Savannah Tribune
Thursday, June 22, 1922
Savannah, Georgia
Page text (machine-generated)
Washington, D. C., July 18—Dr. psychology, rural education, school
Peter G. Woodson, the director of the management, primary methods, soci-
cation for the Study of Negroes, rural economics, commercial
and History, has recently secured course, handcraft, millinery, Earness,
$25,000 from the Carnegie Corpor-making, carpentry, domestic science
and an additional $25,000 from agriculture, domestic art, animal hus-
Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memor [bandry, and music, instrumental and
This fund is to be used to further local.
VOL. XXXVII
50,000 GIVEN TO STUDY NEGRO
ew Program For Historical Society
search in the neglected field of Negro History and to publish the results such investigation. These substantial contributions mark a new epoch in history of the Association. Where the work has heretofore been larger the effort of Dr. Woodon fighting battle almost by himself. It will be possible for the association to try out a more intensive program to attain its important objectives. Beginning with the new fiscal year on July 1, 1922, to June 25, 1923, association will undertake the following:
1. To continue to edit the Journal Negro History, a quarterly scientific magazine which has been regularly published since January 1916.
2. To conduct research restricted at least to the effort of: One investigator in the field of the "Free Negrorior to 1861" another investigator in retro Reconstruction History."
3 To train for this sort of work a Negro students who will be give-fellowships in accredited graduate tools with adequate libraries counting collections bearing on Negro and History.
The investigators will begin their work first of July. Before the opening of the universities in the fall students to undergo special training will be selected by the Committee Scholarships and Fellowships. Any knowing of young college graduates in an honorable record in this field will render the association a service giving it information as to their alliances to function in this capacity.
The Association for the Study of Negro Life and History was organized Chicago September 9, 1915, and was incorporated under the laws of the strict of Columbia October 3, 1915, adquarters were then opened in washington and on January 1, 1916, b-director published the first number the Journal of Negro History.
The purpose of this society was to infect sociological and historical documents, to publish books on Negro life and history, to promote the scientific study of the Negro through clubs and races, and to bring about harmony between the races by interpreting the go to the other. The Journal of Negro History and other publications of a association are therefore read by 11 classes of both races in the North and South and virtual.
The association is endorsed by such stigmatized men as Harold H. Swift, sorton D. Hull, Bishop W. D. Johnson, shop Ellas Cottrell, Bishop G. Cements, Frank G. Lowden, William Schieffelm, and Jillus Roewald, has the cooperation of such scholars as Roland G. Usher, John M. Meckey, Jerome Dowd, Kelly Miller, C. H. Hesley, William Renwick Riddell, on Charles Lay Gwantoniscoot, jr. Charles E. Chapman, J. Franklin Jamison, Henry Churchill King, Walter eyel, Frederick L. Hoffman, A. H. one, R. L. Park, William E. Dodd, art Russell Fish, Edward Channing D. Arnold Garrison Villard.
During its seven years struggle it is succeeded in spite of handicaps in erecting world-wide attention to the gleaned field of Negro history by publishing articles and documents giving it which are generally unknown organizing and stimulating local jobs and class. the association has meuch to change the attitude of manners toward the Negro.
NATIONAL NEGRO BUSI. LEAGUE
Announces Unique Feature For Meeting
The Savannah Tribune.
Summer School At Ga. State College
SIX WEEKS COURSE BEGINS ON MONDAY MORNING
The summer school at the Ga. State College will open Monday June 20th at 8 o'clock. Plans have been made for the accommodation of at least two hundred teachers. The following subjects will be taught: English, history, geography, mathematics, educational psychology, rural education, school management, primary methods, sociology, rural economics, commercial course, handcraft, millinery, tarness making, carpentry, domestic science agriculture, domestic art, animal husbandry, and music, instrumental and vocal.
The faculty is composed of the following; Prof. F. R. Lampkin, director; Prof. W. I. Tibbs, J. F. Rogers, J. A. Lockette, F. A. Curtwright, J. L. Lomax, R. W. Gadsen, Miss Jessie Parkhurst, Mrs. F. A. Curtwright, Mrs. Powerd, Miss Simpson, J. S. Frazier, C. F. Flipper, A. Orsot, Mrs. L. Thornton, Mrs. Willie P. White, Mrs. Munnie Williams, Mrs. Littel Hannah.
At their convenience Mr. E. A. Williams and Miss Juanita Conyers will lecture along the lines of agricultural and home economics.
The recreational features of the summer school will be swimming, tennis and boating.
President Wiley has planned big things for the teachers of Georgia and his faculty is a unit in helping to make this first summer school a great success.
INJUNCTION IS DENIED
Colored Shriners Win Their Case In Court
Jacksonville, Fla., June 22nd (Associated Negro Press)—What has sent a thrill of triumph through the hearts of Attorney D. W. Perkins, legal adviser for the masonic fraternity of the jurisdiction of the Most Worshipful Union Grand Lodge of the state of Florida and the twenty or more thousand who pay allegiance to that jurisdiction handed down in the Circuit Court in the city of Tampa on the 5th of this month, wherein the temple of the Mystic Shriner, white, had said out a writ of injunction, restraining all colored men in Florida from using the name, finsigia, paraphernalia word-costumes etc., of the Ancient Arabic Mystic Shriner. Arguments were made before Judge Robles of Tampa who holds the reputation of being one of the fairest judges that ever sat in any court in this state. The case was fought hard, and every assault made by the opposition was smashed by At-
torney Perkins, and Judge Robles gave his decision, denying the injunction. This is the first time white shrimpers have attempted to interfere with colored shrimpers in this state, and their failure may not be the last of it. Attorney Perkins is being lionized over his great victory. The white press obviously published the entrance of this case, but so far, not one of them has had a word to say about the denial of the court to grant the injunction.
ST. JOHN'S DAY TO BE
CELEBRATED SUNDAY
Masons to Hold Exercises at The Masonic Temple
The annual celebration of St. John's day of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons will be held Sunday. The local lodges will hold their exercises in the afternoon at the Masonic Temple. W. M. McNell is chairman of the occasion.
The program will start promptly at 3:30 o'clock with G. Boatwright as master of ceremonies. The sermon will be delivered by the Rev. W. A. Daugherty, pastor of Mt. Bethel Baptist church. The following program will be rendered: Opening ode by the audience Invocation, by G. L. Bowen Instruction of Master of Ceremonies, by N. M. McNoll
by W. W. McNutt
Address, by master of ceremonies, C
Bottweight.
Selection, by Eastern Star Chorus
Selection, by Eastern Star Chorus
Address, by Eastern Star Representative, Mrs. Mary L. Ayers
Selection, by Eastern Star Chorus
Collection, from the audience
Sermon, by Rev. W. A. Daughtry
Prayer, by Rev. H. P. Wellhorn
Solo by Alfonso M. Roberts.
Address, by C. G. Oliver
Trio, by E. Shuler, J Carmichael and Jake Simmons.
Presentations, by D. Canty.
Closing ode, sung by audience
Benediction and charge, by A. W. Alexander.
BLIND WOMAN AS WITNESS
BLIND WOMAN AS WITNESS
Uniontown, Pa., June 21st (Preston
News Service) Mrs Jane Butter, aged
72 years, and who has been blind for
a number of years, was principal witness
against Harrison Howard, charged
with violation of the Drug Act.
Mrs Butler offered testimony which
she obtained by Ler senses of hearing
and touch. It is said that she was the
first blind witness in the Payette
county courts in many years
SAVANNAH, I.A., THURSDAY JUNE 22, 1922
[Image of a man with a mustache and a suit, facing slightly to the right.]
CHAS. H. MACCARTHY
CHAS. M'CARTHY PASSES AWAY
Was Prominent Fraternal Man of State
Pythian circles were alarmed on Tuesday when the news was spread through the state announcing the denise of Chas. H. MacCarthy, of Albany.
For the past several months Mr. MacCarthy has been very sick, but more recently it was announced that he was slightly improving, so much so that when his death was announced it came as a shock, for no one was more popular in the state as was "Charlie MacCarthy," as he was generally called by his friend. He was genial, whole-ouled, unselfish and ever responsive to appeals for help. He carried a ray of sunshine wherever he went.
The deceased always lived in Albany, and there he was beloved by citizens of every walk of life, regardless of race. There he was connected with every civic movement, and his stamp of approval meant success. He and his lamented brother, Frank W. MacCarthy, made quite a team, and it was a sad blow to him when his brother died about twenty-five years ago. They were partners in Albany's leading barber-hop.
At an early age he joined the Masons and was one of the oldest members of King Solomon Lodge, in which he has served in several stations. He was an honored member of the Masonic Grand Lodge and had the honor of serving on the recent Golden Jubilee Committee. He was a zealous member of the Old Fellows and represented his lodge at several of the national gatherings, not counting the state meetings.
He was a member and an official of the Supreme Circle and was one of the leading spirit- in the enjection of the spaces building in Albany. He was an able second to Hon. J. H. Watson in the fo-tering of this organization.
At the organizing of the Knights of Pythias, he was among the first ones in Albany to take a hold, and has assisted in its growth throughout the state. For many years he served as Grand Master of Echemer, and after the death of the late F. M. Cohen, he was selected as Secretary-Treasurer of the Endowment Department, which position he has filled for more than five years. He has repreented the Grand Lodge at the Supreme Lodge sessions and has served on the general's staff of the Uniform Ranks.
Mr. MacCarthy's home life was beautiful. His was a palatial residence with all of the necessary comforts, graced by a wife who was devotion itself. His two daughters added to this picture, then arrived a grandson who was his earthly idol. It was indeed inspiring to be in his home.
The funeral will be held tomorrow at Albany, and Pythias from all parts of Georgia will be in attendance to pay the last tribute of respect to this noble character.
Negro Girl Wins High Honors at Columbia
MISS- HENDICKSON WINS M. A. DEGREE IN ECONOMICS
New York, June 20—Among the graduates of Columbia University this year is a Negro girl, Dorothy Merle Hendrickson, twenty-two, of 144 West 132d street. Miss Hendrickson is the first girl of her race to take the M. A. degree in economics at Columbia, in which department she entered in September, 1921.
The subject of Miss Hendrickson's graduation thesis was "The Effect of Vocational Guidance on the Employment of Negro Graduates of Public School No. 119."
.
COLORED AUTO RACES JULY
The feature sporting event of July fourth will be the running of the second annual colored automobile races at the Tri-State Exposition track. The event gives promise of being the most thrilling speed contest ever held in this state by Negroes and some of the most prominent Negro drivers in this section of the country have already seat to Chairman McKeley for entrance blanks.'
There will be two automobile races a five mile race for light cars and a ten mile event for heavy cars. Especial interest, of course, is centered in the heavy car event. It will bring together such stars as Joe Druln, winner of the ten mile grind last Independence day, Dick Neely, winner of this event on last Thanksgiving day "Ooole" Waters, the plucky little pilot of the Dodge that came to grief in races last November; Diredevelt Williams and several other speed kings who are well known to local followers of the racing game.
Aside from the automobile races there will be two motorcycle races and three horse races. Infact, the committee has mapped out an unusually full program for the afternoon and the large throng that will be present will have many hairraising thrills upon which to feast their eyes. All information concerning the races together with entry blanks may be had at the McKelvey Tire Company, West Broad and Gaston streets.
Forceful Sermon Delivered Sunday
MANY HEARD SPECIAL DISCUSSION AT F. A. B. CHURCH.
Again, the members and visitors at the First African Baptist church on Sunday were the recipients of a splendidly outlined discourse by Rev. Thomas Jefferson Goodall, pastor of this historic church.
At 11:30 o'clock hundreds crowded into the office for the morning worship and to listen to the specially prepared sermon that was to be delivered from the subject, "Race Pride." Not one of the many listeners were appointed for the subject was able handheld. For about one hour and fifteen minutes, Rev. Goodall held his audience at rapt attention and every point propounded by the speaker was driven home and undoubtedly made an indelible impression upon the vast throng.
His explanation of race pride and the self-repelling conduct of the Negro men and women were excellently handled and should serve as a stimulus to the people as a whole. Many more should have heard this sermon which was forcefully presented and full of pungent facts.
During the course of his sermon the took occasion to mention the practice of some of the public schools in holding afternoon dances which is frequented by hundreds of the pupils, this he claims is a bad practice and that no good can result from this kind of entertainment for the children. The audience seemed to be overwhelmingly with the reverend on this point and could hardly restrain from handclapping.
Since Rev. Goodall came to the pastorate of this church seven years ago, he has delivered a number of special sermons, all of which were instructive, aly hardlied and beneficial to the community. He is a forceful speaker and a pulpit orator of no little ability. He has fostered many progressive efforts among his members and on tomorrow night a meeting of the men members of the church will be held to inaugurated a "Forward Movement" among the members. At this meeting it is expected that quite a number of the male members of the church will be present.
CHARGE HARVARD DISCRIMINATING
Jim Crow Policy Alleged In Protest
Boston, Mass., June 20—Harrard
men are charging that the color blue
is being drawn by the authorities at
Harrard University against Negro
students.
a petition drafted by a committee of seven Harvard graduates, which is being sent to Harvard alumna all over the United States, fully asserts that the university, which before the Civil War mothered most of the famous champions of equal rights for Negroes and white men, is conducting a "Jim Crow policy" in order to cater to students from the Southern states. 1
The committee which is asking Harvard men to sign the petition is headed by the Rev. Dr. William Channing Gannett of Rochester, N. X., Unfarian clergyman and author. A member of the class of 1880, Dr. Gannett matriculated at Harvard in the very heat of the Abolitionist movement.
Another members of the committee is Morfield Story, 76 of Boston, who was private secretary to Charles Sumner just after the Civil War, and who has been president of the Massachusetts Bar Association and a former Overseer of Harvard. He is president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Other members of the committee are Charles C. Burlingham, '70, of New York, internationally known as an authority on maritime law and formerly president of the Board of Education; Alfred Jaretzki, '81; John Reynolds, '07; Edward Eyre Hunt, '10, who was in charge of American relief work in Antwerp during the war, now Secretary of the President's Conference on Unemployment and Robert C. Benciley, '12 the writer
Annual to whom the memorial was sent were requested to hold it in confidence, as the committee hoped to obtain favorable action from the corporation, the governing body of Harvard, without publicity. When a copy of the memorial reached the newspapers and Mr Benciley, secretary of the committee, was asked to comment on the movement he replied:
"I am very sorry the memorial has become public. We had hoped to work confidently among Harvard graduates, particularly among the older men in whom the Civil War traditions still lives, and to have the ruling changed without publicity.
Other members of the committee had nothing to add to this, but it was learned that President A. Lawrence Lowell of Harvard is held responsible for the ruling which prevents Negro students from obtaining rooms in the freshmen dormitories. It was said that, so far as is known, the ruling was not adopted by the corporation in meeting, or even brought before it for consideration. The committee's letter to the President and Fellows of Harvard College says:
"We have learned with surprise that the long traditions of the college as regards Negroes has been broken and a color line drawn in the freshmen dormitories. The exclusion policy has never been publicly announced, so far as we know, and has only lately become known.
"It is now stated that this policy was adopted when the dormitories were opened a few years ago; that during the war it hated and that through indulgence two Negroes, Jourdain "21 and Ghee,"22 roamed in the freshmen halls. They suffered no difficulties as of their presence there.
"Last summer Cecil Blue and William J. Knor, Jr., were excluded from the freshmen dormitories because they were Negroes. A room in Standish hall was assigned to Knox in May, and after attending examinations in June, he received a telegram asking him to return his resignation card, and a week later, a letter saying that the halls were full. When he went to Cambridge Dean Chase told him that it was the policy of the college not to admit Negroes to the freshmen dormitories.
"So far as we can learn, the policy of exclusion is based in the fact that residence in freshmen halls is now compulsory and the opinion that as men from the South and Southwest come to Harvard in considerable numbers they should not be compelled to room and cat with colored men.
"We respectfully submit that these are not sufficient reasons for abandoning the long and honorable tradition of Harvard college.
"In the past, Southerners coming to Harvard have accepted Northern customs. They have eaten in Memorial Hall where Negroes also ate, although at other tables, and have roomed in dormitories where Negroes also roomed although in separate rooms, avoiding an intimary distasteful to them but confronting to the college customs, just as they had to conform to them in the college lecture rooms and the Harvard Union, as well as on trains, in troop cars and in restaurants.
"We believe that the university owes the Southern man the best possible opportunity for education, but we do not owe him the surrender of our Northern ideas of democracy and our Harvard ideals of justice. We do not believe that the Southerners who come to Cambridge for their education expect Harvard to give up her traditions. * * *
"We are informed that last autumn a Negro member of the freshman cross country team was admitted after discussion to the training table, although excluded from the hall; also that a
680 Teachers Attend Summer School
MANY INTERESTING AND BENEFICIAL ADDRESSES MADE
Tuskegee Inst. Ala., June 19—"No group in the world is more welcome at Tuskegee Institute, than are teachers" said Dr. Moton welcoming the GS0 teachers repreenting every Southern state, attending the thirteenth annual session of the summer school which opned here recently.
The attendance this year is a record-breaker and the teachers are entering in upon their work earnestly and steadily....The following special courses are taught: Administration, supervision and methods for principals; prural sociology and industrial courses and drawing for all.
