Nashville Globe
Friday, November 1, 1918
Nashville, Tennessee
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CHURCH WORK COLUMBIA'S LIFE
WHAT SOME OF THE PASTORS ARE DOING—NEWS OF INTEREST FROM MAURY COUNTY MANY ELOQUENT PASTORS—CHURCHES PROGRESSING.
Rev. J. B. Ridley, the pastor of Friendship Baptist Church has just left Maury County to go back to his home in Nashville, this ending a missionary trip, he was away from his home ever since July preaching and doing church work in general. He closed out his revival at Friendship Baptist Church this season giving Rev. J. T. Tunstall. $30.00 for two weeks preaching. He also closed out his revival at Mt. Zion Baptist Church giving Rev J. T. Tunstall. $50.00 for two weeks preaching.
REV. W. H. ADAMS,
Columbia, Tenn.
Pastor Bethel A. M. E. Church.
NASHVILLE GLOBE. NASHVILLE A CITY OF OPPORTUNITY--THE LEADING NEGRO JOURNAL IN TENNESSEE.
wine press to get the juice out of the grapes. It takes trials and tribulations to get the good out of a Christian. Don't look for an easy place, there is none here in this world. It matters how hard your work seems to you surrender yourself to your task and get your pleasure out of your work no matter what it may be. If you work for Jesus he will pay you what is right, if you don't get it in this world you will get it in the world to come. You will need to prove yourself a workman, aworkman that nethed not to be ashame. Study what the Lord would have you to do, study the Holy Scripture, study yourself. Read at every opportunity that you have, not novels but good and religious literature and read all of the daily, weekly, and monthly newspapers that you can. Signed by the Board of the First Baptist Church and Rev. J. T. Tunstull, pastor, Bro. Dave Jackson, Sec. Bros. Mose Beckett, Trets. Bro. Norman Booker, Finance Committee.
We the pastor, Rev. J. T. Tunstull, officers and members of the First Baptist Church, Columbia, Tenn., are preparing for another big drive on Satan and she for the ensuing war. The Lord has given us great victory the last year. He gave us souls for our hire and a splendid band of Christian men and women to work in this great army. We are winding up this year's work with great success and are striving to do more for the Master this incoming year, whenever we shall be able to
REV. T. J. TUNSTULL, JR.,
Pastor of the First Baptist Church,
Columbia, Tenn.
open our church doors again. Columbia is the city of today for church work. The different pastors and their congregations are alive and are working as never before making a way that the world especially Maury County may know that Jesus did die that all men might have a right to the life of life. Jesus said eaf of the tree and ye shall never die. He told Peter upon this rock I will build my church and the very gates of hell shall not prevail against it. Our aim is by the help of the good Lord is to hold about two weeks revival meeting, then entertain the Executive with the cooperation with one of the leading pastors and churches of Maury County we are endeavoring to form a Maury County Association which will be done in the above said Board meeting.
Bethel A. M. E. Church has been in the wilderness for sometime. The Lord has sent us this gospel preacher and he has stood before us as a Moses and has mastered the situation. He is as bold as a lion and fearless of men and women. He was converted to the Lord years ago. He is a God-follower and he was sent to us. Watch us, if the Lord will be our helper this ensuing year will be our jubilee year. With Bethel and her good pastor, who has the ability to lead us to victory. Through Christ we can do all things, without him we can do nothing. The Lord told Moses to go to Egypt, he went, Christ told the blind man to go wash and he went. He also told man and he went and man and he walked. And great results were accomplished. Let both pastor and members go first to the Lord and see about the church. Christ said upon
NASHVILLE, TENN., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1918.
SPECIAL WAR WORK CONFERENCE
DR. GEO. HAYNES WRITES LETTER—MEETING HELD AT GUFPORT, MISS.—EXPERTS SPEAK—DISCRETION AND CARE USED.
(Special to the Nashville Globe.)
The inclosed letter written by the Secretary of Labor last summer to the Southern Sociological Congress is now released for publication as it has a statement of the attitude and point of view of the Secretary with reference to Negro wage-earners and the application of general principles of justice to them which will doubtless be of interest to the readers of your valuable journal.
During the past few months we have been so pressed with other work that we have not been able to send you as much material for publication as we have doubtless desired. I trust that we shall be able to give you better service in this regard in the future. This letter may be given appropriate heading to show that it was officially released by the undersigned.
Yours very truly,
GEORGE E. HAYNES,
Director of Negro Economics.
July 9, 1913.
Dr. J. E. McCulloch, General Secretary, Southern Sociological Congress, Gufurt, Miss.
My Dear Dr. McCulloch: The special War Workers' Conference for the State of Mississippi, to be conducted by the Southern Sociological Congress July 10 and 11, impresses me as a very significant step in the effort of the Nation to mobilize its labor power for one hundred per cent production in industry and agriculture. Such use of the labor power of the country is imperative as a second line of defense behind the millions of our men now on the fighting front in France, in the army corps in this Country and in our Navy upon the high seas.
The experts tell us that it takes from six to ten workers at home to keep one soldier on the dinghy when the war is over. When the troops help to mobilize, distribute and energize those who do the work of our war industries has become an important factor in winning the war as the prowess of our armies in the field or our Navy on the seas.
The President of the United States has lodged the function of recruiting and placing labor for war industries in the United States Employment Service of the Department of Labor Beginning with common labor on August 1, this service will gradually take charge of the mobilizing and placing of all labor for our industries employing one hundred or more workers in public or private industries, and with workers. It will correct the abuses and the troubles growing out of the large labor turnover with the consequent disruption of regular work.
In assuming such responsibility the Department of Labor is aware of the dangers. We need the cooperation and help of such men and women as gather in your conferences to guard against these dangers. Workers must not be taken from one essential industry only to be placed in other work not necessary to the prosecution of the War. Discretion and order must be used by the laborers from one part of the country to another. in order that the economic fabric of the Nation will be disturbed as little as possible. We need to keep ever before us the idea that the interests of the laborers and the interests of the business men are complimentary. They are parts of that great organization of industry and agriculture so necessary to the successful waging of this war and so essential to the life of the Nation. Above all, every safeguard must be taken to the standard of building and the most careful carriers. Especially must great care be taken to keep the age limit of those who enter industry at a high level, lest we rob our future citizenship of its right to growth and time for education. We must also take knowledge of the dangers attendant upon the large entrance of women into heavy and hazardous industries. The exegesicles of war times should not be made the occasion for: the breaking down of those standards of homes wages and conditions of work which are necessary for the childhood, the womanhood and the motherhood of the present and the future.
It is especially important at this crucial period, when we need to conserve all the resources of the Nation for the conduct of the war, that these principles should be applied to all the people of our Country, including the Negro people, who constitute about one-sixth of the total laboring population. A similar policy will be equally important in the readjustment period which will follow the war. I am pleased to know that your Congress is giving the problem its earnest consideration.
Yours very truly,
(Signed) W. B. WILSON
First Baptist Church, Columbia, Tenn., regarded by all as the lead-in church of Maury County now pastored by Rev. J. T. Tunstull.
TEDDY ANSWERS WILSON'S APPEAL
TEDDY ANSWERS WILSON'S APPEAL
PLEAS FOR G. O. P.—SAYS
REPUBLICAN CONGRESS IS
NEEDED TO SHOW AMERICA'S
DETERMINATION —CRITICISES
ADMINISTRATION.
New York, Oct. 28 — Col. Theodore
Roosevelt, answering President Wilson's appeal for return of a Democratic majority in Congress, urged voters of the nation, in an address
here tonight, to transfer control to
Republican leadership. Such an out-
come of the election, he declared,
would assure "our Allies that America
is determined to speed up the war and insist on unconditional sur-
rection of the enemy, and would serve
notice on Germany "and her vassal
states" that they would have to deal
henceforth "with the resolute and
straightforward soul of the American
people and not merely with the ob-
sure purposes and wavering will of
Mr. Wilson."
Declarating that "hair the leaders of
the President's own party opposed
him when he had committed himself
to war measures." Mr. Roosevelt ascertained that heads of the Republican organization in Congress supported
administration when a decree was
of war needed, when there was a
demand for the draft, when the army was sent overseas and when money was required by taxation or by loans.
The former President spoke at a meeting under the auspices of the Republican Club at Carnegie Hall to advocate the election "of the Republic can state ticket here in New York and of the Congressional ticket brought the unpopular." Rebuking what he termed the "serrity" of Democratic leadership, the Colonel said it was "a small wonders that in the chalk rooms of the House the better jest circulates: 'Here's our tour last, in war, first toward peace, long may he waver.' (Continued on page 5.)
THE MILITARY UNION
PRIVATE JAMES M. MARTIN.
Columbia, Tenn.
JOBS FOR WOMEN UNLIMITED
JOBS FOR WOMEN UNLIMITED
WOMEN IN PATRIOTIC SERVICE
GOVERNMENT FINDING WORK
FOR WOMEN—DON YOUR
OVERALLS AND SERVICE
CAP.
Time has come, says C. T. Clayton, to take up regular work at regular pay. The best way for many women to show their patriotism is to train for service. Efficiency was never a more highly prized asset than it is today. The Government is helping women to find the work they are best fitted to do, and suggesting how they can best train to fill places of men called to the colors. Women has come now when many women must drop their knitting needles for a field of greater service, cease volunteer work, and take a regular job for regular pay," says C. T. Clayton, Director of the Training and Dilution Service of the U. S. Department of Labor. "The fact that women may not be in need of the money has nothing to do with the case. The United States Government needs their service for production, and the Government is very particular about women being paid the same wage as men for services equally rendered.
"The patriotic thing is for women to do the work her training has fitted her to do, and prepared it has been along the lines of an essential vocation. School teachers should stick to their calling no matter if munitions offer a higher reward. The youth of America must not be neglected.
"For the untrained woman, who has never worked in her life, industry probably offers a more profitable field than any other line of endeavor. Many factories are organizing training schools in their plants. Two hundred factories, according to the Training and Dilution Service, are spending or preparing to spend millions solely in the work of intensive training of new workers. 750,000 new skilled workers are headed by the country by January first. The woman with nimble fingers who not with idle of grease, and who is willing to cast aside for eight hours a day her fluffy ruffles for overalls, her plumed bonnet for a service cap, and to concentrate on the task at hand is sure of a quick and certain reward.
"Here is an example: A girl from a country village far removed from any war-producing industry came to the U. S. Employment Office and asked for a job. She explained that she had two brothers in the service, had never worked in her life; but she wanted to get into industry, and was willing to take any kind of a job in a war-producing plant. She was in a munition plant near work at 8 a.m. In six weeks she had been promoted three times and was earning $22 a week. The fact that she had had her salary almost tripled in an incredibly short length of time meant nothing to this young girl; but she was inexpressibly happy to feel that she was successful in doing her part and making good on the job assigned to her. That must be the spirit of the American women in industry—to stick to the job and train herself to work as faithfully and well as any man." Order that the work of women may give the greatest economic value to the community, every precaution is taken not to fit square pegs into round holes. For this reason women who apply to the U. S. Employment offices are asked to give full information relative to their various qualifications, especially regarding their school, college or technical training. For full information relative to nursing, hospital assistants and reconstruction alds, address the Office of the Surgeon General, Washington, D.C. For nursing, the Nurses' Corps, Student Nurses and Hospital Assistants, Army School of Nursing, Reconstruction Division.
In addition to the facilities for training offered under the direction of the Surgeon General, there are 1,579 schools and hospitals throughout the country that register nurses, and graduate nurses from these institutions are eligible to enter the Army hospitals with the same standing as graduates of the Army School of Nursing, according to the Committee on Nursing of the Council of National Defense. They are also eligible to service with Red Cross nurses and the Navy Nurse Corps. Another opportunity for training is given by the War Industries Board, which is offering in many large cities War Emergency Courses in Employment Methods advanced for maintaining happier relations between capital and labor. The solution offered by the Employment Management Section of the War Industries Board is the organization of an employment department and the putting of all matters having to do with living wage setting, transfers, promotion and voluntary employee relations into the hands of a competent and especially trained officer.
The section has secured the services of the foremost instructing authori-
ties in the country on subjects dealing with employment management, and personnel work. The courses are located in points where universities and industries can co-operate; such as Boston, New York, Rochester, Pittsburgh, Seattle, Cleveland, Chicago, Cincinnati and Berkeley, California. To these courses employers are invited to send man and women of their own choosing, subject to the approval of the Section. It will be understood that such candidates are to return to their sponsors, and be utilized by them in employment work. In the beginning, ten per cent of the applicants for these courses were women, now fifty per cent of the students are women, and the instructors are enthusiastic over the progress they are making. A preliminary course in English is part of Cleveland this autumn, and a subsequent course will be arranged there.
The position of employment manager offers a lucrative field of endeavor for women, and like all works that pays well, the standard for service is high. It would only appeal to a woman, who has some knowledge and liking for factory or shop life. The salient requirements are tact, common sense, resourcefulness, imagination, motivation, a capacity to bear responsibility. Those interested in this new profession should write to Captain Boyd Fisher, 717 Thirteenth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
In order to train women to take the
REV. JOHN RIDLEY,
A Shining Light.
places of men who have entered the
Service, the Railroad Administration
has organized schools of instruction
in several forms of railroad and
office work. Officials state that the
response has been so prompt that in
struction agencies, have many more
applications than can be accepted.
They are now taking only applicants
living in the vicinity of established
schools.
There is a shortage of teachers for radio classes of conscripted men and women are eligible for this line of endearment. The Woman's Radio Corps, 7th Street and Amsterdam avenue, New York City, has the approval or the Federal Board for Vocational Training in training women as radio operators for teaching positions. Those who satisfactorily complete the course go up for the test before the United States Bureau of Navigation and receive a first-grade commercial license, the same as granted to men who qualify in the same way.
The "Flu" condition, generally speaking, is better. There are still a few critical cases. Among them is Mr. James Dukes. The following departed this life since our last write-up: Mrs. Annie Johnson, Faxter, Rachel Johnson Dukes, daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Johnson, Mrs. Wm. Baxter, Mr. James White, Miss Gertrude Harwell and Mr. Wm. E. Martin. Mr. Martin was the brother of Mr. Monroe Martin of this place and Rev. Martin of Tullahoma. He had been in falling health all the year, as he was a victim of tuberculosis. On account of much rain and swollen streams washing away bridges, it has been hard to get sufficient help to look after the sick and bury the dead. Mr. Ira Buford recovered sufficiently to return to Nashville. Mr. Amanda Martin is still improving. He daughter, Mrs. Ella Holt, Jones, returned to Chicago last week to see her husband before he leaves for the campus. Will some one tell us why we fall to see the colored soldiers' names in the casualties? We look and we search but never a name do we see in the papers. Are they not soldiers, too? Are they not giving their life's blood, even their lives? Will some one please explain? We have been asked why, but can't give an answer. Please explain. Rev. Tally was here visiting sick members and trying to collect some conference claims. He saw a few who chanced to be holding out against the Flu and reported a neat sum for all departments. Rev. Tally was the only man in the department is loved by his members. He was awe-stirred when he went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Johnson. There was a sick child in each of four beds. One on a pallet, a married daughter and her child sitting by the fire sick, two other daughters and their husbands sick. This, with the grief of the rec忘 loss of a daughter, who left a two-year-old child. Since then an other has passed, leaving two small
NUMBER
BAN LIFTED FROM CHURCHES
BAN LIFTED FROM CHURCHES
SERVICES WILL BE RESUMED
SUNDAY—CHURCH-GOING PUBLIC WILL RETURN TO SERVICE
—RELIGIOUS CAMPAIGN TO BE WAGER
After a suspension of services for nearly one month all houses of worship will be thrown open Sunday to the church-goers. No doubt the first service held will be the sunrise prayer meeting. Most of the Nashville church people hold these early morning prayer services. At the meeting of the Baptist Ministers' Conference, Monday morning and at the meeting of the interdenominational Alliance this week every confidence was expressed in the hope that the health authorities would see the advisability of lifting the ban on church services with their supposition and in answer to their petition the ban has been lifted. The church-going public will have an opportunity to serve the Lord under their own vine and fig tree, so to speak, this week. No doubt this will be the greatest outpouring the churches have witnessed for a decade. For once it was evidenced that the people of Nashville were tired of staying out of their houses of worship. They were so loyal and so patriotic, all of them, that not a single church endeavored to hold a service. Notwithstanding many of them had heavy obligations financially, and a number had big rallies planned, an event that was assisted in helping the authorities to prevent the spread of the disease, although it caused the closing of their house of worship stopped active religious work, not a murmur was heard. From now on it is stated by all the denominations that a progressive, religious campaign would be waged, and that every department of the church work would be pushed vigorously through out the remainder of the winter.
MASTER L. V. ALLEN HONORED
Master L. V. Allen, Jr., of Scovel
Street was the guest Sunday of Masters Rufus and John Wesley Williams at their home on Green Street. The mothers of the little fellows were present and served them a sumptuous dinner.
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON TOURIST CLUB
B. T. W. T. Club met with Mrs. Besie Gordon, 1814 Jefferson St., as hostess, Mrs. A. V. Marshall, Pres., presided. The club voted to prepare a Xmas box for Nashville Negro soldiers in camps, also a collection of magazines to be. Business was dispensed with and the hostess served a very tempting three course menu. Those to enjoy the hospitality of the hostess, Mosdamnes Marshes, Marshall, Gordon, Bovd, Vineint, Priest, Floyd, Bolds, Bolden, Rucker, Wilder, Cook. Mrs. Webster was reported sick.
children. Truly this family needs sympathy. May heaven smile on them. It will be remembered that their grown son, Allen, called for France nearly two months ago. Ever and onon we seem to hear the patter of the rain, which is bad for the cotton gatherer; but Mr. McBufofman managed to get out about twenty-six hundred and sold it. He is wearing a rather broad smile now.
[Image of a man in a long coat and tie, standing with his hands on his knees.]
REV. P. J. WHITTAKER
Columbia, Tenn.
Pastor West Brook Baptist Church
and the Hazeland Baptist Church.
VOTERS SHOULD NOT FORGET THAT
HON. H. CLAY EVANS, Republican Nominee for United States Senator.
COLORED TROOPERS PROVE
MARKSMANSHIP
WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE—(By Mail). Our colored troops proved their marksmanship recently by bringing down a Boche plane, which had raked them with machine gun fire, in less than fifteen seconds. More than a hundred bullets penetrated the aeroplane. The German appeared over the quadricopter down of St. DIE and swooped down on the plane. 150 feet. He was forced to rise to clear the tower of the Hotel de Ville, but again gibbed down and turned his machine gun on the principal street, despite the fact that many civilians, men, women and children were on the sidewalks. One civilian was wounded. Two colored military policemen pronounced unloaded their revolvers at the Hue Hue Hotel. Of the range and passed over the city, bullets down again when he discovered a company of Negro infantry, on the bike, resting under some trees.
He turned loose his machine gun again, the company commander ordered his men to open fire. The Bochee burst into flames and fell in a field of yards away. The pilot was killed -Nashville Tennessee and American
STATION COMP
Mrs. Ella Patton is sick with the Influenza, hope she soon will recover. Miss Leanna Brickley is sick but some better now. Mrs. Georgia Latimore is yet on the sick list but some better. Mrs. Willie L. Price is on the sick list with the Influenza. Had Sunday school Sunday and had a week visiting school. Class No. 1 moved the L. Toliver preached an excellent season. Miss Orale Watkins is visiting friends and relatives in Nashville for a two weeks' trip. Mr. Charlie H. Hassell made a trip from Nashville, Sunday to visit home folks. Mr. Lit Zirker visited home Sunday from Nashville.
