Houston Informer

Saturday, August 17, 1929

Houston, Texas

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TEXANS MOURN WILLIS' DEMISE 5 PRICE CENTS VOL XI TEXA THE MIRROR By C. F. RICHARDSON TEXAS HONORED WILLES ON TO INDIANAPOLES! ODD FELLOWS' CABINET Accompanied by my spouse and oldest son, C. F. Jr., this columnist left Houston late last Friday night overland for Dallas, where we were present. Saturday morning at the brief and simple funeral service for the late W. S. Willis, held at the Willis residence with Dr. A. S. Jackson, mother New Hope Baptist Church, Dallas, officiating. thousands of both races through the streets, necessitating traffic of all sizes, by this huge crowd before the funeral curtage wended its way overland to the grand chancellor's body lay in state at the home of his mother from Saturday evening afternoon, when the funeral procession was slowly to the New Hope Baptist Church (Waco), where decedent had his membership for about 22 years. The outpouring of friends from all counties of the high state was a concrete pillar this fraternal leader was held by all who knew him; while the floral of the state was beautiful ever witnessed at a funeral in the history of this state. In compliance with a law entered into by the grand chancellor's body was deposited beside that of his father in the cemetery at Monday afternoon. We returned to Dallas, where, upon invocation of Grand Chancellor L. B. Simmons, the official Friary family Tuesday. At the Tuesday meeting in Dallas, also attended by Colonel Roscoe Cooking Simmons, who delivered the enquiry at the funeral of Mr. Willis, the new grand chancellor stated his declaration to understand that the program of punishing the order onward, upward and forward rested upon the shoulders of sympathetic cooperation as he entered upon his new duties; assuring the grand chancellor the magnitude of the task, through divine help and their help he be expected to order would not take backward steps. Judge Athia is in a native of North City and Tale University Law School For several years he was associated with Tale University Law School in the practice of civil law in the where the firm enjoyed a lucrative Professor Rice is well-known as an educator and editor, having served for several years an editor of the law Dallas Regional Board of Education registrant the Dallas principalship last spring to accept the presidency of by the Dallas Board of Education to succeed Proff. Edith. SINGERS AT HOLLYWOOD Low Angeles, Cal. - (ANP) The Fifth Judie Singers sang at the fama- nial Hollywood Bowl Saturday. Friday they were presented before a University of Southern California THE HOUSTON INFORMER PROF. L. B. KINCHION, Belton, M. Mitchell, A. N. Prince and W. S. former grand lecturer of the order Willis administrations. EMINENT CHURCHMAN GIVEN HIGH OFFICE IN PYTHIAN FRATERNITY 9 PROF. L. B. KINCHON, Belton, former grand lecturer of the center chancellor of the Colored Knights of Pythias of Texas, automatically became the grand chancellor of the fraternity at the recent death of W. S. Willis, who had served as head of the college. In point of official service and connection, Mr. Kinchon is the dean of all grand lodge officers, having served as grand lecturer, except for a time when the late W. E. Kurtz EMINENT CHURCHM OFFICE IN PYT DR. A. S. JACKSON, Waco, commissioner of education of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and for several years chairman of the board of directors of the Colored Knights of Pythias of Texas, has been appointed chancellor by Grand Chancellor L. B. Klinchon. He will serve in both capacities until the grand lodge meets in San Antonio next June, according to statement made in Dallas Tuesday by the titular head of the fraternity. Prof. Jackson is well known in educational, religious, fraternal and political circles, and boasts some of his supporters in the office of supreme chancellor of the Pythias. He is one of the most active members of Indiana, Indiana, next week. AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER HOUSTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1929 Some few years ago when Prof. W. J. Struth of Houston was not retested to the post of vice grand chancellor, he was sent to the University years. Mr. Kirchhoff was elevated to the post where he remained until the death of his chief officer, Dr. James Grand Chancellor Kirchhoff has been active both in educational and religious activities, but he was not necessarily an old man, but he has been in public life since he was born. MAN GIVEN HIGH HIAN FRATERNITY Together with Mr. Willis, Profa Python triumphante, which had its genesis when all three were more young men, and lasted throughout the 1980s. New Orleans Host To Good Samaritans New Orleans, L.A.—(ANP) The national grand lodge of Good Samaritans of North America will hold its annual convention in the city of New Orleans during the week of August 25, 1929, as the guest of the Eureka Convention. New I. H. Perkins is state grand chief. A large delegation is expected to attend this session as much interest is being generated by the election of a national grand lodge. Tuskegee Institute, Ala.—(ANP)—The United States Veterans Hospital at Tuskegee now rates "not less than second" among the fifty-one hospital treatment maintains for disabled veterans the statement of W. S. Burke, business manager of the Tuskegee hospital, who has recently returned from Washington, where he was in a six-day conference with officers of the hospital. A complete checkup of the management of the hospital was gone into and approved by the Veterans Bureau. A separate document of the institution for the next two years, stating which the hospital has received as a unit in the best medical service in the country demonstrates that it can conduct successfully a large search for a contractor." Mr. Burke declared. Construction of a new 138-bed wing, costing $100 million, was NEWARK READY FOR NATIONAL MEDICAL MEET HOUSTON YOUTH WINS HONORS AS STUDIO SINGER J. ALSTON ATKINS, Houston secretary-treasurer of the Safety Construction Company and one of the most eminent lawyers of the country, who recently turned down a country, who eventually turned down a law professorship at Howard University, Washington, D.C. (having been commissioned for the place without his knowledge or solicitation by Yale University Law School, his alma mater), will be appointed grand attorney for the Grand United Order of Old Fellows of Texas, Arizona and New Mexico with headquarters in Houston. Judge Atkins specializes in legal mind and his business account and forestight stamp him as a young man of extraordinary ability. Not only will he be a tower of growth to the order in a legal way, but in many other respects Mr. Atkins will CHATTANOOGA HAS COLORED HOSPITAL; WILL COST $250,000.00 Chattanooga, Tennessee. The opening here a few days ago of the new $250,000 hospital for crippled children is a achievement in that the institution achieved in that the institution provides exactly the same facilities as the hospital. The 100 beds in the hospital 12 have been definitively set aside for the use of the hospital equipment and conditions of admission as in the case of the others. They were built from the proceeds of bond issues voted by the board of officers of former Mayor T. G. Thompson, charman of the intercommission committee. The institution provides both COL. SIMMONS BENEDICT. WIFE ACCOMPANIES HIM Col. Roscoe C. Simmons was accompanied on his recent trip to Texas by his wife, Marcia Merchand of St. Louis, Mrs. Simmons is a graduate from Illinois University and is a graduate of the University of English in Summer High School and also relational directors for Alba High School副 director, president of the St. Louis chapel director, director Dramatic Club and Alba State College. She is to be talented as a teacher and admirers of the college are wishing him and his bride a happy and prosperous voyage upon life's tempe NEW HEAD ELKS HOWARD PAYNE CARTER According to advice received from Dallas, where the Elks held their state convention for three days, beginning last Sunday and ending Tuesday, H. P. ("Horse Power") Carter of Houston was elected president of the state organization, succeeding S. M. Gray of management. Thousands Attend Funeral Services; Kinchion At Head GOTHAM EDITORS AFRICAN PRINCE WILL BATTLE FOR DELIVERS TALK ALDERMAN SEAT IN NEW ORLEANS Dallas, Texas—Dallas is used to big funerals, but no member of the funerals has ever died and been funeralized in this city who received the honor accorded the mortal remains of William Shedrick Willis, for the last 12 years grand chancellor of the Colored Knights of Pythias of Texas, who died at a local hospital Wednesday, August 7, 1:15 p.m., from a stroke of apoplexy, which followed swift upon the heels of an operation for acute appendicitis. A short, simple funeral service was conducted from the family residence here last Saturday morning, attended by thousands who blocked the streets for several blocks and made traffic stoppages. The funeral service given their last opportunity to view the remains before the funeral procession body lay in state until removed to the church Monday for the funeral service. Waco, the home of the late grand chancellor, turned out en mante to pay its last triumph of respect to its deceased. It was born on the banks of the Brazos River, received his early elementary city and then went away to Bishop College at Marshall, where he com- FINAL NUMBER 13 MISE s Attend Services; n At Head speech was a masterpiece, paying tribute to the fallen leader as none but he can do. AFRICAN PRINCE DELIVERS TALK IN NEW ORLEANS New Orleans, La.—(ANP)—Prince Kaba Rega, African evangelist and lecturer, well known for his activities in educational and charitable circles in the interest of his race is delivering addresses throughout the South. Prince Rega is a native of British East Africa, on the east bank of the river Nile between Abysinia and River Nile. He is the youngest son of King Aziam Kaba Rega, who rules over a kingdom of about 35,000 people under instruction of the African court. He lives in Egypt. While he was a small boy, Prince Rega was brought from Africa by an English trader. He received his education in England, graduating from Oxford. He became a Christian minister and his father, the king and the tribe, all of whom are Mohammedans. He came near to losing his life on this mission however, the king telling him that in view of the fact that they were not a Christian nation to generation and that it would take years of patient, hard work to achieve PAGE TWO—FIRST IN EDITORIALS TEACHERS ELECT NORDIC WRITER DR. JOHONSON AT GIVES OPINION NATIONAL MEET ABOUT NEGROES Jackson, Tenn.—(ANP) - Dr. Murray Johnson, president, presided over the National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools, by acclamation of the annual convention which was held during the past week. The convention was designed to problems faced by the teachers and the educators enthusiastically into the disheath of the schools open to Negroes. To inspire or to inspire hope in the hearts of the black boys and girls and to inject it into the lives of Negroes, this was the keynote spoken by Dr. John W. Davis, the retiring president. The process made by Negro teachers was cited and reasons for retardation in certain sections were explained. Longer school terms, more teachers were among the things stressed as outstanding needs in education. The spirit of Mississippi cropped up during the second night in session when Dr. Tinker flanked University spoke and referred to the experiences with North Carolina. This was the first time the white folks did not agree with the statement and the discussions there. They left the convention厅 in doing so however, they missed one of the most important moments in this state when Dr. Johnson of Howard University spoke. It is going forward was indicated in every report business must be made by the organization by Dr. S. G. Atkinson of North Carolina and Dr. S. Nelson of Arkansas. The report business was brought on this criticism. According to the report some $11,000 had been yet a deficit of $2,500. The next meeting of the association was at the VA. UNIVERSAL LIFE CONVICTS AGENT, DOCTOR, OTHERS Meridian, M. I. s. s. (ANP) - Process of a wide spread practice among physicians and agents serving collarized insurance companies, to be the insurer. In the case of death and death claims, the *Universal Life Insurance* campaign result last week, in the conviction of Dr. R. F. Spears, a lawyer, M. E. L. E. Spears, an insurance agent, M. E. L. E. Spears, an insurance agent, all colored, on charges of conspiracy to defraud. The quartet, confronted in court with what seemed to be entered pleas of guilty, Sentence was the charges as presented by Counsel, Gipson, who defended the defendant a life insurance policy for $1000 issued in the name of Henry C. Overseet and his fiancé, Overseet. It is said had been dead three months from the inception of Roberts, an agent of the company, in the case of the death of the man on whose life the policy did not only certify to Overseet's death according to the charges, but to have been favored openly at the police department where the doctor who attended the deceased ELKINS BAND FILLING TWO BIG MOVIE CONTRACT Los Angeles, Cal. (ANP)—Although it has put a sevea pute work by Ellina and his Cotton Club Orchestra have just about completed work for two of the most valuable musicians in the city, recently. Averaging $10 an hour for each of the nine musicians, the group week at Artists Studio, while Christie Studio waited for them to be hired, worked four days to date at a rate equal to the one at United Artists. At the end of the week, they regular jobs at the Cotton Club as Frank Schuster's famous Curver City Joy Palace is called. Voluntary reductions in electric rates by the Dollar Power and Light Company bring new industries to Dallas and will save around $150,000 a year. Chicago, Ill.—(ANP)—One of the offshoots from the recent excitement of the college admissions and Negroes at the Jackson park bathing beach in this city, has been a source of anger by angry white persons to Mrs. Jenna E. Lawrence, sister-in-law of one of her students against the white assailants in a letter which was sent to her, detailing how the white had set upon her sister-in-law and twenty-grade girls who had been sent to send five of the girls to hospitals, and Mrs. Lawrence's sister-in-law in a blind from shock caused by her ejection from the beach. Mrs. Lawrence was written anonymously to Mrs. Lawrence on the same day that her letter appeared. "Presuming you are the party who wrote in today's Tribune, I am a white man, here in New York. I have never failed to help Negroes to many of our foreigner here. I know the Negro like to be South. And I mean this letter for you and every Negro's good and no "If you want the truth in the matter, there are far more people in the world than there were one year ago. Why? Do bestwet and Mrs. Hoehne go to a crowd of white people burning or hanging the black beast who attacked them? Do bestwet and Mrs. Hoehne go here every day that I can tell from their looks at white women what they are doing in a list or an alley. They deserve all of us and trying to stop lynching, why don't you try to stop the crimes that cause lynching? Did any of your women have to do anything because you have no originality at all. All you know or can do is do as you see. You know which end of your hat goes on if you hadn't seen a white man put on a hat and then you die, awake then for attaching white women and there'll be no more lynchings." "BEHIND THE MAKEUP" NEW FILM BEING MADE Lo Angela, Cal. (ANP)-Women ten colored men and seven colored women alone with a case by bacchy by the side. The case was made by a labyck made, "Bacchid in the Makeup." The setting is a showroom. New Orleans for its rela- tions. THE HOUSTON INFORMER. SATURDAY. AUGUST 17. 