One of the main features of the summer school is the daily lecture bysome speaker prominent in educational work. Those who have spoken to the teachers since th session opened; are Professor J. T. Williams, of Drury College, Springfield, Missouri; who advised teachers to read the books of Dr. Booker T. Washington; to emphasize composition work and to develop dramatic art among their students; Mr. W. T. B. Williams, special agent to the Jeannes and Slater Board related the history of the summer schools and the opportunities thereof for Negro teachers in the South; Professor Charles Albert of Bloomsburg, Penn sylvanian, who delivered a series of lectures on Psychology and methods and a series of lectures on health by Dr. Ralph B. Stewart, of the United Public Health Service.
$10,000 BUILDING TO BE ERECTED
urgent necessity and will be used as a girls' dormitory. It will be morden from every standpoint and conveniently appointed for the housing of the large number of girls that the board of management is putting efforts to have in the school at the next term. Work is about ready to start on the building which will be rushed to completion and ready for occupancy the early part of the school term. The school is of the Baptist denomination and was established something more than twenty years. Rev. E. K. Love, then pastor of the First African Baptist church, this city, was the foremost figure in the organization. It is now headed by Prof. W. E. Holmes as preident and a corps of able teachers.
Rev. S. S. Broadax of Thomasville, secretary-treasurer of the building fund is making an appeal to the members of the denomination, to the pastors and the superintendents of the Sunday school, the R. Y. P. U., the women's convention and auxiliary and all other branches of the church to get behind the movement and raise funds at once, so that the work on the building will not be hand-trapped, but carried through as planned.
"It is said that the school has a beautiful campus which can be put in excellent condition, hence the management is sending out appeals for the raising of funds and it is expected that an early and liberal response will be made in order to further the work.
Negro, Charles J. Houston, els at staff conferences and luncheons as a member of the editorial board of the Harvard Review, with Southerners.
'If, however, we are mistaken in this impression and if the continuance of the traditional policy means the loss to Harvard' of Southerners, many or few, of intense race-consciousness, we believe that ideals of social justice are not an unimportant part of Harvard education and that the college should accept that loss rather than surrender its standards.
who would increase the burdens of the colored race. It is the Growp policy. The Alma Mater of Channing of John Quincy Adams, of Sunner, of Robert Gould Shaw of the 54th Massachusetts Infantry should not abandon the tradition of Harvard liberalism, tolerance, and justice.
"For these reasons we feel it our right and duty as Harvard graduates to request the President and Fellows to abandon the policy of exclusion and to return to the traditional Harvard policy of no discrimination on account of color or race."
The Negro student, Jourdain, mentioned In the memorial, is not Gourdain, the famous Negro athlete member of the Harvard track team who won the intercollegiate broad jump. He is E. B. Jourdain, now a student in the Graduate School of Business Administration. He roomed last year in Wold Hall, in which William Knox, Jr., also roomed. Cedd A. Blue, as a freshman, roomed at No. 46 Dana Street, Cambridge, and E. P. Gee, who graduates this year roomed in Clayver Hall.
NUMBER 38
EX-SERVICE MEN INSPECTED
Vocational Expert Returns After Tour
Washington, D. C., June 17—The return of Dr. J. R. A. Crossland, special expert, charge Colored Trainees, U. S. Veterans Bureau, last Monday from Wilberforce University, marked the completion of an extended tour of inspection of vocational work among colored ex-service men in the states of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas Nebraska, Illinois and Ohio. The inspection tour included not only the well-known Negro institutions of learning, but many white institutions in which lored men are being trained. This itinerary was one of the most difficult undertakings assumed by the representative since entering upon his duties in Washington.
The opportunity for service and feature good of the Negro race was interwoven with the trip of Dr. Cresland. As a result the future attitude towards ex-servicemen is being definitely established by means of a comprehensive study of all educational facilities, schools, equipment, training opportunities and systematized instruction. His particular mission was to determine whether our men have been assigned to the right sort of training, whether their training is under competent instruction, and has the training brought them definite social and economic values.
The particular contribution that Dr. Crossland is making to government efforts in educating the former service man is that the benefits derived from these courses when finished will point to a new day of civic adjustment within the race. He wants the way opened for the fullest expression of all the will, energy, genius, destiny, skill, taste, technique and art of every man of every city, every town and every country place.
At this writing, Dr. Crossland is busy engaged in submitting recommendations for training centers. NeuroPsychiatry. Tuberculosis training. Out of these suggestions will come the moulded expression of the educational policy as it effects colored service men throughout the Unit d States.
In the germination of his department, he found only a few hundred colored men taking vocational training. In the eight months of his official career he has created an office force of 8 or 16 specially prepared individuals and many competent coordinators, counselors and nurses who are looking after the needs of service men in training as well as increased the number of men in training to 2,775. We already see from the shaping of his beneficial plans and policies dehnite signs of progress and improvement.
SHOTS INTO NEGRO HOMES
Charleston, W. Va. June 19th (Preston News Service)—The homes of Negro miners in Sharrow, Boone County, were fired into by an automobile party last Monday and one of the Negro miners was severely injured. As soon as the report of the trouble reached the State police a detachment of state troopers was sent to investigate the shooting. Ten men were brought into state police headquarters on Wednesday under charges connected with disorder around the mines in the Cabin Creek and Paint Creek districts.
NEGRO INSURANCE IN UNITED STATES
Washington, D. C. June 15- The Secretary of Labor James J. David announced today a statistical summary of the finances and personnel of the principal federal insurance companies in the United States, compiled for the U.S. Department of Labor by Phil H. Brown, Commissurer of Cancellation, shows that there are twenty-five representatively active companies with home offices in thirteen states and the District of Columbia. The insurance sold by these companies covers life, health and accident, principally. Of the twenty five companies reporting 4 home offices are in North Carolina; 4 in Georgia; 2 in Kentucky; 2 in Pennsylvania; 2 in Louisiana; 2 in Florida; 2 in Virginia; and 1 in the District of Columbia, Arkansas, Ohio, Illinois, Tennessee, Maryland, and South Carolina.
Capitalization figures, which were readily available for only 14 of the 25 companies, total $1,256.00. The total assets of all the companies are $6,322,198.59. During the past fiscal year these companies paid insurance claims of colored policy holders and beneficiaries of the United States in a total amount of $3,072,199.00. The companies employed 6,575 colored persons, comprised of 527 clerical employees, 3,568 field agents, 1,523 medical examiners and 557 miscellaneous employees, to whom was paid a monthly amount of $250,728.10, either in salaries or commissions.
OUT OF TOWN NEWS
Darien, Ga. News
The commencement exercises on May 17th marked the close of a very successful year for Todd Public School. The outstanding feature of the commencement, week; were as follows: Backchuldurelate sermon Sunday May 11 by Prof. C. G. Wlyg of G. S. I. G. Savannah, Ga.; primary exercises Monday, evening May 15; play entitled "Princess of Poppyland by intermediate grades"; Tuesday, evening May 16 On Wednesday evening, May 17 in spite of the heavy down pour of rain the graduating exercises were largely attended. The exercises throughout were very impressive. The following criterion was reemplaced:
Come to the Gay Feast of Song.
True Greatness—Chatam Ferguson.
AdVICE to the Sixth Grade—Unicee
Could.
Response—Frances Wing.
Ophtalia Italia Belored
Wet Build the Ladder by which we
Rise—Joeph Traeye.
Victory Poem—Hattle Mac Balloy
Welcome Sweet Springtime.
The Class Grouch—Erlyn Larive.
The Class Optimist—Frances Living-
son
Mammys Little Sunny Honey Boy-
Americanism—George Lewis.
The Progress of Humanity-Malvin Scott.
Class History-Mamle Green.
Class song—School Day of the Past—
Presentation of Diplomas by President
Board of Education.
Prof. Grant and his corps of teachers
need to be commended for their
splendid work.
Misses Willie Taylor and Henrietta
Miller, who are attending Selenon Inst.
Brunswick, have returned home for
the summer.
Mrs Ruby Howard who is attending
Sgelman Seminary. Atlanta, has
returned home for her vacation.
Mrs. Helen McDonald Gibbs, formerly of Darden but, now of New York,
and, Gibbs of New York, are spending in while with relatives and friends.
Miss Clara and Willie Forsyth have returned home from Jacksonville, Fla., where they attended Edward Waters College.
Miss Marie Young of Sarawan form
city of Darlen who has been slick for
quite a while is in Darlen for her
health. Her many friends wish for
her a speedy recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. Roht. Small. Little
Robt. Jr. Misses Limle. Willle and
Ethel Taylor and Miss Marie Young
toured to Brunswick Sunday.
Mrs. M. S. Grant. Mr. and Mrs.
Leane Hicks. Mrs. Susie Lenke and
Mrs. Hagar Mungin have returned
from Washington where they have
been attending the Good Samaritan
Grand Lodge.
Miss Ophelia Mells entertained at the home of Prof. and Mrs. J. L. Grant Friday evening June 16th in honor of Miss Dora Grant of Brunswick and Miss Ruby Howard of Darfen. The parlor was decorated with potted flowers and ferns. The evening was enjoyed by all present. Mrs. Hola Palmer, Misses M. L. and Linda Taylor assisted Miss Mells in serving. Punch was served as the guest entered. The menu consisted of salt onion salad on lettuce leaves with French dressing, saltine crackers, ice cream and home made cake. Carrot and checker playing and dancing were much enjoyed. Miss Alma Taylor presided at the piano with the assistance of Miss M. L. Taylor, Mrs. M. L. Lawn and Miss Fannie Dixon of Brunswick. Present were Misses Commish Jones, M. L. Daule, and Mina Taylor, Ruby Howard, Marina Hall, Ruby Oneal, Maggie Mungin, Emice Gould, Mary Small, Manile Green, Pearl Holmes, Erlyn Larvine, Lutle Moore
Young, Henrietta Miller, Lacey Moore, Lila Traege, Willie Robertson, Mr. and Mrs. Jno, Lawton, Mesdames C. E. Halley, C. E. Miller, B. L. Williams, A. E. Chisholm of Jacksonville, Fla. Emily Stevens, Helen Gibbs, Dusie Gibbs of New York, Chatam Perguson, Neo, Lewis, Malvin Scott, Edward Rogers, Jerry Young, David Mungh, Willie Forstry, Jos, Traege, Those from Brunswick were Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Harris, Misses Nettle and Fannie De Loach, Dora Grant, Thelma Boyd and Fannie Dixon; Edward and Herbert Murphy, R. W. Collins, Edward Brown Geo, Lewis, Molen DeLoach.
Blackshear, Ga., News
The services at Scotts Chapel M. D. church were well attended Sunday night. Rev. Register preaching, Rev. D. R. Copper is pastor.
The Ladies Aid Society met Sunday afternoon at the church.
Miss Carolell King left Friday for library to attend school.
J. W. Cunningham who has been attending the Georgia State College, has returned home.
Mrs. Rebecca Davis is still on the sick list.
A Moonlight party was given by the young people on Thursday night on the school house lawn. It was enjoyed by all who attended.
Brooklyn, News
The Rev. W. B. Wyatt, formerly of Central Baptist church, Thunderbelt, Ga., is making rapid success here as pastor of Mt. Sinai Baptist church. The Sunday school, under the leadership of Supil Wm. Johnson is steadily growing, they made an excellent show ing in the parade of the Mird anniversary of the Brooklyn school union.
Fixe Twu
hold last Thursday. The principal address to the school was delivered by Rev. E. T. Black. Rev. John Dawson Gordon, formerly pastor of the Bolton Street, Baptist church, Karanahah, is now pastoring the Brown Memorial, Baptist church, this city. Since taking charge he has succeeded in having erected for Jean a beautiful fountain on Herkner street
Waycross, Ga.. News
Tom Metherson and Williams, auditors for the Guaranty Mutual Insurance company arrived in the city on Sunday. They are taking the inspection of the superintendent.
Miss Mamie Holmes of Fairfax, spent a few days in the city this week visiting relatives.
Mrs Cerelia Shooks, the new clerk for the Attaina Mutual has taken up the duties of this office and is making good.
Joe Jennings of Savannah spent three days in the city last week with his fast ball team which took two games from the locals out of three. The boys left on Sunday for home.
Jas Young spent a few days in Savannah last week attending the state insurance agents convention.
Mrs. J. W. Hawkins also Mrs. A. L. Hawkins and daughter Miss Dula, all of Atlanta are in the city spending a short visit at the home of Mrs. A. B. Hawkins.
J. W. Moody, Jr., Tom Simmons, Jr.
Benford McKiver of this city also
Joe Brown of Homerville, students of
Ga State College returned home last
Thursday.
Mrs. Katie Cragh and children are
visiting relatives in Quiltman, they will
spend two or three weeks at her old
home.
A party of twenty young people met at the home of Mrs. B. J. A. Jones Friday evening for the purpose of organizing a social club. The club was named the Mystic Social Club, Misses Inez Jone and Beatrice Crooms founder. S. R. Mack president; Miss Irene Jones, vice president; Miss Beatrice Crooms, secretary; Miss Marion Woods, assistant secretary; Amos Williams treasurer; Miss Naomi Leaks, pianist; Miss Ilaa Walker, reporter.
The Wayeross parent teachers association has disbanded for the summer on to the fact that many of its members will be away on their vacation. During the past term much goal was accomplished for the city schools. Among the many things worthy of commendation was the purchasing of shades for all the windows of the Northside school and the calming of the walls of the Reedsville school. It is hoped that a greater interest will be manifested in the organization during the next term and that a closer relationship will exist between parents and teachers in order that more effective work may be accomplished. The president, Mrs. L. A. Minesman takes this method of expressing her high appreciation and thanks to all the teachers and parents of the organization for their hearty cooperation and trust that there will be no need support and cooperation in the future.
Mrs. Julia Clark is improving under the care of Dr. T. W. Welle. Her many friends hope for her a speedy recovery.
Miss Ernestine Bunch, e teacher of Hazzard Hill school, is in the city spending a few days with her parents.
Miss M. I. Hinesman, a teacher at Montville, is in the city for a few days the guest of Dr. and Mrs. A. H. Hinesman.
Mrs. Phoebe Pickett left Wednesday for Saranina to visit her mother.
Mrs. Bertha Smith who has been spending sometime with her parents left Saturday for McRae from where she will go to Philadelphia.
Mrs. I. West and son of Navarre are the guests of her son, Hiram West.
Miss Beulah Head was in the city Monday en route to Albany.
Statesboro, Ga., News
The third quarter conference of Statesboro Circuit was held here last Friday night at Bethel A. M. E. church, the presiding elder being absent the pastor, Rev. W. D. Stephens presided. The presiding elder, W. G. Alexander preacher Sunday morning and night his lecture Sunday afternoon was a master piece.
A large crowd from here attended the anniversary exercises at Pinegrove Baptist church Sunday of which Rev. J. L. Lowery is pastor.
Mrs. Philis Jones is still very ill at her home on Walnut street. Mrs. J. P. Bryant entered for the charity and benevolent club last Thursday afternoon at her home. The topic discussed was "Stander." Those present being Mrs. D. Latlimer, Mrs. J. E. Klimbal, Mrs. P. D. Hendry, Mrs. G. Lawrence, Mrs. Lidgen Thomas, Mrs. R. Butler, Mrs. Lillian Latlimer and Mrs J. P. Bryant an ice course was served.
The stork visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Roberson and left at fine girl. The mother and baby are doing nicely.
Mrs. Iillan Latlimer who taught term in Tallahassee, Fla. is here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Latlimer.
HARDEEVILLE, S. C. NEWS
Rev. L. D. Gregg, district sup of the Beaufort District M. E. church preached to a very large crowd on Sunday night. His left was taken from 18th chapter of Gehoda and 19th verse. Rev. Gregg also held his quarterly conference on Monday and lectured Monday night to an interesting congregation.
Mrs. Salite Brown of Savannah, spent Monday here the guest of her parents Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Hodge, She was accompanied by Mrs. Hodge back 'to Savannah.
Mrs. Eliza H. Robinson left Sunday
for Savannah where she will be the guest of her mother Mrs. R. H. Serrien. Morgan lodge No. 180 K. of P. held its semi-national election at their seminar meeting on Thursday night last. The election on the election will very interesting. The following officers were elected; Sum Washington Chan cellor Commander; J. R. Freeman, vice chancellor; Dan Pelot, K. of R. and S. R. Serrien, master of finance; John Merkle, prelate; A. R. Pelot, master at works; Marile Scott, master at arms P. S. Thompson, master of exchequer. Mrs. Dilia Serrien returned Sunday afternoon from Charleston bringing home her little daughter. Dille Frazier who was attending school there the past term. Joseph Causey spent Sunday here visiting relatives and friends.
Miss Maggie Martin left for Savannah Sunday where she will remain indefinitely.
Mrs Lula Strain accompanied by her husband Joshua Stain spent Sunday here the guest of her mother, Mrs. Annie E. Mitchell. They left Sunday night for their home at Savannah accompanied by her sister, Mrs. Sarah Haynes.
John Fennell was quietly married Saturday morning at Hidgeland, S. C. to Mrs. Maude Williams. They are residing here at the present.
Mrs. A. B. Pelot was a visitor to Savannah during the week.
