The Afro-American
Saturday, June 29, 1929
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
4th.
38th Year, Number 41
Entered in the Postoffice
Second-Class Matter un
HAL
SOCIAL EQUALITY BUNK, DEPRIEST TELLS ROANOKE
Audience Applauds as He Asks Where All Mulattoes Come From.
KNOXVILLE CHEERS
Crowd There Hears DePriest Condemn Separate Schools.
Straight out from the shoulder. Oscar DePriest, Congressman, of Illinois, discussed social equality at Roanoke. Va. Sunday, and Knoxville, Tenn. Monday.
In Roanoke. Mr. DePriest spoke under the auspices of the Eiks and C. Tillian Tolliver, president at the First Baptist Church.
In Knoxville, 1,800 packed the auditorium to hear the Illinois Congressman. He was met at the train and escorted by crowds to his stopping place.
Mr. DePriest said at Roanoke: "Social Fertility."
"When I hear the question of social equality mentioned so much in America, I always mention where all the mulattoes come from. There has been social equality some where. This Sunlight Prejudice, and midnight cohabitation is something to think about. The mulattoes have increased over 200 cent in the last 30 years, so there must be some social equality somewhere. Prejudice is based on down right ignorance."
Advocates Co-Education
Advocacy
I am currently in in or of Co. education, both among the black and white. If black and white boys were permitted to attend the same school, there would be more respect for each other, and less of this inferiority compared to William Hale Thompson, Mayor of Chicago, is the best friend the Negro has had since the days of Abraham Lincoln, and we are going to "our Congressman, Clifton A. Wood," a gentleman in every sense of the word, both in his office, and on the floor. I have never met the Negro man, who lives here. If I lived here I would vote for him myself.
"In fact, I find all of the Congressmen gentleman, I would not want to be treated on social quality, but I do work together to promote your best interest. I would not give a 'takers' blessing" for Social Equalization. What the Negro needs is and will be make his own social equality"
Legislation
"Legislation for the Negro now is too plentiful; if there were not now, we would have the Jim Crow" laws now in many of our States, and the black and white boys and girls would not be attending separate schools. I know this not sound good in Virginia, but it is true."
Select the man who will best protect your interest and then vote for him, regardless if he is a Democrat, or a Republican, whether he be black or white. Know a man's politics, but if he is an American citizen should treated, stick to him, and back him with every effort.
No Favored Amendment's: "I will not vote a dollar for the enforcement," the eighteenth amendment until the nineteenth; "he will put particular stress upon the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments; he will not for the Negro, but it shall be for the American citizens, both black and white."
Pricha-ha.
"Third people never get anywhere. If next Robert objected to having his office to mine, and he was the third."
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. . . .
"And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor."
Entered in the Postoffice at Baltimore, Md., as Second-Class Matter under Act of March 8, 1892
.TED
AT DINNER, D. C. PASTOR QUITS JIM CROW CHURCH
Presbytery Debates Friday, Resolution to Move Meeting.
MORE SOCIAL EQUALITY;
PAGE COLE BLEASE
MARY SNEEP
NEW YORK--Mary Snepp, white,
Broadway, court, where she was acquitted
on a charge of first degree man-
slaughter in connection with the
sweetheart Seymour Rick, her colored
other photos on inside page.
WOMEN LEAVE FIELDS FOR PROFESSIONS
U.S. Report Shows Half Million Decline in Gainfully Employed.
FACTORY WORK GAINS
Decrease also Shown in Num
ber of Domestics.
WASHINGTON—Race women are deserving the farms and domestic service for factories, offices and professions, according to deductions made from a bulletin of the Women's Bureau, U. S. Department of Labor, just released and which gives a survey of industrial conditions among women in 15 states.
More than a million and a half Negro women were gainfully employed in the United States in 1920 a decrease of almost half a million from the 1910, 1920, 1930s to this bulletin.
Farm Decrease
This sharp decrease of almost half a million in the number of Negro women employed at the two census dates is explained by the great decrease in agricultural figures as a whole, which resulted from the 1920 census being taken in January when little of that sort of work was done. The number of Negro census figures were collected in 1910 in April when farm work was at its best. The figures also show a decided decrease of 7.4 per cent in the number of Negro domestic and personal service for the decade.
New Fields
That the Negro woman is slowly but nevertheless steadily branching out into new industrial fields, is seen by the 1920 report which shows that even women of the age 7 and 8 are in agriculture, 10 in domestic and personal service, and 2 or 3 in other work, as compared with the 1910 report which shows for every 20 women, 10 or 11 employed in agricultural pursuits, 8 or 9 employed service and 1 in other fields of work.
The greatest increase is noted in occupations requiring dexterity and skill, a considerable number having gone in for machine operating, while the number in the professions, clerical occupations and supervisory posts or positions requiring responsibility are far more numerous. Of the 1,571,289 Negro women employed in 1920, 612,261 were engaged in agricultural pursuits, 790,631 in domestic, and personal service. The number in other occupations. The number in public service clerical occupations has almost trebled in the last ten years.
Wages Low
Earnings were low, ranging from a median (half earning more and half less) of $3 in the lumber and veneer-industry in a survey by the CBOE to $30 in the general mercantile industry in a survey made in 1820.
DR. H. B. TAYLOR WALKS OUT OF HOOD COLLEGE
DR. H. B. TAYLOR WALKS OUT OF HOOD COLLEGE
Invited to Frederick Meeting,
Pastor Declines to be In-
sulted.
APOLOGY IS ASKED
FREDERICK, Md.—Interrupted at dinner in the dining hall of Hood College where the Baltimore Synod is in joint session with the Woman's Synodical Missionary Society of the Presbyterian church, the Rev. Dr. H. B. Taylor, assistant pastor of Fifteenth Street Presbyterian church, Washington, left the building and the conference, Thursday. Dr. Taylor had registered and been assigned to his room, afterward attending the morning session, lunch hour, he was the dining room took his seat. Before the meal started, he was asked to the office and it was explained to him that the regulations of Hood College forbade the entertainment of people.
Donors of Hood College buildings he was told, had expressly stated their gratitude to the students be permitted to use the dormitories or the dining room.
Not Invited
Dr. Taylor was also informed that colored ministers of the Synod which includes Presbyterian churches in Maryland, Dr. Lawrence, the governor and a northern Virginia, had been notified that they would not be welcome at the Hood College sessions.
Dr. Taylor was advised to hunching quarters' in the town of Redick and to attend the business sessions of the conference usual. Instead, he withdrew his registration and left for his usual in Wash-
Dr. Taylor Talks
Dr. Taylor
Dr. Taylor told the APRO-AMERICAN Friday, that was nothing else for him to do. He is secretary of the Washington Presbytery which included colored and white pastors in that city.
He has not been able to attend the Hood College meetings for several years because they conflicted with his vacation year he deferred to attend.
The committee of the Synod which meets on Friday, Dr. Taylor said, has two resolutions before it, one offering an apology to Taylor for his defiance, and one Frederick and the second, to move the conference to some other city for the next year. Fifteenth Street Church, the largest and most prominent basilisk in Washington, the Rev. Francis J. Grimke, for 37 years its pastor, is perhaps the most colorful and vigorous opponent of Jim crow and segregation in the Washington capital.
Baltimore Pastors Not There
The Rev. John T. Colbert, pastor of Grace Presbyterian Church, passed away in Union Theological Seminary. New York.
Mrs. Colbert said he did not attend the local Synod sessions at Hood Col-
Dr. Walker Invited
Dr. W. W. Walker, pastor of Madison Street Church, Baltimore, said he had two invitations to attend Hood conference, and the olderiders was also invited. He did not attend. he said, because he is not certain of the racial attitudes in small Maryland schools. He did not expect this to happen. Dr. Walker, said, "and I am waiting to see what the committee is going to do. Its chairman is Dr. Hugh L. Hodges, pastor of First Presbyterian Church,
"If this committee on place of next meeting selects Hood College again, it will place its stamp of approval on Jim crow. If they decide otherwise, it will be an evidence of their Christian spirit."
**V Meet At Hood**
Dr. Thomas Thomas I. Brown told the AFRO Friday that the student, V.M.CA. Conference has met at Hood College three times since
Each time delegates of both races used the dining-hall for meals and
Afro Office Closed All Day, July 4th
Agents and Correspondents should mail all orders and news to reach this office. All orders will be mail early Wednesday. THE AFRICAN AMERICAN CO.
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
Bohemia Club "Good Guy" Jailed to Save His Pal
Dennis Marshall Takes Year Sentence to Save Friend Who Has a Wife.
Many Pass for White in California City
Women With Few Jobs Open, Seek Employment Among Other Race.
YELLOW- FEVER VICTIM
William T. Francis, of Minnesota,
American minister to Liberia, who
American mini is critically ill. The yellow fever epidemic in Monrovia, Liberia, accorded to the State Department, received by the State Department in Washington from the U.S. legation. The yellow fever epidemic which has been current in Monrovia in Monrovia, is said to be the reason whi Bish-
a victim of the yellow fever epidemic in Monrovia, Liberia, according to a letter received by the State Department in Washington from the American legation. The yellow fever epidemic which has been current for sometime in Monrovia, is said to be the reason Bishop and Mrs. Monroe Davis, of the A.M.E. church, remained only three weeks there.
BAR WHITE STUDENTS FROM RIVAL PROM
GARY, IND—White teachers stood guard to bar a number of white students who wanted to attend a Junior prince school to have a boy and boy grads as a protest against faculty Jim Crow here last week. The dance was organized at the suggestion, it is said, of Principal C. S. Coons, white, who was quoted as telling the colored students to make their dance so good that the whites who would want to have them attend theirs.
Faculty Jim Crow
Although it was said a number of the white students had no objection to allowing colored students to attend school affairs, a faculty ban against mixed dances brought about the fight against this Jim Crow attitude. The student, who had been opposed to Jim Crow dances when they were inaugurated was the leader in the fight against the faculty order, the students voted to invite white Juniors to their affair. When several of the white students decided to attend school affairs, the students stood guard and prevented them from entering the hall.
ST. LOUIS, Mo.—(ANP.)—Superstition among citizens here is not on a deline, according to the night market, the City Hall. A large per cent of the hundreds of colored and white visitors come to the 'morgue to touch the head of a dead person with the forefinger and so that it will bring them luck. One person recently came for that purpose because he wanted to see a girl on a day. A young white boy who was allowed to leave his home for the first time at night spent that awful evening at the morgue, and then times of clinching his good fortune.
LOS ANGELES, Cal. — (ANP.)- Passing for white is on the increase among women and girls due to the few avenues of occupation open for them. According to the result of a recent investigation by the ANP. representative, there are colored girls working as salesmen, teachers, and department stores downtown. In shoe stores, Oriental beauty parlors, and similar places the subterfuge is practiced extensively and is seldom discovered. A man was discharged last week from the hospital after working for three years under a foreman who thought he was white. He became too clumsy and revealed enough of his history back in their mutual life to check on him.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—It is not always in fiction and the moving pictures that a "good guy" takes the "fall" and gives his partner "a break" for the sake of the wife. Sometimes even in real life.
Such is the case of Dennis Marshall, chubby little fellow, who with Charlie Jones made "whoopee" at the Night Club Bohemia, where society including members of Greek letter fraternities and sororites and the college boys were wont to play after dances and when the city offered no division.
One night no so long ago Sergt. O. J. Letterman and his squad of liquor raiders decided to pay the club a visit. In order to find out before personally coming to the club whether "whoopee" was being made, he got a "stool pigeon" and sent him to make a purchase of a half-pint of ale" liquor at the club.
Then the purchase, the "stool pigeon" returned to Sergt. Letterman and reported everything okay. Letterman and his raiding squad went immediately to the Chelsea club to retrieve the doorwork. The orchestra was ordered to keep on playing and the dancers were told to go on with their dance. Meanwhile the liquor shoppers searched the club, and the musicians immediately took with them employers and employees, officers of the corporation operating the club, entertainers, waiters and checkroom workers, but permitted the guests to
Marshall and Jones were indicted for sale and illegal possession. The case was called for warfare to be called for jury duty. Chief Justice Walter I. McCoy, who was to preside at the trial, and Assistant United States Attorney William H. Collins, who was to preside at the trial, James A. Purcell, attorney for Marshall arose, asked leave of the court to withdraw his former plea of not guilty for his client and entered into a plea of not guilty. The case was referred to the probation officer for investigation. The case against Jones was not-pressed. Last Saturday Marshall was brought to sentencing. Everybody expected him to be given a suspended sentence and put on probation. But Chief Justice McCoy just could not be made to believe that Jones was dropped and out of curiosity he decided to give Marshall a year in jail.
24th Infantry are Rifle Champions
WASHINGTON, (C N S)—Scooring fifteen points more than its nearest competitor, the 24th Infantry small bore rife队 knocked out of the regional championship match recently staged at various posts throughout the United States. Its match in competition with twenty other teams which represented each Corns Area. Each team fired the match on its own range and the target were sent to Washington to score. The three high teams and their scores were: 24th Infantry, 3,382 (out of a possible 3,500); 12th Infantry, 3,667; 7th Infantry, Vancouver Barracks, Washington, 3,340.
Killed by Lightning
PHILADELPHIA, PA. — Whils pitching hay into a Rockhill farm barn in Northampton township two miles west of Levantown, 40, he was struck by a bolt of lightning and instantly killed. Thursday.
Still another, singer of great talent, was a member of a well-known grand opera company. She. of nine years old, now covets her sister, whom she supports and who is darker, stays in the "Belt." One young wife of a well-known but beautiful wife was offered a position as beauty cultiseur in a very exclusive beauty parlor in Hollywood as soon as she finished the special course she took for the white trade. She has blue. Irish glove and a bandana. Her mother is much darker. Daily, she declares, her blood bolls at some of the remarks made about "niggers" by some of the Southern petrons. She is asked, "Why is she believed for them," she says that she believes in justice.
JULY 4, 1929
SENATOR COLEMAN BLEASE
Cole Blease, white. Senatogz from South Carolina-1924-31- whose infamous "Niggers in the White House" poem, was expunged from the Congressional Record after it had been termed obscene and indecent.
Note the large nose, the apparent florid complexion and the long hair.
Like many a southerner insane on the Negro question, Blease says and thinks he's a friend of the Negro.
Actually his usual conversation is how to keep the Negro down and how to get Jim-crow cars in the District of Columbia.
He's been elected to public office eight times and defeated eleven times. He boasts of no constructive legislation, but while governor of
Using the reasoning employed by Walter White in his new book, "Rope and Faggot," it's not unlikely to suppose Cole has a few drops in him of the blood of the Negro whom the hates so heartily.
EXCURSION HEAD SEEKS END OF FALSE REPORTS
Passengers. Referred to as "Kitchen Mechanics."
Determined to halt the publication of false and misleading statements about his pleasure boat, the "Avalon," Captain George Brown has instructed his attorneys to institute $50,000 damage suit against the Baltimore Sun and Evening Sun as a result of a news story appearing in the evening edition of those publications, Saturday.
The specific news story to which Captain Brown takes exception and will ask the court to take judicial notice of, declared in its headline that the boat's hawser had fouled. In the story it stated that the Avalon had been for this reason tied up and again tangled the servant problem in Roland Park and Guilford, white residential sections.
The fact is, Captain Brown stated, the local Shriner held the excursion down the bay on that evening and it was by direct request from them that the boat delayed its return to the city. There was no boat trouble of any kind, he said.
Captain Brown also called attention to a recent news story in the Sunspaper which referred to his passport as a "machine." Following his protest and notice that he intended to take legal action representatives were called in to compromise the matter, the Avalon owner stated this he refused, and instructed Nice, Nice and Herman to proceed with this attack, to proceed with the court action.
What Fifty Leading Newspapers say about the Hoover-De-Priest Tea Party.
1929
Creator
we mu-
4th.
AN
Prices 6c in City—7c in State and D. C.—10c Elsewhere
DIVORCED MAR.1
WED MAR.30
RIFT JUNE 21
Ralph Matthews and Wife
No. 2 Separate After Two
Months' Bliss.
WAR TO THE SHOE
Love Baby and "Brokenhearted" Letter Figured in Divorce
"All one needs to get married with nowadays is a girl, a ring and a preacher and the ring and the preacher are the hardest to get.
"Love is blind, but marriage always restores one's sight.
"Some folks have scrambled eggs for breakfast every morning. The eggs get scrambled in the scaffle.
"Mariage may be all right, but one advantage in eating in a restaurant is that the waitress doesn't serve your breakfast in a kimono and get sore because you don't hear when you go out. Matters not how much you toss it around, a menu never talks back."
So sang Ralph Matthews, newspaper man, in his column, "If You Ask Me," in last week's Afro.
Than things began to happen.
Friday, he was summoned to Court. Almany ordered paid to his divorced
Alimony ordered
first wife, Mrs
Matthews, 1903
Madison avenue
for the support of
Ralph Jr.
w a s reduc e
a week and
a week and he
was ordered to
pay $1 a week
on balance of
$127
At home, 1203
Glenden in a ve
venue, Raiph met
Mrs. Letha Busin
e hws, 124
w a rd. wife.
first wife, Mrs M ae Townsend
Matthews, and 03 Madison avenue
for the support of Ralph Jr.,
a sale a sale from $10 to $7 a week and he was ordered to pay one week balance of $127 overdue. At home, 1205 Clendenin a ve a ve Mrs. Letha Bush Matthews, his 2d wife married March 30, 1929 and the following dialogue took place. Letha: "You should have set-tled that... matter before let me." Ralph: "How could I when you wouldn't let me?" Mrs. "Well, you are not going to pay a blank cent." All Mr. "If I don't pay, then the court will send me to jail."
Mrs. "I don't care whether you go to jail or not you have no feeling for me, if you did then you would have straightened this life and not have to be embarrassed by this court mess every month."
Mr. "Woman stop all this chatter, you wouldn't let me up the alarm and not you are the first one to raise a lot of hell."
Mrs. Yes, and you are the one who sees you straighten it up once and for all."
The Fight
A few more slams passed between them, then Mrs. Matthews seeming less terribly and started to fight. Garland Mackey and Levi Jolley separated the couple. Matthews starred out. the door Le-tha gave him a kick, but by this time was in a rage struck his wife on the jaw and she retaliated by punishing the wife holding
Matthews seemlessly went into hysterics and started to fight. Garland Matthews, Mackay Jolley separated the couple When Matthews started on the road, the gave him a kick. Matthews who by this time was in a rage struck on the jaw and she retaliated by punching him in the eye, holding him by the hair with one hand and punching him. Ralph appeared Saturday morning with a jump and a dent in his 'forehead, said to have been caused by a shoe in his wife's hand. People with whom he lodged, had been aroused in the early hours of Saturday morning by his cries of 'help' and 'murder' and rescued him, number two, attempting to kill him.
Ralph sought shelter at the Madison avenue home of his parents and his first wife. His wounds were dressed and he was put to bed.
Saturday when Letha had left for her work in a downtown office, Ralph secured his belongings and dropped out of sight. He is that to have left town.
First Marriage
Ralph was married to his first wife, August 7, 1926. Both were Afro em-
This Paper Consists of
Two Sections—20 Pages
Sectio 1, 10 Pages
Section 2, 10 Pages
See That ..... Get All Of It
Mostly Pair
Temperature: Normal
Sun rises: 10:44 A.M.
Sun sets: 7:38 P.M.
Moon rises: 9:39 P.M.
Moon sets: 8:44 P.M.
Moon Phases: First quarter, 14:18
Foll, 22:38, new, 7th last quarter, 30:28
"48" PERSUADED BALTO'MINISTERS IN CAROLINA
White Lunch Shop Owner
Uses Gun to Make Delegation Swallow Jim-Crow.
TENT "BLOWS" DOWN
S.S. Congress Prevented from Meeting in City Stadium.
Persuaded by a 4.4 Colt revolver, the Revs: A. J. Payne, C. R. Coel, J. R. Butler and Wm. H. Young, a Baltimore delegation to the National Sunday School and B. Y. P. U. Congress, in Charleston, S. C. had to submit to "Jim-Crow" in North Carolina this week.
The delegation, which was motoring back to Baltimore, had stopped at a filling station in North Carolina to gas, and one of the party asked the attendant was it possible to get a lunch. He was told to go inside.
They went into the lunch stand, where maintained two tables and a counter, where they found a girl in charge. They ordered coffee and sandwiches, which were placed on the counter before them with instruction to take them out. Not know, then, were to be subjected to Jim Crow, one minister declared that in that case they would not take it. Immediately the girl called her father and brother, who reached the men before they had gotten into their
"Don't get in that car until you pay for that lunch," he yelled. In astonishment the men stood and looked. When they did not seem to get quickly enough, the son, who had appeared on the scene shouted, "get it, dad." Immediately the father reached inside of the filling station and brought out a bottle. With the Rev. A. J. Payne leading, the men paid.
Don't Count a D—
But the father had experience that the Baltimore ministers had had with Jim Crow since they left on their trip from Charleston to Baltimore.
Nash vaults, carrying a woman driver and man, had been trailing the ministers' car, a Cadillac, and driven by a boy, when the whites discovered that they were trailing a car full of colored folk. In some cases, the driver was riding behind colored folk, so the driver made an attempt to pass them. In doing so, the Nash struck the Cadillac and caressed into a field.
The driver was blowing for half an hour," declared the angry man in the car with the woman. At this moment a white man standing in a field nearby declared that he had heard a woman crying, told him that they had four witnesses in the car who would testify to the opposite.
"Your four won't mean a D—down here," he said. After a one-sided and disheveled
The first trouble, however, was when they found that the meeting place of the Congress in Charleston had to be changed, because some time during the night preceding opening session, the arrangement arranged at the diplomatic stadium had "blown" down. Leaders in Charleston who understood the situation, believed that either Klu Xuk or hostile whites in the neighborhood of Charleston held there, had helped that tent to "blow" down.
Rev. Gray Used Tact
The Rev. Junius Gray, pastor of Psalmist Baptist Church, who also carried a delegate to his church, had no trouble at all on the trip. He was surprised, he said, that men coming from Baltimore, where segregation in white eating places is the rule, should expect different treatment. He said, "and received only the most courteous treatment."
"Numbers" War Breaks Out Anew in D.C.
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Albert Smith, Seriously Wounded by Men in His Place Tuesday.
WASHINGTON—A feud for control of "numbers" operation between colored and white hook-makers is blamed for the stabbing of T. Smith, 30, in the 600 block of T street here Tuesday morning.
Smith is in a serious condition, while Edgar Williams and his alleged accomplice, Carl Rivers, have been arrested and charged with the stabbing.
Police say Smith ran a "numbers" court for a large syndicate and believe that the stabbing is a breach in the generally known agreement in which they colored "number" bankers the southwest, a part of the northwest sections.
So keen has become the contestation, they say, that in several places added have been increased from 600
Few Raids Staged
One of the few raids staged during this time was at 622 N street, northwest, where the premises recently occupied by a church, police found several men and women kneeling and in a prayerful attitude and were to conclude to give them a mistaken when a gust of wind blew into their faces a score or more telltale number sills. Only easily revealed the piles of change, the spoils for a day's activity in the "numbers", which the party of six was counting of counters, had intruded. Remembering that their soft-drink and shoeshine parlor had for years been used for church massages, they began to pray. The failure of the ruse cost Magie Hall 30. and Charles, 39, both of 628 N Street, northwest, to post general as a result of gaming奖金.
Needed Ambulance; Pulled Fire Alarm
Believing he was summoning the Municipal, ambulance officers for all fight, Wilbert Collins, 17, 647. Dover street, pulled the fire brigade on Saturday.
When fire . . . apparatus arrived and found no fire, Collins was arrested on a charge of turning in a false alarm. He testified that he ambulance service was under the direction of the fire department, so he pulled the box to get the ambulance. He was dismissed by Magistrate O'Donnell with a warning not to repeat the performance. Herman Fitzhuhe, 216 Otterbein street, Leipzig Finn, 216 Otterbein street, Leipzig Jones, 213 Hill street, who were cut off the altercation at Hamburg and Peach street, were fined $5 and costs each.
Three Report Autos Stolen this Week
Three persons reported to police that their automobiles had been stolen.
William Wilden. 513 Lauren street, reported to the Northwestern district that some one had taken his Fortress. Reported that this home Friday. Reporting that his Chevrolet touring car. 1923 model, had been stolen. Silvester Small, 620 Chevrolet street, made a plaint at the Northwestern police.
William Jackson, of Washington, D.C. reported to the officers of the Eastern police station that his Chevrolet rooftender, 1929 model, stolen while he was attending the high school excursion, Saturday.
NO TITLE FOR AUTO; FINED
Because he was operating an automobile for which no title had been issued, displaying markers behind him, he operated without a registration card, William McVey, 906 Boyd street, was fined $70 and costs after a hearing in Traffic Court, Thursday.
PASS AUTO AT CENTER: FNED
A fine of $10 and costs was imposed on William Henderson, 633 N Fremont avenue, when he was arraigned in Traffic Court on charges of passing another vehicle in the intersection of streets, Thursday.
NAACP INSISTS ANTI-LYNCHING LAW IS NEEDED
Memorandum to this Effect Sent to Hoover Enforcement Committee.
Disfranchisement in the South, Disrespect for Law.
NEW YORK. — Insisting that a federal antitrusting law is necessary for the enforcement of constitutional guarantees to the American Negro, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, asked President Hoover's Law Enforcement Commission to include lynching, disfranchisement, peonage and mob violence in its investigation, Monday.
The brief, signed by James Weldon Johnson, secretary of the Association, was sent to George W. Wickersham and states that "lynching constitutes the quintessential form of law breaking and brutal disregard for human life and Constitutional Guarantees in the United States."
Asks Representation
The Association asks that it be given a hearing before that body. The brief also calls sites as the treatment of residential segregation ordinances in Atlanta, Georgia, and in Louisiana, both in defiance of a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court. The accommodation ordinances are also violated in Jim Grow accommodations on southern railways, says the brief, where "equal accommodation" is not given colored passengers, "and no pretence is made to offer them accommodations" to the states that "colored women and children, as well as men, are often obliged to go without sleeping accommodations at night, and colored passengers generate arbitrary facilities and opportunities for refreshment."
Disfranchisement
Disfranchisement of colored citizens in the South, says the brief, is accomplished by "plain intimidation and terrorization, as well as by grossly discriminatory administration." Nothing we think, it will be conceded, so contributes to disrespect for law and person, as the violation of rights of groups of citizens and of individuals composing those groups, especially those of blacks, especially of depriving them of their one means of redress in a democracy, the ballot. "The legality of the entire legislative structure of the United States is qualified by the disfranchisement of blacks, especially of disproportionate representation accorded the states guilty of this practice, and we believe that no thorough examination of lawlessness and crime in America can ignore this fundamental guarantee and of the nation's legal fabric."
Rev. Caution to Open St. Cyprian
The Rev. Tolle LeRoy Caution, M.A., University of Pennsylvania, and S.T.B., Philadelphia Divinity School, recently ordained to the Episcopal ministry by Bishop Murray, the Primate of that church, is 2224 Oak street. The lower floor of the building has been fitted up as a chapel, where divine services and Sunday School will be conducted, while the upper stories of the building furnish a home for the children. The first service in the new chapel will be held Sunday morning at eleven oclock, at which time the Rev. Caution will preach. In the afternoon at 5:30, an informal opening service and inspection of the building will be held. The mission already has been used on the seven girls, who will render the music.
The mission is located one block from. Maryland avenue and 23rd street and the Maryland car line. The young minister expects a number of his former classmates of the high school to attend the services.
The Rev. George E. Curry, district superintendent of the North Balti-
more district of the M.E. Church,
preached the sermon to the F. and
A. Masons, including the members of
the Episcopal Church and the bishops
dies, the Eastern Star at Metropolitan M.E. Church, Lanvale street and
Carrollton avenue, Sunday afternoon, at their annual St. John Day service.
Rev. Curry preached from the text,
"Why know the truth and the truth shall make you free." P.G.M. Joseph P. Evans introduced the Grand Master, Willard W. Allen, who also addressed the lodge. The pastor, the Rev. Y. Trigg, gave the
sermon. The Rev. J. Reed, re-
derated by the Masonic churc. The collection was $78.
Members of the holy day observer, chairman; Joseph P. Evans, George B. Brown, H. Bevans, Joseph A. Thompson, and Isaiah Smith.
Mrs. Fannie Brown, 17, 918 McCulloh street, is being held in the Provident Hospital for observation as a result of the attempt she made to end her life by swallowing three bichloride of mercury tablets.
Dr. Hilburn Dismissed
Charged with reckless driving on April 26, Dr. James H. Hilburn, 1944, was venomous and misused, when given a driving in the Municipal Traffic Court. Thursday.
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
A woman in a floral dress and hat stands in front of a cloudy sky.
HIGHLAND BEACH, Md.-The beach ensemble,简单而简单 a pajamas of generous dimensions Often the accompanying coat presents a contrast to the bathing suit and unbleached linen are favorite fabrics.
By SARA PELHAM SPEAKS
Call Nearl 3734 2001 Eleventh St.
(C.N.S.).
Now that the numerous commencement
festivities are over, there has been a not
notable lull in the social activities of the
Capital City. With the arrival of summer,
everybody who has any place to go is pre-
paring to depart from Washington to the
arrival of cooler weather. With the
exception of numerous weddings, social
activity here is at a standstill. Some old-
time friends don't maintain a fashionable
summer season.
Davis-Stubbs
A pretty wedding of unusual interest to Eastern society was so solmized at the Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel, four John University, University of Chicago, and eleven Elizabeth Slubb, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. Bascom Slubb, of Wilmington, Delaware, became the bride of Mr. Allison Davison, son of Mr. John A. Davison, Allison gave his age 26, Alley 26.
The Rev. Mordecal Johnson, president of Harvard University, affiliated.
Tall palms and ferns were massed to form an effective background. and lovely allot, before the ceremony was performed. The bride was escorted into the room. She wore a gown of lovely white bride's crepe, with a fawned skirt, shorter in the front and to the floor in the back, with a fawned peplum, which was joined to the skirt.
The waist was cut becoming low in the back, and was outline by a hertha collar. Her hair was cut short, and brind, turned up off the face, and frilled low on the neck in the back. Her bouquet was of the Jean Stubb-Jameson, of Wilmington, was her sister's maid of honor, and only attendant. She wore a white dress of orchid and yellow, and a tiny hat of black horse-hair. She carried a joyful bouquet of orchids and pink roses, matching the colors of her gown.
Mr. Collins Davis, of Hampton, was the best man.
Mrs. Stubbs, mother of the bride, wearing green chiffon, and a large green picture book, taught Mrs. Davis the wedding reception which followed, at 1338 R街, northwest. Mrs. Davis, who was also in the receiving line, was in black and light figured crepe and wore a white hat. Mrs. Davis and his bride by motor immediately after the reception, to spend a week in Harper's New York, Baltimore, Baltimore, where Mr. Davis will be a member of the summer school faculty. The young couple plan to make their home in Baltimore, where Mr. Davis is professor of English. The wedding and reception were attended by a host of friends from Wilmington, and a host of friends from where both of the young people are well known and popular members of society.
Hughes-Styles
All Washington looks forward with much interest to the coming nuptials of Miss Thomas Hines and Fitzpatrick Styles, attorney of Philadelphia, Pa., which will take place, Wednesday, June 28, at the residence last evening, in her a lovely pre-nuptial shower was given in honor of Miss Isie Hines at her residence last evening, by a group of friends. The charming affair, a complete surprise to the honoree was attended by Miss Inadore Williams, Opuscular Institute, Irvine, Miller, Mae Miller, Alice Bell and Madamas Martha Sheif, Mary Ewan, Zunice Matthews, Olivia Matthews, Olivia Matthews, Olivia Simmons.
A green and white color scheme was carried out in every detail.
Highland Beach
Due to the continued hot weather the season at Highland Beach got under way yesterday. The guests, the cottages are occupied and have entertained numbers of guests, and by the time Inwood Beach is celebrated the cottages be at its height. The Last Saturday, Mrs. Waverly Holland entertained guests from the charm of little cottage, Zwanzhurst. Thus one of the most interesting parties of the season, guests arrived early Saturday afternoon, donned attractive "beesjax" in brilliant colors, and spent the day fishing, swimming, and enjoying a "belonging" to Mr. Fred Pelham. The men in their overalls and knickerboks, pretend to party sat and sang, while lucious steaks, marzmellow crabs, corn and everything roasted in the embers.
The guests were. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Patee, Peter. Mr. and Mrs. Corrine M. Mr. Theorede McClean, Mr. Reymond Savoy, and Mr. Ben Petham.
Dr. O. N. Simmons Entertains
The last meeting for the season, of the Athletic Conference, Mr. Phi fraternity, was held at Dr. O. N. Simmons' artistic bungalow at Highland Beach G. Herbert Marshall, Captain Newman's running mate a la humor, and the unavailability of a capable pinch-hitter, the good "whole team," the plus the sergeant-at-arms.
When it comes to Parliamentary Procedure, those present found out that Roberts was a graduate course. Newman's Rules are a graduate course. Among those to partake of the delightful session, Mr. Summons, and her mother, Mrs. Moore, wree. Dr. Aaron Russell, Dr. McGuire, Dr. Henderson, Dr. Hoffman, W. T. Bradshaw, Dr. Paul Mime, who was the guest speaker.
5,000 Crowd Washington Auditorium at DePriest Meet
"Save Black America's Body and White America's Soul," J. Weldon Johnson Tells Audience. WASHINGTON, D.C. (C.N.S.)- funds. The next affair is planned for the death of February.
WASHINGTON, D.C. (C.N.S.)—Nearly 5,000 citizens turned out at the Washington Auditorium to attend the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's Musical and Benefit sponsored event, which was the nationwide drive of the organization for $200,000 defense fund. As a result of the mammoth entertainment, Washington over the weekend somewhat more than its $2,000 quota. Publicity given by the white press here which regarded the music as a social equality preserver was the affair for anyone who by purchase of tickets would aid the N.A.A.C.P. fund, merely served as added advertisement of the act. Nearly a dozen whites were in the
The program began with the introduction of Neval H. Thomas, president of the Local, Washington Academy for the Advancement of Colored People, by Mrs. Julia West Hamilton, assistant chairman of the Citizens' Committee, to the University. In the course of his remarks, Mr. Thomas said: in referring to the amendments of the Constitution and law enforcement that I most wish that American statesmen would have recourse to their arithmetic and learn once and for all time, that thirteen, fourteen and fifteen come before eight.
James Weldon Johnson, Secretary of the National organization acclaimed DePriest as the man of the hour, who worked for the advancement of the Negro and for the advancement of the African-American. He closed by saying: "It is the duty of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to make America's best fall, democracy in America's soul with us. America can never have more democracy than it is willing to give to its black citizens." Social Equity Representative DePriest thanked the author of its report and that the entertainment would be the first of many which would furnish the association with defense
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He refused to have anything to say about so-called "social equality," claiming that "too much nad been put it already."
said about it. Mrs. Hampton presented Mrs. De-
Priest and Mrs. Morris Lewis with
bouquets of flowers in behalf of the
committee.
Ms. DePriest wore a lovely gown of capri chiffon caught at the neck with a diamond pin and a necklace of sapphires. Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. DePriest, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. DePriest Box
In the box occupied by Representative DePriest were Mrs. DePriest, Mrs. Morris Lewis, Mrs. Marcy Russell, Mrs. Will, Mr. and Charles I. West, Jr. Mrs. Will Strickland. Mr. James Weldon Johnson, Mr. Neval H. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Miller. Miss Ella E. Perry, Morris Lewis and Mrs. Clarence.
The program was turned over to Sherman H. Dudley, well known theatrical producer, who served as master of ceremonies.
The program included the Program
The program included the Mabel Jones Dancers in an arrangement of toe and ballet dances. They were followed by the S. Coleridge Taylor Choir, directed by Mr. Alberto H. Johnson.
The Model Club of local Fraternal organizations presented a fashion show showing correct models for wear for street, sports, afternoon evening,
Particularly well received were Adrienne Marshall's "Franciscan's a series of esthetic dances and skills," Francis Junior High Bai Boheme. The program which closed with the singing by the entire audience, was followed by dancing in the exhibition. Group of entertainers from the Howard and Lincoln Theatres, including the Birmingham Four and Putney Dandridge were presented by Mr. Dudley at intervals during the
The success of the affair is due largely to Representative Oscar Despriet, of Illinois, who not only supported the benefit of the book, but also written it and worked tirelessly for its success. Morris Lewis, Secretary of the Congressman, who served as director and manager, Mrs. Julia West Hamilton, President of the Committee and man of the membership Committee of the local branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Mr. Archibald Pinket, Secretary of the National Association for the N.A.C.P., and the following chairman: Mr. W. H. C. Brown, finance; Mr. Edward H. Lawson, publicity; Mrs. Robert McGüite, program; Mrs. net, budget; Mrs. P. Heath, courtesies; Mrs. S. W. Rutherford, admissions; Mr. Louis Melhinger, music; Mr. Albert H. Johnson, chorus; Mrs. Halle Q. Jackson, Mr. Ben Bentley, music; Mrs. P. Briscoe, trades; Mrs. Milton A. Francis, social clubs; Mrs. William B. Harris, fraternal and benevolent; Mrs. Florence Letcher, printing; Mrs. Douglas Johnson and Colonel West A. Hamilton, order; and Mrs. personnel of their several committees.
The Hope Chest award was not made at this time, although it is understood that the Miner Normal School, who has worked energetically, and has brought in over a hundred dollars in materials for the prize with over 450 votes. The contest will be extended for several weeks. Miss Celeste Roscoe, a young businessman, ran second, Mrs. Lillan Curry, third and Mrs. Aaron Russell, fourth. T. J. Ellis, enterprising "dark hats" ladies a scare when he came out fifth on the list. Other candidates were Miss Ethel Brent; Miss Alma Parks; Miss Mattle Camp; Miss Linda Mays; May M. White, Mrs. Ruth Cumber; Miss Ames Freeman, Miss Billie Williams, Miss Vernice Linstord Diggs, Miss Sally Smith, Miss Hilda V. Webb, Joseph William Cook. V.
**Storm Kai**
The storm Kai made a mid-summer storm raged at mid-night, accompanied by dazzling flashes of lightning and torrential rains, which flooded the streets through the roofs. The water rising above the door sills, seeped in at the doors of the Auditorium on the floor where the crowd was dancing.
ONE JAILED, ONE FINED
AS DRUNKEN DRIVERS
One man was sentenced to jail and another was assessed a heavy fine when arraigned in Traffic court, this week, on charges of operating their automobiles while under the influence of liquor. Charges of reckless driving, operating without a license, without a registration card and while under the influence of liquor. William Simms 1352 Saragotta Hospital, sentenced to a jail and fined amounts of 855, after a hearing before Magistrate Staylor, Tuesday. Testimony showed that Simms, was operating his automobile near his home when his vehicle ran into parked automobiles near a nearby intersection. Witnesses claimed they noticed the odor of liquor on his breath. William Boyd, 1347 N. Glimor street, was fined $130 when given a hearing on charges of driving without a license, operating of liquor, and failing to give the right of way, Thursday.
With unceainy aim, Samuel Boston, 1008 Wagon alley threw a knife into the side, while he was attempting to evade him at Gilmer and Lexington streets. Monday. The woman is in the Franklin Square hospital while she is awaiting the outcome of a western district authorities pending the outcome of her condition.
WOMAN SHOT WITH "EMPTY"
Cleaning his revolver in his home, Glarence Dorsey, 26, 1700 E. Eager street, accidentally shot his wife, Mrs. Dorsey, 23, in the left leg, Sunday. Mrs. Dorsey was treated at the Johns Hopkins hospital. Police of Northwestern police station are inquiries about circumstances prior to the shooting.
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
Crossing Pennsylvania avenue and
Biddle street, Alfred Gaskins, eight,
was struck by a bus. He should
shoulder bone when he was struck by
an automobile, Friday.
1 KILLED; 2 INJURED
OVER THE WEEK-END
1 KILLED; 2 INJURED
OVER THE WEEK-END
Man Stabs Friend in Fight
Over Game and Woman.
One man was killed and two persons, including a woman, were seriously injured as the result of altercations over gambling debts and love affairs over the week-end. During an argument, said by police, to have been over a debt from a card game a week previous, Raymond Wilson, 17, 1121 Sharp street, was fatally stabbed about the face and throat by Baldolph Burns, a man standing at Montgomery and Plum alley, Saturday. The youths who had formerly been friends, were said to have been angered by the other's affection for young girl acquaintance. Mr Wilson has been seen the true cause of the slashing. Wilson was taken to the University hospital, where he was given first aid and later transferred to Provident hospital, where he died. After the stabbing and has not been apprehended.
Angered because his former sweetheart, Miss Blanche Jones, 22, 200 Hillen road, is going to make another 19 Grindle lane, seriously shot her when he went to her home, Friday. The young woman was taken to the St. Joseph hospital and later was transferred to the hospital, which is reported by police to be in a serious condition with two bullets wounds in the left arm and body. Washington escaped after the shooting and has not been captured by the police. Four Four Times William Duffy, 26, 9 Reisenfeld court, is being held in the Eastern police station, pending the outcome of the juries of Andrew Williams, 30, 104 Gavin Cox, who took out the jury during an argument over a crap game at the latter's home, Thursday.
When Pain Comes
Two hours after eating
What many people call indigestion very often means excess acid in the stomach. The stomach nerves have been overstimulated, and food sours. The corrective is an alkali, which neutralizes acids instantly. The most important medical science is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. It has remained the standard with physicians in the 50 years since its invention. The poisonful of this narriless, fastest alkali in water will neutralize instantly many times as much
DECATUR
STREET
TUTTI
DANCING
DECATUR STREET
by JABBO SMITH
and his RHYTHM ACES
Vocal Chorus by JABBO SMITH
Brunswick race record to 1078
THERE ain't no sitttin' still while Jabbo Smith and His
Rhythm Aces let go with their jazz-makin' too. They
above a chord and marvel that gutters with a vocal
chorus that's full of pop. "TILL TIMES GET BETTER,
the coupling, by the same band. Is just too bad.
HEAR IT TODAY.
Decatur Street Tutti Fox Trot 7028
Till Times Get Better Vocal Chorus by Jabbo Smith 1x
Four Aces and the Joker
Jabbo Smith and His Rhythm Aces
Ask your dealer to play this record for you today. If he
can't supply you write to us direct.
Brunswick
RACE RECORDS
Get em'-cause they're HOT
Mid. by
The Brunswick-Below
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Chicago
Boy's Shoulder Broken
LOVER SHOOTS GIRL
Shot Sweetheart
Shot Four Times
GENUINE
PHILLIPS
MILK OF MAGNESIA
For Troubles due to acid
INHALATION
AND STONCHAM
HEADACH
HEADACH
GASES: MAUSEA
IMMIGRATION QUOTAS BAR DARKER RACES
Only 100 Yearly Allowed to Enter U. S. by National Origins Quota.
LIBERIA INCLUDED
African Republic and Abyssinia Among Nations.
WASHINGTON, D.C.-The immigration quotas which will be effective July 1 under the national origins system, will not affect the number of darker peoples to be admitted annually from any nation or geographical area, it is shown by the proclamation of President Hoover putting the new system in force.
The provisions of the immigration act of 1924 which had been postponed from going into effect, were approved by the Senate before it recessed against the expressed desire of President Hoover who opposed the original origins quota in his acceptance during the presidential campaign.
100 Yearly Limit
The countries or a.aeas whose people belong to the darker races have a higher percentage in the system at the minimum of 100 immunists a year. Their quotas will remain the same under the national or foreign countries or areas that will no gain or lose under the change include Afghanistan, Bhutan, Cameroon (British mandate). Cameroon (French mandate). Liberia, Union of South Africa South West Africa (mandate of the Union of South Africa). Tanzanian (British mandate). Togoal (British mandate). Togoland (French mandate).
Immigrants from Haiti and the Dominican Republic remain in the most quota class. Immigrants from the British West Indies include the quota class. Britain which mainly supports the national origins system Great Britain has a present quota of 34,007. Under the national origins system it will have a quota of 65,721.
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N.A.A.C.P. Conference Opens 1n Cleveiand
The Nation’s Biggest All Negro Weekly.
Presence of DePriest, Only
Race Gain in Special Session
From Legislative Viewpoint, Conigveas Was a Disappoint-
ment. Farm Relief Measure Not Expected to
Benefit Race Group Much,
OVO ns fund of $500,000,000.
The stabilaation corporations. wil
jbuy ‘and sell agricultural commod!
ities to prevent price Auetuations an:
[bree “agpressions: due to surphs.
| No Co-operatives
There are no Negro agricultural
|eo-opeative organizations or stabil
zation corporetions. It is possible
|however, that the 949,889 colored
[farmers in the United tSates will oi-
| gamise co-operatives and set Up at
Shization corporations in order (> eb
jtain {ull benefits of the farm cll
HIegslation of Uhis Congress,
| gpTinebam Amendment fas
The census-resppartionmen il
[became a law without. the ‘Tinkham
Janiendment whieh would hava. #
duced representation of Southern
States in’ proportion to. their ds
franchisement of Negro citizens.
| While the House was cobsidering the
cengus-ceapportionment. bil, Repre:
sentative George H. Tinkham, Re-
publican, of Massachusetts. got his
Jamendment tentatively aoeriee: but
it was finally killed with the Hoch
amendment which would have ex-
Gluded ‘allens" from. the ‘count upor
Sihihe the “reapportionment. of the
House of Representatives wil be
‘The shift in Negro population from
the rural South to the industrial
centers of the Bast and Middle Wes
Since the last reapportionment. of th
House following the census of. 181
il result in again in. representa:
tion ‘for-the urban ‘centers. to. which
they have moved and a loss to those
States which suffered from the ii
| gration,
Loss Distributed
‘The states which will lose repre-
sentaiion and” the number of seat
‘that will be lost are estimated by
the Census Bureau. as follows: Mle
souri, 3; Mississippi, Indiana, Towa
and ‘Kentucky, 2-each: New Yous
Nebraska North ‘Dakota, Benn
Vania, ‘Fennessee, Vermont, Virgie
Blabama, ‘Kansas, Louisiana, stain
nd Massachusets 1 each,
‘The following gains are estimated:
California, 6; Michigan, 4: Ohio, 3;
Stew Jersey and ‘Texas, 2 each: Ar
Zona, Connecticut, Plorida, Nov
Garona, Oklahoma ‘and. Washing-
Iton, 1 each.
‘Test to Come
‘The test of reapportionment. s
tar as its political effect on colore
Eersons is eoncerned, will come i
fe’manner in whieh the states re
district to care for the increases 0
decreases in representation. If the
Hasge ‘Nezro alstricts in Dilinois, In
idiana, Kentucky. Missouri. New
York. Ohio, Pennsylvania and Ten-
fesse ate left intact: Me, DePzies
fay be joined by others of his rac
3S members of the House
rhe (arift Bi
‘the tariff bil passed by the House
pleases no one. The bil increase
Bues on some 1000 items and add
perhaps 8600000000 annually to the
ESL et living. ‘The Senate Financ
Gormmiuze folding Hearings an
will probably rewrite the bill and
Glimshate its worst features
"The Senate will return to. Wash:
ington August 19, the House mot be
iofe September 28. bul even” tbe1
limder an agreement not transact
anv business before October 14.
Hee re ee ea
eon of Congress, Which began its
‘mer recess June 29. was of espe:
sumierest because of the presence
gal apresentative Oscar | DePricst
a oikkean, of Minos. t being | the
Repiesion in 28 years in which
faired person hes sal a5 a member
Setter heuse
fram the legislature viewpoint the
setlon was disappointing. No reme-
gsiMicisiation relieving the Negro
gil "Setranehisement 1h the Sou"a
fom palizing Southern | States. for
& Perenieement of thelr: NezrO, yop,
ation was writien into any’ ou that
wienacted 1:10 TaN,
‘congress met. in extraordinary £es-
oe Spal 18. ‘The President 0
fo mfessage the next, day outlined
He Mroores for which the session
the Rajied, They included only a
Hi sor the relies of agriculiure. a
bition of the tari, the passage ul
AeSfensus-Feapporiionment bill. and
ibe Gal or fuhtrer etension of the
ths fprhich the national origins
tsien of the immigration lav
Goud go inte effect.
"the txo months’ special session
eramed farm relict legislation, ‘ni
teeg tani revision, refused to Te-
Uef'ine national, origins “quotas of
pall mmigration law and passed the
we geeapportionment bill, In ad-
Grn ihe Senate confirmed _nearly
{ithe Hoover appointees to Federal
ampere None of them was colored
Farm Relicf
‘The farm rellef measure. enacted
aout the so-called debenture plan
Tht expected to prove benestcla! 12
Servo farmers. "The act crea:ss a
Federal farm board, This board will
fof funds to agricultural co-opera-
Me oreanizations and commodity
Tee eri ee mitiene Obt Of & Te
Beat the Numbers!
With This New Calculating
Wonder!
Re stow, sou how bude
Igcnouse“selanese, ste a
freee) wccuratels computed, No. mi
B) ies eae Sl ts Sometning
fee) ce “Eich machine as
REET ice tats tice time Get
BEGET iSite Now ror tiie mic
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double.
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ets come Pace
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sere eee?
Seesenr io
directions. Begin this wonder-
ree Bae ee
racer”
fee Sy
ferent
send us 30 cents or $1, and we will
sample box of Nedine Face Pow-
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eae eee oe une Ame. chorea
RESINS AGREES al ote dave rata
pec in, Cin, Rein
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Bo for ene enue
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M.A, depres or rome graduite Work
Nauiren.” Other Pesitions.
‘Standard. Teachers Agency
‘tort N. ¥, Ave. Washington, D. C.
deta erpernirs
aN H Ginss. Thick
Dy A ras
apa Er eee
(Cele
COCOA-TAR HAIR AND
SCALP TREATMENT
wii iin prorat
MASKIN DRUG CO.
Nene Ry 2S MARE we
fee
AFRO-AMERICAN
CIRCULATION
BUREAU
~ Washington, D. C.
6100 Clay St., N. E.
Tel., Lincoln 2497
ISAAC © BANNISTER, Manager
DISTINGUISHED AFRO VISITORS
OT Nae
Pigg —
nse Big os
aS Git ee
oe pine 6
s ener some a
ee ‘t
TER i 7 t
Re oa 1
ca Hs = |
oe; e
Base Gee | hye F
HES eu : Ce
a Roo
= a ene eo
: ee iB
tae one cae a Ja
saa, E Pretec ie Se F
redic eae eae
ie
Rca, Seaamenin es ese =o
eT ee"
‘Miss Beatrice E. McGhee. left, southern beauty who spent several days
in the city last week as the guest of Mrs. K. Bertha Hurst. right wife of
He al nn lil
=
Villard Prouder of NAACP
thanAnyOther Achievement
oe Beard, Van Doren, Herskovits, Sinclair Lewis
| and Bishop Faber Among White Leaders Who
Land Association’s Twenty Years.
, NEW YORK.—Villard is prouder
‘lo have founded the N.A.A.CP. than
ot any other accomplishment. he de-
flores in commenting upon the 20th
anniversary of the association.
"A number of other 20-year tributes
were sent the association by white
Jeaders of national fame, in part, as
follows:
+ Charies A.,Beard. historian. teach-
fer. author "The Rise of American
‘Civiization, ‘and other works on
history:
Un’ the old days in the rural
‘South, Negroes caught in the toils
‘of, the law could often secure the
aid of white employers or neighbors
Who knew them, but-in the wilder-
ess of the greuk industrial city, Ne~
froes: must usually Nght their’ own
fegat battles—against the double odds
fof poverty and race feeling.”
‘The Church Speitks
Rt, Rev, William F. Paber. Bishop
of Montana:
~The wrongs against which the
NAACP, existe to protest, are
fwsongs Rot only to, & racs. but
‘wrones to. our boasted democracy.
And what concerns me most, wrongs
to. the Religion. we profess’ and to
Him whom We worship.”
Fight Back =”
MeWille J, Herskovits, Assistant
Professor of Anthropology. North~
western University, Author "The
Americar. Nearo.” cis.
ARMAS amore or Jess detached ob-
server of Negro lif¢ in this country
and of the friction belween Negroes
and whites, it has been forced non
me that one of the reasons the Ne-
fgro is under the handicap of as
uch discrimination as he is, is be-
‘cause he has never learned fo fight
tack, ‘Though my association with
Negroes in this country has been in
the course of anthropological re-
Search, T have again and again en-
encountered. situations in which onle
the refusal to undergo an embarrass-
ng situation rather than give up 8
Hfhe was the cause of the Negro’
being denrived of that right.”
*From “Main Street”
Sinclait Lewis. novelist, autho:
Main, Street.” “Babbitt” “Dods-
worth,” and other works:
Stthere 3s James Weldon, Johnson,
who, along with Carl Sandburg, has
given to America the realization’ that
Wer have here a native beauty and
2° native music comparable to, the
Hest in europe. ‘There is Dr, W. E.
Br ‘DuBois, who is aimost the only
man 1 have ever met in twenty
fountries whose ‘sense, of -humor is
equal to his scholarship,
“there is, Walter ‘White, whom 1
‘have put last in, this list because he
ig one of the best. friends that I
Haves That I have praised | Mr.
White's novels is less important than
tke fact of my admiration for him
2's charming—rather curiously he-
Foic—human being.”
Mencken on List
H, L, Mencken, editor of the Amer-
jean Mercury, author of “The Ameri-
can. Language.” “Prejudices.” and
ther Ors:
"Tt it had achieved nothing else
the National Association for the Ad.
vancement of Colored People would
have deserved the thanks of every
Yair man ivr its excellent campaign
against lynching. The campaign was
‘Gamed on with courage and intel
Gence ang its. results are visible, in
$Re‘anmual returns. I believe that 1%
thas accomplished more than any
Federal law could have accomplished.
Hhe'Southerners have been made
ashamed of their lynching record
and that is better than trying to Use
force on them.
“certainly it deserves the support
of every man who believes in fair
Slay he United. States. will neve
be completely civilized until the
Teast Negro in the most backward
Hite Shas full eqdallty under the
Jaw with the most influential white
Jaan. This” ieeal, perhaps, may
Taaver be realized, but it i, certainl
rein woe to trugete for st”
‘Only $78,000
‘Mark Van “Doren. professor oF
English, Columbia University, poet
‘and editor: and Dorothy Van Doren,
hovelist, associate editor. the Nation;
“And ‘one is astonished to discover
that the National Association last
year spent, only $78,000—less than a
Aisi fee in many @ legal case, far
jess than many 2 lobby, @ mere pit:
Jess than npared. with the sums that
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1925
OOO eee me met
: | |
: \ |
SF .
