Houston Informer
Saturday, December 7, 1929
Houston, Texas
Page text (machine-generated)
PYTHIAN LEADER RAPS BARCUS N. CAROLINA COURT ENJOINS GREEN
5 PRICE CENTS
VOL. XI
PYTH
N. CA
THE MIRROR
This year she decided to present home talent in the society's annual music festival. Malcolm Maleet was selected, and will be heard in numbers to please all musical applites next Wednesday night.
Paraphrasing the words of Caesar, "the conquered" (and "conquered") the colored teachers of Oxas held their state convention in 1982, where they saw and they were conquered.
Really, those visitors, attending the colored Teacher's Station at the Colored Teacher's Station were overwhelmed by the Houston brand of hospitality and entertaining. James ("Jimmie") D. Ryan, outside themselves as hosts and hostesses, all the more enjoyable, ideal weather
THE HOUSTON INFORMER
Ohio Grand Chancellor Rebuked Anent Failure To Aid K. P. Projects
MASONS TO MEET NEGRO PORTER HERE NEXT WEEK; BALKS ROBBER LEADERS COMING FOUND IN BANK
New Orleans, La.—(ANP) In a lengthy open letter to Robert B. Barcus, grand chancellor of the Knights of Pythias of Ohio, S. W. Green, the Pythian supreme chancellor, has just made a reply to charges contained in a proclamation issued by the Ohioan in October in which a variety of complaints against the supreme lodge were contained and abstained from the Ohio grand lodge chairmen of any more taxes to the supreme lodge.
Green replies: "I note that there are a low grain of wheat among the shaff contained in your proclamation."
The principal accusation made by Barcus was: "For the fourth time the supreme lodge loved another new tax of one dollar per member against the supreme lodge loved another tax for the purpose of raising money for the purpose of rushing money for the national Pythian temple located in Chicago, Ill."
The principal chancellor answers that the charge of Mr. Barcus is untrue and produces facts from the records of the organization from as far back as 1815.
St. John Union Grand Lodge and Grand Court will meet in their fifty- sixth grand communication Monday morning, December 9, 10 o'clock at their temple, Nance and Sydron Academy grand junior warden, W. Q. Hunter, obeying the call of Grand Master B. R. Adams, will sound his gavel promptly at 10 a. m. Monday, December 9, calling St. John's Union Grand Lodge and the grand master will proceed to open his grand lodge in ample form. The Heirens, who will be presided over most ancient matron, will meet in the same building at the same time. Grand Master Adams has just completed reports that the lodges, in the main, are in good shape and that he anticipates an Ample preparations are being made for the entertainment of the delegation. The grand opening will be held at Sloan Memorial M. E. Church, Nance and Sydron pastor, Rev. G. E. D. Becher, pastor, Monroe High-class program has been arranged for this occasion to which the mound is cordially
Memorial Service Wednesday
Joint memorial service will be conducted at grand temple Wednesday during the grand session. A lodge of the congregation has been changed for the compilation on condolences.
Annual Banquet Friday Night
For the enterment* of the delegation and friends and in keeping with their custom, an elegant banquet will be given Friday night, December 13, at the temple. A very palatable menu will be provided by the committee and the season's decorations will be in evidence, according to M. W. Jordan, local leader and officer, prevailed during the three-day parley here, and an elaborate program of education will be entertained. An audience will be provided from the their arrival until the last one departing. In the words of Dr. C. B. Johnson's far-famed booster song, "Houston marching along, singing along, marching and, incidentally, "stirring stuff." Hurrry back, Texas teachers, for it is the only place you have to ask our distinguished guests.
AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
HOUSTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, DEC. 7, 1929
Eldorado, Ark.—(ANP)—To Henry Harris, porter of the National Bank of Commerce and Trust Company, goes the credit for frustrating Mr. Harris to rob the bank here Tuesday morning. Harris, who has been in the employ of the bank for a number of years, entered the bank about 6:30 o'clock Tuesday morning to clean up the bank. Harris arrived, rived. When he went into the director's room a hooded man pushed a pistol in his face and demanded him to throw up his hands. The command of the band was disliked by Mr. Harris, who instead of sticking his hands up, dared quickly behind a curtain and turned in the burglar alarm. Seeing that he had been caught, Mr. Harris came out of the back door, through which Harris had entered. Harris told him of his experience and subsequent search of the neighborhood revealed that he had been caught and a pair of overalls on the top of a car about two blocks from the bank. He discovered the robber must have discarded
LANDLORDS BOOST
RENTS IN HARLEM;
NEGROES VICTIMS
New York City.—(ANP)—The recent decision of a New York court, that the emergency rent laws were invalid, has led to a wholesale increase in the rents in Harlem. But the court has also allowed for the inclusion of inciting a general rebellion against the rains.
Here in Harlem where the colored inhabitants are confined to a relative's apartment, they are elsewhere, they are at the mercy of unscrupulous landlords who are re-occupying the kitchenette apartments which landlords are asking from $18 to $20 a room, with the exception of the one room kitchenette apartments which are asking from $45 to $50 a month for the one room.
A general protest is being organized in the failure of the Democratic administration to relief from this condition. Mayor Walker and his staff are coming in to share of rents from Harlemites.
For the first time in the history of the organization, the male group of the Coleridge-Taylor Choral Club will appear in a special program at Antoich Baptist Church, Wednesday night, December 11, in what promoters term a "male musical melange." Program will begin promptly at 8:30 o'clock, and no one will be admitted during the rendition of a number.
DR. C. B. JOHNSON
Second Tenor
MRS. P. O. SMITH
Directress-Planist
C. F. RICHARDSON
Basso
According to Miss Virginia B. Miller, president of Antioch Women's Home Mission Society, which is sponsoring this odd and unique musical, all of the advance tickets have been sold and it has been necessary to have additional
pasteboards printed and distributed for this extraordinary event. Miss Miller states that a capacity house is expected and urges all who plan to attend, to get their tickets before Wednesday night.
N. DUDLEY, Jr.
Second Tenor
H. M. MIDRLETON
Baritone
JAS. L. MITCHELL
Baritone
An all-male program is indeed novel and distinctively different and many musical surprises and treats are in store for those who witness this male musical medalge at Antioch next Wednesday night.
NEGRO WOMAN
ASKED TO WHITE
HOUSE PARLEY
Mrs. H. R. Butler, President Colored P. T. A., Given Place on Important National Body
Atlanta, Ga.—Mr. H. R. Butler of this city, has been invited by Hon. Ray Lyman Wilbur, chairman of the White House Conference on Child Health and Protection, to assist in the organization of that body and to serve on the committee on the infant and child health. In this capacity Mrs. Butler will represent the National Congress of Colored Parents and Teachers, of which she has been the chairlady since its organization some years ago. Mrs. Butler has indicated her acceptance of the invitation. The date for the conference has not yet been fixed.
2.
DR. C. B. JOHNSON Second Tenor
V. L. PLEASANT
Basso
N. DUDLEY, Jr.
Second Tenor
JOHN R. GRIGSBY
Basse-Guitarist
LEROY BYRD
First Tenor
B I SHOP COLLEGE
BEGINS QUARTER;
DEGREE IN MUSIC
(BY C. F. RICHARDSON, JR.) Marshall, Texas—Bishop College began its second quarter with several charter schools. These changes, such as they are, were made for the purpose of decreasing the load of work on some of the teachers and increasing the efficiency of the courses. The college now offers four years of work in English, mathematics, history, biology, chemistry and ancient and modern languages. It is also the only Negro college west of the Mississippi, which offers four years work in English, mathematics, history, biology, chemistry and ancient and modern languages. In the music it employs four full-time instructors; two of these outstanding teachers, Miss Ernestine Jessie Covington. A new course has been added to the curriculum, civil government which includes the study of Howard, J. C. Timmer, B. S., Howard and M. S. in mathematics from Chicapeco, Mexico, his work on his Ph. D. has been made acting dean of the college, according to an announcement made by the standard required by the college. The administration expects to add several new teachers as soon as to meet the standard required by the college. Thus spoke President Rhonda at evening ague. He further urged the students to "cultivate a passion for excellence and sustained mental labor and to ally themselves with the surface of ideas and to display initiative in all things." This he set aside and aimed at the college for coming years.
A. B.
C. F. RICHARDSON
Basso
M. H. MONTGOMERY
First Tenor
JAS. L. MITCHELL
Baritone
Supreme Chancellor Stopped In Attempt To Start New Order
Winston-Salem, N. C. - Judge T. B. Finley, presiding over the November term of Superior Court for the trial of civil issues, signed a temporary restraining order last week, enjoining E. W. Pearson, J. T. Saunders, E. M. Dixon, special deputy supreme chancellors of the jurisdiction of North Carolina, Colored Knights of Pythias, and S. W. Green, supreme chancellor, from holding a reorganization meeting in Charlotte, December 3, for the purpose of reorganizing the grand lodge of Knights of Pythias of North Carolina.
The order was given upon petition of W. S. Scales, grand chancellor of the lodge in this state; W. B. Windsor, grand keeper of records and seals; and the grand lodge of Knights of Pythias of North Carolina as a body. The action has grown out of an attempt on the part of S. W. Green, supreme chancellor of the Colored Knights of Pythias of North America, Asia, Africa, and Auctioneer, composing the grand lodge of North Carolina to pay a tax of $8,338 upon the request for the erection of a Pythian temple for use of the supreme lodge.