Fort Valley, Ga., News
The summer school opened on Monday morning with a fine attendance and others are still coming. It is expected, the enrollment will exceed that of former years. This is most encouraging when we recall the fact that Georgia held no summer schools for colorful teachers, only a few institutes, when we opened our first summer session, ten years ago. Now there are many institutes held throughout the
teachers of their counties enroll for study in the summer schools. The keenest interest and appreciation is shown by the teachers who attend, which more than pay for the extra trouble and work one must undergo to hold a summer school session. On Friday evening the "Get Ace"
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WOMAN'S GLORY
Has been justly called—A heart smooth complexion. Those who tain them only by constant care merit. Those who do not, need Madam C. J. Walker's preparaluxurant hair and a complexion AND FALLING HAIR USE M
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FOR ROUGH, PITTY, SALLOW, LITTLELESS COMPLEXIONS USE MADAM C. J. WALKER'S
Six Week's Trial Treatment of Hair Preparations sent for $1.50. Write Today. Dept 1 --
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640 North West St. Indianapolis, Ind.
qualified" social was held in the school chapel. In the receiving line were the summer, school instructors. Games and plenty music furnished entertainment for all. At the lecture hour period on Friday Dr. W. H. Harris of Ahtens and Mr. Jesse D. Thomas of Atlanta addressed the instructors and teachers on the advantage of summer sessions. Dr. Harris and Mr. D. A. Williams, state farm demonstration agent and Principal Hunt held a conference Friday afternoon for the purpose of perfecting plans for a tour of Georgia next fallyll Dr. Moton of Tuskegee and others. Mrs. A. D. Hamilton and family, Misses Funce, Nell and Messers, Henry Cooks and Marion made short visits on their trip to and from Amerigens where they attended the Turney-Hart wedding.
Miss. Amie M. Glaze and Adole J. Hunt, and L. L. R. Bryaters were members of the Turney-Hart bridal party.
Other guests of the wedding party who visited the school were Mrs. Ruth Carey and daughter of Atlanta and Mrs. Ellen N. Brinson and niece of Americans. The sight of the summer teacher as they stroll on the beautiful lawn of the campus leads enchantment to the view.
Mrs. A. W. Hunton of New York field lecturer for the N. A. A. C. P. overseas worker and founder of the Y. W. C. A. for colored women will speak engagements in this state during June and is expected at the school after the 22 on which date she speaks in Savannah.
Beaufort, S. C. News
Mr. Robinson of Washington, D. C. attended the funeral of his cousin Miss M. L. Wright.
Prof. J. B Blanton of Penn school
Prof. J. K. Shenklin, Port Royal Int'l
d-trial school were among those here.
The colored merchants of the city
closed their places of business out of
respect for Miss Margaret L. Wright
during her funeral on last Friday
which shows how highly she was
respected.
The children's day exercises at The
((Continued on page Six)
rest by Test
GIANT
HIGHEST HEST
LYE
head of beautiful, long hair and lovely
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LET PREPARATIONS
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The Bankrupt Sale
We have just received 50 DOZEN of Men's and Ladies' Sample Shoes, high and low, from three manufacturers sample lines. The manufacturers loss is your gain.
SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY ONLY
Ladies' Sport Oxfords, Smoke with brown apron. $8.00 values for Saturday only.....$4.85
Ladies Sport Pumps, white buck, patent leather tips and apron; $8.00 values, for Saturday.....$4.85
Ladies Sport Oxfords; Tan with Brown apron, $8.00 values for Saturday only.....$4.85
Aunt Kaolyn Komfort Shoe $5.00 values; for Saturday.....$2.95
Ladies' White Kid Oxfords; former value $10.00, for Saturday only $3.35
Lades' High Grade Patent Leather and Kid Pumps. Low military and Baby Louis heels: former prices $5.00 to $10.00 for Saturday only.....$2.75 to $4.45
Ladies High Grade White Canvas Pumps and Oxfords in low military and Baby Louis heels formerly sold at $3.50 to $6.00. for Saturday only.....$1.35 to $3.45
Old Ladies' Comforts. Formerly sold at $3.50 to $5.00: for Saturday only.....$1.75 to $2.45
We also want to notify the public that after remodeling the interior this store will be known as THE NOVELTY SHOE STORE, (Highest quality, lowest prices)
THE O. K. GARAGE
Open Day and Night
GASOLINE and OILS
Care Washed
Good Service Oue Motto
W. L. TYLER, Propr'tor
West Broad and 33d Sts
Men and Women Wanted to go Into Business
You can easily make from $50 to $75
a week with our plan. Write S. F.
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Phone 5424
Wage Earners Bank Building
D. ZOSLOWS
OLD STAND
216 WEST
BROAD ST.
The
OF D. ZOSLOW AN
Morehouse College Summer School for Teachers 6 WEEKS, JUNE 13-JULY 22 Primary Methods, Physical Training, Home Economies, Handicrafts and Manual Training Emphasized Extension of First Grade Certificates of Georgia Granted by the St for Full Attendance Registration Fee $3.00; Board for 0 Weeks $21. Bulletin sent upon request JOHN HOPE, President S. H. ARCHER, Director ATLANTA, GEORGIA
"111" cigarettes
10¢
Good!
Buy this Cigarette and Save Money
Children's High Tops, Pumps and Sandals. For Saturday only 75c to $1.45
Ladies' Scuffers, Pumps and Sandals. For Saturday only ... $1.85
Men's Bates' English Bals. Former price $7.00, for Saturday only $3.45
Boys' High Tops and Low Shoes. Former prices up to $5.00 for Saturday only ..... $1.45 to $2.25
Ladies' High Grade Satin Pumps. Low or Baby Louis covered heels; former prices. $5.50 to $8.00: for Saturday only..... $3.15 to $3.85
Black Vici Shoes. Broad toe, solid leather; specially adapted for policemen and postmen; former prices $6.00 and $7.00: for Saturday only..... $4.45 to $4.95
Men's Scouts. Former price $3.50. for Saturday only... $1.95 Men's Oxfords. Former prices $6.00 to $8.00, for Saturday only $3.45 to $4.95
Fifty Dozen
Sample Shoes Included In
D. ZOSLOW'S OLD STAND 216 WEST BROAD ST.
IN HIS HOLY TEMPLE
CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY
Chattanooga, Tennessee, June 11—The
First Congregational church of Chatt
anpoga, Tennessee held a great celebration
today in honor of its fifty-fifth
anniversary. The anniversary sermon
was preached by Dr. Abraham Lincoln
Demand, of Memphis, Tennessee, and
addresses were made by Mayor A. V.
Chambliss of Chattanooga, and by
other prominent citizens. A large
amount of money was raised. Rev W.
L. C. is the pastor of the Chatt
anpoga church.
ZION TEMPLE A. M. E. CHURCH
A splendid meeting is being conducted at Zion Temple A. M. E. church, Gwinnett street and Waters avenue this week, Rev. J. S. Campbell of Augusta, who is the presiding elder of the Augusta district of the above named denomination, preached for several nights on last week and will preach the remainder of this week. Dr. Campbell is an added speaker and one of the foremost men of the AM E Zion church in the ship. Rev. B. R. Sapp is pastor of the church.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST CHURCH
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. G. H. Veal, pastor. On last
Sunday Rev. cal spoke at 11 a. m. or
the subject "Saturn Slitting Among
the Saints." At 4:30 p. m. Rev. James L.
Dudley spoke on subject "Behold the
Lamb of God." At 8:30 p. m. Rev.
Veal unreached again, subject "Make
Preparation for a Royal Visitor."
There will be a program rendered Wed
nesday night for the church.
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Taylor and Halseyham streets; Rev.
A. H. Gregory, pastor. For
morning hour, "A Moon Man's Child
to Charmer." Sunday school 9:45 a.
m.; Christian Endevor, 5 p. m.; mil
week prayer service, 8 p. m. At 6:30
p. m. Children's Day was observed
with a special program which was well
treated. A class of young people
was admitted into the church.
ST. PAUL C. M. E. CHURCH
Rox. E. W. White, pastor. The pastor is on both hours, on last Sunday, and delighted two inspiring sermons. The Sunday school was largely attended. Junior hour under Mrs. C. Erwin are still the banner class. The Sunday school will observe promotion day at the morning services. There will be a special program rendered by the school assisted by local talent. Services Sunday at the usual hour, weekly services at the usual hour.
CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH
Hull and McAlester street; Rev.
THE FIRST TIME A MAN WAS PUSHING A TRACTOR ON A ROAD.
Admission 50c Grand Stand 25c Parking Space Free
J. K. Iry, pastor Order of services:
Larly Sunday prayer meeting 5:30 a.m.
m. Sunday schools 10:30 a.m.
preaching 11:30 a.m. m. and 8:30 p.m.
B. Y. K. K. 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday night.
prayer meeting; Thursday night.
preaching. On last Sunday morning
we had a large attendance at the early
prayer meeting to witness baptism.
The pastor filled the pulpit both morning
and night. On next Sunday night
we will have the exercise for the Sunday
school. The church is having
preaching every Wednesday night.
MTS ZION BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. John Q. Adams, pastor. Th/ services were all largely attended and inspiring last Sunday. The church celebrated the third anniversary of the pastor at the evening service. An excellent program was rendered. The usual services on Sunday as follows: Prazer meeting, 6 a. m.; preaching, 11:30 a. m. and 8:30 p. m.; Sunday school 10 a. m.; B. Y. P. F. 7 p. m. On Monday evening, June 26, there will be a musical concert at the church under the auspices of the B. Y. P. F. and the Deaconesses.
ST. PHILIP MON; CHURCH
Hull street West: Rev. B. S. Hanth, pastor Sunday was a great day. The pastor preached to a large audience Sunday morning and at night Rev. J. W. Moore, Y. M. C.A. Secretary preached an interesting sermon. The Sunday school is doing nicely. The attendance has been increasing gradually this month. Bible training class is still in the lead of which the pastor is teacher. The pastor officers and members began celebrating the 57th anniversary of the church Friday. June 16th Dr. W. G. Alexander preached an eloquent sermon. The whisper held an, interesting meeting Sunday afternoon and formulated their final plans for their mid summer outing. The Allen Christian Endeavor is doing nicely, a large number of Leaguers were one Sunday. Respectively reading led by Miss Mary Smith topic discussion. Albert Day. The citizens are cordially invited to hear the debate Friday evening. 8:30. Resolve which is the greatest asset to the church, Men or Women.
EAST SAVANNAH PRAYER HOUSE
A union meeting was held on Sunday, June 15, at the prayer house of P. A. B. church In charge of Deadens Smalls and Agers. An excellent sermon was delivered by the pastor, Rev T. J. Goodall Deacons Lagroe and Mercherson led the devotional service Deacon Lagroe of Beth Elen church and Deacon Mercherson of P. B. church spoke very encouragingly about the prayer house. Music was furnish-
THE SAVANNAR TRI BUNE. THURSDAY. JUNE 22, 1922
P
The image shows a train traveling along a railway track surrounded by trees and buildings. The train appears to be a steam locomotive, characterized by its large wheels and a streamlined body. The tracks are laid out in a parallel fashion, with a railing separating them from the surrounding landscape. The trees and buildings are densely packed, indicating a rural or semi-urban area. The overall scene suggests a moment of train travel, possibly during a period when steam locomotives were more common.
by the choir and Junior choir of the prayer house. Many friends attended the meeting. The deacons present from P. A. B. church were Deacons J. B. Williams, Joseph Marks, William Ward John Davis, David Smalls, W. J. Avers and Dr. Bellecher. After the meeting refreshment were served free
FIRST BRYAN BAPTIST CHURCH
Bryan street West; Rev. Daniel Wright, priest; Order of Services; Weekly prayer services Tuesday and Thursday night; early Sunday morning prayer meeting, 6 o'clock; Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.; preaching 11:30 a.m. and 8:30 p.m.; Junior R. W. P. U. 5 p.m.; Senior R. Y. P. U. 7 p.m.
The Exchange of the church was crowded each prayer service night during the past week. On Wednesday night, June 14. Rev. Wright accompanied by a number of officers and members attended the Second Baptist church and assisted the missionary Dr White. The early Sunday morning prayer meeting was conducted by the ushers board. Sunday school attendance was large as usual. Rev. Wright preached at the morning and evening service. The Deacons and D. W. W. W. club held successful meetings. The Junior and Senior R. Y. P. U. exercises was inspiring. The gueses of the evening service were the Royal Palm Aid and Social Club. The program rendered was commendable. The sermon delivered was a powerful one. The donations were credible. The R. Y. P. U. and Sunday school rally is on
COLLEGE PARK BAPTIST CHURCH
On last Sunday morning Rev. Hayes
preached. Blackboard demonstration
on the Sunday school lesson by W. S.
Roundfield of Second Baptist Church
Order of services as follows: Weekly
days. Tuesday night, prayer meeting:
Thursday night, preaching: Friday
night S. school, chore rehearsal: Sunday
school. 3 p.m. B.X.P. 17:30
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
The last week was spent in interest of a missionary rally conducted by State Missionary Rev. White, there was proaching every night by ministers of the various churches. Terry White thank all the churches and their choirs who assisted him. On last Sunday the services were well attended. Rev. Curtlart preached at the morning and evening services. The Sunday school was largely attended, the deacon board were their guests. The R. Y. P. U rendered quite a program to a large audience, the lesson was discussed by Dragon Rain. The union was entertained by a newly made orchestra the young men did well. Mr. Simmons sang a solo. The meetings of the week will meet in their usual form.
FIRST A. B. CHURCH
FIRST A. B. CHURCH
Franklin sonate: Rev. T. J. Goodall
pastor. Services: daily prayer service.
5:30 a.m.; preaching. 11:30 a.m. and
5 p.m.; prayer meeting. Tuesday night
preaching. Thursday night. Sunday
school. 10 a.m. m. B. Y. P. Y. 6:30 p.m.
Rev. Goodall preached a powerful
THE NEW YORK TIMES
sermon at 11:20 a.m. m. Sunday, subject "Race Pride" This was indeed a most splendid sermon filled with food for that and timely advice Many comments were heard. The attendance was very large and in spite of the very intense heat, Rev Goodall held his hearers spellbound Sunday school was well attended. The historical facts on the lesson was discussed by Harvey Burris. The practical side of the lesson was given by Miss Prandi Brown. Little Miss Evorilia Marks in behalf of the primary department recited. It was indeed a treat to hear such a tiny for speak so well. State Missionary, White made remarks. The membership drive in the S. S. is doing well. The Ablemench class is in the lead. J. B. Brownler had charge of the R. X. P. U. The lesson was discussed by group leaders and was indeed interesting
ERUSALEM BAPTSIT CHURCH
45th street near Montgomery; Rev.
' H. Prince, pastor. On last Sunday.
prayer meeting 5:20 a. m., at 11 a. m. the pastor spoke from the 9th chapter of St. Matthews 18 to 2021 verse the service was well attended. Sunday school at 2:30 p. m.; communion services a+ 2:30 p. m. the pastor made the communion talk. We were glad to have Rev. R. G Carter with us at this hour of service. The B. Y. P. U. was called to order at 6:45 p. m. by the President. Joe Whitley. The group leaders are very much encouraged in their work. The pastor also filled the pulpit at right Sunday, June 25, being our grand tally day. we urge that each captain core prepared to make a worthy report in this effort to raise 700 00.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHERS' UNION
The Sunday School Teachers' Union will hold its regular monthly meeting on Wednesday night, June 28, 8:30
ME WHEN YOU SHOULD SEE
BEAUTY DOCTOR
allow any and everybody to ex-
tract hair. Your skin and hair should
with great care, using strictly mod-
scientific methods. We have it
SYSTEM practice it. The Egypt-
taken the lead, because it is the
tion that is suited to any and all
however short, rough or stubby; or
plicate. Thousands of satisfied
ady and willing to give testimon-
ies necessary? You know many of
you. Don't waste more time on
get us take care of you. We know
with and beauty. All branches of
Original and effective. Who
If you are, why look it? Special
no join our class in hair dressing
are which begins May 15. We are
burnish any information regard-
ent of hair and scalp. Egyptian
preparations. Mail orders re-
tention. Phone 3227
POMARD M'F'G COMPANY
Wage Earners Bank Bldg.
THIS IS THE TIME WHEN YOU SHOULD SEE YOUR BEAUTY DOCTOR
You should not allow any and everybody to experiment on your hair. Your skin and hair should be looked after with great care, using strictly modern, up-to-date, scientific methods. We have it. The EGYPTIAN SYSTEM practice it. The Egyptian System has taken the lead, because it is the one hair preparation that is suited to any and all grades of hair, however short, rough or stubby; or thin fine and delicate. Thousands of satisfied customers are ready and willing to give testimonials, but why's this necessary? You know many of them right about you. Don't waste more time on trashy stuff. Let us take care of you. We know the secret of youth and beauty. All branches of Beauty Culture, Original and effective. Who want to be old? If you are, why look it? Special offer to those who join our class in hair dressing had beauty culture which begins May 15. We are always glad to furnish any information regarding the treatment of hair and scalp. Egyptian high grade hair preparations. Mail orders receive prompt attention. Phone 3227
THE ALLEN-POMARD M'F'G COMPANY Rooms 205-206, Wage Earners Bank-Bldg:
o clock at College-Park church Thunder
fight. Every Sunday school worker is
asked to be present so as to represent
their school.
SAVE FOR THE RAINY DAY!
