The Afro-American
Saturday, April 24, 1926
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
FITCHETT BODY IN POCOMOKE R. THREE MONTHS
PASTOR LAST SEEN
IN HARGIS HOME
Bricks Found In Dead Mans
Pocket, Bullet And Knife
Wounds
POCOMOKE, MD.—The
Fitchett mystery which
Burns detectives could not
solve has been cleared up
at last. This town is all ex-
tivement.
The body of the Rev. J. H. Fitch,
pastor of the A. M. J. Church
was found Saturday in a swamp off
the peconic River on the Somer-
County side three miles from
here. It was in such a decompos-
ed condition that it was buried the
same day. It had been missi-
sive 19th.
Papers in the clothing of the
dead man established his identity.
There were bricks in the pockets to
serve as weight and keep the body
winter. There were wounds
in the body such as could have been
made by a knife and a bullet.
Because the head indicated that he
had been struck there by a humid instru-
A coroner's jury hastily summoned the called witnesses, including Harrison Hargis and his wife, Ethel Neighbors, and home保姆 He was not able there. There was not sufficient evidence to hold either. The jury found that Fitchie came to his death at the hands of parties unknown.
Detectives couldn't Solve It. Fitchie of Fitchie's body three months after he disappeared has created a sensation here. It was thought that he was alive, hiding somewhere in the main follow-up case, in which Hargis declared he found Fitchie alone with Mrs. Hargis.
Baltimore A. M. I. Preachers Meeting in vain offered $250 reward for information which would lead to the arrest of Rev. Mr. Fitchie, dead or alive.
(Continued on Sixteen)
H. U. GETS $218,000
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The House agreed, 62 to 22 Tuesday to the action of the Senate of reinserting the Howard University appropriation of $218,000.
Representatives Hare, (S. C..) Lowery, Allison, and Brynes in the Senate of reinserting Blaton of Texas and Crampton, of Michigan, supported the measure.
Representative Lowery said Howard's president was getting a year and a half to have to take a Whale where he charges $100 to $300 to put his mug in this publication.
Rep. Blaton said there was no law authorizing the appropriation, but that it ought to be given. The only kind of teachers who ought to be colored people are colored people (applicants).
Rep. Green, of Florida, interrupted to say that Congress ought to send all colored people in the United States to some isolated land and their own republic. Blaton said he would not object to that.
Referring to the fight against President Durkee who has resigned Representative Crampton who will have some allies who are knackers and kickers. Howard has some too.
Year Round---
Real Estate
Year Round---
Real Estate
Some one recently asked money in real estate what he should do when he considered the best time of the year to invest in real estate opportunity, is no respecter of season, "contains a world of what one can buy" is always an opportunity as will be evidenced by a glance through the "Real Estate institutions."
Opportunities for profitable investment are on every side, no matter how sum you want to put to work, whether you want a time of your own perity, or whether your interest is in improved or unimproved real estate.
If there should be some specific proposition you seek, it will pay you to write an ad of your own and send, bring or
Telephone It To
THE AFRO
Vernor 6016
Champ Charleston Dancer
Boston—Photo shows eleven year old Anise Boyer, champion charleston child dancer here, giving a demonstration of her dancing skill before Mayor Malcolm Nichols.
Less Said About Voteless South, The Better.-Bruce
Maryland Senator Answers Borah's Declaration That Disfranchisement In The South Is Legal
King Fights For Withdrawal Of Troops From Haiti
WASHINGTON, D. C. "The less said about the question of disfranchisement in the southern states the better. This is the conclusion of a debate in the Senate Tuesday between Senator Borah (Republican, Indiana) and Senator Bruce (Dem., Md.) who violated the constitution in their various methods of keeping Negroes away from the polls.
Senator Borah was speaking on a reason why the progress that the prohibition law be amended so as to permit light wives and beers and leave to the several states the right to enforce the law as each state contends.
Mr. Borah contended that such legislation, if passed, would permit the State to determine which laws should be enforced and which should be abolished. Senator Bruce interrupted him here to say that just what the north did by refusing to return fugitive slaves before the war. Both Borah and Bruce admitted that mistake to give the Negro the vote following emancipation. Senator Borah referring to the period immediately following the war as a period of liberation also admitted that Senator Bruce also mentioned the fact that the South after the Civil War determined for itself without regard to the 14th and 15th amendments of Negro suffrage.
Mr. Borah retorted that so far as he knew all laws in southern states governing Negro disfranchisement the United States Supreme Court.
When Mr. Bruce told how citizens of his home town when he was a boy banded themselves together, 14th amendments, without regard to 15th Congress, Senator Bruce accused him of preaching communism and anarchy. Senator Bruce denied this misinformation, but also helped the suffrage problem in its own way despite the constitution. Penned down by Senator Born that state whether or not the state should have the constitution in disfranchising Negroes, Mr. Bruce replied.
"What is the use of asking me to say something, that everybody knows, to make their choice between constitutional abstractions, and civilization and they selected civilization."
When Mr. Bornhalter his view that the disfranchisement laws are within the constitution, Senu
"I think the less we say on this subject the better."
"What do you think so?"
Mr. Borah—"I think so."
WASHINGTON, D. C. — A resolution providing assistance for forces from Haiti was introduced in the Senate late Friday by Sen. William H. King.
The resolution-declared that the actual government of Haiti is in the hands of General Joffre, the United States High Commissioner, by the military forces of the United States, and that President Louis Borne and the Haitian council of state are surmised that will and act in accordance with his
It is also set out in the resolution (that the town) of the convention on the United States and the United States expired on September 15, 1928, and that if the United States has had to occupy Haiti and control its government and people, such right no longer exists. With respect to-the-people, the United States, April 12, last
TWO GET $2,500
SCHOLARSHIPS
TWO GET $2,500
SCHOLARSHIPS
NBW. YORK—Two colored were among the 37 American scholars and artists to be awarded Guggenheim scholarships by the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, this week.
The foundation has an endowment of $3,000,000 and appropriated $100,000. The scholarships carry a stipend of $2,500 a year and are tenable anywhere in the world for any length of time.
Two colored bioplasters were Issue Paper of Pike University, for continuation of the study abroad on danger trends in world race relations, and to Julian Herman Lewis, associate professor of Pike University, Institute, Assistant Professor of Pathology, University of Chicago; pathologist, Provident Hospital of Chicago; associate professor of the fundamental nature of immunity phenomena, with particular reference to the relation of chemical constitution to biological specifically and immunological specificity of proteins isolated from organs.
No Color Line At Sargent School
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.—There is no color, line at Sargent School of Physical Education, Anna Herry, told the AFRICAN-AMERICAN this week.
Statement had been made public regarding that, Sargent, Drexell, and Peast Institute were among the northern schools which had decided to accept no more colored students.
Miss Herry said, "Sargent's policy remains the same, but the past students not submitting two-colored students every fall. We have many difficulties to overcome in doing this, both in connection with the work in Cambridge, and also at Camp in New Hampshire. However we are glad to have the students and this fall are talking in two, one a local girl, the other from New York City."
the resolution charges that President Borno within the last year appointed 18 of the 19 members of the which did the electing, from among his relatives and personal friends in order that he might be assured of relection. The resolution declares that President Borno was suspended from the State Department. It states that on April 12, last, the council of state, with the approval and support of the mujahideen forces of the rebellion, select Borno for another term of four years, although he is not eligible for the presidency of the Haitian Republic because he is not a son of a Haitian citizen prescribed by the Haitian constitution. Senator King gave notice that an early date he would discuss general conditions existing in Haiti and the course of the United States in Haitian matters.
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND, SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1926
METHODISTS IN MYSTERY FOLK CONFERENCE AT IN THE PAGE HAGERSTOWNDIVORCE SUIT
BALTIMORE IS
NEXT MEETING PLACE
HAGERSTOWN, MD. Officers of the A. M. E. conference meeting here are the Rev. Charles Wesley, secretary; the Rev. J. W. Armstrong, assistant secretary; the Rev. C. D. Walden, statistician; the Rev. E. T. Addison, secretary to the Bishop; the Rev. C. E. Stewart, treasurer. One hundred and three delegates are present.
Lay delegates present include Phaddeous Copeland, W. H. Banks, C. Nixon, Mrs. T. Sullivan, Sultan, Kinsay Brown, Mrs. M. M. Pindler, Nathan Johnson.
Bishop Johnson in opening the conference urged the committee on admission to use greater discretion in advancing the candidates for the min
"their minds and hearts need to be better trained," he said.
Waters' Chapel-Church, Baltimore, was selected as the place of next meeting.
The status of the Rev. Frederick Dougherty and Cosmopolitan A. M. E. Church is not understood. He reported 500 members and only $25 in dollar money.
Some members of the conference understand that he has not entered his church in the conference and that it is not the full-fledged A. M. E. Church. Other members hold a contrary view.
Finance and Church Extension Boards of the A. M. E. Church motored here from Washington, today, left by J. J. Harkin's, financial secretary, and Dr. S. J. Johnson, church extension secretary. Bishop W. Decker Johnson accompanied them.
Dollar money reported by Baltimore churches made a $250,000 total of $16,731 which is a $1,305,000 triniton; $750,000, $450; Phenecor, $580; Metropolitan, (D.C.) $910; St. John's, $390; Payne, $300; Shiloh, $21; Grace, $106.
The conference is being held in Ebenezer A. M. E. Church, the Rev. John Johnson, the Bishop, and the General.
Sessions got off to a good start following communion and the annual address by the Bishop Wednesday morning, followed by reports by the pastors.
In the afternoon the Rev. W. A. Harris, at the敬献的堂, was conducted devotionals.
At night a reception was given. Bishop Johnson by the conference.
Reports of committees, presiding elders and general officers for the Thursday morning, followed in the diocese by the Rev. W. H. Manoo and J. G. Martin and in the afternoon by the Rev. George W. Scott and the Rev. E. H. Purnell; at night by the Rev. A. A. Murray and the Rev. J. R. Nelson with a missionary sermon by the Rev. S.
The Rev. M. W. Traverse and the Rev. C. A. Williams will lead the devotionalals Friday morning the Rev. W. Lohwil in the afternoon and the Rev. P. A. Scott and the Rev. E. P. Plummer at night. The Rev. W. H. Thomas will preach the educational sermon. He will recess at noon on Saturday. Saturday morning devotionalals will be conducted by the Rev. M. E. Simpson and the Rev. M. Stunshoe. Stunshoe will be the benefit of the Ministerial Relief.
Appointments
Appointments will be read by Bishop Simon Sunday night. The bishop will preach Sunday morning and ordain new elders. Devotionalals will be led by the Rev. P. H. Green and the Rev. W. H. Dorsay with the Rev. M. H. Dorsay and the Rev. T. E. Butler. Choirs of Payne and Allen churches will furnish music. Night devotions will be conducted by the Rev. W. Walker and the Rev. J. R. Zarum.
Douglass Case Up
Omoha. Neb.—Dr. Wesley Jones shot in the chest, shoulder and leg by his wife after he had teasingly told her he had been out with the girls drove a mile to the hospital, undressed, got on the operating table before he collapsed. "Go to work, boys, do whatever you can for me," he said. He will recover.
Medals For: Sheriffs
Tuskegee, Ala. (A. N. P.)—Handsome medals have been awarded by the national police to be awarded to officers who protect their prisoners from mobs
"Mr. X" Who Drove Dixon Car Said To Be Love Nest Man
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TEACHER INVOLVED
Cross Bill Says Hubby And Instructor Took Out Of Town Trips Together
Who was the mysterious Mr. X who was alleged to have been caught in the hotel love nest with Mrs. Hattie Page prior to the filing of the bill for divorce by her husband. Herman Page in the Circuit Court last week?
William Dixon, in a assigned statement to the APRO declares it was not he but admits lending his car to another man whose name he has given to him in a question. He thinks that the detective hired by Mr. Pago saw his automobile number and took for granted that he was the driver. He then asked when the case is called on its merits. Who was driving Mr. Dixon's car? To *File Cross BILL* Another question that will be answered in a future study who is the pretty elementary school teacher to be named in the cross bill which Mrs. Page has instructed her attorney, J. Steward Davis, to draw up and die against her husband, Mr. Dixon. Young woman's name but declared that evidence of clandestine trips out of the city and state, in violation of the White Shave Law will be required against her husband, that she was trailed to any hotel with Dixon or any other man. In his statement Dixon declares: "I wish to announce to the public a decision of the statement made against me, connected with Mrs. Battle Page. I have had no personal transactions with her and want it known that there have been no familiar relations between them, and that the gentleman in company with her was using my machine, and therefore placed me in this false position. If any one insultates against my character in regards as a former employer, I will prosecute them to the extent of the law."
HOWARD SURGEON
TAKES 6 INCH BLADE
FROM MAN'S SKULL
NEW YORK CITY (PNS))—The almost miraculous operation on John Taylor/Hines, of Harlem, from whose head a six-inch knife blade was removed, by James L. Wilson and M. E. Rosz, physicians at the Edgecombe Sanitarium Sunday afternoon, is regarded in the medical: world as a little less than marvelous. The operation was performed by Hines, who was stabbed in an alteration March 15, worked with the blade dangerously near the brain cavity for nearly a month. Finally certify the physician who advised immediate operation as the only means of saving his life. The delicate surgical feat was performed by Dr. Walter I. Walters, University Medical School, assisted by Dr. Moss and Wilson. The Edgecombe Sanitarium is owned and operated by Negro physicians and surgeons. The operation was reported as a success. Hines is on the road to a rapid recovery.
GARAGE EMPLOYEE SHARES BIG REWARD
James Blake, employed in a local garage, shared in the $1000 reward given to severa men who dled in the apprehension and conviction of a white "hit and run"嫌犯. The first clue he gave the police was received from Blake, who noticed blodies stains or a car that was left in the garage where he was. employed in the police apprehended the guilty person, weaving a web of evidence which resulted in his conviction.
BURLINGTON, N. C. —Refusing to put nut, but nutting, Shelly Lee, Richmond Hill barber, was shot to death by an unknown person. Hospital, ggts 368,990
SLAIN
THE FILM MAKES A SUCCESS OF THE FILM "THE FILM MAKES A SUCCESS OF THE FILM "
Latest photographs of heart as she appears in her newest musical, "Blackbirds of 1926" at the Alhambra Theatre and Plantation, New York. The dainty songbird will fly across the Atlantic leading her flock to open in London next month.
Editors Face Grand Jury For Printing Girls' Photos
Isaac Dixon and Ernest Purvance publishers of "Dance Fan News", were held for the action of the grand jury after a hearing in the Northwestern Polio Station Tuesday upon charges of printing obscene pictures on the Magazine cover Tuesday.
The affair is the outgrowth of a photo of four chorus girls advertising the Eddie Rector's Revue at a local theatre last week. Action was brought against the publishers when police after investigation found that the paper containing the picture, which they considered immoral, was standing by children of all ages. To further prove their case a small school boy was given money and made a purchase. Appearances at any stand by children of all ages were arranged before Magistrate Johannson.
Other Papers Shown Several papers published in the interest of art lovers and on sale at news stands were produced by Attorney J. Stewart Davies to show that such pictures were to be made by Magistrate Johannson refused to consider his argument but held the men in $200 bond each for the action of the grand jury. That the matter had been taken over his head to the States' Attorney, who ordered the case carried through to a higher court. They were released on their own permission.
The same pictures are being carried in daily papers everywhere according to the elders, who regard the pictures with expect and expect difficulty in winding.
GARY, Ind.—Before an audience of 2000, William C. Huston, commissor of education of the Elks, said the order had raised $15,000 for scholarship purposes and expects to account from the public to be added to the fund.
U. S. WEATHER
REPORT
TEMPERATURE
COOLING
Sunrise: 5.27 a.m.
Sunset: 6:50 p.m.
Moonrise: 6:50 p.m.
Full, 28h
Last quarter, 6th
First quarter, 19th
First quarter, 19th
c. in Baltimore; 7c. in Maryla
e Mills
"Blackbirds of 1926" at the nation, New York. The dainty Atlantic leading her flock to
Grand Jury
Girls' Photos
PENN STATE PRIMARY HOTLY CONTESTED
PHILADELPHIA — Chestnut and Broad streets look like a circus is coming to town.
It is all due to the three-cornered G. O. P fight for United States Senate. He has headquarters in this neighborhood.
In the primary which takes place in May, the candidates are Governor or Pinchot, William S. Vare, member of Congress and political boss and boss W. Pepper, present incumbent.
Pepper has done little for colored people since he has been in office. Vare represents the old machine and prefers White, playing commissioner and Edward W. Henry, as judge.
He is also backing G. Edwin Dickinson, colored attorney, for U.S. Congressman.
Slayers Get Life Term
NEW ORLEANS, LA. — O. P. Kirkland and Fred Stokes, both white, are murdered and sentenced to life imprisonment for killing Richard Burgin, of Folkston, Ga. It was the first time in the history of Duval County that white people convicted of first degree murder for killing colored people.
NEW ORLEANS, LA. (ANP)—The Masonic Temple, Sanctoga and Gravier streets, was slightly damaged last week by the action of a small cyclone which swept the business. strict
CITY EDITION ALABAMA TOLD TO REPEAL ITS JIM CROW LAW
Inter-Racial Committee
Head In Birmingham Al-
so Hits Courts
ROBBERY OF SCHOOL
FUNDS IS CITED
Frank Talk Creates Stir In
Inter-Denominational
Convention
BIRMINGHAM, ALA.—
The only place they put
the Negro in the front is in
the army,"—Clarence Darrow.
Darrow is wrong. They also put
him in the front coaches of railroad
trains in the southern states. It's
most dangerous up there.
This is the new expressed by Will
Alexander, of Atlanta, head of the
Commit. Jon on Inter-racial Coopera-
tion.
Dr. Alexander created a stir
addressing an audience of nearly 2,000
delegates of the Inter-Denominational
Young People's Conference in ses-
Delegates from the colored churches were conspicuous by their absence. A. M. E. and M. Zion Johnson, A.M. E. and M. Zion Johnson, learning that a girl cimw seats would be available, sent out official notices to all delegates to stay away.
Dr. Alexander declared it was unjust for the white majority to be allowed the Negro minority, and called attention to the inconvenience experienced by Negro travelers who do not have smoking car and Pullman privileges.
In White mail.
Dr. Alexander said that Negro were ruled against not only in matters of travel, but also in education, housing conditions, i. the courts and social affairs.
Dr. South said the speaker, "do not find white men guilty of crime upon the testimony of Negroes. He added: "I will protect every individual by law will ultimately become an unsafe country in which to live.
"Every person, regardless of race, should have every opportunity for advancement of powers which are within them."
Dr. Alexander said that Richmond's population was 32 per cent Negro, and yet only 5 per cent of that city, allotted to the . . . "cee."
Statistics were noted to show that m.m. states were discriminating against Negroes in the distribution of public school funds.
Questioned By Hearrs
"Do you believe in the repeal of the im. law?" asked some in the audience when Dr. Alexander had concluded.
"I believe in the repeal of unjust laws, and it is unjust," replied Dr. Alexander.
The questioner asked:
"Do you think that educated Negroes are more hostile to whites than uneducated Negroes?"
"Poll," he replied.
"Naturally, as the mind is cultivated, one sees more clearly the injustice done."
"Do you believe in segregation?" another asked.
"My time is up. I shall answer that later," said the speaker.
that later," said the speaker.
Dr. Alexander said that, he did not advocate intermarriage. "That is not necessary to a Christian solution to the problem he declared. It is not respect or sonality." Dr. Alexander asserted. Continuing he said: "The final rule by which personality will be judged is not race, but character. That race will be supreme which is not race. Being a true Christian is to wish every race to have, the fullest possible advancement of which it is possible."
Institute, W. Va. - Jackson Davis, of the General Education. Board New York, was here last week conferring with president Davis, of InFerior, a scholarship which is available to some colored educator of this state.
White Man Blacked Face
NASHVILLE, TENN. (PNS)—E. Cornett, a young white man disguised himself as a Negro, and was arrested by police on a charge of vagrancy. Bottom, a section of this city early Wednesday, morning. He was arrested by police on a charge of vagrancy. Cornett told the police that he was a student of Cumberland University.
National Capital News
D. C. MINISTER IS SUED FOR DIVORCE
D. C. MINISTER IS SUED FOR DIVORCE
WASHINGTON, D. C. Through Attorney Armond W. Scott, Mrs. Ida B. Miles has filed suit for a limited divorce from her husband, the Rev. David L. Miles, whom she says is emplemant in a messenger in the Interior Department and on Sundays preaches at a church in Alexandria, Va.
In her bill of complaint, Mrs. Miles says that for the first two years and a half of their married life, they got along fine, but that at the end of that period by the manner Brown is woman in the house where they resided. Her husband, she says, became infatuated with Beatrice Brown and began clandestine meetings with her. Because of his friendship with Beatrice Brown, Mrs. Miles elicited husband became cold and indifferent toward her.
Mrs. Miles says that she went to visit her sister in Philadelphia about March 21, last, and upon her visit she found that her husband had moved and had made no arrangements for any place for her and their two children. She found that her husband had moved and had made no arrangements for any place for her and their two children. She found that her husband had moved and had made no arrangements for any place for her and had not spoken to her since last June. Her husband calls himself a minors' counselor, she states, and is a regular pastor of a church in Alexandria, Va. He receives about $75 a month from this church, her states and uses the church for her needs. He is with money and other necessities of life. He is also a messenger in the Interior Department and receives $115 a month from the church. Mrs. Miles says he has told her.
Mrs. Miles asks the court for a limited divorce, temporary and permanent allmany and counsel fees. Mrs. Miles asks the court for a limited divorce, temporary and permanent allmany and counsel fees. District of Columbia on July 29, 1920, by the Rev. W. H. Hill. They have two children, a boy, aged 2 years, and a girl, aged 15 months, are in the custody of the mother.
OLDEST INHABITANTS MEET
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The annual
celebration of the nomination of slaves
and African Americans brated by the Oldest Inhabitants Association at Calvary Parish Hall, Saturday,
June 11, 2014. Those on the program included
the Rev. F. I. A. Bennett, the Rev. J. T.
Brown Carey, Robinson Johnson, the
Floyd Fargo, the Fake, George L.
Watson, Dr. W. S. Montgomery, J.
P. Nelll, Dr. W. A. Warfield, Whitfield
John Jackson, Charles E. Robinson, Thomas
Short and John P. Taylor.
NEW LIBERTY HOTEL
C. D.-NEW LIBERTY HOTEL-
berkeley
Hotel are: Mr. and Mrs. James Mad-
son, Chester, Pa.
Mrs. and Mrs. James Mad-
son, W. M.
John Wells
and wife, W. New York City;
Fenny, P. Philadelphia.
Mr. and Mrs. W. W.
Ianmore, Md.; Mr. and Mrs. B. King
New Haven, Conn.; C. S. Zobohan.
New York, N.Y.; B. Braxton.
and W. B. King, Baltimore.
THE AFRO
7 Cents
In Washington,
D. C.
PAY NO MORE
INSURANCE MEN ATTENTION!
TWENTY-FIVE DISTRICT MANAGERS WANTED
WE have vacancies in our field executive forces as indicated upon the thumbnail sample. Three District Managers are open, in Texas, two; in Arkansas, one. You can apply in any state in your state by consulting the little maps. These openings represent opportunity, with a chance to be involved in experience, ability, energy and initiative men who can prove to us that they are of whom successful executives are made. Some of the men we will engage already have the opportunity to be behind them but are looking for a wider opportunity. Others may have confined their energies to the work environment with the corresponding opportunities, with the corresponding rewards. The National Benefit Life Insurance Company of the outstanding leaders in the commercial field of the Race. Its history is a chronicle of achievement. The Higher executive positions are constantly opening in this far-flung organization. Every solution is in his hands. Every district manager of the National Benefit is in line for the biggest jobs in us. Therefore, the men we want must measure up to the highest standard. They must be able to produce good business and to train and direct others to do so, but that they are capable of doing even greater responsibilities if called upon.
that to the kind of man you are and this is
the kind of job you are seeking, write us in
confidence such information about yourself
as to correctly judge your qualification.
General Store
609 F Street, N. W.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
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2
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1
1
2
Call VErnon 6016
al Capita
AFRO-AMERICAN Office, Isaac Bannister, Manager. At The Variety Book Shop, 1102 U St., N. W. (All matters for publication must reach the office by Monday, 5 p. m.
SOCIETY
Mrs. Emma Williston, of 1517 S street, northwest, is spending two weeks in New, York City.
Dr. Arthur M. Curtis, Jr., has returned from a trip abroad.
from Detroit, Michigan, where she established a Indies shop.
Mr. John Smith, salesman for the Nash Automobile Company, has sold Mr. Abdul Kahn, a native of East India, and U street merchant, a Nash coach.
Mrs. Carrie 'Simms, 1922 Sieth street, northwest, was called to Norfolk, Va., on account of the illness of her grandmother.
ELK HEAD TRANSFERS
MEMBERSHIP
ELK HEAD TRANSFERS
MEMBERSHIP
J. Finley Wilson Joins Maryland Lodge—Gets Ready To Suspend D. C. Body
WASHINGTON, D. C.-J. Finley Wilson, Grand Exalted Ruler of the Improved Benevolent Protective Order of Elks of the World, has signified his intention of transferring his membership from Community Lodge No. 380 of Fairmont Heights, Maryland.
He has issued a special dispensation to Bruce Evans Lodge to receive him as a member of the granding of the benevolent dispensation is taken as an indication that the Grand Exalted Ruler is preparing to go through with his threatened suspension made by the decision of the District Deputy E. W. Bundy in allowing an appeal by Joseph I. Bailley in the case of Herbert C. Akers, who was acquitted by the court having a manorous remarks concerning the Grand Exalted Ruler.
Columbia Lodge was ordered to show cause *w* it should not be suspended. It advised the Ground Exalted Ruler that the district District Deputy Bundy acted without authority. Grand Exalted Ruler Wilson takes the position that the lodge should have followed the regular procedure and appealed to him and by its action in ignoring a decision of the lodge against the laws and authority of the Grand Lodge.
D. C. ELKS AT PEACE NO SUSPENSION
Peaco kwas restored at Columbia Lodge Monday night and danger of a fire had been avoided. Lodge receded from its position ignoring a decision of District Deputy to the grand exalted ruler. Motion affecting peace was offered by Perry W. Howard and supported by F. Jones and John F. Rose.
WHITELAW HOTEL
Guests registered at the Whitewater Hotel are:
Va. and Mr. Charles A. Winn, Charlottesville,
Va. and Mr. Wm. W Lee, Philadelphi-
ville, Va. and Mr. Rakier, Buffalo, N. Y.
Roy Baker, Buffalo, N. Y. Malen
Burnett, Trenton, N. J. W. J. Smith,
and wife, City; Chas. F. Valentine, New
Philadelphia; Murray C. Burges, C. Burges;
Ole W. Jackson, Omma, Nebraska; Leon
Philadelphia; Murray C. Burges, C. Burges;
Ronoke, Va.; Mrs. J. E. Sando-
Brick College, N. C. W. J. E. Asse-
gnment, N. J. E. Jones, Page, Va. Paul
Coleman, Plainfield, N. C. J. Casper Hol-
ton, Va.; B. E. Boker, New York; L. E.
Johnson and wife, Atlantic City, N. J.
Philadelphia, Va.; B. A. Boker, New York;
N. Y. Beatrice Lewis, Mrs. E. H.
Ravennain, Baltimore; S. M. Hawkins,
Philadelphia, Va.; P. Davis, Richmond, Va.; N. R.
Hawkins, Boston, Mass; James Stratton
Pittsburgh, Pa.; Oscar Sammo, South
Orange, N. J. M. A. Cray, Payne,
Andria, R. A. Robert, Cornell, N. Y.
Lynn, Allen, Petersburg.
SCREEN TEST - NOT QUILTY
WASHINGTON, D. C.-John Brown,
chauffeur of the Broadway Taxi Company,
Seventh street, near P. was found
on the charge of possessing a amake screen.
EN ATTENTION! ACT MANAGERS WANTED
1926
D. C. Body
CHURCH NEWS
LINCOLN CONGREGATIONAL
At the Lincoln Congregational Temple
the pastor, the Rev. R. W. Brooks,
spokenen, "Spiritual greeting." The
Christian Endeavor met at 6:45.
SHILLOH BAPTIST CHURCH
The reopening services at Shilloh Baptist
Church came to a close Sunday, at
Walden, delivered an eloquent sermon,
on "The Journey to Emmaus," at 11
p.m. A special musical selection was
rendered by the choir, E. M. Mypax,
organist.
THIRD BAPTIST CHURCH
At the Third Baptist Church. Sunday
morning the pastor, the Rev. Geo.
Brown, delivered from the Logic,
"God in the Beginning."
JOHN WESLEY A. M. E. ZION,
At the John Wesley A. M. E. Zion
Church, the pastor, Dr. H. T. Medford,
died at 10:45 a.m. and 7:45 p.m. Communion was administered during the morn-
ing services conducted by the recorder in
services conducted by the church by
the Gospel Band, of Ohio, resulted in
new members received into the
church.
METROPOLITAN BAPSTEI CHURCH
At the Metropolitan Baptist Church
the pastor, the pastor, sermon on
"Some Things Not Shaken," at 11 a.m.
D. C. Masonic Temple Trustees Sued
Washington, D. C.-Alexander Wolfe and William L. Houston were enjoined to them from paying out any money received from the sale of the unfinished Masonic Temple until two liens were paid. The first lien is $5,500 for granite used in the building purchased from the Onandaga Litholite Company through Attorney A. W. Gray. The second lien is $10,300 for brick work, labor, etc. due Charles H. Green, 3332 Sherman avenue. Green was represented by attorneys James F. Settle and Mortimer Har.
New Fraternity
Washington, D. C.-Kappi Pi, an honorary scholarship fraternity was made by 15 members of medical class of Howard University, last week. Dean E. A. Balloch, Dr. W. A. Warfield, Dr. R. A. Coburn, as first honorary members. Coburn E. Walden, Secretary; C. Wendell Freeman, treasurer; H. Rowland Jurongi Bailout College of Engineering. Walter A. Adams Edward H. Bailout, Harry D. Harper, Clarence O. Pair, D. Norval Unthank, E. Henry W. Prazzi, T. Ezra Turner, W. Morris Wright. The other members are as follows. From the senior class '20:
Felix A. Anderson, George H.
Batson, Alphonso D. Belton, William
C. Henderson, Jesus C. Randolfo,
Peter L. Richardson Herman A.
Warner, Reuben S. Young, Anthony
L. Jordan,
Pierce the junior class '27;
Richard E. Banks, Robert J.
Craft, Milton G. Edmonds, Clarence
O. Hilton, Alfred J. Jackson S.
Evelyn Lewis, Kelly Miller, Jr.
Algernon Phillips, D. Anderson
S. Edward Phillips.
The charter members are:
John J. Goldsberry President; P.
R. Higginbotham, vice president.
Reviews
Photoplays screened at the theatres beginning, Sunday., April 18 follows:
beginning, public. You street, near 14th, W. L. E. Sandford, manager: "When Love Grows Cold, The Tail of Night Hawk Serenaders, assisted by talent, concludes the program.
Lincoln. You street, near 12th street: "The Untamed Lady" "Wrecked" "The Love Toy" and "The Lure of the Wild."
Dunbar. Seventh at T. P. W. Dunbar. Seventh at T. P. "Brave Heart," "California," Straight Ahead: "The Cowboy and the Countess," "The Broadway Lady" and "Blue Blade."
Broadway. Seventh at P. N. W. Rufus G. Byars, manager: "Don Q. Son of Zoro," "Eyes Lover," "The Trouble With Wives," and "Bright Lights."
Howard Theatre. T. near Seventh. Black presents "Mary Mack's Mer-
BIRTHS
There were 47 births reported to the Health Department for the week ending the 19th. There were three who were one set of twins. They follow: John and Markaret McCoy, boy. John and Markaret McCoy, boy. John and Olivia Coleman, boy. Leo and Gladys Fletcher, girl. Geo. and Alvie Dorsay, girl. Geo. and Alvie Dorsay, girl. Chas. and Elsie Dudley, boy. Thomas and Loretta Banks, girl. Thomas and Loretta Banks, girl. Francis T. and Mecedes Lefferty, girl. Earl and Chara Caldwell, boys (twins). Henry and Rosa Matthews, boy.
James E. and May Butler, boy.
Sylvester and Bertha Fennell, boy.
Bernard and Bertha Fennell, boy.
Fabian A. and Estelle Lebat, boy.
Herschel T. and Ethyl Wilson, girl
John and Bertha Lyons, boy.
Bernard and Bertha Lyons, boy.
Raymond and Gladys Colbert, boy.
Aaymoud and Gladys Colbert, boy.
Winn H. and Lucinda Powell, boy.
Perry H. J. and Florence A. Pierce, girl
George W. and Katie R. Edinson, boy.
Winn H. and Lucinda Powell, boy.
Rudolph and Jane Fisher, boy.
Frank R. and Elizabeth Cook, boy.
Frank R. and Elizabeth Cook, boy.
Bernard and Sarah Coghill, boy.
Ollie and Mary H. Roots, boy.
Charles T. and Mattie Bell, girl.
Charles T. and Mattie Bell, girl.
Winn P. and Mary Richards, girl.
Y.W.C.A.
Arbor Day was observed last Friday, April 16th for girl Gri Reserves. Approved by the girls. Through the kindness of Mr. P. A. Rayford, of the Armstrong school, faculty, a maple tree was given, which win' in honor of the great educator, committee. Miss Kittie Bruce, chairman, committee. Miss Kittie Bruce, chairman, committee. Phans was given a highland Beach, MD., from July 19th to August 30th. Membership social will be on Thursday, 29th. This is Health Week and each club includes Health discussions in its program. Our general secretary, Mrs. Martha C. Browne, of the Luise Madella are delegates to the National Y. W. C. A. Convention, being in Milwaukee, W., April 21st to 27th. The Phyllis Wheatley Girl Reserves program at the Sunday Caterpillar service.
The Carry-On-Club has planned an
The Sunday Ves-
port.bsr.com
The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
Affairs Of Marcus Garvey And Two Wives Are Tangled
Picture 1. Lawyers of Mar-
cus Garvey, provisional president of Africa, are asking the courts to deport Mrs. Marcus Garvey No.1.
Civil Service Exams
Further information and application blanks may be obtained from the Comprehensive Information Center, representative at the post office or customer house if any city.
STATION AND HOSPITAL LIBRARIES HOSPITAL LIBRARIAN at $1,500 a year, Veterans' Bureau and naval establishments throughout the United States.
AUTONOBILE MECHANIC, Departmental Service, Washington, D. C., at $1,500 a year.
CAKER at $1,020 a year, ASSISTANT COOK at $600 a year, Indian Service. Quarers, fuel, and light will be furnished.
DESIGN DRAFTSMAN (TOPOGRAPHIC AND SUBSURFACE), Public Works Department, Naval Station, Cayman Islands.
APPRENCEICE FISH CULTURIST, Bureau of Fisheries, Department of Commerce, at $600 a year for duty in the United States, at $1,020 a year for duty in Alaska.
MARRIAGES
Walter Taylor, 35, 1832, Vermont avenue, N. W; Ada L. Gill, 35, 5024 street, N. W. The Rev. Wm. D. Jarnell. William A. Brewer, 29, 6114 Third St. N. E; Ea Edmonds, 24, 2242 Street St. N, E. The Rev. Geo. Samuel Sawell, 24, 300th St. N. Eulin Stewart, 42, 1960 80th St. N. Eulin Stewart, 42, 1960 80th St. N. The Rev. W. A. Jones.
Caleb Robinson, 50, 629 Pitcher St. 45, 213 Newport Place, N. W. The 45, 213 Newport Place, N. W. The
Dempsey Foster, 25, 4200 Stl, N. E.
Alice Force, 20, 4210 Brook St, N. E.
Edith J. Butler, 30, 43 Defres St. N.
W; Annie Johnson, 20, 33 L. St. N.
Henry Simm, 40, Fails Church, Va.
Eliza Byrd, 40, Fails Church, Va.
The Rev. J. Barker, 35, 429 St. N.
W, Lillian Hawkins, 32, 3010 St. N.
W, The Rev. J. Harvey,
S. E; Mamie Llew, 40, 110 Van St.
S. E; W. Mamie Llew, 40, 110 Van St.
The Rev. D. Harvey, 30, 430 St. N.
W, Muggle Taylor, 24, 810 St. N.
W, The Rev. A. Jones,
S. E; Brown J. Brown, 24, 1576 St.
S. E; Edith Cohn, 24, 1539 Stafford
C. N. W, The Rev. Walter,
S. E; Edith Cohn, 24, 1539 Stafford
C. N. W, The Rev. Walter,
S. E; J. Egan Holley, 20,
116 268 St. S. E. The Rev. Isaac
A. Wheeler, 22, 43 Myrle St.
N. E; Katie E. McCure, 18, 41
Eighth St. S. W. The Rev. E. B
Billy Cornell, 12, 1227 Seventh St., N. Wax, 19, Hazel Turner, 19, H. Wax, 19, The Rev. Simon P. Dave, Fred D. Wright, 23, 1215 18th St., N. Wax, 23, Hazel Turner, 23, The Rev. Larry R. Arts, William Shorter, 24, 666 Calleen St., N. Hazel Turner, 24, 200 H. St., N. Wax
Chifton, Roberts, 25, 128. Thomas B.
Coleman, 25, 128. Thomas B.
Coleman, 17, 118. Greenham Place, N. W.
The
Coleman, 17, 118. Greenham Place, N. W.
Reginaid Edwardws, 22, 3336 Dent Place
W., W. Mary
W., W. Mary
The Rev. The Rev. D, Edwards
Alvin F. Sewell, 18, 239 Oakdale St.
Dolphin S, N. W. The Rev. F, J. Tobin
Joseph F. Moore, 21, 2019 Ninth St.
S, N. W. The Rev. A, J. Taylor.
DEATHS
There were 45 deaths reported to the Health Department for the worst number of deaths in the country, and 40 were under one year of age. The follow: Fry, 85, 320 24th St. N, W. David Shanklin, 64, Freedmen's Hospital Elizabeth Jennings, 49, 1002 6th H, W. David Shanklin, 64, Nielsen Wooden Stroman, 34, Tuberculosis Hospital William Saxon, 30, Casualty Hospital Jake Walker, 1, 725 Ded. Ove, S. W Annabell Carter, 23, Gallinger Hospital Hillary Snowden, 30, Casualty Hospital Brown, 50, 1124 C St. N, E. Hampton Green, 23, Gallinger Hospital Mutila Snowden, 30, Casualty Hospital Auney Henderson, 43, Freedmen's Hospital Sarah C H, 30, Casualty Hospital Wm H, Bannister, 43, 1321 Wallach St. N, W. Robinson, 70, 1011 Mln. Ave. N, E. Julius Bradley, 70, Gallinger Hospital. Fry, 85, 320 24th St. N, W Frank A Hill, 44, Walter Reed Hospital Fred Acwith, 68, Casualty Hospital Hicks, 4 hours, 110 10th St. S, E. Cora Cohenman, 44, 2823 Gn. Ave. N, W Susan F. Clark, 84, 2128 Wayne Ave.
Arthur Hughes. 28. Tuberculosis Hospital Infant of New York Hospital. 1 day
Freedland's Applicant
James Smith, 42, U. S. Soldiers' Home
Hospital.
Gussie Jones, 37, Freedman's Hospital
James Edington, 55, 1518 St. N., W. N.
Chas, H. Anderson, 61, 947 25th St.
Osalay Mitchell, 44, Children's Hospital
Hortense Thomas, 19, 444 F. St.,
Cornell University, 19, 444 F. St.
Harris, 2, Children's Hospital.
Amalia Turner, 58, St. Elizabeth's Hospital
Richmond Smith, 58, St. Elizabeth's
Hospital, 43, 1231 1st St.,
N. W. Geo. Lucas, 65, Freedmen's Hospital.
Alexander Wills, 51, U. S. St.
Carrie Dunnington, 33, 1023 13th St.
Chas. T. Green, 15 mon., 1329 W St.
N. W.
Colle Williams, 3 mon., 424 N. Y. Ave.
Mary Peyton, 47, 607 2nd St. N. W.
Pastor Hughes Surprised
WASHINGTON, D. C.-The Rev. and pastor of Church, 16th and 18th Lewis streets, northeast, were showered with surprise and friends of the church. party after secretly assembling, entered the parsonage singing, "Susan's Favorite Hint" with tokens of favorite effort.
Among those present were the Rev. James Church, northeast, Washington, D. C.; the Rev. Robert and resident of Washington, likewise a worker, delivered the closing remarks.
DIPLOMAT LOST 72 QUARTS
WASHINGTON, D. C—Bun O'Kelly, junior of an apartment house, 2456 20th St. in New York, was sent three years in prison for the larceny of 72 quassons from a secretary of the Greek institution.
ANOTHER WHITE PRESIDENT AT HOWARD WOULD BE BLUNDER SAYS ALUMNUS
Fully Qualified White Man Wouldn't Come—Has Too Many Openings Among His Own People. Old Excuse, "Time Not Ripe Yet For Colored Head," Won't Work Well This Time. Work of John Hope at Morehouse Cited. New Head Should Come From Present Faculty.
A man in a suit climbs a staircase.
Picture 2. Garvey came to the United States. From Europe several years ago declaring his first wife deserted him in London.
ANOTHER W
Fully Qualified White
His Own People.
Work Well This Ti
Should Come From
By ALUMNUS
It is impossible to discuss frankly the Howard. University situation without bringing in the color question. In every matter affecting the color question, the student thinks feels, and talks in terms of the color problem; but the poor colored brother always wants the soft applied when the color question comes up in relation to the prescienceency of the refuge in the convenient slogan, "The time is not ripe yet for a colored president.
Efficient Prexy
The writer wants and efficient connotes, with all that the adjective connotes, for Howard University, regardless of color, or intelligence. As he intuitively believes that the most efficient person who can be attracted to this position is a colored educator. The day of the educational mission of A. M. Kennedy Academy, White men, with a few notable exceptions, are no longer making their wonted sacrifice for Negro education. The academic success of Negro education has not been entirely forsaken by competent white educators, but the trend is unquestionably in the other direction.
His Own. People
A white man fully qualified for a college presidency does not seek the position because he is no need of such a quest; he has too many flattering inducements from his own people to run the inevitable social and educational risks accepting the presidency of a coloration.
A college presidency brings social prestige and makes possible a career education. He is a reviving agency of profound gratitude, as the Howard trustees are inclined to think. The person who has served gives generously of his time to the people whom he serves. He cannot open the gates of the university to them while he boots the doors of his mansion to these same people.
Social Equality
Call it "social equality" or what other name you will, there must exist a wholesome intercourse with the president's students. The president's home is none too grand for frequent gatherings of groups of students or adults. Social intercourse with his sable constituency means a loss of social prestige with his own possessions. He likes like Washington. For this reason, it is very improbable that an active, career-seeking white man, with unquestionable qualifications, is going to accept the president of Howard University. Prescribed
Proscribed
Moreover, the standing of a white educator is never enhanced by his administrative connection with a colored university to a larger and more attractive white university. His educational activities are thus prossebred; so he is not the missionary business-heartedly into the missionary business, he is not likely to sacrifice a more brilliant career elsewhere.
No Calls To Durkee
During Dr. Durkee's career at Howard University, a number of attractive university presidents then gave him a call. So far as his educational career was concerned, it was limited wholly to Howard University. Fortunately he was in the university to help develop his ministerial attributions. His retirement from Howard University has come through the church and not through the call from any other. There is no galasaying the stubborn fact that a white educator's career in a colored university has no future beyond that institution. Likely to give him a call thereafter. It follows, then, that the best trained white educators cannot be pushed, pulled, or persuaded into college. White men of advanced age too worn out for real service, or white men flattered by an attractive salary which they could not hope to attain, their own people, are invariably the only types that can be drawn in these days.
Fisk University
Fisk University, for example, first called a white scholar of recognized achievement to the presidency. The student was educated in serving, easily outbid Fisk for his services, so Fisk has had to turn to a young foreign missionary who is at present studying at Columbia University. He—a young man of unknown pedagogical attainments. In doing so, Fisk has passed up such distinguished alumni as DuPont and Vivian Ware, an escapable philosophy is that a white man of unknown qualifications, or even of negligible qualifications, is superior to the Negro scholar of known a.d. approved qualifications.
Time Not Ripe
Carp at the writer, if you will denounce his homely philosophy and hurl all manner of curses at him
Picture 3. He'got a divorce out west and was married to Mrs. Garvey, No. 2 by the Rev. J. R. L. Diggs, in Baltimore.
but In the meantime let some person come forth with proof of the falsity of the assertion that the assentment that he made in these days, outstanding white educators. The writer's philosophy, or its established contrary, ought to be of some guidance to the Nominating Committee. The usual retort to the argument for a colored president is that "the time is not yet ripe for one." As the president of the Phenomena of maturity, he wants some agriculturist, botanist, or horticulturist to figure out, with mathematical precision, the best president of Howard University will be reached. What kind of seed is necessary? What kind of fertilizer must be planted? Are the harbingers of maturity?
Memory Germ
Like all epigramic utterances, this oft-repated assertion has become a memory gem and many colored people scite it without considering the somewhat pathetic that race advancement has been lagging in developing a colored schoolman who can understand the affairs of Howland University. Compatent colored leaders are running churches, insurance companies, banks, theatres, and various other institutions. The university is still considered beyond their power of guidance. What a humiliating reflection on colored schoolmen! Will they continue propaganda?
Carpet Bagger
The educational carpet-baggers tell us most confidently that since Howard University is maintained largely by federal funds, there are no annual appropriations, if a colored man were made president. There was never coined a better hook to frighten poor credited colored people. Howard University is not added by the government because it has a white president, and it will never be coined a colored president. At present, the appropriations are gratitudes granted to help a struggling race of 100 per cent patriotism — a race which is denied almost every annual prize. Thus far, Congress has never prescribed the color of the president, trustees, or faculties.
Appropriations
As long as the appropriations remain unprotected by legislation, they are liable to be lost in the House, restored in the Senate, and passed by both houses, so the Crampman Bill is enacted into law, the appropriations be legalized and thus protected against the annual "Point of Order." The Crampman Bill does not provide for white colored president white or colored queens, white or colored fadities.
Argument
As a matter of information, the annual argument for the appropriations usually presented by a colored officer, is colored too. The benefaction these annual appropriations, they are the logical people to state, through one of their own representatives, what their needs are. The basic principles of race advancement is the ability to stand on one's feet and state the needs of one's race. No Negro has to affect a fervor when he is pleading for the education of his race. Good Politics
The justification of the Howard appropriations has been thoroughly examined. Generalement, regardless of what party is in the saddle, will hardly deprive Howard University of its appropriations. It would not be good would be made over night and many states would feel the political force of the Negro's wrath. It is reasonable to conclude that theROWN ORDER would remain both a republican and a democratic measure.
More Danger
There is much more danger to the appropriations in this continued wrangling among colored people and alumni ought to be able to get together for the good of the institution. The solution of the quarrell is so simple that it is a strange wonder that the leaders cannot see the threat. The Howard alumni are by no means a troublesome group. They love their university life and they simply can not sit still when the institution is placed under a president who has no recognizable qualification for the position. They have positively no knowledge of the institution they have ideals and standards which they demand that the next president shall exemplify.
Alumni
The alumni will surely carry the public welfare mission of a qualified president. They want no monstrosity with a hundred eyes and a million hands. They must not minister to handmaking
Picture 4. Mrs. Garvey No. 1 heard the news on the other side, rushed to America, accused her husband of bigamy and sued for divorce and alimony.
DENT AT HO LUNDER SAY
me— Has Too Man Not Ripe Yet For Co Hope at Morehouse
politician, but a real educator, outstanding in scholarship, unimpeachable in conduct, sound judgement, endowed with executive and judicial ability. Such qualities will not be so difficult to locate in one person that the trustees will have to hold the presidency open a year until they find this man. The writer wishes to advise the trustees that they can go right the most easily, and likely find the very man who can run Howard University with success and distinction, though the writer has no definite person in
Policy To Promote
In all probability the trustees will not give even passing consideration to prospects within the university. It is usually a wise policy to promote when promotion is possible. Distance may lend enchantment, but can often pay back this loan in confusion and uproar. If the trustees go without the university for a president they should be positive that he really is superior in attainments, achievements, and possibilities to any prospect within.
Faculties Fed Up
The writer cannot speak authoritatively for the university faculties, but he is reasonably certain that they have been fed up enough on incompetent leadership. Men who have given years to educational thought and study have virtually been punished for their training. They want Howard made safe for scholarship. They naturally want to work under an educator who values scholarship, recognizes achievement, and respects seniority. They seem to be most eager for a reunited faculty.
It will not be surprising if they ask the Nominating Committee to promote one of their number, with the pledge of loyal support.
In an undertaking of this kind, a faculty has to be very careful about seeming to take part in a matter peculiarly limited yet yet not entirely concerned in the selection of the next president. It is possible for the professors, in particular, to have a manner, to decide among themselves whom they would like to see promoted to the presidency, if they were called upon to make a nomination. If they transmit their information to the trustees, but there can be no impropriety in their ascertaining this information for themselves.
**Alarmists**
One of the most serious arguments to be considered will be if a colored man were made president of Howard University, the colored professors would not support him. The alarmists see the argument was waffer when Professor hope was being considered for the presidency of Morehouse College who can point to a better and more successfully managed colored college than Morehouse?
No Rebellion
The history of Negro education will not reveal one instance of a rebellious spirit in a faculty headed by a prominent leader. Minds are not likely to run along together, for they are not fashioned exactly alike. A difference of opinion is not synonymous with intolerance, but it comes a difference of opinion, though he may not be able to accept it.
Fair Treatment
Teachers like fair treatment. They like to see an equalization of the teaching burdens, of the extra work required, of the rewards. It is a mistaken notion that colored teachers will not pull well under colored heads. There is no real college professor at Howard University, a colored president to an incompetent white president. All the professors ask is for an opportunity to
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Friday, April 24th
Tangled
FRED B. VASON.
Picture 5. Garvey detectives raided the apartment of Mrs. Garvey No. 1 early one morning last week and found her in the arme of her lover.
OWARD
Y'S ALUMNUS
My Openings Among
Colored Head," Won't
be Cited. New Head
surround their students with the best possible conditions conducive to learning, both intellectual and moral. The next article will have a word on the towward professors. Their attitude may help determine the type of the next president.
Mrs. Johnson Off To Ohio
WASHINGTON—Mrs. Henry L. Lincoln Johnson, of the stace of Secretary of Labor James J. Davis, left this course, where she said she will make a brief general statement of the State's industrial life and assists conditions affecting the workers.
Mrs. Johnson will visit Industries in Johnson, Ga., Bellevue Dayton, Youngstown, and other state industrial centers.
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Death Of Patients Reveals Horrors In D. C. Hospital
Congressman Fish Warns Of Opposition To War Monument
Youths Planned $43,000,000 Swindle, Got $10,000
Friday, April 24th
Death Of Pati
Horrors In
NEW YORK—Alleged murder of William Green, patient in Saint Elizabeth's Hospital, in Washington, D.C., charges that two other colored men were killed there by misrepresentation, have been forwarded to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, by Mrs. M. W. Monta, a white woman, who argues that all colored citizens support Senator Stipstad's resolution calling for investigation of conditions at the hospital. The hospital houses about 1,000 world war veterans and has 4,400 patients
It is charged by Mrs. de Montis that Green, a patient of the hospital was beaten by death by two attendant at the hospital who were by a coroner's jury for the grand jury, which allowed them to go free, but in a subsequent proceeding, on October 5, Green's players were indicted, according to Mrs. de Montis. Mrs. de Montis further charges that two further men killed in one of the buildings of Elizabeth's Hospital, Howard Hill, the deaths being attributed to paralysis and parsitis. A suspect in the grand jury, which inducted the hospital, reported to the U.S. Senate that the hospital was "greatly over crowded, and Congressman F Opposition To
NEW YORK—Congressman Hampton Fish today telephoned the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People saying that his bill, providing for a monument to the American Revolution, brigaded the French Army during the world war, would come in the House of Representatives probably on Wednesday, the 21st of April, or on the following Wednes
day.
Congressman Fish asked the N. A. A. C. P. to broadcast to the colored people throughout the United States, and is the time to write their Congressmen demanding that this measure, H. R. 9694, be passed at once.
"The indications are," said Fish today, that although the Bill will be generously reported from Committee, there will nevertheless
Youths Planned Swind
CHICAGO, Ill.—(ANP)—Visions of the day when the Negro is really going to see things in a big way and to manipulate himself from the ranks of the potty tradesmen, enough, however, to receive Saturday in the exhibition of a troe of youths, two blood and one white, on suspicion of engineering a $4,000,000 swindle and coercing a white man to the extent of dollars.
The three young men, Charles E. Humphries, 23, Harry McAlpin, former student at Harvard, and David Winnis, white, led by Humphries, who claimed to be the inventor and holder of a patent for a special retiring device. He is said to have believed the term near St. Louis, at his home, a small cafe, told his story to an uncle, who believed him and who made him a patent for Humphries. The wealthy title gentleman Henry Jansen, white. This gentleman became interested in Humphries, disclosed to him artfully that the rights he had to the city were California firm for more than $30,000,000. He also showed the contractor notes for that amount and a patent issued to Humphries, retiring. The manufacturers of Michigan. He had letters apparently authenticated from officials of a St. Louis bank, supporting his claims. There was absolutely no flair Mr. Jansen could pick in Humphries'
Not so much money floating in a colored boy just did not seem real to the white contractor. He did not be the youth he was than $10,000 to him, but him $100,000 to obtain manufacturer's rights). he went to consult his banker. This latter gentleman advised the business that young Humphries and his companions, who may have been dupes or accomplices, were arrested. Humphries was living summarily in a home at 614 Port Orford, a race leader in few months.
Garvey Out $150,000
BRITISH HONDURAS.—The Garvey organization is out $150,000, chief justice of the Colonial Courts here having ruled that the estate of the late Isaiah Morter, valued at this amount, must go to his relatives instead. He Henrietta Vinton Davis, who says she was born in Baltimore, was the witness at the trial for the Garvey organization.
N. A. A. C. P. Reprints Supreme Court Decision
NEW YORK—Because of the numerous residential segregation cases in various parts of the country, the National Association of Fifth Advancement of Women announced that a reprint was being made of the U. S. Supreme Court's decision to segregate the Segregation Cases (Buchanan and Warley) by the N. A. A. C. P. in warley as a basic case in the segregation light. The reprint, together with an introductory chairman of the Association's Legal committee, will soon be available for request to the association for requests to those desiring to have it.
Cincinnati, O.—Francis M. Russell, principal of the Douglass school in Cincinnati, and of other ordered schools in Baltimore, was second vice chairman in local health activities, last week. He was also the city cooperated and Dr. H. H. Proctor, of Brooklyn, N. Y. was brought here here to address a large mass meeting.
Evangelist Reddie Converts 52
BUFFALO, N. Y.—Evangelist Isaac C. Reddie conducted services in First Shiloh. Baptist Church here, converted persons and added 62 members. The Echols canals can be found one year later, with 90 finding 90 members. Today the congregation numbers 1,560. Evangelist Reddie recently closed services in Ebenezer Baptist Church, Boston, the Rev. C. A. Ward, and at Antioch Baptist Church Brooklyn, N. Y., the Rev. Moses Taylor, pastor.
ents Reveals
D. C. Hospital
that if present conditions are not
remedied "we fear that the per-
centage of inmates becoming hop-
eless insane will be greater than
those cured, inspire of the best ef-
forts of the superintendent and his
assistants.
2,000
NEW
sance TD
cause thi
tion dolt
Bis
NEW
cording
Bishop
The report states that in the "Bull Pen," which is the only available recreation space "the dangerous as well as the noisy patients who have been almost normal." The grand jury indorses the statement of one of the guards who said: "If a man went in there, (Howard Hall) with a perimeter hopelessly insane in less than three years. If I were an inmate I would go crazy in less than a year." The grand jury reports that a number of witnesses testified to a general account of the events now confined there who are not now and never were insane, but who have been sent there for ulterior motive." The result in Senator Stiphead's motion—Senate Resolution 84—asking for a thorough sentimental investigation of the Hospital, and colored people throughout the country are urged by Mrs. de Soto to A.G.P. write their Senators asking passage of this resolution.
ish Warns Of War Monument
be a minority report opposing the bill. It behooves every colored editor who believes that the valor of a American soldier be regarded with French troops, should be recognized and commemorated equally with white American soldiers, to write an editorial calling upon his readers to send letters and telegrams to their Congressmen inington.
"Everybody interested in this Bill should write at once, mentioning it by number. H. R. 9684. The operation and the South will be determined and can be overcome only if colored people will now act to show that they want for their soldiers the recognition accorded to all soldiers who fought valiantly and there is no time to be last. Write at once to your Congressmen and make your wishes known."
INSURANCE FAKIR GETS FIVE YEARS
ST. LOUIS, MO—Charles L. Howell, local undertaker, accused of burying a $200 pound sack of cement as that of a man in a library. Liberty Life Insurance Company, was given five years in penitentiary last week. Raymond Hurling, the supposed dead man, was a witness in court. He was accused of being with cement and excelsor, caked with graveyard mud, rested on the table in the court room. Hurling was supposed to have been buried in a graveyard casket. The body of James Moore, who did really die, was transferred from the coffin shown in court and was buried in Hurling's fine casket on December 15, 1980. It suited for Moore's body and buried in his dilapidated coffin.
N. E. A. Committee
Charleston.—W. W. Sanders state supervisor of Negro schools in West Virginia, has been selected one of the six members of the National Education Association's committee on educational problems in colloquial speech, field agent for rural schools of the Julius Rosenwald fund, Nashville. Tenn., is chairman and in addition to Mr. Sanders the other members are, Dr. Thomas Jesse Jones, S. W. Jones, N. C.; Dr. W. T. B. Williams Tuskegee, Ala.; and S. D. Shanklin, Washington
Kentucky Off Again
Hopkinsville, Ky., (A. N. P.)—Telephone warnings and growing signs of mob spirit have caused the spiring away of Joseph Blanton, held as a suspect in an alleged attack on three white male companions. Efforts to have captured victims identify Blanton failed.
Home For Girls Opened
Durham, N. C.—A home for delinquent girls located two miles west of the city under the auspices of the State Federation of Colored Women's Clubs. She also led the annual here. Mrs. Charlotte Hawkins-Brown, is president.
Jones Again Heads Interracial Group
TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Ala.-Dr. M. Ashby Jones, of St. Louis, Mo. was unanimously re-elected chairman of the Commission on Inter-racial Cooperation, Saturday morning closing session of the conference on race and white leaders of the south, which met here Thursday through Saturday. With Dr. Jones we re-elected the entire executive staff of the commission. Mrs. Maggie L. Walker, editor of the book, Richmond Channing H. Mobley, secretary, F. M. C. A. New York, are the newly elected members of the commission.
Augusta Black Belt
Finally Gets Sewers
AUGUSTA, GA.—The City Council of Augusta has just authorized sowers for eleven streets in the colored section. The program is intended to increase success through efforts of the local interracial committee. George Barrett, prominent lawyer, heads the white section of the committee, and Lucy Laney, principal Hines Institute's chairman of the colored section.
Fisk Seniors Endow
NASHVILLE, Tenn.-Fisk University senior college students took out a sufficient number of $500 endowment policies to assure the college's endowment in 20 years. Those were with a Columbus insurance company.
NEW YORK- Sale of the Rennsaince Theater to Jewish interests may cause the los sif a quarter of a million dollars to 2000 stockholders.
NEW YORK, N. Y. (ANP)—Acc
bishop John A. Gregg of the Ari-
bishop
YESTERDAY a
ster skipping
street. Next a d
who never forge
nate girl friends
gracing the thro
of Beauty Cultu
Life holds no s
this thrilling narr
an with the heart
Written especial
By RAMS
Feature Writ
YESTERDAY a pig-tailed youngster skipping gaily down the street. Next a dashing debutante who never forgot her less fortunate girl friends. Now securely gracing the throne of the Queen of Beauty Culture. Life holds no stranger tale than this thrilling narrative of the woman with the heart of purest gold.
On a blustery March day some years ago, there had gathered in the cozy little home of Anderson and Melissa Doke, a well-known and respected couple of the then rapidly growing town of Macon, Georgia, a small circle of good friends who had come to pay homage to the family's newest arrival. Papa Doke, with inflated chest and a sense of superiority that only a father feels, was strutting about with the reckless abandon of a proud peacock on dress parade, smiling acknowledging the well wishes of all who thronged his spacious parlor that eventful day. Mama Doke, convalescent from her recent trying ordeal, wistfully smiled her happiness upon the laughing, chatty group. To the left of the parlor was the gaily bedded bedroom . . . and there . . . right in its center . . . snug and secure in the white recesses of carefully placed coverlets, lay the coining, brown bumble of bliss, who had just been baptized and christened "Mamie." One by one the guests softly tipted over to the cradle to venture a look upon this newly arrived "queen of the household." Many indeed were the words of praise showered upon the happy couple destined to the priceless parenthood of one of the Group's greatest women
Madame Mamie Hightower's Most Prized Possessions
Madame Hightower has thousands of letters addressed to her personally by men and women she has never seen, endorsing her Golden Beauty Preparations. Some are from famous stars of stage and screen, others from obscure individuals, but all are equallyprecious to her.
Baby days passed quickly for little Mamie. While she was young the family moved to Memphis, Tennessee, and ere long she was a familiar sight in the neighborhood of the Old Charleston Depot. "Lil Mame" as she was fondly called, was quite precocious for a little miss of four and she endearedly herself to all with whom she came in contact by all her alluring smile and invariable "Howdy do." Naturally Mamie was a source of continual pride and joy to her parents but little did even they in their fondest dreams vision for her the place she was to occupy in after years. Bright by nature and studious by inclination Mamie early gave evidence of accomplishment and she was continually plying questions about this or that to her fond mother and dad. And here it may be stated to the everlasting credit of her parents that with the limited facilities at hand as well as with their none too plentiful finances, they did all in their power to inspire their little daughter to bigger and better things. Mother Doke was a patient and willing teacher and many's the night in later years after Papa Doke had come home from a hard day's work, that the happy family group gathered 'neath the glare of the lamp to discuss a variety of subjects.
Inspired to Lofty Ideals by Her Parents
Under such tender guidance and care it is only natural to expect that this most
From Obscurity to Fame and Fortune!
---
Written especially for this paper By RAMSAY RAY Feature Writer (I.R.N.S.)
Early Days in Memphis, Tenn.
The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
old can methodist Episcopal Church, who has charge of the work of this denomination in South Africa, will arrive in the states within the next few days. The Bishop is returning from the meeting of the Missionary Board in the St. Louis, Missouri, May 5.
Women Plan $50,000 Scholarship Fund
NEW YORK—National Association of Colored Women's Clubs is in a campaign to raise a $50,000 scholar.
