Houston Informer
Saturday, April 28, 1928
Houston, Texas
Page text (machine-generated)
McDonald Raps Creager Regime THE HOUSTON INFORMER 5 PRICE CENTS FINAL EDITION
Tinkham Outlines U. S. Judges' Powers NAME DIXIE G. O. P. DELEGATES
VOLUME IX
By C. F. RICHARDSON
****
NEWS VERSUS NEWS
SURVIVING THE EXAMPLE
DIALOGS BELOW THE WAY
SIX RECORDS SMASHED
Some of our ardent Hoover supporters have endeavored to glean the idea that The Informer is trying to play both sides of the story from the fact that, as a newspaper and not a subdued sheet, this paper carries NEWS, whether favourable or unfavourable to the cause and we are backing and espousing.
The policy of a real newspaper is not judged by its news column. The newspaper has never played both ends against the middle and never will—informed Inferior has never played both ends against the middle and never will—informed of the editors appearing in its columns.
It is rather unfortunate that the Republican leaders of the state instead of being engaged in football for a majority row at Dallas, did not follow the lead set by the Independent Colored Voter's group in Dallas, March 24, 1928, when a tentative program, calculated to restore party power and build up and improve its wield, was adopted by the most largely attended representative of the nation, its kind of Texan, the Dallas conference suggested a set of delegates from the National Convention, advising eight with one half vote each rather than four members; with all three factions being represented in its personnel, viz: T. Houston, R. B. Crouser of Brownville, Congressman Harry M. Wurzbach of the State Assembly, Attorney General Seymour, S. W. Willis of Houston, O. P. Do.Walk of Houston.
Not neither factor has handled any attacks against the state assembly goes artery space with plans for a rift and division at the state convention, December 22, 1928.
If the Republicans of Arkansas, where Black Republicans are fully exiled from partisan affairs for fully independent, declare peace and give the colored group one-fourth representation on the convention of the party, with a Negro as one of the "big four" delegates to the party, the major leaders of Texas should not have any less zeal for and interest in the party's growth and development in
Honor Bishop Jones
M.
Congressman Holds Federal Courts Can Assure Negro Votes
Washington, D. C.—(ANP)—Representative George H. Tinkham of Massachusetts showed how federal judges throughout the country could protect Negro voters, in a speech here in which he cited the charge to the jury given by United States District Judge James H. Wilkerson regarding the recent Illinois primary.
The congressman from Massachusetts declared that disfranchisement of Negroes might be checked materially if federal judges in the South saw fit to use the federal statutes upon which Judge Wilkerson based his charge to the grand jury.
I. C. Railroad Refuses Colored Leaders Berth; Seek Damages
New Orleans, La.—(ANP)—Bishop Robert E. Jones, the first negro to be elevated to the episcopacy in the Methodist Episcopal Church, was tendered an ovation Wednesday by a House of noted colored white educators and citizens, at the Wesley Methodist Church. Dr. Matthew S. Savage, president of Clark University, Atlanta, Ga., acted as Congressman Federal C Assure N
Washington, D. C.—(ANP)—ham of Massachusetts showed the country could protect Negra which he cited the charge to the District Judge James H. Wilker primary.
The congressman from Mass chievement of Negroes might be judges in the South saw fit to which Judge Wilkerson based him.
"Judge Wilkerson brought to the grand jury's attention section 19 of the federal code," said Representative Tinkham. "This statute makes it an offense for two or more persons to comprese in failure or threaten to intimidate any citizen in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege of any form, by his own constitution or laws of the United States or because of his having exercised the same. It imposes a penalty for violation of one year's imprisonment and a fine."
"This charge of Judge Wilkerson brings into clear relief the duty fed I. C. Railro Leaders Louisville, Ky—(ANP)—The Illinois Central will be made defendant in a suit to be filed this week by Wilson Lovett, president First Standard Bank Trust and Savings Company of this city, and A. P. Brown, vice president of Sturgeon Life and Casualty Insurance Company of Columbus, Ohio. These two business leaders were the victims of the charges against them by Conductor Joseph Nelson of the Illinois Central Railroad, who three weeks ago, refused to permit
HOUSTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1928
master of ceremonies, assisted by Dr. M. W. Dogan of Wiley University, Marshall, Texas. Bishop Jones was one of the founders of the National Negro Business League, as instituted in or created by the National Negro Press Association, National Negro Medical Association, and represented his race on the unification commission of the church.
Can Holds Courts Can Negro Votes
Representative George H. Tinkow federal judges throughout two votes, in a speech here in a jury given by United States son regarding the recent Illinois schuetthes declared that disfrane checked materially if federal use the federal statutes upon is charge to the grand jury.
real judges in every state of the union to instruct grand juries in relation to this law.
Continuing the representative declared: "In many Southern states the demand of Negroes to vote is denied and they are interfered with in variance. The court is completely intimidated. This condition has gone so far that the Negro fear is the polls or public affliction.
"The federal judges in those states are recurrent to their duty and trust if they do not bring this condition of affairs in their several jurisdictions to the attention of grand juries."
ad Refuses Berth; See
Memphis to Louisville, and addressed them insinuitively.
The N. A. A. C. P., recognizing the case as one of extreme importance, has joined hands with Mr. Lovett, and will assist in defying the expense of the suit in an effort to strike a blow at the jim-crow practices of railroads in this section.
A sleeper over the Illinois Central to Memphis. When they sought to retract, however, having purchased action, the N. A. A. C. P. found to permit them to using the
G.O.P.LEADERS ATTACKED FOR TEXAS POLICY
"BILL" McDonald Raps Creater's Partisan Attitude—Urgent Republican Veterans To Attend District Conventions and Elect Dolgate.
The Houston Informer is in receipt of an open letter from William M. ("Gookenck Bill") McDonald, Fort Worth, fraternalist, banker and political activist, conditions within the Republican party in Texas. Mr. McDonald's letter follows:
"I am a Republican and I know the reason why. God knows that I have no political ambition to hold any office in the gift of a Republican president, or for that matter any man whom the people may elect as president of the United States. My only desire is to do what I may to maintain the public party, both state and national, to maintain a political organization which shall stand for the freedom, away and sacrificed upon the altar of federal patronage, by craft, or calling themselves Republican.
Against Creager and Hoover
"The descent Republicans of Texas, white and black, have been cheated, but the Republican Party has bribed them. Greuer-Melbe federal aide romance combine or brigade, until our souls are embittered, and true Republicans are to poll voters." The Republican Party is personally concerned, and I measure my words and understand their meaning and descriptions, when I say (Continued on Editorial Page.)
WHITE STUDENTS
JAILED AS GIRL
ASSAULTS GROW
Pandena, Cal.-(A.NP)—Six very prominent high school students of J. P. W., form a superintendent of Pandena schools, and last month was last month of Mrs. Mimie Murphy, 19, former laundry worker. She was last week, West Paul Schepp, *S*. Weatherby, Charles Randolph and Bonner Maxwell, who were on April 5, and released on bail of $5,000 each. Mr. Murphy, then youths took advantage of her after they drugged liquor given to her at home and left her with the absence of his parents. She said other girls at the party had home and left her with the six boys.
Those arrested denied Mrs. Murphy had been dragged and asserted she was merely intoxicated. They also denied the assault charges.
Colored k Damages
Pulliam after demanding to know their nationality.
K. W. Sprague, general claim agent for the Illinois Central at Memphis, and the superintendent at Memphis, both refused redress.
The suit will be filed by Burke and Lincoln, and the plaintiffs in Louisville, President Lovett has announced that he is determined to sue the plaintiffs in Louisville to end the embattlement which Negro Americans suffer constantly in the South. Exactly, Arkansas and adjacent
Harris Endorsed From Harlem Area For U.S. Congress
New York City.—(ANP) The Kings County Republican committee recorded an enduring George W. Harris, editor of the New York Times, from the Harlem district, Mr. Harris, who formerly served as alderman from the 21st assembly, at which time Kings County Republican Men's conference was at, at which time Kings County operation from other organizations in the Brooklyn district. He has an even better than fair chance winning the election if he is nominated, and it is expected that he will be nominated if he fails to secure nomination.
Prague, Germany.—(A N P)—Never before in the history of this city was a ten-day engagement at a local cathouse, recorded Josephine Hauer upon her arrival here Wednesday to begin a ten-day engagement at a local cathouse, and was later created such a sensation in Vienna, was met at the train by a multitude of admirers and was literally swept away. Hours before she arrived the crowd began to gather and when she was sighted there was a general run, where the members of the crowd were the members of the crowd to see her that several women were injured in the attack, and to take refuge upon the top of a limousine, from which she smiled and waved to the shooting multitude. She was to go to her hotel until she had first driven around the city in an automobile. Everywhere she went there the cheering was and the cheering was deafening.
N. Y. NEGRO DEMS
URGE BLACKS TO
SUPPORT TICKET
Buffalo, N. Y.—(ANP)—The National Colored Democratic Association with the National Democratic Association broadcast an appeal for Negroes throughout the country to support the Democratic ticket in the forthcoming round elections. The states that Buffalo has been a shrine of Negro Democrats since 1872, and the states that Buffalo has put over "big things politically" in various elections and administrations.
It is from the text of the call that the association, which is seeking a national membership, will work on nomination and election of Governor and President of the United States.
Coolidge Cheers
Hampton Singers
At Church Recital
Washington, D. C.—(ANP)—Among those who attended the recital given here last Wednesday night by the Hampton Glo Chio, the President remained throughout the concert and applauded the singers. Mrs. Coolidge had made an effort to remind her to remain indoors as she is recuperating from a recent illness.
The recital was given at the First Congregational Church, and was attended by a large and applauding
Jackson, Miss.—(ANP)—Delegates to the Republican National Convention were selected at the party's state convention, and a shotgun was adopted to instruct them to re-elect Perry W. Howard and Mrs. Mary C. Boone, national committeeman and committeewoman, respectively. The delegates will go uninstructed but will probably lean towards Hoover.
Speaking of the faction headed by George L. Shelden, former governor of Nebraska, but now a Mississippi planter, Hoover said: "If they can build a party in Mississippi from the ground up, that the national party will recognize in preference to the organization of long standing, then I am willing to withdraw from the party forever."
Howard read an extract from a letter from W. M. Butler, national committeeman, which said in part, "Of course, the national committee looks to you as our representative in Mississippi and to the organization of which you are chairman."
The Shelden group will elect delegates to the national convention, April 30.
Cohen Faction Holds Meet; Elects Delegates
New Orleans, La.—(ANP) While court action on a plan for an injunction to prevent Walter Cohen interfering with the affairs of the Republican party in Louisiana awaited a hearing, a convention of the Cohen faction held a primary Thursday and elected delegates to the national convention as follows: James L. Higgins, Algers; B. V. Barano, Baton Rouge; Mrs. James F. Perrin, Arabi, and James Lewis, Jr., New Orleans; alternate; Gas Oertling, New Orleans; S. W. Green, New Orleans; Frank C. Labit, New Orleans and C. W. Rowe, Rosedale.
Resolutions were adopted endorsing the Coolidge administration. The anti-Cohen delegates elected by the faction controlled by Emile Kunzt are uninstructed, but it is understood they favor Hoover. The Cohen delegates are believed to favor Loudon. S. W. Green, head of the Pythians, in a statement published Friday might, despite that the use of his name as an alteration, be deemed to have caused the Cohen faction further use of his name.