IT COMES TO'EVERYBODY.
n't Spend Unless You Have It:
n't have it Unless You Save It:
n't Save It without a Definite Plan:
n't Find a Better Plan than
DELITY SAVINGS BANK
WEST BROAD STREET
You Can't Spend Unless You Have It
You can't have it Unless You Save It
You can't Save It without a Definite Plan
You can't Find a Better Plan than
Afternoon of raising Thrills nnah's Leading
An Afternoon of Hair-raising Thrills Savannah's Leading Harness and Running Horses
```markdown
```
3 Automobile Races
2 Motorcycle Races
3 Horse Races
Fabe Tiffe
Wait and go with St. Philip on the
annual outing to Beach 'Hammock'
Monday July 3rd 1922. Clifford will
leave foot Abercorn street at 11.30.
RACES
eye Four 2
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rE re 1 ly,
‘Pe. Re .
2? 2 OoHARTIP’ wecOARTHY
rene Ceath bf Chatiie” MacCurthy
atyMibiny cqrly, Taesday morning
Wea “from Georgin one of ita bent
Kqojgn, and orort highly crespected elt:
jaja: “Str. MatCarthy, on account of
WT promlngice’In thesjeading fraternat
tfdrlvafions, wax one of the best
Kbhwa tien fh the state ‘and his pass-
Abgayas- will be-a xouree of deepest
ret to thoikandy of Georgians, He
Fave onlysk prowfituent — fraternal
mi to bot was, also.Tne of those who,
‘acconnt of his tery genfal and
fty disposition stood exceptionally
“$i the éstimation of those who
Kins him.
PeMicttasths’s qanduct of the of
Mgt sourctaty-treasurer of Endow-
u the Kulkhts of Psthlas of Geor
ghewae'a’matter of much prhle to the
Wlopigainls “ot ‘members of that dody.
eas reflefent afd progressive und
scpnduét of the affulrs of that of,
344, above board aud it his death
Shu \ Sthér érguntzations of whieh
‘sips a-meniber bave lost one whose
fappavlll be extremely diicult to si
ate
a —_
1
OY sep cp rHe-recurD
®Durieg the thonth of August the Na-
taal Negro Huelnes League, with its
ted bodldy will Lokt its annual
weting Jn the ety of Norfolk, Va,
rte past, four annual meetings of
the lesgue Savunuan has hud’ the dis-
ele of baving larger representa-
sph than any other city. This is, in
dpi, an honor which we might well
Ugelprad of avd It behooves us te
egg|ye this seat to keep up this recond.
pe meeting of the league in Nor-
folk.should be ubove ordinary inter-
ty those who are in attendance,
Peanve this city vccuples a foremost
fe among thy eltles in which Negro
es¥ has made rapid strides.
There will be much to be scen in this
petepive cffy from which the vis-
ilors' may get fnsplratlon. Norfolk
may ot haveé-quite. as,much diveralty
‘plegsures to offer tlie members of
the business ledgue ay some of the north
n dtles whtte the leugue has met
ve ad, yet’we idoubt whether there
4s a shigle oe, of theve citles which
She ‘ay much fedl jrogresnlveness along
Dhatness lines jo offer ab’docs this busy
Sirstate city,“and, after all, whut the
jen of the feigue should want to eee
ahi hear about, fs just what Norfolk
has to offer. We bellete that the lea-
she’s meeting placz this year will give
tgeits attendants that Sort of inspir-
atioh ,which they are seeking. Nor-
folk Has made great strides in Negro
hsiness and these evideuces of ad-
Yancement ‘will undoubtedly be the
fieans of innch inspiration to the
scores of Negro business men from all
‘over the country who will attend the
coming meeting of the Natloual’ Negro
Business leagne.
EDITORIAL
EXCERPTS
i REVENGE
{“Vengence Is mine, will repay, sabi
the Lord,”
‘rhe mau who goes thrott;h the world
gpa a crouch wo te alms matte
bg for an vpportnuity to get even with
somebody whom he thinks las done
Bior_aif Injury 1s put to many disad-
‘wintages in trylng to carry out that
threat. The deeire for reveuge acts
in tho system Ihe a leaven of poison,
crippling the brain power and Judue
ipg unhappiness, No ove can do his
Best when he has an unkind feeling
ar kesentment towards bis fellowmen—
Star. ~ nd ae
AVERICA’S GOLGATHILA
‘The continued burning and torturlug
of the dlack people are becoming «ich
ening and nanseating. The idea that
a lunran being in a civilized country
can be burned allve and horribly muti
slated fs revolting to tnat thing ‘that
‘we call’ the human nature. When dogs
offend society they are shot dex—Dnt
uot burned alive. Erveping, crawl
dug reptiles ate speedily slulu whee
they become dangerous to humanity
and even the most bated and feared
‘df the brutes ure uot tortured aud burn
vd while they have life. Yet the
buck people in this country are put fu
@ category b.ieuth the brate and the
human nature of thelr maltreaters is
amverted in dn Insutiaple something
which erles for exchutlating agony
and unepeahable suffering. Human'ty
and_Sunerica cannot bé understood.
We need not iook with sorrowful
eses and bleeding hearts Iuto the eyes
‘of our oppremors beaiine thelr souls
hore fied to nether Iuds and theft
earte bave turned to stove. We can”
not appeal to the ‘Temples of Justice
Pecause they will not listen to our
Pletidings, Sometimes we wonder if
God has forsakea 18 and we can on
derstand why Jesus cricd out ta the
throes of lls torture: “My God! Afy
God! Why Hast Thou Forsaken Me?"
eThe whip. 2 oS
True Religion In Negro
Hymns
Ree er, mater erne w/e neces
Negro singer. This well-known yum,
especially familiar because of the in-
strumental and vocal adaptations by
Clarence Cameron, Whife and Harry 'T.
Burleigh, the Negto composers, was a
great favorite of General Armstrong,
and-it speaks a language which all
who have suffered deeply and suffered
especially from huma}‘ misunderstand-
ings, can comprehend. “Sometimes
T'm ‘up, sometimes I'sh down; some-
‘times I'm almos’ to de croun’, Ob, yes
Lord. Although you see me goin’ long
so, I have my trials here below.” So
the quaint words go 6u, expressing, in
thelr elmpiicity, thoughts that are as
common us human ‘experience. . This
pe often brings tears to eyes loug
Inuscil to weeping; eat in itself is not
ja doleful melody but father plalatively
fexpresses the comfort which the troubl
ed heart of the ignorant slave, whose
“wap was cloudy,” felt in ieaning up-
ou‘his inner consciousness of the pres-
lence of Gow
‘That very real sense of the Imman-
ence of God and the reulity of spiritual
things appears In the hymn just al-
Huded to, “My way, My way's elou-
lay; ob, seu them angels down!” Out
of the darkness might ‘ut any moment
appear bright and radiant figures aud
rescue from thelr troubles the oppress-
ed Singers. Almost thelr comlug could
be felt ut sunrise aud sumset—"Dhere's
ja fire in the cast, there's a fire in the
Fest.” Now conies the touch of -bu-
mor. “Ole Satan's mad an’ I ann glad.
He missed the soul he thought be hud”
for the squi has ccaped by milracul-
ous Litervention, as a bird out of the
re of, the fowler, 7
Anotherbymn sald to be a favorite
Jo Generul Armstrong is that beghan
ing, “Ll be thefe, Vibe there; wher
the general roll ts called I'll "be there.”
Of course the Sgures used fy that of
the plantation roll cai, but it Js ap"
plied to that last great day when the
dead sball rise und take thelr places
in the heavenly company according to
prophecy. “Oh, come get ready when
Gabriel culls” exhorts the singer, and
they alt auswer in chorus, “I'll be
jthere, 171 be there.”
|The great virtue of perseverance f»
extolled in the yz begtiming, “Stay
In the fick.” It does not require a
strong Imagination to see those burn-
ing flelds of cotton, filled with patl-
feut. stooping figires, who may have
jeolaced thelr labors’ by the thought
that the tedious task fs but-an cuiblem
of what all Cheistiams have to enduré
long stretches of duty without
“grate” to cheer. Sometimes just to
stay in the telds” Is all the Obristiau
can-do, Dut the Sgure fy fuéther ap-
plied 40 the fleid of battle; perhaps it
is an echo vf Civil War experiences
—"Stay In the Held, oli, warrior, until
the war Is ended.” Perhaps both fields
ssere in mind of the singer.
Perseverance is aleo encouraged in
ti hymn, “Keep a incbin’ aiong Ike
2 po iuch-worm.” No doubt the sing:
ers who first used this qudlat figure
recognized, u» well as we, how humor-
fous it is Ib iy a pity to bar humor
from hymus. Whe Christian's halting
[progress along the path o£ virtue could
not be better described; the end 1s not
fac distant. “Mussa Jesus comin by
fan’ by.” ‘This thought of miraculous
deliverance Was never far stant from
the minds of bluck foik under slavers
conditions. é
Both this byhm and the preceding
lone have sulu- words entirely uncon-
hected with the main thought, This
foftin happens; indeed, some words
[seeusllke the “patent insides” to coun-
try papers, able to be fittdl into any
Tketting. “Ob, look up younder whit 1
see, bright angels coming after ine”
Joceur miore-than neg It mleDt haf-
pen that a singer would burst forth in
fa religious gathering, with a xenulne
“inspiration”—genuine but nut sts-
talutd—or quite strong enough to conm-
mmunicate itvelf to those about hint. “Tir
such a case we find a fine chorus with
frrelevant and weaker words. Where
the inspiration was stietained and con-
tageous, the greatest hymns, such us
SCoundn't Icur nobody pray"; “Nov
Gody"kuows dé trouble I’ve seen’ re"
sulted; iu these the solo strengthens
the chorus. :
In ‘Inchn’ along” the words are rath-
er vague and mystical; “Yu in de wor
amd de word in you” (referring <at
course fo the passage in St. Joba, “tit
$e abide iu me and my word ablde Jk
Sou"); nild “I die one time, goingto
le no mo'—how ean Idle when Im in
de wordy’ The exliorter or soloist
twas evidently thinking more of the pas
Rage of scripture and perhaps vaguely
of rome striking recent experience of
his own than of the general subject
lof the hymu. “While I was musing:
the fire burned,” sags the Psalmist.
No man planned or ‘composed these
hiymns; Uiey are vbstousty a sort of
Lampaate of the spontancous denota-
tion of many hearts fustd for the mo-
huent in a great common couception.
yagne ard primitive perhaps, but one
common to all mankind. |
|, One must not, only understand the
‘vay In which tlese hymns came into
boing but the widely different eircom;
pte teh eee them Girth, ‘Thies;
THE-SAVANNAH TRIBUNE, THURSDAY... JUNE 22. 1922
a a
Madam Ida B. Jefferson,-A Widow
Evangelist 10th Episcopal:Dist. A.M.E.
+ Church, North [exas
———— ‘Atifealer of Great Power +
o| 2 Leety wan and woman
ought to sce this wonderful
lady, for she can tell you
many things that wilt put
ce s Bi you to wondering, Madam
Jefferson can bring tapgled
Pree bralus to the Ught of hope-
ae ‘i ful sensibility. She can
>. cure any discase that you
(eee. were not born with, iu fuct,
Be? Se she can locate any disease in
beh... <a eee the human body, and tell your
5 ace en: complaint by your writing to
& a her when other doctors have
. coe é failed, then write her and she
mass will give you full details of
+ ris your disease, Madam Jeffer-
F RAR a 80n possesses a natural born |
rs oO gift {fom birth and is one of
w ia the greatest Ucensed preach-
io << * ere of the age. She has a
Bie supernatural gift. God has
‘Seat given-her power fo heal and
ewe lead her people. Her advise
- ¢on business problems js worth
Z more_thay you will ever be
able to pay. Only business
matters will be answered. Send ten cents in .etnmps for reply—
Madam Jefferson has discovered a wonderful hair restorative. It
grows hair on bald heads. Agents wanted. ft teaches the art.
For consultation other than sickness, send twq7($2.00) dollars, and
if you take treatment, this will go on your bill °
Address MADAM IDA B., JEFFERSON
Box,648 Longview, Texas
dence in ultimate kliverance, , bat
instera, u- pious asptration. : The+Ne-
ro ut le best-has-a-sure fath—Edth
Armstrong Tolbert in- Southern Work-
man. .
Seeing Ourselves
@ As Others See Tlc
lean ae Beton, D. C, June 21st Pres-
toa News Servicey—it Is very forta.
nate that a man‘like Robert Barry, a
former Louisville, Ky., hewspapermun,
who has just returned from an extend
ed tour of Europe, bas had a splendid
opportunity to see and fully realize
jJust what Europeang think of America
and Americans, Ills experfences were
evidently very humiliating to him as is
evidenced by his article to American
newspapers after bis zeturn to this
country.
Mr. Barry thinks American life s
pictured in a talse Nght abroad by the
European press, for he says “Ameri-
cans arg being pictured dally through
out Eurdpe as w nation of gun-toting
[Sectiegectes Jazzmad idlers; money-
laden spendthrifts; immoral divorcees
blood-thirsty Iynchers; ete.” Of ‘course
Afr. Barry should know that the
foreigu editors could not aud would
not print accounts of these bappen-
ings in Americun life If untrue His
composition should be entitled. ~The
White Crackers Tues”
i Mr Barry sings out that, “European
pMewspapers curry very little Ameri-
ean news What they do print Ja of
;the cheupest, most sordid and seusa-
tionally misrepresentative brand” Hg
further complains that European ye
jes publish long aecounty of At-
sluntic seaboard roorruuning; — high-
Jacking and inland whiskey selzures,
cach with its complement of lurid ac.
counts of pistol battles: HL ollywopd
revels; apartment ‘house scandals;
oudole murders: |nebings jind race
rlots;> ele. Expergenced Pey'spaper-
amen now platuly why Thropenn
eagerly read accannts @ fluyipenings
of this hind whlch are sq cutracteris-
tle of certain American life
The fortgnate thing about Mr,
Barry's trip te Europe is that he Tas
had un opportunity ta we Americans
and thelr conduct at home as. others
see them eThe spectacle was indeed
painful to kim and his public expres
ston through the Amerlean press. will
Possibly arouse the American white
people to think” seriously of their short
comings and begin ty do something to
correct these evils in an effert to show
themselves before the world In a2 mere
compliuventary and favorable light.
Some such general cif improvement
of the part of the American white
{Beople is bound to be Leneficlal to the
Amuyican Negro. ‘The woeful ory of
Jerimes comuittet by Americans’ dues
appear qhite appaling and disgusting
When seriously thought of. What
other impressfon could outsiders Ket of
American lfe than as expressed ht the
Europea preys? ‘The things publish-
jed uctonlin happened in this, country
and are growing to*snch proposttons
ay to constitute cause for serious
alarm on the part of serions minded
and high-thioking white and colored
Americans who ure proud of thelr
feountrs
American Negrovs, ‘thronghout the
entire length and breadth of this conn-
try. are glad that Mr Barry has had
fan opportunity to see the exnet esth
mate put upon Atnerican life by Dure-
peans.
GARDEN DAY AT CUYLER
st s+" “VERY IMPRESSIVE
—
Large Crowds Inspect Exhibits and
Witness: Drills
(BS Mins ALR Cares)
“wise ai thu: Pesce
Garden day at the Cuyler— Street
School surpassed all former days as
to-the iuterest dlsptised by the public
At no time during the honts from four
to six were there Toss thun one thous:
and spectators\present
‘The cakes. pies candy and other ev.
Mblts of the domestic selene depart:
mnent showed Gire du preparation ay
well) as artistic gil One can
twarvely Delleve that the pmmerous
Deantiful dresses displayed in the tro
sewing rooms were made by children.
Desks, chairs, magazine stands, Irall
trees, flower augers, taborettes, Ii
brary aud tea tables plano benches
foot stools, metlicine cabinets and mit
sie stands were exhibited In the man
ual training departments +
| A splendid physical trifdog estthit
Jon was given by the children of the
¢lementary departinent. ‘The chil
dren were welt trained and the pro-
gram was carried out without 2 break.
‘The prograg} was as follows:
First grgges a, Danish vance; b
idnderpolka
Second grades; (a), kinderpolih;
(op, The Chimes of Spunkine; (e)
stretching'"lercise; (d)F hoop’ drilt
‘Third grates; gymnastic game song,
‘he Aniuials in the Zoo.
h) Fourth grades, The Virginia Reel.
Fifth and Sixt hgrades, (a), physi-
cat exercise; (b), Vance, We Won't
Go Home ‘ill Morning *,
‘There was also a splendid display
of Ilterary work from both the Junlor
Hilgh and elementary schools. The
Junior High school displayed Engllsit
mathematics, phystolozy, economical
descriptive and ‘commercial geography.
The intermediate aud primary depart:
ments ‘of tit elementary school dis:
Physca writtng, Buglish, arithmetic
and geography aud also’ an excellent
Industrial art display,
The Woadfitle echoot made a splen.
did showing, ax usual. Of especial
Integest was'a mosquito exblblt, prop-
erly screened house aud clean’ yard.
