The Afro-American
Saturday, October 5, 1929
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
THE WEATHER
FAIR — COOLER
Sun rises: 6:03 a.m. Moon rises: 3:15 a.m.
Sun sets: 5:15 p.m. Moon sets: 4:00 p.m.
Moon Phases: New, 3rd; first quarter, 10th;
full, 18th; last quarter, 26th.
39th Year, Number 3 Entered In the
Second-Class'Ma
GA
JAMAICA COURT JAILS GARVEY FOR 3 MONTHS
U.N.I.A. Leader Sentenced for Contempt of Court.
FINED $500
Verdict Carries "No Hard Labor."
INGSTON, Jamaica. — Marcus Garvey, head of the Universal Negro Improvement Association of August, 1920," was sentenced September 26, to three months' imprisonment without hard labor and fined $500 for contempt of court.
In a political speech Garvey had attacked the Jamaica courts. An even suffer sentence was avoided when Mr. Garvey underdered an apology to the fall court.
This was Mr. Garvey's second appearance before the court in contempt proceedings in the past thirty days.
Three weeks ago, he was fined $125 for failing to produce in court certain books of the association demanded by the judge.
The action in the first contempt case was the result of a judgement which the organization in New York, which judge the Jamaica court ruled could be endorsed here, it being held that the local association is a branch of the New York association.
When no money in satisfaction of the judgment was paid, the summons was issued so that the offices of the local branch could be examined with regard to what property
Money there was, and it actually drew distinction between the U.N.A. in New York and the local association by searing that the Jamaica U.N.A. is not incorporated, has branches all over the world and he is president of it, and it is a separate institution from the U.N.A. incorporated in New York. Basse White, secretary, was called upon to produce the cash books, as auditors declared without them they could not find head or tail of Mr. Garvey's financial affairs. The chief secretary called in Mr. Garvey and stated: "I ordered the books to be produced and they have not been." Mr. Garvey replied: "As a British subject, I must decline to produce books or do anything that might tend to incriminate me against an organization about an organization with which I have nothing to do." The court ordered the books to be brought in within the next half hour or the arrest of Mr. Garvey. Mr. Garvey left the court and produced the books. Subsequently, Liberty Hall was sold for $5,275 to satisfy Mr. judgement. But meantime, Mr. Garvey, speaking at a political meeting, criticized Jamaica courts again and was thereupon hulled up for his second contempt charge. He was same time with Mr. Garvey and in the same connection were Lewis Ashenhelm and A. V. Hague, Garvey attorneys.
Prays For Pardon
*OBRIDE, Mass.—The Rev. SINCEIMP Drew, preaching in Western Avenue Baptist Church, here Sunday, praved that Marcus Garvey, migrated to that city that his family on Thanksgiving day, November 28th.
"White Primary" Case to be Argued Oct. 11
NEW YORK-Argument on the Florida "White Primary" Case, arising out of denial of vote to a N.A.C. will be heard in the Florida Supreme Court in the N.A.C.A. P. E. W. Marsh, attorney in charge.
a vote in the primary election last fall, this action prompted the U.S.-Supreme Court's decision in the Texas "White Primary" Case, where it was held that the state's Nine Negroes from voting in party primaries. In Florida, as in other states, it was sought to vest the governor of presidents' office with qualifications in State Party Committees.
HARLEM'S OLDEST, DEAD
YORK—Mrs. Sinal Wade, Irene's oldest, died at the age of 73. She came here from Virginia 55 years ago and lived at 57 Moylan
Write or phone the AFRO Society Editor so that your friends may know about it. There is a program for your friends. You'll find it for a letter from home to have the AFRO follow you. You change addresses as often as desired. Send a note for each copy you desire and the AFRO will follow you promptly.
Dept. Communication. The AFRO-AMERICAN, 628 N. Eutaw Street.
THEAFROAMERICAN
Entered In the Postoffice at Baltimore, Md., as
Second-Class Matter under Act of March 8, 1892
Heflin Ordered
Not to Serve
Investigation, However, Shows th
Has No More to Do With Senate C
Heflin Ordered Restaurant Not to Serve DePriest
WHITE WOMAN DIES,
PHYSICIAN HELD
WHITE WOMAN DIES,
PHYSICIAN HELD
WASHINGTON, D.C.-Dr. James T. Blue, 54, 534 Ninth street, N.W., was held for the action of the grand jury in connection with the death of F. Leimbach, 26, white, of 2253 374 North Street. Dr. C. J. Murphy, coroner, testified that Mrs. Leimbach signed a written statement that Dr. Blue had performed an illegal operation. The woman died Thursday at the Hepaticopathic hospital, blood poisoning, having a husband and two children.
Virginia Segregation Case Up November 7
City of Richmond Still Flouts Constitution
RICHMOND, VA.-Lucius F. Cary, assistant city attorney, filed suit for the city of Richmond last week in the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals arguing that Judge Groner erred in holding Richmond's segregation ordinance to be contrary to the federal constitution.
Judge Groner refused to dismiss the suit against Richmond of Richmond, asking for relief from the ordinance which makes it illegal for him to live in a house in the East End purchased by him last March. Under Richmond's segregation law, he was for anyone to inhabit and block in the city in which the majority of the residents are persons with whom he is forbidden to intermarry under the Virginia racial integrity law.
Does he has until October 10th to file his reply brief. The case will be argued before the Circuit Court probably on November 7th.
Kluxers Burn Cross, Home Is Stoned
NEW YORK.—White members of a mob, who came and went in automobiles, burned a cross fifteen feet high in front of a home recently built by Bowles on 169th street, Jamaica, L.I. The mob afterwards put out the lights in the block and proceeded to stone the building until every window was broken. Rocks were taken from a sewer construction job near by. When police arrived the vandals had escaped in an automobile. Bowles has applied for a permit to carry firearms. He bound himself to a hard pressed white widow after it had been vacant a month. He says he will not move.
Home is Stoned
Bowles is a porter in a downtown office building. The subdivision known as Albon Manor has exactly twelve colored home owners, and although all of these homes are in the rear, only one colored family owns a car. Nine of these families have moved in since May.
One colored resident said that white children of the neighborhood amored her at first, but one day she stepped on her door and street, lost all her religion and forever silenced her tormentors.
"And I told them I would shoot the first one that crossed my door step, for I am here to stay," she declared.
ST. MICHAELS, Md.—A fire, originating in the garage of Mayor Marshall, white, swept over the colored section of this town, devastating properties valued at more than $40,000. Tuesday.
Longs Chapel, the oldest church building in the city and which owned by the late John Lloyd. The loss was estimated at $800. A house belonging to Richard Mitchell, valued at $3,100 went down in flames and the furnishings and outbuilding of John Mitchell valued at $8,000 were also destroyed.
In Jail Again
American Singers Dance With Royalty
VIENNA, Austria—Nell Hunter of Durham, and John Payne of London, who have been on concert tour in Europe, appeared on the program of their instructor in Vienna. On the front row in the audience sat no lesser personages than Hunter and the Countess. After their numbers which were marvellously received, a note went back stage from the royal Hunter and Mr. Payne to tea the following afternoon. When the dancing started at the party that afternoon, Miss Hunter and Mr. Payne, Prince and Mr. Payne with the Countess, So this is Vienna.
FOUND DRUGGIST IN N.Y. LODGING HOUSE
Wife's Strategy Uncovers
Other Woman in Love
Nest.
Petition for Separation Goes Uncontested.
NEW BEDFORD, MASS.—Mrs. Lylan G. Gwynn, choir singer and soloist, testified in probate court yesterday afternoon at New York local pharmacist, to a New York lodging house and there found him in company with another woman. Mrs. Gwynn's daughter was also present. Her husband went to New York ostensibly for a two weeks' vacation, while she remained home to manage the drug store at Kempton and Georgetown. She was hired by Hitch. A week after he, a telegram asking for money was received and she decided that it was best to investigate.
In New York, Mrs. Gwynn called at the address left by her husband, and was told by the landlady that no one by that name was staying there. There were a Mr. and Mrs. Wrenwood and a Mr. and "Tm friend of Mrs. Winn's", Mrs. Gwynn testified she represented herself, and climbing the stairs she knocked on the door, and in answer to her husband's voice, said "Tellgran. When the door opened, Mrs. Gwynn said she discovered her mate in a strange woman's company. She married December 12, 1917. She is now making her home in New York.
Harrisburg Couples Wed at Hagerstown
Harrisburg Couples Wed at Hagerstown
Lexington, Va. Couple Also In Marriage List
HAGERSTOWN, MD.-Two couples from Harrisburg, Pa., and one from Lexington, Va., are they will be married. They are William M. Johnson, 21, Louise L. Clark 18, Lexington, Va.
CLEVELAND-After 12 years of married life in which she worked to help her husband accumulate a fortune of more than $20,000. Mrs. Cresta A. Taylor, pharmacist, has brought suit for injunction and alimony against River A. Taylor, physician and surgeon. According to the bill, the doctor has been acting jealously and queerly within recent months.
The wife estimated the husband's income at $2,000. a month.
College Head Killed
REBANK. Miss. -President J. R
Ramsey, 85, of the Mississippi Indu-
lance, killed when his automobile ran into
loose gravel and overturned near
the week.
With him was his wife who was
uninjured.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
CANNOT SELL TO WHITES; WON'T TO NEGROES
D. C. Segregationists "Carry On" in Protest Meeting.
USE HARD NAMES
"Menace, Invasion, Blacks, Darkies," Used
WASHINGTON, D. C. Disregarding a notice from the Community Center department of the public schools of the District of Columbia, the Columbia Heights Civic Forum, white, held a meeting last Friday night in the Wilson normal school building for the purpose of crystallizing sentiment in favor of the exclusion of colored persons as residents of that section of the city.
Darkies, Blacks, Menace Invasion
The buying of property by colored persons in that vicinity and their moving into that section were described as an invasion. Colored persons were an invasion. They were sometimes called "blocks." One man referred to them once as "darkies." The chairman of the committee on invasion alleged that he had done against the so-called "invasion." He said he had gone around trying to get people to sign restrictive covenants against the sale of property to or its occupancy by colored persons. He said he had had the opportunity to own property owners that residential segregation is public-spirited and that white residents were not interested enough to sign such covenants.
Some Blocks "Safe"
He said that the average depreciation of property values as soon as colored persons move to fourteenth streets, five-fifth per cent. He named the following blocks as being safe from invasion: Eulich street from Eleventh to Fourteenth streets; Clifton street from Eleventh to Fourteenth streets; and Columbia road from Thirteenth to Fourteenth streets.
Backs Against a Wall
He conceded the right of the colored person to live wherever the white person sold him. He admitted frankly that their backs were against the wall, that there was nothing he could do. He assasinated him, and had off the invasion. He concluded by saying that the tide has swept over them.
Whites Offer $8,000
The next speaker presented a pitiful figure of the effects of race prejudice in the 1900 block of Park road, in which there are no colored residents at present. On account of ill health he is forced to sell his property.
He had listed it for sale with three white dealers, who told him they could not sell it to any white person for full value because of the nearness of colored people who are living in Lamont and Morton in the Northeast where he got from cheap white people who would turn his home into a rooming house, he said, was $8,000 or $8,000.
Negroes Offer $12,000
A colored real estate agent had clients. They had gone through his house three times, he said, the last time planning where they would put the furniture. They offered him $12,500 for the house, but he turned down because he would wait to see him to decide whether to sell to them. He had gone to see his neighbors and offered them his property, but they would not buy.
The man was almost in tears as he told his story of unwillingness to sell to colored persons and inability to sell to whites.
Black Real Estate Agents
Another speaker told of the same story as he was going around in the vicinity advising property owners to sell to colored persons first in order to get more money for their homes. The black-listing of real estate agents who are going into white blocks to get property listed to colored persons was advocated.
Darkies
The next speaker was afraid to use the word "colored." He said "other people" "others," or "mance." Once when he no longer excused himself, he sold to a darky. His plan is to go to all the large businesses in Fourteenth street in that vicinity and get contributions for the purpose of paying solos and seeking permission to restrict covenants.
Blames Higher Schools
The next speaker was asinine. He asked if the white property owners that is behind "all this invasion." He said it was the presence of Howard university and the Miner normal school. He did not understand what students in the Miner normal school and only two hundred in the Wilson normal (white). He asked what does Howard university do with the dollars of the college appropriations it gets annually from Congress. He expressed the belief that the money is used to recruit colored people to move into white neighborhood.
Please Named
Another plan suggested for stopping the so-called invasion was to talk it over with members of the Senate. The Senate would be sympathetic. Senator - Cole Blease was named.
CAROLINA LOVER CAPITAL GIRL DIE TOGETHER
Week - End Petting Party Ends in Double Death.
HIS BODY NUDE
Corpses Not Claimed at Morgue.
What is believed to have been the tragic end of a week-end petting party was uncovered here Monday when George Hill, 705 Pennsylvania avenue, broke into the apartment of Albert Lynch, 24, and found him and a young woman lying dead on the floor.
The young woman, Miss Bessie Smith, of Washington, D.C. was said to have been invited by Lynch over Sunday.
Follows Carousel
Neither Lynch nor his companion are intimately known in the neighborhood and are American reporters were told, but Hill and neighbors declare that the pair had been together since Saturday and had been frequently in the night clubs of the district, where they met another and his anxiety was aroused when he knocked on the door of Lynch apartment without receiving any response.
Gruesome Find
What greeted his eyes was Lynch's body nude and cold on the floor. His body lay the lay in dishabille, there was a lot of solleness and the conditions and circumstances surrounding the tragedy led police to believe that the two had been the victims of poison liquor.
The bodies were taken to the city morgue, no relative or friend has died.
Lynch is said to have come here some time ago from North Carolina to work as a woman, who is about 23 years of age, is known only by sight in the neighborhood. There is a drinking party in the apartment was discovered.
Democrats Work Hard Down in Virginia
Orators Claim Republican Party Menaces White Supremacy
STAUNTON, Va.—Democratic orators are working hard in their efforts to carry the state and elect a Democratic governor in the November election.
Senator Samuel L. Ferguson of Appalachia, speaking here, said:
"If we put the control of the government of Virginia in the hands of the Republican party, white supremacy in the state will be threatened." Democrats were urged by the senator to get busy, to work, to sacrifice time and effort to carry the Obama campaign for the party. "There is a big job before us," he said.
Anti-Al Smith Democrats and Lily-White Republicans are lined up together behind the Republican nominee.
North Carolina Bank Official Is Jailed
North Carolina Bank Official Is Jailed
WILSON, N.G.—(A.N.P.)—Charged with attempted arson, H. S. Stanback, cashier of the Commercial Bank, which closed the day by fire. Bank Examiners, who failed and held in default of bond. The fire which Stanback was charged with starting, was in the vault of the bank which Stanback believed that Stanback was trying to destroy certain valuable papers and notes which are of much importance in the investigation. Whether or not these papers were destroyed by the fire was not disclosed.
Faulty Elevator
WASHINGTON, D. C. — Thirteen
passengers, delegates to the Federation
of Civic Associations, were
trapped in a elevator between the
two floors of the building in the
District Building for an hour, Saturday.
They were leaving the building after
the meeting of the board on
the fifth door. They escaped by
using a crowbar on the safety lock.
N. Y. WAITERS REFUSE TO SERVE BLACKSHEAR
Jim Crow Recel and Three Women Forced to Leave Restaurant
NEW YORK. (CNS)—Walters in a fashionable restaurant a mile away, the New York street near New York avenue, threatened to go on strike last week when the Rev. Wm. Blackshear, white, the Jim-crow rector, the Blackshear flared up and appeared in the restaurant with three women companions.
The waiter serving his section refused to serve him, whereupon Blackshear flared up and called also a Negro, upheld the waiter and refused to assign another waiter to serve him.
Blackshear then called upon the waiter to call to fire all the waiters, but in the end had to go to another restaurant.
$750 A WEEK HER PAY NOW
A young girl sits cross-legged on the floor, her hands resting on her cheeks and mouth open in a joyful expression. She is wearing a sleeveless top and shorts, and her hair is styled in a short, curly fashion. The background is plain and light-colored.
MISS ESTHER JONES
ten-year-old dancing star who rose from a street dancer four years ago in Chicago, to the top rung of a dance company on his a 759-a-week guarantee. When not enjoying a living by dancing, Ethel plays with dolls like any normal child.
MOB VICTIM STRUNG UP BY A ROPE
MIAML Fla. (ANP)—The sheriff's office announces that Lawrence Knowles, 45, is in a serious condition as the result of an attack by five masked men several night ago. The police report to a report made to the sheriff by the county physician. Knowles said his attackers accused him of hiding and feeding Robert Hand, a white man, sought by the police in a small girl. Knowles told the physician the masked men tied a rope about his neck and twice raised him from the 'ground while they beat him with a strap around his neck. He then tell where Hand was hiding.
Knowles said he was freed when he finally convinced the men that he knew nothing of Hand. who still is at large.
N.A.A.C.P. Secretary Off to Japan
James Weldon Johnson Has Year's Leave of Absence.
NEW YORK.-At the invitation of the Institute of Pacific Relations, James Weldon Johnson, secretary, of the National Association of Colored People, leaves New York City September 30, en route to Kyoto, Japan, to attend the third biennial conference of the Institute of Pacific Relations. October 28 to November 9, as a member of the American Group.
Mr. Johnson's leave of absence for a year, granted by the N.A.A.C.P. board to enable him to accept the Rosenwald Fellowship, begin duties as Far East Journey.
The conference draws many important representatives of China, Japan, the Philippines, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Greece, and the United States for the informal discussion of problems of the Pacific. There will be observers from Russia, France, Holland and the League of Nations. Among those who will attend from United States: Miss Ada L. Conklin, President F. Keeley, president Carnegie corporation: Jerome D. Greene, of Lee, Higginson & Co. Charles R. Brennett, manager National City banks, Peking, and John D. Higginson.
Whites Hypnotized
African Witch Doctors Have Real Power
NEW HAVEN, Conn.-G. Proctor Cooper, on a Yale University expedition., who has just returned from a year in Liberia. West Africa, reports there is more to the work of African medicine men than just pure superstition.
Bush doctors, he said, not only hypnotize their own subjects, but strange white men as well. They compete with elephants and other hostile animals when in reality none exist.
The Yale educator was astonished to find out that the medicine men know and use every plant in the forest, while some of their medicines only psychological tests others of them are very effective remedies.
Captain Campbell Johnson
Refuces St. Louis Post
WASHINGTON, D.C., (C.N.S.)-Campbell C. Johnson, executive secretary of the Twelfth street branch of the Y.M.C.A. denied him Saturday the St. Louis report, printing the AFR's letter to the president his post in Washington to accept a position in the Y.M.C.A. in St. Louis. Mr. Johnson stated that he had been offered the post but had never considered leaving his present position and had declined to accept it.
HEADS NEW YORK Y. M. C. A.
WHITE PLAINS. N. Y.—Samuel Mossell has been recently appointed secretary of the local branch of the Y. M. C. A.
James Weldon Johnson, secretary, of the National Association for the Advancement of Women leaves New York City September 30, en route to Kyoto, Japan, to attend the third biennial
H.U. FRESHMAN WALKS FROM NEW ORLEANS
Alexander Gordon Makes 1,118-Mile Trip in Nine Days.
In New Orleans he had heard much of Howard and had been impressed by the successful achievement. of Howard graduates. He determined that upon graduating from high school he became to Howard, even if he had to walk.
Weights 175 Pounds
He had played football in high school and avoided dissipation. This coupled with his youth and 175 pounds of bone and brawn, well fitted him for the ordeal.
Kills Pastor, then Surrenders to Cop
Church Member Tells How He Found Minister In His Home
MEMPHIS, Tenn.—George White, 38, of Bristol, shot and killed the Rev. Jenkins S. Madison, pastor of Union Baptist Church, whom he discovered in his home with his wife. Tuesday night, and then caused police headquarter to find the pastor's body. White, gave himself up.
Beside the murdered pastor lay a loaded pistol and a brief case containing his Bible, insurance papers and official communications.
LOVE SLAYER SUICIDE
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Randolph Jones, 26, sought as the slayer of Miss Magnolia Richardson, 35, his sweetheart, at 1216 E. 42nd St. place, so he believed to have himself in the Potomac river. Police recovered the body Saturday.
Bishop Ransom Visits
PHILADELPHIA—Bishop R. E. Ransom was in the city last week, and spoke at, an educational meeting at Wart's church Sunday.
Edition
This Paper Consists of
TWO SECTIONS—20 PAGES
COMING, "MAMBA'S DAUGHTERS"
"My Love Tangle," a True Story, Pg. 11.
Nine Days
Rested at Y.M.C.A.
SWEDES PADLOCK
JIM-CROW U. S.
RESTAURANT
Insult to U. S. A. Child Abroad, Year's Biggest Scandal.
MILK REFUSED
Swedish Reply Is Invites from Best Families
PARIS.—Little Esther, the ten-year-old dancing wonder, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Jones of Chicago, and her manager, Sidney Garner, passed through this city on her way to Nice and Monte Carlo to fill engagements there.
She is said to be the highest paid child artist in the world. Sheh as just left Berlin where she played at the Winter Garden at a salary of $5 a week, for week. Her story leads like a fairy tale. Four years ago she was playing in the streets of Chicago, dancing the Charleston just for fun. Her companions were poor like herself. Now she makes it like she was being made by some of the best designers. As to offers to appear both on the stage and in the moving pictures, she is getting more than she could fill in ten years from all over the country. At ten, Little Esther is wealthy.
Started at Five
She scored her first success when just a little over five. There was a prize. A white manager saw her and got her engagements in New York, Chicago, Toronto and "other cities, where she made an instant hit. Appearing at the Casino de Paris, the Moulin Rouge, the Empire, and the Palais des Festivals wild about her, while the Parisian press gave much space to her. Vu, leading illustrated weekly, devoted its first issue to her, carrying a two page story about her.
Before Kings and Queens
Since then she has danced and sang in many private homes all over Europe as well as for the King and Queen of Spain and the King and Queen of Sweden. You said to her: "Dressed in a costume with spangles, like some brilliant little butterfly, the light of the projectors is shining." She also noted that her flutive voice comes distinctly to each in the audience. She sings at first, her body softly swaying to the accompaniment of the popular American music. She is therefore a seductive mixture of seriousness and childish mischief.
Doesn't Need Legs
"Truly she is an amusing and delightful little mimic. Now she trembles as if caught by sudden fear, or else she pleases her suffering. She pleasures from the most friendly pain, then suddenly she is all laughter again. The song finished."
$250,000 Campaign Will Close in January.
SALISBURY, N.C.-President W. J. Trent of Livingstone college has just received official notice that the Julius Rosenwald Fund of Chicago has appropriated $30,000 toward the $50,000 projected campus fund that the college launched several years ago for buildings and general improvements. This campaign is to close the first of January, 1930.
There has been raised $205,005.74 of this amount, of which $50,574 was proposed to cash from the pockets of the colored people. Next week, a final extensive campaign throughout the church will be launched.
Pastor Who Can't Pray, Preach or Whistle, Sues for $10,000
Silly Suit by Silly Man, Mr. Bryant, Tells Afro.
NASHVILLE, Teen. (ANP)—Rep. Walter A. Lewis, presiding elder of the AME, church, filed suit for $10,000 against Ira T. Bryant, editor of the Allenite and secretary of the Sunday School Union, here Wednesday. The suit was libel. The presiding elder claimed that Mr. Bryant in the June issue of the Young Allenite characterized him as "one of those presiding elders who can't pray, sing, or whistle," and accused him of forging the names of church trustees to checks.
SILLY SUIT, BY SILLY MAN.
Mr. Bryant sent the following wire to the AFRO, Monday:
"I am sued for charging Lewis with appropriating to his own use money given to him which he Ransom compelled to pay back under penalty of leaving him without an appointment.
"He claims damages, too, because he presh. pray, sing, or whistle. A silly suit, by a silly man, that will amount to nothing."
IRA T. BRYANT
HOME TOWN TURNS OUT FOR STAR
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WARD BAKING CO.
OVER 2,000 STUDENTS ENTER HOWARD
1,200 Enroll in Freshman College Classes Alone, for Coming Semester.
170 PROFESSIONALS
Dr. Ainslie, Dr. DeBerry to be College Preachers.
WASHINGTON, D.C., (C N S ) — The vanguard of an army of more than 2,000 students spread over the campus on "University Hill". Monday morning as the registration for the sixty-third session of Howard university began. The closing of the three sorority houses in June, added to the congestion in the girls' dormitories and there was a touch of sadness as these smaller groups of girls disbanded to seek individual attention on campus. The focus for the professional schools closed Tuesday with 170 students enrolled in the freshman classes of the several schools. There are 30 students enrolled in the freshman class of the medical college, 25 entering the dental school. There are freshmen in the school of pharmas- tics, 35 in the freshman class of the law school.
1200 College Freshmen
The enrollment in the academic colleges will not be complete until the end of the week, but the largest freshman class in the history of the university is expected. It will probably exceed 1,200 in the combined freshman classes of the colleges of liberal arts, education, applied science and music. Classes begin Tuesday in the professional schools. The academic students begin work Thursday, October 3. The schedule of the Sunday religious service for the autumn quarter has been prepared. The services are held each Sunday morning in Andrew Rankin Memorial chapel. Dr. Mordecai Johnson, president of the university will be the speaker at the first service on Sunday, October 6.
Dr. Minslee, Dr. Baldwin, and Dr. Beesker are: October 13. Dr. Roland Bainton, of Yale university: October 20. Dr. Eugene Lyman professor of philosophy at Yale University, New York City: October 27. Dr. Conrad Henry Moehman of Rochester University: November 3. Dr. Gains Aikin of New York; November 17. the Rev. William Derry of St. John's Congregational Church. Springfield, Mass. November 24. Dr. Johnson, of New York. November 17. the Rev. William Derry of St. John's Congregational Church. Springfield, Mass. November 24. Dr. Johnson, of New York. November 17. the Rev. William Derry of St. John's Congregational Church. Baltimore, Music will be rendered on each occasion be the university chair, under the direction of his class. Children, dean of the college of music.
N.J. GIRL WEDS C.D. MAN WASHINGTON D.C.—Miss Mabe Ellis, 20. of Asbury Park, N.J. and James W. Beckett, 35. 2619 O street N.W. by the Rev. Robert E. Ford.
D. C. Society
MISS SUSIE DYSON has returned to her home at Bushwood, Md., after spending some time here visiting friends.
MISS JANIE BOWIE, who has been visiting relatives and friends here, has returned to her home.
ALEXANDER BOWIE is quite slick.
MRS. MATHIA CARTER of Boyd, Md., was the week-end guest of her son, M. Boyd here, last week.
MR. AND MRS. EVERETT WAULS and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Ellis were house guests of Mrs. Ellis. Mrs. Ellis was in town, Md. over the weekend. The party was also entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Miller while there.
Aida Ward Crowds Church Twice on Sunday
Admirers Spill Over into Streets to Welcome Stage Star from Paris, and Hear Her Sing Spirituals. Ma Ward in New Home; 11-Year-Old Son in Bruce School.
WASHINGTON, D. C. (CNS)—Miss Alda Ward, the petite little lady who graces Lew Leslie's "Blackbirds" and charms audiences with her original rendition of that hit of a quarter of a century, "I Can't Give You Anything but Love," came to Washington after fourteen weeks with the show in Paris where she completely captivated the town.
She spent two delightful weeks with her mother, Mrs. Susie Wallace, who has just moved into her love new home. 1204 Jeremiah Street, and her son, Jeremiah, sparkling eyed, mainly favorite at Bruce School.
and Johnstone" have become the most talked of stars of London, came over for this affair.
Studio Parites
There were numbers of studio parties, a show with the mother, to whom she is devoted and who spent several weeks with her, were the guests of honor, and no end of wonderful buffet suppers, all beautiful affairs.
She found time to wander through the shops and扑出 some unique and lovely gift for each of her childhood friends.
During her stay in Washington, Mr. and Mrs. John Carpenter's car was placed at her disposal.
Saturday to New York
Saturday night, eight to New York.
There were dinners, luncheons, bridge parties and receptions following one another in a mad round of gayety, as her many friends entertained in her honor. She was one of the most highly entertained of the visitors who have graced the capital city in many moons.
The largest crowd in the history of the edifice packed itself into the church and overflowed onto the sidewalks. In the audience were members of both races. She was given on ovation.
SUNDAY MORNING
Miss Ward appeared at the morning service as guest soloist and sang one of the rarer spirituals, so prayerfully and with such depth of feeling that tears streamed from the faces of the audience. The entire audience was wisely affected.
STREETS ARE FILLED.
Enthusiasm ran high after this appearance and the little artist arrived for her concert at the vesper service of the Baptist Young People's Union and find the street adrenaline church where she admired friends that it was only with difficulty that she herself was able to reach the platform.
Her program of selected classics was beautifully rendered.
After the service many of her friends, an older teacher, Ms Belle Kenner, paid tributes to the girl who through all of her successes had retained her love for her friends and the church. There was many a sob and a catch in the voice as the friends told her great story of their admiration for Aida Ward.
THREE MUSIC TEACHERS
Three of her former music teachers were in the audience. Mr. Wellington Adams, of Baltimore having made a special trip to be present, and hear his talented pupil sing. Later Miss Ward, modestly reduced to a childlike talk, interestingly and in a charming manner of Paris, and of old acquaintances renewed over there, and of many new friends.
She told the delightful hospitality of the French people and of their appreciation of her work, and her black eyes snapped and sparked with the telling. There was one outstanding event given in the honour of Georges Henri R寓, Sou directeur d'athropologie, and his friend, Monstre Henri Mounett. The party was given in magnificent Paris, Turner Layton and Tandy Johnstone, who as 'Layton
and Johnstons' have become the most
loved stars of London, came over for
kids.
Studio Parties
There were numbers of studio parties, at which she and her mother, to whom she is devoted and the spent time she is no end of wonderful honor, and no end of wonderful buffet suppers, all beautiful affairs.
Yet, sometimes time to wander through the studio and pick out some unique and lovely gift. for each of her childhood friends.
During her stay in Washington, Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter's car was placed at her disposal.
Saturday to New York
She left Saturday night for New York, where she will rejoin the first company of "blackbirds" which goes into rehearsal for several weeks, before opening up the half season. There they go after the fall season, but the snow is booked for Chicago in December.
Bridge Party
Among the many parties given in her honor was a bridge party given Saturday night by Mr. and Mrs. James Herbert, Mrs. Reine Taucher of Chicago, was the other guest. The guests were Mrs. Helen Washington, Mrs. Katherine Edwards, Mrs. Viola Jackson, Mrs. Lillian Curry, Mrs. Edith Taylor, Mrs. Annie Jasper, Mrs. Bita Mason, Mrs. Annie Akerson, Mrs. Lucie Herbert and Mrs. Malachi. The lucky guests were Mrs. Edwards, Mrs. Curry, and Mrs. Washington. Miss Ward and Mrs. Tancil, the guest of honor, were awarded lovely prizes. Card Party
Mr. and Mrs. William Edwards of Grace, and Mrs. David and prized in her honor Tuesday evening. The prizes were won by Mrs. Violet Jackson, Mrs. Lillian Curry and Mrs. Lawrence B. Curry.
Dinner Party
Miss Ward was the guest of honor at a dinner party given Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. Roy Nelson at their home in Howard which was followed by a small reception. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Julian Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hagler, Mrs. Mayne Carter, Mr. Charles Newman, Mrs. Marian Jones, Miss Suttle C. Gaskins, and Dr.
Sunday Party
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hagler of 1935
Second street gave a dinner party Sunday,
September 22, in honor of Miss Aida Ward.
This was followed by a reception at
which many of Miss Ward's old friends
were able to greet her for the first time.
Earls Hosts
A host of admiring friends were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin H. Early last Friday evening at a reception given at the library at their home, 118 H. street northwest.
Autumn leaves and dahilas formed a
colorful background for the beautiful
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
MISS AIDA WARD
MISS AIDA WARD
Dr. Brown Buried
Funeral services for the Rev. Sterling Nelson Brown were held from the Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel of Howard University last Friday afternoon. Rev. R. W. Brooks, pastor of Lincoln Temple Congregational Church, of which Dr. Brown was a former pastor, officiated. Dr. Dmecal W. Johnson, president of Howard University, of the school of religion, assisted Mr. Brooks. Burial was in Woodland cemetery. Dr. Brown died in Freedman's Hospital on September 24. He had been ill since January.
MRS. ROBERT GRAYSON McGURE is ill at her home, 180th Street, northwest. MRS. TERESA JOYCE SCOTT is recuperating at her home from a minor operation.
DR. FRANK MARTIN, a physician of Asheville, N.C., accompanied his wife, Mrs. Martin, and their recently, Mrs. Martin is a teacher in the public schools of the District of Columbia.
Stag for Elk Leaders
3. Finley Wilson, grand exalted ruler, and Perry W. Howard, grand legal advocate, Order of Elks of the World, were the guests of honor at a stag given by the house committee and the convention delegation of Columbia Lodge at Harrison's Cafe last Saturday evening.
A BABY GIRL was born to Mr. and Mrs. BABY GIRL was born to Mr. and Mrs. GARFIELD hospital Mrs. Gambrell in the former Miss Marinna Grass, of Westminster, Md.
ROSE STREETS, of Atlantic City, visited friends here last week.
MRB, PANNIE DOW JOHNSON, of Harpers Ferry, W.Va. was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Margaret D. Cutter, for several times, while taking treatments from a local phlebotanist.
MRS. REBECCA HEARD, of Anacostia, motored through Philadelphia, last week. JOHN KEMPER of Brandy, Va., is visiting in this city. M. BRACKETT of Culpeper, Va., will spend several months here. M. MARSHALL of Culpeper, Va., who has been visiting his wife and son there, returned here Thursday. MRS. F. M. HEARTS spent a few days with Mrs. Edmond Williams at Culpeper, Va.
M. BERRY visited his daughter. Miss R. Werry of Fredricksbury, Va. .over
M. BERRY visited his daughter. Miss R. Werry of Fredricksbury, Va. .over
MR. AND MRS. P. D. BOWES of Pred-
fice, and visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dixon.
MISS THELMA ROBINSON of Elkton,
M. spent the week-end in Washington,
D. PUPUS JOHNSON aunt the woe-and
with his mother, Mrs. M. T. Taylor, of Bran-
ford
D.C.Society
By SARA PELHAM SPEAKS
2081 Eleventh St. Call North 8734
(C.N.S.)
Sandridge Concert
The recital of Justin Sandridge of Boston, whose mastery of technique and interpretation of the famed compositions places it among the fewest known of day, looms as one of the gala events of the early autumn season. He appears Thursday evening at the famed brilliant male in Polls De W. R. by Rachmaninov in D Flat by Llisti; compositions by Shumman, Debusy and Charlton; a Chopin group; two delightful French songs; a group of Coleridge, Oates, W. P. Lawrence and W. P. Lawrence is managing the Washington appearance of Mr. Sandridge.
DePriest Out West.
Congressman Oscar DePriest of the First District of Illinois while in the far west, visited Boulder Dam to acquaint himself with actual conditions surrounding the recent emergency project.
Secretary Lewis Back.
Mr. Morris Lewis, secretary to Congressman Oscar DePriest, who has been spending three weeks with his family at their home in Chicago, motored back to Washing-
Before returning to the Capital City, Mr. Lewis motored to Urbana, Ill., where Morris, Jr., is back at the University of Illinois for his second term. He met his two daughters, Mrs. Carol Lewis-Jones, and her son, Willis, and Miss Dorothy Lewis, who entered Howard School of Education, this week. She brought along her favorite pet cat, well known in Chicago as the En route to Washington, the party visited for several days in Philadelphia.
Mrs. Jones and Willis will spend two weeks with her father. Her Washington experience already busy planning for her entertainment.
Mrs. Terrrell will be the guest of her son,
Sarah Terrrell, during her stay in the Windy City.
History Parties.
Enhance plans are being made for the
study of Negro History, which meets here
Study of Negro History, which meets here
The College Women's Club will be the first to welcome the guests and will receive at tea in their honor on the afternoon of October 28th, and the national men will entertain them on October 28th, with a "Get Acquainted" dinner, plans for which have not been finally worked out. On the evening of October 28th, the Muso-Lil Club will entertain the visitors after the literary exercises early in the evening. After the evening session of the 30th, the women of the local branch of the association will be their hostesses. The exact nature of this function is not known, but it will probably be a delightful invitation.
Hunster Paintings.
An event of unusual interest was the exhibit of the paintings and works of art of the late Thomas W. Hunter at his late residence Ardmore, which he designed, friends and former students on alternate days since last Saturday, and may be seen for the last time this Saturday. The oil paintings and water color paintings of him, his friends and former students and resulted in his being known to Washingtonians as "The Father of Art," among his group. Mr. Hunter was a teacher of art in the public schools for thirty years. During most of this time he served as Director of the Art Department 10-13. He retired about five years ago and died at Ardmore, last summer.
Mrs. Wormley Buried
Mrs. Anna Cole Wormley, daughter of the late James E. and Anna Wormley, of Washington, died last Sunday at the home after a brief illness. C. Summer Wormley, after a brief illness. Mrs. Cole, who at the time of her death was in her seventies, had been an active member of St. Luke's Episcopal Church for 40 years. She was a member of her lims to church work and charity.
Welfare Tea
The Washington Welfare Association gave a tea Sunday afternoon at the proposed location of the Southeast Center for Preservation at which sime plans for an intensive campaign for funds to equip the center were concluded.
The drive which began formally on October first, and formally on an October 1st, the standing people of the community.
The project was conceived and sponsored by Miss Sara Burkin, of Friendship House, southeast, and Dr. Dorothy Boulding, who as a practicing physician in that community, known the the mother of children of our group.
The project has enlisted the interests of trained workers of the Community Ghost, who are advising on matters relative to the budget and the operation of the Center. The center will then soon qualify and become eligible for help from the Ghost.
Until that time the colored citizens of Washington will be asked to contribute objectively to the training of a few of the disadvantaged Negro children may begin under improved environment.
Insurance Luncheon.
The Insurance Managers' Association has resumed its weekly luncheon meetings after the guest speaker is the first lunch of the season Tuesday held noon at the Whitelaw Hotel, was Charles A. Boaji McLachy a native of Nigeria, West Africa. He is the President, Baskin Presidency of the association. Mr. Charles Pearing is vice-president and Mr. William Stevenson, secretary-treasurer.
The Mahal Jones Studio of Chance Dancing opened Saturday in its attractive quarters at 1214 Fairmont street, northwest, for its fourth season.
Under the instruction of Miss Jones, graduate Vestoff-Servoer dancer, classes will be conducted at the Technique, Oriental, Spasmatic, Interpretative and Plastic Dances, Dance Drama, Music Visualization and the individual creation of dances.
Odd Card Club.
The Odd Card Whist Club opened its season Tuesday September 19, at the residence of Mr. Edward Arthur, of 608 U.S. northwest.
The four teams started their struggles for the club trophies which are unusually interesting this year. The winners for the conference were Waughn: Robert Jones and Merter Conway, captured second place; third place by Boyd Clarke and Edward Artheur, and fourth place by Robert Sims and Lawrence Moten. Goose Brown is the timekeeper.
THE REV. A. A. TALLIAERO was the principal speaker at a Men's Day service at Asbury Church at Boyd, Md., last Sunday.
COLDS
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One of the first cards clubs to get startled on its fall season was the Covered Wagon Whist Club which met for the first time Tuesday night at 2317 Ontario road. The club reorganized electing Miss Ann Woodland, president; Miss Josephine Bass, recording secretary; Miss Katherine Locke, corresponding secretary; Miss Ruth Daugherty, financial secretary; Miss Christobel Paxton, treasurer; Miss Norma Clifford Watson, business manager; Miss Grete Grace, manager; and Miss Katherine Sylas, conductress.
Mary E. E. Anderson will become an honorary member of the club in 2015. Ms. Kissel Martin and Miss Georgia Harper who will not return to the city this year.
The club plans an elaborate season of activity.
The business was transacted the client delivered a delightful supper served by the business.
Dracene Plans
The Dracene Social Club is another of well-known groups which has already completed its plans for the winter, and started the spring season. The club met for the first time at the residence of Mr. Homer Swann, 2117 Georgia avenue. At this time the club has two annual deals. It will be given on November 15, and will celebrate the birthday of the club. The present included, William C. Traynan, president; Oscar Patterson, vice-president; Charles H. Wells, treasurer; Frank A. Coutzens, business manager; Elmer A. Swann, Homer Swann, William A. Swann, Anthony Perry and Albert Jones.
Symposium Meet.
The Symposium Whist Club met Wednesda
day at the guests of Al Wharton.
day as the guests of All Saints present were: Dr. Fredrick Smith, president: William S. Edwards, Jr., secretary: Robert Pinkney, treasurer: Albert Hunter, business manager: Stephen Fredrickts, official scorer: Fred Al, sergeant-at-atarms: Fred Gregg, Fred Al, Gregg Al, Al Wharton, Raymond Jackson, Edward Williams and Clifton Lomax.
Federal Employees.
The Federal employees of Union No. 71 will meet Friday October 4, at their hall on Fourteenth street, at the National Convention at Sainte Sauve Marie, Michigan, this summer, will be heard.
The union is enlisting in the light for a position throughout the entire year, a minimum salary of $1,500 for all federal employees and efficiency rating and promotion for all employees doing a high grade of work.
WILLIAM JACKSON spent three days with his sister-in-law, Mrs. Jane Jackson at Catonville, Md., last week.
MISS CARRERA returned home after attending Philadelphia. HENRY SINCLAIR of Purcellville, Va., is visiting here for a few days.
MISS M. WELCH is the guest of Miss Pocahontas Jackson of Winchester, Va., for the week-end.
TROMAS HOFFLER and Miss Bernice Blas, both of Elizabeth City, N.C., returned to Iowa for their studies at University. Miss Blas finished the normal course at her home class, 1928, of which she was valedictorian.
MRS. ELLOUSE DUOULEM, school teacher, returned to resume her duties.
MR. AND MRS. RANDOLPH PROCTOR have returned to their home in Boston, after two weeks of service spent with Mr.
MISSES VIVIAN FLAGG and Florence Bennette of Lynchburg, returned here Sunday, to resume their studies at Howard University.
MRS. VIVIAN BROWN spent Sunday visiting her parents, Mrs. and Mrs. Alfred Ward of Lynchburg, Va.
MRS. LOUISE TAYLOR has returned to her home in Lynchburg, Va., after spending time here.
MISS LILLIAN SMITH has returned to her home after visiting friends in Washington, Pa. Miss Smith, who graduated from Howard in June has accepted a position as teacher of history and French in Manhattan.
FRANCIS PRICE was the guest of his parents in Williamston, N.C., this week.
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
Williston, Marshall, Hewlett Wills Filed in Capital
Widows of Physicians Inherit Husbands' Estates. Hewlett Remembered "Dear Friend" With Monthly Annuity.
WASHINGTON, D.C.-The wills of Dr. Edward D. Williston and of Dr. Charles Herbert Marshall were admitted to probate last week by Justice Wendell F. Stafford, while the will of Judge Emmanuel M. Hewlett was filed by August W. Gray, attor-
Letters testamentary on the estates of their husbands were granted to the widows, Mrs. Emima L. Willston, 1512 S street northwest, and Mrs. Paulette L. Marshall, 2710 P street northwest. Special bond in the administration was fixed at $1,000. Houston and Houston are attorneys for both execu
Marshall died September 3d. His heirs are his widow, a son, Dr. G. Herbert Marshall, Jr., and a daughter, Miss Julia A. Marshall. His estate consists mainly of real estate. The only debts listed are his funeral expenses of $600. His will was dated May 13, 1924.
Life Interest to Mrs. Marshall
His property is given to his widow as long as she remains unmarried. In the event of her remarriage, she is given a life interest in the family home at 2710 F street northwest, and upon her death this property is to go to his daughter. If Mrs. Marshall remarries, No. 1513 Twenty-seventh street northwest is given to his son and all the remainder of his estate is given to his daughter.
is given to Dr. Marshall, Jr.
Dr. Marshall bequeathed the sum of $500 to his sister, Mrs. Ida V. Thompson, of Amissville, Va.; the sum of $100 to his sister, Mrs. Rebecca Waller of Catlett, Va., and his office furniture, fixtures, medical books, treatises, pamphlets and other articles used by him in connection with his practice of medicine to his son.
$1000 to Virginia Union
He also gave a trust fund of $1,000 to Virginia Union University, Richmond, Va., for the creation of a fund to educate deserving young men the Baptist faith for the ministry. He directs that $60 a year from the interest on his bequest shall be paid to the student making the highest general average in the subjects of Old Testament History, New Testament History, Biblical Exegesis and Systematic Theology.
Dr. Willston died July 21. His survivors and heirs are his widow, a son, Sidney Willston, Pittsburgh, Pa., two daughters, Mrs. Grace Willston Parrott, Baltimore, Md., and Edna H. Willston, a minor, 1512 S street northwest.
**Estate to Mrs. W.**
He left several pieces of real estate and personal property valued at $4, 260.16. The debt listed was his funeral expenses of $556. Mrs. Willett is named executrix of his estate and has been appointed guardian of her minor daughter. His will was dated June 15, 1915. Dr. Willett left his entire estate to his widow. Annuity to Howeley Friend
Mr. Hewlett died September 19. He left certain estate in trust to Charles. Barker to pay a life annuity of $60 a month to Sallie A. Williams described as "my dear
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friend." On her dea. the real state is to be converged to his niece Marian Barker #5 this city and Ea Barlow of Oakland, Kent, England. Other real estate is given to his sister, Mrs. Aaronella M. Scott, and cash bequests of $100 each are made to Saille A. Williams, Paul D. Scott and Huddle Oliver. His Liberty bonds are given to Marian Barker.
On the death of Saille A. Williams the premises at 1526 Church street are to be sold and $300 paid to Batrice Malvin, also described as "my dear friend" and one-half of the remaining proceeds given Marian Barker and Ea Barlow. The other half is to be distributed among his sister-in-law, Mary V. Lightfoot, and the children of a brother-in-law, Edward Amber.
Library to School
His library is left to the National Training School for Women and Girls, at Lincoln Heights, D.C., as a memorial to Elizabeth P. Hewlett, his deceased wife. The remaining estate to go to the University of Texas B.A. program to be distributed among themselves and the children of Edward Ambler.
Women Start $15,000 Headquarters Drive
WASHINGTON, D. C. (CNS)—Han an effort to raise $15,000 to clear the mortgage on the national headquarters of the National Association of Colored Women, located at 1114 O street, northwest, M. r. s. Rebecca Stiles Taylor, chairman of the headquarter'sikes, is a tour of the coun-Mrs R. S. Taylor during the next few months. She leaves Wednesday for New York, and New England, where she will spend the months of October toovember. The Southern states during the months of January, February, and March, and making her appeal in the Middle West during the spring. Women are anxious to burn the mortgage on the builder at the next biennial meeting of the association in Hot Springs, Arkansas, in July.
The building was purchased in 1928 at a cost of $25,000. An initial payment of $13,000 was made at that time. The women plan to expand from this building which they consider as the first unit of a national woman's college. They plan to build a hotel and cafeteria and a social service school.
HURT BY ARLINGTON CAR
ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA. (G.N.8)—Samuel Thomas, 37 years old, of East Arlington, Virginia, was struck and probably fatally injured by a trolley car of the Arlington and Fairfax Railway Company while trail walking between Mount Vernon Junction and Reale Station.
and
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The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
gan to show a cool and indifferent attitude toward her. Shortly before then, she was advised by him, she declares, that he was going to occupy a separate bedroom, which he proceeded to do, removing his clothing and personal effects into the bedroom which he chose to occupy. Later he forbade her coming into his bedroom, she states, and from that time on they have never lived together as man and wife.
Course of Cruelty
Shortly afterwards, he began to practice a systematic course of mental cruelty, which has gradually grown worse, she alleges. He became cool and indifferent and treated her with disdain and contempt, she says. In the year 1925 he stopped speaking to her, she states, and he has totally ignored and refused to speak to her ever since.
On one occasion when she remonstrated with him and asked for an explanation of his conduct toward her, she says, the only answer she could get from him was "she was not a good student" and that she didn't suit him and that the real trouble was incompatibility" Mrs. Taylor also charges that Dr. Taylor failed to properly and adequately support her and that in September, 1924, she was compelled to go back to her employment as a substitute school teacher in order to earn sufficient money to properly maintain and support herself. Since her recent employment, she was given to give her any money at all for clothing or wearing apparel or the ordinary necessities of life.
After she went back to work, she states, Dr. Taylor employed a maid to perform household duties. He compelled the maid, she says, to purchase two different kinds of food for his table, himself eating the finest and best obtainable food and compelling the maid to serve her ordinary, coarse food. On one occasion when she objected to treatment, she created a quarrel ensuing when she pushed her down the steps.
In the spring of this year, without her knowledge or consent, she declares, Dr. Taylor turned their home at 1623 S street northwest, into an apartment and rooming house. She is still occupying her room, she says, while Dr. Taylor continues to occupy the whole downstairs, including the basement, where his offices are located.
Stopped Buying House
He stopped making payments on the home which he was purchasing, she states, telling her that he did not intend to buy the house in order to deprive her of her dower rights and interest. Dr. Taylor has an income from his practice as a physician and surgeon.
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ANNOUN
because of our lionage, we are catering to land of our dining glad to serve than twenty-fifth be made very private dining rooms, with general public.
Mr. Harold Curtis Brown has just completed his mourn's Cafe. The elite client taurant is profuse in its with the decorations, as well of food, polite service, clear ment, privacy, and moderation.
Lunches—Dinners—Supplies
Cigars
HARRISON'S SPECIAL
"The Cream
NOUNCEMENT
because of our large and ever-tronage, we are compelled to catering to large banquets than of our dining room space, be glad to serve small banquets than twenty-four (24) persons be made very comfortable in dining rooms, without inconvenience.
Old Curtis Brown, the celebrant, completed his modernistic treaty. The elite clientele of this fair profuse in its expressions of decorations, as well as with our excellent service, cleanliness, cheerfulness, and moderate prices.
-Dinners—Suppers—Sandwichs
Cigars Fountain Drinks
HARRISON'S SPECIAL ICE CREAM
"The Cream of Creams"
Address: Mme. T. G. Bramlette
1532 Seventh St., N. W. Washington, D. C.
ANNOUNCEMENT
because of our large and ever-increasing patronage, we are compelled to discontinue catering to large banquets that take up all of our dining room space, but we will be glad to serve small banquets to not more than twenty-four (24) persons, who can be made very comfortable in one of our private dining rooms, without inconvenience to the general public.
Mr. Harold Curtis Brown, the celebrated race artist has just completed his modernistic treatment of Harrison's Cafe. The elite clientele of this fashionable restaurant is profuse in its expressions of satisfaction with the decorations, as well as with our excellent quality of food, polite service, cleanliness, cheerfulness, refinement, privacy, and moderate prices.
Lunches-Dinners-Suppers-Sandwiches-Salads
Cigars Fountain Drinks
HARRISON'S SPECIAL ICE CREAM
"The Cream of Creams".
Harrison's CAFE
455 FLORIDA AVE., N.W.
OPEN 'TIL 3 A
PEN 'TIL 3 A.
OPEN 'TIL 3 A.M.
CO - RESPONDENT NOT NAMED IN TAYLOR CASE
Howard Instructor Is
Sued by Wife for
Cruelty.
DIVORCE ASKED
Medical Practice Worth
$10,000, She Says.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—
Disdain and contempt with
mental cruelty added, Have
marked her husband's treat-
ment of her for a period of
seven years, Mrs. Elfrida
Kennedy Taylor declares in
her petition for a limited divorce and alimony.
Dr. James Eli H. Taylor, the husband, is a physician and a clinical instructor in surgery in the Howard University medical school. He is a professor in the public schools at a salary of $1,400 per year. No co-respondent has been named.
Sought Reform
Mrs. Taylor filed her bill of complaint in the District Supreme court on Wednesday of last week through Lawyer, Yeatman and Canfield, attorneys. She endured and tolerated his treatment of her, she says, in the hope that "he would find himself and reform his habits." His "crue and unbearable torture and treatment of her," she asserts, has been without cause or provocation on her part.
She has been a faithful and loving wife and has done everything in her power to make him happy, she says, but in spite of all this he has continued to ignore, mistreat and abuse her so that she is compelled to seek the aid of the court for re-
Happy Eleven Months
At first their marriage was very happy. Mrs. Taylor says, her husband lavishing his affections and attentions upon her. In November, 1922, eleven months after their marriage, in Alexandria, Va., she states, he be-
B
Course of Cruelty
Two Kinds of Food
A.
DR. TAYLOR TALKS
Dr. Taylor when seen at his office at 1623 S street, a representative of the AFRO-AMERICAN, Monday evening, refused to discuss the matter of his wife's suit for divorce. "I is against my principles to discuss the family affairs in public or in private," he said. As I cannot discuss the case without doing this, I must search for what we nothing to say for publication. "I will say, however, that like all similar cases there are two sides to it," he continued. "Courts are established for the adjudication of all such matters and the side as there is another side—will appear due to regret exceedingly that such matters cannot be settled without so much publicity," he concluded. Dr. Taylor is one of the most successful physicians and surgeons in the city. He has been practicing here for twenty years and has visited the visiting surgical staff of Fpeedman's hospital for years.
Dr. Taylor graduated in medicine from the Howard Medical school in 1809. That same year he took both the District of Columbia medical board and the examination of the state medical board of Virginia. He considered considerable comment at that time, passing third highest out of a corps of more than a hundred applicants, being led by a graduate of Virginia university and a Johns Hopkins graduate, in first and second places. He is a native of Virginia.
according to what he told her, Mrs. Taylor says, of $30 a day at least. He also has an income from teaching, medicine and other sources, but she says she cannot give any accurate idea of the amount. Mrs. Taylor asks the court to make him make known his entire income from all sources.
Has Great Wealth
Dr. Taylor possesses great wealth, his wife says, in the form of stocks, bonds, mortgages and diamonds, which are kept in a safe deposit vault, the exact location of which is unknown to her. He also owns, she says, valuable real estate in Carolina County, Virginia, and a Stearns-Knight automobile.
CHAMPAGNE FOUND
PORTER HELD
BOSTON, Mass.—Henry Crawford of 154 Worcester street, a pullman porter on a Montreal Express, was arrested Thursday, charged with importing liquor into this country. It is alleged that in the sleeping car, which arrived in North Station Thursday morning, 20 quarts and 24 pints of imported champagne were found.
D.C. Births, Deaths, and Marriages on Page 18
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The Board of Directors declared a regular quarterly dividend of one and three-quarters per cent (13%) on the Cumulative 7% Preferred Stock of this Company, and a regular quarterly dividend of one and one-half per cent (11%) on the Cumulative 6% Preferred Stock of this Company, for the current quarter, payable Oct. 15th, 1929, to holders of record at the close of business Sept. 25th, 1929.
Checks to be mailed. Transfer books will not close.
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Takes Third Wife
DR. W. G. ALEXANDER
ORANGE, N. J. —Friends are con-
gregating Dr. Walter G. Alexander,
physician, and graduate man-
ager of athletics of Lincoln university,
who was married in New York
university, Lillian Johnson, of
409 Edgecombe Hall, Johnson,
the couple is now at home to
friends at 48 Webster place, Orange.
This is Dr. Alexander's third
marriage. Some time ago he divorced
his first wife on the charge of des-
ertion. The second Mrs. Alexander
died some months since.
Socks, Shoes, Kills Two Timing Hubby
NEW YORK—Not content, with giving her husband Lee a sock on the jaw when she found him in the company of another woman, Mrs. Ethel Martin, 25, 712 DeKalb avenue, Brooklyn, chased him to the roof of 1790 Dean street, Brooklyn, and showed him off. The man fell four stories, and was killed. Mrs. Martin was arrested on a charge of homicide, and Mrs. Nellie Smith, 28, 1913 Pacific street. Brooklyn, alleged to be the "other woman," was held as a witness.
NEW YORK-The Second Ward Regular Republican Organization of Chicago, which last year elected Oscar DePriest to Congress, sent a contribution of $25 to the Delany-for-Congress campaign committee, in New York.
Members of the committee declare that they have received encouragement and contributions from all over the country, and that that people in the United States are eagerly watching and hoping that Hubert E. Delany, the regular Republican candidate, will be successful in his run for Congress from the 21st district on November 5th.
CHICAGO, C. N. S.—Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, widow of the late Judge Robert Terrell of the municipal court of the District of Columbia, is here assisting in the campaign of Mrs. Ruth Hannah, recently announced her candidacy for United States Senator from Illinois.
Mrs. Terrell came here from her home in Washington early in the morning, meeting the McCormick campaign among the women of the South Side.
UNDERTAKER FREED
CHICAGO, Ill.—(A. N. P.)—After one of the hardest fought legal battles in the Cook county courts, Bindley C. Cyrus, undertaker and former secretary of the Chicago Undertakers' Association, was acquitted by a jury in Judge McGoorty's court, on a charge of embezzling $1000 brought by the officers of the Chicago Undertakers' Association.
Klan Puts Up $100,000
DETROIT. Mich—Members of the Ku Klux Klan are alleged to have put up $10,000 to elect Charles Bowles mayor. here
The Heffin of Alabama, addressed a political meeting in the interest of Bowles for mayor.