; PUL, WE UUL SUN) REDIEFERDD 2 ENT OPTEE ef
; CUTS sel cee
HAIR AND TOILET ARTICLES :
} “Hawaiian ‘Treatments and Products —————
; ‘Will Grow Your Hair” es
§ “LONG SOFT FLUFFY” (a a
; Learn Art of Hair Growing | es :
5 cee our peavant agent or write ux catalog FREE. | (esti
Two Months’ Treatment by Mail $2.00 | ESE |
: Wo Teach YOU How to Serve Successfully. ame, Bramiette
: Address: Mme. T. G. Bramlette
$4532 Seventh St, N. W. Washington, D. C.
turn America’s Industries. Twelve
million men, women and children
defended for a year for $78,000. Sure-
ly money was never better invested.”
Prouder of N.A.A.C.P.
‘Oswald Garrison Villard, publicist
champion of. liberal causes, editor of
the Nation:
“E have but one fault to find with
it, and that is that it does not ac-
complish five or six times as_much
as it does. ‘The only reason that it
Goes not is perfectly plain: It has
not the means to do so.
“But these twenty years of its ac-
tivity have only reinforced in. me the
Intense feeling that I had in 1908,
that an organization like this, mili-
tantly led, uncompromising and un-
ylelding as to the rights of the Ne-
gro, is the ,prime need of the colored
people in ‘America. I think T am
prouder of being one of the first five
fo found this association than al-
most anything else in my long ca-
reer of meddiing in other people's
business.”
FOLLOWS DAD BY
CETTING YALE DEGREE
oN : is Rete
PREDERICEK, WITLI oss.Pred
NEW, BEDFORD, Mass-—Fred.
erick Willis Bonner, son of Mr. and
Sirs. Fred D, Bonner, who at, the
commencement exercises at, Yale
lumiversity on June "ie, received th
(BA. degree, He made an excel
lient seholasile record, being on the
Inonor roll-all four. jears, “and a
|eraduation Tecelved “orations” | 20
Pomntment. “He was o holder of a
[scholarship al four years, | the
amount for senior year alone’ being
$500," During the last, three year
fev aia honor” work in the Cas
es.
($e roomed on the ollese campus
lauring ls course |: "his " residence
Gucing senior year being in the fam-
aun FCbecs Memoria
louie ig the iter con of Nog
graduate, Yale cver fo, Basa
fom that. institution. bis” father
Frederick D. Bonner, public account
Ent having also, recelved his B.A
3 ae tee
RACE HAS WON
A REVOLUTION
SAYS DR, DUBOIS
Crisis Editor’ Outlines Pro-
found Changes at Cleve-
land, in Keynote Speech.
20TH ANNIVERSARY
N.A.A.C.P. Celebrates in
Annual Conference.
American Negro , stands
on the threshold of a new
era, having won a revolu-
tion in public sentiment
during the past twenty
years, declared Dr. W. E.
B. DuBois, editor of the
Crisis magazine, deliver-
ing the opening keynote
address Wednesday, before
the twentieth anniversary
conference of the National
Association for the Ad-
yancement of Colored Peo-
ple.
‘The conference will be continued
here through July 2
‘Reviewing the twenty years of the
Advancement Asszciation’s activity
Dr. Dut Bois ‘contrasted the diffcus
situation of colored citizens of ‘thi
country twenty years ago with the
advantages they have won and nos
enjoy.
20 Years Ago
“Twenty years ago.” declared Ur
iy Bois, “ere was scarcely a rept
Table scientist. who dared to. 3830"
the’ equally of the, sara,
any essential particular. Atria. wa
aatumed to have no history and ther:
fas only ‘one college in the Unite
States that offered a course of study
in’'Negre. history and psychology
Bunbat and Chesfutt and others we
Rriting but. they were looked. upor
Au exceptional aid no one for a mo
mene dreamed of counting America
ogra iteratare ag part of the ite
ary give of america.
eats me in 908, they wer
tynching three Negroes. every | tw¢
GeskeSnd jn. tne previous. decade
Negroes had been irnched at the rat
Aries "years the Supreme. Cour
nad’ never, passed or, tne Jegalt 0
the Ith, Amenament and souther"
ferisletures repeatedly demanded th
repeal even of the 14th as Toxas dic
rePiiman and Vardaman were. 3
thelr glory, Vardaman declared
1909" that “the mest literate. whic
an Se better equipped to understan:
Ther echome, of this government. ai
Weocote intenlgentiy han any Negro.
| ‘Republican Party
“George White, the last of his race
to ni in Gongress_uniil 1998, lll Con:
Loe in 1BOl. "The. atterapt. of the
Negro "to vote, Independent of th
Republican ‘party ‘Was laughed ati
Rie vigorously’ denounced. in 1912
INP ropseded as ‘reason to. the Ne
fro race even af Tate as 1916
"Tt was declared by all renutable
authorities thas the fate of the Ne.
auprtace in. the United States wa
einction and death, and that wha
fibereuosis did not’ do. crime. an
Wprcleney would Anish: And final
ly, it was,said by the Negrors -hem
yd Saiiet untanimaush. that re
Sflective organization for the attain
Sit of the rights of black men i
imerica. was. impossible
"Bue we aistegarde the advice 0
our frienas. We went in for agita
lon. We pushed ‘our way Inte th
tons. We demanded the right 2
vote, We urged and pushed our chi
Weer, Into collese.. ‘We encourage
een, “Ore and. iterature. We stud
Nesiistean history and n season AN
tea of season we declared that, th
Outre ‘aces were destined at 15
Gechare in the heritage of th
earth.
New Generation
we stand today .t the thresho!
‘of a new generation, with 12,000 0
our children in collere: with a rec
‘ognized place in American ‘iteratuc
and art; with the reappearance 0
the black man in Congress and, wha
Pe nore important, with the emec
gence of an independent Negro vot:
We have recognized Negro leadershii
in education, science and in legal de
fense. And our demand to be rec
oanized as civilized veople, no civi
lized American can deny.”
Miss Ovington Speaks
In commenting on the history. 0
the association. Miss Mary White Ov
{hgton declared thatthe work of th
eeestieation In future would probabl
follow the same line ast has in th
12439 yeas. “An ‘oppressed. minor
sty Seslow tase ta) win full ct
Oh ahip. "ie wil gain is Tights ont
Hendy inet Tetike to think the
Tare toren bearers. Work is doubl
hard if it is done in the dark.”
“Thave ‘who gent, greetings tot
conference were: Prof. Gilbert Mur
sere oxford, Ensiand, Paul
‘Warburg, Sinclair “Lewis, Hi
‘Mecken. Waldo Prank, Will ‘W. Alex
Meee charles (A. eard. Counte
Cullen, Oswald Garrison Villard an
|Dan’ Jackson Estate $75,000
CHICAGO —Wih the , exception
NO uals, ae entre
estate, valued at $75,000, of the late
esate ES fon eal orm pl
Daniel M. Jastson euuner Charles
elas, goes fo Pree” necomes
SS: acm. Ue A led
for probate here last week. Pirst re-
for probate here last, week. First re.
A Jew, Colored Man, Catholie
Help Bond ‘Tom’ Heflin, Jr.
Profligate Son of Senator J. Thomas Heflin, Dry, Anti
Catholic, Jew aud Negro Hater, Charged With
Driving While Under Influence of Drug.
‘WASHINGTON. — Declaring tha’
svenybody who could get him out wa
a right.” 5. Thomas. Hedin, pot
gate son of Senator Tom Hefti. de
trilseder, anti-Catholic, and * oper
hater of Jews and colored folk
thanked Millon 'S. Kronheim, pro
fessional bondsman, George | Noble
his assistant, and Patrick Haltigan
2 Cathclic, for arranging a $100
ond after he had plead not guilt
and demanded « Jury trl ater be
ny arraigned on & charge of driving
tlie under the influence of 2 drug
Thursday.
Aside’ from gaining his freedom
the most presting worry which
Stsmed to concern the. son of the
Siiite Senator from Alsbama. wa
When and. where Re. could. get an
Giner drink. "No, Lam not worrying
Shout Ghat my father wil say. for
Etow he wil saya plenty. ail tha
orrles ‘me now is where T can. gel
PUrink? ne told newspaper men.
‘Kicked out of Schools
‘The proceedings lasted only a fex
iminutes. Young Hein left the cour
Rouse in, quest of another drink.
Ye talked rely with reporters, an
inthe course of the interviews ad.
‘Muted that he had been "kicked ou
Or three. gehools” the University. o
filabems, Washington and Lee, and
george Washington. unlvetsities
wore his corse sone of "Whi
en
‘Trafic policeman. ©, S. shelton
acrested, Heflin Wednesday” afternoct
ating the, tush our atter is ca
fied crashed into the rear of 3 tric
Ar seventh. and Pennsylvania. ave
Dues Shelton smelled Liquor’ on i
Breath and questioned young, Heftn
tne told nin that he ad een tak
Ing veronal,
ie was, immediately ‘taken int
custody by Shelton, and later exam
fred St “Zmergeney ‘Hospital. wher
tthe physicians’ report resulted In
charge of driving under the Infiuens
Starige weing placed against him.
"Alabama, Story”
Heflin claims. tet he knew th
polisemen smelled liguor "on hi
Bresth and only. attempted 10 ol
Smart him when he told him that 1
Bad‘ taken veronal, which he clin
IS his "alabama story
He said, "L dlgnt know what t
say. T. promised my father. Mat
sound never take another Grint. fo
Towing the New York episode sever
ontiis Age. When thew arrest
ne, naturally 2 led to bide al
Gesice of liquor’ because I Wa
scares
“Teauld feel the effects of th
higuor all right, Thad. been drink
Tee eealent Satcohol and hadn't fa
any breakfast, but T- don’t think 1
finertered with my criving, = pull
on my brakes but they wouldn't hold
Shen’ when the. police came uD!
Gouldn't explain things. verv ‘well be
Sause ney tongue wae kinda thick
Sou know."
"Tne Traghe Bureau. revoked Hel
sin'e Distslet automobile operator
Heense, ‘Thursday.
Sonator Heflin, why was in Toled
obiaon a speaking trip. was 10
[evare of ‘his son's arrest until. th
fatiowing aiternven, whereupen be
fig’ t@. dave ranted and” rave
scteristicall
AeiSiy son is all right. His arves)
‘Washington is all a frame-up and 2
atlempe to embarrass me.” he de
‘Stared, the boy may have hea
drink he seid, “but Tam sure
find. othing. to. do. with» narcotic
Gt course Fil stand by him. Tvl
6 crerything ean to help him out
‘eal, elizens aoube thet dhe
will bed great deal. more heard
the cases a6 the voung man is fv
Min"his boasts that ‘is father I
Aiways gotten him out of numerou
pei fol. ecg hr geet
DRY AGENTS FIND 59!
BALLON STILL GOING
Finding a 500 gallon still being op-
erated We dona Herbert at. Jasons
Greek calvert Counts. dry azents a=
Tested the man after destroying the
Spparatus, Monday."
Paitin om information the, agents
recat the Fuge sit wal daen in
the woods, poing ‘at full blast with
Boe aces oP nash and tres hundred
Tien eons of ot. mash. which was
Borgr Sipped to. Baltimore. the fo:
lowing day. Herbert Is being heid
PINE Federal District court pend
ing. an investigation before Commis-
loner Suopiees
‘Wiliam Lone. Hela
‘William Long, 30, 1606. Pratt street
‘is being held by Marshall Collier on
charges of sales ard ‘possession of
Sheol ‘auors, as the result. of 2
et ant anh ce
Tie Walon ter selzed a small
Gurine of alleged. red whiskey amd
Big Tuesday,
George Alexander. 234. S. Dallas
suese'SS Geng held for a, hearing
‘on charges of sales and possession
Shree having gold an under cover &-
gent a pint of whiskey. Tuesday.
Di a aperatine &iodegal sl in
the woods near their home, Oliver
Higcon ‘and. Wiliam Carr, Severn
Beg Mee being held, by Mar
Feil davier at tre ecgeral Dull
Ba Goncing belore the eammissin
er on the charge of manufactur-
Jing. A large amount of alleged corn
Ja atte pr ona we ound. tp
29 barrels in the loft of the stable
Be they mere workin
‘Stopped by agents who weve pa-
aiiee site Heads of the Washineton
seg fod ‘Adame, (Ft, 1900. bloc:
Present were arrested, when three
cases of alleged rye whiskey were
found in the tumble seat of his car.
|Alphas Award Ten
|” Scholarships
‘WASHINGTON. D.C-—The Schol-
arship Commission of the Alpha Phi
Alpha Fratemity announced, today.
through its, Chairman. Emory, ®
Smith, of Howard University, the a-
ward of ten $100.00, scholarships,
Withose receiving the scholarships
include three young women, a native
‘African, and two members ot the
fraternity. Ten states including the
District of Columbla and, ten dit
ferent. educational institutions are
represented in the awards
Pirsona secelving. scholarships are: O. 3
alee Morehouse. College: Walter Blanch
Bakes suacege, Golege: Miss Catherine. Van
Siren Fisk Voivertity: aise. Pauline Car
Pe ene College, Columble. &.C.; Mla
Herine ‘N-Gatus, Virginia, Slate Colice
Petersburg. Var dobn ‘Coby Western. Re
Eerre, Cleveland, “Ohio: Wim. i, Gaines,
Galversty of Pennylvania: Zrnest B. Kall
Sols Tnative. African), ‘New York Univer
By: Jobe W. Lewis, chy college of Dr.
ott, “aed Wie Howard Sneed, Hower
Mg a Hie
CXXKXKEL AAA AE ALAA ALAA ASAADAAAAL,
( e@
EXCURSION!
to Charlotte, N: C.
$ ] 0 00
; Round Trip |
BLACK SOX
OF WASHINGTON, D. C. (
Will Run Their First Annual Excursion
* To Charlotte, N. C.
July 4,1929
Where They Will Oppose The |
BLACK HORNETS
mi a Double Header at Warren’s Park
Corner Bland and Ment Streets
at a fant amraancn E
a NT TE Friis eget | ae
Qe ca
a ibis, a cv
byt oo HH
nt i in
eS Se cael
a Ni Pe =
OCR ea heat
| eo ee yO \
i) , A on
—_—_——-—:”—~“=<O;€’”
Mai itt ci
FREE GIFTS TO NEW AGENTS k a a, —y
We have openings for'a few live Ve, BHI SIA)
agents. If you are interested in he easter roa
making some extra money and inf Ara eie
winning valuable and beautiful fyi paiae esas
: v i omen
cette
Rag PRICE 25 CENTS UB
(Plan Display for
Handicapped Work
Chair-caneing, neadiee work, chro
enting and had rue” andthe
handicraft by the blind, will be on
display at a unique entertainment,
given by the Community Club, as-
sisted by the Kings DAUR and
Sens of Sharp Street” Community
oer Friday, July 12th, at 8:30 P.
‘rhe committge on, arrangements
are Mesdames Sara B. Mason, Beu-
fh Le Sotneon, GD. sefferson, Bs-
telle Young, Miss Flossie Whyte. Rev
Bane’ W. Haves, Rev. A. 3. Green,
George Whyte, Wan, i. Lancier
snd HobertW: Coleman.
Jim-Crow at Chicago School
| CHICAGO.—Jim-Grow showed, his
Inoray head: hete fest” week when
{Mise in charge of the anmal Jun-
ior and senior prom of Tilden Tech-
nical high school barred colored stu-
dents of the school. Albert E.
rans, principal of Tilden and, for:
mer principal of Wendell Phillips
Bigh Behool, admitted that_he knew
ofthe alcerimination. nut saw. othe
fhe unusual in the fact that colored
‘students are being barred.
Have
beautiful hair
like hers
One of our friends tells us
that her hair once nappy,
short and ugly now is her
pride—admired by men— en-
vied by other women. Hi-Ja
Quinine Hair Dressing, used
regularly, retulted in two
inches growth the first month.
Soon it was long enough to
dress in a pleasing bob that
is entrancing, .
Is your hair as pretty and as
straight as you'd like it to be?
Does it softly wave? Does it
Jisten with life and light?
an you say that your hair
is one of your best features?
If you are not complimented
‘about it, see your favorite
Ss
| (Cxntneed tom pase one)
Oi
lone who moved. I did not mind his
‘objection, but I did object to his
{telling me what tu do. ‘There is noth
ing any Congress-man in Washington
can do that I cannot do. I regret
{hae We have to come in contact wits
each other so frequently, because
some day, I might have to sit at the
ame table with him, and be would
have to move, because I surely would
not move,
“rr was told that, one could hardly
teint’ a" Was ‘a Negro, but tw prove
thar T'was ¥ invited @ man almost as
Black ax my ange to dine, with me,
Othe ergon of my friend, BoD AD:
‘ott, of Chicago. My race is one
that 1a Doug of mnyaene in the
Walah Mr, Debriest said
Three Va. Schools
Plan Merger
RICHMOND, Va—A merger of Va.
‘Theological Seminary and College at
Laynehburg. the Hartshorn College
in Richmond and the Virginia Union
University is planned, according to
‘officials representing the manage
ment of those institutions, it was
learned here last, week,
‘Preliminary details of the consoli-
dation of the three institutions have
been worked out by commissions rep-
resenting the Baptist General. Ass0-
Giation and the Virginia Baptist As-
Sociation, and it is believed that the
plan will become effective before the
oan eof the schools next fall.
druggist today and order Hi--
Ja Quinine Hair Dressing
from him, The price (25c)
is the same as ordinary hair
dressing, but the results you
will get are a lot different—a
Jot—more certain and a lot
quicker.
Send For Special Bargain
Assortment
If your druggist does not car-
ry Hi-Ja Beauty Preparations
refuse all imitations and send
$1.00 for our Special Bargain
Assortment. On receipt of
price we will mail four boxes
of Hi-Ja Quininé Hair Dress-
ing and one box of Hi-Ja
Beauty Soap (Value $1.25).
;
Hi-Ja, Inc.
« Atlanta, Georgia
+ Dept. N.M. 24
7 Injured When 600 Stage Melee in Front of Liberty Hall
FILL POSTS OF SIX SMITH PROFESSORS
FILL POSTS OF SIX SMITH PROFESSORS
Johnson C. Smith University Will Drop High School Work Next Term
CHARLOTTE, N.C.-The places of six professors who recently resigned from Johnson C. Smith University here, have been fille, according to John Edgar Smith, secretary of the Board of Trustees. The faculty, which contains 23 members, is composed of men with special training for their various departments, the secretary also declared.
Drops High School
Beginning with the 1929-1930 term the high school work in the college will be discontinued, it was announced. For the past 37 years, Johnson C. Smith University, formerly known as Biddle, has had a complete corps of race professors and, according to Mr. Smith, the last 22 years under the presidency of Mr. McCoryre, it has experienced steady development. The last commencement a $125,000 university church was dedicated.
Veteran Pastor on Vacation Here
After 25 years of continual service as pastor of the Elm Baptist Church of Boston, the Rev. C. Herbert Johnson, one of the most widely ministers in the city, spent an expending and dedicated vacation in this city. "I am here for a rest." declared Rev. Mr. Johnson, "although my officers told me that a man in my condition did not need a rest. I had cided to lay down in my hands to the man of pastor." While here he will be the guest of the Rev. W. J. Winston.
Lincoln University in the class of
The Rev. Mr. Johnson graduated at
1802 with the degree of S.T.D. having
spent four years in the College
and received its symbium. He was
also a student at Howard University
for two years.
Woman Struck by Auto
Crossing Stockton street, near
Roert street, near Elizabeth Bailey,
29 Roert street, received injuries
of the head and body when
she was knocked down by a hit-and-
run driver. Friday.
MODERNIZE
YourHome
SHIELDS OFFERS
Every Service
From Cellar
to Roof
No Payment
Until
Oct. 1st
Take as long as 3 years to
pay at slight cost
Hot Water
Heating
Plant
$295
This Includes
8 Radiators,
17-in. Roller,
300 Feet
Radiation.
5 Year
Written
Guarantee.
CALL SHIELDS
for
PLUMBING
REMODELING
PAINTING
PAPERHANGING
CARPENTERING
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Members of the 1929 graduating class that were awarded diplomas last Wednesday night at the Coppin Normal auditorium. They are, left to right, front row: Lillian Pratt, Viola Catlin, Helen Yerby, Anita Polk, Mamie Young, Francis Matthews, Dorothy Addison, Mriam Gwynn, Myrtle Billips, Ellen Scott; second row—Lola Haskins, Lillian Smith, Lillian Pace, Kathleen Bass, Cathrine Lee, Inez Landsdowne, Berenice Genus, Miles W. Connor; principal; third row—Dorothy Chapman, Corrhea White, Nerissa Taliaferro, Mildred Bouldin, Vivian Hardy, Naomi Cook, Martha Blackburn, Mary Johnson, Mary Newton, Geneva Lockhart.
MACHINE GUNS END
GARVEY 'FACTION RIOT
Looks Like Civil War as Uniformed Groups Fight With Rifles, Sabres and Bottles.
Opposing Groups Clashed Over Possession of Hall.
NEW YORK—A small civil war was quashed here Sunday night when two opposing factions of Marcus Garvey followers staged an empty rifle, sabre and bottle fight over the possession of Liberty hall at 120 W. 138th St.
It required a wiot call and machine gun display on the part of police to halt the fight between 600 participants and sent seven to the hospital more or less inquired.
The Injured
Those reported injured and taken to the Harlem hospital were: John Spalding, 66, 344, 145th street; John Spalding, 66, 299, 145th street; John Doublen, 26, 625 Lenox avenue; Daniel Israel, 27, 105, 1 W. 138th street; Alexander Edan, 49, 165 Henry street; Brooklyn, William Grant, 29, 165 Henry street; Francis Hurfranc, 30, 358 W. 127th street.
Two Factions
Some time ago dissension among the Garveytes caused a split and a group seceded and formed the Universal Association, using as headquarters a basement adjoining Liberty Hall. The Garvey club, it is said, rented the hall from month to month. Taking advantage of this situation, the Universal Association signed a lease with a real estate firm and paid a month's rent in advance. It was when they came to take possession of the basement night club with the Garvey club, which was holding a drill in the place. According to eve witnesses the Garvey club clad in their uniforms and bearing empty rifles and sabres, fairly swept the Universal Association into the street where he latter, also in uniform, engaged them in a free for all fight.
Machine Guns
The first contingent of police and detectives who answered the riot call found themselves unable to deal with the situation and it was necessary to send for a machine gun squad who read the riot .ct and threatened to mow down the fighters, before the disturbance was quelled. A majority of the members of both opposing factions are said to be West Indians.
Girl, Despondent, Takes Carbolic Acid
Despondent because of ill health and domestic troubles for several months, Miss Ruth Winston, 30, 2100 Madison avenue, attempted to end her life by swallowing a small quantity of carbolic acid, Tuesday. Miss Winston was taken to the Provident Hospital, where she remained for observation.
Beats Cop, Man Fined
Harvey Bunningham, 32. Seventh street, Fairfield, was fined $50 and costs when arraigned in the Southern police station on charges of assaulting Officer George Wilson, after being arrested for creating a disturbance at the Maryland Dry Docks, Wednesday.
Mrs. Dodd Bitten by Dog
Mrs. Elizabeth K. Dodd of 1626 Madison avenue was severely bitten by a police dog belonging to Mrs. Georgia Jackson of 721 Dolphin street, Thursday evening about 9:30 p.m.
Mrs. Dodd had her wounds dressed at the Provident Hospital and is being treated by Dr. C. H. Fowler and at the Pasture clinic.
Baseball Fan Jailed
Because he started an altercation in the Maryland Baseball Park Sunday, during the Cuban-Based Sox baseball game, Sidney Jones, 35, 1712 McCullon street, was committed to jail to await the action of the grand jury when given a hearing in the Southern police station. Monday
J
Misses Myrtle Billups and Lillian Smith who took the leading roles in the playlet, "Les Adieux des Fleurs" last Friday during the Coppin normal school class day program. Miss Billups was Queen of Flowers, and Miss Smith represented Dawn.
Negro Pays When White Man's Cow Jumps His Fence
Piney Woods School Pays When Sick Mule Dies After Being Shod.
PHILADELPHIA. - Negroes are in Mississippi only through good will, Laurence C. Jones, head of Piney Woods School, wrote Anne Biddel Stirling of this city, who published his letter in the local press.
Jones' letter in part is as follows: "You will remember several years ago I sent you a letter about some one's cow jumping over our wire fence and getting caught. It died and the owner made us pay for it. You know, down here when a white man demands you do something it is wise to do it rather than incur his displeasure. So we paid for the cow.
Sick Mule "The other day a man brought a sick mule to the blacksmith shop to have shoes taken off and one of our blacksmiths pulled off the shoes. A
AFRO SPEAKER
[Image of a man in a suit and tie].
Dr. A, J. Mitchell, field secretary for Morgan College, was the principal speaker at the Saturday AFRO Club meeting.
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
and the owner made us pay for it. You know, down here when a white man demands you do something it is wise to do it rather than incur his displeasure. So we paid for the cow.
Sick Mule
"The other day a man brought a sick mule to the blacksmith shop to have shoes taken off and one of our blacksmiths pulled off the shoes. A week later the owner came to the shop and the mule was pulled and the cause of it was because our blacksmith pulled the mule's shoulder out of joint in taking off the shoes. Regardless as to how absurd that sounds, he demanded $75 because of the loss of his mule.
Kill Every——
"A few nights ago a white man driving at an intemperate rate of speed ran into one of our cars and smashed up both cars rather badly. He jumped out, pulled out his pistol and handled the .boys pretty roughly and demanded that his car be repaired or he will kill every nigger in Simpson County."
"Although we are right in both cases, it would not do to take it to court. A lawyer would cost almost as much as is demanded and the costs would mount up, besides making enemies. We are here only through good will."
Anne Shirley makes this further comment:
"With a halter around; his neck on one occasion; placed there by strangers through the facile misunderstanding that dogs the color Jones was from luring by a chance neighbor who recognized his worth and the fine quality of work he was turning out. His letter is a commentary on the heartbreaking difficulties in the path of Southern Negro educators."
Police of the Northwestern District are trying to locate Troy Gough. 27, 355 pressman street, who seriously injured his wife, Mrs. Georgann Gough, 23, when he struck her in the head with a brick in front of their home after an argument over money, Saturday.
Man Alcohol Victim
Found lying at the foot of Bank street, in an unconscious condition Leroy Samuel's, 28, address unknown was pronounced by physiologists of the City Hospital to be suffering from acute alcoholic poisoning. Tuesday
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MORE MATTHEWS
(Continued from page one)
ployees, and their happiness seer it assured.
Then across their marital sun came the shadow of Letha, the office stenog.
At first their love trysts were secret, then more brazen, eventually a love child resulted. It died.
Ralph tried newspaper work in New York, Cleveland and Washington, but always -same back to his wife and child and the woman who was trying to steal him from them.
Then one day Mrs. Mae Matthew found the following letter in her hus band's pocket signed by Letha.
Brokenhearted Letter
"What a tool I've been.
"Oh well, it's good I found out your inward desires and wishes, as it always gives me pleasure to grant you what you most desire
"But this is the end, Ralph, I know not what I shall do. care not. I shall make of it. I shall live on memories of the past 8 months. After today, I shall just live, with no hope for the future.
"Please tell Mae for me that I do it for her sake as well as for yours. May God 'less and take care of you, Mae and the dear little baby; and may you all be happy.
"Thank you for giving me at least few months of happiness I shall never know such again. I shall not even look for it. There is none for me now."
"I shall continue to love you and watch you rise in life to the greatest heights. You have a wonderful career before you. I will watch closer and watch you do Give the world the best in you. May you be as good and true to Mae as I feel you have been to me. Make her happy. God will reward you. This is my only request. "Good bye, Kalph until we meet the other side. Brokenhearted, but still happy, if this decision will make you. Mae, and the baby happy, also your dear parents.
Was this "brokenhearted letter" a farewell or merely a come hither?
The letter proved sufficient grounds in court for the first Mrs. Matthews to secure a divorce early last March. By the end of the month, Ralph had married the brokenhearted girl who had borne him a child out of wedlock. For them domesticity was not as sweet as stolen love. Their romance shattered. Ralph is gone. Letha carries on in the Clendenin street flat alone. Her death threats fall on the empty air.
Girl's Leg Broken
Playing in the alley in the rear of her home, Dorothy Westley, sx. broke down and she was struck by an automobile. Tuesday.
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Stabber Gets 3 Months
Because he stabbed Lester Aquilla, 1905 Lamley street during an altercation said to have been over Miss Jane Austin, Richard Hudgins, 1903 Lamley street, was sentenced to three months in the House of Correction after a hearing in the Northeastern police station, Friday.
Hold Auto Driver
Charged with assaulting and knocking down Louis P. Dages, 2011 E. Preston street, with an automobile. James Jones, 2011 E. man field in the Eastern police station, pending the outcome of the man's injuries.
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He married Miss Margaret Vorhees in 1891.
Dr. Roman He was co-founder and for many years editor of the Journal of the National Medical Association.
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Americans Blamed For Insult To Diplomat and Egyptian Princess
PARIS, FRANCE—American influence in drawing the color line hobo up here again last week when Stephanie Alexis, Charge d'Affaires, the Republic of Haiti at Brussels was barred from entering the ball room at a hotel, here.
The Martin Diplomat in company with Princess Mansour Deau, wife of the Crown Prince of Egypt, had dined in the Coupele when they tempted to enter the ball room down stairs. The manager told them that on account of the American whites' objection they would not be permitted. Alexis made a protest to Premier Raymond Poincaré reminding him that 500,000 of France's Negro citizens are liable to similar treatment in their own counter.
The Paris public is complaining that the Paris government allows their patrons to lay down the law here and have everything done as they wish.
Crazy Man Hurts Three
Believed by police to have been insane from excessive drinking Edward Blake, 303 S. Dallas street, seriously injured three persons with bricks Thursday. Without any provocation, Blake started throwing bricks at person passing in front of his home. Miss Annie Tulman, 303 S. Dallas street; Adale Curran, 1618 Baltimore street and Earl Fowlks, 315 Dallas street were hurt.
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Marcus Garvey Not Eager for Return to United States
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
BRITISH WATCH MARCUS GARVEY LIKE A HAWK
Each Flatters the Other in Diplomatic Game, Saya Visitor to Garvey.
NO U. S. RETURN
Garvey Admits Bitterness for Leaders and Politics.
CLEVELAND. — Garvey and the British Jamaican government are flattering and watching each other, says Inez Wallace, white correspondent, after a visit to Garvey in Jamaica.
The story was carried recently in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. In part it reads as follows:
"I waited five minutes and was ushered into large office where girls work on typewriters and secretary and executives hurried back after telling a secretary who approached me that I Mr. Garvey had any word to say back to the American press. I would be glad to take it. I was ushered into Mr. Garvey's
office.
"Let me say that no bank president in New York has a longer line of lackers than Marcus Garvey. He rose and looked at me impertinent, almost defiantly—an act I realized that perhaps, he has a great antimony for while person. But he is a gentleman. I held out my hand, he took solemnly.
which. Many of the people are illiterate' he said, 'but it behooves us who are educated to look out for and their rights. They deserve world recognition and a place in the League of Nations.'
Race Mixing
"I asked Mr. Garvey if he believed in the races mixing and intermarrying as they do in Jamaica. No, he said. "Socially we, we mix for the sake of the race. We should meet on business and diplomatic lines as equals."
"Garvey referred to the rotten politics of America as a trouble to be declared that he states desire to go back to the states except as a private citizen. Speaking of his many followers, America, Garvey declared that he be in Cleveland and 20,000 in Cincinnati. When asked will Jamaica become a white man's land or man's land after marrying, he answered promptly. Neither, it will be a black man's land—for the whites cannot live permanently in the tropics—they should stay in God intended them, in a temperate climate."
Much Bitterness
"Asked. 'Have you any bitterness towards the United States?' He responds. 'I have much bitterness towards certain individuals in the States.' Garvey, however, spoke highly of the British government.
Colored Statue
"On the way home I rode past his residence—a house where beaded curtains hang from the doors, a bunch of the Africa he loves. In his front yard is a huge colored taupe."
WOMEN AT ST. PAUL
Annual Woman's Day services were held at St. Paul M.E. Church, Sunday, June 23. The Rev. M. Estelle Turner preached at the 11 o'clock services and others on program days. Mrs. Minnie Hopkins and Mrs. Ellinor Hutchins, Mrs. Rachel Wicks preached at 3 p.m. Mrs. Rachel Wicks preached at 3 p.m. Matthews, Mrs. Jessie Collick, Mrs. Lucy Sorrell, Miss Ala Taylor, Miss Evelyn Douglass, Mrs. Maude Kelton, Mrs. Pres. Mrs. A. B. Jackson presided at the night service and Miss Mabel Whitening of the Y. Church, Mrs. A. B. Jackson presided at the national addresses. Others on the program were Mrs. Rachel Thompson, Mrs. Elia Jessett, Mrs. Mary E. Mossley, Mrs. Lula Jenth, Mrs. W. William, Mrs. Bettie Bow-
New Adventist Church
PHILADELPHIA, PA. (A. N. P.)—Ground was broken for the new Second Seventh Day Adventist Church, 18th and Flitzwater streets, which building is to cost about $100,000. The building will include a nurses' bureau, a library, and classrooms for domestic science and handicrafts. The congregation was organized in 1811 and became 600 members. The new building is to be of brick and will be completed in the winter.
Dayton Honors 3 Bishops
DAYTON, OHIO, (A. N. P.)—Three bishops of the African Methodist Church, who have played an important role in the fight to before University were here Sunday: the testimonial to Bishop W. H. Heard, Bishop Joshua A. Jones, and Bishop J. A. Carey, took the form of a monster parade and mass meeting which school officials, local churches, organizations, and churches participated.
In Europe
CHEYNEY, PA.—Miss E. R. Hall
and Mrs. Laura Wheeler Waring
both members of the Cheyney faculty,
are spending the summer in Europe.
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PORTER ARRESTED IN $100,000 THEFT
Russell Everett, 21-Year-Old Train Porter, Held in New Hampshire.
tention; Youth Is Silent.
PORTSMOUTH, N.H., (CNS)-Russell Everett, 21-year old porter of Peru, Ind, attached to the Sells-Floto circus, was arranged in police court, Friday, charged with grand larceny of a satchel containing $100,000, property of Tom Mix, noted cowboy screen star. Everett was held in $10,000 for his appearance before the October Grand Jury. When called to the bar he resisted, and was arrested. Judge Ernest Gupill ordered him held. City Marshall George Ducker and Patrolman Dennis Kelley of the local police told the story of the theft to the court. City Solicitor Ralph McCarthy, City Judge to put the case who was lodged in county jail in default of bail.
Shipped Money Away
Mix's handbag containing his cash and securities was recovered in Concord, Thursday night. Everett car it was sold by police. All but $3,900 of the amount in the bag was recovered. The balance was shipped to Peru, Ind, so Everett informed the local police received word from the American Express Co., that a suit case Everett sent to Peru, Ind, before meeting with Crowder, in Peru, Ind, and was being held by company officials. This is the suit case in which Everett in his confession, declared he was the owner of Mix. It will be returned to local authorities for inspection.
Made Blg Splurge
Suspicion was pointed to Everett, when he made several purchases, including a store and a wrist watch for $35. In each case, he passed new currency.
U.A.M.E. CONFERENCE MAKES APPOINTMENTS
Harmony Marks Annual Session of United American M.E.'s
ABERDEEN, Md.-With complete harmony prevailing, the United American M. E. Conference announced the following appointments at its recent session here:
M. E. Calvary, Dr. E. I. Davis, St. Mary's, Rev. J. Joseph Statesman, Calvert, Rev. G. W. Harman, Balmimore, St. Luke, Rev. William B. b. h. Palms, Rev. G. W. Starkey, Cedars and Conowing, Rev. G. W. Milburn; Millingon, Rev. Samuel Brown.
The Rt. Rev. T. A. Boulden, presiding Bishop, called the session to
Praises Youth
In his sermon, Sunday evening, Bishop Boulden declared that all of the young people were not going to the devil. "When we take the right view of conditions in the church, we are compelled to that the young people are as much interested in it. In fact, they are as more earnest attitude towards the church and they are the future builders," he declared.
An old-time experience meeting was held Monday evening, under the auspices of the Junior and Senior daughters of the Conference.
Baltimore Girl Gets H. U. Post
Dr. Alethia Washington, formerly a teacher in the Coppin Normal School, has been a fellowship in the Department of Education at Howard University. Miss Washington was recently a faculty at Ph.D. degree at Ohio State University.
PHARAOH NOT WILLING TO LET 'MY PEOPLE GO'
PHARAOH NOT WILLING TO LET 'MY PEOPLE GO'
Writer in American Mercury
Thinks Nothing Will be
Done About Race Problem.
BRUTALITY IN NORTH
Use of "Mister."
NEW YORK CITY.—Pharaoh is not willing to "let my people go," according to G. Peyton Wertenbaker, writing on "A White Man in the South," in the July issue of the American Mercury.
"We are afraid of the Negroes. We don't understand them, and we don't know what would happen if they should freely mix with us," Wertenbaker says.
He continues in part:
"As long as we can keep them in practical servitude we don't have to worry about the slaves it is to our economic advantage to keep them in servitude. They do the work we don't like to do and for minimum wages.
"We feel about them as Egypt for the Toupons and Rome about the Toupons."
"If the Negroes were removed, their loss, at least temporarily, would have great and detrimental effects upon the economy, not only employed as servants, but in the north they are the body of labor for the large factories and are in innumerable small businesses. They are the chief body of labor for the cotton plantation in the south from large farms. A large percentage of Negroes in this country have small farms and businesses of their own. There are almost no totally idle Negroes as are idle parasite white men of wealth. The Negroes have a share in the economic life of the nation which is not easy to do without suddenly." Wertenbaker talks about a white Episcopal mission travelling in the interest of Negro education and addressing teachers and Negro professional men as "Mister." At home his wife and daughters smile indigently about his reference to colored people as "Mister," and Mr. Washington," he says.
BRUTALITY
"The white man is brutal to the Negro in the north." says Wertenbaker, describing how, as newspaper editor, he policed up a prisoner who didn't like to be searched.
The turnkey struck him across the face with the heavy ring full of blood. He hindered the desk and helped him. The captain came out of his office and kicked him until he was unconscious. The nun suppose he is dead? said the turnkey.
"What difference does it make?" asked the sergeant, "we will say picked him up in a street fight anyhow."
Down south we treat Negroes as children, laugh at them and take them off periodically to jail. They have no chance to defend them casely but the police caught something really bad, they are liable to be strung up, but even then there is little unnecessary cruelty. We are always prepared. Down south a white man is not banged for shooting Negro.
THREE SOLUTIONS.
The writer declares there are three solutions of the Negro problem.
"Either he will disappear like the Indian or become a slave again, losing everything but the animal instinct to work and obey masters or eventually struggle up until he can challenge racial mastery of the whites. The Negroes can take our civilization away from us they are welcome to it. It isn't worth much anyway."
Pittsburgh C.M.E. Conference Meets
PITTSBURGH, Pa.-With the largest delegation in its history, the Pittsburgh and Detroit C.M.E. conference closed its session here last week at Carter's Temple C.M.E. church of which the Rev. C. A. Craig is pastor. The Rev. J. M. Wooden, presiding elder, presided with Mrs. M. Harris Craig and the Rev. C. E. Chapman serving as secretaries. Mrs. Katie Missionary society.
RAPS "UNCLE TOMS."
Declaring that religion must concern itself with conditions on this side as well as the other, Dr. George C. Parker, editor of the Christian Index, declared that the great need of the people is economic freedom. Said he: "Bishops, the officers and priests, are of value only as they stand for the highest, noblest and best in our economic, religious and civic life. The worst thing in the world is the lack of grinding, bowing Negro preacher, who will sell his race in his manhood for measly dollars. The time has passed for the man who is an opportunist, for the man who is afraid to speak his convictions." Church leaders freely admire Dr. Parker as the most candidate for the episcopacy in the C.M.E. church and his elevation is expected at the 11930 general conference Louisville, Ky., next week, or when ever he is invited more in the C.M.E. church.
Two other addresses which created widespread comment were those by Drs. J. Moppin and J. McGraw, the Church, and "Science and Religion" by C. E. Chapman. Dr. Moppins advocated a program that will more effectively protect, hold and benefit mankind. He says the church as an institution should be opened "seven days a week, each month," but cannot expect to undo in one day what has been done in six days." The mission society raised a large sum for mission preachers. The membership of churches showed a decided increase.
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
20 Years Between these Two Photos of Dr. Bragg, Who Has Ordained 12 Pastors
Rev. Dr. George F. Bragg, 66, rector of St. James P. E. church, Baltimore, as he looks today and as he appeared twenty years ago. Dr. Bragg was for four years trustee of Hampton Institute, Virginia, and organized Grace church, Norfolk, before coming here thirty-eight years ago. His newspaper, the Ledger, was merged with the AFRO two decades ago and he was the last week he helped ordain the eleventh member of his congregation to the ministry. Pastors he has sent out include, Rev. James N. Deaver, Atlantic City; Rev. E. Robt. Bennett, Brooklyn; Rev. Basil Kent, Lunenburg, Va.; Rev. Charles Sedgwick, Asbury Park; Rev. Robt. A. Jackson, New Jersey; Rev Walter Payne Stanley, Poledown; Rev. Robert C. Cunningham, Charlestown, W. Va.; Rev. Gustave Caution, Wilmington, N. C.; Rev. Edmund Trotman, Cumberland, Md.; Rev. David Croll, Annapolis, and Rev. Tollie Caution, Baltimore.
M. E. Missionary Women in Annual Session Here
All Organizations Are Invited To Worship With Us.
MRS. SARAH BAILEY, President.
REV. D. E. RICE, Pastor.
3 P. M.—Sermon by Rev. C. H. Fountain of Mt. Morlah A. M. E. Church, Annapolis, Md. Music by his choir, accompanied with his officers and members. REV. C. H. STEPTEAU, Pastor. THADDEUS COPELAND, Chairman.
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P. S. HENDERSON, Photographer
Phone Vernon 6016
The twenty-ninth annual meeting and the seventh school of missions of the Washington Conference. Woman's Home Missionary Society of the M.E. Church was held at St. Paul, M.E. Church on Monday night, the Rev. W. S. Jackson, pastor of St. Paul, served Holy Communion and others on the program were Miss Mary J. Knight and Mrs. Bessie Austin. On Tuesday Mrs. Della Simmons and Mrs. Bessie Austin. On Thursday Mrs. Della Simmons and the Rev. W. A. English, of Sharp Street Church, were participants. Reports were read. At the evening service, Dr. J. W. Haywood, of Morgan College, delivered a speech and speakers were Mrs. Bluette Washington and the Rev. Victor Johnson.
Wednesday
Speakers at the Wednesday sessions were the Rev. A. J. Mitchell, field agent of Morgan College; the Rev. Ernest Lyon, of Ames M.E Church, and Mrs. Florence Gather, national field secretary of the W.H.M. Society. The School of Missions was held in the afternoon.
Thursday
Devotions were given by the Rev. J. D. Brown, of Asbury M.E. Church, Thursday morning. Bering the Rev. J. D. Brown, M.E. Church, conducted noontide period. School of Missions was held in the afternoon and the Rev. J. W. Waters of Johnston M.E. Church, M.E. E. were spoke at the evening.
Rev. Trier Speaks
On Friday, the Rev. C. Y. Trigle, of Metropolitan Church, had charge of the devotions and care of the congregation. Care of the Mt. Zion Church, Washington, and the Rev. M. J. Nazier,
Officers
Officers are Mrs. P. D. Carroll, president; Mrs. M. P. Thomas, corresponding secretary; Miss H. H. Beason, recording secretary, and Mrs. M. J. Camper, treasurer.
Ill Wife of Teacher Jumps from Window
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Marshall, wife of Cyrus Marshall, 2543 McCalloh street, Douglas high teacher, in a moment of temporary insanity, brought on by a long nervous depressure from the window of her mother's home on Mount street, Monday, breaking most of the bones on the left side of her body.
Mrs. Marshall was taken to the Franklin Square apartment where she is said to meet Thursday morning. It is said by friends of the young woman that she had been despondent since Christmas, brought on. it is thought, by the death of her brother, last year, her uncle and that of a friend. Mr. Marshall and the doctor, who had been attending his wife, went to the third story back room for a moment. Upon their return they saw the form of Mrs. Marshall disappearing out of the window. Neighbors were in shock and despondency. Mrs. Marshall frequently had hysteria with weeping spells.
IN THE COURTS
CENTENNIAL M. E. CHURCH
Caroline at Bank Street
Rev. Charles S. Briggs, Pastor.
WOMEN'S DAY
10 A. M.-Junior.
11 A. M.-Junior Worship,
Sermon, Mrs. Ida J. Raiff.
2:30 P. M.-Sunday School.
Mr. George Mitchell, Supt.
3:30 P. M.-Platform Meeting.
8 P. M.-Special Program.
ST. PAUL M. E. CHURCH
Sutton and Schroder Streets.
Rev. Walter S. Jackson, Pastor.
9:30 A. M.-Church School. (June
July and August Sundays.) Mr.
Thomas H. Franklin, Supt.
11 A M.-Sermon by pastor, Subject
"Three Great Works of God."
8:00 to 9:00 P. M.—One Hour Services.
Sermon by pastor, subject, "But He Repented?"
Music by Senior Chair, Mrs. Annie O. Brown, Organist-Director.
PERKINS SQUARE
BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. F. R. Williams, Pastor
Rev. W. D. Yerby, Associate
9:30 A. M.—Sunday School.
11:00 A. M.—Sermon by Associate Pastor
6:30 P. M.—B. Y. P. U.
6:30 P. M.—Sacred Cantata by the Choir, "Great White Throne."
NELSON MEM. HOLY TEMPLE
1003 McCulloh Street
Rev. Elizabeth Green, Pastor
11 A. M.—Divine and Test.
8 P. M.—Prescending and Test.
Tuesday, 8 P. M.—Preaching and Test.
Thursday Divine Healing and Test.
JOHN MARK M. E. CHURCH
Biddle St, near Penna. Ave.
11 A. M.-Sermon by Pastor.
90 S. School.
2 P. M.-A bus ride to Elkridge camp
meeting. Fare round trip, 75c.
8 P. M.-Preataching.
JULY 4th, a bus excursion to Atlantic
City. Buses will leave town 1 A.
M. Fare round trip, 450.
Rev. J. J. Barnes, Pastor.
GILLIS MEM. M. E. CHURCH
Stockton St, near Baltimore St.
Rev. Levi Woolford, Pastor.
11 A. M.-Sermon by Pastor.
200 S. School, George Rich-
ardson, Supt.
3:30 P. M.-Sermon by Ida J. Raiff,
to the auxiliary Carroll Ben-
ieficial Pleasure Club.
Monday Night and Wednesday prayer meet-
class. Friday night, prayer meet-
SPEED'S EMANUEL BAPTIST
CHURCH
Roberts Hall, Catsonville, Md.
10:30 A. M.-Preaching.
2:00 P. M.-Sabbath School.
3:00 P. M.-Juvenile Elks will turn
out.
6:30 P. M.-B. Y. P. U.
3:00 P. M.-Preaching.
Isabella E. Byrd, church clerk.
REV. WM. H. HACKSON, Pastor.
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RACE DELEGATES AT CHURCH CONFERENCE
BUCK HILL FALLS, PA—Leaders of Protestant Church life in America assembled here at the call of the Christian Herald in the first annual Institute of Religion and Spiritualism in discussion at the problems of unity of the Protestant church denominations. Among the delegates were Dr. and Mrs. T. H. Copeland, of Hopkinsville, Ky., of the Colored Methodist Church, George E. Haynes of New York, a secretary of the Federal Council of Churches.
Mrs. Copeland described the contacts through the white and colored churches in her home own in exile in the city. She used denominations as illustration of the necessity of facing the race question on a Christian basis in any effort for unity of the denominations. She urged white churches and Christian churches to touch toward their colored brethren and sisters as one of the steps toward church unity.
Dr. Haynes spoke of the effort through interdenominational action of dealing with the race problem both within the church and in the situations of the protection of human life, the seeking of justice for Negroes before the law and justice in economic conditions, and the outloud out of one of the great obstacles in getting larger results in good will and co-operation between the race was the fact that church loyalty runs through denomination, and the problem must be faced by theited church forces.
Murderer Escapes;
Cops Out $1200
ALEXANDRIA, Va.—Plunging from the rear door of a bus in which he was being taken to Pittsburgh County, Pennsylvania from officers last Tuesday. According to reports, Lilly, 51, was arrested in Alexandria, June 9, by Sergeants Sims and McClary and Policeman Roberts to Sheriff Charles A Murphy, Monday. Murphy, it is said had Lilly on a rear seat of the bus while he occupied another seat. When near Danville, and as the bus slowed plunged through the rear door of the bus to the road and fled.
Lilly is wanted for shooting a woman in Pittsburgh County and killing a policeman in Wilson, N.C. The men, who were shot and killed from a reward offered for Lilly's capture were dumbfounded when they learned of his escape.
Shaw Man on Penn. Faculty
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.-Dr. James L. Martin, graduate of the Leonard schools of medicine and pharmacy of Shaw University of radiology in the University of Pennsylvania, it was announced last week.
TO WORK HERE
A.
Rev. G. Herbert Johnson, S.D.L.
Boston, Mass., who will cast his lot
here. Rev. Johnson was pastor of
the Elm Baptist church of Boston
and was a member of the graduating
class of Lincoln university in 1902.
CAPTAIN BROWN
PREPARING FOR
JULY 4 CROWDS
CAPTAIN BROWN
PREPARING FOR
JULY 4 CROWDS
Fourth of July will be a gala day at Brown's Grove. St. John's A.M.E. Sunday school is preparing to carry one or the largest crowds in its history on the two trips; the first at 8:30 and the next at 2:30 p.m.
In the evening the Natators, a well known organizer of young men, will give Saturday afternoon excursions for the past several weeks, will run another one of these popular events, with the boats leaving at 6:30 p.m.
Captain Brown's stenner has carried the largest young crowds thus far of any season in his twenty-three years of excursion business.
Speaking to a reporter from this paper several days ago, Captain Brown talked weirds of pride of the thousands passers back and forth to his grave since 1006, without accident or loss of life to a single passenger. The Amor company equipped a boat and brained a boiler, the latter cost more than $17,000.00, and is without a doubt, the safest and finest excursion steamer anywhere in the world. The company should have the support of every race loving person in Baltimore and vicinity because of the fact that it is not only the largest business of the company but also the only excursion steamer manned and owned entirely by the race.
A. M. E. ZIONS RAISE $29,606 FOR MISSIONS
Secy. Medford's Report Shows Two-Thirds of Money Goes to Foreign Fields.
FIVE FIELDS
Work in Gold Coast, Liberia, Virgin Islands, and S. A.
A total of $28,696.90 was raised for foreign missionaries to the report of Rev. H. T. Medford, executive secretary of the Department of Foreign Missions of the A. M. E. Zion Church.
The report, which covers his term of office from June 1, 1928 to May 21, 1929 also shows that $7,622.67 of that amount was raised by local Women's Committees throughout the denomination territory. This represents about one-half of the money received by this society, the other half having been sponsored or missionary work in local fields.
Two-thirds To Fields
The Rev. Mr. Medford's report also shows that two-thirds of every dollar of the money collected went to the military. This is said to compare exceptionally well with shows generally made by foreign missionary organizations. On this money, $444.64 came from the United States, $481.75 came through bequeaths and the negotiations of loans. Appropriations of this fund include $7,707.71 for transportation and salary of missionaries on the ground, $1,000.00 for mobilization and expansion work, $484.00 for liquidation of notes and $1,084.47 for supplies.
13 Unlucky for this Couple
Millard Quarles is seeking divorce from his wife, Myrtle Quarles, whom he charges with desertion in his bill filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore, work, through his attorney, S.B. Bond.
He states in his bill that they were married September 13, 1916 and lived together until May 10, 1925, when she deserved him and is now living in New York City. The couple have no children.
Hold Daddy of Three
Daniel Hargrove, 1238 Ashland avenue, was held when given a hearing for falling to support his three minor children, in the Northeastern police station. Tuesday.
OBLATE SISTERS of Providence, at Greenwood Electric Park, Thursday, July 11th.
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6
—_—_
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CNY
an tndenendent Weekly MewtPaDe
A Champion 6§ Civie Welfare
‘and The Sqaare.Deal
Oe
a ney a we ane BE
na BUNS eT SACOG te, Ma 07 THE APRO-
Siena Sat
hero BER omer aug muse
eg GRPIE, Se ony ae ge
Be Monri te gk aaa tf
Ceeecip ie fils natin sont
wie 2 i i, Hen "Band eons ne
rere ee
[What The “AFRO” Stands For \
{_ What The ee
nme ase Sa a
| iiss MNOS. Sty BEF oe
seein
Petre Ea none tr enn nee
Bei ce rt
Cae ee Saree cate mtnees
See ate tare
SRE na mone 8
si etd en
1 Bee et oe ier and te ae
ern aat as in
THOUGHTS OF THE FOUNDER
tonne 198
men you plant. late Jour YAsaton. Te
nRiiGh AOE Bae Se Ronazede and howiands
of poor people who will not ‘be able to take
2f Pome Fup oy, et eer ae
A ae ypu cane el game
one ound ca breath of esha
You will be amply rewarded.
> Lie and Legend
‘The German press told of the death of a fe-
male Tarzan in the wilds of West Africa re-
cently.
‘The story ran thus:
‘An African worker. hunting in a forest
here no human being ever set foot be-
fore, meta patty of apes and fired at a
particularly fine specimen. The animal
Tail to the ground. Stooping to examine
ft he was surprised to find the body, not
Of an ape but of an African woman,
ithout ornaments. or tattoo marks,
Te was presumed that she had been
carried off in her youth by the apes and
had become one of them.
From this it looks as if it were not a great
step from an African to an ape, and apes had
been able to deetvilize an African native woman
with little trouble.
‘Hardly had this slory been a nine days’ won-
den Until the folowing dispatch was cabled
from ‘Cape Town, South Africa, to the London
daily press. Tt was printed last week in she
African World:
'A German overseer was hunting in the
Cameroons. and seeing a company of
‘pes, shot one. To his horror he saw an
inelothed, half-human girl, with blonde
hair, tumble out of the branches and
fall to the ground, while the apes, scared
bv the shot, ran away. The strange
creature, who had been shot just above
the heart, died a few minutes later.
