The Afro-American
Saturday, October 19, 1929
Baltimore, Maryland
Page text (machine-generated)
THE WEATHER
SHOWERS — WARMER
Friday and Saturday
Sun rises: 6:17 a.m. Moon rises: 4:07 p.m.
Sun sets: 3:33 p.m. Moon sets: 2 a.m.
Moon phases: First quarter, 10th full, 19th new, 2nd;
last quarter, 25th.
HOWARD
AFRICANS DREW COLOR LINE AGAINST WHITE EUROPEANS
Native Men Won't Marry Women Who Bear Children to Whites.
CAPETOWN. S. Africa—Native Africans of the Bantu tribe have pride and draw a color line against the whites of Europe.
Information to this effect has just been brought to light by Dr. C. M. Boke, professor of Bantu languages at the University of Witwatersrand.
Prof. Doke tells of Adam Renders, a white American trader, who came to Mashonaland in 1867, deserted the white race completely and went to the natives.
Apparently the Bantu man was greatly liked by them, for he married a native woman, traded with them for rice, eggs and milk, the necessities for his daily food.
White Renders and his Bantu wife had two sons. One of these boys died before his father and was buried. Render himself died about 1876 because he was not given burial because he was not a native. His body
PHIL EDWARDS PLANS TO STUDY AT OXFORD U.
Athlete and Newly Wed Bride Scoff at Ku Klux Klan.
WED THURSDAY
Couple Won't Say Who Performed Ceremony.
NEW YORK—Phil Edwards, captain of the New York university track team, and his white fiancee, Edith Margaret Oedelshoff, were invited Thursday.
The marriage was that postponed until the arrival here of Edwards father, a court judge in British Guiana. Edwards announced Wednesday that he had been married he. He refused to say who had performed the ceremony. After graduation in June the couple will go to England where Edwards will attend Oxford U. He is a former mourner, born in Alaac- Lorraine.
The couple are not disturbed by the request of the Freeport, L.L., Ku Klan Klan against miscegenation.
The Klausman passed a resolution Tuesday night calling upon the legislature to enact, a law prohibiting marriages. Copies have sent to various states, especially Assemblyman Eleanor Wallace and Senator Thomas, to get behind the agreement.
Interrace Love Matches
During the year the Klan has been dismembered by the following six inter- social lore incidents:
Colored Affinities
March 24 - Divorce suit of Mrs. Leroy Unmanman versus Jack Unionman of Atlantic City. 255 Rhode Island avenue. Each accused the other of a colored affinity.
Mideer, Cuban
March 24 - Micheal Miguel, Cuban of Puttsville, Pa. charged with murders of his wife, Louise Jacks, 19, christine Mrs. Clara Fessler - white, school teacher, charged with attempt to aid in his escape of Chicago. 15-17 Virgin Fox, white, daughter of a craft manufacturer in Augusta, Ga. with her four-year-old clooped to Philadelphia with the colored chauffeur, Alexander K^2
Nortons Aart
John S. Eugene Newton New York City, and Dolores E. Ford, wife, daughter of Winn E. Ford, director of Winn-Owen Illinois College, Co. of Tolwedo, O. ce separatior.
Students: Wed
July 11-Miss Editorial Group, 21
July 11-Miss College of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, of Columbia University, married Jerome S. Pigou, colored medical student at Columbia.
From Colored Hubbr
July 11-Anti-Williams, 28, white Canadian, found dead in an apartment by T. Toko, Japanese, I. W. Toko, New York City, from her colored husband in Buffalo was found.
Canadian Beer Gone
Alderman Arrested
GARY, IND. (A.N.P.)—The battle of the federal officers against racketeers and their "protectors" continued when A.C. Whitlock, alderman of the fifth ward, was arrested along with four policemen, on charges of conspiring against the dry law. The arrests on Wednesday brought the police into war with warrants out for ten more. Most of those arrested are police captains and lieutenants. connection is thought to be based on the fact that he was a member of the city council committee to investigate the police several months ago and after several brought the verdict "nothing been connected with the famous "Carling incident" which concerns the disappearance of a truckload of Canadian beer. Blackwell, Gayl's second colored alderman, was also arrested in the vice clean-up last week
Liberian Slave Probe
Okeyed by League
GENEVA, Switzerland—The League
of Nations has agreed to the request
of the Liberian government for the
appointment of an international commission
to inquire whether slavery
and forced labor still exist in Liberia.
The commission is composed of the
three members of the United
American, recommended by the
United States government, and a
third to be recommended by the
League of Nations.
THEAFROAMERICAN
Entered in the Postoffice at Baltimore, Md., as Second-Class Matter under Act of March 6, 1892
ARD U
Liberator Editor Here
NEW COLOR LINE
EUROPEANS
Men Who Bear Children to Whites.
Africans of the Bantu tribe have
just the whites of Europe.
Just been brought to light by Dr. C.
ages at the University of Witwaters-
ders, a white American trader, who
arted the white race completely and
is greatly liked by them, for he mar-
them for rice, eggs and milk, the
wife had two sons. One of these
is buried. Render himself died about
because he was not a native. His
gender's widow desired to marry again.
she had a white man's child with
grants, marries the boy, that the
EDITOR ROTHCHILD FRANCIS
of the Virgin Islands, who was in
the city last week and spoke at the
Y.M.C.A. under the auspices of the
International Labor Defense. He
also visited the AFRO-AMERICAN
BEN BESS AGAIN FREED BY THE S. C. COURT
Supreme Body Rules Governor's Pardon Stands.
17 JUDGES SAT
Innocent Man Served 13 Years in Prison.
COLUMBIA, S. C.—A pardon once issued by the governor of a state cannot be revoked, the State supreme court ruled here late Saturday night by a vote of ten to seven.
There are nineteen circuit judges in the state. Seventeen of them deliberated on the case until late Saturday night. Two other members were disqualified.
As a result of this decision, Ben Bess has served thirteen years of a thirty-year sentence on a white woman's perjured testimony, was set free again.
The woman, Maude Collins, 60, said Bess assaulted her. She was sentenced to prison for thirty years. Last year she admitted that Bess did not assault her. She made an affidavit that effect, but withdrew it after she found herself likely to be jailed for perjury.
Bess, who was pardoned by the governor and freed from prison on the basis of the affidavit, then returned to prison.
The N.A.A. protested and contested $300 toward the court fees.
Lawyers for Bess contended that a pardon once issued could never be revoked even if it were discovered by the governor that the pardon had been obtained by fraud. The supreme court
Bess was a prosperous farmer fifteen years ago and the Collins woman and that he was intimate with her with her husband's consent.
Paris Crowd Tries to Lynch White Slayer
Paris Crowd Tries to Lynch White Slayer
MARSEILLES. France—a crowd of white Frenchmen made an effort to lynch Francis Carbone. 23 dance; after he had fired five letters to the French Hrylla, African Senegalese, in a quarrel over a white girl.
Carbone and two of his friends, having passed the night with a woman of the underworld named Aylan gave her two hundred francs and took them back.
Sylla, protector and friend of the girl, saw Carbone and demanded explanations, whereupon the latter extirpated him behind a building and
Talk Bank Merger
WASHINGTON, D. C.—(ANP)—A movement is on foot to consolidate the Industrial Savings Bank and the Prudential Bank of this city, both owed and operated by members of the group. The merger would together resources more than $1,000,000 in the new institution.
Depositors Get 11 P.C.
SAVANNAH, GA. (ANP) — The depositors of the defunct Wage Earners Savings Bank are now being paid the first and final dividend of eleven and one-half per cent.
INSANE LOVER CONFESSES HE SLEW GIRL
Virginian, Conscience- Stricken, Surrenders in Boston.
TAKEN TO N. Y.
"I Love Her Still," Is Constant Wail.
BOSTON, Mass.—Suffering from the pangs of a guilty conscience, haunted by the death cries of his sweetheart, and the ghastly look on her dying face, Colonel N. Heidelberg, 32, of 56 West 130th street, New York. walked into the editorial room of a Boston newspaper Saturday afternoon, asked to speak to a reporter, telling him, "I killed my sweetheart in Harlem last Wednesday and I want to confess." Police Headquarters were notified and to the reporter stallering for time waiting for Inspector Coleman Joyce, Heidelberg made the following confession, which was later told to Inspector Ainsley Armstrong at Police Headquarters.
Proud and Bad
Heidleich said, "She was proud and she was bad. She took me and ruined me, kept me away from my wife and family, but I still love her. I love her yet. I have been following her poor body around, trying to get a last look at her before they buried her. I met Babe in Worcester five years ago. I came up from down in Newborn. N.C. where I left my wife. I took a job in Worcester, washing cars for a Mr. Barsker in the Daylight Barber in Green Bay. Her mother was Arline Robinson and she had been married. She was living at 78 Market St. Worcester, when I met her. I was going around with her sister, Mary Terry, and I met that. She made Mary give me up.
Lived in Portsmouth
Wouldn't Drink
"She was bad, she was. She did not want me to work. She wanted me to be a sporting man, to make whiskey. But I did not want to do that. I told her about my mother, how she raised me. I wouldn't drink, with her, and it made Babe mad. I knew had to get away from her and I went back to folk to my wife. But I did not stay. I went right back to Babe."
Took Every Cent
"I earned $40 a week in the garage. She took every cent. I bought a piano and a radio and furniture for w flat in Brooklyn. My conscience bothered me. I my life was told and didn't know how to hold a man. But I left Babe and got me a room over at Mrs. Wright's at 56 West 130th street, Harlem, Sloc
No Spittoon Cleaner
CHICAGO—Mrs. Ida B. Wells Barnett, 3624 S. Parkway, speaking at a political meeting in opposition to the senatorial candidate of Democrat Paul Hanna McCormick, white, said that Leroy M. Hardin, a confidential secretary in her office, passed four years, was in reality a splitton cleaner. I am going to ask you to retract
political meeting in opposition to a senatorial candidate of Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick, white, sexualual,敏y M Hardin, a confidential secretary in her office for the past four years, was in rehab, a splitoon cleaner.
"I am going to ask you to retract such a statement publicly or to me Ida Wells Barnett in writing, or I will proceed to place the matter in the hands of an attorney."
"This is the second time you have attacked me ni the efforts to belittle me in the public's eye.
"No matter what grevience you may have against Mrs. McCormick for her campaign, there have to handle her campaign, it is no reason why you should attack me."
Good Wives Picked by Bigamist
Good Wives Picked by Bigamist
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.—(A.N.P.) A bricklayer, who formerly lived in Cleveland, and New York, was found guilty of bigamy here last week by a jury. He had married into the best families of New Jersey and Alabama. Mrs. James Martin. No. 1, was formerly a Miss Heron, of Birmingham, Ala., a nurse in Dr. Herndon White's hospital, Baltimore, and now head nurse of Hope Day Nursery, in New York. Mrs. James Martin. No. 2, was formerly a Miskel Jones, of Newark, graduate of Mt. Clair, J.N. Normal school.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 1929
THE FEDERAL NATIONAL HISTORY SOCIETY
NEW ELK TREASURER RECEIVES $46,000 IN TURNOVER AT CHICAGO
MORRIS COLLEGE PREXY HEADS BENEDICT
Merger of Two S. C. Schools Is Announced by Trustees. ALL RACE PROFS.
Whites Complained of Will Resign.
COLUMBIA, S. C.—Benedict College, Columbia, and Morris College, Sumter, are to be combined, effective at the beginning of the 1930-1931 school year, it was decided at a meeting of the trustees of the two institutions, held Tuesday.
The Benedict trustees accepted a proposal that came from Morris College. Morris College becomes a Junior College with two years' of college work and theological education. Benedict, which is to have its position strengthened, both as to curricula and finances.
The present academic department of Benedict will be transferred to Morris College.
At the same time it was announced that the Northern Baptist church, white, heretofore sponsors of Benedict, will be the institution ever to the colored Baptists of South Carolina, and that in the future the instructors, with one exception, will all be colored. The exception will be Rev. C. B. Antiselid. The exception will be Rev. C. B. Antiselid. who is president of Benedict, and who will, under the new system, head a new theological school. The institution is now composed of white people.
Change of President
Rev. J. J. Stark. D.D. new president of Morris College, will be president of Benedict. The new president of Morris College will be named lance
Teachers to Resign
Among the white teachers at Bendick who will resign at the end of the school year, white, whose Ph.D. degree from Providence University was questioned by a recent government survey of the school. No such college can be lo-
Students Struck
Last year, students struck, protested against Dean Redfern's presence on the campus. Adjustment was promised at the close of the year.
Benedict College is Glass A, with eight white and four colored tractors. College property is valued at $34,911. There are 104 college students, 257 in the prep and 175 in the rest. Its annual income is $33,277, including $8,460 from endowment, $6,600 from white Baptists, and $1,157 from colored friends. Total value of Morris College plant is set at $24,600. The annual income is $73,180, $38,000 of which comes from Negro Baptists. Total totals 63 in college, 20 in foreign training, and 244 prepa.
6 WED AT BELAIR
Jerome Preston, 23. Belair: Marjorie Jones, 18
John S. Stevenson., 21. Joppa, Md.; Mary
Tolliver, 18.
Joseph Bolgano, 26, Harvie de Grace; Mary Elta Hall, 20.
Howard Hawkins, 22, Lydium; Julia R. Klein, 18, Grace.
Caria Mills Taylor, 22, Belair; Gadjee Genevieve Wilson, 25.
Gilbert, 25, Fountain Green, Hilda, Marte Warfield, Feryman, 18.
CHICAGO, Illinois — (CNS). J. Finley Wilson, grand exalted ruler of the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World, and Perry W. Howard, grand legal adviser of the order, witnessed a turnover of $46,000 of the grand lodge funds from the former treasurer, James C. Martin, of this city, to Henry S. Warner, the new grand treasurer. Refusing to support Martin in an attempt to withhold the fees of the lodge from the grand lodge as a protest against the increased fees, he recorded as heartily endorsing the administration and its program. Martin was unable to get a second when he stepped down from the chair to make his radical changes for this apparent change of front, members of the lodge declared that they were willing to face a challenge to the further embarrassment. Fort Dearborn lodge was suspended on a similar techni-
CHARLOTTE, N. C. (ONS)—The "Labor Jury," two Negro and ten white workers, sent by the Cleveland Trade Union unity convention to observe the Gastonia trial of seven members of the National Textile Workers Union and render a verdict to the working class, was thrown out of the court. Just before the court convened the twelve workers entered and took seats together. The court attendant immediately told the Negro members of the jury, Charles Frank and Solomon Harper, members of the New York branch of the American Negro Labor Congress, that they were in the balcony, as Negroes were not permitted with whites. The union in the balcony, as a protest against this racial discrimination and started in the balcony.
JUDGE ALARMED BY SOLIDARITY.
diligently alarmed the Southern judge balcony a second attendant rushed up that for this trial no Negroes would labor jury protested against this the and drove them out. In the after-court and marched in a body to the remain unmolested.
AN ENGAGED TO CANDY GIRL
English Women Were Disappointed.
National bit of news in Western Europe Agha Khan, Indian religious leader, his richest men, to Mile. Odette Car- occupation of selling candy behind the Indian prince came in to make a his time in England, and it is said flat feminine circles in England for chest widower would have taken an Thesela of Italy. In color, the Image Negro of mixed blood in the
This gesture of working-class solidarity alarmed the Southern judge and before the jury could get to the balcony a second attendant rushed up to the court room and be allowed in the court room at all, neither downstairs nor in the balcony. When the white workers on the labor jury protested against this court threatened them all with arrest and drove them in the aftermath of the attack, they were permitted to remain unmolested.
DARK EAST-INDIAN ENGAGED TO MARRY FRENCH CANDY GIRL
DARK EAST-INDIAN ENGAGED TO MARRY FRENCH CANDY GIRL
First Wife Was Italian Princess—English Women Were Disappointed.
PARIS.—The week's most sensational bit of news in Western Europe is the reported engagement of the Agha Khan, Indian religious leader, turb magnate and one of the world's richest men, to Mile, Odette Carron, white.
Mile Carron was at work at her occupation of selling candy behind a counter at Aix-le-Bains when the Indian prince came in to make a purchase, and fell in love with her.
The Agha Khan spends most of his time in England, and it is said that the nsw is not welcome in certain feminine circles in England, for it was thought that the world's richest widower would have taken an English "ke."
The wife was the Princess Theresa of Italy. In color, the Indian prince is darker than the average Negro of mixed blood in the United States.
RACE QUESTION IN NORTH CAROLINA TRIAL
Belief in Social Equality Enough to Discredit a Witness, Attorney Says.
RED LEADER SPEAKS
W. Z. Foster Believes in Race Equality and Intermarriage.
CHARLOTTE, N.C.—If a white man believes in social equality, anything else he says ought to be discredited.
This was the view of State's Attorney Jake dewell, examining witnesses in the Gastonia murder trial, in the effort to find out who killed Police Chief Adernicht, white.
Dewey Martin, white, the Communist organizer, was on the state's list of people who Martin was not to be believed because he had spoken from the same platform with Otto Hall, a colored man of New York, and that Martin believed in race equality.
Martin's bill ruled that matter of social equality would not be admitted and urged the attorneys to stick to the case at hand.
William Z. Foster, white, Communist leader, and Solomon Harper, New York colored Communist leader, were charged with the authorship of the National Textile Workers' Union, here Saturday.
Foster declared that racial equality is a part of the Communist program. He said:
The Negro is now in the same situation as the Jew was in Russia before the revolution. The Jew was repressed, slain by thousands and regarded everywhere as an inferior race.
"Today the Jew has gained full social equality in America. The Negro has gained full social equality in Russia.
"The theory of inferior races is simply a conjecture that is felt by different races. When my father came to this country the signs and advertisements were everywhere saying, 'No Negro.'"
He was reared as an inferior race.
"The Anglo-Saxon race is made up of races one regarded as inferior. The Normans looked down on the blacks and on the blacks. The scientists hold that there is no basis for the theory that the Negroes are inferior racially, or that the mixed races are inferior. It is purely a matter of prejudice and racial condescension." "Where white men and black men work together we will organize them together. We stand for social, political and racial equality the fullest extent."
Back Quinn for Minister
PLAINFIELD, N.J.-Friends of Dr. Walter Charles Quinn, who have sent letters to President Hcover, urging him for the vacant post of Minister to Liberia, have received courteous replies from the President and State Secretary, with signed by two hundred persons was sent in Sunday.
New National Bank
CHICAGO, (A.N.P.)—Stock in the New South Parkway National Bank, which will soon open its doors here, is being sold at $25 per share. This is the first bank stock ever offered to the public. The stock will range from $100. Charles Jackson will serve as president of the new institution capitalized at $200,000.
Police Indicted for Murder
Police Indicted for Murder
CHICAGO—Lieut. Philip Carroll, who was member of the squad, were inimical to the grand jury, and suspended from duty for the murder of Octavius G. Grannady, attorney, in the April, 1928 election.
No Use Voting G. O. P. in New York
NEW YORK—There is no use voting for the Republican party in this city, according to William H. Austin, attorney, Democratic candidate for derman from the Twenty-first district, whose campaign is being directed by Dr. John O. Oliver. "New York is overwhelmingly Democratic." Mr. Austin said. "All the departments and firms are filled by appointments by a Democratic
derman from the Twenty-first district whose campaign is being directed by Dr. Hudson J. Oliver "New York is overwhelmingly D. no more than A. Amtil said." All the departments and offices are filled by appointments. Democrat mayor. Wm. J. Austin Democratic party runs the subways, cleans the trees, gives us police protection, guards our homes from fire, provides parks, schools and every other municipal requisition. Mr. Austin came to this country thirty years ago from the West Indies and is chairman of the boys' work of the Y.M.C.A. He says that the Republicans cannot truly represent its people, the democratic board believes there is such a small group of them that the Democrats shut them out.
Fred Douglass's Cousin Dead at 87
ST. MICHAELS, Md.-Thomas H. Caldwell, 87, prominent churchman here, and cousin of Frederick Douglass, died in the Easton an automobile accident several weeks ago, in which he was injured.
He was a member of Union M.E. Church for seventy-three and a local preacher for fifty-seven years. Fulbright was a church minister for 7th, the church, the Rev. F. H. Quinn, pastor. Other assisting ministers were, the Rev. J. W. Bond of Chester, Pa.; the Rev. T. H. Khal. of Princess Anne, Pa.; the Rev. J. H. district superintendent; the Revs. W. C. Jason, T. W. Cooper, W. T. Spellman, J. T. Wallace, C. W. Dickerson, J. N. C. Davis, E. Thomas, J. A. Fassett, J. A. Fassett, the local A.M. E. Church. He is survived by one sister, Mrs. Hester Jackson
N Y Has Parole Officer
NEW YORK-For the first time in the history of the State, a colored man is acting as a parole officer.
Arthur Thomas is a civil service appointee. He is one of the paroled prisoners, both white and colored.
cality at the Atlantic City convention.
The trustee board, in session in the week last week, plans for a membership drive through which they hope to enroll thousands of new members before the next convention. They also worked with the board to increase the expenses of the order, to meet the increased expenses of the 193 program.
At the meeting of the educational board 50 four-year staff members, they awarded $250 and totally awarded $8,000 for each year, were awarded. They were paid from the $30,000 educational fund.
Exalted Ruler Wilson and Mr. Howard spent several days in Detroit, visiting the lodges and meeting with the state leaders of the order who are united for the first time in many years.
Warring factions have forgotten their difference: in their determination to make the 1930 convention for them, they are planning, the successes in the history of the organization.
Edition
This Paper Consists of
TWO SECTIONS—20 PAGES
"MAMBA'S DAUGHTERS" AND
"My Love Tangle," a True Story, Pg. 11
Prices 6 CENTS IN CITY 7 CENTS IN STATE 10 CENTS ELSEWHERE
CHICAGO WOMEN PROTEST IMPORTATION OF MRS. TERRELL
3. Illinois. (CNS)—Colored women voters here are questioning the governor's decision to send Mary Church Terrell of Washington, D.C. to Chicago, to manage her campaign for nomination as Republican candidate in the United States Senate, at the South Side.
Incedent over the appointment of Mrs. Terrell, who hails from "voteless and Jim-Grow Washington," the women are abandoning the McCormick ranks in great numbers, according to reports. The past six years of the McCormick-owned Chicago Tribune are being used as issues in the drive of the women to recruit other voters to their ranks in their revolt against "Lady McCormick" and the leadership of Mrs. Terrell. They also accuse that Senator McCormick was responsible for the selection of New York Tammany man to a foreign post, which, Chicago will claim, was due a member of the eighth Illinois regiment.
PRETTY HAMPTON CO-ED LOCATED IN NEW YORK
Police Locate Missing Student in Harlem Apartment.
GONE 9 DAYS
Dissatisfied, She Left School for Home.
HAMPTON, Va.—Home-sick, depressed because of her failure to advance in her work as fast as she expected, Miss Elinor Johnson, Hampton co-ed, left here for her home in New Bedford, Mass., September 28.
She telegraphed her mother she would arrive at home by way of a steamer from Norfolk to New York next day, but it was not until a distraught and frantic mother put the police of New Bedford, Norfolk, New York and Hampton to work that Miss Johnson was located eight days later at the home of Mrs. M. Taylor, 187 W. 18th Street, New York. Her mother was notified. No explanations were made public.
Father Is Dead
Miss Johnson's brother. Elsworth an accomplished musician, is organist at the A. M. E. Zion Church in New Bedford. Her father is dead.
Garvey Attorney Is Fined $1,500
JAMAICA. B.W.I.-Lewis Aisenheim, Marcus Garvey's attorney, was fined $1,500 on two charges of contempt of court here, last month. He was accused of intimidating the auctioneer and publicly advising prospective purchasers not to buy Liberty Hall, which the courts had ordered sold in order to prevent the agreement. The district of New York. Aisenheim paid his fine. For alleged disrespectful references to the judges, Mr. Garvey himself, and sentenced to three months in jail. He has already begun to serve his term.
Hold Dean's Shirt
WILBERFORCE, O.-The sophomores defeated the freshmen in their annual shirt rush here, Saturday, when they were in the dept. of the college, was placed in a tree on the lawn leading to the school library about eight feet from the ground. Sophomores defended it while the freshmen in the computer possession of it. The contest lasted fifteen minutes. A freshman hand book, special freshman cap, and a government student, greeted the incoming first year class here.
Klan Visits Blackshear
BROOKLYN — Twenty-five members of the Ku Klux Klan attended services at St. Matthew's P.E. Church, white. Sunday morning, the clan held a delegation of 100 colored people would attend, under the auspices of the N.A.A.C.P. and intended to see that it didn't get in. The Rev. Mr. Blackshear, "whom someone ago asked colored members to leave the church, said: 'I do not need the klan's services in my church. If any colored people come, they will be treated like anybody else. I will not tolerate any dis-
MRS. MENARD NAMED
WASHINGTON.- Mrs. Edith Menard has been appointed physiotherapist at the new school for eripped children at the Magruder Building, M. Meees.
The school will open November 1.
CHICAGO WOMEN
IMPORTATION OF
CHICAGO, Illinois. (CNS)—Questioning the "more
Cormick to Chicago to
ton as Republican can
among the voters of
Incensed over the
hails from "voteless a
men are abandoning a
bers, according to report
The anti-George
Tribune are being
women to recruit other
H. U. PROGRESS IS LITTLE SHORT OF MARVELOUS
Dr. Johnson Secured $900,000 in Gifts Last Year.
DORMS FOR GIRLS
Separate Residential
Separate Residential Area Planned.
WASHINGTON.—Howard university's progress in two years under the presidency of Dr. Mordecai Johnson has been little short of marvelous. Last year the U.S. Government appropriation for Howard totalled $500,000. In addition, gifts totalling $500,000 were secured from friends of the university.
Modesty itself. President Johnson has made no announcement of the donors. In all his talks to alumni and students he has not hinted at the names of Howard's benefactors.
Full-time Professors
Additional funds this year enabled the dental school for the first time to have full-time professors.
Last week forty-four appointments were announced in the university nearly a year ago, studying for the degree of doctor of philosophy. Three Howard graduates last week began to function as deans—Dean Edward P. Davis; college; Dean Numa P. Adams; medical school; Dean Donald Dicuna, dental school.
Bids for Women's Dormitory
Bids have been received for the construction of a dormitory for women and men. W. Johnson, announced Saturday. The date for the opening of the bids and the letting of the contract has not yet been fixed, he said. The plans for the dormitory have been finished. They were drawn by Albert I. Cassell. They have been approved by the Commission of Fine Arts, and the plans for five dormitories which are to be built for women and will constitute a separate women's residential area, Dr. Johnson said. Dr. Johnson, asked to comment on the request, said he would teach teachers in natural sciences, books on natural sciences, books on law, books on social sciences, books for the dental library, graduate scholarships and physical training extension."
Cow-Calling Contest at Tri-State Fair
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Some 15,000 Tri-State Colored Fair, which will be persons are expected Saturday at the Mississippi Day. — A feature is a cow-calling contest for women, and a hog-calling contest for men.
A.K.A. LEADS AT K. U.
LAWRENCE, Kans. — The Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority leads in scholarships at the University of Kansas, Regis University. O. Forton announces a week.
ROSCOE IS AFTER DEPRIEST'S SEAT
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HEIRS SEEK $32,000
GRAVES ESTATE
SKELETON BARED
Hotel Owner Said to Have Lived Apart from Wife.
WASHINGTON, D. C.-Heirs of Joseph S. Graves, cafe proprietor who died April 20, 1928, are involved in litigation over his $32,000 estate.
Mr. Mack Connors, 1928, 20th St. N.W. asked the court to authorize and direct the sale of the real estate left by Mr. Graves, to appoint a trustee to sell and convey it, and require Mr. Mimim to hold the widow and administratrix of the estate, to account to his heirs for the rents received by her from his property since his death.
Three Co-defendants
Mrs. Graves is a daughter of Mr. Graves by a former marriage. In her petition she names as co-defendants with the widow, Mrs. Annie E Baker, a sister of the petitioner, 2008 Twelfth street northwest, and Bernice Robinson, aged 16 years, and Sterling G. Robinson, aged 18 years, and children of a deceased daughter of Mr. Graves and Mrs. Minnie L. Graves.
Dissinated
This estate. Mrs. Connoe charges in her bill of complaint, is being discharged, and is charged in Mrs. Connors also charges that Mrs. Graves has no interest in the estate except as his administratrix Her step-mother, his colleagues, the judge, and Mr. Graves in the District Supreme Court on July 27, 1922, of them being for an absolute divorce from him and the other for the reformation of certain deeds.
Sought Dower
The two suits were dismissed July 6, 1922. Mr. and Mrs. Graves having settled their differences. An agreement, which was the basis of the lawsuit, was filed in the office of the recorder of deeds of the District of Columbia. By this agreement Mr. Graves gave Mrs. Graves certain property and she relinquished all claims to lower in property he owned or might afterwards acquire
Lived Apart
Mrs. Connors says that her father and Mrs. Graves lived separately and apart after the signing of this agreement and never resumed marital relations. Mrs. Connors consented to the appointment of Mrs. Graves as administratrix of her father's estate after filing an intervening petition asking for the appointment of a collector to take charge. She explains that she did so on the assurance that she would be the administratrix would have joint control of the estate with Mrs. Graves. Such joint control was not taken by the
surely, she declares.
Rents $350 a Month
Mrs. Connors claims that Mrs. Graves did not file an inventory of the money and debts due to her, until the Register of Deposits issued a citation for failure to do so. The notice filed April 13 last showed assets of $648. His real estate is bringing assets of $350 a month.
Mrs. Connors says. She states that she does not know how much monthly rent is due to property known as "Graves Hotel." Mrs. Graves as administratrix of the estate is collecting these rents.
Harian Wood and J. P. Donovan
represents Mrs. Connors.
Plan Concert Series
The Coleridge Taylor Choral Society, Alfred Taylor, director, and the Amphibian Glee Club, director, and the oldest musical aggregations in the city, opened their winter activities at the Cleveland Community Center last week, and助Plans for a series of concert dates will be announced at the attention of music lovers through the east. The Amphibians program includes a public appearance, a concert with the musical community, the choir of Metropolitan A.M.E. Church and a concert early in December at the Garnet Patterson Junior High School. Heads Shaw Parent-Teachers. Mrs. Principella Clark was elected president of the Shaw Junior High School Parent-Teachers Association on Saturday evening after the organization was opened for the fall meeting of the organization was held.
Other officers elected were, A. S. Rucker, secretary, and W. P. Goodhue, treasurer.
secretary and W. P. Goodhue, treasurer,
the speaker. 2000-2001, Assistant Superintendent
Garnet G. Wilkinson and the Reverend
Bob L. McKinney. 2001-2002, Nearly
are hundred parents attended.
Dr. Dyett Back from Europe.
Dr. Russell Dyett has just returned after a year of intensive study in Europe.
He is a graduate of Howard Medical School, and an interned at Fredholm hospital, and a graduate of Washington D.C., the New York and Florida board examinations, and the Florida board examinations, he sailed for Edinburgh, Scotland, where he spent seven months post graduate work at the Royal College of Surgeons in gynaecology and general medicine, and at the American Medical Institute, sciences, surgical anatomy, clinical surgery and ex-ray plate reading.
He went to Venna, and, as a member of the American Medical Association of Vienna, continued his work. Several months were spent in Budapest on operations under the supervision of the Vienna Wereby and Medical Dr. Dyett is the first colored surgeon to attend the clinics in Budapest. He home he visited clinics at Switzerland and Berlin.
Pastor's Wife Buried
Funeral services for Mrs. Alice Bone, wife of the Rev. E. H. Bone, were held from the 19th to the 20th of October. Bone died at her home, 82 Pickford place, northeast, October 10. Besides her husband, her mother, Mrs. Lucinda Brown and a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Brown.
Heads Bach-Bens
THE WOMEN
These popular Howard co-eds were downhearted last Saturday, although their team failed to win from Smith College. They are, left to right: Misses Ida Milton, Juanita James, Elise Dowling and Edna Dowling.
D.C.Society
Recital in Baltimore.
A large number of the Washington friends of the Baltimore Conservatory of Music are planning to attend the autumn opening afternoon, October 20, at three oclock at the Sharp Street Methodist Church in Baltimore. Mr. Wellington Adams is the director. Miss F. E. White will be mistress of ceremetry.
Metropolitan Recital.
The senior choir and choral club of Metropolitan A.M.E. Church will present Maude G. Bemuthers, soprano, in Bemuthers' Thursday, November 6. It was announced recently.
The rectal is being managed by Dr. R. T. Nelson, Mrs. Corinne C. McCampbell, and Mrs. Emily Gibson. The rectal will accompany the artists, on this occasion.
Miss Williams Instructs
MISS VIRGINIA Williams is instructing classes in sight-reading and piano playing and Friday nights in the Garnet-Patterson night school, to which she is welcoming all persons interested in music. The classes are a part of the night school curriculum and there is no charge made.
Alumnae Club.
Cards are out for the tea to be given by the College Alumni Club of Washington in honor of the delegates to the annual meeting of the College for the Study of Negro Life and History. The tea will be a large affair to which several hundred guests are expected. The tea will be served by the Gauze Guy-Moore on Sunday evening. October the twelfth-seventh, from six to eight o'clock.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 1929
Bridge Supper.
Misses Antoinette Wilson and Elise Rogers were the hostesses at a delightful little bridge supper Saturday night at Mrs. Rogers'. home on Second street.
The guests were Dr. and Mrs. Merrill, Mrs. Mildred Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Davidson, Dr. Walter Garvin, Dr. Ira Dews and Mr. Kurt Sarnes, served from a table lovely with pink roses and sparkling with rose-tinted glassware, softly lighted by the glow of candles.
Elks Ball.
One of the first functions to be given in the Crystal Ballroom of the Lincoln Center is to be given there on Tuesday evening, October 29, by the Columbia Temple of St. Mary's, Mrs. Aletha Williams is daughter ruler. The committee in charge of the affairs are Mrs. Ailetha Williams, vice-chairman; Margaret Ford, secretary; Ailetha Robinson, treasurer; Bettie Williams, Princess Petee, Mildred Williams, Princess Eleanor, Maury Lee, Maibel Crawford, Mary E. Harris, Beste Taylor, Carlie Cypress, Sarah Tucker, Isabella Hell, Mattle Hill, Sarah Tucker, Isabella Hell, Mattle Hill,
Miller. Printer
Mr. Paul Miller, youngest son of and Mrs. Kelly Miller, who for years has been a teacher at his small scale, has opened his new print shop, "Miliprakro," at 2004 Georgia avenue, where he is now prepared to do business in a small business. Much to the amusement of his friends, Paul swapped his first bond for a printing press more than a decade ago. His work for neighborhood clubs and later for organizations of Howard University. Va., has returned to this city to complete his job at Dunbar high school, where she is a senior.
D.C. Society
D.C. Society
Taylor Addition.
A nine-pound baby boy, Cecile De Wint
Taylor, arrives at the hospital with her
mother, and Mrs. Walter J. Taylor,
of 1444 Swain street, much to the de-
sign of their charming little daughter,
Mrs. Taylor is a statistician of the
Department of Statistics, and Mrs.
Taylor is employed in the postal service
Association Scholarship
At the regular weekly meeting of the Insurance Managers' association of the District of Columbia, held in April 2014, the association itself to move the movement fostered by the Inter-Federal Council, to give scholarships to those students at Howard University, in Atlanta, Georgia. A committee consisting of William Stevenson (chairman), B. V. Lawson and Charles Feenning was appointed to work out details and report at the next regular week.
$6,000 Curtis Home.
Dr. Arthur L. Curtis has been granted a building permit to make structural alterations at his northwest, at least, 4,000 ft. He will make his home about his first floor office.
Bridge.
The Thursday Nite Bridge club met last Saturday evening at the home of Mrs. Nelia Thorne. Those present included Miss Caroline Callaway, Mrs. Trevian Guy, Mrs. Sara Arnold, Mrs. Trevian Guay, Mrs. Joel Simms, Mrs. Hilda Brown, Mrs. DeWitt Perkinson, Mrs. Lucas Lucas and Mrs. Thomas. The meeting was for the purpose of planning and planning for the culinary and gardening season.
University Preacher.
Prof. Roland H. Dainton of Yale University was the speaker at religious services in the Rankin Memorial Chapel on Sunday. He was urged the Chrisman Life as the most appropriate way of commemorating the death of Christ. A large audience of students and visitors heard him. Services were presided over by the Rev. William Stuart Nelson, administrative assistant to the university president, Music rendered by the choir on Sunday. He was I Watched for the Lord," and I Watched for the Lord," from Mendelssohn's "Hymn of Praise." For the offer, Miss Louise Byrd, contrina, sang. Miss Pamela Fellows, eloquent, lost Dr. Dainton's address, the song burelsh's arrangement of "Swing Low, Swing Charity." The speaker of Sunday will be Prof. E. E. Burchard of Union Theological Seminary, Schenected, N.Y.
Delvers' Literary Club.
The Delivers' Literary Club, the oldest club in Washington, devotes its life to literature with a meeting at the home of Miss Susie P. Quander, 745 Fairmont street, northwest, Thursday, inoving officers were elected for the current year: Rev. George A. Parker, president; Mrs. Martha B. Parker, vice president; Kidick, secretary; Miss Louise R. Lewis, assistant secretary, and Miss Margaret L. Braxton, treasurer. The programmen: John W. Johnson, Mrs. Martha H. Winton, and Mrs. Marie Bragg, reported. The books to be read this Thursday, and "SeaCrest Sister Mary," by Julia PeterKim "Experience and Nature," by John W. Johnson "Anthropology and Modern Life," by Franz Bonz "Folk Beliefs of the Southern Negro," by Newell W. Johnson "Life," by Joseph S. Collins; also Color, by Countine Cullen "What the Negro Thinks," by R. R. Mooson "Mortal Marriage," by Ben Lindsey "Ogrant Orations and Their Orations," by Carter G. Woodson "Ulysses," by the American Life Problem, by E. S. Reuter. The club plans to entertain the Association meeting of the American Life and History, the latter part of this month, when it meets in Washington.
High School Cadet
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D. C. Society
Roland Grayson, second battalion: Harry A Breedlove, fourth battalion, Second Lieutenant, Supply Officers, William Hawkins, second battalion: Vernon Reynolds, fourth
Captain Starks
Captains: H. H. Starks, Alonzo B Turner, Wendell H. Cooper, Bernard L. Coleman, Alfred H. Cooper, L. Coleman, First Bristol, William H. M. Ailey, Horace Lloyd, Wilbur C. Wallace Robert Swales and Chauney W. Grimes Second Lieutenants: James Johnson, William Carson, Haywood Furr. Robert Marshall, Rudolph Simpson and Elmore G. Moran
Cadet Band
The high school cadet band will be under the command of Captain Lutheir Grichow, the captain of the Lloyds Dunbar, and James Green, Armstrong. The following officers are unattached: Captain Home Adams Armstrong; Captain John Duncan; First Lieutenant Theodore Reed, Dunbar; Second Lieutenant Henry Burrell, Armstrong, and Second Lieutenant Tomlinson 4d, Armstrong.
Miss Wormley Ill.
Miss Edith Wormley, charming daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. Sumner Wormley, is confined to her home suffering from a severe attack of plueritis while she is in the hospital. [WA, EUROPE]
It will still be several weeks before she will be able to return to her studies at Miner Normal School, where she is leading her class, although she is reported improv-
Howard Night at Musolit Honors New Deans
"Howard University Night" opened the 1929-30 season at the Musical Hall, where he met the new dean of Howard University and Dr. Mordecal W. Johnson, president, as guests of honor. There were more than a hundred members of the president, Dr. Daniel Renfro, called the meeting to order and introduced Mr. Mortimer to the executive committee, who presided.
The first speaker of the evening, Vice Dean Charles Renfro, was the new work of the law department not as a radical departure from prior methods but as a new development. The students, whose aims were to turn out to law as the finished product of the law school, "social engineer" equipment, were to effect the race in its social relations with one another, with the members of other races and in fact the members of the medical schools. Dr. Donald Donawas of the dental school, and Dr. E. P. Davis of the college of liberal arts, all of plans and aims of their
President Mordeel Johnson of the University, who was introduced as the guest he gave him to listen to the talks of the young deans who had recently been called to their high position, was a man of character and ability. You greeting here tonight is a silent surrender to the positions in which you are in placing these young men in these positions voted not as their hearts wanted to carry them, but as their minds had done. Passing from distinctively university masters, Dr. Johnson stressed the importance among the members of poorer communities for cultural and uplift. He challenged themselves, assuring them that they would find almost anywhere a rich field of enlightenment and an opportunity to know some of the most interesting people in the world. MIDD ENA WILLIESTON, the popular "Peggy," has been unable to register for the annual quarter at Howard because of illness. She is now confined to her bed with pluessy but is now reported on the road.
MRS. WELKINSON, mother of Mr. Garnett
and Mr. Fred Wilkinson, is improving
along spell of illness. She is confined
and has been hospitalized. Mr. and
Mr. John C. Bruce.
The Nation
T'SS
D.C. BIRTHS, DEATHS,
MARRIAGES—PAGE 19
MR. THOMAS H. R. CLARKE was in New York City over the week-end on a short business trip. During his visit he was the dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Rosec at the Dunbairn Garden Apartments.
MR. RUTH ATWOOD will be the first hostess of the season to the "Bluebirds," entertaining them at the Whitekaw on October 25.
MR. AND MRS. DUVAL EVANS are receiving the congratulations and wishes of their friends at the age born in the Linwood apartments at Zievebeth and Euclid streets. Mrs. Evans, before her marriage, was Mrs Edith Chandler, teacher of physical training at Dunbairn High School.
MR. AND MRS. THOMAS H. R. G. LARKER entertained at dinner Monday evening after attending an organization of War Mothers of all nationalities for world peace. Madame Herdin hopes that the organization has sons saw service in the last war, and is inviting them to join the organization and attend the meeting of the international group in Paris. DR. AND MRS. FRANK JONES molested to attend the Navy-Notre Dame football game last week. MR. AND MRS. GEORGE E. C. HAYES also attended the game. DR. AND MRS. NORMAN C. HARRIS and Mrs. Dorothy Leon plan to drive to Philadelphia for the football game next week. A LARGE GROUP OF WASHINGTONIANS are planning to attend the Hampton-Lincoln football game in the spring. 2, which will be the occasion of a gala week-end in Harlem. ON ACCOUNT OF THE ILNESSES of her baby daughter, Mrs. Susan Duckworth, teaching here, was forced to return to Morristown, New Jersey, where she and Dr. Graddick have been making a series of since leaving school years ago.
DR. AND MRS. ARTHUR L. CURTIS are entertaining Club Finesse Thursday night, which marks the beginning of the third season of the 909 S.T. club. It is spending a few days in Boston, Massachusetts, with relatives and friends.
MRS. MARIAN D. BULTLER of 1752 T street northwestern to her sister weeks resting from neutrals. She is improving slowly.
THE INDUSTRIAL DEPARTMENT of the Women's Federation with permission from the Township at Trinity Baptist Church of which the Reverend Bundrant is pastor.
MRS. WILLIAM LEACHMAN, who suffered several torn ligaments in a fall in London this summer, is able to be about again.
DR. LE COUNT COOK entertained his Medical Reading Club at Annozean's Wednesday night.
THE BUDDIES" were the hosts to a group of their friends Tuesday night. They will be full party at Annozean's.
MRS ELOSEI WALKER of New York City and Baltimore, is spending the autumn with her aunt, Mrs. Estelle Mayer, at 490 T street northwest.
She is a popular addition to the younger
MR. LOWELL LOMAX, son of Mrs. Ski-
lewis, of Blueder, and of Howard University
in school at Howard University this year.
MR. CLARK CARKSON, son of Dr. and
Mrs. Simone Carson, freshman (freshman)
and medical school this fall. Mr.
Carson completed his pre-med study
at Fisk University.
THE WI-MO. team hold their first meet-
ing last Saturday evening. "GILL" EDWARDS, "BOB"
Sirode and Henry; "BOB" deceived that
Sirode and Henry too. They gave a
party at the Club De Luxe Saturday night
from ten "on" and it was nobody's but-
ter.
ness.
THE ALUMNUM CHAPTER of the Kappa Alpha Pet will hold its first meeting of the fall season at the home of George E. G. Saturday evening.
Hayes was given last Friday evening at the Alpha House in the private house, northwest.
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SPIRI
Rossoe Declares Himself Candidate in Primaries, New April.
Rumored Split in Chicago C.
O. P. Ranks
WASHINGTON, D.C. — (CNSA)
Representative Oscar DePriest of the
First District of Illinois will face
sidereal opposition in the April
maries, according to present informa-
tions, unless he succeeds in bolting
up his fences during the eminent
sports say.
Roscoe C. Simmons, monarch
known orator, has already succeeds
dePriest, and is believing
have a following among the men
the South Side while several
unannounced candidates are in
grooming themselves in the
office.
Rumored Dissension
To cap the climax, rumor brings news of dissension in Beirut, news of dissension and tells that its best well buttle with the president and his erstwhile staunch ally and former companion in the council. Alderman Louis Andreas. Some claim that as plants for the primaries shape up, Anderson is sought as the candidate for Congress by the Mayor Thompson in迎
Anderson Laughed
Although Mr. Anderson laughed at the suggestion that he might be the richest district in the United States, it is believed that he is adverse to running in the next mary. Too, it has been reported for some time that 'the boss of Illinois is not altogether happy with DePriest's selection and is ready swing his support in another direction. In fact, the political pot is boiling in Chicago, and there seem to be enough cooks watching it boil to completely spoil the broth.
Some Black Man
Congressman DePriest thinks so
seriously, however. In a recent speech
in Salina, Kansas, his former loa-
her asserted that "if he is no sat-
man will be and he (meaning
Washington Congressional circle
might as well get used to it."
"We won't bite, and the color was
rub off, he concluded,
washington friends here fairly
in Washington friends the same
sense which say that Congressman
DePriest reiterated his stand on
right of Mrs. DePriest to assu-
place in Washington society the
as the wife of any other represent-
ative was first elected to
he and Mrs. DePriest annunci-
ted they were not interested in sex
black or white.
Friends brave the report as an
white press to read the issue of social equality and an
an issue for his enemies.
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RIN
BUYCOPSFORMGUARDSTOSCHOOLS
BUYCOI
NEARLY 450 BOY COPS
PATROL STREETS
School Lads Drilled for Work
by Real Policemen and the
M.A.A Safety Squad.
NO DEATHS THIS YEAR
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CNS)—Protecting the lives and limbs of their playfellows from the thoughtlessness of motorists, approximately 450 of Washington's colored school children patrol streets in the vicinity of school buildings, directing traffic and looking out for safety of the children at accrete time and on the way to and from school.
Select by the principals of the school as being outstanding for their alertness, police and assertiveness and the commanding little brown belts their white canvas Motorists, who willingly obey the commanding and help them safeguard patrolmen and help them safeguard the four of their companions.
For several days prior to the opening of school, members of the traffic bureau drilled them in the direction of traffic and upon arrival at the apartment of the American Auto-mobile Association give the boys instruction and furnish the belts and badges. The young people are efficiently
how a patrol was first organized last year and though experimental, provably successful. Having won the audience of their parents and their superiors, the patrol served public these youth take pride in their work. They are at all times under the watchful care of selected members of the police force, and the American mobile Association, the twenty-five school children died as the result of injuries sustained in traffic accidents and eighty-five others were seriously injured. At the close of the first month of the year, only one injury has been reported, which fact bears witness to the efficiency of the school boy patrol. The list follows:
THE NEW YORK TIMES
THE NEW YORKER
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FREE GIFTS TO NEW AGENTS
We have openings for a few live agents. If you are interested in making some extra money and in winning valuable and beautiful prizes, write today.
J. C. Cook, C.
C. B. Stern, C.
S. Sergentis
Babylon Ballet
Babylon Ballet
Babylon Branch
Babylon Cascell
Babylon Jackson
Prod Petatin
Dennis Ricks
None at seven Schools
There are no school Boy Patrols operating in the following schools:
Birmingham High School, Commandant Phelps Vocational, M. M. Washington Vocational, Dunbar High, Cardozo High and Francis Junior High.
Phillips Band School
Linwood Head, C. Paul Russell
Browley Lrown, B. Ernest Glascose, Sub.
Leo Pinkard
Joseph Beckwith
Phillips School
Flood Daniels, C. Paul Arthur
Lorenzo Mason, 1st L. Charles Ross
Horace Bucker, 2ndL. Charles Ross
Marshall Bucker, Morgan Brown
Paul Arthur
William Green
Senko
Jim Arthur
Charles Ross
Charles Payno
Morgan Brown
William Green
School
Louis Magruder, C.
A. Williams, L.
James Prye
Mary Ann
James Turner
Lee Berkley
James Fisher
Elden Lawson
Hillon Coleman
Harry Thompson
Raruder
Leroy Washington, C.
Wentley Glaze, L.
Percy Pitt, L.
Everett Brown
Buffalo Oxford
Roland Clemonds
James Davidson
Harry Dawson
George
Grooms
Ciuade Henderzon
Welton Johnson
Brendan Morgan
Morgan William Montgomery
Daniel Neal
Harold Saunders
Victor Tate
Earl White
John Henderson, J.
Elijah Driver, L.
David Gross, L.
David Williams, L.
Louis Brown
Alexander Sullivan
James Morris
McHoness Dixon
Edgerton
Theodore Parker
School
Johnson, C. Johnson.
C. Chasler, B. Butler,
C. Charence Blackwell
Theodore Spriggs
Ehlot Robinson
Lee Lewis
School
Arthur Colbert
Martin Joseph
Lee Lewis
Hubert Sumner
Geo. Templeman, C.
Wilmer, L.
Larson
Elsworth Rucker
Joseph Brown
Elsworth
Cook
Fountain Parker, C.
Pierce Jeter, L.
Preston Warren, L.
Edward Burdy
Arthur Burdy
School
Wilbur Scott
George Tinker
William Herrod
Leon Riddick
Wm. T. Randall, C.
Jawis, Williams, L.
Dougless Roberts
Maurice Clifford
Norman Newby
William Plummer
James Pratt
Burke Bucket
Frank Luckey
Arthur Johnson, G.
Abbey Watkins
Abbey Watkins
Charles Allen
Norman Newby
Mary Newby
Training Schools
Ulissy Kessenny
Joseph Stewart
Folwer Pollock
Joseph Kessenny
Livin Conmert
Earl Brown
Slater-Langston
Maxwell Powell, C.
Laird, J.
Taylor L.,
Sherman Jenkins
Nathaniel Carter
Leroy Holmes
Cardozo School
Norman Lewis
Harry Hawkins
Randolph Johnson
Oliver Wills
John Vance, C.
Rozier Jordan, L.
Nathaniel Dixon
Claude Thomas
George Praxier
School
School Robinson
Norman Mitchell
Barrington Jefferson
Henry Holmes
High School
Robert Bonds
Dubois Curtis
Raymey Curtis
Inford
Mortis Swann
Loraine Hammett
uort High School
David Anderson
Theo. Cook. C.
Rutus Collins, L.
William L.
William Boyd
Collegen
Lovell Cyrus
Hugh Dowling
Addir Edunna
Arthur Cyrus
Harry Goss
Randaal Junior
Roberta Roberts
Lucile Roberts
Juanita Brown
Doria Dudley
Doria Dudley
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WASHINGTON—Dr. Mordecal Johnson, president of Howard university, was host Saturday at a luncheon conference to members of the press, at which time methods of handling releases and publicity of the institution were discussed. Among those attending were (left to right): William N. Jones, managing editor of the Baltimore Afro-American; "Wallie" Reeves, reporter for the Washington Times-Herald; Robert Nelson, editor of the Washington Eagle; A. E. Manley, Dean George W. Cook; William O. Walker, editor Washington Tribune; Mrs. Halle Queen Jawson, the New York Age; Charles M. Thomas, of the Washington Times-Herald; President Johnson; J. A. C. LaWolle, the Washington Tribune; Mrs. Sarah Pelham Speaks, the Capital News Service; Edwin D. Sheen, H. U. department of journalism; Robert Pelham, the Capital News Service; I. C. Taylor, "Hilltop"; Louis R. Lauier, Washington correspondent, Afro-American; T. J. Calloway, manager, the Crisis.
Albert Carter, C.
Alloysia Warren, C.
Bernard Brooks
William Jones
New Beh
Richard Glicon, C.
Raymond Dixon L.
Jerry Jackson
Charles Liberty
Bernard Brooks
Bernard Jacobs
James Chew
Richard Clomax
Graham Anderson
Jones
Vincent Samuels
Wilson Cloud
Parker
Predlerick Underwood
Walter Williams
Berton Jefferson
Robert Hill
Richard Hill
Wilson
Birney School
Bichard R. Lane, C. G. William Green
Lanier Lones, L. S. Secret williams
L. L. L. Secret williams
Emerson Brown H. Harry Underdur
Paul Brooks D. T. Collins
T. Collins
Odell Shumate
Jesse Tyler
Wm. Washington
William Williams
Leroy Hardy
Herman Hopkins
Cedric ejsup
Joseph Lee
Joseph Lee
Nassau Schools
Washington
Chancery Cromer
William Rucker
John Dickson
John Dickson
Douglas-Slim
Chester Gotham, M.
William Johnson, M.
William Johnson, L.
Nelson Withers
Alonzo Gordon
Albert Richard
Giddings
Sandy Worthington, M.
Bernard Steele
Richard Steele
L. William Belcher
Howard Gearlman
Linehous
Thomas Higgins, M.
William Courtney, M.
L. Books, M.
John Young
George Tighman
Daniel Dyson
Herbert Martin, M.
William Jones
Hezekiah Humphles
Colman
Rudolph Johnson
John Henderson
Martha Armstrong
Beetle Beauzard
Hodford Brown
Hodford Brown
Hodford Preston
Hodford Beauzard
School
School
James Jones, C.
James L. Larson, L.
Henry Hughes
Joseph Penn
Brentt Warren
Brentt Warren
Chester Reevis
Earl Campbell
Earl Bowen
Nathaniel Randolph
Wilbur Carnegie
Burrell Jenkins
John Kenny
William McPherson
Alvin Middleton
Ernest Whiting
Hugh King, C.
Chilton Loe, C.
Ishanee Lee, L.
Ishanee Crawford
Thomas Hill
Smith
Harold Gibson, C.
Boyd Truer, C.
Swornsted Gross
Swornsted Gross
Frederick Bowie
Jullus Johnson C.
Herbert Williams L.
Charles Simons
James Simons
Jeremy Strong
Win. Pufford C.
Milton Piper L.
Charles Washington
William Haney
Jane
D. C. SOCIETY
MISS MARGARET HARRIS and Mr. Battles are entertaining a friend at their home in Silver Springs. MRS. AGNES WILLIAMS is planning to open her new shop on the campus. Her formal opening will be attended by a host of her friends and well-wishers.
BETA SIGMA CHAPTER of Delta Sigma Theta first meeting of the season Thursday evening, at which time they laid plans for the season's activities. JOSSEE HARRIS has resumed his studies in Howard Law School. Miss Maybelle Brown has also arrived from the School of Pharmacy.
MISS ELIZABETH JENKINS of Pulsak, MRS. ELIZABETH SUNKEN at the School of Pharmacy.
MISS ELIZABETH JENKINS of Pulsak, MRS. ELIZABETH SUNKEN at the School of Pharmacy.
THE REX. C. C. W. CILLIAMS has left the city to take up his duties as pastor of the Columbus Avenue A.M.E. Zion Church, MRS. NANNIE FORTE, of Boston, returned to her home Monday, after visiting her mother here. JOSSEM BANDER, of Boston, returned to her Friday, after spending ten days in this city and Philadelphia. MRS. EVA BROOKS was the guest of mrs. and Mrs. Lloyd B. Robinson, of Boston,
MRS. PANNIE DAUGHTER and daughter, Mrs. Lula Clarke, were visitors in Frostburg, Md. Sunday. Mrs. Clarke was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Brown, of Boston, last week. DR. ALGERONN B. JACKSON, of Howard University, spent several days in Philadelphia.
dephilipa.
MRS. VIDA LEWIS, of Philadelphia, a senior at Howard University, has returned to resume her job. LILLIE WARE, a graduate of the West Philadelphia high school, has arrived to take up her job at BIGGE EWELL, of Philadelphia, has returned to her home after attending the funeral of her sister, Mrs. Ruth Davis, last week. MRS. HESTER A. SEEENY visited her sister, Mrs. Annie Moseley, of Cheswold, Mrs. ALMEATA BEACHAM spent several weeks visiting Mrs. Mille Jones, of Lynchburg, Mrs. MILDRED. BROWN has returned to her home in Lynchburg, Va., after undergoing an operation at Carson's private
MRS. ARTHUR CLAYTON is spending a few days with her mother. Mrs. Lelw Brown, Mrs. K. B. Holley, of Hedgeville, W.Va.
THE REV. JAMES GARFIELD spent last week with Mrs. L. H. Garfield, at Gulper, MR. AND MRS. MCKENNLE HARLEY MR. and Mrs. Charles Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edmonds, in Kingston over the week-end to visit relatives.
WALTER EDMONDS has gone his mother, Mrs. Mamle Edmonds, of Lakeland, Md.
MISS C. E. LIGHTFOOT has gone to Norton, Md. where she will resume her duties as teacher in the public school there.
Mr. and Mrs. Edmonds of the Misses Christa Bruner and Bessie Hardy were visitors in Brunswick, Md. Sunday.
MR. AND MRS. LEIGHTON BRUNER, Mrs. and Mrs. Edmonds were the guests of Mr. and Brs. George Butler of Knoxville, Md. Sunday.
DR. S. LECOUNT, COOK entertained his
weekend as Annozeus on Wednesday evening.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 1929
BOY TRAFFIC COPS MAKE D. C. CROSSINGS SAFE
A
WASHINGTON—An invitation to join him in special summer work at the University of Berlin, has been tendered to Dr. Ernest Just, head of the department of biology at Howard University, by Professor M. Hartmann of that institution, it was announced here last week.
The invitation came as a result of Dr. Just's recent research trip to famous laboratories of Italy, Germany and France; and while he has not visited the United States, he is giving the matter consideration, it was learned.
Professor Just will be a guest worker at the institute which is one of the greatest in the world, having among its members Nobel prize winners.
Studies Early Life
For several years Dr. Just has been engaged in research at Woods Hole Massachusetts, to discover just how life starts. After exhausting a number of avenues in this country, he returned to Roswald Foundation grant and returned last August. He has been bussy since shaping his report to the foundation.
Mrs. Natalie Cole-Johnson, who recently graduated from the University of Newark, N.J., where she will make her home with her husband and Kristen Johnson, a successful young dentist.
Dr. Johnson drove down for her Sunday morning and spent the day.
MRS. JULIA A. DODSON of 1001 Third Street that a birthday party last week. She spent a wonderful evening with all of her children and grandchildren present.
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One Guild Will Celebrate Their
SEVENTH ANNIVERSARY
Evening, October 23rd, 1929
the Lincoln Colonnade
WASHINGTON, D. C.
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MUSIC BY THE PARAGON ORCHESTRA
DANCING FROM 8 TO 2
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Studies Early Life
Joins Husband
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WASHINGTON, D.C.—Denying pattern of pachy, Achild, Raymond Watson, a minor, has brought suit through his mother, Mrs. Sarah Watson, of New York, 201st District Supreme Court for annulment of his marriage to Lillian Newman Watson, 1424 Swann street northwest. The youthful husband alleges that he was induced to enter into a marriage from the fact that his wife concealed from him the fact that she was in a delicate state at the time the ceremony was performed, March 5, 1929. A child was born to his wife May 10, 1929. The child is not his but the child of some person whose name is not known to him, he alleges.
Linen Shower.
Linens and lovely gifts of all kinds were showcased Saturday evening at Miss. Woods. Mrs. Woods, a longtime host and entertainer in her honor at the home of Miss Edwin Simkins, 1901 Pfilt street, entered her marriage. Mrs. Adams was Miss Marquette Jetter, a popular teacher in the Kansas City General hospital. Among the guests were: Madames Puniele Alexander, Louise Johnson-Lovett, Heen Foster, Avis Tyrus, Una Fletcher, Coleen Brooks-Williams, Billie Miley, Ebert Teler, Miss Luby Cies, Elizabeth Bennett, Helen Bennett, Margaret Pewsey, Joe Bennett, Bethel Jones, Inez Rivers, La Verne Gereg, Ruth Harris, Alta Million and Hortense Freeland.
Mrs. Terrell Better. Mrs. Ethel Webb-Terrell, who has been asking for several weeks, is in Freedman's hospital where she is recuperating from an operation for appendicitis performed Tuesdays.
no bad after-effects. You once learn this fact, you will never deal with excess acid in the crude ways. Go learn—now why this method is so useful. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years in correcting cysts and 50 c a bottle-any drugstore. "Milk of Magnesia" has been the U. S. Registered Trade. Mark of the Charles H. Phillips Chemical Company. Charles H. Phillips since 1875.
P.
—Scurlock Photo
in conference to members of the press, reading were (left to right): William N. Wald; Robert Nelson, editor of the Wallace Queen, Nassau, the New York Age;bourne; Mrs. Sarah Pelham Speaks, the I. C. Taylor, "Hilltop"; Louis R. Lau-
CROSSINGS SAFE
WIFE SAYS SHE HAD TO SEW BUTTONS
Owens Divorce Revelations Shock Capital Sporting Circles.
Claims Husband's Income is $1,000 a Month.
WASHINGTON. D.C.—Franklin A. Owens, of 1724 Second street northwest, whose sporting clientele is the District Supreme Court and the District Supreme Court his wife, Mrs. Maybelle H. Owens, 1846 Third street northwest, for a limited divorce, alleging cruelty and desertery. Mrs. Owens intimated the presence of the "other woman" in her domestic difficulties but named no one.
On the morning of October 2 he told her she would have to leave, she says, as he had secured a housekeeper. He handed her a check for $200. Frank became attentive to another woman, Owens charges. He is frequently seen in the company of this other woman, she says, taking her to public places with utter disregard of her or the humiliation caused her. In the late winter of 1928-29, Mrs. Owens alleges, he beat and assaulted her, he injured out of bed and choking her and trying to throw her out into the street.
A reconciliation was effected. They moved to 1724 Fourteenth street northwest, continued to neglect the states, by staying out sometimes until 6 a.m.
He insisted that she saw sebutions on his clothes, which she says she did, although physically unable to do it.
Mrs. Owens was employed as a stenographer at Freedman's Hospital. She resigned May 15 last to manage one of Frank's stores, "Maybellue," a store owned by the company. This store was closed September 15. She has tried to secure employment, she states, but has been unsuccessful.
Income $600 a Month
Frank owns a cigar and magazine business at 1728 Fourteenth street northwest, and "maintains other business connections with horse racing and sporting business, which he has monthly income from $600 to $1,000, Mrs. Owens claims.
He paid the balance of $5,500 on their home in eleven months, she says.
He owns a Reo automobile which cost more than the home, which she says is paid for, cost approximately $4,000.
Frank also owns stocks and bonds and diamonds, the value of which is unknown to her, she states, although the sold he has enough put away to retire.
The couple were married by the Rev. R. W. Brooks, pastor of the Lincoln - Temple Congregational Church.
SEMI-NUDE STREET DANCE COSTS, MAN $25
WASHINGTON, D. C.-CNGI- Philip Irving, 30, dancing in his "undies" at 22nd and K streets, northwest, had little trouble entertaining the crowd in ten minutes to watch his aesthetic performance until Policeman Patrick S. O'Brien attempted to stop the crowd. But then, strange as it may seem, things got better, and the crowd was treated to an added thrill, for Irving, objected, proceeded to step out of leaving Policeman with the garment in his hand.
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ISAAC C. BANNISTER, Manager
Paid Athletes in Colleges Must Go, Says Howard Head
President Mordecai Johnson, in Plea for Clean Sports at Howard, Flav Professionalism. Cites Difficulties.
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BY LOUIS R. LAUTIER
WASHINGTON, DC. — Spurring winning teams that smack of professionalism, Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, Howard University president reiterated to a group of newspaper men at a luncheon last Saturday at two years old that sports at Howard must be conducted upon an absolutely amateur basis.
One-half hour later this group of newspaper men watched his expert, Michael B. Anderson, and saw a Howard eleven, spick and span in blue and white jerseys, humbled by a smaller college, 19-0.
In explaining his sports policy, Dr. Johnson made it known that he is not a publicist and saw that the public believes that is not favorably disposed towards athletes. "The public only knows," he said, "every time it looks up here, the presidt; and trusts seem to be hammering athletics. That is true," he admitted.
Was Athlete Himself
Dr. Johnson told of his participation in sports, while a student at Morehouse College. "The in the first place," he said, the president is an assistant professor for four years quarterback at the Morehouse College team. During that period Morehouse lost only one game. That was to Fisk, and we had plenty of players.
Played Hampton
A reporter interrupted. He asked Dr. Johnson if Morehouse played Howard that year. "No, we played Hampton that year," he replied, "and Hampton best Howard that year." Dr. Johnson stated that he was also a forward on the Morehouse basketball team. The only reason he did not play baseball, he said, was because he was on the debating team. No Money for Playing "But I was in an absolutely clean
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OOLS in Colleges Howard Head on, in Plea for Clean Sports atonalism. Cites Difficulties.
athletic situation," he declared. "Nobody ever suggested to me I was to receive a dime for playing. We played under a coach who would draw you a ball and give you a chance of the season if he thought you were not playing a clean game. I have seen him draw out the quarterback and say to him stutteringly. Young players don't want to win any games except in a perfectly honorable way."