SIMMONS SAYS LIGHTNER HEARD HE WILL DEFEAT BY BUSINESS MEN COLORED SOLON ALSO EDITOR MAY
The North Carolina grand lodge, having been forced to pay other supreme lodge levies four years in advance and because it is in no position to pay the tax, it is claimed by Scales, a resident of the city, and State Insurance Company, to have advised the lodge officials here that the supreme lodge tax cannot be paid from the endowment fund of the lodge. The endowment fund of this commonwealth will not countenance any action on the part of the lodge to borrow money to pay the tax. Commissioner Boney in a letter to Scales calls the national building program of the lodge necessary. The officers having notified S. W. Green, the supreme chancellor, that the tax could not be raised on account of conflict with insurance companies, the lodge was allowed to stand without allowance for the number of members quitting the lodge under present national regulations. The grand lodge of North Carolina granted a new lodge in the department of the state insurance department which recognizes only one of the Pythias order in the state, it is said.
FINAL
NUMBER 28
RCUS
GREEN
Chancellor
in Attempt
New Order
T. B. Finley, presiding over the
urt for the trial of civil issues,
order last week, enjoining E. W.
Dixon, special deputy supreme
North Carolina, Colored Knights
preme chancellor, from holding a
lotte, December 3, for the purpose
of Knights of Pythias of North
edition of W. S. Scales, grand chan-
w. B. Windsor, grand keeper of
lodge of Knights of Pythias of
action has grown out of an at-
n., supreme chancellor of the Col-
w. America, Asia, Africa, and Asia
of North Carolina to pay a tax
the erection of a Pythian temple
L. H. Lighter, supreme clerk of the American Woodman, Denver, Colo., was the guest of honor and principal speaker at the Monday imminent meeting of the American Woodman Club. He urged our business men to familiarize themselves with conditions and facts calculated to help them in their business, and contended that a cooperative spirit is more essential to economic success than capital per se. Editor May of the Newspaper Magazine, dress in which he re-emphasized some of the romarks of Mr. Lighter and the Woodman, was canvassing for the fine program they are putting over. Editor San Antonio, state loan agent for the Woodman, was prevented to the club, but made no talk necessary to the local body during September. Cognizant of the good being done by the Woodman, now being held at the various churches in the city (the last one having been held at the church, Rev. William Sykes, pastor, Sunday night, November 23), the second quarter in the Fourth Ward during December.
SECOND QUARTER TO BEGIN
The second quarter at Houston is scheduled for December 8. Registration December 6 and 7 at Jack Yates High School. Prof. J. F. Foley in charge.
MAMBA'S DAUGHTERS A Story of Sacrifice, Romance, Humor and Tragedy DU BOSE HEYWARD Author of PORGY
PAGE TWO—ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
MAMBA—Not a full-blooded Negro but whose dark colored suggest, an admiral and American Indians, is the much beloved employee of the THE WENTWORTH FAMILY—Consists of Saint Julien de Chalay, a Frenchman, and Wentworth their widowed mother. The family is more an oracle than a widowed mother.
MAUM NETTA—Another colored member of the Wentworth house-
hold, who has been with them for many years.
Mamba has an unannual, clever understanding of the ruling white class and also possesses a naturally deep and unusually rich contrasto with the. The Wentworths are unable to pay Mamba, but Mamba is so devoted to the family that she is satisfied with her board and the opportunity of acting as maid to Polly, a young lady of inherited social prominence. Polly was very apt in school, but Saint was a disappointment to everyone in the Wentworth family, except Mamba, whose keen insight and intelligence made her a strong and did not respond creditably to the school system. Mamba alone understood Saint. Mamba's gaius, musculus, slow-witted daughter, had an inordinate liking for strong drink, much to Mamba's distress. Two voice and a large body. Mamba had said Hagar was "born for trumpet" and "had a great sense of humor." HSA--Mamba's daughter, was the object of Mamba's sacrifice and the cause of Mamba's constant resistance against Hagar's habits. Mamba leaves the Wentworths for the Atkinsonns, who are also wealthy, incidentally more wealthy than aristocratic—in order that the Inmeantine Saint obtains a five dollar a week job as storekeeper at the mines and begins a business career. Mamba leaves the Wentworths for a welf with a Negro, whom she belabors with so much severity that she is arrested and charged with aggravated assault. Mamba acquires the mines by performing a man's work. She turns her earnings over to Mamba, who in combination church service and "Love Feast" (hagre new name is Baxter) befriends Blaton, a very much despipped mutalo, by carrying him to a city hospital after he has been severely burned. Mamba was forbidden to come within the city limits and she barely escapes again. The most exclusive event among the white folks is the hall of the St. Cecilia society. The Atkinsonns are elated over their invitation to attend this event, consequently they invite Mr. Atkinson's pretense.
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At the very moment when Bates went on their churn a conference which also included the destinies of the Reverend Thomas Crayson was upon the door of a businessman company's office. It had an appearance two white men had been aliring there since breakfast, onjoying their breakfast, of a vehicle sounded in the distance, the rumble of hooves over a bagger of a bagger turned into the private road behind his anun of tretters. He alighted, and his step, and stepped up his plank.
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1929
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abroad in the land—febrile meetings gin' see um no mo. Oh, Gawd, haw'
—campaigns—campaigns—campaigns—a little pity."
Back again into the quiet of black Friday, that he inhabited the same place as his friends a few miles away in the marsh and pine forest of marshland and pine forest that were being delivered against the mute robbery of rubble opinion were muted. Then slowly the change commenced to coex. Invading committee areas and the colleges of colored organizations in town, for the most part. Keen young multitudes in their backwacks for the first time, telling them that this was the world made safe for democracy, world made safe for democracy, getting puffiful little contributions to war funds. Then a young white fund. Then a white gift for oratory, and then a white contours. The Red Cross. Not vague abstractions only, but suffering humanity—the welter of the battlefield—"Who was going to be help?" The inm of the speaker was cut short by a sobriety filled the room, unnoticed by walls of agony. An unnate voice said, "The blood he gave me on使命." The assemblage, and the spiritual assemblage, out in the little meeting house.
In two and three the congregation was filled with tears, but the wife those that remained kept her alive. Finally there were only a few children. The young lawyer was frantically on a watch, running on aunch of an army Necroes and they had walked on on him. He got into his overcoat, and called the two pretty nurses. There was an arm in his arm. The nurse was sitting. The choir was unmine and, be that way they were coming back. Into the church they were armed and be that way they were armed to the platform. They be saw that they were money in the church and they were even a dollar bill. Every eveny in the and the outpouring of burying sympathy was a presence in the room.
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A month since the men had gone home the one bright day, a man called the government that contained the first rich and rich now—excitement—laughter and the rich fear forgotten. The thirty old men went awaar were now objects of envy in the village. Strange in the in-lit—something that Gold Star had mystery—the nur sway little dentist who came and explained it all to everyone. The nur sway gold tooth "Gold Star," after all, but gold tooth mothers, and the government wanted the town in every month and get a gold tooth out of the check—one tooth to show how long their men had been away. After that, Midas moving wide and ever wider stretching of "dittering yellow metal." And the spry little to see how things were getting along, driving a twin-six that pulled up a great dust cloud wherever he
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Now the commissary was getting wet, and he was trying to vie with one another to see how soon they could vanish the day they arrived. He had not, but notation, enough, and with his eyes everywhere, keener than ever at yards and participants in hidden crap games. labor was growing scare and wages were so scarring. The result was that he was leaving pits for the men who were left instead of six. Why should a man in wages be so scarred when in half that time he could earn enough to keep alive and have a chance in warm sand, absorbing sun, or goosens on the store piaraz? And no the commissary gloriously through the late summer and into the long autumn
Valerie I and wrote from her Red
Cress unit in France;
"I wanted you to be in dear, until I got here and saw it. But now I am not here and wait. It is not a bit like the soother at first, in the cappetine at Haven, I and I wished for you. But then the hives were coming out. New, here in my heart, and my heart breaks into little pieces over day. If it were not for two of the old New York crowd who were flaming and who are here in the hospital, I don't know what I would do. Then another time she said: "My boys are getting better, but the artist is into it. Of course, I am playing an important war in the war, but it is terrible to keep them heavily braced and tremendously brave about it, but they have spent their lives learning to see that they can't protect themselves as well as the others, and they have to pay so Saint's fingers closed over the lacemate letter as though it were a part of the girl who had written it. I am grateful for the first time in his life."