Note how the story has changed from a na-
tive to @ German hunter and from a native
girl to a white gir) with blonde hair.
the African World calls attention to the real
facts ‘which He’ at the base of both reports:
‘Two or three months ago a native
hunter reported to the officer in charge
Ol a district of the British mandated
territory of Cameroon that he had ac~
Cidentaily killed a native women while
hunting In the forest. On enquiry the
District officer was satisfied that this was
‘one of the accidents which occasionally
occur in the forest where the under~
growth is thick and the light bad. ‘The
Snvoluntary homicide was acquitted of
blame and the story was probably for-
gotten.
But it has reappeared in two entirely dif-
ferent. legends in Germany, England, and half
around the world.
‘Thus a true story is changed into a tie, 1nd
fa lie into a legend. which we may expect to
Zssume a doven different forms and even get
jato the books on history and ethnology.”
Don’t Blame Brazil
Brazil, which, despite its large Negro populs:
eet Rts “dramh the line against, Negroes ‘rt
Hon. States is not to be blamed. for ft
the Unley. Ford aginst importing. lac
Prorat ane fo work. his newly” established TU
fer‘plantation at Manoas, Brazil
ype americans have taken thelr race pre
Judice around the world.
oe rece a Haitian diplomat is relused ad
migion'to a cabaret because his. color Tigh
iene the moneyed. Americans.
tere mutations are welcomed. but Ne
rots are not acceptable fo the natives.
‘One Brazilian newspaper says:
“che American Negro bas not the men-
tally and. moral characterises of the
Brasiian Negro.
"Phew is no. reason why we. should
‘open our frontiers without reserve to
(Become black unassimiable clement of
Hkcn Amenca, Hospitality is beautiful
Durie We more dangerous to accept. a
Qungerous, ‘persecuted, unhappy people.
se erocs'of real value the gale 1s
een Sur they are unlling to Weave the
States.
coming fsem 2 country nearly one-third Ne
\ gro, where there is no color line, and wher
£fo.. hen ate eligible for any public ofc th
fright sound stranze.
EE fe'Braall reed upon us for her concep
tion of the average. white man in the. Unite
Boge st wouldn't set a far different picture,
‘Siecats only error lies in the gullbity wit
whieh It bas svatiowed he story of tne Negr
Reitola in the white press
{that story were faithful, accurate and fal
every ome of the 36. Negro” newspapers in t
Galea” Slates would. be forced out of busine
Brazil, which, despite its large Negro populs~
eitel “Gian ‘the. tine against. Negroes from
Hon. a States is not to be. blamed for tts
protest to Henry Ford against importing black
‘Americans to work his newly established rub-
fer‘plantation at Manos, Brazil
“ype americans have taken thelr race pre-
Judice around the world.
oe cea Hatian diplomat is relused ad
mnigiont'to a cabaret because his. color might
iene the moneyed. Americans.
te re mutations are. welcomed. but Ne-
groes are not acceptable to the natives.
‘One Brazilian newspaper says:
“che American Negro bas not the men-
tally and. moral characterises of the
Brasiian Negro.
"Phew is no. reason why we. should
‘open our frontiers without reserve to
(Become black unassimiable clement of
em Ametca, Hosplcalty is beautiful
Durie We more dangerous to accept. a
Qungerous, ‘persecuted, unhappy people.
se erocs'of real value the gale 1s
een Sur they are unlling to Weave the
States.
coming from # country nearly one-third Ne-
poctante there. fe no ‘color line 'and where
§fo.,Nher ate eligible for any public office. ths
fright sound stranze.
‘Bet ie Breal telied upon us for her concep-
tict'of the average white man in the United
Boge st wouldn't set a far different picture,
Siecats only error les in he gulibity ‘wit
whieh It Uns svatlowed the story of the Negro
Reitola in the white press
af that story were faithful, accurate and fale
every ome of the 36. Negro’ newspapers 1m. th
Galea” Slates would: be forced out of BUSINES
>
Get’Em Ready
Charles 5. Weir. of Washington. now a stu-
aon at the" University of Chicago. failed in
$emt stesca examination for Annapolis ecause
OF detective vision
snining ofilals, in order to. avold rite
cis’ conducted a. second ‘examination and. re-
Ghetk ‘before they ecrihed that his eyesight
‘ras too poor to qually him.
‘Weir was the only survival of two principals
and five alternates ‘nominated by. Congressman
Cheat ‘DePaist for the Naval Academy. One
Ge oe oid veo Tailed to report Tor the April
Tr ods, cepular mental examipations, and Uaree
Znked them
‘These menia) tess were marked on a, scale
ranging from & (0:0. n order to. pass, i 38s
ectsery to make a. grade of 25 tn each side
Ject. The three men who flunked made aver-
Byes of 1 13 and 12, that is, about 90: per
oon =
To recheck on the work of ie. examiners
who’ masked ieee papets seems posable, Which
Theans that condidntes must be sble 1 ‘male
bust high grades dn those teatg that they cane
not be disqualified on technicalities.
‘Down in Leavenworth. Kansas. is Mr. Blanche
ax Bice whe fas ne ‘isdnclen ot "hung
coached 1800 men to. pass army and naval
Scademy tate "On every ship and in ever)
_ init se once raced bp br Brus
‘cy Between tow and the wextAnnapolis exam
_ jelous ia Febery ah Apr 6 we sures
the ‘Annapolis candidates consult Mr. Bruce.
Absurdities
From Tenaessce
‘THEORY FACT
vigour peopit do The Pink Rose
noseauter Pen Ne- Amusement Garden o0
not associate Ht) NG. Water, avenue, Mem
cial equality. phis, was built org-
a ea oy assor mally as & residence
ciate ‘pees Cor Miss Amands
ciate ith, Sonate”‘on Serusps, colored, 2
terms of equality with one ‘of Memphis’s lead-
Merms of, oval” in ing-white candy, Ak
Negroes pha (Tenn) ers) just after the
Be sana Appeal. World. War.
rom Mississippi
weve do not practice In” MSsissippl 228
coon eiatity and we per" cent of all, Ne
Sei erection to groes are of, (while
people who do."—Jack- black) mixed blood;
son (Miss.) Daily News. 188 per cent of all
thilares’ under’ Ae
Sears ot ager and 208
Ber cent of all under
Ene year ‘of age. WC.
S"Gensus fqures)
From Georgia,
the Negro knoxs "CHICAGO— White
his place. socially, and relatives of the late
fo PMosible. Negro James” Banks, "lh
wants anything €x- white lawyer, are
cept the status al- suing his colored wife
ready fixed in the or his $350,000 estate.
Tae» Oatlanta’ (Ga) The couple, ted 10
Constitution. gether 43 years in At-
fenta, ‘before coming
Han to weed in 1821"
ae F
Morgan’s Future
‘This editorial has been purposely delayed n=
erTnis etary Bes ‘Morgen Colleee.campaleh
th he et, barra ein any wa.
As te ation, Board several yeart
er Senet in tne college B5060H C1 Would
ae a Me ayo S200, 0h
Rate te sMjone after a sirugge which has
Tisha eee eof Breadent 9.0. Speneet
area the Powe pigwine chairman of the
Mcrae wastes
ard Of TUBER ay need for thse continued
pind wt ther or Morgan college tne nit
college in Maryland available for our boys and
girls.
stance from the taxpayers, of the city
antaitanes rere Mun Teaoh Mie Morgan
tea ae cent and ar-secing enough
ie ie
EE Prore ity supports a normal school 1
ecatmor tg tocar a tencet taining
ould be wills det “some “nich, arrange
over to More? governing te abolishment a
ene noe col and the waste of Is
ihe te me Normal School at ToWeON
ore to the Sta ned to conceive of the Uae
eX ‘ing work of the” Bowie slate Noroal
Wich ee Golced Teachers to Morean
Sena ot et ailion dolls yetr t
eta Ee oe The whi taee. allo
Ene eta unter of Maryland, andthe
goo Sone ke Hopkins, Western
Mmined College es
Hen coe eased—legnlly of eourse—rom
these schools
ee eho tes. fostered by Morgan of it
aneoRe genta compel the state to admit, Ne
alum, woul cueaty of Margiand or provide
Freee Meher clelate. medial, a2 TaN
Aen in hme Stee pace
ing fae carbuet the stale would be
fora, as, he, cates grea Negro univer
Filing er tban be forest to open the. dou
Picts o eine
inte fois one cuserrequirement~-Morgan
| must east off its church afliations and become
eecarian sche
© RO ee boord sat. present sndependent
ae ere eating. But the Washington A
Se cede resslion at sia
session requiring assurance from the trustees
feston, mac tars tie church ve sul
thay Meunoge eepayment of all tral the church
Eos putin i
‘The community is grateful to the Methodist
Bang aU of Rr etaultrsent an ap
Pe er organ Colee
TE Morea coer hat the college can pe.
(ee eet noe ae wl ake el
frm A ees aee sate cs Oy sven
Ae church eonseclins
‘Today it has a choice which it may not have
sees sia The harch andthe true
& dacads hence, The ‘starch and the unless
Finding Things Out
‘The first thought about the result of the
Hoover tea. party is thal Mrs. Hoover's eourlesy
Thre, DePriest has” dziven the "Southern
Hoovererats, back where they’ belong-in. the
Bemocratte party.
Mtr Hoover ie dubbed a auinmy and ignora-
mus, The first Republican to carry Virginia,
TTovas, and Florida, in sixty years, ne loses al
fre gained in the last election by giving a svi
Lek tothe crackers" idea of social equality.
‘The AFRO'S view is that the break nad to
come anyway, tod the DePsiest tea. party
night as well be the final straw as anything
oe.
‘There can be no permanent alliance between
‘the “all-men-up" Republican party of Lincoln
fand Roosevelt and the "some-mes-down” Demo-
ratio party as it exists In Die.
Sooner or later ‘in Hoover would have sired
of compromising himseli—elling nis sou! fo
Shother sure-fire term in the White House
"the South cannot be. civilized. by. alliation
with the Republican party. It must repent ol
Fis wiekedness and. inhumanity. and must 23
the price for its centuries of human debesement
No one, not even Mr. Hoover, is evangelist
enough to eect the reform, and the sooner th
‘White House and the. lily-white Republicans
fnd it out, the better for’ themselves, and th
fallen.
‘The first thought about the result of the
Hooter tea pariy is that Mrs. Hoovers courtesy
Bere pepe has. ctiven the Southern
Hoovercrais, back where they” belong—in the
Benocade pert.
Mie Hoover i dubbed a duinmy and sgnora-
mus. The first Republican to carry Virginia,
TTorss, and Florida in alsty years, ne lose all
fre gained in the last election by giving = site
Wea o the crackers idea of soial equality.
‘The AFRO view ig that the break nad. to
come anyway dod the ‘DePsest tea" party
ght ae well be the final straw as anything
tae,
‘There can be no permanent aliance between
‘the “all-men-up" Republican party of Lincoln
tnd Roowevell and the "some-mea-down” Demo-
Eratie party as it exists in Dis.
Sooner or later in Hoover would have tired
of compromising himsel{~seling ‘is. sou! or
Shother sure-hre term in the White House
"Phe ‘South cannot ‘be. civilized. by alaton
withthe Republican party. Tt_must repent of
Ter wlekedness and innusnansty. and. must pay
the price for ie centuries of human debasement,
No one, not even Mr. Hoover, is evangelist
enough 16 effect the reform, and the sooner the
‘White House and the lily-white Republicans
fd it out the etter for themselves and. the
-
Speak Up. Gents
Senator Cole Blease (Democrat, South Caro-
hina) Infainous for his indecent "higeers in the
ta uate ee ee a oe
a ee
sere te coat wee ae
ae corres 2 oe
en ae Se iis sad ta
a ae
a Ae tet rane, Pulnientes
ee ng eae
Mer ae ot ae pee
hing etry tag oe
conta cis Nips be Tends a
Reng reper
jim-erow cars in Washington for the colored
People.
SN ci tthe’ Reverend Ri Ws Matic,
nate See i Tae wanes
ABE nie canons ier of Se
ee ee ce ee oes
home state who supported his views on the race
eo
ean hl Nn.
‘the Blease statement for the AFRO then. E
Se ee Arie Gaoe th
“obscene” poetry of Blease on the White House
eee Sa ae
4 tu oe
Readers may write on any subject they Ie
| oferta cite. canes (ne,
ger See ree Oo a
Sees Me et io Sato et oo
|| log an ett ant Sgn auras evden af
tm sia:
19 he aor
"The Board’ of Trustees of the Virginia, Theo-
session, held at Washington, noticed an article
A BS cies a at
ne ee RN eat
may bar CLAA. return because of financial
HON Sah aie, Bei ate
Hel ie GEESE GY ate eat
Ee SR Sa Gar Pee a
Sie ee
ts Bee AAI oe constr
@ record-breaking student body is expected this
SRO as ele CA naa
ment, September 19.
eas sai GORE S SR,
ae GO,
‘Washineton. D.C. Ny,
= The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
SSS
Down Below | x A Save lle
To the Editor:
‘There was no danger of hell freezing over.
__ Pole Grease was stewing over the bottomless
‘ieery pit. A vicious but nonchalant red skinned
devell used a three-pronged fork to Keep Poley
Senter of the intense heat whenever he wandered
{oo close to the cooler edges which brigntly iuml-
nated thermometers showed to be 110 degrees,
‘Cut from the rim the, temperature, gradually
rose until the hottest part registered 135 degrees.
Sickening, but not killing hot.
“You musta been one hell roaring o'fay up yon-
der,” mused the devil boy to himself, as his fork
pricked the pork colored hide of Poley and let
Sut a few drops of hot water.
“r domt see why you pick on me, Big Bos.”
spitied Poly, edging ns wav again to the side
of, the
‘“Don': Big Boy me,” was the devil's come back.
“rm Just plain nigger to most of this crowd, but
I've special orders to keep an eve on you. From
now on address me as Mister Nigger.”
“Mister?” exploded Poley. “I don't mister no
nigeiss. ‘That's secial cquali'y. You don’t know
‘who tam.”
“No,” answered the devil. “but T know where
you're at. an’ where you and me's gwine to be
fer the next trillion years.”
Poley's tongue was parched, his skin shriveled,
and his eye-balls popped as he still essayed che
Tole of the southern gentleman.
“Listen, nig—," he began, but his tongue drop-
ped off. “He caught it in his hands as 1 fell. it
‘as stl wleling, trying to nish the word,
“The devil reached out with his fork and snared
Poley's tongue: and chunked it down in the side
of the pit. He spit on it, flattened it out with
fis. huge bare black heel, then eatching it up
with a twist of his lail, flung it full in Poley=
face.
“T's a good tongue,” ruminated the devil with
‘out malice. “Hitch it'up and try again.”
‘Poley Was embarrassed: he'd never met Sehe-
gambians in South Carolina who dared spit_on
ffis tongue there, He hesitated. ‘The devil pursed
his lips and a mouthful of tobacco juice struck
him squarely in one eye. It was cooling for an
instant, then burned like Sloan's liniment. He
put his tongue in his riouth, and hung his heed,
“Mister,” began Poley.
You're learnin’” was the devil's only comment,
‘using an extraordinary Dig toe to thrust Poley
/away from the side of the pit
rain’ nobody's, senate in hep you now.” the
devil went on, "You raised hell up there and
you're eatchin’ it down here, An’ what it takes
to give ft to you, T aint got nothin’ else but.”
‘Ad Poley cooked on.
k OS CHARLES FRANCIS WELLER,
a le
RD ee Conuke tan}
‘Ain'y nobody's senate kin hep you now,” the
devil went on, “You raised hell up there and
fou're catchin’ st down here. An’ what it takes
Weve ito you, Taint got nothin’ else but."
‘And Potey evoked on.
CHARLES FRANCIS WELLER,
Spartansburg, S.C.
There Was Nothing Obscene in Blease’s Poem.
"he AFRO. Printed eto Inform Ns Readers
How Cowardly and Hateful Blease fs, Yet D.C.
Header Read the Article Again, With Undsr-
standing.
Ta the Bator:
Ge'is indeed a pity that your paper, with a
nation-wide cireulation, should stoop to publish
Micha damnable article as the one carried. in
ins wees uosue’ om the poem written by that
ditty low ‘contempble rat called Cole Blease.
You are giving him just what he wants, pub-
Hiaity What wit he doe He will take coples of
the ARO back down to South Carolina and show
the other rats what he has done while in Con-
ress, ‘The poem, as You state, was read oub of
fhe Congressional Record. because it was, ob-
Soene. but yel sour paper displays it on Ue front
c. :
" A.D. C, READER,
Ir This Writer Thought it Possible for Cole Blease
to Go to Heaven, He Would Stop Praying,
‘To. the Editor:
‘of iate, there has been much ballyhoo going
fon in the ‘newspapers. concerning the wile of
Gongressman Debriest, of Chicago, taking. tea
Sith hrs. Hoover at the White House.
‘Such events should be the rule and not the
exeoption and by virtue of our status as eltizens,
"Senator ‘Blease, of South. Cayolina, passed on
the White House affair, and as usual, his com-
Ment was vile. “He sees evil in everything that
ie dark, ‘I wonder does he think Negroes bang
those davk clouds in the firmament, just before
the storm.
‘eT ahought that such men as he, are going
to heaven, f would stop praying.
PHOMAS E. ROSS,
2038 MeCulloh-s
Inlerracial Meetings, Colossal Joke — Don't
"Amount to-a Tinke's Damn.
‘tothe Editor:
“rhe southern spy, Belle Boyd. although dead
many years, is now to be honored by the daugh-
ferevof the’ rebel cause,” Honor for what? For
fier part in trying to keep black men and women
‘in perpeuial slavery and degradation.
8 Reeently a grou o1 variosan white southern-
ers met in solemn conclave and announced to
fhe World: “That. we. bow our, heads in. shams,
‘ahd Yepret and express tn the strongest andl most
Empiatic terms at our command, our condemna-
{fan and humiliation at sald conduct, it true, cn
the part of the mistress of the White House and
her ‘associates.
"The reason for this outburst is because a. lady
of ur croup Was ited fo, che While House
45 the guest of Ms. Hoover.
| ‘After reading these things T have come to the
conclusion. interracial. meetings. are, a_ colossal
Soke. “they don't amount to a tinker's damn.
EDWARD RYAN,
2137 Madison-av,, New York ity.
Stnator Blease Would Lang Have Been Swing-
ing From a Limb and Widdled With Bullets.
‘To the Baltor:
“Pe. recent. entertainment of Mrs, Oscar De
priest, wile of Representative DePriest, of il
ols has stimed up the wrath and indignation
Of the Senator from South Carolina,
‘The resolution ‘headed:
DS Fequest the President to respect Une White
House." isa. point blank insinuation upon the
chavacter of Our own Mrs. DePriest, and ll
Stegro women.” Such language. should cause the
blood of evsry Negro to boll. 2 the Negro were
fs barbaric as the white people of South, Caro
Tina, the Senator. would Tong. since have been
Sigg fom a, mb, and vidied with bul
‘Mis, ebriest is a lady, -She deserves every
respect that the wives of other, representatives
Teeeive. She has. character, education, inf
ence and, by the way, she pays her sncome tax
"The ‘Negro. papers, organwatiors, and better
thinking white people should make 1t 30 Bot for
the teat sender from Seuth Cocina, tha
he will be asfiamed ¢o let other people know how
Ignorant ana low he is.
iA man who cant respect the women of, an-
other rave can hardiy' be expected to respect his
own.
ORLEANIS REID, Jr
| Skytop Lodge, Cresco, Pa,
| sons: meh France a od Rose Ba
ry But a Poor Educator.
‘To the Baltor:
{attended the, commencement at, Johnson C.
smith this year.” This is my alma mater, £ love
her and rejoice in her progrest had heard of th
Inagnificent gifts of Mrs. John ©. Srelth and Mr
Sames 8. Duke, ‘and my heart had been mad
ind besause of the enetactions of these human-
fiyloving people. T found there cement, walk
in abundance, leading to every building. ‘Ther
are several modern buildings, well equipped, anc
forcrown it al a handsome new church adorned
the campus, ait the gifts of ths generous lady
Mrs. Smith,
T found buildings, but no great, personalite
at Johnson ©, Smith University. 1 found appear:
ances, but o Feal spirit behind these appear
fnces.‘T'found ‘unrest and dissatisfaction among
the entire student body, and teachers. As evidenc
Wwe learned that sie members of the faculty. are
Teaving. ‘The students, many of them, are say-
ing thet they will not return next year unles
more satisfactory administrative conditions a
Drought about. ‘The students feel that they at
not getting what they ought, to get with this oon
Hrant tumover of teachers. ‘For the last ten year
there hes been & change in a third of the facult
each year. Its believee that only those teacher
femain who cannot qualify to do work elsewber
‘Modern “trained men do not stay. One teache
Said fo me that he would ike to stay, but th
Jack of organization im the school hindered in
from doing his best work and prevented hin
| from getting the best results from the students
Tt could be Heard very blunty stated bys
| denis and teachers that the big need at Smit
| fa hesman at the head. ‘The joke goes aroun
| the campus that the president tole the ‘new stu
ents Er his. opening “address lest fall, that th
_| fmportant, thing is to be religious, for the onl
| tm that Robert G. Engrs the fel, ha
| ig fame wa. that e invented the Ingersall at
3, ion preva thatthe preident 8 8 00
road builder, but 3 poor educator.
columbia, 6°, Tn
The Press, on Hoover-
| DePriest Tea Party
Weekly Press Supports Mrs. Hoover; Southern White
f Press Stands Alone Against Worth and West.
In one of George Cohan's Dfight
plays there 1s @ character whose
conversation consists chiefly of the
question: “What's all the. shootin’
for?” Perchance the President and
nis wife, in ‘the privacy of thelr
home—sueh as it is —may ask ench
other the question and smile.
‘The Boston Post (white)
‘The Real Purpose
‘This protest exposes the real pure
pose of the South for our race. Tt
takes clear the real meaning of the
color persecution and segregation.
Theirintent 1; to put all of us out-
side the pale of civilized society, to
make us officially: outeasts,
Boston Guardian
DePriest’s While’ Blood
(On the question of race purity, one
has only to remind the South that
Mrs. DePriest has a high percentage
Of white blood in ber velr and her
fhusband has a higher percentage
than the. wife i
‘Byeryone kaows that this per-
centage of white blood owing in the
Seins of Mr, and Mrs, DePriest is
due to the direct violation of Negro
Nomannood ‘by avaricous southern
Rhite men who should have remem
Jered inthe neat of thelr unbridled
iffeit intercourse with Negroes that
Mother Nature does not know he
fordiscriminate in the production of
oftspringe, even if the father hap-
pene ta be hile ana the mether
rappens to be black.
sppens Pittsburgh Courier
‘This re-action to Mrs. Hoovel ©
gente ‘Scartegy a nasty mess
gle comer Sah "out
eh ate 7
ison Chrenicle
pai oe ma
ane tents” hear tn Paige
ecivloud toms, ea rece
Mrs. Hoover entertained the Negro
He Home ere tive he
‘good old-fashioned politics, Plorida
fo abd tenes ss ala
ent Republica 22 Sad tee,
hie and Rar Cal a
Fe ee a ae eee 12
iteereeteaet gt 8 eat
fy, ae Do
i ee
iat ee a eet
GF than argeung “ast
Republicans.” ‘promoting the cause’
Bopanna tata thea
‘they ‘will be only too happy but their
icp rte son
SE ai oa
| aman Deverey
+ gaeg our to be conatulateg
Mh RR eat OF he et
to, Gig Ramin, See ane aie
32S st ee
“EIN, om (white)
‘There is nothing unusual about (he
the South to have fits when the
rights of Negro citizens are granted
ished ee Oe" ps
moe onl ae Re
He re Se ae
iy nl be Se a a
Suh igre ci ne Boies
Sie dit ine
Se gato aca he
aay omg a,
By Beta tbouhe B
fet berth ee Uae
pies ines Gee
| ee “aera i
dh, So aA
eress.”
a i, chrtan Reeder
| as
si gd mae tt
df Fania reuse ot
Date ae, at
ee oe oa
Mion Tanith ol)
Governor Dan Moody of Texas,
Sart, Pa Mesh a
ema ee, Mee
ey te Tras vpn or
soa te eas amen
sg eens Sa
Bae ge
Hs ees i er
Bie Sareea is
of ‘the people of the Nation.”
‘Boston Post (white)
‘To the’ Northern mind, at any
rate. to a great. many Northern
minds, discrimination on grounds of
feolor "seems totally indefensible,
chester N.Y, Times Union (white)
‘Mrs. Hoover Is to be commended
for her brave, stand in. managing
affaits at the White House which
shows that she is void of tenden-
ies based on trace prejudice.
Knoxville East Tenn, News
Badly Advised
The better class of colored people
do not want social recognition—they
desire recognition, politically, that is
thelr right—and they desire equal
opportunity to make a livelihood,
and they are entitled to it. Mrs.
Hoover was badly advised when she
issued her invitation.
‘Towson, Md, Jeffersonian (white)
‘Mrs. DePriest simply went, because
an invitation from the first lady of
the Jand is equivalent fo s summons,
a refusal would have been construed
and even commented upon by those
who seek to keep the race Issue to!
the fore as a brazen attempt on the!
part, of the Negro to snub the wife
Of the President of the greatest ve-
public on earth.
“Newport News, Va, Star
A Dirty Rag
‘This nation, must soon learn, that
se the “Constitution is hot & “scrap
of paper.” it must treat every citizen
alike.” Blease and his cohorts would
make the Constitution = “scrap of
paper” and “the flag a dirty rag.”
if his prejudice-warped conscience
Wes left ‘as the guide to public
opinion.
cmmiale:,’ ten au:-<nsiiiaeen
| K. M. Says:
An Open Letter to the Presi-|
dent on the ee
of a Colored Man on the;
Farm Board.
Honorable Herbert Hoover,
TR ee ge or aa ie aoe |
ing you with reference to -the ap-/
pointment of a colored representative!
on the Farm Board recently authori2-|
ed by an act cf Congress. It Is gen-|
erally belleved that the proper func-|
tioning of the board will have far-|
reaching influence upon the agricul}
tural and economic cestiny of Amer-|
fea, ‘The issue between the agricul-|
tural and industrial elements .have|
reached the state of acute irritation)
whose efficient treatment calls imper-
aiely for wie constructive. sates-|
manship. The coutitry congratulates)
you upon your courage and fimmness
tn handling this issue which confirms)
our bellef in you as master admin-|
istrator and executive.
Rooted in the Soil.
‘The Negro’s destiny in this coun-
try, as. Was his beginning, is rooted
and grounded in the soil. ‘This is the|
one basic industry ia which he 5
an essential factor. ‘The farm offers
him by far the best chance amidst
the feree industrial rivalry, in which
the weaker factor will inevitably ‘be
forced to the Wall, ‘The color bar 35
a bar sinister fo ihe tiesto. as ‘con-|
cerns city industries based upon ma-
chinery and organization, The un-
controllable law of race prejudice
Will pormit him nefther to campela|
hor fo. combine with. the dominant
White labor forces, But. in agricul
lure he “is, largely sheltered frova
this mexorable law of Aryan compe-)
ion.
‘The Negro’ should. «therefore, be)
encouraged to seek for his salvation, |
asa mass, m the unopposed. sphere
Sf producing. food and siber to neul-|
fsnPand clothe the nation. | He is
forced to work at & disadvantage in
ail spheres of activity in which =
Tay be engaged, but cn the farm
tis relative disadvantage is reduced
toa minimum. Mother earth re-
spongy with enol reads $0 Ek:
ing by the black or white tiller. The
markets. are color blind as to the)
complexion of the producer. {
"The Negro should take ‘over the)
farm’ es often ax the white man a-
fandens it. Very unfortunately, the]
Negro is biindiy imitating the white
nan in this mad cltyward rush They
Ere alike attracted by the, glare of
ity ‘allurements:. but. the black ar-|
fiver finds ‘himselZ the more hope-|
fessiv delusioned, by the enchant)
ment.
Mechanical Industries. |
tthe World, War prolonged, for, 3)
while, the deluded hope of the Ne~
Fro in’ competitive ‘mechanical in-|
dustries. “A vacuum was created in
{ite labor market and the Negro rush
ed into fll the temporary demand.
he incressing restrictions, of Imrni-|
gration will serve to suspend his docm
‘a fittie longer. But as_ conditions|
Settle down o.their normal, state
Japd the white labor fund. becomes|
Adequate to tne demand. the black |
Competitor. will oe pustied further!
and further down onthe scale. of
desirable nd) remunerative employ
ment
There ls an essential difference n)
the reison dete of the to races as:
Concerns. this blind cltyward move-
frent, Manufacture, trade and trans-
portation are under the, contro! of
fhe monopoly of white lebor,
“ine Dero, s0 fat, has shown little
‘developed aptitude for business and
Gommerce. The rapid. rise of. the
[merger and the svncieate. business
hich tustrates the: succes oe: |
ation of, all small concerns, adds)
igloom to the Negro’s hope to develop
independent. cnterprice.
i Decline. *
| The saddest. chapter in, the history
lof Negro progress is diseased by the
Qst census which reveals the decline
of farm ownership end operation.
The ‘seeming increase in city hold:
ings isa, poor fet for this, vital
Hose Sng ity. Nexess, possession
[Eonsists all but whelly in home own-|
Erahip whieh 4s & decd asset withow
Productive valve. On the other hand.
[farm epreaitsprodutig capita
for 2 working tool whereby the over,
{enabled to meke a living for him
fof and femilx, The farm owner
fs his own proprietor and civects his
fown activities, where's the urban, Ne~
gro is merely’ a hired hana. conned
|mmainly to manual and menial forms
jo Tabor.
[Sit the Nezro ic lo become haituat
fed. to tell-propristorship and | the
ede TTL Attn
Business, he will be more likely to
Require oth the knowledge ard the
nack by the orderle conduct of
farming “activities which are more
and more. zeculting Tike skill enter
prise and initiative than through the
Efant opportunity. winich an over
fhacowing city environment afford
him.
Greatest Usefulness.
I gather from various angles tha
your administration urposes, to ley
Zomparatively “itte stress on the race
proviem from the purely political
ont of View. but rather hopes 10
Bowe fhe ‘Negro comprehensively by
fenccuragang. improvement in his in
ustrial, economic and moral lot,
Here, It seems, you have a strategic
opportunity.
"ne selection of a competent, cols
lored man to serve on the Farm Board
ould go, further to stimulate the
mind of the race in the direction of
fis greatest. usetulness to itself and
© the nation than. the appointmenc
of a dozen candidates 28 register of
Something, recorder of something else.
Assistant to somebody or minister to
somewhere.
Crime Commission.
1 greatly hoped that you might have
segs yout way cleat to select 8 colot=
aman, for &_ pee on your Grime
|amntsion, malo for tne bene
Scaction.of such @ choice upon. the
froup which is at once the greatest
‘Fetim ‘of lawlessness and the chief
beneficiary of Jaw enforcement.
"The Negro should be ted to appre-
late the benefteent, purpose and in-
ent. of ood government by en-
trusting im with some responsible
Telation a the machinery of govern-
relation ‘The “white race will prove
‘The entertainment by Mrs. Hoover of Mrs. Oscar DePricst,
wie of the Hegro Conarzaman rom, Cheton, tt, 62 oth
ite oF tor wises of the Iilinols delegation ix Congress, has aroused.
considerdble interest im various parts of the country. | The AFRO
Serewith ‘prints some. of. tke ewspaper editorial comment the
Rare Or
NORTH
eee ads:
‘The Real Purpose
TePricct’c White’ Blood
4 Crude Country
‘Political, pot Racial
Traman YNecerncy
Sonth True To Form
‘tranver Hac Wife's Courage
Noles
No PYiccrimination
SOUTH
‘Mes. Hoover Commended
‘Radilv Advised
Spub?
A Dirty Rar
The Nation’s Biggest All Negro Weekly,
: Solid South
‘This noise over so insignificant an
official recognition by the South
proves how far we are from perma
nently breaking the solid South.
Detroit. independent
Not Flated
We see nothing in the incident to
cause us any particular elation, nei-
ther do we see any cause for edi-
torials in southern dailies tending
to stir racial feeling between the two
groups.
Birmingham, Ala, Truth
Quit Seeing Black
‘Such occasions, while social, are
noe soeal but olla, “The ‘color
shebe toes not enter into the a=
rengernent; and, cannot. There is
ror gnore, justification for the exclu
Hon af a blag man and fis, wife
from sueh a function ‘than, there
otek elude a red, yeln
fon, ‘brown ‘or “white “one.” the
resident and ‘his wife. donot select
any af them: the consituency “does
iE about me for everbody te
cuit coingSack, ory apa RATE
ese Batant outbreaks bout
Bishop W. N, Ainsworth,
a Me. Chureh, South
Sout Snsalled
‘The South vill not tolerate & vio-
tation of ite social distinction, be
(heen the races: Not even the Presi-
dent of the United States may. defy
Geional customs and. maintain
the. respect of southern people.
‘oowee has given. affonk zo the
south whieh cannot_be palliated or
ondoncd. it was raiedl_and. pre=
foesigted. and ‘a gross. insult” 0
iby southern white Person,
Siemphis Commerciai Appeat
Commonplace
Monarchs, rulers, men with power
an prestce have, im all ages, been
mown to summon to their presence,
Siem sore of tne lowllest, "thereby
falsing these tthe soctaleauals, of
tery guest ‘present, and raising
fhemnsettes. immeasurably through
thelr exercise of seh power,
‘Washingtom, D.C, Eagle
wets Sw Meuek
This matter of whites and blacks
eating and drinking together jis net~
ther hew nor novel, and as long as
The. two races live side by side im
this country they are going to be
ound quite often in the other's
company; and this i$ just as, true
{nigh ‘élreles as it is in low circles,
Heston, Texas, Informer
Fifty Fifty
2 is ne more honor for « coloved
man to eat with white man thao
it is fora white man to eat with
2 Negro, The honors break: even.
‘Atlanta, Ga, Independent
A ta Will Rogers
© course, as Mr. Will Rogers put
it, "Whom 1 entertain is| my bust~
fase; who Mrs, Hoover, entertains is
‘Mrs. Hoover's. business.”
‘Facksonville, Fla, Sentinel
/_Sogiat Rquality After Dark
rom ‘Knight, Oklahoma ‘legisia
tor, in discussing the proposed rcs0-
Ition,‘mcongemnation of Mrs.
Hoover's act, said Tuesday: “The
leopard can't change his spots or the
‘Euiiopian his skin." Thavs the only
part af the Bible that sounds ie, 8
fe, Knight ought to run upto Wash-
gon and take ok at Oscar Ds:
Briest (a half-white Negro) and while
‘he fs up there he should inquire very
diligently as to what happened 1
Setlsest’s skin before he got out of
Alabama and that section of America
‘there Nordic s.uzzipre prate about
face purity in dayntht hours while
Inthe shadows andthe gloaming
they hold clandestine trysts , with
dark-skinned amorists.
‘The Black Dispatch, Okla, City
; Gutee.
‘The Southerner wha voted for Al
freed timselt trom prejudices at ox-
der to do so, therefore if, he sees
Relghbors who voted him down out-
Taged because Mrs. Hoover has en-
fertained a Negress in the White
House, he sees people who permilscd
thelr prejudices to. control thent last
November now smitten Unrough sm-
other’ prejidice—the engines: Nolst-
ed by ‘his own petard. Well, it as
been seven, long months, since Als
friends in the South had a chance
to indulge n'a great roaring guflaw.
Hf they improve their present oppor-
tunity to the limit, who ig to blame
them?
Balto, Evening Sun (white)
Stay Away, Herb,
Several weeks ago it was an-
nounced that. President and Mrs
Hoover intended to visit several
Southern States during the autumn
ang early, winter.
‘For their own sakes, and to save
Southern people from embarrass.
ment, it is sincerely hoped they will
not. do $0.
“Jackson, Miss, Daily News (white)
39 Others
White Howie etiquette. requires
the President's wife to give olfcial
entertainment. to. the ‘wives of Con-
gressmen. It js 2 White House cus-
fom sidestepping of which would
have created 2 greater ruckus than
Its performance, and while the pub-
li Tray rte, ‘tnese ented, to
fet a part of it are gre thirty-nine
Shute women who shdred honors in
the function, “if criticism js. to be
cirected at the, First Lady ‘of the
fand, her guests should be the legii-
mate sharers in It.
es Ghatlotte, N.C., Observer (white)
' ‘edisla HasAbes.
Why the reported Reap stented
over Mrs. Herbert Hoover entertain-
Ing the wife of Oscar Depriest, Ne-
gro member of Congress from Chi- |
€ago? The case 1s, in $0 far as the
reported facts go, merely one of ex-
tending official courtesy, It is tan-
tamount to the wile of the President
entertaining the wite of the Haytian
Minister.
Loulsville, Ky, Times (oie)
No Other Reason
President Hoover ‘went into the
‘White House on the flood tide of
votes from. all but four of these
‘Southern States. If for no other
Feacon ‘than this, the, courtesy to
te ws of DePriest might have
eft oft
‘Charlotte, N.C, News (white)
Vathinkable
It fs unthinkable that any’ woman
living in the limelight of public af-
faire could willingly or otherwise ac-
cept an Ethiopian in her drawing
room on terms of familiarity and
personal and social intimacy,
Austin, Texas, Daily Statesman,
‘rbiie)
~ (Continued on page twelve)
Ath
Os
| Oe 3
Lise
"si ea 7
Agar
i
a
[Day by Day
[mete
Ministers, and the
“Root of All Evil.”
When Bishop A. J. Cai
seended. from hic “exited inet
Dhere’of cloistered church ett
{o sit on a highiy political saq’s
tian ‘etil sevice. bosrat ng Pe
Moric’ most noted “cong off
Writer called attenetion oi gt
er inal. such acts. honsver (ao.
estly motivated, wotld ‘help toate
irom ‘thnwuands orang ‘ht
ralth in present-day; religious
faith sous Tends
‘ANC NOW comes 2 white
the Right Reverend and HMenetge
SainessG: Gannon. dr turmeeas
as a Wall Street. investor and pe
haps stock gambler
"Hove any man With the mest eon-
mon "knowledge ‘ol econoiie es
and. the most." clomentat” ets
Yalues, could harmonize "easy aoe
hey" with religion, isa msten,
but the Right Héxorabie oaks:
calls it his own, private busines
‘Using heen ‘wits and spect px.
iiege to stick nis Hans’ down"
the pockets of. mien and. wexse
eho Frid out their lies in face
Tes whose stock Is milked fo death
in Wall Siveet, is @ man’s own
Yate. business: 40.0. may sta
Yatek-up arti lai that pat
iaga spa in a mans fare ane te
listing fim of fis cash se his 0
privete business: sa" also is“
"gang" operations of “Al” Capo
andthe salting’ of cronked pal
tieians
You can_hace tiie resptet
for “Ai cepone’ chi seme a
{he ofher men and women xo
tag their ehagees, Sad eal 4
shade 2 spade: but the hypocrss
Nihich allows the scered Crucifix
To be held in one hand while the
Sther teaehes dosen into the Beth
pois makes. one sick at the stom-
Rohe
Farming, Our Last
Laan: Trench.
Seren DAR AY re Seas
Hoover {0 agprits a ecicred man
onthe Parm ftief ‘Bozrd.
From. an "2nnre. standin.
farming. is tice 1. * 20a! ceonome
trench in’ preductise’ industry for
the race. group. 1 is the. onle
source. feft' open whercin ve mat
et establish ourselves. alone ih
ihe leading financial {crees of the
earth, and construct & base pan
hich to develop 4 tea! wealth.
producing. sescem cf industr:.
‘Race economists have been slow
to prasp. the. difference orveen
Teereiy. wage sauces of wealth and
productive industrr. A certain per.
Eentage of the zicip should, of
course, tke advaniane of the aze
Source of income, an" Kean & foo!
hhold in the great manufacture
plants of the courts
But study the uneminiovment fs
cures, in any Big in intial els 1
day ‘and one will zev some :cea of
what Havoc would come 19 the
oun it for, instance, the, count
Should pass throveh the same eco-
nomic érisis which, Europe, and
Bpgland. in. pevtictlar. has pases
Guring the tast five wears, UNDER
SUCH A ORISIS. THERE WOULD
NOT BE WORK FOR ONE COl-
ORED MAN OUT OF. EVERY
FIFTY WHEN BLOOD BEGAN TO
BECOME TEICSER THAN WA-
TER AND ALL THE WitTE
OWNED PLANTS COMMENCED
TO SQUEEZE OUT THE SUR-
PLUS BECP.
Naturally, such 9, calastreahe
swoutd trees “he weak fonndation
fof our present econémic life. The
fusiness. ana professicnal sroups
in the. rece—deperdent aint
shollen the ee, caning a
for their patronece—mould £0
Hoon in’ the crash: SUCH AN
BVENTUALITY, EVEN IN PROS
PEROUS AXERICS, iz SOT
IMPOSSIBLE.
Better Foundation
San thea Future:
‘This writer has, pointed aur AE
after time tna! the Traders of the
Group. escecatiy: business, acer
Sfould help las. a better foundation
than we have for tie lure sene-
rations.
‘Sur econcmists—and here ie 4
suggestion. for the Fact Findine
Gonterenee—sheaia ezlenlate the
Smount of farm fend waich would
grow enough produce to entitele
SEpport the 112,000,000, members
ofthe group were thes (0 be cut
Off trom every ther source of
fneome, and hry strauid sat about
the business of guiding the 136
towards the ‘acquisition of this
land.
Burin in South Carolina. bexseet
Spartanburg 2nd a Wie, rails
Statin they called, Rocauck, & the
third generation of @ {emit whith
hhag year. in and sear out made
Tiving out af 2. aere farm, Tair
Yo years eo heir laud was, 20?
at $250 per cre, Altheuch the:
Rave made it vicld for then not
Only, tha acessitias of ie bub 3
‘surplus sufficient to produce sever
professional mien and women in tht
Best. sehnols of the land, itis xodar
worth $200 per acre
The tremors of financial earthy
‘quakes, money panics such 25 Hit
fhe country durin: the Roorerct
administratien, the failure of fore
ign markets, never once sims”
Iv threatened the neace and B20
Biness of that farming fem
Faday, they cout cell their #3¢
at 23 conte per dozer and they
hater at 25 cents per pound.
AND MAKE MONEY,
Pive hundred thousand such fan
files awning 75 acres rach af Jatt
Would ley the kind af foundation
wwe need for Worra indenensenct
Not in on the Benefits
of Farm Relief.
Not only are, ye mat, scales
more ferm land but, Ssures, sha
that, we are eoandoning farms
the bie cities.
‘with vr” present set-up: oF
will eet little direct benefits 27
$500,000,000 of tax money, which
the covernment will use, to Bele
the farming class. We have 10
Migely “orgenized co-onaraticts
This money will be handled th
govaneratices and ons. in so, fat
Se the whole scheme will tend
False “waees—and this mer nth
Joexpected for years—wil it Bed
the maces of colored folk nor
on the farms.
"Here is certainly a. field cali
for the very ibest leadership hf
Sire ‘estleges ‘can snooly — THE
MAKING ECONOMICALLY 1
SYEPENDENT OF 112,000,000 mi
lion people.
A
Ride on REBUILT HOOD TIRES
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
LIVING TOO HIGH FOR ECONOMIC STATUS,HANCOCK
Face Crisis Unless Conditions are Relieved, He Tells Coppin Grads.
THREE LIVING LEVELS
Forced Out.
"Unless the economic condition of the race is relieved within the next 25 years, the Negro faces great tribulation," declared Dr. Gordon Blaine Hancock, Virginia Union university professor, in addressing the 16th annual commencement of Coppin Normal school Monday evening.
The standard of living that the Negro has set for himself is too high for his economic status, affirmed the speaker, adding that the Hecht Company of Washington is said to have sold $80,000 worth of furs for a Howard-Lincoln football game. Servants to work so well stressed that the employees fire them for someone apparently more need of a job, often the LLIVFE osShETNIOAONIse, who will live on a cheaper table.
Three Levels
Speaking of the three economic levels, Dr. Hancock said that the high-salaried class; he is unprepared for the second or level of the skilled worker, and is being forced out of the lowest level by the competition of poor whites who are willing to replace him. The man has reached the place where he looks the world over, decide what he shall do with it; he reached it through suffering in past ages. The Jew is the most remarkable man in the world, his contribution to civilization is but a proportion to his numbers, but he has been done through suffering, that who would reign and rule must
Dr. Hancock urged the young graduates to meet this economic crisis by taking the fact with sacrifice and determination. Our forefathers, he said, faced a problem directly after they became free—a problem of no nurseries no schools and no economic status—they faced it and to large degree solved it with work and sacrifice. Will the New Negro meet this economic crisis just as successfully?
Mayor Broening
Diplomas were conferred by Mayor William F. Brenning, who was introduced by Dr. David E. Weglein, subinterendent of schools. Mayor Brenning told the audience that less than ten years ago the City of Baltimore was spending less than $4,000,000 on its schools, but now it is spending this year $10,000,000 plus loans agreeing $32,000,000. The Rev. W. D. Yerby delivered the invocation and the benediction, music was furnished by the orchestra under the direction of W. Llewland of chorus under the direction of Miss Francis Jackman, Mrs. Ruth Lee McAbee, accompanist. Principal Miles W. Conor presided.
Class Dag Exercise
The teacher graduates held their class day exercise Friday afternoon in the school auditorium, at which time they presented a playlet entitled "Les Adieux des Fleurs." Those taking part were Lillian Smith, Ellen Scott, salutatorian; Kathleen Bass, historian; L. Pratt and A. Harris, historians; Naomi Young and Eliza Sherrill, prophets; Nerissa Tailferto, class will; Myrle Billups, valedictorian. The class poem was composed by Miriam Gwynn and the poem by Corbeda White and Naomi Cotter. Other members of the class took parts of leaves and flowers. Baccalaureate Sermon
The sermon to the graduates was delivered at the Sharon Baptist Church Sunday morning by the pastor, the Red Beale Elliot, who called the attention of the class to the "imperious amount of sacrifice on the part of parents and the race in the cause of education."
Put on a full set of rebuilt HOOD TIRES for that vacation trip. They will safely meet every motoring condition, assuring safety at any speed. Their low cost will mean a real saving and because of their remarkable quality you will never pause for any cause.
White Grads Insult Race Class Members
GLASSBORO, N.J.—Race prejudice marred the annual reception of the Glassboro State Normal School here when white students walked out of the auditorium in protest against the presence of two race members of the class, Fricay evening.
The action drew the attention of Hazel Godfrey, Woodbury, N.J., and Walter Gordon, Royal, N.J., to participate in the regular school functions after their fee had been accepted by the school authorities. Dr. J. J. Savitz, principal of the school was absent from the affair it was said after having tried to persuade the colored students from attending.
The students and her escort together with Gordon and a guest entered the auditorium and participated in two dances the white members of the class deserted the hall and went out on the campus. A number of older colored students, members of the February class did not attend.
DOUGLASS GRADS GET DIPLOMAS
DOUGLASS GRADS GET DIPLOMAS
With Mayor Broening, Superintendent David E. Weglen and Director Francis M. Wood present, the 174 graduates of Douglass High School were handed diplomas, Wednesday evening. In his address, Mayor Broening, in outlining the program under which Baltimore is developing, declared that of the $26,000,000 appropriated for general use in the city, $7,000,000 were recommended for hospitals, $1,000,000 for repairing old schools and $250,000 for extension of the water system. The Mayor personally schools with and congratulated her graduate.
Dr. Weglein, who introduced the Mayor, made an appeal for co-operation on the parts of the parents and citizens in developing what is beginning to be one of the best school systems in the country. Principal Mason Hawkins urged those students not planning to enter college or training school to enter some industry or business career.
The principal also declared that parents were partly responsible for failure of students to graduate, and that it was their duty to scan report cards each month. The school he said sends home a monthly report of the extra activities of the school, which he offers after school hours, when the faculty has no disruption of students. The invention was given by Rev. Samuel H. James and music by the school orchestra and chorus under the direction of W. Llewellyn Wilson, with Miss Milred Williams, accompanying.
Headwaiter in Dope Raid
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (A.N.P.) Andrew Payne, headwaiter in an apartment hotel on Dorset avenue, was arrested Tuesday night, the dinner hour by detectives armed with a warrant charging sale of nar-
coles
According to local detectives. Payne is alleged to have sold a quantity of heroin to federal men who have been working in the resort during the past three weeks. He is under $10,000 bail.
KILLED IN GRAVEL CAVE-IN
BURTONVILLE, MD. (AN.P.)—
Henry H. Waters, 64, was killed and
Earnest Moore seriously injured when
a gravel bank on which they were
working caved in here Monday.
Promotions
Division ST. AT MAYVILLE MISS ELLA BELLBRY Principal List of pupils recommended from Eileen Johnson High School.
Thelma Anderson Arthur Johnson
Robert Bailey Lewis Johnson
Laura Branch Doris Jones
Archibald Bullett Forrest Jones
Charles Bishar Linwood Roger
Bible Archibald Lewis
Bernie Casson Louis Mack
Bart Carter Pauline Matthews
Alice Davies Pauline Matthews
Victoria Davis Cleveland Pritchard
Dixon Roland Rogers
James Europe Charles Samuels
Catherine Fitzgerald Cornella Sawyer
Oliver Frazier Hillard Shorter
Cora Gibson黛西 Holland
Earl Clinton Erma Holland
Griffin Mary Jackson
Edward Hill Acella Jefferson
SCHOOL NO. 112
Laurens & CRAIG
GEORGE B & CHRISTINE. Principal
List of Employees. Recommended from
Elementary to Junior High School.
Dorothy Anderson. Emily Forrest
Margurite Bush. Marile Fireshear
Mildred Butler. Mary Griffin
Margaret Byrd. Evelyn Cook
Elizabeth Byrd. Geraldine Goodman
Alice Barra. Alice Carter
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
1000 USED TIRES All sizes, $2 to $8 each—these tires were exchanged for new HOOD TIRES—many almost new.
Charles Dorsey
James Lucas
John Williams
LOCKERMAN SCHOOL NO. 100
Mount and Sarafaga Sts.
George A. Owens, Principal
List of Precedents for elementary to Junior high schools.
James Allen
John Anderson
BenJ. Bell
Alice Carroll
Ernest Congress
Alfert Cooper
Odde Dodson
Lester Fauentiery
Joseph Fitzgerald
Ernest Franklin
Mines College
Hilda Himbry
Louise Jackson
Archie Johnson
James Johnson
Andrew Jones
Lena Kellam
Lucille Lomax
Ruth Miller
Ernestine Parker
Janeine Smith
Sydney Smith
Greola Stacey
Doris Thomas
Raymond Wheatley
Dorothy Young
Sarah Murray
Muriel Pinder
Mines College
Goldie Spence
William Talley
Margaret Thomas
Wallace Chestley
Lloyd Wood
Caline Lockhart
2 PLACES 1 BIG NIGHT 2 BANDS
Down the Bay Back to the Hall
Beulah Dyson
Louise Greene
Mary Grant
Geneva Hawkins
Douglas Henderson
Dorothy Jefferson
Arthur King
Mabel Lawrence
Allen Martin
Bernard Franklin
Brunhain Polston
Harry Reynolds
Hazel Sweeney
Ross Stephens
Gertude Sanders
Edward James
James Wade
Thomas Wright
Mamie Harrison
Thelma Howard
Leonard Harris
Marie Johnson
Norbert Johnson
Kenneth Keeps
Ora Lee
Anderson McNell
John Minor
Curtis McNell
Hortense Penn
Audrey Palmer
Gertude Powell
Gelda Pigg
Philip Higgard
Albert Streeter
Gertude Randolph
Mary Scott
Sarah Boote
George Forrest
Bernice Carberry
Theodore Davis
George Dorsely
Jugenson Gregg
Ellis Grosse
William Griggs
Richard Goldring
John Johnson
Kenneth Lennesse
Clarence Jones
William Murphy
Ida Murphy
Jimmy Murphy
Barnet Moore
Mary McGown
Robert Murdock
Ralph Mason
Evelyn Nikon
Freddie Vera Rice
Todd Lagers
Edith Savage
Marion Shepher
Supper Shepher
Eunice Turner
Nelle Conway
Helen Coles
Ophella Warn
Herria Woodruff
Leonard Ayers
Hilda Young
Bonsal Amos
Leonard Ayers
Hilda Young
Ethel Braxton
Irene Brown
Dorothea Cryan
Ruth Collins
Mary Crane
Jayne Dell, Burl
To Vocational School
Frank Blandy Miller
Blanche Mason
Carpol Stecant
SCHOOL NO. 104
Carey & School Streets
MRS. MARY E. RODMAN, Principal
List of pupils recommended from Elementary to Junior High School.
Frank Hutchins Ada Heckett
Norman Skiles Inex Johnson
P. Wheeler Drew Johnson
Roland Jones Gladys Holton
Eugene Hawkins Maxine Walker
George Young Ola Carr
James Dickson Elizabeth Warner
Ellen Kirkley
Eugene Hall Rosa Mallachie
Parrott Russell Christine Tripp
Thomas Oden Geneva Palmer
James Brown Howard Scott
**TREASURES W. Doughass, Principal**
List of pupils recommended Iom Elementary to Junior high school:
Gorka Gorka Chesley
Gorka Gorka Chesley
Lucy Ross
Capsil Williams
Robert Brooks
Geraldine Wood
Chester France
Thomas Turner
Brett Turner
Nammi Allen
Leonard Brown
Geneva Green
Dorothy Taylor
Stewart Cruse
Marie Robinson
Eugene Cooper
Douglas Mellory
Emory Wilson
Evelyn Campbell
John Gross
Lucy Wilson
Anna Young
Wilson Leslie
Bernard Bentley
Rosmond Laws
Caroline Cottman
Marjorie Bolden
Ellie Tooman
Alloysus Stansbury
Tobias Tooman
Isabell Ringgold
James Chaney
Hermione King
Virginia Rakes
Joseph Bryant
Harriet Cook
Melville Wallace
Annie Smith
Melvin Chessly
David Taylor
Mildred Daphney
William Hammock
Emma Edward
Karen Wewell
Beatrice Hurd
Elsworth Langhorn
Daisy Hines
SCHOOL NO. 118
Arglez Ave. at Laundre Hill
MRS. M. E. CARR, Principal
List of pupils recommended from Ele
lementary to Junior High School
Albert Evawin, Evawin Smith
Waters, Waters
Robert Pearson, Hilda Simms
Emily Young, Davis Boyd
Julia Carter, Catherine Knox
Bernard Smith, Hester Johnson
Anne Smith, Hester Johnson
Martha Patterson
Jannie Watkins, Dorothy Chappelle
Adyne Farr, James Turner
Nettis Barnes, Algive Scott
Bentice Curtis, Joseph Edwards
Lillemom, Charles Battey
Ellis Carter, Charles Battey
Jasper Carter, Hampton Mears
BENJAMIN BANNKEE NO. 113.
