Savannah Tribune
Saturday, July 19, 1913
Savannah, Georgia
Page text (machine-generated)
The
New School Plans Accepted
WILL HAVE ACCOMMODATION FOR ABOUT 1000 CHILDREN
Will Hare Twenty Rooms—Industrial and Domestic Science Departments to be Main Features—To be Steam Heated—Class Rooms will be 24x36 Feet
Plans for the new Haven Home school were formerly accepted this week and the building which will cost approximately $40,000 will be in course of erection during the coming winter.
The new school as planned will be, when finished, one of the finest public schools in the south for Negroes and will accommodate about one thousand children. The new school will be the first grammar school of the city to have the industrial and domestic science departments. It is planned to have house sanitation, sewing, laundrying, the preparation of meals, the proper methods of nursing children, housekeeping and other industries taught.
The building will be a two-story brick structure with all the latest conveniences. It will also have an emergency hospital ward room, an office for the principal and library. Ten class-rooms, with the library and principal's office, will be on the ground floor, while on the second floor will be ten class rooms with the emergency ward. The building will be steam-heated and the rooms will be 24 by 36 feet. The main entrance to the school will be on Anderson Street.
ANNIVERSARY OF ST. JOHNS
BAPTIST CHURCH ENDS
TUESDAY
Church Has Membership Of 2865
The anniversary of St. John's-Baptist church, Hartridge street, Rev. William Gray, pastor, was begun on last Monday night and will end on Tuesday night with a jubilee by the members and friends of the church. Each night of the anniversary has been very largely attended and the program very interesting. On tomorrow Rev. W. A. Daughtry, pastor of Mt. Bethel will preach at the morning service, and Rev. Daniel Wright will speak at night. On Monday night Rev. L. A. Townsley will deliver the sermon and a banquet will be held after the services. St. Johus Baptist church is one the largest and best attended churches in the city and has a membership of 2865. Rev. John Grove was the first pastor of the church, and after three years he was succeeded by the Rev. Wm. Gray, the present pastor, who has made it one of the strongest churches in the city-
Negro Employment Bureau Established
During the past two weeks there has been established at 457 West Broad street a Negro employment bureau. This new enterprise among the Negroes of the city is known as the Negro Employment Exchange and is managed by Prof. L. B. Thompson, of the Georgia State Industrial College, and Mr. Wm. J. Jackson-Messrs. Thompson and Jackson will endeavor to supply efficient help in all lines of work and the exchange will undoubtedly be of much service to those out of employment or seeking more lucrative places. The management is endeavoring to get into touch with all the big firms of the city and will be of much assistance to the Negroes of the city provided the management is able to carry out their plans.
Mrs. A. S. Lloyd of 736 Waldburg street, east, will leave on Sunday for Port Royal and Braufort. While in the former place she will be the guest of Mrs Anna Smalls and in Beaufort, she will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H G. Fisher. Mr. Lloyd will accompany Mrs. Lloyd.
Mr. Albert S. Beaten of Charleston. S. C., spent the week in the city visiting relatives and friends.
VOLUME XXVIII
PROPO
Over Home News, Beaufort S. C.
中学校
(J. S. Blocker Correspondent)
Mr. R. Carr, Jr., was in the city last week on business.
Miss Mamie Rivers died at her home in Savannah, Saturday July 12th. The remains were brought over on Sunday for interment on St. Helena Island, her former home. She was the daughter of Mr. J. R. Rivers, formerly of St. Helena but now of Savannah. Sympathy goes out to the entire family.
Miss Bessie Singleton, of Savannah, was in the city last week for a few days.
Mrs. Irene Moultrie came over on the St. John Baptist church's excursion on the 7th, also Mrs. Kelly, her friend.
Beaufort is to have a musical treat. The famous Tuskegee Institute band is to play here on the 16th and 17th of August.
The many friends of Mr. Wm. Washington will regret to learn of his death which occurred Saturday morning at 3 o'clock at his home on Prince street, after an illness of three weeks. His death came as a shock. Mr. Washington was esteemed very highly by both races. He was about 27 years of age and has lived in Beaufort for more than nine years, where he made a host of friends. He was a very prominent member of Acme Lodge K. of P. No. 78. The funeral services which were held at his home Saturday morning, were conducted by Rev. A. W. Waller, pastor of the F. A. B. church. He was laid to rest at his old home Mt. Carmel Baptist Church Cemetery, Keans Neck, with Pythian honors. The funeral was in charge of Jas. Riley and Son embalmers and undertakers.
Among those that came over on the St. John Baptist church excursion from Savannah on last Monday were Mr. J. S. Lloyd, also Mr. W. W. Devaugh of 507 Bowen street.
Mrs. Lucy Mitchell and her daughter, Miss Jestine, left for Fall River, N. Y., last week, where they will remain for the summer.
Mr. R. N. Moore and his wife, Mrs. Eliza Moare, have been very sick for the past two weeks at their home on Charles street.
One of the most beautiful home weddings that have taken place at Earley Branch for some time was that of Mr. Abraham Riley of this city and Miss Leslie Brown of Early Branch, on Sunday 29th of June, Rev. A. W. Waller officiating.
Hon. J. I. Washington, for more than 11 years deputy collector at this Port, resumes his law practice after July 15th at which time his office as deputy collector will be abolished by a recent act of Congress, putting the Beaufort office under the district of Charleston Hon. Washington will be pleased to have his Savannah friends consult him at his new suite of offices in the Auditorium Building. The Good Samaritians of this city carried a record breaking crowd over to Savannah on Sunday night. All reported a good time on their return to Beaufort,
Sermon at St. Stephen's
The sermons by the Rev. Mr. Parris at St. Stephen's were greatly enjoyed last Sunday by an appreciative congregation. His subject to-morrow morning will be "Man." The evening subject, "The Non-Prodigal Son." A welcome for all who attend.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1913
Charity Hospital Makes Appeal
ASKS FRIENDS TO CONTRIBUTE FOR FURTHER IMPROVEMENTS
Operating Room Enameled and Sky Light Placed in—Hospital to be Moved to Allow Street Opening—Campaign for Funds Started
During the past three weeks Charity Hospital, 30th and Florence streets, has been undergoing several improvements, which have added materially to the looks and effectiveness of the institution.
Chief among these improvements have been the enameling of the walls and ceiling of the operating room and the placing therein of a sky light. For some time the hospital staff has been greatly inconvenienced in performing operations on account of a lack of light in the operating room, due to the condition of the room and the fact that there was no means of admitting light through the ceiling. Therefore, the recent improvements have eliminated this inconvenience and made it one of the most modern operating rooms to be found in the city.
Further improvements to the hospital are anticipated by the board of trustees. These include the enlarging of the institution, the purchasing of the adjoining lot and moving of the building about ten feet to the front and about an equal distance to the castward, caused by the opening up of Thirty-fifth street lane and the widening of Florence street.
Recently there has been organized by the institution an association of former students and graduates of the nurse training department, whose object it is to further the interests of the hospital and assist in raising funds. This association met last Wednesday afternoon and authorized certain members to collect subscriptions from friends of the institution.
In order to effect the contemplated plans of the institution a considerable amount of money is needed, and it is thought that the friends of the institution will rally to its support and assist in raising the needed money.
There has been established a "Permanent Improvement Fund" to the institution and the money given by friends will apply directly to this fund.
Those who are authorized by the hospital association to solicit subscriptions to this fund are Mrs. A. E. Randolf, Mrs. George LeGare, Mrs. A. B. G. Carr, Mrs. Mintie Cannal, Mrs. Sarah Haywood, Mrs. L. A. Newton, Miss Maria Gardeen, Miss Georgia Saunders, Miss A. E. Williams, Mrs. S. Louise Maiden, Mrs. L. E. Wilson and the members of the hospital staff. The next meeting of the association will be on the 30th of this month.
The Carnegie Library Fund
The Curators through the secretary, Prof. H. Pearson, acknowledge the following contributions to the Carnegie Library Fund: Mr. Walter S. Scott $40 completing his subscription of $50.00; Boys of Pleasure $2.50 completing their subscription of $5 00 Mr. Scott's contribution is the largest to made by any individual or society. Who next? Mr. Scott is lonesome; who will join his society? It costs only $50.00. H. Pearson, Sec'ty.
Must Treat All Patrons Courteous
COMPANY WILL NOT TOLE-
RATE MIS-TREATMENT
OF NEGROES
Reprimands Conductor Who
Mistreats Colored Girl—Em-
ployees Must be Courteous to
Both Colored and White Patrons.
That the Savannah Electric Company means for all of its employees to be courteous to all patrons of its lines was unmistakably shown in a letter from the acting manager of the company to Mr. J.C. Lindsay who protested against the discourteous treatment of a Negro girl who was riding home on a Battery Park car on the night of the 5th of this month and who was spoken to by the conductor of the car on which she was riding in a very discourteous manner.
Mr. Lindsay who was riding home on the car which the Negro girl boarded, and overheard the insulting remarks which the conductor addressed to her, spoke to the conductor of his mistreatment of the young woman, but the reply which he received from the conductor was of a very aggravating sort, and he (Mr. Lindsay) therefore, wrote to the manager of the company, protesting against the unwarranted and discourteous treatment which the conductor accorded the young lady and also himself.
The reply which Mr. Lindsay received from his letter shows that the management of the company will not countenance any unfair or discourteous treatment to any of its patrons and that they all, both colored and white, must be treated with utmost courtesy by the employees of the line. The communication of Mr. Lindsay, telling of the incident which happened on the car. and the reply of Acting Manager H. C. Foss are as follows: "Savannah, Ga., July 8, 1913. "The Manager,
"Sav'h Electric Co.
"Cit
"Dear Sir:
"Saturday, July 8th, at 9:45 p.m., a Negro girl boarded a Battery Park car, No. 454, at the corner of Duffy and West Broad streets, and handed the conductor, whose cap number was 50, her transfer in payment of her fare, and quietly took a back seat. It became necessary for the car to wait at the corner of Anderson and West Broad streets, until the car which was at the south end of the line pass. While waiting there, the Negro girl took out her change, and began counting it, and the conductor who seemed to have been a new man, stood up over the girl, reaching out his hand and remarking to the girl, 'Haven't you looked at that little money long enough?' She thereupon inquired of him, 'How did that matter concern you?' He (the conductor) remarked that he wanted his fare. She assured him that she had paid upon entering the car, with a transfer ticket, and asked him if he did not remember it. He thereupon acknowledged the payment, but said, 'You niggers is such dead beats, is why I asked you again.'
"About this time the motorman heard his loud mouthing.jn the rear and came to the rear end of the car and asked what his trouble was. After being told, he smiled and returned to the front end.
"I then made the remark to the conductor that I thought it very
SACRED CONCERT AT FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH TOMORROW
Mr. Spelghts to be Leading Sololists
On to-morrow afternoon as 4:30 o'clock there will be a sacred concert at the First Congregational church. The main feature of the program will be Mr. William Speights of Boston, Mass. Mr. Speights is one of the best known Negro tenor soloists in the country, and as was demonstrated several months ago in his recital here at the Beach Institute, possesses a voice of great range and sweetness.
Mr. Speights will render several selections and the best local talent will appear on the program. Prof. R. W. Gadsden has charge of the program and a real treat awaits the crowd which will undoubtedly be out. Admission is free, but there will be a silver offering taken.
Six Pass Teachers' Examination
Of the applicants who stood the teachers' examination for positions in the Chatham county schools, six succeeded in passing. They are Misses Clinton Dingle, Frederica Johnson, Harriet Jones, Delphene Stoney, Mattie Victory and Dorothy Williams. Among those to resign from the system is Mrs. Florence H. Robinson, for many years a teacher in the city schools.
unkind in him to make such remarks to his inoffensive passenger, and especially to a female. He shouted out to me. 'What it takes to cool you and your kind, I have it in my pocket.' I assured him that his conduct would be forthwith reported to the proper authority, as the corporation did not stand for that kind of treatment to its inoffensive passengers.
"In view of the fact, that I and hundreds of other Negro men and women find it absolutely necessary to use the cars daily, going to and from our work, to say nothing about our churches and various organizations, which patronize your various lines, from time, to time on outings, I consider the unwarranted conduct of this conductor outrageous and deserving, of your prompt attention.
"And on behalf of my people, I feel that I would not be asking too much of you, to be assured by you, that this man, who seems to be determined and bent straining the friendly relations now existing between the intelligent and industrious portion of both races in this community, be removed from this position, where he will be forced to come in contact with an inoffensive people, for whom he shows so much intense hate. . .
"I feel that your company stands ready and is willing to give to the humblest peasant a square deal. Your reply in regards to the treatment, which I may expect in the future, is anxiously awaited.
"Signed J. C. Lindsay."
"Savannah, Ga., July 9, 1913.
"Mr.' J. C. Lindsay."
"509 West Broad Street.
"We beg to acknowledge receipt of your letter of July 8th, in which you report the discourteous conduct of one of our conductors on Battery Park car No. 454, on the evening of July 5th.
"We have investigated the matter very carefully, and it is our belief that the conductor was courteous, and we have reprimanded him accordingly, and have explained to him carefully the absolute necessity of treating passengers, both colored, as well as white, courteously at all times. Inasmuch as it is the first report we have had against the conductor, we do not feel that it is proper to dismiss him from the service, and we hope that the means we have taken to impress the matter upon him will have good results.
"We beg to assure you that it is our desire that our employees treat all passengers, whether colored or white, with the utmost courtesy.
"We thank you for bringing the matter to our attention, and trust you will have no further cause for complaint.
Tuskegee Band Will. Play Here
TO APAEAR AT SAVANNAH
THEATER NIGHT OF
AUGUST 18TH
Band is Composed of Forty-
Seven Musicians—Tour of
Band Through North and
West a Great Success—Local
Charities to Get Aid.
On Monday night, August 18th, 1913, the people of Savannah will be given the much looked for pleasure of hearing Professor N. Clark Smith and his Tuskegee Institute Band, Orchestra and Glee Club, consisting of 47 pieces, at the Savannah Theater. The band started on June 1st, a tour of the western states, the northern and southeastern states. They have met with unstinted praise and encouragement throughout the trip in the west and are playing before crowded houses in the north.
The coming of this organization, with Captain Smith at its head, is really a treat for Savannah. Captain Smith, as every one knows, stands in the forerank of Negro musicians and composers, and his knowledge and love of music he has diligently and successfully imparted to the Negro lads under him. Capt. Smith's record is an enviable one. Among his many achievements is that for four years he was band master of the 8th Regimental Illinois State Militia. He is also known and recognized as an exponent of composers of Negro folk song. Capt. Smith is an attraction by himself.
The band is coming here under the auspices of the Local Branch of the National Negro Business League, of which Mr. A. B. Singfield is president, Mr. J. C. Ling-say, vice president and Mr. W. W. Hill, secretary, the names of these men guarantee you a concert of merit. A portion of the proceeds is to be given to Charity Hospital and the Old Folks' Home—two worthy charities.
The Business League is not asking your support because the personnel of this band is Negroes, not because the proceeds are to be given to charity, but because they are bringing before the Negro public of Savannah an organization that know music and know how to render it.
Make your reservations now. Do not wait until the last minute. For reservations, see Walter S. Scott, 468 West Broad street. Information will be gladly furnished by any member of the League: Seats 25c., 50c., 75c. Box seats $1.00.
Mr. G. H. Bowen Asked to Sell Macon Real Estate
On last Tuesday, Mr. G. H. Bowen made a hurried trip to Macon in response to a request of the trustees of Morris Brown College, who were meeting there. Morris Brown College owns a tract of about six hundred acres of land in East Macon, and the meeting Tuesday of the board of trustees of the university was called for the purpose of considering the advisibility of placing about one third of this tract, approximately 1000 lots, on sale. Mr. Bowen has met with much success in the sale of real estate in this city and the members of the board, feeling that he would be just the man to handle the proposition which they were about to put on the market, requested his presence at the meeting. The proposition as offered Mr. Bowen by the board is a flattering one and he has taken it under advisement. The subdivision which Mr. Bowen is asked to handle is very desirable property and the chances are more than even that if he accepts the handling of it he will be equally as successful in disposing of it as he has been in his deals in this city.
Mrs. Nancy Simmons of Jacksonville. Fla., is in the city visiting Mrs. M. G. Graham, of York street, west.
Prof. B. S. Ingram of Macon, Ga., Grand Master of the Odd, Fellows of Georgia, spent several days in the city this week.
Monumental Church
Services at the Mother Church last Sunday were grand, and all who failed to hear them missed a treat that may never be offered again. Rev. H. Henderson, of West Palm Beach, Fla., a delegate to the B. Y. P. U., preached an excellent sermon at 11 o'clock, from Timothy 2nd, chapter, 3rd, verse, subject, "Christian Endurance." Everyone was made happy by his forceful sermon. In the afternoon, the funeral of Mrs. Belle Watson, was conducted by the pastor, Rev. L. A. Townsley, assisted by Rev. James Gillens of Birmingham, Ala. The deceased was, for a number of years, associated with the Sunday school, choir, and the different boards of the church. In the evening at 8:30 o'clock, Rev. A. L. James, of Ocala, Fla., another delegate, preached a wonderful sermon. Mrs. S. A. Townsley has been quite sick, but is convalescing now. The services are always inspiring and one can find no better place to go than o the church. A cordial welcome awaits all, free pews, plenty of fans, and as fine a sermon as one can hear anywhere, with good singing to cheer one who is despondent. Services Sunday: early sunrise prayer meeting, Sunday school 9:30 a.m., preaching 11 a.m., and 8 p. m., Allen Christian Endeavor at 6 p. m. You are invited.