Rans Professionalism
"No man who has been around our colleges in the East, white and colored, has failed to see that there has been a considerable amount of professionalism in these schools, a considerable amount of the use of money, soliciting donations, mutual mistrust between institutions, and destroying the morale of the institutions themselves, because whenever the student body of a particular institution begins to understand that some men, for athletic purposes, are being dealt with, they begin to doubt the integrity of the administration and all morale and discipline begin to crumble.
"The one thing that the trustees and president of Howard University set out to do was to develop an absolutely clean, open, and above board amateur situation with men playing the game because they love the
Have Had Difficulty
"Many friends said it could not be done, it was impossible, and, it is no matter to conceal, we have had a chance to win. We had our first game this season under the leadership of a coach, Thomas Verdell, reared in the Western Conference, who played the game under the guidance that did not permit even a training table."
"Beginning to Arrive"
"We are beginning to arrive at the thing we are driving at," Dr. Johnson commented. "Other college presidents recognize our drive in this direction, and several of them wrote that they were pleased to learn that we are now recognizing the resources we are trying to develop. 'If you succeed, they said, you will spread a blessing throughout the whole college situation. But if you cannot, with all your advantages, put up clean, manly, non-professional teams, how can we expected to do it without smaller institutions and smaller resources?"
Must Be Trusted
"When we get out into the world, there are so few Negro college men and women, it is absolutely essential that we be able to trust one another the game, the game of trust, it can pass that when Howard men and Lincoln men, and Hampton men meet one another, they will say 'there is a man who has played the game of trust, the game of trust, that I know he can be trusted, and whenever Lincoln and Howard meet, or when Howard and Hampton meet I am going to be against him, but when the game is played, the game of trust, that I man trusted companion and friend.'
"We want sports. We want football, basketball, baseball, hockey and every wholesome sport that can be found, but we want it to be sport, absolutely." We want we rejoice we are going in that direction."
METROPOLITAN LEADS
WASHINGTON.-Under the pastorate of Dr. William H. Thomas, the leading congregation in the Baltimore conference in its reports of $1,000 each, made to the Mite Missionation and the mid-winter conference.
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BISHOP R, E, BENNETT
CONSECRATED IN N. Y.
Acchbishop McGuire Pontifi-
cates; Four Other Bishops
Assist. __
BISHOP IS MARYLANDER
Joins African Orthodox After
31 Years in Ministry.
BROOKLYN, N. Y—Boyle's Me-
morial Church, Irving Place an
Gates avenue, was ctowded to th
doors Sunday with an overflow con
ereration, gathered to, witness th
Solemn service of conseeration of th
Very: Reverend Eamund Robert Ben
nett D. Dx to, the episcopate in th
African Orthodox Church,
‘Archbishop George, Alexander Mc
Gulte, primate, pontiseated, assste
By four other ‘bishops, one ‘of then
white, ‘The Rt. Rev, William Eres
Robertson, D, D,. acted as senior as
sistant and_ the’ Rt. Rev. Frederic’
Alexander Garrett, D. D., as juntoi
assistant, bishop.
‘The Rt. Rev. Arthur Stanley ‘Trot
man, D. D., and the Rt. Rev. Willian
‘Pyarks, D."D.. (white), bishop of th
‘American Catholic Orthodox’ churel
Piatlcvated in the Laying on
jands.
‘The sermon, was preached by th
Bt. fev, Wiliam Emest Roberson
‘All five bishops Joined in the lav:
tng on of hands, “After the singing
‘of the Gospel, the bishop-elect wa:
brought to the high altar where
Joined in the singing of the Mass.
The mass ended, and the newl:
eonsecrated bishop being fully vestec
and given his pectoral cross, crozler
Initre and gloves, he was enthroned
and during the ‘sineing of the Tt
Deum proceeded’ throughout th
aisles of the church giving his episco-
al blessing to the congregation.
‘Adopted Marylander
Bishop Bennett ts an adopted son
of Maryland and was educated in th:
Baltimore schools, St. Mark's Acad-
eRiegand seminary of ine epee
lege and seminary of the :
pal. Church, located in Wisconsin.
‘He was for 31 yeats a faithful and
hard laboring priest in the P.. E.
ainiteh, helding’ rectorshipe in. Wil-
mington, N.C. Camden, N T- and
Buralo, ‘N.Y. He inauirurated the
‘work tn St, Paul, Minnesota. and wes
The first, Neera’ archdeacon of the
diocese of Florida, residing in Jack-
sonville
‘As avviliary bishop of the New
York cistrict. his. supervision will
extend over the state of New York
Upper New Jersey and Connecticut.
‘TWO MARYLAND COUPLES ART.
WED IN D. C.
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Miss, Mars
. Williams. 17, 319 Lynn street, and
James L. Baker. 2%. 110 Ivy street,
both of Brentwood, Md., were married
here last week by the Rev. James L
Jasper.
‘Marriage licenses were granted
Miss Hattie Diges, 27, and Elzle C
Forrester. 30, both of Annapolis, here
Test week, “The Rev. W. Westray
performed’ the ceremony.
HOLY NAME 13 YRS. OLD
‘The Washington, D.C.. Holy Name
Guild, 2 Community Center of Col-
ored Holy Name men and ‘boys will
selebrate its thirteenth anniversary
at Lincoln Colonnade October 23. A
cordial invitation is extended thelr
Baltimore friends to attend.
Guarded Bier of Bishop John Murray
CO EA 2 een er
ee I ee
a
Bo ee a
ee i
ewe eS ee Fe ie ia Pmesamecge,
Porc ae es seutane at we
ony ee DS teas
Ue pe een os een
ae oN ek ee
—Ajro_Photo.
Dr. George FP. Bragg, jr., for thirty-eight years rector of St. James Protes-
Pic Belsopet ehursh: wo was one of the honorary pallbearers. at. the
Hintral of ie ite ‘Bishop John. Gardner Murray. cunte) primate of the
aRommination® "Dr. Brage ie-one of the pioneer Protestant Eplseopal fead~
Senor pa On own sitting im ‘his study ‘at home, 1425. MeCulioh street
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH . ..
INSTALLS NEW PASTOR
WASHINGTON. (CNS) — T h ¢
levent of the week in Baptist. church
feircles, was the formal instsllatior
fof the Rev, Augustus Lewis, as the
pastor of Jerusalem Baptist church
Thiry-sixth and P streets, northwes
Georgetown by a delegation rom
the Baptist Ministers Conference.
‘The Rev. Mr. Lewis, was formerly
pastor of the First Baptist church
Sf Rosslyn, Virginia, directly acros
the Potomac river from Washington
Jwhere he served for nearly ten years
land attracted the attention of his
[Georgetown neighbors by his minis-
terial and executive ability.
‘He built that charge up from sixty-
nine to nearly two hundred members:
accumulated a bullding fund of
nearly $8000 and left all of the
fourteen various organizations _ at
Rosslyn’ in good financial condition
Rev. Mz, Lewis was edueated tn the pubic
seheals of Virgina, and received is "Bible
training at Howard, and through the Metro-
poiltan Bible Correspondence course. He
Fraduated from Howard as president of his
Glass and delivered. the benedtctory sermon,
Many Pastors Assist
‘The instatlation serviets, of the pastor.
elec began Sunday. September 29. and end:
fd" wrondny night, Octeber 1, with a recep.
fion tn. hs honée,” ‘During the week, the
felloring ministers ane. thelr choirs’ and
congregations took part In the exercises:
Rev GZ. Brown, Mt. Zion Bapitel
church, northeast: Rev. JU. 8. Holle
man, Second Baptist Church: Rey. 8B. ¥.
Whiting. Priendship. Baptist Ohurch “Rev.
P. C. Bundy, Morning Star Baptist Church:
Rev. W.. A” Graz, St. Salvation Baptist
Church, Hal's Hil, Va. Rev. A, Wilbanks,
Fenty Guert Baptlae Church: Rey. Shermer
W. Philips. Macedonia Baptist’ Church,
Ruck, Vai Rev. Jo iH. Mussa, Fist
Baptist Church, souinwest: Rev. W. A.
Jones, Mock Creek Baptist Church, ‘ren
haliyiown: Rev. Robert Anderson, Ml Pleas
Ont Septist church: Rev. LT. Hughes
Be. dexreel Baptist Church, and Rev. A. 3
Tye, Mt. Airey Bepust.
‘Gundas, October “12, the Ree, Dante
Wamingion, pastor of the Pst, Baptist
emioriee Terant, peengned che inatalie-
Pe
Fees ee ea oo
Co eee
[ee oath NSE
a he
Paes eee
ton sermon, and the young people of the
tech renetoed fe pros
| Ree. Holloman Presides
ache formal tntallaton took place. Mo,
aay evening before ‘a large oudience and
nine presence of cary tty visting clr
‘Symen, of the Baptist. lnsters” Conference
headed by Rees J. L. 8. Holloman, hd
presiee.
During” the evening welcome | addres
secre made by clizens and the visiting eer
as folows:
Me, Rutherford. Speaks
(On behalf of the ehureh, Rev, Wa
Dorsey! on behalf of the-cltlrns’ of Wes
Washington, air. George 7. Beason, pres
dent, Georgetown Give Agsoeatton: on be
bale of protessions br 4.08. Bloke, sete
tary, NaaeP., of Washtigion, D.C: on
Sehsit of business, by Mr 8. W. Rutherford
Hterelary and geferel manager of Nationa
Brneat Life Insurance Company: en sehalt
er avlonsy Intersbenomiaatenel Minis
feria altance of America. by fev. Cr Dy
Fuse presigent: ‘on bebalt_ of pics. y
Br J. "6. LaValle, Washington Tebune
‘Rev, Hareis Retired
Mr, sexse Peing brought pcetings {con
ie Fiest ‘Baptist Church of Rossy, V9.
Ghe Gharen ehole rendered musie. and Mire
Ella White, Mrs, Saargoret ‘Caldwell an
Miss Laura’ Neson sang solos, Mrs. tren
Bzhardson rend pope.
‘the ev, Jt” having, the Ree. Dente
washington, the Rev, Wet. Jernagin. ane
The Reve J: tS. Holloman took part
{he forme! insiallstlon ang charges te the
Riv. Hr Lena, who succeeded (othe pul
fede vacant dy the fetfement of tne fo
mer pastor. the Rec. W. M.Macris. sh
Tins been, iacepacttated. na retired unde
pension from mis beloved congeesation.
Fanily Weleomed
‘At the dose of the regular program. Mrs
‘Aquat Las and daughters, and Bees, Rat
fares, he aster of abe’ setired pastor,
fee callea to the latiorm an given
Hears: greeuing by the auaience atcer whieh
tho fared or gre ins est
Iminisets. wero sees refreshments. ia th
{Dwer auaitorium ef the ebuteh
‘Pe following bosrda. and chihs assist
ne pastor in the manegement of the Jeri
Sem Bapust chureh:
Beacon Board--Alcsander all. chatrman
wile clark. Samuel Piensant, Jame
Brite "Gamucl ‘Day, Richard ‘Dorsey. Aber
Hrsg, Ernest ‘Brown, desse Jones, Bawa
Haina and Charles Grimes.
‘Trustee ‘Boara—George ‘Barnard. char.
ant Bennie’ Brice, dames Bri. Bre
Christian, Richard. Dorsey. dames: Jackson
End Bennie Bree, peesaent
ralenaie, Ork edge, direstess
{Ghibs—Duilaing Atsoctailon, atra” Star
ontvey: ned Crom Mrs Delia Gree: Den
Goa. ir. nlbert Harris, president. Ushers
fr! George Bannard. present: auxiliary
Mrz. incre Pethe,. president. ahssionar
Chub, Mes, Wattle Holman 0.0.0. Me
[Samuel Pleasant. president: Sunday. School
tre. Hote Holman. superintendent, an
ae: RS eer cee cone
DePriest, Rosenwald,
Moton, Yergan Talk
CHICAGO.—(ANP.)—The _ twenty-
second national conference on
'Y.M.C.A. work that will be held in the
city on the 18th, 19th, and 20th, will
be addressed by Oscar DePriest, rep-
reesntative of the first Congressicnal
district of Illinois: Dr. Robert R.
Moton, principal ef Tuskegee; Julius
|Rosenwald, whose benefactions have
done much to make possible the
score of modern “Y” buildings that
‘dct the country, and Mrs, Max Yer-
gan, wife of Max Yergan, who is
representing the Y.M.C.A's of the
uated ‘States in work in South Af-
rica,
‘Mrs, Yergan will return to Africa
immediately after the conference.
200 AT SEMINARY
LYNCHBURG, Va.—The Virginia
‘Seminary and College has aiready en-
rolled more than two hundred stu-
denis who represent more than
score of states.
Since August 1, when Dr. Vernon
N. Johns became president, _ the
board of trustees has made a pay-
ment of $10,000 on its bonded debt,
Tenovated grounds and buildings, anc
has met the regular current expense
of the institution,
Mayoral Candidate Backed
by K.K.K., Loses in Detroit
DETROIT, Mich. — Backed by
gighty, Per cent of the colored vote,
John: W. Smith, candidate for mayor,
polled 71,417 votes in the _ primaries.
Sharles “Bowles polled 58222 and
John C. Ladke, 4820. smiths op-
ent, te is said, Was
pon mp, Ue = ‘Supported by
1,500,000 WOMEN WORK
ore than 150000" Nedra “nomen
an 1 ‘women
were gainfully’ employed in the Untt-
ed States in 1920, a decrease of al-
Most, 500,000 from’ the census figures
of 1910 ‘according to @ bulletin of
the women’s bureau. United States
Department of Labor.
PRESBYTERIANS IN
ANNUAL SESSION
106 Delegates Come from
Points as Far Distant as
Panama.
DR. WARD ELECTED
Next Conference Will Go to
Indianapolis.
NEWARK, N. J-—The thirty-ftl
annual session of the Afro-Americay
Presbyterian Council was held at th:
Thirteenth Avenue“ Presbyterlar
church from October 10 to 13. .Rev
LOB. Bllerson was éntertaining ‘pas
‘The Council favored. the, merge
of the denominations, advocated tha:
more attention be given to Evangel
ism, and religious” edueation, —an¢
urged that the church be foremos
in all movements making for the bet
ferment and advancement of UW
community.
‘The Council stressed the need o
greater interest in both foreign anc
Rational missions. ‘There were 10
delegates "present, Delegates cam
from as far West as Seattle. and Cal-
Hornta, and ‘one delegate came from
the Panama canal. ‘The younges
delegate was Louls Willams, sixteer
years of age, who came from Firs
‘African Presbyterian Chureh in Phil
adelphia.
‘Addresses of welcome were made D;
Rev. 8. D, Chambers, In behalf of the
Bresbytery of Newack: Rev. A.
Martin, pastor of the St, Johns M
E, Church, in- behalf of the Method.
‘sis; Rev. W. H. Hilliard, in behalf 0}
the’ Interdenoininational "Minister
Alliance; Dr. W. H. Southern In be-
hhalf of the officers of the church: W
A. Abby, in half of the congrega-
tion; Hughes Allison, in behalf of th:
Eolscopalians. ‘The response to the
addresses of welcome was made bj
the Rev. Dr. Charles Preeman, pas-
for of the Lafayette Presbyterlai
Chureh in Jersey City.
Retiring President
| The annual sermon of the retir!
president, the Rev. J. Vance McIver
bf Englewood, . J., followed the ad-
‘dresses of welcome: ‘The session on
Friday morning began with an ad-
‘dress by the Rev. John W. Lee, fiel
corstary.. Divisions of Mission fo:
Cotored People.
Rev. Dr. William Ltoyd Imes, pas-
‘tor of the St. James Presbyterian
‘Church, gave the report on Religiou:
Education.
Papers on Social Service were reat
by Mis. Mary O. Griggs. of Atlantic
City, and Mrs, Gabrielle Drake o!
Washington, 'D. ©. ‘The principal
feature of this report was the addres:
of Thomas L. Puryear. executive sec-
fetary of the Urban League of New-
ark, NN. J. who spoke on “The Church
and Social Service.”
‘Evangelism
‘The report on Evangelism was
made by Rev. Benjamin F. Glasco
of Pittchurgh, Pa, and Rev. C. B
Allen, also of Pitisburgh.
‘The afternoon session on Friday
afterncon began, with a report of
Women's work. Mrs. Clara M. Colber!
of Baltimore, is the chairman of the
women’s work.
Mrs. Gladys ©. Fairley of Washing-
ton, D.C. presided.
‘The report of Stewardship was
‘made by the Rev. Milton A. Thomp-
gon, of Detroit, Mich, | Mrs. W. Mae
Hatrie spoke on “The Stewardship of
Time." and Mrs. George B, Brabham
spoke on “The Stewardship of Pos-
Sessions" ‘The report of the State
of Country was made through Rev
James G. Carlile, and Dr. H. P, Blue
Dr. Colbert Reports
| Rev, John T. Colbert, of Baltimore
‘statistician making his report sai
that there, were 66, churches in, thy
Council, with a membership of 11,63
communicants. ‘There are 8139 Bib%e
school members, and that during the
Year $4306 was contributed to. nu-
Uonal missions, The report_statec
that $189,262 was raised for Conere:
gational expenses. The church ‘ha:
fad a remarkable erowth within th:
past decade. In 1917 there were oni:
4273 inembers of the Council, anc
‘only 3000 Bible students,
The St, James Pesbyterian Churct
in New Yorke had 268 accessions dur
jing the year and raised $23,140.
irs, Lottier Speaks
| The session on Saturday mornin:
‘had to do with a report on Youn:
| People’s work made through the com.
‘mittee consisting of srs. Lillian Lot
‘er, of Baltimore. Mrs, Bessle Adams
(of Bhiladeiphia, and rs, A.B. Lewis
of Detroit. Mich. ‘The report showec
that extensive work Was being don:
‘in the work among young people.
"Rev. Thomas T. B. Harrls, execu
tive Secretary mal:ing his report urg.
ed that women be given a large
place in the work of the Council,
82 Year Old Singer
One of the inspiring features, o
the Sundav evening meeting were the
solos rendered by Mrs. Mary Purvis
fighty-two years of age. Adresse
‘were made ‘by Mrs. Cora wilkinson
of Washington, D. C., Mrs. Anni
Givbs. of Germantown, Pa., Mrs
Ella Lee Jones, of Detroit, Mich., Mrs
George ®. Bradham, of Paterson, N
5. Mrs. Dougiazs of Chicago, and Mrs
Bragg.
New Officers
The new officers elected at the
Gouneit were Rev. Charles Ward.
Toledo, Ohio, president; Rev. Johr
L, Colersan, ‘Indianapolis, Ind, Vice
president: Mrs, George R. Bradham
temporary clerk, and Rev. Charles S
Freeman, of Jersey City, treasurer
‘The next meeting of the Council wil
be'in Indianapatis.
De RR. Moton to
John R. Hawkins and Jobn Nail on
Same: Program
WASHINTON, D. C—Dr. R. R.
Moton of Tuskegee Institute will de-
liver an address at the annual meet-
ing of the Association for the Study
lof Negro Life and History to be held
in Washington, D. C.. from the 27th
to the dist of this month.
‘His theme will be the present eco-
nomic situation of the Negro. This
Badress will be the Keynote of the
Session devoted to the discussion of
the "Negro ag 2, Business Man.”
John R. Hawkins will speak on
the Negro in business compared with
the Chinaman. John E, Nall of New
Yon wil discuss the, Negro business
man compared ae the Jew.
Morgan Secretary 53
The Rev, Albert John . Mitchell,
field secretary of Morgan College,
>. who Will celebrate his
BPs. Rity “turd birthaay
p42 Friday, October 25.
Be was born at Ocala
ie Weed Flosida, in 1876, ‘and
GH ecucatea at Gammon
tte, Theological seminary
(MAR He hes pastored
Pg churches in Virginia
oS the District of Co-
SS lumbia and Maryland
YPYE) He matried Miss
4; Mamie L. Jones in
eesre+ 1898 and there is one
eS
Re
oc
child, Hazel /
12 COLLEGE HEADS
MEET IN ATLANTA
Fraternities, Athletics, Co-
operation Are Subjects
Discussed.
SESSION THREE DAYS
Baptist Homie Mission Secre-
tary Presides at Meeting.
ATLANTA, Ga.—The presidents of
colleges assisted by the American
‘Baptist Home Mission Society of New
York, held an tmaportant conference
‘lat Morehouse College, Wednesday,
‘Thursday and Friday, October 9% 10,
Hrunder the direction of Dr. George
Rice Hovey, secretary of education.
ee considered _insludet: :
coperative Financi fampaigns; 2
"The relation of the schools to the
Home Mission Society; 3. the Relig-
‘ous Life in the schools—helps and
hindrances; 4. Coles Fraternities;
5, Increasing Methods of Improving
the Existing Ministry; 7. Relating
the Colleges to the Communities: 8
How to awaken a deeper relig-
‘ous and educational consciousness in
the leaders among Negroes.
nea foiowing cauectors rere presehted:
pron ope: resent Morenoude Coles
Bean 8. A aicher and Prof, C. D. tuber
Sethe shoal of eliglan:Pretdent 3.
SLURS, peer Gon be Tule, Shaw Unt
SAIC prealaent Ww. 3, clark and. Prot
SEY Bee Veen Union Gnetty
Frese, eorth and Prog MB
Petdent Cons Univetaty, haus
Hae ea panty aackaoh, ss)
BREE Bigot Bes’ Newon, Athan
ene: tse i Rook Present
Ber cee Willams. Coleg, Men
Sua? President dA. Bacnels, Leland Col
ph Ereicen J etcaaant CB. antic
Ee Bakes tee Columbie, SC Presiden
Bene cen Boh Coheze, Sumter, 8.
Peeiacte 2 Polar, dain tal) U0
Erssder Rolaent nenny 7. WeDanal, Stor
See re ee Paci. war Pret
SEC En NG hondes:Bihen Clee
Seb ngOOR a, BID. o. Grawtord, At
MAGD, Por ar". ebowel Durham,
ie:
Salisbury Conference
Marks Co. Activities
Many Prominent Ministers and Lay-
‘men Attend District Conference
SALISBURY. Md.—The 18th annual
conterencs of the Salisbury District
Soeeare ME. Conference. met in
annual session at Shiloh M. E. church,
‘Tuesday. Jasting, until Thursday.
‘Rev. D. S. Quillen, pastor of Shiloh
church, planned the entertainment
of the conference and was instru-
‘mental in its success. He was prom-
{nent in the activities of: the three-
day session. Rev. D. W. Henry, D.
D. District superintendent, presides
at all sessions.
‘The district embraces all of the
territory between Delmar. Del. and
Onaneock, Va. Churches throughout
QeeRertgry were represented... 112
Eddrece of Welcome was delivered 0
them by L.C. Quinn. Sr. (white). pres-
ident, of the city council of Crisfield.
eine, Wednesday. evening session,
the city officials expressed the cor-
Gist greeting of the community” 10
‘all visiting members of the confer-
ence. Response was delivered by Rev.
‘PG. Campbell. of Deal's Island.
‘Mrs. R. W. Howeth, (white) ren-
dered’ a number. of vocal selections;
‘Dr. Clarence True Wilson, (white).
Of washington, secretary’ of | the
poard of temperance, prohibition and
public morals of the M. E. ‘church,
Spake slong the nes of bs Gener
von
‘The outstanding address of the ses-
sion was made by Dr. Leslie Pinck-
ney Hill, prineinal of Cheyney Insti-
tute, Chevney, Pe.. who spoke on th
Mibiest“Prover ‘Treatment of out?
Insleps of Development”
‘the eonference wes the most large-
ww ditended of any ever held in the
Sailsbury istrict
Jews Wouldn’t Hear
Jeremiah -- Stepteau
| Prophet Died in Despair, Says Dr
‘seen
“The Prophecy of Jeremiah’ was
the subject of a paper read by the
Rev 6. Harald Stepteau at the AME
Preachers’ meeting on Monday.
‘The prophet, he said, disbelieved in
alliances and "stood for forty years
encouraging the people to leave theit
idols and worship yd. But little
heed was taken to his teachings. and
despondency and grief succeeded his
hopefulness. He died in dispair.
‘Visitors introduced included Rev.
sunius Gray, Rev, A. J. Payne, and
Rev. Charles S, Mortis.
Rev. Tolley Caution
An)
at St. Katherine’s
‘The Rev. Tolley LeRoy Caution
will preach at St. Katharine’s P. 2.
Ghueh, Presstman and Divislon
streets, Sunday, October 19. at 11
m., in ‘the interest of the rally to he
held under the auspices of the Vi-
ars Gulld.
‘The Rev. Caution was ordained a
minister by the late Bishop John
Hurray, June 8, last,
The Sunday ‘setocl has begun tts
winter sesciun with the vicar. the Rev,
OW. Deven” ag” superintendent
Sha JG, Briscoe, Mrs. Ella L. Fen-
wick, Miss Ivy Boone, Miss Mary
Brass and Charles H. Jones as teach-
‘A. new feature of the church is. 2
parish paper which 1s to be publish
Baptists End Meet
ATLANTIC CITY, NJ, (A.N-P.)—
‘The twenty-fifth annual session of
the Afro-American Baptist State
Convention of New Jersey, and. its
auxiliaries, the Sunday School Con-
Vention, and the Women’s Baptist
Home Missionary Union was held at
Galon Baptist Temple beginning
Tuesday an eootinued through Sun-
GETS COLUMBIA DEGREE
RALEIGH, N. C—W. H. Fuller
public schoo! teacher, has been grant-
éd the degree of master of arts. in
education by Columbia University,
N.Y, He majored in secondary edu-
cation, a
| KILLED WITH AX
| FAIRMOUNT HEIGHTS, Md—A‘-
tacked by an unidentified’ marauder
at an eatly hour while in bed and
robbed of $309, George Gray, 49, died
at Casualty Hospital from ax wounds
‘Tuesday.
1,250,000 INDIAN
GIRLS WED AT FIVE
Census of 1921 Shows Need of
Restricting Child Marriage
CALCUTTA, India, — Sterner
measures against child marriage
are to be taken by the British
government in India.
Pigures from the census of 1921
reveal that, 1,250,000 Hindu wives
and widors afe not yet five years
old, that 2,000,000 are not yet ten,
and that forty per cent of the
fils between ten and fifteen have
1 married more than once.
ee 2 ie
i oem) ee a
eee oe
be ee te
ey Chane oe fe ms
fe ig ae eee
gates ia ea oe ce ss os
E. (= Ge
2 ag
Boe ee | ee
eee
ee Ce oe
ae ie ae 6 eis age
He oa et ey aapeit las
—Ajro Fnoto.
nat. J. W. Norris, at 87, as he appeared recently in his seats Calhoun
street.’ Rev. Mr, Norris was born in Jefferson, county, Wet ‘Virginia.
After getting what, schocling ‘he could, he joined the Bethel AM.E. confer-
enee at Philadelphia in 1877 and was orddined an elder at Smyrna, Dela~
cnet Sunder the jate Bishop Daniel A, Payne. During his career as a min-
ister, Rev. Norris has pee ‘several of the largest AME. churches here
and in Washington. ie is at present presiding elder over the ‘Baltimore
district. He has been married twice and has fourteen living children,
three of whom are in Baltimore. There are also several ‘grandchildren.
‘Both wives are dead.
D. C. Pastor Welcomed| Chicago Judge Is 56
in Boston albert Bliey George, Judge he
ss mi co ago, Minas,
Rev, Charles Williams Takes Charge] our “einee 1824, who
‘of Zion Church Baa 28% will be. itty six
——— grr a years old, Wed
(Ry Cornell News Service) .... Me nesday, October
BOSTON, Mass.—Over three thous:
and worshippers attended the morn:
ing and evening services at. the Co-
Jumbus avenue 4M, E. Zion Churcl
Sunday, to greet thelr new past
Dr. Charles Calvin Williams, forme
Pastor of-Union Wesley A. M. E. Zlor
Shurch of Washington, D. C.
Dr. Williams came to the Columbus
aveniue church following the trans
of Dr. Benjamin W. Swain to the
Broadway ‘Tabernacie at Lovisvil
y.
‘ie was born in Tarboro, N. C., Oc-
tober 20, 1688. He is an alumniis
Livingstone college. " Following is
Rraduation he pastored in Newark. N
5, Paterson, N.J., Philadelphia and
‘Washington, D.C.
At the morning services he took
for his text: "The Secret of the Lord
ig with ‘Taem that Know Him.” and
‘at the evening services he spoke on
"Messengers of Good News. . At the
morning services he requested ths
Congregation to “look him over good.”
IN D. C. CHURCHES
a aia ana tos
‘on Sunday, October 12th, the pastor, the
Rar bith preaehed, Av algae, te
Patio sake,
amin BAPTIST
‘on Sunday, Outer 1h, toe pastor, the
na Sanit ooputtnt, piesebed on er
EE ona ale te’Ren Ay Job
2h. Cfemert et iubunah,preetbcd ea
Pie Chetan ant
"TENT SInEET BAPTIST
on suaay, Octave ith the pastor, Rev
a Slbnet Geese’ at nit tne es
fe frended ob iat tenner ot anf
te
| Mr, 210% 3,
on sunday, "Seisete ithe the ev, Ges
2. unt thastane soperntence of “i
Fora “Binimore bite, presenet. “A
Nant, be Sattor, tne Rex, Gains Cars
Fetched
ASBURY
On sunaay, Getbe 10h, ihe Rev, Thon
0578. ahh, ater of Randal tenor
SL cuit’ esched on "hy. Caen
janet Preval :
eich he Rex, 3. A. lies, of kan
pam, Mer spelen "ihe Revd Seo
2 the paar
Giivken oF ovr, REDEESIER
sundh, Gutber 10th, the pater, the Ree.
anil S: Seman: peschea on Tbe Ur
Piabie waster” Ak nigns the yon
Fein Nag nange othe" meting
‘inst pasberEMiaN
sunday, Ocoee Toth, the aster, the Rev.
expen preached ‘on "Foret
Ga"
BEULAR Barris
con sunday, Geter igh, he pastor, the
ar wp jesch poeened on "Foe Ch
ks tape
i THE setae, communton was ada
sare ad ang, “experiment meeting.
‘its young peomlewas eld
fel permet BAPTIST
ctor ‘ath. "the patton, the Rey, Wi
oe DSi: wencked ob the Wonder.
Ia words of eles At might the peste
Spout oak Gatmmand Yor A the Pempe
B'Felce the ord
Mi canies,
fon Sunday, Outset Ih, he: pastor, the
Rae Wa Stenain, preached on he
Brcait ‘bey, Wis and, hele cures” At
iit his soiet wane “Ghrce Wounded 1
Piette or ts rience
sont Wests Ane,
oon Sundey, octoer 13th pastor, the
ae Feb. anny prescned, AE nah
Be pte ox "inne Passes”
Siermoroutra Ae.
fon sundesy ortber 3th the, Rev. D.
cwltentestant pesto. preaches.
Pac eof saga Uninet,
spe aig the ew i Se oa
TROVIDENCE BAPTIST
fon sundey Octave ist te pastor, the
av Agi 'Stsee peashee on “the See
five of Sulration At Spa cane
Sfuntn wou amined, anda aig the
Batter presehed on tthe ite Does”
MOUNT BErMEL parrisr
sundays October fthy the pastor, the
nan eel Sw. Roy whi preach omy “slow
te ootate eternal Lie
seta, he il spe oe Rt Poo!
sibtog a" Peed ie Sout Wits Corn”
: RAVEN Mt
on Sunday, Geter 1th, the pastor, the
aunt ugens Wittens, preached on “ine
Banger $e patting” AE 9 scice,. ine
Rare’), ©. Wing. Browa's Meson, 9:
Eoupanied'ey ni eboe and. ‘consepslon,
see vers) AU nights dhe pastor pesshed
were visitors. At nig
Liberian Consul 66
‘The Rev. Ernest Lyon, Liberian
consul general, and pastor of Ames
[M.E. church, this city, who will ob-
serve his sixty-
ai sixth birthday,
HO ‘Tuesday, October
fae was. bon
‘getty in Belize, British
at Cede] eonres, a as
io a educate a
ee ‘Straight univer-
“idrmcema sity, Union ‘Theo-
aa Jopleal seminary
A Wits college, the
Ca Bm, Callece of” Li
See em beria and Kittrell
ey college. He was
a Pd ordained a minis-
gear ter of the ME
church in 1882.
oat sixth birthday,
fi on ‘Tuesday, October
fo a He was born
‘a4 in Belize, British
Ld rede d eonres, a as
- educated “a
Te TNR Shion dnwvers
“grmewy sity, Union ‘Theo-
exe Jopleal seminary
rm Wey college, te
Ca Bm, Callece of” Li
aa Ary bam beria and Kittrell
df college. He was
a of ed a minis-
Pe gage ter of the ME
d_has a ‘haces tn Nev
andes pastored, churches in, Nen
Orleans, New York City and Balti-
more," He” married “Miss” Marl
Wait,
Dr. yon served as minister rest
dent and consul general of | the
United Slates in Liberia from
1903-11,
CHURCH PASTOR
BOSTON, Mass. — St. Paul AME
church gave an appreciation banque
in honor of the Rev. Marion F, Sydes
‘pastor, Priday night
Girls who_hav
pretty hair |(@>’
are invited a ‘-
LPN
everywhere Bg/(, |
r |) l-- ees —= Jf
—| LCi |
Q . HEED
oD
Lf /- NELSONS
Harr Dressine
makes Hair Pretty
because it keeps it in place, permitting the most becoming st
of hair-dress, and a neat appearance at all times. Get NELSONS
from your druggist, or write Nelson Mfg: Co» Richmond,
CE ee eee ce
Quf f
LEW,
KSA ] =e
Pure Aspiria:
Twelve five
frandy nell
; keene
from pain/
9
St. Joseph's
Pww ASPIRIN ,
as Purcas Money Can iC
Chicago Judge Is 56
Albert Bailey George, Judge of the
municipal court, in Chicago, Tilinois,
7 Since 1924, who
Sabie eee will be fifty-six
ger a, years old, Wed-
F % hesday. ‘october
f) 23. He was born
: 0 Fin’ Washington,
Be x || Dec, in 1613 and
By So educated at Miner
fey high school and
EE) cthe. “Spencerian
pf< Business" College,
Bie veome both in Washing-
pion, and North-
be Nwestem_ univer
2 ggsity, | He | mar-
~ ried Miss Maude
BBD 254. Roberts and
TOO thoes te one child.
St Wil be fifty-six
ger years old, Wed-
FY nesday, ‘October
PW 25. He was born
@ <> hin’ Washington,
Be DC. in 1073 and
bey, ee > educated at Miner
Py high school and
bE othe. “Spencerian
Bh Business” Coltese
ser. both in Washing-
gyton, and North
geste univer
sity. | He | mar-
“ee 8 ried_Miss Maude
EL AD. 54). Roberts and
“8 there is one child
[Albert Roberts. Judge George began
his career as clerk in the office of
James ‘B. Raymond, alderman
‘Altoona, Pa, in. 1898.
Howard Grads in Alabama
MONTGOMERY, Ala—A. D. Burk
and E, Dolores Preston, graduates of
Howard University, . have been ap-
pointed to the faculty of Alabama
eee ot cinflews
BAPTISTS PROGRES
FELD REPORTS
Collections and sy
Gaining, Preachers Me
| ing a :
JOINT MEETING
D. C. Pastors to Come i
October 28.
That the Baptist churches of |
timore and vicinity are steady
agressing with thelr fall “pro
Gs pastors atthe meas
us pastors at the meet
miners, Monday.“
‘The Rev. W. W. allen, pasty
[Shiloh Baptist church, mace the
fnouncement that last Sunday mast
the 27th anniversary of thal ches
Anniversary exercisés willbe iG
during the week of October 28 ni
vember 7, clesing with reapie
East Sunday's Woman's day gg
eat success, He also etal
Shiloh No.2 was steadlly sad
ing as a unit of the mother chant
‘The Rev. J. H. Green, pase
Metropolitan church, “sald “tha
missionary work of the churty te
improving. "Last, Sunday seven me
members were added to that has
‘The Wise Chorus
‘The Wise Chorus of Phil
te Wt, of i
mn the city during “the lat nag
ill be presented ‘to the iy
pie, Prasied ete. ae
Gctober 21. Woman's ‘Day at Gus
Memorial was a notable stcauy ne
proceeds from the services hn ot
netted $540.
"Abyssinia Baptist church tp
more than $400 last Sunda. she
wil be applied to thewariout
fot the church. ‘The Rev. G. WA,
{s_pastor. ‘
ine ev. M. Lewis, newly
Hed pastor of derisaln dee
church, {s again in the city ant
take active charge of tne work tex
The Rev. W. D. Yeroy, asitat
pastor of Perkins Square church ar
ounced a revival which the Re
Re Guss of Virginia. wil conde
‘among the visors at te na
were the Rev. Ernest Lyon, 8 i
fon of Kentucky, and E. R. Gus
Virginia,
Will Hold Joint Meeting
‘The Baltimore and Wasting
ministers will hold a Joint met @
October 28. AN elaborate. prome
and special entertainment fcr t
visiting, ministers are belng lame
by the local aggregation.
oonra
Train Cuts Off Man’s Len
CRISFIELD, Md.—William Col
61. was run over and had b:th ¥
‘cut off by a south bound excurs
train at Marion Station Sw
morning at 4am.
It is sald that Collins had be
drinking and was dead two be
‘before the train struck him. &1
survived: ‘by two sons and two days
, W CANNMATE LARP CONCR ERG AN ATR
\ f Wise 4.
‘AINT iy
MISBE: (fy
y Y 43h Fe
i SSA eR ey cath
. SSS. Re Ey,
i BA SSW 6S ify
Uy Z ay 4 ay
art Eu ann ee
“o i j 298 25 302 cate ome iced dance mae wht
VEY, esc tees eka ect nas nakes
oy Wea “ie fe Gl
SUMAPAUEE vrs Gt atest seer "0F Tn
NOONES ‘another nataral—Ask Your Dealer Te Play ae
APEX CLU Ain't Misbehavin? . . . . 15819
Crchenng OF Time Eran re
ecu chs Pex Club Orch.
4 & ANOTHER SNAPPY VOCALION HI
DABY rs Soiitee oe + seat rio cint a b98
ALB ee toa ed and Ceoraia Tom
Heoalion Voralion Recor
fecar ocalion
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iniWorld’s Largest Distributors of Kace Records By Mail
FRENCH NAVY 10
BE MANNED
BY AFRIGANS
‘ Plan for Separate Navy
for Colonies Is De-
bated. __
OFFICERS NOW.
Black Nica Command>
ed Paris Air Defenses.
paRis.—Garveys dream
of an African navy with
Crack men commanding great
battleships ‘may yet come
true!
‘But. there will be this exception;
that navy, instead of flying the tri-
olor of Garvey, will be carrying tat
of France!
rench Naval experts are proposi
to increase Frances marine strengti
# Mopting Great Britain's policy of
Pising separate navies for the colo-
ies,
‘his is now the case with Canada
and Australis, ‘The African colonte,
reetore, wll have ets ov navies
the proposition goes through. Tt is
1 the Proton up at the forthcoming
Ave-power conference which is to be
held at Geneva shortiy.
70,000,000 French Blacks
France has an enormous black
man-power_in her vast African pos:
fessions. Gen. Mangin calculated
that. 76,000,000 natives inhabit the
‘huge territory of the black, continen¢:
ana the proposed trans-Seharan rat:
road, which the French Parliament
fg studying. Is aimed at the populous
Riger region, where the Senegalese
Were recrulted during the last war.
“At the present time there are se¥-
eral Negro officers in the French na-
Yy, most of them from the West In-
Gits, “There has also been a Negro
fdmiral, Lecamus. row dead.
in retirement lives @ very dark Ne-
gro who has commanded French
Rarships and. was for several years
commandant of the great naval for-
fincations at Brest. He, is | Com-
mandant Mortenol,” Mortenol was
fiso in command of the air defenses
of Parig at Le Bourget during the
Sor, and ‘White “American aviators
br pr Wg wages ra
Haberdashery Succeeds
yew YORK, ANP)—"You'd be
suipased” is the expression with
heh Mr. Lane of Lane and Nichols,
Grners of a new haberdashery neat
the'"Eafayette ‘Theater on Seventh
Henue. New York, greeted a commer.
Gal agent of the government, Who
frquited how the. public was, taking
the thoroughly. modern men’s. Wweat
establishment these Men had’ recent-
ipopened.
‘The four, thousandn dollar stoc’
with whieh the place Is provided met
Hitt such Immediate ‘ales that ac-
Guding to. the. first. monthly -cudtt
nd the ‘second ‘one, ‘by an expert
Scuntant, it is ‘being turned over
Sih egueney such’ ase normal
{0 old established stores. “The reason
If care in the selection of stock, mod-
fim equipment, advertising, courtesy
ee EN ee ee onnest
M. E. BISHOP IS 64
ME.
» GF
i ot ie
fe ae.
ee oS
ops oe
ee a
Rc gO
Lee CE
Peo te i ce
wo | ee e
CO eg
A ee eee
eee fa. Be
ree) os) Un ee
\ 2 ee
ys ee se ee
oN eae ee aera Ph
ieee Sees ei
— Na Bs
Ne eee Oe
Meee ee
‘MATTHEW WESLEY CLAIR:
bebe of the ME. church, who will celebrate his sixty-fourth birthday,
Monday, October 21. He was born in Union, W. Va,, in 1865 and educated
at Moen college, Baltimore; Bennett cole and Howard university. He
Was ordained an ME. minister in 1883 and has pastored churches in’ West
Virginia, Virginia, and Washington, D.C. He was elected bishop in 1920
and assigned to the Liberian field. He is now in charge of the Kentucky
district. In 1889, Bishop Clair married Miss Fannie M. Walker, now de-
‘ceased. He has since re-married.
Law Institute Adopts ... STEEL DOORS YIELD;
World Rights of Man! 5
ssusncurs vopoe, xx | POLIGE RAID CLUB
(CNS) —Departing from precedents ieee
oC Sity sie seach, Mie ena ge
atlona in session ae, Briaz ey
aint Lodge adopted a declaration of Dunbar, ‘Protected’ for
Se ees atoral ests “ot man} Years, Smashed by Sledge-
which if enacted into law would in-
sure to every individual person the| hammers.
equal right, fo life. liberty and prop- ——
ily with full protection of the Iaw,
and guarantee ‘women equal statis. 350 ARRESTED
Ralph Baker Leaves Hospital; " 7
Bee Home Under Bail. | Cops Find Both Races; Rich
—= Furniture, Oriental Rugs.
cREW YORK Ralph, Baker, Un! CHICAGO—(ANP)—What _ nest?
cel university siudent.. shot Wor |mhe Dunbar Club, which js reputed
Penber 9 has left the hospital and | (0 have enjoyed absolute “protection’
fas been ‘released to go to his home,| for years, was raided here Saturday
Tider ‘ball, according to announce: | #flernoon, and a squad of, officers
Iiene today by the NAACP. Baker| {om the state's atiorney’s office
rae ota Oe rf Rontaine, are | assed through the portals and when
Charged with disorderly conduct, | they emerged carried away some
TEE ae nae narged | three hundred fifty individuals who
by the boys, and witnesses gathered | had gathered to watch the outcome
by the NAACP. fired wantonly | of the races and to endeavor. fo in-
hitting an innocent person, has been | crease their “earnings” through vari-
Summoned {0 appear in ‘court on| us types of gambling.
re at. ‘The peautiful steel-lined doors
STEEL DOORS YIELD;
POLICE RAID CLUB
Dunbar, “Protected” for
Years, Smashed by Sledge-
hammers.
350 ARRESTED
Cops Find Both Races; Rich
Furniture, Oriental Rugs.
CHICAGO.—(ANP.)—What _ next?
The Dunbar Club, which, js reputed
to have enjoyed absolute “protection”
for years, was raided here Saturday
afternoon, anda squad of, officers
from the state's attorney's office
passed through the portals and when
they emerged carried away some
three hundred fifty individuals who
had gathered to watch the outcome
of the races and to endeavor to in-
crease their “earnings” through vari-
ous types of gambling.
‘The beautiful steel-lined doors
were rudely broken down by the raid-
ing squad and the Oriental rugs
which covered the floor were severely
punished by the thick-soled shces af
the police who so ruthlessly dared to
enter the club and disturb the peace
and quietude of the institution.
‘And it Was an institution that the
raiders found, with beautiful roulette
wheels in action, elaborate racing
booths and. other devices for gam-
bling mixed with the beautiful and
costly furniture for which the club
has been famous for vears.
‘Everything was quiet, “and the
members, among whom ‘were. white
and black gamblers, were abcut their
business in carnest, when a “lookout!
sounded the alarm that the Jaw was
there. ‘The watchman must have
been asleep on the job. for when the
word was given, the place was sur-
rounded completely by police and
the ring of axes and sledze hammers
on the door was resounding through-
out the building, There was no dubt
about it, the “law was there” end
meant to come in.
"The club is reported to have been
founded by the late Daniel M, Jack-
son, and was named for Paul Lau-
Fence Dunbar, who was a friend of
the late political leader of the second
ward years ago, when the poet lived
in Chicano.
Jersey Girl Weds New Yorker
‘WASHINGTON, D.C.—Miss Laura
all Shr or sersey Clty. NS, 29
‘married to Joseph F, Terrace, 45, of
‘New York City, here last week by the
Rev. William D, Jarvis.
ou TINH ROM
~~ DIXON'S LUNCH ROOM
110 West Princess Street
i YORK, PA.
vans. taxon, Prope,
How One Woman Lost
* 20 Pounds of Fat
Lost Her Double Chin
Lost Her Prominent Hips
Lost Her Sluggishness
Galnca Physica Vigor
Gained tn Vivaclousnss
Galocd a shapely Figare
If you're fat—first remove the
cause!
KRUSCHEN SALTS, contain the
6, mineral salts your body organs,
glands and nerves must have to
function properly.
When your vital organs fall, to
perform their work correctiy—your
Dowels and kidneys can't throw oft
Ghat. waste materlal—before | you
Feallze it—you're growing hideously
fat!
“ire one halt teaspoonful of
KRUSCHEN SALTS te 2 slate of Hot
water every miorning-in. 3, weeks ge
On the “seslew ands note, how many
Sounds of fat have vanished,
Notice also that you nave gained tn
energy—your alin is clearer_—your eyes
Sparkle wien glorious health—vou eel
gounger vin’ Body cm ecner, I mind,
ERUSCHEN. will give eny fat DEFson &
josous surprise.
Get "an 5c bottle of KRUSCHEN
SALES from any leudlng GrusRint any
herein America, Casts 4. weeKs). If
Inte fest Sottle doesn't convince "you
Uns isthe easlent, safest, and surest
Was (0, lose fatrit you, don't feel
Superb tmprovement in health to Blori-
Ously” energetie—vigorously, allve—your
ey eee
DETROIT BOMB
DRIVES TENANTS
INTO STREETS
Explosion in Apart-
ment House Near
Sweet Home.
OCCUPIED 3 MOS.
In Section Recently
Held by Whites.
DETROIT.—Colored citi-
zens of Detroit are greatly
aroused over the bombing of
the nine-family apartment
house at 10334 Charlevoix
avenue, corner of Garland
avenue, Thursday evening
shortly after 8:30 o'clock.
‘The explosion drove more than
score of the tenants into the strect
and. shattered windows throughou:
Bh nelgnbor on.
‘The bombing "occurred directly
across the street from the home of
Dr. Ossian H. Sweet, who during
1025 and 1926 ‘was the central ‘ogure
ine rate rot in which one white
men Was killed,” Clarence ‘Darzow
defended Sweet who was acquitted.
Tt came just after the close of the
most bitter contest for mayor ever
staged in Detroit, and some are
ascribing the act to political reason:
‘Dr. Sweet took @ very active tothe am
‘the present campaign on behalf o!
former Mayor John W. Smith, anc
‘was instrumental in creating greal
sentimient among race voters for hitu
‘The building was taken over by
‘Negro tenants last August, and nv
threats had been made. The bom
consisted of several sticks of dyna-
‘nute placed in glass container, anc
the explosion occurred in the real
court of the building. Approximately
oe damage was done to the build-
fz,
an teh Btu and demand prop
stand thelr growitd anc cop
er protection as law-abiding ees
No further disturbance is anticipated
as the attitude of Detroit Negroes 1
‘previous cases has been to answe
Rare with fire?”
Coca-Cola Salesman
NEW. YORK, (A.NP.)—One color-
ed, man graces the seat of Cora:
Gola truck ase salestaan of the
bidet knot soft tink, He bas been
on his route for more than @ year,
and walle the wages ave but $15 per
week, the pay of & chauffeur, his
sales commissions provide the men
wath a total wage exceeding $79 each
week.
“The concern announces him to be
the first they Have encountered who
hhad eonugh self-confidence to accept
Jacommission job which is the basis
of all commercial salesmen’s success
To Try Twice-Convicted
Arkansas Boys Again
NEW YORK—The | Arkansos Su-
preme court has fcr the sceond time
Teversed the case of Robert Bell, who
‘with Grady Swain, has twice been
convicted and. sentenced, first to
death, then to life imprisonment, for
the alleged murder by drowning cf
two white boys.
'W. J. Lanier, white attorney, who
has ‘defended ' the boys and Js con-
vineed of thelr innocence, informs
ihe National Association for the Ad;
vancement of Colored People, that
the two frlendless and helpless col-
cored boys face a third trial, The
NAACP. to date has expended $1240
in Keeping these two boys from the
electric chair and prison.
Craft Rejoins Show
George Craft, comedian has return-
ed to Sammy’ Lewis's “Dixie Jani-
Gree” revue, and mail will reach him
oecaeii: Myrtle avenue, Baltimore.
Whiskey!
iskey:.
By John’s Wife
trent
Veuind Meracedl gy aed len,
rele aha iP ie oaano
Atdine weridns jerea partes
iisiopeabn
ran Ss
RS Sa
z iE Gas
fe 7 ie
C Stef ee
onaurpradgeon ere,
ea sent for GOLDEN TREATIENT.
ideas veces
eee
ide er
esate
Ao
amare.
angiiacare he ares
ee Baie,
amaiet ea
ay hate
Sinte he's eared of énckine,
ears aree
~feaiteneiante
fsbo bates
Aaieieeree
add wtant sag ay pagers at alah
ee ee
Had, GOLDEN TREATMENT,
HomeTreatment forBrunkards
Oder atime ten
Ea erFe
Costs Nothing to Try
ofa has t Battin aer a oes
cael ee tarace deere ar
ERS Sherri eddie
Po seen
Fillin your name and address on blank:
| yaa ae.zes bere Murine -ssreg aed
Beate a eee 60 teen
Bi dictona one Yount recive
Pekacateciphofttetenmectinn ait
| sealed prereset prove oes that itil
soled meats Rasy fog Yeuate
j ecealeenttecarlad padre
Sie ating sfnoce eowine why.
fete acer
Esiags
| ERB, Dae
[C1 ener SUM reo,
‘A CARD Pnon PARIS says,that Besteee
Camper ie aguin Nove wea Be tots pack
fad orth from Chicago, ike noted? Bas-
Bese ier ‘Seite it's fhe 4neesonie
Spal coopers ane of ne ils of Pati
Moe Uskxktet ctace Wilans hes
seturmed fom utala und Ts be gee 10,86
Beck? you should tsk me, Me, brings tbe
dovrect Buta sang vanow. mening O16):
Puirt coming!" weasing dont want 80
“T ain't coming,” weaning con't want to)
fin’ coming,” meaning 1 don't wan
do something. :
Avon Tennis Club
“The son Tennis lay premnted Ht ou:
some forma "Srom SYebaadey esin 8
tee enalnence Bunreen ‘ape sive and
wie he tee cee et maeh in =
Hes and CU shaope nae caer
te ae ete ne” Neve
3. ing prensa, B sboh Mee
Prot, "Sates Trespon cere
Hitman crt ieeeaay Biden Brae,
Ssh alge ‘liaketh Finch hen ramet
Morea. Sriati tr tavoaed, Vet
Bereta Chis Witenes” Ole For
arate Se io
eter iers are: sents Bor Ruby
Bitte te take cates tarthar Panel
Barca adh haste str Wales
ettgadcal’ peter te ayer
John Wilsen. 7
Your Bid Bridge Club
Cony Agatha Togcam was hoses to the
ye oid" Bage’ has, "thuteey even
That dunes seta thee Tell, te
Fins "oun in? formes ceeg ef
Bate he mating Se Slag: nay tal
Bane ee ee oe ect hae rad
pinged fc ey Gute age Rees
deipen Meceay,ounnting caake aging
cee coretat i need out we
rae as act Usinet of te este a
GME el thet tne nay peanash whe
Peat ae
‘esis fey toed u, ee adie and
cated taeed ean font in he
ERG ‘Sy Teak al te gueste—tae
‘Bert. Harrises, G. Pendersons, T. A. Neelys,
Bune yale taateran Pere,
Fico Asinbun Bente sate,
aot, EN te Manas Blok, Pes?
feuians Venetia Br ame West
Hay wr Eamon tase mine:
Mee EE sos Seno ora seme,
Brett Gusts Sure ilace farm
5, Pay Sette my Bases, ie
Be Behe ana ues. Date Memes, Fras
BE 28glienhd anv ene ne whoopee
waiting occupies one ream, dishing 9
ei Sa en cs
AE BRAS, Sacto’ feg'icharomn a
Su ney Bam ea and os
Say Atte: Mi antl sie ton
Seek iut aga toned tanee
Sete atten eam, ‘Beet
sours ine: in oud sisal ote
BEOE! “Vout ne" pty oor seen
BLO: ga/Sean aalen" smn pet frou
tS utetta tbe pay wa realy& 00
Venton of “peat bate meh
Fish Club
‘he Fish Cb, Toes staged it at Bre
tee Oe edie at mes
fas cence ite peace ose Sargent
aan teen tae en oy tet
it, be ace Hu hat Sw a
‘Su io the erst popsterityof Charl
spate dite pds aha tule tas
sehen! nnuland’ the “Pan, soandoned
Hi father poy st geing a ately in
tee raes Pand teea 8 aati ge Me
Sua GReSbeanktst tour. ane Satie
SSvimied int eatin tee horeing arate
satin ant ene the Bee ate
ates Hae ite ee hed
eng eaten wt Waser ts
Hosta Pig’ ener weer” Pau
Peetu meneutd Covariance
pete ee Bint Branden Prin ioe
Aitmcrapah ont Snare, Gears
ee ee aaa
Simi ae, diccenty” eunnet. "aed
SURE ities’ hope yu te them,
Mummers’ Costumes
se Columbus Day elbration ces Sx
ckty Sutin Oey sues mes Coe
EGY ge al ee at Roecona Peace,
Fe ae oa et ei vere
Raligdane ms ciate
come fort, ye wrtiy Damas, fn a 7e
Sern eee eee as ed seat
Figet al angereela ‘notes,
cia te itty frees fone oi
sa mae Zee ine nessa Palace
Fat eee ne eres of
‘Laughter, Song and Dance?
wat ne monte,
a ts oan ven
Witter teens
Bre atate
nt
Hew dork ets.
0,3 ue give oon bg sren
Seale fa ;
ANE SNe
na
lcety-hekaty boc,
Se
Sees
See orden”
ee et te See
pe youl dest
ed
Maree—"vo0 soet'r am gtting fat
aon utoe pat Sear St the
sea eee
You ‘opt squirt ‘Gee
Bae Egg! ai eon you went
tint fee ang site afmee of yours?
Serene ine be oech Me 6
Aes ie
ere eae tdeas are tape
oun tai tite &'peany or
Soir nose"
Signed “Georle” Borns and “Maxie”
se
And, th that, the most gorgeous af fe
itd ihe te parcued sbasbe s
As ceettmtes Bho gat meas to shure
REAM oe ets Uno Baar atone
ea Bea ings Sn ea sear ro
SE Set pee tnd i ee
“Born to Be”
taylor Gordon's "orn to Be i witho
ear Garten cat eon
See ine it Saar gitwing ro
ci ete tet ago fe and. Me
seoveteaten Cae et doe ont
ee stn ed tee aed ith cope
Bue tat eciya vay arene
A eae tat ue, Gordon, soa 0
etna e"Gettpe a teeta th
Daa ee Geenee Sao ae Joc
a aa a eth ated ew Yorkers
Tour of Philly
smne Reencaliatgn Tp, under he die
a eePeeeeatatgs Sot Sey fae
‘ion of Clarence V. and Ide Oatley Towel
‘The Reconcollation Trips, under the Cire,
tion of Clarence V.-and fae Oatley Towell
Of New York: cevotea Saturday, October 12th
fo ‘Negro Lite im Philadephia. The tip
tras eopectally planned by Marion E, Roller,
Tecond vice president of tha Ceméen Dist
feiee Epworth, League, for members of net
orahfantlon,, but everyone ‘eho wished. 0
Silene and "had. the ecessary ity) cents,
Enst of dinners tips and fares, was welcome,
othe group met in. the euditorlum of the
christen. Aesocietlon at “Tnirty-sixth and
Goeust treet, where, Dr. Sadie 7, Sosell
Biorandet, representing the | NAACP,
Gpoke on “How fo zstabllsh Reciprocal Re-
ions Between ‘Colored aad White People
FRayeneres” and enswered. the questions
put to her.
‘From there they made a tour of Negro
phiiy's ‘busineas. enterprises, fraternity
Bullngs, ever including the ‘Citizens and
Southern Bane and Trust Company: the new
SGodo Ntasonte ‘Temple, ullt by Negroes:
nights o€ Pythias Hall: Philadelphia, Trib-
lines ANCE. Book Concern: the Poro Beauty
Parlor from dollars to Pora College, « rll
Ton, dollar enterprise: the: Robert Hartis
Studio, 148 S. Sixteenth street, where fUrDi-
fare 1$ transformed from salvage to douve-
Sirvart antiques.
Mrs. Clark, Hostess
Mrs. Carolyn Clark. mother of Langston
aghts entertained im honor of Mrs, BYFHe
‘Grinch of Kensas City, ‘Thureday, the 1th,
Beneing and’ whoopee’ went on "until the
yawning.
“Among the revellers were: Grace White
sinnche Betty, Helen Brown, Rebecca Stes
Taylors Me, and. Mrs. A. 34iekins,, Irene
‘Batkedene, ital sohnson, 4: Warner, Sezvice
Balk Roland, Timmins, vincent cel Bole,
‘Hugo Bornn and Bob Douglass,
“Black Christ,” Cullen’s Book
‘Countee Cullen's “Black Christ” published
by Harper and Co., Parle, Prance, ts expected
fa America by November 1st.
Langston Hughes
Langston Hughes has established x rts!
aente’in'the quietness of West Had. N-
Shere he hopes to resume hls writings for
magazines.
ae ear omeaananety,
Corey Davis and Roosevelt ee ith
feeriaioed at thelr apartment, 102 W, 11%
Street, Bondar afternoon, 18 Wonot of Mr.
and srs. Leonard Aassenburs, of Ratelgh,
Sic. Mehose, marriage was recently aR=
Rouieed. |
‘These, prevent_were willl | Hirshani,
aces Pattie Taylor aed Pauline V0"
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See How New French Creme
Lightens Dark Skin...
10 Shades In 10 Seconds!
FAN TAR “creme.
NEW YORK SOCIETY
THOMAS ROAM, who tas been a patient |
tn the Veteran's Hospital here, is. visting
hie iter Ms, ‘hucy "Turner, 1at'W. Gouth
Caroling avenue.
‘MR, AND MRS, RUDOLPH COTELLO have
returned home after epending the summer 12
Ausntle City sith relatives tnd friends,
guceneateas Were exaue.
The folloxing Harlem girls with the
peteentage after halt memes were highly
fuceessful In the Stato Clerical. exemina-
tion, held Nay 28, about 79 of whom have
Deen) certiged for positions,” mong. them
were: Catherine DePreitas, 95.25, and Blas
Rovaile DeP. Moore with’ 98.20. “The lst
follows: aénzgaretJohtson, 92,98: Inez E.
Seaborn, 91.15: Mary E. Powell, 89.18; char-
Totte Alkens, 8140. Lalu M. Payne, 96.0;
Lucy Dean, #420; Dorothy Q. Bourne, #832;
Mildeed. Walker, 2.82; William Phair
fats: Thelma ib, Sivan, 62.00: Besse 3:
Brooks, e110: Aiary Patterson, 8022:
Sonn §, Craig, 73107 Daisy T. Poster, 71.78
‘Migs HAZEL Mf, WIGDEN has been 2
signed to the ofiee of Charles W. mitchell
tnd Ailss Barrett has been re-assigned to
the Heralé-Vindleator ote,
'NaSS ETHELYN MORROW, of Summ!
na, will become Dookpeeper ‘for, the Mor-
Tow’ Transportation company, “with ofers
tt Durham, HG, and Riehsiond, Ve, af-
ter finushing er” course at the academy.
fa JUSTICE will entertain the member
end frlenés of the Jounson ©. Smith Unt.
versity Club of New York, Inc., of, which
Siibpbert Alien 4s president, and Mf, Yancey,
secretary.
‘MISS LUCILLE WALKER has been as
signed a3 secretary to De. P. BM. H. Savory.
eae ee
dieceiarr Sabia.
‘Committes women of Ashland Place ¥.W.
CA are favited to tho Setropoltan Volun<
teer ‘Workers’ Conference to be held at
Gergen S.W-ccy, Weenestny, October 2,
at 10 em.
‘among, the principal apenkers will be
william Hodgson, executice secretary of the
Wellere Counell cf New vork city, of the
subject, “Pundamental Principles Underlying
Gommlites Work,” and Dr. Larson Lorie,
exoeutive secretary of the Tnsthute of Child
Ordinance, who eit speak on, “The Psy~
chalga" Puetors Ia "Comiiee Dereop-
‘Following the cénterene, & Junchon will
berheld at the Harriet Judson "Yat which
Mrs. Franklin Recsevelt, wife of Governor
Raosevelt, will be guest speaker.
‘embers of the Business. and Profession
a1 Girls Ohb of which Mlts Grace Hinds
{3 president, enjoyed. holldey hike Octo-
beri, and plenic, at the ome of the
World ‘writer, Bir. Otls Swit, ab Hastings
on the Hudson,
MISS ML REND. of Clarksburg, W.Va.
acrived ta thls city Saturday.
MRS. NIMEVAM MILLER, who attended
the funeral of her uncle, Gen, Edward Bet~
toy in Boston, has returned to her home,
‘MR, AND MRS. HARRY KENDALL visited
Mer and Mrs, Charles Washington, of Bos-
fon, Inst week.
MISS MAROARET WILLIAMS has return
ed'to ner heme. In Boston efter visiting
fb ils ety aad Newark, NJ.
YRS. EURETTA SANFORD has returned
toner nome in Boston, after visiting 10
New ‘York ‘city
“(ISS MARY PERRY, of Plymouth, Mass.,
thas entered Lincoln hospital as & nurse,
USS INEZ SMITH wes the guest of Mr.
and Mrs, @tephen L, Maxwell of Bosion,
ase week. irs. Zula Tasco Is: the guest
fof her aunt, Mrs, Grorgle Tasco, of Boston.
MM AND BIS. JAMES and family, of
phinidelphiy spent the weckeend nere vis
fling thelr sister, Mrs. J. Boll.
URS, LIZZIE HERRING, of Philadsiphie,
spent. ihe week-end in this city.
MRS, EDWARD JOHNSON, formeriy) of
pittsburgh, visited in that clty this week.
1318S PAULINE BIGGERS has returned to
her home Jn Gastonia, N.C, alter spending
the summer in this city.”
"DR. M, CORNWALL and Oscar Cushing,
both of itartford, visited In Stamford and
Rew Yoru during the weak,
Sins, ‘MABEL SHEPHERD PORTER. who
‘nas buen visiting er sister, rs. stella
Br Rideout of Hedgesville, W.Va, bas Te-
firmed to her home:
MURS, ‘MARY ATKINS, of Lexington, Vin
arrived here last week, to spend tbe’ wis-
er.
OSS MARY, BAYLOR, who hes been
spending some time heze, hes returned to
eg home ins Prederixtarig, Va
Gen. BEULAH DISPIELD and Miss Mag-
gle Teylor, who spent the summer here,
five itried to Geir nome at ow
Sis ARNITA WILSON returned to hee
ome at Eparroes Point, Nd. after spend:
ng teveral weeks here
SnWoOD HOPKINS is visiting his moth-
Jer, tars, Bilsabeth Hoptias, at St, Dtichaels,
<8
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Insurance Salesmen
| WANTED
Men who can help build a Company--
| A Company of Character, Strength and
a Service to a People.
Come, Let’s Grow with the Country and
Company.
Write or Phone
Home Office: 407 to 413 W. Franklin St.
Mutual Benefit
e
| Society |
of Baltimore, Md.
LONNIE BRANCH, Field Agent
| Baltimore, Md.
Raised $43,000
Reece ae eS eg
ere ores
ee ee
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oo.
1S
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BISHOP HURST
‘With $15,000 turned in by some
presiding elders of Scuth Carolina,
Eihe Mdowent Day eatton
area ome
ve ea ter alien Unlerty
$0 ree a a Hr
left thelr Baltimore home for South
ite aidan where ania
conferences will begin. They will re-
conferences will bet
PA, COUPLE WEDS IN D. ~
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Mrs. Mary
©. 8. Hill, 42 and William H. Ford,
60, both of Chester, Pa, were mar-
Hed here last week by” the Rev. I.