Postn
man, a week to
Pace For Elk Office
NEW YORK--Harry H. Pace, local insurance man, has announced his candidacy for grand secretary of the order of Elks at their Cleveland
a pig-tailed young-
gaily down the
washing debutante
not her less fortu-
s. Now securely
one of the Queen'
re.
stranger tale than
native of the wom-
t of purest gold.
ply for this paper
SAY RAY
er (I.R.N.S.)
unusual child should develop into a glorious and buoyant type of young woman. As one of the social leaders of the younger set, Mamie, all of her popularity, never forget to spread words of happiness and good cheer among her fortunate and lessattractive "sisters." It is even claimed by many of those that knew Mamie Doke best that it was in these early days of social gayeties that she developed an intense interest in the beauty problems of our Group and that it was her genuine love for her people that awakened in her the desire to concentrate her activities toward creating and developing a system of "beauty aids" that would raise our standard of racial beauty.
The Act of Kindness That Started Her to Fame and Fortune
An interesting tale is told by one of Mamie's old time admirers that does much to establish proof of the sincere feeling of interest that Mamie felt for those of her girl friends with whom Beauty had dealt less kindly. At one of the outstanding social events of the season at which Mamie was the reigning belle there was one little unattractive miss who sat sad and in one of the unfrequent spots adjacent to the joy-filled ballroom. As Mamie whisked by in the swing of the waltz she cast a direction in the direction of the pitiful "wall-flower." Imagine the surprise of Mamie's partner when she immediately ceased further dancing and with a hurried "Excuse me!" fluttered quickly o'er to the saddened one. "Twas Selma, one of Mamie's intimates, whose unattractive complexion persistently marred an otherwise pleasing countenance. Selma, upon perceiving Mamie, greeted her with a pitiful look and eyes fast filling with tears. "Don't worry, honey," soothed Mamie, "you are not missing anything by not dancing. Never mind, before long you'll be the envy of all who spurn you. We'll change things a bit and
Make a world w What Woman
BEGINNING with no capital except her knowledge of hair dressing and cosmetics and indomitable pluck Golden Brown Beauty Preparations are now shipped to all points of the world and are sold by possibly 12,000 drug stores in United States, Canada, Mexico, Cuba, England, France, Liberia and other countries. She is known to hundreds of thousands of men and women of our Group who bless her name. R.R.
Make a better mouse trap and the world will make a path to your door. Said Emerson.
What This Wonderful Woman Has Done in Her Short Lifetime
The Remarkable Career of Madame Mamie Hightower
Beauty Culturist of International Fame and Creator of the "Golden Brown Beauty Preparations"
"Selma"
Mrs. Jefferson Jefferson
Home Laboratory
The Humble Beginning
Golden Brown OINTMENT
FROM THE LABORATORY OF GOLDEN BROWN CHEMICALO MEMPHIS TENN.
The First Corp.
NEW YORK—National Association of Colored Women's Clubs is in a ship fund. The ship fund, State leaders in the campaign fund include, Miss Ardella Hicks, Miss Martha Hicks, Miss man, Baltimore, Mrs. M. R. Cotton, Henderson, N. C.; Mrs. Bettie Cousins, Richmond. va.; Mrs. J. C. Bradley, N. C.; D. C.; Miss Layle Lane, this city.
Home Labo
The Humble
The Fifti
of Oin
the next dance you go to it will be a different story."
Turning Tears of Sorrow
To Smiles of Gladness
Mamie's kind words brought happiness to poor Selma. But how little she realized how well Mamie would make good her promise. How little she realized that her own pitiful self would be the inspiration that would guide Mamie to her creation of a world-famous beauty ointment that would prove a blessing only to herself but to thousands upon thousands of others of her Group scattered throughout the length and breadth of this great nation.
a better mouse trap will make a path to you —Said This Wo n Has D
NEW YORK.—Samuel Brown, postman, asked the police department this week to return the special guard protecting his home on Staten Island, which was discontinued Saturday. White bombed Brown's home, July 18th, last, uproasted his garden and the house he must protect. The police have been constantly on duty, day and night.
Curit
and Fo
The
C
M
ratory
beginning
Gold
B
OIN
FROM
GOLDE
st Corp
ment
Mamie Delves Into Secrets of Chemistry
Being naturally inclined toward chemistry, Mamie proceeded the very next day after the party, to work upon a mixture that would be the salvation of her forlorn friend. Tirelessly delving into the mysteries contained in many books upon the subject and augmenting this information with practical knowledge gained from one or two of her druggist friends, Mamie made rapid strides in her endeavor and at the end of about a month of arduous work succeeded in perfecting her compound to the extent that she skipped daily down to Selma and greeted this bewildered individual at the
and the our door. Emerson.nderful one in
Baltimore, Md.
Brown's wife, who is a school teacher here, paid $55,000 for the property in 1933 and has refused $10,000.
NEW YORK.—The entire chorus and some of the principals in the audition out loudly. A new show will be placed. Johnny Hudgins, Al. Moore. Clarence Robinson and John Vigal only ones of the principals retained.
the Remarkable
career of
Madame
Jamie Hightower
Beauty Culturist of Intern-
ational Fame and Creator
of the "Golden Brown Beauty
Preparations"
"Selma"
Mrs. Jefferson Jefferson
Golden
Brown
MENTMENT
THE LABORATORY OF
UN BROWN CHEMICAL CO
MEMPHIS TENN.
door with an. excited, "Here is your beauty, honey!" Selma was the willing pupil and gazed upon her benefactress with admiring eyes. "Honey," said Mamie, "spread this ointment on your hands and then rub it briskly into the pores of your skin. Repeat this process every night and when the boys of The Robin Club give their big ball in the spring I bet you have the time of your life." With eyes glowing with gratitude Selma thanked Mamie profusely for her kindness and promised to begin and rigidly adhere to the plan as outlined by her sire friend.
The Grand Ball and the Miracle
Time passed quickly and ere long the glorious Springtime arrived . . . and the gala ball of The Robins was at hand. It was a carnival of beauty . . . for all of the flower of Memphis manhood and womanhood were present. Mamie, as usual, was scintillating in her distinctive charm, and Selma, to the surprise of many of the guests, was the object of admiring eyes. "What a change in Selma!" exclaimed many in whispers. "Why, the ugly duckling has become a beautiful swan," philosopher one old gray haired dignitary whose eyes took in every scene. Selma's conquest was complete. The young men present besought her with entreaties to dance. Dashing beauty had previously shunned her presence now came forth with compliments and pleasanties. Selma's handsome golden brown complexion was charm in itself. Gone were the blotches and blisters that had previously sentenced her to the dreadful existence of "wall-flower." But even in the midst of all this happiness Selma's heart was full of gratitude for her faithful love friend . . . i, the loving fairy who had waved her magic wand o'er and made her beautiful. Slipping for a moment from out the throng of admirers who surrounded her, Selma gully slipped o'er to Mamie who herself was the center of another enjoyable gathering and with outstretched arms took her fond embrace, thanking her again and again for her great gift. But Mamie with her characteristic modesty, which was to win her so many friends in after years,
Page Three
SOUHEERN, PINES, N. C.-Dan Harrington, policeman, is in the county jail charged with killing Clarence Williams, from whose car he had taken a gun. He is charged. This town is a colored settlement, governed by a colored mayor, and commissioner. Harrington is a white policeman. He says he killed Williams when the dead man and three companions attacked
soothed the sentimental outburst of Selma and with a knowing smile calmly said, "I have made good my promise honey, let us give thanks."
One User Then; Nearly a Million Users Now
How this act of friendship was to lead to grand and glorious heights of success and how this same beauty ointment fashioned with loving hands to help a friend was to be sold as Madame Mamie Hightower's Golden Brown Beauty Ointment in drug stores throughout the land is a tale that even rivals the fantasy of the Arabian Nights. But this must be told in a later issue of this story which will be printed in this paper in the near future.
Madame Hightower Belongs in the Hall of Fame
Our Grouphasmade remarkableides of progress. We have produced our full quota of great scholars, lawyers, doctors, preachers, writers, artists, etc. We have our great universities like Wilberforce, Howard, Tuskegee and others. Everywhere is there evidence of our industry
SELMA and Mamie were girlhood chums. Mamie was beautiful, Selma an "ugly duckling." Mamie's kind heart prompted her to make anointment which would clear Selma's complexion. Her success is told in this story.
and activity. Madame Hightower is proud of Memphis and Memphis is justly proud of its most accomplished daughter. Memphis has reason to be proud, not only for what Madame Hightower has done, but because of the fact that it has contributed much toward the rapid advancement of our Group. The South has given us the great and gifted writers and orators whose potent pens and powerful voices are mighty instruments of our People. Memphis has given us a politician who is a power at our nation's capital and a man whose vast political influence has stretched far and wide. Another of Memphis' noted sons is a preacher whose spiritual influence has done much for the good and betterment of our People. The Hall of Fame has opened wide and Memphis has answered by giving to it many of its best loved sons and daughters who have achieved international prominence.
Golden Brown Beauty
Preparations
are highest quality
The success of Madame Mamie Hightower's preparations is due entirely to their high quality, for very little money has been spent for advertising as compared to the huge amounts spent by imitators.
First there was only Golden Brown Beauty Ointment at 25 cents. Gradually new things were developed, tried and proven and then offered Madame Hightower's friends. Golden Brown Hair Dressing, 50 cents; the face Powder, 50 cents; Beauty Soap, 25 cents; Cold Cream, 50 cents; Venishing Cream, 50 cents; Compact, 50 cents; Rouge, 50 cents; Lip Stick, 25 cents; Talium, 50 cents, and the wonderful Flowers of Liberia Perfume, $2.50.
All of these are sold by those druggists who value the patronage of our Group.
Write to Madame
Mamie Hightower
Success has not spoiled Madame Mamie Hightower. She still gets a thrill out of helping others improve their personal appearance. She receives many letters from men and women who ask her personal advice. Many have gotten to know her personally and there has sprung up between them a friendship which will grow to intimacy. If you are bothered by a blotchy complexion, harsh, unruly hair or other things that detract from your appearance and charm, you may feel free to write Madame Mamie Hightower, care of Golden Brown Chemical Co., Memphis, Tenn. She will be glad to help you all she can.
THEATRICAL SECTION Where the Professionals Play—Routings
DIXIE SINGERS ON SPLENDID PROGRAMS
Broadcast And Appeared
With Capitol Family In
New York Last Week
SINGERS TO OPEN
IN BALTIMORE SOON
Engagement At Loew's State,
In Boston Booked For Next
Month
NEW YORK—The Dixie Jubilee Singers again broadcast a weekday evening, and at a benefit program given by the Family on last Wednesday at the Vicorta Theatre, Osborne University group left Broadway in eight high powered cars escorted by three motor policemen. All traffic was held up for the cars to pass through the street. Proceeding the latter concert, they had lunchon the Rotary Club. Each lady on the program was presented with a large bunch of American beauty roses by the Capitol Theatre and Family. The return to New York was begun at 2 A.M. the week of May 6th, the last Singers concert of the season. It is a tribute, as a special attraction. The company having originally been formed in that city, great success for the engagement is anticipated.
From Baltimore the artists will go to Boston, opening at Loews' State Theatre. The engagement will be led by the Goldwyn management. They have also done considerable recording for various companies recently. The Commonwealth Theater, the Commonwealth Brown emm, employees on the Steamer Commonwealth which runs from New York to Fall River broadcast from WNYC on Wednesday their program of Spirituals and other numbers was accolled excellent.
ARREST DANGER ON A SERIOUS CHARGE
NEW YORK—Alberta Pryme, 197 East 128th street, engaged at the Owl Plaza, held holdup by two dancers employed there, was arrested on a statutory charge. The manager of the Filipino bus boy, who also taken into custody, Reeves, the manager, was infined for dangling on his premises.
All of the girls employed were accused of doing a dance that began as a Charleston, but further developing into a dance that was said to have solicited one of the patrons on behalf of the accused girl unaware that he was Detective Faux of the police. The officer, who was accused of being when accused by the bus boy, and returning to the dance floor, Miss Pryse spoke to him. Jack Lanigan, prophetor of the dance floor, said that he never permit the colored girls to speak to white patrons.
ATLANTIC CITY—Will Ramsey is making quite a reputation as a master of ceremonies at the New World Cabaret. Ramsey is a clever talker with the requisite wit for position. He will pay for the evening a brunt and Marie Moore are the girls employed. The band titled "Six Red Hot Vacuum Tubes" is composed of Billie Overton, director and pianist; Edward Nichols, saxophonist; John Brennan, drummer; trumpet; Buck Kelly, drums; and Dick Kunard, banjo. The establishment caters to both races.
New Mixed Show
NEW YORK - Jimmy Cooper, who formerly piloted the black and white helicopter to steer the company potted to steer another similar company over the burlesque route next to the airport, presented of such companies, a record making money getter, and believed to have been the incentives or so many that have since been playing the time.
Married In Theatre
WASHINGTON. D. C.-Billy Cornell, comedian, and Miss Hazel Wallace of Baltimore, were married on the stage of the Mid-City Theatre on April 14th. "Baby Dory" draws the flower girl, and Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Warbington best man and bridesmaid respectively. A trio has been formed by Mr. and Mrs. Cornell and "Baby Dory" which will be billed "Cornell's Dike Three." White Sox Victors TREHEREVILLE, Va.—The Treherwick team, a fast game from the Tidewater Institute, 6 to 5. On Saturday the Sox will play the Eastville Stars.
7-11
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It Puts PEP in your STEP
Drug Stores, 25c per bottle
WEAK, TIRED,
RUN DOWN?
NU-PEP
(A SYSTEM BUILDER AND
CLEANER)
Call VErnon 6016
STAGE THE REVIEWS
Children's not only the kinders lowing grades have an ad Jack and Jill's schooldays. After school there are the
How differently did the she had to be content with a bag of candy at forgotten promptly some A NOISE. An occasional amusement menu in the audience, town thrills consist, and occasionally town on the Emma Gile over. No the little boys LASTED LONGER.
The famous Excelsior for to become a, community be subscribed before the ed.
An editorial in the loft purpose of the New York is selected to give open-air concerts of the preceding statement Bay, he will hear the Tit in Baltimore Town. Yes, posed of about 40 of the A. Jack. There was Bay, we didn't mind. WUS WE. We didn't mind. No side of the Bay, but we a Rand. "In which we a ceed.
The After threatening to the scarcity of clothing, A. M. E. Church, with the Commission Gatheral steer
According to the modern styles to see scarcity clad work the whole problem worm Which latter statement wung in this statement to force them Sodom and Gomarra Midnight SHOWS.
Furthermore these the Bartier and M. E. m. are licensed by the city. I respect the A. M. E. m. (in which they worm pulling with Bappi sides are so NOISE and their loudest, tones the shut down when they got.
These clerics have been the various managers, invitation, choosing, as to whom they claim, the L they who themselves sims without sin first cast a sending orgies that the manager be prepared to into the what the PSALM SIN WITHOUT A BATTERY.
THE SPOTLIGHT
Children's Amusements Now And Then
the kindergarten of the public schools, but
have an admixture of work and play
schooldays pleasurable and indeed. Songs
dancers enter to believe the monotony of
the are the movies with all of their entertain-
thrills Of Other Years
ly did the schoolboy and girl fare in the
content with a dull, dry, entertainment,
sandy way to enjoy. And someone to say
someone made a noise. And someone
occasional trip to see "David the Shephe-
pu in the fall and winter, but he was
contributed a pin aplece to see a show in
consisted of a trip to Cambridge, St. Micha-
lle, after the white people's extra
boys and girls missed the thrills of the.
Children's Amusements Now And Then
Not only the kindergarten of the public schools, but all of the following grades have an admixture of work and play nowadays that Jack and Jill's schooldays pleasurable indeed. And other pleasurable factors enter into the memory of their daily grind. After school there are the movies with all of their entertaining wonders.
The Thrills Of Other Years
How differently did the schoolboy and girl fare in the old days. He or she had to pack up her clothes and get on a playmate in a playmate's attachment on Friday after forgetting promptly someone made a noise. And someone ALWAYS made a NOISE. An occasional trip to see "David the Shepherd" made an amusement menu in the school's cafeteria that was enabled to get an entry into a pin glove to see a show in his cellar.
Summer thrills consisted of a trip to Drudl Hill Park in a furniture wagon, and occasionally a trip to Cambridge, St. Michaels or Chesterton on the Emma Giles, after the white people's excursions were all over. No the little boys and girls missed the thrills of today BUT THEY LASTED LONGER.
Jusitfiable Jealousy
The famous Excelsior Band of Norfolk, which has been organized for 40 years, is campaigning for a fund of $5,000 which will enable to become a community band. The fund should, and doubtlessly will, be subscribed before the end of the two weeks time limit has been reached.
We Too Have A Band
An editorial in the "Norfolk Journal and Golde" in agreeing with the lofty purpose of the fund asked says that, "The Monarch Band of New York is selected by the Park Commission of that city to give open-air concerts." Surely if the writer Baltimore, just a few miles up our joint Virginian-Maryland Chesapeake Bay, he will hear the Thomas City Band, serving in a similar capacity in Baltimore Town. Yes, gentlemen, we too have a Municipal Band composed of about 40 of the best musicians in this wide world directed by A. Jack Thomas. We are the colonial-colonial band in Baltimore. We WE BEMIND YOU DEAR NORFOLKIANS.
I In the "Norfolk Journal and Gold" issue of the fund asked says that, "The M elected by the Park Commission. Some of our statement will listen attentively with his & few miles up our joint Virginian-Maryar the Thomas City Band, serving in a Miami, we gave great music to Main w. our musician in this wide w. Our organization was the first color JS WE REMIND YOU DEAR NORFOLK mind Norfolk poaching on our oysters, but we do that in Main, which we are well pleased. May the Exc
We didn't mind Norfolk poaching on our oysters and fish on this side of the Bay, but we do think that she should recognize our Municipal Band. "In which we are well pleased." May the Excelsior Band succeed.
The Strong-Arm Pastors
After threatening to go to the Grand Jury with their kicks against the women, they told them they alleges they were told were worn by the girls in Pennsylvania avenue, the剧院, the crusaders from the A. M. E. Church, with their usual policy of vacillation, went to Police Commissioner Galther singing the blues.
According to the AFRO-AMERICAN, the commissioner told them that modern styles made it unnecessary for people to visit the theatre to see scantily clad women. And further the commissioner told them that the theater and other educative forces. Which latter statement we penned in this column a few weeks ago. Tailing in this the August body retreated to their deliberative chambers and are attempting to force their HOLY DOSE down the throats of the modern Sodom and Comarrah by devising WAY and MEANNESSES TO STOP
o the AFRO-AMERICAN, the commiss
ries made it unnecessary for people to
clad women. And further informed the
poll falls on the churches and other
element we penned in this column a fow
August body retreated. We then
cease their HOLY DOSE down the thir
summer by devising WAY AND MEANN
OWS.
Baptist Navy And Methodist Army
Furthermore these honored "sky pilots" agree to join hands with the Bartist and M. E. ministers in sticking their noses into business that are licensed by the city, state, and Federal governments. As much as I respect the A. M. E. (not their methods) I can but look on horror at the state of Richard Allen's ghost when he sees honest M. E. Jacques pulling around his suitcase in the BOMBATIVE when that when they get to arguing in their loudest tones the theatre managers will have ample chance to shut down when they get within 20 blocks of the theatres.
Furthermore these honored "sky pilots" agree to join hands with the Barrist and M. E. ministers in sticking their noses into business that are licensed by the city, state, and Federal governments. As much as they are proud of their accomplishments, they are the state of Richard Allen's ghost when he sees H.A. M. E. jars pulling around with Baptists. One effect of the union will be that both sides are so NOISY and COMBATIVE that when they get to arguing in their loudest tones the theatre managers will have ample chance to shut down when they get within 20 blocks of the theaters. M. E. Jars have been invited to inspect these hell holes of injustice by the various managers, but to date none of them have accepted the invitation, choosing, as they are always won't to stand atarf and yulp, and to run to the TEACHER. These were not the methods of Christ and the Bible, but the methods of the people they who themselves sinned criticized another he said, "Let he who is without sin first cast a stone." The midnight shows are not the hell-sending orgies that the honored prelates would have the world believe. There is not a manager who will permit anything knowingly indecent in front of the audience, but they are not going to be blackjacked into what the PSALM SINGERS AFFECT TO BELIEVE IS RIGHTEOUSNESS. WITHOUT A BATTLE.
is have been invited to inspect the hell managers, but to date none of them hail, as they are always won't to stand in front of them. These were not them; the Lowly Nazarene came out In the selves sinned criticized another he said, cast a stone." The midnight shows a that the honored prelates would have the chance to be in the theatre, but they are not going to HALM SINGERS AFFECT TO BELIEVE T A BATTLE.
They Grew Them In Baltimore
asking the city has made such durring the 18 months it Gross, one of the best kni 15 years have passed Grounds School with a vital voice. A former st Street School in this city and was thoroughly trained ougnness. She was n co teacher; both accomplish Personal alusions forg age I was presented with possession of by teacher, the elementary
American of May 6th, 1911 said, "Probable such rapid progress as that of Trinity months it has been under the leadership of the best known contralto singers in the city we passed since the above article was the helm of the choir, and still a contralto former student in Dr. Staley's class in this city, the singer evinced an early highly trained in methods of the day that was a conscientious worker and soon wiser," a distinction in that day, akin to complishments in themselves not easily
The Afro-American of May 6th, 1911 said, "Probably no choir in the city has made such rapid progress as that of Trinity A. M. E. Church during the 13 months it has been under the leadership of Mrs. Maude Gross, one of the best known contratto singers in the city. Mrs. Maude was ordained as a priest and was planned and Mrs. Gross is still at the helm of the choir, and still a contratto singer of beautiful voice. A former student in Dr. Staley's class in the old Holiday Street School in this city, the singer envised an early interest in music and was thoroughly trained in methods of the day that demanded thorough training. Mrs. Gross was called a "first sight reader", a distinction in that day, skin to being a school teacher; both accomplishments in themselves not easily obtained.
Others First
Personal allusions forgiven by the readers, may I say that at an early age I was presented with a music book by Mrs. Gross which is still in my hands. I was taught the basic techniques for the elementary instruction and interpretation of the lessons there in. The foregoing examples of preparation and helpfulness are mere cross section of what Mrs. Gross has been willing to do to aid the other fellows. Had she chosen she could have undoubtedly, as could Wilson, his Trinity, secured positions far greater than either of them have received.
Personal alusions forgiven by the readers, may I say that at an early age I was presented with a music book by Mrs. Gross which is still in my possession. Coached by the giver I have had occasion to thank her many times for the elementary instruction and interpretation of the lessons she taught. She has been a great teacher and more cross section of what Mrs. Gross has been willing to do to aid the other fellow. Had she chosen she could have undoubtedly, as could Llewilyn Wilson, organist at Trinity, secured positions far greater than either of them have received. Both Sacrificed
Few church choirs can boast of two accomplished members; even those paying the munificent salaries received by many of their inferior. Both of these artists live strangely parallel each others. Neither was enabled to secure their knowledge without the hardest personal effort, acquiring musical knowledge ordinarily efficient at a time when the means of acquiring musical knowledge were few. Both chose to remain singularly enough, where they began.
choirs can boast of two accomplished munificant salaries received by many artists live strongly parallel each other and are extraordinarily efficient without the hardest knowledge by colored folk were few, enough, where they began. They passed through the successive stages of a pianist, to organist, master of the other kinded technical instruments they director of music in Douglass High Schools. But recently he became a member of the training of both these musicaI MORE. A record of which both the city feel MIGHT PROUD.
Wilson has passed through the successive stages of pumper of a pipe organ to organist, master of theory, harmony, composition and other kind of music. He graduated schools to director of music in Douglass High School of which he is an alumnus. But recently he became a member of The American Music Association, both these musicians was acquired wholly in BALMORE. A record of both the city and TRNTY CHURCH should feel MIGHTY PROUD.
Roosevelt
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 28th
Monday—“Fang of Fate”—7 Reels
Starring BILL PATTON
Tuesday—“Her Sister From Paris”
8 Parts — Starring CONSTANCE TALMADGE
Wednesday—“Welcome Stranger”
7 Reels — Starring FLORENCE VIDOR, NOAH BEERY
Thursday—
THE NEW GIGANTIC AND BIG MASTER PRODUCTION
IN 10 PARTS
“QUO VADIS”
A CAST OF ALL-STARS
Friday—“Wigs of Youth”
7 Parts — Starring MADGE BELLAMY
Saturday—“The Dark Angel”
7 Reels — Starring FLORENCE VIDOR, NOAH BERRY
Also A Big Western Drama
“The Rustler Scout”
Starring EDMOND COBB
STAR THEATRE
MONUMENT STREET, NEAR BOND
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 28th
MONDAY—JACK MULHALL In “WILD WEST” No. 6
TUESDAY—JACK PERRIN In “COCOTE FANGS”
WEDNESDAY—AL FERGUSON In “PLANTATION SHADOWS”
THURSDAY—HERBERT RAWLINSON In “FLAME FIGHTER” No. 6
FRIDAY—EILEEN SEDGWICK In “THE WEB”
SATURDAY—“ONE WILD TIME”—A Western
Matinee Saturday and Monday — Open 2 P. M.
PHOTO - PLAYS
By KENNARD WILLIAMS
Jusitfiable Jealousy
We Too Have A Band
The Strong-Arm Pastors
Commissioner Got'Em Told
Managers Unafraid
Others First
Both Sacrificed
The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
REGENT
2 BIG PICTURES THIS WEEK
MONDAY — TUESDAY
A NATION'S LOVE STORY
THE BEST PATRIOTIC PICTURE EVER PRODUCED Story
The Man Without A Country
William Fox Presents
AS NO MAN HAS LOVED
BASED ON EDWARD EVERETT HALE'S STORY
THE MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY
A nation's love story
A ROWLAND V. LEE
P.R.O.D.A.U.C.T.H.O.N.
AS NO MAN
HAS LOVED
WEDNESDAY — THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY
ONE of the BIGGEST PICTURES of the YEAR
John Barrymore in
"The SEA BEAST"
with
Dolores Costello
George O'Hara
Directed by Millard Webb
From the story--Moby Dick
by Herman Melville
Scenario by Bess Meredyth
WARNER BROS
Classics of the Signature
VERSATILE ACTOR CLEVER IN "KONGO"
Herbert Ellis Began Career
In "Happy Days" Minstrel
ALSO HAD PART
IN "WHITE CARGO"
Actor Also Skilled Dancer
And An Accomplished Pianist
NEW YORK—Herbert Ellis,
who is appearing in the sensational play "Kongo", at the Belmont Theatro is being acclaimed on every hand for his splendid playing of a native of the Kongo in the play. The actor appears almost continually thrust out the production.
The actor's childhood ambition to be an actor was gratified, when he was given a chance for his first stage appearance. He attended minstrel show, he made an instantaneous hit before the audience that quacked the theatre. From this company he went on to years became a seasoned troupper. When he returned from the road he was given a part in Earl Carroll's, white, film. In many of the sketches and one pantomime.
In "White Cargo"
His fame brought him several vauduelle offers, his dancing having been often used by representatives of several large theatrical interests, and by many other companies. Following the musical engagement he was given a part in "White Cargo." He played a native with the company playing in New York and other companies and the present engagement in "Kongo" followed. Ellis has a wonderful physique and has developed grace by much dancing. He is also a skillful pianist. He is also a skillful pianist, and has appeared in many film productions. Ellis and Clarence Redd of the same company who has also been pronounced a sensation, and share the same dressing room.
To Sing "King Olaf"
NASHVILLE—The Mozart Society of Fisk University will present "King Olaf" set to music by Sir Edward Elgar, the famous composer of the music of C. Hole, head of the music department, will direct the presentation.
Routings
T. O. B. A. EASTERN CIRCUIT
Willis Company, Mid City
Washington
Speed, and Jesse, Hugh Turner, Dur-
sley, Sammy Lewis, Company, Blue Mouse,
Lewis
Bilbie McOwens Company, Palace,
Nortok.
Indaho Company, Star, Baltimore.
Bahoe Lee Stock Company, Hippodrome,
Richmond.
Kid and Skeet Pearl and Jeanneette,
fashion designer, Bradford and Holley,
Lincoln, Baltimore.
Whirlwind Brevities Company, Dudley
Theatre, Peterstown, Cu.
Cleveland, Clinton and Battie
Resala, Washington.
Mack's Merry Makers, Lincoln, Newport
New.
COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Bathing Beauties, Orpheum, Patterson
Crescent.
Black and White Review, Gayety
Boston.
Happy Moments, Gayety, Detroit.
Happy Unibo, Star and Garter, Chico-
cau, Illinois.
Vaudeville Offer
ROCHIELLE, N. Y.-Four boys of this city; Clarence and Tom Brown, Charles Simmons and Tom Brown, have been so successful in broadcasting that they are understood they have received a vaudville proposition. They have frequently broadcast over WGBS.
Harmony Club Wins
Harmony Club Wins
After a good basketball season, the Harmony club has turned to the diamond and chalked up an 8 to 6 victory over a white club last week. The Blowden Brothers played a good game for the winners.
MADAM GRAY, THE C
of Baltin
WISHES TO ANNOUNC
French Sal
MADAM GRAY, THE CHAMPION CAKE BAKER of Baltimore, Md.
2122 DRUID HILL AVENUE
May 11th at 4:30 P. M.—0
Dinner Served at $2
the choicest viam
There will be prizes o
pieces. First and second t
May 11th at 4:30 P. M.—Continuing until 1:30 A. M.
Dinner Served at $2.00 Per Plate, where the choicest viands will be served.
There will be prizes of $5.00 and $2.50 in gold pieces. First and second to the best dressed lady and gentleman. Entrance fee for the contest will be 50c.
The Champion Cake Baker, Madame Gray, will auction off several fine cakes to the highest bidder.
THEATRE HISTORY
Taken From the Files of The AFRO-AMERICAN
April 22, 1911—The Winna Moving Pulture Parlor at 1531 East Mountain street, advertised for $6 or 6 cents admission. Souvenirs were given to all patrons. William Green was manager. William Green, Jeanette Green and Thomas Kane were mentioned in the advertisement. Note: The Star Theatre occupies the site today.
April 22, 1915—Representative Dervish of the National House of Representatives to prohibit the pictorial representation of films calculated to harm any race or group of people.
April 22, 1921—Gonzell White's Company was playing the Star Theatre, act is now a Keil-Alin attraction.
NEW YORK—Seven-Eleven, Rarlin' to Go, Lucky Sambo and the Black Mamba, to the money getters on the Columbia Burlesque Circuit for the season. Two of these shows, Lucky Sambo and the Black Mamba, are casted costs, the other companies are half and half.
Pianist A Marvel
NEW TORK—Marie Davis, a young pianist, who recently gave her first performance, is considered a marvel at that instrument. So successful was she at her initial public performance that a concert performance at Acadian Hall has been arranged. The news is said to have come so suddenly of her good fortune that Miss Davis had not prepared a program for the first of the concert series.
CHAMPION CAKE BAKER
more, Md.
BE THE OPENING OF A
lad Garden
Continuing until 1:30 A. M.
.00 Per Plate, where
wards will be served.
of $5.00 and $2.50 in gold
to the best dressed lady and
for the contest will be 50c.
Baker, Madame Gray, will
es to the highest bidder.
WE ARE
KAUF
439 N.
5 MAMMO
JINES & JACQUELINE
Full of Nonsense
WEDNESDAY — THURSDAY
ONE of the BIGGEST
John Bar
AUSTIN, Tex — The Sam Houston
Dragon's-tamed Coach Long's Wiley
Wild Cats in the two game features
he won both games first time in the history of the school.
He was won 7-4 and the second
17-4.
You Get Mad
Clara
and Her
Two new blue select
Columbia Record
Champion Moaner, and
You Get Mad
For melody and a
some other late Columbia
14123-D
10 in., 75c
Golden Rule
Lonesome Dee
14129-D
10 jin., 75c
What's the M
I Want Every
14125-D
10 in., 75c
Make Me a Po
Bring Your G
The finest race talent m
Columbia. You are always
you want as you want it
Colu
WE ARE HEADQU
COLUMBI
KAUFMAN'S
439 N. Gay Street
WE SHIP E
MMOTH
FEATURING
WE ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL COLUMBIA RECORDS KAUFMAN'S MUSIC SHOP 439 N. Gay Street Baltimore, Md.
JONES CHATMAN
2 Dancing Limber Jacks
QUELINE CHA
insense
THURSDAY FRIDAY
IGGEST PICTURES
Get The Money
Where the Professionals Play—Routings
you
get
Mad
Clara Smith
and Her Jazz Band
to new blue selections on one New Process
Columbia Record by Clara Smith, the World's
pion Moaner, and Her Jazz Band.
Two new blue selections on one New Process Columbia Record by Clare Smith, the World's Champion Moaner, and Her Jazz Band.
14126-D You Get Mad
10 in., 75c Disappointed Blues
For melody and snap with the real blue feeling get this record. And here are some other late Columbia hits:
14123-D Golden Rule Blues Bessie Smith
in., 75c Lonesome Desert Blues
14129-D What's the Matter Now Bessie Smith
in., 75c I Want Every Bit of It
14125-D Make Me a Pallet on the Floor Ethel Waters
in., 75c Bring Your Greenbacks
The finest race talent makes records exclusively for Columbia. You are always sure to find just the music you want as you want it, at the Columbia Dealer's
For melody and snap with the real blue feel,
some other late Columbia hits. And here are
The finest race talent makes records exclusively for
Columbia. You are always sure to find just the music
you want as you want it, at the Columbia Dealer's
store.
COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH COMPANY
1819 Broadway New York
Columbia
THE HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL
COLUMBIA RECORDS
TMAN'S MUSIC SHOP
Gay Street Baltimore, Md.
WE SHIP EVERYWHERE
OTH ACTS 5
EATURING
LONG AND JACKSON
In Southbound Train
CHARLES ANDERSON
The Greatest Yodeler
Y — FRIDAY — SATURDAY
PICTURES of the YEAR
rymore
Friday, April 24th
Manassas Wins Third
MANASSAS, VA.—The Manassas
Industrial School won its third
straight game Saturday when their
baseball team defeated the Maryland
State Normal of Bowie in a slugging
duel by a score of 21 to 17.
THEATRICAL SECTION High Class Musical and Vaudeville News
ROYAL THEATRE Formerly Douglass Theatre 1300 BLOCK PENNA. AVENUE BIGGEST AND BEST SHOW IN TOWN Week of APRIL 26th 1-11p.m.
And Dance Numbers by Bert, Alice and Essie Whitman Ernest Michaels and Alberta La Bastiste
PICTURE PROGRAM Monday "The Phanton Express" Tuesday Wednesday DAVID FRANK AND ETHEL' BUTLER DARRO SHERMAN
ductions
NEW YORK—The recently announced picture to be made with an all colored cast by Cecil De Mille, will be "shot" at the De Mille Studio in Culver City. Bertram Milhauser, production editor, have full charge in making the full play. Mr. Milhauser states that there will not be a single white person in the cast of the proposed story.
It will be a simple, human, friendly story and it is the lives of the Negro in everyday life. No ponancement has been made by the resters of the picture what actors will appear. It is pointed out that a new era for Negro pictures is dawning. Cecil De Mille is acknowledged one of the greatest producers and its honor for players to work under his direction and to have the splendid facilities of his studies available.
Although not the first picture made with an all-colored cast, there is no doubt that there has never been a more successful film under the advantageous auspices guerring this one. Noble Johnson, and recently Charles Gilpin, who is now appearing in "Uncle Tom's Cabin" for Universal, have both played very important roles in plays with mixed casts, and the Reel company are the outstanding producers of all-colored pictures to date.
screen
Stage
THE
Robeson's Illness
Prevents Singing
NEW YORK—The concert of
Spirituals given by Taylor Gordon
and J. Rosamond Johnson at Town
Hall on Sunday night for Manassas
Industrial School, Manassas, Virginia
is considered one of the best ever
held in the city.
Paul Robeson, who was announced to appear, was prevented from appearing by illness, thus his opening number with Lawrence Brown was accompanied by Jasper Gatewood accompanied by Jasper Gatewood to his classic airs and to familiar arrangements by Harry T. Burleigh, three extra songs at the start J Rosamond Johnson, and Taylor Gordon, who also interpreted three numbers at their first hearty greeting, with many of Johnson's vivid airs and meeting revival alrs. The number these songs was called unique in racial sympathy and fervor, and was applauded by a brilliant social house.
Edwards Writes
Le Edwards, the Baltimore comic on tour with The Chocolate Box Revue wrote the AFRC-AMERICAN saying that all is going well along the line of march. Edwards is particularly desirous of hearing from Harry Thomas and his former team mate and tutor, Leo Edwards. This week he is at the Gayetty Theatre, St. Louis, Mo.
Act Gets Raise
BOSTON.—The Gaines Brothers, Charley and Albert, are completing their Leewith season and will open on Leewith time April 26th. The act has been given a route of 20 weeks at an increase of $75 a week in salary. The turn is billed "The Cuban Athletes," and is considered one of the best acrobatic specialities touring.
School Boys Beat Speed Boys
FEDERALSBURG, MD.—The Federalburg High School baseball team defeated the Maryland Speed Boys of Ridgley in a close game by a score of 7 to 6.
"Square Joe" Shown
NEWPORT NEWS.—Joe Jeanette the well known pugilist and Marion Moore, head an all-colored cast this week in "Square Joe" the feature film shown at the Dixie Theatre.
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IEAT
TO ADDRESS CITY CLUB
A.
Countee Cullen, 22nd old poet and author, will address the City Club at its weekly luncheon meeting at Emerson Hotel, Saturday. Cullen, the son of the Rev. M. Cullen pastor of a Methodist church in New York City, recognition as a poet in high school. He won prizes in poetry contests while attending the New York University of which he is a graduate and was adjudged the writer of the most meritorious verses of 1925 by Sara Teasdale, George Sterling and Witter Bymer. In 1923 1924 he held second place. His first book of poems "Color" was published in December 1925.
Act Entertains Elks
ST. PAUL, MINN.—Guests at the cabaret dance given by the Elks at Elks Hall last week, were entertained by Chappelle and Stinette, who are appearing at the Pantages Theatre at the Charleson added to the enjoyment of the guests with their class dancing.
TU
THEATRE
MABEL WHITMAN Presents
Act Entertains Elks
ROYAL
Charley Davis' Carolina Nights Beginning with a conventional plot that starts in the Southland and ends in New York, Charley Davis' Carolina Nights opened here on Monday. It is refusing to have a plot to guide you through musicals as they are played today, for Baltimore is about fed up on reviews of numerous specialties are be sprinkled generously throughout the unfolding of the story which gives Davis an opportunity to sing, "Carolina Sweetheart" that the buyers seemed to think, without concealment, was a ripping number artistically recreated by "Cottonmouth" who "Do Do" Green and Paul Floyd are the comic and straight capability through long usage, a bit which has lost none of its respectively. The pair romped with Green thoroughly at home and capably shelled it, no matter how much apparatus of the customers throughout the situation.
"Do Do" again rose to the heights with a topical song, "Not By Myself." For the delivery of songs of this character, Green has no superior or equal in our vaudeville or musicals today. His style is the measured one of Bert Williams, yet possessing an individuality all his own. He was repeated again and again on Tuesday afternoon. Georgette Harvey, who has the voice with the delightful low tones, was heard to advantage in the opening number and again when she delivered the old favorite, "Log Cabin Days." One sitting in the auditorium is aware of Miss Harvey's evident difficulty with her upper register. It might not be considered an unfriendly suggestion, to say that her lower tones are less pleasant than those ofore the customers thought a whole heap of Miss Georgette Harvey and said it with hands. A female quartet also "clicked."
It did the old timers good on Tuesday afternoon to see Wesley Hill in his familiar old man character in the opening. A veteran player, every inch an artist whose example it would pay to the younger "makes a storm" to follow in the performance, in company with Green, Hill again pleased. Musa Williams the kind of a girl who "makes men go wrong".
pleased with her looks and her restrained acting throughout. As an ingenuine Musa Williams is alright with the customers, and I ADORE HER. Ida Bennett and Gladys Thompson added their glorious contributions to the collection, the collection's own impurity. Both took good and their art is equal to their appearance. How much more candy could one expect for a cent, Scott and Evans, two dancing demons, came on the job prepared to please the customers and the boss. The former attested their approval by asking for returns and the efforts of his hired hooters, then he's a mean man. 10 Carolina Steppers are the choreologists. Charlie Davis has perfected and brought us A SHOW.
JOSEPHINE BAKER NOW IS PARISIAN CRAZE
PARIS—Josephine Baker, who came to France with Caroline Baker's Revue, opened at the Theatre des Follies Bergere at the Louis Lemarchand's Super Revue, "La Folie du Jour" and scored a 100 per cent hit. Miss Baker created a sensation when she sang "Skeedie Um," "I Want to Yodel," "Charleston Dense" and "Moreorocene Dense Afrique." Spencer Williams, the artist, compilated and wrote the songs especially for the artist. Miss Baker scored a tremendous success here last year in "La Revue Negre" which played 10 weeks at Theatre Champ Elysse. She is the pet of Paris, ranking with Mlle Cecile Scolel and Saint Gramier. They are displaying nature of Miss Baker which can be seen in all of the novel shops in Paris.
Act Playing Nebraska
Jennings and Reed, the Creole Musical Wonders, formerly with "The Chocolate Dandies," are playing a number of Western dates enroute East. They are in Omaha, Nebraska, for two weeks at present. Mastings, Fremont, Columbia, and Nebraska, will follow. Fred Jennings, a former Baltimore sends greetings to all the home folk.
Formerly Douglass Theatre
1300 BLOCK
PENNA.
AVENUE
The Smallest Perfect Woman in the World Today SEE HER DO THE CHARLESTON
Golden Brown Beauty Chorus
Thursday Adolph "The Grand Duchess Friday Menjoue AND Saturday The Waiter"
REGENT
Mamie Smith's Revue
Mamie Smith's Revue
Mamie Smith, the first woman to gain fame on the records has returned to Baltimore ahead of her Syncorated Revue, an aggregation of singers, dancers and talkers that measure up to the average revue as they are known today. A filled theatre looked the outfit over on Tuesday evening.
Evening, Mamie has lost none of her charms as a song delineator, and though through the years hundreds have come into the field, she still maintains her grip on many of her old worshippers.
Miss Smith sang three songs "Good-time Ballet," "Sweet Love" and "What You Need Is Me." The latter with the old of her pianist, smacked the customers, and brought the singer merited applause.
Just the same Mamie Smith merely being a little less appreciated by the decline of blues, which, of course, is not the artist's fault at
Ethel Williams Dotson, who I believe, added the last title to her name when she married Clarence Dotson, the Keith-Albee dancing star, did some stepping that stuck out like a baldhead in the House of David. She is the soubrette of the company and one of the pro attractors at the Chelsea Fetcher. Ethel Williams Dotson's name would be an asset to any program, anywhere. Ace, King, and Jack (Herbert Taylor, Eugene Taylor and Daniel Winstead three male brother dancers, tapped and otherwise danced their way into the hearts of their countrymen. Two of the boys came mighty nigh stopping the show. (Dusty) Fletcher and Mose Gaston, comics did their stuff according to form as was assigned them. Later Fletcher did a monologue that proved it's power by holding a homeward bound crowd throughout it's delivery. The material used, though not of a 1926 vintage throughout, was delivered with showmanship that caused the showers oblige Fletcher to bow several times.
Fred Tonstell directs the orchestra and James H. Smith, is very much AT the drums in the orchestra pit. Two capable fellows who are valuable to Miss Mamie indeed. The choristers are: Sadio Montgomery, Lillian Stokes, Bille Henderson, Phoebe Helms, Lucille Basey.
BIGGEST AND BEST SHOW IN TOWN
To Present Opera
WASHINGTON, D. C.-Shaw Junior High School will present "The Pled Piper of Hamameli," an opera in three acts by Josephine Hamameli, a dramatic performance on the evening of May 8th, in the new auditorium of the Armstrong Technical High
The opera, chosen for its classic story and exquisite music, is adapted by a large number of pupils. The performance is in fact a school project; the costumes are being made in the school being done by the school print shop, the opers and scene by the art department. Every pupil and teacher is responsible part of the work.
Much interest centers around the fact that the play is to be produced in the new Auditorium of the Armstrong Technical High School with a progressive modernly equipped theatrical stage offering opportunity for elaborate setting, Mrs. Fannie Douglass, instructor in music, is directing the performance.
HEAR CLAY
MOAN HE
14126-D-YOU GET MAD
75c DISAPPOINTED BLUES
14129-WHAT'S THE MATTER
75c NOW
I WANT EVERY BIT OF IT
Sung by Bessie Smith
14124-D-CANNON BALL BLUES
75c VAMPING LIZA LONG
Fox Trots, played by Ori-
ginal Jazz Hounds
Kaufman's
439 N. Gay Street
We Ship
Week of
APRIL
1-11p.m.
EAR CLARA S
MOAN HER LATE
GET MAD
APPOINTED BLUES
S THE MATTER
EVERY BIT OF IT
by Bessie Smith
NON BALL BLUES
PIPING LIZA LONG
Trots, played by Ori-
Jazz Hounds
Fifman's Music
Bay Street
We Ship Everywhere
14125—BRIN
75c
BACK
MAK
YOUR
Sung
14123-D-GO
76c
LOU
BLU
Sung
14130—LET'S
75c
SWE
MAMA
YOU
Sung
A REAL SHOW
D
CHICAGO—Charged with the theft of $50 from a room in the Columbia Hotel where she is employed, Miss Virginia Johnson was arrested on complaint of Miss Virginia Liston who is appearing with "Shufflin' Sam from Alabam". It was brought out at the trial that no one knew just where the money had gone, although the accused admitted repelling a handkerchief in which the money was some money under his trouser. Complaint's pillow, Trude refused to hold the hotel employee over, declaring that the state had not made out a case, Virginia Liston is a well known vaudeville blues singer and formerly with Sam Gray had a company on the T. O. B. A. Circuit. She has also made a number of records.
Some people want their brains to last them a long time, so they don't use them much.
JERA SMITH
FOR LATEST
14125—BRING YOUR GREEN
75c BACKS
MAKE ME A PALLET ON
YOUR FLOOR
Sung by Ethel Waters
14123-D-GOLDEN RULE BLUES
75c LONESOME DESERT
BLUES
Sung by Bessie Smith
14130-LET'S TALK ABOUT MY
75c SWEETIE
MAMA IS WAITING FOR
YOU
Sung by Rosa Henderson
Music Shop
Baltimore, Md.
Everywhere
6th
2
Doings Behind The Asbestos-Reviews THEATRICAL SECTION Where the Professionals Play-Routings
New Dunbar
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, APRIL 26th
MONDAY—Special, One Day Only—
"Red Hot Tires"
With MONTE BLUE
The fastest and most thrilling auto race you ever saw. Come early. May not be able to get your ticket at 4 P. M., Matinee or 8 P. M. Night. So if you can't get a ticket you can't blame any one but yourself.
Two-Reel Western—"Flaming West"
TUESDAY—
"Woman Handled"
With Richard Dix
Full of pep; lots of thrills. You will be gripping your seats, grasping for breath, and wondering what's going to happen next. Please don't miss it.
Comedy—"HER LUCKY LEAP" and NEWS
WEDNESDAY—Double Feature Day—Always Two Good Shows
Feature No. 7—GLENN HUSTER in
"PINCH HITTER"
Feature No. 2—LEFTY FLYNN in
"SIS LUMBER JACK"
YOU WILL MORE THAN GET YOUR MONEY'S WORTH.
COME EARLY
THURSDAY—
"Irish Luck"
With TOM MEIGHAN.
They loved him as a gentleman, but when he was made policeman, he was the king of his beat.
Geo. O'Hara in "Casey of the Coast Guard" No. 6
FRIDAY—
"Slave of Fashion"
WITH AN ALL-STAR CAST
Herbert Rawlinson in "Flame Fighters" No. 3
And A Good Comedy
SATURDAY—Special Cast in
"Camille of the Barbra Coast"
THE GREATEST OF ALL SEA STORIES
GREEN ARCHER" No. 10—Last Part
GUMP.COMEDY—He is great.
NEWS No. 25
Coleridge-Taylor Masterpiece
To Be Rendered By Picked
Local Talent
LLEWELLYN WILSON
TO WIELD BATON
Y. M. C. A. Herald Event As
Season's Big Musical Af-
fair
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's "Hawatha" will be sung at the Lyric on next Friday evening, April 30th by soloists and chorus numbering more than 100. The occasion will be observed by Dr. David Hill Avenue Branch Y. M. C. A. and will be directed by W. Liewclaw Wilson, instructor of music in Douglass High School.
The singing of "Hawatha" will conform to the policy of the association to encourage and develop local talent by affording them every opportunity to play or sing in the Music Festival. In the first success carried when a program of Spirituals was sung by a large group of singers at the Fifth Regiment Armory. Last year no festival was held.
The forthcoming production is considered the most ambitious attempt with local singers. More than 20 years ago the work was sung by a group of Washington singers, the late John Layton, of Washington conducted one of these presentations and another was directed by S. Coleridge-Taylor the composer of the score. This years director will be a local musician who has received his entire musical training in Baltimore, W. Llewellyn Wilson. He is teacher of Public School Music at Morgan College and a member of the American Guild of Organists. Ruth Lee McAbee, of Baltimore, soprano a winner in the recent audition contests held in New York to select a singer to be trained in singing the role of "Alda." Jovie Nichols, an advanced bassist in the Chicago School Music, will sing the tenor part; Ralph Baker, of York City, barlton. Mrs. Herndon White, of Baltimore, a local pianist of unusual attainments will be the accompanist. The affair will be the outstanding musical event of the season.
School No. 116
To Hold Bazaar
The annual bazaar of this school will be held every week at the school building. Drudg Hill avenue, near Niddle street, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights, April 22 and April 23 at 10 a.m. It will be 5 cents each night. Fruits, can goods, soft drinks, cakes, candy, lunch, ice cream and novelties will be sold at reasonable prices. Come and enjoy Miss Bertha Fleming, teacher of History and Geography, in the Junior High grades, has been a teacher at the school because of slickness. The faculty presented her with a large basket of fruit and hopes to have her with them. This school entered the bird box contest and is fortunate in having three boys prize winners. They are: Juniun Hayes, 71, Thomas Curtis, 7A, and Lawrence, 71A.
New D PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEG MONDAY Special One
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING APRIL 26th, 1926
MONDAY—Hoot Gibson In
“Spook Ranch”
ADDED ATTRACTION—Joe Frazier and Dixie Kids Novelty Circus
COMEDY—Educational, “Soup To Nuts”
TUESDAY—Warner Baxter and Esther Ralston In
“Best People”
SERIAL—“Scarlet Streak,” No. 4
COMEDY—Vit., “Horse Shoes.”
WEDNESDAY—Milton Stills and Anna A. Nellson In
“Flowing Gold”
ADDED ATTRACTION—Every Wednesday Nite
COMEDY—Pathe, “Handsonic Cabman”
THURSDAY—Lefty Flynn In
“High And Handsome”
ADDED—“Mazie Series,” No. 4
COMEDY—Educational, “Beware”
FRIDAY—Adolph Menjou, Bessie Love In
“King On Main Street”
VAUDEVILLE
COMEDY—Fed, “Doughnuts”
SATURDAY—Jack Perrin In
“Cactus Trail”
CARTOON—“The Puzzle”—Serial—“Branded Four” No. 13
COMEDY—Fox, “The Wrestler”
COMING NEXT WEEK—Sister From Paris” “Stage Struck”
Miss Lillian Reld in singing "Alone At Last" at the nine o'clock show at the Regent this week. The song is illustrated with slides, a novelty that seems to be returning in favor in houses all over the country. The audiences here apparently like this form of entertainment.
Wonderland
The weather has been against the resort since opening day, but bad weather will pass this season as it has in former ones. It takes overcoastless weather to draw the crowds in any large number, so any outdoor facility must the management is keeping right on with last minute preparations for the record breaking crowds who will attend. Dates are being booked by churches, clubs and charitable organizations for day picnics. The grounds are given free and all of the facilities are free to them without cost. All rides and other devices are in plance and carrin to go.
Lenion Released
Eddie Lemon, the Baltimore comedian and owner of "Stepping Babies," the musical traveling over the T. O. B. A., who shot Charles Oiden a member of the company, received recognition on behalf of Indianapolis authorities it was learned this week. It is understood that Oiden's conditions is improved. The shooting occurred in the dressing room of the Washington Theatre in Indianapolis, and was said to have the outcome of an alteration over money.
A woman should make a good member of Congress. She is always introducing bills into the house.
Hey Folks! Here They Are!
Each Record 39 Cents
Caroline Johnson
Buy All 3 Records Today
Mamie Harris
Be Sure To Ask Your Dealer for Perfect Records
Mary Stafford
Get These Records Today
“Georgia Grind”
“Mama Stayed Out the Whole Night Long, Mama Didn't Do No Wrong”
Perfect Record No. 103
Sung by Caroline Johnson, with Her Jazz Devils
This “Birmingham Lama” stayed out the whole night, and when she came home and told her daddy where she had been—Why of course it was hard to believe, as he thought she'd been out doin' the “Georgia Grind”. Friends, no kiddin' this is one record you'll always want to keep in the house.
“What's The Matter Now?”
“You Get Mad”
Perfect Record No. 101
Sung by Mamie Harris, and Thomas (Fats) Waller Spankin' the Piano
Hey! Hey! Wall it, Miss Mamie. You she' can sing “What's the Matter Now?”. Now take about Fats Waller spankin' the Ivories, boy, he's got 'em. “You Go: Mad” is on the oth' erside of the record. But you'll never in this world net mad for buyln' this record.
“Aint Got Nobody To Grind My Coffee”
“Take Your Finger Off It”
Sung by Mary Stafford and Her Jazz Band
Perfect Record No. 102
Here's a Synchated Jazz Singer of years gone by, and on this record she is better than ever. “Aint Got Nobody To Grind Her Coffee,” the selection which will be knikely a hit with all over the country. “Take Your Finger Off It!” will knock you for a row of tin cans as this song is the Willie and will be had by every phonograph owner. So you'd better get yours right now before they all run out.
Perfect Records are the Best — 39c each — Perfect Records are the Best
PERFECT RECORD COMPANY, 34 GRAND AVE., BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Oliver Pierce of the Royal Theatre has entered suit against Ocey Wilson, husband of Mamie Smith, whose company is appearing at a local theatre this week for the sum of $2,100 for cancellation of contract. It is alleged that Wilson contracted to appear at the Royal ber, but failed to do so. Through the law of Hawkins and McMechen, Pierce has entered-suit for a love sum, claiming damages to the Royal's business to that extent. An attachment, it is understood has been placed on the box-office of the theatre where Mamie Smith and her Syncaped Revue are appearing this week.
Ocey Wilson has managed his wife since her debut as a vaudeville singer. Mamie Smith is the original and well-recognized woman to sing in record companies, and made records in the early days of the entry of the industry which are thought to have netted her a tidy sum. Recently the company has been touring the country with much success.
Ja Band Final Sunday
The winners in the semi-finals of the Jazz Band Contest which has been held at the Royal for the last two months will meet night, in a hall been offered the winner by Manager Tinney, and its expected that the last competition will be keen for the possession of it. Leaders to date in have been Johnny Haughton and the Valley John Haughton Banders and the Baltimore Holiday Boys. A capacity of rooters for their respective favorites will doubtlessly attend the midnight performance.
THE THEATRE
Love., at Stricker St.
BEGINNING APRIL 26th, 1926
"Ranch"
Mazier and Dixie Kids Novelty Circus
To Nuts"
Esther Ralston In
People"
4
Anna A. Neilson In
Big Gold"
Wednesday Nite
Cabman"
Handsome"
e"
Love In
Main Street"
DEVILLE
Trail"
Serial—"Branded Four" No. 13
From Paris" "Stage Struck"
WANTED
BY BOOTS HOPES
..GOOD LOOKING GIRLS..
5 Ft., 2 In., 120 Lbs.
GOOD WORK. ALL SUMMER
Apply
LINCOLN THEATRE
Baltimore, Md.
Another sign of age is for people to
begin telling you how young you look.
Hey
The Phonograp
FILM TIPS
The "Sea Beast" Is Here At R
Wednesday
All Baltimore will, doubtlessly,
on next Wednesday, Thursday, Fri-
"Sea Beef" featuring John Barryme
The highlights are a magnifiche
with the white terror of the seas.
It will hold you even after you ha
adaptation of the widely read "Moby
CAST AND
Ahab Cooley
Esther Harper
Derek Cooley
Rev. John Harper
Ahab Cooley wore the covered
men who dured death to pierce the
bition in life was to pierce the hide
the whaling seas. Then he met E
brother Derek shared that latter feel
find more favor in her eyes. Derek
once, when the brothers are together
board almost into the mouth of M
outlook upon life are the poisons Aha
no longer loves him, but that it is
civilization with vengeance upon M
he is told of his brother's role in
fate, wreaks his vengeance where it
Fires You Will Want To See At Local Movie Hits
"Cast" is Here At Regent
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
More will, doubtlessly, wend their way to town, Thursday, Friday or Saturday, when watching John Barrymore. Rights are a magnificent storm scene and a terror of the seas. It will grip you and you will even after you have left the theatre, the widely read "Moby Dick" by Bess Merey
CAST AND SYNOPSIS
Beley. John B. Harper. Dolores Gecker. Georg O. Harper. James O. Weyore the covered harpoon on his hat, death to pierce the thick whale of whale to pierce the hide of "Moby Dekl," the sea. Then he met Esther, and loved her, shared that latter feeling with Ahab. Hopin in her eyes, Derek also tries his hand and brothers are together after Moby, Derek puts into the mouth of Moby, amputated with the result. Derek, whose part in him, but that it is pity that keeps her n h vengeance upon Moby his one thought, his brother's role in his misfortune and w is vengeance where it rightfully belongs.
Pictures You Will Want To See At Local Movie Houses
All Baltimore will, doubtlessly, wend their way toward the Regent on next Wednesday, Thursday, Friday or Saturday, when the famous
"Sea Bea," she highlights a magnificent storm scene and the two battles with the white terror of the seas. It will grip you and hold you in a spell that will hold you even after you have left the theatre. The story is an adaptation of the widely read "Moby Dick" by Bess Meredith.
CAST AND SIXOPSIS
Ahab Ceeley.....John Barrymore
Esther Harper.....Dolores Costello
Drew Ceeley.....George O'Hara
Rev. John Harper.....James O. Barrows
Ahab Ceeley the covered harpoon on his hat—the insignia of men who dared death to pierce the thick hides of whales. His one ambition in life was to pierce the hide of "Moby Dick" and be freed her. But his half the whaling seas. He did not matter that latter feeling with Ahab. Hoping that he would find more favor in her eyes, Derek also tries his hand at whaling. And oice, when the brothers are together after Moby, Derek pushes Ahab overboard almost into the mouth of Moby. An amputated leg and a sour outlook upon life are the results. Derek, whose part in the deed is not known to Ahab, further poisons Ahab's mind by keeping his no longer loves him but that he loves her near. He leaves he is told of his brother's role in his misfortune and with the help of fate, wreaks his vengeance where it rightfully belongs.
"Slave Of Fashion," Carey
Wednesday's special here next
of fashion" in seven parts. The st
Katherine Emerson.....
Nicholas Wentworth.....
Dick Wayne.....
Mother Emerson.....
Father Emerson.....
Sophie.....
Mindeline.....
Maryne.....
Katherine Emerson hungry for
home town for New York. Enroute
girl is killed. Katherine finds her
Wentworth to occupy his apartment
in prosperity and lives in
it becomes necessary for her to tell
He appears unexpectedly and is gree
full advantage of the conditions to
actually does fall in love, proposes
The wonder dog "Rin Tin Tin,
a drama in which the canine actor
and training.
it's special here next week is Norma Shea
seven parts. The story and cast follow.
Mc Emerson.....Norma
Wentworth.....Lynne.....William
Emerson.....M
Emerson.....Jamie
White.....Viv
S.....Madeline
Emerson hungry for three good things
of New York. Enroute there is a train wre
Katherine finds her purse containing an
occupy his apartment during his absence
and lives in luxury. Her family
essential for her to tell them she is married
expectedly and is greatly amused at the
of the conditions to make her miserable
all in love, proposes and is accepted.
her dog "Rin Tin Tin," appears star of "B
which the canine actor again shows his ren
Wednesday's special here next week is Norma Shearer in "A Slave of Fashion" in seven parts. The story and cast follow.
"Irish Luck" At Dunbar Thursday
The film starts off with Tom Miles of "one of the finest." But just as his familiar choice roles, the picture and we have the star in what is for that is dromy, whimsical, and for a life. All told, it makes a satisfactory Later, action of a good intelligent the balance it needs for those who o taining flavor throughout even when they are when Tom is being shown who retain food money Close-ups of pretty streams, bridge which have been made known to a world through sobbing Irish lyrics, background. These should find wild There is an exciting scene in v as a New York cop, by rounding up on murder bent. On Friday, chapter three of "Fli 10 of "The Green Archer" will supp
Week-End Features Lafa
LAFAYETTE—George O'Brien Thursday; House Peters in "Taffles day" Jack Kowal in "The White Out ROOSEVELT/THUILLE mas of all time. A picture that will know about the great struggles that great conflict when brother was ag construction that followed. On Friday, double feature day, "The Lo Benny Leonard in "The Come Back STAR—Thursday "Drug Store "Cowboy Grit;" Ben Wilson
Douglas High School Alumni To Meet
parts off with Tom Meighan directing traffic off the finest." But just as we are visualizing the choice roles, the picture departs for parts the star in what is for a decidedly new type, whimsical, and for a good part, depends it makes a satisfactory measure of entertainment of a good intelligent sort is staged and a someone who can whoeve excitement throughout even when the scenes are pure. Tom is being shown the country by his fond memories of Old Erin will welcome pretty streams, bridges, monuments and can be made known to the English speaking sobbing Irish lyrics, contribute a sensitive these should find wide appreciation. In exciting scene in which Tom capitalizes cop, by rounding up single-handed, three at chapter three of "Flame Fighters" and Sir James Archer" will supplement the excellent TE—George O'Brien and Madge Bellamuse Peters in "Raffles," a crook drama, one in "The White Outlaw." MI—Thursday, "Abraham Lincoln" one of a picture that will benefit every patrure the great struggles that preoccupied the Goo in when brother was against brother, and the at followed. On Friday, "The Wizard of O'Festday" feature, "The Love Hour" and lighten in "The Come Back." SURPRISE "Drug Store Cowboy"; Friday, Pet Saturday, Ben Wilson In "Mystery Box."