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Wentworth heard the metallic ring of silver on wood. Instead of going behind the counter, he jumped on the floor, his beak tight, his hard, his clenched teeth. But Wentworth looked up and of Blunton the Negro looked up and of Blunton his Expression was one of ludicrous steps, with the white man climbing upon him. Then the surprise in his eye gave place to explorer of fear, Wentworth. Exquisite tremors shook upon him, passed, leaving them pulled tilted, in a hard, level voice: "Get out!" The Negro backed rapidly toward them, then with the opening at his back, he ran. The question? Ah ain't done nuttin' and the knowledge of it 'fanned through Saint like an intoxicant. He closed an remaining distance, and Blunton the Negro looked at Blunton the coat collar. The Negro went alack and insert, bubbling softly with
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MAMA DON'T ALLOW
NO EASY RIDERS
HERE!
by GEORGIA
TOM
and
TAMPA RED
Vocal
with Piano and Guitar
by TAMPA
RED
and his
HORIZUM JUG BAND
Vocal Chorus by
FRANKIE 'NELF-PAIR JAXON
Vocalion Record • 1420 Vocalion Record • 1430
THE boys who turn out a wicked brand of music that gets hit. Just listen to the two records of "MAMA DON'T ALLOW NO EASY RIDERS HERE," one by Tampa Red and His Mama DON'T Allow No Easy Riders Here. You'll find them nighly cunning, catchy and, Ask your dealer to play
Mama DON'T Allow No Easy Riders Here . . . 1429
Strewn 'Your Mess . . . 1430
Mama DON'T Allow No Easy Riders Here . . . 1430
Saturday Night Scrunchie . . . 1430
Ninja Dances with Toads by Trademark: Wolf Pine
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In a voice that gave me induration of feelings, Raymond remarked, "You have feelings, things rather independent of the company, haven't you?" Then, with a well-worn voice, "Well, I don't know about the Buster kicking. There was something wrong with you." Youerdavon Goo-law directed his job. War pickups are too far for him to resist. He's put the muff in his mouth and dry without a manager for the stores. "Completely come with which Saint had given himself to his new phi-lophy was demonstrated in his im-mergence with the desk, looked dark-inked into a employer's eyes and said, 'You're got to give me that job, Mr. Eax-yon.'" He said, "And have you kick my customers out of the front door?" Then, to that he, "You'll be to hit me run thing, my own way. But if you do, I'll
MAMA DON'T NO EASY HEART
BY GEORGIA TOM and TAMPA RED
Vocal with Piano and Guitar
Vocalion Records #1420
THE boys who turn out a wizard them a big hand every time the Wizard comes to the Vocal with Piano and Guitar
NO EASY RIDERS HERE, and Hokum Juj Band and the other Tama Red band from mighty your dollar to play
Mama Don't Allow No Ea Strewin' Your Mess
Vocal with Piano, Guitar, Tama Red
Mama Don't Allow No Ea Saturday Night Scratchin'
Novelty Dance with Piano and Guitar to Tama Red and
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The big man got to his feet and held out his hand. "That's that man," he said. "He's a smile. 'Shake on it, and I'll be out tomorrow at ten to go over the details with you.**
Nineteen hundred and eighteen—a hectic year. Stumendous energies were consumed in unmissable minnies over night. Winter—summer—trod on and finished the job. But out in the mining camps did was still unshaken from the morning grass, as stilloured moors lifted over vast marshes, pulled their flood tides high into salt water, sowed again. Nothing was changed deeply. It was as though the man had lived living to smoke them out of their long death, telling them of the transmitters of human existence the futility of living to smoke them out of their face of time. The great pieces (covered above their scaled villages). The blind marches rimmed their world of time.
The men who had gone from that district were in an in-bor war battalion, and they were wounded in the wonders but little of the horrice of war. And, in the meantime, wages were mounting to still higher levels, and the wounds arrived monthly with unfailing regularity, and the smiles of the "gold牙母 mother" grew always broader and more intense. In the last war had not Mr. Lincoln come South and smitten the men in his hands, as shown in picture upon many cabin walls! And, now was this war not making them rich? Why. The Ashley and made its debut in the diapering of golden smiles. Then suddenly a new word crossed the Ashley and made its debut in the diapering of golden smiles. And, it had a ringing sound like smitten brains: it filled the mouth, and it masted with other fine reverberations. Whalley heard it first in the office
DON'T ALLOW
EASY RIDERS
HERE!
by
TAMPA
RED
and his
HOKUM JUG BAND
Vocal Chorus by
FRANKIE KALF-PAS JAXON
Vocalation Record - 1430
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Easy Riders Here - 1429
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Easy Riders Here - 1430
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and His Hokum Jug Band
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In the little room behind the store, the minning camp sat a very different Salamander, effacing boy who had entered the compartment, compartmentary keeper. The flaring cock still played havee with all attempts still played havee with all attempts of hair an appearance of sprouting in various directions from a given point seemed to be heightened with his
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DECEMBER 6, 1929
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My New Method Roofless Plates
My Art Expression Plate
# 16 This de-n-ture is a rework, especially indicated in these cases where others failed in filling your plate, where you have to do, but want it to be a glue solution, principle so that the plate can drop during eating and do not hurt the plates. This plate is the plate of plate making. It is so sunken places in face, so soon and features so wrinkles and makes you talk with and talk with your friends.
Bridgework, $4 Up Silver Fillings, 500 Up
$3 Up Painless Extensions, $1 Up
ATION AND AVAILY TRESS
AYMENTS CAN BE ADVANCED
at TB 3; Sunday Morning TIR News
Hamman
Ft Save
New York 1
Chicago, You
COND FLOOR BIND BLDG.
June 20, 1960 - Napoleon, Mike Nishan
Gold Crowns and Bridgework. $4 Up. Silver Fillings. 600 Up.
Teeth Cleaned $1 Up. Painless Extensions, $1 Up.
EXAMINATION AND ADVICE PRESENTED
Open Bureaux T1 1 Sunday Morning T1 Nine
PETER B.
greater maturity, and the old day dreams that had filled his glass-colored eye with a shaggle sigh a way for a purposefulness that rested physical world upon which they lived. His figure was slender be muscular and knelt an air to the sun on the undistinguished and that he wore.
He had just completed the final reports on his various war work commitments for the committee on public information—food conservation—agriculture, and now he was glad that it was over. Glad with the exception, perhaps, of his own idea. He had realized the unceasefulness of attempting to educate the people of the European conflict. He had cast around for some one concrete and durable outfit, and had hit upon the scheme of encouraging him with his farm. He had made arrangements for the B-42 that had been put in truck by Negro soldiers. He had become tremendous and now that they had been given a start he intended to keep behind the walls of his grown themselves, and to prove to his financial backers that the proposition could be made to pay on its own
NT 5
. FOOTBALL!
WHEATLEY WILDCATS
End Park
siriay, Decenber 7,192
TS TAME
BRUINS
“INANNUALFRAY
Fa ent
"Sone nd Bat an ie
Sy meas ee
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TUSKEGEE TAKES
EASY GAME FROM
BIG BLUES TEAM
te ee ine
‘every department of the game, an
Seuss” sce Tenese Tews ooh
T'iaherne sewers he fot
iat pees arta, ioe
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a seers Soe of tin fel
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SSE esos de noms
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Seki tol Sept wae treat
ion "Scena oy saul: Harring
(Bop ty Site" sdinaon, be the
SELS gator puter ns bw
Pee aoe
Mancha. Sgn fT
; Sen
‘Sor peencs in eAlualBewt
sScsterees Suen sa of
see’ cee cote ns het
‘inrowgh the entire Btuefield team and
SPetelisa iyo pe
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{ice for touchdows will, for =
ae
Sey hay oe bine nite
jae tiene "gees vin hi
a
| that, beautiful block, work dove by, the
ister Saag he ga
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| play by superb interference.
(Rakeore a pre otal
foe cane ts wk ee poe
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jee tie gi
[scree coe tah Ses
(Race “Pini evo
I aw eae he ona Hoe
ak Bes ese to ts
Bees Re id ee
Jor genes scoters
NSE felted he ees pol
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Iie as tates tk ni
‘Seat in he ae quarto ‘hat
a ae
fae ee
leer Sate avers
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eae Sos eet tes soe
ae Dewte eat tat ef
Seon Datars St She
pig i titer, ia
Is cee fs Tne a
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Fete ees ae emer
rage a Sa
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pee seesere Stes ts San os
|S Sea" hae om a
Soon re ta chs
[ti tecory, "Beet west ct
a Sica mec
eS eee go as ear ret
saan tat Seen and Pet
| reieved tate, ‘im the game he was stil
|S te
Tet WeitVignam, were
ae Sr a wa
ISspene ae fal ee ne
‘ championship had og th
Se "owe ent Reine tly
Eee ae eal
; 2 “attack falled to. materialize
; Sy crepe Soe Ca Bisa
(gg ea
iat ay hea Ce
Sear cash ties ene
Sap os sal cee ee
sree, eat tak ‘bn ti
ae
i ene basen ns
Specht fee of ib se
at eee
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Pi Bie at eat
See ita eked hole
LOCAL BUSINESS MEN
To GIVE SCHOLARSHIPS
mato mere thin week, 6. P. DeWalt
Beoeietormanager of. the Lineal
‘Frente and shart 7, Taylor, Ne
Steal"Bemeit Life manager, hee
‘greed to give two, tcholarshipe te
SSE HouStan ‘Colored Junior Callege
“these scholarships, in the form of
custen joe one. You's abd lm
‘Saried The tee"pepie who are mon
reemn tinge Syooe
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 192
GOLDEN EAGLES
CLAW WILDCATS
IN WEIRD GAME
Playing at Wet End Park Thanks
sitet Dey tates te leet tom
Leh gg
coce er eta
sn ake" Wang
enue enced “Wy RG
oni tere” nig
tocar ut Way
eerie era e Cool
sor font oe came te
sei ole tee sae
mae on es
wroneileg or cociiena af een
ese cer aoe ta
a Sk nee eames et
set ae rane
TE ee tll neh
nies tie reich sie
fe, Serer cer eae
SS, Walls date lg
eee
seatng tre sobesintionat ots set
fat rte ht
SS eae
cane
ee eee oe
fac in hn
Tomar oneloing te conteat
pubes oe een
a cae
oe eae
ee
ela ity oa eS
Reg rag gg
Sa oa
sea Greate ae
Ber, ease cats eet
fe arene
Ie fathead Seti
Soa eee
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Seep," Tate ac
ear tere
onc, fiipiay, the ball abo
Ser Pha a
i See ee
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cae oe ee
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sping o Pre, Eel be
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beeps tt
rae aa ae
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ety oes ests et
Seen et eatae ane
sm sane sch "Gees, cal
jand Johnson were the Wildents tum!