Pythian Head Stricken
JACKSONVILLE. Fla.-W. W. Andrews, grand chancellor of the Knights of Pythias, suffered a stroke of paralysis while taking a bath at Hot Springs. Ark., last week.
Pastor Weds in Atlanta PHILADELPHIA—The Rev. and Mrs. W. P. Stevenson of Pittsfield, Mass., passed through the Ga. route onto Gauley City, where he married last week. Mrs. Stevenson is the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Hadley of Atlanta.
He's 40 Friday
[Name]
Clyde G. McDuffie, head of the department of languages in the public schools, of Wahington, D.C., who will be forty years old Friday, October 5. He graduated from M street high school in 1909 and from Williams college with Phi Beta Kappa Key, in 1912.
confessed slayer of Policeman Gallagher, of Chicago, whose aspiration to the leadership of the Moorish Holy Temple of Science, caused the fatal shooting of the officer. He is shown at the detective bureau where he is held for murder, illustrating the "Holy Sign" of the order.
Citizens Mobilize to Aid Unemployment
Negroes Spend $65,000,000 a Year in Capital
WASHINGTON, D.G., (C.N.S.)—Claiming that the cost of living causes colored people here to spend at least $65,000,000 a year, citizens are urging a greater consideration for colored men and women as employees of the businesses which they patronize, as a means of overcoming the unemployment situation, believed to be, becoming increasingly grave.
A group of representative citizens meeting at the call of the Twelfth Street branch of the Y.M.C.A. considered these problems, and laid plans for a thorough survey of the city.
The Federation of Civic Associations, at its meeting Friday night, endorsed the plans of the Y.M.C.A. group and appointed a committee to cooperate in their efforts toward the development of increased employment facilities for employment of the Negro.
Plans are being made here for a trade exhibit, and charts showing the consumption of goods and the lines supplied by Negroes are being prepared.
The formation of a board of trade being contemplated.
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MD., VA., COURTS SOAK NUMBERS PLAYERS
Prince Georges County Man Must Pay $500 Fine for Dabbling in Racket.
14 OTHERS ASSESSED
$25 and: $50 Fines in Norfolk,
Virginia. Cases.
The authorities in nearby Maryland and Virginia counties are having success in handling persons arrested for participation in the "numbers" racket. In a courtroom, a number of a numbers game caught in a raid on a "clearing house" in Prince Georges county, at Suitland, Maryland, September 17, pleaded guilty to setting up and maintaining a gaming table before Judge H. Chew, Sheriff, in Prince Georges county police court last Friday and was fined $500.
The fifteen other persons arrested at the same time and charged with "playing a game with a fraudulent device or trick, to trick, by the use of numbers" were released on payment of court costs of $3.50 in each case. Heavy Fines Promised Judge Sheriff gave notice that he intended to impose heavy sentences in future in all cases brought before his court. Those who paid court charges are John Foster, Kermit Gilbert, Maurice Clayton, Harry Goldberg, Alfred Scott, Bryant Clark, Edward Jackson, Charles Jackson, John Smith, Mary Coleman, Dorothy Hill, Alice Montgomery, Margaret Perry, and Parthela Adams.
In Alexandria
The effort to break up the game in Virginia has reached the point where the players are falling under the ban. Robert Timblet, 26 years old, of 304 north Henry street, Alexandria, was fines $5 and costs by Judge Snow in the Alexandria police court last week, for having a five cent "numbers" ticket in his possession. At the same time, Minnie School, 55 years old, of 82 P street northwest, Washington, forfeited $5 collateral in the Alexandria court on a charge of running a "numbers game".
In Norfolk
In Norfolk, Virginia, last week. Leon Russell of 639 east Brambleton avenue, was fined $25 and given five days in jail: Robert Johnson of 1223 Chicazola street, was fined $50 and five days in jail: Washington Word of 688 Lexington street. $50 and one day in jail: Emory Anderson, of 824 Bank street. $25 and five days in jail; and Howard Ryland, of 724 Puget Sound all chained with writing "numbers." Anderson, Johnson and Russell all noted appeals to the Corporation court.
25
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428th Infantry Captains
'Made Majors
Six World War Lieutenants are Also Promoted
WASHINGTON, D.C., (C.N.S.)—
Officers of the 428th Infantry, Reserve Corps of the United States Army, a Negro regiment, received well deserved promotions last week.
Captain Campbell C. Johnson, executive secretary of the Twelfth Street Branch of the Young Men's Christian Association and Captain Howard Donovan Queen were advanced to the rank of major. They will continue to command the 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 428th Infantry, as heretofore.
First Lieutenants, Walter H. Mazyck, Thornton H. Gray and Joseph H. Cooper and G. A. Ferguson were advanced to the rank of captain. All of these men are World War service men with fine records.
In addition, several of the junior officers were promoted, including 2nd Lieutenant L. H. Russell and P. L. Slade, who became first lieutenants, and Maurice Johnson, J. H. Robinson, Hyman Chase, and E. R. Welch, graduated from the Coast Guard Officers' Training Corps at Howard, who were advanced.
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NEW CHICAGO CULT
DOESN'T MIND DYING
Recent Riot Staged by Famatics Who Shot Down Police.
CULT MUST GO
State Asked to Revoke Temple's License.
CHICAGO—The imitators of the dress and rites of Mohammedanism, about 2,000 the police estimate, must give up the "sheik" and "bey" additions to their names and return to normaly.
Coronor Bundesen and a jury investigating the riot and battle that cost two lives and the wounding of four last Wednesday, have called on the State authorities to revoke the license granted the Moorish Science Temple.
Ira Johnson, leader of the kidnappers who forced Charles Kirkman to accompany him to the scene of the battle, has confessed that he killed Policeman William Gallagher, "he was shooting at me," said Johnson. Kirkman testified Johnson wanted to be the "Grand Vizier" and after the kidnapping threatened him with death unless he produced important papers relating to leadership in the Temple.
Many doubt his story, pointing to the fact that he, like other members of the clan, have been fed up on Moorishism, which he said that it is better to die in the cause of the "prophet" than a natural death.
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Almost all of the residents in the neighborhood of the Temple are opposed to it.
The editor of a local weekly is serving on the coroner's job; another member the member killed was shot by Detective Frank Reynolds, white
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Some Pastors of Leading Bodies Say they Would Not Bar Race Church-Goers. Few Have Colored Members.
Dr. Fred Palmer's SKIN WHITENER PREPARATIONS
Although but few of the white churches in Baltimore have colored members on their rolls, a number of leading white ministers here say they would not car colored attendance at church services, a canvass by a AFRO reporter found this week. In answer to questions, representatives declared that any one of any race would be welcomed, by officials of the church as attendants. Most of them, however, declared that they have no colored members; the exception being local Christian Science churches.
Christian Science
The custodian of the third Christian Scientist body declared that they have regular attendants and that at the First and Second churches in this city they have both attendants and that they have special welfare organizations they work directly among colored people, he said. Since the services of the church are carried on without a pastor, they have not had leaders to preach in their churches. The pastor spoken in their churches because of the type of service.
Entaw Baptist
The Rev. O. C. S. Wallace, pastor of the Eutaw Place Baptist church, emphatically declared that his perseverance with the advancement of interracial understanding. "We have had joint meetings of white and colored ministers in my church," he said. "There are no colored ministers in the church, but I could not answer the question as to whether they would be welcome. "I do not know," he replied. He has never breached in a colored church, nor ever preached in his. He has spoken to a colored audience, he said.
Dr. Peter Ainslee
Speaking for both himself and Christian Temple, Dr. Peter Ainsley said that he colored members on roll thems were colored members in the mission churches conducted by his dean, Dr. John H. Browne, at his church at any time he said.
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♦ When asked had he preached in colored churches, he declared that he had not only preached often in colored churches, but that colored ministers had been invited to and had preached in s.
Evangelican Lutheran
The Rev. Oscar Blackwelder, pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran church, declared that while they had no colored members on their rolls they would be welcomed and admitted to membership, the colored church not has a colored minister preached in his, he said.
Teachers in Virginia
LEESBURG, Va. — Residents of Washington who have been appointed to teach in Virginia schools include Miss Bernice Jackson assigned to teach at Ashburn; Miss Mary L. Abrams, to take the place of Miss Mabel Dudlev, in Sycolin. In the primary department at Midland, Miss Wanda was accepted a place recently made vacant by Miss Ella Mae Evans.
ELK SWIPED FUNDS
BOSTON. — William L. A. Henry 44. of Munroe street, Roxbury, treasurer of the Bon Voyage Club, compose the budget, fund the museum, and organized for the purpose of conserving funds to pay the expenses of contributors to the convention of the order recently held at Atlantic City, was found guilty in a court of the bridge. Friday, of larceny of $722 of the $1000 trust fund.
BAPTIST LEADER BURIED
PHILADELPHIA. — The Rev. G. McArthur Sullivan, once on the faculty of the Virginia Seminary, but for many years he was a Baptist Church, at Llandewyn, was buried here last week. He succumbed to a serious operation at Northwestern Hospital. He was buried by a wife, formerly Miss Mary Derring of Luray, Va.
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Rev. S. H. James Tells Ministers Church Population Is on Decrease.
BLAME FIXED
People Losing Confidence in Leaders. He Says.
"Whether we face the fact or not, organized Christianity is losing its grip on men and women of today," said the Rev. S. H. James, in his sermon to the Baptist Ministers' conference, Monday.
Pointing out that within twenty years the percentage of the total population of the country having church connections has decreased from 45 to 32 per cent, the Rev. James blamed this decrease, not upon the fact that people were losing their faith in the Christ, but rather they were indulging in dependence in the leaders of the church.
The Rev. James said that when a bishop so far fell from his Christian dignity as to speculate in Wall street, when a rector drew the color line in the Blackshear, and when a minister committed such a crime as the Rev. James Walton committed, organized Christianity would continue to be on the losing side, and for an upstanding Christian leadership.
Wise Chorus Sings
The Wise Chorus, an aggregation of men singers from Philadelphia thrilled the members of the conference and invited them to selections. The chorus has given a series of concerts in the city and have been enthusiastically praised by those hearing them. They will sing at St. John's Baptist church Thursday, March 16, at 10 a.m. for New York, where they are scheduled for eighteen programs.
Among the visitors at the meeting were the Rev. C. H. Johnson, of Boston, Mass., the Rev. J. C. Dunbar, of Boston, S.C., and the Rev. M. Tate.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
BISHOP HURST AT N. Y. ANNIVERSARY
Crowded Emanuel Church Hears Baltimore Prelate
By CLEVELAND G. ALLEN
NEW YORK, N.Y.-The principal feature of the opening exercises of the third anniversary of the Emmanuel A.M.E. Church, on Sunday September 29th, was the sermon by Bishop John Hurst, presiding bishop of the Seventh Episcopal district. A large audience which crowded every space in the auditorium greeted the bishop, many of whom were natives of South Carolina where Bishop Hurst presides.
"What the church needs to day," declared Bishop Hurst, "is an old fashioned revival and spiritual awakening. No church can grow unless it has this spiritual awakening."
The anniversary exercises of the Emmanuel A.M.E. Church, of which Rev. D. Ward Nichols is pastor will continue until October 11th. Three members had 65 members now is 900.
Rev. Nichols is a progressive young man, and has received an unusual preparation for his work. He was awarded the Phi Beta Kappa honor received his early education in the pulilis schools there, and at Avery Normal School. He later entered Howard University from which he graduated in 1920. From the college of missions of Drew theological seminary with the degree of M.A., and in 1926 received the degree of B.D. from Drew. As a recognition of his achievement, all university conferred upon him the honorary degree of D.D. in 1929. He was ordained in 1926 by Bishop W. H. McCormick toateate at Jamestown, R.I., where he served for one year. From there he came to New York. He is a member of the Omega PS Phi fraternity, and the International Presidential Fraternity.
RACE WILL ABANDON
P. E. CHURCH
Former P. E. Rector Says Denomination Caters to Whites only.
JIM-CROW PREVALENT
Candidates for Priesthood and Seminary Refused.
BY REV. ROBERT S. BENNETT,
Former Episcopal Minister
BROOKLYN, N.Y.-Rev. William
S. Blackshear, spoke the truth when
he stated that Negroes were not
wanted in his church. For that matter
Negroes are not wanted in the
Protestant Episcopal church any-
where. The Negro clergy of that
church can testify to that fact.
For the past fifty or more years
the neglect, indifference, secret hosti-
ility, segregation, deceit, and out-
sidings of the white bishops
of the white bishops and clergy of this church, in their dealings with the Negro clergy, have been
ample proof that they were not wan-
ticed. What the Negro clergy of the P.E. church have experienced all these years, hastened many to untimely
deaths, chased others out of the church,
and denominations, some into business and
the professions and a few outside of
the Christian faith altogether. None
in high places of this church have
the souls or the welfare of these men.
Now that the strong and so-called radicals who battled for their race and an equal footing for themselves in the church, the problem of the policy of segregation, ridicule, prejudice and repression has centered upon the lalty.
P.E. Church is White
The P.E. church is white and must be kept white at all hazards. No real effort must be made to evangelize, but the church should age. Negro youth who may desire to enter with the priesthood as their goal: bishops hesitate, and in several instances absolutely refuse to receive orders, offering the lance excuse that they have no work or fields to offer them on the completion of their stu-
Isolation—Jim Crow
No Black Bishops
Out of the scores of available and proficient clergy of the Negro race, not one was considered fit and capable of election to the vacant bishopship in Liberia, Cuba, Porto Rico or Haiti. Clergy who make their marks in the white seminaries of the church, are called to sideration, when appointments to seminary professorships were being considered. One Negro priest was given the empty honor of being ejected from the seminary beforehand agreed upon, that he should refuse to accept the election.
Eventually Abandon P. E. Church and eventually abandon P.E. Church. The color question must be faced. Like Banquio's ghost it will not down. All the subtertures have been used and are now being used by white bishops and white priests as well as white laymen, will stick together and declare that the P.E. church is white, and must be kept in the church to seek a God and church of his own.
Three Great Lies
"The Three Great Lies of Today" was the subject of a sermon by the Rev. Blackshear at his Sunday morning services. He referred to were the lie of religion, the lie of science and the lie of democracy. The minister criticized clergymen who do not tell the truth; he ascertained that the Bible story of creation, declaring that evolution is a process and instrument of creation; and he challenged democracy, stating that men are not born free and equal. Men, he said, are born free and equal, background and economic slavery.
District Attorney Speaks
Zionists Vote Union
LOUISVILLE, KY—By a vote of fifty to one, the Kentucky conference of the A.M.E. Zion Church voted to ordain the A.M.E. Church here last week.
Bishop George C. Clement said if the two denominations united they school buildings into hospitals houses for superannuated ministers.
Mrs. Ada H. Battle, of Washington, general secretary of the young women's department that women received $4000 for foreign missions since May 1928.
Dr. H. T. Medford, foreign missionary secretary, declared that Zion has good members and $40 Sunday school members in West Africa.
CUMBERLAND. MD—The Ministerial Union of Cumberland and adjacent counties meets in Keyser, M. the Rev. inet. M. the Rev. P. Moon will be the entertaining pastor. The program will begin promptly at 12:30. The address of the day will be delivered by Rev. Hooper the pastor of Metropolitan E. church, Cumberland, on "Some Methods of Church Finance." A program has been arranged for the evening session at 9 p.m. by the location. The clinic is invited to attend both sessions.
THE LORD OF THE WEST
Charles W. Davage, 1234 Druld Hill avenue, age 75, church incorporator, elder, sexton, and organ pumper at Grace Presbyterian church, Dolphin and Etting streets, has lost one of his titles. Beginning Sunday of last week he was relieved of his position as organ pumper. The reason assigned was that the church organ has been electrified. Seen by an AFRO reporter this week, Mr. Davage admitted that he had learned to love organ pumping and that he will miss it, now that he is no longer able to pump. At the same time, Mr. Davage said, his mind felt freer, because rain or shine he knew he must be at his post at Grace church. "I am getting older now." he said, "perhaps someone else would have taken the job anyhow even if they had not installed an electric motor." Mr. Davage was one of the incorporators at Grace Presbyterian church when it was organized at Linden Hall, southwest corner of Linden avenue and Hoffman street in 1879. When a split developed in Madison Street Presbyterian church, a Sunday-school was formed in the school. Even so, the School-school grew so large that the Baltimore Presbytery organized it into Grace Presbyterian church, with the Rev. Charles Hedges as first pastor. This was in 1832 and the congregation selected the church building at the corner of Dolphin and Etting streets which it has built. From an active member in the Sunday school, Mr. Davage became an elder of the church, a trustee, a member of the chair and sexton in addition to his other duties. He was a great seeker in the chair left and listened to every pastor including the Rev. Frank Ecleton, the Rev. Edward Williams, and the present pastor, the Rev. John T. Colbert.
M. E. Leaders Home from Mississippi
Attended City Workers' Meeting at Winteland
Waveland
Dr. R. F. Coates, district superintendent of the Washington district, Washington M.E. Conference, Dr. Charles Y. Trigg, pastor of Metropolitan M.E. Church, Baltimore; A. Michael Schmidt, pastor of M.E. Church; the Rev. John F. Mourne, pastor of St. Paul M.E. Church, Oxen Hill, Md.; Dr. W. A. C. Hughes, pastor of St. Paul M.E. Church, ending the Council of City Workers, held at Waveland, Miss, September 10 to 11, under the bureau of the board of Home Missions and Church Extension of the M.E. Church.
The council was held in the Jackson House, one-time summer home of former president Andrew Jackson, at Gulf Side, on the Mississippi, a summer court established by Bishop R. Jones.
The house has great historic value and is often visited by tourists. The death of Andrew Jackson is still preserved with its tall four-poster bed and other antiques. other buildings on the grounds include a school building, a dormitory, small guest rooms, camping and both houses for bathers.
The meeting was attended by delegates from 22 church conferences.
Priest Says, Don't Read Papers
AFRO Sold Outside of Church After dermon
CHICAGO—Father J. C. Eckert
rector of St. Elizabeth's Catholic
Church, on Wabash avenue, advised
his congregation, Sunday morning,
no to buy colored newspapers.
He merger-AMERICAN by
name, he said.
"It is not fit to read."
Alliance to Meet
The Interdenominational Ministers' Alliance holds its first session. Thursday at Great Northern Church, the traditional speaker will be the Rev. H. T. McCormack and his subject, "How Can We Improve Brotherhood in America?"
GALLEAN FISHERMAN
All lodges connected with the Gallean Fisherman are getting under way for a big drive for the purpose of remodeling the old temple at 409 Biddle street. Summer vacation has all led to the order of meeting twice per month instead of once per month.
DAUGHTER OF CALANTHE
These illustrous daughters have just returned from a week's convention in Indianapolis, TN.
They have organized a scholarship fund, by which means a student may graduate. All students graduating from high school are eligible. A unit of Red Cross nurses is also cared for feature of this lodge. They care for the sleek and needy of the lodge. Mrs. Mary Allen, newly elected pastor, instituted the first juvenile at Rockland, Md. lack Thursday.
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly
Bishop Brooks' Nine Conferences Start
CORPUS CHRISTI. TEXAS.—Bishop W. Sampson Brooks' Mexico and Rio Grande Valley Conference open, October 5th, Chapel A.M.E. Church, October 5th. This is the first of Bishop Brooks nine conferences. The second opens October 16th at Abilene, Texas. Six conferences are held during October, and November, the bishop winding up his final conference at Palestine, Texas, December 4th.
PASTOR IN ACCIDENT
YORK, Pa.—The Rev. B. J. Boling, pastor of A. M. E. Zion church, here, was slightly injured in an automobile wreck here last week.
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IN D. C. CHURCHES
MT. ZION M. E.
On last Sunday the Rev. W. Williams of Burnsville, Md., preached on, What is In Thy Hand?
At eight o'clock a benthy lawn was by the Lady's Aid Society, No. 2. Rev. Julius the pastor.
METROCENTER
On last Sunday, the Rev. E. preached on "Home, Evidences of Life."
At 8 o'clock, his subject was, "A Church." On last Sunday, the Rev. W. E. preached on, "The Abundant Light," preached on, "The Francis Watson," and curated missionary work. "The Customs of the People in Africa," Rev. George O. Bullock is pastor. "The Redeemer," on Sunday, October 16, is pastor. Rev. Daniel E. Wiseman, will preach "Put On the Old Conversation." "Light a young people's meeting will be held."
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
On last Sunday, the pastor, the Rev. W. E. preached on, "Christian hertiness."
BULAH BAPSTH
On last Sunday, the pastor, the Rev. W. E. Marath, preached on, "The Out Prayer."
At night, the Rev. Stewart preached to "To Go Forward."
**M.T. BETELT**
On last Sunday, the pastor, Rev. W. Z. Jernakin, preached on "What Happens When Men Prey." He then he spoke on "Becoming Arm of God."
**NEW BETELT**
On last Sunday, the pastor, Rev. W. D. Jarris, preached on "Our Lost Shenherd and His Bishop of South." At night, the Rev. W. Edwards preached to "The Unicorn."
**M.T. BETELT BAPSTH**
On Sunday, October 8, the pastor, Rev. K. W. Roy, will preach on "The Companionship in Tribulations." At 3 o'clock, the pastor will speak on "Companionship in Tribulations." Our munion, a special service, will be preached by the pastor.
**PROVIDENCE BAPSTH**
On last Sunday, the pastor, Rev. Sayers preached on "The Oneness Holy Spirit."
At night, the pastor preached on "Jesus Wounded in the House of His Friends"
RANDAL MEMORIAL A.M.E.
On the morning of the day, Thomas Wilson will preach on "The Glory of the Abiding Christ."
At 3 o'clock, a special sermon will be preached on "Jesus He will preach on, "Jesus Remain the Perishing."
METROPOLITAN M.E.
On last Sunday, the assistant Rev. Woodson preached on, "Heroes Faith."
At night, the Rev. J. Brown, of Washington, preached.
WESLEY MUSEL
Sunday, the pastor, the Rev. H. D. The man preached on "Seeking to Find Jesus"
At 3 o'clock, the Woman's Home Missionary Society had charge of the service. Solos and reading concluded the program.
At night, the Rev. W. Hills of Raleigh company on "Things That Are a company Savior."
HAVEN M.F
SHILOH BAPTIST
Bunday, October 6, the pastor, the Rev. Frank E. Hearns will preach morning and at 3 o'clock, the Union Communion, will be the assemblies, will be the will be the Zion Baptist Church. Miss Ethel Wise, of Washington, will be the church in a relic, October 11, 8:30 p.m.
The item appearing in the September 21 issue of the AFRO stating the Rev. J. W. Norris asked the ax of the ministers in liquidating to $8,000.00 debt he would have read "on & John's Mission." instead.
SINGERS AT GACE MEMORIAL
The Trustees of Philadelphia, presented a rectal at the Grace Memorial Baptist Church, of which the Rev. A. J. Greene is pastor. Thursday night. Nights are observed with special entertainment Sunday.
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NORMAN COTTONS ARE HOME FROM ABROAD
London "Superior." Italian
Irritating, and Paris Just
Hot.
GLAD TO GET HOME
Debut of Nora Holt in London Described.
Quite the event in social circles this week was the return Wednesday of the Norman Cottons and their daugh- on, on the Homeric.
ter Gloria
month's rest at their summer home at Oak Bluffs, Dr. and Mrs. Cotton sailed August 2nd on the Saturnia for a tour to Rome, Florence, and Pantheon Switzerland, Paris and London where they were the guests of Mrs. Cotton's sister and brother-in-law, the Turner
Layouts.
They expected that they would return laden with foreign novelties and goods and pleasant memories and singing the retrain. We hated come back. They did not come back of the lovest things—clothes, jewels, gifts and even flowers; they have a new collection of European impressions to add to those of their first trip, but Mrs. Cotton at least is not singing, "I hated to come back."
Glad to be Back
The day of my interview, Friday, she wore one of those smart new long black chiffons and no jewelry except a stunning necklace and white crystals that were leaving that arm. Her home in Pattsville, where Dr. Cotton still practices medicine, and where they once lived. My first question was "Are you glad to be back?" and she prised she wore no dress that does not express her work. "Rork is the only place for us to live. It is a lovely trip, but, I'm happy to be home."
Hot in Paris
And then the reasons poured forth. The weather was unusually warm and they had "done the sights," regardless of the heat. The continued difficulty with the Italian language had proved irritating, she had consolled herself by thinking that when she sheared Dr. she would find friends especially Dr. Curtis, who was especially of being the best person who goes to Paris.
When she arrived, she went directly to the Moulin Rouge to secure the doctor's address, only to find that she had sailed for America, that morn-
Her sister, Emma Layton and Little A'Lella came over from London to keep her company, but A'Lella who attends one of those swanky English, fresh air, private schools, couldn't bear the heat of Paris and back they had to go. And Mrs. Cotton didn't find a person she knew.
"Superior" English
Of course, things are quite different in London where they stayed in the magnificent home of the Laytons. However, Mrs. Cotton - a Cotton miller - too superior in their attitude—and they have a subtle way of attempting to correct you. I very quickly told them that I was a Bostonian, proud of it and spoke English as it was spoken to me. I am not keen associating with white people. I prefer to be with my own people and they are scarce in London. And don't let anyone tell you that the English are not prejudice against them and Negroes." A small group of Harlemites in London entertained for them. The Laytons gave a dinner party, the Leslie Hutchinsons a dinner and dancing by special request, cooked a plain American supper for them.
Nora Holt Debut
As the guests of the Laytons, they attended the debut of Nora Holt at the Cateele Theater, and the Princes of Wales. The baby grand piano was rolled into the center of the dance hall, and the girls were down walked Nora Holt in a stunning white gown, all of her diamonds, a colorful ensemble. The audience were all of "my man", type, not so popular with English audences, but she put
Noble Sissle
Mrs. Cotton was most enthusiastic over Noble Sisle's work. He directs his band in the show, which includes Layton and Johnstone remain the idols of the varsity fans. Paul Roberson is very popular. Prince Hutchinson is still the faction's Prince. They are all living magnificently.
"Dr. Cotton had a wonderful time. But on my next trip I shall select some one to play with," he said, becoming acquainted with the people. I don't his touring—not even deluxe in Europe."
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CALLS BLACKSHEAR'S CHURCH "ST. LEGREE"
Bishop E. D. W. Jones, Speaking Before the Kentucky A.M.E. Conference at Louisville
"It is quite natural that Negroes everywhere and all Christian people should deploy the racial outburst of the Rev. Wm. S. Blackshear, Episcopal minister in Brooklyn, New York. He was called to be 'St. Matthews'. It would be keeping if it did not insult the spirit of fellowship of the 'receiver of customs', who was called to be a disciple by our blessed Lord and Master. It would be more fitting to change the name of the church to 'St. Vardaman' or 'St. Legree'. Like a majority of white churches and white Christians, this minister's Christianity is a mere joke. The teachings of Jesus suffer more than the powers of those who profess Him the authority those who are indifferent to Him.
"Books written by white authors, such as the 'Scandal of Christianity' and the 'Impatient Pastor', show that one or two honest souls are aroused over the viole being done to Christianity by its face, having clergy. Aside from the face, there is no Jesus in it, there is no humanity in it. It is vapor and vaporings.
"It is up to the Negro ministry and membership to resent this insult to our race and this disgrace to Christianity by immediately protesting as a clergy as would dare defy the teachings of Jesus and the Apostles on the common brotherhood of man.
"The A.M.E. and A.M.E. Zion denominations set them a splendid example of heroic action, but the men themselves rather than be insulted by such men, who are in the ministry only to set man against man and race against race.
DR. BRAGG—DR. DANIELS.
"Two men of our race, Dr. George F. Bragg, of Baltimore, and Dr. W. A. Daniels, of Dept. of History, will speak in no uncertain terms, when the time is ripe, against this most monstrous insult to God and that ever uttered in what proclaims to be a Christian pulpit."
NEW YORK PERSONALS
MRS. ESTELLA HAMILTON and Miss Daisy Young were the guests of Dr. Lettie Moss. JOHN H. J. HALMAN is visiting her aunt, Mrs. H. H. Hart of Pittsburgh, who entertained in her honor, Monday. H. JOHNSON of Pittsburgh who has spent two years visiting to his home last week to resume his studies at the University of Pittsburgh. MISS DOREY WASHINGTON and Miss Dora Dork are visiting relatives in Lexington, Va.
MRS. M. GRANT of Stamford, Conn., was a visitor here recently. JESSE C. PRICE, Jr., who has been in Philadelphia, his former home, to take up a course in dentistry at the University of Pennsylvania. J. MILTON JRISI and MISS Lea Balens emeritus of Philadelphia, and Henry Thomas of Philadelphia. Sunday. GEORGE E. LUE of FREELCE, Va., is
Thomas, O. "Fulfillship," Sunday.
"Fulfillship," Purville, Va., is
assembling a week, here.
MR. AND MRS. L. H. HOWELL and JACKIE, of Grafton F. WA. arrived here last week to enter their son in school, then be taught in the school, then be taught at the Elizabeth City State Normal School, N.C. will study at Columbia University, N.C. HENRIETTA SHOWNES is visiting her mother, Mrs. Charlotte Soden, at Camp Pole, Md. H. F. QUINN has returned to his home at St. Michaels after attending the New York District Conference, he CAROLO CANNON is the guest of his bride, Mrs. William Cannon in Bridgeville, Del. WILLIAM WEBB, who has been living here for two years returned to his home
MR. AND MRS. B. VANDERBILT, are visiting their parents and children, of MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH HARVEY, were Mrs. Marjorie Hubbard of Lynchburg, Va.; Mrs. Marjorie Hubbard of Lynchburg, Va.
Daily Appears in N. Y.
NEW YORK. N. Y. (CNS)—The introductory issue of the New York Times, "Negro Negro," appeared September 24, "unheralded and unhailled" and pledged to political independen- ties of the working class.
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A'Lelia Walker.
A *Telia Walker* divided a hectic week between Atlantic City and Philadelphia. She arrives at her Harlem apartment Thursday and dayends in her Eastern front. She made the trip in her Lincoln and when you discover that her city hosts you. Everett Johnson and Whitney host her hosts in Philadelphia you need not be told that the whoepee was Grade A.
**ENUNCE SHEETS** mises of the late Mr. and Mrs. Berl Williams, does not teach the junior high school girls at P.S. 136 sufficient nerve rack. She has missed the course in psychology at City college. Miss a member of the popular Girl Friends' club.
**T. ARNOLD HILL**, national industrial school of the Urban League, made one of his mad runes in and out of Harlem last week.
LA *MELLER TOURJOUR*, popular group arrives at the Harlem clubs, gave its annual dinner to zokhany Alamah ballroom, last Tuesday.
Mrs. Washington Visits.
Mme. Sara Spencer Washington, founder and sole owner of the Apex School of Business, was named the new manager, Arche Morgan, breezed into the brand new President, Quilee the CEO, preparing for their annual ball, beauty ball, staged at Rockland palace, November 8.
Cecil Lacev Leaves.
Cecelia Lacey, lyric soprano, and pupil of the Metropolitan Opera, will concert tour immediately after the performance on the occasion of her singing on the occasion of Miss Lacey will be accompanied by Frankie Dixon, pianist and conductor.
Mrs. Walker Here.
Mrs. Maggie L. Walker, founder of the Order of St. Lukes, and president of the St. Lukes bank, and Mrs. Mary Bingo, of the St. Lukes bank, will participate in one-day conference. Mrs. Walker completes concentrating on a Harlem campaign and will open an apartment for the year.
Hall Johnson Party
Hall Johnson, director and trainer of the famous Hall Johnson Negro choir, pitched, and directed the group's apartment at 203 West 145th street, last Wednesday evening. The group was decidedly "mixed." Among the celebrities was the singer who has returned from a summer abroad.
THE MEXICO CLUB, formerly The Gateway, rendezvous of the smart set of up and downtown, has the formal opening. Last Tuesday, the Numbers of 133rd arrest will call it, *Mexico*.
Home from Paris
Dr. Charles A. Petition, 114 W. 131st street who has been at the Hospital Brea in Chicago since 1985, has served of women, will leave on the lie de France, arriving in New York on September 23 He also visited hospitals in London, Vienna, Berlin, Milan, Rome and other cities. Douglas O. Howe, proprietor of the Hobby House, has visited Italy, the French Chateau, and the French Riviera. He spent a few days in London before returning to New York City.
N.A.A.C.P. Represented at
The N.A.A.C.P. was represented by James W. Johnson, Walker White and Wm. Piek director and legal champion, which was held last Tuesday morning from Temple Emanu-El in Chicago. The closing streets were blocked for a distance of half a mile in both directions from the synagogue, by an outpouring of 10,000 people in official, social and business life, who came to do honor to the great Jewish leader and champion of the Jewish cause at the funeral were: Julius Rosenwald, Lieutenant Governor Herbert N. Lehman, Governor James W. Kearns, bearers included: Judge Benjamin N. Curdzo of the New York Court of Appeals Felix M. Warburg and James W. Times; Chancellor Charles W. Flint, James Weldon Johnson, Charles Evans Hughes, Ex-Governor Alfred David Guggleheim.
BROOKLYN Y.W.C.A.
Sunday, October 6, will be Conference Echo Day at the Y.W.C.A. when Asheville and New York will host their impressions and memories of summer conferences. The speakers will be Mrs. W. McCarthy, who went to Silver Bay, NY, for the Community conference, Thelmia Dokson who represented the University of Portland, Me., Nellie Verchlidle who attended the Summit Industrial conference, and Margaret of the Bust Conference. The membership committee, of which Mrs. Idame Matthews will chair, will be at the conference, 4th at 8:00 a.m. Friday, among the hostesses for the evening will be Mrs. Missouri Moore, Lavania Irbys and Mrs. Neelah Pelham.
Mrs. King Named as Travellers Aide.
On the recommendation of Forrester B. Washington, director of the Atlanta School of Social Work, she was just appointed Mrs. D. King as one of its paid staffers at the Pennsylvania Railroad station, one of the largest stations located in the Atlanta School of Social Work in the class of 1977-1983 and has been employed by the Brooklyn Urban League. She is the daughter of Joseph Watson, of Albany, Ga.
NEW YORK ACADEMY SOCIETY
TWO OF THE OLD GRADUATES
of the Atlanta School of Social Work, September; Miss Dorothy D. Handy of Brooklyn, and Miss Nolce Spencer, of New York City.
Both weddings were largely attended by MrB. BLOSE WATERS, who has been in the downtown office of the contractor, Charles B. Mitchell of the Civil Service. She was appointed to the Department of Public Works in the city service, as typewriter-copier, Mr. Mitchell has been with her, Mr. Mitchell's office.
COMMERCIAL LAW and Business English classes were resumed for the fall semester at the academy. Filing and Indexing beamed to the NEW STUDENTS for the week are, the Miss Ruth and Pearl Vincent, Dedicated Quarterly Students. Gertrude Lee, Helen Lewis, Vera Thompson and Vivian Strong.
MRS. GERTRUDE SAWYER, director of MRS. GERTRUDE FILING, visited the last week.
MRS. MARGARET ST. JOHN visited the MRS. MARGARET ST. JOHN visited the high school service in his state civil service appointment.
ACADEMY STUDENTS who have signed up for examinations this month: William C. Walters, for patronage; James W. Lewis, for professor; James L. Walters and J. Williams are preparing for the postsecondary clerk examination. THE COOSMOPOLITAN BUSINESS LEAGUE will be conducting the exam on October 3, at 8:30 p.m. in the assembly rooms of the academy. New members are asked to join.
Kittrell Teacher Gets Howard "U" Post.
NEW YORK-Eva Hilton who has been visiting hr sister, Mrs. M. R. Davis of Elizabeth, N.J. her brother, Mrs. R. G. Davis of New York City, left Friday for Washington, D.C., where she has been appointed instructor in educational psychology at Howard University. Miss Hilton has her degree in psychology at College. N.C. of psychology at Kittrell College N.F.
MISS OLIVE WILLIAMS, daughter of Mrs. A. G. and Mrs. of Harburg, Pa., has arrived in this city to pursue further studies in voice culture.
MISS LOLA GILES has returned after her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Giles.
MRS. RUTH PAGE. who has been visiti-
mated. RUTH COOPER of Lakehead.
m. has returned.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
100 BISHOPS SILENT IN BLACKSHEAR ROW
100 BISHOPS SILENT IN BLACKSHEAR ROW
Protestant Episcopal Bishops Convened in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
BLACKSHEAR READY
Appears in L. I. Diocesan Convention.
EAST HAMPTON, Long Island—Colored and white delegates to the Epicopal discussion convention held here September 26th, fought shy of the racial question raised by the ban on colored people at St. Matthew's church, Brooklyn.
The Rev. William S. Blackshear, white, the pastor, was ready to defend his action, while three colored delegates, the Rev. Egbert A. Craig, pastor of St. Cyprusian's church, Brooklyn, the Rev. George Leighton, of St. Augustine's church, Brooklyn, and the Rev. William McKinney, of St. Stephen's church, Jamaica, L.I., were ready to attack the alleged discrimination.
The colored delegates agreed not to comment upon it unless the matter was brought up by Blackshear. "I will not discuss the subject unless it is brought up officially."
Dr. Alnisez, Dr. Derry to Speak
October 13, Dr. Soland Bautson, of Yale
university; October 20, Dr. Eugene Lyman,
professor of the philosophy of religion
Dr. Soland Bautson, of Yale
university; October 20, Dr. Conrad Henry Mochman,
of Rochester University; November 3, Dr.
Gains Glein Athens, of Auburn Theological
School; November 3, Dr. Rev. William Derry of St. John's
Congregational Church, Springfield, Mass.
November 24, Dr. Johnson of the university
of Rochester; November 24, Dr. Annie
of the Christian Temple, Baltimore.
Music will be rendered on each occasion
by the university chair, under the direction
of the Children, dean of the college of music.
HOUSE OF BISHOPS SILENT
HOUSE OF BISHOPS ATLANTIC CITY—Dealing that the canons of the church do not permit the bishop to consecrate, the House of Bishops of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States, refused here, Sunday, to consider protests of colored members of St. Matthew's P.E. church, white, of Brooklyn, over their virtual exclusion from the congregation by its rector, the Rev. W. S. Bishops, numbering 100, of the 142 in the United States and its territories, are conducting the first annual meeting authorized at the general convention of the church at Washington last year. Formal sessions began Tuesday. Bishop John Gardner Murray, of Baltimore is presiding. The bishop issued a statement which said:
"The Rev. Mr. Blackshear, has in no manner violated the canons of conduct governing the use of expelling Negro members from his congregation is one concerning himself alone." The Right Rev. Ernest M. Stires, white, bishop of Long-island pre-merged there were 110 elegymen present.
FEDERAL COUNCIL OF CHURCHES ACT
NEW YORK—The regular monthly meeting of the administrative committee of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ, in America discussed, Friday, the attitude and policy of the Federal Council with reference to the relation of white and Negro members of the same churches.
The committee finally voted to ask the committee on Church and Race Relations to study the whole report length thoroughly and to award the annual meeting of the executive committee of the council which will be held in Chicago, December 4 to 6.
The committee to this question has been referred consists of seventy-even members and colored members included by Bishop George C. Glement, of the A.M.E. Zion Church as chairman.
Bishop Reverdy C. Ransom, of the A.M.E. Church, Dr. Channing Toblas, Dr. A. M. Townsend and Dr. William Lloyd Ims are also members of this committee.
LOWER LEVEL THAN STREET CAR NEW YORK. — The Rev. Henry Hugh Procter. speaking at Nazarene Congregational church, Sunday, declared that the cultural level of Rev. Mr. Blackshear is high, the public street cars which haul all persons regardless of race, color or previous conditions.
VESTRY MAKES STATEMENT
NEW YORK—The millionaire vestymon of St. Matthew's P.E. church issued the following statement last
"Due to the general misunderstanding of the real views of the Rev. Mr. Blackshear, with which the vestry is in harmcy, it is deemed advisable to make no further statement."
Faulkner Brot Pigmy Hippo to Europe
Liberian Candidate for President Salls Next Month
NEW YORK-Thomas R. Faukner, the Liberian who has spent several months in the United States, expects to sail for home about the middle of November, so as to arrive there. United States, Mr. Faukner brought with his as far as Germany the only baby pigmilopotamus in captivity. The animal was sold to the famous animal farmers, Hagenbach, at Berlin, for $33. Since being in America, Mr. Faukner has received word that the animal is alive and in theaters in length and has a body circumference of 24 inches.
Liberia is also the home of pigly elephants and Mr. Faulkner has contracted with Hagenbach to provide elephants also for exhibition purposes. None of them, at present, are known to be outside of Africa.
Randolph to Address A.F. of L. Convention
NEW YORK—A Philip Randolph president and general organizer of the Brotherhood of Pullman Car Portors has been invited to tea dress the Forty-ninth annual convention of the M.A. of Pullman.
This will probably be the first time that a Negro will have addressed the convention, in the history of the American Federation of Labor.
MISS LAVINIA BLACK is the guest of Mr. Mary Spencer of the M.A. of Pullman, N.C., who returned home after visiting her for two weeks.
MISS WARRICK visited Hartburg, Pa. Sunday.
MISS MILDRED and Hilda Elliot spent time with parents, and Mrs. George Ellott of Town Town, Md.
```markdown
```
WILLIAM ST. JOHN BLACKSHEAR
white, of Texas, rector of St. Matthew's Protestant Episcopal church,
Brooklyn, N. Y., whose jacket has been warmed by press and pupil since he was born at his church. Such language is "indefensible." said Bishop Stires; whereupon Rev. Blackshear
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David George, White, Named to Organize the South in 1930.
FOUR YEAR PLAN
Socialists Think they Can Draw from G.O.P.
NEW YORK, (C.N.S.)-For the first time in its history, the Socialist Party will make an organized attempt to gain Negro votes in the South.
It move decided last week at a meeting of the Executive Committee of the party of which Morris Hillquist, was unanimously elected chairman.
It is reported that they plan to call in outstanding Negro organizers who will advise with them in working out details for an effective campaign to be conducted during the next four years.
Socialists believe that they can make great inroads into the ranks of both of the major parties and are hopeful of electing several members to Congress in the Congressional 1930. G. George, white, of Richmond, Virginia, was given the tasks of organizing the party in the south. George said that because of the industrialization of the south, trade unions are flocking to the standards of socialism.
Leaves Girl in Upset Car
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J., (A.N.P.
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thursday. She turned on the Albany avenue boulevard and her escort fled. She was brought to the hospital by a patrolman. The police are seeking the driver.
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Mr. Holsey's chain of C.M.S. (Coored Merchants' Association) story extends through five cities and it has estimated that Harlem alone 'h' from fifty to eight stores which could, if they entered into the Hc se co-operative plan, compete will be able to define, Butler as Pigly-Wilks chain.
His first meeting was held Sunday afternoon at the New York A. building. Grocers and press representatives are involved in intensive merchandising, co-operative policies, buying and selling, will given and the Department of Commerce has loaned "Billboard" Jackson for the drive!
TO FILE PAPERS IN JI N CROW BEACH CASE
NEW YORK—Dr. William J. Park President of the Asbury Park, N. Branch of the N.A.A.C.P., inform the National Office that the attorn for the Branch, E. Louis Moore, about to file papers in the beach sewer system.
The N.A.A.C.P. there is contingent segregation on beach prepar owned by the city and leased to private parties. Comprised in these cases are the plaintiffs in a lawsuit alleged to have been committed by lifeguards against colored people.
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NEW YORK—Mr. and Louis K. Spalding entertained in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Massenburg in their apartment, 45th street and eighth avenue, last week. Over 100 guests were present, the wedding of Mr. Massenburg to Mrs. Mary Mayfield, the wealthy widow of the late High Mayfield, of New York, came as a surprise to their many friends. The wedding took place last fall in its well-known Raleigh. She was educated at Shaw university of that city and Columbia university, New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Massenburg left for their future home in New Brunswick, where she met her husband at 10 Woodburn avenue has just been completed at a cost of $10,000.
NEW YORK PERSONALS
MRS. M. D. BOYD has returned to her home here after visiting her mother in Pittsburgh. MRS. M. DULINE PATRICK, who has been spiking a milk here, while returned to her home in Buchanan, Va., this week to resume her studies. MRS. M. DULINE PLATO, accompanied by the mother, have returned home, after visiting relatives and friends in Buchanan, Virginia.
MISS MARIE PERSON returned to her home Goldsboro last week, after visiting Franklin here.
HERBERT FRANKLIN has returned home after a vacation spent in Boston as the guest of his brother-in-law, Mr.
MRS. INEZ JAMPS of New York, who was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. William Allen of Boston, has returned to the city. MRS. MILDRED HARNESON, Boston, is in the city, visiting her mother, who has severe internal injuries in an automobile accident.
MRS. MAHITE has arrived after a two weeks' visit to Boston.
MISS GEORGE ANDERSON has returned to her home in Boston, after a vacation spent in New York. With her sister, Mrs. Rose Madison, MISS MINERVA PRIZPATRICK has returned home after a brief visit to Boston. MISS MINERVA visited friends in New Haven, Connecticut. ALBERT SANDERS, a licensed underkinder at the New York Public Library, visited his sister, Mrs. Jessie Wilson.
What The "AFRO" Stands For
1. Colored policemen, policewomen and firemen.
2. Colored representatives on city, county and State
3. Equal salaries for equal work for school teachers without regard to color or sex.
6. a University and agricultural college for college
7. Cooperation between farmers and the White
8. College for college
Why not do a little praying as well as a little working and a little talking and a little voting? Mix them all up together and take a liberal dose. It should help considerably.
People of the next generation are going to give some attention to debunking the practice of medicine.
Go into the office of the physicians: they take your blood pressure, examine your heart and lungs, make an x-ray photograph, and their head, wrist, and foot are prescribed a Latin and send you off to a druggist who concocts a bitter and nameless medicine which you are to swallow every three hours without knowing what it is or what it is expected to do.
There is too much secretory about doctoring. The public will insist on knowing more about it, and the intelligently progressive physician will take his patient into his confidence every time for the sake of the doctors, who have the exposure of quacks who go through these mysteries and many more in the well-known game of bluster and bluff.
Under present conditions, a good doctor has no chance to advertise in the papers and sell himself to the public as every other dealer in goods does.
Why shouldn't a doctor be permitted to sell his goods?
How many days the preachers were the doctors. They placed the blame for the people they killed on the Almighty.
Prescriptions issued by these physicians hastested the death of many. One. Dr. Faustus, admitted that his medicines carried off almost as many as the plague. Today there is still much about the human body that is unknown and unsolvable, but the progress of the profession of medicine is one of the great wonders of the scientific world. The doctor has conquered scarcity fever, and pneumonia. He has put a check to the ravages of tuberculosis, syphilis and cancer. He not only advises the sick but he tells the rest of us how to keep well. But in all this the dependable, progressive physician has carried on his back the imposter, the rogue and the humbug, who threw their books away when they started to practice, and who stopped learning when they graduated from medical school. The medicine of its mysteries will make the good doctor stand out. At the same time it will put the incapable and dishonest practitioner in the rear where he belongs.
The Snob Army
If Lieutenant Colonel John E. Green holds to his intention to retire or resign from the U. S. army next month after serving two years as an enlisted man and twenty-eight years as an officer, he will be the first Negro commissioned officer to take this step. Behind it of course is the War Department staff the Ninth and Tenth regiments of cavalry, the Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth regiments of infantry with Negro officers.
This is one of the queer things in American race prejudice: namely, that the dominant part of the white race, though it apparently resents every intrusion of the Negro, yet forces
American standards of discipline require that there be no social relations between him and enlisted men.
Race prejudice demands that there be none between him and white officers. Negro officers Lieutenant Colonel Green lives in a lonely, isolated existence. Major Allen Alenworth, late chaplain of the Twenty-fourth Infantry declared that a white junior officer "passed and repassed him for six months without a salute." Hardships fall not only upon the Negro officer but upon his entire family, who are similarly isolated, with the expectation that they will be able to stand it and that the Negro officer Lieutenant Colonel Green has apparently had enough, yet at fifty-one all the fight is not out of him. He can perform a patriotic service after retirement if he will substitute the pen for the sword and let the world know in detail of the practices in Uncle Sam's snob army. If he is beaten, if he is a quitter, Lieutenant Colonel Green is no more good outside the army than in it.
If he has just served to fight, outside the place for him. He may there fire a gun that possibly will be heard around the world.
DePriest-Heflin
Said the Baltimore Sun one morning last week:
"Along the better elements of his race there is probably a growing impatience over the challenging trunculence of Oscar DePriest. Negro Representative from Chicago, in his campaign for the removal of various discriminations that are founded on racial prejudice."
The AFRO-AMERICAN is in a better position to speak for both better and worse elements of the Negro race than any daily newspaper on the Eastern seaboard, and so far as we are aware, Congressman DePriest's activities while in Congress have met the endorsement of 295 out of 300 Negro weeklies.
In the last analysis, Mr. DePriest represents only his Chicago district and what it thinks will be manifest in the new election. He is a strong supporter of upon Mr. DePriest's Seattle address, which included a reply to Senator Thomas-Heflin (Dem. Ala.), Mr. Heflin had said that if Mr. DePriest ever entered the Senate rest rooms, he, Heflin, would throw him out.
Mr. DePriest's reply was, "Just for that, I am going over and see if he is big enough."
Mr. DePriest knows that Mr. Heflin is a boaster, a braggart and a bluffer. He's got a big nose, long enough to that, calling that Heflin will go big on Chicago's South Side. If Heflin's challenge is good for 5,000 votes in Alabama, DePriest's reply is good for 5,000 Chicago. If Heflin want to play politics in this manner, it should cause the rest of us very little concern.
Where's Success?
"I want to be a trained nurse, educate two children and pay for my home."
"I'm twenty-nine. How can I save money, buy a home, run a business?"
"What career might I pursue? I don't like teaching."
"I have six children. How can I help my husband?"
"I'm twenty-six, sing nicely, want to be an actress. Is there any chance?"
"Does the business world offer success?"
"What's the chance for a writer?"
"I separated from my first husband after ten years. Now I am about to lose another. What can I do?"
These seven questions represent a cross section of queries received from nineteen correspondents a week. They indicate ambition, eagerness for counsel and dissatisfaction with present conditions.
It's a good sign when people are dissatisfied and start after something. Before we accomplish anything we must begin, and having started, must hold on until success comes.
If the AFRO could give advice in two words to all of these correspondents, it would say PERSISTENCE SUCCEEDS.
These seven questions represent a cross section of queries received from nineteen correspondents last week. They indicate ambition, eagerness for counsel and dissatisfaction with present conditions. If asked when people are dissatisfied and start after something. Before we accomplish anything we must begin, and having started, must hold on until success comes. If the AFRO could give advice in two words to all of these correspondents, it would say PERSISTENCE SUCCEEDS. The plugger in the water fails. Tongue-tie Professor T. Washington became the great orator. Fred Douglass, the slave, was caught the first time he sought to escape.
Dogged persistence wins where spasmodic genius, and high ability often fail.
Dogged persistence wins where spasmodic genius and high ability often fail.
To the reader who is in doubt, we say: Choose a course, then hold to it without swerving, faltering or flinching. Keep on, plod on, until you've seen the thing through. There you'll find success.
To the reader who is in doubt, we say: Choose a course, then hold to it without sweating, filtering or finching. Keep on, plied, hit him with the thing through. There you'll find success.
Afro Readers Say:
Readers may write on any subject they like. Usually 150 words are enough. Beyond that expect the blue print. Readers make matters worse by writing a brief man, a fact, or an evidence of faith, it will not be published if you so desire.
CONTENTMENT
While shining sun pours light and heat over all,
Your presence bathes me with a healing trust;
As sparkling dew on moonlit meadows fall,
So my hope sparkle in the paling dusk.
Because I hold you near
I rest content.
While falling rain-drops cool the parched soil,
Your love enfolds me warms my loving heart;
Let Wintry snowflakes end the Summer's toil
I laugh and sing content we neer shall part.
Because you are so dear
I am content.
Brooklyn, N.Y.
"Sounding Brass" Again. The Thinking Negroes
and the Best Element of the White Race Approve Mr. DePriest's "Truculence," Certainly the AFRO Does.
To the Editor:
The Baltimore Sun is "righthete" again. After a vacation of almost two months, "Sidney Hill alias Cinderella Hill, Negress," appeared on page 4 of the morning Sun. September 24th, while "Mrs. Stone," a white alleged malefactress, appeared on page 28 of the same issue, simultaneously with an editorial page 12 anent the page Mr. DePriest. The Sun says editorially: "Among the better elements of his race there is probably a growing impatience over the challenging truculence of Oscar DePriest, Negro representative from Chicago, in his campaign for the removal of various discriminations that are founded on racial prejudice. We hold no brief for Mr. DePriest; but we should like to reply that if "the better element of his race" were ever given a chance to cease being made impatient by this same "senseless prejudice" to the Sun refers, as so aptly demonstrated by the Sun itself, in its news items, those of the Negro group who may not admire the DePriest type, have time to start being made aware of the alleged idiosyncrasies of the Gentleman from Illinois.
In the meantime, it may be quite fortunate that the first Congressional ice-breaking, after so long a period of absence on the part of the Negro, is being done by someone whose mental epidermis is tough enough to stand the crudities of his white contemporaries. So long as the Sun shines on setting such a pristine surface, we see less prejudice. it is considerably worse than a waste of time for it to make conjectures as to what certain members of our group think of Mr. DePriest.
In the meantime, it may be quite fortunate that the first Congressional ice-breaking, after so long a period of absence on the part of the Negro, is being done by someone whose mental epidermis is tough enough to stand the crudities of his white contemporaries.
So long as the Sun insists on setting such a priceless example of senseless prejudice, it is considerably worse than a waste of time for it to make conjectures as to what certain members of our group think of Mr. DePriest. Mr. DePriest quite confidently election will produce additional representative of the Negro group, more nearly approximating the shrinking violet than the gentleman at present so much in evidence. If so, it is probable that the new incumbent will not be the last to appreciate the rough and ready log-hewing done by his colleague.
My we suggest that the Sun extend the period of its vacation from "Negresses" and other evidences of bad manners, to let us say, six months. Being thus slightly relieved of gaucheries on the outside, we might find the time for a little introspection on the subject of Mr. DePriest.
CONSTANCE DANIEL,
(Mrs. Victor H. Daniel)
Cardinal Gibbons Institute. Ridge, MD.
Philadelphian Seeks Bride.
To the Editor:
I would like to correspond with a nice settled southern woman between 30 and 40 years of age, who would consider matrimony after we are acquainted.
I am a working man. 34 years old, quiet, easy to get along with and desire a wife and family life. Am brown-skin, five feet, six inches tall and weigh 159 pounds. I like to go to church, moving pictures, and am a steady worker.
F. DAVIS,
1748 N. 53rd-st., Philadelphia, Pa.
To the Editor:
I can't express in words just how much I appreciated the AFRO-AMERICAN while at Wes Hampton, BLL, New York. It was a real friend I realized that whenever I read the AFRO was reading the real news from home and abroad I will venture to say that the AFRO is the best colored paper in the United States. A. W. STEPNEY, 1118 P.-st. N.W., Washington, D.C.
NO SNOBBERY IN THE
JAPANESE NAVY
To the Editor:
I was forcibly struck by a news article in the Baltimore Sun, concerning the coaling of the two Japanese naval ships in the harbor here last week. Said the article: "Fifteen hundred men—officers, midshipmen and crew—are coaling the two ships of the way of getting coal aboard and storing it in the bunkers. Side by side with the enlisted men, the midshipmen—100 on each vessel—worked in hour shifts." The coal was carried on board in the usual Japanese manner—on the shoulders of the men in bags, each weighing about two hundred pounds. It was, a site Sun article stated, a tolomeo, dirty, messy job. However, to quarrel with the midshipman, it seemed, was wont to show his physical equality with the husky seamen and stokers, in some cases hurrying to dump his load and make his round trip quicker than the man who started ahead of him. Can you imagine the officers in our army or navy doing anything like that? Admittedly, the Japanese learned much from the Western nations, including our own, but fortunately, they did not absorb the not-inconsiderable degree of snobbishness which seems intrenched in our army and navy—and is more and more intruding itself into the federal civil service because it actually dominates South.
If real democracy exalten a nation, surely "heathen" Japan can look down on us.
WHITE CHRISTIANITY ROTTEN
Rev Mr. Blackshear Only Stated Publicly What the character of White' Fashion Thinks
Bs REV. FRANCIS J. GRIMKE
Pastor 15th St. Presbyterian Church, Washington
A good deal of unfavorable criticism is just now being heaped upon the head of a Rev. William S. Blackshear, rector of St. Matthew's Protestant Episcopal church, Brooklyn, N.Y., because he openly and publicly declared that he wanted no colored persons in his church. After all, the only difference between him and the average white minister in this country is that he has had the courage to say what his real sentiments are. The way he feels is just majority of white ministers in this country feel; they would rather not have Negroes or people of color in their churches.
The Rev. Mr. Blackshear is simply reflecting the sentiment of white Christianity in the United States. It insists upon colored people worshiping by themselves, keeping to themselves, the simple way, honestly hypocritically the opposite may be asserted, is that white churches are for white people and not for colored people. And all that this Rev. Blackshear has done is simply to publicly and honestly avow that fact, shameful as it is, as damage to the spirit of Christianity, the represents and that the white churches generally represent. So far as the color line is concerned, white American Christianity has been and still is absolutely rotten, utterly alien from the spirit of Christianity. Instead of blaming Rev. Mr. Blackshear rather let us turn our weapons on the brand of Christianity that exists in nearly all of our white churches. Call it by whatever name you may, but to call it Christianity, to associate it with Jesus, is a lie. Not Christianity, and those who are responsible for it, know that it is not.