A book of “Splatter” pletures maue
of one ‘aud_two drops of fuk, also a
‘splendid display of industrlal art, gur-
den und: canned products were on ex-
hibition,
‘There swere a number of county
schuoly represented, namely, Barstow,
Rose Dhu. Rice Hone, College, Mon-
tWth, Springfick! Terrace, Mt, Zion
and Whituntrsh istand, ‘They had
wisplngs of Industrial art, busketry,
pine needle. work, sewing and agricul:
tural exhibits. ~~
Black Belts Are 7
* Disintegratng
DUE TQ MIGRATION AND DE-
CREASING BIRTH RATE
ce Menta, Ga. June 19—The historic
Southern “Bick Belts" are disintes
grating axl are destined to pass {n
A fow more ‘generaflons, according to
census stiles made be Dr. L, JW olf
tor. at soclologint of Uily elty. Tie 188
there were 300 counties in the South
in whidh the Negro population out-
funmbered the white. “My 1910. the
pxamber Inu strum: to 264, aul i 2920
there were only 216, In Wt) fifty-
four eomnties showed a Negro popala-
ten of more than three to one. In 1920
ate thirty-two eouuties had so high
3t proportion,
went to the North and to. the
eltles suut x decreasing birth rate have
fanned the change, During the last
decade: the Gtfes gained three quarter
of 2 anillion in Negro population an
the roral districts Tost a quarter of a
willion, The increase In the — whole
ronntry ts only 600,000, or 8 1.2 yer
vent, av-against cleven, fourteen, sev-
enteen and twenty-two per cent re
pectively in the fonr decades precee!-
Ing. “SMeuntlne the infant death rake
mong the race continues to be heavy,
| The Northern states showed “the
largest percentaze of gal, Mlehigin
leading with 251 per sent. Pennsgl-
pula "now as more Nextous tan
Marsland of Kentnchr and Qhto more
than Oktulwma. North Caroliua haq
se of (it and Lexar’ of 51,645,
hile Vinginia, Marsiaal, Florida,
Georgia, South Carolina aud Arkansas
cach gained fro tients’ thonsand to
forty thousand, Missisaippl_ lost 74,-
mrt, Kentucky lost 25718, Tennessee
212820, Loulstana 13,617 and Alabama,
7,630. ee
|B. F.. COFERSRESIGNS POSITION
| WITH SUPREME CIRCLE NEWS
TF. Cofer, who for neveral years
bas been associate editor ang manager
Jof the Supceme Circle News aud Pub-
Hshing Company, has tendered his res-
ignation, having accepted a position Tis
‘managing editor of the Atlanta Inde
pendent aud deputy for the Odd Fel-
owas nugeenling the ute Prof. Joli
|Wesleg Davidson,
Mr. Cofer, wha is well hnown fn the
Hell of jputpativm, took up the work
of the sere Circle News hn 1017
and sluee that time has done a great
work, hasing treblyd the circulation
laud gregtly increased its fnances.
1 Since jils work with the News, it
(hus greatly increased In prestige “and
1g recognized ae one of America’s best
rwoekltes. :
Tt is very largely the work of Mr.
Hevfer thay Abe News now hus 184 own
[printing pit which is one of the best
iu the South and ts doing a splendid
tne Under his management, the
printing bustuess has grown in inthe
‘erce eyed Into other states where it
das furnished printed matter.
: = ad ? | \@ f ES ‘
» » — aie be x we %
Sf ~~ Vee, st —
; MO Miah Sat
itis Just iP Ga os,
Slipping eRe ie
From_You? f /
: Do you realize that some day- you will
| ‘greatly regret letting those precious
*. + dollars slip through your hands? ©
e e, When Theodore Roosevelt Said: . - re
“Thrift is commori sense applied to spending” wget
. he gave to thousands the key €6 success © yf” ~
we a
This Bank makes it easy for you to save. No matter how, :
. little money you have right now, deposit it here and let a
it begin earning five per cent interest, compounded
quarterly, with absolute safety of principal. - 5
Wage Earners Savings Bank:
Savannah, Ga. , ,
Mr, Cofer has. very many friends in
Albany and this section, and his going
Will be learned of with regret—Su-
preme Circle News.
5 ees
BUSINESS BEFORE PLEASURE
New York Pity, June 2st (Preston
News Service)—“Business Before’
Veasure” opencd at the Lafayette
theatre on Monday night and went
over nicely in spite of the oodles of
white paint Leing used by some of the
amateurs This production was first!
Presented downtown and “inade guite|
a bit when the white performers ap-
peared in it They are now figuring
on sending this show on“the road with
{ts colored cast Of course, not exact-
ly on the road but in a few colored
houses that will stand for it for a
week. The white men, or ut least cer-
tain of them ,believe that it fs lucky
to fol around with colored performers,
in these days, aml as we have said
before, are doing it
June 19, Monday—Mid-summer out
‘ing at Lincolu Park by the 8. S. Cit
of St. Loula. Admission 35c.
June 1, Priday—Annual plevie a
Lincolu park by St Augustine Guild
Admission, 25¢,
June 21, Welnesday—Afternoon out
Ing at Teach Hammock by the 1
Star Boys. Pare 0c.
June 26, 3tonday—Afternoon ex.
eursion by the Christiam Worker:
Club. Fare 50c,
dune 14, Wednesday—Dance at the
Swimming pool by the Orioles, Ad
misston 25c.
June" 28, Weduesday—Spot dane
Jat Swimming pool hy the Ideal Sucia
Jelub. Admission 250,
June * 14, Wednesday—doonllgh
ride by Hurmons Boys. Fare Ge.
June 26, MondusOnting at Lin
coln park by the Young Adelphla A
and S:C, Adwigsion 25¢.
Jtine 19, Monday—Outing to Daufas
Ae by the Lincoln A. and S$. Club
Fare 50¢.
Juné™19, Monday—Pievic at Lincolr
Park by‘ Crystal Court No. #10, 0. 0
July 3, Monday—Onting to Reach
Hammock by St Philip A 3f E ciurel
Sunday school Fare 50c ,
Jity 5, Weduevds—tincln park
with the Eureka Ladies Branch Ad
mission 25¢
June 26, Monday _night—New Was
‘Moon Dnnce at Harris St Hall by Pink
Carnation Adinisston 25¢ +
Every Thurwlay —night—Dance at
Savannah Home Assoclutlon- Adin:
sion free
Fuly 18, Tuéwlay—Outing at Lincotr
park by Auerican Woodmen Camp Nc
45. Adinission 25¢.
Juls 3, Monday night—Dapse, at
Harris street Hall by the South Atlan
ie Rosat Cabin, Admission 25c.
| Tuly 19, Wednesitay—Madizas Danee
at Lincoln Park by S. 8. Clty of At-
Janta Admisson Ue +
| July 21, Wednewds—Sith, anntver.
sary plenic at Lincoln park by xt
Pilip Monumental church Ushers As
soclation Admksion 25¢
July 4, Tueday—Dance hy Sevan.
nah Home Association at its auditort-
um Admission 23¢
Ga. State Ind. College Summer’ School
AT SAVANNAH, GA—JUNE 26th to AUGUST 4th,, 182
Courses—Literars, Manual Training, Handicrafts: Sewing, Cooking
Agriculture, Dairying, Poultry Raising
Reereation—Uoating, Swimming, Excursion.
Rates—Registration$3.00; Board and Laundry for Six Weeks, $21.50
7 C. G. WILEY, President
a
a
~
THREE STORES 2 3
‘ S
Savannah’s .Only Colored Drug: Stores
ot eR
719 W. BROAD ST. 140 FAHMST. 202 RANDOLPH ST. .
PHONES 3570—5453—1652 é
Get your Uver cleaned ont with 9 bottle of Hepatic,fompotnd, the
dost medicine you ever used, it will mako you feel Ikdalnew person,
After dhaving take a few doses. Price 75 Cents, Spptial Prico 50 Cla
Moody and Fonveelle, Proprietors’
< y 5
Want Separate City
From -Tulsa
RESIDENTS WOULD WITHDRAW
FROM COMMUNITY
‘Tulsa, ote June 20—Tulsa Ne
groes Wednesday petitioned Govern
Robertson to call a special election t
permit them tp vot upon withilrawin;
thelr~section Hom the ety of Tulsi
and incorporating under the name o
Norris City. More than 2000 Negroe
singed the petition, :
They claimed that they are having
to rebuild thelr’ section vf the cft}
from thelr own pockets after destruc
tion at the luuds of 2 mob last year
The city covernment at that time di
not give them 'the protection for whic!
they were paying and they havaync
assurance that shonld a similar emer
lsepey again arise that they would re
edive any protection. They object. te
paying taxes to a clty which does no
Drotect them, they ltd,
Directly after the riof the clty o!
ulst declared: through the papers o!
the nation that they would rebuild the
homes of Negroes who were left home
fess after the riot. June 3, three day:
after the rigt, the city commissioner:
passed un ordinatice which was ‘atend
i to oust the black folk from thed
land. The called it a “fre ordinance’
Later the courts set aside this regula
tion declaring that it was Hot pasnec
in good faith. Governor Roberts
sald that he would act on the petition
later and it fs plain from the wording
of the document reaching ‘the executiv.
office Wednesday that the city of Tul
sa has in no wise carried out its prom
ise ty repay those who were belpless Ju
the ciutches of pillage, loot and*mur
der last year in that city,
EVERYBODY! SEEMS TO BE
GETTING OUT A SHOW
New York Clty, June clsit (Presten
News Service) —With everybody get
ting out a big show, it seems strange
that Frank Montgomery haeu’t enter-
ed tue ate aa gee RL ca wSsaly
hake a big hit with bis-productious in
the, West and wWe'wokdor why be docs
se to the front with something
nere. ‘The last time Frank had a bis
chow he also had ‘Hinwelt a big car, a
big diamond and Dig ideas of what he
‘was xolng to do when he go¢ rear tu
John D Rockefeller. But suddenly the
show 'n eversthing , went bloocy und
all that was left“was a column in the
Chicugo Detegder Wherein Frank, whv
was unfortunate enough fo meet with
failure, told tht theatrical world Low
To be, A success In The Game
West Broad Street
Shoe Repair Shop
| “SOLE SAVING BTATION™
Work Called tor and delivered. Gire
us a trial wad you will call again
re Shoe Venairing While You Walt
Wo use thy Best of Material
RUBBER HEELS’ A SPECIALTY
*, + Priees Reasonable
Satistaction Guaranteed
CHONK Y348 1103 WEST BROAD ST
B. ML GILLISON, PROP. |
F N aD
POSITION WANTED!
‘As Funeral Director and Embalmer,
Have had eleven .years’ eaperienc,
Wish to get with some good, reliable
firm that appreciates services. State
full particulars in firs Uctter- Can givs
best of reference.
E. ¥. WILLIAMS
608 W. Park Ave. Savannah, Ga,
DR. GEO. W. SMITH
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Special attention to Diseases of the
Itluod aud the Genlto-Urlaary Organs
also diseases of women and children
Offices 411 WEST BROAD STRLET
Next to Unlen Station, Savannah, Ga
Savannah Home Association will give a pleasurable dance at its auditorium on Tuesday night July 4th. Admission 25 cents. William Mitchell is chairman of the occasion.
Mistletoe Circle
The Mistletoe Circle met at the residence of Mrs. Clinton Johnson, 635 W. 31st street on Wednesday nightfall. The meeting was well attended and an enjoyable time was had After the usual routine of business refreshments were served by Mrs. Johnson. The next meeting will be held at the residence of Mrs. Estella Martin, 611 Garden street, Mrs. D. B. Williams, president: Mrs. Massalline Greene Seubrook, secretary.
The Savannah Home Association
Ladies Branch meet on Tuesday night
at its regular meeting and held a
good live meeting. After the regular
routine of business the officers
were very impressive yinstalled by
President of the Association, E.L. H.
Burke. The others installed are: Col
Nathan Roberts, president; James
Battie, vice president; Mrs. V. B.
Roberts, secretary; Mrs Lille Ulmer,
treasurer; Mrs Elmore Harris, chap-
lain; Mrs Rena Lindsey, chairlady of
health; Mrs Mary Lovett, clerk or
order; Mrs Stella Thomas, chaplady
investigating committee; J-F Butler,
Wait and go with St. Philip on their
annual outing to Beach. Hammock,
Monday July 3rd 1922. Clivedon will
leave foot. Abercorn street at 10 a. m.
chairman of finance committee.
On the 26, the Young Adelphia Ald
weather the St. Louis Social Club post-
posed their dance. Most likely a wise
thing to do. But the boys are coming
back strong.
"Stuille Along" is coming. Its great
Watch for the date!
On the 26, the Young Adelphia Ald
and Social Club goes to Lincoln Park
and promises a good time to their
friends and well wishers.
On last Friday evening at Lincoln
Park the St. Augustine Guild held its
annual picnic and there were quite a
number present. It was one of the
nicest affairs held this season.
Attend the 55th anniversary of St.
Philip Monumental Church by the Ushers
Association at Lincoln Park, Wednesday,
July 12th. Admission 25c.
The Young Men's Progressive Club of Thomasville held its regular weekly meeting at the Douglas High School. A wonderful meeting was held and many helpful things were discussed. The club planned to give a womanless wedding, Monday, June 10, 1922 at St Thomas A. M. L. Church, under the auspices of the rally of the St. Thomas church The club is doing wonderful work along the line of progress. The club is planning to make the city live for the summer. The others are Wesley H. Hadley, Jr., serge; Percy Gold en, president; H. J. Johnson, vice president; Roscoe P. Smith, secretary
Attend the 57th anniversary of St. Philip Monumental Church by the Ushers Association at Lincoln Park, Wednesday, July 12th. Admission 25c.
* * *
On Monday night the Magnolia Sewing Circle will give a party at the home of Mrs Sallie B Middleton, 101 Cuyler street 'The officers are Mrs Joe L. Burgman, president; Mrs Catherine Marshall, vice president; Mrs Anna Reynolds, treasurer; Mrs Willie Simmons, secretary; Mrs Cus Battree Cuney, instructor; Mrs Jessie L. Burgman, president; Mrs
The National Boys and Girls Club will hold their fourth Sunday meeting at their club room Daniel Simmons will address the club at 5 o'clock and Mrs Ada Scott Dunbar will presen and take a part in the ceremonies All members are asked to be present at 4:30 o'clock. C.A. Mun gin is president and J. N. Hunter, secretary.
NOTICE-AMERICAN WOODMEN
OPENS OFFICE
To all American Woodmen and to the Public: The Supreme Camp has opened office for Local Camp, No. 45, in Wage Earners Bank Building, room 208, second floor. This office is under the management of National Supervisor J. H. Robinson, assisted by State Deputy O. S. Scott and Special Deputy O. G. Quarterman, with Mrs. M. A. Colh, the clerk of Camp No. 45 All members who fall to meet at hall may come to the office and pay their dues. Bear in mind that, Mrs. Cloe, the clerk will not be found at her home, but instead will be in office daily between the hours of 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. We hope to make this office a business center for the camp and ask that all members take due notice and govern themselves accordingly—6-29
"JUMP STEADY" STILL JUMPING Philadelphia, Pa., June 21st (Presson News Service)—The Jump Steady Company arrived at Gibson's Standard Theatre here for a week's run and we understand will go to Atlantic City next week. Some entertain the fear that this company will not reach Broadway. It is claimed that the white men with the sayso on the one street of all streets having decided to give the production' the once-over while it is at the seashore and if it comes up to what they hope and expect, "Jump Steady" will be placed in a house on Broadway or not far off the big lane.
$4.95 $4.95
FASHIONS SENSATION
IN-PATENT LEATHER, BLACK
VICI KID AND BROWN CALF
8-8 Low Walking Heel
or 12-8 Baby Louis Heel
QUALITY SUPREME
STYLE THAT'S RIGHT
B. RASKIN
344 WEST BROAD STREET
LOCALS
Mrs. Marigie Moore Taylor and little daughter Katherine, after a stay of several months in the city, returned to their home, LaGrange, Gn. for a brief stay, after which they will make their home in Chicago. Ill
Miss Iona Louise Greene returned home Monday after completing the commercial course at Walerforce University.
Miss Q. V. Priester, principal of the Allendale County Training School left the city Friday June 16th for Hampston Inst. where she will take a six weeks course.
Jos. R. Brown, after spending two months at home left June 8th for Alenhurst, N. J. to take charge of his department for the Alenhurst Hotel. After spending several weeks with her brother H. C. Huger, 901 Elliott avenue, Mrs. Martha Frazier left Monday for her home in New York city. She was a former resident of Sarawah and during her stay visited relatives and several friends and expressed herself as having enjoyed a pleasant time. She was delightfully entertained by many of her friends. Miss Margaret Hutchinson has returned to the city after spending four successful terms at Cookman Institute. Jacksonville, Fla., and graduating with honors from the academic course. J. R. Logan of the navy department, Charleston, S. C. was in the city during the week on business.
Mrs. Lula K. Jenkins and daughter,
Miss Pauline Mae King, formerly of
Savannah but now of Philadelphia, are
here the guest of Mrs. Annamie Curley.
From here they will go to Atlanta to
be the guest of Mrs. C. E. Hopkins.
Mrs. Jennie Murray Evans of 44
Manhattan Ave. N, X, is elected delegate to represent the Lady Ushers
board of W. I. C. M. E. church at the
convention of the United Ushers league
State of New York.
Madam Mollie E. Floyd is in Brunswick attending the annual convention
of the Woman's Missionary Society of
the Savannah Conference in Graze M. E. church. While there she is the
guest of Mrs. B. L. Jordan.
Mrs. Romena Fuller Summer of 240
W. 62nd street New York had as her
guest on Sunday Mrs. M. P. E. Overton, James Fuller, Mrs. Florence Pinkner, Mrs. Lalla F. Brown and others.
A GIRL
The stock visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Dempsey and left a fine baby girl. Mother and baby are getting along fine
Attend the 57th anniversary of St. Philip Monumental Church by the Ushers Association at Lincoln Park, Wednesday, July 12th. Admission 25c.