P. Brooks.
CAT BITE FATAL,
‘NEW ORLEANS, La—(ANP.)—Ce-
lestine Baptiste, of Kenner, La., is
dead as the result of @ cat bite sev-
‘tral Gays O20,
atti az eae
Ghar ain tot rednes ght tery Tone
te utile In noes aa toca Mle
thd et uae tne fe hanes 7
iss tnd wieesy epee Rory
Hela
tater uae Tho ae. eled "Ban
sth tor very dee complesons end
ees ee a Sac Rade STR
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ee eee SEES cea
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eek att Sake EI
ert lds
Bee oat ee csc
Se He ee ace Pete aSar,
ay. the posta oly eet for tea days:
DELANY APPEALS. FOR
WHITE 6.0,P, VOTE
‘Harlem Candidate Asks in
Srantgcieinnta Talk Over
SreenTceDiVED |
NEW YORK.—An appeal to white
Republicans in the 21st Congression~
al District for fair play was made
over Radio Station WPCH, located at
the Hammerstein ‘Theatre, October
10, by Hubert T. Delany, who is make
ing a strong fight for election to Con
gress trom the lstnet
‘he Ast Congressional District, has
an’ estimated population of nea
Halt million people, equally divi
between the Gaucausian and. Negro
races, in the past, colored candidates
for this ofice have been defeated be-|
cause white Republicans “vote with
white Democrats against them,
‘This situation has been somewhat
offset by an increased registration in
Harlem, among the colored voter
But, aspecial effort, is also, being
made to win over these white Re-
Publicans and make them stand loy-|
fly by ‘hele candidate, Hence Mr
Delany's plea for fair play,
‘He was granted the courtesy of the
air by the Rev. Ohristian ¥. Reisner,
pastor of the Chelsea. M. E. Church,
thi i erecting the Broadiiay Tem.
ple, the ‘tallest church building in
the world, Dr. Relsner usually speaks
halt an hour over, this station every
‘Thursday evening but he allowed Mr.
Delany twenty minutes of his time.or
this oeeasion and promised to grant
a similar time for the next week.
Dr, Reisner has been ureing all his
members to vote for Mr. Delany and
is actively working, in his behal!
among all the white voters of the
District.
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THE AFRICAN AMERICAN
Published ever, Saturday in The Aftar-Aerienian Building, Baltimore. Baltimore. Md. by THE AFTAR AERIENIAN GROUP, CAMPAIGN.
JOHN H. MURPHY, Sr. Editor and Publisher, 1895-1922.
CARL MURPHY, Prep. Editor, 1895-1922.
MARTHA MURPHY, $2.50 Per Month, $1.75 for Six Months.
$1.00 for Three Months.—(Payable in Advance),
Foreign Subscription, $1.00 for Annual and
annuals and $1.00 for One Year, $3.54.
What The "AFRO" Stands For
1. Colored policemen, policewomen and firemen.
2. Colored representatives on city, county and State Boards of Education.
3. Colored representatives equal work for school teachers without regard to equal or color sex.
4. Colored members on Boards of State Institutions where inmates are colored.
5. The organization of labor unions among all groups of colored workers.
6. A university and agricultural college for colored people supported by the State.
7. Children's farmarms and the State and Federal Farm Agents.
THOUGHTS OF THE FOUNDER
Kissing women without their consent is quite an expensive luxury, as has been recently demonstrated in this city where a man was sent to jail for two years, or cr bussing an white woman. The doctor the won on a white woman. The would kiss her wen but a short distance toward paying his counsel fees. Down in Virginia, a white man was recently compelled to fork over a $30 fine and costs for the same thing. It would better and possibly cost less if permission were first obtained, but there is a difference of opinion even there.
Look Up
Autumn is here, summer has gone and winter is just around the corner.
The hot days have given way to cool frosty mornings and a balm mid-day sun that invites everybody out of doors.
Week-end trips ought not to stop because summer has gone.
There is new blueness in the sky. Woods and fields have decked themselves in the brightest colors of the year—red and yellow, brown and gold.
Go but a little way outside of the city and look up. look around at the Master Painter. His work is good. He put it there and the viewing of it is soul-lifting and refining.
Besides, most city people stay indoors too much when the weather is chilly. Sunday, Saturday, whenever possible, they should follow the German custom of an excursion into the suburbs, by trolley, by auto, or, perhaps better, on foot. If you want to increase your salary, add to your appreciation of the universe and your ability to enjoy it, spend some time this month out of doors.
We haven't yet, and we never will, develop a substitute for the health-giving, nerve-soothing qualities to be found in exercise, fresh air, and sunlight.
In town, we are too busy watching autos and traffic signals to see much, or enjoy much. We have to take to the woods in order to get a chance to relax and LOOK UP.
Autumn is here, summer has gone and winter is just around the corner. The hot days have given way to cool frosty months and the mid-day sun that invites everybody out of doors.
Week-end trips ought not to stop because summer has gone.
There is new blueness in the sky. Woods and fields have decked themselves in the brightest colors of the year—red and yellow, brown and gold.
Go but a little way outside of the city and look up, look around at the Master Painter. His work is good. He put it there and the viewing of it is soul-lifting and refining.
Besides, most city people stay indoors too much when the weather is chilly. Sunday, Saturday, whenever possible, they should follow the German custom of an excursion into the suburbs, by trolley, by auto, or, perhaps better, on foot.
If you want to increase your salary, add to your appreciation of the universe and your ability to enjoy it, spend some time this month out of doors.
We haven't yet, and we never will, develop a substitute for the health-giving, nerve-soothing qualities to be found in exercise, fresh air, and sunlight.
In town, we are too busy watching autos and traffic signals to see much, or enjoy much. We have to take to the woods in order to get a chance to relax and LOOK UP.
Garvey, the Flea
Mr. Marcus Garvey, campaigning for election to the Jamaican legislature last month, said that if he were elected he would seek to reform the island courts. Corrupt judges, he said, spend evenings in clubs instead of in study and often conspire with lawyers to defraud litigants and prisoners at the bar.
No names were called, but the entire Jamaican bench, feeling itself affronted, haled Mr. Garvey into court, charged with contempt.
The trial was unusual. Mr. Garvey said (1) that he did not refer to existing judges; (2) that he was misquoted; (3) he introduced sixteen affidavits of persons who said they did not bear Mr. Garvey make any such remarks; (4) he claimed that even if he had used such language he was so privileged as a political candidate.
The court in reply termed Mr. Garvey "foolish." "not headed." The affidavits, the court pointed out, did not state that Mr. Garvey did not utter the statements, but that these witnesses did not hear him utter them.
In brief, said the court, Mr. Garvey is trying to make a fool out of us, so they voted, two to one, to send him to jail for three months.
Mr. Garvey apologized for his speech, sentence would have been increased to six months.
In the United States, Mr. Garvey's political speech attacking the courts would probably have passed unnoticed. In Jamaica, the size of Connecticut, with a population of 15,000 whites ruling a million Negroes, a whisper against the white officials is sufficient to start an investigation.
Mr. Jamaican court probably knows its problem better than we, but from this distance, it seems as if the court's summary action is but another step towards making a public martyr and national hero of Mr. Garvey.
Following his imprisonment, his constituents nominated him for the legislature, while 5,000 persons cheered.
If anything were needed to give impetus to his political campaign, the courts have supplied it. Mr. Garvey will be elected overwhelmingly and will leave St. Catherine's prison for the legislative seat where he will—to use his own words—"he an everlasting flea in the collars of his enemies."
The conviction of Mr. Garvey does not settle the question whether Jamaican judges are tiplers or not, but it makes it very apparent that their Honors are sensitive on the subject.
Mr. Marcus Garvey, campaigning for election to the Jamaican legislature last month, said that if he were elected he would seek to reform the island courts. Corrupt judges, he said, spend evenings in clubs instead of in study and often conspire with lawyers to defraud litigants and prisoners at the bar.
No names were called, but the entire Jamaican bench, feeling itself affronted, halted Mr. Garvey into court, charged with contempt.
The trial was unusual. Mr. Garvey said (1) that he did not refer to existing judges; (2) that he was misquoted; (3) he introduced sixteen affidavits of persons who said they did not hear Mr. Garvey make any such remarks; (4) he claimed that even if he had used such language he was so privileged as a political candidate.
The court in reply termed Mr. Garvey "foolish," "not-headed." The affidavits, the court, pointed o'j, did not state that Mr. Garvey did not state statements, but that these witnesses did not hear him utter them.
In brief, said the court, Mr. Garvey is trying to make a fool out of us, so they voted, two to one, to send him to jail for three months.
Had not Mr. Garvey apologized for his speech, sentence would have been increased to six months.
In the United States, Mr. Garvey's political speech attacking the courts would probably have passed unnoticed. In Jamaica, the size of Connecticut, with a population of 15,000 whites ruling a million Negroes, a whisper against the white officials is sufficient to start an investigation. Jamaican court probably knows its problems better than we, but from this distance, it seems as if the court's summary action is but another step towards making a public martyr and national hero of Mr. Garvey. Following his imprisonment, his constituents nominated him for the legislature, while 5,000 persons cheered. If anything were needed to give impetus to his political campaign, the courts have supplied it. Mr. Garvey will be elected overwhelmingly and will leave St. Catherine's prison for the legislative seat where he will—to use his own words—"be an everlasting flail in the collars of his enemies." The conviction of Mr. Garvey does not settle the question whether Jamaican judges are tipplers or not, but it makes it very apparent that their Honors are sensitive on the subject.
Private Athletic League
Private Athletic League
The Public Athletic League is a misnomer. It should change its title to Private Athletic League in order to conform to its present program or else change its program to conform to its name. The P.A.L. is a semi-public institution, drawing appropriations of $10,000 from the state, $35,000 from the city, and $55,000 from the city park board to foster athletics in public schools on public playgrounds and in the public parks. Under Director William T. Burdick, white, who boasts of his northern ancestry, the policy of the league has been to take the public funds appropriated and neglect the Negro as a part of the public. Dr. Burdick's platform might be expressed: "Baltimore is in the South. The South does not believe in a square deal for the Negro. I am here to hold a job, not to buck race problems." I keeping with the program. Mr. Ernest A. Attwell, director of Playground Association of America, found out in his survey that the P.A.L.'s budget was in excess of $250,000 but that it did not spend $3,000 a year of this sum upon Negroes.
The Public Athletic League is a misnomer. It should change its title to Private Athletic League in order to conform to its present program or else change its program to conform to its name.
The P.A.L. is a semi-public institution, drawing appropriations of $10,000 from the state, $35,000 from the city, and $55,000 from the city park board to foster athletics in public schools, on public playgrounds and in the public parks. who boasts of his northern ancestry, the policy of the league has been to take the public funds appropriated and neglect the Negro as a part of the public.
Dr. Burdick's platform might be expressed: "Baltimore is in the South. The South does not believe in a square deal for the Negro. I am here to hold a job, not to buck race problems." In keeping with the program, Mr. Ernest T. Atwell, associate director of the Playground Association of America, found out in his survey that the P.A.L.'s budget was in excess of $250,000 and spent $3,000 a year of this sum upon Negroes.
To understand the P.A.L. as it has developed under Dr. Burdick, the city's recent 200th anniversary is a glaring example.
Dr. Burdick gets $6,000 a year from the school board to direct athletics in Baltimore schools. The anniversary pageant of white school children was held in the Stadium, on Friday of the anniversary week. The pageant of colored school children—though none was actually held—was held at Drud Hill park on Monday of the week following the anniversary celebration. The P.A.L. operates one school gymnasium and one playground for colored children the year-round. It employs one colored worker. It pays no attention to recreation for colored girls. It ought to have a colored director and staff of five according to a bi-racial committee which
Dr. Burdick gets $6,000 a year from the school board to direct athletics in Baltimore schools. The anniversary pageant of white school children was held in the Stadium, on Friday of the anniversary week. The pageant of colored school students throughough a year held—was proposed to be held at Drud Hill park on Monday of the week following the anniversary celebration.
situated for that of the P.A.L. (Detroit, Michigan, has ten colored year-round playground workers—men and women.)
Meantime, Dr. Burdick's budget, calling for an increased appropriation of $10,000, is before the Baltimore Board of Estimates.
The AFRO-AMERICAN does not believe that Mayor Breening and the board want to perpetuate the program of this PRIVATE Athletic League.
We do not believe they are willing to appropriate taxpayers money when only some of the taxpayers may benefit from it.
Hence we urge the mayor to hold up the appropriation of the league until he can hear the report of the Bi-racial Committee.
In addition, the AFRO urges Dr. Burdick to take a good look at the heart of the city of Baltimore. Perhaps he'll find out that the city is eager to do much more for colored boys and girls than he has given it credit for.
Afro Readers
Readers may write on any subject they like. Usually 150 words are enough. Beyond that expect the editor's blue pen to make the mark. Readers may write in man." Signs are evidence of good faith, it will not be published if you so desire.
"BALTIMORE. OUR BALTIMORE"
BY RALPH E. THORNTON
Baltimore, our adorable Baltimore,
Our city more than ever before,
Jim-croweed and ignored wherever we go.
But we love it in spite-"Our Baltimore."
Our two hundred anniversary we celebrated so
gay.
Everything beautiful along the way.
A very few colored, a mighty few to say.
But this is "Our Baltimore." Ray! Ray! Ray!
Our two hundreth anniversary we celebrated so
Who carried the bricks for whites to lay?
Negroes, of course, for very little pay.
We helped the city on the way.
But this didn't count on the historic day.
Department stores have utterly hanged
The privilege of the colored woman and man.
For no just reason, so I understand.
But we love you, "Our Baltimore," privilege be
damned.
There's nothing we can do or say.
To brighten the present cloudy day.
But to keep on working in every way.
And praise "Our Baltimore." Ray! Ray! Ray!
The New York Clearing House
To the Editor:
Talk about money reminds me of the day
When I used to play the numbers and throw
it all away.
I played them high and played them low.
Only a few games go;
I played the number 538.
The boss is now sending me out of the gate.
Miss Dixon and Mrs. James:
And when the number did not come,
His heart would almost break.
They cause people to go hungry.
Make them grow old;
Cause them to weather.
And suffer with the cold
So, stop, look and listen!
And you can plainly see;
Stop playing the numbers.
Or you will soon be like me.
ROBERT G. MILES
10? Second Street, Salisbury, Md.
Commissioner Harrison's Rise Edifies His Boyhood Friend.
To the Editor:
Yucung men of poor families, who read the AFRO-AMERICAN last week which gave details of the appointment of Harrison, Ill., as a member of the pardon board of Illinois, ought to have an incentive to aspire for higher things in life and break down every barrier of oppression.
William, as the Judge was known to his boyfriend, friends of Harrison, is a pardon board of rank, in days when about a Negro out of every ten thousand had the opportunity to attend college. His youth was spent in dire poverty, and a plow was just as common to the new member of the Illinois pardon board as the sight of an automobile is to the eyes of our college guard. Judge Harrison, as a boy, did work that young men of today frown upon. The ghostly sight of the Mississippi cotton farms was the only incentive offered him to go higher.
William's progress as a lawyer, as a justice of the court, as a commissioner brings to the hearts of those of us who knew him as playmates in the early days.
Commissioner Harrison's Rise Edifies His Boyhood Friend.
To the Editor:
Yucung men of poor families, who read the AFRO-AMERICAN last week which gave details of the appointment of William Henry (Judge) Harison, the first member of the pardon board of Illinois, ought to have an incentive to aspire for higher things in life and break down every barrier of oppression.
William, as the Judge was known to his boyhood friends, was born without emolument or education. He was the only member of every ten thousand had the opportunity to attend college. His youth was spent in dire poverty, and a plow was just as common to the new member of the Illinois pardon board as the sight of an automobile is to the eyes of our college graduates today.
William, as a boy, did work that young men of today frown upon. The ghostly sight of the Mississippi cotton farms was the only incentive offered him to go higher.
William's progress as a lawyer, as a justice of the peace, and now as a commissioner, brings joy to the hearts of those of us who knew him as playmates in the early days.
HENRY F. ARNOLD
Reasons Why Senators and Representatives Should Be Called Upon to Name a Proportional Number of Negroes as Census Enumerators.
To the Editor:
The Seventy-first Congress of the United States appropriated $40,000,000 and made provision for the employment of 100,000 people as supervisors, enumerators, and clerks in the taking of the Fifteenth Decennial Census, beginning May, 1930.
This is a matter of great fundamental importance to every American citizen and group of citizens, for aside from the moment of the mathematical notation, the Constitution of the United States provides for apportionment of Congressmen according to population and re-distributing accordingly.
In agricultural and commercial census will also be taken. The information, statistics and data will be the authoritative basis of conclusions, attitudes and reports throughout the entire world.
In past decades many census frauds have been disclosed. Minority races, groups and parties were generally the victims of these fabrications. (Not surprisingly, I come to the following in inevitable conclusions.)
First. That in governmental employment all elements, qualifications admitting, of course, should be equitably represented.
Second. It's an entirely laudable thing—say nothing of its equity and democracy, have the right to participate in the South, to see our people engaged in decent and honorable pursuits. The more it's done, the less the revolution to it becomes.
Third. The employment of colored in the census taking would serve as nothing else perhaps, and disguise the fact that we lacked disparity and confidence in the reports.
Fourth. The method of selecting the census workers makes it very easy for many representatives and senators to recommend some of their colored constituents.
Fifth. Republican administration to which the Negro in the last campaign as in those before gave his loyalty and support.
There is no reason why hundreds of Negroes should not be employed by the administration to help in the great task of taking the Fifteenth Decennial Census.
DEWITT T. ALCORN.
Collierville, Tenn.
The 12th of October is a state holiday. It is Columbus Day. Co-incident with that same day is "Maryland Emancipation Day." The day is also the day all the slaves of this state are the expressed will of the people of Maryland, registered at the ballot-box on the 12th day of October. .364. Such a happy occurrence did not take place "just so the men can speak for ourselves God raised up men of the white group, led and inspired by Henry Winter Davis, to battle against the wrong, and create in this state the sentiment of freedom for the slaves." It was an hotly contested election, and the final result was not made known until "the soldier vote" had been received. In other words, the soldiers who were in the Union army, not only fought to put down the rebellion, but to break the shackles of the slaves at home.
The Man's a Saint, Damn His Color
Africans Hail Late James E. K. Aggrey, Native Born but U.S. Educated, as the African Booker T. Washington. His Oratory Compelled the Dutch Crackers to Listen. (Review of "Aggrey of Africa," a biography by Edwin E. Smith, published in the African World.) "The man's a saint; damn his colour!" A group of white sailors in East Africa were desirous of seeing and hearing this visitor, James E. K. Aggrey, of whom everybody was talking.
They saw before them a slim, black African man in a blackish, which was as clear and idiomatic as their own. His ready wit, his sunny smile, his intense sincerity, his frank and honestness, and rather fascinated them. These settlers were not wont to sentimentalise about Africans in general. As a matter of fact, they recognised a man when they saw him. They discussed him among themselves, canvassed his opinions, went against and again asked questions to test his knowledge and attitudes, and finally one of them summed up the judgment man's a saint," he said,
M. A. B.
James E. K. Aggrey, and finally one of them summed up the judgment of the group. "The man's a saint," he said, "damn his colour!"
He meant, of course, that the tint of a man's skin is not the most significant thing about him. Beneath external and potent dissimilarities which separated him from Negro families, he ensured he perceived four new sensibilities; they even detected elements that made him in some respects their superior. In view of these things, the blackness of his skin was an irrelevance.
He meant, of course, that the tint of a man's skin is not the most significant thing about him. Beneath external and potent dissimilarities which separated this Negro from themselves; these Europeans perceived fundamental resemblances; they even detected elements made of iron, recessed their skin. In view of these things, the blackness of his skin was an irrelevance.
Gets Bed Offer
When in South Africa in 1924, as a member of the Phelps-Stokes Educational Commission, he was invited to address a meeting of students, who were shunning him, to a Franclair mournful young girl: "Catch me going to listen to a black man!" he said. His fellows persuaded him to change his mind. He listened with amazement, and at the end went up to Aggrey and said: "Dr. Aggrey, here is my hand, and when you come again, you can have my bed." Aggrey's school was there, and were taken in a teacher's school at Cape Coast. He became a teacher at fifteen years of age. Most of his spare time was given to study. At twenty years of age he was head master of a school of over four hundred pupils and was the means of raising it to such a standard that the Director of Education said that there was no better in the Colony.
When in South Africa in 1924, as a member of the Phelps-Stokes Educational Commission, he was invited to address a meeting of students, One young Dudley was doing the annual ritual of "Catch me going to listen to a black man!" he said. His fellows persuaded him to change his mind. He listened with amazement, and at the end went up to Aggrey and said: "Dr. Aggrey, here is my hand, and when you come again, you can have better access to education, were taken in a mission school at Cape Coast. He became a teacher at fifteen years of age. Most of his spare time was given to study. At twenty years of age he was head master of a school of over four hundred pupils and a student of that school, a student that the Director Education said that there was no better in the Colony.
At Livingstone (N.C.) College.
With an insatiable craving for learning, he left Cape Coast for the United States of America. At Livingstone College in North Gate, he entered the course in the course graduated B.A., with honours, at the head of the class. He won a gold medal for English composition, and a second gold medal for general scholarship and deportment. He distinguished himself by delivering the first Greek oration ever heard in the college.
With an insatiable craving for learning, he left Cape Coast for the United States of America. At Livingstone College in North Carolina, he graduated B.A., with honours, at the head of the class. He won a gold medal for English composition, and a second gold medal for general scholarship by deliciating at the first Greek eration ever heard in the college.
At Columbia University.
Then for eighteen years he was a professor on the college campus of Columbia University, a way of saying. He held the Columbia University, one of the Big Four of the universities in the United States. He was awarded the teacher's diploma, and received the degree of master of arts, and a fellowship for Ph.D. training. golden opinions from professors of high standing.
As an exponent of the gospel of co-operation between the white and black races, he was held in the highest esteem by persons of all classes. He was a member of the committee of the doctrine of love and work; as against Gandhi's Indian policy of non-cooperation, I proclaim all the time cooperation," was one of his favourite sayings. He was a many people in South Africa who recall with what charm and eloquence he expounded this gospel when touring the country as a member of the Phelps-Stokes Education Commission.
Then for eighteen years he was a professor on the college staff. But he was always learn- ing from the professors of the Big Four of the universities in the United States. He was awarded the teacher's diploma, and received the degree of Ph.D. in arts, and the degree of Master of Arts, often golden opinions from professors of high standing.
"As against Marcus Garvey's hostility, I teach the doctrine of love and work; as against Gandhi's Indian policy of non-cooperation. I teach the doctrine of cooperation," was one of his favourite sayings. And there are many people in South Africa who recall with what charm and eloquence he expounded his gospel when touring the countryside. A member of the Phelps-Stokes Education Commission.
South African Booker T. Washington.
As a member of that body he be visited a great part as a member of the body who saw great natives created a profound impression. His presence in South Africa, it is stated by Mr. Smith, awakened apprehensions in the minds of the authorities, who were aware of the subversive influences exercised by certain degrees from the experience of Bertie Pollock, a way to confidence, and it was recognised that Aggrey could do for South Africa what Booker Washington had done for the Southern States—teach one race, accept one respect, accept one opportunity was the offer made to him of a professorship at Fort Hare, with the understanding that he should spend part of his time in travelling from place to place for the purpose of promoting cooperation between the natives. It was not all easy going, though, in some parts of Africa. When the commission arrived at Dar-es-Salam they put up at an hotel kept by a Greek. That evening they were invited to dinner at Government House.
As a member of that body he visited a great part of Africa. His speeches to Europeans and natives created a profound impression. His presence in South Africa, it is stated by Mr. Smith, awakened apprehensions in the minds of the European nation, which influenced exercises by certain Negroes from across the Atlantic. But suspicions soon gave way to confidence, and it was recognised that Aggrey could do for South Africa what Booker Washington had done for the Southern States—teach one race to respect the other. The best way to do this was to him of a professorship at Fort Hare, with the understanding that he should spend part of his time in travelling from place to place for the purpose of promoting cooperation between the races. It was not all easy going, though. in some parts of Africa when the commission arrived in the United States the putative man was by a Greek. That evening they were invited to dinner at Government House.
"Nigger" in Hotel.
On returning to the hotel between eleven clock and midnight, Aggrey found that all his business was done by the Government's Palace and some white men had threatened to break up the hotel if they were required to sleep under the same roof as a "nigger." The joke tickled Aggrey immensely. Entertained by the King, he thought fit to sleep under the same roof with half-educated whites! He found a resting-place in the proprietor's private apartments. As a member of the commission, Aggrey was busy writing his report each year and member of the commission made his important contribution to its conclusion—and none more so than Mr. Aggrey," wrote Dr. Anson Phels-Stokes in the report on the commission. Aggrey was writing in education and sociology, and high Christian purpose, all proved assets of great importance, especially in dealing wisely and constructively with the complicated problems due to racial differences."
On returning to the hotel between eleven o'clock and midnight, Aggrey found that all his baggage had been moved out of his room because some white men had threatened to break up the hotel if they were required to sleep under it. He was forced to stay in Aggrey immensely. Entertained by the King's representative in the Governor's Palace, and not thought fit to sleep under the same roof with half-educated whites! He found a resting-place in the proprietor's private apartments. As a member of the commission, Aggrey was asked to bring the chief office and member of the commission made his important contribution to its conclusion—and none more so than Mr. Aggrey," wrote Dr. Anson Phelps-Stokes in the report on the commission, "His humor, sanity, eloquence, thorough training in education and sociology, and high Christ-centeredness, especially in dealing wisely and constructively with the complicated problems due to racial differences."
His Life's Purpose.
Instead of coming to Fort Hare as some prominent South Africans had hoped, Aggrey accrued the honor to be the principal of Principalship of Prince of Wales' College, Achimota, near Acra, and for three years he did work of enduring value.
He died, almost suddenly, while on a visit to New York in 1927. Sir Gordon Guggisberg, a former governor of the Gold Coast, who knew the interpreter and that "he was the finest interpreter which the present century has produced of the white man to the black, of the black man to the white."
He expressed his life's purpose in a letter to one of his nephews:
Instead of coming to Fort Hare as some prominent South Africans had hoped, Aggrey accrued the honor of being principalisipal of Prince of Wales' College, Achimota, near Acra, and for three years he did work of enduringure. He subsequently, while on a visit to New York in 1927, Sir Gordon Gugsberg, a former governor of the Gold Coast, who knew Aggrey intimately, said that "he was the finest interpreter which the present century has proclaimed to the black, of the black man to the white."
He expressed his life's purpose in a letter to one of his nephews:
Fire. More Fire.
"To those who have fire, I give more fire, and to those who have might, I want to give might mighter than man's. I want to sing a song of hope to the despairing; to breathe the breath of love that will chase away all hating, and to breathe the right to fight the right ultimately conquer wrong, virtue conquer vice, harmony take the place of discord."
"To those who have fire, I give more fire and to those who have might, I want to give more might and to those who have song of hope to the despairing; to breathe the breath of love that will chase away all hating I believe, my devoted nephew, that right will be given to me. And the conqueror vice harmely take the place of discord."
PEACE OF MIND
There is a peace of mind that comes" to me
Thru the deeper channels of my soul—
My inner self remains undisturbed,
The troubled waters around me roll.
"The Christian church is near a crisis. Conduct must square with creed, or creed must be abandoned. The white Christian is on trial before the bar of his own conscience. The critical spirit of the age will no longer tolerate hypocrisy."
THE BLACKSHEAR INCIDENT.
Behold what a great fire a little matter kindle. The incident of the Brooklyn clergyman and his colored contingent has aroused public attention and discussion out of all proportion to its inherent significance. Several months ago, here in Washington, a Catholic priest gave the identical advice to his colored parishioners, which excited very little local interest or comment. A historical instance of the religious instance of the races will portray the whole situation.
Christianity Above Prejudice
Immediately after the Civil War Northern zealots generally believed that Christianity must overcome race prejudice and that Christians should Forwish that they proceeded to put their theory into concrete practice. The Congregationalists, who represent the pure in heart and soul of the Protestant faith, other branch of the Protestant faith, based their whole philosophy on the doctrine of race equality, both in state and in church. The Congregationalist constituted the ideal laboratory for its practical demonstration.
Race Equality Church Founded
While Summer and Stevens were writing this creed into legislation, General O. O. Howard and his fellow believers were planting the First Congregational Church in the two races might worship God in full co-racial fellowship and communion. This church was calculated to accomplish in religion what Howard University was designed to achieve in education. He was a side under common educational and spiritual instruction. Colored people were not only invited to become members of this church but were urged to do so. Negro children were gathered on the Sunday before the streets along with their fellow white scholars in the public celebrations.
Division Arises
For a little time all went well. But shortly the Devil entered into the hearts of certain of these co-racial leaders, who were unaware of this issue. A faction pulled out and formed a separate organization on the lily-white basis. General O. O. Howard espoused the cause of the Negro and his title to spiritual equality. He was forced to pass through his gifted son began to ferret out charges against the gallant general, which ultimately led to the investigation and closing up of the Freedmen's Bureau and the sovereign connection with Howard, University.
The faithful contingent of the First Congregational Church called to the pastorate the Rev. J. E. Rankin, the professor of the Howard University. During his pastorate he remained true to the faith of the founders. But again a new brood of dissenters arose which caused him to withdraw and seek work elsewhere.
Negro Mission Fostered
In the meantime, the church fostered a Negro mission for work especially among the freedmen. This mission was the church. The colored members of the First Church were invited to withdraw and join the Lincoln Memorial Congregational Church—for that was the name of the Negro office. Identically the same arguments which Rector Blackshear advances were resorted to. President W. E. B. Johnson, University, certainly believed himself to be a sincere and genuine friend of the colored people. He openly and insistently urged this line of policy of the colored people and social good of the colored people.
The pro-Nero element lost out under the pastorate of Dr. Rankin, and Dr. Newman, who also later became the pastor of the University, came pastor, on the understood policy of elimination of Nero members. Some of the older and more distinguished colored members, like the families of the Honorate, the Honorable John K. Bruce, and certain members of the faculty of Howard University, held on under cold toleration, until finally a colored church was started which without it I believe, the last colored church from the old civil rights congregation.
President Coolidge's Church
This is the church where President Coolidge's family worshiped and held membership and pew. This church stands today as one of the foremost liberal churches of Washington, but is as purely white in its membership as it is in the rest of the nation. Georgia. Its pastor is, or considers himself to be, as good a friend as the colored people have at the national capital, and is received and accepted as such. And yet the marginal difference of racial policy between this church and that of Rector John C. Reece is that between the white and black races would be a matter of form, and not of substance.
A. Common-place Incident
The Negro has no interest in this common-place incident to which he has become immuned by a thousand people, and that he can find neither spiritual consolation nor social comfort by intimate intermingling with so-called Christians who treat him with contempt and denial of the demands anomaly avail him nothing. He can only be filled with pity at the incapacity of the white man, in his supercilious racial conceit, to be a priest, and to request the requirements of the creed which he professes to espouse. Why then all of this outcry over a black priest, publicist and press in all parts of the country proclaim or decry Mr. Blackshear and his deed throughout Christkinddum? It is because the psychological moment has arrived. At the moment the race secures the cause. The silhouette occasion may he seized upon to produce tremendous consequences. A massing gust of wind may overpopleat a mighty oak already rotted to the core.
Christianity Near a Chisis
The Christian Church is near a crisis. Conduct must square with a crisis. The Christian Church is the White Christian is on trial before the bar of his own conscience. The critical spirit of the age will no longer be ignored by religious legions and ethical systems are demanding that professing Christians give account for the wide gap between the Christian and the Christian accept Christ seriously or only conveniently?
Chips from the Quarry
The Proofreader Talks
Mr. Horace Teal's three principles concerning the compounding of words (referred to last week) may be stated as follows:
1. When the words constituting a single expression are used in their normal sense and in their regular grammatical relations and construction, the words should be separated unless they are jointly applied in some arbitrary way.
For example: "a badly worn coat." The meaning seems clear.
Accordingly, only in rare cases, if ever, would ambiguity result by omitting the hyphen between an adverb and the (following) adjective which it modifies.
His second principle is a sort of corollary of the first:
2. Abnormal associations of words generally indicate unification (or change) in sensory compounding for them (NW) that compound means to join together, either with a hyphen or solid).
According to these principles "iron saw" (separate words) would mean a saw made of iron; while if the two words are joined, with or without a hyphen the meaning would be a saw for cutting iron or might have a special meaning; perhaps, a sort of tool, as "fation" means a special implement, while "flat iron" (separate words) would not mean an implement.
Again: A "sleeping man," is a phrase in which the words carry their normal meaning—the man sleeps. "Sleeping-car," however, in which the words are associated abnormally, require hyphen or conjunction, so constitute a single word.
So likewise, if a hyphen be inserted between "badly" and "worn" in the example given above, the meaning would be changed.
The third principle, being merely the first and second, need not be stated.
It is needless to say that these principles are by no means universally followed. More often the use or dropping of the hyphen is (as stated in the previous talk) a matter of familiarity with the similarity with the given expression. Nor are the principles always readily applicable; for, it is not always easy to determine when words are used in their regular relations and construction. Nevertheless, the principles are useful and are being more and more followed by lexicographers and writers.
Notice carefully as to the influence of the hyphen: apple tree, apple butter, apple-gum (not a gum, but a species of tree), apple, apple butter, kind of knife of jack—though the drinker of it may be).
F. H. M. M.
All Not Dead —Yet
Headline in Washington paper-
MAN DEAD. WIFE AND SON ILL
AFTER EATING TOADSTOOLS
If there is anything in the theory
of heredity, it is a pity that the man
who was the father of the
eroded the supposed "mushrooms,
had not remained a batchelor until
There are Others
AFRO types and proofreaders are not the only dummies—or victims. Imagine the struggle in a newspaper composing room over the chirography of a headline which they finally renatured. The editors, nationalists, Howard, Buck Indorex." (Intended for Sir Ese Howard. British Ambassador and Senator BORAH.)
Never Too Old
News note in AFRO from Pond-town: "Mother Harkless, 103 years old, sang."
Stealing DePriests Thunder
Headline in daily paper last month—PRESIDENT HOOVER URGES
CONSTITUTION
This one has been held back to see whether Herbert would make acknowledgements to Oscar—but he hasn't.
Y's Cracks
The hen that cackles before she lays will not be a profitable investment.
man on his way to Hail pays no attention to trade signals
Lizard Mash
Whiskey is getting worse and worse according to Henrico County Policeman J. S. Sheppard, who found 400 gallons of mash Saturday containing dead frogs and lizards. A 60-gallon iron trunk still was covered in mold. The destroyed. It was made of cooked potatoes, roasting corn, old tomatoes, dead frogs and lizards.
Alexandria (Va.) Gazette
The Negro Presidents
By BOBT B. HAYNES
He knows the world is round, but he doubts it. He thinks the Nero is inferior to the white man. He hates white men and yet he admires them. He never sees them. All good in Nero's organization. All good in organizations the best. A white restaurant always serves better food than a Negro restaurant. He wears his clothes according to what he sees the white man wear. He married a black woman. He law forbade him marry a white one. A pat on the back from a white man would make him burst his vest buttons. A pat on the back from a Negro and he would become suspicious. A pat on the back from a white man will make him overlook one hundred kicks in the nants. He loves himself. He is the wisest in his neighborhood. He thinks if he had his way he'd make the world a better place. He won't trade with a colored man because he doesn't want him to see what small quantities he buys. He wouldn't think of employing the services of a Negro nvisician or lawyer. He thinks the Nero keeps himself. He doesn't have to look at a white man. When he has to take bitter pills, he chews them.
Do Trees Die of Old Age?
No close parallel exists between trees and animals in respect to longevity and maturity. Trees do not age and maturity causes that human beings and animals to then death results either from accident or disease.
The disease usually takes the form of decay in the trunk, which shuts off water and food supply from the soil.
A human being reaches his maximum height at a comparatively early age. In fact in later years his height will decrease somewhat. But a tree continues to grow as long as it is alive, although after it reaches a certain size depending on the species and other factors, the rate of growth slows
All Beat Together
Sooner or Later
"What made your hubby run off
with that colored maid?"
"Her time was up, anyway, next
week."
At Dear Old Morgan
Soph—What was the tenor of your
Kat's letter?
Fresh—No tenor; only a five.
"He's down in the dumps most
every day."
The reason for the high rate of
divorce is that, too many women are
getting married before they are able
to support husbands.
Blue Monday
Roses are red.
Violets are blue.
Sos's the old man.
When Ma has stew.
Birthdays
Riddle, puzzle, enigma, conundrum
relus.
Word Study
Use a word three times and it is yours. Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word a week. JUDICIOUSLY; wisely; prudently; "He handled the situation very judiciously."
Etiquette
1. How should apples be eaten at the table?
2. When a marriage engagement becomes known to both families, what advances should the families make to each other?
3. When one has a crest, or a monogram, on stationery, should it tear the address also?
4. Where is the correct place for the oyster fork?
5. Should one drink an entire glass of water, soda, or other refreshment, or leave part of it in the glass?
A. One small silver fruit knife should be provided, the apple cut into quarters and eaten with the fingers.
B. The man's mother and sisters should eat the apple, the mother her family, extending a cordial welcome to the one who is to become a member of their family. Within a few days the girl and her family should return the call.
C. At the extreme right of the cover.
D. It is all right to drink all of it, you know the head back and turn the glass completely upside down to drain it.
Week's Poem
NUTTING SONG
By Emily Huntington Miller
Who has no sunshine in his heart
May call the Autumn sober;
But boys with pulses leaping wild
Should love the brown October.
Along the glade and on the hill
The ruddy oaks are, glowing.
And merry winds are out by night,
Through all the forests blowing.
To drive the withered leaves about
And heap them in the hollow.
We'll shake them down in showers.
When heads are cray and eyes are
dim.
We'll call the Autumn sober.
But now, with life in every limb,
We love the brown October.
S. S. Lesson
Sunday, October 20th: USEFUL WORK A CHRISTIAN DUTY. Gen. 2.15; Exod. 20:9;
Acts 20:33-35; 2 Tues. 3:12; Eph. 4:28.
Golden Text: If any will not work, neth-
lth will. *The Bible* Devotional Reading: Ps. 8-11.
Primary Topic: Doing Our Work Well.
Primary Text: Doing 20:33-3. 2 Thess.
3:44-47. *Catechus* 4:28.
Memory Verse: Whatsoever the hand findeth to do, do it with thy might. Eccles. 9:10.
Solar Topic: Doing Our Work Well.
Lesson Material: Acts 20:33-35; 2 Thess. 3:16-12; Eph. 4:28.
Memory Verse: Eccles. 9:10.
Intermediate and Senior Topic: Honest Work Essential to Success.
Solar Topic: Poet and Adults: The Gambling Spirit Hurful to Business and Morals.
A Revolution in North Carolina
Two hundred white and colored factory workers — Southern white factory workers — sit, if you please, listened to William Foster tell the... that colored workers in North Carolina must be accorded political, economic and social equality, if the workers' program to smash the present system of wage employment down there is to succeed.
To make it definite, Foster told the whites that social equality meant everything from social intermingling to marriage, and that meant the same wages for colored as same work as that gotten by whites.
In a little parlor meeting in the North such a statement would mean little; but in North Carolina the fact that such a proposition can be made openly denotes a pro-change of attitude down there.
There are perhaps thousands of white workers in North Carolina who would not yet attend a Community meeting, but who now see that the work between them and their colored low workers, is not only keeping the Negro down, but keeping them down also.
As to social equality, there has always been more actual social intermingling of a kind to the square inch in the South than to the square mile in the North, and the new Republican policy of relegating the Negro leadership, as a sop to the white-whitish, is bound to set both parties out to get their vote.
All in all, all things are not pointing in such a bad direction below the Mason and Dixon line. It may be after all, that the real solution of the race problem will come in the South down there that they are accustomed to do, what they say they want if in the past there have not said and done the best things.
Another sidekick, on the North Carolina labor situation is that the white mill workers, losing faith in the American Federation of Labor, to the more radical Communists.
As for the colored workers they have never had much reason to have faith in the A. F. of L. White, who advocated a square deal for colored workers, it has nevertheless allowed the locals to treat them as they pleased.
On the other hand the Communist organization is meeting the question without equivocation. It avowed policy as well as its open practice is to accord complete equality to the group, and it would human for the Negro workers to turn to them when all hope has gone elsewhere.
Robert R. Church and Claudius H. Huston.
A news story, evidently carefully inspired, came out of Tennessee last week in which it is stated that the Church-Taylor faction had decided that the church whites" and that "Fighting Bob" will control the 10th Congressional district of that state.
Recently National Chairman Huston went down into Tennessee to compose differences in his home state and differences being the belligerency of Robert R. Church.
When you try to fish out the actual facts from the carefully wounded news story, you come to the conclusion that both Huston and Church must both give and take," and that both being practical politicians, they came to an understanding.
If Robert R. Church has decided to "let in" on Huston's whistleblower order in states in order to gain patronage control of the 10th Congressional District of Tennessee, he might be playing good politics, but he won't be adding to his prestige in the hearts and souls of those who had秘ared him as the iron statesman of the group.
One thing, however, is significant, and that is that Huston has probably had to make some changes to Chisholm if he has not been because of any love for the distinguished Memphis BIT BECAUSE CHURCH, BIT BECAUSE CHOURS, BIT BECAUSE THOUSAND VOTES IN SHELBY COUNTY.
We can't help feeling, however, that the patronage in the Tenth Congressional District of Tennessee calls "muse of postage" to exchange for the threat against driving the birthright group influence out of Mississippi, Georgia Louisiana and other southern states.
Precept and Practice.
Every day sees a larger number of white men and women outspoken in their attitude towards colored fairness to colored men and women.
But there still exists a large number of white friends who proffer advice, not based on what they would do under the same conditions, especially for what colored folk should do.
A letter to this column, for instance, suggests that we do what we can to curb the utterance of the ground that "that kind of blatant procedure will do more to make enemies for the race than a less militant one." The writer of the letter, a woman who does not say "brawl" to Mrs. Gann, sister of the vice-president of the United States, for fighting for her right to sit in a certain seat at State functions, but she won against Mrs. DePriest for venom.
It is all right for the former "Princess of the White House," now Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, wife of the speaker of the House, fight for her social prestige, but it blatant for condescension. It is a right to take a seat in the Senate restaurant.
There is not a white man in this country worthy the name who would not wade through buckets of blood for a single right denied to him. All of their movements are to be. All of them were blatant and who fought. BUT PERHAPS THEY DON'T FEEL THAT WE NEED ANY MONUMENTS.
"Africans have much in common with us as wit and wisdom expressed in their proverbs show. Je is time for them to go away, but we are in the interior and barbaric state. In more than one sense, we Americans are less civilized and more barbaric than they." C. J. BENDER.
You may be able to remove the tar from your hands; but the odor remains.
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
FLORIDA PHYSICIAN REPRESENTS U.S. AT INTERNATIONAL MEET
Chosen at University of Paris to Represent the Medics of This Country.
PARIS, Dr. I. E. Williams, physician of Jacksonville, Florida, was selected to represent the United States at an international meet held at the celebrated watering place.
The doctors who are pursuing special courses in medicine at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Paris, and their professors were the guests of the mayor and president. All had been educated to study the hydro-mineral treatment. There were medical and thirty-four nations were represented. They were put up at the best hotels, and a banquet was given in their honor at which Dr. Williams spoke.
their Dr. Williams has been taking special studies at the Hotel Dieu (host) for several months. This is his third summer. He has been given his first job at the Hotel Dieu. He has been called Vichy, Dr. Williams went to London, and after further work there, sailed on the Aquilanta, due in New York October 18.
Wednesday of each month. Dr. William R. Henry is president, and Dr. L. Henry Johnston is president and MRS. J. R. WILSON, accompanied by Miss Briell J. of Atlanta, Ga., metored through HENBERTON, the president of the Henderson Hotel, Atlantic City, NJ, after spending a week in the city, left her home in New York, and GORDON, of Frank street, near Palmount avenue, was induced to substitute James Barker, of Burlington, Jill and Calenhill gardens, for a ten dollar bill. Berkley is a fugitive from justice. Adolph Goldsmith waits for the return of his property, had Gordon represent Berkley. When the case was called in court, informed Judge Barker, the first of losing his property, had Gordon represent Berkley. When the case was called in court, informed Judge Barker, the first of losing his property, had Gordon represent Berkley. Gordon is locked up awaiting the outcome of a charge by MISSES IRENE DUNN and Marjorie Wright, of Ridley, MD., will spend the winter in this city. MISSES IRENE MASSEY and grandchildren of Fountain, MD., are the guests of Mrs. Awnie Watty. M. WASHINGTON is visiting his parents, and Mrs. William Boyer, at Norton, MD. MR. AND MRS. S. WEST are the guests at Norton, Mrs. Cecil Simmons, at Norton, MD.
MISS ELISHE SPRY, of Petersburg, Md.,
MISS HAROLD LELAND, Emmons Holiday and
Rudolph Adrienne of Petersburg, are visiti-
ng in this city. MISS OLANZO WATERS, of
Peconocock City, Md. are visiting here.
JAMES H. BEARD of Brunswick, Md. is
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.-Mr. and Mrs. Clis-
sels, of Peconocock City, are visiti-
ng the sleeping OLIANZO City at
home, last Wednesday evening. After the
business meeting was adjourned, the host-
ers met with Mrs. Clisels, of Peconocock
Those present were Nesmaden Hill, Ki-
kker and Miss Emure Shields. Everyone
was visiting Mrs. Clisels. MHS. ETHEL LAWRENCE of Boston is tailliing her mother here, who is seriously
MHS. C. BISHOP is visiting her daughter,
Miss Lydia Williams of Magnolia, Md.
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YOU RASCAL YOU"
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on the other side. Hear this record today!
"YOU
RASCAL
YOU"
Mom - a lot him
Jim going
wrong with
him. How?
LOVIN' SAM'S gain' a gunnin'. He's after a low-down
rascal who done him wrong. After liven' off Sam for
a long time, the rascal messed with Earl's wife and took
he away. But when Sam gets him, he'll get him good.
Don't miss hearing Lovin' Sam in his great hit "YOU
RASCAL, YOU" and "THE LOVER AND THE BEGGAR"
on the other side. Heat this record today!
You Rascal. You 2098
The Lover and the Beggar. Vocal. Piano 76c
Lovin' Sam From Down in Bam
(Sam Ticket)
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MRS. CHARLOTTE GILBERT returned to her home in Magnolia, Md., after spending the summer at MISS DOROTHY HUTONIKS, who has been visiting her parents in Roseville, Md., MISS GENEVA HUTONIKS, who has been visiting in Roseville, Md., has returned to her home.
And MRS. E. TEDD are visiting their brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Brown, of Bloi Air, Md.
Mr. AND MRS. NEAL BROOK are visiting their brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. LETT E STANLEY, teacher of Bridgeville, Del. spent the week-end here.
MRS. TEENIE DREDDEN and Miss Lilie DREDDEN the guests of Mrs. Elmra Cook of Bridgeville.
MRS. MARY POINTER, of Bridgettille
Delaney, spending a week in this city.
WILBERT MOSELEY, and Mr. and Mrs.
mored, her SUNDAY, Bridgeville, Dell,
mored, her SUNDAY,
OLEN J. BERKLEY was guest of his sister, M. Spencer Garnett, of Maryel, Md. MR. AND MRS. GEORGE J. GROSS. of 5 Brunswick street, has returned to their home in Newark, Md. M. Madeline LeBar, JOIN NORRIIS and George Nelson the guests of Elam L. Banks, Jr. over the Older Boys Conference at Hartburg, Pa. J. A. NORRIIS was the guest of Prof. and Mrs. J. Henry Williams, of York, Pa. last week MISS IDA MAY GRIFFIN has returned to her home after a visit with her grandmother, Mrs. Lille Woolford, of Seaford, Ml. LIZZE SMITZ SPENCER visited her daughter, Mrs. J. Helen Hughes, Mr. AND Mrs. MOSELL DERRY spent the week-end with their mother, Mrs. Mati Derry, of Cambridge, Md. MISS JULIE HUGHES visited their brothers, Donnard and Ocarg Hoghes, at Blackwater, Md. MISS JANE WILSON and Mrs. Henrietta Ellis visited relatives in Princess Anne, Md. last week. MISS SULA BUTLER and Mrs. Lu Emma HUGHES, of New York, CHARLES GOLDBORO spent the week-end at Broad Neck, Md. MISS LENA NORTHERN is attending her mother, Mrs. Lena Northern, who is ill at St. Michaels, Md.
Business Men Exhibit
DETROIT. Mich. - (ANP) — More than 15,000 people visited the St. Antoine, St. Branch of the Y. M. C. A. here October 2, 3, and 4 to witness the opening of the new exhibit sponsored by that institution. The entire lower floor of the "Y" the main lobbies and gymnasium were lined with display booths beautifully decorated and attended by affable courteous, polite attendants who passed out literature and chalked frequently about their various businesses.
PHILLY PEN POINTS
The graduate, cognitive Florence Baugh-
Evans,艾丽 Webb, Louise Drake, Rosamund
Linton, Virginia Runn, Madeline Herbert,
Linton, Virginia Runn, Madeline Herbert,
Redding, Wilmington; Mike Love, Julia
Park-Parham, Lola Wilson, Marion Roland-
Minton, Ethel Bergman, Anne Coulson,
Wilmington, Ethel Bergman, Bright, Dorothy
Warrick and Sata Stiles, The
Chapman shall be known as XI Sigma.
The Mugs
Incidentally, the "Mugs," a club of Delta girls, are planning a matinee dance, to be held at the Berean Training school, School College avenue, the Thanksgiving day grid scrimmage. These young women are the first to come forward with the announcement of any of the more than 100 students in the Quaker Ville's visitors to the classic.
AN INTERVIEW by Dr. Charles Lewis, Lincoln Alumnus, and Quarketton physician, revealed the fact that he has in mind a very elaborate program to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Lewis that thus far, he and his "bags" of "untent" clauses are, only in a small measure realizing their cherished dream of
Benefit of the Classic
The various Turkey Day games throughout the country have been a decided factor in the success of the games. They have been a sort of subtle drive for "better communities." He feels that the thousands of students who are not foolishly away homes, beautiful clothes costly, have resulted: thus bringing to the surface the challenges of the competition. The competition, begun on the gridiron, has spread wild like fire in a decade, and has been a major factor in fostering the idea of higher education, certainly not to our detriment. More intimate social content has given us the much needed tools to build our own group. It has, of necessity, divided us into distinct classes — and we have been unable to unify us, usually, it has played no unimportant part in fostering the idea of higher education.
Classic Week.
Dr. Lewis and his colleagues are hoping for and working lovingly with students beginning with Sunday services in the churches. Moreover, they are members of a University Club, composed of students and graduates of various colleges, who will be able to attend classes in active participants—even though it is nothing more than their moral support. The students of these men, as mere students at Lincoln.
- Orrin Evanses
Marian Anderson.
Oh. the critics gave our Marian Anderson a wonderful send-off. Don't you think almost belongs to you merits unlisted praise—and gets it!? We get all possessive praise and share in her glory. . . As for poor little me, I was so an infinitely small portion of American Academy of Music, on Friday evening, that I just sat tightly in my seat, and I was so nervous that I had when she sang the request number, "Danny Boy," well-jil. I just forgot all about my genial neighbor, neryboy, who was a popular words issuing from the very soul of America's ranking contrasto. I was in silent attention the audience too was held in silent attention.
Baxter-Nicholas
Another pretty scene, into which I can't go into great length, unfortunately, but I do want to share. Baxter, daughter of the Robert Alexander Baxter, of South Seventeenth street, and son of Attorney Nicholas, which took place last Saturday evening at 8, in Central Presbyterian Church, where attorney was perused by Berard Coelman. The bride was exquisite in white satin gown, Julie: cap of pearls, and elegant linen tress, with a lace collar. She is a lovely woman of white roses. The bridesmaids were, Barbara Mathens, Lola Warrick, Grace Bennett and Gertrude Haxter. sister of the bride, was maid of honor. These young girls formed a picture of her, and she is wearing their luscious velvet gown, latest French patterns, ranging in tone from the maid of honor's pink velvet kelly. Model best model, best gown, best slippers, to a slightly deeper blush in the more conservatively designed gown worn by Lela, and shading her neck with a lace collar. Gertrude elude blue, and Grace turquoise velvet; slippers in each instance duplicated the color of her gown. The little princess caps of mesh and rhinestones, boasted trailing tails, and sounded the new full note for bridesmaids, in her honor's crown for the lack of tails.
Attendance at the bridegroom was, Joseph Trent, best man; and Dallas Nicholas, honorary steward; and brothers of the bridegroom, and William Thomas.
Attendance was filled to capacity, with old Philadelphiaists, young Quaker Villans, and adopted folks—and so was the Baxter home, shortly after.
With presents with presents—gorgeous presents! useful presents! eloquently proclaimed the popularity of this young couple, who by the way, has a beautiful home, will be well say, near the suburbs—furnished in rare taste from "cellar to garret." And do you know how they've done all this themselves! It's perfectly foolish to try to mention "Who's孔" for that was the instance Philadelphia was concerned, was "Who" Philadelphia was concerned, was "Who"
Tillie Young.
I say! Harret had a chait with you since the Saturday evening I entertained Mrs. Mercer and I was by before and after the Stanley performance. Mrs. Bob Young of Baltimore, is just as attractive an woman as the fascination she has with "Thie." While we were visiting her brother and sister-in-law, the Jack Trowers, of Germantown, and she and Minnie after a talk for an event, they after a talk with them, they came back and supplied and dallied with cards. and I hope "twas jolly" she seemed twu. We laisted and jolly "all quite late." Mr. Lewis completed the fourroom.
MRS. SUSIE HODGES DESHIELD has met Mrs. Mercer and the summer at Nantucket, Mass., and Woolshire, N.H. William A. Jackson Dental Chelly holds
Sorority Showers.
In my town ramblings, I find that the sororites are getting down to bitters, after one. The Phi Delta Kappa gave a shower for the new Mrs. Dr. William Jackson (partner of Forgy, being formerly the talented Miss Marion Towns, daughter of Mrs. Robert Forgy, and sister of Dr. Hewan Towns, opening the office now faces me, here on the desk. The Alpha Kappa Alphas surprised Mrs. Robert Forgy, and sister of Dr. Hewan Towns, opening the office now faces me, here on the desk. The Delta Sigma Theta, Mrs. Harold Amos, an Anne Porter—this past summer. So Eda Gaines, of A.K.A., here pre-printed a book, for a card tournament, to be held at Bergen on the 26th, at 8:30 p.m., for the purpose of a card tournament, to be held at Bergen on the 26th, at 8:30 p.m., for the purpose of a card tournament, of 13 seasons. Those assisting in putting the african accross are Roberta Digma Rosa, Madeline Bowes, "Leticie" Stevens, Elise Smith, Beatrice Miller-Robertson, Elise Owens, "Emmy" Thus and Robertson. . . . Whist, 500 and Bride!
Two Delta Chapters
Sara Birckland gave me "ting" to aprise me of the doings of the Dallas. The doings of the Dallas. The Borea Sorbery, in Philadelphia: Penn Students—the undergraduate chapter, composed of Wilma Lucas, Marion Tuten. Jean Anselm, Murphy, Muriya Arlington, Rita Boston.
Cato Adams.
Guesst from whom I received a Halloween
card?
Give up?
Cato W. Adams, of Washington. Surpri-
sure! I should say so, but very pleasant.
On California Tour.
Mrs. Madeline Monroe, and the Clay Holmess, of Chicago, paternal grandmother of the late Florence, and Junior, Monroe, are touring the state of sunny California. Received a card from the University, and visited the time of her life, seeing more of California than ever before. She has been visiting the University, Berkeley, visited the University, went down to Palo Alto with the DePriest party, and visited the University, Berkeley, visited the University, was fine at writing) it was cool enough for him to write, and visualized the pretty California "peaches" stalking in bathing togs, and looming in sandals at the far-famed western golden sunset!
Marie Hyde.
Got 'nawfully sweet card from Maria Hyde. St. Paul, Minn. It was an 'Am I early, or late?' card. But I aren't sure of the cause 'I don't have more bird-Coch. I amost told ya. At any rate Occhid kiddies have my sympathies — my young nephew, my older brother, Louis Harmon, now at Howard Med. I understand: Dan Wilson, McHarry—and any other unfortunate child of the golden brown deer—or otherwise, I recommend to these folk to get, by hook, or purchase, 'October's Child.' (Have only read the review and already be aware the authors' name. But it may be worth glancing through.)
By MRS. FANNIE A. BARRES
1017 Lombard Street
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.-Edna Worsham, of 2035 Master street, has been ill with a cold.
MRS. ALGES EWELL, of 1927 N. 23rd Street, went to Washington, D.C., last week, to attend the funeral of her sister, Ruth Davis.
MRS. ALLEN, of 2044 Turner street, celebrated her 12th birthday Monday.
MR. AND MRS. JAMES and family of 2019 Redner street, spent the week-end in St. Louis.
MRS. MIRA, of 2019 J. Bell, of 1040 W. 33rd street.
THE REVEREND BROOKS and wife of 2013 Jefferson street, have returned home from Steeleton. She attended Bristol State Convention.
MRS. CHRISTINE TROMPSON and daughter, Naomi, of 2045 Oxford street, have moved into their own home at 2238
AT A CALL issued by Mrs. H. R. Turner of 2002 Oxford street, England, and organized a club, composed of the women voters of the 17th Division of the 47th Ward, Republican vice-president, were elected for the ensuing year. Mrs. H. A. Turner, president; Mrs. Josie D. Preman, vice-president; Mrs. B. Grant, tracer; Mrs. Amy E. Fugh, chaplain. The Division Commiteeeman George Smith, the District Smith, the Mr. Smith greeted the new organization with a few encouraging remarks, after which the refreshments assisted by Mrs. Mary E. Thomas and George Smith. Mrs. Turner's home will be headquartered to the new organization until
HARR. LUCK MOORE and Miss E. Jenkins have returned from Atlantic City, where they have been spending the summer, and attended in Baltimore and Washington, D.C.
MRS. ALLEN, of 2044 Turner street, has recovered from an illness. She has been spending several months in Brooklyn, N.Y., is now located at 3708 Warren street. MRS. BTACY A. left for her for burea Monday morning, after spending $1 week in the city. While here she was entertained by her friend, Mrs. Fanny A. Harres of 1017 Lom
MR. DRUMMOND of 2240 Oxford street
driving with a fractured arm.
is suffering with a fracture in
THE ELMWOOD WOOD METH-
ODIST CENTER which was purchased the lot at
the age of 88th and Laycock avenue,
which is all paid for, and they have the
deed. The Rav. H. A. Norris is pastor.
MISS LAESHIA WILLIAMS, of 1014 Pine
street, has returned home from Laeshe-
Pals, N.X., where she was spending the
MRS. LOTTE HALL of 1530 N. 20th street.
has returned from Boston, Mass.
has returned from Seattle, of 1145 N. 741 St. street, who has been seriously ill, is slowly regaining her strength. MRS. MARGARET JOFFRE and daughter, Mina, of 1727 Alstreet street, have moved into numerous quarters at 2528 Montgomery Avenue.
MRS. LIZZIE HERRRING spent the week end in New York City.
RUPUS REYNOLDS, accompanied by his son, Levy Reynolds, in motoring to Winston, N.C. DOWNING of Roanoke, Va., in the city, taking a graduate course in surgery at the University of Pennsylvania. MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH TREMP, of 2014 Master street, entertained the past week, Theodore Spoordale, attorney, of Detroit.
MRS. EFFIE COSTILLE, of 1737 N. 22d street, has gone on vacation, to visit JOHN B. QUINCY, quite ill. DR. ALGERONN B. JACKSON, head of the School of Hygiene and Hygrometry, D.C., spent several days in the city visiting old acquaintances, a daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Lewis of West Philadelphia, left for Howard University last week. Mrs. Lewis is in her
MISS LILLIE WARE, a graduate of the WEST Philadelphia High School, has gone to training at the University of Cumberland School, Training College. MKATTE V. KEZENE, of 2229 West Cumberland street, gave a lecture at Katelyn Kathryn Keene Saturday afternoon. The occasion being her ten birthday. MKATTE, ADDIE of Mrs. Miss Bade Katherine of Mrs. Wesley M. Gratt, 246 N. Illinois avenue, Atlantic City, last week.
Globe.
The William A. Jackson Dental Society has its first regular fall meeting at the Mercy hospital, Wednesday, with almost a perfect attendance. A clinic was conducted by Doctor Bates blocking and difficult extractions, the clinic starting at 5:30 and lasting until 10 o'clock. A number of interesting cases were demonstrated and applied to this society is now sponsoring a movement to establish a permanent modern dentistry hospital in the city of the William A. Jackson Dental Society are held regularly the first
FLK QUEEN GETS OFFER
JERSEY CITY. N. J.-Miss Constance Perdue, former resident of this city but now of New York, who crowned Queen of the world, was offered at Atlantic City, has been offered a year contract to appear in the movies.
ROYAL THEATRE
JOSEPHINE BAKER
And The Entire Casts of The FOLIES BERGERE and MOULIN ROGUE Special Added Vitaphone Acts, Talking Comedies and Singing
MORE INSANE LOVER
Plice Raided
"I tried to please her and make whiskey as she said. But policemen raided the house and ran off the house with Mr. Wright. "Babe, I will do anything for you but be bad." Babe once left me and I found her at Lotte Taylor's house. "Bowie in Newark. Bowie wild-ad like, and I got down on my knees and told her I loved her. She kind of laughed at me, and told me to shut up and go to school to get the party in good snirk."
Lost His Job
"Babe went back to Mrs. Wright's with me but I lost my job by taking too much time to find her. I told her my trouble and she told me to call up my boss and tell her called him up and he told me to come back to work. Babe, she always knew how to fool people. She told me the lie to tell, and then she sewed a big black mourning band on my sleeve. Boss asked me how my wife got killed him in an automobile accident." "Last Sunday night she left me again and took 450 I gave her and did not leave me a cent to eat on. Rush and Williams, I gave her money to the corner of Lenox avenue and 142nd street. I would see Babe. I waited and watched for her but kept seeing Lottie coming from her house and going to 72 West 142nd street and everywhere Lottie went I followed
"I stopped Lottie and said to her, 'Lottie, please beg Babe to come back to me. You know where she is, Lottie, you are a friend of mine.' Lottie she said to me, 'when you have a good woman, 'boy, you ought to take good care of her, take care, and show her a flower.' I said to Lottie, 'I want that woman everything I had. I have pawned everything I have to give her money.'
Policeman Helped
"Lottery would not do anything for me so I went to see a policeman named Green who used to see a lie that saw two men grabbed my wife and dragged her into the doorway. Green went with me to the house on 142nd street and asked me to give five minutes and some one asked who is there and he said policeman. Then Allen opened the door. It's the first time ever a policeman asked Green about my wife and Allen said I have a wife of my own here.
"It Was My Babe"
"Green asked her if she was my wife and she told him no, that my wife was down in Norfolk with my two children, he said that he could not do anything. I saw a potato knife on the floor. I saw a baby named Babe, daring I know you are no good to me, but please come back. I do anything for you,
WASHINGTON, D. C.—The Board of Athletic Control of Howard University at its meeting last night taught the first course in present school year, Dr. E. P. Davis, re-elected chairman, Dean Holmes, vice-chairman, Clarence W. Davis, secretary, John K. Hill, assistant secretary. The following assistant student managers were appointed; football, Harry F. Robinson, John B. Thomas Butler, Geo. E. P. Davis F. Jones, and W. S. Fletcher, basketball, W. L. Morris, J. A Lee, and F. Harris.
It is the plan of the Board to designate ten assistant coaches from within the capable will be selected as student manager for the following year.
BRUSSELS. Belgium. — Reports here say that a powerful strike movement is on in Brazelvie, Congo of the French, and in Thirty Chinese have been arrested. Chinese have lately been imported into the Congo by the Belgium imperialists in the heart of the heart of the native workers who have, within the past ten months, engaged in several widespread struggles with the local employers and their government.
Takes D.C. Bride
WASHINGTON D. C. C.-Miss Mac Kearney
10, 131 Eighth street, northwest, was married to E. Walter Walker, 32, of 1919 Montgomery avenue. Philadelphia, here last week. The Rev. Richard D. Grymes officiel-
"She looked at me for a long time and said 'You poor fool, you are raved about that you always raved about being so crazy is crazy. Your sister is crazy, too."
Crazy Mad
"I got up then all crazy mad, and all I remember is that I ran down the stairs. Allen threw a jug at me at the door, and I went over to Brooklyn that night. I cried up a cousin of mine and he told me she was dead that they had taken her to Worcester, Mass, to bury her. I three wrestled her, and I to come off the suit with the morning band and put on this blue one. I could not bear the suit I had killed her in. She sewed her own mourning band on the sleeve. I came to the house and I met her before they buried her. I could find no one to take me to her.
Everything Went Black
"That is all. I do not care what happens to me. I love her still and she is dead I knew it must have been me that killed her because my coworker was dead. That's what happened when every thing went black in Allen's flat." Heidelberg was arrested and taken back to New York by two detectives
WASHINGTON, D. C. The enrollment is 1,552 in the college, with 32 registered in the new graduate division, 468 in the professional school division, 100 in the pharmacy, 420 medicine, 73 dentistry, 53 pharmacy, or total of 2,052.