Is it not time for them to be honest, and cease to cloak their hypocrisy under the sacred name of religion, certainly not the Christian religion? Race prejudice can never be justified, can never be made respectable by associating it with the Man of Gilead, the leader of the Israelites, who renders it all the more hateful, all the more detestable by way of contrast. He knew no color or race lines, and we who profess to be his followers must know none.
TO THE PESSIMIST
Say friend, why sit and eternally prate
At the cruel deal given to you by Fate?
Do you not know, your fate is YOU—
That you choose joy or gloom, by the things YOU
do?
If you fold your hands and never try
To conquer adversity with smiling scorn.
Nor journey anew, with hopes new born.
Then life and love will always be
Suggests New "Church of the Spirit" Without Color Line or Clergy.
To the Editor:
In order to offset the appearance of exclusiveness which has recently come to light in one of our publications, we wish to whisper that elsewhere in that and in other sects, and as a step forward and upward toward that brighter, fairer day toward which we all yearn, no matter what our creeds or our faiths may be, I want to suggest the starting of a new religious movement, or rather the coordination of all religious activities everywhere in a rebaissance of spiritual endeavor, the suggested title of "The Church of the Spirit.
It is in my mind that this church should be without formal organization or with as simple a staff as can handle its necessary secular affairs; that it shall be without an ordained or formal ministry or priesthood; that it shall exclude no one for reasons of color, race, creed, or any other reason, but shall cooperate with any and every existing religious organization which desires such cooperation; and that it shall devote its activities to the study and development of the spiritual qualities of love, faith, and hope through prayer, informal discussion among its members, and by every form of activity which can be undertaken.
DAVID DARRIN,
Roosevelt, N.Y.
Colored and White Handkerchief-Read Editors
Continue Their Campaign to Muzzle DePriest
We who Want Our Rights Protest, DePriest
Should Pay an Attention to These Critics.
To the Editor:
I have read editorials in some of our leading white dailies, whose editors purport to be friendly to our race, and editorials have appeared in some of our colored weeklies anent Representative DePriest's speech. The able statesman suggested a Federal Election Law to force the Senate to pass a law that would allow his franchise by chicanery and force, to allow him full freedom of the ballot in Dixie. There seems to be concerted effort, by both our so-called white friends and distinguished colored editors to muzzle Mr. DePriest.
How can an individual or group of people protect themselves unless the protection emanates from the state? New York, are trampled upon in New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Maryland because they have redress at the polls.
Southern legislators, at every tick of the clock, are wont to offer bills for the purpose of JIM CROWING and humiliating our group because we are not as good as others. I have been as close to some of the so-called best white friends of our group in Dixie as the majority of our leaders. Ex-Governor Dorsey, of Georgia, and I have been friends for a number of years. The late Thomas W. Bickett, one-time governor of the State of North Carolina, and I were personal friends. I quote here from Governor Bickett's speech at Tuskegee Institute in January, 1919, before the Farmers' Conference:
"I urge you in the language of Booker T. Washington, that there is only one road for the black man to follow, and that road leads straight to the door of the white man's conscience. Stand at that door and knock. Knock. You will be knocked. You will be chosen, chances not tomorrow—some day the God of our redemption will come. Not in the mighty wind, not in the earthquake, but in a small, still voice that will trouble the white man's conscience and drive sleep from his eyes until every plea born of wisdom and truth will be allowed. What good is education of the South is to not do too much agitating for the ballot. There are other things more important. What you need is more education and good homes."
In the name of all of the gods at once, what good is a home if you cannot protect it or get the same civic improvements as the white man gets. What good is education if you are denied the right to assert your manhood because you have no redress at the polls?
Why pay taxes on a palatial home in Dixie devoid of civic improvements because you cannot help elect city councilmen. Why do you have to be by a white man with his hat on and you dare not resent his action because you have no redress at the polls?
I ask our distinguished colored editors why is it that the white South strives so fervently to keep the ballot out of our hands if it is not valuable? Why does the white South require that a Negro must own so much property or have a certain amount of education or money before he can vote? Will some of our distinguished colored editors cite some instance where one white man in their neighborhood has met these requirements and then been denied the right to vote? The black man is able to meet them.
It would be a blessing to the colored race if ninety-nine per cent of our group were made of the stuff of Oscar DePriest. It would take a Federal is to get that weapon into our hands that is so dear to the white man in the South and elsewhere, go to it, Mr. DePriest.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox declared: "To sin by silence makes cowards out of men." The whole human race has been built on protestation. We who want our rights protest. Editors are cows if they are afraid to speak out.
This is the day for men and not molly-codies.
DAVID DABRIN
"If Christ should appear in Brooklyn or any other city under the guise of a colored man, and should seek membership in the church which He died to create, He would more than likely be met with a polite or blunt refusal."
WHITE AND BLACK
HYPOCRITES
A hypocrite is one who feigns to be what he is not. We are all disposed to compound for sins we are inclined to by damning us, but we are not a brother in black who complacently violate every requirement of the Christian creed, and yet he will blatantly denounce the white professing Christian who fails to exemplify fraternity and fellowship within the household of faith. Recently an Episcopalian rector in Brooklyn has raised himself to a "bad eminence" by inviting his off-colored member to seek membership in churches conducted by and for their own race variety. Every Negro newspaper and organ of public opinion has joined in heaping anthems of faith because he deviates from the faith which he professes to accept. Agnostics, atheists, infidels, scoffers along with the rest unite in assisting Mr. Blackshear to the Christian in which they do not crudely believe.
What right has he who does not believe in and practice humility, sacrifice, service, fortitude and strength, another because he may default in another requirement of the Christian faith? He who violates any part of the Christ cult thereby forfeits his mortal life in the benefice of any other portion.
Immoral Courage.
The Reverend Mr. Blackshear has the moral courage, or perhaps I had better say, the immoral courage of his conviction. What he did in the open, nine hundred and ninety-nine out of a thousand white ministers by overt act or covert contrivance. If Christ should appear in Brooklyn or any other city under the guise of a colored man, and should seek membership in the church which died to create he, the church which died to create he, the polite or blunt refusal. What white pastor is there in Brooklyn or elsewhere that dares propound to himself the self-searching query: "Lord. is it 17?" Let him then apply the Christ test to his own conscience and condone it, then done it unto the least of these, my brethren, we have done it unto me."
Spiritual Superiority.
But our colored clergy must not become too exaltant in their spiritual superiority. Have you not heard of fastidious Negro churches do not welcome the poor, ignorant congregational fellowship? to their congregational fellowship?
What is the difference between classifying the saints on the color scheme and on the social grade? Which would be the more displeasing to the Christ? He is the white preacher, the white preacher who practices the one, or the colored minister who practices the other? The Negro Christian who seeks entrance into a white church for other than genuine reasons of worship is as reprehensible as the priest who refuses him to too feel that he gains in social distinction and prestige merely because he is accepted into white association. The eleven men upon whom the tower of Siloam fell were not sinners beyond all the time. Blackshear is by no means the greatest hypocrite among Protestant or even Catholic clergymen. A simple act of his-merely serves to exemplify and dramatize the hypocrisy of the Christian church. He must be a white preacher who acts creates. The offense must needs come, but woe unto him by whom it cometh.
Color Question.
The Christian church must come to grips with the color question. Which exerts the controlling sancitary authority of the church? Will Christianity compromise with caste? Is the church of Christ a biracial or a co-racial institution? The church has been equivocating on this issue long enough. It accounts Christianity as a social force of the future because, he alleges, it has become insincere and unconvincing. This is a serious challenge, and seriously insincere. But the Reverent Bloor Blackshear et id cern genus are doing their best to make this religion appear to the Negro to be both insincere and unconvincing. A creed comprehensively deviate from its exections they thereby weaken its virility and appealing power. The kind of hypocrisy which Mr. Blackshear exhibits has over the non-white world. The unphilosophical mind is severely logical. It comes from Missouri and must be shown. You cannot hope to sain convert a meachine brother who is a creedful social intolerance and exclusiveness.
Condemnation.
Every Negro organ which has fallen under my eye indulges in blatant destructive condemnation of Rector Blackshear and seems to relish the opportunity to attack the white man it thinks of him. Should we not the rather strive to turn this spiritual faux pas into constructive channels? Will it serve to bring the white church to a realizing sense of the great damage it is doing to the white man? Will the black brethren to offend? On the other hand, the Negro should feel a stimulating sense of positive duty as well as of negative complaint. After all, the spiritual treasury of Christianity is not in the exclusive keeping of the white man, the Negro should redouble his zeal. The ideals of the Christ must be held up before the eyes of the world. The Negro has the strategic opportunity. The humble, the meek and the lowly always possess the moral and spiritual advantage that the Negro should take up the cross where the white man leaves it off.
Merely to rail at the white man for his lapses boots him nothing unless he sets the better example. Merely to rail at the white man against untwanted act does not indicate nobility of soul. It is merely animal reaction against insult and injury. Let us hope that this unugly incident will serve to make the white man more vertical and the Negro corsivelonist genuinely and sincerely Christian. In the meantime I would advise Rector Blackshear to omit from the list the Apostle of the avowal: "I believe in the communion of saints."
"GO DOWN TOWN AND MEET HIM"
The Problem of the Negro and the Downtown Stores Discussed from a Woman's Point of View.
BY NANNIE H. BURROUGHS
"I don't believe in standing a white man thinks that I am not the weeest of men. I think I heard a Negro who wrought up, say to another color he meant I did not know, but curt I drew "nigh" and listened be would "go down town and meet wondered whether I was there, and the "ins and outs interest me very much nor was would amount to anything. Somehow I could not refrain to me into another channel and nificance and economic possibility." Go down town will have to get our do: "Go down town and meet him."
"I don't believe in standing around up town talking big. If that white man thinks that I am not as good a man as he is, every day in the week, I'll go down town and give him and show him what I am. That's what I heard a Norwegian who was apparently courageous and wrought up say to another colored man the other day. Just what did not know, but curiosity moved me to find out.
he meant I drew him" and not him unless I could see that the man who would "go down town and tell him" was no ordinary chap. But I wondered whether he would do anything besides talk after he got down there. I heard the "ins and outs" of it, but the case in point did not interest me very much nor was I convinced that what he would do amount to anything.
would author
Somehow I could not refrain from turning the thoughts that came to me into another channel and I began to think on the deeper signifi-
cation and economic possibilities wrapped up in that challenge to
"Go down town and meet him." That, thought I is just what Negro business men will have to get courage, sense, and standards enough to
"Go down town and meet him."
PREACH TO NEGROES ONLY
Have you ever thought how starchers to "go into all the world" ONLY, and He calls Negro business Negro ghetto and cater to NEGRA. Until Negro business men set and I leap ahead and call to "whenever spend their 'sho' nuf" money with change with Negroes and apologize. Negro business men, take this down town, or up town—wherever and open ask, and "meet" Kwans's positively pathetic, embroges wading through department ness sections, spending their mone paper bags, and can't even get a nine-tenths of the big stores that restaurants, and dining rooms. HOT DOO. Some of the five and ten cent, only at their little old hot dog stat thousand dollars in some of the in the middle of the store from a home to get a cup of coffee with Money. Money for one hundred per store in which, it is spent—that many patrons in a store is a public It is high time that Negroes w with letters of protest and boycot unhappy men, that some enterprising Negroes, sense enough to conduct first class ness sections of our large cities. That's sense.
Chips from
Have you ever thought how strange it is that the Lord calls Negro preachers to "go into all the world and preach the gospel" to NEGROES ONLY and He calls Negro business men to go into back streets and Negro chatters and cater to NEGROES ONLY?
Negro business men set up businesses in business districts and compete and sell to "whoseover will," our people will continue to spend their "sho' muf" money with white merchants and their pocket change with Negroes and apologize for patronizing Negro business. Negro business men, take this advice. Move on and go down the road. Go down the road and "sho' muf" business section is—and open up and "meet um"
It is positively pathetic, embarrassing, and disgusting to see Negres wading through department stores, drug stores, and the big business sections, spending their money and lugging bundles, eating out of paper bags, and can't even get a nickel's worth of anything to eat in nine-tenths of the big stores that have soda fountains, lunch counters, restaurants, and dining rooms.
HOT DOG STANDS.
Some of the five and ten cent stores have the nerve to serve whites only at their little old hot dog stands. And. a Negro might spend a thousand dollars in some of the department stores and faint right in the middle of the store from hunger, but he would have to stagger home to get a cup of coffee with which to revive himself. Money talks, but the Negro's money does not talk. the right way. It must ask for one hundred per cent service of the store in a store as "mats" as well as sheets. Serving in a store is a public service and not a social courtesy. It is high time that Negroes were either bombarding the merchants with letters of protest and boycotting stores that will let them dress up in there but will not let them eat up in there; or, it is high time that some enterprising Negroes, with high standards, were getting sense enough to conduct first class lunch and coffee shops in the business sections of our large cities. "Go down town and meet um."
Chips from the Quarry
Bad Grammar Interracial.
(Noticed in an Hour's Reading.)
"One of them WHOM she said was Lieut—"
The Crisis for September—"The playing of Harry Gray and Mr. De-Knight WERE excellent."
"Everybody should see Halleluiah (note spelling). THEY may even be slightly jim-crowed as I was."
How Bad Is Wrong?
Query—On what scale do we measure the intensity of jim-crowning? Explicitly: Is a person in the rear of the jim-crow car—next to the white people's car—any less jim-crowed than a person at the front end?
The Proofreader Talks
"One word or Two?" This question comes up once or twice every day, and it is not always easy to answer without consulting the dictionary. Even then, it is not unlikely that the libraries are available they will not agree. Perhaps nothing connected with the language is more unsettled and chaotic than this matter of the compounding of words. In this instance of the Standard dictionary was being compiled, about forty years ago, the late F. Horace Teal, then perhaps the leading proofreader of English and an agnified authority, devised some rules and laid down some principles concerning compounding. In the 1950s, the author and not wholly consistent, have been the chief guides to writers and dictionary makers since that time. For the layman, however, there is seemingly only one available principle and that is based on the mathematician. It may be roughly stated thus.
Every word (in English) of two or more syllables has one syllable accented more than the rest. Hence, when two words of one syllable each coalesce—or are compounded—as the word is stressed, the syllable will be stressed. For example, in the early years of the game, people spoke of "foot ball"—two words, neither term accented. Now we make one word of the two terms with accent on "foot."
The same rule or principle applies to other compounds. So, when in doubt, the doubt may often be resolved by the pronunciation. When one or more of the words composing the term in question has two or more syllables, the matter is more difficult to understand. Compare the pronunciation of "water" and "melon," as two separate words, with "wafermelon" one word. It will be noted that the accent on the first syllable of "melon" disappears.
There is still the question whether the first word, "watermelon," should have a hyphen. That matter will be discussed in a later talk.
The rule, as stated, of course, is of limited application; for in many cases the correct or prevailing propulsion may not be known with certainty. Yet its observance is worth while. Under its guidance, for example, these two words would never be compounded into "worthwhile as some persons are wont to do. F. H. M. M
1. Is it advisable to use a knife or any sharp pointed instrument to clean the finger nails?
2. What is the "cutlery" mean?
3. When entering a theater, if an usher is at the entrance to the aisle, should the man precede the lady he is accompanying?
4. How can one use initials on a visiting card?
5. What kind of flowers are appropriate for the dinner table in early autumn?
ANSWERS
1. No. An orange-wood stick is the best thing to use.
2. It means plain, or simple, such as cakes that are cooked in their jackets.
3. No, the lady should follow the usher, then the man.
4. It is preferable to have the name appear in full.
5. Goldenrod, daisies, and asters are all appropriate.
"Americans have much in common with us as wilt and wounds expressed in their language, so we can to get away from the notion that they are in an inferior and barbaric state. In more than one sense, we Americans are culturally cultivated and than they." C. J. BENDER
ANSWERS
round up town talking big. If that is good man, as he is, every day in town he and show him what I am. so was apparently courageous and seded man the other day. Just what posity moved me to find out. cause I could see that man who him was told he chap. But I him was told talk after he got down " of it, but the case in point did not I convinced that what he would do from turning the thoughts that came it began to think that the deeper sig- that, thought I in that challenge to Me, thought I, is just what Negro sense, sense, and standards enough to m."
range it is that the Lord calls Negro up business and preach the gospel" to NEGROES men to go into back streets and OES ONLY! up business in business districts will尔 our people will continue to white merchants and their pocket for patronizing Negro stores. advice: Move out of Sodom and go the "sno" nuf" business section is arreassing, and disgusting to see Negro stores, drug stores, and the big busily and hugging bundles, eating out of nickel's worth of anything to eat in have soda funnels, lunch counters, G STANDS. stores have the nerve to serve whites and. And a Negro might spend a department stores and faint right anger, but he would have to stagger money does not talk the right way, cent of the public service of the beans "eats" as well as sheets. Serv-service and not a social courtesy. are either bombarding the merchants storing stores that will let them dress up in there; or, it is high time with high standards, were getting lunch and coffee shops in the busi-" Go down town and meet us." the Quarry
Birthdays
OCTOBER 58: Julian P. Adger, 35, 1291
Catherine street, Philadelphia: George R.
Bridefoot, 36, Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee
Ridge, Al.: Samuel R. Davis, 31, 6358 Frank-
Beeley, Al.: Samuel R. Davis, 31, 6358
Woodbury, 55, 12 28th street, San Diego, Cal.
August W. Brown, 45, Brown, S.C. C: Alexander H. Newsome, 65, Highland, N.C.
OCTOBER 68: James H. Robinson, 34, 3755 Gaffe avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio: Isaac
Michaels, 34, 3755 Gaffe avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio:
Michaels J. Miller, 39, Bishopsville, S.C.
Mich. Isaac J. Miller, 49, C. Glaves, 44, 4145 Brenton Street, St. Louis, Mo. I. Garland Penn, 62, 2833 Park avenue, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Mo. R. Saratoga Avenue, Saratoga Springs, N.Y. William R. Valentine, 50, Bordentown Training School, Bordentown, N.J. Robert B.
S. S. Lesson
Sunday, October 8th: RECOGNIZING OUR DEBT TO Others. Neh. 4:15-23; Mark 3:24; Phi. 14:11-17; Phil. 2:1-8; Col. 3:12; 4:11; Jas. 2:15-17.
Golden Text: Not looking each of you to his own things, but each of you also to the things of others. Phil. 24.
Devotional Reading: Psa. 40:5-10.
Primary Topic: Helping One Another.
Lesson Material: Phi. 14:28; Mark 3:28.
Memory Verse: Let us work that which is good toward all men. (Gal. 6:10).
Topic for Young People and Adults: Ful-
lilling our Obligations to Others.
BIBLE THOAT TODAY
THE GIFT OF PEACE—Pace I leave
with you and be thanked for your help
as the world gives, give I unto you. Let
not your heart be troubled, neither let it
be afraid—John 14:27.
English
Word Often Misused
Do not say "then we retreated
back to the fort." Omit "back."
Word Often Mispronounced
Curtail (verb); accent last syllable
Belligent, bellcello, warlike, combative, contentious.
Word Study
Use a word three times and it is yours. Let us increase our vocabularies by mastering one of a week's CLARIFY to make clear. "Your explanation has clarified the points in question."
Week's Poem
I have to live with myself, and so
I want to be fit for my knowledge;
I want to be able as days go by
Always to look myself straight in the
eye.
I don't want to stand with the setting
sun
And hate myself for the things I
have done;
But I want to go out with my head
I want to deserve all men's respect;
And here in the struggle for fame
and pet
I want to be able to like myself.
I don't want to look at myself and
know
That I am bluster and bluff and
know.
---
MYSELF
An unusual Fling at Abraham Lincoln.
"And when," asks the versatile George Schuyler, "are Negroes going to stop eulogizing Abraham Lincoln?" Let us hope never.
The time has already come when the Negro has stopped worshipping the Republican party, the party of Lincoln, and rightly so because of what it has become; but let not the day arrive when a single colored man would hesitate to lay laurels at the feet of the Great Emancipator.
Abraham Lincoln helped to fight the Civil War and signed the Emancipation Proclamation. Some men might have believed in fairer treatment of the Negro, than did Lincoln; but few DID more.
Even if Lincoln had been in accord with Lincoln Legere; even if he got his inspiration from the heart of Dixie and preached the doctrine of jim-crow, his mere driving the Confederate Army from Gettysburg; his signing the Emancipation Proclamation and dying a martyr's death, would have been sufficient reason for laying wreaths on his grave.
Much has been said as to what Lincoln meant and believed: THAT IS A QUESTION FOR ARGUMENT. What he actually DID, however, is no question for argument, and it is what he DID and the consequences of what he did which really count.
As to some of the men eulogized on the temporary monument reared in Baltimore recently, we heartily agree with Mr. Schuyler, but as to Lincoln, we can't.
Watch this Young Woman Develop.
Every community should be interested in its unusual young folk. Observers at the tennis courts at Drudid Hill Park have no doubt been attracted by the form and playing of Miss Helen Ford, high school girl who undoubtedly is on her knees in this popular field of sport.
Miss Ford has been playing less than two years, and tells you that she has had no expert coaching other than playing the game on the local courts. Naturally she is no star yet, but no one could watch the lithe and natural manner in which she plays the game, the perseverance she shows, the earnestness with which she is putting herself into the sport, and not feel that she has wonderful possibilities.
She is on her way to the nationals, of course; but let us hope a little more. A white "Helen" "cut and lobbed" her way to the court of St. James and to world recognition on the tennis courts of two continents; Baltimore may, through this young woman, write the city's name high in the archives of sportdom.
Anyway, we must begin to watch out and encourage all the talent of every kind that we have.
A Wise Step for Business Men.
The appointment of a committee by the Business Men's Exchange at its meeting, Thursday, to look into and study the affairs of a local shoe manufacturing enterprise ordered men with a view of helping that institution, was one of the best things that that organization has done for some time.
Heretofore, this organization has endured this enterprise in a persevering great energy in seeing that the colored people of Baltimore get behind the plant with their patronage. In taking the step, that they must first study and investigate fully the character and the business of the movement as well as the market possibilities in this field, before they urge citizens to invest in these securities, they have begun well. for by this procedure they will gain the confidence of the public and their endorsement worth while.
At this same meeting a committee to study the possibilities of putting colored Baltimore on the air map by promoting a flying school here, was also a forward if the men are in earnest about it.
The one unfortunate reaction, however, seen at Thursday night's meeting of the league, was the determination of the officials to keep the administration narrowed to a few stockholders. Under the present constitution there are not more than twenty actual voting members, and under this same constitution they can perpetuate their tenure of office indefinitely.
Their argument is that during the past fourteen years they have purchased one building valued at about $4,000 and are purchasing another on the building loan plan and that they do not propose that any new men shall come into the league and have any controlling say about things. To this end they will allow no entrants to become other than associate members and this is automatically keeping the bulk of the business men out of the body.
Business Men Want Active Program.
What these otherwise estimable gentlemen fail to see is that the average business man in Baltimore is interested in controlling their business in order to be interested in supporting an organization which will help to bring the buying public behind our own business enterprises. The fear that they will lose office or lose the right of the league to vote, that is a sure indication that they are not living up to their obligations to make the league what it should be. We hope that the committee sent out some time ago, write a more practical definition will make its report this month and that the present officials will have the good judgment to accept some guidance which the league can expand and to modern business league program.
BETHEL AGREES TO PAY HENRY O. TANNER
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly
FASHION SHOW FOR MEN IS HARLEM'S LATEST STUNT
NEW YORK—After fashion shows and fashion shows, all of the same hue and color, the Obisyn Club stepped out Friday with a male fashion revue that was quite the thing. The usual collegiate attire that frequents the well known Idyll Wylie tea room, William Clifford, with only a few of the old familiar faces, among them William Clifford, Failt, Moss Malloy, Gay Ingram, Roberta Jones, Lee C. Robinson from Morris Brown. Last year's "Queen of the Classes," J. C Robinson from Morris Brown. Lamar Williams, Coleman Willis, Bertha Lambert, Amy Brown and Dr. Kelly Miller, Jr., packed Rockland Palace. From the Club can the charming Louis Cole, just back from his Parent engagement with the "Blackbirds." Frazier and Green who with Cole did a trip special, Gwendolyn Posey and Kathleen La Mar. They featured the Breakaway and the number label.
Of the Broadway fashion, And what a reception he got, and how swanky were his foreign made clothes.
RICHARDSON FIRST
First honors for the male models went without question to Webb Richardson, whose most attractive garb was a riding outfit of tan breeches, a lighter tan polo shirt and a high-cut high waisted boots. To appreciate picture one should know that Mr. Webb has a gorgeous color, aquiline features, set off by coal black eyes and way hair, and a trim boyish figure.
He heals from either Charleston or Columbia, which, I take it, makes him one of those fascinating creatures. Gechee. Incidentally, his family is more than well supplied with the current of the land.
BEACH ATTREU,
Ernest Chawell, who introduced beach attire and what the well-dressed man will include in his fall wardrobe, was a close second. The other models were Walter Scott, Gordon Roberts and Edward Chavers. Robert Drain, Holloway, William of Porry company who is a high way, were tres chic, William of Porry company who is a high way, and Fred Kerion. All of them had the proper nonchalant air and knew their mannequin business.
The program offered sport logs, smart hats and fall suits and top coats.
Caplan's Pharmacy
We Ship Records Anywhere by Parcel Post, Insuring Against Breakage.
F MONEY ORDER IS SENT WITH THE ORDER WE PAY THE POSTAGE.
AM I BLUE
FOX TROT from the Motion Picture ON WITH THE SHOW by JIMMIE NOONE and his Apex Club Orchestra VOCAL CHORUS by MAY ALIX
VOCALION RECORD No. 1296
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Bishop Heard Returns
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.-Bishop W.
J. Heard and Miss Valeria Caldwell
H. Heard and Miss returned from the trip on Saturday. T. H. bishop attended the continuation committee on Faith and education and reported and reported a pleasant trip. He opened conferences in West Virginia. S. Hill hold his other conferences on scheduled time. Bishop Heard pre-identifies district embracing several conferences covering the states of
JOHN H. HARRIS
Bishop Heard
Pennsylvania.
Dodd, Dr. Wesley on History Program
Negro History Association Ready for Annual Meeting
WASHINGTON, D. C. — Professor William E. Dodd, head of the department of history of the University of Chicago, will deliver an address at the annual meeting of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History to be held in Washington from the 11th to the 13th of November. He is one of the best known historians of his day and is regarded in many circles as the nation's leading authority on the history of African Americans. Chicago he has done much to train Negroes to do historical research.
Professor Dodd will appear along with Dr. Wesley head of the department of history, of Howard University.
126 North Gay Street
PHILADELPHIA—Discharged from his work as a truck driver and refused his pay, James Williams, 519 E. Haines street, Germantown, shot and Charles Nester, white, head of an employment bureau at 124 N. 126th street. Nester accused Williams of burning the outings of a truck belonging to Nester which Williams denied. Williams denied the responsibility and when discharged, asked for his money, which Nester told him would be held up until he found out what the "repairs to the truck would cost" and taking tax out, and then I'll pay you the rest." he said. Nester was standing behind a cage and near him were three white girl cheeks. Look out, girls" Williams said, and the next instant shot his employer through the chest.
GOOD SAMARITAN HIT
3Y STREET CAR
WASHINGTON, D.C., (C.N.S.)—
deed landed him in the hospital.
While helping a motorist push his car through the intersection of T streets, northwest, a street car rounded the curve and struck Roxxie's ribs and ribs and injuring him internally.
Boxboro lives at 316 V street.
DANCED WITH HIS GIRL
WASHINGTON, D.C. — (CNS.)—Moses Black of the 1600 block of Sixth street northwest, was sentenced to 360 days in jail for carrying and bringing to use a dangerous weapon.
Black had an argument in Murray's Casino, a local dance hall, with William Blaine the latter had forbidden him to dance with his girl.
THE WILLIAMS
CONGRESSMAN AND MBS. OSCAR DePRIEST
LOS ANGELES, California—Congressman and Mrs. Oscar DePriest photographed in California last week where Mr. DePriest reiterated his plea for increased interest in the U. Congress. In the state, he said, the snow-covered Sierra made the trip see like a second honeymoon to the Congressman and his wife.
PHILADELPHIA
LEON DAVIS and Haywood Purrell spent the week-end at St. Michaels, Md., with his wife, Katherine. MRS. E. HOLLIS, in Centerville, Md., last week.
MRS. NELLIE ANDERSON, who has been visiting relatives here, has returned to her home at Cecilton, Md.
PROC. HYGEOID DOUGLAS, spiritualist, was in Cecilton, Sunday.
MRS. ANDERSON who has been visiting Boyd, Md. has returned home.
MISS MNIEE SPIRIGGS has been visiting her mother at Brunswick, Md.
MISS EVANGELINE EVANS has returned to Petersburg, Md., having some time in Petersburg, Md., visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Evans.
MRS. RACHEL JOHNSON and children, who spent the summer with her parents, MRS. HOLLIS, in Petersburg, Md., has returned to the city.
SAMUEL DEMBY was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sunday in Petersburg.
MISS ORTHELLO SPRY, who has been the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Thompson, returned to her home at Petersburg, Md.
MRS. WILLIAM LAMPKIN has returned to her home in Pittsburgh after visiting friends.
MISS VIRGINIA CLARK, who has been visiting Marianne Mastic Clark, of Leinerville, Md. has visited
MRS. MAGGIE JOHNSON. Mrs. Eliza Sharper and Miss Mary Anderson spent at MRS. Susan Rothell of Middleown, Mrs. GERTRUDE KYLE and daughter, little Rosa Kyle, and little Martha Cuff, of Salem, Va., have returned home after Mrs. Kyle's sister, Mrs. Rosa Pearson.
LITTLE BETTLE WILLAMS, who has been visiting in Bridgeville, Del, has returned to Frankie WILLAMS, Mrs. PLAINKIE WILLAMS, Mrs. PLOREANCE Johnson, Miss Stella Burbage, Charles Williams and Harrison Bury were among the excursitors to Bridgeville, Del, Sunday.
ANDREW MOORE has returned to the city after a brief vacation in Boston as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mitchell.
MRS. ALVERTA COURSEY was the guest of Mrs. RICHARD Harris, in Bridgeville, Sunday.
MRS. BESSIE RICKETTS visited her mother, Mrs. Lillie Cannon, of Bridgeville, Del, Sunday.
MRS. CANNON spent a few days in Bridgeville, Del, last week.
MRS. ORA MILES and Mrs. M. Henry,
principal of the public school in Middletown,
Del., spent a day in this city last week.
MRS. ESTON BURNETTE spent the week-
end visiting Mary I. George, of Lynebeth,
WALTER HIGUINOTHAM, and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Waiters spent the week-end in Lynebeth, Va., visiting relatives and friends.
JOHNSON visited in Culpeper,
Va., Sunday.
PROP. J. R. CURTIS of Tidewater
Institute, accompanied by two students,
Mrs. MABELA GEORGE Trherne, mo-
tored here.
MRS. ARELIA GOODMAN, who has been
spending the summer here, has returned to
Mrs. MABELA GEORGE Trherne will
leach in Ascocne county this term.
JAMES AND HOWARD CHESTER motored
their car to the airport to pick up
pregnant Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Chester.
Phi Beta Sigma
Fraternity
Presents
MARIAN
ANDERSON
Contralto
WM. L. KING
at the Piano
AMERICAN
ACADEMY
OF
MUSIC
Broad and Locust Sts.
Philadelphia
FRI. OCT. 11, 1929
8:30 P. M.
TICKETS, 50c-$2.50
May be obtained at Heppel's,
1119 Chestnut St.; Your Pharmacy,
18th and Christian Sts;
Bowleton Pharmacy, 18th and
Christian Sts;
18th and Lombard Sts; King's,
19th and Fiftwater Sts; Miller's,
20th and Ridge Ave.;
Bowleton Pharmacy, 59th and
Rice Sts; Garden and
Lombard; Geo, Decane, 5914
Germantown Ave.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
By MRS. FANNIE A. HARRES
1017 Lombard Street
MRS. J. A. BROOKS of 2044 Nicholas street, has returned home from a week's visit to the University. MRS. PESAR DESHIELDS of 1888 N. Van Pell street, entertained at a course dinner, Henry James and D. Thomas of Kentucky. Saturday. Northern District Convention of St. Luke's held a meeting Monday at the Fisherman's Hall, 2414 Montgomery avenue, at 10:30 a.m. the ensuing year: Freeman H. Averett of 2018 N. Nineteenth street, district deputy, the ensuing year: Smith treasurer; Benjamin View, secretary. MR. AND MELVIN MELVIN JORDAN and mother, Mrs. Harriet Burton of Spring Valley, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Moseley of 2031 Nicholas street. LITTLE RUTH SAMUELS, one of the teachers of North End, and daughters of Mrs. Lisa Samuels, 2049 Oxford street, presented Mrs. Jones, wife of the late Mrs. Lisa Samuels, a beautiful bouquet at a surprise party last week, given by the members of the church. AND MRS. J. E. WALER of Pamela, who are in the city visiting friends, purchased last week, a fine home, corner lot, in the near future. They will occupy in the near future. Upon their return to the Canal Zone they will stop in Richmond, Maryland, visit the relatives and friends.
THOMAS OWENS of 1836 N. Van Pelt street, has visited Atlantic City, Abu Sarya, and New York. Mr. MOYUN. Sr., of 1507 Sillies street, will resume his duties in the new club house at Ardmore, after a three week's vacation. THE REV. WILLIAM DAVIS of 1545 N. Twenty-ninth street, has returned home and went on business, meeting there and back. MRS. MARY PASKINS of Cape May, N.J., spent a few days with the club, before returning home, after spending the summer in Ocean City, New Jersey. MRS. HENRY HARRIS of 2018 Master's degree, surrounded by a number of her friends. Saturday afternoon, who came to her farewell before the center her second year at Howard University. NOBLE CARNEY of 1738 N. Lambert street, of Indianapolis, Ind., St. Louis Mo., Evansville, Ind., Toledo, Ohio and Pittsburgh. PA. ALMERITE WHITE of 1812 N. Van Pelt street, after a long illness caused by overwork. She is still confined to her room. EVELYN BROWN is spending her vacation of three weeks in Long Branch and Abu Sarya. ALFRED ROBERTS, Jr., has gone to Culpeper, Va., to visit his father, Alfred Roberto.
MR. AND MRS. HENRY THOMAS entertained J. Milton Jarris, a vice president of New York, and Miss Lella Baines of New York, Sunday. The People's Finance Corporation of this city has just decided to rent a cent on its outstanding capital stock. The company was organized one year ago. Thomas Hope is manager of the institution. BALLEY of Mery Hospital, entertained her sister-in-law, Mrs. Ethel Pergougion of Cambridge, Mass., while in the Hon. W. H. HUNT, U.S. Consult to Guadalupe, F.W.,L was in the city a few hours Monday. BESEGCA HARRIS of Anacostia, D.C. motored through the city last week. THE REV. AND MRS. O. J. GOODWIN of Zion Church, Plainfield, N.J., were visitors here. C. PRIZE, Jr., who has been living in New York city, has returned to the city and entered the University of Pennsylvania, where he is the son of Jesse Price, the confectioner, 804 S. Nineteenth street. DR. S. M. FRANCH, the poet, addressed the Church Sunday night, subject, "Who Are We and Witness We Came." TANNER G. DUCKERY, principal of the Township, where he spent several weeks' vacation.
MRS. ROSWELL WATERS and children, of Oriskind, Md. spent several days with her sisters, Mrs. Charles Johnson and Miss Mabel Ward. 1926 N. Ringleton, Md. accompanied by motor, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Johnson and family, and Miss Ward. who spent one day with MRS. MARIE FARRIER visited her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ward. 1926 MRS. ROSWELL RWIGHT visited Mr. Wright's brother, J. P. Wright.
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Says G.O.P. Leader Embraces Lily-Whiteism, and Ku Klux Klan.
Davis Asserts Vann Works
With Both Parties.
ATLANTA, Ga.—(Special)—Robert
Vann, of Pittsburgh, is swallowing
the lily-white program of the Hoover
administration in the hope that he
will be named assistant U.S. Attorney-
general, Ben Davis, editor of the
Atlanta Independent, asserted in his
paper Saturday.
The editorial, in part, reads:
"Bob Vann is a typical example of
the southern Negro who migrates
North and turns traitor to the section
of the country that gave him birth."
"It matters not who is responsible for the editorial entitled, 'Republicans in the South,' it sounds like Bob Vann's sophistry and cowardly demagogy. The administration is responsible for the victory of Bob Vann. His name appeared on the payroll of both political parties. This being what, right now has he to ask the Republican party to provide a berth for him? He was for neither Hoo-tee nor the Republican party to bear the boodle, and it made no difference to him whether he got it from one party or both."
"Vann is perfectly willing to see every Negro in the South politically eliminated, if their elimination would help him land Mr. Hoover's job. The independent wants the Attorney-General to help Bob Vann and see whether he will prove a liability or an asset."
Best Element
"Mr. Vann says Mr. Huston will pick leaders in the South from among the best element, and the best element is among the element, as agreeing with all the whites, if all Negroes are like Bob Vann. Mr. Vann says it is quite obvious that conditions being what they are in the South, a strong Reservationist group, there except by subordinating the Negro politicians. He says it is useless to blink at the fact that white people in Dixie will not follow Negroes in the South, so he to have two parties in the South, the Negro must step down and out."
Lily-Whites
"This is the fundamental doctrine of the lily-whites and Ku Klux of the South, and Bob Vann becomes a propagator of lily-witness and Ku Klux in stepping stone to Perry Howard's job." "Mr. Vann says, the black leaders of the South have been discredited, and that the new policy of the Republican party in the South will prove political in the South," Vann says. "Mr. Vann is the first Negro to advance the theory that disfranchisement and political
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MOTHER BETHEL ENDS
TANNER COURT SUIT
Philly Church Settles Suit Instituted by Noted Painter.
Trustee Board Had Refused to Pay $3,900 Balance.
PHILADELPHIA—The long drawn court case between Mother Bethiel A.M.E. Church and the artist H. O. Tanner, to an end here last week when the trustee board agreed to a settlement arranged by Raymond Pace Alexander, attorney for Mr. Tanner.
Because of the prominence of the litigants, the case, filed by Mr. Tanner, September, 1927, created national interest.
S3.900 Involved
His history dates back to 1924, when the Rev. Henry P. Anderson, at that time, planned a plan whereby the artist was engaged by the board of trustees to design and execute a model plaque containing a basrelief of the late Richmond, founder of the A.M.E. church. This plaque, intended to be exhibit dat the Sesqui-Centennial held in 1968, was also to contain a model plaque of the founder and a model sketch of the blacksmith shop which the founder conducted, and to be the super, containing upward of 2,000 manes of prominent men and women. The artist agreed to execute the work of $4,000 and was paid $100 for the plaque, and containing upward of 2,000 manes of prominent men and women. In the meantime the Rev. Mr. Anderson was transferred and the project abandoned. It was then that the suit to recover the plaque was instituted by Mr. Turner through his attorney.
Pastor Praised
The present pastor, the Rev. J. Campbell Beckett, urged the church to recognize the moral obligation and needed for bringing about the settlement.
A release was signed by Mr. Tanner and in return a cheque for the full settlement was forwarded to him by Rev. Mr. Beckett, pastor.
PHILLY PERSONALS
MRS BACHEL SMEMSERS visited her parents and relatives at Ekton, Md., Kearney.
MRS ROXANNA NICOLAS and Mrs. Dorea Presnation returned Saturday after visiting her parents, and Mrs. Allen Nicholas.
MRS SUSIE Pearline and Roxy Tateyens. MRS SUSIE and friends at Aberdeen, Md., last week.
MRS. E. I. DAVIS accompanied Mr. and Mrs. D. Hall of Aberdeen, Md., here.
MRS. AND MRS. WALTER GLEAVES and Mrs. Lizzie M. Hutchins visited the late Mrs. A. Hutchins, of Garnetville, Md., Sunday.
U. S. BAND BOOKED FOR 50 WEEKS ABROAD
MONDAY and TUESDAY—
Lon Chaney
“Where East is East”
with
Beautiful Estelle Taylor as the Enchantress
Columbia and Vitaphone Acts
PATHE FABLES and NEWS REEL
MUSIC! SOUND! TALKING!
FRIDAY—All-Star Cast in
“The Shake Down”
A Talking Picture! Action as You Like!
“Black Book”—No. 2
TALKING COMEDY MOVIETONE ACTS
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY—
John Gilbert
in
“DESERT NIGHTS”
MUSIC and SOUND!
Vitaphone Acts Novelty Reel Comedies
SATURDAY—
SPECIAL Western Feature
Watch for Advertisement at the Theatre
TALKING COMEDY MOVIETONE ACT
“The Final Reckoning”—No. 8
LOCAL BOY SCORES IN SISSLE'S BAND
Pike Davie, Trumpet Player, Is Acclaimed by British Audiences.
BOOKED FOR 20 WEEKS
Call Band Exponents of New Rhythmic Art.
LONDON—Noble Sissle's "sissling syncopators," featuring Pike Davis, are quite the musical sensation here. The band has just opened a twenty-week engagement in England and is playing at the Gladium. Pike Davis is scoring heavily with the British public as one of the greatest trumpet players ever heard here. The Daily Mail here,
"Jazz-sizzling hot—kept Monday night's audience at the Hull Palace fastened in their seats until after the last tram had gone. Just when the encyclopedias and the encyclopedias had nothing new to offer us, along comes Noble Sissle and his band of accomplished musicians to delight us with something new. He was only with great reluctance that Monday night's audiences accepted the final curtain. "Mr. Sissle does not need to present anything particular, but his melodies are all well-known favourites but the talented players at his disposal manage to infuse so much verve, so much spirit, into every element of the delight and unexpected appeal. Harmony joins with movement to form a mixture well-night irresistible, and with the vocal solos and choruses, place these colored musicians at the top of their class. The personnel of the Band is as
The personnel of the Band is as follows:
Pike Davis, trumpet; Demas Dean, trumpet; James Revey, trombone; Juice Wilson, violin; Andrew Rosemond, violin; Jean Harrison, vocalist; Butler Bailey, sax; Raymond Usera, sax; Rudy Jackson, sax; Lloyd Pincney, piano; Bass Edwards, tuba; Jesse Baltimore, drums.
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MOVIETONE and
VITAPHONE
Nothing But the Best
in Pictures
MONDAY and TUESDAY
Lon C
"Whe
(Continued from page one)
Little Esther dances. She dances so lightly, and so freely does her body play above the hips, that really seems that she can dance. Now she dances easily on one foot while she draws the other unused behind her.
Plays With Dolls
"But what struck me most of all regarding this little black fairy is that throughout the entire performance she is playing for her own child amusement. Later when I visited her in her dressing-room and saw her playing, with one of the children she amuses, the dimmers have sent her, I asked her whether she ever got bored with her act. She looked at me, her black eyes big with surprise, and all in tears. In spite of her successes, Little Ether has remained the merry, laughing child she was on the streets of Chicago. She loves play, all her work is as play, make a hit with her, play with her. She is full of life and speed, and her build is all perfection itself. Her legs, arms and hands are strong, her skin is as smooth as silk. She is so gay and winsome that when she walks on the streets she always has an adoring crowd behind her and a restaurant many strangers call to her as she passes.
Breaks Every Record
"The London Sunday People says of her: "Thousands flock no longer to herself, or the clever American table, the Moulin Rouge to see Mistinguette girls, or the beautiful women of the chorus, but to applaud a little mite, ten years old, who has weamed and within the space of a few weeks.
"We are living in an age of speed but this amazing little child has broken every record of sudden theatrical success.
Of all the countries she has visited, Little Esther has had the biggest success in Sweden, not because of her altruistic alone, but because the owner of a restaurant, one Brande Tomton, who had been a class of milk because she is colored. The Swedish papers made it hot for Tomton, while Little Esther, her mother, and her manager, received invitations from some of the highest persons, socially, to visit them in their homes, just to show that she disapproved of Tomton's conduct.
The Dagblad called the incident, "the greatest scandal Stockholm has ever had." Causing as much sensuality as the Stockholm Dagblad also made an inquiry at all the leading restaurants and hotels regarding their attitude toward receiving colored people. The Dagblad also in all our leading restaurants, and hotels Little Ester or any other Negro would be received with pleasure, except at Branda Tontons. Little Ester was welcomed because of her popularity.
Kids Brought Flowers
Such a shower of ridicule poured in on Tomton that he was forced to close. He was caricatured in several of the leading papers, while Little Esther's popularity rose, higher than ever. When she left, it was clear she was seeing her off, presenting her flowers and inviting her to return to Stockholm.
Mother is Proud
Mrs. Jones, a modest, quiet little woman, is very proud of her daughter. To her the astonishing success of her little girl seems more like a humble circumstance than leaf from humble circumstances to wealth and popularity.
White Manager Failed
She told this writer that it is Mr. Garner to whom is due all the thanks for her present financial standing, and said that the white manager who brought her from America treated her very badly. She further charged her with the maid of his child when Little Ester gave performances in private homes. At the home of M. Dreyfus, Paris banker, Mrs. Jones said that she was made to wait in the hall, and that she was invited to see her and saw her, and learned who she was, he invited her in and introduced her to his guests. The white manager scolded her and asked if she did not know that that that wasn't done back home. The Garner, who comes from New York City, has been in Europe for
[Image of a child standing in front of a door]
HARRY R. (Buddy) MILLS, Jr.
of 4 East Penn street, Bellefonte,
Pa., who is the only race member of
the Wetzeler Junior Band of 110
pieces. Buddy plays a clarinet. The band's
headquarters is at Milesburg, Pa.
fifteen years and has made a plaid
record with the American Red
Cross with whom he served as an am-
bassador driver from the first year of
the war.
He has served as secretary for
Johnny Hudgins and others. He
says he finds opportunities. He
seeks to act as acts everywhere.
His address is: 17 Rue des Acacia,
Paris, France, care of Fons.
Listening In
Sunday, October 6
4:30 P.M.-Pickle Jubilee Day program
4:20 P.M.-Hiddes, Sanders, "Hallehill," and other Negro movies, WEVD.
9:30 P.M.-Aunt Mandy's Chillin. WOR.
8:30 P.M.-Dixie Singers. WOR.
9:00 P.M.-The Four Dusty Travelers
WOR.
(UNDER MONDAY, OCT. 7-)
10:00 P.M.-Cabin Night, N.B.C. System.
10:00 P.M.-Cabin Night, N.B.C. System.
Taylor Gordon's New Book Out
Critics Approve Work of Rosamond Johnson's Partner.
Covarrubias Presents
Another Negro Drawing
"Moanin' Low," an illustration by
Cecilia Cox, "Born to Be," is receiving much
comment in artistic circles. The
production is a modernistic drawing
that emphasizes and accompanies
singing for royalty.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
T.O.B.A. DOIN'S
"Shake Your Feet," Joe Carmucho's big rev, is hitting on all six; the Williams and Brown "Happy Go Lucky" is going at it. The "Brown Gal" is John Henderson's "Brown Gal" is coming in also for some fine mention in the different papers and the dawn Lemons "Shake Your Feet," "Happy Go Lucky," and "Brown Gal" are slated to play the Grand Theft Auto series and November. All of the above mentioned shows have more than twenty people and the check up on them shows that they are able and able to care for by themselves.
ROUTINGS
"Miss Broadway," *Palm Beach*, Memphis, Teen.
"Jazelle and Girl," *Jazzland*, Elmhurst.
"Jazelle," *Ogden*, Columbus, Ohio.
Whitman Sisters, Kippa, Detroit.
"Cotton Blossoms," *Ella*, Moore, Dallas.
"Birth of the Blues," Prolic, Birmingham,
"Happy Go Lucky," Minore, Pittsburgh.
Butterbets and Buse, Lincoln, Louis-
town.
"Brown Gail," Walker, Indianapolis,
"Golden Brown Steppers," Roosevelt,
Cincinnati.
"Dinah Dink," Washington, Bt. Louis.
"Chocolate Town," Eighty One, Atlanta.
"No Poool," Douglas, Macon, Ga.
South Bars Race Films
NEW YORK - Southeastern exhibitors want no race films, the Weekly Film Review, here, emphasizes in calling attention to the reaction of audiences of this section to the nurseries in all-white casts, which have been released in recent months. A resolution against such pictures was passed at the recent convention of the Southeastern Exhibitors at Columbus, Ga. They have called upon the governor to severely restrict or foreign" the making of pictures exploiting the colored race.
Finish "Miracle Maker"
NEW YORK. — Led Goldberg, 225 West 46th street, who produced several talking shorts with all-colored casts, "Harlem Cabaret," "Darktown Court," "Cafe for Whites" and "Billy Power's Band," has just finished his latest feature photoplay "The Miracle Maker," featuring Salem Tuttle, Whitney, Sylvia Brown, and William Smith, with a large cast. "The Miracle Maker" will be released the latter part of October.
AN ARTIST HOUR
WASHINGTON, D. C.—An artist hour will be held at Israel Baptist Church, 11th street between F. G and G.northeast, Sunday. October 6th at eight o'clock to celebrate the arrival of the Rev. A. B. Fisher. The chair under the direction of Maurice C. Tibbs, pianist, will assist.
Chilton and Thomas
Chilton and Thomas, society dancers of Chicago, featured on the show's opening day, playing city dates for the whole of October. They recently were the only Negro act featured on a special show, the Pelicanaban on the Baldwin-Katz circuit.
Leigh Whipper
"Leigh Whipper collaborated in dramatizing "Big Nigger." Adolph Aiken's play of Georgia Negro life. The book is said by critics, to be a good one. As for the name, there is talk of a change.
Jazz Girls Left.
When Jazz Regiment closed its engagement at the Lafayette, a score of chorus girls were left "waiting at the gate" for their money. After rehearsing five weeks and playing two, Mr Grisman packed his kit and skipped
Dramatic Authors.
Many new dramatic authors have sprung upon the horizon laterly. Among them are Frank Wilson of Porgy fame, James Jackson of Lily Bell, Adolph Aiken, and Andrew Smith expects to have produced for public Each has written a play which has approval in a short while.
Isabelle Washington.
Isabelle Washington, who made a hit in "Harlem," is being sought for a role in "In the Rain," to reprise Louise Perkins, the Spanish type first selected.
JOSIAH DIGGS, Owner
WALTER CARR, Manager
House of Refinement and Quality
Prince's Partner
```markdown
```
VENENA, AUSTRIA—Nell Hunter soprano, danced with the Crown Prince of Germany at a tea following her recital here.
Race Girl Lead in Movie
NEW YORK--Roy D'Arcy, MetroGoldwyn-Mayer star, whose work will be best remembered in the "Merry Widow and "His House," the University Pictures, entitled "Beggars," and has sagged Gloria McCutchen as his leading lady for this production.
Miss McCutchen is one of the most beautiful girls in New York City and will be featured in Hollywood. Donald Heywood, of "I'm Coming, Virginia" fame, will also go along to do the musical score.
"Chocolates" at Roseland
NEW YORK—To open their tenth fall season, the Roseland, Broadway's finest ballroom, a special program was arranged last Wednesday when a number of the stars from Connie's New Orleans," current book cover book in the evening's entertainment.
Among those who appeared were the eight Bon Bon boys, Baby Cox and Florence, Jazzlips Richardson, Edith Willem, Merres and Merres, Fletcher Henderson, whose tra was booked here every year, has been booked this year by Katz and his Kittens.
Bledsoe and Mamie Smith
The great Jules Bledsoe, bartone, and Mamie Smith was among the first to become famous in New York. Both were on Broadway last weeks. Mr. Bledsoe was at Paramount and Miss Smith at the Rialto.
"Make Me Know It," a political melodrama, using an all colored cast is rehearsing for an opening the middle of October. It is reported that the "Subways" will be played before coming to Broadway. In the cast are: Ivan Baber, The Company, who will play the lead, Monte Hawley Jean Powell, A. DeComitheme and Enid Raael.
Park Avenue Likes Jazz
According to records of New York offices supplying bands for dancing at the Park Avenue society folks, Negro bands are far ahead in demand.
The number of home affairs with the hot syncapation increased in the eight night clubs the last two years, and the popularity of Negro outfits is ascribed to the desire of the black entertainers to entertain who sing or dance when the guests are not dancing.
Fay Rutledge.
Fay Harper Rutledge, the Chicago girl who came to New York to do the lead in "Big Nigger," is being hired by the band leading parts. Mass Rutledge, who has been in New York but two weeks, has made a hit as special pianist for the radio artists in several productions. Chippy Gardner is her manager.
Blackbirds to Cbl
Blackbirds Number One, just back from Paris, will open in Chicago October 12th. The Company will remain intact. Lew Leslie, the hustling manager, says the show should stay in the Windy City for a long time.
Ida Anderson
"Nigger Rich" has made one more change. It is now called "The Big Shot." We hope this is final.
Louis Cole
Louis Cole who went to Paris with the Blackbirds, has been offered a contract at the Casino de Paris, by Harry Plicer.
Alberta Hunter
Alberta Hunter and company close the Witherspoon in Paterson last week. Her success has been unbroken. The company includes Pearl Wright and two dancing plots—Papoose and Johnny.
Jubilee Choir
The patrons of the Renaissance theatre on the Fox-Cox singing short, featuring the Fortes Randolph Kentucky Jubilee Choir.
Berry Brothers Party
The Berry Brothers gave an honest-to-gooodness birthday party aboard the S. S. France for their mother, James, namesake of the beautiful bishop, takes out of the chef. There were the usual gifts and making of whoopee.
Gibson Theatre Is
Leased for Season
White Promoters to Take Over Popular
Broad Street House
PHILADELPHIA—Because of press
of business, John T. Gibson, owner
of the popular Broad and Lombard
states playhouse, will leave to
whitewater, it was announced
here this week.
VICTORIA SPIVEY
as Missy Rose in the talking motion picture ~
"HALLELUJAH"
"Zeke leaves Missy Rose...
Her constant love could not hold him from the wiles of Chick."
as the famous Blues Singer
... SINGING
8713
75¢
FUNNY FEATHERS
How Do You Do It That Way
8652
75¢
FURNITURE MAN BLUES
Part I & II ~ Sung by
VICTORIA SPIVEY and LONNIE JOHNSON
8634
75¢
MOSQUITO, FLY AND FLEA
No, Papa, No!
RACE
OKEK
RECORDS
ELECTRIC
Okeh Photograph Corporation, 11 Union Square, West, New York, N.Y.
Week beginning 7. Addison Garey and Charles Dales present "Too Bad Jim." Three showings in LENGOLN
Norma Shearer in "The Lost of Mrs. Chepsey," October 5, 6 and 7; Lupa Vales and Gary Miles in "Wolf song," October 9, 10 and 11
REFUILLO
"The Red Swallow," Miles Collier, 6; Myers October 3 and 4; "She Goes to War," with Elson Boardman, Edmund Burns and Ala Rubra, starting October
BOOKEER 1
Ruth Catherine in "Madame X"; second week, running indinately.
THUNDERbolt, with George Bancroft, October 6 and 7; "Sunrise," with Charles Parrel, October 8; "Bachelor Girl," October 9; "The Equal," with Ronald Colman and Wilma Banky.
BOSALZA
"Alkhalawan Wallace Backy, October 9 and 11; "River of Romance," with Buddy Rodgers, October 8 and 10; "Greta Garbo in "The Single Standard," October 11; "The Equal," with Alice Joyce, October 12.
Troup Tours Europe at $450 a Day
PARIS, France—"Louisiana," an American Negro revue, starring Louis Douglas, its author, is road-showing all over Europe on an unusual arrangement, Gino Arbib, general manager of the outfit all around, has booked the outfit all around, getting them $450 a day against a 70-30 per cent. arrangement.
The revue will have its first Paris showing next month. The troupe, comprising thirty-six people in it, was assembled from the "Blackbirds" company here.
"Malinda" R ehearses
New York—Kathleen Kirkwood of the Triangle Theatre in Greenwich Village, has placed in recitales "Malaise," colored playwright, Dennis Dougheu. Among those in the cast of forty are: Collington Hayes, Marietta Warner, Lucille Richardson, Fay Rutledge, Harrison Blackburn,伯伯 Brown, John Browne, Irving and Westfield, both colored. The Triangle Theatre is known all over the world. The London Stage reviews every production. The Parties are in New York and New York is New York's most unique Theatre. It has the most remarkable lighting system in this country. Seat 100, performances are given every evening at nine. The production, "Ten Nights in a Barroom," started at the Triangle and finished the season on Broadway. Among other noteworthy Triangle productions are, "Cabaret," "Good Hope," "Salome," "A Program of Grand Gugulnol Plays," "The Crucible," "The Milk Kings," and a yearly edition of "Bare Facts," the current production. Malinde is scheduled to open October 1.
"Nigger Rich." Name of
Play, Again Changed
NEW YORK—"Nigger Rich", offensive play title which was changed by the producer on protest by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and restored a demographic identity again chanched. The latest name of the play is "The Big Shot". The play, has nothing to do with Negroes or the race problem.
