Kansas City Sun
Saturday, July 20, 1918
Kansas City, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
BOUND FOR BERLIN
Greatest Demonstration Ever Witnessed Here.
A GREAT SEND-OFF
An Enthusiastic, Patriotic and Cheering Crowd of Thousands of Colored People Give a Fitting Farewell Demonstration to the 820 Drafted Men Who Left For Camp Funston Thursday Forenoon.
Bands, Glee Clubs and a Mighty Chorus Furnish Patriotic Entertainment Throughout the Parade.
THOUSANDS WERE IN THE LINE OF MARCH
If you want a real live up-to-the-minute Negro Newspaper that gives ALL the News in which colored people are interested, subscribe for the SUN. Bell Phone East 999 and 2789
VOLUME X. NUMBER 47.
GREATEST
A GREAT S
An Enthusiastic, Patriotic a
of Thousands of Colored
ting Farewell Demonstr
Drafted Men Who L
Funston Thursday
Bands, Glee Clubs and a Mighty
Entertainment Through
THOUSANDS WERE IN THE
PROGRAM.
At Paseo "Y," 8:30 a. m.
HON. W. C. HUESTON,
Master of Ceremonies.
Chautauqua Chorus, 500 Voices
"AMERICA"
Prof. R. G. Jackson, Director.
Invocation ..... Dr. S. W. Bacote
Address..... Rev. Reverdy C. Ranson
New York City.
Address.....Hon. Robert Disney
Solo.....Mrs. Robert G. Jackson
Address.....Rev. J. W. Hurse
Address.....Hon. Charles H. Calloway
Chorus.
Address.....Mrs. Lizzie B. Fouse
Lexington, Ky.
Farewell Words.....Rev. Wm. H. Thomas
Chorus
"STAR SPANGLED BANNER."
With a forceful unraised hand and with the commanding quality of a General, backed up by the experienced counsel of the Editor of the Sun, Mr. J. J. Mattjoy, Grand Marshal of the day, formed twelve thousand of enthusiastic Negroes into marching order exactly at 9:30 a.m. last Thursday morning. Negroes who were out to give expressions to their feelings of patriotism and they did, oh so great! As early as seven o'clock Mr. Crews and other committeeemen were busily engaged doing the things which were soon to cause the mass of people to burst forth in arrayed order. What was it all about? You know and I know. The drafted boys, black boys if you please, were leaving for Camp Funston and we their friends, brothers, mothers, fathers sweetheart and comrades were there to cheer them on. While the Grand Marshal was forming the many platoons, groups, stand bearers, postures, signs and vehicles, appointing and reappointing, ordering and reordering, the draftees, who had already marched from the Local Board up to the Paseo "Y" were being addressed by various speakers in short talks—all of one theme—America Must Win War and Negroes Must and Will Gladly Do Their Part. The acclamations of that vast, happy, joyous, delightful crowd testified that they understood. And they cheered and cheered, leaped in the air, waved their flags and went wild with enthusiasm, while the big singing chorus standing by sang "Over There." One draftee was heard to exclaim that he felt like he could excel the exploit of the two black heroes who recently whipped 20 Germans. They start and swing out on the last turn of the Paseo at 18th street. They move along and stretch out to 15th street without phasing the thousands who wait for a place in the line. Turning West the eMarshal discovers thousands disposed to march in groups along the curbing. These were promptly commanded to fall and they swelled the ranks to the mighty. Looking back from the front on the coming thousands in line, one could see what could have easily embodied a "Black Town" only the black was nicely relieved by many bronzed faces and the palm beaches, the shirtwaists and highly decorated attire of our women who seem to show as much fire and glow of the hour as the men.
The parade formed as follows:
Grand Marshal, J. J. Mattjoy and Aide
George Anderson.
Squad of Motor Cycle Police.
Pension of Negro Police Officers in full uniform.
American Flag.
Flags of all the Allied Nations borne by prominent citizens.
General Secretary of sixty.
Second Regiment K. of P. Band.
Four companies niform Rank K. of P.
The Kansas City Sun
BAND
K.G.Mo.
The Famous Second Regiment K. of P. Band of Kansas City, Mo., which under the leadership of Sergeant Cooper has become the greatest Negro Band in America and Kansas City stands ready to back in a competitive musical contest for $5,000.00 against all comers. At Quindaro last Sunday afternoon they rendered one of the most difficult and classical programs ever rendered by a Colored band and it won the unanimous approval of officers and men stationed at Western University. While in the monster Parade on Thursday they were the recipients of a one continuous ovation from the start to the close of the Parade and in the business district, where thousands of whites lined the sidewalks, the applause was simply defending.
Red Cross Unit carrying large American Flag, Mrs. T. G. Campbell commanding.
Wirtz Graduate Nurses in uniform.
Wirtz Brothers beautiful automobile hearse with inscription, "We are going after Kaiser Bill."
Four Companies of Boy Scouts, under Scout Master Rev. F. D. Wells. Large Flag carried by oung women all large in hair. Drafted men from the various wards. Mothers, sisters and relatives of drafted men. Two thousand School Children. Citizens, men and women on foot, decorated. Two hundred motor cars. They go on and on, turning at McGee street up to Eleventh street down Petticoat Lane to Main. On this broad asphalted expanse on thoroughfare, which the motor cycle police had cleared, marched the now lively throng. The great Second Regiment Military Band struck up the National air and at the inception of the Star Spangled Banner, all marchers and many observers uncovered. Here we give the white people credit for the "hands" they gave us. This was a parade to win the war and none knew it better than they—they did their duty.
We are on Main street. The escort maintains, ah, heightens joy of the moment with more music and more enthusiasm. It is all glorious! See how they march! And they keep time, every mother's son and daughter. They are Colored people and they therefore step proudly, and as natal as a goosefoot in a clover field. They put 'em down as if they would step on the very notes that the untiring band continuously played All the popular airs were played over and over again but the people showed a preference for the National Anthems and they got what they wanted. It was a feast of music and march.
Turning east they came back to Grand and started south, a broad beeline to one of the approaches of the Union Station. Those conscious of a
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1918.
certain indifference on the part of the Kansas City Star concerning us looked up at this Institution and seemed to challenge it to criticise the thousands of Colored people who were passing it. We noted, however, a portion of the office staff giving us the glad hand and cheering us on. We are thankful for this, and those who expressed themselves obviously were true Americans. In the moment they stood above the line of color and felt the atmosphere of pure patriotism, so much for the Star.
We drop down to 18th street and keep going. The workers in the big factories on each side of the street show hearty and unbounded applause. One large concern filled their hundred or more windows with cheering onlookers, chiefly women. But the big Carnie-Goudie Company engaged the utmost attention from all the marchers with a massive streamer which read: "Goodbye and Gooduck." At this all cheered. Add to this the still loud and happy emanations of the band and the continuous whoop of marchers and auto horns and it was now pandemonium.
We are now at the approach of the station. The parade becomes a living, hollering, flag waving mass and in they go. By the thousands! The colloidal building seems a mere booth. White people seem scared. It seemed that it was understood that Negroes would take the place. And they did. Still, no lights fell down. The supports of the building remained in their concrete order. The water founts did not go dry, nor were poisoned. The only unusual occurrence was the big jam at the outlets where eagerness coupled with some roughness was displayed—it was the only thing that seemed to reflect on the whole demonstration. This can be avoided in the future. Colored people have got 'em, all parts of them. They have got the temperament and talent of a great people. It takes a frank, clean race, without guile to rise to these occasions so splendidly. Here let us point out for once, the value of leadership. We have got to have somebody to rise to every public need and tell us that the stuff is in us and make us demonstrate it ourselves. Every time this is done in a tangible way we are moving on up to the front with the foremost American groups and we are becoming a step more progressive. Then hats off to him who fathered the idea. Hats off to the Committee who cooperated. Hats off to the speakers. Hats off to the Marshal of the hats and hats off to somewhere around 20,000 Negroes who turned out to cheer our boys on their way. It was grand and great.
NOTES ON THE PARADE,
Among the banners carried in the
Photo by
J. M. MIEK
J. J. J. MATTJYO
Nassau County, Mo.,
of the Drafted
this great affair
his organizing
such as this was.
crewingcking "con
which made a飞
Parade possible,
Negro in Great
Hueston, Callo
in the West back
J. Mattjyo and
him himself a bor
Probation Officer of Jackson County, Mo., who as Grand Marshal of the Monster Parade, held in honor of the Drafted Men, made a striking impression upon everyone who witnessed this great affair both by his magnificent physique and horsemanship and by his organizing ability to handle so easily and satisfactorily a great parade such as this was. As a hustler, Mattjoy is in a class to himself and the "wrecking crew" composed of Mr. W. C. Hueston, Dr. E. B. Ramsey and himself, which made a flying tour over the city collecting funds to make this great Parade possible, won for themselves the gratitude and sincere regard of every Negro in Greater Kansas City. As an orator Mr. Mattjoy is in a class with Hueston, Calloway and Crews, and as an organizer he has got everybody in the West backed off the board. Kansas City is exceedingly proud of Mr. J. J. Mattjoy and wishes for him success in all his undertakings as he has proven himself a born leader of men. Hats off to J. J. Mattjoy.
parade was one saying "We are all 100% Americans"; another read "50,000 Negroes are now over there and 500,000 more screaming to go. Look out Bill"; another read "We'll keep the home fires burning boys"; a fourth said "Make everybody work or fight"; another said "Bound for Berlin via Funston"; while yet another which seemed to make the big hit of the parade read "If two Negroes can whip 40 Huns, what the
h—— can 500,000 do?"
The Ladies of the Red Cross, as well as the uniform Nurses from the City and Wheatley-Provident Hospital, were the recipients of much ap please.
Watkins Bros.' beautiful new auto mobile hearse bore on its side the inscription "Going to Bring Back the groes can whip 40 Huns, what the
The Ladies of the Red Cross, as well as the uniform Nurses from the City and Wheatley-Provident Hospital, were the recipients of much applause.
Watkins Bros', beautiful new automobile hearse bore on its side the inscription "Going to Bring Back the Kaiser."
In the front ranks carrying the flags of the different Allied Nations were Dr. J. E. Dibble, Hon. L. A. Knox, Mr. N. C. Pearman, Mr. C. A. Starks, the writer, Hon. C. H. Calloway, Nelson C. Crews and Dr. E. B. Ramsey, and just preceding them was a massive Pythian carrying their beautiful new $200.00 American flag.
One of the biggest hits of the parade was "One-ton" Chaney, the big humorous, good-natured kid of Eighteenth street who only weighed 357 pounds but who marched every step of the way from the Paseo to the Union Station and incidentally won a hat full of money from a lot of boobs who said he couldn't do it. He was given a great ovation all along the line of the parade.
More than 200 beautifully decorated automobiles were in the Parade.
Among the Ministers marching on foot were Drs. Thomas, Bacote, Hurse, Osborne, Wells, Williams, Jenkins.
The singing of the marchers (singing as only Negroes can) brought round after round of applause in the business district.
The address by Rev. Dr. J. W. Hurse was the greatest ever delivered to drafted men here and it brought a storm of applause as well as a flood of tears.
The white people along the route of the parade made many favorable comments on the orderly conduct of the paraders and their enthusiasm.
To J. J. Mattjoy more than any other man on earth belongs the credit for the wonderful demonstration, he alone having raised more than half the money secured to finance it beside working day and night to complete arrangements.
One of the handsomest cars in the Parade was that of Dr. and Mrs. E. C. Bunch and with the car containing the officers of the Grand Chapter, led the Parade.
The Graduating Exercises of the Wheatley-Provident Hospital and Nurse Training School will be held at the Paseo Y. M. C. A. Tuesday evening, July 23, 8:30 p. m. Commencement sermon at the Vine Street Baptist Church Sunday, July 21, 11:00 a.m. Everybody is cordially invited to witness these exercises.
C. A. FRANKLIN,
President Board of Directors.
Mr. C. H. Calloway returned this week after spending a few days in St. Louis on business.
We have many calls each week for houses and rooms of all descriptions. Why not advertise what you have to rent or sellin thispaper which reaches all the colored people in greater Kansas City?
PRICE, 5c.
THE ST. STEPHEN'S MISSIONARY. BAPTIST CHURCH, NOW LOCATED AT 12TH AND MICHIGAN, IS CONDUCTING AN OLD FASHIONED DOWN SOUTH SOUL-SAVING CAMP. MEETING.
We are having a great success. Rev. Geo. McNeal of Kansas City, Kansas, is preaching for us this week. He is delivering some strong sermons and souls are being added to the Church every night. Come and hear this great Gospel preacher. He will be with us until Friday night, July 19. Sunday, July 21, at 11:00 a. m. preaching by the pastor, Rev. J. W. Hurse. At 3:00 p. m. old fashioned covenant. Everyone is invited to attend. At
REV. MOSES WILLIAMS
The wonderful Evangelist known as
the "Black Devil Catcher" who will
conduct the big reviral meetings for
Dr. Hurse next week.
8:00 p. m. preaching by pastor and the Lord's Supper. Monday night, July 22, at 8:00 p. m. preaching will begin by the Rev. Moses Williams, D. D., better known as the "Black Devil Catcher" of the West. Come and hear him. He makes the gospel so plain that the least child can understand. He is really a power in Israel. He will discuss the following subjects this ensuing week. Monday night, July 22, at 8:00 p. m. "Work for Your Prayers." Tuesday night, July 23, at 8:00 p. m. "A Good Soldier." Wednesday night, July 24, at 8:00 p. m., subject "The Pale Horse and His Rider." Thursday night, July 25, "A Christian Invitation." Friday night, July 26, "What Shall the End Be?" These subjects are subject to a change by the Holy Ghost. The Church which the Rev. Moses Williams is pastoring is invited to participate with us in this great soul-saving effort. You will miss a treat if you miss this meeting. We will be favored with some of the greatest singing that can be had anywhere in the West. Come one, come all.
EXECUTIVE SESSION OF GRAND
CHAPTER-EASTERN STAR
HELD.
An Executive session of the grand Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star was held at the Masonic Temple, 18th & Woodland Avenue Wednesday and Thursday July 17 and 18 with the following Grand Officers present:
Mrs. Virgie L. Walden, Grand Mastron of Columbia, Mo.
Mr. Geo. W. K. Love, Grand Patron, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Kate Wilson, Grand Relief and Burial Secretary, Omaha, Nebr.
Mrs. Ursula Hines, Grand Treasurer, St. Joseph, Mo.
Mrs. Minnie L. Crosthwait, Grand Secretary, Kansas City, Mo. and other prominent members of the order. Reports of the various officers were heard, the accounts audited and the transaction of such business was deemed necessary for the continuance of business the ensuing year. The Session was very harmonious and the funds of the various local Chapters were conserved greatly on account of not holding a Grand Session this year.
Messrs. W. D. Lucas and John Grantham of Chicago, representatives of the American Woodmen, were pleasant callers at The Sun office this week.
eo ee ee ee ee ee
rom Our rei Corr nden
Fro u Foreign orrespo ents
HELENA, MONT. ROSEDALE, KANSAS, |pified out, amid a waving of hand-| LINCOLN, NEBR.
A. F. and A. M. Mo. By dW, late. By Mrs. Rosa Jones, kedchiefs and farewell shouts. Mr. | By W. W. Mosley, [+
ede as oe em Mrs, Samuel Blanks entertained James G. Williams, Jr, had charge of| Mrs, Eva Smith arrived in the city LSA ae .
Jurisdiction The greatest of all cunning is tO) Mrs, Mamie Robinson and son, Mr. the men from Boone county. The|from California last week to visit her HAIR CULTURE | Reheat bi
Officere—1917. seem blind to the snares laid for us;| Maurice Steamer, of Kansas City,|stattion platform was crowded with! mother, Mrs. Jas. O'Donnel, who is | je -
'W. W. Fields, Cameron, Mo,, Grand
Master.
C. C. Clark, St. Louis, Mo, Dep.
Grand Master.
Ernest Boone, Loutstana, Mo., Senior
Grand Warden.
I. H. Bradbury, St. Louts, Mo,
Junior. Grand Warden.
H. H. Walker, St. Joseph, Mo., Grand
‘Treasurer.
Geo. W. K. Love, Kansas City,
Grand Secretary.
Nelson C, Crews, Kansas City, Re-
Met Secretary.
BH, G. Lacey, Kansas City, G. L,
Ast District.
E. J. Cooper, Mexico, Mo, @. L.
2nd District.
OFFICERS OF GRAND CHAPTER,
R.A. M.
Missouri and Jurisdiction, 1917-18.
T. G. McCampbell, G. H. P., Quin
aro, Kans.
A. L, Thomas, D. G. H. P., Jeffer
son City, Mo.
J. P. Moffett, G. King, Sedalla, Mo.
S. A. May, G. Scribe, St. Louis, Mo.
Chas. Griggsby, G. Treas., Liberty,
Mo.
B. 8. Baker, G. Secretary, Kansas
City, Mo,
OFFICERS OF GRAND COMMAND-
ERY, K. T.
TOTS
W. G. Mosely, R. B. G. C., Kansas
City, Mo.
J. W. Beard, V. BE. G. C., St. Louis,
Mo.
G W. Lewis, E. G. G., St. Louis, Mo.
C. Brassfield, B. G., Captain Gen-
eral, Kansas City, Mo.
W. A. Ashley, E. G. P., St. Louis,
Mo.
J. H, Kenner, B, G., Treasurer, Mar.
shall, Mo.
J. T, Cannon, EB. G., Recorder, St.
Louis, Mo.
George A. Johnson, E.G. S. W.
Kansas City, Mo.
Benjamin F. Graves, B. G. J. W., St.
Joseph, Mo.
Lodge Directory
Rone Lodge No. 25, A. F. and
Bare todas Ne, AG
Heats, ett tints an
/e\. Master Masons in good standing
of Goo eats, eae een
4K Mi C. H. Countee, Sec'y.
BONE ea
Liberty Lodge No. 87, A. F.
Di and A. M., Liberty, Mo., meets
BX the Ana” aad ath Saturday
5 Hither cat mbath, “Willies
Re Bien SE "Nelson Wallan,
. Sec'y.
at. Staphena charter Ne,
pivaeaenee anseter sie.
Bove Ane APPR laa a
a ete eon tralia
Bp MTA ahs Hectrden
GE. Matthew Commandery
See No. 17, Liberty, Mo., meets
35 Bar| the third Saturday’ night.
Gr v.'s. Starks, B.C: W. M
ce Robinson, Reo, Beo’y,
peewee eee
iiilnviy, E. A. Walker Lodge No.
ANS 257, U. B. F., meets the 2nd
aye 228s Bi Beitave sh the utonth
sedis Ashigaaaes ee
, Biden aah Sing
BeBe I ble Watkins,
Veprek, tio Virwiuia
MASONIC BUILDING ASSOCIATION.
T. G, McCampbell, President.
E. B. Thompson, Vice President.
‘W. H. Washington, Treasurer.
8. H. P. Edwards, Secretary.
Board of Directors:
N. W. Jordan. 8. Myers,
W. H. Brown. 5. 8. Baker,
W. R. Patterson.R. V. Adkins,
B.R, Francis, Richard Harris
Geo. Johnson, =‘ R. Fulbright.
Meets second and fourth Tuesday
im esch month.
GHURCH DIRECTORY.
area COe Bantiat Church, 18th and
‘errace.
Clark Chapel M. ©. Church, 1664 Madi-
son Avenue.
Beigel AM. 1. Church, 24th and Hora,
St, Stephen's Baptist Church, 604 Char-
‘Centennial M. B, Church, 19th and
WoodlanA. eat Au
joBseond Maptist Church, 10th and Char-
‘Alien Chapel A. M. E. Church, 10th and
Charlotte,
benexer A, M. H. Church, 17th and
‘St, Augustine's P. E, Church, 1ith and
‘Trgony Avenue.
abe Sohne &. M. H. Church, 1743 Belle-
wegen Dar Adventist, 23d and Wood-
‘St Monica's Catholic, 17th and Lydia,
ino St, ‘Baptist Chuten, 836 Vine St
Wara Chapel 4M. H. Church, 11th and
‘Morning Star Baptist Church, 2311 Ving
pafihignd Avenud Baptist Chureh, 111
nd.
Me varnes A. M, ®, Zion Churoh, 1828
‘Woodland Ave.
‘Second. Christian ‘Church, 2th and
Avoodiand.
Friendship Baptist Church, Seventeentt
#94 BT caer ttt Yee Are,
Si, Jamés Baptist Church, 4089 aim st
Bt Luke's A. M. B. Mhurch, 43rd and
Prospect Place.
AMGAS CITY, BAN. Own nes.
Church of the’ Ascension Episcopai—
Third and ‘Stewart, Kansas City, Kans,
Birat A. M. ©. Church, sth and Neb.
Hlgnth St. Baptist Chureh, “8th and
Oakland.
Metropolitan Baptist Church, Sth and
‘Washington.