TRYING TO LOCATE RELATIVE
Dogs anyone know the whereabouts of Thomas Rutland, Minnie Lee Rutland and Eliza Rutland, brother and sister of Alice Ivey? The mother of the above named persons was Mrs. Julia Rutland and up to the time of her death lived in Virginia lane, Macon, Ga. Mrs. Ivey is trying to locate her relatives, her brother when last hear from was working at the Standing Candy Co, Savannah, this was in 1905, as she is his sister, she is very anxious to locate him on some very important business and anyone knowing his whereabouts will kindly write to Mrs. Alice Ivey, P. O. Box 216 Summit, N. J. - 6-15.
THE SAVANNAH TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1922
RUNMAGE SALE
A rummage sale will be held on the west side of the city market by Circles No. 2 and 3 of the Women Auxiliary of the First Presbyterian church. The sale will start at 9 o'clock Saturday morning and continue all day.
On hand a few sewing machines which I will swap for chileens or farm produce. Also new Singer Mashines, Kohlage, P. O. Box 1442, City.
AGENTS WANTED—Male and female agents at once to call on the colored population in your territory with the fastest seller of its kind on the market today. Big money for those who will work. Write for particulars.
Indian Chemical Co., Augusta, Ga. 9-7
WANTED AGENTS to write Industrial Insurance Salary and Commission paid to hustling men. Call or write, Liberty Mutual Life & Health Insurance Co., 721 West Broad St.—6-8
WANTED AGENTS to write Industrial Insurance Salary and Commission paid to hustling men. Call or write, Liberty Mutual Life & Health Insurance Co., 721 West Broad St.—6-8
FOR SALE—Frock Coat and vest, suitable for a parson. A No. 1 condition. Cost $50, will sell for $15. Call at 2011 Jefferson street
Lest you forget Universal Club's dance at Catholic hall June 23.
Lest you forget Universal Club's dance at Catholic hall June 23.
WANTED AGENTS to write Industrial Insurance Salary and Commission paid to hustling men. Call or write, Liberty Mutual Life & Health Insurance Co., 721 West Broad St.—5-8
MAKE AN OFFER on 1919 OAKLAND TOURING CAR—T. J. Stewart, Arade Building—6-1
Mme Katherine's School of Dressmaking and be an independent woman. Diplomas awarded in each branch. Terms to suit all. Call or write for particulars.
91x JEFFERSON STREET Savannah, Ga.
Attend the 57th anniversary of St. Philip Monumental Church by the USers Association at Lincoln Park, Wednesday, July 12th. Admission 25e.
PONDER AND RIVERS
FORM PARTNERSHIP
TO THE PUBLIC:
We want to announce that we have opened up a first class barber-shop in the Savannah Savings Bank Building and shall make it the very best shop for colored people in the State of Georgia in cleanliness and competence of workmen.
Our experience have brought to us a knowledge of the fact that sanitation is a great drawing card and this coupled with good workmanship completes the full story of an up to date place. We are asking that our friends call and give us a trial. Our work is executed with out after results and a trial forces a repetition
Saint Louis Ponder R. M.
Rivers, Props.
JOHN SIMUEL
THE BUTCHER (Formerly Wadburg & West Broad) has moved his place of business to Waldburg and Burroughs Sts, in Musicians Building, where he will continue to give you relaible service.
$4.95
SOCIAL HAPPENINGS
Miss Holmes Entertains
New York City June 14—Miss Elizabeth T. Holmes of 35 west 135th street entertained in honor of Mrs Mamie Turner of Savannah, on Monday evening, June 12. The rooms being decorated with roses and ferns. The evening was enjoyed by all present. Delicious refreshments were served. Card playing and dancing were the features of the evening. Those present were Mrs. Mamie Turner, Mr and Mrs. R. E. Johnson, Mrs. Nancy Morris, Mrs. Mary Wills, Mrs. ary Simmons, Mrs. Susie Maxwell, Mrs. Erric Listo, Mrs. Grace Johnson, Miss Meta V. Holmes, Miss E. T. Holmes, Miss Lula Belle Woodson, Messrs Robert Walt, Willie Wat, James White, J. Singer, H. A. Robertson, R. Sands, Edwin Stewart Peyton Jasper, Laurence Holmes, Josie Sapp, Mr. Bell. Mrs Grace John assisted Miss Holmes in serving.
Welcome Party
Mrs. Bessie L. Washington Entertained a few friends at her residence Saturday night June 10, in honor of her husband Elw Washington. The evening was enjoyed by all present. Music was furnished by Price's Orchestra. The house was artistically decorated with dashes and pale pink hydrangeas. Refreshments were served in three courses. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Washington, M. and Mrs. Royal, Mr. and Ms. Danrsey, Mrs Eln Kent Mrs. Slater, Mrs Mary (B. Smith, Prot Shanklin, Mrs Elizabeth Myers, Mrs Sarah Bowman, Jacob, Bowman, B. Smith, G. Price, Mr. Carter, F. Hamilton.
Spanns Entertained
In honor of Mrs. C. Black who left June 15 to make her home in Marraneck, N. J., the Spans entertained Tuesday June 13 at the residence 250 Agustin avenue. Dancing was from 8:30 to 10 after which delicious fruit punch was served by Mrs. Spans asst. by Mr. O. Coleman and L. Spans Those present were Mrs O. Coleman, Sarah Robertson, Diane Palmer Diannah aVndress, B. Pringle, D. Wiaters, F. Frampton, Misses E. Johnson C. Varross G Wadkin-The men invited were G. Cohen, A. Wadkins, M. Sanilas, J. Moody, F. Ford C. Oliver G Palmer, J Coleman, J. Brinson.
Miss Corswell Entertains
On Thursday evening, June 15th Miss Cogswell street at her home 842 Killgrew street at the house of Mr. Sadie Daniels a former Savannahian but now of New York. The evening was plenantly spent. A three course supper was served by Mrs Cogswell Those present Mr and Mrs Thomas Southward, Mr and Mrs, El Matthews, Jr., Abram, Cogswell, Miss Daisy Phoenix, Mrs Sadie Daniel, Miss Susie Cogswell.
Mr. and Mr.s Scott Entertained
On Sunday afternoon of this week Mrs. Blanche C. Fmher and Mrs Correne G. Gray were entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Scott with a delicious dinner at their apartment 625 Lenox avenue, New York City. Others present were Mrs. Anna White, Mrs. Daphne Claybone, Mrs. Mary Belle. Dinner was served by Mrs. Nellie Smith
DRAMATIC CANTATA
Saul, Saul, the great dramatic cantata, in five acts will be presented at First African Baptist church, Franklin Square on Monday night. Mrs. Julia A. Ward is directress. The admission will be 25 cents. Following are the characters:
Saul—P. D. Davis
Samuel—J. P. Brownlee
Jonathan—Miss Thema Tuzant and Harvey Burris.
David—The Shepard boy—Mrs. M. C Wicks and Mrs. A. B. Edmundson.
Michael—Miss Marion Brown and Mrs. F. Gordon.
Witch of Endor—Mrs. J. H. Fields
Abbigall—Miss Catherine Williams
Dansel Chorus—Miss Freda Mae Johnson and others
Chorus of Soldiers—W. J. Ayers M. B. Ilery, J. H. Deleware, and Herbert Burke.
Messenger of Comfort—Mrs. Clementine Jordan
Chorus of Witches—Mrs. J. Johnson M. M. Sampson
Guards and Attendants—Trueman Cooper, Deacon Joseph Marks and Deacon Johnnie Davis
Voice—Miss Emma Pierce
Chorus of Witches—Miss Mildred B. Johnson, Mrs. Rux Maxwell, Mrs. Jolise Curery, Mrs. N. Prince, Mrs. Ruth Currey, Mrs. G Ruggles
STOCKHOLDERS MEETING
The annual meeting of the Stockholders of the Fidelity Investment Corporation was held June 5th as publish ed, and the following officers were elected to manage the affairs of the Corporation for the ensuing year:
E. H. Quo, C. H. Houston, H. J. Wash ington, H. J. Jenkins, J. H. Johnson, D. D. Murchison, I. Mitron, Dan Holloway, J. H. Quo, W. K. Callen, Patterson Hawthorn and J. B. Butler.
Immediately following the adjournment of the Stockholders the Directors met and unanimously decided to make no change in the present office force in charge. Joe Sampson Park Island, S. C.; S. M. Walker, Ludovice, Ga., and H. R. Bell, Alley, Ga., were appointed special representatives.
Benjamin Daniels the youngest member of the A section of 3rd grade R. of West Broad St. School has won the distinction of being the best spell-
SOUTH CAROLINA R
ANNUAL
AT LINCOLN
Friday June-23rd
one pupils, from a hard fought contest which lasted thirteen weeks. Samuel Williams, eight and a half years has shown that he is the best speller in his class of nineteen. Benjamin, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Dauplies of 614 Berren street. Samuel, si the son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. street. The prizes consisted of sterling silver pencils, and were presented to the boys by their teacher, Miss C. B. Hendrickson on Friday morning. Benny and Sammy are very popular with the primary teachers and pupils of West Broad St. School.
CUYLER ST. SCHOOL
FACULTY COMMENDED
Savannah, Ga.
Dear sir, will you allow me space in the valuables columns of the Tribune, to thank the faculty of the Cuyler St. school for their notability of labor in training the students of the school. Actual experience, give me to know the advancement of the children are second to none. The speaking contest of Monday night 19th, inst was a great event, incidentally it was marred to some extent, though it was not the fault of the speakers, nor their teachers. In the judges' decision, it could be plainly seen that, they were "some relations or, they were "housed in on great friendship" to the ones that they awarded the prizes.
The audience, who cheered, for the second return of only two, were greatly supraplied in their decision I regret to say but with sorrow, we go down with defeat, we trust that time will allow the occurrence, of such event in the future, I would ask the judges seat be more carefully cared for Father, let our action be, Such as would approved by thee Be the person, great or small, Give the right decision to all
TEN DOLLAR RALLY
The captains of the ten dollar clubs are to report Sunday afternoon and it is hoped that much success will be had. The muscial part of the program is under the direction of A. L. Mitchell, director of the St. Philips choir. The following are the leaders of the ten dollar clubs: Ralph Myers, J. C. Lawrence, A.C. Mitchell, Consello Myers, N. W. Este, David Brinson, E. M. Pnickley, Lawrence Miller, A. B. Brown, Dr. Eherhardt, O. C. Clayborn, Arthur Clarke, S. C. Orrestreet, Father Brown, Mrs. W. G. Hill, Mrs. W. White, Mrs. L. Newton, Mrs. J. Johnson, Mrs. Smallley, Mrs. O. Hayrs Mrs. O. A. Lannar, Mrs. S. Moore, Mrs. M. Floyd, Mrs. S. Miller, Mrs. R. S. Taylor, Mrs. J. McUtoch (5 clubs); Mrs. G. S. Williams, Mrs. N. Roberts, Mrs. A. Bogan, Mrs. Parker, Mrs. M. Cade, Mrs. Moore, Mrs. E. Simplips, Mrs. E. Seahrooks, Mrs. M. Jones, Mrs. G. Newberry, A. Dunbar (3 clubs); Mrs. J. H. Brown, Mrs. M. Moody, Mrs. M. DeVaughn (3 clubs); J. W. Handy, Mrs. E. W. White, Rev. S. T., Redd (5 clubs); Mrs. Nadine Rivers Cooper
Sunday's program will be as follows:
Music, St. Philip choir; recitation,
Miss Allene James; solo, Mrs. James
Leak; duet, Misses Victoria Chapman
and Martina Williams; reading,
Miss Louise Gillens; solo, Miss Sadie
Owens; music, St. Philip choir; solo,
Louis Patterson; character, Miss Erla
Brown; oration, Miss Victoria
Chapman; music, St. Philip Jr. choir.
MISS LIZZIE STOPPED STRUT-
TIN DOWN ON HOUSTON ST.
New York City, June 2nd (Preston News Service)—As to the truth of this we know not, but it is known that Creamer and Layton show called "Strut Miss Lizzie" closed down all of a sudden at the National Winter Garden last Saturday and the news went out that the production will open at the Elfinge on Thursday. The Elfinge is considered a Broadway house: all the剧院 in the downtown district right off the great street are considered as being on Broadway, hence Miss Lizzie is expected to strut her stuff on the big street immediately. There are many in the theatrical world who are expressing their doubts about the show being seen at this theatre. They claim that Miss Lizzie does not measure up in any detail to even the worst show of its kind seen here in many a day. We shall wait and see.
SEABOARD
AIR LINE RAILWAY
OFFICIAL ROUTE
to
BRUNSWICK, GA.
Account Colored K.
of P. .
JULY11th-14th 1922
Special car on local train No. 25,
leaving Savannah, Monday July 10th
at 8:00 a. m.; arriving Brunswick
11:00 a. m.
Also direct connection made at
Thalman on through train, leaving
Savannah 4:20 p. m. arriving Bruns-
7:15 p. m. Approximate fare $5.24
for round trip.
BENEVOLENT ASSN
PICNIC
OLN PARK
Admission 25 Cents
(By Geo. W. Williams) M. P. A. Musical tones are produced in various ways. They can be produced by striking, with a hammer, or some other hard substance, against metal, iron, steel glass and wood. Tones are produced upon the stringed instruments without frets such as the Violin, Viola and Violin-Cello, by drawing a halred bow, rosined, across the strings. Stringed instruments with frets, such as the mandolin, Banjo and Guitar, produce tones when the strings are plucked with the fingers or a "pick" or plectrum. We produce tones upon the piano by means of wire strings, set in vibration by specially prepared hammers which strike them Wind instruments, like the Flute, Ocle, Cornet, French Horn, Charleston Saxophone, Trombone, are made to give musical sounds by blowing into them, with a special prepared mouthpiece. The only instruments used in music, which can not give musical sounds, are those called "instruments of Percussion" such as the large and small drums, symbols triangle, etc. The Bells, Xylophone and Glockenspiel are sometimes used in the third period of a musical composition, and are mostly used in popular alrs. The ylophone is a popular instrument used for solo work in orchestras, and consists of a diatonic by graduated series of flat wooden bars adjusted horizontally upon two cords. It is palyed with two small mallets, and produces a peculiar hollow tone effect. The vibrations occur irregularly produces noise, and regular vibration produces musical sound.
VISIT THE COLORE
Rockweed
DANCING
EVERY
NIGHT
SECURE YOUR DAY
Henry Burne
BEACH HAMMOCK
EXCURSE
BEACH HAMMOCK
Beginning
The Steamer Clivedon leaves at 22
refreshments. The usual good or
joy the salty breeze. Bathing in the
Bathing suits obtainable at 25 cents
FARE ROUND TRIP
HENRY MEARS
Wholesale and Retail
Grain of
THE MEARS
Expert piano and fun
pack, store
Before closing out
.....Ring
H. Mears, Prop
JOHNSTON, THE
LOOK! LOOK!
6 POST CARDS I
LARGE PH
819 WEST BROAD
LINCOLN PARK
Special Offer for W
Societies for A
COLORED SWIMMING
Rockwell Street
YOUR DATES FOR I
Henry Burney, Manager
AMMOCK BATHING
EXCURSION TO
AMMOCK EVERY S
Beginning May 14th
On leaves At 2:30 p. m. sharp. Annual good orage will be observed. Bathing in the salty Atlantic table at 25 cents and first class acce
ND TRIP
MEARS FEED COM
and Retail Dealers in
Grain of all kinds
THE MEARS EXPRESS
to and furniture movers, store and ship
losing out with anyo
.....Ring 3461
rop 309 BER
IN, THE PHOTOGR
LOOK! SPECIAL CARD'S FOR $1.00 A
ARGE PHOTO FREE
BROAD ST. PHO
IN PARK SEASON
Her for Women and girls for Afternoon D
JUNE
VISIT THE COLORED SWIMMING POOL
HENRY MEARS FEED COMPANY
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Hay and Grain of all kinds
JOHNSTON, THE PHOTOGRAPHER
LOOK! LOOK! SPECIAL OFFER 6 POST CARDS FOR $1.00 AND A LARGE PHOTO FREE 819 WEST BROAD ST. PHONE 1820
22—Musicians Protective Assn
23—So Carolina Benevolent Asso
26—Young Adelphia A. & S. Club
27—Juveniles Union Picnic
28—Mt. Morlah Chapter
29—Musicians Protective. Assn
30—Ladies Circle of Truth
W. J. WHITEN
817 East Broad Street
WHITEMAN, Mana Broad Street
W. J. WHITEMAN, Manager
817 East Broad Street Phone 5648
1
2210
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Is your hair Rough?
Then use Lewis "GRORO", the great hair grower, guaranteed to make the roughest hair smooth, longe and brilliant. Will grow hair one-half to one inch per month. Six weekst treatment $1.3S, and direction how to use.
For further information, write
MADAM MARY L. LEWIS CO.
302 E. Forsyth St. Americus, Ga.
None just as good!
Beware of imitations
Agents wanted everywhere.
If your local agent can not supply you with "GRORO," write us. Use none other.
D SWIMMING POOL
All Street
MUSICAL
CONCERT
SUNDAY
TUES FOR PICNICS
by, Manager
BATHING CLUB
ON TO
EVERY SUNDAY
May 14th
20 p. m. sharp. Music and choice
will be observed. Come and enter
the salty Atlantic Ocean. Sanitary
and first class accommodations.