Federal and Carter Sts.
JOHN WOODHOUSE, Principal
Pupil School, Junior High
School from School No. 113.
Mable Henderson Lillian Seney
Ethel Grant Frances Jackson
Melissa Jackson Joanne
Elizabeth Kinney Robert Dummore
Ruth Pendleton William Wilson
Gertrude Lee Gladys Griffin
Mary McLean Thasellona Andrews Carrie Washington
Cornelia Flerce Etta Robinson
To Vocational School
Hansel Datcher Hazel Johnson
SCHOOL NO. 110.
Wasche S. near Fremont Ave.
M. McLean Thasellona
Lift pupils recommended from Elementary to Junior High School. No. 130.
GIRLS
Catherine Crawford Frances Sheffield
OBLATE SISTERS of Providence,
at Greenwood Electric Park, Thursday,
July 11th.
"JUST WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR"
ROOMS AT THE ILE D'HOUR
By the Day or Wear
With a hardwood, hardwood lawn and porch. All conveniences. Quiet, just the place to rest.
MRS. OSCAR McKIM, Hostess
38 S. Rue de la Paix, N. J.
Phone Rivière 975
WHEN AWAY FROM HOME Hotel Rockland
3 to 13 West 136th Street, New York City
Hot and Cold Water in Each Room—Immaculately Clean
Courteous Treatment
Special Rates
Daily or Weekly
HARLEM 9622
CHAS, J. JONES, Prop.
1500 ST. ANTOINE ST., (Near Guy)
ROOMS BY DAY OR WEEK-STRICTLY FIRST CLASS
Write For Reservations—JUNE 15 to OCTOBER 1—(Open Year Round)
The Capitol City Club
OF WASHINGTON, D.C. Corollally Invites You to Attend The Spectacular Double-Header Sensational Saturday Society Cabaret Twilight Excursion TO BROWN'S ELECTRIC GROVE Saturday Evening, July 6 at 7 o'Clock
SCHOOL NO. 125
These rebuilt HOOD TIRES are good for from 8,000 to 10,000 dependable miles. They are protected by the long established reputation of Baltimore's Leading Tire Dealer. Modern factory methods are used in their rebuilding.
Ruby Patterson Ivrington Williams
Wilbur Radcliff Myrle Wilson
William Randal Juanta Smith
Jasmin Wilhelmina Watkins
Joseph West
DUNBAR JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL. NO. 10
HARRY T. PRATT. Principal
February Class
BOYS
Bannett, C. Jerome Johnson, Arthur
Bright, Ernest Jackson, R. Leroy
Beckett, Stanley Lewis, Clinton
Byrd, Rugen, William
Bimms, Thomas
Charke, Alvin Waters Daniel
Ford, Edward Waters, Raymond
Poster, Junius Washington, R. S.
Wilson, William
Goddard, George Harvey, William
Hunt, Melvin
GIRLS
Camphor, Anna Mae Madidox, Rebeis
Daen, Alessia Lourne McCook, Lee A.
DeGroot, Janet Mary Mello, Vasheli
Fletcher, Velma Moore, Vasheli
Ford, Elaine Parker, M. L.
Elaine Green, Mildred V. Robinson, M. V.
Griffin, Margaret Rowlte, Lillian
Harris, Mae Mattie Scales, Louise
Harris, Mattle Laura Schmidt, Alice
Holloway, L. Ala Tilghman, Annis
Jackson, Hilda Walker, Ruby L.
Johnson, E. E. Williams, Clara D.
Jones, Kizzie Vincent, Florence
Annie Locks, Berrice
Kidd, Mary
June Class
Bowles, Linwood T. S. Sheppard, Bernard Bowles, Wm. Wrox Shields, Walker Cornick, Charles Sorrell, William T. Pinney, Theophilus Sterling, Sidney Green, Walter B. Tissen, A. J. Martin, John Lewis Vessels, Harrison Moore, Leroy G. Walker, Christo Preston, Lester White, Thomas J. Saunders, Arthur J. Wormley, Rogers A. Scherer, Gilbert H.
GIRLS
Alston, Ann Newton, Elizabeth Austin, Rosetta Offer, Odera Braxton, Orysia Odera Palge, Rosetta Lella Gerey, Laurita Parker, Oleta Carter, Eleanora Poole, Christopher, Evelyn Poole, C. G. Henderson, Ruth Richardson, Jessie Ingram, Doshi Jone Robinson, Junita Irvin, Eula Mae Robinson, Junita Jackson, Edith Stevenson, Cambria Johnson, Madeline Tyler, Hazel Jones, Isabella Tynas, Ivory Lee
Alston, Ann
Austin, Bess
Elmore, Elenora
Brown, Gertrude
Carey, Laurita
Garter, Eleanora
Henderson, Ruth
Hill, Evelyn
Ingram, Basha Jor
Jackson, Edith
Johnson, Georgia
Johnson, Johnson
Isabella
Milbourne, M. E.
Opening song—America: Invocation-Rev.
Walker: Remarks—Principal: "Bed in Summer"
—Lucius Leeper: "The Turtle Curse"
—Honor Holmes: "How I Feelries";
"The Land of Nod—Evelyn Franklin: "In Your Own Back Yard"
—Major Lawson: "My Bed Bound"
—Mary Wade: "Whole Pole"
"Talking in Their Sleep"—Edward Ford:
"Mr. Nobody"—Pleda Cunningham: "The Night Wind"—Willie Poy: "A Trip to Seneca"
"The Parts of Speech"—Charles Waters.
The decision of the judges was made by Miss L. Olivia Carter, a winner of the H.S.
Brown, president of the Parent-Teacher Association, awarded the prizes. Benedic
The New Steamer "AVALON" Is Here
AVALON
BROWN'S GROVE and All Points on the Bay And Books Are Now Open For Dates For Excursions To Also From Towns On The Bay To Brown's Grove
This is the only steamer and the only park in the State of Maryland run exclusively for Colored People and by Colored People.
Captain Brown will be at home on Saturday and Sunday evenings from now until the first of May. Be sure to give your committee authority to secure dates when application is made, as positively no dates will be held in reserve. Captain Brown will wait on any committee who wishes to engage dates.
tion was announced by Rev. Widgeon. Carrie Pinkle, chairman; W. W. Brown, president of the Parent-Teacher Association; Rev. W. W. Walker, pastor.
SCHOOL NO. 114-A
Coatline and Bank St
MARTHA B. WARSOM. In Charge
The operetta, "Mother Goose's Garden."
was produced by the primary grades of
School 1444 and the University.
The production showed earnest work on the part
of both teachers and children.
The pupils of the intermediate grades
sang two two-part choruses, "the oo-
t and 'Sundown in a very creditable man-
ner.' The operetta was given in the yard
with the sky for an overhead canvas, mak-
Prather's Cottage
CAMP FOR BOYS
10-18 Years
AN INVESTMENT IN HEALTH
A beautiful farm, 30 miles from
D. C. and 35 miles from Baltimore.
Excellent Food, Swimming, Hiking,
Camping and Tennis.
TERMS REASONABLE.
Apply LAURENCE D. HOWARD,
Gaithersburg, Montgomery County,
Maryland.
MADISON 8692 MADISON 6019
Baltimore's Largest
Colored Hostelry
PENN HOTEL
SAMUEL W. KEYS, Manager
1631-33-35 Penna. Ave.
Baltimore, Md.
ROOMS BY DAY
Special Rates By Week
DINING ROOM
EUROPEAN SERVICE
Dance Hall To Let By Night
Special Rates to Ball Players
The New Store
BROWN'S GROUND
And Books Are Not
Also From Town
This is the only steamer and the
by Colored People.
Captain Brown will be at home or
to give your committee authority to a
reserve. Captain Brown will wait on
In Order to Secure Choice Dates A
Captain George W.
2103 Druld Hill Avenue
DAYS—
JUNE
28- School 114-114-A.
29- School 154.
30- Mt. Zion M. E. Church.
JULY
2- First Baptist S. S.
4- St. John's S. S.
5- St. Matthew's M. E. Church.
6- Monumental Lodge Marching Club,
J. B. P. O. E. of W., to Cambridge.
7- Assemblage M. E. Church.
10- Bethel M. E. Church.
11- Union Baptist S. S.
12- Metropolitan M. E. Church.
14- People's Christian Church Baptiz-
15- John. Wesley M. E. S.
16- Cosmopolitan Church.
17- Metropolitan Church.
18- Social Free Will Baptist Church
(Baptizing).
22- Grand Lodge, K. of P., to Cam-
23- Centenual Lodge, M. E.
24- Allen A. M. E. Sunday School.
25- Ebenezer Baptist Sunday School.
26- Elks Chor No. I.
27- Grand Lodge Maons to St. Michael.
4th
July Outing!
Edgewater Shore
(Turner Station)
Fire Works, Salt Water Bathing, Tennis, Croquet, Horse Shoe Pitching
SPECIAL ATTRACTION
Take a Cruise on the Speed Boat "FLAVIA"
MUSIC
DANCING
ADMISSION -- -- 50 CENTS
TWIN PINES — THE NEW PLAYGROUND—Near Middle River. Consists of nine (9) acres of the most beautiful woods, fields, orchard and shore property. Boating, fishing, large dance hall with player pkno. Dancing every Wednesday and Thursday. PATRONAGE OF CHURCHES, CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS SOLICITED Walter Pinderhughe, 1203 Druid Hill Ave., Madison 2403
bring a very appropriate setting for this
season of the year.
season of the year.
Many of the musicians were present, and themselves possessed with the entrainment offered them.
Mrs. Ruth, the music supervisee, and the music school, and possessed her
4th
July Outing
Edgewater
(Turn
Fire Works, Salt Water Bathing,
SPECIAL
Take a Cruise on the
MUSIC
ADMISSION --
NEW Electr
TWIN PINES—The NEW PLAYGRO
nine (9) acres of the
and shore property.
player pikno. Dancing every Weslnes
PATRONAGE OF CHURCHES, CLU
Walter Pinderhughes, 1203 D
steamer "AVALON
OVE and All Point
Now Open For Dates
Down On The Bay To
the only park in the State of Maryland r
on Saturday and Sunday evenings from
secure dates when application is made,
on any committee who wishes to engage
Apply at Once to
V. Brown
Phone Madison.8288
Wal
30—Ebenezer A. M. E. S. S.
31—Trinity A. M. E.
AUGUST
1—Providence Baptist Church.
2—Zion M. E. Church, Govans.
3—Unique Benedictine Society.
4—St. Mary M. E. Sunday School.
5—St. Francis Xavier.
6—Ames M. E. Sunday School.
7—Ladies' College of St. John
Hks. St. Peter Claytor.
8—Metropolitan M. E. Sunday School.
9—Federation of Colored Catholics.
10—St. Mary M. E. School.
11—Watch Your. Step Social.
12—Ushers of Eastern M. E. Church.
13—Alphens. Pleasure Social.
14—Sparrows Point.
MOONLIGHTS
JUNE
Grand Court of Calanthe, K. of P.
U. S. Custom Employees Association.
JULY
1—Jefferson Auxiliary.
2—Stewardesses of John Wesley.
3—Frances Harper Temple of Elks.
4—Species Society.
5—A. N. L. C. and M. W. L.
6—Ernest Purviance.
pleasure at the manner in which the con-
ference is held, the co-operation
given by the teachers.
The primary classes held their picnic in Drudg Hill Park last Tuesday and both schools, 114 and 114-A, will go to Brown's Grove Friday.
ing!
For Shore
(ater Station)
Tennis, Croquet, Horse Shoe Pitching
ATTRACTION
Speed Boat "FLAVIA"
DANCING
50 CENTS
Atric GROVE
ROUND—Near Middle River. Consists of
a most beautiful woods, fields, onchard
Boating, fishing, large dance hall with
day and Thursday nights.
BUS AND ORGANIZATIONS SOLICITED
Druid Hill Ave., Madison 2403
tt.
N" Is Here
Points on the Bay
For Excursions To
Brown's Grove
un exclusively for Colored People and
now until the first of May. Be sure
as positively no dates will be held in
dates.
Or Call
alter R. Langley
418 Jefferson Street
9- Nonparrels.
10- Good Hope No. 14.
11- Blue Ribbon, Jr. Pleasure Social.
12- Advisory Council of the Hagerstown. District S. S. Workers.
13- Usheres of Sharp St. Church.
15- Unique Beneficial Association.
17- Nonparrel Auxiliary.
18- Knights of St. John's, 264, Lerley Auxiliary.
19- Pleasure of Baltimore Marching Club.
1A. C. E. League of Eastern District Sunday School Council.
2Blue Army Social.
2Pleasure of Public Club.
2Independent A. M. E. Church.
2Lady Board of Managers, Provident Hospital.
2Alphens Pleasure Social.
2Union Beneficial No. 1.
AUGUST
1- Federal Social and Athletic Asso.
2- George Ball Social of St. Paul.
3- Shriners.
4- Tear Tee Tars.
5- Union Bridge Beneficial.
6- Johns Hopkins Club.
7- Rhodes Auxiliary.
8- Nonparrel Assembly.
9- Maddox Loyal Flower Social.
st i a ee Afro ssi Be ae ae - : S - gs it i at
Former Chicago Newspaperman Now Movie Directoy
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‘ apasiN STREET BLUES” ~ Fox ‘Trot
«“NO”?~ Fox Trot.
D+ Played Tt tons HO
{ No. 8600 2 2 ~ No. 3690
Bdance Oksh >a
2 nee. Gt: MUN: ae,
Food ELECIRIC Records
8
WILLIAM FOSTER
HOLDS J08- WITH
PATHE =
Wet Maer of Com
: _ LOS ANGELES, Calif—
. When William Foster gives
orders to Pathe's race
i movie actors, they obey
i"him, for he is an assistant
} director in the film studios
of the Pathe Company,
: here.
i Mr, Foster, a former Chicagoan,
| hrough o dogged persistence, has
Hended the berfh which he dreamed
fof many, many times. He has had
fa long and interesting career, which
Searries him back beyond the days
when he Was with Petes Jackson in
England and later when he and “Jay
Gould” were doing first nights in
‘the show houses on Broadway. He
eame to Chieaco. knew the Pekin
players and began the production of
Colored motion pictures when enthu-
giasm for the Pekin players, was at
ts height. In those days he was one
Of the closest friends of Flournoy
‘Miller. Foster now carries a diamond-
studded wateh, a gift from the, kind-
Jy Flournoy.
“Bill” as he ts known by most of
his friends, got out of pictures and
into the newspaper game, 50-called.
For some years he wrote’ sports for
@ Chicago paper. He Jeft and start-
ed a daily paper of his own, with
Count Gary of New York. ‘Gary's
health forsook him and the paper
failed. But Foster did not stop
trying. He wanted to make pictures
He had written stories and he
wanted to see them on the screen.
Had Hard ‘Time
He himself tells of his efforts to
get on the movie lots. Time and
fime again he went with his story.
Most of the times he could not get in
At other times he got in only to be
seint out. Sometimes he was played
with, at others, ridiculed, It was
not until he ran into a Mr. Powell,
vice-president of Pathe, through the
influence of the doorman at Pathe's,
that he struck a chord of interest.
Powell was wiliing to talk to Fos-
ter. He came from’ Virginia and he
had a wey of understanding that
Foster might have an idea. Foster's
Stories were read ard reread. Con-
versations were held with lawyers,
and. finally Foster was sent for—
to go to work. He could scarcely be-
Heve it himself, Nor could the Ne-
goes whom he was to direct. When
e gave them orders, they looked at
the white men to ses if they should
do what the Negro director was tell-
ing them to do. Powell stuck behind
Foster, in spite of criticism _ from
blacks’ and whites, and now Foster
is well in the game. He stuck, and
ie W0n.
Dunbar
Se ee ee eS
ehos.”
Lovers of thrilling dog pictures
should get their fill of entertainment
when they see the great dog star, Rin
Tin, Tin, in “The Million Dollar’ Col-
lar,* at the Dunbar ‘Theatre, Monday.
“he Charge of the Gauchos,” fea~
turing Prancis X. Bushman, has been
booked for the’ Tuesday ’ program,
Wednesday is doubie-feature dav, and
the management has secured “Tropiz
Madness.” as feature No. 1. and “A
Ship Comes In," as the second attrac-
mn.
“Milton Sills, in “The Crash,” will
appear Thursday, followed by side
splitting comedy.’ “The Cameraman.”
featuring Buster Keaton, Friday. This
picture, is said by crtics to be one
of the’ droll comedian’s best efforts,
Saturday's program features Buzz
Barton in. “The Preckled “Rascal,”
while the fifth chapter of the “Dia
mond Master,” serial, will also be
aeen.
THEY SEEK TO GO FURTHER
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These are the boys and girls who Onished the seventh grade at Towson and took the examinasich for eet
TSS Sherance this fall, ‘The examination is given by @ white supervisor and is understood to be very stiff
but these students have 2. strong determination to enter the On ‘high schools, their ‘tuition being paid by
the county. They are, left to right, bottom row: Raymond Noylan, William Bishop, Clinton Purviance, Ed-
the coitlams, Carciyie Johnson and Russell Frazier. ‘Top row: Principal Jesse Nichols, Corrinne Taylor
Beulah Mack, Constance Williams, plies Mack and John Smith. ..
™ rams are featured by [us
Royxl Theatre | HE CAN PEAY, TOO [flit Shsksiown.* and cl
eee iB “A are of ae ‘a
7 7 1 single picture, "Ridin: rough,
The Tron Masi’; “The O'Donovan | Statting ‘biek ‘Hatéon, 's. the alirac
ffair.’ SER tion for Friday, while the bill wit
_ ‘The inimitable Douglass Fairbanks
comes to be seen and heard at the
‘Royal Theatre Monday, Tuesday, and
Wednesday of next week in “The
Iron Mask,” bis latest, screen achieve-
ment. i
‘Th this Dumas pieturization, Fair-
banks once more is D’Artagnan, the
dashing French hero of the Lith
century, and again he rides with
Athos, Porthos, and Aramis through
years of intrigue, war and love.
‘The first part of the pious takes
place during the reign of Louis XML,
when the four musketeers wield their
swords in defense of their king and
his infant son.
The tine of the second part. is
twenty yeats later during the early
period of the regime of the young
Louis XIV. D'Artagnan and his com-
Denions areas valiant and loyal in
their guardianship of the new king
as they were of his father. D'art-
agnan solves the mystery of the man
in the iron. mask, outwits the car-
inal. and his conspirators, restores
the rightful Louis tohis throne, and
goes to his grave with the baton of
the Marcehal of France upon his
breast.
‘Marguerite de la Mott is once more
Constance, to whom D'Artegnan gives
the only lover of his life, as she was in
“The Three Musketeers.” Belle Ben~
nett. plays Anne of Austria, Queen
mother of the young Louis XIV.
For the last three days of the week
the Royal is offering “The O'Dono-
van Affair.” The story of this thrill-
ing double crime production involves
the escapades of Jack Donovan, a
gambler, who is too friendly with the
wife of a certain Captain Rankin,
who owns a beautiful estate known
as Craigmoor. ‘The latter invites
Donovan as one of’the guests at his
birthday dinner party. During the
meal, Donovan exhibits a cat's-eye
ring which he claims will shine in
the dark. The lights are turned off
to prove his contention and when
they go on again, he is found with’
a knife in his back—dead.
From this point on the mystery
thickens until it is finally solved.
Dorothy Revier is the heroine, while
Jobn Roche plays the part of a
onion
“Bamboola” Slated for
Wednesday Opening
NEW YORK, — “Bamiboola.” 3
musical, comedy. ‘was scheduled tc
Qpen at the Royale theatre, here
Wednesday night,
‘There wilt be’ seventy -people in
the production and a hand unde
the “direction of Lieutenant ‘Tim
Brymn. Names featured in the cast
inélude Dusty Fletcher and John
Masons, comedians formerly ‘with
the “Jaez Regiment"; Isabel Wash-
ington, of ‘the ill-fated. “Harlem”:
Revela’ Hughes, Billy Andrews, Hilda
ats Gat a Gata GF Ene
pabraabReeEExXxExxxnarcanrxnne
* 996 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
HOME OF THE VITAPHONE.
PICTURES AND VITAPHONE ACTS CHANGED 8 TIMES A WEEK
ieee ne
PROGRAM FOR WEEK BEGINNING ON MONDAY, JULY ist
ERIN ON MON OAV SUEY TE.
MONDAY and TUESDAY ONLY—
« +o?
‘The Bellamy Trial’
100 Per Cent Tatking with LEATRICE JOY and BETTY BRONSON
EXTRA—FAMILY PITNICK and REV. SPIKES—Vitaphone Act
COMEDY and FOX NEWS 7
eee nee eee
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY—
Vitaphone 109 Per Gent Talking DOLORES COSTELLO In
, ‘ "9
. _“TENDERLOIN’
With CONRAD NAGEL, MITCHELL LEWIS and others
SPECIAL TREAT—CLYDE COOK VITAPHONE ACT
“WATER BOY,” Big Colored Act—COMEDY and FABLES
er,
FRIDAY and SATURDAY—
CLARA Bow In :
« + .
The Wild Party”
100 Per Cent Talking, Singing and Dancing
“EARLY MORNING”"—Fox Movietone Act
BROWN and WHITAKER—Viteptione Act
PATHE COMEDY and NEWS REEL
2 Song Hits At Each Performance
een naan
OPEN 12:20 To 11:20 CONTINUOUS
Always a Good Show
ROOSEVELT Theatre
S12 W. Biddle Street Home of the Photophone
PROGRAM FOR. WEEK BEGINNING ON MONDAY, JULY tet :
MONDAY. and TUESDAY—Double Show
» “SAND,” 8 Reels, with Wm. S. Hart
“FLYING BUCCANEERS,” 6 Reels with Wally Wales
SERIAL, ‘coMeDy NEWS
——
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY—Double show—
. ' “SHAKE DOWN,” 6 Reels, with James Murray
| “A GRAIN OF DUST” with Claire Windsor
| SERIAL, comepy News
$$
FRIDAY— . *
“RIDING THROUGH” with Dick Hatton
——
SATURDAY—
“THE FOREIGN LEGION” —10 Reels
. With NORMAN KERRY and LEWIS STONE
aaa eee Te ee eT,
HE CAN PLAY, TOO
mo.
ee” i
Sa
fe? a i
A oe 1
ee
er re See
_,. Afro Photo.
Dr. T. Henderson Kerr, local phar-
macist, who played several — violin
selections for the members of the
Saturday AFRO Club. He was ac-
companied on the piano by his son.
Roosevelt
“Snd"; “The Shakedown"; “The
Foreign Legion.”
‘Two features. William S. Hart, in
“Sand,” and Wally Wales. in “The
Plying Buccaneers,” will be shown at
the Roosevelt Theatre, Monday and
Tuesday.
‘The Wednesday and Thursday pro-
grams are featured by James Murray,
mm “The Shakedown,” and Claire
Windsor in “A Grain of Dust.” A
single picture, “Riding Through,”
starring Dick Hatton. is the attrac~
tion for Friday, while the bill_ wil’
close Saturday with Norman Kerry
and Lewis Stone in “The Foreign Le-
gion,” a colorful story of fighting men
in foreign lands,
ee pa
. . New Lincoln
“The Bellamy ‘vial; “Tenderloin”;
“The Wild Party.”
Sound and’ talking effects feature
the pictures shown at the New Lin-
coln Theatre and for the first two
days of the week patrons will be
treated to a view of “The Bellamy
Trial,” an all-talking dramatization
of a mysterlous murder case, end its
‘unusual solution.
| Dolores Costello and Conrad Nagel.
‘two of the foremost lovers on the
silver sheet, will be seen and heard
in “Tenderloin,” a stirring drama of
the life of a ganz of the underworld,
Wednesday and Thursday.
“The Wild. Party,” featuring the
vivacious Clafa Bow, is scheduled to)
play Friday and Saturday. This’ is)
2 spicy story of modern flappers and
the delightful Miss Bow is said to be
at her best in it.
2S
Carey Theatre
“Wolf of Wall Street”; “Me Gang-
Soe = ster" ““Sharpshooters.”
George Bancroft, in “The Wolf ot
Wall Street,” opens the Carey Thea-
tre movie program Monday, the story
being that of a heartless ' financier
who is the terror of small investors in
the stack market,
“Me_ Gangster.” featuring lovely
June Collyer, is offered Teusday, with
William S. Hart following on Wed-
nesday in ‘The Cold Deck." - Hart. Is
supported “in this production by a
great cast and Alma, Rubens plays
the feminine lead. George O'Brien
and Lols Moran appear in “The
Sharpshooters," ‘Thursday.
A thrilling ‘western film of the
bad lands is presented Friday when
Leo Maloney will be seen in "Across
the Deadline.” Bob Stelle in “Men
in the Rough” winds up the picture
program, Saturday.
Be SET | wwe
: WONDERLAND |
: PARK
| “JULY 4TH
: Spanish-American
| WAR VETERANS
Potomac Division
| Syaccietnereenlt encase
| Admission — Free!
| GOOD MUSIC
oD ust eee) [at fe
“Well the South!”
e © SOUR.
‘Yes.. just snuggle down "long side of a moonbeam and
let George Bias croon this one in your ear! Melody?... |
it fairly sparkles! And rhythm? . . . it’s downright restless
with it! The stuff George puts into this one is plumb
intoxicatin’! Hear this great record today — at your
Columbia dealer's! :
Record No. 14430-D, 10-inch 750
TELL THE SOUTH .
; SWEETHEART IF YOU WERE MINE { Mocelas:Loecrgs Biag
OTHER POPULAR RECORDS
Record No. 14429-D, 10:inch, 25¢
Rick aad Blas [Voc
‘Spanish Blues Guitar Solo. 233 3 4 Lewis Black
Record No. 14428-D, 10-inch, 75¢ &
eee REMY Novice Vocate wo 6 6 4 « « Otis Harris
Ask your dealer for latest Race Record Catalog
Columbia Phonograph Company, 1819 Broadway, New York City |
eo
] “NEW
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‘Viva-tonal Recording ~The Records without Scratch
erummpbsieenmnmnnrmierementicciicienitiitniig
AS “HARLEM” CLOSES
CHICAGO—A bit of drama, not
called for,in the show, maried the
closing of “Harlem,” here last Wed-
nesday, when Roscos “Red” Sim~-
mons, local cabaret entertainer, is)
said to have used his fists on Chap-
pie Gardner, member of the “Har-
lem” cast, following an argument,
over the latter's disposition of some;
‘money belonging to Miss Vivian Ba-
ber, star of the play. j
Mr, Simmons is said to havel
pounced upon Mr. Gardner as the
latter emerged from behind the]
theater and accosted him with a
question involving Mr. Gardner's dis-
position of some of Miss Baber's
money,
Without waiting for an answer,
“Red” sallied from the midst of two)
stalwart friends and popped Mr.
Gardner two healthy swats in, the|
eve Mr. Gardner did .not strike
‘There are said to have been two
reasons for Mr. Simmons’ attack.
‘The first cause was seported re-
marks Mr. Gardner is alleged .to
have made to Miss Baber about Mr.
Simmons to whom, according to the
local papers, she is engaged. The
| second involves. Mr, Gardner's dis-
ose] of some mbney which Miss Ba-
#5 said to have given him to pay
on a dress which she had purchas
at a local shop,
Actor Stabs Self
in Biblical Play
WASHINGTON, (AN. P.)—Wwhen|
King Saul of Biblical fame stabbed
himself @ few centuries ago, he did’
not do it any more gepcetally and
realistically than did ward Sewell
in Sepicting ‘the role on the stage
here ‘Thurs ay night,
‘The original King Saul might have
made ita bit more effective, but Se-
well certainly added realism to the:
‘suicide scene, and when he drew the
sword from the wound it was drop-
ping with real blood. Sewell who is
an actor of no mean abiity ise mis-
judged the space between in his arm
and side, through which the sword
Jas supposed to pass and instead ran
‘the sword sols ‘his arm, -
. He fell tot he fioor, just as he
‘should and groaned:' “So died
mighty King Saul.” it was, real
groan and Sewell testified to this fact)
when he arrived at the hospital where
he was rushed for treatment.
jp eneatoe een
~ SPEED WEBB
LOS ANGELES, Callf.—SPEED
WEBB, who brough: his Melody
Lads here from Ohio two years ago,
has built up an enyiable record on
the cdast and is atill going strong,
BFULN
BF ULNDLAGIN
THE TALKIES ARE COMING! WATCH FOR BIG OPENING!
] Saunas Fon WEEK SEER SI ONGN aT
—III Il SS 5
MONDAY—Special—One Day Only— {
* waRNERBROS. promt "7 7 i ie
Bi 4
RINTINGTIN. gi),
THEMILLION 27: | \j
san mee Aor °
| e END |
ce Oh 4 {
. sah PING
ae
eee f/ Y\ |
bre F @ | |
gr< | |
gs et ee |
MATTY KEMPo* PHILO MECULLOUGH fr
TOMMY DUGAN®~EVELYN PieRCE Watch Royal |
STORY AND ScEWARIO By ROBERT LonD _Rinty in ac- 4
tion against a
‘ou will surely say this Is w Sutton Dotinr band of hard. |
Picture, is best yet! DON'T Miss 17: boiled out- 3
laws. |
WO REEL WESTERN ana PATIE FABLES
) MAUR AAA GAETBAS SAEs as {
TUESDAY—Special— : 4
} FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN in {
66, j
| “Charge of |
the Gaucho”
got, eiSn Bsa wetiehe ehhis ae see kane
"TWO REEL COMEDY and SENS f
AAAAABAVAABALABALAEASAWBASAAy ‘
WEDNESDAY— ., |
) Double Feature Day—Don’t Miss This! 3
| FEATURE NO. 1— ;
! Special Cast in 3
66 e d. sat
“Tropic Madness”,
| FEATURE NO. 2—. q
Special Cast in {
66 6 C ”
, ‘A Ship Comes In"|
GLUBUWVAWAWIAVTRAAABAALSBAESSS :
| THURSDAY—JULY 4th—Giant Special— f
| MILTON SILLS in f
| “The Crash” |
tor alnelldae
¥. B. O. COMEDY and “CHINATOWN MYSTERY"—No. 2 q
/ MUAIUAUVAAAATEECASEAAABASe
| FRIDAY {
BUSTER KEATON in i
‘TheCa an’;
| meram i
Itis funny! Keeps you laughing from start to finish. The #4
“Iron Faced Man of the Screen.” i
Comedy—"LADIES MUST EAT" .
| “Fire Detective” —No. 8 i
, LAVACA AAs i
| SATURDAY— q
| BUZZ BARTON in a
“Freckled Rascal’;
| “The Diamond Master”—No. 5 i
| Comedy-—-“THE BOY FRIEND" Ey
Preparing for -
Big Crowds at
Wonderland Park
10,000 People Expected to Crowd Park
Fourth of July
‘Wonderland Park is prepared for
the largest crowd in its history this
duly 4, This park has long been a
mecea for pleasure seekers on holl-
days vf this kind and it is expected
‘that the crowd this year will exceed
all others in number. One of the fea-
‘tures of this entertainment for this
day will be the parade of the Span-
isk-American war veterans of the
Middle Atlantic States, the Patomac
Division. These veterans will march
at 3:30 in full uniform, exemplifying
the spirit of 1898,
‘This park which is the largest
amusement park run exclusively for
the race anywhere in America de-
serves the full support of, every col-
ored citizen of Baltimore. As its man-
ager, Mr. Seamon, has endeavored to
Place everything at the disposal of
‘our people here which may be found
in parks of “similar nature through
out the country.
Admission will be free on this day
and there -will be music throughout
the day in the dance pavilion,” You
are cordially invited to come and
bring your lunches. Bring your chil-
dren and enjoy a_day’s outing in this
beautiful park. "Don't forget--admis-
sion to the park will be absolutely
free this day.
“ST, LOUIS BLUES”
TO BE NEW PleTURE
Work Begun on All-Talking,
All-Singing Story of Fami.
‘liar Tune. a
BESSIE. sMiTH STARS
Scenes to be Laid in Memphis
Underworld. =
NEW YORK—Plans have tsen
completed and work beg
“the St, Louls ‘plus, ot
talking, "all -singing "photopiy
version of of W. C. Handys
world-famous song by that nae,
by the, R, C. A. Photophone Com,
pany, it was announced ths
week :
Bessie Smith will be the stay “blues:
singer in. this ‘production “ang
be supported by & chorus of 38 suit
selected from the best musical one
zations in this city, ‘The backgrtes
for the picture will be laid an aries
his tenement house and dane: iyi)
Freddie Washington. wil pley te
role of the St. Lewis women with her
diamond rings. Dudley’ Murphy
directing the production 2nd a t:.
piece orchestra, uncer the direction
of Mr. Handy and featuring Jolu ny
Dunn, cornetist, and Jimmy Joknsin
Pianist. will be featured.
WRITE NOW FOR SPECIE tatty
ak a ts VK tiaiaae
"Hot Chocolate" Show is Tempting Theatrical Fare
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
CRITICS PRAISE LATEST SHOW TO SEEK BROADWAY
"Jazzlips" Richardson and Baby Cox Stop Show With their Specialties.
DANCING IS TORRID
"Ain't Misbehavin" Is Song Hit; Risque Lines Cut Out.
NEW YORK. (Special)
—From the smacking of the lips in the metropolitan sector, "Hot Chocolate," the expanded Connie's Inn revue, which opened last Thursday night at the Hudson theatre, is a rather toothsome and palatable offering.
Geraldyne Dismond, after seeing the show, says: "Hot Chocolate, regardless of the fact that the comedy, outside of a Big Business bit featuring Jazzill Richardson, Eddie Green and Billy Higgins, is nothing to speak of; that there are spots that would make even a fapper blush; and that you see distinctly a blackbirdishness, exhilarates you like nothing at all. The dancing does it. And the Bon Bon Buddies lead the way. If there is fast, peppier or more thrilling dancing going on anywhere, you couldn't make me believe it. Of course, the girl-chorus can step, too, but it is so good to look at that it would be all right if it couldn't dance.
Jazzlips Scores
"In front of this marvelous background is Jazzi Richmond, a grade A artist who stops the show cold; the Three Midnight Steppers (what a trio!); Paul Meercs, who, thank goodness, in one spot is relieved of twirling his wife around; Louise Cooke, whose dance is a 'knockout'; and the darling of the show. Baby Cox, who not only dances, but sings and tosses across the footlights a personality that makes her a wow.
"The 'lovie dove' work is done by Margaret Simms and Paul Bass, so handsome, so sweet singing. 'Ain't Mishehavin', surely the song hit, is put over by them with the able assistance of Russell Wooding's Sextet, a favorite up and down town.
Colorful Scenes
"As for pictures, nothing more could be expected than the Goddess of Rain and Indian scenes. Jimmy Baskette, who has a physique and voice that makes delightful shivers go up and down your spine, sings the theme song of each Low-Cook, as the goddess Rain gets away in the first scene and the Woman invites the center of the stage in the second.
Spicy Risque Bits
Spy Raisa Rescue
"It fails to the lot of clever Edith Wilson to carry the burden of the rique entree. It is spicy in the best Andy Razaf mannee and those who like it, will: and those who don't, won't; but a for Miss Wilson, she does a song of perfection. Pool Room a song that led your imagination in the wrong channels and brought down the wrath of Broadway was removed after the first night. So was a bed used by Miss Wilson in her feature "Black and Blue."
"No, I didn't like it all. I thought about a lot of other things, especially the heat, while sitting it out, but I shall see it again and again, if for no other reason than because the finale of the first half is the best thriller I have found on YouTube and in orchestra are it the pit, and Louis Armstrong does a specialty just before the opening of the second half." Louis Sobel, white, dramatic editor of the Evening Graphic, says:
"Sepia maids, who used every muscle of their bodies as well as their hands, ears and heads in wild furries of maddening dance routines; colorado maduro lads who squirmed and twist-steped until you expected a dozen joints to crack any minute; wide-mouthed, gold-toothed comedians who chirped no sound, your knees your waist, your knees and laugh right out loud every time they uttered a sound—these are particularly fresh in mind at this moment.
"Jazzilis Richardson' is a chap that beats them all. I don't know who he is—I never saw him before—but I don't believe yet that he did everything I saw him do with that one pair of rather large feet. It just seemed possible.
"Concerns he likes it or not, has a hit on his hands. Hot Chocolates should be here to greet the new arrivals in the fall. And in the winter, too, for that matter."
IKE DIXON, wishes to explain the non-appearance of Horace Henderson's Band on 10th and 11th, at Wonderland Park, Baltimore, and Ike Dixon to play five engagements, three in Baltimore: two at Wonderland Park, and one at Tobin's Ballroom (white) to also play in Sugar Saddles, Washington, and at the Paley-Orient in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Ike Dixon received a telegram from Horace Henderson (white) to meet me with a terrible automobile accident and not be able to get here until Tuesday after. Ike Henderson failed to show up in Baltimore, and the people come to see him and not have any music. Ike Dixon secured a band to so that the dance parties would be able to show up until Horace Henderson's band did show up. After the band did not show up at all, Ike sent three telegrams, not getting any reply. Horace Henderson would be unable to make the engagements. Ike Dixon has promoted attractions in Baltimore for the past five years and never have come disappointed the public. Bands have come after that they but always have come as advertised.
Dillon never has faked advertised a need, wants the public to feel he is not trying to trick him on playing over them now, as he must depend on the public to support his attractions and dances, he could not hope to fake advertise. He Dillon has telegrams to prove he worked Helen Henderson's Band as stated above, and also to prove the statement of the accident. Using the public will have confidence in his future attractions.
The CAREY
WM. S. HART, ALMA REUBENS and MILDRED HARRIS In
“THE COLD DECK”—6-Acts
A Rooting, Tooting Story of a Gambler, who Could Fight and Use a Gun with the Best of Them and SURE DID!
Toots and Casper in “SMILE, BUTTERCUP, SMILE”—2-Act Comedy
FOX NEWS—Interesting and Educational!
THURSDAY—
GEORGE O'BRIEN, LOIS MORAN and TOM DUGAN In
“SHARPSHOOTERS”—7-Acts
“Sharp Shooters”—a tale of men and women who shoot straight.
Bobby Dunn in “GIVE-HIM AIR”—2-Act Comedy
Leo Maloney in “FIRE DETECTIVE”—Last Part
BOB STEEL, MARJORIE KING, LING TIGHAM and Cast, In “MAN IN THE ROUGH”—6-Acts A devil with women, a demon with men—Here’s hard-fightin’, ha ridin’, hard-lovin’ Bob in a thriller. Wm. Fairbanks in “VANISHING MILLIONS”—No. 8 Mickey and His Gargain in “AST CHANCE”—4-Acts Also FABLES
THEY BOTH PLAYED
THE FRIENDS
Little Misses Grace and Ambra Woolridge, who are accomplished in music and each played a piano selection last Saturday at the AFRO Club meeting. They are daughters of Dr. Thomas J. Woolridge, 703 W. Lafayette avenue.
"In Old Arizona," Full-
Length Talking Drama,
Opens Monday.
"GHOST TALKS" NEXT
Stepin Fetchit, Race Star, in
Regent Film.
CAREY
Hey Street
HARRY DUVALL, Manager
RUNNING ON MONDAY, JULY 1st
ARROLL, ARTHUR RANKIN and
NOVA in
"STREET"—8-Acts
only crashing to wealth and power,
lived by the men who battle there.
of finance.
BARKED ON "THE CORNER"—2-Acts
World Before Your Eyes"
CAROL LOMBARD and Cast In
A smashing story of a gang-
ster, a girl and love—with action
aplynty and thrills throughout—
MAY DAVIDSON in
"THAT NIGHT"
2-Act Comedy
PATHE NEWS
Interesting and Educational
ENS and MILDRED HARRIS in
DECK"—6-Acts
Gambler, who Could Fight and Use
SURE DID!
BETTERCUP SMILE"—2-Act Comedy
tating and Educational
ORAN and TOM DUGAN in
TTERS"—7-Acts
men and women who shoot straight.
NIM AIR"—2-Act Comedy
DETECTIVE"—Last Part
HILL and BEN CORBETT in
LAD LINE"—5-Acts
West and a Cowboy who proved he
HOD HOW"—Some Comedy
GENIC
DIMOND MASTER"—No. 4
TOM LINGHAM and Cast, In
ROUGH"—6-Acts
with men—Here's hard-fightin', hard-
SHING MILLIONS"—No. 8
KEY'S LAST CHANCE"—2-Acts
ABLES
MADNESS" "SUNSET PASS"
GOOD IT'S AT THE
GENT
MONDAY—TUESDAY—
IN OLD
"My man," crooned Tonia to her
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WITH
EDMUND LOWE
WARNER BAXTER
DOROTHY BURGESS
IN OLD ARIZONA
RAOUL WALSH-IRVING CUMMINGS
PRODUCTION
Story and dialog by TOM BARRY
STORY OF SOUTHWEST LEADS REGENT BILL
STORY OF SOUTHWEST LEADS REGENT BILL
The long-awaited epic of the colorful old southwest, "In Old Arizona," has been booked to play the first half of the week at the Regent Theatre.
It is a story of the romantic southwest. Its central figures are a notorious bandit and killer who had eluded all attempts to capture him, a fiery girl whom he loved and a United States calvary sergeant who was assigned to capture the bandit and who fell in love with the girl.
The sergeant persuaded her to betray the bandit. That is the germ of the plot, but it does not begin to describe the fascinations of hearing the trio.-Warner Baxter, Dorothy Burgess and Edmund Lowe-
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
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speak their lines; of the accompanying sounds and the novelty of having a score of famous film players in the supporting cast.
Fetchit in Film
Stepin Fetchit, the race movie star, who was seen to such good advantage in "Hears in Dixie," has a prominent part in "The Ghost Talks," which will play, Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Charles Eaton and Helen Twelvetrees have the leading roles in this farce comedy. It is the story of the activities of a correspondence school detective.
Melancholy winds; weird, sepulcral voices; mysterious footsteps; the dog and hysterical screams of two New Yorkers are sounds which help to establish a 'creepy' atmosphere in the haunted house sequence of "The Ghost Talks."
Fetchit and Baby Mack, the bridegroom and bride, hold the spotlight in the particularly comic action having to do with the ghost.
Sheldon B. Hoskins at Demonstration
Sheldon B. Hoskins, Baltimore representative, was present at the demonstration conducted by the Dennison Company for three weeks at a local development store. Mr. Hoskins, whose work was highly commended, will give a summer course in the work, including flower making, wax craft and costume designing.
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PITTSBURGH, Pa. — The "We's Got It" company, was presented by Sam Robinson at the Elmore Theatre last week. The show was a snappy, song and dance production, featuring many former "Sonny Boy Sam Robinson" players. Sam Robinson plays the leading role as comedian and shows great ability, being particularly good as the parson in the wedding scene. Jay Goings, Wallace Curtis and Fred LeJole are also good in their parts as comedians. Bessie McKinley, Bessie McKinley, Robert Wheat, tap dancers, and Paul L. Foster, straight man, are good reasons for the success of the show. The interpretations by Ma Balley are especially good. For the week commencing Monday, June 24th, the "Hot Ella" company, rated among the best in the circuit, will be featured. This show features Brown & Brown, Boyd & Boyd, and Miss Lorine Winn.
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"The Rainbow Man," and "A Dangrous Woman," Vitaphone and Movietone acts, conclude the bill.
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"Hoof Beats of Venegence," "The Cop," "The Little Savage," and "The Desert of the Lost."
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"Blockade" and "Eternal Lova," a synchronized music score, has been composed for this picture by Hugo Risenfeld, and is played by the famous Risenfeld orchestra.
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In Chicago
Stepin Fetchit, movetone artist and comedian, who appeared in "Hearts in Dixie," "The Ghost Talks" and many other pictures, visited the Regal last Sunday and delivered a short talk on activities and the future for the Negro artist in the talkle field on the west coast.
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Theatre Owners Booking Association
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Baltimore County Hi Entrance Exams to Continue
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COUNTY SPENT $10410 ON HIGH PUPILS
COUNTY SPENT $10410 ON HIGH PUPILS
Plan of Sending them to City Schools to be Continued as in the Past.
CO. OPPOSES SCHOOL
Commissioners Unwilling to Erect Colored Hi Building.
The Baltimore County Board of Education has refused request of the County Parent-Teacher Association for a colored high school.
Petition to this effect carried before the board at its last session by a delegation cited that "the principle of equality of educational opportunity would seem to require high schools as well as elementary school facilities within easy reach of all children without cost of tuition or transportation." It operates high schools for white pupils at Catonsville, Towson Sparrows Point, Sparks, Franklin, Rannallstown, Fullerton, Dundalk, Parkville and Essex. There are no Baltimore county high schools for colored pupils.
After the seventh grade, pupils are given a stiff examination and if they survive, their tuition paid for four years in Baltimore City high schools. The county does not pay the transportation of these colored pupils, although it spends $13,856 a year supporting white children from home to school and back again.
The four years tuition paid by the board carries the child only once the third year. If it would graduate, the parents must pay the child's tuition for the last year in addition to the car fare.
For parents living in Sparrows Point, the means six street car fares are for a single child.
Hershner Talks
Assistant Superintendent Hershner told the AFRO this week that the county board paid the tuition of 77 colored children in city schools. Tuition cost the county $10,410, he said.
Of these children, 62 entered Douglass Senior High. Four later widowed; seven entered Douglass Junior High; two were dropped; eleven were entered at Dunbar Junior High School.
Assistant Hershner said the board is considering the claims of the parents to pay the tuition for five years, but there seems no likelihood for a county colored high school or the addition of an 8th grade to county elementary schools. White and colored elementary school pupils are given an examination at the end of the 7th grade. He under the superviosl of the board. Only those who pass are permitted to enter a high school.
With patience, he declared, colored parents will see larger numbers each year pass the examinations. Last year only 10 passed. In 1912, he said,
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These young ladies learned good wit last Sunday when they gathered with friends on the farm of Calvin with interest to spend the day away from the crowded city. They are, right to left, Mrs. Edith Gail, 1407 Madison avenue, and Miss Mae Richards, 1800 McCulloh street.
the average attendance in county colored schools was 60 per cent. Last year it had increased to 85 per cent. Average attendance in white schools was 87 per cent.
The assistant superintendent said that, though Baltimore County only ordered 25 years of public schooling for white pupils, this was sufficient to admit them to standard colleges on equality with Baltimore City white pupils who have spent 12 years in public schools.
New Schools
The county board is authorized to buy a two-acre lot for a two-room school at Bergies, Md. The present school is housed in a badly litched house.
At Turners Station a new 6-8 room school is planned and a new building is planned for Chattolance. Twenty-nine years ago. Assistant Superintendent Hershner said, all colored schools were in rented buildings.
DAVENPORT IN TRAFFIC COURT
Edwin Davenport, son of William H. Davenport, local politician. 1000 Pennsylvania avenue, was fined $2 and costs when arraigned in Traffic Court on charges of wrong parking Monday.
D. ARNETT MURPHY HAS 20TH ANNIVERSARY
Advertising Manager and Treasurer of Afro, Tells Club of Paper's Progress.
MUSICAL RENDITIONS
Woolridge Sisters Play Selections on Program.
D. Arnett Murphy, treasurer and advertising manager of the AFRO-AMERICAN, celebrated the twentieth anniversary of his connection with the firm Saturday, at which time he gave the progress of the plant in twenty years, to members of the AFRO C
Mr. Murphy worked in the office after school hours until his graduation from high school in 1909, when he began full time work. At that time the AFRO plant was located at 307 St. Paul street, and specialized in job work, publishing the paper as a side line. It employed ten men with a weekly pay-roll of 1,000. The paper ran eight pages with six columns,印敷 of 2,367 lines of advertising; the reading matter and advertising, totaling 768 inches. The equipment was valued at $5,000 and the circulation was 3,000.
Today there are forty employees, with a weekly payroll of $1200. The paper runs from 20 to 24 pages, with eight columns each, carries an average weekly lineage of 100 advertising, has 3,820 inches of reading matter of advertising. The president is the building and equipment is $165,000 and the circulation is 37,000. Mr. Murphy also told the club that job printing has been dropped and the publishing of the AFROAMERICAN is the business of the company. Mr. Mitchell Speaks
The Rev. Albert J. Mitchell, field agent of Morgan College, spoke on the two great needs of the race today; viz. the development of culture and philanthropy. He emphasized the need of group philanthropy, stating that it would take the philanthropy numbers of individual philanthropists to the race lacks at the presetime.
Violin and Piano Selections
Dr. T. Henderson Kerr rendered two violin selections, accompanied by his son, T. Henderson Kerr, Jr., who is also an accomplished violinist Little Misses Grace Blailey Wooldige, Dr. Thomas J. Wooldige of 703 Lafayette avenue, charmingly played two piano selections. The young musicians are all pupils of Herbert Y. Johnson.
DOUGLASS HI HOLDS
ALUMNI NIGHT
The Alumni medal was awarded to Gertrude L. Proctor, valedictorian of the 1929 Douglass high school graduating class lage Friday night, at the school. George B. Murphy, 901 of the fourfathers of the Alumni Association. President Cato Anderson was introduced by Principal Mason H. Kwins, who announced that the entertainment of the alumni by the school will be held on Friday. President Anderson responded that a duplicate alumni medal is being prepared for Miss Lucy D. Cawthrop, valedictorian of the 1929 Douglass high school graduating class lage. Other features of the program were, a playlet by high school students, directed by Miss Mae Muller, and short talks by Arthur Briscoe, 05; Carl Muller, 07; Miss Margaret P. Williams and Dr. H. P. Hughes, 11.
OBLATE SISTERS of Providence, at Greenwood Electric Park, Thursday, July 11th.
BALTO. ELK ENDORSED FOR GRAND EXALTED RULER
At the Bi-State association meeting of the I.P.E.O. of Elks, held at Frederick, Md. on Tuesday, June 18, the convention went on record as endorsing the candidacy of J. Finley Wilson as grand exalted ruler to succeed himself.
We, the delegates and past president of the association, Samuel T. Hemsl, members and delegates of Monumental Lodge No. 3, did not endorse the candidacy. We, the candidate who is fully qualified and aspires to the high office of grand exalted ruler in the person of Wm. Lewis, past grand organizer, P.E.R., and a member of Monumental Lodge No. 3, whose candidacy we heartily endorse.
Signed:
TRULY HALYCHETT,
WM. E. NELSON,
GEO. W. SMITH,
HOWARD MASON,
SAMUEL T. HEMSLEY,
Eutaw
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The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
Missing
Roland Breeze, 1834 Stockton street, missing since June.17th; reported by Walter Breeze, father. Age 15 years, height, 5 feet 4 inches; weight 125 lbs., complexion light brown. Wore long blue sailor pants, gray sweater, gray skull cap with red and white ball on top and black oxford shoes.
Wife Had Bobbed Hair
Mrs. Gertrude Cole, 2417 Baker St,
Missing since June 17th; reported by
Jack Cole, husband. Age 25 years;
height, 5 feet, 8½ inches; weight, 155
lbs; hair light, bobbed; asst. for
J. C. tattooed, on forearm and
arm. For forearm. Wore a
blue hat and blue dress, black patent
leather, pumps and gray hose.
Boy Aged 18
Charles R. Wilson, 1918 McCullow street, missing since June 13th, reported by Norma Wilson, mother, same address. Age 18 years, height 5 feet, 7 inches, weight 140 lbs, has lump behind ear, has light grey S. E. coat, black pin stripe pants, black low shoes and grey bow tie.
Woman Leaves
Nannie Brockington, 1113 Sharp St.
missing since June 17th, reported by
Lawrence Brockington, father, age
24 years, height, 5 feet, 6 inches,
weight, 145 lbs, hair, black; eyes light
brown; complexion medium; built
slender; occult eyes; housewife;
Wore black shirt; black coat, black
shirt; black hat. When last seen
with niece, Marbelle Temple of
same address. Age 18 years. Went
in yellow cab to 1122 Shields ziley and
thence to Union Station.
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THE ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
FIJIS SACRIFICE FINGERS FOR DEAD
AUSTRALIA
TYPICAL SOMAN WOMAN
The chief of the marriage, death, a child is born, a client of num from a pig down, youngster; whi but a few hours the sea and Then comes the few days later mixture, much on its head to
By Wilton Pember
If you take a world-mar-
k and study that it carefully you
will find that about one hundred miles to the north of Cape York. Northern Queensland, lies the island of New Guinea, probably the largest island in the world. Originally owned by fierce headhunting cannibals. Many still row through the interior, but it is now ruled over by the Dutch and the British, who divide the island equally between them. The northeastern part was originally German New Guinea, but at the beginning of the Great War, was taken by the Australian forces and is now the Mandated Territory.
The southeastern part of the island, originally called British New Guinea, is what I am about to tell you of in this chapter. The name was altered to Papua, which means fuzzy-headed, some years ago in order to avoid confusion with the northeastern part. It is about 90,000 square miles in extent, and has a population of about 250,000 natives.
"Razor-Back"
The country is rough and rugged, much of it being known as "razorback" formation. Some of the mountains are very high, their peaks rising above the valley, which have perpetual snow upon them, though they are quite close to the equator. These mountains in general are stern and savage-looking. The sides are so steep that the bare rock glows in the sun" Only "the bare rock glows in the sun" in the valleys the vegetation is luxurious and varied: wonderfully colored cactus and coleus, sago and coconut palms, area palms and peppers, beautiful lilies flourish in this pristine. Georgeous butterflies fit about, and the beautiful Bird of Paradise adds its luster to the scene. Papaver rhoeas are the largest. Borer is one of the largest in the world, and is navigable for about five hundred miles, and it has been said that "enough water comes down the river to provide everybody on this earth one hundred and twenty gallons each."
Queer Life
The people live in small villages. About fifteen to twenty houses generally form a village, and as very little order is preserved, the houses are built without any idea of town-planning. Sometimes they are built good for protection, or for pleasure, and the sea. All the houses are built upon high piles as a protection against white ants rats, and other vermin, which are numerous. These village houses are often covered with decorations and avenue figures, some of which are situated in the extreme. It is the form of art, still it shows a striving for beautiful things inherent in all people.