‘Bethel A. M. B. Church, Water and
Steward Streets, :
wily, Pout AM. H. Church, mist anc
by.
Baptist Church, th and Neb.
Solomon Baptist Church, 3rd and
@eimhdaro A. M. 1. Church, Quindaro,
aia? Yauley Baptist ‘Church, Bove-
turch, 9 Oakland,
axe uptist Chureh, 24th, and’ Ruby.
a eee cee atntee
Kane. May. D. }
r PY oak end
HELENA, MONT.
aoe SY ree eee
“The greatest of all cunning is to
seem blind to the snares laid for us;
men are never so easily deceived as
while they are endeavoring to deceive
others.”.....Miss Ruth Christian of
“Townend was in town last week the
guest of Miss Florence Matthews. ...
; Mrs. James Taibut is dangerously ill
at St. Peter's Hospital. She is not
expected to live....Miles York was
in town from Great Falls to attend
the wedding of his daughter. Miles
is doing well in the smelter city...
‘The officers of Bathsheba Chapter
|were installed on the 11th, In our
|last week's issue we omitted the name
Jot Mrs. Callie Matthews who was
elected Secretary of Bathsheba Chap-
ter and installed with the other of-
jficers on the 11th, A social session
was held following installation at
which refreshments were served...
Mrs. Alice Palmer and daughter, Mrs
Pearl Rodgers, haye returned to the
city from a month’s stay at Mrs, Pal-
mer's ranch on the Big Black Foot...
H. Y, Lazerous of Sydney, Australia,
passed through Helena on his way
to the coast....Rey. C. N. Douglas,
Presiding Elder, left for the Falls and
|Havre where he will hold Quarterly
|\Conferences....The wedding of Miss
Olga York to Mr. George Robnett
took place at the residence of the
bride's parents on Monday, the Sth,
at 515 N. Idaho street. Rev. George
|F. Martin, pastor of St. James A. M.
|. Chureh officiated. The beautiful
|ring service was used, and the bride
‘entered the room on the arm of her
‘father, Mr. Miles York, to the sweet
strains of Mendelssohn's wedding
march, played by Mrs. Clarinda Low-
ery. The bridg was gowned in chit-
fon with lace trimmings and wore a
|Dridal veil draped with orange blos-
soms, and carried a beautiful bou-
|quet of American beauty roses, Miss
Carolyn Dorsey acted as bride's maid
"and Was attired in white voile with
[blue trimmings and wore a picture
hat, Mr. Antonio York, a brother of
‘the bride, was best man, and a als-
ter, Miss Alice, maid of honor, was
[dressed in blue and white. ‘The house
| decorations were patriotic throughout.
| Mr. Robnett and his bride left imme-
|distely after the recpetion, which was
held after the wedding ceremony, for
Columbia, Mo. A large gathering of
friends were at the depot with the
[usual rice shower as the train pulled
Jout of the station....Mrs. A, E, Me-
Ginnis yeturned home after a visit
in Butte where she attended Quar
terly Conference at th eA. M. E,
|Church....Deputy Supreme Chancel
[lor J. H. Hilliard with his bride of
[two months strolled down to the de
| pot, intending to accompany the new-
lly weds, Mr. Robnett and his bride,
jas far as Billings where he was to
install the officers of the Knights of
|Pythias lodge. His ticket reposed
|peacefully upon his chiffonnier at his
jresidence one mile and a quarter
jaway. Like Mahomet and the moun-
tain, he had to go for those tickets
jand while he was trying to connect
|up with them, the train with the new-
jlyweds safely sboard pulled out and
friend Hilliard and his wife reached
| Billings twenty-four hours after the
jbridal pair passed through,
HELENA. MONT.
’ Me Ve Bee SSUNEEG.:
| J. H, Hilliard, Past Grand and Dep-
uty Supreme Chancellor of Knights
of Pythias, returned from Billings
where he installed the officers of the
Montana No, 3....Mr, Ed Glenn cele
‘brated his birthday on the 6th in a
‘quiet way....Mrs, Mable Stitt and
daughters returned from Missoula on
the 13th, where she has been enjoy-
ing the zephyrs of the bitter root...
Miss Florence Matthews entertained
a party of young friends on the 17th
at the resident of her mother, 522 Hol-
lins avenue....Mrs. Lee A. Hankins
Sarees ines a number of friends at
her resident in honor of Miss Ruth
Biand’s birthday, the 13th,..., Mrs
Hancox, while en route from Great
Falls to Butte, stopped over and vis-
ited her sister, Miss Bland, for a few
days....Mrs. James Tolbot is still on
the sick list and has been removed
to St. Peter's hospital....Mrs. Dinaz
Brooks has remodeled her residence
on the Bungalow style on the inside
:-..Master Robert Brown, Jr., enter
tained a party of friends at the resi.
dence of the family, 1037 5th avenue
| those present were the Freeman
| Brothers, Master Alley and Hayes of
|Butte, Misses Helen Christian ot
| Townsend, Georgia Curry of Chicago
Corrine Soulds, Florence Matthews
Emma Dorsey, Alice Yory, Alice
Fisher and Annie Bell Crump, Ells
worth and Horace Christian of Town
send and Jullan Anderson.....Mrs
J. H, Hillard spent a few days ix
Billings last week....Rev. C. P. Pat
terson of Columbus; Ohio, arrived ix
the city last week for the purpose 0
assisting the Baptist with the worl
they have to do in’ this state,...Mrs
Sarah Morris was operated on for th
eye trouble a short time ago at SI
Peter's hospital, She is doing wel
at the present time......Miss Len:
Dorsey arrived last week from How
ard University, Washington, D. C.
where she is a student....Mrs. Len:
‘Hall of Butte is with us for a while. .
{G88 aad Mra. H, 0. Parepus. an, dela
Brae soma ete ge Ay
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 191:
ROSEDALE, KANSAS.
By Mrs. Rosa Jones.
Mrs, Samuel Blanks entertained
‘Mrs, Mamie Robinson and son, Mr,
‘Maurice Steamer, of Kansas City,
‘Kan, at dinner Thursday evening... -
‘Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Black, 2710 Bell,
entertained the members of the Rose-
dale Cornet Band and other friends
‘Monday evening complimentary to
‘their son Curtis’ eighteenth birth-
day anniversary....Mr. Peter Green-
wood, who was injured while at work
‘a few weeks ago, is improving to the
|pleasure of his many friends. ...Mr.
‘and Mrs, Fred Garth have been some.
what indisposed the past week.....
‘The funeral of little Emma Bell Grant
was held from the residence of her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Locke, Saturday....The program giv-
en under the auspices of the broth-
erhood of the Pleasant Valley Baptist
Church Tuesday was very enjoyable
and largely attended......Mr. James
Russel read a splendid paper on the
situation of the Negro at the close
of the war. He brought out many
good points and one of which was:
the Negro must be prepared mentally
as well as physically to meet the de-
mands at the close of the war....
‘Mr. Thomas Metcalf read a very ine
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OR SE as
; ame es
Res {ot ae
Fat sane
MRS. C. R. MCDOWELL
of Hannibal, Missouri, Past Most An: readers that
cient Grand Matron o fthe Heroines ed Treasure:
of Jericho of Missouri, Editor of ‘the tion of Col
Hannibal Record and one of the fore- its recent s
most women in every uplift move- which positi
ment in this Commonwealth, The ness and ab
Sun is exceedingly proud to inform its
teresting paper on the Necessity of
Helping One Another” which was
full of good thought....The song ren-
dered by Messrs, William Henderson,
Thurman Jennings and James Rus-
sel was good. Rev. J. R. Williams
made remarks and invited all man to
join the brotherhood whether they
be members or not. Splendid music
was furnished by the choir.....Mrs.
Iulu Lewis was awarded a fine cake
for the person holding the lucky num-
ber....Sunday was Women's Day at
the St. Paul A. M. E. Zion Chureh at
the morning service. Quite a num-
ber were present and @ good collec-
tion was taken, In the evening a very
interesting program was rendered.
Mrs, Mary Webb read a poem con-
posed by herself which was very good.
Timely remarks were made by Revs.
Gray, Smith and Newman. The pas-
tor, Rev, M. O. Bonaparte made a
splendid talk on the progress women
are making in the world today which
gave inspiration to his hearers. ‘The
choir furnished some very choice se-
lections, Rev. Bonaparte is the new
pastor of the St, Paul A. M. E. Zion
Church and we wish for him a year
of success. We believe with the co-
operation of the members and friends
Rey. Bonaparte will be able to ac-
complish much good....Mrs, Mason
Banks has returned from Topeka,
Kan,, where she attended the Grand
Lodge of the Daughters of the Tab-
ernacle, Mrs. Banks was delegate
and had an enjoyable time and 1s
High Priestess of the St. Ruth Taber-
Gara.
Miss Alethea Merchant of St. Louis, OS Sew BSP w Slee y Neen | v7
Moy in the Bowne. guest of alee Wil Famous Wheat ‘
vian Hicks....The Young men gave , f ren
fh dence’ ak Sobwsichs pail Montag The right kind The right kind makes
evening, complimentary to the boys
that were in the drétt ond some that $ | OF a mam Of a woman 4 — ly
left for Detroit, Mich. Mrs, Bertha Appreciates Appreciates fiz fa%, Lise
'T, Buckner, of St. Louls, Mo,, lectur ey & ewe
ed to the Court of Calanthe the lec The Desire The Efforts ee fe
ture was well attended and appre. ° 4 ET At
ciated....The Mite Missionary- wa Of his Wife Of her husband
entertained at thie home of Mrs. Ag- —TO OWN A.HOME —TO OWN A HOME
nes Snell, An elaborate luncheon was
served by the hostess....Mrs. Mayme
Ou iat Sanhes iit Mor it Sea You can reason out the rest for yourself. My Hard, winter, ‘turkey red’” is the world’s flour
Mrs
hee Darenta, Me, and oS Y Broan in H Selling in the't ‘i wheat supremé, Given the benefit of 1-H modern
Moore aid ekilarea, Me Sond ERTL A one cs ae ae ee Ome POE a Ee ER Ag paling ue fin vw pradet Encomes a pe tro
weet on ta ia tee || cities at your service. food “1H Flour —the aristocrat of “every
nest O. Boone, Jr, and son motored A
to Jefferson City, Mo., Sunday in Dr, | EUGENE EDWARD VAUGHN Ismert-Hincke Milling Co,
Moore’s seven’ passenger Case..., on esa . J
‘Nineteen Negro boys entrained Tues- Real Estate Brokerage GB Kansas City, U.S. A.
day morning for Camp Funston. The A
oye showed a brave spirit, they'sang |? 26th and Parkway Bell Phone W1757
& DUMbEr of songs before the train | bmn’ NS, Bag
, 7 aah) c iia a eet [lis : x
COLUMBIA, MO.
pifiied out, amid a waving of hand-
kedchiefs and farewell shouts. Mr.
James G. Williams, Jr., had charge of
the men from Boone county. ‘The
station platform was crowded with
friends and relatives to see the boys
off....25 Columbia boys left for De-
troit, Mich. Tuesday....Mr. Madison
Douglass is visiting his daughters,
Mrs. Jones and Mrs. James in Kansas
City, Kansas....Mrs. V. L, Walden
left Tuesday for Kansas City, Mo., to
meet the Executive Board of the O,
E, S.....Mrs, Addison Swar of Jack-
sonville, Til, and her two sons are
visiting Mrs, D, ©. Samuels and Mr,
and Mrs. Henry Kirkland....Mr. and
Mrs. J. B. Coleman, Messrs Renfro,
Curtis Williams and A, Fisher motor-
ed to Moberly, Mo, Sunday in Mr.
Coleman's car. ... Announcement have
been received by Columbia friends of
the marriage of Miss Dorothy Wat-
kins to Sergt. Robt. Huntly of Camp
Funston. Mrs, Huntly visited Colum-
bia and ts pleasantly remembered by
a host of friends,...Mrs, Stella Han-
na has been ill but is convalescence
at this writing....Subseribe for the
Sun by the year or six months and
save money....Mrs, Lucile Smith has
returned from a visit in St, Louis with
friends....Mr, Alex Strawn and Mr,
readers that Mrs, McDowell was elect
ed Treasurer for the Netional Federa
tion of Colored Women, which held
its recent session in Denver, Colo.
which position she will fill with fit
ness and ability.
Hubert Cochran left for Detroit, Mich.,
and other points in the east to spend
their vacation for two weeks.
Sunday services at St, John were
nicely attended. Sunday morning Rey.
Williams was at his best in the pul:
pit....The evening service was beau
tiful as the sermon and all of the
songs were illustrated on a canvass.
After the sermon the congregation
was favored with a violin selection
by Mr, Maceo Williams, ‘This was
indeed a very interesting service...
‘There were five persons taken into
the church, ‘The collection for the
day was §137.75....The W. W. Club
held a lawn social Saturday evening
at the residence of Mrs, Wright. A
very enjoyable evening was spent by
all.....The double military wedding
held at St, John Friday evening was
a charming as well as an artistic af-
fair. The whole ceremony was car-
ried out in military style. The little
Tom Thumb brides and grooms were
very perfect and composed in their
parts, After the ceremony every
member of the wedding. party was
served to supper up on the platform.
The brides were Misses Celestine
Smith and Beatrice Brown. ‘The
grooms were Messrs. Floyd Reddick
and David Ferguson. Mrs, Plumber
Walker, directoress deserves much
‘credit for such am excellent affair.
One and One Make One
The right kind The right kind
Of a man Of a woman
Appreciates Appreciates
The Desire The Efforts
Of his Wife Of her husband
—TO OWN A. HOME —TO OWN A HOME
You can reason out the rest for yourself. My
Seven Years Experience in Home Selling in the two
cities at your service.
EUGENE EDWARD VAUGHN
Real Estate Brokerage
26th and Parkway Bell Phone W1757
OMAHA, NEB.
LINCOLN, NEBR.
Ry W. W. Mosley.
‘Mrs, Eva Smith arrived in the city
from California last week to visit her
mother, Mrs, Jas, O'Donnel, who is
sick....Prof, Perkins of St. Joseph,
Mo., was in the city last Sunday.....
B, Hampton was over to Beatrice last
Sunday and held services; there are
some Baptists in Beatrice....A series
of meetings aré in progress at Mt.
Zion Baptist Church this week.....
Mr. James O'Donnel is reported quite
‘sick this week....the Newman M.
'B, Chureh Sunday School ptenicked
in Antelope Park, July 4th.....Mrs.
‘Dalia Alexander is yet confined with
injury and sickness....Owing to the
‘rain, Mt. Zion Baptist Church held
‘their annual 4th of July dinner inside.
‘However, amid disadvantages the af-
fair was well patronized by members
and friends and about twenty-five dol-
Jars was cleared......Mary White
Ovington of Brooklyn, N. Y., member
‘of the National Board of the N. A.
A. C. P, was here on last Friday night.
‘The Temple Theater was well filled
with those of our race, seemingly
eager to hear what was to be sfid of
‘the race. Mrs. Ovington is not an
‘orator by any means, but such as
‘could hear what she said were elated.
She recited the condition of our race
and why she sacrificed her time and
money to help in humanity's cause—
thus the organization of this Associ-
ation was effected and with the aid of
our staunch white friends the associ-
ation is continually growing and is
greatly benefiting the conditions of
our race, May our race strive to aid
in this association that we may keep
the “Home Fires Burning” for the suf-
frage of our cause......Mrs, Fannie
Young and Mrs, Ada Holmes went to
Denver, Colo., last Saturday where
they are attending the National Fed-
eration of Colored “Women's Clubs
this week....The members of the A.
M. E. Churely held their Fourth of July
dinner in the basement, owing to the
rain....The A. A. O. N. Mystie Shrine
elected officers for the ensuing year
last, week, Bigger and better things
are the hope of the future,
LINCOLN NEBR,
Mrs, L. B, Moore and Mrs, F. D,
Forbes returned home from Topeka,
Kans., last Saturday where they at
‘tended the annual session of the
‘Daughters of Tabernacle....Mr. Kel
lis of Keokuk, la, spent a few days
in the city with his daughter, Mrs.
G. L, Maston....Mrs, L. B, Moore,
‘Mrs. Ellen Corneal and Mr. Chas,
Haynes are reported on the sick list
‘this week....A Lodge called the Sons
and Daughters of Jerusalem, which
‘has been lately organized here by
| Mrs. ida Banks of Omaha, had an an.
‘nual ‘Thanksgiving Sermon preached
at the Newman A. M. B. Chureh las
Sunday by Rey. A. W. Talbot, Visit-
‘ors present were: Mrs, Ida Banks,
Supreme Matron; Mr, Harry M. Gra.
ham, Supreme King of Kansas City,
Kans.....The series of meetings con
tinues at Mt. Zion Baptist Church this
week with success....Mr. John Carri
‘gon and family wilt remove to St, Jo-
seph, Mo,, this week....Mr, and Mrs.
Jas. O'Donnel are improving from re-
cent illness....A. L, Taylor is able to
be up and around home.
BEVIER. MO.
_ Rock Chapel has been engaged in a
revival meeting conducted by Sister
Susan J. Duncan of Kansas Gity, who
is a power in the pulpit, Many souls
have been happily converted under
her. It is the voice of Rock Chapel
and the community at large that God
may bless her and that she may ever
preach his gospel and in general she
is an all around woman. She is an
uplifter for humanity,
REV. J. F. SMITH, Pastor.
A NEW MAGAZINE.
A new magazine known as The Col
ored Athlete, published by E. J.
Peters of Santa Montica, Cal., reaches
our desk this week and is a very in.
teresting and neatly printed book.
‘This magazine invades a new field
of endeavor and there is no reason
why Brother Peters should not make
it an instantaneous success, It is re
plete with photographs and biogra
phies of prominent Negro athletes
throughout the country and has as a
frostispiece a likeness of Miss Fern
Caldwell who is the champion tennis
player of Southern California, Suc:
‘cess, Brother Peters.
Uncle Sam Needs Our Men. Let the
PORO SYSTEM
Take Care of You
| LE
SFI ge HATED PENNY
AV iy r P wt
| Ga
7 winemaves \\)
> ae A
mA \ TSeMtprcivine Lire seaury.coLOR Ks
RY eee re AY
Wie
VA Gaines 11,7
EY
SEE
| "PORO” COLLEGE COMPANY |
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Dept.G
Bell Phone E. 4394R Office 2460 Waldrond Ave.
TE Modern Builders Co.
A. E. ESTES, President
General Contracting
Repairing a Specialty
The history of Kansas City records but one real, legitimave,
eompetent, established Negro jeweler, and he is
J A W i i
. A. WISOn
at 1616 W. 9th St. Half block west of Wyoming St.
: Mr. Wilson sells
Diamonds, Watches, Clocks and Staple Jewelry
Es and ey
Guarantees to the public satisfactory and proper treatment.
BELL PHONE, MAIN 3859,
, poreeangy
Kansas’
Famous Wheat
makes
loaf * a of
ff =—-s
[ae Aw fait
' \, Hard, winter, ‘turkey red”” is the world’s flour
& reme, re ft 1-H
grocery, Try
aS \. Ismert-Hincke Milling Co,
or) Kansas City, U.S. A. {
ATT |
HAIR CULTURE
Ihave the greatest hair-grow-
ing system in the world.
Have just received diploma *
from Prof. G. Yhnell of Stock-
holm, Sweden, I claim to |
positively growhairand Iteach |
what I do.
Give me a call.
MADAME E. NEFF
1715 EAST EIGHTEENTH ST |
| Bell Phone East 412.
Peg ! at
My
1 Pm
pines : a
, , ah
ek j f
ADDITIONAL CITY AND LOCAL HAPPENINGS
1520 E. 18TH STREET KANSAS CITY, MO.
Do you need money
We have plenty of money to loan to rooming house keepers on short time. Must have reference.
PROPERTY OWNERS
can obtain a loan through our agency and pay it back by weekly installments.
IF YOUR HOUSE NEEDS
repairing, painting or papering, get a loan and put in its necessary repair.
Our Business is Strictly
Confidential.
Bell Phone, Grand 4204.
Home, Delaware 950.
MRS. F. M. DANIEL
Teacher of Piano
Lessons given at your Home,
75 Cents.
Bell Phone West 4048
SEE,US—SEE BETTER
Too many people wait until their eye-sight falls them before they go to see an optician. Better come down today and let us examine your eyes. It might save you a great deal of trouble.
We grind our lenses on our own premises.
ALCO
OPTICAL
1 CO 1
Opticians and Optometrists
1103 WALNUT
ANNOUNCEMENT.
Roland W. Hayes, the celebrated Negro tenor, having completed arrangements with the Columbia Graphophone Company to reproduce his songs. This is to announce that these standard records, which will play on any disc machine, will be ready for sale on July 1st, 1918. For further information apply to
* 1515 E. 18thSt. Kansas City, Mo.