F. B. 3. Churchi
On Sunday morning there was quite a large attendance at church. The services were conducted by Rev. C. Walker. He read for the lesson Ps. 101. His text was from Ps. 101:2. The subject was "David's vow and profession of Godliness." The subject was fully and profitably discussed. Rev. Wright introduced Dr. Prittechett, proprietor of the East Side Pharmacy, who made a few cheering remarks and bade us "go on." At night the church was crowded, Rev. Wright read for the lesson Ps. 23r. He then introduced Rev. A. Hitt, of Knoxville, Tennessee, president of the State Baptist Convention of Tennessee, who preached: very pointed and striking sermon from St. John 1:38. The subject was, "Where dwellest thou." We were delighted to hear Rev. Hitt. We are always glad to welcome strangers and cheer the weary traveler. A collection was taken to assist in the work he represented. "Visit our church at any time."
Beth-Eden Baptist Church
Corner Lincoln and Gordon Streets.
Corner Lincoln and Gordon Streets.
We are very sorry that the pastor, Rev. N. M. Clark, who has been confined to his room for the last few days is still not able to be out, but very glad that he is very much better, and hope to have him with us again soon. The Rev. A. L. James of Fernandina, Fla., preached a fine sermon Sunday morning on "Transfiguration." At night we were favored with another good sermon by Rev. William Bennett of Atlanta, who preached from the text, Psalm 84:11, "For the Lord God is a sun and shield." Services tomorrow is follows: prayer service 6:30 a.m., Sunday school 9:45 a.m., preaching 11 a.m., B. Y. P. U., 7 p. m., preaching 8:30 p. m. We welcome all.
---
A Successful Meeting
The forty first annual session of Mount Olive Baptist Association convened With Richmond Baptist Church, Rev. E. Thomas pastor, Montieth, Ga., July 9th, 1913. The meetings were largely attended, and those present showed a great deal of enthusiasm. The sessions were harmonious, a number of new, churches were added to the financial part was quite a success. Too much praise cannot given the board of deacons, especially Deacons R. Steele and H.ton, and the ladies who assisted in caring for the delegates royally. On Sunday an old union Georgia barbecue was had in a watermelon cutting, during which 200 of Montieth's deliciousions were served. Over three hundred persons enjoyed the hospitality of these good folks. Therowing officers were elected for ensuing year: Rev. John Wilkins, moderator, Brunswick, Ga.; W. L. Jones, vice-modera, Savannah; L. A. Washington, park, Savannah; Mrs. V. Bugg,istant clerk, Brunswick; Dea, O. M. Bugg, treasurer, Brunswick; Rev. E. D. Nichols, missionary, Savannah. The next voting will convene the Thursday before the second Lord's day July 1914, with Tabernacle Baptist Church, Huntingdon street, West, Savannah, Ga., Rev. E. D. Davis, pastor.
Evangelical Ministers' Union The Evangelical Ministers' Union met Tuesday with Rev. W. W. Daughtry. presiding Dervo-
tional service was conducted by Rev. R. H. Singleton' Reys. J. F. Gillins and Wm. Bennett visited the union and made short addresses. Rev. G. W. Campbell also was among the visitors. The topic of the day, "Moses influence on Modern Christian Life," was discussed by the union, as the writer was absent Rev. R. H Singleton led the discussion. Next Tuesday will be a paper by Rev. J. A. Martin's subject, "The Relation between Science and Religion." Visitors always welcome.
Among the Masons
The Grand Chapter O. E. S. meets August 6, at Waycross.
To be a true Mason is to be a true man and a true man is God's ideal of perfection. I honor the names of the noble exemplars of its teachings, in all the ages, and I love the brothers wherever they may be found. —
It is a considerable of a blunder to take out your dimit from your Lodge because you cannot have your own way, it is a mistake, because the lodge can do without you much better than you can, do without the Lodge and the Masonic tramp is not a lovely object, however you may regard him.—Los Angeles Freemason.
"As Masons we should endure to cultivate a disposition that will be agreeable to all mankind. In other words, we should instill into our daily life the true teachings of Masonry, so that the prafune world can see that there is true merit in Masonry. When we do this we will have more seekers after mystic rites.—The Masonic News.
It is suggested that Masonic Lodges follow the example of the churches, and hold peace meetings. Every meeting of a Masonic lodge is a peace meeting, for one of the most solemn teachings of Freemasonry is brotherly love, and that our brother belongs to every nation and every race. Masonry never, directly or indirectly, fomented a war.—Texas Freemason MASONRY IN TIME OF WAR
When, after four long years of war, when hundreds of thousands of men had lost their lives struggling to capture Richmond, at last it felt, when that worn and starving "Pain Gray Lite" had crossed the river and burned the bridges, the foe came marching in as a column of cavalry 'murched up Franklin street, while the fire was raging in the city, thousands of Negroes set free in a moment, while hoodlums, spies, desetters and criminals of every sort were burning and pillaging, all law and order was gone; at this dreadful time the colonel of a regiment saw our emblems and the words "Masonic Hall."
He halted the column and placed a guard, all Masons over the oldest Masonic building in America. He thus preserved records back to 1787.—Rt, Wor. Bro. Dr. Jos. W. Eggleston of Virginia.
THE MASTER
The lodge is ruled by a master. The word Master comes to us from the Latin Magister—a chief, director or magistrate; and ultimately from a Sanscrit word, signifying great. To this day a ruler over great territories in India is called a majharajah, or great king, just as the Persian monarch styled himself great king or king of kings. But until comparatively recent times the Lodge was ruled by a Warden. The Master was the employer or "lord" for whom the work was done. He seldom appeared among the men, though on extraordinary occasions he may have graced their meetings by his presence. At a later date, it was the custom of Masons, as of other artisans, to place themselves under the protection of some powerful men, who guarantee to them their ancient privileges and promoted their interest. If this protector appeared among them, it would be as a superior, before whom they uncovered. In some jurisdictions the Master wears his hat in open Lodge. May this not be a survival of the old habit of the master or lord remaining covered in the presence of his employees or dependents?—A. T. Freed, in Masonic Sun.
TO SUBDUE OUR PASSIONS
One of the objects of speculative Masonry is to learn to subdue our passions.
It is truly a pitiable thing to see a man whose passions have domination over him—who is, indeed, the slave of his passions. His will power is overcome, his life is wrecked. his God-given powers are engulfed in the evil maelstrom of his unholy desires.
His short life is lived to no purpose the world is worse because of his having lived in it, he is an influence for harm and not for good.
Masonry is intended to strengthen the weak-willed, to aid the faltering, to give power to those who are battling bravely against their evil passions.
The lesson so strongly taught in the lodge-room, the brotherly admonition outside of the lodge room, the friendly hand, the kindly aid—all these tend powerfully to assist the tempted Mason to subdue his passons and improve himself in morality.
And thus may Masonry continue to assist us to daily increase in faith, hope and charity, and in every moral and social virtue.—Herald.
MASONIC DATING
The Masonic dating is a matter of mystery to many members. The other day, glancing up at the figures 5877, on the Masonic Temple in Rome a Mason asked me "What does that mean?" It isn't the number of the building is it?" Others have asked me what the letter A. L. after the Mosaic year means.
The matter is very simple, once it is understood. To find the "Year of Light." Anno Lucis, or "A. L." used in the Blue Lodge Masonry, add 4000 to the current year, Anno Domini or A. D. The year 1913 corresponds to the Year of Light. A. L. 5913.
To find the Hebrew Year, Anna Hebraico, the date, used by the Scottish Rite, add 3760 to the current year. The year 1911 corresponds to the Hebrew Years 5771-5772.
To find the Year of the Discovery, Anno Inventions, used by the Royal Arch, add 530 to the current year. The year 1913 corresponds to Year of the Discovery A. I. 2433.
To find the Year of the Deposit, Anno Deposition is used by Royal and Select Masters, add 1000 to the current year. The year 1913 corresponds to the Year of Deposit, A. D. 2913.
To find the Year of the Order,
Anno Ordinis, used by Knights
Templar, subtract 1118 from the
current year. The year 1913 corresponds to Year of the Order, A. O. 795.
Dates of Masonic significance
this year are Good Friday,
Easter Sunday, Ascension Day,
May 25; St. John the Baptist's
Day, June 24; St. John the Evangelist's Day, December 27.
Local Happenings Boiled Down to Hasty Readers.
A handsome silver service was presented Editor P. A. Stovall of the Press by some of his friends.
A set of plans and specifications have been submitted the board of education for the new school building on the Haven Home site.
Mr. Fred Jones was killed by being ran over by freight cars, while sleeping on the tracks near Pooler, on Tuesday.
Mr. William Jackson, who operated the elevator at the Hotel Tybee, was badly injured by the falling of the elevator on Sunday last.
The primary for sheriff t kes place July 30th. The candidates are Col. Merritt, W. Dixon and Messrs. Robert Saussy and F: M. Butner.
F. Lanthrope George killed Henry McClennan, a city employe, Tuesday afternoon. Both white. Unfaithfulness of George's wife is the alleged cause.
Tyme Boylston, a white woman, attempted to committ suicide, while at the Thunderbolt Casino, Sunday night, by drinking sodme she has recovered.
Contract for the garbage
constructor has been signed, by the
major. It will be finished within
200 days and will be erected near
the water works.
According to the recent school
census, there are 7477 whites and
7,130 colored children of school
ages of 6 to 18 years in the city.
In the county there are 3569 colored
and 1,208 whites. In the city
there are 147 colored children who
can not read and write and 161 in
the county.
License Revoked
Savannah, Ga., July 8th, 1913. To The Tribune:
We, the members of the St. John Baptist Church, ask for a small space that we might let the public know of the misconduct of Brother. I. R. Riley, a licentiate of our church, who communed the members of the Ebenezer Baptist Church of Woodbine, Ga. He communed them the first Sunday in May also the first Sunday in June. He told the people that he was ordained six years, and for such misdemeanor, we the members of St. John Baptist Church, have revoked his license and have withdrawn the right hand of fellowship from him.
Iours.
Rey. Wm. Gray.
Sister L. Baldwin, clerk.
Lesson III.—Third Quarter, For July 20, 1913.
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text, of the Lesson, Ex. iii, 1-14, Memory Verses, 13.14—Golden Text, Matt. v. 8—Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns.
How many years are often passed over in silence, as in the life of Elijah, of whom we know nothing till we see him standing before Abah, and John the Baptist, of whom we know nothing from his birth to his call to service, and those forty years of Moses' shepherd life. Thore cause a day toward the close of those forty years when Moses, having led the flock to the back side of the desert even to Boreh, the mountain of God, saw something unusual, even a bush burning, but not consumed. As he turned aside to see why the bush was not consumed God called unto him out of the midst of the bush and said, "Moses, Moses."
If Moses had not turned inside to see that great sight he might perhaps have missed the call. If we would properly consider every unusual thing that comes unto our lives we might hear the voice of God more often than we do. Note how Moses in his old age speaks of "the good will of Him that dwelt in the bush" (Deut. xxxiii, 16). Stephen in his sermon refers twice to the angel of the Lord which appeared to Moses in the bush (Acts vii, 30, 35). When Moses replied to the voice of Him that spake, saying "Here am I" or "Behold me," he was told that if it was the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob who was speaking to him, and he was told before the interview ended that this was His memorial name forever unto all generations (vvsss 6, 15, 16; iv. 5).
The Lord Jesus referred to this incident at the bush in His reply to the Sadducees and used the same threefold name (Luke xii, 26, 27). The Lord after telling Moses who He was that spake to him then gave Moses to understand that it was none of his affair as to how it was to be done; he must put off his shoes, for it was a holy place, the presence of God, and He was to be the door of it all. Joshua had the same orders as he was about to lead Israel into the promised land (Josh. v, 15).
The key to the meaning of unshod feet is found in Deut. xi, 24; Josh, 1, 3. In that light consider Isa. ivili, 13, and lay it to heart. While considering the name of Him who talked with Moses we might notice that other wondrous name given in reply to Moses' question, "I am that I am," or simply "I am" (verses 13, 14). In the New Testament, where we read His statement "I am be," you will notice the word "he" is in italics, so that He said simply "I am," as in John vill, 24; xvili, 6, and then He often added a name such as I am the door; I am the way, the truth, the life; I am the good shepherd; I am the Son of God, and many others in the book of Revelation.
Having told Moses who He was, He then told him His purpose: I have seen, I have heard, I know, I am come down to deliver and to bring them up onto a good land (verses 7, 8). He asked neither advice nor help from Moses; but, having declared His purpose, He puf before him a great offer in the words, "Come now, therefore, and I will send thee unto Pharaoh, that thou mayest bring forth My people, the children of Israel, out of Egypt" (verse 10). Notwithstanding God's revelation of Himself Moses did not grasp it, but began his objections and assertions of incompetence in such words as "Who am I that I should go?" "O my Lord, I am not eloquent. * * * I am slow of speech and of a slow tongue" (dil. 11: 1v. 10).
How patient and graciously the Lord dealt with him, saying: "Certainly I will be with thee; * * * I have sent them." "I will be with thy mouth and teach thee what thou shalt say" (iii, 12; iv, 12). When he was told to gather the elders of Israel and day before them the Lord's purpose and was assured that they would hear him and was then told what he and they should say to Pharah he again objected, saying. "They will not believe me nor hearken unto my voice, for they will say the Lord hath not appeared unto thee" (dil, 16-18: iv, 1). Then he was given three signs, the rod and serpent, the leprous hand and the water turned to blood, each full of significance and bearing directly on the case.
When he persisted in insisting that he could not speak his brother Aaron was given to him to be his spokesman or prophet, and the Lord said, "I know that he can speak well. * * * and thus shalt speak unto him and put words in his mouth (iv. 14-16; vll. 1). Truly He is the God of patience, and we need to live in and be filled with the love of God and the patience of Christ (Rom. xv. 5; II Thess. 11, 5, margin). The Lord knew well the heart of Pharaoh and that he would need sore judgments to humiliate him, but He would be patient even with him and bring Israel out with great spoil, even that which belonged to them (iii. 19-22). They did not borrow but asked or demanded (verse 22, R. V.).
Note in iv. 22, that the Lord calls Israel His son. His firstborn, and, His firstborn being oppressed, the firstborn of Egypt must suffer if there is no repentance. The meeting of Moses and Aaron in the mount of God after forty years of separation and Moses' communication to Aaron of all that the Lord had said and done is interesting.
Do you get up in the morning feeling bad and sleepy. Nasty taste in your mouth? What you need is a twenty five cent bottle of Pate's Chill and Fever Tonic. Cleans out the Fever. Makes you eat and puts ginger in you.
JOB PRINTING
Lunch Room
J. B. Simmons, Prop.
Hot and Cold Lunches to Order
Confections, Milk Shakes
Soft Drinks
Quick delivery of Ice Cream.
Phone 3640) 325-327 E. Broad St
BAKER
THE TAILOR
Suits made to your measure $15.00
up.
Pants made to your measure $3.50
Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and Repairing "Our Motto." Giye us a trial.
Ladies' work a specialty.
510 Price Street
Protect Your Horses' Fee
Have Them Shod by the
The Cresceus Horseshoeing and
Clipping Shop
315 JEFFERSON ST. Phone 2500
NELSON A. CUTLER
"The Expert. Horseshoer." Prop
Important—The only expert
horseshoeing shop in the city oper-
ated by a colored man
PATE'S DR
S. vannah.
Doe's all kind of high grade dental work of the best quality and workmanship Gold crowns and bridge work. White Porcelain Pivot and Gold Crowns mounted on the natural roots. Gold Fillings, Cement Fillings, and Silver or Amalgam Fillings. From nine to a full set of teeth $8.00 and $10.00 Broken plates mended and teeth added. All Gold Crowns Guaranteed 23% K Gold. Bell Phone 1-744
Dr. J. W. Jamerson
FIRST-CLASS
DENTIST
All Work Guaranteed
623 W E T BRGAD TREET
Between Charles and Oak St.
PHONE 2098-J
Dr. A. R. Ferebee
Surgeon Dentist
Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
3 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Sundays by Appointment
Gwinnett and East Broad Sts
(Adjoining Drug Store)
Henry Mears Feed Co
HAY & GRAIN
OF ALL KINDS
508 W Jones St.
Come and take a look at ou
Stock or Phone your
order and it will be
delivered promptly.
Phone 3461
YOUNG'S
is the place to go. Ice Cream and Lunches. We will treat you right.
The Acme Biccle Store
Dealer in New and Second Handed Bicycles. Tires and Supplies. Expert Vulcanizer of Bicycle Tires Vulcanizing 75c
K. HALPERN, Proprietor,
463 West Broad St.
Phone 1340.
UG·STORE
oprietor
For the Children
yet
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PDCantrmaahigihes aes
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Prince Frederick William of Ger-
mauy fs the high sounding ttle of the
little boy whose picture is show n atbove.
Mo is the grandson of Kaiser Wilhelm,
the German emperor, who recently
celebrated the silver jubilee of his as-
cent to the throne. Ilis father is the
Crown Prince William, who will one
day succeed to the titte of emperor—
that is, if he outlives the present ruler.
Frederick William is the oldest of the
crown prince's children and is in the
direct line of succession. At present that
probably doesn’t bother him very much.
“Waving fun," us young America ex-
presses it, is doubtless more to his lik-
ing than thoughts of future grandeur.
‘The little prince is seven years old and
was born on the Fourth of July—a date
that has no signifleauce to him other
than that it is his birthday. What boy
or girl in this country would not feel
an especial pride in having Independ-
ence day for a birthday? Then the
Fourth of July would mean two cele-
brations in one. as
Valiente: Ou Shen: Aven
Why is a cat's tail like tho ends of
the earth? Because it’s fur to the end.