Race Music in Next Tabloid
NEW YORK—Some of the most beautiful singing by colored voices ever recorded is promised in "Jazz," the second all-colored tablid feature by Dudley Murphy, author and director of "St. Louis Blues" which is now being shown at the New York Brassie Smith. The rich brilliance of colored voices in choral selections form the background for the story, which is a dramatization in two reels of Duke Ellington's famous composition "The Black and Tan Fantasy." Duke Ellington and his Colton, or orchestra, and the Moelet and Fredi, will head the cast.
SAM MANNING BACK
NEW YORK-Sam Manning, West Indian actor, after an extended tour of the West Indies and Arentin-licated Monday at the Lafayette Theatre.
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
A. E.
Robert Nathaniel Dett, who is composer and director of music at Hampton Institute, will be 47 years old, Frida Kahlo, he was born in Drummondsville, Ont., and educated at Oliver Wilk Conservatory, Lockport, N.Y., Oberlin Conservatory, Columbia, Pennsylvania, Harvard and Howard universi-
He married Miss Helen Elise Smith
In 1916.
He received the Harmon Award for
cognitive Achievement in music for
2028.
DOWN BROADWAY
"HOT CHOCOLATES"—(5th month)—HUDSON THEATRE, Skippers Richardson, Katie Kramer, Jimmy Baskete, Paul Bass, Margaret Simms, Billy Higgins, Eddie Green, Billy Mayer, Louise Greer Jacken, Merries and Merries, Loreus Armstrong and Leroy Smith the orchestra.
"SHOW GIRL"—(5th month)—ZEIGFELD THEATRE, Billingston the orchestra
"ORCY"—3rd week — MARTIN BECK THEATRE, Frank Wilson, Leigh Whipper, Jack Carter, Evelyn Piles, Percy HALLLEUJAN—(2nd month)—EMASBYE THEATRE, Nina Mae McKinner, Daniel Haynes, Fanny Belle McKnight, William McKinney, Victoria Spriya, and Dixie Bingley Singers.
HARLEM
LAFETYE THEATRE – (v if phone e) –
“CRAZY QUILT REVUE” (mus.)–Wus.
Jack Johnson, Monette Moore and large
ALHAMBRA THEATRE – (triple program) –
“PARISIAN REVUE” (musical)–With Zim-
mie Browne, Monette Moore, J.,
Jr., Hazel Van Vierah, Henkelk
Jenkins, Crackshock Hackley, Mary Clem-
sons, Amanda Handcolp, and Edna Young.
Jimmy Browne, Monette Moore, Gio
Randol, Wrights, Edgar Hanks,
Thomas Moseley and Al. F. Watt.
NIGHT LIFE
COTTON CLUB - Glarence Robinson's re-
action to the passing of his brother,
Theresa Mason, Maude Ruess, Rustle
Cremer. Mildred Dixon, Alex Loveloy,
Dilton Ellington's orchestra with Sonny
Gordon.
YE OLE NEST—Hannah Sylvester and orchestra.
CLUB SPIDER WEBB—Orchestra with reuve
BAMBOO INN—Joe Steel's orchestra and entertaining.
PARIS, FRANCE—(Special to the AFRO)—Miss Augusta Savage, well known sculpture, has arrived in Paris where she is to study for the next 6 years on a Julius Rosenwald scholarship. At present she is making the sculptor whose styles please to find a sculptor whose styles please to Chancey W. Reynolds of New York is in Paris with Elisa Borlo, singer and actor, for whom he is private secretary.
Abbeets Rev
Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds both returned to Paris and rented for a few days before taking the southern part of their trip through Southern France. Italy and Spain.
Dr. J. Y. K. Williams
Dr. J. Y. K. Williams by surgeon of Jacksonville, Teen, after making a tour of several counties has returned to Paris to attend a special lecture at the Faculty of Medicium, the University of Paris, and the Hotel Deux.
Miss Yarborough
Miss Katherine Yarborough of New York has returned to Paris the past year has returned to Paris, where she studied for some years, on a brief visit. Miss Yarborough leaves Milan on a visit for sitting engagements in Russia, Austria, and Germany.
Frank Bastombs
Frank Bastombs, 20 West 98th street, New York City, returning to the U.S.A.
Mr. Bacombs has been studying the piano at the Academy and under private teachers for the past four years in Berlin, plans to teach some time in New York City.
Davis Stages "Take It Easy"
NEW YORK—Charles Davis, one of the few dance originators left Broadway, who has not succumbed to the lure of California's talke gold, has been engaged to stage the dance ensemble numbers for Herman Timberg's new intimate musical comedy "Take It Easy."
Among the more notable productions evolved the terpsichoremic intricacies and evolutions in recent seasons have been Al Johnson's "Big Boy," "Shuffle Along," Eddie Dewling's "Sidewalks of New York," and "Honey Moon Lane" and Vincent Loumans's Great Day, the Square at Saint Louis in two shows at the Shubert theatre in Newark, N.J., and will then come to Broadway.
Robeson In Again
Formal statement was made last Wednesday of the restatement of Paul Robeson by Equity.
A
The snappy appearance of girls like Madeline Belt has much to do with the success of "Connie's Hot Chocolates" the new comedy hit conceived by Leonard Harper, now appearing in *The New York Times*. When talking about her rise to popularity she said, "One thing is certain. I never let the audience see me without my hair smooth and even brushed, bright in its natural color, learning to look like little La-Em-Strait hair dressing into the hair, then brush it. That changes it to the condition it is in now. I have seen La-Em-Strait make the most stubborn hair of men as well as women stay back so smooth and even you wouldn't know if they were any different." You will like La-Em-Strait hair dressing better than anything you have ever used. Takes about 30 seconds, and isn't greasy. All Jig stores from New York to California have 20 and 50 size now that the most popular of all hair dressings.
TENOR BACK FROM PARIS SUMMER HOME
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly
IN "ARABIAN NIGHTS"
A young woman stands in a dark dress, holding a large vase. Her hair is styled in waves, and she looks directly at the camera. The background is plain and dark.
Virginia Wheeler in an artistic pose as the Slave Girl.
JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY
JERSEY CITY N.J. New Jersey formed
Dilbert Club, incorporated. Located at 354
Forrest street, held a smoker last Thursday
night, which was attended by a large
number. Games, music and other amuse-
mentation were celebrated after which a col-
lection was served by the manager, M. Bash
Crusoe. Granville C. Davenport, chairman,
wrote a short speech. After which a large
number paid their fees and joined the club.
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categorized the three winners in the Tattler contest, one of the three winners in the Tattler contest, who received a trip to Atlantic City to represent Eiks' Convention. One of the openers of her school, Convention, Miss Jackson was one of the winners at the recent popularity ball, held last Thursday, the auspices of the well-known Tattler Social Club, at Columbia Hall, William
Jeffery was L. Tabb of Petersburg, Va., has returned home after a three weeks' visit with his sister, Mrs. Hebert, and John Cott street sweeper, John T. Sharp on several sight-seeking trips to the metroplex of New Jersey, Mrs. K. E. Gibson of Virginia, Mrs. K. E. Johnson of Virginia, home after a twelve weeks' visit with relatives in Kansas, and other states in the West. While there, Mrs. the was the greatest admirer in Mrs. George and in Lyons, Kansas, quest of another cousin, Noble Taylor and family. Several social affairs were given in Her
honor while there.
John will leave the city next week for a two weeks stay in Petersburg, Va. where he will visit his homehead and other points.
ATLANTIC CITY, NY NEW JERSEY
MRS. ROSE BROWN 246 Rosemont avenue, last week visit friends home Washington, D.C. Before visiting home she will visit his family and Mrs. Ginger BROWN of Baltimore, her son and daughter-in-law and sisters of predeceased MRS. BEAU SUDLER, of Philadelphia, is visiting MRS. STREETS who will have soon on a tour of the United States was tendered a farewell party on Saturday night by Mrs. Emma Braxton, 246 Rosemont avenue.
Always the Best REGENT
Selected Quality Photoplays
MONDAY—TUESDAY—WEDNESDAY
You Loved Her in "The Trial Of Mary Dugan"
—You'll be wild about her in the newest ALL-TALKING HIT!
NORMA SHEARER
in The Last of Mrs. Cheyney
with BASIL RATHBONE
HERBERT BUNSTON
THROUGH the upper crust of London's swankiest society crashes the mysterious and charming Mrs. Cheyney, leaving a trail of broken hearts and vanishing jewels.
Here is beautiful Norma Shearer's finest screen role. The Lonsdale play that ran eight months on Broadway.
THURSDAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY
Alastair Mackintosh presents REX INGRAM'S Production
The 3 PASSIONS
by Cosmo Hamilton with ALICE TERRY IVAN PETROVITCH SHAYLE GARDNER
Produced by St. George's Productions, Ltd.
with The Greatest Cast
Ever Assembled
Before a Camera!
with One of the Screen's Most Brilliant Stars!
A True Heart DRAMA Of All Times
ROLAND HAYES
BACK; 6TH TOUR,
70 CONCERTS
Tenor Spent Summer in His Home Outside of Paris. _____
HERE SIX MONTHS
BOSTON, Mass.—Roland Hayes is returning from his home outside of Paris, in October, in readiness for his sixth tour of America, having spent the summer in England and France. The coming tour of the great tenor will consist of about seventy concerts, which is as many as can be undertaken in six months, since the singer makes a rule never to give two rehearsals. In November, December and January his itinerary is solidly booked for the cities of our East and West, extending as far north as Canada and westward to Minnesota. He will visit many parts of his native South, where his return is always eagerly awaited. The month of March is solidly booked for the Pacific Coast, where he will make few eastern appearances before his return to Europe later in the spring.
Hayes now holds the sole distance of three recitals in Carnegie Hall, New York, and three in Symphony Hall, Boston, and stage in the hybridevitum and stage.
In Colleges
That his singing is much sought by various universities may be seen by a list of those before which he has performed. At Dartmouth, Vassar, Wellesley, Smith, and the state universities of Michigan, Indiana, Minnesota, and California; likewise, University, his alma mater, University of Chicago as solist with each of the principal Symphony Orchestras, and each season gives private recitals in New York, Washington, Chicago, and Boston; and his regular concerts in these cities.
Spirituals Too
This success may be measured as impressively from an artistic as from a numerical帖点. The Hayes exhibition at the Metropolitan Europe know is a quiet, simple-mannered figure, deeply engrossed in his art. His programmes are chosen not only because they are the best there is in the song literature of the world. A group of spirituals is included as an essential part of the work. A fine perception of the inner beauties of these songs—an utter mastery of language and style, a voice of an incredible sweetness and a degree of convoluted unmatched in the singing of today.
NEW AMUSEMENT PARK
LAUREL, MISS—Thomas Armistead has announced the formation of a corporation for a $10,000 amusement park here, to include riding devices, games, a restaurant, a rink and hotel, two miles outside of the city on the southern railway.
VODERY WITH FOX
HOLLYWOOD, Calif—Will Vodery, colored musician composer and conductor, is expected here next week, where he will join the Fox composing staff. Vodery is the first colored composer to be signed by any studio
The Artto-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
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BOSTON, Mass.-Roland Hayes is returning to the U.S.A. for seventy concerts in which he will meet an audience which is expected to net him from $3,000 to $50,000.
ATLANTIC CITY
MRS. EVELYN TAYLOR, policewoman, and her husband, accompanied Mrs. TAYLOR, to New York, where they will visit relatives. The party will also tour the New England. THE REV. WILLIAM H. DEAN, D.D. of Pittsburgh, Pa. preached at the Ashbury M.E. Church Tuesday at 9 p.m. Dr. Dean is superintendent of the Pittsburgh Disciple. WILLIAM WALTON, Jr., and Harold Sparks, two popular young men about town, James STOKER left the resort last Thursday for his home in Brooklyn, N.Y. His mother for a few weeks after which he will resume his studies at Lincoln University.
JOHN SCOTT is visiting with friends in New York City.
MRS. FLORENCE PATTERSON and son, John L. John, I. and Miss Rosa Richerson, Bishop of New York City, over the week-end. WILLIAM REVELS, son of Mr. and Mrs William T. Revels, left last week for WILLIAMFORCE, who instituted his studies at campus institutions.
Decorator. Off for Year in Paris
Decorator. Off for Year in Paris
WASHINGTON—Curtis Brown, the artist, is sailing for Paris, aboard the French liner
A.
Ole Grasse, To
be Grasse, to
Petret, the
celebrated
designer, Mr.
Brown has a year
abroad, studying
in Paris and do-
ing research work
in art art art
in Italy.
Among those who have had their homes decorated by Mr. Brown are Dr. Ernest Lyons of Baltimore, Dr. James Tucker of Boston, Mr. Barnes, attorney, of Detroit. The famous Tinged shops of Washington and Detroit were decorated by Mr. Brown who also is the President of the board of bakers at the Jack and Jill Tea Room of New York City; the La Grange Country Club at La Grange, Illinois; the Plantation Club of Philadelphia; the modernistique apartment in New York City; the Cotton Club in New York; the Cinderella Inn in Philadelphia. Most recent work was done at the Republic theatre in Washington, Harrison's cafe, and the Embassy apartment at Connecticut avenue and S street, Washington. Brown is not it really modern art, but the art of the so-called ignorant Africans, produced by them 500 years ago.
MRS. ESTELE TUCKER. Worthy Matron, was hostess to members of the Ether Chapter No. 21, Order of Eastern Star Hat
MR. AND MRS. LOUIS WINCHESTER, of 1105 Commodore avenue, gave to their daughter, Eleanor, a birthday party in honor of their fourth and sixth birthday. Saturday. The children were invited in the afternoon and presented were: Eleanor and Louise Harris, Bernice and Gladys Marshall, Evelyn and Elizabeth Robach, Sarah McLean and Clara McLean, Robert Matthews, John Johnson, Robert Matthews, Junior McLean, Billy Harrison and Pat Helm. In the evening adults present were: Mr. and Mrs. Maryann Elliott, Miss Sarah McLean, Maryann Elliott, Miss Sarah McLean, Lavinia and Pearl Hill, Mrs. Bessie McLean, Messrs. Edward Miller, Walter Reed, Mrs. Bessie McLean, Julius Gray, Arthur D. Blend, Roger Hamilton and Wendelle Dickerson.
LINCOLN MUSICAL CLUB ORGANIZES
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY, Pa.—The Lincoln University Musical Club including the glee club, quartet, orchestra and string ensemble was organized last Wednesday under the direction of James E. Dorsey. Officers elected are P. P. Boswell, vice-president; E. S. Gray, secretary; H. H. Myrick, treasurer; T. A. Webster, business manager; A. J. Pinkett, publicity manager; W. K. LeLtridge, assistant; W. K. LeLtridge, graduation the club loss W. A. Hill and J. H. Robinson from the quartet, C. A. Ligon and A. H. Thomas, from the glee club, and S. A. Jones and A. H. Jenkins from the
Girl Held as Female Raffles by Police
Fifteen-year-old Lillian Brown,
1025 Lexington street, is being held for juvenile court authorities on charges of stealing a firearm and on employment employer, Mrs. Gertrude H. White 310 St. Dunstons road. Friday.
Baltimoreans Leaving
for College Campuses
Sub-debs and debbles are head over heels rushing at the last minute to buck this or that in their wardrobe trunks or suit cases for the thrill of college campus life.
Second only to last minute shopping for accessories to complete that stunning outfit for the football game, is the question of making the most popular sorority.
For the Baltimore boys entering college for the first time, the main thought is how they are going to duck their foes or in what way they will be made to look. How are putting up a brave front, but the majority are shaking in their boots.
In their sutcases are generally found photos of dancers, and dancers in them. In thruks, when they have them, are silk pillows and desk lamps from the girl friends.
Such is college life.
The following are among those leaving this week for the different college
To enter Morgan—Rosetta Murray, Ola De Nell, Bernice Tucker, Norma Howard, Meldora Stevens, Phenola Valentine, Thomas Williams, Robert Burrow, James Daughtry, James Spencer, Irv Lobhardt, Paul Wendell Williams, William Proctor.
University of Michigan—Argentine Ford, Helen Rhetta.
Lincoln University—Garnett Lee, Donald Murray.
Ohio State College—Thomas Young.
"SHUFFLE ALONG"
BOOTLEGGER
BOSTON, Mass.—"I love liquor too much, I couldn't be a successful bootlegger, because I would be my own best customer," was the admission made by Ralph W. Lee, 37, of Western avenue, Cambridge, when he defended him in a courtroom Thursday, on a charge of selling and keeping and exposing liquor for sale.
The court imposed a fine of $100.
Lee caused much straining of the neck by the spectator when he hit that head, the head-strucker in the old musical comedy, "Shuffle Along."
BROADWAY TO SEE PETERKIN PLAYS
"Searlet Sister Mary" and "Black April" Slater to Reach Bright Light Row This Winter
Julia Peterkirk's two novels of Negra life, "Searlet Sister Mary" and "Black April," will reach Broadway this winter, via the "legit," according to rumors.
The Ethel Barrymere is bringing on the first with Black Barrerymere doing the title role in blackface, and an entire supporting cast of white players in black make-up, while it is said that Hawk plays to do "Black April" with a cast composed solely of Negroes. The interpretations compalled to result from these outstanding differences of presentation should say the least. Daniel Reed is responsible for the plays from both novels.
T. O. B. A.
Theatre Owners Booking Association
SHOWS OF ALL KINDS
WANTED
CONSECUTIVE BOOKINGS
Communicate with Sam E. Reerlin, manager, Volunteer Building, Chattanooga, Tenn., or S. H. Dudley, 1223 Seventh Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C. tt.
Teachers Training School, Coppin
Norma, Missouri, graduate,
University
Howard University-Louise Coleman, Louise Young, Gladys Flitzgerald, Esther Braxton, Catherine McMechen.
Bubblin'
Ethel
sings
steamin'
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thel Water
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ON YOUR MAN}
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Nobody Knows You You're Down and Out
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MINISTER'S WIFE
SEEKS DIVORCE
Mrs. Belle Jones, 635 N. Schroeder
street, tied up for divorce from her
husband, Alfred Jones, in
circuit court, Tuesday.
According to her statement,
the couple were married May 19, 1923.
She was born on this day of
this year. Mrs. Jones charges
cruelty and unfaithfulness and asks
for an absurd divorce. She is rep-
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"LOVE BABY" IS NAMED IN HER DIVORCE CASE
Mrs. Lola Pye Charged Husband With Misconduct; Gets Decree.
NAMES WOMAN
Miss Ruth Wyman Said to be Co-respondent.
After giving testimony involving a "love child" and the name of a young woman whom she called Miss Ruth Wyman, Mrs. Lola Pye, hairdresser, 615 Dolphin street, was granted an absolute divorce and the use of her maiden name in circuit court, Saturday.
In the testimony, taken before a special examiner on June 4th, Mrs. Pye declared that shortly after their marriage, her husband invited women en friends to their wedding where the bride was lavishly at her expense. She declared that for some time she bore the expenses of the home.
Short Lived
For this reason they lived together 1923. She also testified that there only from March 25 to August 20 was a love child, a three-year-old bossess and a Mormon Wyman. She will take her maiden name of Lola Smith.
Man Drinks Poison
Death will probably be the aftermath of another story of jealousy and despondency over an unrequited love affair, here this week.
Following an argument with his sister, Jeffrey Hoffenstein Henrietta Waters, said to have been over another man, Harry Fiddle, 1806 McCulloh street, obtained a bottle of lysol from the bath room and drank a large quantity of the contents, Wednesdays morning, at Provident Hospital where he remains in a serious condition.
Coppin Parsonage Sold
Bishop A. L. Galnes announced this week that Coppin Memorial A. M.E. church parsonage, on Calhoun street near Presstman, has been sold to the Pennsylvania railroad company for $5,000.
The parsonage occupied a plot of ground needed by the railroad for its new tunnel project.
Fractures Roommate's Skull
Miss Fannie Bailey, 569 W. Biddle street, received fractures of the skull when she was struck with a poker by her roommate, Miss Ethel Smith during an alteration over three dollars, Friday.
Man Acquitted of Girl's Charges
John Smith, 1518 Pennsylvania avenue, was acquitted of charges of assault and carnal deviance. A court jury in Miss Mary Smith Northwestern police station, Wednesday.
BOY INJURED
Albert Branton, 9, 529 Mosher St. received injuries of the face and head, and was struck by an automobile while crossing the street in front of his home.
Joseph Laurence, 17, 533 Mosher street, accidentally shot himself in the abdomen, while cleaning a revolver in his home. Friday.
According to police, the youth pulled the trigger of the revolver thinking it was unloaded. He was taken to the Provident hospital, where physicians pronounce his condition serious.
"TRIANGLE" FIGURES IN DIVORCE CASE
Two Women Named by Mrs. Joseph Stewart in Circuit Court.
TWO DESERTED
Mates Get Absolute Divorce After Testimony.
Basing her petition upon the unfaithfulness of her husband, Joseph Stewart, 1008 S. Sharp street, Mrs. Margaret Stewart, S. Sharp street, Woodyean street, was granted an absolute divorce by Examiner A. DeRussey Sappington, Wednesday.
According to Mrs. Stewart, the couple were married on October 7, 1925, and resided together until August 15, 1926, when he deserted her to Miss Tina Holly. There is no child, Irvin custody of whom the mother was granted. Mrs. Stewart was represented by Roy S. Bond.
Two wives are granted divorces on charges of desertion. Mrs. Elfe Coates 1890 McCulloch street, was granted an absolute divorce from her husband, John L. Coates, New London, Conn. Monday. The couple were married June 29, 1919, and resided until June 15, 1922.
An absolute divorce was also granted to Mrs. Matilda Allen. 919 Arlington avenue, from her husband, Dob Allen. They were married May 14, 1916, and maintained a home together until November 16, 1923, when, Allen testified, he deserted them without just cause. The man will resume her maiden name. Roy S. Bond represented the plantiffs in cases
Alleged Bootlegger Held by Dry Agents
Poppleton street, was arrested by dry agents, Monday, and is being held for a preliminary hearing before the district commissioner on charges of sale and possession of alcoholic beverages. Said to have been selling liquor at his home, William Robinson, 45, 7 N.
HELD FOR BURGLARY
Benjamin Berman, 16, 1840 Division street, was committed to jail in default of $500 ball, following a preliminary hearing in the northwestern police station, on charges of burglariously entering the house at 4108 Forrest Avenue and taking small banks containing about $12, Thursday.
GETS ONE YEAR ON MANSLAUGHTER CHARGF
Pleading self-defense. Rudolph Burrell, 19, 215 W. Henrietta street, draw a sentence of one year in jail for the killing of Raymond Wilson, 17, 1121 Sharp street, when arraigned in Criminal court, Friday.
MAN HELD FOR BAD DRIVING
Charged with reckless driving. Lindsay West, 24, 804 Shutter street, is being held in the Northwestern police station for Baltimore county police
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929.
A
Carolina Times Threatens to Expose Kittrell College Shortages.
Times Thinks It Sees Hand of Bishop Carey.
DURHAM, N.C.-A resolution passed by a group of men of the Western North Carolina Conference of the A.M.E. Church, urging a boycott of the Sunday-school Union because of the frank utterances of Ira T. Bryant, secretary, expressed the real sentiment of the A.M.E. Church in the state, according to the Carolina Times in its issue, Saturday.
The Times declared that the resolution was the work of friends of Bishop A. J. Carey, in Chicago, whose dark and muddy eyes as a priest and bishop in the church has been accepted by Bryant. Says the editorial:
"We would have the signers of the resolution to understand that the salaries of the bishops, presiding elders and preachers, and the means by which the A.M.E. publishing house operates, are furnished out of the pockets of the laymen of the A.M.E. Church, and no great effort can destroy any of the A.M.E. Church without reckoning with that source.
"If the men who signed the resolution want a general clean-up, it is a fine thing, for certainly in the cleanup the immorality and the theft of monies raised by the laymen of the A.M.E. Church which should have gone to advance the cause of Kittrell College, will be exposed. If we be a clean-up, it is going to start at home, and the laymen are going to have a hand in it, and it won't be a hand lined with cotton."
Among those who signed the resolution are, J. W. Walker; chairman; G. A. Stroud, D. A. Avery, D. W. Williamson, J. W. Dalton, F. W. Sowell, S. G. Tompkins, J. A. Corde, F. C. Maddkins, J. E. Holt, H. B. Lucas, K. C. Holl, J. D. Cowan, L. W. H. Lucas, W. Compton, J. P. Ridley, J. D. Davis, C. C. Ferguson, M. E. Cable and E. W. Albright.
Provident Reaches High Water Mark
Record Number of Patients Treated in the Clinic, Emergency and Wards.
Physicians of the Provident hospital staff were kept busy treating a record-breaking number of patients at the institution, this week.
Records of the hospital reveal that the institution reached its high water mark in the treatment of clinic, emergency and confined cases. Sixty persons have been treated in the emergency department, in hospital alterations and accidents, while 217 persons were given treatment during the week in the clinics.
The most notable record of the hospital banner week is the 91 hospital patients confined to the institution, undergoing treatment. Of this number, 15 are state patients, 73 city patients, two private and one semi-private patient.
Suffering from abdominal cramps during cleaning a large quantity of furniture polish, Eighteen-month-old Delores Burly, 1709 Calhoun street, was treated at the hospital, Sunday.
Men Prefer
The child is said to have taken the liquid from a table in the kitchen, during the absence of her mother. She was taken to the hospital where an antidote was administered. She was pronounced out of danger before being dismissed from the institution.
Files $7,000 Suit
Against C. and P. Co.
A suit to recover $7,000 danages for the loss of a wife's services and personal injuries were filed in city court by Mr. and Rufus Jackson against the C. and P. Telephone Company, Friday.
The suit received as a result of injuries received by Mrs. Willie Mae Jackson when she was struck by a truck owned by the telephone company. The bill calls for her injuries and $2,000 is claimed by the husband in the loss of his wife's services. Both are represented by Roy S. Bond, attorney.
Charges of illegal sale and possession of alcoholic beverages brought two men into the fold as dry law violators this week.
Isaiah Austin, 32, 926 Jordan St. was placed under arrest by agent Leo Pinski, two pints of alleged whiskey to an under agent, Thursday. He is being held under $1,000 bail for a hearing in Federal court.
Buck West, 925 Shields alley, said to be the owner of the "doe joint," is being held for a preliminary hearing on charges of illegal possession, following a raid on his home, Friday.
Sues Assistant City Attorney
A suit to gain $135 alleged to have been owned by Mrs Dorothy A. Grosso, deceased, Arthur Briscoe, administrator of the estate by Mrs. Ella Queen in city court, Saturday.
Pluko HAIR DRESSING
Police Tighten Grip to Drive Writers Out the District.
Three persons including two women were arrested, and fined when arraigned in the Northwestern police station on charges of lottery, this week.
Caught writing "numbers" slips at their home, Missess Ida Powell, 20, 1531 W. Lexington street, and Lillian Berkley, 30, 1531 W. Lexington street, were fined $10 and costs each when arraigned in the Western police station, Friday.
Herbert Vosker, 38, 910 Shields alley, were fined $25 and costs when given hearing in the Northwestern police station on charges of writing lottery slips in his home. Saturday. Police are making a drive to drive writers out of the district, it is said.
PEDESTRIAN INJURED
Crossing Fremont avenue and Paca street, Oscar Robinson, 40, 875 Clifford street, sustained minor injuries of the back when he was struck by an automobile, Sunday.
HELD IN SHOOTING ATTEMPT
Said to have attempted to shoot Robert Washington, 716 N. Eden St. Noble Valentine, 21, Patapsco Hotel Sparrows Point, was held for the action of the gerd jury whena raigned in the Northeastern police station, Friday.
WOMAN DISMISSED
The new team of Turner and Turner, who made their first appearance in daylight last Thursday at Provident hospital, and were snapped before they were a day old. They each weighed eight pounds, and although they have the same surname, they are not twins and are not even related.
Miss Clyah Stits, 1114 Pennsylvania Avenue, charged with keeping a disorderly house was dismissed, when arraigned in criminal court, Monday.
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Daddys Face Judge for Non-Support
Five. fathers are arraigned in local police courts this week on charg-
Accused by his wife, Mrs. Esther Dorsey, of failing to properly provide for their five children, Wilfred Dorsey, 29, 1213 McCulloh street, was dismissed on parole to provide for his family, after a lecture by magistrate Johannsen, in the northwestern police station, The Others arrangement. Roland Rancaster. Bake street, street, Wilson 113 York street, Davis Grayson, 84 Calhoun street, and Leroy Henderson. 1518 E. Fayette street.
Coroner Investigates Death of Woman
Coroner George C. Blades of the Eastern district, is investigating the death of Mrs. Elise Myers, 30, 211 S. Durham street, who was found lying on the floor of her home in a semiconscious condition by her common law husband, George Williams, Monday. The woman was taken to the Johns Hopkins hospital where she died an hour later.
Delaware Visitor Hurt by Car
Bernard Manning, Wilmington, Del, received a probable fractured skull when the car he was operating collided with a Sparrows Point street car at Gunter street and Railroad avenue, Monday.
Boy Skater Hit by Auto
Roller skating at Franklin and Carey street, David Collett, 10, 1645
he was struck by a fractured when he was struck by an automobile, Thursday.
Rosie Braxton Follows
Mate to Woman's Home
Cutting Follows:
GET THREE MONTHS
Both Sentenced at North-
western Police Station.
Women's sergams attracted the
police to the house at 1738 Llewellyn
street, where they found two enraged
women slashing each other with
knives, Sunday.
According to police investigation,
Mrs. Rosie Braxton, 19, 1311 N. Dallas
street, and Mrs. Minnie Logan,
1738 Llewellyn avenue, engaged in a
knife duel at the latter's home.
Mrs. Braxton is said to have followed her husband to the other woman's home where she caught the couple in a compromising position. A fight ensued, during which knives were used and both women received serious injuries of the face and body. Arraighain, another woman, Mrs. Braxton and Mrs. Logan were each sentenced to three months in the House of Correction.
TOOK RAINCOAT AND 35 CENTS GET 3 YEARS IN JAIL
Leroy Palmer, 24, 715 George street and John Durant, 30, 420 Ogston street, drew sentences of three years each in jail, when arranged in criminal court, Friday on charges of denying an agreement. Danny Green, 80, 028 Myrtle avenue, of 35 cents and a raincoat.
THE ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
MAMBA'S DAUGHTERS by DU BOSE HEYWARD Author of PORGY A Story of Sacrifice, Romance, Humor and Tragedy
It was no more chance that, during the first decade of the new century, brought Mamba out of the darkness of the underworld into the light of the Wentworths' kitchen. Casual as that event seemed, there is good evidence for the belief that it had its origin in some obscure recess of its original mind; or in perhaps some deep and but half-buried instinct that drove her, against the reasoning of her brain to embark upon what must seem a fantastical and sensuous venture. For Mamba and arrived at an agitation that the downhill of fifty and her habitat had always the waterfront.
The amazing thing is that, having arrived at her decision, she was able to muster the courage necessary to take the step.
In the Charleston of Mamba's day the peasant population might have divided into two general classes: the upper, consisting of those who had white folks, belonged to the Nedo-lozolous respectability and enjoyed a certain class of workers which had no folks and were little better than outcasts.
How long Mamba had incubated her amazing plan there is no way of knowing. It is quite certain ever, that with a "cunner" that promised success, and that then, armed only with an enormous and devious experience and a remarkable histrionic talent, she selected her peril attack. She then, with the genius that was to prepare her to ultimate success.
The Wentworths, as was well known, had been wealthy plantation people before the war, which arranged the rise and fall of their land and placed the original grant from the British Crown directly across the line of march to be taken six generations later by a General Sherman, the later of the Wentworths. In the army had been brought through their plantation was the famous definition. Immediately after the war, and after the war, the shared remnants of what had once been the ancestral home, sold the land to liquidate old debts, and moved to Charleston. There they settled in the district of Battery that they occupied when they were selected by Mamba as her point of attack.
bore of the family. Mrs. Wentworth was a widow in the early forties, possessed of intelligence, unquenchable industry, and a personal charm that the exigent years almost too rigid for so soft a word. It was so desperately important for her children to place their place in the society in which they had been born. It was so thought knowing, that she dared not give an answer. The boy, St. Julien de Charnay, went, was now fourteen years of age. He had inherited an ancestral curse in the nickname being Sain and was known as a genuine desire for knowledge and the frustrating public school system of the period. Polly, the girl was altogether charming. A stender blonde of twelve, was well known as a school for young gentlemen, on Lauret street, and in accordance with the custom of the old city, was just beginning to attend her first dancing-school soiries in the company of a fellow student, by no means the least important member of the family was Maum Nettle. She was a small intensely black woman of great delicacy of feeling, and with a social confidence she lacked anything that one had a right to expect it was, strongly enough for her race, a sense of humour, and she shrewdly suspected that she had deliberately suppressed this quality as jeopardizing her relationship to the man that she required the Wentworth for their protection and love with a loyalty, devotion, and faith that imposed upon the two children an obsession of fulfilment almost as a relationship of child to parent.
It will be readily seen that the Wentworths just described presented a highly vulnerable front to the invasion of the Four Hundred, who had been larger and weaker she could not have gained the attention of the white folks and would probably have been even scant courtesy by the new Negroes in the kitchen. Negroes a family born in the slave states affectionate tolerance toward the Negro once that Negro had detached himself from the mass and become identified as an individual. Here, too, in the person of Maum Neta Instructor in the intricate technique that the aged tyro must acquire. True, she knew that the old servant would treat her with well-bred condescension, but, with the true spirit of the climber, she was prepared to pose for him until it could be worn with dignity.
The exact moment of attack was timed to a nicety, and slipped into place with that appearance of a man who had carefully calculated preparation. It was spring in Charleston, and almost overnight the sudden urpish or life from the soil had transformed the town. Wisteria dropped its purple leaves from the trees and gakes from the ground, of colour and perfume over the garden walls. Even the air had a sort of onetit, like pollen on a petal. It was incoincivable that at such a heart's could be hardened or hearts words spoken. The tree was one of unusual excitement in the little brick house. Saint was to escort his sister to her first soiree. Polly was slim and lovelier than her white dress with its handwork. Order made after hours by Mrs. Wren. She was powerless to the debut. In all the city, blocs the little brick house was made of a garden, its four massive walls crowding the little lot to the limits of its accommodation. The child was breathless with longing.
"Please, Mother, please; May, and Damaris, and the Hugens all have big gardens. It won't take a minute to turn over to Legare street and ask for some dessert. Saint will go. Won't you Saint?" But the mother said: "I am sorry, dear, you cannot you know. We are too poor to have to do that, and that is the very reason why we cannot ask. Remember what Landor says. You have already paid the highest price for a thing when you have asked for it."
"Yes, I know. Horrid, rich old thing. I bet he never wanted anything in life that he couldn't run to a shop and Saint put in: 'Aw, they have millions and millions of them. It wouldn't be really giving, they wouldn't miss 'em'. They will have to be offered, 'We cannot ask.'
Tears then—tragedy in that gay moment of departure; high-strung little nerves jumping from tears to laughter and back again. And a mistletoe in her mouth stuntsy of an idealist in her firm mouth and lilted chin.
"A hink tink my Little Mieje gin' tuh dance tuh Mie Miss Snowden party to-night an" Ah say de outlies' lady dore dought fuh hab flowers. She swung her rags about her in another courtesy and extended the bouquet. She gave a gasp of pleasure and held out her hand to take the flowers. The terrible grit of ethics again raised its head. If one could not ass, a gasp of tears could be gift of roses that had undoubtedly been stolen over the wall of the selfsame neighbour? "I think that we must know where the flowers are from before we take them." Mrs. Wertworth interposed a little weakly. "Ah gots frien' who gardner on Legare Street, Miss. He gib me lot on the Saint cut the Gordian knot: "Take the old flowers and let go. We'll be late, anhow with all a吻. Then, seizing with all a吻, we bring the bouquet to her breast with the other. he rushed her to the door, and before Mrs. Wentworth could say anything more, their feet had pattered into silence down
The mother turned and looked at Mamba. There was a moment of silence, then the strange old woman gazed up into her face with her a amazing girl's eyes, and smiled wide single-toothed smile. Mrs Wentworth threw back her head and laughed. Did you come she asked.
"On not so far. Ah been see Little Missie go by eberv day an' Ah jesn't wait no longer tuh put dem flower whar day blongs". Mrs. Wentworth with her hand on the dining-crook door knob am sure I will good of you' he said 'and now you must jesh Menna Netta give you some supper before you go away. It was so very odd, your coming just to night". But was it odd, after all? it not rather one of the most inevitable happenings that are often misinfluened with confidence but are in reality the mathematical result of a premise originating in some remote but unsuspecting human purpose?
There was that about the invisible cominess and coins of Mamba, after that first night, which tended to confirm Mrs. Wentworth's grave misnings. It suggested a profiler smacked of the poisonous lion, like a game of poker, billiards that is almost too sweet for a gentleman. She would mow about the kitchen dooryard as silent and as unswervingly watchful as a neighbourhood cat, and then, without having been seen the house, she sheds a piece of evidence, a visit there in some gift or her service for a member of the family.
On the morning following the soil-still there were fresh roses, with dew on girls' breakfast, healed on the bed, and a shark observed, that they had been torn from the vine. Gardeners on the streets were shears and shears. Most certainly she must tell Maum Nekta not to allow the women to return. She was not of the type to be enclosed after breakfast, when Mrs Wentworth repaired to the house she encountered complication.
Maun Netta was seated in unacustomed ease eating her breakfast and Mamba was just ushering in the moment that Mrs. Wentworth stood unobserved in the doorway, she was an eavesdropper upon a masterpiece diplomacy. Mamba was a master of 'Trek Ah knows dishwashin', tikn yo'ease, quality cultil folks. Attuh yo'do sit un, an' com' do breakus, an' splain tuh yo'white folks what tuh do all day, yo'vo'fuh tuh yo'ease an'study 'bout yo'frien Gaveld some poor-fool' bigger 'like me
cleans up
Maum Mesta, with great digenity,
exressing itself in a heavy lugubriousness, but already making social
appear.
contents-sous.
"Well, it use' tush be dat-a-way.
Dey was always kitchen 'niggers' in
de ole days. But 'tings is change'
in 'phone."
now, times is change.
Mrs. Wentworth's cool, high-bred syllables fell chinch through the gathering warmth and requested Maum Netta's presence in the dining room. When the door was closed she turn-
The mistress could have burgled then. A single flat order could have done it. But instinctively she with a question instinctively showing the burden. Ms. Mertta delta, and at her marriage her and re-establish her, inertily.
THE LIFE OF BERT WILLIAMS No. 17 . . Text by BEN DAVIS, JR. Drawn by A. W. RENNEGARBE
ACT
2
SCENE
1
"Under the Bamboo Tree" had an entirely white company with the exception of Bert, who was the star. All admired him and took him as a member of the "family."
"I am really provoked, Mauna" (she had not gone as far as that in years); "I was just going to ask Mauna to leave the premises, and I find you ask her. You know we have no money to pay a servant. Now, what am I to do?"
"Ah sorry, Miss. Miss. Dat a haud of oak, the haud of oak. See. If you can find a ole dress or something, Ah'll gib it tuh she an' sen she away."
There was silence in the kitchen and the tension of impending crisis when Mrs. Wentworth returned with a large arm. In a cool, positive tone of finality which dismissed a mutual future and expunged the past, she said.
Mauna Neta will attend to those dishes. Thank you for helping us. Here are some old clothes."
But she got no further. Mamba courtesed almost to the floor, with her rags trailing grotesquely about her waist. She was radiant with gratitude. She started talking rapidly while she took the clothes, and her volubility was increased. She entered the door. Twice Mrs. Wentworth attempted to stem the tide, then gave it up. She tank yo' miss, Ah' so tankul. Ah' been too 'shame' tum come roun' yo' an' Little Missie in dose ole rags. Now Ah' goin' be dat clean my own ma' wouldn't be shame' time Little Missie go to dance she ain't goin' be 'shame' fur let me go long, wid her 'an' car can she slipper back. The queer bobbing figure paused for a moment in the open door; then with its hand on the knob, raised its hand to the woman's and folds of skin looked the woman's astounding eyes, audacious and mocking, then for a second in the closing door they caught the mood with smile and overflowed with laughter.
---
Can't you dance the peacock?
that the Negroes loved, then on into the next hymn without missing a beat. He'd be laughing now at his joke, up there by himself in the steeple.
the bells commenced to toll. Three minutes now before service. Mamba peered from her retreat, and an expression of satisfaction overspread her features, entwined entworms from their fruit and proceeded decorously toward the calling bells.
In the Wentworth kitchen Maum Netta was washing her dishes and carefully cracked soprano. She reached for a high note and held it with evident pride. Then through the open window there entered a meloon ring with it in resonant chord. Maum Netta's eyes widened with pleasure while she held her note to the limit of her lung capacity. Then she crossed to the doorway and looked immediately below her on the doorstep, and she met the older woman's gaze with an expression of awe. "My Gawd. Maumna." she half whispered, "how come you told me I can sing like that?"
"Cose Ah kin sing." Then slowly the necessity of being firm with this person began to triumph over fatness and narcissism, nor dure. Ah gots orders from Miss Wentworth not no mo." "Cose yo' has, Mauma, cose yo' has, Ain' Ah knows Ain' ahn't yo' has, Ain' Ah knows Ain' yo' has, Now don't yo' worry none about dat. Ain' ahn't go' let dese feet go ober dat do' no matter how hawd bey deys me. But sense all de white folks done gone to chore as we is, 'yo' in yo' place, and jees in de outdoors, an' sing some tuggeder? Ahan jees in a-wonderin' if yo knows 'Light in de graebayne' Outside de Sun 'risk further parley, Mamba raised the tune: "Light in de graebayne outside de sun, Light in de graebayne outside de sun, Way beyond de moon."
de mocho
"Chi Chi Chi, hol' out yo' light,
Hol' out yo' light, hol' out yo' light,
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
My Christian people, he'll out 'o' light, and he'll be more melon. Deepen them, and slur, and slurring only a little from the toothless gums, her contraction notes lifted to the window where she was sitting and with that same irresistible quality of youth that shone in the woman's eyes. Mamba and she per now. The gratification of that mysterious urge that had started her on her adventure hung in the balance. She let the whole force of her throb in the mysterious music.
Maum Netta listened for a moment. No Negro can resist harmony and while soprano voices of great beauty are common enough among the crowd, Maum Netta dropped almost into the baritone register, and throbbed there full and true. She commended to sway slowly from side to side as she sat there on the step. Maum Netta tried to keep it up, and it was as though she had unlocked floodgates, for the spiritual swept irresistibly from her lips. She returned on tiptoe to her dishes, her hands out in that strange communion that comes from merging two separate and imperfect voices into a rare and beautiful common offering. The little kitchen and the small brick kitchen were out of the moment of t. The rhythm possessed itself of its creators. In the dining room the little mahogany clock on the manel sent its hands spinning on toward noon.
Church was over, and Mrs. Wentworth approached the little brick house chatting with several neighbours.
"I did not know there was a Negro church near," one of them remarked. "Why, that singing seems to be right in our block." "And Sunday, too!" contributed a little woman with arched eyebrows
women of African descent, Mrs. McKinney did not like. Like Mrs. McKinney, she said sweetly: "Well after all, they are spirituals, you know. The Negroes evidently still believe in the Day," but her defensive attitude widened suddenly. She was before her own door now, and grim forebodings were up. She "excused him brutally and humiliated," Ament later she stood surveying a scene that, while it tempted her to laughter, told her in no uncertain moment witnessing her own defeat.
Maum Netta sat just inside of the room with her turbaned head nodding back and forth to the measure of the room, wide open, and upon the step sat Mamba swaying and patting with her large, flat feet and throwing her right arm forward. The visitor had not been idle, and therein lay her triumph. Before her on the marble step, fairly sparkling in the sun, were ranged salty of the shoes and the socks, and the one, a dancing pump of Sain't, was just being given a final polish.
Mrs. Wentworth was obliged to
makes her presence known. She
could her presence known.
"Maum Netta, have you gone raving crazy?"
Instant silence in the kitchen, and the slow gathering together of faculties in the two rooms before her What was the use? Mrs. Wentworth re-entered the dining room, closing the door to impatient herself, herself to impatient laughter. With the success of the she-shing episode, Mamba attained her position, and she was more of fact. Mrs. Wentworth was destined for failure in such a situ-
Dr. Bunker's Handwriting Analysis
By DR. M. N. BUNKER
Nationally Known Grapho-Analyst.
ing. She would be
cessful in bandaging
making them comfi
she has talent for d
things skillfully.
This writing shows
me a very great dea
tion, and exactness
The nurse who is tra
supervision of Mrs.
learn to be orderly.
a place for everythi
thing in place.
Such a nature as th
ally leads to a posi
tion.
MRS. J. V. JACKSON lives in Richmond, Virginia, and has direct supervision of the nurses in Saint Philip Hospital. She is known that she has charge of the discipline, control, and cultural training of the nurses. It is a responsible position, and Mrs. Jackson's writing shows that she has the cool judgment to suit such extreme, instead she has the natural noise to meet emergencies.
She is enthusiastic about anything that really interests her, but she is particularly interested in her. There is much skill in the use of her hands expressed here, indicating that while she holds a position of authority, she is also capable of going right in and nurses-
A
They were very fond of him and all grieved when they found that in spite of his great acting his health was failing and that he played under great difficulties.
tion by reason of her virtues rather than her weaknesses, and where such is the case, a cause is indeed hopeful for her success, and owed its existence to it is understanding of the ruling white, knew just how vulnerable those virtues were, and so she had only to direct her attention to her time. Her position was now fairly secure. She had only to keep a favour ahead of her victim, leaving upon her the burden of an unrepaid obligation. The entworts between them were then to pensate her, so in lieu thereof, she must be given food in the kitchen and the outworn and easily recognisable garments of her new misfortune, to be buryed in her own eyes, this soon gave her the superficial colouration of a retainer of the aristocracy. Presently, when she was in her own eyes, Neta she commenced to refer to the Wentworth household as "my white folks".
Mamba had no regular hours for her comings and goings, but she had a way of materialising dramatically when she arrived, she delighted in certain conspicuous services of a social nature. To Polly's great pride she insisted on following the dressing room carrying the slipper the ostrich to dressing-room door. Then, while the dance was in progress, she would play the ladies' maid with the waitress, gregressed and dressed girls from the Battery homes. More than one amazing story of her daughter's talents and her own wealth circled back to Mrs. Banks, who were easy struck by her to these bounce-stairs gatherings at the dances.
Mamba's logic in these cases was simple: what could possibly give her more distinction than to be the maid house she was humility personified. But around the little brick house she was humility personified. How the old woman must have longed to adopt the head kerchief such as was worn on a Neta. Matta the house-bride, the traditional house-bride servant! But she was well aware that this would be a fatal presumption. For the present, at least, she must depend on her husband, who was Wentworth for her borrowed respectability. As for her head, it was still treated in the asterning manner common among older Negroes who had not been born, the diggers and whidmen who generation had not yet adopted kinremover. The wool was divided into a dozen or more equal tufts. Each of these was tightly wrapped with a thin layer of cotton ending at the scalp; then the collection, resembling rope ends, was drawn together and united in a tight knob on the crown. The genius of the mongolian gray tarantula had settled upon the head and was holding on tightly with outstretched legs. But if Mamba dared not essay the head kerchief, she did the next best thing without her hats.
When the first autumn arrived neighbors were commencing to identify Mamba as "that new Negro of the Wentworths". Three years passed without a chance of Mamba being adopted Mamba and her adopted white folks, except that by her continued association with them she became a cooperator in their fortunes. She received in her hands an independence that she loved. She had a way of dropping out of sight for days at a time. The Went-
ing. She would be unusually successful in bandaging patients, in making them comfortable, because you can for doing just such things skillfully.
This writing shows stick-to-it-tiveness, a very great deal of determination, and exactness about details. The nurse who is trained under the supervision of Mrs. Jackson will be able to perform it. She will have a place for everything, and everything in place.
Such a nature as this quite naturally leads to a position such as Mrs. Jackson holds. She is using her natural talents to the best advantage. You may not be suited for own instead it may be you have talent for the stage, or the movies, or for writing books, or going into business. Of one thing though, you can be more successful if given proper use will give you happiness and success.
You may have a personal report made of your handwriting if you will write a page, using pen and ink. Sign your name, send letter to Dr. M. N. Bunker, in care of this newspaper, with a stamped and self addressed envelope. Send the stamped envelope, for letters without this will be discarded.
Black King Was In Struggle For Mastery of The World
Black King in Struggle Between Rome and Carthage, Held Balance that Decided Mastery of the world,
TELL THEM I'M ALL RIGHT!
DO YOU WISH TO MAKE ANY STATEMENT TO THE NEWSPAPER REPORTERS MR. WILLIAMS?
A.W. RENNEGARDE.
All day, every day, during the time of his last show in Chicago, he food and gave ordered constant attention, despite the fact that he was given a growing constant attention.
By J. A. Rogers
Paris, France
ERHAPS no character in history stands out in more interesting relief than Massinissa, king of Numidia. Certainly none furnishes a more splendid example of daring, tenacity and consummate skill than he. Coming on the scene at a time when two great nations were struggling for the mastery of the world, he threw his weight on the losing side and it won.
There was nothing extraordinary in that, it may be stated. But at hunted and tracked by his enemies the time, Massinissa was a fugitive—He had less than six followers.
A Great Love
And all for the love of a woman. No love story is more touching than that of Massinissa's.
Let us glance at the leading figures in this mighty drama. They are
Hambal, the Carthaginian, said to be the greatest military genius of the ancient world, called Seipio, foremost Roman general of his day, a man of calm judgment, cultured, ruled by his head. Syphax, king of Numidia, the kingpin of the situation. Both Rome and Carthage were his favor. Seipio had used all his wiles, grace and power on Syphax and at last had secured him as an ally.
Most Beautiful Woman
Sophonisba, most beautiful woman of her time, the daughter of Hasdubal, Carthaginian general, and niece of Hammabal. Massinissa, son of Gala, king of Massyla, a petty kingdom in southern Tunisia, was the group of mixed Berber and Ethiopian ancestry. The Berbers were a dark-skinned Asiatic race. Earlier in history the empire of Ethiopia extended over all that region. The humiliated Berber force of the Carthaginians, Commanded by Metius, the mulatto, they nearly took Sicily, from the Romans.
Falls in Love
Glorified in War
At 17, inflamed by his love for Sophonisba and eager to do something different, he declared war against Rome, and gathering an army. Massinissa marched against Syphax and defeated him in two great battles. He went on to join the Carthaginian forces in Spain. At that time Carthage had the upper hand, and Hannibal was winning the war, but does not far from the walls of Rome.
18-Year-Old Prodigy
Arriving in Spain, Massinissa, not yet 18, attacked Seipio. Rome's most leader, and defeated him. Another Roman general, Gnaeus Romulus, gave a sate fate. With his black cavalry, Massinissa seemed invincible. But while this gallant young knight was endeavoring to kill her, something else was happening in Carthage. The Carthaginians, anxious to win over Syphax, had offered him the prize he always coveted: the beautiful Sophia against her will, Sophiana yielded. When Massinissa heard that his fiancee had been married to Syphax he hastened to the tent of Hasdrubal, where he waited for the first time, was grieved at the injury done his brilliant young friend, but would take no stems to redress it. Forced to choose between the public good and the public was the public good, Hasdrubal decided for Syphax. That decision was to mean the doom of Carthage. The Carthaginians had taken a sinmore unhuey. They had not reckoned with Massinissa.
Deserls Carthaginians
Hot with anger, Massinissa quit the Carthaginian camp to return to his native land. Before leaving Spain, he ceased his camp and private talk with him. On the way back, Syphax sent him to capture Massinissa, but he escaped and finally arrived in Massylla. In the meantime, his father had died; and, welcomed by the people, he was now Syphax, eager for revenge, descended upon him, and defeated him in battle after battle. Dangerously wounded in the passage of a river, Massinissa was forced to hide out of companions in a cave. To cut off pursuit, he gave out that he was dead.
GOD
"I love better to depend on a Numidian than a Roman. I prefer those born like I, under the skies of Africa. Let death take me rather than a Roman."
Loses in Love and in War
But undiscouraged, he gathered
another army and again he was beaten
by Syphax. Neither in love nor
war did he seem to have any
success against this great rival.
He more note he fugitive.
Then he may have been queen that
Scipio had landed, on the African
coast with an army, and with great
difficulty Massinissa made his way
to him and offered to become his
ally.
With him were only five followers,
But Massinissa as will be seen, alone
was equal to an army. Scipio, who
had already felt the force of his
genius, welcomed him.
Marches with Selplo
Rallying his people once more, he began to call for the allied Numidian and Carthaginian armies commanded by Hasdrubal and Syphax. In inferior in numbers, he was able to rely on strategy. They began by a pretense at wishing to make peace.
"I love better to depend on prefer those born like I, under take me rather than a Roman
Noting that the Numidian camp was built of reeds, the two set fire to it one night. The Numidians, not knowing to fight it, leave their arms behind. On this the Romans fell on them with terrific slaughter. In the Carthaginian camp, the sentinels had seen in them the fire, awakened by the cries, made the same error and rushed toward the fire unarmed. As to the cries of the wounded and the dying, they thought these also were stealing into the Carthaginian camp also set it on fire.
Carthaginian Camp Destroyed Caught by the flames, men and beasts, fell into the fire or on the swords of the allies. Forty-five thousand of the enemy were killed and wounded; 17,000 Numidian horses were captured and the Syphax, utterly routed, fled behind the walls of Carthage.
Rallying, Hasdrual and Syphax prepared for another battle. "The disastrous battle of Syphax by fire; not by battle, One is inferior only when beaten by arms."
Once more the four leaders met in battle. This time Massinissa arranged that he would be opposed to Syphax; and the former, made redoubtable by his first victory, swep his enemy before him. In vain Syphax pushed his horse in his arm, and Massinissa armed him to inspire his men. The rout was complete; and Massinissa, catching up with Syphax, cut down his horse and made him prisoner.
The beaten army had taken refuge in Cirta, Syphax's capital, and Massinissa pushed on there. Was it the victory in Cirta or the defeat in Cirta a prize he deemed greater than all his victories—Sophonisa.
Text by BEN DAVIS, JR.
by A. W. RENNEGARBE
YOU WISH TO
MAKE ANY STATEMENT
TO THE NEWSPAPER
REPORTERS
MR. WILLIAMS?
11
Four years had passed since he had lost her—four long years of tortured waiting that had but served to inform him. With Massinissa he was the Roman general, Leius. He decided that it would not do for Leius to accompany him. Skillfully he used argument, and he kept the garb behind he pushed ahead.
Finds SophonIsba
Arriving before the walls of the city, Massinissa displayed to the citizens their king loaded with chains. Quickly they surrendered, and Massinissa, in all the ardor of her kingdom, entered through the gates. Once inside she spurred his horse to full speed, thrue the city, past the palace gates, and up the steps.
There Sophonisba in the full bloom of her marvelous beauty was riding her horse Massinissa went to meet her: feeling more than ever her prisoner. She also came to meet him and
a Numidian than a Roman. I
r the skies of Africa. Let death
."
throwing herself at his feet began to plead with him not to give her over to the Romans. "The gods, thy courage, and thy fortune," she said, "hath given them power over us, but if it is permitted to a captive to embrace the knees and touch the hand of a conqueror, I pray thy, by which we ourselves may master but yesterday, not to hand me over to the capreof some cruel Roman. Dispose of my myself."
Overcome by Love
But Massinissa, overcome by his love, was speechless while Sophonisa went on: "I love better to depend on you, but I prefer those born like I. under the skies of Africa. Let death takes me rather than a Roman." Massinissa, letting her to her feet, embraced her, assured her that she still loved her and would save her.
But he had to think quickly. Sophonisa was in reality a Roman sophonisa was on the way with his soldiers, and not far behind him was Scipio. There was but one way. It was a bold and foolhardy way, but it seemed the only one. He would have been a fool, and his wife, she could not be treated as a -ap squarus ue nounjo -andrea lay he had the ceremony performed, when Lellus arrived and heard what he said, "I am angry that he wished to snatch Sophonisa from the marriage bed and send her off with the other captives, but Massinissa was too powerful to be offended thus, so he agreed to the matter rest until Scipio came.
Scipio arrived and, as fate had it, he saw Syphax first.
Fate Intervenes
New Syphax was crazy. He knew that Madam Teresa his wife, and he would rather see her dead. When Scipio reproached Syphax, recalling his past fortunes, and wishing to know why he had rejected the woman, he asked his former friends. Syphax replied: "Yes, I have committed a great fault, an act of folly for which I am now extremely sorry. But the Romans were the arms against the Romans was the end, not the beginning of my folly.
Syphax Pleads
"My ruin began when I fell in love with Sophonisa. No man can withstand her and she is passionately devoted to her country, and though I was our friend, her charms made my love of her corpse my love for her that precipitated me into this misery.
He added: "Now I am ruined, but I have one consolation and that is to see her pass into the hands of her husband. He noiser than I. His youth will make him feebler yet. Has he not in marrying her shown a blinder passion and folly than myself?"
Selipio who added, in inclined to this subject of the matter now saw the thing in a different light. Why, indeed, this sudden marriage in the midst of arms even without consulting Lelius? Why this eagerness to marry a captive? Surely it was a mistake. Sending for Massissa, he spoke to him as a brother:
MAMBA'S DAUGHTERS
12
(Continued from p.ge eleven)
worths never speculated as to her private life. They took her as they found her. But she so subtle are the forces that knit human relationships together that the time arrived without their realising it when they of serious importance could affect when the participants in the strange partnership without bearing upon the destinies of the other.