* B. Ph. E. 4893. H. Ph. E. 4042.
The Handy Colored Store 2409 Vine St. Ladies' and Gent's Furnishing Goods and Notions
PUB RIGHTS OFFICE
MADAM P. M. DABNEY'S XX
CENTURY PREPARATIONS
FOR SALE HERE.
SPECIAL BARGAINS IN OUR
NOTION DEPARTMENT
AND HAIR GOODS.
Help Make Our Store, Your Store, Our
Customers Your Friends
Special Values in Furnishings for
Men, Women and Children.
GIVE US A CALL.
$2.50 In Goods Free.
WE GIVE SURETY COUPONS.
Taylor Holmes & Co.
Mrs. Annie Holmes, Mngr.
2409 VINE ST., Kansas City, Mo.
Bell Phone East 422JJ
---
PAID IN FULL
These Subscribers to the Wheatley- Provident Hospital Fund Have Paid Their Subscriptions in Full and the Total Amounts Have Been Placed in Bank to the Credit of the Hospital.
As Subscribers Pay in Full, Their Names Will be Added to This List.
A few more days and our beautiful new Wheatley-Provident Hospital will be ready for inspection and dedication which the committee hopes to make one of the greatest events in the history of the race in this city. As soon as the contractors have turned over the building the ladies' clubs, fraternal organizations and individuals who have pledged themselves to furnish various rooms will be called on to install their furniture; then a program will be arranged including all the various social, civic and religious organizations in the city for the dedication ceremonies.
The Negro State Medical Association, as well as the State Federation of Clubs, and the heads of the various fraternal organizations with their staff, will be invited to be present and take part in the ceremonies.
Up the Ladies' Auxiliary have made a great quantity of new linen supplies and are busily engaged making others with which to equip the Institution; bills have been met promptly and the only thing required is that our people shall pay their pledges so that the whole plan of the General Committee may be carried out fully. The Sun has no hesitancy in saying that in appointment, arrangement and modern facilities, this hospital is vastly superior to any other owned and controlled exclusively by Negroes in this country and every citizen of Greater Kansas City should be proud of this splendid achievement. Go by and look at the building and if you have not paid your pledge, send a check to our headquarters, 1803 E. 18th street, or call Bell Phone, East 2789 and we will send a collector to you.
$5,000.00
Kansas City Railways Co.
$1,000.00
Hon. Chas. W. Armour
Hon. Wm. Volker.
$500.00
Srith & Co.
Hon. Walter S. Dickey.
$250.00
Hon. R. A. Long.
$200.00
Hon. William T. Kemper.
J. W. Jenkins Sons.
$165.00
Dr. D. M. Miller.
$100.00
Dr. J. E. Perry
Dr. and Mrs. G. W. Brown.
Dr. and Mrs. J. Thompkins.
Better Mason Company.
Platt & Marks
Physicians Supply Company.
Dr. T. C. Unthank.
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Malone, St. Louis,
Houston, Mason, Kearless,
Dr. Howard Hill.
Dr. John E. Sheldon.
First National Bank.
$50.00
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Younng.
McQuague Carrion.
Copper & Campbell.
Phyllis Wheatley Art Club.
Dr. B. S. Poorman.
Miss Alice Whiteside, for the Sixth
Grade Attucks School.
Dr. T. A. Fischer.
Frank C. Niles
R. T. Sloan
G. N. Grisham
J. A. Harzfeld
Wm. Bucholz
N. C. Crews.
Dr. J. F. Shannon.
Dr. Samuel Ayers.
$40.00
J. E. Connole.
$50.00
Prof. Joe E. Herriford, Sr.
$25.00
Prof. and Mrs. R. T. Coles.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Lewis
Charles H. Cawleyw
Mrs. J. T. Winklin.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Christian
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Rowan
C. A. Farnklin
E. R. Sweeney
J. C. Malley
Dr. S. E. Saunders
Shaw Transfer Company
Prof. W. H. Harrison
Dr. S. H. Thompson
C. A. Franklin
Professor Henley L. Cox.
Mrs. Ell Harris
Bishop H. B. Parks.
Dr. M. O. Pickard.
P. J. Pordergast
W. E. Halsel.
J. F. Houlihan.
M. H. Waggoner
Jones Store Co.
Burhan Munger-Root
Judge Miles Bulger.
George H. Edwards.
Harry E. Barker.
Ryder-Shane-Hyman.
Neubschild & Son.
Julius Behler.
Bernard Zick.
Gray-Bryant-Sweeney.
Faxon & Gallagher.
t. B. Watkins.
Dr. Howard M. Smith.
Fred W. Dabney.
Dr. E. H. Skinner.
Martin Myers.
Dr. L. L. Shelton.
King Jumber Co.
$20.00
Leon Rosenwald
H. P. Koehler
Ed P. Lewis
C. S. Bishop
Edward Friedson & Son Coal Co.
$15.00
S. H. P. Edwards
Mrs. V L Hueston
Mr. Hardy Smith
Josephine Hopkins
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1918
T. C. Sharon.
G. T. Shriner.
W. S. Smith.
W. S. Wood.
Frank S. Moore.
$8.00—Charles A. Starks, John L. Steele.
$7.50—Miss Rosa Barbee.
$6.00—Dr. Jno. T. Hamilton, Mr. and
Mrs. J. C. Ray, J. L. Gandol, E. Whittier.
$4.00—N. Black, I. L. Smith, J. H. Clayboune, P. Leyer L. A. B. A. Pittman, Denis Seals, Mrs. Isabella Bigby, Mrs. Isabella Bigby, Powell, Mrs. Lott Jackson, Mary L. Knox, Cornelia Birch, C. D. Cowen, Leo Koehler, A. F. Payne, Hattie Cook, Miss Anna L. Goffe
$2.50—E. P. Epstein, Miss A. Della Newson, Miss Edna Hill, Gus Fowler, H. R. Richardson, Mys. A. J. Johnson
$2.00—L. M. Cohen, Edw. Costello, Mrs. Isabella Dochar, Chas. Agard, Leon Jordan, Jr. Johnson, Yantis Fritz, Willa Henry, Jennie Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Holmes, Elbert E. Mrs. M. Fisher, Freedman Bros., Mr. Frazier, Georgia Harper, Mrs. T, W. H. Williams, Frank Brady, Taylor, Taylor, Whitside, Whitide, Riley, A. E. Toney, M. W. Wilson, Sam Borone, Mrs. Inez V. Chinn, Mrs. Carrie Preston, Mrs. E. Mott, Le Roy Burns, $1.70-Pleasant Hour Club.
$1,00—L. F. Cochran, M. T. M. N. Chaney, F. W. Calhoun, Miss Amanda Chrisman, L. J. Duncan, Lee Dooley, W. C. Donnelly, F. Bergshelder, Mr. Bridges, Mr. Brady, Lizetta Johnson, M. Johnson, M. Brady, Lizetta Johnson, M. Johnson, Co. A. M. Kleinheffer, Beauil Lewis, Clyde Lanagan, Arthur J. Leite, S. Leberman, R. Lund, D. M. McClanahan, Mchepike, Frost Brook, J. Wise, Wheeler, Flora B. Jones, Mrs. O. W. Jones, Mrs. O. C. Maxwell, J. W. Martin Joel Holman, B. S. Howard, Sam P. Highee, Heckel Bros, G. A. Miller, C. Merry, Mrs. Yves, Merran, India C. Merna, Moore, Mize Peters, L. C. Payne W. T. Peters, Herbert Patterson, J. E Reed, F. N. Redheffer, Tom Rini, C. H Roberts, Mack Singer, Security Iron & Grant, Joseph Georgen, J. Germ Gardner Grieve, A. A. Graves, Mrs. S. E. Hart Floyd Adams, M. Chaney, Harol Smith, Elizabeth Nevells, Mrs. J E Reed, Miss Bouah Leo Lewis, Mrs. J E Reed, Miss Bouah Leo Lewis, Grant, Miss Mozella Joseph, Dr. F. M Lowe, Mrs. A. E. Jenkins, Mrs. Ia Bryant, Miss Edith Williams, Amelia Hutchins, Mrs. Pauline C. Crawford, Miss Catherine Washington, Alonzo Brown $50. M. Lighthowser, H. E. Mathey G. Gillins, Gillin Davis, Jno Davis, Donated, Humphrey, J. R. Strobel, T. H. Whibbler
$25—A Friend, Lester Rolland, A. L. Smith, L. A. Stroth, Carl Tucker, Ala Williams, C. R. Haldeman, Pinkie Jones Cigar Man, F. O. Kline, Mrs. J. D. Burton, Tom Colley Ed E. Gilbert, Mrs McCarthy.
THE COURTES BENCH
DR. EDWARD B. RAMSEY Kansas City's smallest physician physically but on everything that pertains to racial recognition and advice is a Prince of Good Fellows, generous hearted to the hustler from away back when it comes to raising work on the Boosters' Committee and generously motor car day and night to make the great demonstrate whelming success that it was.
Kansas City's smallest physician physically but one of her biggest men in everything that pertains to racial recognition and advancement. Dr. Ramsey is a Prince of Good Fellows, generous hearted to the superlative degree and a hustler from away back when it comes to raising funds. He did valuable work on the Boosters' Committee and generously allowed the use of his motor car day and night to make the great demonstration Thursday the overwhelming success that it was.
NATIONAL FEDERATION OF COL- ORED WOMEN MEETS IN DEN- VER, COLO. circle of helpful and enjoyable acquaintances. Not much time was given for formal entertainment but the
LARGE DELEGATION IN ATTEND ANCE.
Many Resolutions Adopted.
The National Federation of Colored Women met in its 11th Biennial Session in Denver, Colorado, July 8th to 13th inclusive. The sessions were held at Shorter Chapel A. M. E. church and the representatives from Western, Eastern and Southern states were largest in attendance. On account of the high cost of transportation, many of the reports from the various states were mailed in without representation.
Among the many commendable acts done at the splendid session was the cancellation of the mortgage on the home of Frederick Douglass and a fund set aside for the care of the grave of Mrs. Frederick Douglass and to erect a monument thereon.
Many resolutions were adopted by the Federation and splendid programs were rendered each morning, afternoon and evening. The following-officers were elected: Mrs. Mary E. Talbert, Buffalo, N. Y. President; Miss Hallie Q. Brown, Wilberforce, O., Vice President, Miss Georgia Nugent, Louisville, Ky., Cham. Exec. Board; Miss Roberta Dunbar of Rhode Island, Corr. Secy.; Mrs. Charlotte Hawkins Brown, Rec. Secy.; Miss Webb of Denver, Colo., Asst. Secy.; Mrs. C. R. McDowell, Hannibal, Mo., Treas; Mrs. Ruth L. Bennett, Chester, Pa. National Organizer; Mrs. Dorcas Watson, Pueblo, Colo. Chaplain.
Tuskegee, Ala. was selected for the Silver Jubilee Convention to be held two years hence, 1920.
FOOD
WILL WIN
THE
WAR
$.15—Wertie Slaughter
$.10—Gertrude Smith.
NEW PRESIDENT LINCOLN INSTITUTE VISITS CITY.
NEW PRESIDENT LINCOLN INSTITUTE VISITS CITY.
Kansas City was honored this week by an informal visit from Dr. Clement Richardson, the newly elected head of Lincoln Institute. During a stay of two days he was the house guest of Joe E. Herriford, 1217 Woodland Ave. who was generously assisted by Dr. Wm. J. Thompkins, Superintendent of the City Hospital, in entertaining the distinguished guest. Dr. Richardson by his simple, unaffected manner, his frank and cultured disposition, made a host of friends during his brief visit in the city and both colored and white people are already convinced that the Board of Regents has found the right man to make Lincoln Institute just what it ought to be in the educational development of our people in Missouri and the west.
The new President is a graduate of Harvard and is one of the type of men whom the late Booker T. Washington gathered about him at Tuskegee whence he comes to Missouri after several years experience at the great southern institution. He has been at Lincoln Institute a month and already has a firm grasp upon the situation and has laid plans for a wide scope of usefulness in his new field.
During his stay in Kansas City he merely devoted himself to the preliminaries of what he hopes to be a wide
Don't let your beauty be spoiled by a plexion can be made as fair and soft as ve
Dr. Fred Pa
SKIN WHITE
AND
SKIN WHITEN
Whiten dark or brown skin, remove all blemish.
AGENTS MAKE BIG MONEY! Miss Mabie writes:—"I sold my package out the day I received Palmer's Skin Whitener, Skin Whitener Soap and Shampoo.
The price has not advanced; it is 25c each. A receipt of price. Manufactured by JACOBS' PH
BEFORE
DR. FRED PA
SKIN WHITE
D B. RAMSEY
physically but one of her biggest men in cognition and advancement. Dr. Ramsey hearted to the superlative degree and a nes to raising funds. He did valuable and generously allowed the use of his great demonstration Thursday the over-
BE FAIR TO Y
EXCEL
EXCEL HAIR
A particular Hair Dressing fo can be used by the people v Hair Dressing with perfect s EXCEL PHARMACAL CO.,
circle of helpful and enjoyable acquaintances. Not much time was given for formal entertainment but the ever alert social instincts of the Kansas City men were quickly put into motion and on Tuesday evening a delightful stag luncheon was tendered at the Y. M. C. A attended by over forty of the men about town who do things Dr Thompkins acted as master of ceremonies at this informal affair and short talks were made by Grisham, Crews, Herriford, Coles, Hueston, Knox, Shackelford, Harrison, Bowser, Perry, Lee and others.
President Richardson in his brief talk outlined his ambitions in his new position. He offered himself as the strict servant of the whole people without any self adulation or self gloryification. He indicated his desire to carry out the modern ideas of industrial education and at the same time maintain a strong acedemic department for those better fitted for the higher literary and scientific culture. The school will not be one-sided if the new President can prevent it.
He has been given a free rein in selecting his faculty and will endeavor to secure the services of the very best available teachers for each department. Much headway has already been made in this direction.
The Kansas City people have pledged to Dr. Richardson their unqualified support in creating this new, long looked for order of things and it now looks like the school will start out with a greatly increased attendance in September. The whole people of Missouri will unite in this same sentiment and will extend a hand to the new Lincoln Institute both cordial and firm.
BIRTHPLACE OF JOHN BROWN
BURNED.
Torrington, Conn.—The house in West Torrington, in which John Brown, the great Abolitionist, was born, was destroyed by fire the other today. The building was one of the principal historical landmarks of the city. The cause of the fire is unknown.
have opened offices in New York City where they are launching their greatest song success, "A GOOD MAN NOWADAYS IS HARD TO FIND," by Eddie Green. Orchestration written by Dave Peyton of Chicago. This is the song HIT of Chicago's amusement places. Send for our catalog of band, orchestra and piano music also player rolls and phonograph records. Address phonograph records. Address Race & Handy Music Co., Inc.
HAVE YOU SEEN IT?
WHAT?
The Beautiful, Up-to-the-minute
Spotless Kitchen Annex Cafe
1303 Baltimore Avenue
The Best Service---The Best Foods---
The Best Place in Town
FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN.
Mrs. Pearl Riley, Mgr. Martin Young, Prop.
YouNeedntHaveADarkSkin
Don't let your beauty be spoiled by a dark or ashy skin. Your complexion can be made as fair and soft as velvet by applying
Dr. Fred Palmer's
SKIN WHITENER
AND
SKIN WHITENER SOAP
Whiten dark or brown skin, remove all blemishes and leave the skin soft and beautiful.
AGENTS MAKE BIG MONEY! Miss Mabel A. Jones, of Crystal Springs, Miss. writes:—I sold my package out the day I received it, and am writing for some more of Dr. Palmer's Skin Whitener, Skin Whitener Soap and Skin Whitener Powder. Send me this at once.
The price has not advanced; it is 25c each. At your druggist's, or sent direct upon receipt of price. Manufactured by JACOBS' PHARMACY CO., Atlanta, Ga. (1)
BEFORE
SKIN WHITENER
AFTER
SKIN WHITENER
DR. FRED PALMER'S
SKIN WHITENER
BE FAIR TO YOUR HAIR
A particular Hair Dressing for particular people. EXCEL can be used by the people who use the finest imported Hair Dressing with perfect satisfaction. Postpaid, $1.00. EXCEL PHARMACAL CO., NEOSHO, MO., U. S. A.
A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY
125 COLORED FAMILIES WANTED TO LOCATE IN THE OZARKS IN SOUTH MISSOURI
Steady employment; wood chopping. Two and three-room houses furnished free with water and fuel also. Transportation advanced. Wages paid in cash. Ground furnished each family for gardens, chickens, pigs, etc. SEE
HUESTON & CALLOWAY, 1612 East 12th St.
KELLEY'S BEST HIGH PATENT FLOUR Kelley's Best Beat all the Rest Kelley Milling Co. K.G., U.S.A.
1918 Season Announcement 1918
The Moses Dickson Regalia and Supplies Co,
1217 Woodland Avenue, Kansas City, Mo.
; Everything For Every Lodge. Ask Us.
Employment Office
For Work of All Kinds and
For Employes of All Kinds of Labor
Call at the
12th Street Employment Office,
1509 East 12th Street.
MRS. J. H. CARTER, Manager.
Home Phone East 916 Bell Phone East 5257
' ANNOUNCEMENT
Having bought the printing business of Arthur W. Harris, I wish
to announce to my friends and the community of Kansas City that
I will conduct a first class Printing Office at the Old Stand, and will
endeavor to turn out only first class work at reasonable prices, I
shall make a specialty of Church and Lodge Printing. Tickets, Cards,
Stationery and all lines of advertising,
Bell Phone East 2782. JOHN H. LANGE,
Res, Phone East 571. 1515 East 18th Street.
We have spent $10,000 remodeling the TULLIS COURT -
FLATS at Eighth and Jefferson; steam heat, electric lights,
water, bath and janitor service; large, light, airy, cheer-
Tvicous; new paper throughout. Some apartments have two
large rooms and bath, some have three rooms and bath; all
new plumbing in bathrooms. Remember, WE FURNISH
WATER AND STEAM HEAT AND JANITOR; rent. only
$12.50 and $15.00 for small flats; large 8-room flats, $40.00
month, fine for roomers; fine, high, healthy location, walking
distance to downtown and all west bottoms. See these at once
and phone
4 THE RENTAL AGENT—MR. BECK
BOTH PHONES, MAIN 3207, or call 215 R. A. LONG BLDG.
THEKANSASCITYSUN
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
All communications should bo addressed
fo The Kansas City Sun, 1803 Bast 18th
Street.
Bell Phone East 999.
Bell Phone East 2789
Bntered as second-class matter, August
—, 1908, at the postoffice at Kansas City,
Mo, under the act of March 3, 1879,
Nelson C. Crows....... Editor and Owner
‘Willa M. Glenn.........General Manager
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
pe Kear, vesvssseessesseeseeseensess $200
ie MOWthE’”ssccsccccccccccasececesce 108
Three Months ooo ele. 60
Canada and Foreign Countries $1160 ad-
aitional
ADVERTISING RATES, $2.00 PER INCH
Pen Monae
MEMBER
NATIONAL NEGRO PRESS
ASSOCIATION. |
——
Don't forget the big Chautauqua at
18th and Paseo.
Every Colored family whether rent-
ers or owners should take special
pride in seeing that the premises they
occupy are kept in a sanitary, neat
and pleasing condition. A nice bit of
green lawn with a rose bush or potted
plant here and there makes any home
attractive; and improved not only the
appearance of the locality but increas-
es the value of the property. Make
your homes attractive.
‘The splendid results that are al-
ready accruing from the recent con-
ference of Negro Editors and race
leaders with Government officials in
Washington a few weeks ago should
be a source of gratification to every
Negro in America and again amply
demonstrates that Emmett Scott is
ngt only a fit Champion of the rights
of his people but is the wisest diplo.
mat and most successful figure of the
race now in public life. May his
shadow never grow less.
The Local Branch of the National
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People at its meeting in the
Second Baptist Church last week, dis-
cussed the frequency with which of-
fieers of the law counselled violence
in the handling of Negroes accused
of crime. Because this advice has
ag its culmination the killing of a
man on 18th street the branch voted
its condemnation of this method of
punishment without due process of
Jaw and in this instance, without
crime being even charged. The next
meeting will be at Ebenezer church
the second Thursday in August.
SUNDAY |
xm Meas oe
WHEArLEss fps
sxe UM)
Classified Wants and
FOR RENT—Rooms for rent; strict-
ly modern, near Mth and Michigan
avenue, Mrs. H. L. Kinsler, Bell
Phone Grand 4204. Home Del. 950.
WANTED TO ADOPT—A girl child
not under 2 years or over 3 years;
Brown skin preferred. Will give ref-
erences, Write Mrs, Loulla Smith,
740 Kiowa St., Leavenworth, Kan.
HOUSE WANTED.
COLORED MAN with reference
wants to rent a five-room cottage
with garden space. Will not occupy
until October 1st but will deposit
now or pay the parties who expect
to move about, that time. Bell phone,
East 103-3.