But if the cat has no tail? Then it
would not be so fur (far).
What is the-best way to find a per
son out? Call when she is not at home.
Why are printers liable to take cold?
Because they always uso damp sheets.
Why is wit like the shoe ona Chinese
Indy’s foot? Because brevity is the soul
of it.
What {s the difference between a
blacksmith and a safe steed? One ts a
horseshoer, the other a sure horse.
‘What kind of sickle does Father Time
use in winter? Ice sickle.
‘Why 1s it dangerous to sleep in a
train? Because the train runs over
sleepers.
Why is “a” like 12 o'clock? It is the
middle of day.
When {s a boat like snow? When it
ig adrift.
What is that which works when it
plays and plays when {t works? A
fountain.
‘The Daisy.
The Latin name of the daisy comes
from a word meaning “pretty,” and all
will agree that it is well named. Our
English word daisy is really “day's
eye.” and that is what it was called
many hundred years ago.
Like the dandelion, each of its fow-
ers is made up of a number of ttle
ones, the tiny golden “disk flowers" in
the center and the tong white “ray
flowers” around them. Daisies grow-
ing on the prairies from Kentucky to
Texus have violet or purple rays.
To this same big family or “order”
belong the asters. robia’s plantain,
goldenrod, dabliz, boneset and many
other common but beautiful wild flow-
ers which we all know so well.
If we look at the flowers in the yel-
low center of a daisy through a micro-
scope we shall find that each fs sbap-
ed like a little bell and bas polotea
teeth on its edge.
Robin’s Helpers.
On a bloss'ming apple tree
Robin sanz so cheerlly.
“Come, dear neighbors, for my nest
Win you give me of your best?"
«Raa, baa," sald the sheep, “my wool
Is soft, wilte and beautiful.
You shall have some for your nest,
My pretty Robin Redbreast."*
“Cluck, cluck, cluck,” sald Mrs. Hen,
“You won't have to ask again.
L will give to you a feather
With the wool to weave together.”
‘Mulley cow sald: ““Afoo, moo, moot
WI a wisp of sweet hay do?
1 should think that would be fine,
Robin, for your nest to line."
Dobbin horse spoke: “Black and strong
Is my wavy tail so long.
Hair will bind them well together—
Wool and hay and fluffy feather.”
Robin sat upon the tree,
Trilled his song quite merrity:
“Thank you, friends, for of your best
vou have siv’n me for my nest.
“Feathers, hay and long, strong hair,
I will weave them all with care.
‘And tho wool, so soft and fine—
Just the thing the nest to tine!”
—Philadelphia Record.
A HOMEMADE ROAD DRAG.
The office of public roads at Wash-
ington has recently xént out a circular
which contains the foilowing directions
for making the split lux drtg and how
to use it: “This road drag is wade from
two halves ef a lug which bas been
split. The loz should be about efght
iucbes In thickness and from six to
eight feet long. Tue two halves of the
log should be set with the fiat surfaces
forward and upright and fastened to-
gether with braces set in holes bored
through the log. The team for haulivz
the drag should be hitched to a chain
fastened tothe front half of the lug. he
drag »bould be hooked up in such a
way that it will run diagonally and
cause a small amount of louse earth to
slide past it ta the center of the road,
thus forming the crown. The edzes
of the drag will smovth out the ruts.
‘The best way to drag is to begin at
the side ditch‘and go up one side of the
road and then down the other. “In the
nest trip the drag showld be nm a lit-
tle nearer the center, and the last trip
over the road the drag should be work-
ed close io the center. Small ridges of
earth will be thrown in ‘the horse
tracks and wagon ruts. This smear-
‘ing of the earth by the drag is ca}ied
‘puddling’ and tends to make the sur-
face of the road smooth and water
tight after the sun comes out. A road
should always be dragged following a
heavy rain. when it is moist and mealy
and will work to the best advantage.”
THE DODDER PEST.
Dodier ix one of the worst ills that
ean beset the grower of small grain,
clover and alfalfa. and It is likely to be
especiilly troublesome in delds of the
legumes named because its seed so
closely resembles theirs. The presence
of dodder in one’s field is usually the
penalty be pays for buying “cheap
John.” catalogue house clover and al-
falfit sco The dodder ty a parnsitie
plant and spouxer—that is, it hves off
other plants. As soon as the seed is
started and the plant gets a start it
attaches itself to any plant which it
may touch, and shortly afterward the
stalk from this point of contact to the
ground withers, but the plant above this
Point flourishes on its stolen nourish-
ment. The most effective way of get-
ting rid of dodder is to quit buring
cheap seed that Is infested with it. An-
other is cutting the crop which it in-
fests before the dodder seeds. Still
another is following a system of crop
rotation which will not leave the same
untilled crop on the land two years In
succession.
THE HANSON ALFALFA.
Some three years ago Professor Han.
son of the South Dakota’ Agricultural
college made a trip to Siberia for the
federal department of agriculture for
the purpose of securing, if possible,
the seed of a variety of alfalfa that
would withstand not only great cold,
but also the semiarid conditions that
prevail in many of thecwestern and
intermountain states. He brought
home the seeds of a yellow flowering
variety, the stalk of which fs smaller
and the leaves of which are finer than
the common blue flowered variety. It
is three years now since this Siberian
alfalta seed was ‘sown, and it is now
possible to note results. A stool of
this variety recently dug near Pierre
weighed seven and a half pounds,
while the stalks measured more than
thirty inches In length. In view of
such a showing, this new variety of
alfalfa gives promise of being a real
find an@ of flourishing under any con.
ditions which are Mkely to be found
in the bleakest and driest parts of the
country.
PRIZES FOR RURAL PUPILS.
Some months ago Director Page of
the office of public roads announced an
essay contest to be participated in by
pupils of the rural schéols of the coun-
try. One gold medal and two silver
‘medals were to be awarded on the best
essays written on the subject of “The
Maintenance of Country Roads.” The
time limit within which these essays
may be written bas been extended to
Oct. 15. The Idea which it 1s desired
to have brought out In the essays
and to have public attention centered
upon Ix that of the improvement of
country roads and the keeping of them
up through the use of materials that
are found available in each locality.
This contest is one in which both
texghers and pupils sbould take a keen
interest, as it is one of the practical
and vital problems confronting every
rural community today. Further, par-
ticular, in regard to the contests may
be bad by addressing a letter af in-
quiry to Director Page. office of public
roads. \Vashington.
CROWING THE CATALPA.
The Burlington railroad is closiag an
interesting test in the growing of ca-
talpa trees for railroad ties. Eleven
Fears ago the management of the road
planted a tract of 125 acres adjoining
Its right of way In western Iowa, and
for the past three weeks this bas been
a forest of bloom, the fragrance of the
bloom being wafted through the win-
dows of passing trains. The Grst fall
after setting the trees were damaged
‘by an early freeze. afid two years lat-
er thes were hit by a hailstorm, but
notwithstanding these drawbacks they
have made a good growth, many har-
ing attained a height of twenty fect
and a circumference of eighteen tu
twenty inches. Lsxperiments by the
railroad company with the ecatalpa
‘yrood treated and untreated indicate
that the untreated trees make the best
‘and most fasting tie.
AEG
omen fy oe
OTR g:
NOTES P|
ae ry *
ICM.BARNITZ|| /y fin
RIVERSDE Toh \
PAL fh
O Ikyia
IconRESPannzxcs| oe
‘SOLICITED g : ae
x
(There articles and {Illustrations must not
be reprinted without specis] permis-
ston.J ‘
SWIMMING FACILITIES FOR
FACILITIES
nae ca
SWIMMING FACILITIES FOR
DUCKS.
A visit to most of our prominent
duck plants will disclose the fact that,
while they raise millious of youns,
green ducks for market without their
having had a day’s swim,.yet they fur-
nish swimming facilities to their
breeding ducks. This is because
ducks naturally pair in the water, and
thus those that swim lay eggs with #
Righer average fertility and greater
hatchability, and the ducklings are of
stronger vitality. better breeders and
can stand more forcing for market.
Tue great alm in murket duckling
raising fs to get quick, big growth
and to keep the duck soft and juley.
Exercise in swimming, like other
healthful, exercise, makes muscle.
Paes
fiusmeeemen pals
Pama as 2
PST Ras VASE eget
re Ses ee BS E
ie -ta iptv Pe Rae aaa
eae ees
seers! ace SE? ele eae
eg
arte fee
=} . ot eee =
Photo by €. Mf. Barnitz.
escaessimerereacenecs
hardens the flesh, retards fat, creates
stamina and uses up food in the proc-
ess.
‘That {s why the swimming duck is
harder, stronger, tougher and thinner
than the market duckling, and that is
why, on the contrary, the market
duckling is such a fast -grower, so
toothsome and juicy. It melts In the
mouth, is 60 large and lovely because
it exercises but Httle and loafs and
eats much, and most of its food just
quickly turns into layers of fancy
flesh and fancy tat ‘The only time it
goes to swim is when it is driven in to
wash off before killing, and’ so unused
to swimming are they that we have
seen them refuse to do that.
Duck growers along streams simply
Inclose water along shore, or others
Sit oe a ee RP oa fe
Reanias i eS
Be aR shag Spe
5 a Te ee
Roe Seg NR SO aR Ce Sees
Bere xte OS Re ee ST
PE kee SE ak BR
Be FEES Etat Gh ORE 8%
BS oes Rage PE te 23
Eo ge, Btn eis ene ORME ets
Be at ete Pye os
oa E a fies
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Photo by C. Mf. Barnitz
DAM FoR DUCKS.
make ponds or dams, the thickness of
the dam wall depending on volume
and yelocity of water and made thick-
er at base than top. The proportions
for making 'the concrete dam wall
shown were one barrow of sharp sand
and two of clean gravel to one sack of
cement. The majority of duck raisers
feed their breeding ducks fish, either
fresh or fish scrap." This tends to
vigor In breeder and offspring and in-
creases fertility.
DON’Ts.
Don't cultivate pessimistic tratts, but
hoe your own row.
Don't be mercenary. You may pile
up money by the plan, but be stigma-
tized “‘a miserly man.”
Don’t write the editor for poultry in-
formation, but write us, and don't
write us until you have tried to think
it out for yourself first. .
Don’t throw dead fowls where they
will rot and breed maggots. A blow
fly may come from that carcass to
your fable and bring disease and de-
struction,
Don’t buy a stack of poultry wire
unless sure the chicken=? can't go
through. Leghorns go right through
wire that grades from small to large
squares toward the top and over any-
thing with top rail.
One Dollar per month pays for a life Membership in the
Henry Street Pressing Club. We Dye, Clean, Alter and make
Repairson any garment.
LA DIE S-: Send us your skirts and suits. We know
how to clean them. .
Our Dressmaker Can ‘Please You
= WE SEND FOR AND DELIVER ALL WORK
1 7 H
Tho Bene tt, Prssig And. Dress Making Estelihieat
305 West Henry Street Phone 1487
B. B. Chauncey, Prop. Thomas Floyd, Manager
EEE
. : sons a
Are You Particular About Your Printing? i
We are now in position to handle your Printing to the
utmost satisfacion. .
Our equipment is of the most modern type, our work-
men skilled craftsmen; and the work is given’ an in-
terested personal supervision from start to finish.
We will give you prompt service at prices consistent a
with local conditions. May we have your next or-
der for Printing ?
OREN LNA CELE
THE BEST PLAGE
In Savannah
FOR MEN'S GOOD SHOE
Prices $3.50 up
BH Lovy, Bro. Bo.
| Preference.
| “Do you ike. 2 man who quotes
| poetry 2°
| “Well,” replied Miss Cayenne, “he is
/sualls better than one who relles op
original conversation.” — Washington
Star.
) A Painful Face.
| “My face pains me, doctor, What
‘shall I do?" asked the patient.
“I'm sure I don't know," replied the
truthful doctor: “You know I have no
way of itbproving your looks.”—Lon-
‘don Telegraph. .
Big City Perils.
More than thirty-fve hundred acct-
dental deaths occur every year in New
York city.
Misunderstood.
“Blow dia you find your bed?” ask-
ed the bustling Iandindy of the new
lodger.
“Madam, I am not a drinking man.
I found my bed without dificulty.”"—
Houston Post.
The Restin,. _
“Why do you suppose he has such a
vacant expression?” “Well, he thinks
of himself a zood deal.”"—Judze.
When She Has Temperament.
When a girl is intense, that means
her mother needn't expect much help
with the housework.—Pittsburgb Post,
“At the Foot End.
“alas, L am at my wits’ end.” ex:
claimed the ménarch as he was unex
pectedly kicked by the court jester.
Away Ahead.
“I hear that Briggs is behind with
bis tallor” “Wrong! He's three suits
ahead.”—Boston Transcript,
Densely Populated,
In the densest parts of Bombay there
are.740 persons to the acre. New York
has 1,000 in the same area.
Original Sin.
Wife —Jotn, what is original sin?
Husband—Apple stealing, I think, my
dear.—Fun.
. Town Founded In 1639.
Stamford was founded in 1639 by a
band of enterprising pioneers of the
New Haven colony.
Dreams.
Sometimes a man calls a gir] a dream
and then wenders why dreams are no!
always true.—Florida Times-Union.
* Matched.
Jakes—Norway has a midnight sun
Rakes — That's nothing. So have L—
Baltimore American.
Tillie Speaks.
‘Millie—Willie is a confirmed bache-
lor. Tillte—Yes. and 1 assisted at the
confrmation.—Lippincott’s.
Too Deep.
“He's a deep thinker.” “I guess 80.
A Woran’s Question.
| “One of the doctors sass a woman
lean keep wel! by doing her own house
work.”
“Yes, but how, if she dues that, car:
she Keep ber bands Git to be seen b
her friends?"—Chieago Record-Heral:
} Four
“Did the doctor diagnose your erse
easily?" a
“Yes.”
“How long.did it take?"
| “Not long. 1 wore my sbabbiest
suit”"—Birmingbam AgeMerald
dietet Stiecatmomenet.
| The high prize of life, the crowning
fortune of man, is to be born to some
pursuit which ands him in employ
ment and bappiness, whether it be to
make baskets or broadswords or canals
or statnes.or songs.—Emerson.
: A Receiving Teller.
| Willie—Pavy, what is a receiving tell-
ex? Paw—A gabby woman, my son—
Cincinvati Enquirer *
South America.
Soutt America bas on the averaze
five and one-tenth inhabitants to the
square mile. .
The Underdog.
The underdog wants no sympathy.
What he wants is assistance—Chicago
News . eS
Musical.
“Is sbe musical?”
| “Yes. She bas a natural voice, a
sharp tongue and a fiat nose.”
England’s Royal Family.
The annuity paid by the British peo-
ple to the king and queen of England
1s $2,350,000.
Toothbrushes,
Dip toothbrnshes in boiling water
occasionally ta disinfect them and al-
ways rinse thoroughly after nsing.
The Pitch,
“They say life should be a grand,
sweet song.” “What is yours pitched
in?” “A fat"~Washington Herald.
Dreaming.
‘The cause of fallure with most men
is dreaming what they might have
been.—Judge.
. Well Used to It.
Doctor—What you need is a change
e€ scene. Vatient—Get away} I'm a
scene sbifter!—Comie Cuts.
lodine Stains.
| Boiling bot stdtch will, it is said, re
move fodine stiins from linen and cot-
ton.
A Blank Check,
Many # man puts bis money and bis
faith fn a speculation and later on
draws out his faith,—Walter Politzer.
Plenty of tt = *
“Have you hot water in‘your house?”
“Haye 1? My dear boy, I'm never out
‘of {t."—Baltimore American.
Anxious to Be Firm,
“Now, Rufus. 1 hope I hare convince
“d you that there are nu such things
as ghosts.” *
“Yassuh. You has convinced me.” ,
“You are absolutely sure?”
“Yassyh. An‘ all T hopes is dat no
ghos' am g'ineter come along an’ foree
me to change my mind."—Washington
Star. ae
Ecvacor and Stoves. -
Ceundor knows no market for stoves,
The native cooky declare that the beat
from them causes fever: ;
Tho Other Place._ a
“I have a regular old family knocker
en my front door.” “We've got one in-
side.”—Baltimore American.
Theory and Fact,
“Do yon think it right to rob Peter
to pay Pan?" “if 1 happen to be Paul
1 do.”—Houston Fost. es
For a New Set,
“Does Alice like her new dentist?”
“Well. he certainly made an {mpres-
sion on her.”—Boston Transcript.
The Makeup Forces. ,
“Did you ever belp put-2 puzzle to-
gether?” “No. My wife always as-
sembles herself alone.”—Judge.
Five Presidents,
Five presidents married widows—
Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Filk
more and {tenjimin Harrison.
PERSEVERANCE, .
Perseverance is more prevailing
than violence, and many things
which cannot be overcome when
they are together yield themselves up
when taken little by little. —Plutarch.
Geod Example. s
Teacher—Who can tell the meaning
of “persistency?” Small Goy—Mother
talking for a new hat—Tudze.
, Information Wanted.
“Isolate the patient” “Yes. doctor.
Where sball we put the ice?”—Balti-
more American
Headstones. -
The Turks were the first people to
bury their dead in cemeteries adorned
with ornamental hendstones., - * «
A Proverb Revised. gy
“A. theatrical producer is known+by
the company he keeps. — Philadelphia
Inquirer.
Look Ahead.
Many a man fails forge ahead be-
cause he bus the looking backward
habit.—Chicago News. é
Big Tin Producers,
Bolivia is the world’s second largest
producer of tin, the main supply com-
ing from the Malay stralts.
‘The Separation.