COLORED WOMEN IN WAR WORK
New York, Oct. 29—War work among colored women, under the direction of the Y. W. C. A., is grown up in the field. Just one year ago Miss Eva D. Bowley, executive secretary, was the only colored worker in the field. Today there are nearly one hundred.
The Y. W. C. A. has opened eight colored Hostess Houses. Three more to be opened by December 1, and the establishment of four additional has been authorized. The Hostess House is the one and only place in camp where a soldier is reminded of home, thanks to the kindly attention shown every boy in khaki by Y. W. C. A. workers. The female relatives and friends of soldiers have found the Hostess House the most ideal spot to meet, greet and eat when a visitor arrives. Camp Upton, L. L. is the first camp in which a Hostess House was opened to the friends of the colored extruded men. Now there are seven others—Dix, Funston, Sherman, Gordon, Jackson, Dodge and Grant. Following is the staff under the War Work Council: Miss Eva D. Bowles, executive secretary; Miss
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ARE TO BE VOTED FOR NOVEMBER 5TH,1918.
Josephine P. V. Pinyon, hostess house and field worker; Miss Mary E. Jackson, industrial worker; Mrs. Cordella A. Winn, special worker; Miss Crystal Bird, girls' worker; Mrs. Ethel Kindle, special office worker; Miss M. K. Kindle, special office worker; St. Louis, Miss; Miss Adela F. St. Louis, Miss; Miss Richmond, Va.
Hostess House Staff: Mrs. Anna May Adams, Miss Georgia Blackburn, Miss Etha Briggs, Mrs. Emily Brown, Miss Dawn R. Casey, Mrs. Mary Feltix Dons, Mrs. Callie Edwards, Miss Phoebe Felts, Mrs. Amanda V. Gray, Mrs. Julia B, Green, Miss Viola Colista Grey, Mrs. S. E. Hancock, Mrs. Belle Highward, Miss Florence Thomas, Miss Mabel Whitney, Miss Clarissa Gwathney, Miss Anna Hope, Miss Nelsine Senora B. Johnson, Miss Viole, Miss Jackson, Miss Jennie M. King, Mrs. Ella Mossell, Miss Elizabeth Moore, Miss Willy Overstreet, Miss Rilda Phelps, Miss Virginia Robinson, Miss Magnolia Smith, Mrs. Cecella K. Yerly, Mrs. Clara Smith and Mrs. Azalia Mitchell.
Local workers: Miss Florence Kennedy and Miss Lottie M. Frazier, Atlanta, Ga.; Miss Irene T. Brown and Miss Isabel H. Hurlong, Augusta, Ma.; Mrs Hannah G. Smith and Miss Ethel Caution Davis, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Miss Luey V. Richmond, Burlington Co., N. J.; Miss Beatrice D. Walker and Miss Pauline Sims, Charleston, S. C.; Miss Anna Augustus, Charlotte, N. C.; Miss Lula Morris and Miss Marie C. Bowling, Columbia, S. C.; Miss Jean Hamilton and Miss Irene Strickland, Columbus, O. Miss Ursus Guy, Des Moines, Ia.; Miss Marie C. Bowling, Mich.; Miss Hattie R. Haywood, Hopewell, Va.; Miss Ruby Craig and Miss Rachel Pendleton, Houston, Texas; Miss Pauline Massey, Miss Helen Tuck and Mrs. Princess Curts Harris, Louisville, Ky.; Miss Alice Harper and Miss Sadie Bruce Davis, Little Rock, Ark.; Miss Clinton C. Boyer, Lynchburg, Va.; Miss Frances Gunner and Miss Ruth Sisle, Montclair, N. J.; Miss Ruth Anna Fisher and Miss Rosale Pickney, New York; Miss Josephine Wycba Newport News, Va.; Miss Alice Lawrence, Pennima, Va.; Miss Hattie Jackson, Petersburg, Va.; Miss Juanita Bowen and Miss Elise Taylor Tamarin, Ma.; Miss Emma K. Fischhorn, San Antonio, Tex.; Miss Helen Adams and Mrs. Anna Coe Green, St. Louis, Mo.; Miss May Phillips, Washington, D. C.; Miss Juanita J. Sadier, Winston-Salem, N. C.
The Y. W. C. A. has joined with six other welfare organizations to raise funds to carry on their work for next year.
The campaign will take place the week of November 10, and will be for $170,500,000. The six other organizations with whom the Y. W. C. A. is co-operating are the Y. M. C. A., National Catholic War Council and Knights of Columbus, Jewish Welfare Board, American Library Association War Camp Community Service and the Salvation Army.
NINETY COLORED SECRETARIES New York, Oct. 29—Announcement was made this week by the Per-
NASHVILLE GLOBE. FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1. 1918.
GEORGE C. TAYLOR, Republican Nominee for Railroad Commissioner,
sonnel Division of the Young Men's Christian Association that there are ninety colored secretaries in camps and twenty-eight overseas.
The general impression prevails that by the first of the year the number of colored Y. M. C. A. secretaries doing war work will exceed the century mark.
This work is one of the reasons the Y. M. C. A. will hold a campaign for funds the week of November 11-18. At that time the Y. M. C. A. the six other welfare organizations, the Y. M. C. A. National Catholic War Council and National Columbus, Jewish Welfare Board. War Camp Community Service, American Library Association and Salvation Army, will ask the people for $170-500,000 to carry on their work.
MR. JAMES M. MARTIN
Columbia, Tenn., Oct. 28, 1918.
This brave young man his gone to give his life for his country if it is necessary, he is now in France. He is a fearless young soldier boy. He wrote his mother, Mrs. Katherine Dodson a few words of consolation, referred to two passages of Scripture. This is the first of 6:19-34. It begins as follows: "Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt and where thieves break through and steal." The next is John 14. It begins is follows: "Let not your heart be troubled, ye believe in God, believe also in me." After referring to these two passages of Scripture, he closed by bidding his mother goodbye in his letter saying I may return home some sweet day.
JAMES M. MARTIN,
To his mother, Katherine Dodson
A LETTER TO HIS MOTHER
Clarence M. Bang, the son of Mrs.
Fannie A. Bang, left to serve for
Uncleam S., March 29, 1918. His
first trip was to Camp Meade, Mary-
land, where he stayed three weeks
then transferred to Camp Humphrey
Va., and stayed through August.
He stayed there for five days with his people. Then left
Friday night following for Camp
Humphrey again. He stayed there
three days and was transferred again.
It has been some time since his peo-
ple had heard from him but they
were trusting in the Almighty above.
So a few days ago they were fortu-
nate to have the first letter from
him which reads as follows:
American Expeditionary Forces
Sept. 28, 1918.
After so long a time of writing you, and as I have just been stationed I thought I would write you a few lines to let you all know how I am. This leaves me well except an awful bad cold, but hope that I will get better soon. How is the family and how are all of my friends? Give my love and best regards to all and tell them to pray for me that I may get back home safely. I know you all thought I was dead because I had not written before now, but I have been half sick and just haven't had the heart to write, but don't forget me as I am so far away.
reach home again safely. I won't write much now but just want to let you know that I am still on my feet. I stayed three days after I left home.
Tell Cassandra to give my address to Viola and Carrie and have them write me. My time here is limited. Nothing like the other camps. But think of you all just the same. I will write you again soon. Tender my love to Arthur and Eugene, Willie and kids and Blanche. Kiss them for me. Am getting along fine. Tell papa I haven't forgotten him. Good luck to you, remain your Loving son. PVT. CLARENCE M. BANG. Co.C., 521st Engrs. American E. F. A. P. O. 780.
HAMPTON ANNIVERSARY POSTPONED.
Hampton, Va., Oct. 26—The Hampton Institute Fifth Anniversary celebration, announced for October 31 and November 1, has been postponed on account of the present Nation-wide epidemic of influenza. The Hampton Faculty and has been confirmed by the Hampton trustees.
CONFERENCE OF MUSICIANS
R. Natha the Dett, director of vocal music at Hampton Institute, in announcing the postponement of the conference of noere musicians and asking for the hearty co-operation of his musical friends, said: "The idea of holding such a conference at Hampton has not been abandoned. It is hoped that the session will be held next spring in connection with Hampton's annual music festival. Meanwhile the program of the conference is being enlarged.
HAMPTON'S S. A. T. C
The Student's Army Training Corps unit at Hampton Institute numbers 445. It is made up of 200 men who came from Fisk University; 196 former Hampton Institute students; and 49 men who were held over from a previous training detachment. Addresses were recently delivered to the S. A. T. C. by Dr. James E. Gregg, principal of Hampton; Capt. Robert H. Neely, commanding officer and Harry J. DeYarmett, director of the Hampton Institute Trade School.
PERFECT PEACE (DEATH) COMES
TO MRS. MORROW
On Sunday, September 29th, Mrs. C. W. Morrow, beloved wife of Dean Morrow, and long-time faithful worker at Fisk University, was called "home" and found perfect peace in death. The passing was in Nashville.
Deferring to the wishes of the family, the University held no funeral services, Mrs. Morrow's body being taken immediately to New York.
The sympathies of the University friends have gone out in broadest measure to Dean Morrow and to the other members of the family surviving the absent one.
In its June number, the Fisk News paid its simple tribute to the character of Mrs. Morrow while she was yet alive so that she might read it on this bank of the "Great Divide."
HON. H. B. LINDSAY, Republican Nominee for Governor.
That tribute was sincere; and it is repeated here because it was expressed while the dear friend was yet with us—"Mrs. Morrow is a rare type of woman—refined, lovable and of Christian character. Her quiet dignity and poise and her sweet personality have long made her a welcome figure in the social and religious life of the University; while her broad culture and wonderfully efficient teacher in the class-room, during the years when she was one of the teaching staff at Fisk.
"It has meant a great deal to a great number of young people who have studied here to have been touched by Mrs. Morrow's gentle influence; and the News speaks for all those who love Dr. and Mrs. Morrow when he prayed for her. Her prayer God may specialize restore this beautiful woman and all that her useful life has stood for here to health and to her wide circle of friends." To the prayer in the last sentence above, the Reaper for the Lord of the Harvest said, "Nay, not so;" and "He gazed at the flowers with tearful
Peace to Mrs. Morrow's memory.—
Fisk University News.
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Twenty-third Sunday After Trinity. (The Collect.)
"O God, our refuge and strength, who art the author of our godliness: Be ready, we beseach thee, to hear the devout prayers of Thy church; and grant that those things which we ask faithfully we may obtain effectually through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.
Phil. 17:21-21. St. Matt. 22:15-22.
Early services at 6:30 a. m.
Service and sermon with celebration of the Holy Communion at 11:00 a. m.
Vesper service and sermon at 6 p. m.
Morning, "The Sealing of God's Saints."
Evening: "The All-sufficiency of Christ."
REV. WM. NEVILS HAS PASSED OVER
Erin, Tenn., Oct. 30, 1918—Rev. William Nevils, pastor of the A. M. E. Church at Clifton, Tenn., departed this life at his home in Clarksville October 21, 1918. He had been an itinerant preacher for more than thirty years and had served at one time as presiding elder of the Union City District. He realized that he was coming home to never return to his work, he placed one of his local preachers in charge and came home to die. His funeral was held from St. Matthew Chapel, Ridley Tenn. The sermon was published by Rev. J. S. Kelley, presiding elder of the Clarksville Church, assisted by Revs. A. C. Smith, J. F. Dean, L. J. Valentine and O. W. Washington Peace to his ashes.
PROF. T. H. POLK GOES TO HIS REWARD
On October 8, 1918, death visited
the Pollock, John and use
for his life
Mixed Grap Switches
Tamale Oil
Tetter,Cure
Diplomas Awarded
Pullets
Pressing Combs
Guaranteed to GROW your HAIR. Try
R=H=O=D=A=O
PREPARATIONS
6 Weeks' Treatment, $1.60
Hair Dresser Supplies
Agents' Club Terms
RHODAO COLLEGE,
Madam Renaud L. Rhoda,
514 10th Avenue, South,
Nashville, Tennessee.
HAMPTON INSTITUTE Students' Army Training Corps Hampton, Virginia
The U. S. Government has authorized Hampton Institute to organize units of the Students' Army Training Corps. New Students arrive September 24. Work begins October 1. The Government will give each member of the Students' Army Training Corps: Board, Clothing, Free Tuition and One Dollar per Day.
MEN. WHY NOT?
KONGOLENE
WILL MAKE YOU SMILE
POSITIVELY
STRAIGHTENS THE HAIR
KONGOLENE $100 Per JAR
BROMIZED GROUND DIL-25
A NECESSARY ADVICE TO KONGOLENE
SEND $128
FURNITURE JARS
KONGOLENE
PRODUCTS CARE
1215 WYLIE AVE.
PITTSBURGH, PA
ASK YOUR BARBER
Work is permanent, that is, it will continue after the war is over. Permanent houses are being built and rented at low prices, and school facilities furnished. Work for both men and women.
For further information apply in person or by letter to the U. S. E. EMPLOYMENT SERVICE KNOXVILLE. TENNESSEE
tim, its owner, Prof. T. H. Polk, of Nolensville, Teen. Prof. Polk had been in falling health for about sixteen months and the end was expected over a year ago, after which time he grew better only to relapse in the spring. Prof. Polk was 48 years, 1 month and 3 days old and died very near the same place where he was born. He was a member of Nolensville M. E. Church for nearly thirty-five years. Was educated at Walden University. The earlier portion of his life was devoted to teach-
JAMES E. GREGG, Principal.
WHY NOT?
GOLENE
WILL MAKE YOU SMILE
VELY
THE HAIR
900 Per JAR
Dial On-25
AT 70 KENMOLLEH
SEND $128
FENTRIAL JARS
LONED PRODUCTS CO.
1215 WYLIE AVE.
PITTSBURGH, PA.
families for work in on
the War Industry
continue after the war is over. Per-
ated at low prices, and school facili-
n women.
in person or by letter to the
MENT SERVICE
TENNESSEE
ing school. He taught school in both his native state and the state of Kentucky. The last few years of his life were devoted to farming and stock-raising. He was what one might call a great financier, owning at his death two valuable farms containing modern and convenient buildings and stock valued at not less than $3,000; also a moderate bank account, the church and Benevolent Order of Solvantville and the Sons and Daughters of Rocky Fork in his death have lost a faithful and devoted member.
TULLAHOMA.
Friday evening th death of tho)
wife of Rov. 1. S. Raussau, the popu
lar pastor of the A.M. E, Church
at Chattanooga, was a great shock to
tholr many friends. Mrs, Rausau had |
‘been sick only a few days. Sho and
four of the children wero: taken ill
of tefluensa. ‘The case of Mrs. Raw
ac went into pneumonia which re-|
ulted in her death. Sho was a wom
‘a0, wile and mother beloved by all
who knew her and this family has
the sympathy of thoir many friend.
Rey. Rausau as a minister and hus-
Wend was at her bedside when the
Jaat breath was drawn with four oth-
children in the room | We pray
Go's blessings upon this family and
hope that he may be able to rear his
@ildren up in the fear of the Lord.
rs Rausau was buried with much
honor in the Citizen’s Cemetery. On
Saturday night tho girl of Rey. Rau-
‘mu died and was burled Sunday,
leaving the other children quite sick,
Rey. Rausau has the sympathy of his
many friends. The influenza is stil
raging at this writing with the fol-
Jewing families stricken: — Jobnson
Duncan family, Mrs. Reana "Smartt
au motheriniaw, Joo Cooper and
wife, Mrs. Ante Hunt and four chit
en, Airs Ada Gupton and threo in
family, Mrs, Org Smartt and daugh:
ig, fist Heather Hunter, better
‘MoGhee, better. Don't fall to
mar Rev. J.B. Lock at the Mason
Mall nest, Friday’ night, The wil
it of Mr. and Mrs, Aaron Staple
od Sunday and was buried Monday
Mr. John West Young was the gues
of Mr. George Gwynn last wook. Rev
erier, who has beon sick with in
fisenza, 1s much tmproved at thi
weiting. Mrs. ‘Tennie ‘Tipp, who ha
been quite sick with tho Influenza, {
able to be out at this writing an
Jeln the Globe family, Mrs, Berr
‘ald that she didn't know that ther
was 80 much going on until sho be
Fan to read the Globe, Will Ra:
says he always wants tt by his side
Mrs, Elia Mack has returned fron
Gkaitinoosa. She was acomnanie
¥y John Henry. Mrs. Moda Bonne
i@ preparing for a trip south. Sh
wall bo acompanted by Mrs, Char
Bancan. Miss Janie Lee Lane has ri
fumed trom Wartrace, where sh
went to be present at the burial «
Aer aunt and to meet hor father. Mr:
Le Smartt is much improved at thi
writing, Miss Ruble Lock is sti
@ite iil at her residence on Jackso
treet. Miss Grace Lock has 1
farned from Chattanooga, Miss Nin
Mazie has returned from Nashvill
Wilmore Hunt is in with the influe
za, this Week. Miss Lueverna Arnol
ig quite busy this week solling ws
pictures, Mrs, Estella ‘Thomas is
great missionary and Red Cros
worker, She has heen quite busy t
the Just four weeks looking — aft
dhe sick, poor and needy. Mr
‘Thomas Kennedy ts out of — tow
Bishop Leo and nineteen of nis ©
workers are doing some importa
work for the A. M. E. denominatfo
at the A.M. B. Church this wee
‘Hho many frionds of Rev. J. W. 8
vastian will-be very proud indeed |
‘know that he ie meeting euch a gre
success in Ohio, Rev. Sebastian 18
‘man sent from God to preach
gospel.
TRADE UNION WOMEN MEET IN
WASITINGTON.
Secretary Wilson Speaks at First Con-
ference Ever Called Under Goyern-
ment Auspices.
‘The fir conference of trade union
women ever held under Government
‘easpices, called by Miss Mary Van
Kteock director, and Miss Mary Ander-
assistant director of the women
{Exbor, brought together in Washington
2% women representing national and
imternational Inbor organizations,
‘The purpose of the conference was to
establish close relations between the
Government and organized women
‘workers, 80 that their cooperation may
ve assured in meeting problems that
wil larise in war work, as well as ‘tn
tho regnlar developmen tof opportu
nities for the employment of women
Among the questions dis@ussed were
how to assure equal pay for equal work
how {o protect the health in hazardous
tasks and in’night work, and how tc
weovide for the enforcement of sanitary
Jaws.
Secretary Wilson, in the opening ad
“ss placed stress on the fact. tha
established Inbor standards should no
b lowered withou tspecial permission
# the Council of National Defense, an¢
Pointed out a tendecy of certain em
Moyers to take advantage of the wat
@mergency to accomplish purely per
sonal ends. The Secretary proposed ¢
Program of direct Federal control te
‘moot the problems involved in the ex
tension of night work for women, He
said that in only seven states had ther
‘Ween any attmpt to enact much needa:
laws. Concerning the pay of women h
declared thatfor the same amount o
work performed with the same eff
¢ioney women should receive the sain
‘Mages as men,
WOMEN SAVED NORTH DAKOTA
CROPS.