Fortunes had waned in the little brick house. Polly was approaching the time when she would graduate from her school. She would forward and backwedge, speak French, spell perfectly and do sums in elementary arithmetic. So much for what might have been classed as commercial assets with which she met the general extent of the gentle and charming old ladies she had absorbed the old Southern gentlewoman tradition that had lingered on in the disintegrating old school. She was beautiful, and sheanced beautifully, and in her eyes was that unalterable word that men seeing, answered. She already had a host of beaux, and the career to which she had belonged tradition, and instinct, resolved itself in its particular detail to a matter of selection when the proper time should arrive. But she must be given an opportunity of appearing to her parents from a period that would lie between graduation and marriage.
Saint was a disappointment to every one but Mamba. He had failed utterly to yield to the standard he was sensitive and took refuge from humiliating realities in a dream world of his own. The result was absent-mindedness. Teachers at the school a forlorn belief them. A gangling adolescent of seventeen, out of school and not yet at work, practically penniless with the hoop of an animal he spent most of the time roaming the waterfront. His acquaintances who caught glimpses of him in those days decided that he waself confirmed neer-do-well. Not that he was dissipated. It was probably worse. The old town looked with indulgent eyes upon youth in its wild-oats stage. He was a tradition understood. Good blood could be counted upon to win through in that reckless period. Fathers and uncles would exchange information of today while they implied a vanished but far more adventurous youth of own. "Get it safely over with, then marry and settle down." Young blood, young blood. "Yes, undoubtedly boys not only would, but should, be boys. But Saint was a boy who obviously did not even have a heart. Young blood, poor Kate Wentworth a widow. too the boy felt it rising in the air about him like a tangible wall—a wall against which he could bruise him out from which he could not escape.
Sometimes at the waterfront he would forget. There were sights there that had nothing to do with him, and that were detached from actuality and seemed to invade the territory of dreams. Negroes crossing a dock head single, with cuffs on his back, were against a blue-green sea horizon. He'd like to catch that so that it could not elude him again; fix it in his hands and walk away with him—paint, maybe. But one could not study to paint, one could not study anything until one had passed in algebra; there it stood, a blank canvas of knowledge. It had to be mastered before one could go on. Well, he had been born without that kind of a knowledge, fortune and were getting ahead. He had been dropped from his classes—the fate of the fool. He was at least logical enough to follow that to its conclusion. But here he was
Only Mamba seemed to understand the boy. Days would come when the old woman would grow restive under her straitjacket of respectability, and the two would be in a corner of the kitchen yard seated on an empty packing case. Mamba, with her disguise laid aside, and a look of low and humorous cunning or her lined face, would be nodding her gray tarantula up and down while the tote stand up and down the counter. Daughing his shy, quiet laugh and forgetting himself in the tale.
. . .
Summer came, and with it a desperate decision on the part of Mrs. Wentworth; a decision that quite unexpectedly resulted in an important victory. That one may know how desperate the situation in the little brick house had become, it is only necessary to say that the house, the shore furnished with the Wentworth plate and linen, and that a limited number of 'paying guests' were to be permitted to share the sanctity of a Wentworth home, and to be treated with the family: Maum Netta was as a matter of course, and at the ferry that was to convey them on the first phase of the journey, the house was hired by a Negro woman, but him a look of great importance. Upon arriving at their destination this individual was found to possess a reputation for cooking, an enormous appetite, and two women, an entirely adequate tenor voice.
Mamba was living well now, and she should have been happy. She should have been happy. She suited her fancy. The kitchen was far enough from the house to allow almost constant singing. There was a shady breeze sweep. She was at night the unremitting flow of broad sea winds under the soft summer stars. But that mysterious fire in her spirit negroes tried to laugh her out of her preoccupation, but without avail. Sometimes in the middle of a song the Negroes plaza rail, gazing over the bay to where the lights of the town created a false illusion of dawn against the west and her eyes would be filled with light. By August Mrs. Wentworth's venture had proved itself to be a distinct success. The house was well filled, and pleasant. We yielded, yielded, yielded, profit that promised well for the future. But to Mamba, the month was tremendous and memorable, for it brought an enlightening speech-making enigma to the reader's mind.
Judge Harkness had arrived for a rest immediately after the June term of court. It is unlikely that a more immediate rest would be the sands of Sullivan's Island since the historic days of General Moultrie. He was tall, and of a commanding presence, and the proper finish was added to his appearance by a well-clipped beard and pince-nez. Maum held him socially with the tribute: 'Me an you. Cook, we call culled folks' talk. Miss Wentwort, she tells white folks' talk, but de Jedgehill don't speak nutting but de grammar. But the judge was too closely allied with the law for Mamba to admit
By DU BOSE HEYWARD
his superiority. She had a way of
sucking her tooth with a loud, derisive sound, and she employed this
method of expressing his desire to
the method he was disused.
Once she contributed her
comment, and with it stripped him
to the fundamental weakness of the
male.
"Yas. Ah seen um once, a-settin
on bench wud he long black robe
on, sendin 'nigger tuh jal, like he
been Gawd. But don' yuh fergit,
onnerneat' dat black robe he got
on two-leg pants same like Cook
dere.
Now the cook had acquired a
reputation among the Negresses
of the neighbourhood, and the
connotation freighted her remark with
outrageous impulses with imprecation.
Maum Netta pretended at first not
to understand, then frowned her
disapproval. Mamba, enjoying her
own audacity, improvise stills, and sit there
looking darkly mysterious.
This particular August morning was in the midst of one of the hottest spells of the season, the waves could be seen crawling up the beach and dissolving into low, monotonous breakers, as though reluctant to release their cooling water. The judge had risen early and gone in for his morning dip. Several guests sat listlessly on the plaza, waiting for breakfast with pre-coffee indifference to life so common in the American city. Mamba was cleaning a pan of fish in the kitchen when her keen ears caught sudden excitement of the smell of the house. She dropped her pan, and, trailing a suggestion of whiting behind her, ran to the plaza and gazed over the heads of the guests who were there, their coffee for the moment forgotten.
In the shallow surf, not a hundred yards away, a most amazing sight presented itself. The judge was standing near and forth over a section of beach that might have measured twenty-five feet square. The agitated movements of the body, the turning at a given point, though stout and steel inevitably suggested the caged animal. "Why, he's gone crazy," one of the women shrilled. Suddenly the strange performance cost the judge got to his feet and started toward the house. As he passed the plaza on his way to the rear entrance, it seemed to the onlookers that his dignity had fallen from him. His figure in front of him was the most of the drinking one. One hand was held over his face but was unable to conceal the bright of sensility that seemed to have settled upon him. The gained his room and closed the door behind him.
A babblement of speculation and comment burst forth but was immediately met by Mrs. Wentworth's smile, and she seemed a little upset," she remarked quietly. "I am sure he will appreciate silence in which to collect himself. Saint, you must go at once and see him, and see him, and see him, is unlikely that the shy, self-conscious boy ever experienced a more cruel moment. But there was actual physical propulsion in Mrs. Wentworth's voice that morning, and seemed visible to the reluctance of the man and the man him through the dreaded portal. The guests waited eagerly for Saint's return, but when he came they were doomed to disappointment, and the guests kitchen door and summoned Mamma. When he had conducted her out into the middle of the road, safely out of earshot of the house, he said: "I think--the old boy lost his teeth."
Mamba raised her eyes, and for a moment the boy was puzzled by what he saw there. He got the odd impression that some conflict was taking place behind them, some of the woman wanted to keep to herself. This was not like his friend. She told him things, just as he did her. A question was on his lips. Then suddenly she looked down, and her eyes were quivered slightly and she mopped the moisture from her brow with a corner of her apron. "No, Ahn't fin' um," she muttered, "an, Gawd, Ahn't an' were corner trembled. "Well, he's got to give you something, anyway," the boy asserted with a new note of authority. "Come a corner, the cars were pulling in when they resumed the session. They had no time to lose. Saint touched Judge Harkness on his sleeve, and a face was turned toward him that would have been mirth-provoking had it been for its pitiful defenselessness.
The authority in the boy's voice was going, and he spoke hurriedly on the last of its ebb: "This old man was going to call all morning. She did not find—anything. But she's awfully hot and tired and all that." The man fumbled in his pocket and drew out a two-dollar bill which he handed to Mama. "All aboard!" shouted the conductor.
Judge Harkness combed the steps. The wheels commenced to grind on the sandy tracks. Saint felt his body leaped past him and on to the platform of the Jim Crow car, Wheels were humming now, and windows sliding past in a blur of glass and faces. The only smile the race arm an awakening to was a real window. Dumfounded, he looked into the wide laughing eyes. Then Mamba smiled that broad unforgente. single-booted smile of hers, hers, hers. He was a Saint had ever known. A sudden premonition smote the lonely boy and etched the strange picture indelibly into his memory. It was well beyond his memory. More than twenty years before he saw it again on Iamba's face.
Under the pelting heat of the autumn the moment that it landed in the street 'shine opposite side' (of the street) 'shine opposite side' (of the street). One of them was
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
Harkness: the other. Lamba.
Harkness; the Sother, Lambda.
Taking the least frequented streets, they cut across the city, the inn faintive and ill at ease, the wimmy familiar with the secret of the city, Lambda, while the hunted its 'very rays' down upon her unprotected head. When they arrived at King Street, with its shop windows and 'panging signs, their ways apart, grooved, grooved, grooved, hesitated moment before an unobtrusive brass plate marked DENTIST. then plunged through a door into welcoming gloom. Mamba continued or discontinued, fastened against the front of a building, that had often engaged her fascination regress. In it were a number of examples of dental art, and its centre a complete set of teeth opaque, with the teeth chewing with a slow, hypnotising rhythm upon an imaginary cu
Mamba knew this place by rutation. It was here that her wealth friends came for her and climbed a flight of stairs to the office. Through an open door she saw a young man in a dirty white coat sitting in a dittany chair, reading a newspaper and climbed his eyes, therer away his paper and stepped eagerly forward.
"Can I do anything for you, Auntie?" he asked superfluously.
In portention: silence Mamba hosted her apron up and unlined her skirt. The exhibition to the astonished gaze of the dentist a dollar bill. eight-five cents in chance, and a fordable set of teeth, which, upon examination, reaffirmed the her interests were filled 'thsand
"What do you want me to do with these?" he asked.
"Fit 'em tuh me."
"Were they made for you?"
"Not zactly, but most."
The man handed them back. "Sorry, but you have to get them made for you. Now, for forty dollars..."
Mamba laid her hand on his arm. He stopped speaking and looked up in surprise. He had not noticed her eyes before. Now he was looking at him that made him hesitate. She had his hand now, and was fumbling with his fingers, keeping her eyes on his 'll the time. She pressed the money into his hand that still held the teeth, then closed it tightly between both of his ears. Mamba, still holding his hand closed so that he could not return her possessions, plunged in her plea. "Here's you 'an me 'an dem teen' an, one dulch an 'eighty five cent all right here to together now. I done tek you to be here. If obber get separate' now, Gaw know it eber happen now. Gaw know it tuh fix 'em somehow. Boss. We jus' guts tuh!" "But, Auntie, it's like I told you," Auntie said. "I done tek you. Ah tuh huh hab 'em tuh some' plicar. Now, how's dis? Dere's a plicar. lodge insurance 'n an' dery is a family Ah knows what jus' gots dere goin' get goil 'eet'. Now yo go long em tuh me dose huh 'e呵 be ing em all tuh dis shop. You e呵 Ah don't."
The dentist laughed. He could not help it. He was entirely unconvinced as to the existence of that family, and he was not in by that sort of stuff? He stood looking down at her, and his laughter stopped. Now he felt something about the comic old figure that was standing in by that sort of stuff? He could not define but that somehow stirred his rudimentary imagination. He was something exerted against him that he could not define but that somehow stirred his rudimentary imagination. He was something big here, too big for the pitiful subterfuge that it had employed. Slowly he became aware of the conviction that some tremendous and then wonderful thing, and that it rested with him whether it should triumph or fail. Charity. No, not that, somehow. Chivalry, then women. A far glimmer came to him from a boyhood buried under ugly years of Negro dentistry, a figure in armour, Sir Galaahad, or someone else, the way he used to feel when he went to do those silly things for women and knew he wasn't going to get anything out of it. Then at this moment of himself, he laughed outright.
Mamba knew then that she had won. Now she must clench her victory. "Gawd bless you. Boss," she exclaimed. "When now." Fascinating man was smiling down at her. "There's no saying to you. is you. there Aunty?" Then, a moment. "No. not today. But come in to-morrow and we go." Mamba started to carry her treasured possession away with her, but at the door she thought better of it, returned, and handed it to the den. "What's the story she begged?" "Dey is too valuable tu carry 'bout de street." Then, wagging her head up and down, while she added in a deep-throated, dramatic whisper: "Yas, suh, yo mightn't be meble, but dem quiet teet' whent yo is holdin' so sate an' purty in yo' case we cut a mug." She then 'sen' plenty ob 'nigger' tu meet dere Gawd.
The dentist started and looked down again. Against his palm the snout of now of窒s seemed suddenly to become fierce, almost carnivorous.
When he looked up for further explanations Mamba had gone.
(TO BE CONTINUED)
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Black King In Struggle For Mastery of The World
(Continued from page 11)
"I believe, Massinissa, that you have seen in me several qualities, you, who first came to seek my friendship in Spain and again in Africa, you, who have confided to me all your faith and hopes.
Scipio Adylses
"Of all the qualities which you have recognized most in me, the quality of which I am most proud, is my continence—the empire I widen. I am the most passionate Massinissa. I would like to see crown all that has already distinguished thee. Because, believe me well, at your age we have less to fear the passions which besiege us." Going on to say that a victory over himself would be greater than his victory over Syphax, he continues: "I will have defections rather than to speak to you in a manner to hurt your pride, but permit me to say this first: Syphax, his throne, his country, lands and people, his all are now the property of all men with which I lies in the hands of the Roman Senate. "Is not his wife a part of all this? Is she not accused of having alienated me, and thrown him into the war against us?"
"Now I urge you to be victorious over yourself. Do not nc' tarnish all your virtures by a single vice. Do not efface all the services you have effected, and step the, effected, which will be to nullify all that you have done."
Between Love and Duty
Massinissia's heart was as lead when he heard this. He began to plead and tears came into his eyes but Scipio sent him to his tent to meet him. There, alone, he spent several hours torn with anguish and uttering groans that could be heard on the outside. To have loved Sophiahina all these years and now to be forced to forgo them, he told her to keep her would be his ruin and the ruin of his people; to give her up seemed impossible. She saw her being led a captive behind the walls of his house and the thought was torture extreme. Then, seized at last by a sudden decision, he called his favorite slave and bade the slave give him a certain package he always carried on him.
Pouring it into a cup he bade the slave take it to Sophisba. "...'ay to her." he commanded. "I would have to marry her but a superior force has made it impossible. Now the only thing left to me is to keep my second promise not to let her fall in love. My father, the remembrance of her father, the illustrious general, and the thoughts of her country dictate her conduct."
Senhousba Accepts
Sophonisla received the fearful present calmly: "Tell him," she said, "that I accept the wedding present and without regret. If it be true that my husband can do no more for his wife. Tell him also that I would have died more intelligibly if more time were between the wedding and the funeral." A few moments later she was dead.
When Scipio heard the news, he was troubled lest the fiery Massissa surrendered and only then, had he learnt the full story. Sending for Massissa, he presented him to the assembled army and claimed him king of all, Numidia.
Massinissa Acclalmed
"Then he gave him a crown of gold and a seepte; threw over his shoulders a toga bordered with purple, and put a tunic such as only Roman citizens of the highest rank could wear.
"There is no honor among the Romans greater than this," said Sebpio, and you are the first stranger in Rome deemed worthy of wearing the toga."
But Massinissa had taken a secret oath to be revenued against Carthage and took a tunic in Rome joy reigned when it was known that Hadrusdal was dead and Syphax a prisoner. Massinissa's sacrifice made a great impression on him, and his envoys were treated, like kings.
Hannibal Appears
But Carthage was far from being beaten. In the next campaign Carthage fought together. This time they had to tend with the formidable Hamulai, who, quitting Europe, had returned to Africa. Hamulai had tried to capture the city, but he had remained faithful to Rome. The two forces met at Zama, Again Scipio and Massinissa resorted to strategy. In the forefront of Hanseatic phants, Scipio caused the triumphes such a blast that the beasts became
Milk Makes the Difference
pant-striicken and, turning, spread havoc in Hannibal's army. At the same time Massinissa with his cavalry swept down on the left wing of the enemy and soon the Carthaginians were in flight.
Thev Clash
In this combat Massinissa and Hannibal came to blows. He wounded Hannibal in the shoulder while the latter sled his horse. Massinissa had intervened and Massinissa slew him. As he did so he received several darts on his shield of elephant's hide, and snatching out one threw it at Hannibal. Again another received the same. Massinissa tried to pull out another dart from his shield, he was wounded in the arm and forced to retire from the field. But it was only to dress his wound; and, mounting another dart, he was in the hope of capturing him alive and presenting him to Selpio. But night coming down, Hannibal escaped.
Of the Chariottinians, 25,000 were killed, and 8,800 made prisoner. Last lost 2,500 men and Massinissa 4,000.
Peace Returns
Now ensued a period of sixty years during which peace reigned between Rome and Constantinople. Massinissa devoted himself, to the development of his king-
dom. From a tribe of robbers and
Maurades, the Numidians became
people of the day, and Cirta became
a centre of learning. Massinissa had
a powerful army, a rich treasure, a
bounty from time to time he sent
alto Rome.
Maintains His Brilliance
Massinissie was now eighty-eight but he had not forgotten his oath to be revenged on Carthage for the loss of Sophonisa. At last, he caused Carthage to declare war on him, and he was able to meet the enemy. Two of his generals deserted him, but in spite of the years, his brain had not lost its cunning. Meeting with the enemy, he pretended to flee and drew it on until he had reached a great barron plain surpassing the heights of all means of subsistence. Then he made a stand occupying the plain while the Carthaginians seized the heights, thinking they had the more advantageous position. "Day came," says Appian, Massinissie, "and the old strong and vigorous soldier, was mounted on horseback without saddle or other covering as is the custom of the country; equally acting in the capacity of general and soldier, for the Numidians are the lustest of all the people of Al-
Carthage Trapped
The Carthaginians, as was said, had thought that in occupying the hills, they had the superior position. But soon they saw their error, for Massinissa, surrounding them, after eating the horses and even the leather of their saddles, the Carthaginians surrendered after promising to pay a heavy annual tribute. But Massinissa's victory was to have another effect. The Romans, seizing on the pretext of Carthage on an ally, descended on the weakened republic and destroyed it utterly.
Sophonisha Avenged
Thus was Sophionis avenged, but Massinissa did not live to see it. He had died a few days earlier, aged nearly ninety.
Livy, Polybius, Appian, Justin and all the historians of the period speak in highest terms of him. Polybius says, "Missinissa was the greatest and the happiest sovereign of our epoch. He retrained more than sixty years in perfect health and died at the age of ninety. Physical Specimen "Physically he was the strongest and the most robust man of the time. He it necessary to stand, he could keep on his feet for days at a time; as to remaining on horseback, he could for days and nights at a stretch.
"Thanks to the harmony that reigned in his family, his kingdom was never troubled by intrigue or domestic strife. But this was his greatest merit, his most admirable work: before him, Numidia was wild, uncultivated, and alien to all mankind. He was the source of new knowledge that all kinds of fruit like any other country. He has, therefore, more title and rights than anyone that his memory should be honored. A short time before his death he inflicted a great defeat on the Carthaginians. The day after the battle he was to be seen before his tent eating whole wheat bread."
Changed History
But for Massinissa, the history of the world as now written would have been different. One fact is certain: the fall of the Carthaginian republic in 1183, when a hundred years, took world supremacy from Africa, and gave it to Europe.
Memory Honored by D'Annunzio
Interest in Massinissa has been revived in recent years by a love story written by D'Annunzio, Italy's foremost writer. This story has been filmed and has been shown in the United States where this writer has seen it. This story has been adapted days to depict great personages who, from the earliest times have been
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known as Ethiopians or blacks, as white persons. For instance, there are the Queen of Sheba, Simon of Cyrene and Balthasar, of every European art gallery. Balthasar is represented as a Negro.
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In the Italian film, however, Massinissa has been depicted as the Negro that he was. Massinissa left a nephew, Massinilla.
Mississippi left a nephew, Jugurtha,
who was hardly less famous than he.
(END.)
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BY CARROLL'S NEWS SERVICE
# 61
Harvard Street
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BOSTON MASS. - MRS. MARION GOSS of
Wilmington, who was the house guest
of bf. Ralph-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Graham of 20 Sharman street
the last four months, for her bed
Gender:
HERBERT FRANKLIN of New York City,
left his home Thursday, after brother
spent here as the father, brother
and sister-in-law, and Mrs. Charles V.
Prentice, Columbus avenue.
Gender:
IRENE JACKSON of Camden street,
rented to her home Sassafras, works
with friends in New York and
Philadelphia. She was a
spouse by her sister, Mrs. Grace An-
niel,
dation of Worcester,
PROF. COLLIER, president of
St. Augustine, Pin. left for
home last week after a vacation spent,
as the guest of Mrs. Anderson of 16 Green-
with Park
JAMES JAMES of New York City, who is the host guest of Mr. Husband, Allen of Bradock Park, left for her home street.
WILLIAM H. SMITH of 68 Lincoln Street, postal clerk at Kensington, took from his annual vacation which was spent in New York City, Philadelphia and Boston. MRS. JOSEPH WILSON of Bradford street, returned to their home Tuesday from Philadelphia where they were accompanied by Donald. BANNE FORTUNE of 30 Village street, returned to her home street. Portland, Maine, she was the daughter of a daughter, Mrs. Bessie Pryer, former resident of this city. LUTHER HAWKES of Downtown, Connecticut, the city last week, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Dave W. Wilkerson of Harrison Street, returned to her home Tuesday from a brief vacation, spent in New Bedford,
HARRY ADAMS of Pittsburgh, Pa., was a visitor in the city in law, law-mart, and Mrs. Rufus Adams of Batavia street. MISS ELEA BROWN of Wellington spent the day to the city Tuesday from a three months' vacation, spent with friends in New York. MISS JESSICA BROWN and MRS. CHARLES W. SHAW of Cleveland, Ohio, were visitors in the city last week, guests of the street, and Mrs. Adams SELVIA WILLIAMS of Humboldt avenue, returned to the city. Mrs. Adams accompanied by her son, Walter. Mrs. Adams was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Bampson of Appleton street, returned to the city with a few friends in Cambridge.
ANDREW MOORE of Philadelphia, left the city Tuesday after a brief vacation as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mitchell and Mrs. MILDER HARRISON of Harold street, left the city Thursday for New York city, left her mother, who sustained in-
ternal injuries in an automobile accident. HOW YWN of Louisville, Ky., was a visitor in the city last week, guest of Mr. MISS GERCY ANDERSON of Humblebald avenue, returned to her home Friday from a three weeks' vacation, spent in New York City, and accompanied by her sister, Mrs. Rose Haven. MRS. ESSERT WHITE of Chiment Park, entertained friends at her residence Friday and received versions of the evening. The affair was given in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dickens of Bridgeport, Conn. Among the guests were Helen Hinton, Mrs. Margaret Washington, Mrs. Edin Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Alexander, Mrs. Edna Moore, Mrs. Florence Monroe, Mrs. Fannie White, Ernest Freeman, James Moses and Oscar Franklin, a monthly meeting, Friday evening at the League of Women for Community Service. The memorial, which will be held during the month of October. Many plans are being formulated for the club's winter activities. The New York City, was a visitor in the city last week, guest of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Franklin of Yarmouth street. En route home she visited in New York City and New Haven City.
MRS. ELOISE DOUGLAS, school teacher for several months here with her husband at their residence, 627 Columbus avenue, for Washington last week to resume her duties. MR. AND MRS. RANDOLP PROCTOR of 2-A Wellington street, returned to her home and spent with Mr. Proctor's parents in Washington, D.C. MRS. RANDOLP PROCTOR of 2-A Wellington street, returned to her home Monday from a vacation spent in New York City. MRS. MARTHA MASON of West Canton street, returned to her home Monday from a vacation spent in New York City. MRS. MARTHA MASON of West Canton street, returned to her home Monday from a vacation spent in New York City. Among those present are, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hamilton. Miss Minnie Stokes. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Hall. Miss Minnie Stokes. Mr. and Mrs. Kendall. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lewin. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Braxton and Miss Gertieduz Miss MELIA MIRILLA WILLIAMS of Batavia street, entertained friends at her residence during the evening. Among some of the guests present were, Mr. and Mrs. Pred Lawson. Mr. and Mrs. Cordell Madison. Mr. and Mrs. Cornellius Roberts. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bates, Miles Shamford, Long and Miss Eva Wade of New York City.
MRS. MARY GREY OF Cleveland, Ohio,
Washington of Humboldt avenue, for the last two weeks, left for her home, Friday,
relatives and friends in New London, Conn.
MRS. MALLIE WOOD of 11 Westminster
birthday party, given at her residence by
Mrs. Mildred Showell of 108 Hammond St.
the morning, Mrs. Wood was the recipient
of the evening.
O. H.
I Garland Penn, author and educational secretary, M.E. Church, who will observe his 62nd birthday, Sunday, October 7.
Born in New Glasgow, Va., he was educated at Rust and Wiley colleges He married Miss Anna B. Rhodes in 1889 and there are seven children.
or many beautiful and valuable gifts. Among the guests present were, Miss Helen Lindsey Mrs. Amy Jones, Mrs. Ireen Brackett, Mrs. Clara Williams, Mrs. George Hinds, Mrs. James Bryant, Charles Hadley, Miss Ethel Wood, James Cressy, Robert Butler and Charles E. Freeman, Jr.
JAMES WILLIS of Warwick street, returned to his home Saturday from a business trip to New York City and Philadelphia. Mr. Willis will leave for Nashville, Tenn., the first of next month.
MR. AND MRS. KENNELL of 612 Columbus Avenue, entertained some of the children of the neighborhood Saturday afternoon. The affair was given in honor of the eleventh birthday of her daughter, Donaldson. Among the little friends present were, Barbara Hope, Helen Penny, Helen Holiday, Kathleen Robinson, Edna Mair, Eleanor Simmons, Ursula Hylton, Jerry Robinson, Leman Boman, Daniel Skinner, George White, Kenneth Hilton Keith, Joe Booker, John Chadwick, Morris Robinson and Fred
MRS. MADALINE WILLIAMS of Bridgeport, Conn., was a visitor in the city last week, guest of Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Johnson of Massachusetts Avenue,韵.
HENRY MOORE of Columbus, Ohio, was a visitor in the city last week, guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Neary of Munroe Street.
The Buds of Promise Club of the Columbus Avenue A.M.E. Zion Church, whose membership consists of sixty-five members of the Columbus Avenue A.M.E. Zion Sunday School, held their last meeting with Mrs. Hettie Belle Swain as their superintendent. The meeting was held Monday afternoon.
After the business of the meeting was disposed of, the members enjoyed various games and surprised their superintendent with a lovely fruit shower.
MISS IDA FRANKLIN of Norfolk, Va., left for her home Thursday, after a vacation spent with relatives and friends in Greater Boston.
MRS. MAE WHITE of New York City, who was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Saunders of Massachusetts Avenue, left for her home Tuesday after a two-week's stay.
MRS. PHYSIC OF 40 VILLAGE STREET ENTERTAINMENT
In honor of James Hollis, Thursday evening at a surprise birthday party. Mr. Hollis was the recipient of many beautiful gifts. Among the guests present were Joseph Singelery, Mrs. Mary Pina; Lawrence Physic, Miss Gladys Taylor of Montreal, Miss Alice Wade, Misses Dorothy Forman, Edith Smith, Helen Wade, Rosene Hutchins, Merclides Burgess, Alma Taylor; Mesdames Rose Rambeau, Gwendolyn Goskins, Agnes Physic; John Parker, John Wyatt, C. A. Warren, M. Conklin, Gilbert Hamilton, Stanley Thompson, Gerard Miller, Freeman Irving, Arthur Williams, J. Cook and James Bland.
IN THE CHURCHES
The Rev. Benjamin Wilson Swain, pastor of the Columbus Avenue A.L.E. Church, whose pastorate came to a close Sunday, delivered two sermons. He delivered his farewell sermon Sunday evening. Morning subject was, "The Pattern that was Shown Thee in the Mount," and his
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farewell sermon was "The Minister's Parting Sermon." The Rev. R. W. H. Hester, pastor of the church, both S. Hester, accepted his multiple at, both S. Hester, Sunday.
Holy communion was administered at the Columbus Avenue A.M.E. Zion Church Sunrise, the Revs. Jacob W. Poseil and Frank G. Gibson. The communion was given last week and the new minister would be detained in coming here. The Rev. E. C. McCleed, director of colored work at Morgan Memorial, was the day before the vesper services Sunday afternoon.
PITTSBURGH
PITTSBURGH, Pa.—The Homewood A.M.E. Zion Church will present Madame Lula Robinson Jones, the noted soprano soloist from New York City, in a musical recital, Monday evening. Madame Jones will be accompanied by Miss Charlotte Enly.
THE EIGHTY-SECOND SESSION of the Allegheny Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Zion Church will convene October 1-6, at the Homewood A.M.E. Zion Church of Tioga street.
THE AVERY MEMORIAL CHURCH has secured "The Timpson-Hardy Singers," to appear in a concert at that church on the evening of Tuesday, October 1st. The concert is being sponsored by rMs. Margaret T. Hardy, who is the chairman of the rally drive now being held for the church.
MEMBERS OF THE SOUTH HILL'S CIRCLE will give a dinner at the home of Mrs. B. P. Ellison of Estella's avenue, for the benefit of the Church of the Holy Cross.
THE ANNUAL CONFERENCE of the Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary Societies of the Pittsburgh district, will be held at the Homewood A.M.E. Zion Church. A usual program will be presented on the opening day, October 1st, with Rev. Slias Williams delivering the address.
THE NIGHTINGALE ART DRAMATIC CLUB proved able hosts at their "Artistic Ensemble" which was held Monday night, including the Central Parlor. Gladys Washington and Cora Moe Wilkes provided excellent entertainment with their clever dancing and singing ack.
MRS. L. B. HIGHTOWER has returned visitation in Denver, St. Louis and Chicago Mrs. Hightower attended the convention held by the American Wooden, in Denver. Mrs. Hightower visited while in St. Louis. In Chicago, Mrs. Hightower was highly entertained by her many friends of that city. In MRS. who has recently returned from an extended trip in the east, as has her guest for the week. Mrs. B. Hightower, Daisy Young, also of New York, accompanied Mrs. Hamilton. ASLEONER and family of Harbison College, Iroca, S.C., have returned to their home after spending six weeks visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Carter, of MRS. A. ACTY, of Auburn street, and Mr. and Mass. of Warble street, have returned from a motor trip through Virginia. MATTIE B. WOLLEN and Rainy Birch are at home after attending the weddings. Wollen's daughter, in Zanesville, Ohio. JAMES THOMAS and son, Elmore, of Susquehanna street, is in Gosport Hall. Tortoise Montgomery, who is the brother-in-law of Mr. Thomas, who is monomacas several times, has many friends. N.P. AND MRS. JAMES L. SEARS, of Harry street, had as their guest for a week. N.Y., who is the sister of Mrs. Searle,
MRS. ELIZABETH ELLIOTT, industrial secretary of the Lucy Thurman W.Y.C.A. of Montclair, and Mrs. William Wood, of Montclair street. Mrs. Ellott will spend some time in Cleveland before returning to Detroit. MRS. VIRGINIA WOOD has returned to New York, where she is a patient in the Pittsburgh hospital, following an automobile accident in July. MRS MARY HAVISTON, of Roanoke, VA., is making her home with her Mister. Mrs. Wood is a graduate nurse and is employed by Dr. Cults, of East Wylie avenue. JAMES E. JOHNSON, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. JOHNSON, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. JOHNSON, for Virginia Seminary and College, where he is professor of chemistry. MRS. JOHN J. HALMAN, of New York, is visiting her Mrs. Hart entertained in honor of her niece, Monday. J. H. JOHNSON, who has been in New York all summer, returned to the city last week to resume his studies at the University. DR. S. O. CHERRY has returned from Chicago, where he attended the council of the American Association of Medical Physicians, at the School of Orificial Surfaces.
MRS. CLAIRE BANISTER of Kentucky avenue, accompanied by Miss Lillian Howell o'. Dilary street, is spending two weeks, living relative and friends in Lyndsburgh, Va.
MRS. M. D. B. BOYD of Harvard street, with her mother o the East End. MRS. ELIZA FORD, of Swickley, entertained in her home at a tea thirsty club, with her mother o the East End. Club, and Hawthouse Club, accepted Mrs. Ford's invitations. Mrs. Lena B. J.ason of Port Rico, was theICKMON and William H. Haynes, of Newton, Kans, who have been the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Hance of Zara street, will spend some time with friends in Port Wayne, ind. with the Ransom Youngs, of that city. DR. ROBERT J. of Lawrence, is at home after a trip through the West. After spending two weeks in Los Angeles and vicinity, Dr. Bolden visited friends in San Francisco. Ms. ABNER HILL of Warble street, with her son, Abner, Jr. is visiting Virginia, and will return to her home after a spouse by Ms. P. Reece and her sister, Msg. Gertrud Pasyne, in honor of the members of her son, Lena B. J.ASON, of Port Rico, left for her home after spending the summer visiting her children, who are teachers. Ms. ESSIE M. PORTER of Detroit, Mich., was the week-end house guest of
THE CHILDREN
Three talented youngsters who appeared on the AFRO Club program last Saturday. They are, left to right, Mattie and Booker T. Payne, children of Mr. and Mrs. John Henry Payne, 121 N. Mount street, who sang a duet of the spirituals type and Miss Gwendolyn Nichols, 2024 McMullen street, popular sub-deb, who played several selections on the piano. They were received into full membership in the AFRO Club.
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Well, here is a good one that is on display at 1107 McCoulon street. This is just one of the many unattractive signs around the city that mar rather than add to the business places that have them. It has been suggested that the AFRO conduct a "better sign" campaign.
Mr. and Mrs. William Blens, of Lincoln avenue. Mrs. Porter is a niece of Mr. Blens.
MISS U. V. ROSS, who recently resigned her position at the Y.M.C.A., as stenographer and bookkeeper, was entertained at a dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Peteus Johnson, of Mrs. Blens. Industrial and Agricultural School. Many interesting events are being planned.
MISSISSE ESTELLE and Celeste Bobo, have returned to Spartansburg, S.C., after spending a vacation in Pittsburgh, with Mrs. Humble, Headmaster of Meadow street. Miss Estelle Bobo will resume her studies in South Carolina.
MISS BERTHA E. BRADPORD of Steetland. Mrs. E. Bradpord, Mrs. C. M. Smith, and Dr. Robert S.
MISS LILLIAN SMITH, charming visitor from Washington, D.C., with friends to Washington, Pa. Miss Smith, who is a June graduate of Howard University, has received a position as teacher and French in Manasquan Industrial School of Virginia. MRS. C. H. MALLOY, of First street, Niagara Falls, N.Y., is visiting her daughter, Thomas W. Bolden, of Finance street. MISS HENRI LILLIAN AVENT was the honored guest of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. D. Avent, of Frankfort town, Wednesday evening, with Mrs. William Palmer as host, with Mrs. J. D. Jauvent, Elizabeth Brown, Gretchen Mc
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Donald, Anne Mae Palmer, Ruth Rerr, Dorothy Butler, Marys. Arthur West, Welford Graves, James Johnson, Thurman Graves, Edward Marino, Joseph Johnson and Alfred West.
ALONZO C. THAVER, executive secretary of the local Urban League, attended a regional Industrial Conference of the Urban League workers and executives last Saturday at Columbus, Ohio. The conference was under the directorship of T. Arnold Hill, who is the president of Pittsburgh Urban League last Thursday and Friday.
ALVIN RUGER, recent graduate of the University of Illinois, this week matriculated in the Graduate School at the University of Pittsburgh, on the fellowship jointly sponsored by the Pittsburgh Urban League and the National Urban League of Mrs. WILLIAM LAMPKIN, prominent woman, has recently returned from a brief visit with friends in Philadelphia, the University of Pittsburgh, left the city to assume his duties as a member of the faculty of the Johnson O. Smith University.
MISS ELLA HATHY of Winston-Salem, N.C., is visiting Miss Elinabeth Green, of Montclair street. Miss Hathy is studying dramatic art at Carnegie Institute of Technology.
Found Dead on Street
Miss Eileen Moore. 30. 22 Perry street, who was found dead on Wylie avenue, Wednesday night, September 18, was identified by the police from the funeral barrers of J. T. Woolfe.
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riding a bicycle and was, taken to the York hospital. He is mending rapidly. Mrs. Jane Limb, who has been confined with a bad limb, is able to be about. She was hospitalized. She surprised an amenable wreck Sunday a week ago if setting better.
Wm. Chambers who has been on the slick list, is able to go about his duties The trolley ride given by Shiloh Mis slonaries, was quite a success.
HARRISBURG
HARRISBURG, Pa.—Dr. James Warrick, of New York City, died on Friday. He was a devoted daughter, a teacher, a daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sheppard, of South 18th street has entered Houthorn College.
MRS. HENRIETTA WITHERSPOON, who put the past month's work in the National Benefit Association's office. MRS. MORRISON and little niece, Eilee, of New Rochelle, N.Y., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Morrison, in formerly of Hartburg. Miss Morrison is formerly of Hartburg.
WILLIAM P. ALLEN continues ill at his home in South 16th street.
home in South 16th street.
REV. JAMES WHITE, former pastor of Harris A.M.E. Zion Church, passed through here last week and preached at Second Baptist Church, Sunday morning.
THE HIGH SCHOOL Girls' Reserve of the Y.W.C.A., had their fall opening Friday, September 27, at the branch. The graded school girls will meet Tuesday, October 2, and the Steelton G.R. will have their opening Friday, October 4.
THE OLDER BOYS' CONFERENCE of the Eastern Area of Pennsylvania, will convene October 11, 12 and 13th, at Bethel A.M.E. Church. Some of the best speakers available will be present, among whom will be Prof. G. B. Lomax of Downingtown: Prof. Henry W. Hopewell, of York, Pa.; W. E. Griffith of the Christian Street Y.M.C.A., Philadelphia: Philo C. Dix, state secretary; Rev. Max Wlant of First Baptist Church, Harlsburg; R. W. Bullock, national Boys' Work secretary; and one will be fifteen members represented and one hundred and five of the boys.
AT 10:45 A.M. SUNDAY, the pastor, the Rev. J. L. H. Watkins preached on, "How to Preach." The pastor, choir and congregation worshipped at Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Steelton, Pa. At 3 p.m. Rev. Watkins preached about, "The Old Paths." In the evening services were held with the pastor in charge. His subject was "Looking to Jesus."
AT WESLEY R.M.E. ZION CHURCH, the pastor, the Rev. S. T. Hawkins preached in the morning, subject. "The Winds of
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God, the Type of the Holy Spirit” a calendar rally was conducted at 3 p.m. at the City Hall of the City of Hoboken. He used as a subject, “Success” was raised from the effort. At 8 p.m. the pastor apologized to the Churches Journey to the City of Hoboken.
MISS HAWKINS preached for his son last Sunday in Avonville. They had Women’s Day, and the subject was, “The Spirit Among Women.” A musical and literary program was given in the afternoon, and in the evening, Rev. Hawkins lectured on, “The Needs of Africa.”
MISS WILLIAMS, daughter of Prof. and Mrs. J. Henry Williams of Linden, will Wednesday for New York City, wives she will pursue further study in Culture.
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER, 26, Mr. Hawkins will Wednesday for the Urban League, lectured at the Harrison Viv Club to a mixed group of interested folk. Mr. Hill spoke of the and oppose the Urban League in relation to recreation and housing conditions.
YORK
YORK, Pa.—The Dutch supper held by the Drive club of Bethel, was well attended, president: Mrs. Flavie McChendon; secretary: Mrs. Mamie Young, treasurer: Rev. W. A. Flamer, pastor. secretary: Mrs. Timothy Bunting was observed in Bethel church Sunday. The pulpit was filled by the pastor, Rev. W. A. Flamer. Mrs. Jane K. Wilson and grandson, Wendy K. Wilson, returned home after visitation, Wetton, W. Va.
The P. and J. orchestra held a dance in Lehman street hall Friday. A. Fisher E. King has charge of the orchestra. Bocker gave carriage patrons to rms. George Washington and son from Sheeps埔 town. B and Mrs. W. G. Johnson of Wayzant, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Harris, Mr. Grace Billingham, John Bell and Elmer John, only son of Mrs. Reld, East King street, was struck by a truck while
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nas A (ut. 1901-25 years of satisfaction),
} THE FIRST THING YOU WANT TO KNOW IS:
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Direct your steps to the office of DOCTOR FOR MEN,
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‘The office of DOCTOR FOR MEN, with DR. H. F. SCHAMEL
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Condition ys
(Our Inborairy tests of toed, urine and thet GI
acre give Jou imnedinie aad poate Laos: NN
ige of she location extent and. degree of our AN
Be ceaeeatal ee BUN
eetor or the ile insurance examiner, “toe ore GOP BANS NI
Sty tetls ave often sulcent for eecemining toe BAN
ENG (ot eee heli “Bae ee Yeo neice US
Giagnosis of most chronic disenses and weanester, Fi ps y ‘
ifpeci “anatyele must bende’ "It" you want vi |
fo Bo euccestuly treated for any opecit tense A
SF Sesunese you should coniult ‘teal specialist Crd en :
Tho" contests ‘pinion ang sagnosis ‘of gour Ay Of
condition by a laboratory analysis of your blood ri A 4
Sst Une. ah ie tne oly proper hing to 60, ay !
for you ‘cannot afford to take chances witb pe YN ‘
anything 30 vitally important as your heelth, iy WA 4
"Winn jou come to our ofieee to nave tee = A
SEGA tol ttle of see own dl
Bnallon, ad” sou wills thereby "be ehaniee 10
flan fat"whit oo ec treatment il oo
‘Knowing this you will want to co-operate with What Is Weong With Toot |
ust can uf ory batt resus: Poe time
UAsRaNTS'InE miter ts now. “Do\sot torte come Pep! Nerve! Splet—Gone? |
Sietlons fads:
setae
—
I Treat Successfully j
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Rheumatism, Gatarrh, Asthma, Piles, Gall-stones and Constipa- |
tion; Ulcers, Eczema, Acne, Boils, and other Skin Diseases; Or- |
ganic Weakness, Blood-poisoning and other Contracted Diseases.
My offices are equipped with many kinds of Mechanical and |
Electrical Apparatus such as ere used in the best clinics and |
hospitals of Europe for the treatment of diseases of the human |
body. 1
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Daily Hours—9 to 12 A. M, 1 to 5 P, M. Evenings 7.0 9, Except
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° 10 AM. to 2 P.M.
DR. H. F. SCHAMEL, Medical Director
703 N. HOWARD STREET
Between Monument and Madison Sts.
8 Baltimore, Md.
Q
HOWARD COACH FAGES
TEST WITH HAMPTON
Showing of Bisons Against
Seasiders to Gauge Ver-
dell's Ability.
OUTLOOK GLOOMY
Must Teach Fundamentals
'to Most of New Men.
WASHINGTON, D.C—When How-
ard meets Hampton at Hampton, Sat-
urday, for the first time in four years
football fans will get some indication
of whether Tom Yerdell Is to be «
“goat” or a miracle man.
Bison Outlook Gloomy
‘The former Northwestern star is tn
as tough a position as, any football
seach ever found, himselt., Despite
Tosy reports of optimism in the How-
ard tfalning eamp, the outlook or the
1029 football season on the Hilltop 's
gloomy.
‘Only 18 men reported to Verdelt
in response to the call for football
eandidates. In the two weeks that
training has been going on. that orig-
fhal number has been increased by
only ‘17 additional men, making a
total of 35 candidates out of whom a
Howard eleven must be rebuilt.
‘Only Two Letter Men
Only two letter men have reported.
‘They are Mack and Marshall, Onuy
two more are eligible to play, Shelton
and “Hawkins. | Sehoiarship require:
ments for participants in athletics
have been raised. ‘The old stars, Dan
Brown, Jack Coles, Jack Young, Herry
‘Webb, ‘Harry Payne, Simpson, Ewell
Hall and others, will be sorely missed.
‘There ere Mone to take their places.
‘Jack Young and Harry Payne are
assisting Verdell But even whey mut
fear bls sivle of play. Payne and
Young were tutored by Watson and
West, two coaches whose styles of
play pere,unilke Verde brings wita
(im the Northwestern syst2m.
Menn All Rookies
At this time, however. it is not, a
matter of learning a system. |The
chief problem facing Verdell and his
two assistants is teaching the candi-
dates who have reported for prac-
tice football fundamentals. ‘The can-
didates are rookies. They are not the
finished players that Dan Brown.
Jack Coles, BI Martin and Jack
Young were when they first reported
for the football team.
‘Odds Against Bisons
Verdel! succeeds Charley West, for-
mer Washington and Jefferson’ sta:.
‘West Is theo ne year that he coached
had a fairly successful season, but|
‘was temperamentally unfitted for his|
post. Before West was Watson, who
Sent great teams on the field. ° Stu-_
dents, alumni and fans will expect
him to bulld a winnnig eleven. Hamp-|
ton will be his first test; Ho One
thinks a Verdell-coached Howard
eleven will win that game, But if
hhis team can hold the Sedsiders to
& close score and make a good show-
ing. there wil be satisfaction, If the
arme is lopsided, there will be erurab-
Ting on the Hilltop.
--FIRST GRID BATTLE
By GEORGE W, BLOUNT
Reserving. their strength for a
great second half drive, the Cheyney
Fd sladiators olay on thelr Home
ei, Saturday afteroen, spent Hor.
ard ‘High School of m, 10
2 decisive 24-6 defeat.
After ‘Howard's score the prospec
tive teachers tightened thelr defense
Their ageressive, spirit crystallized
into a definite attack at the opening
of the second half and before the
third period was up Rufus Johnson
of Pitaburgh, “Cheyney's new ful
back, had duplicated Burton's 35-¥
run for a touchdown and brought the
Score to 6-6 stalemate.
Tt was at_this juncture that Hen-
ry (Tiny) Foreman of Bridgeton, a
hewcomer to the Cheyney squad this
fall, broke out with e series of line
bucks and end runs that completely
dazzled Coach Naylor's Howard elev-
en, co effective was his plunging thet
twice in that hectic final period he
carried the. pigskin across the goal
fine. Lawrence. Williams, a substi-
tute quarterback. scored the fourth
eR ee eet omtater..
‘CHEYNEY BONS nee
Barry esescossssesTe Keeccecesens, WillaDn
Pre IEEE EINE. sohns
Baran (ssc QL russell
Davis. wlocciecese G. yscecccoce Mayward
Demag” TiciiceceRe Gcvecrcetos, MEDS
Broa cassuerseeedts, Ceevoseccoassese, SA
Fleming isco, Bucssccccsss Menten
Be SQ. BIL anton
Jirdan’ secccccceode Hovis wattams|
Foremen ccs, Maciiileses dahnson
Johmeoe, coggeessRe Bocccecousse Lagate
‘Referee—avihur B. Wheeler” 1Wiimingten),
unpire-sW. i, Burton «West Cheaters. Head
Liaeuman—Ceorge E. Dunlap «Wat Chester)
BASEBALL
PAUL QUINN COLLEGE
et. (Bryan Migb at Bryan,
Set Yorcorsieeng. Mian ae Mex,
et, MoLangston’ at Waco,
Oct) Wears at Wacs.
Nov. 2-Western at Kansas City
New, ii--Houston ‘Junior College at Waco
res; Mecbinesia University at Jederson
cits. Mo,
wan e—Cundalupe at San Antonio,
rcemiber 25—Knoxville at Waco (tenta~
uve).
FOOTBALL SCORES
Biueneld, 8A. and T, 6.
Lincoln, ‘12: 82” Paul,
Kins State, O. 24th Infantry, 0.
Cheyney, ts Howard High, 6
cos BASEBALL «10 cans.
Wileiie ‘Tiley PLAY
Malse’s All-Stars st BLACK SOX,
SCORES
austars, 2: BLACK, SOX, 1.
RUACK GOX, 2: all-stars, 1
Hillesle, 48%, Louis stars, 3
Hilidate, 1: Se. Louls stars, i.
Se, Louis Stars, 12; Hilidale, 1.
St. Louis Routs Daisies in|
First Game by 12-1 Ver-
dict.
SECOND GAME TIE
Hilldale Takes Third Encoun-
ter, 4-2, Saturday.
DARBY, Pa—Takihe advantage of]
errors by Palm, and the Russell boys,
the Hilldale tossers soored a 4-2 vic~
toty over the St Louls Stars ‘bere,
Saturday to even the series.
‘The Stars had from
wong oy a eT oe and had
iayed 2 1-1 te game which had to
be called because of darkness, Pri-
day. In the first game of the series
played Thursday, bunched hits out
Charleston, Hilldale hurle:, paved
the way for an easy viclory’ for the
Missourians.
‘The second game proved to be the
thriller, resulting in @ duel between
Hyan’ of aildale and ‘Trent of St.
Louis. After Wells had doubled to
score Bell in the elghth soning. witn
eGecond run for ‘Se. Louls, Hilldale
stalled and delayed the game until
darkness settled over the field, re-
verting the ‘tilt to the 1-1 score.
abr hal aprne
paiet. "4343 Sluonomas.ie “C128
Betoun, APigpamate $b 49
Rae iisimucct™ 3868
Bina, fitsneacce 2310
Regus” C22 owarmacean, ¢o1t
Seer, «LTB thaugeaes S000
fame 1S demerit, | 3000
Prose, Cth aimenr” p008
wine” Tifgpensss. | 3ett
grarcsion, 10 18
Steors* aeoe
routs sei) totale BOT
‘tan for Covkell &ihInaine.
Ssout'3 Sinaia.
gt tools Sars endo O BAT Oo
Hinds SA Pee bod cau
Meetas His“ "Meme, Gute
uenrplint, Butebse bugesetoray Sue
Heces testeys ial oh tasers Lau
2 ante I0" auae of base Hensler,
Fee ation't of rena, ite
Sa °Cnaritston bina tnnings, io ron.
Strctottentg” ic" entiestony
Sion,
st, Lovis stand muLpALE
Wee he SPE e
aaict, “208 diotonana. "3'0 09
Bite. 202 oper Fore
Bae’ 29s sivanacese, 320%
Biers, 3tiowmec™” 2090
Seawin” Eanonmcwye 3013
Saari, semanas | 3818
Giitshrs, aecetsdyes. 3008
Tnuels, osapease i800
Beaty 280dieng 3088
tolls 730] Toa EET
eee ee ae
Bt. Louis Stare .......--.010 000 0-2
Biuliore Back “Sox's 100 900 St
Bioen baser—suiter, Willams. Saeriees
|—Biency, "Double playehuckey to Lackyet
FB Rustem to: Guiles, Lett on baser Bi.
Toul tr ultaale, 3° Bete on belie—ort
pant 1, Stesee out—By Ryan, 4 Treee,
er Fiu'yy pltenerssby Byes "cwitnme)-
Tworbise tec white, 2.
N. C. College to Meet
’Force October 12
Coach Crudop's Eagles Expected To
Give Ohiolans Surprise of Career
DURHAM, N.C—Coach Crudop’s|
eager Eagle eleven may surprise the
powerful Wilberforce team when the|
Ohioans invade the North Carolina |
College stronghold here October 12th.
in a gridiron contest which Eromiees
to be the classle of the Cardinas.
Secret practice sessions blackboard |
drills and rie conditioning workouts
have converted the Carolinians from
la bunch of flopping birdlings to 9
horde of feathered monarchs.
Shaw and A dT, and Xittrell and
3. He. Brick colleges’ who Were sched-
fuled to play on. ‘October 12th have
changed their dates to the lith, and
both coaches and players plan_ to)
jbe present at the Eagles’ classic. The|
‘Duke University (eam and its mentors
also intend to be on hand.
‘A homecoming ‘banquet, a grid-
fron ball, and numerous other red
letter “functions ‘are among. the, so-
cial affairs on the calendar for Clas-
sic Day. The game itself is sched-
Uled to start at 2 PM.
Alabama State and
Soldiers in 0-0 Tie
MONTGOMERY. Ain—The_ Grst college
same at the Boatieasirn ‘Conference. rte
Eifte th "0-0 te ere at Paterson Pield
Petts. ten tae aieggma siste Teachers!
Eoliegs Hornets nde auuh Taian
Ses" trom Pore Bennlog, ‘Ga, hed. exch
Siher 0 Bay for the sity minds of the
ontes
uxe-vP
puapann aa Weaxrny
FeRON ao Bante Coho
Sted UR Ec alee
1 Robinson sioso Guocesciacs Adem
Beak crecece gress” sana
Denard Se BIL AEs
$. ehntbe GE ELITE peor
Bales LOE BST, mes
Walon cg) BIIIT Bier
Motard SCI eect anes
OM eter TE, RLS aes
Ro DoBlows Tk Bo ware
SCORE BY PERIODS
ALABAMA SEATE vracssesnd 09 0-0
Te Rare IT 8 88 88
TetereeAbbott “16, Davolay. Ompire—|
celine ierplon), "Heedinesman Dabney
Hamper Z
W. Va. DuBois High
Defeats Stratton
McDONALD, W. Va.— R. M.
cyan) Gaiters’ DuBois high school
Yellow’ Jackets met and defeated
the Stratton high school footballers
Friday to the tune of 6-0.
"The big thrill of the game, came
when Booker, dimunitive, brainy
quarterback, shatched 2 pass out of
the air thrown. bv & Stratton back.
and galloped, “dodged, side-stepped
and squirmed his way snrodeh, ‘the
whole team for the only marker of
the game. :
Cheyney, 24; Howard Hi, 6
CHEYNEY, Pa—The Cheyney grid-
ders took the measure of the Howard
high schocl team of Wilmington,
‘Del, by the score of 24-6, here,
Saturday.
Be Derry ceveeseebe Enseeee G, Willams
i Bree IIIT Ecco aon
G, Baga 200IIE OILY wh gual
We Bate 0g) SSL aewara
Douglass e200 60S we Omen
2 Brown De a per
Bi, Pleming seccecR ELIE, Benton
Ro Bilge BT” Burton
H. Poremin wok. HB Le williams
& Jordan tC 20 R. WB. 3, Yonmsonlet
Riufuy dohawen oF. Boe). natate
SCORE BY QUARTERS
HOWARD HIGH sees b 0 0 0-8
CHEYNEY Oe ISD 8 ioe
"Toveh-dowieBution for“ Howacd ‘Wish!
R. dennvoa, He Poremad, 2, 4. Willams,
for Cheyney,
‘Substitutlens—Howard i: Davis for Ben-
tao, Lewis for Johns. Cheyney: wiuiass
for ilu, Broea or Daves Aibery fot
Tynes, Evel! for riewlng. doraan tor uoek,
Sohnuon for Douglass, Ells for wane,
‘Umpire<W. Button, Releresa ga,
er.“ Tatekeepers—Dr_ 0. N. Souther and
Leroy Bertiek, Head” Lisemnnttee Be
Se
Hear Me Talkin’ To Ya
Pinch-Hitting (or oe ee eth Rill Gil
‘UNDOUBTEDLY my brief acquaintance with Bill Gibson.
the original "Heah Me Talkin’ to Ya" man, has at least proved
to him that I am capable of uttering a vast, number of words with~
tPiaying anything: twaicn ig the fret prerequisite of e columnist,
as I understand), ‘This is attested by his request that I act as
“guest conductor,” whatever that 4s, for him this week,
‘Comments on the statements which are made below, will be.
appreciated, and are sélicited.
appreciated, and are solicited.
DISPENSERS of sportive tidbits In the past, have not devoted
very much space to professionalism, af it ip often, prsciced
our high schools, colleges and other institutions of learning that
are supposed to’ sponsor amateur sporting activities. ,
Jt is my observation that instead of condemning these Insti-
tutions for this untoward practice, sports writers in some localities
have appeared apologetic, and in some instances have appeared to
endorse and encourage these actions,
Baseball, football, basketball, track and other sporting en-
deayors have thelr youths who follow the particular game tor profit
or for @ livelihood or for gain. In some instances there are youths
Sho practice professionalism while in school without a true under-
standing of the meaning of the charge. ‘They are truehenny men, *¢
they are not amateurs in the true sense of the word, ‘This being the
cease, it should be the duty of the coach or athletic director to Inform
the athletes just how far they will be permitted to go in performing
feats of athletics without violating the amateur code.
‘A cage comes to mind of a young man on a Kansas City high
school rid Squad, who fought as a poet at the same time that he
was e Gackfidid man on his high school team. ‘The young man in
Question needed the few doliars earned as a boxer to further his edu-
fation, and he was not apprized of the fact that he was practicing
professionalism.
‘This resulted in the forfelture of all games won in the confer~
ence in which the boxer-footballer hed engaged, hereby causing his
feam to lose first place and other honors in the high school confer-
ence.