Pittsburgh Theatres
PITTSBURGH, Pa.—Billie Young's show, "Shake, Rattle and Roll," which appeared at the Elmore Theatre this past week, was full of humor and wit. The show was filled with pleasure; very clever tap dancers, were one of the main features. Billie Young, a singer and elocutionist of unusual attaintments; Nora Marshall, singer and dancer; Louise Marshall, singer and dancer; Troy Coleman, comedian, and other exceptional artists composed the highly entertaining cast. The Whitman Sisters, one of the outstanding troupe members of the American stage," will open their engagement at the Elmore Theatre with their spectacular show, Monday night. Alice and Bert, Pops and Joe, Princess Wee-Wee and the bovy of them are expected to create a sensation.
Urban League Follies
The annual Urban League Follies, which will be held at the Carnegie Library, October 16th, will be interesting and entertaining affairs of the month. Elaborate plans are being made by the committee in charge to make the
WASHINGTON, D.C. (A. N. P.)—One of the largest coal companies in this city, the Southeastern Coal Company, is operated by James Hawkins, who was formerly president and chief executive. It is located at 1104 Second Street, S.E. Annual sales exceed $200,000.
Color Line in Oregon "U"
PORTLAND, Ore. — Miss Maxine Maxwell was denied permission to occupy the land she intended to her at the University of Oregon, in Susan Hall, when it was found out that she was colored.
Miss Maxwell's parents have appealed to the government of the state. She said she was told that foreign goods were sold occupied by the others.
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Strike in Belgian Congo
Takes D.C. Bride
Fraternity to Sponsor Achievement Week
Omegas Plan National Event of Annual Celebration
The annual Negro Achievement Week, sponsored by the Negro Rel Phil Fraternity, for the purpose of stimulating in the Negro Youth more interest in its growth and accomplishments, will be celebrated during the week from March 10 to 16th, according to announcements.
Programs and concerts will be staged throughout the country in both churches and schools. "Achievement Programs" of the Negro Artists Composers will be broadcast. Also prizes aggregating $150 for the best Essays on any phase of Negro achievement will be distributed among high school and undergraduate college students as a
special feature. Last Year a Big Year
Twenty-three states with a total of 254 essays from 171 schools was last year's record. The number from any school and prizes were distributed as follows: one to Kansas City, one to New Orleans, one to Virginia, one to Maryland.
Judges will be prominent Washington educators.
Indict Ex-College Head FRANKFORD, Ky.—(AMP)-No one with driving Prof. P. G. Russell, former president of the Kentucky State Industrial College, from that position which he held for eighteen years, his enemies had him indicted and jailed for misuse of school funds.
Mr. Russell was charged with carrying the name of his daughter, Mr. Birdie R. Rose, on the payroll for months of the year, the number and December, 1927, when she performed services for the school during the period.
D. C. DANCER RETURNING FROM ABROAD
From the Front Row
By LULA GARRETT
About Wings
ALL STRETCH FORTH HER WANT to refer to the Negro and don't say. But it certainly can be a particular field just now. The players who have played all-colored programs." She dance Jackson flew over from Paris, then that a race orchestra, the C. of the entertainment game on Brew that been closed to race music, that the beautiful Gloria M. (white) in the big M-G-M all
"ETHIOPIA SHALL STRETCH FORTH HER WINGS!" Now whether that prediction was meant to refer to the Negro and the theatrical and musical world or not, I can't say. But it certainly can be applied to that par-
ticular group in that particular. We read in a London newspaper: "The colored radio craze has hit London again, and this time for all-colored programs," and in this connection, "the popular Miss Zaidee Jackson flew over from Paris last week to broad-
cast."
And again: We learn that a race orchestra, the Gibbs-Thompson aggregation, has broken into the entertainment game on Broadway, at the Knick-arborocker Grill) which has been closed to race musicians. Then, last week came the announcement that the beautiful Gloria McCutcheon will be leading lady to Roy D'Arcy (white) in the big M-G-M all-talking special, "Beg-
They Follow, and How!
"As the modern tendency toward realism of the past, so the dance Harry Alan Potankin in a recent issets that the native dances of Africa of modern forms. Now, as far as we can see, that with the fair Nordics' charlestoning 'break-away' to the breaking point.
tendency toward abstraction need it, so the dance needs an analog in a recent issue of "Billboard dances of Africa are full of sugars can see, that happy suggestive "Charlestoning" down to the reaking point.
"As the modern tendency toward abstraction needed the elucidation of a realized art of the past, so the dance needs an analogous clarification. So Harry Alan Potamkin in a recent issue of 'Silboad,' and other augurs that the native dances of Africa are full of suggestions for the utiliza-
Now, as far as we can see, that happy suggestion was taken long ago, with the fair Nordics going down to the bricks and doing the breaking point.
Walton Coming Home After 11 Yrs. Abroad
PARIS—Henry Georges Walton of the "International Five," augmented, will return to America in October after being eleven years in Eurpee. Mr Walton has the reputation of being one of the best trumpeters in Europe, rope swain in most of leading cities. He once worked with the "Musical Sullers."
The "International Five" is playing at Chez Florence. The other members are Opsl Cooper White, White, and Charleen Lewis. Its is their fifth year.
The Best of AIN'T MISBEHAVING—THE
The Best of Them All!!!
AIN'T MISBEHAVING—THEY'RE SAVING IT ALL FOR YOU!
FLETCHER AND HIS HENDERSON
World Famous Recording Broadcasting Orchestra
JUST BACK FROM THE COAST
HEAR HIM NOW! At
New Albert--Tues. Nite, Oct. 22
POSITIVELY AS ADVERTISED OR YOUR MONEY BACK!
THEY'RE WORTH WAITING FOR!
50c. Before 9 - IKE DIXON - 60c. After 9
PROMOTER
MONDAY and TUESDAY—
A beautiful story, told by
two glorious lovers, who
loved throut eternity!
The Greatest Spectacle
of the Year!
VITAPHONE ACTS
Dolores COSTELLO
IN NOAH'S
ARK
with
George
O'BRIEN
subtraction needed the elucidation of a needs an analogous clarification," said ae of "Bilboard," and he further sugare full of suggestions for the utilizer-happy suggestion was taken long ago, down to the bricks and doing the "CHOCOLATES" MIDNITE "YORK — Midnight performances for "Hot Chocolates" Broadway hit have been changed from Tuesday to Thursday, and the Thursday matinee will be played on Wed-
The midnight performance audiences have been found to be more responsive because of the fact that many artists from various other productions turn out.
With the closing last week of "Hold Everything," after playing 420 Broadway, "Hot Chocolates" now enters the golden dozen, having 152 performances to their credit this Saturday.
In the picture, the Congressman is shown with King Vidor, the director, and Miss Nina Mae McKlinney, expressing his appreciation for the fine work the director has done in the film, "Hallelujah."
LOS ANGELES, Calif—Congressman Oscar DePriest had one of his most strenuous works here recently. He christened a new airplane for the Excelsior Colman Aviation company, took a ride in it, visited the Baptist Ministers' Alliance, delivered an address at Second Baptist church, visited the Metro-Goldwyn studio and saw a pre-view of the picture, "Hallelujah."
The nose of the plane was molested with champagne and it was
Davis to Middle West
NEW YORK—Joe Davis, president of the Triangle Music Publishers, is now in the middle west on business where he will remain for ten or more weeks. Because of the large business increase of the Triangle, which has several song hits on the market, this comedian will be one of the florals of the Roseland building. Andy Razaf, who wrote "Aint Mistbehavin'", popular song hit in "Hot Chocolates", is connected with this comedian to write exclusively for Triangle.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 1929
PROGRAM FOR THE WEDNESDAY
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY
WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY
D.W.GRIFFITHS
See!
Hear!
"Lady of the Pavements"
VITAPHONE ACTS COMEDY COLUMBIA ACTS
LISTENING IN
The Negro Achievement Hour, originated and directed by Joseph J. Boris, editor of "Who's Who in Colored America," which has been on the air over WABC for eighty weeks, will continue under his personal direction over WAAT.
Beginning October 8, a popularly contest will be conducted on this station. The object of the popularity contest is to discover who is the most popular artist among colored people. The contest will continue for six Sundays. The radio audiences will be asked to vote.
Sunday, October 20
11:00 A.M.-Beatrice Wade. Instrumental selections. WBNY.
1:45 P.M.-Negro Achievement Hour. WAAT.
2:00 P.M.-National Youth Conference.
N.B.C.
4:40 P.M.-Richard B. Harrison. Dramatic readings. WEVD.
11:00 P.M.-Ames 'n' Andy. N.B.C.
Monday, October 21
9:30 P.M.-Aunt Mandy's Chillun.
10:00 P.M.-Cabin Nights. N.B.C.
Tuesday, October 22
6:00 P.M.-Wallace Woodfolk. concert singer.
WFDM
7:30 P.M.-Joseph Hilton's Jubileers. WOR.
8:00 P.M.-The Four Dusty Travelers. WOR.
9:00 P.M.-Selections from "Hot Chocolate"
11:00 P.M.-Nestle Club Colored Art Hour
WEVD.
Wednesday, October 28
7:45 P.M.-"My South." Katherine Tilt
8:45 P.M.-Silver District, Mt. Jones, district, WPG.
11:00 P.M.-Nesto Club, Color Art Hour, WEVD.
Friday, October 25
10:00 P.M.-The Gribe Club, Nego spirituals, WPG.
10:00 P.M.-Planters Pickers - Hallelujah Singer, N.B.O.
10:00 P.M.-Knoppers, WPAP.
Saturday, October 28
11:30 P.M.-Nesto Club, Color Art Hour, WEVD.
Duke Closes in "Show Girl"
NEW YORK-After five months on Broadway, being featured with one of Ziegfeld's most beautiful musicals "Show Girl". Duke Ellington and his Cotton Club orchestra closed last Saturday, the Broadway run.
Duke and his boys are still entertaining those persons who frequent the very popular Cotton Club and it is rumored that this combination will leave for Hollywood next month to make a special all-singing talking for one of the biggest film companies, the Ellington's latest release for Victor Records "Doing in Voom-Voom" is now all the rage in and around the big city.
Vitaphone and
Movietone
THE BEST TALKIES
IN TOWN
You Will See an
PROGRAM BY
WEDNESDAY and THURS
DWG
BOJANGLES SAYS HE WILL KEEP MONEY
Tap Dancer Won't Turn Money Over to Florence Mills Memorial Fund.
CHICAGO—(Special)—When Bill (Bojangles) Robinson appeared at the Regal Theatre, here last week, to explain what had been done to move him to the last year in benefit sponsored by him for the Florence Mills Memorial Association, he started wagging that have not yet been stilled.
Has Check for $4,600
Bojangles, who displayed to the full view of the court that what purported to be check for $4,600 he said was made out to the Florence Mills Memorial Association, declared that he would keep the money until he was satisfied that it was safe to turn it over to the trustees of the
The tap dancer's bank account in New York was tied up temporarily when the trustees sought to attach some of his money in an attempt to force him to turn over the best fund to them. The trustees and Robinson is said to have called Irwin Miller, Jesse Shipe, Salem Whitney, Homer Tuttle, Leigh Whipner, Bob Slater and Luckeyh Roberts, trustees, a bunch of "crooks," adding that they had appropriated some of the $7,000 and had purchased for an actor's building which had formerly been raided.
Calls King a "Liar"
When Billy King, king in the theatreal man, greets in the audience to deny that the men mentioned were "crooks" Bojangles is said to have branded King as "a liar", causing an uproar in the audience which lasted for several minutes. A suit to recover the check is pending.
Certain He Is Right
NEW YORK.—Speaking to the press here on his return from Chicago, Bojangles Robinson is quoted as saying:
"I am so certain of being right in the matter, I am satisfied to wait until such time as the case comes up in court for a hearing, I am fighting for it, I am fighting for it, I do not see why it is necessary for them to send as far away as Chicago to induce some friend to come and talk matters over, hoping thereby to call off the pending suit which they will be, they are so certain that I will not be swayed from the path which I believe is the right one in holding on to this money until such time as a final disposition is made of the suit, I will be far in this affair they have made a personal matter of it, but I will not resort to the methods they are using as I can point out each and every one of those involved in Chicago that I have personally included when they needed it most.
"They have placed me on the defensive and now that I have the opportunity, I am going to make the most of it."
STAGE STARS INJURED
IN AUTOMOBILE CRASH
CHICAGO—When the taxicab in which they were riding was struck by a heavy sedan, Thursday, Mae Alix, theatrical star, now featured in the floor show at the Sunset cabaret, and Sussage Brown, star of "Plantation Days," were painfully injured.
A
MRS. BELLA TAYLOR MCKNIGHT
national Girl's Reserve secretary of
Y.W.C.A., who spent several
days in the city at the Drill Hul
branch Y.W.C.A. last week. She also
attended the third annual "setting-up"
conference of the local organization.
Mrs. BELLA will route to
Denver, Colorado.
Wilberforce Music Groups to Chicago
Vocal Units to Give Series of Concerts at Various City Churches
XENLA. Ohio--Wilberforce University will send to Chicago for the Tuskegee game the largest array of musical talent ever sent forth from a Tuskegee university.
A group under the direction of Prof. C. W. Saulsbury will arrive in Chicago Wednesday morning; a uniformed band of twenty-five pieces, under the direction of Prof. H. D. Damon, the team member, the team, Friday morning.
The vocal units comprise a men's glee club of twenty-four voices, a women's glee club of like number, a mixed sexette and a mixed octette. The women's glee club, as well as the sexette and octette, will be the direction of Grace Edwards, who will be rendered by the organizations at various churches Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings.
Beguine is Shimmy Plus Mess Around
By EDWARD
The gardens in this Bail-Colonial-Martinian dance hall in Paris are very fascinating. Most of the women are homely. They wear their kinky hair brushed on their heads, their skinny hair on the line features and excellent physiques. Their popular dance, known as the Beguine, is a combination of shimmy and messy but elegant movements, a manner that is more graceful than either of these dances. There are now two of these bals in Paris. But they only frequent the Martinians, but many French and Americans.
Black Has Place of Honor
The gardens of the Luxembourg are the most beautiful in Paris. At the entrance to the garden, stands a large mountain group, known as the Four Mountains of the World.
The four women are standing with their arms outstretched. It is interesting to note that the black woman holds the place of honor.
Josiah Diggs
Owner
Walter Carr
Manager
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
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MARIAN ANDERSON IN PHILLY RECITAL
Contralto Scores Another Triumph at Academy of Music, Friday.
ENCORES ARE MANY
PHILADELPHIA—Presented under the auspices of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity, Marion Anderson, contrata, another triumph, when she appeared at the Academy of Music here Friday night.
Miss Anderson, as is the custom with artists, began with the classic group, her opening number being "O Del Mio Amato Ben" by Donauda, which immediately won favor, "Dormil bella" by Bassan; ending the A Tormentarmar byesti, ending the difficult "Allaulce" by Mozart, which showed marked improvement in tonal effect. In this she displayed how very well she has her voice under control. The second group of songs included "Der Zwerg," "Wolin," both by Schubert; "Der Schmiled" by Brahm; "Faden" by Wolf and "Zungegm" by Strauss; and "the beautiful and colorful smooth and melodic. She rendered with deep dramatic feeling the beautiful aria from Chalkowsky's "Adieu Forests" (Jeanne D'Arc), a number not so well known to local concertgoers. She was applauded again and again and responded with joy and pleasing Mozart's Echo Song, "None He Me," which with charming lyric feeling she rendered with soft beauty.
Her English songs were sutted to a particularly musical audience and included Rachmaninoff's "Soldiers Bride"; Griffes's "Night on the Unknown Has Failed" and Sara's "At the Spiny Wheel" and Jacobson's "Love."
A group of spirituals was done with telling effect. "Wade in De Water" and "Peter, Go Ring Dem Bell" (by Burleigh), both proved good numbers, while "Talk About a Child that Do Love Jesus" was remarkably well interpreted by this gifted young artist, the same true as to "Little David Play on Your Harp" to Dawson, and the laureate Johnson's arrangement. "There's No Hidin' Place down Here" because of Miss Anderson's unique rendition, afforded much laughter.
GIRL PIANIST 15
BY GEORGE W. BLOUNT
CHEYNEY, Pa. — Miss Thomasina
W. Talley, concert pianist, will be
heard in recital here Saturday
at 7:30.
In June of this year she received
her B.A. degree and music diploma
from University. She was a
pull of Miss E. F. Cook, an Obelina
graduate, starting at five years of
age.
Miss Talley has also studied with
Mr. R. Augustus Lawson, the concert
artist and teacher, of Hartford,
from Mrs. Sonoma Talley-
Sequist.
She was recommended by prominent musicians for a fellowship in the Juillard Foundation, but on account of her tender years the fellowship was not granted her this year, but instead of musical art, the Infant of Musical Art, the Frank Damrosch School, and free private lessons with Mme. Olga Samarov Numbers by Bach, Listz, Grieg and Chopin make up her program.
T. O. B. A.
Theatre Owners Booking Association
SHOWS OF ALL KINDS
WANTED
CONSECTIVE BOOKINGS
Communicate with Sam E. Beerin, manager, Volunteer Building, Chattanooga, Tenn., or S. H. Dodley, 1123 Seventh Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C.
JOHN B. HARRIS
COLUMBUS, Ohio. — Thomas W. yong has been appointed to the editorial staff of the Ohio State Lantern, student daily at Ohio State University, as managing editor, succeeding his brother Bernard of the Norfolk Journal and Guide staff.
Young came to Ohio State after taking his freshman work at New York University, where he distinguished himself in freshman debating. He is a member of the varsity tennis squad and won his numerals as runner-up to the fresh championship. A senior in journalism twenty.
He is at present taking a combined course in law and journalism and will receive degrees in both.
MCKAY LEAVES PARIS.
PARIS—Claude McKay, poet and author, has left Paris for parts unknown.
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And what lovely fragrance Nadine has, deep, rich and captivating. Use Nadine on your throat and arms, as well as your face—surround your self with the lingering fragrance for hours at a time.
Begin to use Nadine Face Powder today. At drug and toilet goods counters, in flesh, white, coral-rose and brunette, 50 cents. Or, send us your order, and receive valuable booklet on beauty, free. Address Dept. V, National Toilet Co, Paris, Tenn. U.S.A. Nadine FACE POWDER
The CAREY
MONDAY and TUESDAY—Douglas Fairbanks, Belie Bennett and Cast in
DOUGLAS
FAIRBANKS
DARTAGNAN
The
IRON MASK
UNITED ARTISTS PICTURE
A thousand thrills, a thousand laughs, a thousand gasps crowd upon one
another as the most daring guardman of all France rights for love and country
dances the groom and the wife. They are entertainers in KADEE.
MONDAY—SMITHY and HIS GANG in "RODEO"—2-Act Comedy
METRO NEWS—The World Before Your Eyes
TUESDAY—CHAS. GANG in THE WINNIE GUCKON—2-Act Comedy
PATHE NEWS—Interesting and Educational
PREFERS BARBERING TO PARIS STAGE
P. C. Girl Six Years Abroad
Returns to Cut Men's
Hair.
IS WORLD TRAVELLER
**PARIS.**—Mrs. M. Greenlee of the team of Green and Lawrie has given the stage and is attending the Parisian School of Coffees. She will return to America to open a barbershop of the latest Parisian model, and announces that she will "cut men's hair, too." Mrs. Greenlee, who formerly worked in the Census Bureau in Washington, left America six years ag., and was for a while a stage baroness. During that time she has over most of Europe dancing partner, including Poland and Russia.
In Brazil
She has also danced and sung in Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, the West Indies, and Dakar. West, West has had many experiences and experiences that in Brazil, America is asked to keep her out of a hotel because of color, and that most of the papers of Rio de Janeiro took up the matter. The most interest to me is that I was that the edition of nearly all the dailies were named "men."
In Russia
She says that she also found Russia interesting and the people very appreciative. "And I did want to tell you, Russia, so we asked a price which we felt they would not accept, but they did." She has received five press notices in the various countries, and she is not by accident that she got on the stage as she did not know that she could sing. After seeing the world she is tired of traveling and will return to her hardworking shop in November.
Mrs. Evans to Return
Mrs. Mosella Evans who has been studying millinery with La Femme de Demain, one of the leading Parisian schools, will also return about this school two years, and was recently given her diploma.
T.O.B.A. DOIN'S ..
CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. -- According to an announcement from Sam E. Reevin, manager of the T.O.B.A. circuit, Drake and Walker have accepted a route over southern Tennessee at St. Louis, October 21-28, Memphis, Birmingham, Atlanta, Chattanooga and Nashville. Follow. Buttebeams and Susie have also accepted a southern tour, which opened at St. Louis, with Memphis, Birmingham, Atlanta and Chattanooga to follow. Their show will be of the Drake and Wakeup.
Where They Are (Week of Oct. 21)
"Bandana Days." Liberty, Chattanooga.
"Hot Ella." Palace, Memphis, Tenn.
"Happy Lucky." Grand, Chicago.
"Jazzland Girls." Ogden, Columbus.
"Hello Everybody." Pike, Mobile.
"Butterbeans and Susie." Prolic, Birmingham.
"Brown Gal." Elmore, Pittsburgh.
"Billy Young's Company." Lincoln, Guisville.
"Shake Your Feet." Walker, Indianapolis.
"Birth of Blues." Roosevelt, Cincinnati.
"Drake and Walker." Washington, St. Louis.
"Cotton Blossoms." splitting, Liberty and Grand. Alexandria-Baton Rouge, La.
OUT OF HUNGARY
PARIS—After a successful season at Budapest, the Benny Payton New Yorkers have returned to Paris. The members of this orchestra are: James Encher, violin; Tim Henley, piano; Brace Eubanks, saxophone and voice; Coen Cox, saxophone Florie; Allen, saxophone Bert Belltrumpet; John Parker, trombone and vocal; Benny Payton, drummer, and R. Hones, banjo.
[Picture of a Native American woman with a feather in her hair and beaded necklace. She is wearing a headband and a necklace with beads.]
MRS. LORETTA LEWIS of 2333 Madison avenue, who recited the Famine episode from the book, left Saturday at the AFRO Club meeting. Her Indian costume made her recitation realistic and impressive. Mrs. Lewis was a graduate of the college context at the Douglass Evening high school at the last graduation.
Russian Sculptress Keen on Negro
PARIS.-Mile. Dora Gordine, Russian sculptress, has been attracting considerable attention in artistic circles with her Negro studies. One of her torosus was recently bought by the British government or Acorns Moche College, and she is said to be the first work of art bought by Britain for one of her colonies.
Among Mile, Gordine's best known pieces are the head of Princess Touvalou, sister of Prince Kiko Touvalou, and that of a young West. Indian woman. Her recent exhibition at the Tate's Gallery in London created a sensation and caused much discussion.
DOWN BROADWAY
B. MAURICE DANGER
WEEK OF OCTOBER 14: "HOT CHOCOLATES." 14th month HUDSON THEATRE - Jazzills Richardson, Edith Wilson, Baby Billy Huggs, Bucky Grainger, Billy Huggs, Edith Green, Merries and Merris, Margaret Simms, Paul Bass, Jimmy Baskette, Dick Campbell, Louise Cook, Rusty Worsham, Singer, Louis Armstrong and Leroy Smith's orchestra.
"GREAT DAY" - first week (COSMOPOLITAN)
Depee and Russell Winged Singers.
"HALLELUJAH" - (Picture EMASBY THEATRE - Nina Ma McKenny, Daniel Haynes, Fannie Belle McKnight, Victoria Haynes, Jubilee Singers, Jubilee Singers.
Harlem
WEST END THEATRE — one week before
WEST END
Richard Gleason, Teegad Black, George
Bandele, William Edmondson, Bebow Tewa-
nley, Michael Foster, Betsy Foster,
Fuller, Marie Young, Vera Johns and Willi-
son
LAPAYETTE THEATRE — "HOT TIMES
AND TUNES" TUNES, Carlyle, Ettie
Little, Carrie, Carlson, Carrie.
ALHAMBRA THEATRE — "AUTUNN RE-
VELS," (musical). With a cast of Harlem
ALHAMBRA THEATRE "THE HIDDEN
DRAMAS." With the Alhambra
PANZI
Night Life
LON CHANEY
an epic of railroading—
THUNDER
GRUMPY ANDERSON, the hard-boiled, soft-hearted locomotive engineer, is a Chaney character that will rank with his finest.
See him in this drama of the thrills, laughs and surprises of railroading!
A William Nigh production
with PHYLLIS HAVER
JAMES MURRAY
A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer PICTURE
Dance Halls
BY LEVI JOLLEY
Preparations are being made by several clubs to hold pre-Halloween dances here next week. These affairs, the private, will carry many of the dance clubs and bowlers and a majority. With approaching festivities of Halloween there is expected to be the biggest carnival of joy and Mardi Gras to be witnessed by Monumental City within the past five years. The reason for this belief is the rumor that the Junior League and the Sub Deb Club will join themselves together and sponsor Baltimore's first big "All-Club Dance." Dance is to be held at the New Albert atrium on Wednesday, October 30.
The "Breakaway"
The "Breakaway," a specialty dance feature in the Vitaphone attraction, "Fox's Movitone Foilles of one may cause more trouble than one who is taking especially if rumors are to be taken." It is reported in local dance circles that several of the popular hoofers, including Joseph Gresham, Ruth Raffi, Jimmy More and Louise Gibson are trying to perfect a combo the Breakaway. From the Wampas and the Breakaway, they had been enough, using more energy than the once popular Charleston. With a combination of the dances one will be unable to do more than these hops-siop-and-jump affairs in these female partner with the cause of the tremendous amount of energy and vitality used in the execution of the difficult steps. If we don't be careful the collegians may originate a football dance during which the male partner will be the female partner if she doesn't make it happen. We must expect anything with the present dance madness gripping the youneret. What they want is an exotic, fast, imbuishing dance and they must have it. So look
"Nappy Pals"
Thanks to the popular dance promoter and orchestra leader, "Ike" Dikon, dance fans and jazz lovers have a nice treat when "The Happy Pals" made their second appearance here. The dance fans, who had been clamoring for the appearance of the "Pals" since they gained national recognition, result of having won a recent "Battle of Music," were well satisfied.
The boys started slow, but, like the radio, when they got warmed up it was just too bad. A little before midnight, when the heat was getting a little under the skin of many, the temperature of the zenith of harmony, volume and expression (if these are the right terms for expressing their getting "HOT")
Internes Dance
I nearly forgot to mention last Friday night at the Elks hall. If you were not there you perhaps will never be able to live it down. To go on when the Provident Hospital did so their first annual dance, is to know that it was wonderful from the point of enjoyment and great from the point of interest, caused by the many historical costumes, yet it was greater for the beautiful decorations, and more in another section of the play. I found the full details as described by "Pat" in her missive to "Pansy."
Abyssinian Jazz Leader
Has Blond Partner
PARIS—Levy Wine, native Abyssinian, has left with a jazz band of mixed colored and white for the Barcelona Exposition where he has a contract to play.
Wine has traveled and played around the world and speaks several languages. He lives in a cave, and has as his partner, a blonde lady, known as the Spanish Eva Tanguay.
CENSOR BARS "HARLEM"
BOSTON—To the long list of play that bear the label "Banned in Boston" add "Harlem." Wallace Thurman's play on colored life in New York after wilting the first performance of the play when it opened last week in Springfield, Mass. City Censor Pohn M. Casey, of Boston, decided that "Harlem" in its original form would be used to be produce the play. The play was being revised, "Harlem" opened at the Abolio Theatre here, last Monday.
BALTIMORE MUSICIAN NEW NEGRO SHOWN IN JAILED IN CLEVELAND "MAKE ME KNOW IT"
Stanley Miller Injured Gir Playing in "Get Happy' Company.
"ABRAIAM'S BOSOM"
Bojangles and "Blackbirds" also to Cleveland.
BY GEO. D. TYLER
CLEVELAND. — Politics has the town all astir. Race candidate for garrens clean demean, the recent uphailings.
Baltimore Musician Jailed
Baltimore Music Jailer
Stanley Miller, former Baltimorean,
for several years featured as blues
artist, and arranger and pianist, is in
here after a career with Williams and Brown's
"Get Happy" company. It is alleged
that police found a quantity of dops
on Miller.
Tylers to Winter Here
Mrs. Lucille Tyler and daughter, Henrietta, wife and daughter of the AFRO scrive, will arrive here next week to spend the winter with Mrs. Laura Atwood, sister of yours truly. Mrs. Atwood, formerly of Towson, is now a professor of time a protege of Philip Patterson, a member of "Blackbirds."
"Blackbirds Coming
Lew Leslie is bringing his musical revue, "Blackbirds," in which Aida Kahn plays the role of a singer to the Ohio Theatre Sunday, October 20. for a week's engagement. From here the show goes to Chicago for a run. Bill Robinson, a "Dark Cloud of Joy," will be in town the same week appearing at Keith's Palace. As a tap dancer, Bill is considered by experts to be one of the best in the world.
"In Abraham's Bosom"
"In Abraham's Bosom," which was awarded the Pulitzer prize in 1925, will open the season at the Karamat Theatre, home of the Gilpin Players. The play will run for five nights. Cast includes Pitzhugh Woodford, Olive Hale, Hazel Walker and Rozelle Ingram. Gilpin Players this season will present six full-length plays, three before and three after, which will be shown in their own theatre, 3807 Central avenue.
Utica Singers
The Utica Jubilee Singers were a feature over the air Saturday evening from WTAM. The boys registered nicely and show quite an improvement over the time they performed in the form of the AFRO'S Saturday Club
Bessie Brown
Bessie Brown continues to score as a feature of Inspiration Hour from WTAM. She is on the air about three times in Henderson and his "Brown Gal" company is the revue doing the week at the Globe Theatre.
Vallee Back to Harlem
By MAURICE DANGER
NEW YORK—Rudy Vallee, who lately made "The Vagabond Lover" in Hollywood, is again bringing his Connecticut Yankees to Harlem. Occasionally, he will dance at the Rockland Palace. John W. Moses, and William Smith, of the American and West Indian Times are responsible for the attraction. The orchestra is also Hollywood's "Million Dollar" orchestra of 15 pieces as a special attraction and John C. Smith's will be added to complete the music.
"BIRDS" IN PITTSBURGH
PITTSEBURGH, Pa.—The musical hit of the late Broadway season, Lew Leslie's "Blackbirds," which completed a two-year run at the Ethelse Theatre, an engagement in France opened at the Nixon Theatre, Monday.
Critic Praises Players in Drama of Political Intrigue.
Vivienne Baber, A. B. de Comathire. Lauded.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
CAST OF CHARACTERS
B Ebsnedy Brewster Brennell
'Tegger Day' Leo Bailey
A Bweet Mama Zenda Ellington
A Faint Mama Martha Flemont
Policeman Allen Gillard
'Nolay Knowles' Mitchell Lewis
'Nolay' Knowles Jack Riggs
Joe Nippy Charles L. Hawkins
Joe Sawyer James Dumont
William James James Dumont
'Hop' Abbott Napoleon Whiting
Mrs. Sophie Crouch Endid Kaphela
Floyd Fowler James Chauffeur James J. McAtee
'Bulge' Bannon A. B. deComatheme
George Gaines George Gaines Monte Hawley
Rev. Washington Stubbs L. Schooler
Party Guests-Edda Ellington Marion Fleming Paul Jackson, Tischle Lewis, Mitchell Lewis, Francis Don Carter, Allen Fleming James J. McAuse and Napoleon Whiting
Pedestrians, newsboys, etc.
NEW YORK—Friday night at New Rochelle, I saw a wide audience taxing the capacity of the big New Rochelle theatre, and firmly enjoying the dramatic scenes. I made Me Know It." These are the actors assembled by D. Frank Markus, author of the play, and presented for public approval by Wallace Davis. The entire production is controlled by Progress Theatrical Enterprises, Inc. The play takes place in the Negro section of a large metropolis. It didn't take a fortune teller to remind you that you were watching every day scenes along A. James's play and nights of political activity, for "Make Me Know It" is a play of political intrigue. Bulge Bannon (played by A. B. de Comathiere) is in power. He rules the city, and he hands hand. He is nobly aided by his pretty and vivacious daughter, Vivienne Bannon. former "Farlem" lead, who successfully vamps George Haines (played by Monte Hawley) into helping him with his political hold on the community.
From the beginning of the stroll of the great crowds along the Avenue to when Ezra Gaines (played by Paul Giamatti) came to the final curtain when even the minister (Louis Schooler) and the deacroness (Phil Ranhael) had failed to shake Bulge Bannon from his colliul throne, there was marked and unpleasant dramatic action in the crowd, every principal and the ensemble.
Brevard Burnett and Lee Bailey were well cast: Paul Floyd, stage manager and veteran of many successes, box oratory expert. Allen Gillard, Walter Lee, Lou Vernon. Don Carter, Napoleon Whittle, Louis Schooler, Mitchel Lewis and Charles Hawkins, not only cleverly acted their emancipation of the department of gentlemen in dress suits displacing court manners to ladies at a formal party.
A brand new picture of the Negro in white muble, which spends millions to educate us, but gazes in utter bewilderment when it sees its displaying that which we are tamed. the play raises the Negro theatrical standard. "Inspires home," he says. "The street may deserve the highest praises of 12,000 people for showing to another people a true picture of their black sisters and brothers acting like reunions. Make Me Know It" is truly a wonderful show well acted.
Community Cinema
NEW YORK. - Harlem's movie problem will be solved with the opening next week of the Community Cinema, behind 140th and 141st Streets. The house will be dedicated to films as an art. The latest products of color photography, the foreign pictures, educational films, the Amor Theater, will be in the most attractive surroundings. The house seats only five hundred.
4 Days Only!
374 STATES
050
MISS VIVIAN BARBER
Harlem beauty, who plays the leading role in Broadway's latest drama, "Make Me Know It," the Missing Man, has carried her directly from Harlem to Broadway.
Youman's "Bondage"
NEW YORK.—Great Day," Vincent Youman's extravaganza, is now reported to be the all-time champion for postponed premieres. Considering its numerous designs and artistry, the band that name be changed to "Bondage." Because of last minute changes in the cast, this production will be on Broadway and 40 colored singers is scheduled to open this Monday on Broadway.
2-Days Friday--Saturday 2-Days
How Much Should a Girl Risk — to Shield the Man She Loves?
SEE and HEAR
WARNER BROS. present
"HARDBOILED ROSE"
The Mystery That Started Rose on Her Hardboiled Career.
with
MYRNA LOY
WILLIAM COLLIER J.
JOHN MILJAM
GLADY'S BROCKWELL
Based on the story by
MELVILLE CROSSMAN
ROBERT LORD
Directed by
R. HARMON WESMUT
Coming-- "The Black Watch"
Lafayette Changes Policy
NEW YORK—Jimmie Marshall, manager of the Lafayette Theatre, announces that this theatre changes its policy from Monday openings to Saturday. The changes will enable the management to secure the R-K-O attractions which recently have been unable to play the Lafayette because it would mean a week's kick-off. It would come into effect Saturday, October 19.
NEW ALBERT MONDAY NIGHT October 21st
Only Fair House Greets Opening Performance
NEW YORK—One more attempt has been made Go by Harlem. Harold Revia, former manager of the Alhambra theatre, opened the West Bnd theatre at 125th Street and all-colored stock day evening with all-colored stock company, the national Colored Players.
In the company are Ida Anderson, Veronica Joey, Young Jill, Young William Edmondson, Hilda Oaffley, J. Homer Tutt, Richard N. Gregle, Bebe Townsend, Ted Blackmon, William Shephard, Jay Monday, David Dale. They selected for their debut, "Seventh Heaven," the Broadway and cinema success of several seasons ago. The performance was decided by the possible exception. George Randol had some excellent spots and Miss Anderson her moments, but all in all, the whole business was rather
Honse Fair
Only a fair house, and it well papered, greeted the company. However, those who did come out were generous in their applause and the great number of the patrons were white. The West End is on a border line. The success of the venture seems doubtful, but talks take place, stock company, even at airports from fifteen cents to seventy-five, and of the highest calibre, will find the going tough. Another handicap is the position of the so-called 'neighbours' by Broadway companies before taking to the road.
CUBAN JAZZ BAND
PARIS—Few colored folk from the States are to be seen in the neighborhood of Rue Pigalle and Rue La Fontaine, Montmartre, these days. Most of them have left Paris. The "Grackerlacks," which have been at the Palermo, "wishable cabaret for the past six years have left, and the ones has been taken and the Cuban jazz-band."Three of its members, Walter Kildare, Joe Caulk, and George Archer have gone to Nice.
3rd ANNIVERSARY-PRIDE OF BALTIMORE LODGE
You are Cordi 3rd A
Past Exiled Ruler
TWO ELK LODGES JOIN IN WEEK'S CELEBRATION
Monumental Takes Part in Pride of Baltimore Anniversary.
BEGINS SUNDAY
Band Concert at Bethel Starts Affair.
With the Monumental lodge taking a leading part in the festivities, the week's celebration of the third anniversary of the Pride of Baltimore Elks will get under way here Sunday with a seventy-two-piece band concert at Bethel A.M.E. church.
Not since the organization of the Pride of Baltimore lodge, three years ago, have Elkdom and the Daughters been in such perfect harmony putting over a program as in the present effort, and there is a prediction that the effect will be to bring Baltimore in the forefront in the march of the order throughout the
DAUGHTER ELKS.
Another feature of the weeks' celebration is the enthusiasm with which the Daughters are helping to put over the program. Under Daughter Ruler Ida Cummings, and her deputy, Daughter M. Pulley, the ladies are not only aiding in the regular nightly affairs but are putting on an auxiliary program of teas and afternoon affairs for younger people.
EVERY NIGHT.
The regular program will feature some big affair every night. Following the band concert Monday evening at Bethel, the Maryland lodges will render a program Monday evening at the Elks. Mill. Madison avenue near DePauw, with Past Exalted Ruler Gorge W. P. McMechen the interim speaker. On Tuesday evening Grand Exalted Ruler J. Finley Wilson, himself, will be the speaker and this will be Grand Lodge night.
Wednesday night, with Hughes's Southerners playing, the midweek social will be one that will attract young Elkdom and their friends. There will also be special music Thursday night when the Disciples of Columbia lodges will bring over three bands, several hundred Elks and Daughters.
P. A. Lomax is chairman of the Washington delegation.
On Friday night the big reception will take place, when there will also be good music, and at the Regent theatre Sunday evening, the 27th.
MIDDLE EAST
ELKS BIG PARADE
Form at Bond and Fayette Sts. Bond to Jefferson to Monument to Eden to Madison to Forres to Drusilv Aven. to Biddle to Bargle to Mosher to Calhoun to Baker to Division to Gold to McCullough to Moher to McCullough to Hoffman Madison to the home.
FORCES DEPARTMENT STORE
The Peoples Department Store, Pennsylvania avenue, opposite Lafayette Market, one of Baltimore's largest, keeps its doors open to all, and offers the same high-end merchandise, plus courteous treatment, to everybody. Their popular money-saving sales draw large crowds.
Fear Mother Took Life Over Son's Fate
Coroner Orders Autopsy on Body of
Mrs. Hattie Wilson
On request of coroner Eugent Zellers, an autopsy will be performed on the body of Mrs. Hattie Wilson, 45, 222 Calvin street, who died in the City Hospital. Monday Mrs. Wilson died lying in an ambulance condition in her room by Mrs. Sarah Nolan. She was taken to the City hospital where she died without gaining consciousness several hours later. She is believed to have committed suicide during a fit of despondency after the death of John Wilson, who is serving a sentence of one year in the house of Correction.
SUSPECTED OF SHOPLIFTING
Suspected of shoplifting, Lennie Melvin, 23, 850 W. Saratoga street, is being held in the Western police station pending an investigation.
two Elk choirs and the big Pride of Baltimore band will build a musical program around a speech by Dr. John M. Marquess, exalted ruler of Quaker City lodge, of Philadelphia.
PHILADELPHIA NIGHT.
Featuring the O. V. Catto string band, Philly lodges and their friends, come down Monday night, the 26th to close the affair at the Elks' ball.
Exalted Ruler John H. Murphy, Jr. with J. Howard Payne, chairman of the election committee, have elected an organization to take care of every detail.
ordially Invited
ANNIV
No. 713
8
At EI
Sunday, 20th—
Sacred C
By The
Pride of Balti
75—Piece
At The
Bethel A. M.
Lanvale Street and I
Bro. C. Harold
Minist
Under Personal
Bro. A. Jack
Rally Invited To Part
ANNIVERSA
No. 713-Assist
8 DAY
At ELKS
Sunday, 20th—
Sacred Concert
By The
Pride of Baltimore Band
75—Pieces—75
At The
Bethel A. M. E. Church
Lanvale Street and Druid Hill Avenue
Bro. C. Harold Stepteau,
Minister
Under Personal Direction of
Bro. A. Jack Thomas
No. 713-Assisted By F. E. W. HARPER TEMPLE, No. 429 8 DAYS-OCTOBER 20th-28th At ELKS' AUDITORIUM1112 MADISON AVE
POSITIVELY SILVER OFFERING
Washington Night
Columbia Lodge, No. 85
Morning Star Lodge, No. 4
Assisted by Lodges, Temples and Units from
Alexandria, Va. and Fairmont Hei
Morning Star Lodge, No. 40
Assisted by Lodges, Temples and Units from
Alexandria, Va. and Fairmont Heights
Accompanied by their Bands, will storm our
Elks' Home on this night. These bands are
"hot," don't miss hearing them.
Hon. Perry W. Howard
Will Address the Assembly
BRO. P. A. LOMAX, Master of Ceremonies
JOHN H. MURPHY, Jr., Exalted Ruler
Anniversary
J. HOWARD PAYNE
DT. EMMA RIDGELY
Deaf Man, Accused by Girl, Dismissed
Witness Testifies that Miss Mary Wilson Had Been Friendly with Accused
Richard Jackson, 1222 Shorter Alley, was declared not guilty of criminal assault charges brought against him by Miss Mary Wilson in part one, criminal court on Monday, October 15th.
Mary Wilson testified that Jackson, who is deaf, lured her to his room, feigning he had a job for her. He locked her in over night at which time the crime was committed.
In the testimony of Howard Sanders, 1222 Shorter Alley, from whom Jackson rented his room, it was brought out that Miss Wilson became angry when she discovered that Jackson had money, and it was then that she threatened him and decided to have him arrested after going with him on her own accord.
GIRL SHOPLIFTER HELD
Caught in the act of shoplifting a silk blouse valued at $9 from the Stewart department store, Fay McGee, G. department store, Fay McGee, G. department store, Fay McGee, G. for the action of the grand jury when haled into the Western police station. Friday.
INSANE MAN HELD
John Edwards. 50. Crownville, Maryland, is being held in the Southern police station on charges of assault and escaped inmate of Bayview hospital.
To Participate
ERSARY
- Assisted By
DAYS
LKS' AU
Concert
More Band
75
E. Church
Orbuid Hill Avenue
Stepteau,
Direction of
Thomas
Monday
May
Mon
TR
Assisted by
Bladensburg
Wicomico,
chester, Rotain City, G
and John
night a gal
accompanie
Lodge, No. 40
Duples and Units from
Fairmont Heights
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 1929
zipate in--BALTIMER
ERY-PRIDY
d By F. E. W.
YS-OCTO
AUDITO
PROGRAM OF THE BIG
Monday, 21st—
Maryland Night
Monumental Lodge; No. 3
TRULY HATCHETT, Presiding
assisted by Prides of Sparrows Point, Chase,
ladensburg, Talbot, Montgomery, Crisfield and
lecomloo, Ancient City, Fort Cumberland, Dor-
quester, Roosevelt, Chesapeake, Crescent, Mount-
in City, Olympia, C. A. Tindley, Sydney Mudd
and John P. Forrester Lodges, will make this
night a gala one. Monumental Lodge will also be
companied by her Baud and Marching Club.
incipate in-
MARY-
ed By H
YS-O
AUL
Monday, 21st—
Maryland
Monumental
TRULY HATE
Assisted by Prides of
Bladensburg, Talbot, N.
Wicomico, Ancient City,
chester, Roosevelt, Ch
tain City, Olympia, C.
and John P. Forrest,
night a gala one. More
accompanied by her B
Assisted by Prides of Sparrows Point, Chase, Bladensburg, Talbot, Montgomery, Crisfield and Wicomel, Ancient City, Fort Cumberland, Dorchester, Roosevelt, Chesapeake, Crescent, Mountain City, Olympia, C. A. Tindley, Sydney Mudd and John P. Forrester Lodges, will make this night a gala one. Monumental Lodge will also be accompanied by her Baud and Marching Club.
Friday, 25th-
By Joint Co
Pride of Ba
By Joint Committees of the
Pride of Baltimore Lodge
And The
Francis Ellen Watkins Harper
Temple
In Honor Of
Their Visiting Guests
Temple
In Honor Of
Their Visiting Guests
CHAIRMEN
THREE MEN HELD ON VOLSTEAD CHARGE
THREE MEN HELD ON VOLSTEAD CHARGE
Three men were arrested and are being held in the Federal District; building on charges of violating the Volstead Act, this week.
Taken when agents raided the store at 400 Wilson street and found a small amount of whiskey, Monday, Robert Chase, 40, 520 McMechen street, is being held for a preliminary hearing under the Galli, John McMullen, 34, 229 Bernard street and Howard Price, 101 S. Hanover street, are being held on charges of manufacturing and selling liquor. Agents who raided the Hanover street address confiscated a 50-gallon still and 20 gallons of corn mash.
YOUTH HIT BY AUTO
James Hill, 16, 150 W. Hamburg street, sustained injuries of the face and body when he was struck by an automobile while attempting to cross Charles and Cross streets, Wednesday.
Woman Struck by Ambulance
Crossing Charles and 22nd streets, Mrs. Agnes Wells. 2303 Guilford avenue, received serious injuries of the left foot and leg when she was struck by the South Baltimore hospital ambulance. Monday.
BOY'S LEG BROKEN
Crossing Churchill and Charles street, Stillman Butler, eight. 17 W. Montgomery street, was struck by an automobile causing him to suffer a broken arm, Monday.
STOLE BUDDY'S CLOTHES: HELD
Edward Adams, 38, 244 S. Bethel street, was held for the action of the grand jury under $1000 ball when arraigned in the Eastern police court, Tuesday, on charges of stealing clothing valued at $110 from James Praine. a former roommate, 35 S. Caroline street, on September 26.
HIT AND RUN DRIVER HELD
Charged with violating the State Traffic laws, Goldsborough Cooper, 20, Northside, Sparrow Point is held in the Eastern Police station for investigation believed to be the operator of a hit and run automobile.
DISORDERLY ON CAR; FINED
AUTO DRIVER DISMISSED
Edward Johnson, 20, 1630 Orlean street, was dismissed of charges of assassination and knocking down Bernard Novak, two years, 621 S. Regis street, with his automobile at Fleet and Register street, on September 26, when arraigned in the Eastern police station, Tuesday.
George W. F. McMechen Past Grand Exalted Ruler Will Address the Assembly Big Street Parade
RECEPTION
Program
JAMES H. HILBURN
DT. MARY ANDERSON
---
THE MAYOR OF BROOKLYN
Is Independent Institution With Self-
Perpetuating Board of Trustees
WASHINGTON, D. C.—Howard University is not a government institution. President Mordecai W. Johnson at a press conference Saturday.
The impression is abroad that Howard University became a Federal institution with the passage of the Cramton-Couzens bill in the Seventh eth Congress. Dr. Johnson made his statement to correct that impression. The Cramton-Couzens bill simply authorized Federal appropriations to aid in the construction, development, improvement and maintenance of Edward University.
Since the establishment of the Budget system, items recommended for Howard University by the Budget Bureau and approved by the Budget committee on appropriations have been issued to point of order and invariably stricken out on the ground that such appropriations are not authorized by existing law. The Cramton-Couzins bill also relieves that situation. Items were never related to the In-
MRS. ABBIE JOHNSON
Grand Daughter Ruler, who, with
Mrs. Emma V. Kelley, Founder and
Grand Secretary, will be the principal
guest on Harper Temple night, du-
ting on Elks' celebration.
"Howard is still an independent institution with an independent, self-perpetuating board of trustees, receiving an annual grant from the Federal Government." Dr. Johnson said.
M.
SHARP STREET M. E.
COMMUNITY HOUSE
The opening meeting of the Community Fund was held in the Sharp Street Community House, Monday, October 14. The Embroidery classes under the direction of Miss Maggie Bailey will have their full opening this week.
Miss Flosse E. White, acting executive secretary, has been appointed as chairman of the Colored Division for Protestants of the World Friendship Among Children committee of Maryland. Mrs. L. B. Mather is chairman of the Maryland Division. The project to be put on the war is the filling of treasure chests by the children of America of all races to be sent to the United States of the Philippine message of good will. The first fall meeting will be held at the Y.W.C.A., Park avenue and Franklin street, Tuesday, October 11. A number of well known local colored women will compose the colored executive committee, among whom will be Mrs. Elira M. Bond.
MISS IDA R. CUMMINGS
Daughter Riler, F.E.W. Harper Tem-
MISS IDA R. CUMMINGS
Daughter Riler, F.E.W. Harper Tem-
TO ORGANIZE FOR COMMUNITY FUND
The organization meeting for workers in district five of the community fund will take place Monday evening at eight o'clock at the Community house for the purpose of selecting those who will head the team in
The Baltimore Conservatory of Music, under the direction of Mr. Wellington Adams, will present a program in the church. Sunday, November 10 p.m. Well known local talent will palm the program. Admission is free.
this district
Francis M. Wood is chief of this
district and Maurice Moss is secretary.
the pastor, congregation and choir, together with friends of Sharp Street M.E. church, journeyed to Chester, Pa. Sunset, 11:30 a.m. the pastor preached at the morning services and the choir rendered a sacred concert at 3 p.m.
HOLD MAN OF SERIOUS CHARGE
Charles Harris, 27, 810 Tyson street,
was held for the action of the grand
jury when arraigned on the North-
western path in ton charges of
the murder of father of the child born to
Miss Zola Stewart, 826 Tyson street,
Tuesday.
Laborer Injured Here
Crossing Light and Pratt streets.
James was knocked a fractured rib when he was knocked down by a truck. Thursday.
Coming — Marian Anderson
GEST FRATE
ALTIMO
TEMPLE,
20th-28
M1112 MA
DGE
Wednesday
Harpe
MORE'S BIGGEST
E OF BALT
HARPER TEM
OBER 20t
DRIUM11
EIGHT DAY CELEBRATION:
Tuesday, 22nd—
GRAND LODGE
NIGHT
The Grand Exalted Ruler
J. Finley Wilson
Will preside over the ceremonies, which will be under the auspices of the Grand Lodge, L. B.
P. O. E. of W.
Hear and See This Matchless Leader Preside
Music by
Irvin
Hughes
And His
Southerners
Sunday, 27th—
Anniversary Night
Pride of Baltimore F. E. W. Harper
Lodge, No. 713 Temple, No. 429
Special Services Will be Held in
Regent Theatre
7:45 P.M.
Dr. John M. Marquess
Exalted Ruler, Quaker City, No. 729 Will Dellve
The Oration
MUSIC
Elks' Choir, No. 1 Elks' Choir, No. 2
Monumental Lodge Pride of Balto. Lodge
Oscar Johnson, Director Wm. B. Hamer, Director
Pride of Baltimore Band
A. JACK THOMAS, Director
OF COMMITTEES
Reception
WILLIAM M. JONES
DT. MARTHA PULLEY
The Held in
Centre
Marquess
1729 Will Deliver
Quaker C
Accompanied
Will be present on
the Pride of Bask
of seeing and her
organization in E
Dr. John M. Marquess
Exalted Ruler, Quaker City, No. 729 Will Deliver
The Oration
J. Finley Wilson
Will preside over the ceremonies, which he will be the bearer the faces of the Grand Lodge, I. B.
P. O. E. of W.
Hear and See This Matchless Leader Preside
FOR A GO
Odd Fellows' Hall, B
Baltimore's Most Po-
IRVIN HUGH
On Air Station WCAO from
RATERNAL CELEBRATION
MORE LO
PLE, No. 429
-28th
MADISON AVE.
Wednesday, 23rd—
Harper Temple
Night
The Officers and Members of
F. E. W. Harper Temple
Will Present a
Barn Dance and Birthday Party
Assisted By
The Great Southern Temple
And Other Temples Throughout the State
R. ABBIE JOHNSON, Grand Daughter Ruler
DT. EMMA V. KELLEY, Grand Secretary
Irvin Hughes and His Southerners
Will Furnish Music for This Night
WRITER
IMON
PLE, N
n-28th
2 MADI
Wednesday, 23
Harper
Ni
The Officers
F. E. W. Ha
Will D
Barn Dance and
Assist
The Great Sc
And Other Temples
DT. ABBIE JOHNSON
DT. EMMA V. KEI
Irvin Hughes and
Will Furnish M
Barn Dance and Birthday Party
Assisted By
The Great Southern Temple
And Other Temples Throughout the State
DT. ABBIE JOHNSON, Grand Daughter Ruler
DT. EMMA V. KELLEY, Grand Secretary
Irvin Hughes and His Southerners
Will Furnish Music for This Night
Monday, 28th
Philadel
O. V. Catto
Quaker City
Accompanied by
Will be present on the
the Pride of Baltimore
of seeing and hearing
organization in Elkdo
Philadelphia Night
O. V. Catto Lodge, No. 20
And
Quaker City Lodge, No. 720
Accompanied by Their Marching Clubs
will be present on this night and the guests of
the Pride of Baltimore will have the pleasure
seeing and hearing the most unique musical
organization in Elkdom—
Philadelphia Night
Accompanied by Their Marching Clubs Will be present on this night and the guests of the Pride of Baltimore will have the pleasure of seeing and hearing the most unique musical organization in Elkdom-
O. V. Catto String Band
Judge Edward Henry
Exalted Ruler of O. V. Catto Lodge, Will ..
be the Principal Speaker
IDA R. CUMMINGS, Daughter Ruler
Steering
ROBERT W. COLLIER
DT. HELEN C. DEAN
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly.
PRESTON STREET.
PENNSYLVANIA
PEAK
SCHOOL NO.122
WALNUT ALLEY
ONION STREET
ALLEY
BIBLEL ALLEY
SCHOOL
NO.107
CALVARY
BAPTIST
CHURCH
Avenue
W.
BIBLEL STREET
This is where Northwest Baltimore is hoping to have a new playground and relieve the congested conditions which now exist in this community. The proposed area will extend from Pear alley to Etting street and from Preston street to Biddle street. School No. 122 will be chiefly benefited, because
Three Women Hurt in
Fight. Over Dress SAM the SHOEMAKER
FOR A GOOD TIME
Odd Fellows' Hall, Every Saturday Night
Baltimore's Most Popular Dancing Class
IRVIN HUGHES PLAYING
On Air Station WCAO from 7' till 8 Every Saturday Night
Three women received minor injuries of the face and body during a free for all fight over the possession at 1143 McMerryd Street, Thursday.
Those injured by bricks and bottles which were thrown during the fracas gave their names as Mrs. Mary Wright, 43, 1143 McEldery street; Ethel Richardson, 20, 1107 McEldery and Ethel Roberts, 23, 432 Calvin street.
HUNT UNKNOWN ASSAILANT
Police are trying to find a man who seriously injured Clarence Johnson, 1008 Sharp street, by striking him over the head with a blunt instrument while he was walking in the 800 block of China street, Saturday.
SKULL FRACTURED BY BRICK
Suffering from a fractured skull and left arm received when he was struck with a brick by Harry Schofield, 35, 302 S. Spring street, during a fight over money, Jerome Christopher, 56, 619 W. Lafayette avenue, in the City hospital in a serious injury.
WINTER
Is Just Around the Corner
Bring Your Old Shoes to Me
I Rebuild them Like New!
HALF SOLES, 73 AND 90 CENTS
Store Hours, 7 A.M. to 8 P.M.
Saturdays Until 10 P.M.
ONLY ONE STORE.
Cor. St. Mary St. and Druid Hill Ave.
Suffering Women and Girl!
Take DR. ROBERTS FEMINAL
TABLET. A guaranteed VEGETABLE TONIC recommended by
Doctors and nurses for years for CRAMPS, PAINS IN THE SIDES or BACK, NERVOUSNESS, BEARING-DOWN PAINS, LOSS OF APPETITE, IREGULAR and DELAYED MENSTRUATION.
DON'T FAIL TO TOUCH THIS MENSTRUATION! Mail with this "ad" and receive a genuine $1.00 box of FEMINAL TABLETS, FEMINIAL LABORATORIES, Druid Sta, Baltimore, Md.
GOOD TIME
Go To—
Every Saturday Night
Popular Dancing Class
GHES PLAYING
from 7 'till 8 Every Saturday Night
CEBRATION
ODGE
E
EMORY R. COLE
Past Exalted Ruler
N
J. H. MURPHY, JR.
Exalted Ruler
Membership Drive
For 2,000 Bills
Begins
TUESDAY,
OCTOBER 29th
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
INSTALLMENT III
The next morning found Saint occulting a third in a dirty litter with a shabby leather bag buckled on his legs. The remaining two were fully lined in substantial bulk out of Raymond, bulwarked behind an outward copy of the Counter. During the half hour of train, the boy remained in train of their destination and the nature of that destination and parenting environment goal toward it was to fight his way.
When they arrived at the little station the paper man's overcoat stuffed into the man's overcoat and they climbed into the rear seat of a waiting buckeboard. Then the employee brought the business of the nuomente he had a straight man-to-man way of talking to the boy that both put his hands on his face. He watched him closely but kindly, and he drove his ideas in with stout, confident understanding." understand" keeps his listener's wits on tipte. There were no heroic visions now. It helped the teacher to decorate the teacher in the commissary for the Negroes at one of the mini camps. There were other camps, and the teacher decorated a storekeeper, and over all of them there was a general manager. One of them was a one-day party on some day to rise above the others to the managerial position the direction of the chain. So they felt a feeling of relief. "In the manneau," the genial voice informed him, "you must watch the man and the supplies they run low and stop, and a nigris credit when it runs through the wages. Think you manage it?"
Sank looked up and saw before him a small clapboard building with a square that always denotes the country store. Across its front ran a black cedar fence that cut into and an old Negro were dug in the sun. Behind the little building a wide broom-straw field with gold-brown pith the silver-brown of the winter marsh, carrying the vision of the sun. Beyond the bright thread of the Ashley river, North south, and west, the little pool was walled up by virgin longitude and stopped the shrill cry of crushed crumbs on their long made trunks and stopped the shrill cry of monotone. Overhead swung a vast empty sky, blue-green over the tree, almost purple where it dipped behind the warm line of the marsh. "All out," commanded Mr. Raymond, "do you like it, Worthy?"
The boy stood looking about him. His mouth had dropped a little more than normal, almost stupidity. In a cavalryman flash he saw himself from behind, and would see him, in a failure facing this迷信的迷信, conventionally mounted on a horse, traffic with Neurosci he was safely out of sight, and could be spoken of himself with the eyes of phosphates, and he pitied terribly himself with the eyes of his emperor, and he knew what he was going to do any higher, that he would stay there until he rotted down into the camp. And yet, deep within the camp, melting; warm new currents were gathering. Standing there, he almost felt passionate questions that his youth had dang against the wind. He turn-around, the employer and gave a strangely sadly summed up his foot on the bottom sound of the commercial ladder. He will be happy here, sir. I will stay.
But if Mamba had moulded her life according to her plan as far as the big Church street she said, she could not have been said of the course of events in the East Bay tenement. Hagar been in trouble several times, and she was serious; no charges that involved a stay of more than a fortnight, or perhaps a month, at a time in the county jail. But she also getting a bad name with the police.
When Mamba had told Mrs. Wentworth that her motive for seeking permanence in the house was a girl who was born for trouble, she had been as wise as she was prophetic. In the building, she was a woman of the women who made trouble. In the great honeycomb to the south, as many again. But they had attained maturity in time of peril, Hagar, on the other hand, with her luge frame and her big wounding carriage in the picture. Also the police knew where she could be found. Mamba had given the woman a religious intelligence she had driven the need to care for the child, to give it a chance. A Saturnian merurial spirit of the neo-mournful would leap beyond bounds. There was always a quantity of the neo-mournful with the seal of the great commonwealth of South Carolina, and known among the Negroes as rogue, and her enormous body, released from its slight control, would become one of the great rogue, the ensuing orgy that inevitably resulted in a riot can.
In the panic the big woman could be counted upon to rush to her room and grab the girl. She knew this. A fruitless raid was humiliating to the force. There must be something to show for it at the gate, and she would fall, the officers would stand at the bottom of the steps leading to Hagar's room and whoop for her to come in. She would be suddenly cowed, she would soumble suddenly cowed. Still a bit dazed by the liquor, dumb and bewildered, she would come down the steps. She would build in the corner. Then someone would go to the Atkinson's gate and whisper to Mamba, who would be in the room with a neighbour to care for Lissa until Hagar's return.
And while Mamba sat in her dwelling on the past and speculating upon the future, she came to the different room six blocks away in the black belt Hagar was putting her child to bed. For her six years, with a faint colour in her cheeks under the light bronze of her skin. The child was her mother, who loved to stroke it with her finger tips. She got the little figure into bed and asked her mother, who contorted which, with her eyes, made up the sum total of her physical heritage from Mamba. The dress was quiet. Far away on the tracks of the East Shore Terminal a switch engine was singing a little lullaby full of minors: "Mush, it baby, don't yun yun. The mudder an ladder bum tub tide." The soft tossing sounds beside her ceased and were followed by the rhythm that tipped over. dimmed the kerosene lamp, picked up a large bundle of clean wash, stepped behind the room, and closed the door behind her.
Across the street and down the dim perspective of the wharf her gaze travelled and rested at the pier head. The boat was motionless, but a steam exhaust beside the funnel wheeled up and blew a film between her and the starry stars. An hour now and perhaps the boat would be under way. Her wash was for the fireroom crew, Sam and Abel. She never seen the men they had not known to her. And she did not know the boat. Perhaps it was just touching port for supplies and was going South, and she must have kept open; one could not tell about strange river "niggers."
When she arrived at the pier head she saw that the fire-room door was open and she flushed with the deck. She looked down and saw an iron ladder that descended into flickering light and caught the shadows. She stopped over the hatch and called:
"Yuh Sam an' Abel. Heah Hagan wid yo' wash."
voice called: "All Right, Sistuh, bring um down."
"Silence for a moment then: 'No, I will come on. Come up an bring you two do collah."
Sam appeared at the bottom of the ladder with his face thrown up toward her. His voice was beguiling.
"What is it?" he asked. "What whim mey so on suspicion?"
The thought came to Hagar that they might touch at the port regularly and that customers were not vague misgivings, but she lowered her heavy bulk through the opening. It was so low between deckes that she could see the water, but who were both shorter than she, laughed openly and good-natured at her. This served to allay her suspicions. She chuckled at her own curiosity, and she flicked across the darkness of her face. She sat herself on an empty box, she said: "Well, dars yo closes." She entered, but continued to sit on the edge of a bunk with a guitar in his lap. He had a round face with a spurious expression of ingenuousness and an instrument and plucked a chord.
Sam said: "Dat's right, go on an armade de jure de gaine." He gingerly gave a smile through second thought, he lifted a pint flask from behind him and handed it Hagar on. On Sisuth, he opened the vase you loved. Abel wasaking away steadily now: not a tune, but the intricate improvisation of chords so loved by Hagar. He held the vase close space. Before Hagar, the red fire box, cut into segments by the black grate bars, grinned like a man, and winter stars behind the hatch showed infinitely remote and pale through the warm light of the fire room. Hagar, with a smile, and instantly the air was pungent with the rank fumes. She tipped the bottle and took a long pull, then gently, the air was pungent, finally, returned the flask to Hagar, then took up his playing again. The music beat through the woman in the room, and broad foot commenced to tap the floor. She lifted the flask, and it seemed as though she would never slow, narrowing her eyes to bright sights, then closing them. One might have thought her asleep but for the box and swayed slowly from the box and swayed slowly from the hips with the rythm of the music.
Through the hardshell that the vessel's wash travelled landward under the waiting steamer. lifting it. thrusting it forward, allowing it to settle back, then lifting it again to grasp the chords rang the bright. certain notes of a ship's bell—seven crystal beads of sound strung with beautiful precision. the ship's Abel exchange meaning glances, and Sem grimmed the words "Not yet." Overhead a crisp, authoritative step smoothes footsteps strived away forward.
Suddenly the shattering blast of a steam whistle filled the night. It stilled the guitar which dropped from Abel's hands and broke into an intense activity. They seized Hagar by the arms and hoisted her up until her head struck the ceiling. She opened bewildered eyes and looked at her. "Sistuh," Sam command-
"Step it, Sistuh" Sam commanded. "Dat's de cast-whistle."
Her conductor gave her a final shove and she was on her knees with a painter from a bollard, and it fell overboard with a heavy splash. The steamer's rail was clean and clear where she could still touch it with her extended hand. Sam's face came into her head and she touched the rail, and as she looked at him he threw back his head and laughed. She saw the side of her brain. She her out of the two dollars. The money that she needed for Lissa was thrown out of her body. Her eyes were fixed on the laughing face that was drifting away from the ward of space that divided her long arms flashed, and her hands closed on the shoulders of the man she was laughing at. She squirmed coat. The stuff bailed up in her palms, giving her a firm grip. The face that she was laughing at frightly from laughter to fright. She set her knee against a bollard, and threw her whole weight into the frantic clutch at the rail, but the pull on his shoulders jerked his arms up, and he missed. A second time with Hagar standing astride of him. Behind them sounded a bright thunder of opinions of the paddles. The boat regarded its former fireman with a green and sardine starboard eye, then gathered an engulfed by the aqueous darkness.