‘They Formed 70 Per Cent of the
“Shock Troops’ That Went Over the
‘Top in the Harvest Fiolds.
Women coniposed nearly 70 per cont
#€ the workers who shocked grain in
the harvest fields around Fargo, N.
Kak, this autumn. This war service
Ms brought about through the local
elfico of tho United States Employment
Service, Department of Labor.
Owing tothescareity of agricultural
Jebor in the community the variou:
farm-labor reserves, enlisted in Farg
by Employment Service, were callei
out to shock large quantities of gratr
‘Two thousand voluntesrs were em
Poyed throughout the season,
‘At the close of the harvest the Farg¢
employment office, the Fargo Commer
ai Club, and the Fargo Rotary Clu
‘arranged’ a parade to commemorat
the success of the season's work. Bas!
oss was suspended in Fargo on thi
ay that the procession ,composed 0
the various groups that had performe:
faithfa Iservice in the harvest fields
marched through tho streets, It wa
then that a tally by the marshal o
tho. parade revealed the fact that al
most 70 per cent of the emergenc:
farm workers were women, The “shocl
troops.” men and women, were dresse
in their odrinary working clothes,
‘A moving picture of the parade wa
released in Minneapolis, St. Paul an
Duluth during the week of the Minne
gota State Fair,
FRENCH GIRLS STUDY HERE. |
‘Thirty-five are Taking Business Train-
ing in the Commercial High School
at Springfield, Mass.
Thirty-five young French girls, ot
high school and college age, will bo
given two years’ busines straining in.
‘Amorican methods by the people of
‘Springfield, Mass., who recently en-
tered ‘nto an agreement to that eifect
with the French High Commission,
jwheih sent a delegation to Springticld
to place war contracts,
Tho girls, a large number of whom
are war orphans, havo been caretully
selected fro mamong the most promis-
ing young women in France. They
wil live in Springfield until their busi-
ness education is complete. This edu-
eation will consist of courses in tho
English language and corespondence,
jseography, arithmetic, ponmanship,
| and’ a commercial course ,which wil
include bookkeeping and office practice
| This will tnelude the use of office ap
| pliances, stenography and typewriting,
business organization applied econom:
| tes. They will also take a course in
physleg! training, hygiene, and physi
ology.
‘This course will be given by the Com
mercial High School of Springfield
‘Connected with the course wil be tech
‘nical and practieal lectures, and dur
r) tag. ves Vacations ihe girls will be
'} placed in local factories, waere. the)
:
eso lereen cee ra?
| ‘PATRIOTIC.
Members of Deutscher Liederkranz,
of Webster, Mass., Have Service:
Flag Showing 78 at Front.
‘The patriotism of German-speaking.
workers of Webster Mass,, has been
strikingly Mustrated during the great
war. Most of these men, or their
parents, came from Germany years
ago to escape German — militarism.
Now that thero is an opportuni v to
destroy it they are going bak to
Europe to help in the work.
Germans are not especially numor-
ous in Webster, and the service flag
‘of the Deutscher Liederkranz Society,
bearing 78 stars actually means a very
‘igh percentage. Practically all the
‘men were employed in the Webster
‘mills, and those who remain at work
‘there are backing them up by faithful
‘service and the purchase of Liberty
bonds,
HELD STEADY ATTENDANCE
CONTEST,
|
“Rock Island gyrsenal Offered Flag
to Depargfimnt Which — Showed
Best Recolor Workinen on the
Tob.
‘The Rock Island Arsenal has devel-
oped a means of stimulating workmen
to maintain. good attendance records.
Many war-work establishments have
found difficulty in keeping the men on
tho Jobs, for they have been prone to
take days off on many occasions,
‘The argnal first made a clear ex-
planation to the workers of the impor-
tance of the work to be done ,and next
introduced a contest among ‘the vari:
ous departments, through whieh a flag
woul be awarded to the department
making the best attendance record.
‘The spirit of competition thus devel
oped proved extremely helpful, for the
records of most of the departments
promptly improved.
WORKMBN GIVE PROOF OF
LOYALTY.
Houston Shipyard Men and Detroit
Workers, ‘Though ‘They Have
| Grievances, Remain at Work.
‘Two instances which reveal the de-
sire of workmen to ald the Nation.
even under difficulties are reported
From Houston, ‘Tex, and Detroit,
Mich.
In Houston @ number of shipyard]
workers were about to strike, ‘They.
esented a proposed cut in pay and
complained that back pay due them
had not boen given them. At the car-
nest suggestion of labor leaders they
resolved to remain at work until all
Possible means of settlement had been
‘attempted in order not to hamper the
‘Nation's shipbuilding program. |
| In Detroit another group of work-
men, it {8 reported, are receiving only
|27%eents an hour, whereas they are
fupposed to receive 6 cents. ‘These
mon. have agreed not to strike until
‘thelr employers have balked at all
‘other means of settlement of the dif:
culty,
“DON'T GET HURT—WERE TOO
BUSY,”
Result - Bringing “Safety - First”
Poster Concludes, “Uncle Sam
Noeds You Again Tomorrow.”
Routine bulletins of “Safety First”
‘work do not always prove effective,
‘and the officials of the Tilinots Stee!
Co,_have boon developing new menns
of bringing to the workmen the impor:
‘tance ofthe care for their personal
[welfare and that of other employees.
A poster which, has been found high:
ly effective reads: “Don't get hurt.
Wo're too busy. Uncle Sam needs you
‘again tomorrow.” Bulletins _ are
“posted frequently, usually with some
picture that will attract the attention
|of the men.
Another ‘means of promoting safety
tn te Gary pants has pen the ein
of certain plant accidents, without
using names of the workmen to show
how they could have been preventod
| BIRTHDAY PARTY.
Miss Willie Morgan, at her rosi-
dence, 907 Division street, was host-
ess of a birthday party given in hon-
or of Miss Maggie Rucker Thursday
evening, October 24th. It was an en.
Joyable evening and one to be re-
membered by’ the honoree and
guests. Many valuable and handsome
presents were received by Miss Ruck-
et, A five course menu was served.
Miss Rucker was very pretty in
lavender plush and white satin with
tunic effect and flowers to match.
Her jewelry and. costume brought
much admiration from every one
‘present. Among the guests were
Miss Nannie Webster, Mrs, Hugh
[Whitelow, Mrs. Ollie Epps, Mrs. Bes
sie T. P. Rhoda of Rhoda College
‘Messrs. I. Gadson, Wm. 8. Ridley,
Tohn Holand, James Shepherd. and
/Prof, Nelson,
NASHVILLE GLOBE, FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1, 1918.
MT, NEBO BAPTIST CHURCH
NOTES. ;
Our beautiful church will soon be
finished. Our loving pastor, Rev. H.
Ae Alfred, is doing his best to finish
it before cold weather. Rev. B. L.
Cleggett, the able superintendent of
Mt Nebo Sunday School, is doing
fine. He hopes to be in Sunday school
‘on the first Sunday, hoping to meet
‘a large school as he usually does.
(There was quite a joyful time at
Rev. BE. L. Cleggett's home Sunday
| when his seven daughters and two
sons-in-law were seated in their beau-
‘titul dining room at 6 o'clock tea
|The names of Rev. EB. L. Cleggett’s
‘daughters are Mrs. Rosa’ Bandy, of
St Louis, Mo.; Miss Susie Cleggett,
of Nashville, Tenn.; Mrs, Pearl Ber-
ry, of Indianapolis, Ind.; Miss Ger-
| true Cleggett, of St. Louis, Mo; Mrs.
C. H. Brown, of Nashville, Tenn.;
Miss ‘Lucile Cleggett, of | Nashville
‘Tenn.; Mrs. Lela Ganit, of Columbia,
\Penn. Sons-n-laws, Mr. C. H. Brown
land Mr. P. F. Brandy, of Nashville,
Tenn, Friends of Rev. and Mrs.
Cleggett were Mr. Arthur Harris,
Miss Eva Lawson, Rev. and Mrs. H,
JA. Alfred and Miss Brawlett of Ala
bama, ‘and Mrs. P. 1. Watkins, Th
'|table was decorated in fine linen and
‘jeverything that heart could wish wa:
there, Eight courses were served the
'|guests. The dining room was beau
"|tifully decorated with —beautifu
"|flowers of all kinds, ‘The Rey. anc
"| Mrs. Cleggett certainly enjoyed th
;| Presence of their childre anit friends
T~ PARIc.
‘The Board of Health having decid-
ed that thé conditions are sufficiently
improved to remove the influenza ban
the schools reopened ‘Thursday Oct.
aist, and the following... Sunday
churches will be open. Quité~2 few
have boen very sick, butt only a. silat
number of deaths. Mrs, Mamle Du-
mus Howard of Nasbville is visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Bugene
Dumis. Mr. Joe Mosby, one of ‘ou
prozrossive. and influential citizens
and Miss Addie Hollsbrook ot Jack
son, Miss., were’ quietly married at
the A. M. EB. parsonage Friday eve
ning, Oct. 18th. After their visit to
‘St. Louis they will be at home or
Topot streot, West Paris. Rev. W
Hampton, stipervisor of the A. and I
State Normal, spent the weekend a
home, Misses H. V, Monteomery 0
Nashville and S. 1. Hodekins 0
Clarksville. two of the city schoo
teachers, having spent their vacatio:
at home, returned Wednesday evenin:
to resume their work, Mrs. Ann‘
Edwards of Memphis spent a fer
‘days visiting her parents, Mr, ani
[Mrs Daniel Cowan. Mrs, Net
‘Cooper has returned to Chieaeo, 11
after a yisit to relatives. Mrs. Lil
Tian Maury has returned trom Mem
|phis after a visit of several weeks
‘Tho Parent'Teachors' Assoriation wi
|meet at the public school Fritay at
fernoon at 3 o'clock. Mr, Ulysse
Tumus of St. Louis sent a fow doy
“here visiting his mother, Mrs, iN
Dumus, *
STUDENT ARV TRAINING
CAMP
The Government has just estab-
lished a student army training ¢amp
th connection with the State Agri
cultural and Mechanical College for
Nogrves at Normal, Ala, ‘The camp
4s in chare of Lieut. W. 1. Thomp-
fon, commanding officer, aid Lieut.
W. R. Smalls, who is in charge of the
quartermaster’s division,
‘This camp offers to. the colored
‘boys of Alabama just the facilities
‘that are now being offered to the
white boys of Alabama to get. ace-
‘demic, military and industrial train-
ing at the expense of the Govern-
ment, ‘The camp is open to young
[men not under eighteen years of age
and not over twenty-one. The Goy-
ernment furnishes board, lodging and
clothes, and pays the men $30.00 a
month besides,
Young colosed mon desiring to en:
‘list in this studont army: training
gam will eommunteato with Prost
dent Walter $. Buchanan, or write
direct to Lieutenant Thompson, com-
‘manding officer, Student Training
Camp, A, and M. College, Normal
Ala, (Adv.)
| ——
| HICKMAN.GUY. °
Announcements have reached this |
cily to the effect that Mr. T. Lloyd
Hickman, of St, Panl, Minn,, and Miss
Dora Mae Guy, of Newark, Ohio, were |
united in holy wedlock on Monday, |
October 21st. ‘The bride is the daugh:
ter of Mr. and Mrs, Daniel N. Guy,
well-known citizens at Newark, and,
4s one of the accomplished young
Women of the city, while Mr. T. Llovd
Hickman fs the son of Mr, and Mrs.
Hickman of St. Paul, one of the oli:
est families in the west. He has been
pursuing his studies as a minister in
Olfo. Mr. Hickman has a host of
friends in Nashville, where he visited
“several years ago on a tour of the
South,
A Ge
A BOOK YOU WILL WANT—“THE
| CALL OF THE SOUTH”
‘By Victor |. Masters, Superintendent
of Publicity.
| ‘This is the Home Mission Roard’s
lates, book for Mission Study Class-
es, and for the general reader who
desires a capable treatment of homo-
land missions trom the standpoint of
underiying principles. 2:4 pages,
beautifully printed and bound, Post:
Paid, cloth 6 conts, paper 49. cencs.
|. You will want this book for your
JAlission Study Class. You will want
it equally for your own personal read-
ing. It, will prove distinctly. stimu-
lating to ministers and other re-
[lstous teaders,
| Testimonials.
President J. B. Gambrell, Southern
Baptist Convention: “It is a strong,
timely discussion, end deservos a
wide study.”
|_Dr. B. W. Spilman, Field Secretary
to Colleges, Sunday’ School Board
‘it gripped me like @ galvanic bat:
tery. I did not turn it loose until I
read every word of it.”
President L. R. Scarborough, South:
| western Theological Seminary: “I ap
prociate it very much, T am giad you
hit the mark on some great matters.”
Dr. George W. McDaniel, Pastor
First Baptist Church, Richmond, Va.:
“Mission Study Classes will hail {ts
coming and find in it a delight. whick
‘will not be less than that occasiones
by ‘Baptist Missions in tho South
and ‘Country Church in the South
by the same author.”
eee
Professor W. J. McGlothlin, South
em Baptist Theological Seminary: “I
| possesses all the qualities which hav
Dr. J.T. Henderson, Secretary of |
japtist Laymen's Movement: “Vital | n
opics are discussed in a fresh and |)
onvinelug manner. It is absorbingly | 4
teresting. 1 shall make large uso |
it it in my educational work among |
ayimen.” Y
see t
Dr. F. N. McConnell, Secretary /
State Board’ of Missions, Oklahoma
éity. “Phe author's best book to date. |
Combines in a most remarkable de-|
gree couciseness of statement with |
extraordinary common sense.” 1
ae t
Dr. 0. B. Bryan, Secretary of sme|
Board of Missions of Keniucky: “It |
fs the iost thoroughly practical treat|
ment I have ever seen of Southern |
Baptist conditions as related to our
world. responsibility.” \
eee:
Dr. J. S. Rogers, Secretary of State |
Board of Nilssions for Arkansas: “Its |
message is vivid and fundamental. |
isa thrilling, inspiring, informing
hook. It ts really a great book, How
T have enjoyed it!"
Dr. Albert E, Brown, Superintendent
‘of Mountain Mission’ Schools “It. is
chuck fall of just the information
‘Christian workers need, in a most at:
tractive style. You want to read all
esa
|_Dr. R. 1. Boyd, Secretary National
Baptist Publishing Hoard “It presents
the tenderest plea for the Negro race
in the South that | have read. Tt
binds me more firmly to those white
men who are at work for the Ne
gro's better day in the South.” |
Dr. G. W. Lasher, in Journal and
Yessenger editorial: “The present
writer has read “The Call. of the
South With great Interest and ts de-
ighted at the tone of it, as well as
informed by its narration of facts.
Dr. Masters knows the South, and
Toves it. He js levekhended and he
Jean see both sides Of an argument,
|The book ought to be Fead by ever
Jody in the South, ait by many,
Jospecially Baptists, in the North!
Dr, W. P. Ulnvey, Auditor oi he
} Southern Baptist Convention; “It 18
‘| mighty chatlense to the Baptists of
||the South. Wo neo a campaign of
|Jeducation and Dr. Masters is ably
| Ioading, it.”
; see
| he Western’ Recorder: “Dr. Mas:
|| ters is a great Ttaptist, with oonvie:
+| ton and courace, and ke delivers his
,|megsage with clearness and force.
:|No other man amon us has a clearer
-|concaption of the Baptist, message ani
-ymission than V. 1. Masters. It fs a
1| hook of real merit and will do great
-|sood. Every aplist tn the South
:|shouid read it.”
|" For sale by the National Baptist
»| Publishing Board, R. H. Boyd, Secre
tary, Nashville, Tenn.
HALE HOSPITAL NOTES .
‘The Nurses’ Club spent a very en
Joyable evening at their last meating
| with Miss Cunningham as hostess
» | Quite a few visitors were present and
"| many interesting gaines were ploved
|Dr. H.C. Floyd gave us several vio
5 tin numbers,
| Miss Izetta Donelson will be th
hostess for the next meeting,
. wee
Prof. Inman Page, prestient of Ro
1) cer Williams University, is back a
| his post feeling fine after x majo
o | operation
e tee
2) Miss Myrtle Johnson of the Prima
=| ry Class is still at the bedside of
{very siek aunt,
‘| Ne &
~| Miss Josephine Wright of Touts
4 ville, Ky., also a member of the pri
| mary class, Who was called home o
account of the death of her father
=| writes that she will be with us fn
g few days
: tee
| Miss Jessfe Wilson continues quit
|i. ‘The hospital force sent out tw
dozen carnations Sunday to cheer he
i land moke the sick room bright,
| Dr. Harris of Triune, Tenn,, ts on
‘of our new internes.
| ois
5) Mrs. Blaneho Foster of Columbia
d Tenn, returned home Thursday fee
ing fino after a major operation,
v1! Mtrs, Cloverine Osborne and he
N/ youn son have returned home, Mr
Y.| Osborne was the patient of De. J. W
| Fussell.
iz eee
Ht Mrs, J. B. Batte, wife of Prof. J
s.|p. ratte, ix able fo be homo. agal
a after having undergone a major o1
gration, Mrs. Batie was the patter
In of Dr. J. W. Rrixht.
of mes
‘| Airs, Hattie Gilmore of Columb
1} Tenn, wife of Lieut, Gilmore, who |
| makistg soot in France, 1s a pation
yrs, Mary Grimes, patlont of
T. ©. Dullard. W eonvateseing,
nt Mr. John Waters fs able to resin
his sthdios at the A. and 1. Sta
Normil after havine recovered fro
(9 recent attack, of pneumonia
s
no | Mrs. Frankie Maynie, 519 Sou
ND Sixth atreet, patient or Ne. JW. Rd
of sell, 8 able to be with friends arc
sts) Mra, Nannfo ‘Timon, patient of T
Os Le A. Fisher, was recently oporat
ur on,
Wis ‘The superintendent renrived a ve
ii Pleasant letter from Mrs, Corde!
ro. Cole, one of the much heloved ot
|zens of Fulton, Ky. She is loud
[her praises of tho hospital a
merecent
‘Miss Sallie Tally is one of our new
nurses.
Are Tantra Gilbert, wite of Prof. A.
M. Gilbert. principal of Union City
High School. is recovering from a
recent operation.
ee re |
lin street, patient of Dr.'L. A. Fisher,
vas receally operated on. |
Mrs, Lena McAdoo, one of the
most Prominent members of Clark
Memorial Church, is recovering trom
& recent operation. | |
‘The nurses have already on foot
very interesting plans for the annual |
Christmas tree celebration. Many
pleasing features aro being arranged.
Some of our distinguished visitors
of tho week were Kev. Wells, Rev.
‘Clark, Rev, H. L, P. Jones, Mrs D.
‘Houston, Rev. Preston ‘Taglor, Mra.
‘Gilbert and daughter, Mrs. G. L: Jack
ison, Mrs. Francis of Virginia, Prot.
/A, Sh glibert, Dr, Darden, of Athens,
Ala; Dr. Bullard. © |
| rjew arrivals at the Rosita: Lit
| Miss Eilzabeth Williams, Mrs.
Clara Owen, Mrs. Virginla Oden, Miss
| Mary Pinch, Mrs. Collier, Miss Mart:
jetta Flemming, Mr. Henderson, Mr.
| Gooet, ‘Mrs, Lilly White and Mrs,
Ella Grimes.