Eat Bees and Ants
Their main food is the yam (what like a potato), bread-fruit, taro (which is the root of a lily), bananas, sugarcane, pineapple and nuts. Someones they have pig, or fish, or lion, and with every prepared food the cocoons they are not over-ripe, for: the lion, the lizard, the snakes, like bees, bees, antles, stinging setimein fish, opossum, and even rats. Their clothing consists of very, as befits a hot country; grass who are worn by the womencifo, who are quite as keen on fashion as our own people, while men and boys wear a round leaf, fastened with a stairing around the waist, leaving the limbs free.
Primitive Customs
The Papuans still cling to their customs, rites and rituals, many of which are both straine and unique
NATIVE POLICE AT
SUVA, FIJI
Every Time a Member of the Family Dies, Australian Relatives Have to Cut Off a Joint. Holes are Bored in Ears and Nose of Newly Born Infants. Adults Use Long Hair as Pockets to Keep Things In.
The chief of them relate to birth, marriage, death and harvest. When a child is born the mother is the recipient; numerous presents are given to the youngster; when when the baby is but a few hours old it is taken to the sea and bathed in the waves. Then comes the next process, for a few days later some black resinous paste is applied to the ribbed on its head to harden the skin. The next process is to pierce holes in the child's ears, and, in some cases the nose, into which are stunts made bigger are made bigger as the child grows older, until it reaches a stage when a large plug of wood can be thrust into the stretched lobes. One never sees a birthday beast or celebration event, and are often ed as unlucky events, they are forbidden all about.
Mutilation
At the death of a relative the natives paint themselves with a mixture of charcoal and coconut oil, and this must be done with a brush, but must be renewed should it wear off before that time. Then again, if the relative is a near one a joint is taken off a finger as a re-creation of the original other islanders they go in for tattooing expensively, and this is done in youth with a thorn or other sharp point, which has been dipped into a strong blue dye, made from certain
"Keens"
Even from quite an early age, the hair of the Papuan gets quite a lot of attention, for children are taught by their parents to comb their hair long enough to keep it damp. Thus the furious mop becomes as good as a pocket, and is more often than not the receptacle of a strange assortment of bits of string, fish-hooks, pieces of coconut, and in fact, anything and everything that appeals to them. It must not be misunderstood by readers that the Papuans are distressed or derelict people. If one lives with these natives for a long time, they will find them as happy, virile race, and if treated properly, will respond in a way that will be beneficial to themselves and the world in general. It must be remembered that they have not been treated with high-rated races should help those not so blessed to realize the highest within them without imposing their civilization upon people with disastrous results, as is frequently
Papuans Educated
Much is being done for the Papuan of late years, by the federal government of Australia. The natives are being educated and are now much more active in quite an admirable way by the Australian authorities. The children, in most cases, are not only eager, but quick to learn, and the white teachers are more active than their general advancement, both from an educational and civilized standpoint—this, of course, is in the Mandated Territory, which, as the Australian government under Australian administration since the opening of the Great War:
New Hebrides Situation
As for the various groups of islands that stud the Pacific, there is an ever-increasing attention being paid by the authorities of the Dominion, unique in many things, is unique also in this, that alone among South Sea Island Governments it does nothing for the promotion of education. The teaching and training of the lives are left entirely to the unions.
The question of education in the islands is complex and beset with difficulties. Children whose parents are emerging from the sea quite the same lines as boys and girls who are the product of a highly-developed civilization. The islander by nature is a tiller of the soil, and does work other than agriculture. The trades and industries of the islands are largely in the hands of Europeans and Japanese, and are likely to remain whole future of the native is bound up with the use he makes of his land.
Witchcraft
In bygone days the prevalence of witchcraft debarred any possibility of progress, and made *i* native content with his dugout cane important impetus towardeward construction. His ideas in agriculture are still extremely primitive. For the most part the natives of today till the soil in the same fashion as their forefathers did in Captain Cook's day, merely scratching the surface their old-fashioned under such conditions the location of an island solid can never be complete until he
The Paris Pepper-Pot By J. A. ROGERS
International Correspondent and Author.
is taught to farm his own land and
can an able and intelligent cultivation.
Only within recent years have the benefits of education been understood and appreciated by the natives. In addition, the prince schools were regarded as an unaccountable whim of the missionaries, and the scholars attended with the idea that they were conferring a favor upon them; attendance at school was regarded by the dark-skinned pupils as a service for which they were entitled to payment. Periodically, they demanded their "wages," and the children of a dispute could "strike" if they thought their wages were overdue.
Certainly, the little islanders were not difficult to appease, and the more warded with calico hemlants, fish hocks, pocket knives, and such trinkets. The raw savage could see no meaning in purpose, his mission was to contend with contentious questions, asked why teachers should show a preference for children rather than muscular and sagacious men. The riddle is in a dramatic and conclusive way.
A Dramatic Incident
A Dramatic Incident During a Diving Mission Paama Mission Station. Mr. Sapii of Epi, in need of a tool, asked Apok, his native assistant, to go to the carpenter at the other end of the compound and get it. The native, a raw bushman, grabbed a grasp what was wanted. Plecking up a short piece of lining board, Mr. Sapii scribbled a message with a blue pencil, and handing it to Apok, told him to take it to the carpenter. The carpenter then looked first at the strange hydroglyphs scattered, higgled-piggled, over the board and then at Mr. Sapii, as if to say, what mad caper is this? The native scratched his woolly head and did it again. The carpenter looked—he tried to reassure. A door had been opened through which a flood of light streamed into the dark recueses of his vacant and primitive mind. Round the carpenter, the chief historian, and as a result of his first lesson in deductive reasoning, he drove home upon his fellow-islanders, the inevitable conclusion that the school was not such a mad venture after all.
A glimpse of the far-reaching significance of education has at last dawned upon the native mind. The power of the printed book and written letter is no longer questioned, and the secret of wealth and security is revealed. When the tide turned and they began to see that school, instead of being a foolish and trivial fad was an institution maintained for their benefit, big brothers and bearded fathers, and even grandfather, had to declare declaring the printed page. But to their profound dismay, the autocratic warrior chieftains
THAT one half the world does not know how the other half lives, is an old saying. But it would be truer to add: One-hundredth part of the world does not know how the other ninety-nine hundredths live.
The American, for instance, can have little idea how the European passes his time. Life in Europe, while not nearly so opulent as in America, is freer and more natural. There is less restraint, and the student of life comes nearer to seeing human nature as it is.
New information always relieves the monotony of existence. It takes us out of the rut and gives us new points of view; so we intend to give as accurate a picture as possible in this course of certain phases of ocean life.
We do not intend to moralize but to present facts as they are. No, we take that jack. The Anglo-Saxon motto is: See that you are truth as little of it as display. So we can't. To continue, then the subject of
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
TYPICAL PAPUAN
GIRL
found that there was no royal road to knowledge...
School An Ordeal
Side by side with little children, accurately adding syllable to syllable and word to word, must they take their lesson, teach it, and stumble in pursuit of learning. One of the first experiments in school work the natives undertook on their own account, was made at Port St. Lucie, where the eager were the parents to provide educational facilities for their children that they decided, at a big palver, to secure the services of a resident, to take full time to the teaching of his pupils. During a visit of the district missionary, the chief announced the decision of the word conference and promo- tion of the word efficient teacher, to provide the salary.
The missionary recommended the post to Jimmy Fletcher, a native of character and talent, but as the appointment was very much a challenge, Jimmy required a good deal of persuasion to accept it. Though only thirty years of age, Jimmy could boast of a varied and adventurous career, more in keeping with a soldier of fortune than a schoolmaster. When only one of the two brothers of the house was invaded, during a vendetta feud, by the chief of the opposing tribe, and Jimmy was awakened in the morning to find himself an orphan. As he and few friends, attracted and adored, adopting him as his son, gave him the family name Jimmy Grux. His adopted father was the last of the old style of South sea traders who, in the primitive days, were New Hebrews able to graftify his passion for adventure and hazard. Boylike, Jimmy idealized the dar-sel-feats of the sea rover, and, accompanying him on his cruises as first lieutenant, shared in his ventures and
A. Tragedy
But father and son were not destined to have each other leng. On Grube's death, Jimmy found a home under the roof of R. J. Fletcher, the author of The Isles of Illusion, adopting him as his Friday. Jimmy gave his name to which he still answers. Jimmy Fletcher. Under his new tutor, Jimmy proved an apt pupil, and made excellent progress in book and field knowledge. When the
the Montmartre cabaret. We are going on a trip to one of the most popular of the night clubs. Arriving at the door one is greeted by attendants who him feel like they had been faced there for the express purpose of serving him alone of all the wide world. He passes through a swing-door, which the attendant pushes open for him as if he were a Maharajah, and he asks for the dress of which are covered with caricatures of individuals done in color. They include some of the most noted persons who have visited this famous night club. In the collection are several colored persons.
Another swing-door and one enters a spacious hall of fanciful ornamentation. The sight is an enchanting one. Gleaming chandeliers, dainty electric lanterns, a beautiful balcony, tables with snow cloth on carpeted tiers, a dance floor of wondrous beauty and smoothness. The music for the two orchestras. Music is continuous.
Obsequious waiters hasten to seat one at a table. On each table is a shining automatic telephone. His head swings and the lantern is marked the number of the table. He can speak to any table merely by turning the automatic
Such is one of many playgrounds of the rich to be found in this part of Gay Pare. Midnight. The guests begin to ar-
author give up work in the "Isles of Illusion" to take up literary work in Australia he left behind him a capable schoolmate in New Zealand. The New School Master Success attended the new schoolmaster at Port Vale from the outset. Though two years have gone, the wave of enthusiasm which swept over the school has been embarked on the new venture, has not spent itself, and the children of their own accord, still troop to school. At the summons of the drum files of the school, the school's book schools may be seen on the tracks, converging on the school-house. Even parents spare time to look in and bestow upon the school their children with gifts to mothers and upon their children doing the strange exercises.
The experience gained by the schoolmaster while in the service of the school is invaluable for making instruction in agriculture a part of the school curriculum. Every day, at the close of morning school, the pupils accompany Jimmy the teacher into up-to-date methods of work. They have laid out several tracts of land for the cultivation of cotton, an article of commerce in the country, and in mer these cotton fields are white with the bursting bolls. The white lint, resembling snow flakes, gives the place the appearance of a snow scene. Educational system of Papua is marvelous. The number of dialects one finds among the various pupils who meet at a certain school, is especially range from four to fifteen years of age, and come from many tribes, all of which have a different lingo. Some of them are exceedingly brilliant; others are good at technical work, such as carpentry.
Girls Clever
Among the girls, it is found that they are particularly smart and clever at all handworks in the domestic line, such as sewing and other crafts. They are also skilled in cooking of their chief masterpieces. Domestic science, in the way of cooking and general housekeeping is also being taught with pleasing success; the students are gradually leaving behind the primitive ways of his forefathers, and is becoming more and more civilized day by day.
drive. The orchestra has been going at full blast for some time and the "girls" or hostesses, and the gigolos or male vamps, are moving gracefully over the floor.
Champagne is the order of the day, or rather, night. He begins by ordering that, the hostesses indeed most likely, he is "a wise one," and came out to see Gay Parlee alone. The wife may be at the hotel or in far-away U.S.A. He does not intend to drink alone so he gives a "once over" to the hostesses, who are decorating the tables not in use. Picking out one, he reaches her by phone.
She comes over. Most of her English is carefully memorized "naughty" words. These hostesses, as some hostesses, like them, take the dinner, thirsty, hungry, and broke. His selection dances with him, drinks his wine, eats his lobster, and generally it pleasantly fits him. He smiles at his mood: if he is flippant, so is she, and vice versa.
On leaving her—that is, if he decides to leave her. The minimum is 100 francs ($4).
But do not judge these girls too harshly. Life is harder in Europe than in America. Besides, we have seen pretty and intelligent clubs. Some of these girls are mothers with children whom they are carefully rearing. Besides, meeting men as they do night after night, they are keen judges of humor. They might envy their knowledge of psychology.
A part of their business is to make the guest buy as much wine as possible, then get a percentage on each bottle.
So far, we have spoken of the male guest. But suppose the guest is a lady. That brings us to the interesting object whose role which will allow us to express our week.
THE CREEPING THING A Story of Gruesome and Haunting Mystery
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A
"Leaning forward and bracing myself against the bulk of the man in front of me, I gripped the heavy iron knob in both hands and gave a great heaving turn without warning: . . . "
WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE
An eccentric oldie, Erra Systera, a monk in the monastery, a octagonal tower in his mysterious home, known as Selwyn House.
Meme, two Halifah servants that have been with him ever since his return to Selwyn House where his young bride was lost in the Voo-oo-didden jungles, were the only other Dionaea heard a huge something creeping overhead and then heard wild wind blowing through the master's body. He summoned the neighbors. The body has been left for the monastery, and he goes to the octagonal room only to find that the body has disappeared. It is summoned to the case by his friend, Alea Jones.
CHAPTER II
The strange gaudness of Alec's brown face turned anxiously upward toward the slowly moving coach windows of the incoming train, prepared me for something more than his letter had told me. It did not save me from the shocking impact of the news that other guests carried to my consciousness, however.
"It's got old Meme this time, Tom." he shot at me in a hoarse whisper when other guests or Alec? "What you must Alec?" I clutched after my vanishing composure with the question. It was not like Alec to be so agitated. His emotion under control as he my own. I gave me an unenemy sense of immanent fear to see him apparently so upset as to effect the effect of his weakness.
I could tell by the gray pallor that underlay his ordinarily healthy bronze color, that he was still in front we were in a jerk, and my mind automatically dropped back to normality. I smiled. But Alec did not return my smile. But Alec did not grow more anxious as he stared straightly and seriously into my face.
"It's passed the smiling stage, Tom." he said, and his voice was as loud as a rock beyond thinking about, the way this mysticious Death creeps upon its victims and takes them into oblivion. Snatches them out of life and then—consumes them, leaving no trace. I picked up my parcel that I had set down to grasp my friend's hand, but I turned toward the high boardwalk leading into the single paved Main street of Mellville.
"Now, tell me about it." I curried me, my breath gave as the mood demanded and my confidence in his judgment decreed.
"You know old Meme wasn't afraid of kids like you," I kidged kids used to try our Halloween tricks on her and how flat they fell. no matter how weirdly successful they might be on the more pullable end, she was just the same with this Thing.
"Spite of the fact that she had old Diaron's version of the occurrence, she scuffed at the idea of supernatural
"Old Meme knew too much about the really inexplicable happenings of her native Haitian jungles." I threw in, "to allow a mere unexplained murder and the disappearance of the body to frighten her." My reasoning must have been at fault. There was sadness in the conviction of Alec's voice, sadness and a thin thread of anyone else I would have called fear.
A Plan
"It in suite of all any of us could do," he continued, "she insisted that if we would let her stay in the room all night alone and Eza's death and maybe—her marve was almost sinister in its implication as she said it—produce his body, or part of it. There is no doubt that that was exploitable, at least to her if to none of the rest of us." Old Diarom seemed almost as fearful of her mood as moonlight and lengthened for her to remain for the night in that uncany octagonal room." Alec paused and drew a long breath. The eerie mystery of this thing had gotten Alec. I see in the awed and baffled body of his.
"Well—" I wanted to rouse him
By Cora Jean Moten
The Well-Known Serial Writer
*from the brief silence that seemed to grip him. He started and looked at me. The ghost of a smile touched his lips. "Yeah, it's got, me old man." Alec could almost always read my thoughts like that. He said he could see them in my eye though no one else had ever been able to read any more than I wished them to read there.
her. she very tightly with fortuitous salveurance talk on to gath available
I had learned to control my features in the best and most dangerous of schools. But, Alex and James. I had been boys together and, besides, insuperable chums in pleasure, and in danger. So, he perhaps of all persons, could sense changes that others could not. He knew the knowledge that was mine without words. He cleared his throat and shrugged as if throwing aside the incubus of fearfulness. "Well, we know of whole matter that was that all thought maybe. Meme, being a woman and a bit well, a bit uncanny—might get to the point of being a head of a line that we might catch hold of and—she was very firm and insistent about it. Old Diaron is so complete! at her bidding after forty years of school, and the poorest of allies in the general attempt to dissuade her.
"Anhow. Meme," with some limiment for her rheumatism, retired to the octagonal room about dusk and shut her inell. She was firm in her decision to be taken, and should be taken. We felt it best to humor her, so, with the sole difference of our presence in the bacse sitting room, she was Dionon in his usual seat, at the entrance of the marrow hall. She was left to deal with the occasion in her room. "What besides yourself was in the sitting room?" I was a detective, and in my study of crime and criminals I knew that the truth was not connected with however remotely connected with a crime. must be accounted for. I knew that Alec Jonas was a keen observer with the instincts of the true detector of crime, but I saw that the weird and unusual character of the crime he was picturing out for me had ordinarily sharply analytic mind.
Garland
"Oh. I forgot," he said. "I hadn't told you about the coming of old Ezra's nephew, G. land. You know. of course, of his young wife. You know. the one who married the Haitian woman and and unusually well endowed with the instincts of the true detector of crime, but I saw that the weird and unusual man was picturing out for me had blunt-lived with her in the hinterland of the Haitian jungles. Well, Garlan, is the son of that marriage and—the man he turned up quite suddenly the day after the murder; no one seems to know just why or how. It is certain he was not in the vicinity prior to the murder, but he appears very mysteriously the day after it."
Alec seemed to be waiting for some counsel but I made none, so he went on.
"He was there with us that night and Alene Hardmore, the new woman an detective that wanted to take me into this on the invitation of young Selwyn (Garland) it seems. Then there was Jake: you know Jake is the marshal now, and the county Varan, that was all emergent, myself."
We were at the gate of my mother's home now. I wanted to hear the rest of her talk. I didn't understand. Unlike most mothers, mine was not of the nervous, apprehensive kind. She loved bravery, and she loved her mother, although she knew the dangerous character of my work full well. I invited Alee in.
A Strange Prescience
The warmth of greeting between mother and me was in no wise interfered with because of its brevity. She knew with few words of explanation that I was home to take in the solution of the mystery of the THE GREEPING THING, and she was the kind that made everything easy for those about
her. So it was only a matter of a very few minutes before Alec and I were installed in the library in comfortably deep chairs with coffee and sandwiches and our pipes and the assurance of an undisturbed hour of talk over the plans and, in my case, to gather un all the information available.
"We were all talking," Alec resumed at length, when suddenly it was evil fell about us like a pall. One looked at the others. We all fell silent. It was almost as if we were waiting for something—we knew not what.
Then family at first, we sensed something unusual about the quality of that silence. It seemed to develop a new element. Something was moving above our heads—furtively. I bent forward. The faces of my companions seemed tearful and breathless in horror and horrow disturbed. We all listened intently.
"There was a dull swishing sound such as a heavy body might make if I were to walk into the room and sound as if some huge ungainly reptile were crawling over the ceiling above our heads. The sound awoke we seemed to chain us helpless as we sat staring at each other. Then as it seemed the horrible THING had begun to move, the width of the room in which we sat There was a short silence. Then a dull thud that sent a tremor through the whole house, and
Horror
"In premonitory dread the listeners in that room, rose as one man. Alene Hardy the outer hall, but Gateland Selwyn passed her there and in six bounds was up the stair and at the entrance to the narrow hall before old Dioron, wide-eyed and bent his arm about him. I was at his elbow when he reached the door of the octagonal room. More he could lay his hand on the knob we now it again. The horror was nearer now, nearer and more sinister. It was as if we could feel the undulating tremors of its body quivering through the dreadful in such close proximity to us was like the vibrations of no earthly creatures, rather it was as if the very corridor reeled under the dragging hold of some super-human monster. "Behind us in a line, filling the narrow passage to its length, were the rest of the watcher who hid within the fearfully and listening to the awful sound.
"My throat seemed parched. I moistened my lips with my tongue and tried to breathe in a bronze-colored man who stood in front of me facing that fateful door that shut us off from the sinister mystery beyond it. I saw his great smile. He handed to tense himself for action and, then with a determined motion, he laid his hand on the knob of the door and turned. He walked in their purpose, as the knob failed to turn. Then I saw the tightening of the grip in the tautening skin above the joints of the closed hand."
The knob did not move. Surprised chagrin dawned in the eyes of the big man as he turned his face to me:
"Something is holding it from the other side," he whispered in an awed and unbelieving voice.
"I felt the breathing of Alene Hardmere on the back of my neck. Her breath seemed eager, almost as if she was sniffing and saw the ahead of her."
Blocked
"Let me try," she said, and tried to push ahead. But the narrow corridor was scarcely large enough to allow of the passage. She pushed her hand back against the wall, there was no chance of her passing and just then I did not intend to give back for anyone. In note of the fear I felt of that continued scraping, creeping, and closed door. I was determined to try, to find out
In Darker Baltimore
BY RALP MATTHEWS
SPARRINGS POINT — It's days like these, hot, torrid days, that you both envy, and pity the worker. We need the Thermium Steel plant a sparrows point. It's days like these, when the mercury soars high, the mercury heats up, the mark that makes it heat, that you feel that there is something radically wrong with an economic system which forces human beings to labor in place.
Below you, as you walk thru that mammoth plant, you see nothin' leaping, leaping, leaping, crackling furnaces, molten steel, red-flowing metal—all vicing with the scorching sun without to no extent below. There is a smacking of hell around Sparrows Point these days, and your sympathy goes out to those, who earn armor in Hades.
But do they ask your sympathy? No, it is quite misdirected. They scorn you. They look upon you or an air of contempt that they make no effort to understand, your white collar is wilted by the heat, your apparent discomfort, your suffocated look, is all a sign of weakness to them as they hurt their head, ladies—their unladed backs, revealing massive muscles that glitter from
They sing as they work. They laugh and joke as their brown lies lay mechanically with the rata-tat-tat of some engines in the dis-
Above the din you hear them pass a remark in some peculiar language their own; and of the same language but unintelligible to you. They look towards you and a guffaw of laughter follows. It seeps scorn. You wipe your brow and laugh.
Nothin' to Eat
There's a restaurant in Sparrows Point—two of them in fact. They are operated in a don't-care, listless fashion. Into one you walk down. When you get tired and your hat, you elbow yourself in the hat and walk out or go to the door of the kitchen and call. The proprietor seems to be quite peeved if you distract him. What do you do? He draws. Not moving his chair, Assured that he would like something to eat if he no as objection, he informs you that it is too hot to cook and he doesn't feel like bothering back in a rest. He are familiar with Sparrows Point, you will go about your business and molest him no further, but your stomach gets the better, your discretion you have sheepishly in your eyes or any ice cream or cold drinks? "Yes," he will reply. "But I don't feel like opening it, if you want something to eat, why don't you go down there over the garage back of the pool room, they might serve you."
He resumes his seat by the window and you go to the place over the garage back of the pool room. He hospice is more proactive. The proprietor, a portly individual in a white apron, leans lesurely over the cash register. His eyes are glued on a game, his pool that is filled with playing on a badly scarred pool table. They are two of the kind of fellows that you saw in the steel plant, equally horrily, equally sunken. "Can I get something to eat here?" you ask meekly, cowed by your last experience. He waves his arm ward the rear, never removing his eyes from the pool table. "Uh huh!
"Back there" you find a greasy cloth counter and a waitress equally greasy and decidedly more stale. After a while she asks you what you
"Let me see your menu," you say, but you never should have said that. She looks mean at you and says, "We make it little difference whether you are fond of ham and cabbage or not. Everybody in Spain loves ham and cabbage. If you fail the waitress looks at you meaner. The proprietor turns his eyes toward you, his look is also mean. You offer ham and cabbage to you. Of course, a spell before you get the ham and cabbage, not because it isn't ready, but because folks in Scarrows Point don't rush when its hot. The chairs around the table aren't chairs at all; they are uprumped soft drink bottles, and you can comfortably, like outside hungry. They eat with a relish. The ham and cabbage is well cooked. You wipe your mouth with satisfaction. There is something carefree and primitive about Scarrows Point after the whistle bells and the lion machine is turned loose. The way they throw their coats over their shoulders and swine their paws with a sort of frenzied freedom to radiate laughs, you get.
That whistle means a night to do what they will. No worry of what the morrow holds. The plant behind them is ble, imposing. It may the day window to go round. If a fellow gets broke tonight in a crap game or card, there is nothing to worry about, a chao can move on him and switches to another dungeon, there may be a fight, but it will soon blow over and he'll find another girl. Women like working fellows—the pay is good. After dark there will be a dance somewhere, perhaps in a stuffy room.
PETER HARRIS
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The Press, on the Hoover DePriest Tea Party
A man carrying a stick and a dog.
1. When he reached the Boy Scout age he was fond of tramping alone, climbing the hills, fishing and indulging all his naturalist instincts.
The Press, on the DePriest
(Continued from page six)
Painful
This paper is too occupied with the larger aspects of this painful incident to emphasize the political values of the situation. As a human agency it cannot help congratulating the Democrats who stuck to their guns last year on their being free of the spiritual harrassment, the unseemless embarrassment which Southerners who went over to Hoover are experiencing these days.
Birmingham, Ala., Age-Herald,
MID.WEST
Dennizens of Capital
It is gradually dawning on the denizens of our capital that the White House is more than the apex of Washington "society" bol of the cordial hospitality and sympathy of accuracy of feeling that are outstanding qualities of American social life. Cincinnati Enquirer (white)
Tempest Over Teacups
The protesting white women of the South can better employ their energies, using their influence to persuade their men to help to harm women. The women after dark with colored women than to endure, direct or encourage distresses against the First Lady of the land, who seeks to practice real democracy, devoid of sham, hypocrisy, pretense or deception.
Chicago Be
A. Bank Account
In his discussion of the subject with newspaper representatives, Mr. DePriest very rightly said that Whites had to be treated just as has about social climbing and social equality and more about a bank account for their old age.
What Is a "Negress?"
The Cincinnati Enquirer (white) proclaimed to its readers one day this week that Mrs. Hoover had entertained a "negress" at tea. This was done in glaring headlines. If a resident had chance to attend a meeting through space on that particular morning, and landed upon the earth, he would have thought from this statement, that the wife of the President, our great counselor, was curious and possibly ferocious species of the animal kingdom. How would it sound to say that Mrs. Hoover entertained a "Jewess," an "Irishness," a "Germaness," a "Chine-ess," or a "British" Cincinnati Bulletin
Inward Ignorance
Of course, all of this complaint comes from the little, narrow-mindedness of the writer, who have always opposed the Negro's advancement, particularly that class who still think of the Negro as the bearer of this soaring, snorting, and pitching is the outward expression of inward ignorance. St. Louis Argus
Unroar
The uproar made by certain Southern Democrats in Washington because they colored Congressman from Chicago, was present at a White House tea last week, is very cheap, stuff. The question is whether the question of "social equality" which Senators Sheppard, Hefflin, McKellar and Harrison profess to see involved, has nurses know, and the nurses know it does not. Detroit Free Press (white)
Nordic Superiority
It amuses us to see southern aristocracy (?) lose its head. If Uncle Tom-Tom Heflin and Cole-Oil are true specimens of Lothrop Sloot he are all the more glad that we belong to the race of Mrs. Deprist.
Gary, Ind., American
Ass Jack Congressmen
Now let the President follow his wife's splendid example and prove that he, too, does not fear "ass-jack's" and prejudiced southern congressmen's "noise." Cleveland, Ohio, Gazette
Absurdity
These very southern legislators were silent when President Obama asked the presidents to the President of Liberia. Their inconsistency is the height of absurdity.
Southern Fanatics
If Mrs. Hoover's tea party has driven Southern fanatics away from union and association with the Northern fanatics it has been the best use of tea since the night it was thrown into Boston Harbor.
Pondered
Maybe Mrs. Hoover pondered the matter a long time, before deciding to send an invitation to Mrs. Harald Ottawa, a dearly directing her 'secretary' to send invitations to the wives of the various Congressmen.
Herald, Ottawa, Kan., (white) with low lights, drowsy, moany music, corn drinking and women-wild banon—heaven—then tomorrow back into the inferno again for another eight hours of hell. That's Sparrows out.
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
$
2. He possessed an extraordinary sense of humor, far beyond his years, and often shocked the members of his family, when he displayed his intelligence that offended the deacons and deacones.
H
Walter Francis White, who is assistant secretary of the N.A.A.C.P., will celebrate his 36th birthday Monday, July 1st.
Born in Atlanta, Ga., in 1883, Mr. White was educated at Atlanta University and City College in New York. He married Miss Leah G. Powell and there is one child, Jane, Mr. White is author of "The Flint," "Flight," and the newest book on lynching, "Rope and Faggot," in which he tells of investigating 41 lynchings by being so fair of skin, southerners thought him so. Mr. White quotes Dr. A. A. Briel as saying lynching which accompanies lynching is a bestial form of sex perversion.
Africans Say:
"Africans have much in common with us as well and wisdom expressed in their proverbs. It is just for us to get away from the notion that they are in an inferior and barbaric state. In more than one sense, we Americans are militated and more barbaric than they."
Experience makes a man careful and wise.
Week's Poem
I sometimes quite forget He leads me on
With hands of love;
But yet I realize the path must lead me to
Immanuel's land.
And when I reach life's summit I shall know
And understand.
I cannot always trace the onward course
My heart must take;
But looking backward, I behold afar
I shine wake
Illuminated with God's Light of Love,
I onward go
In perfect trust that He who holds
the earth trusts me.
The course must know.
Birthdays
JUNE 20: Robert L. Bailey, 44, 1760
Benatee-st. Louis, KY.
Benatee-st. Louis, KY.
10:40 Lemberg-st. Philadelphia:
Philadelphia: L.E. Brown, 60, 1006 W. Chestnut-st.
Louisville, KY.: Martin L. Walton, 30,
Louisville, KY.
JUNE 20: James H. Anderson, Jr., 81,
Charlotte, NC: N.C. Annans S. Croom, 60.
JULY 18: Thomas J. Anderson, 35, 828
Walter, 35, 828 N. Boulward, Baton Rouge,
Walker, 35, 828 N. Boulward, Baton Rouge,
La: Walter P. White, 35, 828 Edgecombe,
C. Moore, 35, 828 I. Institute, Singhamton, N.J.
John Davis, 51, Ridge Springs B. C. William
B. C. William B. C. William
D. Dunn, D. Nunn, C. William
D. Dunn, D. Nunn, C. William
B. C. William B. C. William
Nicholas-av, New York City; D. C. Dornhus-
er, 60, 600 N. st.-st. Philadelphia; Auger
Springer, 60, 600 N. st.-st. Philadelphia;
Springer, 60, 673 Unisaw, Los Angeles,
Cal.: Charles D. Salley, 75, Orangeburg,
YULH Sik: J. Max Barber, 312, 5230 Woodland-aw, 312d. Helpiepe: Arthur H. Heardan, 312d. Helpiepe: Arthur H. Heardan. Pia: Henry C. Tusser, 60, 158 Hamilton-st. 60, 158 Hamilton-st. Max. K. G. King, 43, Frank K. N.G.
(Editorial in N.Y. World)
With regard to the future that has been stirred up by his wife's presence at the White House, Oscar De Priest, Negro Representative in Congress from Illinois, gave out the following statement:
It's all a lot of moonshine for any one to suggest that a question of social equality was raised in White House. My wife was invited not because she was white or black, Republican or Democrat, but because she thought anything of her personally. She was invited because she happened to be the wife of a member of Congress. That's all there was to that.
When the Democratic Democrats, these haters, are trying to stir up prejudices and help themselves politically in those elections, the wife voted against Smith and gave votes for Hoover. The political effect will be to drive all colored votes back into the
There can be no social equality question in this case. I am all a master of individual taste. It isn't national or racial. For instance, there are two blacks and two whites, whom I wouldn't care to have any social relations or contact. There are both blacks and whites, whom I wouldn't care to have a relationship with persons I like. I keep away from those I don't like. This is so clearly put. so profoundly. I have not only involved that there is little to add to it.
Booker T
Many of the correspondents of Southern newspapers have received instructions from their home offices to telegraph "something" to the Southern editor. On Southern editor telegraphed to his correspondent as follows: "Assertion if Washington was accustomed to the White House dinner by his wife. Also see if Roosevelt escorted her in to the dinner on his arm." N.Y. Herald (White) on "When Bookworm" Washington dinner with Roosevelt.
40 Other States
White supremacy is falling. Somewhat akin to the excitement our good white Methodist brothers of the South say, predation of the black man is day after day, dwelling and grasshling of teeth that is ringing out from the South these days because of that little insignificant black man who is resolution from Florida calls upon President and Mrs. Hoover to "remember that the house in which they are temporarily residing is the White House, and that it is the black man in the North Carolina contributed to their becoming its custodians."
To which Mr. Hoover could reply, "And so did 40 other states." But seriously, we do not white supremacy it fails so easily! - Chicago Defender
Official Responsibility
It is going to be very difficult for politically minded Southern people to bring a resident to the court and the point of acting in his official responsibility to the 12,000,000 Negroes of whom he is also President, the same way that the President would ward them, or the same way that the President himself would act toward them in his private life. There is no indication in principle of course.
Colored Diplomats Too
It is seen to be nothing more than a routine White House act, no more significant of any ambition on the part of Mrs. Hoover to encourage the establishment of a policy of social commingling that neither race desires, than the attendance of colored diplomats and their wives at a State Department reception is significant of a new American policy of racial amalgam-
It is improbable that the White House will be moved by the indecent resolution adopted by the Florida legislature censuring Mrs. Hoover for entertaining Mrs. DoPriest, wife of the late Senator Robertson, against equality with the wives of white members of Congress. Florida is, in common with the rest of the country, the most negroic citizens. Such state of mind divides the country along color lines and makes two nations where there should be but one. The situation that is created is full of danger and of menace. It is senseless, as are all prejudices. It is a denial of the American doctrine of social, political and economic equality, or the elementary right of every citizen.
Slowly and in the face of astounding handicaps the Negro is emerging as a major force in the country, attaching to it. Two or three more generations will see the Negro in every walk of life and holding in place the things he has well earned as any other. In such circumstances the bitter hostility and hatred of the Negro and of ignorance generally mustautomatically disappear. Meantime, it is the duty of every self-respecting American to avoid discourage prejudice on all occasions. Phila. Daily News (white)
A
3. The Williams family lost their money and Bert's father, failing in health, was forced to move to California where his later boyhood was spent.
WALTER F WHITE
MY TRUST IN HIM
S. S. Lesson
S. S. Lesson
Sunday, June 30th: REVIEW: PROPHETS
The Bible: I have loved thee with an everlasting love; therefore with lovingkindness I have loved thee. 11.3.
Devotional Reading: Psa. 130.
Primary Topic: Stories Retold.
Primary Material: Review of lessons for Quarter
Memory Verse: I have loved these with an
everlasting love. Jer. 31:3.
Junior Topic: Learning to Serve God.
Lesson Material: Review of Lessons for
Junior Students.
Memory Verse: I have loved thee with an everlasting love. Jer. 31:3.
Intermediate and Senior Topic: True and Topic for Youn- People and Adults: God's True Propheta.
THE ONLY MOVEMENT FOR TODAY
THE ONLY CREATOR--In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. All things were made by him; and without him was not made what made that was made. John 1:13.
DO YOU KNOW?
What is The Sun-Compass?
Polar navigation by airplane is difficult because the compass is south; the sun is constantly on the meridian—always noon unless it is night. Magnetic and gyroscopic compasses, are useless. Commander of the ship must insure the compass, a reversal of the sun-dial. In the latter north is known, and the sun's shadow indicates time of day; with sun-compass time of day is measured when the ship's hand of the 24-hour clock faces the directions. The movement of the hour hand being in opposite direction to the revolution of the compass, in effect makes the sun stand still, so the navigator can steer with reference to it.
MORGAN COLLEGE DEAN
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY
A. B.
John Wilfred Haywood, who is dean of Morgan College, will observe his 49th birthday, Thursday, July 4th.
John Haywood was born in Mt. Pleasant, Tenn., in 1880, and educated in the public schools of Waxahachie, Texas, Lincoln University and Lincoln Theological Seminary. He married Miss Lottie J. Burnett and then three children, 1912-14, who dean of Wiley College in Texas and came to Morgan in 1920.
6554
6534
6516
Send 12c in silver or stamps for UP-TO-DATE SPRING AND SUMMER, 1929
BOOK OF PASIONS
JUNOR JUNOR AND MISS—Cut in 4 Sizes: 14, 16, 18 and 30 years.
A 16 year size requires 4½ yards of 36 inch material. For the girdle and bow of
widibion 2½ yards are required. To finish neck and armweave with bliss bind
will require 1½ yard 1½ inch wide. Price 10c.
For neck and armweave with 4 and 4½ yards a 3 year size requires
1½ yard of material 32 inches wide or wider. For yoke and sleeve bands of contrast-
ing material 1½ yard is required. Price 10c.
8158—LADIE BREES’ DRESS—Cut in 6 Sizes: 34, 38, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust
material. For sleeve material. For collar and belt of contrasting material 1½ yard is required cut crosswise. The width of the Dress at
the lower edge with silhouette extended is 1½ yard. Price 10c.
THE AFRO-AMERICAN Pattern Bureau, 1-12 Sterling Place, Brooklyn, N.Y. Use no other address and use this address only for AFRO Patterns.
A.W. POWNEGARDE
Text by BEN DAVIS, JR.
Drawn by A. W. RENNEGARBE
4. His taste for books and academic study
studied at night and studied at night in the hope that his
would be admitted to Leland-Stanford Uni-
l. and never financially able to
realize his dream.
```markdown
```
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.-Dr. R. R. Moton, principal of Kusgee Institute, was among the twelve to receive the Harvard College June 20. He was awarded the honorary degree of master of arts. Booker T. Washington was received the honorary degree of 1982. They are the only two race men ever given honorary degrees at Harvard. Others who received degrees were Sue Schroeder of the Navy Charles Francis Adams, former Secretary of State Frank B. Kellogg and Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, of New York, who received the doctor of laws de-
Wilberforce, Oberlin, Williams, Union, have given Dr. Moton an appointment to the Prof. Moton was cited as a "worthy successor of a great educator of his race, a man whose course was guided by the philosopher over the perils to his school."
ETIQUET
ETIQUET
Q. If a man finds himself by chance next to a woman of his acquaintance in the street car, should he offer to pay her fare? A. No. B. If attending a theater with a man, it is necessary for the woman to thank him for a pleasant evening? A. No, unless he has in some day inconvenienced himself to be with her. C. In fashion of "cutting in" at a dance correct? A. It is accepted by polite society, and is therefore correct.
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(Continued from page eleven)
what might be known of it.
"I reached under Garland Selwyn's muscular arm and gripped the knob I the narrow door. It was absolutely rigid. As I gripped it, and tried with all my might to turn it first forward and then back, there came a sudden, far-away thumping sound of another gurgles like a man sinking in deep water, and -silence. I paused.
"The THING that held that door closed was not human, and it was no known creature that I knew of. And set—something within me, something deeper than my own fear, urged me to pit my unny strength against it.
A Struggle
"Leaning forward and bracing my force were playing its grim joke upon me. I was sitting in the thing gave easily and the tail narrow door swung open, precipitating both Garland and myself into the room with the others stumbling in. I was the unexpectedness of the movement. "In the tangle of human bodies, Garland lost his flashlight, and as it swelled I was shaken in darkness so dense that it was like thick black velvet. "Someone sobbed. It sounded like old Dionar. There was a quick gasp and I was shaken in darkness marshal called frantically for a light, and I heard doctor Varant and Alene Hardmore exclaim as their heads met in a thwack of mutual dismay. Then I hardened and unmistakably some laughed.
4. Sob
"It was none of those struggling there in the darkness, that I will swear. It came from somewhere outside. I thought of those touching trees just outside of the tiny windows, but I knew that if that low, mocking laughter came from inside of THEING which, laughed had not been in that room, for there was no human larger than a six-year-old child who could have entered or by those windows, or turned my face upward. It seemed as though I felt a quivering somewhere up there beyond me in the blank darkness. Then I saw relief. The light swished up, Alene Hardmore had found it.
"With a quick, sweeping motion of her arm she flashed the bright circular beam of light around the room. The huge shadows seemed to follow the circular whiteness and threaten it. I shuddered.
THE ROOM WAS EMPTY."
Alas stopped, abruptly. I had been sitting forward in my chair listening. My tensed muscles had involuntarily held me rigid. At the final sentence,
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so horribly suggestive, so intently inconclusive, I sank back stunned for a moment speech.
"But," I said, "but—what of But? What was she? Where did you find a tree? I stopped hied by the strange look that crossed Alec's brown face. "Only this," he said, and drew a knife through his pocket. W fingers that trembled around the bundle and opened to care. I spread the bit of old linen in which it was folded, open on the chair and put it on the floor. Then, I almost let the thing drown.
A Long Blade
The mystery of the Greeting
Thing seems to grow more gigantic
and complex with each installment.
Better follow it closely!
English
Word Often Missspelled
Boudoir; no w.
Word Often Missused
Do not say, "the is one of the nites
men that I ever know." Say "that
I have ever known."
Word Often Mispronounced
Laboratory. Pronounce the first
and not as if lao-ra.
Chance; as as in "ask," not as
"at."
Synonyms
Fun, fricil, sport, laughter, enter-
tainment.
Word Study
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lays by mastering its word a week
PENSIVE; thoughtful; sad. "I
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Odds Are 600 to 1 If You Win—But 1000 to 1 that You Lose.
It is estimated that between two and three thousand dollars are played daily on the numbers by the people of Palmore.
School children, teachers, business and professional men and women, have acquired the "habit" and the common heard question now is, "What's the number?"
The carefully able to toddle, tell you the answer to this question and the newspaper sales are said to have increased considerably by people interested in finding out the number for the day.
This is done compounding the figures of daily New York Clearing house statement. Say the clearing house statement reads thus, for every day: Exchanges: $2,432,000,000. balances: $250,130,000. credits: $1,455,000. The third and fourth digits of the exchanges, with the third digit of the balances, make up the winning number, which in this case, would be
In Baltimore a person may play from one penny to 50 cents on a number, and may receive oddings vary from 400 to 1 to 600 to 1. minus, of course a 10 per cent discount to the numbers "runner" or "bookie".
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The Numbers Racket
on whose book your number "hit." For example if you had played five cents on a number at 600 to 1, and a number "hit," you would receive $27,000 dollars of the $30 going to the runner. While the odds may be 600 to 1 if you win, the chances of picking the lucky number are 1,000 to 1 against you. Many people have a number hoping they play without variation. hoping they hope that it will "come out." There are people who play "hunches," and numbers that they dream about, but it is usually the person who follows one number who wins, if ever.
Here are some of the numbers that have "come out" recently.
June 5-211 June 324 June 17-318
June 7-601 June 18-568
June 7-601 June 18-568
June 8-106 June 20-384
June 10-289 June 21-805
June 12-1866 June 24-492
June 13-114 June 25-596
June 15-232 June 25-198
June 15-232
June 17 - 318
June 19 - 163
June 20 - 384
June 21 - 387
June 24 - 499
June 28 - 198
Shoplifter Held
Miss Mary Butler, 27, 542 Howeson street, was held for the action of the police officer who given a hearing in the Western police station on charges of shoplifting nothing valued at $5 from the long time officer 801 W. Baltimore street, Wednesday.
PULLMAN PORTERS
The Baltimore Local No. 52, P. P. B. A., will hold a memorial service at Shiloh Baptist church, Rev. W. H. A. Johnson, Sunday. Porter's J. Johnson, Gatewood, D. S. Clark and J. Penn have returned from California and the extreme north west after a thirty day trip with their owners. Porter J. Lacey was called to North Carolina upon the death of his father.
MILLERSVILLE. Md. — Russell Stokes, former Baltimore Vocational school athlete, captured four medals in the 100 yard track and field meet, here last week. Stokes won the 100 yard dash in 10.1-5 seconds, the 440 in 53.1-3 sec. with the 760 break jump with a lead of 10.5 seconds. He also won the medal awarded to the highest scorer, his days' work netted four medals. He was awarded to Carl Lincoln, who won the 220 yard dash and the standing jump.
The 175 yard dash was won by James Bracey. Stokes won this event a few weeks ago at Boston in the 2012 Olympics. Chell won the high jump. Good marks were also made in other events.
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BEAUTY, HAIR
AGENTS WANTED
BROMIA HAIR CO.
Dept. E. 10 W. 23rd St, New York, N. 2
DISMISSED
TER RAID ON
ANDON'S CLUB
Charge Police With
the Activity in Raiding
imate Night Club.
SUNDAY MORN
Docketed at 2:25
on Police Blotter.
owing a plea made
air lawyers that they
conducting legitimate
120 men and wom-
aken in a raid at
men's Rest and Lan-
Night Club, at 1027
031 McCulloh street
120 DISMISSED AFTER RAID ON LANDON'S CLUB
Following a plea made by their lawyers that they were conducting legitimate places, 120 men and women, taken in a raid at Sportsmen's Rest and Landon's Night Club, at.1027 and 1031 McCulloh street were dismissed Sunday. The raids were made around two octicleen when police entered the places and carried the merrymakers in patrol wagons on the Northwestern border. It required three wagons, making four trips each to complete the arrests.
Undue Activities
At a hearing Sunday morning, Clark Smith and Joshian Henry repudiated the plans with undue activity and declared that the places run by Bailey and Landon were legitimate restaurants and that they had their patrons. They also declared that the placed had been in operation more than a year. Those arraigned and silenced were.
OBLATE SISTERS of Providence at Greenwood Electric Park, Thursday, July 11th.
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formerly at B. Mayer's
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526 N. GAY ST.
2 Doors Below
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THE WRITE DEPT. MEMPHIS, Tenn.
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
Baltimore's vouner set turned in full regalia last Saturday when the Douglass high seniors held their annual outing at Brown's Grove. Upper left, Misses Maria Harmon and Ethel Jones, teachers who accompanied the students as chaperones. Lower left, debilitates who are very active socially. They are, left to right: Misses Elizabeth Hardy, Annie Brown, Henrietta Brown, Clementine Redmonde and Helen Tingle. Upper right, the entrance to Brown's Grove, showing the various amusements. Lower right, Miss Rosetta Murray and Reginald Watts, who were voted the best looking couple aboard the "Avalon."
Eting, Leonard Ralph, 627 Schroeder; Vining, Loretta Brown; Ethel Jones, teachers who accompanied the students as chaperones. Lower left, debilitates who are very active socially. They are, left to right: Misses Elizabeth Hardy, Annie Brown, Henrietta Brown, Clementine Redmonde and Helen Tingle. Upper right, the entrance to Brown's Grove, showing the various amusements. Lower right, Miss Rosetta Murray and Reginald Watts, who were voted the best looking couple aboard the "Avalon."
N.A.A.C.P. SEC. SAYS OFFICIALS DESERTED
Drive Failed of Goal, but Local Branch Gains in Members.
MISS FERNANDIS WINS
P. O'Connell
Junius Gray
M. J. Naylor
Jesse B. Weaver
REVERENDS
W. W. Allen
Slashed Girl; Gets 1 Year
Because he slashed his sweetheart, Miss Alice Ware, 713 Eisen street, when the machine slipped and he attempted to grab it, causing the blade to be released. Thursday, the injured man is being detained at the University Hospital for observation.
Man Cut by Machine
Carrying a meat cutting machine from one stall to another while working in Lexington Market, William Gallope, 104 W. Fayette street received a seriously lacerated arm when the machine slipped and he attempted to grab it, causing the blade to be released. Thursday, the injured man is being detained at the University Hospital for observation.
HAD TO WORK, WIFE
ASKS DIVORCE
HAD TO WORK, WIFE
ASKS DIVORCE
Mrs. Maudie Jones Says Newspaper Man Drinks
WASHINGTON, D.G.—A wife of less than a year ago, Mrs. Maud L. Jones, 50 O street northwest, is seeking a limited divorce from her husband, James Jones, an employee of the hospital and Houston, attorneys, she filed suit last Friday in the District of Columbia Supreme Court.
In her bill of complaint, Mrs. Jones requests that the court keep to maintain and support herself. During the period of their married life, she states, besides donating $10 a week for household expenses her husband has paid in three installments of $35, $25 and $20. She contributed $75 a month out of her earnings to meet the payments on their home, she declares. Mrs. Jones also alleges that his wife says, and while under their influence was cruel, abusive and insulting in his conduct and speech.
The couple were married October 31, 1928. He deserted her Mrs. Jones
Boy Is Drowned
Taking a swim during the lunch hour of the Butterfield Packing Company in the inhouse John Penwick, 191 Ruthland avenue, was drowned. Monday. According to witnesses, Penwick was good swimmer undressed after eating his lunch and jumped from the wharf at Webster street. The youth did not come to the surface. Several fellow-workers made attempts to rescue him by diving in the harbor, but were unsuccessful. The police boat "George Hewey" cramped into hours before recovering the body.
Divorces Filed
Augusta Williams vs. Frank Williams; George W. Evans for plaintiff.
Roy S. Bond for plaintiff.
Marie Snowden vs. Charles J. Snowden; U. Grant Tyler for plaintiff.
Melodia H. Keys, v. Herman Keys, Roy S. Bond for plaintiff.
Weekly Fires
1415 AQUITH STREET. Three-story brick dwelling, owned and occupied by Morris Paul. Damage to building and contents, slight. Cause, unknown.
Realtor, Pastor, Doctor Sued
A suit was entered by the Commercial Savings Bank against Dr. and Mrs. Herman White. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Young and Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Coleman for $495 alleged to have been owed on a promissory note, in City Court Friday. The same company against. Rev. Daniel T. Magk and Mr. and Mrs. Coleman for $107$4 on a promissory note.
New Yorker Hurt Here
Attempting to cross Saratoga and
the Hudson River, he crashed
24, 219 W. 30th street New York,
received lacerations of the face and
wrist, and was struck by a hit
during the drive Friday.
N.A.A.C.P. SEC. SAYS OFFICIALS DESERTED
Drive Failed of Goal, but Local Branch Gains in Members.
MISS FERNANDIS WINS
Afro Society Editor Wins First Place in Contest.
Declaring that the president of the local branch of the N.A.A.C. P, had practically deserted the organization in its effort to raise the Ballimore quota in the 20th anniversary series of the national body, Mrs Martha Evelyn Brown, Secretary, announced that $72 had been forwarded to New York as a result of the local effort.
"About six weeks before the opening of the contest plans for the same were presented to the president of the local branch. When after a reasonable time, no response was received by the secretary, the President was urged to act upon the plants presented or to suggest another plan supporting the 20th anniversary fund. There was no response, however.
"On Friday, March 8th at a meeting addressed by Miss Mary White Owington, those present pledged to support the apportionment for this year. It is noteworthy that Miss Owington believed that Baltimore would keep faith with the national body. The branch has no paid its apportionment for more than $100,000. It would meet the apportionment in this the 20th anniversary year.
"When there was no response from the president, the secretary asked to go ahead with plans for raising the money for the branch. Permission was given and the plans were completed." "With no executive committee or other officer to look to for support the contest was carried on entirely by the contestants and the board, and concerns the contest has been a failure, but it has gained for the branch more than 70 memberships. The branch has been judged and judged in the past five years. Because of this alone we think in spite of the failure to raise the apportionment, we better off than it has been in years."
Miss Fernandis Wins
Miss Sarah Fernandis, Society Editor of the Afro-American, won first place in the voting contest, taking the prize of $50. The second of $25 was won by Miss Catherine Courburee, the third of $12, by Mrs. Mabel Chew.
Miss Brown reports receipts of
$187.80 and expenditures of $114.80,
which included $7.50 for prizes and
$7.30 for printing, postage, etc.
The paid up members of the branch at present according to the secretary's statement; are:
MEDDAMES
Shirley McChanns Erica Logan
Anna McMechan Adelle Brown
Edw. Wilson Maybelle Chew
J. R. Conasy Beulah Sorrell
Angela Smith Grace Arnold
Grafton Brown Salile Logan
Lee Davis Lillian Lolter
Major J. D. Tucker Thomas Fradock
Major J. D. Tucker Thomas Fradock
Edna Hinton Clara Robinson
New York New York
Marsel Browne Eden Flaury
Francis Wood Grace Murphy
MISSEY
Ellen Brown Loltee Brown
P. O'Connell
Jesse B. Weaver
REVERENDS
Junius Gray
W. W. Allen
M. J. Navlor
Slashed Girl; Gets 1 Year
Because he slashed his sweetheart, Miss Alice Ware, 713 Eisen street, in the courtyard a year in the House of Correction when testimony given at the Western police station, showed that they were over her talking to another man.
Grand O
New Cau
County
WINTER
JUST ACROSS FROM GREAT
CATONSW
One Block From
Dining ...
Entertai
"As You
(PLENTY OF FRE
Grand Opening
Wednesday,
"AND OPEN EVER
J. C. BAILEY, President
BOB MATTHI
HELLO, BILL!
AND OPEN
CATONS
COUNTRY C
WINTERS AVENUE
FROM GREENWOOD ELEVEN
CATONSVILLE, MN
The Block From Street Car
Long ---- Day
Entertaining
"As You Like It"
Y OF FREE PARKING
Open EVERY DAY AND
President IKE DEN
BOR MATTHEWS, Secretr
Open Tuesday, Ju
OPEN EVERY DAY AND
Grand All Day
TO CAMBRIDGE
BY THE MARCH
MONUMENTAL
Monday, Ju
On The Steep
Leave Foot of Bro
AL AT TELLS HOME 1828
Y, JULY 7, 1929 FROM 6 M
FARE TO ALL - $1.00
ke 21 or 16 Car Direct to the
TOTFUL OUTINGS AND
At The
Grove, Denton M
Ice! By All Means See and
HIS DANCE ORCHEST
AR LOAF CASINO from
BASEBALL - 3 P. M
GROVE vs. PORT KENYA
At 5th STREET PAY
JOHN W. THOMAS, Mau
I Fail To G
Grand Opening! New Catonsville Country Club
WINTERS AVENUE
JUST ACROSS FROM GREENWOOD ELECTRIC PARK
CATONSVILLE, MD.