Pied te meet a een
ete Paes ras
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Secrraes
earns cana PS ca
eb eee eee
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cee
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es eager a
ee oe eee
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Se ac a a
ea good loser thane winner.
Peaks seo ro
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Hudidlerton ‘Johnaon
| Left end
ae ec
| tar
ess aa
| att gard
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TW. Crewe Gre
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cas ec
soiia Coli
1, Blam end
acta SM PE asc (0
uate
rae Setters
Let black
ice tayward
Newer ht lack
tent hen
Tata
JACKSON” BRUINS
SMOTHER TEMPLE
coniete, oscars SHEE
partie sie y wise
Besa the rn het
Re Stet ree
is toes oe ie cana
Reartse "pu Wh ate
ste ied ei
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fie i nk eee Rl
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tone are ‘under wns for's rate
Se ee ee
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a Tanne gu fate
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Feeder weit Wi
lai ie ake, Hs
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erates maine
rent ot Sm A
HOWARD BISONS —
DEADLOCK WITH
LINCOLN LIONS
\ Philadelphia, Pa—Out of the dregs
etm sour heaton, ached wnaweee
sist comcesinere
Se aed na ary
ee eae eters
et oa cere, Hae
‘cipal "Stadium before 18,000 colored
el eter ced ere
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ene fren Seg
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fed hits poceents n'a Ss ot Cae
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tang Sacer oe
a
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sais. Sra, Sea ata
[eae aie
be See nor et
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jand roahed toward Barfield. It was
eae ee aes
ieecrantaes ee
pertains. ot fe
oe eae
ines erate re
SA os pera ces
eae Same
a dramatic baile
BULLDOGS BITE
STATE COLLEGE
IN FIERCE TIL
avual lerthess and deceptivenes, the
Fisk University. Bulldogs easily over.
Seelam
coe ad ne
eres hae a
Iromenta of amazing fgtball marked
ling “work of, Wireinn, Cox” and
Reed geen or
Seti rt
pe
oii raaie ae
eee ete Be a
paniaght ae
Wingins’ and fitle "Duck" Coxe led
state “started with a rush that
rei farce nc,
fee ees
ai ati
te ae hg gt
Sei
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Soke ean ae
ee aren ee
some eae sie, whence a
peaaie forthe State faye Joe Foenped
iSeadues ora ie cate
Be roe eae
SEeomae enum
hoicien he
eases a
ae eee
Ban acetaee
ee a ee
cam for a touchdown. Piak. file
Se fee coterie ee
Ege) he
is Eo bet ew oe
Se ee
Seton
in dee Burros et and is
pase he Soe
area etka med
the funersl of Dr. Phillip A. Butler
emai ies
BRILLIANT TENOR
‘TO STAGE RECITAL
ON MONDAY NIGH
LEONARD PUNO, forme of
nat aa Men Sy Cab
fre atv end ae
Eros cute weiss, wi
tered ye hase
cote Teme Somes aod
src Wadena?
Biber hems dso
pa
ithe “api Carey a
teow ft ena te
ren toolset tnd var Saat
tes coro etc a o
Sic, Seno i me’
cura feeder
ce aise tat Sit lt
tices, cnt ch
srrace Sag.
LOCAL, BRANCH AACE.
‘CONDUCT MEEDNG
eee sens
At here this weck by OP DeWalt.
ocd here this week by ©. P DeWak
este th Hamat Genser
Rect ates ate ttc
Neue! Geel Pegi at
Pe tia se bas
Sats Twig any er
Beet Oe ee
Fea, WO wai
iascbetted Remeeel pees ©
sas ear amo ees
iba ens comes
ae peepee moe
ae eee a oe
a
SomeraINé NEW FoR
Bice wovsros
Me 1. Sete fret 3
sain Ration seers
Sod eae nee
ie sve recital
‘Shon, trated. 7 Mila wher
eee ee
attr ae tnd
Seeecegace rae
irsecumeeeeete fos
rte arses tye
fang Scent are Gan
chee hasta St
sources bee ot te
ser ie
ae eee
Horace
i ae eres
eter ee eee
ee tea paneer Tobaaooes
Fe faethe
Paee ee
oly
PA to
Seater ae es
rewee eats
iad ere
ae eenars
tis sre tanta ta
Wilterfore’s forward wall bold
ieee red eee
win Femara
Piatra a
‘stanres downing the bal "carrie
feearcinst Settee
Redden, ‘Tynes pushing’ the bail ove
‘The second foachdown war mate by
arent eras
tae are rs
ies eee ae ae
eae as wees
waa, ina line delve for. thelr thir
ue et are oe
eres
only once more did Wilberforce fall ‘s
Somemeet acne
arctan
Bp Sa ieee
is as esta
eee
fos agen WN
ieneaee Eee
aerate et
eae a a, Sr
sic reat aca
snd Wetted Took eiplene The
se Rees
sade ete oe
ge eae
Sa eat ater oe ti
oe eae
i eee
Seat ee
Seems
eee ee
levee eter
tetera
ea
ete
fee ee ete
Ses ere
sri a
SEEEECES GREATERY WEEELY NEWS ATSS
DALLAS DOTS | BRYAN BRIEFS
rare gm
See
operates
ier Sin Sem Groen whe
isso ee
ig tees wires
he site rejoiced became they were
Spe =
Sete ae ae
cere
ican ooet e
race eee!
SSS
eS
Ee cane
aerate =
Sota emes
SS te cas
ee
eo eee
Yen wil ne the sete ss mls
EG eeareu ees
ca eee a er
Serene
rence
AUSTIN DOINGS
sat ee aca
parse
siete tr See
ee a
ESS
rae
ete es
ee ee
= anes ea
SS
ee
reese core
Tere
2 ee
eee
= ssomre:
fest oe:
Seca es ae
Sots, Eecrerece
felating, 5. Praakite e bec from
ee
eS
CUERO CULLINGS
Tene — She Yoniay Meested
wiv boca Gah caret es
Sos sae
Tce were preven tye ci. AE
ters rad of mame oa pee
esata Se Reg met Pon Oe
rp
ts lee ee fe ee
ae oe oe ee
Mbit formety of Price Wie
alee sited oar cay Sir beer
<a age ek” Se ee
Sen's. B Forres BR Goce,
Bostic Hail sed Piet A Decks
ee
et
orient ae OT
Biel eres, Te oer. ee
Bina Sve "Toendag. Vicia od
fax ot pay as Oe Poe
ia
ORANGE DOINGS
Plies of Pie, Whey Ook
:
Tech ot tee Pease
Saag eners Gai mat
Saget Sostns tthe Sk
Scotter tenet eee a
= ieee ee hey a
Serco sat seats
ea be i ee
ae Seater os tee
Pike eel omy.
a
=a. =
ede ponte =
Foe het eee =
i Oreane Geet Riga Se
che Sal wet ae Ree Be
Seeaber "Cake Fens
as
CORSICANA -
old io in the feugindd to entaue ae
Teddi i the beat to. Seder oe
ovat My ty tig ad fe
at ay ee
BC aginst ita Sie
srspt Thankagee st, Dome ee
te Histo nat week hese te
Biss Tent Sy
face asus ae
doy at Py rea
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See led fan Tat
ie eter eee om Da
i aay ts Se vee
IS sae reenter
fram re ore soy re
Gta leee ie Pee
tie Whar a woh Gest
Tove‘na anced. toes
‘oa Regaine
cea ee tees
Se See eee a ea
Src Tee Soe ar
elie ig ea hee
ria tie Shea Bt
tic Nema ced eters
fied i ie ee ft a
feat Ue te oS
linge see em Ea
ince BE ha nee I
conan Pon ene my
iw, Anan Sod ty
vate oe cae
eae sess, eo Ea noe
ree
IP oom ana ae
were eta rae ng Se
a
a cor eee are
th seme they nhs et
fet i boone i a Bee
sd Chery Cay a hy
=
Deval ‘Waer See eee
Mined wee hee A ka
ee el Sel Nin Oo
iow pg he ae
ore
de tr cn Abeer
Grete Pen itp Rae
eye coy ee
fr der eee
tr Fg ke cing
ge
Sr oe Etaoin wars aoe
fs neces Se
tr he aoe oe ed
cs Gael
Se ie alee
rep
BRYAN BRIEFS
seek scan
oe een ee
Sora
eet reer toe
pan Sacer eas
Se bee petted tae el oor
SE ere ers
eee eee
eee ee
Rese ioe
see
ka
on eae ee
een eg, Bn
‘Sim the city soliciting members. Mra.
ae
ge
erect Se
eee
— reporter was highly en-
Se are rest
Serena meets F
eee ee
perimeter
eetege en
Siar stot Adio Griffin, who
a ae ee
See
eee
Rees het
ie, arenes ee
St aera
eae
aster
Salis
ae
CLEBURNE
ee a
Medectay funeral from A.M
See oe ee Sion
wst'Pr honor. er, Johnson
Si ‘Carie yy Mian Tareas Jone
sad bread Mit. iter Bicol
Senin i somes corenes at Por
Seclny ot Fir ‘Raptet Chock he
Set Mea Tou Jone and. duaghter,
Boner Cl gers ef Md
Bary Gung bape a wry ack on
Ber Aw, Beers of Hc wan i
oo oy et Vf
sez, Dla, ene calf
Sr feue Seminy ned wes
of Me. I. E. Small The Social Art
Ga et wh Mi, PB Soy, We
mete Ney wth ee, er
Se ees’ presi
sartwo cours Habe an serve
one” ter sorgttons- attendant
ent Rents mera gore kre
Esvie Devin Bewvery Mesdanes Mat
Se ‘ries fren" inesapela ies
ee
SeaiesChicare; Men Be A Jones,
Wide Lamy ean
Tom Greil Dales rnd
Hee Fort Worthy "Dr. hivong.