Two new internes are expected
next week .
Miss Katie Willlams of Paducah,
Ky,, one of our “'sta> nurses” accom:
panied Mrs, Bessie Jackson home,
\Guuaenae rasan
Colonel of .he “Fig iting 70°9 Kansas.
Fred Funston, the man and soldier, |
00,
How often your comrades think of
you, |
‘As our colonel and our friend,
‘Tino to his country to the end. |
There never was a man more brave
than he,
His favorite command was, Boys,
follow me!”
1 saw you at the battle of Caloocan
Ureing Your steed onward, sword an
hands
‘Then a few days later you received
your wound—
| You safi to us boys, “IM be with you
| soon,”
“twas but a few days, though it seem-
| od Hike a year,
| When your returning calued our
great fear,
For the love ani confidence we had
in you
Your wisenee from camp made us all
, feel Dine.
alter our reznent arrived safely
| nome,
| You went hae, to the inti once
‘te to Foam
| Throws tee Juaxtes and swamps,
| Som dil ot care,
| so tong as yo! captured Aguinaldo
| there.
| nut now, dear coxanel they have lata
| © “you to rest
| om a nill in the Presi. near to the
crest,
| when 1 visited your gravz, | made
a short prayer,
Asking God to be merciful 10 you
‘over there,
| And let you know that we on thts
side
(Aco pauper aie sh be
tide
| Of the vicious Huns ani other men
Who would bring ali liberty to an end
Rest in peace and bave,no fear,
| Por tie tun can never‘enter hero,
| As Tons as there's left a mother's son
Able at least to shoulder a gun,
|Our entry wil remain among th
free
| ‘The brightest Meht of liberty.
+! Then lve on, dear Colonel Pred,
| For we behind have nought to dread:
| And at ou» reunion on the other shore
“| Lot, ws pray the world will war n
more.
—By Charley Hamilton, $15 B. 29t}
| St, Los Angeles, Cal,, member of th
| 20) Kansas; Author of the new wai
-} song, “On to Victory."
BOOKER 1. WASHINGTON TOUR-
Ist CLUB
__, The Booker T. Washington Tourist
Club met October 23 at the home of
Mrs. A. V. Marshall, 1305 Chureh St.
House called to order by president,
Mrs. A, V, Marshall, after which Mrs
RG vided Opened
the usual way, Members paid their
‘dues and quoted quotations. ‘The
house was then turned over to the
‘hostess, Mrs. A. V. Marshall, — who
served a very elaborate ’ menu,
‘Those present were: Mrs, B. B. God-
don, Mrs, H. M. Burns, Mrs, J.C
Floyd, Mrs. B, Bryant, Mrs. BLA.
‘Sanders, Mrs. 7, Arledge, Miss 8. 8
Henderson, Mme. Daisy Evans Wade,
Mrs. A. V. Marshall, Mrs, Katie Wal
ker Slaughter. Mrs, H. M. Burns,
‘one of our sick members was able to
he out. The B. ‘T. W. Club thanked
the hostess, Mrs. Marshall. for her
hospitality.” ‘The clu) will moet next
Tuesday, October, 1918, at the home
of Mrs. B. B, Gordon, 1814 Jelterson
Street. Miss Cook was also able to
be out. Rey. HM. Burns was also
with us. Mrs, Webster is still il
|Mrs, MeQueen was also with us,
laminate
The death of Miss Henrietta Ar-
nold was very sad. She departed
this live October 24. She leaves to
mourn her loss a father, brother, si
ter and daughter and a host of rela-
tives and friends, We hate to give
bs up but It was our loss and
Heaven's gain, Mrs, Laura Gooch
Was visiting at home Sunday, Misse
Ophelia and Myra Blair and Mr, and
irs, Odey Mabry were the guests of
Miss Carrio Arnold and sisters, Mr
Barnes after spending a few da:
with his mother hay returned to the
city. Mr, Charlie Searcy visited
Misd Mable Card, Sunday evening
Mr. Willie Peebles, Mr, Willle Nel
son and Mr. Finney were the guests
of Miss Mollie Barnes. Mr, Eddie
Arnold spent the night with his
‘cousin, Mr. Dennis Arnold. Miss
Birdie Card, Mr. Thomas Pannings
jand Mr. Ferrel Shannon were visit-
‘Ing the Misses Blair, Sunday evening.
Rey. D. M. Brown and Mr, Robert
Davis visited Mr. J. 8. Blair, Sunday
morning. Influenza is raging in our
part of the country. Mr, George
Guthrie is down with the Influenza
and we hope for him a speedy _re-
covery. Mrs, Kittic Davis met with
a serious accident Friday. She i
improving nicely. Oh, joy, churet
opens up the first Sunday. Mrs, Juli
Brew is ill at this writing, Mrs
Allean Fannings is sick at this writ
ing but 1s somewhat better. Mis
Ophelia Blair being sick with the In
fluenza came home and spent tw
weeks in the country with her fathe
Jand sister. She will return to th
city Monday morning.
—_.__—__
NORMAL. ALA.
‘The student army training camp
at the A. and M, College, Normal,
Ala., is proving to be very popular,
Young men tro mall parts of
jare Mixon, Briggs, Wills and Harri-
are several applications trom other
ipratane ‘Commanding officer, Lieut.
DARK SKIN
RACE MEN AND WOMEN PROTECT YOUR
¢ FUTURE
= CR)
rece =. <e
oa
wine eee
; eae
‘REMOVE FRECKLES, TAN, RISINGS, BUMPS, BLEMISHES—HAVE"
SOFT, FAIR, BRIGHT, LIGHT SKIN BY USING BLACK
AND WHITE OINTMENT,
(BY MAIL 250)
Be attractive. Throw off the chains that have hel
back from prosperity and happiness that rightly belong to». ,
‘Apply Black and White Ointment (for white or colored folk
‘as directid on package, to your face, neck, arms or hands. Ii
very pleasint to the skin and has the effect of bleaching dark, sal
low or blocty skin, clearing the skin of risings, bumps, pimples.
‘blackheads, Wrinkles, tan or freckles—giving you a clear, soft
fair, bright, ligit complexion, making you the envy of every.
body. Black and white Ointment is alway ahead of powder,
which only covers up imperivttions. Black and White Ointment
removes them. Sold on a ménvj-back guarantee, only 5c
| (stamps or coin) sent by mail, or if you send $1 for four boxos
jof Black and White Ointment, a 2c cake oi Wisale and White
Soap included free. Address’ Plough Chemical Co., Dept, M.
Memphis, Tenn.
| AGENTS MAKE AN EASY LIVING.
|representing us. Apply for territory and special deal. Black
\and White Ointment provides a chance for you to make an exsy
jliving and a good living, No experience required. Write today
| ‘THE PERFECT FLOUR
j FOR BISCUITS, CAKES WAFERS, ETC. THE BEST GN THE
MARKET. ALL GOOD COOKS USE IT.
| LIBERTY MILLS
NASHVILLE, - - . - + TENNESSEE
oe
os
g —
& :
“ fe
>, oo
pg aaah!
Aba ei,
12 ANS
RENTS
HOVE SiriAGney
WP core cokes ne a
Pen ake ie
oes
“ist 25 cents shi,
AGENTS Beate
go |W. H. Thompson, expects fully tWO jooon
fa (hundred voys when the camp is Teo
formally opened November. 10th. (2° |
th | Flnst Lieut, W.-K, Smalls is provid: | £0" 8
ining for a litle the rise of two hun-
ch dred men with the understanding
ia that some of the men will be in mo-| — §
m(tion all the thine, as they are certi-|
it-|fled to the Government for use else-| ing
is|where, In addition. to these two | wor
ne eotimissloned officers, there aro sev-| In t
wo [en non-commissioned officers who at-| tho
er |tended the s. A. TC. at Howard: Un-
he |lversity last summer, These men
|the Mixon, Briggs, Bilis and. Harri-
son from Selma University and Sim-
mons, Stone, Anderton from" Stato]
np|Normal in Montgomery. yt
al,| The Normal Red Cross workers | IIL,
ar.jare fitting up a recreation room | fath
of which will be directed by a regular | kno’
ri-|Y. M. C, A. secretary, and arrange- | eric
her|ments are-on foot for securing a | seri
ut, | complete band outfit. Cha
; ;
3
a>?
1,0G:
Agents Yatto @
Good Money Mode, We pomb,
aqeats ta every ily end vir
tol The Siar Ho®
2a Foooien tore
Sih” Ge athout sights
ree
Send fer 250 box—
25c bax proves Ms value 5
person that will ase a 25¢ bex
‘wil be comviaced. No matter )
what has felled to grow your |
hair, just gre the Star
Hair Grower 2 ie
and be convinced. susie
for full size box. If you wish tr
be an agent send 2.00 e
we wil send you ® fall sube
that you cap begin work wish at
‘once; also agents’ terms Sem
ali money by Money Order
GROWER MER
pn
P. 0, Box 812
Greensboro, N. 6.
5 pT eis aR ST i!
; ES ig ks caed i
Lae Coe CCR
ee e.
" JR eS:
ee Se
ea am, |
. NR) |
\
CB OS |
iz Saas >
SS
Tk tod Aca
Valued avin teil go weaned
igraecsarrerseayy je
ae wee er eee
a
I Fico 11 plter tlt, Mawes
ccaccren AUR Stee Ser
Siiss ts one te de ba Cane
Meee bua de wuts pee
sn ic aris oie eae oes
President Buchanan's: mony
friends, both colored vnd white are
fecommeiending epleduid. young. men
for this camp, “There is ce, Fonts
for several more to enter during the
ext two weeks.
SS,
SOMEWHERE IN AMERICA, *
‘This column tells how the war is be-
ing won right here in America—by the
workmen who are doing everything
in their power to back up the mem at
the fea
| CITY ITEM.
Mrs, Essfe Lou Partee Jones, 3
Nashville girl who resides in Chicago,
UL, was called to the bedsile of ter
father, Mr. Wm. Partee, a ell
known citizen and owner of the Dead:
erick Street Moving Co, who was
seriously injured Saturaay — niskt
Chances for recovery are slim.
/
ey oi _
4
Published every Friday in the year at 447 Fourth Avenue, North, Nashville, Tenn.,
NASHVILLE GLOBE PUBLISHING COMPANY
Telephone, Main 1989
Entered an asynchronous class matter January 18, 1900
until December 31, 1901, under the
Apostle Congress of March 3, 1903.
SUBSCRIPTIONS IN ADVANCE
TO THE PUBLIC
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, status or occasion of any person, firm or corporation, which may appear in the College of NASHVILLE GLOBE will be gaudily corrected upon being brought to the attention of the management. Send correspondence for publication as so to reach the office Monday. No matter intended for current issue which arrived late a Thursday or appear in that number, as Thursday is press day. All news sent us for publication must be written on the paper, and should be accompanied by the letter of the publisher, or necessarily for publication, but as evidenced in good faith.
MEMBER
NATIONAL NEGRO PRESS
ASSOCIATION
Nashville, Tenn., Nov. I, '18
The Evanston, Ill., Advertiser in their issue of October 24th wants to know will the President indorse a Republican...state. N. J. Gill, President Wilson is not out endorsing Republican candidates. He has just issued a call urging the people to return a Democratic Congress, upper and lower house. But we will reproduce your editorial for the bene fit of our readers:
Will the President Indorse a Repub
lican Candidate?
Since the President has publicly and doubtless privately stated that politics has been adjourned for the duration of the war, the Advertiser is of the opinion that he should make it his indispensable duty to endorse candidates in this coming election for Congress and for the Senate, men who will support his administration, especially his war program, irrespective of party. The best interests of our country come first and the party next. No man should be elected to office who will not work in harmony with the President when it is essential to the welfare of the country.
A great many of us are aware of the fact that the President took a conspicuous hand in defeating primary candidates in his own party who had not measured up to his standards. His opposition was effective in disposing of Cole Blease in South Carolina. Senator Hardwick of Georgia, Vardaman of Mississippi, and Representative Stayden of Texas. The President also opposed Representative Huddleston of Alabama, but his opposition was of no avail. He pronounced Huddleston unit for office because of his opposition to his war measures. But Huddleston won the renomination of the Democratic primary. He is now opposed by Jas. G. Thompson, of Birmingham, a Republican who is committed to a vigorous prosecution of the war.
The question is, Will the President indorse him for Congress who is very much in accord with his war measures, or will he refuse to indorse him on account of his politics? Now is the time for him to act. We trust that our President will demonstrate to the American people that politics has been adjourned by him indorsing Mr. Thompson for Congress from the state of Alabama. This would be a very good time to establish a precedent for his successors. Let us hope that he will perform his duty without fear or favor or political reprisals from any one.
OUR HATS OFF TO MOBILE
Occasionally one find a Southern city with backbone enough to employ labor that will turn out the work, irrespective of the race to which they belong. Happily for Nashville, it is that kind of a city. You can follow any profession you are big enough to follow in Nashville if you are honest and upright. And it is no surprise to find Negroes doing all kinds of serviceable work. But we must take our hats off to Mobile for getting in line with Atlanta and several other southern cities for employing Negro boys to deliver telegrams. We have always regarded Nashville very liberal, but we have not as yet accomplished that fete. The Mobile Weekly Press comments editorially on the Negro boys being employed by the Postal and Western Union. In their last week's issue, they said:
"The Western Union Telegraph Company has followed in the footsteps of the Postal Telegraph Company and are now employing colored boys to deliver messages. It is reported that a few white boys were still at work when the colored boys came in, but they immediately quit and refused to work with the colored boys. We see no reason why they should refuse to work with the colored boys. Men of both races all over the country are learning to lay aside the petty prejudice, and are working and fighting together to make the world better to live in.
SATURDAY
PAY DAY
SAVING DAY
In our opinion it would be a wise step for some of the white fathers to teach their boys to encourage the colored boys to work, rather than allow them to fight and intimidate them whenever they meet one another in the streets or at work. The boys of today will be the men of tomorrow, and their training of today will largely control their future lives."
LET US HOPE THEY WILL ALL
PRAY.
The Progressive Citizen of Texarkana, Ark, had as its leading editorial last week "Behold. He Prayeth." We hope not only he is praying, but that the people everywhere are praying. But there was so much in the editorial, we are asking permission to reproduce the same. The editorial follows:
"Behold He Prayeth"
In the excitement and flux of the hour we are likely to overlook or pay attention to many things and occurrences of great moment, which in normal times would challenge and letter our attention as a miracle. The disposition to pass lightly over serious and important matters is more or less peculiar to us as a race but there are extinguishing circumstances at this particular time which make this disposition less a fault than formerly. World events are now stepping the hours with the regularity of the sun. Everything is big, everything is colossal. Big armies, big navies, big defeats and big victories. Money counted in billions; unheard of and undreamed of figures. So only events the first mind can stimulate the mind out of this abnormal conditions of the last four years have driven it. We as a race in large measure are suffering from this mental atrophy. And yet we, unacustomed to big things happening for US are aroused, for the time being, out of our mental lethargy by the results achieved for us in the march of events since the Great War. Since April 6, 1917, one big thing after another has happened for us until the most forlorn and hopeless has lifted his tired and lusterless eyes and dared to search the horizon for the rifts in the clouds of despair. And all the while he looked, he prayed. And he did not look and pray in Fim for indeed the riffs were there and the light was breaking through; streaming, golden light of promise and hope.
In all great convolutions, whether racial, national or international, certain chain tower above the rest of if before, rise level to the emergency and stamp the impress of their genius on mankind for all time to come. In this great world, crises men, both white and black, have met the test and like peaks in a mountain chain tower above the rest of mankind.
Judge William H. Harrison and his fellow committee men grouped about the President in the President's reception room in Washington City, praying, pleading and pouring out the complaints of a strenuous race was the epochal event of the century for the black race in this country. The method of procedure used by the delegation was unique and entirely out of the ordinary. The President no doubt holding in memory the haughty and undiplomatic attitude of Trotter, whom he ordered out of his office four years ago, was surprised—and we hope agreeably—at the request that they be allowed to offer a word of prayer. We do not know Rev Austin, who delivered the prayer; in fact we had never heard of him before, but we are satisfied that it was a prayer with power. The next move in the drama was the stepping forth of Judge Harrison to plead with the man who has the power to soften the hard conditions of an unfortunate race. We can think of no man who would have done greater credit to the occasion than the Judge. Learned in the law, an orator of the first order, an erudite scholar and master of the English tongue he indeed had a peculiar fitness for the task in hand. We hear from the dispatches that so eloquent, so convincing and yet so pathetic was the appeal to the President that he was moved to tears. And the great heart of the President was moved as perhaps never before by the pleadings of this dark son of the DARK CHILDREN of America.
"And the President of the United States of America, the man whose word carries more authority than any man since the dawn of civilization, gave to Judge Harrison his WORD—his WORD that can stop battling millions, his WORD that can unmake kings and emperors and change dynasties—that his prayer for his people be answered. Only those who have suffered as we as a race have suffered can pray as we pray. Behold He Prayeth was spoken of the lowly Nazarene in His hour of trial and tribulation. Yet be it said of us, "Behold THEY PRAY."
NASHVILLE GLOBE. FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1. 1918.
SAVE FROM YOUR PAY.
It's the wisest way. While you earn, save. That's the principle on which every great fortune has been built: Make pay day saving day and you'll soon find yourself free from debt and dependence. Make up your mind to save a dollar for every dollar you spend. Put your savings in this bank and let them earn money for you while saving.
ONE CENT SAVINGS BANK
NASHVILLE. TENN.
A POEM.
Heavenly Father, give us that love and courage
That may guide us aright;
That we may help to win the struggle Under the stars and stripes.
Make us ever mindful
Of your wondrous Son above;
As we fight for righteousness and democracy
We'll be protected with unity and love.
Then when this world's war is over,
And we've stacked our guns in peace;
And again cross the briny ocean
And ask for our release.
We'll come to you, Mr. President,
And ask for our share;
May God give you zeal and courage So there'll be no hatred there.
Composed by G. C. Childress, June,
Composed by G. C. Childress, June 1918.
MEHARRY NEWS
The following named persons have been inducted into the Meharry Student Army Training Corps: Pursuant to War Department an authority of October 3, 1918, Privates Henry Goss
B. Lee Love
Theophilus M. Johnson
Joseph H. Ellis
Christopher C. Brevard
William H. Hoffler
N. A. Raines
Jesse E. Wallace
Moses A. Richardson
William G. Grant
William S. Boyd
H. H. Taylor
Owen D. McFall
Clell E. Jeter
Charles S. Foster
Eustace O. Smithwick
William E. Hill
Harvey J. Graves
Robert C. Morgan
Wilmer C. Easton
H. A. Hogans
William H. Smith
G. W. Holt
Jossph B. Gilbert
R. N. Green
Norman E. Dunham
Ocie C. Queen
James L. Harris
Joseph N. Dunstan
Halph W. Hixson
John H. Moore
Alex A. Staples
John H. Trueheart
Thomas H. Brewer
Victor H. Palmer
Charles M. Alston
Lloyd G. Phillips
Sarrule N. Sisson
Aaron W. Goodwin
Joseph R. Tanner
Robert I. Francis
Rosecoe C. Porter
Henry D. Richardson
Van L. Polk
Lenin R. Breedlove
Royal C. Alexander
Lonnie I. Strickland
Cecil C. Thomas
John H. Williams
Jarell J. Salter
Horatio Erwin
Riley F. Thomas, Jr.,
Serial Order No. 263.