One Block From Street Car Line
J. C. BAILEY, President IKE DIXON, Vice President. BOB MATTHEWS, Secretary.
TICKETS ON SALE AT ELKSON
SUNDAY, JULY 7, 19
FARE TO
Take 21 or 16 Cars
DELIGHTFUL OUT
At
Industrial Grove, D
Come! By All M
ELLIS WATTS and HIS DANCE
at the SUGAR LOAF C
BASEBALL
INDUSTRIAL GROVE vs. F
AT 5th
JOIN W. TE
$500 If I Fail
DELIGHTFUL OUTINGS AND PICNIC
ELLIS WATTS and HIS DANCE ORCHESTRA from Chester, Pa.
at the SUGAR LOAF CASIKO from 8 to Midnight
BASEBALL—3 P. M.
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Man Cut by Machine
Carrying a meat cutting machine from one stall to another while working in Lexington Market, William Gallope, 104 W. Fayette street, received a seriously lacerated arm when the machine slipped and he attempted to grab it, causing the blade to be released. Thursday. The injured man is being detained at the University Hospital for observation.
Opening!
Atlonsville
Ferry Club
S AVENUE
BENWOOD ELECTRIC PARK
VILLE, MD.
On Street Car Line
D - Dancing
Gaining
"Like It"
(RE PARKING SPACE)
July 3
DAY DAY AND NIGHT"
IKE DIXON, Vice President.
WS, Secretary.
I AM WITH YOU
On The
All Day Excursion
CAMBRIDGE, MD.
THE MARCHING CLUB OF
INSTRUMENTAL LODGE, NO. 3
Today, July 8, 1929
The Steamer Avalon
From 9 Broadway 7:30 A. M.
HOME, 1928 MADISON AVENUE
19 FROM 6 P. M. UNTIL
ALL—$1.00
Direct to the' Boat
TINGS AND PICNIC
The
Penton Md., July 4th
Jeans See and Hear
ORCHESTRA from Chester, Pa.
ASKO from 8 to Midnight
L—3 P. M.
PORT KENEDY, PA. GIANTS
STREET PARK
TOMAS, Manager
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SLEPT ON JOB;
FLA. MAN BEATEN
JACKSONVILLE, FLA. — Because he slept in a house at which he was employed as carpenter, Jim Menclon is recovering from two gun shot wounds and a badly battered head. Menclon was asleep in the faint after he was in a white neighborhood, when a mob of white men rapped on the door. He refused to come outside in their command and they came in and after beating him, he then told him to run. Before he had gone ten feet some of the 30 or 40 men started shooting at him. He was left for dead. Sheriff W. B. Cahoon declared that he had no hopes of death, but he arrived fifteen minutes after the men had done their work.
Hold Man for Murder
John Partlow, 37, Glover, S.C. is being held in the Southern District waiting identification. He is suspected of being the man sought for committing a murder over a crap game on May 18th at Glover, S.C.
SALE BY MAIL OF
FOR, PER YARD 90c
This is the genuine real silk satin
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BLACK ONLY, NOT OVER 10 YARDS
These remnant mill ends are absolutely
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back satin (Crepe Starlight) at $1.70
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Coupon for Black Satin
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C, O, D.
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. ee 5 . The Nation’s Biggest All Negro’ 7
en — Saturday, June = 1929 3 gees —= .
Sox, Grays, Lincolns Win Twice
ee oe gee ma pct A the ost epee eat twain <=" ss Sa Ss Alot dea: She ch ae weg
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omestead Grays, with John Beckwith, Vic Harris, “Smoky sit. ti) be admitted to the park free, Monday afternoon.
The Dangers of Bad Blood Overcome
} cpp NO. MATTER WHO THE MAN IS. WHETHER YOUNG OR OLD.
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DR.H. F. SCHAMEL, Medical Director
. 703 N. HOWARD STREET
Between Monument and Madison Sts.
Baltimore, Md.
DUNBAR, SCHOOL 112
WIN IN SCHOOL LOOP
P. S. 155 85-lb. Team De-
feats P. S 112 for League
* Yonors.
VOCATIONAL ‘WINS
Dunbar Tosers Prove Su-
perior to Douglass Nine.
Dunbar athletes again came
Into. thelr own fast. week, when
their 120-pound playground base-
ball team’ defeated the Douglass
High ‘School outfit into games
bythe scores of 1 to 6 and 26
28.
Sn the seeond game the Dunbarites
ent on a scoring spree, tallying five
uns each in the first and second in-
nings, elght In the two in the sev-
nth and six in the eighth,
+The Junior high unlimited class
found the Vocational School tossers
‘winmne two games {rom School 130
By 20-10 and 23-12 scores.
{School 155, alter having lost one
Game to School 112 in the »85-pound
Elass, came back to cop the second by
& 21"to 18 verdict, to knot the count
fn the series. The teams. will meet
again Monday to play the deciding
fame, the winner fo piay School 11
for the championship. “The 112 tos-
gers defeated School 118 by 2 34 to
14 score in the first game, but when
the time came for the second game
fo be played. the 118 tossers did not
Homestead Grays to Play
A
| Sox Four-Game Series Here
Poseymen to Meet Sox in Doubleheader Sunday and
Monday; House of David Nine, Here July 4.
isis oer
ea manenl 1GKG fi
8-0 score. LEWISTOWN, PA—Six Home-
OSS scoRES BY INNINGS stead Grays baseball players were
PBT senseseeses $92011 0-10] injured, vo seriously, when the
emote ES amo] ite? Soe ate
PS. 155 in the final inning of they ‘The Homestead Grays, with
Hee tonday, at Dred Fi Park, ‘local Black Sox at Pittsburgh. two
the last inning that the Murpaymen | Sunday. and Monday, to attempt to
ror contributing largely to the score.| ward first position for the first half
mang trees af the Aimeriean ‘League race.
PS. 12 .......... 00048 1 4-12
BS, 185 120.0000. 0301403-11
Lowe Manages Chieftains
‘Maurice H. Lowe was named busi-
ness manager of the Chieftain A. C.
baseball team, at the club's meeting,
Wednesday night. 5
Mr. Lowe, was at one time playing
manager of the Afro baseball team:
Yeainy desiring games in or out of
town can write him at 2509 Madison
avenue, or call Madison 6941 between
atk
Grays in Auto Crash
LEWISTOWN, PA—Six Home-
‘stead Grays baseball players were
injured, two seriously, when the
bus in which they were traveling
East, ran off the road near this
city, Tuesday.
Walter Cannady, first baseman
in i hospital ere, guffering a
fractured rib. Oscar’ Owens, vet-
iam pitcher, suslained a broken
ett. shoulder and Graham, out-
flelder, a broken wrist, Cum Po-
sey, Jap Washington, Smoky Joe
Wiliams and Senford Jackson,
received minor injuries.
‘The Homestead Grays, with
thoughts of four victories over the
local’ Black Sox at Pittsburgh, two
weeks ago, will invade Baltimore
Sunday and Monday, to attempt tc
check the advance of the locals to-
ward first position for the first hall
of the American League race.
‘The Grays have been burning up
the league lately, and last | Sunday
handed @ double’ lacing to the Hill
dale Club at Cleveland. Sam Streeter
“Lefty” Williams, and the oid. mas-
ter, “Smoky Joe” Williams, the 52
year-old ball hurler, are being de-
ended upon to silence the big, bat
Of the local swatsmiths, while Yoke-
ly, Ryan, Hayes and Flournoy will
be called upon by Manager Frank
Warfield to give the Grays the blues
‘The Black’ Sox, will have a chance
to avenge their four losses in. Pent
sylvania. as four games will be
Played “here. two Sunday and. two
Mondey. Ladies will be admitted
to the park. free to the » Monday
games, ;
Play House of David
For the July fourth attraction 1o-
cal fans will see the House of Davic
nine in action against the Sox. These
bewhiskered players were here last
season, and made a very favorable
impression with the brand of base
ball they played. In addition there
is the comedy added by Kenny. the
clown first baseman. All of the mem.
bers of the team are heavy hitters
so. that there should be good base:
eta ee dee Glee
|Hampton-Lincoln Game
Awaits Signed Contract
While pace, are on foot to stage
a “HamploncLincoin 'ooteal” game
in New York City next fall, final
Srrangements have. not, yet been
Completed, according, to an ‘a=
Gougeerent teceived thie week from
Fee Gules) damison, graduate
Tanager of athlcies at Lincoln.
‘Nessliaons for, this contest. have
ettt ing on for over'a Sear and
Bir edirts are being: mage’ to" have
Bh Gece played in November. Walle
Sondacts have not yet. been” signed
E's expected that they ‘will bev be-
fore sone.
Piles Disappear
a
Peterson’s Ointment
“If you could see the letters ~ get
from people ‘who have suffered. for
fears ftom pres ind got entirely. wel
inva short ine Oy tang Peterson's
Gintment vow sould help but say?
Shares!” Ste'at all" drugssts
For free sample white Peterson ine:
ent Go. Woon Bo, Bulla, Na
“ou MEN. PAST 40 ‘TRY THi>
V1 Sees
nd row fired 7
Cee
Seger
G'S ine diet,
Seiten
a go or
Spetala package oft, $3.00. Aso| COD
Seca 2 pachereofer $3.00. Hee O.D.
ARE YOU SICK?
ag pale dears
Ss, enw alo
SePseatey haven’ todays °reeth
Universal X-Ray Laboratory
ian eng ea
eae eB)
Unnatural and mucous dis-
charges can be avoided by de-
stroying the germs of infectious
diseases. $1.10 At all druggists
SOX MASTER CUBANS
IN TWO EASY GAMES
Locals Decisively Upset Is-
land Aggregation With
12-3 and 5-0 Lacings.
HUBBARD THRILLS
Husky Outfielder Raps 3
Triples, 2 Doubles, 1 Single.
~The local Black Sox Sid not
see any reason for showing pity
towards the unfortunate cellar
Fiding Cuban Stars, and. proceed
ed to hand them a double Inc
ing Sunday.
‘The locals begad their stick work
Jn the first game without any pre
liminary whiffing. Boss Warfield
frst up, walked: Washington singled
to lett; Winters singled to score
Warfield; Dixon whiffed, and Lunds
gent a Tong sacrifice fy. to ente
{o score ‘Weshington. Marcel wen!
out, Correa to Perez,
Cubans Tally in Sixth
‘The Cubans went scoreless until
the sixth, Alfonso flew out to. Hub
bard, and Baro got on when Lunds
muffled. Ramos ‘poled along sacri
{Hee to’ Washington.” scoring Baro
and Correa flew out to Dixon.
‘Sox Get Tin Fourth
‘The first game was no longer in-
[teresting atter the fourth, when the
locals pounded Sijo for six hits an¢
two free tickets for a total of seven
ins. Zn this stanza Hubbard rapped
‘outa three-bagger, his second dur
{ng the game, and) Lundy smashed
‘the pil for tio ‘sacks.
Hubbard Shines
By fr the mast brillant luminary
of the Sox's stickmen was Jess, Hub:
bard, who clouted a. thousand, get
ting. three triples and one single out
of. four trips, and scoring twice,
In the third frame, Dixon made a
Jong run to snare Sijo's fly In the
third inning. Inthe sixth, Dixon
smashed the left-field. wail for thre
bases. ‘The double Killing of Dixor
and Lundy in the sixth by Alfonsc
to Solis. to Fernandes prevent
Dixon from scoring after riding. th
apple for three. bags.
‘Sijo was sent to the showers tr
the fourth with two men’ down ans
the bases. drunk.” Juanelo, took
the burden and let Marcel pop."
to Perez to end a scoring bee which
began when Solis allowed . Dixon's
‘ball. to. roll, between his legs and
|Warfleld and Winters romped home
‘The final score was 12 0 3.
Second Game
In the nighteap of the twin, bill
loumey was opposed by the vetera
Glsentaner, who sent up . slants
Which the Sox were unable to solve
unl the fifth, “Until then, not on
Sex player reached the initial sack
But old Gisentaner walked Dixon
fand “after that three runs came
crass.
‘The Cubans touched Flournoy for
six bits, one in the second, thicd,
‘fifth, seventh and two in tne fourth,
‘but ‘could not score,
|, Hubbard donated two doubles and
two runs. towards the cause tn this
game, but hit into a double play
Perez unassisted in the eighth to re-
fire Clark.
Flournoy whitewashed the Island-
ers with & 5-0 score, allowing only
sit scattered hits,. while his mates
garnered eight smackers for the five
Inarkers,
Thao
FIRST GAME
gy as
warneaae, “2°14 Olattonso.ay, ‘0219
Wamngtonet. 120 Ofuaror! 2100.
Winters. 21 YRamonie, 0400
Bisonit 120 0lcorrens, 088
Gondrss. 14 alvabrect” - 0000
Mareeito, . 221 dltambertoet, 0000
Girke 210 00iaty. 0040
Huvbarart, 240 Olpemandene, 0010
Yorelyp. 22 0lvereaiy 1910
. jaiion = OT
Buaneiop. 9110
ower 9.000
‘Tota 1217102] ‘Totals 3 va
gpa tt 103] Totals |
Totals _ 1217103] Totals 3 8140
‘SCORE BY INNINGS
Black Sox sored 1D 420 10x12
Cuban Stars 2221.00 O08 0 = 3
Oscar batted Zor Juanelo tn oth,
‘Dwobase hits—Lundy. Peres. Three-base
hulsedubbard, 3: Dixon. GacrifeeLundy.
Baro. Ramos.” Base oo balls-O@ Gio. 2.
Stolen “banes—Werfied. “Strike "cute By
‘Yokelr. 7: by Bile, 4. Double plays Lundy
te, Wartetd” to. vitniers, Correa to Peres,
‘itonso to Salts to Fernancer,
SECOND GAME.
sox ‘CUBANS,
PR aelAlfonse a. 0131
Wargelaas, 013 odsraet 108
Wash'sion.ot, 000 Olnemosit. 0008
Wikea.tb. 001lcarrea.s, 0930
Dini.” 110 O}rubrect, = 4100
Lundy.ss, 00S Olsolsy, == LTT
Mareei3b. “121 0lperaandene, 0320
Claris ii 10ers 950%
Eubbarast. 220 doutenaarp, 0010
Flournos.p. G1 Osoxar 600.0
Teun —“For09
touts T gaa
Otter batted for Pernander tn 9th,
‘SCORE BY INNINGS
Gass cower SOOO OB Og
ee Sox 000 831-10 x8
‘Drocbace bits—Hiubbara 2 ‘Taree-base
bile—bizon. " SeeriteeLuney, sells, Base
oo ballemom ‘Gistentaner, 8.” Strike cuts
Say Gleentager, 4: by Fiouraoy, 3 Bows
‘bie playe—Perez’ (unassisted .
TE ee lee a el secs
e re e
Royals Divuy With Hollins Club
‘ ae ~————————_-_- mow wqwé
ROYALS SPLIT BILL THEY WON AND LOST SUNDAY
WITH HOLLINS NINE a t ' so ?
es @e 3 ee = LE OE, (ED
First Game Won by 9-5) a ee, ae Les se ee eee : nee Oo oof)
mn eal El Sif ee gee
— le ee ve
vomanrom | Ee one Coe
“Pencil” Fans 10 in Brilliant BO ee eS . CoS ee. Ge ¥
Exhibition. Cg ee eT hr eee eck eye ge aS
‘With “Pencil” Williams, elong-
ated moundsman, sorving them
up In dazzling styie, the Eoene2-
ef Royals took the first game
from the Hollins A.C, Sunday,
by a 9-5 score, but dropped the
second contest,'5 to 1, at the Hol-
fins ‘Oval, Hollins and Catherine
streets,
Williams, formerly with the Pitts
burgh Giants, had only one bad inn-
ing, the eighth, when three Hollins
runners trotted across the pan. Pre-
vious to this he had held the West
Baltimore nine to two runs, while
his mates had been piling up seven
runs,
No Hits, Yet Score Rt
‘The Royals scored one run in the
frst inning, though they made no
hits. "Yotko” Jackson opened by
drawing pass, and Garnett emulat-
ed him. “Hen Pen” Stewart hit into
2 double play whict. killed Garnett
at second pitt allowed Jackson to
reach the third hassock, \“Puddin’
Parker then cut locse with @ crash
that should have been an out for
Clark, Hollins’ centerfielder, but, the
bulky’ outer gardener booted it allow-
ing Parker to get two bases and scone
Jackson. H. Williams then lined out
to Saunders,
"phe Hollins crew counted when
McCleary, who had singled and stolen
second, came home on Harris's dou-
ble. ‘They tallied again in the second
when Byer! sneaked home afler two
hands were down,
‘Rally in Fifth
A fitth inning rally by the, Rovals
however, put them in front. “Pencil
Williams singled, Jackson walked and
when. Harris fondled Garnett's easy
tap. Willams dashed home and ail
of the runners were safe. Stewarts
Single scored Jackson and Garnett
and Williams bronght Stewart hone
with a timely single, scoring 8 minute
jater when Campbell smacked out a
two-nly blow.
‘Williams breezed alone on the
mound safely until the eighth, and
during the course of the contes:
whiffed ten batters. His mixture of
ficaters, dusters and gas balls was
ouzaling to more than one, Hollins
batsman, In the Hollins half of
the eighth, Harris sagled and came
home on Clark's circuit crash. | K.
Williams’ muff of Saunders grounder.
paved the way for another rin. when
the latter scored on Bdel's long’ sin-
ele.
Garnett Saves, Dey
‘Two triples were hit by the Royals
in thelr half of che ninth, one by
Stewart, the other by H., Williams,
who could have stretched the bit
info a home ran. With two men on
base in their haif of the ninth, and
two down, the Hollins outft looked
as if It would become dangerous. Gas
hetts great catch of Harris's tone fly
to Tight. field, however, saved the
day.
‘Second Game
In the second game, @ more listless
affair. the Rovals with Clash piteh-
ing. bowed before the shoots of Fore-
man, who helped win his own game
by Knocking 2 home run,
Fe ate MOLLING Ae.
Se ee gk ee ee
rhea rhac
seotsonm, (203 Shecgearray, 14S
sess STEAM? oa ea
Seen: 31 Siete 9108
BEETS Sho liens, faa6
Eiviligmam, (2taennee | 1201
Sewer ooo deeta, 3138
Gast’ Boe asrinenss. 1108
UGilkimen, Pee semie oto
sit titiach, 0020
tom Basal wae
rouse “0183
sone By mines
oenecer nope abo a 89 102-8
BRE ATS oon ages
Ns A: “Siue“iavs,* ComporhBee
eaves mucccunet, Stewart H. Wie
tne iawe rele “Bose so bli
Oe ace eof Re Willams. 2 Sian
Seasacheos, Garnett esate Wit
PES ai ehetl eal auruee ove Wi
THRE SP tah, “eDovmie ars
Ach to accuser byfey to, slag 0
Mace) Meceoy te Hare to saunders
sesntet, Daruer Suet hiesay Kitch
daieeare veut
SECOND Game
ouLms Ag SRENEZER ROFALS
‘hey Thee
cciaryae, "1d 3 Siscksonm 188
Haar ™ gtecieamatan 8168
Hee big aGareea: She
Gach Pte olearteriy S100
Sclias. Sy Lojewil'naae, 0120
Eucrs if oleamptelia” oi 18
Rinne, [20 cre” $008
size’ oleate” a 208
Fiitning, Ifteldenp 9800
soins “Se00 tots 3760
soon bY 1msivos
alias AC oa 288 x8
Beiter tapas 808 408 Oot
eer EiCwiliass” taciner=steok
Revs 'Home rut-Peresan, Bese on bell
Bar portman, af Gath 2 eision bases
=Shencle Rieter an, Glare Bauder
Beta"asiehy Foretas, by Canes S
Soable Saver ucelecy to Hare to Beun:
Bee ica hance Rayne fs wong 6
‘Win at Annapolis
ANNAPOLIS, MD.—The Ebenezet
Royals stopped Saturday at Annapo-
Taig tpa shut ut, the cam
Parole Giants twice by the scores of
Eb cand 5-0.
“ne fesiure of the frst game was
the sensational pitehing of Sharp fn
the hitting of Williams wao carnered
4 hits in 4 times at pat and the pitch-
ig of Ray Williams in second contest
who struck out 6 in five innings and
alowed # hits.
Rex Tossers Defeat
Rossmore Nine, 8-5
‘The Rex AC. nine defeated the
Rassmore A‘Ge white, ‘Sunday by
the score of 8 to 6. Sunday they
play the Calvin P.C. at Herring
un park.
Caen als bapa 5 “yer
DDisaaee.e, 020 Olcomberse, "1105
Evans 120 0)Bencarss,” 1100
Bisanents. Os olpimeie” — ¢ 308
Mowiycl, L100}tynehp, = 3200
MePneisone, 110dTuxs, ©3201
Bors. 110 iltanon a, O111
Tanke, 110 OWieit = 9000
McOuinit. 000dstem, cord
Boa. 2100shmame, L401
Tots 31201} Tous “S826
‘SCORE BY DININGS
ene are reader one OE F 2 OO. teed:
Roumere AS. voc 000 2-$
‘Teobase hiteiisiey, Lynch,” ‘Saerinee
Boy, "Home ‘riePeno, Bate on. balls
Bali. 3: Sham. 2 Stolen Sases—Ban Dies
Gane," MePheracn, Larson. Struck out —
By Bou, 7: Shaw, 3. "Lett on basse—Rex K.
ceeky ai Necmmnee Ak Tk
| THEY WON AND LOST SUNDAY
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a a @ >: @ 8
as & oe D> Sm, CO
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toe saree ene Me oh ee Fe LPG RAY
AC.. white, Jest Sunday. Kg HL W. +]
Lai ee, es atta Pht Rae Ae tie
BREE, GUS: and Dio " a
a a Inca on TaN MLBOMEAnoEa
Rangers Cop Two Games| a
LINCOLNS TAKE TWO foot x Moniees Nine 20 GARS READY FOR
FROM BACHARAGHS! == sii aes tk | GAS DERBY TRIALS
NEW YORK—Although han-
aicapped byte. abgenee ot
EGU Wana not ae aes
Moree tt Co a ats
Bi ar eae dblenc
er at Protectory Oval Sunday
Sick Me see Ihe Bae”
ae ee eee of ie
me
BEAT Ene ont ot the game be
eae haat nl® SANS
ci Gt ttse escent
uaa
Rally in Ninth
ae tine ge Hints ing
caren net Bee “ate
Fe abet all or fat of te
BU ite ae in
See HRY ae ued
ing eG,” saben Sava
Bc er ude nae foe an
Beater eer in
Be See Ene anh
Bey ‘niin as” Baers
Giants were leading by one run.
Bre Ra of he a,
Smith singled and Riggins pie
sols teal oat ead
ne aaites These ae HONE
ro dae ie Asn cae
Ue clea he ana ty mia
uP a cadet cote Re
tod
io
SILVER MOONS, 7-6
ie ee ete cir cape sunday.
another feather in theit caps Sunda’.
‘when they nosed out the Silver Moons
outht by a7 to 6 score. at Druid Hull
Park before 1.500 persons.
"The winners gained their margin of
‘victory by scoring four runs in the
frst inning, and when they were ov;
jertaken by’ the Silver Moons, staged
fwo tallies that netted them the mins
necessary to Win. ‘The Moons scorea
ine ed ning when neo
férew & pass and scored on Savage's
Hong homer to deen centerfield, | in
ithe fourth Inuing Smith hit a home
um, scoring: Massell and Gay ahead
of him.
Moons Miss Chance |
‘The Moons lost a fine opportunity
to win this came, when in the fifta
frame with the bases loaded Branch.
‘usually a danerous hitter. lifted a
Hong fly to Hillsoa in left field, Co-
ifield smacked out a circuit clout, in
‘the Afth to tie the score and MeCo-
‘mas came across in the sixth with
‘the winning tally,
CHTEPTAINS, "| SILVER MOONS
hha thee
Biutsonit, 11 0 0Graneb.et, 0000
(oulisonie 14 0ulsmihay” TTT
|Gaideigct, 220 liGibeon.tb, | 0110
[Aimauongt. 1 EY gaistork on 0 0 01
Necomnsto, 103 8Geragep. 1110
Aileen, G02 0Nerriec 9000
[ieekiontb. 00 0G)Mouetit, 2010
Genamp. PhO
Esler.” 0001
souley” (00001 |
Sai Tee Tees
rotsls | Teal
SCORE BY INNINGS
Jontetiains Sooners OL OTT 00-7
Stier Moons’ vevvevcess040 900 00-6
“Brosbase Rits—Cey” 8. Olen, Home runs
—Eecnge, Smith, Calfeld. Bese on balls
‘0: Sevuge, O1 of Graham, 4: oft Keer, 10
‘Siolen beses—Gibson. sive outs —Bs Sav-
ee be Granam. te Wild. pitch savage.
Batters bt —-By Graham (Branch, Hallstork,
Nea
Fit at Sixty!
JEMEVIBER Ponce de Leon
tnd bs fruitless quest for the
fountain of Youth? For more
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mensnd women who at Sty, ax ty,
even seventy are still young inside.
How have they preserved. their
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when you kaow theic secret”
PERUNA! This good old internsi
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1. .io short, makes and Aeeps you,
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Nineteen Twenty-Nine Summer School Session
A Splendid Opp rtunity to Make Up Deficiencies
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Write for Catalog and Summer Normal Bulletin
JAMES S, RUSSELL, Principal
Lawrenceville, Virginia
_ i ef
a = = a a I
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(' BETHOLINE 1
(== al
Rangers Cop Two Games
from St. Monicas Nine
‘The Highland Rangers took both
games of a doubleheader from the
St. Monicas nine, by the scores of
12-3 and 11-7, Sunday.
Highlights of both games were
furnished in the hitting of A, Scott
and Bob Williams. Both of the
Rangers pitchers were wild but fast
fielding held the score down. Riley
hie best for. the losers.
‘Sunday the rangers cross bets
with the Lincoln A.C.. of Ellicott
Sity’ at “Mt. Washington.
Anacostia Wins, Loses
ANACOSTIA, D. C.—The Anacos-
tia A.C. split even In their Sunday
games, winning irom" the Hillsdale
Ko. by a $-2 score in an t1-inning
Battie” Bue dropping "ae to se
Washington Athletics by a 13 to 4
scare.
Th the frst game, Reed and Levi
staged a pitchers’ duel, the former
having ‘2 ‘litle edge ver bis op
ponent. =
TIGERS-MT,_ WINANS DIVVY
‘The Piedmont Tigers and the Mt.
Winans Ac. split © win bill Sun-
day, the former winning the first
gamie by a 7-4 score, but losing the
ee te 4 oa tnerein,
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind—Primed ang
gamed tothe last notch, teeta
bles of the. greatest engineering
brains of America, repost ready to te
wheeled out on. the Fair Grounds
Speedway, here. July 3rd to prove br
hele showing in the time tal ta
they ean deliver the stud that de-
mands a place in the lineup befor
the starter in the Sixth Annual 10)
Mile Auto derby the following day
Possible rivers and. cars entered
thns far. and numbers of the cars thy
Wil) drive are a5 follows:
‘Grehamn Speciss Wen done: Ein Pe
ton Pin" Specal, san’ Smith rents
“iildman’ Gaines. As Tecte Haste Spe
jal Gatlend Brooks: Refin Speci Wes
Waitt Essex Speriah Win, Garson ve
hameas, Lawrence Drvaon: Whipp Spe
GAs Window: Wayins Specal eer
Wiaetasc Wnnamecs. Bil Bodener! fe
on special, Melerim Hansen: Chalet
Special Dos, Whit: vUnaaes, Sil Ai
hail: Rex Special, Rex stanuel: Recret
Plath, 'Onoameeh, and (Unnamed Bey
Wallace
Grays Trim Daisies
CLEVELAND, O—The Homestead
Grays. playing heads-up _basetl.
eked out two close victories from tie
Hilldale club, here Sundas. ov ihe
one one on 6 and Tt &
American League Wars on Outlaws
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
Pelayo Chacon's New Cuban Club Precipitates Moguls' Action.
SUSPENDED MEN BACK
PHILADELPHIA. — Reports that Pelago Chacon, former shortstop of the Original Cuban Stars, member club of the American League, was bringing seven suspended players of Alejandro Pompe's team to this country as the nucleus of an outlaw club have been acted on quickly the officials of the League.
By Booking agents throughout the East are advised of the league ruling that no club will play any team which plays any outfit using a suspended player or in any park where team plays.
such a. The following men accepted terms with Pompey and some of them resided advance money: Oms, Rosell, Valgas, Valgas, Peorosa, Baglana and Beijenar. All of them except Rosell and Valgas have been members of the Original Cuban Stars. Refused to Report
These men went to San Domingo following the close of the Cuban Winter league and refused to report to Pompey in time to start the A.N. season here.
Rumors it have that the backer of Chacon and the new team is Nat Strong, former owner of the Brooklyn Giants. Strong is a powerful factor in independent baseball and New York City.
Race Tightens
When the Homestead Grays took four straight games from the Baltimore Black Sox they pulled that team out of first place, elevated the Lincoln Giants to the premier position and pulled themselves into second place. Games in the past week have resulted in changes in all six positions in the league with three runs in and out of the glory hole. The closing days of the race bid fair to be exciting and the winner of the first half may not be decided until the last day. July 4th. The clubs have arranged their schedules to get as many postponed games played as possible. Rain and cold weather seriously hampered the early days of the flag
Suspended in Game
Buz Mackey, of Hildale and Georce Carr and Ping Gardner, of the Bacharach Giants, have served out their term of suspension and now working in league gear. Thus he will be able to start the second half, at full strength.
Meeting Friday
The final schedule meeting of the league will be held in Philadelphia on Friday when the second half layout will be approved. Other matters coming up before the league will involve the matter of fines and suspensions for disgruntled and warring athletes and a final decision on a player-limited teams to 15 men, including a playing manager, is hardly acceptable to real owners and this may be amended.
Outstanding Players
League records, soon to be released,
show that the stars of other years
are still holding their own but some
new faces are asserting their right
to priority. In these two groups
might be named Correa, Alfonso, So-
lis, Fabre, Oscar, White, Reid, Sullivan,
Riggins, Bojo Spearman, Namon Washington.
Dolly Gray, Rector, Holland, Lloyd,
Beckwith, Jap Washington, Ewing,
Streeter, Joe Williams, Cannady, Dicho,
Oscar Charleston, Hudspeth,
Judy Johnson, Joe Lewis, Warnfield,
Holloway, Wilson, Dixon, Warfield,
Pee Washington, Ryan, Lee, and
Clark.
ELLICOTT CITY NINE
TOFS WARD WAY TEAM
ELLICOTT CITY—The Lincoln A.
C. rouled the Ward Way Giants of
Baltimore in both ends of a twin bill,
by the scores of 5 and 3 to 1, here
Sunday.
In the first ga. Bel Brown, the
Lincoln's newly acquired left handed
pitcher, held the Giants to four hits.
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The Passing Review
THERE IS AN ARGUMENT, as is usually the case, among local followers of amateur and semi-pro baseball, on the matter of which is the best baseball team in Baltimore.
Of the several clubs in Baltimore and vicinity, perhaps the strongest claims heard are those of the Ebenezer Royals, Locker A.C., Baltimore Giants, Mt. Winans A.C., Chieftains, Oval Blues, Silver Moors and a few others. Frequently the cry is raised that a certain club "ran out" on another club and that all efforts to get the two together be futile.
With the first half of the season coming to a close, we feel that it is not amiss to ask the men of these various contending units to get together in order to arrange a series which will allow all of the clubs to meet each other before the season comes to an end. While this is a little different from a league series, we believe that it will give a rather definite answer to the question, "Who is the champion?"
There has been too much "woofing" going on without basis, and we are anxious to see a settlement of the matter. Another thing that we would like to call to the attention of managers is that
pitching I've seen has been good, but boy. I've seen some miserable support pitches, pitchers who have practically won their own championship. Eligible
We'd like to add to Mr. Slocum's remarks that managers please learn the correct way to fill in score sheets. Thanx to the improvement of a number of clubs in sending in their score sheets correctly filled, we have been able to make more detailed reports. Look on these pages at the various box scores for examples.
G
YOU NEVER CAN TELL what's going to happen in baseball, and as we write this the Black Sox are making a desperate attempt to regain first position in the standing of the American League.
An unfortunate road trip saw the local tossers drop six out of seven games, and the Johnson's used a two ahead of three applauded him with the Honeoad Grays vapping at their heels, the task of George Rossiter's boys is anything but an enviable one. The temporary shifting of Winters to first base, and the strengthening of the locals' pitching staff may be the desired changes to get the locals back once more into pennant-winning form.
"Babe Ruth" Wilson is away back in his hitting, compared to what he has been doing in past years. "Rap Dixxon and Jess Hubbard have no consistency in connecting with the apple, but the "Babe" is confident that he will hit his stride many more balls are passed. The Sox are out to regain their lost laurels, and woe to those who stand in their way.
A HORRID EXAMPLE of what we preached about some columbs back, concerning the accuracy in filling out score sheets, may be seen from the following reports of a local Sunday baseball game, one report being sent in by each of the teams.
We call your attention to the wide discrepancies in the two accounts, and urge that you note in one report that only eight players are listed in the lineup of one of the teams. There is even a difference of opinion as to the innings in which the several runs were scored. But we need go no further. Examine these two box scores carefully and then resolve that you and your team will not be guilty of a similar offense. Learn how to fill out a score sheet now.
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D
By BILL GIBSON
taken apparent unanimity with score books that appear in his travels from diamond to diamond. Caleb Slocum, a score books being used. All clubs should have score books. Without a score book as a permanent record of individual and team performances during the season, a team has absolutely nothing with which to back its claims. Complementing the batting, fielding, pitching averages, refers to members of these teams, and these with team records of scores will give some index to the brand of ball the team has been playing. Interviewed by this department on the general subject of amateur baseball. Caleb Slocum, our secret sleuth said: "By cracky, them baseball team, they are not going to stop knocking the ball back of the diamond instead of toward the outfield. Much of the
Aside to Milton Fowler of Virginia Seminary were not one of the Seminary athletes named. clean, and we hope you'll keep it so.
A
The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
THURSDAY, JULY 4th AT MARYLAND BASEBALL PARK—DOUBLE HEADER
THE NEW YORK TIMES
NEW YORK.—Yes sir, that's what Al Brown, lanky, six-foot bantam-weight boxer, ain't nothin' else but Al, already recognized by the N.B. A. as the leader of his division, substantiated the judgment of the fistic fathers, last week by giving Vidal Gregorio, th. Espaniard, a good lacing in a bout billed the "battle for the bantam title."
Brown's something of a sheik, too eh?
ARTEMAS CLUB SPLITS
WITH SPARROWS POINT
The Artemas A. C. split a doubleheader at Sparrows Point, Sunday, with the Three Stars nine, winning the first game, 8-6, but dropping the second contest by a 5 to 6 verdict. Tyson pitched well for the Artemas tossers in the first contest and his mates gave him good support. Malone and Stoke proved the batting stars, the former setting three home runs in the two games, and getting into the first game. Poor fielding contributed greatly to the loss of the second contest.
Sunday the Artemas team will meet the Stars in a return engagement at Clifton Park.
ARTEMAS THREE STARS
r h a e f r h a e f
White,cf 1 1 0 0 Whip,lb 2 2 0 0
Malone,2b 1 1 5 0 Whip,lb 0 1 0 0
Hurtt,ss 1 1 5 0 Whip,lb 0 1 0 0
Chattman,rf 1 2 0 0 McNell,ss 1 1 0 0
Green,3b 1 2 0 0 McNell,ss 1 1 0 0
Green,3b 1 3 0 2 Powell,lf 0 0 0 2
Stokes,lf 1 2 0 0 McNell,rf 0 1 0 0
Young,1c 1 1 0 0 McNell,rf 0 0 0 3
Y唐,p 0 1 5 0 Jones,p 1 1 0 0
Towns 8 13 14 4 Totals 6 10 10 5
Score by innings:
r
Artemas 0 0 5 0 0 1 0 2 0 8
Three Stars 2 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 6
New Coach at Cheyney
CHEYNEY, PA—James C. Williamson, star athlete of the University of California, and until recently connected with Tuskegee Institute, has been named as coach at Cheyney Normal School, here, and will take up his new duties in September. Mr. Williamson will also serve as dean of men and will teach social studies.
OPEN EYE
Mannie B
"THE OLD BOY HIMSE
600 East Baltimore S
Exclusive Styles
Straw Hats and
Mail Orders Prom
'KEED' K.O.'S RIVAL IN THE FIRST ROUND
Drops Canadian Opponent in
Toronto Ring; Black Bill
Wins Bout.
GODFREY WINS BOUT
Knocks Out Chuck Wiggins
in Seventh Round.
TORONTO, CANADA—Continuing his unbroken string of ring victories, Kid Chocolate, the flashy Cuban leather pusher, knocked out Jackie Johnston, local fighter, the first round of their scheduled 10-round match at the Maple Leaf Stadium, here Friday night.
A clean right to the jaw sent Johnston to he canvas, in exactly 2 minutes and 47 seconds of fighting. The Canadian was fighting well on the moment and the troop had 1000 that packed the two large seats gasped when Johnston fell, so suddenly was the blow delivered.
Johnston weighed 126, while Chocolate climbed thru the ropes at 122 pounds.
Black Bill. Chocolate's stablemate, proven to be worth when he easily disfigured of Harry Goldstein, of Boston in eight rounds. Goldstein weighed 111 pounds and black Bill 110½.
Godfrey Wins
CLEVELAND. O.-George Godfrey, the "Big Truck" from Leiperville, knocked out Chuck Wiggins, of Indianapolis, in the seventh round of a scheduled 12-round bout at the Taylor Bowl, here Wednesday night. Godfrey knocked Wiggins thru the ropes and as the latter re-entered the ring. Godfrey landed a series of rights and lefts to the Hoosier's face and body that sent him to his knees. Godfrey weighed 239 and Wiggins, 194.
51 GIRLS COMPLETE P.A.L. BADGE TESTS
Dunbar Junior High School Has 40;
School 130 Has 11
Of the 51 girls taking the bronze
badge test under the Playground
Athletic League auspices at Drudu
Hill Park, last week, all of them
passed, according to an announcement
made by Clarence C. Jackson,
playground director.
Miss Templeman Mise of Dunbar
Junior High School had 40 girls while
Miss Mattle of School 130 had 11.
Frances Hammond, of School 130,
having wore her bronze and silver
badges, in the county schools, success-
fully completed her test for the gold
badge.
badge
Gls awarded badges are as follows: School 130—Gold Badge, Frances Hammond, Eronze badges: Mary Forrest, Alma Jackson, Rachel Smith, Mattie Davis, Marjorie Cunningham, Esther Waters, Beatrice Waters, Marguerite Lambson, Helen Cole, and Geither
Gertrude
The following from Dunbar won
the badges:
Arnita Dorsey
Hazel Tyler
Ada Pembleton
Imra Tyler
Alma Tyler
Elizabeth Newton
Laura Alston
Evelyn Christopher
Netton
Mary Diggs
Bernice Carey
Emma Robinson
Marge
Ruth Brown
Catherine Gram
Sylvia Johnson
Lichelle Lewis
Louisa Brady
Audrey Gram
Lucille Jones
Mary Davis
Linda Jones
Gosine Jones
Amelia Anderson
Preda Scott
Ia Dockins
Thomas
Elizabeth Roberts
Ruby Mills
Evelyn Dismond
Tina Rose
Julla Coleman
Willie Glover
Ada Williams
Melissa Clark
Mae Ruff
Julla Coleman
Catherine Young
VENINGS
died To
th AT MARYLAND
DOUBLE HEADER
"Play Safe—
when you put a cigar
to your lips"
says
Alfred W. McCann
D. Litt., A.B., LL.D
Famous Pure Food Expert
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Distributed by F. A. DAVIS & SONS, 119 S. Howard Street, Baltimore, MJ.
BOY, WHAT AN
HERBERT (Rap) DIXON
outer gardener for the Black Sox,
has an arm that many outfielders
have to have. Shifted from
right field to left field when "Crush"
Holloway went to Hildale. Dixon,
who can throw accurately from his
position in the outfield to home plate,
proved that fly bails are all the same
to him, no matter where they may
Formerly with Colonel Jacob Strothers' Harrisburg Giants, Dixon, since coming to the Black Sox, has proved a valuable man and ranks next to Jud Wilson when it comes to soaking the ball. Playing ball in California for the latter months, he has chance to idle, and is always in the best of condition. He is regarded as one of the cleanest players in the league.
9th Inning Rally Nets
Twin Oaks 13-13 Tie
# A ninth inning rally, which netted them 10 runs, enabled the Twin Oak Giants to tie the Alphian Pleasure Club nine at 13-all in a loosely played game, Sunday.
**TWIN OAK** **ALPHIAN**
| | h | a | c |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Holpes.rf. | 2 3 0 | 0 1 0 | 2 3 0 |
| Garpill.lf. | 0 0 1 | 0 1 0 | 2 5 2 |
| Maker.ef. | 0 0 1 | 0 1 2 | 2 5 0 |
| Haynes.3b. | 2 4 2 | 2 4 2 | 1 1 1 |
| Watkins.3b. | 3 2 3 | 3 2 3 | 1 1 3 |
| Coston.2b. | 2 0 0 | 2 0 0 | 2 4 1 |
| Harris.c. | 2 0 0 | 2 0 0 | 1 2 1 |
| Harris.c. | 2 3 3 | 2 3 3 | 1 1 3 |
| Sutton.p. | 2 3 1 | 2 3 1 | 1 1 3 |
| Gibson.p. | 0 0 0 | 0 0 1 | |
**Totals** **13 18 12 9** **Totals** **13 21 17 11**
**SCORE BY INNINGS**
**ALPHIAN** **1 0 2 1 2 1** **4 2 x - 13**
**TWIN OAK** **0 0 0 0 3 0** **4 2 x - 13**
**two-base hits-c.** **Haynes, Barnes, Smith.**
**two-base hits-c.** **Haynes, Barnes, Smith.**
**Hendler, Sacrifice-s.** **Harris, L. Sutton.**
**Davis, Home runs-c.** **Haynes, Holmes.**
**Bae on balls-b.** **Five, Slots holes-b.** **Holmes, Haynes, Harter.** **Barnes.**
**Struck out-by** **Clayton, 8; Sutton, 8.**
BLUE SOX LOSE
SHARPTOWN — The Snarptown baseball team nosed out the bridgeville, (Del.) Blue Sox, by a 1-0 score after ten innings, here Saturday. The Blue Sox meet the Wilmington Peerless Club, at Bridgeville, Saturday.
MEN! KEEP YOUR HATS ON
"Every time a woman leaves off something she looks better. Every time a man leaves off something—He looks worse."—WILL ROGERS.
P.A.L. Schedules Swimming
Meet for Thursday Morning.
16 TRACK EVENTS
Five Classes to Compete in
Afternoon Meet.
Featuring the Fourth of July
celebration the Playground Athletic
League has arranged a swimming meet and a track
and field carnival to be held at
Drud Hill Park that day.
Swimming Meet.
The swimming meet will be held at 10:30 a.m. The following events have been listed:
Boys (under 14)
25-yard dash crawl, spoon race
1 length), 50-yard dash (free style),
and light candle race 11 length).
Bogs, (over 14)
50-yard free style, 100-yard free
style, 50-yard back stroke, 100-yard
breast stroke. (3) optional dives, and
poon race (2 lengths).
Girls
25-yard free style, 25-yard novice,
and breast stroke (1 length any).
Track Meet at 1 O'clock
The following events have been
sted for the track and field meet
which is scheduled to begin at 1
m:
15-bl class---50-yard dash, standing broad jump and standing hop, step and jump.
10-bl class---60-yard dash, broad jump, standing hop, step and jump.
10-bl class---70-yard dash, running broad jump, and running hop, step and jump, until unlimited class---80-yard dash, running broad jump, running hop, step and jump.
jump.
running, unlimited class—100-yard dash, running broad jump; hop, step and pump, and 8 lb shot put.
Clarence C. Jackson will be in charge of both meets and will have a number of assistants to aid him.
BLUE JAYS WIN
The Blue Jays baseball team defeated the Miller Giants, Sunday by the score of 24 to 4.
MEN!
"Every time a woman leaves
Every time a man leaves off s
WILL ROGERS.
THE FAMOUS STETSON STRAW
$5.00, $6.00, $10.00, $15.00
YACHT STRAW SAILORS
Wide Variety of Fancy Bands
of the Newer Patterns.
$1.85 to $3.85
YEDO SAILORS
$1.85 and $5.00
NEGLIGEE MILANS
$1.35 and $3.85
GENUINE MILANS
$2.85 and $5.00
South American PANAMA HATS
$5.00 and $15.00
GENUINE LEGHORN HATS
$5.00 and $10.00
AMERICAN LEGHORN HATS
$1.85 and $2.85
Non-Breakable PANAMA HATS
$2.25
CARLTON KAPS
85c, $1.25 and $2.00
CARLTON
1 N. CALHOUN ST.,
EUTAW AND SARATOGA STS.
How They Stand American League
Won Lost Pct.
Lincoln Giants 17 17 .698
BLACK SOX 17 10 .630
Homestead Grays 12 8 .600
Hildale 12 16 .625
Bacharachs 7 14 .332
Cuban Stars 6 14 .300
BLACK SOX. 5: Cuban Stars. 0.
Lincoln Giants, 12: Bacharachs, 11. at
New York.
Lincoln Giants, 12: Bacharachs. 2.
Homestead Grays, 8: Hildale, 6 at Cleveland.
Homestead Grays, 7: Hildale, 6.
WHERE THE PLAY
Hildale at Lincoln Gates, June 30.
Homestead Grays at Hildale, June 28, 29.
Bacharachs at BLACK SOX, June 30.
Homestead Grays at BLACK SOX, July 1.
Homestead Grays vs. Cuban Stars (Dexter Park). July 4.
Lincoln Giants at Bacharachs, July 1, 2, 3
BLACK Sox at Hakeidin, July 2.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Birmingham at St. Louis, June 29th, (30th)
July 3rd, (4th) Games.
Milwaukee at Detroit, June 29th, (30th)
July 3rd, (4th) Games.
Kansas City at Chicago, June 29th, (30th)
July 3rd, (4th) Games.
Cubans open.
T.O.L. LEAGUE
Wichita Falls at Houston, June 28, 29, 30
Port. Worth at San Antonio, June 29, 30
July 1.
Dallas at Tulsa, June 27, 28, 29, 30.
Savannah at Oklahoma City, June 27, 28, 29, 30.
Ebenezer Royals at Helmar A.C. Oval.
Silver Moons vs. Woodland A.C. at Hill
BLACK SOX vs. House of David, July 4.
2 games.
National
Darby Phantoms vs. Monarch Giants, Atlantic City.
Pearlest A.C. at Bridgeville (Del.) Blut Sox, Saturday.
SCORES
Local
Locke CA. 4; Baltimore Giants. 8.
Cheftalts. 7; Silver Moons. 8.
Chiefs. 6; Brown Moons. 6; G. A. 5.
Hollins A.C. 5; Ecueen Royers. 1.
Pledmont Tigers. 7; Mt. Winans A.C. 4.
Mt. Winans A.C. 5; Pledmont Tigers. 8.
Mt. Winans A.C. 5; Highland Rangers. 11; St. Monicas. 7.
Twin Oak Giants. 13; Aliphan P.C. 13.
Rex A.C. 4; Aliphan P.C. 8.
Rex A.C. 4; Sparrows Point. 6.
Sparrows Point. 8; Artemas A.C. 5.
KEEP YOUR HATS ON
does off something she looks better.
something—He looks worse."—
1
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420 W. FRANKLIN ST.
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A very detignitel and enjorable evening
‘cah Spent ate the ome of the | recent
hathieds he Rex. and Mra. H. Octavius
BeSRome ada Bond street om last Tuts:
3p irecing. when. whey entertained | at
‘Boe ‘ceeding reception. ‘The Nappy courte
Bare “the, recipenss. of aumerour beaut
ful presents
Mofcortonn guests present were: Mrs
26'S omphedy, of VFashungton: Miss, Tey
S Sant ot istams, Florita: and Mrs.
Hag Harrie of Brooklyn, WY. sister
Hthe eee ane groom,
other guts were Ree. and Mrs, J.T
Obert, Rew ana atts, G. &. Greene. Ree
settee Bruce H. ieDonald. “Rev, and
SRS Ge. browne, mee. and irs. W. 8
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Hones Stary Moore, ©. H. Buchanan. Fred
fiibicion, ‘Geran Derkins, Rebecca May
se eiieana donee. Viola Brown. Sisse
Hh Neore, Bb Dunston, Beulah Hall
Sein ation Gantt. staceline, Wilson. Lee
PEER ote inaptinte. eusra. Jest
Wana: cS Siarsm. 8. B, Stephen. Robert
Tee God Mr ane Mrs. Oeerze Col
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Chole Tenders Directress
1A Surprise Party:
‘ane members of the choir of Enon Bap-
aulMogureh tendered «surprise party
Per Caiveetess: Mrs." Mabel "Brooks. o0
Siti directing at the home of Mrs. Abe
Fiera 1200 Argyle. avenue, A Durst
Pup eumcemus. sites wer presented to, Mrs
Sona oppreciation. of er services,
aie. and stes, Sltborn Taylor Entertain
AL a Cock-tall Party
ar and ates, Milburn ‘Taylor were hosts
toh cocknl party prior to Mrs. Laure
Sfosnisoncs butee supper from 6 until 6:30
Sninse Thurseey evening
Mereie guess were members of the Phyllis
ate Shop and tne escorts and 2
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ta ha her left orm and lees
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Many Attend Brilliant
Wedding of Young Couple
A wedding of ntersst to Baltimore, PRtL
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‘The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June <7, 17<?
‘MESSRS.
Harrison Diggs Bernaré Hushes
Howard Lee Tea Mosely
Games Dougherty Charles Dotson
Prank Tees Gepnas Rawlings
Charles Trigg Nelson. Groom:
Sob Janey Winslow Rut
Bima ‘Galloway Lawrence Sprisgs
Francls Lewis Jean. West
Burnett. Haywood Edward Mosely
Bherlock- Grinage Roland Henson
suse Brown. Sonnnte, Sethorn
Kenneth Bronn David Johns
Bernard Grelgler Earl Rogers
NEW YORK —Mary Snepp, white. in four posse in Bronx Court Tis
wee, where ane is on tral for the king of Seymour ‘rick, her colored
sweetheart,
{They used to call me ‘Mary Butterfly,’ because: I filtted around
Mary's story was In part, as follows
so lightly, And when T came to New York two years ago, t got s Job as
‘Gancing hostes in the Orpheum Dance Hall at 44th street and Broad-
‘Seven months ago I met Seymour Irick. He was good to me
and, he promised 9 take care of me and, break me in with ‘swell act
onthe stage. Well, all around me were, iris going wath colored fellows
and before’ knew it I never used to think of the difference in our colors
CFor the first time I had everything. And he had an expensive
sport coupe and we used to have fine times riding around. He made big
‘money as an entertainer.
‘well. that afternoon he and I had been, going from cabaret to
cabaret, I don’t believe we missed one ia Harlem's Black Belt. | We had
swell time and we hada ste time and she threw back her head and
laughed.
SHOT APTER QUARREL.
“When we got home he accused me of firing, with another man,
nen he encetsned to il me; He Tehipped out a gun and I screamed
‘nd rushed et him to save my life, He pulled the trigger three times, but
fitne struggle 1 manaued ‘9 aivere the gun, and twa of the shots endered
fils body. "He fell to the floor gasping and then dled, and that’s all T
know about it.”
‘When the shots went off John Hudgins and his wife, who lived on
‘the floor below. dashed upstairs and then notified the police.
‘mont avenue, who was seriously a eriand
eek, while en route from Northumbertanc
County, Van in an automonile accident
‘Bhere, In. company. with ts wife, they
Wislued hs relatives, Alexandria. Lodge
Elks, No. 48, are caring for him whle at
the’ hospital” ‘Me, Lucas 1s 0 member of
the Pride of Baltimore Lodge No. 713.
MRS, HARRIET MINOR of 1314 Plotid
agenue, Neves Washington, is visiting De
Jon and daughterin-aw. "Sr, and. Mrs
George ©. Minor. of 10ai Brantley avenue
MR. AND. MRS. JAMES PIELDS ang
daughter, Ada Merle, motored to. Phila
Gdeiphia on” Sunday to ‘visit. Mrs. Pela
Sster, Mrs. a Powell.
RUSS A, SUSIE MEARNS of | Morgan
Coolege 1s the guest of Mr. and Mrs, Mat
fhew'b. Laws for the month of June ané
they spent a. delightful week-end visting
Incnds and relatives. tn Charlottesville
Virginia.
DR. AND MRS, C, MANSELL LAWRENCE
of isd Mosher. atréet. will sail trom Nes
York on Saturday. July 6th. on the SS
Pieines for Jamaica, WL, vie.” Santiago
Ginn. White tn damoles, they will be the
Guests of Dr. Lawrence's: parents, Mr. and
‘Mes, Charles E Lawrence.
MR, AND MRS. EDWARD STERN are
fraud parents of Babr Bil, who bas Just
Arrived home, after being contined to’ the
Fospital since its birth for Ave months
REV, CHARLES THOMAS of Drew Unt
versity gas the house quest of Miss Selen
Purvey of 2112 McGulloh street this week
MRS, LOTTIE GILES of 608 W. Prank
sins atteet and. Mrs. Bessie Watts of 90
AP Pranktin street is spending week I
New Rochelle, -¥.
MIES MARGARET “3, ROBINSON, whe
hak been attending school ere, lett or
Brigay. for her home in ‘Washington, D.C
While. here, she. eed with her cous,
Me. and. Mrs. Eéward Stern.
‘MISS OWEIDA I. MORRIS, kindergarten
teacher St Elba. School in Richmond, Va,
ands former graduate of Coppin, Norma
School, ease. of "28, is Rome visiting. he
patents at 812. N. Bond street. She ha
Be her house gust, Mss Teer C. Thornton
also’ teacher of the same school In Teh
fend! “The afe being ighip emertlne
DR AND MRS. J. EDWARD FISHER, an¢
daughters, Miss Jean. Pisher, motoerd 1
Nee jersey on ‘Sunday. They were ac
empanied by gene Briscoe and. Alte
UTHMAN RAY and Mise Mildred. Jeter
son. motored. to. Philadelphia on Sunday.
They wer secompanied by Mr. Ray's. tath
fr and. sister, Miss Gladys. and) bareu
Batt
MR, AND MRS. JOLIUS REED. IR. of
aon, SieMechen rent returned. Rome tis
‘eek from Rootevrit. Camp, Calvert, Co.
Nay where they mere house Euestx ol
Me.’ neea's mother, Mrs. James “Reed.