cine
JACKSONVILLE
Jeter, Teme Theos
a ac
at Seeet Usien Bape Chore Int
Seek the ete an very
cient The firing steed he
se se oat m bev
fice an Men Bai
Scent \Fesinc ‘MeGores, ins
Sa med tw Hck "Ture? an
Gee Tin fer
See te, edernlp ef Nesta
Was Latkes nj MY. tetertaen
ere Destin, ere
Tui cle Wale ane
EI bakes were marrnd ats
Pee “Bs Tensons i rcorerin
tens of age tas on
Seermetane cae ot Beton
Cee Senay shal fd ‘st Canes
Sentey by rising the highest
COLUMBUS
Calemtnn, Tena —Wille, Thomas
Ben iyi, ras
AS esto Se Aston ape
Treskaciving with ia moter. ‘Bis
Deis gi © ing be
arenes Mine Vaya left
feiwine’"hethers "atten the
Tearhers Asmciation vin Hooston
Prot and bt Bt 1 Johnson Prof
Soc. Robinson Br. danice Mores
Maes Jee Ve docen, Goncrs
Bayes Ber, Haye and Mr aod
Xx: Sanford Mine Granvel San
fie hed hee Cheverog damaged fn
sch ner Ene Lake. Me. nd br.
doa ete oesien
=e. on
Thankoring toe’, Br MDa
SOE ee EF aly Bl
1 Riewinn witniased the fost
Fave Tharnday im Hoot. On the
ae ee
Thomas tn Sum Campbell Get The
Informer at Davia Drog Store
TEMPLE DOTS
alate Zeman rm sts
we ca wher ma bl mor. Was
5G. anaes wet at te eal oer
fa oy bra Rhino, the Pree
fected the ney pasor, er Benet
The Send nniverary ‘of Rev. Ed
rs secon” Wayman Chapel a
whale regrets to nee Rey. and Mrs.
Taoward ineve we for St. itney Chap
se Dali Brand Mra. Bon Hayes
Ret Tew and ir. Howard ne goons
st rei tuthay dinner Fonadey even
Se hee ‘Benmett anion he
"acne sow Catiei, he
nage rere Bt ape. He
EE Gye emcee Taker
Kee aed’ Men Romelle motored to
coerce aad Bil Wea Cat
zr
See
Former tw Bon Hayes ss
MEXIA _
cotems aeaitew of yn
i gin from Balt of ee
so ges Bee per
Se teat, wer Son he
=p ee
St Re direc eo
Ser sy es a ae
SS Se ran ae
Seas Mr Went a Nn
AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
POPULAR MATRON
NEW CHAIRWOMAN
OF GIRL RESERVES
LOCATION
MRS. JOHN W. HUBERT
Girl Reserve Chirladay
Although it seems that the Girl Reserve department of the Y. W. C. A. is unfortunate in having its chair is unfortunate in having its chair is unfortunate in securing other splendid ones. In the vacancy of Mrs. Hubert, who is well known to the people of Houston in many business persons and her charming Mrs. Hubert has been chosen to be the chair of the annual ulcer in January.
Saturday afternoon, December 14, Christmas party being planned for the next week, friends. Plenty of music, games, atunts and other fun-making pastimes will be offered. The girl is invited to come and bring a friend. The department is turning its attention this month toward making some happy at Christmas. Atunts are encouraged to sponsor the donation of a basket will sponsor the Social Service Bureau for distribution. The Girl Reserves of Blackhawk serve the girl at the Y. W. C. A. Sunday Service 8, 4 p. m. They are cordially invited to promises to be interesting. Reporter
HOUSTON TEACHER
GIVES BREAKFAST
HONORING TUTORS
HOUSTON TEACHER
GIVES BREAKFAST
HONORING TUTORS
D
South's Largest Florist
1918 - 1920 - 1922 McKinney
Phones Fairfax 6341-6342
P
**LOCAL KAPPENINGS**
Mrs. Lila M. Jupiter, 1017 Gregg, who has been ill for sometime, is much impatient. She will be held Hicks, 1201 Yokau, underwent an operation at a local hospital this week.
Mrs. Belle Hicks, Williams, 1510 Mason, who has been confined at a local hospital, was removed to her home this week.
**DOLLS!** Beautiful COLORED DOLLS for COLORED CHILDREN, Phone Leigh 9383.
Mrs. Belle and bellagan at Hotel Hotel, died last week. His remains were shipped to Beaumont for burial.
Mrs. Lizie Whitfield, daughter of Mrs. E. C. Whitfield, Galveston, was the end-guest of Miss Rosa Joye Jupiter, 1017 Gregg.
Live Oak, Mrs. W. J. Howard, 1402 Live Oak, had an than-wargiving guest Meadstone, C. F. Unchus and C. F. Worthe. W. E. Day, Sapulpa, Oka, was the house guest of Prof. and Mrs. James during the State Teachers Association.
Mm. L. B. Kerr, Bastrop, who attended the association here last week was the poet of the, and Mr. Hayward, the author of the book, is Mr. Smith's first public music teacher.
DAIN
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1929
Dickson Discusses Gilmer Orphanage
[Portrait of a man in a suit with a bow tie and a medal].
HERE 'TIS ~ ~ THE SONG WITH THE HOTTEST SIZZLE!
"YOU DONE LOST YOUR GOOD THING NOW"
PART I and II
sung in a low-down mood by ...
Lonnie Johnson
and VICTORIA SPIVEY
No. 8733
75¢
OKER
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REV. W. L. DICKSON, president and general manager of the Dickson Colored Orphanage, Glimmer, Texas, who was in Houston last week, relentlessly working with the institution with an Informer representative.
According to Rev. Dickson, the orphanage in Houston has a long history with Dr. R. C. Buckley (white), founder of Buckner's Orphan Home at Dallas, be co-founder of the Nesco Reservoir, and managing Reserv. Dickson has worked and managed the orphanage and developed a connection with and direction of the orphanage I have not received one of the payments I have used money obtained from my pastorates to keep the home going. We bought an 800-acre farm at 7200 South 10th Street, large on the farms and campus.
association. Mrs. Lysa is a teacher in Hillabrook High School. Mrs. Octavia Rebelow Wiedon, Mrs. Karen McKinney, Navasota, were guests of Mrs. Cilia Summers, 1917 Davis, during the
The Official Social Club of the Knights and Daughters of Tabor will hold a dinner for all members of home of Mrs. M. L. Griffin, Daughter Willie Holdie will read a paper. Dress Making and Designing. Street dressmaking especially. Phone FaIR 8825 ams. Stormwater Perry Collin, 1212 Robin Street. The Pore Club's monthly meeting will be held at the Y. W. C. M. Monroe and John B. Holle. East Texas teachers here to attend the association with Mrs. Burton students of their arm, Mrs. Burton students of their herd. C. F. Rikardson received a message Tuesday that one of her brothers, William A. Rice, is dangerously ill. Rikardson, J. P. Rikardson, is in the bedside of his sick son, with modern conveniences, two blocks from car line. Ring Fairax 8645 after 5 p. m., or preston 1243, after 4 p.
J. C. Phillips, elocationist, Cleveland. Ohio, and Dallas, was the guest
These physical properties have been tested and the state will assume control of the school as soon as the present board of directors of the school will be appointed. But the state will assume control against the home. The state law does not permit the state to take any action against the school unless it is free of debt and the deed and bill of sale can be transferred to the school. "During the last 31 years the orphanage has been partially destroyed and during this period 7,989 children; married off 169 girls and 49 boys; from the orphanage has ever been sent to a county farm or penal institution; we only have a number of marriages, of which some of these former separations. Some of these former separations of them are holding paterns in Georgia, Missouri, Arkansas, Ohio, and others. "Under the state legislature, which took over the state condition of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Kempner, 249 Dowling, during the State Teachers Office, will be heard in many recitals. Among the out of town visitors last week were Miss Halle Dickerson the girls and Mrs. Ethel Thomas of Huntsville, both guests of Miss Mary L.
M. Mrs. Laddock, Fort Worth spend Thanksgiving week here as the guest of the Larry Lorrine. M. Mrs. Laddock is prima dona of the Harry T. Burchell Harrington, Mr. and Mrs. Ewing, Mr. and Mrs. James T. Ewing, East Alabama and Burkett, had as guests Thanksgiving, their daughter, Mrs. Mildred Johnson of Acol, Col. D. L. Lyons of Austin, Mr. and M. V. Mildred Johnson of Acol, and Thomas Holly of San Antonio.
LOANS TO COLORED
Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) to Buy, Build and Refinance Colored Homes. Texas Trading Co. Phone Fax number 8585. 210 Pilgrims' building.
Card of Thanks
We wish to thank our many friends
we wish to thank our many friends
and many floral offerings during
the illness and death of our beloved
brother, Stuart and death of Rev. Tay-
lor, who was a great friend.
(Signed) Meddames Eva Williams,
R. J. Jackson, R. E. R. R. R., R. L.
Jackson, Vickey K.
ialty (that is when the present board meets) and will earnly worth $190,000 will be turned over to the state, also 35 Jersey cows and 27 mules and horses. The state will provide the appropriate proportion of $7,500 for the operation and maintenance of the orphanage. "During my recent conference with the attorney-general and state board of control at Austin, a resolution was passed to allow the state to Gilmer and operating name as an agricultural school for Negro orphans and to have neither father nor mother). The students will work one-half day and will spend the other control plans to spend $100,000 for improvements, consisting of artesian wells and electric light plant." Speaking of his conference with the attorney-general son added: "I've never met more genuine encouragement that I received from the board of control and attorney-general."