“this unfortunate occurrence could easily have been averted
by the coach, whose duty it was to warn his charges against the
acceptance of pay for any athletic endeavor while engaged in any
Sporling activity ‘while in school. "Any but, a refractory person
would have taken heed to the warnings of his coach and abided by
the amateur rullng of the association or conference. The feasi-
bility of lecturing By the coaches on professionalism and amateurism
5 Well as on passing and bucking the line at this time of the sea-
San, should oeeupy fn Important place in the colleges and other
educational institutions,
While it 1s not our custom to issue advice to those who are
recognized as higher in authority than we, yet, we cannot refrain
from asserting that a coach who does not consider it proper to ad-
vise his charges on what 1s professionalism, should bear the fruits
of his negligence. a
‘THE OLD ORDER of things no longer obtains in the present
ogress of sports. Changes are being or have been made in, bes~
Ketbail cootball, (Got ane 64 this me" he ten-man ‘paseball team
change is being debated. ‘Why?
ere are many reasons for these changes that may be stated
thout actualy "Hosking any of the, games, alshougiy one, reason
can be advanced which will be suMiclent—each of the different sports
{s'a competitor against the others.
Golf was losing out to polo: a change in the size of the ball was
rpade, wich itis blleved wil encourage more people co practice
e game.
Basketball and football rules have been altered to allow more
chances and give the public a better understanding of some, ples
which formerly seemed to be the cause of many controversies,
Interest in, baseball ‘increased considerably during the season
by the introduction of the "lively" ball, It ts safe to say the game
Fas, losing ecmires fore the advent of this bal. Interest sill
Hela a5 far’ ac pltching was concerned, but goed. pltehing was
becoming rarity, and interest in the “inside” features—hit-and-
run, squeeze play, base stealing, and the spectacular one-man feature
pingcoweswaniig. fans wanted and demanded action, as In
sketball and football, where one may see more real action in
fifteen minutes than in’ two hours of some baseball games.
‘Today, fans go to games largely to see hiting and so it is, the
lively bail’ ts saving baseball by giving the fans what they want—
slugging—and action other than at the mound and behind the plate.
‘the new football rules enable the team to try anything behind
the line of sorimmage, take chances, pass open things wide, without,
fearing loss of the game through one fame as nerelotere,| Oppor-
tunities are now afforded every coach to exercise his ingenulty for
the development of ‘the smartest, most spectacular football the
game has ever known, and all properly within the rules.
‘Some of the new’ football rules follow: ‘
7, Backward ‘passes must be thrown two yards through the
air t come under the former ruling.
2 ‘Elimination of the muff and fumble clause regarding punts:
ball dead at polnt of recovery Mf retrleved by kicking side; ball to
receiving team if it gets out Of bounds, regardless of whether it was
fouehed in fel of play’ by kicking tea after having been fumbled
3. in all shifty players must come to stop for one seoond
atte. coming out of huddle; one player may be in mation. pro-
vided he comes toa definite stop before the ball is put in play.
‘On all forward passes no player of side in, possession of
the ball, elther before or’ after the pass hag been made, shall inter
fere in ‘any manner with an opponent. ‘The word, before” has
been Inserted into the rule to discourage screen passing.
dead: AMY Hloked ball which siikes the goal posts is 10 be ruled
ead.
6. Close line play is in the space between the two defensive
tackles and three Yards either side of the serimmage line
VERY SOON NOW the world setles between the Chicago Cubs
and the Philadelphia Athletes will hold the attention of tite base~
ball fans the country over. After the series 1s over a person may
be able to read about how each man worked in the games, How
many times ’he faced the pitcher, how many hits he made, how
many stolen bases, base on balls. errors: how many. balls were
pitched, how many strike-outs each pitcher made, and other data
Which are important insofar as all statistics are for future consul-
tation ana comparison,
‘Why should these figures interest race baseball? Probably they
do not, yet. they should, if for no other reason than a glaring show-
up of ol own “leagues” and "world series.” .
‘For over ten years the race has been attempting to play or-
ganized professional baseball with more or less failures, all because
hey "wal patiern after, What has been proved, the proper
methods. “Each year a body of men has gathered to draw up &
Schedule, make rules and plan a year of baseball, hoping thelr plans
and efforts will meet the approval and support’ of the fans.» In-
varibly plans and schedules have gone a-squint.
Experience should have taught the different race leagues that
if ten gears of endeavor have not met the proper response from the
fans, a change should be made. Nevertheless, experience sgemingly
has taught them nothing.
Instead of merely making rules and agreeing to enforce” them,
the leagues should see that they are rigidly enforced. A stipula-
tlon that a player be fined so much for misconduct and yet be per~
milled to do az he pleases without restraint will never make a suc~
cessful baseball league,
Tf these men have capital to invest, they should be interested
enough In thelr capital to see that rules which are made to protect
ieare enforced. A player should not be, allowed to “smash” um-
pres, come upon the diamond drunk, or directly trom an all-night
fin party to perform before thousands ot paid fans,
itis our fondest hope that accurate records of batting. feldi
and pitehing will be kept next year as well es strict enforcement
of training and playing rules.
“Tacklin’ Parson at Kittrell
KITTRELL COLLEGE, NC—Rev.
pong Anderson, veteran fullback
for Kittrell college, has joined his
teammates ere, It was thought that
the “tackling er had carried
the ball the last time for Kittrell
cellege, when he did not show up &
few weeks go.
Zp \
eat ATS \\
Aceh Olam \\
NC ep
\ ai Sg
\\oM ek
BAvER ASEIRIN
true. There can :
stitute for either one.
ee ere can
Aa
Aa
ZA rt
ae \
i ATS \ f
Paw >\\ e Mark o:
\ ee 'Z Genuine
\(ores ay ee
NCE Aspirin...
BAe ASPIRIN is like an old friend, tried and
‘true. There can never be 3 satisfactory sub-
stitute for either one. Bayer Aspirin is genuine.
‘It is the accepted antidote for pain. Its relief may
always be relied on, whether used for the occa-
sional headache, to head-off a cold, or for the more
serious aches and pains from neuralgia, neuritis,
rheumatism or other ailments. It’s easy to
identify Bayer Aspirin by the Bayer Cross on
every tablet, by the name Bayer on the box and
‘the word ‘‘genuine’’ always printed in red.
A Biee Menatterre of Moose
. aveR) Ee
Florida Hard at Work
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla—With stren-
mal Lions are steadily rounding in-
to gridiron form. Head coach Kings-
bury was much passed with the ar-
Alabama State...
a
Aspirin..
like an old friend, tried and
ever be a satisfactory sub-
Bayer Aspirin is genuine.
nee for Dain. Tta relief may
lena DIVIDE BILL
WITH BLAGK SOX
White Club Takes —
Game, 8-1, With Locals
Taking Nightcap, 2-1. .
HIT CALLED FOUL
Darkness Halts Further Play,
Meet Again Sunday.
Sesh Bes eee
‘The Baltimore Black Sox received
a big score Sunday, so much so that
they were only able to split even in
their double bill wisn Fritz, Maisel's
Snternational All-Stars, white, losing
the first game, 3-1 and winning the
second tilt, 2-1.
Disputs Marcelle's Hit
‘A. hit by Marcelle in the seventh
inning, enabled the Sox, to win the
nightcap, but caused a. diferenee of
opinion as to whether or not the
Ball was foul or fair, ‘The ball went
down the right field foul jine | and
dropped in the crowd that had edged
its way almost on the field.
“phe. sacks were loaded with the
score 1-0 in favor of the Stars, with
two hands down when Marcelle drove
two runners across the pan. This was
& signal for the {ans who swarmed
on the field and as darkness was de-
gcending made it imposible to play
further.
Sox Errors Beat Them
‘The Stars won the first geme on
miseles by the Gox, none of therr
three tallies being cared. ‘Three er-
rors, a sacrifice, and Moore's pop to
right, field, all in the fifth Inning, 2c-
counted for the three markers.
‘The All-Stars, bolstered by @ num-
ber of additions to their lineup, will
take the field against the Black Sox
again, Sunday afternoon, in another
twin bill. After this contest 2 num-
ber of major league luminaries will
be added to the lineup of the Baisel-
men and the serles will be continued
overy Sunday until the weather be-
comes unseasoneble for, baseball.
Te is not expected that the Sox wit!
use anv outside players this year.
as‘hag been done in previous years.
bt will denend solely, upan the men
Who ‘carried the locals thru to the
Arveriean League bunting.
wire topes BLACK SOX
pimpiess, “"S'1'0 Hurbapest “2009
Doses, “ELE puma, 3th
Berk ifgitn” 029
ene, bb oluarae teas
fuerre PLM boa
Here SLL Neen 4888
femme, Peg tnaiatsht $02
Hemem [eo maee 3has
Emr LETS. fect
satis sda
‘Totals ‘38:3718) Totals 01619)
scone BY mes
guar g SS Gab beast
Se ean worn, & Catt, Yo
ye Rtas tte, Wigton.
ae eae lia: Sine he ton:
Soe are tae anes, eat
fe babi a Meena eae ia
sete nisin DU eae
See ecm Si ar See |
Ba on eae te Sette,
BRO fetta Stee” San
Beast, atte cc ay
Hone Ste oes eae a
Sere fe USE "anger tae “na
Bel
sso sot aucsrans
a rel
sumer, "282 fourem Set}
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Neweort NEWS, Ya—The tn-
teREWTQRT SEN ashteic Conser
eee eae Satie! gta eso wih
games Friday, Oct. 4, involving prac
Hes Te Mee’ members.
cay the eae entereawhole-
renttedlg Into ine apint of the on
ference. Large squads are turning
‘out at all of the schools and enthusi-
asm runs high. There is much con-
jecture as to the possibilities of Pea-
‘body high school, Petersburg. repeat-
Fess nuh Serves Shan
ae Reece echingtan, as
‘year's runner up, stands perhaps the
Hear, runner, sping the cup.
ree ee of aeerPak and ‘Thane
Chase City, will furnish plenty of
se Se order,
things, Norcom may loom as the
proverbial dark horse.
‘Huntington high of Newport News.
usually well up in the running. fin-
gual sai ade pene dite. che
jei8 Rey chahe unl» few toueh
engagements have tested her out. St.
Joseph. too, stands excellent chances
of springing a surprise this season.
8 earpie t
Talk Co-opration
| at F.B.0. Meeting
‘WASHINGTON.—1ne se Ofte.
ing of the Eastern Board of Offt-
Giis which convened atthe Zesi-
dence of fis secretary-treasurer, Ben-
Semin “Washington, gave indication
Stan intensive study campaign
Among. its members, a8 one of the
best inethods of inereasing {ts ef-
ficiency
“Team work among officals is no
Jess necesary for the ‘proper, fune-
Honing ‘of e football’ game, than ve
fear fork fmong the plavers of the
Contending teams, according ton
Statement inthe paper by ‘Mr.
‘Washinon fn, "Go-eperation anpne
Ofnlaig’ "which was presented” at
She meeting. ;
‘eearmony” among the officials
through study and knowledge of the
ules. firmness ‘with courtesy ine
Toreing. the penalties. mechanics. of
otfiisling were. some ‘of the high
‘Pounts stfessed by. the reader.
"The prineloal changes in the rules,
ag presented by Mrs Westmoreland,
Giclted “quite a departure from the
publie's coneeption of certain. phases
Bf the’ gridiron contest.
‘ 45 at Knoxville
XNOXVILLE, ‘Tenn, — Knoxville
college Bulldors, under the direction
of Coach Wallace Hawkins, pry, the
iia ‘oft the 1029 ‘grid. season’ Sulu
Frankfort Kentucky fora yome bith
: for a game with
epiucky Slate.” 7
Practice ‘as’ been underway for
three ‘seeks with e touad of 48 and
material which looked green at. the
beginning of the eeason is beginnin:
to whip Into shape, While there are
‘oacic this year, seven
others tate bees ee ee
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Wheatley Quits
*Force; Politics Cause
PITTSBURGH, Pa. — Thomas
app) Wheatley, former Morgan
ikke “Tootwall" and basketball
star, who deserted the camp of the
Bears to cast his lot with Wil-
perforce this season, passed.
through this city, Saturday on his
Bi ‘to New York, having quit the
‘Ohio institution.
Praternity pe it is under-
stood, which have extended to the
‘coaching department as well as
the players, | is setpeceible for
Wheatley’s decision leave the
Green and Gold school. 7 j
Tt is also understood that
Wheatley was unable to schedule
some of the courses that he need-
ed in order to obtain his degree.
wens THEE PLAY
Local
va. state at Morgan Collese, Satuedey
Gina
Howard at saripton
Eigeols at Voc Seminary.
Shaw at Bt Pash
Cae
Lincoln infos af Pak
Renate Coebe st Kentucky State
onwen Games
A, a at Pusees
Beet Beutse NE Ein uncer.
ES. Gale at ry. Inala
Wiitertoree at buena
Bitoni at Morrie, Brown
Bode a se hin State (Pees
—
TE eee ae
oct, S$-cheyney vs, Lincoin Freshmen at
oneysey,
‘See Yiaoneyney xs, Bowie Normal
Bowie, 38,
‘Gch, loscheynes es. Wlsahickon Boys
eige at eneyney ton Ghayner Das
‘Oct 26-Gneyaey vs. Siorer calles, a
arpers, Perey
or, 2-cheyney ys, Princess Anne, a
Jonesy
Nove Chesney vs. Dover State College,
as Cheyaer.
‘Nor, 1e-Cneyney xs, Downingtown, at
onesner
Mor 2a—cheyney v5. Bordentown, a
Bordentown, Ns
Harrison High Downs
P.P.P. Athletic Club
ROANOKE, VA—in @ hotly con-
tested battle here the Harrison high
school eleven won out over the fast
P.'P. P. Athletic Association squad
[RB gM stag he
Mi ise
Coe
Muss
Hf hai ‘
K) avai aa ae
peers
pay et pga
etc eiemegy
Kenbolene 122
H Eonzed Ground Ot 25%.
A Necessary Adjunct to Korbolene
Re AGENTS :tit
‘WANTED
ROI eme oe
Cases EAC uaa
LINCOLN LIONS Vj
FROM ST, PAUL 1g
ide fase
ST i oe ce
ginians Only Score, |
LAWRENCEVILLE, VAmtiy .
goin University Lone traned
St Paul Tigers by the seore 4
here Friday.
St. Paul rushed the ball to te
coln's twenty-five yard line twig:
the opening quarter where they jc
it on downs. ‘The Saints in thes
tiod outplayed the Lions,
In the second quatrer the uy
cunning attack got going, and ry
Harmon, Clark and Lewis teatty
first downs around the ends ang q.5
the center the Lions carried te ki
down the field to the St. Pails
yard line, Anderson carried i
by a plunget ru center. tg}
Feriod Lincoln completed try ‘a
Ward passes and missed im,
Tigers Block Punt, Score
In the third quarter this same,
ning attack netted another taliy sai
Hews going over from the then
line. "In this period Wicks, st it
left tackle locked one of
unis and Wells, "he
Eight end recovered bod
behind Lincoln's goal line my
tally for St. Paul. i
ions Threaten again |
In the final period Andere
Murphy’ slaged punting die as
Anderson gaining an, advantage ¢
each exchange. When by no meat
this. exchange the Lions got the te’
on St. Paul's 40-Vard line, ther ene
renewed their running atlath 1s
the: game: ended as. Harmon te
thru “and landed one foot rea f
Patll's goal line ‘
Wels and Wicks were hee
standing men for St. Paul, whl dc!
mon, Clark, Lewis, Percival, Ss!
made creditable showings fer
Lions, 5
‘Anderson did the punting for.
coin. His kicks averaged ten vic
more than those of St. Pauls it
Murphy. Lincoln made fours te
downs to St. Paul's five. Botha:
failed, to make extra point om
after touchdown.
‘Forward passes completed. Lis
four out of ten tries. St. Paul te
cut of seven tries.
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| QUINN GRIDDERS READY
WACO, Tex—The Paul Qs:
football team will open its grid
son Saturdat, October 4, agai
an high school at Brych.
‘rhe now coach, J. N. South
former Butler College, athlete, 3
two fill teams av work.
| BROWN AND WHITE '
CAB CO. .
414. W. LAPAYEYTE Ave
cheap Rator-Fieat pull 13, ate
wards 20e por quarter mile=Mate
SON 3382-24 hour service
15-Year-Old Boy Wins 'Shoe Title
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
FOOTBALL
OPENING GAME
MORGAN College vs
VA. STATE College
Saturday, Oct. 5
Bus service from 32nd St. and Harford Ave. to the Campus
VA. STATE ELEVEN TO FACE MORGAN BEARS
VA. STATE ELEVEN TO FACE MORGAN BEARS
Petersburg Team to Pry Off
Local Gridiron Lid With
Locals Saturday.
Morgan, Light, to Use Aerial Attack.
The Morgan College Bears enter their first gridron engagement Saturday, when they face the strong Va. State College eleven of Petersburg, Morgan field.
98. The Va. State eleven will be playing the second game of the season, having not m. C. College last Saturday: The Hilltopsters bring a *driving* attack with them, and boost of a *vault* team. They are placing much confidence in Bounds, a 210-point backoff "find" of Bryn Mawr, Pa., who has been ripping the line wide open in practice sessions. Dabney, the speedy back, who was a terror to the opposition, last year, will be with the Martinmen when they line up Saturday, as will Williams.
Bears To Use Air
With the expectant an aerial attack from the Martinmen the visit defense, been perfecting their air defense. Morgan, however, will present a varied attack with the forward pass predominating. The combination of Bob Mawr and Bell Williams will be seen in local fans for the first time this season. Coach Hurt has not decided on his starting lineup yet. It is very likely that he will action before this game is over. Waugh will be very likely to hold the pilot post with Williams calling the signals.
DARBY PHANTOM LOSE
TO PASSON A.A., 2-1
DARBY, fn.—The Darby Phantoms lost a thrilling game to the strong Spooks A.A. team when the Spooks finished on the short end of a 2 to 1 score at 48th and Spruce streets. Saturday.
The game developed into a hurler's duel between Bob Underhill who tossed them up to 10 yards of the home club. Bob shaded his opponent on the slab, permitting but three safe hits and retiring eight victims via trout on trout. He reached the visitors' hits and but three of the visitors expired on strikes. However, the home team received the "breaks" in the third frame that aided them to score a brace of runs which eventually decided the con
The Spooks bunched bingles in the fourth inning to shove a run over the platter, but the rally was wipped and in the following outouts. Myers succeeded in having outouts.
**Passion A. A.** 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0-1
**Passion A. A.** 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0-2
**Batteries:** Underhill and Jones.
**Myers:** Ands and Unholtz. Pas-
NEW FALL
FELT HATS
$1.85 to $5.00
STETSON
$8.50 to $10
CAPS
85c, $1.25 and $2.00
Carlton's Stiff Hats
Made in Black and Brown.
$3.25 and $4.00
Stetson Stiff Hats
In all the leading shades.
$8.50
Carlton & Co., Inc.
Dealers in Hats and Caps Hat Cleaning a Specially 3-STORES-3 420 West Franklin Street Eutaw and Saratoga Streets Baltimore and Calhoun Streets FOOT OPENING MORGAN COLLEGE VA.
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former track man at the University of Pittsburgh, from which he graduated in 1971, and assistant in the department of physical education at Talladega College, Talladega, Alabama, and is in charge of the basketball and track
Scrimmage at Howard
WASHINGTON—Verdell put his Bison charges through a tough scrimmage in the Howard University stadium.
The practice took the form of a real game with regular fifteen-minute quarters, the assistant coaches acting as officials. It could be regarded first or second as they were distinguished only by the color of their jerseys, one wearing blue and the other white.
The best men on the squad were evident, and a indicde by the score. A forward pass from Marshall to Mack over the goal line in the first quarter accounted for the only touchdown. A trick pass for the Bison would have been good, had Mack not been outside of the end zone.
Uncover New Find
"Hike" Gordon, the freshman end who hitched-hiked from New Orleans to Howard, proved a sensation in the first quarter, he threw Marshall for a twenty-yard loss in an attempt to get off a pass.
Scribby Adams, the all-Maine-State half back from Hebron, Academy in the third quarter for a thirty-five yard gain. Only a fumble on the blues' one-yard line prevented a white touchdown. The fourth quarter was featured by Mack, the game ending with the ball in the blues' possession on the whites' ten-yard line.
BLUES. 6 WHITE. 6
Thorne R. R. E. Thompson
Huntington R. E. Shelton
Whiting R. E. Moore
Hagan L. G. Walkins
Stokes L. G. Williams
Whiting L. E. Hewlett
Peyton L. E. Hewlett
Dickson Q. Q. Perwell
Dickson Q. Q. Adams-Marshall L. H. Moore
Boswell L. F. Ukkor
Substitutions--Blues: Allen for Mack, Nuttell for Marshall, Starling for Bassell, Sims for Washington, Howell for Washington, Wheeth for Wheeth for Hall, Gordon for Howell, Schenck for Porch, Referee--Young, Umpire -- Webb, Head Lineman-Payne, Timer-Clay.
Young Sam Lankford Kayoes Chubby Wood
RICHMOND, VA—In a six round bout here Monday night. Young Sam Lankford. Baltimore boy, stopped Chubby Wood of Charleston, W. Va., by the bots. The best bout seen here for some time was staged when Zavolla, of Panama, defeated Kid Dennis Moody of Baltimore in eight rounds. In the minor engagements, Halifax Smith defeated Didi Dillen, Richard Flash defeated Joe Cook in eight and six round bouts, respectively.
Simmons Defeats Garnet
CHARLESTON, W. Va.-The Nelson eleven, representing Garnet high school was defeated by Coach Fitzhuh's Cat Eyes group of Simmons with designation of 3.0 Friday. The game was called at 3 p. m. Simmons displayed fine school spirit throughout the game. Garnett will meet Siraton high of Beckley, at Beckley October 6. Simmons plays Washington high of London, W. Va. on the same date.
NEWPORT NEWS SQUAD READY
NEWPORT NEWS, VA.-The Manhattan Athletic Club, with basketball and team games, organized is ready to be teamed with similar teams, has been announced. Address Raymond Faults, 2201 Marshall avenue.
USE
ROYAL CABS
GALLERY WATCHES AS SALISBURY YOUNGSTER WINS HORSESHOE PITCHING TITLE
THE BOWLING CLUB
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From The Grid Camps
From The Grid Camps
8 Lettermen at Fisk
NASHVILLE, Tenn.-Prospects for a good football season at Fisk are unusually good this year. There have already been forty men out for workouts. Eight of the letter men of school are in the school band; Henry A. Yost, of Bowling Green, Kentucky, all-American left half last year; C. L. Cox, of St. Louis; W. H. Bass, of Little Rock; R. W. Eavens, of Los Angeles; R. A. Lewis, of Montgomery; R. A. Lewis, of H. S. Doyle, of Kerrville, Texas, and Paul Edwards, of Tuscaloosa.
The brother of John Coleman, star tackle, who came to Fisk last year from Montgomery, H. S. Doyle, in Fisk playing end after spending the summer in China.
Fisk plays five games at home, with Lincoln university of Missouri, Lane college, Morehouse college, Talladega college, and St. Louis college. For most of the year is scheduled for October 5, at home with Lincoln university of Missouri.
Wiley Meets Prairie View
MARSHALL, Texas.-Tickets for
the great class of the Southwest,
the featured lilie between Prairie
and Wiley, will be on October 11, which will
warm the Southwestern Athletic
conference for Wiley, will be on sale
October 10.
L.U., Mo., May Play Morgan
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - Lincoln
university of Missouri will coach
scholars in tennis with Fisk at
Temple, Tenn. October 5. On
October 13 the Blue Tigers of
Missouri travel to Zenia, Ohio, to play
Wilberforce. West Virginia comes to
St. Louis on November 5, and Langston
is met in Kansas City on November
12. These are the big games
with an audience with Morgan
in Baltimore the Saturday
after Thanksgiving and a game with
Paul Quinn in Texas.
Coach Waters has a squad of forty men down to intensive training.
Morehouse Has 4 Teams.
ATLANTA. Ga.-With forty-nine men in uniform, in spite of rain practically every day, the coaches express themselves as being satisfied with the development of the Morehouse squad. It is especially certain that Pearson's last year's sterling guard, and Webster, center, will not return this year. With the loss of Huffman, tackle, Latimer, tackle, and Allen, guard, by graduation, the coaches are faced with the task of building an entire new center line.
Friday afternoon, with the sun shining at intervals, four teams were trained to signal practice and Saturday the first scrimmage of the season was held behind closed gates.
Lose 12 at W. Virginia
INSTITUTE, W. Va. — The second week of practice finds Coach Hamblin and Goode pessimistic about their football prospects for thi. year. Twelve games last year's season will not be back.
Coach Hamblin has been working strenuously on fundamental line drill and condition exercises, while Coach Goode has been drilling the backs in the tricks of their position.
Dummy scrimmage was held for the first time Thursday. The first team lined up as follows:
Palmer and Green, ends; Froe and Smith, tackles; Scott and Dickerson, guards; Anderson, casks; Cavaliers, fullback, and Whitted, quarterback.
On the second team were: Patterson and Johnson, ends; Jones and Leftridge, tackles; Dozler and Howard, guards; Ware, casks; Anderson and Ross, halfbacks, and Roxdale, fullback.
At the present time nothing definite has been decided on the Thanksgiving game. Cleveland, Columbus and Pittsburgh are bidding for the game, which will be played at Lakin Field, Institute on Saturday, November 9th.
STEELTON, PA.—The Nava Athletic Club here has organized a strong basket ball club and is out to accept Charles Ayers. 138 Adams streets.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
BIG BLUES DEFEAT AGGIE ELVEN, 18-6
Jeffersonmen, Undefeated in
Two Seasons, Out for New
Record.
CAIN'S ARM BROKEN
Veteran Quarterback to be
Out of 'Force Tilt.
This game was a real test for the Wilberford, not caused or defeated in two seasons. Wilberforce and B. I. meet Saturday on even terms, each team played by them, the other game being a scoreless tie. The Wilberforceians are out to attack the defeat handed them last year by the Big Blues, which, by the
Most Valuable
I select ...
of the ...
uable player in the Negro Am
season.
Remarks:
Name:
Address:
FOOT
The Big
LINCOLN UNI
SATURDAY, O
3:00
MEMORIAL STADIUM-
Admission
FOOT
Hampton ve
ARMSTRO
FOOTBALL
The Big Game
NCOLN UNIV. vs A. &
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19
3:00 P. M.
MEMORIAL STADIUM—GREENSBORO, N.
Admission—$1.00
FOOTBALL
hampton versus Howe
ARMSTRONG FIELD
Most Valuable Player Ballot
of the ..... as the most valuable player in the Negro American League during the 1929 season.
FOOTBALL
The Big Game
LINCOLN UNIV. vs A. & T.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19th
3:00 P. M.
MEMORIAL STADIUM—GREENSBORO, N. C.
Admission—$1.00
FOOTBALL
Saturday, October 5, 1929
Game Called 2:30 P.M. Admission
October 12—St. Paul at Hampton.
October 19—Virginia State at Hampton
Be Sure To Me
Called 2:30 P. M. Admission
October 12—St. Paul at Hampton.
October 19—Virginia State at Hampton
Sure To Me
GENE'S BILLIARD ROOM 1601 Penna. Ave., 2nd Floor-Corner McMechen
Scene at Druid Hill park Saturday when Howard Leonard, 15-year-old Salisbury, Md., idd won the state-wide horsesees pitching course.
Inset right shows Leonard in action.
In the front row of the main picture are shown some of the contestants, including Feliah Baltimore; John Sembly, Annapolis; Leonard, Salisbury; Adolphus Coffee, Hagerstown; and Thomas Blake, Baltimore, winner of second prize, winners of third prize, winners were presented AFRO chium-plated shoes.
Va. High Schools to Clash
NEWPORT NEWS, Va.-On Friday afternoon St. Joseph high school, with her usual horde of enthusiastic rooters will stage her biennial invasion of Huntington high school's gridiron.
Reports have it that the visiting eleven has an even stronger degree of the old machine is back and great preparation has been made to take the bacon back to Norfolk.
Since Thursday's encounter with the Manhattans, Coach Thomas of Huntington has been drilling his boys in an effort to smooth out the roug't places.
way, was the only reverse that Wilberforce received last season.
Coaches Graves and Corrothers have been pointing their warriors particularly for this game because they believe that with the Bluehill game out our team is playing for the 'rest of the season. The Green and Gold are fortunate in having most of their last year's squad back this season. Nixon Bovd. and Campbell are back. Cain, veteran quarter-back, will be out of the game in account of a broken arm sustained in the A. & T game.
Player Ballot
Pos.
as the most val-
American League during the 1929
TBALL
Play Game
IV. vs A. & T.
OCTOBER 19th
P. M.
-GREENSBORO, N. C.
on—$1.00
TBALL
versus Howard
ONG FIELD
Admission $1.00
at Hampton.
a State at Hampton.
NEED SCOREBOARD
SAYS D.C. DIRECTOR
Dr. E. B. Henderson Urges Signals Which All Football Fans Can Understand.
WASHINGTON—That some form vented to inform foot ball fans what of score board or signals will be it is all about, is the prediction of Dr. E. B. Henderson, Director of Physical Education in the D. C. Public school system.
Dr. Henderson's statement says: In popular sport, the people who pay, for the most part, can tell what it is all about. But in football, spectators are in general but little awards of much of what transpires. The writer will never forget the emotional alumni, years ago, when Terry after seemingly crowning the efforts of a long run with a touchdown was called back by Beckett of Baltimore for touching outside. Amidst vociferous non-academic language, the writer his footprints in the side-line and added. "He never touched outside." Although, one of the two had played football four years, he had never learned that the side-line, and then, his lines were outside the field of play.
On another occasion, in a Howard and Lincoln game a hack of uniformity and goal has been used to goal has sports writers and spectators in doubt, for a long time.
Other Games
Basket-ball decisions are usually audible. In track, an announcer is in the middle of a jump and umpires have always used signals of one kind or another to indicate to the man who pays the money what he has said in decisions. A new whinkle has been devised. Some fertile brain has put a "mike" in the mask, a spike in the shoes and a steel place on the ball. The ball and strike umpire to make his voice audible around the world.
Very soon the oft-times mystified occupant of seat number 9909 will be able to know the why and the how of the situation, if it does, instead of getting the garbled gleanings that the befuddled snorts, writer gathered.
Signalling will be witnessed in many of the games this year. Recently, pictures of a Georgian Tech Coach, in the far north of Georgia, have been used to illustrate a manual code of signals. We shall see officials in our own games in various sections of the country using the same signals. Georgian Tech has illustrated. It is to be wished that the officials in all parts will use the same movements to designate similar situations. The signal, coupled with the resultant action should inform the controllers. Some day, an inimical mind will develop a score board or amplifying mechanism that will make more intelligent spectators of the great mass of those who now play football. This article will explain how the new rules will affect football this year.
LYNCHBURG A.C. WINS
LYNCHBURG, Va.—Dunbar High eleven fought against great odds to a defeat of 25-7 at the hands of the Lynchburg Albany club in the city of Lynchburg on Friday. Outweighed to the average of 80 lbs. per man, the Dunbar aggregation, with only two letter men back the season, has good game skills, heavy A.G.
Coach C. W. Sey, of Fisk University, is working hard getting the Dunbar team in shape to shape an Eastern District school to meet are. The school of Harrisonburg; Booker High of Staunton and Addison High of Roanoke, Va.
CLARKSBURG, W. Ya.-The Kelly Miller high school of Clarksburg, defeated the Dunbar high eleven of Fairmount, by the score of 13-0 in the first scholastic game on son. An unusual accurate air attack on the team by the backs the Kelly Miller gridders is responsible for the defeat.
L
MISUNDERSTOOD
What It's All About.
Other Games
SALISBURY BOY ANNEXES AFRO 'SHOE TITLE
Howard Leonard Captures Gold Horseshoe in Thrilling Exhibition
GETS 20 RINGERS
Mark Tops State Record for 50-Point Game
A 15-year-old Lochinval coming this time from the Eastern Sho' of Maryland flashed an uncanny display of form to win the state championship in the AFR AMERICAN Horsesho Pitching Tournament, which came to a brilliant finish; Druid Hill park, Saturday.
Howard Leonard, a third year his school student of Salisbury, worked with play earned the right to the gold plated horseshoes, symbolic of sts supremacy, by defeating Thomas Blake of Baltimore in the final match of the 7 day game the decisive scores of 50 to 42 did to 52. Leonard did to Baltimore or with his carfare. He had never prevailed with the regulation shoe, clay court and handicaps to the good right arm the boy from Salisbury.
Speaking before the Atto Club for football, Leonard said, anticipate carrying back home to gold horseshoes. He did and in addition a pair of chronium plated horseshoes with leather carrying back for winning his local championship.
Was "Dark Horse"
This "dark horse," playing in first major competition, gave the gallery thrill after thrill as he tossed the iron luck tokens around the to score ringer after ringer. Use an easy arm swing, and grasping a shoe just below the right toe he spun the iron footwear, so the ringer could land on the air, landing with the calks on toward the neg.
Throws 20 Ringers
His highest number of ring thrown in one 50-point game, 20, and peculiarly enough, they were thrown in the on goal position during fifteen minutes competition. He lost this game in the finals to James F. (Marble) Hall Baltimore, by the score of 51-44, during the eight games. He was the only player in 68 ringers, of which were thrown during 50-point contests. Leonard tossed four double-ring in no game of 48 ringers, avering 14 ringers per game for his 50-point games. In the first round Leonard defeated horse pitcher of Amnolois, by the score of 18-31, 22-11 and 21-7. The quarterfinal round found Thomas Duke Ballimore, easily disosing of Ae. Hagstown in straight games. Prizes of chromium steel hoops were awarded to district winters and following the close of the season, the prizes were presented to vince Wiley by Carl J. Murphy, editor of the AFI AMERICAN. who commended youth and expressed an amusement by who made the tournaments a success.
A. and T. Tuskegee GA
TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE. All Prospects for a larger attendance the A. and T.-Tuskegee football game this season will be nonstoply bright according joint statement of Alvin J. N. chairman, and Edward V. Taytureen, Athletic Association. partial check-up at the business first showed that he expected that of this a year ago. As many tickets he been sold at night as during day, since the business office be to operate each evening was a statement made by the secretary Bears Hold Scrimmage
SALISBURY, N. C. Sept. 28, 2002 -- the coach M. and Assistant coach Smith, the incident Blue Bears went through the first scrimmage of the Saturday. as backfield man who not expected to be available in year because of the prolam I has received the doctor's O. K. has demoted his moleskine. He straight in with his sweetheart number better than fifty years.
L. Jackson, veteran tackle was latest letter man to report to squad, swelling the number of l men on hand to eight.
JACKSON WINS
JACKSON, MISS—In a one- tilt here Saturday, the Jackson- edge Fighters completely swamped Wesley College eleven by a scor 40 to 6.
COLLEGE
ies for Teachers
At
High School
tics, Social Science,
professional Subjects
MORGAN COLLEGE Special Courses for Teachers At
English, Mathematics, Social Science,
Chemsitry and Professional Subjects
Leading to B. S. and A. B. Degrees
Class work begins on October 9th at 4:15 and will be held every
day thereafter from 5:15 to 6:15. Evening classes on Mon-
y and Thursday from six to nine p. m.
Registration From
October 7th to October 11th Inclusive
Room 136, Douglass High School
Circular's of Information Furnished Upon Request
Class work begins on October 9th at 4:15 and will be held every school day thereafter from 5:15 to 6:15. Evening classes on Monday and Thursday from six to nine p. m.
WASHINGTON--with more than forty candidates in the trout lineup, Armstrong high is warming up for a big season this year. Armstrong driving the boys hard, and Assistant Coach Benjamin Washington has also had the help of several members of last year's team in drilling the aspirants. Armstrong hopes are high this season in the running of the second championship.
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HEDGESVILLE, W.Va.—Men's Day in here were Mr. Grouch, Dougress Grove. The Rev. Henry Minor, local preacher, preached at 11:15 a.m. and the Rev. Paul of Shepherdstown, W.Va., preached at 2:30 p.m. He was accompanied by Mrs. William H. Palk and son, and part of his congregation. Quot. a number of folk from Duffield, W.Va., worked here. The rally was quite a success. John H. Bennett and George Phoenix of
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Several years ago, in Gold Valley, California, two boys were playing a game of rock battle, and accidentally struck a middle-aged woman. Dr. J. C. Delano (the founder of the World Famous Blood Medicine Herbs of Life) was called in to dress the wound and found that the patient was suffering with a fractured skull and congression of the brain.
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The Rev. I. N. Patterson, Rev. and Mrs. E. L. Liggins, former pastors of the A.M.E. to the Annual Conference here last week. A choir contest between Palmount, Grafton and Clarkburg, the church. A loving cup was the prize for the choir that sang the best by popular voice. Clarkburg was the winner of the choir, director, Missoni Wilson, organist. Little Alverta Wilson and Ethel Lee Loury were combined in the houses several days later.
Rev. Rudolph Wheeler, of Buckhame, W.v.A., was a visitor in the city last week.
GRAFTON WEST VIRGINIA
GRANDMA V.A. was choir of Warren M.E. Church was one of the participants in the contest conducted by the West Virginia Triangle Society. Palmerton was a winner of the contest with margins. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hewell have gone to New York City to take their oldest son, Jackie, who will attend school there this summer.
Prof. Homer Howell, after spending the summer with his family here, has gone to Logan County to take charge of his school there.
Glencore Morehead and Scott Martin have returned after an extended motor trip to Logan County, V.A., and Reidallsville, N.C., Carolina.
Miss Delta Moor is recovering after under-
and overdose. Ms. Walter Howell will the day with
Mrs. Walter Howell.
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THE MUSIC OF THE MUSIC OF THE MUSIC
Mrs. Nannle Armstrong is at Garrison
rebel, again.
second Sunday.
Brown, B. A. Nanna of the M.E. Conference, preached at the Second Baptist Church on Sunday morning.
ROONEVERTE, WEST VIRGINIA
ROONEVERTE, W.A. There were services at the First Baptist Church, morning and evening. The Rev. Fairfax preached at the Rev. Lee of New Jersey in the evening.
Roy Pleasant, from Charleston, is spending two weeks visiting his aunt and uncle.
Miss Mamie R. Cousins returned from her vacation Tuesday, after spending a few days with those who attended the union in Aidenport, W.Va. were, G. B. Cousins, René Renck, Georgia Cousins, Willie Cousins and Alfred Carter.
CHARLESTON, WEST VIRGINIA
CHARLESTON, W.Va. = MISS LOUise "Kay" Webb was the bathing beauty contest, sponsored by the Mamie R. Cousins, Monday night. Miss Webb were a one-piece red bathing suit. Her hair was marbled beautifully and she were black on her sleeves and no stockings. The prize was ten dollars.
Other contestants were, Miss Evelyn Cousins, Miss Julia Perkins, Marie Woode, Mary Julia Perkins, Elizabeth Grant, Mary Inez Carner. The young lady receiving the most applause received the prize. Each contestant represented a colored business. Miss Webb represented Campbell. CHARLESTON PERSONALS
MESSRS. JOHN HILL, Matthew Pairis, Harry Martin, Husten Crane, John McDowell, William Thomas and Coach Davin of Huntington, Harvester, Friday to Carnegie-Carpenter.
MRS. CHARLOTTE MARTIN is a patient in the Kenawa valley Hospital.
MISS EVELYN WOODY spent the week end in Columbus, Ohio.
MESSRS. CUM POSSEY and Kennedy of Pittsburgh, were guests in the city over the MISS THELMA JEFFRIES, a former student of W.Va., Sunday, where she will attend Brown's district high school in Kimball. She will dance set, October 1st at the Knights of Pythia Hall. MISS DEAN and sister, accompanied by Miss Elizabeth Scott of Montgomery, were in Charleston over the weekend. COACH ANDREW CALLOWAY and Miss Robert Yancy of Washington high school with W.Va., were in town over the week-end.
Morehouse Expects to Raise $600,000
ATLANTA—Dr. John Hope announces that the campaign to secure $600,000 in additional endowment for Morehouse College is progressing. The Board of New York offered Morsehouse $300,000, on condition that the college raise a like amount. The Rosenwald Fund of Chicago offered $100,000 of the College's quota. The condition that Negroes give $100,000. Doctor Hope says that Negroes in the sections that have been canvassed have pledged very generously and that pledges are continually coming. Be launched during the fall are being planned for several of the larger cities of the North.
DOPE QUEEN GETS 7 YEARS
MAYS LANDING, N.J. (A.N.P.)—Esther Boone, known as the "Done Queen of Atlantic City," has been removed from the county jail here to begin her term of seven years in state prison.
Prominent Southern Matron
Visiting in the East
Mrs. J. W. Darden, of Opelika, Alabama, one of the leading matrons of the South being the Vice President of the Women's Federated Club of her home State, besides filling other positions in the A.M.E. Zion Church, having carried on very successfully a club of young people orphaned into a Study Club, and their combined efforts have greatly aided the Church program.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
Mr. and Mrs. William Palmer entertained at dinner Sunday, Mrs. and Mrs. Derham, daughter, Bentrice of Rochester, N.Y., and Mr. and Mrs. Willett Smith, and Mrs. Ada Winslow and son, George, at Anburn, N.Y. Mrs. and Mrs. A. P. Meele, people A.M.E. Zlon church. Rev. R. A. G. Poster preached Sunday morning from the subject, the pastor, and the district president of the Sunday school of Western New York, spoke at the Sunday school. At 7 p.m., Mr. Green of Rochester, N.Y., spoke at the Christian women gave a program.
WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK
largely attended at the churches Sunday.
A chain rally was conducted at the Sec-
cretary's office, Mrs. M. V. Waters and the group leaders.
It was a success. The church was crowded.
The Princess Anne Academy Quarter rent-
ed by the school. The following person gave addresses Samuel Morseil, the newly appointed secretary colored branch of the Y.M.C.A. Dr. Er-
void D. Cohen, the President of the Welfare League for colored people, and Mr. Allen of New York City.
M. V. Waters, Mrs. Anne B. Green,
and the two Miss Delaware attended the New York District Conference held at Newman M. E. Church, Brooklyn, N.Y., last
Rev. M. V. Waters has returned from his vacation trip. He visited the Salem, N.J. and was the guest of Rev. G. W.
Brown, the Ket, Md. Denton, Md. and Cambridge, Md.
DELAWARE
MIDDLETOWN, DELAWARE
MIDDLETOWN, Delaware - A friend of Sampson was called anointment of her illness. She is much improved. She is both on the sick list. In Ross are both on the sick list. I am much improved from
Georgia Christy is much improved from a stroke.
Mrs. Gra Miles and Mrs. Henry, principal of the public school, spent the day in Philadelphia. Mrs Lissie Anderson has been suffering with an injured knee. She is slowly getting better. Mrs Maggle Johnson, Mrs Ella Sharper, and Miss Mary Anderson, of Philadelphia, spent the day at the Rusholme-Rusholme Rusholme, and Mrs W. H., Mrs Rachel West were present at the Educational Chaundaum of District at Emmow, Pa. Reports were good. Over $21,000 was raised for education. Mrs Rachel Green, Green pastor of Trinity A.M.E. Church, churched both morning and evening. In the morning he preached on "The Lord's Prayer" and Peter of Prayer. In the evening he preached on "The Handwriting on the Wall." Miss Mabel Moodle is home visiting her mother, Mrs Edna Keeply, Devitt Friend and Master Raymond Keeply, of Willow Grove, Mrs Edna Keeply, with her mother, Mrs Sarah Green Moeer. Howard Simpson will give a reception at the Willow Grove Academy, of Balmur, Haskins is at a attorney, of Balmur, and G. C. Owens, will be present.
CUESWOLD, DELAWARE
GCHWESOL, Mr. Suniday school was held in the after school which was conducted by the leaders. Many of the members of Cheswold charge sermon was prescribed by Rev. Hodges, of Cheswold, and Mrs. Hodges and daughter, Ruth, were the callers of the Mrs. and Clem Carney.
BRIDGVILLE, BRIDGVILLE
BRIDGEVILLE, Del.-Evanglist Frankie Williams had charge of the services in the after school camp, meeting Sunday, Rev. John L. Williams, pastor.
Mr. and Mrs. Jahshon Johnson and daughter, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Johnson Sunday afternoon.
Roland Palmer has returned from Ocean City, Md.
Carrion Cannon, of New York City, is the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Miss Alice Rhodes has returned to Dover State College, to resume her studies. Miss Dorothy Cannon has returned to Princess Anne College, to serve as Prof. W. F. Nichols spent Tuesday as the guest of Miss Lucy Okey. Messrs. Rory Courthouse of Philadelphia, Pa., and Mrs. Robert M. Dare, mdr. are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Harris. Herman Jackson has returned from Ocean City, Md. Messrs. Oliver Price and James Maddox have served Laverd. Wednesday.
Earl Douglas and James Maddox were georgeous in Gannon, Leon Brigge, Missa Paua Palmer, Beatice Palmer and Matthias Palmer, both on Sunday evening, and attended the dance. Little Betty Williams has returned to her Messa. Walter, Nephas and Nahw Wright, of Chester, Pa., motivated here and there. The excursionists from Philadelphia Sunday, were: Mrs. Frankie Williams, Mrs. William Burbage, Burbage, Charles Williams, Harrison Belley.
James Carey visited here Sunday.
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pretty Virginian, who spent several days in the city last week, the guest of Miss Mallia Stokes, 1524 McUllohst street. The American Girl MRS. Paxton is of interest including the plant of the plant of the American Girl MRS. Paxton is graduate of Hampton and does physical education at the Addison high school in Roanoke.
Bradford Cannon and Mrs. Mary Pointer spent Sunday in Mt. Washington, the city of Waple, of Milford, Del. visited Mrs. Helen Parker, last week. Charles Cannon spent a few days here Mrs. Maggie Polk of Harrington, Del. spent the week-end here. Mrs. Maggie Polk of Harrington, Del. spent the week-end here. Suddenly Ill Satuary after returning home from Williamsburg, MD. Shera Coursey of Philadelphia, was the guest of her father, Sunday, Richard Hartis. Mrs. Bosse Rickett of Philadelphia, visited her mother, Mrs. Lillie Cannon, Sunday.
SLAUGHTER NECK, DELAWARE
SLAUGHTER NECK, Del.-The services at Siloam Church were fairly good. The school is a private school.
SOUTH CAROLINA
FLORENCE, SOUTH CAROLINA
FLORENCE, S.C.-Mrs. Ida E. Greene, who has been for a number of years, a member of the Wilson high school faculty at
Sunday morning at Westley Chapel Camp a sermon was preached by the Rev. Cobb pastor of the Baptist church Milford. If the morning the Rev. Mall of Hartington seattle.
The sons of the Rev. and Mrs. Marks and the daughters of the Rev. and Mrs. Mulliam Sunday afternoon by the Rev. Mull, Mr. and Mrs., and Mrs. Bates. Both sons of Virginia Hassard and Hazard made a short visit to State College, where they got a hundred per cent in attendance were. Miss Phoebe Watson, Beaumont, the Parent Teacher's Association will hold a meeting at Georgetown school Saturday.
NORTH CAROLINA
THOMASVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
THOMASVILLE, N.C.-Willeb Webb has returned to college where he has made his home for two years.
Mrs. Frances Haese is back from New London.
And Mrs. Willeb Borders, a girl who born September 3rd, and they are getting along fine.
Stella Currer, who spent two weeks at Giflore with her mother, has returned.
The Enjoy boys have put their barber in the first class cappellium.
Mrs. Martha Payne visited her father last Saturday, she attended her daughter last Sunday, and she attended the family, she left for Springfield, B.C. Sunday night. She left for Leake Halt and Mrs. Juniale Payne visited Rev. Smith, superintendent of the Holy Church through North Carolina, who is from the school she did some real work at the school building Wednesday night, under the direction of D. E. M. Müse, coastermaster. Mrs. Patte Hedreth has been on the sick list.
Roy Dallas was operated on last Monday and is getting along fine.
Daniel McCaulley has been sick for three weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Paint have returned from South Carolina, after burying his father.
WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA
IMMIGRATION, North Carolina Legion, elected as their officers for the year, beginning October 17 the following: Rhoe. Scott, commander; J. Robert, captain; C. Carrion, adjutant; Hubers Muster, second vice commander; Rev. J. T. Stanland, chapman; John C. Gibbs, sorgeant-at-arm; installation of officers will be held the second week in October. The legion promises to watch the city, which is being pushed forward in the city county and state.
A
-Afro Photo
returned from New York, after a stay of two weeks, visiting relatives and friends. Miss Carrey C. Bailley, popular teacher of North Seventh street, this city, is teaching at Livingstone College, Salisbury, this year. Mrs. Bailley, a student, this city, left last week to begin another year's work in the graded school of Tarboro, N.C. A government has been promoted to the position as district manager of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company.
SOUTH CAROLINA
FLOREANCE, SCO. CAROLINA
FLOREANCE, S.C.-Mrs. Ida
Grenewald, 19th grade, a
member of the Wilson high school faculty,
joined the Mayor high school faculty at
Darlington, S.C. Creek. Wilson lost
his job but beaches teachers.
Miss Lucille Cannon, of Charleston, who
laught for two years in Timmontville, was
the home of Misses Almeta and
Mabel Williams.
Mrs. Frederick is the Latin teacher at
wilson High School in Timmontville.
She will teach the Latin teacher at Chalfin
University.
Randolph Grant is invading Florence this
year for medical College, where he will
enter the Pharmaceutical Department.
L. M. Dantler visited his mother in
Orangeburg last week.
Mircea Cooper, who is a college student
at Benedict, was home last week to see
Dr. Throne, one of Charleston's oldest
colored physicians, was a visitor at
the home of Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Holmes, last
-455 at Fisk
NASHVILLE, Tenn.—Over 455 students registered September 30, opening day. Miss Juliette Derritte, a graduate of the College, is dean of women, Mrs. Viola Goin, of New Haven, Conn., is assistant. Dean, A. Taylor just returned from Hershey, where he studied toward his doctorate on leave from Pisk, bequeathing dean of the college in the absence of Columbia, Amberoe Calver, who is studying Dr. ELMER IMES, graduate of Pisk, heads the department of physics, John Hankins, college of OLGEES, white, Ph.D. John Hankins, for seven years ph.D. professor of zoology at the University of Michigan, head of the Department of Zoology, JOHN KNOX, white, a pastor in the Methodist Church in Bethesda, Maryland, succeeds Rev. Paul E. Baker as minister, LORENO Z. D. TURNER, of Howard university, is in the department of English. DR. LARRENCE E. VAN HORN, of College of Arts and Sciences, Jackson College, Rangoon, Burma, will be head of the department of mathematics. Theodore Curtur of Harvard will teach
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sciences, already become well known for the leadership of Dr. Charles S. Johnson: Mr. James Robinson of the University of Mefaslion of Negro welfare, and Dr. E. Franklin Prater of the University of the Research Coimbi will make a study of the Negro family. Prof. Alon L. Snell comes back to the department of psychology after a year's study at Yale.
Calm Slayer Electrocuted
BELLEFONTE, Pa.—William Weston, Jr., 30, of Philadelphia, walked calmly to his death in the electric chair for the slaying of Mrs. Helen Coles, December of last year.
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TENNESSEE
PARIS, TENNESSEE
PARIE, Tenn. — The following were in an accident early Sunday morning on the North Carolina side of the car in which taking a morning shift, the Mr. Geary Cooper and children, the two boys and Chancey J. James of Memphis, Tenn. brother of Mr. Cooper. No one was seriously injured.
Melissa Hilly is a visitor in Memphis Tennessee. The Porter has returned from Chicago, after a brief visit. Master John Wesley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wesley, left recently for school in Chicago. Mrs. Murray M. Murray, who has been very ill, was taken to Memphis, Thursday, where she resides with her uncle, Dr. D. B. Grander. M. Zion Baptist Church will start its revival the second Sunday in October. The school is located at three weeks' visit in Indianapolis, Ind. Mrs. Clint Wright has returned from a trip to East St. Louis, III., and Cleveland, M. Eugene Travis was a visitor in Cleveland, Ohio, recently, guest of Mrs. Zulla. Since the closing of the school at Henry, Tennessee, for cotton picking, Mrs. R. H. Woodson is substituting at C.H.S., as all the students are attending school. Mrs. A. M. W. Williams of Puduchak, Ky., is principal of C.H.S. She is the only teacher present this term that served on the faculty in Puduchak, Ky.
CONNECTCUT
STAMFORD, Conn.-W. T. McDonald lef
on a two weeks' vacation with his mother,
Mrs. Lucy McDonald of Lake View, N.C.
Mrs. Chara McBride has moved into
the apartment.
Mrs. Tanner entertained the "Jolly Twelve," Wednesday night at her residence in Newark, N.J., for a dinner. Dancing, cards and music were enjoyed. The party was given in honor of the man of Shuppan and her niece of Newark, N.J. The Rev. I. A. McCoy, pastor of Bethel A.M.E. Church, was host to the preschoolers' all day. They had a successful day. Miss Licele Kingston Tanner, daughter of the man of Shuppan, Washington events was made seated in the christian class in her school. Wife of Dr. Grant, was recent visitor to New York City.
NEW JERSEY
ASBURY PARK, KS. Miss Maris Towell was hostess Saturday, a day in honor of Wm. Braxton party, given in honor of Wm. Braxton avenue. The guests included, Miss Braxton dancers, Richard Dixon, Richard Denare, all dancers, Josephine Markhane, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Kline, Geneva Samuels, of Philadelphia, Mrs. S. M. Martin, Mrs. Edith Taylor, Miss Mrs. E. B. Brooks, Miss M. Harris, Miss J. Frazer, M. Williams, all of Asbury Park. Mrs. E. B. Brooks was beautifully decorated. Mr. Braxton received many valuable presents.
NEWARK NEW JERSEY
NEWARK, N.J.-At the Soupourner Truth Rally held in feature of the Rally Ride, night were, a solo by Mother Puris, and a report of the West Virginia Branch Conference. by the Harris, chairman of the Board of Management. In addition to classes already announced, Miss Bessie Swan, of the Public Service, will teach the classes of health and home economics. Miss Erie Morris will have charge of the class in First Aid. At 8:00 each Wednesday evening, in the gymnasium of the Central Association, 53 Washington street. Special arrangement will be made by the Association physician without cost, for those wishing to take gym and basketball, at the Association street, Wednesday evening, October 9, for this test. Much interest is being manifested in the Truth Rally and Leadership, with the latest methods in pedagogy, and applied modern psychology, by Mrs. J. B. Huckey will have charge of the class in gym.
Harry Jones, of 79 Lillie street, is filling
the Marble Photo company, a large Newark
company.
BLOOMFIELD NEW JERSEY
BLOOMFIELD, N.J.—At the Trinity Presbyterian church, at 11 o'clock Sunday, the actor, from Verona, is joined, a conversant accompanying himself with his Swedish morning sermon. The Sunday school will be held at 12:30 p.m., and the consecration will be at 1:00 p.m., Paul C. Lawrence, at 4 o'clock in the afternoon. A special program will be rendered by members from the Sloan Presbyterian church, Christian Endeavor of Elizabeth, N.J.
FAST ORANGE NEW JERSEY
EAST ORANGE, N.J.-Mrs. Bertha Bauermann-Randolph, wife of the late Dr. Robert Randolph, resumed her work at her studio, 34 Cambridge street, East Orange, N.J. She is the New England Conservatory of Music Boston. She is also a pupil of Carl Bearmann, Germany. Germany, branch, Y.M.C.A. the Business, Industrial and Professional Girls' club at a supper meeting, opened in 1981, ball, drama school, ball, drama schools, arts and crafts, charm
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
formerly Miss Louise Patterson of Annapolis, who passed through the city, last Sunday on her honeymoon. The Simmonses will make their home in New York. Here while she meets the teachers and Mrs. Francis Thomas, 1888 W. Lafayette avenue.
Talks and many other interesting things will be held in the club's program for this winter. The calendar of events will embrace World Fellowship Week to November 10th and end November 17th. The educational committee offers the following courses: Natural Rhythms, Natural Rhythms, Lilyda Coleman, Natural Rhythms, Miss L. S. Polk: Igla shade make, Mrs. Lyda Coleman, Natural Rhythms, Miss M. Hendenon, and group study group. Miss Josephine K. A child study group has been arranged to meet on Wednesday with Mrs. W. Hensam Smith as leader.
MRS. EDWARD SIMMONS
formerly Miss Louise Patterson of Annapolis, who passed through the city, last Sunday on her honeymoon. The Simmonses will make their home in New York. Here while she meets the teachers and Mrs. Francis Thomas, 1888 W. Lafayette avenue.
Graham, Mrs. Joseph Coile, and Mrs. Kinney, P. Hgoldt Johnson arranged and decorated the set-up most artistically, and will embrace World Fellowship Week to November 10th and end November 17th. The exhibited was given a special blue ribbon award, and numerous gifts claused for the students in order to develop greater interest next year.
PORT NORRIUS, NEW JERSEY
PORT NORRIUS, N.J.-Rev. David Stanley formerly of Cambridge, Md, now of Portsmouth, N.H., and with Mrs. W. Hensam Smith as leader.