Hogan—Did Clancy’s wife get a sep-
aration? Grogan—She did. Four cops
tore her off him.—Brooklyn Life,
Fuse and Feathers.
“The Joneses goin for fuss and feath-
era” “Yes. Jones gets tho fuss and
his wife the feathers.”"—Town Topics.
‘The Tramps’ Beverage.
All tramps must be coffee drinkers.
We never heard of one asking for a
cup of tea.—Toledo Blade.
Indefinite.
Mr. Almost Bald—Tony, my hair ts
getting thin. Tony (the barber)—So!
‘Which one?—Exchange.
‘The Present.
She (after the quarrel)—Leave my
Presence! He (confused)—Why—er—
you've got them all!—Judge. =
GRISWOLD & DOZIER
1 Capinet Makers
Mattresses made to order and
Renovated. Furniture repaired
and overhauled. Phone 4188-J
; 602 maldburg Street, West
Ocean Wave Cfae
Meals at all hours. Quick,
|. lunches served in ‘up-to-
date style. Open day
and night ©
J. S. Lloyd & Son
42 Habersham St.
yFlneaea 3, Wil
Madame Tloreara T.. Willems
Graduate Prof. Rohér’s School,
New York.
719 West Broad Street.
Telephone 2328 .
Wigs. Switches and Pompadours
‘Made from Naturel Hair. OF *
Combings Made Up. Shampoving*and
Hair Straigtening a Speciality.
Face and Electric Massage, Dyéing
and Matching Hair. =
ORIENTAL HAIR GROWER,
An_ excellent. preparation, will’ pro
duce a beautiful growth of hair. Di
rections on each box. For sale, price
2 cents per box
THE WLKER'S HOTEL
‘ .
For Colored Only
> J, EB. WALKER, Prop.
Nos. 620 and 622 Inpiay STREET
First-class Boarding and Lodging
By the day, week or mopth
Electric lighted rooms 25 cents per
duy"and up. .
Regular meals 15 and 25cents
-FOR- :
Stapfe & Fancy Groceries
“ -CALL AT—
Carr's Grocery Company
1711 Ogeechee Ave
Polite, Attention. Best Service
“we Me |
Gee Savannah Crikme,
+" established 1875
\.tBy JOHN H. DEVEAUX
Pablished by
_ SOL. C. JOHNSON
Editor and Propriotor
‘* JAScH, BUTLER
“Asso. Editor and Manager
ars sien iene
- Published Every Saturday
1000 West Broad Street.
| Phone 2171.
a Subscription Rates:
One Year - - - - - - $1.25
Six Months © 2 22.
‘Three Months - = = > ‘50
Remittance must be made by Express
br Post Oifice Money Order, o Register
ed Letter. Adveriising rates given ou
“pplication.
et
Zntered at the Post Office at Savan-
sab, Ua,, as Second-Class mail matter.
eae as
* . Whenever a Negro triumphs ir
life, whother'it is in politics, re-
ligion, education, society or athle.
tics it is genorally an admitted fact
that success’ has come to him ir
his particular field of endeayor
not through any special dispensa-
tidn injhis favor or’any establish-
od lair to suit his case. It is
knownjthat he has succeeded in
open’ field in competition with
othors bécatise he was fit and able
to!“‘deliver the goods” better than
his fellow competitors. Such
seems ta.be th2 case of Howard P.
Drow, the crack:colored athlete of
the Springfield, (Mass.,) High
school. Drew seems to be in such
Gue-fettle at the present time un-
til he is having little difficulty in
showing his heels to_any and all
of his pompehiors: In the Nation-
al Champiogship meet held at
Chicago a few days ago, Drew
was able to demonstrate his
supremacy as a sprinter by win-
aing in‘open field the 100 and 220.
yard dashes. In so doing, he suc-
ceeded in breaking the senior
amateur union records. Time and
again, ht has been able to show
that asa short distance sprinter,
he.is in.a,class by himself. In bs-
ing-ehlg to.out.class all rivals in
his particular, field, Drew has
rendered to the.race a great ser-
vice, ‘He has indeed put to, flight
the idew'that in athletics as ‘well
as other’ finds, we are an inferior
people. , Oh tne other hand he has
contritiiged’ ' his share toward
proving; the’' versatility of our
people.” “The race to-day is in
dirg,need. ofj.more Drews. We
need. raws-in finance, in educa-
tion, in religion, in politics and in
every other field of endeavor. We
acéd'tolbe able to demonstrate tb
thé wditd 6ur‘ability to hold our
‘own in whatever Vocation or avo!
cation we may find oursélves. All
hotiorté, Howard P. Drew, ou
crack réptesentative on the ath.
detic field. May the time be naj
fardistant,when the Drew, spirit
of achibvement ‘and success will
manifest itself ‘in every field of ac
tivity aniong us.
Seite om, jf£ever, has any stand
taken by aay of our white ‘friends
in ourbebilf, created’ more wide
spread enthusiasm and hope among
us or called forth more genuine
thanks from‘our people, than thé
one recenty, taken by Dr. Walter
S. Wilson;'a prominent member
of the Board of Education of
Chatham: county, in regard to in-
creased school facilities for the
Colgred clildren of the county.
According to information obtain-
ed from & reliable source, itis re-
ported that at a recent meeting of
the Board of Education, Dr. Wil-
son in out spoken language made
it plain to his fellow members of
the Board that he would not coun-
tenance nor support. any move-
ment for increased school facilities
for tho white children of the city
until the present congested condi-
tion which now exists among the
Negro school children is relieved
by the building of a first class and
modern school building for them.
It indeed requires no_ stretch of
thought or breadth of imagination
for one to appreciate the unselfish-
ness and unusual candor which
prompted Dr. Wilson to take tho
stand which he has. It must be
absolutely clear to all that as one
of -the leading members of the
Board of Education, Dr. Wilson
feels it to be his duty to serve his
entire.constituency each and all
alike and this, regardless to race
orcalor. There is no denying the
fact that a new school is badly
needed for our children. The
congestion is indeed too great.
Aad now since the Board of Bdu-
cation has seen fit to giye a new
school building it is believed that
under the leadership of such men
as Dr. Wilson, Judge Adams and
other members of the Board, men
who are fair minded and just to
all, alike, a now first class
school’ Bailding for Negroes will
soon grace athe location of the
present, Havén Homie school. The
Colored people throughout the city
are indeed grateful to Dr, Wilson
for his timely words in ‘their be-
half. They feel that in him they
have a representative of justice
and fair play to each one and all
alike and atrue friend to the race.
yl ee ae a
-Mr. Andrew J. Cochran died
suddenly in St. Paul, Minn., on
last Monday. The funeral services
may take place to-morrow from
Congregational church this city.
Mr. Cockran was a very promis:
ing young man and was 26 years
old. He was born in this city,
where he had a host of friends.
At the time of hisdeath he was
in the railroad service, running
out of St. Paul, Minn., which
work he was following during his
yacation from Meharry Medical
College, Nashville, Tenn. Mr.
Cochran had spent three years in
Meharry, taking the dental
course, and was preparing to're-
turn to school in the fall. He was
a young man of exceptional man-
ly qualities and his death is great-
ly deplored throughout the city.
He is survived by his mother and
other relations.
Died at the Old Soldier Home
Intelligence was received in the
city last week of the death of Mr.
Alexander,Melton, which occurred
atthe Old Soldiers’ Home, aoear
Hampten, Va. The funeral took
place on Saturday last, the re-
mains being intered ir the Nation-
al.Cemetery at that place. He
was given all the Lonors of a
veteran.
Mr. Melton was born in Thomas-
ville, Ga., 73 years ago. The bet-
ter part of his life -was spent in
this city, where he is well and
favorably known by the'older citi-
zens. He was a model inbis man-
ner and beloved by those with
whom he came in contact.
Mr. Melton was one of the old-
est Masons in the-state, being
‘among the first candidates to be
initiated in Eureka Lodge No. 1,
of this city. He lived an’ exem-
plary Masonic life, and was ever
loyal to his Lodge and the order.
Along the line of charity he was
liberal.
He left a half brother, Mr. Hol-
Joway, and a step-son Mr. Geo. L,
Smith with many friends.to mourn
his death. -
+ Mr. Smith attended the funeral
and speaks in the highest terms of
thé officials of the Old Soldiers’
Home.
Letter Carriers Easily Defeats
Mactersund Heetiese Men,
The baséball game whieh was
played. gt_the_ball¥park’ on last
Monday afternoon between the
letter carriers and the doctors and
business men was won by the
former bya score of 19 to 10.
‘The game while witnessed by a
very small crowd, due tothe heavy
rain just prior to the -honr sched-
juled for the gamé to ‘begin, ? tras
very amusing, regardléss of ‘thé
fact that the;doctors and, business
men's telia' allowed thelr opped
ents to gota lend of fourteen run:
in the first three innings. The game
was replete with errors and imis-
plays, but*herein Iay-theplexsares
of the afternoon. In several in.
stances the! spectators were giver
‘a exhibition which more resembled
football than the,national pastime:
‘Howbeit, those present had an en
joyable afternoon and ‘more laugh:
than they probably would have ex
perlenced at a minstrel show, Thi
pitching by Mack for the lette:
carriers and Weston for doctor:
and business men was superb. Thi
former struck out 14 in nine ig
nings and {iatter 12 in_sever
innings. °° 2
Score RHE
Carriers 842102020-1914 §
lDoctors 000301321-1011 |
Miss Theresa Mack Mitchell of Wash-
ington, D. C., was the guest of honor
ata very pretty and interesting whist
party on July Isth, given by her aunt,
hrs. Robert McNiehels of 222 Park
Avenue, east. The ladies were out in
full bloom and it was hard to decide
which looked the best, The guest of
honor was presented with a dainty pin-
cushion of yellow ribbon, aud. shadow
lace. The first prize was won by Miss
M. Clark, thesecond Mrs. J. L. Jack-
son, thirdMrs. M.D. Johnson, Instead
of‘ consolation prize there was a
unique drawing contest. Each lady
drew a slip of paper with the name of
the local doctors. The lucky name for
tae married ladies was that of Dr. W
G. Blackman and was drawn by Mrs. G.
‘H. Bowen, this prize being a hand made
baby's dress. The lucky name for the
single ladies was Dr. C. ©, Middleton,
drawn by Miss Maud Speneer, the prize
being a pink satin rose. Thosé presen,
wore MissT. M. Mitchell of Washing-
fon, D.C.; Miss M Clark, Greensboro;
Miss F'G. Davis of Charlotte, N. C.;
Mra James Monroe ef Brunswick, Ga.,
Mesdames Jas. H. Butler, Goo. S.” Wil-
liama, L. G. Middlefon, F.F. Jones,
Jos King, David J. Wilson, L. M.
Campfield, M. B. Branham, G if.
Bowen, Jas. Davis, Lewis Collier,
L. M. Pollard, David’ Moore, Jos. L:
Jaekson, John Habersham, W. S. Scott,
1. D Williams, N. W. Este, R. E. Scott,
FH. Benson, E:M. Edwards, Albert
Jackson, H. MReed, Mz O, Johnson,
J_H. Kinkle, Geo. Johason,# Misses S-
©. Houston, ‘Annie Scott, Alice’ Ellis.
Eureka Jackson. Rebecca Gaston H. C.
Houstoun, Helen Ellis Susie Scott,
Maud.Speucer, Dollie Pris, Sophronia
Gaston. Sarah Lee, Auna Tucker, Cor-
nelia McDowell.
BAND CONCERT BY
Tuskegee Institute Band,
_ Orchestra and Glee Club
SSAVANNAH THEATRE -
DMONDAY NIGHT, AUGUST 18; 1915
°F POE BRE” 8 ER TRS SLY \- SS
. Wedding Bells
Wednesday evening last, the-ehimes
of sweet wedding bells rang out from
the home of Principat Jao, McIntosh of
the Maple'Street Public School of Sa-
vapoah, =
His, the second daughter, the queen-
ly Miss Mable Gertrude Mcintosh, was
joined to Mr. Richard Wright in holy
wedlock, by Rev. W. L. Cash in the
beautiful home of her parents, 312 E.
Duffy street. Mr. Wright is’ one of
Savannah’s best young men. He has
been in the employ of the hich officials
of the Central R. R. of Georgia for a
long number of years-and is, esteemed
by them and the many whites with
whom he has come in contact, as
being very. intelligent, studious, gentle-
manly, faithful, reliable and christian,
amodel young’ man. He comes from
one of the best families of our race.
Thé happy bride is a graduate of the
Anderson Street Publicschool, of which
her father was principal. She subse-
quently attended Beach Tustitute,. The
eorgia State Industria) ¢ ollege, The
Florida Baptist College, Spellman Semi
nary in which she made, dress-making
and music a specialty. At the appoint-
ed time the pianists, Miss Etta Meln-
tosh and Mr. Jno. Mcintosh, Jr., skilful-
ly played Mendelsohn's 4 hand wedding
march. Just preceeding the rendition
of the wedding march a novel feature
of the occasion was the beautiful ren-
dition of a very spicy duet by Mrs. A.
E. Orner and Miss Etta Mclatoshr They
were af their best and charmed the
classical’ and musical audience with
‘very noted delight, Jno. McIntosh, Jr.,
pianist. Then sang the Misses Porter
and Wells, §Their most exquisitely har-
moniously sweet voices electrified and
charmed the many musical celebrities
in that dense audience, Miss Etta MeIn-
tosh, pianist. Now all being in perfect
readniness, the bridal tram wended
its measured steps down the tastily
carpeted and linened Stair nay, through
the spacious hall to the bridal chamber.
Messrs Edgar Blackshear and Clarence
O. Houston, ushers, entered forming,
auisle for the bridal train. Next came,
Master Jno. H. Law, Jr., son of Mr. and |
Mrs. J, H. Law, He wore an emaculate |
white linen’ sailor blouse and carried |
the bridal'ring of intrinsic value and|
significance on an unique silver tray;
his steps marked the inheritance: of. 2
soldier true to music. Then entered
the charming Miss Sadie E. Tyson, the|
bride's. maid, sweetly gowned in ‘pink
silk crepe trimmed inshadow lace with
a girdle of pink brocade silk. The
dimpled cheeks and bewitching eyes of
Miss Jennie Ophelia Mcintosh, sister of
the bridé and maid of honor, were es-
pled nexs, beautifully costumed in blue|
silk pongee, trimmed in shadow lace
with a girdle of blue brocade silk.
Then followed the sweet cherub, Mid-
dred L. Larsheay, the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs D.Solomon Karsheay. She
was attired in pink messaline trimmed
with point de sprey, Bearing a basket of|
fragrant roses, which she strew in the
pathway-of the queenly bride amd star
of the occasion. Then entered the
bride supporting herself upon the arm
of her father who was attired in Sicilian
cream. The bride was gowned in silk
embroidered net draped over whitesilke
messaline, with a girdle of white silk
messaline’ finished ‘with orange Dlos-
soms. She wore’a silk tet veil" wreath-
ed with orange blossoms;.she alsowore
a,beautifulnecklace incased with, din-
monds) the gift of the grodnt;, she car-
red 2. soo “of (bri, Rosegeaind
ferns: 3She was met, by fhe grodry an:
best man, Mr. Avtiuy Andrews, who
entered the bridal chamber from the
fropt door of :the front parlor They
met beneath an arch mest entranciigly
bedecked and: adorned with electric
lights ofvariegated colors . emblematic
of the rainbow ii ‘duplitation making
seven colors on either side of a white
centre light fromwhich.way suspended
most atistically usique tand beautiful
“'Colé’*bell of lovely toses... The bride
stood direetly under this bridal “‘Cole”’
bell of, nature's roses and. was solemn-
y wedded to Rickard for life, Rev. W.
Cash, Ner eminent pastor, officiat~
ing, with DreL“A. Townsley, Richard's
pastor, assisting; “The groom aud alk of
fis atleadable ‘ere. dressed-in— eon:
ventional style
1 The mother-‘of the bride and the: fa-
ther ofthe, grooms with very stately
physique snd bearing led the, “Grand
dal March” and stood in the arch
formed by.the bridal party, The moth,
er were, a cream silk serge, trimmed
with embroidered net ‘nessaline and
pearls; ‘she ‘carried a rich bouquet of
white carnations, the gift of the groom.
Mr.Jobn Mcintosh, Jr., assistant pian-
iat waszdréssed in’ cream, Miss Etta,
pianist and sister of the bride, was
gowned in a dress'of Invader crepe de
chene, trimmed in net and pearls. The
frontand back- parlors~of- this lovely
honie were converted by the decorators
into a veritable “Eden” of beauty,
loveliness and splendor: Golden photos
hung upoh the beautiful walls, and
decorated with bright bamboo ‘vines,
potted geraniums, ferns, palms and a
rich variety of Eden’s flowers,
The whole affair seemed but a dream
of paradise with the elite of Savannah
in large attendance. The happy
couple departed amid a shower
of,roses at9 o'clock the same eveniog
| for Chicago and other points of interest.
Presents were too many and too rich,
beautiful, useful and valuable to de-
scribe or count. The parents of the
[contracting parties extend to numerous
= A Friend.
_ ‘Mrs. Annie McBride of Chatta-
nooga, Tenn., and little, daughter
ara in the city.3visiting, Miss Al-
ber Smanteith and her’ sister,
Miss Fannie L. Deveaux entertained
Jast Wednesday afternoon at her home,
5 4 Taylor street, east, in honor of her
guest Miss Jimmie Bugg of Lynchburg,
Va_ The afternoon was very pleasant.
ly spent in progressive whist. The la-
ies were all,very charmingly dressed
and the affair was one of much delight.