CHURCH
ANNOUNCEMENTS
BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. J. R. Burdette, Pastor
J. C. Phillips, the celebrated read-
ing teacher, read a reading Sunday
morning follow-up.
M.T. CORNISH BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. A. H. Burdette, Pastor
In spite of the inclement weather,
Sunday school was held on schedule
time and all enjoyed a well taught
class. The students were surprisingly
willing to participate. Pastor Hus-
bard preached at 11:30 on "Conquest
of the West," and was surprisingly good.
Pastor Husbard was quite a success. Messi-
das H. Dillard, Alice Williams and M. W
Dillard, all were on Wednesday
morning, 9:30. Prayer meeting
Tuesday nights 7:30. J. C. Prayer
meeting a sacred a sacred a sacred
program at 8 p.m.
Card of Thanks
We wish to express to our many friends and neighbors our sincere appreciation for their many kindness and generosity during the illness and at the death of our beloved mother and sister, Mrs. Sallie Amble, who recently passed away. (Signed) Mrs. Hattie Petty and family.
I wish to say a tribute to Senator Gov. Warren Barrie. Biller, my personal friend, for the part they made in the ordinance to make the orangutan state a national symbol.
"Just recently one of the buildings at the home was destroyed by fire, and only $4,000 insurance, with no insurance on the contents, of the building three piano, furniture and personal belongings of some of the children. We had to send them and I regret to state that only 5 Negroes have responded to this urgent appeal and have have 158 children to be provided for, and it seems that it in high time that Negroes can fortunate and disadvantaged children and contribute something to this needy cause. I am sure that professors Christianity and readiness for these helpless children Here's a chance for us to show some examples of professors Christianity and readiness for these helpless children."
HOUSTON TEACHER
EXPIRED TUESDAY;
F UNERAL FRIDAY
The friends and acquaintances of M. E. Lee who has for many years been a member of the schools of Hotton, were added by the news of his death at his reside in 290 Shepherd St. Street, New York, also a local preached in the M. E. Church, was in poor health for some monk on his way to the church, the best, and were shocked when the news of his death was flashed over the news of his death will be held from Ease Trinity M. E. Church Friday (today) until the news will deliver the feral oration
PYTHIAN DIGNITARIES HERE
B. I. K. Bicknell and A. S. Jackson, chancellor and chancellor, and chancellor, the Knights of Pythian of Texas, passed through Houston Wednesday, ocurrece in the city to celebrate the factorialists, who are motoring in Dr. Jackson's car plan to return to the city. The interest hydro-electric plant in Texas is to be built on the Devil's River by the Central Power and Light Company. It will have 45,000 kwh.
PAGE FIVE
DOCTOR PASSES AT WASHINGTON; BURIED IN TEXAS
Prominent persons attending the
event are: Mrs. Dallan; Mrs. Juaril Eanes,
Austin; Mrs. Lillian E. Haywood,
Ester of Dallan; Mrs. Juaril Eanes,
Austin; Mrs. Corene B. B Phillip,
Houston; Mrs. Corene B. Phillip,
Kansas City, Mo. Dr. and Mrs. L.
Cotton, N. W. Dr. and Mrs. L.
D. Yen, Little Rock, Ark.
The following news was received
from Dr. Pillbury of Walter Reed
Hospital, Washington, D. C.
December 28, 1929
Mrs. Ethel Miller,
186 2nd Street N. W.
Washington, D. C.
May I express to you my very sin-
cere sympathy in informing you of
the need for your husband, Buf-
tles, when he is 4 a.m. on
November 28, 1929, while a patient
in this house.
It will it that it will be a comfort to
you to know that your husband re-
laps from treatment due to
dreatment of treatment here. You will have
the further consolation of the thought
that your husband is county and die
died very truly yours.
For your comfort Officer:
C. D. PILLSBURY,
Major, Medical Corps.
Card of Thanks
We wish to thank our many friends for their kindness and sympathy extended us on the occasion of the death of our brother, Dr. Philip Augustus Butler,博士, Nov. 25, 1929, at Washington, D. G. Signed: Mr. Eibel Parkinson Bower, wife; Mrs. Emma Buly, mother; Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, mother; Ebel Thomas Viviana Martha Maria Michel, Eliza Jackson, Franklin and Miss Ea Buxer.
OKLAHOMA BARON
HOUSTON VISITOR
Among the visitors to Houston during the Thanksgiving season were interstate travelers and tableau models, Mrs. Lola Brady and Joe Carter, Wewoka, Oklahoma. While Mrs. Wewoka has been souping in the Sooner State now for about two years; and, Mrs. Wewoka has been returning to her mother and many friends here in her old home town, she is required to Oklahoma to look after her oil and other business interests. Mr. Carter is one of Oklahoma's much oil acreage and many producing oil wells in the fertile Seminole Hills. He mentions royalties from his oil lands above amount to a small fortune, and as a result he has been able to invest in his business channels. In addition he boasts of being a farmer of some proportion living some of the time in his section of the country.
LOANS
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ALLEN ORANGE, PRES.
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NOTE—If the articles appearing in this column suggest any particular question to your mind, or if you desire further information on the subject, please contact the Department of the Associated Negro Press, 3123 Indiana Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, or Secretary, National Negro Business League, Tukeague Institute, Alabama, or a communication in the Inquiry Department, D.C. will be productive of the further information desired.
BEWARE THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON
CREOMULSION
FOR THE COMEN FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON
PAGE SIX
INDUSTRY ACADEMY
Survey
The Association
With the co-
The National Negro Business Leag-
and Other Re-
NOTE: If the articles appear
ticular question in your mind, or
along the lines suggested, you m
new Department of the Negro
American Chess, Illinois, or Sor-
tzerland
Tuskegee Institute, Alabama, or
vision, Bureau Domestic Com-
municative of the further informa-
tion.
ROAD TO SUCCESS
(Biography: Harry H. Pace, president Supreme Liberty Life Insurance of the Negro Insurance Association.)
The road to success is not strenued with roses but is filled with many appointments and pitfalls as may be shown by the biography of Harry H. Pace, president of Supreme Liberty Life Insurance Company. Mr. Pace was graduated from college in Atlanta and received a professional career as did no many others of that time by banking in a professional enter business. This the did. He became the printer's devil in a shop owned by 3 prominent Atlanta stores, Dr. Dell-knall and the A. M. E. Church, and Mr. Matthew, trainee to the Atlanta schools but promenant did not grow and the business as a foreman and manager of the show but promenant to the business man was invaded into Dr. W. E. R. DuBois and Mr. Simmons to create a new printing business manager of the Moon, a final business man, a present Crisis, he worked for one year but the publication and its owners of their time and it finally found a place.
With two unimpeachable business careers in position at Lincoln University, Jefferson City, Missouri, where he taught for 15 years, he later in career the ambition of the Memphis Solvent company was no-fee in salary from $190 down to $50 see month. But the company also in this young bank an opportunity for the development of his preconditioning cashier of the bank had abscended and left the bank in a very difficult position under Mr. Pace's direction and the confidence inspired by his aggressive fundraising from $2,400 to more than $600,000. Dressed in their very small beginning to $225 monthly. At this point itself, Beren, Pace, founder of Standard Life Insurance Company, the company's expanding, program. Mr. Pace once more sacrificed a part of his company because he disagreed with position which paid but $12 monthly. Seven years later when his salary had been $1,000, the company because he disagreed with position which paid but $12 monthly. As a result of the administration policies which Mr. Pace opposed, within five years the company crash-
present assistance to the Association of
States of New Jersey and the University of
New Jersey. A board of trustees of
Lincoln is accomplished. Today Mr. Paice
enjoyes the benefits of the fourth largest
no-go insurance company in America,
and the first great insurance thought
provided by the University.
Cough from cold may lead to serious illness. You can stop cold now with Cream of Tartar, a common remedy that is pleasant to take. Creammation is the process of dissolving a cold in a liquid; it soothes and helps the inflamed throat. Of all known drugs, cremation is recognized by high medical authorities as one of the most effective remedies for cough from cold and intestinal irritation. Creammation, in addition to relieving symptoms and head the inflamed menstruae and stop the irritation, while also ailments like the blood, attacks the seat of trouble and the growth of the prostate.
CREOMI
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COMMERCIAL NEWS ITEMS
Indianapolis—The new building of the Hod Carriers and Common Laborers Union of America was delicately renovated at the Avenue. The building was erected at a cost of $30,000. It is the only New York Avenue building. Durham—The Mutual Building and Loan Association, of which C. C. building is present, has received $25,000. The association, which has resources of $28,500, has had the largest earnings in the state during the past year. Richmond—Through its assistant office of Virginia recently made a donation to B. V. Lawson, president of the University of Virginia, the scholarship fund which is being awarded at the discretion of the officials to the student in the College of Law or Commerce and Finance has the highest scholastic average.
MISSOURI CITY
HOSPITAL FIGHT
GROWS INTENSE
St. Louis, Mo.—(ANP)—The long drawn out effort of colored St. Louisians to obtain "adequate and decent" hospital accommodations, entered a new phase this week when its critical staff members for several years has been battling to force the city to provide sanitary facilities for the Negro症, petitioned the board of aldermen to buy the famous Poro city infirmary. Denied access to white hospitals, with the exception of Barnes Hospital, the city has acquired it with 33 beds and the Bandin Cancer Hospital, which allows hospitalization for colored patients, save the People's Hospital, cancer accommodations fifty. is the city own charity establishment known as City Hospital.