PLEASANTVILLE, NEW JERSEY
PLEASANTVILLE, N.J.-The Rev. G. C. Collins of Jersey City, preached at St. Paul's Church at 11 o'clock. There were held at St. Paul's for children under the auspices of a committee of ladies. Mrs. Pinder, the wife of St. Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Rev. M. Washington, pastor, committee of ladies presented Mrs. Edna H. Gaspard at St. Paul's in recital. The Citizens' Civic Club met at the age of Wednesday, the day before Emory, Emory, several committees were appointed. G.T. H. held a meeting Sunday at Garfield of which time a child's L. T. L. was arranged to be set apart soon. Steven Britton, who met with a painful accident, Nancy Gould met with a serious accident, when her hand caught in the
TRENTON, N.J.-A variety party was given to the home of Miss Ethellyn Knighten, who is the daughter of their daughter, Miss Ethellyn Knighten, who is returning to continue her course in Physical Education at Trenton High School.
A debate was held at the Glahete Baptist Church recently. Speakers were: Affirmative, Barack and Norman Wallace, Negative, Barack and Norman Wallace. Robert Edward Lee, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Scalell Lee of 228 N. Willow street, has entitle the school of pharmacy at Howard University. Milla Daly Daly of Tuscaloosa, Ala., is visiting her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Daly, and cold plaster supper was recently given by members of St. Monica's Church, under the direction of Mrs. Henry Reynolds, charlady, and Stewart, president of Guild.
The Trenton Branch of the N.A.A.C.P. effected a reorganization under the appraisal of the board. The board last night, September 26th, at the residence of Mrs. Agnes L. Kemp. The meeting was larger than the previous meeting and the election of the following temporary officers: John D. Hopkins, president; Horace Gogel, vice-president; vice-president A. John A. Gordon, treasurer. The reiling officers were: Dr. J. C. Gibbs, president; Dr. J. C. Hogel, vice-president; S. L. Hogel, sergey, and Rev. C. E. Wilson, treasurer. A membership drive and permanent oration were held at the residence of the immediate objects of the association. A chicken dinner was held at the home of the association. A Thursday evening, inington Avenue, Thursday evening. Among those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Haverstick, Mr. and Mrs. Dillman, Mr. and Taylor and several guests from Trenton.
For the first time in the history of the annual Trenton Flower Show, the colored people of the city entered because of the flowers which were grown in the back yard beautifying contest that was promised by the loaned baskets or vases as follows: Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Lynch, Kemp, Mrs. Pearl Cash, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Priman, Mrs. Anna Stout, Mrs. Wm. Luce, Dr. and Mrs. John S. Sawyer, Mrs. John S. Johns, Mrs. Clara
Graham, Mrs. Joseph Coles, and Mrs. Nana Kinney. P. Hargelod Johnson arranged and decorated the set-up most artistically, and JohnARGET asked assistance. The exhibition was given by Cedric Jensen. The exhibit was given a special blue ribbon award, and numerous glits of bulbs and seeds have been offered by sweep to order to develop greater interest next year.
PORT NORRIS, NEW JERSEY
PORT NORRIS, N.J.-Rev. David Stanley formerly of Cambridge, Md., now of Port Norrish, N.J., graduated from Cambridge, S.J., studying band. He gave a fine invocation, which was enjoyed by all. Of Cambridge, Md., who was here on business, has returned. Mrs. Bethea Anderson, of Cambridge, was here visiting her parents, the Rev. and Mrs. James Wind was in Port Norrish on business. Carrie Shepard has returned to Port Norrish, after spending the summer visiting friends and relatives in Atlantic City, Philadelphia, New York, Critchfield and other points. James Wilson, of Atlantic City, is visiting friends in Port Norrish, N.J. He will be visiting Port Norrish, N.J., where Hanson Wright has opened a restaurant, barber shop and lodging house. Howard Baynum, Cormorad, and Raymond Woodlion, arrived here for the oyster season. James Swelens has also arrived here for the oyster season. He will be paid for when delivered. Wm. Robert Anderson, agent.
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Longer Skirts . . Paris says four inches below the
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Uneven Hemlines . . a fashion for afternoon and
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Higher Waistline . . . belts, shirrings, tucks or pleats
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Back Interest . . . intricate seaming, tucks, godets and
flares on coats and frocks.
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MUSEUM OF ART CALIFORNIA
LACQUILLEON N.C. Lacquileon is a landmark was hosted by the Ladies Aid Society of Moores Chapel A.M.E. Zion church Friday evening. A delicious course was served at the event, and a present were: Meddams Middleton president; Maud Stack, secretary; Mary Ramsure, treasurer; Hainah McVey, Jennifer McVey, and Karen Hooke. Hike, Louise Miller, Miss ailna Ramsure and the Rev., and Mrs. A. B. Moseley. A large number of Linehouton people attended the camp meeting at MacKenzie Grove on the third Sunday. The camp meeting at the home of Mrs. Logan on East Pine Street afternoon.
Mrs. Pannie Weldon went to Cherryville
last Saturday.
or his wife, M.Lillian Barbar, of Newark, N.J., who has been in Ganston for the last year. The couple, Amanda Barber, spent several days in this city as the guest of the Rev. and Mrs. A. B.
Mrs. Jennie Jones and daughter, Eula Mae, motored to Stetsville last Thursday. Mrs. Jane McBee is visiting relatives in Stetsville. Mrs. Jennifer C. Smith attended the grand chapter of the order of Eastern Star, Wilmington, N.C., the first week in spring.
Mrs. Smith, of Ricmond, Va., spent several days in the city during her part with the H. Hoke. Mrs. Olivia Holmes Everett entertained at dinner Friday, Mesdames Nelson Durham, J. James McDain, G. McDain, James McDain of Gindinnah, Ohio. Dr. J. H. Barnhill and Miss Melia Chambers, of Hickory, N.C., were the guests of Willie M. Mageres last Tuesday. WILLIAMSTON, NORTH CAROLINA WILLIAMSTON, N.C. - Bernard Moore and gancee M. Mageres Miss Semma Mue Brooks. Friday evening, at the home of Miss Jane Resapas. William Allen is at home after spending the summer in Washington, D.C., and Bali.
Miss Delizie Peel spent the week-and in Robersonville, with respect to Reefer, of Durham, where in town Saturday, on business, While here they were the guests of Miss Francis Price, of Washington, D.C., was the guest of his parents, this week. was in the city Friday. Rev. Alexander, pastor of the Metropolitan church of Washington, conducted the reveal session of the Methodist church, last week.
Mr. Howard, of Hamilton, was in town on business Saturday. Mr. Durham, were called home Saturday, to the bedside of Mr. Williams' brother, who is very sick. Phila, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Slade, of this week. Mrs. Bell Latham, of Norfolk, were parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gorgusan. The Household of Ruth. No. 1644 visited the evening, and left with him a few pounds. Mrs. Lizzie Jackson of Petersburg, Va., was the guest of Miss Jane Respurs, Thursd
Prof. Milton Armstead, of Plymouth, was in the city on business Saturday.
Miss. Dellar P. *Allen* spent Sunday in Pimtown, visiting Mrs. Webb, her mother, Mrs. Lucy White spent Wednesday in Wizard, her Ella Pule, of Washington, D.C., to here visiting Miss Mary E. Hookins, and relatives. Miss Jane Respass has returned to the summer spending at Ocean View, Ya. Tom Peel, Jessie Rodgers and Slade Peel motored to Rocky Mount, Saturday night. Miss Delizie Peel has returned to the city after spending the summer in Brooklyn.
Miss. Bell Hassell is ill at her home in Elm Street.
Miss Semma Mae Brooks of Dardens, the guest of Mrs. A. E. Rongers, while at her
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WILLIAMSTON, NORTH CAROLINA
1920s
A
George Turner Hyman left Monday for Lawrenceville, Va. where he will enter the House of Diplomats, No. 5383, "celebrated its 12th anniversary. Thursday night. Rev. Edwards visited in Newbern, Friday. Rev. Edwards visited in Greenbelt, the State Normal school at Elizabeth City.
BURLINGTON NORTH CAROLINA
BURLINGTON N.C.-Profs. S. E. Burford. Carter spent Saturday in Greenbelt. Miss Ruth Kelly, who is teaching in teach- ing, will be the week-end in Greenbelt with relatives.
Misses Marguerite Hicks, Lillian Triplett and Bette Partam were visitors in Greenbelt.
Mr. and Mrs. Simmons of Grensboro,
visiting Mrs. Mareuite Scott.
visiting Mrs. Marzaghi Scott, a teacher in the Vocational department of A.C.T. school, won first and second prizes at the fair that was held at Mebane during the A.C.T. S. held its first chapel exercises Friday morning, under the auspices of the Mebane Music School, a group of musical selections and recitations. The next chapel exercise will be held under the auspices of the junior class. The group has been seriously ill, is improving. The parent-teacher association will hold the annual Music Fair at the Alamance County Training School.
The Glees Club of A.C.T.B. had its first
address in 1882 at 100 West 42nd Street, the
direction of P. B. E. Burford.
recreation of PFO. He shot Sharon
Boykin, McKenna Helen Boykin and
Leanne Gunn, left last week, to enter Shaw
University.
Miss Spencer Thomas has got to Durham to enter school.
Daye is seriously ill at the Hainey School.
GOLDSBORO NORTH CAROLINA
OOLDSBORO, N.C.-Miss Jessie Leake has returned to her home in the city of Wilmington, where she lives at the home of her brother, Holly Leake on Virginia street. She has been ill several weeks here at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Leake, and Johnson was also with her. They left for their home at New Born, Friday, with Miles Scott much
Messrs. Charlie and Jerry Hargrove, with their friend, M. Godner, accompanying them, will be in St. Paul, Minn., spent several days in the city last week, as house guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Bostock on Virginia Street. The city last week, as house guest of Mrs. W. B. Hewlett and Dr. C. Holl and family, attended the football game at Greenboro, Saturday. The city last week, as house guest of Mrs. Sarah Haleche, and Lo. Williams visited in Raleigh last week. Among the new cars seen in the city this week, the Honda roadster, driven by J. H. Graham, and an Essex sedan, by Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Lloyd, with Smiling Billy Celly, city seremeris, is going over big with his preaching act and sends regards to his friends throughout the states. Colored weeklies can be bought at the Melody Music Shop, south James street. Please send news in by Friday of the week, and send to the club publish news, or any social items.
A play entitled, "A Kiss in the Dark," written and directed by J. K. Darden.
days and many other interesting and important issues. We are indicated by A Astrology House, a Partial Horoscope, All work Scientific and Individual. from grateful individuals in India, England, China, India, Africa, in face from all the countries and I refund money in all cases of dissatisfaction. Since Jinon Private House.
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HICKORY, NORTH CAROLINA
HICKORY, N.C.-Miss Verna B. Paden
and Miss Marie Poston were on the sick
list at the week-end. They are teachers
of the Ridgeview High School faculty.
Mrs. Marle B. Cherry and little niece
Dora B. spent the week-end with her high
band, who is a mortician at Gattonia, N.C.
Mr. Wilson, the Ridgeview High School
coach and science teacher, went to Chate-
lotte Saturday, to purchase some materials
for the team.
A. D. Bitard, the musical director of
Ridgeview High School, has excelently
trained the glee club and dramatic club.
The high school faculty, rendered a musi-
cal Monday night.
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POLSDSSCHSOHISNSISOOOCOSLSESOOOTOC Orne ee
Phone Cilmor 6410, South 1910 and Madison 4922-W. |
a Dae ane NIGHT SERVICE
* JOSEPH A. LIVELY
. FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBAUMER,
ewoacentee A aPabtnt teat Ge AG promt ence atuceien ae
BCH rte Has aiy vls mdiee molt estomect ESS §
409 N. Mount St. 709 S. Fremont Ave. |
Baltimore, Maryland ‘
500000086000 00 0000 eon
‘PHONES: SOUTH 0422; VERNON 4029-W, 6196, 2953
, JOHN H. TOADVIN
Mortician
142 West Hill Street 1027 Druid Hill Avenue
‘GARAGE, 612-(4-46 GREENIWILLOW STREET
I Have the Finest Grey Hearse in the City
COUNTRY WORK—GALVERT COUNTY, MD. WORK A SPECIALTY
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OGSOOSSSETECLOCOEOS:
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DIGNITY
‘an Ententhad Feature In Every Entire Funeral Provided and Directed by.
BYRON WRIGHT
Better Known as “Sergeant Wriehl”
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Office, 1218 McElderry Street
r BS ES 8 ee 2 eee eee 2 =
7 C. and P, Phone, Madison 2817
= A Ly 8
‘ George T. A. Gibson
Funeral Director and Embalmer
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
srvee av RENBESCE
s 1735 Druid Hill Avenue Baltimore, Maryland &
. inca ae aa
ae
ia een oe 5 A A em ome
MRS, ROBERT A. ELLIOTT
* Funeral Directress and Embalmer
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% 1631 Druid Hill Ave. Madison U692
. Wp aewen © .weenae, 4
CLARENCE C. WRIGHT | |
Funeral Director and Embalmer
ome peone pater QUALITT, others ook at PRICES. 1.cén sit ou
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EDWARD RINGGOLD
‘A BROOKS’ successoR
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GZ euone macison sm aEvan:ctoaen:
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——————
THEW LINES OF WORK
~ OPEN FOR RAGE
Urban League Secretaries
=: Optimistic Over Labor Con-
‘ditions. __
. . MEET IN COLUMBUS
*: Meeting in New York to Fol-
low Soon.
.. COLUMBUS, O—Scretarles of the
“National Urhan League in the mid-
dle ‘west area met here Saturday to
make oe, for 2n extensive cani-
paign for larger opportunities in em-
Biogen
rans, Hey PORES aaa
nate hese New Bore: the’ Lasse:
director of industrial ’relations, is-
sued the following statement for
‘publication:
“The purpose of the conference
ras te rlaie"out @ united: prouram
Tar: 2° more. thorough concentration
‘on better jobs for BELO ‘The loss
Or places Smnn members of the rae
Pa eeeees accustomed to fil. make
it imperative that they seek employ-
Trent? elsewbere
“A spirit of optimism prevailed
throughout the conference, for out
secretaries have no fears for the fu-
{pe because of totes in employment
Bae enifar with employment pes
Elbities, thet see new Relds of labo:
mo “shiek both ‘men, and Women
hhave gone recently and have faith
that, Shere ie vsome_ compensation
for Negroes in these newer fields fo-
#95 Webeestained in the older ones
sro Meet tn East.
“A similar conference of | secreta-
‘ies in the Eazt is to be held in New
EE Aisin ihe ‘next two, weeks to
pass upon the ‘proposals of our con-
pa wee nee
Gained 28 Pounds,
A Real Man Now
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Jantic City Man Wrote
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Mrs. Alberta Rogers, _thin.., ran
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ference here. When these have bees
ralifed by the eastem group ve wil
Ee he press 3 e
Bian which dll provide for the par,
Yolpation, of ell organizations ‘and
socleties that care to join the League
in its effort to met demands for 1005
fereated by a growing number of
Greined youne people, and-the remov-
Sl of members of Ure race from usual
occupation.”
‘Heren Secretarien
‘rhove précentat. the conference 18 24+
ait oe wee, A Bon,
Saco AG; Hoyer, Pitzorghs deh 7.
Eilts, Si. Touts: Gerald B Allen, Canton.
‘Shi’ Wes. R. ‘comers, Cleveland, Georet
Pe eraeeneas, Akron, bier NB, Alen
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SAREE pean, “Bedale! J, Ac, Thomas,
Poon: Chest N. Hayes, Zanes
“PARSON,”
MARRYING “PARSON,
SWAIN,. TRANSFERS
Boston Minister United 1,529
Colored and 318 White
Couples.
GOES TO KENTUCKY
Boston Gives Farewell At-
tended by Thousands.
‘BOSTON, MASS.—Dr. Benjamis
‘Wilson Swain, the marrying “parson”
for 11 years pastor of Columbus Av-
Jenue AME. Zion Church, has ac
cepted a transfer: to Broadway Tab
emacte at Louisville, Ky., ‘effectiy
Getober Ist.
‘The transtef was forwarded from
‘Bishop W. J. Walls to. Bishop E. D
W. Jones, in Louisville, Ky,
‘pr. Swain was appointed to, Co,
lumbus avenue by the late Blshor
‘Walters at a thre when the church
‘was mortgaged for $41,000,
‘During the pastoraate of Dr, Swat
the debt has been reduced to $13,000
several thousand dollars improve.
ments have been placed upon, th
Church anda parsonage, valued, a:
$8:000,. purchased,
‘Dr. Swein was known here as “the
sparing parson,” having united 4
$47 couples during his 17, years. Of
this ‘number 318 were white.
‘Br. Swain’s average was slightly
more than two couples, s, week.
‘A. testimonial attended by sever
thousands was given ‘at the church
in his honor, Monday, and a purse
‘was, prosented,
The speakers included Mayor Quinn
of Cambridge, and ex-Mayor Jame
M. Gurley, of’ Boston.
‘TENNESSEE FAIR OPENS
NASHVILLE, Tenn—The colored
triestate fair will open, here October
10th and continue for three days.
START A BUSINESS with emell .cepltal
ere. is your opportunity te, start In Sik
Hosiery. Borinese.” Buy latett potnted tk
Foslery direct from Mills end make sour ova
Price,” Sear to. sell three. pales for S420:
Posts you 87.00 per_dowen pats. Absoluiely
Sra quetey.. Money refunded 3t not, fully
iusded, Oct darted ana grap some of tat
Roney people are Teady to spend for Christ:
Ren done money order for tare of smal
Gusitity. Hicaay Service, 200" Broadway,
ee ae eek tae
J ust W ed
SELATR, MiB." 3: Pegler Obe.
Gladys Wileon “were married last Monde7
se the parsonnge.
YAUGHNJORDAN
BEDFOFRD, Ve—Mr. and Mrs, Render.
ton 'C. Vaughn announce the marriage of
their daughter, Olga W., to. Rev. Nelson
R. Jordan, »Thirsday. Septeniber 8. Rer.
Jorden 1s pastor of the Washlagton strset
Baptist ehureh.. The couple will be tt
ome to friends: after clover 10, ab 211
Franklin street, Bedtord.
‘TINDAL-AUSTIN
WILMINGTON, Del. — Announcement of
the. marriage of Miss Talla Agatbis. AUS
lin, popular dgughter of Afr, and Mrs, Nias
S, Austin, to Mensy B. Tindal, son of Mr.
thd Mrz, Louis Brock, prominent wader
tiker of Manning, SC” wes made resent.
Wy. The marriage took place. April 28th,
In the precenee ‘of the smmediate. family,
with Rev J. 3. Mouze offetating.
‘Atter the wedding. the couple. left wile
mington ‘on their honeymoon for points
orth, including Richmond, Waahinston.
Rew York and New Jersey. Betore rete
tag. Rome the couple. visited. the. grooms
parents end relalives of the bride tn South
Borotina, ‘The fourth. of September, they
Feturned to Wileington..
"A reception was given tn whelr honor at
Paynes wolel, ‘The beige was. lovely_In
2 jorn of ile essary, beautifully trimmed
frith eggahell Ince, with rese and. canacs
Howers, The dyiiog room was. profusely
decoreied ‘with the Bride's costume. susie
for, the occasion was furntaned by the
Southern. Jazs -band.” A number of out-
Ghiowa guests were present. Many Ust-
fuland pretty gifts were received. by ths
couple. Mr. and Mrs. Tindal lett Wil
frington for New York city September 28th
for ee iadeftite 3t3y.
‘TAYLOR-WARING
BOSTON —Srs, Zlizabeth H. Teylor of 1
Lynwood street, Roxbury, and Benjamin
R. Waring of 20 Ballevue street, west. Rox-
Bury. were united. in mafrisge Weenesday
tresing, September 28th at the hore of
the bride snc way witnessea by a few rele
Uver and friends. "Mr. and Mrs. Cheri
Bennett oeted ag witnesses. ‘The Rev. DF
Benjamin Wilson Syn, pastor of the Co-
Jumbus Avenue ARSE.” Zion church, 63s
tan aeeaie sane chateercnns *
‘HENDEEBSON-GOODLOE
|. PETSOSURGH. Miss Lotsa | Hendrrson.
lof Washington, D.C, became the bride
George 'B.. Goodloe,” Saturdar, September
fhe fist, at the home. of is. Walker
‘West of" 233 Auburre street. Rev, Brows
fof me. Ararat chureh performed the cere
ony.
‘The bride's gor of white setin was
trimmed In valle lace, with a high waist
jeea bouent style. "Her "flowers ver
[Shite soses and ies of the valley. Mrs
‘West, the mutton of Bonar, wore’ pal
[green chiten, trimmed’ tn ecru ace. The
‘Bedding march was nlered by Mist Heir
Mortin. A reception folioxed, Mr. Geod
fee end his bride feft for Staunton, Va.
‘where thay ‘will be at heme to thelr man)
Tilends after the ars ef October.
t ‘jee
CLARESBURG. W. Ve.—Joshua A. Emith
and Mics Dore ‘Rowe were marired”at the
former's home. Saturday nfght. | Tho¥ tn
sMendanes ‘were Mesdames. Lele Smith,
sabello Wison, Mss Nace Wilton, | and
Aaron "Wilson." They will resige et thei
Roms: on Washington avenue,
i
SIRACUSE. ¥.5-—The marriage, of Mis
oraihy dotuon ie cuarence, llchell
BURLY Sac nacce'a ne home 3
seemed” aoe Rate “name
Shade Sts "adogun ets oat
Mleaet nt a ethene Rca
a Beltig agp circ pete th
teense att ig tar, Bk Os ro
ere ANE ae sa ai
st. Blea st 3 stiist Bap
Peet SE Sag are, uth la
Pee bondsiot ar Buna 8,
uniaT-aionerss
reoenadtUne, ECG Eéne Mur
nyrat tess Gia tec ucts et
nite "ruta gh "seleee sth
BURSA ehonthe! ne 8
oe pe
SANDY SPRINGS, Md.—The most beau-
tat Nedetng of ths season way teenie
fiat. Mondes, when Miss "Aine. Powel
fdsighter of Sass Florence Porell'and th
{ste 8 Bil Porat, of thu pisee, become
ke trae of Robert Snowden, son of Sr
hd “ites, ‘Geotre ‘Saosaen, of Rockale
Ree Hodaes, of" Wasnt, D0
ive ceremony was performed at the home
ot the bride which wg bewstfuly“e=
[Grated for the occasion, the. predominating
preceding, ine ceremony” Zmersop Jem.
eon eng," *O Promise Sey" after wed
Sits ‘Ginéya challenger played Lohengrin
‘Fecaing merch,
‘rie Seige, who wes piven: martlage by
er ‘uncle, “AdoiphurEnomas” of Piece
Phle, wore a lovely gonn at ‘nite satin,
linea with tlle Toles and rowebuée, He
PAYS $100 MONTHLY
‘The Soutbem Fidelity & Surety
Company, Box 612, Durham, N. ©.
fs issuing an accident insurance
policy ata cost of one cent a day
Benefits are $100 monthly and. up te
s1500 at death, ‘The policy. will be
ent for 10 days free inspection 1
lyou will send your name, age, ad-
dress, beneficlary's name and re-
lationship. After studying the polly
you may return it or send $3.65 tc
i {ttn force for one year, 0-19.
Coughs or Bronchitis
What Liver Extracts are doing for
Anemia and what Insulin is doing
for Diabetes, awn day's remo
Prescription is doing for Asthma.
‘Sold only by the Argray Drug Com-
pany. Not one. record of fllure
Potmes. Asthma sufferers wh
thought that they ‘were hopeless ac
now going about inthe enjoyment
‘of life, entirely free from — those
Sreaafa ‘attacks,
‘A strictly pharmaceutical re
tion, free from Nausea, habit form-
ling, or injurious -drugs.
Jawn Jay's preerpeen. is famous
Because IT MAKES GOOD. All whe
‘suffer and who put their money. theit
faith and their hope for health in
ja medicine are entitled to get the
facts about that medicine. Get, th
facts about this treatment ~for
Asthma, Coughs or Bronchitis.
‘Literature discribing this treat-
ment will be promptly sent to any-
fone anywhere on request,
THE ARGRAY Pea. SOME ANE
Argray Bldg.
‘Indianapolis, Ind
Siddons & Lester |
FLORISTS |
Punerai Designs and Wedding
Bevguets a Specialty
A orgera Promptly tended To
CHAS & LESTER. Mor
16 Penna, Aven, cer Geerge St
Dakine: Narn’
‘Phone Vernon 72
Aight Phone, Liayette 0602
[ Yy #+ + #32x= ey.
| Thomas E. Kelson
| Funeral Director and
Embalmer
Successor to the, Late
men, ANS MNS, TASH Benn
1303 Presstman Street
PHONES *
5901—MA dison—9214
POLITE ATTENTION Astuseo.
fhe Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 9, 1727
Tan wa bl by geet of ona Be] _
TOU TSARAGE fa the bocce:
some ant ait ore a ering of pearls an
Seat PH scuquey wba roses :
se ame oar nee ork cs, | -P SF COBRRIED
ae ee hwo Se Sa EY
tes |Se Stuer, Gore tose std elon taate Wits Y
Sammie mac, abe ened ie Pies. THIS
= ee .
Me vata cook, eter ot the wese, xax| | MOLAICOE: WEEK
ants tala Gate etree preg save | |e ee
ert gree and rink ttt and ari nk || FAAS
2 |"eniam E. Hl of New York-Cits, was
ce [beat ‘MAESBY-DUNSTON—Chatles Z., 22, 420
cr [Pt eebien was bed at the Powel nome | Pomlnae Marquee Ey 3
it fide nds se eh ave tae tees” | AROMAN AASON Hamer 2h, 8
wit |ulbte hus to Runaied. guests attend, | Mosherat, Bee 31
ae i meres Mrs aNd Mr Walter | WOODSON WELLS —clibert, 43, don
"| BESS ATPP shllaephias "hes ane’ aes | ate Winches Beth, 32, wigan
Beate yShan al and ies Then, Thom: | SEREET-CRISe-Harld, A 36, 487 H ¢
JHE BPRS ile ‘Bove Stead | mor ae Bernice My 18
ot) iis MEaalet meta ie ane here‘ nome | PECK LEWie-voha. Wy My 105 2st
or | Been Me and Mer ntomea Boonen | ert ale
a Beer, Me abuned” che Sc Aes | LEE- WILSON dames 48 vigor:
HT | ing, ait. end Mn. George Snowden, 3r, | wenle Vi 48, wir. 32, Piper
er od ats: Ese Shason ue andes | Maguay JONES Eeaar 2H, 08'S. C
| sear mamas, rend Mr, Wile Mi, raanars Ba
th. Isr, and Mrs. Prank King, Mr. and Mrs, ‘DUDLEY-WRIGHT—Joseph E.,. $0, wider
iy. | Moses Butler, Ste. and Birs. Emerson Joho: | SMS Demore-av.i ‘Mary B. 22.
en aSiophentte—wilias P27.
oa Mire, Mildred Cox, Mrs. Annie Hopkins,| | Eémondson-av.: Sedle V.. 27.
ns | ac naplitn acd ian wi |Algncsommaane eu, Patong,
| is, ap AU ae Seg ns? aur | 36, Tnareae, 23. Brooklra P.O, Md.
i: [J cde, A andre nized ge" | MOWwan OULACORE las HL, 26%
ie Sos wil webaee, ey Suze, | Oats N, acO
= jand Mrs. Walter Awkerd, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- DOVER-HENDERSON—Walter, 22: Beatr!
9 nm Hacuett ene Gus oe onan Presse.
7 [Ba Met Ses mcnts Rica, mr. ane] DOWGRE DAViS Wile, W. 92, 200
atte” tdsard hee Aan Weiser, | Sua Meee Bi
| thd: ale” inut Ghutt niu Be Hap-|BakEey sae lan, G; |
ad |e ME Pte, Bele Chrse, Metile wi | Pemmaanlaaes ery B. 7.
a |, desephine’ Challenger, Allean Brown, | WHITEZONES sus, 7, 218 8: Mou
uy lal sabhin, me gabeth ek
| esis, abet Govks, Colin satan, 3, | HLVA.NOLAN-—Mfrvieh, $2, #28 Harior
ne | mage Hi acehcly Meok, witere Cote” |, Barat G23
at-|"Sftpy beaurival ane tseful presents were | =ANE-ADDISON—Ernest, Passedenty %
i: |resiindudlng © eee oom sey |» Be Mai, 28, a
the} ghertly after the wedding, the couple lett PHILLIPS-CHASE—James C., 25, 89, OF
tor ew Hate, Coy wbte thay Wl se | anus: Magee M2
ith | side. ‘TISDELL-BAPTIST—Danlel, 40, 634 W. F
an EE alee ad water:
28 D. C. M a | BAYHHUAM-CORBDY wales , 20, 22,
MPN streets Ore 18
sal . C.:Marriages § | ,dsditt-tirton—orence #, 2, 2
| Wazhington Christian, 29, 2008 3rd-st., ner;
Santee GM ae Binat te
Bee aver
Pa Bice A to grat. ae ze
inde Rinasipn, 11 ie eat, BR a
SS he et wom
chasis Sus" a0 1 Gata Cora smith
MM same add,‘ Re Aeulle Spl
atte Sige ae 3B stat nee Mam
Be bobnish tala ucts be. The Bee
Falla 'BY dase :
Remus 7 shclen, 21, 402, at, ae:
SShatny reise Vs, te Best, oe
Fen i te eran,
cates G7 Glver, HWee engonet. oe:
ney ds Sag! don nee Stee, ne
het! wae We Broom
aeues Siahobes” 24 ais it, om: al
Digg 2 19h Hat, ete Rew
Brooke
sesh Sith, 42, 247 Cette am “Am
2 at hae atures: ine he Bk
St Caer
wits WG, 90, 19 Mav, ne: Lou
ean a aie meat, Be Be
Sev. Bessie
Betis Biota Ya, 31 Oat, mele
Schnee hata aaorerty Sn th
SOI: 2 atte
satel Syn: Seis sabato Rox
ile ‘Sticn’ aor aime adress Te
Bar WB ite
sess 0; Ghaie 24 39 pattersonat, na:
es i West, Bh, Bd Oakanleae, 2
‘Fre Ret Grogs 3. Hames
sohe ee pater ai AE iat, ms
te, Mine, st aes
fee 3: 8. eanot
wile “aie, HTH anda, me, Aaa
rane, SOs, a ea
Da sayie
Ramla Vesy 19, 79 O-sh, nw.s Agnes Mar
Mine Wa Nat bateesst, ow “foe Be.
ania i, Sindee
RE ate BTS wat, mes nave Sons,
SPYaMs tht, ate "zoe Revs Wan. B
saree
wile'Sx, 28,4804 wet, wes Bane. WH
ness diate Yona, oe Tee
meron al nator
reed ti, 28 tia tomato. Rath
Sidios: wait ae s3¢8 Poss, ‘ae. "The
Raw. Westar
uate E, Danie B, 216 sasg-ae, Be
Bieey. Gianni Sieh ‘oeorpae, Be
The net cones
silos Siueis HAT Pat, ne Bike
Weblo‘, "2085 Kest,' a "Eve ew
Sees asa
seine Soroet 2, 14 themasbat ne
Srcine says Wat Nees 3. Tae
Ree Sames'e. wants,
RAM Lat Thioplan, 31, 128, oxe.Hatt
ii ba bunel Bop, Sue seston Te
SecA Wnlbanes
sini A! Holley at, 2B aed, Bat
Bae! siaseem & Meith, ie Mes
Sith aatinore, Ma rhe nes eo
a Wet.
sation W Becett 38, 2618 Oat, na 3a
Welsh, or aabery Pare, he Ree
Boonie eta
pilin Feyean Sh 198 that, nes Gene
atrhoebuon, "tee anes ne, oe
Bee a antant,
ober Sines, 20:08 O's, um: Alle Dix
eta, 4 anict, bec” "The es,
Fete,
Deni, 4, 48 ama. ne ag
Su ateenton, We, S16 Bic. "ae "Poe
ev, dunes 'E,Waehngos
seine Beh, is ies ates be Amy
Sicalvan' 2, ibe tothe, ne. Fhe Rew
we Sito.
ities Sivbarie, 99, winer Pat, ss
Shite ‘meet an ike Mute,
Saas wat ee
46 D.C. Deaths
chore’ were 48 Genk teported 10. th
enti’ Defoe tor: ee cee “end
Esplemser 3 peta ‘te nome
fare ete una! one seat of ate The
EINE Joram, e, ite sisters of the Poo,
sry dnckion, Sh "asecamens heap
ce, ening Gata, ah
etn elon is Betsarecrs om,
BR pile an stbecaens hosp
Sieur arose ah Sis Bate he,
AEE" Sat ta “Galtnger hse
Seti’ cane, S20 esendene, me.
ice brace (aiuees 34309 Foide-tv.08
Sense Yoana Ws, Oationer om,
HiSal Wilttinl isreedine’s hosp.
Site Bra 'eg"ac"Sliases'e Rep.
See tues“, Salinger hose
Hiker Ssane io Hon tot Raed na
a,
MAty'T watson, 8.122 noverest, Be,
Bae Fale el de ihe,
fice taney he 9 Pot, ‘ne
Fos Be Mobactions a 38 Het, am.
ossiesohmo i, Preedmen's bos.
Betue'raemne a0" evens osm
Wilsm Bees, Mi, 18 Orseonars 3.
homes Selth 33, aubercuens ho.
ce weston, 2s Ste a,
Rarking Pitas iaéas Sie Sioe-cke A,
Taf’ of deni and Eimie Gray. 1 he, al
iiaee Bah,
Mary West, 120 Pat, ox.
EREE Wings, Wales Rte cen, nop
idlon Hodges, ei, Cahinegr NS
Sotn ackaah ae tet eaten
Save Brown so Freteme’s oop.
Bee deri pone aii eet oe,
EOS hn cOe sue tenet Se
‘ne “peter to cen
Pattie Vecning ap Pretdness bom.
feisee sans a Mies ee.
Mensou Ricnerdao. ste TCA carols
airgst, ome
erncs ios 24, cattnger harp.
BotShoh Novel 26 eastern Beane of Po.
‘oe rier 8, Gago
asta Cole a BY Pinan, Ow,
Bethe sobisée, a0: Pieters Hosp.
Bling MrBtona, Wa, reedaen's hep.
sere Honsls. 3h Besrcency Bes
ars crapt 9 rubetcaee bone
eae rea ee pee ae
| 63D. C. Births
sevens was cue @ i
pee rme c e ae e
ieee a aed a te
Soe Seat eee
Bate re aE
Bates See ae
eerste he
Se ae
ie gee
cee ee eee
et eta
ae oat ae ae i
ee ne ere ae Ne,
i 2 ht
Fareed toms rte Be
Eason a ee
Bee ad ee.
aie a a Pe,
et Sat Saw facet
ee, le en er
eee ale
Se OS sh
eet tha A come
ane aut pees Recon
Sealy ea
es as Bae Sse
Foor ah ian ft
Een coe,chae, eke
Sates aed Ri Sot
fp, eee, be
‘Elmore. G. and Prances Briscoe, boy,' ©
gee cage mens ta, |
Bie seach Sac,
Be citrine
ees a a Ee,
ii hoe to
Waring and Sarah Briscee, girl. ‘ibge
Faring sve SurteSrices gi,
| @
y :
| Lie
a eee
(JSRRIED
“TIS
WEEK
‘MABSEY-DUNSTON—Charles“L., 29, 420 N.
Poplin: Matguerito E, 27
BARDMAN-MASON—Zimer "., 21, 6 W.
MMosher-st: Besse, 21.
WOODSON-WELLS—Glibert, = 43, widorer,
Pe we Suckers: Berlha, 3, widor.
STREBT.CRISE—Hareld A, 26, 437 N. Git
moratt weraice M10.
PECK LEwis-—Joha W, 31, 1105. N.” Strick
terest Samia. 12,
LEEWEGON—ames 7, 43) ldower: Lu
Wenle Ve 46) widox. 2131) Franiklinst,
equayioNEs—Eaward, 21, 108 8, Car
ollteu-av.; Dols, 21.
‘DUDLEY.-WRIGHT-—Joseph E.,, $0, widozer,
Nis Demore-av.s Mary By 2.
REYNOLDS WH TE—Wiltas P., 27, 160
‘Pémondson-av.: Sadle Vo 27
ALLERCTOHNGON—Joseph,” Patepeco, MCL,
“So; Theresa, 29. Brodklyn P.O, MA,
HOWARD-OHMORE— Willams HL, 26: Rose,
er ait N. Carey-at.
DOVER HERDERGON-Walter, 22: Beatrice,
21, 1604 Pressimanst
DORSESDAVIS—Willlem W,, 92, 2829 Me
ullob-at.: Helen B.. 24.
BIAKELY-SDIMS—Willem G., 4, 105
‘Penasvania-ave Mery B23,
WHETEJONES versie, a7, 213 N, Mount
it Eilsabeth ta. 29.
SILVAINOLAN-Afurriel, 29, 895 Harford-av
‘Baran C23,
JLANE-ADDISON—Ernest. Possedens, 364,
3s: Mamie 0. 28, widok.
PHILLIPS-CHASE—James C., 28, 889, Orch:
ierdest; Magelize 2,29,
‘TIRDELL-BAPTIST—Dinlel, 40, 654 W, Bld
dest Allee, 42, wider,
TBAYINLAM-CORBEY—Walter C., 20, 22, 24
Te.'Pearl streets Grace, 19.
DOGGETT-TAYLOR—clirence H, 28, 720
Stsdlson evenue: Nancy B., 28. wieon.
jsokeecnaiaat—sanes, 38) Mi tuber
WHITE BESCHENG-Denjemic, | 24, 208 N
Benroeder streets Hievearet, &, 29, iden
POBINGON-CHEW—Thomas W., 20, 628 ¥.
Sillegten avenue: Toes A.” 18,
|PAGAN-WISE Joseph, 23, 1851 MBIT
‘treet. Hilda, 21.
ROSS-GRAVES—Chettes, 22, “620 WW, Bit
idle sires Mary L. 12.
picKs-CAGER—Fredirie, 74, 126 8. Bord
‘areel: Bary, 16
BAOWN-PHILLIPS—George U., 38, widow
er ania Druid Rill avenue! Gladys ©
28, divorces.
BIVANG-THOMPSON—James, 28, widorer.
je3eot Vera steet, Dells, 23.
WHLEON-SATTH Alfred,” 29, 419 8. Cen
‘zal avenue: Annie E., 18.
CHESTER STALLINGS Joseph Z, 1, 82
M Fremont. avenue: Eva, 20.
ccmremess Hebert Ey" 3, 18, Bev
treet Fannie. 1
TOLLOCK-SMITH—Ciaud, 28, Mary, 2,
Yes Orleans street.
MOODY SSITTa—aerion, 34, 2908 Betons
‘svenue: Ada, 3
BURTON-CARTER—Cnton, 21, 189 2.
ager street: Clara, 22.
WSLEACE-DAILEY-—-Hobert A, 2, 2409 Pa-
Hen avenve: Ironia, 12
WRIGHT-RANDALL—Deaver, 31, 1996 Brunt
treet: Bertha, 23,
COPLIN-KING-Murt E, 24, 809 Edmond:
See eat; ines. Sk
Whitehead, Herbert, 1, 1735 Risasay.
Raker, Charles, 25, 23'N. Amiti-st.
Willems, George, ‘67, $03, Sapp-st-
Bryant, Charles, 50, 926 W. Soratoge-st,
Shipley, Reese, 88, 1225 MeCulloh-st
Hurt, Herbert @.,'2.mos,, 318 N. Arlington
Boone, William ic, Th, 1120 B, Lexingtensst
Sohnsbo, Carrie, 48, 1390 X, Premont-ov.
Wright, Alles, 48, 1810 21, allmor-st,
[Upshure, Menty. €8, 402. Tyson-2t
‘Bhephard, George 2, 2, 675 W. Mulberry-st
‘Butler, John, $4, 405 3. Bood-st.
Ployd,, Thomas, 49,623. Dolphin-st,
Pope, rene, 33, 1410 Hatlem-ay.
Neal! Albert, 24, 617 Greenwillow st
JOrconnur, Lucien 4., 78. 1231 Greenmocnt,
Ssutebury, Bltzatedh, €2, 607 Gold-st
Draneniet, Prancis, 9 mos, 1612 Eastern-av.
Bowns, Emme C., @, 17ii Drulantiisy.
Rela, Catherine, 33, 206 2. Glimor-st,
Thomas, Geraldine, 37,1213 Drug Hilly.
Bros Priciis, si, 395 N.. Blricker-at,
Gress,” George, 44," 1311. Woodyear-st.
Grower, Waller, 2, 1082 Sbarpst,
ilams, samen, 48, 806 Drala Hitl-ay.
Cohen, Louise, 19, 687 Vine-st,
Meeks, Sherman, 37, 1815 W, Lanvale-st
Hackiey, Willam, Sl, 233 Styrtle-av,
Jeayton: John, 37, $80 Tyson-st.
Fore, Moser, 46, 082 5. Bhare-st
‘Brown, Sarah 2. $9, 030 N. Dallascat
JSevage, Baby, 10 hrs.. 1909 W. Lanvalest,
Bruce, aby, 12 brs,” 1316.W. nfulberry-st
Brown, Thomas H., 61. 118 W. Nambute-st
Wilson, Georae, 44, 604 5. Greeneest
Esrhardt Tayler. 4 davs, 1616 ©. Nonument,
Smith, Viennie, 13, 1919 c, Fayette
Shores, Robert or Howard Gitson, 43, Col
pale, Ma.
[perney, Susle, 67, 113 W. Lanvate-st,
rer Wolle,. 4, €40 W. Conway-st
Smith, Bertha P., 46, 1208 Druid Willa.
‘Besley, Solemen,” 65, 1314 Divislonst.
Harrison. Lataine, 3, vTerth Por, and
Wiseeav, »
Semicon, Mortis. $e, 1223 Bayard-at,
Panmelt, Allee, 422 106 Hughes.
Hammond, Hennetia 0, 1114 Sarsh Ann,
Meclaine, Maria, $8, “1610 Meeiderty-st.
eer eae: samies. 26, 703 8. Greene-at,
N. Y. Civil Service
erepted bs the few Fork Academy of
ees
re
‘rhe big news of the weck Is the examina
amet ME pitti thee tneotad eve
SeedPtagatenerapisusnas are 3a
Ieeney eels decd tne irae
[EROME Sits," oes” poy of
Slat at Ciel sector, “om
ease tan any ere
a ae seh ea
fieaat Semen cer ch acree com
ess see eee
Bee see” Commlnloner_ Waste
ede Ne pomelions"" aisant 80
nee, eat
te ee can eaminilons
pene tnevcly wttce er ae
Beet roi” gage 3, and" ier
Heer Tomer etene tor advance
rade a dint Sat asa atthe caer
ek cet Py copacnt sh
Ie ee Shtaed ee ear take
iain ae ee ie Ge eet
rea teacher
ERE! tl Zod ind TaN BEG at
Heth" Bie eaumn fos yeu intra
Teta fr line applets.
Mc tcngtsgne nad ator yt
ea tne aie nae hull a
Fan fer Sr ete
Pig sage Gemcune fa becenbe. A
a Mite ‘on beinness et ti
Aue hanes Sr ceanieais are Sonnet
ee sere Te er yale cone
SEO iam Ae nee wort
sree iactae at" ao’ ontea Wythe
eatin Chet commie: "rae
Peer gettnr Tiel acyune nt cay i
BEE bias!" Guteet
Te ole eta, f.
ahaa int aap toring sppleaton
Beebe
Siniannty Pitman ighonessre ple
iba Schr fae pete
Shean "Eats Gay ang appa
bette an
Sins 1 eshington, De, fer Informs
ug" ahd“pplantns
Garson 8's yer, aug omer
oe Eee Ste Cae ek
{Sset sett. ‘Boud FU Cl Ser
He Bettas oes toatl Oy.
Peso Clerk and caver examinations
rekive oale‘etemiseions ‘held on Uh
easy of every month entrance
sy aes cor AAmecucse hos
Eas oun, ed Yor Coy
stir Rn snes, atntaton
ec" bah cin te Stake
Brera 002 appccuans ecieetron
ei es kee este See
GP Rea 'aps" ete: cele for th
ects SA patton ia the src) Th
amass Ge, ner ‘cer gente, a
Seisterag asa,
ecipce were also cylied for tan
jpeg sts sere, ase, onrtie
George an¢.Lavonis Mattos, boy.
Willem and Marjorle Camish, ft] twins
‘Eawin ard Josephine Leah. girl.
Belden and Lola Rodgue, boy.
Bilis sod Geran. Walalp,' boy.
Bepjemin and Einms Gray, girl trina,
fGamuel and Marthe Boone. gil.
‘Silam G. and. ary Mt. Savoy, gle,
Jelaude and Gyathla Pranzlin, il.
[Meminey ané Margaret Brown. girl.
Nethaniel.and Suste Dowdle, gil,
srmstead and Viola Berry. bor.
ue and Marguerite Scott, bo7.
fills aud Sarah Spears,” boy.
Waiter and Annie Rolin, ‘gic,
Wiliams Land Cecllin Gillard, pte,
Bernard and Mary Hall. irl.
[Joseph and. Ruth Brent: boy.
[Prank sud Margaret Butler, boy.
Charles and Roselle Stewart, boy.
[Mareus W. 2nd Laure Caul. Boy.
HEpomas ‘and Magele Gibson, boy.
feriltara end Pate Bell, boy.
jJonn Land Ella ©. Baylor, boy, %
'7y Northwestern Pharmacy}
. 4200 Pennsylvania ave cor. Dolphin a banner Madison 4173
i erie avereer, Fegment AVE :
STORES = nee = STORES
| THE BEST DRUG STORE ‘ON PENNSYLVANIA AVE, -
First Class Medicines at FIRST CLASS LOW PRICES &
: i pint Iron Quinine and Strychnine—for 75.Cents.
i Most Places Get From 89c Up to $1.25 for This a
1 pint FRANCIS HYPOPHOSPHITES for $1.00 .~
‘The BEST GENERAL BUILDER and TONIC You Can.Buy)
] ‘And You Can’t Get It at All at Most Places =
1 pint Pure Norwegian Standardized Cod Liver Oil.”
The Highest Grade—for 75 Cents <t
For This Grade of Oil Most Places Charge You $1.00 :
; $1.25 Father John’s Medicine.... 89 Cents 65¢ P. K. Powder cecesosssesstsieeen-48jCents,
one eames chn's Medicine....-48 Cents $1.50 Pertussin -snenmene-9B Cents
" $1.50 Gray's Glycerine Ponic.....m-$1.08 50¢ Nadinola Bleach.......-.css+---39 Cents
BEBO Newser vcrereeennewenemn S108 35¢ Ponds Creat ig----28 Cents
: $1.15 Othine, double or triple......83 Cents B5c Welter’s Tooth Powder........30 Cents
‘And Hundreds of Other Items in Proportion
a
GENUINE HONEST PRESCRIPTION SERVICE
: We Give You EXACTLY What Your Doctor Orders and THE BEST-IN THE LINE
No Cheap Imitations and No Cheap Substitutes
You Get What You Pay For -
ASK YOUR DOCTOR—HE KNOWS
: FREE! For a Few Days Only . FREE!
A Natural, Beautiful Living FLORIDA FERN .
| Given Away ABSOLUTELY FREE with Every Box of Nature’s Own Laxative
PELL-MA TEA
;
: A Laxative and Diuretic for the Stomach, Liver and Kidneys
non oot ee eee e eh chee babi be be obOSs “ ‘
— Missing
Sage Snes, 1 Sl ere, sin
sncet pee September i reveiee
a’ taouner enie ones, of ibe came, e
ae ae Sees bene, «its Sele
Bou: Soiapietion. “igh browa "hin
Mitt sat tore a lynlon checkered
rae tat, gray" pants and brome
tennis ses.
om oct, 225 Fe Bond steet, sing
ace eptember hc, reported. bp bude
eee rie Sime scutes Ase, 17 20a
Sette i eens i bes Ger
Fes, ‘bros akin. Wor. khaki pants,
Free Genk em. short siewes. Blah (a8
Be, Sy uy and deine Nord of APB
ie thipmese 8 some oat
bats Perves. Sig, Laurens strest, missing
junta"‘sptcaber etn, reported by Mildred
Been Re icoer cree Abe, 28 285
Font, 8tcSs weight, 1s Toss-eompleio,
SEAT dint: occupation, wos employed at
Gir “Caaucbeega, stam ane sarators
Hite, Wore Grown nat ane ea
streee:_ sno brawn sub: oS
I: functional Bladder Trritation
disturbs your sleep, causes Burning
or Itching Sensation, Backache or
feg “Pains, ‘making you feel tired,
depressed, ' and discouraged, _ why
foe try the Cystex 48. Hour’ Test?
Bont give up. Get Cystex today at
any drug. store, Put, it to the, test
BEE ser Foursert oinst St does. Mon:
ey back if it doesn’. bring quick im-
provement, and satisfy you complete-
ly, Try Cystes today, Only 60c,
Suffer From DROPSY
reper. eweling or, shortness of breath
SER SP yn eal pachanes Inte
SECA ‘Gouna Bieicine Comper. Deb
34 seats, Cottam
Sore Legs Heaied
pen Last, Ulcers, Eolaged Vela. Got,
cree Wiad ie you works Wile fe
Ere haoht Son un eat iy Sore Lees a
Tis oh clbe your casts Cie
Homes Hy Gian Bat hives elie,
Fuermssy: ian Chace Buy hve, lleause
ae
Hz
USE
Ora
oD,
Sed ae pus
Sean SHEE suns
estlitecet™ airatt
| CONSTIPATION
||, peRnANEsTL eLtEyeD
og RERUN clay Babi ees
ARLE t cogs
MINERAL AND
VAPOR BATHS
Physiotherapy Clinic
1900 Druid. Hill Aveaue
amuyeate 0822
woe,
tt.
‘CLEARING HOUSE
I DREAM INCENSE: Well St., Clearing
eee ecatiuon rents incense
If baeiat sods taesy Sur, Hey
' Eowiomacion & cating Mout: Agen
Gites dled, Box 8-06, Cslege
Sialoos New fore ee
NEGRO DOLLS
Agents, Deoters, Toy Stores, Drvs
Sith GE euy Colored” Bots ere
Boteroney-makers during fall” ans
ekbastnas
STANDARD DOLL €9..
222 west (abed St Riew york
ow 30
ROY S. BOND:
2 LAWXER E
3 14E. Pleasant Street &
5 (lat Fees) E
| omico Phone, Veruon 6956
5 esldene: :
| 1520 DRUID HILL AVENUP &
Residence Phone, Madison 7744-W
“Gone tours: 7 te 9 FM
s : Pa:
Hommanemmyrmmmmery yn
|| Ernest A. Brooks |
1711 DRUM BILL AVE.
Ladies’, Gentlemen’s and
Children’s Clothes
French Dry Cleaned
Dyed and Repaired
Latest Modern Equipment
||| Gall ana Delivery Sersice ”
i Phone Madison 9244
|] | ates or Date of rormat openthe
The Nation’s Biggest All Negro Weekly, °
| Fire
| 1:5. ajay alley Tee cand, patton
orks Mind eset by walter weoes oe
ae aes eet eh, Damage co te
[sud alone “Rearrange os ie oe
[rae call hid ieee
Se et ae ee rxo.stor
trite goth, qua py Mast Whuen ec
Lr ae ene ete Damage
Si eat PR mstratee ok the coe
Pancha slaviag eats ob
Sue Ct ON Ave, Threeston” Sek
2 ea ara Wiener ate
ScglUF strins we" Damage to bulig
Diego ame Tate hues xereated
oe Sas aoe
U. S. Civil Service
urtter foforetion ay be obtained
eatin ems ee Haansaton, Be
emda emma ie pantie
tee eT et
serial SPbARon, o1.300 « rer
FErse ites peomonics sebctaLies
ee ae ee TOKE BCOROMGS
ee Steal tg Geteo year aS
EEECIALIPT fe peowoaties_Srastaiior.
ee a Hen nasterANT HOME
EeStoncs
FeO CMIGE: 42.0 to £3200 «sear.
PECLSE Sbecabe angnitech, 4.
toons sea
essatnt ENGiveeR, cwelene), $6600 0
oan .
Péscocure saute eeuxoLooise
sib etn othe
HOUSE WIRING
six tor ‘Rouse, complete. ith 82>
Sed Rotn ain ase” weekly.
2 MONTHS 10 PAY
HARFORD ELECTRIC CO.
{1 WASHING TO BOULEVARD
| CALVERT 8915,
___ AUCTION!
AYESDAYS AND FRIDAYS. 19 A. 5
Sa tel Olts f
retoeee aeena dM Suet ee
Gen’ Tuesday ang Fetes, 19 o'clock
ein
708 N. HOWARD STREET
BEAUTY PARLOR
|| Hairdressing, Santcuring, Ete.
|| 1823 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUB
Tiatidl Se
———————
Eee Mogren, Se Aenea acs St
Bee See Se So lettin
ea scant of sntreeet is Oe
) 0 of facet of tare ee
- Tnmpy, call Vernon 0935 and talk it
a
TANITARY MATTRESS CO.
nue
(MEN and WOMEN REGAIN YOUTH |
if Pete i cue ees
} otis aaa, bee ‘Bee
fOu, Sere nstaeatt
i row Grek too som fost cone
BE Gite Nears
Hetatae (ES Se
' voit”
nse, acl BRP BODE, Cees, m,
BLOOD Bateastecte ster
BLOOD Biceaszese tate
Shaun Rist cieleny es cee
faiy tor over 26 years in. the most severe
GR? Glter: Gis", ‘Wasniopton St, Boo
Fe Cae, TP ee si *
ts 8 Peecrpton for
Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue,
Bilious Fever and Malaria.
1M te the mt speedy remedy koma.
Sept
Pia eee
by aot have an X-Ray eran
nation ade "to. avermine the
Ssune, of your healt As
SEmtay “picture tea the” atory-
Scop gusting. nd dette torbave
an aay taken twiny. Teeth
SEmayed Yor ove celia a sim?
ScRays of other parts of the body
at moderate fees
| Universal X-Ray Laboratory
Wit Linden ‘Axes Baltimore, MG,
Prone: Laiayete 40h
Houre: iz a Wate Me
IKNOX! J
; pears
Unnatural and mucous dis
charges can be avoided by de-
stroying the germs of infectious
diseases. $t.r0 At all druggist
>
PRESCRIPTIONS
eons paves aview stan
M. STRASBURGER
North and Madison Aven
Lafayette 1778 i
ARE YOU
LEADING A
_ LIFE OF
FAILURE
Do You Want Success
Health-and Happiness,
Write today for free
{formation
M. Williams
901 Bergen Avenue
Jersey City, Ne Je
It.is sepa!
| Teisthe a. iugattas.
Very Bost Sorte
by Test Sati eus
Used nnd Advised | % “6
ty. taoy Feole Sepa tes
Tig 8 hit Say aapaee
So's box tne APP e aye
22 tal ucts Bua baes
Ster Incense $1.60" “7 ene
SHR very PAREN
FeERaM Mn a tn pa
Freer tar? ee, Rush your et
io SS Ssdtha Mian Ween Suc 8
House, eaulsore Bands ed
Hees hoes Satine Me
«
eg
caahimy, usta SR
seipy, Sassi? ie, Be
RN te
[AEA SYST 1c, ‘Bhi
Serie is nent ae
Sepa ea eg teste "iooesta
Benes aa
PS Fis. My rie
IRE Soe thee
Se Re
ocey crams, onto pete is Fe
He aie tne tne ease
ace sh Gand L0G ita ir ae
SIRO Ret tons Pa, Po
SAE Bed Ut er ot achat oe
Had td, ad ei aeaed oc
BER Mosnee Fore Ton:
Bento FS. BunEAe, Geet 8
Nortce? We Sosaistely GUARANTEE
RTP ate Bibs Vester tty
Cee eee eraar rier ec
oe ese seu Sant eich wacnet™
y
Gain Your Sweetheart’s
Hove ana arecion
PERLE Ete B
win dte i ee ae
Bares cir ae,
ies Pa ch
fragrance help you gat, and Beld, we.
Sa sie nae Sa
zy spay ter
yea (ate eg
wee Lae Se
ER tie oe
Se eT ee Sei ee
Erwan erates
2 oe aah” aie meget
Revie ae ee
325 your sopey ait be Fu Te
Somment Stell coupon. below (ott
mp ust epee
SEER RE Sa
HY csvesssessscenees Btete ooossttlls
svsranzon, toh" og = Beit
en TOA maan! uanioe Ver tn on
SL conened fm theo, Warrenton, [and 5 easan Sanues, Mas, Tal
gt <'Geptemoee th and closed BU: Ton, Dey ins motored
Be eptenter “oth. Many. matters of | Dc» Saturday afternoon,
i estat” Kee" comiered an | netoen, of Marien
EC aie Alt =
Qt ye" Grane Master Dodson of the juris- PULASKI, VIRGIN!
Meudon ef te District of Columbia, also, PULASKI, Va.—Wednesday.
fepresemcatives of the onder of Eastern ‘and Mrs, Dillard entertained
Sar ia 7 eens at a Sener pare
CTRNG GE, Rciclte Wb. % Growel |Rlenards ond, ner, Goetane
ye following officers were elected: 1. ‘Those present were: Mesés
Pe Teslor, of Danville: M. W. grand mas- Codd, Peachroe Jackson, Aan
EES 'Rienmond, junior grand. deacon: fe", snendne several months |
Eo wusen, Lenenburg, RW. grand secre tives tn Baltimore, Md.