The prizes were won by Mrs, Joseph
King Ist, embroidered silk collar; Miss
C. McDowell, second, fancy apron;Mrs.
€. McDonald, third, handkerchief bag;
Miss H. Ellis, fourth, vanity bag; Mrs-
J. Habersham, consolation. Miss Jim.
mie Bugg was presented with a beauti-
ful goldcross and chain Those pres-
ent were Mesdames L.. G. Middleton,
W. Scott, R. Scott, JH Butler, M-
Branham, L. M. Pollard, G. H. Bowen,
A: Dilworth, J. Habersham, J King, J.
Davis, L. Campfield, Jas. Monroe, of
Brunswick, M. Johnson, G. Williams,
E Edwards, J. Jamerson, H. Reed,
Chas McDonald, D. Moore, Jos. Jack-
son, A Jackson. Misses Jimmie Bugg
of Lynchburg, Va., Harriet Jones, Clif-
ford Allen, Clinton Dingle, Cornelia
McDowell, Eureka Jackson, Alice Ellis,
Helen Ellis, Dolly Price, Susie Scott,
Annie Scott, Anna Tucken, Theresa
Mitchell of Washington, Di.
ae
In Memoriam
In loving remembrance of husband and
i our father
SCOTT SMITH
who departed this life Jwy 18, 11906.
‘Dear husband, how we miss you
‘Since you have gone away,,
It has been seven years ago)
‘Though it seems but yesterday.
Gone but not forgotten,
Wee all still love you dear,
And even though your voice is stilled
We feel that you are near.
LU fills our hearts with sadness
To see your vacant place,
We long to hear the voice we loved,
And see thy dear sweet face_
Not now but in the coming years
Perhaps we'll understand,
Why God took you from us, father dear,
To live in his beautiful happy land.
Mrs. Sylvia Smity, wife,
Miss Rainey Smith,
Mrs. Frances Williams
Mrs. Ethel Walker, of
New York
Mrs, Leola Hutching,
Mrs. Elzy.Smitb,
In memory of my beloved daughter,
LUCILE BOTTAMUS RHODES
who departed.this life Jely 18th, 1912.
A light is from our homestead gone,
A voice we loved is stilled,,
A piece is vacant at our hearth
Which can never be filed,
A gentle heart that thrabbed, but now
With tenderness and love,
Has hushed its anxious throbbing here
To thrill in bliss aboye. !
Yes, to horae whera angels are,
Her happy soul has fled,
We can call her dead, but yet we know
She dwells where lizing waters flow.
And some day we shall walk through
the streets of thatcity 7
Where we meet.to part no more.
Loving Fathar,, Prince Bottamus,
Mother, Josephine Bottamus
Sisters: Bertha Ferrebee,
Geraldine Bottamus,
Brothars, Vernor Bottamus,
Alvin Bottamus_
YOUNG BROS.
NEW STORE *
is the place to get your Groceries,
} Meats aid Confectionerias,.
Cigars and Tobacco.
Telephone erdere promptly attended to|
EDW:G: YOUNG, Manager
“i Bone 4291
Cor. 3@th and Burroughs Sts.
Savannah, Ga.
Se
BEQHSOKRSELOSD
ae. POINTS, _
@iy5,9--Romr-No 1. 18
Si Startling i anontcement
eeothat De cD Se Browara
a=-3Drominent=Nesro: phiysi-
OS cian” of.“ St. “Augustine,
* Fla.t has really.discover-
@:
Ethae
é
ais
Fon ‘ ;
~~ eda remedy that promises
to ouf~strip and remedy for the
‘eyre of consumption now known
to the medical world, gives the
Negro a very prominent place in
the medical column, and we all
are going to “root” for Brown. -
Port No.2. But since the
human system has so often proven
itself the real master of its own
condition, as a mutter of precau-
tion you had better takea policy
With the Ga. Mutual Insurance
Co., that inthe event the unex-
pected should happen, you would
have financial assistance in your
declining days and despondency.
Ga. Mutual Ins. Co.
Branch Office 509 W. Broad
| St., Sayannah, ‘Ga.
H. T. Singleton, Dist. Mgx.
| —Ad
ee
August 4th, Monday. * Outing by the
Piasters Union No, ie OP. ert at
‘Woodlawn Park. Tickets 15 cents,
|
: : a o
| AIR DOME >
g. ws ;
2 , ‘
_ A Kalem Realistic |
A Beer War Picture--
: ab . |
) «6“The Battle of |
Freedom" . |
In Ths Reels 2
: fae
: Monday July 21
: ne 3
: ‘
|
| BAKER |
: THE MOVING PICTURE MAN |
Boanr armmancrawantarcrm memeateemerre xen
Bar ines
*GET THE HABIT =
e "Start a saving accoanb next pay-day and save rega- *
# —_Jarly for some definite purpose. You will be sur.
a prised’to see how fast your account will grow when %
-f ~ you get the saving habit, 2
* Mechanics Savings Bank &
x 189 BARNARD STREET =
3 HENRY PEARSON, Pres. F. D. TUCKER, Cashier *
BR HOS SREY Ne Ye SY Ss ey he oh ake oh a a a oe
i ile ies <=
boas oe eer
me a
s ee Er Sc
i ay eee oo
ce ee Bete 5?
a Ts aa es
Ce a a emi 2
- SS
ie Sy nual.
eee
3 eee a,
ee as
7
“puede
a eR ET ogg
T—The Union Mutual does fhings no—W
H—Has never stood for a little “U” nor a big—l
E—Enrolling members, is a pleasure ide a—L
U—Unlike some companies, we give a square dea—L
N—No big promises made of cheese and maccaron—I
I—Insure with us, who are classed as company—A
O—Our company has stood the financial stor—ML
N—Nothing for your protection. for us is too goo—D
M—More over, we keep our contract to the lette—Ht
‘U—Useless to say more about thelittle U and big—1
°E—This is a chance for protection that protect—S
U—Upon sound basis, we stand and wor—-K
“A—AII policy holders, treated alik—B
L—Let us prove to you, that our contract is rea—E
A—AlIl obligations respected, moral or lega—t
S—Show your race loyalty, by your uct—s
S—Since we begau, many have passed and son —E
9—O ur business, institution is now called giganti-C©
C—Competencs, the basis in ou business curee—EL
i—In all these years, our contract the sam—E
A—All | are acquainted with this fac—T
T—To all alike, whether it be Mr. “B" or Mr.—A*
i—Insure * today, “come from the rea—R
O—Oar ‘conipany eveiFwhere, is known to pa—Y¥
Now; see onsvef oui Agts to-day or phone 1470.
Y¥."Cx Lindsay, District Manager, 509 W. Broad St.,
_~ Savannah, Ga., oF write Wim. Driskell. Secretary-
Manager. 216 Auburn Aye. Atlanta, Ga. -
MEN TAKE NOTICE!
IF YOU ARE TIRED of wearing ready made or misfit, clothes let us make
YOUR NEW CLOTHES WE GUARANTEE A PERFECT FIT COOPER AND ODRIZEN THE UP-TO-DATE TAILORS 218 W BROAD ST SAVANNAH GEORGIA
LOCALS
On Friday morning, July 11th, Mr. and Mrs. R. H: Polote, 1112 Bolton street, east, were blessed with the arrival of a bouncing baby boy. Mother and baby are getting along fine.
Miss Inez E. Adkins, the daughter of Mr. J. S. Adkins, is in the city to visit her father. She has been visiting her grand-mother and other relatives in Augusta. Miss Adkins reports a very pleasant stay while there. She expects to remain in our city until the fall, then she will again take up her work at Spellman Seminary, Atlanta, Ga.
Mrs. Geo. S. Williams left on Thursday for a six weeks' trip through the north, accompanied by her uncle, Mr. Henry S. Patterson.
Mrs. T. J. Hopkins and sons, 1119 Gwinnett street, east, who have been in Americus visiting friends, left Monday for Columbus to spend the remainder of the month with relatives.
Mrs. C. E. Mayo of Jacksonville, after spending several weeks with her neice, Mrs. Gertrude Anderson, returned home on yesterday.
Mrs. Maude Lancaster and Mrs. Patsy Bently of Boston, Mass., and Mrs. Julia Jones were the guests of Mrs. Lizzie Hill at dinner on Sunday last.
Mr. W. J. White, manager of the Georgia Baptist, was in the city last Sunday. Mr. White is keeping up the standard of the Baptist and each week he is giving his patrons a paper of which they may well be proud. Miss Louisa Shields left on Wednesday last for Myers Mills, S.C., where she will spend the summer-
Prof. L. S: Clark of Athens, Ga., was in the city on Wednesday en route to St. Mary's Ga., to visit his mother. Prof. Clark is doing effective work at Knox Institute and is receiving enconiums on all sides. Miss H. E. Brown of Augusta is in the city, spending the week as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Singfield.
Mrs. C. A. Jackson, of Columbus, Ga., spent several days in the city. the guest of Mrs Jennie Holbrooks, of 36th street, west. In company with Mrs. Ida Hudson she gave us a call on Tuesday. Miss Mabel M. Clarke of Greensboro, N. C., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Dr. I. D. Williams, of 220, East Broad street. Miss Alice B. Miller sailed Thursday for the north, where she will spend about two months.
Miss Madeline R. Shivery sailed Thursday for New York, and other points. Miss Shivery will be the guest of Dr. Alice W. McKaue while in Boston, Mass. Mrs. Jesse Whiteman was among those to sail for New York on Thursday.
You are cordially invited to attend the Twenty-Second Anniversary OF THE Morning Call Social Club
Steamer Pilot Boy leaves her wharf at 2:30 p. m., returning leaves Daufuskieat 7:30 p. m. Come and enjoy yourselves with us as the committee will spare no pain in making this one of their enjoyable times for which they are noted. A choice line of refreshments will be served to order. Music rendered by one of the leading orchestras.
Ticket 50 cents
J. D. Powell, Secretary
P. E. Cohen, Chairman
J. H. Dayis, Ex-officio
Second Baptist Church
Sunday School
Will hold their
ANNUAL PICNIC
— AT —
WOODLAWN PARK
Tuesday July 22nd, 1913
Adults 15 cents
Children 10 cents
MENT
1
East Side Sanitarium
THE BEST PRIVATE PLACE IN THE CITY FOR
Colored People
(WHEN SICK)
Modern Equipment
Good Nursing
Terms Reasonable
Write, Phone or Call on us.
Rates—Private Rooms $7.00 to 10.00 per week.
GEO. W. SMITH, M.D., PRESIDENT
EAST GWINNETTE ST. AND ATLANTIC AVB. PHONE 4941
Employment secured for reliable and capable persons. All kinds of help furnished promptly. Phone 4812. WM. J. JACKSON, MGR.
Mrs. R. Ethel Wright is now in the hair culture business and is agent for the famous Madam C. J. Walker's hair goods Address 608 Waters Avenue or Phone 4723—Ad.
Miss Anna Johnson and Miss Nettie Scott of Jacksonville, Fla., are in the city visiting relatives.
Mr. H. F. Johnson and little daughter, of Tuskegee, Ala., are in the city for a few days visiting friends and relatives. They are stopping at his brother, Mr. J. H. Washington.
Mr. M. G. Graham spent last Sunday in Waycross, Ga.
Mrs. M. M. Stripling of 916 Cuyler street, is now handling Madam C. J. Walker's hair goods. She will be pleased to have her friends in need of hair goods call on her—Ad.
Mrs. Leah H. Gooden of this city, accompanied by Miss Miriam Steward, left on Monday last for Portsmouth, Va., en route to Philadelphia, Pa., where they will spend the summer and will return the latter part of September.
AMUSEMENT COLUMN. ComingEvents in the Social World.
NOTICE—Articles in this column one cent per word.
The First African Baptist church Sunday school, Franklyn Square, will give their picnic at Woodlawn Park, Wednesday July 23, 1913. Cars leave Union Station at 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 and 8 p.m. Tickets 25 cents including car fare.
July 22, Tuesday, Afternoon outing by Mt. Carmell House Hold of Ruth No. 4616 to Daufuskie. Tickets 50 and 35 cents.
July 28, Monday, Trolley Ride by Star of Success Court of Calanthe Fare 25 cents.
August 4, Monday, Lime Kiln Boys Outing to Palmetto Park. Tickets 50 and 25 cents.
July 28. Monday, Trolly Ride by the Friendly Brothers A. and S. C. Fare 25 dents.
August 4, Monday, Compress Glee Club's Excursion to Daufuskie Fare 50 and 35 cents.
July 21, Monday, Trolly Ride by the Ice Men. Tickets 25 cents.
July 21, Monday, Picnic at Palmetto Park Daufuskie by Bellmont Lodge No. 3693 G. U. O, of O. F. Fare for all 50 cents. Double 85 cents.
July 21, Monday, Trolly Ride by
Foithful Hope Lodge No. 223, I O. of
C. and D of S.
July 22, Tuesday, Grand Entertainby Eureka Tent No.194 at Mechanics hall. Admission 15 cents single. 25 cents double.
July 28, Monday, Outing at Woodlawn Park by Ga. Union Tie and Socfal Club. Admission 15 cents.
July 21. Monday, Two boat excursion to Beaufort, by Mt. Seir Lodge, 2461, G U. O. of O. F. Round trip 50 and 35 cts. July 21. Monday, Trolley Ride by Usual Friendly Aid Society Fare 25 cts. July 28th. Monday. Annual Excursion to Beaufort, by Bethlehem Baptist Church. Tickets 50 and 25 cents.
July 21st, Monday. Trolly Ride by Golded Circle No. 4. Fare 25 cents.
July 29th, Tuesday. Outing at Lincoln Park by Fountain City A. and S. Club. Tickets 15 cents. July 28th, Monday Excursion to Beaufort by Bethlehem Baptist Church Fere 50 and 35 cents.
July 21st, Monday. Trolley Ride by the Spencer's club, for benefit Mt Zion Baptist church, tickets 25 cents
July 29, Tuesday, Picnic at Lincoln Park by Fountain City Aid and Social Club, admission 15 cents
July 21, Monday, Military Day at Lincoln Park by Uniform Rank Knights of Damon, admission 15 cents
July 22nd, Tuesday. Outing at Woodlawn Park by Second Baptist Church Sunday school. Tickets 10 15 cents.
Social Happenings
A very pleasant surprise reception was tendered Mrs. R. L. Barnes, at her residence on Tuesday evening by the ladies' Past WorthyCounsellors' Union, O. O. C., at which a very beautiful cut glass vase was presented to her by the union. A short musical program was rendered, after which Mrs. E. W. Sherman in well chosen words presented the gift. Dainty refreshments were served. Mrs. Barnes is held in high esteem by the Calanthians in all parts of the state and especially by those in Savannah.
Mrs. Rachel Lunday of Jacksonville, spent two weeks' vacation in the city with friends and relatives. She was entertained on last Sunday by her brother, and was given a reception by Miss Laura Willis of 723 East Anderson street. She left Tuesday last for her home, Jacksonville, Fla.
Mrs. J. C. Woodruff entertained at her residence Friday July 11, with a dinner in honor of Rev. and Mrs. P. J. Bprant of Atlanta, Ga., who were in the city attending the B.Y P. U. Congress. Those present were Rev. and Mrs. P. J. Bryant, Rev. and Mrs. Daniel Wright, Mother Haynes and Miss Taylor, Atlanta, Ga., Rev. and Mrs. Wm. L Craft and little Miss Craft, Nashville, Tenn., Rev. R. H. Thomas, Mrs. A. J. Rivers and Mrs. L. Chaplin.
Sanitarium
PLACE IN THE CITY FOR
People
(N SICK)
ment
ursing
ns Reasonable
1.00 to 10.00 per week.
M.D., PRESIDENT
Atlantic Ave. Phone 4941
ment Exchange
BROAD ST.
ABLE
NGERS
TO DELIVER
Light Packages
OF THE CITY
Available and capable persons.
Finished promptly.
KSON, MGR.
NOTICE!
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Finest a
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Complete
P
E
Mo
E
M
FOU
Finest and Largest
For Colore
LOOK AT O
VAUDEV
Complete change of Ac
THE ON
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IN CONJ
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EDDIE
(West Broad Street, Just South of Gaston Street)
Finest and Largest Theatre in the South For Colored People Only
LOOK AT OUR SUPERB VAUDEVILLE BILL Complete change of Acts Monday and Thursday
THE ONLY ORIGINAL PETE PORTER IN CONJUNCTION WITH MANCE McDANIEL
McNEIL
John and R.
THE CELEBR
Eva Dale
SINGING AND I
MOVING
FOUR NEW REEL
McNEIL & McNEIL John and R. Desdamonia McNeil THE CELEBRATED COMEDIANS
Monday July 21st
"Death's Short Cut"
"One round O'Brien comes Back"
"Pride of Lonesome"
Tuesday July 22nd
"The Crimson Stain"
(Great 3 reel Kay Bee war picture)
"The Tell Tale Light"
(A very funny Keystone comedy)
Wednesday July 23rd
"A tale of Death Valley"
"Her Two Jewels"
"Mutual Weekly"
"The Ingrate"
YOU Regular
YOU WILL LI Regular Matinees M
YOU WILL LIKE OUR SHOW
Regular Matinees Monday, Thursday and Saturday at 3:30. Two Performances Nightly at 7:30 and 9:30 o'clock
STAR THEATRE
THE HUMAN CORKSCREW Will Present His Famous Limber Dance
McNEIL
monia McNeil
COMEDIANS
gerfield
ING SOUBRETTE
ICTURES
CHANGED DAILY
Thursday July 24th
"Safe in Jail"
(Keystone Comedy)
"A Rural Romance"
("San Francisco")
"Her Rosary"
Friday July 25th
"The Wager"
"For The Man She Loved"
"One of the Finest"
"The Impulse"
Saturday July 26th
"Heart Throbs"
(Broncho two-reel War Picture)
"Funnicus At Luna Park"
"The Golden Jubilee"
OUR SHOP
ans * = . ll
Gcak = <x ae * ey 5 wx es a 7 . »- &,
‘Cookery
‘Points
Cherry Delights.