CHARLESTON S. C. Oct. 16, 1918.
Pursuant to War Department Authority
of Oct. 3, 1918.
James E. Gipson
John R. Ferguson
Melton B. Bryant
Andrew F. Belchner
O. P. Martinez
Dewitt T. Burton
E. I. Robinson
Leander R. Hill
D. K. Jenkins
M. J. Holmes
R. D. Love
J. K. Rhines
R. L. Jackson
C. M. Robinson
T. C. Mitchell
S. J. Perino
E. E. Elmore
W. G. Newsome
C. R. Woods
John W. Simms
Algeron Jacobs
C. O. Henry
T. H. Keith, Jr.
W. E Van Buren
R. L. Stinnett
G. W. Glymp
J. J. Carter
I. S. Lee
C. C. Machin
Henry Long
R. D. Jackson, Jr.
W. T. Ayers
Paul L. Branch
G. L. Haynes
Charles Wiggins
A. A. Owen
C. B. Steel
V. G. Tolbert
Guy H. Thomas
G. D. Flemmings
C. Scott
M. H. Betheam
B. H. Adkinson
M. P. Coker
H. E. Love
H. E. Jones
C. C. Smith
George Gonzales
J. Norcrest
Oscar L. Barland
T. Blake
Glen Evans
Alonzo James
Antonio Moore
Eugene Hale
Brown Perry
William Wilson
Miles A. Jones
Horace W. Smith
John Hudson
Matthew Womack
Robert J. Howard
Wm. Sears
Major League
Henry A. Maxwell
A. R. Brown
R. Sadberry
Albert Wooten
James Waters
Casper N. Wheeler
Daniel M. Darden
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FOR Every Evil Under the Sun There is a remedy Or there is None; If there is one Try to find it, If there is none Never mind it.
THE GANTT OUINO SCHOOL
Here's The Remedy
636 Fogg St.
Ernest B. Colg
Edward J. Cling
Peter M. Mixon
James W. Bradford
C. H. D. Bowers
J. Honey John
G. W. Fields
O. A. Childress
W. N. Edmonson
M. E. Dysart
Needham Roberts
J. A. Sherrod
R. B. Taylor
D. A. D. Bowers
Earl R. Livingston
Robert E. Ashe
Macauley Bolton
J. C. Avery
J. B. Robertson
C. E. Bonar
J. W. Bland
P. M. Mallard
Allen Phillips
J. C. White
C. H. Harrison
William W. Baker
Joseph C. Sheffield
Isom S. Wilkerson
J. H. McKillay
L. Routen
G. S. Tanner
T. T. Tildon
J. O. Young
Robert J. Howard
S. A. Curren
Claude T. Hume
Joseph I. Dupont
B. R. Selden
G. S. Brooks
W. J. Vidal
L. L. Spann
A. B. Cooper
F. C. Clay
F. B. Lane
J. A. Bone
O. O. Sweet
W. Minor
John Parrish
Thomas Jackson
Anno Loch
A. Bowers
Linwood Bayton
T. D. Turner
Ray Clark
H. C. Herman
William Puryear
W. Thompson
Manuel Wilburn
W. E. Carr
Kingston H. Lawrenc
Donnell Coleman
Jasper Caston
Henry M. Gildersleeve
Jackson B. Taylor
W. A. Zuber
W. S. Walker
Sellers Meadows
Nathaniel Lockley
Robert B. Compton
Willee A. Beck
Ulysees W. Williams
L. A. Haywood
Isaac F. Scott
F. E. Anthony
E. M. Brown
A. A. Foster
Mayo A. Harris
P. A. Goodwele
J. S. Love
Walter T. Napler
A. C. Dungee, Jr.
J. C. Isaacs
James Ross
E. L. Ellott
O. W. Phillips
E. A. Young
M. M. Queen
M. W. Brooks
H. D. Fleager
A. L. Fleager
M. P. Glmer
S. R. Filey
R. A. Ferrand
A. E. H. King
C. Christian
J. N. King
Greer Allen
S. F. Harris
J. A. Williams
C. A. Wade
P. A. Edwin
C. D. Gibbs
J. F. Abbott
H. L. Erwin
H. L. Burnett
B. L. Jackson
F. L. James
H. T. Hommon
R. L. Jackson
B. D. Donatto
J. S. Evans
L. Green
Liggett, O. E.
E. J. Jett
H. B. Cochran
Cornellius Lockley
R. Roberts
W. E. Lawson
C. L. Eccleson
C. Youngblood
A. Love
Augustus Charles
D. C. Smith
Edgar John
A. Blackwood
D. C. Davis
T. C. Hendricks
Joseph Adams
Wm. Brooks
Quino BEST BY TEST
Nashville, Tennessee
Tully Owens
Simon R. Doulas
Eddie C. Smith
Manuel W. Butler
H. F. Majors
R. C. Bryant
A. Cooper
The unit is progressing nicely under the efficient command of Lieut. Joseph H. Cooper, Commanding officer and Lieut. Lawrence E. Boyd, Adjutant. A military and Medical program combined has been agree dupon so that at certain hours in the day the Medical school pursues its usual professional appearance and at other times the presence and character of the Student Army would indicate the near approach of the Kaiser, and his combined land force. The dignified senior stretches his chest and stands at attention to the Command of the officers as readily as does the important Sophomore, the trusted Junior or the dorile Freshman.
THE NEW MESS HALL
The new mess hall 32x60 feet just east of the Auditorium presents a beautiful appearance. It is being used for the first time this week t oacomodate the large student body. The soldier Medicos are all smiles at the neat and comfortable surroundings and are loud in their praises of the hygienic and sanitary measures practiced.
ATHLETIC ACTIVITIES.
Foot ball is again in evidence at Meharry. As a means of exercise and development of physical manhood. The first game of the season is scheduled to take place on the Walden Campus this week. Enthusiasm is at a high pitch and every body is looking forward to enjoy the return of the good old days once historic in and around Meharry.
HEALTH AT THE INSTITUTION
The Spanish Influenza has claimed much of the time of the student body and a number have been forced to enter the Post Hospital for treatment. The vitality of the men has been remarkable and thus far no one has succeeded to the ravages of this disease beyond the point of endurance. But each week news comes to the institution of the passing of some of the alumni to the great beyond. Since the last issue of this paper, E. W. Reed, D. D. S., Class of 1911, of Aniston, Ala., passed to his reward. Pneumonia followed an attack of the "Flu" and the ravages of the disease proved too powerful for his strong manhood. On Oct. 15 he died. His office and a large practice is offered to a competent well prepared dentist. C. F. Hoskins of Brunswick, Ga., Dental class of 1909, fell a victim to the Influenza, Dr. Bullard of Springfield, Tenn., visited his Alma Mater this week and reports the epidemic in and around Springfield raging.
MARCHAL NIEL ART CLUB.
The Marshall Niel Art Club will meet with Mrs. J. A. Lester at her residence on Lafayette street, Friday, Nov. 8th. The president requests that all members please be present at this meeting.
NEW HAVEN LITERARY SOCIETY
The New Haven Literary Society is entertained by Miss Hibbett on the eve of the 29th of October. The New Haven Literary Society was entertained at the residence of Miss Kosalei Hibbett, 923 111th Ave. N.
Despite the unfavorable of the weather, the attendance was unusually large under such circumstances. The program was quite interesting and patriotic. After the necessary preliminaries for opening, we sang, "John Brown's Body is a Moulding, etc." Then came the quotations followed by "My Country 'Tis of Thee." Then of course the knitting took up a great part of the program.
Those present were Messrs. Bradshaw, Ferell, Davis, Warfield, Payne, Milton, Osborne, Robertson, Maddix, John Maddix, Jr., and Dr. Jackson. Misses McFaris, Pratee, Moore, Christmas, Reeve and Mrs. Maddix. We entertained as guest, Messrs. Gibson, Brown and Allison, soldiers of the Fisk University Camp. Mr. Milton and Mr. Paynes Music was superb. After the serving of a two course menu, the meeting adjourned.
INSTITUTE FOR COLORED SPEAKERS
Tuesday at 4:30 p. m., the first meeting was held for the local speakers among the colored women for the first time and it is to be launched early in November.
For your Hair, 50 cts
THE BUILDING OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA.
Nashville, Tenn.
BAPTIST THEOLOGICAL & TRAINING SEMINARY
Not all the speakers were present because some failed to receive notice of the meeting.
Mrs. M. H. Flowers, Chairman of the Committee on Speakers addressed those present as to aims of the drive and was followed by Mrs. S. W. Crostwait and Mrs. A. N. Johnson, State Chairman for the work among the women.
A meeting of the speakers is called on Saturday, Nov. 2 at 3 p.m. in the headquarters of the Council of Defense, 4th Ave and Cedar street, Y. M. C. A. building.
The committee of speakers is as follows:
Mrs. J. P. Rhines, Mrs. Eddie Dickerson, Mrs. J. P. D. Chavis, Miss M. Hadley, Mrs. Cora J. White, Miss E. Jerry, Miss E. Joe Cockrill, Miss Dorothy Bennett, Mrs. W. B. Flagg, Mrs. E. Cummins, Mrs. Alice Martin, Mrs. Anna Haynes, Mrs. Lovell Lanford, Mrs. Annananks, Mrs. T. M. Brumfield, Mrs. Eve Green, Mrs. Eugene Allen, Mrs. G. L. Jackson, Mrs. D. W. Berry, Mrs. G. A. Goings.
TEMPERATURE SONG.
Many are _he homes_ that are dark tonight,
Blighted by the curse of rum;
Many are the hearts that saddened
at the sight.
Longing for the end to come.
Many are the brothers awake tonight.
Praying for the absent one;
Fearing that the demon with his
Fearing that the demon with his power to blight,
Has the awful work begun.
Many are the sisters alone tonight,
Dreading lest the news may come,
Telling of the death's sad and awful plight,
Dying far away from home.
Many are the husbands away tonight,
Drinking of the cup of death;
Many are the wives that awaken with fright.
Shrinking from the hated breath.
Many are the prayers that arise tonight,
Calling for the help Divine;
Many are the hands that battle for the right.
Pleading for your boy and mine.
Composed by Mary Ray, 328 Benedict street.
ENTERTAINED AT DINNED.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Northington of 1517 Mary street entertained at dinner last evening Mrs. Joseph McGavock, of Chicago. Ill. We are always glad to have Mrs. McGavock and her daughter, Miss Nelle Ionna, to visit us. Mrs. McGavock will go from here to Indianapolis, thence to St. Louis, Mo., visiting friends before going home.
PAGE- CHESTNUT
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene T. Page returned Saturday evening from Willow. They were married at noon Thursday, October 24th at St. Marxxs Episcopal Church
Nashville
NATIONAL BAPTIST
IGAL &
The National Baptist Convention (unincorporated) at its recent session held at Little Rock passed a resolution, authorizing the Educational Board and the Trustees to speed up our educational work, and open the Seminary this fall. Having dedicated ourselves to carry out the purposes and spirit of the resolution, we are making this announcement. The Seminary will open Jan. 6, 1919. In order to carry out the plans we find ourselves face to face with a financial obligation and other requirements to the amount of $6,625.00 that must be raised. The valuable property and institution should be the pride of the denomination, and is destined to become the pride of the race. It is the earnest plea and sincere desire of the Board that all the friends who have pledged any amount, if it has not been paid up to date, that they will please do so at once, and also those who can advance their pledge, there money can serve to a greater advantage, now when it is needed more.
Dear brethren, it should not be said that "the war, or this, that or the other has taken all of my money, and I cannot help the Church School at this time." Such an attitude is unscriptural. "Render to Ceasar the things that belong to him, and unto God the things that belong to him." It would be contrary to the expressed desire of the President of the United States, who said, "I am pleased to know that despite the unusual burdens imposed upon the people by the war, they have maintained their schools and other agencies of education so nearly at their normal efficiency, there should be no falling off in attendance in elementary schools, high schools or colleges, is a matter the very greatest importance affectionate with each other in national welfare and efficiency when the war is over. I would therefore urge that the people would continue to give generous support to their schools of all grades, that the nation may be strengthened as it can only be through the right education of all its people."
$20,000 is no large sum for the Negro Baptists to raise. The amount should be oversubscribed and paid within sixty days. This is the most propitious time in the history of the race and denomination in this country for this project to be launched. If we speedily pay for this property it will prove as nothing else can the educational progress, the religious stamina and business acumen of the
NEGRO SOLDIER IN OUR WAR
NEGRO SOLDIER IN OUR WAR
Tells all about the way it is fair to educated people; evercolored MAN NO SLACKER, free, or choice of other 25 pictures; agents making 57 to 823 per day. Send AUSTIN JINKING CO., 829 91st St. Washington, D.C. of which the bride is a member. Mrs. Page before her marriage was Miss Zilphia I. Chestnut. She received a degree in Diversity of which institution the groom is also a graduate. Since her graduation she has visited her sister, here who is Mrs. Luther Headen. Several affairs were given in honor of this couple prior to their marriage. On their way home they stopped in Asheville, N. C., and Chattanooga, Tenn. While in Chattanooga, they were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Wm. B. Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Page are at home at 1532 14th Ave., N., where they will be glad to welcome their friends.
MRS. EVA MURRELL SIMPSON IN THE CITY
Mrs. Eva Murrell Simpson is in the city for a few days the guest of her sister, Mrs. Fowler, 1811 Scovel Street. In a few days she will join her husband James A. Ala who has accepted a position in the government hospital at Muscle Shoals, Ala.
HUBBARD HOSPITAL CLUB
The President, Mrs. P. R. Burrus,
of the Hospital Club, extends an in-
troduction to the students to be present at the first fall meeting. Monday, Nov. 4th at 4 o'clock,
in the parlors at the hospital.
THE BELIEF CLUB.
The regular meeting of the Relief Club, which has been postponed for several weeks on account of the influenza, will be held at the residence of Mrs. Maggie Petts, Friday, Nov. 8, 1918, at 4 o'clock. Officers are requested to please be present to fill their respective positions.
CARNATION ART AND EMBROIDERY CLUB.
Carnation Art and Embroidery Club met with Mrs. J. C. Fields Tuesday, October 22, and elected officers for the year. Mrs. Wm. Wilson is president for the year and Mrs. Hall secretary, with Mrs. Simmons treasurer. Mrs. Cartwright will report the meetings. The club will do knitting this year and Mrs. Fields will teach them to knit. At the first meeting of the year the members were ready with their knitting; and began on wash rags for boys over 12 years old. That number who was absent will be ready at the next meeting with thread and needles ready for work. After an hour of knitting the club was ushered into the lovely dining room and served a tempting two course menu. The next meeting will be November 11th with Mrs. Wm. Wilson, 538 Ramsey street.
le, Tenn.
THEOLOG-
TRAINING SEMINARY
denominatinot. This is the one enterprise to which every Baptist man, woman and child should make a liberal donation and make it now, in the incipiency of the institution when it can and must be used as the founding fund or educational and endowment fund.
Dear brethren, sisters and friends, send a post office money, order, check or registered letter to the National Baptist Theological and Training Seminary, 523 Second avenue, N., Nassau, New York. pray over the matter at once and J. L. HARDING, Secy-Treas.
CHURCH WORK—COLUMBIA'S LIFE
(Continued from page 1.)
this rock I build my church and the very gates of hell shall not prevail against it. And it looks like hell is prevailing against the church of God today, but we know our God will deliver us. He has always delivered his church and always will.
Miss Mary Nickerson of Indianapolis is here visiting her sister, Miss Ellen Nickerson, 903 Glade St., Mr. Edgar C. Dodson was here this week from Camp Sherman visiting his wife and relatives. Miss Rush Young of Riverburg will be in this city Thursday, visiting her sister, Mrs. Katherine Dodson. Mrs. Alex Armstrong and Miss Leah Lea have reentered from North Glade St. Miss Rush Rutledge the sister of Miss Rosa Wigfall took her leave Sunday for Chicago. Mr. Harry Harding of Nashville was here this week visiting his mother, Mrs. Caroline Grandberry, 901 Glade St. Mrs. Mary Porter of this city took her leave Sunday for Nashville. Mr. Earl Harlin has recovered from the epidemic. Mr. Morris Jackson has recovered of the epidemic. Mrs. Leora Smith has recovered from the epidemic. Miss Gay Willie has been very sick she is up again. Mr. George Brown is improving after a long illness. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Booker has returned from the South B.A. B.A. B.A. the teacher of the South Columbia A. M. E. Church has returned from the quarterly conference.
Paul Connor, brother of Amanda Connor was buried in Prescott, Phoenix, Ariz. . Oct. 23, 1918.
Miss Bessie Rose of Pulaski was the guest of Mrs. J. W. Cofer Sunday. She left for home Tuesdaysay on No. 3.
Dr. C. O. Hunter, C. K. P. and S. of the K. of P. of Tennessee was in the city this week from Columbia.
The Tennessee Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, which was in session at Gordon Chapel, October 3-6, was one of the best entertained Conferences in the history of the church.
Bishop Bristol of Chattanooga, Tenn. made the following appointment.
Central District, J. B. Booth, Superintendent.
Anes, J. W. Wade, Clifton Circuit, W. C. T. Travis, Cumberland Furnace Circuit, S. P. McDonald, Dickson, J. W. Richmond, Dover, to be supplied, Farmington and Petersburg, E. J. Reddick, Franklin and Spring Hill, A. B. Thompson, Howard and Cooper's Grove, A. J. Whittaker, Lawrenceburg and West Point, S. T. Miller, Lexington, C. C. Teague, Missold and Paris, to be supplied, Supply Circuit, to be supplied, Selma Circuit, to be supplied, Springville, to be supplied, Waynesboro, G. A. Sanford.
Cumberland River District, J. D. Chavis, District Superintendent.
Cherry Valley, E. F. Carter, Cookville and Algood to be supplied, Decherd, J. M. Huddleston, Gallatin, E. J. Guthrie, Gordonville, William Neal, Hartsville, H. E. Erwin, Lebanon, Aizarian Rashan, Lebanon Circuit, A. D. Butler, Liberty and Alexandria, J. F. Neal, Livingston, to be supplied, Manchester, to be supplied, Vailville, J. O. Dixon, McMinnville Circuit, to be supplied, Mitchelville, W. L. Dotton, North Lebanon, to be supplied, Sparta, J. S. Nance, Sparta Circuit, to be supplied, Stonewall, to be supplied, Tulahoma, H. P. Belcher, Memphis District, T. W. Johnson, District Superintendent. Alamo station and Hudson, T. B. Blackman, Atoka Circuit, A. L. Nelson, Binghamphray, S. P. Walker, Capleville, E. D. Taylor, Dyersburg Circuit, B. J. Meredith, Friendship Circuit, J. S. Hughlett, Galloway circuit, to be supplied, Humboldt, to be supplied, Marion and Sharon, J. H. Walters, Marion R. A. Dowell, Mason, J. E. Ford, Memphis, Centenary, J. H. Thompson, Memphis, Warren Chanel, H. P. Gordon
Nashville District, J. H. Ellis
District Superintendent.