Ee atta amie Rr. erang| SPAMS SMO J and
ta, Gamage ogon, Reanoke, grand [Of Nevtek, Va,” sopped 1 t
Batty eh Grand: lodge closed to. meet in |AubIREE Deine, “Nohiesse Oolg
tes meat morning for New Glascox, Va
PERRYVILLE, vee ey einen
TUELASVZE ncie present were: be
Serra ROO James ene. nepher, Law:
Sea Se, APSE ae nueay, aa Beh
roe 20h atnogion, tir Ton
Sastny ey Oo eatagtons rs Grae
fe Bd 2 Geum, ands Mee Gee
Hon. EMS govees bea Lean Taylor
er, ao Bee Bouter. Work
Be tea oueph Mien, 0
Php
Miriane Mrs. Hamilton Paige had as
ete ‘Sthae nee” and Sra noun
We seen, BG, 40d ‘Ree. and rs
Shae tara
‘HR fmcskee of Pythiag eld their me
eet tees a the Bpiopnt chute,
Bee Ae gin mevs Jeep Muay de
FEA Us ase,
TE angen melting of the sitet
Heer a hse Shesindoah catee
BESS sae Bing auptie “ene ot
TED Mla begtenber aba eh
SRE ietsen Sie opened in data form
Zie'"Gevtions "ater which “ihe. peed
JER. fev Seth Miceay otk he ha
SEAR sate Giaceded te teanset te
SShottt af the tases Remors om
meters and ‘the Aes at labor, wer
GE he mets ete made be the ai
ie Mingie Dinner ess seved br
Apeemaeh
Sa ances ation ex given ont
weit Ae tscatien af the Winereetin
Sea Be ins cuetein, Rete Winn i
Se Orn eeene eae tnterenng
Septet Bass Sar carmid ‘eer
Ho EEMhaom “Tne asst meting o
TE Stance 2htth ci ne‘on the ones
Tee orth Sundar’ in" October si
Cr. ne Sion Supe” re ai
Cove! ve of eich the Rese With
| Make Yourself
WITH
A Savings Loan
Perhaps you intend to start a Savings Account and
perhaps you have one, but how often do you miss
making deposits regularly?
For Everyone Interested in Accumulating Money,
We Sugaest a Sarings Loan,
The Savings Loan Plan
You simply make a Joan from us of $100.00 or
more, and we place this on your Savings
Account. You need no endorsers or other
) collateral, because the deposit will serve as
your security.
Then you repay the loan to us by paying $2.00
each week on each $100.00 borrowed, and
when the loan is paid, you will have $100.00 or
more on your Savings Account, plus Interest,
compounded twive a year; money that you
would never have had if you hadn't made the
loan. |
eee
Let us tell you more about it. Come to see us,
We shall be glad to discuss it with you.
ESTABLISHED 1910 "
C ial Saving
NORTH AVENUE BRANCH
1394 W. North Ave., Cor. Woodbrook Ave,
Opposite Division St.
We Have Over 7,000 Savings Accounts
We Have Close to 1800 Christmas Savings Club Accounts
0! Wai =
‘Don’t ve st |
o coib aril j ou |
eu |
coo
e ee
oe mee |: ed
=} oan,
ae lee I 7 ie |
ro a SE |
Bees = . if i s |
a ita
a dh ae "S|
ee mi oe i
es 5 i = }
ma 4,98 i
ee) etigh
Ht Ton a ‘ E Cane \ ; i
Acme ater
iy, 28
‘w?wARRENTON, VIRGINIA
PERRYVILLE, VIRGINIA.
fe nReOe, Va Birs. Freee een
paiss ‘Susan ames, Miss tnuinna,Reblneon
find Rezinald Gaskins motored to Wasbing-
fon, Die, saturday” afteraoen.
‘The Rev. J. H. Ford, of Arlington: Rey
31B. Neeman, of Maryland, returned 9
eit "nomes.‘Fiidey ‘evening. aftr spend
ing two weeks in feria, friday morning
ar labtnt Gon
ee eee a
Jand Mfrs. Dillard entertained a number
friends at a dinner party at. thelr ome
98: Maple street in honor. of Miss Rebecca
Richarge’ ond irs.” Goetenen Reynolds,
Wie Te Ge tele Fespestve tencing pou
Those present ere: Mesdames Saxton
‘cobb, ‘Peachroe Jackson, and Goetcher
Richardson, Mlsses Lena Ferguson. Beta
Mexinnes, ‘Mira Clark and Rebecca Rich.
ards, ‘Messrs. Charles Stewart, 24. 1. Saun
ders. Prank’ Mardy. Prot G. W. Liver
peals and Dr. P. G. Corbin.
Siiss' Mira Clark as returned home af
ter spending several onthe visiting rela
ver in Baltimore, 3.
Chatter. Morris) dru. and MC ciaytes
of Norfolk, Va, siopped {9 the cliy” Tuer
day enrotte to Tennessee Slate college
at Nauhvile, “Tean. MF,, Morris gave
Splendid lecture at the BEE, church, his
Ribject being. "Noblesse. Obilge.”
“ules Gretchen Reynolés left Thursday
morting for New Glascox, Va.. where. she
Fill resume ner doties a8. teacher there.
"hira oyntbie, Por entertained “a. number
of friends ata party Tuesday evening. in
Ronor of Charles's. Morris and Mfr. Clay"
tor of ‘Norfolk. Va.
"wis, Verga Randolph and daughter, Vir
ginny accompanied Vielor Randolph » t
Chesuansburg. W. Va.. Sunday. where he
Si enter schoo! thts fall
Afr. and Mrs. Perry. stopped In the elts
‘nuesday in route to Nashville, ‘Tenn, t
Tesume their former duties and were’ the
ueste of Mrs. Perry's. parents, Mr. and
Ritz. John ‘Dunean.
Miss, Maurlee. Polndexter, has returned
‘home from sehoot at Bluefield Institute on
ecount of ines,
D. T. Cox, of Christiansburg, Va., was s
business visitor, $m. the city Priday.
L. Beysnn, of Bhiefld, W.Va. 8aS
husinese. visitor tn the city Saturday.
‘lst Rebeces. Richards feft Sunday morn.
tng for Natural Boge, Va... where the
ie Gaaeik The tanta.
| PALLS CHURCH, Va.—Services were held
‘aU Galloway MOE! Church, Sundar. The
Dastor being tthe Rev. 8. K. Murray, a
focal peeacher, spoke. At 3 pm. the Rev
Giver Hei, pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church
st Ordrlee’s Corner, preaches.
"the Rev EW. ‘Welland. of Marrison-
burs. Ya. was a visitor of the parsonage
fase week,
‘Tne ‘Busy Doren Club gave Mrs. Pannte
ishards 4 suepeler party on the 19th of
Beqtember, “tive presigent, Met Marth
Balls of alexangsin, gave Ret a hexket lam,
Refteshmence. were ferved at the residence
of des. R. W. Stein.
‘Temes Dorsey. of Staunton, was 2 sucst
fora (ew hours. of Mr, and Mes. Lews
Rlenards, of Palis Church, en route home
From Warentan, where the concention of
the Masons was eld We was & delegate
bg agente
ALANTHES “WRRGrcA
PULASKI. VIRGINIA
‘PALLS CHURCT. VIRGINIA
BUCHANAN wreecmrs
teachers’ mecting Gat, Botetout, County
at the school Saturday, “these: were et
Be There, were
a, aumber of wits angi friends and
Saperintengen: a seiner eas ais
Present. Dinner wat gered in the bule
Master James py
ts Banister, the goungest
ehllé of ie. ang atts, dentine Banister
rs accidentally stot by bie brother. HED
ERrOUBH ‘he fot" ae’ ig recovering fo
soon Sees afar: dutta, James wil
09m to be able to" begin school agsia.
‘les ‘Golate Reynande™ ono has, rturaed
home from” Cincinnait, is visiting
Wilting Be parents ana’ reiatives.
iss Paulibe Patrice, whe. has been
Nem “York for awhile, “will” return
Buchansn to fesime net studies tik ee
Mr. and hrs. Platte. and. nEBReN, 0
ew (Fork, who. have ‘been. wiilng thet
atives and Trends, Jett for New Yor
latices and ends, et
ames Ferguson, of Nex Casts Pa.
ines Sinit, of Huntington W. Vay
mother and tilings.
Soe =
LEESBURG, VIRGINIA
LEESBURG, Va, — Men's Duy nas ob
gerved' at Me. Zion Aeetnoaist Church, Rev
SW. “Carre, paetor. ast. Sundsy.” Rex
(George A." Parker. the assistant, pastor o
ih Siteet" Baptist church, Washington
D.C, preached « aaron at il am. Prof
Yoni “G. Walker presided. The evenin
services “were of x ilerary 0d mustea
nature, The prominent. features, were a
address by 3. Luvale, of Washington, DC.
and select reading by andy. Jonni, 0
Gieedovile. Va. dames C, Walker presided
Mis. Margaret. Giford, ‘eho. sen
fave weeks with her parents, Rev. and Mrs
Swe Garroil retuned to het Nome
‘incinnatl, Monde.
Ning hs Davis, of Ghleago, ater spend
ng several weeks “with er paventa, Re
find Mrs. Hamilton irks, eft Monday”
Bieningham. Ala
ev. Garroll spent last Thursday tn Bal
amore, ne the puest Of Is parents. Rev
Drvand’ Mrs WM. Carrol Mis fathe
Celebrated his, 248 biethany.
aise Vicpinia Valentine, after, srendin
jtne summer here, ‘will relurn to Washing
en, “Sunde,
: rere
SALEM, Ve-~the Rev. G. B.. Shen, of
Norley preschea a wondetiul eimon”
sri ress a eater
2 Since tk Mea tae ac tines
ee omET EIR and her dune,
SRT eee as We
Pcl Je Pad, aM Pane ae
Benen
rae see pumbey tlt taeda to
acetate tay nent
Fag rap a gn Se
re afc Ra ty a he Re
to inks own
_wemonenran, vag ae Wah oh
Pega ry
PER Bee at
Fae eee ttt wor scan
ee ee atennand
ee a er tite nce ge
rane
nana of iacribure, Pe wa
Cae UNA Tam Sea Thee
at Siditeent Ve
Si utes i vaared,_ tte
seine ti Peat at
poping tame ae sat, va,
so aa a
Oe tag
PURCELLVILLE, Va.—The Rev. Mrs. Wil-
tuame'prenebed “at it oelock” at Orc
MBS chien
‘Siest epee ahere Tuendas, Mrs E, 1
arog nil sha Stat Rate
Ba elant
Gecat Bruce is spending ® wetk
ow Ue ith cena
Senn Canta esate Cooke en
alee, SE Brown were inner putes
Theiaig at hie ond ws 3. 8. Cooke
“Seotds Whe ne Yom’ peat Sunda
1 Baltimore,
scan E. Gooke let Tharséay for Chien
6 :
ss Rache) Recor. who, as Hurt m9
ote atident Septenter 20is wey i
isthe Spore it Sunday for Sti:
ef Guage Marserr Feary Ws
‘Hepn iochie te, spending few das
roueeieson 9,
Meal be bull raze at
Fe, Macomn and RB. W..Moton spent
sunday at Berrie, a
Sat ga Dar ftitaee nome Pee
aft villog Yer pafenas Mrs and” Nts
ae ron,
pects Siekart te lating his aunt, Mrs
suse
A AIET, once In slag ta Waste
8 Se
Sie Sa ars. AL denion ere vistors
intilaress Posy. “Gundep.
‘lee atl broke
ALLS RELI, vIROTSIA
mauas witty vate Ree, £. , Jeb
ssh pheched au tie We chareh Soma
SE Pitt com ‘ison Wd ane a8 bm
Hom ettnne Tt,
SEs eaitor Ws, of auante 7.
lig he poem at Sadi Sie
acon
BEE tecoy andsine of New Roche
Mand ay wnat, oF Mena: Va
Tete lied iaine veaige of ther mater
Feciag Meee Aan 3 wowser, heh
FAA tthe SP persone
Thule Louie ‘alsn, aawsnter of ms.
an Ae tiated Sate
SEES ieleeés SaMe Chine ter Gram
Sake Opes ear dees Dye whe man
fromthe’ siete of Ohio, The "el, ea
tro ecu nd ince to Washoe
Bek ere ne za tase for bres ©
IS ihe tot i tne osntal tere
sg re ay
| BALLYBAOK, vars. Aloe Fee
aniel a sewing citte, Shieh met “x
Ein Poske's ‘onasy iterneen,
‘Sins Pelscenter and tis. Florence Ces
auanded tne grind ultdeg of the Red ei
Ag" Duuchtes of Pocahontas, Such coh
Mined et Denville, late,
"The ‘nooner Te Heights Bchool bees
tna seston nt sents
ie Sg” Atocation was organic, ts
seo ith lis Bra Hollands presieet
Nest Anmle May. Starker. cectetary, a0
[Met Detlan “Meceorge, treesurer,
(Mes "arie enka. and teniy of Vinton
[usted here Sunday.
Mes and. Men. Henry Morman, and Me
apd Stes Leels Combn tnd Son, ef Roanoit
AN Mie guene ot rand Mos. Lent
Teiiend Sunasy.
BRANDY, VIRGINIA
RANDY. Var, and Sirs, WP, tacts
sent np’ thelr “Bee” brop Tan” fo th
Steicend.
Rin sonnson of D.C. spent, the week
end th ble mother, sits. Taye,
Sir Anne, Stay Geammar, ot Ses, der
sen siting ner ser. Med, Sohn Fone.
“ona ‘Ieenper hat gone to DG. to con
sl an_exe pects
Hfnestich Ghuren eins wes fo
cei :
ei otlawon bas taken poston i
pibreare.
Paper. tacer Oak taken potion
c
Sh. and Mrs. ©. ¥, Kemper and fame
and'adn’ dora Harper, were the fternoos
BSc hie Laake Gpitmans Sanenr
‘Rages Geos and George ‘atimare, ie
toted Gp Go their summer home, Sunder
Stes, ele Cine wil prench_ at Sho
jonuich the frst Sunday in November.
caine ween.
FREDERICESBURG, Va.--The pastor. tie
Pow otmacar weer Gute
Be ris fe
toe Ss er a
Ear a
Te cd somo ee
Sih colored achogols of the surrounding
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929 1s
CULPEPER, VIRGINIA
CULPEPER, Va—The bigh schoo! league
held~its"cegttar” meeting Frt@ay “angnt” at
Aniloch Church. "Collections amounted to
513, Mrs. “Hughes and. Brackett, “now
members of the'lenguc, gave an eniertaln-
Rent at thee residence om Orange. Righ-
ay for the beneht of the bigh school snd
ave the League $18,
Me, ‘len Brackett left Culpeper Sate
jueday'tor Washington, D.C., where she Ii
spend several months.
‘Albert. Standard of ‘Pluisburgh, fe spend;
Ing two weeks in Culpeper, visiting B. Bard
om the Orange highway.
AS. M. Mazahall left Culpeper, ‘Thursday
after spending a few dass with his site
Jand ttle 4om, Mf. MM. Marhhall. Mr. Mar-
Shall left for Washington, (D.C.
Beeb. Shite te ite sie,
fe BM. ears, of Wemnlogton, spent
a few dase ith Mrs. Bdmond Williams,
‘The teachers’ meeting “was held at An-
lock Church Saturday, with a large mum:
ber of teachers. Me. Gresham WAS one of
the apeeters: of the day.
‘Grates Jentaon, of Philadelphie, was i
coulpeper, Sunday.
"the stork called at the realdence of Mrs,
Lewis Bilis, and leit a Ane aif.
peace teil
LYNCHBURG, Va—Robert Thompson an¢
atrasce Bart lt Botcay fr Norge
estes
MAES vivias mac and ores Bex
eli ie Sante toe soar Unie
“Ub, tt uns! at VANDER wh
an ping ome tine tn Rew Yoru Cy.
sean ee ng the aren
SE obdien af Fe tet
eg SR gnBea AaNSTE ee Tmaratey
tottbrarh ease
eT SO owen, of Plumuce
petebaaaae doa rng as Wass
Sieg abl Ti Wht ono
ee
enka seer vag “ees
agit! Ge tnesené olor ht
BEEP Geet une Barbee te Sun
eye Seine,
Ba SES ona 7. amne
moleed io enenntie Court” Hews a
FRaetdy ening, i wetness We
Be Resear ana” oalee.
ihe" Wace sicunWontan snc
and aie “dew Watters ot Baatth
[Pa spent the week here visting relatives
Ti Mente
GeOnGE, ranNsLs, who, comes
ee he ert ailing Mutat Be i
Fustnecapany ae Bunt a pen
SOLON the SG. ats
thea tn Ple
Sth. RDM" sosuex RARUEY of We
YE Gia? Bie oSeaena oP Nee, bar
ree eat te Sher
Sal Vii "aaowie ei washacon
iS pent Say ing her parents
Pag ai iatd cdo shetty see
NOH DAVIGy at ah line tcet he
seitneg tome vig Sata, "a
amu of ness
Sao CSulGES avon te nee tram
wethingin, Bice catecabe sere
Femme Wis "aio was st, Babe car
PR, etna ae nate Gee
abe tateam ar eStats Sr
anatase fom Wine, Enel
dae EO ge ta aa se
Sh Eh fo kit,
obit COaia of Biol, Mth,
Sidney oem AS and ht, Blo
|Cobbins, of 1201 Sth street.
MESS AYE BROWN, whe as bes
sng contaeee
Sige Hix SPENCER tmertine a te
setas tr betas ot Ser tothe Niger ah
120ee Saeki Wat site Stee
foo poli edie ales bec eh
ret Ett! Biicet ata “Anns sot
ROG and iat oma "Chrtne ese
[athe Niue! Snr inet ond eter
[eee aut, “Wate Somber an
issitanaon” Ral” ane" Bove, Sew
THOSE estan” Gl Pn wei
Iiving sn ehrsopher Born.
Tike ChviRid eke her ork,
nega Ss bs tenes of Pr
Mie
Sih ano uns, ©, B. naRien one
tale an a gene Son te
Sioa olthorse Sith Meneay
Teepe a "iene nes
Behe Se cerone Gun, hen‘
SC ae aed ng The aon roo
Ge atioas cpa” Inote present ere
it and ae, ‘Say ate late mae
Misa voung: Seater A Set
Fraps ae ccnp
eat, Maa. eoeeBinrman,
jand Mrs. L. Jefferson, Mr, and Mes. Miner,
Ai. nti See Rage and Sor
iy Sieben thd ite Made
che ieee: 58 "
| __CAPE CHARLES, VIRGINIA
care onan eur ih Pi
Gage cuanees, vec tent tah
pi See Snel Une oe
a ee Aiea cm
eee
|August. The newiy elected administration
ei ine sare ere, set
etic, nt ot tae aes oe
Soe pecans, ae at ce
etl
nS suis ened teen
ean Sine cen oat Boe
ie Se a a aan
Rea ie teat
oa ee
soe hes Sandee ite i Fe
aired ster tte ato oe
oe en oie as eee
ee
ee cull of Teeter It
es cee Ce cain
cathe Sot tebe ence ee
= gas Ba ee SE in apc
ie oui Fc
ah ats ES Ewen of erro
ensoe eas ara gatas
st eee seb iil
sie Sie ten er
dik "te aero a e
se Pi mee ne ces
ate a se cal
ats
Rat A a whe, kit
icine cteertt tiga. len
reemieg te seine ee
ee this winter.
ee
eer te eaeeant God Bebtin
tended st the Methodist nad Baptist
churehes. Sunday. "The Rev. ZH Carpenter
Of the Sie. chureh, preached a special ser
fon Sunday morning to te church schoo
jee: Anda Lite hile Shall Le
"Ene Ladies" Ald of the MB. ehureh,, me
at the Bone of Mrs. Emma Burns on ens:
ey street Thursday evening.
"Fe one thousand delinr valle, to be held
at the MLE. ehureh the. fourth’ Sunday tn
Qetober ie arousing great interert among
the entire memberships
"phe Ree. PW. Cook of the First Baptist
church, assisted. the Rev. "Brown of the
Fist Baptat Ghoreh at Staunton, Va. In
rally last Sunday, ‘helé at Cedar HI
‘Goureh on ‘Buffalo
"The junior missionary eleele ot, the Dap-
Uist chien met at the home of Mrs. Mette
Hofman, Sunéay afternoon on Massle street
‘The Rockbridge Walker Federated Club
ngldta Heese) gentng, Tetday cueing
Beane, nome’ of Sita "Eure Sorin. on
‘A threeccourse dioner was given. by Miss
glene sohason lest” Thursday evening at
the Rose inn in the honor of her cousin,
Mrs, Marie Porter of Baltimore. Md. ‘Those
Present. were, Mrs. Eliabetn. ‘Townson of
Priledeiphia. Yormerty tse Johnsen of Ler-
ingion anid Mrs. Bllce Cisco and Mts Mae
Aesander_ of Lexington.
‘Mr-_and. Mrs. Godfrey, Washington . and
‘ss Dora Clark of New York, arrived here
Hash gunday one isi to relatives
tugs Vitgioln Clare of Pasladelpiin, wo
nos been viietten have mother, Mts. Sait
Ginse, hee rewrned,
‘Earl Clark o:_vaston, Ohio, is visiting his
father, Albert Clare oh Davidson street.
: WARTFIELD, YIRGIXIA.
| HARTPIELD, Va-—-Grafton Baptiss vauren
reid. thelt- service. Sundhy:
"The Literary Union was held at 3. Oltve
Baptist Church Sunday. A large crond
eas present
St Binns, of paltimore, a¢d.. Is going
toys he mothertnclas, “Mts. Sarat
Thornton, of Topping. Va.
‘Mrs, Leah Jackson, of Harmony Village,
Va. ie Mat her nome,
EX popularity contest sill be sive at the
training sehool very soon; also & Whoopee
party.
‘De, Tong, the onlr coloréd doctor in
elddienex County. ill give a lecture. every
Wednesday on “ityglene.” at the training
shes
ALTAVISTA, VIRGINIA
ALTAVISTA. Ya.—Sterling BONFOE,. Mrs.
william Hubbard and the Rev. C; A. Oxden
ended” the Grand Lodge of Masons in
Roanoke, fast week.
iiss Lathe: Bond ang JR. Nelson Jett for
‘virginis Seminars and. Coltee.
‘irs, Sam Anderson. has the conteact to
repair he snanion -miver, Bagi, Chet
James. Prater and vile, ho. hove, ree
tumed. trom piuusburgh, will make thelr
ome here
(ROSS ROADS. VIRGINIA
| GROBS ROADS, Va—rMi. snd Mrs. Al-
bert Jones and Joseph Green, of Catlett
Obituaries
fof Easton, “who died Mondor, September
Ee a se Balen ae ore
a ier
sect sc
leg Settee of apie ae
Pet fel 3 te gt, Ou
fate es, a kak
ee cara tia
sp ERE as
PITTSBURGH.—Mrs. Sarah J. Sweeney
Woodyard, 87, dled Ih her home Saturday.
September 21: “She-was a member of the
Euclid avenve AME. chuteh, the £.W.C.An
and the NAAM. Mrs. Wooayard Is sur:
‘Hved "by" her husband,” Daniel A. Wood
are: one son, Earle D. Weodyard: | two
‘Gaueneers, Mr, ‘Lillian Brown, and Mr,
Basine Prima
uns, GRACE DRUTT
PITTSBURGH —Mrs. Grace | Drutt of
house 109, Blyihesdaie, Pa. died in the
Nerey hospital on the 24th’ of September.
‘Death was due to gunshot wounds.
WILLOW. HUNT.
BOSTON. William Ho Hunt, of $8, of 20
[woodbuer street, died at Long Island hos.
pits SeGtember’ 18th, ‘after am ilness “of
‘Bix months, Funevai services” were held
SC Morrison's Chapel. Rev. 3. W. Swain
mclated. Interment was In Palrview eeme-
tery
MARGARET JOHNSON
BOSTON Margaret Johnson, €0, of 23
Hammond street, cled at her late residence
het Seek afters. brief iiiness. Funeral
Userelces were. held aL. the chapel Rey.
[egoare ‘cbeate Interment "eas 13
Woodlawn cemeters.
HAROLD LOGAN
BOSTON. — Harold Logsa., 9. of 111
Shawmut avenue. ss found dead in
doorway on Madeachicetts avenue, “neat
[Tremont sere, Sertember “0th.” Bret
funeral sereices| were held at the Chapel
land the body was shipped to Henderson-
‘vile, N.C. the former home of the de.
Ceased, fo? Interment. Death was. caused
by heart trouble.
ARTHUR WARDELL,
nosTor “Artie Wardell. 99, pullman
poner, sled av the Clty Hospital September
Pith, after an iliness of n fee days. The
funeral services were held at the Twelfth
Baptist church. Rev. W. H, Hester oficlat~
ing. The body Sas taken to, Richmond,
Van, for interment. Mr. Wardell was
[member of the Hike ‘eho performed. thelr
erelees, "The. services were. larzely ate
ended, with representatives of Une Pullman
Porters’ uinlon and the Pullman company.
<ishe: Sch ramee SUAIEORE
SORTON.-- MS BIRR NEE eee tase.
Jof't Dilworth street, Ged at her late” res
ence September te, ater a, tong “ile
Seas Auneral servese" were held Ade’
Funeral home, Rev. Dabbs officiating... Ine
INBKAL Sau in Puiestew eoneter.
ins. riossie ier FISHER
wnalnoron. Note funeral of Mrs.
[mute kee Tisher wag hal om he i
SUG ‘ptise “chutes, Weenesday ae
toms Tae stersiess were, concucted by
eke G. itland sna Ret Brera.
Jory WOIARD
caunntocé Se “son Howard, 18, 6
aes Sine etl
Biers Gish itnes, Pomerat sersees ere
Heid Thuraeay nt Waugh SLE. hare
ee
| aAw ce
| PLORENCE, S.C.—Punernl services were
ioe HE OIC wr
- Bm.
|xere ‘held for iiss Frances Moligay Fri-
IM. H. Dorsey officiating, assisted by the
ingore SEs ina
mina eSE A BEM wa
fade See ern ees
cnt CETUS the te
lchurch Tuesday afterneon. She is survived:
morning. September 28, at the home of
his sister, Mrs, Rachel Stewart. ‘The
ras Se.
aa FO
sma ene ete co
Sates mt nt, unr
NELSON SMOTRERS
pusaspervnite, N--Puneral_ erin
ASD Baal char outa
[Selon Seater who led at ine Be
Se aes rales ven Bus
loficiated. Int~rment was held in Pleas
[Shute comer
{ ay
| ECs ‘Md.—Funeral services xere held | ~~
waives oF pane for Pave, orem,
[and ola mamber of Asbury church, { SITUATIONS
dni amb faves har |
| Tyler. Thursday. pastor of the Fir
|e, Taare community attended the (Of, anmadelphia. Si
|T.M.D. and C. Union, Saturday and Sur excellent teachers.
Fe Sue Groce, Baptist Chureh, bie! Wm. A. Harrod. 183
ahh Philadephia, Pa,
| 7 CLASSIFIED ADS
je ASSEE
| AGENTS WANTED DELP WANTED
aes ase | __Be awr
| SaNRROPT AND BARGAIN SALES — BIg) DETECTIVES —TRAVEL
jatar orsthatonse saat S| aren Fe ee
anc Sees On A Hv? aha
ec A
| WHY WORK FOR LESS “PROM $89 70 150 |
nar og pyracch Sn a Me | a kati
Bes Harsat iets de hedge
Ebbtide tut ot bee Goce | eh. B®
ARS enoovens cosess? eAso
sain ofS Sheer i ee
sary sou Site Sivas “Ghee | saRaae Tear
is DALY—GENUINE DupONT WEM-| Diuretic and Laxative
8 BESO Ett os, ate | Br fl gt
paiiched pclae tania Sai ue | Kee co, ta 8 en
rer Neh ine Si oi ert |
Hanah Gs ORY bx SDNTOHT
———————— date, lock of hair $2
Spopnege—zn pay #9 daly to,etat Mote | Hampton Court Hl
EEF tt Ra pears a
HU atest hte oS 2 str hat a8 | ltr eeenment: 3
Je nat Samp RPE, Gu "Oho a Bees Ga we,B
_..Makes Visit Here...
el
ee ee
SS
ee es
bee ea
a. =
Fe SS oe
sae OG
Ht oun ‘i
HR Muerte v
—Ajro. proto
DR, LAWRENCE PARFON
Among the. visitors to the AFRO
Bune lot puae wes Dr, lawrence
re prominent dentist of Hos:
Rake yr ehe as ust completed
Stal ae ee
week-end in Baltimore and Wash-
ington before they returned home.
Obituaries
eerste Darke
JERSEY, CITY, NJ—William | Mclciniey
Watkins died Monday, September 20 after
3 shore illness. Punetal services. were held
Weaneséay evening and interment was at
Stovall, NC. He fy survived by bis father,
Richards Watkins, Ave sisters, ors. Elza:
beth Baskerville," Gracie Rabinsoa, Matte
Wesb, naam Wilson and Elle Marrow, and
Teo brothers, Adoighs and Emmitt,
‘etisheern pOUNe
ELLICOTT, CITY. Md.—Puneral services
a See cre eee
sas ata
ie a we
irene nice
ie, Soe
eee as ee
sane a cae cookie
ager cere, tate
sear iste ar ek See
oeea: ead ase,
impasse RT SLE
SOR tg fe tls
ee ait at anes
a
en iene
asc ES PE ce iy
[held Sunday at 2 p.m. at Calloway MLE.
[nee oreeTescicy Baowden, whe dled es
Dep alleged
fe, sere cece Se
pee ae Be ee ee a
Bia eae ae la
aruanersc “ert —Jocepn Briscoe, ed
ce cc, be mee ta
tales RAN cay
"He ts survived by his wife. Eile, and two
areata wa tout ater es 2B
sere Pes le piers a
| In Memoriam
~Guaie = Bumey, aeparied the ie
in full triumphant of faith, on Sep-
tember 27th, 1929. She ‘was the
daughter of’ the Ite Danis} and
Patience Webster, old Baltimore resi-
‘dents, She {s survived by a husband,
dent. She ten igh grgod-chlaen
‘and six great grand-children,
CARD OF THANKS
The family of fusle B Burney
ane ee hee ty Tani aed
caer ene ether dougntes Mes,
ee Tne “tom Antal, fr
their kindness during her illness, and
for the beautiful floral designs at her
te ae sacl thane Re
Douzias.
Help Wanted
Seiebehieebbtehinndebtebtebtbtiet
FIREMEN. Brakemen, _Bagqagemen
TEMEN, Prater segRee Cae
Train Porters (colored). $150—$250
monthly. Experience unnecessary.
monte ay’ oreau Bast Se boule
ith te
WANTED Widdle-age)_housokeeper
Lee Miao eetry adress
eeete telker sokeilas MaTy:
land. in care of Harry Etgler.
SITUATIONS WANTED
Wate — By br, Wm, A Hared
ANTE rine Pek wants, Chen
of Bagh Fiat tor for
excellent teachers. Kindly apply +9
elit etch taxg Chistian rece,
Philadelphia. Pa. Ltd
HELP ANTED—INSTRUCTION
———$—
ORTECTIES TRAVEL, MAKE SECRET
Treagaieaa Detieetunmeceay
eerie antena rect
Sree Sli mratan few ore
THROM oa 10 sim & WEEK sol
Melee tO ttt, “pottal Pe
apis aah Wong: sare ine oe
log "2" PREE. New York Institute of Pho-
(Ghats 1, ra te new Yor”
PERSOSAD
Tamas —Tpearer Gooey, Tea
‘pearance fe
Bost ult taal Fig waned Mae
Eis costa eau aus Hae.
ion ob ae Aus cei
"BORN gr amRTON—T aye ane, Bi
aan (PUP OM as aktat oe a
wis ten Slcy Warne
Hmpon court, Haywent, at” ——
Lapearore, ranoit Fest Tay, 2st
Pere fk ae Bet
ac Bes Garay, Be
BASIL DAVIS
CASE. CREDIT | =
‘TIRES and BATTERIES! CHEVRO T
ae fi
utcanihtt *Reciatng, age
oon eA Se
We have the greatest selec-
tion of O. K.’d cars at the
LOWEST PRICES in our
| Chevrolet Direct Factory Dealers. history. ‘
USED CAR STORES |EVERY CAR GUARANTEED
4636 Edmondson Ave. You Can Buy Here With
satnels Wr Baltimore 8 Confidence
NOTHING DOWN Low G. M. A. C. Finance Rates
o-peorsary OwnEnd TEAMS CONVENIENTLY
1927 Flint Coupe ....++---+--.8298
1925 Diana ‘'S" Coach: ..++.-+-$345
1926 Hudson Sedan ....001.00.$286
192% Oakland Seda ...002.0218455
1928 Essex Sport Coupe... -.$435
1928 Pontiac Coupe........-+.3498
1926 Buck Sedan..-s.10-+-+ + -$385
1926 Dodge Coupe...121.7+...$289
1925 Chevrolet Touring. -..+++-_$98
1923 Chevrolet Coupes: -......$148
1924 Chevrolet Sedan -+s..c++. $65
1924 Chevrolet Coupe :--..+-+-_$48
1929 Chevrotet Coach...11111 13545
1929 Chevrolet Coupe, ....12..$589
1929 Chevrolet Cabriolet «11... 3688
1998 Chevrolet Coach......++.$378
1927 Chevrolet Coupe. :+..0.2.$277
1827 Chevrolet Coach «112221119181
1926 Chevrolet Touring. .......$135
1926 Chevrolet Coach «....... $187
White T-ton Stake body...::2.$125
Ford Ton; curtain sides....... $63
Republic $-Ton; Inrge open body $53
G.M, ©. 2-Ton Panel....---.-- $72
‘Terms—Trades
4636 EDMONDSON AVE.
Gilmor 5600.
Used Car Branch,
1310-12 W. BALTIMORE ST.
Plaza 8179.
Open Evenings and Sunday.
HULL-O-GRAM
pen zou ay scat sou want rete
erect upon your taste and fuagment.” You
Sin inds salty of crt ot that oct among
the, oferings sted below.
le CHRYSLER COACH ooecsevenss $325
Heat Ghevouer gspan ccc! 3
1985 Boor Gong veee.ctisiiicc! 38
1986 BUICK SEDAN ccrcciciiics $8
iogg PLYMOUTR SEOAN COI
Ios Bulge 4Pass. couse ccc: BB
19H GARLAND COACH Coesscccss 8
ings Ghinvaten ‘ToORING 0000! Bs
eae SOBGE SEDAN cacreelccccsss | BB
Jie BorMourd coagit 000: 8
198 BUIGR GourE ca tcc: | He
1939 Bopoe Seige COUPE. sats
Je9 WHLYS-RNIGHT SEDAN 70. B0
{i88 REO'SEDANCreoeessccs HS
“Peo shew coms,
| MAIN BEILDING,
ayy SY AND REMINGTON, AVE,
| HOiWoOD SIop—eARS NO. 10 AND 28
LORD CALVERT DESOTO BLDG.
Giakbes & OLIVER S73. VERNON 14%,
OPEN EVENINGS.
The HARTER B. “JULL Co.
P DODCE DISTRIBUTORS.
Every Car
A Used Car
After Driven Once!
BUT! fvery used ear doesn't
possess the camo value, We
Specialize in selecting cars that
will give you value received for
Jour money. We have them of
Svery koowa maxe. Come out
and make your selection,
Piedmont Motor Co.
1821-1333 N. MONROE ST.
Phone Madison 8586.
WM, A. JACKSON, Mer.
ACCESSORIES,
Bethotlne and ‘Texaco Slotor Olts
and Gas.
DUco FINISHING.
Battery Service. Expert Repairing
STORAGE WASHING.
CONSUMERS AUTO
EXCHANGE
812 Madison Avenue,
‘Telephone, Vernon 3992.
Open and Closed Cars.
$50.00 Up!
HUDSON Sedan.
HGDSON Cone,
CHEVROLET Conch
CHEVROLED Coupe:
TEP Tomring.
top cours:
STUDEBAKER Sedan,
Tansow ours:
TSSEN Coach.
BEST TERMS
AND TRADES.
Open Evenings ané Sundays.
THEO. RICE.
LAMBERT
sos ca
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rat ra
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2a
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Sree as
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Se cae
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we be oat
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HERES S
The House Of Confidence
Tia Stlgs nad eee
oo
a SS in
16 W, Read Bt. Vernon 3340
We have the greatest selec-
tion of O, K’d cars at the
LOWEST PRICES in our
history. ‘
EVERY CAR GUARANTEED
‘You Can Buy Here With
Confidence
Low G. M. A. C. Financé Rates
TERMS CONVENIENTLY
‘ARRANGED
1929 FORD Rondster....+-.8415.00
1928 FORD Phaeton... +.-.$356.00
1931 FORD Sedans. 2.20001824800
182f FORD Pourlng...0212-8126.00
1926 FORD Roadster. ..<2-5120.00
1926 FORD Sedan. .+.212.2-8165.00
126 FORD Coupe. ....0255.8180.00
1926 DODGE Sean 2.0.01..$925.00
1825 CHEVROLET Goach.--5145-00
1828 CHEVROLET Touring «$80.00
1825 CHEVROLET Sedan. 3185.00
1936 CHEVROLET Touring -$120.00
1826 CHEVROLET Coupe.» -$195.00
4928 CHEVROLET Sedan. $235.00
1826 CHEVROLET Coach. 3225.00
1226 CHEVROLET Roadster $170.00
1926 CHEVROLET Touring $165.00
1336 CHEVROLET Landau ($210.00
1231 CHEVROLET Coupe. .. $285.00
1327 CHEVROLET Coach, .$275.00
1931 CHEVROLET Sedan. .$330.00
1331 CHEVROLET Touring .$235.00
1525 CHEVROLET Couch. .$385.00
1528 CHEVROLET Coupe: 410.00
128 CHEVROLET Sedan. ..3450.00
128 CHEVROLET Landau -4440.00
1538 CHEVROLET Roadster $385.00
1985 CHEVROLET Cough. $485.00
1989 CHEVROLET Coden, ..565.00,
1997 FORD Panel Truck. ...$190.00
1926 FORD Truck......... $110.00
1928 CHEVROLET Ton ‘Truck
(Stake Body) wsv-v+- $455.00
1927 CHEVROLET ‘Pane!
Body Deby ss.re2ses $290.00
1998 CHEVROLET Panel
Body Del'y ss .eress es 4376.08
Park Circle Motor Co,
Direct Chevrolet Dealers
1426 REISTERSTOWN ROAD!
Above Cartin’s Park,
Phone for a Demonstration
Liberty 800. Always Opens
o
Pierce-Arrow
In considering a used’
car you should keep in-
mind the original quality.
and value built into that
car. It is that fact that’
gives you real value and
service when you select e
cused car. We, therefore;
suggest these fine waked
of cars at these attractive
prices. 3
1923 Plerce-Arrow T-passenger ;
Touring .....ceceseeeee $850
1924 Jordan 7-passenger ......$800
C. H. Reeves & Co., Inc.
1313-1315 Cathedral St.:
Phone 2
Vernon 2640-2641-2642
Days!!
Cetoher is yronably the Anes out=
ace eer hehe year Coot wee
eer meter Haina really engosabie==
fing. the‘cur responds’ ike trace
rae rail is inthe ait and every
eas feels tinppss Buy a good ear
ov ane get out and got
$100 to $300
In26 FORD Coure.
1531 Berek Counc.
{38 Nast segan.
1528 ORDEMORILE coach.
Ind2 PRANRLIS Brougham.
Ise BuleK Sedan
DS WILLS KNIGHT Tourles.
$300 to $500
MODEL A FORD Sedan.
Hae SASit seca.
133 CHECROLEH Roadster.
13it CHEVROLET Coach.
1215 Essex sedan,
Het ESSE Coaeh.
1s Sasi aces Seas.
Hit PAANAEIS Brougham.
138 BURGE Coach
138 BUICK Tour.
init PONTIAG Janda.
3235 WADLYS SIGH seaan.
$500 AND = Up
1229 ESSEX Coupe.
133g BEDSNOBILE coupe
LES QiaHASt PAIGE Sedan.
Taos PIANRLIN tia Touring.
4538 FRANKLIN ILA Sedan,
1338 PRANRUIN Yieunta Coupe,
Tbs WItbYS SIGHT Coupe.
HE? BUICK Sedan.
SPECIALS
laze CRAHAM-PAIGE S.Cylinder
Roasters big, ‘rooms, ‘powertult
Bete ery fitie. sii and shiney!
Heres a cat t0 appeal to anyone lke
ng speed and action:
1929 CHRYSLER TOWN, SEDAN,
Vip Tow mileage. 6 cream, wire
Niu "Looks like new and may be
Bought at a veal saving.
1925 ADVANCED Six NASH Coupe,
Hees ABN ANGnuttion, attractively
palgted Ip slowsy Stuck ‘wien white
painted IS ce wheels. Snappy and
deyendable. :
Convenient Terms, Of Course
Your Car Accepted In Trade
Franklin Motor Car Go.
1112-4116 CATHEDRALST.
Open Bvenings and Sunday,
| ‘vernon #110.
“TngQusiness Since 1912”
All the Used Cars adver«
cised in this. paper are guaran-
teed to give satisfaction or you
don’t have to pay». ©.
"Y" MUST HAVE $4.000 IN NEXT 60 DAYS
Oliver Scott (inset). 1624 West Mulberry street, who was driving this Hudson sedan East on Stricker street and was forced to make a sharp turn at Mosher because he failed to give the right-of-way to another machine. The turn was a little too sharp, and the sedan landed against a tree on its side. Scott crawled out of the wreck un-
Must Serve 10 Years
MARY MAY
of 16 North Bethel street, who must serve ten years in the Maryland House of Correction for throwing lye in her lover's face while he slept, Ralph Doran, the victim, is in Bayview hospital and will never see again. He said that she was jealous and had been drinking.
Pat To Pansy
Cora Nelson is Mrs. Ernest Holly now. Provident Internes' Invitations are Out. Douglass Murray Opens Law Office in New London. May Murphy has Pretty Birthday Party.
Dear Pansy:
The past week really has been rushed with tidbits here and there, of expected fall brides to whom honor must be done—plus the summing up of social gossip and momentum as it has glided along through the past months. Card clubs are swinging wide their doors now and planning heaps of bridge luncheons and card tournaments for the fall and winter pastime. Far as learned to date, fashions in apparel for the Thanksgiving football classics, formal dances, and afternoon socials seemed to be the height of topic among the debbies and sub-debs. And from one who should really know, I learned just recently, with decided interest, that Cora Nelson became the bride of Ernest Holly last Wednesday, at Washington, D.
My dear, isn't it too funny for words how things can happen to some people and other folks just stay out of luck? Cora Frey Nelson, for instance, just met Ernest Holly not quite a year ago, they are now a well-known motored to Washington, unbeknown to anyone on last Wednesday and were married. They are spending their honeymoon in Philadelphia and Atlantic City and will make their home at 2439 Woodbrook avenue.
Mr. Holly is in the post office here and Corn, who is the widow of the late C. Nelson, was residing with her mother on West Lanevale street.
Mardi Gras at Elks.
Pansy, the internes of Provident hospital, have issued invitations—out this week—for their Mardi Gras at the Elks' hall on next Friday night. They are the nifttest that you ever laid your eyes on.
The internes are requesting costumes, but are non-essential, and their girl friends have been already discussing what they shall wear.
They tell us that Xaveria Gorton and Martha Harmon will be chose tie as to their outfits, wife and Lester and their wife are taking their models from Paris. Alphna Peek Williams will of course, be among those most noted.
According to the beautiful arrangement and decorations on the invitations, the hall is to be in accordance, surpassing all other artistic arrangements that ever have been staged there.
The internes include Doctor Allen Howard, John Edwards, Reginald C. Neblett, Carroll St. Clair, Charles Decasseries, Lee C. Dudley, McKinley Reesley and Charles Woodland. It is said that they will wear original costumes. All the physicians in town, girls are patrons and expected with their wives or sweaters. In all, a brilliant affair is expected. Douglass Murray in Conn. Murder, Pansy, guess where Douglass Murray is now? Well, he has set up law offices at 133 State street, room one, in New London, Conn. He was here not so long ago, visiting the Howard Murphys. Alma Reynolds at Howard. Alma Reynolds, Pansy, left this week to resume her studies at Howard. She is the daughter of Rev. Luke Reynolds, you know, of 2020 Druid Hill avenue.
Pansy, beard, we talk about Highland Beach, but Idlewild resort in Lake county, Michigan, midway between Detroit and Chicago. is a great big place beside our little summer resort in Maryland. Since about 1815, according to one report, he has recently returned from there, the settlement has grown to 700 cottages which vary in size in from two-room shacks to some of the prettiest and coziest homes imaginable in which feminine touches of beauty and originality are everywhere apparent.
There are people from everywhere, for on the grounds are a club house
DRUID HILL BRANCH TO MAKE APPEAL
Metropolitan Board Will Furnish $7,000 of $11,000 Needed at Once.
PAYING PLEDGES
$1,667. of Recent Drive
Pledges Have Been Paid.
Following announcements this
week that the Metropolitan Board of
the Baltimore Y.M.C.A. would furnish
$7,000 of the $11,000 needed to insure
the continuance of the work at
Druld Hill avenue branch is doing,
the committee's management took
steps to raise $4,000 for the work at
the Sunday.
Although $1,667 of the recent drive pledges have been paid in cash, and Secretary Anderson reports that, cash is coming in regularly from this drive, unexpected and pressing obligations have absorbed this and the branch finds itself still unable to proceed with its program.
the matter was put up to the central organization and decided to help put the building in first-class shape. It will invest 7,000 or more in the office of management; can raise $4,000 in cash.
A committee comprising President of the Board William Anderson. Secretary William A. Anderson and Secretary N. Jones, was appointed by the committee to put the matter before the public. It is planned to organize a team to make a personal design for the funds.
campaign.
The statement of the committee of management follows:
A crisis in the life of the Drudg Hill Avenue branch makes it necessary for the colored citizens of Baltimore to determine whether it shall continue its existence in the community or close its door.
Because of a lack of support the branch finds itself facing pressing obligations of approximately 1,000, in addition it finds itself in need of repairs and reinstallations.
It has been estimated that it will cost approximately $11,000 to thoroughly repair and refurbish the building and pay off outstanding indebtedness. $1,687 of which has been paid. This amount has been applied to necessary current expenses, leaving nothing for improvements and obligations noted a-
Of the $11,000 that must be raised if the work is to continue, the Metropolitan board of the Y. M.G.A. has promised $7,000. Divided the colored citizens, Baltimore contributed the remaining $4,000. This $4,000 must be raised within 80 days and must be practically all cash.
The committee of management, believing that there are enough people in Baltimore whose interest in the Y.M.C.A. is sufficient to prevent its having to close, accepted the challenge of the Metropolitan board. We are therefore appealing for immediate and generous contributions to this $4,000 fund.
F. A. A. Y. MASONS ELECT OFFICERS
F. A. A. Y. MASONS ELECT OFFICERS
The Most Worshipful Maryland Grand Lodge F. A. A. Y.Masons (national compact) held its annual session September 20.
Prof. S. S. Simmons, N. G. M. presides at the election of the following officers for the ensuing year:
Morris G. Burke, G. M.; Wndyow. D. G. M.; Geo. Queen, G. S. W. Annapolis, Md.; Herman Ennels, G. J. W.; Daniel Price, G. treas.; Henry Wilson, G. sec'y; Noah Lawrence, G. tyler; Dr. Harry Marion Harris, G. W. J. J.; Frown treas.; Charity Dept.; Franck Lapton, G. M. A. M.; Belle Degey, G. Dec. M. A. M.; Renae Jackson, G. S. M.; Renae G. Feggans, G. Sec'y; Lillie G. Jones, G. Treas.; Anne Warren, G. O. G. K.; Mary Thomas, G. Marshall.
BALTIMOREANS WED IN D. C.
WASHINGTON, D.C.-Mrs. Cord C. Nelson, 44, 1816 McCulloch street and Ernest A. Holley, 44, 423 E 23rd st. both of Baltimore, Md. were married here last week by the Rev. George H. West.
ONLY AT SHIELDS
A Bonded HEATING Plant
ASSURES YOU LIFETIME AND A LIFETIME SAVING SATISFACTION
NO DOWN Payment
Take as long as 3 years to pay at slight cost
Guaranteed
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This Includes 6 Radiators, 17-in. Holder, 300 Prest Radiation.
Fear Written Guarantee.
CALL SHIELDS for PLUMBING REMODELING PAINTING PAPERHANGING CARPENTERING ALL HOME SERVICES
SHIELDS
274-26 N. HOWARD ST.
VERNON 6653
BELIEVE IT OR NOT, BUT HE IS UNINJURED
PHOTO
Mrs. Cora Holly Now.
Mardi Gras at Elks.
Rev. Martin to Wed
The Rev. James G. Martin will be wedded to M. Helen Grayson popular hairdresser of 1828 Pennsylvania avenue. The wedding ceremony will be solemnized at Quincy A.M.E. church, at the address of, which the Rev Mr. Martin is the pastor, on Wednesday evening, November 6, at 8 p.m. Miss Ella R. Browne and Miss Edith A. Graham will be the bridesmaids. The Rev J. C. McEddy is to be best man, and the Rev C. E. Promise Me", and the Rev C. E. Stewart will play the wedding march.
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A large reception will follow immediately after the ceremony. Their honeymoon will be taken in the spring.
Bishop A. L. Gaines will perform the ceremony, assisted by the Rev. D. G. Hill.
The couple will live in Frederick.
hotels, smooth roads for autolists and a lake for boating and swimming. Some of the amusements provided are hiking, horseback riding and tennis.
This means that the management provides various amusements, including a lyceum, continuous vaudeville and service at a community church. There is music and dancing everywhere.
Served on Grand Jury
WASHINGTON, D.C., (C.N.S.)—Mrs. Eva Bingham of 1434 Corran street, northwest, was a member of the Grand jury, that indicted Robert McPherson, (white) for the murder of his wife, Mrs. Virginia McPherson.
The dead woman was branded as a suicide by the police, after she was found dead, by strangulation in Park Lane Apartments, on September 14.
WIFE GETS JAILED FOR
BEATING UP VAMP
WASHINGTON, D. C. (CNS)—Judge Schultz in police court Monday, sent Mrs. Claire Johnson to jail for 180 days for slashing Miss May Gregg with a knife. The latter was talking to Claire Johnson's husband and when told to stop and go away, replied, "Did you stop the interview. It took eighteen stitches to close up the wound in Miss Gregg's arm.
Freed but Rearrested
WASHINGTON, D. C. (CNS)—After serving a sentence of ten months in the Maryland House of Correction at Jessups, for theft of property at the Bannockburn Golf club, Noble Madison Price, 20 years old, of southeast Washington, was released but immediately taken into custody for alleged violation of parole.
Lovers Trekked 300 Miles
NORFOLK, VA—Echon Smith, 36, killed his 33 year old wife, Josie and then himself at his home 38 Monticello avenue, last week. Smith moved here from South Carolina and moved from her many maleadmirals down there, but they followed her 300 miles and he killed her out of jealousy.
Successful Lover Slain
LOUISVILLE, Ky.-Henry Brummer, 50, and Mrs. Gertrude Neiderloh, 45, white, are dead and William Miller, 60, is held for double murder.
Miller and the white woman were sweethearts but Brummer undermined him while he was in the hospital.
Auto Overturns; Injures Four
YORK, Pa.-The auto of M. Martin, 129 W. Princess street, overturned as he on route with a party of four to Carlisle- injuring Mrs. Martin. Miss Mary Ellen Page, Clinton Barr and John Hill
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 5, 1929
Powder
the finishing touch to your toilette ~ ~
IT'S ever so important that you pay special attention to the powder you use! Well chosen, it has the magic power to make you more charming and enhance your beauty as nothing else can.
From the seven shades of Poro Face Powder, select the one that blends naturally with your complexion—the one whose delicate caress imparts the touch of perfection.
As you dust on this wonderful powder—sifted through silk to almost unbelievable fineness—you will be captivated by its alluring fragrance. Without effort it spreads softly and evenly over the skin, leaving a smooth velvety film that lasts—truly the finishing touch to your toilette.
Price 50 cents per box. For sale by Poro Agents or order direct from
U. S. to Bury Poor Vets
WASHINGTON, D.C., (C.N.S.)- The Secretary of War would be authorized to pay the burial expenses not to exceed $107. of former service men who are in indigent circumstances while receiving hospitalization and whose burial expenses are not otherwise provided for. under the provisions of a bill introduced in the House recently.
the finish touch to toilette
IT'S ever so important attention to the power it has the magic power to ing and enhance your beauty.
From the seven shades select the one that blends complexion—the one with parts the touch of perfection.
As you dust on this wash through silk to almost you will be captivated without effort it spreads the skin, leaving a smells—truly the finishing.
7 SHADES IN PORO ONE WILL SUIT
1 Poro Brown
2 Light Brown
3 Medium Brown
Price 50 cents per box or order
PORO
4300 St. Ferdinand Avenue
St. Louis, Mo.
Doctor Moves Office
A. B.
DR. JAMES C. CARPER who has practiced medicine for the past eleven years and earned the avenue office and residence to 1433 Madison avenue. He will serve his patients from now on at his Madison avenue office.
HAVERHILL, Mass—Miss Alice R. Roberts, 84 Arlington street, has received word by cable here of the death of her brother, Honorable Isaac Roberts, a member of the Lt. Governor's legislature, in Since county, Liberia.
Miss Roberts will sail for Liberla on October 10.
PHYSICIAN TRIES SUICIDE
LOUISVILLE, KY.-Dr. Walter Adams, physician, tried suicide at his home here, where he has been suffering from a nervous breakdown.
wde
wishing
to your
important that you pay special
powder you use! Well chose
power to make you more charm
your beauty as nothing else can
shades of Poro Face Powder
it blends naturally with you
one whose delicate caress is
perfection.
this wonderful powder—siffl
most unbelievable fineness
vated by its alluring fragrant
spreads softly and evenly over
a smooth velvety film the
wishing touch to your toilet
IN PORO FACE POWDER
WILL SUIT YOU EXACTLY.
Town 4 Dark Brown
Town 5 Brunette
Town 6 Flesh
7 White
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order direct from
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Chicago, Ill.
P
FOR
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MOSES D. JONES
And this will be the road traveled by Moses D. Jones, youthful slayer of his wife, who has served four years of his eight-year term. He was among those recently paroled by Governor Ritchie. Jones, who said that the crime for which he was sentenced was the only real bad thing that he had ever done, is elated over his freedom.
ZULU PRINCESS SAVED
LONDON—Zulu custom which compels the second born of twins to be killed at birth was thwarted by missionaries six and a half years ago when Princess Lillian, of the mkwanai tribe, was saved from the knife of the witch doctor and is now being raised by the Rev. and Mrs. John Hawkins, missionaries, here.
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly
John Moses of the North Insurance company and treasurer of the Bankers' Fire Insurance company, who will celebrate his 53rd birthday, October 10.
PETER B.
Born in
Burke County,
N.G.; he was
educated at
Kittrell
college.
He married
Miss L.
Laken in 1903.
There are two
There are two J. M. Avery children, Jennette and Vivian. He founded and conducted Waters' Academy, 1900-3, and his director and trust officer of the Mechanics and Farmers Bank.
AFRO VISITORS
George H. Pendleton, Tn. Fanida Pendleton, Glarence McL. Pendleton, City, C. L. Towns, Richmond, Mich., P. G. Hoffer and Adolph Haggen, Howard Leonard, Jr., Salisbury, Md., Mr. and Mrs. James D. Blake, Atlantic City, N.J.
Master Cooper T. Payne, Miss Nettle Payne, Gwendolyn Nichols, Mrs. Amie Saints, M. Mrs. Elizabeth Allen, Linda Locklear and Milred Pellet, City. Dr. Lawrence E. Paxton, Mrs. Pellet, B. Paxton and Mrs. Minnie S. Paxton, Roanoke, Va.
Mrs. Hattie Butler, and Mrs. Harriet Forrest Washington, D.C. Lillian E. Pearson, Reagan, Va.
STREET CAR BREAKS LEG
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Miss Clara
Diggs, 23, suffered a broken leg when
she was struck by a street car at
11th and M streets, Southeast.
FINLEY WILSON TO SPEAK IN BALTIMORE
Grand Exalted Ruler to Feature Week's Anniversary of Lodge
Grand Exalted Ruler J. Finley Wilson will lead the out-of-town lodges to Baltimore for Grand Lodge Night of the week's event
[Picture of a man with a mustache and a suit].
tion to be staged here the week beginn ing October 20, by the Pride of Baltimore lodge of Elks, according to John H. Murphy, jr. exalted ruler. Grand Lodge Night will be held Tuesday of the week, and the principal address will be given by Mr. Wilson. A large number of visitors from every section of the state as secessionists from Washington Philadelphia and Delaware will come down to join in the occasion. The anniversary will open with a big concert Sunday evening. October 20, by the Pride of Baltimore band of seventy-five pieces, under direction of A. Jack Thomas.