. Cherries served fresb and cold on
their own stems for breakfast are so
" delicious that no otber way of serving,
the » at that teal could be better. But
pitted and sprinled with Sugar and a
by’ of lemon juice they serve as an ap-
ft “er and at the same time tose none
of wir delicate flavor. Another way
vt ,reparing them for breakfast is to
pr .bem and mix them with sugar in
tl. proportion of half a cupful to a
v pis of cherries and cook them until
th+y are just tender. Then pour them
v\ + buttered toast.
+ arry soup has been made, but it
co, hardly be more than the result of
a1, effort to serve cherries in a new and
unexpected way. However, at every
course save the soup course cherries
cn be legitimately served.
‘herry cocktails are made in this
\.¥: Stone ripe cherries, chop them
fir “, add a tablespoonful of lemon juice
te vach cupful of cherries, sweeten
th. 2 to taste and serve them either in
co stall glasses or else in lemon skin
er < made by removing part of one.
sis of a sufficient number of lemons,
cut ing a bit of the rind from the other
sis, removing all the pulp and juice
a+ washing and chilling the shells.
Cherries served with French toast
can be used as an entree. To make
them cut rings half an inch thick from
‘r-‘d and‘soak them in beaten egg
y+ milk, a little sugar and a pinch of
s.° Roll the bread rings in crumbéd
. bi .d@ and macaroons and brown them
in “trer, Stew ripe cherries with sug-
a, augh to sweeten them, drain and
1 + tn the middie of a dish. Surround
t! a with the fried bread rings and
se them with the juice of the cher-
r. * thickened with a little cornstarch
au. # flavored with orange juice.
Cherry fritters can be served with
iment,as a separate course or as dessert.
‘fo make them prepare a batter of a
cupful of flour, a teaspoonful of salt
and half a teaspoonful of baking pow-
der mixed with a tablespoonful of
melted butter, a well beaten egg and
enough water to make a thin batter.
Stew ripe, pitted cherries until they
are Just tender—but do not cook them
to pleces—and sweeten them. Drain
them and add them to the batter. Drop
it in spoonfuls into deep fat and fry
brown. ‘The juice drained from the
cherries can be substituted for water
to moisten the fritter batter.
Sour cherries are needed for cherry
sherbet. Stone a quart of them. In
the meantime boil together a quart of
water and a pound pf granulated sugar
for fifteen minutes. Add the cherries
to the hot sfrup just as it {s taken from
the stove and stand aside until it 1s
perfectly cold. Strain through a fine
wire sleve and freeze. When you take
out the dasher stir in a meringue mado
of the white of one egg sweetened with
2 tablespoonful of granulated sugar.
Dieser in She. thw an hau oe tes.
Raspberry Tarte,
Raspberry Tarts—Delicious raspber-
ry tarts can be made by cooking paste
im patty tins, Gilling the shells with
rice or beans in waxed paper to keep
the paste from bubbling and filling the
shells with fresh raspberries covered
with sugar and whipped cream.
Bespberry Ice Cream.—This ice
cream calls for three pints of raspber-
ries, Cover and mix them with a cup-
fnl of sugar and let them stand for an
hour. Mix three pints of cream with a
cupfal and a half of sugar and two
tablespoonfuls of sherry. Freeze and
when stiff take out the dasher. Put
the berries and sugar in the cavity
where the dasher was and set away in
ice and salt for an hour and a half.
Boiled Sweet Apples.
‘Take five nice, ripe, sweet apples.
halve and core them, place in a kettle,
sprinkle with four teaspoonfuls brown
sugar. Add water enough to boll well
over the apples. Cover and let them
cook until tender and the juice is be-
coming thick. Then with a silver fork
or spoon IIft the bottom pieces. letting
the top ones down into the sirup.
Cook from twenty to thirty minutes
longer, being carefnl net to Duro them.
‘these are much nicer than baked ap-
les.
Pan Dowdy.
Vie crust, apples, two cupfuls of sug-
zr, one teaspoonful of cinnamon, one
vxpful of cider. Line the sides of a
«cep baking pan with common pie
«rust, fill it with apples. pared, cored
nnd quartered. Add the sugar, cinna-
mon and cider. Cover it with rather
n thick crust. Bake ft slowly four
hours, then break in the crust and mix
it well with the apples. Eat with
cream.
Roman Parfait.
Beat up one quart of thick cream
until stiff. Then add one pound of
powdered sugar and put into the can
of tho freezer. Pack in ice and salt
and let it stand until half frozen.
‘Then add the juice and grated rind of
two lemons, one tablespoonful of bran-
dy and a little green coloring. Repack
and let it stand from two to three
hours until frozen.
Good Sandwiches.
Have ready thin,slces of bread
Spread them with butter, Neufchatal
cheese and minced olives. Press every
two together in sandwich fashion and
serve. .
A MODEL FOR YOU.
I've a big fluffy hen that's a dandy.
She always does her best. +
She ‘oesn’t sport any fancy frilis
‘N+ wear a rounded crest.
But shen ehe scratches she crooks hw
oes.
Ar | the dickens is to pay. *
You'd tink she'd scratch the barnyard
Ard the garden all away.
And when she lays—oh, my, what egce
‘And she lays when eggs ate high,
Her eggs are firsts—you bet they“re best -
And make swell pumpkin pic.
And when she hatches—oh, goodness me:-
She sits tili the cows come home.
But, oh, the chicks that she brings out?
'Phey’re dandy and then some!
And when she's In love she’s in’ love, oh
my*
| She has roosters by the score,
And, like the seaside summer girl,
She's always hunting for more.
Oh, no, Sir Sluggard, don’t go to the ant
For lessons in industry!
‘The ant's not in it with the hen.
“Just take that tip from me.
‘The hen brings in a billion a year.
‘You bet she fs a prize! ~
So go to Biddy and learn the trick,
And then do thou likewise.
Cc. M. BARNITZ
THE POULTRY DOCTOR SAYS—
Doping all the hens in a flock be
cause one dies or fs sick ts 2 peculiar
and foolish method of some fancier
This generally puts the whole’ buncb
off their feed «ind stops laying, and
these conditions confirm the dope
fiend’s funny opinion that they've al
got ft, and so he dopes them again. It’s
far better to remove, the sick fowl
clean up und disinfect. study the flock
and especially to scrutinize one’s metb-
ods closely, for it's often: what is fed
and how it’s fed that brings sickness
among the flock.
“Cholera” is a term often applied to
poultry disease in summer, but there
is mighty little cholera among the
fowls of this country. ‘These intestinal
troubles, this indigestion, that some-
what resembles cholera, have their
cause mostly in rank, rotten yards,
lack of shade and greens, dirty drink-
ing water, hot sleeping quarters, multt-
plying Hce and mites and feeding too
much heat, fat producing cora in warm
weather.
‘The plaster droppings of ducks that
soon cover the whole surface of a yard
should be systematically removed dur
ing the development of the ducklings
or serious results, such as intestinal or
theumstic troubles, develop or the
stamina ‘of the stock is lowered.
‘We have seen 100 ducks die in two
days, and an investigation showed it
was not the feed, as supposed, but tbe
microblal mess through which the
quacks waddled every day and which
fertilized the desert air with its awfu)
stench.
Unless very hungry, hens will not of-
ten fill up on mash that fs too wet, be-
cause they seem to know it is not
wholesome. Same with a mash whero
moldy ingredients are used. Both
mean Jntestinal irritation and scours.
Feeding small chicks and turkey
poults sloppy feeds {s a cause of much
mortality on farms. The majority of
poultrymen feed nothing wet to chicks.
To be right a mash must not only be
composed of good grain products, but
should be crumbly and of such consist-
ency ag not to stick to the bands.
FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS.
| ‘The Iowa State college at Ames now
holds free poultry clinics, where poul-
try diseases are diagnosed and 1n-
vestigated. Solomon didn’t lve in the
age of progressive poultry, culture oF
he wouldn't have sald, “There's noth-
ing new under the sun.”
Lice and cholera germs flourish most
in hot weather, and both by a litte
work may be prevented. Running for
remedies and cleaning up when @ flock
is down with contagious disease is
certainly a ridiculous and fruitless pro-
ceeding and exhibition of bow not to
doit.
‘The country boys and girls of Minne-
sota are taking n poultry census of the
state for the state agricultural college.
These young people will make a thor-
cough job of ft, It will be the first
complete poultry census taken, and
"we advise other states to' follow Min-
nesota's lead.
In every neighborhood there are al-
ways some who point the long finger
when any one tries to farm or dairy
or ralse poultry or frult by advanced
methods. These weeping Jeremiahs
who are always prophesying failure for
progressive people generally arrive at
thelr conclusions from facts in their
own unsuccessful personal experience.
One hundred and twenty-four stu-
dents made a specialty of poultry cul-
ture at the University of Missouri tho
past term. Fifty-eight Missouri coun-
ties and sjx outside states were rep-
resented,
‘A feast today and a famine tomor
row will upset the digestion and egg
production of any hen. This method
neither works with hen nor men.
A male bird is often rendered sterile
by the strain attending too much ex-
hibiting. Eggs from your pens, wheth-
er set in incubators or under hens,
should be tested for fertility, ‘This
will often save time that would be
wasted in setting worthless eggs and
also selling eggs that can’t hatch.
The beginner fs often disappointed
when he discovers every egg doesn't
hatch a winner. He may buy setting
of eggs for $20 and not get a perfecto
from the lot. He learns later that phe-
nomenal birds are not the rule, that his
best breeders do not always breed true
and that, andestry will show. Just the
same with humans, where a red headed
baby may be traced back to a great-
great-great-grandmother without an.
other bricktop between.
"eo
ie
ene 5a |
CULT.
5 a eg ok.
a Ny BS ees Soe if
[ NOTES Pez:
BY fy oe
lie i
C.M.BARNITZ CEE
RIVERSDE [> He eS
Saas
MA BOY
CORRESPONDENCE | dd fee
SOLICITED : a
[These articles and iMustrations must not
be reprinted without gpecial permis-
sion}
KILLING BUGS ON BIDDY.
Killing bugs oa Biddy is a pestit-
erous proposition, one that many don’t
indulge in and one that many others
don’t indulge in enough to quality as
experts.
Some get round the bughouse job
by sprinkling louse powder on the hen
while in the nest, placing bug killer,
moth balls, tobacco, sulphur, slaked
ime, in the nést-or greasing the hen
with lard with the idea that she will
grease the chicks.
But why take lazy balfway meas-
ures with these crawlers that are so
a o \ an
f re
See
mee
NR
p84 \ See aes
E ges ——Z-
ENO FASS
Ca
Pt 2 ase: Me
ed pees ED
Photo by C. M. Barnitz
‘iene: serie
destructive, breed so fast, have so
many hiding places in the feathers and
resist so inauy so called insecticides?
‘The most effective method is to treat
each fowl individually, to apply the
louse powder by hand.
‘Just take your hen by the hocks so
she can't jerk and break a leg and
hold her head down over a newspaper,
and her feathers will fall open. Start
with the fluff, the louse incubator; get
the powder down to the skin; work it
in around the roots of the tail between
‘body and thighs, on thighs, back, cape
hackle, head, throat, wing quills; work
it down to akin all over the fowl, then
shake your hen gently over paper and
release ber quietly lest she fly around
and sbake off the powder. We find
the louse machine next in effectiveness
and recommend it for Dig flocks.
It fs easily made, dusts five or six
hens at once, does quick work and
does not injure fowls. It is simply a
CC
Nat:
ROR ME Sri pee SLE A
Par PRIS ORR ei
pe RS ena
Es a x
he Sts 2 &, ele S
asap ee ae ;
ogee’... ><° Cee Ar ae!
eer ARS
TURNING THC LOUSE MACHINE. ,
revolving canvas drum in which the
fowls turn in contact with the pow-
der,
Good louse killer is' hard to buy,
‘Much on the market {s worthless, some
injurious, Persian insect powder 1s
the best sold, especially fine for chicks
and poults, but rather expensive for
big flocks.
For new readers we repeat our louse
killer recipe, and we find no better for
sold stock: a
One pint gasoline.
One-half pint crude carbolic acid.
Four pounds plaster paris.
Str the mixed liquids into plaster,
sereen on to newspaper and let stand
two hours, then can for use and use
in moderate quantity.
DON'Ts.
Don’t buy much cracked corn at a
time. It,soon molds, and that’s deadly.
Grind, your own and save money and
mortality.
Don’t change methods as soon as yoo
read what great success some other
fellow has had with another. He may
be lying to induce buying.
Don't do others, but do your part
with all your might, art and heart.
Don’t think filth is dormant when
dried on the dropping boards. It be
comes dust, and every moving wing
sends it into the lungs with its destruc.
tive microbes
— 1 2
y aN
SE r
f ° The Average Buyer
A Buys the Remington —
¢ : A P
ORE 4 Fs
5 RE AE Zt } Mf. é
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E 4 See ee 1 AYE
5 5 SRE (Ra heee Seo f
a [Sen eee OAL AM AN
rl. pglilegGh Dears SNS & E
RASS RTE i ye OER S ‘
A ee eee pe NN AN
{i eS eee eee ae ey i
US pe SSS Ss Gi i. ee
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oe Se an eee ae er eas,
2 T Thzt+ zen repettisn, he buys the Remington. Ifhe buys
BU Tne Comnrison, he buysthe Remingiom Ihe
— Lox nothing short ef acvaal test, he buys the Remington.
BL oT. Send under cay conditions, the Remington is his
Boron. or ifee _ 4 f
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ROOM 8 SOUTHERN EXPRESS BUILDING,
im PHONE 898 SAVANNAH, GA.
INSURANCE GEOGRA-
PHY.
; When is a man most confused?
mhen he miszey his fram.
| When are the people most-un-
fe? When they are not insured
IS uth the Pilgrim Health and Lite
lnsurance Company,
Which company pays for all dis-
eases known to medical ‘science?
‘The Pilgrim.
Which company carries its mem-
bers the longest before lapsing
their policies? The Pilgrim. _.
Will you explain why the Pil
grim does this? Only to aid its
policy holders, that’s all-
Which company organized firs
among Negroes in Georgia, and
secured a charter to do business
along the Industrial lines? The
Pilgrim, of course.
Which company ‘collected the
largest amount of morey, accord-
to the last report of the INSUR-
ANCE DEPARTMENT, to
the Governor qf the State? The
answer is inthe report, The Pil-
grim.
How can this statement be veri-
fied? By referring to the report of
the INSUKANCE DEPART-
MENT, of the State of Georgia.
How can a policy be obtained
with the Pilgrim, in case its agents
turn back before they seach your
home? By ringing phone 4129.
Why has the Pilgrim so many
satisfied policy holders? By per-
forming its perpetuated motto,
PROMPTNESS, HONESTY
AND JUSTICE.
Why is it so easy to secure new
members for the Pilgrim? They
have heard of the many blessings
it has, and is still bestowing upon
its thousands of satisfied policy
holders,
How long after the death of a
member, before the beneticiary can
draw the death benefit? As soon
as the death certificate is properly
filled by the attending physician.
How many men and women of
our race are employed ‘and are
well paid by the Pilgcim? SIX
HUNDEED TWENTY SEV-
EN.
‘Are you being satisfactorily
secved? Ifnotsee the Pilgrim’s
agents, or ring the office, and your
order will be filled; and promptly
delivered. Local arid long distant
‘phone 4129. Office, 509 West
Broad Street, Savannah Georgia.
J.S. Perry, Supt.
A. B. Singfield, Gen’! Supt.
—Adv.
Maximilian.
Among famous tall men of history
was the Roman emperor Maximilian.
whose height was said to be seven and
three-fourths feet. He was a young
barbariun, the son of Gothic ancestors,
and he first attracted the notice and ad-
uiration of the Romans by overcoming
sixteen of thelr strongest men, one aft-
er the other. °
Nearsighted.
Ella—I have seen twenty-two sum-
mers. Stella—I wish I were as near
sighted as yon are.—Ilustrated Bits.
“~" Useful Cements,
One of the slimplest hard cements is
| the well known misture of Itharge
and glycerin mide to a sti paste It
| sets bard asa rock and is ollproof. A
solution of water glass mised with
| powdered calcium carbonate serves the
| same purpose
A mixturr of boiled lnsecd oil and
fire clay resists acid better than most
cements, though sulphur melted with
| glass powder is also rauked-as very
| resistant to chemicals im zenerat,
A good stone cement is made by mix-
| ing two parts of magnesium oxide, one
part of magnesium chloride, powdered
Stone to suit as a Giller and water to
/make a stiff paste. Basie magnesium
chloride results:—Sclentifie American.
> A Monster Crane.
The largest crane in the world, erect-
ed at a Scotch shipyard, can be utilized
at every point within a circle 386 .féet
in diameter, and can lift loads of 200
tons to a height of 140 feet, seventy-
five féet from the center.
Belf Conscious.
| “What made sou jit Harold Hicol-
lar?” asked Maud.
“I didn't,” replied Mamie. “His con:
ceit misled bim. [ said I- wouldn't
wed the best man alive; he thonght 1
meant him."—Washington Star.
. Exactly So.
“Embroldering letters on bandker-
chiefs is a very nonprogressive busi-
ness.” 5
“How 30?”
+ “Because it never gets beyond the
Anitiat stage.”—Baltimore American.