Brentwood, W. B. Crenshaw, Dilton
and Cainville, J. R. Gray, Flat Rock, W. E. Mitchell, Murfreesboro,
T. W. Davis, Murfreesboro Circuit, J.
T. Patillo, Nashville: Braden, D. T. Burch, Clark, J. W. Wells, Eleventh
Avenue, S. M. Strayhorne, Hubbard, J. W. H. Barham, Gordon and Mission, J. W. Satterfer, Seay, F. N. Collier, Smyrna, Williams, Thompson Chapel, to be supplied,
Shelbyville, S. M. Shelbyville, J. A. W. Moore, Shelbyville,
G. A. C. Hill, Springfield, S. M. Carmichael, Springfield Circuit, E. F. Douglass, Stone River Circuit, to be supplied.
Special Appointments: J. C. Sherill, Field Secretary of Board of Foreign Missions. Member of Seay Quarterly Conference. S. M. Utley, Professor in Meharry Medical College. Seay Quarterly Conference. J. P. Price Conference Evangelist, member of Hubbard Chapel Quarterly Conference. Lawrence left without appointment and attend some of our schools. William Harris and J. W. Sebastain given leave of absence.
CITY ITEM.
Medamesd Elizabeth Morgan and Carrie Davis Hicks, of Terre Haute, ind. are in the city domiciled at the Gantt Quino School, 636 Gogg street, where they are taking the complete course in the Quino System of Beauty Culture.
Mr. J. C. Napier is in Hubbard Hospital, where he has undergone a successful operation. His faithful wife is at his bedside and on Tuesday of this week he was reported to be much improved.
Mrs. Hattie Sargent Gilmore, of Columbia, Tenn. is invadesales from an operation at the Millie Hale Hospital, where she has been for the past three weeks. She is the wife of Llewat. Gilmore, now somewhere in France.
Mr. H. D. Maves of Campbellsville Ky., was in the city last week on a visit. He was the guest of Mr. Elias Tate, of the training camp out, at Fisk University. Mr. Maves is an active Sunday school worker and was on the reception committee which entertained the secretary of the Sunday School Congress on his recent trip to the Blue Grass State. Mr. Maves was en route home from Brunswick, Ga.
Mrs. Albert I. Maker of 122 Twelfth avenue, N. who recently underwent an operation at McMillan's Infirmary, is able to be out again.
SIX O'CLOCK DINNER
Miss Amanda Rucks of 620 Sylvan St. entertained at a six o'clock dinner Sunday, Miss Marie Price, Mr. and Mrs. Woodson, Mr. Henry Halley, Caruth and Mr. P. G. Baker. A delightful menu was served. Music and games were enjoyed until a late hour. Te guests departed after spending an enjoyable evening.
Mrs. Joseph McGavock of Chicago, after a very pleasant visit with friends in the cities of Brownville, Lebanon and Goodlettsville, Tenn. will leave this week, via Indianapolis and St. Louis.
SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE
Mrs. Myrtle Halley of 59 Lafayette street, received a letter from her husband, Mr. Napoleon Halley, who is now "Somewhere in France." He is enjoying good health and likes France very much.
GREER TRAINING SCHOOL NOTES.
Greer Training School located at Greerville, near Denmark, has a strong faculty this year and the school is doing a great work, fitting young Negro men and women for future life. Its graduates do a good work wherever they are located. For information write—
A. SAMPSON BROWNE, Prin.
Greer Training School, Denmark, Teann.
Masters Rufus and John Wesley Williams III of 129 Green St. spend the week-end with their grand mother, Mrs. Millie Williams, 528 Elmwood Ave.
Mr. Curtis-Miles of 83 Maury St. has entered State Normal to take a special course. He expresses him-les as enjoying school life.
WOMEN, GIRLS, FEED YOUR HUNGRY SGALP
[Picture of a woman with dark hair, wearing a white dress with a lace collar.]
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St. Louis, Mo.
Send all orders by Money Order to Eloso College
TEDDY ANSWERS WILSON'S APPEAL
(Continued from page 1.1)
Mr. Roosevelt criticised the general courses of the administration through opt the war, declaring:
"If Mr. Wilson had really meant to disregard politics he would at once have constructed a coalition, nonpartisan cabinet, calling the best men of the nation to the highest and most important offices under him, without regard to politics. He did nothing of the kind. In the positions most vital to the conduct of the war, and in the positions now most important in connection with nexploitating peace, he retained or appointed men without the slightest fitness for the performance of the tasks, whose sole recommendation was a supple eagerness to serve Mr. Wilson personally and to serve Mr. Wilson's party insofar as such service benefited Mr. Wilson."
Contrasting the President's appeal with Lincoln's outright refusal, even in the darkest days of the Civil War, to apply any party test to fitness for office, the Colonel said that Lincoln "appealed to all loyal men of all parties and asked that candidates for Congress be judged, not by the standard of adherence to his personal administration, but by their unconditional support of the war." Election of a Republican Congress, the Colonel continued, would be understood abroad as meaning that the pro-German pacifists and Bolsheviks and Germanized socialists could be anger counted upon as efficient and tortuous tools, that the fighting men and not the rhetoricians were uppermost. Mr. Roosevelt interpreted the President's reference to the anti-Administration" attitude of Republican members of Congress as based on their "demand that inefficiency, waste and extravagance be remedied" in the war conducting departments.
"Need America"
The President asserted
"that what need is an American
Congress, a Congress of straight
Americans and not a Congress of
rubber stamps."
"We Republicans pledge ourselves
to stand by the President so long
as he stands by the American people
and to part company from him at any
point where in our judgment he does
not stand by the people," he said.
"This is the people's Government
that is the people's war and peace
this follows shall be the people's peace."
Quoting a press dispatch to the effect that Republican Senators such as McCumber, Nelson and Lodge are as "highly thought of in France today as are the American generals," Colonel Roosevelt declared that "nine times out or ten this administration has never led the people," has been reluctantly forced forward against action by criticism of which it has "received" and "has sullenly and sometimes maliciously sought to punish the men who by their truth telling have jorced it into action."
"In a word," the Colonel said, "the Democratic party, under the lead of the Administration, has carried partisan politics during the last eleventh months to an extreme never before known in this country in a time of war, as among local upholders of the war it has come dangerous to the nation, as partisan of the test insisted upon has been, not loyalty to our allies and hostilities to Germany, but adherence to the Administration," he declared, adding that President Wilson's request of October 14 that citizens should subscribe to the loan, but "leave to the Government of the United States and of the Allies the momentous discussions initiated by Germany" could be interpreted as meaning that they "should both put
Criticises Army's Work.
Criticizes Army's work.
Colonel Roosevelt asserted that "if the Administration had used with moderate efficiency the results of lavish genetical research of Congress our军队 and the Allied armies would have been doing last March what they are actually doing now in October." After asserting that this war must be put through "to our last man and our last dollar," the Colonel declared that "we should accept no peace not based on the unconditional surrender of Germany and her vassal states."
He asserted that the President's latest notes had placed him in such a position that he had either to "sacrifice American military or to responde such a manner as to stultify his own diplomacy and repudiate his own diplomatic offer.
"It was not a pleasant thing for America that he should have put himself and the nation behind him in the position or inviting a proposition which, when accepted, he repudiated," declared the Colonel. "For the very reason that I abhor German's trickery, treachery and bad faith, I am most anxious that Americans shall not imitate her in these matters." Asserting that peace would be settled, not by the President alone, but by the acting in conjunction with two-third of the Senate the Colonel continued:
"When it comes to the peace negotiations we should emphatically repudiate the famous fourteen points announce! by the President last January. One of them he has repudiated himself and the remainder are either
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so mischievous that they ought to be repudiated without further defini-tion, or else we should insist on having them defined in order to know exactly what they mean. They have been greeted with enthusiasm by Germany and by all pro-Germans on this side of the water, especially by the Germanized societies and by the Germanized Americans. This reason good Americans should regard them with suspicion—Nashville Tennessee.
TABERNACLE BAPTIST CHURCH
Now since the Tabernacle Baptist Church like all the rest of the churches of the city has had to close down their services since the First Sunday in this month because of the request that was made by the city health department that we join in and help them to combat the awful epidemic, the Spanish Flu, and since our blessed Saviour has provided for and kept us alive in the midst of so much sickness and so many deaths. We wish to send forth the cheering news through the columns of the Globe to each and every member and friend that the doors of Tabernacle Baptist Church will be thrown open again on the first Sunday, Nov. 3rd, 1918, for services at 9 a. m. Supt. Morgan will sound the bell and call the S. to order, every member of the school is expected to be in their seats on time. Pastor Burns has been feasting also fasting as well as praying, working among the sick and waiting for the happy hour to come when he can stand upon Zion's walls and blow the trumpet and call men to repentance. All day Sunday, Rev. Burns will fill the pulpit. The Lord's Supper will be administered in the afternoon. Be on hand. Come praying for a great day in Zion. As special honors are extended to us we help you. Our revival sinners, if you want to find the Jesus, will begin Sunday night. Dr. Burns was heard to state that he would put the plans before his people by which he hopes to raise a hundred dollars ($100) for the Theological and Training Seminary at once. Mrs. A. V. Marshall, President of the Ladies' Auxiliary has announced to all of her chairmen that there will be no meeting during the revival. Mrs. Bettie Rucker, President of the B. Y. P. U. forces has called upon her union to meet early Sunday afternoon to arrange to do their bit in the way of soul saving. Mrs. Venson, President of the Galedas and the Robt Williams, President of the Metokas are planning for big things in the near future.
STATE OF TENNESSEE, EXECU
TIVE OFFICE NASHVILLE.
PROCLAMATION
In the history of the nation, never has the meanance of fire been greater an dthe husbanding of our resources more necessary. The unusual strain upon production is in itself an element of fire hazard, while the danger of incendiarism threatens in many parts of the country, causing the destruction of food stuff and material. Every fire strikes at the foundation of National power. The toll of human life from fire and accident suggested the safety factor to be added to the observance of Fire and Accident Day heretofore, on October 9 of each year. The day falling within the period of the Liberty Loan drive this year, in order that there be no destruction of any kind to the work of such vital importance, the day was set forward to November 2, with the understanding that the Liberty Loan speakers were to call the attention of the people to the importance of Fire and Accident Day.
Fire losses in the United States, with the upkeep of fire departments occasioned by these losses, total in war time annually $450,000,000. The statement is made upon investigation that 80 per cent of these losses are due to carelessness and fires that were preventable.
The annual per capita fire waste in the United States is over $2.00. The loss will average $500,000 per minute. Tennessee fires destroy more than $3,500,000 worth of property each year, to say nothing of the many lives that are sacrificed.
Therefore, in keeping with the spirit of conservation, I earnestly request that all efforts be turned to the need of fire prevention, which has become a country-wide custom, and that SATURDAY NOVEMBER 2 1918 be set aside as FIRE AND ACCIDENT PREVENTION DAY for the state of Tennessee.
That appropriate exercises he held in all schools throughout the state on Friday Nov. 1, and that teachers assisted by Municipal Officers and the fire departments give to the children suc hinformation and instruction as they have at their command, on the subject of fire prevention.
in testimony whereof, I Tom C. Rye Governor, as aforesaid, have here unto set my hand and caused the Great Seal of the state to be affixed at the Department in Nashville, this 22nd day of October, 1918.
IKE B. STEVENS, Sec. of State.
TOM C. RYE, GEOVER.
NASHVILLE GLOBE. FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1, 1918.
TRUSTEE SALE.
In keeping with a trust deed given to me and registered in the registrar's office the 19th day of May 1913 at 1:05 p. m., o'clock recorded in Book 441 page 169 in the registrar's office County of Davidson, state of Tennessee to secure a note of 250.00 with interest from date of said note and attorney's fee. I will sell at the south door of the Davidson County Court House at noon Saturday, Nov. 16th to the highest bidder one lot 50x150 feet in Block 1, Jones & Dudley edition of the city of Nashville.
The notes and the deeds of trust were signed by Henry Holt and Sallie Holt and the trustee deed was made to satisfy the principal and interest on said note. The property is to be sold and the buyer is to assume the side walk taxes, the city, county and state taxes for the years 1915, 1916 and 1917.
HENRY ALLEN BOYD, Trustee
Nashville City Church Directory.
MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCHES.
M. Nebo Baptist Church. Sunday school 9:30. Rev. E. L. Clegget, superintendent. Preaching 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Communion every first Sunday afternoon. Monday night Pastor's Ald Society. Prayer meeting Tuesday 8 p. m. Wednesday night choir rehearsal. Thursday night preaching. Friday night Teacher's meeting. Rev. H. A. Alfred, pastor, 709 Twenty-fifth avenue, N.; Rev. J. W. Pitts, church clerk; Mrs. D. D Crowder, assistant clerk.
Second Baptist Church. Ninth avenue, S., corner Stevens. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Henry Halley superintendent. Services 1; a. m. and 8 p. m. B. Y. P. U. every Sunday at 6 p. m. Monday night Ladies' Anxiliary, Mary Mary Moore, president; Tuesday night, prayer meeting at 8 o'clock. Thursday night preaching 8 o'clock. Communion every first Sunday. Rev. G. B. Taylor, pastor.
Bass Street Church, 627 Bass St.
Rev. Wm. T. Baugus, pastor, 917 Vine
street. Preaching Sunday at 11 a
m., and at 8 p. m. Sunday school
9:30 a. m. Geo. Lynch, supt.
* * *
First Street Church, N. Second, cor-
ner of Mark. Rev. S. Stubblele
pastor, 246 Foster avenue. Preaching
Sunday 11 a. m., and 8 p. m. Sunday
school, 9:30 a. m. S. Gregory, super
intendent.
---
Kayne Avenue Baptist Church, 1107
Kayne avenue. Sunday school 9:45
a. m. Services at 11 a. m. and 8
p. m. Prayer meeting Thursday
night. Teachers' meeting Friday
clerk. Rev. E. M. Lawrence, pastor,
1027 Amen street.
Ewing Avenue Church, 624 Ewing
avenue. R. L. Alexander, pastor, 20
Fairfield. Preaching, Sunday at 8:00
p. m. and Thursday at 8 p. m. Prayer
meeting. Tuesday 8 p. m. Sunday
school 3 p. m. Vinicair Scruggs, 620
Ewing avenue, church clerk; C. Cunmings,
606 Ash street, supt.
Eighth Street National Baptist The
ological Seminary. Rev. John Alexen
passor, 924 Notherland street
Preaching, Sunday 11 a. m. and 8
p. m. Sunday school, Sunday at 9:30
a. m. Cora Nobb, church clerk, 730
Boyce; Eil Webb, superintendent, 721
Boyce
North Sixth Street Baptist Church
831 N. Sixth street, Rev. J. T. Tunstill, Sr., pastor, 817 N. Sixth street
Preachins, Sunday 11 a. m. and 8
p. m. Thursday 8 p. m. Prayer meeting,
tuesday 8 p. m. Sunday school,
Sunday 9:30 a. m. Duff Tunstill
church clerk, 600 Cleveland street.
Ruth Bender, superintendent, 609 N.
5th street.
---
Pleasant Green, 1410 Jefferson St.
Rev. J. C. Fields, pastor, 2030 Jefferson
son street. Preaching, Sunday 11 a.
m. and 8 p. m. Prayer meeting;
Tuesday 8 p. m. Sunday school, Sunday
9:30 a. m. T. G. Marshall, superintendent; T. E. Dickerson, church
clerk, 1503 Harding street.
First Baptist Church, East Nash
ville, Rev. W. E. S. Ellington, pastor
Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Preaching;
11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Prayer meeting;
Wednesday night. Choir rehearsals;
Thursday night. Fite's meeting
Friday night. A. W. Fite, Supt.
Corinthian J. Baptist Church, W.
Nashville; Rev. A. F. Murray, pastor;
Rev. S. S. Page, supt.
New Hope, 1203 Hawkins. Rev. J.
C. Harding, pastor, 1017 Fourteenth
avenue, S. Preaching, Sunday 11
a. m., 8 p. m. and Thursday 8 p. m.
Prayer meeting, Tuesday 8 p. m. Sunday
school 9:30 a. m.
Tabernacle, 1005 South street, Rev.
H. M. Burns, pastor, 920 Tenth avenue, South. Preaching, Sunday 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. and Thursday at 8 p. m. Prayer meeting, Tuesday 8 p. m. Sunday school 9:30 a. m. H Morgan, superintendent, 1001 Overton street. Mrs. A. V. Marshall, church clerk, 1800 West End.
Third Avenue, 338 Third avenue, N. Rev. J. L. Harding, pastor, 2714 Jefferson street. Preaching, Sunday 11 a. in. and 8 p. m. Prayer meeting, Tuesday 8 p. m. Sunday school 9:30 a. M. J. H. Shute, superintendent, 1106 Porterfield street; J. H. Shutte, church clerk.
Mt. Olive Baptist Church, Rev. C. H. Clark, D. D., pastor, 610 Joe Johns
ston avenue. Sunrise prayer meeting. Sunday school 9:30 a.m. Services, 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Communion every first Sunday 3 p.m. Prayer and Teachers' meeting, Tuesday night. preaching Thursday night. Phil Douglas, church clerk; G. P. Baker, superintendent, 1833 Scovel street.
Fifteenth Avenue Baptist Church, 409 Fifteenth avenue, N. Rev. A. W. Porter, pastor, 409 Fifteenth avenue, N. Preaching, Sunday 11 a.m. and 8 p.m., and Thursday at 8 p.m. Prayer meeting, Tuesday 8 p.m. Sunday school 9:40 a.m. Mrs. H. Cannon, superintendent.
Pilgrim Emanuel, 621 Peabody at. Rev. A. Phillips, pastor, 320 Berry street. Preaching, Sunday 11:30 a.m. and 8 p.m., and Thursday 8 p.m. Prayer meeting. Tuesday. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m. m. James Bryant, superintendent.
St John, Pearl street, between 11th and 12th avenues, N. Rev. W. H. Whitaker, pastor, 1409 Hynes street
Preaching, Sunday 11 a. m. and 8 p. m., and Thursday 8 p. m. Prayer meeting, Tuesday 8 p. m. Sunday school 9:30 a. m. J. A. Turner, supt., Clinton street.
Foster Chapel Baptist Church, Rev G. B. Bolden, pastor, 103 Lewis st. Preaching, Sunday 11:30 a. m. and 8 p. m., and Thursday 8 p. m. Prayer meeting, Tuesday night. Sunday school 10 a. m. T. Grooms, superintendent, 61 Murry street.
Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, 211 Fifth avenue, S. Preaching, Sunday 11 a. m. and 8 p. m., and Thursday 8 p. m. Prayer meeting, Tuesday Sunday 9:30 a. m. Mrs. Margaret Thomas, superintendent, 45th avenue, N.
. . .
First Church, 319 Eighth avenue, N Rev. S, L McDowell, pastor, 14th and Jefferson street, Preshaching, Sunday 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Prayer meeting, Tuesday 8 p.m. Sunday school 9:30 a.m. m. T. A. Frierson, superintendent, 1712 Thompson street. C B church clerk, 1234 First ave. nue.
---
Mt. Zion Baptist Church 1100 Jefferson street. Rev. J. A. Brown, pastor, 1217, 11 Ave. N. Preaching services Sunday, 11 a.m. m. 8 p. M. prayer meeting Tuesday 8 a.m. m. Sunday school 9:30 a.m. J. C. Patton, 16th St. Supt. J. C. Patton Church Clerk.