Tagar never nursed a grudge. Always her anger was defensive, always his head and made payment of what he owed her it is likely that she would have let the matter drop there. There was a sense that he and she smitten with that madness which the gods lay upon those whom they are about to kill, the shoulders and the feet and attempted to make a dash. A swift, clubbing stroke caught him between the shoulders and a pile of barrels. He cannoned off at an oblique angle and again tried to holt, but the too late action was too much. The steamer heard the noise and came running. A single lanton hung suspended from the ceiling and only she seemed to shed a place of reeling shadows and elusive half lights. The whart hand rounded a double toe of what he hew. He brought up standing
Hagar had her man in a cut-dee-dee between two owl plains, but she was not alone. She was like other fighting Negresses, nor was she at it with teeth and nails. But there was something strangely, like a snake, in her. For she was sobbing loudly and bitterly, and through the sound ran a monotone of two words said over her mouth, two dolphins. Her victim was attempting to speak, but she would not let him,
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 1929
She raised her face and looked at the officer over the laxed form in her arms. Then she rose, placed the child on the bed, and tucked in the shirt under her arm. Out of a word she gave a long coat from a hook, slipped it on, and buttoned it over her nakedness. The officer watched her, and she watched her. He had slipped his gun back to the holder. He had come for her before, and he knew the woman, with whom he had to deal. There would be no trouble, but she was a trunk and bundled them together. Then she returned to the bed and stood looking down at Lissa.
"Come along, Big Un," the officer said, not unkindly, "let's get it over, don't get a better from walkin'!"
THE LITTLE BUSYBODY WHO GOT A "BREAK"
In Hollywood, when they say, "We will call you if we need you," it is a polite method of permanent dismissal. But here is an instance where the unexpected happened.
HOLLYWOOD—the land of rocket-like rises and meteoric falls—can tell many a story of startling successes and tragic failures. Like the legendary will-o'-the-wisp, it has lured many from homes, from positions that were secure, to wait patiently or impatiently, with the throngs of prospective actors and actresses who crowd about Central Casting Office hoping and praying for a "break."
and presently he was so beset that he gave over trying. The watcher of the game had to be careful with balance and balance before the woman. He was small, but quick and wiry. He seemed obsessed with a single idea, and he opened the open. Hagar stood braced across the exit like a Colosseus, her arms moving in swift downward strokes that would have worked with a sledge. The terrified wharf hand saw the man venture too near a bloody him of him and the darkness into darkness, "Godmighty!" exclaimed the onlooker, and with eyes showing high lights in the faint lamp glow named and raced to give the alarm. Out of the shadows emerged Sam, driven forward by a single idea—another fixed and unaltered opposed idea that had possessed itself of the devastated human machine another fixed and unaltered opposed idea that had possessed itself of the devastated human machine this time the smaller figure struck, and remained impinged upon the larger one, smashing terribly up at him, striking a pile of boxes that toppled and fell with a crash. People were coming now, the white-watchman swinging his lantern, and striking a pile of boxes that toppled in a little circle and waited.
The bundle that rolled in the shadows' quiet or a moment, then resolved itself into two individual arms, each right. They faced each other, and their breathing sounded above the slap and suck of waves against the backhead, but each held on and launched himself at the opening in a last desperate attempt. Hagar bent forward and met him with an arm, a whole tremendous weight fume into the effort. Shock—recoil. The man's body described an arc, struck the planking, and the woman's lips moved in.
THE LITTLE WHO GOT A
By RUBY BERK
(Continuing a Series of Articles
In Hollywood, when they say, "it is a polite method of permanence stance where the u
HOLLYWOOD—the land of rottell many a story of startling legendary will-o'-the-wisp, it tions that were secure, to wait patient prospective actors and actresses who hoping and praying for a "break."
THE MUSICAL 'THE MUSICAL' BY JOHN M. MAYER, WITH A FILM BY JOHN M. MAYER, AND A PRODUCTION BY JOHN M. MAYER.
The little BusyBusy is here dressed in the manne
that has masked her. The mournful stars of Hollywood,
His prisoner bent and pressed her wounded mouth against the smooth skin of her chest and obediently and went to the door. While the policeman stood waiting for her to precede him down the street, she looked at the familiar room. It was not until then that the realisation seemed to dawn upon her that this was different from the blind deparasite of the future a faint presence of some vast disaster flickered its warning. Showily her eye was through a window, locked upon a dim room with its familiar disorder the bed, and the slim form of the child. In the half light the loot the impound of her farewell kiss showing dark against the light tan of the cheek. She turned and felt her way down the dark stairs with the policeman clumping heavily behind her.
There was nothing the chameleon about George P. Atkinson. His burial did not blur his mid-Western outline in the smallest, particular. Two years in Virginia had left him guild-master, and he went about the Charleston streets obliquely rolling his R's before him. He refused formal orientation from the formally him. For the same reason he neither played golf nor shot. But he knew cotton-seed oil from the Texas cotton crop for 1507, the best market for linters, he told you the Texas cotton oil market for any give day in past half year. Every morning he would breakfast at the crude-oil market for fifteen minutes, walk briskly to his office and say in that snappy tempo with which employers haunch a daily day; he would breakfast at the reports ready? He would have told you that he was a specialist, and, as such, by his wife, for the net result to the family was ten thousand a year in a city where many of the residents are strongly marked and assertive, and he showed in raw contrast to the urbane, rather ceremonious, and strongly marked and assertive, and he showed in raw contrast to the urbane, rather ceremonious, and strongly marked and assertive, and he would have met in most of the Charleston drawing rooms, in the early nineteen century, only to be left at home when she sailed forth on
BODY
BAK"
need you,"
he is an in-
teroic falls—can
failures. Like the
homes, from posi-
ch the throngs of
Casting Office
Needless to say the race should be proud of Roberta Hyson for her excellent record. I felt that Mr. Cohen was paying a compliment to every black woman under her, and I knew that you, too, would be interested in the story of this demure little brown girl, so I shall let her to you as she did to me as we eat in her kitchen. I will be her beloved books and pictures and music:
"My first advent into the land of the movies was anything except pleasant. You had to make a screen test for a part in the Cohen comedies. The officials were very curt. 'Why you won't do for the part at all. You're not sure spoken in the first place, and then I don't think you are the type we are looking for. If find that we can use you we will call you.' I knew that my doom was sealed as far as Christie was concerned and back to my work at the Moulin Roulon on West Sikh street. There was the time. A month passed and no word from the studio. But one bright six weeks they asked me to come out and make a Viaphone test. My good, so they gave me a small part in the 'Me兰泠孝 Dame.'
"Tell me." I asked her. "how did you manage to bring up Roberta as she is? Most girls with her salary would think of nothing but clothes and 'whopee.'"
"I don't know. As I now look back over Roberta's early life, there wasn't much I had to do. I just let her alone. She was always quite serious and staid in her ways. Today she likes clothes but she loves to design her own. We were always very confidential with each other and my job was largely one of succession."
"You are a wise mother." I told her. "If only more parents suggested instead of commanding, we would have more Robertas."
After she had passed from the room Roberta told me of other ambitions yet to be realized.
"I long to be a star. I mean a real star. There are so many things I would like to do. So many people I would like to help."
"Suppose you were to become a great star. What would you do with it? I would spend thousands instead of hundreds as it does today?" I quired. "First, I would build a home for my mother. It would not be a palace, for she would want one. It would be a very comfortable and home one built exactly as she wanted it. Then I would move for my moulded sister so that life could be made beautiful for her.
"Rush, it'll baby, don' yo' cry,
you won't do for the part at all. Your English is too correctly spelled, and then I don't think you are the type we are looking for. However, if we find you, we will call you. I knew that my doom was sealed as far as Christie was concerned. I went home and back to Moulin Rouge on West Sixth street. I was an entertainer there at the Moulin Rouge and no word from the studio. But one bright morning, at the end of six weeks, I met and made a Vitaphone test. My voice recordings were good, so they gave me a 'Meantham Dolce' Mame.
"Evelyn Reeer played the leading role in the picture, the star actress of the famed Lafayette Players and had been understudied of Genre in college. Lau Bellie was just the least bit awed because of her stage and screen skills, and was determined to do my best.
"We finished the picture, and I had the surprise of my life when I saw that I had stolen the show and a two-year contract awaited me. I was stunned, and I believed in fairies and believe in fairies and everything.
"I am fond of my wife. I am the picture I still like the cabaret work too. There you see the audience, there you see the space you see the smiles of approval when you have done a good piece of work. I suppose it hustles nature to wartise.
"When I am not working in the pictures, I am playing in the Thaven Club in Wilmington. Each evening at seven noon, I went to KFOX in Long Beach. I like to be busy.
"Oh, It's a habit I like to be busy. I've been that way all of my life. When I was a kid I had to be doing something to read or see or be banging on the piano. You see I never get tired of music as I would
Roberta Hyson and Claude Collins in "Music Hath Charms," a picture that brought the actors much movie recognition. The two stars are often cast together.
Gaining And Holding Love at Seventeen
Gaining And Holding Love at Seventeen
Have you a puzzling love arat on which you need friendly ad-
dress? Send me a stamped, self-addressed envelope,
a personal reply, please send a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
A
Roberta Hyson, as she appeared in "Music Hath Charms." Her sticking
personality is very well shown in this picture.
CURIOUSLY enough we have three letters this week, all asking the same question (with seventeen). One is from Detroit, one from Gainvillea Florida, and one is from Miami. They are all with young men whose arder, though once burning brightly, has for reasons which they do not state, begin to fade.
Now, young ladies, if at seventeen all loves proved permanent and ever more important for something to talk about? If our first loves always lasted forever we would have nothing worth writing about, and no one to sell their stuff to. So we almost owe it to the love of seventeen, disappointed in love as seventeen. The young men whom girls of seventeen are averse to, who aren't old enough to know the her career, and refused to attend dinners except in his own house. Even in decorations, Mrs. Attkinson decided that he might have been much worse, for while he said little, she noticed that the men gave him respectful attention when he and liqueurs to her guests with a natural quiet dignity, insisting on taking them from the ceremony of passing them himself after they had adjourned to the drawing-room fire. He had the same sense of dignity which was then at the height of its vogue, and he looked well leaning against the walls at times he would break through her restraint and militantly pronounce a spade a spade. But he loved her, and now, at forty-five, did most of
and Claude Collins in "Music Hath
is much movie recognition. The two st
"I have a very clever kid sister who sings and dances. I would see to it that she had every advantage money could give her. Next, I would build a home for myself. Just a nest of a house where I could play at housekeeping and putter among my flowers at odd times.
"After that I would try to find all the people who had been unkind to me or who had been mistreated by me and I would treat them so nicely that they would be forced to
kind of sweetheart they want and support them. They are out learning what women are like. How do they know? They are permanently if they don't know anything about the fair sex at all and holding on grimly to the first thing your hands touch instead of banding from your feet.
The young men are sensible and are seeking experience. And this is what he does. He will vate. For with experience your own characters will be developed and you will be more interesting. You will be able to do anything you do choose a man it will be because you know you are both suited to each other. You cannot hold the man of your choice now is simply because you have not had sufficient experience. But you are handed differently from every other, yet there are a few fundamentals which apply to all of them. Appearance; be interested in what they are; be good matured and do not rush matters. His bristling with his close-cropped hair makes him the one who offers one of his breaks with: "Mr. Atkinson has such a droll sense of humour." He went on weeks after Hager's arrest George P. Atkinson sat with his paper open before him, and of the fifteen allotted to that daily rite, and he had not yet been allowed to commence. He made what he wanted, and effort to disguise the interruption.
"I can't see it, my dear," he told Mrs. Attkinson. "We go out and hire a woman to work for us. Very good. We don't have to be injured in our employ we may be responsible under the Employer's Liability Law, but in South Carolina, I doubt even that. Not that I would (Continued on page 23)
Charms," a picture that brought the cars are often cast together.
be my friends. I love friends and wish that everybody in the world were friends of mine.
"By the time all that was done, I would probably be broke," she smiled, "but if I still had some money left I would invest it in real estate."
To find such success as this in Hollywood, is indeed an inspiration and an invitation for other little busybodies to be prepared when the "break" comes.
100
Afro Fashions By Aunt Dilsey
5236 6618 6632
THE APRO-AMERICAN Pattern Bureau. 1-12 Sterling Place, Brooklyn, N.Y. Use no
tablet addresses only for APRO Patterns.
printed in silver or stamps for our UP-TO-DATE FALL AND WINTER, 1929, BOOK
OF PASHIONS.
THE LIFE OF BERT WILLIAMS No. 19 . .
100
12
MARYLAND
BY SAMUEL TORSELL
MRS. JOSEPHINE CARTER and her three
daughters, Sarah, Mary and Leona of Clarka-
ville. Sarah, Mary, and Leona, of Mr. and
Joseph, of Clarkaville.
MRS. ODELLA COLEMAN of Newark, N.J., is the guest of Mrs. Ella Pountain. Rally Day will be held at Grace Church, Sunday, October 20, William Adams, chairman. Boots and Her Buddies Club will be held at Grace Church, Sunday night, October 27, anniversary Church. The pastor, church and congregation from Grace Church, will worship Thursday night.
THE REY, E. T. ADISON attended the Kentucky conference of the A.M.E. Church, presided over by Bishop Monroe H. Davale at Frankfort KY. He met with Mrs. Beiss and Her Buddies Club met and elected the following officers: President Miss Gladys Simpson; Treasurer Miss Ethel Johnson; Assistant Secretary, Miss Ethel Johnson; Boots, Miss Olivia Johnson; Treasurer Amy Hill; Assistant Secretary, Beverly Hill; Elder School School Orchestra, under the direction of Ephert Hall, will play Sunday night at Ekbert Baptist Church, Elkridge. FOER BAKERVILLE, his wife and three children were the guests Sunday, of Mr. and Mrs. Bamuel Torsell. MARDEE BENNETT is suffering from a
Stewardess Day, Sunday at Grace Church, was largely attended all day. At 11 a.m. the Rev. Addison preached on Sunday, and presented, among whom was Prof. Ford of Baltimore. At 8 p.m. a sacred concert was rendered by local talent. Mrs. Mariah Fields in charge of the event were in the home of Mrs. E. T. Addison, Wednesday evening and elected officers for the ensuing year. They were Mrs. E. T. Addison, president, Mrs. E. T. secretary, Mrs. Irene I. Josephson.
PRINCESS ANNE MARYLAND
PRINCESS ANNE, MD.—The Rev. and Mrs. R. W. Cheers attended the District Conference, which was held in Crissfield, October 12. Mrs. Salle James and Mrs. Celeste Denis have returned home from Bryn Athyn, Wales. Clinton James and Samuel Green metored from Bryn Athyn, Pa., Wednesday, and renew acquaintances here at Crissfield.
Frances Gale has returned from Atlantic City, NJ, to take up studies in Princess Anne Academy. She Clark motored to Baltimore and spent the week-end, and Prof. L. H. Martin motored to Philadelphia for a few days. Mr. Taylor, of Bowle, and Mrs. Alice Tate and daughter, Mabel, of Berlin, spent a few days here with their mother. Mrs. Mary Anne Wilson and Mrs. Henrietta Ellis, of Philadelphia, visited rela- tions. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rutherford, of Huntington Valley, Pa., accompanied by Walter Cotman of Philadelphia, and Harry Cotman of Philadelphia, motored here Sim- and spent the day.
Seeks Degree at Oberlin
OBERLIN, Ohio—Miss Frances
C. Berry, of冉馨oke, Virginia, grad
uate of Morgan
college of music
of 1928, and concert
pianist, has en-
tered Oberlin
Conservatory of
Music, seeking a
degree in music
Her report for
September should
marked progress
Miss Berry
late college, class of 1928, and concert pianist, has entered Oherlin Conservatory of Music, seeking degree in music. He music report for September shows marked progress in her work. She is the grand-daughter of Mrs. Frances Cox of Lynchburg, Va.
BLADENSURB-HYATSVILLE, MARYLAND
BLADENSURB-HYATSVILLE, Md.-The regular services were held at Dant's A.M.E. Church, Sunday. The Sunday service was attended by the officers. At 0 a.m. the pastor, the Rev. E. R. Williams, delivered the sermon. The Rev. E. R. Williams has been in progress for two weeks night. The Rev. Leach, closed Friday night. The Rev. R. R. Williams also preached at the Rev. Leach, largely attended at Paul's Baptist Church, Sunday morning and night. The pastor was largely attended at Paul's Baptist Church, Sunday morning. Subject, "Deep Water Fishing." The Sunday school was observed at 10:15 o'clock in the courtyard, petitions held at 10:30 o'clock. The Young Booths of E. Society held their meeting at 7 o'clock. Mrs. Carle Broome in charge. The subject discussed was, "Jesus Teaching
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse James, Jr., motored to Boyds, Saturday evening, to visit their mother, Mrs. Hearon, on Sunday, to attend the carnival, held Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights of last week, by the Men's Progressive Club of St. Paul. Baptist Church, was well attended by colored citizens of Blindensburg and vicinity the last of September to benefit the Rescue Squad of Prince Georges County and the amusement park, one hundred and fifty dollars was turned over to this fund by the committee in charge. St. Paul's Baptist Church, celebrated the first Sunday, with preaching all day. The Rev. Daniel Washington of the First Baptist Church, Mt. Pleasant, celebrated the anniversary service a clocked up. Mr. and Mrs. George James of Alexandria, Mr. and Mrs. William E. Burke were guests of the meeting of Jesse James, Sr. of East Riverdale, accompanied by the Rev. and Mrs. J. T. Brooks. John T. Green, William O. Lee and Edward Brentwood, are still on the list. A surprise pound party was given Mrs. Sarah Hollow, Friday night, by the Mrs. the Missionary Circle and Deaconess office. The monthly meeting of the Bladenburg Union was held Monday night. At this meeting several applications were approved.
The Parent-Teachers League of Bldendown, held the morning Wednesday, were inaugurated zan, to be held on the meeting night in December. The president,
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Harris spent the Sunday with their sister, Mrs. Fannie Plum
AIBEY MARYLAND
AIRREY. Md.-Sunday morning services were held at Christ Mistle. Chichester with the oyster company report from the oyster super showed it to be a success with a total of $76.37 earned. The Stanley's annual home coming conference will presach at 11:30 a.m. At 3:30 the district superintendent, Rev. J. W. Helm of the Easton district will preach. The superintendent will home from her visit to Baltimore. Rev. J. C. Griffin and wife visited the Rev. Levin M. Molok, pastor, of Seaford, he is ill with pneumonia. He is improving.
The Molok home coming was held Sunday night with a large attendance. Many visiting ministers and singing and praying visited. There was one convert and $360 raised. John Griffin and Charles Hackett have entered the first year of high school at Cambridge. Mr. Brestice Molok was a graduate of the high school this year.
80
PER CENT
BETTER!
HOW
DO YOU
FEEL?
Annapolis
ANAPOLIS, Md.-Mr. and Mrs. William
Steward and Mrs. William
Steward to this book and spent a week here
as the guests of Mr. Steward's sister and
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Garfield
MRS. CHESTER WRIGHT of New Albany,
Ind. formed by this city, is spending several weeks here, visiting her mother,
Miss Carolyn Addison of South street.
MRS. JULIUS GROSS has returned home from Chambly and after attending the birth of her niece.
MISS CONSTANTA JOHNSON and Miss Lena King were the week-end guests of REV. and MRS. G. H. FOUNTAIN had as their guests last week. Rev. D. E. Rie, Rev. and Mrs. Harvey Waltman, Rev. and Mrs. Harvey Davis, Davies, the wife of Bishop Dewall, all of Baltimore. Md.
MRS. ANNINE THOMPSON entertained the Woman's Home Missionary Society at her home in Eastport, Md., Sunday after meeting the PREACHERS' WIVES ASSOCIATION met at the home of Mrs. Hannah Harris, Md.
THE PATHEFIT WORKERS of Mt. Morish Church met at the home of Mrs. Virginia Jackson, Carroll street, Thursday evening. Mrs. Virginia Jackson, the secretary of members we added to the club. A lovely rast was served. Mrs. Emma Harris is president; Mrs. Virginia Carter is secretary; Virginia Johnson, treasurer.
THE PARENT-TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION of Station school held its first meeting Tuesday evening at Station school. How
MRS. MARY BROWN was hostess to the Jonquil Art Club at its opening meeting for the winter, on Tuesday evening, at the Clarence Allen will entertain the club next week. Mrs. Brown is president. The ROYAL FLUSH CLUB has sent out invitations to the club, to be given the Armory Halloween on night. Norman Johnson is the president of the club. Mrs. MARGARET TAYLOR entertained the Daughter Eks Elsko School District at Ft. Street. After the business meeting, a lovely repast was served. Those present wr. Mrs. Mary J. Andrus, Mrs. Rale Carroll, Mrs. Ids E. Johnson, Mrs. Maud Randell and Mrs. Zorn
THE USHERS' ASSOCIATION of M. Morrish A.M. E. Church met at the m. Morrish Spencer center, opening. The members present were John H. Williams, Richard Colbert, Abraham Chambers, Frederick Johnson, James Brooks, William vice-president, Harry C. Cooper, secretary; John C. Smith, assistant secretary; Frank Simpson, treasurer, and Sanford Jewell, Mrs. C. H. FOUNTAIN, who has been indisposed, is much improved.
AMONG CHURCHES
ABBURY CHURCH SCHOOL was held at the Morrish Spencer center, intendant. At 10 a.m. class meeting was conducted by John Hawkins. Reverend Perkins, the pastor, occupied his pulpit from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Worthage League was held. Mrs. Alice Thompson presided. This Sunday, revival will begin at the church, on the evening of
Sunday was the last day of Pentecostal services, held at the First Baptist Church for a week. Reverend M. Church school at the church, Sunday school at 2 p.m., Charles Sims, superintendent, Reverend Perkins delivered the sermon at 3 p.m. Services were well attended at M. Morah A.M.E. Church Sunday. Rev. C. H. Poulin, superintendent, school was held at 2:30 p.m. Brown, superintendent. Services were held at Abuse Mission Sunday school, held at 2:30 p.m. Preschool was prescheduled at the morning service, Sunday school was held at 2:30 p.m. Mrs. Annie Cecil, superintendent. Class meeting at 10 a.m. lead pastor to pastor had charge of the evening services.
CAMBRIDGE MARYLAND
Sunday was Home Coming Day at St. Luke M.E. Church and will continue during this week. Mr. W. Hayward, preached a sermon. At 2:30 p.m. the Rev. John Wilson preached and the Harri丝丝 Singing and Praising Band conducted. Mr. W. Hayward preached and the Waugh Chapel Praying and Singing Band conducted services. He will be out again, after several months' illness. Mr. and Mrs. Motell Derry of Philadelphia, spent the week-end in Cambridge with their mother, Mrs. Mattle Derry of Pine Street. ENOCH Church will be to his house Pine Street, on a week A.E.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bryan have returned home from New City, N.J., where they spent one year. They are now occupying home on nine street, corner Dubon street.
Lewis Henry of Cedar street, made a business Ernest Lyle, who now lives on Washington street, has purchased the home place of Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Watkinson on Cedar street.
Miss Alice Camper, a teacher at Lincoln, spent the week-end in this city with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Payne, accompanied by Rudolph Burrows, motored to New York City Sunday and spent several days with friends. Mrs. Mary Washington, Miss Bess Christian and James Sterling motored to Wilmington, Del. Tuesday. Mrs. Edward Hughes of Philadelphia, were in this city recently, visiting their brothers, Messrs. Dennard and Oscar Hughes, at their home at Blackwater, the dramatic club of the Cambridge high school, met Monday, October 7 and appointed officers. There was a meeting of fellow officers were elected: Alonza Myster, president; Walter Ross, vice president; Mabel Cebphas, recording secretary; Addie Bohn, treasurer; Aaron Kane, business manager; Gyrus St. Clair, chapin; Miss Mayer is chief advisor. A constitutory committee was advised.
Carroll Waters, a student at Bowle State Normal School, returned to his home in this city last week because of Illness. He will return to school soon.
JAMES DENNIS
Seeks Election to
General Assembly
JERSEY CITY, N. J.—C. Bion
Jones is a candidate for the General Assembly in the Republica ticket from the eighth ward. Election will be held Tuesday, November 5.
PETER H. BURKE
C. Bion Jones Post No. 209
American Legion, and is deputy
grand exalted ruler of Eks in
North Jersey, the department of
the United States' Regular Republican
Association of Hudson county.
While he has worked tirelessly in
the interest of the Republican party
he has not before sought public offi-
cation. He served as a sergeant in
the World War.
MARYLAND
At Bethel Sunday School several new classes were formed, and the following in 1985 were added: Mrs. Lillian Gatman-Henson, Alexander Lyte, Mrs. Mattle Derry, Mrs. M. J. Henry, Mrs. America Thomas, Mrs. M. J. Henry, Mrs. Maggie Thomas, Mrs. Ada Kane, Mrs. Minkle Farow, Mrs. Mildred Goodrich and Mrs. Mildred Lyte. The Sunday School board met on June 16, 1985, at 6:00 p.m. and mapped out an extensive program of Sunday school work for the winter. Assistant Superintendent Alonso Mullen, the superintendent, Charles Cornish. Among the prominent visitors were Mr. and Mrs. Derry of Philadelphia, son and daughter of the oldest teacher in Bethel Sunday School. At the A.C.E. League at 6:30, Mrs. Cornish Haywood and George McGregor, the superintendent respectively. The Bethel Community Orchestra, with Edgar Harris as director, furnished attractive music at the Sunday school and A.C.E.
The Rev. Walter Young preached at 8 p.m. and Mrs. Annie Porter, president of the club, welcomed the coals rally, and announced that the club would present the trustees with a check for the club's fund. The club contributed largely to the fund for coal each year, besides helping liberally with the other obligations the club had held Monday night, at the home of Miss Ada Mack on Washington street, with the president presiding. Refreshments were served. A special service was held in Bethil Giapht Friday night, at which a cermon was held. The club, with William Willett, bands number one and two united in this service, the captains being Levi Lane and Sunday will be observed by Bethel as "Local Presachers' Day" and an elaborate promenade for three days' services will be in the hands of local preschers, who, in the afternoon will preach seven ten-minute sermons on Open Day. Young will act as master of ceremonies.
CHURCH HILL MARYLAND
CHURCH NILL MG—Miss Maude Miller was the week-end here, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. and Mr. Chase, from Chester, Pa., were also visitors of Mr. and Mr. Henry
CHURCHTON MARYLAND
CHURCHTON, Md.—The Rev. F. F. K. preached at St. Matthew and also preached as Franklin at 3 p.m. Communion was observed at each service. The bench rallied that place at Franklin Church, Sunday at 8 p.m. was a success. Mrs. Frances Stewart entertained at dinner. Mrs. R. H. Misses, Miss Laura
Miss Sarah Gecehl Dennis of Pittsburgh Pa. who summer with her mother
Mrs. Mainz Cainde of Shadighez, who spends a week in Atlantic City, N.J., has returned
home.
Special services will be observed at Prank
In. and St. Matthew's. Sunday.
VIENNA, MARYLAND
VIRGINIA, Md.-Services were well attended at Wesley M.E. Church, Sunday, the class meet at 11 a.m., and Jackson. The Adherent Aid met at the home of Mrs. Grace Frieder Tuesday night. After the business session a delightful repast was served. A huge audience filled the church Monday night, at which time the quartets were here from Coronado to Rock. They renamed the program,
Men's Day will be observed at this church Sunday, October 27.
Mrs. Emmia Pinder is still on the sick list. Woman's Day will be held at this church on Friday at 10:30 a.m. fifth time a year. Rohinson, the evangelist at Baltimore, is expected to be present.
McDANIEL MARYLAND
MEDANIEL. Md.-Class was led at 8:30
Sunday morning by Samuel W. B. 11 o'clock.
The Rev. Sylvester L.庸 preached a very in-
formative lecture on "The Foundation." Sunday school was well attended. Sunday was Missionary Day. Col-
lege was held. 20 will be Women's Day at John Wesley.
Robert Trott, who was badly burned, is
mrs. Emmie Johnson is still on the sick list.
Mrs. Emmie Johnson is the guest
of Mrs. Edna Caldwell, Wednesday.
Mrs. Mamie Jones is much improved.
Mrs. Mamie Jones is much improved.
CENTRIVILLE. Md.-Services were held at St. Paul A.M.E. Church, Church. Class was led by Robert Allen. The pastor, the Rev. M. H. Dorey, preached Sunday night.
and service. Mildred Taylor, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Taylor is getting much better, after having been conceived by the husband, Mr. and Mrs. George Brown, of Charleston town were the guests of Mr. Kate Golden-borough Sunday was the guest of Mrs. Emmia Berryman, Sunday.
At Charles Wesley M.E. Church, the pastor, D. Breech, preached Sunday morning, which was the beginning of the anniversary. Sunday evening, Reverend Coverington, from Hurock, Mrs. M. Cook entertained some friends at dinner Sunday, and Randolph Hollis also entertained him. Mrs. M. Cook entertained Mrs. Mildred Taylor is improving nicely, after her illness, the supper was a success last Thursday evening.
CENTRILVILLE. Md.-Services were held St. Paul A.M. Church, with Robert Morning, his guests for class Sunday morning. Charles Gross, Edward Wilson, William James, all of, Church. William James led the service was well attended all day. The pastor presided at night, from the subject, "We Know Not What
AWAKEN
The Women's Mite Missionary Society will meet October 24th, at the residence of Mrs. Louisa Thompson, Sunday at the elder, Rev. R. J. Nelson, will be present. The annual Harvest Home will also be observed Sunday.
FREDERICK, MARYLAND
FREDERICK, Md.-Mr. and Mrs. Custman and family have recurred to spending the summer in the State. Thomas of West Sixth street, has
Ralph Thomas of West Sixth street, has been very sick with pneumonia, but is now getting slowly
Recruit
Quite a number of folks have been ill with
leukaemia.
Mrs. W. I. Snowden visited her mother and family during the visit of John attended the York, Pa. fair last week. The public school teachers of Frederick县 their meeting last Saturday at the Benz street school. Quite a number were present. Prof. J. W. Bruner, super-
VIMM.
And Mrs. Thomas H. Clark of Madison street, spent the past week in Washington and Rockville, visiting relative and friends. Mrs. Thomas H. Clark of Madison street, pastor of Buckstown M.E. Church, pastor of Saturday in Frederick. The Rev. W. I. Snowden, conference evangelist, attended the mid-year conference, St. John's A.M.E. Church at Baltimore, last
CHASE MARYLAND
CHASE, MG.—An oyster supper was held at the residence of Mrs. Catherine Cooper. The Rev R. Griffin of Falls Church, Va., preached at Sharp M.E. Church, Sunday at
M. Laura Waltighwr and Little
Olite May May home from
home on Friday 11:50
Swedishman G. Harris has returned from Aberdeen, after spending a couple of weeks with Mrs. M. Hall.
Those on the sick list are: John Jones, Mrs. Ida Jones and Lottie Mallet, Mrs. Martha Mallet and Charles, were hospitalized last week.
A debate will be held at Sharp Street M.E. Church, Thursday, October 24.
FEDERALSBERG, MARYLAND
FEDERALSURG. Md.-Sherlocks were the junior league and at 10:45 a.m. preaching by Rev. Charles Hammond. At 3:30 p.m. the Rev. V. B. Carson of Bridgerton, Del. preached. He held and 8 son, preaching by the pastor. Rev Jerry Goss of Mission. Quite a few members from Mission accompanied him. Mrs. R. H. Bedford of Philadelphia are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Tingle. The Silver Star filled an engagement at Bridgerton. Del. Thursday, playing for the Eninanciation.
Many folk attended the Emancipation
at Ridgeville Thursday.
a Mrs. Grace Breeding and Mrs. Catherine Magee were guests of Mrs. Ethel Magee Wednesday. A friend entertained her granddaughters, Misses Innes Friend, Marie Friend, Ida Dickerson and Roberta Dickerson. Many of the people from Chance, Dealsland, and Virginia, who were working in the campground, have gone home. The Princess Anne was the guests of her friend rendered a successful program Friday evening; while her guests the guests of Mrs. Ida R. Dickerson, a student of Seaford high, spent the weekend with her parents. The princess Roberta Dickerson Hester Jackson entertained at a party Wednesday evening, the following guests, Mrs. Ida R. Dickerson, Marie Friend and Otter Turner, Wilmer Magee and Cliffon Dickerson. Misses Friend, Ida Dickerson, Marie Friend and Roberta Dickerson have returned to Atlantic City, N. J.; while here they were the guests of Mrs. Lindy Dickerson.
Mrs Hester Jackson and niece have returned to Winnipeg. Del, after spending some time with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hester Jackson, and Mrs. Christmas Sharp of Preston, is visiting Mrs. Lindy Dickerson. Mrs. Helen Dickerson, student of Seedland College, is the week-end with her mother, Mrs. Jindy Dickerson. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stanley of Cambridge, were Sunday guests of Mrs. Helen Scott.
George Scott visited friends at Willimington, Delk, Sunday.
mington, DEL, SUBURY,
Mr. and Mrs. SULLIVAN, Folks. Miss HARRIS,
Mr. and Mrs. GLANCE, Glance Turner, Mrs.
HOLEN Scott and Oscar Turner were guests
of Mrs. Ethel Magee Sunday evening.
Frank Cannon and Mr. Agnes
motored to Delaware visiting
friends.
110105:
Please bring all news to George Christ-
...
BOYD. MARYLAND
BOYD, Mr.-Woman's day service at
St. Mary's was a success with a very
spendible program. Dear Mrs. Wiggs was mistress of ceremonies, assisted by Mrs. Florence Hembley $3.85 was sermon to her brother, preached by her friend, Pinkney Simms of Washington, D. C.
Woman's day program at Hyattsville was given Sunday. Mrs. Hembley was mistress of ceremonies, assisted by Mrs. Allie Weems. Program was rendered: $33 was realized. Men's day program was run by Mrs. Lewis Rohm was master of ceremonies. Lake Johnson of Rockville, organist: $33 was realized. The Rev. Mrs. Elia Lutz of Boyd, is visiting daughters and sister in Cleveland, Ohio. James Wilson's sister from Philadelphia is visiting parents of Boyd, Diggis of Boyd, is visiting her sister and friends in Virginia.
Industrial teachers meeting was held a Rockville Friday.
Mamba's Daughters
A Story of Sacrifice, Romance, Humor and Tragedy
(Continued from page 21)
not do the right thing by Mamba. She's a good soul and, white or black, I'm fond of her. But when a disgruntled reputable creature of the shocker a police recorder has, he claimed court to take her medicine for set-taking upon and breaking up a lawabiding Negro. I am out. Business is in a thousand years justice is even justice. I would be an as to interference. I won't. That's final." "But, George dear, you miss this point. It won't be going out of your way to do it. It's the thing. The right to do it. You do look in it. Negroes. They take pride in it. Most likely you will not be the only one there. You're as apt to not find a Ravenal, Waring, Pinknock doing the same. The other of the ladies on Saturday Club entertaining stories of scraps that their husbands had gotten their Negroes out of." "Their Negroes! Am I to assume that the person charged with aggravated assault and indecent exposure of the person is my Negro?"
The head of the Attkinson clan balled his paper up in a knot and threw it on the floor, looked his wife in the face, and said rudely. Then he cleared the floor, raised his wife deliberately repeated the offensive monosyllable.
"And you don't know the whole story either. You just read what your hateful paper says. Tell you what I'll do. Just at the moment come in and say, 'Hey, the version of help. I'll promise never to save another word about it.' Atkinson emitted a short grunt that was intended to convey scepticism of his wife's promised silence, but seized it and interpreted it as assembling the attorney door. 'He summed up the bimba.' The old woman entered with a promptness that suggested wearment, and advanced until she stood before her master, then bowed head and hands that clenched each other tightly before
Mrs. Attkinson said in her crisp compulsive voice: "Now. Mamba, tell him exactly what happened to her recite she was sobbing into her apron, and her listener was sitting forward with his chair with his moustache writing. "So he tried to rub her hair, he exclaimed. 'When's the third?'
"To-morrill mornin', suh. A ah'im want foh boder yuh 'till A ah'im wait no longer." "Very well, well we see what can be done." His overcoat, then and out of the door on his last word. He'd he ten minutes late at the office. No bad example. Loose mistake. Rotten position hered. He's not up to the task up his wife that absurd fiction about the plantation. Attnions. They'd have a damned good right to laugh at the club now at the club now. Mismatched all things that he hated. But that poor old "migger" and her story about her girl. Well, he was in for it.
When Atkinson entered the courtroom on the following morning he saw Mamba waiting or him just inside the door. Then he noticed that she was accounted for about six years of age. It was the old woman's attitude toward her charge rather than the child herself that first caught his attention. The entrance with Negroes' insolence their way into the interior 'inclosure' and a bellfight was 'tempting to clear the doorway. In the confusion of opposing bodies Mamba was managing to keep the space about the child. She was silenced with the child, and held before her and gazed into the faces of the milling Negroes with an expression of such color ferocity that they instinctively drew
BEL AIR. MARYLAND
BEL AIR. MD.-Sunday at Ames church the Rev. V. N. S. Hughes prepares a sermon and holy communion on Monday the second day at Ames school the second day by the superintendent. Miss Cornelia Ruff. A large number present at 8 p.m. Rev. V. N. S. Hughes prepares again. Holly communion is followed by night. His text was "Confidence in Self."
Miss Bethea Hughes is in Washington. D. C. and Mrs. E. Todd of Philadelphia. Pa., are visiting their brother and sister-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Brown of Port Deposit estate of Bel Air had the following visitors Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Davls. Miss Ella Armstrong, Mr. Myrtle Olive of Brooklyn, Charles G. Wilson and Master Bernard Wilson. Janice Jarrie and Mrs. Wesley Hall of Baltimore. Md. Mr. and Mrs. Neal Bound of Philadelphia are visiting Wesley Hewitt of Baltimore. On the return of the pastors from vacations, Mrs. Sarah Brown entertains Dr. W. A. C. Hughes, Mrs. Mary Hughes, Rev. V. N. S. Hughes and Bertha Hughes was the dinner of Mr. and Mrs. Otterne of Pennsylvania avenue.
Mrs. Louisa Hewlett is improving
Miss Blanche's expected to return
Miss Elizabeth Ruff has not been well for the last few days.
Mrs. Viola Green of Bond street. has been sick in the Havel de Grace扎夫街.
GRASONVILLE MARYLAND
ORASONVILLE, MD.-At Robinson chapel the Rev. J. G. Goins, pastor, Sunday, October 13 was the closing of our anniversary. Glass was held at Joe Brown Browning in an after party and was preaching by the Rev. M. Goins, followed by prayer meeting by the Back Neck band. Sunday night at the Back preaching in the Chapel. Next Sunday, October 20 will be quarterly meeting day. The presiding elder, Rev. Nelson, will speak. Sunday night a
black. Then he noticed the girl. He saw a slender, delicately made body, a small sentient face, and eyes that seemed to be before them with that precocious which is characteristic of children with Negro blood. A trial was already in progress, a jury trial at that. He could not help Hager's case. A whole day gone. Five perfectly good business hours. Wet! he was in for it. He'd stick it out. Might pick up something that would be useful for the case. With characteristic economy of movement, he went straight one of the swivel chairs behind the attorney's table and motioned Mamie forward. He met him. From under level brows his seen gray eyes applauded the room.
Against the rear wall of the courtroom were the two sections reserved for the public. There was a scattering of non-reflective rectangle occupied by thir whites. Across the aisle, the coloured space was packed to the walls. Black, brown, yellow, with intent faces and wide eyes, the crowd appeared as a common and utter absorption. The overheated air was tinged with a faint exotic odour compounded of fertilizer dust, fish, and unwashed Negro bodies inseparable from such a crowd at first, but soon he lost consciousness of it, for he followed the gaze of the crowd to the prisoner in the dock. She was a big yahoo of a girl about sixteen years of age, very black, and set wide apart, and with the broad, flat nose between them, gave her an expression of bucolic calm. She was a creature for the simple rhythms of the country, and seemed out of place in the complex machinery of a city.
Continuing his survey of the scene, Aktinson met the eyes of the prosecuting attorney, who was seated at the table. He had a pleasant acquaintance with the young court official but was unprepared for the informal and cordial reception that he received. The attorney was blind, with that instinctive graciousness of manner toward a guest that Aktinson always admired, and secretly envised, in the men of his adopted city. He asked her you here, Mr. Aktinson, he said, extending his hand across the table. "Just looking us over, or are yu interested in one our cases?" Aktinson explained that he was there to do what he could for Hagar. "Splendid!" exclaimed the young lawyer. "One can't help liking the woman. She's not a criminal type. Do you know whether she is repressible?"
"I think not. As a matter of fact, Mr. Dawson, the woman is guilty of the charge. I understand that the man is still in the hospital, and is no doubt as to who he there is. But there are estimating circumstances, and I'm here to vouch for them."
The prosecutor leamed forward and gave his instructions briefly: "You must make her plead guilty. Whatever you do, do not agree with her. You must be with her when her case is called and see what can be done."
The bailiff bawled for order in court, and the judge inquired formally if counsel for prosecution and defence were ready to proceed with their speeches in the case of the
"Great Godamighty!" exclaimed a woman's voice in the Nero section and "Silence in court" bawled the bailiff.
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BROAD NECE MARYLAND
BOAD NECK. Md.-Services were held
Daydaway's chapel Sunday. Church
Bishop was held at 2:30p.
The supper held on Wednesday evening was a success.
The T. E. Randall attended the conference at Dover, Del.
The third quarterly conference will be held at Hadaway's chapel Saturday afternoon, October 19.
A few of the孔 attended the meeting at Hadaway Holy Union church at Edisville, Md., Sunday.
Charles Goldsboro of Philadelphia, Pa., visited his wife and children over the week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wilson of Barclay, Md., visited Mr. Lucinda Johnson, Sunday
afterton. He will be given at the school on
Halverson night by the teacher, Mrs. M.
D. Smith.
Nina Mae Lewis entertained a few
friends Wednesday evening.
BAFFLAND, MARYLAND
LAKELAND, Md.--Sunday was stewardess day at Embry A.M.E. church. Sunday school was largely attended. The sermon was by the pastor, H. H. H. H. 11 a.m. by Rev. W. P. Abbott and at 8 a.m. Rev. P. Ennezeren, Washington D. C. delivered sermons. The First Baptist Sunday school was well attended Sunday. Services were conducted by the pastor, W. P. Abbott. Sunday day holy communion services be administered. The elementary school gave an entertainment at the high school Thursday evening. Music was furnished by Leon Robinson and company. A large crowd attended. The school has been sick for
James H. Gray, who has been sick for the past week, is rapidly improving.
the past week.
In Hickie it Hickie has returned to her
Easter visit after her visit to her.
Benjamin Hicke, for three weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose, Greene, Mrs.
Emmett, his daughter, Greene, mother
to Baltimore to visit their
children and granddaughter, Marie, who
wished school there.
And Mrs. Charles Lomax entertained
Gregory in honor of Mr. and Mrs.
Gray of New York, the follow-
er, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Brisoee
and family.
Mrs. Agnes Gross, Mrs. Susie Brisoee,
Mrs. Maria Dory, Mrs. Mary Brooks, Eliza
Ger, Vera Johnson and Elance Gray,
an enjoyable evening was spent by all
present.
Mrs Edmonds of Washington, D. C.
taken his mother, Mrs. Manie Edmonds,
Sunday.
Chesley Muck and Clarence Gray were
taken to theorman school Sunday,
the Mary Walls is still counted to her
bone.
Coming - Marian Anderson
A.
CARMEN DALE
17-year-old Jamaica girl, who was lured aboard a merchant vessel and smuggled ashore at a Baltimore dock and finally landed in the hands of immigrant authorities where she told her story and caused the arrest of her two abductors, Henry Owens and William Stewart. The men will face a white slave charge and Carmen will be returned to her home.
MARYLAND
ROCKS, MARYLAND
ROCKS. Md.-Women's day will be held at Rocks church Sunday, October 20.
Our teacher, Chaucey Hierst is having the school house painted inside, this week.
Mrs. Bell Curtis is very ill in bed.
Chaucey Hierst spent Sunday with Mrs. and Mrs. William Rice and daughter, Gladys.
Mr. and Mrs. Preston Clark of Towson, spent Sunday with Albert Berry, sr.
STILL POND MARYLAND
STILL POND. Md.-Services at the Mt. Zion church were well attended all day. Sunday. Class meeting was led by Davis Wilmore. At 10:45 a sermon was preached by the Rev. G. L. Fields of Salem, N. J. He was accompanied by his choir. The anniversary celebration closed with a program under the auspices of Mrs. Carrie White. Sunday. Miss Suh Bider of Philadelphia, is visitant.
Ms. LaEmma Wilmer also of Philadelphia, is visiting her parents, the Rev. and Mrs. R. W. Thomas. Ms. Annie Ford and Mrs. Minnie Wilmer were guests at dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Perry Anderson, Sunday.
Horton Naylor of Camden, N. J. Is visiting his mother. Mrs. Eliza Wilmer. Miss Anna Johnson is visiting in Camden, N. J.
MARYLAND
ROCK HALL, Md.-Miss Marjorie Port, public health center, visited Sharpstown school on Thursday. A child's clinic will be held at the school by the county board of health for children by seven years of age.
Our teachers will attend the annual teachers meeting in Baltimore, October 25-28. Miss Elizabeth Hall and Miss Helen Harris entertained Henry Henry and Luther at tea Saturday. Miss Harris is from Plainfield J. J., and Miss Harris from Newark, N. J. Sharpntown school's Hallowe'en frolic will be on Thursday evening, October 31. of the members of Aaron chapel church worshiped in Chesterton, Sunday evening.
MITCHELVILLE MARYLAND
MITCHELVILLE, Md.—Mrs. Charity McWilliams Shephard was hostess at a birthday reception last Wednesday, honoring her father Mathea, when about twenty of the younger were entertained. At a late hour a delicious repast was served. Miss Shephard, escorted by her father, Thomas Shephard and brother William; led the group to the bedroom and the dining room. The guest list included Mrs. Joseph Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Diggs, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Ignatius Mitechell, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mitechell, Mr. and Mrs. William, Helen Jozzi, Estella Deal, Juanita-Mitechell, Mrs. William Snowden of Collington, Mrs. Leo Shephard, Mrs. Josephine Deal, Mr. Richard Shields and Miss Millimore and Millmore, George Mitchell, Watson Worth Spriggs, M. Smith and Isaac Henry
ST. NICHAELS MARYLAND
ST. MICHAELS, Md.-Services at Union M.E. church were well attended at 9 a.m. class was led by Henry Day. At 10:30 the morning worship, sermon was on Wednesday, pastor the Rev. F. H. Quinn, subject, "Present Day Needs of a Missionary Spirit." Sunday school was held at 2:30. Mrs. A. M. Mitchell is superintendent. At 7:30 Epworth League; 8 p.m., evening worship, sermon by the pastor. At 9:30 the Tribe of Benjamin, and Carroll Jackson, captain of the Tribe of Joseph, conducted a very successful pew rally at Union M. E. church, in interest of the $1,000 Twelve Tribe rally. captain of the Union M.E. church gave a very successful dinner last Friday at Good Samaritan hall, benefit World Service effort. The Junior Sisters of Judah, a class of teen age girls, under the direction of Mrs. Dorcella Thomas, held a supper last Saturday night which proved to be quite profitable. The Tribe of Judah, Mrs. Susie Spencer, captain, and the Tribe of Reuben, Robert Miller, captain, will give a supper jointly next Saturday night, October 19, and will give a service Sunday, October 30 at Union church
The Rev. John Kirby, pastor of the A. M.E. Zion church of Englewood, N. J., spent a few days in town last week, being his brother, James, a World War veteran. T. H. Kliah, principal of Princess Anne Academy, was the dinner guest last Wednesday of the Rev. and Mrs. P. H. Quinn, Mr. Emma Johnson, Mrs. Brooks, Brooks, and Clean, who have been very ill, are much improved. Mrs. Lena Norsturce, who became suddenly ill, was rushed to the Easton hospital, where he was seriously injured in a horribly improbable
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The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 1929
Pretty Western Stenographer Marries Son of Prominent Marylanders STATE TEACHERS TO VISIT CITY CLASSES
A
MRS. LEROY A. H. WILLIAMS
Mrs. Williams, who was formerly Miss Ethel Ray, was born in Duluth, Minn. and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Ray of that city. She was at one time stenographer for the Forest Fires Relief Commission but is now with the Woman's Bureau of the Minneapolis police department. She was married to Mr. Leroy A. H. Williams, so of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Williams of Elliott City, Md., on August 16, 1920, to reside at 4029 Climax, Minneapolis, Minn.
Mrs. Amanda Nortune, who has been living in Philadelphia, was called to the bedside her mother, Tricia M.E. Zion church services were well attended Sunday. At 11:30 a.m. the pastor, Rev. James R. L. Allen delivered a powerful sermon, theme, "Mutual Christian Duties." The 0 a.m. service was at 11:30 a.m. Endeavor rendered an interesting program. The week's reiveal conducted by Rev. M. E. Poe, of New York City, was a success. The meeting was closed by the Trinity A.M.E. Zion church.
QUEENSTOWN MARYLAND
QUEENSTOWN, Md.—Class was led at 9 a.m. at Bryan's Church. There were no other students in the room. The meeting will preach at 11 a.m., Sunday. At 3 p.m. a nageent entail, "The Works of Faith" will be rendered under the direction of Mrs. Estelle Turner from Baltimore. She will be the speaker. Meeting will be held at Bryan's. Upon the invitation of Mrs. Hannah Price of Baltimore, the pastor of St. Luke, Baltimore, will present. The Silver Leaf Club of Bryan has purchased a new pulpit set for the church. The club was entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wrightson Wilson.
50 AT PAYNE SEMINARY
WILBERFORCE Ohio—Fifty students enrolled this year at Payne T. Seminary. Wilberforce, Gilbert Jones in his annual message said that the seminary had turned out 300 graduates, including pastors, presiding elders and bishops.
3,000 ON CONVICT SHIP SUNDAY
Counties Represented in Throng that Go Thru in Groups of 100.
Thousands of people, including many readers of this newspaper, continue to visit the old British Comped Ship "Success," oldest ship in the world, which now on exhibition inimore at Pratt Street and Market Place.
The 139-year old vessel was the mecca last Sunday for more than 3,000 visitors, and the daily attendance during her stay in Baltimore has been almost as much. She is open every day, including Sundays, from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.
The stay of the ship is now drawing to a close but Captain D H. Smith, her commander, has promised that the ship will continue on exhibition at her present location during the coming week and be well into next week. He is now making plans for her next stopping place, heading south for the winter.
Every nearby county was represented in the crowd that was taken through the ship in groups of 100 last Sunday. In addition to Baltimoreans, there were visitors from Frederick, Annapolis, Belair, Catonsville, Elliott City, Emmitsburg, Hampstead, Harve de Grace, Reistertown, Tanne Towns, Dowson City, Westfield, and automobile licenses also disclosed that there were also visitors from Pennsylvania, Virginia, New York, and even Ohio.
Much favorable comment was heard from visitors for the manner in which Captain Smith and his associates handled the big crowds without confusion. As groups came aboard the vessel, guides started out every seven or eight minutes and as soon as one guide left the upper deck, another guide was started with a new group. By the time the second guide was ready to go below, the first guide had reached the bottom deck. In this manner, three parties were always listening to the story of the ship and her exhibits, and at the conclusion of the lecture and tour, the visitors were invited to stay aboard and examine all exhibits at their leisure. The average stay amounted to an hour.
"It was a pleasure to handle such an orderly and interested crowd." said Captain Smith yesterday. "Of course, we are used to handling large crowds wherever we exhibit the ship and the spirit of our visitors in Baltimore has been one of helpfulness. As a result, we are able to give hundred per cent, sparse, and the hundreds per cent, I spoke to per cent all expressed their immense satisfaction. They realize that when the ship leaves she will never return and it is an opportunity that is not to be missed."
MARYLAND
Counties There
Every 8 Minutes
Last Trip to City
Ethel Ray, was born in Duluth, Minn.
M. H. Ray of that city. She was at one
as Relief Commission but is now with
police department. She was
son of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Williams of
the couple now reside at 4029 Clim-
neapolis, Minn.
New Theatrical Agency
Formed in New York
NEW YORK—The Independent
Colored Theatrical Agency, Inc., with
offices at 169 West 133rd street, has
just been organized in this city, having
as its purpose the catering to
the needs and interests of the race
performer.
B. L. Burt, white, former manager
of the Lafayette Theatre is personally
supervising the new organization
and associated with him are John
Carey, Mal Frazier, Chauncey Hylan,
Sam Manning, and a number of others
well known to the profession.
53c
10 lbs. Domino Granulated
SUGAR
For 53c, with a purchase of 25c or more,
Saturday—7:30 A. M. to 11 P. M.
Free Parking—Free Delivery
Surprise Specials Saturday from 9:30 to 11 P.M.
North Avenue Market
“Where Better Foods Cost Less”
KOESTER'S
HONEY
BREAD
KOESTER'S IS A MOTHER'S DUTY!
and, of course, Koester's is his favorite brand of bread. Fortunately, its wonderful taste and its building qualities go hand in hand—and this makes Mother's job much easier.
Teachers to Stress Improved Classroom Teaching and Attendance.
ASSOCIATION BEGAN 1886
Held Semi-Annual Meetings for Several Years.
The Maryland State Colored Teachers' Association which meets at the Booker T. Washington Junior high school, October 25th and 26th was organized in July, 1886, and held its first meetings at the Howard Normal school building at the corner of Saratoga and Courtland streets; with Garrison D. Trusty, first president.
It is interesting to note that these early meetings were held semi-annually for a while, during July and December for two days each year, of the subjects discussed in the beginning are almost identical with those discussed today. At the morning session on December 27, 1887, "The Best Methods of Teaching Spelling and Grammar" was the subject for discussion. "The Best Methods of Teaching Writing, and Arithmetic" was discussed at this meeting. Today, one of the principal problems confronting the state teachers is the salary question, in those days it was securing colored teachers for colored schools and considering for colored people.
The fifth semi-annual meeting was held in Frederick City, July 5th and 6th, 1983, at Quinn A.M.E. Church, Misses Fannie Barbour, Nannie Grooms, George and Grant Biddle, and Joseph H. Lockerman, were among the prominent educators who took part in the meeting at this time.
Progress Since 1920
It has been the custom of the organization to meet annually for a long period, usually on the Friday and Saturday after Thanksgiving, during the teachers' holiday. Through a recommendation made at the last annual meeting, the date was moved to a Friday other than a holiday, in order that the attendance might be increased.
Progress of the association and the schools of Maryland was indicated by a report of accomplishments since 1920. Two hundred eighty-five new buildings have been put into use in that period representing a value of $650,000. There are 605 teachers with first grade certificates or 82 per cent; 101 second grade teachers, or 13.8 per cent, and only 28 third grade teachers, or 3.8 per cent of the rural teaching force. Of the 24 rural high schools with an enrollment of 1,600 pupils, 17 are doing four-year work.
New Feature
A new feature of the session this year will be visits to the various class rooms of the city schools, Friday morning, October 25, from 9 until 12. This arrangement has been made through Director Francis M. Wood and special permission of the school board.
In the afternoon regular sessions will begin, which the city teachers will attend. The stress will be placed upon increasing attendance, decreasing over-agerness and increased salaries for teachers. Emphasis will be placed also this year on improved class room teaching.
WINCHESTER, Va.-Mrs. Gerritude Hamilton was hostess at a dinner party at her home, which was in honor of her daughter, Miss Lottie Hamilton, who has been spending the past week at home just returning from Connecticut, where she has been spending the past week at her home, D.C. for the winter. Those present were, Miss Lottie Hamilton, Stonington, Conn.; Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Henry Harris, Martinburg, W.Va.; Carrie Weaver, Midle; Way, W.Va.; Richard Coulton Chamberlain, W.Va.; Elizabeth Parker, Wilbur Wright, Delmar, Corinne and Little Paul, Winchester, Va. Mrs. Amelia Magruder, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Greene and Lawrence Thomas motored to Hagerstown, Md., Sunday, visiting friends. Mrs. and Arthur Galters and Mrs. Allister Conte motored to Front Royal Sunday. The opening of the Seven Seals Series closed Sunday at Bethlehem A.M.E. Church,
After beginning
oyster supper was held at the Eks
home for the benefit of Bethel A.M.E.
Church.
BALLYHACK, YIRGINIA
BALLYHACK, Va.—The Parents-Teachers
Association of the Booker T. Heights school
held their regular afternoon attended. The patrons
were favored with an address by Dr. J. H.
Roberts of Roanoke, Va.
Mrs. Robert Cannady is spending some
time in Franklin, as the guest of her broth-
Miss Salle Jennings entertained the Golden Sewing Circle Monday afternoon, at the home of her mother, Mrs. Anna Jennings. Miss Eloise Taylor and Miss Mary Lee Barnette were guests of all Helen Amos Mason, while there was accompanied by Miss Amos, they moved to Vinton. Charles Mattox, head of the Red Men, and several of his friends were visiting here Sunday. Mrs Casey and family were visiting her sister, Mrs. Rebecca Poindexier, Sunday. Mrs. Cornelia Brown and sister, Lottie, left this week for West Virginia, to make a home future where her husband is employed.
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WINCHESTER, VIRGINIA
VIRGINIA
BRANDY, VIRGINIA
dee Hammily at her daughter, on spend-returning has been return to Mrs. Marshall Carter, in the afternoon. Miss Edith Kemper entertained a number of FRIENDS Saturday evening in honor of her 18th birthday.
Mrs. Cora Butler and Mrs. Jennie Banke organized a juvenile class, Knights of Gideon. The Shallon Sunday school will have daily service the first Sunday in November. Mr. and Mrs. Eva Harris and Edward Harris morphed here Sunday from D.C., and spent a pleasant day with Mrs. Cora Harshin. Johnnie Rector, of Pittsburg, came down Saturday on a business trip, and returned Saturday on a business trip.
CULPEPER, Va.—Mrs. C. C. Blair gave a house social for the benefit of the high school Monday night, which was a great success. Richard Thompson, Mrs. L. Emmitt, Mrs. Elgin McIlmore, and Mrs. J. Johnson, Mrs. Treichler to Richmond, Va. for Sunday on the day. Rev. James Gaird of Washington, D.C., spanned with Mrs. L. R. Garfield, at her home on Main street.
VINTON, Va.—The pastor of Reid Street Baptist Church, Rev. R. M. Gwen, preached Sunday morning at 1 a.m. from Corinthian 610. Many of the roanoke and northwest services were served. Sunday was held at 9:30, with Superintendent Roy Martin in charge.
Miss Thelma White, who is on the sick list, is improving, the officer, of Gladstone, had as dinner guests Thursday, Rev. and Mrs. McClough and children.
Mrs. Alice Carter, who has been ill, is out again.
Mrs. Belle Woods, who has been very ill, is Morris T. Miller will leave on Wednesday morning for the West Virginia State, expecting to obtain work for the winer.
CULPEPER VIRGINIA
VINTON VIRGINIA
14 : ‘The Afro-American, ae Saray October 19, 1929 ‘Whe Nation’s Biggest All Negro mest
Morgan Bears Win; Sox Annex Pai
Smith Captain too Much for Howard SS ——— Bis BL Machine
Do En iid ae ae Sf. Hear Me Talkin’ To Ya id Flattens Va. Sta
De ces ts hasan Wangs t sy eid REMAN APM Aa Ge feet es be = 1 Petersburg Eleven Com
WHEN You ARE SICK |
§
THE FIRST THING YOU WANT TO KNOW Is:
“WHERE TO FIND A GOOD DOCTOR”
Direct your steps to the office of DOCTOR FOR MEN,
703 No. Howard St., Baltimore, Md., and you will find
the Reliable Physician you are looking for.
‘The office of DOCTOR FOR MEN, with DR. H. P, SCHAMEL
as MEDICAL DIRECTOR, has reached the stage when you can
ask your neighbor and find out about us. This signifies that, we
fave enjoyed a large volume of business, drawn from various
sections of the city and surrounding country. News travels fast.
‘and word that reliable medical service could be secured at mode- §
tate fees at our office, would naturally spread, as it meets a long
evident need, We are confident that it has taken more than our
conservative statements through the press to make this a large
Institution in Maryland, and believe that word of mouth recom-
mendation is largely responsible. Everyone pays the same fee
for the same service at our office.
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DOCTOR FOR MEN:
DR. H. F. SCHAMEL, Medical Director
703 N. HOWARD STREET
Between Monument arid Madison Sts. !
Baltimore, Md.
Warfieldmen Find Olden
Easy. Defeat White Out-
fit, 8-8 and 2-1
LUNDY IN-HERO ACT
Single, With Bases Loaded,
‘Accounts for Victory
A timely single by | Bice sth
with the bases loaded In the sixth
thd nai inping of the second game
‘ded and abetted by the strategy, of
Manager Frink Warfleld, enabled the
Black’ Sox to take the {ilt from the
All-Stars, 2-1, having already clinch
2d the first contest with an 8-5 de-
cision at Maryland Park, Sunday.
‘The crack of Sir Richard's ba’ as
tt meta. steaming offering of Bill
Henderson, spelled finls for, the Stars
and. with’ dusk. rapidly descending,
dhe sans began Jeaving tte seats
‘dille Marcel and dud Wilson scurrisd
found the paths with tne runs thet
decided the battle, Of the six games
played. :0\ far, the Sox Rave won
Four, with two going to the All-Stars.
The’ bleachers were praciically de-
sere as the leas tok the Ned at
‘Yokely Subdues Stars
‘The first game found Yokely, the
Black Sox mound ace, facing ‘Jack
Geden, of the St. Louis Browns.
Ghar the Sox did to Ogden was. a
plenty. for they banged his deliv-
Gry for a total of 12 safeties, slx of
hich were of she extra-base variety,
hile Yokely was holding the Stats
to five scattered bingles.
"Two runs were counted by the Sox
{in the frst inning, when Dixon, wha
had reached first, on Dalrymple's er-
ror, and advanced to second on Mar-
Gel'g sacrifice. bunt, seampered home
as Wilson ragped out, a sizzling two-
piv blow to the left field fence, scor-
ing later when Charlie Smith’ lined
ovt a clean sinzle over second base.
Sox Score Four
‘The second inning was the big in-
ning for the Sox, four runs coming
hetsre the side had been retired. Peie
Washington opened the inning by
smashing one of Ogden's, slow ones
over the lett feld wall, With Clarke
and Yoxely out, Dixon doubled down
the first base line, scoring later. when
Marcel singled. Jud Wilson parked
the second. bail that Oden served
him and Charlie Smith doubled, on-
iy to succumb when Lundy was an
easy out, Porter to Neun.
Double Plays Feature
fourth which was matched by the
"The All-Stars counted one, in the
Sox, and marked up two in the fifth
double. with Dalrymple and Moore
as the Sox scored one. Dick Porter's
on the sacks, did the trick. | Yokely
fanned eight, while Ogden ‘etherized
five. ‘Two lightning double plays,
Mocers to Forter to Neun, and Dal-
rymple to Mocers, nipped a pair of
Sox, rallies. :
Dison “tiple and Washington
wilson and. Smith knocked home
runs during this contest.
BROWN AND WHITE
CAB CO.
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LIONS’ LOSS DOESN’T
FAZE COACH TAYLOR
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY, Pe. —
‘phe set back of 18-6 which Union
handed the Lions of Lincoln uni-
yereity Saturday, was 4, shock to
the Lineoin rooters who came from
distant comers of the country.
Realizing. the fact that, no Lin-
coln team had defeated the Pan-
thers of ton, unjeersiy fot the
ast years, | Coad
Wath his remarkable oratory, ‘hred
his proteges to go out and fight
for, "dear ole” Lincoln.
‘Though Lineoin lost the, game
coach Taylor told us that he was
not downhearted. He will not ad-
mit defeat. He believes that by
esing the’ frst, major game, of
the season his team could profit
by it rather than for lt, to de-
moralize their spirit, Prom all
indications, he still ‘believe that
the Lions will hit thelr stride as
‘the season matures.
——_——_$_—
Second Tilt Close
Script Lee held tne veak for the
sox. in the nightcap until the fifth
Thning when he was replaced by Bun
Hayes. The Stars, with a 1-0 lead
in the third inning, counted on sew-
thg up the contest but they did not
count on the strategy of manager
Wpundy opened he fitth by whith
indy ‘open yy whifling
and’ then dawn Beckwith lifted a
fone, “hich, fy’ to, the center fe
fence, which Loenp, snared ty step;
ping over the boundary ropes, Ground
ules, however, allowed Beckwith
Gouble after the game had been de-
fayed. for several. minutes to settie
the question. Washington’ then fan-
hed. and Manager Warfield sent Bur-
bage in-as a pinch hitter. | Hendec-
son, walked “Burbage. and Warfield,
batting for Lee. swing at one and
then had the uinpire call two ques-
tignaie strikes on him to elie the
side.
Lunde Breaks Up Game
With ‘darkness hastening. | Dixon
walked {o open. the sixth, but, was
caupht, at second as Marcel boat, out
Porter's throw to’ make o double
Blav At first base. Wilson doubled.
End Smitn. ‘was. intentionally walk-
ed, commletely popmiating the has-
socks, “Then came Lunds's single t
break up the ball game.
Fielding by Dalrvmple and Mooers.
shoristop and. third. baseman, Fe
svectively of the All-Stars, ard, be
Beckwith, Dixon. Washington and
Lundy. featured both contests.
Play Acain Sunday
‘The two" teams. will, meet again
sunday. vith the All-Stars present:
fie a revamped linevo in which it is
possible that vimme Foxx and Letty
Grove. of the Athletics may appear.
Nick Altrock and. Al Schacht, who
amused the fans with their clowning
fast. week. will also be on. hand,
t week. mill also De OP LACK SOX
ae ea aw eh
abr hel abr hte
patrympless. "$10 21Dionit, $3.29
Paneer’ 400 OMarcelte, «4110
Revie’ = ¢0.0 0 Wiisonze, © 4221
Mowel, $12 0smitnet, = 4140
Ponerts, SL ioluundyis, | 4010
Locppet, 100 OBecknith.b, $010
Mosersib, 40 1 olWash’glongct. 4 110
Eco goo
fOpienp. 3.0.00!¥eKri.p, $000
at aoe
rotats 34.352) Totals 968322
ecoae sx tonics
AML Stars oeesseeeeere@ OO 120 OO Oe
Black "Sox saa 140 90 x8
two-bave fils--Bizoa, Wilson, Sooke, Zot |
ten oTireebuse_hite-Dison.” Sacrifice —|
{Sects Siome” rune—wison, Washington,
Smith, Bases on balls—O8 Yokes.
Smith, Base Cv ocely, & J. Ogden, 5.
| Smith Captain too Much for Howard
Ropers goatee orem
ae a aa
SSR oh ee ns stas aah re a ant Bye
Bee OWE as es a i 2)
Bo ee i eae RN Re aa
ee ee ae AS
ie oe ae bil ae cK ie
CE pit ee as
ton Meee 2 ‘ Bo
ei cs) oh ge aces
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NP ie i ar 5 NG Lae
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7 Ae
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lg Oe gd Gee
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SA aes SE NON at ct anak
—Seurlock Photo,
Captain Williams of Smith university, breaking through the center of!
Giiiards ine for w substantial gaat, Howard Stadium, lst, Saturday.
‘The Smith territory was never in danger at any period of the game, whic
Pee Bein gioco victory. “Walliams fs captain and quarterback of his
team. He played without sox or headgear.
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY MENTORS |i} MORGAN COLLEGE | iwents-rewatty 80x”! wrapped 3
es ry —vs— corer a Aczeny wll toe
oe digg : . i Bell penaty as it ie eae by the of- Protection OS
yw 4 = || UNION UNIVERSITY | aero te He “Si
aS NEY Bod en . - jin
i, gill PE MORGAN CAMPUS jf iz ntc-cgh'as || te ties tn ¢
: J ee aca Game Called at 2:30 |Paerateiee '] Geo. Schafer-H.C.Pfalf Cisse Ce
: oe carom rome’ Team wins |], Au#o siazeas oF
his too of Lincoln heads expect to Nave a cieyeon tne Lows tom || Saturday, October 19, 1929 | | RtoH ROR Gian re NOSES BAAN
early in the season. They are, left to right: Ted Walls, line coach; Dr. P. high opened at eee | FIRE RING und CUIETOS
| F. Jamison, graduate manager, and Bill (Speed) ‘Taylor, head coach. | Bus Service from 32nd St. and Harford Ave. | | Sian Heights ot ‘Winston-Salem 7-6 ———
| RE BTS ain ER EL A A SEN
TANTDATT) AAT . |
. e
—vs.— Li Universi |
Morgan College — vs. — Lincoln University
| Morgan College Campus Saturday, October 26th. 1929
||| Bus Service from 32nd St. and Harford Ave, GAME CALLED AT 2:30 : toot —75¢,
| Tickets on Sale at Hilburn’s and Fowler’s Drug Stores General Admission to All Games a
N.C, EAGLES SWAMPED
BY BIG ‘FORCE WAVE
— |
Buckeye Eleven Rolls Up
43-0 Score Over Durham!
Grid Aggregation.
LUCAS, TYNES, STAR
"Force Scoreless. in Two}
Periods, However.
wuasnronce NON. Gob
Senge sec, Bikes
Heseen eee Westherpeen|
Soe LORRI Brekingon
Green CITI sehen
Bins ccd, Boman
Tey gba wl
‘seoRe BY QUARTERS |
Tne cuca 060 to
DURHAM, N.C. — (Special) —The
Green and Gold wave of Wilberforce
university surged up and down El
Toro Field, here Saturday, washing
clean the N.C. College Eagles by a
42-0 decision,
Lucas Makes First Score
In the second pericd Wilberforce
recovered a N.C. College fumble on
the latter's 30-yard line, from which
point Baby Lucas broke through the
line to make a run for the first socre
of the fray. ‘The extra point was
missed.
‘Tynes, Wilberforce scored two
touchdowns In succession, the first
coming as @ result of & pass from
Lucas, the second after a series of
hard line bucks. Red Fowler. former
Virginia Seminary star and All-
American end, then intercepted an
Eagle pass, to race 60 yards for a
scare,
BASEBALL
Where They Play
peal
AI Stars at BLACK SOX, Sunday, 2
= scones
BLACK SOX, &'AllStars, 3
BUAGH SOX, 2: ‘allstars, 1,
Lincoln Giants, 6: Oehrie’s Stars. 3,
Gehrig's Stars, 3: Lincoln Giants, 2
Intercepted Pass Paves
‘Way for Lynchburg Win
LYNCHBURG, Va.—An intercepted
pass, shageed by Brown, in the cles,
‘moments of play. furnished, the
margin by ‘whieh, the Dunbar, high
TERT teen at oie ater detent
‘eflerson Hi of Charlottesville, 20-13,
in spo mmuveipal scan here 65>
Brown ran 30 vards for a touch-
down and added the extra point. The
Poets stack up_against Washington
hhigh school at Staunton. Friday.
TRAINER ONLY SOX
~ SURE OF HIS JOB
CHICAGO. TI. (CNS)—Charles A.
Gomiskey cwner of the Chicago
White Sox of the American League,
is credited with saying recently, in
speaking of the change of mange
ment of the team, that “Bill” Buck-
nnre, the Sox trainer, is the only man
ine Box outfit sure of his job.
BORDENTOWN, 47-0
Bears Prove too Strong for
Tronsiders, Who Make
Game Fight.
BELL RUNS 92 YARDS |
Clarke, Bob Williams Show
Scoring Power.
BORDEKTOWN MoRoat
Suephenson eves REesssesereenng Bal
Semaine SRC IIIT ater
ee eee initieecriiccitere MABE
oui cae cc Ba
Sontag cc IIIT Samba
Paine cE in
We Wiltams 2.°00B 00000 “ote
Wableg ee cg Becitoree, Willems
Shave 2000S ame (eh
Ge co tegotth ce mare
Jackson (Go) veces PBs ca We Turton
Scones avaeitins
SORA ee ee ean a6 a7 47
BOMDENTOWA willie 80 oo
Teferee—storer(Ticnton iar
kot iba Mead Liseaman—Borrett (Dor
protein
Referee—Storer (Trenton). Umplre—Kar-
kas Bates). Head Linesmani—Barrett (Dor-
dentown).
BORDENTOWN, N. JA hopeful
Bordentown eleven held Morgan Col-
ege scoreless until near the close of
the first half today, and then went!
to pieces fo be buried under the
devastating count of 47-0.
‘The Jersey" schoolboys showed|
plenty of spirit at the start of the
contest, holding thelr more. experi-
enced opponents on downs time and
time again, and making creditable
gains around Morgan ends. ‘The vic-
tors ‘scored thelr first touchdown bz
flashy ball carrying on the part. of
Clark and Williams just 2 few min-
utes before the close of the first half,
Bordentown Players Hurt
‘The second half saw Stephenson
and ‘Williams, Bordentown ends, out
of the game on account of injuries|
ang Morgan pounded Bordentown’s
Weakened ends with unending say-
Rgery. The line defense xeakened|
ahd the backfield crumpled, Borden-
town's eleven went utterly ‘to pieces
while the Baltimore collegians danced]
up and down the field ‘at will
through Coach Watson's charges,
"The work of Captain Pinky Clarke,
Bell, Bob Wiillams, Harris, and Fra-|
tier’ was outstanding for the Mary-
anders. Clarke and Williams, scor-
ed three tuchdowns each, while Bell
‘accounted for one which provided
the thrill of the afternoon. when he
intercepted 2 Bordentown pass on
his own elght-vard line, and raced
2 saris rough a broken feta, 0
score.
““Morgan scored one extra point, by
‘passing, but the others were gained
by rushing.
. —— |
| CHEYNEY, 12; BOWIE, 0
BOWIE, Md.—Coach J. C. Willlam-
con's Cheyney grdders | penetrated
hostile territory beyond the Mason-
Dixon line last Saturday afternoon
and administered a 12-0 thumping to
Bowie normal school.
Cheyney scored touchdowns in the
first and second periods. | Williams.
Foreman, Johnson and Jérdan played
best for Cheyney while Captain Bar-
clay was the star for Bowie.
SANTIAGO KAYOED
PHILADELPHIA.— Armando San-
tiago. Cuban boxer, wos kayoed by
Benny Bass, white, in the second
round of scheduled 10-round bour
at the Phillie’ ball park, Friday
oe
‘Hear Me Talkin’ To Ya
MAYBE YOU DIDN'T LIKE IT, but somebody certamly upsr®
the old dope bucket over the past week-end.
‘The principal upsets occurred when Smith rubbed in a 10-0
victory on the Howard Bisons and ‘Virginia Union caught a nervous
‘Lincoln Lion by the tail and twisted out @ 13-6 eT
‘Most of the other games ran rather true to form. ready the
“downtown coaches” have started fearing. a folie when at this
‘of the game, means very little. ‘hey make an attempt to
‘arrive at the comparative strengths of Lincoln and pepton. by
Polnting out that the Lions nosed out St. Paul 12-6, while the Sea-
siders gave them @ 20-0 drubbing. ‘Lincoln, they say, is in for @
good Heking when the Lions face Hampton at the Polo Grounds.
‘In other quartets there are soothsayers who ‘would make me be-
Meve that Johnson Smith has a better team ‘than Hampton, by rea-
‘son of the Bulls’ 19-0 rout of the Bisons ‘while Hampton rested with
‘a 6-0 decision over the same team.
Saturday sees the same Virginia Union team that beat Lincoln,
in action against the Monga Bears, and local interest. is running
high in view of the fact that the loca} collegians also meet Lincoln,
‘their perennial foe, just a week later. ‘The Bears will be in for &
battle’ and you can lay odds on that,
"hrf the fous ate ting thet stride now, so thet, you, need
not iene Samed at any tidings you Near trom Our football
fronts.
If 1S, BEING BUZZED AROUND, so that you can hear it if
you listen ‘hard enough, that some of the baseball czars are not so
Sptimistie about e baseball league in the Hast next, Beer
"The big boys, so I hear, have found that in going ‘over their
books at the ‘end of the season, they see we a bit of red, which
‘as you know 4s not good for the system, hile there has been no
Joud wall heard, it fs sure that some of the baseball owners susteined
painful if not serious ny, ‘in the region of the pocketbook.
‘It certainly is questionable as to whether or not the Cuban
‘Stars, Bacharach Giants, and Homestead Grays took in any great
amount of profi. during the past season. 1 should be willing to
‘that the Cubans and the Bees, at least, did not break even.
Hildate the Black Sox and the Lincoln Giants, in all probability,
made some money. How much, T won't venture, but I'm certain
fae ee ‘Sox and the Gtants lead ‘the league when it comes to money
making.
AKIDE sve, this pillar 1s Informed, or rather Fd Bolden, was by no
means tickled to Feat with the showing that the Daisies made dur-
Ing the past season, as there was wrancling and squabbling in. the
‘luo that impaired its efficiency considerably. Late reporting on the
part of some players and the trades that failed to pan out, caused
dissension and the Darby chief's spirits were sameered considerably,
ension Stnould mot be surprised next season if some names that
graced the roster this year are missing. Jackson. Strong, Charles-
fon, and one or two others may not have Ed Bolden's signature on
ae ‘checks next season, for reasons which they understand only too
well
The. fiery. ‘Cum Posey, leader of the Graymen, is reported to feel
toward the league just as some of the members feel toward him—
disgusted. Posey's entry in the league did not make the showing that
many fans expected it to make. True there were accidents and
illness, but taking everything into consideration the Grays didn't
jnave a world-beater by any stretch of the imagination.
‘Not able to hold a free rein in the league. Posey found himself
unable to rik pares. here and there as he chose. Followers of the
game predict that the Homestead Gray leader, in order to raid at
Hindor, will take his club out of the league next, year
Really one of the reasons that the Kansas City Monarchs did
not come Bast fora championship series this year was due to a
strong feeling on the part of the National League against the East,
because Posey, as 2 member of the American League, insisted on
“stealing” players from the western circuit.
‘Whether the geval Tke Washington. owner of the Bacharach
Giants, will be able to continue his losses is questionable. for while
he now plans to place a team in the field next season, it is also pos-
sible for him to change his mind after a winter's reflection. “At~
Jantic City seems doomed for baseball.
‘The Cuban Stars wobbled quite a bit this year and Senor
‘Alejandro Pompez scratched his head more than once as he saw his
tailenders lose game after ere and as his pitchers developed glass
arms and his batsmen whiffed the ether.
‘Ed Bolden and Nat Strong broke up the league in 1928. Will
Bolden again withdraw? ‘This Colvum believes that Ed the wizard
will stick by his guns, but the Hilldale outfit that trots out next
year will hardly be recognized by the old timers. Mark my words.
‘The Baltimore entry and the Lincoln Giants. with the wily Jim
Keenan and crafty John Hennery on deck, will stick, and like
Postum, there's a feason. ‘These boys do baseball in a business way.
‘Prom Richmond, Babe Morris shouts that the Reb City wants @
ging organized baseball next year, and the portly Colonel Jacob
Strothers of Harrisburg, Pa., radios that he may cast his lot. with the
boys again. Norfolk, Va, and Reading, Pa. along with Washington,
will have their entries on'file.
‘The ouestion that arises then, is whether or not these appl!-
cants t*”"be able to Ail the brbeach should some of the present clubs
oe. ie ‘And it's a big question, if you ask us. ‘One ‘thing is
certain ere will be a gang of changes in the personnel of most
of the eastern teams next year, league or no league. This copy
Found has aivays made a plen (or organized baseball and trusts
that some new blood shot into the tottering frame, will bring the
American League back, hale and hearty.
‘THAT EXTRA POINT after touchdown. important asitis, seems
& be an unknown quantity with most of our school and college
elevens.
‘A glance through the list of scores of last Saturday's games of
the leading universities and colleges of the land, will reveal that any
umber of contests were decided by the margin of one point—added
after a touchdown.
‘Last week, a point for either team would have meant victory
for someone ih the Bluefield-Wilberforce til. There will be other
games of a similar type played this season in which an extra point
Will mean vietory or defeat.
Among our teams Tuskegee seems to be the only one putting any
stress on scoring the extra point after touchdown. At Tuskegee,
they tell me, the printers have a line set MP. which reads: “Stevenson
added the ee pane so sure are they that he will make it.
‘There should be “Stevnesons" being developed at all of our
schools, either players who can kick or who can outsmart the enemy
by rushing or using the alr, in order to score the point. It fs not.
too be for these foams fo get fo work along this ine, and is they
do, this writer knows that they won't, ee it.
‘The erles of “touchdown” and “block that kick” are all right in
their paces, ‘but even they may be without avail unless that extra
point is made. And we hope you i ‘the point.
And may I drop the perennial hint to the coaches and athletic
ones 2 cortpersic with the sports writers in their endeavor to
acts?
LATENESS IN STARTING the baseball games at Marylat
ig prohibiting the local fans from seeing TWO FULL GAMES "for
their hard-earned kopecks.
Instead of starting at 1:90 or 1:45, the games have been start~
ing well pe two o'clock. Delays and stalling during the first game
make it apse ile to go over six innings in the Second, and tis $0
dark then that really only four innings should be played.
‘Rumors that the Sox-All Stars series is fixed, ‘hus ‘the fact that
only two or three MAJOR league PLAYERS were present in the line-
op au attendance considerably at the park, Sunday. There was 2
R ity of room in the bleachers, This pillar insists that more major
ad should be brought here and that the games start
Regardless of color, give the fans a breakt
a
————————EE
FOOTBALL
MORGAN COLLEGE
UNION UNIVERSITY
MORGAN CAMPUS
Saturday, October 19, 1929
, =
Big Blue Machine
Flattens Va. Stat
i a
Making Extra Point, Jinx |j Petersburg Eleven Crom
to Many School Elevens Before Bluefield Aty
Inability to make the extra 20-0. |
point atte ouendown, has fur: ees
r margin same ||
ished the mare ether ted or {| TOO MUCH Wiens
defeated this season. -
eres oar yaa but ave ene ——
owns Bu Flee
dents negected ‘o,embbacae the |) Virginians Able to Score q,
palate Wwilereecesiueze Two First Downs,
en te ;
fers Feulc ar one of the teams || PETERSBURG, Va.—The Big
been able to make an extra point, || Machine of Bluefield Institue ry
Dy ended Rowente Bok suikite || bled on to 2 20-0 victory over they
Siltlege gud Fave been broken State College Outfit, here Satur
by an ra point. Off-tackle ple ind end
jaen Stevenson,” the Tuskegee || sured the West’ Virginians vse
flash, has not missed a point af- |! wiggins, again covering himseit »
fe touch ton tier Tatar inv the || GLOEY By SCOT two touchdowns
Seauon, how me Anetra” point || 22 ne he aE haters
will mean to them. ed machine "completely smutty
the Va, State attack, presenting
almost impregnable line and sny
HAMPTON RALLIES TO)teiis‘Granaey sds
Bluefield made eight first
against only two for the Hillops
proving superiority in all deparinn
' y ZU°U [or the game. adding lustre
play of the Big Blue team was
mest ho ‘proved “an able substi
[Rey
Stubborn Defense Crumbles in pnts Nay Sate halfback
Final Quarter to Permit 3] frea iat hess the wii
. . Biuetel ee
Scores fo offer. Blucheld is entering j
HARRIS FUMBLES
Murphy's Educated Toe ‘Near
Fatal to Seasiders
HAMPTON, 20 BT. PAUL. 0
McGowan ervvsseesBBocercenneeese Wall
Muncer (00GB Jones
Patterson seesvcccRBecciccsccees QU
Patterson cc0ccR@0 IIIS Blunt
Gates. svescsvscvecensGucsccsccceeee, WIE
HM IG Sprewell
Gaines veecvvsccseeBalocce sites Bore
Moton 020IIIME III connor
dones. .o20000000URBR III. “Burke
Guess 20020, set
Hares 0000000. Murphy
| oh tee ei “De dt ares
Te et a ocac’ weteen tor Meakt,.
for Jones, Scott for Guess, Briggs for Scott,
Winans for Haves, White fer bioten. Sub:
[Ututions for St. Psul—Dse for Wicks.
HAMPTON INSTITUTE, V2—Play-
ing a defensive game, and as a_re-
sult gaining only two first downs dur-
ing the entire game, the St. Paul
‘Tigers, held Hampton, scoreless fo
three quarters, and then collapsed to
to see the Stasiders romp to 2 20-9
victory, here Saturday.
The ‘first quarter, was @ booter’s
duel, broken periodically by a, tew
vain’ attempts on Hampton's side 10
brety rough, the ‘Tiger, gefense, £9
the fatter part of the quarter, | the
Blue and White backs _ did ’ drive
twice Signt, up io the Saints’ yard
iiine, only to have the ball go over.
"By reason of a penalty, Hampton
came down to the five-yard line only
foibe stopped, ahd, what, she. geined
‘was soon lost through a series of
fumbles. St. Paul punted to the
end-zone, and Jones of Hampton an-
swered with a short punt back, Con-
nor drove through to the eight-yard
Tine, but neither drives nor passes,
end runs, nor fakes could net another
‘yard, and St. Paul lost the bell al-
Inast at Hampton's goal.
Hampton Scores 3 ‘Times
By several off-tackle and center
plays the Seaside backs gained th:
Gne-yard Jine, and Jones hurtled
through for 2, score, which Harris
finished off with a kicked goal. S:
Paul made a fight to drive Hampton
from her territory, but a Afteen-yard
penalty. threw her back to the fve-
Yard line, and a. blocked ‘kick which
Hill recovered, gave Hampton the
advantage. Harris made | another
fouchdown, but missed the try.
The Tigers then tried to come ou:
of their lair but errors by the center
Jost them twenty yards, and whe?
they did hick they had gained noth-
c.
Pass Intercented
‘The Tigers. with about four min-
utes fo play. tried @ pass which Mc-
Gowan, Hampton end, nabbed and
garried over the line. In the last
Geo minutes, McGowan roughed,
St. Paul back and the game ended
with the Saints far into Hampton
Territory. asa result of a thirty-
seven yard penalty.
MOREHOUSE TRIPS |
KNOXVILLE, 12-0
Dellart Hubbard's Brother Shines In
Defeat as Triple Threat
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Knoaville
College Bulldogs went down to defeat,
Golege Bula en eos sida
by_@ score of 12-0.
perhaps the most spectacular play-'
ing of he game was done by Bertrair,
Hubbard of Cincinnati, brother of
De¥art, Hubbard, former holder of
the national broad jump champion~
ship, who played at half back for
Knoxville, His passing ‘and broken
field running providec plenty of
thrill,
INVENTS “PENALTY BOX”
‘CLEVELAND, O.—A “penalty box.”
which flashes to the fans each foot-
ball penalty as it is calied by the of-
ficials, has been perfected by Harry
J. Walker of this city, the box hav-
ing been used with success in a re-
cent pe. here.
‘Walker, a deputy clerk in Municl-
pl court, has wig-wageed signals at
Sa a aor
twenty-three years.
se years
HIGH POINT TEAM WINS
|. HIGH POINT, N. C.—William Penn
high opened ‘ts football season Pri-
day afternoon by defeating Colum-
bilan Heights of Winston-Salem 7-6.
Petersburg Eleven Crom
Before Bluefield aig,
20-0. |
TOO MUCH Wiens
Virginians Able to Score g;
Two First Down,
PETERSBURG, Va.—The Big
Machine of Bluefield Tnsttie mt
bled on to 2 20-0 victory over they
State College Outfit, here Satu,
Off-tackle pleys and end ru
Osa la tr ont
‘Wiggins, again covering himself.
ory by searing two touchdowns
ey Bis running mate, “acces
for the other. ‘The Jefferson st
ed. machine completely shut?
the "Va. State attack, presenti
almost impregnable line and at
ing the Virginians alr attack,
‘Bluefield ‘made eight. rst dy
against only two for the Hilt!
‘proving superiority in all deparin|
Ef the: game, “Adding lustre
Dlay of the Big Biue team wuss
Feho ‘proved an able suites
- :
‘johnson, Va. State, halfoae w
Pegram, Va. Siate end. provides
est Unreats the Virginians
for offer. Bluefield is enterig f
third vear without a ‘deleat ier
its record. et |
DELAWARE STATE (sx
DOVER, Del—The State oo
eleven found. itself beaten baci
s heavier Newark A. C. tea be,
Ballndar, dropping the contest ite
2 'atifl fete be the score of 198
State worked the ball to Newt
onestard mark in the secon pe
Sur eked. the. punch necessary
Garry it over. ‘The visitors smd
carey, It cae ual periods
G. Ryde os eeeeee LAE coesss seer Cammy
ite caste Picesseen
Gr wtson sccccciiedGocnneee Bite!
Sager Ss ence Game
Bron cc Gon ae
Bee nek ghee ae
Witness CURE cas oa
donnaah ococcici@ Be coe Rae
IoD ocrecassedR moc secen Mag
Miason iit trersece sae
Bgn a g PB e
Scere by pends
HATE nrrnrscenscessi 1 OEE
Bite CoE cee Bet
Te iia Baciaie ties os.
‘rimekeeper—Balley. Pertods—Aees c=
Fe" Risaie eon sute cal, &
Be so brn casey for Wer
| GRAVES TENNESSEE SUR
| MORRISTOWN. ‘Tenn. — Nae
tou recelted lig frst st-baek
|Stasoa inere on the College Ped
[ifeay. afternoon atthe hand ¢
Ringsport to. the ine of 19-6,
faine ‘vas “featured by the Ex
Bhashing of Graves, brother of
Graves of the Bluefield Ine
fam
‘TAELADEGA TWiNs
TALLADEGA, Ala—Toe
squitming, ang. pounding unde 3
inspiration afforded by BR. dba
and company, ‘Talladeea crashes
State A and’ Me Tnstitute (Nort
Ria.) by 24 to 6, Saturday.
| Here’s A Sure
| Winner
You cen bet your last nick]
that the mild, smooth taste al]
Unele Willie Cigers prevails
tee tet lingering pall
Pr,
Ca. jy Dad's
Ce, [ vorite a
‘ fer <
Sot te fe
Years Ba
The Smoke Be
With a Smile pe come
UNCLE,
WILLIE|
gg
5 i
MILD! feaiege
Bee
sa
Foil o
Wrapped BoaNae”
For Your Saas
| Protection RPE
ee
“Smiles”
Sie
The Londres Size, 3 for
|| Geo. Schafer-H.C. Pfaff Ciser Cm
‘Ang0 MAKERS OF
| entre or manrisone
Nonument sacabe
FIRE RING and CLIFTON ABE
melee
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a
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When we raced to New York
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Jut put on Magic Shaving Pound and then the hair on your own eyes was washed off. You then gave it back naturally as if it had been washed off. It is merely dislodged away, it is merely washed off, and is used by hospitals and beauty patrons. Women find it priceless for removing hair.
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Imperial, Laptop, write, "A fortunate day when
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Sydnor Is Goat as Union Downs Lincoln on Home Field.
Muff Ends Lincoln's Chance
to Tie Score.
VA UNION
Williams L.E. Temple (C)
Wilson L.T. Kane
Wilson L.C. Kane
Lawson L.C. James
Lawson C.I. James
Thompson R.G. Venty
Thompson R.T. Venty
Booth G.E. Sydor
Booth G.E. Sydor
Robinson Q.B. Anderson
Robinson L.H. Grace
Washington L.H. Lewis
Barton P.B. Harmon
Barton P.B. Harmon
SCORE BY POINTS
after touches for Lincoln -LeMar for Harman, Troy for Temple, Smith for Clarke, Vance for Veney, Carter for W. Jackson, W. Jackson for Anderson, Crasson for Jack
Unpure - Gibson (Springfield), Referee -
Temple, Heap, Line Headman - Wheeler
- Temple
(Staff Correspondence)
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY, Pa.—Fate, fiddle lady that she is, smiled at Lincoln on Saturday, only to turn her head to snicker as the sirens burst up from the grass while Virginia University crashed through to a 13-9 verdict.
Both Teams Kick
The first quarter developed into a kicking duel between Williams of Virginia Union and Anderson of Lincoln. Maxle Robinson, Lincoln, ran 38 yards up and only to be guarded offside. The quarter ended with the ball deep in Lincoln's territory on Union's first first-down. As the second quarter opened, Washington ripped 12 yards and ripped off nine yards by Cotton took the sphere across the goal line. Williams failed to kick the extra point. After an exchange of kicks following the kick-off, Clarke of Lincoln, ripped off nine yards, and LaMar to Lincoln, netted 12 yards, and pass, Clarke to Troy, gained 15 more. Hold for downs, the Pennsylvaniaians punted, only to have Williams return the kick. A forward pass, LaMar to Sydnor, was good for 30 yards, bringing the ball within Union's 10-yard
Sydnor Muffs Chance
Then Stretch Sydorn. Lincoln end, muffed the opportunity to give the Lions a die or victory, and he stood on the Virginians' goal line. The ball hit him squarely in the stomach and there were no tears. The
Union Sub Stars
Sam Brown, a Union sub, paved the way for the winning tally when he scooped up a free ball on Lincoln's 18-4 line in the final period. An and run by Washington made six, and Cotton made over four, second-hundred. Williams kicked goal for the extra point.
Lincoln's belated forward pass attack proved unsuccessful and the game ended with Union in possession of the ball in midfield.
During the third quarter Harmon and Lewis of Cotton invited the ball to be made a few gains, which netted them two first downs, but were unable to gain yardage to cause Union any worry.
In this quarter Maxie Robinson of Union and Cotton were the shining lights, causing Lincoln's secondary defense plenty of trouble. One Robinson's end run completed a 32-ward. Lewis took the ball from over his head, and was headed for the goal line but a crowd of Union men smothered him. Harmon then made seven yards and the third quarter
ROYAL CABS
We made a
Touch-down!
Who
and
the
"D
$2
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Eutaw and Saratoga 420
Baltimore and Call
AGILE
250 Reasons Why
ERNEST HARDY
Baltimore lad, ad-Douglas high
player, now a guard on Lincoln in
250 pounds and he's fast with it. These
are 250 reasons why one side of
Lincoln's line will be tight this year
ended with Lincoln in possession of
the ball.
Lions Score
At the beginning of the fourth quarter, Lincoln was made a present of a first down by an offside penalty. Lincoln again failed in an attempt to pass, but the pass was allowed. Headlineman Wheeler ruled that Washington of Union had interfered with the Lincoln receiver. Lincoln received a Union's 18-yard line and Lincoln, invigorated by this break of the game, carried the pigskin across the goal line after three thrusts at Union's line, Lewis making the touchdown. They failed to make the extra point by an end run.
Seek Howard-Lincoln Soccer Match
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY, Pa.—The soccer squad of the university has swollen since the initial call last week. Coach Silvers, white, sees this year's team to be of championship capacity. Capt. Stokes and the boys have been practicing with zest and peep, and negotiations are on hand for a Howard-Lincoln soccer clash in Washington this month. And shoes have been given out and more students have reported. Outstanding new members on the team are Donowa, of Tidalid; Alston the fresh soccer sensation from Pittsburgh; Chapman Williams, Brooks and "Turk" Ban-
Benedict-Livingstone Tie
COLUMBIA, S. C.-Benedict and Livingstone College eleven battled to a scoreless tie on Hurst Field, hers Friday.
The local team had four opportunities to score but fumbled on each occasion, losing the ball. Livingstone never presented a threat and when the game ended the teams were struggling in midfield.
ALA, STATE, 2; BROWN, 0
MONTGOMERY. Ala.-The Alabama State Hornet nked out a 2-9 victory over the Morris Brown University here at Paterson on Saturday. The second conference game and the second conference victory for the Alabama eleven.
Send 55c in stamps for a package in U. S. A. or at stamps pina. Foreign prices quoted on request.
THE MAGIC SHAVING POWDER CO.
and Lincoln Teams Beaten
HOLD 'EM; HOLD 'EM, HAMPTON
A quartet of Hampton linemen, who have already started gathering laurels for their team. They made a brilliant showing against Verdell's Bison in their recent annual title at Hampton. They are, left to right: Harold Gates, center; Samuel Gaines, tackle; Carl Hill, tackle, and Oscar (Wop) Hunter, tackle.
Schedule Includes Dunbar, Wilmington and Annapolis as Apponents.
Cardozo Hi of Washington,
Here Next Week.
HOW FEUD STANDS
Since 1960—Armstrong has won 10 games; Douglass, 3.
Coach L. U. Gibson's 1929 edition of the Douglass high school Ducks will get its first taste ofattle with the Armstrong high school eleven with the Armstrong high school eleven of Washington, in the Capital.
Have Won Only 3 Games
It will be the matter of a new, green team going up against experienced opposition, as the Washington school has been given edge on Baltimore in a defensive game between the schools in 1909, the Ducks have won only three games, scoring victories in 1909, 1917, and 1921. Last year the Ducks were swamped 20-0, and the previous year, an inaccurate boot from the toe of Hugh Doram caused the locals to drop a motion to the Washington aggregation.
Duck Teams Sirimmage
The Ducks, who face Cardozo high here next week, have been practicing hard, holding their first real victory over the Bs' won a 26-5 victory over Squab, while C gridders gained a 14-0 decision over the D squab. Both games were of two periods, the first two being driven over four touchdowns, all of them being made by Parker, halfback, who crashed through the "B" forward wall at will. Parker skirted the ends for the first two scores, and the second for the last, being a foul, and the second on a pass over the line. The third touchdown was scored when Parker intercepted a forward pass on the "Bs" 40-yard line. The attempt at making the extra point by rushing failed.
Savage Intercepts Pass
The "B" team scored its only touchdown in the second period when Savage intercepted a pass shot at Tartar, on the "A"s' 40-yard line, and romped unmolested to score. A bad pass from center killed the attempt at Tartar, and Lennie in Parker Hall hit off tackle for the "A"s' final tally. Bad passes from Washington caused the "B" team to lose much ground, and the "A" forwards frequently broke through to nail runners behind the line of scrimmage. Defensive play of McKinney, Strong's tackles, and the offensive plays that led to the "B" gridders. The play of Captain Young, Parker, Tartar and Collins was outstanding for the "A."
"C" Team Routs "D's"
In another two-period contest the "C" eleven defeated the "D" team, 14-0. Both touchdowns were made by Houston Johnson, the first extra point being made by Dorsey, who ripped through the line, and being awarded a full Pulley. Douglas dash stair, starred on the defense and "D" eleven.
The following is a tentative schedule for the local schoolboys.
Oct. 25-Cardoora High, at Baltimore.
Nov. 1-Duiker High, at Baltimore.
Nov. 8-Howard High (Wilmington), at Baltimore.
Nov. 12-Bowie Normal, at Baltimore.
Nov. 22-Stanton High (Annapolis), at Baltimore.
D. C. SCHOOL SCHEDULES
DUNAR
Nov. 1—Dunbar vs. Douglass High, at Baltimore.
Nov. 2—Dunbar vs. Newport News, at Washington.
Nov. 28—Dunbar vs. Armstrong at Washington.
Games are being arranged with Bowie and other schools.
ARMSTRONG
Oct. 25 — Armstrong vs. Staunton High, at Annapolis.
Nov. 28—Armstrong vs. Bowie, at Washington.
Nov. 1—Armstrong vs. Booker T. (Norfolk, Washington).
Nov. 28—Armstrong vs. Huntington (Newport News, Newport).
Nov. 15—Armstrong vs. Peabody High, at Petersburg.
MILLERITES WIN 23RD
CLARKBURG. W. Va. — Scoring their twenty-third consecutive victory, and their third of the present season, the team swept the swapped the Lincoln Hi队 of Northlork by a 51-0 score, here Friday.
End runs, line plunges, and forward passes, featured Morgan, Morgan and Sherrod showing up best for the winners and Gary sparkling for the losers.
KITTRELL, 6; BRICK, 6
KITTRELL, N. C.-Kittrell College and Brick Junior College鉴 locked horns here, Friday, batting to a. 6-fit.
Both teams used many substitutes, and fumbles spoiled many scoring chances. Woodhouse scored for Kittrell and Phillips made the Brick touchdown.
HOLD 'EM; HOLD
A quartet of Hampton linemen, who
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 1929
THE MEMBERS OF THE METHODIST CHURCH OF KENYA
A group of the spectators and participants in last Saturday's Inter-City Horseshoe Tournament in which the local team defended the Washington tossers in the singles and doubles. They are, left to right, back row: Mrs. Emma Rice, Miss Laura Rice, A. J. Rice, C. E. Recklin, J. F. Hall and Isaac Bannister. Front row: A. A. Greene, B. Armstrong, D. Bax利, J. Bortos and J. Carter.
D. C. 'SHOE TOSSERS
DEFEAT BALTIMORE
District Horseshoe Pitchers Take Match Series from Locals, 3-2.
Hall Brothers, Reckling and Woodford Play.
Washington horseshoe tossers proved their superiority over local exponents of the game Saturday, when a team from the capital defeated the locals in a match series, 3-2. Bearing the brunt of burden for the visitors was David Baylor, who cleaned up the athletic champion, who cleaned up all opposition in the district and in Eastern Virginia to win the title.
Baylor Leads Males
Washington took three singles matches, while the local tosses took one singles and the doubles match. Baylor, an exponent of the game, James Hall by the score of 50 to 46 and also defeated Charles Woodford. 51-33. A. A. Greene, physical director of the A. Tweddle Street in Washington, can and did defeat Ralph Sr. by the count of 50-43. Charles Hall was the only Baltimore to come through with a victory in a singles match, defeating Joseph Bentley by the count of 9. The doubles team of Hall and Hall proved the class of the competition in that division, defending Greene and Carter. 50 to 8, and taking the measure of the series, the doubles match the most exciting of the series. 50-46.
Doubles Match Thrills
Trailing on the short end of a 32 to 21 score, the local team worked their way to the point where the couple stood on the court. The owner a close shoe by Charles Hall knotted the count at 48-all, and then James Hall nestled two close shoes by the peg that Greme found it impossible to beat, clinching the con-
Baylor "Inherited" Thrill
Baylor, heroved as a ringer-pitching champ, made his total 13 ringers for one came. this hilt mark coming in his came with Mr. Woodford. "Boney-Bones," as Baylor is called in basketball, was Rachambeh Abuatments, and is said to have inherited some of his horseshoe pitching ability from his mother, who herself, was once a great performer with the iron footwear. He formerly played for Sanders and planned to resume his education, this winter.
Open Shoe Wins
The open shoe style proved the undoing of the local tessors, who in the absence of the city champions, Slvester Chase and Robert Lloyd, represented the local lions pitched their shoes so that they made many turns in the air, landing often as not with the closed end toward the neg. Baylor lined his shoes directly at the per, there being no loops, so he pulled a southwarm proved to be his only competitor in the matter of throwing ringers. To Play This Winter Under the direction of Mr. Greene an indoor horseseat court is in Washington of the man of the man in all probability be staged this winter between Baltimore and Washington representatives.
COLLEGIANS DROP TILT
NEW YORK — The All-Southern Collegians football team dropped a 9-2 decision to the College Pointers, white, here Sunday. The Collegians, under H. Jacob Hoeck, Union, star, and "Bulldog" Williams, former Howard huminary, will take on the McMonie队. The team is using Pon Warner's famous wing-back formation along with Meehan's "Pissian Huddle."
HENDERSON PANTHERS WIN
HENDERSON, N. C.-Playing their first home game of the season, the Henderson Institute, played the Berry O'Kelly eleven to chalk up a 6-3 victory, here Thursday.
BEN TAYLOR, OUT AS BEE BOSS, SAYS ATLANTIC CITY IS DOOMED
BEN TAYLOR, OUT AS BEE BOSS, SAYS ATLANTIC CITY IS DOOMED
Intended to Quit, Says Taylor, Who Hadn't Heard of Release. Pay in Arrears—No Cooperation—1,000 a Big Crowd.
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (ANP)—Big Ben Taylor won't be back as manager of the Bacharach Giants next spring.
Dr. Washington, the owner, was authority for this statement Tuesday night, and he made no bones about the fact that Big Ben would not return.
Pressed to give reasons why Taylor has become persona non grata. Washington stated, "I didn't like the way Ben ran the club. Our club failed to show anything worth while under his direction; therefore, I believe a chance is for the best."
TRADED FOR LUNDY.
Taylor came here last spring in shortstop, and it is a well-known fawn of the Bees dropped from pennant winnings of the American Negro League penny. Washington stated that he hopped the next few weeks. He also expelled club, hoping to bring the team back.
Intervieled at his Baltimore he had received no notification from his fired.
"My contract with Washington 'was to run for one season. He kills his club season, and probably of my action.
PAY LATE-NO CO-OPER"
"I received practically no co-op and all the players were two weeks to his negligence. The biggest creature during the season was probably the played there. A crowd of three can readily see, see, then, that no man ball there."
"It is too early to say what I certain, and that is, I won't be at own free will."
last spring in a trade ex- well-known fact that unde- pennant winners to the I- League pennant race. that he hopes to select. He also expects to make he team back to the top of Baltimore home, Taylor- tication from Ike Washin- Washington." the local season. He knew that I d and probably circulated the CO-OPERATION-1,000 no co-operation from me two weeks later in late bigest crowd that we probably the time we ha- id of three or four hund- that no man can make a say what I will do next won't be at Atlantic City
Taylor came here last spring in a trade exchange for Dick Lundy, shortstop, and it is a well-known fact that under Big Ben's supervision the Bees dropped from pennant winners to the last place in both halves of the American, Negro League pennant race.
Washington stated that he hopes to select a new manager within the next few weeks. He also expects to make several changes in the club, hoping to bring the team back to the top of the ladder once more.
Interviewed at his Baltimore home, Taylor told the AFRO that he had received no notification from Ike Washington that he had been fired.
My contract with Washington," the local ball player explained, "was to run for one season. He knew that I did not plan to return to his club next season, and probably circulated the report in anticipation of my action.
PAY LATE—NO CO-OPERATION—1,000 BIG CROWD.
"I received practically no co-operation from him during the season, and all the players were two weeks late in drawing their last pay, due to his negligence. The biggest crowd that we had at Atlantic City during the season was probably the time we had 1,000 when Hilldale played there. A crowd of three or four hundred was average. You can readily see, then, that no man can make any money out of base-things."
"It is too early to say what I will do next season, but one thing is certain, and that is, I won't be at Atlantic City. I left the job of my
FOOTBALL Where They Play
Local
Va. Union at MORGAN COLLEGE,
C. I. A. A.
Lincoln at A. and T.
Lincoln at A. and Hampon.
St. Paul at N.C. State.
C. A. G.
Harpard at Mosehouse.
Pick at Morehouse.
Knoxville at Talladega.
Other Games
Tinkgeees vs. Chirk. in Mingham.
St. State at Mosehouse Brown.
Wissahickon Boys' Club at Chneyne.
Ala. State at Ala. Normal.
Albany State at Ky.
West St. Corolina vs. Kingston Yellow Jackets, Sunday.
Wiley vs. Prairie View, at Dallas, Tex.
(October 21st).
SCORES
C. I. A. A.
a. and T., 25; Shaw, 0.
Va. Union, 13; Lincoln, 8.
Hampon, 20; St. Paul, 0.
C. A. C.
Morehouse, 12; Kineville, 6.
Talladega, Ala. a. and M., 0.
C. A. G.
MORGAN COLLEGE: 47: Bordentown, 0.
Smith University, 19: Howard, 0.
Wilberforce, 0: Wake Forest, 0.
W. State, 27: Ky. State, 0.
Ala. State, 2: Morris Brown, 0.
Tuskegee, 24: 24th Infantry, 7.
Maryland, 24: Arlington, 6.
Benedict, 0: Livingstone, 0.
Cheyney, 12: Bowie, Normal, 0.
S. C. College, 19: Institute, 0.
Wiley, 3: Brightway, 0.
High Schools and Clubs
Armstrong High (D.C.), 20: Howard High
(Wilmington), O.
Kelly Miller (W.Va.). S1: Wheeling HI, O.
Lynchburg HI, 20: Charlestville HI,
Henderson HI, 20: Kelly HI, O.
Southern Collegians, O.
Newark U. 13: Delaware State, O.
McDonald (W.Va.) HI, 25: North HI, O.
MARSHALL. Tex.-The 1929 edition of the Wiley College Wildcats proved a terror to the Straight University seven hours Saturday, scoring en even dozen touchdowns and kicking 9 goals to swamp the Louisiana outfit by a score of 81-0.
NOTBAY
ATE vs. HA
FOOTBALL!
VA. STATE vs. HAMPTON
Armstrong Field
Saturday, Oct. 19, 1929
Game Called at 2:30 P. M.
Admission $1.00
Hampton and Lincoln—Polo Grounds, N. Y., Nov. 2, 1929.
Hampton and A. and T.—Norfolk League Park, Armistice Day, Nov. 11, 1929
Hampton and West. Va.—Hampton, November 10, 1929.
Be Sure To Meet
Your Friends
--AT--
GENE'S BILLIARD ROOM
1601 Penna. Ave., 2nd Floor—Corner McMechen
a trade exchange for Dick Lundy. That under Big Ben's supervision mannert race. To the last place in both halves he tries to select a new manager within cocks to make several changes in the to the top of the ladder once more. Some, Taylor told the AFRO that he like Washington that he had been "the local ball player explained, new that I did not plan to return to circulated the report in anticipation STATION-1,000 BIG CROWD. Operation from him during the season, late in drawing their last pay, due daw that we had at Atlantic City time we had 1,000 when Hildale or four hundred was average. You can make any money out of base-will do next season, but one thing is Atlantic City. I left the job of my
Lincolns Divvy With Lou Gehrig's Stars
Holland in Rare Form as Giants
Win, 6-2; Lose Second, 3-2
N.YORK.—The Lincoln Giants
shared honors in a twin bill with Lon
Gehrig's All-Stars, white, on the
sunday, at 8,000 fans looked on, winning
the first tilt, 6-3, but dropping the
second contest, 6-3. Gehrig's the second game,
and in the first game made the
longest home run ever hit at Prot
ectory Oval, the ball going far over
the bleachers, the ball going over
the field, being faced by Murp-
hy, and allowed 12 hits. Melton
shared honors with Holland, however;
by lining out a double with two men
on in the sixth, as the score stood
at 4-2. Red Ryan had one bad inning
in the nightcap, the Stars' three runs
being scored in this frame. He tight-
ened the ball, this time, and allow-
ed only four more hits.
GEHRIG'S STARS
ab r h e l
Emrich.if. 5 1 2 0 Mellon.cf. 5 1 0 0
Jacobson.if. 5 1 2 0 Wingling.ib. 5 1 0 0
Gobleh.ib.3b 4 2 2 0 Wingling.ib. 2 1 1 0
Kelly.if. 5 1 2 0 Yodlb.ib. 4 1 0 0
Skiff.if. 4 0 3 0 Yodlb.ib. 2 1 1 0
Cavaughn.3b. 4 0 0 0 Yanck.ib. 2 0 0 0
Cavaughn.3b. 4 0 0 0 Monchille.ib. 4 0 0 0
Murphy.ib. 3 1 0 0 Holland.p. 3 1 0 0
V.Kelly.ib. 3 1 0 0 Totals
37 13 21 Totals
SCORE BY INNINGS
Gehrig Stars .2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
Lincoln Giants .1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3
Sacrifice hit-Yanck.ib. Gehrig.2 two-base hits-Linsey and Holland. Home runs-Gehrig and Melon. Double play-Shigeri.ib. Gehrig and Holland. Sindey by Melon. Strickouts-Holland. 12 Murphy. 2 Murphy. on base-Holland. 12 Murphy. on base-Gehrig at plate: Jamieson on bases.
BALL!
HAMPTON
SCORE BY INNINGS
Bison Herd Unable to Stop Charging Attack of North Carolinians
Marshall and Dickson Helpless Before Smith Wall
HOWARD, 19
Peyton L.E. Massey
Williams L.T. Coleman
Stokes L.T. Coleman
Stokes C. Jones
Whiting R.G. House
Harris, C. R.T. Henry
ee L.H. Williams
Mack R.H. Poukes
Boswell P.B. Walker
Dickson Q.B. Martin
Touchdown = Martin 1. Williams
Williams = Point 1. touchdown-Walker.
Substitutions for Johnson C. Smith-Hamlin for Massey, Blue for Jones, Stanback for House, Lightner for Bills, Best for Coleman.
Substitutions for Howard-Ukerd for Marshall, Gordon for Washington, for Williams, Hawkins for Stokes, Ellis for Williams, Hawkins, Nuttall for Dixon, Adams for Bowell.
Referee-Wright (Hempton). Umpire-Cupid (Harris). Herd Linusness-Jackson (Union). Field Judge-Douglas (Howard). Time of quarters-15 minutes.
(Staff Correspondence)
WASHINGTON. — Coach J. F. Thomas of Johnson C. S. College, sent eleven of his Golden Bulls out on the Howard University stadium field and they light through a Howard Bison to the tune of 19 to 0, Saturday. Verdell sent in 14 new men to stop the stampede but they were just out of luck against the plucky North Carolina boys who tore around ends and their quizzes at will. Not only did they do this, but they blocked practically every end run and forward pass the Bisons tried to make.
Poor Showing
Taking it from the words of Howard's own rooters, the Bisons made a drab showing. They did not, however, that this opinion must be tempered to some extent, for Williams, Foulkes, Walker and Martin. of the Smith eleventh, the second, the fourth, they have "clicked" against almost any old team. The evident strategy of the Bison is to play the Bulldogs, the All-American Smith lineman, and while they were trying to do this, other players tore through the line and around the ends to put the quietus on the ball, that the Howardies tried to pull.
First Touchdown
The first touchdown was scored in the first quarter. Williams let go one of those long forward passes which Howard had been trying to make. Martin caught it and, after trouble run, the Bisons made the Bulls the lead. The Bisons blocked the kick which would have added the extra point. In this same quarter, Marshall, playing left half-back, made the play and run, netting made the play. But straight line plunges netted Howard nothing and, somehow Peyton, of the Bulls, got through the line at most times when the Bisons might have "done their stuff." This was the forward pass, plunges, playing half-back for Smith, seemed to know just where the Bison hurler intended to send the ball and was there to greet it in advance. Howard completed two forward passes out of nine out of the visitors got five out of seven. The second quarter was played on fairly even terms. The visitors scored their second touchdown in the third quarter on a 17-yard line. An attempted pass for the extra point was grounded.
Smith scored again in the last quarter on a 20-yard pass from Williams to Walker, who carried the ball through a clear field for the remaining distance. A forward pass from Williams to Walker was good for the
Howard's one good chance to make a touchdown came in the third quarter when Lee muffed a long forward pass deep between him and the goal. At this point, Verdell sent in Hike Gordon, the plucky boy who walked all the way from New Orleans. The hope of the team was voiced by named amplitude, minutes later the Bulls sent this hopeful back to the bench with tears streaming down his cheeks. Some stiff defense in the back by Howard stored the touchdown. The Bulls had the Howard's ten-yard line.
The Smith team is coached by Bill Thomas of the University of Minnesota, with Dave Ray of Bates College and "Perk" Williams as his assist.
Fisk Bulldogs Win
FISK
Gordon.....L.E. Galloway
Ames.....L.O.
Rankin.....L.O. C
Ballard.....C Compton
Ballardy .....R.G. Nelson
Daughter.....R.G. Nelson
Wiggo.....R.T. Countes
Forde.....R.E. McIntrah
Ford.....R.E. McIntrah
Williams.....L.H. McIntrah
Hutcherson.....R.H. McReynolds
Chrite.....F.B.
Substitutes for Ferguson, Wheedbee, Vost,
Brownson, Robinson, Cox, Coxy, Whittaker,
Edwards, Martin, Madison, Dunnings,
Turner, Forster, Miller, Whittaker,
Jackson, Richards, Cook, Bond, McClure,
Referee-Brooks (Howard, Umpire-Johnson
(Mehray). Feld Judge-Miller (Howar)
F. B. SHELLEY RENDER
NASHVILLE. Tenn.—Successfully
employing a deceptive running attack
and taking advantage of costly breaks, the Blues and Gold bulldogs of F. B. Unierry and Gold bulldogs of F. B. Unierry swept through
to College Dragons to win,
2nd-Saturday.
W. VA. STATE WINS
INSTITUTE, W. Va. — West Virginia State College inaugurated the grid season here with a 27 to 0 win over Kentucky State College Satur
Kentucky tried a last minute barrage of forward passes and was completing them one after the other when the game ended.
A. and T., 25; Shaw, 0
RALEIGH. N. G.-The A. and T. football team won. T. had played with a victory of 25-0. This was the first same that A. and T. had played in the C. I. A. A. this
season. Byarm is rapidly building up his machine to meet Lincoln University, which will invade Greensboro. October 19.
H. U. Fine Sports,
Says Hampton Prexy
WASHINGTON, (C.N.S.)-Com-
plimenting the Howard Bisons
upon their sportsmanlike con-
acting Principal George P. Phenix,
of the Hampton National and
President Mordecal Johnson of
Howard University the following
letter in relation to the footba-
l team name and teams last week at Hampton. When
Hampton won 6-0.
The letter reads:
"I was in New York last week, but came down Friday night especially that I might see the game between Howard and Hampton. Saturday afternoon. "I watched the game from beginning to end and noticed particular men, while they were here. They impressed me as a fine lot. The game was orderly and clean throughout. I thought you might be able to please impression your boys made here."
Tuskegee Defeats Soldier Team, 24-7
HACKERMAN'S FALL SHOWING Mallory and Emerson
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CHARLESTON, WEST VIRGINIA
CHARLESTON, W.Va.—The Rev. o- O:
arper, pastor of Simpson MB. Chueh, be-
og ik the Rev, W.'W. aston. state sup-
frsisor of the Negro, schools of West Vir-
tata. preached Sunday morning.
‘The Rev. Harper is greatly improved. af
ter several daye’ Hines
‘The Rey. J. L, Thompson. of Plint, W.VA
ts conaueting % series of revival mectings
ft Simpson MB. church.
‘ohe NOACA.C.P. held a meeting t_St
aul'a 3-8, Chured Sunday, and the spe
Pil lectares deliveret by Prof. Matthens, 6
the ‘West Virginia State College. was fae.
are. A. Me Matone will exniiit at Gat
net "Audlioriim October 32, epent of th
Churches and the rece.
‘Sh Paul A-M-E. Church ts putting on
[harvest home cally sith appropriote serv
Keen Rev. Je Gwynn, pastor. Rev. J. R.
MeGiendon spoke Tuesday night. ” Othe
fpeakers, Wednesday and. Thursdey nights
the Rev, 9. Raymond Henderson, pesto
lof the Picst Baptise Church, has been Il
ux ts out again,
‘Tne NUACA.C.P.. is putting on a specia
arive for memberahip, Roping to reach |
goal of 1,000 members by the Tast of No
vember,
“Tne itinisters' Alliance of Charleston. an
vicinity veil) meet at the First Baptis
Church Tuesday. October 22, at 1 pam. Al
the mloisters ate. expected to be present
Rev. J. owynn, president
es) Viole. Wright, niece, of Mrs, Emm
loowser, Ys visiting th Charleston,
3. B. Rowe, the delegate to the O.N.LA
ee eee ee eee celerhed.
: F
boner -atel
Cie eee
—
oe
(ope
Meher a.
Avgvetx.tign: oF
‘toned complex- *) “Qyagl et
lonilearandsincoth. a a
is easy to get if you 0 rag
use Nadiaola, the NT
we Nadel Oe
eee Re ater
Nadinola Bleaching Cream works
a eae econ
uly: ae ee dany, When you
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fees oe Nae Sc
a0 Se ot Saracen
Eerie es
Te eect din dade by
shade, this fragrant white cream also
clears away eruptions. ciliness, black-
San ory es Si orca
All you need to do is to smooth on
SLES See Sete our tse
See oy ots wee
Se a en ker,
Fa sara anes
‘Money-back guarantee and direc-
‘tions in every package. Begin using
Nadinola tonight. At drug and toilet
Bee es tae ices
Se nt eat
peers Se Fe al al
‘Nadinola to you promptly, postpaid,
Ratio 0 200 De Neat
See et vecy coe
let. Address Dept. WW, National
Toilet Co.. Paris, Tenn., U.S. A,
cNadinola
BLEACHING CREAM
—————.!|TCU. Lt .. OBe ee 7
Carolina Couple Honeymooning Here
oe
crn
PN ee Ne
Ven Rp cae Ee °“é
ee Be a or
, <a *
Se eee) Ve
Bu meas cae Mk ewe
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—afro Photo
‘Dan Cupid made a dash for the pulpit and captured Rey, Gustave Caution,
an CUP eins ‘The bride’ was formerly Miss Annie, E. Lanier of
pouthful 7 "ter visiting several eaddern elties, Rev. and Mrs, Caution
ait return to Wilmington, N.C., where he pastors St. Mark's P.B. ‘church,
MRS. GEORGIA SHORTON and Miss Eth-
aXe Corbin, of 203 W. Hoffman strect,
fave jose returned from Ocean City
Md, ehere hey spent the summer.
patisS, MINTS STANLEY turned to bet
home, U2 Pine street, Cambridge, Md. af
ter spending week with Rr. and Mrs, Wil
ami, of 610 Lafayette. avenve.
MRS. PRANK WALKER, of Newark, Ohio
and Mrs. Nannie 3. Ross, of Martinsburg
Wiva,, are thsiting Mrs. Abbie Bell, of $03
Pressiman street, this week,
WILLIAM 0, TOADVIN, 215 Iadlana ave,
ue, Atlante City, te Visiling. his fate
here, emo si 2
‘MIGS GLEN THOMAS and Miss Naom! Me.
‘G09 of Allnniie Gly, Visited friends Nace 1a
Seuss They were en route te Maxton, ¥.C,
‘Phere they are texchers In the publle schools
samisiered eee Via,
LEWISBURG, W.Va.—Mr. Prank Perkins
Jer. returned ‘Sunday {rom Philadelphia,
here he visited relatives and attended
Game of the World series.
MT. and Mrs. Lake Gardener. of Charles
ton, visited relatives In the “burg” Sunday
‘Mr, George Cabell of Staunton, Va.. rls
sted his son and daughter-in-lne, Mr, ond
Mrs, Walter B. Cabell
‘Mk, Marion Cooley motored from Charlee
tons to spend the weekend at home
‘Rev. LC. Chase spent a very enjovabls
yin" compen, shilewisting
mother,
‘x lent school, nas been started for, the
people who con't. read or. waite, Ther
Promises to be n good attendance,
‘Mrs. Marye Cabell, of Julia, Wa. ha
adults entolled for a night schoo! also
“The. annual relly of the Mt. Tabor Bap
ust Ghureh on October 6th, netted sum
fo 31,00,
‘the revival at the Jobn Wesley M. E,
onuren ts inspiring. The pastors, who, are
Ging scuwe part are: Revs. Paictax, Red-
fran, tien, Lewle, Winston and tC. Chase,
fesident pastor,
‘Miss Beulah Chambers, who has been very
uke ts improving.
Hudsces Mary Bush, Ruby Redman, and
Nannie Johnion, of West Virginia State
Gailege, are there ang doing nicely.
REYSER, WEST VIRGINIA
KEYSER, W.¥s—The Ministerial Union
of Cumberiand and adjacent towns, met, In
Keyser, lett Monday. #8 commitize of ladies
Served the unton einer tthe James 34E.
Ghuren parsonage, Dr. B. B, Moon, pastor.
‘Sunday. ae Jamies BEE, Church, the an-
nual Evergreen Day celebration was held
Des B. Pe Moon talked. at length on_ the
True Tmeaning of “Evergreen Dos." — Each
person attending the service wore = plece
of evergreen,
‘A'S Spm, the Rev. G. A. Thomas. of
Moorefield, W.Va., preached.
At # pm, an Svergreen Rally was held
atter ‘g"ewo weeks" effort, the sum raised
Being $160,” At this hour the vested cholr
sage fis debute,
ithe er. Ancerson, of Delmarva, Del,
wasn distor at the parsonage.
irs. Gross, the sister-in-law of Mrs, Bit
aa Gross, fs vllling in Keser.
mmawniba Gnu weet VIRGINIA:
CHARLES TOWN, W.Va—Monroe Weeton
of Prederiek, Mey wan the gunat of Miss
Magdalene Russ, ‘oesdey evening.
‘The ev. ané Met. Dacson motored to
Shepherdiown, W.va., Inst Monday, accom:
Dames by the Ree. and. Mes. Parker.
rts, Biza, Willams mad ® radio. suprer
jar her home, Thutsdas.
‘he Rev. G. Dawson and Rev, M. Jnck-
son motored to Baltimore last. Wedoesdy,
sua rewurned nome Wednesday night.
"Monday, the Methodist choir of Charis
‘town, visited Shepherdtown, W.Va, (0 317
Rev. ‘Dawson, of Charleston, Wve... hid
the service sfondey night at Sherheratonn
Methoaist churen.
SXOW AILS; NORTH CAROLINA
SNOW HILL, NC—The Ast. group meet.
ingot vocational teachers and. farmets of
the year was eld atthe Greene County
‘Trelalng School, this ety.
"The mecting wae opened at nine o'clock,
by Prof, S. B. Simmons, state supervisor
Jot oeatlona) education.” The , lavocation
fas given be Je B. Blunt, m farmer of
‘Greene County,
"The tople discussed during the meeting
was erie. Number of Objectives, to He Pul
[Over th Each Community ‘This Year by the
Goettionat, Teacher, Members. of the F.N
BP. and the Parmers.”
‘Tie tople eas discussed by all delegate
presents Each vocational teacher brough
Qfo‘or untee farmers. from the comunity
invehien they are worktoe,
‘rhe following. vocational teachers en
pecsent at thls meeting: Prof. J. A. Prihce
Bnow Hill, N.c.2 Prof. M. S. Burl, Dudley
Nor Prof, B.C. Sitzer, Grimesland, N.C.
od Prot, K. E. Broadhorst, Parmele, N.C
"Dinner wae served at 1:30 o'loek, Co th
delegates, peesent in the domestic” selene
foom, and was prepared by Miss B, J. Hol
Tone’ director, ot thls department and th
Jane seal gitis, who are taking this course
NEW BERN, N.C—The FP. Bridge Club
opened tts season Wednesday at the tesl-
dence’ of Mes. ater Powell of 237 Pollock
[Sect oweive hands of progressive bridge
ere played. The fist prize was won By
Tis Ractn, “The "eochy went (0. iss
Mave ‘Barber. "A meni was served after
wacae.
Trove. present were: Mrs, Alston, Rev.
and ters ae dohnion, Mise Oaver, Misses
Dotaen, err, "hearuln, dennines. Cordon,
Zones, Sumner and. Mayme ‘Barber
ay. alnnie E- Kere_of the high school
atk, Mina B e"voung pes et
ings at the, St cypran church ist “Son,
ny ‘on che Bullglog. of» Noble. ite.
$2, Vivian ancerson. wil give 6 reading
Ind Ales "Jonoson eit read. paper on
2% eheteh ‘of the, Ute. of St." Augustine”
sunday at the mesting. Others on the pro-
Sram veil be. Alton donee and Prof. 3. 7,
Berber, wno will make the address,
Sire’ Bite Wilson Jett the elly for Quit-
rman Gee to spend fem Seeks ob Bust:
‘tis, Anna Day Smith went to Durham to
attend tne otballpame between the N.C,
State college and. Wilverforce, Saturday.
‘GREENSBORO, NORTH CanoLIa
GREENSBORO, S.Ct speaking to. the
student body of A, and 7. College, Mr. Prank
ren ot Mer, York. seer sient eee
tetary of the YALGA. slated that_Amertea
Today fe Sehg eduction cars of
hituralexprestion, amidst tte petied of mas
ferlal prosperity. ‘Today over & mllion pers
Sha are in the college and univeriles of
evchunueg. "We ate’ mow having © conflet
‘Netween the gunilty of exiture and fhe quan
ly of caus, according to Pivkin,
"Pre student body of Arend Twas thriiea
tng Wednesday when thirty near gterieg
Instruments arrived es 0 gio Me fiends
of the tnsittion.. Already Prof. 7B. Jones,
Sho ‘wih direct the ‘band, has siaried ve:
Tearais. ‘Prof. Jones staez that the boys
STB Sealy re Sand cancer Sa
‘Brday, Oetober 15, Shea A. and ew
‘Uincain ‘Universtiy, a eaee
Nov. 8 — Marian Anderson
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 17+
The Afro-American, Bal imores Satay
+ eepy
Honeymooning Here | AT LINCOLN “U'
LiNcoLN Cale), Pale Sond,
LINCOLN Cale Pte a
he Rune ip umm. Nee
IT, toe fOr MN nec tua.
Cee Tike BMS eee game tac oan
fag! vee ncn Ueen ®eiy. Cae
ere aa tert nee er
ee - Fag pet
DE remeron “usr, Cac, Hole, an Shen
: ie ae, Mackey, of Iast year’s class, came all the
: ae nee &¢ we yom Philadelphia. In thelr “de luxe"
I | Sa iy te Pe
[ee
pM 7 | te sunday moray series ote ay
aL | jueiagrbes eee etna! Stee
a by | (BSc Ramee
gs Et | emer proteser ere congue ne se
pe es #2927 |icer'and preached on, “Our Responstlty
oe ee | (ete
cy ha Be | [Suze ie: voung, 30, organist, and 9. B.
fp Fe | | lors nee te Shrne on ide
As ges. | [Pane'riatcc.a. Forum, under th leader
oN Pa 4 [ship of John 'P, Freeman, ‘30, discussed
gle as P| | ine topic, “Should the Negro Coltege Grad-
| ie Concent in en
a, < Jf] [ings atis Ome. Race, or Humanity in. Ge
Gon Par aes te eS: em a
ey esi Me iia Bs we watsa an
os : : HY [SRE PeDS cheat “took part ia the
i fame | |rencrat atscuson.
ey Bg | |Past Sas ears tor the. ex
on i Be] | | wit be in charaesot Prot. A. A. Bullock,
y BLA [uh Rate Senex Glens
Gee ete | | iesieesngronon, chine 2, thee
’ P| | acisttstF esos om the Sine
: Bay | |e ieee atic averted ae
. A] [sein Macn tntercome, tay a
: A] [eset hthcn ing come ter, a
: : Rivers | 2023 *ohatsne one these. cater
; at oe tert tate ip” A
Cy o a] ton, ~aheik” Jackson, “Lequacious’ Reed
A a | | ee Bes” tea the Pie ane Fo
4 ee | [Sk eosin.
pie roe MARYLAND
SWINGTON, camp ef
EWINGTON, Mé—The camp ended test
sunday wilh large ettendance,
Mlatler Whllam Host spent the winter tn
Germantown, Pe, with nis sister, Mabe
Sant Faines Lonmon will leave f0r But
felo, New York for the winter.
Wee Gusle ‘stourea visited her brother
en ee docwan Siele
PROTECT
YOURSELF
If it's Genuine Bayer Aspirin
it is
SAFE
Always the Same |
, Never hurts the heart
The World’s
cidote for | WES)
mi
ae
Annual MEETING
Maryland State Colored Teachers Ass'n.
9 ‘the
Booker T. Washington Junior High Schoo!
MeCulloh St. and Latasette Ave,, Baltimore, Md,
Friday and Saturday, Oct. 25 and 26, 1929
PROF. LESLIE PINKNEY HILL
af tne Cheyney Normal School, Pennsylvania
Ie Among the Noted Speakers Who WM Appear.
NUERE WILT. BE EXCELLENT MUSIC.
Arrangements ace belg mae forthe Stale teacher Co isle the Baitinare
ity MEARS oe SN Non Frise
JESSE 1. NIEMONAS, President 3. ©, PARKS, Seoretary
Sotity GEO. B. MURPHY, 1741 Deuld Hill Avenue at once Hf yon
| Mosiré necommodatlon. ik
ae Pe |
‘Moses Kahn & Sons
Gay and Aisquith Streets _
s] Down Furniture -- Women’s and $ 1 A!
| “fh emmm Misses’ Coats and Dresses WEEK
Sane terms for olf and new exstomers a etea ebaree for credit. |
Cars 4, 13 and 39 Pass Our Door—Open Salurday and Monday Nighte !
ee
You don’t have to guess or wonder whether we
cater to colored trade. The invitation is extended to |
you always and all you have to do is accept it, We
draw no color line.
The Same Courtesy Shown Everybody
Finest Dress Coats, $58
Our finest quillty dress coats. Ail-wool ma
teainls, oanulfally ik lined, Stralghe ine sil
houettes, flared, or draped, skirts, | Standing Sp)
Weiiats and tremed Dackse "Tsimmed with Wolk, &
Skunk. Kit Fox, Marmot (mink dyed muskrat), \.3)
Stuecinn Painted Wott or Cer Gat, Shawl of VY
[meh care seas newest inde. A
| Sees a
‘Women’s Finest Dresses ae
‘Transparent velvet — the finest 5 oe
alt Tabsies A large selection of $] 3-75 FS
Glee "tine avesses has dust are AS
rived. Draped, flared, of ruifled fleas
models, All the new Autumn shades—Dahila aR
Fe Gat tha Black ace prominent. Stes kl
tos. BY,
Extremely new silhouette $ 75,
aresses! ‘Exact reproductions of . \
Gresees that. sell for as much ax a
$op.s0! Crepes, velvets and sauins nine
Seem) uiese clever reocks. Mie newest and most if
Popular Kall styles snd colors, i
Mourning Dresses, $10.95 |}
Black mourning dresses. Wine Silks—satins, ,
crepes or_georgettes—are tailored in the newest /
STEPS OT Rey siyiea, but tallored Jn the = 1 Vg
Siyiole lines so necessary for mourning weat.
Mourning Coats, $15.75 Adé
Bhiek mourning coats. Allewool, all fll Lined. 3
pemchcls tuetsiomed, Long lengths, resular
peaalsltely ‘ihe tie. women’s: haf-eize’Siaply
longed siples most appropriate for mourning.
FURNITURE For the Entire @—1 DOWN
Home —1 WEEKLY
- 7 a
Homeward Bound
=
a9
Ss.
Loe oe ED
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Pa Bees
SOs ees
Eve Pos el
bier Sens al
by Rea. eS
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bee Re oe
os SE an
eo ete ss
i
Ce
eo. oe ae
de soos are AEs ee
Bee oe ae
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Po ae ee ea
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‘ og eee
Ae Ree ee
ces om
a c
oa
4 Moe fd
7 he
eee a
‘Mrs. Robert S. Abbott,
pant ue Sate Robert 8
‘Abbott of Chicago, have left Poris
for a tour of ‘Switzerland, Italy, and
‘Spain, ‘They -will vezuen 'to- America
Sra, he, wi
sprang end of SE _—
Pat To Pansy
Provident Internes’ Mardi
Gras at Elks’ Hall. The
Post Office Clubs’ Dansant.
Alphas Stage Hop. Letitia
Brown Honors “Zip” John-
son. George Sumner Whyte
is Given Birthday Surprise.
Saturday was truly a day of days,
football players, their rooters and
et ie
i ie a
‘The Alpha Frat house in Washing-
ton opened its doors for the first
fot popular, pretty damsels and their
boy friends to come forth and help
fenjoy the collegiate event of that
particular Friday evening.
‘The Pollyanna club was entertained
quite charmingly at the home of
‘Mrs, Edward Pisher also this week.
‘This occasion brought Loge many
pleasant sequeiniances, for she hai
2 number of extra guests. Besides
‘these affairs there were numerous
dances pulled off.
Mardi Gras at Elks’ Hall.
| brim-hatted Mexicans, pirates, Span-
fish ladies and gentlemen, ballet
|dancers and many other | appro
[Res agar nt le
|the “provident Hospital Internes
|AiSveGrasat ike” eu, "Pe
‘Swaying most, gracefully, my dear
ea Se i Bey
mother earth, knew of any hardships
for the merriest sengnter rang from
|°"Gragubtedis, Pansy. the one mos
Beth Woodland. Fashioned from
[pale pink delicate material, Elizabet
seemed to have just stepped froz
this month's style book. No doub
her costume was a good investment
‘bed with it and feel at home,
"Then, girlie, dressed as a balle
dancer. Ethel Waters appeared read
at that minute to go right on th
stage and dance in the scenes of on
hed it os Shae
Zerita Stepteau, too, attracted 1
gress deal of attention. Her cos
fume was composed of a little pinl
Ge wai ater
i ig bana
most stuntingly costumed little ladle
But Elaine Hughes, Pansy, as :
‘Hungarian gypsy, just ole you
go on having your fortune told fo
the rest of your days; while Olga Til
den, in that fetching pirate outfit
made you long to be stolen and take
TD aE ding sine
trice Reesby was quite the talk, wit
that cometh, shawl.
‘But Oh, Pansy, those Internes-
they turned Spaniards for the even
ing and maybe they wouldn't mak
any native Spanish lad feel abashe
in| those tons pie trousers an
alas eerie f
So an ner ine ae
mi
sei i a lees
‘hall had all the good features of
first class decorators attention. Tn
yellow and black streamers with th
many — colored balloons, whic
changed the lighting effect, gave th
hall an opportunity to be dressed u
las it has never been before,
"and if the costumes and the dec
cfs tg a
clder was ing out most free!
Fe ead aE an a
Se an a
jis hoped for in the future.
‘The internes include: Doctors A\
‘len Howard, John Edwards, sep
C. Neblett, Carrol St. Clair, Char):
Decasseres, Dudley Lee, McKinl
Reesby and Charles Woodland.
‘The guests cover about two hun
dred or more of society's most elite
Post Office Clubs’ Dansant
‘With every Sescripeae of novelti
that could be purchased, Pans, t
gether with Bea) Mason, the Gl
elub’s tenor par excellence, a8,
added attraction, the Post Off
Glee club and the Post Office Pr
[ereesire Organization's dansant, «
Yast Friday evening at Odd Feliov
The Naiion’s: Biggest All Negro Weekly,
THE FIRST INDUSTRIAL EXHIBIT
of the Relief Association of Baltimore County
so oo Ai
RELIEF ASSOCIATION HALL
CLE oe pan, TOWSON, MD.
NOVEMBER 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and ‘9th, 1929
se a ere iit toa chance on 4 Ton of Cl
po intormation write, Wal 2 sehnsent nse Aas'neldg, Tate, Me
sefsrmation wate ee ta Nigire. gi CENTS
Sah Hoe MCL tee Wek at eter ath
Se
$500 If I Fail ToGrow Hair
— BAe, G0, A Re en
ch Sh!
CE Saee CTs
ae weno” $1.00 Oy ira
oy nar Root Bair Grower 6% (GEN Hye
y | ot 42h Aa settee ne, cs AZ
§ (FZ sown Brame for salah, en
f ee wet a
i fae Sale BN
E 2oyal Chemical Co. WY Ne
q 50° Box 44, Hamilton Grange fare
7 ‘New York City, N.Y.
en See ee sccaes
Y 3
Lae ae The woman who inclades St.Jo-
Zz & aq seph’s G.F.P. in her daity health
Fl pull fied program seldom finds thst dull
i ors headaches, lack of “pep” and
b . | quick fatigue ruiz her hours of
ses recreation.
EP aL For St. Joseph's G.F.P. ie more
GEE RS than a mere stimulant! Not oaly
oes ae does it soothe ragged nerves and
" Dy pees banish fatigue: but it conditions
ee the system, inereaves vitality ad
Ba . tends te correct the causes
ZAR ied") | Scone
egg GEE. At you are ran-dewn, weak st
eg Zo delicient—finding le sed i
3 SEE | pleasures dall—you may nly aed
a a the help of 2 good tonic te beill
ee | 8 up energy and strength. Thos
=H ands of worsen who bere ind
py EF and beea benefited by St Jove
V/A EZ G.E-P. urge you te try it, tov. Tot
@ CF can get the big dollar bottle #
Was your dealer.
St.Joseph's G.EP.
t. s em oe ®
w She Womani Tonic ®
Inever forget.
Jevin Hughes Royal Southerners
played as they always do, giving just
the right kind of spirit and pep to
the whole affair—a wonderfur gather-
jing of old. and young, numbering
Eibut one hundred and fifty couples
‘The members proved most cordial
hosts and to put Jt in a nut shell
‘was a bang of a success.
Alphas’ Social Hop.
af you did not attend the opening
dance by the Alphas, given, at the
$ipba house in D.C. on Friday last
Pansy, you missed one of the swellest
ollegiate ars of the fal, 50 fa,
jee Clarence Pendleton is, there
is always fun and he and his boys
just went the limit on the ivories
‘and otier instrumental strings. Even
Bill Hil, the shelk, sang several of
the latest song hits. An the girs
why, Pansy, they came from every-
fwhere, From Baltimore, | Louise
Young, Bill Hill and James Murphy:
Anne Gray from Providence; Elouise
Walker irom New. York: Sarah
Terry of Atiantic City: the | Woods
ir from Kentucky; ho is teaching
ere at the junior high, and 2 num-
ber of boys and girls, friends — of
Johnson C. Smith university. In fat
Summing up everything, I. belleve
fevery state was represented at thet
sence. even, Henry McPherson, of
Galifornia, was in the bunch.
However, on leaving, everybody
itnrew out hints, to have just such
Janother one in the near future,
‘College boys and girls always can
‘nd amusements you know, abd can
make 8 lot over jas 2 small thing
Which generally, turns out better
than larger and more briliant af-
fairs.
“Zip” Johnson Honored.
I hardly know, Pansy, how to go
‘about tnis, but evidently Lawrence
ip) Johnson, of Norfolk, Virgin,
{the quarterback on the Virginia
State ‘college varsity eleven, is. the
poy friend” of Letitia Brown, of
Morgan colle, Anyway, ebe gave 8
great, big to-do for him last. week
ther home and invited @ long list
fof school boys and girls to help en-
{foy. the evening.
"phey danced and played _cards—
‘they sang and told school jokes, and
finally were invited out by,’ the
charming hostess into. the dining
Foom and served with an abundance
of everything that’ would tempt: one’s
appetite.
fowever, he has returned to schoo!
now, and no doubt is stil telling Le-
fitia’ in his letters, what a delightful
party she gave him
‘Here were her other guests: Vio~
tetie Jorinson, of Georgia; Edith
Eubanks, of Virginia State ’ coliege:
Dorothy singleton, and Clare Dow of
Morgan college; ‘Edith Camper. of
Coppin. normal: Harriet .Grooms
Geraldine Robinson, R. Pryor. George
Sforse, Hugh Scott, Fred Notting-
ham, Monroe Clip, Win. Cross Lan
Fence Johmeon, ot’ Virginia, State:
Patrick Lee, of St. Paul industrial
institute; John Howard, of Howard
University: Herbert Boardley, J. Taze-
wel, 6, Paige, Paul Blackstone, Alva
Johnson, of Morgan clolege; James
Garr and Rudolph Davidson. ' $0 you
see, there were quite a jolly bunch
there.
George S. Whyte'’s Birthday.
‘Whether we want to realize it or
not, we still have birthdays. There
His always, Pansy, someone to remind
(us. and think for us,
|"“yar: George 8, Whyte, of 663 George
|street, had another year added to his
‘age on last Friday, the eleventh.
His mother, Mrs. Annie M. Whyte
got Up the nicest litee ° surprise
Sorty in honor of his birthday, that
fou ever attended, and invited in 2
umber of his closest friends to help
celebrate with him,
‘Mr, George B. Murphy, st was
asked and Was present so) was, Wil
iam Anderson, James L. ‘Thomas and
Willlam Proctor. Bach one gave a
short talle and. toasts were given
while they enjoyed the delicious re-
past that was served them. Clar-
Thee Wing ebtertained them with
Foray mses and Br. Whyte fs st
ing to survive the surprise,
oo
pan JIicrraAn.™
AFRO VISITORS:
wutlam 8, Pari Gi,
Toledo R. Mosely, Oty
Miss Loreta Lewis, iy.
Arthur As Greene, Washleten, Bo,
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Constipation Often Causes Sickness
"About fifty years ago," says Mr. Lewis G. O'Brien, of Portersville, Ala., "my mother gave me the firstose of Black-Draught, andhave taken it ever since,when I paused a medicineor constipation. I haveused this remedy all my marriedlife, in raising my children. "I have used Black-Draughtfrom early forhearthm. I have hadspell of this kind, off andon, for years. This followsindigression, and indigressionconclusion, close on constipation. "I have found that thebest way to head off trouble isto begin taking Black-Draughtin time. It relieves me ofdizziness, tightness in thechest and backache.
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CRISPHEL. Md.-Sunday school at St. Paul A.M.E. Church were well attended. At 9 a.m. class was held at 10:30 a.m. a special sermon, subject, "Come In Out" was observed the evening school at 8 p.m. The Rev. L. M. Meneffe, pastor.
John B. Adams, who has been very ill, is able to be up and out again.
Mrs. Bortha Handy, who has been visiting friends in Annapolis, has returned after a week in W. S. Ward, daughter-in-law of the Rev. S. Ward, is spending some time with him in Critfield. University League met at Critfield high school, Friday evening, Prof. Togo West, principal; the Rev. L. M. Menece, chaplain, at St. Paul A.M.E. parsonage last week were the Rev. M. C. Anderson, the Rev. Lee Deshields, the Rev. Clarence Hayman, Mr. Hoobrooks, the Rev. and Mrs. J. K. Lee, the Rev. A. A. McDowell of Dames Quarter; the Rev. and Mrs. Malachal Rasin, Mrs. Waterz, the wife of Dr. J. R. Waters, pastor of the Rev. and Mrs. W. N. K. Wing of Stockton, were the house guests during the week.
Those on the sick list are Edward Moore and Mrs. Josephine Scarber.
FOND TOWN MARYLAND
PONO TOWN, Md.-Sunday was "Gleener's Day" at the M.E. Church, one morning preaching at 11:30 a.m. At the afternoon service, Prof. Fritz Krause gave a aray of the world to the Mission Movement. Mr. Manstaff and Mrs. S. G. acted by the Rev. John Goldsboro, acted as master of ceremonies. At night the Rev. R. T. A. Johnson was preached. The Rev. T. A. Johnson is pastor.
Miss Bessie Elliott of Rockaway Beach, N.Y., spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Bratcher, Mrs. May Ashley, Mrs. Freddie Prices and Mrs. Samuel Wilson, motored to Wilmington Saturday and spent the evening with Mrs. Julia Kennard Lee, Walter Johnson, Jr. Oliver Bratcher, Charles B. Hall, Daniel Bratcher, Jr., James Perrell, Mrs. Bertha Fletcher, spent Saturday evening in Wilmington.
Please have your change ready when agents deliver your paper.
CARMICHAEL MARYLAND
CARNICHAEL, Md.-Service at John Wesley W. M.E. Church, Sunday, were held at the McDonald's, 100 West 12th St. Rev. G. B., Mills. At 3 o'clock a rally was conducted, under the auspices of the four units. Collection for the day was made by the McDonald's, delivered a sermon. Sunday night the pageant entitled, "The Way of the Cross," will be rendered at John Wesley McDonald's, and there will be a trustee rally at John Wesley. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Russell have returned to Philadelphia, after spending the summer at his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frisby Anderson.
Daniel Hutchens and J. C. Coleman spend the week-end in Baltimore.
Miss Katie Wright and several friends, of Smyrna, Del. motored to Carmichael and were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Wright.
Mrs. Elva and Elva Goldsboro, school teachers, set forth an end at Carmichael Center, New York.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Mercer and Joo-
Sandie Bunnel and the house guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Griffin and Mr. and
Joe Daniels are. Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Mercer, Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Griffin
wilson and Mr. and Mrs. John Har-
liss, Monday.
Joseph Rhynes spent the week-end in Chester, Pa.
MARFEDL MARYLAND
MANYDEL. Md.-Last Saturday night the Ladies' Aid Society of Mt. Zion Mt. Church son, of Baltimore, at their summer hometown. After the business meeting, a social hour was spent and a repast was enjoyed by the students, the school teacher, and the Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Gernett were the guests for the evening. Sunday, the Queen's Bally, by the Junior School, was attended by church on the charge were well represented. The Queens reported $88.38. Miss Helen Minus, of Parkers, received the first prize. Sunday the churches will begin their regular fall work. Olen J. Berkley, of Philadelphia, was the guest, Mrs.苏cer Garnett, Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Berkley and family, of Millington, and Mrs. Wm. Berkley, of Millington, and recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. Garnett.
CLAIRBORNE NARYLAND
CLABORNE, Md. —The Rev. C. W. D. Derickson preached at Borman Sunday morning. Mrs. Annie Adams is on the sick list. Mr. Robert visited his brother of St. Michael's Saturday night. Charles Pinkney met with a serious accident, while at work last week. Ransom Caldwell and his brother, Charles, Jr. met with his sister, Dace. Debeck Waller visited Crawford Caldwell. Sunday.
Those wishing the AFRO, see Crawford Caldwell.
ELLICOTT CITY, MARYLAND
ELLICOTT CITY. Md.-Quite a few of the members of St. Luke's A.M.E. Church, held in Iowa, were present. Board, worshiped in Grace A.M.E. Church, Catonsville, Md. Sunday at 3 p.m. in a meeting that was held by the Boarded Board of Grace Church, Catonsville. Services were well attended in St. Luke's A.M.E. Church, Sunday. The pastor, Rev. Elijah Olsen, presented at 11 a.m. from the office of the Glimpse of the Future Glory," and at 8 p.m. from the subject of "The Valleys of the Valley," and the Sunday school at 3 p.m., as well as the League at 1 p.m., was well attended.
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HAIR DYE WONDER
A chemist and hair specialist of St. Paul, has discovered what is known as Hair Dye Wonder. It colors nothing except human hair, the application dyes the hair and stops the kink. No cure. Clean and not washed out nor rubbed off. Write Bristol Medicine Co. 788 Kelly Ave. Dept. A-12, St. Paul, Minn. for free and about it. It costs $500 reward if it dyes the hair or rubs off. It is simple, easy and easily applied. Get this out—Nov. 16.
MARYLAND
BRUSNICK, Md.-Miss Mildred T. Boyle
honored, D.C. spent the week-end
here, listing Mrs. Edna R. Holland and
family.
At M. Olive Baptist Church, the Rev. J.
Mary pastor, Sunday school was held
at 8:30 a.m., Sunday. The church is being
painted.
At Ebenezer A.M. E. Church, the Rev.
Ebenezer pastor, Sunday school was held at 8 a.m.
and 8 p.m. The Sunday school gave a biel social
Wednesday night.
The Sunday school Board is making plans
for the Sunday school fair, which will be
held in the near future.
The First Pentecostal Mission, Elder G. H. Johnson, pastor, the usual services were held Sunday. Jimmie Thompson and son, and Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Wedden and family, of Dauhs, Md., motored here Sunday, to see the funeral service and the family and Mr. Hester Hester and families.
James H. Beard left Saturday morning for Philadelphia, Pa. He attended Holland and Miss Clarisse Bruner, and Miss Bessie Hardy were visitors here from Washington, D.C. Sunda, and Mrs. C. H. Handy spent Sunday evening in Burkittsville, Md. and Middlebury, and Mrs. Leigh Bruner, Mrs. Laura Perry and Miss Thelma Bruner of Washington. They were the guests of George Benson, Md. Sunday. Earnest Robinson, of Frederick, Md., and Miss Bessie and Betty Hardy, and Hardy Moore moved to Baltimore, Md., Sunday evening.
SPARROWS POINT MARFLAND
SPARBOWS PONT, MD—The Union Baptist Church is having a revival service. The Rev. Carrol, of Fountain Baptist Church, is leading the service. The Sunday school is having an attendance drive. Come and make your class win the prize. The Temple, No. 631, Daughters of the King, of Point, had a meeting at the Elk hall on Monday last. The sick in the community are: Mrs. Martha Johnson, Mrs. Lillian Johnson, Mrs. Martha Crag, and Anderson Clay. The sick will be a Halloween dance at the Elk Hall.
Penton Brown and family, of Gfarrows Point, was called away to Remington, Va., on account of the death of his mother. She the B.Y.P.M. is having a special program Sunday. There will be special guests from Baltimore City.
Miss Amita Wilson has returned from New York City. M.E. Church will start revival Friday night. Rev. Mrs. King will have charge of the services. The pastor, the Rev. H. E. Tucker, morning the Rev. H. E. Tucker, Sunday the Rev. Moore will preach a special sermon to men nest午夜, at 3 p.m. Miss Julius Jones is here visiting her aunt Mrs. Fessia Wilson. Miss Breathe Powls is improving slowly.
EASTON, MARYLAND
POCOMORE CITY CITY
POCOMORE CITY CITY
Dr. DR. Dr. J. R. Watters of Mt. Zion M.E. Church, preached to the people of the city.
This was tithing week among the members of the church. Dr. J. H. Kish, principal of Princess Anne Academy, will address the Junior Church at 8 p.m. upon the occasion of the re-opening of the junior church for its fall and winter work.
Service at Trinity was well attended. A wonderful sermon was prescheduled by the pas-
sion.
tor, the K. W. of our folks motored to the First Baptist Church in Virginia, to witness a large baptism. Alonzo Waters left for Philadelphia, Friday night, to spend their vacation. Edith Waters and Mrs. Gerritje Merriel and children, motored to Newark to visit their sister, Miss Pesci V. Waters. Mrs. F. P. G. Waters is somewhat indis
Services were well attended at St. John A.M.E. Church Sunday. At 3:00 class was led by Rev. Major J. H. Purnell, preached from the subject, "The Subject of Discipleship." At 2:30 p.m. an hour with the children was held by Miss Nancy Henderson. The theme was superintendent, Class No. 5 is the banner class. At 7 p.m. A.C.E. League was presided over by Miss Nancy Henderson. The theme was Sunday, Miss Bessie Gunler will have charge of the League service. At 8 p.m. the pagan, "The Shepherd and His Flock," given at St. John Church. Rev. E. H. Purnell and Rev. Silas Shrigs motorled to St. James M.E. Church, Sunday day noon, and present to many visitors at St. John Church throughout the day.
NORTON MARYLAND
Mrs. Addie Johnson, of Wilmington, Del., is visiting her parents, Mrs. and Mrs. Stanley Howard. She is Lightfoot of Washington, is again in the city and will resume her quizzes as teacher in the elementary school here. Mr. and Mrs. William Nash, of Wilmington, city visiting friends. While here they were the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Massey. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sampon's son, A. and Mrs. Anna Kyung in visiting Mr. and Mrs. Anna Kyung in visiting Mr.
Sampson Amy Khnson is visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. Freeman, at Qui Neck, Md.
RIDGELY MARYLAND
The trainees held their rally and 8:00 was raised during the day. Dr. Drew and a crowd crowded attended. The members of Replanked Zion are renovating the church complex in the Community Conference, for that reason, services were held in the Replanked Zion Community House, next Sunday the doors will be thrown open to the public for the opening services will be held at 10:48 a.m. A new pupet set has also been purchased. Misses Irene Dunn and Marjorie Wright were invited to attend the opening services. Dr. Drew is expecting his father, Rev. J. L. Davitt, of Ocean City, N.J. to visit him during the District. Conference, beginning next Tuesday.
CAMP PAROLE, MARYLAND
CAMP PAROLE, MD - Sunday the 11th at the Big Apple Conference, Camp Parole. At 11 o'clock, Dr. L. P. Herring preached from the subject, "A Marvelous Change." Mr. Ida Igs. J. Raffi preached. She also preached at the night service. Our big tent meeting closed today with many souls added to the church. A collection for the day amounted to $38,500.
The Afro-American, Baltimore, Saturday, October 19, 1929
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GALESVILLE MARYLAND
GALESVILLE, Md.-Services were held here Sunday evening, by the pastor, Rev. E. N. Thomas.
St. Mark's Lodge, No. 96, of Galesville, held their annual sermon here Sunday at 2 p.m. Joopa Lodge, Eastern Star, of Churchion and Good Samaritans of Galesville, turned out with the St. Mark Lodge Sunday.
Sunday school was held as 10 o'clock. Missed Mildred and Sarah Maksell, of Maleah are visiting their mother, Mrs. Mary Maksell.
FEDERAL HILL, MARYLAND
FEDERAL HILL, JAN. 23th we will attended Sunday.
Jan. church will have mounted Sunday.
Tebasen church will have mounted pictures Friday night and an oyster supper will be given at the parsonage. Saturday night.
A Sunday school roly is being planned for St. James Church.
Mrs. Annie Taibers will give an oyster supper. for the benefit of the Mt. Zion church. Monday night.
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QUANTICO, MARYLAND
**QUANTITY** 6d.-The services at the Mt. Zion Monastery are offered at 9 a.m. class was led by John Giesel and George Wilson. The class is given Friday night by the Woman's Home Missionary society for the benefit of the community, and the netting $6; by this they were able to pay the bill in full and have a little money left for Friday night. The young people rendered a literary program. Other collections for the day amounted to $5.58. Raylyn Monastery is giving his bungalow a Raylyn oil print. The electric lights are installed in the
new church. October 8 Rev. I. D. Pitta, the pastor and Mrs. Pitta, and Mrs. Elizabeth Pinkett, and Mrs. Elizabeth Pinkett, to attend the eighteenth annual district conference, which lasted three days. On the sick list, some of the members who reaped nine crops of tomatoes were Linwood Stewart, Joseph Weatherly, Emory Pinkett, William Gayle, James Winder, Linwood Wilson and others. Those who were the APRO, please see the website.
BARCLAY, MARYLAND
BARCLAY, Md.-Services were conducted Sunday, at St. Daniel Church, by the Rev. Jefferson. Class was led at the A.M.E. Church by Chasen was led by The members went to Thomastown Sunday afternoon, to attend the camp of the Rev. W. F. Bratcher. Miss Hatal Hollis is able to be out and at work again. Miss Bright were guests of Geo.
Dickerson, Sunday,
Mrs. M. Gibson was guest of her son,
Charles Maze last week.
Mrs. Mary Berry used her father, Edna
Mary Berry.
Ollys Brown, who has been ill, is able to
return to school.
Mann. Nannie Eileen has gone to Easton home to host a dinner. Dickerson has picked 1400 baskets of tomatoes this season. The dime party at Mrs. Brown's residence will be on Saturday.
CECILTON, MARYLAND
CECILTON, Md.-Sunday was observed at Bethlehem church at tristee day at 4 a.m. W. Bowl. At 2:30 p.m. church school was held, and at 7 p.m., a song service was rendered. W. P. Ruley, promoter. The participants were Messra, L. Sewell, R. Boyer, M. Bowl, Mrs. J. Ruley, J. Heilman, M. Bowl, Mrs. Ennus P. Boyer, Mrs. Eva M. Harris and Mrs. Mary B. Young. Mrs. Lydia Helm of Saton, is the guest of Mrs. J. Ruley. Mrs. Mary J. Bowl left Friday for Washington. D. C. accompanied by her sons, Nathaniel and Infantino Bowl. Mrs. J. Ruley attended Washington, D. C. The Rev. J. W. Bowl will presch
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Pretty Miss Zerita Stephanue, 770 Dolphin street, whose costume was one of the most outstanding in the state, was presented by Grace Lass last year at the state's presentation of an Egyptian princess.
LYNCHBURG, Va.—Miss Nancy Goldsberry was elected vice-president of the Glossilla MIS. J. W. GOLDSBERRY, who visited her son and naughty-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Goldsberry, in Pontiac, Mich., has received the LEWIS APTT. of Baltimore, was in the city recently, visiting friends. DR. P. L. LANDER, who has been practicing in Charlotte, N.C., has opened a 92nd floor new WZ building. MRS. EDNA EVANS established with presiding in honor of Mrs. Dorothy Patterson Scott, of White Plains, N.Y. Louise Lewis, of New York, Patterson Pannie Smith received the consolation prize, and the guest prize went to the honor Misses Frank Anderson, Louise Ward, Misses Frank Anderson, Louise Ward, Nancy Goldsberry, Ellis Scott, Cleopatra Bradley, Cita Clark, Lucia Burrell, Burrell, Messiah Henttles Jones, Georgia Lander, Selena Strott, Orlando Harris and Christine Dillard.
MESS THELA MEMA entertained with progressive bridge Thursday evening, in attendance at a Virginia Theological Seminary and College. Mrs. Christine Dillard was the winner of the first prize, and she was served after which the guests danced by the lovely music from the radio, until the wee hours. Others in attendance, O'Neill Hattie Cunningham, Chara Majors, Fannie Smith, Elise Scott, Louise Bondurant, O'Neill Colins and Mrs. Alphonso Smith, John L. Mitchell, James O. Hopson, William Randolph, William Winiklea. THE SWAN ART CLUB met Pricely evening at the home of Miss Georgia Singleton. E. A. BONDURANT and grandson, Sidra Pitterson, J., spent the past week in Pittsburgh.
GLARENCE BROWN, who underwent an operation at the Lynchburg hospital, is reported as doing nicely, and will be moved to Martinsville, the past week-end.
MESSERS SAMUEL WOMACK and Rudolph Hawkins attended the Wilberforce University, N.C. AMONG THOSE who attended the Bluefield-Virginia State football game at Petersburg, Va., were: James Smith, Marie Roberts, Gregory Higginbotham; Messrs. Bldges Higginbotham, Lucus Patrick, George Martin, Frank Murray, James Henderson, Madeline Percy White, Joseph Taylor, Vernon French, Turner Patrick, Professors J. O. H. Hanson, J. E. Johnson, William Randolph, Mitchell, Coach Ted Thompson and Mr. and Mrs. C.W. Seymour.
MISS GRACY JENNINGS entertained with a luncheon Sunday, at her home for Misses Ocean Mellar, Martha Bolling and Messrs. Bernard Davis and A. J. Oglesby.
MALTER NYCENGS, of Jamaica, N.Y., spent the week-end visiting Miss Elizabeth Long, while en route to Tuskegee Institute, where he is studying landscape gardening.
MRS. ALMEATA BEACHAM, of Washington, D.C. spent several weeks visiting Mrs. MRS. MILLEDROB BROWN has returned from Washington, where she recently underwent an operation. She was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Brown was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Oils Wallace, of Third Street, MILLEDROB BEACHAM CARTER, of Bedford avenue, entertained a number of friends at dancing, Friday. Mrs. Brown was the guest of her sister, Jessica Brown, Elaine Turpin, Minnie Jackson, Elizabeth Jackson, Julia Turpin, Marie Ellis, Janie Carter, Philippe, Jessica Phillips, Mears. Houston McMillan, Laurence and Wm. Spencer, George Hughes, Maco Day, William Alexander, Thomas Hughes
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TENNESSEE
PARIS, TENNESSEE
The Rev. Walter A. Lewis, presiding elder of the Episcopal Church, ten thousand dollars against Ira T. Bryant, at Nashville, Tenn. The bats of the suit was label, as the Rev. Lewis claims that he, the bats of the suit, a paper, said he could not preach, pray, sing or whistle, and that he trusted to check the Rev. Lewis is well known in the city. Mr. Bryant is editor of the Allenite and ecclesiastical outstanding in church affairs. Both are outstanding in church affairs. Mr. Abel Allman, who has been very ill, I
Near Century Mark. Dies
Punical services for Mrs. Susan Puckett of Henry, Tenn, who died Sunday, October 15, 2015, at the Church at Henry, with the Rev. M. Davis, ex-pastor, officiating. Burial was made at Harper Spring.
Aunt Susan, as she was called, locked a few doors and locked many years old. She could recall many incidents that took place during slavery. She is survived by four daughters, three sons, twenty-seven grandchildren, thirty-three great-grandchildren.
MICHIGAN
DETROIT. MICHIGAN
DETROIT. Mich.-The event of the week in Michigan is the People's Finance Corporation, capitalized at a quarter of a million dollars.
Addresses were made by J. C. Ganey, mime artist; ceremonies; Rev. A. G. Williams, New Hope Baptist Church; Rev. W. H. Peck, Bethel A. M. Church; Rev. D. Daniels, St. Matthew Church; Rev. M. Kelch.
Amid brilliant unifrons, glittering plumes and fashing swishness by the Acceptance strains from the Elks band placed the cornerstone. Overhead, against a bright autumn sky, the group held their silt to the city's newest venture.
FIRE IN CAMBRIDGE
The Beauty Shoppe of Mme. Helen Coleman Waters was damaged when a fire occurred in the Harrington Bayly building (white) two weeks ago. While the fire was confined to the hall and adjoining rooms, the Beauty Shoppe was damaged by smoke and water. Mme. Waters is one of Cambridge's most popular and energetic colored women, having opened the first Beauty Shoppe in the white business section of this city. We are glad to learn that in a few days she will be reestablished. She is the mother of Worthington Waters, 1920 trainer of the Morgan Bears.
Lost Husband's Love
The above headlines appeared in a New York newspaper of April 4 in connection with a divorce trial that has attracted wide attention.
"She was a beautiful woman." owitness testified, "but she got fat and is not attractive any more."
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PETERSBURG, Md.-The Calendar rally held at Zora M. Church Sunday was a great success. The campus of Cambridge, Md., preached, H. M. St. Clair also spoke. Mrs. Morris Morris was the guest of Louse Spry, Sunday. Miss Elsie Spry will go to Philadelphia Sunday, to spend some time with her mother. Mrs. Mary Jackson Henson and children Sally and William are here visiting her. Mrs. William is here visiting her. Mrs. Hensen's first visit here in fifteen years Harold陆, Emerson Holliday and Rudolph Aldridge left Saturday for Philadelphia. Mrs. Hortense Jolly entertained the following young people last Thursday night: William, Mrs. Hensen, Mrs. Wilmore, Mrs. Sarah Jolly, Charles Cornish and George Cornish. The Ladies' club at the home of Mrs. Cornish on Thursday, Mrs. Wilmore, teaches in the public school here, became a member. A delicious repast was served on Thursday evening and a collection of $19.13 made.
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If you want to
lose your hair,
Grown One Inch
a month and to
have a mass of
hair, Beautiful
Hair, Healthy
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Itty Scabe
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The Healthy Hair It
has the Hair Care.
If you want to
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MASKIN
FOR HEALTH & BEAUTY
COCOA-TAR HAIR AND
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Maskin Cocoa-Tar
Maskin Cocoa-Tar
Oil Shampoo.....800
Maskin Vegetable Hair Tolu-
have a Smooth
Beautiful and Clear
Compliance-
Use MASKIN SKIN WHITENER
and MASKIN HEAT and Beauty Skin Soap
All the MASKIN Preparations are sold on or outside the guarantee everywhere or post paid by
MASKIN DRUG CO.
1339 Monument St. Baltimore, Md.
AGENTS WANTED TO MAKE THE MONEY
Felt Worn-Out
"I WAS very weak and had such a tired feeling, even when I had not been doing any work. Miss Mary O'Downey, 253 Oak Ala. whose picture is printed above. "I was sleepy and no matter how much I rested, or sat around I still felt worn-out. I had a bad taste in my mouth, and I ached all the time.
"I felt like I needed tonic, and nicu, and much Cardui and what done for others, I thought it would help me. "After my first bottle, I felt more like eating than I had before, and I didn't feel quite so tired. On taking it, I gained so much better, it sure is a splendid tonic."
WHEN AWAY FROM HOME Hotel Rockland
3 to 13 West 136th Street, New York City
Hot and Cold Water In Each Room—Immaculately Clean
Courteous Attention
Special Rates
Daily or Weekly
HARLEM 8962
CHAS. J. JONES, Prop.
TWIN PINES -The NEW PLAYGROUND-Near Middle River. Consists of nile (9) acres of the most beautiful woods, fields, orchard and shore property. Boating, fishing, large dune hall with player plano. Dancing every Wednesday and Thursday. PATRONAGE OF CHURCHES, CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS SOLICITED Walter Pinderhughes, 1203 Druid Hill Ave., Madison 2403
102 W. Satelego street. Three-story brick dwelling owned by H. T. Geisendaff Realty Co., operated by Savannah Smith. Damage to building and content, very slight. Cause, unknown.
818 W. Lexington street. Three-story brick dwelling owned by Louis Mellon, damage to building, slight. William Mayfield. Damage to building, slight. Cause, overheated coal store.
1208 MCCULLON STREET. Three-story brick apartment house, owned by J. Zukerberg, occupied by Rustis Stuart容伯. Damage to building, slight. Contents of coal store, $500. Cause, overheated coal oil store.
Sick List
Mr. James Randall of 715 W. Mosher street, a teacher at School No. 118, is out of school indefinitely, on account of illness.
Believe Young Woman Attempted Suicide
Found lying in in an unconscious condition in the City Spring park, Miss Lena May, 25, 223 Burket court, is in the John Hopkins hospital undergoing observation. She is believed to be suffering from mercury poison taken in a suicidal attempt, Saturday.
When you register at these hotels say you saw their ad in the Afro-American.
When In
NEW YORK
Stop at The Hotel Olga
E. H. WILSON, Proprietor A Select Transient and Family Hotel Lenox Avenue at 145th Street
Telephone Audubon 3976
WHEN AWAY
Hotel R
3 to 13 West 136th St
Hot and Cold Water In Each
Courteous Treatment
HARLEM 9622
NEW Electr
TWIN PINES—The NEW PLAYGRO
and the 39 rooms of the
and shore property.
player piano. Dancing every Wednesday
PATRONAGE OF CHURCHES, CLUBS
Walter Pinderhughes, 1203 D
AGENTS WANTED
To Distribute
The H. P., The Lucky Star
And The
1929 Combination Dream
Books
Telescope
The combination
Dream Book consists
of three parts,
New York Cleaning
House Report for
the past five years
Wife
G. PARRIS
219 Edgecombe Ave.
NEW YORK
$-ALWAYS HAVE LUCK!-$
Unlucky in Money
In money you
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LEO S. OSMAN B. Baltimore Branch.
1530 Kirkwood Ave, Baltimore, Md.
Why not have an X-Ray examination on your gout ill health? An X-Ray picture tells the story. Stop pessuring, and X-Ray today. Teeth X-Rayed for one dollar a film; the parts of the body at moderate fees.
Universal X-Ray Laboratory
1311 Linden Ave., Baltimore, Md.
Houses: Lakigtey 4100
Hours: 10-12 A. M. 5-4 P. M.
KNOXIT
PROPHYLAGIC
LIQUID
ASKS ANNULLMENT OF
"GIN PARTY" WEDDING
George A. Green Says, He Was "Gloriously" Drunk During Ceremony.
HAD LOST REASON
Did Not Know He Was Married for Two Days.
"We had a booze party and some younger let's have a marriage, and while I was gloriously drunk I was married without my knowledge or consent to Miss Arnila Green, 1639 McCulloh street," declared George A Greene in a petition to annul the marriage to the petition. the marriage took place on August 31, and was performed, he learned later, by a Reverend Mr. Claude of this city.
Booze Party
Green stated that he met Miss Arnita Green a short time prior to the party on August 31, 2005, when she booze party with several other couples. They obtained liquor and he became "gloriously" drunk. During the party, someone suggested marriage would add to the gayety of the festivities. By this time he was so drunk that he lost knowledge of what occurred. That day, he was a married man and that his wife was the former Miss Arnita Green.
She Got License
He accuses his wife of having procured a license which he had been carrying out and carrying out the wedding. He states that he never would have married had he been of sound mind. He also states that he repudiated the union and refused to live with his bride.
The petition was filed in circuit
the law office of J. Howard, PARK
Virginians Wed in D.C.
WASHINGTON, D. G.-Miss Dealia
Regland, 19, and Linwood Groom, 21,
both of Treolins, Va. were married
last week by the Rev. G. O.
Bullock.
Miss Ethel Johnson, 18, and William Deskins, 25, both of Falls Church, Virginia, were granted license to wed here last week. The Rev. W. D. McKenna, 26, and Miss Martha L. Williams, 50, and Miss A. Denny, 55, both of Falls Church, Va., were wed here last week by the Rev. W. D. Jarvis.
REASONABLE PRICES
Dancing Monday, Wednesday and
Friday Nights
1624 Madison Ave. Baltimore Md.
FROM HOME
ockland
Street, New York City
In Room—Immaculately Clean
Daily or Weekly
CHAS. J. JONES, Prop.
eric GROVE
FOUND—Near Middle River. Consists of
the most beautiful woods, fields, orchard
Boating, fishing, large dance hall with
days and Thursday nights.
AND ORGANIZATIONS SOLICITED
Oruid Hill Ave., Madison 2403
t.f.
NEGRO DOLLS
Agents, Dealers, Toy Stores, Drug Stores, Beauty Parlors, Dry Goods Stores, our Pretty Colored Dolls are big man-made makers during Fall and Christmas.
STANDARD DOLL CO.
222 West 133rd St. New York, ny 10019
or dropsy swelling or shortness of breath
write us for FREE trial package. In use
34 years. Colum Medline Company, Dept.
250, Atlanta, Ga.
MEN AND WOMEN RECAIN YOUTH
Do you wish the slow of youth,
health, inerased fatigue, the PEP-UP
TONIC. Strongly recommended
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Money back if not satisfied.
MEN AND
WOMEN
75 Wacker Drive, Dept. 9-F, Chicago, Ill.
ASTHMA
Coughs or Bronchitis
What Liver Extracts are doing for females that Insulin is doing for Diabetes, Jawn Jay's Famous Prescription is doing for Asthma. Sold only by the Argray Drug Company. Not one record of failure. Former Asthma sufferers who thought that they were hopeless are now going about in the enjoyment of life, entirely free from those dreadful diseases. Specifically pharmaceutical preparation, free from Nausea, habit forming, or injurious drugs.
Jawn Jay's prescription is famous because IT MAKES GOOD. All who suffer and who put their money, their faith and their hope for health in a medicine are entitled to get the facts about that medicine. Get the facts about this treatment for Asthma, Coughs or Bronchitis.
Literature describing this treatment
makes it possible to any-
where on request.
DRUG COMPANY.
107 Argray Bldg.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Big Ulcer All Healed
"Here is another letter that makes me proud," says Peterson. "One that I would rather have than a thousand dollars." It seems a miracle, but it's true every time of it.
I knew it because I get similar letters al-
ternately. I don't know if it's Pete's Petition or
Pete's Petition for Old Sears, exca-
mense.
"Is it any wonder I am proud?"
Dear Sis:
An untender suffer from an old running sore and ulcer. I had tried most everything without any relief from the pain. I obtained aointment and the first box took away the pain that had not left me before in years, and after I was able to walk again I am cured. The ulcer was 9 inches by 4½ inches, is all healed and I can walk. Never. You may use this to recommend your ointment if you wish. I cannot say enough to praise it. "Yours truly, Mrs. Albert 85 cents.-Adv."
Woman Realtor Got Idea While Student in School
Mrs. Mary Perry Has Developed Lucrative Business of Her Own.
8 P.C. Surety Dividends
DURHAM, N.C. (A. N. P.) — The Southern Fidelity and Surety Company, with its home office in the Royal Mail, has mailed 8 per cent dividend checks to all stockholders of record as of September 30.
W. G. Pearson is president of the company.
The special meeting of the stockholders voted to enter the states of Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio and Illinois. At present the company is operating only in North and South Carolina.
The company has an authorized capital of $250,000, with $76,000 paid in and $50,000 surplus.
Records show that company had a surplus of $25,153 for the first eight months of this year. Total assets are $134,000.
31 D. C. Marriages
Chirence Swell, 32, 164 Patmort-st. nw.
Susan, 32, 164 same address. The Rev
Rick P. Ritsch
Butter Palmer, Jr., 23, 1316 Union-st. sw.
Sophronia Samuel, 19, 15 same. The address.
Wilson, Degrimar, 24, 310 Hst., am: Amanda Springs, 21, 242 H-sk, new: The Rev. Charles H. Gatty.
Linwood Groom, 21, Treolius, Va.: Dealia Regland, 19, Treolius, Va. The Rev. G.
William Pertell, 22, Sisters College, Brookland, D.C.: Jennie Cargill, 24, same address. The Rev. C. R. Alexander.
Edward F. West. 21, 431 - stl. nw; Mary
Campbell. 31, 431 - mst. nw. The
Wright. 31, 431 - Saginaw.
William Deskins, 25, Falls Church, Church
Ethel Johnson, 18, Falls Church, Virginia,
Hiram Williams, 21, 2443 P-st, m.: Margaret
Robinson, 3642 P-st, n.: The
Hiram Williams, 21, 2443 P-st, m.: Margaret
Robinson, 3642 P-st, n.: The
Guy Henderson Hopewell, 25, 1707 131st-st.
nine address
The Req. Thomas E. Tilden
The Req. Thomas E. Tilden
Joseph P. Lewis, 37, 22. Glefdras-av, nw. X
Joseph P. Lewis, 37, 22. Quincy-ley, nw. X
The Rev. R. N. Gooch. X
James Cunningham, 21, 187 9th-st, nw. X
James Cunningham, 21, 187 11st-st, nw. X
The Rev. W. D. Javris. X
Wilson Wells, 24, 918 18h-st, npl: Lila
Wilson Wells, 24, 918 15th-st, ht: The Rev.
R.
James L. Baker, 22, 110 Ivy-st., North Brentwood, MD: Mary C. Williams, 17, 118 Lynn-st., North Brentwood, MD: The Rev. Richard P. Clanen, 22, 1309 T-st. ,w. Dorothy Crump, 22, 757 Fairmont-st. ,w. The Rev. C. B. Alexander, 22, 757 Fairmont-st. ,w. Adrian Gray, 28, same address, 20, The Rev. W. Westray, Leroy M. James, 22, 2914 Sherman-av. ,w. John M. Turner, 24, 1620 Florida-av. ,w. The Rev. William D. Jarvis.
Alexander Brown, 26, 618-M仕, nw. Best
tire律师, 19, 1454-Qst. nw. Thew
Brown, 19, 1454-Qst. nw.
Lawrence Baker, 22, 2353 Sherman-aw, nw.
Mary William Wallace, 21, 1214 R-s, nw.
Joseph W. Wheeler, 21, 1214 R-s, nw.
George W. Stitt, 516, 1008 23rd-st, ww. Mat-
tle, 516, 1008 23rd-st, nw. Mat. Rev. C, C. Williams.
John Preector, 28 F-st. sw.; Grace Pla-
ter, 34. S-st. 68. The New Pather-
ship, 34. S-st. 68.
William H. Ford, 60, Chester, Pa. 1: Mary
H. Ford, 60, Chester, Pa. The Rev.
P. Brooks
Robbie Crossby, 23, No. 3 Freeman-pw. 11,
Bethina, Hempell, 40, same address.
George A. Denny, 55, Falls Church, Va.
Matilda L. William, 55, Falls Church, Va.
R. William L. D. Jarvis, D. Jarvis.
Elizee C. Fosterer, 30. Annapolis, MD; Hat-
tle Digges, 27. Annapolis, Md. The Rev. R.
Raymond Jones, 29. 325 Missouri-av., nw.
Roseville, 29. 323 Missouri-av., nw.
Roseville, 29. 323 Missouri-av., nw.
Joseph P. Terrace, 48. New York City; Lu-
lain D. Jarvis, 48. The Rev. William D.
Jarvis,
Leroy Berry, 22, 1610 Columbia-st. nw.
Estelle Berry, 43, 483d-st. sr.
Grand Guilds.
William Spencer Johnson, 21, 1525 Marlons-st, nw; Pearl Nelson, 15, 168 same address. E. Walter Walker, 21, 1919 Montgomery-av, Philadelphia, Pa; Mac Lucie Keyes, 20, 1331 8th-st, nw. The Rev. Richard D. Grymes, 20, 1254 6th-st, 22, 1458 Columns-rd, nw; Arsnaio Workman, 26, 1739 17th-st, nw. The Rev. J. Million Waldron, Albert G. Barmore, 20, 1728 Jeremy-av, Jersey-st, 10, 1620 10th-gown, nw. The Rev. Robert Andersen
60 D. C. Deaths
There were 60 deaths reported to the Health Department for the week ending October 18. Included in this number, 6 were under one year of age. They follo
Frank Pleasant, 70, Emergency st.
Frank Green, 53, 1408 C-st. se.
Delores Lobster, 1 mo. Children's st.
Davis Carson, 1 mo. Children's st.
Lavinia Corser, 65, 1744 Stellard-st. wk.
Anna V. Churchill, 58, 1531 261st-st. wk.
Nell Garnett, 56, 337 C-st. sw.
Susan Garnett, 56, 337 C-st. sw.
Elizabeth Harrison, 40, 20 St. i-st.
Lena Wothers, 38, 1103 New Jersey-av.ne.
Vincent Dorsey, 38, 1103 New Jersey-av.ne.
Thomas Hunter, 4 mo. Children's st.
days and many other in-
firmships, and affairs of your life as indicated by Astrology. A visit to Partial Horoscope. All work Scientific and In-
formational mounts from grateful clients in India, England, France, America, Africa, in fact from six of the countries in which you live and I refund money in your case. Since long, Private Astrological Advised to
teresting and important
has been indicated by Astrology.
Send 28 cents (taxi-
meter) to the School of
work Science and In-
ternational monu-
mals from grateful
clients in India. England
and Ireland. USA.
America. Africa. in fact
where English is spoken
and I refund money in
the absence of money.
Since long, Private
the aristocracy of Birth and inten-
tence Write name, address and date of birth
of the recipient.
Tabore." Dept. 415, Upper Forjett St. Bom-
sia, British India. Postage to India 5 cents.
Sore Legs Healed
Open Legs, Uclips. Enlarged Veins, Gothics
Eczema heated wells you work. Write for
The New York Times. Home. "Describe your case. A. C. Lipe
Pharmacy, 1799 Green Bay Ave, Milwaukee."
A quiet, unassuming little woman, who has steadily worked out an idea gleaned from the classroom to the most beautiful home owned by members of the race in Baltimore, is Mrs. Mary Perry. Perry, who is the wife of Joshua Perry, got the germ of an idea to own property of her own when a child in school. Problems of real estate, taxes, grants, rentals, and other matters so that she suggested to her mother, Mrs. Bette Jones, of Scotchville, Va., that they purchase a home. However, limited by the time of this idea until a later time.
Was Virginian
Mary Jones, as she was then, attended the elementary school at her home in Virginia. She moved to Baltimore when a girl and attended the evening school at the high school business course. She later married Joshua Jones, who is employed as a chef on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. She began to accumulate savings until she was enabled to purchase her first car. Laurens street, which she later sold. Her next venture was the house at 1316 Druid Hill avenue, which she purchased and lived in for some time. She continued to buy, sometimes obtaining the property until on April 1, 1929, she bought the magnificent home at 1115 W. Lanvale street, which was built by J. W. Pitts, onetime millionaire merchant of this city. The owner may keep or may sell, is beautiful in location as well as in its interior appointments. It is a three-story mansion edifice facing Lafayette square and is next door to Metropolitan Ma
The house, which cost the owner $32,000 when built, contains 14 rooms, including a conference room, floors, hand-painted ceilings, and all modern conveniences. The green and gold embossed paper on the dining room wall looks finished off by a carved oak wainscoting and mantel to match. The other mantels in the home are of white marble and tile, decorated in gold, said to be 14
"Black Jew"
The owner attributes her success to the regularity of her husband's pay envelope as well as to an ability to take advantage of her own skills and sell advantage. She was assisted by her sister, Mrs. Fannie B. Low, at one time, but now works alone, occasionally buying and selling items. Mrs. Perry is so modest about her ability that the world goes by admiring the beautiful home, not knowing that a financial genius does probably inherent, as the lady is a cousin of Willard W. Allen, well-known real estate man of this city. Friends have called her a Black woman, but believes that she is an opportunist.
8 TAXIS NOW
OMAHA, Neb. (ANP)—The Sun Set Taxi Near this city which comprises a fleet of six modern cars, has recently added two new business lines, a business business. There are three filling stations here operated by Negroes.
35 D. C. Births
There were 35 births reported to the Health Department for the week ending Octobr 14. Included in this number is on behalf of Ruth and Wilhelm Ables, girl.
Ruth and Wilhelm Ables, girl.
Shellie and Jinnie L. Miley, boy.
Isaac and Corlie Davis, boy.
Edward and Diana Damas, boy.
James and Lillian Hayes, girl.
Pred and曼丽 Roberts, girl.
George and Lena Coombs, girls, twins.
Poul and Caitlin Hines, girl.
Rebecca and Bettie Broughty, boy.
William and Grace Proctor, boy.
Wilbur and Virginia Jackson, girl.
Hemel and Caitlin Hines, girl.
Rebecca and Bettie Broughty, boy.
Robert and Beatrice Harris, boy.
Floyd and Natlalia Height, girl.
Alphonso and Caitlin Hines, girl.
Rebecca and Bettie Broughty, boy.
William and Hattie Berry, girl.
Clarence A. and Rebecca V. Post, boy.
Edward and Caitlin Hines, boy.
Charles and Virgilia Newman, boy.
Robert and Dora Beaverley, boy.
Jerome and Hilda Edwards, boy.
Edward and Caitlin Hines, boy.
Lusbend and Lusbend Jennings, boy.
Negi and Lyla McLoughlin, boy.
John W. and Nelle R. Mays, girl.
R. and Lusbend Jennings, boy.
Emmett and Helen Hemby, boy.
Roger and Naomi Smith, girl.
James W. and Willie C. Chase, boy.
Robb R. and Palmetto Jennings, boy.
N. Y. Civil Service
Prepared by the New York Academy of Business
Uffices on State Clerk List at Present Number 410-This test was held by the New York University. At least one-third of this number are girls and boys of our group, four of this group with an average of 18.5, six of this group with 18.5 and Harlem should be proud. Several appointments have already been made from this list: the salary range is from $400 to $600.
CITY EXAMINATIONS—Applications Now Being Issued—Parole Officer, and Inspector of Public Instruction from Municipal Building, N.Y.C., from October 13 to November 1.
Temporary Clerk For Census Work—The U.S. Clerk Service has announced that will receive applications until November 2, 1929, for certain temporary p.itions in the Bureau of the Census in connection with the 11th decennial census.
The positions are—junior clerk calculating machine operator, and junior clerk is from $1180 to $1440 a year.
FEDERAL EXAMINATIONS—Applications for Open Substitute $1500 a year, Driver-Merchane for Post Office service at $1600 a year, Guard, for service on Ellis Island and Bronx, Driver-Merchane for Bronx, Hospital, Bronx, $1500 a year, October 30, 1929, is the last day for filing applications for Guard. Examinations held monthly, entrance salary $1700 a year, with yearly increase of $100. Applications and information for the Federal examinations obtained from Custom House, New York. FOR EXAMINATIONS—Junior clerk ttypist. Clerk file, clerk, stock clerk, clerk-book,eeper, clerk-stenographer, assistant-matron teacher (elementary), and many others. Applications and application form obtained from the Commission, State House, Trenton, N.J. Don't forget the two big examinations from the Commission pending STENOGRAPHER-TYPIST, Grade. 2, and GLERKE, Grade. 2. Watch this monitor for dates.
APPUF
Pitty substitute clerks in the Brooklyn
museum at 65, 65 cents an hour.
post office at 65 cents an hour.
*Thirty cents* each, for clerk list k.
from the clerk (G) A list,
both state examinations, held May. 1922.
Four of our girls on this list of certifica-
tions.
*Fifteen Examiners appointed at $1800 a
year. Fourteen Food Inspectors, Gr. 2, at
$1800 a year. Ten Prisoners at $1800
a year. Five Prisoners at Gr. 3, at $1800
a year. Five Court Attendants at $1260
a year. Three Law Examiners, at $1560
a year. Fifteen City Accountants at $2160
MARRIED
THIS WEEK
DAVIS-WALKER—James C. 37, 905 N. Cat-
houn-st. 11.
FRAMED DYSON-Arthur, Jr. 43, widow-
er, 1230 Stockton-st. Lottie, 31.
PHIPPS-DORSEY—James J. Junco,
Hawkins, Hewitt, son.
ANnapolis Junction P.O.
Jenne, Annapolis Junction, MD, 42.
HENSON-GARR-Edgar L. 30, 404 W. Cen-
tury, Hewitt, son.
PUGH-WILLAMS—John T., Fairfield, MD,
23; Angelina, Fairfield, MD, 20, 170.
19, 1146 N. Calhoun-ss. 28
HARRI-ARVIN - Nathan L., 21, 309 E. 23rd.
C
st. Jessele
Mount.-st. ERER - Joseph, 30, 1319 N
mount.-st. Mimie, 28, 1919
KHAM-NICHIOS-Aaron, 49, widower. C
LEWIS-POX-AcherM, 38, widower, 151
N. Strikerst.-Mary J, 28, divorced,
SCOTT-NAHER, 25, 11
WALKER-PamM, 25
WALKER-WILLAMS-Robert B, 18, 528
Conway-st. J, RulA, 17, 17
TAYLOR-ALLENVILI, 21, 916 Leadenhall
COMBS-ROSGE-Pfrederick, 63, widower
1805 N. Franklin-st. Maris L, 42, widower
GULLSON-ORGE-Gorence, 4, 507 N
BELL-Al. E. *Thurston* Wills, E. 25, 3415 Paton
HELL-Al. *Thurston* Wills, E. 25, 3415 Paton
*Audubon*, E. 25.
COLLINS-CGULBERT-Lester R. Washington, D.C. 25, 1522 12th st., Nw. Hazel, Philadelphia, Pa.
Missing
Alice Dockin, 239 Morris street, missing staircase, D.C. 25, 1522 12th st., Nw. Hazel, Philadelphia, Pa.
Mother Dockin, of the same address, Age. 12 yrs; height. 4 ft. 7 in.; weight. 8 lbs.; complexion. dark brown skin. Wore a brown coat, light brown hat and brown tennis shoes.
Lola Graves, 232 S. Dallas street, missing since October 8th, reported by William Graves, husband of, with her son, John Graves, of the same address, weight. 40 lbs. Wore a dark coat trimmed with fur.
George Washington, 1411 Madison avenue, missing since September 28, reported by Frances Washington, wife of, with her son, John Graves, of the same address, weight. 40 lbs. Wore a dark coat trimmed with fur. Left home with his sons, Frances, ages, and Clarence, ages, with the same address, and has failed to return. Wore dark suit, light brown felt hat, black lace shoes. Has a smooth face.
Henry Shumate, 951 N. Wolle street
missing since October 5, reported by Pansy
Shumate, 951 N. Wolle street, age 45,
height, 6 ft.; weight, 150 lbs.; color,
lighten, brown. Glass eye in right
socket, wear eye glasses. Wore blue serge
suit, striped shirt, black pants, riding in
Douglas tour automobile, with Maryland license.
84-851.
Local Deaths
SCHOOL BOY INJURED
SCHOOL BOY INJURED
En route home from school, Charles Dawkins, 13 years old, 1030 Compton street, received a fractured leg when he was at a trunk which竖了股 at the street. Tuesday,
BOY BITTEN BY DOG
Playing in the rear of his home, Harry Elliott, 241 Rivers street, sustained minor lacerations of the leg and arm when he was bitten by a stray dog, Saturday.
WALKS IN SLEEP; HURT
George Henson, 53, 409 Archer street, received a fractured knee and a probably fractured skull when he fell down the stairway in his home while walking in his sleep, Monday night.
FALLS FROM SHED; HURT
Playing on the shed in the rear of his home, John Coffin, 11 years, 1240 S. Elton street, had his left leg broken when he fell twelve feet to the ground, Saturday.
PAYS $100 MONTHLY FOR ONE CENT A DAY
PAYS $100 MONTHLY FOR ONE CENT A DAY
The Southern Fidelity & Surety Company, Box 612, Durham, N. C., is issuing an accident insurance policy at a cost of one cent a day. Benefits are $100 monthly and up to $1500 at death. The policy will be sent for 10 days free inspection if you will send your name, age, address, beneficiary's name and relationship. After studying the policy you may return it or send $3.65 to put it in force for one year. 0-19
BLOOD D. SEASES—No Matter How Bad or Old the Case or What's the Cost. Patricia's Treatment used successfully for over 25 years in the most severe and chronic cases. Write now. 612, Chicago.
Bladder Irritation
L. functional Bladder Irritation disturbs your sleep, causes Burning or Itching Sensation, Backache or Leg Pains, making a feel tired. Learn how to encourage you not why try the Cystex 48 Hour Test? Don't give the Cystex 48 Hour test at any drug store. Put it to the test. See for yourself. If it doesn't bring quick improvement, and satisfy you completely, Try Cystex today. Only 60c.
Northwestern Pharmacy
1200 Pennsylvania Ave., con. Dolphin St.- Phone Madison 4173
900 Harlem Ave., cur. Fremont Ave.
Phone Madison 5305
1016 Druid Ave., con. Oxford St.
Vernon Ave.
First Class Medicines at FIRST CLASS LOW PRICES
1 pint Iron Quinine and Strychnine—for 75 Cents
Most Places Get From 89c Up to $1.25 for This
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
For This Grade of Oil Most Places Charge You $1.00
$1.25 Father John's Medicine.....89 Cents 65c P. K. Powder.....48 Cents
60c Father John's Medicine.....45 Cents $1.50 Pertussin.....98 Cents
$1.50 Gray's Glycerine_Tonic.....$1.08 50c Nadinola Bleach.....39 Cents
$1.50 Noxzema.....$1.08 35c Pond's Cream.....25 Cents
$1.15 Othine, double or triple.....83 Cents 35c Welter's Tooth Powder.....30 Cents
And Hundreds of Other Items in Proportion
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
A Natural, Beautiful Living FLORIDA FERN Given Away ABSOLUTELY FREE with Every Box of Nature's Own Laxative
PELL-MA TEA
Charles Willms
Surgical Instrument
Company
223 WEST SARATOGA STREET
Established
Over Fifty Years Ago.
TRUSSES
Perfectly Fitted
Elastic Stockings
Fitted by Measurement
Sick Room Requisites
Of All Kinds
Lady Attendants
tt.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PURE DRUGS
QUICK SERVICE
M. STRASBURGER
PHARMACIST
North and Madison Aves.
Lafayette 1778
Felt Mattress, $12.00; Mahogany Post
Box Springs, $25.00; Hair Mattress, $25.
90% of the cost of Mattresses is the
material inside. If your mattress is
lumpy, call Vernon 0355 and talk it
over.
SANITARY MATTESS CO.
921 Madison Ave. Baltimore, Md
Six room house, complete with fixtures. Nothing down, $1.50 weekly.
24 MONTHS TO PAY
HARFORD ELECTRIC CO.
631 WASHINGTON BOULEVARD
CALVERT 6915.
AUCTION!
TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS. 10 A. M.
You should attend Auction Sites
of Furniture, Household Goods, Rugs,
China, Etc.
Every Tuesday and Friday, 10 o'clock
A. M. at
708 N. HOWARD STREET
E. T. NEWELL
Auctioneer.
MME. GRAYSON
BEAUTY PARLOR
Hairdressing, Mantaining, Etn.
1828 PENN. NIVE
HOURS: 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
MADISON 6756
WHAT ABOUT IT?---
You take a chance on being humiliated during the hours of your illness, that can be easily eliminated by protecting yourself with a SICK AND ACCIDENT POLICY.
ARE YOU INSURED?
IF YOU ARE NOT—Don't turn a deaf ear to our agent when he asks permission to explain our Sick and Accident Insurance policy.
Home Friendly Insurance Co.
Centre St. & Park Ave.
Known As The Prompt Paying Company
Ernest A. Brooks
1711 DRUID HILL AVE.
Ladies', Gentlemen's and
Children's Clothes
French Dry Cleaned
Dyed and Repaired
Latest Modern Equipment
Call and Delivery Service
Phone Madison 9244
Watch For Date of Formal Opening
and Inspection
Phone Gilmor 6410, South 1910 and Madison 4922-W
DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE
JOSEPH A. LIVELY
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER
My service is always as near as the nearest telephone calls from the
authority. We greet the person from careful attention as
those from closer at hand. We complete modern motor equipment annihilate
distance.