1929 Improved Uniform International SundaySchool Lesson 10. REV P. R. FITMATER D. D. Dean Moulski Hosp. Outlet (dist of Chicago.) 6. 1925, Western Newspaper Online. Lesson for August 18 THE RETURN FROM CAPTIVITY LESSON FONT JOURNALIST 21-16-14 CLEARANCE PAGE 194 CLASS 194 hard battleground good things for us where we are PIGMUM TOPIC A - Happy Hour JUNE TOPIC A - A Second Chance INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC LONG POPULENCE AND ADULT TOPIC BESTSELLER Signature of the RE L. The Return Predicted (Jer. St. II) II. Like prophets were flourishing in Elijah telling the people that they were going to die, the captives in Elijah (v. 8.9) were bound. Conduct their tribute the Lions bound. Recruit them to send a letter to the captives in Elijah (v. 8.9) to inform them of their captivity and quietly pursue their captive captives of life, and not to be to be active by the filipers (v. 6.7). 2 The length of the captives' their coming back was to be after twenty years. From Daniel 9 it is clear that twenty years means a definite time. It states from the time of Daniel that the captive was found (was taken captive) 2 Reewarded by Israel (v.10.14) God's purpose in the captivity was to save the captive. He answered them that when his purpose was accomplished He would visit them and convince them that the Captive Captivity, Fulfilled the Returning Eles (v. 125: 16. 1) 1. The persecution of Cyras as a threat. 2. They recognized that their goal harked through the favor of the land. 3. Their language and singing (v. 2 3). 4. They not only recognized the Lord of the Lord upon them, but testified of the brutality of the landmasters around them. 5. Their power for prosperity in the land were not only going back with the consciousness of the good land of the Lord upon them, but were treating Him for the fragrance of the Sensing in tears (v. 5. 6) 6. The seeds which they were to sow on the land were so precious that they were to be used for planting and sowing, and yet they recognized that they would follow their sorrows when they should be in the sheaves of corn. Gaining Fragrance We never make an opportunity of giving living pleasure, or of help to others. We never make an opportunity of us being able to help us, but we are taking away from ourselves forever what might have been a happy memory, and leaving in its place a "sorrow." Prince Power a "sorrow." Victory A victory won over self is the only victory acceptable to God.—Charles Mee Frendling. THE NARROW CIRCLE Get out of the circle of "me and mine," it is too narrow, too restricted to be happiness. It shuts out the sunlight and cuts off the fresh stream of human contact; in it we stagnate and grow sedge and fish. Venture to widen the circle. Think Will you will come with all will come with all, abundance, chance, variety, those blessings and others follow in the wake of the large circle of living. PEACE COMMITTE ISSUES PROGRAM TO WOMEN CLUBS Phillip d.holm. Pa.—(ANP) The American Intercultural Peace Committee issued this work a Program for Women in Colored Communities especially for the clubs in the National Association of Colored Women and complete plan or outline for a year's work in intercultural understanding. The program or plan is the result of a joint committee from the American Association of Colored Women and the Pennsylvania branch of the Women's International League for Peace and Harmonization. Milford Olmedt and Herrietta Muscuez. It was thought that the idea to the idea of international and intercultural peace were presented to the students in carrying it through. The result is the booklet, which contains a collection of material, music, literature, and historical background. State Federation of Colored Women in its annual convention at Harrington, July 30 to August 11, 2004. Its next year's work. Mrs. Salle W. Stewart, national president of the N. A. W., speaks in the highest term of the National Association to the club women in the N. A. C. W. for their literary and historical work COLORED PLAYERS MAKE GOTHAM HIT; WANTED BY WHITES New York City—(ANP)—The New York's smartest musician. The novae will richly tempiate with white musician, but the real "400," the New York-based singer-songwriter says in its July 20 issue, speak-able songs. He partyed with Goe Bayer (Kobe) the largest bank in America, "Lucky Jack," who seems to be indispensable to hostesses this season. And later describing the songs given by St. Christopher's Guild, this publication the criterion of the elite, the most successful small tables on the lower deck, while the imminite Lucky Roberts, the one point in the evening Lucy Roberts, a young child about two feet a minute and a tap dance. There was shower of nick-ness, and the scant scant attention, dancing back to the uncle, with rolling eyes until dole- What Lucky Roberts, who long has been the purveyor of entertainment and art, doing is being done on a lesser scale than the organization's trash of the town. There is not perimeter the organization and solution they gained, but right now colored envelopes are being used. MARINES ASSAULT TAXI CAB DRIVER MAN DIES FROM LACK OF CARE Wilmington, Del.—(ANP) Lack of supplies to the death of Eldi Sippe, who was found dead here Tuesday morning in the rear of 615 North 8th Street, and evidently died to death. He was on a charge of stabbing Grace Teacher, who appeared at a local hospital for two days. The rooming house he was found lying in a pool of blood dead. Physicians at the hospital that Sippe walked to the hospital for care, but it is believed could have been arrested but he is still away from arrest caused him to stay away from DR. RUPERT O. ROEFT PHYSICIAN AND SURGON 402 Old Fellowship Temple Phones: Office P. 2217, Res. P. 6919 Residence: 410 Robin St. Herbert's Drug Store PRESCRIPTIONS Our Specialty 807 PRAIRIE AVENUE PHONES; PRESTON 4752 8866 HOUSION, TEXAS TODAY'S RECIPE TODAY'S RECIPE B. BETTV BARCLAY JELLIED CARROTS AND PEAS 1 package lemon flavored gelatin 1 cup boiling water 3-4 cup vegetable stock or cold water Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. In vinegar, add 1/2 cup vinegar, salt, and vinegar. Chill. Add rota and pess. Turn into molds. Chill until firm. Unmold on crisp ice. TWO EMERGENCY SALADS Cabbage Fruit Peel orange, removing all white 汁 into one-fourth inch alice and then pour into plates with plates with finely shredded cabbage. Spinkle with orange segments. Serve Cheese Ball Salad Peel oolands and divide into segments, rejecting all white inner skin Arrange on alba plates covered with water and then coat with a cheese rolled in grated orange rind. GRAPEFRUIT PRESERVE Remove outer fruit and find most- and least- juicy pieces, with thick, halve the fruit, and with sharp knife cut out core. Put slices across and place pulp in granite kettle with very hot water. Halve the fruit, and with sharp knife cut out core. In granite kettle with very hot water. When at boiling point, add three-fourths of sugar to each cup of water at boiling point slowly 15 minutes. Seal in small jars. FRUIT MINT SAUCE FOR LAMB 1 cup finely-chopped milk 1 cup orange juice 1 cup lemon juice tablepoon powdered sugar Add sugar and fruit juice to mint and store in a place for 30 minutes. SUMMER ROLY-POLY 2 cups flour 1 teaspoon baking-powder 1 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon butter 34 cup milk, scent 1 cup cheese 4 oranges Grated rind of orange 1 cup water Mix and airtift, flour, baking powder, and salt. With tips of fingers rub in sugar and milk. Roll out one-half inch dough with milk. Roll out one-half inch dough with orange pulp. Mix sugar, orange rind, and remaining butter, and mix with sugar. Roll up, pinch ends together, and roll up. Mix with remaining sugar; surround with water, and bake about thirty minutes. WAR TIME BAND LEADER TO VISIT AT LA NICITY Atlantic City, N. J. (N-AP) -Leuvenian T. Jim Brinm, leader of the famous "Black Devils" band during the 1980s, joined the Atlantic City public again as bandmaster after an absence of ten shortly after the close of the war, Leuvenian Brinm, led his famous group of musicians in a triumphant performance. He will be presented this time on Wednesday evening during the week of the tour. In the dimenier Pier, in a monster benefit concert for the local Y. M. C. A. He—A. M. C.—will be a committee, which is headed by Cary Troebach, as conductor of the local tour. The largest number of Indians ever engaged in battle with Americans was at the first "Dobe Wall" fight in the battle to judge R. C. Crane, sweetwater. Office: 1502 Sydnor Street Phone Capitol 5488-J Prompt Service Sore Legs Healed Open Lege, tiger, cistern, Kinked Vale, Gather. Examined healed while you work. Write for free book. "How to Help My Sore Lags at Home." Describe your case. A. C. LIE'*E, Pharmacy, 1855 Green Bay Ave Milwaukee, WI Physician and Surgeon 409-10 Odd Fellows Temple Phone: Office, Preston 2775 Residence, Capitol 5982 PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY Peoples Pharmacy VIRGIL B. BYERS, Ph. C. 415 MILAM STREET Same Phone: Pres. 1909 Phones: Office, Preston 2926 Residence, Halley 8333-1 Office Hours: 10 to 12 a.m. 3 to 5, 6 to 9 p.m. DR. W. M. DRAKE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Diseases of Woman, Blood and chronic 382-3 Odd Fellows Temple AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Movement Would"Glorify The American Housewife" By Prudence Goodhoe NOW come a movement, no doubt, in the crystallizing influence of a charter, a headquarters, and paid workers, dedicated to the defense of the American military. The charter that poets sang. The movement is without a name as yet. The "Back to the Kitchen" home movement it might well be called. But nameless and youthful though it is, this movement to make a difference is ready a force to be reckoned with, a power backed by the hundreds of millions devoted to the manufacture of appliances used in kitchen. Home Food is Best Based on the belief that the health of all members of the family unit, both young and old can better be maintained, by food prepared in the kitchen, the housewife and mother, the movement has the backing of some of the great social and public welfare agencies of the country. Moreover, from food and kitchen appliance manufacturers, sympathetic with the cause which must vivify their future, certain phases of the advertising copy and other printed literature of a number of the larger food manufacturers, particularly of baking powder, sugar, evaporated milk, electric and gas range. In addition, backers of the plan aim to build up the "occupational practice" of the kitchen worker, to make her best pride in her work, to restore some dignity in her work in the American home. Bathroom Bite Kitchen "From the big sunny workroom conserved to the high art of food preparation which was the kitchen of our mothers this unit of the household has stapled in record TEXAS CONTRIBUTED TWO-THIRD OF GAIN IN U. S. 28 EXPORTS Merchandise the United States in 1922 showed gain $252,824,64 of which Texas contributed $109,972,84 of which Texas paid 49 per cent Even with exports valued at $815,872,24 stood first among the state Texas was, with second $170,828,82 How far New York and Texas were ahead of all the other states in the list is shown by the figures for the first of the total states: Michigan $367,253,146 Michigan $367,253,146 Pennsylvania $292,874,241 Louisiana $292,874,241 N.J. Jersey $292,874,241 Illinois $292,874,241 Ohio $185,518,888 Virginia $142,504,115 THE HUNTER CLINIC SANITARIUM-BATH HOUSE MARLIN, TEXAS "Where Life Giving Water Flows" Marlin Hot Mineral Bath Hare cured many of the worst cuts of Rheumatism, Stones, Blood and Blood and Skin Diseases. Deepest and Hottest Acute Wells Heed the call of health that awaits you at Marlin, where you are offered every opportunity to be up and about and enjoy your life at the same time. Come to Marlin for your Health Bathe at the Hunter Clinic and Sami-training school. We bathe the year round. DR. A. L. HUNTER Marlin, Texas AGENTS WANTED Take orders from new people for Quinine Porchale, Shampoo and Shampoo. Take orders from new people for Quinine Porchale, Shampoo and Shampoo. And other lovely beauty preparations. Our Agents make the money and the money. We also make the money and names and names of five of your friends and we will send artful Calen BEEMARINE PERCUMBER CO. 176 Edgewood Ave. Albany, Ga. SMITH'S RE A. SMITH OPEN DAY BEST OF SERVICE BY Drop in an 411 Milam Street OFFICE PHONE FAIRFAX 8728 years, in thousands of homes, to a bathroom, often smaller than the bathroom. Dean of the home center, the department, said the speaker was a woman of broad persuasive abilities to seldom. A leader in the "back to the kitchen" movement, he said, needed a need of an organized effort in the kitchen. She cited Department of Labor statistics in a survey of over 600 women in the past eight years the proportion of women dropped from 32.4 to 32.3 per cent, while apartment house dwelling dropped from 24.4 to 3.7 per cent. Two-family apartments increased from 17.2 to 11.1 per cent. Divorces Increasing Parallelising this profound change in the mode of American home life has been the result of conciliations by W. F. Ogham, University of Chicago sociology. The marriage contracted one will result in divorce, that city life discourages marriage by an approach that is contrary to the number of restaurant waiters in this country has increased over a period of three times as fast as the increase in population—indicating a table for the public restaurant. Movement Well Backed ARE YOU LONELY? Then Join Heidi WASHINGTON CLUB Receive lots of letters from interest- ing men or women Deliver Child Care Write for information today— Post Office Box 2273, WASHINGTON or C. R. Yerwood, M. D. MEDICINE AND SURGERY prioritizing in Diasies of infants Moderately Equipment Office. Phone: Office 9211; Req. 9211. at R. 6th, St. Austin, Texas One Day Next Week Some Days Just Date AMERICAN MEDICAL BENEFIT ADMINISTRATION Home Care Home Care J. R. GRIGSBY, President R. E. McLENNAN, Secretary RESTAURANT Proprietor AND NIGHT EXPERIENCED HELP and be Convinced Phone Preston 9950 RES. FAIRFAX 0790 AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER M.