ROCK CITY—Rev. A. W. Wilson, pastor, preaching services Sunday, 11 p. m. 8 p. M. prayer meeting Tuesday 8 a.m. m. 8 p. M. prayer meeting Thursday 9 a.m. m. m. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m. m. Mr. Dan Stafford, Supt. Mrs. M. Bowling R. R. 10. Rock City church clerk.
MT. LEBANON, 1431 Fourth Ave. S. Rev. Q. S. Davis, pastor, 617 Fern street, preaching Sunday 11 a.m. 8 p. m. Thursday 8 p. m. prayer meeting. Tuesday 8 a.m. m. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m. m. Supt. Rosa Green, 1525 4th Ave. S. Minerva Baby, Clerk, 1128 4th A. S.
AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL
CHURCHES
Bethel, Tenth avenue, South. Sun-
day services 11 a. m. and 8 p. m.
Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Christian
Endearach meeting 7 p. m. Class and
prayer meeting Thursday night. Rev
S. J. Howard, pastor.
Trinity A. M. E. Sunday school
9:30 a. m. Preaching 11 a. m. and
8 p. m. Rev. W. L. Powell, pastor
Ebenezer, Stone's River Turpike
Sunday services 11 a. m. and 8 p. m.
Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Christian
Endearach 7 p. m. Class meeting Tues-
day night. Prayer meeting Thursday
night. Rev. H. G. Stanford, pastor.
St. Luke A. M. E. Church, 42nd ave
nue, N., W. Nashville. Rev. J. K
Childness, pastor, 130. Skeette ave
nue, N. Preaching, Sunday 11:30 a. m.
and 8:30 p. m. Wednesday 8:30 p. m.
Class meeting, Thursday night
Sunday school 9:30 a. m.
Salem, corner Fourth avenue, N.
and Buchanan street. Sunday services
11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Sunday
school 9:30 a.m. m. Christian Endeavor
7 p. m. Class meeting, Thursday
night. Prayer meeting, Tuesday
night. Rev. A. Whitworth, pastor.
Scovel Street, 1705 Scovel street.
Sunday services 11:30 a.m. and 8 p.
m. Sunday school 9:30 a.m. m. Christian
Endeavor 7 p. m. Class meeting
Thursday night. Rev. W. A. Anderson,
pastor.
Paynes Chapel, corner Seventh and
Winter streets. Sunday services 11
a. m. and 8 p. m. Sunday school 9:30
a. m. Christian Endeavor 7 p. m.
Class meeting, Thursday night. Prayer
meeting, Tuesday night. Rev. J. H.
Grant, D. D., pastor.
St. James, Moorstown. Sunday services
11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Sunday
school 9:30 a.m. m. Christian Endeavor
7 p. m. Rev. G. L. Jackson, pastor.
St. John Church, corner Elethr
avenue, N. and Cedar street. Rev.
J. M. Smith, pastor. Sunday school
9:30 a.m. M. Preaching 11 a.m. m
& b. p.m. A. C. E. League 7 p. m.
Class meeting, Tuesday evening at
8 o'clock.
St. Paul Church, corner Fourth
avenue, S. and Franklin street. Rev. H.
L. P. Jones, pastor. Sunday school
9:30 a.m. Services 11 a.m. and 7:30
p. m. A. C. E. league 6:30 p. m.
Trustee Board first Monday night.
St. Phillips, Mt. Nebo (Texas). Sunday
services 11 a.m. m & b. p.m. Sunday
school 9:30 a.m. Christian Endeav
or 7 p. m. Class meeting, Thursday
night. Rev. M. L. Spears, pastor.
St. Peter A. M. E. Church, 4 miles
on the White's Creek Pike. Sunday
school 9:30 a.m. Preaching 11:30 a.m.
Allen Christian Endeavor 7 p. m.
Preaching 8 p. m. Rev. James L.
Martin, pastor.
Flat Rock. Sunday services 11 a
m. and 8 p. m. Sunday school 9:36
a. m. Class meeting, Friday night.
C. M. E. CHURCHES.
St. Luke C. M. E. Church. 26th and
Heffernan street. Rev. A. Rossi, pastor.
2601 Albion street. Praaching.
Sunday 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Epworth
League 7 p. m. School 9:30 a. m.
S. m. B. W. Web, superintendent,
1041 28th ave. N.
Lane Taternacle.
Sunday school 9:30 a.m. m. Preaching.
11:30 a.m. and m. 8 p. M. Epworth
League meeting at 6:30 p.m. m. Prayer
meeting every Wednesday at 8 p.m.
* * *
Phillips Chapel, 8 Wharf avenue.
Sunday school 9:30 a.m. m. C. E.
League 7 p.m. m. Class meeting, Tuesday
night. Bible class, Wednesday
night.
* * *
Capers Chapel, Church St. preaching
at 11 a.m. and m. 8 p. M. Sunday
school 9:30 a.m. m. C. E. League
7 p.m. Tuesday 3 p.m. class meeting.
Wednesday 3 p.m. m. Bible class.
METHODIST EPISCOPAL.
Braden Chapel, 705 Georgia street
Sunday services 11 a. m. and 7:30 p.
m. Rev. D. T. Burch, pastor
Gordon Chapel, Herman street, near
Prospect. Sunday services 11 a. m.
and 7:30 p. m. Rev. J W. Sater
field, pastor.
Hubbard's Chapel, Trimble S. W.
corner East Hill. Sunday services 11
a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Rev. J P.
Price, D. d. pastor; Mr. Mayfield
superintendent of Sunday school.
Seay's Chapel Green street, corner
Fairfield. Sunday services 11 a. m.
and 7:30 p. m. Rev. F. N. Collier
D. d. pastor.
Eleventh Avenue M. E. Church
Services 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Sunday
school 9:45. S. M. Strayhorne, pastor.
...
Clark Memorial, 308 Franklin St.
Sunday Services: Sunday School
9:30 a. m.; Preaching 11 a. m. and
8. p. m. Epworth League 7 p. m.
Rev. J. W. Wells, Pastor. Prof. H.
J. Johnson, Recording Steward, Prof.
T. B. Hardiman, Superintendent
o. Sunday School.
Episcopal.
Church of the Holy Trinity, Ewina
Avenue and Sixth Avenue, S. The
Rev. Father Bruce, Priest in Charge,
Celebratin and Holy Eucharist and
Sermon 11 a. m.; Sunday School, 9:3
a. m. Evening Song and Sermon
p. m. A church with welcome to at
PRIMITIVE BAPTIST
---
West Nashville, Sunday school 9:30 a. m.; preaching 11:30 a. m., and 7:30 p. m. Prayer meet Thursday night,
. . .
St. Ell Primitive. The Bible Band meets every Sunday evening at 5:30 o'clock, taught by Sister Syla Hien Donery. Every one is invited to meet us. The Sunday school school opens every Sunday morning at 9:30. Superintendent, Rev. S. Y. Douglass; Secretary, Rev. S. Y. Prescott; Preschool Director, Rev. S. Y. 1:30 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. every Sunday under the auspices of Elder G. Thompson.
CATHOLIC
Holy Family, 543 Third avenue, N
Sunday services 10:30 a.m. Rew
Father Planktett, Priest.
PRESBYTERIAN.
St. Andrew Presbyterian Church
corner 8th avenue and Gav street
Rev. S. Jackson, minister. Telephone
M. 3826. Sunday school 9:30 a. m.
m services 6:30 a. m. 11 a. m and 6:30
Thursday 7:30. choir rehearsal Tuesday
day and Saturday evenings. Church
open daily.
CONGREGATIONAL.
Howard Congregational Church
12th avenue, N, near Church. Services Sunday 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Communion every first Sunday at 11 a. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday night. Miss Frances Banks, church clerk; T. M Broomfield, pastor.
...
St. Mary's Chapel, 2012 Twelfth
avenue, N., Sunday school 9:30 a.m.
preaching 11 a. m.; Y. P. S. C. E. 6
p. m.
A. M. E. ZION.
Hills Chapel Church, corner Lewis
and Short. Sunday school 9 a. m.
Preaching 11 a. m. and 9 p. m. Sundays.
Rev. Z. W. Hill, pastor.
Zion Church Sunday School, Howerton avenue, near Fifth. Sunday services 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.
PENTECOSTAL CHURCHES
Holiness, 605 Twelfth avenue, N
Sunday services at 11:30 a. m. and
7 p. m.
CHRISTIAN CHURCHES.
Lea Avenue Christian Church, 709
Lea Avenue. Services Sunday 11 a
m., and 8 p. m.; Sunday School 2:30;
a. m. Young People's Christian En-
deavor Society, Sunday evening at
7:00 p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday
day night. Elder Preston Taylor
Pastor.
Gay Street Christian Church, Elder
F. J. Smith. Pastor. Services 11 a
m., and 8 p. m.; Sunday School 12:30;
Willing Workers Club every Thursday
day night; Pastor's Aid Society every
Friday night. S. J. Chandler, Clerk.
Willow Street, S. Hill, S. W. Corner
First Avenue. Sunday services 7:30
p. m.
Church of Christ, Charlotte and
46th Avenue North.
---
5
KINKY
HAIR
Kinky Hairdressers Co.
Alabama, Ga.
Geniuses: Before I used
your Exotic Hair
Porado my hair was
wet and it was so
blow it has grown to 6ft
looks long, and is so long
and all it can do it
up any way you want to
conceive you want to
picture to show you how
your hair looks in
44. SALLY REED.
Exalento Medicine Co.
Gentlemen! Before I need
your Exalento Quinine
Blood, earwax, and mop-
age, show me.
Indices long, and is so soft
and silky that I can do it
and an end to my pain.
I am sending my pic-
ture to show you how
you should handle
SALLE REED.
Don't let some fake Kink Remover fool
you. You really can't straighten your hair
until it is nice and long. That's what we
EXELENTO QUININE
POUMIDE
does, remove Dandruff, feeds the Roots of
the hair, and makes it grow long, soft
and silky. After using a few times you can tell
that your hair is pretty and long that you can fix
it up to suit you. If Exelento don't do as
we claim, we will give your money back.
Price 25c by mail on receipt of stamps
or coin.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
Write for particulars.
EXELENTO MEDICINE CO., Atlanta, Ga.
TO GROW LONG, STRAIGHT HAIR
You Need a Real Scalp Food.
There are so many so-called hair growers on the market, a large number of which are nothing more than perfumed grease, it is no wonder people get discouraged and lose faith in all hair tonics. In deciding what to use on your scalp be sure and get a remedy of proven merit. Seeby's Quinade is a highly medicated powder that has stood the test of time. It is a real scalp food; it stimulates and nourishes the roots of the hair, causing a natural growth of long hair. Quinade is the invention of an expert chemist and is made under the experienced reiterated pharmacist. It makes the hair soft and smooth and easy to put up in the style desired.
To get best results from the use of Quinade it is necessary to shampoo the scalp about every two weeks with Seeby's Quinasoap. Quinasoap is made entirely out of pure vegetable oils, principally coconut oil, and is a thorough cleaner. Quinasoap lathers and fuddles the hair soft and fuddly and imparts a refreshing feeling to the scalp unequalled by any other shampoo. Do not accept any substitute, but insist on getting Seeby's Quinade and Seeby's Quinasoap, for them or the full name. Price is 25 cents each. If your druggist or dealer does not obtain these two articles, ask back to obtain them. We will wholesaler or send us the price and We will mail them to you. Seeby Drug Co, 79 East 130 street, New York City.
WHAT
DID
SHE
DO?
NOAH'S HAIR DRESSING
Please if your dealer can supply you send
their necessary substances Manufactured by
BROOKLYN CORP. RICHMOND, VA.
DROPSY!
TREATED ONE WEEK FREE
Short breathing inflicted in a few hours-
swelling, water and urine said removed in
a few days hospitalized. Mothers and
horses. Write for Free Trial Treatment.
COLLUM DROPSY REMEDY CO.
l.apt. KS, VILANT, GA.
The National Life and Accident Insurance Co.
Nashville, Tenn.
Cash Capital $300,000.00
Life, Health and Accident
Insurance in one Policy
Weekly and Monthly Premium
Plan
Lung-Vita Gives Relief From Goughs and Colds
All Colds and Coughs Should Be Treated as Serious, as They Lower Your Resisting Powers.
Nowadays, colds and coughs are recognized as serious by nearly everyone. When they should be treated at once. When they may greatly lower the resisting powers of your body and make you much more capable to attacks of pneumonia and other diseases of like character.
Take no chances with them. Give them attention at once. And you'll find no medicine that will give better results than Lung-Vita. It scatters the congestion, soothes the irritation, catches the phlegm from your lungs and bronchial tubes and enables your system to return to normal.
Get a bottle of Lung-Vita from your druggist or dealer today. It's harmless and can be taken by anyone. It's made from barks, tops, leaves and oils of known medicinal value. And it's economical—a small bottle lasts a long time. (Adv.)
INVESTIGATED EXPENSES OF
SALARIED MEN.
New York Bank, in Devising Plan of Compensation for Its Employees, Collected Interesting Data.
Living costs for the salaried man have received considerable attention from the Bankers' Trust Co., of New York, in devising a method for increase in the pay of its own employees. It has developed a plan whereby salaries are increased generally throughout the force, the maximum percentage of increase being 40%. Salaried employees have suffered more from increased living costs than wage workers, for the demand for manual labor created by the war has had the effect of boosting pay very considerably. The men on fixed salaries have been less fortunate, and in many places their only opportunity to get more compensation to meet the increased cost of living has been based
the trust of their employers.
The trust of their investigators
took as a basis for their work figures
compiled to show the expenditures of
workmen, classified according to their
yearly wage. These figures
that yearly expenditures for food,
among families of workmen receiving
from $500 to $1,399 a year, were
roughly about 45 per cent of the total
income. For men receiving $1,500 a
year the expenditures for food were
8.5 per cent. Within the limits,
$500 and $1,599, expenditures
for clothing, according to this table,
increased from 4.4 to 16.8 per cent;
rent went down from 16.3 per cent;
direw down from 4.1 per cent;
the remainder of the income
for insurance, health, and sundries.
The bank's figures were made to include salaries as high as $2,500 and book into consideration the standards of living required of bank clerks, in respect to clothing, etc. Its investigation showed that such clerks spend roughly 45 per cent of their income for food, to about $1,299 a year. From that figure the expenditures for food declined until they amounted to about 35 per cent for men receiving $2,500. Pent went 25 per cent of the salaries of less highly paid men and about 20 per cent for the men receiving $2,500 a per cent of the pay of the lower salaried men and 20 per cent of the $2,500 men.
Increased compensation allowances were based on the increases in food and other essentials, as shown by figures obtained by Dunc's Bradstreet's the Department of Labor, and the Annalist. These showed general increases in the cost of commodities, ranging from 75.7 to 92.1 per cent in the three years from 1915 to 1918.
In the final development of the increased compensation plan the bank officials based their work on the evidence which indicated that increased living costs bore most heavily on men receiving more than $2,500 were paid men in these classes increases to 40 per cent were given; a clerk receiving $1,200 would get $480 as his increase. The rate of increase declined gradually to 30 per cent in the case of the $2,600 per Employee receiving more than $2,500 were paid $750, the same as the $2,550 when, if they had been employed by the bank a sufficient time to receive the maximum allowance.
FREE STYLE BOOK
MAILED TO
COLORED WOMEN
Every woman should
picture end of her
hair and shade covered
by color. It is important
to maintain your hair.
We are largest
manufacturer
of Colored Wom-
nage Hair. We guarantee
action on every
order and most of
mong refunded.
This solid braun straightening comb with extra layer
of color is the most popular
product for $1.10. Money returned if not satisfied.
POSTPAID $1.10
Sold at manfacturer's price, balmette, comb,
seed be, strands for hair, articles, etc.
HUMANA HAIR COMPANY
22 DUAL STREET CITY
When writing mention name of this paper
You don't have to rub it in to get quick, comforting relief
Once you've tried it on that stiff joint, sore muscle, sciatic pain, rheumatic twinge, lame back, you'll find it warm, soothing relief you never thought a liniment could produce.
Won't stain the skin, leaves no musc, mustes no time in applying, sure to give quick results. A large bottle means economy. Your own or any
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR INFORMATION AND EDUCATION SERVICE, WASHINGTON.
Government Builds "Y" for Negro Workers at Nitro Plant; Modern and Well-Equipped Building Under Direction of Negro Secretaries—Associate Secretary Reports Increased Morale and Efficiency as Result.
No policy was ever better calculated to increase the efficiency and morale of the army at home, the workers who must sustain the army at the front, than that inaugurated by the Government with reference to the Negro workers in the powder plant at Nitro, West Virginia.
At a cost of $15,000 a modern and well-equipped Y. M. C. A. building has been erected for the Negro workmen. It is provided with billiard tables, bowling alleys, baths, baths, a soda fountain, a library of 1,000 volumes, and 30 current periodicals, a moving picture theatre and auditorium. A gymnasium for indoor activities and a swimming pool are soon to be installed.
The supervision of the building and the Y work is under the direction of Negro secretaries, most of whom are men, two or them having studied law, and a university. The addition of men of this type who have broad training and experience and who are capable of winning the confidence and support of both worker and employer, means that this splendid effort by the Government will bring the very best results.
Morale and Efficiency Increased.
An increase in morale and efficiency has been already noted. When asked for an opinion about the Negro workers an official at Nitro recently stated that the Negro employees are the most satisfied and appreciative workers in the plant. This man is a white Tennessee and one who claims much experience with Negro labor. He says he has carefully watched the activities of the laborers and that they "cannot be critiqued." He sums up the experiment by saying: "This Government has provided very liberally for the colored men at this place, and we believe that the colored men have responded, and will continue to respond to the treatment they receive here."
DO NOT LET YOUR POLICY LAPSE.
Caution to Policy-holders—Hold On to Your Insurance—No Other Investment Can Take Its Place.
When you took this policy you intended to give your family something valuable. You are not in the habit of taking back your gifts. If you fail to pay this premium and allow the policy to lapse you will take back your gift! Don't take it back!
Suppose you are short or money. Have you thought that when you are it there is no insurance, that your wife and children will be SHOCK! better make a little personal sacrifice yourself rather than have your family make sacricles which you can avoid. Better pay your premium and keep your policy in force.
The day you insured and received this policy, you were glad. You congratulated yourself on your foretread thought in preparing for the future. Life insurance is the only asset a man leaves that is always worth one annuated cents to the dollar in CASH. Real estate sold after a man's death brings to two thirds of its value stocks and bonus accrual. But Life insurance is 100 per cent immediate Cash. Below are somes of the causes of death for which we have paid claims:
death for which we have paid claims:
Typhoid Fever
Run over by Automobile
Killed on Street Car
Gun Shot Wound
Pneumonia; Never Sick Before
Kicked by Horse
Acute Indigestion
Took Wrong Medicine
Dropped Dead After Preaching
Smothered in Cottonseed Hulls
Drowned
Stuck Nail in His Foot
Fell Out of Tree
Burned to Death
Ran After Car; Fell Dead
Pneumonia
Suppose your turn came in any of these ways. Your family would feel mighty good if your policy was in force.
The only way your policy can lapse is for YOU to fail to pay the premiums.