Chicago, IL—(ANP) In spite of the fact that the coroner's jury has taken over a week, the murderers of Oren Stanley, who was slain here on a primary election, are still at large. The coroner's jury has interrogated a large number of eye-witnesses to the traditional testimony. Several witnesses have testified that the Deneen were in the police car, while others have fastened the crime on gangsters. The coroner reached Thursday when H. P. Gros, another Deneen worker, drew a ninety percent chance on the near west side at the time when Granady was killed and men in the car had his idea as to who did the killing, but feared to reveal his opinion at this time. Notwithstanding that the murderers would have learned that would fasten the crime upon any particular individual, police cannot have planned that the murderers will be apprehended before the case is continued. Attorney Granady's funeral was held Tuesday at the Gaines Chapel A. M. E. Church, at which time Sen. Oren Stanley, the earliest plan that the murderers be brought to justice and urged all citizens to clean up and such crimes stopped, to lend whatever aid they could to those who had killed Granady.
NUMBER 50
Powers
GATES
d Chosen
Miss" Leader
negates to the Republican Nation
at the party's state convention,
instruct them to re-elect Perry W.
Rae, national committee man,
and the delegates will go uninstructs
Hoover.
ed by George L. Shelden, former
a Mississippi planter, Howard
y in Mississippi from the ground
recognize in preference to the orn
I am willing to withdraw from
a letter from W. M. Butler, na-
said in part: "Of course, the na-
our representative in Mississippi
which you are chairman.
delegates to the national conven-
ALIENS COMMIT
SEVERAL BOOZE
CRIMES IN CAL.
Los Angeles, Cal.—(ANP) It is
a commendable fact that Negroes are accrued
of nearly every census the cla-
der, they are not, so far, accrued
of the great amount of run running
going on by way of the Pacific coast.
PAGE TWO—FIRST IN EDITORIALS
Trying To Pass For Colored
Trying To Pass For Colored
BY WILLIAM PICKENS
(For the Associated Negro Press)
White Negroes are usually thought of, especially by white people, as always trying to "pass for white," and trying to be "white," yet a girl who is fighting hard to pass for colored and to avoid the embarrassment of being forced to be "white." The person in question is so well known to so many colorful people of the West, that it is the West is so peculiar, that it is interesting. All the colored people of the West are shouting, lashing, Lane her mother and her sister and her brothers. Many of the colored people of the West are shouting, Lane family and know that they are all "colored," as colored people go in the United States, as colored people go in the Baltimore and Washington know this family, and one of them would find it difficult to pass for another, like a girl.
It is also well known to thousands of people in the East that Mande colored man of the American expeditionary forces, who is brown, and hardworking and lived and worked for a while in Yakima, Washington, and now lives and works in Portland, Oregon. Mande Lane family is not known, Mande Lane booker, wife of the colored man of the losing battle to be and be understood as a colored person. Among crackers are some of the colored people themselves. Cannot you hear them now, taking advantage of her humiliation, would you go up there that Negro dentist: he is married to an old white woman up at a club, and the discussion turns about the common interests and struggles of colored people, who item from her experience as a colored person—can not you see them eyes, by their ideas: "What do you know about it? What right have you to be interested in this colored man than interested you! What do you want here anyway?"
of the same kind, Dr. Boehner is greatly interested in interacial affairs and the effects for interacial relations. He has spoken on this subject to white audiences or to audiences partly from his cross-questioning and submitting: "Is that what you want?—Maybe that is what interacial harmony we are not discussing the merits of these questions nor the merits of colorism? We are simply describing a situation. Here is a colored girl, known to thousands of colored people ever since she was born, who will fight to be what America decrees that she should be. And yet white people are the mulattoes have passed over in it to the white race, and colored people say that the "white Negroes" are now many colored people from the East, who are now white people in the circumstances. The situation of Mande and her husband and her two beautiful little brown children is an anomalies of democratic America.
this number. Dr. C. H. Laughman, house secretary state health department, said the mortality rate and the preventative methods being used to stamp out disease and he did not say one word among the people "your" other officials among your people." Other officials is prosecuted North Carolina will be way in front of other Southern states in the matter of providing teachers for Negro children. - Class teachers for Negro children.
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Raleigh, N. C. (ANP)—Everybody in this section was in a jubilant, neighborly, and almost demonstrable 4,000th Rosewood school was dedicated at Method, N. C., about four miles from this city. Jew and goodle black and white, and the students in the dedication and celebration.
Rosenwald Attends Dedication
Julius Rosenwald, through whose philanthropy the school was made, dedicated the school building and whole-heartedly in the program. In fact, while the real occasion was the dedication of the school building, he more properly dubbed "Rosenwald's school." He about Rosenwald, Speaker after speaker praised the manner in which the Chicago philanthropist had helped the Negro children. Second impatient, Rosenwald was Berry O'Kelly, the founder of the school, which bears the name O'Kelly. O'Kelly, one of the foremost Negro citizens of the state of North Carolina, the growth of this institution for a number of years and according to his remarks at the exercises, had dreamed of county training schools in the South. His dream has been realized and he is being about further improvements.
State Superintendent Presides
The exercises were presided over by the dean of NEG schools. Mr. Newbould reviewed briefly the progress in edu-
cation and revealed the state and revealed the fact that North Carolina has a total of 67,000,000 the largest number in any state. Josephus Daniels, former secretary of the state, and Dr. N. Y. Gulley, chairman of the Wake County Board of the state, accepted it in behalf of the state.
This was the first dedication which Mr. Roosevelt had attended during his presidency. The school building program and if his matron on this occasion is any other, he will never miss a dedication. He was by far the most enthusiastic present and the occasion was enshrined in his address which was climaxed by the statement, "The only thing I re-entered was not being beated fast enough."
Even Josephus Daniels "Loosens Up"
As stated in the beginning, everybody was in a jujuit and neatness for the day and everybody was united in a common cause. Even Joseph Daniels, who has evidently attended this session by presenting a finger to Negroes instead of his hand in the practice of handshaking, entered and a lot of glowing compliments to the Negroes of the South, with notice from various sections of the country. Bank president, educators, missionaries, clergy, and minded people present and minded together freely.
Educational Conference Held
The exercises of the day reached the climax in the field in educational coalition held at Shuang University. Wednesday afternoon. At this time, the students will board for the future park and will plane for the future set forth by state officials. Dr. A. L. Hirsch, the department of education, told of the 56 standard high schools now in the district. "The effects behind put forth to increase
Constituent will be helped by photography and by confirmation. In event of a death, the body treatment will be followed full-time.
JUDGE M. W. Anderson, Nine Mile Cemetery, C.G. Baskell, New York Artist, and the General Manager of the American Theater.
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1928
NEGRO ACTORS DISCUSSED BY WHITE AUTHOR
NEGRO ACTORS DISCUSSED BY WHITE AUTHOR
Philadelphia, Pa. — (ANP) —Negro theatrical talent is as fine and as abundant as that of white actors, but it is spied by the 'solo-importance' the race assumes as soon as it has attained. The production was an assertion made Sunday by Jasper Dester, director of the Hedgow Playwrights, playwright, playwright, and director of last year's Pultizer prize play, in a lecture on "The Negro Theater" at Kenneth Israel Temple. The character is favored by white critics, Mr. Dester said, "he immediately gets a case of self-affirmation" using self-affirmation among his own race the others display intense jealousy and endeavor to pull him down. For the last two years, they will not stand for an unequal situation among their own kind. They are decidedly easier to handle, they are more prompt and, in spite of the contrary public stories, they are more decidedly similar to that of other
Citing as proof of his contention a number of successful plays staged by the Negro in the 1930s pointed out and insisted that the talent of the Negro is a natural gift of the Negro and almost an insult "The Negro is a man who goes into the white man's theater or appears before white audiences. He wants a master of his own," declared Mr. Dearborn.
In Patronized By Stars
"This fact," he continued, "due to the patronizing attitude of important audience members, is superintensive of his supposed inferiority. The fact that the audience victorious is also an important factor. No audience will go to see a film that is victorious in and in which the white man gets the worst end of it."
An explanation by an incident during the run of Eugene O'Neill's "Emperor Jones," it was being staged in Wintersburg, and in which Mr. Deuster to part.
"In this play," the speaker added, "centrated, for not only was the audience divided into black and white players, but also the play, the white man played, attack by the Negro, the black section of the white audience prepared to walk out.
In the matter of fact, the director of the Hedgerow players explained, "there is actually no Negro theater, but the audience one is very good, provided the correct material in regard to play and actors is used to proper advance."
The recognition of the Negoor agent was the quest of the Leahner Club in New York when the men were invited to see a Negoor selves all at what they thought were mere clowning until they were mature. Mitchell, of "Abraham's Boon," how decidedly superficial was the Negoor agent, but she relied on her experience to further efforts. He acceded to Mr. Decker, now holds an important position in the theatrical world, still better protec- tif if he can rid himself of his in-hernia.
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Prejudice Fighting vs Prize Fighting
Prejudice Fighting vs Prize Fighting
BY WILLIAM PICKENS (For the Associated Negro Press)
Ever since Godfrey licked that Spaniard in Los Angeles, there has been a sweeping storm of sentiment against prime fighting. We, too, are opposed to the savage and commuter Spaniard to it before Godfrey fought the Bastache, and we would have been opposed to it even if the white man had won.
Are all of these women's clubs, clubs, clubs, aminer" sure that they would have been equally opposed if the white man had won.
Are they at least, answers for itself, in an editorial not proceeding? the fight The Negroes fighting white men is a bad thing.
Get that? The "Examiner" does not say that white men fighting Negroes men fight them. The Negroes would either run or stand still and take action, but the Negroes would not be quite so "bad" if they all. Notice carefully the "Examiner" does not even say that white men fighting white men to fight each other.
Now, the "women's club" are not the "Examiner," they are to be opposed to "brutal prize fighting," only the clapped up on the dakest. The "Examiner," they proclaim, the week before the fight, the chance to stop the fight it was over. Pauline's face might have been saved an awful binge up in the hospital. Just the proverbial feminine habit of the "Examiner," a suggestion to the "Examiner" and the others: Perhaps the best all, would be to let "Jesus" Godfrey meet a few more white men, even in Mississippi, Mississippi, South Carolina, and the editor of the "Examiner" would rinses to stop the whole internal business. Jack Johnson, when his big brother came very near to killing prize boxing. Perhaps if you turn Godfrey an angel, he'll finish the beasty game.
New Orleans, La.—(A N F)—To suppress the organization of another grand lodge of the A. F. & A. Masons, headed by E. L. Jackson, Judge Robert B. McCormick granted a permanent injunction to the Grand Orient Lodge of Louisiana, restraining E. L. Jackson and associates from using the name, seal or anything pertaining to the said lodge, under date of April 10, 1928. The lodge was granted a permanent lodge of Ancient Fee and Accepted Scottish Rite Masonry, William B. Jackson, so much odd with E. L. Jackson, so much that both factions have from time to time sentenced to court petition. It was also granted to the Louisiana Orient Lodge of the Louisiana lattice charter granted to the lodge in 1879, but E. L. Jackson secured a charter from Bibishop Thornton of New York to administer under it since last August.
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The local branch of the N. A. C. P. has established drive headquarters on the second floor of Lincoln Theatre building, rooms 299-10.
dent O. P. DeWalt says: "With most of the $ to $2 prospects paid in and practically all of them plodged, the general drive is to plod. The drive is scale than has ever been undertaken in this section before. Every Negro in Houston will be given an opportunity to help himself by helping this association carry out its program for the advancement of his race everywhere in America. If you want to help, you cannot complain about not having all of the rights to which every citizen is entitled. You must qualify for these rights by doing your part towards getting them. Otherwise, you are inelegible. Whether you do as much as you would like to do, you must do best. Do not wait to be solicited—come to headquarters and make a payment on your debt to your race. Do all you can for yourself before asking others to help. Your duty to yourself and posterity is paramount. You must mount to everything except your ful to him. If you neglect your race."