50 CENTS
FEED COMPANY
Dealers in Hay and
all kinds
EXPRESS
Furniture movers. We
e and ship
with anyone esl°
3461
309 BERRIEN ST.
PHOTOGRAPHER
SPECIAL OFFER
FOR $1.00 AND A
PHOTO FREE
ST. PHONE 1820
SEASON 1922
women and Children's
afternoon Dates
MAN, Manager
t Phone 5648
Fare.Five
PAGE SIX
MASONIC NEWS
MASONIC NEWS
MASONIC CREED AND MISSION
"What is the creed and mission of this mighty Brotherhood which makes it stand out in both relief against the skyline of a universe?" His creed is a belief in God, and Immortality—in God, the All Goddess, the Great Original First Creator Architect and Creator of all that is. It strives to learn His will, that this little life we live is not the end, but that beyond the 'Gates of Mystery' there will be complete understanding and full fraternity in realms of life and light eternal."
"His mission is to protect innocence, to redress wrong, to relieve distress and make men wiser, better man, that the world may be better because they have lived. It stands for all that is great and good and noble and true—honor, morality, truth, charity, patriotism and all their kindred virtue—and more—it is an active not a passive force. It promotes education and condemns ignorance. It cherishes liberty and combats despotism. It counsels toleration and combats bigotry. It teaches enlightenment and combats superstition.
"This is the Mason's work and in that work all Rites are joined. There is no contention between the Rites of Masonry, save that noble contention, or rather emulation, of who can best work and best agree."
"All regular Masons have received their first instruction at the same altar in the Mother Lodge of all, the Blue—and it matters not if their later inspiration is received from the Royal Arch. Templarism or this Scottish Rite the result is just the same—each is contributing its part to the completed Temple, where Confucian, Buddhist, Hebrew, Mohammedan and Christian can meet as brothers on the common ground of the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of man"—Selected
MASONRY AND PATRIOTISM
Masonry is, through all its teachings and precepts, primarily a progenitor of peace and brotherly friendship and love, which are compatible only to peace and fundamentally opposed to war. It may not be an arrogant assumption to assert that our own land, in whose development and councils the Masconic spirit of freedom and justice has ever been present, stands today before the world an example of enlightenment and of peaceful honor and dignity. We may even claim for our beloved fraternity the credit for much of this spirit of pacific achievement which has tempered in the interest of humanity many of the acts of this great republic.
And yet Masonry has never seen its members desert their country in time of need. When our forefathers, after years of exasperation, decided that it would be necessary to resort to arms to obtain what was their right and due, Masonry was always prominent in the ranks of the patriots and among their officers.—Oriental Consistory Magazine.
ENDORSED FOR BISHOPRIC BY
MASONIC GRAND LODGE
American Ga., June 11, 1923
To the Grind Master, Wardens Of Offices and Members of the Most Worshipful Union Grand Lodge. Jurisdiction of Georgia.
Whereas two believe the bishopric to be all that the Bible says, he it Resolved. That this Grand Lodge in fifty-second annual session assembled, do hereby endorse the candidacy of Dr. Tommasley, commending him to the brethren of his church and pledge him that he shall ever pray that he may be successful in reaching the goal of his ambition.
Respectfully submitted.
Wm. D. Johnson
J. H. Carroll-hael
R. D. Griffin
G. H. Dwelle
C. M. Manning
C. D. Thompkins
OUT OF TOWN NEWS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE TWO
H. A. Blythchurch on last Sunday were indeed smart. The musical numbers were colored and the little fall all their parts well. Rev O. S. Thompson, postar.
Charlie Washington is spending information here with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Washington.
Mrs. Etta Washington is attending the W. C. A. at Ashville, N. C. She will arrive home this week.
The stock left a bounding baby girl at the home of Mrs. and Mrs. Gee Woods at June 10th. She will be called Mary Elizabeth.
Mrs. Flannery W. Sanders left last week for Hampton. V. where she will attend the summer school for teachers. Mrs. Sanders is taking a special course.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas Waterman motor oil down last week from Omaha where to spend some time with Mrs. Waterman's mother, Mrs. Fare on River Side Drive.
The men's Bible class of Taborale Baptist church gave a musical and the concert last Monday evening June 15th. An interesting program was rendered.
Amour the teachers learning Beanford last week to attend the summer school at State College upon Misses B Harnes, Nettie Holmes, Martha Simmons, Gunera Green, Madie Ford; Mary Curtis, Madam Sadie Roch, Lizzie Miton, Helen Schefer, D. M Anderson, Lurene Frazier.
BARGAIN BASEMENT SALES FOR MEN LEOPOLD ADLER
Men's Collars, Arrow and Lion Brand
Men's Soft Collars, Regular 35c an 50c Kind
500 Men's Straw Hats, $2.00 Kind
700 Men's Union Suits
Men's Fancy Shirts
Men's Wool Bathing, Suits
Men's Low Shoes
Men's Handkerchiefs
Men's Work Shirts, Fine
Men's Overalls, Excellent Quality
Men's Silk Socks
Adler's Men's Bargain Basement
Mrs. Geo. A. Reel and son Geo. Reel, Jr. left the city last week to visit Bastoh, Mass., and other points east. James Alexander has been confined to his home for the past two weeks, he is much improved at this time.
The N. A. A. C. P. will hold a mass meeting of the colored citizens Wednesday day evening at the F. A. B. church. Come out and hear what the association is doing for the Negro. Good music. We need your help.
Misses Dorothy Thompson, Pearl Saxon, Mabel Williams, Bell Dickson, arrived home from school last week.
Rev. Isaac Meyers was called to Ramberg, S. C., last week; while en route home he preached at his oil charge Ruffing.
Miss Nettle Kellingsworth was called to Saranauah last week on account of the illness of her sister.
Summer visitors will find Beanfort an ideal place to spend their vacation. Write Box 54 for information as to homes. We can place you. Enjoy the said alr. fishing, swimming, boating away from the city.
Miss Margaret L. Wright passed away at her home on North street Wednesday June 14th after a very short illness. In the death of Miss Wright Beanfort loses a most valuable character, the writer had known her for the past twenty-two years. She was a most lovable person, a sweet and pleasant disposition at all times to those who came in contact with her. She taught in the Beanfort high school for twenty-nine years. The deceased is survived by three brothers, Dr. J. W Wright of this city, H. H. Wright, Hoboken, N. J: Robert Wright, Salt Lake City, Utah: two sisters. Missed Lottie and Janie Wright. The funeral took place from Taterinacle Baptist church on Friday evening June 16th. Dr. D. W. Dythewool officiating:
Chester. Pa.. News
THE K. OF P. lodges of the city had their annual thanks-giving sermon on Smalay at Ashurw A. M. Lchurch, Rev. Brown preaching the sermon. The American, Woodman are having very successful here. The camp on the 5th made 23 members and on the 19th they will make 32 more. The camp's officers are T. J. Gwain, commander; Bro. Kemp, clerk; M. B. Locklus recorder, and C. M. Watklus, linker. If you desire the news of the race, get The Tribune from R. L. Lockley.
Daytona, Fla. News
The closing exercises of Cookman Institute, Jacksonville was among the best in the history of the institution.
Mrs. Mabel M. Dorey is visiting friends in Galveston.
Mrs. Clara Chase formerly of New York, died at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Brown of Spruce street on Sunday morning. Her funeral took place at the Friendship Baptist church Rev. Primm Edwards, a prominent minister in the A. M. E. church, after a brief illness died Monday. The funeral services were held at Mt Zion A. M. E. church.
The city wide campaign union revival is sweeping through our city in great force and with excellent results.
The Rev. S. A. Harris, pastor of Allen Chapel A. M. E. church has been appointed presiding elder of the Orlando district.
Father G. A. Adams of Myrtle St. is on the sick list, but is now improving.
Material is now being placed on the ground with which to build a new Stewart Memorial M. E. church.
Father J. G. Clarl is on the sick list.
Anthony Stephens recently left the city for the north.
The Mt Morlah M. F. church at Or
mond is undergoing many attractive improvements.
Walt and go with St. Philip on their annual, outing 16-Bench: Hammock; Monday July 3rd, 1922, Clivedon will leave foot Abercorn street at 10 a.m.
WANTED—Colored men to qualify for sleeping car and train porters. Experience unnecessary: Transportation furnished. Write W. W. Böggess, Stupt; St. Louis—6:30.
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY LOTS IN SAVANNAH
TAKE IT UP
We are still doing old stand and like we have demonstrated to start. Keep you for the anniversaries. We will that can't be beat.
G. M. M. GROCERIES & 34th & Ra
V IS THE TIME BUY LOTS IN SAVANNAH
NOW IS THE TIME BUY LOTS IN SAVANNAH
WARD OFFICE
SALE
Many lots are being bought on people are buying lots on city. The colored people West Side.
The lots in Cherokee in the city. They are a line and paved street Terms.
Buy for a home or for for circular
G. H. BOW
467 WEST BROAD ST
The Georgia Benevolent POPULAR Thursday Evening New Star Casino, 107
The Georgia Lady or Gentleman must and will receive a handsome present. Music furnished by Monarch Orchid son and James Middleton, director.
ADMISSION
J. H. Gathers, President
Edward B. Ro
DO YOU WANT Lots
Positively Wilson's grow it for you. wanted.
lots are being bought. The w
buying lots on the East Side
The colored people should bu
side.
in Cherokee Heights are the
city. They are located on s
paved street.Low Prices are
for a home or for an investmen
ticular.
H. BOWEN, AGENT
EST. BROAD ST. SAVANN
Georgia Benevolent Association
POPULARITY BALL
Saturday Evening June 22nd, 19
Star Casino, 107 St near Lexi
on Lady or Gentleman most popular in New Y
receive a handsome present will receive a hand
ished by Monarch Orchestra, L. B. P. O. B. No
names Middleton, directors
ADMISSION 50 CENTS
Pers, President
Frank S. Weaver
Edward B. Roberts, Jr., Chairman
YOU WANT Long, Soft, Fluff
positively Wilson's Hair Grower
grow it for you. Try it. Agent
wanted. Apply
Many lots are being bought. The white people are buying lots on the East Side of the city. The colored people should buy on the West Side.
The lots in Cherokee Heights are the finest in the city. They are located on street car line and paved street.Low Prices and Easy Terms.
Buy for a home or for an investment. Send for circular
G. H. BOWEN, AGENT
467 WEST BROAD ST. SAVANNAH, GA.
The Georgia Benevolent Association, Inc. POPULARITY BALL
New Star Casino, 107 Stnear Lexington Av
The Georgia Lady or Gentleman most popular in New York will be de-
and will receive a handsome present will receive a handsome present.
Music furnished by Monarch Orchestra, L. B. P. O. B No 45, Fred Slimp
son and James Middleton, directors
ADMISSION 50 CENTS
J. H. Gathers, President
Frank S. Weaver, Sec. to Com.
Edward B. Roberts, Jr., Chairman
DO YOU WANT Long, Soft, Fluffy Hair?
Positively Wilson's Hair Grower will grow it for you. Try it. Agents wanted. Apply
MRS: V. B. WILSON
Wilson Hair Grower C IN BASI ES FOR
BASEME FOR ME
Wilson Hair Grower College America; Ga:
WANTED—Colored men to qualify for sleeping car and train porters. Experience unnecessary: Transportation furnished. Write W. W. Boggess, Supt.; St. Louis, 6-30.
THE TIME TO OTS IN NNAH
ought. The white peo-
the East Side of the
people should buy on the
Heights are the finest
located on street car
Low Prices and Easy
an investment. Send
EN, AGENT
SAVANNAH, GA.
ent Association, Inc.
CITY, BALL
June 22nd, 1922
7 St.near Lexington Av.
will receive a handsome present.
estra. I. B. P. O. D No 45. Fred Ship
50 CENTS.
Frank S. Weaver, Sec. to Com.
Agents, Jr., Chairman
ing, Soft, Fluffy Hair?
s Hair Grower will
Try it. Agents
Apply
EMENT
MEN
ER
URDAY
7c
12c
98c
63c
77c
$1.75
$3.35
Basement
5c
59c
$1.12
35c
HOME OFFICE, DURHAM, N. C.
Old Line Legal Reserve--Operating in Twelve States-
Total Admitted Assets, $1,517,922.16
Insurance in Force 33,763,816.00
Insure your Life and Protect Your Family Today.
Branch Office: 817 WEST. BROAD STREET Savannah, Ga. I. R. Spaulding, District Manager M. H. Nichols, Assistant District Manager
TAKE-IT FROM ME
We are still doing business at the old stand and like the American flag, we have demonstrated that we are here to stay. Keep your eye on this space for the announcement of our Second Anniversary. We will quote you prices that can't be beat nowhere in town.
G. M. MANAGO
GROCERIES & CONFECTIONERY
34th & Randolph St.
LITTLE WHITE MOTHER"
"ASK HER concerning business,
domestic, social or love affairs;
changes, health, evil influences,
enemies; rituals, unnatural spells,
perplexing matters human or spiritual
interests.
MILL ONE DOLLAR bill, TODAY,
for book containing cherished message,
THE MAGIC, SECRET
questions answered WITH BOOKS daint for smelling sealed.
For further particulars and picture send dime. Ask for confidential advice and about her WORK.
GRACE GRAY DELONG
420 W. Wayne St., Savannah, Ga.
(Mention this paper).
Sanders
EXPERT SHOE-REPAIR
Best Material's used with' Modine' Machinery. Workmanship. Guarantee
530 WEST BROAD STREET
Corner Huntington
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Miss Dibel Mongin, Savannah, Ga-
I have been sick two years with rheumatism and Dr. John D. Wallace, Indian Doctor; cured me in threedays.
My address is 821 Cuyler street.
Y. H. Harrison, 905 W. Gwinnett St
—Sick with stomach trouble 9 years.
Cured by me.
CALL AND SEE ME
Dr. John D. Wallace
3091/2 Berrien St
Upshaw Shirt Hospital
Gentlemen, you don't have to diseard your shirts, bring them to me, I fix them. No darning, no patches. All repairs Invisible.. Shirts and ladies hats made to order. I teach full course of hairdressing, dressmaking, shirt repairing and millinery. Private, not connected with any other shirt hospital Mrs. L. C. Upshaw, Prop 508 MINIS STREET
$490
Gulbransen Trade Mark
GULBRANSEN
Player-Piano
Can be bought on easy terms
Sheet Music
ALNUTT MUSIC CO.
114 E. BROUGHTON ST.
Next to Bijou Theatre
PROBLEMS
All burial problems are met by us with wisdom and logic. We have the praise that is bestowed on this establishment by a polite effort to satisfy the most exacting demands of our clients.
ROYALL UNDERTAKING COMPANY
L. M. POLJARD, Manager D. J. SCOTT, Aust. Manager MRS. LAURA FIELDS, Vice President Office Phone 676 Residence Phone 4241
COMBINATION SHOE REPAIR SHOP
"THE SOLE-SAVING STATION"
ALL WORK NEATLY AND PROMPTLY EXECUTED
SATISFACTION GAURANTEED
Phone 1851 1011 West Broad'Street
J. W. JOHNSON, Proprietor
PAINT
BUTLER'S
a paint we know is right We can conscientiously recommend this brand of ready mixed paint because we know it is the best quality paint to be secured. Our reputation and our guarantee stand behind, this brand
oe es eee SV ANN TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JUNE 22,11922.. "
SSS ee
aan ag RARE STO aaa oe sadn tin 4h oa ch 2 Oh a
Days of sagincks vill come o'er me, Ol Te . ee
Tears et sorrow Swifily flow Look for “The Plate of Courtesy ° Servic: ° Cénsdéra
AN - FY af [Peel eadory Nezge tay lod obo uous Service” es,” Ee ce ‘on Onsder:
i the ‘ a . THEFU OF
cones stee napame mn saat] Moti “Fon ft me tinely one year | SUFTS ALTERED, CUL AND MADE ¥ 0 OF TINDGRTAIE =
RURKE—in memoryof oug Rebecea °°". , egy ie : fl! NR UNDER! AKERS
wha departed thie Uife Jane JU, 192011 Mhati niger Bod dear mother Cleaning and Pressing ‘oontth
surrounded by friends, We Rte Tonely. | When'thy life work ia-rvided, sutt < proprigrors _
in the midsy. of pleasure we are blue; [And I erosn the swelling tide, Polite Service for Ladies and Gentle; ESSIE HONROE EDWARDS
A smile on our fade, stit}ia béartackie; | Whentha bright asd glorious morning men, Wark called for and ns AND.
Lonesome, dear Rebecen for’ sou T ahiall see; Delivered : TOLAND 3. EviyAvps *
Relatives I shdll know ‘my Redeemer ae ace . ea rami: 7
Tawarit H. Burke . | When I reach the other side, H. J. MOULTRIE Lady Attendant . 611 West Broad St
Jom F, Burke . And His smile will be the first to wel- 7 ee xop
‘Mberta Burke ee ati Lax . . TELEPHONE 9409 Charles JI, Royal and Stubb C. Paghstey, Etmilaimers
‘h AL Burk Sac mis py loving cs - =
One IL, Berke Sadly meee ty ov io 2. Hoag. |--180 E. Gwinnett Street} ———_ >
JONES—In loving, mémory at 'my
dea rhusband, Sam Jones, ssho depart
wt this life June 23, 1921, ,
‘One sear Li Teaven
Wh the evening shadows are fall-
ing .