Standard Life Insurance Company.
Capital Fully Paid $125,000,000.
(Not Fraternal—Nor Assessment.)
First Regular Old Line, Legal Reserve Life Insurance Company Operated by Colored People.
Has Over Six Million Dollars Insurance in Force.
Home Office, 201 Aultura Avenue,
Atlanta, Ga.
Branches in Georgia, Alabama,
Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky,
Missouri, Mississippi, Texas and District of Columbia.
SAFETY WORK IN CALIFORNIA
No Deaths in Construction of Big Building; no Prosecutions of Employers for Unsafe Working Conditions.
California has not found it necessary, since the passage of the workmen's compensation act of that State, to prosecute an employer for maintaining an unsafe place of employment, according to Will J. French a member of the State Industrial Accident Commission.
This does not mean, he admits, that all workrooms are perfect or all working conditions safe, but the employers have shown a readiness to co-operate with the State that has made prosecution unnecessary. Workmen are likewise done their best to co-operate in safety work.
There are still on the average two deaths a day from industrial accidents in the State—a figure which Mr. French considers too high, but he expects fairly continuous improvement in this respect.
In the building of the great Southern Pacific building at the foot of Market Street, San Francisco, every precaution was taken to insure safety in the construction. As a result there were no fatal accidents and only one man was seriously injured. The maximum compensation to work men under the act is $20.83 weekly and the death benefit is $5,000.
NASHVILLE GLOBE. FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1, 1918.
TEACHING HANDING OF WAR
LABOR.
Bureau of Education Describes, in High-School Lessons, Methods of Solving Industrial Problems.
Problems of war organization of industry are outlined in a lesson prepared by the United States Bureau of Education for the upper high school students to show the difficulties that stand in the way of proper utilization of man power.
Wasted man power through strikes, lockouts, and industrial disputes which do not develop so far, through lack of knowledge of labor conditions in every part of the country, and through other causes, are described in the lesson. The necessity of providing good living conditions is strongly emphasized, and as a corollary is deduced the observation that the Government must provide housing where it is necessary—a method already adopted by the Department of Labor:
The need of a spirit of co-operation on the part of the workmen is strongly urged. Waste through excessive labor movement, or "turnover," must be prevented.
The experience of America in the war is then described from the point of view of the labor situation. The work of the National Defense Council is described, and the origin of the labor or industrial service organization of the various Government departments is outlined. The necessity for a more systematic organization of governmental activities dealing with Labor problems led, it is shown, to the formation of the War Labor Board and to the establishment of a number of new bureaus and services in the Department of Labor.
DO IT FOR BABY.
Home Nursing
BY RUTH DANENHOWER WILSON
OF THE XIGILANTES
In these days when doctors and trained nurses are so society needed in military hospitals and among the very sick of the civilians at home, every mother should feel it her patriotic duty to learn as much nursing as possible. By so doing she may often keep her baby from serious illness and keep her nurse to call in a doctor or trained nurse. Keep at hand a clinical thermometer, an enema bag and castor oil and learn the following ways to use them.
learn the following ways to use them.
To take baby's temperature make sure the thermometer is shaken down to below 96 degrees, put vaseline on the bulb and on the baby's anus, insert thermometer gently into the rectum and leave three minutes.
The normal rectal temperature of an infant usually fluctuates between 98 and 99.5 degrees. A rectal temperature of half a degree below or a whole degree above normal is of no importance when a baby has a high temperature give a dose of castor oil, and enema and a sponge bath with cool water. Substitute barley water for the usual food.
The dose of castor oil is half a teaspoon until baby is four months old, a teaspoon up to twelve months, after that two teaspoons. The best time to give it is on an empty stomach not too soon before the next feeding.
To give an enema pour a pint of water at a temperature of 98 F into a fountain syringe bag and add a teaspoonful of salt. Grieve the black rubber tip. Let a little water run through the tube to expel the air, then introduce the tip into the anus. Hang the bag two feet above baby's head and allow the water to pass into the intestine. Half the amount is sufficient for a baby six months old, the whole for a year old. In case intestinal indigestion give a warm first instream twice a day. Connect a soft rubber tube to the douche bag with a glass joiner. Instrre the tube as far into the intestine as it will go easily. Use in the douche bag two quartes of hot water and a teaspoonful of salt to each quart. Let the whole amount of water pass into the intestine and be naturally expelled at the same time.
Never attempt to treat a sore throat for baby without a doctor's advice. Diptheria is often fatal to a baby because of a home-treated sore throat.
KEEP THE SCHOOLS UNTAINTED
By Raymond S. Spears of the Vigilantes.
When anyone applies for work in the camps of among the troops of the United States in France or war service, as a Y. M. C. A., or nKnight of Columbus cantonment assistant, the War Department insists that the applicant's own record be perfectly clean, as a patriot.
Has the subject any relatives or personal friends or business connections in enemy countries?
"Has the subject or his close rela- tion indirectly with any organization or propaganda opposed to the position taken by the U. S. in regard to the war or with known or suspected agents of the enemy?
"Has the subject or his close rela- tives expressed approval (either before or after the war by the U. S.) of Invasion of France and Belgium, the Sinking of the Lusitania, general act of the war by Germany from the humanitarian standpoint?
"Has subject or his close relatives been opposed to entry of the U. S. into the war, acts of the U. S. in conducting the war, shipment of munitions, the selective service act, the Liberty Loans?
"What is subject's general reputation as to Loyalty, Integrity, Moral Character?
The Government will not accept questionable patriots for service in the camps, among the grown men, the soldiers; how important, then is the selection of school teachers to take the pliable and impressive minds of the American school children through thir school lives!
And yet in American school districts, there is now a cold, deliberate and hateful pressure being made by the smypathizers with Germany to get their own people onto school boards and, especially questionable teachers into the class rooms, apparently to forestall the full instruction of children in Americanism.
LITTLE STORIES OF TODAY.
By Theodosia Garrison of the
Vigilantes.
One day a traveler came to a village green upon which a number of citizens stood in a discouraged and
exhausted fashion about a flag-pole. "And who are these men?" asked the traveler. "They are patriotic citizens," he was told, "who are trying to raise the flag to the top of the pole. Each one, however, has his own method of rope-pulling and through they are very willing to raise the flag end end, as you can see, each one is putting all his strength in the work, nothing seems to happen. We spectators are afraid that they will spend so much time in argument that the flag will never be raised at all." "This as very interesting," said the traveler. He approached the group and addressed it, "Patriots," he said, "if you will stand with a moment and all pull the rope steadily in one direction your object will be accomplished." "But we have different ideas of direction they told him, they will discuss those afterward." The traveler, in the meantime let us take one long strong pull together and see what happens."
With much distrust his suggestion was acted upon, the flag went swiftly to the top of the pole and opened NEGRO EMPLOYEES AIDED
Carnegie Steel Co. Provides Them Better living and Recreational Conditions.
The Carnegie Steel Co., of Pittsburgh is trying to better the living as well as recreational conditions under which their Negro employees have been forced to live. They have hired Negro welfare workers in two of their mill centers and are now planning to extend this type of work to theother mill districts.
At the Homestead Steel Works there has been developed a plan for a Negro club house which will contain dormitories, gymnasiums, public baths, community lockers, recreation rooms, and special classrooms for educational work.
WORK IS THE RULE IN COLLEGES.
Military Activities and Serious Demeanor Incident to the War Have Changed Conditions for Students. Work, not "rah-rah," is the keynote of college life this fall in practically every institution in the land. Practically all the college students of the country are entering military organizations, and those who are not are devoting themselves to their studies and to civilian forms of war work with a seriousness seldom witnessed before. The usual college-boy demeanor has been superseded by the necessities of the war, and in uniform or out of it the college men of the Nation are rendering effective service.
WILLIAMSPORT.
Mr. James Alexander Russell was called to October the 18th inst. Mr. G. W. Russell of 2514 Hererman street, arrived Sunday to be the welcome guest of homefolks. Mr. Russell's many friends are pleased to see him looking so stout and strong. The remains of Mr. Thomas Watkins were shipped home the 21st inst., from Camp Sherman for burial. The remains were laid to rest in Kinderhook Cemetery. Rev. G. J. Stanford has closed a very successful year's work at this place. Rev. Stanford left for Godwin Tuesday to be in the annual session of the Columbia District Tennessee Annual Conference. Mrs. James Church was hostest Oct. the 20th inst. The dining room was decorated with the choicest flowers of the season, colors, yellow, white and green. Those to enjoy the hospitality were Mrs. W. M. Johnson, R. G. J. Stanford, M. M. Johnson, R. G. J. Stanford, Mrs. John Tucker, Mrs. Lawrence Watkins, Mrs. Mrs. Ephraim Bryant and Mr. L. E. Buford. A six course menu was served. Misses Christine and Willie Church assisted their mother in serving King Solomon's Order, Jones No. 20 held a grand session the 17th inst. Four new members were inst. This order is a grand institution. The remains here from Franklin, the 27th for burial. The remains were accompanied by the family. It will be remembered that Mr. Russell was one of the drafted men who went to Cleveland, O., a few weeks ago. He was discharged on account of a weak limb. He was exempted several weeks before he returned home. The funeral services were Sunday at 3:00 p. m. Rev. B. B. Flowers officiated. Mr. L. R. Tucks is indisposed at this writing. His many friends wish for him a speedy recovery Mrs. L. C. George is convalescent. The farmers are quite busy sewing ..... Mr. and Mrs. Curtie Church spent Monday in Columbia shopping. Mr. and Mrs. Walt Hooks made a business trip to Columbia Monday.
SHELBYVILLE.
Mrs. Felix Allen, widow of the late Fork Allen, has received a check from the endowment department of the kings of Pythias for $400. The promptness with which the claim was settled speaks well for the management of the K. P. Ortig. Rev. Moore, the new pastor of Scotts Chapel, has arrived. we hope the bau will soon be lited so he can begin his work. he comes with an excellent reputation, and we are satisheu he will do well. Mrs. Elaine Bain continues on the sick list to the regret of her many friends. Some apprehension is tells as to her being able to resume her school work. The school will be at a loss without her. Dr. Bias is hoping to be out next week. Mr. Gillespie Little has been called to the beaside of his mother, Mrs. Carrie Littie, who continues quite ill. Mrs. Eleanora Tillman has received a very interesting letter from her son, Sidney Davidson, who is oversees. Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Price and daughter have recovered from the influenza. Mrs. Una Dryden has about recovered from her recent sickness. Mr. Tom Hines was called to Nashville to the bedside of his daughter, Miss Alma. Miss Pauline Davidson has been very ill in Nashville. She has been employed at the colored Savings Bank. Mr. Allen Brown has returned from the Bend. He has purchased a wool and buggy. Miss Mary Mayo here from Nashville. Mich. She is the picture of health. Mr. A. J. Scott has returned north. The good school boys and girls are becoming impatient. The agony will soon be over.
Our baby ward will soon be completed.
North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association
Home Office: Durham, North Carolina C. C. SPAULDING, General Manager Strongest Negro Insurance Company in the World
Insurance in Force.....$11,157,472.00 Paid in Claims since Organization.....1,736,504.50
Deposited with Insurance Depart-
ments.....130,000.00 Liberty Bonds Bought.....110,000.00
Total Income, 1917.....624,794.31 War Saving Stamps (all allowed).....1,000.00
Policies Issued From $500.00 to $5000.00
We Can Furnish Your Home Complete From Partor to Kitchen.
We Take Old Goods as First Payment; Balance Weekly or Monthly
304-306-308 BROADWAY NASHVII-LE, TENN.
will take care of you."
FIGHTING
FOR
DEMOCRAFT
PORO-SYSTEM
ST. LOUIS, MU.
PORO"COLLEGE COMPANY
BIBLE THOUGHTS
WITH
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
This great little volume is worthy of a place in any library. The minister that has not the time to peruse the Bible daily should carry this most helpful little book, with him at all times. Though the questions asked are very deep, the answers are very clear and easy to understand.
In these times of higher education this book of valuable information holds a position near the top. We only have a limited number of the last edition on hand.
These may be had for 25 cents each
SEND ALL ORDERS TO
NATIONAL BAPTIST PUBLISHING BOARD
R. H. BOYD, D. D., Secretary
523 Second Avenue N., Nashville, Tenn.
Excellent Opportunities for Live Agents Throughout the State.
CILARY E. HOWSE
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FIGHTING FOR DEMOCRACY
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BIBLE THO
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These may be had for 2
SEND ALL ORDER
NATIONAL BAPTIST PUBLI
R. H. BOYD, D. D., S
523 Second Avenue N.,
MULBERRY.
MULBERRY.
St. John A. M. E. Church doors have been closed since October 6th. However, the influenza has visited only a few homes among the colored people. Brother Cal Newcoms, Lesley Smith and Wm. Fox, these are the ones can make a heavy impression when they tell how the influenza works on the human frame. We thank God for his watchfulness and for not allowing the influenza to claim them as its victims. Mrs. H. E. Bailey, our teacher of this community is without restlessness over the fun, only waiting for the time to call her little ones to prepare them for usefulness. Mrs. Bailey also has the right to work in the school work, serving as the superintendent in St. John A. M. E. Church. Mr. Carl Parks has returned to Turner College. Mrs. Omega and Anster Deny spent Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Laura Brown, October 27 with Mrs. Annie Parks. They were delighted to be with these two great women. Mrs. Bettie Parks attended
---
Address
IRA T. BRYAN
Nashville, Tennessee, Tenn.
BROS.
BESS AND CARPETS
EVERYBODY
complete From Parlor to Kitchen.
ent; Balance Weekly or Monthly
NASHVILLE, TENN.
at the front
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PORO-SYSTEM
ST. LOUIS, MO
EGE COMPANY
Department "M"
HOUGHTS
WITH
BIND ANSWERS
A little volume is worthy
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Bible daily should car-
most helpful little book,
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every deep, the answers
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Other education this book
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a limited number of
all for 25 cents each
ORDERS TO
PUBLISHING BOARD
D. D., Secretary
Nashville, Tenn.
the bedside of her husband, Mr. Harmon Parks, at Camp Sherman. Another Esther is among us. This was greatly manifested when the message came from government authority to look for Harmon Parks at any time, as he was very low. In a short time Mrs. Bettie was on the train, around the curves, through the tunnels until she reached her destination. She went to the hospital office. Permit was given with the understanding she must have on a mask to prevent further spread of the flu. This she consented to. Through the different rooms of the hospital, among the dead and dying soldiers, hearing the groans of the sick, seeking for her sick husband. By the consent of the doctor, after she found him helpless, she was at liberty to play the wife's part to a sick husband. Gladly she went to work. In two or three days her hope was strengthened, her sad heart was made glad and today she reports great improvement. It is the proud hope of this community that Mr. Harmon will soon be able again
---
THE EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
Will promote a full Growth of Hair. Will also Restore the Strength, Visually and the Beauty of the Hair. If Your Hair is Dry and Wry Try to
EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
If you are bathered with Falling Hair, Dandruff, Itching Scalp, or any Hair Trouble, we want you to try a jar of East India Hair Grower. The Remedy contains proteins that go to the roots of the hair, stimulate the skin, helping nature to do its work, leave the hair soft and silky. Perform with a b lm of a thousand flowers. The best known remedy for Heavy and Beautiful Black Eyebrows; also restores Gray Hair to Its Natural Color. Can be used with Hot Iron for Straightening.
Price, Selt by Mall, 50c. Be Extra for Postage.
AGENTS' OUTFIT
1 Hair Grower, 1 Tangle Oil, 1 Shampoo, 1 Preshing Oil, 1 Face Cream and Direction for similar, $2.00.
S. D. LYONS, General Agent,
314 East Second St.
OKLAHOMA, OKLAHOMA.
100 extrafar postage.
Mrs. Julia Williams, President
Willie Belle Flagg, Vice President
UBEDELIGHTED CAFETERIA
1622 Jefferson Street
Colored Goods a Specialty
Main 2748
Fuchsia B. Miller, Secretary
Marian M. Hadley, Treasurer
PLOUGHS
HAIRDRESSING
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MEMPHIS.
TENN.
WE SELL THE EARTH
Buy and Sell Real Estate, Build and
Repair Horses, Secure Tenants and
Collect Rentals, Improve and Redeem
Property. Terms to call. Call on
us before going elsewhere.
THE STAR REALTY & INVESTMENT CO.
(Incorporated)
Office
410 CEDAR STREET
People's Savings Bank
& Trust Co. Building
PHONE MAIN 2554
Relieves CATARRH
the BLADDER
and all
Discharges in
24 HOURS
with appropriate
certificate
to take his place by the side of others in this world war, fighting for democracy and for Mrs. Bettie to return home safely again.
Mr. Henry Sanders, 1516 Mary street, was recently operated on.
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NASHVILLE GLOBE, FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1, 1918.
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENTS
ON
NASHVILLE
GL
ANNOUNCEMENT
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT TO THE READERS
SHVI
LOF
NASHVILLE GLOBE
For more than four years the publishers of periodicals have had to face the rising tide of costs. Fully as much-perhaps more-than other lines of business, they have felt the fast-increasing burdens of the war.
To this total must be added the printing and binding costs, that are advancing step by step with all the other processes that enter into the making of THE NASHVILLE GLOBE. A new schedule of printing and binding prices recently went into effect, adding $75.00 a week to our operating costs. This is only one step in the successive advances that we have experienced in this particular branch of manufacture. Added to all these are the increases in editorial expenses and all the multifarious charges that are included under the general term "over head charges."
The publishers of THE NASHVILLE GLOBE have watched the prices of other papers advance from five to ten cents a copy, from ten to fifteen cents, and in some instances from fifteen to twenty cents. By increased economies in operation and by careful and painstaking business planning they have so far been able to maintain the low subscription prices of THE NASHVILLE GLOBE, hoping that for the duration of the war it would not be necessary to place any share of this burden of increased cost on the subscribers.
These facts will clearly indicate that the fifty cents increase we ask for a year's subscription for THE NASHVILLE GLOBE does not even cover the increase in the manufacturing cost of the paper. In view of this we believe our many friends will consider this advance reasonable, just and conservative.
We regret to say that this is no longer possible and that the time has come when it is imperative that we make a slight advance in our subscription rates. You may have noticed the announcement in last week's issue that the annual subscription rate for THE NASHVILLE GLOBE is now $2 instead of $1.50.
We do not wish to leave our readers under the impression that this advance in price is permanent. When the war is over and normal and natural economic reactions bring about a decrease in the cost of labor and material, our subscribers can expect a corresponding reduction in the cost of their paper.
It is almost unnecessary for us to explain to our readers the reasons for this action. The simple statement that the present low subscription price of THE NASHVILLE GLOBE has long since ceased to cover even the bare manufacturing cost of the paper is almost sufficient.
In figuring this increase in price we have taken no account of the increase in the second class postage-rates. Last July a zone-postage law became effective. This law establishes a complicated system of postal rates for all publications that will eventually result in a heavy postage tax on paper subscribers.
We are just completing new contracts for our paper supply for the coming twelve months. The advances in the cost of the paper alone needed to supply an individual year's subscription of fifty-two numbers of THE NASHVILLE GLOBE will be $1.28 more than the price we paid for the same amount of paper prior to America's entry into the war.
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★★★★★★★★★★
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OF THE
THE NASHVILLE GLOBE.