FOR SALE. |
Duplex—Six rooms each floor;
strictly modern, slate roof, separate
entrance, large front and rear yards.
$1,000 down and $500. per year for
four years. Balance to suit, Price
36,500.00. Can pay any amount at any
time. On Garfield near Twelfth St.
‘Address The Sun.
os |
fy
Ij
| f
‘We are the honored recipients of a
copy of Major N. Clark Smith's re-
cent composition entitled “Prayer
From the Heart of Emancipation,”
written for solo, chorus and orches-
tra, Undoubtedly this is destined to
be one of the most popular choruses
of the year and many complimentary
notices have been published through
the Press concerning this stirring and
significant composition.
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1918.
Negro Business and | Betty@Sum's
i : Little Cornex
Professional Directory, 3 :
of Greater Kansas City | gage’ yy
BAKERIES.
MRS. SUSIE OWENS, 2231 Vine street,
Bell phone, Bast 5017.
|HOME BAKERY. Mrs. A. Compton,
| Prop. 1717 B, 18th street,
BEAUTY PARLORS AND HAIR
DRESSERS,
MRS, BERTHA McCAMEY, Poro Hair
Dresser, 818 East Tenth St. Bell
Phone, Main 4756,
M, B. JACKSON'S WONDERFUL
HAIR PREPARATION, 2100 East 9th.
|uns. CORA WILLIAMS, Graduate
| Masseuse, Treatments given. Also
[residential work. 1817 Fast 22d St.
Bell phone Grand 2319.
as: SUSIE P. GIPSON, 1704 Paseo,
Poro Hair Dresser. Bell phone,
Grand 4035-W.
| Poro Hairdressing, Singveing, Mant-
|curing and Factal Massage. - Instruc-
tions. Mrs. Hattie Wiley, 329 Parallel
| avenue, Kansas City, Kans., Bell West
(2378 W.
MRS, ROSIE B. JONES, Poro Hair
Dresser, 820 South Fourth St. Ar
mourdale, Kans.
CAFES.
BOND CAFE, GIS Charlotte Street.
Mrs, Amanda Bond, Prop. Home
| Cooking,
| DRESSMAKER. ~
| miss PEARL MAYSE, 1715 E. 18th.
Bell phone, E. 412 W.
| FLORISTS.
| CROSTHWAIT FLORAL CO,, 1510 E,
18th Street. Bell phone, Eastt 272.
| ICE CREAM PARLOR.
| Mrs. Charles Black, 2815 North 5th St,
| Kansas City, Kans.
LAWYERS.
—. A, SHACKLEFORD, Attorney.at
Law, 511 Minnesota Avenue, Kan.
sas City, Kans. Bell Phone West
3866,
le H. CALLOWAY, N. W. cor 12th an¢
| Highland. Home phone East 2850
Bell phone East 4648, Practices ir
all courts.
W. C. HUESTON, N. W. cor 12th ant
Highland. Home phone East 2850
| Bell phone East 4648. Legal advice
Practices in all courts.
| JEWELERS,
, J. A. WILSON, 1616 W. Ninth street
.| Kansas City, Mo, Bell phone, Mair
| 6248R.
51 PHOTOGRAPHERS,
|4.E. MILLER STUDIO, 1622 Bas
>| Eighteenth street. Bell phone, E, 91
: PRINTERS.
;/C. A. FRANKLIN, 1309 East 18th St
,| Bell Phone, Grand 2988,
| REAL ESTATE and EMPLOYMENT
|COLORED PEOPLES INVESTMENT
CO. Solomon Smith, Pres. 212:
Vine St, Bell Phone, East 1011
| Home Phone, East 4011.
|H. L. KINSLER, 918 Bast Twenty
| first street. Bell phone, Gran¢
| 42045
| SHOE STORE,
|G. A. PAGE'S SHOE STORE, 1507 E
| Eighteenth street, Pell phone, East
| 1828,
| SHOE REPAIRING.
| ELECTRIC SHOE & REPAIR SHOP,
| J.C. Banks, Prop., 1514% East Eigh:
| teenth street, Bell phone Bast 4939,
| UNDERTAKERS.
|| ADKINS BROS,, Nineteenth and Vine
| streets. Both Phones, Bast 4349,
East 4349.
H. B. MOORE, 1104 Independence ave
nue. Bell phone Main 8398W, Home
phone Main 2341.
| WATKINS BROS., 1729 Lydia avenue
Bell phone Grand 987, Home Mait
| 7989. Res., Bel! East 3281.
AS neat SN Cee
|], You've Tried the Rest, Now Try
. the Best. 4
| Driven by the Owner (
° > ‘+. Sennteneerena:
| Service § Satisfaction :
| Seamer
| C. A. FRANKLIN
| THE PRINTER
1309 East 18th St
} Bell Phone Grand 2988
Left iene eee |
ee
Betty@® Sim's
Little Corner)
| gen GR,
eS Nt
| hy Nim (Aaa,
| Met (A f. tH
| i CASAS f
| 4 i Bye Hi
ey bye
i
(Cates yw
| ics vit i
toon Wi a Wat p
| oe a
im AY
THY SAY
-That the Law laid a heavy hand
on a well known woman last week.
—That the more prominence re
acquire the more slander you ae
That sins ate like chemicals: the
more often analyzed the worse they
smell, x
—That-a man will sit up all night
to hear money talk, then work for
money all day,
—That the American Negro is do-
ing more thinking about his citizen.
ship than ever before.
—That if séme peoples’ faces were
their fortunes, they would be bank-
rupt all their days.
-That flattery travels awfully fast
and scandal trayels faster, but mighty
truth just slows along,
—That the old time love when
couples vowed “to stick for better or
for worse” hain’t no moah.
—That if the Vice Squad is success.
ful in the contemplated clean-up, a
| new jail will have to be built to hold
| the violators,
|. —That if the numerous revivals no
being conducted are able to save jus
\a few of these “bad Niggers’” souls
their efforts will not have been ir
| vain,
—That a certain woman was s
|*put out” the other evening at he:
[eee to hire an automobile that sh
reached down in her stocking anc
| pulled out @ roll of bills and bought
(one, Go to it, sister.
| —That an old Cullud man went
into a store and when approached
|by the clerk said: “I wanis to buy
janything in dis heah store that hasn't
| gone up.” The clerk replied: “Every.
thing is up, brother, but paper and
| that’s stationery,
—CALL WEST 380,
DR. HORTON EXCELS ALL COMPE.
= TITORS.
For some time the Sun has been tell-
ing the public of this expert Negro
Optometrist’ and that he was really
an aristocrat in his line and as further
proof of this statement, Dr. Horton
permits us to publish the following
letter from one of Kansas City’s most
successful business men, the organiz-
er and promoter of several highly
successful business enterprises dem-
onstrating that the white man who
makes @ specialty of going around
alleging to give an expert testing of
the eyes of Negroes absolutely failed
on this particularly delicate fitting
that called for the most careful and
expert ability:
Kansas City, Mo.,
July 10, 1918.
Dr, 1, M, Horton, 1735 Paseo, City,
Dear Sir:—I am writing you, not so
much for the great good you have
done me, but because I believe it my
duty to my race, and to the general
public, to inform them of the skillful
and successful way in which you ex-
amined my eyes and fitted my glasses.
A person's eyes are about the most
delicate and most important members
of the body and should, when defec-
tive be treated by an expert Optome-
trist. My eyes bave been defective
from childhood. ‘They have always
been weak, When I was a boy, my
father had one of the best Army doc-
tors of Fort Leavenworth treat them.
Since I have been grown up I have
had some of the best Oculists, Optt-
cians and Optometrists In Boston, Chi-
cagi and Kansas City treat and exam-
ine them. Iam very proud to say that
your treatment and four fitting of my
glasses has been the most successful
of ehay: I can see furtehr and better
than ever before with your glasses,
8 face I am really living in a new
‘world.
Hoping that you will be permitted
to do for others as you have done for
me and wishing you the greatest suc-
cess in your profession, 1 remain,
Yours very sincerely,
« Samuel R, Hopkins,
When the cut-rate eyeglass peddier
‘and the cheap downtown stores have
mussed up your eyesight, then see
Dr. 1. M. Horton, expert in Optometry
and the aristocrat among the eye
men, white and black. The Doctor
Knows. 1737 Paseo.
i am oh
rm ay |
mY va r»* 4
i |
Markav’s Liniment
Dr. Hurse has for sometime been)
the distributor of Mackey's Wonderful |
Rhelmatic cure has recently purchas-
ed outright the forntula for compound:
ing the same and now has the sole
rights for the manufacture and distri-
bution of this wonderful preparation.
| This is the only ten days’ cure on
‘the market taking ten days for rheu-
matism two hours and immediate re-
lief for neuralgia, forty-eight hours for
lumbago, one week for throat trouble, |
ten days for asthma and all pains and |
stiffness in the body, ten days for lung
jrouble in first and second stage and
‘a guaranteed remedy and destroyer
of appendicitis, absolutely guaranteed
under the Pure Food and Drug act,
serial No, 44333.
| Sold only by Rev. J. W. Hurse, D.
'D., at his Laboratory and residence,
|1205 Michigan Ave., Kansas City, Mo. |
Bell phone East 4880. $1.00 per bot-
tle—Agents wanted, Orders out of the
city 25¢ extra for postage.
| Kansas City, Mo.
T suffered with Jumbago for, (a long
time and I heard of Mackey's Liniment,
|T'used one bottle of this Lintment, and
was entirely cured, and I feel safe to
say it Is the best Liniment made and
{t'cannot be beat. I must say Mackey's
Liniment will do’ all it, is recommended
10. do. JOHN SAULSBURRY,
2414 Highland Ave., Bell East 3757.
Apert ae. tole
‘This is to certify that I had Rhetimatism
very badly, limbs swollen tlght, pain in-
fenge.” I Secured ‘a bottle of "Mackey’s
Liniment from Miss Lillian ‘Tooley and
after,” trying, " according | to directions,
found more immediate relief than in any-
thing else I had tried.
MRS, LILLIAN B. SMITH,
240i Flora Ave.
March #1, 1918.
| Having bought a bottle of Mackey's
Liniment of Miss Tooley and tried it for
‘Rheumatism on my son, found itvall that
‘was needed, I will recommend it to any
One for soch troubles or neuralgia, ‘
MRS. N. M. HENDERSON,
1525 Virginia,
March 19, 1918,
My face was swollen from neurdigia al-
most had the lockjaw.. Mackey's Liniment
was recommended and I purchased a bot-
tle of Miss Lillian ‘Tooley and had one
treatment before. bedtime. ‘The next
morning 1 was able to eat with ease. 1
find it instant relief for any disease where
iniment is required. “1 always expect to
Keep a bott! on hana,
8. 'W, HENDERSON,
1727 Forest Avenue.
WILLA M. GLENN
Notary Public
1803 E. 18th7St.
Bell Phone E. 999
A GOOD BUSINESS MOVE.
Many Colored people own automo-
biles in Kansas City and environs.
‘They must be housed in a garage at
home or elsewhere; they must be re-
paired at home or elsewhere. It be-
comes necessary in case no garage is
at the residence and no repair can be
done there, to find such a convenience
elsewhere, Such an establishment has
been opened under new management
at 1420 Woodland avenue,
The men back of this garage and
training school are anxious to give ser-
vice to the entire public.
If you store your car there we want
it absolutely safe from harm. If you
have your car repaired there, we want
it to come out whole and not ruined
forever.
If you want to learn to drive, we
teach you in the easiest, safest, sim.
plest manner. If you own a car bring
it to us and we will teach you how to
operate it at least expense to your.
self,
It you desire to buy a car get us to
give you expert advice on the pur-
chase. If you want a nice car that
looks right to spend an hour or go in
these hot evenings and hotter days,
call us and we will give you a car
that will give you comfort, pleasure
and at the same time a modest and
dignitied appearance,
Now we ask the public to give us
a fair trial; we are in our infancy but
we shall stretch every muscle to give
you absolute satisfaction,
We want to make our Automobile
#fome and School at 1420 Woodland
avenue, a place reliable, well equip-
ped and a credit to the mechanical
geulus of the race.
Help us—Try us—Call upon us now.
‘Teaching—Repairing—Storing, For
rates call East 78%, Bell phone,
DAVIS AUTO TRAINING SCHOOL
& GARAGE.
R. G. Jackson will conduct a Sum-
merSchool of Music at Allen Chapel.
Beginners in music will be given
spectal attention, Call Bell Phone
4676 Main. Residence Phone, West
1032,
Learn To Grow Hair and Make Money
a Te ee
Complete Course by mail or
— : by personal instructions. A
|: mee Ce diploma from Lela College of
\ Pee as oe Hair Culture is a passport to
can > 2] prosperity. Is your hair short,
| a S| «breaking off, thin or falling
Seem «= | «out? Have you tetter, ecze-
v= |«s ma? Does your scalp itch?
f | Have you more than a nor-
Fal see mal amount of dandruff?
7] | ~=MME. C. J. WALKER’'S
pee Wonderful Hair Grower
a F ——— |= Wr'te for booklet which tells
= | «oof the positive cures of all
Oi a | scalp diseases, stops the hair
ee =. | strom falling out and starts
Ben 3] It at once to growing.
Bit co Beware of imitations—all of
ALN the Mmo. ©. J. Walker Prep-
; BS arations are put up in yellow
sa tin boxes.
A six weeks’ trial treatment
sent to any address by mail
MADAM ©. J. WALKER for $1.50. Make all money
President of the Madam C. J. Walker orders payable to Mme. ©. J.
Manufacturing Company and the Walker. Send stamps for re-
Leila College, 640 N. West Street, ply. Agents Wanted. Write
Indianapolis, tnd. for terms,
See your nearest Walker Agent or Write
THE MADAM C. J. WALKER MFG. CO.
640 North West Street, Indianapolis, Ind,
SAVE YOUR MONEY!
The W. L. Martin Ladies’ and Gents’
Furnishing Store
Will Show You How to Save Money and Time.
Buy Your Children’s Clothing Here.
1313 E, 18th STREET.
waisten ea NO MORE SHORT, HARSH
istircer'/ Ame (Soec AND UNRULY HAIR
oe <7 a Vim and Vigor Hair Promoter
b | (SA Selita A new discovery—stops the hair
tf ee i from falling out and makes the
annie 4 hair long, soft and glossy. ‘Thou-
AN Rha, i a sands are getting results from
Sl ee its use.
oe Are you? Get a box today and
s ie ae be convinced,
T| an) 4 Price 50 cents. For sale by all
= f m first class Drug Stores. If your
Ps Sy druggist hasn't it, he will get it
lacy ‘Sy oh for you or you may send Money
ef Hi Order or 50 cents in stamps to
HO) dash THEO. SMITHi
Deny Roe Druggist and Distributor,
BARR 1301 B. 18th Street,
\ PFT RSS KANSAS CITY, MO.
Ui. Uy YHIRSS SS Bell Grand san ier Main 5467
A pe MSI. ell Grand 4591 Home in
PE AN SSS ‘All phone and mail orders
wae >» Promptly filled and delivered.
Have you visited the new, up-to-date
Perfecto Hair Dressing College?
S If not, why not?
Hair Dressing, Manicuring and Face Massage
ean a SET al
1 ES eae e
Pcs i Sit] | We make switches and
i ‘ Ste
ee Me; re e| transformations from your
he PY? ap] combings. We_guaranteo
“tg be De aoe | to grow hair with our Per-
iat | Site - | fecto System and Hair
Ray yee) | «Grower in a shorter length |
we Me Pees * | of time than any other
foe co ee S| _ system in the United
SD peg b | States or money refunded.
oe | © ee| We give diplomas to grad-
ek = See A.M Ge | Yates. 5,000 agents want-
eee W2 || 00 to sell our goods. Lib-
UE Gag Beth Aatatag > | eral discount to agents.
Pe cle 5) ae Te 7 | Perfecto System taught by
Mee aR Tak) /@ >. | Mme. BE. Floyd and Miss
beeen Oe 2 | Willie Mantece, profes-
[Sse a ae sa sional hair dressers and
lee eb Ye Ges | scalp specialists,
LOCATED PERMANENTLY AT 1636 EAST 18TH ST.
BELL PHONE, EAST 3955,
Why pay more than 50 cents
to get o trunk hauled?
LIVE AND LET LIVE AUTO BAGGAGE AND EXPRESS
T. T. TIVETT
Bell Phone Grand 1266
Stan, 2109 Campbelf Street
Haul Everything. KANSAS CITY, mo.
LYRIC HALL FOR RENT
For All Entertainments
— Bee —
0. H. HARRIS, Mgr.
1731 Lydia Ave.
Hours: to 9 a, m. 12 to 1
p. m. Hall phones, Home
Main 2783, Bell Grand 3352
Residence, 2624 Euclid Ave
Res. Phone, Bell East 3429W
RATES REASONABLE.
pis at) 7 ee
i : si ae ea
eRe
tee mae
whe ae pe
aa - Cohn
CITY NEWS
This paper has enlisted with the government in the cause of America for the period of the war
1628 East 18th Street is the place to go to beautify yourself.
Go see the only first class Beauty Shop for the race at 1628 East 18th Street.
Mrs. Ida C. W. Gladney has returned to the city after a five weeks' visit in Chicago.
Mrs. Maggie Cousins and Mrs. Cordie Lewis left Thursday, July 11, for San Francisco, Calif.
Dr. and Mrs. D. M. Miller, who are touring the West, write that they are having a delightful time.
Have you ever tried the Spotless Kitchen, 23 West 13th street, the best piacce in town to eat?
Miss Lucille Lewis of Dallas, Tex. was highly entertained last week by Misses Viola Crawford and Mary Helen Floyd.
Mr. R. B. DeFrantz, one of the National Secretaries for the Y. M. C. A. is spending a few days at home visiting his family.
Mrs. Mary Wheeler, 2414 Montgall, has been quite ill for the past three weeks. She will be pleased to see her many friends.
Mrs. and Mrs. Delaska Hendricks, 1425 Woodland avenue, this city, left for Chicago where they expect to remain permanently.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Oliver, 2430 Garfield, are the proud parents of an 8-pound girl whom they have given the name Ruby Fay.
Among those visiting at Excelsior Springs and guests of the Albany Hotel are Bishop Tyree, Rev. and Mrs. W. Sampson Brooks.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Zorah of Boley, Okla., are visiting their son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Zorah, 2223 Woodland avenue.
Mrs. Nelle E. Young, 3412 East 21st street after touring the West for the past five weeks returned home and reports a delightful trip.
Mr. Joe Taylor of Dallas, Texas, who recently returned from France, is visiting his sister, Mrs. J. B. Oliver, 2430 Garfield avenue.
Have you visited Caddie's new Beauty Shop at 1628 East 18th Street? It's first class in every particular.
Messrs. Lester G. Hefford and H. B., White of Excelsior Springs were in the city this week and pleasant callers at The Sun office.
Mr. J. J. Tillman of Springfield, Mo., passed through the city en route to Las Animas, Colo., where he expects to remain permanently.
Mr. B. F. Wilson has returned from Kentucky after visiting his parents and friends. He enjoyed his trip and left his mother much improved.
Mrs. Marian Brown Whitaker wishes to announce to her many friends that her husband, Lieut. J. C. White aker has arrived safely overseas.
Mrs. Nannie B. Wilson was re-elected Worthy Counselor of Prudence Court No. 166 and will attend the Grand Court to represent this court.
Mrs. Mildred E. Mott, 1918 Woodland Avenue, who was called to her home, Baxter Springs, Kansas, last week, returned home last Saturday evening.
Mrs. Annie E. Floyd and daughter, Mary Helen, left Thursday night for Chicago where she will visit her son, Mr. Harry J. Brown, formerly of this city.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Williams, 1317 East 22nd announce the engagement of their foster daughter, Miss Elizabeth Burrel to Mr. Jerry Parner, marriage to take place in the fall.
Mrs. M. A. Ford entertained the Woman's Home Missionary Society of the Centenniel M. E. Church Thursday afternoon, July 11, at her residence, 1601 Tracy avenue. Quite a number of ladies were present and a delicious repast was served and a pleasant time spent.
The Woodland Studio at 2112 Woodland Avenue will be open every Friday evening during the summer.
Prof. C. W. Black, who has been Principal of Washington School, Plattsburg, Mo., for the past nine years, has been elected as Principal of Douglass School, St. Joseph, Mo.
The Sun received a card from Dr. Brookins saying he and the Madam were having the time of their lives. They were in Los Angeles and from there went to Salt Lake, Portland and Seattle.
Mrs. S. L. Lewis and daughter, Lucille, of Dallas, Texas, visited here for a few days and were the house guests of Miss Amanda Moore, 1828 Woodland avenue. Mrs. Lewis is one of the cit yteachers of Dallas.