MRS, MCKNIGHT ané son, John ©
night, of 215. 23rd street, acompanie
by Airs. MeDougins, are visiting relatives
In New York city.
“REV. MM. G, EPPS, of New York City
spent ten days Inthe clty visiting friends
He returned. nome ‘on Wesnesdoy
MRS, FLORENCE DANIELS, of Prince
ton, Nay was the quest of her sister
Mrs, Benirice lack, fora couple of weeks
She returned nome on Monday.
MRS, ANNIE HARRIS, who hag been 10
Baltimore forthe past” there "weeks. a
‘returned to her home In, Ann ATber, Met
She. hos tilly recovereé from a sezl0us
‘operation In Detroit recently.
MESSRS, SCOTT MARTIN and Clarence
Moorehead, of Grafton, W. Va. aida
Shore vist! to Baltimore’ this week-end and
hile heee paid’ fying visit to the APRO-
‘AMERICAN.
JOHN 3. CRAIG, 1281 7h street, H.W.
washington, ‘D.C. is visiting "Bln sister
Mrs, Alice ‘dare. 108 Myctle avenue, whi
fs very fil, Mr, Craig isan APRO agent
and opersies a sand at ‘tN street and
Louisiana avenue,
Ow stcK tisT—
Nyrrs, Alles Dobbins of 1417 Druid Hit
avenue, “who ‘was convalescing after ar
Siiness tn Provigent Hospital ot uso wecks
Ie seriously MM again at ner bome,
Ars, Mamie’ MeKinnin of 809 W. Fremon
avenue, who, wat returning home {fom
Fehearsal of the Saxophone Bang, of stk
She ir a member, fell and dislocated. he
snkle.
Mes, Mary Hughes of 08 Drulé_ Wil
avenue ie atl quite sick at her home
Stes, Een ‘Winfams ie very lat he
nome, 803" Haslem avenue,
Mrt. J.-M. Green of Lexington street
‘eho is ‘tht. hing gone “to. the country fo
Fecuperation, Mts, W., Dean eccom
panies her.
Solomon Tripp of 1936 Brunt street
Improving. slowly.
‘John. Lee, of 1038 Drolé lll avenue
We better ‘fier an diness of few weeks
MRE. NELUIE 1, GTASOH, of 1006 N. cal
nhoun street, who” an bees) Ill for several
seeks, if slowly Fecoverlng,
Saturday
Savings
a §
Saturdays, to 11 p.m. Stands anxious to clear stocks for
the week-ends, offer special values
=| = Serurday night in fine foods,
F je} Free guarded parking, south side
= GBR {of 20th Street, between Maryland
# {3 y, Avenue and Oak Street.
1} Bx) 0 ys
ia | AVENUE
Cram i ang
aaa | | Ge
i =i -MARKET-
gy ily vines
ete
Oo ares |
| LAFAYETTE SEAFOOD COMPANY
BIN Fremont ave, M18 New Aone Avenue
MADISON 7566 VERNON 7458
z= Special for Saturday
Fancy Steak Fish...cccccnenesne LC Tbe
Pix
Gide
Vy yh
Led.
ee
Spread Golden
Crown
andSpread Good Cheer
HS ees
in Cheha edad the Sa
may bring forth. Pancakes
topped off generously with
Gilien Growa' Syrup.
‘The combination will start
‘any man off with that cheerful
Shang ne ele oie och
day a day of accomplishment,
At All Grocers
Steuart, Son & Co,
tse
SSS
Bir Booklet!
ee Booklet
aay ae
| Save la
| "the: Tree Southern Flavor! _
Og .
The Nation’s Biggest All Negro Weekly.
MAJESTIC TEA ROOM
tot N. FREMONT AVE, cor, Lanvale PHONE MADIGON jy
woe HOUR SERVICE—
European and American Plan Private Dining Room
CARO PARTIES, PRIVATE LUNCHEONS, AFTER THEATRE PANTIES
‘oun SpESInLTY
MAS. c. M. WINDER, Manager. Wi. 8. DICKERSON, Prepnay
\Gularen “*
a. arink_.
iHiews Rock {
pGinger Are »
WITHOUT BEING }
| URGED Je
They are never too busy at : be :
sf sa Mother ean « at
cold glass of High Rock /pJei\
Ginger Ale.” And Mothers, EER :
knowing the purity of this ee
product, are never afraid tq
let them have it. ff a ih aN :
= Firlincch E
a ; ae
a Ale
See
RS RS D a
Pe elie
- Qe
yO Apa
oo Brae a
aay en
OT Uno-and Oe :
eee Honey Bread started Aree
_a.small store and one wagon.. Today they sae
the largest bread bakeries south of the - Mason-Dixon
oi og Their success can be explained in two words~
op es oe Looe 2s
a Pees 9} i es
ee ed ec set er ae] E:
th, ae ae A ge | ae
po ky ee Er ee .
bs ¥ Pee? eo |
ae we CE bd ped
Pe ae Swe Sp
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ee »y £8 a PR aR Fi Bo AN
oa ow oN a es
we es hee se
Pee ee pee eee Ngee tS BES NM s a
eee I ae) bod % oe
oe ee ey ee fe
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p vesuncmmnssinasvencmweacdoe eee
NEW YORK.—Mary Snepp, white. in four posse in Bronx Court, this
wes, here abe 1 on tial for the ing of SePmour Tek, Her colored| Mrs. Holland Gets $250
eetheatt,
“They used to call me ‘Mary Butterfly,’ ‘because: I fitted around
Matyle Slory ‘as In part, as follows Atte one res Uitigation, | Mrs.
so lightly, ‘And, when I came to New York two years ago. ‘I got @ Job as ean fe og epee
dancing hoses! in The Orpheum Dance Hall at 44th street and Broad-| 0° Ot So) cowden and Mrs. Lil
geven months ago I met Seymour Trick. He was good to me|!¥, Mat Jacrsn, 1184 Druid Bill ave-
and he promleed eo vak care ot mand onetime wi tHe te nue, Fricay. 5
on‘uhe, stage "Well, all-around me were. gins going, with colored fellons,| ,,MiR He eae incur sit as the
and before I knew it I never used to think of ‘the ifference in our colors. | result of expenees incurred from the
gre T knew it 1 never used to tfing. And he had an expensive |funeral of the late Charles Carrol,
ime I had everything. And he had an expensive | UETS OF 410° sefendants.
AND
eee eee
Pr ye rere
Pe ern
CENTS.
————
aco Se Se a
Quarter 1 BF rouna
Pec eee
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
Pat To Pansy
Towson, Md. tips scales for marriage licenses this week.
—Mrs. Bertha Hurst entertains charmingly at a porch party.
Pat Pansy:
It is indeed the month of weddings, the couple has taken the epic Baltimore folk.
when they were leaving the nuptial rites had been a lot simpler than they thought. They simply wanted to be by their realize that they belonged to other.
Mary Childs and Forson both of Towson, invited their wedding and I heard that a pretty one, too, but Little Forsonville, and Mary I would have had a hit if I threw.
Agnes Matthews of Monkton pounded a fire at who took other for better. They are the latest married
Other Wedding
tale as well. While visiting in Towson the other day, while visiting was outstanding, for weddings there had to be become a necessity, since the towns of Baltimore and new towns of Maryland were lately, from Baltimore, marriage honeys recently, but to the location interest at an afternoon hotel there but our own Nellie of 1139 W. Laundry, a hotel that tipped up 30 and married Jake street, a merchant, 67, of $13 million. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Matthew, this surprising was the first around at the same ten. George H. Barnes, 21, of New York, had sake, the E. of Washington, a venuce, to be his wedding ceremony. The Rev. J. H. Green perished this ceremony. He was rather brief in person, laying long enough to learn that S. Purnell of Runnells Run, a doctor and Coordinator, took his delight and thrilling again to the altar.
Cumbys of Pocomoke
of course, you have heard of Hermann R. Gessner, the founder of Towson, marying resurgence, James J. Chestery of Monkton, and John B. Smith of Dumfries, and made units, for they make good-looking
sukhak M. hostess at a dinner party every last day in Toxon spread the news that LOU W. Jones, of Batterton, and ERIH C. Hugh, of Batterton, were mark-makers.
Dr. White
Dentist
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Sept.28
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"when they put up rites had been gone through by mutilated rites had been gone through by simple想要 to be by themselves and to resize that they belonged only to each other Henry Childs and Florence Watkins, both of Towon, invited my hostess to see me and I was such a pretty one and but Littleton Gatonsville, and Mary Robinson, 54, have had a fit if I had missed their. Agnes Matthews of Monkton and Raymond Speed of Phoenix are another couple who are the most worse. They are the intest married couple."
Other Weddings
Read Villiard's "Crumbling Color Line," in Harper's was Charlie's part shot.
*Wed in D. C.*
Miss Emma Brenner was married to John P. Wallace of Durham, N.C. in Washington this week by the Rev. W. W. Hill.
From Philadelphia came Claire N. Lann to claim Loutte H. Craig, D.C. girl, as his bride.
**Guest Lists**
Hostesses who have entertained for years, and to whom throwing a reception or a courtroom guest list is available for making the guest lists available for the editors of newspapers.
But when somebody was present, they are out and out, or when the hostess is a driver, or a newly rich, getting a guest list is as difficult as a marriage aid.
*Summer Home*
The Thomas R. Smith are in their sum room, the Daniel Rittersterron road.
The Daniel Rittersterron road to their Browns road home for the summer.
**Browns Happy**
Mr. and Ms. Browns are still receiving congratulations at the fine showing of their son, Rayner, at Howard Medical Center.
The first place in his class, not to speak of an internship at Freedman's. What a lad! What a lad!
*Browns Pass Through*
The Philadelphia Norwoods passed through this city for Washington. The doctor and Rosa are as fine a couple as ever.
Mrs. HUBBARD Peter Farnett
It was certainly, please gather, the porch on the front thrust, on Friday from 6 to 10, in honor of her house guest, Beatrice M. McOhee, of
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Alken: $500 with. Mrs. Hurst's beautiful beauty has an atmosphere and surroundings all of its own—a picturequeen aburban house, a beautiful backyard, with all its greens, flowers and shrubbery, was where the party began. The guests in the most dining and become familiar with the course, gave to the passerby a picture of exquisite coloring and beauty. The course dinner, the hostess argo and invited her guests to the music room where she sang. The course dinner, the Wharton sisters, Hermione and Connie. Ada Jenkins and Lillian Parrott entertained with several beautiful piano sois.
Guessing games followed, in which Mae Wright was awarded two prizes out of the three. The prize was the winner the other prize. These prizes were boxes of pretty handkerchiefs, Mildred McMeen, Milda Anderson and Constance McMeen, the two sisters. Rebecca Murphy, received a half-dozen Madera napkins; and the guest of honor compartment complete, was presented to Beatrice McChee.
David, Florence Carter and Grace Murphy assisted Mrs. Hurst. The other guests present at the party were, Bert Fitzgerald, Chita McChern, Elizabeth Johnne, Jean Fisher, Julia Woodhous and Bert Fitzgerald.
Elizabeth, Nothair But the Trubt?
Elisabeth, Nothair But the Trubt?
She sparkling diamond. She claims it is a token from Mrs. Edna Reid, at Christmas.
She shall we tell her?
Thelma Home
Although Thelma Coleman is able to sit with her children, she is at home with her parents and surrounded daily with her churns, and surrounded daily with her broken leg and her confinement.
Dr. J. Edw. Fisher and Family Move Up-Town
The East Baltimore folks have begun living uptown here of late. Just last week, Dr. J. Edward Fisher, his wife and daughter, Jean have opened their new home in the East Baltimore. Dr. Fisher's office, I understand, is to star at their old residence, 1612 East Montgomery and be leaked out that Dessau Thomas and her ma and pa are anticipating moving in the near future, to the 2000 block of the North Bond street, his keep his office as his old residence, 822 N. North Bond street, and one uptown, too, it is whispered. Forget Gate Scholarship It was said that the girls of the Douglas high school graduating class received all the honors. However, let it also be said, the teacher, the doctor, the honorary doctor, has been worthy of mentioning, by receiving a scholarship of $100 from one of the sororities. So a boy from the graduation class will receive all boys, William sawmed your record.
Rev. Walden Given Pastoral Reception
The Rev. C. H. Walden, pastor of Ebenzer A.M.E. Church, and Mrs. Walden, the wife of Rev. J. H. Walden, ception at the church on last Thursday, 10:30 a.m., addresses in behalf of the pastor, he was presented with a purse. Mrs. Walden was the Mission Society. A beautiful reception followed in the language of the distinguished guests were Rev. and Mrs. D. E. Lice, Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Brittles, Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Brittles, Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Brittles, Rev. and Mrs. O. J. Hayman, Rev. and Mrs. J. M. Harrison, Rev. and Mrs. J. M. Harrison, Rev. and Mrs. J. M. Harrison, Rev. and Mrs. Thaddeus Copeland.
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The Afro American, Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
DR. AND MRS. C. M. LAWRENCE, 1933 Mosher St., sail from New York on the 63rd Fluvia, July 6th for Jamaica, West Indies via. Santiago, Cuba. Dr. S. J. Brown will have full charge of Dr. Lawrence's office for the months of July and August.
Principal George Owens Given Surprise Reception by Faculty
Stop In and Step Out with the Garment You Want to Wear on the 4th
MR. CARTER says: "That he has taken great great in selecting a complete line of up-to-date Men's and Women's wearing apparel, that can be bought on your own."
MR. CARTER Says, That a Short Talk with Him is All That is Necessary, and Then Select the Garment You Want, "And the Goods Will Allmost Follow You House."
Hub Furniture Co.
710-712 Perina Ave.
a beautiful surprise reception was tendered Principal George Owens by former members of the faculty of School No. 106. Hill street, near Sharp street, at 1060 West 106th Street, on Monday afternoon from 2 to 6 o'clock. Frank Sorrell, who is now vice-principal of the high School, No. 101, acted as teacherst. Howard Gross, principal of School No. 104, Carolina High School, No. 101, acted as interim address on the many happy associations with Mr. Owens. Mr. Gross cited Mr. Owens' achievements at the beginning of his occupation in preparation he got in working under him, and the splendid cooperation he always had with the students. South Carolina's wonderful cooperation he had in the school that Mr. Owens left was called on andoke of the progress and achievements that Mr. Owens had made in the past; his great work in South Carolina; the high esteem and respect his teachers, friends and associates have always held for him. The teacher, Tucker, vocational guidance teacher of the public schools, in behalf of the faculty, presented Mr. Owens with a handsome leather traveling
Spanish Veterans Meet Here July 3
The nineteenth annual encampment of the United Spanish War Veterans, Department of the Potomac, and their ladies' auxiliary, will be held here, July 3 to July 5, include: take the official opening session is scheduled for 10 a.m., July 4, at Booker T. Washington junior high school, there will be a public program July 3 at Ebeneneer A.M.E. church, at 8 p.m. All busiest classes, junior high school, Washington junior high school, starting at 2 p.m., July 4, and closing July 5. Mayor William F. Breening will deliver the opening address, and there will be other distinguished guests present. The encampment will be entertained here by L. Col. Allen Allensworth Camp No. 19, of which L. A. Gibson is the commander.
Miss Agnes Pryor. Douglass high school graduate, won the scholarship prize given by the University of a contest which just closed a subscription contest here this week.
Miss Carolyn Harris, Morgan under graduate, won second prize. The first prize was a $50 scholarship to Morgan College.
FEMALE USHER BOARD MEET
The Female Usher's Association Awards at the home of Mrs. R. Casey of $20 Bond street on Thursday evening. After a most interesting business meeting, a delightful repeat war board will be closed until September 5th.
Stor
line
Prom
Then
CLUBS
JUNIOR MATRON'S S. & A. CLUB
Mrs. Helen S. Johnson of S. 161 Presstamman
Mrs. Helen S. Johnson of Junior Matron's S. and A. Club on Tuesday evening. Owing to the fact that all the business will be called on Friday evening.
PHILLIES WHEATLEY L. & W. CLUB, INC.
The Phyllis Wheatley Literary and Whist Club will be called on Wednesday en on en was incorporated this week by its attorney, Gobert E. Macbeth.
This corporation was incorporated as a great promise of developing into a worth while social organization. Incorporated, as well as the Board of Directors for the time being: Mrs. Julia Taylor, Mrs. Laura Morrison, Ethel Thomas and Miss Blakey.
LE MARDI SOIR CARD CLUB
Mrs. Ehlac Scott was the hostess to the Le Mardi Soleil School in Grosse Pointe 628 Mosher street. The evening was enjoyably spant playing cards. Priez was attended by the children. Mrs. Emma Swain: canciliation, to Mrs. Edna Hinton. This meeting was the closing meeting of
LAH CLUB
Mrs. Elsie Mitchell was hostess to the club this week. Our annual business meeting was held at which time we had our installation of officers, namely. Mrs. Ella
Gift Suggestions for the HACKER
New Department of Ladies' and Kimos
10 Piccots
Full silk to to
All new sizes.
and Crepe de Chine
AVENUE'S LEADING HATTER A
1731-33 Pennsylvania Ave.,
SAVE YOUR HOSPITAL
Southern Stelos Co.
Hosiery Repairs
1503 Pennsylvania Ave., Balt
1021 U St., N. W., Washington
24 Hour Service
Satisfaction Guaranteed
DO YOU LIKE HOME?
IF SO, VISIT AND
PLEASANT I
Madison Avenue and W
Short Orders a Specialty
In and Step Out with the Garment You W
R. CARTER says: "That he has taken great
up-to-date Men's and Women's wearing apparel
to Pay.
R. CARTER Says, That a Short Talk with Film
select the Garment You Want, "And the Goods We
Beautiful
Women's Dresses
The world of fashion is here—at THE HUB. Here you can select from hundreds of beautiful models in crepe de chine, in gay colors, georgette silk and chiffon dresses in printed, smartly fashioned. All sizes—all prices—and, just a friendly talk with MR. CARTER and the goods almost follow you home.
Men's CoolClothSuits
2 for $25 00
Plain black and blues or the smart stripe. A wide variety of patterns to choose from and, remember, MR. CARTER trusts you.
Just a heart to heart talk and the suits will almost follow you home. Come in now and step out on the 4th looking like a fashion plate.
Hub Furniture C 710-712 Perna
Smith, president; Mrs. Elise Mitchell, secretary; Mrs. Katherine, publicity agent. We had as our guests, Mrs. Harriet Smith, Miss Plores. We were with a group. We were with *A delicious repeat*.
TWILIGHT EMBROIDERY CLUB
TOLLOS, EXHIBIT, AND REVIEW
The Twilight Embroidery Club held its closing exhibit and review, May 16, on last Tuesday and Wednesday. The rooms were artistically decorated with beautiful flowers and greenery. The exhibit paper, the club colors. The exhibit showed excellent workmanship and quality. The women were Medames Fountain, Anna Smith, Gertrude Banks, Rose Fields, Amy Scott, Isabella Byrd, Anne Taylor, Elizabeth Fox, Katherine Miss Mary FOOT, Battle and Katie Pfe.
THE BON AMI ART CLUB
A delightful evening was spent at the home of Mrs. Genevieve Carrington of 2304 Madison avenue in Ami Art Club. Plans were made for a straw ride in the near future. A refreshing repast followed.
LE MARDI SOIR CARD CLUB
Mrs. Mattie Johnson of 2200 McCulloh street entertained Le Mardi Soir Card Club last Saturday evening, and were played.
Businesses were awarded to the Mameses Bibet Scott, Emma Swain and Fannie Wallace. The street enlisted the club this week.
JOLLY BOYS' CLUB
Sebron Jefferson of 2467 Drudg Hill avenue was invited to the Hollies Boys' Club on Friday evening. Cards were played, followed by a very dainty repast.
LOTUS CLUB
Smith's Hotel
Guests registered at Smith's Hotel this week are:
Mr. M. D. Williams, Washington;
Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Jackson, Mr. and Mrs.
O. N. Sylvester, Mr. and Mrs. H. Sur-
Leon Hammond, Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Williams, Harbors; Charles Bradford,
Newark; N.J.; Mr. and Mrs. B. Dotson,
Richmond; Mr. and Mrs. P. Boston, Wash-
ington; Stanley W. Horsley, Houston;
J. Butler, Newark, N.J. E. B. Burgess, At-
lantic City; Clarke Smith, Philadelphia;
D. C. Creole, Herman Anderson, J. W.
Lake, Chicago III; Fredrick Williams,
Cedric Creole, Herman Anderson, J.
W. G. Johnson, New York James Thomas,
Atlantic City.
OBLATE SISTERS of Providence,
at Greenwood Electric Park, Thursday,
July 11th.
For the Girl Graduate
BIRMAN'S
ies' Silk Hose, Underwear
Simonas
1000 Pairs
Picot Top Chiffons
Full fashioned
silk from top
to toe.
All new shades and
sizes.
Beautiful Selection of Rayon
Underwear
ER AND GENT'S FURNISHER
ave., opp. Lafayette Mkt.
```markdown
```
HOME COOKING?
AND DINE AT
T INN CAFE
and Whitelock Street
Open From 7 A. M. Till 1 A. M.
July-13
You Want to Wear on the 4th
great pains in selecting a complete
parcel, that can be bought on your
Him is All That Is Necessary, and
He Will Almost Follow You House."
0. ve
Dr. Miller's Famous Plate
WILL NOT DROP OR SLIP
$10
Guaranteed
For Service, Fit and
Appearance
Examination Free
Best Bridgework,
Gold or Porcelain,
$5 and $6
Gas
or
Novocains
Administered
Broken Plates Repaired
While You Wait
Guaranteed Plates,
$10, $15, $25, $35
Dr. Miller~Dentist
542 W. LEXINGTON ST.
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20007
HOURS 9 to 6 ONLY
SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT
Coppin Normal School
Graduate
MISS MIRIAM ESTELLA GYWYN
Rev. and MISS JOSEPH GYWYN
Rev. and MISS JOSEPH GYWYN
M.D. Nedd, E.D. Baltimore, M.D.) finished the course at the Coppin Normal School in February, 29 and according to averages, stood first of three to the. Of the entire Glass of 29 stood third.
Miss Gwynn was also the winner of the Third College Prize in the East Coast, and the December, 1928, by the Omega Pai Phi Fraternity of which Mr. Linnwood Koger was Ess Manion. Prof. Charles E. Gwynn, brother to the Miss Gwynn, has held the position as Band Master at Albert University, Columbia University, and as a big honor in Baltimore for the summer.
Hawkins' Hotel
Guests registered at Hawkins' Hotel this week are:
Walter Tiphman, James M. Brooks, Frank Stewart, Washington: C. Hewkins, Harson Station, N.Y. S. P. Holmes, N.Y. S. P. Holmes, Thomas Malford, Pittsburgh, Pa. S. P. Holmes, Thomas Malford, Thomas Welford, Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Albert Borow, Norfolk, N.Y. S. P. Holmes, Jackson, Ky. S. P. Holmes, W. Joyson, Annapolis, L. D. Smitch, City, James Myers, Boston: Sidney Crawford, Parker, Philadelphia, M. T. Tuinstall, Chase City, Va. Palm White: Atlantic City: T. H. Burh, Richmond: Mr. and Mrs. J. Ruston, Ruxton, Mr. and Mrs. I. Thomas
York Hotel
Guests registered at the York Hotel this week are:
the Hunter, New York; Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Philadelphia; D.C. William Brent, Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Finks, Philadelphia; D.C. William Brent, Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. J. Willmann, J. H. Hunter, Carl Eribs, Renee, R. Carroll, G. Brown, East Orange, N.J. Hary Simmons, New York; A. Horner, Matthew Philadelphia; J. Blake, Richmond; R. B. Dannett, New York; Charles Lloyd Washington, New York; J. Bresol, Quimby, V. J. T. Budd, Philadelphia
"Y" Arrivals
Dr. Leroy Morris, Lester, WJA. Waltz Williams, Tuskegee, Ala.: Arthur Walker, Herman Kelly Jackson, Winston Salem, NG: J. C. Hope, Candlen, N.J. A. Davis, Hampton Kelly Jackson, Winston Salem, NG: J. John Boyd, Chicago, Ill.: Fred Boyd, Philadelphia. H. Tilghman, Winchester, Del. James R. Webb, Laurel, Williams, Augusta, Ga.: Raymond Marshall, Kusas City; Henry Jasson, John Hammond, New York; Pittsburgh; Williams Benjamin, Washing; Robert Hennessee, Clarence Hill, Philadelphia; Williams, Philadelphia; P. O. Bryd, Jersey City.
Penn Hotel
Cathedral Drive-It Yourself
Company
CHASE & CATHEDRAAL STS.
BALTIMORE, MD.
Phones Vernon 0576-0577
ALWAYS OPEN
GARAGE
NOTICE!
GREENWOOD CAMP
Princess Anne, Md.
Beginning Saturday, July 13th.
Ending July 21st.
Good Order Will Be Observed
Astrid Hall, Alphabets Security Board.
Ski Annie Miles, Security.
Stewart Patterson, Pastor.
PARALYSIS
A STIMULATING TONIC TREATMENT
CHASE'S TABLETS Write for Free Book
Medicine 224 N. 100 St. Philadelphia, Pa.
WONDER WATCH FREE CHAIN
Criticizes biggest value, fastest watch
ever manufactured. 16 size, thin model,
open face, gold plated case, lower case
watch. $15.
Free WALDREN chain with watch. If unsatisfactory return in 9 day. Unused Code.
Co. 909 West Central Avenue, N. Mx.
Open legs. Ulcers. Enlarged Veins. Golfer. Ezzeema health while pregnant. Writer. Free book. How to heal My Sore Legs at Home. Describe your case. A. G. LEIPE PHARMACY. 1385 Greer Bay, Milwaukee. WI. J-29.
Dr. Miller P.
WILL NOT DRIVE
$10 GA
An Interactive moonlight excursion on Captain Brown's boat, the Avalon has been planned under the auspices of the American Negro Labor Congress, and the Marine Workers' League, for Friday evening, July 5; it was announced that two officials of these organizations this week. The Avalon will leave the Municipal pier at 8:30, and will carry a group of white and colored workers belonging to these two organizations. There will be refreshments and other amusements. Mrs. James Robinson, Annapolis, Md.; Mr. and Mrs. George A. Smothers, New York City; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew A. Washington, D.C.; Mr. and Mrs. John Christian, Richmond, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Robertson, Newark, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. A. Robertson, St. Strasburg, New York City; Joseph Johnsen, Washington, D.C.; Mr. and Mrs. A. Smith, Maryland; Mr. Mattox, E. Bailley, Smith, Mr. Bart Gray, New York City.
Romona
Perfume Shops
1048 W. Baltimore St.
1603 Pennsylvania Ave.
(Near Regent Theatre)
High Grade
Perfumes
From All Over the World
Patent Medicines
At
Cut Rate Prices
Arlington Powder Puff
Arlington Powder Fun
MANICURING
FACIAL TREATMENTS
HAIRDRESSING
Medames Gladiola Johnson and
Eva B. Short, Proprietor a.
ALLINGTON & BRANTLEY AVES.
11
PORO SYSTEM
TAUGHT
Poro Hair and Toilet Preparations
MRS. ROSA MYERS
835 N. FREMONT AVENUE
MADISON 5756
MME. GRAYSON
BEAUTY PARLOR
Hairdressing, Manicuring, Ec.
1828 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE
Hours: A.M. 10 P.M.
MADISON 6756
We Will Handle
With Care!
Your
Chair Covers
Blankets
Comforts
Lace Curtains
During House Cleaning
Time!
Druid
Laundry
MADISON 1664
Dress
Your
Hair
With
PARISIAN GARDEN
BOUQUET
HAIR
POMADE
FAMILY FURNISHED
PARISIAN GARDEN
BOUQUET HAIR POMADE
FOR THE HAIR
HIGHLY REFURNISHED
STREAKHAMS STUBBROOK HAIR
BALTIMORE MARY STREET STORES CO. INC.
348 NORTH GRY ST.
BALTIMORE, MD.
Insist on the Yellow Can PRICE BY MAIL, 25 CENTS 30s All At Barber Shops, Drug Store and Hairdressers Balto. Barber and Hairdresser Co. Incorporated 304 North Street
Famous Plate
ROP OR SLIP
guaranteed
For Service, Fit and
Appearance
Examination Free
Best Bridgework,
Gold or Porcelain,
$5 and $6
Broken Plates Repaired
SAE ee at nen
# Main Office Phone, Gilmor 6410 or South 1910
JOSEPH A. LIVELY .. j
MORTICIAN
fc mun oh ae RT a |
Get seat go eh eae a's AENONT AVE,
DALTIMORE, MARYLAND 4
ee SS
PHONES: SOUTH 0122; VERNON 02i-W. sist, £962
JOHN H. TOADVIN
MORTICIAN
142 West E7 Street 1027 Druid Hill Avenue
GARAGE, s2-4446 GREENWILLOW STREET
I Have the Finest Grey Hearse in the City
GOUNTRY WORK, CALVERT COUNTY, MO» WORK A SPECIALTY
Wincor Por all Occasions From ity Own Garage
Kose eaENNA IIASA SSDS SERENA SESSSSSSSS ST
THE WAY WE LOOK AT IT |
te Jeol upon our work as opportunity 30, e of sevien It hag
pea fate ee et as PROPEL ett of prota ad
pecially ns sete ravens SSatnde hue end tele ding But oe
f think it gives unusual scope for sympathy and thoushtfuiness, and }
SRO sites Nabe’ al age’ pve tne ideal wesc for ourselves
MRS. GEORGE H. HOLLAND
MONCURE A: BROWN, sHanager 1
1631 Druid Hill Ave. Madison: 0692
eee ei ee sees eee
; ¥
¢ CLARENCE C. WRIGHT. j
Funeral Director and Embalmer - 4
Bomo people prefer QUALITY, others fook at PRICES. I can sult you.
Soe Rece make: ie expensive. to-go sbsewhero when Sou need a ;
aN WRIGHT QUALITY" 3
Phone Madison 4464 3
1364 N. Carey St. Baltimore, Md. J
Sn RINGEOLD:.: |
EDWARD RINGGOLD
‘A. BROOKS' SUCCESSOR %
Funeral Director and Embalmer
ew Give to All eho Very Best and Courteous Service Bonide
CARRIAGES AKD LINOUSINUS TO HIRE FOR ALL, OCCASIONS
1463 ivorth Carey Street, near Gold
PHONE MADISON 6261 never cLoseo f
C. & P, Phone, Madison 2817 q
GEORGE T. A. GIBSON |
Funeral Director and Embalmer 5
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
OFFICE PND KUSIDENGE:
1735 Druid Hill Av ae Baltimore, Maryland |
FOSITIVELY No PARTNERSHIP
ee
MRS. ROBERT A. ELLIOTT
Funeral Directress and Embalmer
1 AM THE SOLE PROPRIETOR OF THIS BUSINESS— q
AND AM NOT IN PARTNERSHIP WITH ANTONE.
Phont, walle 00 Ummaste Service ty and Natt
1725 Ashland Avenue, corner McDonough Street §
Branch Ofice: 2109 Oruid Hill Avenue
1 LIMOUSINE FUNERALS & SPECIALTY
ANATAAACSAASATAEATTATTST THAIN
SESS SSS CER
4 CONFIDENCE
%. When D...i1 has r. vbed you of yzur Loved Ones and
¢° Friends and yon desire a real Sympathetic Undertaker
Z in whori. Consolation, and Confidence is assured,
Z JUST CALL—
A CHAS. G. COOPER
Z~514 North Calhoun St. Phone, Gilm 6894
; Funerals Within Prices That Satisfy
|: Newer Closed Phone Wolfe 3355
be DIGNITY
Am oisenuia feature. tn every ebtire fuaaral provided and directed 7,
- BYRON WRIGHT :
§ Better: Known as “Sergeant, Wright”
DIGNITY, GOUD TASTE. FIRST CLASS SERVICE ARE PARAMOUNT
||. ‘My prices wie suit vou
Al). | 2. . Office, 1218:McElderry Street |
“18
Sub-Deb
‘Chatter
SOSESS
cles Day Peo
Post ig, my ss -genbce would bee t0
cnerene biton Te bee o, dverite 30
eee ie case dey prosy neld Im the Daub
Fea gh Seseae etehartum | Thursday
abt tbe grate im the bors exm seems
RIE eso, magnetic pacer over ail {he
wep ie Jy eusiomary for the crowd 20
FEE vo ene. culs aye, but this time che
Boch Wosm was eroxded tncouzhout
alte Drenteg. The rata probibted me
see eam gong. in die courts bu th
SESE itgnted maui serced the D¥p00*
Ines a3 ehh
"ne? dresses were very, prettr, But net
aaltSo Stsuing 23 thove wenn to the Juntr-
Ree em Suocers. stalled to and tor
Fee punch Dost alt the evening
Senior Excursion
‘pe Dougiass excursion was second (0 the
eee eee “Coppin ranting Rest THe
ERE ee ane ae 3:18 an, telurned
bows tae sellons ana gins feally Woked
Sporty in their sport outs
ry eee a ery litle dancing st the
gebeereuner because ft as (00 warm of
fee edamcang. ts something, one, cen 39
pea pitne racerdip, was crowed 00
BE OT ane port lanaed unt the wp
tee US ome sere Home. it lonkrd 5
feundet arginald Watts ard Rosetta: MUITay
though Reg Pgase rioing. “Bese Bo the
sresat binds sang Ruth Dean and Rufus
‘Pie tna a eie hearts because they Se
Hackett op uners side a minute coring, he
from eee cardoza and frvin Louw
$2 4 Rasy unusual together (0 s2me eset
fedked iteas it waz expected, Dat Clazk
Doe fe ith her Howard shetk who alse
Beat per to commencement. Satz, Cole
eet Ted by Jonn Reeder. Uirsset Gloctt
Res ere ce Paenola. Valentine for fe2r
wowtee atin some one lst, Corie Car.
seed ER rest, Daley were. stem TosetBer
everal tines.
Se
‘Delmas Melborne was host to 9 Tee en
eee das nite, alter the Coppin, 62e
ep TuesEsS ace nop see. youl three.
Baenet ee Tyses, who were, at the Com
Most of iMjance were. present. TuRre, were
BURRS Sind. piano, music, The lisht
Beth ae ea can poess. Hiarrst, Jone
Bert cdarics gibson were partners throu
fed etrening. Robinette Male and Ham
ut AM Gir mist nave. made up defor
Ke Eeteenuse they ceally were 9 1c
hand. Pesce denier and Josepiine Holland
eeu in rare form, Mate | Serzhal
Se eeerarg Tater srclled towerds the
park,
‘Mis Hiyant Honored
ars, Rese Mammond pave a party Ts:
antthgh in honor of Ergest Pretisman and
25 008gS tnt of oware, The mado And
ech Betmpson furnished the music. Sal
Gladys Sampson foie an diots of other
sats wert served. Among the, EOS or
Siac giiee Seems "Enonas, Fer
Baty Wat, due ben
se, ioe Cana
er ee
Hari Guha tae
“oc ne tad eet
Foosters oegan to crow. Punch, ssid
ele cae nae to
ee ae to
ei re ae
a oon Tae
ane ine 7B, ae
eth PE th
tbe wile ning, pass pleasantly away. Waxes
etn re gies Sat
a fi Be i yay a
ee eaten fa
i te arth Cian
i see ie eae
ie at ted tt tw
FE cine
: A Correction
‘The name of Miss Thelma L. ‘Tho-
aetna "emntted. trom the dist of
graduates of the Douglass ‘Hi School,
Scbtahed in Hag wenks paver. The
AFRO regrets the error.
3 Bitten by Dogs
‘Tree persons were reported bit
sett aber this week, Phey were:
1a core 6 248 Carohine street
Ttving Shipley. 1112, Washinsto.
street. and Sarah Dutton, O22 E.
26th street.
i
Held for Non-Support
Bony Jokes, 38, 679 Bradley street,
vege pelesuet tee romaine to, Dey
Mat Sie Mes. Binora,"sokes, “69
Ba or support of tel thre, cut
eek ‘Phiowing a hearing. in North
dren, following 2 heer wednesday.
| hin Afso, Acsevlean: Baltimore Setarday, June 29, 1929 __|______ The Nation’s Biggest All Negro Weekly.
FI rae i
ry g y
ee
pe CARRIED
Ate TIS
eek WER
aeth of Brides
NELSON-WOOLPORD—Chariss © ©
ee sts. Mary. 30.
PAR CARBERRY Leland ¥.. 72, 218 W.
Woemanst: caiberine, 22
GRRE COOK -Andrew'te, 207 Marie B, 3.
BI. carey-st,
REIDAELLYNatbentel, 3 Mldred 3.
8. 1204 arte,
[sGuNcON-BROWN-Rleberd E28: Ethel
Ca gs, widow, iaib, Mecullobs,
| yOtne-piencs—James H. 31, 2107 Dru
Giiltey. Devothes J 2%, Widow.
AIGELAODEN™ Melvin. W., 21,2229 St, Bate
thewest: Bernice Gn 8.
MALONEDROOKS—Jemes, W 22, 0 8
remontear: Laura 2. 17
RENDERSON SINGS —Cherles &., 23, 904
Drulg aiav.: Myre, 28,
MOpitfs PaRicER doses, 42, widow, 410
Re Durham: Rosle &. $3.
spisnecougeeiL—noverts $9. idoner,
DBl arpsieays Pennie 2,4, divorced.
WESrJoMNson—soha M23; Betting B.
Te, is Pree
petrigew-MencHantT—Fortuno M2
oa Mecullonst Los, 38,
BaSce ADAMe Samuel 36, 629 Plercesh
Liven. 35,
WHIGHE:BARTON—Archie A. 21, 100
Tormanvst Rosie, 1,
WHSOMENNELS—tialer, 42, widower, 14
Licte Georgese: Bvelyn, 92.
CRAWFORD SoNES—Lewrence C72, 8
MW. persion sts. Bueabeth 3. 2,
Lowasy-canten—David W. 2, 101
MeGullah-sts Rose. 3,
SOMES OUNS-—wibert 0, 98, widower, 651
emmoncsts cre 3B. 32,
SMFTEGOR olan Po 44, widowers As
mle At 29, 821 N. Dellasst
HINES eIEGORE—Solomon B., $0, widow
ee eat Martordav.: Beulah, 95 wow.
uANEVGREWS Welter Lo, 2% 227 Kesttt
hei Lula Ay 1D
HINES KILGORE Sitomen, B50. widow:
ee tas Startorgavs Beulah, 38, wide.
Pinter THORN—Jesse, 21, 77% Weesche:
eh: uantina, 26
[cOStON CARTER—Lewts, 59, widower, TE
Grorgest Lillian, 38.
CORMISH-MERRITT Rowland E, 2% 15
Sigrtieses virginia ba 19
LUNCH STHOMPSON—Oesrae, 23° 510 Pine
nt. RebezeaB, .
[JONES PARKER —Sptvester A. 23, 2110 Dt
vaionat: Juli By
WOOD MOWARD—John P38, divorced, 247
‘Si, patinews-sh: Matte. 28, 81d0%.
CHANDUERSONESON-Dendla A. a, 1606
R Dailasst: Oleopattia © 2%
WHSTON-WAEKER™ Thomas “W.. 42, wt
‘dower, 1612 Division sts da, $4.
PAGANCASKEW Kelly. 39, wleower, 210
‘Garclay-st: Elnora, 28, divorced.
NELSONWALEERSBemard, 2,212.
MAringtoneave: Doroihy, 18
BARFELDHUMPHREY—o8en D. 22, dh
‘oreed: Jeanette, 26, 1918 W, Linvalest,
|WINGEIBLD-LOCKES-~Ceplo K., 22, 102
ir garatogacat Grace, 22
JOHNSON-OCOMNOR=Lees, 47, $11 Ox
forsests tax 2. AT
yobiigeraireem Ean 1.5, 18 ostee
[SCHLEY-DANIEL—doreph A. | Washington,
DG. 22,2209 Galtst: Dru, 22, Was:
Ington. B.C,
WHEATEEYSHERWOOD—Robert C.. 2,
RS He Sebroederse Emma. 5. 2
NELEON-BELLPhilp, Dy Blaridgt, A,
Bikrigge, MGs Rose M20,
BELLVANLANDINGHA —" Theodore A..
Washington, D.c. 21: Nove 8. Je, Pal
eld, Ma, 3104 Totest.
MORHiS-WOODBRIDGE--Deck, 48, Edce
‘wood. Ma. clvorces, Edgewood Arsenal
Betis 8 3
POLSTONRLLIS—Harees, 21, 1100 Ri
ave Regina, 18, Ses
LESBOMORAY ames W.. 1, 1108.
Gainvunsts duis
Johnson, Sarah E., SS, 2135 MeCulloh-st.
sain ath Be deh tomne
beens Ste: fe ne sicatona
BERR 2a aS eter
Bere Uae ine, Ponagtons
Sere. ‘tie aia Sates
Ears Gait WS SAPS iprne
es care Bly We rant
Bison clea git aut
See ul Ve ak it aia
Sieh pearl a feet Lomas
Bich, Lip ds a us oneensae
Mitts Ny Es Wes Baewat
ee Me 2 ha part
ea a Sa ae
ean, A at att whoo
Ser, baie, Tas" aneae
Bt ie MARC.
Sorel tina. tht Bien
Nace Sage af Daphne
eA lt Ut Tompson.
BURA: soma 3. 1h Radon:
BURN Bs a Wu Boone ee
envi, 2 dye, SE ra,
Seem aeehia ew censors
Bree" baait a fis W, Veiegtonse
Bre, Bae Ba he ees
Bony a Bten, Clin, ie Soin,
Hersey Sethe Sa" wt saga
Beas diie's. ap, Mig bea ha.
Bums, Mae: Be tithe clinoes
BELGE Harte ale ware
Beet era ak avin
Bice deta Be eae,
Mins ee lena AU Eland
Serna aes Araneae
Ba aay Ar de nN foment
wernt Ns oath Be
Feta an wk SNe ana
Sree 80s ei i aloo
Hosen, tS tsar
Rae BSG ane, a alot
SUED AN 1 ie Sutte aiba
aca a Bt ost,
Se Ha Bh Ae uO emitta st,
Bevishe tna tn © Solace
WOMAN FINED FOR . STRIKING
POMAN FINED FOR .STRIKIN(
Accused of purposely striking Mrs,
Rachael White, 40, a-cripple , 704
Vincent street, with a milk bottié be
cause she made several remarks
‘gainst her cheracter, Miss Eliazbeth
Brooks, 706 Vincent. street, was fined
‘$10 and costs when arraigned in the
Northwestern police. statton, Sun-
aay. .
FINE WOMAN GUN TOTER
Ester Moody. 25, 523 N, Paca street,
‘well known. underworld - character,
Was fined 's§0"and costs, when ar-
{aigned in “the ‘Northwestern police
station on charges of carrying @
Toaded pistol.
HOLD WOMAN AS. INSANE
‘Held pending an investigation, sus-
[pected of escaping from the insane
Gepartmient of Bay View, Miss Lucy
Edmends,. 1337 Fremont’ avenue, is
inthe custody of Western. district
police. ee
JAW-BONE HURT BY FALL
‘Waverly Parkham, . 22, 1028 N.
Mount street, had his jaw-bone frac-
tured when be accidentally fell from
jan automobile while attempting, to
get-out, Sunday. F
WHY GO. DOWNTOWN FOR. ..
NOTARY PUBLIC?. Stop in. the
APRO-AMERICAN office and. save
yourself some steps.. tt
ee
Thomas E. Kelson
Funeral Director and
Embalmer ‘
Successér to the Late
fer, ANS MAS, JABS MH DENNIS
1303 Presstmen Street
‘ PHONES
5901—MA dison—9214
POLITE ATTENTION ASSURED
Siddons.? Lester
Fudaists:
Funsrat Oesigns ‘snd Wedding
‘Bouauets 9 Goecialty
‘ku otaers Promptly Attendca’ Té
CHAS 8. LESTER. Nor.
10 Penna, Ave: Cor. George, St.
85Rimors: arvana
‘Phone. Vernon «372
‘Night Phone. Latlyette 0982
HE IS SELDOM PHOTOGRAPHED
a =f —
OC La
op Ne Se a hy _
oe oy eB ie
el gk aor ae
Se oh fo ee
Pro, | ie ay pi
PO Ne Ba SS bd Ne poo =
oer)
hae
ae ~ ; = : pa | ay
a ee Re
‘ERY. few photographs have ever ten made of His Bigiecss. ot
ERY, fen Phen of Zanaiber.. He is a Sultan in his own tigh
Dandsome ves wih e kindly but firm hand. He is a descendant
[Bee oa, aoe ne of brag "bie Bo eae short time he i
Se) ie nS yondon as tie guest of the Imperia} government. He is
eee companied by his son. Prince Abdullah. The Sultan. as show:
Teves seated im the royal palace, A recent cinema, Weel of Zanzibar,’
peveilsh ton Chaney starred, represented Zanzibar natives to be of strange
and mystic customs.
MARYLAND, PENNSYLVANIA AND NEW JERSEY
— peaidesintcemsbenenionans
rundets of youre, men, tom
Maryland, Pennsylvania and New T F RT
SDE ee asta
in the South, are making splendid)
‘records and opening up opportunities| es
for other colored youth. Among ninety-four persons fined
Ft ey arc a fH ying
ne ee ae hem, nt
REREE SEE yottns of today nave |™S* 8; rang
jing aptitude for a trade, should get) x, 3. Callahan. 27 York-ct.. $1 and cots:
fae aps fa ene, SU, «Ets Se si tS
IB en ith iota rare) ae eh ete yg eee
fg thr ee, vote, rea ia mate ar
schon” focated in Lawrencevile, Va. NP Yinta3 arnetad puitien, 8
for the past thirty-five years. aS|ano, gi: charlce Toger. $61 Conway, st:
been turning out skilled tradesman] ¢""p “zulett. 101 Jackson, st: allen ‘gen.
land has recently organized its in-|nings, 1104 Droid Hil, $10; James Teal. 1109
a sme Samoa! aS GMa Pate et Se i
basis making it possible for young] leans. $1: Winston, Ayers. ‘whitehall._ $t:
basis maxiME ave "completed igh | haves Lecnard, 688 \9. Praniiin, 3; Sam
men Work to do work of college|Uel Bast, 201 Miteson, st: 1. Forel
in ete eg. Sete | a ea a
rick laying, plastering, steam AULins,) iin, si; Herman Keating. 900 Bruce, $3
electrical engineering. automobile Fioed for speeding
cite eG Pong and| nae aut REL coms
Fe a ee aN
peeneal ‘that young, nen coat | 3234 pet ‘Sk: ener Pe 44 Par
inst ihe omuremonss of te tt eg Perce
world. ton, $3: William Miller, et,
Pet sags and uleins of irr Beh Paki Wines
mation are gent out free upon re-| Robert Scott. Haperstown, $10: Ollie Jack:
Ft See enc 6 SBOP | Se ea pee.
Fires Berg nt ona
‘M1 M. CENTRAL AVENUE. ‘Tro and
a hut tory brik dmeling. oxted br
Set pack ccupied by Annie Sut"
Bilsege wo buliding. alight. No damane
contents, caute, uiknoen,
1099. sarah “Ano sineet‘Teo-sory ich:
aveling otned. by. William’ Zanrendt, 0:
ATER Bille Matthews” No dtmaee. i
SERIES SPcPeoncents: cause, soot in gD
Ber.
S21 prestman arent, Three story ble
qeceny tare and dueling ovoce by Belth
BSED Stupied’ by abraham ‘Sherr, Das
227% Cstiing “ane contents, alah
Bone? spapteoss_etiete
1920. Whateoat atseh, Twostory | bil
Seung exned py. Tesae Litman. eeeupie
Gpinochael sathert Ho damage: t9ullé
Re Gamage to conteais, sigbt Cause,
stkzore
Purther Information may be cblalne
faogine cameaton af Washagen, BE,
ee'tts repremntative, 2
Seat te cay eke
Per GuaespiSeL-EcecTRIC EN
QINEMAN, Government Printing | Ofc:
Gesiagtoa, Dios at shan. nowr for
ignchtor working ay. eth 89 pes ceOt Is
Ethece for Sunday on@ holiday work.
sUnoR, ‘SOCIAL ECONOMIST, (Invest
tor, Juvenile Delingueney), childrens Bu
Fescr Department of tabor. for uty
WShuagtons BiG. or im the aela, ob 4200
ovsnsts 2 year,
‘SENIOR AGRICULTURAL, AIDE (FARM
otha Fru and Pied. Crops, eb #2
Fro to $2,800 a year
ToRsANAReTRUCTOR «Damm
rOReNANMeTRUGIOR IDATEYDNG AN!
Tip annual iNbusTaY). Us. Penten
AND ‘Stavenworih, Kans. at $2,000 3 year
Felt Mattress, $1200; Mahogany Post
Ged, g2500r sik Floss Mattress, 82000
See spring szhdor Hale Nattross $25
Soc of ths costo Sfatresses In the
material tose. It your mattress 12
tumpy. eall Vernon 0095 and talk tt
SANITARY MATTRESS: 60.
421 Hadinon ave, Baltimore. Ma
The Place To'Buy
Highest Grades
LOWEST SPRING
PRICES
Now In Effect
* Cash Discount
50c
PER TON
fj. PAYMENT PLAN
For Property Owners
If Desired .
| E. S. Brady & Co.
Ff Montos and Laurens Sts
Madison 0529
TRAFFIC GOURT
Among ninety-four persons fined
12 total of $876 for viclating the ve-
hhicle laws, were the following
‘For Wrong Parking
ze, 2. callahan, 27 Yorkct. $1 and costs:
Atetandcr Boston, 208 Ben, $8: James Mer-
ite a0 Lewis, siz arthur Wyatt, MeGulon,
Ski" onesles, Willams, Eleslage, SS: George
W, Berry. 1C3. Westwood, st, dames Smita.
Trig Orleans, ss: Armatead Petron, 208 3
‘Ann, #h:, Chatles ‘Teger. $61 Conwar, Sh
Gp. “Euiote, 101 dackson, $12 allen ‘gen.
ings, 104 Druid Hil, $10; Jarzes Teal, 109
Re Bisicker, S10: Hetoect. Crate, 1829 Or-
gang. s2: "Winston ayers, Whitehall. st
(Gharies Leonard, 688 W. Prantlin, $i: Sam:
Gel Base, B01 Ditewon, S12 J. 8. Powel
Tia W. Lanvale, $1: Vernon Turner, Fred-
trick, 2a Molile Coral. 1720 W, “Frank:
Tiny Sty Herman Keating. 300. Bruce, 8.
Flea for speeding
Frank autlen 1633 Westwood, $5: Samuel
ganett, 101 Mosher, $1; Mattie demerso3,
Haut MicGullon, 31; Reger Jones. 414 Pay-
son, sis Siervin Webster, Street, 34. $1
Gheriese Burton, 721 Hamburg. $100: Aver
Dickerson, 409 ‘Spring, #1: George. Fisher.
‘RS Bolton, $8: Wiliam Miller, 1128 Comet,
Si, Grorge Folia. oid E. Wonument. $8:
Robert Geatt, Hagerstown £10: Ollie Jack:
Son aud atieet. sit Willam Dorsey, 1615
Usvrens, st George Ulan, 1ea8 Lanaie, $1:
Herbert Fey. 2021 Madison, $1: J. PW
fon, Pocombke ly. sid. &., Glare, 201
E"enesters a5: Albeee Pagaiee. 1080 Mount.
Si dokn Byre, Wor Memaen, eee tees
Brooks, 720 Mori, 85: William Belts, Sper-
rows, Point, $8: Gcerge ull. tad Und
‘Driving Withost Lizhte, or Proper
‘Equipment
lag Simms, 1325. Saratons, S45:
Ernest Monroe, 800. Dolphin, i: Willsm
[Eord. 1347 Gilmer. $12: Cluihten. Willams
Heo Pennsylvania, S10; Willam MeVey.
208, Boye, $0" Hazald. evans, 1048 |W.
Lexington, $80: James Pitman, #07 Linden.
310, Charles Lexis, 1000.” Whateoat, $1:
Waiter ‘Weshingten. rileote chy. 63: Alls
trorth avis, S2tPinn. $8: Charles Berd,
U2 weculloh, $8: Howard Brent, 629 Har-
fem, eis Prank. Metter 1203 W, Lancate,
{Sh Wiliam Tuekes, 200 Hotiman, $l: Ba-
fein Davenport. 1006 Pennsylvania, &1: Jes
Epyne, Elerlage. $8: Theodore Day. 1620
Mesner, 65: Wiliam Marlson,. Catonsrie
Hi Philip Harris, 212. Welle,
Reckless Deven
sionn gultivan. 126 W, Lee, $8: dha Com-
sh i128 Sarah Ann, $8: Oseaz F. Brown.
[302 B. a2ng, 8: dames Reynolds, 239 Lau:
fens, $8: Jeeves Washington. 303 Calhoun.
3is:"Ernese Robinson. ssa Dolphin, $1: Rey:
fniond Stokes, 1607 Harlem, 31: Flore Ste
Fett, 1964 Steer, $1: Mtcolm Tabs, 223
Payson, $8: Thomas Burress. 207 N. Strlee
tr sor Gillen Williams, 1109 Peansyivenia,
Hos W.°P, Leonard, 19. Payson, $8: Ad.
ison Jone, aot £, Payette, $8:) Willam
[Soyd, 1917 Ollmor, $120" Anthony Hankey,
Ho Laurens, $5: John ‘Helton, 322, Mount,
ES: Melvin. icemne, 209 Lafayette, $8: How:
[Sra 6. Robinson, 91s Mulberry. $8: James
Geant: 26 Spring, S10: Ralph Bevel. 609 W.
St. Sig: James Resbinecn. Lakeland. Fla.
$k “Chains “Tin “sensei.
Fined for Falling to Hare License or
Reglstraton Card,
tatah Seott, Has Pennsylvania, $8: Stee.
en Normood, 420 gst. sh. Mf. 1 Kyler, Sit
‘huungion, #1: John: Grasies. 2008 Oak. 3:
Joseph voung. 1240. Droid Hl, $1: Joseph
Green, ts43 Leslie. si: Willan’ Parks. 104
Eeaier $1" Willlam. Perks, 0e8Pennss!
Vanie, ds; Masry Cried, danover, 31: El
thor tucks, Jae K Gainoun, 3: Charles G.
roots, Tied) Durhem. S10! Jesse Saraple
{age Cares, $2: 24, He: Sample. 1132 Cater,
42: 1 imme. 4007 Wooslend, 2: Choe
Sennen, 2110 Wetson, St: John ‘mothange,
310 carey. st: ‘Elser Smith, 418 ‘sanders
310; Willem Henderson, 633" Fremont. $10
[Sohn Gorman, 209 . 21th, $42 Dennis’ Men.