The film starts off with Tom Meighan directing traffic in the uniform of "one of the finest." But just as we are visualizing Tom in one of his familiar choice roles, the picture departs for parts across the sea, and we have the star in what is for a decidedly new type of story. One that is dreamy, whimsical, and for a good part, dependent on pictorial later, action makes a splash in the form of capturing the later, action-packed and intelligent sort it staged and gives the picture the balance it needs for those who crave excitement. There is an entertaining flavor throughout even when the scenes are purely pictorial as they are when Tom is being shown the country by his relatives. How those who retain fond memories of Old Erin will welcome these shots! Close-ups of pretty streams, bridges, monuments and castles—most of which have been made known to the English speaking peoples of the world through soothing lyrics, contribute a pensive beauty to the backdrop. There is also the wild side. There is an exciting scene in which Tom capitalizes his experience as a New York cop, by rounding up single-handed, three Irish gangsters on murder bent.
On Friday, chapter three of "Flame Fighters" and Saturday, episode 10 of "The Green Archer" will supplement the excellent features.
LAFAYETE—George O'Brien and Madge Bellamy in "Havoc." Thursday; House Peters in "Raffles," a crook drama, on Friday; Saturday, Jack Hoxle in "The White Outlaw." ROOSEVET—Thursday, "Abraham Lincoln" one of the master dramas of all time. A picture that will benefit every patron who cares to know about the great struggles that proceeded the Civil War, during the great conflict when brother was against brother, and the period of Reconstruction that followed. On Friday, "The Wizard of Oz"; and on Saturday, double feature day, "The Love Hour" and lightweight champion Benny Leonard in "The Come Back." STAR—Thursday "Drug Store Cowboy"; Friday, Pete Morrison in "Cowboy Grit"; Saturday, Ben Wilson in "Mystery Box," chapter 10.
About fourteen former graduates of Douglass High School met at the Y. M. C. A., Monday night to discuss plans for a reunion of all alumni of the high school, to be held during commencement week in June. Members of all graduated classes, are urged to communicate with Cato Anderson of the Douglass high school.
Tyler An Agent
George Tyler, who contributes a weekly letter to the theatrical section of the AFRO-AMERICAN, is branching out in the business end of the show world. Tyler says that he is now sole representative for Johnny Jones' Valley Inn Orchestra, and is also booking agent for the Regent.
Folk
h Records You Wan
olks!—
ls You Want — The B
Buy
Regent
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
wend their way toward the Regent
day or Saturday, when the famous
ore.
storm scene and the two battles
will grip you and hold you in a spell
ave left the theatre. The story is an
Dick" by Bess Meredith.
SYNOPSIS
John Barrymore
Dolores Costello
George O'Hara
James O. Barrows
charpoon on his hat—the insignia of
"thick hides of whales. His one am-
of "Moby Dick," the white terror of
sther, and loved her. But his half-
ing with Ahab. Hoping that he would
also tries his hand at whaling. And
after Moby Derek pushes Ahab over
amputated leg and a sour
Derek, whose part in the deed is not
ab's mind by telling him that Easth
pity that keeps her near. He leaves
oby his one thought. Then one day
his misfortune and with the help of
rightfully belongs.
week is Norma Shearer in "A Slave
ory and cast follow.
. Norma Shearer
. Low Cody
. William Haines
. Mary Carr
. Jaime Curtinan
. Virta Ogden
. Madellin Dupont
. Estelle Clark
the good things of life, leaves the
there is a train wreck, and another
pursue containing an invitation from
at during his absence abroad. She
luxury. Her family joined her,
she is she married to her贤,
tally amused at the situation, taking
make her miserable. However, he
and is accepted.
"appears star of "Below the Line"
again shows his remarkable ability
Eighman directing traffic in the uniforms we are visualizing Tom in one of two departs for parts across the sea, a decidedly new type of story. One a good part, dependent on pictorialy measure of entertainment. In sort is staged and gives the picture excitement. There is an entertainment scenes are purely pictorial as the country by his relatives. How Old Erin will welcome these shots, monuments and castles—most of the English speaking peoples of the contribute a pensive beauty to the appreciation. Which Tom capitalizes his experience single-handed, three Irish gangsters name Fighters" and Saturday, episode element the excellent features.
This Week
Hayette-Roosevelt-Star
and Madge Bellamy in "Havoc"; a crook drama, on Friday; Satur-
law; aham Lincoln" one of the master draill benefit every patron who cares to appreciate the Civil War during the first brother, and the period of Kee-
ay, "TheWizard of Oz"; and on Satve
Hour" and lightweight champion
Cowboy"; Friday, Pete Morrison in on "Mystery Box" chapter 10.
Chandler Owen Here
Chandler Owen, editor of the Messenger Magazine in New York and the Bee in Chicago, was a visitor at the AFRO-AMERICAN office Thursday. Discussing the suit against him by the Chicago Whip for criminal libel, Mr. Owen said he would prove the truth of his blackmail charges against the Whip. His only fear was that he would come to trial so that he can give the matter the deserved publicity.
Arabala's Band
Franklin (Turk) Kerr, banjoist; John Adams, violinist; and Oliver Lee, pianist, are now playing the dance tunes at the Club Arabia.
s!—H
nt — The Best Rece
NEW YORK. —Cros' Croole Pollies are doing their second week at the Lafayette with a few interesting changes. Manager Burt, realizing that vandelleville did not prove a box office guarantee, is booking worthwhile and available attractions. Leroy Smith, the incomparable, and his band open access from 'Ambient' rendering 'Always' with everything that goes to make the selection an overture. These thirteen musicians are picturesquely arranged upon the spacious stage. The clever manipulating of the baton by Smith is wonderful. 'Shake that Thing' is big hit, being played at Smith's own concert from opera to jazz. Musicians standing out were the cornetist and pianist.
The Five Crackerjacks, four men aud a woman sang and danced throughout the program and were big hits. A trio of these acrobatic dancers dressed as cops and reminding one very much of Mack Sennett comedy cops went big. A Spanish dance also scored. Viola McCoy replaced Kitty Brown and scored nicely. An evenly matched chorus of seated dancers and one shade, yallers, dance especially one who did a double tap Charleston. The biggest hit of the day was Roscoe (Reds) Simmons who scored a K. O. with his dancing and at the end had the house in an uprour crying for more. Radcliffe and Radcliffe who can sing and dance were riots. The male voice of this team under cork is some Caruso.
Stuartfield, Trinity
A variety of charity bills offered by Mr. Glubson with Juno. Mason and Slim Henderson "In Nonsense";
Long and Jackson, "East Bound Train," Rabker Ben All Troupe, six Arabs offer Arabian gymnastics; Dinah Scott Tri. song, dance and dance; Rustus and Marie, song and dance; Eva Metcalf and Ross Henderson; Holly, comedy and music; Holly, comedy and music and the famous Sandy Burns and Company as the finale.
In Washington
The last half of the previous week was osent covering Washington Theatres. Theatres were clean and entertaining tubs and vaudeville bills were offered. At the Foraker Samuel Lewy "Bainville Dandies", Broadway, Lucille Hegamin, blues artist; Mid City, Walters and Willis Company; Howard, Miller and Slater's "Charleston Friarsse". Noted missing from this company were the Misses Dolly Worthington, Emme McCormick, Wrigley and undergoing operation at Johns Hopkins Hospital, String Beans, famous drummer, formerly with Liza, Runnin' Wild, and late of the Chocolate Dandies, is to be featured with Watts and Willis. He will take his mail for the present at 1033 New Jersey Avenue.
Cambridge High Wins Eight Games
CAMBRIDGE, MD.—Cambridge High School closed their basketball season with a 58 to 23 victory over Chestertown at Waters Opera House on Thursday.
The school team under Coach J. R. W. Grace, has won eight of their YOUNG LADY WOULD LIKE TO OBTAIN POSITION as Plane Player in picture theatre. Call MADISON 311
24-HOUR
SERVICE
RATES:
50 - 75c
$1.00 per
Person
615 - 617
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Baltimore,
Maryland
VErnon
3632
CAREY
MONDAY—Pauline Starke, Starke, Nodag Nagle, Arthur Rankin and Cast in
"SUN UP"—7 Acts
Adventure in a land where a man's a coward who does not kill—where life is cheap and honor high. A Story of fighting hearts and naming passions, and a mother who thristed for blood.
GLEN TYRON In "HOLD MY BABY"—2-Act Comedy
"LORRAINE OF THE LIONS"—6 Acts
SEE the wreck of the Freighter off the CANNIBAL ISLAND — the Battle between Alligators and Human Gorilla — the Attack in the Jungle Thicket — the Fight for the Jungle Queen. Thrills and Ex-
through a crocodile swamp, and licked a pack of bloodbounds, to save his master.
MAEMAKERS IN "THE MARRIED LIFE OF HELEN AND
Here is a story replete with Life incidents and deals with a sort of Robin Hood band who steal from the rich to give to the poor.
JIMMY ADAMS in "WHO'S WHICH"—Some Comedy
JACK DAUGHERTY, LOLA TODD and AL SMITH in
"THE SCARLET STREAK" No. 5
SATURDAY—Herbert Warrillen, Crooked Nose Murphy and Ginders in
"THE FLAME FIGHTERS" No. 3
ALBERTA VAUGHAN in "SNITCH IN TIME" No. 11—2-Act Comedy
FRED BRIER in "BRIRR OF THE PASS"—2-Act Western
JACK HOXIE in "LIGHTNING BRICE" No. 14
AESOP'S FABLES in "THE MERRY BLACKSMITH"—Cartoon Comic
COMING—MAE NURRY In "THE MERRY WIDOW" 8 Acts — RALPH
LEWIS in "THE LAST EDITION" 6 Acts — TOM WILSON, the
COLORED ACTOR in "MILLION DOLLAR HANDICAP" 7 Acts.
Radio Bulletin, List of new stations, Department of Commerce, 108, price 5 cents, Medical Department, Regimental Equipment, National Health Reports, 10 cents; Public Health Reports, U.S. Health Service, Vol. 41, No. 14.
price 5 cents; Study in Natural E-amination in School Rooms, U. S. Health Service. No. 150, price 15 cents; Preservation of Fish Nets, U. S. Bureau of Fisheries. No. 688, price 10 cents; Price List No. 82, Publication Relating to Insular Persessions of the U. S., free distribution; Public Health Reports, Vol. 41, No. 12, price 5 cents.
Basketball, Baseball And Gridiron Sports SPORT OF ALL SORTS Comments From Pens Of Leading Sportsmen
SOX TAKE TIGERS INTO CAMP BY 7-3
SOX TAKE TIGERS INTO CAMP BY 7-3
Cold Does Not Stop Wilson
From Getting A Home Run
And A Triple During Game
RECRUITS SHOW UP WELL
DESPITE CHILLY WINDS
Jaggers And "Red" Payne
Make An Impression On
Fans With Their Fielding
Several hundred loyal Black
Sox fans braved the cold and
chilly winds to see the local en-
try in the Eastern league out-
class the LeBroit Tigers of
Washington last Sunday at
Maryland park by a 7 to 3
score.
On account of the extreme cold only
rete gas can be used. With the aid of overcats
and heavy mudflies managed to stick-out
the allotted time it took to finish the
Jaggers Shows Well
Jagger, the new Sox recruit who paid shortstop, gave the fans an injury jolt. He was a triple and he handed many difficult chances with only one misshap. His work was exceptional and it being his first game under local conditions. He has speed, a good throwing arm and can cover a lot of territory. It will be a close match for youngster and Flat the triple berth.
"Red" Payne On Second
"Red" Payne, the sorrel top second baseman, played a clever brand of ball, but he is slated for an outfield job. He got two hits, one a double, in five upsets in Smith. Wilson, who has been balking down the hot corner during the training period, was the big noise for the Sox. He netted a home run, a triple and two free passes in five innings. Smith had a high fly to the center fielder.
"Bill" Force
"Bilr" Fleece teed the rubber for the Sox, was rapped for four hits in the game. He was taken to the locker. From then on he drew in his roins, holding the Tigers to the bags of the season and kept the vistors gushed in the paths. McClure showed flashes of his famous fast ball which made him a terror to opposing batters last
Lacey Yielded 14 Hits
CLAFLIN, 4; PAINE, 0
AUGUSTA, Ga.—Glover, Clafin star
bound-man, after a month's idleness
of fire, has been returned to the
Sha Friday to hurt a shotout game
against Paine. The score resulted 4-0.
The minutes: R. H. S.
Paine 02 10 00 1000 - 0 15
Paine 00 00 00 0000 - 0 3 5
Clafin Glover and Blake.
Paine Burton and Dye and Wiggins.
FIRE
KING
New Shape
Panatela
CORONA
Were 8c
Now
5c
GET acquainted with this Great Cigar. You'll like it not only because it's so pleasing to mild, but because it satisfies to the last puff. Today is the day to try one.
Geo. Schafer
Cigar Co.
Makers of Good
Cigars For
25 Years!
SEND ALL BASEBALL NEWS TO THE AFRO
The Afro-American will renew this season the page of unisex and semi-pro baseball. Each week we will be carried of sandlot games.
C club managers are invited to send in the club management plans for the season and as have been arranged, they may be held at the office or they will be invited upon request. All communications Sports Editor, N. E. Watters agree.
ST. PAUL OUTHITS A. & T., BUT LOSES
ST. PAUL OUTHITS A. & T., BUT LOSES
By EDGAR R. PETERS
LAWRENCEVILLE, Va.—St. Paul lost its third association game here when the strong, A. and T. aggravated the Tigers' seven hits, resulting in a 4 to 1 score.
Wallace trudged the whole road for the Tigers, with Landy Colson at his side. Cooke for the Tigers, garnered two hits, a triple and single resulting in a 4 to 1 score. The Tigers, Colson pitched a heavy ball, giving up but nine hits.
WARD GIVES 'FORCE VICTORY IN NINTH
WARD GIVES 'FORCE VICTORY IN NINTH
BY "SECK" SIMMS
WILBERFORCE, O.-At the home opening game, what seemed to be a stinging defeat to the Big Green. turned into a victory after trailing in the first two points. Wu Fang Ward being the hero of the day with a homer and a triple, made it possible for the Wilberforce victory by a score of 3-0 added in the ninth inning, with two out. King Callen, captain of Wilberforce, got a nice little single and stole second. The defense hit the bat and with two out and Callen on second base and two strikes on him and no balls, he clouted the horseshoe to deep tight field for three bases and was able to advance to second base二bossman, he went loosing home for the winning score.
Totals 30 7 0 11 Totals 30 8 0 6
NUMMARY
Two-base hits—Ward, Cruser, Cruser.
Three-base hits—Ward, run—Ward, Ward.
hits on ball—Off, Duff, hitches, 0; Off, 2; Strike out—by Duff, 3; by hitches, 4; by
Strike out—SCORE IN 11
Wilferforce..... 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 2 2 1
Delliance..... 0 1 3 2 0 0 0 0 6
Imperle—Randal.
Imperle—Randal.
Hilldale Loses To York In Tenth
Hilldale Loses To York In Tenth
NEW YORK.—Hildale lost a 10-inning game to York here Saturday when pitcher Lefty George won his own game with a right eight in the winning run. Score 5-4.
Paul Stevens. New York product, enjoyed a huge day before the home game, and had a perfect slate in the field, accepting five chances and figured in the run getting with a single in the seventh. Warfield also played a whale of a fielding game around the keystone sack and bagged two hits. Otto Briggs was another Hildale player who showed up the night before the single and a double for his day's work.
Tillman worked five innings for the hometeam and blanked the visitors during his stay on the rubber, and his hits were collected from his delivery.
Hildale lost a 7 to 7 game to the New York team on Sunday. The combined hurling of Leos, Ryan and Danny failed to stop the New York batters.
Lincoln Giants Divide
Two Games With Camden
NEW YORK—The Lincoln Giants split a double bill with the Camden club, white. Sunday before a big crowd at Catholic Protective Oval. The Jersey team took the first game 5 to 2, but the Giants coped the second, 7 to 4. The second game was won in the game by doubles by Lloyd. Hudspeth and R. Gee, which scored two runs.
Giants Take Opener
The Allegheny Giants defended the M. M. Giants 7 to 5 in their opening game and now are ready to meet all of the winners for Wednesdays and Sundays. For games write Manager C. Maddox, 314 N. Eden street, or call Wolfe 977. ALPHA 9; M. AND M. 1.
The Mcleman and Miners Giants dropped a 9 to 1 game to the Alpha Club last week in a seven linking game. The hitting of Hebron and Dorsely featured
Nogales Artz—Jack Johnson, former heavyweight champion of the world is trying to stage one, back by meeting Pat Lester at Tucson, on May 2. Johnson has engaged Cyclone Cooper, member of the 25th Infantry baseball team and star heavyweight of that regiment as spurring partner. Johnson is now 47 years old.
VA. NORMAL TURNS BACK A. & T., 5-2
VA. NORMAL TURNS BACK A. & T., 5-2
PETERSBURG, Va.—The scrapy V. N. and I. l. nine added another scalp to its string by unexcelling the initial team in the season with A. T. y a score of 8.2. The day was cold and windy and neither of the pitchers were able to do their best work. The game was the part of the Petersburg and at times on the part of the visitors. The batting of Coward featured. He secured two doubles and a sing in three times up and back, and two runs were badly needed by the locals. Lane, of A. and T., had a big day in the outfield, accepting four and doubling Coward at second when he took too much of a lead and was slow returning when Lane spanned Wiggins' line drive to short right. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 2 4 3 9 V. N. and I. l. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 2 4 3 9 Rattlester. T. - Stokes and Ducean, V. N. and I. l. - Allie and Durrah.
Wills Or Nothing Says N. Y. Commish
NEW YORK—James Farley, chairman of the New York Boxing Commission, said this week that the commission has approved Rikard's trip to Texas to sign Jack Dempsey for a bout with Gene Tunney. Farley added, "Wills must get the first chance. That is final and always with the offer. If you want to be City, as has been hinted, this commission will revoke his license."
RALEIGH N. C.—Show University is now making preparations for her first inter-scolastic track meet to be held here Saturday, May 1. It will be held in North Carolina. All high schools throughout the state will be represented at this meet.
There will be individual prize givers, the winners of first, second, and third places. A special feature of a half-mile relay will be staged, the winning team receiving a beautiful loving cup. There will also be a cup competition, the school scoring the highest number of points in the meet.
Wills Siers, Armin
PORT WORTH—Jack Dempsey today committed himself irreversibly to meet either Harry Wills or Gene Tunney, or both, for Promoter Tex Rickelbush this year in near perfect form. The champion signed a contract binding himself the match.
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The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
Community Wins Inter-City Basketball Championship
O. K.'s, Afro League Champions, Lose Final Game Of Series To Washington Team In Y. W. C. A. Gym Monday night
By Afro Sports Editor
washington—The Community basketball team, champion of Washington, passed their way to 25 to 14 victory over the O. K.'s, winners of the AFRO-AMERICA basketball team on Monday night on the floor of the W. Y. C. A. gym before a big gallery of cheering fans.
This was the final game of a three games series and the winner was crowned champions of the two cities, Washington and Baltimore, in the junior lightweight class. The Washington team won the tournament and the Baltimore tosses the count at one all when they played in the monumental city.
Murray Fouls Missed
At the end of the first half the District drummers were sitting on top of a 15 to 2 score and never headed. The O. K.'s tossed away enough four points for some reason they missed the 13 out of 15 tries.
Clubs Required To Play 50 Games
Teams in the Eastern league will be required to play at least 50 games to be eligible for world's series monarch.
The present ruling is the outgrowth of a general feeling of dissatisfaction among club officials choosing a club to mirror confines the number of games that will be accounted for at home by the respective clubs.
For years the league is basing its lay-out on a 70 game schedule. In all prior seasons some of the clubs were short on their team of games for the season. The fact that some of the clubs are operating in leased parks and these parks are available only when the other
The visitors had built their team around Lewis so all the Senators had to do was to stop him and the team was sorely crippled. The was rarely allowed to near the team, which continued to two goals and two free tosses for six points. Both of these were made from distance shots.
Lacey Shines
Sam Lacey was the individual star His night's worked netted his mates 14 points and had the lead in the minutes the crest star would have heaten the Baltimore champs singlehanded. Long, Thomas, the Community player, provided both good game and covered second scoring honors with three baskets. Johnson, in guard, added two goals and one shot from the four marker. The team was also scoring for the inter-city champions. The game was slow with neither team playing their usual brand of defense. The team was flawless and kept the Baltimore champs hewledier. This ended the first junior inter-city game in cities. The IAFRO champs are planning a banquet shortly and the Community team will be invited as guests of honor. Three Westmoreland kept the game clean and congratulated both teams on their sportsmanship.
Next year the AFRO will make plans for a greater basketball league and an effort will be made to have Philadelphia, the city with the most other cities come together in a tournament for the Eastern title. Teams in the AFRO league were evenly matched-and 19 games were won by a one-point margin. The winners of each half were only determined by the score. The Decatur XV masers, St. Barnabus, Grace and Turquise had excellent clubs and it is assured that they will give good teams themselves in the league year.
Harrisburg, Pa. — The Harrisburg Giants won two games from the Senators here on Saturday and Sunday by the scores of 6 to 5 and 14 to 11.
Saturday's affair was a free hitting fraces, with the Giants doing most of the hitting. The outstanding event of the game was Dempsey, the first of the young season. Dempsey's long hit was a drive into rightfield, the speedy first baseman beating the throw in by a few seconds. The Giants Sunday's engagement was much more interesting, Insofar as there was a measure of doubt throughout the game as the pitchers and machines won.
The Senators got to Gillespie youthful Giant pitcher, for ten hits, but he kept them well scattered and stayed in the field, boys collected ten hits to the eight chalked up for the Giants.
A. D. Bibb, of Harrisburg and Lincoln University graduate, has been appointed manager of the Connel Stropper, owner of the Giants. Chick Meade was business manager last year.
For Girls On Saturday
ORANGEBURG, S. C.—At the Clifton track and field meet which will be held on May 1, the Clifton girls will furnish a tracing and a track event for the first time. The events for the girls will be the fifty and seventy-five yard dashies, quater and running broad jump and high jump. Team and individual prizes will be awarded.
Alabama State Wins Four
MONTGOMERY, Ala.—With a 5-4 victory over the Seema University tossers on Patterson Field Friday, the "Stinging Hornets" of Alabama State record of four victories out of five starts in the first eight days.
A pair of games were split with the Montgomery 6-6 and 10-4; two games were won from the Montgomery Gray Sox of the New Southern League 6-1 and 6-5.
Heavyweight Loses
PHILADELPHIA, PA. (A. N. P.)—Colored boxes met with hard luck in their matches with white fighters in this section of the coun-
Arthur DuKuh, a six foot, three-inch, 214 pound Italian, made short foot, one-inch, 209-pound fighter from Burlington, N. J., when the former knocked out McDougal in the third round of a ten-round semi-final bout at the Arenn.
**Brown Vs Goldstein**
NEW OKEK-A-Brown of New York, OKEK-Al-Brown of Goldstein, on the feature card at the Pioneer Club Friday night.
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Clubs Required To Play 50 Games
Teams in the Eastern league will be required to play at least 50 games to be eligible for world's series money.
The present ruling is the outgrowth of a general feeling of dissatisfaction among member clubs effecting a choice of playing dates and drawing to narrow confines the number of games that will be played at home by the respective clubs.
As in former years the league is basing its lay-out on a 70 game schedule of the clubs were short on their total of games for the season.
Taking into consideration the fact that some of the clubs are operating in less than half play when the other league club is on the road, also that other clubs are what might be termed established Sunday clubs, playing on the same ground and further two clubs are travelers without any parks.
Hayes' Homer Wins For J. C. Smith Nine
Poles Signs With Lancaster Team
MOUNT, JOY, PA.—"Googles" Poles, Athletic basketball captain and star forward, has signed with the Lancaster Black Crackers, baseball team, or Mount Joy and the Houston Rockets. The team will play every Sunday at their home grounds at Mount Joy and week days at Jake Brown Athletic Field. The line up: Poles, ss. Grass, rf. Thompson, jb. Guys, sb. Lorraine, lr. Johnson, c. Cooper, H. Jordan, Hawkins, Martin, Johnson, pitchers.
For games write Eilert Bates,
Push Hill, East Falls, Philadelphia
Kappa Wins D.C. Basketball Title
WASHINGTON.—The third game of the series between Kappa and Alpha was a victory for Kappa but one which required the best in the winners. The longevity of the score, 29-23, is indicative of the intensity of the struggle. This victory entitles Kappa to the year's Fraternal Basketball supremacy in Washington for they have lost one and won one from Omega; won two and lost one from PGA and Phil Beta forfeited one to them:
What A Rising Young Physician Thinks About the Modern Game of
BOWLING
"Bowling is the most pleasant and helpful indoor exercise I have ever taken part in. I am a fan of the sport and avoids those depressing after-effects that follow the more strenuous exercises. I am enthusiastic and appetite and definition and relieves the mind of business worries. I always look forward with pleasure to my visits to the Bowling Center."
Dr. John W. Gaines, M. D.
Dr. John W. Gaines, M. D.
If you will be guided by the advice of a physicist you will imitate up this healthgiving game.
Tournament
Opened with a big B-A-N-G Saturday and entries have been coming all week and are still coming fast. It is best that you get your entries in early as only a limited number will be permitted to compete for the prizes.
$60.00
IN CASH PRIZES
Will be given to the winner.
Don't Wait—Enter Now
FULL PARTICULARS
FROM MANAGEMENT
THE BOWLING
CENTER
1323-25 PENNA. AVE.
Next To Royal Theatre
DUNBAR HIGH WINS
CROSS COUNTRY RACE
DUNBAR HIGH WINS
CROSS COUNTRY RACE
AUGUSTA, GA.— Haines won three games in a row last week by defeating the Augusta White Sox, 10,5. Claffay, 6-3 and Schofield, 16-
Let Mannin
Your
Get Your
from
Mannin
(The Old B
Reg. U. S.
600-02 E. BALTU
EN-
T A SPECIALIST — READ
During this Month I am offering a thorough
examination—FREE To All Sufferers—including
examination of Blood and Secretions If necessary
Armstrong Runners Disqualified For
Falling To Keep On Prescribed
Let Mannie Cover
Your Head
Get Your Next Cap
from
Mannie Berg
(The Old Boy Himself)
Reg. U. S. Pat, Off.
600-02 E. BALTIMORE STREET
WASHINGTON.— Dunbar High with 28 points for low score won the cross country race against Armstrong Tech here on Monday. Armstrong Tech won the first and lost attoh Armstrong men placed first and second.
On checking up the runners complaints of unfairness were lodged on the course reported that two Armstrong men had not completed the full course. This caused each runner after the fifth to be moved up two places and the revised score on the course reported the victory.
Wade Carter of Armstrong crossed the finish line a winner in 10 minutes and 2 seconds. Slate Armstrong out. Our Checkes of Dunbar for second place. The race started at 3:15, the leaders setting a stiff pace.
There were twenty-three stairs for the race, the team having the low score receives a cup as the school trophy and the first ten men to qualify each received medals. The first two men who are to receive medals are:
There is many a safety pin, says William Kelley, 1409 Jefferson street, that carries more responsibility than a bank president.
MEN
CONSULT A SPECIALIST
This does not obligate you in any way.
IT'S FREE
IT'S FREE
Be Vigorous
MAKE NO MISTAKE
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No matter what anyone else has told you, SHE ME before you give up hope. I will give you the benefit of my more than 20 years of study and unlimited experience in treating the diseases of MEN. I will give you the benefit of my scientific appliance and method to determine the exact nature of your case—FREE.
I AM A S
More than 20 years of study and UNLIMITED
it is that makes you suffer. When I examine you you
lie in the sympathetic symptoms which might be
TAUGHT ME THAT I MUST GO DEEPER TO
CAUSES.
The organ which seems to be most affected in
that one diagonal area of the SINES
sary vital NERVE FORCE required for the DISEASE
and reveals the exact point where RESERVE
THE SINES SIMILAR AND FAULTY ELIMINATION, the
normal health.
WHILE CHANGES begin to take place
is sometimes imperceptible but CERTAIN, and it is
NERVE FORCE with which Nature endowed us
some diagonal area of the SINES we have exhaust
CESSES OR DISEASE, then if we do not
health and happiness, WE MUST ASSIST NATURE
protect us from the proven value in RESTORING the VITAL
ripe age in perfect health and strength, we must to my a
SKIN-PROSTRATE-BLADDER-KIDNEYS-STE
And remember I COSTS NOTHING TO you
your SINES FREE, My Feasible are you. THERE IS NO
you should be only HALF A MAN. COME TO ME
LIMITED EXPERIENCE to assemble
and place you under a treatment which has prov
I AM A SPECIALIST
I TREAT MEN AND MEN ONLY
I do not treat symptoms—I do not alm with a shotgun at a bullseye in the hopes of striking the colleague or the hundred palms. I do not separate the coff from the palms. I am not satisfied with merely whitening a wash of the skin with a cream of salicylic acid and contributory complications and my treatment is designed to remove the CAUSE of your condition. I would not permit his brain to be operated on, nor should he be satisfied to be temporarily hospitalized. I clearly demonstrate to you the need for and the necessity of as they apply to YOUR PARTICULAR CASE.
BE A TAN-A WHOLE MAN BE-healthy and vigorous. Don't suffer from disease--don't suffer from lack of nerve force. I have given more than twenty-five years of my life to STUDYING THE DISEASES NO MATTER WHAT IS THE FAULT WITH YOU I am qualified through knowledge EXPERIENCE to treat your IS THE CASE to better advantage. Come to me without delay--Now.
BE A MAN—A WHOLE MAN—Be healthy and from lack of new force. I am a successful MEDICAL MAN—I MEN with a MORE PATIENTS. NO MATTER WHAT IS THE MAIN and EXPERIENCE to treat your case to better
Blood
Diseases of the bloodstream in the SPECIAL KNOW-LEDGE ARE here required and which few physical causes them.
Skin
Diseases of the skin often come from tired causes. My diagnosis will disclose them.
B
Concerns out a new trouble may treat
My Fees Are Reasonable Terms Made
Stomach
Cavity analysis of cause must be made to determine what may treat
WHOLE MAN—Be healthy and vigorous. Don't supersize it. Have given more than twenty-five years of experience. A SHORESTER. A MATER WHAT IS THE MATTER-WITH YOU to treat your case to better advantage. Come to me.
Skin
Diseases of the skin often come from causes, my diagnosis will disclose them.
Bladder
Come to me, get a prescription without any doubt the most agony. Grow me a new bladder so that I may successfully treat you.
Stomach
Careful analysis of cages must be made to determine
Nerves
I have studied the peculiar nervous diseases of your city, York.
Kid
Blood
Diseases of the blood system
SPECIAL KNOW-
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Skin
Diseases of the skin often come from deep-seated causes, drug noises will disclose them.
Bladder
Come to me, let me explain without any doubt the purpose that I may successfully treat you.
Prostate
Frequently the seat of infection that caused agony. My modern methods have been successful in relation to annuated sufferers.
Weakness
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Careful analysis of the course must be made to determine where trouble lies. My medical are accurate, my treatment successful.
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I have studied the specific nature of various diseases of men for more than 20 years. I know every phase of the work.
Kidneys
I have attended the classes in New York. Knowledgeable me to treat successfully any kidney trouble.
Chronic
These diseases I have studied to treat by the most modern scientific methods. They have gained me my large practice.
RELIABLE-SUCCESSFUL AND ESTABLISHED IN BALTIMORE FOR YEARS
1. Wade Carter, Armstrong.
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6. Michael Tyler, Dunbar.
7. Frederick Duhany, Dunbar.
8. Harry Landers, Dunbar.
9. Owen Cox, Dunbar.
10. Leslie Coxes, Dunbar.
FREE
Comments From Pens Of Leading Sportsmen
Mannie Cover
Your Head
Get Your Next Cap
from
annie Berg
(The Old Boy Himself)
Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.
0-02 E. BALTIMORE STREET
MAKE NO
MISTAKE
—READ MY FREE OFFER
SPECIALIST
EXPERIENCE have fitted me to ascertain exactly what take into consideration every factor. I am not misstaken as the disease itself. EXPERIENCE HAS DETERMINE ACCURATELY FUND MENTAL
not be the diseased organ at all. Form them much easier. SERVICE FORCE is BEING WASTED AND ORDINATIONS of the nervous system are likely to assist functions upon which the body depends for a man at about the age of 45 years. This change should not call upon the RESERVE birth and which we have generated and conserved to our RESERVE NERVE. It should then be used and ten with continued TO RENEW THE VITAL NERVE FORCE through KILLED SPECIALIST. so that men may reach their full, ability to successfully treat diseases of the BLOOD—SECTORIC CHRONIC DISEASES.
CONSULT ME. It costs you not one penny to satisfy AGAIN HEALTH. Consultation FAILURE—no reason why permit me with my years of study and my UNQUESTION OR DOUBT exactly what your disease is successful in thousands of other cases. . . .
ND MEN ONLY
Speaking man to man I want to say to every PERIENCE HAS BEEN IN THE PAST, no matter how discouraged you have become over WILL CONVINCE YOU THAT I AM THE MAN I have prejudiced can convince himself easily that I am not a negotist, that the fact I adhere to ethics, that I do not engage in dislocations as a physician, regardless of so-called ethics. COME TO ME and let us discuss your questions with a practitioner of the health that I am. Give me the opportunity to demonstrate the complete health.
Ligurious. Don't suffer from disease—don't suffer
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If the back,
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Page Seven
Haines' record to date is 12 won
one lost and one tied. This is the
first time Haines is in line for the
Georgia-South Carolina. Conference
championship. Haines will play
State College here Friday. April 23.
703 NORTH
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na eal CN \TT ' News Of The Ring And |
Tennis, Trac! . fe : . What Boxers Are Doing] _
ater Sports BP $$$
7 a aecrcerte tre rteatrocrcat a ronnauynevtteHTHITEFETTUTTTEEUTUITUHTUGEEUHUUTTTTTG
TED THOMPSON IS
RANKING A. T. A.
‘Youthful Washington’ Boy
And Wilberforce Student
Heads: Racqueteers
‘EDGAR BROWN, FORMER
CHAMP, RATED SECOND
Dr: Rhetta Of Balto., Comes
From Number 13 In ’24 To
No..4 In 1925
‘By. J. MERCER BURRELL.
Lecceiady of the A. T. As
|< NEWARK, N. J-—The 1025
vatings of the American Tenals
‘Association released (kis week
‘shove several important changes.
“tea” Thompson, Wilberforce
student and a native of Washington,
BiG. ts pieced Now 1, with. agar
JQ: Brown, the 1922 champion, hold-
tie down second place.
UME yre G. Saitel, the New York
champion: hells "ute ‘same position
Se°ho aid in 1924, in third-place.
Talley Holmes, whe was the Nation-
al champion and No. 1 in 1922 and
1924, Is placed at No. 4.
© Thompson Vadereated
‘Thompton’s superiority was_un-
chaileaged and hls record Dears no
marks of defeat,
Grown reached the semi-finals tn
tie Nationals and put up & wonder-
ful battle against the youthful cham-
pion before he. went down to a glo-
Fious defeat. Brown proved Wis
Buperlority_over Saitch by winning
the New. York Open. Tournament
2nd unquestionabty ouzelassed Holin-
‘es In the Chicago Open Tournament.
+ Willams Wins
Hig sole reversal of form was his
detest by Dr. 0. B Willams in the
Miawestern Open. Tournament at
Wilberforce. However, this defeat
can be discounted a= this particular
Jnatch was played indoors in a gym-
Jfaslum, awblot had very ite ‘back
space. ‘
his -handicay’ was far more se-
vere to.one employing the "driving
Fane” as does Brown. (hun too
Bohop stroke artist” like Dr. 0. B.
Williams.
Then, also, Dr. Williams. has al-
sways. been a sort of “jinx” to
Brown. Brown has frequently easi-
Wy defeated men tar superior to
Walliams and in tho same Tourna-
ment, has himsel€ been eltminated
"by the Chicago Champion.
Holmes Fourth
= mrailey Holmes, “The Olé Master"
Toit to Brown in the finals at Chi-
cago and was defeated "dy —Saitch
fn tho semi-finals of the Natlonais.
Gn: these two performances, he me-
its fourth position.
The rating of Dr. BM. Rhetta
fof ‘Baltimore, Gt No. 8. will une
Goubredly occasion a good deal of
comment.
Rhetta Comes Up
By winning the Wilmingzon Open
rrournament.. reaching. te. Anal
round in the Baltimore Open, and
Sinning the Baltimore Closed. the
Doctor was able to amass a num:
er of points on paper, watch en-
Btled. bine to. eanaitrratton
Sfncdse4, Dee RNewa was_ rated
Now and hy has now advanced
rer the heady Gf sich players. as
Moviridge, vated. No. 4 "in 1924:
Richard: Hudlin, 3 Ae. Anderson. B.
Ry Simmons, Dr. J. §2Gri(t, George
Sith, De 0. 2. Williuns and.
Gores.
Mrs. Scames
Ars. $0, Seames, the “Grand
ofa Laas of tennis, is rated. as No:
oe athe majority of tennis fans. whi
Fesatly appraelato the henor done
FMotner Seames". but unfortunate-
1y, the. records. will hardly. sustain
the Committee in thelr action
Sirs. Seames did not playin the
Singles at the Nationals! and made
Zovsensational showing in any’ othe
fr tournament sufficient to oust such
Phuyers az Mrs, mms, Leonard of
Rep York, and Miss Mareellus of
New Jersey. trom consideration,
Ballard First
In the Women's Singles, Miss Lu-
ju Ballard, the Philadelphia. south-
paw, has ousted the’ perennial
Ehampion, Aliss Isadora Channells,
from No. tin the 1925 Ratings.
Mise Channélis is rated as Now,
whieh position was held” by" Miss
Ballard’ in last, year's. ratings.
‘ Cook: Heads Suniors
i! Lenoir Cook of Washington, D.
ie, heads the Juntors and there is
Batdiy ‘any cominent. necessary on
‘the other Junior ratings. The
Committes has vated "six Juniors
this. year duo. to the larger entry
in: tho, Nationals.
"in the mens, doubles, 3essrs
‘Holmes. and Thompson, the winners
fhe Nations Double Championships.
bye rated at Now 1. wih alecsrs.
Silteh and" Smith’ of "New. York,
Fonhers-up, at No. 2.
‘Downing and MeGritt of Virginia,
once. holders of the National ‘Title
Ste rated at_ No... Worde and
‘Worde. the .New Jersey‘Champions,
nd. semi-finalists in the Nationals
See rated at No. k. “Rnette and
fiker of Baliimore, AMd., are
Dracketea with Grinnel and Stranse
of Philadelphia No. 5.
re Mixed Doubles
“In. the mixed doubles, Mrs.
Seames of Chicago. and Dr. L. C.
Downing. of Virginia, winners 0° the
National: title at Bordentown. are
placed Now le Mes and Mr. B. "ts.
Hones of: New York. the runners-up
Inthe Nationals. are ‘rated ‘at No.
2: ‘Nise Nicholson and Dr. Rhetta
of Baltimore, former holders’ of the
title and rated’ No. 1 in 1924, have)
dropped to Ne. 3. |
Women's Doubles
In; the women's doubles... first
place goes to Miss, ‘Lulu Ballard
Sha ‘Miss Ore Washington, of Phila
Gelpnia, winners of the Natlonat 2
“isiie’ Chanelle of Chicago and.
Miss Lillian Hines of North Caro-
Uke are “rated et” No. 32. “Mrs:
eames. aud Mrs. Dorothy Radcliffe
Eqrell of Chicago, are. rated at No.
B.rtn 2924 this team was rated al
Nias: aig: con
16: Ratlig’ Gonimittea ~ consists
of the following: ‘Nise L. Junior, of
Pulladetphia, chairman: R. V. Cook,
of Baltimore. De. D- La. Hoagn, of
© New svork- City, Edeund ‘Burke’ an
| RANKING PLAYER
é
i >
AY Siac ieee
ee 7 a)
ee eee? ri
E a hee
ay =
Rae ches eae a
ERR eS Si ee
een Oe ae
ee US Mae
Opes eae Vee
Pe pace:
ee
foe ue
i Gm Se
. Pcavangeiere ena
Ped. Taompeon’ of Washinston
wiinertorce Sephomore, Fated mum
stiipartarce: Sephomo) "
lina, and. Harry Crestot St..n
3025, RATINGS
Men's Singies
1. Theodore Thompson. D.C: °
E. Eager. C, Browe, New York,
31 Eyre C.Saiteh, New York City
4. Talley “Hotmes.. D.C.
5 Dr. B. M. Rietta, Baltimore.
&. E.R. Simmons, Dayton.
BW. Andeson, Virsinla.
Aten’ Woolridge, D. “Cj
5: Solomon’ Worde, New Jersey.
30. Russell Smich,: Chicago.
1h; Dre John MeGritt, Portsmouth
1%, Dr, 6. B. Willems, “Chiease
(Note, didnot” play. In” Nationa
Journament and according to. Ful
Gould not be vated in-first ten.)
1s. John. Wilkinson, D. C.
J4, Richard Hudlin, St. Lovls.
15. Kenneth Warde, New. Jersey
16: George Smith, New. Terk.
32, Dre Be D. Downing, Roanoke
1g, Rev, W. W. Walker, Baltl
mors.
Jo. B. Gomes, New Tork.
20. Dr. Ross Strange. Phitdelphia
‘Junlor Sligles’ "|,
4, Lenoir Cook, D.C. 0.
2, Lewis Jones, New York.-
ES Troutman, New’ York,
4: Reginald Weir, Nev ‘York.
SAlffea Walker, Baltimoré.
8: f. Calloway, North: Cacolina,
Men's ‘Doubles:
odd i Holmes and Thompson, D
ie: ‘2 saitch and Smith, ~Nep
orks See hes
No: 8. Downing and MoGitl. Vi
ginia. :
No. 4 Worde and Worde,.' New
Jersey.
‘Nov's, Rhetta and Waiker, Baltt
more: Grinnell and Strunge, Pasta
delphi. :
‘Women's Singles
__No. 1. Lulu Ballard, Philadel
phi.
Nas, typdore Channels, Cicage
No dha Wastington, lege
hia.
No, 4. Mrs. Dorothy Radelift
Eweli, Chicago.
No! . Nellie Nicholson,” Balt
more. :
Xo: 6. Alberta Ballard, Philadel
phia.
WN6. 7. Blanche ‘Winston, D.C.
Xo: 6; Laura Y, Junlor, "Philadel
phia.
NO. 9. Mrs. C.'O. Seames, Chica
50.
‘Xo. 10. Eunlce-Brown,, North Cér-
oline. ‘
ioe 11 Elian Hines; North Car
oina. :
NO. 12. Ellse Conte, New, Tork
‘Women's Doubles
No. 1: Ballard and Washington
Philadelehia.
No. 2. Channells. and: Hines, Chl
cago-North Carolina.
‘io, 3, Mrs. Seames. and rs. Do
roihy Radellife Brell, Chicas.
No. 4. Mrs. Leonayd and, Mts
Junior, ‘New. York-Piiladelphia,
Mised Doubles
Now}. Mrs, Seames. Chicago.
L.¢. Downing. Roanoke, Va.
No.2. Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Jones
New Fork. .
No. 3. Aites Nicholson - and - Dr
Rhevta, Baltimore."
Bowling Center:Puts
On Spring Tourney
ane management ot the, Bowlin
center patting on one ot the bles
anite enemas ores attempted. and
eee aerenee promise et survassing
atte, Ee arbiking Uke ie at the
Neademy.
steerer that competition may be
carrieh Sut on ‘an aosontely fal
Sha impartial baste the entires-have
Been “aivided into. three classes
Bowlers whe general: games ave
pe over Secate tiaced in cas
ee eos with ant average of 35
Ages Ao Cass" cineltes those
eaSseraveruse ie around.
Meech rase or F100, $5.00. and
$250" teil be atvarded io) euch. of
$e cnreo. winners. in .the several
Slesen
acets ig those_alteady’ entered are
nee tae tae eeeat Chase B. 88
Seetie Mine i Wei, Ralph W.
Be orig’ Wiliam edalngs Wier’
isda, "biBriscse. dames, V
Bennett 7. Coates, 2 Harriat Class
Benet JB al, Re Howard
Gaiph Xe” Cook’ Dee. Gloster,
RSP Seenet, Wilke Burke: G Pal
eek Holmes See Smallwood
C. Talbert, C, L. Davis!
pei
Wilbur Cohen’ Fights
Benny Schwartz Here
‘Wilbur: Cohen, New . Tork : boxer,
will mest Benny’ Schwarter white, of
sane Raney eas ie
104th Regiment Armory on Monday
cece Rapin “armory op
Ha ssn ioc sept oe
oa et tiene mE a
subety eee ee
Be eee
shay ove eevee ged
PERSE sage Toe
at aka te preuaenees Beat
are lie als i
‘Wills came. into’ the lmelight: when
he won a décision-over’ Young: Joe
Remar sane, ree re
Boe ue, sara: Be
eta
ni ie pa ae otee
cee ee ee
sis Fy hy ee aa
a gret ahi as ft. went.
Flowers:Walker
Bout Called Off;
Gans. Defeated
NEW “YORK —Chateman Tames
A. Farley ot the New ork Boxing
Eomninieslons-refoses to let Mickes
Salven welterweight ‘champlon
ght “Tiger, Flowers. middieweieht
champion. in. the propored bout. i
‘the Yahkee Stadium for June.
‘The Commission ruled that Harry
Gres’ the deposed. king, had. the
Sree. ee te tneet Flowers and
Feet ite ‘enoush opposition in
Me class and did aot have #0" mee
mniddleweights:
ELT ig our choice for
Blowern wld Parley. "tarry i
anitiea to “t chance to regein. hi
Srown ang Flowers wilt not be al
seed te nght neve Until he meet
hime
lowers. defeated Joey Gans, of
fatlemown, ‘Pee at Wkes-Barre
Anefadssr night ine 10 round bout
TrerereY wan inva speed and. ag.
Free enaaee AleNO outclassed
Eats managed to land, several bars
Slows, ‘Flowers weighed 68 and
Gane 16h a
HAMPTON, .Va. — Three records
ware, broken last year in tho tnter-
ollesiate ‘track and. feld. moet “at
Hiumpton in “the collegiate’ division,
hile one was equaled.
Jn'ube seholastle class. sixipow marks
sete, hang uy, sour elma
ivetes trom” ‘Duntar “High” Sehéel,
Washington.
Riemedson, of Dunbar, was the out
standing performer in 1995-, Hie ran
the. century In.'5" 9-10 seconds_and
established’ a snow mark’ inthe: 220
Sard sprint in-22 seconds.
“Hhevcolagate trae eco tm the
100 was made by Cool of Union, whe
uated his mark of 1228) Cook. nso
olds the record inthe 280, whlch he
mude In 188i. Hargrove, of Hampton,
Ruled the favelin 16 fect, 6! inches
fast. sear toa new dlsiaice.. Plevee,
of St Pauly is the king of shot put:
terse iti heave of 4f feet, 4 Inches
SoLLeginve “vHAcK RECORD
Hampton, Meets ons-e5
80,2880 Cooke Un 2222,
Priest, Bord, FA, Lins, 122
PSE sera, cook, Wy: Union, 194.
410 vara, Langiton, J. 1, Hanipton,
198k, eaeb ge
Sto ards Parker, Wm. St. Chelate
pier, 1388" emt §
Mier, ichths, Howard, 1923, 4m
ages :
Fut mlle van, Coles, R.A. Hamp-
tom eal tom 36 F-8
‘io vara —
Hes oraies, Xeng,” Wm.’ Hampton,
sents te
1B garde,
Hick hurdles. King, Wm, Hampton
lhe US ietonde :
PEhot is Bleze, Bt, Pal, 385, 37M
Biseus thfow, Asderson, ons
sReeANS GttHRN Antero. Mone
Sein irons Hargrove, Ba, Ham-
opt as, BPR Be :
{eBay 976 nos, 183,22
lt sump, Toons, Morgan) 124
Moet Rai Barca W. Veta 285,
sfiraliy, Howard, 192, 3m, 28-25,
LEWOURSTIC TAG RECORDS
5 Byard sinronon, Dane
$50 ie9 Rienardson, Dunbar, 195,
ergecmnde, ;
BNE, Georet, Donbar, 18, 8
ee ied. Miller, Dunbar, 1925, 2 maln-
ey arf Seca
ee «
Toe Mea, veer’ woreentowa, 1,
ifoed limp, Watson, Bordentown,
weet (ce
SFieh Sinhbcew,"charelo, Dunbar
Bee een,
PPB Sut orden, Union le, 8
fain
Hid Ring, Bordentown. Ni Iq 198.
a Atlk sath: eocondne"Danose, Wank
faglanSt ce bs nigtey 3 secant,
BRE reisy? Union gly tidevater)
ruamgion Va. ies, Binion, 40 2
| Hamptor
‘WILBERFORCE, OW10.—“Ted”
Thompson, ‘Wilberforce ctudent and
Ravjonal singles champion of the
American ‘ennis Assoctation, will
fepreasne Wilberforco University In
the “Western Conference Tennis
Tournarient in Ehlcage. in Juno.
‘Other playersvot note. will be
Richard ‘Hudlin of the. University
of chicago team and George M. Lott
fhite, ranking sumber 9 player of
the U.S Let Ay who "will also
represent. the University. ot Chica-
goves number ono player. This
feunament fe composed of the Bis
Ten Colleges such as Michigan, Wis-
Gonein, .Chicago and others.
Wilberforce “University baseball
team defeated Antioch | College,
will, st Seliow Springs, obie, 20
‘Wu, Fang Ward’ was the heavy
hitter‘of the game, obtaining a dou-
bier two triples and @ liome run out
of four times. at-bat.
YOUR SPRING SUIT
(MADE. TO" ORDER)
Botter' Have Your Sult Ready for|
‘May Dee
1. $22.80, $60.00
“Dien
KDuLOR SHOP
405 W. Baltimore st.
© cAnvert One.
Dr. RX. Giering :
710: E. Baltimore Street
: DOCTOR FOR ' MEN.
‘CONSULTATION AND: TREAT-
: ainndee et
c ee 3
ba
PROPHYLACTIC
Unnatural: and: ‘mucous : dis-
‘charges Cain, be’avoided. by'de-
-stroying the germis of infectious’
‘diseases.’ $1.10 at all:druggista,
oat
a qn Le }
ez fi ieee /
PUTTING: OFF IN- aA
STALLING YOUR gfgan oH
HEATING PLANT ‘& \eeee
Let us install the Franklin Sys- HK |
tem of Hot Water Heating and a
your heating. worries are over, fae
We will be glad to tell you of thé sy E
advantages and low operating ;
cost-of the Franklin System. No 1
down. payments required: the \ N
jest wee] or mont ay-
ments in the eity. vey toot
aes a It is better to have The
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“sap Rees your home than wish-you
ae 4: Read:
TE: i ‘
E ers National Heating
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220, iL! \(The Franklyn System). :
1005:W.'BALTIMORE ST. | CALVERT 0111:0112
cio We Give Service’ Everywhere
MANY ATHLETES 10
COMPETE AT RELAYS
Penn Carnival. Will | Bring
Cream Of. Tracksters To
Philadelphia This Week
LINCOLN AND HOWARD
SEND STRONG “SQUADS
Lincoln Will Hold First Track
) And Field Meet On Cam-
pus May 22
PHILADELPHIA, PA.—Over
200 race:athletes will be repre-
sented at the’ Penn “Relays here
on Friday and’ Saturday of this
week.
+, Besldes a-number of schools send-
foe teams io the ahirey-sncond. rg
jay. carnival,, many Race boys will
represent white schools and colleges
“Lincoln Ualversity will be repre:
sented Ly ‘tho strongest team thal
fever carried the colors of the in-
stitution... ‘The probable lineup will
Include “Strickland, Stratton, ° Gras:
ty-and "BH" Tayle:," captain and
Baitimores. own. =
Expects - Victory.
All: of the tack*men have’ been
Blocked ;under.-54 seconds for the
440-and' nothing but victory is. ex-
pected’ by’ the ‘Lioris.
Lincolt is holding. her frst-track
and. field: mect' on’ the campus: or
Min ay. stees ure coming In du.
ly' from many colleges, : clubs and
YM. CG. A'S, Those desiring
blanks should “write 10 the Lincoln
Rolay Meet, Lincoln’ University, Pa
Howard is Sending a crack team
to" represent the school and will
be A powerful contender In “me
sprints ja Williams: front the Yhid-
dle west. He has run the: century
in 10 flat-and will prpove a strong
competitor in this: event.
‘Dunbar and Armstrong of Wash:
Ington will also have teams In the
scholastic divisions.
Morgan will not send ari entry thie
year an tho Baltimore school has
hot replaced Coach Law who te.
signed last winter.
Many From White Schools
The majority of ‘boys will come
from white schools in Pennsyivania
Jand New Jersey. As usual the 196
yard dash will be one of the fea.
tures of tho Relays. -De Hart Hub.
bard, world cha-“ion broad jump.
er; won this event jast year. Hub:
bard has ‘infshed college and will
Hot compete.
‘Other specials on the. program
will "bring together: many stars. in
the hurdle races, track -and field
contests. From 10 o'clock Fridas
morning to. 5:80, Saturday ° evening
athletic fans°In Philadelphia should
See" enough .competition to satis
them for sometime.
ALLEGHANEYS WIN-IN NINTH
‘The “Alleghanes. Giants by" timely hit-
ting won"a f to 6 game from the Mer.
[chante and Miners Glante In. che ninth
{qning. "However. the Merchants and
Miners arevanviovs to fear from unl
forms. teams. playing Wednesdiy, Sat-
Grdays-and Sundays, Addresy Manager
Robert: ¥. Jackson. 519 W. Lee street.
Robert. V. Jackson. 510 W. Lee street.
oes ab rh ti ., sbrboe
doinias “343.4 Ulnoumeer, “815.95
Bie Shi gdnemest, foart
easeene, 32 1 5 gioutlew te 401101
Seekers, Tblodaeuers 4242)
MER fetta 1h842
Wier 901 Ssaameae” $8490
Werte POE sueulaa, 30408
pimies See aiiueueel 31405
Trees. ania ce 31230
“tons 7B A ine, sea
ne BNNs
‘gtegae SESE EONS GY 0 10 37
Meme Cubs BPET885 8823
Caps ‘Caps Caps
All $2.00 values
BUY: YOUR NEXT.CAP
nO RROM
The Kap King
405 N. Gay Street
Caps made while you walt. All:
iG ate eee Sate and te
icine. $25; none’ higher.”
| .
| Twice Told
| Sport Tales
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
REN TEASE :
athe camer Betttute' comment
ort Snes Con: Saree ets
goal at 2d nse Sgt
EE meres ttn ana tar Sater
aibs fice 4665," Ye luc
he Cr bintice rhe champions
ican to prac, 0, oomags
Pee THR Alaetion Te A.B
Genie Hips ormmtee
ew YEARS_AGO
Race Sa ey es
flat’ Bitch dress, otage, in a
by dat iGo Yard dash at Brooks.
ela ceoc"Wastingos, de
(cute Ete Renan ete hr eh
feat the Fgh Sinan 200 Bute
Aerasty oSuaD Space (ot Hien Schoo
Bade Ut Nei ad the a0 by arm
sos
EE Booker, of the TM. C. As fs
piSinlis™s GIS olkasor met:
| Five YEARS AGO
sett Thommtbe af Storgan, wen. the
oftleB uae atin hc Hota BP 23
spend
black. Sox srl. doubleheader
ithe Be Seco the Arg 8
Fu ne Ree ch Casa Oo aga
rae Sanat aie boc des ld
Benes dB se tdcond
Barton Makes New
| Record Saturday
TOWSON, ND —Biily Barton was
tng nae the Grand. Paint to
eat ae Emersons in Brooklands
welt Geden Srring valley tat Sat
wees,
sey on, nished the two and seven
eieear eee tn ‘te! minuten and
ents Pee smuae wich was
tiara te lig 25"yeare Of rune
Ie ora or was ‘badly hurt
BE ag’ the wace., Barton wil star
Gag ntetyland: Hunt Cup on April
in Spowarde Rruce. of Elkridge
Fina Cine te owner of oth horses
Burtt Norris and_andrew Young
Be Fowson ure trainers:
PIONEER LEAGUE,
Outlaws Pisces Bk SE
Peeness SII es
snboys iccccccdas on
Salers IIIB 4a
Shite Sox 21k aes
Bowlng Genter sc 1813 gi
Buccaneers sees 18 tr* Sito
yclones eesecces 8 tk ER
eS ed
OUTLAWS PEERLESS
cooper 6t = saa Robins's 26 198 105
Gfatana “33. $5 168] Wright 93 89
Rearies 1 300 arlL Ames +... 53)
Qegper sii ioe as] swe 42 113 18
So6Pe" Tas tot $3] Wvate™ ion 98 104
SSSper 35 fob vzel Brown "st 10 34
‘Totals 106 303 508! “rotals 492 524-529
BUCCANEERS LOSE THREE
BUCASSEERS., | CUILFORDS
Nick i895 83 Tat 2834
Siwy 88 $8. SB FAMens 121" 96 190
SHES Tee ao Selerme’n” HE 1s 19)
Rowen GH 80 g1|WBrown 20 73 95]
Btlscoe- & 30 7 3 8
icontes "3 93 9
Totals OTE GSI Totats 9 GI TA
lg CT aia
BOWLING C. | 1, COW BOYS |
eae Be ae
Totals 186 5 479] ‘Totals 44 5 103)
eit a ye
excuses cox
ae ger a Be
Green 93 $9 92) Rob’son 33 $8 105
aut aur
commemorate Se I 2334)
| COSMOS, 44) GIATNS,
ist 2a aa ist za 38
cer SU goneay Hee
Shorr $2 Hai] RSohe’a Hae
Samer Els Al iecony at at a
Noehin B63 ie] Xsonatn te 8
Hass" $5 60 $3] Sigeare' ste wd ats
‘Totals 31 164 MG] Totals 488 476 18
STARS OUT. SHOT
santo Shits °? TBALTO, CLUB,
ise ist Pag
waraen 3 HE Slrtones ut
Besser fH aaa|Siseray 52 100.12
Geer 8 Mol zunay’ sa 92
Biloce HF At Hr|Stewart “88 82.
Bale 55 oo Se|EWrise $7881
otal 137 WG WE] Totals 2 Ow
Williams’ Single Give
American Giants A Win
CHICAGO, “TLL—A singe in
ine fourth By Charles Withams, with
the ‘Gases ‘fal, _gave, the, American
Glants three rons and 2.2.0 victory
Gree the Gheago. Bives In the open=
fhe game of the season at Sehorling
JUNIORS.CAPTURE
HOWARD TRACK MEET
Williams Outclass Field Of
Sprinters To Take Century
Dash In:10 Seconds
BASKETBALL QUINTET
| HAVE A’ GOOD. YEAR
Varsity Court’ Team Played
18 Games And Lost Four,
Two Dropped To Morgan
.C. West Is coaching those students
ot Gnu Cniversiey who report on the
indepth is year and seth the me
neat te bl Howard has 6
Steet begun seolig’ combination
See ea el and any ce
nine care os, any "eltane
eer RE FRE call Hone, te es
Une ie cnty Stowe honors eet
oie Sea. .
“eto seta, ted the meet
polit, wining dese ase ie almost
esas CMa caine Sophos
ry "Freshman Clases esr
eaittned" Berio ar Send.
Pn tae
sFimaries
imo Sarg DastMOSN'Gy wwe
edt Dash hides a
SB, Eiken thine
ha vara Rondon ty Doveles, ph
ornate! Waistline, freshman Pere) Sle,
seen ee
Hetty RUGS wy Pare,
ators Aenea eat: ROB
et Pe Sa
lity LEN Bifano. Doe.
ermal sie, Hutte, SANE:
ations amare ©
eats go esate: eptonore
rane: ene, ant
aR ag
Bie da summon, WE
eth ce she TPAC, ak
sah Pe al Shonen
Ben? &
db shel naas Won by dani Clas
cof eA et deni st
iakAe coor Base Mahe
Frise Ct Sones
indie Bion, Una Sees
ht _won wr ben Brown, fh
mee seca Re Ree, ah
aa: tates A ein
Badin datas ae
Sn Stl hag west
rote Booey SE
Pines hn a Rested a
Bet ae Gans PE beset
te Sa Aca
owara Unrat Say,yanea
ota Uther a a i
ea Pea GSe mare
eee te poses
Bharat Bved 38 pans the nat
fois ad Bees ie Fas A
ere tha sneer aoceen Eas
HPs, ei ine Caen Sh
oe ane eles ec Ch
Bs Aes ON lo
wee ea Felt a te ee
sah fi dig RA AG
Wien cage cca" Re hue ened
eat aASCin yw tails! secur
te Hee Rat at
1. Howard ..... 24 Athenians... 3%
E Howard 02. 34 Phila: Plastics 2 #3
E Howard 27 Hf Storer oom i:
{Howard icc 18 Morgan 00 3
E Howard 24 Simms 2
Howard “20 2 Morgan pgoccone 32
2 Howard Sil Alea, & FH
E Howat 00 8 Were Vacs
B Howry oo 9 bine
to Howard 2" 38 Morehouse
Be Homard 00 38 Oncol en accoce 18
I= Howant ‘2. 40 Eta Chapise =! 1
{ Howard ccc: 30 Forwards, Det. 11
1 Howard ic MY West as ns 24
Le Howard S20 13 Wiivertored "34
TE Howard oc. 38 ftand Inte mance 18
1 Howard 7: 24 Simmons" a
TE Howard 18 Fisk eons 8
Pe "51 Total 304
Foe we reel *
read Bae
BEE eo ——
eer —— HE
eet —— eh a
ime ——— Bod oy
ie a HY
gee, eet —— ET
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fete MSH
Geom ht EY
MAOSiieas Bot
reas ea
SHAVE WITHOUT A RAZOR
agle Shevine Peder oil gi 08
a Safle SIRE stoves ala atagYs
BE PEN oh oncte lee bit
Sig nigneatcanesour mace 8
PD eta a CEST op capa.
med eect ted AE
at all utd cen OY tall
postpaid, enough for 15 shaves. ¥
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| Spring Sale |
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‘Western Conference Teams
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Men's Exclusive Store—Baltimore And Gay Sts
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to Acconamodate Customers
| This Is the fourth of a. serles 0
articles by noted football coache
expressing their views.on the nex
forward pass ruling recently adopt
ed by the American Inter-Colles!
Ste Football Rules Committee |i
New York curbing the use of th
forward pass by teams on the shor
end of the scoring in a Jest, minut
effort to score-—Editor’s Note.»
‘Coach Dean Mohr, of Wilberfore
university, Wilberforce, Ohio, , sas’
altho the new ruling is causing con
Siderable twouble in che ‘Paster
Gonference, ils teem will follow th
old ruling tn. conflict with the Rul
ing Committee. This will give: hi
team an advantage over | Easter
teams playing out, West, but hi
team will de handicapyed pldyins
East, So it will be a ftty-ftty pro
Position. Dean -Mohr's. -statemen
follows:
Follow O14 Ru=2g
‘The new forward pass ruling®
fs causing considerable trouble
in this section of the country
and the officials of the Western
Gonterence area of which we are
f part have decided to follow
the old ruling in ccafilet with
the American Inter-Collegiate
Rules Committee.
‘Of course. this may work
hardships >with | Wilberforce
when playing in th. East but
again Wilberforce will have’ the
better of the argument against
teams of the East playing at
‘Wilberforce. ‘
‘The West Virginla-Wilber-
force or any Western football
game Is more spectacular to
mie than any I have seen of
Eastern teams with the excep-
tlon of Colgate which uses the
short. pass.
Nothing To Lose
T wish to state that I do.not
see any effect it, will have on
‘& team well taught in the fun-
Gamentais of the forward pass.
‘When you are behind, you
nave nothing to lose but all to
gain, You can always Kick on
the fourth down unless you are
penalized for passing on the
third down. ws
Like Baseball
In other words, I compare {t
fo baseball with the batter hav-
ing two' strikes and three balls
Sou know the pitcher is g0-
ing to groove the ball across the
plate the next time.
With the two unsuccessful
passes the quarterback knows
That it willbe one of the three
things—kick. Iine-play or end
Tun and will mass ‘his team for
the, oceaston.
‘The uncertainty of the sec~
ondary defense not knowing 2
Dout what is going to happen
as in the case of the unrestrict-
@d forward pass ix removed.
B. 1. Harvey, divector of Athle
les at Morehouse College, Atlante
Ga., does not think the new formar
pass ruling will help to increase
Recrease the number of forma)
passes in the coming season, bur a
Heves. the ruling with reference ty
palls out of bounds belng dead ang
piven to one touching the ball isa
pefore it crosses the” line, cause
more concern. Coach Harvey say
Twish to say that T do not
consider this ruling will help’
<decrease or increase the nme
‘ber of forward passes In” the
coming season.
However. T expect st wit
cause a great deal of deley I
stepping oft five yards after each
forward paso incomplete ‘whieh
carries with ita penalty,
Can Swill Kick
Every team that I have
met Which used” the forvarg
pass as a method of trying tp
in when behind, use such long
passes that a Ove yard ot evet
B.ten yard penalty for” that,
matter would not stop thet”
teams, especially as they can
aul! Kick’on the fourth dom
and five or ten vards dliterenes
fn the distance covered by"
Kicks will not materielly help ot
hamper the team that {s behing
and trying long forward passes
‘Further, 1" think the only”
thing the rullng wil do weil be
‘to. make the teams devsiop 2
short forward pass on whlch
they. do not hope to galn, but
merely to complete it atter an
Unsuccessful one so that they
may avoid being penalized,”
‘More Concern
‘The ruling with reference to
balls out of bounds being dead
and given to the one touching
the Ball last before It crosses
the line gives me more concern,
‘There are many loopholes for
a team to take advantage of,
that suggest. themselves to ma
However, sinco you do. not In:
quire of this and.turther in that
fe may start others to thinking,
T retrain from commenting fare
ther.
Baby Joe Gans Wins All
Way From Bill McCansi
FRESNO, CALIF.—Baby Joe Gans
Los Angeles lightweight, hammer:
fea his way to 2 decision over Bill
MeCann of Cleveland in the 10-
round main bout of the fight exxd
here Tuesday.
‘McCann, whose fighting was fees
tured by ‘much clinching and Kt
tle leading, was floored” for the
jeount of eight in the eighth. rouné,
Phe bell saved him from a knock.
out, An injured right hand hampe
ered Gang and he was unable
eae ee oe ee
Mr. Bryant, a senior in the medical department and guest of guest of Mr. Freihil Mantler, of McCulloch street.
Master dames Bennet, of 1515 Press friend street, entertained a few of his friends there, including were: Florine Bennet, Brudy Baskerville, Ellen Bennet and James Green.
The "Order of the Javelinin," a newly organized membership consists of: Charles Jervis, president; George Brooks, secretary; and the treasurer; Lockerman and others.
Miss Lilian Brown, a student of Penn, is spending the holidays with her parents, 182 N. Cary street.
Fred, O'Connell, of Morgan College, spoke to the brotherhood of Sharon, on the streets with, and the Rise Question.
SHORTER:PHILIPS
On Thursday evening, April 18th at 8 o'clock, at 615 George Street, Philadelphia, Philippe was married in the presence of the two families and numerous friends by her father, Mr. John Philippe, was beautifully attired in a dress. After the ceremony by Rev. E. S. Williams, who offered flowers, Philippe followed that the guests went up stairs where the gifts received were displayed. Thursday following the 18th, the bake and groom were at home to their friends and they will make their permanent home. They will make their permanent home. Miss Amaritha Stanley is spending 10 days vacation in the city.
A Junior Choir has been organized at Miss M. P. Church, of which Mr. Alfred Buse is director and Miss M. N. Muskus bassist, and Mr. Robert Turtumman
Fraternity Dance
Pi Omea and Pi Chapters, Omega Pi Phi-Seventyth will give their first annual reception at New Odd Fellows Hall, Haiti. The committee issued this week. The committee includes, J. Steward davis, John Hampion, James H. Carter, Edward N. Wilson, D. Soken King, Dr. Leon H. Mayer, Mr. and Mrs. Merritt B. Sanders, of Honuille, Md., were in the city last week to meet with Robert P. Sanders and Miss Lovie Duff. Mrs. Louise F. Jones, 1256 Lafayette avenue, had as her week-end guest, Mr. Lil, Merritt B. Sanders and daughter, Mrs. Louise Sandery all of Hunua
LUNCHON GIVEN
PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEASE MADE IN YOUR HOME INTERIORS EXTERIORS GROUPS Drop Post Card for Appointment Phone: MAdison 5353-J Baltimore: 1621 DRUID HILL AVENUE Washington: WHITELAW HOTEL, APT. 301 11
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THE WEDDING OF MARY AND JOHN
Miss Elizabeth G. Lee, who became the bride of Mr. William P. Saunders Saturday, April 10. The ceremony took place at the residence of the bride, 1700 Druid Hill avenue, and was performed by the Rev. John W. Cobbert, pastor of Grace Presbyterian Church. Maids were the Miss Desirafa Thomas and Miss Eula Simms, of Washington. Best man was Mr. Harry Saunders. Miss Louise Marsh played the wedding church. Mrs. Saunders is a teacher at School 104.
Photo by Grenqual
Major Charles E. Gladden, of 305 Myrtle avenue, is out again after an illness of four weeks.
No man ever got prostration pushing his business; you get it only when the business pushes you.
Herman's
203-5 N. EUTAW ST.
Charming---New Spring
MILLINERY
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At. $4.95
Regular Values up to $10
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Large and Small Head Sizes
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Regular Values up to $5.50
THE WASHINGTON TAXI
FOR HIRE
WEDDINGS AND ALL EVENING OCCASIONS
FUNERALS AT ALL TIMES
Phone, Madison 10554
Residence:
2221. Madison Avenue
MME. EDNA M. KENNEY
ONE OF THE FOREMOST
HAIR CULTURISTS
AND
DRESSMAKERS
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All Work Guaranteed. Special prices on dressmaking during APRIL and MAY
1825 PENNA. AVENUE
Phone, MAd. 2414-W
PORO SYSTEM
JUDY HAIRDRESSING
The opportunity awaits every girl to make a good living in this pleasant trade. For Hair and Toilet Preparations give satisfaction.
MRS. ROSA MYERS
835 N. Fremont Avenue
MAd. 5756
A Store Where You Are Always Welcome and Where Your Credit Is Always Good
BUY NOW AND PAY LATER Cars No. 4, 15 and 19 Stop At Our Door Store Open Late Saturday and Monday Nights
M. And B. Entertained
Mrs. Herbert Moseley entertained the M. and M. Five Hundred Club
the M. and M. Five Hundred Club guests were: Mesamnes S. S. Booker, Mary Matthews, Robert J. Hackett, Herdon White, J. Logan Jenkins and Misses Regina Wright and Marie Thomas.
Mr. John Bailey of 2497 Decid Hill Avenue, has returned from a business trip to Norfolk and Portsmouth, Va.
Visitors In Raleigh
Dr. and Mrs. J. G. McRae and little son, Jay, J. were visitors in Raleigh, N. C. last week, the guests of the doctors' mother, Mrs. Susie McRae and other relatives.
Mrs. Marion' Armstrong of North Philadelphia was in the city last week visiting her sisters and brother, Mrs. Florence Snowden and Mrs. Susan Snowden, and Avenue, and Mrs. Lilly May Jackson of 1625 Drudl Hill avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Wren W. White and daughter, Mrs. of 1123 Division street, accompanied by Mr. White's mother and Miss Lilly May Britton of 1116 Division street, motored to Washington, Sunday, April 18. After their return to Baltimore they were entertained at the home of Mr. Joseph Broust M. Lacey, 2604 Bronsa street.
Entertain With Dinner
Mrs. Bessily Walker and Mr. Lily Young, of 214 Dolphin street, entertained at dinner Tuesday, April 20, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hall who are returning on a short visit to the school. Mr. and Mrs. Edy, Payne, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Johnson, Mrs. Alice Tilghman and Dr. B. Mason.
COMPLETES COURSE
Mr. Moncure A. Brown has successfully completed his course in Embalming Specialty School at the U. S. College of Embalming in Philadelphia, Pa. In the recent examinations held by the Embalming Specialty School he was successful in passing both the Embulmers and Undertakers exang. He is now associated with his aunt Mrs. George H. Holland, 1631 Drudg Hill avenue.
UNION DENTAL
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THE WASHINGTON TAXI
FOR HIRE
WEDDINGS AND ALL EVENING
OCCASIONS
FUNERALS AT ALL TIMES
Phone, Madison 10554
Residence:
2221. Madison Avenue
"The Blue Triangle" Girls will hold
on Thursday, April 23rd at 4:30 p.m.
on Thursday, April 23rd at 4:30 p.m.
Parents and friends are invited of High School girls gave their advisor, Miss Mary Goode, a happy surprise. Miss Goode was presented with a daisy gift. The evening was spent engaging and delighting the children. The "Blue Briangle Tringle Girls" took their first hike with Miss Hilda Anderson and Miss Yolanda Dubols as chaperone. The girls such as Emma played an important part. The Leaders' Training Course, under the leadership of the City Girl Reserve Secretary, will hold its next meeting on Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. April 22nd at 7:30 p.m. m. Fox is the author of a manual on Parliamentary Committee of Management held a successful meeting on Monday. The committee showed progress in the work. The Publicity Committee held its reg. meeting on Monday. The members of this committee are very enthusiastic in making known the activities of the.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Addison of Glimor street, spent Wednesday in Washington with friends. Mr. Addison returned home Thursday.
Mrs. J. A. Addison left Washington Thursday, in company with Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Hopkins, Jr., and son, motoring thru Savannah, Ga., and other points. Will return in May.
Mrs. A. H. Lee, Maggie Balloy and other members of Sharp St. Choir are appearing at a great advantage in "FAITH". April 29th
Keep Your Sweetheart!
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Shows you how. Tells what to do on all occasions. Price $1.00.
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High-Grade
CROWN
BRIDGE
WORK
ARANTSE
"Picked Up" at Concessions in New York Last Week, and Offered Friday at Our Famous Price
There are more than 1100 bats in this offering—bats that are worth possessively 50 per cent, and more than the sale price. They were bought AFTER Easter, which explains the remarkable character of the values.
BASEMENT SPECIAL
Greatest Millinery Event
of the Season
500
BRAND>NEW, HATS
$1.89
Never on sale before. Over 500 brand new
Hats of the latest materials and colors.
Limit—One Hat to a Customer.
BASEMENT SPECIAL
An Opportunity to Buy Your
SPRING HATS
In This Great Sale!
New dress hats, new draped
turbans, new sport-hats
79¢
Coats for Matrons. Coats for Misses
World's Greatest Values
ADAMS Co.
BALTIMORE THRIFT STORE
211-313-W. LEXINGTON ST.
Hats for Miss and Matron
New tams . . . new pokes . . .
new turbang . . . off-the-face
shades . . . off-the-shades
—now wanted. All are
very latest shapes . . . which
makes the price all the more re-
saleable. The cake will begin at 9
clock Tuesday morning in the
Basement.
At $2.88 tomorrow you may buy
it at the store. You will now
peanut straws . . . now
Swies hair hats . . . all-straw
binations of ribbon and straw,
straw and crepe. We picture
the of the smart styles in
the sale.
Page Nine
Books Now Open for Dates
CHARTER NEW SUNSET PARK AND
PALACE STEAMER SUNSET
TWO AND A HALF HOURS RUN TO PARK
GOOD BATHING
APPLY AT ONCE FOR BEST DATES
"Good Dates" closing fast. Patronage solicited from Churches,
Sunday School, Sacramento, and rural and also patron.
age solicited from Washington, D. C., and small towns on the Eastern
and Western Shores of Maryland. Flentry Groves for meetings.
Page Ten
GIRL, 5, KILLED IN YOUTHFUL GANG BATTLE
Brick Hurled At Boy Fractures Skull Of Innocent Child
DISMISSED AS TRIVIAL BY HOPKINS SURGEON
Later Examination Showed She Sustained A Fractured Skull
A score of urchins crowded into the barren parlor at 249 Colvin street, void of any other furnishings except a dliplaplated chair and a little white coffin and looked upon the remains of Mary Jefferson, age 5, Saturday, who died with a fractured skull, the victim of a brick battle among a typical "Our Gang." Richard Fulton, age 9, 257 Colvin street, was a leader of one of the factions of youngsters who drifted into the street for lack of a better place to play and play another, also a leader of the son, also of town ball gave way to a game of marbles and when marbles failed to hold their interest they finally fell into the ground, cemented by the spring like mosphere, by starting a fight.
Innocent Bystander
Sticks, bones, brickbats and broken bottles in fact anything that could be used as an effective missile was soon raining through on the street and down Colin Street. The light soon dwindled down to a brick duel between the two leaders. Hearing the commotion and prompted by curiosity five year old Mary slipped into the watchful eye of another, Mrs. Emma Jefferson, and with an effort opened the door that led to the street. No sooner had she toddled down the front step, then the singing Mr. Richard let a brick fly at his opponent. The brick went wild and struck the little girl in the head.
Thought Trivial
Upon being rushed to the John Hopkins Hospital, the child attent treatment, was declared dead or danger of death, and dismissed. Fulton was summoned to the Juvenile Court where he was turned over to Probation Officer George Ralph Mrs. Jefferson refused to answer on condition that the boys' father, Fulton, paid the doctor's bill. This was agreed upon. During the days that followed the little girl was again seen playing in the street. The doctor's headache and was returned to the hospital where she died the following day due to hemorrhage.
The boy was released in the care of his parents to await a coroner's investigation to be held at the Central Police Station.
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44
Mother and brother of five year old Mary Jefferson, of Covin Cvb St. and attended accedents in stone battle between neighborhood boys.
MISSING
BUD HENDERSON, 1342 N. Stricker street, missing since March 19. Age 36 ex-brown skirt, dead mute. Wore binn shirt, brown pant, light cap and black shoes. RUBE GRAY, 625 Smith street, missing since April 1. Age 15 years. Light brown skin. Wore black cloth coat and dark hat.
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Phone, MAdison 1621
The Afro-American
Officers Say Infuriated Lover
Hurled Girl From Third
Story Window
MAN AND WOMAN
FIGHT IN DARK
Miss Mary Weems Found
With Fractured Skull When
Officer Forces Door
ckers by their
are this
BY STANDER WOUNDED
BY STRAY BULLET
Thomas Tucker Gets Struck
In Heel When He Gets In
of the
Mrs. Mary Lewis vs. Edgar Lewis.
Mrs. Virgie H. Hunter vs Henry Hunter.
Mrs. Lillian A. Truss vs Edward G. Truss.
Mrs. Lucy Cole vs Frank Cole.
Mrs. Rosie Tolson vs William Tolson.
John Monroe vs Mrs. Elizabeth Monroe.
Mrs. Lizzie Mimmus vs William Mimmus.
Announce Marriage
Invitations have been issued for the marriage of Miss Margaret Joyce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Joyce to Mr. Vernon Robinson, 17, by the home of Miss Joyce's aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schanitz, 841 Harlem ave. After a short stay in Atlantic City, Mr. and Mrs. Robinson will take an
TWOWOMEN NEAR DEATH AFTER MEN'S ATTACK
Two women may die of wounds received in attacks by men said to have been their lovers, which occurred here this week.
Miss Mary Weems, 1913 Henniman street, lies at the肝es Hopkinson house as a result of a severe beating administered, it is said, by Edward Price of the same address.
According to the police of the Nassau District,警署 were heard coming from the house in which the pair lived. Upon investigation made by Patrolman Hippler he forced his way into the house and found a match and found Price beating the woman. Price was placed under arrest and the woman was removed to the hospital where she was said to be suffering from a fractured man. The man is being treated without ball.
Huris Woman From Window
Ruth Hall, 710 Raborg street,
also lies at the point of death in
the Mercy Hospital suffering from
injuries received when she was
killed in the attack that the
window after an altercation with
Edward Harris of the same address,
Tuesday.
Harris was employed in the Cumberland Coal Yard, and disappeared after the assault. He was later arrested in the home of his relatives. He is also being held without bail. Two days prior to the assault both Harrington and Western Wear were arrested and fined in the Western District for disturbing the peace.
JUNIOR HIGH GIRL WEDS VIRGINIA MAN
Cupid Won Over Books When James Hembrick, 23, Lead Girl, 15, To Altar
Cupid won out over Pyerian Springs of knowledge when Miss Droothy Booker, 15, a junior High School girl, was married to James Hembrick at the home of her parrents. Sterling street, Wednesday evening.
The wedding ceremony was performed by the Rev. J. H. Taylor, pastor of Mt. Sinal Baptist church. She was married six months ago when he came from Richmond, Virginia. The bride was charmingly attired in white satin, trimmed with silver lace. She carried a bouquet of orchids, and had a large bouquet of flowers. The intimate families were present. Mr. and Mrs. Hembrick will make their home in Washington, D. C.
TYDINGS OPPOSED TO H. U. APPROPRIATION
Millard A. Tydings, congressman from the second Maryland district, took the seat of the mayor while white support and work for Senate Resolution No. 45, authorizing an appropriation of $60,000 for a monument to colored men and women, and still is opposed to a bill appropriating funds for Howard University. "I believe it unnecessary and unconstitutional. My opposition is to the bill that I claimed Mr. Tydings. "I will be very glad to support the Resolution No. 45 to that it will be shown that I ordered race as many of whom I count as my acquaintances and friends."
Y. M. C. A.
The local "T" held its first organization day at the Royal Theatre Sunday afternoon at which eight organizations came out in a boy. Short addresses were made by representatives of the organizations and music was furnished by the theater. There were about seven hundred people present. Capt. Geo. W. Brown was in charge of this meeting and its success was assisted by Watty assisting in raising the money. The responses were as follows. Doctors Coachman's Jr. $25.50; Doctors Coachman's No. Jr. $25.00; Doctors Coachman's No. Jr. $25.00; New Fife, Ltd. $9.05; M. Y. C. A., $25.00; Chaldeans $10.00; Seven Wise Men, $12.45; Custom House Men, $8.32; $120.19. Metropolitan at the "Y" Sunday. The Metropolitan M. E. Church, pastor, choir and congregation will be at the Y. M. C. A. Sunday School and interest of the Mother's Boys club bench rally at 3:30 P.M. The meeting will be held in the gymnasium and a large crowd is expected. This is the second meeting of the boys club in the interest of the boys department.
Divorces Instituted
South's Biggest and Best Weekly
Woman Dies From Auto Injuries
After suffering for some time from injuries received when she was struck by the automobile of James C. Mulliken, white, 2441 Calvert street, Mrs. Alice Young 1368 Whitcoat street succumbed in the Colloquium. Mrs. Young was struck by the vehicle as she was attempting to cross the street at the intersection of Colloway and Liberty Heights avenue. She was removed to the Colonial Hospital to recover from the suffering from a fracture of both legs. The accident occurred in October 1925.
TWO MEN HELD AFTER FATAL SHOOTING
ed Feud Corner Paca And Cornell Streets
Range Of Mad Gunners
Walter Stewart, 517 Burgundy street, was shot to death and Thomas Tucker, 510 Kings Court was seriously wounded during a shooty affray which took place at Paca and Cornell streets and in which Norman Spriggs and Theodore Hill, both of St. Dennis, Maryland, are said to have emptied their revolvers at the former late Saturday night.
Striggs and Hill who were arrested following the shooting and held for an investigation by the coroner, are said by police to have attacked Stewart as he was standing at the above mentioned intersection and before pedestrians were aware of what was transpiring, they began to fire. One bullet entered Stewart's abdomen, another struck Tucker in the heel. Tucker was not a party to the argument and knew none of the men, it was said.
The men made their escape after the shooting, were arrested on witnesses,urnished by eye witnesses by Western District police where they are being held for investigation. The cause of the shooting has not yet been disclosed. Stewart was held at the University Hospital where he died. Tucker was able to return to his home after treatment.
MORE COMMENT ON AFRO STUDENT ISSUE
Attorney Thinks Class Had Rare And Valuable Bit Of Experience
Letters commending on the recent issue of the AFRO-AMERICAN by Jay Douglass Evening Class in journalism, continue to express reaction of leaders throughout the country.
Attorney W. Y. Clark, white interested in local politics and civic issues, in Baltimore, says: "I read the paper with great interest and it would seem that the editing of it was well done. This is certainly a valuable bit of experience that gave me the journalism hostess have to deal in theories and when they can get a chance actually to carry out those theories it seems to me most helpful to them."
W. Howard, member of the Republican National Committee from Mississippi, says: "I am frank to admit that I could discern no difference between this edition and the regular weekly editions of the AFRO-AMERICAN
This edition is very creditable indeed and speaks volumes for this class in journalism. I congratulate both the class for its fine work and the AFRO-AMERICAN for the class. I congratulate the class "With best wishes for the continued success of the 'AFRO-AMERICAN.'"
Father's Conference At School 112
School No. 112 held their first annual Fathers' conference last Friday and held a special funeral affair. More than one hundred twenty-five fathers were present. Supervisor Wood and Secretary Browne briefed the fathers most helpful talks.
Miss Ida R. Cumming's kindergarten class had the largest number of fathers present and as a result she received a cream treat on Tuesday morning.
On Friday evening the 23rd, the mothers will meet and listen to addresses by prominent women. In recognition lesson the emonition lesson was given to a class of fifth grade girls by Miss Margaret Bryan, teacher of domestic science. The aim of the lesson was to teach the students to be politically." In order that the lesson might carry over a real grocery was set up and the pupils of the class bought and sold. Emphasis was especially laid upon courtesy to Miss Faulkner, Supervisor of Home Economics, Miss Engle, as assistant, together with a group of teachers, observed the lesson.
When we hear of an American going to Europe to die, says William Davis, 1920 Drudl Hill avenue, we cannot help thinking he has deliberately selected the longest possible route to the Pearl Gates.
Dr. White's Maternity Hospital
1029 Madison Ave.
Phone, VErnon 5192
What was declared by Judge Eugene Obonne to be one of the worst revelations of sordid crimes in the criminal court for some time was the case of James Dixon charged Tuesday with being the father of five illegitimate children, Bullet and another by his step-daughter, Bertha Wheaton who live at 1411 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Dixon had been arraigned in August of 1924 and paroled to pay $2 weekly for the support of the step-daughter. The girl at that time was 19 years of age and declared that Dixon was the father of the child.
Tuesday the mother of the girl appeared against him and declared that she was confessing. Judge Obonne threatened to send both to the House of Correction for living in adultery. After reconsidering the case, however, he postponed it for a month and another a marriage will be arranged.
Dixon and his wife will then be brought back into court at which time he will be paroled to support his wife and the provisions of the law. When Dixon stated that he wanted time to think it over, Judge O'Dunne declared that he had no choice. He had to marry to legitimate the child. He had to live up to his obligations after that he would be sent to jail.
"Y" Arrivals
George Goodman, Lincoln University, Pa.; James-Garland, Washington, D. C.; Charlie Sessom, Richmond, Va.; William Winston, D. C.; Alexander Wilson, Buffalo, N. Y.; E. A. Mitchell Hillburn, N. Y.; Lewis Williams, New York; E. A. Mitchell Hillburn, N. Y.; C. White, Burkville, Va.; Spencer Hart, Rocky Mount, N. C.; Robert Maddox, Walton Lee, Baltimore.
A new tailor in town used as a crafted red apple. Curiosity got the better of the villager pro and he asked the tailor why. "Well," said the tailor, "the clothing business would be to day if it hadn't been for an apple."
"Ask the Ma-
WHO LIVES IN A HOUSE
FROM
Homemakers Bu
Assoc
whether he likes the arrangement.
and our business has grown to the
office of
We Moved to
521 McMECH
Corner of D
where we shall be open
7 to 9
We have bought and pla
$100,00
worth of homes; and many more pe
with us to be ready to make the m
they hope to buy. Why
WE PAY 6% C
Whether you want t
Homemakers Bu
HOMEWOOD 6200.
ENJOY HOU
RUDD INSTAN
HEAT
k the Man"
HOBLI LIVES IN A HOUSE WHICH HE IS BUYING
FROM THE
remakers Building and
Association
likes the arrangement. "We are advertised by our
business has grown to the point where we mu
office of our own.
We Moved on April 5th
521 McMECHEN STREET
Corner of Division Street
where we shall be open on Monday evenings from
7 to 9 o'clock.
we bought and placed families in more
$100,000.00
times; and many more persons are putting their
be ready to make the moderate first payment
the hope to buy. Why don't you do the same?
WE PAY 6% ON DEPOSIT
whether you want to buy a home or n
makers Building&Loan
OD 6200
JOHN R. CARY
ENJOY HOT WATER
AND INSTANTANEOUS WATER
HEATERS
"Ask the Man"
WHO LIVES IN A HOUSE WHICH HE IS BUYING
FROM THE
Homemakers Building and Loán
Association
whether he likes the arrangement. "We are advertised by our friends,"
and our business has grown to the point where we must have an
office of our own.
We Moved on April 5th
521 McMECHEN STREET
Corner of Division Street
where we shall be open on Monday evenings from
7 to 9 o'clock.
We have bought and placed families in more than
$100,000.00
worth of homes; and many more persons are putting their spare money
with us to be ready to make the moderate first payment on the home
they hope to buy. Why don't you do the same?
WE PAY 6% ON DEPOSITS
Whether you want to buy a home or not.
Homemakers Building&Loan As'n
HOMEWOOD 6200
JOHN R. CARY, President
ENJOY HOT WATER
RUDD INSTANTANEOUS WATER HEATERS
$5 Down — $5 Per Month
TANK HEATERS
Nothing Down—Fifth
INSTALLED SAME
Wallis Plumb
2218 Pennsylvania Avenue
CO
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Cash D
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Why Pay An excess
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E. S. BRA
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Pennsylvania Avenue
MAd
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LOWEST SPRING PRICE
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50 Cents Per Ton
Why Pay An excessive rate to fina-
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INSTALLED SAME DAY OF ORDER
LOWEST SPRING PRICES Cash Discount
MONROE and LAURENS STS.
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BOOKS NOW OPEN
FAVORITE
USED RAZOR ON WIFE,
GIVEN YEAR IN "GUT"
Elmer Hall Must Serve Term
In House Of Correction
For Assault On Mate
SLASHED MISTRESS
WHO INTERFERED
Mrs. Richard Waters Also
Wounded When She Came
To Aid Of Cook
Hearing screams in her kitchen, Mrs. Richard Waters, white, 3407 Walbrook avenue, mado her way to the room where she found Elmer Hall, 5517 Denmore street, attempting to slash the door of his wife, Mrs. Louise Hall, a servant in the home, Saturday.
Hall wielded a razor and forced both women into the parlor where he cut his wife across the chest and throat. The room and furniture was blood spattered when police forced their way into the house and rescued the women. Mrs. Waters, in her home, Hall, from his wife's threat, was also cut across the hand.
Hall was overpowered and conveyed to the Northwestern Police Station where he was given a hearing Stuart's wife and left him girl went to live at the address where she was employed. He forced his way into the house and assaulted her. He was sentenced to six months in charges of cowardice in charges. Mrs. was not seriously hurt.
Thrift, says Henry Woolcock. 1015 N. 10th St. The wife who looks so much more feminine than the wife that she looks so much more masculine.
AN"
WE WHICH HE IS BUYING
THE
Building and Loán
Association
"We are advertised by our friends," the point where we must have an own
on April 5th
HEN STREET
Division Street
on Monday evenings from
o'clock.
secured families in more than
000.00
persons are putting their spare money
moderate first payment on the home
don't you do the same?
ON DEPOSITS
to buy a home or not.
Building&Loan As'n
JOHN R. CARY, President
NOT WATER
ANEOUS WATER
WATERS.
Fifty Cents Per Week
THE DAY OF ORDER
Bringing Company
MAdison 7968
OAL
BURING PRICES
Discount
Per Ton
Passive rate to finance
at our office and re-
about our
T·PLAN
money. It is not nec-
perty to take advan-
ADY & CO.
Baltimore, Md.
BOOKS
BOOKS NOW OPEN
e Term Also
correction The
e State o
ple and
In
Also
Came
Cay
Sunday
Be sure
dates w
will be
any con
kitch-
white,
Baptizing.
10-Uniform D.
Lodge State
20-John Wester
23-Humane Law
25-True Refore
25-Golden Lea
HEA
BLO
Makes S
A Wor
(GIVES ST
TO THE
COUR
Take this
pon to any
following
and get a
one collars
"Health Yay
The North
Pennne Av
ington Drum
walk St.
dle St.; La
Ave.; Kerr
St.; Solofe
H
Only
can get
We
A
Make
This is
select just
in the woo
We Do R
If you
so you may
CREDIT
Spec
GED
725 W
BROWN'
STEAMER
All Points
Also Fro mTowns on the
This is the only steam
State of Maryland run ex-
ple and by Colored People
In order to secure che
Captain Geo
2103 DRUID HILL AVENUE.
OR
Walter R.
1418 JEFFER
Captain Brown will be
Sunday evenings from no.
Be sure to give your com-
dates when application is s
will be held in reserve. O
any committee who wishes
BROWN'S GROVE STEAMER FAVORITE
Also Fro mTowns on the Bay to Brown's Grove This is the only steamer and the only park in the State of Maryland run exclusively for Colored People and by Colored People.
In order to secure choice dates, apply at once to Captain George W. Brown
Captain Brown will be at home on Saturday and Sunday evenings from now until the first of May. Be sure to give your committee authority to secure dates when application is made, as positively no dates will be held in reserve. Captain Brown will wait on any committee who wishes to engage dates.
The following excursions have been booked:
DAYLIGHT EXCURSIONS
Every Saturday and Sunday in May at 2:30 in the afternoon.
MOONLIGHTS
JUNE
I.-Stewardesses and Ushers of As M. E. Church.
2—G. U. O. Seven Wise Men.
3—Migonectes Social.
4—Nonparley Beneficial.
10—G. U. O. B. and S. Chaleans.
10—G. U. O. B. and S. Chaleans.
17—Seventh Day Adventist Church.
17—Alen's A. M. E. Sunday School.
18—Maryland Workshop for Silent.
18—Leaf Musical and Literary Society.
18—Helfel Sinking Fund, A. F. and A. M.
18—M. E. Church to Chester-
town.
2—Young Men's Willing Workers of
Ames.
2—Young Men's Willing Workers of
Ames.
27-Green Leaf Social.
28-People's Church and Sunday School.
29-First Baptist Sunday School.
JULY
1-St. John's A. M. E. Sunday School.
4-Guest of East No. 1, Samaritans
18- Blaeconde Baptist Sunday School,
18 Church.
19- Blaeconde Baptist Sunday School,
19 Church.
20- WILL, Bastet, Church.
Baptism.
10-Uniform Dept. K. of P. to Grand
Lodge, Station at Gambledge
20-John Wesley M. E. Sunday Sch.-ol.
23-Humane Lodge, G. U. O. O. F. and
True Reformers.
25-Golden Leaf Circle of Fairfield.
HEALTH Y
BLOOD AND NERVE
Makes Strong Men and Hea
A Wonderful Spring To
Whole Family
(GIVES STRENGTH AND VIGOR
TO THOSE WHO ARE WEAK
COUPON
Ask your drugs
YAGA. Accept
Take this coupon to any of the
Health Yagas for only
The Northwestern Pharmacy, cor.
Penna Ave. and Dolphin St.; Living
ington Drug Co. 1830 Penna Ave.;
Eagle Hill Ave.;
Dale-St.; Laurens Pharmacy, Laurens
St.; Laurens Pharmacy, Myrtle Ave.
St.; Solomon's Pharmacy, Loxington
Homes Are
Only when they have be
can get beautiful furniture
We Carry A Complete
A Little Down and
Makes the Home Happy
Good W
This is the place to come when
select just what you want in any
in the world. You always go away.
Makes Strong Men and Healthy Women A Wonderful Spring Tonic for the Whole Family
Homes Are Beautiful
Only when they have beautiful furnishings, and you
can get beautiful furniture here at lowest prices.
This is the place to come when you need furniture. Here you can select just what you want in any quantity, with the very best service in the world. You always go away satisfied.
A Complete Line of New and Rebuilt
GAS RANGES
$1.00
A Week
We Do Repairing Especially
If you don't have an account to
so you may have the benefit of all
CREDIT - CERTIFIED
Special Appointments Made
GENERAL A
OPEN EVENINGS FO
725 W. Baltimre St.
OPEN, EVENINGS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
725 W. Baltimore St. CAlvert 2934
JULY
Friday, April 24th
OPEN
S GROVE
FAVORITE
On The Bay
The Bay to Brown's Grove
er and the only park in the
exclusively for Colcred Peo-
ce.
price dates, apply at once to
George W. Brown
PHONE, ADISON 8288
CALL
L. Langley
ASON STREET
e at home on Saturday and
new until the first of May.
committee authroity to secure
made, as positively no dates
captain Brown will wait on
to engage dates.
MOONLIGHTS
1- Stewardesses and Usheres of Asbury, M. E. Church.
2- Annunciation, M. E. Church.
3- The Beacon Light of Eastern M. E. Church.
4- Executive Council, Eastern District TWILIGHT
5- Saturday Nighters.
7- Unique Beneficial Society, Workings of St. Matthew's M. E. Church.
12- Saturday Nighters.
14- Eastern Section Pleasure Club.
17- Ladies Aux. Seven Wise Men.
17- Ladies Aux. School of St. John's M. E. Church.
12- Ladies Aux. Seven Wise Men.
17- Ladies Aux. School of St. John's M. E. Church.
13- Saturday Nighters.
13- Uniform Rank, K. of St. John, St. Peter Claver.
23- Shriner.
23- Usheres of St. John A. M. E. Church.
23- Enterprise Social, No. I, East Balto.
24- Pamela S. and L. Club, South Baltimore.
JULY
1-Knights of St. John, 26, St. Bar-
nabas Ladies' Auxiliary 212.
5-St. James' Council 29, G. U. O. St.
6-Stewardesses of John Wesley M. E.
Church
7-St. Thomas Heights Imp. Asso.
8-St. Thomas Lodge No. 2, Good Ropes
-Advisory Council Hagerstown Dist
-Jefferson Pleasure Social Aux.
-Jefferson Pleasure Social Aux.
-Emergency Helping Hand Circles
-Ladies' Aux. Nonpari.
-Mt. Olive Beneficial Aux. Social.
-Daughters of Isle Shriners.
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Kelly Miller Writes Regularly To The Afro EDITORIAL PAGE 2d Section
A Champion of Civic Welfare and the Square Deal
Published every Friday in the Afro-American Building, 628 N. Eutaw
Street, Baltimore, Md. by the AFRO-AMBRICAN COMPANY.
Baltimore, Editor and Publisher, 1898 to 1922
Civil Museum. President
Subscription rates: $2.80 per year, $1.25 for six months, 75 cents for
three months, (payable in advance).
1. Colored poniesmen, policewomen and nuns.
2. Colored representatives on city, county and State Board of Education.
3. Enlist salaries for equal work for school teachers without regard to sex.
4. Colored members on board of State institutions where inmates are colored.
5. The organization of labor unions among all groups of colored workers.
A university and agricultural college for colored people supported by the State.
Closer cooperation between farmers and the State and Federal farm courts.
Friday, April 24th
Kelly Miller
Regularly To T
THE AFRO
A Champion of Civic Wes
Published every Friday in the A
Street, Baltimore, MD, by the AFRO
John H. Murphy, Editor
Carl Munney, President
Subscription rates: $2.60 per year
three months, (payable in advance).
Foreign advertisers: Representative
Street, Chicago; 321 Victor Building
New York.
Independent In All The
What The "AFR"
1. Colored policemen, policewomen.
2. Colored representatives on city
equal salaries for equal work
to color or sex.
3. Colored members on board of
colored.
4. The organization of labor u
workers.
5. University and agricultural co
the State.
6. Closer co-operation between fai
agents.
Thoughts Of The Founder
"The fear of death is universal and cannot be overcome, only by great minds who have mastered the issues of life and death; and even here we find a certain awe and fear of the unknown.
"In the highest of creatures the divine eminence has acquired sufficient concentration and steadiness to survive the dissolution of the flesh and assert an individuality unrammed by the limitations which in the present life everywhere persistently surround it. When we get this view of death, we see it is not a calmity, but a boon, not a punishment inflicted upon man but the supreme manifestation of his pervasive as the chieftest among God's creatures."
J. M. Mullery
Cal Says
President Calvin Coolidge, speaking before the Daughters of the American Revolution Monday night was "het up" over the fact that only 50 per cent of those eligible voted in the last presidential electio
It was not the President's best speech by any means. He seems to have a case of nefarious pronouncements, due to his inability to handle his manuscript property, and was interrupted twice, due to the fact that in England and Germany $2 per cent of those qualified have been known to vote in recent years. Between 1850-1890, $1.5 million qualified voted, but since then there has been a steady Extension of the ballot to women instead of capping matters so bad it it become, the President says, that "drastic action" has necessary. As a result, favor organizers have interrupted the motion rather than the proposals to make failure to vote a crime or to disfranchise those who do not cast
In the comparison of U. S. voting statistics with those of England Germany we take it for granted that the President will account to account for illiteracy rate in Germany. S. Illiteracy in Germany is 0.05; in England 1.50 and in the United States 7.00. Proper education of American voters would add 2,000,000 voters to the list. Enforcement of such laws in states, where a conspiracy exists to keep Negroes from the polls would add another 3,000,000. Suffrage in Germany, for example, is direct, free and secret. In Alabama a voter must have lived in the state two years, must own property or be able to read and write, must be employed to read and write, must have taught in the colleges must have taught in the colleges must have paid a poll tax. It's no wonder the President remarks he has noted some states in which only 7 per cent of those qualify. The voter is to us, that Mr. Coolidge hasn't read his "Booker Washington" more closely. Mr. Washington said "You can't hold another down in the face with him."
Our white friends in the Southern states have kept Negroes in ignorance so long and put up so many bars to keep them away from new polls, that the same agendas now linger upon the whites themselves.
2 Lynch Bills
Representative Victor Berger, (Soc.-Wis.) introduced a second anti-lynching bill in the House last month. It differs from the similar measure already on the House Calendar introduced by Representative L. C. Roy (Rep.-Mo.) in that it under the Berger bill, if convicted, could be jailed for five years and fined $5,000. Officials who failed to protect prisoners would be subject to a fine of $10,000, member, communities in which lynching occurred would be compelled to forfeit $10,000. Officials who failed to house now in the Senate, provide no fine as a punishment for members of a mob. In these bills also the fine for county or city officers who were involved in lynching would be $5,000. Southern members of Congress who have opposed and been successful in sidetracking any kind of an anti-lynching legislation would be pleased to accept Berger's efforts. Lynching to them is a subject-a bout which, to use the words of attorney Bruce—the less said, the
Horrors
M. Lowell C. Wormley, of Washington, a graduate of Dunbar High School and a Senior in Dartmouth College, will present the Biology Prize there last week.
Anont the comparison of Dunbar and Douglass High School, Baltimore, made in these columns last week, the above news item will be discussed in the William College advised a graduate of Douglass High who failed in his studies to take a year at Dunbar.
The fine work of W. Mormley at Dunbar is good. Mr. Wormley will Williams College president's words Dunbar has a fine reputation in northern colleges because its graduates are good. Mr. Wormley is an example of this. Alison Davis at Amherst who made Phi Beta Kappa. Not a single graduate of Douglass High School such distinction in the past ten years. Dunbar is to be congratulated upon the achievement of its students. Douglass High is in "A". The Dunbar High must be "A Class Plus."
LABOR
Efforts of the Division of Industrial Relations of the National Urban League to have the Executive Board of the National Urban League to include a representative of our race on its board, should be pushed to a successful conclusion. With the exception of the U. C. Council, the influence of direct representation could be felt with such far reaching effects as in this great-body which is the trend of labor in this country. Of all forms of discrimination and race isolation those which effect wages and working conditions reach the most serious violations of tolers of the group. Altho the policy of the A. F. L. is to include Negroes in its programs on equal basis with that of whites, the two groups are openly excluded. Unions they are openly excluded. Direct representation will be the only way to correct an evil of this organization to the two groups into closer relations. In recommendations presented at a recent session of the Executive Board and sent to President Green, the Director of the Division says:
The number of Negroes in the trades and industries has increased during the past fifteen years, and the policy they constitute an important economic factor in many of the cities of the North.
Many of these men and women are already working for women in the industry, and the standard set for the occupations in which they engaged. They are thus endangering the health and happiness of their own families, and they are endangering the reforms which the labor movement has sacrificed to achieve in order to benefit wage earners everywhere. If they are endangering the rapid strides made by Negroes in industry will break the hold of white men and ultimately lead to confusion and destruction in the ranks of organized labor.
In keeping with its allowed policy the APRO-AMERICAN argues that civic organizations and leaders throughout the country actively join this effort and that every means available be employed to impress the public with the importance this move.
(Preston News Service)
The Ku Klux Klan has come out with an astonishing overture to Negroes. In a proclamation printed as an advertisement in the newspaper of Oklahoma, the Invisible Empire says that it is a friend of the Negro race, which, in return, should be billed with love for the playboy of Imperial Wizard and the proponent of it is a proponent of Pro汉唐ism, carrying the indirect inference that it is a foe to Catholicism. All Negroes, says the klan, should be Protestants and an alliance with the Church of Christianity. Forthwith the klan unclosed its purse strings, and in Cincinnati, O, last week, gave the o Cpplies Missionary Baptist Church a purse of more than $251, while the mem-
As a matter of fact, there are tens of thousands of Negro, Catholics in the United States, whose churches should not more. If the kind of Protestantism which the klan sponsors is the same kind which prays or Sunday morning and prays or Sunday evening, there is no especial reason why Negroes should not want to change their faith, now and then. Nothing in America, ed up upon it, can canonize the American theory of democracy, despite those who would tear it down, is one of Hope for a Group of Christians, religious or otherwise. must nuzzle the hopes and aims of all the people all the time. This midnight overture by the KKK, which any group has tried to practise upon the Negro race since the days of slavery, is so apparent upon its face that no Negro in the United States will be fooled by its artifices.
Forum
Dissatisfied With Yourself—This May Help You
Are you dissatisfied with your position which you are holding? You are accustomed to expecting that your position, your own, is not, appreciated, the way you wish it to be. I often feel that way. You are not always satisfied with your position you hold in life. You see so many other people who applaud your position, your own, and have much more money to spend. You ask yourself why life should be so hard to some and smooth for others? You feel that there are others who get better dwell on others of letting your dwell on others who seem to be more pleasant and happily circumstanced, cease envying them. Compare yourself with those less well off, and with those you would have no change place. Edward Wallace, Brooklyn, Md.
Maybe Some Other Folk Are More Qualified For Federal Patronage in Marylanders, But We Doubt It.
To the Editor:
Just a word or two. You will make me sick in what you say and publish about the south and the North in what you say and appointitions. I know you are right in what you say in regards to appointees to federal offices. Maybe some people from Virginia or Pennsylvania. I know my state, Maryland, should be recognized more in the way of federal office, on the part of the president, and worked and voted for, but just don't be so fast and strong on the president. elt us first be right to ourselves, uphold the rights of the Congress, and bring them as Jefferson and stand by one another alike. The best of the race of American civilians should first in legal rights and talk about the president afterwards, about appointments and segregation. J. C. Butler, Pittsburgh, Pa. 1410 Sherman Ave. Industrial Ennunciation Will Open Avenues Of Social Expression
Accept my congratulations upon your excellence in American Journalism. Your paper, I find, stands in a class by itself in championing the cause of our professionally exploited bears. Bear in mind a fact with which many of your leaders must acquaint themselves.
No race can rise higher than its unpatriotic victims of exploitation. The industrial exploitation. The industrial emancipation of your race will alone open up the avenue of social prestige, civic betrayment and economic freedom. The industrial Freedom. Arthur Johnson, 817 Deed Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Wil Boys And Girls Leave Home—Penna Avenue And Parents To Blame
Dear Editor:
Have you ever wondered why young boys and girls leave home? Walk north on Pennsylvania avenue and you will see three blocks you can always see at least twelve women at different corners and doorways. If you are ready to relieve him of his money, But if a young boy happens by and looks like he would fall for them, they will accept him just as quickly as they will ask him to buy strong drink, and in a short while the boy's parents are unable to do anything with him. They leave home for good. The next thing you know, either he has killed some one or some one has killed him and you are not sure. Then ten times a woman is the motive. Now, girls coming from school sometimes are inited by this kind of woman to quit school and they are told how they can make easy
Well, for the first week or so they might be late getting home from school, then they keep on until you get home, but once baby From there they start to going to the wild parties and in a few days you are putting your address on the missing list for your daughter and maybe you are putting your address on the boxes in and tell you that you have a grand child.
You might wonder why all this is. It is just, because the parents don't make them feel important. But if all parents would make a rule that their children would have to be in the house not later than 10:30 p.m., it would make Baltimore-75-per cent employer. A Reader.
That Firestone "Investment" In Liberty Might Prove Fire and Stone After All.
Louis failed to get a five million dollar loan from the United States government, and we thought that the failure was good luck for Liberia; for a loan by a big government to a little one; for a loan to a small politician, that is, the loan is a purchase.
But after good luck saved Liberia from being stranded by $5,000,000 from Congress and choked of death by $100,000,000 from the Firestone Rubber Company, an American corporation with less heart and soul than American politicians. It seems that little follows like that not resist temptation. Hayt's experiences were no lesson to Liberin. If the Firestone Company invests $10,000,000 in Liberia, this company will be the de facto government that will not even be de jure but, only de nomine. The American gun must always follow the American dollar. That is really what American guns are made. Now we have guns, and we are about to save Liberia again and from this greater ennace, and that the proposition to let the Firestone Company invest $100,000,000 in Liberian liberties is being held up by some rebels in the legislature.
There one hundred million dollars is a hard thing to go—even when we are not going to get any of it but are to have the sole privilege of seeing it 'being
We hate evil predictions, but predictions never change anything. If they miss, they cannot fordress. We predict: If Liberia is Firestone in now, in a generation the two hottest-and-scorchingest and hardest-and roughest words in the world vocabulary will be FIRE and STONE.
Timco Danoas et daun ferentes.
William Pickens.
"PAT" ALL BY HIMSELF
SENATE CONFIRMATION
PAT MARRISON
JAMES COBB
FRED B. MASON
DAY BY DAY
WITH WILLIAM N. JONES
Despite the chaos and disintergration into which Mrs. Laura J. Wheatley, as president, has plunged the Baltimore University, she is now clear that she intends to hold on to the position, if she can, for another year. Even the most ardent partisans of Mrs. Wheatley, must agree that she will be a hardiness state of dissension and bickering which can lonely destroy its real usefulness as the important factor it should be in this city, technically, technically, any given her friends a satisfactory explanation to the letter she wrote to Miss Augusta Savage asking for 20 per cent commission, and a recent exhibit, and upon which the Executive Board based its vote asking for her resignation, but the whole-matter has left a cloud of suspicion which will hamper developments of this kind. Right or wrong in intent, this letter brands Mrs. Wheatley as lacking the sense of propriety the face of an organization protecting the welfare of school children should have.
To say the least, it has battered the public confidence in her identification of the organization that its usefulness is seriously impaired. The sensible thing for Air. Wheeler to do is to resist it. He must resist a serious duty and responsibility upon every minister, every civic leader, every mother and father to plunge into the militarism leadership that must be raised as a guiding light to civic virtue. This light will terminate the first encounter in the selection of association in the various schools will select delegates to the federation which is to elect the next president. This should result in a new organization that will organize organizations should see to it that delegates are elected who will disregard all personal bias and do their duty to Baltimore school children.
The parent-teacher, associations, headed up as they are in a federation, should be the outstanding organization behind it and the organization behind it the force of the parents of 15,000 school children. Public sentiment should see to it that its next meeting is held centrally, and may be a representative attendance.
Out in the neighborhood of Gilmor street and Lavale last week the wife of a Chinese, laundryman, Sing Lee. She will be interested in Mrs. Sing Lee not only because she lived and died, as her neighbors tell you, but because she colored community, and because her children were playmates, of the little group which made a gang in the Gilmor street neighborhood. She would also muse a sympathetic chord in any breast. She was one of those young mothers through the usual initial period of sacrifice by work, almost day and night to help build a laundry business and died just on the threshold of success. Mahoney, who lived in the extremes in sacrifice and low standards of existence practiced by some foreign folk who come from such over-populated areas, is something about their persistence which sollicits admiration. Our young men may well contend with the bottom and LIVE THRU THE DEVELOPING PERIOD.
From the little dilapidated house in which they started business two years ago the Lees moved with their laundry only a few weeks ago to the corner of the Island and Glimor signaled their success. No wonder there were some moistened eyes when the wife who had laboriously contributed to this success died the week following.
In a two-column editorial, the Chicago Bce asks the question "Is the Negro Shipping?" The Bce Editor is disturbed because the Bce bars of discrimination are being built about the Negro with unprecedented speed; the segregated school proceeds aspace; residential schools are being demanded in New York, Boston and Chicago as in New Orleans, Birmingham and Charleston and in the world of work, labor and commerce to be called "industry."
New President
Sing Lee's
Progressing?
All of this and the other things pointed out by the Bee editor are true and deserve serious consideration, BUT THEY DO NOT SHOW THAT THE NEGRO IS NOT PROGRESSING. On the other hand they show the opposite.
Only immobile and latent groups fall to butt up against opposition. This writer knows little hamlets in the heart of the South where poor whites and unprogressive members of the race live in perfect harmony without race friction. NEITHER IS PROGRESSING.
But in the cities and rural communities where Negroes are buying land, educating their children for higher places in life, establishing successful business and invading the fields of the white man, THERE YOU FIND OPPOSITION.
The tiger was a mere cat one, all he had to fight the lion and other wild animals for existence.
It is not the opposition you have that impedes your progress. It is opposition which makes your progress.
Last Reserves
Evidently the wet element in our political arena are bringing up their picked reserves in the offensive launched last week in Washington.
Big guns like Senators Bruce and Reed have been brought into terrific action and have compelled the dry to counter with brondesides from every sector.
Ostensibly the question hinged around light wines and beer and for a while it seems the wets almost succeeded in driving a wedge into the very heart of the prohibition enforcement machinery of the Government itself when Secretary Melton's enforcement chief, Col. Lincoln Andrews, said something consoling to the wets.
The real gun in the fight to whom most people in this country will listen, most thinking and independent voting people anyway, will be Dr. Irving Fisher, well known economist, who told the committee that the net results of prohibition so far had been enormous savings in both morals and money.
Vast smoke screens of alleged increases in drunkenness and crime attributed to "life-ineffectiveness of the 'Volstead Law,' the resurrection of State's Rights and pleas for personal liberty will not be able to hide the real will of you.
Admitting that there is, an怒 of bootlegging and that poison whis. key is being, sold on every corner enough argument against any form of the legalized saloon. There may be carnest and honest people, who believe the present law too drastic and that law and liver may be the best road, to complete prohibition, but there can be no difference, of opinion, on the question that the law GOES AS A BEVERAGE SOLD IN LEGALIZED SALOONS. But these people are being used as cat's paws by the real wets who win the race. They can win with all of its damnable vices and license. They care not one whit for light wines and beer. Give them that and they will do the rest. What they want is a legalized saloon with byproduct and political hive.
In fact it is only in the big centers like Baltimore, New York, Chicago, and similar cities, shrubs and where Governors, Senators and other officers must kotow to machine polities that you find such persistent sentiments in the city. It was the machine's main ally.
Let no one forget that John Barclaye is the same old friend that whiskey, even good whiskey, makes brutes of men when taken as a beverage; that thousands of old friends of the thousands of wives, children and victims it has murdered.
Whatever may be, the fault of government can be IT CAN BEREMEDIED. BUT THERE IS ABOLUTELY NO HOPE IN THE LEGALIZE IT WHETHER IT IS BEER, BEER, WHISKEY, OR EVEN WATER.
HOOSIT?
By ROBERT P. EWARDS
47 in the "Jubileo" of Italy, dated
1504, he is registered in the voyage of discovery in 1492, and also on his second voyage in 1503, and on his third authority states that he was in command of the sea in Hesperia? 46—Urcan Tie
maithe "or" to Hoosit? 46—"Uncle Tom's
Cabin" by Haceret Bieche Stowe.
Heard and Seen In Baltimore
Heard and Seen In Baltimore
By RALPH MATTHEWS
Several of the very sanctimonious gentlemen of the cloth joined the hordes of the shout and listened out other atres, where worldly souls such as you and I go to have a little innocent pleasure.
The bare legs and short, skirts of the chorus girls shocked their ecclesiastical modesties and they rose up and went straight forward to the office of the police commissioner decked in clothcloth and ashes crying "reform."
A fate worse than that which some came awaits our fairly, cried the spokesman, "unless the limbs are covered up."
"In other words," added another, "we want you, Mr. Commissioner, to put stockings on every chorus girl and see that their dresses touch their ankles. The legs of the show girls must be covered up."
Of course, if the pastors were referring to some of the knocked knees and bowed shoulders that were perfectly right in their contention.
"Such revolutions of the feminine form tend to corrupt the minds of the young men doctor bounded out. The young men can't be so seen by the young men can't get to see them because of the old men hugging all the seats.
The commissioner said he could not regulate the girls' dress but he could not regulate the every theatre. Now you and I will be afraid to laugh for fear the guy next to us is a detective and will lock us up for thinking unwholesome thoughts.
If you act as if you are enjoying the show you are liable to be arrested and charged with moral turpitude.
If you applaud after a chorus girl shakes if shimmy you are taking a picture, you will be forcibly if caught smiling in a theater you will be fined for disturbing the peace.
It is a poor rule that won't work both ways. We will not be surprised if in the near future a group of theater managers visit the commissioner with the following requests: they press for more spicy jokes in their sermons.
2. That choirs, sing snappier hymns and wear restments of louder colors.
3. That ushers should charleston up the aisle.
4. That saxophones be added to Epworth League orchestras.
Being more or less an easy going individual content with the world as it sands we have a general insatiability for our instruments. They seem from drinking anything that was fit to drink—ried to stop us from smoking and now they dont even want us to look.
In their effort to make the world a decent place to live in, the psalm singers in this sphere dry old joint there anything left for us to do but die
AMOS HOKUM
AMOS HOKUM
A good neighbor is one who feeds his chickens on his own flowers and vegetables.
What a joy Methuselah must have been to the life insurance agent.
The girl of yesterday who could dress on so little lives now anew in the life of today who can dress with so little.
"I never saw such dreamy eyes," said he. You never stayed so late," said she.
Definition of a football game—Twenty-two nice young men entirely surrounded by maniacs.
Helen of Troy was always well gowned; all her new clothes came from Paris.
Next time it might be well to study the capacity of nations before lending.
Never, 'admonishes Nathan Lemons, 1143' Dolphin street, believe a woman when she says she is "done with men," a man when he vows he is a stranger with women, or "a man when he says "it won't hurt."
Kelly Miller Says
Kelly Miller Says
The Negro must more and more depend upon himself. He may not now be able to set up independent educational housekeeping for himself, but he must move as rapidly as possible in that direction.
In the meantime he can surely rely sensibly on generous philanthropy.
The Higher Education
I believe it was the editors of the Messenger, in one of their most radical moods, who referred to the college education of the Negro as the "education of the filth," and relocated the foliage of the fling, and responded that in my view, the higher education, the greater should be the hire of the educator, leading to the socialists' point of view, the capitalists are seizing the control of the church and the school as a means of coercing public settlement and of keeping them out of the church, as they are wholly incapable of understanding or of appreciating disinterested philanthropy. The editors of the Messenger, amused by the chief benefactor, were to remember the wholly unselfish and ultratic beginning of Negro education, of which they were among the chief benefactors. The editors of the university were the outgrowth of pure unadulterated philanthropy. There was no conceivable ulterior motive. There is no more creditable compliment to the American conscience at its best.
Unselfish Missionaries
The Negro could be of no conceivable advantage to the Northern missionaries who planted these new lands, nor the generators who supplied the necessary wherewithal. My tongue shall never live in telling of their altruistic deeds nor the virtue and defending their fame. But this is not my present purpose in this release. I am concerned chiefly in this output, in point of support in the battle of support which are made necessary by changing circumstances. At first outside philanthropy, not only founded and maintained them, but provided for the personal support of the students who attended them.
Many Scholarships
Practically every college bred Negro of the first generation of college culture was the beneficiary of personal chemosensory aid. Such a degree account of the general poverty of the race.
Adequate scholarships were provided for every capable and ambitious student, and whose wholesale account of benefaction had the inevitable effect of pauperizing the spirit of the Negro collegian. He be-
The student who showed normal group upon the principle of the higher qualities of the student and assisted in making his way through some Northern institution as a vindication of the higher qualities of the student or denied. For a long while, the Negro regarded it as the duty of Northern philanthropy to support his higher education.
Beneficiary Biag
This beneficiary bias has not even now wholly departed from his mind, the degree, the religious and religious foundations, but relies upon the white race to support his higher institutions of learning, dependent education, to self-sufficiency and religion. But at best philanthropy is limited in its scope and short lived in its duration. It can be, in the very nature of education, dependent on during. Every firm and lasting scheme of education for any people must rest upon public support or upon the contribution for their own sons and daughters. Anything else can be but a temporary and impermanent makehift.
At first, philanthropy undertook to cover the whole field from the elements to the upper stretches of knowledge. The philanthropy assumed the front was too extended to be effectively maintained. The public schools took over the education of the students, but relied sufficiently upon philanthropy to carry on the work In the secondary and higher levels. Southern states are now more and more taking on their proper function of providing secondary education for the colored race, leaving to Northwestern states the responsibility of education only. But even here several of the states are projecting Negro education of collegiate and university education is not a philanthropy but the asserted and accepted duty of the state to enlighten all of its citizens in the maintenance and support of the education of whatever form or phase of education he receives. He contributes according to his ability as much as any other to the maintenance and support of the education he receives from equal advantages and facilities according to his needs.
The Negro college student to-day, not only pays his own personal expenses but in most cases also meets a bureaucratic way in defying the general running expenses. So that the race is not only becoming more and more self-supporting in a personal way, but is carrying the national overhead cost of the machinery of his higher education. As philanthropic contributions decrease, his must increase. The national proselytism has constituted one of the great motives of Northern philanthropy. Every great denomination was anxious to extend the booming opportunities to an amplify the missionary potential of its peculiar dispensation by invading this new and inviting territory. The Methodists, Baptists, Congregationalists, Presbyterians, and the rest planted chains of schools and colleges as agencies of gaining black reinforcement for the kingdom of Heaven, and for national persuasion. This is still a stringiving motive.
Denominational Schools
The Negro religious denominations have established their own schools and colleges, wholly maintained, "manned colleges." Wilberforce University, Livingstone College, the Virginia Theological Seminary and College are samples of schools of this type. In a peculiar sense they deserve the attention of an unconcerned philanthropy. For after all the only help that is worth while is the temporary help which leads to permanent self-help.
Tax Payers
As the case stands to-day, the Negro is supporting his own public institution, an Indirect contributor to the public weal.
Many Scholarships
Beneficiary Bias
States Functioning
Self Support
Tax Payers
Page Eleven
is supporting a chain of denominational schools and colleges founded and fostered for the enlargement of the religious estate. It will place the race in increasing amount, is contributing to the support of his own education in the private philanthropic schools, hitherto maintained wholly by charitable contributions. He said that the largest Negro university has been all but wholly supported by the Negro. During the past forty years, Howard University has supported wholly by congressional appropriations and tuition from the student body. The money appropriated by the government by every law of right and equity is fairly to be construed as the government's responsibility toegestation in this national institution.
Feeble Response
It is deeply to be reregretted that in the past there has been such feeble response to the philanthropic appeal of the philanthropic appeal, it is to be hoped that the future response will be more liberal. General philanthropy has probably not contributed ten percent towards its establishment, and support from the foundation till now.
Increase Contributions
The Negro race is not able, according to its present scheme of expenditure of supporting its own higher educational institutions, though he can contribute in great increase, his contributions in this direction. If there were half of the concentrated purpose to support the universities and colleges which the race evinces for the black population, his lapliqueous enterprises the results would be equally, encouraging.
Less Emotion
Educational philanthropy to-day has taken a different turn from that which it exhibited immediately after the war. It has become emotion and more deliberate purpose. The great foundations and multinent individual donors have in mind the welfare of the public at large. The philanthropy of the public object of benefaction as formerly, but he is considered as an essential part of the general public. The colleges will receive bestowals, in proportion as they can show that they can utilize such grants to promote the wellbearing of the people at large, though benighted by their own part. Partly to public. Furthermore, general philanthropy will be greatly encouraged to help these Negro higher institutions in proportion to show a disposition to help themselves.
Self Dependence
The Negro must must more depend upon himself. He may not now be able to set up independent education that he secreting for himself, but he must move as rapidly as possible in that direction. In the meantime, he can surely rely sensibly upon a generous philanthropy with the assistance shee-ko long thy power has helped me, sure it still will head me on."
But all of this is in behalf of the highest education, not the hire education as the Metsenner scoffingly describes it.
Weekly Lessons in English
By W. I. Gordon
Word Often Missed
Don't say "he was shot in the fight." Say "during the fight he was shot."
Word Often Mispronounced
DANCE. Pronounce the "a" as in "ask," not as in "at."
Word Often Missedpelled
Debutante.
Discourseous, fill-bred, impolite, unpolished, ungentlemanly.
Word Study
Use a word three times and it is yours. Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one work each day. JUDICIOUS: proceeding with discretion; prudent; wise. 'He handled the situation very judiciously.'
AFRO HISTORY
April 26, 1902. Head and side walters and cooks, of Atlantic City, organized the American Federation of Labor stood behind the movement. The meeting was held at Fitzgerald's Auditorium.
April 27, 1907. Mrs. Mary F. Thomas, known all over the world, filled the Maryland General Hospital. Mrs. Thomas had a mania which caused her to attend hundreds of successes was more than 70 years of age.
April 27, 1912. Delegates from all over the world attended the first International Negro Conference at Puskegee. Probably the most successful members, and Dr. Dr. F. Washington was asked to go to help the natives in reaching an agreement to work among them. West Indian delegates asked in establishing a school modeled on the lines of Puskegee.
April 28, 1917. The Rev. Sampon Baptist pastor of Bethel A. M. E. Church. The AFRO-AMERICAN stated that the formations of the new appointees indicated a successful period for the church. He had also been a prominent candidate for the Democratic and received a number of votes.
1. What animal's hide is so tough that it cannot be penetrated by lead bullets.
2. What state in the United States contains 10,000 lakes.
3. Whose portrait was on the first U.S. state?
4. How fast does light travel?
5. During what kinds of nights will dew not form?
ANSWERS
1. The rhinoeros.
2. Minnesota.
3. Benjamin Franklin.
4. Benjamin Franklin.
5. Cloudy nights and windy nights.
SOCIAL
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Pendarvis of 341 Robert street, entertained at dinner Sunday evening in honor of her aunt, Mrs. Sadie Coates, who recently lost her husband. A pleasant evening was spent.
Mrs. Grace Caulk of 1029 N. Gilmor street, and Mrs. Wakena Johns of 1427 Riggs avenue, spent the weekend in New York City as the house guests of Mrs. Theresa Williams and Mrs. Clara Galloway of 222 W. 144th street.
Mrs. Hilda Hayes, 2307 Division street, who has confined to her home for two months is convulsing.
The Gentry Club, an organization composed of employees at Union Station, will give a dance at Pythian Castle on Friday, April 23.
Mr. Everett Howard Russell and Miss Rebecca Jones were recently married at the home of Miss Jones in Chicago. Mr. Russell is a Bali-
Guest At Party
Miss Bessie Knight, of Carsey street, gave a party on Wednesday night in honor of Miss Eveyn Neal, on Monday the 26th or Short Hill. N. J. Covers were laid for ten. Those present were: Misses Eveyn Neal, Agnes Hebron, Annie Robison, Eleanor Rhone, E. Williams, Banks and Whittington. A very enjoyable evening was spent.
Mrs. Mary L. Randall, 1830 McCulloh street, has returned home after attending the funeral of her brother, Mr. Moses E. Robinson, of King and Queen County, Va.
Dr. Wm. H. Cargill has been confined to his home, 611 N. Carolina street, for the past two weeks. He is now able to be out and resume his practice.
Mrs. Bessie Watts, 610 C. Green street, is very much improved. She wishes to thank her friends for their sympathy and faithfulness during illness.
J. M. S. Whist Club
Mrs. M. E. Boyer Williams, 1822
East Mount street, was the hostess
to the J. M. S. Whist Club, oMonday,
dressed Martina Jones, Elsie Hamilton,
Maxie Gray, Martha Gwynne
Thompson, Mary Smith, Irene J.
Bennett. The invited guests
tallied the cards furnished
the diversion for the evening
after which a delightful repast was
served. The next meeting will be
with Mrs. Irene J. Bennett, 1741
Carey street, on Monday, April 26th.
. . .
Mrs. Bessle Adger of 2135 Division street was in Asbury Park the early part of the year. Dr. John P. Sampson which took place Wednesday, April 20th
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DON'T LET WORMS
TORTURE CHILDREN
Children who have worms have not a chance of being healthy. Watch for the symptoms. Gritting the teeth, picking at the nostrils, disordered stomach.
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"ACHED & ACHED"
Lady Says Her Back "Hurt Night
and Day"—Least Noise Upset Her. Better After
Taking Cardui.
Winfield, Texas.—My back hurt night and day." says Mrs. C. L. Eason, of R. F. D. I., this place. "I ache and scald until I could hurt by go. I felt weak and did not feel like doing anything. My work was a great burden to me. I just hated to do up the dishes, even. I was no-account and extremely nervous.
"My mother had taken Cardul and she thought it would do me good, so she told me to take it. It's hard find me, it's bully and began on it. I began to improve at once. It was such a help that I continued it until after the baby's birth.
"I took eight bottles and I can certainly say that it helped me. It's hard find me, it built me up and seemed to strengthen me, grew less nervous and began to sleep better.
"I can certainly recommend Cardul to expectant mothers, for to me it was a wonderful help. ... In every way I felt better after taking and I think it is a splendid medicine."
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FOWLKES—BURNELL
Mrs. Isabella Burnell was quietly married April 3, to Mr. Morton Fowkes, at the home of her sister, Mrs. George Handy, 1511 E. Fairmont avenue. The girl was well grown. The maid of honor was Miss Pauline Nickens, who wore blue silk. The flower girls were Miss Lula Goines, Ella Hawkins and Emma Williams, performed the ceremony. A reception followed. The couple received many presents. They will make their future home at 411 Central avenue.
Miss Gladys Heath 1204 Argyle avenue, who has been quite sick is slowly improving.
Mr. Charles Lester and Mr. Cato Jones motored to Atlantic City to spend the week-end with their cousin, Mrs. Annie E. Reveals of 315 N. Indiana avenue.
Mr. Laura D. Thompson, 1216 Drudr Hill Avenue, entertained Kittrell College Club. April 16th.
Club De Mode
The Club DeMode met with Mrs. Gertrude Cooper on Friday, April 16, 1935, when she spent in sewing and embroidery work. A repstist was served.
Progressive Club
The Women's Progressive Club of the 16th Ward met at the home of Mrs. Addie Wood, 1031 Carrollton avenue, Tuesday evening, April 20. Current events were discussed Entertained With Dinner Mr. John Nelson and Mrs. May Bell Nelson were entertained Sunday evening at 1037 N. Stricker street by her brother, Mr. Alexander Wineberry and Mr. Andreas Wineberry and Mrs. Nance Wineberry, Mrs. Nance Palm, Mr. John Palm and Miss Alma Palm of Philadelphia. Mr. Robert M. Deuver was toastmaster. The guests were entertained by radio, after which they were ushered in formally decorated with cut flowers and palms, where an elaborate dinner was served. A very pleasant evening was spent.
Exude Music Club
Mrs. Harry F. Brown, 1835 Madison avenue, entertained the Etude Music Club, Friday evening, April 15. Mrs. Harry F. Brown on the program were: the Misses Annie, Harriett and Mayme Brown, Master Clarence Chambers, Mrs. Dorothy Churks Helen and Emmitte Jenkins, Mrs. Emmitte Jenkins, Jr., and Misses Wilkins, Exusa guests ware: Mrs. Jessie Wilkins, Miss Antoniette Henry, Mrs. Mollie Killon, Mrs. Lottie Willis.
Matinee Ensemble Club
The Matinee Ensemble Club was entertained by Miss Laila Hayes, Mary M. Hayes the first period was spent in playing progressive whist; the second, picture puzzles; third, several articles out of which five prominent cities in the United States were received the guest prize: Mrs. Pauline Armstead, first club prize: Mrs. Goldie Talbert Brown, second and Mrs. Hermione Hayes, third, which the hostess served a recess.
. .
Mrs. Ralph Cook and Mrs. Carrington Davis were in New York Greek attending the Annual Meeting of the Alma Kappa Alpha Sorority.
Bishop and Mrs. John Hurst are visiting in New York.
Honsckeepers' Art
The Housekeepers' Art Club met with Mrs. James Hunter, 1324 Drumlin Avenue, Tuesday afternoon, Oct. 20. On our hour spent in art and needle work. Round table games were played while repast was being served. The tables were of wood, words were given out of which to form as many names as possible of foodstuffs, without the letter "T." Mrs. J. Logan jenkins formed thirty names. Another game of pennies was played.
Mrs. Emma Bryson of 790 W. Franklin streets, who has been conceived some time for four weeks, is convalescing.
Mr. Raymond Anderson of 2456 Drumlin Avenue, visited Norfolk at Portsmouth, Virginia, last week.
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The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
WHIRL
Century Club Dance, Union Station Boys, at Pythian Castle, featuring Johnny Jones' Valley Inn Orchestra and Mary Ray, singster.
Monday, April 26
Matinee Ensemble Club will meet twice a month, 2000 Madison avenue, at which time current topics will be discussed.
The Liberty Progressive Social Number 1 will give a Novelty and Dutch paper 60 George street. Mrs. H. Green, president. Mrs. Apple H. Green, president.
The Phy Dellan Literary and Social Club was organized April 14 at the home of Miss Evelyn Lamm, 543 Bloom street. The following of members were: Michael M. Doyle Lamm, president; Miss Emma Brown, vice president; Miss Daisy Dawes, secretary; Miss Clarice Morsell, treasurer; Miss Gussie Toliver, business manager; the business a dainty repast was served and covers were laid for five.
* *
Emertain Friendships
Mrs. EBilton C. Taxx entertained a few friendships, 416 E. Federal street, Wednesday evening last. The out-of-town guests were: Mrs. Emma Steward of New York; Mrs. Mary Hayward of Philadelphia; Mrs. John T. Redd, Mr. M. Flair, and Mrs. C. LaForge of Conn.
Mr. J. H. Bishop, president and general manager of the company declared that the business had increased wonderfully during 1925 and that the outlook for the present year was highly encouraging. In the manufacture of hair and toilet preparations and started business about nine years ago with a $15.00 capital.
Mrs. Susie Stewart told a reporter for the AFRO-AMERICAN this week that a statement made in the Good Morning, Judge column came some trouble with Miss Annie Valentine during church service, was erroneous. Mrs. Stewart states that she had avoided any kind of contact with the young women involved was said to have grown out of a misunderstanding and that the case was brought to the attention of the court only when warnings by Mrs. Stewart had not caused Miss Valentine to molest her in the public streets.
The City Missionary Society will render a program at the Mt. Zion E. Church, Gilmore street and Rigid avenue, Sunday, April 25, at 3:30 p. m.
More Than 1000 People Killed Weekly By Tuberculosis
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DRUID HILL AVENUE AND NORTH AVENUE
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Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Smith, 1506
W. Muberry街, spent the weekend
with the latter's sister, Mrs.
Lucy Cooper. $8 W. 118th街,
New York City.
Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Whittington
of 1817 Division street and Mr. and
Mrs. J. F. Brown of 2126 McCulloch
street, with Mrs. Sarah Blake
motored to Lincoln University on Sunday
to see their sons.
Entertains With Dinner
Mrs. Madeline Banks of 1340 Carroll street gave a dinner Sunday, April 18, in honor of Mrs. Daisy Thomas and her brother, Mr. William Dorsay of Philadelphia, Pa.; Mr. Sherman Brooks, of Florida; Miss Cora White, Miss Lena Bennard; Mr. J. Thomas Jones of Baltimore.
Birthday Party
Among the many social events of Monday evening April 6, was u a Mister Herman Brewery, 827 Drulg Hill avenue. Those present were Misses nz jacques Jaison Sheppard, Mary Motley and Master Herman Kelly; Medames Mary Crimer, Viola Clark, Billy Nields, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Koch
. . .
Maxola Club Entertained
At very delightful evening was enjoyed at the home of Mrs. Susie Stansbury, 215 Shipyard, April 9, at which time the Maxola Club was entertained. Special guests, Mrs. Cecilia Monroe Mrs. M. Carroll and Miss
Birthday Party
George A. Simmons of 1044 N. Durham street, who has been spending some time in Atlantic City and New York, is in the city visiting Mr. Simmons and Mr. Simmons gave a birthday party. Those present were Misses Mahek Ford, Bortha Courtney, Mildred Dunckey, Martha Banks, Miles Helen Henson, Alma Johnson, Mrs. Fannie Dunlap, Mrs. Agnes Jones, Mrs. Sarah Montes, Mrs. Cliff Hurt, Howard Burton, Ernest Simmons. Out of town guests were Mr. John Matthews and Mr. Daniel W. Lucas of New York City; Mr. Joseph Gillans of Newark, New Jersey.
Kiwanis Whist Club
The members of the Kiwilans Whist Club were the hostesses at a party used by Mr. at the back of the room, Mr. McRaehon N. Carey street. The evening was spent in playing whist. Mr. Saundre and Mr. Jackson the second, after the same guests were served a delightful collation. Dancing followed. At a late hour the guests departed after spending a very pleasant evening.
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Housekeepers Art Club
Mrs. Teresa B. - 1330
Druld Hill avenue, was hostess to
the Housekeepers Art Club, Monday
evening, April 12, at 8:30 o'clock.
The feature of the evening
Musicale. Numbers were rendered
by the following soloists: Mrs. C.
Talbert Brown, Miss Irene Blay
Mr. Herman Jackson, Mr. Nelson
Tunstall and Doctor Thaddeus S.
Peck. Mrs. Constantia Reckling
William Young were accompanists.
Mrs. Stewart entertained the club with two guessing games. The first was a large jar of peanuts. Two prizes were awarded: first prize, a Killon; first prize and Mrs. Helen Ling second. The next game was a large jar of beans. The prize winners were: Miss M. Wilson, first; Mrs. J. Logan Jenkins, president of the club, responded to the acquaintance. The guessing games were in charge of Miss Fannie Barbour. After this a repas was served. Mrs. J. Logan Jenkins, president of the club, responded to the acquaintance. The Theresa B. Stewart is not a member of the Housekeepers' Art Club, but quite an admirer.
Mrs. Annie L. Carson grant the week-end visiting friends and relatives in Washington, D. C., and Alexandria, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard H. Murphy of 164 Cathedral Street, are the week-end guests of Mr. Thomas J. Calloway of Lincoln.
On Honeymoon
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Fields of Richmond, Va., were the guests of his aunt, Mrs. Dianah Fields, 1820 McCulloh street, during the week of March 12th. Mr. and Mrs. Edwards of New York City were also guests there at the same time. Both couples were on their honeymoon, having been married Easter. After having a very enjoyable week, the guests have returned to their respective homes.
Mrs. Robert Evans of McCulloh street, who has been under the care of Dr. S. B. Hughes for four weeks, is able to be out again.
Mrs. Mollie Gibson, 100 Calhoun street, who has been ill for two weeks, is improving slowly.
The Frogs Cotillion at the New Albert April 14. was a great success. Many guests urge a reepition of which will be given sometime in May. Cards will be issued soon.
Social Calendar
Friday, April 23
Monday. April 20
Tuesday. April 27
The Housekeepsers Art Club will
mature in the Jenkins, Jenkins,
432d Druid Hill Avenue.
Wednesday, April 28
Wednesday, Music Club
The Etude Music Club will be
entertained by Mrs. Carrie Dorsey, 1306
Riggs avenue.
Thursday, April 29
Glies House Warming
The Palm Beach Social Number
1, gave a successful house warming
on Monday, April 19, at 30 N
Carey street. Mrs. Emma Johnson
chairman, Mrs. Florence Gunther
president.
The Phy Deliaus Organize
Entertain Friends
J. H. Bishop Co. Pays Dividend
At a recent meeting of the stock-
holders of the J. H. Bishop company
a dividend of 7 per cent on all
stock was declared due and paya-
Missionary Society
*Stop Weak Jung and Broochitis*
*Trouble—Cataract of Nose and*
*microbial mement, with Aeriferm*
*Medicated Vapor: Treatment—the*
*Great Jung and Broochitis**
*microbial mement, with Aeriferm*
*is carier direct to all the*
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In elements into direct contact with the parts—the common sense way of reaching the seat of a verge.
Doctors said I could only live a few days from lung trouble—the Aeriform saved my life. Mrs. H. Hickey, Orlando, Ky.—The Aeriform saved my life, Mrs. M. E. Smith, Oakley, Tenn.—I can now preach the Word of God, the Aeriform saved my life. Geo. McConley, Chapll Hill, N. C.—My throat is well, discharges from nose cured—. early, Mrs. Lilly Dewey, 218 S. Boylston St., Los Angeles, Cal.
Our confidence in this treatment enables us to offer to suffering humanity the following:
SEND NO MONEY—Just write and explain to us your trouble and we will send you The Aeriform Inspirator and Medi-trion without one cent of expense to you—Try it for 10 days and if benefited—Send us $2.00. You are to be the sole judge, and only the one, benefit to you, do we wish any pay. Address, the Aeriform Laboratory, 15 Amazon Assn. Cincinnati, Ohio.
PHI BETA SIGMA HEAD ARCHIE THOMAS MUST
AT MORGAN COLLEGE FILE ACCOUNT BOOKS
phasizing
The forty-five chapters of the Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity throughout the country are this week emphasizing the fundamental importance of stressing better business among our people. Out came out the program of the week, the Gamma chapter at Morgan College brought the National President Arthur W. Mitchell, to Baltimore. He spoke to the students at their chapel because he was familiar with the theme of his speech "The Negro in Business." In discussing the subject, Mr. Mitchell emphasized the need of greater intelligence in business said that the great need for fellow students among Negroes have been due to the lack of intelligent management and supervision. In conjunction with its "Better Business" program the chapter is also "Clean Speech" the main feature of which is an essay contest among the students of Morgan College on the subject, "The Negro in Business" in awarding the points to be considered are thought contour punctuation diction and neatness.
CURING MEAT CAUSES FIRE AT BOYS HOME
CURING MEAT CAUSES FIRE AT BOYS HOME
Curing meat in the smoke house at the Home for Friendless Boys at Catonsville nearly ended in a catastrophe when the building caught fire and only the quick action of Superintendent Hawthorne Smith caused charges against the flames from spreading to the other buildings, Monday.
The damage, according to Mr. Smith, amounted to about $200. The smoke house, containing a supply of meat, was partially destroyed. At no time was the lives of any of the youngsters endangered, he stated. The building was covered by insurance.
£1250
£250
Kitchen
Sink: 1 -
full apron f
$12.50
Enamel
Kitchen &
Mrs. L.
6919-W, sa
installed in
SH
820 N
Of Spirituals
FORMER MEMBER SHARP
STREET MEMORIAL CHOIR
Abbie Mitchell, former Baltimore and celebrated soprano and actress, appeared in recital at Sharp Street Memorial Church on Iss Thursday evening before an appreciative, audience that almost filled the lower floor of the auditorium. Miss Batrice Laws was accompanist. An authoritative rendition of a group of numbers in German and French was given by the composer, Pham Van Lieshout, Loretta Brahms; "Am Sonntag Morgen," Brahms, and the delightful "Erklänkung" of Schubert. The singing of the latter was particularly vivid in coloring and intensity. Pleurette Mies Yenx was also brilliantly sung as only one possessing the profound technical knowledge and voice of Miss Mitchell could give it.
Following the prevailing customs of the modern day artists, a group of Spiritualists was sung. "Sometimes I feel Like a Motherless Child, I feel Like You There." Burdick, and "Way Up In Heaven," Johnson. The breadth of the artist's versatility in musical interpretation was evidenced by her sparse use of instruments, varied songs, "Bleed and Break," Bach, and two numbers by Handel and Purcell were the opening numbers. Miss Beatrice Lewis skillfully accompanied the art-
Lived In New Street
The audience was composed of many persons who had known Miss Mitchell when she lived on the street this week, and a member of the Street Choir. She left the city to join one of Williams and Walker's companies, became the bride of the famous composer Marion Cook. Subsequently Miss Mitchell toured both Europe and the United States, and member of Cole and Johnson's companies.
She is recognized as one of the country's foremost concert artists. Intimates of the show have been published, and an altered physical appearance, she having become stout since she resided here. Miss Mitchell obtained a divorce from Will Mitchell, and is in family life, Mrs. Thompson.
A Baby In Your Home
Mother and baby
So many married couples yearn for children that thousands of copies of a new book by Dr. II. Will Elders are being distributed without cost to childless women. Any family interested in overcoming conditions of nature that hinder the gift of children should write for this free book today. It describes a simple home treatment based on the use of Sterilization, a wonderful scientifically tonic that has had marvelous success all over the country in relieving constitutional weakness.
Every woman who wants to live a normal, happy home life with little ones around her should consider it her first duty to know what Sterilization is and why it should be so wonderful an aid to her. Read this little book which is sent without charge or obligation in a plain envelope. It unfolds facts that most women never have had explained to them. Send NO Money, NO Obligations. Simply name and address to Dr. II. Will Elders, 1000 Ballinger Bldg., St. Joseph, Mo.
One Thin Woman Gained 10 Pounds In 20 Days
All weak men and women
All nilous men and women
All skimmy men and women
All more vigorous and take on solid needled flesh in 30 days just by taking McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets four times a day—
Everybody knows that masticating evil-smelling Cod Liver Oil is a wonderful vitalizer, flesh producer and health creator, and swallow the horrible stuff, when these wonderful tablets—McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets, are just as good and so easy to take.
In box, take ten for 60 cents and if any skinny man or woman doesn't gain at least 5 pounds in 20 days—Your drugist is authorized to give you your money back. Ask any drugist.
Get McCoy's, the original and genuine, and don't forget there is nothing on earth so good to make backward, listless, underweight children grow strong and robust.
McCoy's Laboratories, Inc. 62 W 14th Street, New York City.
AGENTS WANTED
226 ARTICLES TO SELL
BIGGEST RACE LINE
Baltimore, Md.
ARCHIE THOMAS MUST
FILE ACCOUNT BOOKS
An order signed by Judge Frank
in Circuit Court demands Archie
Thomas to present all of his account
books and building loan association
be the clerk of the court so
that they will be available to Mrs.
Thomas and her attorneys in pre-
paring their case.
The order was signed upon a petition
filed in Court. Howard Payne in
preparation of Mrs. Thomas, Tuesday.
Prior to this, Mr. Thomas
WAR
Why wait until the Fax
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Mrs. Louis H. Hatchett, 1620 W. 5919-W, says she is "very much pleased installed in her home;" it has proven to be SHIELD 120 N Howard St.
WHAT MAKES BEAUT
It is every woman's duty to self to gain the things that be tion, happiness.
There is nothing that makes beautiful head of hair. Hair Make yours beautiful.
If you have hair that is sh using Hi-Ja Hair Dressing to your hair will become long, Quinine Hair Dressing is not perfumed hair tonic, that will the scalp, tetter and all scalp.
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Mrs. Louis H. Hatchett, 1620 Westwood Ave., phone Madison 6919-9, says she is "very much pleased with the Hot Water Plant we installed in her home; it has proven to be very satisfactory.
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H. Hatchett, 1620 Westwood Ave., phone Madison he is "very much pleased with the Hot Water Plant we come;" it has proven to be very satisfactory.
HELDS CO.
Howard St-Vernon 6663
WHAT MAKES A WOMAN BEAUTIFUL?
every woman's duty to be beautiful. She owes it to her-gain the things that beauty, holds for her—love, admira-ppiness.
there is nothing that makes a woman more beautiful than a ful head of hair. Hair is a woman's crowning glory. Your beautiful.
you have hair that is short, stubborn, kinky or wiry, start HiJa Hair Dressing today and after a few applications the hair will become long, soft, straight and beautiful. HiJa Hair Dressing is not just grease but an excellent highly used hair tonic, that will remove dandruff, stop itching of help, tetter and all scalp disorders.
other product which will do wonders with your hair is Cocoanut Quinine Shampoo. Used with HiJa Quinine Dressing it will make startling improvements in the ap-pearance of your hair.
WHAT MAKES A WOMAN BEAUTIFUL?
It is every woman's duty to be beautiful. She owes it to herself to gain the things that beauty holds for her—love, admiration, happiness.
There is nothing that makes a woman more beautiful than a beautiful head of hair. Hair is a woman's crowning glory. Make yours beautiful.
If you have hair that is short, stubborn, kinky or wiry, start using Hi-Ja Hair Dressing today and after a few applications your hair will become long, soft, straight and beautiful. Hi-Ja Quinine Hair Dressing is not just grease but an excellent highly perfumed hair tonic, that will remove dandruff, stop itching of the scalp, tetter and all scalp disorders.
Another product which will do wonders with your hair is Hi-Ja Cocoanut Shampoo. Used with Hi-Ja Quinine Hair Dressing it will make startling improvements in the appearance of your hair.
Another wonderful product for both Miss Florence Collins, hair and kink is Hi-Ja Beauty Soap. See one of the most famous special introductory offer we are making of beauties, says Hi-Ja in this ad and order today.
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had filed an answer in regard to his financial affairs in which he was alleged to have withheld many properties and mortgages. The order of Mrs. Thomas declares that she was unable to proceed with her case unless an outward account of his possessions is available to her and her attorneys. According to the order of Judge Frank he is compelled to file with the clerk this information. Mrs. H. J. Douglass acting in "FAITH" will long be regarded as being an outstanding character of drama "Faith" at Sharp St., April 19.
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Baby Care, Recipes Household Hints MAGAZINE SECTION Short Stories, Puzzles $5 Prizes Given
Friday, April 24th Call VErmon 6016
Just Call Me One And Win Lots A Cash
SMACK
Second prize
goes to Mrs. Ella
Stevens, 59 Ivring
Place, Brooklyn,
N. Y. She
says, "Call me
expressor." I will
WITH THE BABY
a tip.
And prize of $1 goes to Mrs. E. V. Head, Va.—"Call me pen; I alck to the point."
Or Call Me's which win honorable near-prize winners, are:
me comb; I have lots of teeth.
Just call me glue; I make you pick up.
give you a tip.
Third prize of $1 goes to Mrs. E. V. Lee, Nohead, Va.—"Call me pen; I always stick to the point."
Other Call Me's which win honorable mention, near-prize winners, are:
Call me wind; I like to blow.
Call me hazel; I am a nut.
Call me pain; nobody likes me.
Call me cement; I'm hard to beat
Call me roof, because I am all
er the house.
Call me pistol; I've been fired.
Call me calendar; I'll keep your
tes.
Cal' me hospital; I'm always sick
On The Rock
A LOVE STORY
"No, she hasn't. So you've heard that. Well. I did take her to the movies. She was lonesome and she wanted to get acquainted. She is a nerd. She's for life. Is that why you've been turning me down lately?" Emmyluw trembled. "Why, I've been busy—and tired—those first hot days. So he caught her hand. 'Look here Emmyluw!' If you thought I cared about that Roberts girl—that's why you've given me the cold shoulder—don't you know I have high browns? No, no man could have resisted, even if he had wanted to. Will Handy did not want to. There was no reason why he should. He dropped her hand and walked away. Emmyluw—dearest!' he breathed. There was an interruption. Down the steep, slippery bank shot a stout knife. He landed he said something that sounded like a naughty word. With a leap He was besieged him, offering assistance, picking up his hat and books, while Emmyluw forget her earthly stum. on the ministerial coat.
"This is ridiculous. ridiculous." sputtered Mr. Dawson, murmuring, "I—I never heard of anything like this, never. Where is the bridal purf?"
"You haven't come, sir." Will answered.
"Haven't come? Well, this is a pretty trick to serve me after making me take this long walk. Where are they?"
"I don't know. We were just wondering ourselves."
"I suppose we were going to stand up with them?" asked Mr. Davis.
"We were asked to be present," said Will.
Then suddenly Emmylou spoke breathlessly.
"Let Beatrice, has changed her mind."
"Then what?" demanded Mr. Davis. "Why, then they have just jumped into affect to be married, gone some distance to be married." I say. "I believe that it's." cried Will. "It would be just like Beatrice." "So I've had all my trouble for not getting married." "Oh, no! me you shall marry Emmy Loyou and me! you shall tomorrow at this time. I'll get a license and—" "Will!" gushed Emmy Loyou. "I can—" "Yes, you can. We can start housekeeping in the rooms over my store. They're empty. Why, don't you see them? Why, don't you see to see that Mr. Davis gets his fee?"
Emilyou was laughing and crying.
"Good idea!" and Mr. Davis, and he
shapped Will's shoulder. "Tomorrow
might you say it."
"You answered Will. "We
will talk it over as we go home.
Bready, dearest?"
If you have some good in view,
If you have a do,
Do it now!
Waiting for some other day:
No excuse vain allow—
But do it now!
Your work may pledged be,
Seek not from it to be free;
Whatever may be the cost,
whatever may be the cost,
To perform your vow—
And do it now!
If you would perform a deed,
For a neighbor who
For a heart more bright,
Or a heavy burden light,
Sothe a weary, aching brow,
Do it now!
If you would be free from sin,
And no life would begin,
Do not longer hesitate,
But, before you can vain,
Of mercy bow—
And do it now!
Is so
sit-
Will
late
she
with
her
with
visit-
gone
ended
her
Little Mary, after a while in market
with her mother for a when she
started love Mary, said to her moth-
mother, buy some bananas. Her
mother said, "Why, darling, they are
too high! Mary said she saw lady shorter than you
and she could reach them." -Miss Pearl
Gray, 307 N. Stricker street.
POULTRY
A mother is a mother,
As long as there are
A father is a father,
Until he gets a new wife.
PEARL GRAY,
307 Stricker Street.
"Call me watchman; I sit up all night with the baby," says Luther Graham, 1005 E. Monument Street. This wins him the first prize of $2.50 for the best Call Me. Mr. Graham sent in three Call Me's together, but his second one was the best. Mrs. Graham sent in one, too, but Luther gets the cash.
Emmyluo Fengli slid down the last bit of steak finger into the glean, thankful that she had not torn her best look of her new neck and walked in happily and was tired everlasting. The coolness of cluster trees, the trickle of sweet water gave her instant refreshment. She laughed at gratefully, the blue sky sky with the white cloud that tangleed in the top of a high snake. A catbird was calling from a nearby bush: "May! May! May! Emmyluo thought that there was one there. She needed to be late in her hurry. The facechief to snatch a mere bite of meat shrimp and she wanted plenty of to dress. Besides her shoes were new. Well, no matter. She was here anyway and the others would be coming soon. Whom had Bentriches inked besides herself? She did know, but she must have asked some-
ga do see them, for the glen, though on a rock and sit down, eyeing her set to see if they looked as they should. She wanted a drink and after the was no way to see her and after the arrival she grew sal and began to sigh. Oh dear! How full of ups and downs life was. A year before her father had been living and she never dreamed of sinking in a river before she had not known Bristore or—or Will Handy, a year before she had thought of trouble and loss and heartache as something that could not touch her heart, a leaf from a shrub he had to shed glaucoma and her brown eyes gurgled gloom and her mouth dropped and more. Surely, never was another wedding guest as she
Police shoved her the road went by toad Alfred! Indeed, she would be town. Somebody was coming, Beatrice got to see them, for the glen, though level, was secluded. Somebody it made her shiver, because there caught a movement through the leaves, then came a movement of slipping and sliding, an exclamation, a clutch at support and a young man landed before her looking startled—once at his close encounter from a fall and once at the sight of
"Hello!" he exclaimed, righting him
himself, his impatience.
**self.** "Why. It's Emmylynly. Emmylynly has been fasted to eat. The color not have been more helpless. The color went from her face and she fluttered in hands and teeth. For this slender body, she could not find his hat and scrape the earth from his shoes. Was Will Hardy, whom she adored. There is the rest of the party." Will Hardy.
Emmyloit shook her head. She dare
pollyt, her voice.
at trust her voice.
Will please at his watch
It is 7:15 and Alfred told me to be sure and be here by 7 if not a few moments before." he remarked. "Didn't you see you anything of him? He was getting her color back and felt better. "Not a glimpse. Nor of the minister either. And he ought. He was getting his fee, and most of them are. Will sat down on another rock and smiled upon Emmyou. "Nice place to get married. But it must have been Beatrice's it. "It was," admitted Emmyou. "You see, there wasn't any other place except the pursuance," she added, earnestly.
"No, there wouldn't be," Will nodded gravely. "We folks who are far from our homes must do as we can. And is a lovely spot. Do you think they will be here?" Emily smiled. "I don't know. Really, Beatrice didn't tell me anything except that she and Alfred were to be married here and they wanted me to come to it. Didn't you know I was to be here?" "No." Well, I didn't know you were to be either. I'm glad you are. Is there a place where you can be, too?" Emily moved over. To be sitting on the same rock with Will Handy: How nice it seemed. "Don't seen you very often later?" Emily was silent. Just as if she were to blame! The trouble lay with him two or three girls had told her that girl from boating was visiting at the place where he boarded. "Has-hus Eleanor Roberts gone here?" she asked shyly, and pretended to be much engrossed in another place.
"Do It Now"
R. A. Adams (P.N.S.)
Why Pretty?
The love of beauty is the motorower of the things we call civilization. From the earliest records, found in silhouettes, we find from Egypt and Babylonia, Judea and Phoenicia, there are treatises on the beautifying of the body. Thousands of years before Christ, records show receipts for the burial chambers of the burial chambers of the pyramids, cosmetics to paint the face, lips and eyes are found, which are identical in substance with the ones we use today. The Bible is full of allusions to the burial chambers of perimeters. Indeed, no modern debatable, preparing to meet the Prince of Wales, or to be presented at the King's Drawing Room, would take us long to make such a statement. And so he presented to the King Akhauserus. These facts are stated as background to support the beginning of this article, and to sustain us for any direction or inclinations through these columns.
Our last talk was bath: this shall be the care of the hair. Bath requires cleansing as frequently as the face, and it is important to wash the days of bobbed hair, we have neglected the most essential treatment, brushing the hair regularly. By the time we are done with dust which is so infurious to the hair, especially if it has been pressed with an abundance of oil; brushing stimulates the hair, and a massage to the scalp; because it creates a more rapid circulation of the blood, the function of which sets into activity the glands that nourish the hair. We also lift the hair and the luster, producing beauty.
Improper shampooing often causes falling and non-growth of the hair. It is important to shampoo twice a month, while dry scalp needs washing only once a month. The scalp should be kept scrupulously clean at all times, and the hair should be well oilled on the skull and is one of the main conditions that produce the growth of the hair. It is also the attention today than it ever did before, because we are more conscious of its real value, as the framework of the face. That it is no longer quantity, but quality, is what it represents culture and proper grooming of woman the foremost assets that secure for her a recognition or consideration among her acquaintances and friends.
BESTHER—Do not wear your hair in the sun, as it can sharp features, and an innocent face. This is the most trying parting that occurs in the hair, a slight degree to the left of the center of your head. If you must try to cover your face, do not shave the hair half so that the dips will toward the center of your forehead, which will cover the lines of which you speak.
All questions answered through these columns or send a self addressed, stamped envelope to Mime, R. Creditfile, 4170 Calmet avenue, Chicago, IL.
One half of the women employed in the state of Oklahoma received less than $2.20 per week in wages, according to a report on working conditions of women in that state made by the Women's Bureau of the United State's Department of Labor. This report gives $2.20 as the median wage of colored women. For whites in the state the median wage is $13. Four-fifths of the women in the state are married and nearly one-half of them have living husbands. Three-tenths of them are under twenty-five years of age and two-fifths are over thirty years of age. Three-tenths of the interesting phases of the report is that practically four-fifths of the women who work, live at their own homes with their families. Of these working women the report indicates that a single, that working was to them almost a necessity which indicates inadequate wages for the men.
First Aid And Home Remedi's
(U. S. Public Health Service)
DROVNING: Do not stop for anything but at once suspend the child's head downward and pull the tongue forward to allow water to run out of mouth. Lay the patient face down, the tongue out, and do not rinse the patient's mouth (See any plastered text on first aid). Put warm blanket about the child and rub arms and legs toward heart. Get a doctor as soon as possible. Carefully examine of earache in infants: Crying, turning the head from side to side, trying to put the hand on aching side. Earache very frequently accompanies a attack of tonsilitis, and then is caused by an extension of the inflammation to the middle ear. This may result in deafness or mast-told abscess. Apply dry earpads to the affected part and placed in a sack or old sock. Drop into the ear, a few drops of 5 per cent phenol in glycerine. Never neglect earache. Have the child examined by doctor, and if necessary by an ear
EYES: (sore or inflamed). Sore eyes are reportable by law. Call your doctor. While waiting for him to come bathe the eyes hourly with a saturated ECZEMA. Cleanse affected parts with olive oil, avoiding water, soap or other irritating substance. In eczema, the diet is important. Use freddy. Apply remedies and change the diet according to physician's directions.
FAINTING: Place child with head lower than the rest of the face. Cut face. Rub extremities toward heart. If fainting is frequent, consult a physician.
FEVER: Fever is not a disease, but a symptom. Undress and put the child to bed. Reduce diet and give plenty of drinking water. Open the bowels. Apply cool cloth to head and neck or give cool or topical range of pain. Give 600 green or over, or continued or frequent temperature, send for the doctor.
Clerk: I've made a great discovery, sir.
Grocer: Well, what is it?
Clerk: I've found out that the heavy end of a match is the light end.
SCRUB BRUSHES Each 14c
BOWL BRUSHES Each 15c
SOLARINE POLISH Can 16c
LUX, Small Package 10c
DRAINO Can 20c
MOPS, complete with handles Each 47c
MOPS, without handles Each 35c
BON AMI Cake, 9c Powder, can, 11c
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BREAKFAST
Grapefruit
Broiled Roe with Bacon
Raised Muffins Endive Coffee
LUNCHEON
Ham Rissoles
Cress Sandwiches Olives
Ginger Ale Peach Float
DINNER
Tomato Soup
Panned Sweetbreads
with Green Pens
Celery Cucumber Potatoes
Apple Charlotte
Since the left-over oven ham fritely baked the minced parsley, a quarter of a teaspoonful of minced parsley, a quarter of a teaspoonful of minced French ham, a few minutes of minced chicken, a table-tablepoonful of clutches. Place a table-tablepoonful of quail, moulded thin, round rounds of quail, moulded thin, turn over, and, after moistening the edges of the rounds of quail, form a lick of a fork. (Chill them on the tops of the lick.) Drain on brown paper before servicing.
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
A lion met a tiger.
He sat in the pool.
Said he tiger, "Tell me why
That's not foolish," said the lion,
With a twinkle in his eyes,
That the beast
Because I advertise."
A rabbit heard them talking
and stalked, streak.
He thought he'd try the lion's plan
and break.
A fox came to investigate.
Had luncheon in the woods,
Became a friend.
Be sure you've got the goods.
A match has a head but no face.
A watch has a face but no head.
A rooster has a comb but no head.
A rabbit has hair but no comb.
A tiger has a mouth but no nose.
A wagon has a tongue but no mouth.
A needlele has ribs but no trunk.
A needlele has trunk but no ribs.
A clock has hands but no arms.
The sea has arms but no hands.
Beverly spots upon the check,
or on the knee,
or on the backyard
Beverly spots
Which have, appeal for me,
I like to have my beauty spots
Down in my silken hose—
To buy powder for my nose-
To buy powder for my nose!
IN WASHINGTON
"Can I see the secretray of agricultu-
tion?" Well, he is very busy, madam.
What was it you wanted to see him al-
ways?
"About a geranium of mine that
can't doing very well."
Spring
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As I entred the smoker all expectant with the pleasure I would have in my final communion with Diva Nicotine, I ran into a rapid-fire debate, which temporarily banned my smoking, and my interest up on a topic of which I had long been seeking information. One of the participants was a plain homespun - gentleman - whose job opened and shaded the way to be a young college chap, resplendent in a tuxedo suit, as he idly flicked a cork-tipped cigarette, man, you Jim," said the homepun man, "you're all wrong. American-made goods from a first class shop are fur better than the best foreign products. They represent... Interrupted the youngster, "when you consider that all the finest arts and sciences that are known to manufacturing methods were a rule, tried out and proved successful," this shirt, for instance," he said, as he pointed to his handsome dress shirt. "That was manufactured in the Irish mills, and I'd like to know when." He continued the collection, with a satisfied smile.
"Boss!" snapped the other gent. "If you'll take the trouble to trace you, maybe you find out that it was made right up in Massachusetts. And, as I started to say, before you interrupted me, he made me a neatly-trimmed contented workmen, receiving a good wage, and trained by the most skilled workers in the world. I tell the wives who are not eating the meat too regularly and who have to work so fast for fear of losing their jobs that they can't do their work
"But," countered Jim, "I'd like you to tell me who works any faster than these dudes in the American factories. They've been working for a long time, continued, as he exhibited a handsome gold watch in a beautifully engraved hunting case. "See this watch? Well, I had the case made to order for me, and I continued to order for it, and they told me to come back the next day and it would be ready. Sure enough, it was ready when I went for the job. "And I had a lot of misgivings about it ever since then, for a friend of mine, who a watchmaker, told me it was impossible to turn away. I thought that the job was either a fake one or that the factory was the fastest one, and consequently the least efficient one of our American workers," Jim concluded, as he turned the watch over in his hands. "Well, what's the trouble with the case?" inquired the homeowner man, who might pretty—hit it well." Nothing's happened to it yet, "answered the question, "but I'm expect-
"Nonsense. I've been all through the factory where that particular case was made—and I can prove to you why. It's one of our jobs," responded the booster of home-made goods, as he straightened up. "I was out there last fall, and when I went through the alley department, when I went through the allots which go into watch cases. I found out that he scientifically checks up every grain of alloy that goes into every case that's made in the factory. I found two or six young colored fellows, who I thought were leafing. They were reading books in
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a room right next to his. 'Say, George.' I asked him, 'What are those guys not?' he replied, with a bread grin. 'They're studying metallurgy during their lunch period. Each one has a particular chemical reaction perfecting the alloy for our watch cases; then they come to me for the final tests, he replied, as he reached to me, for me. I knew that when a coloured man holds a job like that, his products must be good; for as a workman he goes on his job, he does the rest, concluded the gentleman, as he shut his aws with an almost perceptible click. 'So guess maybe you're right,' ventured the college man, as he slipped his watch back into his pocket. 'If you don'w think so. I give you a watch, more than you paid for the case. 'No, I guess I'd better keep it,' responded the younger, as I went off to work. 'As proud as a child with a new toy.
MORE AMOS HOKUM
Church attendance, thinks Mrs. Lulu Redmond, 1215 Park avenue, would be materially incarcerated more back seats were provided.
Whether or not evolution is true is the greatest question in the world, says William A. Grayson, $23 Hoffman street.
Wrong, says Mrs. Virginia Griggs, $23 will the neighbors say?" is the great est question in the world.
Photos by telephone being now a fact, we suggest an up-to-date simple: "She has a face like a wrong number."
Female fell and broke her wrist while doing the Charleston dance. Keep on and that dance will soon be as dangerous as football.
It was washday on the Carroll County farm.
"I wonder what we'll have for din
ner," said the farmer boy.
"I never ate any," said Irene, his eldest son on a visit, "but Aunt Hester is cooking a big pot full of old clothes.
The man who knows it all doesn't know one thing. He doesn't know how many people yearn to kill him.
Small Boy: I want another box of pillows for my mother like I get yesterday — and charge dengteng: Certainly Did your mother like them?
Small Boy: I dunno — they just fit my argum.
Maybe we wouldn't produce such awfully raw statesmen if we didn't have such terrifying raw material to make em from.
What is home, Ernest Roye, McCullah street, asks without a baby or a puppy both?
Many
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Sheiff|t (to convicted Negro on scaffold)|-Bill, have you anything to say before you die? Hii-Yes, boss, dis am sutttily gwine Hii-Yes, boss, dis am sutttily gwine
Hill—Yes, boss, dis an suttily gwine
to touch me a lesson. "
Mme. Grayson
BEAUTY PARLOR
1828 PENNA. AVENUE
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Afro Fashions By Aunt Dilsey
5258
5409
4587
Send 128 in silver or stamps for our UP-TO-DATE SPRING AND SUMMER 1928 BOOK OF FASHIONS, showing color plates, and containing 500 designs of Ladies' Misses' and Children's Patterns. MAKE POINTS FOR THE NEEDLE (illustrating 30 of the various, simple stitches) all valuable hints to the home dressmaker.
5258—JUNIORS' AND MISSES' DRESS—Cut in 4 Sizes, 14, 16, 18 and 30 years. A 18 year size requires 2½ yards of 54 inch snatter with 1¼ yard of 42 inch snatter. The width of the dress at lower edge is 12 yard. Price Ile.
4587—A PRACTICAL UNDER GARMENT.—Cut in 4 Sizes: Small, 34-36; Medium, 35-40; Large, 42-44; Extra Large, 46-48 Inches bust measure. A Medium size requires 2½ yards of 36 inch material. Panel of embroidery requires ½ yard 8 inches wide. Price 10¢.
Price of Patterns, 10 cents in postage stamps only. Orders should be addressed to the APRO address. Use this address and use this address only for APRO patterns.
"Sootchman Jumps From Bus to Pick Up Nickel—Killed." The jury, no doubt, laid his death to natural causes.
Many a man who howls for William Garrett, 120 Dover street, will take a swig out of any old flash he can get hold of.
The heirress with a million dollars doesn't have to be a good conversationalist; her "money
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MENT—Cut in 4 Sizes, 14, 16, 18 and 20
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material and 48 yards of striped material
at the lower edge with plants extended
edge stamps only. Orders should be ad-
dorn Bureau, 1-13 Sterling Place, Brooklyn,
address only for AFRO patterns.
EPIGRAM
Life is the lemon which we suck between the halves of eternity.
Three are two sides to every question: Yours and the idiotic one.
Teacher: Johnny, what great change occurred during the World War?
Johnny: Pa bought ma a new wasuboard.
Only time can tame a wild rumor.
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Page Thirteen
$35.00
Page Fourteen
SCHOOL 100 DEPOSIT
IS $6.03 PER CAPITA
300 Students Have Placed In- to School Bank Sum Of $1809.78
SYSTEM REGARDED AS THRIFT INCENTIVE
Early Habits Of Saving Regarded Foundation For Economy
Students at School 100, where the late Miss Edyth Cooper was principal, had per capita deposits of $6.03, according to records of the school bank given at all times.
This is the largest amount reported deposited by students in any of the schools and represents a total of $1,899.78 deposited by about 10,000 students. The school bank system in the schools is regarded as a valuable mean of practically teaching thrift and although all of the schools have not yet begun the system, it is growing in popularity and vol
Make Sacrifices
Some idea of what the savings bank means in the school as a developer of habits of thrift may be judged by the sacrifices some of the students make to increase in their deposits. Pennies saved from lunch money, nickels intended to buy candy and other sweets so relished by young hopefuls, form the biggest source of savings. This is the valuable factor in that it teaches the child to save by denial. Children are also taught to save at regular intervals. Savings accounts are School No. 106 with a total deposit of $380; School No. 110 where 531 students have a total of $244.64, and School No. 118 where 235 students have deposited several other schools having deposits will be given at a later date.
GALLOWAY TO MANAGE
SES-OUI EXHIBIT
Thomas J. Calloway, secretary of the Maryland interracial commission has been selected to manage the exhibit at the race which will be put on at the Ses-quil Centeniliae be held in Philadelphia. Mr. Calloway will supervise the collection of exhibits representing all sections of the country and bringing Philadelphia Tuesday, April 27 to map out the details. J. C. Asbury and E.T. Atwell director, assistant director of the race competition will be present.
Away Goes Eczema
"One day a drugstreet told me," says Peterson, "that Peterson's Ointment was the best remedy he soals for eczema. But you will never make any itches it." He added, "because it heals so quickly that only a little Ointment is used. Big box 50 cents.
Peterson's Ointment
No More Gray Hair
Larieuse
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Lurvee Black in 15 minutes.
one application $4.00 POSTDAID
Codefroy
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DEPT. 4
3806 OLIVE ST.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
TARIEUSE.
South Carolinian Took Black Draught For Indigestion, and Says He Could Soon Eat
Anything.
Ballentine, S. C.-Mr. W. B. Bouknight, of this place, gave the following account of his use of Theford's Black-Draught. Afterward, I had indication. Working out, I got in the habit of eating fast, for which I soon paid by having a tight, bloated feeling after meals. This made me very uncomfortable. I would feel stupid and doldy, but I was indication. Some one recommended Black-Draught and I took it after meals. I soon could eat anything any time.
"I use it for colds and billowness and it will knock out a cold and carry the bile better and quicker than the liver medicine 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 down with a swallow of water, will help be brought up. Black-draught sensations, eruptions, bad breath and other common symptoms of indigestion have disappeared after Black-Draught has been taken for several days. NC164
Theford: BLACK-DRAUGHT LIVER MEDICINE
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The Sunrise Circle held their regular monthly meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Mason, 708 Ensor street, with Mrs. Ida M. Hilton, Lady Regent, presiding. After the business session, the following officers were elected for the ensuing year: Mrs. Ida M. Hilton, lady regent; Mrs. Mabel Mason, first vice lady regent; Mrs. Oxella Dorsey, and Mrs. Jill Howars, third vice lady regent; Mrs. Julia Howars, secretary; Mrs. Annie Sennett, assistant secretary; Mrs. W. W. Allen, and Mrs. Elyse Kann, entertainment; Mrs. Hattie Daniels, chairman of flower committee; Sir H. E. Bennett, publicity chairman; Sir E.E. BBE. Jones, advisor; Sir E.E. BBE. Kann, secretary; into the dining room where a feast awaited them.
N. C. STATE SCHOOL CHILDREN RETARDED
N. C. STATE SCHOOL CHILDREN RETARDED
RALEIGH, N. C.-State records show only 53 per cent of school children as far advanced in classes as they ought to be. The majority of the colored children in city schools and 75 per cent of the colored children in rural schools are retarded. There were 262,079 white children and 174,107 colored children in the city schools. The assumption is that a child enters school at the age of six years and makes a grade a year. If a child makes such advancement it is classed as a mal. If it fails, it is classed as a good. In one county, Allegheny, 100 per cent of the colored children were normal or better.
CHICAGO NOMINATES NINE IN PRIMARIES
Chicago, (A. N. P.)—A state senator, four representatives, a county commissioner, and three senatorial committees were nominated by colorado Republicans in the primaries. The Senate nomination went to the present incumbent, Adelbert H. Roberts, who was elected two years ago. He was the first person ever serve in the Illinois legislature. Shadrack beat Turner and Charles Griffin was nominated in the first district. In the Third district the political candidate Oscar DePree was sounded. His candidate for the legislature, William King, was badly defeated, the two successful nominees being Geo. Keser, father of the monument bill committee of the Third Ward, and Warren B. Doughlass a Duneen incumbent. P. W. Chavers only polled 2,000 votes. His fight to succeed Congressman Madden had the support of colorado leaders who said Chavers wasn't a big enough man to represent them. Frank L. Smith, white, defeated Senator nomination to the United States Senate.
Despite a vigorous fight in which Walter Cohen of Louisiana, Col. Patton of Mississippi, Wayman Wilkerson of Memphis and other southern leaders came to Chicago to help Mitchell, the primary are regarded as a complete victory for the Wright faction.
N. J. Mill Strikers In Race Clash
LODI N. J. (PNS.)—Racial encounters entered the textile strike Wednesday and police had to be called to the white strikers and the Negro mill workers. Eight men were arrested. Many of the men were wounded and were called to the mill and sustained bruises and cuts about their faces and bodies. It is said the white strikers were from the plant of the Negro mill workers. The Negro striker breakers continued their work in the mill as soon as the disturbances were quiet. Plecketing is seen as a way to stop the strike. Late Wednesday the pickets went near the colored homes and attempted to intercept the night shift on their way to work. Police are arresting the homes of the Negro workers.
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Here Is Holp of Prideless Value for Rebuilding
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Just look at the man who is called "re-engineer." He is a man who admits and saddles after, by women and you will see a man who radiates energy and energy should be like this: CAN I lift a physical condition, possess the magnetic force of manhood, if you lack the ambition, energy you suffer from pain in the back and legs, your life is weakened and your likelihood your system is weakened and it lacks of strength. Don't take this wonderful FYI Formula treatment a simple yet powerful system. You can actually watch the wonderful improvements you get power radiating from your body once your powers radiating from your body once your tiger and youth zone have had happiness a remarkable results achieved by only a short
It would be difficult to clear that Form W-249 is not required. It cannot be done; only the internships make such a statement. You must stay 30 days, you will enter a new life—died with spina bifida, before menace. This is our promise, seeded on our faith and backed by our obligation or money back you our ill-fidelity statement, which serves for you. If you pay your fee for the job, CO, INC., 49 W. 54th St, New York City
CHANGE URGED IN REPORTING FUNDS
A. M. E. Preachers Meeting
Deprecates Emphasis Placed Upon Finances
SOUTH WAY AHEAD
BALTO., CONFERENCE
Bishop A. L. Gaines Tells
How Louisiana Has Solved
Same Problem
Baltimore A. M. E. Preachers,
Meeting appointed the Rev.
J. J. Baker, the Rev. J. G. Martin
and the Rev. M. H. Davis
as a committee to seek modification of the present method of reporting funds to the Baltimore annual conference.
The ministers will confer with Bishop J. Albert Johnson, head of this district. Under the present system some dozen or more tables are set up for the conference meets. As each pastor reports he must bring a certain amount of money to each of these tables, dollar money, Easter funds, missionary department funds, etc. The Rev. G. F. David, a visitor of Lexington, Ky., declared that such a reform was necessary as laymen had begun to think that the chief business of the conference was to teach the children rather than the saving of souls. Bishop A. L. Gaines declared that his district in Louisiana is awa-youth of the north in handling its conference funds. He said the Bishop, "teach each pastor all money to his presiding elder, the day before conference opened. The presiding elder read his report in conference and the conference were dispenses of in 48 minutes."
"This year," the bishop, "the presiding ciders will report the pastors conference conference before conference meets. The reports will be audited and checked up without taking up any part of the time of the conference. This discussion followed the address of the Rev. J. J. Baker on Monday in Collecting and Distributing Finance at the Annual Conference?"
The pastor and congregation of John Wesley M. E. Church worshipped with the First Baptist Church, Caroline and McBlderry streets, Sunday. The Rev A. J. Greene, pastor, reported an addition of five new members, John Jollers, the new pastor of John Wesley M. E. Church, delivered the sermon.
The officers, members and friends of the church tended their pastor, the Rev. Richard Allen Greene and his wife, the Rev. Richard Greene and his wife, a ring and a substantial purse was given him. Mrs. Della Greene also received an Eastern Star pin and a purse from the Helping Hand Association with co-operation of the Stewards and Trustees and a loyal support of the organizations and members of the entire church. All claims were paid and the congregation thanked for their visit and the services rendered in helping to crown the Rev. Levi B. Miller, of St Paul M. E. Church, his chair and congregation for their visit and the services rendered in helping to crown our year's work with great success.
The Rev. J. T. Colbert, of Grace Presbyterian Church, was appointed Commissioner, of the three Evangelical meetings of the General Assembly by the Baltimore Presbytery, to take place from May 27 to Jung 2.
Unique "Tab" Here
What is considered the most unique tabloid, company to tour the T. O. B. A. Circuit is playing a local circuit house this week. The little music is called "boots" and the Star Ring company, composed of eight members, all of whom have records as successful artists on the time.
The personnel is: Annie Mac Reynolds a Baltimore artist; Olse Reynolds a Baltimore artist; Josephine Gooseman a Baltimore artist; Fred Longshaw, former pianist for Bessie Smith, and "Boots" Hope, the world's greatest star. The aggregation is capable of giving an hour and a half show without the assistance of a keyboardist. The Duet office of the T. O. B. A has booked them solidly. After a five week's tour they return to the Star in this city.
OF MAKILAND, INC.
C:catered to the Sevenwaters 10th at Payne Memorial A. M. E. Church, Calhoun and Laurens street. The services were conducted in the room that was, "The Right of Way," which he handled very brilliantly.
The Professional Academy's Aid 19th with a membership in March, 1919 with a membership of 10 men. At present it has a financial membership of the most reliable men in the State.
HAMPTON, VA—Hampton Institute will celebrate its $88 anniversary exercises in Ogden Hall, Friday.
ST. LOUIS, Mo.-C. C. Spaulding,
president of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance company, spoke at the Pine Street Y. M. C. A., last
Childless Marriages Explained
Every married woman should write for her family, physician, Dr. Burroughs has spent forty years treating women in book tells why so many married women have been desired the blowing away of their marriage in early life, in early life, in plain language and how pain and suffering, so common with women may be overcome and relieved by the use of a simple home treatment, Dr. Burroughs wants you to read his book, so if you will send your name and address it will be mailed to you in plain letters. Every woman owes it to herself and family. This book may be the guide to how you know.
to have good health and this local may be the
university you want. E-mail today for your copy! it's free
and places you under no objection.
722 Mansion Hill, BLOXTON
Kansas City, Mo.
The Afro-American—South's Biggest and Best Weekly
Pastor Honored
Appointed Commissioner
WILLIAM F. PAUL, President
S. D. NEWTON, Secretary.
Hampton Celebrates
Spaulding In St. Louis
DOUBLECROSS IN NEW ORLEANS CASE
BY WILLIAM PICKENS
New Orleans, La. (A, N. P.)—Up to Friday the appeal of the New Orleans segregation law had not been filed in the supreme court in Washington. Local people are suspicious of the witchcraft charge of the case. The supreme court permits 60 days within which an appeal may be fled. The time is nearly expired. Locally attorney recall Supreme Court Judge Grosso of the Pythians was similarly double-crossed by his white lawyers in a case to compel officials of the railroad to afford accommodations for colored passen. green. The lawyer simply let the time slip around to the last day for going to Washington and filling the appeal, and then his wife got summarily acquitted. The lawyer could not go at all, and Green's case went overboard.
Rebecca Art Club At Bethel Church
On Thursday, April 1, John O. Hill presented the "Rebecca Art Club" of Baltimore in a musical concert at Beths Church featuring Murie Johns and his piano. Miss Marie Johnson, who is a Douglass High School graduate and the prima class of 1925, started the audience with her art appreciation. Misses Grace and Helen Morris the celebrated songsters of northeast Baltimore, rendered the first two selections. Mr. Arthur Boardkey was also included. Tanner and Ulysses Johnson sang and dramatized a very effective duet. Mr. William Hamilton was violinist and his selections were very appreciative. In addition, the orator of the club interrupted one of Mr. Dunbars famous selections. Loggins, the guest artist, contributed two Russian pianist, and Paul Farx, the pianist, included the music with the art of a genius.
Gold Bars Buried Turn Out Brass
Gold Bars Buried Turn Out Brass
ALBANY, GA—The discovery of three bars of "gold" by the use of divining instruments cost Clevie Riley $100, the armer $100 and a mule and buggy. Riley who sought gold with the assistance of another whose name he said was Green, unearthed three bars each stamped $50,000 and dated 1915. Green told Riley the discovery that it would cost $200 to send the gold to Washington and have it assayed and offered to share it. Riley gave him a money order for $100. Yesterday Green borrowed Riley's mule and buggy. He failed to return it. Riley stall an investment and an investment statement on the money order, but learned that he had been in Macon. Riley first said he had plowed up three bars while at work on the farm. He admitted, however, today that they had been discovered by himself and Green with the "assistance" of the "divining instrument" of the bars had been previously placed in the field by Green.
"Faith" On Thursday
Shieldon B. Hopkins' drama, "Faith will be presented at Sharp
Park," opens April 29. The play is in three acts and requires 19 characters for its
presentation. It has been success, and it has received a number of times, eliciting super-
active press notices. Mr. Hopkins will be supported by six, Henkelpatra
Henleit, O. O. White, Maggie Bailey, Oscar Simmons, Harry Hunt and Annie H
Organ Recital
Howard Carter, organist, gave a recital at Trinity A. M. E. Church on Sunday afternoon at 5 P. M. The soloist was presented by W. Llewellyn Wilson. An appreciative audience was present.
Among the numbers played by Mr. Carter were: "Toccato and Fugato in D Minor," Bach; "Toccato," Bach; "Ave Marie," Borowski's "First Sonata," and Massanet's "Angelus."
This recital is one of a series educational in its purpose, program notes explaining the different numbers used. W. Llewellyn Wilson organist of Trinity, arranged the recitals. The Rev. W. H. Thomas, pastor of the church. G. Sylvester Mason, programmed to appear failed to do so.
Dixie Singers
Nelson Tunstall, Baltimore's best known baritone, left the city this week to join New York. The singer has been soloist at Grace Presbyterian Church for the last six years. He seemed enthusiastic about his new role, recalling former tours with Cole and Johnson's companies of other years and tours with Will Marion Cook's aggregation that carried him to Europe. He will return to the city in May at the singer to fill an engagement at a local theatre.
Class Leader Surprised
Mr. Richard Harrlott, leader of class number 2, Metropolitan M. E. Church, was given a surprise last week. He was short of the number of the church by members of the class. Short talks were given by the pastor, Rev. E. S. Williams; in the church, Rev. E. S. Cornelius Dowell, Bessie Bissimon and Mr. Garrett D. Rawlings. Mr. Nathan A. Bryan, toastmaster. In his closing remarks he presented Mr. Harrlott with a purse of $10 coming from the class.
**REV. THOMAS TO SPEAK**
The Rev. E. N. Thomas will be the speaker before the A. M. E. Preachers' Meeting at beth. Ethel Monday, April 28th on the subject of opportunity and Duty of the Church."
Diggs Conservatory of Music
1124 DRUID HILL AVE., BALTO., MD.
Maurice S. Digs, Dir.
Maurice S. Diggis
A limited number of Scholarships given to School Children in Piano, Voice, Violin, Harmony, Counterpoint, Theory, and Conducting. Certificates given on completion. For particulars see the Director.
Dr. Locke At A. and T.
L. Locke, professor of Philosophy at Howard University, addressed the study body of A. and T. College, last
GROUP INVITED TO WORKER'S MEETING
Young Workers League Proclaims Equal Opportunities For All Races
RUTHENBURG AND DUNN TO SPEAK
Liberal Labor Leaders To Set Forth Aims Of Workers Party
Considerable interest is being manifested in a meeting of workers under the auspices of the Workers' Party of the Young Workers League at Conservatory Hall, 1029 E. Baltimore street, Friday evening, April 30th.
Speakers at this meeting will include Charles Edward Ruthenberg, well known labor leader and general secretary of the workers party; W. F. Dunn, editor of the "Dally Worker"; and Norman H. Tallentine, labor organizer.
The Workers' Party and the Young Workers' Lease represent the largest element of the labor group in this country and is openly advocated for complete equality in working conditions of all races. Both its colored and white leaders have declared openly that they stand for the abolition of segregation and Jim Crowism in this country and all ports of the world, and all of their meetings are open to all races alike.
Liberal Program
Especially will the leaders of the races be interested in the program of the Young Workers' League, which stands out for a Labor Party; better living conditions; for organizing the unorganized; for equal rights of white and colored races; for recognition of the Soviet government; for a workers and farmers government; and it stands out against injunctions; wage cuts; child labor; militarism; discrimination of the foreign born.
The meeting will be held at 8 p. m., and the promoters invite all color leaders and civic workers to us the labor masses, to be present.
CATONSVILLE, MD.
CATOISVILLE, Md.—The funeral of Samuel Lee, 22, who died Saturday at Henryton Hospital, was held Tuesday at 2 p.m. from Grace A. M. E., Church. He was a student of Morgan College and a graduate of the Baltimore High School, also a member of the Stewarship Board of Grace A. M. E., Church. He was a student of the League. He leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Sisters, Laura and Mary M. E., two
The Rev. C. A. Williams left Wednesday for Hagerstown to attend the Annual Conference.
Mrs. Mary Foreman, Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Williams and children, of 44 Winters avenue, made a flying visit to Frederick County Sunday to visit their father and mother.
Rosa. Watts, of Southerton, Conn., is spending two weeks here. She is the sister of Mrs. Mary J. Bennett, Mrs. Lula Matthew and her daughter, Mrs. A. Carter, of Wooldawn, spent two days with Mrs. Maria Smith, 80 Winters avenue, last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Tersell will motor to Hagerstown Sunday and attend the A. M. E. Conference, which is in session there.
The first rehearsal for the great jubilee that will be given at Grace Church Sunday, May 20th will be held Monday night at the church.
Mrs. Rosie Dorsey, who gave her daughter, Mrs. Edna Cutch, 2634 Etting Street, Baltimore, a surprise, raised
Wm. Fountain is still confined to his bed by illness. The cottage is erecting a two-story cottage on land owned by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ridlow. Thomas Boston, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Boswell, son of Mr. and Buffalo, to spend the summer. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Hall and grandson, Ehbert, left Tuesday for Chicago.
where Leona Hall, one of the captains in the Bench Rally at Grace Church, read her report Sunday morning. She then went to Ashbury Williams, Samuel Hill, M. Phoenix and M. Johnson, and Spencer attended Sunday, school here Sunday. The choir of Grace A. E. Church, the men of the Sunday school, the men of the Bible Class, and the boys of the Rev. Holland Fields' class made a trip to school to Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Hall and Master Egbert Hall, who are members of the school and are going to Chicago
The Post Office Glee Club, of Ballimore, sings at Grace Church, a crowded house.
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Bible Class Meets
The S. S. Adult Bible Class of Metropolitan M. E. Sunday School held its regular monthly meeting Friday evening April 1st at the residence of Mrs. Ellen Trotter, 1206 McCulloch street. After business, Mrs. Bessie Harmon, teacher of the class gave a very interesting talk concerning her trip to the Annual Conference which was held in Pittsburgh. March 21st to 30.
G. D. Rawlings, superintendent of young people and adult departments also spoke. At the closing of the meeting the class was invited into the dining room where a very delightful repast was served.
POLICE TAKE 32 IN
SUNDAY RAID
POLICE TAKE 32 IN
SUNDAY RAID
Six "Y" Delegates
TUSKGEEE, Ala.-Southern delegates to the world's Y. M. C. A. conference at Helsingfors, Finland, in August recently named Dr. R. M. Moton, Tuskegee; James Bone, Kentucky International Committee, Louisville; John Hope president, College Hope; E. Jones, New Orleans; R. W. Riley, student at the Florida Memorial School, and C. C. Sooulding, Jr. Durham, N. C.
Baptist College Burns
HAMMOND, La. (ANP)—The Third District Colored Baptist College recently completed was destroyed by fire at an estimated loss of $10,000. Only one engine was detailed by the local fire department.
Soft Hair In Latest Style May Be Yours
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AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE
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By TRAVOLA CHEW
19 Calvert Street
Annapolis, The State Capital
ANXAPOLIS, Md.-Alderman Charles A. Oliver, treasurer of the University of Washington, w' attended the meeting of the Executive Committee, held Sunday, April 11 at HA
The Sunshine Sowing Circle gave a very unique surprise birthday party for Ms. Danielle Parker-Brown, April 12th at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Danielle Neal, Camp Pole, Parker-Brown. The centerpiece of yellow and green was artistically carried out. Mrs. Washington Ainey, South River spent the day with Mrs. and Mrs. Danielle Parker-Brown.
W. H. Brown, Joseph Coates and Richard B. Brown, the home of Mr. Richard Brown, W. J. Washington street, W. H. Bates, the home of the federal street and W. H. Bates, to serve on the United States Grand Jury for the spring term in Baltimore, Md. His trips to
made a flying trip here this time. Ms. Louvainia Coats, of Friendship Mad., who has been confined to the Emergency Hospital for nine weeks is
Pullet.
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MARY
MARY
TOWSON, MD.
"TOWSON, MD. (By Paschal Jones)—The Relief Association of Baltimore County, of which Benjamin Johnson is President, visited Israel Baptist Church of Baltimore last Sunday afternoon. The Rev. James Williams, pastor, preached
The Rev, J. T. Deshields, pastor of St. James A. U. M. P. Church, congratulates the Rev, J. T. Deshields, pastor of St. James A. U. M. P. Church last Sunday afternoon. Sermon was preached by the Rev, Deshields. The Rev Moore, pastor of Mt. Calvary A. M. E. Church, left last Tuesday evening to attend the A. M. E. Conference, where witnesses in Hangzhou for a week.
The choir of M. Calvary A. M. E. Church was entered into the residence of Mrs. Levering Williams, on Lennox avenue, last Friday evening. The easement, Eason of, 306 Lennox avenue, has returned from a short visit to Portsmouth, Va. of Fairmount avenue, who was confined to her home for days suffering from the gripe, is able to be with her and Mrs. Jerome D. Dolman, of Fairmount avenue, entertained on last Monday in Miss Mary Solomon, C. Burgess, of New York, and Mr. and Mrs. Pascal Jones, who is employed in the Senate Chamber, in Washington, D. visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alice, of Pennsylvania avenue, last Sunday. I. Stewart, of Fairmount avenue, and a party of motored to Hanover, Sunday.
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improving after a long illness. Mr. Nash has been sick since last summer. He has with his father, J. W. King of Cedar street. Mr. King graduates this year with his father. J. W. King of Cedar street. Mr. King graduates this year with his father. J. W. King of Cedar street. His is a student of Howard University.
Little Russell and Charles Moore, sons of James spent Eating on East street, are still very sick. Bates private school has been closed with the children. It responded Monday to the children. Mrs. Marian Parnell and son, Artherdelle Parnell, spent Sunday in Washington, D. C.
William Sharp, of Charles street, is planning to improve his property very much. Mr. and Mrs. George Price have improved his property, one room and bath. They live on Cedar street.
Mr. Nannie Phelps, of South street, has and her home remodeled. M. Diggs, of South street, is having and her home remodeled by adding a porch and several rooms.
The Briscoes, of East street, have had their property of 97 East street, remodeled. Sarah E. Duke is still on the sick list.
Ashury M. E. Sunday School is preparing for a contest rally and pageant Sunday afternoon at the Johnson Memorial Owens will represent Mrs. Margaret Johnson, spring: Miss Dora Weems, summer, and Miss Flora Blackston, autumn.
There will be a special sermon delivered at St. James A. U. M. P. Church on April 27th, by the Rev. James Iams, pastor of Israel Baptist Church, Baltimore, in interest of the Spring Rally. He will al. have the support of the Blue Army Social and their clerks, served at Stempel's Hotel on last Monday evening by Mrs. Clara Steep and Mrs. Mitchell of St. James A. U. M. P. Church.
C. Burgess, Mrs. Mary Salomon, Mrs. Elizabeth Jones attended the musical contest which was rendered at Sharp Street Memorial Church by Abbe Mitchell on guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Dolman. Mrs. Martha Houton, of Lennox avenue, is safening from an attack of the grips.
Mrs. Albert Wilson of Pennsylvania
from Rhode Island, is much improved.
Mrs. Marile Wilson was a clam giver
to Pascah Jones on last Tuesday.
Indianapolis Wins Next
General Conference
ATLANTA, GA—Indianapolis will out over Baltimore and will be the meeting place of the next general conference of the Association. The conference will meet in Raleigh 1925. General Conference Commission met here last week to make the decision. Its members are Bishae D. Johnson, Bishae D. Johnson, Bishae Johnson, Bishop W. A. Fountain, Rev. W. Thornton, T. J. Miles, G. T. Sims, J. T. Cowan, G. T. Lawrence, H. Y. Tools, and John Harper.
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MORE SPORTS Mungin Slated To Oppose Bethlehem Steel Sunday
Sox Will Open New Ball Park at Dundalk On Saturday and Will Play Doubleheader In Baltimore Sunday. Julio Rojo Has Signed Contract For Season
Friday, April 24th
Mungin, Connie Day's California peach, is slated to do the honors at Black Sox Park Sunday against the Bettleheim Steel nine from Sparrows Point. He will oppose "Babe" Baldwin, former New York Giants player.
Mungin arrived in town this week and the Steel boys out under the eye of Manager Ben Taylor, announced that he will start work. He will more than likely be the selection to op-
PARKER
JULIO Rojo who has been holding out has sent in a signed Mungin contract and is on the way to Baltimore.
Ben Taylor announced this week that his regular up will be on the road and will be sent to third while "Babe" Both Wilson will cavot out in left field. Connie Day will be on second and that king of all holders, "Crush" Holloway, will be the first. George Britt.
The second game will probably find George Britt, an original product of Barnum, toeing "Crush" Holloway. Britt has left California and winter is in the pink of condition.
"Red" Payne who played second last week against the Ledroit Tigers on Saturday. Payne this week. Payne is from Pittsburgh and did not impress Taylor as being of Eastern league material. With a year or two in semi-pro ball he will no doubt be able to make the
Lullard will be in centerfield the same berth he held last year. Altho not a heavy hitter last year, he showed up well as a fielder and expects to be up among the 400 class during the season.
Connie Day
Connie Day who is rated as the peer of second baseman, will be around the keystone sack. Just to watch Day field the difficult ones and shoot them over to direct them the price of admission to any park.
basketball, will be seen around the keystone sack. Just to watch Day field dome about them and shout them over to first is worth the price of admission to any jerk. The Bettlehem Steel club has one of the best teams playing profession- Loving their line up will Rojo found many names familiar to fans as big league stars. This same club gave the Sox some tight battles last year and one occasion almost got damage in a thrilling extra goring tilt. The Sox have about the best balanced team in years and have three players in Wilson, Johnson and Traylor, who are the heaviest hitters in the East.
The Sox will play Saturday at Dundalk, between Baltimore and Sparrows Point, against the Bethlehem nine. This will be the opening game of the season, and take fans to the park. Atkinson formerly of the Virginia league is listed to play against the Sox in a games ban, which will be called at 3:30 P. M.
P. A. L. COUNTY MEETS
Friday, April 23—Caroline.
Saturday, April 24—Jorchester.
Saturday, April 25—Worcester.
Tuesday, April 26—Worcester.
Wednesday, April 28—Somerset.
Saturday, June 5—Baltimore
County.
Monday, June 14—Baltimore City.
SIXTH ANNUAL TRACK AND FIELD
CHAMPIONSHIPS
Anne Arundel County Schools
Held at Annapolis, Md., April 6.
Bee Chapel 10 Magothy 10
Boe Chapel 10 Magothy 10
Marley Neck 10 Cedar Hall 10
Running Broad Jump Frederick
Brush, Robert Brushers, Stanton, I.T.
12-Found Shot Put-John Thomas,
Banton; James Woods, Stanton, 33 ft.
Ross' Dodge Ball—Won by Marley
Girley Dodge Ball—Won by Lothian.
Mixed Dodge Ball—Won by Chester-
field.
SEVENTH ANNUAL TRACK AND
FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS
Charles County Public Schools
Hillmont Public Schools
Pomasky ... 12 Federal Hill ... 16
Malcolm ... 24 Gymnast ... 15
Chicumens ... 24 N Hope ... 12
Ask for Class
50 Yard Dash—Josh Colbert, Mt. Hope; Charlene Thomas, Tompkinsville; Charles Woodward, Ripley; James Scochran, Malcolm; G. Ford, Malcolm; H. Bowman, 6-2-5.
51 Yard Throw for Distance—John Pomkey, Pomkey; French Myers, Pomkey; William Glymount, 6-5-0.
52 Yard Johny—Winning team, John Pomkey; Franklin, Brawner, French Myers, John Ward); second, Malcolm.
53 Round Class
50 Yard Dash—Joseph Gray, Pomkey; Roosevelt Swann, Chicaux; Pomkey; Standing Broad Jump—Roosevelt Swann, Chicaux; Robert Key, Pomkey; Laurence Brown, Glymount, 6-2-5.
52 Basball Throw for Distance—Joseph Gray, Pomkey; Lorenzo Green, Glymont; Michie Cheen, Pomkey, 1977.
19 Yard Dash—Dash by Sayles Sive, Lump
Russell Miller, Milcoh, Malcolm, 1-4
seconds, Running Broad Jump—D. Ross, Gly-
Bowman, Bowman, Bowman, E. King, K
GlyBowman
Baseball Throw for Accuracy - M. Mil-
lane, M. J. McInnis, J. Maribury, O. Oak Grove, 206.7.
Unlimited Class
100 Yard Hill; Mitchell Smallwood, Biscoe.
Federal Hill; Mitchell Smallwood, Biscoe.
Merrick Martin, Federal Hill,
14 seconds.
Running Bound Jump- William Briscoe,
Merrick Martin, Federal Hill,
monkey; John Smallwood, Chexumuz,
13 feet.
Shoot Put- Stan Salton, Briscoe,
Pomonkey; Merrick Martin, Federal
Hill; Henry Harris, Pomonkey, 25 feet
Boy's' Dodge Ball Contest—Won by
Ross' Dodge Ball Contest—Won by
Girls' Dodge Ball Contest—Won by
Pomanky High School.
Girls' Dodge Ball Contest—Won by
McCannella School.
EIGHTH ANNUAL TRACK AND
FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS
Prince George County Public Schools
Held at Upper Marlboro, Md., April 10.
Fairmount Hts. ... 39 Brentwood ... 18
Marlboro ... 19 Oak Ridge ... 21
Camp Springs ... 19
Glen Arden ... 20
Savannah Class
90 Dard Yash - Raymond Hawkins, Lee
Bee School; Samuel Brown, Crosne
Station; Ray Jones, Fairmount Hts.
Call VErnon 6016
SPORTS
To Oppose
in Steel Sunday
k at Dundalk On Saturday and
in Baltimore Sunday. Julio
Contract For Season
ney, Dupont Heights; Lewis Smith,
Meadows; Arthur Johnson, Camp
Spruce 44.
Dodge Ball Throw for Distance--Earl
Tolson, Marshhorn; Swan Proctor, Cedar-
ville, Quincy; Kee Cedarville, $1 feet.
40 Rard Relay--Winnings school, Gink
Grove, Joseph Hamilton, Curtis Marsh-
shall, Eugene Jones, John Marshall-
second, Glen Arden; third, Capitol
Heights.
69 Yard Dash—Henry Washington, Rosaryville; Benjamin Springs, Ridgegirl; Matthews, Dupont Hus. 8-3-5 seconds. 2 Standing Broad Jump—Thomas Hancock; Benjamin Springs, Mariboro; Den Wilson, Upper Mariboro. 11.9. 3 Throw for Distance—Ostewart, Mariboro; H. Hawkins, Brentwood; G. Redd; Brentwood. 185.9. 4 Throw for Distance—Mariboro; John W. Perrie, Abe Jones, T. Wilson, Osborne Stewart; second, Brentwood, third, Parmont Heights. 130 Yard Dash—Emory Gibson, Murkirk; Wilfred Gross, Amendale; Carroll, Wilfred Gross; Running Bound Jump — Sylvester Mitchell, Newton Hill; Paul Ramsey, Glen Arden; Joseph Eatys, Aquasco. 114 Baseball Throw for Accuracy—Osborn Stewart, Upper Mariboro; F. Allen, Ridg
600 Yard Replay—Won by Glen Arden.
(Paul Ramsey, Laurence Henson, Wen-
nard Lennwood Marshall); second.
Aquacus.
Unlimited Class
100 Yard Replay—Fairmount Fairmount
Heights; P. Spencer, Fairmount Heights;
Abraham Williams, Fairmount Heights.
188 Yard Run—Walter Proctor, Clinton;
Edward Butler, Brandywine; Chas.
Brown, Brandywine; Running Broad Jump—Abraham
Williams, Fairmount; Paul Ford, Fletchertown,
Simmons, Simmons, Croome Stadium.
11.75.
12-Pound Spot Put—Emory Driver,
Tee Bee; John Holliday; Mount; Pink-
town; Bodge Dog Ball Contest; 2211
Bodge Dog Ball Contest—Won by
Fairmount Heights School.
Bodge Dog Ball Contest—Won by
Oak Grove.
Mixed Dodge Ball Contest—Won by Camp Springs.
SIXTH ANNUAL TRACK AND FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS
Calvert County Public Schools
Held at Prince Frederick, April 7th.
Mi. Hope ..... 61 Appeal
Chaney ..... 28 Hall's Creek ..... 8
Prince Frederick ..... 24 Cheesapeake Bldg.
Island Creek ..... 23 Barstow ..... 6
Adeline ..... 25 Huntingtown ..... 3
Plum Point ..... 21 Lusby ..... 1
Dares ..... 18 Olivet ..... 1
Lowry ..... 10
85-Pound Class
50 Yard Dash—7 1-5 seconds. M. Mackall, Stonkly, won: G. Brooks, Dares Wharf, second: M. Coutes, Dares Wharf, third: W. A. Brooks, fourth.
Standing Bound Jump= 6-ft. 4 in. A Johnson, won: C. Clemson, Sunderland second, Chance, Chance, third: A Kang, fourth: Dodge Ball Throw for Distance= 6-ft. M. Coats, Dares, won: W. Sewell M. Coats, Barstow, Barstow, third J.K. James, fourth:
440 Yard Relay—67 seconds, M. Hope,
(C. Clemens, G. Wallace, T. Gray, J.
Hones) won.
100-Point Class
60 Yard Dash—3-5 seconds, M. Brown,
Plum Point, point, E. Parker,
Adelina, second; E. Brooks, Island
Creek, third; E. Baker, Island Creke,
fourth.
Two Standing Broad Jumps—13 ft, t.
in G. Marshall, M. Hope, won,
in G. Marshall, w. Brooks,岛
Creek, third; E. Baker, Island
Creek, fourth.
Two Standing for Distance—128 ft,
a. Young, Adelina school, won;
E. Baker, Pink School, second; W. Johnson,
Creek, third; E. Baker, Island
Creek, fourth.
440 Yard Relay—6-5 seconds, M. Hope,
G. Marshall, J. Jefferson, O. Gray,
G. Moppe, won.
100-Point Class
70 Yard Dash—10-1 seconds, M. Wallace,
M. Hope, won; L. Wills, Chaney,
second; L. Wills, Chaney,岛
Chaney, Chaney, beach, fourth.
Running Bread Jump—11 ft, t. in
F. Rice, Island Creek, won; L. Wills,
Chaney, second; L. Wills, M. Hope, third.
Running Bread Jump—11 ft, t. in
F. Rice, Island Creek, won; L. Wills,
Chaney, second; L. Wills, M. Hope, third.
Unlimited Class
100 Yard Dash—13 5 seconds. C. Herbert, Plum Point, won; F. Hicks, Prince Frederick, second; J. Kent, third.
880 Yard Run—3 1-5 seconds. G. Jenkins, Chaney, won; A. Johnson, Chaney, second; H. George, Hall's Creek, third; N. Bannister, fourth.
Running Bread—10 ft., T. Emerson won; F. Hicks, Chesapke, second; E. Thomas, M. Hope, third; J. Morsell, M. Hope, fourth.
12-Pound Shot Put—21 ft. 6 in., H. Morsell, won; F. Hicks, Central Industrial, second; C. Herbert, Plum Point, third; R. Chambers, Chesapke Beach, fourth.
Boys' Dodge Ball
Adelina d. Mt. Hope, 19-14; Adelina d. Chaney, 12-9; Mt. Hope d. Dares Wharf, 17-12. Winning Team—A. Young, E. Parker, R. Wellett, C. White, C. Young, J. Henson, W. Henson, W. Hurley, I. Boone, E. Willett, A. Johnson.
Girls' Dodge Ball
Prince Frederick d. Mt. Hope, 17-2.
Adelina d. Dares, 10-4; Chaney d. Adellina, 12-5. Prince Frederick d. Chaney, 11-7; Prince Frederick d. Aden, 12-11. Winning Team—A. Sewell, M. Hardman, M. Wallace, M. Hicks, B. Hardman, B. Thomas, J. Ross, V. Wal-
Lowry d. Hall's Creek. 11-10; Appeal d. Willows. 10-25; Barstow d. Cove Point. 10-25; Barstow d. Hall's Creek. 11-10; Lowry d. Plum Point. 11-18; Appeal d. Barstow. 13-11; Harriet d. Barstow. 13-11; Appeal d. Barstow. 14-12; Winning Team m. Long, G. Gross, I. Chase, R. Chase, C. Collin, G. Chase, S. Chase, G. Washington, H
Cohen May Fight Benny
Schwartz In Baltimore
Wilbur Cohen, clever New York boxer, may be matched to fight Benny Schwartz, white, of Baltimore, at the 104th Regiment Armory at an early
Cohen has met Schwartz several times and in their last bout in Philadelphia. Cohen got the best of the argument and had the Baltimore scraper stretched on the bench the sessions before he will make the mixed card in Baltimore the last winter when Lombardo, of Panama, fought the main bout here.
BLUES, 13; PATAPSCO, 10
100.Pound Class
Unlimited Class
85.Pound Class
100-Pound Class
Unlimited Class
Boys' Dodge Ball
FIVE WERE AWARDED
CARNEGIE PRIZES
Annual Report Of Hero Commission Shows 71 Whites On List
MEDALS, CASH AND INCOME ARE REWARDS
William Wesley Cager Given Bronze Medal And $1,000 For Worthy Purpose
PITTSBURGH, PA. — The twenty-second annual report of the Carnegie Hero Commission just published shows that 75 persons, five of them colored, were awarded money and medal prizes during the last year.
The colored heroes include Robert Royal, Lamberton, P., who was given a bronze medal and $600 for
William Wesley Cager, cauler, Baltimore was given a bronze medal and $1,000 for a worthy purpose, but the $1,000 was attempted to save a white girl from drowning, a bronze medal and $50 a month to the widow not to exert pressure on her years or the date of her remarriage.
Felix Hood, Fairmount, W. Va., who died trying to save two women from drowning, to the widow and $50 a month, $5 additional for each of four children for 11 years or until the date of her marriage.
Edward Broyles, Koscice, Miss, died trying to save a porter from drowning, bronze medal to the widow, and $50 additional for each of two children for 14 years or until the widow remarries.
The white men were awarded medals and money prizes for saving colored people.
AFRO ALL STARS TO BATTLE FRIDAY NITE
The second All Star team picked the of the AFRO disputes the claim of the first All Star team to the mythical members of the second team issued a challenge to the first team to settle the issue on the court, and the second team will meet on the court of the Y. M. C. A. gym Friday night to decide which has the prior right to the title. The first team will include Lewis, O. K. S. DeCurtis, Joseph, O. K., Corin, "Y" Defenders. The second quint will present the following line up: E. Campbell, DeCurtis; Hunt, "Turpureo"; "Spee" Parker; O. K. Jones, Grace. These two teams represent the cream of the seven clubs making a good push to be played. A good game ought to be played.
MORGAN CHAMPIONS TO BE BANQUETED
Morgan College basketball team will be the guess of George W. F. McCulley, center, Culley at afternoon at banquet in honor of the college champions. The team under Captain Mack Payne, went thru the season with one of the best decisions to the Athenians, the first game going into two extra periods. The game lost Easter Monday was by two points. They also by Lincoln in their first meeting. The college squad came back to overwhelmingly defent Lincoln in their second, and then fourth, season. Alcoa, two from Howard and Elsfield. The last team defeated Wilberforce. On this game the Morgan girls gave them a made known right to the collegiate championship. The first team will not lose a single game. They made known intention to represent Morgan next year on the court.
Unknown Win And
The Harmony Five
TEAM W. L. P.C.
Harmony Five 4 1 500
Ukrainna 14 1 500
Tornado 3 1 750
Celtics 2 2 500
Pirates 1 2 500
Titans 9 5 500
The Unknowns handed the Celtics a
33 to 27 drumming Friday night in
the Y. M. C. A. league and deadlocked
the Harmony Five for first places in
the league standing. In the first game
the Celtics chased the Pirates by
a 27 to score.
The tie between the leaders will be
played off this Friday night on the
floor of the "Y. M. C." gym. The preliminary
playing together Celtics and Trojans. The Celtics won the first
half and will meet the winners of the second half for the city championship
of the National Championship.
Robinson was the star in the Unknown's victory with eight field goals and one free toss from the foul line.
West and Allor stood out for the Celt-
Powell and Contee were the outstanding players for the Trojans, while Thompson and Johnson reaped 12 and 11 points respectively for the Pirates.
PIRATES
G. F. P. TROJANS
Thompson, rf 5 2 3 Jefferson, rf 3 1 0
Hanson, lf 2 0 1 Contee, lf 4 0 1
Johnson, c 5 1 2 Powell, c 5 0 1
Dixon, lg 2 0 2 Binds, lg 2 0 2
O. Sampson, rf 1 0 4 Jackson, rf 2 4 2
Total
Total 15 3 12 16 5 6
CBLICS
G. F. P. UNKNOWN FIVE
Diggs, rf 2 1 2 Johnson, rf 3 1 1
West, lf 3 0 2 Morris, lf 3 0 0
Allor, c 3 2 0 Robinson, c 8 2 2
Holly, lg 2 2 0 Newton, lg 1 0 2
Ryan, cg 2 0 13 Mackey, gr 0 0 2
Total
Total 12 3 71 Totals 15 3 6
SILVER
MOON, 30; RANDALL, 15
The Silver Moon A. C. downed the Randall Athletic Club at Druid Hill Park in a heavy hitting slugging bee by a score of 30 to 15. Sunday the Silver Moon team will cross bats with a strong white club at Druid Hill Park.
SILVER
1
Ware,2b
1
Bass,1b
0
Johnson,1c
0
Smith,ss
1
fallstork,3b
0
Dotson,rt
1
Norris,cf
0
Jones,c
1
Hebron,c
1
Bibbens,p
0
Connor,p
4
Totals
10 53 30 27 27 10
SCORE BY
A. C. — 10 3 6 3 2 3 0 3 5 3
Randall A. C. — 7 0 2 2 3 0 0 0 1—15
1
The Colored Shoe Store
AT SIGN OF VEL-VE-CO
1842 Pennsylvania Avenue, at Robert St.
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Payments Arranged to Meet Your Convenience
A. Fineman
"Makes-Them-Better-Tailor"
318-320 W. Baltimore St. 227 E. Baltimore St.
Walter Eubanks Under
Wing Of Great Trainer
NEW YORK—Walter Eubanks, formerly Young Jeff Clark, is boxing under the direction of Jim Fighter and trainer. Eubanks is training at Stillman's gym. Eubanks is a Baltimore boy and for some time was under Dixie Kid at Joe Jeanneette's gym in Jersey City Eubanks will be in position to get in fast company at some of the York fight clubs. He stated for several important bouts this spring.
A. & T. AGGIES SUBDUE HAMPTON SEASIDERS
A. & T. AGGIES SUBDUE HAMPTON SEASIDERS
BY NORMAN STEVENSON
HAMPTON, Va.—The A. and T.
Aggles, of Greenboro, N. C., sublued
the Hampton Sealers by the score of
10.
The game was dull at times but
sensational batting milies and spectacul
catches by the outfielders enabled
the fans to enjoy their money's
gain. The game was a one-handed catch by
Byrd. Hampton's flashy gardener.
HAMPTON
A. & T.
Jacobs, 5 1 1 10 2
McGon, 5 1 1 10 2
McGon, 5 1 1 10 2
Wilms, 5 0 1 2 1
Tal'Mil, 5 0 1 2 1
Quinne, 4 1 2 2 0
Walker, 5 2 0 0 5
H.Werk, 5 2 0 0 5
$Yosb, gh, 1 0 1 0
25 $11 27 11
46 $14 13 27
Substituted for J. Walker in eighth.
Hatted for J. Walker in eighth.
Two-base labs—Ibucas, Quinn, Williams
Quinn, Lane, Harvey, Lance, Quinn,
Quinn, Lane, Searles labs—Ibucas, Searles
bases—Harris, Vodaugh, 2; Follard, Lane
Follard, Lane, Searles labs—Ibucas, Searles
bases in seven inlings; by Stokes, 1 in two lings
bases on balls off Harvey; 1; off Colson, 1;
off Colson, 1; off Hargrove (Pollard);
by Colson (Harris, 2).
Empire- Jackson, Newport News "Y" )
Sierra- Siouxland and Townsend.
SCREEN BY INNINGS:
A. and T.
Hampton
8 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1-14
8 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1-14
TIGERS ARE READY
The Piedmont Tigers have reorganized and are playing games with fast teams with grounds. Perates wrote D. Smith, 1317 Bayard street. COAL
ANNOUNCEMENT
The following reduced prices which become effective April 15th, are the lowest of the season:
Ice delivered to all parks and outings, 50 cents per hundred pounds. Prices out of town, 60 cents per hundred pounds.
AMERICAN KINDLING CO.
800, 802, 804, 806
Whatcoat Street
PHONE, MADISON 9833
Owned and Operated by Colored
DELEGATION STARTS NEW HOSPITAL MOVE
Group Asks Mayor Jackson To Recommend Loan For Municipal Plant
JOINT COMMISSION TO FRAME MEASURE
Will Ask City Council To Petition Coming State Legislature
lature
A new movement for a municipal hospital started Wednesday when a delegation of citizens went to the City Council A. Mitten Altfeld called on Mayor Jackson to ask his active support in having the City Council petition the next session of the Legislature for authority to vote a loan for this purpose.
The mayor expressed his sympathy with the movement and promised to help by indicating that it would have his active support.
The delegation which included Drs. M. C. McCard, K. G. Chissell, M. C. McCard, K. G. Chissell, Berry, E. V. McCard, Attorneys J. Stewart Davis, J. H. Henry and Wm N. Jones, of the Afro American staff was introduced by Mr. Altfeld who pointed out the need of more hospitalization and the need of sentient assistance in an institution.
He was followed by Dr. McCard who recited numerous cases, where proper hospital facilities. Dr. McCard told the Mayor that there were but 250 beds available now for colored patients and the cases were often refused at white institutions when it is known they are colored. The high death rate rate by the McCard pointed out, was partly due to lack of proper hospitalization and the consequent lack of facilities where the cases were able to keep abreast of the medical times. Negro physicians are prohibited from following up even their own cases in local hospitals. Dr. Wright and J. Stewart Davis closed the appeals where with the Mayor indicated in his remarks that he would actively support the move.
Municipal Movement
If the plan carries it will involve a municipal loan to be approved by Baltimore citizens and the establishment of the Dr. C. Hammison Jones, Commissioner of Health, is said to highly favor such a project. The mayor stated that Commissioner Jones had often recommended suitable accuracy for such an institution is said to be available and a commission will be appointed, it is believed, to frame a resolution for the City Council. As the question of operation cost is a big item in hospitals, it is believed that a municipal hospital will meet with civil court approval.
New Negro
Incidentally the ambitious and aspirations of the New Negro was touched upon by Mr. Attfeld, who pointed out that the time for sociological and yearly assessments must and that they should now be death with as citizens and part of the body politic. They own homes and contribute their share to the progress of the city.
Sydepham Proposed
Members of the delegation proposed Sydenham hospital plant with its 64 acres as an ideal site for the proposed hospital. It is believed this property could be bought for around $300,000. This plant could be developed to one of the best in the country, it was said.
I Shoe Store
F VEL-VE-CO
Avenue, at Robert St.
A Trial
Baltimore, Md.
COURT ROOM CLOCK
SAVES 3 FROM JAIL
Time Of Day Proves Waterloo
To Near Sighted Witness
Who Identified Men
ACCUSED FACED 10
YEAR TERMS IN PEN
Policy Of Judge O'Dunne To
Would probably Been Set
Three men, Robert and Spyrister Allen, 861 W. Fayette street, and Ulysses Jones, 1031 W. Fayette street, owe their freedom to the clock on the wall of the court room and to the near slaughter that positively identified them in the criminal court Monday.
Harry Grace white, accused the men of having held him up and robbed him of $145 on the night of February 15, 1914, President and Pratt street. The men were arrested several days later and when arraigned were positively identified by him. The case was committed for the action of the grand jury and they were indicted.
Got Ten Years
The three men were brought into the court room immediately after the court imposed a sentence of ten years each on two white youths who held up a man and robbed him of thirty cents. Things looked dark indeed and they slowly perished in their seats.
Again Grace, who is a shoe maker by trade, positively identified the three men. He was about to leave the stand when he was asked by Charles W. Main, the defence attorney, who saw him face and near sighted in the other. Grace denied this, declaring that his vision was perfect.
"It is 17 minutes after six," said the witness. "Gave insisted," said Judge G. Dunee. The hands of the clock pointed to three thirty.
BOY, SKATING IN STREET, IS KILLED
Another death was added to the list of Obituaries for this week when Olivia Chunneler, 9, 1716 W. Laffayette avenue, was almost instantly killed when he was struck by a truck while roller skating on Mount street.
An eye witness of the accident says the Chandler boy was swinging on the fence and he got hit by the go and was thrown directly in the path of a truck driven by Joseph Stevenson, 812 Mosher street. The boy was found in a dead body and was found to be dead upon admittance. Stevenson was taken to the Northwestern Police Station, where he was before the coper's jury. The accident, however, is said to have been unavoidable, as Stevenson was not able to stop his vehicle before it crushed the life out of the boy.
at Cor Dolphin and Eting St.
Sharp St. Church, April 29
The Y.
will
"HIAW
"HIAWATHA
"HIAWATHA", that famous old cantata written by S. Coleridge Taylor, a Negro, the son of a Native African Physician of Sierra Leone, will be presented by the Local "Y" at the
Lyric Theatre
RUTH LEE McABEE
Soloist
Got Ten Years
Washington Trains For Chaney
Philadelphia—Billy Washington is training for his bout with Joe Chaney, white, of Baltimore. Washington is working faithfully and will be in fine shape for the bout on May 26.
Lawson Floors Clements
Wikies-Barre, Pa.-Bob Lawson knocked Hughle Hclegme, white, and lunes here recently. Objects went down for keeps in the third round.
Flowers Receives Cut Eye
Tiger Flowers, world's middle-aged man, nearly cut over the oye in his bout. Alenton Gans. The injured memoir of a man in some trouble for quite a while.
Davis Returns To Philly
Philadelphia—Jim Davis, the African light heavyweight, is in the city after a trip to New York. Davis made a big hit with the fans when he fought a man 18 pounds heavier.
St. Francis, 18. St. Barnabas, 8
St. Francis won a 18 to 8 slugging match from this St. Barnabas last week. Johnson and Longworth featured with home runs.
Two For San Huston
San Huston, Texas—San Huston College won two more games this week, defeating Texas College in a doubleheader, 7-4 and 16-10.
MARRY
TRUST
Ask or Send
"EVERY LETT
TELLER'S
giving full inform
lions on how t
Maryland T
N.W. Corner Calver
Y. M. C. A.
will present
VATHA that famous old can Coleridge Taylor, a Native African Phy one, will be presented
Two For Sam Huston
Never too early
THE habit of saving can never be acquired too early in life. The earlier you begin to save—the earlier you can begin to enjoy the fruits of your saving. Start a Savings Account for that boy or girl of yours now!
Maryland Trust Company N.W. Corner Calvert and Redwood Streets
"PAWNED" GUN TOTER DISMISSED BY JUDGE
Isaac Johns' Plea Of Good Samaritan Brings Clementry
When is a man caught with a revolver in his hip pocket not guilty of gun toting? This question was settled in Part One of the Criminal Court when Judge Eugene O'Dunne dismissed Isaac Johns, 30, 923 Madison avenue, Thursday.
Johns, according to his story was eating a meat in a Pennsylvania Avenue restaurant when another man tried to bounce him out of the chair. Johns refused to give the man a meal but offered to loan him the money if he could furnish any security. The stranger produced a cover and offered it for one dollar.
No sooner had the weapon changed, pockets than two Northwestern District patrolmen entered the establishment and in brushing past him, the officer, unwrapping from his pocket. During the excitement that followed the stranger made his getaway and Johns was locked up.
Judge O'Dunne ruled that on the strength of Johns' story he did not have the recorder in his possession long enough to be guilty of toting a gun and dismissed him. He was represented by Attorney Peter Woodbury.
and for our Folder
BETTER-BOX YOUR
"WINDOW"
information and instruc-
to bank by mail.
Trust Company
Liver and Redwood Streets
A. E.
Friday Eving,
April 30th
A Chorus of Some
75 VOIGES
under the direction of Prof. W. Llewellyn Wilson, has been preparing for this event for more than five months. This chorus is composed of some of the best talent in the city.
The soloists for this cantata are
Mme. Ruth McAbee
Baltimore's Leading Soprano
Mr. Ralph E. Banks
of New York, a Noted Young Baritone, and
Mr. O. L. Young Nichols
of Chicago, a Baltimorean who is destined
to become a rival to Roland Hayes
Tickets are now on sale at the "Y" and Dunbar Pharmacy, East Baltimore, and Hayes' Pharmacy in North West Baltimore.
Boxes, $1.50 Orchestra, $1.00
Balcony front, $1.00
And the rest, 75 cents
Page Fifteen
a
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H ronsquntems oe :
cadmas Ch: /.
. paris ad a ance ry
Use HARADE (pronounced: “hair-aid”), the genuine
Cocoanut Oil pomade if you really want your hair to be
smooth and silky. A wonderful hair dressing and scalp
cure. One user wrote she had suffered from tetter for
15 years, but HARADE-had cured it. Look for the
Lucky Rabbit on the can, At drug stores;or send us
2c for large can. Do not accept something else!
AGENTS [7 aa),
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Mollie Dean of Dania, Floriés, |* OFFER
makes §8t0$10aweekin spare. | The $1 Gold Box for 72c!
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_ HARADE MEDICINE (0., .88 Capitol Ave.,-Atlanta, Ga.
“Page Sixteen
pe
Socialist’s Measure Is Simi-
lar To McKinley-Dyer
Bills
WOULD FINE MOB
MEMBERS $5,000
Sheriff And County Involv-
ed Would Forfeit $10,
000 Each
WASHINGTON, D. C.—
Representative Victor L.
Berger, Socialist, (Wiscon-
sin) introduced last Friday
in the House a bill to pun-
ish state and municipal of-
ficers who fail to take pro-
per precautions to protect
individuals from mob at-
tacks, and also fo punish
those who participate in
such mob attacks.
‘The bill was rezerred to the Com:
mittee on the Judiciary.
‘The bill introduced voy _Repre-
sentative Berger is in sonie respects
similar to the bills Introduced by
Senator Willlam B. McKinley, Re-
publican, of Ulincis, in the Senate,
End Representative L. C. Dyer, Re-
publican, of Missouri, In the House.
$5,000 From Mob
‘The Berger bill makes it a felony
to participate in any mob ov as-
semblage composed of three or more
Persons acting In concert. without
authority of luw, for the purpose of
depriving any person of his life, oF
Going him. physical Injury, result.
ing in death’ or injury to such per-
son. Conviction would cary with
it punishment by imprisonment for
not less than one year nor mort
than five years, or by 2 fine not e:
ceeding $5,000 or by both fine and
imprisonment.
Fine Sheriff $10,000
Tt would also be a felony for any
State or municipal officer, charged
with the duty or who has the aut
thority and power to protect the life
of any individual who miay be in-
fured or Killed by a mob, having
Such person in nis charge as a
prisoner, who falls or neglects to
Protect an. individual fom a mob
attack, or conspires with any other
person to injure yr Kil such pris-
oner.. Punishment. upon conviction
would be by imprisonment for not
less than two years nor more than
ten. sears or by a fine of not ex:
ceeding $10,000, or by both fine and
imprisonment.
U. §. Court
‘The United’ States district court,
in which 2 person ts Injured or kill-
ed by a mob, would have jurisdiction
to try and punish all persons. par-
ticipating in mob violence, if it ap-
peared to the court that public sen-
{iment was such that the ‘persons
necused would not be given a fair
trial because of the refusal or nek-
lect of local ofticials or citlzens to
punish such acts.
‘County Forfelts $10,000
+ whe. Attorney General of _ the
United States, under the provisions
of the Berger Bill, would be author-
ized to Institute through his proper
Subordinate ofliicer in the district
in which mob violence has occurred,
proceedings In the United States’
district court to compel the forflet-
ure of the surn of $10,000 from the
county in whieh the mob violence
was committed. The action would
be brought in the name of the Uunt-
ed States against the county and the
sum obtained would go to the per-
gon injured. or his family if killed.
or to the United States if the per-
son killed has no. family.
Tt the forfeltuire fs not pala. the
United States’ district court would
be empowered to levy execution up-
fon ‘any. property: of the county to
Gonect the forfeiture.
In the event that a person is seiz-
ed in one county and injured or
{ined in another county, hoth coun:
ties would be. jointly. and severally
Hable to vay the forfeiture,
Social Worker Named
PHILADELPHIA,—Mrs. Maude A.
Morrissett, head of ‘the Women’s Ac-
tive Workers’ Association, has been
named supervisor af social work In
Municipal Court at a salary of §2000
‘year and bonus.
FEW MORE LOTS LEFT
To seni IN
BLASS PARK
At $9.99 each
If, interested write, GEO, BLASS,
BALDWIN, MICHIGAN, for infor:
ination. It
Garvey Asks Her Deportation
EF NS Siar |
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bcos: givmgies’ eda Wand
Ce ame see YY
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A Pee 4 ee asta
TE Ge PL NERS se ae
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Since she is suing Garvey for divorce, Garvey has filed a counter
Bans Short Skirts And
Di ds For Teach
Diamonds For Teachers
Instructor of Principals Special Training Class Say Teach-
ers Should Be Given Rating On Dress As Well As Efficiency
Call VErnon 6016.
That the school room Is no. place
for extremes in styles diamonds and
other finery, was expressed by Prot
George A. Johnson, who ts con:
ducting a training class for princl-
pals at Douglass High School here
‘The remarks of Prof. Johnsor
were made during a discussion of
grading teachers for promotion
formed the most_interesting period
of the lecture Friday afternoon.
He pointed out that. the objective
in the school room is not only ta
impart concrete knowledge but. to
organize the child’s mind for prac:
teat living.
The teachers should always pre-
sent a personality that can be ben-
eficially imitated by the child who
in most cases regard them as theit
ideals.
Tanght To Steal
The creating of abnormal desires
for finery Is dangerous to the ma-
jority of children, he said, and has
been known to develop’ pilfering
The speaker xlso pointed out. that
while neatness and correctness o!
dress was one of the most Imnortant
details In teaching, that gaudy and
showy finery was out of place in
the. school room:
“renchers should be diplomatical-
y, bUL none the less positiviey, told
when thelr dresses are too near of
too far away from the floor, and
Where to wear party dresses,” he
sald,
Large Class
A.large class is taking the course
of lectures being givon by Prof
Johnson, and Supervisor Wands «13%
it'is a part of @ plan to round out
a developing system. whereby. an
bitious men-and women in the sys.
fem nay be advanced ag occasion
Crees.
CANO OF THANE
McKENZIE take. thie means te
ot QGES AE en al a ne
me Mase een! teat ead eee
Fae mp Sate dR a eee
i IR SSP Bait Ma
Aces, ee AUN
aed ht he ainahen tokens
BGS MGR tans (eos Wi
PAGE lon ic feel? nae
SPEEA, BUS cetot th th
Shira bated sf Whacky We
See eH aHaIG Nate Cea ae
RUSIAg ti Boe bene
TSBAURFUE, SUDURRAW RIMMER HOME
AUTH cH ag? Bo
oil a ut Ea ue
teas aig LS Ae
are ten ea
lM tates Rt: a Sua
Hertha ernie’ “Buiatr Mit
Sid ae ttn Me ast
Ser Nines aa ae
Sei aah i fet Rei
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dere ares Maca Ma
EA HP teri ith ge
‘Crozet, Va., RF. D., Box SRA, dpsed,
Oe pele eae Biscese dnd Best Weekly io Baltimore, Md. : © Friday, “April. 24,
MORE FITGHETT
A Burns detective sent here from
Baltimore by the AFRO-AMERICAN
amd. the Preachers’ Meeting came
tg the conclusion that Rev. Mr.
Fitohett “was alive and nad fled the
town for reasons plainly apparent.”
‘Hargis, who caught the pastor
alone in’ his home with Mrs. Har-
gis is @ cook on a Penna. R. R.
Work train. He gets home ustially
twice a week, usually around 10:30
pm. His work is located 60 miles
away in Virginia and the first train
he ean catch out of Pocomoke puts
him there a halt hour late.
Hargis! story of Fitcnett’s disap-
pearance 1s as follows:
Came Home Early
“On January 18, due to the rain.
Iwas off duty early. I came home
and saw all the lihgts in my house
out. I went in, turned on the lights
fon the first floor then went up stairs
to the second floor, turned on the
lights and-saw no one.
‘One of my sons came in and 1
asked him where his mother was.
He said he did not know. It was a-
round seven o'clock. I sat down in
my front room upstalrs and started
to, vead a newspaper.
‘The door of a side room opened
and in came my wife holding her
side und saying sho was ill, f was
Surprised us we seldom use this
room which contains only a cot and
a clothes closot. Suspicious, 1 went
into tho pstre room and snapped on
the light.
In Clothes Closet
Tile door of the clothes closet.
ordinarily kept open was closed and
L went to it and jerked It open.
‘Out stepped Rev. Mr. Fitchett,
“What are You doing here? I ask-
ed, him. Ile did not answer.
“MC ywife wus in the other room.
L'went to her. Gert, I sald, what
. that man doing up here? ‘Tell
me?
“I looked around and Mr, Fiteh-
ett had flea.
I went, out and saw my friend
John Gumby, told him about my
wouble and told him T was going
to havo them arrested. He advised
mo not to.
“Twent to the church where Mr.
Fitchett was expected at a meet:
ing. He was not there. I totd
several persons what had happened.
T algo went to the parsonage and
told Mrs. Fitchett.”
‘Made Frequent Calls
One of the unusual things con.
neoted With the caco was the fact
that Fitchett had located his pls
pen a quarter of « mile from his
hiwuse ima close wo the Hargis home
Tc 18 believed that he used this as
aa excuse to go i thas vielnity and
cal on Ms. Hargis,
Fechet was (land Gark. Har-
jgis is short and dark. Mrs. Hargis
is tair, pretty. and. of undoubted
mixed ‘parentage. ~
Rey. Ford ‘Here
Rev. R. E. Ford of Bultimore was
hore this week. He is presiding cl-
der of the Kaston District, Baltt-
more Conference, and represented
bis church. ‘The conference how in
session at Tlagerstown, Md. will
hear Rev. Mr. Ford's ‘report and
send 2 new pastor t9 Pocomoke.
Mrs, Fitchets, the pastor's wife, fs
gvief stricken. She is left alone with
Six childveu, one of them a student
at loward University.
Who Killed Fitehett?
Who killed Fitchet?
‘This is the question everyone is
asking here. Hargis from his own
story had cause enough, but no onc
believes ke did.
‘Someboiy killed ‘him, however,
hauled the body four miles otitside
of town, filled the dead man's cloth-
ling with bricks and dropped it in-
to u desorted swamp 100 yurds from
a highway where it could never be
found except by accident.”
Fitchett kin losated in’ Baltimore
ate William H. Flechett, 624 W. Lee
Street, and Miss Mary Fitchett, 650
W. Lee street.
Neither was at home when an
AHRO yeporter looked them _ up.
Phe houses were closed up. It is
possible they are in Pocomoke.
Gladys says that she knows a
fellow they call Lavalliere because
he's always hanging around your
A Long Sufferer Speaks About
_ The Results He Received
* From a Tonic
Anslie M. Battaglia, Coolidge Corner, Boston,
Mass., A Noted Merchant, Says Tree of
Life Changed His Health and Put
Him In Good Condition.
“t derived such fine results by taking a treatment of Tree of Life
Medicine Company's famous Tonle—TREE OF LIPE that 1 am glad to
iatk about Fr and Rope that what I have to say will be a benefit to others
{ho are suffering with kidney and bladder troubles, constipation, Indiges-
Yon, rheumatic helns, depressed feelings, head and back aches.
ior iifteen yeare 1 suffered with stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels
Thad gastritis and nervous Indigestion so very bad that I had just about
riven up hope of ever being well. ‘The little food that I ate would sour
End Torment i my stomach and cause gas in no small quantities to form.
iter formation vf the gas It would rise up in my chest and cause.my heart
to paipitate, Besides the above allments I was very badly constipated,
Ue result ef tite poor condition of my liver made me aluggish, and then
these dizzy spells and bilious headaches would -grab me like’ a hungry
lion grabs a pleco of raw meat. And since my kidneys were #0 poorly
functioning, it caused many severe pains across my back and I would
get up many times during the night, It is useless to tell how I lost
weight, and my nervous condition which caused me sleerless nights and
you Would be amazed.
“A'netghbor who had been at sea and had used TREE OF LIFE
Tonic gave mea halt bottle and told me to take it as directed and as it
had benefited hin, he was sure it would do me no harm, if no good. by
taking it. After taking the first three doses 1 notice the pain in my back
that caged me so much agony when I'would get up after sitting a while
Was not so sharp. ‘The fuliness in my chest after eatng waa not 20 heavy
as the gas from the fermentation was abated. "I found s0 ‘much results
in the half bottie that T went to my druggist and bought four botties,
"Ag Tisit here and write this story, T feel happy to know after such
jong suffering, and at times 1 felt like committing suicide to rid myselt of
pain to know that my kidney and bladder actively are functioning;
headaches and agonizing back pains are banished; bowels are in good con,
dition: pep nd vitality such as I had years before my suffering.”
NOTE: TREE OF LIFE can be purrchased from all druggists or
TREE OF LIFE INDIAN MEDICINE CO,, 500-A MeMechen Street. Bal-
ee wee eae
Mississippi Senator Say
Proposed Judge Fights
| Segregation
ISSUE MADE PLAIN"
ON SENATE FLOOR
Harrison Wants Race Sep2-
ration Law For The Dis-
trict
Wednesday, Senator Pat
Harrison, (Dem., Miss.)
told why he opposed the
confirmation of James A.
Cobb, for municipal judge
jn the place of the late Rob-
ert H. Terrell. -
Sonator Harrison utillzed the op-
portunity to urge senators to enact
b segregation law in Washington
He said,
“The moving of colored people
Into white sections destroys values
land shifts residential areas.
“New Jersey avenue was once @
residential section for white peo-
ple. lis values were high, its lo-
cation attractive; but now look al
it.
“Colored people moved in and on
ft; the white peeple sacrificed and
Dought “elsowhere. As the whtte
people moved further west and fur-
ther north the colored populatior
‘one by one followed, and in propor-
tion to the numbers that did fol-
low values declined. ‘This situation
continued until the colored residents
forced themselves as far as Four-
teenth street. .
“Some thought that surely the
movement would then stop... But
no? ambitious ones of the lot dream-
ed of blocks beyond, and so the {a-
Vored and prominent and socially
inclined among them bought up to
Sixteenth Street. At every step val-
ues went down. and so today st mat-
ters not where you may select tc
hitiia your home or live. it will be
put a short time when the stabili-
ty of prices will be shattered and
the property value declined on the
invasion of the colored population.
“There must be some considera-
tion given to this question. Poor
people, ave, even widows, who pos-
sess perhaps nothing but a home
have experienced their life savings
sacrificed because some of the col-
ored population bought and moved
next door to them.
“Restricted areas for the whites
and" colored make for the stability
of values and the cormmon content-
ment of both. Any other policy,
such as we have experienced in
Washington, breeds differences be-
tween the races and makes not only
for the insecurity and instability ot
property values but estyangements
and bad feeling. Why. the business
people and the residents of the Dis
trict remain silent I cannot .under-
stand.
. Conb
“ion the other hand. they endorse
for high office men of the colored
race who are the prime movers in
that Invasion, men who appear as
lawyers in the Supreme Court of the
United States to test the validity of
restrictive ordinances.
“T have sald all T desire, perhaps
more than T should have said, But
it fs out of my system, and I shall
at least feel better from It.”
Cambridge High Leads
CAMBRIDGE, MD.—With a _per-
centage of 95.3 per cent, Cambridge
colored high school leads all coun-
ty schools, white and colored, In at-
tendance for March.
‘The white high school of Cam-
bridge was second with an average
attendance of 93.2 por cent.
Langrall, a one-room elementary
school, with an average attendance
of 99 ‘per cent. led both white and
colored schools in this division.
poets nae
Editor Joins Law Firm,
PHILADELPHIA, PA, ANP)—E.
Washington Rhodes, editor of the
Philadelphia, Tribune, becomes a
member of the law firm of NIX &
RHODES. Robert N.C. Nix is the
other member of the “arm and has
been practising for the past year
in this elty. Mr. Nix is a graduate
of Lincoln University and, of the
CO se ae Ba miclve nih
Attributes Long Life
é To Good Whiskey
BOSTON, MASS.—Willlam Small-
wood, of 22 Phillips street, Boston,
Mass, Who the other day celebrated
his 110th birthday and is thus start-
ing in on his 111th year. ‘He says
"Good lauor and tobacco never
hurt any man” and attributes his
fong life to thelr use in moderation
He has full possession of -his facul-
Mes and does regular chores around
the house.
| ——
“NO FUND YET
| 1
NEW ORLEANS, LA—Passing
through this city today, enroute 10
Beaumont, Texas, Bishop W. Samp-
Bon 'Brooks, of Monrovia, Liberia,
making a totir of the country col-
Jecting funds for his West Africun
work, stopped long enough to tell
the AFRO-AMBRICAN that he had
not yet recelved funds from the A.
Rf. E. Missionary Department, hoad-
ed by Dr. Colt.
‘A letter printed in last week's
AFRO-AMERICAN from Dr. Coit
Stated that he had sent certain sums
to Africa and could not understand
how missionaries there could be in
need.
Bishop Brooks publicly took the
church .missionaay department to
fask at Allen Church, Aulanta, Thurs-
Qoy night of last week before a
crawded audience which Included
Bishop John Hurst, Bishop A. J.
Carey, Bishop W. A. Fountain, Bish-
op W. T. Vernon and Bishop W. D.
Johnson.
He cited specifically the fact that
the ‘Missionary Department had ‘s-
sued Invitations to, the opening of
fa new and expenst-e headquarters
jn New York City, using therefore
funds which ‘should, properly go, to
fahoring missionaries In forelgr
fields.
Tishop Brooks expects to spend
ten days in ‘Texas and ten In Ar-
Kansas and then rest a bit before
continuing his campaign. He wil
attend the meeting of the missionary
board in New York on. May 15th.
"Accompanied by Dr. J.T. Wilk-
inson on a tour outlined by Bishor
J, 8. Flipper, Georgia churches gave
Bishop Brooks over $500 last week.
St. Philips contributed $275, ‘The
Rev. Mr. J. A. Lindsay, of Savan-
nah, is pastor of this church.
‘St. James, the Rev. R. V. Branch,
pastor, gave $126; Monumental, tho
Rev. 8. F. Andrews, pastor, $00;
Bethel, the Rev. F. J. Duhard, pas:
tor. $60; Central Park College stu-
aeets. 822.
Given Bishop’s Scholarship
Columbia. S. C.—The scholar.
ehip offered by the four A. M. EB.
Bishops of the “class of 1908" has
been awarded to Prof. George A.
Singleton, professor of social ucience
in Allen’ University of this city.
Prof. Singleton is a graduate of Al-
Ien University, saw service a8 Chap-
lain in France in the World. War,
took 8. 7. ¥. and A. M. degree
from Boston University, studled al-
s0 at Harvard. Ho will matriculate
in University of Chicago this sum.
mer and work for the Ph. D. degree.
He eventually will go abroad.
New Rules For D. C. Bar
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Candidates
will not be permitted to take the
Gistrict bar examination hereafter
unless they are graduates from &
four year high school. Grammar
school graduates may toke a spe-
eial qualifying exanrination by pay-
ing a feo of $10. Anptivants for wd-
milesion to the bre must Day at fee
nt 855.
Tove scones in
MRAYTE”
alone are worth the price of
‘Admission
ee
ie
‘i
<> on
Ke BP:
oh Bch oo.
a ee oe
ee. a8 Ens
eS ery
IN MEMORY .
In memory of Robert Henry
Gaines who died April 4th, 1925,
one year ago.
‘A place Is vacant In our home
that never can be filled.
‘He was a faithful husband, fa-
ther and friend.
Gone but not forgotten.
By his devoted wife, Mrs. Harriett
E. Gaines, 651 George Sty and
Sanghter, ‘Mrs, Leanora Oden, New
York.
SS OA a Pe ee
—s
/ -IN-
‘The Afro-American’
Puts More Money In
e
The Collection Plates
Read what Rev. David Over, Pastor of one of the
lar gest Baptist Churches in Baltimore has to say:
The Afro-American,
Advertising Department,
Druid Hill Ave., and Eutaw St.,
City.
Gentlemen:
Your letter of April 10th, expressing appreciation for
our response to your Easter program of advertising
reached me this morning. I appreciate your sentiments
in this matter. It has been in my mind since to write you
my entire approval and pleasure at this very fine demon-
stration of what the newspaper can do to help on our
church programs. Our single embarrassment in all our
Sunday services Easter was that we did not have the ca-
pacity to accommodate all those who would attend. This I
understand to be true with most of the churches,
Tt is a concrete demonstration that the church people
read your paper, forming as they do a large element of
your subscribers, and that the ‘possibilities of a closer
Zo-operation between the church and the weekly press
have hardly been sensed by those of us who have given
it the most careful consideration. I congratulate you and
thank you for what you did in this single stroke to advance
the very highest welfare of Baltimore community.
Trusting you will consider me ever ready to make
whatever response possible toward the advancement of
- our mutual obligation, I remain
Sincerely yours,
. DAVID E. OVER.
For 33 years The Afro-American has been a con-
stant companion of church-goers in Baltimore.
. °
Advertise Your Church Services
-IN-
EERE E RE ae Se es Me es See
EL TE I TRE eM ce oe ta
Me Tee eae rete cieompne eet CSI So te UE
—_——_-— ie
See
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WE ee
PERE: eid 2 4 ee
GE
a ae
Ne .
of
Co ee eo
hi S Vee yuri a
fo 2 snd 2
CANDIDATE ‘FOR CONGRESS
~ 4th Congressional District of West Virginia
Hon. M. Edward Hersman, of Spencer, West. Virginia, who is making the ie
for Representative for the Fourth Congressional ‘District of West Virginia, sv A
ject to the Republican primary that will be held in August, solicits your help an
your vote,
Pastor Weds
DENVER, COL—The Rev. J
Francis Robinson, of Cambridge
Mass, Field Secretary of the Nation:
al Baptist Sunday-schoo! Board, Inc.
tras married to Mrs, Nellle Bowen
soprano soloist, of Second Baptist
choir, of Evanston, Ill.”
Women At Capitol
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Colored
women Were among the delegates tc
the conference of the Women's Na.
tional Committee of Law Enforce.
ment which stormed the capitol las
week protesting against the cam.
paign being conducted by wets fo1
i nodification of the prohibition a.
5 ee
WASHINGTON, D, c.—Lowell ¢-
Wormiey, son of Principal, ©. Smith
Warniley, of Randall Junior High School
and @ senior in Dartmouth College, hag
heen" awarded a scholarship to study
biology at Wood's Hole, Mass., this, sum
met. The scholarship. was’ made on
the basis of competitive examination,
Cligibles being chosen from students
Gating a high scholarship in zooloRy.
Nir-Wormley has also been recently
awarded ils “letter D for proficiency
fra rifle match with the University, of
Vermont, making & score of 388, the
highest individual score for his teum.
HENS graduate of Dunbar High
Bee ene 1982.
Junior Songsters At Ames
‘The Jumping Jack Songstery
the Sharp Street Community ise
rendered a group of songs at Ame
Epworth League, Sunday, Apri \!
These fittle fellows, whose. agt
range from 4 to 8, were enthuss
tically’ recelved by the audiences”
Rev. Green To Get Vacation
Officers and members of the \e.
tropolitan Baptist Churen ga
granted their pustor a sixty {a
summer vacation. The Rev, “i!
Green reported the financial ye,
fave of the church in splendid con
dition and the membership com
stantly increasing.
Friday, April’ 24th. Call VErnon:6016 ~ The ‘Afro-American—South’s Biggest and Best Weekly. “Baltimore, Md. Page Seventee
a
Church Notices
Sunday School Lesson
yA, CONFERENCE
APPOINTMENTS
WYTHEVILLE, VA, — Sixtieth
anni nesion of the Va, conference
sor Be Ghuceh closed: here. Sums
4. gichop J. Albert sohngon pres
MCN. ta, Bovey wag, transterved
wise Scnns Church, Nortolk,. Vac
we sha ‘pince of Rev. JA. Young
1 te ce to Bmunanuel ‘chureh
reall
Postal District, F. A. Seaton,
esiding Elder.
Pgainnns, Norfolk, 1. L. Berry
pth) Ao Wrights” Briage:
Bats a somague: Prankiown
2" phauas Capoville, W.d-
Siu. muvagerilien Jed, Benga:
Becker ancack, D. W. Raitert Acc
a MTR Sanders: Daugherty
eo panes Ball Haven, We itl
i lene Cie, 8. J. ‘Drummend:
ie ete We, ie Whiter Cape
Teeny UX. Marcin Alten
cer Sotuiiny de Sk A. Bats
CeoM mouth District, M. B. Davis,
precinz ide.
Peeuuel.. Portsmouth, J. A,
pate" SY anmes. Berkley, G. Olt
Fe Ning! Tenis. Berkley. SR.
we ans Deen Creek, fe. Walking:
Mera, IM. Gray! Caton” Beth:
Seite nek: Carrollton, 1. V:
hans, South Hill J. ANted Beek
deme: Sfuriane 3, Parolng Winds
eT ie applied: Borexmouth
er Toon Smttn:. Queen Clty Fo
Signed. Fenuress. J. 1. Sanders:
IeNoonce Missions, Miles Cor-
uknond Distrlet, A. J. Notting:
pan Woniding elder
Zionmnnds dns. Ss Hatcher; New-
po Nite Geos &. stavtors. iam:
fet Soba Sutfoik. W. i, Sprat:
eA aka Brawn. Mononmental,
Hiaata APC Claes Mty lon,
Ieee Ds E, “Gadney: Princess
seat 1. it, Randolph: Oven
22 SNE eisethan: St. Btauhews,
Cok Iusist New Me. Zion. ded
Gisne Newsonia, A.M, Sivitis New
FART yiisston, se B. Winttams, sup-
Tae saars Phebus Mision, ones
iawn suppiy. pastor: emporia
Hin” Ie Goode, supply pastor’
Bialies Minsbom, de tte Mackey
annie. District, . W. Cotton,
rreniing. Hider:
Tinnmke, WR. Mowerton: Dan-
fet, Vatentine: Wythevine
1 “ladle: Salem. GB. Shaw:
[ounsa. bn 8. Roberts,” Rocky
Bone, WW Washington: Martine:
then] Bumgardner: Bedford
Ug Pasion itoloman? West Roanoke,
yh Werle. Bosdton,. Geo.
foots: Jinrmons.. iy Je Blilups!
Such. Dunilie, "Te. 6 supplied:
Jikan. G. i Holomant Rerrum.
Jair supplied: Boones ill, Le Le
Theos Cavenirings Be De Smith:
Taines, here, Grundy; “China
ems a. (Sh outs Maxmendown
We Svieyer, Churtotte, Pe de ate
on Ainnigtone "tobe" supplied:
Hekate, Herring.
Sesnon’ Dinwiets sane Ewer
sreiling Ider.
‘Seumina, “Ac Ex Seruggs: Wagnes-
iene ie, Foster: Marrisonbues.
OTE lark, Raphine. To. be. sup:
ct St Pauk, Eynchbieg. GW.
centctnt, Rartiviite,. W. Sanders:
item, GB. Harsinggon, Winches:
veil 13, Walker! MeDowell, To be
GATHCLIGS RAISE FOR
MISSIONS $14,626
Cathotien sais 514.626 in thks
csehwnsn ‘for Indian. and” Negro
we “yorehes where ther
eed and muted eongresulons
oe TARY followings amounts
Shuvnutase $482 Gt. Brantle Xa
eS, Shee cavers: $40:
iwcintine’s, 825%: Sts copehta
oping, gate St. Mary's
sieht thas Si, sMogaiua’, Leon:
Gian 3028. SC Montea’s 8
area.
iter M4, 2 Sayachan, former nes
ate Neeventh Day Adventis
Hucchl pene, now tocated at 306
ha Street, New Vor City,
Thee ie puatora a Harlem conere-
Baton ean" the ity wWwedneatley
fet Tutiod at ihe, APRO. offee.
ite isd. heen in. Washington. to
auina ite funeral of am unele. wie
Sac'Galed fn an auto. ageldent:
“fuer sarachan “says New York
of inspussibte to vue the erie
ey eoruer inthe. business. distret
tot ix te middle of the block hold-
is estar and: burglars eseHpe.
Rev. J. W. Lykes Dies
GREENVILAA, 8. Ca-Atter | 8
lf century af getive service in the
Mein Methodist inisistey, Rev
JW. Lskes, D.Don ied at Ws
Vows! tf civeenvinne, S.C. and ns
Gnevst reventiy was largely accend-
HE He joined the conference In
is. covered 2.000. was never
Hiperamimnited ur had @ vacation.
Reception To Dr. Lyon
Weleome reception iv honor of
the javier and hie wife, Dr. and
Sirs. Tries "Lyd, will be given at
Aue Memorial M. E. Chureh,
Taursday’ might. Apell) 22nd.” Mem
Tis ire gratified over the return
Wt their pastur for nother year
Incorporate B, and. L. Assn.
A versizeate of Incorporation was
Seance this week by” the State
Commission tg Lincoln Johnson B.
and t., Awoeiatlon. with. headquar-
fm cit “Gs Myrue Avenue, | The
Gpital stock fe given’ at $39,000.
th exch sha» par valve of $130.
The sim ut the ‘urganbztion fs to
wmaict it heme “Building Associn-
fn sind. the ineorporators wre:
Samuel avis, Robers de Parhan
(88 Lauded WWitcies, 7
[=p eorveneteerernt: etter ae
ic OLONIAL,
COAL CO., Inc.
| Brink all. your. SMOKE
jand Heating troubles to
us. “Prompt Service.
| With prices: that are right
| “asa eee es
t ote:
1827 Maryland Avenue
i VErnen, 7683 ag
‘Leaders Of The A
Mz E. Conference
ce — | :
= &
aa
. ee
6 pe a!
.
2 : |
See SERRE
po ee
a eee
| a eee
ee
Ree we
ia re
The Ree, Harold. UC, Stopten,
Bee a
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Becta
Cee oe
ee
Re
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A ae
Ge oy Aa
a oe
ia. fs ae
Beate ere
wanes ea ag chanch. “Balt
Visiting Ministers
At Bethel Suxiday
Last Sunday proved to be a bust
augint Bethel "there seere four vi
fide" iministers who took charge of
the. agevicen (Ret. A. sane of
sae tarpulet Churen, with chobr und
Conpregution reveled at 3 ‘Vm
Sethe evening services. chvee, (Gas
Rernat visite wero paid: Dr. W. W,
eitiker, wieh, hie ehole ainl congre-
gution took. churge wf Ure evening
Services. Later. Dr. colbert, with
Mambera of his congiegation visit
a Bethel. Both churches lett lib-
SeatPeottections, ‘und best wishes for
TMyccessfu report. Tater att Dr.
yonest. Wwilliany. with se fuil choir
dada. host of his congregation, wis
Heed ‘ethel, sane and et bara
ESfection, ‘Conference efains came
Ce Sith a rushedurlng the day and
AB Sethe for Dr. Stepteau’s ree
turn’ to Bethel.
Seo
M. E. Ministers
In Theatre Fight
‘A vepresentative from the Ban-
ust aiinbters. Conference visited
HE) SUE: Ministers’ Conference this
Wontand asked for « committee
Hoke chat boay. to coopernte with
ftomenittee from the A. 3M, B. and
econe Conferences. te study. plans
Bervhich they Might. break up the
Peamtent shows in theatres. The
Pollowing committee was appointed
eeoRes. Re E, Costes. C. 8. Brixes.
(eee Lyon, CS. Brown, i. 8.
Williams, =
Shesieg
Lutheran Pastor
-At Morgan College
| amme Rev. John Flack, actor of
the "Lutheran Church. will be the
Morgan. Awembly. Speaker “Sunday.
April 2s, at Moran College. The
Services ‘will be held wt 3:80 und the
SOF v COS we blic. fe invited.
DURHAM, N. C. (ANP)—By N
Duke. benefactor of Johnson C
nith College and Duke University
ave $500 10 the Wall Street Bap-
JM church, north” of the tas
tT aohooks. hee
Duke Alas Church
Wis ae
ee
ZARA: ex
Ze
C2, SUT IEE REI Tsp
ie Wate re
epee Nee cial ria
a
ee ee
to be on the alert to enforce Such laws, = Sol ve ie. to the amount of
{eee Blitwbich states that the county Is resronsible to the amount of
Fiovov to the family of the victim of iynching because of the negligence
Of some officers to do. thel” duty.
are evot kitow that 1 can) suggest @ remedy. It is a big question
and [have not considered it sufficiently (0 propuse a method of stopping
such w practice,
Site Shimips writes: "1 do not believe in. iynehins. 1 do not
believe the Byer bill @ sufliclent ur proper remedy, The interest is purely:
HOU Snot national. and federal authorities could not handle thé cases
Early. “the clause of, the Isil, concerning the $19.00) tine against the
Guitios Is cnuively unfair. Why assess the majority when the minority
fete boune? Twin not expable of giving a suitable remedy.”
‘Mise’ "Erances Marshall thinks all men are entitled to the same op-
portuities ‘tor protecting their lives, ‘To deny this to some inen she
Fools is nut in keeping with the preaching that wi men are crewted equal,
She writes the falluwing statement on Iyneliing:
Min'Sny_ opinion, Iynehing Is open contempt of the court, 1 do not
believe in mob rule. ICI Is true that all men are created equal, 3% we
peerings prociaim it tobe. then alt men should have the sume oppor
Aunities for’ rrotecting thelr tives, whether guilty or Innocent. 1 am In
tltoro€ Dyer Milk. The Cundamental purpose of law is to protect.”
Miss’ Bernice Peck inakes the following statement:
ST am against iynehing, for in this state why have lynching when we
have laws tw protect and punish people who commit crimes-—2 I ant
pars tnvor the Dyer bill Because {do not think that the county should
have ansining to do with It. Some one could make x “frame up” so that
they foul elie the 810.660, Tsay tet the state contrl che Punishment
of crime.”
‘Misa 1a Jones ike Miss Peck, thinks that lynching ought to have
no plitee inthe present stage of civilization. She writes:
MSnehing is the form of punishment that people inflict von a
criminal when thelremotions are it such & height ws to craze them und
S{hder them incapable of thinking clearly and logically. Lynching is by
nb means & test of the effielency of the government and steps should be
kano do nvmoy with this cutrageous form of punishment in this day
and time.
EPG against the clause in the Dyer blll whereby the Inw-abiding neo-
ile of county are taxed (@ pay for the erlme of those who ure not Taw
The following statement by Mise Anne E. Markley is perhaps the
voit une subnilited by the Wwenty-Ave girls of the Oklahoma College Cor
Mfomene “She thinks thac tho Wer may believe. tynehing Is sometimes
justitied, we would still have to consider’ the question as to whether It
Is hot' a violation oc the constitution. She contends that its Justification
Uoes nor make it-constitutional. Her statement is as follows:
sTothink that since Iynching is murder, it should be dealt with ax
such. The person who is tynched has, under the constitution. the right
TO public tal by jury no matter what his eriine may he. The people
gobo foen dhe vlsin! aves oleae criminal thay Ne, and thay 20 stodld
we irled und. made to vay the penalty for-thelr crime. We mry some-
times think lynching is justified Just as We sometimes think murder iy
Justified: bur even fg Justification dues not muke ft constitutional. and
We never have the Hight to deprive a criminal or any body else of his
elvil rights,
GN an not In favor of the Dyer bill because 1 think state courts would
ue able to handle such questions better than the federal courts. | Also 1
think the forfeiture of $10.000 by the community in which the crime oc:
‘curs is an unnecessary taxation of many pegple for the crime of a:iow. It
fe true that the knowledge thar such « sum would be forfeited in case of
2 Jynching would make the local officers more careful to protect their
prlvoner, but even so. I can not believe that taking so much money from:
Reoinmunits and putting fe inthe hands of the tarliy of a man who was
in all probability w desperate criminal fg the Fight thing to-do.
“the race question is different in every state anid. should be handled
by the individual tates since In practically -every case of Iynching or
tloting the interest is purely local.” I can not suggest a suitable remedy
for mob tule, but I do think it is question that can not be settled in
fu single term of the legislature or Congress or, even in a single genera
tions, Ie ig x matter of education. law simfiar’ to the Dyer ill. or. even
this bili fiself might be instremental in crushing lynching or it might
be the meats ot stopring it altogether for a time. butt believe that a
ermaent renteds ‘must ie something. that strikes the fundamental
SUNDAY. SCHOOL LESSON
Sunday. April 25th: THE STORY OF
GAIN AND ABEL." (lay be used wid
Temoefance “Apnlicationsa—ceneste |
‘And Adam’ knew, Eve Ins wifes anc
ghin eonigetved, nd. bare Cait, and said
Thave gotten a man trom’ the Lora
And: she"again bare nis brother, Abe
Ana Abel Wan a keeper “of sheep, bu
Gath Was a Uller of the ground.
‘Aud n process of tlie IC caine to pass
anat“cuid brought (or the trait of th
Hround-an offering unto the Lord.
"And Abel, he also brought of the feat
un ot ifecfoa af th tet tere
Oh And the Lord had ‘respect. unt
bet 2nd co's oterimgs
But unto Cain end to his offering,
had. not feypoct. And. Gain was. ver
‘rouh, oud iis countenance fel.
‘And the Lord satd uso, Cain, Why
get thou wrath and why ts. thy’ coun
(enance fallen’ if thow doeth not wel
sin Wieth xt the door. And unity thee
shall he his desire, wd thou stale ru
over tls.
‘And Cain talked with Abel his bro.
ther and teaine to pags, when the
wera Inthe field. that cath. roe fi
Against Abel hx brother, and slew him
"And the Lord said unio ain, Wher
is Abel thy brother "And he’ »uid
Know not AML my brother's Kocher’
‘And he said, What hast thou dove:
rhe tolee Of the wrothers blood erith
unto ‘ie Team tie ReOUNd.
‘And now wet thou cursed from the
earthy whieh hath onened her moth, te
Peeclve thy brother's blood trom th
hav.
Whien thow tllest the geound, it shal
noe “heneefordh sie aie thee | he
rengih ft fngiiive wid A Yugabone
Shate how ‘be iw the eavth.
Golden “Tests, Am {my brother's
keepers—Gen. 4: 9 :
Devotional Reading; John 4: 2h.
Priinnee ‘Tople: Chin Quarrels. sith
tls Brother.
hesson Siterkal: Genesis 42 1-15.
Memory Verse: Let, us love one an.
otiver, “far Yove is of Godt ohn 42 4
dito "Pople: Cala tases His Set
“freswon Material: Genesis ts 1-10.
Memory. Verse: And tliix command
ant hive Wwe fron hin, tha he. wi
foceth at laveth his. bivthiey slso—1
john ts st
Tmitermediate and Senior Pople: Whe
jealous and Auger Lead To.
‘vonte dar uumng Weve. aad Adults
he Sint Hate
Melon A eis, Prayer Meeting. p-
cei aut Wee tein 0, stake, Cur
into thrigtign’—statt. bis 2021, 25-0
(Misicnsirs Mooi)
ational fiapttse Sunday Sell Les:
son! rhe, Stary at cain nnd Abe
Beno imines the ssin nk Hite
semen 1st
th rests Amt my bruther's
aaa Te Oe
esis
eg.
ah
es
ies
be
Beatie feed ne eae
Bee a
ogre Rea eA UN
EGCG:
see Brae
per aan
Be ee
Eber esate
Ketek ai ae
ee
He Nie Gh
Bee
Cena anes
Sea ae
De
SN ee ae
EN Nea
. . .
Baptist Bodies To
Meet Semi-Annually
Following 1 series of conferences
between” wiite and’ colored: Uaptist
Minwters of this ety. tne eo bodled
Eurecd’ aon a cersauiee tan = ot
senicannsal conferences: at's meet
ig a weok
Sine decision fo'lowed a number of
conferences rinsed some time, KBD
Sian aagerd in, bose grouee cone
Milered tne advisability" oC. Rotaing
scctitonat folveavimutera west
Sthettrg of those wecuinue’ tar
nad eeriy in the pear where come
uittee composed. St ministers. trate
oi grouse. were conferred) wit
‘The sucess of this meeting romp
ean desire to hold veguinr, meet
fae
| Church Pays Dividend
Washingion—D own in Ounbisa
com Areanante where nents: St
per cent of the Inhabitants are ices]
Bees and witere si hor vent at she
Fae oe eemners are cect Ane
locticiais of the Snow. Hill Bantist|
Sinmreie pave annouseed a cast aes
(dong ‘of 394.18 to be kal enh
member of the cungresition. ‘The
mee una’ tenet at mid. 188
Tare end, HED feck Tong. on
tett eute cue nretactnee oly well
Satie A's Be chueh. ssa nod
seme Sicttia ents enn ston,
SHIMON Fern Towed m reste
ti Monday an ‘kann tn to
Conrorerce witiali hie ciate. The
aE ead cor hin rern:
grat] Eiger bee A
sm; | Orown's Progressive Ay Mi. E, Church,
wwimne| Sregen’s, Eeogerties Mcetment Aver
| ane, cord Sewinan, his Mrs, Ryan
“ec will Surpghe you Jn the deanna
wiher's| Sharp St, April 20
ea Whi
America Where
Mobs Run Wild
25 White Oklahoma College Girls
Give Their Views On The Ques-
tion Is Lynching Right
‘Miss Daisy Sritble thinks lynching
should he prevented by the states i possi
Dle bin in the event states fail to, do hts
the federal authorities vught tu du it. Con.
cerning Ivnehing she writes:
mi do. not favor Iynching in the tenst.
Rvery. person, bas. yashe ve tral hy: Jury
and con not be convicted withoutdue (0r0-
tess ‘of law, Lynching. fs an exit whieh
chould be elimintted even if it t1kex the
federal authorities tw siecomplish ity boll
ion.
“However, 1 aim against the Dyer bil
Un the estent that | truly believe tmmadiate
Hintes are more.expable of Liking care of
such on affair, ‘There are shite Lassa pr
hibiting lynching, and it Is wp to the states
BETHEL A, ML E.
CHURCH
4 U
fees Druld Mit Ave, and Lanvale St.
Ki a 11 A. M.—Sermon
eu 1:30 P. M.—Sunday School
a Wm. H. Proctor, Supt.
Git 6:00 P. MA. C. B, League
ep Om, 8:00 P. M—Sermon
firth een ALL ARE WELCOME
SMV A cordial greeting, a cheering
HSA Soca hie
BRON iB) pe. c Harold Steptacu, D. D.
yee eeeierss 86 DT. ©. teptaeu, D. D.,
es are Pastor
SS HIRD WTAE SERIES
‘THE FREDERICK DOUGLASS GLEE CLUB & ORCHESTRA
Sunday Afternoon, 6-7 o'clock
Seventh Day Adventist Church
‘ariocn Avanve and Deine est
Aowission race aoe seats
BIZ ZION A. M. E. ZION CHURCH
penniyivania avenue, near Deiphin Rev. ds Ws MeG0y, Br Bu Pastor
"Sunday, April 25th—Woman's Day
ILA. M—Preaching.
2'P. buecPlatorm soreees, Fae frogram will Ue rendered
FEE a eee cece At ARES WELCOME:
\Notice—The World’s Great Wonder—Little Aron Macheal
Fourteen. Yeare Old — Will Pregeh at the
New Odd Fellows’ Hall, Sunday, April 25th, 1926
Lanvale and MeCulloh Streets
3:9 P.M.
EVERYEODY WELCOME — COME CROWD THE HALL AND RECEIVE
'S BLESSING
Ena Gionon Gross, Chkieman 7
Fie EVENT OF THE SEASON a avenue
The Allen Christian Endtaver League of Trinity A. Ne €. Church, Linden Avenue
‘dnd’ Biddle Street, will present the
FAMOUS POST OFFICE GLEE CLUB IN A RECITAL
‘Sunday, April 25, 1926, in the Main Auditorium
From 6 10 7:30 P. M.
MEMBERS, FRIENDS ANO VISITORS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO HEAR
Ih, Henson, Lougve Prost Wesies Thorne, Manager Glee Clubs Viola, Braxton
He Monson. Lene. sa Remotter: Revs Willtam 5f, Thmons, D. Dy Pastor |”
COME! COME! . COME!
$500 Rally at Union Baptist Church
No, 2, Saratoga Street
REV, N. WILLIAMS. 0. Dy IS EXP"UTED TO PREACH A SOUL-STIRRING
SEAMON, WEONESDAY EVENING, APRIL 28th, 1925
FOR BENEEIT OF SAID CHURCH AND CHOIR, Come ong and all. Goad
con OEE chair Prot: i ilie Thomas, muste director; aties lle’ Jones,
Mreeldents Hee. GB. Jones, pastor. :
gosdooensoococeSTaS SOOO TOTO COOP OY
9 WATERS A. M. E. CHURCH 3
0 Aisguith Street, near Qrleans -
§ ew. tts H. Davia, Minaton Seisonnge, 427 Aiaquith Street
SUNDAY, APRIL Bath
4.4, Semdunlor, Church, Spec muss .
3 A Sie Sermon Ren, Be, ina. .
S aetbelaskortaaey Sass itll area o” Cnt Xo. 12, Mias
eriiat chraphon taneker, sir. Milburn, Belly Supt,
Bert, BING EE ua it ite ebiennia Chueh Pre-
Q ara ennioted Sie 2S, Relaos Ne
m conducted Be TF Ercan te, Aswoctations.” Mrs Hints Webb, Brea,
3 eesresiniPervcer Sunday geemigesionday. header and Weg
nods higte seteyar meeting, Spero Ment, trian’ matt, U6 Q
9. Bixeas, BEEN can Rimes nya Ga trang Cas 8
Ome Benet: essen gee st mented Supper And Musial Ratertaomnent
8 cla Wem weg fot ou seco werlec Stenges ane
& communtiy, esneciunies, Pres. A. C. B. League. J. F. Waters, See,
Pe et aa GR ce Boek
Among Churches
ECoNPEN a.m, ¥, eMOROR
eS i, Baa
28 & Weare,
vege, Shade Cina tS
HS RE ae fete
18k ad
as Ciaecaat! “Medvasday sve Thoreday
aig sate
onal SEP ayer uel eng
staat ei. ‘
apes Ee
aT ne Sone eae iy it,
fined SA a i la
wa Seana, oF onURE
ange geberal public Is Igstted to het, os,
vis Iariged to help, us,
) SUS PeorLer cuaiecAT ooo
ond and Jetende Stree
srestit ANNEAL UTS! DA.
an a. Mtn sleet,
shin § HiRes bag sora, Ree,
a eee acon, nt Palate
he, Seamer, aise THE HOY
00 5 rraem,.Pramian
1 Goenore amont them Alga. Hake
fenretaey. We ake dt St. he tration
ice bie eis anteron, On
tt SE Adi Met eta the
inlatae tab Shot, respective
on eae cae Slee elt SRE ana
vig lai ere churches wil ake
3100 Si —Prearhing, tes, 5. Winemore
eased Sion Al wy Ov OBS
tieiee” :
ore ie i ag ee Marr th
acimernvend's ‘essen aap and encouree
Potioy. C_RPWAIM BROWNE, Pastor.
SAYSE amiomtar aor i enuwait
fgureon mia Canam gine
ec] Ae Rae” Pastor
na Set set
2:09 A. Monbrayer od son Slee
eae i (Scien tetes deader.
1009 8.73. Ml, eta
odin Stace, tnsteuctor.
ti, shomtarain,
220 8 ites oho
cae atte aichgeanaté Seth San
ame oe ae paeateaman. Nantes
HO 38 BAA, set
8.001, sheen servi hy the Be
me Bie
Mii, sme wencowe.
aR genonny. ae cuEReT
SoMa Mite 2 oe
00 a, Heine srt
hits 4. hte tite ian
HER A: SR Her
iS) A sunday Nw
40 ¥ 3k Cansaoles’ ion Eavnence
00 8 3 Camas iste
00 FS pwonth hanson
pea ed, Peden.
S00 aicner of Coan oe
ALL ARE WELCOME,
Silt MANA Nos, mtr
TAs MG, CAP RCH
| Stee Sami, en hitmate
EVANGEMISTIG SERVICES:
At match Saturn pravar meeting
cin« nnd rontinoe. untlt the close of wershens
iia cht with rt tense ere
wile Nine, preva, wrsiene AL Sk
Sn sha ATS Ah nea. tate
‘Monday’ Crenng ati atts "ane embers
ue seangicd ta elena meets,
Wdneninr-stnign ines
Evitng Prager sew
HERE nasa, rast
snc ihe Neeaen
otal, at it rte |
+ ee hone MOSER.
segnay scndthe ARiGensany pay
SE ol Year af xbtence,
so ATR Semeny ass
zit Pjhecsuidar Seto! Commemoentin.|
cata watered tr, esiosery
ners td Somer enum er
00 St “ect Progen, ag Heng
‘Bin i, Moctoaton enn ty inert
Ini eal Sunie parinent with Ca
regan Hews” fam aint
Sette it eto of"Manterr
Tepwanm 8 DIAN, tees, sea,
SERN ABIL TLE FHI
sian a RE Baal ieee Pastor
ion i asnnay Senont,
Sim He M—Peachine flowed bp seem
Teayitealing ani Tost,
Toratay-vitealing and Toes.
“All we like sheep have gone astray, we have turned
- -'y_. every one to his own way and the Lord has laid on Him the
Text for Today: iniquity of us all: Isaiah'S3: 6.
x ‘this is the-favorite Bible verse of Mrs. Daisy Freeman, a member
of Amt Stemoriat Mt By Chueh ‘
nee Sea a
10:00 A. Std «Heaney, Soperiotendent
laa ts eee dare
Se FESR tery Siptntn
Oe Rare =Sime, Dean, President
6:00 8 M.—iesulue Rervioe.
On jean nate.”
ian t 2h
on BAe a ncoen wea chee
30 at —Plonchiag fen Es Johan, Pee
ps0 T'S. —sundny. Shoal.
‘hous nid Tinreiasectremeiine and. Test
suit comics” Hat Ray
fie ees res teas oat De
mae BG Sn ann 4
BON Te: THE GCAPEL. TRUST
COME TO THE GOSPEL TREAT
‘The Christian Pilgrimage, entitled
| MtHe Way To THE GROSS"
wilh appear ac
enataean Hh ‘gre “Avenue, near
Sunday Evening,” Aprit sth, 1808, at
Offering at she dour. Benuekt ef St
Pacers Lage, Noo 4, GeO. ister
Sarah” Mebonild Che! Gro,” Walter
Ercen, Grand Masters Sirs, Rian Cole
‘WOMEN’S DAY
at
WINCTELD M. E, MISSION
<Sundage May, 9 4920
Katherine Dowon, Chatrman
REV. C1. LOWERY, Pastor
‘TREE OF LIFE RALLY
May 16, 1926
at
WOODVILLE M. E. CHURCH
Saura Hammond. Chairman
ee cL He Lowery, Pastor
PUBLIC INVITED
A Discussion By Jesse H. Ferguson
for the lack of interest so apparent ih many people, both us individuals
and as groups in religious matters. ‘They hold that, ecording to the
law of the conservation of energy, there is no need for those who are
foreordained to doom to be interested in salvation—a thing which is not
meant for them. "Tis Car better, these Calvinistle propenents aver, for
that Individual or that group whose predetermined end is, without
the pale of redemption into «newer and broader iife, to have théir minds
eg fur removed from the subject of sulvation and ali things pertaining
thereto, as Jy possible,
But what is predestination? We know that St. Paul in a masterly
eplstle writes HMluininatingly on thly subject. We know that he speuking
through the spirit, Challenges man's right to question what God shull do
With His own handiwork, “Quoting the words of Jehovah, in speaking of
Pharoah—"And for this vause have } ruised the wp: ane,
Predestination carries with it the quantity of CHARACTER. God.
therefore, has for ordained the churacter of tte sentiment being Aho
shall come Into His kingdom, Whoever and whatever number of beings
measure up to that character predetermined as shall be possessed by
the eltizens of the heavenly land, front whatever race nation or clan,
from whatever country, isle and clime, shail enter into the Heavenly,
land—and WHOSOEVER WILL -MAY COME, How beautiful and how
fittingly nevessery. then, docs ‘predestinition hecome when looked wtpon
in the light of tis true interpretation—CHARACTER. And that eharacter
walked ‘the earth in the person of a diving Christ,
How much good could he done by the ministers if they would STUDY,
instead of Just READ their Bibles!) Study brings about the ability to
Interpret. Reading only begets the habit of misinterpretation and en
bitters that whieh in itwelf ix aa sweet us new-made honey.
at ee or |.
5 Sharp Street M. E. Church 0
SUNDAY, APRUL 25, 1026 Q
The Adult BIE CIA6S....ceseeeeeeeeseeeeeee dU ALM. Q
Sermon by the Pastor... -ss-2-- essere ee ee-s10 Ay Me 9
Subject: "the Kinig of Suny Crowns Q
Bundy Beboolecescccecsteceeceee cereal eal
Epwotth Utngue, cc lcccceccousccesscucsesg RM 8
Sermon by Pastors coors cece neccccecnceec Bed
: Visitors and starngers especially invited to aicend all services, —Q
g WALTER A, ENGLISH, Pastor 8
39090000000000000000000000000000006.
PODSSSSSSOSSSSSSOOSOSSSOSS SSO OOOO
: The Community House ¢
presents 8
SHELDON B. HOSKINS ¢
3 Fontan OF iararerrs Paves Is x mae DRasA §
} “ee ‘Tyo? 8
, FAITH 3
q Sharp Street Mem. M. E. Church, Dolphin & Etting Sts. ¢
> Thursday, April 29th — Curtain 8:30 P, M. §
5 igen av coADMISSION 25 CENTS gs $
; TIT Av COMMUNES OU AR AE TUDE. TH |
ne ee ee ee a oe ae ee ee
2 The Mothers’ Club of the Y.M.C. A. §
; ‘ WILE HOLD HEME «
> ANNUAL BENCH RALLY §&
, ae THe ‘
) «
Y. M. C. A. BUILDING
Sunday, April 25th, at 4 P.M. ‘
isa: EVENSOOR IS VITRO TO HELP THERE WORE ey.
Loooocooocooooo ooo osoooooooooooe$
a
PROSPERITY CHAPTER, No. 11 iwuseeyyg, |
. B. O. P. loose a) Le
will hold their ER a
ANNUAL MEMORIAL ees
_ SERVICES Ge
Sunday, April 25th, at 8 P, M.
AT PAYNE MEMORIAL A. M. E. CHURCH
Pree en ee vgs
| A Marriage of Nations
AT
ENON BAPTIST CHURCH
Park Ave., near Dolphin St.
Thursday Evening, April 29th, 1926 «
'Y S> AP.
: At 8:00 P. M. ‘
3 Admission 25c Children 10c. {
; Miss Mattie B, Johnson, Directress
> Mrs, Bessie Walker, Secretary
) Rev. Arthur J, Payne, Pastor
} Come and Enjoy the Evening With Us.’ |
ee ee ee Ee oe
‘ 4
| MENS’ DAY —
‘Sunday, April 25, 1926
7
, xp
- FIRST COLORED BAPTIST CHURCH |
) Caroline and McElderry Sts. 4
OUR SLOGAN IS: “ONE THOUSAND | ‘
DOLLARS ON MEN’S DAY”
. At11-A.M.—Sermon by the Pastor, Albert J. Greene. |
} At BP. M.—Platform Services—
Ais, Whiara We allen Grand Sngter, FA & Mt, 6€ out |
AND: SeittoalBpcinee.* © >
} At 7:80 P. M.—Platform Services— Yaa
Ser Peas Me sfeed supertien of Caled, Schools, Proelbl
> Speaker. Sniging by Men's Choir, Mr. Robert Thompson, Chorister.
yeas me He Cane nae, cree eHee Slits Ser
Business and
A Weekly Review Of
Conducted by
Labor Condition
In K
Workers Average Between
Rooms Renting
Labor Conditions Stable In Kansas City, Mo.
At no time, says Secretary Lano, has Kansas City been able to make a bid for workers in any large number or in any particular line of work. Labor conditions have been more or less stable with two periods of serious unemployment and one strike upheaval in the Packing Plant, in the past five years. Most of the labor work is done by our group, Mexicans and poor American whites. With the exception of the Building Trades, work in Kansas City is not unionized. Carpenters and carpenter members of a union, find considerable employment during building season. There are nearly 3,000 Unionized carpenters this Union being controlled—since 1906—by our group.
The average wage of colored workers is between 66.4 and 100 dollars in lines of work that can be considered regular. In the last three years the Chamber of Commerce of Kansas City has conducted a Campaign to increase the salary of its City of Kansas industrial center. Already there is here a fair cross section of the essential-industries, such as: grain beekeeping, the City of Kansas steel industries, stock yards, packing plants, mail order houses and railroad terminal.
While an unusually long white beekeeper is not the most available for them, this includes available for them. This includes both the men ten years of age and over are employed as laborers and while $3 per cent of the women are in domestic and personal service.
The housing situation in Kansas City. is still critical. There have been 100,000 occupied by Negroes in the past six weeks. Most of the homes are overcrowded and unsanitary. This overcrowding is contagious. The high health rate is the fertility percentage is three Negroes to one white in ordinary diseases and four to one black. The paid for convenience offered are exorbitant. the rate being from $8.00 to $11.00 per month per room furnished and $12.00 to $20.00 furnished.
State Industry
Kent County farmers making preparations to grow green tomatoes for early spring. The county's Lichen-Blds to be asked for constructing 2.65 miles of road between this Baltimore-National Pike Highway, between this city and Hagerstown, to be completed soon. Contracts awarded, for oiling 32.56 miles
Pettvryll—Construction of new bridges across Susquehanna River, between this place and Havre de Grace, soon to begin.
Midtownland—New macadam road to be
west of here to be Young's sawmill.
Young's county Bank
building completed.
Toworths Old Fellow Temple to be
built.
Four sections of highway in Wicomico
city to be hard-surfaced, during
1985.
Cumberland-Quarters formerly occupied
by the Queen's Company, being
remodeled for the opportunity of Queen
City Glass Company.
Mrs. Jas. H. Dennis
Jam's H. Dennis
THE OLD RELIABLE CUT RATE
UNDERTAKER
Edward Keison, Mgr,
BALTIMORE, ND.
1303 Pressman Street
Phone, Madison 8076
EDWARD RINGGOLD
A. Brooks
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
WILL GIVE TO ALL THE VERY
POSSIBLE. CARRIAGES A
FOR ALL.
1463 North Carey
Phone. MAdison 5361
MRS. ROBERT
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
I am the sole proprietor of this b
with
Phone. WOlfe 6590
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
WILL GIVE ALL THE VERY BEST AND COURTEOUS SERVICE
POSSIBLE. CARRIAGES AND LINOUSINES TO HIRE
FOR ALL OCCASIONS.
I am the sole proprietor of this business—and am not in partnership
with anyone.
Phone, WOIfe 6590 — Immediate Service Day and Night
1725 Ashland Avenue Corner McDonough St.
BRANCH OFFICES: 504 EAST STREET, 2109 DRUID HILL AVENUE
LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A SPECIALTY
I HAVE THE FINEST GREY HEARSE IN THE CITY, LIMOUSINES FOR ALL OCCUPANCY OF THE CITY. WE WORK WORK. GALVERT CO. MD., MOV. WORK A SPECIALTY
Page Eighteen
Housing
---
JONES—STANLEY Clinton, 27, 222. N. Eden street: Reba, 23, widow. N. Eden street: Reba, 23, widow. 221, W. Biddle street: Gladys, 23. SAUNDERS—DUFF, Robert, 25, 1345 Calhoun street: Jennie Marie. 201, S. Bethel street: Marie G., 23. LINIEAR—WASHINGTON, George R., 201. N. Stricker street: Martha V., 21.
FULLER--SAMPSON. Oday L., 66, 73
Dolphin street. Laurie E., 46, 43
Dolphin street. Laurie E., 46, 43
N. Calhoun street. Mary D., 25.
SHORTER--PHILIPS. Bernard G., 22.
SHORTER--PHILIPS. Bernard G., 22.
BROW--BODLEY. Wardell, 21, 816 N.
Fremont avenue: Jamie, 35.
HEMBICK--BOOKER. James, 23.; Dor-
WILLIAMS--THOMSON. John H., 41.
1421 Madison street. Christina, 15.
FORWARD--THOMSON. 113 E. 24th
WILLIAMS--THOMSON. 113 E. 24th
WILKS—RICE, Willie, 28, 1875 N. Carey
square; Grace, 22.
BURGESS—FLINTOFF. John W. 30
BURGESS—FLINTOFF. John W. 30
ANDERSON—NIGTHINGALE. George
R. 18, 540 Wolfe street; Nora 50.
BURGESS—NIGTHINGALE. E222
Madison street; Mary V. C. 21.
FRANKLIN—GREENE. James. 45, widow
Mary E. 55, 225. N. Montfort
BLACKWELL-DORSEY, Robert. 21
RIVERDGE, Robert. 21
WASHINGTON-AURAham. 24
1112 Whitlock street: Irene M. 15.
WASHINGTON-ANDERSON. George.
28, 1112. ar lavenge. Goncalo. 28.
MILLE, 1112. ar lavenge. L. 26. Myrtle
28, 1265. Park avenue.
BLAND—SMITH George E. . . 39. . dl-
vored. 1820 St. Joseph street.
MGQUITE-RICH' Louis H. 25. Othel
MGQUITE-RICH' Louis H. 25. Othel
ROBERTSON' FETROSRON, Joseph V.
21. Lavena, 25. 32. W. Hofman street.
22. Lavena, 25. 32. W. Hofman street.
McDonough street, Christine E. 21.
22. McDonough street, Christine E. 21.
WILSON-DONALDSON, Joe E.; 25, 21
E. Virginia street, EDWARD, 20, 21
GIRGIN STREET, EDWARD, 6, 35
widower, 1635 Winchester street, JULIA,
41, 24
PRICE, Roland E., 22, 1425 F. Eyette street, Hilda, 19, 24
PCKEPTT-TURNER, John W. J.; 28, 24
SILVER-WILLIAMS Antone, 46, widower, 615 Sterling street, Mellie O.
JOHNSON-HOSS, Alin D.; 21, 715 W. Saratoga street; Anna, 24, 24
AIMA W. Saratoga street; Anna, 24, 24
GROSS-FAUNTLEYOR, Charles E.; 24, 110 N. Vincent street; france, 24, 110 N. Vincent street; france, 316 N. Fremont avenue; Elsie L. 38, widower,
DEATHS
Carrie Stephenson, 33, 224 S. Dallas.
Amnile Smith, 75, 711 Elden.
Amy Smith, 75, 711 Elden.
Arthur Gee, 1 month, 338 W. Preston.
Nervis Griffin, 31, 241 N. Schroeder.
Arthur Gee, 1 month, 338 W. Preston.
Borice Date, 13, 211 W. Hoffman.
Henry Fountainley, 70, 521 N. Schroeder.
Linzy G. Nickings, 56, 1135 N. Carey.
Bertha Jones, 20, 621 Owens.
Linzy G. Nickings, 56, 1135 N. Carey.
Bertha Jones, 20, 621 Owens.
Linzy G. Nickings, 56, 1135 N. Carey.
Maggie Quinn, 35, 838 Harford.
Birdena T. Sewall, 19, 1504 Brunt.
Birdena T. Sewall, 19, 1504 Brunt.
Infant Valentine, 12 days, 1209 Brervand.
Irma Thompson, 16, 1415 F. Palmount.
Infant Valentine, 12 days, 1209 Brervand.
John H. Dorsay, 61, 1006 E. Jayne.
Emma Hamilton, 54, Fourth avenue.
Charles Goc, 72, 17 N. Eden.
Martha G. Chissell, 32, 650 W. Barre.
Martha G. Chissell, 32, 650 W. Barre.
Bessie Streams, 46, 1032 S. Euuw.
Charlotte Cooper, 75, 613 McNechean.
Charlotte Cooper, 75, 613 McNechean.
Amnile Robinson, 25, 146 W. High.
Purnell Tailferro, 22, 983 N. Stricker.
Purnell Tailferro, 22, 983 N. Stricker.
William Hall, 34, 221 Grewwillow.
Mary L. Jefferson, 5, 244 Culvin.
Mary L. Jefferson, 5, 244 Culvin.
Evelyn G. Beans, 45, 1614 DIVision.
Thomas Pendleton, 57, 843 Lauwale.
Melvin Nicholas, 1 mo, 913 N. Currell.
Margaret Dean, 60, 2355 Drill Hill.
Margaret Dean, 60, 2355 Drill Hill.
Clinton Johnson, 1, 909 Arlington.
Clinton Johnson, 1, 909 Arlington.
Clinton Johnson, 1, 909 Arlington.
Successor
MER AND EMBALMER
BEST AND COURTEOUS SERVICE
AND LIMOUSINES TO HIRE
OCCASIONS
Y Street, near Gold
Never Closed
T A. ELLIOTT
ESS AND EMBALMER
SAY PETE, MY WIFE'S IN TOWN AND SHE'S RIDING MY TRAIL—WHERE CAN I HIDE FOR A FEW DAYS UNTIL SHE LEAGUES?? IF SHE BEES ME, I'M BURNED UP!!
I THINK I CAN GET YOU FIXED!!
GIRL, THIS IS AMOS HOKUM, FRIEND OF MINE—TELL GOB TO LOOK OUT FOR HIM FOR A COUPLE DAYS
SURE PETE, GOB WILL BE HOME SOON!!
MR. HOKUM, THERE'S A LADY AT THE DOOR WHO WISHES TO SEE YOU!!
SHAKE THAT THING!!
GOOD MORNING JUDGE
The AJro Court Reporter
The 18th of April was the first wedding anniversary of the Joseph Wyatt. $39 W. Lexington street.
Mrs. Lillie Wylie, young and pretty, put on her dress and waited for her on her couch and did some work. At six o'clock he did not show up, even he was still absent, eight o'clock came then eight thirty with still no husband. It was nearly nine o'clock when he came in grubby and hungry. "Do you know what day this is?"
"Why, I dressed up for you," she answered.
Wyatt became suspicious. "I begged her to read to me, to sneak out," he said, after a moment of hesitation. "Answer me, yes or no." He didn't wait for an answer from Wyatt, but he mercifully. The remainder of the anniversary was spent in the Western Police Station. She waited the next morning; Mrs. Wyatt told the judge that she was going back home to Virginia. And the judge told Wyatt that he was going to jail for 30 days, to their respective destinations.
James Lewis, 124 Perry street knows how to keep his wife from leaving him. He revealed his mother Thursday morning. Police Station "Your honor," began Mrs. Mimille Lewis, his wife, "my husband came home drunk to the other night and tried to sue me after sinking me." "Is that true?" asked the Magistrate, looking at the accused, those things? said Lewis. "I took one drink of some mighty, bad liquor and didn't remember what I was doing." Judge, I was going to leave him, but when I went to pack up my clothes I couldn't find them where in the house. "With her clothes" demanded the Magistrate.
"Now, that was just where I used my head, judge," said Lewis. "I know if she left, then it would be hard to find her. I must preserve close until I, got sober enough to talk to her, but in the mean time she had me arrested." "Are you willing to stop drinking and act right?" asked the Magistrate. "If my wife will come back I will promise anything, your honor." "No sir, Judge. I won't go back because afraid of him." said Mrs. Lewis.
William Smith, 55, 551 N. Paca.
Marsha M. Thomas, 25, 209 W. Mont-
Louse Waters, 18, 1809 McCulloh.
Mary Hall, 44, 1019 Drill Hill.
Mary McCulloh, 44, 1019 Drill Hill.
David Morgan, 54, 313th Avenue, Fair-
field.
Sidney D. Saunders, 20, 1136 N. Bruce.
Charles Parker, 52, 522 Pine.
Alice Young, 49, 166 Whatace.
Alice Young, 49, 166 Whatace.
William Williams, 54, 1037 Eutau.
Sarah Purvey, 49, 2135 Division.
Michael Jeffman, 49, 2135 Division.
Earl Townsend, 1, 1208 Jofferson.
Thomas Davis, 1, 1208 Harford.
Nelia Harford, 1, 1208 Harford.
Baby Edwards, 1 day, 219 N. Schroeder.
Ibory Roberts, 50, 603 Argyle.
Alexander Nelson, 49, 533 Pressman.
Charles Washington, 69, 224 W. Monu-
Arthur Thompson, 40, 1827 E. Madison.
Maggle Thomas, 50, 613 Central.
ALEXANDER—In loving remembrance of our dear son and brother, Thomas Clinton. Alexander, who departed this life twelve years ago, is resting. A memorial rest.
When life's toils no longer shall be,
There to rest eternally.
We shall meet him some bright morning
Resting by the waters' fair;
Our curious garden in
that upper garden fair.
Twelve years ago you said farewell,
And with the angels now you dwell;
As in the hour you passed away.
Soon we will meet to part no more,
Where there is no sorrow and pain;
As in the hour you passed away.
We'll see our darling loved-one again.
BY HIS. LOVING MOTHER, JULIA
BROWN, our dear mother;
TER.-ROSE ALEXANDER, Fredrick-
burg, VA.
ACKWOODIn loving remembrance of
our mother, Jane Ackwood, who
departed this life three years ago, April
20, 1923.
She has gone to the home of her Sav-
her who loved her and bore her away:
From earth's sorrows and sufferings
To that realm of endless days.
Oh, how sweet it will be in that beau-
tiful land,
With sorrows and pain;
With songs on our lips and with harps
in our hands,
We shall greet our dear mother
BY HIS. FOOTED CHILDREN AND
HUSBAND.
COATES—In sad but loving remembrance of Arthur Coates who died April 2nd, 1926.
Dear brother, we have laid them to rest. But their memory will be cherished, But their memory will be cherished, Until we see thy Heavenly face.
BY HIS BROTHERS. HARRY AND
JENEGIA MEMBER. 768. WM MULBERRY.
IRVING-In and and loving remon-
brance of my dear daughter. Nettle
R. Irvine R. (Ringgold) who departed
in the depth of our sorrow we cannot
oil. In the depth of our sorrow we cannot
oil. In the loss of my daughter and sister
we so well:
Unique Method
DEATHS
IN MEMORIAM
"Well, he has promised to do
a murice on him."
Meanest Man Steals Girls Easter Dress
"A man, who will steal his best girls, new creep de chine Easter Easter meal is really too much to be out of jail and that I just where Miss Ethel Alexander. 346 Welcome Alley, wants the judge to put Wesley Gorman in jail. "Yes sir, Your Honor," she told the Magrastate in the Southern. "I had been saving a long time to get that dress and put down stairs and believe me, it did look good. She paused to sigh. "Yes, yes," said the Judge. "Go on." Well, after giving Wesley something to cut. we started to go out. He said it looked like rain and I had better not wear my new dress out and changed. then we went not to go with no but told me to go up town and he would be up late. "But what about the dress?" asked the Magrastate, inimitable.
"Well, you've located him now," said the Magistrate; "and I will hold him in 3500, ball."
Held for Larceny, Robbery or Burglary: Clifton Redell, 922; Raborg St.; William Matthews, 327; Vincent St.; Caperet Gamble, 532; George St.; Joseph Sutton, 219; N. Parrish St.; William Durham, 119 W. 20th St.
Fined for Disturbing the Peace or Disorderly Conduct: William Robinson, W. Biddle St., 322; James Ricks, 1100; Low St., 325; Wilbur Evans, 321 N. Fremont Ave., 530; Charles Wilkins, 1631; Millman St., 35; Ethel Wilkins, 1641; Millman St., 35; John Brown, 226 N. Bradford St., 35; Edward Teal, 2601; Herbert St., 310; Bettle Baker, 5 N. Poppleton St., 55; Helen Salter, 1619; McElderry St., 510; Nathaniel Powell, 507; Ashland R. v. 510; Beatrice Jones, 713 N. Spring St., 45; Vloia Taylor, 922 E. Madison St., 510; Barbara Strand, 730; Sterling St., 310; James Ricks, 1100; Low St., 325; James Wilkins, 1124; Low St., 525; Fred Overley, 1629 E. Fayette St., 310; Joseph Williams, 223; Xyrtle Aye., 310; Agnes Williams, 223; Myrtle Ave., 55; Lewis Lovelace, 622; Cider Alley, 220; Sadie Hunter, 400 Jasper St., 51; Henry McGates, 11 York St., 31; William Brown, Friendly Inn, 225; Martin Samuel, 1130; Saratoga St., 51; James Jones, 1226; Druid Hill Ave., 55.
For assailant by Cutting, Striking
Cant, Feld; held John Green, 1027 Bagher
St. $25; Nelson Beasley, 62 W. Con-
Stay L. 6 months; Nettie Beasley
$25; Nettie Beasley, 62 W. Con-
Burgundy St. 30 days; Lawrence Jackson,
368 Tyson St. $50; Sylvester Carroll,
406 Diamond St. held; Fred Cole-
lson, 2026 McCulloch St. held; Sa-
uwers, 2026 McCulloch St. $30.
IN MEMORIAM
ALEXANDER—A tribute of love to the memory of my dear brother, Thomas Clinton Alexander, who departed this life twelve years ago, April 22, 1914. You have left me, dear Thomas, And I hear your voice no more; I am safe in my convictions. That we will meet on yonder shore. They say that he is dead, but he isn't. Too bright to remain here below: His Heavenly Father called him, And brother, had to go. Was he ready? Yes, and waiting. His obedience was simple and sweet. Long ago he made his confession. And followed the Savior complete. Brother, oh, how we tried to save you. Prayers and tears were in vain: Happy angels came and took you. From this world of care and pain. Watch and wait for me, dear brother. For I know it can't be long. Till we are again united. In a land of sun and song. Keep him, Jesus, in thy keeping. Till we reach the shining shore. Then, O Master, let me have him. To have him as I did before.
BY THIS LOVING AND DEVOTED SISTER, MARY E. JOHNSON, Fredericksville, Virginia.
CAMPFIER- In sad, but loving remembrance of our dear mother, Mary, who departed this life. April 26, 1918.
At her bed and her bed
And saw her depart.
It nearly broke our hearts.
Unhappy and beautiful in so her ways.
Wonderful character to the end of her days.
A loving mother, kind and true.
What a beautiful memory she left be-
She went to Jesus as she was weary and worn.
In Him she found a resting place, the bed she had slept on. Before - our eyes she faintly grew weaker every day, and she added to save her, Until God took her away. He had laughed and so much for us, He laughedlessly, Nice to hear, on dear mother, and take the
God called you home. He thought it best.
BY 'HER LOVING DLAUGHTERS.
ROSE, GRACE and LILLIE CAM-
PHER.
GAINES—In memory of our dear mother,
Jane S. Gaines, who departed this
life two years ago, April 22, 1924.
Where sin and sorrow are no more.
BY HER SONS. PAUL AND ALEXANDER GAINES. 1449 Myths avenue.
TYLER - in loving remembrance of my mother, who parted this life two years ago today.
Uphight and faithful in all her ways.
A wonderful character to the end of 'her days', both true and kind.
A loving wife, both true and kind.
With a wonderful memory you left behind.
BY HER HUSBAND.
JAMES H. TYLER.
WASHINGTON — In loving remembrance,
with a warm heart for your memory,
Washington, who departed this life one
year ago, April 21, 1925.
Although you could not speak to us,
good luck with your life.
We know your thoughts were with us,
When you were called to die.
We know the touch for us,
How helplessly they lay;
God knew they worked continuously.
But they are gone today.
God knew they worked.
Since you were indicted to rest.
Those who think of you today.
Are you still with us?
BY HER LOVING DUAGHTER.
VIOLA L. WASHINGTON.
IN MEMORIAM
DANIELS—in sad but loving remembrance of my dear daughter, REGINA DANIELS, who died in her life three years ago. April 25, 1923.
Even death has its wonderful mission. Though it robs us of those we love: her love for us, her love for others, and we long for a meeting above.
Only those who have lost can tell
Of the grief that is borne in silence
For the one we love so well.
For the one we love so well.
Nestled all among the flowers,
Jes our pure and stainless lily.
That a little white was our
and gave us.
Little soul without a stain:
Little lips that smile so sweetly,
Little form that suffered pain.
Earth her little casket keeps:
While the umbrella hues to linger
Where our daring Regina sleeps.
BENJAMIN JAMES AND FLAMINGHE DANIELS.
DANIELS—in sad but loving remembrance of my granddaughter, REGINA DANIELS, who departed this life three years ago. April 25, 1923.
Today remembers her love who has gone torest;
And the one we think of today,
Is the one we loved so dearly.
Happily we loved.
How sweet the memory is.
But death has left a vacant chair,
That never can be filled.
How to
One who feels so sad.
To speak of friends on earth about her
It fills my heart with inches.
We stood by her bedside until the fatal
And saw her life depart.
And when we knew that she was dead
It almost
She LOVING GRANDMOTHER
AND GRANDFATHER, MATTEI AND
WILLIAM H. JOHNSON.
JANEY—in sad but loving remembrance
of my dear mother, Martha
Jayne, who died 15 years ago, April
17, 1913.
She has gone to the home of her SAVlor,
Who loved her and bore her away.
From her sorrows and sufferings and heartbreak.
To that heartless of endless day,
MRS. ANNIE BAKER, DRAUGHTER, MRS.
QUEEN—in sad but loving memory of
this life three years ago. April 17, 1923.
She had gone to the home of her SAVOR
She loved her and bore her away,
From earthly wounds and sufferings
from earthly wounds and sufferings
To that realm of endless day.
Cards Of Thanks
CARD OF THANKS
The family of the late Liny Nickings,
1133 N. Carey street, acknowledges with
grateful appreciation the kind expressions
and friendships he called at the home of the deceased
during their recent sorrow.
WANTED
WANTED—An experienced barber. Appr $2 Winters avenue, Catonsville. It WANTED—BARBER for white trade; sober men, wages $15 per week and boarding. C. Stephan, $3 Francis St. Amunapolis, Md. 21May 21
WANTED—Lady for plain sewing, mending and patching. Good wages. Apply, 213 W. Madison street, near Howard street.
WANTED—Intelligent young colored man to do shipping and general work, around store. American Dollar Store, 660 W. Lexington Street.
AGENTS WANTED — Throughout the United States by an old established and reputable land development company to sell lots and 5 acres plots in the fast growing town of Mispah, N. J., near Atlantic City. Big commissioning. More than 3,000,000 people know about our development. As to our fair and square dealings you will refer to Dr. L. K. Williams, president of the National Baptist Convention; Mr. Overton, president of the National Poughlass Bank, Chicago, Ill.; Mr. J. Finley Wilson, Grand Exalted Ruler of the Elks, Washington, D. C., and Dr. Ernest Lyon, Liberian Consult, Baltimore, Md. Steady positions to good willing workers. Reference required. Inquire N. Rathbott Development and Realty Co., 1001 N. 7th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Apr. 24
AGENTS! GOOD FAY- Saturday
after 12 noon. Other days 6-8
P.M.
HELP WANTED
We need good, reliable help. Day
workers wanted.
WHITE'S EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
1023 Penna. Ave. Phone, Ver. 7652
WANTED
SEVERAL MEN AND WOMEN
who have knowledge of tracing
Removals.
APPLY, BLUM'S
305 North Gay-Street 31-May
WEALTH FOR AGENTS
Live agents calling on the race can quickly build big sales and repeating 700s with our wide-
ly-demanded specialties. Address for particulars.
Exelento Company
P. O. BOX 2201 Atlanta, Georgia
31-May1
WANTED
Experienced Operators
For Beauty Parlor
Applicant must be experienced in all branches of the work. Espe-
cially PERMANENT WAVING, Marceiling, Bleaching, Water
WAVING, Drying, Bench work.
Salary and Commission.
Proctor Hair Shop
600 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Northwestern Pharmacies
The Tree of Life Indian Medicine Company's Tonic
No Matter What You Do, You Need Good
TREE OF LIFE MEDICINE COMPANY'S TONIC, as an ALTERATIVE, RESOLVENT and ELIMINANT in affections of the Blood and where there is a tendency toward Rheumatic conditions, has a Tonic and Laxative Action in Constipation, Billiousness and kindred affections of the Liver.
PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED RIGHT
Filled with PUREST DRUGS
Filled by REGISTERED MEN
Filled as Cheaply as Possible
NO SUBSTITUTES USED
ASK THE BEST DOCTORS - THEY KNOW
WANTED
BARBER WANTED
1610 Druid Hill Avenue
MEN, WOMEN, BOYS AND GIRLS
You can pay for a $5,000 or $10,000 home within a few years with our business opportunities. Spare time after your usual work or school hours. Easy pleasant work in your home without time.
We will give every one who writes for proof Prof. M. Young's Receipts and Formulas Lesson. How to Manufacture Toilet and Beauty Preparations at Home as a Free Premium if you send 10c silver, or 12c stamps to cover postage charge. EOW GREET & RECEIVE 1338 Cleveland St., Baltimore, Md. 2t-May13
HELP WANTED
HLLP WANTY
WANTED MEN
To work for the A. J. Bozzar Corp-
oration, at TWIN LAKES IN
Missouri. Send resume to
J. Long-Time Job. With good pay
only those who want to get ahead
need apply.
For further information call at
office, 1321 Penns. Avenue, Baltimore,
Md. Phone, Madison 0602.
FRIDAY and SATURDAY April 23-24
716 N. EUTAW STREET
OPEN 10 A.M.
Colored Salesmen AT ONCE
To handle an article
with a national reputation. Good position
CLAREMONT
PRODUCTS CO.
1376 W. North Ave.
KERR'S
Kill-A-Kough
(Bad Cold's Worst Enemy)
For Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis and
Throat Afections
35c and 60c per bottle
THE "DRUGGY" STORE
Myrtle Ave. & George St.
Regular Advertising
In the AFRO-AMERICAN
INDICATES
STABILITY, PROGRESS
RELIABILITY
Northw
Two Store
Pennsylvania Ave.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT—12-Room house, Taylors
avenue, Catonsville. One car fare to
chill all conveniences. Phone, Catonsville 1027-1.
11
FOR RENT
Beautiful 3-Room Cottage with all conveniences in
Douglass Park, Catonsville
Call Catonsville 10
for terms.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE OR RENT - New suburban
- homes, Govans, M. Apply, Robt. L.
Smith, 409 Schwartz Avenue, Phone.
Evergreen, 2704. 2-Apr. 24
FOR SALE: 6-Room house with large
investment in fee (st. ht. Wiman's
Glorim 3158.
WORK SCARCE IN THE NORTH
Urban League Sounds Warning: To Dixie Migrants
NEW YORK CITY.—The Industrial Relations Department of the National Urban League acting on reports from local secretaries and advisors throughout the country, calls attention to the scarcity of work in the North.
Here and there may be found small cities in which the colored man or woman may find employment, but both the large and small cities to which Negroes have been accustomed to go are plentifully supplied with laborers. Especially is this true of New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis, Kansas City, Youngstown, Buffalo, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Newark, and Hartford, Connecticut. The general unsettled labor conditions in the East are aggravated by stilkes which cause more unemployment than is usual at this time of year. It is estimated that in New York City alone 250,000 men and women are on strike.
To those who are planning to come North at this period of the year when most newcomers usually leave, Leah advises careful selection in order not to be disappointed in securing work. This suggestion seems wise in view of the number of applicants from the Mason--Dixon line.
Frederick Honors Rev.
FREDERICK, MD.—A grand reception was given in honor of Rev. E. M. Mitchell and wife at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Holland, 121 Ice street, on Thursday evening, April 15th.
Rev. Mitchell was sent to Pittsburgh and later to Mt. Zion, Baltimore.
Those present were: Rev. and Mrs. Mitchell and son, John Mitchell; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Holland, Mr. and Mrs. John Parker, Mrs. Mame Henderson, Mr. William Rollins, Mrs. R. V. Hammond, Mrs. Lillian Staunton, Mrs. Julia Hill, Mrs. Margaret Wars, Miss Ella and Nettle Jones, Miss Jennie Tall, Miss Lalita and Ethel Parker. A collation was served, after which they were tendered
Lost In County Jail
KANSAS CITY, MO—Carl Jackson, arrested on suspicion after a robbery got lost in the local jail and remained for six months without trial. He was released after data obtained the aid of one of the judges.
USED CARS
Paige-Jewett
$500
Jewett Touring - A 1924 model car
built by the car company
our shop; good tires, new paint
a beautiful blue with gold stripe
in the general of this type
to choose from.
$450
Chandler Sedan-A 7-Passenger Sedan in perfect condition; good extra equipment. Newly painted. An ideal car for use as Taxi.
$275
Lexington Brougham—Late 1924 in good running condition with good tires. A bargain at our price.
$225
Studebaker Coupe--Good running
condition, appearance and rubber.
Palga Sedan-Latel model car that
has been told to be new, Newly
pumped. Two extra tires. Price
$1,200.
Moon Sedan-Latel model car that
has been driven only $3,000 miles
and is in excellent condition.
consider your car as down payment. Balance monthly.
We will trade your car. Low
finance rate. One year to pay.
Open evening till 9
Sundays 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
USED CAR DEPT.
1120 Cathedral at Chuse
Fax: 1121-1111
Hudson-Essex
Hudson-Essex
1025 HUDSON COACH.
In splendid mechanical condition; runs
like new; fully equipped; 8,000
years old; name upon request. Price, $800.
1025 HUDSON COACH.
Very good condition; repainted, balloon
tires, extra tire, bumper and grate;
light, windshield, price, $800.
1025 HUDSON COACH.
Good tires, repainted and rebuilt, bumper
fork and rear, rear axle, Price, $650.
1025 EXEC COACH.
Balloon tires almost new, repainted,
fork and rear, bumper and motor
meter, Price, $755.
1824 ESSEX COACH.
A new running condition, with tallines
three tires, extra tire, bumper, motor
motor, Price, $450.
LAMBERT
USED CAR DEPARTMENT
115 Richmond St. Veronica $100
See CROXTON
WHEN HAVING TIRE
TROUBLE
THE BOY WITH VULCANIZING
EXPERIENCE
All Work Guaranteed for
Life of Tire
Modern Vulcanizing Co.
235 W. Biddie St.
Robt. D. Croxton, Prop.
VErnion 2796
USED FORDS
ALL MODELS
BEST TERMS IN CITY
THE BACKUS MOTOR
COMPANY,
10-20 EAST NORTH AVENUE
Open Evenings, 9 P.M.
Why Work At Hard Work?
LEARN BARBERING
Ladies, Gents. Earn More. Work Less.
Big demand everywhere. Learn
day, night, spare time. Call
PHILADELPHIA BARBER SCHOOL
332 N. 8th St., Phila. Pa.
To Keep Your Ship of Happiness from Floundering on the Rocks of Dependence, and Uncertainty and Difficulty
MARSE STANDS OUT LIKE A LIGHT-HOUSE
Week after week, day and night, year after year, Marse has stood like a Beacon Light guiding those who have been struggling under the burden of a rented home into the quiet and peaceful harbor of a beautiful home of their own. Many who had given up all hope and many who had thought their problems too big for them have come to Marse and have been brought safely into the delightful atmosphere of Home Ownership. You will think you will love Marse, but you will love your own home, come—take courage now—for Marse can help you and Marse will turn your Rent Dollars into a golden stream that will bear you easily and safely into the port of opportunity and you will be blessed with the consoling thought that you will soon become the Owner of Your Own Home. Whether you have MUCH or LITTLE, Marse is in a position to help you. Won't you come—NOW?
---
Friday, April 24th
To Keep Your Shore Rocks of Depen
MARSE A L
Showing You
Week after week, day and night have been struggling under the bus of their own. Many who had been come to Marse and have been broughed. If you are lost in the Sea of I take courage now—for Marse can he bear you easily and safely since the you will soon become the Owner position to help you. Won't you come
Marse S.
FORRENT
1896 N. GILMOR STREET—Apartment,
2 rooms, modern conveniences, in
good condition. 11.
1897 N. PREMONT AVENUE—Furnished
room, gas and electric. 11.
1898 DURHILL AVENUE—Apply for
first class apartments, 3 and 5 rooms,
2 bathrooms, in the first floor.
1902 DURHILL Hill, 1234 McCulloh, cess
garage street. Also private garages. 11.
1915 MADISON AVENUE—Apartment
for rent with private family. $7.50 per
week. Electric lights included. 11.
1922 MADISON AVENUE—Two small
or one large apartment, heat, gas,
electricity, phone, janitor. 11.
118 W. LEXINGTON STREET—Apartment for rent. Beautiful third floor, large room apartment. Convenience. 119 W. BALDWALK. Apartment. 125 W. BALDWALK. Apartment.
1125 BURD HILL AVENUE—Furnished rooms with electric lights. $2.25 per week.
1255 ORCHARD STREET—Three-room house with guard back and front. $2.75 per week.
129 N. GILMOR STREET—Furnished house with guard back. Week. Board and locking. $7.50 to $5.50 per week. Table board. $7.75 per week.
1133 N. VINCENT STREET—Six-room house with water on first floor and in basement. $3 per week.
1850 MCCULLOH STREET - Rooms for
Fent with all conveniences.
514 N. GLUMAR STREET - Apartment,
2nd floor, modern conveniences.
1822 WOODYAR STREET, near North
Avenue - 6 Rooms and bath, $8.00 per
week. Appy. 1529 E. Monument Street.
Call Wolfe 2337.
FOR RENT—Nice apartment to married one or one front room and use of house. Just the place for nice people. 111 Whitelock street. Phone, MADISON 3591. 31
114 N. CALHOUN-ST.—3 STORIES, 9 N. bath; key 818. Apollo Fredenbock Donoho. 18 N. Charles-st.—2nd floor. Phone Plaza 6026. tf
TEACHERS may find an apartment or furnished room with refined family at 2016 McCullion street. Mrs. Daly. tf.
1816 DRUID HILL AVENUE—One 3rd-story front room, suitable for a gentleman. Modern con
lences. MAD. 4807. Apr. 94
PROSPERITY
HOME OWNERSHIP
SELF-RELIANCE
INDEPENDENCE
FOR SALE
Phone:
Madison 10296 - 7439
FOR SALE OR RENT
1704 MCCULLURY STREET—10-Room,
good condition, low rent. Apply, 210-
W North Wing, 11th
FOR RENT—302 Laurent Street,
$ 4 room, kitchenette, bath, light and
call. Call or phone, Madison 7644-W 11
419 E. TWENTY-THIRD STREET
House, $ rooms and bath, gas and
electric. Reasonable rent. Apply 411
E. 23rd Street. Phone, Mad. 844-J 11
1226 DRUG HILL AVENUE—Small
furnished apartment, first floor rear,
grace room, electric light, gas
price, $2.5 per week.
FOR RENT—SUN North Wing
APARTMENT FOR RENT-809 North
Stricker street. 11
FOR RENT-3-Room house and bath,
and electric lights in the 2000 block
Dridd Hill avenue. Apply. 2010 Drud
Hill avenue, or call Madison 7635. 11
2451 DRUID HILL AVENUE-Rooms
furnished or unmanned or small
apartment. Modern convenience. 11
FOR RENT-1715 Madison avenue, 3
and bath, gas, electric and
al modern conveniences; clean and
attractive. $7.50 per week. Madison 768. 11
1831 W. LAFAYETTE AVENUE-Bea-
ful second floor apartment. Phone.
Madison 2451-W. 21-May1
APARTMENTS
OF
THE BETTER GRADE
2340 Madison Ave.
COR. WHITELOCK ST.
ALL CONVENIENCES
Reasonable Rentals
Phone Llberty 0344
FOR INSPECTION
41-Apr.24
STORE FRONT
FOR RENT
Ave.
ST.
ES
James A. Lisle
14 E. LEXINGTON STREET
CALVERT 0383
GOOD LOCATION - REASONABLE
FORRENT
1028 Pennsylvania Ave.
2-STORY
2500 Blk. McCulloh St.
1800 Blk. Presstman St.
2500 Blk. Druid Hill
1500 Blk. Gilmor St.
2-Story New Houses
2500 Druid Hill Ave.
400 Blk. Presstman St.
1100 Blk. Whitelock St.
400 Blk. Calhoun St.
3-STORY
700 Blk. Dolphin St.
2100 Blk. Madison Ave.
2300 Blk. Madison Ave.
1300-1400 Blk. Lanvale
2000 Blk. Druid Hill
1800 Blk. Eager St.
700 Blk. Mount St.
500 Blk. Calhoun St.
1400 Blk. Madison St.
2500 Blk. Madison Ave.
500 Blk. Calhoun St.
300 Blk. Laurens St.
1900 Blk. Druid Hill
1100 Whitelock St.
2100 Blk. Madison Ave.
700 Blk. Stricker St.
1500 Blk. Lanvale St.
1411 Madison Ave.
3 Complete Apartments,
Double Garage.
EAST BALTIMORE
1800 Blk. E. Eager St.
1400 Blk. Ashland Ave.
800 Blk. Rutland Ave.
1000 Blk. Wolfe St.
600 Blk. Caroline St.
Everything for
Your Convenience. Special
Salesman and
Automobilio at
your service
day and night.
OFFICE OPEN
DAILY
From 8:30 a. m.
to 9:30 a. m.
1305 Penna. Ave.
FORRENT
HOUSES FOR RENT
APARTMENTS
1112 Mosher St.-3rd floor, 3 rooms and
bath, $6.00 week.
225 N. Gilmor St.-1st floor, 4 rooms
and bath, $6.00 week.
252 W. Lamprey St.-3rd floor, 4 rooms,
$5.00 week.
1523 McCulloch St.-2nd floor rear, 2
rooms and bath, $5.00 week.
1523 McCulloch St.-3rd floor rear, 2
rooms and bath, $3.50 week.
1974 MADISON AVENUE — Apartment for rent, 1st floor floor from 1st floor, private bath, gas, electric, with porch.
31-AU-10-24.
1916 MADISON AVENUE—Furnished room for rent, 3rd floor floor. Call before 11 m. or m. after $ p. m.
FOR SALE
1500 Blk. West Mulberry St.
6 Rooms and Bath. Electricity. All
rooms private. in good condition.
Small cash payment. Balance as
call.
REAL ESTATE
Look over the list below, select the House you want, come in and tell us How you Want the Terms Arranged, and you have our new Quick Way in Purchasing Your Own Home.
LISTEN! We Have the Money. We have our Own Building and Loan Association LOOK! WE HAVE THE HOUSES, and you become a member at once. STOP! BEING THE LOSER, and the rent you are paying buys a Home. We have the most beautiful homes in the following blocks for sale:
Loans Made At Once
Without Red Tape or Publicity to
Housekeepers, Salaried Employes and
Automobile Owners at Legal Rates
Even though you already have a loan, we
will advance you more money.
Call; Write or Phone
ATLANTIC FINANCE & DISCOUNT
COMPANY
Calvert 2802
123 W. Fayette St. Second Floor
ing blocks for sale:
2200 Blk. Madison Ave.
1400 Blk. Madison Ave.
1600 Blk. Madison Ave.
2100 Blk. Druid Hill Ave.
2500 Blk. Druid Hill Ave.
2500 Blk. McCulloh St.
1000 Blk. Argyle Ave.
500 Blk. Blddle St.
1300 Blk. Carey St.
600 Blk. Calhoun St.
700 Blk. Franklin St.
600 Blk. Dolphin St.
400 Blk. Fremont Ave.
800 Blk. Harlem Ave.
HALLOWS
1514 Penn
Phone MA
Open 8:30 A.M.
Loans Made
Without Red Tape
Housekeepers, Salary
Automobile Owner
Even though you alr
will advance you
Call, Write
ATLANTIC FINAN
COMM
Calver
123 W. Fayette St.
W. Henry Thompson
If you want a square deal, if you want to be advised by a man who knows what it is to have a small earnings account, and a small income, who will sympathize with you in your present position, and will not lead you into a proposition he knows you cannot support, call me in person at VErnon 1470.
Adams Realty Co.
923 Madison Ave.
PHONE 7492
FOR SALE
FINANCED
TERMS THAT ARE SAFE
AND SANE
1800 BLOCK MADISON AVENUE
3-Story; Dwelling, furnace heat.
900 BLOCK ARLINGTON AVENUE
GLOVANS—Furnace heat,
and electricity. Lot 90x140.
418 N. CALHUGH STREET — 2
story, furnace heat and electric
ly.
2200 BLOCK MADISON AVENUE
—3-Story house; 2 apartments,
furnace heat, electric lights.
2500 BLOCK MADISON AVENUE
Porch front, hot water heat,
and electric lights and garage.
319 E. 24th STREET—18-Ft., strict-
ly modern, 2-story dwelling.
FOR RENT
A modern furnished apartment, occupied by a young man who wants to share with another young man of good character.
LOTS SOLD ON EASY TERMS
900 N. EUTAW ST., AT BIDDLE
VERNON 2839
900 Blk. Myrtle Ave.
600 Blk. *b*l*n* Pitcher St.
700 Blk. Saratoga St.
1300 Blk. Stricker St.
1700 Blk. Lanvale St.
1600 Blk. Lafayette Ave.
1400 Blk. Lanvale St.
1500 Blk. Lanvale St.
700 Blk. Fremont Axe.
400 block Calhoun
900 block N. Fremont
.500 block Calhoun
1200 block Harlem Ave.
1300 block Harlem Ave.
.700 block Dolphin
M. STANLEY
A. Avenue
Jason 9453
to 8:30 P. M.
At Once
or Publicity to
Varied Employes and
Rates at Legal Rates
ready have a loan, we
need more money.
or Phone
CE & DISCOUNT
MANY
2802
Second Floor
FOR SALE
400 Blk. N. Calhoun St.
1300 Blk. W. Saratoga St.
1400 Blk. W. Saratoga St.
500 Blk. Gold S.t.
1500 Blk. W. Mulberry St.
3-Story
1300 Blk. Mulberry St.
2500 Blk. McCulloh St.
2000 Blk. Druid Hill Ave.
1400 Blk. W. Franklin St.
2200 Blk. Madison Ave.
FOR RENT
3-Story
2025 Druid Hill Avenue
534 Gilmor Street
528 Gilmor Street
APARTMENTS
1613 Lexington St., 4 rooms
1115 Franklin St., 2nd floor
1619 Mulberry St., 1st floor
1115 Franklin St., 1st floor
2033 DRUID HILL AVENUE
MAdison 7030
Madison Ave.
2213 Madison Ave.
2219 Madison Ave.
2238 Madison Ave.
2303 Madison Ave.
2307 Madison Ave.
2337 Madison Ave.
2339 Madison Ave.
Beautiful 2-Story Homes
420 N. Calhoun St.
431 N. Calhoun St.
432 N. Calhoun St.
Terms Same As Rent
Carey Realty Co.
1215 Edmondson Ave.
Gllmor 0341
When we analyze all this talk about OWNING YOUR OWN HOME—
What does it mean? What are its advantages?
For the benefit of those who have possibly never stopped to consider just what advantages a man who OWNS has over a man who RENTS we will just quote a few here:
First A Man Who Owns His Home is First of All INDEPENDENT
He never has to worry about moving from place to place at the pleasure of his landlord. He never has to wonder if his rent will be raised on him the next day or the next week. He knows just what his taxes are and usually a few dollars each week will take care of that item, and so he feels free and independent.
By that we mean he has a natural tendency to save something and have something. Buying a home calls for some sacrifice, and so by the same time he has paid for his home he has cultivated the habit of doing without some few luxuries and puts aside some money for the "rainy day," and perhaps invests in another house until finally he has saved enough to help him and his family in old age.
A MAN WHO OWN HIS HOME IS HAPPY
Generally you will find a home buyer is continually "fixing up" his home. And what man is not happy when he is "piddling" around the house, papering here and painting there, putting a nail here and a screw there, knowing that all his efforts are being made for his own benefit and not for his landlord, then when the last dollar is paid and the mortgage is paid his happiness knows no bounds, for his home is his forever and ever.
We have the most beautiful homes for sale, and all the investment properties that you could desire, also church and business properties in all sections of the city. Our list will be submitted most graciously upon application. Phone, write or call upon us. We will explain every detail personally.
Let us show you these beautiful homes with every city convenience-electric lights, furnace heat, located near schools and car lines.
OUR NEW NORTHEAST BRANCH
Located at Corner of Caroline and Monument Streets, is now open for the convenience of patrons in that district and we assure you the same personal service and consideration as in our up-town office.
The Man Who Shows You How With A Smile,
1423 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
PHONE, MADISON 4639
Third
Generally you will find
And what man is not ha-
here and painting there, p
his efforts are being made
the last dollar is paid and
for his home is his forever.
We have the most b
perties that you could d
tions of the city. Our li-
Phone, write or call upon
SU
Let us show you the
tric lights, furnace heat,
OUR NE
Located at Corme
for the convenience
same personal servi
Willa
The Man W
1423
FOR SALE
$500
PLUS
Settlement Money
WILL BUY
a very desirable
Home
in whatever location you
desire. Consult
F.C.
WEBER
& CO.
REAL ESTATE
METROPOLITAN THEATRE
BUILDING
North and Penna. Aves.
2nd Floor Madison 6620
SMALL CASH PAYMENTS
Balance As Rent
8 Rooms and Bath, elecrtic, furnace heat, good condition.
762 Dolphin Street electric, furnace electric, furnace heat. Call Liberty 0346
HOUSE FOR SALE
ON CARLROLTON AVENUE,
NEAR LEXINGTON
10-Room House; bath, electric lights,
furniture and hot water heat-
ing plant. Ground rent. $60.00. Price
$3,400.00. $550.00 down. $150.00 per
week. Apply. PETTY E. ROSS
2010 Drud Hill Ave. MAd. 7639. It
FOR SALE—6-Room house with
fee in fec. (M. Wippea);
Gilmore 3168.
SUBURBAN PROPERTY
FOR SALE
Consisting of 9 rooms, bath, hot and cold water, gas, electricity, hot water heat, cement cellar and yard, hardwood floors. A-1 condition. (2) car line. Price reasonable.
1500 BLOCK W. FRANKLIN ST.
Three-story dwelling containing 8 rooms and bath. New furnace; electric lights throughout. Can be bought for $3,500, subject to $55 ground rent.
This is one of the best buys on the present market. Will assist in financing. GEO. R. MO. RIS ORGANIZATION Appraisal & Sales Division Charles at Sarnatga, Morris Hldg.
FOR SALE
RARE
OPPORTUNITY
Beautiful residence in vicinity of Lafayette Square. Electric lights, steam heat. Apartment of four rooms and bath on third floor. Pays all expenses. No speculators need apply.
Write, Box S,
Afro-American
Bldg.
HOUSE WIRING
Six-room house, complete with fixtures.
Nothing down. $1.50 weekly. 24 months
to pay.
HARFORD ELECTRIC CO.
2718 Overland'Ave. tf Hamilton 2486
Quality
Satisfaction
Let me beautify your home
Price to suit the times. Practical
Workmanship
Drop a line and I will call
W. LEROY WANSEL
PAPER HANGING AND
DECORATING
Residence: 421 Mosher Street
Felt Mattress, $12.00. Mahagany Post
$25.00. Felt Mattress, $20.00.
Box Springs, $25.00. Hair Mattress, $25.
30% of the cost of Mattress is the
material inside. If your mattress is
lumpy, call VErnern 0935 and talk it
over.
SANITARY MATTRESS CO.
921 Madison Ave. ff Baltimore, Md.
A. B.
HIS HOME IS
TY
save something and have
and so by the same time he
of doing without some few
day," and perhaps invests
to help him and his family
HIS HOME IS
ally "fixing up" his home.
around the house, papering
new there, knowing that all
for his landlord, then when
happiness knows no bounds,
and all the investment pro-
business properties in all sec-
craciously upon application.
detail personally.
ERTY
every city convenience—elec-
r lines.
BRANCH
ent Streets, is now open
and we assure you the
our up-town office.
Allen
A Smile,
VENUE
Miscellaneous
1711 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Let me Steam your Fall and Winter
Coats the Brooks Way
MAd. 9244 Balto., Md.
GET READY FOR SPRING
Men's Suits Pressed, 25c
We remodel indies' and gents' gar-
ments to latest styles.
THE ADMARK
CLEANERS — DYERS — TAILORS
1401 MADISON AVE.
Cor. Lafayette
PHONE, MADISON 1379-W
WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER
Tailors! Steam Cleaning
Pressing and Repairing Ladies' and
Men's Garments
SPECIAL—Men's Suits Steamed and
Pressed, 25 Cents
Mosher and Druid Hill
Mosher and Druid Hill
Corner
Phone, MAdison 9380-J
PROFESSIONAL
ROY S. BOND
Lawyer
220 St. Paul Place
Third Floor Front
Office Phone, Calvert 0552
Caundene
1520 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Res. Phone, Madison 7744-W.
Home Hours, 7 to 9 p.m.
May29
FOR RENT
THE MOST DESIRABLE
Professional Office
IN N. W. SECTION
Madison Ave. & Whitelock St.
ALL CONVENIENCES
Phone LIberty 0344
4t-Apr.24
MONEY TO LOAN
24 Hour Service No Red Tape
Large or Small Loans
PARK REALTY CO.
1000 EDMONDSON AVENUE
Phone, Glimor 3210
MONEY TO LOAN
On 1st, 2nd and 3rd MORTGAGES
AND NORES
HOMES REFINANCED. MORE
MONEY ADVANCED
See Petty B. Gross
2010 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Phone, Mad. 7-9-3-9
Md.
MOTHERS SEE TWELVE BABIES TAKE PRIZES
Charles Meichler, Jr., Is Youngest Winner In Under One Year Class
138 YOUNG HOPEFULS IN BIG CONTEST
Twelve proud mothers saw as many babies take prizes at the Regent Theatre Friday as a result of the Health Week Better Baby Contest
Twelve of the 138 young hopefuls who participated in the better baby contest were successful in obtaining the very handsome prize by the various business firms in the community, and four youngsters were from three months to one year formed the first group. Then those from a year to three, from two to three, and from three to four, the prize winners were seated in each class.
lecctors. The children were judged purely on their physical and mental development and those that had defects were advised. Twelve physicians examined physical skills made the examinations and filled in the forms. The head of the city health department, child welfare bureau says, the best forms are the purpose he has wanted. They were then submitted to three physicians who were not among those making the examinations and these three doctors picked the champions for 1926. Those winning prizes and the awards made were:
**Group I**
1st prize - Silver Baby 'Set, Castle Jewelers; 1 quart Milk Daily (4 weeks). Won by Charles Meichler, Jr. 1500 Lanvale street.
2nd prize - Rock-aye-Swing, nesh Furniture Company.
Milk Daily (2 weeks). Won by Lloyd Hoffman street.
Cr8Mon 89
Brize—Comb and Brush Set.
Fowler's Pharmacy; I quart Milk
Dilly (i week). Won by Charles
E. Harris, 412 Orchard street.
Group II
1st prize-Ten-Dollar Gold Piece
Won by Audrey Jones, 548 Lanvale street;
(Home Friendly Ins. Co.)
2nd prize-1 quart milk daily (4 weeks).
Won by Catherine Haller,
1140 Ellington street (Fairfield Dairy).
2nd prize-1 quart milk daily (2 weeks).
Won by Carlie Pigford,
933 Sterling street (Fairfield Dairy).
**Group II**
1st prize-Ten-Dollar Gold Piece
Won by Angela Jones, 1528 E. Madison street
(Regent Theatre).
2nd prize-Five-Dollar Gold Piece.
Won by Christie.o Deshiels,
1530 Drudl Hill Avenue (Dr. Chulmers Hairston).
3rd prize-Months' Premium
Downtown Policy. Won by Evelyn Burl, 2100 McCullough street
(National Benefit Life Ins. Co.).
**Group I-3 To 4 Years**
1st prize-Unbreakable Colored Doll. Won by Irmia Wilson.
vision street (Dr. H. Bishop Co.).
2nd prize-Five-Dollar Gold Piece. Won by Daisy Bishop, 503 Claggett street (Dr. J. C. Carpur).
1st year-1 price $100 Endowment. Won by Hazel Glimmer, 416 W. Hoffman street (National Endowment).
Mrs. Herndon White, wife of the founder of the White Maternity Hospital, a group of nurses and young ladies of the committee in charge of the event. In 1925 there were but 43 babies examined. The tremendous growth this year in the popularity of this event led to the work of the members of the committee who induced mothers to have their babies entered. The Health Week Committee hopes to follow up the work by getting mothers to care for the health regularly during the twelve months.
At the same time the awards were made for the baby contest the Regent Theatre also allowed the Healthe Week Committee to the big prize team in the marathon race. The silver cup was donated by the Regent to the winning team from the Grace Boy's Club of Grace Church, and each of the members of this team John Carroll, Robert Lee and Chris, receive an individual prize, a medal from the Hornstein Brothers. John Carroll was also presented with the Marse S. Calloway cup for breaking his own record over the course. Emma Coleman, Carnegie MUHLE Insurance Company was the chairman of the prize committee which secured the awards.
DON'T
EXPERIMENT
Your eyes should have expert attention. 25 Years experience and the most approved modern method at your service. Reasonable charges.
WM. B. RUTTER
Optometrist
Phone, Glimor 3800
1701 Harlem Avenue
Wholesale and Retail Cleaning and Dyeing
VErnion 3830
4 SUITS
SPONGES AND
PRESSED
$1.50
PRESSING
CLUB AND
HAT
RENOVATORS
404 DRUID HILL AVENUE
Utsuw
Free Call and Delivery
Ladies' and Gents' Garments Cleaned
Dyed and Altered
Suits Preserved. In Gilted and
Reblocked. While You Walt.
Call VErnon 6016 The Afro-American-South's Biggest and Best Weekly
THE BIRD HOUSE
Winners in the bird box on bouncing bounces, wounded Mayor, School 101; Howard Williams, 101; William E. Duval Junior High; James Lee, 156; Bernard Corbin, Edwin Brown; Moore, 156; Michael Miles, 118; Benjamin Brown, 113. Photo by AFRO Staff
PAIR GIVEN 10 YEARS
IN PENITENTIARY
Romantic-Story Of Love Trail
Interests' Crowded Court
Room
Room
Ten years each in the Maryland Penitentiary was the sentenced to prison upon Madeline Johnson, alias Gladys Dooley, and Walter Johnson, for their part in the robbery of three homes in which over $1,000 worth of clothing and jewelry was stolen.
The perpetrators of the robberies were discovered when police rested Johnson in a Pennsylvania man shop trying to dispose of two valuable rings.
The rings were recognized by police as being a part of the last reported stolen early from Johnson in Jamel Berman, 1015 Clifton avenue. After questioning Johnson, police went to the home of Madeline Johnson, who lived with him as his wife, and found dresses, rings, jewelry and articles of wearing apparel.
The woman was identified as a servant girl employed in the house. She was also alleged to have robbed the home of Mrs. Fannie Mazor of 2612 East Baltimore street, of wearing apparel and jewelry approaching
Story Romantic
The story told by Johnson on the stand of the romance between himself and the girl interested the crowded campus of the nearby hour's cross examination had failed to break the girl's testimony that Johnson knew nothing of the robberies he had offered to save the man. According to Johnson he met her in Wilmington, Delaware, when he was traveling with the Walter L. Malm Circus. After traveling across the country, he effort to locate her. His frail led through Delaware, Pennsylvania, and finally to New Jersey where he located her. They lived together four years before coming to Baltimore. Convinced by their conflicting testimony that Johnson knew as much as the girl, they apologized to the apale of her demails, Judge Eugene O'Donnell met out an equal sentence. Johnson, because of the girl's testimony was found to have given him guilt of receiving stolen goods. The sen- was ten years each.
LONG-LIFE
Roofing
GUARANTEED
10 YEARS!
Nothing Down
Pay Only
YOU needn't draw on your savings—or wait for ready cash—to get the Giggle of the Proof. LONG LIFE ROOF over your home. There'S NO red tape. You need NOT pay one penny down—just pay in small, easy weekly or monthly payments and that NOT until 30 days after work is completed!
THE time to have roofing done is RIGHT. NOW—before the Spring rain rains through, the spring water eats through, and the damage is told you—without obligation—how amusingly little it will cost to have a fully GREAT TEN-YEAR ROOF put over your home.
Write, Call or Phone
SOUTH. 2468
Enterprise Roofing Co.
705 Light St.
prizes by the
Elwood Mur-
Jr., Douglas
Junior High:
Robert Hines,
Photograph her.
9 SCHOOL BOYS WIN
BIRD HOUSE CONTEST
Nine Boys Will Be Awarded Trip To Washington And First Prizes
175 HOUSES OF ALL SHAPES AND SIZES
School 113 And Douglass Junior High Furnish Three Winners Each
Nine school boys will be given first prizes and a trip to Washington for taking first awards in the bird house building contest, which has been in progress in the city schools under the supervision of the Industrial Educational Board of Baltimore. George M. Gather is supervisor of industrial education.
School 113 furnished three boys in the Mills Brown, chickadee; Bernard Mills, woodpecker; Edward Lewis, nuthatch. Douglas Junior High. had three prize winners in Bernard Corbin, flicker. Edward Duval, woodpecker. Robert Williams, of 101, martin. George Moore, school 112, coped a first prize by winning the prize-winning wren house while Robert Hines, of 101, prized in the house contest. James Lee of School 155, Gavans, had the best home for blue birds, according to the judges, so he will be one of the nine to go to Wash-
The prizes were awarded Friday by Mayor Howard W. Jackson at the Y. M. C. A. Approximately 175 bird houses of all sizes and shapes have been built with billows of lilies, lobby of the "X", About 10 boys took part in the contest.
Purpose of the Contest
To stimulate interest in bird life and to provide houses, feeding devices and bird baths for the birds which are in and around Belfast.
Details
The details of the contest as appraised by the Superintendent of Education are the prizes. The contest to be open to the pupils attending the industrial arts centers and shops of the elementary and junior high
Prizes provided by the Park Board were awarded as follows:
10 for Wren boxes
50 for of:
Bluebird
Chickadee
Finchice
Nuthatch
Dovey Woodpecker
Flicker
Sparrow Hawk
3 for Hairy
Prizes awarded on the following points:
Object specifications
Workmanship
Design
All bird boxes entered in the contest because of the property of the Park Board.
Wren:
George Moore, 112; Raymond Williams, 106; Benjamin Randall, 104; James Hayes, 116; Nathan Caskey, 106; Henry Young, 112; Gerald Costley, 156; Clinton Neal, 114; Gladstone Anderson, 101.
Taylor—James Lee, 155; Joseph Taylor, 113; Fred Wilson, 114; Joseph Cook, 154; John Nicholson, 108.
Chickadee—Eugene Brown, 113; P. Jackson, 113; Clinton Neal, 114; Thomas Curtis, 116; Lawrence Smith, 116.
Wanted
A Partner in an Established Business
A young man with ambition and some means. One who is willing to work and share responsibilities is preferred, or an investment partner who only wants the earning of their investment. Apply,
BOX B
AFRO-AMERICAN
OFFICE
COAL
PRICES DOWN
Walter W. Jones
WHOLESALE
RETAIL
552 LAURENS STREET
PHONE, MADISON 3869
Don't Pay a Premium On Your Coal Bill!
WE are prepared to extend the most liberal terms to home owners on orders for coal placed now. Credit for 4, 6, 8 or 10 months will be extended, without increasing the cost of your coal.
You deal direct with us. There is no arrangement with any loan or finance company, and there is no bonus, no service charge, no extras of any kind. You buy at the regular prices, pay nothing down and get immediate delivery.
If your bill is paid within 4 months, no charge of any kind is made. If longer terms than 4 months is desired, the only charge made is interest at the legal rate of 6% per annum. Payments may be made weekly or monthly.
Compare these liberal credit terms with the cost of any financing plan. Arrangements to purchase your next winter's coal supply under this plan can be made at our main office. Place your order now.
Hi: Walter Hayes, Douglass Junior
Hi: Walter Hayes, Prestwidge, Douglass
Hipster Jr.
*Mittmouse*—Robert Hines, 110;
*Charles Knight*, 113; Harry Quarles,
113; Roosevelt Wahingt, 110;
Harry Freeman, 114.
Sparrow Hawk* Edward Duval, Walter Carr, Milton Bailey, Edgar Powell, Earl Anderson, Douglass Junior High.
Downy Woodpecker — Bernard Mills; 113; Herman Christian, 113; William McConkey, 110; William Curtis, 113; Lewis Davis, 113.
Martin—Dilwood Murray and
Bernard—James Paul. James
Douglass Junior High.
Nuthatch—Edward Lewis, 118; Samuel Barnett, 113; Michael Walker, 106; William Davis, 114; Harrison Boone, 106; Flicker—Bernard Corbin, Junior
Williams, School 101; James Paul, Douglass Junior High.
More men kick the postoffice spit-tooons than spit in them.
THE WHITE WAY
Every man is limited to his own experience, his own viewpoint, his own observations. Neglect of vital elements may eventually lead to results not desired.
As a part of our regular everyday routine we are inclined to encourage independent thinking and self-reliance.
Every man and woman have a right to understand and expect the—
THE WHITE WAY
Every man is limited to his own experience, his own viewpoint, his own observations. Neglect of vital elements may eventually lead to results not desired.
As a part of our regular everyday routine we are inclined to encourage independent thinking and self-reliance.
Every man and woman have a right to understand and expect the—
BEST POSSIBLE PRICES
POSSIBLE MATERIAL
POSSIBLE WORKMANSHIP
BEST
Perfect Suction In Platework
22K Gold Crowns Perfect Suction
22K Bridge Work In Platework
Nerve-Blocking --- Infiltration --- Gas
Small Weekly Payments --- If Desired
First,
Small Weekly Payments --- If Desired
Ask AFriend Who Knows Then
Phone:
VErnon 0356 - 7952
1028 Penna. Ave.
BENEFIT DANCE
Given by Associated Friends of the Orphans — Benefit of the Orphans
in charge of the Oblique Sisters
At the New Albert Auditorium, 1224 Penna, Ave.
Wednesday Evening, April 28th, 1926
Music by the Baltimore Syncopaters — Other Galloway Songster
A Prize of $5.00 in Gold to the person listing the highest number of
tickets and reporting April 27th
A Prize of $2.50 in Money to the person selling the next highest number
of tickets and reporting April 27th
ADMISSION
C. F. Woodland, President
Joseph Jennifer, Chr.
Don't Pay a Pre
On Your Coal
Regular Prices.
Nothing Down
10 Months
Credit
No Bonus
No Service
Charge
No Charge
whatever if
paid in 4
months
WE are prepared to e-
terms to home own
placed now. Credit for
will be extended, witho
of your coal.
You deal direct with
rangement with any loa-
and there is no bonus,
extras of any kind. Y
prices, pay nothing dow
delivery.
If your bill is paid
BENEFIT DANCE
Given by Associated Friends of the Orphans — Benefit of the Orphans
in charge of the Oblate Sisters
At the New Albert Auditorium, 1224 Penna, Ave.
Wednesday Evening, April 28th, 1926
Music by the Baltimore Syncepaters — Cabel Calaway, Singer
A Prize of $5.00 in Gold to the person issuing the highest number of
tickets and reporting April 27th
A Prize of $2.50 in Money to the person issuing the next highest number
of tickets and reporting April 27th
ADMISSION
C. F. Woodland, President
35 CENTS
Joseph Jenifer, Chr.
10 Months Credit
Interest at 6% per annum if longer terms are desired
Immediate Delivery
Compare these liberal cost of any financing to purchase your next
Immediate Delivery
CARROLL- INDEPENDENT BLUE RIBBON COAL COMPANY
The Carroll-Independent
Main Office: Harford Avenue and 2
Branches:
60 W. Oliver St.
Gay St. & Sinclair Lane
Baltimore, Md.
BEAUTIFUL Egg-Harbor C Manor EGG HARBOR CITY, N. J.
Known As the City of Industrial Property
More Than Fifty Mills and
Manufacturing Industries
Millions are being spent in transforming these properties
advantages of Pine-Hurst, North Carolina, and the Coral
Florida, and bring to the Doorway of Atlantic City in the
all the advantages of these two Resorts.
The Gateway Into Atlantic City
THE WORLD'S GREATEST PLAYGROUND. THE EGYPTIAN CITY MANOR has a large frontage on the Pennsylvania and Railroad and the Pennsylvania White Horse Pike. A population than 8,000. Atlantic City only sixteen miles away. It be
mitted by every one who sees it.
More Than $10,000 Home-Sites
HAVE ALREADY BEEN SOLD, and HUNDREDS OE BUILT on these Home-Sites for the purchasers by the A. C. Corporation, and many new ones are in the course of c.
The A. J. Bozarth Corporation's Motto
"The Customers Must Be Satisfied"
We want you to examine other developments. Learn to and all the information you can; but before you buy call or examine our maps, and improvements installed, or to Accept our invitation. Go and see our properties, and be
Terms To Suit When You Are Satisfied
You Will Be Under No Obligation for Infom
Call or Write
The A. J. Bozarth C
1321 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
ARE YOU KEEPING UP WITH YOUR CHILDREN
BOARD MEMORALIZES
LATE MISS COOPER
Official Minutes Of April 15th
Take Note Of Principal's
Death
21 PASSED RECENT TEACHERS EXAMINATION
Miss Edna I. Roye Leads;
Miss Edna Bowers Is Second
The following letter, sent to the family of Miss M. Eldy Cooper, former acting principal of the Training School who died last week, was read by Secretary Roche at the meeting of the Board of School Commissioners last Thursday afternoon:
"At the meeting of the Board of School Commissioners held on April 15th, the death of Miss Mary Eldy Cooper, acting principal of the Teachers Training School and School No. 100 on April 8, 1926, was reported and the following minute ordered:
"Because of the positions Miss Cooper had held, she was very widely known among the principals, teachers and pupils of colored schools. She was an earnest student, and she was always exercised a strong professional influence on her co-workers.
"It is probably that no woman of her race in Baltimore influenced her career more than Miss Cooper, the School system is decidedly poor because of her departure. There is very great respect. The Board of School Commissioners."
The following persons passed the teachers' examination held January 25th and 28th: Class II submittutes, Roye; Edward M. Cox; Roye; Edward M. Caesars; Roye; Edward M. Caesars; Mary Ronella Howard, Edith Gross Matthews, Marian C. Minn, Geneva Alenkington, Blanche Leonore Langley, Roberta Gertrude Wright, Lillie Mae Mills, Sadie Marguerite Laws, Baysmore, Annie Geneva E. Rainey, Nora Mae Waring, Mabel Virginia Galines; Kindergarten Primary; Julie Jones, Gladys Mays, Doe Jones, Katrina Katrina, Nicholas Churty Alberta Bailey.
extend the most liberal
owners on orders for coal
or 4, 6, 8 or 10 months
but increasing the cost
in us. There is no ar-
n or finance company.
no service charge, no
you buy at the regular
own and get immediate
within 4 months, no
made. If longer terms
issued, the only charge
legal rate of 6% per
may be made weekly
and credit terms with the
plan. Arrangements
winter's coal supply
be made at our main
er now.
Cant Coal Co.
25th Street
Homewood
1065
1066
S. W. Rutherford, treasurer and general manager of the National Bank of Washington, D. C., was a caller at the AFRO office Tuesday. He was accompanied by W. T. Rutherford, the Washington office and E. L. Barbour, district manager of the local office. According to Mr. Rutherford, the company will discover the fact that the National Bank all other race insurance company this year in income from premiums, and that the National Bank, business he said, noted during 1925, doubledly be continued in 1936. The company now has $4,300,000 worth of insurance in force and 1.1 million was written in Maryland in 1925.
Messiah Extradicted
New York—Elder J. N. Robinson who styles himself, Messiah of the "Live Ever" "Die Never" sect, was brought here from Chicago to answer the charge of wounding the Mann act. According to the rules of the sect, it is charged that women of the church were given to the Messiah as well as the property of the men.
Mrs. Ella I. Eunnels of 531 N. Patterson Park avenue who has been a patient at Mr. Carson's Private Hospital in Washington, is at home convalescent.
TIFUL
bor City
nor
OR CITY, N. J.
H
Of Industrial Progress
Fifty Mills and
Bug Industries
transforming these properties into the
home of the World. Combining all the
Carolina, and the Coral Cables of
of Atlantic City in the winter time
sports.
Atlantic City
PLAYGROUND. THE EGG-HARBOR
on the Pennsylvania and Reading
Horse Pike. A population of more
seven miles away. Its beauty is ad-
0000 Home-Sites
and HUNDREDS OF HOMES
to purchasers by the A. J. Bozarth
are in the course of construction.
Corporation's Motto Is:
"Must Be Satisfied."
or developments. Get their prices,
but before you buy call at the Office
ORATION. Learn our prices, and
ments installed, or to be installed.
our properties, and be convinced.
On You Are Satisfied.
obligation for Information.
Write
Bozarth Corp.
WANIA AVENUE
Known As the City of Industrial Progress More Than Fifty Mills and Manufacturing Industries
Millions are being spent in transforming these properties into the finest Resort, and Residential Sections in the World. Combining all the benefits of the resort, the Gateway Into Atlantic City in the winter time all the advantages of these two Resorts.
The Gateway Into Atlantic City
THE WORLD'S GREATEST PLAYGROUND. THE EGG-HARBOR CITY MANOR has a large frontage on the Pennsylvania and Reading Railroads, and the Famous White Horse Pike. A population of more than 1 million miles away. Its beauty is admitted by every one who sees it.
More Than $10,000 Home-Sites
HAVE ALREADY BEEN SOLD, and HUNDREDS OF HOMES BUILT on these Home-Sites for the purchasers by the A. J. Bozarth Corporation, and many new ones are in the course of construction.
The A. J. Bozarth Corporation's Motto Is:
"The Customers Must Be Satisfied"
We want you to examine other developments. Get their prices, and all the information you can not before you buy call at the Office of THE A. J. BOZATH CORPORATION. Learn our prices, and examine our maps, and improvements installed, or do not be installed. Accept our Invitation. Go and see our properties, and be convinced.
Terms To Suit When You Are Satisfied.
You Will Be Under No Obligation for Information.
The A. J. Bozarth Corp.
KEEPING H YOUR DREN?
ARE YOU KEEPING UP WITH YOUR CHILDREN?
17,000 Boys and Girls in Public Schools of Baltimore.
3,300 In Junior and Senior High
300 Will Finish Senior High In June
Will you be ready for your boy and girl when they reach the end of their public school career?
Will you have the means to start him in business, to send her to college?
Are you saving now for that purpose?
North Carolina Mutual is an ideal way to assure your children's success. Guarantees their education whether you survive or not. Talk With Our Agent About It Today
'THE COMPANY WITH A SOUL AND A SERVICE'
W. EMETT COLEMAN
JOEL BERRY
BERRY
DOROTHY MAGGONIE
er was in the in-
cloak of the guest of Morton
Chase, W. T.
other old friends.
other old friends.
He came to ex-
cellence and dared ap-
reciation to Grand Master
W. W. Allen, of
Boston, who recently
conferred upon
past tithi of a Fort
Grand Jr. War.
den, Jurisdiction of Maryland.
A year ago, Mr. Hutchins presented to the Stato State Assembly which had belonged to the elder Hutchins and authenticated the history of Maryland Masons.
93 Doctors At Clinic
Tuskegee, Ala.—Ninety-three physicians and surgeons from 16 states attended the 15th annual Tuskegee Hospital clinic here last week.
Two hundred patients registered and 50 major operations were performed. Visiting surgeons included Dr. J. H. Means, Boston; Dr. M. O. Dumas, Washington; Dr. M. O. Dumas, New York; H. D. Howell, New York; Clyde Donnell Durham; Dr. Algernon Jackson, Washington.
Samuel S. Horne, Dist. Mgr.
Balto., Md.
Page Fourteen
SCHOOL 100 DEPOSIT IS $6.03 PER CAPITA
300 Students Have Placed Into School Bank Sum Of $1809.78
SYSTEM REGARDED AS THRIFT INCENTIVE
Early Habits Of Saving Regarded Foundation For Economy
Students at School 100, where the late Miss Edyth Cooper was principal, had per capita deposits of $6.03, according to records of the school bank given at this bank.
This is the largest amount reported deposited by students in any of the schools and represents a total of $1,899.78 deposited by about 10,000 students. The school bank system in the schools is regarded as a valuable mean of practically teaching thrift and although all of the schools have not yet begun the system, it is growing in popularity and vol
Make, Sacrifices
Some idea of what the savings bank means in the school as a developer of habits of thrift may be judged by no sacrifices some of the students make to increase in their deposits.
Pennies saved from lunch money, nickels intended to buy candy and other sweets so relished by young benefaction students. In fact, teachers say this is the valuable factor in that it teaches the child to save by denial. Children are also taught to save at regular intervals. Savings accounts are School No. 106 with a total deposit of $330; School No. 110 where 531 students have a total of $244.64, and School No. 116 where 25 children have deposited several other school having deposits will be given at a later date.
CALLOWAY TO MANAGE
SES-OUI EXHIBIT
CALLOWAY TO MANAGE
SES-OUI EXHIBIT
Thomas J. Calloway, secretary of the Maryland interracial commission on homosexual exhibits showing the progress of the race which will be put on at the Sesqi-Cenlenniato be held in Philadelphia. Mr. Calloway will supervise the collection of exhibits representing all section of the race called in Philadelphia Tuesday. April 27 to map out the details. J. C. Asbury and E. T. Atwell, directors respectively of the race commission will be present.
Away Goes Eczema
"One day a druggist told me," says Peterson, "that Peterson's Ointment was the best remedy he sold for eczema. But you still never make any in it. Oh it!" he added, "because he heals so quickly that only a little ointment is used. Big box 60 cents.
Peterson's Ointment
No More Gray Hair
Larieuse
Hair Coloring makes it Lurteous Black in 15 minutes, one application will DOSTAID
Godefroy Mfg. Co.
DEPT. 4
3508 OLIVE ST.
ST. LOUIS, MG.
TARIEUSE
South Carolinian Took Black-Draught For Indigestion, and Says He Could Soon Eat Anything.
Bulentine, S. C.-Mr. W. B. Boukintine, of this place, gave the following account of his use of Theford's Black-Draught. "Just after I married I had indigestion. Working in the garden, I got to which I soon paid by having a tight, bloated feeling after meals. This made me very uncomfortable. I would feel stupid and drowsy, didn't feel like working. I was told it was indigestion. Some one recommended Black-Draught and I took it after soon could eat anything any time. "I use it for colds and bifluoresis and it will knock out a cold and carry away the bile better and quicker than any liver medicine I have ever found. Too much, or faulty chewing of your food, often causes discomfort after meals. A pinch of Black-Draught, washed down with a swallow of water, will help to bring prompt relief. Bloat of sensations, eructions, b a d breath and other common symptoms after Black-Draught has been taken for several days. NC164
Therford's BLACK-DRAUGHT LIVER MEDICINE
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Elects Officers
The Sunrise Circle held their regular monthly meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Mason, 708 Ensor street, with Mrs. Ida M. Hilton, Lady Regent, presiding. After the business session, the following officers were elected for the ensuing year: Mrs. Ida M. Hilton, lady regent; Mrs. Mabel Mason, first vice lady regent; Mrs. Oceella Dorsay, second vice lady regent; Mrs. Sims, 3rd vice lady regent; Mrs. Julia Howers, secretary; Mrs. Annie Sennett, assistant secretary; Mrs. W. Johnson, assistant musician; Mrs. Mary Kennard, entertainment; Mrs. Hattie Daniels, chairman of flower committee; Sir H. E. Bennett, publicity chairman; Sir E.E. BEE. Jones, advisor. Mrs. E. Bennett wasub into the dining room where a feast awaited them.
N. C. STATE SCHOOL CHILDREN RETARDED
N. C. STATE SCHOOL CHILDREN RETARDED
RALEIGH, N. C.-State records show only 53 per cent of school children as far advanced in classes as they began school. Six per cent of the colored children in city schools and 75 per cent of the colored children in rural schools are retarded. Two per cent of white children and 174,107 colored children in the retarded class last year. The assumption is that a child enters school at the age of six years. If it is not retarded, the child makes such advancement in it as classed as - visual. If it fails it is classed as retarded. In one county, Allegheny, 100 per cent of colored children were normal or better.
CHICAGO NOMINATES NINE IN PRIMARIES
Chicago, (A. N. P.)—A state senator, four representatives, a county commissioner, and three senatorial committees, were nominated by the primaries here last week. The Senate nomination went to the present incumbent. Adelbert H. Roberts, who was elected two years later, was the first ever serve in the Illinois legislature. Shadrack beat Turner and Charles Griffin was nominated in the first district. In the Third district the political death penalty of the once powerful Oscar DePriest was sounded. His candidate for the legislature, William King, was badly defeated, the two successful nominies being Geo. Roberts and the movement to elect Eighth Illinois Senator and committeeman of the Third Ward and Warren B. Douglass a Doneen incumbent. P. W. Chavers only polled 2,000 votes in his fight to succeed governor James Madden and the support of colored leaders who said Chavers wasn't a big enough man to represent them. Frank L. Smith, white, defeated Senator John Minton to the First Illinois State Senator.
Despite a vigorous fight in which Walter Cohen of Louisiana, Col. Patton of Mississippi, Wayman Wilker, son of Memphis and other southern leaders came to Chicago to help protect the primaries are regarded as a complete victory for the Wright faction.
N. J. Mill Strikers In Race Clash
N. J. Mill Strikers In Race Clash
LODI N. J. (PNS)-Racial encounters entered the textile strike Wednesday and police had to be called to the white strikers and the Negro mill workers. Eight men were arrested. Many of the men were wounded and several of the white strikers and cuts about their faces and bodies. It is said the white strikers were from the plant of the United Piece Mill, and the Negro breakers continued their work in the mill as soon as the disturbances were quiet. Picketing is seen in the plant. Late Wednesday the pickets went near the colored homes and attempted to intercept the night shift on their way to work. Police are the homes of the Negro workers.
EVERY WOMAN'S IDEAL
EVERY BOY'S IDOL
ARE YOU THIS MAN?
Or Are You a Physical Weakling Only Half
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If you no longer possess the magnetic force of magnetism, you need power to do what you want to do. If you want to power your system to work, and life has lost its thrill for you in all likelihood your system is weakened and you will lose all of your life if a total loss of strength. Don't take this wonderful 777 Formula Treatme a simple warm, exhausted system. You can actually water the wonderful supernova system, and integrated power powers from your body once your back to a healthy condition through this formula. Your vigor and youth gone have had lifelong magic turned to achievement by only a short course of Formula 777.
You can claim that Formula 777 will make a new man of your overpowered self, and make such statements. But we do say you will enter a new life—lived with spindle tiger and stenom, a man unmoved, used on experiences of thousands of joules, used on experiences of thousands of joules of satisfaction or money back. If you only live 50 days, which sells for $1,000, you must postpone.
SO. INC, Dept. B. F. 249 W. 34th St.
CHANGE URGED IN REPORTING FUNDS
A. M. E. Preachers Meeting
Deprecates Emphasis Placed
Upon Finances
SOUTH WAY AHEAD
BALTO., CONFERENCE
Bishop A. L. Gaines Tells
How Louisiana Has Solved
Same Problem
Baltimore A. M. E. Preachers
Meeting appointed the Rev.
J. J. Bakon, the Rev. J. G. Martin
and the Rev. M. H. Davis
as a committee to seek modification of the present method of reporting funds to the Baltimore municipal conference.
The ministers will confer with Bishop J. Albert Johnson, head of this district. Under the present system some dozen or more tables are set up for the conference meets. As each pastor reports he must bring a certain amount of money to each of these tables, dollar money, Easter funds, missionary department funds. The Rev. G. F. David, a visitor of Lexington, Ky., declared that such a reform was necessary as laymen had begun to think that the chief minister was to discuss the raising of money rather than the saving of souls. Bishop A. L. Gaines declared that his district in Louisiana is awa-yahead of the north in handling its finances. "Last year," said the Bishop, "each pastor referred all money to his presiding elder, the day before conference opened. The 'presiding elder read his report in conference' were dispensed on of 40 minutes."
"This year," the bishop, "the presiding elders will report the passional committee before conference meets. The reports will be audited and checked up without taking part of the time of the conference." This discussion followed the address of the Rev. J. J. Baker on the topic of In Collecting and Distributing Finance at the Annual Conference?"
The pastor and congregation of John Wesley M. E. Church worshipped with the First Baptist Church, Caroline and McEldridge streets, Sunday. The Rev. A. J. Greene, pastor, reported an address to the church. The Rev. John Walters, the new pastor of John Wesley M. E. Church, delivered the sermon.
Pastor Honored
The officers, members and friends of the church tendered their pastor, the Rev. Richard Allen Greene and his wife, the Rev. Richard Greene and a ring and a substantial purse was given him. Mrs. Della Greene also received an Eastern Star pin and a purse from the Helping Others Society, a close friend of the year close with co-operation of the Stewardies and Trustees and a loyal support of the organizations and members of the entire church. All claims were paid and the church was thanked for the rev. Levi B. Miller, of St Paul M. E. Church, his choir and congregation for their visit and the service in helping to crown the closing of our year's work with great success.
Appointed Commissioner
The Rev. J. T. Colbert, of Grace Presbyterian Church, was appointed Commissioner of the three Evangelical metings of the General Assembly by the Baltimore Presbytery, to take place from May 27 to June 2.
Unique "Tab" Here
What is considered the most unique tabloid company to tour the T. O. B. A. Circuit is playing a local circuit house this week. The little music is called "Booo" and Star Survival is composed of eight members, all of whom have records as successful artists on the time. The personnel is: Annie Mac Reynolds a Baltimore artist; office of the star; Kid Wiley, Butte; Kid Wiley, McWillon; Fred Longshaw, former pianist for Bessie Smith, and "Booo" Hope, the world's greatest liar. The aggregation is capable of giving an hour and a half show without the need for a piano. The Dudley office of the T. O. B. A. has booked them solidly. After a five week's tour they return to the Star in this city.
OR MARKLAND, M.C.
C: Created their Seven
14 at Pairs
Memorial A. M. J. E. Church, Calhoun
and Laurens街. The services were
conducted by the Rev. Briscoe, pastor. His
subject was "The Way," which
means very brilliantly.
The Professional Chaufeurs' Aid Association was formed in 1911 to membership of 10 men. At present it has a financial membership of seventy-eight percent of the members, elected by the State.
WILLIAM F. PAUL, President
WILLIAM F. PAUL, President
GEO. C. NICGERS, Chairman
of Board of Directors.
DEMOLD LYNCH, Administ
Agent.
Hampton Celebrates
HAMPTON, VA—Hampton Institute will celebrate its $5th anniversary exercises in Ogden Hall Friday.
Spaulding In St. Louis
DOUBLECROSS IN NEW ORLEANS CASE
BY WILLIAM PICKENS
New Orleans, LA. (A, N. P.) Up to Friday the appeal of the New Orleans segregation law had not been filed in the supreme court in Washington. Local people are suspicious of the white lawyers in charge of the case. The supreme court permits 60 days within which an appeal may be filed. The time is nearly expired. Locally, attorneys recall that Supreme Chancery of the Pythians was similarly double-crossed by his white lawyers in a case to compel officials of the railroad to afford accommodations for colored passengers. The lawyer simply let the time slip around to Washington and the appeal, and then his wife got suddenly and conveniently sick so that he could go at all and Green's case went overboard.
Rebecca Art Club At Bethel Church
---
On Thursday, April 1, John O. Hill presented the "Rebecca Art Club" of Baltimore in a musical concert at Bethel A. Church, featuring Miss Marie Johnson, a prano. Miss Marie Johnson, who is a Douglass High School graduate and the prima donna of class 1925, sturtled the audience with her art presentations. Misses Grace and Helen Morris the celebrated songsters of northeast Baltimore, rendered the first two selections. Mr. Arthur Boardley was the first pianist and the Tanner and Ulysses Johnson sang and dramatized a very effective duett. Mr. William Hamilton was violinist and his selections were very appreciative. In addition, the orator of the club interrupted one of Mr. Dunburt's famous selections. Loggins, the guest artist, contributed two Russian piano and violin music, and the pianist, handled the music with the art of a genius.
Gold Bars Buried Turn Out Brass
Gold Bars Buried Turn Out Brass
ALBANY, GA.—The discovery of three bars of "gold" by the use of divining instruments cost Clevie Riley, Lee County farmer $200 and a Miley who sought gold with the assistance of another whose name he said was Green, unearthied three bars each stamped $50,000 and dated 1315. Green told Riley after the discovery that it would cost $200 to send the gold to Washington and have it assayed and offered to share with Riley, who gave him a money order for $100. Yesterday Gore borrowed Riley's mule and buggy. He failed to return it. Riley started an investment in the farm while at work on the farm. He admitted, however, today that they had been discovered by himself and Green with the "assistance of the" divining instruments that the bars had been previously placed in the field by Green.
"Faith" On Thursday
Shieldon B. Hopkins' drama, "Faith" will be presented at Sharp
Hall on April 20. The pity is in three and
requires 10 characters for its
presentation. It has been success,
only present in three times, eliciting super-
active press notices. Mr. Hoskins will
be supported by Mrs. Harnett
Wiggins. Mr. Hopkins, Maggie Bailey, Oscar Simmons, Harry Hunt and Annie H
Organ Recital
Howard Carter, organist, gave a recital at Trinity A. M. E. Church, Sunday afternoon, and an autobiography was presented by W. Llewis, Wilson An. appreciative audience was present. Mr. Carter was "together played by Mr. Carter were" "Toocato and Fugue in D Minor," Bach; "Toocato, Bach; "Ave Marle," Borsowick; "First Sonata," and Massanet the "Angel." This recital is one of a series educational in its purpose, program notes explaining the different names of the works, and the organist of Trinity, arranged the recitals. The Rev. W. H. Thomas, is pastor of the church. G. Sylvestre, programmed to appear, failed to do so.
Tunstall Joins
~ Dixie Singers
Nelson Tunstall, Baltimore's best known bartender, left the city this week to join the Dixie Jubilee Singing Group, a soloist at Grace Presbyterian Church for the last six years. He seemed enthusiastic about his new venture, recalling former tours with the band and the company of other years and tours with Will Marion Cook's aggregation that carried him to Europe. He will return to the city in spring with singers to fill an engagement at a local theatre.
Class Leader Surprised
Mr. Richard Harriott, leader of class number 2. Metropolitan M. E. Church, was given a surprise last Monday evening in the dining room of the church by members of the Society. She was given by the pastor, Rev. E. S. Williams; Mrs. Charles H. Gordon, Jr., Mrs. Cornellus Dowell, Mrs. Bess Harmon and Mr. Garrett D. Rawlings, in his closing remarks he presented Mr. Harriott with a purse of $10 coming from the class.
REV. THOMAS TO SPEAK
The Rev. E. N. Thomas will be the speaker before the A. M. E. Preachers' Meeting at Betheh Monday, April 26th on the subject "Present Opportunity and Duty of the Church."
Diggs Conservatory of Music
1124 DRUID HILL AVE., BALTO., MD.
Maurice S. Diggs, Dir.
A limited number of partial Scholarships given to School Children in Piano, Voice, Violin, Harmony, Counterpoint, Theory, and Conducting. Certificates given on Instruction. For particulars see the Drector.
11
Dr. Locke At A. and T. L. Locke, professor of Philosophy at Howard University, addressed the study body of A. and T. College, last
The S. S. Adult Bible Class of Metropolitan M. E. Sunday School held its regular monthly meeting Friday evening at residence Ellen Trotter, 1206 McCulloch street. After business, Mrs. Bessie Harmon, teacher of the class gave a very interesting talk concerning a museum in Pauillac which was held in Pittsburgh, March 21 to 30.
G. D. Rawlings, superintendent young people and adult departments also spoke. At the closing of the meeting, the students were dined into the dining room where a very delightful repast was served.
POLICE TAKE 32 IN SUNDAY RAID
POLICE TAKE 32 IN SUNDAY RAID
After skydiving about the house at 1714 Madison avenue until the early hours of Sunday morning, the officers swooped on the officers swooped down on the joymakers and packed 38 men, women and girls into two patrols and rushed them off to the Station House each at a hearing next morning.
TISKKEEE, Ala.-Southern delegates to the world's Y. M. L. A. com-munity. August recently named Dr. R. R. Mottusk, Tuskegee; James Bone, Kentucky International Committee; Robert E. Morehouse College; Atlanta; Robert E. Jones, New Orleans; R. W. Riley, student at the University of C. C. Shulding, Durham, N. C.
HAMMOND, La. (ANP)—The Third District Colored Baptist College recently completed was destroyed by fire at an estatistical loss of $10,000. Only one engine was detailed by the local fire department.
Soft Hair In Latest Style May Be Yours
This girl's beautiful, lustrous, smooth hair was once very harsh and unruly. By the very easy way of applying EXELENTO QUININE POMADE daily she was soon amazed and delighted at the beauty of her hair—a beauty that was noticeable to all her friends.
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Send your name today and get our valuable book of beauty hair, and a library of our preparation, FREE.
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GROUP INVITED TO WORKER'S MEETING
For All Races
Considerable interest is being manifested in a meeting of workers under the auspices of the Worker's Leagues League at Conservatory Hall, 1629 E. Baltimore street, Friday evening, April 30th.
Speakers at this meeting will include Edward Rutherhenbeck, well known labor leader and general secretary of the workers party; W. F. Dunn, editor of the "Daily Worker," and Norman H. Tallentine, labor leader of the Workers' Party and the Young Workers League represent the largest element of the labor group and advocate for complete equality in working conditions of all races. Both its colored and white leaders have declared openly the right to segregation and jim crowism in this country and all ports of the world, and all of their meetings are open to all races a
Liberal Program
Especially will the leaders of the races be interested in the program of the Young Workers League, but out of concern for better living conditions; for organizing the unorganized; for equal rights of white and colored races for recognition of workers and farmers government; and it stands out against injunctions; wage cuts; child labor; militant discrimination; and its own.
The meeting will be held at 8 p. m., and the promoters invite all colored leaders and civic workers as well as the labor masses, to be present.
CATONSVILLE, MD.
BY TORSELL
CATONSVILLE, MD.-The funeral of Samuel Lee, 22, who died Tuesday at 2:18 p.m. from Grace A. M. B. Church. He was a student of the College and of the Baltimore High School, also a member of the Steward Board of Grace, the Baltimore High School. He leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Lee, one brother, Spencer Lee, two sisters, Laura and Mary.
Rev. C. A. Williams left Wednesday for Hagerstown to attend the funeral of Hagerstown.
Mrs. Mary Foranin, Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Williams and a philanthropist visit to Frederick County Sunday to visit their father and relatives, Mrs. A. Carter, of Southerntown, Conn. is spending two weeks here. She is the sister of Matthew and her daughter, Mrs. A. Carter, of Wooddawn, spent two days with Mrs. Smith, $500. Mr. and Mrs. Wen, Adams and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel, and Mrs. and attend the A. M. E. Conference, which is in session there. First rehearsal for the great justice that will be given at Grace Church Sunday will be held Monday at the church. Mrs. Rosie Dorsey, who gave her daughter a Baltimore, a surprise, raised $$$. Fountain is still confined to his bed in Blessness.
Abbey C. Ridout is erecting a two-story college building and Mrs. Wm. Ridout.
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Bible Class Meets
Six "Y" Delegates
Baptist College Burns
Annapolis, The
Annapolis, The State Capital
By TRAVOLA CHEW
19 Calvert Street
ANXAPOLIS, Md.—Alderman Charles
Association, B. I. P. O. e. W., of
attended the meeting of the Executive Com-
munity, Sunday, April 11 at Harken-
ford, Md.
"The Sunshine Sewing Circle gave a unique surprise, surprise, surprise," their members, Mrs. Pendella Parker-Brown, April 12th at the residence of the late Mrs. Parker-Brown. Covers were in aid for 25. The color scheme of yellow and green. Mrs. Washington Alnay, South River, spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. Daniel W. H. Brown, Joseph Coates and Richard Brown entertained at an April Richard B. Washington street.
W. H. Bates, of 47 Cathedral street has been appointed to serve on the United States Grand jury for the spring trial of Mr. Gid. His trip to Bollinger are daily.
Mrs. Laura Holt, of Changy, Md., visited her Holt hst Sunday. Mrs. Jebson Johnson, of Croone, Md., made a flying trip here this week. Mrs. Loyce Counsell, Md., who has been confined to the Emergency Hospital for nine weeks is out again. Mr. and Mrs. Leven Nash's family is
rebecca Smith,
Craw-
ph st.,
Holt st.,
Mary st.
MARY
TOWSON, MD.
TOWSON, MD. (By Pascal Jones)—The Relief Association of Baltimore County, of which Benjamin Johnson is President, visited Israel Baptist Church of Baltimore last Sunday afternoon, Williams, penned a preach the sermon. The Rev. J. J. Desplies, pastor of M. Calvary, was invited to M. Calvary A. M. E. Church last Sunday afternoon was preached by the Rev. Desplies. The Rev. Matthew Moore, pastor of M. Calvary, was invited to attend the A. M. E. Conference, which convenes in Hagerstadt, MD. for a week. A. M. E. Church was entertained by Mrs. Oscar Davenport at the residence of Mrs. Lever-Friddle on Lennox avenue, East Friday evening. Mrs. Charles Eason, of 306 Lennox avenue, was entertained from a short visit to Portsmouth, VA. Mrs. George Henry, of Fairmount avenue, who was confined to her home, is able to be out again. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome D. Dolman of Baltimore, on Monday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Rush Williams, Miss Mary Solomon, C. Bergess, of York, and Mr. and Mrs. Jones.
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Friday, April 24th
the State Capital
Improving after a long illness. Mr. Nash has been sick since last summer. He children. Just spent a holiday with his father, J. W. King of Carstreet. Mr. King graduates this year. His father is a student of Howard University.
Little Russell and Charles Moore, so far, of Moore, of East street, still very sick.
Bates' private school has been closed for a semester. illness of the school. J. reopened Monday. of Mrs. Marian Parnell and son. Anderson, spent Sunday in Washington, D. C.
William Sharp, of Charles street, is planning to improve his property very
Mr. and Mrs. George Price have improved their home by adding one room and a bath. They live on Cathedral Street. Mrs. Nannie Philops, of South street, has had plenty of South street, is having his property improved by adding a porch and several rooms. East street, have had their property of 97 East street, remodeled. Rhac E. Duke is still on the slick list. Asbury M. E. Sunday School is preparing for a summer rally and pep rally. April 28 at 2:00 p.m. Owen's will represent winter; Miss Margaret Johnson, spring; Miss Dora Weens, summer, and Miss Flora Blackston, autumn.
YLAND
There will be a special symposium delivered at St. James A. U. M. P. Church on April 28th by the Rev. James Williams, pastor of Israel Baptist Church, Baltimore, in interest of the Spring Festival. Have all, have the support of the Blue Army Social and their co-
A chicken and waffle supper was held on Wednesday evening by Mrs. Clara Stepp and Mrs. Pannie Young, for the benefit of St. Mary's Hospital, C. Burgess, Miss Mary Solomon, Mrs. Annie Dolman, and Mrs. Anne Patsas. Mrs. Dolman was the centrepiece which was rendered at Sharp Street Memorial Church by Abbie Mitchell on a lawn in the corner of the guest's of Mrs. and Mrs. Jeone Dolman. Mrs. Martha Hinton, of Lennox avenue, from an attack of the gripe, offered from an attack of the gripe. Mrs. Albert Wilson of Pennsylvania, from rheumaticism, is much improved. Mrs. Mamie Wilson was a guest at Mrs. Pachal Jones on last Thursday.
ATLANTA, GA—Indianapolis will out over Baltimore and will be the meeting place of the next general conference of the Association. The conference will meet in May 1928. General Conference Commission met here last week to make the decision. Its members are Bishop J. D. Johnson, Bishop John H. Johnson, Bishop W. A. Fountain, Res. M. W. Thornton, T. J. Miles, G. T. Sims, J. D. Cowan, W. A. Hewlett, J. Barrus, J. Tools and John Harmon.
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