Mrs. Dora Powell, one of Chicago's most charming Matrons who for six weeks has been the guest of her sister and brother, Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Smith, returns to her home today. Kansas City society regrets to see her go.
Mr. Leon Smith and mother, Mrs. R. B. Smith, of Boise, Idaho, are in the city visiting the latter's brother, J. A. Davis, of the Davis Auto School, 1623 Agnes avenue. They will be in the city about a month and will then go to Oklahoma.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
CHARLES H. CALLOWAY
One of our leading Attorneys who holds the uni Grand Attorney of the Masonic fraternity and Gran U. B. F. organization at the same time, a splendid or power in politics. He is one of the flying squadron splendid success of the great testimonial parade in last Thursday.
One of our leading Attorneys who holds the unique distinction of being Grand Attorney of the Masonic fraternity and Grand Attorney of the Great U. B. F. organization at the same time, a splendid orator, a good mixer and a power in politics. He is one of the flying squadron that helped make such a splendid success of the great testimonial parade in honor of the drafted men last Thursday.
Mr. John A. Lucas left last Friday for Colorado Springs to join his son, Harry E. Lucas; who had been out there for his health but passed away a few hours before his father arrived. He left word for his father with the nurse that he must not worry about him because he had gone to Rest. The remains were shipped to Paxico, Kan., for burial.
Negroes, and any one wishing to buy at this time should consult him. Home phone, Main 3963; Bell phone, 317 Grand. Address, 1315 East 18th St.
PRITCHARD LODGE CELEBRATES 45TH ANNIVERSARY.
Pritchard Lodge No. 42, A. F. & A. M., will celebrate its 45th anniversary Monday evening, July 22, at the
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Williams of 1530 Euclid avenue, royally entertained, on Wednesday evening, July 17th, Mrs. J. Majors of Hillsboro, Tex. A very beautiful rose gold cameo ring was presented to Mrs. Majors by Mrs. Williams, a gift from her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Jones. Those present were: Mr. E. F. Butler and wife, Mr. W. H. Hasten and wife, Mr. E. E. Bryant and wife, Mr. E. Perkins and wife, Mr. Toliver Jones and wife, Mrs. S. D. Jones, Mrs. Lula Walls, Miss Josie Watts, Mr. W. L. Young, Mr. E. H. Bonnett, Mr. John Roberts, Mr. Joe Talton, Mr. J. A. White. Those present report a very enjoyable evening.
CARD OF THANKS.
We wish to thank our many friends and neikhbors for the kindness shown through the sickness and death of our son and brother, Richard, who died June 15, 1918, and for the beautiful floral offerings.
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Rather,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Craig,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nolan,
Edgar and Bennora.
Mr. Stephen Holt departed this life July 12 Thursday morning at 8:00 o'clock. He was a member of the Second Baptist Church and Mt. Oread Lodge. He leaves a wife, daughter and other relatives to mourn his loss. We thank the many friends for the beautiful flowers and especially the ladies of the Cudahy Packing House Club. MRS. STEPHEN HOLT.
CARD OF THANKS
CARD OF THANKS.
We wish to thank our many neighbors and friends for their kindness shown during the illness and for the beautiful floral offerings at the death of our son, husband and father, Harry E. Fields.
THE Interdenominational Baby Camp Association desires to announce the opening of a Camp Sunday, July 21st, for the benefit of the sick babies in our Community through the remainder of July and August. The Camp will be located in Spring Valley Park near 26th street and Woodland avenue. There will be a Registered nurse and several of Kansas City's best physicians in charge.
BUY BEAUTIFUL HOME.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Montgomery, one of the oldest and most respected families of Leavenworth, Kan., have purchased a beautiful 11-room, strictly modern, brick house at 1212 Euclid avenue, for a consideration of $5,500. They are contemplating moving to their new home just as soon as it is vacated. The sale was made by Alfred W. Rivers, the hustling manager of the Square Deal Real Estate and Employment Co., who wishes to say to his many friends and acquaintances that he has many other high class homes, both large and small, in new localities that are being opened to
1
holds the unique distinction of being
unity and Grand Attorney of the Great
a splendid orator, a good mixer and a
swing squadron that helped make such a
tial parade in honor of the drafted men
Negroes, and any one wishing to buy
at this time should consult him. Home
phone, Main 3963; Bell phone, 317
Grand. Address, 1315 East 18th St.
PRITCHARD LODGE CELEBRATES
45TH ANNIVERSARY
Pritchard Lodge No. 42, A. F. & A. M., will celebrate its 45th anniversary Monday evening, July 22, at the Masonic Temple, 18th and Woodland avenue. Addresses will be made by Harry Miller, A. Frank Neal, Eugene Lacy and Nelson C. Crews. Patriotic Sons will be rendered by Miss Katherine Adams. Music for the evening will be furnished by Mrs. Ida M. Brown.
In loving remembrance of Mrs. Ida
Grant, who departed this life July 8,
1918, and in taking leave of our depar-
ted sister, may we say with the
writer:
Green be the turf above thee,
Friend of our better days,
None knew thee but to love thee,
None named thee save to praise.
Sorrowfully submitted,
HATTIE COOK, O. O. C.
In loving memory of our dear mother, Mrs. Nettie Henderson, who departed this life three years ago today, July 22, 1915.
More and more each day we miss you,
Friends may think our hearts are
healed.
But they little know the sorrow
That is within our hearts concealed.
Peaceful be thy rest, dear mother,
It is sweet to breathe thy name
In life we love you dearly,
In death we do the same.
Sadly missed by her daughters,
MRS. CYNTHIA MILLER,
MRS. JOSEPHINE FINNEY,
MISS BERTHA BERANUGH
---
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1918
MOTHER AND WIFE.
IN MEMORIAM
IN MEMORIAM
Kansas City, Kansas
Mrs. Zenobia Nelson of 730 New Jersey avenue, is confined to her home with illness.
Mrs. Sarah Park, who has been confined to her home with illness, is able to be out again.
Mrs. Birdie Jackson of Joplin, Mo., who has been visiting Mrs. C. H. Birch, 4 Lombardt, for the past two weeks, returned to her home Sunday.
Mdme. E. Alsop of Chicago, formerly of this city, is visiting in the city at 131 Greely avenue. She will be pleased to see her many friends while here.
The Ladies of the Missionary Society of the Metropolitan Baptist Temple have furnished a Mission room with the Baptist Mission furniture and Missionary literature. Interesting lessons are being conducted each Sunday at 2:00 p. m. Everybody invited to attend.
MRS. ZENOBIA NELSON, Pres.
Mrs. A. McHale, Sec'y.
M.
DR. WILLIAM J. THOMPKINS who resided with dignity and brilliancy at the recent banquet tendered Clemant Richardson the new President of Lincoln Institute, and who contributed largely to the overwhelming success of the great demonstration last Thursday.
Mrs. Edw. Saunders and Mrs. Mabel French entertained with a delightful luncheon last Friday at their residence, 1717 Holmes street, in honor of Mrs. Lee Wright, President of the Iroqnois Club. They were ably assisted by Mesdames Wm. Claybrooks and Drew. The guests present were: Mrs. R. Jones, Mrs. Nevill, Mrs. Braxton, Mrs. Nora Saunders, Mrs. L. Triplett, Miss J. White, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. C. Duran, Mr. and Mrs. Foreman, Mr. Lee Wright, Mr. A. Ward, and the guest of honor, Mrs. Wright.'
COLOR.
March 2 Lieutenant Tribbet of the United States Army was traveling on transportation, railroad and Pullman, handed him by the United States Government. The train stopped at Chickasha, Okla. Lieutenant Tribbet was pounced upon, arrested and fined. He was without redress. Why? Beneath his uniform, and covering a gentleman, was the skin of a Colored man. The uniform of the country he was bound to die for did not protect him in Chickasha, Okla.
The matter was appealed to the War Department, but nothing has yet come of it.
A private, in uniform, S. P. Jones, of St. Louis, was traveling under Government orders, on Government transportation, on a Government errand. When he reached Texarkana, the conductor ordered him out of the sleeping car.
Again the War Department is appealed to. It is now squarely up to the Government to say whether its uniform and its commands are to be subject to race prejudice. An official letter to the Secretary of War has these words: "The uniform of the United States at such a time as this should protect any citizen from indignity. Can the Government of the United States consent to invidious distinctions between her soldiers, all alike, whether white or black, offering themselves in the service of their country?"
We would think so.
—Central Christian Advocate.
When in Kansas City, Kansas, call on Mrs. Katie Franklin, Proprietress of the BUSY BEE CAFE, for good eats. 430 Minnesota Ave. K. C. K.
Light, Heat and Power Rates in the Hands of State Commission
"IT IS ESSENTIAL PUBLIC UTILITIES BE MAINTAINED"
The question of a temporary increase in light, heat and power rates to meet the additional costs placed upon this Company by the Missouri Public Service Commission itself is now in the hands of the Commission for settlement.
The State, through the Commission, exercises its power to fix the rates charged our customers, and also the rate of return which we shall receive on our investment.
There is no question of watered stock or inflated values. We have not received the return fixed by the Commission as fair upon the valuation of the Commission's engineers—not even received sufficient income to meet operating expenses during the last five months.
In the establishment of light, heat and power rates the "service-at-cost" plan is being followed in a strict manner. The books of this Company are open at all times to any legitimate investigation. As soon as possible the Public Service Commission's engineers will make a complete investigation. The Chamber of Commerce has selected a representative committee to make an inquiry into the question of a reasonable advance in rates.
We welcome these investigations and will assist the investigators in every way possible.
All we ask is that the same treatment accorded business of every kind be accorded this Company. Only by just and equitable treatment can the capital necessary in the development of any institution be attracted to Kansas City, and we do not believe the people are disposed to treat this Company, now constructing a new $5,000,000 power plant, unfairly.
BIG SALE OF SILK SHIRTS
Lot 1—Men's very finest Silk
Shirts. Beautiful patterns in
richest of colorings. Shirts
worth as high as $15
on sale at..... $8.95
Lot 2—Men's Shirts of rich pure
silk in this season's most want-
ed colors and patterns. Shirts
usually sold at $10
to $12; choice..... $6.95
Lot 3—Beautiful silk and silk
mixed Shirts in rich colorings
and neat stripes. Shirts worth
$5 to $7.50;
choice..... $3.95
Auerbach & Guettel
The Palace
CLOTHING CO.
905-921 Main Street
ICE CREAM FOR SALE
We take orders for Ice Cream and deliver anywhere in the city.
All kinds of Confectionaries, Candies and Cakes.
We handle and deliver the following race periodicals:
The Kansas City Sun,
The Chicago Defender,
and The Crisis
MALONE
2418 Vine Street
Bell Phone East 4242-J
Come and Dance
with the
Acme AND Men's Guild
City Park
Kansas City, Kansas
Friday, July 26
Hours 8 to 12 P. M.
Subscription 25 cents.
Light, Hea
A. E.
MRS. WILLIAM HOPKINS a successful business woman and proprietor of the Cheap John Furniture Co.
THE COMMUN
We carry a General Line of
women and children. Footr
leading brands. Extensive lin
which can be made to you at
WATCH OUR W
HOPKINS' DRY G
2416 1/2 VINE S
MISS CADD
COMMUNITY ST
Bury a General Line of Merchandise for
families and children. Footrest Hosiery and
brands. Extensive line of beautiful Gis
can be made to you at a very low price
WATCH OUR WINDOWS.
INS' DRY GOODS S
2416½ VINE STREET.
S CADDIE JE
THE COMMUNITY STORE
We carry a General Line of Merchandise for men, women and children. Footrest Hosiery and other leading brands. Extensive line of beautiful Ginghams which can be made to you at a very low price.
WATCH OUR WINDOWS.
HOPKINS' DRY GOODS STORE
2416 1/2 VINE STREET.
MISS CADDIE JETT
Announces that she has opened a New, First-Class, Up-to-Date
BEAUTY
at 1628 E. 18
Hair Shampooed and Dressed.
Hair, Manicuring.
Electrical Scalp Treatm
LINCOLN INSTITUTE,
Offers for the year 1918-1919 a Colle
years Teacher Training Course leadi
B., a Course in Vocational Home Ec
culture and in Mechanical Arts.
BEAUTY SHOW
at 1628 E. 18th Street
Dipped and Dressed. Dyeing and
Hair, Manicuring. Facial Massage.
Electrical Scalp Treatment a Special
INSTITUTE, JEFFERSON
The year 1918-1919 a College Preparatory C
ater Training Course leading to the degree of
in Vocational Home Economics, and Cou
in Mechanical Arts.
BEAUTY SHOP at 1628 E.18th Street Hair Shampooed and Dressed. Dyeing and Bleaching Hair, Manicuring. Facial Massage. Electrical Scalp Treatment a Specialty.
LINCOLN INSTITUTE, JEFFERSON CITY, MO.
Offers for the year 1918-1919 a College Preparatory Course, a two years Teacher Training Course leading to the degree of B. S. and A. B., a Course in Vocational Home Economics, and Courses in Agriculture and in Mechanical Arts.
CLEMENT RICHARDSON, President
and Power Rate
of State Comm
ESSENTIAL PUBLIC UTILITIES BE M
of a temporary increase in light, he
normal costs placed upon this Company b
ion itself is now in the hands of the
through the Commission, exercises its pr
omers, and also the rate of return whi
question of watered stock or inflated stock
turn fixed by the Commission as fair upo
engineers—not even received sufficient in
ing the last five months.
establishment of light, heat and power rates
allowed in a strict manner. The books
to any legitimate investigation. As soon
son's engineers will make a complete inv
has selected a representative commit
of a reasonable advance in rates.
these investigations and will assist the
that the same treatment accorded busi
company. Only by just and equitable treat
development of any institution be attri
believe the people are disposed to treat the
$5,000,000 power plant, unfairly.
City Light & Power
Power Rates in
State Commission
PUBLIC UTILITIES BE MAINTAINED'
by increase in light, heat and power rates upon this Company by the Missouri in the hands of the Commission for
mission, exercises its power to fix the rate of return which we shall receive
powered stock or inflated values. We have Commission as fair upon the valuation an received sufficient income to meet the months.
heat and power rates the "service-a-t manner. The books of this Company investigation. As soon as possible they will make a complete investigation. The representative committee to make an advance in rates.
ions and will assist the investigators in
treatment accorded business of every kind just and equitable treatment can the any institution be attracted to Kansas are disposed to treat this Company, not plant, unfairly.
Light & Power Co
JOSEPH F. PORTER, President.
---
NEW AND SECOND HAND GOODS
Bought, Sold, Exchanged
Courteous Treatment
Bell Phone East 3851
2224 Vine Street
Kansas City, Mo.
UNITY STORE
of Merchandise for men,
forest Hosiery and other
one of beautiful Ginghams
at a very low price.
WINDOWS.
GOODS STORE
STREET.
DIE JETT
SHOP
8th Street
Dyeing and Bleaching
Facial Massage.
ment a Specialty.
L, JEFFERSON CITY, MO.
College Preparatory Course, a two
ing to the degree of B. S. and A.
economics, and Courses in Agri-
ates in
INTERESTING TES
. ~ Oey / \ ] A) n 4 wa
PRONE TAIE QUIES
ait a a Fe eR ME uP
Champion Mean Man Evidently Operating in Chicago
Ce aa tee hae a ee roll met aoe en
Presents at the paymaster's office in case he should not be in when the pay-
master visits the station. Our four heroes were not in.
It was June 14, pay day being June 15, when the slips were left at the
central bureau, When he went off watch he turned them over to Lieut. John
Meehan, Now, in the interim, the slips were in the lieutenant's office as
safely protected from the slick-fingered “dip” or bold robber, one might say,
a8 though in a safe deposit vault, mightn't one?
One mightn't, because when the four coppers visited the office for the
slips they were missing—four slips, each calling for a check for $60.01—
total, $243.76.
“Well, it’s all right, anyway, a bit inconvenient, that's all; wind's bio
them out the window or something,” explained Messrs, Burke, O'Brien, No-
tand and O'Donnell one to the other.
Certainly. Who would dare brook the majesty of the law?
‘That's what the four coppers want to know, for when they visited the
paymaster's office in the city hall bright and early the next morning they
were told that their slips had been presented and that their checks had been
aigned and cashed and everything.
We'll say a policeman’s life Is not s happy one.
Siinple and Pleasant Method of Reducing Flesh
| fed YORK.—If persons who are carrying around too much avoirdupois
would pay attention to the methods pursued by prize fighters when they
want to get themselves in trim there would be no excuse for taking drugs
#0 days. You needn't exercise at all if it is disagreeable, or If you haven't
the time, though I should advise plenty of fresh air and a walk every day.
Will you do what I fell you?"
The other agreed to do as told. “Very well,” said the trainer; “drink one
tall glass of fresh milk with a raw egg in it four times a day. That will be
enough food and drink. If you find yourself getting a little billous, take a
small quantity of orange juice now and then, I'll drop in and look you over
fa 30 days.”
At the end of the trial period the trainer called on his friend and found
that the patient had iost 30 pounds, “Eat sparingly now,” he told him, “and
drink orange juice. Very soon you will forget you have such a thing as the
Uver.”
A simpler or more effective regimen for keeping down the welght has
never been devised.
Clairvoyant Could See Spirits, but Not Coppers
K ANSAS CITY.—“, . . and you will marry a very pretty French girl,”
Mme. Lou Byrnes, clairvoyant and medium, said, looking soulfully and
skillfully into the soldier's eyes. “You will be. oh, go brave.” she enaid.
kill the kaiser. But no, I pick that out of the ether—the spirits say the
kaiser will be killed—but first he will be whipped. Ah, and for you, it says
for you, you will meet a very pretty, dark-eyed French girl. You will marry
her, Now, are there any questions you would like to ask?"
“When—when—will I marry this Frenchy?"
“Ah, I can see two spirits—two airy spirits to tell me, I see them gently
approaching ——*
But Mme. Byrnes didn't see the two policemen that came to arrest her
“till they were in her house, 1204 McGee street. ‘The soldier, with no clair-
voyant training, was more observant. He saw the officers, and made up his
mind, He left.
“I was born with the art,” Mme. Byrnes said before Judge John M.
Kennedy, in the North side court, “and I will die with it.”
“You'll pay $100 first,” said the judge.
Boy Did His ’Rithmetic and Won a Pair of Shoes
Pe ends, Eddie scratched his head. “Nine times
nine 1-889?" ‘The guess instantly was perceived to be the wrong one.
“It's 81, isn't It?” Eddie hastily corrected himself. Thus Eddie won a pair
“Little boys must know arithmetic, and I want to see if you've bene-
fited in the little tlme you've been allowed to go to school. Start your multi-
plication table,” the court ordered.
* Contemptuously running through the tables of twos, fours and fives, Eddie
benched into troubles, He rattled off “six times,” the “sevens,” and started
‘on the “eights.” With a good deal of head-scratching, shuffling of feet, and
other muscular efforts, he reached nine tfmes nine—errorless.
“ind that answer and your lesson ends for today,” the court promised,
Hddie eventually got out his answer.
“Get Eddie a pair of shoes,” the court ordered, handing a bill to a
patrolman,
__ Eddie's father was placed on probation for a year.
os) mele?
lpeen ha eRe f
an PO) fae CSI
ee pe Sg
ars
and no need to starve oneself. A mun
who trains prize fighters heard an old
friend complaining of his fatness and
his fnability to reduce even by a
strenuous system of exercise.
“How much do you want to take
off?” asked the trainer.
“Oh, about 30 pounds,” said the
friend.
“All right,” said the fight manager,
cheerfully, “if you will follow my in-
structions I will guarantee that you
take off one pound a day for the next
80 days. You needn't exercise at all 1
the time, though I should advise plent
Will you do what I fell you?"
The other agreed to do as told. “V
tall glass of fresh milk with a raw egg
enough food and drink. If you find y
stnall quantity of orange juice now an
fa 30 days.”
At the end of the trial period the
that the patient had iost 30 pounds, “
drink orange Juice. Very soon you wil
Uver.”
A simpler or more effective regim
never been devised.
Clairvoyant Could See S
K ANSAS CITY.—“, . . and you w
Mme. Lou Byrnes, clairvoyant anc
skillfully into the soldier's eyes. “Y:
9 3 ZAP Vou
ey PFA waist
a ‘ S576 PRETTY
e ye FRENCH
Ss bi
\ f
gp gh)
ey | iret
Fh h tz JV =) wal
kill the kaiser. But no, I pick that
kalser will be killed—but first he will
for you, you will meet a very pretty, d
her, Now, are there any questions you
“When—when—will I marry this 1
“Ah, I can see two spirits—two air
approaching ——*
But Mme. Byrnes didn’t see the t
“till they were in her house, 1204 McG
voyant training, was more observant.
mind, He left.
“I was born with the art,” Mme
Kennedy, in the North side court, “and
“You'll pay $100 first,” said the j
Boy Did His ’Rithmetic a
Pe ends, Edd
nine 1-5-8092" The guess Instantly
“It's 81, isn't it?” Eddie hastily corres
of shoes, Louis Gliichrist, Eddie's par-
eat, was in court charged with failing
to send his ten-year-old son to school.
‘The hoy told the Judge he wanted to
see bis father before the latter went
to Jail,
“He owes me 70 cents I made
selling papers,” he explained. “You
see, I want to get some shoes." The
boy displayed a shoe, the sole of
which weeks ago had worn through.
“L can get a first-rate palr of tennis
siippers for 59 cents; I'm a good coun-
ter and I've figured it all out.” *
“Little boys must know arithmet
fited In the little tlme you've been allo
plication table,” the court ordered.
* Contemptuously running through t!
beanched into troubles. He rattled of
‘on the “eights.” With a good deal of
other muscular efforts, he reached nin«
“Pind that answer and your lesso
Biddle eventually got out his answer.
“Get Hddie a pair of shoes,” th
_ *Bddle’s father was placed on prot
Re
RNa lege
city, Ike little Red Riding Hoods
to be preyed upon by every wolf In
stranger's clothing who prowls our
streets.
But let us have at the why and
wherefore of how Coppers Michael
Burke, Thomas Nolan, Lewis O'Brien
and Walter O'Donnell did not get thelr
semimonthly pay checks of $60.04
each, It is necessary to explain that
the mode of paying off in the Chicago
police department is to give each mem-
her an tdentification slip. which he
TCART SEE)
6S (ERS mite stay 50}
ash to dannt
s )
ee
if it is disagreeable, or if you haven't
y of fresh alr and a walk every day.
ery well,” said the trainer; “drink one
rin it four times a day. That will be
ourself getting a little billous, take a
d then, I'll drop in and look you over
trainer called on his friend and found
Eat sparingly now,” he told him, “and
1 forget you have such a thing as the
en for keeping down the welght has
pirits, but Not Coppers
‘ill marry a very pretty French girl,”
1 medium, said, looking soulfully and
ou will be, oh, so brave,” she said,
Seanning a ine on fis palm, “I can
tell that by looking here—see, those
are two planets, Mars and Venus.”
“They ain't planets; them's cal-
louses,” said the prosaic soldier,
“No, they're not,” the medium said
sweetly, yet with the practiced alr of
one who will not be denied, “they're
two mounts, at the base of your fin-
gers, and one is love and the other's
war. You will be very brave, you will
win the Crux de Gerry—let me see—
no—I thought it sald here you would
out of the ether—the spirits say the
be whipped. Ah, and for you, it says
lark-eyed French girl. You will marry
1 would like to ask?"
Prenchy ?"
'y spirits to tell me. I see them gently
wo policemen that came to arrest her
ee Street. The soldier, with no clair-
He saw the officers, and made up hts
. Byrnes said before Judge Joho M,
| T will die with it.”
judge.
ind Won a Pair of Shoes
lie seratched his head. “Nine times
/ was perceived to be the wrong one.
eted himself. Thus Eddie won a pair
——,
1 9K9 1S
i, | 1S -ER
wae) 89, NO—0
Uo . a
egeane ™
ic, and I want to see if you've bene-
ywed to go to school. Start your multt-
he tables of twos, fours and fives, Eddie
f “six times,” the “sevens,” and started
' head-scratching, shuffling of feet, and
e tfmes nine—errorless.
m ends for today,” the court promised
1@ court ordered, handing a bill to a
ation for a year.
‘ :
= THEI
WHAT CAN. |=
ae 7
Cis (ae
fai i ) WE oT ieee
fi ‘\ 5 otf
aii DO? =:
Negligees Are Trousered and Georgeous
. || ih
eS BATE TEE | Rae
HNSYR)
“Nurses Are Needed for Immediate
Service.”
‘The American Red Cross has issued
“several tlyers and, booklets in a cam-
paign to enlist trained nurses for an
increasing army and under the heud-
ing quoted above has this to say:
‘The enemy thinks he can win before
the United States mobilizes all its re-
sources for making war—and among
these resources nurses are vital, Ask
yourself this heart-searching question:
“Is our incomplete mobilization due In
part to iny holding back?”
Trained nurses are noeded today—
needed In the training camps at home
and desperately needed in the hos-
pitals in France, where there are hun:
dreds of wounded dally.
The American Red Cross docs not
pretend that you can serve your coun-
try without sucrifice, You will receive
less compensation in war work, meas-
ured In dollars; but yon will receive
Infinitely larger compensation, mens-
ured In self-respect, patriotism and un-
selfish devotion to your conntry in the
hour of its greatest need.
Longfellow said:
“Trust no future, howe'er pleasant
Let the dead past bury its dead;
Act! Act! In the living present,
Heart within and God o'erhead.”
Nurses, {f YOU fail, HE dies!
In a smali booklet issued by the
Red Cross various questions are an-
swered. For the benefit of trained
nurses who may wish to enlist some
of these questions are repeated here
with their answers, Nurses desiring
general information, or young women
who wish to be trained for nurses
should write to the Red Cross address-
Ing: “Department of Nursing, Ameri-
can Red Cross, Washington, D. 2”
Pajamas. wern tnstend of night
dresses, have proved go sensible and
so fetching that they have become an
established institution in the realm of
lingerie, “iow we accept them as a
matter of course. It was because
they proved pretty and fascinating
that they were followed by negligees
that scorned skirts and reveled in
trousers, Inviting all sorts of gorgeous
oriental silks and furbelows, to come
and be at home with them, Japan,
China, Persia, ‘Turkey and heaven only
knows what other lands, have been
ransacked for inspirations.
The designers, once having landed
‘an idea, exploit it to suit themselves,
In the picture a lovely negligee Is
shown with flowered satin trousers,
or pantalettes, that are guthered in
about the ankle, Over an ivory sur-
face, or on any good color background,
bouquets of Mowers {n several col-
ors are printed on silks that make
these nether garments things of
beauty. Worn over these there are
mantels or jeckets or draperies of
georgette or silk, usually in a plain
color. In the pictur the over-garment
ig rose-colored crepe georgette and It
fastens with s#ilk cord and tassels in
the same color.
Bright green, or black and gold
made up with straight trousers and
short Jackets in the fashion of Chinese
costumes, we may pass by, but not
without casting one lingering, longing
look behind. Black satin trousers and
Jacket, bordered with gold satin and
embroidered in gold colored silk make
negligees that one will never tire of.
Vivid and audacious shades of green
with touches of brililant colors tn
embroiuered decorations are wonder:
ful in georgette or in satin. Turquoise
and bluebird are good choices in color,
‘and then there is gold color and paler
When Should You Enroll?
TODAY!
Nurses are needed now. Five thou
sand are wanted between now and
June 1, and approximately 25,000 will
be needed before the end of the year,
What Are the Requirements for the
Red Cross Nursing Service?
‘To be eligible for enrollment a nurse
must be a graduate of a recogutzed
school for nurses, giving at least two
years’ course of training In 1 general
hospital. In states where registration
fs provided for by law an applicant,
to be eligible for enrollment, must be
registered. She must be at least twen-
ty-one years of age.
What are the Physical Standards?
During the period of the war a phys:
teal examination certificate should be
Med with other application papers at
the thme of enrollment.
Where do Red Cross Nurses Serve?
‘Their service may be in this coun
try or abroad, Service abroad ts not
guaranteed,
What is the Length of Service?
Red Cross nurses appointed for
service In the military establishment
during war are expected to remain as
long as the emergency lasts, untess the
need of their services ceases to exist.
‘They may, however, be relieved from
duty at any time In case of miscon-
duct, or should their services prove un-
satisfactory. The same ruling con-
cerning length of service and resigna-
tion applies also to nurses serving else-
where with the Red Cross.
Must Nurses Pay ‘Traveling Ex-
penses?
‘Traveling expenses are paid for
nurses traveling under orders from the
war and navy departments or the
American Red Cross,
yellows that lighten up a room like
sunlight. These new negligees invite
us to explore the world of color and
to become as brilliant as tropical birds,
Wear White Shoes,
Release shoe leather for service by
wearing white shoes! ‘That's the lat-
est patriotic slogan of fashion and bids
fair to rival the demand that we sub-
stitute silk and calico for wool. White
buckskin, canvas and duck and white
washable kid for evening are the slip-
‘pers and shoes recommended for fash-
‘ion patriots. White shoes are essential
to smartness for completing the sum-
mer costume of organdie and light
silks, For cool evening smart white
kalters are made to accompany white
slippers.
Cue of tha Eekass Now Vella:
It was a rather wide veil of a pret-
ty, silky hexagonal mesh, black, and
it was being draped around 9 small
flower-wreathed turban, ‘The interest-
ing thing about {t was the border; that
was composed of silvery gray coin
spots—the size of a S-cent plece—a
single row on the long edge of the vell,
and a double row across each end. It
was a simple decoration, but, as the
skillful milliner caught up the folds of
the vell and fastened them at the back,
it hung In gracegul’ drapery.
Collar and Cuffs of Scarlet.
A Dlouse of white silk poplin has
tiny collar and cuffs of scarlet, from
which flare plgited ruifles cf white,
A satin blouse has extra piece at
front in simulated button effect, and a
touch of blue embroldery,
ask aie ae ea
THEIR FINAL REST TOGETHER
Soldier’s Intensely Pathetic Desorip.
tion of the Burial of Youthful Scot-
tish Officer With His Men.
I stood one night on a certain hill
that commands the firing line in an
almost soundless panorama. Beside
‘me was an officer of the Second Ca-
‘nadian division, who had just come
out, There that night, by its white
trail of iridescent lght, we could trace
the course of the firing line for many
miles through France and Flanders,
Just to our left the line of light
Jutted far out, like a lone cape into
the sea. “What is that jutting-out
piace?” my friend inquired.
“That,” I answered, “is the Ypres
salient, the Bloody Angle of the Brit-
tsh tine.”
To mention the name of Ypres ts
to have one's memory awakened with
FL TertablW Aleldoscops! of pictures
hat trall of light that jutted out into
the night looked like @ cape, and an
fron cape it has been through months
and years of war. But the holding of
that cape has been at an awful cost,
and there was not an inch along that
trailing line of light that had not
cost its trailing Une of blood.
Just after the first gas attack tn
April, 1915, the whole countryside wns
in a panic. The roads were filled with
elyilians in alarm, fleeing down coun-
try, and with Iimbers and marching
troops hastening up. I was passing
through the town of Viamerthigne,
which {s situated two miles beyond
Ypres. In a fleld at the side of the
road I saw a funeral party. It con-
sisted of several ploneers, serving as
grave diggers, a gray-headed Scottish
manjor, and a corporal’s guard to act
as firing party.
I learned that this {nconspicuous
group were burying the last original
officer of a battalion of the Cameron
Highlanders. The dead officer was 2
Young subaltern, and the gray-haired
old major was his father, who had
come from another regiment to attend
the funeral of his son.
So, over in a great deep trench
where a number of the rank and file of
the fallen Camerons were already laid
the body of their dead subaltern was
placed. As Ieaw the officer and his
-men of the bonnie Highland regiment
| thus laid to rest together, I thought
of the requiem of Saul and Jonathan;
“They were beautiful in their lives
and in thelr deaths they were not di
vided.”—Capt. Arthur Hunt Chute, 41
the North American Review.
Repair Ship Mysterlous,
‘The manufacture of a large part of
machinery to replace anything broken
is almost impossible in the limited
space of the battleship's machine
shops. But wondrous feats’ are per-
formed in the repair ships that ac-
company fleets on stations remote
from dock facilities, states a British
war correspondent.
The repair ship is a huge floating
smithy and machine shop packed with
everything that the wit of man can
concentrate into the space for treat-
ing wounded battleships. ‘These ships
employ some of the best artificers
from our naval dockyards and are
seattered in every quarter in which
the British fleet Is stationed remote
from dock facilities. The Boche has
nothing like them and it has been
stated that no inquisitive Boche has
ever been allowed to intrude his nose
aboard one to investigate its mysteries
and take the information to his em-
ployers of how the strange feats per-
formed by the repair ship are’effected.
‘The repair ship Is the abode of secrets.
Rides Well at Ninety.five.
Jockeys, no matter what their age,
are generally referred to by those not
closely in touch with racing as “the
boy on So-and-So,” but a stable “Ind”
still going well at ninety-five is cer-
tainly hard to beat, ‘There is one, as
shown by the following ellpping from
the London Sportsman of recent date:
“One of the brightest and most alert
of the ‘lads’ riding horses around the
paddock at Windsor prior to thelr
races was old Faulkner, the grandfa-
ther of the steeplechase jockey of that
name, He is ninety-five years old. His
memory Is of the best and so {s his
hearing. He has been connected with
horses all his life and many a tale of
the turf he can tell.”
Sailor Invents Fire Escape.
One of the boys aboard our navy's
fleet has invented a fire escape which
is similar to the rope ladders used
aboard ships. His principal object
was to provide a collapsible fire es-
cape which could be compactly and
convenlently arranged at the window
of a dwelling. It consists of a con-
tainer hinged to the sill In such a
manner that by opening the window
and folding the container on its hinge
the metal ladder may be unfolded
and dropped, When this operation is
gone through, a means {s antomat-
{cally provided whereby the ladder 1s
held at a distance from the walls of
the building, ‘The advantage of such
precaution ts obvious,
Journalistic Ditettante,
“What's the matter with the city
editor? Two members of the staff are
holding him and he looks as if he were
about to have a fit.”
“It's the fault of that wealthy ‘cub’
reporter hired last week, ‘The ¢. ¢,
told him to cover a Red Cross meeting
this afternoon and he sald it would
interfere with his game of golf."—
Birmingham Age-Herald.
Sxtravanance of Baanemy.
“There's one form of extravagance
Tl tolerate.”
“What ts it?”
“{ don’t care how much money my
wlte speuds for thrift stamps,”
WASHINGFON CITY
" ny
me a
SIDREIGHTS
ne TSAINVONN f fs
a od ne
NP SS =~ Fo
me LT a a een a le ae Git?
VASE —————— a
Peon man ADAOAS 1h ar Shs
ee
Would Do Many and Varied Things With a Million
eure as is more refreshing than a choice bit of idiocy
after a day's work that requires a double portion of brains. Which
accounts for the hereby quoted proposition: “If somebody gave you a million
take more than any little old measly million to keep him from helping to get
the best paper ever out on time—a statement indorsed by applause.
All day Exception had snipped flimsies with the relentlessness of that
other fate who does business with shears. And now he was scanning a first
issue, hot-caked from the press—which was what the others were doing also,
because—confidentially—if your own stuff gets by all right it doesn’t matter
about the rest of the paper—really.
And, as Exception read, it needed no seventh daughter of a seventh
daughter to diagnose the lines in his face and the good things mentally and
humanely they stood for,
For that matter, even the one insignificant side comb in the crowd whose
imagination wasn't elastic enough to picture a raise in salary and who didn’t
know Exception’s everyday name could have predicted, without cards or
crystal ball, that the big half of any fortune that should ever come his way
would go toward the hofest helping of that universal relative, our brother
man—and while she was considering Exception had already gone on record,
If he had a million dollars he would buy a bean orchard and hoard it
for soup like his landlady used to make.
Which shows that it is always desirable to be prepared for the best.
No Long Journey Downtown for This Youngster
7 ae is a special delivery boy in this town who Is going to turn out to be
either a bright, successful man or a clever crook, it is hard to tell which,
but you may form your own opinion after I tell you what he did the other
in the northwest section. It was an apartment house. The boy rang the bell
in the downstairs hall, but, receiving no answer, mounted the steps to the
apartment In question.
Still no answer. So the boy rang the bell in the next apartment, and
when a woman answered the bell he asked if she would take the letter for
the absentee,
“Why, you had better take that letter down to Mr. So-and-So's office,”
said the woman.
“Yes, mam,” satd the boy, and departed.
When he came to the row of mail boxes, he stopped, looked around, and
acted. He did not hesitate in the least. His power of decision was very
good, Power of decision 1s a fine thing, too,
He calmly tore the special delivery stamp off the letter, and dropped the
missive into the proper mail box, making it appear as Jf the regular mailman
had delivered it.
Real Estate Man Thinks Women Talk Too Much
Tre women were being shown an apartment by an agent, Sure, it ts
possible to get an apartment in Washington—if you know where. That’s
the trouble, knowing where they are. ‘These women knew, evidently, because
Ncaleh dh niieyoatid:, POM cectae:tadbveae wets ob iai 9
about that apartment,” said Mrs. Smith, failing utterly to see the agent.
And, what was worse, it wouldo’t have made any difference if she had seen
that gentleman, because it happened that she had never laid eyes on sald
agent In all her life, She always paid by check.
“My dears,” breathed Mrs, Smith, “don’t you let the agent fool you on
that apartment. Ask him about the sink that stops up, and———”
Then came a whirlwind of advice, which the two prospective tenants
took in eagerly—as did the agent.
‘That worthy began to blush, it must be confessed, and the two women
began to blush a little themselves, but innocent Mrs, Smith kept right on.
“You know,” she continued, “that apartment is exactly Uke mine, What
is he going to charge you for it?” al
“Sixty dollars,” sald one of the, two ladies. %
“I pay $50 for mine,” said the all-revealing Mrs, Smith.
Pet Polly Went to Gladden More Lonesome Person
A in search of congenial compantonship went to a bird store to buy
@ parrot that could talk. There,were no conversationalists in stock, sa
he tacked off in another direction for a specially suggested Polly, but, disap-
same jovial spontancousness. “seo, colonel” ‘That settled the deal,
And for a long time there lived in this town a lonesome man person and a
knowing parrot who called out to each other at every coming and going:
“Hella, Polly!”
“Hello, Colonel!” i
It wasn't much, of course, but it was something. And the colonel was old
enough to have learned that every Uttle counts, And he was entirely satisfied
with the social gifts of his two-worded friend until just a little while ago he
found a lonesomer person’ than himself, who was blind and wanted a parrot
that could talk, So, after a battle that would have made the Medes and
Persians look silly, he turned the bird over to a new owner—and now in this
town there 15 a lonesome old woman who.calls out ta bor compeuton:
“Flello, Polly!”
I D 1-1-1- WOuld
va a, a NEVER - NEVER
war ye
4 LD
AGO alah rt
SPs» .—_—
2 a J
| ig
“badness” is often a species of pent
up energy, and that the same talent for
mischief shown by many boys, it
turned to good channels, is the very
talent that will make the boy suc-
cessful in after life,
Remember that in considering the
following: ;
‘This young fellow delivered a spe-
celal delivery letter, with the familiar
blue stamp showing a boy riding on
a bicycle on it, to a certain residence
in the northwest section, It was an at
in the downstairs hall, but, receiving
apartment In question.
Still no answer. So the boy ran;
when a woman answered the bell he +
the absentee,
“Why, you had better take that |
said the woman.
“Yes, mam,” satd the boy, and de
‘When he came to the row of mail
acted. He did not hesitate in the le
good, Power of decision 1s a fine thi
He calmly tore the special delivery
missive into the proper mail box, maki
had delivered it.
Real Estate Man Thinks
Tre women were being shown an
possible to get an apartment in Ws
| the trouble, knowing where they are,
| ee Fae GPP.
i Rt Gf
oe en
4 j eo
TnYING $50 Blah ee ll
sry CAM fs
‘APARTMENT. \ | i
Ask He ly TM x
Te LN LR BB ada
about that apartment,” said Mrs. Sn
And, what was worse, it wouldn't hav
that gentleman, because it happened
agent In all her life, She always pai
“My dears,” breathed Mrs, Smith,
that apartment. Ask him about the s
Then came a whirlwind of advi:
took in eagerly—as did the agent.
‘That worthy began to blush, it m
began to blush a little themselves, but
“You know,” she continued, “that
4s he going to charge you for it?”
“Sixty dollars,” said one of the, t
“I pay $50 for mine,” said the al
Pet Polly Went to Gladde
A in search of congenial comp
@ parrot that could talk. There,
he tacked off in another direction for
Ae TRENOS OF ED ARNO EE CLrecwen FOr
owner of the store, always ready to
please a customer, considered the case
apart from its financial aspect:
“Come back later, colonel, and
I'll see if I can't find’a talker for you.”
So the colonel man went off and
returned at the fime set, to find a
knowing green polly posed near the
counter on a perch, And of course
the man extended soclal greetings,
“Hello, Polly!"
‘The parrot responded with the
same jovial spontaneousness. “Hell
And for a long time there lived in th
knowing parrot who called out to eac!
“Hella, Polly!”
“Hello, Colonel!”
It wasn't much, of course, but it ¥
enough to have learned that every ltt
with the social gifts of his two-worde
found a lonesomer person’ than himse'
that could talk, So, after a battle
Persians look silly, he turned the bird
town there is a lonesome old womau ¥
“Hello, Polly!”
a eM
soo eis lh sig has
ae a a ae eee ee ee eae
up In the morning?”
‘The answers were what dear Mr,
‘Venus would call “wartons.”
One big youngster, who was keep-
ing up with the Joneses, admitted that
a sudden million might possibly in-
duce him to phone to the chief for a
day off. Another, hobnobbing with a
fellow-snburbanite over the feminine
inconsistencies of hens, stepped out of
his chicken run long enough to make
it distinctly understood that it would
A. [1 vont eten
EZ Me CON CLEAR
eS POON TO His
Hal Neal OFFICE ——
= WW p's
oe
ihe)
FOROS inher —
partment house. ‘The boy rang the bell
no answer, mounted the steps to the
g the bell in the next apartment, and
asked if she would take the letter for
letter down to Mr. So-and-So's office,”
eparted,
| boxes, he stopped, looked around, and
ast. His power of decision was very
ing, too.
y stamp off the letter, and dropped the
ing it appear as Jf the regular mailman
; Women Talk Too Much
| apartment by an agent, Sure, it is
ashington—if you know where. That's
‘These women knew, evidently, because
ae Sore, Wee, Oeens SHOWER SOune
by the real estate man himself,
As the trio passed up the steps
who should issue forth from an apart
ment but Mrs, Smith, friend of the two
ladies,
“Oh, Mrs. Smith, so glad to see
you,” said one lady. “You can tell us
about this apartment we are going to
rent.”
‘The real estate agent had stopped,
waiting for the women. He was about
three feet away, “I sure can tell you
mith, failing utterly to see the agent,
ve made any difference if she had seen
that she had never laid eyes on sald
id by check.
, “don’t you let the agent fool you on
sink that stops up, and———"
ce, which the two prospective tenants
nust be confessed, and the two women
- innocent Mrs. Smith kept right on.
apartment is exactly Uke mine. What
two ladies, %
l-revealing Mrs, Smith.
n More Lonesome Person
vanionship went to a bird store to buy
‘were no conversationalists in stock, so
@ specially suggested Polly, but, disap-
:
HELLO, 5 &— (eLLo,
COLONEL! ABEyrE) fy ome \POLLY !
: Wee, Ses
Bee m8
erik na
; yee
: AK
: UX
ens ae asl
,
0, colonel!” ‘That settled the deal,
nls town a lonesome man person and a
h other at every coming and going:
vas something. And the colonel was old
le counts. And he was entirely satisfied
d friend until just a little white ago he
If, who was blind and wanted a parrot
that would have made the Medes and
! over to a new owner—and now in this
vho calls out te ber compeuton;
eed i
A Legal
War Bride
(Copyright, 1918, by the McClure Newspe-
per Syndicate.)
picture of perplexity. “Thunder” he
finally exploded, dashed the pen onto
the desk, and swerved around to his
startled stenographer.
“What is the proper thing to write
to an engaged girl?”
“It all depends on how well you
know her.”
“Humph! If I tell you all about it,
will you help me with this matter of
etiquette?”
“Agreed.” And Mary Borden is-
‘tened.
“Well, Ruth Hampton and I grew up
together. She was a good pal and
everybody's friend; she appealed to
me because she had intellect and good
nature. I always have liked girls who
cam really ‘do’ something.
“Phen after both mother and dad
were—gone, Ruth and her mother were
like sister and mother to me. So when
I took up law, it was with Ruth that
I studied—and I do believe she could
have passed the bar exams when I did,
had she been so minded. There was
never anything more than sincere
friendship between us, so I have had
‘no ties to draw me back to Morton dur-
ing these busy years here in New York
—it has been nearly three.” He hest-
tated, but Mary Borden's twenty years
in the business world had molded her
sympathetic nature into a character by
which harried men were ever Inspired
to confidence,
“But,” he continued, “although I was
fast forgetting Ruth, she was vividly
brought to mind this morning. While
reading my newspaper I chanced on
a picture of her, and the announcement
of her-engagement. The picture doesn't
look like the Ruth I used to know, but
time, I suppose, does effect changes.
Now, Miss Borden, the really funny
part of my tale Is this: I feel actually
angry that Ruth has become engaged,
and I've concluded that I'm what you
might call, well—er—Jealous! And
thanks, awfully, but I've just decided
that I'll not write her at all—she didn't
send me a personal announcement.”
“But is it reasonable to expect that
of her? Do you write to her? Does
she know where you are?”
Peters flushed. “Well,” he grinned,
“you've got me in a corner. I believe
it has been some elght or ten months
since I last wrote.”
“May I see that paper, please?”
“Certainly.” Then Miss Borden
busied herself some minutes in the
reading of the article in question, She
started to read it again. At a sudden
exclamation from her Robert looked
at her inquiringly.
“Where did you sey you used to
live?”
“Morton, Ky.”
“But, look, this notice reads, ‘Miss
Ruth Hampton of Berkeley, Cal.,’ so it
can't be your Ruth!”
Robert snatched the paper eagerly
from her and for a long time studied
the cut. “No,” he said at length,
“there can't possibly be two Ruth
Hamptons who look sufticlently alike
to be sisters,
“There has been time enough for
them to have traveled clear around the
world, for all my knowledge of Ruth
and her mother; so without a doubt
the simple truth is that they have gone
to California to live.” ‘
He sat a while in troubled silence,
and at last tried to fix his attention on
some briefs. It was useless, His mind
wandered continually; and he asked
himself over and over “Why do I care,
why do I care?” There could be but
‘one answer!
Atnoon he lunched absent-mindedly.
Before returning he visited a Western
Union office and sent a telegram to
the postmaster of Morton, Of course
the message was an inquiry regarding
Ruth. But his conclusions of the morn-
ing were confirmed by the answering
wire, sent collect: “Ruth Hampton end
mother left’ Morton last October.
Whereabouts unknown,” And it was
now April! After some time spent in
gloomy pensivencss he roused himself.
Robert Peters was not backboneless
and given to mooning. Frequently, to
be stire, he thought and wondered
about Ruth; but “the world is full of
& number of things”—and wise men
keep busy. Robert was wise, hence
oblivionis, and not troubled by sleep-
Jess nights.
Clean-minded, red-blooded, energetic,
Robert grew dally. more alive to his
country's needs, So by June he had
enlisted, since, so he sald, “the law
schools are yearly turning-out hun-
dreds ef young men as_ brilliant
and as capable as I"—further argu-
hents were lengthy, superfluous,
A few days before he was to leave
for camp he had his last ease, a short
case, but rather difficult, ‘There had
been trouble getting a lawyer for the
defense, 80 Robert did not know who
was to play opposite him, who had the
prosecution,
‘The trial lasted three days. The
Oar ee eee as PES. ene a
crackling within reminded him of some:
thing. When Ruth and her mother en:
tered to greet him they found him
sented stiMy, with a dingy, edge-worn
newspaper across his knees, ‘Their
greetings were cordial, but Peters’ em-
barrassment increased ; his tongue was
about as active as the limbs of an
athlete who has been bed-ridden for
some weeks, Mrs. Hampton, being of
the same cloth as all tactful mothers,
presently withdrew,
“Bob,” Ruth demanded, “what on
earth is that newspaper that you have
been clutching so madly?” He handed
{t to her silently, the cut and article
folded on top.
She glanced it hurriedly through and
returned it. If Bob had looked he
might have noticed a hope-raising
twinkle in her hazel eyes; but being
perverse and foolish, he was engaged
in that universal occupation resorted
to in times of stress; tracing the pat-
tern in the carpet! His fingers closed
‘absently over the proffered paper.
Well?” from Ruth.
“Br—oh, yes—er—d-doesn't that
mean y-you?” he finally exploded.
“Me? What, the Ruth Hampton
‘mentioned in that notice? And if 1
were?”
“Then you are. I knew it! When
are you to be married?”
“Married?” she echoed. “Robert, use
reason, Do you suppose my flance
‘Would allow me to run off to New York
to dabble in law?"
“I beg your pardon, Ruth, I hate to
ask, but is 1t—er—er—"
“A broken engagement?” she sup-
plied. “No, Never been engaged in
my life, But listen; I'l not tease you
‘any more. The Ruth of Berkeley is
my own cousin—my father's twin
brother's daughter. You see, that ac-
counts for our extraordinary likeness
to each other. This brother ran away
when he was eighteen, to the West
evidently, but was never heard from;
so I never knew I had such a’ relative
until this Ruth’s engagement was an-
nounced. Being curious, I wrote for
information.”
“But her name?”
| “Father's mother's name was Ruth,
‘and both boys named their only child
for her. Hence the coincidence,”
“I don’t like coincidences, Don't tell
me it was one that made you active
‘in this murder case!"
“It wasn't. I passed the bar exams
over a year ago; you surely aren't sur.
prised at that! Last October I took an
office in Syracuse.”
“Ah, that's why—”
“Sh-i-h! And when T read about
this ease and the difficulty in getting
a lawyer to defend the girl I was tn-
clined to do it myself, What decided
me was your being in it, I thought It
would be rather much of a surprise,
you neglectful boy!”
ae ele he Keele
‘Well, even legally-inclined wat
bridés like to be married in June.
LAKE HAS APPROPRIATE NAME
Body of Water in Eastern Turkestan
Resembles a Pendulum in Its
Regular Swing.
Lake Lop-nor, the wandering lake of
the desert of Tayla-makan, in eastern
‘Turkestan, is the, termination of the
River Tarkin, Lfke a pendulum, the
lake has swung from the south to the
north of the desert, and back again,
‘sine the memory of man, ‘The wan-
‘derings of the lake are a tradition
handed down from fatlfer to son for
centuries. ‘The natives of the lnke
shore have always followed the wa-
ters. :
At present Lop-nor is in the south-
ern part of the desert; a shallow
reedy body of water hardly deserving
the name of lake, Murky and unpleas-
ant, it furnishes a livelihood to the in-
habitants of its banks, the majority of
whom are fishermen, In thelr frail
shallow boats they cut through the
reeds, fishing and hunting for water
fowl along the banks. In some places
‘the reeds are too thick to admit the
passage of the boat; in such cases,
however, it 1s possible to walk over
‘the water on rafts of dried and rotting
stems. ‘The chief native delicacy 1s
‘the eggs of the reed-birds.
| Lake Lop-nor {s one of the hottest
places on the map in the summer and
the coldest in the winter. During the
winter months the Inke fs entirely fro-
zen over, the temperature diving to 20
degrees below zero, In the summer
the combination of a temperature of
106 degrees and the innumerable files
and mosquitoes which swarm on the
banks make Lop-nor anything but a
summer resort.
‘The explanation of the Inke's wan-
derings Nes in the fact that Tarin car-
ries every year quantitles of silt to the
lake bed, which slowly rises. In time,
a hundred years or so, the river must
seek a new outlet, and the pendulum
swings to the north or south of the
desert, as the case may be.
A Hard Loser.
“Ignorance, sheer ignorance,” said
government official, discussing an at-
tack by a war expert.
“This armchair eritle,” he went on,
“is as ignorant as the lady who got
up at the S, P. ©. A. meeting and sald:
“‘Con't something be done, dear
friends—oh, ean't something be done—
to prevent horses from belng scratched?
‘The horse is man's noblest friend, and
yet we read about its being scratched
almost every dayin the papers. The
process must be very painful.
“‘Seratching a horse! Oh, dear
friends, I'm sure it is a eruel and pain-
ful thing to do, for my husband at-
tended the races last Saturday, and
all Saturday night in his sleep he
groaned and moaned and went on aw-
fully about a horse that had been
scratched, If you could have heard
him, dear friends! His grief would
bave melted a heart of stone.’”
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1918
2 TURNING OUT SHIPS IN
es —_ RECORD TIME/@*\
\e ba - \<tandardized Plans and Paeaatc (4 y+
(ee Vessels to Completion * * a,
a . Aa ariel r Nims z
Sel y Uz we k\ CE thi A i Bm &
ee i 2 SS
ROGER VEsuer eae cana TT oT = ss bia hi ‘ tel aw € pee |
+ EELS fess Rm le GAS GC *e\\
A ESO Tipe oe
eee eee Pe ecm) FRR eS e er Fe.
Afecmhres L) ASS ae 7
ah) eS a?
og ale Ne S&S |
ee fe | ae SO’
a eS :
ship out of the way and With a force of care-
fully chosen workmen, the keel of the collier was
laid and assembling rushed.
‘The men were keen to make good and they
labored with unflagging zeal. Not only that, but
they worked in three shifts and speeded up the
building” continuously night and day. ‘There-
fore they were able at the end of 27 days to put
the eraft overboard.
This makes it plain why in ordinary times
three or four months were required to advance a
ship far enough to warrant launching and why
It took two or three months to install fer en-
kines and boilers and to get her otherwise out
fitted and, finished for active service. In the
case of the Tuckahoe her builders found it pos-
sible to accumulate all of the materials needed
and once she was started to forge ahend to her as-
sembling without a hitch,
But even though the pace set by the West
Lianga and the Tuckahoe cannot be maintained
generilly by old-Iine shipbuilding plants, still
most of these are in a position today to produce
faster than heretofore because of mechanical aids
now at thelr disposal. And what was done at
Camden tn turning out the Tuckahoe 1s doubly
interesting because the practice there may be
likened in a measure to what 1s now termed the
fabricated ship,
The fabricated ship was offered as a solution of
a very vexatious situation that had a number
of angles, First, for ship construction it was
needful to draw upon steel workers and allied
labor who were quite unfamilinr with ship-
building. Next, it was essential that steel
plants that were capable of producing the ma-
terlals for bridges, the framework of great office
buildings and the steel parts of other land struc-
tures should he made available and their ton-
nage utilized in the construction of the manifold
parts for oceangoing cargo carriers. Finally, con-
yenlent polnts on deep water had to be chosen
for the assembling of these elements, which were
manufactured far and wide and delivered at the
places of building in a more or less adyanced
stage of fabrication.
‘The fabricated ship is not, strictly speaking,
a type of vessel, but rather a standardized order
or construction which depends primarily upon
a measure of advanced preparatory work done
at plants remote from the shipyard and done so
well and accurately that similar parts are {den-
tical and can be put in any one of a group of
type hulls of corresponding dimenslons. Inter
changeabillty 1s the paramount requirement,
‘The three distinctive fabricating yards on the
Atlantle seaboard are the Newark bay plant
of the Submarine Boat corporation, the Hog 1s-
land plant of the Amertean International corpor-
ation, and the yard of the Merchants Shipbuild-
{ng corporation at Bristol, Pa. Because of the
way in which these establishments are laid out
and because they receive their materials ninety-
odd per cent ready for erection and assembling
and therefore need proportionately fewer men on
the spot per ship than otherwise would be re-
quired, it is practicable for them to handle at
one time an unusually large number of vessels.
While the materials are manufactured at some
score of different steel mills they are so true
to dimensions, thanks to drawings of excep-
tional accuracy and fullness of detail and pat-
terns that are exact in every particular, that the
independent concerns can be relled upon to fur-
nish just what ts wanted,
Chairman Hurley of the Emergency Fleet cor
Poration has told us that we should be able to
turn out annually quite 2,800,000 tons of wooden
craft, ‘This means not only exceptional indus-
try on our part, but it represents the surmount-
ing of seemingly mountainous obstacles. But
Dia ‘conadents Jp so. far. gusting in the scores of
our old and new timber plants that he has re-
cently ordered approximately 200 additional
GABRICATZO STELL SHUPREROY FOR THE
WATE Rg ME
is the spirit that hus gripped Amer-
‘ jean shipyards, whether working in
wood, steel or cement, and ft looks as if we
Should, indeed, have 3,000,000 tons of freight-
ers afloat before the end of the year,
A few weeks ago the nation was thrilled
when news came from the Pacific coast that
& steel cargo carrier of 8,800 tons was put over-
board 55 working days after the laying of her
keel and was delivered to the Emergency Fleet
corporation ready for service 12 days later. But
the record thus set by the steamship West Lianga,
built at Seattle by the Skinner & Eddy company
was fated to survive only a short while.
On April 8 the keel of the colfier Tuckahoe
was laid at the yard of the New York Shipbuild-
{ng company at Camden, N. J. ‘Cwenty-seven
days afterward, on May 5, the ship was launched
85 per cent toward total completion, and on
May 15 she was in all respects fit to be turned
over to the government authorities. Her con-
tract did not call for her delivery until the middie
of June,
‘The West Lianga, {t should be borne in mind,
is a ship of 8,800 tons dead welght capacity,
while the Tuckahoe ts of 5,500 tons, and this dif-
ference brings the two achievements much
closer to equality than ts commonly recognized.
For Instance, the Skinner & Eddy steamship
probably has in her getup substantially 800,-
000 rivets, while the collier built on the Dela-
ware called for substantlally 600,000 rivets.
When all is said and done the rate of prog-
ress of a ship under construction Is pretty ac-
curately Judged by the number of rivets driven
because the ultimate factor ts the riveting gang,
and muscular effort and human endurance on
the part of these men determine the speed of
assembling,
The driving of rivets cannot be dodged or im-
perfectly done if the craft 1s to be put together
broperly, and while exceptional records have been
made of late in tivet driving these performances
are in the main Isolated and by no means an In-
dex of everyday and universal occurrence. Some
of the especially expert gangs have driven uny-
where from 1,500 to over 7,000 rivets in a day's
work, but the majority of them do not average
more than 400 rivets during a regular shift.
How then was {t possible to put the Tuckahoe
together between April 8 und May 5?
The New York Shipbutlding corporation
about 10 yenrs ago initiated the standardized
ship with the idea of productag economically and
rapidly numerous vessels of identical form and
size,
Just before the Tuckahoe was taken in hand,
so It (8 said, @ sister ship was constructed and
simultaneously the materials for the Tuckahoe
were prepared and accumulated eo that they
would be all ready for what oo be termed a
recoré-meking undertaking. ith the sister
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
@y REV. LESSON. D. Dy
‘Teacher of English Bible in the Moody
Bible Institute of Chicago.)
(Copyright, 1918, Western Newspaper
Union.)
LESSON FOR JULY 21
PRAYING To GoD.
may obtain mercy, and Gnd grace to help
in_time of need.—Hebrewe 4:16,
DEVOTIONAL READING—Luke 11:5-18,
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL FOR.
TEACHERS—Péalms 734-5; Matthew 1:1-
U1; It Corinthians 12:6-0; Jamen 4:3-8
PRIMARY MEMORY VERSE—Jehovah
48 nigh unto all them that call upon him.
—Pealins 145:18,
de a 14:23-25;
INTERMEDIATE, SENIOR AND
ADULT TOPIC—Why and how to pray
and the results,
Prayer ought to be a matter of great
concern to every believer (Psalms 145:
18).
Prayer is a matter but little under
stood by Christians; in fact, only as
divine aid is given cun we really pray.
The range of prayer is from the
depths of the soul to the very
thoughts of God. ‘There was some-
thing about the praying of Jesus that
so impressed the disciples that they
requested him to teach them to pray
(Luke 11:1). We nowhere read of
them asking him to teach them how
to preach. Praying 1s more important
| than preaching. No one is fit to teach
or preach who does not know how to
| pray. May each one enroll at once,
| in the school of prayer with Christ as
| our teacher. He is a most wifling and
| capable teacher, In response to the
| disciples’ request he outlines the fol- :
| lowing principles of prayer:
| _ |. The Right Relationship of the One
| Praying (Luke 11:2).
| 1, Fillal—“Father.”
| Im order to pray to God, the sup-
| pliant must be a child of God. God
is a father; his gifts and blessings are
for his children, This relationship
can only be entered into through re-
| generation. Not all men have a right
j to say, “Our Father” when address-
ing God. Only those who are ehildren
| of God by faith in Jesus Christ ean
| so address him. It is not only profess-
| ing to be children but living like God's
| eitaren Children have rights and
privileges which are dented to others,
2. Fraternal—“Our Father.”
| God has more than one child. His
children are bound up together in na-
ture and Interests, Even in our se
eret prayer we should address him as
Our Father, which is a recognition of
the interests-of others, alongside of
ours.
Ul. The Right Attitude in Prayer
| Guke 11:2),
| 1, Reverent adoration,
| As children we have certain priv-
| Meges, and yet holy reverence becomes
| us. We should hallow his name; we
should adore him as the eternal God.
2. Loyalty.
| When praying to God we should
| come with the spirit of loyalty which
cries out “Thy kingdom come.”
3, Submission—"Thy will be done.’
| We should have no will of our own:
| regarding the rule of God. We should!
| let him direct us in all things.
| IL, The Right Spirit (Luke 11:3-8)
| 1, Dependent Faith—“Give us our
| daily bread” (v. 8).
| We should realize that not only:
what we have, but life itself is ours
to enjoy because of him, and that he
is able to do for us exceedingly abun-
dantly above all that we ask or think.”
2. Penitence and Love—“Forgive us
our debts” (¥. 9).