Vicious Conditions Exist
I conditions in this establishment, in a average of more than 300 patient rooms, are described as vicious and deplorable. Located in a ramshackle six-story building, the densely enclosed an unsafe, sadly over-crowded, row miles, insufficient stairways and row miles, insufficient elevators, usually out of reach, by colored cements that the place in a veritable fire trap, where fire hazes trapped the lives of the patients. Sixty years ago a general city bond provided $120,000 for a hospital for the injured, received solid Negro support in the election through the promise of relief
Want White Heads
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THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1929
others, headed by a citizen's committee which has had constant sage to the task of guiding the hospital for the fare hospital from being placed adjacent to the white institution. The committee, led by Dr. Whittier avenue and Dr. Whittier avenue and ordered condemnation proceedings were filed by the hospital where files filed by white improvement societies and protectors of patients who did not wish to be hospitalized.
Can Obtain Property
The citizens committee, which is headed by Rev. Nohh A. Williams, is determined to have action and to address the past few weeks. Meeting last week, the proposed site would not be the preferred site because of suits, from four to six years, they recommended purchase of the Pendleton and North Market streets, on part of their Poro College is located. It is said that Mrs. Malone is the chairman of the community interest can be served because she plans the erection of a new building.
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even more suited to the increasing needs of Porsou's business. Her interest in the civil welfare of the city, philanthropy, in well known, the committee which stands and handels the city office officials in leading the city office officials in composed of leading St. Louisians representing all walks of life. Among them are George E. Stevens, pastor of Central Baptist Church; Dr. R. C. Haskell; Paul A. M. E. Church; Mrs. Mattie Paul A. M. E. Church; Mrs. Mattie Paul A. M. E. Church; Mrs. Mattie Paul A. M. E. Church; executive secretary of the Young Men's Christian Association; Rev. F. B. Abbott, Union Church; executive secretary St. Louis Urban League; Rev. S. R. Stanley, Church; Rev. H. W. Evans, Scruggs Church; Rev. H. W. Evans, Scruggs Memorial; Rev. R. C. Maxwell, Church; Rev. D. Dunnavant, Rev. John L. Williams, Dunnavant, Rev. John L. Williams, St. Louis University Dr. R. C. Haskell, Atty. Walshall A. Moore, representative in the Mansion and R. C. Fiskin
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DR. RUPERT O. ROETT
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
402 S. 10th St.
Phoenix, AZ 85001
Phone: Office 2, 217, Req. 6819
Residence: 410 Robin St.
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Office: 111] W. Houston Ave.
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Mannah, Texas
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AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
Texas ranks second among the states in value of exports and among the 102 countries of the world ranks third among the 102 countries of the world in Wichita County. Texas has $81,600,000, Texas was second with $17,000,000 and Michigan was third with $87,700,000, less than half the total for Texas.
Two new cracking plants are being constructed in the Iowa Park area, Texas has 170 licensed airports and more than 300 registered airplanes.
BLOOD TEST
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701-792 Cleveland, Parking
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FISH AND MEDIC
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Largest Fish Market in the PHONES: PRES. 9111-CAP. 60860
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Wilson's Presc
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616 Prairie Ave.
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OFFICE PHONE FAIRFAX 8729
JACKSON UNDER
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ax 7310 & 7319 Res. Phones Fairfax
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The Houston Informer
Whitening the Republican Party
Rv KELLY MILLER, Howard University, Washington, D. C.
EDITORIALS
THE HOUSTON INFORMER
AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
"It Gets You Told—Nothing Else!"
Published every Saturday by the Webster-Richardson Publishing Company Inc., 409-411 Smith Street, Houston, Texas
One, Mr. Arnold of Florida, the state of the Neo-Republican party of the South, has devised a plan of whitening the G. O. P. From its inception, the Republican party has professed to operate without regard to race or color. It might safely be that President Grant, an eratist Democrat, and slave holder, embodyed and practiced this doctrine before all who went before or came after him. Rutherford B. Hayes first showed the white feather. Since the great surrender of '76, the G. O. P. until now, it is fairly characterised as "ily-white."
Entered as second-class matter May 28, 1919, at the post-office at Houston,
Otaxa, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
G. F. RICHARDSON
G. H. WEBSTER
A. ALSTON ROBINSON
CARTER W. WESLEY
Editor-President
General Manager-Treasurer
Secretary
Auditor
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HOUSTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1929
SOUTHERN SENTIMENT IS CHANGING
But doctrine survives long after the sustaining practice has passed away. The party of Steven and Sumner is still called "Nego lovenoy," in some cases, for the party's candidates for governor in the recent campaign in Virginia was forced to apologize to the leader of the Republicans for seeming to sponsor a circular which implied any sort of fondness for the Republican of Virginia are every whit as white as their Democratic adversaries. Mr. Arnold suggested the best way to unify the hue of the two parties to blacken the Democrat in Virginia and to demoralize Democratic candidates in the North. This is already an accomplished fact New York has a Morton to match Chicago's Carvey. St. Louis nominated a Negro Democrat for congress in the South and the Republicans elected DePriest.
The Informer notes with much pleasure the gradual change in sentiment in the South toward the Negro, which is manifesting itself in more ways than one, and which indicates that a better day in dawning in Dixie for both races.
Of course, the South has not reached the upland stage in interracial relations, but marked progress has been made and is visible in the field of better of more amicable relations between the two races.
Only last week two police officers were suspended in New Orleans, La., because they had tortured a Negro prison in an effort to force the black to confess to some alleged crime.
The Informer remembers when such barbaric practices on the part of police and constabulary officers, with Negroes as victims, played an important part not only in their retention on the department, but added materially in their promotion.
The police officers who were placed on duty in the South for their ability to officer and browse Negroes than because of their peculiar fitness for the role of peace officers.
Only recently a Mississippi peace officer shot and fatally wounded a drunken white man, who had just a few moments before shot and killed an innocent colored minister.
In Arkansas police officers placed a Negro suspect in an improvised electric chair, turned on the current and made him confess to some crime; and the judge of the trial court denounced that the convicted black will get a new trial.
If I mistake not the first Negro judge to be appointed to the bench since reconstruction was elevated by Benjamin Butter, a famous Massa-na-na North is concerned, there is no great margin of political difference between the two parties on the issue of race and color. The Southern Democratic party is in contradiction to its Republican adversary which advocated equality of colors. The Southern democracy has held to its principle or rather its policy, while the "grand" party around to its adversary's position.
In the educational field, the South is spending large sums of money for the training of colored youth, both in private and public schools.
Many Southern cities are showing more interest in their Negro population and are taking advanced steps to make sections of the city more racially and socially diverse. Nearly every month some Dixie court hands down a decision outlawing residential segregation, whether the act is created by municipal ordinance or by a pact entered into by the white owners of residential property not to sell to any person of African descent or admixture.
While improvement is being made along these and other lines, the Negro is being out in the labor field in the South, being supported by the efforts of other states in the right to vote is still denied the mere central of the Southern states through the device of the "white man's primary" law.
The Republican party has already become whitened. President Hoover applied the last touch of the brush in the white washing process. The Republican party were deliberately ignored in the platform on which he stood and was elected. He eliminated every trace of Negro influence in the organization and management of party affairs. He set up a committee to investigate his vice he ignored. He has minimized the Negro as an office-holder, both by silence and neglect. He inherited a few Negro officials who are holding over with tremulous tenure. The Negro party has no place under his brand of leadership. The obvious object of this lily-wide policy is to so whiten the Republican party that it can no longer be rebroached by its adversary the taint of contamination with blackness. He has his point of view, to enable it to compete with its Democratic rival on Southern soil. This is one of his "noble experiments" which does not give great promise of success. The Negro party and Kentucky indicates the outcome.
Conditions will continue to improve in proportion as the Negroes show more genuine interest in their own welfare and organize their forces for the acquisition, exercise and enjoyment of all rights vouchsafed to them under the provisions of the federal constitution. No race makes enemies for itself by contending for its rights, but on the other hand the race which wages an intelligent and concerted fight for its rights will make many friends and supporters by so doing. The Negro who asserts that "all white folks are alike" is as ally and foolish as the white person who argues that "all Negroes are alike" when both races change their attitude toward each other, and seek to understand and know each other better, the South will assume a far more commanding place in the life of this republic. The South can never hope to reach the topmost summits of enervation and achievement, along any line, as long as it attempts to hold part of its population in subject poverty, ignorance and assiduity. The South will never achieve equalities and other practices diametrically at variance with the fundamental principles of democracy and Christianity.
POT CALLING KETTLE BLACK
One of our daily journalistic contemporaries attempts to ridicate the reported attempt or plan to "blacken" the Democratic party, by electing Negroes to high offices on the party ticket in colored centers of the North and East; and then this local white editor essays to rap the Republican party for electing Negroes to high congressional and state offices in Northern states.
The policy of defeating the enemy by imitating his tactics is always a ha zardous, strategic experiment. What on earth is the use of changing parties in Virginia, if the two can be made the same thing? Two college professors were pitted against each other in Virginia. The one bore the out-and-out Democratic label, the other was a sort of nomadic nondescript. The one thing which they tenaciously held in common was hostility to the other. The one who had no Negro turned his hand in the contest, nor shed a nail at the outcome. Florida, Texas, Tennessee and Oklahoma come next in turn. It now looks as if the reconstructed lily-wheel Republican party, of the Hoover stump, will fare as badly as the Democratic regime. The issue is on the knees of the gods, Mr. Hoover's political fate is in the balance. The debacle of the extra session of congress, the Wall street panic, the recalcitrance of the senatorial bloo, and the possibility of emasuring hard times will determine success or failure. Although praying for his success, I am balancing the favorable against the unfavorable fates. If he is succeed himself, the Southern Republican party will remain ill-yellow; if he fails, the old color scheme will doubtless recur, with the likelihood of success.