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Los Angeles, Cal. (A.N.P.) Los Angeles was shocked Monday by the sudden death of Township Smythe Grasty, prominent attorney and excaptin in the U. S. Army. Attorney Grasty became ill in the city on Monday, Dr. M. Musco Cloud rushed his patient to the Dunbar Hospital for treatment, but to no avail. After a valiant battle against death Sunday and Sunday night, Mr. Grassy passed away at 3:12 Monday morning. Decedent was born in Collegge Perry in 1850, and died in Oldenburg. He had practiced law in Los Angeles eight years. For a time he was a student at Oberlin College in Ohio, and later in the law school of Howard University. He served during the World War with the rank of captain, from October 16, 1947, to April 19, 1950, and discharged from Camp Diz, N. J., on the latter date.
Captain Gratty is survived, by a brother living in New York, two sisters, and a nephew. Captain Gratty McWilliams of Washington, D. C. The funeral was held Saturday at 12 o'clock noon, from the parlor of Conn. Johnson Company. The funeral service was held on Bownt Post No. 228, American Legion, of which Capt. Gratty is past
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MEDICINE AND SURGERY
Office: 1141 W. Jordan Ave.
Phone: 1003-2683
Mumbai, India
AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
The stores are full of artificial aids that give artificial beauty. But there is only one Exelina Quinoin Ponadei It beautifies the hair and does it all the good because it works through Nature's methods.
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At All Drug Stores.
Samples of all our preparations and valuable Book of Beauty secrets sent FREE. Send name and address to EXELENTO MEDICINE CO., ATLANTA, GA.
NOTE-We also manufacture the famous Exelento cream and Exelento Peroxide Vanishing Cream.
WAVINE
SKIN-WHITENER
OINTMENT
One of the cleverest entertainers in big time vaudeville is dainty
Mae Alex who is just completing an engagement at the new Regal
theater in Chicago.
Clever! facinating! alluringly winsome! her beauty won the admiration of the hundreds of
well dressed women who greeted her at every performance. One of her chief charms—a fair,
lovely skin can be yours, quickly, by using Wavine Skin Whitener—a delightfully performed
contour that balances freckles, pumples, blondness and makes the skin light, clear and soft as
rose petals.
Enjoy the complete Wavine Beauty Treatment, every day, at home—the Skin Whitener,
Vanishing Cream and Face Powder—the grice of each is only 21c—at your druggist's or by
mail.
PRESIDENTIAL PROSPECTS
AN ESTIMATE OF HERBERT
HOOVER
The important place that Herbert Hoover occupies in the public mind is a presidential prospect quite naturally gives rise to an inquiry on the part of the Negro public as to how the browne fathers in the department must be the executive head. Mr. Hoover is the secretary of commerce and administers one of the most far-flung departments of the government service, certainly the department that has most to do with the everyday business activities of the people. He is the center of interest of our people in a phase of Mr. Hoover's career that is not touched upon in the general press, and about which there is likely to be a paucity of information, the Associated Negro Press directed its Washington representative to make a definite and definite statement. Mr. Hoover's record. The findings are here submitted; and it may be said that they are most gratifying to those with any degree of well-developed
No less than twelve large bureau with a great number of service divisions, and many branch offices and offices, and in almost every one of the establishments identified with the department, colored men and women were found to be employed. Some of the men were employed in one of sorts of one sort or another, and
To beautify hair naturally!
others doing important work without attracting any undue attention. The functions of the department of commerce tends to keep the institution filled with the type of people whose knowledge has been likely to be acclaimed.
The commerce department carries out the commerce in the more than 215 Negroes in the department service in Washington and 19 more in the field service of one bureau or the other, the income of $28,580, while the field force receipts for $23,840 each year, more than a quarter of a million dollars annually.
In addition to these there are many men who have been scattered as seamen and in other capacities in the lighthouse service on tenders where the information is difficult to obtain deficient identification of the facts concerning them in time for use of the information not appear in any segregated form on payrolls and the last tabulation in 1923 when 885 were so engaged, drawing $411,700; and it is known that the number has been increased
The addition of these figures, even on the old tabulation material, was made several thousand dollars that reaches the race group through department of commerce. It is inevitable that among so many there should be some who understand the process. Perhaps one with the most experience, a statistician in the division of statistics of the Bureau of Statistics, who is the senior member of that organization. He has been in the government, the only living member of the original group of statisticians that were employed in the bureau's department when the bureau was tabled to become the nucleus of the new institution, and who is still active.
Dr. McDuffie is a fine old gentleman and a pioneer of American University of the class of 1888, who came to Washington from Georgia, and became then reared a fine son who today occupies a position of prominence in the high schools of the!
Goneall White, Leading Lady
city. The doctor, with Thomas Dent another Georgian, who is now widely known as a medical personnel deputy in the Shriners, as well as the holder of other import duties, has been involved in tabulations on ship tonnage, and custom house receipts. The work comes from the fact that the flag of the United States, into a pleasant face, facing a public square
In 1913 the census bureau had occasion to assemble a group of more than 864-page report and history of the Negro population of the United States, and a 864-page report and history of the 1990 to date. Robert Pelham, secretary of the Negro academy, a department of the U.S. government informed statistician, was placed in charge of the big job that required him to write a report. The report proved itself to be one of the most popular documents ever issued to the public. Pelham pages give full credit to Pelham, Harlan, Hahn, and Jennifer. Hahn and Jennifer still important cogs in the census bureau and highly regarded as a statistician and research man by their director. In the foreign and domestic commercial literature for the guidance of American business is distributed, we find John A. Fuller, a research man, Stephen A. Fuller, a wiry, quick-thinking little colorado man who has colored pieces of business literature. His research, a Howard University graduate, who has some excellent business pro-
In this bureat there is also a mall distribution service, where an average customer moves in and out of the commerce building under the guiding hand of a first-class mail, first-class mail, Charleston, who, by a way, is a Shrine of official of Mecca temple, with two chefs and five auto mechanics, and several hundred special delivery and registered packages to and from alibaba.com, and forwards several tons of supplies and office equipment during the same week. William L. Lee, Edward Garrett William L. Lee, Edward Garrett will up in the scale of administrative importance in the commerce department; and James A. Jackson, widely known as a though a newcomer, comparatively, is in charge of one of the most commercial commerce division, the section devoted to small business units, and which touches upon the affairs of the country. Jackson is not enameled new to government agencies having an officer and a railway police investigator before going into compartment
Alogether, it would seem that the race has fared well at the hands of the department. The human side of the secretary as reflected in his attitude is that he is more involved in the relation of an incident in which a department chauffer figured. He the man who drives the secretary. For nine months he had driven Mr. Hirsch before that worthy gave opportunity to the chauffer told him that he would like more wages, stating that he got a salary that was more amazed, and declaring that he wanted more than a hundred dollars per month gave him a check for back pay on his salary. He did noted that his salary be raised. The man has enjoyed several raises since he was hired $1500 dollars per year. This incident, more than anything else, discloses the humanness of the secret of the department of commerce mercy.
FURMER, SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1928
ch, Friday,
Work In Do
Hoover Pr
DR. ROBERT
TODAY'S Antioch, Friday, May 11, 8:30 P.M.
SCAILOPED SALMON
1 large can salmon
1 skim
1 pepper
1 pepper pepper
1 cup buttered crumbs
3 tbsps. butter
1/4 tbsps. flour
1/4 cup milk
Salt and pepper
Baton Ro
habilization
habilization of
of the Rec
areas of Lo
Baton Rouge, Louisiana—The rehabilitation and relief program, successfully operated under direction of the Louisiana Department of areas of Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas, is now being brought to the University, who was appointed by Secretary Herbert Hoover as assistant reconstruction officer, to direct colored food sufferers, is now complying with the requirements for Louisiana is rather comprehensive in its make-up, containing 32 percent of all phases of work carried out in rehabilitation and relief program. The introduction and organization and how well the program was carried out. In addition to the report on Louisiana's rehabilitation and relief programs from Mississippi and Arkansas to the chairman of the tri-state region.
MAYONNAISE
1 teaspoon grated mustard
1 teaspoon sugar
1 teaspoon milk
table sauce paprika
Yolk of 1 egg
table sauces lemon juice
table oil
The Colored Advisory Committee,
to which Dr. R. R. Moton is chair-
Red L
Red Lantern Blues
Victoria
Spivey
has been seein'
things that will
make your blood
run cold....
lanterns movin'
from hole to hole...
curdlin' groans and
piercin' screams!
Ask to-day for - - -
No. 8550 - 10 INCH - 75£
RED LANTERN BLUES
AND
JELLY LOOK WHAT YOU DONE DONE
. LACE
OKEL WHOGRAPH CO
You will always find
Okeh
ELECTRIC
GOGGAN'S
As Soon As Released
THOS. GOGGAN
& BRO.
1010 MAIN ST.
BY BETTY BARCLAY
CREAMED MEAT BALLS
11 lbs. round steak
1 cup fine dry bread crumbs
1 egg well beaten
1 tap, onion juice
1 pepper
1 Pepper masonite
Put round steak or some other cut of beef through the meat chopter four or five times. Add other ingredients to the mixture. Add milk to make the right consistency to mold into small cakes about halfway thick. Fry in hot fat until well brown (a good flavor). Remove the meat from the pan and stir until the flour is well broken and enough flour to make the sauce. Serve with the flour in a pan and stir until the flour is well broken and enough consistency to consistency. Return browned meat to the sauce and finish cooking cakes over a low fire. This serves about eight persons.
ALL-THE-YEAR PIE
2 tablespoons granulated gelatin
1 teaspoon grated orange rind
1 teaspoon salt
Sok gelatine in cold water 5 minutes,
and dissolve over hot water.
Orange juice, sugar, salt, grind
grain, grind and heat until
until dissolved. When beginning to
set, stir in shipped cream and beat
with a fork. Mix with pine
shell and oil before serving.
Cream the butter, add sugar gradually and egg well heaten. Mix and stir flour and baking powder, adding alternately with milk to first mix
In a buttered casserole or baking
pan, put a layer of buttered crumbs,
then broken into lakes with a fork. Salt
half of white, sauce made by adding
four to melted butter, then adding
four to melted sugar, then preventing
lumping. Repeat and put a layer of buttered crumbs on top. In a moderate oven until brown.
Sift dry ingredients; add egg-yolk and one half-teaspoon lemon juice, add lemon juice to tablespoon oil drop by drop; then add oil in a fine steady stream, continuing the beating, and thinning愈加 the oil. Add tablespoon oil of the oil and lemon juice are used.
Georgetown, S. C.—(ANP)—The responsibility of the present crime was fixed on the white people by the police, but the charge to the grand jury at the opening of the spring court which opened Monday morning out that white criminals were in the majority and blacks in the minority and had into court for breaching the prohibition law, they were simply the tools of some of the white people at liberty.
RACE RECORDS
ON SALE
at
THE MEMORIAL OF JOHN A. MCKINNEY
FIRST IN ADVERTISING FIELD—PAGE FIVE
Richardson of The Houston Informer
officiated.
Praises Report
BERT RUSSA MOTON
man, Bibhog R. A. E. Jones, vice-chairman, Bibhog R. A. L. Hoseley, secretary and President J. S. Clark, treasurer, met in Washburn, Wednesday, to discuss the overtied board over by Secretary Herbert Hoover, was held in the National Red Cross, C. Thursday, April 26, 1988 the full report was submitted and the fact that no fingerprint of work has been done in the state of Louisiana than was done by this commission. The commission is composed of seventy of America's most representative members, consideration to practically every complaint that has come to their attention. Had it not been for the wires, seeing vision of Secretary Herbert Hoover, he would have been a committee very likely to engage people in the Mississippi flood areas would have been neg-
Lanter
Texas has two elements for making glas, an abundance of silica and cheap fuel in the form of natural gas. The value of mineral waters produced in Texas ranges between $50,000 and $200,000 annually.
Of the 17 Negotiators to legate in America, the A. K. will be admitted to admit young women students. Beginning with the fall term this will be remedied-young men and women will mingle together on the campus and in the T. college for the 1928-29 term. The board of trustees held their meeting at the college, with Prif. Nole, president of board, presiding.
President: E. D. Bluford reported on the work of the institution. He considered a new summer session both regular and summer sessions the attendance he reached 945 students, coming from 100 counties. The Tar Heels come from 62 of the 100 counties. entire faculty were re-elected. Major F. Spendling, B. S., from A. and T. College, M. S., from Cornell University, will succeed Royer, professor of biology who resigned. Small, also a graduate of A. and T. College, B. S., a graduate of State College, supervised the greenhouses and forciculture; B. A. Talma was granted a lab of abacus and calculator; University of Durham, Ireland.
New equipment has been finalized a new poultry plant and other buildings constructed, and improvements according to the president's report.
COLUMBIA UNIV.
HEARS COLORED
COMPOSER PLAY
New York City — (ANP)—Bush Margarison, noted young composer, will have the pleasure of playing for piano and piano presented at Cumnan University. Mr. Margarison's latest work, *The Piano*, was played by Prof. Diller of the university staff, with Mr. Margarison on the piano. Several well known musicians, which is said to be one of the most beautiful Mr. Margarison has performed, will be well known for his work with the Schubert Music Club of this city, of which he is president, presenting programs of music from various countries.
HEALTH OFFICER URGES
IMPROVED NEGRO B
New Orleans, La.—(ANP)—New Orleans business men were confronted against the economic wares involved in the health conditions of their health conditions by Dr. W. C. Rucker, surgeon-in-charge of the U. S. Marine Hospital, in an address delivered by Dr. Rucker suggested that it would be wise for this city to improve the housing and health conditions of the conditions are deplorable.
PAGE TWO—FIRST IN EDITORIALS
Omar, Uniform Rank, Juveniles and Dolies. All chanclones and worthy students are admitted with their membership to answer when their names are called. A special feature will be the Jurisdiction of the following courts and lodges: Starks Memorial No. 411, Bro. Leon Lewis, C. C. and Pride of Hounton Court No. 412, Bro. Leon Lewis, Roscoe Lodge No. 333, Bro. J. A. Everson, C. C., and Palm Beach Court No. 165, Mrs. H. E. Richards, Admission is only 25c.
GALVESTON CONTRAILTO TO
CABEAR AT RETHEL CHURCH
Music lovers of Houston are assured of an excellent musical program at Bethel Baptist Church, Westminster, MA. The Garnett, a talented contralto of Galveston, will appear in recital; insisted by local local manager. Mabel Ticket is now on sale at AmeR. C. Wiley-Williams* beauty parlor, 1301 Madison; 1303 Madison; 1304 Madison; 1607 Giveston office, 403-4 Old Fellows Temple; Reeves' Cafe, 124 Andrews; Organ Barbershop, 403-4 Old Fellows temple is only 25c.
NEW FLORAL SHOP
OPENS SATURDAY
Mendesa F. T. Lee and B. H. May have been married in the residence of Mrs. Mary Franks, known as the M. and L. Franks, to furnish designs for all occasions.
On Saturday, April 16, the new establishment will be held at the residence of Mrs. F. Lee 260 West 10th Street, New York, their friends and acquaintances, as well as the general public, to drop in and give them a bovon voyage.
BACK FROM BOARD MEETING
Rev E. L. Harrison, Mines, N. P. Pullman, Harnett, N. P. Pullman, Harnett, N. P. H. Harman attend board meeting of the Baptist Women's auxiliary, hold at Mt. Gleason Backyard work and work all reporting a very successful session.
DOKIES INITIATE FOURTEEN AT CLOSE OF LOCAL DRIVE
The membership drive conducted by the Mokana Temple No. 5, Dramatist order of Omar, will be attended by candidates crossed the "hot sands" and then feasted on "cannel milk"; the coral reefs of the Caribbean; J. M. Tolbert of Dallas and C. F. Richardson. The temple is getting ready for the grand lodge of the order, which meets in Houston June 18-23. The temple will receive a primary reception from the time they arrive in the city until they deploy. John White in the grand lodge will be present.
WEST END FUNE
E. L. WATSON
UNDERTAKEN
First-Class Service at Live
No Job too Large and None too Small
section. Ambulance Service.
MRS. I. L. PERRY, Secy.
J. F. GOMEZ, T.
4416 WASHINGTON AVENUE
BUTLER C
---
YOUR HAIR
Hur power stop
meet you MAKING
at the change! Once it
disappears
more...
A Co-Educational Institute
Education to the Colored You
State Department of Education
A Faculty of Experienced Teach
A Campus of Natural Beauty
the Water is Pure and the Clie
Critical Attention Given to Student
Lowest Terms for Advantage
College Motto: "Strive A
Better Than They Treat You."
Information write
Rosenwalt housekeeping
Little or lady. Phone Had.
A. K. Leonard, real estate dealer of San Antonio, motored to this city on a charter bus. He is his wife, a former Houstonian. Prof. and Mrs. H. B. P. Johnson, a professor at the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Bonner, 3000 Tumu left Monday via FOR ERENT - 2722 Burrell St. duplex, 3 rooms, bath and all modern amenities per week. Call Mr. Bates, Preston 1640. The canvase, "The like Wine Man," stands at Bebel Baptist Church, Thursday night, May 3-8 3 o'clock. Music will be furnished by chester. Mrs. Burk F. Taylor, the artist of the wine man, her sister in Tucson, Az, writes that Tucson is a fine town, and she and Baby Frank, a great time, but will be home soon. SPECIAL RATES on marvelling, hair and dye, scalp treatment, oatmeal ointed lines of beauty work. For appointment call Bachelors 2667; W. 382. Enjoy a rare treat Thursday night. May 2, when the Turner-Foster kinship program begins at 8:30 p.m. Mrs. Bonner traction at Bebel Baptist Church program begins at 8:30 p.m.
ORPHAN HOME HEAD HERE
Rev. W. L. Dickson, founder and president of Colorado Orphanate Hospital, will visit the school week in the interest of the school, the hospital, and denomination (Baptist) situation. The revered is in for Governor Al Smith, who is the first of the two awowed dent, being one of the few awowed
$100,000 FOR COLORED HOMES
**HOMES**
I have $100,000 savings
colored homes; refinance; colored
homes, or if you have a substantial
equity and a lot, I will finish paying
the mortgage on your home and
kind of home you desire. You has
actually quick, as this money is
going fast! PIPER Lirium PIPER,
and Bargy; you press $855.
Trying To Pass For Colored
MERCURY
First-Class Service at Live and Let Live Prices
No Job too large and None too Small-Burial Association in connection.
Ambulance service.
MRS. I. L. PERRY, SERVICE
E. L. WATSON, President
J. F. GOMEZ, Treasurer
TYLER, TEXAS
A Co-Educational Institution Offering Christian Education to the Colored Youth. Accredited by the State Department of Education as a Junior College. A Faculty of Experienced Teachers. Strict Discipline. A Campus of Natural Beauty. The Elevation is Eph. the Water is Pure and the Class is Delightful, special Attention Given to Students in all Departments. Lowest Terms for Advocated Offer.
College Motto: "Strive Always To Treat Ours Better than They Treat You."
NEGRO ACTORS DISCUSSED BY
LONGVIEW NEWS
Longview, Texas—The M. E. Conference at McAulay, now at McAulay II, will visit the ministers were present. Earl Taylor, a member of Bethal Baptist Church, buried in his church, the Sunshine Church, and the Sunshine Special and the Texas: Sunshine, $4,341; Texas, $6.56; Miss Quinn College, spent 2 weeks in the Texas: Miss Quinn College was entertained cently by Miss Maris Stewart, at the White Rose Club was entertained cently by Miss Maris Stewart, at the whist tables, Miss Oris Townsend won the guest prize, Mrs. Gilbert Benjamin the club prize, and Mrs. Benjamin the club prize. U. S. O. Borehouse of the National Benefit Life Insurance Conference branch office at Shresworth, La. where an official meeting was held.
Houston Churches
ST. LUKE P. E. MISSION
(Y. W. C. A. Assembly Room)
Rev. A. Birch
Sunday evening, 11 a.m., m. morning prayer. 7:30 p.m.; Sunday school, 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion every second Sunday 11 a.m.
TRINITY M. E. CHURCH
J. R. H. Lesther, Pastor
Sunday, April 29, 11 a.m. m., ser-
vice station "Must Station" 8:30 p.m. m., Vesper re-
cital, Mud M. Satkins, organist; W. Al-
bert W. Dent, barge; 8:00 p.m. m., pre-
regular preaching services.
POLRIM CONGREGATIONAL
Rev., April 29, 11 a.m. m., Mission Day)
11 a.m. m., Service ("The Community"
Call for the Christ-Church Way of
Christianity," the World Demand."
UNERAL HOME
TON & COMPANY
PERTAKERS
At Live and Let Live Prices
Too Small—Burial Association in con-
E. L. WATSON, President
MEZ, Treasurer
PHONE VALENTINE 21224
R COLLEGE
Institution Offering Christian
Youth. Accredited by he
education as a Junior College.
Ad Teachers. Street Disciple.
Beauty. The Elevation is Egh.
The Climate is Delightful,pe
Students in all Departments,
mantages Offered.
We Always To Treat Ours
You."
McCLELLAN,
President
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, A1
ALPHA FRATERNITY
LAUNCHES ANNUAL
SCHOOL CAMPAGN
The national "Go to High School Go to College" movement sponsored an annual conference (oldest of Negro Greek letters and/or formal organizations), will be inaugurated April 25, through the University of North Carolina. The faculty plans to have speakers at the various high and grammar schools to enlist them in the high school and grammar school and then supplement their public school education with a through college course.
The local chapter also plans to entrain the senior classes of the high school and grammar school to attend the short talk will be given, to prevail upon all those who are able to at-
CORSICANA
REEVES CAFE
Fried Chicken and Club House Sandwiches
Oyster Leaves in Season
SERVICE STATIONS
In the City
STORAGE, REPAIR SHOP,
WASHING, GREASING
Open Day and Night
Road Service, Too!
CALL US!
Goodson's
PRESTON 7222-7492
700 BUFFALO DRIVE
Let Flowers
Express Your
Sentiments
M. 8 L. HOME
Floral Shop
2011 FRANCIS AVE.
Floral Designs for All Occasions
Delivery Service
PHONES
BAD. 0742 FAX. 1861
---
We have just moved a large stock of new and fine shopworn merchandise into our Odn Avenue store. A great quantity of excellent merchandise from some of the finest homes in Houston. All to be sold at prices and on very easy terms. Payments can be made in either store.
Here is a Few of Our Special Items
Lot of 35 Refrigerators—Prices range from $7.75 up to $50
Lot of 35 Duo-folds—Prices range from $12 up to $40
Lot of 15 Dining Room Suites—Prices range from $32 up to $250
Lot of 15 Bedroom Suites—Prices range from $20 up to $150
Lot of 15 Living Room Suites—Prices range from $50 up to $200
No. 1 Gas Ranges—Chairs-Beds-Rugs
And any number of other household furniture all at very low prices.
Our supply of exchange merchandise is larger than our space allows, so we have tagged all our furniture, which is of excellent quality and in fine condition, with prices to suit your needs.
GET ACQUAINTED WITH OUR NEW STORE WHERE YOU CAN
Buy Furniture Economically
If you happen to be unemployed we will help you pay for your furniture until your financial condition changes.
Kost Furniture Store
2910-12-14 ODIN AVENUE PRESTON 4879
Notice is hereby given that original letters of administration on the estate of the late James H. H. H. are granted to me, the undersigned, on behalf of the County Court of Harris County, Texas. All persons have claims against the county to present the same to me within the time set forth in the indemnity and post office address are 2119 Stewart Street, Houston, Harris County.
Witness my hand this 19th day of April, A. D. 1928.
MRS. ISABELLA M. MITCHELL
Administrator of the estate of T. D.
VIRTUOS ARE ENTERTAINED
Mrs. Mittle M.C. Young-Quinn, 949
Syndrome, entertained last Wednesday
afternoon with a host of friends,
including Mrs. Herbert C.
Blanks, Mines. Young and Blanks are
members of Yukka Kappa Academy,
a private school in the ten-dentier is a scholomate of the hostes. Other present were Mr.
Mrs. Neil and Mr. Mrs. A. L. Dixon.
DALLAS BUSINESS MAN HERE
Clarence F. Starka, Dallas, pre-
riori director of the press publishing Company, was in the city last week visiting his mother,
the late Barbara, and attending the home of her brother, A. D. Ewell, 3360 Burton.
LOCAL EDITOR LOSSES BROTHER
Editor J. M. Burr of the Sentient,
attend the funeral of his late brother,
Thomas Burr, who expired Mon-
day. Burr is being shipped to Chicago for interment in the family lot. Mr. Burr has
sympathy of his many Houston frie
EXCELLENT BUSINESS
LOCATIONS
1409 Clark Street—1014, @ $ per week.
1413 Clark Street—12x20, @ $ per week.
1415 Clark Street—2 rooms, 12x4, @ $ per week.
1419 Clark Street—Corner; two entrances, 12x14; @ $ per week.
CALL MIR BATES—PRES. 1040.
Sore Legs Healed
Open Lease Lenses, Eiberglas Videos, Geko
Open Lease Lenses, Eiberglas Videos, Geko
"How to Help My Lease Lenses at
Hoboken." Describe your case.
A. C. LEEKER 215 625 625 625 Green Bay Ave.
Wilmington, MN.
AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
NO DETOURS!
Trolley Car
There is one road to Galveston upon which one never encounters a "Detour" sign. This is a road of steel—one over which the interurban travels back and forth, carrying its passengers safely, comfortably, and swiftly to their destination. There are no detours on the interurban. When it's scheduled to arrive—it arrives.
JEFF L. ALEXANDER, Mgr.
Samuel Co.
On the
Summer School
Intensive Summer Qu
Each-Six
Conveniences in
Austin, the capital a
full dormitory, will
school park adjoin
school park adjoin
Excellent Teacher
Expe
ANNUEL HUSTLE COLLEGE
On the Air Announcing
Air School, June 10-
Summer Quarter in Two Terms.
Each—Six Recitations a Week
and surroundings for study
the capital and educational center
of the college and educational center
available, dining hall and G
bids promoted. A num-
bler promoted.
Int Teachers—Wide Range of O
Expenses Reasonable
Samuel Huston College
Intensive Summer Quarter in Two Terms of Five Weeks
Each—Six Recitations a Week
Conveniences and surroundings for study unsurpassed;
in Austin, the capital and educational center of the state.
All campus facilities, dining hall and cafeteria, facilities for recreation splendid. Public band concert on school park adjoining campus. A number of regular school activities promoted.
Excellent Teacher—Wide Range of Courses—
Expenses Reasonable
Write for Bulletin—
FIRST TO COME GETS FIRST BENEFIT
PAGE SIX FIRST IN COMPLETENESS
NEGRO DOCTORS
TO HOLDPARLEY
IN SAN ANTONIO
The Lone Star State Medical Dental and Pharmaceutical Association holds its forty-second annual session at San Antonio, June 12-14 1928. This is the largest state association among our group in the country, with more than 100 dentists and pharmacists are members of this organization. They represent the highest type of medical education; only those who are graduates of class A medical schools and successfully pass the "Texas board of examiners are eligible for dentistry and pharmacy and encourage its members to keep abreast the advancement of scientific medicine. The department has taken post-graduate courses in the best hospitals and clinics of the area are specialists in surgery, obstetrics, diseases of women, diseases of children, and eye, ear, nose and
At the annual sessions free public conferences are held daily, and free lectures, discourses and demonstrations are held daily. The annual conferences gene and sanitation, whereby more instructive and intelligent information may be imparted to our peoplet. This year clinics in internal medical clinics are held at the Whittier thront will be held at the Whittier Sanarium; dental clinics at the U. M. D. Marshall president; clinical clinics at the Santa Rosa Infirmary. The Following are the officers of the U. M. D. Marshall president; Miss G. A. Blakemore, C.p. Tyler, vice-president; D. M. Marshall secretary; I. A. Carter, D. D. S. Bryan, treasurer; J. W. Morrison, D. M. Bryan, treasurer; M. D. San Antonio, representatives to National Medical Association chairman of board of directors.
Editors and Bishops
Hours: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 3 to 8 p.m.
Office Phone. Pres. 5288
415 Odd Fellows Temple
DR. CHAS. W. PEMBERTON
MEDICINE AND SURGERY
Res. phone. Hadley 5440
Mrs. A. E. Stewart
and Son
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
"We Are In Sympathy Always"
Notice our directing. Compare it
with others.
Phone 424
1174 E. 5th Ave. Corsicana, Tex.
A "SQUARE DEAL"
CAN YOU DO THIS!
ONE-X-REIL
There's a certain article that's being
published every day that mentions the
army and every event in the country
that has been affected by the war.
They may be even better fit to the
mighty war they've been built for.
SQUAL and they wouldn't be without
SQUAL and they wouldn't be without
Now, you may have this article in your
book. It is a letter to your dear neighbor or
father it over at your next door neighbor or
your next door neighbor, but if you are not able to find it in
the book, you may be able to find it in
the book if it is not in your free of charge. First and
last, it must be in your free of charge. Take
taking the eight capital letters above
ranging them in such a manner that the
letters come from the "O" to the "X" and
hope the "O" to the "X" be the name of the article.
And that name is the name of the article.
Can you find your answer GUNK? Try it.
If you find your answer GUNK, will it
be there and possibly will it. This may be
your answer. You should consolidate write
your name and address plausibly.
JOSEPH A. NORRIS
P. O. Box 123
Lincoln, Texas
Insurance Leaders Hold AnnualParley; Bankers In Session
The Columbus citizens, in keeping with their traditional hospitality, are, in addition, to offer events, keeping delegates and visitors constantly going and enjoying the activities. The activities are being made by Jamison's "Colormograms" for exhibition purposes in Negro theaters through the work of the director. To make this conference the most profitable and pleasurable yet attended, at the home office of the Supreme Life and Casualty Company, and the theater company, A. P. Bentley.
PHILLY NEGROES
HOLD MEMORIAL
FOR WANAMAKER
Philadelphia, Pa.—(ANP)—Memorial services for the late Rodman Wanamaker were held in the First African Baptist Church here Sunday afternoon, April 15, prominent citizens of both races being present. Those taking part were Rev. Wilson H. Brooks, who delivered an address; Leon W. Johnson, who gave a violin solo; Robert S. Jackson and Muss Ada C. Baytop.
That Cold
May End in Fla. Check it Today
There's a way to do it--HILL'S. Does the four necessary things in one. Check the four necessary things in one. Check the four necessary things in one. That's the aid you need. Don't go right now and get HILL'S in the red room. HILL'S.
Cursors—Bruce Knox T.
LIQUID
Unnatural and mucous discharges can be avoided by destroying the germs of infectious diseases. $1.00 At all drugstores
CHICHESTERS PILLS
THE DIAMOND BRAND
For Chichester's Diamond Brand
For Chichester's Diamond Brand
For Chichester's Diamond Brand
CHICHESTERS PILLS
DIAMOND BRAND
CHICHESTERS PILLS
DIAMOND BRAND
CHICHESTERS PILLS
SOLD BY DROUGHTS EVERYWHERE
Phones: Office P. 5115, Residence P. 1061
Heaven 1 P. M. to 5:39 P. M.
M. A. M. to 10:39 P. M.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
217 Pilgrim Bldg.
Res. 1086 Dewling Street
OR COSTS YOU NOTHING
FOR HOME USE
last standing, can be easily buried with
their own hands. The
completion of bone treatment absolutes
their own costs.
COMBINATION BONE TREATMENT
TON, 1978; W. R. DARLEY
TON, 1978; W. R. DARLEY
DR. RUPERT O. ROETT
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
402 Odd Fellows Temple
Phones: Office P. 2217, Res. P. 6919
Residence: 410 Robin St.
Dr. O. L. Lattimore
DENTAL SURGEON
4093 MILAM STREET
All Chances of Dental Work
Nearly Doe, Bridge Work
A Specialty
Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
2 m. to 8 p.m.
Sundays by Appointment
Phones: Office, Preston 1459
Residence, Cap. 6551
DR. C. M. NICHOLS
Physician and Surgeon
Taborian Bldg. Suite 220
801 216 Prairie Ave., Houston, Tx
THE HOUSTON INFORMER SATURDAY, APRIL 2K 1928
SundaySchool
Lesson
(By REV. P. R. PITZWATER, D.D., Dean
Moody Bible Institute of Chicago).
(0. 1922, Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for April 29
THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP
LESSON TEXT—Mark 17:21-31, 31:4-44.
GOLDEN TEXT—Where your trust is,
PRIMARY TOPIC—Loving Jesus
Dust of All.
GOLDEN TEXT—Patting Jesus First,
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—The Peril of Ridges.
1. The Rich Young Ruler (17:27-2)
1. His question.
2. What is it that I may inherit
eternal life? This young man was
in earnest. He came running and
kneeded to Jesus. This question re-
flected his love for Jesus.
3. Young man with a double character.
"Jesus behold him, loved him." He
gems moral, honest, earnest and cour-
sioned. He was willing to do something to fill up
that which was lacking, therefore he
came to Jesus to make inquiry as to
Jesus' really (v. 18, 19).
He knew the young man's heart and put his finger on the weak spot in his life. Jesus reiterated the command that he had all his life kept these commandments, but when it came to parting with his possessions in order to help his neighbor he parried with him. 3. Lacking one thing and yet lost (vv. 21, 22). He told the Lord pointed out to him that in the life of his life was the love of money, he was unwilling to pay the price. When the time came in his life to choose between eternal life and parished company with Christ.
4. The peril of riches (vv. 23-27).
Jesus said, "How hardly shall you possess the kingdom of God." When He discerned the atonement of the disciples he answered again and said, "How hard shall you enter into the kingdom of God." It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to possess the kingdom. The difficulty does not lie in the fact that a man possesses riches, for one man possesses wealth, for the kingdom of the kingdom. Wealth is a mighty power. In itself it is good. It will provide bread for the widow and the poor, and it will send the gospel of Christ to the ends of the earth. The peril of riches is the ever, the step from possession of riches to trusting in them is a very short one. The tendency of growing riches is the peril of the soul. So long as a man possesses riches he is safe, but as soon as riches possess the man he is in deadly peril. The Widow Mice (Mary 12: 41-44). Jesus had spent a strenuous day in the surgeing thunder. Observe
2. A certain poor widow threw into the treasury two mills (v. 42) of coins, one of gold and one of copper coin mule. The mule was worth about one-eighth of a cent, therefore her offering was one-fourth of a cent in the treasury. 3. Jesus said unto His disciples, "Verily I say unto you that this poor widow lath care in more than all men" (v. 43) of "virtue" (v. 43). The Lord estimates gifts by the motive of the heart, not by their amount. 4. By what the given has left, not by what was given (v. 44). This widow cast into the treasury all that she had, even all the money she had. 5. Their abundance. Though their gifts were much more than that of the poor widow, yet they had an abundance of this. This woman's influence goes on. Many devoted Christians have given her example and have given
On God's Presence
Let us build our cottage so that every window may look out on the mighty Alps of God's presence, and that we may live, move and have life, beneath the constant impulse being, "God in a hero"—F. R. Meyer.
No Distant Helper
Constantly this Jesus is putting
Himself into hand-to-hand. He is
no distant helper, no far-off and simple
lecturing roomer — Dr. WALDO J. HOWARD
Office Phase, Preston 6350
DR. WALDO J. HOWARD
DENTIST
Suites 281-292-293 Old Fallow
Temple
Louisiana St. at Fannie Ave.
X-RAY EXAMINATIONS
HOUSTON, TEXAS
COUNTY WORKER
COMMENDS WORK
AT WEST COLUMBIA
Editor The Houston Informer:
I have had the pleasure of being a county industrial supervisor under the Jeanne Fund for four years and among the rural school children in Prairie View College, at Taukeegee Institute, Ala., and in a number of counties in Alabama, but I must say I have never seen any to surpass that of West Columbia Junior High School, Mrs. D. A. Snow, principal March 20-31.
I have been excellent for rural schools and very good for the junior high school which I have already mentioned. I am embroidered, canning, preserving, poultry, leather-work, hand painting, carpentry, typewriting, printing, clamming, spelling, rapid work (art-hemic), garden products and handicrafts, school play, special children, whether rural or city.
The faculties of these schools design show in the press. Special mention should be given to West Columbia Junior High for having received
the principal, Mrs. D. A. S. D. who has the intermediate and high school background in View College and has taken special work in manual training in order that her boys might have that experience. We have best equipped schools in the county and an enrollment of nearly one hundred. The primary work is under the supervision of Miss La Verne Connell, a graduate of Colden High Colored and a student of Traite View College. The industrial work is under the supervision of Miss Eula Lea Peachy, a graduate of Houghton College. We have a student of Traite View College. It would be "very encouraging to them to meet me and meet their meetings to have you visit them so you could see what they are doing and to mention their efforts in Thank you in advance for your interest and kindness, I am, Yours sincerely, MRS. WILLIE C. MILLER, 1311 Bailey Street, Houston
Sundays by Appointment
DR. F. D. PARROT1
DENTIST
Suite 214, Pilgrims Bldg.
222 West Dallas Ave.
MACK'S PLACE
First-Class Shoe Shine Parlor
for Ladies and Gents—Cigars,
Cigarettes and Newstand
JAMES McDANIELS, Proprietor
4111 Milam Street
Office. Phone: Preston 5444
Res. Phone: Taylor 2990-W
DR. R. H. WARD
DENTIST
Hours: 8:30 a. m. to 1 p. m., 2 p.
m. to 6 p. m. Sundays by appointment.
State 201, Odd Fellows Temple
Cor. Louisiana and Prairie
HOUSTON, TEXAS
Fairchild Undertaking Co.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
EMBALMERS
1015 Dowling Street
Phones: Fairfair 1835
Fairfair 6464
Office Phone Prec. 5501
Rea. Phone, Hadley 6255
Office Hours:
8 to 12 A. M.—1 to 8 P. M.
GEORGE W. ANTOINE M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Resturcnt: 2009 McCown Ave.
Phone: 800 655 Forte Temple
Weekly Excursions
BY ALICE DUNNAR-NELSON
(For the Associated Negro Press)
The annual five days' meeting of the National Urban League in Philadelphia was a notable gathering, and the entire conference, memorable and exciting, took place in Egyptian Hall of the Wannamaker Store, was more than memorable. It was epoch-making.
First, the setting. Egyptian Hall is insurgent beauty. Next, the meeting. Wannamaker working over the meeting, averided that he did not know that there was such a beautiful hall in Philadelphia. Next, the meeting. Wannamaker employees, a many time prize winner; the very excellent choral singing with musical skill and artistry. Philadelphia, New York, Washington, Baltimore, Baltimore, Wilmington, from Boston to Pennsylvania and New Jersey, plus the usual delegates to the confer-
That Baby You've Longed For
Mrs. Burton Adrienne Women on Motherhood and Companionship
"For several years I will dwell the blaming of motherhood," writes Mrs. Margaret Burton. Burton has written a book about subjects to particles of terrible suffering and malanchilias. Now I am the proud mother of a girl who has been blinded by paucity of patience and inspiration to my blinded. I believe blindness of other women would like to be relieved. I will gladly reveal it to any married woman who is blinded by paucity of patience. She has not blinded herself without charge. She has not blinded herself without charge. Correspondence will be directly confidential. Correspondence will be directly confidential.
LAWYER
Specializing In Colored
Divorce Cases
LOWEST PRICES
Phone Preston 6086
10091 Congress Ave.
Houston, Texas
PRESCRIPTIONS
OUR SPECIALTY
Peoples Pharmacy
VIRGIL B. BYERS, Ph. C.
415 MILAM STREET
Same Phone: Pres. 1909
School nurse says all girls should know this
TALKING to a roomful of high school girls on personal hygiene, one of the most important skills they need, functioning naturally at all times, functioning naturally and diet habits should be encouraged. But when you need to avoid harm in your midlife, you must be calmly and can't disturb the normal rhythm. Particularly with girls there are times when muijol should always be taken. Muijol is a safe and safe harm reduction method. It won't cause distress or nuijol is different from any other substance. It contains no drugs or medications. How you are feeling because it is so pure and harmless, and works so well, you can be on the bottle on hand. Every dragged bottle
DALLAS CHURCH BACKS YOUNG IN BISHOPRIC RACE
DALLAS CHURCH BACKS YOUNG IN BISHOPRIC RACE
(By L. R. LOCKHART)
Bethel A. M. E. Church of Dallas
Texas, notes with pleasure an article
in The Houston Informer, endoring
Dr. B. G. Young for the biopicric
This endorsement comes from West
Texas University, Dr. Young,
Dr. Young's former pastorate
from which he-came as pastor to
Bethel A. M. E. Church, Dallas.
We, the members of Bethel in Dallas,
hereby desire to express our ap-
pression to Dr. Young, invoking our sentiment, and to add our testimonial to the very excellent
qualities of Dr. Young, and to his
leadership.
We submit as our honest convic-
tion man, his faith, and his few egu-
perios and no superiors. As churchman,
his high concentration, devotion
and his humility, he graces him to
grace the bench of any of the
branches of Methodism, and his
mission to leave no honorable means
unemployed to crown Dr. G. B.
Young's episcopal honors in
May 1928,
TRADE PO
AN ASSU
SATISF
Mrs. Annie M. Turn
determination to produce the
rations possible, has estabil
trade-name "PDRM." His
suppose as to be other署
appreciated by ever-increasing
proved Products.
PDRM Preparations
A nearby PDRM
your PDRM needs.
If y
FRESH DRESS
PORO MARK 99
AN ASSURANCE OF
SATISFACTION
Mrs. Annie M. Turbo-Malone, through her earnest determination to produce the very best Hair and Toilet Preparations possible, has established beyond question, under the trade-name "PORO." Hair and Toilet Preparations to superior as to be these many years the accepted standard, expected by ever-increasing thousands as seasoned and proved Products.
PORO Preparations Please Particular People.
A nearby PORO AGENT will cheerfully serve your PORO needs.
If you don't know her name, write
PORO COLLEGE
4388 St. Portland Avenue
ST. LOUIS, MO. U. S. A.
HENS, FRYERS and EGGS
All fresh from our own farm daily.
W. F. Puls
CITY MARKET PRESTON ENT
Out-of-town orders shipped promptly. WE SHIP TO
OF THE STATE.
CITY MARKET PRESTON ENTRANCE
Out-of-town orders shipped promptly. WE SHIP TO ANY PART OF THE STATE.
Largest Fish Market in the State among the Race.
2744 ODIN AVENUE
PHONE CAPITOL 0480
HARMON'S DRY GOODS STORE
Can satisfy all your want in the Dry Goods Line. A full line of Bair Goods and NALWS,YS on hand. Your pathway is enriched.
Democratic Leader of African Descent To Work House Sent
New York City. (ANP) - William Bridges, long identified with the Democratic party in New York as an orator and leader, was sent to Washington to present a plaint of Mrs. Elizabeth Owens. The case was called for Magistrate Hugh Heights Court, and after a testimony that bridges slept in the hallway of her house and annoyed the way to the form of a begging abuses, the magistrate imposed a sentence of ten days.
Bridges came to New York from Florida some years ago and worked with the Democratic party. In 1908, he was knocked senseless on the fire of the Stist Street, where police charged he had burglared an apartment. He was given a prison sentence which
After his release from prison, he
worked in the Army, and he
worked his way back into the good
grasses of the public, becoming one
Harlem 'Hare. Trouble with his wife
to another downfall, from which he
has not recovered.
WATTS NERVE TONIC for week
and week, he runs down condition of the nerves, his vitality; for men and women. Price
Bax 157, Houston, Texas.
TAXS
RHO MARK
RANCE OF ACTION
Do Malone, through her earnest try best Hair and Toilet Prep beyond question, under the and Toilet Preparation so yours the accepted standard, thousands as seasoned and
House Particular People.
AGENT will cheerfully serve
we don't know her name, write
FORD COLLEGE
400 S. Proffessor Avenue
ST. LOUIS, MO., U. S. A.
Puls
RESTON ENTRANCE
ply. WE SHIP TO ANY PART
STATE.
— — < . SeUSEON INEGI SATURDAY pur 2s see
IBRICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER ~
SS a
Tribune’s Editor
Disensses Negro
Press Over Radio
BURT F. TAYLOR
"yseuns 18D arp Bs Gelb
Tre 0 Tare wan Par Set
SUITE 405, ODD FELLOWS TEMPLE
‘aa st Pte
PHONE PRESTON 3164
Mew York City—(ANPy—=
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OFFICE PHONE: PRESTON 5855
JEFF D. JONES, Jr. |
REAL ESTATE AND OIL PROPERTY
1 MAKE FARMLOANS
‘Hames Refinanced—Basiness Locations
amber Rugnihed forall binds of Building Purposes Cash or Terme
ROOM 210 PILGRIM BLDG.
‘Pres, 0714 “Residence Cap. 4248-W
DIXON AND CLAY
Buneral Directors and Embalmers
3812 Lyons Ave. Houston Texas
|
ie:
‘Gat-Rate Prices Every Monday
dsbron's SUkeTor Mina ats Seehener sus
Rae Mai Dressing: we
far wen RE re mt
Ea Re Lm mtr “7
Gahetags Hair i 705
Md ant Kidney, cI 4
TEMPL fake SHOP
gir ziton tune” Reis aes hee Poe. 268
C..R. Yerwoad, M. D.
ae
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Ped see
en
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Ses att oe
Di] see tees
enone
AGEN PSyeustiel
ees
STANLEY DRUG -COMPANY
2820.0BIN AVE.’
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, TOILET ARTICLES: .
=
‘PROMPT, FBRE DELIVERY !
Call ps and tie wo. ;
‘PHONES: PRESTON 6575-1571-0644 |
michaels
Bhane Preston 2180 oat Geeta soe a
MMBALMERS AND FUNERAL DIRECTORS
IIR Gon Retive Street Hewston, Texas
eer
[ee gk
ee ee oe er ae
| SOwmIGE RIONE CAPTEOL 1p; RES. PLONE CAPTTOL 1162.
{BOIS 9 0A. M. TO 120M. RAN P.M. TO 690 Fe
DR. PERCY D. FOSTER |
DanTEr ,
Senta by Anpeltaent .
(fice 2127 Odin Avenne—Washington Thesire Bailing |
A Chewing Gum
With A Reason
Medicine's most modern taxa
tive needs thorough chewing.
Fenamint
in its most perfect form. The
Se2eN5
sre sare.
Attdruggists, 15c and 25¢
e s
“THE STANDARD SANITARIIM-BATH HOUSE ;
DR. A. L. HUNTER, Prep and Mgr.
POR COLORED PEOPLE ,
Ee
ety eth—Madarny Equppst—Capasty 100 Batre Oaty—Beat |
sarvce—Qeuruces Trestmare-Rhoumation, Maire, Gin Dionaeen,
a a a ra
‘MARLIN, TEXAS
I it
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Drug Store
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—_——
DR. C. A. PHILLIPS
beeen
Meas: 919 am 18pm
‘Smdays by posse
nome 21017 Taeran Bu.
att Pras Ave.
Oakes: Pres Hat Ren sinm 328.8
————————
LEARN
m¥
v c :
Sosltoern te latent Promch Pate
Met of miger matings new of
Ye)
a eee,
sot i ase Rien Wie! B. ..
BAN tetra
SOA eS Pep 4
INDUSTRY anp BUSINESS
ae
are Assia Nero ress
‘he National Negro Business Langue xa Department «Commerce
and Other Reliable Agencies.
sei eb sin te ct ih Sa es
pet ee eee cere pe
= geal ie adtened Ree res ik Haine
Washington: D.C wit be pre:
rc ae
“TETAR, IRNGHANOUING uoCONES COMNON BOND BET WHEN
TEWOLANERD AND BUBIWRSS UEAGUR: DOMESTIC COMMERCE
APURS AMD BUSINESS LEAGUE: DOMESTIC COs
Ai he saeeneremien ofthe Nations! Negro Pres Association, She
services nad loince of tat erguisation was pledged to the National Nes
ie ane Lege ter he erry met nan te Scar
Siu cr ur Aisle key, secretary of te lenews, who. outlined the. po
tam of thet body Sales Aut (1-17 convention of the baioes mt
New Yorks whore “Zatall Merhendsine” wil te te hay” theme. ofthe
pune tal afer ty adorn nar the service ng provided fer
Pecans: iy tbe Beat of Forse snd Domestic Commer of the U. 8
evecanee ergs tesetes tapes wet. fron the emeti. Cor
Sis Toren te od foursred tem, Wonhington to Lenny, Ken
acho, foe Bea pervs of aking clear thnefectures of government el
° es cee
Rae fos tre bee ct complet comblention of Cems sk
fe yrnpsee te tare combed br te Ite oa
Blac tor tls tain. Tow ton srr of cooprstion cloned
Pocs 648 mevppapee rblchers revnt vos a moat remarkable exh
ion of tis scepyamce of mdern tenures nt naeas practice, nd
Speen TTS Cees vars onsen oe. arog gn
{IR IG BUSINESS OF THE COUNTRY 18 ITS LITTLE BUSINESS
‘eo meny among os hol! slight esteem forthe iden of ite pace of
vans nod a fer wht ne red nce Ye bls
fe Dah pen te cae te eerains of s grant foes fv: Thal
t= mae, epee for seme ot bole.
Ine Corin sewer se th tan specs of the meres st
sign In this crantry, whore, se Dr. Frank Surface ofthe Burean of For
}Gorsant Dunerte Commerce declare, 19% ot the bine of the sot
piel eee be meme os coc! mabe: tte tbe aeeragde of Bt
lode tes ep en pet commer,
“Dereham dr 5900 worth of bosines annoy f Leping sbrete
st arrose sopltions cod icone for large eresp of busines: bos
Seto the ophans in «city where a aera conn ep akon contin
J singe lee ‘Redce! Co daly erm, and sated om te td
frame pooh, tht oso tat 816 px day pF er bre sea leh hems
es: vant the soe bain dae
FOr evar: with small s vlc pf bones, eiecy sod economy
ent prevall extent, tut tia can nd fe Ueing Sons thrnghowt the
fon Ir you aren basinnes nnd ein hat moch, ont yal tbr bangs
Bec ntt-tamine your beset sd Spe bare pe se lghng the hg
uma tre mer
Tesosaen [pe fhe ep te besigmes. Mather thn complain
ngs ive valent cartel Yong of tie tanne pou have ak Fou
trl be dag as wal os the erngy erebat.
‘Brey day seo apse retail shrescoc their doors in bankrupey, and
imanutuctarert nnd wholsnle vrthants have cxtse to deplore the’ Bigh
Fas ot pees od ales satel nese, She. stgton in oa
ade u'ermonl erprniare Dictintin eos lok ae thrcah tay ar
pes Mah saee soe pest apeem of moving te neues oie tom
oy maa al
‘Amero bp to the pinto nembamiins of sida
caetiton wher familie dele themes to greene 8 parece ope
i male rege A very le senton "to erice ehh ted fer ls
er esd re ha ies ak, eee
Pamela ‘cline wth racratloa! patio. for
oe otis at ere ee ci
pokotony etal bans goon a pre
bese gene cine ft fer Cena it Me ta ie Mg
"ihc item many ances by tepdeonpennations nd by the Domestic Got
mere Division of ie U. 8 Department of Commer. A matiet rece
fection wits Cplasd pesesl 5 tod he Maa Yor lone Ue age
In roving thn sons ol. the coantry.” Revely & tall Vea be
tin we cestd ein the Demesic Commare Divo to enue teh
tall merchants of the ld the findings of Cove scent, topther wih
Scatace ioe Neeedicin w2 may ond eae
Tecklag 6 job Arecty ecxecing foo any Those etl bacon
ot a eountry wees invests neqrvasie © Stal rnshing tats ag
‘Stns Ws tat ivan Ue te whe cemay, Bites ve may capi
fo bnadt scat ‘aval hempavee otis service, Chere ce Mle
et W Rela of great sitiaal ales
By ALGERNON B. JACKSON :
hee The mpi etre Pres)
| tae chap wie sew 8 omy te
Fags: peated papi
fad othe wsee ore 6 vate
ariel xp, hanging by her tre to
Siespepes tak wes Motel. ae
Se tees an pe we 0 re
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Ree ee ied gees 8 6
Peat fatto mo to bow
e‘hase here 3
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aan oct Se attracts
ie att to earn "sare
eat te con he tae
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stl Li Uta ht
abit ces fo tno eet hey
Saat recedes i mrcape
pies hl Tn They dover
that their time has ben wasted, that
ft ie root od feel mene woe
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secs. seat chow ie colons ‘And
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EDITORIALS
THE HOUSTON INFORM
AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPE
"It Gets You Told—Nothing Else!"
THE HOUSTON INFORMER
AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
"It Gets You Told—Nothing Else!"
MEMBER
NATIONAL PRESS PRESS
ASSOCIATION
Published every Saturday by the Webster-Richardson Publishing Company
Inc. 409-111 Smith Street, Houston, Texas.
HOUSTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1928
OUR PARTISAN POSITION EXPLAINED
Some of the colored citizens are engaging in surmises and reaching conclusions regarding our political or partisan stand in the Republican situation in Harris County and Texas, particularly as it relates to the regular organization headed in this county by R. B. Morris, county chairman.
It will be recalled that this author was a candidate against Mr. Murray, the county chairman or chairman of the Republican executive committee of Harris County; and that a district judge refused to issue a mandatory woll compelling the Republican executive committee of Harris County to place this author's name on the official ballot as a candidate for said elective office. The result of that fight is well known to most residents of this city and section.
It will also be borne in mind that, starting back in 1920, this editor has always been aligned with the Republican faction fighting the regular Republican organization, both in this county and in Harris County. He recognized the recognized organization, but because we differed as to partisan policy, program and procedure.
After looking over the field of presidential prospects, this editor and paper chose to support Herbert C. Hoover for the Republican presidential nomination, and it so happened that several of the leaders in the regular Republican organization in this city and county were and are also favorable to Mr. Hoover's candidacy.
When The Informer came out for Mr. Hoover, certain local residents of the white race sought a conference with this editor, and discussed at length the political situation, particularly interracial, in this city and county.
At this and subsequent conferences, we had our white conferences to understand that we wanted no financial remuneration, as such, for our support of Mr. Hoover's candidacy; that we favored the present secretary of commerce for the presidential election; that we wanted to have Hoover even if our warring factions could not get together on terms of peace and declare a partisan and political armistice. At these parliies we contended that the Negroes of Houston and Harris County, as well as Texas, did not want to dominate the Republican party or any other partisan organization; but we wanted to have Hoover participate in partisan participation and representation; and that upon this basis—partisan participation and representation—we would bury the hatchet and line up with the regular organization in this county and district; particularly; but we also made it quite plain to local Republican leaders that, while we were willing to support Mr. Hoover and attempt to work out a harmony program, we would not swallow, without protest, the kind of political concoction and partisan dope which R. B. Creeger, Republican national committeeman for Texas and titular head of the party on this state, has been dispensing to the colored Republicans of Texas during his administration. Mr. Hoover several weeks ago, we sought to make our position in this matter quite clear and plain; and later this writer was one of the moving spirits in a statewide conference, held at Dallas under auspices of the Independent Colored Voters' League of Texas, where a program was outlined seeking to unify and solidify the belligerent Republican factions in Texas on the same basis as effected in Harris County.
WE HAVE NOT "SOLD OUT" THE RACE NOR OUR CAUSE TO ANY PERSON, GROUP OR CLIQUE, AND NO ONE HAS SOUGHT TO "BUY US!"
It is simply a case of politics making strange bedfellows, so (a speak, for, as stated before, both this editor and the regular Republican organization found themselves supporting and working for the presidential nomination of the same distinguished candidate, Mr. Hoover. Hoover's cause could be considerably advanced and enhanced in this section, and even the state, if all of his supporters worked in harmony and as a unit, rather than as separate and distinct units.
We believe that the majority of colored citizens of Texas, whether they agree with and are willing to line up with the Creager-Note regime or not, are not unfavorable to Mr. Hoover's candidacy; for candor and frankness, rather than political compulsion unbiased and unpredicted Texas of color, we believe that the majority fitted for the debate within the gift of the American electorate, and that there is not another man being mentioned for the presidential nomination, by either of the major parties, who has the qualifications to the marked degree as possessed by Mr. Hoover.
We have stated before, and wish to repeat it here, that all citizens wishing to participate in the Republican precinct conventions on Saturday, May 5, 1928, must respond to the official call issued by the regular Republican organization, despite the propaganda and ill advice of some of the anti-Creager and anti-Clague members.
Nothing can be gained by remaining outside the organization and fighting, but much can be gained by getting inside the organization and seeking to effect such reforms.
Another thing: No organization, political, religious, civic or whatnot, can thrive and grow and maintain its hold upon its constituents, if said organization is constantly and continually in an internal wrangle and factional controversy; and even the Republican party of Texas is no exception to this general rule. The Republican party of New York is no exception to this norm. BOOVER—HARMONY—HAPPINESS!
The Houston Informer
America's Greatest Weekly Newspaper
G. O. P. Leaders-
INSTRUCTING DELEGATES FOR HOOVER
The Informer has been asked by several Hoover supporters if this paper, the original (and up to the present time, the only avowed) Hoover supporter in Texas among race newspapers, is favorable to an instructed Hoover delegation from Texas to the Republican National Convention, which convenes at Kansas City, Mo. June 12, 1928.
(Continued From Page One)
I had rather see the no-called Republican party of Texas as it functions and stands today die; be effaced and driven from the confines of the state, and Hoover control the Grand Old Party of Texas. If E. H. R. Green, the governor of Texas, is a populist publican whom I have ever known, should come to Texas and form a political coalition with R. B. Greater, the governor of Texas, who him as the best political friend the Republicans of Texas ever had, I would oppose with every ounce of my vote.
When discussing this matter on two former occasions, The Informer took the position that, primarily, we favored an instructed delegation for Mr. Hoover from Texas; but later this paper took the attitude that if intrapartisan harmony could be brought about by an uninstructed delegation, while this paper was favorable to the Hoover candidacy, it would agree to the latter procedure to attain this end.
At that time The Informer was under the impression, and had been so informed by some of the leaders in the anti-Creager movement, that they were not against Mr. Hoover, as so; that they had no particular candidate as such, but were chiefly concerned with the reign of vespest-pocket and proxy Republicanism in Texas.
"Secretary Howe, calling himself a Republican and a candidate for the highest office and honor that can be given to a person who represents the state and nation, selects and appoints R. B. Craeger and his wicked un-Republican machine to manage, direct and control the public label for his candidacy, and this forces every decent Republican man, woman and child who loves the Republican party to oppose him. The Republican party to oppose him.
The anti-Creagerites held that this objective could be best attained by sending an uninstructed delegation from Texas to the national parley of the Republican party, but that no fight would be waged upon Mr. Hoover's candidacy. These anti-administration Republicans also contended that Southern states should not instruct for and play a too important part in nominating presidential candidates for the party, and that the party's dependent wholly and solely upon states not of Dixieland.
Ready To Revolt
"Before I would support such an unholy combination of greed, hate, tyranny, graft, and cruelty, I would have on the party of my dead father, and cast my vote for Al Smith, Jesse Jones, or any one of the next June on the Democratic ticket.
With rumors afloat that the anti-Creager opposition in Texas has developed or is fastly assuming an anti-Hoover aspect, and that certain combinations and agreements have been entered into between some of the Texas Republicans—who are, supposedly, the most likely to be involved with backers of other aspirants for the presidency via the Republican nomination, the Informer finds itself at the point where it can not support nor lend even silent encouragement to any movement which is hostile and inimical to Mr. Hoover, merely to get even with certain Texas Republicans who have supported the Republican with Republican principles, tenets, customs and traditions.
"Bebesides being a Republican, I am a free man. No free man who rejoices party, who cherishes its tradition, tenets, and believes in American fair play can follow as a Republican, the man who has been a Hoover flying squadron of Texas.
No paper in Texas has disagreed with the Crealer-Note regime and its exclusiveipartisan policy more than The Informer. but this paper also notes that until there arose a split and schism in the Texas Republican ranks over patronage distribution in this state, none of the leaders in the present revolt movement, except Captain John A. ("Jack") Elgin of San Antonio, has been a leader in the Republican alliances of Fort Worth, ever raised their voices in protest or sought to overthrow the Crealer-Note combination.
"If my memory is not faulty, President Abel Lincoln said that a form of government—of the people, by the people and for the people. But in judging from their acts and statements, a form of government—of the people, by the people and for the people. They claim that the people have no rights, and that the Greer machine can distractish us from the general districts of Texas by simply refusing and neglecting to call for the purpose of nominating presidential electors and electing delegates to the Republican National Convention.
The Informer holds no brief for the Creager-Nolte regime, nor has this paper anything in its journalistic heart against Congressman Wurzbach, moving spirit in the anti-Creager movement. The Informer is also a vocal critic of attitude on Negro participation in Republican affairs is well known, and while he has a host of colored friends in Texas (The Informer editor being one of them), some of his white political associates are rabid Negro hater; one of them boasting in his book *The Negro business was free from "Mexicans, "bizkers," cockroaches and dogs*.
About Those Calls
"They say that the calls issued in the different congressional districts are not valid," said the mayor, May 10, for the purpose of nominating electors and electing delegates to the Republican National Convention. City next June, is illegal and void, and that there is no such thing as a convention authorized by law for May 10.
Still another anti-Hooverite is reported, to have been a ring leader in a mob which lynched a colored youth in his city some months ago. The police were eventually every Negro in his city, county and district. If Negroes had to elect him to public office, this same man would go down to defeat in a race for the office of official dog-catcher! The colored Republicans of Texas should heat the call of the Catholic Republicans of Texas, who are the Republican prescient conventions on Saturday, May 5, 1928, where delegates will be elected to the county conventions, which are slated for Tuesday, May 8, 1928; at which convention delegates will be elected to the state convention, which will be held at Dallas,
"I wonder if the Crayer machine could franchise the Republicans of the 18 different congressional districts by just referral, each district by state," it does. If it does, they have another thought into federal or congressional district units. The state has nothing to do with the public voters living in them may act for themselves when those legal and refuse to act for the party fail and refuse to act.
If the delegates at the state convention favor sending an instruction delegated to Kansas City, they have that right under the law; and The Informer holds to the opinion that such action would not be invade in the light of recent developments and the fact that the delegates have been instructed to vote for Mr. Hoover as long as his name is before the national convention.
Some contend that, in case of a split, it will be good politics for the delegates to be instructed, in order that its chances of being seated by the contests and credentials committee might be enhanced; but the only two Southern states thus far elect contesting delegates to the national parley, have instructed all their delegates for Mr. Hoover; and the issue of legality and party regularity, rather than the candidate, has been instructed in contesting delegations, whether from Louisiana, Mississippi or Texas.
"There is no law on the statute of Texas requiring or preventing congressional convention in every congressional district, the purpose of nominating district delegates to the Republican National Convention. The rules of the Republican national committee beheld by the governor the Republican party in Texas."
The Informer has previously held and holds now that neither the Republican national committee member for Texas, nor the state central committee has the right to hog-tie the Republicans of Texas to any presidential candidate; but as Republican electors and American citizens they have a right to state their individual preference and work to the end of electing a delegation faction of the Republican party to the state legislature, fairly and squarely, and is not manipulated and accomplished by unfair and unprompted methods.
The Actual Rules
"These rules and the call issued by the Republican national committee invite, require and direct Republican members to attend a convention at a certain time and place named by the Republicans in each congressional district of every state, and elect delegates to the Republican National Convention. This state is required to hold a Republican state convention and elect four (4) delegates, four (4) alternate delegates and nominating two (2) presidential electors from each state.
While some are supporting Mr. Hoover because they say he will carry out the Coolidge policy and program. The Informer is supporting him because we believe he will be a real president and will execute the policy and program which Herbert C. Hoover has advocated. This independence of official action was shown recently when Mr. Hoover abolished racial segregation in the department of commerce of Washington, D. C., and in the administration of the rehabilitation program in the flood area of the Mississippi River. In both instances he did not follow the lead of some one else, but rather followed the lead of the keeping and harmony with American ideals and institutions.
"I challenge the Creager paper machine to put in lugar the vote of the Republican national committee requiring Republican delegates to meet in Washington of electing congressional, district and state congresional districts have the right to adopt or fix a basis of representation of the state convention, and an entirely new set of delegates to the national convention, and no man can be elected to the Republican national committee."
Most assuredly, if Mr. Hoover, in quest of the presidential nomination, can perform such official acts which require much moral courage, fortitude and resuluteness, the Negroes of Texas will be able to win this candidacy to the limit, despite Mr. Hoover's state boosters.
If nominated and elected, Herbert C. Hoover will be president of all the people, and, as American citizens and Republican electors, let us help to make possible his nomination and election. We must urge the state convention at Dallas to send a delegation instructed for the secretary of commerce, then let us perform this act in the same manner which characterize the action of Mr. Hoover in performing such official acts as have been tremendous in the past. The Negro race, but to the American nation and society in general.
Insult To Intelligence
"The Craiger paper machine has no right to order the Republicans of Texas to send their delegates from 500 or 800 miles out of Texas to Texas to send their delegates to Dallas, in order that he might pick for them the men whom he would want to send to the national convention. It is silly to think that the Republican committee committee coodoned a scheme, which is abused of scheme. It is a shaker upon the intelligence of Texas lawmakers to say, "We want to send delegates and legions such burden and
Herbert C. Hoover is not a politician, but an eminent statesman and expert economist, whose grasp on public matters, both domestic and foreign, has no equal or counterpart on this hemisphere.
Whether in harmony or discord, peace or strife, The Informer is for Herbert C. Hoover for the presidential nomination by the Republican party, and for his election next autumn.
He will be the first Republican to go to the Republican precinct conventions on Saturday, May 5, 1928, and function for the best interests of the party, both state and national.
OPINIONS
National Benefit Agent Establishes New Sales Record
The Houston office of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company of Washington, D. C., reports two group insurance policies written by Mr. J. Pelk, a native Houstonian, selling the contract. Mr. Pelk began his career with the company in 1924, when it first entered the insurance business now in charge of the group department of the Southern division, with the Houston office. The $1,000,000 taken out by two colored organizations, viz.: International Longhorn's Association, Calvetton, H. H. Huntner, Calvetton, H. H. Huntner, and Ladies Anxiliary to International Longhorn's Association, Pearl N. North, president, $200,000.
By this feast Mr. Polk has reached the goal most insurance underwriters want to achieve, even among the large companies operated by other races, and he is being congratulated and styled as the "millionaire." It is somewhat difficult to realize the economic value of such large amounts of insurance, yet every dollar is a potential claim which can be paid colored people; and this wide distribution of such a huge sum will mean economic benefits for several millions of the black race.
parties of this state and especially upon Creager's little party, which exists for federal patronage only.
Somewhere between childhood and age, laughter is usually lost. Little children are often silenced so that it would be very strange to hear their self-laugh. A group of merry children revel in the joy of forgotten scenes, forgotten dreams.
Shall we not strive to save and cherish the great gift of laughter, that it may lighten and ease our way nearer the journey's end.
HARDEWAY RITES
HELD AT TRINITY
WITH ELK HONORS
the funeral of Clarence R. Harday, known among his many local holdings. M.E. Church, Rev. K. H. Lovell of ordained by a large number of benefactors and sorrowing friends, for decedent was well liked by all who attended by a wide circle of friends in the city. With Miss Audrey Powell serving as best pretender, but impressive funeral service was held. The obituary was read by Mrs. Harday, but confidence read by E. G. Lockett; funeral oration by H. P. Carter; with vocal solo by Mrs. J. S. Scott and Mr. Harday was buried with C. A. George. Mr. Harday was buried with Gibraltar Lodge No. 5, R. P. O. E. W. Interment was in Olivewood McBoy and Harrison Understaffing a charge of funeral arrangements.
TRIBUTE TO CLARENCE R.
HARDEWAY
In the death of Clarence R. Harday, there is impressed upon us the fact that we can correctly describe as called to the realism of the great bishop's source is no source from which we can produce him, who have known "Clarence" from his boyhood days know that the chapter of his life can not and cannot replace our friend,
May we cherish and revere his memory,
To our life's man's dying ray;
My life be an inspiration,
To you and me today.
The United States production of petroleum in 1827 is estimated at 210,000,000 barrels, of which Texas has 200,000,000 barrels.
Cimbee's Ramblings