We should come to him reallzing
that we have sinned, and ery unto him
for forgiveness. Our hearts should
be so filled with love for others that
we will forgive those who sinned
| against us as God is willing to for
| give us,
| 8. Holiness and Caution—“Lead ue’
| not into temptation” (v. 4).
Because we are God's children ané_
realizing the depravity of our natures,
and the consequent tendency to prac-
tice that which displeases him, we '
should shrink from that which, if in-
dulged in, would dishonor him,
4. Intercessory (vv. 5, 6).
The man who asked for bread did
| not ask for himself, but for a friend,
Prayer which pleases God 1s unselfish.
| in its requests,
| 5. Perseverance (ev. 7, 8).
Prayer which pleases God and gets
| results is importunate, perseveres un-
till the object is achieved,
IV. Encouragement to Pray (Luke
11::9-12).
1, God's promise (vy. 9, 10). ,
‘True prayer cannot fall of an an-
swer, because God definitely promises:
that every ong that asketh recetveth,
| he that seeketh findeth, and to him
that knocketh it shall be opened,
2 The example of an earthly’ ta-
ther (vy. 11-18), ;
No father will give a stone to his
son who asketh for bread, or a serpent
| instead of a fish, nor a in
| stead of an egg. God ts in
| more willing to answer re
of his children than y
| are to give good gifts to chi
V. The True Goal of an ‘Prayer
wooden freighters each yi 3,700 tons deadweight
eapacity.
A year ago we had In this country only a hand-
ful of qualified shipwrights, und the yards en-
gaged in the building of wooden vessels were few
and far between, of modest equipment and any-
thing but up to date compared with thelr steel
competitors. How, then, has tt been possible to
undertake so imposing a program and to prom-
ise deliveries within periods unprecedentedly
brief? The story is one to make every American
feel proud, for It is a record of Yankee ingenu-
ity and native adaptability at their best,
It was plain to the men concerned in direct-
ing the Emergency Fleet corporation that it
would be quite out of the question to recruit
shipwrights or to train new men in the srt with:
in the thine available. The shipwright in his tin-
ished forn) is the evolution of long years of prac-
tical application, and this means an nequired cun-
ning in the use of a very few hand tools,
Just the same we are launching timber ves:
sels after very short building periods, and these
undenlable results are the consequence of skill-
fully directed efforts following new lines. ‘The
Emergency Fleet corporation first set about
recruiting labor from a wide zange of wood work-
ing trades, and they showed how these men could
be employed, by: reason of already existing me-
chanical alds and others developing, to do virtu-
ally what had previously been done only by the
expert ship carpenter,
We are turning out by the new method ocean-
golng timber cargo carriers to which the under-
writers do not hesitate to give Al rating. This
achievement Is the outcome of a studied effort to
cut out“lost motion all the way from the forest
to the bullding plant and thence upon the finished
product.
Where the shipwright used to hew and cut and
patiently carve the various curiously formed
structural units out of relatively raw material,
his less expert brothers, the house carpenter, the
Jotner, the wooden bridge builder and the like
how accomplish astonishing things through the
agency of the sawmill, ‘The sawmill in fact rep-
resents today to the wooden ship what the steel
mill stands for in the case of the fabricated
freighter.
* By means of planers that can be set at any
angle and saws that will operate when tilted to
different degrees, it 1s possible for the present
day substitutes of the master Wood worker, the
shipwright, to shape and to bevel pieces of all
sizes and thicknesses and, besides, to do this in
a few minutes, where the ship carpenter re-
quired probably as many hours,
‘The pneumatic drill commonly used in struc-
tural steel work has been modified so that it
will answer for the boring of holes in the tim-
bers of a wooden ship; pneumatic hammers,
adaptations of steel riveters, are driving th
bolts, treenails, plugs, ete, that bind a timber
craft together; und portable pluners and kindred
air or electrically operated tools finish off sur-
faces and smooth joints so that the adze and the
other tools of the shipwright are wellnigh dis
pensed with, Further, these portable power-
driven aids are doing their work at a speed ut-
terly unattainable by the traditjional ship car-
penter and his fellows.
As yet the concrete ship 1s too much of a nov-
elty for predictions to be made as to the ultimate
maximum of practicable tonnage, nor are we
yet sure that the big conerete freighter of 4,000
tons and more ts going to prove enduring and
economical, However, concrete craft of more
modest proportions have already established
‘thelr durability, thelr technienl correctness and
the feasibility of constructing them rapidly.
The Emergency Fleet corporation, bearing these
facts in mind, Is going right ahead to supple-
ment our mercantile squadrons by substantially
encouraging the building of some scores of freight-
ers and other granolithic 1
M.
WILLIAM CLARENCE HUESTON
One of Kansas City's most prominent Attorneys and the recent candidate for Alderman for the Eighth Ward, who as Chairman of the Boosters' Committee, that had in charge the arrangements for the monster farewell demonstration to the drafted boys last Thursday, covered himself with glory. Mr. Hueston will yet receive high honors at the hands of his people in this city.
One of Kansas City's most promising for Alderman for the Eighth Ward, whittee, that had in charge the arrangement to the drafted boys last Thur Hueston will yet receive high honors a
Among the guests who worshiped at Ebenezer Sunday were Mes dames Jennie Ashby, Shaw, Lulu Roundtree and Mr. W. Kitchen of Omaha. Because of the cordial welcome given strangers who worship at Ebenezer, many are making it their Church home. There were 6 additions Sunday. The Sunday School is rapidly being filled with both children and adults. The Mid-summer Drive was launched Tuesday evening and a special effort is being made to pay off the parsonage indebtedness and the winter coal. The Captains are all enthusiastic and none expect to come up with their assessment. Mrs. Belle Fulcher, one of Ebenezer's faithful members has been confined to her home for several weeks but is much improved and expects to be out soon. Mr. Howard is doing nicely at the hospital.....Mrs. W. T. Osborne left the last of the week for a few weeks at Excelsior Springs. Mrs. Osborne has worked constantly since the appointment of Rev. Osborne to Ebenezer and leaves on her vacation rejoicing because of the fact that her
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1930
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prominent Attorneys and the recent candidate Ward, as who Chairman of the Boosters' Com-arrangements for the monster farewell demonst- Thursday, covered himself with glory. Mr. monors at the hands of his people in this city.
untiring efforts have helped pay $783 on the parsonage and greatly helped beautify Douglass Hospital. On August 7 will be a big recital under the auspices of Clayter Lodge, managed by Mrs. Osborne out of which some of the proceeds will be given to assist with the improvement of Douglass Hospital. This entertainment will consist of some of the best elocutionists and soloists from several of the City Churches. The admission will only be 15 cents. Mrs. Lulu Monday is on the sick list....Class 12 Brother A. Gilliam, leader is carrying the banner this week....Mrs. Kate Wilson was also among the Omaha visitors who spent several days in the City....In spite of the threatening weather a large number of Ebeenzer Sunday School pupils attended the Union Picnic at Swope's Park Wednesday.
The funeral services of Ellen J. Ousley were held from the 8th and Towne Avenue Church June 29th. Presidig Elder Wilson, life acquaintance of Mother Ousley, officiated, and
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Eighteenth Street and the Paseo
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AMONG THE CHURCHES
Rev. J. Logan Craw, pastor of the Church, preached a memorial sermon. Mother Ousley was a veteran member of the Connection, and during her eventful life rendered valiant service for the Master. A large concourse of friends were out to pay their last respects. She leaves a sister and brother and a host of friends to mourn her loss.—Los Angeles Eagle.
CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
Sunday was another great day at 24th and Woodland, January 1, 1918. There was a mortgage debt on the property of $1,326.00—one note of $826.00 due July 1, 1918, and one note of $500.00 due July 1, 1919. The officials decided to put the whole Church under the whole task without clubs or "tribes," male or female, and make a financial drive to "Go Over the Top" July 1, 1918. The result was $1,507.81 raised in actual cash and on July 10 the mortgage and all indebtedness against the property was paid in full. On Sunday the Church Building was dedicated with an appropriate and impressive program, C. E. Craggett of Topeka, Kan., preached the sermon. It was a masterpiece—clean cut and well delivered. Although all indebtedness had been paid in full, more than $100.00 was raised at the dedication. One mother took membership with the church. The mortgage was burned in effigy by three Bible School girls in the presence of representatives of four generations on the platform while the congregation sang "Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow." The night program consisted of several short addresses and words of gladness by some of the members. Mr. T. B. Watkins madehte principal address before the dressing of the "service flag." Christian and American patriotism has an uncompromising friend in Mr. Watkins. The entire membership and friends were invited to the Church Monday night by the young men of the Church where they were bountifully served. It was a great social meeting where all were happy and rejoiced and plans for future work was discussed. Being made free from "fussing about money" the pastor promises special sermons next Sunday.
DR. HOWARD M. SMITH Supt. of the Home for Aged and Infirm Negroes and Secretary of the Flying Squadron which brought fame and honor to the Negroes in the wonderful patriotic parade by the magnificent showing they made last Thursday.
ALLEN CHAPEL
Much credit is due the Women's Day Committee, composed of Mesdames F. J. Dawley, Laura Gilmore, Eula Harrison, Louise McDonald and Susie Peeler Johnson for their untiring efforts to make the day a crowning success. The music under the direction of Mrs. R. G. Jackson equalled that of her distinguished husband. She too, had brought together some of the best female singers of the city. Mrs. McKee, wife of a Presbyterian minister of the city, spoke at the morning service on war activities. At the evening service, Mrs. O. H. Martin, one of the leaders in Women's War Work, delivered an address. Dr. Wm. H. Thomas, our minister, was presented a service pin at the morning service. During the day there were twelve additions. The day's collection was $131.55....The Sunday Schools of Kansas City held a "Union Picnic" at Swope Park last Wednesday....The Allen Chapel Committee chosen for the Union Chau tauqua are James Crews, Chairman, Dr. Wm. J. Thompkins, C. H. Callo way, W. C. Hueston, F. A. Harris Hon. N. C. Crews, F. G. Gilmore, Geo Teeters, S. H. P. Edwards, Dr. T. C unthank, Wm. Ballard, Secretary, Brother Chas. B. Boston, one of the leaders of Class 8, left this week for the army.
"God save our splendid men,
Send them safe home again,
God save our men.
Keep them victorious,
Patient and chivalrous,
They are so dear to us,
God save our men."
ST. STEPHEN'S BAPTIST CHURCH
A large and appreciative audience greeted the pastor, Dr. J. W. Hurse,
at the morning and evening services.
His sermon was inspiring and instructive. Rev. J. M. Booker, the pastor of the Pleasant Green Baptist Church opened his door at 4:00 p. m. in the afternoon and a large congregation of friends and members of St.
THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1918.
auxiliary meetings of this church have been discontinued from July 18 to 29th, so that the church can throw its full strength to the great Chautauqua of nine churches of greater Kansas City....The great Chautauqua chorus of 280 voices will furnish the music every evening. Don't miss this great event. Come and bring your friends.
CENTENNIAL M. E. CHURCH CHOIR
GIVEN AN. OVATION.
Another request for David, the Sheperd boy. The members of the First Presbyterian Church (White), 7th street and Nebraska avenue, made a request for the Cantata to be staged in their church Sunday night, July 14th. As it was inconvenient for the cantata to be rendered, it was decided Centennial M. E. Choir would render a short program for them. We extended a warm welcome and our singing was highly appreciated. Mme. Hendricks sang a solo, "The Promise of Life." She won the praise of every lover of music. Southern Melody Makers Quartette sang two numbers. The audience was much pleased and expressed their desires for another visit of the choir in the near future.
VINE STREET BAPTIST CHURCH.
All services were well attended with two additions. Mrs. John Ralls is improving. Mr. Geo. W. Taylor was able to be out again Sunday after an illness of eight days. His many friends were pleased to see him. The funeral of Mr. H. Pierce was preached Sunday by our pastor. We extend our sympathy to the family and relatives....The B. Y. P. U. is preparing to have a fine program the 28th of this month. All are invited to attend....The concert given under the auspices of Miss Dorphine Coles was quite a success....The young preachers have services every Wednesday. Don't fall \to come out and hear them.
GREENWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH.
Sunday being a very pleasant day
A TRIBUTE TO THE YOUNG NEGRO D
UNG NEGRO DRAFTEES.
A. Starks.
A TRIBUTE TO THE YOUNG NEGRO DRAFTEES.
By Charles A. Starks.
They go! These sons and brothers of ours.
And by heaven, they go forth with every blessing and hope which we can bestow upon them! They are ours, heart and soul, blood and blood, friends, all of them!
They are Americans, good loyal Americans!
They are also Negroes. Being Negroes their duty, their bravery in battle and their loyalty to the is assured.
To be a Black man today is to be affiliated with National garment is free from the filth, corruption, traitorism.
In the terrible tensility which holds and grips Nations; when suspicion of disloyalty rests upon against the interest of this country is prevalent in the very waters running through common channel is polluted by the poisoning hand which would not and unsuspecting, then we may turn to the Black immune from such acts, and find him one hund. This being true the COLOR of his face at the p becomes his bond.
Then to our Black boys of Kansas City and we are proud of you. You are O. K. with us. That you from the draft to shoulder arms for your co you will prove the true sons of destiny. Goodbye you to the ranks of honor, to your Black fellow who have preceded you—there to win the glory. Young men, goodbye, and God bless you.
ANNOUNCEMENT—After taking a m Mrs. HATTIE LUCAS RICHA has Re-opened Her TEA ROOM at 1 would be pleased to see her many good
Negroes their unsweringness to
their loyalty to the flag and country
to be affiliated with a race whose
the filth, corruption and infection of
holds and grips the war-burdened
quality rests upon many; when crime
ity is prevalent in the winds; when
common channels to our hydrants
which would murder the innocent
arn to the Black man, known to be
him one hundred per cent safe.
is face at the portal of patriotism
Kansas City and Eighteenth Street,
K. with us. The fates have picked
armsfor your country. We believe
destiny. Goodbye! And God speed
our Black fellowmen over the seas
to win the glories of a new day.
iss you.
taking a much needed rest,
CAS RICHARDSON
ROOM at 1831 Paseo, and
her many good customers.
They are also Negroes. Being Negroes their unsweringness to duty, their bravery in battle and their loyalty to the flag and country is assured.
To be a Black man today is to be affiliated with a race whose National garment is free from the filth, corruption and infection of traitorism.
In the terrible tensity which holds and grips the war-burdened Nations; when suspicion of disloyalty rests upon many; when crime against the interest of this country is prevalent in the winds; when the very waters running through common channels to our hydrants is polluted by the poisoning hand which would murder the innocent and unsuspecting, then we may turn to the Black man, known to be immune from such acts, and find him one hundred per cent safe. This being true the COLOR of his face at the portal of patriotism becomes his bond.
Then to our Black boys of Kansas City and Eighteenth Street, we are proud of you. You are O. K. with us. The fates have picked you from the draft to shoulder arms for your country. We believe you will prove the true sons of destiny. Goodbye! And God speed you to the ranks of honor, to your Black fellowmen over the seas who have preceded you—there to win the glories of a new day. Young men, goodbye, and God bless you.
has Re-opened Her TEA ROOM at 1831 Paseo, and would be pleased to see her many good customers.
we had a congregation. Our pastor,
Rev. G. T. Mosby, delivered two very
instructive sermons.....At 2 p. m. the
attendance of the Sunday school children
was grand.....Last Thursday
evening the church gave an automobile
outing after which we returned
to the church and enjoyed a table
spreaded with nice refreshments.....
Prayer service Wednesday night.....
The Mission Circle met at the home
of Mrs. Nancy Reynolds at 12th and
Highland avenue.....Everybody is
invited to attend our services.
JAMISON TEMPLE C. M. E.
CHURCH.
Rev. Walker delivered two <u>excellent sermons Sunday, both being well attended.</u> All members and friends who were absent Sunday are expected to do their bit in the effort on the pastor's salary.....Our last Quarterly Meeting Conference for this year is the first Sunday in August. We must make this a record breaker, also the best half of the $1078 rally, which will be 2nd Sunday in August. Come out Sunday for further information.... Remember Sunday School at 9 A. M. and Epworth League 7 P. M.
LET POTATOES FIGHT
They Save Wheat.
When you eat Potatoes
don't eat
Bread
U.S. FOOD ADMINISTRATION
11 Days— July 18-29
Prof. R. G. Jackson, Conductor. MISSOURI NIGHT Governor Frederick Gardner will Speak.
Governor Arthur Capper will Speak
CLOSING NIGHT
Great Patriotic Demonstration,
Home Guards, Boy Scouts,
Cadets and All Military Orders
Will be Present.
REV. S. W. BAGOTE, D. D. D., Chm.
REV. J. F. GRIFFIN, D. D. D., Sec'y
Stephen's Church marched from the tent and witnessed the baptizing of some of the converts that have been drafted. Sister Nannie Harden requested Deacon Alfred Bartell to go to $2310\frac{1}{2}$ Vine street Sunday afternoon (where she had a very sick brother who is a sinner) to sing and pray for him. Deacon Bartell in company with the following Deacons and Trustees: Sims, Collins, Alford and Smallwood, went to the residence of Mr. Polk and had a glorious meeting and he was converted happily. It is the earnest prayers of the members of St. Stephen's that he may soon recover....The revival is still at a high ebb, sinners are being converted and backsliders reclaimed....The Rev. Dr. McNeal of Pleasant Green Baptist Church is conducting the services for us this week. Among those who united with the Church was Miss Edna Hammett who is the Organist for this Church coming from Allen Chapel. Sunday is Covenant meeting in the afternoon, and at night we will administer the Lord's Supper.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH.
The funeral of Brother Stephen Holt was held in this auditorium at 11 o'clock last Sunday morning, during which Dr. Bacote preached a very touching sermon on "Growth In God." The church extends its heartfelt sympathy to the bereaved relatives of Brother Holt...In the evening services Rev. Williams preached a very instructive sermon on "Pay Day" which was enjoyed by all present.... During the day there were four additions to the church...All of the
[Name]
GEO. W. K. LOVE
Grand Secretary of the Masonic fraternity and one of the real hustlers of Kansas City who does things. Mr. Love rendered valuable service in making arrangements for the great farewell demonstration given the Drafted Boys last Thursday.
The LaBelle College and Hair Dressing Emporium Manufacturers of Human
THE WORLD'S FIRST WOMEN IN THE WORLD
Mme. S. E. L.
1607 E. 18th St. Kansas City, Mo.
JANE WILSON
S. M. MAYER
1910
THE DRUG STOCK
Service and Quality are
WHITE-WOOD
Bring Your Prescription
of Absolute Accuracy
OUR STOCK IS COM
N. W. Corner 19th and Vi
PHONES—HOME EA
THE DRUG STORE BEAUTIFUL Service and Quality are Paramount at the WHITE-WOOD DRUG STORE
Bring Your Prescriptions to us and be assured of Absolute Accuracy and Fair Treatment.
OUR STOCK IS COMPLETE IN ALL LINES
N. W. Corner 19th and Vine Streets. (Transfer Point)
PHONES—HOME EAST 2293, BELL E. 641.
A
Manufacturers of Human Hair goods in all styles, viz: Switches, Hair Puffs, etc., Wigs and Toupes made to order. French ventilating on net. Match any shade of hair. We guarantee to grow 4 inches of hair in six months with our Electric Scientific Method. We guarantee to cure all scalp diseases, viz: tetter, eczema, ring worm of scalp, etc., with our scientific preparations, if used according to directions. For all styles of artistic hair dressing for special occasions see Mme. Laing.
We teach Hair Dressing, Wig Making, Hair Manufacture, Manicuring and Facial Massage. Special inducements to apprentices.
AGENTS WANTED everywhere to handle our La Belle Preparations and Hair Goods. Manufactured only by
AING & CO.
Bell Phone, East 2508-W.
MISS MAYME LOGAN
HAIRDRESSER
I treat the scalp and absolutely guarantee to grow the hair one-half to one inch in a month Positive cure for all scalp diseases. Stops the hair from falling out. Starts it at once to growing.
Bell Phone East 1203
1606 Garfield Ave.
ORE BEAUTIFUL
are Paramount at the
DRUG STORE
ans to us and be assured
y and Fair Treatment.
PLETE IN ALL LINES
ine Streets. (Transfer Point)
AST 2293, BELL E. 641.
THE STAR HAIR GROWER
A Wonderful Hair Dressing and Grower
1,000 AGENTS WANTED
Good money made. Want agents in every city and village to sell the STAR HAIR GROWER. This is a wonderful preparation. Can be used with or without Straightening Irons. Sells for 25c per box, one 25c box will prove its value. Any person who will use a 25c box will be convinced. No matter what has failed to grow your hair, just give the
STAR HAIR GROWER a trial and you will be convinced. Send 25c for full sized box.
If you wish to be an Agent send $1.00 and we will send you a full Supply that you can begin work at once; also agents terms.
Send all money by Money Order to THE STAR HAIR GROWER MFGR.
Box 812 Greersboro, N. C.
Madame Walker's System