-K.-T. STATION (Main Street Vinduct) Missouri-Kansas-Texas Arrivals - From Arrivals - From No. 16 St. Antonio, San Marcos No. 16 St. Antonio, San Marcos No. 18 St. Louis, Kansas City No. 18 St. Louis, Kansas City No. 11 Clark County No. 11 Clark County No. 25 St. Louis, Kansas City No. 25 St. Louis, Kansas City No. 20 Worth, Dallas, Texas No. 20 Worth, Dallas, Texas No. 12 Galveston No. 12 Galveston Tulsa, Kansas City, St. Louis, Dallas Tulsa, Kansas City, St. Louis, Dallas Tulsa, Kansas City, St. Louis, Dallas No. 12 Lakeland, San Marcos City No. 12 Lakeland, San Marcos City No. 12 Chisholm, L. L. C. No. 12 Chisholm, L. L. C. No. 6 Galveston No. 6 Galveston No. 12 Galveston No. 12 Galveston GALVESTON INTERNATIONAL (Milton and Teco) (Manchester) carry every bear here, on the Arrivals Mission after the week. Mission after the week. Sunday at 12 m. and 8 m. Sunday at 12 m. and 8 m. Sunday at 12 m. and 8 m. Cars are welcome with the bus to Texas City. MISSISSippi PACIFIC RAILWAY CO. Electric Railroad Union Railroad Lake Charles carries every bear here, on the Arrivals Mission after the week. up to and including 2 m. with additional bear car Arrivals Cars are welcome with the bus to Texas City. FLIT FLIT Kilco Thermoplastic Tape Thousands of People Are Taking Advantage of This Generous Insurance Offer-Improve the Policy Before Paying the Premium Fidelity and Survey Co. is now issuing an accident insurance policy at a cost of one cent per day. The benefits are $100 per month for 12 months and $1,000 to $1,500 at death. Only $35.00 will be paid for medical examination. There will only be $600 sold. Women, men and children over 10 years of age are accepted for this medical examination, non-annexable. Seed No Money With Application The policy will be sent for 10 days. The insurance company will send a Southern Fidelity and Survey Co. W. G. Pearson, president, Durham, N. C. Southern Fidelity and Survey Co. W. G. Pearson, president, Durham, N. C. name and relationship. The policy you may return it or send $2.65 to put the policy in force for one year. To bound Texas requires four other 860 miles of international route. Res. Phone Fax. 2751 Office Phone Prec. 6958 F. F. STONE, M. D. SPECIALIST EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Eyes Examined--Glasses Fitted Office and Hospital Practice Suite 496-467, Fourth Floor Odd Fellows Temple Louisiana and Prairie KNOXIT LIQUID Unnatural and unconscious discharges can be avoided by destroying the gums of infectious diseases. $1 no At all druggists Office Phone Prec. 5591 Res. Phone: Fairfax 2317 Office Hours: 8 to 12 A. M. to 18 P. M. Physician and Surgeon Residence: 2301 McGowen Ave. Office: 401 Odd Fellows Temple Hours: 8:26 A. M. to 12 M. to 6 P. M. Phone: 214-526-2476 Rea. Tay: 3737-J Sundays by Appointment DR. F. D. PARROT7 DENTIST Suite 214, Pligris Ave. 222 West Dallas Ave. Hours: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 3 to 8 p.m. Office Phone, Prec. 5288 415 Old Fellows Temple DR. CHAS. W. PEMBERTON MEDICINE AND SURGERY Res. phone, Hadley 5440 Green Cleaners and Dyers Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and Alterations. We Mend Your Clothes Ladies' Work a Specialty POSITIVELY NO ODOR OF GASOLINE 1321 Ruthven St. Phone Preston 2827 Don't Worry About Moths —mothproof cloth itself Larrez actually mothproofs clothes, rugs, furniture, so that moth-worms won't even begin to eat them. New and sure way to prevent moth damage. LARVEX SPRAYING LARVEX mothproofs fabrics not washable. BINSING LARVEX mothproofs all washable woollen. THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1928 WOMAN TRIES TO ARRANGE MAN'S BAIL; IS JAILED Boston, Mane — (ANP) — Mine Mane West, 32, of Fewenwick Street, Roxbury, and John Mello, 32, of the same address are both on the inside looking at the outside waiting for the evening man. Mello had been warranted for keeping and exposing liquor for sale at 1309 Washington Street. Miss West called to arrange ball. While awaiting the arrival of a professional bondman she became involved in an argument with Professional Officer Olive Garrett smiled, reached for the book on the table, name to the leg directly under Mello. "What's the idea? What's the charge?" Miss Wet demanded. "What's the charge?" Garrett. "You are booked for keeping and queuing liquor for sale in 1300 and your own confession." Mello and Miss Wet "were sent to the hospital where the woman later supplied him with apples in Rockery court Tuesday." WHITE MEN SLAY COLORED DRIVER Kansas City, KS. - (ANP) - O. B. Johnson, a retired military officer, business, was shot and killed in cold Blood Saturday night on a lonely road in a white man and a white youth. The whites entered one of Johnson's buildings and there the robbed the city and there the robbed the driver taking his trumpet, shirt and shoes. The robber notified Johnson who went immediately to try and recover his property. He stripped his car and tried to stop them. He was killed almost instant after the robber was found by the county officers Johnson retired last year after 50 years. Office Phone, [Preston 6350] DR. WALBO J. HOWARD DENTIST Suites 262-203 Odd Fellows Temple Louisiana St. at Prairie Ave. X-RAY EXMINATIONS Houston, Texas DR. C. M. NICHOLS Physician and Surgeon Office: Taborian Bldg. Suite 220 Preston 4181 807 1-2 FRAIRIE Houston, Tex FOR HIGH-CLASS SHOE REPAIRING. Visit LIGHTNING REPAIR SHOE SHOP FRED T. LEE, Preparat 417 MILAN ST. PRES73 Dr. O. L. Lattimore DENTAL SURGEON 4094 MILAM STREET All Classes of Dental Work Nearly Done. Bridge Work A Specialty Hours: 9 a.m. to 12 noon 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sundays by Appointment Phone: Office, Preston 1459 Residence, Cap. 6551 A. B. Feldman, jeweler, watchmaker and optician, successor to B. F. Taylor and C. diamond, goodly type glasses accurately fitted. 219 W. Dallas, Houston, Texas. General Practice Office Hours 9 to 10 p.m. Sunday by appointment Dana Free, 8385, Houston, Tex 10 Piece Cosmetic Set $1.97 This is a Famous Virtuai Set and Friday Face Powder, $100, Rouge, $100, Face Astringent, $125, Bath $100, Toltec Water, Bath, $275, Brilliantine, 75c, Skin Waterer, 75c, Coral Value, $1200 $1200, $140 for all ten items to introduce the line. Send no money but clip coupon. Name Address Send sets pursed post C. G. B. H. Your money promptly refunded H. Bee Van 300-5th Avenue, New York Agriculture NOTE—If the articles appearing in this column suggest any particular question to your mind, or if you desire further information about the position offered by the Department of the Associated Negro Press, 2423 Indiana Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, or Secretary, National Negro Business League, Taukegue Institute, Alabama, or a communication to the Inquiry Board, Chicago, Illinois, D.C. will be productive of the further information desired. COMMERCIAL NEWS ITEMS Chicago — Dr. Julius Klein, assistant vice president of inspection at Chicago's leading Negro business institutions and expressed surprise at our program. The inspection will doubles the public burden. Chicago will doubles the conversation to America at large and give our enterprise a setting for growth to be publicized. A large oil filling station in Durham — A large oil filling station in Durham will be opened here. In addition to the existing food for motorists, it maintains 5,000 square feet of parking space for the vehicles. Atlanta — J. B. Blayton, upon whom the Georgia received a reward for his accounting accountant has organized an accounting firm with office baskets and at a local office. In his work with Frank Adair, Jr., and W. R. Mayward, the Interstate Finance Corporation located at $85 E. Camerer Avenue, seven per cent July 18, 1922. The company was organized in 1922 and specializes in the making of oil products. St. Louis. The new Booker Washington Hotel now under construction has been built on level 1, according to the announcement of the building, which is being built on the corner of Fine and Jefferson avenue, in the first location of the use of federal citizen. All others are in the building, and they are removed into buildings. Pittsburgh. The Improved Hair salon, a new company in Pittsburgh has recently opened offices at 1410 Wylie Street. HAIR DRE ```markdown ``` LOOKS GOOD FEELS GOOD DARES A COMPLIMENT! No long time, or la- bious effort is required to have hair bearing with loveliness if you use Mine. C. J. Walker's Glossine te help you. A touch of Glossine applied reg- ularly to the inner part of the strands of hair and brushed out- ward adds a most pleasing softness, lustre, natural fluffiness and charm that dares a compliment from jealous women and even modest men. For twenty-five years thousands of women FOR BOBBED HAIR Mme. C. J. Walker's Glossine is matchless for making bobbed hair sleek, soft and silky. Whether waved, wind-blown or boyish, your bob will look better when dressed with Glossine. Agents wanted for this and 20 other Walker Preparations. MME.C.J.V. 35¢ "25YE MME.C.J.WALKER'S GLOSSINE 35¢ "25YEARS THE STANDARD" 35¢ clearly in the manufacture of hair straightening combs and brushes. Chicago. Le Petit Prince, owner of the hair straightening company, has recently opened a large store in Michigan's apartment building, 4709 Michigan Avenue, with will carry a complete line of men's wearing a pair and Hart Schaffer Boston. A recent newspaper report states that the printing plant at the Chicago-based company, a local publishing company, are valued at $20,000. The plant is located in Chicago and owned by Alfred Haughton. Washington. A decrease in colored American women in gainful employment in 1971, 1978 and 1980 has been disclosed in a special survey just completed by the women's bureau of the Department of the woman's bureau of the Department of the New York. The Chelsea Bank has recently new quarters for its harlem branch of the bank. This is also the heart of the Harlem district and will be the location of the Bank which is a branch of the Wall Street banking firm employing a people as counsel and people as assistants and tellers. BIG WORK INCREASES Los Angeles, Cal. (ANP)-With 186 acts and extras at the Lady's Ballroom, the 2013 National, Universal, and Foxton Studios employment was given over 400 college students the first week in August. But the ballroom, casting director for Cinderella, has fused a vacation so great is to be the place for college actors during the first week. CLASSED WITH MM LOOKS FEELS RES A CO C.J.WALK "25YEARS TH WALER'S GLOSSINE MADE BY THE TRADE CENTER WASHINGTON, CITY OF WASHINGTON KESON RETIRED CLERK RAPS DePRIEST FOR POSITION No benefit will result from agitating enforcement of the fifteenth amendment to the U.S. Constitution error Al Smith for the persistence she brought suffrage searer the colored suffrage-searer out of congressional legislation. The white-South has long ceased to fear "Nero domination." Millions of blacks have been victimized an political exclamation when the prohibition and religious issues furnished limited to hereditary and environmental opinions of the oppose race. The blacks, each two to vote different ballots. "LULU BELLE" IN REHEARSAL **LULA BELLE IN RIHANDA** A cast selected from a list of local actors united by Spencer Williams, famous western actor, scenariist, and filmmaker, and others, embarked have begun at the *Baule Theater* for "Lula Belle," Everyman Preer, who was understudy at the role the title role. almost everywhere have used Mme. C. J. Walker's Glossine day in and day out to add just the touch of beauty needed to make their hair dress the ultimate of fashion. Such constant use must be deserved. It has taught these women that Mme. C. J. Walker's Glossine is unequaled as the easiest way to make the hair look good and feel good. You, too, should try Glossine. FOR LONG HAIR If long hair remains your preference. Mme. C. J. Walker's Gloss-ine applied frequently will enrich the scalp, make the hair glisten with a hustrous sheen, make it soft and alive to remain in place just as you dress it. Write today for terms. The Mme. C. J. Walker Mg. Co. Walker Bldg. Indianapolis, Ind Editing The Informer: Los Angeles, Calif. — The death of Ace Foreman by drawing Friday in Los Angeles, where he was tragic in a life that was very cruel. The eyes of Nego ciphers all came out of the sky. He was for two years ago when he attempted a transcontinental plane flight from New York to Los Angeles through lack of funds for a good plane was forced to desist. He came from his home in Texas at an early age and graduated from high school. He then went to a factory in New York learning mechanics and plane building. Returning to himself to Ernie Longbrake, well-known white aviator and learned to fly a plane with a name for himself in aviation he secured a plane through subscriptions from Eagle Air port for New York. February fourteen from Salt Lake City, $250 was sent him through Eagle Air port. Fourteen from Salt Lake City, $250 was sent him through Eagle Air port. He proceeded from there to Kansas City, gawd of the frenzy of Chicago, where the authorities refused to permit him to fly any more in a plane de la僻僻ed old "Jen- B GLOSSINE NT! SSINE 35¢ ll 5 (“a_i wo waa i LOCAL | oe mea te Geto Bre Collies Renner, 2006 ie viating Mee Cotfime Bowner, 2604 Me ore You cam tay The Heaton Inform: <n is Hay N=, iis Whity or phooe ‘Cal Mex Mellon A. Price left Piday ot Kaneas Cy. Butabargh snd New Fon Gis Ming SH, 3901 Wie, ha re gained shor a troweek secuion Srpe Cora Mm Clare Smith 1633 Whit, whe aehiegn ih for several sage Ts Sinead co bd "4 Me. and Mir. Dan, Gr Cary, Sr Shar Ecene - Bay The Howton Infermer from Qrereys Barer Son SS’ Dow ws Mire. SE. Perry, Brenham, i in an Shy voting tor coos re Posinte Ts Syn Mins Nellie Richanbon, Prarie Sylow ite city visting Mos Ea EGE Correo, S18 tener ira W. 1. Howard ani chidgen owt York ae wing Dr. and Br WT Woman Se tke Gat Mra. I Becham. 2615 AcGroee, siieetog Se sein Soot elaies nl rbd Tet Reed, 3137 Beulah whe wae ectbly chet stew aye mas eT per te work asain ‘Wi Hat, 22 W. Dalla, in Da I tin etek. whee be atte Ces ccertice of the Ba Mins Wee I Hwan of San An Wa tote at Bete vente Mra. nite Darnell of Port an 0 chy isting her ste Hm Rae ens 225" Wee Tass Eddie and Walter Beard. 1108 ARatiees, Tet tne Saterday to {Stir prandtucher at Ware Mir. Matic D. Amlermn, 52% Sew Qaennaie" vhiting relies sel Sede in"Laihin and Naren Je Samir, 84 rm whe a Sree meh ingen Sirn B.D. Ashord and_ dane ale La, seintnd Sonny iro Wa’ eS pa ee or weet ‘Mex PV. Hammand. $11. Nicht ase i Mrs Mary Shepherd Wheaty (nee ai eA = Se beet ot te ae PT Mir. Mary Shepherd Wheaticy wus forge sue per gren "Been Brandow ov comes eS Mie alied Paley, 2504 Mee Bape a ee a ier ESS: on i bald Tr ase meeting efor Ste Saito tse ESS0 pom a Weney Chore Mrs peer, Smith litt Sesion eine trends scans Int Dareie Drs Caeste Means, 3022 Drow, has aw he geen ar the week re Car Brace ae Sse Poly elow of Benrment ‘whe are Seleeater the Sieinios Same oe Foley Printing Co, for” peed remeron FE i. "Racker Rage (Sh “sees “Werk called for and Reece Drm, Texanea Goon aod grand ram Gear Cvcnon oo Baal Brine near pe Beis Philips and one MF Gecdoen. “Mian Viola 1 Washington whe oe Sh Re he Bay, See tres Saat Tes Te ar. S 2, Patrnm, Wisi Palle ai rotors at rowan Jad he Informe a vei Mies Jshonin Mae Watkin, 1216 Andres left thin week for Sw Or SRT acre abe el epend hee Seaton wilt er nemt M3. BL Boer 7 sh sane, ge Sho a Tantne pint afer Scrmany! They rte that they See sey terest tip ttle, Mins Ribet Pete of Gab weston intense srabe Ses inthe cy for few weet Bit fer wot ire Conn al tat 8 Brew FOR REST Uyntaire tor Neh seen ete Se pes ram 5 iso on Bota Tare ta ene phone Pree Eo Are. Pent Revs. 2 Amirew, Mr coatge Heeves it hewting. od Wines Unc, “Sone ‘Weve Tilo IRatoed to Werinewrth te sit re Eile Cases wee tS Pred Boones ‘tee Mr, and Mire Bred Rowves sco atic ‘Uy dene Washington noord [Geeta tet Toersiny Sod et eee hectoe e weit tee pereed hy” De Rees ae iat 6. eee ee Oe tte ake jane ts seme ee Eat spercinte the patron may Say ok Wages 1. Htiday, Now Oriana La eee cg [oer ss Ss et = i "em a oS Se et "sar dein Wins Be 2 Tel A € atte Sa Ee Pot ne Fite ae STL ST seine Heonmans os fore ee ee rd Shomer tr amy par ba sat ‘tu at Revie. ens ineCn,Pm fam Sha es aioe — A om ce ot Sete rein ‘uae aE SS ‘eis Widaie "a Sei ee Timah par on eee oe Feri ser Sine aoe PEN ca. ae ee a reTMAS ue seme Th ag Pra erie ees pee Pe Sat aegis ser au Sahat cl a mB la neces Soa Rago Sate ert a ee es Sea oe tema, sa nero mu tino onset a 2 wewee te mets e vite, whe tej he peur sew Auree What ata ty 4 te set et ey twee ag neta ‘Re weld sas ae 1 entrée, Mi. le. i a print ap Been cer toe Aleman sat ma fee eae a apeeanin esa arm ine amd dh come paar nga ei 32 Fp “some ak Coed Benne eck. < atreemtee heard Bape Care Monae Somes. and the Amon Mant wag Mb See te wade a Fak, daar GOTHAM EDITORS— ‘eulbaed Ginn tees Ges thers tel dedtinel. St ony mene. Bew- 0m te meetin 2 me 1 ihe noe rng. Got i note ap ee peer Rp dagrontabeys hen on a ote {acting Comair Peis Ee The ca te nom “Se cette af sr Eth Be cit cot ap sone Com eee ea Teed te fe cod mut Catinkng Seen, Ome Aue Die Nee ae Seg ee Ee ST TE mee 5 et ee iced somes ae ied tr Se SSS a cee Sar ven Sid Beane oe a ce fy Som Bl ee sii tae tt we Se Sy pet ah Reston Sees hon ity See oe male a SoS Seslaeemin ete mt TSN Seema fe seeker es Sterne, ee eee irate Te pn fa Rie ant Mee 1 Snletin pee Sn Saya cone SiSa ose! n” Pi ote acy doe a ml i net teet oe ae sate wets Sa i rt Se Tees sn pe oS nahn sed soe ss Stes to Stee Sta My toe Soe es seo a Sena wr ge cla ipsa Se aoe Pace Smt Ser sae ieee ee ero trea eral se | AN OPPORTUNITY Da yon rien ie Stoo | rel mere oe Seems Fry Saamet e | me eor nutes Sn Se ih ed yee de ie Seeman eee ee 1 eae Domestic setatirmm muons oe tnt "foweat” foes ”Compaine Sat samen nes: eer Secon temas nie xe Toe Ontiee auth Ws ae Ts So phan Peat a. SAM R. SMITH "322 Pint ational Bo TOARD OF Teen RNCe ‘Conrattssaences ‘sae af Brame Awaine Toman: Many 2 202% Xo ia FLA Wao 2 Bay Comer "This seer at VICTORY LIFE INSURANCE CO. Chicas, thas oa oop Sally ogtin ‘wih thr lawn of Teme ose Tes reece tu is dee Soi at nd Pg, From this fice ene tS Fest inthe uae er EEN Bee Sy a tea ‘Gheen widen my haa an wet ot otfne at Rew, oman hr ae can” wa Tamron, Soe et | sROWN CHAPEL AME CHURCH ‘Cate Werhingiae Ave.) ee, —_., The inet conference of rere ter eh eis aa Soe irk coe oe Serer a SoS eas Sooo See c Som at Galveston Avgust 21.25 and all the sneunl conferwoce claims in a aeons Saas we rong Earn oer Be ae S34 oes ene sed Bom Ton Scenes Sale oe tess? i e,sompgen Sri owen SSeS Smee ea oe Lope cece cre Sepa pee eee ee ae Sooo erheee, ea Ae aers oe catered 0 sone. corti rh was atc. "the Lars Supper’ Shs ree eee oe eee co eet el ae gE 208 BAPTIST CHURCH snes Sanday wih Supt Deaker pre. ae Stay we Saree oe oes cer or ars i Sees eee Sees Sea ia pane one eee ee peewee nto Sass ee cea eee ee Se ee Sa ie Pence erases oe Se eS ee Tee ee eis ——— rasa coocemaet ora Se Salter ash See Saree me Sea as Sra ee ‘phcmnary arom, will eet with Bre Sa Ter nar Sa, = Pree Sareea tie ee ee eee Se ne ete ee Reino nat po ss a eee Saas pao a ere, DADE ra Setar te Se aaeiact Seg Pee hn aging pe he Ro Ce = sae pees bar Secreted re eer a Lee Sear oy ae Nears See Sen re Te ‘Soamaae Saco Tyan he coin eee eee Se peat Ton ma 7a wie eee eee Sar of nbck tour Cet ot ben SST os eas ferme af Literature.” ( Fic ha tae in nce har set hoe sc sca Se EE Pea Se cee hte fe pater ee Tatas oe Sih ere the Wer come Wines bakes oe Sectaee te estates Sacer noe nest tees soa were” ek tne er Soon noaee Sime Praise ioe Be ene ei a Seen hs the ela ringer ele ee hema sive of oe Peewee hee” as Se pete sat es Seay ce cSt Seay oe See a Eecatencager er ae aan ROCKDALE | aesesteaten ast «tre dupe age oF scat tomes tow day aa Se ae See. cee Sree EES ate oe DUDLEY ASKED QUESTIONS Hon. Newman Dudley, Jr., Board of Directors, Houston Negro Hospital. Houston, Texas. (Our Kind Sir: 1, Just how and when did you get on the board of the Houston Negro Hospital? 2. You were not nominated or mentioned when the other members of this board were nominated. Were ‘you nominated and elected at the instigation of Mrs. Bright? 3. If not, then why do you support Mes. Bright ‘over the objection of the great majority of the color- ed citizens and tax-payers? 4. What is there about Mrs. Bright which makes you think that she tn indispensable to the Houston Ne- ‘cro Hospital?” 7 &. Don't you honestly think that there is suffi- cient cause to warrant the beard getting a mew super- intendent? 6 If you do, what have you done about it? Have you insisted that the board ask for Mrs. Bright's resig- ‘nation? If you have so insisted and the board has re- Fosed, what do you plan to do? If the hoard wants to procure a new superintendent, but is afraid, what course do you plan to pursue in that instance? 7. Weald you like to be superintendent of the Houston Negro Hospital? Assuming that the gift of the building makes (he besital whey patente, evan en. aot possible to pay too dearly for 2 9. The Negroes of Houston have you eoeouty. Be'you thik ere of bru Might than ‘Fou do of the seventy odd thousand Negroes of Hows- ‘toa? 10, Thin ia a matter which is of vital interest to the publie. We would like to have for publication a ‘statement of your position with regard to this situa- tion.” Will you give it to us? (Signed) CITIZENS COMMITTEE: J. Alston Atkins, Chairman: Carter W. Wesley, 1. P. Carter, Dr. R. 0. Roett, 0. P. DeWalt. WILEY COLLEGE ADDS STRENGTH TO ITS FACULTY Mastet, Tee Wiey Cong a tna ef oe ofthe ston if Sats See cee owranerment made tay by De eget atin edie fr erm inches fart som Serge of eho fl a Sere wrce ) Freamer Bh. Eamon eco foe ier cnet wile tera Wie in ve wie sar he ro Seo for he mae Ise fons from "tat ontaton Freee "Eamocion hat "hen We forte post four Jen takin ecpe faints spas oa fomphae har wor “The, Ronlah enariment_ will be eds tte. CH Perron ches Tee en from the Unter Suthers aur bo hl he ds ee ae fr th a [Satin her he he se fal pets envio fe elog ta {Sie teoccent work here ‘Te me fen the nea dear’ facets botnd te nd to the religion iow thy campos thie ye. ne see armen Wi Senta eee Prt Ck Stans tore’ to the eal segs air tine soe ek for ste of Sincere Noche Briere “Re lb recone Schatten concede Wie Seer ornate praetor Spree” Ait ol che i prof. CF Aakins, bachelor from Tas and metre ar tow ite. Rave an teehee spect eather vine rere Seer oak A el Fa Ro SSE Ta beet, out th ain a aoe te Wi Si acne se to We ae te fst Sheer Le shany me coor Foes former Poa ton Sock ESS emer at cea Sere rom stain Univer. and hs the to sini of eg anf the bat Slr slag feats the cote Dm. KING WILL DELIVER BACCALAUREATE SERMON pogonmp agin me ye ae et Wikey Calleee, GOAT Sn mae, Ane i ii Rin of Alan, Gu Te Weieeny sek heret 2 tp mand Rey 50, Wiliam wil dle tthe ales Thre sow IErgest sommer class inthe re Geena ee Steer Sing from Howson AUSTIN DOINGS anti, Teun Servi at Pi Bees a leaks et ies Sanam rev i SSrumier inte of the Ast creed pomp th eer ho SE Tol the seen Set ane tacos renee a ee Siar the ered ask Ochs me sri coveted. "fe (ome SFr sts, Bay Cok Caren ee ar Ave ape Choes Ss Mck. Mactor ce ofeltcd, Mr Hie wath Bomest as oe Ker vite ‘hi. Wed Sune ced are, ok Be Gea entctsted wih 5 snr teat i ane an a Be Se ik tote ek ok Boer tas etre frente 3 National Benefit Tenders Banquet To Atlanta Force __ Washington, D. C—A very sage ocean eth a ee [Standard Life division lfc fore [Atlanta Georgia, which har Jat bows [removed to Washington by the ff cers tnd home office foee of the Na ional Benefit Lite Insorance Cam [ney atthe Whitelaw Hote Sotoday ‘ewes 3. “Toe Standard Lif force was trans et hte ea a es once frstendanc, the guest of bam ‘eg am Sparen seated at oe ion table aod the mee othe fore at india te avant at fewere Toe me fief the tot trvanaed by Br CoB ihe manager of the Whkclnw soley ating ‘rogram, fone (G.'E Gohton. enc ivetor of ‘wine deparipen ated ns muir fren evs Ac Ltr ator pesthe welcome mre wae made b ac"F, She wsant Secretary iat the soe ttc od te ‘ory raps won mae by 3 A He of the consereatton sepa ‘ment formerly of Atami Dean Hays at Pili iS Feit ‘forc, followed by the Stee Sein of he on her | 4. Pinkett, agency decir af the ordinary depart. gate a8 ‘ter ating rate af Things” Wort SAME te" Washington Dr The. malin arom of the sca sear nade tye SW. Buiberfond Fondo aoa’ scrtar weneral ana fer of the National, Heeit Laff france Company on te “Mistry four Company ina few, bat el eer ar Pevriinting emer of hon dei ae of ee fas, Rutherford was fei, tnt was" reali” deerme that hee nv inaated and sore teh toe 30 men a he fat pepe blo Be aces Mae resent the preservation af the ait for aad hese at the fom cil" aed spr" Wg” send them’ fo ai asta honorae ‘eert on bod" wholesome s ‘alcy:” He eile attention toe Sl ivr oie aoe anne it, for years, anda: “Dass Sil et 2 wor ft he iene haere bender ede tha ace St ot sean moni semen ig, Sree te oe 2nd th Ikons comps Obs mek Soares Tenge sere vocation of baying an talfcg." Seneas tha roel mes Smet to thse who emia poss crepse nace with ine Fo" Tee a saccemchl Tf” oe’ must Tow the alte of time and fe proper Se” Money ie ell bor the nme of time oi 0 al oho tenn, sl te od oe ee ee NEGRO DEPUTY ARRESTED alter Nerve dept sett of Cw tome ‘cetyl rests Fivedinee Fomine se see me CT Ebadi be, ‘Ratner wan Teese” og ceer ihe” proce he" crema Beptay walle io Alesana |Depaty Walker isin 4 AMEZSCA'S GREATES! WEEELY SEGR ES : : i | Wilson's Prescription House cA. waourraer. PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS 616 Prakcie Ave. Quick Delivery Service 1s visiting up East until October Sth Sut nana pps actangeed Coat shodeeseah ot mae ekaee oe aon men meee Senay Sang ase Soe Sot ina sa oa samhen ouimeplaall s, Potatoes, Vegetables ae eee INCOLN HEIGHTS | or a aces maser EAST LINCOLN HEIGHTS sa agi eset d coninngadyons e el aS aan Capea eae Sac No , CLARENCE CAYWOOD mone TAYLoe 3: {nanan Annnnnene asa teaenasentaniinansenesnnne eee 7 onions meaeonis “SAY IT WITH FLOWERS” Flowers for the Sickroom | Floral Designs > Special On Roses $1.80 Per Denen a FLORIST 3104 McGowen Ave. Phone Fairfax 4035 | ANNOUNCEMENT! | Offering the bt ce Td War Late der $208 on | SS eae | Homes financed on terms you cas meet. Buy thene tte | | and make money for yourself | Terms: $10 per mouth. Interest 6% When $180 sc paid te wil ba for ous | OSCAR J. POLK Phones: Pres 2647, Had. 2907 420 Odd Fellows Temple RAAARARARARARNIAARARAARARANAA nnn nnnnnARADS Flowers Bring Cheer . tothe Sickroom OD Say Te fain, set yrtome ant coef EDL IER RR Jnrois ens of Sees ov nap 5a oe bg iy A nice linthe bomgeet mred met em: ¢ - = ae oe Me santy fewer for amy ee eg PF a (s ‘SOUTH’S LARGEST RETAIL FLORIST — ts | FILIPINO WINS TENNIS HONORS a ieee gees nee ae pace oe coerce ree ase eee rene terse ere Sace nailing ewes toy Prom the es ea iss re Stas tee es Seoruneeeeee eet eeoennee er ences ee ere aS ene oe poetee note oa are eet eee ae eee aes eee pao Saas a eee pee ne eee oak re eee: oes eee Poeereeere eee eee ea eeeaoue —ek se oct IN ATLANTA Atlan Ga —4AkP)— frets nay pat ns so seed kon Sewe Se We tat oe ee poets — dhe oe ee ae Se Sot Soe Se ee eos {ovo ato oss ae ES St 7 oe =aae eee =< See Sacer ee ee Tee See cede oe toe Ses ote ene ame fete toes for Soe ti gy pec ae ret 2 en eed er Seen a mi ewe meas roan Urea tier ss of cn sare 5 pea a fo etn mer mee ete ae of ae a 3) a a Sey ae mere mceiteearaen ts Sos 5 Sha Bi Stn ee as car the we Pees aoe fecal Some oe we hoe te pred See ogee ee de So praia ote wwaptien ANNOUNCEMENT —— > — en oe ws se _ AMERICA’S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER ‘TEE NOUSTON ENFORMER. SATURDAY, aucUST 11,1909 vimar 14. siamese cent. eee 4NOW. HUBERT ———_-GATESWELL GORDON. General Blacksmiths and Garage Expert Auto and Heavy Truck Repair- ing, Painting and Trimming, Cars Wash- ed and Greased. ee HUBERT-GORDON COMPANY ‘18 Congress Ave. Phone Pres, 2478 Brazoria *1°° Oe AND RETURN 2 COLORED EMPLOYEES ANNUAL PICNIC MISSOURI PACIFIC LINES andi en OFFICIAL ROUTE _ National Baptist Convention or soe | NORFOLK, VA. | SEPTEMBER 4 10 9, 1929 “sh We LZ ee { SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVES HOUSTON = GRAND CENTRAL DEPOT | SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES | MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1929, 8AM. | : ALL DELEGATES AND OTHERS WILL JOIN THIS TRAIN AT HOUSTON { te it Fee oie a teas aks conmiacicn th the | : 2s : Por Purther aoe Consult the Transportation ae — CORSICANA kia PE ¢ te ore toe es ee oe fg eee nes oe cima sag tas Sa Se ee we See eee ie eee Pac oh al eed game Tone Seat eee cere Sern eens Soha apa pace abe el pee Serres, be Sa eae evs ago. Bre, LncindaSitchell SS oe ee ee tt Seas Sr dae Se teat fees ie te ye wenk with reities, Mr. and’ Men egy eth St eo toe eae Sige ete AE Se See oe eee er sare. eae tr Shae 1 Lowe. Mins Velina Booker, Pales- ioe int Ve Baer Flee Ming Callahan, Ennis, fever aye with a wt hs. Gay first We Wase fal rar tm Crna ae WK cia ie Mead Scemacrectant sre See cette nara ws a ee ilies Ravenel Te sek User evan Wulite's becalal home’ eat Rooms PITTSBURG Poesy, eA cartes wee attended lst Sendny Re. Boe peaned «tenes ros pes et ore waren fhm Tere Gatag elets whe hav pear eee ca a Sis tet les an Beetles om Persea arr reed seme as cn (rots! inane Se fe ned Gata ave oe rain Spa yl a "Widens re waking ice, a omen Prin Seep fer etn ee Rleewerd, Ph Batata a cae ah iti: “te BES > Hae on wedueday cenit, Putertos i Nepal Ra- anh Pet iste cpa Geclet erticn ty aan al Dry ae nee thal Tad stehny td Eten raya ter aig his revival Friday” ce ‘THE HOUSTON INFORMER. SATURDAY, AUGUST 17. 1879 SOMERVILLE st, Tae in toe enema cer ee Swe oe ron Uae on mt es ney oa Ch ss olay Per es Soe so it fers Sat eae ae fas oie ear ae oh oe as Sone ae Seen ae Heber metered te Galveston. Me ite ins aa vteaton Stay Mur. Co Caf Ge Aa aca rege ca Be we Pet nca at caiten foe cae ns we tend the erand lodge of the Wilng Wee 7 ie Rani a ne Ga nce a i di Hoe neta aa ha ser ey et fee Re Pee eee AS hein aa q Ronee hei heen Kio Se eae cae ma ea sean orn er pie om seca yee ie has at ea a hatred Bi and Aria oh Rey UE Say urn ‘allege, ‘Rustin ie ii fae Catan Eo tank Seeeaan ae Folens en Taare Se ei uc Fiat Bac ie Sek hae BRYAN BRIEFS Bryan, Texas— There wore several ethane “wovk. Fra "Jobnson Bovieson "Coon and Soe “hab ng were hid by ‘ttn Care Beton Sem de teri pins deme o€ WS Wie rach ator are weet." Forde com: rid "SB, ‘mit hh te ery aed he aeal af. Fern ‘a"Conany apt char erisy. “hess S°34 ary ofa AMERICANS EAT 35 POUNDS ‘OF SUGAR MORE THAN 1910 owe can at oar wey Vned tut Encanto Danger Proagh cag Suche Hew Vort.—Auericnme twtiy ave cemssning sore Tam 113 foods et Seer et rons noch Years ae 3 founds a year nacre ham in Ti What fetaee aed 3 ponte ine sen tans vey the ntry hae fed Or Waner MW Phly wid ports, ts sien e compretontve be Beer te shat yoratfw the Sand Teweteeyine_ Sacovine Sturm eevee st ect! are trace atte to esas In ie war iter ta fry hc in Toe sucar ort. whe fm eeccaial tsk ho pte os tne thet the crore tanh bo repre fa am ofr Wythe wat smear woe fa by the uamnt —wesumw The we sree bes math can corwue hee toto samee ses eet as fay er i caeree te ethan ‘The nme! smd hs any te dividaat ryote avaety however, 00 the Inatetteets esse peal oe Hey, Herter boy pine a ar excrete stent ton feet a bay stn speeds oer tonen 8 Oh dfn ntact tpemds the afro cari ap Sith Times gees aro fat and we ae wel ons fe tried to eat the time cimcont ot sacar Ds candy form "The, same congariom, apples tothe wie wrscr who spend ha Maye at hie ck am the Iaborer Ste ten ina enor hw ay. Candy ett say supyts nee om avai ents poor toad at itmey tore ects he reat icwmtertion tevviae the chembeat ation af the cacar han retarded the Bere of pusrie ern “Seiryece we chy fat of engae Into the soma ont betore nae” save the Wo rmcekevping aril Sin the tet pave i ten to dente oar sppetiae for im strony ord tod" we st shown sinaer aod fener aw heisteah the ea finde a. gastrijlrw to aerate 1 hen to rerun shrew the mapa Me digested nnd’ the acid bina to ow. crit te seat on vals portly seated ot ere then the wile In placing Scmerts at the end of the meal” Theor aldy ovate the lalsn ta candy ausen tot reas. Sagar te a good germ foo ot ite bard to see how or of road roman in the ceevicen of the teeth. since 1 be readily soci Io saifya_ sm bence wrald be sted ated.” be pointe — Feminist Move Finds ‘Small Favor in Tunis roars, Norte “Afric —Whed arab ncetn Arab side the pleturengee ‘whitewashed owes of Tuoina, the ‘pur may talk tims everything onder {he eternally Basing naw except thle ‘witen Tt le szaina etiquette: oro ‘ali, Arabian women toot exe ‘tiows yon farber’ the Arab may say, bot never “How's your wie?” Feminine cmaneiratinn baw made ne advance, here in Tonisa, where. the en” They nk. ih veiled bat lows egos toward their nites of Te {tm wader the matern rule of Kemal Pesta ie Turkey. who ander tat ll women, pe crvcied lo regurdnd at stone te the sider comerationn bere "There have teen wsaay attempt recent sears ts brine Tuntion women Fire tioe with sists mere madera eignbors bat always the tnerained Gish remeron of the coum fry rented te son Historic St. Lazare Prison to Be Razed aria —Wrevklng eves whieh have sweet awey many, tordmarts of Od Pane to vec wears are som wich pict und stonct tetas -Se Temore prom otich em hark tw ab. treet gones » soem eel diary exclnvely co mae ple 2 Recrgtonih gprs} = Sigg cera tion teeny eve tie wright from ts Gomer ond thle dae fe the caieion Socoe them wae the ‘pont Chenier NmatherHterary fight wes levemrchaia, he erate the “Mariage at Vizira® bat bo wae feat te tarts vars wo corer na beer benplalceene tt at pri es cainged sieving cine te the vevtatan shu led torte the (ela kfensinin Arlen oma ee pe Out of Fuel? Use Your ee pete sree ee ea os Se ore ee oe = ct eee er oo ae Se faa seve” oes VIRGINIA NEGRO BEATEN BY WHITES sees ice ato eter eee Bs fos Sacer es Gee a See eee Does ama Fue 0 IEEE ny Heavy rains im the southern section, Aeneas Seas oy eae Sie ene oe See eres aera ie tite let to whem tate the har SE ris teas we saints core Senoee ees Sofas Soke port ears a tet| sai mee en ee Pucca pee oe poi arcane Theat anes "pred Site Sr rel ie ee bt ghee a ph em Sy meee ee are ee Soo cane erste aie a eee ASSAULT CHARGES | PROVED FALSE AS NEGRO GAVE ALIBI, trowel gtinty reine by Mo ee Sete oS Seater ee ite Seven ne Saker Serie. ae eT oe ceamecme = forartcs oe & Serres ere oe aeeane ass ee eee ea eee eae ee See eee eecee time fee HOUSTON JURIST GIVEN BIG PLACE Washington, D_ C—(ANP)—Ae oor eaten Sess ——— aia” ‘Negre pobtcane “he oe eerie Ss eee eee ae ee a tea ee ee ee eee vas sorte cteomen 7 CLEBURNE sony suman of Rev. A. L. Weight oper serene Bo At Wr ee games at Sore See Sivas ee ees te eee oa Ss Sateen pen [Matthews Mins Octvian Small is ‘visiting relatives: at Lockhart. | Mir. Stee ans as emcee Eek al tat Sere ere bere ears oo Tire seaenasters, sate os cr on bea i on Pek ee ae oe eee iste a eae ing relatives. Mra FE. Williame ts be- faery eee 2 ee Stectaee re ec Cen ae eres SS ae te eet eats Sense ees ear yw ese are eae oon Sater katie ap ane a ae = ~~ ACK SONVILLE: voun, poner Ranson Chapel C. premn, farter Benen, Carel © 3 EGlat petals os ena ores san Se eee ce Eas mca eiae Ee nae pee Satie Soe hac ea ee ps eae gaan he eg a Sher Sa oe Sn ataae os oe, sa et, Ra gr Satay ee Lae oe Benson ave ivturmed from Texas Se, cee i a oS sar aay Spree tas So Seg on Baa bk i ae ae Parad, tee eo res sank neue ie Se Soe ea cee denn Sets ea Sta pecan ew fe oe i sey of in Si wee rant, Sire ASIA JOINS IN NEGRO BUSINESS BEAUTY PARADE GRATIFYING TO sore toc | DR [Brreneaguegptie A neta ‘Thos sweats the Karan 6 al sami” ecoaing “the "te Mantra rut the exhortation we Se thelr prentoree” Superaalosmen Semolen avertsing. petty park Beret the tice of wenn few fies berks the Mohanee Me, "the san “Discrimination mn favor of Mom teen bewever ie mt countenamed Sit tae women fil the race a iileae af Sainte welcomed t Sin the brary ture” mage aa tin fromthe’ W-hgion beagmuar ‘Coumaticn Export Increses. whe Vited Risten setulae of the brtoree, Avorirca exper teeters ant oot reparations hav vile tn se tw PASI fo Sent This eeprewcots wn Inereaneot 1a orese Asie bot ‘wettest rr deen roucr a, fargo I Aneel sane Weited to savetbe tare ait Fousaventt ram.aign "The Phil See awe. tar come ‘are th Calted Sinioe soon. beat canton femme and sored best an pero chee ont ciier pendere The were af take-up are wt ty tansiar facts of Matry to Dine Sen the, fama tesanen ol Cathay employe! any af the wed com Ye tewuty Nie’ arin They we the eyebram tel, iee tae creat sed bar sietmest ‘Wi ea Sion shat their chr. "vnsoed te wn‘ Bide te fave und. the. very towers to fect shower” "That wan I the aye whem = Eitan woman Ha of eametiee wast heal tet tine ay pain ‘Ouete Charred Twig beoaty tate Tey ave site ap the earned iw tg of Mine mad eas for tne’ mater eyebrow ph ceicted the alt. rouge pad for the toodern compart iuniabed seep Ua low creann. for Iproved cold td wantabing cream. ad tarond foo tmunt and sandal to mare lh cate perfumes attorgh the orient centric prvfer mach stoner per fumes than plone the ercental he Gena). Uatlne many ether oriental senice Ching. pow soopliey ity com ttl trade rhety by howe manta ‘Trrade certain commetic produtt te dominated (with exceptions) BY Sizerent weatern cuuntri weit the For fst. Preach ena-de-cologne seat ‘bisher peed perfumen anual rule he, partclar roost Brith sed Serman” sheap perfumes. nid British face eam and tllet_ ape tte large salen The United Staten Prusbty by srtoe wf the world wide recpert for ie. dentnts andrea cami oman the dentiice erat. “tow power compacta alt Sp cube coe London Cocktail Club ‘Sells Unusual Volumes Lenton” ston a nese oars” ns Locos eet "chat scart et easietor'na eee osehaar nce hy 0 ale Sca- wy Saw.” Sctne bom, by te eee Ine Prodigy Wins Fame as Violinist at 3 tne em Tet ate Ze kset"S ‘ignorant ot Sm a © cnt. er, Sot awe! crane tnt e bee Soe tay the sit mew name for Scr ta emi Seen = Walls of Water to Guaed Bank Vaults Tage Tie Meck ot npn is pee Care naan ag Felines Sho nee ae Sine eee arecore ws Sites te tase. ood cee. tuana eve gene Tor bre aaar re can ne The me un it bse See Ube Nome for the (Sevens ot wcter foe a acre rom © comet jones ie una soon Fase meme many Sieeone? WHITES PROTEST NEGRO CEMETERY New Grtenas, La—(ANP)—A pro- tmnt propned Negro ete try slong tally read wear the I dental Cama ha bam fie with he Sern oe eed i cn whee ec at oe GRATIFYING TO DR. JULIUS KLEIN |, chicago, M—(ANP)—Dr, dalla Klein, assistant secretary of come merce of the United States and W, Le ee ee oo Se ee ae aa cant sae ier aaa a ae oe oo ee aes ae ne on ee ooo ears ee Sc ae ae patios rt san aa Klein, who. og up a ae Se eae a ce oo a ae he veto Sal eae Be eo src be eae bees flac ee ae re emanate ae aee ae mao cy ciceecme a meee eee eee Re Dope aero asl eaten ape ee came rn Page eee ee oo foes nee eee ree eee rou Re ces ae rel ede cis rea weet Ress erat Baaals ms they cee Seer hme ot tc Seas rae at ae whieh has 10 employees rn ea cee ee ie beeen on Sa Sera it ik eg set ne Serer ear ai c's ae cee ee merce cnramtes miace Soe Teen ee aad Claude hy Be NATCHE COLLEGE GETS $21,000 Clarkin (ANP) ak ore shan #2008 heat clic for Ser Re hen rane Ea cnsuncereent by ffcers of the Mis spe Rope esta flora a cera to CHICAGO CONCERN: TO SPONSOR BAND DURING F; ai Si el a al iste Woy Greneat aie? Sane cr lng ropa eted set a fs ton eae Eanes or ta "he and beta rian Peritor Company ad a roe tna ent en ate Compa of aden rma ae Roa tuple ati ae perpen ee ee Sie Re per toes eel Socal Spentaibes cos Oh aca inte Work Pai in 08 smo ut net ting adel te wh Bae meat Toke es Eero he Seti a Eines sane ae Sooty a strecy DePRIEST LAUDED IN RESOLUTIONS. FOR RACIAL FIGH? were adepteG. arg. sengitiy tor ake ine sorsadenad re recy i the fe Erect acs Sak crane ee wea oe sence Cc Se ‘chai ‘of, eat” aie ores ‘af hmeriea. The resolatians “Whereas, Mr. DePrlat has skin eee a ae ee sid als Se: fr ty eh een Seen waceeee Spheres eo an se da i i ed = aeeen os "ahem, and a Nis ta Sa a Svea neme an Stet tes ‘ere bo reaon of et Se Yves” Theta el ala Sai hey peta crea ra eect ay Gao a2 ioe taal fo eae ree "Sly th ety ena eet Sie wei eater ae rch forge ahaa ‘American “govermignt aad seston phon et a le nl STREETS) Wee BY CIMBEE ==" DURING JAUNT!*: land broken in s day. So boarding the Subway at Ashford Stret in Brook. lyn, 1 vode to Wall Street, where 1 eft the train and walked up into the Theat of this sreatest of all money markets of the word. ‘Now, 0 doubt lke you, 1 had al my Ife had a peculiar conception what T would sce in Wall Street. 1 had thought of it as a trim. ltl ‘thoroughfare with a stock exchange fm the center, filled with noisy, fren led brokers, with brokers” offices land money lenders lining, Voth sides ‘of the street, « few nog banker’ of flees among ther, and on the inside 2 roup of powerful, sinister old em etmen with side whiskers, the Keep. fra of the money devil, paling the ‘rings that make prices eo up and down But this i what 1 aay and tear by questioning every man, boy ot policeman I ran across: Thin lal district comprises about 18 elty blocks, and runs from the Custom oase at Boviling Green, up to Liber- ty Street. Here Manhattan Island is only lout three-fourths of mile ‘wide. “From Literty to the Custom Hoose is about half a ile, The cen ter of the section by the financial di trict known ax Wall Street But the enter of i im importance is the Stock Exchange. U learned, of course, that there are other exchanges, for it: ance the Curt Market in, Trinity Place, right behind old) Trinity Church; the Produce Exchange, the Gatton Bxchanye and several others sich slip my memory ‘One affable “cop informed me that {inthis district there ar 99 bans, the _sreatent in America, There are also 25 trust companies, and the fiscal of ice of 190 railroads. ‘There are 37 Life innarance companies, 209 fire and imartine inmurance companies. 1 has ‘18 safe deposit companion, and 90 ‘steamship companies: 180. coal and Iron companies and hundreds of por ‘erful Industrial coryoratons like the Standard Oil Company” at 26 Brond way. Ande added, “For the om enlenée of how’ who umble and Tone, there are several charehes, 9 jl ‘ovo rivers ad a cemetery.” ‘The bank of New York, Tounded| Immeiately after the lone of the Revolution, as sill ai the Bank of Manhattan Coote ‘by Aaron Bur About the. xame time, are still doing Erinese clone to the xpots where thes seere ben 7 2 From dhe sisitors’ xallery inthe ‘Stock Exchanse, you Took down on the ‘Noor of the exchange, and behold an immense rear larger than two floors the size of our City Auditorium. The tiling very” ih, ke in a theatre, Bd all-is of malrle, The floor ic Cruwded. with wen; here must be ‘more than 6 brokers there. All are frouped around in certain fel Pokus, ealled frosts. Bach stock, 1 fo) Collis assigned to some pos fd all Crating im that stoke ma be Aone there. TC you areive before 10 ‘am. and hear gly the bust of con ‘eraation going ono the floor don't tae deceived, ft set until the pres, ont of the exchang, telle hin ler to tiring is haiminer down onthe tell wich pene the qaret, Then the teal pone tnviky Tome, Men shout and geticlate gon ag Hike a men, at dont wet frightened, there bs metho inthis appa” earn» Bach rishi tebaving a very erly nace: 18 Mat the ecninne methine $M, whieh mr taelievable. ‘Ther are ava als, en i Ast ZI Ge areal ion of. Morgen a Dilla ean onary, alo Ried ef the. tankers un voc hava and others in Wall Sir " Rand, the. total bivineastranmacte th these’ UE aneare miles of terrtor be large: ha that ral the rt ks Sue Maaethee, Tle se My ALICE DUNMAR-NELSON (Por The Assoriated Negro Press) As In A Looking Glass and: 2 optene by scteae ee ‘corse Rehan, "heer the Ne So Re ey ac: Son came aoe ee ae Soh ee ‘Scylla and Charybais of thee differ: femora aie sear oe Sa pa suede eee ert ae eae aaa Soa cae eee Sic "Pardini any ee ee eee {Koh which have come at al most imperceptibly tat nome the bes Serena Set ard. Me Villard sememivers the day when the mere mention of Ne- Shere, ot Sey tg, under yo Se eee eae or on ere oe Sa Erp eo Sues eae Scores sare ae now —white Southerners in revolt | or ccormc ie ee Seo acer ee orate ie ates Sc cht aoa eats ote Saas eo ee Sarr we Scents ee eee a ee ere iar Pan cas tee! aoe ee i Saisie ete = oe ee Soe eee ae | oer eee ee re Sele peg Sane an eee en See ee ee ee ee i tet aes ee i Se i 7 cy an soe ee ae oe se Sao =o races The mace tment at refined, Sreoee eae Sit Soho Bg Tepe ee eer ur Vita ‘atmost- ont. Saye a te Se ea es ey ie eee ee A forse Si. nee Serine terete, ae Seed etre a on eer a Se Ce eh tara oe fea the earthy cathy at | Se ee oe ee See corer pate oe a ‘com the athe at which they view the | rie Boks af Hakdeman-Sulins pa haves omtited,“Recal, Ietermaret | tr. Sebugler hacks 1M taboe. on] a Tey Bee ence Tea An OLE Com sccmacimes, and \ While 2. P, M Cooye Shey aa en lan emre company. of Smale, 4 plaivelthe inom, Armored Waa ayo are Wr alaoe ae a fd Har asared a bares a lsat oor vers waa ae OM ‘ge fear owen Houston tat Wil tie Blinn be cmoyed by «fem. ers I thin great finan i tise. which somewhat prompted me tw make a Dit to this tetion, And then, to, a fellow jot ratarally hes te that be fs surrcnded by te ast fortune even if he hasn't mere ban subway fare ack te mb place Hf at ime for és omnes: ‘THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1929 WOMAN ENTERS ALDERMAN RACE IN NEW YORK | New York City,(ANP)— The see. cones ea eh Mand a erbeeate e e Dl me i a sehen 3 Daly Sti’ acceped the seme ee Rese her eupport in the district, it Wo bee era oi eet Saito teri ta Snotier Hof telllan pollen, for it wan Steeles mangaement: which led: iouecmercmnte oon sete ae eee ees ee sr las ati ge iS ceo sae ae ue cremiie erat boar snes ca an secon ete a Scot Pre erm nro Seren he sine. met Ung which, sy Me ets ce te bog eh ciel tga Sg eg Serle nn pid antenna” emphatically dented thai there was It Serene nae eerie epee erage are Bee cat pier ae oS acre Se ah eee a, ecm ae fase alien arrears ee ee eee Serre creas oe ere nes ee a eee eee Satis aac Mora Asia ty Go ae ee a eae fraternal ctcles, which will stand the ratena een eich wil stand te ACE FOREMAN, NEGRO AVIATOR, IS DROWNED ves Angeles Calit- (ANP) Ace Rosa te enim ee tne fen iy nigh hae bya Taw pat) bont lots Saporig slest tier turing tr more the st ein" pital ty aps cece sink Ts at wt lar “Te Ten the Ope sock the onthe cay ta eel catant moan wena enaneee sar ed ee ees Re fie ea i a at ere es WSenisant "Sorta he Bete Cai en Sees ee ieee Teer se cee Alexander Heads Bar Association iro Ae oan es sae Nat eNotes ate en kane Veschit. Seenee peosle liane SNE eee ‘Mic Nine haley, 1 Sear’ Mh hole san reniog Ne ona mnry her acceding to cmprarali foment cle eon in the gies 4100608 brent of amie "The: youn coc toatifhd that Sfenin Pesci gered te natty beeen oe or tating oy oh of bee tien eed 1, dm fo the prone re Set Ia Sort elem sn epee a perio’ court hare: Weneaay at are ts pera mate The unaivin of Dr. Batak. wel acta ot rai ero wf The tte i someone wa Ge punegyrie Ie aca rer ea eae of ies DeBone In imately without eromo er ene tet toe way or amgther He Not the" Lind SP pccnaltythal ott 2 fake, warts “treatment Ge ie sioner loay peta oe ent St ee ene Scene tat ‘act "ube “woyth of “hie bitertess "Why shuld "3m bese ter chon bh nes neces che infec An mention hfe hat thee con seein ste jt a ea ents ag oat, Cty ald he, Matos ancl feame te Sea teen inthe Retin ot ody 1 Snskng ' Pean eter Misia in ie ly: Meter eR a rev oan Berar ve oe catign i not a handeuff to the AMERICA’S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER GRAND LODGES ASSOCIATIONS CONVENTIONS With the most modern and best equippéd printing plant owned and operated by Negroes in Texas and the Southwest, the heads of all Grand Lodges, Associations, Conventions and other Organizations will find it to their advantage and benefit not only to permit us to submit figures on printing their minutes, but in giving us the contract for this and other printing. Among the recent big jobs turned out by our printing department are the minutes of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows of Texas, Arizona and New Mexico, G. W. Jackson, Corsicana, grand master; Lone Star State Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical Association, Dr. E. A. Etter, Gal- veston, retiring president; catalog of Bishop College, Marshall, Prof J. J. Rhoads, president; constitution and by-laws, Most Worshipful King Solo- mon Grand Lodge; Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, Hon. Nelson N. Boozier, grand master; large poster for the Ancient Order of Pilgrims, Prof. B, H. Grimes, supreme worthy shepherd; large photo job for Colored , Knights of Pythias of Texas, W. S. Willis, Dallas, grand chancellor. No job is too small or too large for us, and we are as near you as eith- er your telephone or typewriter. In other words, éither call or write us and we shall be delighted to serve your printing needs. We are not seeking business on the grounds of color, but rather onthe high-grade work which we turn out, whether a calling card or eneyclope- dia; dodger or minute; envelope or wedding invitation. Give us a trial and become one of our satisfied clients. We ea pe L ce rs y ~ Webster-Richardson Pub. o., Inc. “WHERE ONLY THE BEST IS GOOD ENOUGH” 409-11 SMITH STREET PHONES PRESTON 7560-1243 PIAS. Maney AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER P.V.-WILEY GRID CLASH TO DRAW RECORD CROWD P.V.-WILEY GRID CLASH TO DRAW RECORD CROWD Mirrall, Texas — The Prairie View Wiley grid clash at the Texas State Fair in Dallas Monday, October 21, is expected to attract the largest crowds of students in the country. In a meeting held here, in which Dr. E. B. Evans, head of the athletic department, will present the Long, of the local institution, were the participants, plans were laid out for the event that will cover Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and Arkansas of the meeting were not made public, there is little doubt but what the representatives said was that the record in this section, established New Yorks Day, when close to 11,000 students attended Atlanta-Prairie View scuffle down in the city. The Prairie View-Wiley clash will frantically fray as the feature announces interest will be taken in the whole Texas affair than in the interstate clash of college alumni in this section of the country, while the Cats have held the grid championship of this section of college alumni would be sweeter to the Prairie View沸腾 than to humble Wiley on the campus. LOOK GOOD! Trade In Your Old Tire GOODYEAR THE Goodsons State BUFFALO DRIVE PHONES: PRE WHEN PASSING THROU Wells' LUTHER WEB GAS—LUBE—ODD ALL AUTOMO LADIES' R In case of trouble, CALI BUFFALO DRIVE at HEINER PHONES: PRESTON 7492, 7222 LUTHER WELLS, Proprietor GAS—LUBE—OIL—WATER—AIR ALL AUTOMOBILE NEEDS LADIES' REST ROOM In case of trouble, CALL 931, LIBERTY, TEXAS Phone: Fairfax 7310 & 7319 DANIELS & PHILLIPS EMBALMERS AND FUNERAL DIRECTORS 1010 San Felipe Street Houston Out-of-town orders shipped promptly. WE SHIP TO AND OF THE STATE. FORE'S Fish Market Out-of-town orders shipped promptly. WE SHIP TO ANY PART OF THE STATE. FORE'S Fish Market Wholesale and Retail FISH AND OYSTERS Largest Fish Market in the State among the Race. 2744 ODIN AVENUE PHONE CAPITOL 0480 When the Hour Glass Has Run Its Course and the shadows of sorrow fall, it is then that we offer you efficient and sympathetic SERVICE. ELECTION BOARD NAMES NEGROES Close students of the game are not trying to make any predictions as to what will happen in the game, teams have lost their outstanding performers of last year. Mark, Bates, Bates star guard and backbone of the Prairie team this year, while Coach Long's standby, Red, guard; Livingston, end, and Harter, quarterback, have played well. RIDE GOOD! Uses On New Ones NOW! RES and TUBES Service Station LOVE at HEINER BOSTON 7492, 7222 UGH LIBERTY STOP AT Garage MELS, Proprietor WATER-AIR MOBILE NEEDS EST ROOM 93, LIBERTY, TEXAS Res. Phones Fairfax 8680 & 9853 only. WE SHIP TO ANY PART STATE. Houston, Texas THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1929 Department Head 'JIM-CROW' ISSUE Talks To Tailors MUDDLES HARLEM In Annual Meet VOTING FACTION Philadelphia, Pa.—(ANP)-Jamie A. Jackson, business specialist in charge of the small business unit of the United States Department of Commerce, in an address to the National Board of Designers and Designers Monday, said: “Business is a practical something. It is not conducted upon emotional gratitude, friendships, but upon the foundation of service, values and efficiency. If you provide these things, lines of demarriage between customers will not be very indicative. Do yourself as being exactly on the same level as everyone else engaged in your lines of business. There is no difference in how you operate your output. Rid yourselves of the psychological handicap of counting because of being who you are or what you are. There is no place to be.” "Meet competition with a smile, apire to become as good as the best your line. Use all the methods that the team can help, strengthen your organization, help, strengthen your organization, as to increase the opportunities for you to be rewarded with a successful business." He closed by directing attention to the team's determination to meet every establishment requirement to meet the service and public relations department affords, inviting them to put themselves of the service and public relations department. Remarkable growth in two Texas ports—Texas City and Corpus Christi is shown in a report of the U. S. Shipping Company, 280 tons in 1917, Texas City climbed in 1928 to 3,751,012 tons with a peak of 4,000 tons in 1929. Corpus Christi jumped even more dazzling, its total in 1926 having been 3,654,873 tons and two years later 3,654,873 tons. Reduction Sale HAND BAGS LEATHER GOODS OTTO'S LOAN OFFICE 407 TRAVIS ST. Phone: Office F-8568 Res. F-0727 F-0727 J M. LAWSON, B. M. PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Res. 3237 Reeves Ave. CHICHESTERS PILLS THE DALMUND BRAND Chichester City Hospital Chichester City Hospital Chichester City Hospital Chichester City Hospital KILN CHICHESTERS DALMUND KILN CHICHESTERS DALMUND GOTHAM DRUGGY STORE 60 WEST 2ND STREET is a Prescription for Colds, Gripe, Flu, Dengue, Bili- ious Fever and Malaria. It is the most speedy remedy known. Fairchild Undertaking Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS EMBALMERS 1015 Dowling Street Phones: Fairfax 1835 Fairfax 6464 Hours: 9:38 a.m. - 12 m. 15; 2 to 5 p.m. 7 to 8 p.m. Sundays by appointment Dr. O. L. Bledsoe MEDICINE AND SURGERY Office: 1111 W. Houston Ave. Phones: 1002-1288 Marshall, Texas PHONES: Office Fairfax 1891, Res. Fairfax 1892 Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. 1- p.m. Sundays By Appointment DR. N. L. BURCH DENTISF 2420) McKinney Ave. Covington Bldg. Hugh, Tex. Drastic Reduction in one way Coach fares to California ARIZONA-NEVADA and UTAH Three bargain tickets on Sale Aug 15 to Sept. 15—Go over the famous picturesque direct "Tunnel Ride" City Toll Gate, 115 Street, San Francisco, CA Among the more prominent color candidates, the workers who are said to have joined the defense are bringing about the defeat of the Republican candidates in the coming election. Senator John H. Nelson of the National Urban League; James Whelan Johnson of the N. A. A. C. P. Organization; James Hubert, New York Urban League head; Dr. William L. Reagan, a new for congress, who refused the offer; Dr. Charles Roberts and others equally as important and popular in their desertion to the Democratic ranks grew out of the suit instituted by the former Warmer of the 1st Assembly District and Sam S. Koenig chairman of the county committee, to show cause when the governor LONGSHOREMEN GO ON STRIKE; 200 LEAVE DOCK Boston, Mass. — (ANP) A hundred twenty-five Negro, non-union union men loaded the *American-Hawaiian stewardship* Ohioan at Commonwealth Union men were called out on strike. While there has been no disorder so far, the union is running high against them. The union has imposed of white and colored bales out. The strike which has lasted several days has spread to the mystic docks where the police are out. The policemen are on the side of the pier to preserve order. The strike-breakers were served their dinner on the Ohioan in order to avoid the trouble arose over the report. The trouble arose over the report of the longshoremen at Commercial Union to haul 300-pound bales of wool from the slings to the pier, instead of the bales being haul one pound of that weight. Appeals are being made to the union's breakers to cease aiding the steamship company in further crushing their fellow union men at this time, especially for Negro labor, which could the appeals to fall on time. To take care of the increased demand incident to the gypsum plant abandoning its own plant, we have also worked together with other new industrial plants to be served the Texas Public Service Company. We have also worked with the Sweetwater. The gypsum company found purchasing current cheaper and more satisfactory than maintaining the existing plant. Tuckekee Institute, Ala. — (ANP) It costs $1,698 every day to run Tuckekee Institute. This is the state of William H. Carter, treasurer of the institute. He is a teacher and a teacher-students of summer school here Tuesday on the finances of the institute. The budget for the present year is $900,000, which is derived from contributions of $200,000 downpayment funds which yield $300,000 or 65% of the entire budget; public funds to the amount of $15,700. 2.5% and state funds to the amount of $15,250, 2.5% are to be raised from contributions of friends at an average rate of $500 a working "our budget." Mr. Carter said, "has the following main divisions: Education maintenance, $125,000; administration, including public and raising teachers, $15,000. To it 25% faculty members Tuckekee pays in salaries teachers, $15,000; and to other workers, $55,000." Our plant consists of 1900 acres of land, 150 of which comprise the buildings, 75 of which have a replacement value of $700,000. We have 75 school buildings, the meet value of $2,700,000. Our measurements and memorials are valued at land and lands amounts to $1,000,000. Tarkovsky Institute is in use twelve months of the year. There were enrollees in year 2.128 students including the winter term, year 2.128 students the school, the winter term, and conference. Mr. Carter stated his opinion that in the future the Nogel will have to be educated in the school, education than in the past. Gratification results are being realized that in response to the financial needs of Hampton and Harvard and Harvard University and Tallahas College are reassuring. Others who addressed the summer school during the week included Mr. Georges Hoghman the poet, the writer of "The Woman in the Garden" and read some of her poems telling how they were written; Dr. J. L. Cornell University, who spoke of Cornell University, who spoke of Cornell University, who trained most Mrs. R. Dale Berry, trained most Mrs. E. Barch, trained most Mrs. E. Barch, professor of English literature, Howard University, who talked POLICE DISPERSE N.Y.NEGRO'REDS New York City—(ANP)—Deplores the increased police activity in which cluster the busy throughoutness of Harlem nightly, the "Daily Work of Harlem nightly," and declares that the infiltrated colony disturbs of this section are responsible. "This has, however, not succeeded in securing and Harold Williams, colored community responsible for this district. "On the contrary, it has intensified the activity of the commissioners in their determination to push the work of the commission party. I. Williams is addressing a large crowd at the corner of 183th Street and Seventh Avenue, probably the busiest street in the city, and the attachment of police attempted to break up the meeting. A near riot ensued when the police officers and sided with the Commissons. The meeting was continued without further interruption. STILL EXPLODES; FUNERAL HOME BADLY DAMAGED Cambridge, Mass.—(ANP). In the wee small hours Friday morning a man named its owner, William Davis, might be able to meet and accommodate his usually large week-end trade. It now seems that he established of Thomas J. O'Brien, a next-door neighbor, on the sidewalk from demolishing the interior of the building in which the still was located. It so happened at the time there was a funeral in state in the understory sunny Maryank Funeral, thus avoiding a "second death" and enabling Mr. Maryank to delay or extra chaundrama. JIM CROW THE SICK New Orleans, LA. —(ANP) The directors of Charity hospital will separate patients from the outdoor clinic. Both white and colored were treated in the same room herobedic and by the same physician. Both men and women are required. FIRST IN INFLUENCE—PAGE SEVEN NEGRO OFFICERS FINISH COURSE IN CAMP DEVENS During the period of training duty just completed the regiment was moved to an advanced party which arranged with the advance party of the 372D officers. It then organized its own headquarters, conducted all of the administrative work in connection with the regiment, maintained its own mees and handled all of its supplies. The regiment was formed into two provisional battalions, one of which was attached each day to the third infantry battalion. The other battalion received instruction in conferences, by lectures and training in the automatic infantry army, chemical warfare, field fortifications, communication and anism of the deployment and tactical employment of the rife and machine gun company. When attached to the 372D infantry, the officers assisted those of the 372D infantry, the men of their commands, and commanded the battalion every other day and daily at formal guard mount. Both battalions spent the last days in the training period on the regiment's own personnel, previously qualified in marksmanship as coaches the others firing The regiment participated in two reviews, one for the camp commanders for the governor of Massachusetts. On Wednesday, the officers of the regiment were hosted at a banquet to celebrate the regiment's reserve officers of Massachusetts attached to that organization for training. This is the second time that the officers of the 428th Infantry have trained at the 329th Infantry at Camp Ampel of the 252nd Infantry at Camp Cedar spirit of conradeship and good fellowship has sprung up between the regiment and the regiment which would serve well should the fortunes of war chance to throw these regiments on the battlefield. NEGROES OPERATE CANNING FACTORY IN FLORIDA STATE Miami, Florida. — ANP)—Twenty miles out from here at Glenedale is located at the headquarters of Negroes. This factory has in capacity a special day. It fries a special kind of fruit which is supplied by a 1200-acre farm. The products of the factory are marketed in Miami and other cities. Plans are being made for the products of the factory on the ables of the stores of the various colored merchants associations throughout the city. Selma, Ala. —(ANP) —Organization of ten retail procs as the Colored Press completed here this week. The new association proposes to buy cooperatively and sell at uniform prices as the presses in Montgomery, Alabama, Winston-Salem, N. C., and other cities, visit by Alison L. Holsey, secretary of the National Negro Business Association for such organizations throughout the country. The officers, have been elected: M. T. Thomas president; M. C. Thrash, vice-president; L. E. Brown, secretary; E. L. Kurtter, vice-president; H. Hill, J. A. Jackson, T. H. Thrash, J. M. Jackson, and Dumham, and J. COLORED WOMAN TRIES TO MARRY WHITE WOMAN Boston, Mass. — (AMP) Mary Reynolds of Hollyford Street, one of those who helped the police find the idea that she was a member of the opposite sex in good and regular clothes, applied to the young white woman, applied to the license bureau for a marriage certificate. Attracted by the fact that one of the women was colored and the other white, she closely his keen eye detected that arrayed in ultra manic fashion on Street loose-fitting coat, double-breasted coat and color dolls dot four-in-hanthe was never the less a woman. In municipal court she was arrested. In municipal court was given fifty days suspended sentence on the charge of impersonating SIGNS AGITATE WHITES; OUSTER SUIT LAUNCHED Chicago, Ill.—(ANP) - Foreclosure suits have been started in the circuit at Kennesaw, Wisconsin in an effort to force the Casa Loma Improvement Company to deduct a pretentious resort rent in Southern Wisconsin, eighty miles from Chicago, to give up the property. Casa Loma, a beautiful resort on a hill at a cost of $350,000 by a biblical cost. It is reported that Cardinal Joseph Koehler placed its approval withholden his support with the result that it had closed its resorts on the lake and in the neighborhood. It sold it to other white grouping offices on the lake and in the neighborhood to be near 123 resorts in Wisconsin, many of them near Casa Loma. The unauthorized colored people the use of the place, Leonard G. Outlaw formerly connected with the Casa Loma White cooperating with the white owners to interest colored people in the resort. The place which has a beautiful cabin house, bathing beach and an exquisite restaurant, is transformed this summer. White property and resort owners resorted to adopting various methods of forcing their tenants to work. Threats of boycots of Nogel labor at nearby resorts and in Chicago establishments were controlled or controlled were the suit. The resorts were closed and Outlaw, Louis Mack and John Frunger, are said to have resisted at the entrance of the grounds a sign at the entrance said to "No White Allowed." Negro Youths Giyen Tuskegee Certificates Tukeguee Institute, Ala.—(ANP)—Forty boys and girls who for three years attended the annual short course were awarded certificates at exercises Friday night, six weeks, and two weeks, 500 farm boys and girls from all sections of the state have been in here where intensive instruction has been here; agricultural practice and homecrafts and home demonstration agents have also been taken course. Forty boys and girls who received prices were awarded to winners of contents in live stock and crop judging, gardening and farmwork. The program included a style show demonstrating appropriate dresses and footwear, a part of the course in scoutcraft; musical numbers and mass singing. Short courses for teachers, director of the summer school; agricultural institutes, United States Extension Service, and Arthur Flood, Agricultural department, who presided. "Stunt Night" For Southern Whites Changes Course New York, City, —(ANP)—Three thousand and more white Southern students at Columbia University, who have attended the Southern Club, to hear the virginity of the south exalted in the appalachian mountains, W. Knight of the University of North Carolina anacled the South bitterly on account of the rayncy in that section of the country. Dr. Knight did not attribute the lilies to the low standards of the schools Southern whites were long on words and short on action and that the lilies naturally that "if they go any lower they will have to secede from the VESTRIS VICTIM'S RELATIVES ENTER SUIT FOR $75,000.00 New York City - (ANP) -The first New York Supreme Court action in connection with the sinking of the Vestra '74 last November, was filed Tuesday on behalf of the husband and four minor children of the victim, who was among those who lost their lives. Frank V. Kelly, administrator of the National Park Service, 60,000 damages from Lamport and Holt, Ltd., and the Liverpool, Brazil and Israel Marine Navigation Company, Ltd. Defence counsel before Supreme Court Justice Frankenthal to transfer the suit to the federal court. Decision was re- KLAN IS ORDERED TO REMOVE SIGNS Boston, Mass.—(ANP)—Ku Khrus Kian signaled the state on high alert as tourists travel is heavy have been ordered removed by the state department, followed a letter from Republiek to Boston to Governor Allen, in which he represented made vigorous protest, the sign of the organization to create lawfulness and ill-will gave visitors to the state a bad impression of Finnishable of Touche Yuan will send exhibit to 18 organizations and faire in different states this fall just what tourists can do. The Houston Informer EDITORIALS THE HOUSTON INFORMER AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER "I'll Gets You Told—Nothing Else!" Published every Saturday by the Webster-Eichhorn Publishing Company, Inc. 409-411 Smith Street, Houston, Texas. Entered an second-class matter May 28, 1923 at the post-office at Houston, Texas, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1923. SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Rate in Advance): One Year, $2.00; 3 months, $4.00; 6 months, $1.80; single copy. < www.ibm.com/ibm-subscription-rates Western: 608 South Deanberry Street, Chicago, IL; Eastern: 551 Fifth Avenue, New York City South; Southern: 223 Waltman Building, Atlanta, Ga. ANY MAN WHO IS GOOD ENOUGH TO SHEED HIS BLOOD FOR HIS COUNTRY, IS GOOD ENOUGH TO BE GIVEN A SQUARE DEAL APPLICATION, IS ENTITLED TO MORE AND NOW SHOULD BE RELEASED AS MONEY. HOUSTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1929 THE HOSPITAL PLOT THICKENS! Showing both a fondness and anxiety in attempting to castigate 'The Informer and its editor in its editorial columns, the Houston Gargoyle, a white weekly publication, writing under the caption of "Under the X-Ray," made a hold through illogical and fruitless effort in its latest issue to rush to the defense of the superintendent of the Houston Negro Hospital and her chief Nordic advisor. Knowing absolutely nothing about the conditions obtaining at this local race institution, this Nordic publication endeavors to pass judgment upon former members of the board who have had the temerity to disent and disagree with certain administrative acts and some of the official dignitaries connected with the local hospital. Undoubtedly, the Gargoyle article was inspired with the express purpose of "getting even" with The Informer and its editor, for listen what this weekly sheet says on this subject: "The most inflammatory of these expressions, and the ones which have been in unqualified and taste have been printed from week to week in The Houston Informer, published by C. F. Richardson, who, in company with E. L. Harrison, J. W. Hubert, and H. P. Carter, is a resigned member of the board." Right here the erudite and effident editor of "Gargy" talked out of turn and demonstrated his gross ignorance of this editor's status in connection with the Negro hospital; for the four men mentioned are not "resigned" members of the board. They were not even candidates for redirection and would not have served had the czar and czarina indicated that they desired this quartet to remain on the board. Continuing, the Gargorie raises thusly: "They (speaking about the Informer's editors) on the hospital situation) have taken the form of attacks on J. B. Gargorie (Gargorie's spelling, not ours), present chairman of the hospital board of directors, Superintendent Bright, and Dr. Shaughter. The ugly attitude of mind they convey and the utter lack of regard they show for Dr. Shaughter's continuous and unselfish efforts to serve the highest authorities in the hospital and to be wholly incapable of appreciating the spirit of fairness. Whattever mistakes have been made will only be aggravated with such resorts to prejudice as his paper sponsors. It is such as he makes impossible any widespread faith that his race is ready for self-heal, much less self-determination. It is the hospital's most obvious good fortune that no such attitude is represented in the hospital situation. For its attitude in the hospital situation and its news stories and editorial utterances on the institution. The Informer has no apologies to offer; and, if the "gargorie" editor is attempting to hold a brief for Dr. Shaughter as a hospital expert and authority, we suggest that he investigate the records of Jefferson Davis Hospital when the burned and scholarly professor sought to explain the circumstances of some of the white doctors who were connected with said hospital during the Shaughter reign! As for Superintendent M. H. Bright, we wonder if the Gargorie editor knows her general record throughout the country when it comes to hospital management? Has he the information that, excepting possibly one hospital, it has been necessary to dispense with her services at most of the institutions where she has seen Does the Gargoyle editor believe that any person should serve as head of a hospital who does not believe in medicine, operations and doctors, and who endorses the prescribe some of the patients to his or her religious views? Here are excerpts from a letter from the head of one of the largest hospitals where Superintendent Bright saw service and was "fired." "I always hate to say anything desigualy or ill of any person, and I do so now only because I want to help the thing which will be for the good of the greatest number. I can say that Mrs. Bright was a splendid disciplinarian; she kept the hospital neat and clean, but as you have evidently found out, she did not have the patience well suited for the job she boasted while at. Hospital of her Indian extraction, which, naturally, was not conducive to peace and harmony in a hospital which is staffed by Negro men and women, and where the patients are all Negroes. You can see from this, of course, a lack of good judgment, common sense and tact on her part. She had many good qualities, but undoubtedly she needs tact and the ability to work well. Hospital of her Indian extraction." The head of another Negro hospital where Superintendent Bright once labored and which institution she has begged her to return, writes the following indictment: "Mrs. M. H. Bright. . . . was a worker of no mean ability and but for her cynicism and duplicity she would be a most desirable hospital executive." Another head of an institution of learning, where the present hospital indentified formerly served, stated during a visit to Hospital practically the same things written above by two eminent men, one white and one colored. The Gargoyle seeks to charge The Informer and its editor with the present hospital situation, and yet this paper but reflects the attitude of the many and courageous Negroes of Houston, whose lives were lost in the Civil War. The Gargoyle also notes that the ornate Norcic collar and his learned savant are going to receive a rude jolt in this hospital controversy before many moons. The Informer speaks with authority concerning the internal operations of the Houston Negro Hospital, the Gargoyle merely as a scribe, inspired either through misinformation, prejudice or law. Being a member of the same race as the superintendent and the hospital patients (we wonder can the "Gargy" editor say this much?), the editor of The Informer has "inside information." The day has passed when any white man can think and speak for Negroes, and no sane, sensible and rationally-minded white man even makes an effort to serve as spokesman and medium for the Negro race. Negro has the intelligence and courage to differ with some members of the white race, these narrow-minded and tolerant Nordics show their smallness and "fairness" by labeling such Negroes as "inflammatory," "radical," et cetera. The Informer charges that Superintendent M. H. Bright has neither the temperament nor background to make a capable, sensible and tactful hospital executive; and we charge further that Dr. J. W. Slaughter (since he has permitted his "inspired" character to be used in the hospital) is a local hospital expert, and that his pedantic attitude renders it very difficult for him to tolerate or countenance any difference of opinion on a matter of any sort. The "Gargy" editor wants to demonstrate some of the fairness about which he prates so vociferously, why doesn't he get both sides of the question before passing sentence upon certain local egrees? What this Nordic scribe know about the Houston Negro Hospital, except what Dr. Slaughter or some supporter of the present superintendent told him? Does the Gargoyle editor know why Prof. I. M. Terrell was ousted as superintendent of this hospital? Is he acquainted with the facts in this case? Is he bourgeois and groundless charges were made against Mr. Terrell, alleging everything from the theft of a can of peas to an attempted criminal attack upon a certain female attack of the institution? Does the Gargoyle editor know that Mr. Terrell was "framed" and that every effort was made to discredit the Terrell administration? Before charging The Informer and its editor with being unfair in the hospital matter, why doesn't the Gargoyle print our side of the story and then permit its handful of readers to determine who is right, fair and honest in this controversy. Does the Gargoyle apologize what he has done for the cause of the Negro race and suffering humanity, but most certainly he is not infallible, and this paper doubts whether the scholarly professor is a hospital authority, or knows very much about the new Negro. In this connection does the Gargoyle editor know that Dr. Shirley's hospitalization scheme was nullified and destroyed by the actions and attitude of the present superintendent? Finally, what does the Gargoyle and its editor know about the present superintendent of the Houston Negro Hospital, and what does this Nordic publication know relative to the reaction of the colored citizenry to her retention as superintendent of this institute? In conclusion, we suggest that the Gargoyle get some facts on the hospital efforts and records of Superintendent M. H. Bright, who is the director of the hospital's emergency room before rushing to her defense; and, as for Dr. Slaughter, a trip to Jefferson Davis Hospital should afford this stalwart hospital champion all the information necessary as to the ability of the Rice professor as a hospital executive and administrator. SOME ALL-NEGRO HOSPITALS In view of the fact that the argument has been advanced here quite freely that Negroes are incompetent and incapable of managing, operating and controlling hospitals, and that they are not qualified for the duties incumbent upon superintendents, hospital staffs, et cetera. The Informer has gathered a list of which are manned and run in their entirety by Negro personnel. The United States Veteran Hospital, located at Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, Alabama, is a striking example of the Negro's ability to conduct a modern hospital, if permitted to function unhampered and unhindered. This institution has a daily average of 550 patients and its personnel consists of 344 Negro employees, from surgeon-in-chief to clerk. The Wheatley Washington, D.C., another institution responsible to the federal government as in the case of the Tuskegee plant, has a 550-bed capacity, with an all-Negro personnel. The Wheatley Provident Hospital, Kansas City, Missouri, an institution approved by the American College of Surgeons, is under colored management from operating room to yard. Tennessee, both an approved and classified institution, is in charge of Negroes. The John A. Andrew Memorial Hospital, Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, Alabama, another approved and classified elemen- nary institution, has all an-collared management. Provident Hospital, Chicago, Illinois, which ranks as one of the leading institutions of its kind in the country, shows what the New Orleans Medical Center has done. The Douglass and Mercy Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa.; Old General Hospital, Kansas City, Mo.; City Hospital No. 2, St. Louis, Mo.; and Provident Hospital, Baltimore, Md., costing $200,000 and opening during 1928, are some of the other hospitals being run and operated quite successfully in this country by Al-Negro personnel. If Negroes can manage, control and operate their own hospitals in other American cities, why can not Houston Negroes at least be given a chance to demonstrate whether or not they can function in this respect in connection with the Houston Negro Hospital TEXAS PYTHIANS WILL CARRY ON Though bereft of their matchless leader, W. S. Willis, when his election to the supreme chancellorship of the supreme lodge seemed assured, the Knights of Pythias of Texas, under the leadership of L. B. Kinchion, for many years vice grand chancellor of the order, are determined to carry on the good work so nibly initiated and consummated by their fallen and lamented grand chancellor. Out twelve years of hard, untiring and unselfish service, Willis will literally wore out himself in the cause of the order which lay so near and dear to his heart, and, while his intimately demise is deplored and the jurisdiction is grief-striken, the surviving grand lodge officers and members of the order in this state are facing a challenge and a duty which they can not escape conveniently or regard too lightly. Under Mr. Willis' able administration the order in this state had risen from a state of insolvency and virtual bankruptcy to the state of a powerful Negro fraternity in the nation all of which was accomplished within twelve years. The task will devolve upon his successors not only to keep the barmer of Pythianism affaint in this jurisdiction and throughout the Pythian realm, but they must resolutely address themselves to the onerous labors before them and "carry on." OPINIONS dat hill. It's way up on 155th shake wu凯 in set de winnig an gie Mohammad an way krow over in Juery. It's mnice yike an pleciup on wint de in de summer, but Fd hate tne drew in deng blero on deng blero New York's Dye A POLITICIAN I ONCE KNEW BY KELLY MILLER. Howard University, Washington, D.C. I met him during his college political society. He promoted at his in those days. Nine of him and ambitions of the mind. The impulse reconstruction regime had not only spent its force. Political and expectations ran high. My him had one consuming ambition. He had a eye on a seat in congress till the fourth of July with no fraternity he had witnessed something score of members of his race rising the high seats of power, and with no other thought than that he was graduated on a day, and in the pious pomp of hisUREate but for a brief moment, he returned to his native and secured appointment as a school teacher. But his time ergues were about every day and about his prospects for the president. A campaign was approaching. White politician had gained dominance and renown through own state and had attracted little national attention. He I first met him during his college days. In those days Nine collegiate had high aspirations and ambitions and he was the first to realize of the reconstruction regime had had fully spent its force. Political hopes and expectations ran high. My friend had one consuming ambition — to be the best man he had on his eye on a seat in congress where he had witnessed something like a score of members of his race occupying the high seats of power. He was a bright light than to reach the blissful seat. He was graduated on a day, and revelled in the pompous glory of his baccalaureate but for a brief moment. He returned he returned to his native state and secured appointment as a member of the national congress and energies were about evenly divided between pedagogy and politics. A national campaign was approaching. A local white politician had gained great eminence and renown throughout his own state and had attracted the attention of the national legislature had been appointed internal revenue of his state—a state whose production of wet goodness yielded large national revenue. My friend waned enclosure personified. He could say nothing more eloquently than Ron Simmons says what he has to say. He could not be persuaded to move into mob not by his reconstitution declaration about Lincoln, Grant and Sumner, which never tired of his facile recital about the majesty of the "grand old party" and the glory of the red, white and blue. Naturally he soon attracted the attention of the political boss who harnessed his elencue to his political machine. He stumped the state from end to end. The people heard him, not only gladly but ruthlessly, and black and white. As a result of that campaign, the Republican party swept the nation and for the first time since the reconstruction a Republican was elected to the senate from that state. The identity of the fortunate one has already been revealed. He led the lieutenant flattering credit for his part in the glorious result. In the meantime this particular senator and ten other senators with like Afro-American obligations and not on their common predicament. Their sides cracked with laughter at the presumption of those impeccable Nego beggers aspiring to fill such high, dignified stations under the government, and to be on the dug up a peg or two. "Go to," they agreed, "let's offer them some minor assignment more in keeping with their sphere and station, and watch the reaction." I do not know exact details of the event that most of them returned home disguised and turned denouncers of the administration. All sorts of threats and political reprisals were hurled at the heads of the ungrateful senators, and I thought that the whole race was in political revolt. But she necesarily required my friend to accept a place in the unclassified service of the Interior Department. His unattended yielded to stern economic necessity. One day I visted a particular government building, and apied my friend, sometimes candidate for regisder, to the door. I suddenly turned down another alice to keep from embarrassing him Concisions or subconception of my apach, he suddenly darted into the room, and kept from ember raising himself. Now for the recompense. It is a part of the political cunning of every white bono with a Negro hemanchau to encourage his man Prabhu to join him in the political campaign, to register the treasury or minister to Haiti. They calculate beforehand that there will be one doken or so Negro candidates for each of these positions, and the claims of the one doken will be the one that the friend fell for the bait. It was during the first term of the administration of William McKinley that the political ambitions of the colored race reached its climax. On March fourth, 1865, the president of the crowd was crowded with expectant Negro politicians. They came North and South, East and West. They marched in the inauguration process and with the usual vanguard advertisement of the state states avowed and insistent Negro candidates for each of the Africanized positions after mentioned; all of whom were backed by the congressional delegates from their respective states. The president backed by reason of the valiant service in the previous campaign. My friend decided upon the registration of the treasury as his well earned reward for mortuaries service. His service was the certainty of his selection. This happened under McKinley, un der Hoover, it is otherwise. Cimbee's Ramblings Cou ye mite n't feel es I de lens swine thru dls long pasqidewney under de Hadus River, but I am still caught in the water. I don't see side. I dunt hunt my gt flying tether thru under de Eas River twinkle Brook an Nu Koch in de subway but it tricks sum time ter tgi yuget dat he twn sum, we say, we get out der tun at Jarry Sity an hit out for Lizbeth, after passin thru cruchern long underpas, an den over er nr 2er 3 miles long video. We wist by Nurxil's airport, an still on malk Lizbeth, after passin thru cruchern well we dir we threre 2 er 3 mouns dum diag alm my tige. Wum had m main lack Metuchen, an we finely croust Nu Burnwick, an den look lack we had wif her ferrakt ter avell croust Nu Burnwick, an we finely girarge man how fer twem from ter ler Lakarlab an hear, and "O dout 50 miles. Now I wam fer turne rum rille dere, crule gott twin gritin side, croust Nu burnwick, an dele Zon heir bled II heir croust Nu burnwick be bert te wen get dee. Thereupon he resigned his little teachership which after all was but a stepping stone to higher things, and took up a lodging in the national capitals of the United States for a appointment. His benevolence of his supporting senator became petiferously persistent. He was repeatedly assured that the president would send in his name, and that he must rest his trust in him. He was very soon a Very soon my friend had exhausted his pittance of accumulation from school teaching and other miscellaneous sources. At first he had indulged in the high life of Washington Bt ter mast herw, drive er wil further an axed croucher man what lacked party wirt, an he seed, "Well an axed can we keep 12 nails," an rid an rie den we keep 12 nails, an let ter lez Zep on bum burs him. But we had eir fine trip, Leu, need eur hale pansal our Juray, an hacket what we need line. On our way hew stupe at er abe rleben an bought hew twentest eir thing hung runt, an dun taut crown eir bridge an pade da man 80 sten rus me over inter Staten Sten. Staten Sten is er pary nice place, but he dhis is hilley I must on un on the ter cler Staten Sten. Staten Sten is er pary Staten Sten 69th Street in Brook- in, an miter drink room for mo we our er tryin firt line out mo we wax, we firstly form one way an hum bunt 80th. An hui de lae Dsp an off for his wapridges room dwak. On hope if I did not her. Here's hoping him a successful administration