409 N. Mount St.
709 S. Fremont Ave.
Baltimore, Maryland
PHONES: SOUTH 0422; VERNON 4029-W, 5138, 5963
JOHN H. TOADVIN
Mortician
142 West Hill Street 1027 Druid Hill Avenue
GARAGE, 512-44-40 GREENWILLOW STREET
I Have the Finest Grey Hearse in the City
COUNTRY WORK—CALVERT COUNTY, MD. WORK A SPECIALTY
Limousines For All Occasions From My Own Garage
Never Closed Phone, Wolfe 3355
DIGNITY
An Essential Feature in Every Entire Funeral Provided and Directed by
BYRON WRIGHT
Better Known as "Sergeant Wright"
DIGNITY, GOOD TASTE, FIRST CLASS SERVICE ARE PARAMOUNT
MY PRICE WILL SUIT YOU
Office, 1218 McElderry Street
C. and P. Phone, Madison 2817
George T. A. Gibson
Funeral Director and Embalmer
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
OFFICE AND RESIDENCE:
1735 Druid Hill Avenue Baltimore, Maryland
POSITIVELY NO PARTNERSHIP
MRS. ROBERT A. ELLIOTT
Funeral Directress and Embalmer
I AM THE SOLE PROPRIETOR OF THIS BUSINESS
AND AM NOT IN PARTNERSHIP WITH ANYONE.
Phone, Wolfe 6590
Immediate Service Day and Night
1725 Ashland Avenue, corner McDonough Street
Branch Office: 2109 Druid Hill Avenue
LIMOUSINE FUNERALS A SPECIALTY
THE WAY WE LOOK AT IT
We look upon our work as opportunity to be of service. It has practically the same problems as any other business or profession. But we subject the same issues to our own control in the same scope as sympathy and thoughtfulness, and our duties have a large part in the ideal we set for ourselves.
CLARENCE C. WRIGHT
Some people prefer QUALITY, others took at PRICES. I can suit you. My prices make it expensive to go elsewhere when you used an undertaker.
"WRIGHT QUALITY"
EDWARD RINGGOLD
A. BROOKS' SUCCESSOR
Will Give to All the Very Best and Courteous Service Possible.
CARRIAGES AND LIMOUSINES TO HIRE FOR ALL OCCASIONS
For a Few Days Only
BEAUTIFUL Living FLOR
ELLY FREE with Every Box
LL-MA T
Diuretic for the Stomach, Livi
Siddons & Lester
FLORISTS
Funeral Designs and Wedding
Bouquets a Specialty
All Orders Promptly Attended To
CHAS S. LESTER. Mgr.
616 Penna, Ave. Cor, George St.
Baltimore, Maryland
Phone Vernon 4372
Night Phone, Lafayette 0492
Phone Gilmor 6410, South DAY AND N
JOSEPH
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
My service is always as near as suburban and rural districts receive those from closer at hand. My common distance:
490 N. Mount St.
Baltimore
PHONES: SOUTH 0422;
JOHN H.
Mo
142 West Hill Street
GARAGE, 512-44-46
I Have the Finest C
COUNTRY WORK-CALVERT C
Limpossies For All Occasions
Never Closed
DIGIT
An Essential Feature In Every Entrance
BYRON
Better Known and DIGNITY, GOOD TASTE, FIRST MY PRICE W
Office, 1218 M
C. and P. Pho
George T
Funeral Director
OPEN DAY
OFFICE AND
1735 Druid Hill Avenue
POSITIVELY
MRS. ROBER
Funeral Director
I AM THE SOLE PROPERTY AND AM NOT IN PARA
Phone, Wolfe 6590
1725 Ashland Avenue,
Branch Office: 2
LIMOUSINE FUNERAL
THE WAY W
We look upon our work as practically the same problem as is subject in the same way to consider it gives unusual scope to these qualities have a large part.
MRS. GEORG
MONCURE A.
1631 Druid Hill Ave.
CLARENCE
Funeral Director
Some people prefer QUALITY, other My prices make it expensive and undertaker.
"WRIGHT
Phone M
1364 N. Carey St.
EDWARD
A. BROOK
Funeral Direct
Will Give to All the Very Be
CARRIAGES AND LIMOUSINE
1463 north Care
PHONE MADISON 6381
FREE!
IDA FERN
Nature's Own Laxative
EA
and Kidneys
Thomas E. Kelson
Funeral Director and
Embalmer
Successor to the Late
MR. AND MRS. JAS. H. DENNIS
1303 Pressman Street
PHONES
5901—MA dison—9214
POLITE ATTENTION AUSURED
The Nation's Biggest All Negro Weekly. ANGLO-SAXON ONLY RACE TO MAKE COLOR A CULT
B: NANNIE H. BURROUGHS
On Saturday night, October 12, be WMAL, the Columbia station at Wash. In his introductory of a pianist number, the announcer said that "and spirit of the old and of the darker and the Harlem high brow—is still a Negro. That on earth did that man men GRO."
Of course he is and so is the Angle. The Negro would be a monstrosity if Chinese or Anglo-Saxon. He can't be born of flesh and "that which is same kind of flesh."
SPIRIT
But men do not win in this work spirit is all. That's why Jesus said again. As soon as any man of an spirit—he rises from the common live only in the flesh.
The Negro cannot gain anything sleek. He can make as much other human being if he works other human being works.
GOOD LU
Physically—in the flesh—he will be when he has the power to concoct self or be worked on, others, and by themselves. He has been out of slavery. Anglo-Saxon has been out—he will kill civilization and power to CONFORD and culture of the period in him.
COMING
A man hasn't done anything for world white and the only way he can something mentally, morally, and spirit of the veneer, the Anglo-spite of the veneer the Indian will a Chanman, and the Negro, a Negro, physically, but millions of them spiritually, and with those in power and promote great institutions.
ANGLO-SAXON
The Anglo-Saxon is the only race against men's color and penalizes the Anglo-Saxon is the only race RIGHT the great opportunity, they don't give a all color is only a matter of taste.
The Anglo-Saxon is the only race that just being white makes a human there is no truth in it. The statement still a Negro, is that it matters not in culture, and useful to human society inferior to the Anglo-Saxon because he infers that a white horse is superfet that the black horse is a black Solomon. "Can't that mischievous 'bunk' possible white person subscribes to it.
NORTH CAROLINA
On Saturday night, October 12, between seven and eight o'clock, station WMAL the Columbia station at Washington, broadcast a program of music. In his introduction of a program, the number, the announcer said that "the next selection will show the ideals and spirit of the old and of the new Negro—the spirit of the plantation darkey and the Harlem high brow—but no matter what he is, the Negro
is still a Negro. What on earth did that man mean? "THE NEGRO IS STILL A NEGRO. Of course he is and so is the Anglo-Saxon, the Indian, and the Chinese. The Negro was a bona fide if he was born a Negro and turned Chinese or Anglo-Saxon. He can't be anything else, physically, because he is born of flesh and "that which is born of flesh is flesh"—remains the
SPIRIT IS ALL.
But men do not win in this world on flesh. Flesh is incidental—spirit is all. That's why Jesus said to Nicodemus, "Ye must be born again—As soon as any man of any race is born again—born of the earth—he rises from the common level and becomes superior to all who live only in the flesh.
The Negro wouldn't gain anything moral or spiritual by merely a physical change. He can make as much of himself, physically and mentally as any other human being if he works at it as long and as hard as any man being works.
GOOD LOOKING
Physically—in the flesh—he will be as good looking as any other human being when he has the money, concoctions, and the time to work on himself or be worked on by others, as long as some other races have been worked on by others, and by themselves. When he has taken over a thousand years—as long as the Anglo-Saxon has been out—he will have, at least as much of the VENEER of civilization and power to CONFORM to certain standards of the ethics and culture of the period in which he lives, as the Anglo-Saxon now has.
COMING WHITE.
A man hasn't done anything for himself by simply coming into the world white, and the only way he can prove his superiority is by becoming something mentally, morally, and spiritually. In spite of the veneer, the Anglo-Saxon is still an Anglo-Saxon, and in spite of the veneer, the Anglo-Saxon will always be an Indian, the Chinaman, a Chinese, and the Negro, a Negro, and they will not try to be anything physically, but millions of them can be equals morally, mentally, and spiritually, and with those three powers they will build great governments and promote great institutions.
ANGLO-SAXON ONLY.
The Anglo-Saxon is only race on earth that keeps up a complaint against men's color and penalizes them for what God made them. The Anglo-Saxon is the only race that is trying to make WHITE, and not RIGHT, the passport into the great world of unlimited opportunity. Men all color is only a matter of taste.
The Anglo-Saxon is the only race on the planet that is trying to prove that just because a human being superior. What's the big idea no truth in it?
The inference in the statement "no matter what he is, the Negro is still a Negro." is that it matters not how richly endowed, how well educated, cultured, and useful to human society the Negro may become. he is still inferior to the Anglo-Saxon because he didn't "choose" to be born white. he inters that a white horse on a black horse regardless of the race. Just being white makes even a white idiot superior to a black Solomon. Isn't that mischievous "bunk" to send over the air? Thank God no possible white person subscribes to it.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. The Rev. R. J. L. pastor of Grace A.M.E. F. Church, pastor of Grace A.M.E. F. Church, from item 1 King 177. "And it came in pass after a while that the brook cranked and jolted men and two young women joined the church. The clerer received excellent
NANTON NORTH CAROLINA
MANTON, N.C.-Miss D. Young, this has been the guest of Miss Hancee has returned to her home in Battleson. The County Training School, of which she is the director, has two instructors. Two new instructors have been added to the faculty, Miss Whitmore, United States High School, Greenbush High School, the teacher of the class. Other members of the faculty, Edith J. Johnson, Brown, Thomas Bickwell and Zora Bailer.
WEST VIRGINIA
HIGHLIGHTS. W.VA.-Services were well attended Sundays, at Mt. Olive M.E. Church, Glorde. The Rev. J. W. Hardesty, S.J. attended Sunday's at 10 a.m. the sacrament of the Lord's Supper administered. Payments were returned to Dupuis Grace. W.VA. after spending the summer at Browneville, W.VA., with his mother, Mrs. Pyle. While there, she visited relatives and friends, and Mrs. J. W. Hardesty were on Wednesday, at the residence of Mrs. John and Mrs. Susan Blake's, at St. Mabel Shepherd Poster, of New York, has returned home after spending a week with his sister, Mrs. Estella Mabel also visited other relatives and friends. Mrs. Arthur Clayson, of Washington, C.C., is spending a few days with Mrs. Lilin Brown and sister, Mrs. R. H. Belter.
Mr. Sannie Burrell is on the sick list.
CHILD KILLED BY AUTO
PHILADELPHIA—Luke Vance, 7
years old, 1848 Reno street, was killed
Sunday by the automobile of George
Griffiths, white, a city fireman, at
the corner of Broad and Brown
streets.
Griffiths was charged with man-
tenance and illegal transportation
of six bottles of beer in his car.
Will your HEA PLAN
Will your present
HEATING
PLANT
last another
winter?
SEXTON
Hot Air
Installation for
6 Rooms
Installed
complete $120
American
RADIATOR CO.
18-in. FLASH Boiler
6 Radiators, any height,
300 sq. ft. Radiation
Installed
complete $295
TERMS AT SLIGHT ADDITIONAL COST
Acme Heating Co.
224 W.Franklin St
Vernon 6381-2
11
between seven and eight o'clock. Stationing, broadcast a program of music which was going to play a Negro razor, next to a section still in the hall, ideas of a black horse, regardless of the plantation but no matter what he is, the Negro are "THE NEGRO IS STILL A NE-
to-Saxon, the Indian, and the Chinese he were born a Negro and turned be anything else, physically, because
is born of flesh is flesh—remains the
IS ALL
Id on flesh. Flesh is incidental—to Nicodemus, "Ye must be born a race is born again—born of the
el and becomes superior to all who
are born of physical by merely a phy-
k of himself, physically and mentally
eating, and the time to work on him-
ing as some other races have been
over a thousand years—as long as the
ave, at least as much of the VENEER
M to certain standards of the ethics
lives, as the Anglo-Saxon now has,
whitish.
I myself, the superiority is by becoming
the "Saxon is still an Anglo-Saxon, and in
Iways be an Indian, the Chinaman, a
and they will not try to be anything
can be equalis morally, mentally, and
ers they will build great governments
XON ONLY.
on earth that keeps up a complaint
in for being what God made them
to be trying to be born white,
and the world of unlimited opportunity. Men
straw about their color because, after
on the planet that is trying to prove
being superior. What's the big idea
"no matter what he is, the Negro is
now richly endowed, how well educated,
the Negro may become, he is still
in the future to be born white,
who is not a black horse, regardless of the
race. Just being white makes even a
m.
BIAS RECORDS FIFTH
NEW YORK.—George Bias, Baltimore tenor, has just made his fifth phonograph record for the Columbia Record Company, recording "Ain't No Match in the hit of the show," "Hot Chocolate Son," a composition by Sydney Easton.
Mr. Bias will leave for Baltimore on the same mother, and while there will broadcast, with Ambrose Smith at the piano.
Help Wanted
---
BARBERS WANTED-Apply 920 I
Street, Sparrows Point, Md. O-10
FIREMEN, Brakemen, Baggagemen
(white or colored). Sleeping Car
Rail Portes (colored). $180-$250
Bureau, Experience
277 Railway Bureau, East St. Louis.
t.l.
WANTED, Salesman to call on Bar-
ry shops and Hairdressers. No retail
or house to house canvassing.
Write L. B. Craig Company, P.O. Brow
155. Point Pleasant, N. J. o-19
YOUNG WOMEN WANTED
We need the services of young
women, light complexion, in every
community for a position that pays well.
Part time or entire time. We can
show you how to make a more
attractive looking. Write us today
giving references. Bruce's Drug
Store, Scottsville, Va.
BIG MONKEY selling V-C Salve. Full time or with other line. Every home a prospect. Repeats, guaranteed. Big profits. Vaude Co. Dept. B.P.O. Box 251, Memphis, Tenn.
MONEY, MONEY, MONEY, or whatever you desire. Write to J M. SPENCER, RUSSELLVILLE, ALA.
N-2
AGENT — 25c household necessity; something new; 3 to 6 sold in each house. Good sellers and fine repeater. Pure Sales Co. 200 Equitable Baltimore. Maryland. Md.
present
TING
NT
Just Wed
STARKEY-DOWNES
NEW BERN, N.C.-Dr. Isaac Wayne Wayne, Boston, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. W. Stirling, W. H. Miss Rhoda Lee Dearman, of Louisville Ky., recently. Dr. Starkey is propeller of the Highland Pharmacy of Boston and was engaged in prescription work in Kennedys.
THEUS.SLATER
The marriage of Miss Helen Theuse
died on January 10 with C. Theuse, his
president of the Savoy, who was
performed on Saturday, evening, October
15. She received the Rev. A. G. Cress
.The couple left immediately after the
ceremony for their honeymoon, which will
be spent in Rochester. They will reside
beneath Rochester.
PORTER-LOVEFACE
PARIS, Tenn.—The marriage of Miss Alberta Porter to John Lovelace of Pittsburgh, too, place recently. The couple will make their home in Pittsburgh.
WALKER-BURNETT
ATLANTIC CITY. N.J.—The home of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford C. Durham was the scene of a beautiful wedding last Sunday evening when Miss Sadie Walker and J. Earl Burnett were united in holy wedlock, the Rev. C. L. Aiken performing the ceremony. The bride wore a beautiful blue transparent velvet and georgette dress, with gray slippers and hat to match. She carried a bouquet of brideal roses. Miss Crispvasquez was bridesmaid. She also wore blue and carried a bouquet of white carnations. Warren Jones was best man. Prior to the ceremony, Mrs. Lillian Coates sang "I Want You, Dear Heart, to Want Me." The wedding march was played by Mrs. Dunham.
Among those present were: Miss Florence Evans, Miss Gladys Brown, Miss Florence King, Clarence Goldsborough, Olperant Jones, S. Crew, D. W. Parker, Mrs. Alice Aldridge, Rev. Clarence L. Aiken, Mr. and Mrs. William Chinn, Mrs. Cline, Charles Aldridge, Mr. and Mrs. Mulr, Miss Mary Miller, Mrs. Oscar Millers, Charles O'Donnell, Mrs. Addie Cotton, William Warren Jones, Miss Agnes Jones, Miss Ellen Carl, Mrs. Allen Powell, Mrs. Little E. Coates and many others.
The bride and groom left immediately after the ceremony for a short honeymoon at the home of the groom in Virginia.
ANDERSON:GALLOWAY
PITTSBURGH.-Mr. and Mrs. Anderson of Bedford avenue have recently announced their intention to hold a reading for Andrew to Frank Gallow, of Reading, Pa. The ceremony was performed August 16 at 10 a.m. on the Street Presbyterian Church, Mrs. Gallow was the national advertising manager of "The Pittsburgh Courier" for the past year. The reading hallway are now residing in Reading, Pa.
YOUNG-HARRIS
PITTSBURGH.—Rev. C. B. Allen officiated at the wedding of Miss Mabel Young and Lawrence Harris in the Bethesda Presbyterian Church, Thursday, September 26.
LEACH-FAIR
PETTJRUSH—The house of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. W. Smith of Anhelm street was the scene of a very attractive announcement of marriage of Mrs. Smith's mother, the former Mrs. M. Leach, to Mr. Jake Pike was announced, Ruth Belle, and Miss Elizabeth were greeting. Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Emment, of Wilmington, N.C. Mr. and Mrs. Carey, of McKeepson, Pa. Mrs. and Mrs. Suggs, of Philadelphia, Pa.
BERRIE BOARD
PFTTSBURGH—Miss Mary Berrie, daughter of Mrs. Mimie Berrie, the widow of Robert Berrie of Alalupuua, Pa., at a very attractive wedding, Sunday afternoon, at the Church of God,承办的。officiated Mrs. R. L. Williams, accompanied by Mr. Francis, played the wedding march. The bride was lovely in a gown, styled in a rose pattern, style, and carried a bouquet of rose buds. Mrs. Mimie Maskley, the matron of honor, appeared in a gown of pink and white, with a rose motif. Males were Miss Dorene Hatchett and Miss Diana Bishop, who were blue wihin with matching hats. Mr. Rose Merrett, the reception host, was blue with a rose reception was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Frederick immediately after the reception, in Alalupuua, Pa.
CLARK-STANTON
PITTUSHBRUCK.-Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Clark of Fox street announced the opening of the Glaysey campus, to Wendell Stanton, son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Stanton, of Maryland and Mrs. William J. Stanton, of Wellesburg, W. Va., by Rev. C. G. Cogley, December 20, 1928. Mrs. Stanton is a member of the Las Modernos, the Mills, the Mills, the Mills. Mr. Stanton is a graduate of Cornell and the law school of the University of Pittsburgh, and has recently opened law offices at
WOODSON-HAWARD
PITT'SBURGH--The home of Mrs. Bettie Stevenson of Jordan way was the scene of the murder of the late Mrs. Woodson and Henry Hayward, which was solemnized by the Rev. M. A. Tailley, pastor of the Clark Memorial Church in New York, and by E. M. Lloyd, was beautiful in her gown of white satin and pearl, Mrs. Claudine Veney McLaughlin, pink chiffon with mourn wrist. Miss Wilma Bartx, the maid of honor, wore green chiffon. Miss Bettie Boden, pink chiffon with White, and Alice Boden were yellow chiffon. Miss Bettie the flower girl, Mrs. Ralph Green, comedian, was the out-of-downtown guests who Louis Clark of Cleveland, Ohio; Mrs. Walter King, of New York; Mrs. Red Talley, comedian and Rev. W. Presley, of New York.
CARTER-CRALLE
PITTUSHORG--Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Stiewart of Pierce, Missouri, and their daughter, Gladys Ruth Cushion to William A. Crawle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Crawle, Friday evening, October 4, and Mrs. Crawle Ike immediately for Chicago, where they will make their future
McNEILL-COOK
PHILADELPHIA. — A beautiful wedding took place Saturday, September 28, when the bride, Juliette Bustier (Cook), at the home of Mrs. and Mrs. William Patterson, 741 S. 22nd street, the Rev. Father Edgar Young officiating. A beautiful feature was the singing of the wedding march by a trio. Mrs. Mary Patterson, Miss Alberta Britton and Miss Harriet Bustier. The bride entered on the arm of her father, Thomas McNeill, of Patterson, N.C., attired in white chiffon with uneven sleeves and she carried a bouquet of well of old lace trimmed in orange blossoms and she carried a bouquet of white flowers. The bride's only attendant was her twin sister, Miss Helen McNeill, who wore a bouffant frond of orchid taffetas with chapel flowers, velvet, and a bouquet of yellow roses. Gogley Jones was the best man. A wedding supper was served immediately before the wedding, and the couple left for the seashore to spend their honeymoon. They will return to Philadelphia before leaving for Washington, D.C., where they will stay.
Among the guests were: Mr. and Mrs.
Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis, Mr.
and Mrs. George Armenece, Dr. and
Mrs. George Armenece, Dr. and
Mrs. John Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Basal
Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Julian Abel, Mrs.
Chaples Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Klein, Mr. and Mrs. William Upshur and daughter, Gene, Mrs.
Julius Forbes, Miss Lyle Forbes, Miss Ann
Tilghman, Miss Victoria Baptiste Miss
Antonia, Miss Victoria Baptiste Miss
Misses Lila Warkle, Barbara Mathews, Louise Warrick, Helen Jones, Elizabeth
B Jones, Dorey Miller, Rulus Rufonio,
Dr. and Mrs. De Havillant Dr. and
Mrs. De Havillant Dr. and Mrs. Borman,
Lindsay, Murdash, Thomas Fagan and Miss
Ella Mat Gibson of Cheyney.
The received many beautiful and use-
ful manuscripts.
PRICE-BENSON
GREENBORO, Md.-Miss Sylvia Benson became the bride of Edward Price. Thursday, October 6, the bride will be R.C. W. John Deering. The couple will reside in Baltimore.
HUDSON-DENNIS
PRINCESS ANNE, Md.-Ernest Hudson, of Princess Anne, Md. were married, of Princess Anne, Md. were quietly married. R. Patton Monday night.
RICHARDS-STEWART
LAUNDS-BIKEWAN
SEAPORD, *Miss* Elisse Richards, of Seaford, and Paul W. Krauel, were quietly married at Concord Sunday, October 6, by the Rev. M. Wilters.
THORNTON-CLARK
HEDGEVILLE. W. Va. — Joseph E
Thornton and Miss Ruby Gray Clark
inwood were married Monday, October 7
the groom's birthday. Rev. and
Mrs. J. W. The Rev. J. W.
Hardesty performed the ceremony with
mrs. J. W. Hardesty as witness.
HAMILTON, LANGSTON
GENTERVILLE, Md.-Chairman Hamilton and Esther Langton, both of Baltimore were married at the A.M.E. parsonage on October 8, October 9, Rev. M. H. Dorsett Officials.
0
Obituaries
Obituaries
JAKE DOWE
WILMINGTON. N.C.-Jake Dove. 621 S. Irene street; veteran A.C.L. cook. died October 15, 2015. Mount. N.C. Mr. Dove was well known in this city and leaves a number of rela-
MISS MARIE COTTMAN
GRISFIELD, Md.—The funeral services of
M.E. McE. Thursday at 1:30 p.m. Dr.
Brown Thursday at 1:30 p.m.
GEORGE CAIN
MAXTON, N.C. — Funeral services were held Sunday at the A.M.E. Zion Church for George Cain, one of Maxton's oldest daughters, four of them, four daughters and other relatives.
MRS. ISAAC LEE
FALLS CHURCH, Va.—Punical services
M.E. Church, Friday, October 4.
MRS. SALLIE DANIELS
GASTONIA, N.C.-N.C. Sallie Daniela wife of the Rev. J. S. Daniels of Salbury, N.C., died at her home Saturday, October 4th. Funeral services were held here Wednesday, October 8th, at St. Paul Baptist Church. Before her marriage, she was a faithful mother, before her marriage.
CHARLES BREWINGTON
FEDERALBURG. Md.-Charles Brewing-
house, 100 W. 10th St., died here
buried there Thursday at Zion 118
Mchurch. He is survived by his parents,
Ron and John, his brothers. The Rev.
Ron J. Johns predeceased him.
WILLIAM WRITT
PFTTBRUGH—William Writt. Sr., formerly of Denniston avenue, and one of Pittsburgh's well-known and most respected citizens, was buried on Saturday afternoon. Mr. Writt died at the home of his daughter Mrs. Sarah Writt-Dunston of Harrisburg, and his son, Robert, was conducted by Rev. Brown, were held at the Church of the Holy Cross. Mr. Writt is survived by his daughter. Mrs. Joseph was buried by Dr. William Writt, of Parrell, Pa.
WASTER FARELL
PITTSBURGH—Walter Farrell, formerly of this city, died in his home at Pasadena, California. September 15, he is sur. his wife, his son, and his daughter, Margene Farrell, and his son, Fred. Farrell
THOMAS E. AMOS
PITTSBURGH. — Funeral services were held Friday for Thomas E. Amos, from the chapel of St. Barnaus, the church of St. Barnabas, and the innate of the St. Barnabas home, died there Tuesday morning after an illness of several months. He was member of the Holy Cross Episcopal Church.
BART HOWARD
PTBTSHURB—Bart. Howard, local musician, died in his home in Homestead. He was accidentally caused by an automobile accident which occurred in Akron, Ohio. He is survived by his mother, Mr. Joseph Porter, a poet, singer, Stingleton and a nephew, Bart Howard, Jr.
MRS. LIEATHIA ANDERSON
PTTWBURGH—Mrs. Lieutaila Anderson, well-known club and social worker, died Saturday morning following a stroke. She was 80. Ohio fifty-one years ago. Mrs. Anderson was an active member of the Tabernacle Church, president of the Allegheny General Association, and the Davis Home for Colored Children. She is survived by her husband, P. L. Anderson; a sister, Mrs. M. Hayes, of Ironton and a brother, Harry Holt, of Plittburgh.
MISS LENA EVANS
NEWARK, N.J.-FUNeral, services were held at Ebenhare M.E. Church, Sparrows Hill, Mt. Zion, of Newark. Mr. Richard B. McIlish, of Newark, N.J. the Rev. J. E. Thomas, officially assisted by the Rev. H. E. Tucker. The Elks were in town to attend the memorial event was held at Mt. Zion, Cemetery.
LEVI WILLIAMS
JERSEY CITY, N.J.-Lee Williams, well known for his work at the Villeville hospital last Thursday morning, where he suffered a paralytic stroke with which he was struck September 11th. The hospital had Sunday from Rocquemore Baptist Church.
MARJORIE LOUISSE WILSON
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa.-Marjorie Louise Wilson, age 3, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Bruce Wilson, died of pneumonia on September 11th. Her parents, she is survived by one brother, Charles Williams, and a sister, Jacqueline. Interment was at the Villeville hospital with full dignity.
MRS AMANDA H BOWYER
MRS. AMANDA H. HOWEEN
LEXMEN, Bowyer, who has been making her home with her daughter and son-in-law, Rev. and Mrs. E. W. Johnson, at Halls Hill, Hill, October 17th, and was buried in Evergreen Cemetery in Lexington from the a sister, Mrs. M. Hoween, She leaves on October 17th. She leaves on one brother, Hamilton Hazel, of Baltimore, Md.; two daughters, Mrs. Gertrude Johnson and Mrs. Annie Cloe Landine, of New Rochelle, N.Y.; two sons, Mrs. Gertrude Richmond, and Deny Bowyer, of Ohio.
LEWIN BINFETT
VIRTENNA, Md. Punjalal services of Levin Pinkett, who died Thursday, October 10, were held at 11:30 a.m. Sunday, at Westley the pastor, the pastor, Rev. Angelo, officiating.
MISS ALICE WRIGHT
CUPPERPEE. Va.-Miss Alice Wright died Tuesday evening at her home near town the funeral was held at Antioch Church Thursday at two o'clock.
JAMES MITCHELL
PETERSBURG, Md.—The funeral of Mitchell was held at Jones Church Wed.
CHARLES I. KING
ST. MICHAELS. Md.-Tuesday. October 8th, at 2 p.m. the p.m. James R. L. James all preached the SUNDAY L. K. Kirby who died in the Walter Read Hospital, Washington, D.C. He was the son of the minister in Waltham, the son of a priest in Trinity Zion Church.
MRS. FARINIE SHELTON
VINTON, Va.—Punzel staff were held here for Mrs. Partile Shelton, 35, who died Thursday at the U.S. Burrell Memorial Hospital, where she is the husband, parents and other relatives.
In Memoriam
In Memoriam
CARPENTER—In fond and loving memory of my beloved husband, Charles Carpenter, who departed this life October 18, 1925.
Gone, but not forgotten.
In my heart he still lives.
By his devoted wife, MARY E. CARPENTER, New York City.
Oh. how our hearts had bled—
For. Elizabeth, you left us full of life
And brought back to us dead.
We trust that you are happy.
In your heavenly hone above,
In your sweet pleasure.
And, everlasting, love.
Measurs. R. E. Williams of Washington, D.C. and Dr. Michler of Wilson, N.C. were joined by Dr. Kenneth Williams, former Goldboro boy, has entered Howard Medical School. He and his families attended their homes are Mrs. J. B. Sykes and Mrs. Hattie Petee. Mrs. Ida Y. Price Hostes at breakfast Mrs. Ida Y. Price Hostes at breakfast avenue, entertained friends at a 9 o'clock breakfast Sunday morning. September 30, 2014, the hostess hosted the pastor of St. James A.M.E. Church; Mr. and Mrs. Charles O'Brien, Baltimore; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Hall, Baltimore; Mr. and Valeria A. Wellington and Mits Goldie Gram. The morning was for disembarking for morning church service.
CASTONIA NORTH CAROLINA
GASTONIA, N.C.-Mrs. John Lyles spent Sunday with her sister-in-law, Mrs. James Moseley, who is in school. Mrs. Dorothy Washington, who is in school at L.A., spent the week-end with her grandmother.
mother, Mrs. Glenn Gather, Mrs. G. S. Weaver, Misses Grewal, Gracew, Brown, Chambers, Costiner, Barnes and Mr. Bryers witnessed the big football game at Durham, N.C., Misses Grewal and Josephus Holland is quite ill at his home on N. Marletta street. She and daughter have returned to Salegh, after teaching here for the past few months, to spend the winter months. Miss Pauline Biggers is home again after spending the summer in New York. She reports that she was in Philadelphia, who was injured in an auto accident some time ago, is not doing so well at this time. She is in an grand musicale as Epworth Chapel, M.E. Church. The pastor, Rev. H. C. Gannaway, will sing Friends of Dr. A. G. Dale have received word from him of his safe arrival in Scotland, and will take a higher job as his profession.
Any news of interest will be gladly received and sent to this our paper, if you will send it to 732 N. York street, or call 1342-3w.
---
WILMINGTON, N.C.-Mrs. Pricilla Bursell 112 B. 121st street, this city, who has been skied for some time, is somewhat impatient. Miss Mabel Huntler 112 B. 131st street, this city, is home convalescing, after an operation at James Walker Memorial hospital after a long ago, and is showing marked improvement. Mr. and Mrs. James Hall 116 B. 131st street were recent visitors to N.C. G., who are back in Blessing. Levi Daniels has returned home after a pleasant summer in Blowing Rock, N.C. Those who are visiting the AMERICAN will kindly send it to Mrs. J. E. Clarke, 113 B. 131st street, or telephone 1364. The paper is also sold from the office. We will be glad to sell you a copy. Our newsletter will deliver it to your door.
HICKORY, NORTH CAROLINA
HICKORY, N.C.-The educational program of the Hartzell Memorial Church was successfully carried out the week from June 1 to July 1, 2014. Gomas is pastor. Dr. J. H. Barrhill was sponsor of the program. Dr. Norwood Patterson, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. McFall, Miss Verna B. Pembs, Miss Marile Poston and Miss Marilah Lane Battle, motorized to High Point, Sunday, June 14, 2014. Of the Mr. and Mrs. McFall, who live there. Mr. and Mrs. Monte Cherry and Miss White, and four teachers from Gastonia. The football game. They spent a lovely day.
Miss Marge Henderson, accompanied by her sister, Miss Pearl Henderson, and Miss Chippy, of Durham, mooted to Pittscher, and held back until Kend with their sister, Mrs. George Leach. Mr. and Mrs. McCoy and Mrs. Logan, both of Durham, and Dr. and T. R. Edwards, and family, of Silver City, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Leach.
Miss Vivian Edwards, of Silver City, and Miss Lucille Crowder, of Winston Salem, are teachers in the public school of Pitttboro.
THOMASVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
THOMASVILLE, N.C.—The Rev. Bowens from the Hoolens Church and his members were present at Zion Church Church Sunday at Mrs. Hattie Alison is visiting her relatives and friends here. She has made her home on the campus of the University of Mr. and Mrs. June Spencer spent Saturday and Sunday with Mrs. Alice Pennington here. Mrs. Greenbush, spent Sunday here with his wife's people. Twins boys were born to Mr. and Mrs.
A bunch of flowers was placed in the M.B. Church Sunday, by Samers White. Mr. Samers is a florist here.
Lawrence Clark, who has been ill for some time, is able to be out again. He lifted the offering at his church Sunday morning.
ELIZABETH CITY, NORTH CAROLINA
ELIZABETH CITY, N.C.—The orchestra known as Puff's and Norman's Carolinians, played at Dr. and Mrs. G. W. Cardwell's residence on Shepard Street, out of respect to Miss Gladys Cardwell, their daughter, who has been ill for quite a while. After the music, they were served dinner.
Miss Cardwell is a bright talented young lady. She spent several years specializing in music and was supposed to get her degree the year her health failed. She is very cheerful and seems much improved.
The Pasquotank County teachers' meeting was held at the State Normal School, October 12, Two demonstration lessons were taught: Mrs. O. W. Holly, of Union Chapel School, taught the sixth grade geography. Mrs. Cox, of Pitts Chapel school, taught second grade silent reading. Both lessons were well taught. Remarks were made by Prof. P. W. Moore and Superintendent M. P. Jenninks, Professor Bias discussed with the teachers, the cause of failure among elementary teachers.
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Concords and Discords
By LLEWELLYN WILSON
Music Should be Taken Seriously. Marian Anderson Coming. Getting Ready for Christmas Now.
In these more or less trying days of racial, religious, and industrial maladjustment; days the like of which the world at large has never seen on such a pretentious scale; days which call for the highest and best spiritual, mental, and physical powers to be found in mankind, in order that the standards of civilization may not perish; days which through new ideas of personal and political freedom, develop, at one end of a given distribution curve, types of manhood which by their deeds, the angels, the "a little lower the angels" and at the other end, develop types of manhood which appear to be more like the beasts of the field; it is a very hopeful note; the word is not meant to imply that the interest that are now devoted to the development of the universal language commonly called music. Now, as ever, music has a refining influence on the minds and spirits of human beings. America is the most important what is real and the cultural counsels of judging by the standards of the traditions of the art.
America has produced no composers whose works rank with the great master writers of the old world. Great musicians, like great personalities in other fields of human endeavor are the results of social and economic evolution. America recently refticed the problems of pioneered life to be very high-developed along the line of real artistic endeavor.
The Negro occupies a very anomalous position in the musical development, here in America. Very often he is found in many communities called the scientific technique of the art, but bountifully endowed with the daring, rhythmically, metodically, and harmonically, which is not found in the more or less musically tired ensembles. The worn-out type of his music represents the worn-out type of his kind. Weil versed, very often, in the traditional forms and methods of musical composition and performance, in the digitization and digitisation and the necessary for real musical progress, many of the newest musical works of progressive composers in this country show more than striking evidences of the influence of the contribution of Negro music. Berry and anon, some prejudiced contemporary attempts to establish his own blinded belief that all Negro music is from the gutter or that our music is from all that is worst in the music of other races.
A very strange position to take when it is generally conceded that the Negro, during the early period of his life on this continent, was closely associated with the best types of Americans and the secondary condition largely obtains today. As servants in the best homes in this country Negroes heard the best of the several periods, and if they imitated, which is human and sensible, under the circumstances, hard to maintain, then their efforts of today are anything other than at worst, a somewhat distorted product of their early and present environment. Music, properly studied and developed by the present day Negro, can do much for the maintenance of the group, through our musical endowments, many of the barriers erected and kept in a state of repair by ignorance and prejudice can be broken down or what is better, can be removed is to much complication, in the matter of far too many of our racial group at present.
The surface of real musical achievement has barely been scratched by members of our race, when one stops to consider the whole story of musical achievement. One or two composers of merit, one or two performers of note, hire or four singers who can possibly make the grade of music, give us no occasion to sit impatient by and rave about our wonderful musical talent.
We, as a group, do possess some musical aptitudes but no more than do other contemporary groups within the confines of our course. We music majors of our young people who and musically inclined are unwilling to learn to read music that they might have an open sesame to much of the world's best music. Indifference makes them willing to a lifetime playing by "earn" by "play," by playing some and satisfied to "fake" by playing some and skipping some. Our group here in Baltimore spends many hundreds of dollars in music annually for music lessons, which lessons they never practice of our own. Music lessons can be by taking lessons; that is to say, by receiving instructions. Many of them deam practice an UNNECESSARY soil. The achievements of Merian Anderson and Faye T. Burleigh, Glarence Cameron White, and Roy Tibbs, are the result of years of work and sacrifice. These musicians are not artists because they are Negroes—they are artists; causes that have developed whatever they originally had as human beings.
Seek out any of the artists just named and you will find most of them working just as hard today as they did during their student life. Art is truly long, and time is surely floating as the poet has so long and told us. Hence if we are eventually to bring our gifts to the face, we as a company must keep them in mind, the Thirteens but we must work while we are.
Prepares for Christmas
Rev. Samuel H. James, the progressive pastor at the Leadhill Street Baptist Church, is already laying plans for an early school. He has the right idea. It takes time to present a first class Christmas service.
HELP WANTED—INSTRUCTION
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PERSONAL
PARALYSIS TREATMENT Chase's Tonic
Diuretic and Laxative Books. Write to
kine Co., 228 N 10th St. Philadelphia, Fo.
LODESTONE. Rabbit Foot. Palm Sisters.
Hare. Dean Co. Books. Catalog Free.
PERSONAL
USED CARS
Wisner Auto Co.
24 Hours Efficient Service
7—DAYS PER WEEK—7
STORAGE
Day, Night, Week or Month
Gas Filling Station Oiling-Greasing
511-19 Wilson Street
Phone, Madison 9479
CASH CHELSE
TIRES and BATTERIES!
IT USED
Vulcanizing-Recharging. 75
Cornet Madison Avenue and Bldde Street.
AUTOMOBILES Are a Necessity
AUTOMOBILES Are a Necessity
They Are Conveni t!
Too often we hear people say automobiles are a luxury they cannot afford, when, as a matter of fact, an automobile is a necessity they sorely need.
We have good used cars priced so low that every one can afford one.
Piedmont Motor Co.
1321-1333 N. MONROE ST.
Phone Madison 8586
WM. A. JACKSON, Mgr.
ACCESSORIES
Betholine and Texaco Motor Oils and Gas.
DUCO FINISHING.
Battery Service. Expert Repairing
STORAGE WASHING
USED TIRES!
Your Opportunity To Buy
RECONDITIONED TIRES
At a Bargain
General Tire Co.
914 Cathedral Street
"In Business
This statement affords the buyer a feeling of safety and assurance in dealing which is well worth looking into. Come in for a visit and let us see if we can be of some help to you in selecting a car to suit your needs. Our list is arranged in price groups for your convenience.
1925 CHRYSLER Roadster.
1926 FORD Coupe.
1927 BUCK Coupe.
1928 NASH Sedan.
1929 OLDSMOBILE Coach.
1930 NASH Brougham.
1931 BUCK Sedan.
1932 WILLIES-KNIGHT Touring.
1933 WILLIES-KNIGHT Touring.
$300 TO
1923 DODGE Sedan.
1923 CHEVROLET Coupe.
1923 PONTIAC Sport Roadster.
1923 OAKLAND Coach.
1923 PONTIAC Coupe.
1923 NASH Sedan.
1923 CHEVROLET Roadster.
1923 CHEVROLET Coach.
1923 ESSEN Sedan.
1923 ESSEN Coach.
1923 NASH Advan. Sedan.
1923 FRANKLIN Brougham.
1923 BUICK Coach.
1923 BUICK Touring.
1923 PONTIAC Sedan.
1923 WILDS-KNIGHT Sedan.
1929 ESSEX Coupe.
1928 GRAHAM-PAIGE Sedan.
1928 FRANKLIN 11A Sedan.
1928 FRANKLIN Coupe.
1928 BUICK Sedan.
$1000 AND
11-B (1927) FRANKLIN Sedan.
12-A (1928) FRANKLIN Sedan.
12-B (1928) FRANKLIN Sedan.
1-30 (1929) FRANKLIN Coupe.
*Convenient Terms Of Course*
*Your Car Accepted In Trade*
Franklin Motor Car Co.
1112-1116 CATHEDRAL ST.
Open Evenings and Sunday.
Vernon 710.
*The Business Since 1912*
ANDERSON
Chevrolet Direct Factory Dealers.
NOTHING DOWN
TO PROPERTY OWNERS
1929 Chevrolet Coach.....3569
1929 Ford Sport Tondster.....$495
1928 Chevrolet Coach.....$357
1928 Chevrolet Coupe.....$376
1928 Chevrolet Sedan.....$455
1927 Chevrolet Coach.....$249
1925 Chevrolet Coupe.....$134
1925 Chevrolet Coach.....$163
1926 Chevrolet Coupe.....$199
1925 Ford Coupe.....$66
1926 Ford Roadster.....$125
1926 Ford Coupe.....$125
TRUCKS
1923 Chevrolet Ton Stake.....$445
1925 Chevrolet 1-ton Delivery.....$369
1925 Ford Station Wagon.....$125
1926 Ford 1-ton Panel.....$135
1926 Ford 1-ton Panel.....$39
1926 Dodge Screen Sides.....$55
1925 Ford Ton, Dump Body.....$65
White 1-ton Stake Body.....$125
**Terms-Trades**
TWO USED CAR STORES
1620 Edmondson Ave. Gilbert $600,
1310 W. Baltimore St. Thaura $172,
Open Evenings and SHOWROOM
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1636-38-18 EDMONDSON AVE.
FOR. SALE-1927 HUDSON Coach,
$425 completely equipped with
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avenue. Lafayette 1875.
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Direct Chevrolet Dealers
3426 REISTERSTOWN-RD.
ABOVE CARLIN'S PARK
Phone for a Demonstration
Liberty 0800. Always Open.
LAMBERT
WHIPPET Sedan.
ESSSE Coach, Challeng.
HUDSON Sedan.
HUDSON Coach.
FRANKLIN Sedan.
HUDSON Roadster.
REO WOLVERINE Sedan.
ESSSE Sedan.
PEERLESS Sedan.
LAMARKE Sedan.
DODGE Coupe.
CHRYSLER Coupe.
CHRYSLER Touring.
CHRYSLER Coach.
CHEVROLET Coupe.
CHRYSLER Coupe, Rumble.
BUICK 4-Pass. Coupe.
CADILLAC Sedan.
CHRYSLER Coach.
BUICK Coupe, Rumble.
LAMBERT'S
The House Of Confidence
Open Evenings, Closed Sunday,
USED CAR DEPARTMENT
116 W. Read St. Vernon 3310.
Night. Vernon 7343.
Nothing But---
It isn't just luck our used cars are so consistently good, because we handle NOTHING BUT good cars.
1924 CHEVROLET SEDAN.....373
1923 FORD TOURING.....335
1925 FORD SEDAN.....485
1928 DODGE STANDARD SEDAN.....4500
1925 WHIPPET SEDAN.....3250
1923 JORDAN TOURING.....3125
1925 DODGE TOURING.....3100
1928 CHRYSLER COACH.....3525
1927 CHEVROLET SEDAN.....3340
1928 BUICK SEDAN.....500
1928 PLYMOUTH SEDAN.....5625
1925 CHRYSLER TOURING.....3225
1928 PLYMOUTH COACH.....5530
1923 REO SEDAN.....5275
1926 HUPMOBILE SEDAN.....5400
1926 CHRYSLER COACH.....3300
SHOW ROOM
29TH ST. AND REMINGTON AVE.
HOMEWOOD 9100-CARS NO. 10 AND 23.
OPEN EVENINGS.
The HARTER B. HULL Co.
DODGE DISTRIBUTORS.
Pierce-Arrow
Whenever you see a car advertised by a PIERCE-ARROW DEALER you can rest assured that the car is in A-1 condition.
Here we offer five—suitable for luxury or convenience at very low prices.
Locomobile Touring . $250
1923 Pierce-Arrow 7-passenger Touring . $350
1924 Jordan 7-passenger . $290
1928 Eulek 7-passenger . $675
1928 Eulek 5-passenger Sedan . $295
C. H. Reeves & Co., Inc.
1313-1315 Cathedral St.
Opposite Mt. Royal Station.
Phone
Vernon 2640-2641-2642
Miscellaneous
Dressmaking and Designing
School
PATTERN CUTTING, SMOCKING
All Kinds Easy Work. Included.
Class or Individual Instructions.
COMPLETE COURSE. $25.
Price Can Be Arranged In Payments.
Wednesday Evenings
MIME, MARY LACKSON
617 Merry Avenue
p02-2
COMING MARIAN ANDERSON
All the Used Cars advertised in this paper are guaranteed to give satisfaction or you don't have to pay
Auto Co.
Resident Service
ER WEEK—7
MAGE
Week or Month
Oiling-Greasing
Mison Street
Madison 9479
We Make LOANS
ONLY TO THOSE WHO SAVE MONEY
IN OUR BANK
Open a Savings Account With This Bank
We invest our money in First Class Bonds, Mortgages, Loans etc., and for the accommodation of our Savings Accounts, we also make smaller, loans from $100.00 up; time of loans: one year; security: mortgages, confessed judgments, or on notes signed by two friends (business men or property owners); payable in weekly payments of $2.00 on each $100.00 borrowed. Applications received daily. Loans made on short notice.
ESTABLISHED 1910
Commercial Savings Bank
NORTH AVENUE BRANCH
1394 W. North Ave., cor. Woodbrook Ave.
opposite Division St.
OPEN DAILY AND ON TUESDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS.
We Have Over 7,000 Savings Accounts
We Have Close to 1,800 Christmas Savings Club Accounts
GERMANS REMIND MCMILLAN OF U.S.NEGROES
They Wear 'Loud' Colors, and Live Chiefly On Pork.
Work also Halted to Attend Funerals.
By LEWIS K. McMILLAN
BERLIN, Germany.—It has been surprising to find the great bulk of the German people so much like the American Negro in so many points. The interesting thing is that this similarity is on the points which are so often, in the minds of "Experts" and "race problem specialists," said to be peculiar to the Negro.
Germans wear many loud colors. The clothes of children are made of red, yellow, loud green and every imaginable combination of colors. The women do a great deal of hand work, tucks and frills adding varied colors all over the garment.
Germans sing and dance. Music is so imbedded in the lives of all the people that there is always a song in their souls and a song on their
They sing simple songs of love, and joy and pain, many folk-songs of the long-age-vestered man, not the music of the heavy music. Whatever else they sing, they sing the songs of simple life. There is present much of loudness and vigor and, at times, among certain elephants, in quietness, with all, a natural, primitive joy.
Dance with the Body
One of the wellnigh lost arts and practices among American Negroes is the "call-set-dance." It is common here.
Among the German youth old dances are being revived. There are two thousand five hundred centers, in all sections of the country, which are devoted to the amusement and cultivation of youth. These centers are supported, in part, by the state.
The slow, lifeless, sensuous American dances have come into the large cities (into certain sections of them). Nevertheless hundreds of thousands per piece dance the dances of rhythm and the dances of beauty—with the hands, feet, bodies and accompanying songs.
Women Must Work
Before going to Germany, I had heard so much of the scholars and philosophers that I thought that every third man I saw would have some of their traits. Instead of a country of "deep" scholarly people I have found a country of simple common people. Most of the women work: so they have large, and often, rough hands, large feet and bodies.
Germans Eat Pork
This afternoon upon coming through the street not far from my dwelling, I ran across a big wagon which I loaded down with hog meat; hogs that were yet larger than ones that I have seen in Baltimore. In the restaurants it is common experience to see a hearty man or woman getting on the outside of a giant hog leg, jaw or side. If coming to Glenwood does nothing more to prove to me that Negroes are not peculiarly and in this practice it has been worth the while already.
Know Hymns by Heart
The American Negro goes to church, and so does the German The German knows his hymns by heart and the Bible stories are plenitively stored in his memory. Like the Negro, the German draws many of his illustrations from Bible stories. Professional religion is as much in the system of the German as in the Negro.
The German goes to church, but unlike the Negro, he does not stay all day. Service begins at ten and is finished before eleventh-thirty. This gives the people the whole day to spend in the parks.
All Go to Funerals
And so I might continue. This German likes funny jokes and all other Germans know. He puts aside everything for a funeral—the women go
heavily in mourning and children sing and play. Is it not after all that the ordeal after all that the ordeal the human race? and that the souls and the responses, of men are so much alike that the faces of men are colorless?
PROVIDENCE PASTOR HERE TO TAKE CHURCH
The Rev. E. W. White and Family Arrive in Baltimore By Motor
MRS. E. W. WHITE
Coming from New Orleans with his family by motor, the Rev. E. W. White, pastor-elect of the Providence Baptist Church, arrived here this week. The Rev. Mr. White will take over the work left by the late Dr. David Over. With him were, Mrs. White, and their daughter, Miss Gladys.
Church in Tears
Tears streamed down the faces of members of Tulane Avenue Baptist Church Sunday night, when, with the singing of "God Be With You Till We Meet Again," the congregation bade Dr. White good-bye. For twelve years he had served this church, and a few weeks ago his congregation gave him a testimonial and purse of $800, in recognition of his services there.
A series of farewell meetings ending with a banquet, were held Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights of last week.
N. Y.'s FOOD BILL IS
$26,000,000
35 Harlem Grocers Organize to Get Share of Money Spent
Harlem is alive to the need of development if it is judged by its response to the effort of Liz Holsey, secretary of the National Negro Business League, seeking to create a merchandise organization among its 100 grocers.
Grocers here are from virtually all of the Southern states, the West Indies, and a few are natives. It has been often said that this group was too cosmopolitan to be brought together. More than 35 of them have gone from three of the Business League meetings so charged with enthusiasm over the prospect of co-operative buying and advertising each without request has been seeking to bring in a fellow merchant.
The Headquarters of the Campaign was opened last Monday in the Dunbar Building, 2814 Eighth Avenue, the opening day, more than fifty interested people passed through the door.
That night James A. Jackson, Business Specialist in charge of the Small Business Unit of the United States Department of Commerce told the Greens that Harlem required about $25,000,000 of food, annually, and that the purchase of these necessities represented a weekly gross profit of more than Ten Thousand Dollars, much of which deserved to reach their different cash registers.
BOY, 5, KULED BY AUTO
BRANDY, Va.-Little Jerry Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. Turner, was instantly killed last week when struck by an auto driven by M. Roberts of the Virginia Creosote company.
His funeral was held Sunday at Shiloh church with interment at Mt. Zion cemetery.
MEMPHIS, Tenn.—Coming as a surprise to her many friends throughout the South, the marriage of Mrs. Edua Isabel-Young to the Rev. Cornelius Barton was made known by her parents, Mrs. and Mrs. Thomas Isabel, last week.
Mrs. Young, who was formerly associate editor of the Memphis Triangle and now doing the society work of the Tri-State Tribune, is one of Memphis' most popular young matrons.
The Bartons were married October 2nd and will reside in Memphis.
"LOVE ESCAPADES" DIVORCE PETITION
Two Women and Two Men File Papers in Circuit Court.
Mrs. Priscilla Branch Says Husband Struck Her.
Mrs. Dorothy Saunders, in her bill of complaint, filed Thursday, charges that her husband, William A. Saunders deserted her after six years and eight months of marital life, although she was kind and affectionate and her conduct above reproach. The Saunderses were married in Washington February 16, 1917. There are no children. Roy S. Bond represents Mrs. Saunders.
Harry A. Tyler filed a petition for divorce against his wife, Milla Lilian Tyler, 534 Tyson street. Thursday, Tyler stated that all were married March 6, 1912, and lived together until May 4, 1911, when Mrs. Tyler deserted him, declaring her intention of never living with him again. Because of the long uninterrupted separation, Tyler states that reconciliation is beyond any reasonable hope of expectation. The couple have no children. Tyler is represented by Roy S. Bond.
Claiming that his wife, Mrs. Pearl Baker, 3700 38th street northwest, Washington, deserted him, Louis Baker filed a suit for an absolute divorce. Thursday. According to the bill of complaint, Mrs. Baker was denoted her husband, 26, 1926. The Bakers were married August 20, 1922. They have no children. Baker is represented by Roy S. Bond, attorney. Laurence M. Adams states in his bill for absolute divorce, filed Thursday, that his wife, Mrs. Gladys Adams, 1718 Presbury street, misconducted herself. According to Adams, the couple were married at Rockville, Md., April 10, 1926, and together until September 1927, when deserted his wife upon the discovery of his escapades" with several men. The couple have no children and Adams is being represented by Roy S. Bond, attorney.
Claiming that her husband, John M. Branch, 222 S. Spring street, forced her to vacate their home by his cruel treatment, Mrs. Priscilla Branch filed a bill for an absolute divorce in circuit court. Thursday. The complaint stated that she had always been a chaste, affectionate wife, and kind wife, her husband maltreated and, on several occasions, struck her. She says that she was compelled to leave him after one of his vicious attacks on July 4, 1926. The couple, who were married December 15, 1917, have no children.
American Negroes Backbone of Reds
French Hear of Propaganda to Free Colonies
PARIS.—American Negroes are the backbone of the Communist movement among Negroes. Pierre La Pechee Coloniale, the newspaper which is the chief spokesman of colonial interests.
Speaking of Communist-propaganda in the colonies, he names the different leaders in Algeria and Tunis, and adds:
The semi-intellectuals of that country are qualified to furnish the working nucleus of the propaganda undertaken with a view to the emancipation of the Negro. But it is in the United States that the Komintern (Communist organization) can most easily find funds for its work. Also, that the aim of the Komintern is to out away the colonies from the powers now holding them.
Three Die in Kitchen Fire
WASHINGTON, D. C.—(CNS)—A ten-month-old baby-girl, her mother, Mrs. Christine Dillard, 29 years old, and the grandfather, Richard Gathers, aged 61, died Wednesday as a result of burns sustained in a fire in the kitchen of the Dillard home Tuesday night. The only proved fatal to members of that three generations, followed an explosion of gasoline used in starting a fire.
MARYLAND
MAGNOLIA MARYLAND
MAGNOLIA, Md.-Mrs. O. Bishop, of Philadelphia, Pa., is spending a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Lydia King, Mrs. Charles King, returned Sunday after spending several weeks in Philadelphia, and Chester, Pa.
The group conference was held at John Wesley Church Thursday, October 10. Rev. G. Curry, the district superintendent of the North Baltimore district, presided over the group conference. Dr. Superintendent E. Trigg and wife, Rev. and Mrs. Brown, Rev. Hayes of Baltimore, Rev. and Mrs. Dotson, of Frederick; Rev. and Mrs. Grant, of Luthrineh, Md.: Rev. N. J. Maylor, of Luthrineh, Md.: Rev. N. J. Maylor, of Luthrineh, Md.: Rev. R. A. Green, of Federal Hill: Rev. G. A. Davis, of Aberdeen, Md.: Rev. E. Hall, of Churchville, Rev. J. H. Johnson. Many inspiring papers were rendered. The use was fostered by Dotson. The conference was taken by the ex-pastor, Rev. R. A. Griffins, of Falls Church, Va. The conference was successful.
Sunday. October 13. services were held at John Wesley Church at 3 o'clock. Rev. Griffin preached at Ebenezer Baptist Church Sunday. At 3 o'clock, Rev. Mrs. R. Brickhouse of Baltimore preached. Her subject was "Have a Mind to Work." At 3 o'clock, a sermon was preached by Rev. Mrs. subject. "How Can These Things Be?"
George Thurston, of Coatesville, Pa., on his return from Virginia, stopped here Sunday to visit a few friends. The Rev. John T. Dempsey of Chester, Pa., will be the speaker at Enzeneer Baptist church the second Sunday in November.
The Beng rally will be held Sunday at Ebonezer Baptist Church. Rev. Mrs. Bricke-
dow.
A Halloween contest will be held at Magnolia school house Wednesday evening, October 30.
CHURCHVILLE, MARTLAND
CHURCHVILLE--The fair will be at
Churchville on October 30, 23 and 21; Asbury, 22, 23 and 31.
M. Perry William and family were the Sunday guests of Mrs. Hester C. Banks. Mr. Carroll Thompson and family mother, Elizabeth Johnson, Mrs. Thompson's mother, who is spending sometime with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Carroll. Hezekiah Smith, who has been ill with pneumonia, Miss Anna Turner, from Abingdon, was the Sunday guest of Miss Lillian Smith. Mrs. Robert King, who spent the summer in Cape May, N.J., has returned home. Miss Lee Cloudus, visiting her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Fisher. Miss Susie Spann spent the week-end in Baltimore. Miss Lee Cloudus, from Kentucky, is visiting her sister, Mrs. E. D. Hall.
EDESVILLE MARYLAND
EDESVILLE, Md. — Class meeting was attended by the Methodist church, Sunday Rev. I. S. Armstrong, preached at the morning service, Sunday school was also well attended. At the evening service, the Rev. J. C. Lockman attended the Church, delivered an impressive sermon. He was accompanied by his chair. Harry Henry and Luther Moor were the Henry and Earl Henry of Newark, N.J. and at Rock Hill. Harry Henry and Luther oldore were the guests of Miss E. Hall.
Nov. 8 - Marian Anderson
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NO HOPE, WIFE SAYS; SHE GETS DIVORCE
Six Women Given Decrees in Circuit Court During Last Week.
NAME RESTORED
Mrs. Harriett M. Thomas to Resume Maiden Name.
Mrs. Harriett M. Thomas, 913 Lafayette avenue, was granted an abasance divorce, the custody of her child, Clarice, and the resumption of her maiden name, in circuit court, Friday.
Mrs. Thomas' testimony showed that she and Samuel B. Thomas had been married at Mt. Giblo. Md., on June 9, 1913, by the Rev. A. Briscoe and had lived together until 1919, when the husband left her without cause. She was represented by Peter L. Woodbury, attorney.
Mrs. Marie S. Jackson, 608 Brune street, was granted a divorce from Charles H. Jackson of Trenton, N. J., on charges of desertion, Friday. The couple were married September 13, 1905, at Trenton, and resided until October 6, 1917, when he abandoned her. There are no children.
Upon her testimony that her husband had deserted her and that, because of the long interrupted separation since there is no hope of reconciliation, Mrs. Rosa L. Lewis married her husband in a absolute divorce in circuit court. Monday. The Lewises were married in Alexandria, Va., on March 26, 1913, and lived together until September 29, 1919. They have no children. U. Grant Tyler, attorney represented Mrs. Lee. Harriett Johnson, 1210 N. Strickler street, won an absolute divorce from her husband, James E. Johnson, in circuit court. Friday. Mrs. Johnson, in her testimony before examiner Sappington on July 21, 1913, was the warden on October 9, 1911, and maintained a home together until December 7, 1913, when her husband
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Cincinnati Negroes
Seek Councilman
CINCINNATI, O., (C. N. S.)—The Negroes of Cincinnati, awake to their political possibilities, have joined in the movement for the political freedom and achievement of the race which has swept northern cities, and are organizing to support Frank A. B. Hale for the city council at the next election.
Hundreds of men and women, confident of the success of their candidate, have volunteered to help register the Negro population 100 per cent strong, and scores of others are attending daily. An effort will be made to replace the ward captains, for although the Negro has for years constituted the basis of Republican strength, the captains of the wards have always been and are now, white.
abandoned her without just cause while she was confined to her bed as a result of an operation. There are no children. Mrs. Johnson was represented by U. Grant Tyler, attor-
500 Families Cooperate
NEW YORK—(ANP)—The tenants of the Dunbar Co-operative apartments have organized a consumers co-operative association with a view of making joint purchases of household necessities. They will begin with group purchases of milk wholesale rates, dating their own distributing through the company. Later, a master meter will be installed and electric current will be bought on a similar basis.
Ice buying will be begun with the coming summer season, and ultimately a commissary established for the handling of the food supplies of the five hundred families in the buildings.
HIT AND RUN SUSPECT HELD
Held for an investigation suspected of forcibly to stop after an accident, Charles Sparrow, 1512 W. Mairmount avenue, is being held in the Western police statolio, faro ETAOINGSHRD police station for a further hearing.
49 EMERGENCIES AT PROVIDENT HOSPITAL
49 EMERGENCIES AT PROVIDENT HOSPITAL
Wife. Who Mislock Phenal for Another Drug, Among Accident Patients.
With 80 patients confined to the wards of the institution, internes of the Provident hospital were kept busy when 49 persons were treated in the emergency rooms for injuries received this week.
Mrs. Elsie Hurt, 38, 1100 Whitelock street, was treated for phenol poisoning. She is alleged to have taken the drug by mistake for medicine in her home. Wednesday. After being considered out of danger, she returned to her home.
Records of the institution show that of the 49 persons who received attention at the hospital, 11 were women, 23 men and 15 children;
Those treated were:
11020 Greben, 25, 1420 W. Muberry; Wallace Green, 8, 401 Wadon; Sadie Green, 25, 262 Fairmont; Gertrude Allen, 29, 545 Mechen; Hattle Hicks, 38, 328 W. 928; Charence Ganett, 401, 224 W. 928; Leon Shaertner, 20, 835 Harlem; Ogden Fountain, 32, 1160 Calhoun; Lena Chambers, 3, 637 Cumberland; Edward Sawdens, 10, 1010 W. Arlington; William Hull, 10, 1010 W. Arlington; Simms, 21, 1021 Ruben Slarter, 21, 2111 James Cliffon, 37, 1106 Clarra Thomas, 18, 574 Wilson; W. G. Thompson, 57, 459 Schwartz; Bessie Chase, 22, 1819 Mary Scott, 12, 1819 Mary Scott; Lawale, 47, 2336 Stockton; Walter Miller, 27, 1428 Pennsylvania; William Chappell, 30, 1812 McCulloch; Samuel James, 40, Vincent; eBessie Whitlock; Elsee 10, 2354 Argyle; eBessie Whitlock; Daisy Smith, 25, 1054 Argyle; eMargery Gregory, 30, 929 Shields; Oscar Bethea, 36, 904 Argyle; Hazel Teler 19, 268 Robert; Thomas Brooks, 50, Smith; Fernie White, 32, 921 Argyle; H. S. Morgan, 19, 814 Argyle; Lenard Ball, 30, 815 Whale
NO DETROIT ALDERMAN
DETROIT—W. Hayes McKinney
lawyer, received 13,000 out of a
possible 40,000 votes in his race for
alderman, last week.
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ST. PAUL, Mimm.-The Twin City Herald, published in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota, reports a complete victory against the color bar in Minnesota university, won for a colored student, Miss-Frances McHie, by the N.A.A.C.P., which hired lawyers and threatened suit.
The case arose when Miss McHie's application for entry to the nurse training course in the university was refused because of her color, the university claiming it only sought to spare Miss McHie, because of the "embarrassment" she would meet as a colored student.
COPS HOLD MURDER SUSPECT
Suspect of murder in Norfolk, VA,
in May, Leonard Ostend, 29, 1022
Leadenhall street, is being held in the
Southern police station for an investigation, pending advice from Virginia authorities.
MARYLAND
WELBOURNE MARYLAND
WELBOURNE Md.—Service well attended Sunday at St. Mary's Hope Baptist Church, St. Mary's Church.
This week's meeting will be held at Mt. St. initial beginning Sunday, October 20.
Mr. and Mrs. James Marshall and Isaiah Teagle were visitors of the Rev. and Mrs. Brown. Thursday night. The Rev. and Mrs. Aterbidge visited St. Mary's the week, God sent to Wardown. Tuesday night on business.
The Rev. and Mrs. Brown and daughter, Zola. William Station and Mrs. Herrettla Taylor molored to Stageville Sunday, where she met the girls. Those on the sick list are, Mrs. Mary Holland. Mrs. Herrettla Taylor and Mrs. Esse Spencer. Holland has moved near here on the Raymond Marshall farm.
James H. Brown visited his grandchildren, Tuesday, Mrs. Lizzie Barnes and Mrs. Florence Holland.
CHURCH HILL, MARYLAND
CHURCH HILL, Md.—Mrs. Martha Johnson of Marshall, Del. visited her daughter, Mrs. Annie Johnson's daughter Dolores, left for Philadelphia, Pa., last week.
The APRO prize will be given October 15. The Rev. George and the Rev. Tiller motored the Ewington camp, Sunday and also others.
Jonathan Minus Found Guilty of Theft of Registered Mail.
FOUND EVIDENCE
Pleading guilty to violating the postal laws by the theft of a registered letter, Jonathan Minus, 34, postal carrier, 1506 E. Madison Street was sentenced to two years in the Atlanta federal penitentiary when arraigned in Federal district court. Thursday.
Testimony given at the trial showed that several registered letters had been reported missing on Minus's route. Federal inspectors who were assigned to "shadow" the carrier sent four decoy letters in an attempt to catch him. Three of the fourth missive was not delivered intact; the fourth missive was not delivered Minus was arrested before he was able to destroy the evidence which was found in his pocket on August 20, past.
In answer to his attorney's request for clemency because of a wife and three children who were dependent upon his support, Judge Robert Coleman in a short lecture preceding the sentence, held that because of his position as a carrier and his regular salary which is $2000 yearly, it was not necessary for him to commit the theft. Musa has been connected with the mail service as a carrier for the past nine years, during which time he has held very responsible routes especially in the business sector where he delivered mail for five years.
Kittrell Head Inaugurated KITTRELL, N.C.-A(N.P.)-Dai K. Cherry was inaugurated as president of Kittrell College here. Tuesday The new library was dedicated.