Idows 1013 Argyle. $8: Charles Crimine, 100
Ee Monument, #8: Harry Craven. 1629 Or
Sisse $1 Wiillam Page. 1120 Proctor, $3.
Hair Restorer
Proves “Destroyer
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—Ellison: . E
Dixon. -37, who, was arraigned be-
fore Judge Arthur P, Stone in the
East Cambridge. district court,
"Thursday, on a-cherge of selling in-
furious medicine referred by Mrs.
Mary "vary. of 142 Purmem avenve
Dlesded sof gully and. Was eld
$1000 bail for a hearing, July 2.
According .to Officer Frank .G.
Detter “of station. “2. -Camrdee,
Biron went to Mas, ‘Yards home
and old. ere Jar. of shale re-
Soret" she paid, 60°cents for the
Puvilese of ring ft. and: Dixon eas
to collect $2 more. His regular
price, he said, was $5. ¢
‘So anxious was the purchaser to
secute the benefits of the restorer
TeSt"ae soon as Dinan ‘eft. she. ap-
lles it fo. her head. "Upon ‘looking
in the lass she elscovered that he
ad bedorae Sal,
“immen her husband | came” ome
trom ‘work and. saw the eflects of
the “restorer” he was risturbed, but
‘willing to give the peddler the bene-
fit of the doubt. he decided “to try
the’ lotion on their 6-vear-old ‘son.
Joseph. Joe lost his hair, too.
|" "Then. with a description’ furnish-
edb his wte, Yard rent ona
for Dixon end ‘found him in a nool-
Toom on Howard street and West-
fem avenues Watkin sip thir, the
eats. hasband acre it he had any
fang tg restore lr eco
he husband) the man nid he has
top ‘are left, Ward vextoyed him
leaf on A pretext end telephoned the
ipolice; who-arrested him. *
__
, a Seas
| ELT ars oe
| Northw m
is my hweste
| 3 TOR! <2
| RES at 1
pate We S — ES”. : 2 : -
sa ee
yee se Beter ell Pe = 5
f ie Peterman Pete Bes ;
eer Liqui rm angus amily r
; Y erman's tiga Di an’s Di = e “SI r
Peta er = 33
: ve W a
E 1 = for Bed Buss the Sai ES f
, Gam rene i Try Tt SO = a =
; 35c Bice Clea Just EH. oon on =
4 eee pho arbol ing F 19 Teley a = 5 =
4 25 Flas am’: wr .. lie’ ee . 7 : } : :
: = : = : = wey, KO ar snares 18.
: noe nae sae ou Ha NJ sn Ise |
ia = ~~ BBe $ 150 La ven’ oO eee
: ae es pow 1.00 r ¢ Ti iL,
bi : ae andlor laives # ime to A
= = — we fe Nux ex a Si Stop I f
| = a x os iquid. pray. ve j
, R. ‘ou CONE | 50 cides i = Ze
; AN Up an IN EA re is = :
, ._ of CIs d Gi RTH ale oe cn : |
, 2We HY! Co: ive Y ! tee = 3 |
{ eek PO mp ‘ou S <2 2
4 3 P| [po 5 ¢
Trea HH un — € :
, DON” ent Fi PHIT! yry, :
PR ec a. Y
ee ‘SCR ET 00 ast a |
, Best tht Thi Pe ric E |
: , e cR T T | te - f
Patt a sk Y nd Be: a ; |
"3 tess aR ION s vou
: i T 4) one f
ae tor He K Price Ge =
sor eas ay
: . : i rnon 1875 >
= & y ~ 2,
Cana
=|
MRS, BUNDY SAYS SHE
IS GLAD SHE IS FREE
[Husband Told Only Part of
Divorce Story, She ‘ells
Afro.
| SHE NAMES WOMEN
She Told Judge of Miss Je-|
t neste Linberry.
Branding as false, statements.
made by her husband to an Afro
reporter following their divorce
yeas ‘Mrs. Pearl Bundy 3.9
fount street, declared that her
husband told only bait of the
Seer in 2 signed statement this
Bits.” Bundy ‘says; “Why did my
| Mars 2:
husband name the two men thet he
Tetined Yas going with and leave
gut the names Of Mus Jeneste 3.
berry and another woman wr
testified in court that he was i.
with?
“All that Bundy proved was tnat
z,had ben in Chisago, ayay fom
him for eleven, Sears, and it took
two lawyers and fifteen witnesses to
prove thet. T am trappy that T won
End ‘made’ Mr. ‘Bundy ay. allmoay
from the time he started the case up
to now, BY, the costs of court and
ay! my fauyer, J. Howard Bayne.
Pi that Mr. Bundy's witnesses
Sere felling untrue things. This was
proven by the fact that pert of the
evidence was stricken out oy Judge
Frank after they were caught ell
falsehoods.
Mise Mildred Andercon, 515 Cum.
berland street, Bundy's niece and a
High School pupil. a child that I
hufged and caved for, tld such braz
fn fatschonds tine the juaee,himeel
Sue shotked ond threw cut the tes
timony. ‘Thank. God. Zeam tid 0
Bundy, rma stey in Baltimore o
0 back to Chicago
POLICE HUNT SLASHER
Police are hunting for a man
known as “Reds,” who seriously
stabbed John W. Neal, 27, 1901 Som-
erset street, during an altercation at
the latiers tome’ over’ money” fo
‘board, Sundéy.
MAN HELD FOR COUNTY GOES
| Held for Baltimore County police
at Essix on charges of larceny, Lin-
‘wood Jorden, 19, 122° Maderia stro,
isin the Northeastern police statien
awaiting the arrival of the county
authorities. in
| BOY HURT BY AUTO
‘Skating near his home, James Jef-
ferson, 1008. Wolfe street, received a
Samui iraseue of te taee when
he was struck by an automobile on
‘Thursday. *
WOMAN HURT BY FALL
Miss Mary Thomes, 25, 205 Herring
court fell when she made a misstep
‘hile leaving her home end sustained
@ fractured knee, Tuesday.
AUCTION!
TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS, 10 A. sf
You stould attend Auction flee of
guraituye housthoid’Goeds “Rug
hina Ete
Every Tuesday £9 Eran. W ofelock
| 108 N. HOWARD STREBT
ET NEWER.
“Kuedionver
HOUSE WIRING
| fates Rotting’ aswne S60" weekly,
MONTHS TO PAT
| HARFORD ELECTRIC CO.
|G WASHINGTON BOULEVARD
Cnciae ae
It is the Bloc
Very Best ie
by Test AOR:
cet wt tonne REMUS
ty bany People Sa ee AP 4
The very best AMP OA be}
corinne
es a Ae
Ee ae halle
a
BARRIS-WILLIAMS
FREDERICKSBURG, Ve—Charles Harris
and ies irene Willams, of Peteisburg,
Yau were married recently, Mr, Harri
wis “and conducts a. gavage, and Tepalr
Shop. oa" the” Washington and -Plehmond
iehoy, Mis, any mas taupe fhe
Public schools here for the past two years
They are residing 19 thelr new home on
Chattes stret,
re
STAUNTON, Ve.~The Rey. W. M. Price,
of Charlottesville, and Miss. Rachel’ Robin
son, of Staunton, were quietly marled Wed-
nesday night, at Uhe parsonage of the Rev
B.D. Meorcary. Rev. Price is the pastor
4 Mlgdlebrook. sles Robinson Was a teach
tr at Waynesboro high school. She Is the
daughter of the Rev. ‘Matthew Robinson
tnd popular among the younger set.
FURR-SINCLAI
FREDOERICK, Va—Omar Furr and Mis
Plosse Sinclair, of Porcellvile, Va, were
married at the residence of the Rev. R. I.
Mickens. After the ceremony, 2 dinner was
served. to the guests, "The couple left fo
Purceliile, where they will make thelr
home.
eee...
"> SE
TEAGH IN NEW JERSEY
Wm. C. Anderson to Teach
Wm. C. Anderson Jr., executive .
sein af the bel Ue bes
re cee
in “The Methods and Principles
Fete sae Pens
Chesapeake = Y.M.C.A. summer |
See
Boch onanes overt Se
adits tel coger fea aE
aut sare Dat
school this year are July 7-21. Dur
es Se os,
July 20-21 a Laymen’s Conference:
teemen from all parts of the coun-
try will discuss problems of vital
Sct cee aan
‘Dr. A. O. Raid and Geo. Murphy
of etn Si ae Ge, Mar
fe coum ree rea
Bene Bo, bl aaa
See sits
a
a, Andere EET et
es made to the “Y” during the recent
campaian, be taken care of by July 1.
farenan co ken he gh
ment is due. These who have paid
a
Benen Aten eerie
Hate Walt lanes Fo.
Serta eS slat
a.d Wm. Dixon,
COLORED MAN BREAKS
t MAN BREAK
Color is no barrier to the man who
can deliver the goods
"Be fact ts perme cut fa, the person
of Mr. Theodore ‘ice, who fas tne
fepntation cf being one of ths lead
Ing auto seiesmen for Cie Turner-
Hinna Compens one of the largest
Gistributors of Hudson-Essex cats ard
Goel cats in Baltimore. Connecting
himself with this firm more than si
Ribas ago, Mt. ioe has. worked
Rineelt tothe. maragentent of the
Shnsumets Auto Exchange, B12 Sadi
Sir'avenue, @ branch of the Ture
ng Honma’ Compan.
Mies Rice, by. demonstrating his a
bully. ag & salesman. not oply en-
Ranced tine value of himselt but has
pened up the field to the evient tha
iver new and used car concerns rc
fektis"on enor seamen, “Thi i
Eat 'the end of the ood. work that
Rr, Rice fis done. His abil to in
Grease Business for, his emplovers
Sipreseed them unt the seornd col
Grad sltsman has been added to the
concern through his influence.
= cb
INVESTIGATES MAN'S DEATH
Coroner Riley of the Northeastern
police sation ie investigating the ci
Pametanges surounding the death of
William °F Spears. 297 1007" Wilesx
Street, who as found by friends on
the steps of $00 Harford ovenue in
Une ‘ete of S00: Marine ove
EXPERT MEDICAL
The new offices opened
oR att oe
expert_medical man’ to enamine dd
eye. This, service ls being Tenet
free of cost itis piven in the eae!
nation of the eye, and gives asset,
that the patient gets The very tine
heeded in the line of a" perfect
Justment of the vision,
‘Without, this” expert service your
eyes Would be i question ag tt
Cauise and cure ot the many ailves?
Pertaining to same. This paren
office gives the best service ar ee
most, reasonable rates and weleon”t
you for, examination and investess
Yon. “This work is done by men tip
know how, experienced, efflent,
‘ae,
TOWSON MAN HURT HERE
Grossing Fremont avenue, a
Baltimore’ St. Samuel Brows, eat
son, received ‘a broken leg, when he
Was struck by an automotie. Thun
day. .
STRUCK CROSSING StaLET
Joseph He Smith, 713 W. stone
ment street, Tad ‘his arnt and "gp
‘Injured when he was struct 'by Sf
‘automobile while crossing Pine, pet
Lexington street, Saturday.
511 att
Douglass “Hi’
Will iscue the Diplomes,
| Let Us Furnish the
| WHITE FLANNEL
PANTS
You'll Be Prout of teth.
511 "e511
| 811 W. Franklin St.
| THE ORIGINAL
(03 Years in Busines)
Till Orders Given
| Prompt Attention
Ernest A. Brooks
{711 ORUIO HILL AVE.
Ladies’, Gentlemen’s and
Children’s Clothes
French Dry Cleaned,
Dyed and Repaired
LATEST MODERN EQUIPMENT
Call and Delivery Service
Phone, Madison 9244
watch For Date ot Forma! Ovenng
| ‘nd inspection
Heat and |
Prostrations|
me
a
guild
‘Home Friendly.
Insurance Company
Centre St. and Park Ave.
KNOWN AS THE PROMPT
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
3 INSURANCE COMPANIES CONSOLIDATE
Five Trucks Bring Records and Equipment of Supreme Life, to Chicago.
NOT A DAY LOST
Policies Issued Up to Very Day of Merging.
CHICAGO. — Without the loss of a single day's business, the merger of the Supreme Life, Liberty Life and North Eastern Life insurance companies took place here last week when five heavily laden trucks quietly unloaded records and equipment of the Supreme Life and Casualty company at the Liberty Life building.
According to officials, politics have been issued daily in the three offices at Newark, Columbus and Chicago up to the time of the attack, which followed after the close of business the trucks transported the records and equipment speedily to Chicago where all arrangements had been made to receive and install them.
A carefully selected and well trained group of clerks and stenographers, a part of the personnel of the Columbia home office, accompanied
Marks Era
The final physical consolidation of the three companies marks an era in racial cooperation.
The moving was done under the direction of President T. K. Gipson, and Secy. T. K. Gipson, who become respectively chairman of the board and vice-president and agency officer of the consolidated Supreme Liberty Life. Early this week the new officers derived in Chicago and assumed their
Thanks Neeru Press
President Pace, when questioned, stated that "the most pleasing thing to me in this whole matter is the splendid cooperation we have received from the Negro press. We have newspaper publications to support our management from the very beginning of the negotiations which have ended so happily into our physical merger of today.
"When many people were saying we could not carry the program through our paper business, others were saying we could go on as deeply grateful to them as to the loyal body of more than four thousand stockholders who be their votes have placed confidence in us. We shall endeavor by our work to merit the cooperation and the confidence that we have built solidly and permanently, this giant institution into a temple of service and a reservoir of profit and protection."
Parkers in Court Over Property Accounting
Claiming that her husband, Mitchell Parker, has refused to give an accounting of the rent of the properties they own in Bedford, Pennsylvania, Parker a show cause petition in Circuit Court. Friday. In her complaint Mrs. Parker states that they own the properties at 142? E. Monument street, 703 and 703 N. Dallas street, and that she had not given her an account of the taxes, expenses or the income. Mrs. Parker is represented by Roy S. Bond.
Mrs. Vincent Asks Property Accounting
Claimine that Mrs. Sedalia Hutchins and Mrs. Louise Luke, joint owners in a piece of property, had made no accounting for the income for two years. Mrs. Lucy Vincent filed a show cause petition in Circuit Court. Friday, the judge ordered a complaint filed through the offices of Roy S. Bond, Mrs. Vincent stated that the house, located at 1031 Argyle avenue, was being used and possessed by the two women and had been for some time.
Girl Hurls Lamp; Lover
Loses Sight of Eyes
Joseph Height, 503 Sapp street, lost the sight of his right eye when struck in the face with an oil lamp by his sweetheart. Miss Jrene Murray, in their home, Sunday. An altercation over another girl she has to have seen cause of the affair is in the Johannes Hopkins Hospital in a serious condition and Miss Murray is being held in the Northwestern Police Station.
Social Club Incorporated
A charter of papers of incorporation were issued to the Dixon White Rose Beneficial Social Club in South Bend and filed through the law office of George W. Evans. The social was organized in June 1911 and has been organized in Baltimore since that time. The organization has a new club home at 1813 Orleans street. The incorporators for the society Leverhaeuser Dixon organizer, Sarah Bertha Waltkins, John Travers and Louise Watkins.
Two Girls Accuse' Man
Found guilty of a statutory charge, be a jury in Criminal court, Charles Benson, 517 East street, was sentenced to the House of Correction, Friday. Testimony showed that Brown had been familiar with an inebic girl on hereral occasions and had been arrested. She was then manhed with an altercation over him. Miss Estelle Allen, 837 W. Lexington street, his childhood sweetheart, also was charged against him. Brown was represented by George W. Evans, Attorney.
Truck Injures Two
Two persons, James Blvens, 24, 623 Gilbert street, and Miss Henrietta were serious injuries, 1804 Druid Hill avenue were struck by a truck while crossing Henderson avenue near hunting Ridge. The injured couple were taken to the Provident Hospital where physicians found that Miss Smith was suffering internal injuries while Blvens had been abused a roken leg and abruptly a fractured skull. The truck was operated by John Herrick, 305 Hoffmann street.
He Got Left When, Ship
Sailed to London
```markdown
```
George Grovel, 18, a native of South Wales. Great Britain, whose ship left the dock while he was sightseeing this city, George Petrangelo was born in the Y.M.C.A. where Secretary Anderson took his case in hand and now he has a job. George says he will be working in government authorities will permit.
ONE OF THE BEST
448
This production, "The Swans," by Raymond Jenkins of New York, won an honorable mention in the senior group of the annual exhibition of small sculptures in white soap for the Procter and Gamble prizes of more than $1600. The contest was held from June 4 through July 15 at the New York series. New York City, where over 3000 entries from professionals and amateurs were included, the sculptures will tour principal museums and galleries throughout the country.
Didn't Speak for Five Years; Wife Gets Divorce
A decree for an absolute divorce was granted Mrs. Mary White, 1829 E. Eager street from her husband, Herbert White, 1100 block Caroline street, in Circuit Court. Friday on statutory charges. The couple have been separated five years, according to testimony, and since that time had not spoken to each other. The couple moved to East Baltimore social circles. Mrs. White was represented by George W. Evans.
HELP WANTED
FIREMEN, Brakenen. Baggagemen
(white or colored). Sleeping Car
Trail Porters (colored). $150-$250
monthly. Experience unnecessary.
277 Railway Bureau, East St. Louis
Ill. kf.
BOYS WANTED!
To Join The
Boys News Club
Earn Money Each Week
and Learn the News
Business
Prizes to be Offered
DURING THE MONTH OF MAY
JOIN EARLY
WIN A CASH PRIZE OR A
NEW SPRING SUIT
1st Prize $5.00 to the boy
with the highest number of sales.
2nd Prize $5.00 to the boy
with second highest number of
sales.
3rd Prize $2.50 to the boy
with third highest number of
sales.
The H. A. Hunt News
Agency
2363 EAST 655th STREET
CLEVELAND, OHIO
tt.
ROY S. BOND
LAWYER
14 E. Pleasant Street
(First Floor)
OFFICE PHONE: VERNON 6956
Residence
150 INHID HILL AVENUE
Residence Phone: Mathison 7744-90
Home Hours: 7 to 9 P.M.
WOMEN START CITY HOUSE CLEANING
Civic Bodies in Campaign to Make City Spick and Span for Summer.
EMERSON RAPS POLICE
Enforce Regulations.
Baltimore women started out this week on a campaign to make the city slick and span.
Headquarters for the Northwestern Section Division have been established at the Y.W.C.A. at the corner of Druid Hill and Dolphin streets, where a meeting was held, Monday evening with Mrs. Mason A. Hawkins, Chairman, presiding.
Mueller Talks
Augustus Mueller of the Street Cleaning Department spoke on the difficulties his department had in keeping the streets and alleys clean. Mr. Mueller blamed carelessness in handling refuse and papers, for dirty streets and urged the women to impress this upon housewives during their visits. Mrs. Hawkins' committee has been divided into 20 teams, who will divide the Northwestern Section and make a house to house residents.
Blames Police
Walter S. Emerson, city councilman, speaking before the group blamed police officers for not requiring compulsory laws. Miss Mabel Whitie, vice chairman of the committee. Wm. N. Jones of the Afro staff and R. Maurice Moss of the Urban League, who were involved in the Mrs. Rogge, of the Women's Civic League outlined what the city departments were doing to co-operate in the campaign. League commissioner, Joseph Galther promising co-operation of his department as well as one from Mayor Broening endorsing the move. More read by Miss Hazel A. Macketh, Secretary of the Civic League.
IN MEMORIAM
IN MEMORIAM
ALLEN-In Loving remembrance of
my dear mother, Henrietta Allen.
who departed this life, one year ago,
June 3, 1928.
DEAR, Dear.
My heart still ashes with sadness,
my eyes have shed many tears;
God only knows how I miss you,
As it dawns another year.
By her daughter, NELLIE ALLEN
BRIDET In loving remembrance
BIDDLE—In loving remembrance of my dear daughter, Maze J. Biddle, who died in the June with death. Out in the jungle graveyard. Neath the sod and the dew. Never a moment forgotten. In silence I think of you. Roses may wither, flowers may die. Friends may forget you, but never will I. Her mother, EMMA BIDDLE.
BRICE—Julian S., passed away in Philadelphia, Pa., June 27th, 1928. Alone in crowds I wander on. And feel that all life's charm is gone. For a once dear, and a smile bright. Have passed like clouds throughout the night. And day by day I miss him more As I walk through life alone. Have missed by the ALBERTA BRICE, and father EMORY BRICE.
MONROE—Hezekiah K., who departed this life June 8, 1929, age 31 yrs. 3 mos. 29 days. A loving husband and kind and on earth like him we will find.
For all of us he did his best.
And God gave him eternal rest.
The days seem dark though friends.
Dear husband, how we long for you.
Sadly missed by wife and son Mrs
H. C. MONROE LINCOLN C. MONROE
Brunswick, Md.
NICHOLS-In loving remembrance
of a dear friend, Benjamin Nichols
who died one year ago, June 22
1928.
He dead to us who loved him,
Not lost, but gone before;
He lives with us in memory,
And will forevermore.
By his friend, ANNA PARRISH.
PHILLIES-In loving remembrance
PHILLIPS - In losing remembrance
of the man who died in
Niephils, who departed this life
three years ago, June 29, 1926.
O. how you miss me, dear mother;
Since you have been called home;
No one knows how our hearts are
staring.
Since you have been gone.
But some sweet day we shall see you.
In heaven bright and fair.
More and more we think of you, dear mother,
As the days go by;
We shall never take a person
Who she takes the place;
Jesus called you home with him
And left a vacancy in our hearts and in our home.
Sleep on, dear mother, and take your rest.
In that great morning when the sun shall blow
We shall meet you, dear mother.
On the golden shore.
By her loving HUSBAND and CHILDREN.
SMITH—In sad but loving remembrance of our dear mother, Emily Jane, widow of the late George A. Smith, who departed this life three years ago, June 23, 1926.
We miss thee from our home, dear.
We miss thee from thy place;
A shadow oer our life is cast.
We miss thee of thy face.
We miss thee kind and willing hand,
T thy fond and honest care;
Our home is dark without thee
We miss thee every where.
By her devoted daughter, ANNIE DENT.
Today recalls sad memories.
Of a dear mother gone to rest;
Of a dear sister who loved today.
Is the one who loved her best.
My lips cannot tell how I miss her,
My heart cannot tell what to say;
God, alone, knows how I miss her,
In a home that is lonesome today
Her loving daughter, LOUISA
SERMILLA.
Cards Of Thanks
I wish to thank the many friends for floral designs use of cars and kindness and sympathy through the illness and death of my husband Hezekiah C. Monroe. I departed this week. 8. 1299, age 31 years, 3 mo. 20 days.
The Afro American; Baltimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
Because he struck and cut Miss Hattie Wise, 606 Comb street, while she was wearing glasses, Robert Nicholson, 28, 106 Hill street was incinerated. He was housed in Correction after a hearing in the Southern police station. Friday.
AUTOS COLLIDE; MAN HURT
Ray McFadden, 27, 1512 W. Mulberry street, received lacerations of the head and a broken arm when the automobile in which he was riding collided with another car in front of 705 Mulberry street. Friday.
BOY HOOKS RIDE; HURT
Coating James, 792 W. Mulberry street, received internal injuries when he was struck by an automobile in front of 777 Mulberry street, Monday.
FORRENT
HOUSES
Ready Furnished Bungalow
Of 6 rooms and bath, screened porches
of 2 rooms each for two families at
3 rooms each for two families at
Spencer Ave. near N. E. Ave. Hal-
thorne for the summer months. Apply
to MRS. KATIE GIVEN, same ad-
mission.
1034 N. GILMOR STREET—House
for rent, 6 rooms and bath. Ela-
cric lights. Key at 936 N. Striker
St. Phone. Lafayette 1049 July 3
FOR RENT. 248 W. BIDDLE ST.—
Store and first floor. Would make
excellent lunch room or suitable for
lunchroom. Available at Market. Apply 899 N. Howard St.
1319 W. LANVALE ST.—Theatre house; electric lights; all conveniences. $15.00 per week. Key at 1317 W. LANVALE St.
1139 N. GILMOR ST.—10-room house for rent. Cheap. All latest improvements. Suitable for three apartments. Apply 1131 N. Gilmor St.
STORE AND ROOMS FOR RENT
1218 F. MONUMENT STREET—$10
per week.
100 N. BRUCE STREET — Store
and rooms. 34.50 per room.
Especially Desirable For .. Professional Man
Nine rooms, 2 baths. Two-family home, splendid condition. Beautiful electric fixtures, gas in every room, linoleum in two large room hall landings. Located the 700 block N. Carrollton Avenue, being vacated by white owner.
For Particulars
Call At
800 N. CAREY STREET
Houses and Apartments
FOR RENT
Rent Very Cheap
If you are thinking of moving, I can get your addition. I have 2 and 3 very houses and various size apartments for rent.
Apply MRS. HARRIS
APARTMENTS
848 Harlem Avenue
4 rooms and bath, third floor, electric,
hot water heat
Vernon, Vernon 3336
FOR RENT—Furnished apartments
modern conveniences. Apply Ad-
ply Realty Co., 823 Madison Ave.
Vernon 7492 or Liberty 3867 Evenings.
APARTMENT FOR RENT—Niely-
furnished apartment in LaVaule
street, 2nd floor, consisting of bed
room, living room and kitchen, $6.50
per week. Others $3.75 and up. Apply
1905 Eutap place. LaFayette 3272.
APARTMENT FOR RENT—All-mi
nern improvements, 4308 Dewey
avenue, Roland Park. Reasonable rates
Phone Homwood 7509. J-13
2218 PENNA. AVE—Beautiful apartment,
three rooms, bath and gas;
electric; private entrance. $6
per week. Phone Gilmor 6998. J-29.
EDMONSON AVE. (Cor. Calhoun)—
3 private apartments, each four
rooms, kitchen and bath rear room,
electric, hot water heat. P. Cook,
110 E. Lexington St., Calvert 1486.
tf.
1501 PRESSTMAN ST.—Cor. Sticker,
kitchen and bath 5 large rooms
and bath hot water heat, gas
and electric. Apply Dr. H. F. Brown.
Phone. Mad. 3168. tf
655-688 W. MULBERY ST. 214
PEARL ST. Furnished apartments;
electric lights. bath. Reasonable
prices. Lewis, 207, Pine St. tf
1755 ADISON ST.—Two apartments,
all conveniences; plenty of
heat and hot water. Gas and electric.
$6.00 per week. Phone Gil. 5998. J-29.
2542 McCULLOH STREET—5 rooms
and bath, electric and heat. Res-
sonable rent. J-29
1634 W. LANVALE STREET—Thin
rice room partitions to no rie
room without children. J-29
510 N. STRICKER STREET—Apartment, 4 rooms on second floor, with quiet private family. Call or phone Glimor 4354-W. All conveniences. J-28.
1420 W. LANVALE ST—Attractive fast floor apartment 4 rooms and bath hot water heat and electric. Apply janitor, 1438 W. Lanvale St. Phone, Glimor 6021-J. t.f.
MODERN APARTMENT, 1522 HARMLE AVE—Facing Harlem Park. Phone, Lafayette 4525. July-6.
1417 McCULLOR ST—Second floor apartment for man and wife or settled woman. July-6.
MODERN, BEAUTIFUL AND Cheerful apartment for rent. 2340 Drum Hill avenue. Rent reasonable. Madison 4627.
FOR SALE—NO
BALANCE WEEKI
1107 NORTH G
9 Rooms. Eath. Gas and
Apply MRS
2442 EUTAW PLACE.
Complete apartments, private bath
steam heat heating water.
JUNIOR SERVICE.
Apply 2121 Oak Street
GALLY YERON 8151.
1110 BOLTON STREET, first floor, 2
rooms, baths and electric. $5.50 per
room.
Third floor, 4 rooms and bath, $5 per week.
352 STRICKER STREET - 2 rooms and
water heater, $49 per week.
Water heater, $49 per week.
Apply M GOLDSEKER.
1234 HARLEM AVENUE — Furnished apartments for rent, facing Harlem Park. All daylight. Modernly equipped. Phone. Madison 9571.
1715 MADISON AVE — Two apartments; all conciences. Plenty heat and hot water; gas and electric. $6 per week. Phone. Glimor 5998. J-13.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS — Reduced. 802 N. Glimor, second floor. 4 rooms, bath. $6.00 per week. 1502 W. Franklin, first floor, 3 rooms, bath. $5.00 per week. 918 W. Lexington, second floor, 3 rooms. 918 W. Lexington, third floor, 2 large rooms. $3 per week. Apply 825 W. Baltimore. Calvert 4722-W.
FIRST CLASS APARTMENTS. 3, 1 and 5 rooms on Drud Hill avenue and McCullon bath. Apply 1215 Drud Hill avenue.
APARTMENT FOR RENT. 1823 Madison Ave.—4 rooms, bath and back porch; gas, electric, steam heat; reasonable. Apply D. Banton of same address.
824 EDMONDSON AVENUE—Furnished
apartment, 2 2 rooms; or furnished rooms.
Modern conveniences, heat and light
included. Call or phone Vernon 05333
W. J-13.
APARTMENT FOR RENT—First,
second and third floor. Apply at
879 N. Howard St.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT—248
W. BIDDLEST—Second, third and
fourth floor. Electric lights. Apply
879 N. Howard St.
2437 MADISON AVE—Apartment, 5
rooms, bar patio, and porch. Joelson
service, hot water and heat.
S12. Phone. Lafayette 3075. J-13.
2428 MADISON AVE—Third floor
apartment with private family,
4 rooms, private bath; heat and
electr.
# ROOMS
DESIRABLE ROOMS in a private home, for summer students and visitors, at special rates. Mrs. Annie Briggs, 315 W. 138th street, New York City. J-6.
B.N.KS HOTEL—1217 MADISON-av. Lee Banks, proprietor. Rooms by day or week. Meals, all hours. Board and home cooking. J-29.
1414 PENNSYLVANIA AVE.—Rooms $123 and $1.50 per week. Privates. junior service. rinse water, use of bath. J-29.
FOR BENT—Two nicely furnished rooms electricity and all modern conveniences. Apply 1014 W. Lafayette. 7-6.
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT: With or without use of kitchen. Apply 1514 McCullough St. July-6th.
FURNISHED ROOM for gentleman. Call Madison 540-50. J-13.
536 ARLINGTON AVE.—Two furnished rooms. Rates reasonable.
718 N. CARROLLT AVE, near
LANVALE ST. Two large newly
furnished front rooms, suitable for
young married couple or 2 or 3 young girls. Do not object to company in your rooms. t.f.
FOR SALE
14 N. GILMOR - 8 rooms, cath; all
private: electric. Price $3,000. $15
down. $10.00 weelty. $924 N. Central
room. toilet, hot water heat. Spencer's boilers.
small down payment. R. Lowdenslager. 300 E. North Ave. t.f.
924 N. CENTRAL AVE - 9 rooms,
bath. electric. extra toilet; hot
water payment. Spencer's boiler; small
down payment. R. Lowdenslager.
300 E. North Avenue. t.f.
Stop Working So Hard!
Make small deposit on high class
apartment house. Let tenants work for
home investment. Act quick.
Apply
FOR SALE
Beautiful Corner Home
(ON TWO STREETS)
Can be bought same as renting a home. This home is absolutely modern. Good bargain.
APPLY 1065 EUTAW PLACE.
Lafayette 3297.
COME and SEE
THE
NEW COTTAGES
AT
MORGAN PARK
(Overlooking Morgan College)
For your future happiness, we urge you to come and see these modern Homes, in beautiful Morgan Park, the Suburb which is beautiful by so many representative people as the most desirable site in Baltimore for their Homes.
From the standpoint of location, modern conveniences, and dignified surroundings, you will hardly find a more desirable Home anywhere.
And it is so easy to own your own
bank. You can explain to
guide you our liberal finance plan.
Awalt and Rodgers
501 Morris Building
Plaza 3713
WOTHING DOWN!
LET SAME AS RENT.
FILMOR STREET
Electric. Good Condition
S. S. HARRIS
LAFAYETTE 1436.
USED CARS
ANDERSON CHEVROLET
Chevrolet Direct Factory Dealer.
Two Stores,
4636 EDMONDSON AVE.
1310-12 W. BALTIMORE ST.
MONEY SAVING
BARGAINS
1929 Chevrolet. Cabriolet. $645
1928 Chevrolet Landau. $455
1928 Chevrolet Coupe. $396
1928 Chevrolet Coupe. $135
1928 Chevrolet Coach. $155
1928 Nash Sedan. $154
1928 Nash Sedan. $154
1929 Ford Touring. $77
1929 Ford Touring. $77
1929 Ford Touring. $98
1929 Essex Coach. $98
1929 Essex Coach. $145
1929 Essex Coach. $145
1929 Chrysler Coach. $345
1929 Willys Knight Sedan. $165
TRUCKS
1927 Ford Ten Panel.....$195
1928 Ford Delivery.....$355
1929 Chevrolet Delivery.....$145
1929 Dodge Panel Delivery.....$335
*Terms*-Gilmor 5600-Trades.
4636 EDMONDSON AVE.
Used Car Branch
1310-12 W. BALTIMORE ST.
Open Evenings and Sunday.
NO CASH REQUIRED
TO RESPONSE BUYERS, PAY BY WEEK
OR MONTH. ENJOY THE PLEASURE
OF YOUR CAR. SEE THE MODEL.
Stock consists of following makes: Dodge,
Ford, Star. Chevrolet, Rickenbacker, Essex,
Hudson, Fiskin, Chrysler, Jewett, Hupmobile,
Nash.
$50 Cars You Pay $1.00 Weekly.
$100 Cars You Pay $2.00 Weekly.
$200 Cars You Pay $3.00 Weekly.
$300 Cars You Pay $6.00 Weekly.
HEINEKAMP MOTOR CO.
CHASE & CATHEDRAL STS. (SINCE 1916)
Telephone Vermont 0578-0577.
Get ready for
the 4th
Fourth of July is less than two weeks off. You can now select a good car and have it ready to take a nice, pleasant trip on the 4th. Then, too, think of the many places you can go all during the summer!
But you must have a dependable car in order to enjoy your outings to the fullest extent.
Come in and let us show you our stock of good used cars.
You will find fair treatment and dollar for dollar value here as usual. Below our cars are arranged in price groups for your convenience.
Come in for a friendly visit and look these cars over!
$100 TO $300
1923 DODGE Sedan
1922 FRANKLIN 10A Sedan
1922 FRANKLIN Brougham
1922 JORDAN Brougham
1922 FRANKLIN Sedan
1922 COLE S Limousine
1922 WILLLS KNIGHT Sedan
1922 FRANKLIN Touring
1922 FRANKLIN Sedan
1922 STUDEBAKER Touring
1922 NASH "Spe" Sedan
1922 OLDSMOBILE Coach
1922 FORD Roadster
1922 HINTT Sedan
1922 RICKENBACKER Roadster
$300 TO $500
1924 FRANKLIN Sedan
1924 FRANKLIN Brougham
1924 MOON Sedan
1924 MOON Sedan
1924 HUP 8 Sedan
1924 CHRYSLER "88" Sedan
1924 WILLLYS KNIGHT Sedan
1924 CADILLA Lac Sedan
1924 VOLKLOT Coupe
1924 BUICK Sedan
1924 STUDEBAKER Duplex
1924 OLDMOBILE Sedan
1924 CHRYSLER Coupe
1924 "88" Sedan
1924 BUICK Touring
1924 PONTIAC Coupe
1924 PONTIAC Landau
1924 HONDA Coupe
1924 OLDMOBILE Coach
1924 CHEVROLET D. L. Landau
$500 TO $700
BUICK Sedan
BUICK Sedan
BUICK Sedan
REB Sedan
GRAHAM PAIGE
WHIPFET 6 Sedan
$700 AND Up
1925 FRANKLIN 11A Touring
1926 FRANKLIN 11A Sedan
1926 FRANKLIN 11A Victoria Coupe
1926 CADILAC Sedan
1926 CHIRKMAN 105 Sedan
1926 FRAINLIN Sport Sedan
Convenient Terms, Of Course
Your Car Accepted In Trade!
Kneip Oldsmobile Co.
Franklin Motor Car Co.
1112-1116 CATHEDRAL ST.
Open Evenings and Sunday.
Vernon 7110.
Lambert
These cars reconditioned and repainted; the busier where needed.
1126 FREETFETT Coupe.
1128 CHRYSLER Cabriolet; rumble.
1129 CHRYSLER Cabriolet; rumble.
1129 ESSEX Coach; Jatest type.
1129 OAKLAND Landau Sedan.
1129 SUNNY Coupe.
1129 BUICK Coupe.
1129 CHRYSLER Sedan.
1129 CHRYSLER Sedan; protected 4x4-Door.
1129 ESSEX Coach; Super Sk.
1129 HUDSON Brougham.
1129 COUPE.
1129 CHRYSLER fouring.
1129 CHRYSLER fouring; seat bump.
1129 CHANDLER Sedan.
1129 CHRYSLER Sedan; repainted.
1129 ESSEX Coach; repainted.
1129 WILLS-KNIGHT Sedan 68.
1129 WILLS-KNIGHT Sedan.
1129 HUDSON Coach; repainted.
1129 HUDSON Coach; reconditioned.
1129 MOBILE Coupe.
1129 HUDSON Sedan.
1129 FORD Sedan.
Open Evenings and Sunday
The House Of Confidence
USED CAR DEPARTMENT.
111 W. Read St.
Night and Sunday, Vernon 7342.
Wisner Auto Co.
24 Hours Efficient Service
7—DAYS PER WEEK—7
STORAGE
Day, Night, Week or Month
Gas Filling Station Oiling-Greasing
511-19 Wilson Street
Phone, Madison 9479
VALUES
THAT DEFY COMPARISON
During the past few weeks
we have taken in trade on
the NEW CHEVROLET "G"
the GREATEST SELECTION
of FINE USED CARS
in our history, and to reduce
our stock immediately, we
have priced them to sell on
sight. We know we have
the car you want and our
G. M. A. C. FINANCE
TERMS will amaze you.
30-DAY GUARANTEE
We Trade Your Present Car
SPORT CARS, all models.
CABRIOLETS with rumble
seat, priced from $350 to
$485.
ROADSTERS, $125 to $350.
TOURINGS, $35 to $275.
LANDAUS, $215 to $510.
4th JULY SPECIALS
SPORT COUPES, k.i. models,
wire wheels, fully equipped,
$145 to $285.
1925 FORD Truck ..... $455
CHEVROLET COUPES
COACHES, SEDANS, 1027-
28-29 models, $245 to $565.
1925 WHIPPET Coupe ..... $305
TRUCKS
CHEVROLETS AND FORDS,
all models, price range $75
to $425.
We Thoroughly Recondition
Our Trade-In Cars
The famous Chevrolet Red
O. K. tag is your definite
assurance of our dependability.
BUY WITH CONFIDENCE
FROM
Park Circle Motor Co.
CHEVROLET DEALERS
3426 REGISTERSTOWN ROAD,
Near Carlin's Park
Liberty 0500. Always Open.
24-HOUR SERVICE
Less
Than $200
WONDERFUL VALUES
AT
NEW LOW PRICES
1925 Willys Knight Coupe . . . $185
1926 Cleveland Sedan . . . $165
1927 Hurmobile Sedan . . . $165
1928 Reo Sedan . . . $165
1928 Built Sedan . . . $135
1926 Essex Coach . . . $75
1926 Ford Roadster . . . $65
1926 Essex 4 Coach . . . $50
1926 Chalmers Coach . . . $20
1926 Cleveland Coupe . . . $55
Repossessed Car Corp.
1729 N. CHARLES ST.
Vernon 2370.
THE
CONSUMERS
AUTO EXCHANGE
IS THE PLACE TO BUY
USED CARS
Open—Closed Cars
$50.00 UP
812 MADISON AVE.
Telephone Vernon 3033.
HUDSON Sport Roadster; rumble
seat.
HUDSON Coach.
CHEVROLET Landau.
CHEVROLET Coupe.
OLDSMOBILE Coupe.
CHRYSLER Royal Coupe; rumble
seat.
ESSEX Sedan.
ESSEX Coach.
CHANDLER Sedan.
MADWELL Touring.
BUICK Coupe.
Open Evenings—Sundays.
THEO. RICE
HULL-O-GRAM
George Washington once threw a dollar across, the Potomac river. Your dollar will go even further on your car floor—and no effort on your back.
CHRYSLER "82" COACH. $770
CHRYSLER "82" COUPE. $780
CHRYSLER "82" SEDAN. $790
DODGE VICTORY SEDAN. $775
DODGE VICTORY SEDAN. $775
CHEVROLET COACH. $825
CHANDLER SEDAN. $825
CHANDLER SEDAN. $825
WILLS-KNIGHT SEDAN. $825
WILLS-KNIGHT SEDAN. $825
DODGE SEDAN. $800
PAULBERT SEDAN. $800
CHRYSLER "70" COACH. $850
CHRYSLER "70" COACH. $850
LORD CALVENT MOTOR BLDG.
CHARLES & OLIVER S. VERNON 1447.
OJEN EVENINGS
THE HARTER B. HULL CO.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Automobile owners vaporize your
gasoline 25 to 50 per cent more mileage.
Representative wanted for information
write BURNETT WHIRL-
WIND DISTRIBUTOR. 238 E. 145th.
Garage 17, N. Y. C.
Wisner A.
24 Hours Eff.
7-DAYS P.
STOP
Day, Night, W
Gas Filling Station
511-19 WI
Phone, M
Thousands of "Unused" miles in every USED CAR
In Dandy Mechanical Condition.
Good tires; price $225.00. Apply
before six or by appointment after
six at Manger's Garage, 4024, W.
Belvedere
PEERLESS
Used Car Department
At
Acme Filling Station
North Point Road and
Sparrows Point Road.
See Mr. Perry
You Can Get Many Good Bargains Here In Dependable Used Tires A. E. HARTIG CO. Eutaw and Madison Ave. Distributors of the Famous SEIBERLING TIRES USED TIRES! Your Opportunity To Buy RECONDITIONED TIRES At a Bargain General Tire Co. 914 Cathedral Street
Pierce-Arrow
Did it ever occur to you
that a high-class used
car is better than a cheap
new one. Any time you can
get a good high-class car
here for much less than the
cost of a cheap new car,
and you get thousands of
satisfactory miles.
Enjoy the summer in a
good high class used car.
1924 Peerless. 7-pass. Sedan. $400
1925 Buck. 5-pass. Brougham. $600
1926 Pierce. 7-pass. $600
1926 Kissell. 5-pass. Sedan Lim-
ousine. $350
1923 Pierce-Arrow Touring. $650
1923 Pierce-Arrow. 5-pass. Sedan. $350
1923 Pierce-Arrow Touring. $550
C. H. Reeves & Co., Inc.
PIERCE-ARROW DISTRIBUTORS
1313-1315 Cathedral St.
Vernon 2640-2641-2642
Pierce-Arrow
J-O-N-E-S
Direct Chevrolet Dealer
1523 MT. ROYAL AVE.
S. E. Corner McMechen St.
Phone Madison: 5335
Chevrolets
YOU WANT AN AUTOMOBILE
THEN COME HERE AND SEE
HOW EASY IT IS TO BUY ONE
LOWEST PRICES—HIGHEST
QUALITY
TERMS—TRADES—GUARANTEE
PRICES FROM $35 TO $510
WIDE RANGE OF SELECTIONS
SPECIAL TODAY
1523-33 MT. ROYAL AVE.
CORNER McMECHEN ST.
One Block South of North Ave.
PHONE MADISON 5355.
COUNTY BOY HURTE
Playing in the road near his home
Vernon Co. Missouri. Seven, Md.
and deep laceration of the
head when he was struck by an
automobile, Sunday.
BOY SERIOUSLY HURT
Isaac Thomas, of 1318 N. Stock-
ton, received concussion of
the brain when he was struck by an
automobile in front of 1306 N. Caret
street, Sunday.
Auto Co.
Efficient Service
OVER WEEK—7
GARAGE
Week or Month
Oiling-Greasing
Milson Street
Madison 9479
The GENERAL TIRE CO.
914 Cathedral St-Vernon 1313
OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P.M.
AMOCO·GAS
Stop at this pump once and we won't need to advertise to you any longer!
Inquiring Reporter
QUESTION: What trade, business or profession seems to you to offer opportunity for largest service and most satisfying returns?
The Answers:
Miss Penetite Jefferson, 1224 McCulloh street: "Personally, I think teaching offers the best opportunities."
William Proston, graduate of the Douglass High School and son of Mr. and Mrs. William Proctor of the 700 block of Carrollton avenue: "I think that the practice of law seems to offer opportunities for largest service and the most satisfying returns."
Miss Catherine Ann Tyler, 627 N.
The only tire financed, elim tras. Giving greatest saving
MICHELIN
The GEN
Carltonville avenue.
"I think far as the Negro is concerned that business offers opportunities for the most service, because the race is greatly in need of service in the business world."
Morgan Football Star Sued for $5,000
Claiming personal injuries to the extent of $5,000, Mrs. Erma Taylor, filed a suit in the court of common pleas against James Hiram Blyer, Morgan College football star. 01F, Division seat. Thursday.
The woman received a fractured skull and internal injuries, according to her complaint, when she was struck by the automobile operated by Butler at 3rd and Guilford avenue on May 23 this year. Butler is well known in college, fraternal and social circles. He was the star end of the last year's Morgan college foot ball aggregation.
PAYMENT PLAN
National Tire Acceptance Corporation
the payment plan of its kit
minating exorbitant inte
the benefit of Top Qu
ing-on payments to suit
85¢
A Week for a
30x4.50 General
All Sizes Accordingly
IT IS EASIER and far more economical to buy long-lasting Generals on credit than to buy cheap grade, short-lived tires for cash. Have the Best-- Pay as You Get Paid
Five Teachers are Granted Leave
Five teachers in the public schools of the city were granted leave of absence for the purpose of study at the regular meeting of the Board of School Commissioners, last Thursday
afternoon.
They are Luther C. Mitchell, School
101. Miss Frances B. Lomax, School
110. Misses Adah B. Watts, and A. Louise Mussenden, supervisors, who will study at Columbia University and Miss Mildred McMeadon, School
125. Miss McMeadon is going abroad on the educational and good will tour of several European countries with the Fellowship of Reconciliation Groups.
Arrest Bail Skipper
Charged with skipping bail. Thomas Moore. 27. 314 6. S sharp street. is being held in the Western police station.
kind. Factory interest and ex- uality at the it every purse.
TIRE CO.
The Afro American, Bultimore, Saturday, June 29, 1929
ONE DEAD; ONE SLASHED AS MAN CUTS WAY OUT
ONE DEAD; ONE SLASHED AS MAN CUTS WAY OUT
D.C. Reveller Plunges Knife into White Man and Stabs Another.
MADE HIP POCKET MOVE
Riot Gun Squad Rushed to
An unidentified man, said to have come over with a pal from Washington, killed one man and stabbed another when he cut his way out of the heart of the Pennsylvania avenue shopping district, Saturday night.
The killing and disturbance, which occurred near that section of Pennsylvania avenue where Patrolman Doebler was shot down a year ago by a man he had just arrested, brought about an emergency offence with riot guns to the scene, but the slasher has made good his escape by the time they arrived.
Eye witnesses to the affair and police say that the two men came over from Washington and had visited several places of amusement when they went to the house of Miss Carrion, a 700 block. The night started there when one of the men, repulsed by the young woman, produced a clasp knife and cut her. She screamed and they ran.
Across the street John Finger, 74, white, turned and saw the man coming. Whether he meant to block the course of the fleeing man, but one who probably had been, but its evident that he was in his path when he was stabbed in the shoulder.
Pistol Feint
It is known, however, that Morris Rothchild, 23, the other man cut by the D.C. visitor, made a feint to capture him by threateningly putting his hand into his hip pocket as if to draw gun shots. He shot his gun, his arm and slashed him. No one else attempted to stop him until a large squad of police with sawed off shot guns covered the entire vicinity of the shooting.
3-INCH PIECE OF STEEL IN GIRL'S SKULL
Operation Fails to Save Life of Miss Clara Brown After Accident.
Clara Brown, 9, 1511 Hazlem avenue, succumbed at Provident Hospital one hour after having a three inch piece of steel removed from her skull last week. The girl received her injuries when struck by an automobile operated by Robert Butts, 614 S. Hanover street. Dr. C. Neblett performed the operation. One year old Thomas McCray, 821 Arlington avenue, was treated for swallowing a small amount of fly killing disinfectant. Receiving injuries of the leg and side when he fell 14 feet out of a tree near his home. William win 10. McCullen street was treated at the emergency rooms this week. Others treated at the Hospital were:
Robert Hutchison, 35, 248 Bruce Street; Thomas McClellan, 1, 821 Horace Majors, 58, 2007 Blunt; Benjamin Gaskany, 56, 2019 Craig Hayes, William McKenzie, 56, 2019 N. 925 Pear Claud; Claud Brooks, 9, 1511 Harlem; Leslie Whitfield, 18, 1134 Jenkins; Ella Midget, 22, 909 Mulberry, Elmer Harris, 18, 516 Preston; Lorean Hutchins, 24, 248 N. Bruce; Holmes Holmes, 24, 248 Preston; Charles Brown, 25, 1403 Mosher; Berkley Moody, 21, 1425 E. Pairmont; Ernst Johnson, 12, 541 W. Lancey; Georgia Stephens, 16, 1838 Woodye Smith, 24, 623 Gilbert; Henrietta Smith, 25, 1804 Drudt Hill; Samuel Mellon, 40, 1124 N. Parish; Moselella Showers, 2, 1235 Myrtle; Baint James, 5, 610 Drudt Hill; 24, 1209 Whatcoat; Mendrum Crump, 19, 169 McCulloch; Elizabeth Payne, 35, 270 Prost; Leroy Carter, 45, 570 Wilson; Hazel Mason, 3, 586 Baker; Robert Brown, 7, 1610 Drudt Hill; Clarice Carter, 5, 1610 Drudt Hill; Jamele Hendrick, 6, 1437 Lancey; McDowell, 259 Robert; William Goodman, 312 McCulloch.
Hold Young Woman When Men Duel
Police of the Northeastern police station are holding Richard Hudgins, 1903 Lamby street, pending the outcome of the stab wounds he inflicted on Lester Aquilla, 1905 Lamby street, during an altercation said by police to have been caused by an argument over Miss June Austin, Thursday. Aquilla is reported to be in the Johns Hopkins hospital in a serious condition from one of the chest, back and a probable punctured kidney. Miss Austin is being held by police under $100 bail as a witness.
Morgan College Is $20,000 Behind Goal
With June 30th set as a final day on which to raise the $50,000 balance necessary to receive a similar gift from the General Educational Board, officials declared this week that $20,000 must be raised.
As a result the workers are making a final effort to reach the 4,000 contributors who will make up this deficiency. Work on the new dormitory is progressing and plans to begin a $125,000 science building next fall are being made.
Had Both Razor and "Gat"
Caught with a loaded revolver and a razor in his possession, George Davis, 38 Pennsylvania avenue, was entenced to 60 days in jail after a hearing in the Western police station. Thursday.
To See Better-See Us!
ROYAL
Program for Week
Beginning JULY 1ST.
Summer Prices
MATINEE PRICES
CHILDREN . . . 10 CENTS
ADULTS . . . 20 CENTS
NIGHT PRICES
CHILDREN . . . 15 CENTS
BALCONY . . . 20 CENTS
ORCHESTRA . . . 25 CENTS
SEE!
E! We and the
teen's Mo
World's S
A thousand thrills, a thou
sand gasps crowd upon on
daring guardsman of all
and country during the g
Three Musketeers."
"One for all, all for one
fearless friends that imme
pen of Dumas.
TheScree in the Wo
TheScreen'sMostRomanticFigure in the World's Supreme Romance!
A thousand thrills, a thousand laughs, a thousand gasps crowd upon one another as the most daring guardsman of all France fights for love and country during the glorious times of "The Three Musketeers."
"One for all, all for one" rings the call of the fearless friends that immortalized the dynamic pen of Dumas.
Don't fail to hear Fairbanks in his first Talking Picture
It's a Real Thriller!
A rare treat!
IRONMASK
Mystery FRIDAY and SAT Who Kill
FRIDAY and SATURDAY—A BIG, NEW ALL-TALKING MYSTERY THRILLER!
Who Killed JACK DONOVAN?
The whole town is talking about the Royal's singing and talking pictures. Everyone says they are the finest in the city. Come and convince yourself that they are really the best you have ever seen or heard. Coming—Another Great Talkie—"ALIBI"
The Daring Exploits of History's Supreme Daredevil!
Life will take on a new meaning when you see the fascinating D'Artagnan and his rollicking musketeers —fighting like the furies; captivating all Paris with their merry making; be fogging the countryside with the dust of pounding hoofs as they match brawn and brain with the best blades and wits of all Europe to solve the mystery of "The Iron Mask" and save King and Country.
Sparkling with the Glamor and Charm of Olden France! Youth will thrill, age will gasp at the romance and valor of the dauntless daredevil who found no risk too great for love and country.
Swords flash, wits clash as the screen's foremost action star bounds into imperial intrigue and radiant romance in the glorious days of chivalry.
WATCH Doug and His Three Musketeers Unfold The
Monday-Tuesday
and Thursday
Most Rooms Supre
rills, a thousand laughs, a
and upon one another as the
man of all France fights for
being the glorious times of
ers."
all for one" rings the call
that immortalized the dy
UGL
Wednesday
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
HEAR!
IN THE
FURTHER
ADVENTURES
OF THE
THREE
MUSKETEERS
DIRECTED BY
ALLAN DWAN
UNITED ARTISTS
PICTURE
The great Owen Davis stage success, "The Donovan Affair" made into the most gripping, compelling, dramatic and thrilling mystery film of the year.
The lights were extinguished—Donovan's cat-eye ring was a luminous point in the darkness. Suddenly—a grean and a fall, Donovan was dead! Murdered! And the murderer was in that room!
A howling dog! Dreary rain! Night! Darkness! Death! Every element of mystery is incorporated in "The Donovan Affair!" the a-c-a-r-y, e-e-r-i-e mystery thriller.
Two murders committed in an hour—one under cover of darkness in the very presence of the police inspector!
You'll find a woman behind every murder! We defy you to guess the one behind the baffling murder of Jack Donovan!