And T am al} alone ~
In my heart comes a longing
If yon only gould come home;
Ort and oft my thoughts do wonder
‘To the grave so far away
Where they laid my darlitg husband
Just one year today
.\ precions one from me jhas gone
A solve T loved is stiled,
‘A place js vacant in my home
Whieh never can be filled
More and more each day T miss you
Friends may think the wound fs healed
Rant ther ttle know the sorrow
That Ves within ‘my henrt concealed
Wife, Rachel Jones
_ Stepson, James__Baker
WEERER—In fnemory of my moth.
er, Tea Nora Webber who departed
this Hfe June 22, 5 years ago
Gone but not forgotten +
We lovedsyou, yes we Ioved you,
Tut Jesns loved you more,
And He sweetly called you to yonder
shore
‘The golden gates were opened,
A gentat yoice sald come,
And with’ farewell unspoken
You calmly entered home €
Danghter, Julia Connely
Grand on, Joseph Connely
ROBERTS—In membrsy, of our loved
ones, MrsnEtizabeth B‘Roberts, ie
May 9%, 1912: WHiidm 1, Robinson.
Qiet June. 1921
‘Their splits lingers near;
They watches oer 1s *
Just g little pace.
They are one beformus.
Well watéh and pray until we've ron
om race
And then we will meet our Ioved ones
face ta face. * .
Renjamin F. Robihson, <on
Clapylia C Roaehford, Toston
Mass, 7 :
Trma B. Roberts, Washington
mig "eT
Alfonso M. Roberts
+ Elizabeth West. Boston, Mass
TUFORD—In, loving renjembraner
of Talward Boford, who departed this
Ufe Inne 25, 1921 He suffered years
months @a"aays, and pore his affic
tions like a Christian brave" A modert
Job he hait borne Ils lot with 5
ratienee, that was no¢ for ought
Tor when the Saviour said, ‘Come
unto ime,” he smalléd into eternity
Toving wife, Mary Buford
A living Godfather, a friend trie¢
and tue, a Christian whom many
loved and knew Tho’ we loved hin
nell our Jesus Iroes bim best and ha:
taken him home with Tim to rest
* — Tteseie Tl and A. H, Coleock.
BLACKSHEAR—In loving memor;
of our dear mother, Stejla Blackshear
who passat away June 23rd, 1921,
One sad and Jonely year has passed
sInce that. reat sorrow fell.
We stood beside your gentie bed
To take a last farewell.
To,take a last firrewrell e
With tearful eyes we watched you
Ant saw yon pace away,
Mthough ve leved yon dearly
We conld nop make yon stay.
When days are dark and friends ar
fow,
Oh! Motler! Wow we mis you.
Heehand, Savannah Blackshea
tp) eg hhildrenss, 5
ante! fa BAR rina
& 7 * .
F.C. Binckshear ¢
Sister, Misa Lalla P. King. Joe
sontille, Fla.
Nelers *
Mrs. Mamie Lee Jamlson, Mz
com, Ga,
Mrs, Armguta Brown :
Mrs Wilhelmina Wiliams
ROBINSON—In sad but loving men,
ory of our departed loved one, Wil
Ham [chinson, died June 21, 1921
“sunsct_ and evening bell.
And one Clear call for mez .
‘And may there be no mourning of the
bar, _
When T put ont ta sen
sh
Tint sneli +n tfde nsx moving seem:
adeep.
Ton full, for soma or foam,
Put that which drew frofa ont ‘thé
houndlege deep, x
Turn again’ home —-
Twilight and evening rfar,
And after that the dark,
‘And mas there le no sadness or fare
nell, :
When T onbat. ~
Tor thonzh from ont our borne of
The flood may bear mo far,
time and place. *
T hope to see my pilot face to face
When I have crossed the bar
Wife, Mrs. pate Robivson
« Brother, Danfet Keel, Robins, 8
Son, Benjamin Robinson
Daughter Mra. Clandia J Roael
ford, Noston, Mass,
Grand ehitdren
Alfonso M. Ttoberte s
Prinn T Roberts, Washingtor
BA,
Runice Pinckney
WILLIAMS—In_— loring = remem
brance of my Deloved mother, Rosan-
na Williams, who.died June 22, 101,
1 often think of you dear mother,
When Iam all aidie,.— i
For memory {s the oniy friend,
‘That gref can call its own.
Days of saginsks will come o'er me,
Tears of sorrow swiltts flow
nd Héniory Keeps my loved ofie neur
dhe
Though "yon feft me -lénely’ one year
ARO. , |
1 kham'‘niver You dear mother
Wien ty lite work 1a-tvided,
And I crosa the swelling tide,
Whenthe bright atid glorious morning
T shat! see;
1 shdll_know ‘my Redcemer
When I reach the other side,
And His smile will be the first to wel-
come me. .
Sadly miseed by loving
4 Daughter, Mrs. Hattie 1, Todg-
erson, Philadelphin, Pa.
© San-indaw, Mit Henry” Hodger-
son, Philadelphia, Pa
Cousin, Mrs, Florin Hodgerson,
Philadetphia Pa,
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs, Belle Pincknes, Mrs. elle
Robinson and famMy wish to thank
thelr many friends for the kindness
n many flotal designs during their re
tent bereavement. =
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs, Nellie Holmes wishes to ex-
presg her thanks and appreciation to
Hilton Lodge A. P. & AML, No. 2. Cros
cent Lodge K. of P., Feay Ca, K, of
P, and Briekinsers and Masons Inter-
national Union No 1 of Georgia for
thelr kindness to her hushand, Mr. |
Mins Holmes, during his late Ine
and for the beautiful flowers. :
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs, Nellie Holmes, Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel Drayton and’ Mr, and Mrs.
James R. Davis wish to express their
thanks for the kindness to Mr, Minty
Holmes and for the Téautifal flowers.
DEATH
Little Arthur Axcon, son of Mrs,
Susie Avson Med Thursday night. ut
Ms parents residence @¥ Tast 38th
treet. The funeral services were
held at Shiloh Baptist chnech, Sunday
avening at 4:30 o'clock, Resides his
‘nother, he is survived by ‘a sister,
Miss Geneva Axgons a brother, Anzus-
‘us Axson, and several aunts and =
‘tost of friends,
ADAMS LEFT THIS. :
COUNTRY SATURDAY
New York City, June 2ist (Preston
News Servfce)—Alton A. Adame the
Virgin I-Jand handmaster who wears
‘he choverans ns the only man of col-
or holding down such a position In
Unele Sam’s navy. left this conntry
for his station In the Islands on Sai-
irday Refore leaving Adains told re
vorters that ke was detighted with his
isit and plans to return here <ame-
‘Imes jn the near futtire He thinks
‘kat come of our jazz attists eonld
wrofit more hy fijecting a little mbre
centiment into their uetivitles instead
af alnays howing to the commencial
and
“Ry this T do not mican that ther
hould not get all they ean’ for their
vork, Dut It fa out of pire for men
of the_zace ta do nothing but capita-
ize on thelr work when higher ideal:
yonld have a teAlaner to place the
vace on h higher plane
Mr. Adam, compasitfins are being
Maget by the leading bands of the
ountry, whieh Ineludes Sousa, Pryor
he U.S. Maricy Rand and n host of
athers. ‘That he fs a mustelan goe:
vithout saying, for the leading whit
nusiclans here forgot his color ‘ant
tiade his stay one of the most pleacan
‘ver experienced br a man of color.
Trursdav’s zane was a free-hitting
fair with many fielding features
she local team came out of theb
Vednesday slump and numineled thi
Mferings of Holland and Marshal) t
+N corners of the lot McCall and col
reit Iabéred for the Kerstones an
sanaged to get away In ulge tvle, be
né barked by good support during ty
*ritieal ctages
BUILDING A NEW HALL
New York City June 2% (Preston
News Service) colored people kore
lected with the Renaisance theatre on
Zerenth avenue are planning on the
weetion of a large hall. Work wae
tarted recente and the plans call for!
* casino that will hold its oven with:
hote ran by" white peapte who have)
een getting the moriey ‘af colored peo-’
Je for the past 25 years, A Manhat-'
“n Casino erected on Seventh avenne
* what the white people choose to
Mjthe “Black Bolt” will bring those
2hind it fortnme, but some fear Is
veld that the new place may turn out
ote the tual twa hy four hall where
Albow room will he the order of the
ught
The only place that promises to de
‘nything near one of the old casinas
@ the new With Infantry Armory
shich ground was broken toontly A
Mace of this knd_ will fill a long felt
vant. but it Js hoped that those in
sharge will ‘not he carried away with
che {mportance of thelr position ats
*n the past and keep aur people away
150,00 SANITARTUM COM-
PLETED RY WOODMEN
‘Hog Springs Ark., June 2st (As-|
welated Negro Press)—This — com-
caunity Is <inging the praises of Jahn’
{. Webb, Supreme Head of the Woad-
nen of the Union, whieh organization
as just completed 3, $150,000 sanitas
sium, which {& not anty a eredit to the
ammunity and organization, but to
he‘ entire race throughout the equn-
“ss, 7
‘Mr, Webh is another one of those
“self-made men.” He is a prodnet
of Tuskegee Institute, Alabama. and a
rative of that state. Mfr, Webh fs an
sxecutive of rare, ability and unasnm-
‘ng but determined in his manner. He
‘sn memher-of the Rapfist church and
takes an interest In All matters of
sacial up-lift Ie takes eapeelat tn-
erect in bora and their welfare. snd
sag done much through his organtza-
ton to help them.
‘The Woodmer of the Unton $s re.
carded as one of the most substantial
‘raternal organizations in the couritry
Te fs strongest In the states of the
cniddle south west, buf {s_ steadily
Sranchtng out ‘During a recent visit
to Chicago, Mr Webb seriously con
Gaerea areAngerients for eventually
Sullding office’ structure in the winds
dtr. ‘
Look for “The Plate of
Service”
SUITS ALTERED, CUT AND MADE
‘4 TO ORDER .
Cleaning and Pressing
Pollfe Service foF Ladies and Gentle,
men, Wark called for and
Delivered
H. J. MOULTRIE
. TELEPHONE 9409
135 E. Gwinnett Street
Courtesy,’ Servide *° Consderation
THE FUNERAL HOME OF )
MONROE UNDERTARERS
provrierors
ESSIE MONROE EDWARDS ;
es 7 TOLAND a, Boys © .
Lady Attendant . 611 West Broad Street —
Charles JI, Royal and Stubb C. Paghstey, Etmilaimers .
SS ee
Tuskegee Institute Sunimér “School for
ie
Teachers
SIX WEEKS—JUNE 5th th JULY 1th i982 :
Literary, Professional, Indusfrlal, and PreNormal Courses. Bute
fal courses for Jeanes Supervisors, Principals’ and Vocational ‘Tea-
chers. Registration Fee $3.00; Board $24.00, Payable In Advance.
* 600 ‘Teachers registered last year, :
R. R. MOTON, Principal hc. ROBERTS, Director—C1
WHAT po YOU KNOW ABOUT
HAIR AND ITS INFIRMITIES?
i. ASK THE
SYSTEM
le ee ——
Bees ee
[EEE Sg Be eS
may ce ea
ees par ELS
pee oe ee oS
Eee ee BS SoS
Raq e ‘eS 23
Rays ar Ba as
Ds ae
ress: UE
ke RK.
et Biers ence]
al re ER
Be ci Ws
| ae
Bas aN a
ee,
ee EI
YOU DONT NEED A NEW HAT
‘YOUR OLD ONE WILL LOOK LIKE NEW
. CLEANED AND BLOCKED +
ti . .
CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED ~~
Frank's
SHOE REPAIR SHOP
45 BARNARD STREET Phone 1314
. “DOWN STAIRS” =
_ SHOP No. 2 AT 151 WEST BROAD STREET
| S
What is Hatr? Describe its Struc
ture? How many technical portions
are there? What are the divisions of
the root?? Deseribe the anatomy of
the hal sbatt? Why fs singeing ne-
ceseary?. Learn the “NU-TIF-" S5z-
tem: It is THEORETICAL, PRACTT-
CAT, and EDUCATIONAL, and will
teach you all these and ‘more.
Write “NU-LIFE” BEAUTL COLLEE
| Dept. H
72 West 133rd St. New York Olty
SOUTH ATLANTIC
BARBER SHOP
Headquarters for Barber's Supplies
and shoe polish. A fine line of ef-
| gars, pipes and tobacco, Shoes shin-
| ed and repaired. Dealet In second
| hand shoes, Clothes cleaned and
pressed and repared. Hot,and cold
and slower baths, Also sells New
The Grit, Bowing Record, Morning
News ‘and Savannah Tribune, *
H. A. MANZO, General Manager
145 West Broad Street /
WE KEEP YOUR CAR YOUNG
A is ae
A eee)
a f= ¥ _— ,
- 4 f er aa cri) ‘no ;
AKA | WAN AC
Be fair toyyourself by being fair to your car. |
Like everything else that should look spick-
indepen grr ear needs regular attention.
- JORZHALLS REPAIR SHOP
Phone'5145 ) 516'W. ist Street,
So Good Hair Grower
Grows Quick Soft Silky
r Hatr from 1 to 2 Inches
& per month |
ry Tialr straightens. Makes
es Me Stubborn Hair stratght
PE “without hot trons,
Recommended by your doctors for
equality ani diseases of the scalp.
Growers, large hoxv.-_----~---$ .75
Straighteners, large box --.----. .75
WIE? ew ecncewnnncn*eencenee 50
Vanishing Cream 2-2. .---... 50e
Tvoth Powders ~—----1.-,---2-- 423
Cocoanut Ol Soap —4.---4——--— 115
Men's Hair Stralghteners, (guar) _.75
Agents, ‘ygntgd everywherés Good Pay
; Bey ie sea ia
‘So Goad Chemical, C6.
153 W. Mitchell St.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
: a x . \ : ;
A COMPLETE GROCERY STORE |
- Largest Finest and Best . |
oe , ‘Only Firstelass Articlés in stéck. ?
‘ ‘Expefléiiced Yndnagement 4nd cofifteous s.
| ; treatment to all. ' ’ :
- * tre “tade ot the public at !large is solicited. os
a . Regulation Cash Prices Prevail. : ,
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SEX-WILLS CLASH
New York City, June 21st (Preston
News Service)—It's ooming. As im-
tible as the advent of the new year is
championship heavyweight battle
between Jack Demjeyse, present title
holder, and the dodgin'est man in the
world, and silent, persistent, watchful
waiting, determined Harry Wills
of New Orleans and New York
S spurred on by the New York State Boxing Commission and the sport writers and authorities on the daily press throughout every section of this broad land. Dempsey and his wily manager, Jack Kearns, will be forced to lay their girds, face-up, on the table. It's either a case of fight or admit to the entire world, that he does not want to meet wills. And such an admission will mean just this—that Dempsey, deep down in his Irish heart, knows that Wills, despite his years, is a better man than he
There is no chance now to dodge or evade the issue The Brennan match and the Willard match, and every other match, which can possibly be conjured up or be attempted to be stuck up to the gullible upslice will not work Both Demspey and Kearns know this These matches are nothing more nor less than "sucker" matches intended by Kearns to be a final, desperate effort to stave off the only match in which the public is interested
Kearns' and Dempsey's latest cry is, "if the public demands a mixed match, (which in clearer terms means a match between Dempsey and Wills) find if a guarantee of $500,000—(p long term lease on the U. S. Treasury) is forthcoming then they will be perfectly willing to agree to a match with Wills in New York, if the boxing commission of that state agrees to such a match.
An awful lot of "if's" but right now we are all inter-tied in noticing just how much Dempsey and Kearns will demand in a match with Bill Brennan, a has-been, who is actually afraid to fight anyone, almost; or big Jes Willard, the man from where Dempsey won his crown—not $500,000 you may be sure.
DOING BETTER Homestead, Pa.. June 21st (Presson News Service)—Coming out of the slump of the last week or two the Homestead Grays won two games this week, turning the table on the Turner
THE GREAT DUNDEE PARK
Club from whom they had suffered two decafs, 7-4 Tuesday and 6-5 Wednesday. They also defeated the Millvale club 11-7 on Thursday. Dismukes pitched for the Grays on Wednesday and had the opponents literally eating out of his hands. The Thursday game was a slamming affair, with the entire Gray team biting the ball hard Four thousand fans saw Thursday's
game
DISMKUES NO LONG-
ER WITH KEYSTONES
Pittsburgh, Pa., June 21st (Preston
News Service)—Coming as a shock to
the entire organized sporting" world
was the announcement that "Dizzy"
Dismukes, manager-pitcher of the Key
stones, is no longer with the trym
Dismukes and owner Williams came
to the parting of the ways Last Saturday
it is said over an argument presumably about balls used in the
series here with the league leaders—A. R. C. of Indianapolis fame.
Strictly Modern and Scientific Treatments taught and practiced by Egyptian Agents SAVANNAH AGENTS:
But according to those in the know, a parting was inevitable. The policies of the former manager and owner were at variance Dismukes, coming up in the school of the late C. I. Tayor, himself a strict disciplinarian and a born baseball leader was not in favor of the alleged par-immonious policy of the owner. According to Manager Dismukes, Friday's game was lost due to poor balls. This statement incurred the wrath of the owner of the club with the result that the former A. B. C. player was ordered to hand in his suit.
No new manager as yet has been selected and short stop Williams is running the team for the present
DETROIT STARS
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