Sympathy. i
“Madam,” suld Plodding Pete, “I
once had a wife and family, but 1
couldn't be contented, so I left home.”
“Well, here's a chicken sandwich for
you. Mighty few husbands are so con-
siderate.”—Chicago News.
Geet: *
The teacher was explaining the
tenses. “Now, Willie,” she said, “sup-
pose I should say,""I have a million dol-
lars." What tense would that be?”
“That'd be pretense,” answered Wil-
Ue.—Boston Transcript.
Disinterested Affection.
He—Darling, you must want me to
give you something or you wouldn't be
so styeet and gentle today. She—On
the contrary, I don’t want anything at
all, It's only for the dressmaker—
Exchange.
i. ik
“Alice is telling her girl friends that
she could have got Jack if she’d only
sald ‘Yes.’
| “That's what Jack thought, so be
never gave her a chance to say {t”"—
Boston Transcript.
The Old Man’s Bluff,
Newedd—Did you spend so much
money as this before I married you?
Mrs. Newedd—Whs, yes. Newedd—
‘Then I can’t understand why your fn-
ther went on so when I took you away
from him.—Boston Advertiser.
Riechtning State.
Lightning is more frequent in Flort-
da and Ilinols than in any other
state. >
Money and Fun,
‘The more money you have the more
your fun wil! cost you.—Philadelphia
Public Ledger.
* Laziness.
Laziness is the deadllest of all dis-
eases, for the disease itself prevents
one from taking the remedy.
SPESRHSSSFSESPEOCSeDRZVE
> s
o +
2 SAVING *
+ +
° 7 +
+ MON EY iS +
* eg *
: = s
i A HABIT ;
t %
> Get the habir of “ss
+ esving 2 part of °
+ your warnings — -
& eaeh weeit ”
> a
+ Reina! *
: $100:
ae * 3 es
of aot - &
e >
r eager iat *
‘ - Starts an a
. = a
+ A pepessge +
+ Accouut >
+ ~ >
* 7 x >
*. THE WAGE- +
+ EARNERS’ LOAN *
* AND INVESTMENT te
+ COMPANY, ‘ +
> +
+43°WHSTB ROAD BT ¥
+ Savannah, Ga e *
oS
PEEPEPE TE SHH HEEL
. GAREY’S
Variety. Bakery
Goods delivered promptly to any
part of the city. :
506 West Broad St, Near Gaston.
Phone 1869-3
ee ey
Masonic Books
. and Regatias
Lopce SEALS,
FINANCIAL CARDS and
BLANKS of every description.
Publishers and Manufacturers’ Prices
Laberal-Discounts Will Be Arranged,
SOL GJOHNSON, ™ :
Savannah, Ga, -
Rooms for Rent
Rooms furnished for light house-'
keeping on first flat. Bed Room,/
Dining Room and Kitchen. Also-
Furnished Rooms for men—good,
clean, airy rooms. Apply
Mrs. W- V. Legare,
| Legareville,Louis ville Road, in
city limit. 5-10-1
_
| The Scuth Atlantic Barber
shop - i
Headquarters for barber supplies and
shoe polish. A fine line of cigars.
pipes and tobacco. Shoes shined and*
repaired.
Dealer in second handed shoes
Clothes cleaned, pressed and repaired
Hot, cold and shower baths.
H, A. MANZO, Gen'l. Mgr
145 West Broad St.
The Up-to-date
Hair Cutting, Shaving, Shampoo-
ing
Bomr anp Warr Treatment
Work GuaRanrTeEp.
W.- H. PRINCE, Proprietor
508W. Gwinnett St Sav’h. Ga
Try the New Discovery
; MAGIC
Shaving .Powder
GUARANTEBOR TO SHAVE. You
CLEAN WITHOUT USING A RA-
zOR. WILL SEND HALF POUND
Soa oats wae,
Agents Wanted
WRITE &
The Shaving Powder Ca,
SAVANNAH, GA.
‘ - For First Class s
GROCERIES and CONFECTIONERY
. canon. f
' M. G@ GRAHAM
i- 626 York St, West.
Courteous Attsntion te AK
Sake 2 at er 3 ee Re OF Se eC OE as lt a! ee eee ee LN OR ge ae te RABI RO) BO Be ee ees
: BE th Ee eg Ea eee ae ea : : ty _ ess
ma . : - ‘ a Me so - . a 3 3
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7 z se Se cisabae oa Receipt aaa at a a a a ace rr EU acces,
FARM eae
ois
ORCHARD
a ae
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GARDEN 2c
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FETRIGG Rie
REGISTER, BSS
RROCKFORD.IAN Yee}
se ist P
ANXO EU a
SORRCSFONDENCE ag j
SOLICITED z 3B
[This matter must not be reprinted with-
out speclil permiss.on.}
<A litde coppers in the drinking wa-
ter serves ‘as x nod preventive of dis-
eases to which the poultry tloek may
be subject.
A Freneb aviator, Perreyon, recent-
ly broke the record for an altitude
flight, in carrying two passengers,
‘reachinz a height of 15,480 feet.
* If the wren’s nest is exposed to the
direct rays of the afternoon sun it is
a good idea to shield it with some sort
of covering. ‘This will take but a mo-
ment's time. put will pea service that
the little birds will much appreciate.
Barring invalids, the folks who com-
plain most pbout dhe hot weather are
those whe have little else to do, The
fellow who is building. ditching or hay-
ing hnows it is hot. but he fs too busy
to think very much about it.
‘A fellow down in Washington has
enreid a bad ease of dyspepsia by eat-
ing 2 teaspeenfal of sand once a day.
This cure is cheap enough, but it
would better net he* tried except on
the recommendation of a retiahle phy-
sician, : .
‘Tbe South American banana erop is
so large that the United Mrait compa-
ny finds itself unable to handle it. ‘Phe
eause of the enormous crep is not only
favorbje growing conditions, but free-
dom from storms and other forms of
damaze .
Old potatecs reached a new low rec-
ord mark in large market centers ear-
ly in June, when they slumped to 16
cents a bushel. In some cities they
were dumped out and poor people of
the city allowed to come and get them
for nothinz.
Coal and charcoal are supposed to be
so0d for hogs—thit is. they like it—be-
‘cause it not only stimulates the flow of
the digestive juices, but because the
sharp cornered pieces are tough on the
‘worms that sometimes infest the in-
testinal tract.
. The soil about the bushes ahd shrubs
should be kept spaded and the suck-
ers cut out. Oftentimes it is advisable
to give.a heavy mulch of straw ma-
nure. This not only serves to hold
moisture, but gives the growing busbes
needed fertilizing elements.
Placing a sack containing equal
parts of saltpeter and fine broken cbar-
coal in a cistern is said to be an ef-
fective means of clearing the water.
The saltpeter draws the soot to the
sack and the charcoal holds it. This
process does not injure the water and
45 effective for several months.
In the manufacture of the high grade
tankage whieh ts used to furnish pro-
tein in a condensed! form in the hog ra-
tion the materials are subjgcted to s0
high a temperature that All disease
zerms are killed., including those of
hoz cholera. Wowerer. the stenizinz
of the tankuse in the cooking proc-
ess would not preclude the possibility
of contamination by cholera germs sub-
sequent to the time of manufacture.
Horse thieves and chicken thieves
are uot ehitire strangers in many rural
communities, but the present season
is the first that many have heard re-
ports of tree thieves. In an instance
of the latter kind ndted the other day
a Inmdret fruit trees that had been
lately planted were found mfssinz
when the owner went to see what
srowth ther were making. In the
sare neighborhood seventy trees were
taken from another farmer.
Where sand or gtarel and decom-
posed limestone and clay are at band
there is no cheaper or better material
for roai improvement. Where the road
to be improved is already sandy, .the
clay-limestone combination is all that
is needed. Where the soll is heavy and
elther muck or loam, both sand and
the clay and Nmestone should be used.
If the roadway {s low the roadside
should be drained and the road crown-
ed with a grader before the surface
tnaterials mentioned are applied.
Professor Larson of the South Da-
kota Agricultural college strongly ad-
vises the buflding of the pit silo in
those semlirid sections of the state
where the farmers are likely to be
short of money duo to erop failures
the past few years and where the soil
is clay or gumbo, so that it will not
cave in ay a result of the action of the
wrerther or mofsture coming from the
silaxe He recommends a pit some
sixteen feet dees and from eighteen
to twenty fect in diameter and puts
tle cost of it at whaterer the value
wont be of the labor required to diz
vt. fle suggests 2 derrick and bucket
for itis purpose, the same outfit also
Velng mved to lift out the silage during
the whiter -ensan, =
*1IS THE KICK JUSTIFIED?
A reader of -these notes who iz a
level headed and progressive farmer
offers this criticism against the work
and methods of the so called county
agricultural expert—nawely.. tbat his
efforts aré far less valuable from the,
standpoint of the average farmer be-
cause most of the experiments be con-
ducts are on so imited and intensive
a scale that they cannot be carried out
In the same way on 4 quarter or balf
section farm. Our friend contends that
if this same expert were to take entire
charge of a farnl, assuming responsi-
bility for the planning of the work
and for the hundred and one details,
some of then often yesatlous and an-
noyinz, and were to make a distinct
success of it, an imporement orer
hat the owner is able to do, he
Would then be in a po-ition to tell the
avernze farmer how to farm. The
same tyvcht is expressed bya Kan-
sas farndr in the followius language:
“Dam in for of progress and ad-
yaneement, but before ive <ct Into the
espert basiness tod far J am In favor
yf puitine those experts un probation. |
Give each one IG) acres of land, one
team, two cows. foitr sleep. provivions
for one year, und, if at the expiration
of five years he bas kept? out of the
poorhonse, paid his taxes. kept bix
lodge dues paid and his preacher, let
the county in which lie Is located give
him a job on the county experiment
farm.” x
THE CELERY BED.
‘The home garden can easily be nmde
to produce all the celery that the fam-
diy needs. ‘The writer has secure es-
celleut results by dissing a trench
three and,n half feet wide and eight
or nine inches deep, spading up the
hottom of this to a depth of four or
five inehes and working in three or
four wheelbarrow loads of well rotted
mayure, The plants, which shoutd
have the roots and tops pruned back.
should be set in rows ten mches apart
and about eight inches apart in thé
row. ‘The plants should be kept hoed
and free from weeds and watered dnr-
ing dry weather. When planted in x
trench in the manner sugzested the
soil doos not dgy out so rapidly, while
the earth thrown fiom the treneh may
be returned ducing the tulling process,
It is best to besin hilins when the
plants are about ten inches hizh, de-
penlinz somewhat upon whether the
variety is dwarf or giant. and to give
a couple of applications of earth after
the first. Plants put out early in July
should yield celery for the table the
latter part of October, while for the
winter supply they may be put out six
weeks later.
THE GRASSHOPPER PEST.
In several sections of western states
grasshoppers have done great damage
within the past few weeks, and ento-
mologists connected with several mid-
ale state agricultural colleges have
warned farmers of possible damage
from the pest in the coming weeks.
A spray that is safd to be effective in
Killing the grasshoppers is made by
mixing one pound of arsenate of Jead
and two quarts of cheap molasses and
diluting in sixty gallons of water. This
should be applied to vegetation along
roadsides «nd the edges of fields where
the grasshoppers may be abundant. A
dope which kills the grasshoppers
when they eat it 1s made by mixing
one pound of paris green in forty
Pounds of bran and adding enough wa-
ter and molasses to make it a sticky
mass. This should be scattered in
small quantities at intervals of three
or four rods wherever the hoppers
are abundant Another mixture equal-
ly good is made by substituting fresh
horse manure in place of bran on the
above recipe and adding salt.
TWO RECORD BREAKERS.
Professor Rice of the poultry depart-
ment of the State College of Agricul-
ture at Cornel! university, New York.
has a couple of hens of which he may
well feel proud. One of these, Cornell
Supreme, has laid 660 exes iu a period
of three years, the highest sustained
preluction of which he has been able
to find any autheutie record. These
ees weished “$6.19 pounds, or more
tl n twenty-five times the weight of
the hen Another hen, Cornell Sur-
Prise, has laid 502 exzs fy the three
year period. a remarkable feature
about her performanve belng that she
Iald more exes each successive year,
her score for the three years heing 180,
186 an? 10% eges respectively. The
performance of these two hens leads
thelr owner to the couclusion that a
hen can sustain a high exg production
for a period of at lenst three years and
that such a breed can be developed by
selection which will add greatly to the
value of the poultry business of the
country. 5 .
WHY SOME SUCCEED.
Success in most any line of agricul-
tural endeavor or in animal or poultry
husbandry is rarely due so much to
exceptiona! opportunity or especially
favorable environment or to unusual
ability on the part of the operator as
to the simple traits of persistence, ap-
Plcation to details and the use of a
falr moasnre of good sense and intcl-
Higence. Chiefly does It follow sticking
to one thing, whatever the drawbacks
for the time being may be. Many peo-
ple make a fizzle of their undertakings
by dropping an enterprise just“ns they
have got through the tiresome and ex-
perience getting stage. They take a
new tack and drop it at about the
same stage, and so on, ‘The net result
fs that they are most of their time
gaining experience at a high price,
from which they get littleor no benefit,
A SERMON’ FROM NATURE.”
+ Let us be cheerful like the birds. --
- Old robin, singing there, =
Has little hungry mouths to feed *
And other earthly care,
Yet he starts singing at the dawn,
And when the sun has gone
He sits beside his nesting mate *
And sings an even song.
Let us be busy like the bees. +
My, how tho bees do work! <
And yet with all their daily toil
‘They never shirk nor jerk.”
« How happily they buzz and fly
From fower unté flower!
So may we work and store away
‘Treasure from every hour.
Let us bd useful Jike the trecs. +
‘The apple, peach and pear
Blossom so sweetly in the spring.
What luscious fruit they bear!
Thus life is meant to bear good frult,
And we should fill our sphere
‘That others, seeinz our good works.
May glonfv God here...
Let us be harness as the roce
“And other lovely fiowers
That shine like stars upon the earth
And glgrify its bowers
‘The lly speaks of purity
£0 may our souls be white
* Anil Iater bison in paradise™ 3
| In gardens of delight. &
©. a. BARNITZ.
KURICS FROM KORRESPONDENTS
| QE note in a recent “uries” you
state you saw a hyn that laid when
her aldomen wis so full of tumors
that her oviduet and intestines éonld no
louger perform their functions. Can x
heii lay without an oviduct? A. No.
‘The printer failed to get our correction
of proof in time {0 insert,the word xiz-
zard for oviduct; thes fe mistake. In
same column 90 per cent of an exg is
water shonld read G5 per cent.
Q. I have used yunr gasoline-carbolic
louse powder on my fowls with success
and am wondeiing if you herent some-
thing as effectual for the green lee
that Kill my rosebushes., A. Simply
Missolve half a five cent crke of com-
mon store washing seap in two zal-
lous of water, place in this a teaspoon-
ful of Kerosene und spray the bush
thoroughly. One thorouzh application
will be found sufficient.
Q. How many varieties of Wyan-
dottes does the new Standard of Per-
fection contain. Please name. A. Sil-
ver, Golden, White, Bud, Black, Par-
tridze, Silver Penciled, Columbian. *
Q. What should one do for that large
swelling that appears on the sule af a
chicken’s fout? I have apirze Brahma
cock bird,with the trouble. Is it con-
tagious? A. Your fowl has bumble-
foot. Not contagious, but from a
bruise, perhaps in your bird's ease
from jumping down from too hich a
roost. Simply cut deep across swéll-
ing, squeeze out pus, paint with car-
Uolie acid or some other antiseptic,
bandage and keep fowl on straw floor
until it recovers.
Q. I have a very fine Minorca cock-
erel and think of showing him, but I
notice one of is feet has webs a great
deal Ike a duck's. If he fs about per-
fect in all other sections would not his
other good qualities overbalance this
defect so that the judge would just cut
him slightly? How about breeding
him? A. No. THe would be debatred
from competition. Don’t breed from
ates.
FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS.
One way to get ducks off their feed
is to get them excited. A dog or a
boy chasing the flock can so disturb a
flock of market ducks as to put them
out of condition. Same way in’ the
laying house. A disturbance that puts
‘the hens ou nerve knocks the egg
‘record.
Some one says, “The best way to
tell whether an egs contains a rovster
or a hen Ig to hatch the egg under a
hen and watch the chick for a year,
and if it crows it’s a rooster, and if It
lays eggs it's a hen.”
It is occastonally thé case that a
breeding pen contains hens, that are
not popular with the male or which
give bim the cold shoulder. . testing
of the exss will show some of the eggs
dnfertile, and they may be easily traced,
Such hens should be mated to another
male, as it is seldom they Become rec-
onciled to the Ticad of the harem or the
male makes up with them.
When the American Poultry associa-
tion met at Nashville, Tenn. most
restaurants put on lots of ebieken frills,
and chicken soup, chicken salad, chiek-
en sundwikh and stuffed eggs were on
about every bill of fare. The mem-
bers felt like the boy who said to the
friend whe entertained him: “Don't
want none of that. Got plenty of that
at home.”
The Single Comb Brown. Leghorn
sceis {o be dropping out of sight, very
few being seen at shows, and one sel-
dom sees a flock of them. One reason
for this is because show requirements
are such that the ridiculous double
mating system must be resorted to to
get birds to win. This -unnatoral
method applied to Barred Rocks has
also retired them from the head of the
procession.
A way to interest that boy and to
keep him busy and happy fs to sive
him an interest in the flock, whether
chickens, turkeys, dncks or geese.
Make him a member of the firm, give
him part of the profit and watch him
get busy. Busy boys, with work that
gives them a sense of proprictorship
and a chance to-mako money, are not
among our dime novel readers nor_as-
soclates of the bad boys of the streets.
A fancier was recently tried at Wil-
Namsport, Pa., for shooting and killing
a chicken thief. The jury brought in
a verdict of not guilty after five-min-
utes’ deliberation. Judges in Pennsyl-
vania are zctting away from the idea
that sterling a horse and a chicken
does hot show the same moral turpt-|
tude. and juries uo longer consider
chicken stealing-a laughiuz matter.
74m
<<. ]
“+ PICTURE FRAMES ial
i We make a specialty of framing diplomas, marriage i
licenses and pictures of all sizes. Work nextly and RE
§§ promptly finished. Satisfaction guaranteed. Prices i
\ _ chepp. | Enlarging pictures a specialty. Orders eall- a
e ‘ . ed for and delivered. a y
e W. W. LILt 507 WEST BRUAD 3IREET + x
CCT SST IT SS IIT
Setar erence eames gn
Frofessor Hayward of the Ivelaware
experiment- station reports that a
Guernsey bull, King Beda, gives a
smaif quantity of milk. Sraus itisa
matter of common observation that
most male mammals have undeveloped
mamuary glands. it is rare that these
glands perform their function,
—— 3
‘The 560,000,000 pounds of veal which
Americans consume annually would
make. 40,000.000.000 pounds of bebf if
the calves that are slaughtered were
wllowed to row to maturity. More
than thls, the vastly larger amount, of
beef is not only more digestible but a
good deal more nutritious than the
smaller amount of veal.
“THE PALI SHAVING PALACE
. FINEST IN THE CITY.
vExpert Hair Cutting, Elestric Massage and Shampooing a Specialty. A
Work Done by Experienced Workinan. Courteous attention to all. “SHT’ -
ING PARLOR ATTACHED. . .
: ZS wes EO W Fe buh
Perry KR Wright
é ; "S
. Proprietor ,
517 WEST BROAD ST - - - - SAVANNAH GA
| Whilo soap, whitewash and some
other things may he applied to the
tronks of fruit trees without injary,
mixtures containing crease or heavy
oils are always injurious. “Many a
young orchard has been ruined through
applying to the bark sneh greasy mix-
tures through the mistaken notion that
they check or ward off some Tungous
or insect’ pest with which the trees
were threatened.”
RIANIR ¢ - os PANY :
A. M. MONROE & GoMPANY
Funeral Directors and Embalme -~
Wrompt and courteous attention -given ‘all. business %
entrusted to us. . Everything of the latést style
Latest Styne Sinver Graraxp Brac Gans
CARRIAGE FOR HIRE "s
69 WEST BROAD STREET. Phone 121.
Rape sown at the time of the last
cultivation of the corn will give ap
abundant supply of grcen stuff for hog
pasturage that wil dovetail in nicely
if the hozs are turned into tbe corn
and alloy ed to lng it<lown next Octo-
bey and November. But, whether the
hogging down mbthod is followed or
not, the rape will give an excellent and
niuch needed pasture after the erop
has been removed. =
Quite unusual damage to the small
branchlets on the Oregof fir has been
noticed on the Pacific slope within the
past few weeks, ‘This is attributed to
the fact that the sap started carly in
April, the trees being hit shortly after-
ward by 2 bitter cold snap, accompa-
nied by a sharp northeast wind. The
damaze seems akin to that which fruit
trees often suffer from what is usual-
ly called sour sap.
~~ Pe
BOARD
AIR? LINE-
__Arvive |" _ Elfectiye April 97, 19is __Depar:
3 20pm.....5| 5... .-Northzand East,.... ... 125 pm
3 80am 14.1... -.-..North and East -..... 2. 12 35 am
O95 amc.“ 1-.--.+-+.-Northand East...) 715 pm
11 O0am...... .... Columbia and Loca ..... 1G 10 am
9,00 pm......+....-...-.Columbia and Loeal..... 0 '4 00 pit
12 30am ..... rcs ~+ sdJacksonville and, Fla.. ' 3 35 am
gi 20pm ...* |.........-Jacksonvilleand Fla... ,3 25pm“
11 BS am Avs. tes+++-.--dacksonville and Locals.) 4.00 yin
9 00am......|..-.. Momgomery and West... .. !7 00 pm
8 35 Dyeee-- [-+---- Montgomery and West...... ‘6 00 am
1 - 4.
Where pasturage is abundant the
feeding of a grain ration to milk cows
dovs in most cases increase the milk
flow somewhat, but the increase is sel-
dom justified in view of the cost of
the grain fed. Towever, it has been
noted in some experiments conducted
by the’animal husbandry department
of Cornell college, New York, that
cows that were given such grain ra-
tion gare 16 per cent more milk ate
the pasture season then cows that bat
pasturace only.
C.:W. SMALL, D, P. A,
‘ TICKET OFFICE
19 BROUGHTON STREErF WEST
Attention bas been called in a good
many quarters to the fact that most
states exact definite qualifications for
the man who would operate a station-
ary engine, but that Tom, Dick and
Harry are allowed to operate engines
of from twenty to sixty horsepower on
high speed autos, which are a menace
to Hfe and limb to a degre far ex-
ceeding engines of the stationary kind.
‘The time is ripe for a change and for
insisting on a fair measure of sense
and capacity on the part of the person
who would run a bigh power motor
vebicle on a public highway.
Johnson Undertaking Establishment
‘ —COMBINED WITH— . :
The Royall Undertaking Company
(Incorporated) :
Funeral Direetors and Embalmers
Finest line of Coffins, Caskets and Robes. White and blick
Burial cars. Office and warerooms 325-331 Jefferson street.
W. R. FIELD and L. M. POLLARD Managers
Residence Phono 2032 no =
Residence Phone 4241. Livery Stable Attached, Office Phone i76
D, J- Wilson, 719 West Broad St, Licensed Embalmer Phone 223
After many experiments and investi.
gation into the causes of white diar-
thea in chickens the poultry depart
ment of the Storrs Agricultural college
recommends the feeding of sour milk
or buttermilk to the chicks from the
time they are ten days old. “The acidi-
ty of the milk seems to serve as a
germicide and to keep the bowels‘in a
healthful condition. Besides this. the
foot elements which the milk contains.
being, us they are, largely protein, are
excellent for the growth and vigor of
the young chicks an also a fine ration
for the laying hens. If plain sour
milk is thns a preventive, of this worst
of poultry plagues ft should be sup-
plied to the chicks and hens whenever
nossible. 7
You will be greatly benefitted by stopping inand getting our
free advice on how to take che best care of your slises
which will cause them to last longer and keep better shape. ‘Ve
do neat repairing on shoes and pay special attention to ladies :ad
children shoes: Prompt attention to all work. .
J.H.WASHINGTON::
309 WHPTAKER STREESr
While there are a few Now Efgland
orckardists who faror keepinz thetr
trees in grass, cutting the grass and
using it for a mulch, and while in
“many ranebes in the far west the sys-
tem of clean cultivation throughout the
season {5 followed, there is much to
commend the system of giving clean
cultivation up to the middle of July
and then seeding to some Iczuminons
cover crop ard plowing this under the
following spring, [ven in sections
where the rainfall is limited and most
of it falls from the Ist of October to
the Isttof April the cover crop idea
is good. In such ease, however, the
seeding should be made, just before
the fall rains set in. ‘he growth
made, while not needed as a winter
protection, serves to keep the soil from
washing and. plowed under in the
spring, furnishes a humus that most
soils 9re much in need of.
SS ee eee oe eee
L. BLUNT
W, fs. BL U i‘ wa
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Ernuit And Commission Merchant
303 ST. JULIAN WEST AND 93 JEFFERSON STREET
—COME AND EXAMINEOUR LINE OF— ~ |
JSRRING AND SUMMER HATS
FINE DISPLAY OF ALL THE LATEST STYLES
Golored Millinery Store
464 WEST BROAD ST
The greatest danger to young apple
orchards comes from the inroads of
the borer beetle. The eggs are laid by
the mature beetle the latter part of
May and early June. and the little
borers which hatch in a few days are
soon busy. The point where they enter
the bark fs usually indicated by a drop
of brown colored sap or, in the case of
the borers that are several months or
a year old, by brownish, sawdust-like
excreta. Washes applied at about the
time the young hatch will destroy
many. Dut tbe only sure method is to
Inspect the trunks of the trees just
above the cround at intervals during
the summer and cut out and destroy
nny thst are found. Where the borers
ure old and deep in the tree a pllable
twig may be used to prod, them in
their holes where at work. The ground
for 4 diameter of two or cass feet
about the trunk should be kept- free
from weeds and grass. so, that evidence
of the borers can he easily detected.
a a ed a ac ad CR De oe R
a
% Wood.awn Parik
a SAVANNAH’S MOST BEAUTIFUL & IDEAL SPOT X
i —FO R—- i
ul PEONCS. &. OUTINGS
Allthe latest mprovemerss and conveniences is under y
cy the:management of Thos. G, Young. Excellent car ser-
ff vice. All erstransfer at 40th and Whitaker Streets fj
fake Isle o Hope car to Baker’s crossing. Secure your
‘4 dates at 143 Drayton St. Phone 2034. Special attention
‘K given to Churches and Sunday Schools. a
<n ee ee ee ee ee ee
Next week's attraction by Russell and Owens Stock Company, a musical Carnival entitled 20TH CENTURY FEMALE MINSTREL
Plenty of singing, dancing, new and original jokes. Grand and elaborate settings. Introducing eight black faced End Men
Special Notice is given to the finale A Recitoire "THE CRAWFISH MAN" This is positively the first time in the history of the theatre that a colored company has ever attempted a RESITATIVE. The Press and the Public in general are invited to witness the first attempt. We also have new faces to offer. Don't fail to see next week's show, the best of the season
Pekin Orchestra of Six Pieces renders High Class Selections at 7 and 9:30 p.m.
Without fear of contradiction, the Greatest Show on earth for 10 cents. Guaranteed to be stricty moral and refined. Ladies and children cordially invited
MATINEE TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS AT 3-30 P. M.
Monday July 21st—"Women and War" 101 Bison 2 reels of thrilling excitement.
Tuesday July 22nd—"His Mother's Love" an Imp Dramatic Novelty. Universal weekly showing all the latest events of the world.
Wednesday July 23rd—"The Guerilla Menace" 101 Bison 2 reel "Out of the Past"
*
A Cure for Consumption by the Magnolia Remedy Company
Among the visitors in the city this week is Dr. D. H. Brown of Magnolia Remedy Company, St. Augustine, Fla. This company makes a specialty of a cure for consumption, which it is manufacturing and which has gained wide recognition throughout the country. The head of the company, Dr. D. H. Brown, has made a special study of the germs which promote consumption and destroy the lungs and other vital organs and the remedy which is being offered for sale by this company is the direct result of Dr. Brown's discovery. The discovery has received many favorable testimonials from all parts of the country from those who have given it a trial. The following is what some of the newspapers say of the company and its remedy:
Consumption Cure
Magnolia Remedy Company of this city manufactures this boon to humanity. It is rapidly receiving recognition as an almost infallible remedy.—St. Augustine Evening Record.
[Image of a man with a serious expression, wearing a suit and tie.]
Mr. Wm. Speights who will sing to-morrow
The laboratory and shipping department of the Magnolia Remedy Company of St. Augustine, Dr. D. H. Brown, president, are fitted up with facilities for handling the large and increasing business of the company. These are on the second floor of a building on Washington street, one of the livest thoroughfares in that city.
The consumption remedy invented and manufactured exclusively by this company is having a rapid sale in many parts of this country and in Canada. Dr. Brown and his office help are kept busy day and night filling the many orders for this medicine and testimonials are coming in daily from persons who are loudly declaring its benefits. Dr. Brown is forced to increase his office force to handle the volume of business that has come to his office. This medicine is sold by leading druggists, and those who use it do not hesitate to tell of its wonderful merits.—Evening Metropolis, Jacksonville, Fla.
We wish to call special attention to an advertisement on the cover from a comparatively new enterprise in St. Augustine that bids fair to become one of the leading concerns of the kind in this section of the country. We refer to the Magnolia Remedy Company of which Dr. D. H. Brown is president. This concern is only a little more than a year old and has grown rapidly in the esteem and confidence of the public in all parts of the country. They manufacture a remedy for consumption, colds, coughs, pleurisy and all ailments of the respiratory organs. Dr. Brown, the discoverer of this remedy, which has already attracted such widespread and favorable attention, is a graduate of Meharry and a doctor of deep research. They have already received thousands of testimonials from all parts of the U. S. and Canada and the company is growing at a tremendous rate.—Florida State Federation Magazine.—Ady.
Thursday July 24th—"The Burden Bearer" (Drama) "The Squaw Man's Reward" (Western) Professional Jealously (Comedy)
Friday July 25th—"The Spell" A gripping dramatic feature in 2 parts. "Brothers and Sisters (Drama) Leo's Great Cure" (Comedy)
July 24th, Thursday. Letter Carriers' Big Picnic at Lincoln Park. Tickets 25 cents.
July 22nd, Tuesday. Picnic by the Barbers' Association at Lincoln Park Tickets 15 cents.
Augnst 19th, Tuesday. Two Boat Excursion by Armour Lodge No. 1884 G. U. O. of O. F to Beaufort. Tickets 50 cents.
July 30th, Wednesday. Outing by the Fox Hunters Club at Woodlawn Park. Tickets 15 cents. August 14th, Thursday. Savannah Home Association will entertain their friends and the visiting Odd-Fellows and Ruths at Lincoln Park. It is their Annual Picnic. Don't miss it. Admission 25 cents.
DR. WILLIE H. JOHNSON Scientific Chiropodist.
A.
My electric bath and massages are wonderful. I can positively cure Rheumatism in its worse stages it is very important that you consult me at once. I can positively cure all foot troubles there is, however no other parts of the body that receives such bad treatment as the feet though it is the most important part of the body. The proper care of the feet is far more important than most men and women think, See me and I will do you good. I will call at your residence by appointment.
W. H. JOHNSON. S. C. 603 Park Avenue west.
Improved and Unimproved Real Estate
For Sale by G. H. Bowen
Whether you wish to buy, sell or rent, it will pay you to see me first. More to select from; less to pay.
551 acres near Pooler, in this County, one half in cultivation, for quick sale, the price is only $1300.
614 Garden St., 2 story 5 room dwelling, good condition. Rents $12.50. Price $1200.00.
4 Room dwelling on Waldburg Lane West, $900.60.
650 Bismark St., 2 story 5 room and attic dwelling, large lot, only $1100.00. Easy terms on this.
6 Room dwelling, lot 57x120 ft. Hill street, second door from Bull street. This is a big bargain, only $1500.00.
One story 5 room house on fine lot, East Anderson St., $1100.00.
One story 3 room dwelling house on West 32 street, $1000.00.
2 story 8 room dwelling on West 32nd street, 2100.00.
3 room dwelling, a nice little store house and large lot on Bulloch street, in Brownsville $2100.00.
2 story 7 room dwelling, large lot and extra lot 50x100 ft. on 38th and Harden streets, in the heart of Brownsville, the high class colored residence section of the city; this will make an ideal home or a choice investment, $2000.00.
A 2 story ten room double tenement, 525 and 527 Gaston east, 2250.00. This will pay you 10 per cent.
5 room cottage and small store on corner lot at Thunderbolt, $1250.00.
No. 306, 41st street, east, fine lot 60x90 feet, $2000.00.
5 room cottage, new, corner Chapman Ave. and Richards street West Savannah, on fine lot, easy terms, $1225.00.
Lot in the Granger tract on 48th St. 30x100 st., $1100.00; 3 lots near Dale Ave. $600.00, a snap. Lot corner 35th and Joe streets, $400.00.
2 Story 5 room house 1128 E. Gwinnett street $1225.00.
221, 224 and 225, 1-story tenement, Barrington street, lot 50x 100. Rents for $15.00. Price $1650.00.
517 Minis street, 1-story, 6 rooms, electric light and bath, $2250.00.
710 Center street, 2-story 5-room
dwelling in good condition and nice lot. Rents $10.00. A good investment and can be had on easy terms. Price $850.00.
Also several choice houses, for either white or colored, which the owners will not permit me to advertise, at reasonable prices. Ask me about these.
G. H. Bowen, 457 W. Broad St.
S. J.Jordan, Wm. M. Jackson,
Salesmen.
457 West Broad St., Phone 4096.
2 Story 8 room apartment, Center
street; rents for $18.00. $2000.00.
514 W. Bolton street, 2 story 5
rooms; $2100.00.
1009 E. 38th street, 5 room cottage
and two lots, $1900.00.
Two 5 room dwellings, good condition,
2006 Bullock street, between 37th and 37th. Rental $16.00.
$1600.00.
512-514 Maple street and 507-
509 Oak St. Rental $36.00. $4.000.
3 Dwellings on Charles street and three on Charles street lane near W. Broad. $6000. At the 6-mile post on the Ogeechee Road I have a number of 40 acre farms which can be sold on easy terms. This is a good chance for the farmer to locate near this city on a paved road. Good market all the year.
Miss Marie V. Tolbert, recently graduated from school in Hair Culture, Manicuring and Massaging is especially prepared for performing the very highest class of work. Being equipped with the very latest and up-to-date methods, the most satisfactory and lasting effect results. Hair dressed for special occasions. Highest efficiency guaranteed on all work.
Mrs. M. E. Tolbert is now associated with Miss Marie Tolbert and would be glad to receive a call from her friends. Agents for Madam C. J. Walker's Wonderful Hair Grower. Phone 3853. 506 Hartidge St. Prussic Acid.
A single sniff of highly concentrated prussic acid will kill a man as quickly as a shot through the heart.