While endearcing to castigate, by imbuendo and insinuation, the Republican party for electing Negroes to such offices in Illinois and other states of the North, our esteemed local contemporary overlooked the fact that his Democratic party nominated and Missouri, district last fall.
This same paper also "forget to remember" that black Democrats have been elected to high political posts in New York, Ohio and other Northern states; and that even now there is a Negro Democrat serving as a number of the New York City Civil Service Commission, who was appointed to this important municipal office. During the last two or three presidential campaigns, the Democratic party thought enough of the black voters of the country to form a colored organization and to make a determined bid for votes from the colored electorate of the republic.
Why, even in some of the Southern states, Texas not excluded, the leaders of the Democratic party have made strenuous efforts to corral Negro voters, as was demonstrated in this state when A. Ferguson ran against and defeated Dr. George C. Bute in 1924.
In 1922, when George E. B. Peddy of Houston ran on a fusion ticket against Earle B. Mayfield for the United States senate, Democratic leaders in Texas catered to the Negro voters.
Whenever a political party wants to win an election the color of the voter plays an unimportant part in the campaign; for it is not only any election and the color of the elector a minor consideration.
If the Democratic party persists in its policy of catering to colored voters in the North and East, and electing Negroes to high political offices, the donkey party will soon be as "black" as the elephant party; and, as things stand now, this reference of the local white newspaper to the "blackness" of the Republican party, stifles The Informer as an instance of the pot trying to
The whole measure of blame for this whitening of the Republican party can not be placed on the shoulders of Mr. Hoover, Mr. Armadillo, nor the members of the Democratic party, but them. Much of the fault lies in the Negro himself. On the whole, the Negro politician has cut a sorry figure from the first day he was unhired into the political arena. He was not a politician. It may be expected too much of them to have hoped otherwise.
I was taken to account for a previous release in which I stated that too many Negro politicians were self-absorbed, sufficiently large proportion to give the group an evil reputation. It does not take many rotten apples to corrupt the barrel. The Negro politician has usually received the biggest pay roll among the party's leaders, race's best friends for back seats on the band wagon. He sacrificed John Sherman for Alger; Tom Reed, McKinley and Foraker for Taft. In this way he eliminated all of his genuine
There is today not a single man in high and influential public life who would rink uttering one courageous word in his behalf with the fate of John Shriman. Tom Reed and Porky Pig have that so large a proportion of conspicuous Negro politicians, now functioning, or are recently have been under serious charges, some indictment, or condemnation. No, the tuoague argument will not hold. Notwithstanding that the Cesar may do as he please; but Cesar's wife must be above suspicion. The Negro politician is largely responsible for the whitening of the Republican party. Now we must stand on the side-line and look while these defendants decide the issue of battle!
NEGROES MASS MUSIC TALENT FOR VISITORS
NEGROES MASS MUSIC TALENT FOR VISITORS
The Houston Press:
With Jessica Ernestine Covington, pianist, as the artist of the evening and well trained choruses from all the Negro high schools of Houston and trained music teachers in the schools, Houston Ernestine presented a credible array of talent Friday night at the City Andorium for the entertainment of our visitors to Texas Colored Teachers Association.
In addition to the choruses several of our visitors to Texas performed by Taylor Choral Club song. This also presented a male octet and a female chorus.
This well-organized wide variety of material used by Negro composition of Negro artistry, several good school songs written by local composers, who sung both the popular and popular songs and classical pieces.
Dedicated portions of the program were in the hands of Jessica Covington, self-appointed musical ambassador on her own race, who in doing so was able to strive to bring her people comprehension and appreciation of the
Her playing has the consistent merit of good technical thoroughness and the charm of the choreography of Chonin, the slay of color in Capucina Viennesi, or the loveliness in which she displaced skillful petals of her own new face, Capucina Taylor, always a name held in reverence and an esteem of achievement of the Ride of Valkriese she gave with excellent commissure of music when agger's music when adapted to plan. A welld moment on the program when the mused choruses from the Ride of Valkriese let out their voices in a round chorus, ac tempo and stirring. The Coleridine-Taylor Choral Club gave a good account of life in hibernation in 1925 and 1926 with finished interpretation. C. F. Picardon in the president. From thirteenth place in 1927 and ninth place in 1929 Texas in 1925 will be placed in a electrical current generated. Texas building and low companies increased their assets $20,000,000 in 1925 and now represent a total capita
Alabaster, excellent quality of which is produced in the gypsum of the Alabaster region, vanishes from the large increase in the output of Italian alabaster factories. It is also the reason that older methods of hand-manufactures are giving way to modernized ones.
More than any other group in this country we need to watch our 91-girl internals to our interests is introduced. We need trained jobbists to work in the position to Negrophobism. We need an anti-jacking law; we need to protect more discriminatory legislation whether affect labor, education or marriage, and we need to force in force; we need civil rights laws in many of the countries are enforced; we need to end the discrimination against Negroes in the distribution of hard-grain food in school funds. We need, I repeat, a trained officer at every state capital. The cradle of laws is the legislature. Unless fort, when these laws are being born we need not register when we discovers that they are intended to be followed by a fellow who yell loudest that gets the most attention. This powerful lobby would not exceed $500,000 a year or less than 5 cents a year from every person who Negroes, who can afford to travel to football "classics," attest to Negroes, who can afford $2 or $6) a year getting their hair "done," a can afford a nickel or a dollar for the defense of their
So far this task has been left to the few thousand Negroes who numbered more than 10 percent of the Advancement of Colored People. It has been efficiently done, considering the meagre amount of money contempt and surface. It is a national organization that is seven percent critical (and I am among them) will not say that it may be worth the money's worth. A group of ten million people can't expect much for seventy or eighty thousand dollars. Negroes do not need any new organization to sort and moderate these they have to seem as if they are loath to proprietors, patent medicine vendors, skin whiteners, numbers bankers and lottery players. They loom on the horizon, they demand that the N. A. A. C. P. or some other organization defend them. They demand that the group of defense men must make way for a well-organized and constant policy informed awareness of the lottery money but only a little from each woman. Wouldn't be wonderful if
Very truly yours,
GEORGE S. SCHUYLER
New York City, Nov. 18, 1929.
Lexington, Miss. — The Standard Petroleral Aid Society of this city, a non-profit corporation, is centrally licensed by the state of Michigan to commerce engineers. James Sample will be supervise of agencies.
Cleveland — a new corporation known as Murrell Chevrolet, Invoices and an authorized capital of $25,000 has also over the business of the Murrell Printing Company, the national印刷公司, in Post. The merger effected by this organization will continue the publication of the name of the Cleveland Call and Washington — the National Benefit Life Insurance Company celebrate its anniversary on November 1, 2015. Total insurance in force amounts to $729,889. The company operates
OPINIONS
Passing Parade
Some observations during the Colored Teachers' State Association at Pedagogy here from all sections of the state, and femininepkulitude Miss Eliza Alma Walls, secretary, treasurer, and her aides, Miss C. M. Willey of Waco, and Mary L. Jones of Houston, as all asleep in the proverbial bees. Very soon John Wayna Rie, executive secretary, can who hardly get a breathing snail. H. B. Pemberton, educator, H. B. Pemberton, principal central High School of Marshal and pater of Dra. W. and Dogan Pemberton of Houston. Among Houston teachers Mrs. C. L. McCarthy on the boat ride on the coral on the R. E. M. Catchers. Mrs. P. H. Holden, Ms. Mabel Whose on the boat ride down the Shi Chau River to Saw Jatihate on the coral on the R. E. M. A. Fuller, new president and Bibson College professor, appearing perennial of youth. That bird looked like vampire on the coral and retiring head of the association. Live in the Harwood Line: Mrs. L. M. Marshing and G. W. Pillar of Pl. Worth V. G. Go and W. J. Hewlett Williams and J. W. Hewlett.
W. H. Fowler, P. V. deen of men
wearing with soldiery bearing and
hearing.
Mr. and Mrs. I. R. Cash, East St.
Cash, M. Miss Christine Benton,
a winter during her college days
at a teacher and teacher of music
taught, M. I. R. B. Kow of Bostrov
she knows both her text-books and
Mariwurse Marie of Lovw Al-
man and M. F. Lee, 1924 Dawnt,
Pr. O. T. McCau, Wharton dent,
and M. F. Lee, 1924 Dawnt,
Pr. T. McCau, veteran educa-
tion.
H. H. P. G. Brown of Sang Ange
W. Hall, folks of Sang Ange C.
T. H. McCau, Benton and son,
I. B. Knocknion and son, I. B. Tou-
hle of Sang Ange, Benton and son,
hospitalization, active in Parent-Teach
hospitalization
Homely Philosophy
By Georgia Douglas Johnson
SENSITIVENESS
Undesign sensitiveness is a great hindrance. It causes one to be easily offended, and it is usually unintended. It makes one unpopular, even distilled, and hinders the ability to be annoyed to be annoyed by citing to the whims of the over-conscientious and so-called sensitiveness is an unhappy cloak that should be proudly and firmly disdained.
Cimbee's Ramblings
Deer Lee: