Houston Informer
Saturday, May 24, 1930
Houston, Texas
Page text (machine-generated)
Heavenly Houston' Biggest Texas City 5 Cts THE HOUSTON INFORMER AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
Officers Prevent Lynching HONEY GROVE STAGES SHERMAN ACT
BY C. F. RICHARDSON
INFORMER OF
IMPROVEMENTS MADE
THE HOUSTON SPIRIT
MODERN PRINTING PLANT
JUDGE GARWOOD'S DEATH
COUNTY STOCK LAW
On Saturday, May 24, the Houston
Informer will be eleven years of age,
and will be allotted a paper
name of date May 24, 1918, upon
paper's name was suggested by this
columnist's spouse, who has stood by this
document both fat and lean periods.
During this eleven-year period the
Informer has fought many battles
lost some and won others, and
times it has contended for what it
believed to be right and justice,
going into existence back in 1919, there was
hardly a decent and respectable public
building in Houston for colored
children, and better schools of
better and more modern school
structures and more scholarly,
this addressed its
Despite the fact that many differed with this paper on the course pursued in today Houston boasts of several high school children; and this city leads the geo school children; and this city leads the country; in the number of public schools for Negroes: Three senior schools; two junior schools; and nineteen elementary schools; and the only junior college operated for Negroes in the district. The principal school district in all the South, as far as we have been able to reach.
Mind you, now, The Informer is not claiming credit for all this, but we have information that information helped to focus public attention on the ancient and antiquated buildings in Houston, resulting in an aroused public through its wide-awake and progressive superintendent of public schools, one of the most creditable and modern buildings.
When The Informer first saw the light of journalistic day, back in 1919, Houston Negrews were living in mud; the improvement forced to eke out their existence in mud, water and squail, considerable improvement has been made in Houston's large black population for Houston's large black population, have become more amenable in many spects, and Houston is a far better city today for the Negre, taken from the area around 183,000 in 1920. It was when The Informer was born.
While the city has grown from a little town to a city around 183,000 in 1920, Houston's 130 population has already been given a 110 percent—more than doubling its population in the past decade. Negrepopulation has shown a corresponding increase in the period, and today Houston has the largest Negro citizenry of any city in this respect among Southern cities.
Starting with the proverbial lead pencil and sheet of paper in 1919, The Times and today has one of the best and most modernly equipped printing plants of any newspaper published by The Times. The former is more widely read and its
HOUSTON LEADS TEXAS CITIES IN '30 POPULATION
Magnolia City Also Second Largest In South — Ma m o t h Street Parade Planned For Friday Afternoon — Ne g r o p Bands, Organizations and Citizens To Participate — Business Mer's Club Active In Celebration With San Antonio's 1930 population announced as 254,662 and Dallas as 269,397 Houston becomes the state's largest city, with a population of 290,811. During the past decade Houston has leaped from third to first place among cities in the Lone Star State, showing an increase during this 16-year period, or a increase of 110.31.
Despite the fact that San Antonio made a heroic and gallant effort to surpass Houston in 1980 population and was the last of the three major cities in the state to announce her population, the Alamo City not only Houston, but run behind Dallas in population count.
Civic authorities of San Antonio are to be disaffected with the government count, and the county count in a determined effort to make a better showing.
Having been the population counters since 1980 and having enumerated his children rather successfully and accurately all the mark far when he announces the decennial population of most American cities, Houston not only becomes the state's largest city, but the second largest city in Texas and the fastest-growing and most forward-looking municipality in the entire South.
The field, with Dallas on second occasions and Houston third. Hence the county count does not seem to suit the civic, price of San Antonians, neither does Dallas to "Honor Kansas."
Having outgrown Atlanta, Memphis, Birmingham and other populations, the population bids fair to be exceeded only by New Orleans.
The words of Dr. C. B. Johnson's booster song, "Houston In A Grand Old Town."
"Houston is marching along, Houston is singing a song
About the Ship Channel she's got
the ships are coming from every
where;
in the harbor, bushes and trains
every day.
They are running every which way.
O. come to H-O-U-T-S-O-N-
Houston is a grand old town"
Negro Citizens To Participate
According to plans announced Wed-
day afternoon, Houston will stage
a monster celebration Friday (today),
4 p. m., in the form of a mammoth
parade, celebrating her triumph
as the largest city in Texas and sec-
tion of the Southwest. In keeping with the spirit which has made Houston the most outstanding city in the South, the citizens will mar-
sh in a parade this (Friday) afternoon. Their line of march will be formed at PLIER CITY, at 4 p. m., and the parade will
move promptly at 4:15 p. m.
James T. Ewing, assistant director of the
has been chosen to line up automobiles
among the local Negro, with H. P.
Carter, of the Negro Club.
It has been chosen to line up automobiles
in the postoffice Corner Band, Pilgrimage
Band and U. B. F. Band. All the pub-
lic school children will be in the line
of parade. The Houston is expected to assemble at the Pilgrimage building at 4 p. m. and get
ready.
HOUSTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1930
Brave Dixie Governor Saves Accused Lads From Mobbing Orgy
STATE COLLEGE SHERMAN STUNT
ALUMNI SELECT DUE TO QUARREL
TAYLOR HEAD OVER FARM DEBT
Graniteville, S. C. — (ANP)—What seemed to be an inevitable lynching was thwarted here Wednesday when officers successfully eluded a mob in quest of Leroy Jackson and Ernest Jones, two youths arrested in connection with attempted assault upon a five-year-old white girl.
Following the attack a mob of more than 200 men and women scored the victims, and the name been named in the case. Lynching was in the air and hourly the news of the capture and lynching was expected.
Governor Richards ordered the law enforcement officers to do everything and augment the corps, one group keeping 'tab on the movement of the mob' and providing to young youths. Fortune smiled on the accused and the officers reached their hiding place ahead of the mob bent
HOBART T. TAYLOR
Prairie View, Texas—The Fifth first annual commencement exercises of Prairie View State Normal and Industrial College closed Monday morning to commencement address by Dr. W. L. Turner and awarding degrees to eighty-two seniors: forty-nine in education, seventen in home economics, nine in agriculture, four in mechanical engineering. The commencement exercises formally began May 16 with a musical recital by Miss Jessie Jessie Covington and Helen Taylor, Houston president; The Alumni and Ex-Student Association convened May 17 and elected president; Helen Taylor, Houston president; Theo. L. Holley, San Antonio, president; Helen Taylor, Miss Houston, Houston, second vice-president; Napoleon B. Edward, Prairie View executive secretary; Miss Houston, Miss Carothers, Miss Houston, Houston, pianist; J. P. Brown, Houston, recording and corporeal music; Miss Houston, dress was delivered by I. Q. Hurd, principal Kealing School, Austin, preached in the college auditorium. Sunday morning, May 18, by Dr. W. M. Movayne, de of theology, Baylor University.
When the news of the arrest reached the city scores of armed men runneth about the local jail, but the officers sensing the danger of a lynching carried their prisoners to the state prison. Jackson was charged with attempting the assault and Jones was held as a suspect. The police has denied that he was guilty of the attempted assault and has withstood the charge. According to reports here all plans for the lynching had been completed, and the police mob that they would capture or wrest the youths from the officers, they had appointed a committee to select the suspect. The police suspended and their bodies riddled with bullets. The tree was near the man's armor, the real men stood near here awaiting word of the capture. It was a sullen man, a suspect, a lynchman, a lected apothecus. The news reached them that the officers had put one on over the would-be lynchers and the police prisoners safely in the state prison.
BY ROSCOE J.D.UNIEE
(For the Associated Negro Press)
Sherman, Texas——Did George Hughes, 41-year-old, c remaired Negro, confess to the charge of raping a Mrs. Atnip, white, living near Howe, Texas? Did her husband husband owe Hughes and refuse to say him? Did an enraged man enter into an altercation with Atnip and his wife only to have the age-old charge of assault cast him into the inferno of death?
There are a thousand confusing and perplexing questions which might be answered by the streetmen who have restrained out of the street which stalked through the streets of bermuda. How did it happen that the sheriff's deputies happeed to arrest the man, who troubled, when the alleged rapist assaulted his victim? How does it happen that a round bullet hole from a bullet struck the car, the car, when they testified that Hughes shot at them with a shotgun, whites, before Sherman was engulfed in shame, admitted that the trouble was entirely over a debt owed the
DETROIT YOUTH
ATTACKS CHILD
OF RACE GROUP
Detroit, Mich. — (ANP) — The colored citizens of the "West Side" are highly incensed over a rapa case that happened here Tuesday. The victim was little Robbie Mae Taylor, five years old, and her assailant was a white boy, 15 years of age, Herbert Walters. The story of the whole affair as given by Mrs. Ethel Taylor, mother of the assaulted child, which was verified by the police record at the Vinewood station while the girl was playing in the back of her home, the Walters boy came into the yard and asked the little girl for a drink of water. When she returned from the kitchen with the water the boy is said to have seized her by the alley to vacant garage up the alley to a vacant garage where he assaulted her.
The screams of the child who could not imagine what was happening to her dew the attention of two men who were sitting on the floor, whom it is said looked on and made no attempt to stop the brutal attack. A third person attracted by the cries of the children of a small colored boy about the size and age of the white brute committing the crime. This ind grappled with the (Continued on Page Five)
High Schools Will Hold Joint Service
The annual sermon to the graduating classes of Washington, Yates and heathen senior high schools and Hokkaido high schools prepares at the City Auditorium, Sunday, May 25, 11 a.m. The sermon is necessary due to inability to obtain the necessary of the auditorium in the afternoon. The sermon is delivered by Rev. E. L. Harrison, pastor Antich Antich Church, and Antich's choir, directed by Mrs. M. Harrison. The principals of the three senior high schools are W. E. Miller, James Ryan and F. O. Fox is member of the junior college.
MOST POPULAR GIRL AT YATES
MISS THELMA AGNES CARLINE, most popular girl at Jack Yates High School, in the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Carline, Miss Carline was crowned as the most popular girl Tuesday, May 6. This charming young damask is a member of the 1920 graduating class, and will receive her diploma in June. At the corporation, which lacked nothing in prudence and courteousness, J. B. Taylor, also a member of the June graduating class, was the an-
Another Dead Negro Outraged By Texans Officers Joined Mo
By CLARENCE WILLIAMS
(For The Associated Negro Press)
Honey Grove, Texas—(ANP who prehpaed participated in the Sherman, Texas, a few days ago ties were denied the pleasure, as the odor of burning lash here is scarred and pierced body of Geo the streets and burned it. This town was the home of friends. Both men quarreled w due them as wages.
The body was dragged through the metro streets with assistance to the Negro section. Stopping in front of one of the largest churches in the city, he was dragged to the back of a limb of a giant tree, satulated it with gasoline, ignited it and danced as the frames consumed the remains of his body. He defended himself against a white man and white men.
MANNING, DIXIE
CRUSADER, DEAD;
FRIEND TO NEGRO
MANNING, DIXIE NEGRO PORTERS,
CRUSADER, DEAD; MOB WITNESSES,
FRIEND TO NEGRO GIVEN NEW RUN
New York City.—(Special) Joseph Columbus Manning, former legislator of Alabama, champion of human justice in the black belt fraud and peonage in the South for more than 40 years, died after three years of lingering death from cancer of the throat.
Born at Lillevie, Ala. May 21, 1915. Born at Martha Normal, he was educated at State Normal College, Alabama, and Martha Normal, became editor for the Age of Prohibition at Atlanta, Ga. Having become deeply interested in politics and the Family, he was elected to the Democratic oligarchy, young Manning took the stump for the farmers.
Champion of Human Justice. J. Joseph Columbus, known, was the greatest crusader of human justice ever born in America. He had injustice. From early youth he was exposed to the 16th and 16th amendments and his entire conditions in exposing Southern slaves. He tried to right the wrongs suffered by a defenseless race; punning him with a regret. "To go to my end without a regret."
Express Trekking to North
America. He was the
honor of Republican leader-
ship and was appointed postmaster at
Alexander City, Ala., and served under
Mckinley. He served in 1800 as
principal school superintendent
Middlesbok Club who documented
the birth of Grant, Grant in Boston,
Mass. On the program were such
(Continued on Page Four)
—Several hundred whites, women, and men burning of George Hughes, and others who due to other distressed their savage desires to murder, when they took the bully George Johnson, dragged it through Hughes. He Hughes and Johnson were with white employers about more. With all the savagery of combat and human family, the manisha women, women and children witnessing burning body, shrieking, shaking and bowling in phantom ghee, burning in the very shadow of the camp. Rain stopped the ceremony here, it did in Sherman and the following day. An investigation is expected here, in public buildings were destroyed, the mug just another Negro can be
Apparently, congress should force Texas, Texas and, a commitment to the president that all members should be sent to the president that all members should be seeking to civilize and Christianize heathen be returned here for war. So intense is the byching spirit that Mr. Moore has been calling of slaying his wife was spirited to "parts unknown" because it was in the meantime, Governor Dan Moore's investigators are at work in Shreveport, Louisiana, where the members of the mob who burned the $60,000 courthouse that killed a Negro named George Hutton.
NEGRO PORTERS, MOB WITNESSES, GIVEN NEW RUNS
Officials of the Pollution and the Southern Railroad have admitted that they information but refuse to
ts oh ‘THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1930 AMERICA’S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
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Has ever used.
XS ELENTO
JUININE POMADE
paviics
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sims anise.
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taking S¢. Joseph's G. F. Pt i"
mae NER Y
See
stimulate the appetite: steady
Sarees ee
Soeeierntrse an oer
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sonal recommendation of three generations for che belp it hes
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9
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ray caer oad vovnaee
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“Hold him if you ean, but don't
aot amphi.” The are the word
earns aes
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curse, the mob lenders and the mb
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mecererens es cares 5
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but usually have only the mobs ‘word
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fate like Texas, it stands an ape
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Puree sia in in the edge of
hell. One year ago I'had s date to
pee aoe ae Se
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‘THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1930
rar ee a oe,
fer'vexed at what seemed the tsclent
SF Saad oe a at
eraser "ar ‘tees soeometiey ‘ois
ead aoe ft
Reged ator” Gera th sae
rte tees
dacs to Geetroy ee 15 sen
fe oer a
SS enter etal fe gees
eet cee a" erate ot the Soles
soci eens “tan Nae
rae ts fers “nt ee
tat fellowed many colored worn,
Sie Cae toe
its Gray ccs aoe
fiendines cose
aa ada ase
eee ea seat
aces Yee See
Forehart wis uekod ect fa sree cae
eect een eel
A
in asec ke
rt Dan ere lab
sept Sens on see
race ems? wets
str i nt es
See flat rie aces
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rec aean arae
aces ame ae
Pale he i
ames aeiasines
2 ee beeaeeateooe Nt
fe eae ee
i ene a
ateer bas Solin
never need any incitement from thet
Sete ete cates
ere ea
‘Old Bul Sherman once said: “It 1
occa agra a
estate at tet De
Saas Teepe te
Loe Angeles, Cal—(ANP)—A ver-
tal cian Willan Dean Ps
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= ee eeenereal aoa
see eee ones
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and women that Pickens” detractors
is the corantally sr et or
tint mt
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sees, i examp!
"1 am the mother of eight
ehilden, Before the lose bs
were born I took Lydia E.
Bintham's Vograble” Cor:
pour and they ary the Beall
Ke of the igh My bay i
thelaraet in thenetghborhvod
for her age. I have lea ured
the Sanadive Wash and I say
fhe Pinkham Medicines ean’
be i) 2 Se beady work,
washing. roning and clea
Bnd T fel fine —Mre Bes
Thomas, 160s Caton’ Plas
NW, Geomeoun, D.C.
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Dest Ciey Old tl Alene
vite for tafoemation todny—
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THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1990
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(SMERICA’S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
By DR. WALDO J. HOWARD
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MERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
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Do You Want a Baby?
Regular $1.00 Treatment Same Free
One was married and bended for a baby over
a week. We were written by a writer, m. L. Schroeder, Indiana, we sent
With taking the session,
we will express my happy
skin day. I became
the mother of the
pound baby. God
I hope every woman
hood will take your
welcome to this
publication.
Thank you.
1
Lost Her Double Chin
Lost Her Prominent Hips
Lost Her Sluggishness
If you're fat-first remove the cushions. KRUCHUSHA GALYT contains the 6 mineral make your body organ, glands and nerves must have to function. When your skin works correctly — your bowls and kidneys can't throw off the excess fat before you realize it — you'll be growing hideous. Try one half hour each day of KRUCHUSHA but — 2 weeks get on the scale and use it. Not only that you gain in weight with a healthy health you feel younger. Give any fat person aragen surgery. From and holding drastically anywhere in the body (4 weeks). If this first bottle of KRUCHUSHA is too thick and sore, we will have to lose it before you realize it — urgently alive. Your skin should stay healthy.
HOUSTON BUFFS
STILL LEADING
BASEBALL LOOP
New Orleans, La.—Having traced the New Orleans Pelicans in a double bill here last Sunday, the Houston Black Buffs are still leading the Texas-Louisiana League with a comfort. With Murray Gillippe, last year’s standout on the firing line for the Buffs, he was named the thesus and Pipkin, the latter their star winger, hurling, had to bow to 8-8. In the twilight time “Dooloo” Foster southbound and headed for Barnhill with Barnhill “Black Diamond” Pipkin. Foster allowed the Pelicans nine scattered hits, including six with bingles in the first game, allowing the Pels only 3. The Buffs and 4 in the second. O’Bryant led the Houston attack in the first game, with a three-ply swat. Dunning, playing third base since Williams left the Houston, Hamilton, Buff catcher, also tripped. Owens, Buff shortstop, registered three points in the final game, while Wesh, Pelican outfielder and captain, garnered three binges. Fast fielding kept down the
Waco Takes Three
Tilts From Dallas
Waco, Texas.—The Waco Cardinals, by taking three straight games from the Dallas Black Giants here Monday, have won the first two games in the cellar and are now leading the second division. The first game of the doubleheader, Waco defeated Dallas, 9-4; winning the second, 5-0; and the Tues. contest, 9-6. Roberts of the Cardinals opposed exile and Malone in the first game of the third, 5-0; to bow in the twilight game to Williams' super burling. Slain of the last game, the prime loser, the final game to Liggins.
CHASES SISTER: BOY INJURED
New Orleans, La—(ANP)—Plunging through a balcony fall, William Swain, 9, fell twenty-five feet
When Pain Comes
What many people call indigestion very often means excess acid in the stomach. It is been over-stimulated, and food sources of acid have been added, and neutralizes acids instantly. And the best alkali known to medical science has been maintained the standard with physicians in the 50 years since its invention. One spoonful of this harmless, tasteless alkali in water will neutralize acid and the symptoms disappear at once.
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ICE: 234 HERNANDO STREET,
GENERAL
PHILIPS
HALF OF BENINCE
For Troubles
due to Aerial
Injuries
AGIS STATEMENT
TREATMENT
GAIES - HAULA
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1930
HOW THEY STAND
Team P. W. L. Peti
Houston 16 13 3 811
San Antonio 8 5 3 622
Pt. Arthur 8 5 3 622
New Orleans 9 3 6 333
Dallas 9 3 6 307
STEERS DIVIDE
BISHOP SERIES;
WILLIAMS HERO
In the second game, Texas College was hitting the ball nearly every time the defense could reach it. Coach Mumford was forced to yank pitcher after pitcher and even that failed to curb the slugging of the deuce. The defense was able to support a couple of players to be a Bishop, was again the most consistent hitter, while Rekia Hofler and Stone saxon, fielded by stone saxon, respectively, played bung up ball for the Bears. The play was the most important it would probably be a different story. The Steers ran up eleven scores, while the that the Bears could push over were four. To the ground at his house, receiving serious injury. The boy was chasing his younger sister when he crashed
Two hours after eating digestion, once. You will never use crude methods in the in the manner once you learn the efficiency of this. Go get a small bottle to sour sources, which. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips Milk of Magnesium prescribed by physician's accounts of 800 calcium tablets, 25c and 8c bottle—any in inventor, any drugestore. Magnetis' has been the earnest, U. S. Register Trade Mark of the neutra-much the same since 1892. Charles H. Phillips Chemical Company owns the license Charles H.
LOCAL OFFICE:
BRYAN BRIEFS
CORSICANA
GOREE FARM PROGRAM
Huntsville, Texas. —The colored girl immates of Goree State Farm rendered a very worthy Mother's Day拍景 for the Goree State Farm. Mamie E. Thurston acted as mistress of ceremonies, and papers, solos, quarrels, and pleasing feaures of the evening.
GIVES LIFE FOR DAUGHTER
Natchitoches, La.—(ANP)—Selae Duncan gave her life to save her after daughter Thomas was attacked in the Pacific Railway and evidently, did not approach, approach, through freight train tracks, and through off the track to safety, but stumbled and fell in the path of the on-coming. The body was cut into three pieces.
Sherman Stunt-
"Only yesterday evening as I was coming home, a white man drove up beside me, and he stopped stepping out, said, 'Get in baby.' I ran all of the way home, but not before he had reached in his pocket and several dollars on the ground."
JOHNSON TEACHES
THOMPSON TRICKS
FOR RECENT FIGHT
Detroth, Mihn—(ANP)—Alkough Jack Johnson, former heavyweight champion, is active in helping Jackie Fields for his recent championship encounter with the man that a trick which Johnson taught him contributed to the latter's victory. It is claimed that Fields has a win over Johnson and pound on the arm of told Thompson to work in close as every opportunity and pound on the arm of did as instructed, and as the fight progressed, Field's arm became more severe of the fight he could scrape raise it, and in the last ten rounds most of the force of his right-hand punch was used.
Memphis Undertakers Freed In Injury Case
Me mphis. Tenn.—(ANP) The case against Akles and White, local police officers, was charged with the death of an accident, was dismissed here Tuesday morning on a rainy day. The case grew out of an accident when an ambulance owned by the uninsured driver was called. The driver of the ambulance did not stop nor did he report the accident. The driver of the ambulance was taken者 were arrested. They disclaim any knowledge of the accident and the driver had left town. The driver occurred the report was creeped. that the ambulance was being used at the time to report the accident was proved based at the truth.
CLEBURNE
Clebrum, Teenan. The graduating night at the school auditorium, Monday night at the school auditorium, Wednesday at the school auditorium, Clarence Gambrell, Hazel Marzell, Rev. Milse will gamble, the baccalaureate sermon 8 at 3 p.m. at the school auditorium, Bachelors cloak bed, school Thursday night with an excellent program France, will leave soon to enrol in the school. Davin, Needell, Calif., attended the school. John Robinson were held at Davin Church with Gov. G. W. Burton off duty. Church were a successful meeting at the A.M. E Church. Mist Vivian small will graduate at the sister's institute at Dal
AUSTIN DOINGS
ROCKDALE
Rockville, Texas—Sunday schools and churches were greatly handicapped Sunday by the heavy rain. Rev. D. Burrows, a pastor of Church a crowded house at 5 p.m. several people were here from Copenhagen, Denmark, Rev. D. B. Burrows and son came in Saturday. He is attempting to oratory the members who left Springfield with his. All members of this Springfield Church are asked to be present.
MISS MAXINE SAMPLETON
Prairie View High. The second annual State Girl Home Economics Contest held at Prairie View College, proved gratifying successful. Both girls and teachers manifested a spirit of good sportsmanship which bodes fair for the future growth and development of the contest.
Miss Maxine Sampleton, a pupil of Jack Yates High School, Houston, was the winner of the grand championship prize in the 1930 clothing contest.
PORTERS BEGIN SUITS AGAINST PULLMAN BODY
PORTERS BEGIN SUITS AGAINST PULLMAN BODY
New York City - Intense interest is manifested in the activities of 25 Pulkman porters in St. Louis who have perfected plans for civil suit against the company for refusal to vote in the company union and sign the "yellow dog contract."
H. E. Fields, 15 years in the service, is one of the group to receive hearing in the complaint of illegal invasion of his constitution. He is existing between the Pulkman Company and its porters and a denial of his occupational interest in the company for the company show that its wilfulness were unlawful, crudely defended when questioned by its own attorneys Lolman and Lolman, according to the Pulkman Company. Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, in charge of St. Louis zone. Oct. 15, 1928, when asked by Forcer Instructor W. P. Smith if he had voted on the superintendent, A. V. Burr, who upheld the brotherhood of the brotherhood in his home and charged him with being an anson and Bandolls age."
On the following morning, according to Fields, he reported for duty in the company, where he served passengers when Mr. Hanson an agent, for the company, ordered superintendent Burr. Fields, who arrived Nov. 2, 4, 5 and 6 and could superintendent; but was first totally told that he would be fictional, that if he would vote for the company union, his job would be immediately restored. He further states that Burr told him he would send for Burr when he got "d— good and Attorney R. N. Rorks, representing the porters, states that he sees no reason why the discharged porters are found when the case is finally heard.
COMMERCIAL NEWS ITEMS
New York City — The United Mechanics Association, Inc., which was named the group of new机械men in the borough of New York City, has opened an office and headquarters at $287 thousand Avenue A, and is driving a drive for new members.
Chicago — Charles G. Nicholson was recently appointed by the president of the Rock Island Railroad Company to serve as the chief solicitor. His general duties will be to solicit the package of colored paper and cover the expenses and conventions trips over the state.
(Continued from Page One)
editorials more often quoted and referred to in other leading publications than any race more frequently published in the South. If not the entire country.
The Informer has not attempted to be a source of information to any public and while none have charged that the paper has been somewhat "radical" in its editorial stance, it must be advised that the Informer has never compromised with never "trimmed its sail to catch the passing breeze" in a question or issue, no one has ever had to guess where the Informer stood; for this paper has all advantages and has spoken out in clauses to when some other so-called rice farmers have been dearly boycott. The Informer has never missed an issue since it set sail in the day its readers are numbered among the thousands, scattered all over the
Upon the attainment of its eleventh occasion, the Informer informs this occasion to upon the attendant a positive attitude to the readers and advertisers who have supported this publication and to the readers, who have all of you that we shall always endeavor to maintain the Informer as "America's Greatest Weekly Newspaper." In the recent judgment of Judge H. M. Garwood, one of the leading lawyers and most prominent citizens of Houston and Texas, there passed from the court that race who had shown a friendly interest in the colored race and who had much in his quiet and unassuming bravery in the defense of the officers of the race, including Negroes in it. It is said on good authority that the late lawyer first rose to prominence when he was beginning the career of his legal defense of a group of Negroes accused of allying several people in his legal defense of a group of Negroes feeling was no intolerance against the accused blacks in Bastrop County that could not get a white lawyer to defend him. He pointed young Hiram Garwood as a defense counsel. The barrister took the assignment, got busy in the case and won the acquittal of all the black men, excepting one, who received a short sentence.
The trouble started, it is said, between the two races when several men were upon and attacked a group of Negroes, the whites sustaining several injuries. For his able defense of these accused Negroes, Mr. Garwood had recalled that he had sentiment soon changed in his favor and he enjoyed the goodwill, confidence and respect of all Bustrop leaders. He later became one of the leading members of the bar in Houston and Texas and at the time of his demise he was a firm of Houston, and one of the foremost in Texas and the entire South-Bustrop area and Garwood. Requested in pace.
Saturday, May 24, the voters of Houston and Harris County will be called upon to determine the fate of the Negroes, statutes, their object the bar in Houston, attack, cattle, hogs, goats and sheep off the highways and roadways of the county.
The need of such laws is too obvious for any extended discussion of their morals, for every progressive county
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
With its many paved highways and main arteries of overland travel and access to the public parks and enforce laws to keep all animals from its roads.
Opposing the proposals of the proposed measure you try to belong to the issue by making glittering promises and predicting the collapse of the dairy industry. If other counties can pass such legalization and its dairy business continue to thrive and expand, why can't you? No, these opponents are trying to edge responsibility for fencing in the cattle paddies. In many cases, males, and apparently want to profit at the expense of the general public by assuming their holdings obligations and go to the polls Saturday and not go to the polls harris County in the county to awake counties, but also do your part in helping to remove all the horses, and enforce laws to keep all animals from its roads.
Detroit Youth
(Continued from Page One)
the attacker and held him while the
mother was on the ground. For help brought the childe
mother to the scene who immediately
killed the child.
The injured child whose clothing was stained with blood, was rushed to the hospital. The guilty boy was taken to the police and the authorities were ordered over to the authorities at the detention center where he is held for investigation and trial in the juju court. Although the blotter from where the daily papers blotter from where the daily papers said about it in the court, nothing was said about it in the court. For several days the thing was quiet a fear arose among the neighbors, who did not dare to do about it, and some talk of the being the child of the parents of the child, who knew the care of a physician, swore out a warrant against its assailant with the police. The child was detained and found that no definite steps had been taken. Neither the child nor the parents were what to do or how to proceed. The parents the boy who was detained were mistaken. The A.N.P. correspondent after getting all the facts in the case notified the N.A. A. C.P. and the Council of Social Workers who was
BY JOSEPH V. BAKER
(For the Associated Negro Press)
PROF. KELLY MILLER
"Isatent, the sunshine on a cultured soil,
Ripens the fruit, by slow degrees for toll;
Gains the sudden Iris of the skies.
In a conversation with a Howard "Dear Doctor," who you think of Dr. Miller's personality, aside from his ability*2, the personality, so incontrovertible in process, is keen interest, "one almost ceases to be interested in Dr. Miller's ability, so incontrovertible in his daily routine, the utter lack of concern that strain of boring geology—at once booms the greater, and the more worry of people, that is, as nearly everyone who knows this contemporary imminent work, what he deems his duty to his race, is uppermost in his far-flung world. Nothing depicts greatness of soul, nothing bespeaks the characteristics of a super-personality so clearly as the personalities and association with his followmen, is tempered by simplicity and unselfish. As a super-saleman, and one of the most effective verbalists of the race's character, is a masterful product of ultra careful blending of those characteris- tures so rarely found in outstanding people. Like so many of the country's great leaders, so many of Carolina in 1863, and Johnfield Institute, Howard University and John Hopkins was listed as alma
Beginning his work in 1880 in the Washington High School, Dr. Miller became the foremost mathematicians of the era; but it is as a sociologist rather than a great mathematician that his contributions to the race have been made. As an author also, especially in the 1920s, Miller ranks among the foremost of the day.
But the great and unmistakably unusual thing about the title hero, is he never gets into the courtroom, which he enjoys—and could enjoy more, is never brought into play, among the amounts of pay he special good, to the general welfare; and therein lies greatest of personality. And so I would have you meet him, Kelly Miller, author, sociologist, professor-man.
Error Saves Negro In Death Sentence
New Orleans, La.—(ANP)—Contending that supreme court judges were in certain positions unnerved on Julius Roberts, alias "Doo Doom," for the brutal killing of Henry Flink, white, 16 years old after he had been previously convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for the killing of Mrs. Amie Flink, the boy's mother, 16 years old, applied to the supreme court for a receiving in a final effort to send
Improved Uniform International
SundaySchool
Lesson
[N. REV. P. R. B. PITWATER, D.D. Mem.
ber of Faculty, Moody School Institute
of Chicago.]
(1938, Western Newsletter Union.)
Lesson for May 25
JESUS DESCRIBES THE FUTURE
OF THE KINGDOM
MISSION TEXT—Matthew 24:15-28
(Print 24:15-28)
TEXT—Take ye a knee,
watch and pray; for ye know not when
PRIMARY TOPIC—Being Ready to
UNION TORIC—Being Ready.
INDEPENDENT AND SENIOR TOPIC
YOUNG PEOPLE JB ADULT TOP-IC-Christian. Preparedness.
1. The Prophyic View of the Course of Time from Christ's Crucifixion to His Second Coming. (2c. TS181).
2. The Time are in general as follows:
1. The moral condition of the world during Christ's absence, v. 1-14).
This is the period covered by the Gospel of Christ, v. 1-14).
2. The appearance of the Antichrist, v. 15-28).
In connection with the Antichrist in connection with this will be mighty convulsions of nature, the mourning of the tribes of the earth, and the gathering of the elect, of the earth, and the gathering of the elect, of the view of the great advent, v. 28-51).
The time of this advent is unknown and on the part of many unexpected.
3. Instruction to believers in view of the great advent of Christ's coming (25-13-9).
4. H. Behavior of Believers In View of the Coming of the Lord (25-13-11).
5. The virgin has continuous application in the present time (I Thess. 16:18; Titus 2:11-3).
6. The equipment of the virgin (v. 1-3).
(1) The foolish virgin takes lamps, but no oil with them (v. 3). Lamps signify Christian profession (Matt. 14); have lamps and no oil shows that they were professors of religion, without possessing its reality. The lamps signify the holy Spirit. As soon as a man is regenerated, the Holy Spirit takes up his abode with him. The Spirit is indwelling therefore is its advance toward the real God, that one is a child of God is that he has the Holy Spirit dwelling within him. (Rom. 8:39). The foolish virgin takes lamps and oil (v. 2). The wise virgin possessed both lamps and oil (v. 4). They backed their profession with a real life of God. The foolish virgin possessed foolish virgins slumbered and slept. This shows that as the present age lengthens, the real and the professing church will cease looking for the comings of the Lord, so that no many, even of God's choice—the wise virgin—should give up the expectancy of the return of the Lord. The coming of the bridegroom (v. 8:12)
(1) The midnight cry (v. 6). In the midst of the night when all the men of the kingdom fled, "He bled the bridge commons, who knew but that the time of this cry is now close upon us?" (2) Activity when the bridge commons trimmed and trimmed their lamps. There will be great activity when the Lord comes on the part of both believers and the people of the earth to be a day when the reality of one's faith will be tested. (3) The foolish cell (v. 8, 9). The revelation of Christ will make manifest the gentleness of our faith and expose the foolishness of our Lord comes, it will be too late to mend one's way. (4) The wise enter to the marriage. While the wise enter to the marriage, the wise are trying to buy off—the bridge commons, came and those who were trying to buy off—the bridge commons. (5) The plush petition of the foolish virgin (v. 11). They begged the Lord to open the door. (6) The Lord declared, "I know you not."
2. The solemn obligation (v. 13). which, for ye know not the nature of your own life, can connent. Two solemn facts should engage in the mind: one is the virtue between Christ to the man ridge depends upon faithfulness to the end. If oil and light be wanting when care is required no admixture is granted. The solemn obligation will not await at that day. Despite the value of godly service, the solemn obligation render no service in the day of Jesus Christ. Personal contact with the solemn obligation in his blood is the absolute essential.
Those Who Do Not Sleep
While many are sleeping and taking it easy, we an overcrowd, are struggling to keep up with the attack, we weep and warning and begging for help to battle against the forces of the enemy.
Hear That Voice
How hard it is to get down to that point where we hear the voice which the sheen always know! He not conceived, he have heard that voice! — John R. Molt
ACQUIT ALLEGED ASSAILANT
Mourne, La—(AMP) —Jack "Sone" Ross, on trial on criminal assault charges, was acquitted by the jury after nine hours' deliberation in district court.
The charges grew out of an attack on the woman, near her night of March 17, when both victims were wounded. Ross was placed on a stand by defense, all testifying that Rose was in McKeehole, on the day of
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1930
TODAY'S RECIPE
BY BETTY BARCLAY
SATIFYING SANDWICHES
Many women do all of sugar in sandwiches, yet a little touch of sugar furnishes some quick energy. Kool for real value and a little sweetness, the real flavor of some of the other sandwich ingredients. Try the following and you will appreciate these.
BOSTON SANDWICHES
Either left-over or canned baked beans can be used for a delicious filling for a hearty sandwich. Whole wheat or plain flour equally desirable.
1 cup 1 tsp baked beans through a coarse corn catchup. 1 tsp beacon onion juice. 1 tsp teaspoon sugar. Spread on butter or bread of bread and with crispy chips.
.....
DATE PICNIC SANDWICH
The picnic lunch needs plenty of butter to bolster this up and furnish very delicious delicits as well. Rum half a pound and a quarter of the meat meats through the food grinder, using the coarse plate. Mix with one Philadelphia cream cheese and 2 teaspoons of butter slices of whole wheat bread.
CHOCOLATE PIE
CHOCOLATE PIE
2勺 sugar
2勺 chocolate
1勺 flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup evaporated milk
1 egg yolks
1 tablespoon butter
1 teaspoon sugar
Baked potato pie
Melt chocolate over hot water. Add sugar that has been thoroughly mix- ing sugar. Add baking water and milk. Add baking water and milk. Cook in a double boiler 25 minutes, stirring vigorously over well-heated egg yolks, gradually over well-heated egg yolks, beating vigorously to prevent curd- lation, add sugar and milk. Cook 2 minutes longer, add sugar and flavoring, cool slightly and pour with meringue and brown to the pre- fered color in a slow oven.
COTTAGE CHISEE CUSTARD
1 cup cottage cheese
2 cups milk
3-4 cup sweet milk
2 eggs
1 teaspoon malted butter
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon salt, add the sugar and the milk, then mix cottage cheese and milk. Bake in cott- ard sets in a pan, cover with water, heat, cool slightly and add meringue made by adding 2 tablespoons of sugar to the milk whites of 2 eggs. Brown in oven.
STRAWBERRY ICE CREAM
1 junket tablet
1 tablespoon cold water
1 pint milk
1 cup sugar
1 pint cream
1 cinnamon strawberry juice
2 tablespoon lemon juice
Crush junket tablet and dissolve in cold water. Add sugar to milk and warm until lakwane not hot. Re-
Dr. C. M. NICHOLS
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Office: Taborian Blvd. Suite 220
Preston 1818
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Phone Capital 548-J
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1469 Green Bay A. M. Milwaukee, WI.
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move from store. Add dissolved juice tablet; pour into ice cream can. Let ice cream cool. Pack in ice and salt, and froze to a hard berry juice and lemon juice. Prepare juice by crushing about one quart of strawberries and rubbing through a strawberry juice can.
NEGROES IMPROVE
HOTEL FACILITIES
Apparently, it will not be long before the darker-hued American may start away from home with the same assurance that others have as to the probability of obtaining bodily comfort in the dark. The best search of a place where one might eat, drink and sleep.
The latest progress is reported at Buffalo, according to the small business section of the Department of Commerce, by William C. Clore, has recently been enlarged and new equipment installed. The new room now has 86 rooms, 20 of them en suite. The 3-story building is proscenium. The dining room and kitchen are attractive and thoroughly fitted up in modern fashion and are under the supervision of the proprietor. The old gentleman has years of experience behind the range of the country.
A brother is house manager, and two sisters, Chase and Ruth Eubanks, maintain an accurate set of books. The house is at midnight over the radio, and all evening long in the dining room. The couple is two years old, and employs 38 people.
Montgomery's hotel is another innovation. R. is opposite the new N. W. C. G. B. is near, and new building four stories high of virtified brick and with the finest equipm. in lunch room in the town, more modern in appearance than the famed Child's restaurants. A occupier of the hotel is the two hotel floors, Danny Montgomery, who for years conducted a hotel on Exchange Street, the populaire. Twice accrued to Canada, by the Buffalo gateway, are in luck with these two hotels.
You can buy The Houston Informer every week at 1838 Whitty Street, 8th Ward, phone Capitol 3104-7.
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DENTIST
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Suite 204-5 Taxorian Building
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Phones: Office P-6788; Res. T-6409
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COLORED HOTEL
FAILED TO HOUSE
YWCA DELEGATES
Detroit, M. i.e.—(ANP)-Properties of the leading local hotels are up in arms because none of the 100 women delegates here to the eleventh borough, Y. W. C. A. Convention recently "up at up" of the colored hotel rooms. The hotel owners the hotel owners was the fact that a list of hotels was sent to "Y" branches all over the country, informing the hotel owners that while in this city, leaving it to the choice of the individual to select her. This was made known through an announcement at a public meeting high up in the ranks of "Y" work, who proudly stated that there was no discrimination at the white hotels in Detroit, only the influence of Y. W. C. A. over the hotel association could accomplish
Just whether any colored hotels were included in the list of hotels sent to the "T" official was asked this question she failed to make a reply. While the calibre of the race hotels here, is rather hoped that this was an oversight on the part of the local committee, it is noted that the hotel list was gummi and same list was sent all the time. It appears that this sort of action will help to decrease the very discrimination. The colored members of the local committee could have seen to it that colored hotels were not discriminated against. The statement that brought on the controversy and gave it so much money to Detroit's tourist and convention bureau who is also a member of the city's hotel industry.
SHADO-GRAPHS
Fire and bristolstone will feel cool to
some criminals.
DR. T. M. SHADOWENS
Old Fellows Temple Phon P. 2004
Phones: Office Pres. 7116; Res.
Rates. 3875. Hours: 8:30 a. m. to 6:30 p. m.
Sundays By Appointment
DR. A. DADDOX
Old Fellows Building
Old Fellows Building
Rooms 403-404 Houston, Texas
EARL'S SERVICE STATION
101 WEST DAILAS
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Phone: Office F-8666 Res. F-0727
M. J. WILSON, M. J. M. LAWSON, M. J. PRICTIGNIAN and SURGON
Res. 322.2 Receives Ave.
Dr. O. L. Lattimore
DENTAL SURGEON
4093 MILAM STREET
All Classes of Dental Work
Nestly Done. Bridge Work
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Hours: 1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
8 p.m. to 10 p.m.
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Phones: Office, Cap. 2955
Residence, Cap. 6881
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PRICES ARE WELL AND REASONABLE
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AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
Detroit Prepares For League Parley Holsey In Charge
Detroit, Mich. — (ANP) The Metropolitan Business League, a local organization, through whose invitation and efforts the National Negro Business League has held its 30th annual convention August 20-22, is making early preparations for the invasion of the league that the hotel association had taken away with White Rose, the Commerce and they had arranged for each white hotel to take a few colored delegates, "not enough to be too complacent," Exposition statement and a war of words ensued.
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Bishop C
MARSHALL
Announcement
To operate as a group of standard,
schools:
shop College
MARSHALL, TEXAS
Announcement for 1930-31
is a group of standard, accredited, four year professional
Bishop College
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
SCHOOL OF THEROGY
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS A
State certificates awarded and the
Degrees conferred in November, Feb-
Highest recognition accorded by the
Texas and other states.
A well selected library of more than
Science laboratories unexcelled by N
Two competent Freshmen Deans and
A faculty of exceptional training as
A Registered Nurse and Health Serv
The atmosphere of a Christian home
oceratic.
No work below the College level.
ranking students.
THE STRONGEST SUMMER IN T
JUNE 9 TO A
A Special Catalogue for either the
Theology; a Special Bulletin for
the let; or a General Catalogue will be m
states awarded and the A. B. B. S. Th. B. and B. Mus. arreed in November, February, May and August. Accorded by the State Board of Examiners of higher education of more than 6000 volumes. histories unexcelled by Negro Colleges in this section. int Freshmen Deans and Personal Service. exceptional training and experience. Nurses and Health Service for men and women. care of a Christian home; distinctively friendly and demow the College level. Maximum enrollment 600 high schools. GREST SUMMER IN THE INSTITUTION'S HISTORY JUNE 9 TO AUGUST 16 catalogue for the School of Music or the School of Special Bulletin for the Summer Quarter; Souvenir Book-ral Catalogue will be mailed on request.
THE STRONGEST SUMMER IN THE INSTITUTION'S HISTORY
JUNE 9 TO AUGUST 16
A Special Catalogue for either the School of Music or the School of Theology; a Special Bulletin for the Summer Quarter, Souvenir Booklet; or a General Catalogue will be mailed on request.
JOSEPH J. REOADS, President
OFFICE PHONE CAPITOL 1459; RES. PHONE CAPITOL 1163-W.
HOURS: 9:30A. M. TO 12:30M.
2:30P. M. TO 8:30P. M.
DR. PERCY D. FOSTER
DENTIST
Sundays by Appointment
Office 2757 Odin Avenue—Washington Theatre Building
DONN CASTOL 1439; RES. PHONE CASTOL 1158-F.
90A. M. TO 12:30 M. 3:30 P. M. TO 6:30 P. M.
DR. PERCY D. FOSTER
DENTIST
Sundays by Appointment
727 Odin Avenue-Washington Theatre Building
OFFICE PHONE CAPITOL 1458: RES. PHONE CAPITOL 1163.W.
HOURS: 9:00 A. M. TO 12:00 M. 2:00 P. M. TO 6:00 P. M.
DR. PERCY D. FOSTER
Phones Fairfax 7310 & 7319
DANIELS & PHILLIPS
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REFAX 8729 PHONE PRESTON 8438
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DIES AT AGE OF 110
New York City, (ANP) Mrs. Elizabeth Gant, who had claimed 110 years of age, died early Friday at her home. According to the family, she was born April 10, 1820, in Marlborough, Maryland, of parents who had been slaves. She leaves five grandchildren, of Washington, D. C., who in more than 80 years old, 12 grandchildren, 18 great-grandchildren, and 19 great-grandchildren. She lived for many, years in Washington, and remembered well the excitement three attending the news of the assassination of two presidents, Lincoln and Garfield.
"BOJANGLES" FOR FOLLIES
"New York City—(ANP)"—Bolan-
ke Roberts has been signed by
Fleurant Ziegfeld for his next folle
which is to be produced this summer.
"Bill has a new dance routine which
promises to be a knockout.
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THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1930
HEADS COLORED ORDERS LAUNCH BIG FEDERATION
Richmond, Va.,—(ANP) The Richmond conference of the Federation of Negro Fraternals brought its two-day session to a successful culmination of the program included the adoption of a constitution, the election of officers and technical papers and discussions by the member societies and expo. tions. At Slavery Hall, the café at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday at Slavery Hall, the café at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday, May 15, and covers were held at the luncheon was furnished by the Independent Order of S. Lola of this city worthy of the secretary-treasurer worthy of the delegates to this historic city.
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THE FEDERAL NATIONAL HISTORY SOCIETY
REVEREND NIX, creator of the "Black Diamond Express" presents a new collection of her recent visit to the Brunswick Recordings Laboratory in Chicago.
Many societies are today facing serious problems in their operation because of the rapid growth of industrial life insurance companies, a more stringent application of the federal law, and the increasing importance of insurance departments and other influences. It is the purpose of the federation to develop a non-member society to solve these problems, that the fraternal system among Negroes may be persecuted. The federation has in its objective to develop methods and information by and between member societies; the collection and dissemination of statistics and information is of importance to fraternal operation. The Federation proposes to set up a central office for the collection of fraternal information, particularly legal and technical, believes that the most vital problem confronting Negro fraternal today is that of readjustment and adequate rates and will aim to assist
Through her familiarity with the "Black Diamond Express," as used in the revival scene from her recent picture "Halloween," Mice McKinney (1910-2000) earned a degree of realism which, according to Harry Kruse, Vocational sales manager of the outstanding record of the year.
member and non-member societies, large and small strong and weak, to and from the curriculature of their membership and funds.
program of Wednesday, May 14, centered around two important subjects which were discussed by the delegates and executive as round table discussions. It was noted itself to "principles and methods of field management," and chief manager of mergers. The morning discussion was led by John S. O. McKinney, chief assistant to the president, and led by J. E. Ormes, financial insurance expert and King David, Durham, N. C.
The first conference of the Federal Association of Teachers was held in Washington, D. C., last October and temporary organization was effected by the organization under the leadership of Attorney N. McCants Andrews of Durham, N. C., founder of the move
WINS PHI BETA KAPPA KEY
Louisville, Ky. — (ANP) - Miss Wile I. Laine, a product of the Central High School of this city, has won the Phi Beta Kappa Key at the University of Indiana. This is the first time an honor has been awarded to a colored girl. Miss Raines is the daughter of Mrs. Virginia Alexander.
NEGRO SCHOOL COLORED ACTORS TEAM WINS N. Y. SHOW DISREGARD ATHLETIC MEET FOR PUNCTUALITY
Theodore Albrighton, brother of the much needed is said because of the famous singer, had for some time on one occasion been the only one of the performers under the direction of Shirakri, a rules were violated as fast as they criedly French ex-convict, were made. One of the rules was evidence that the girl had brought out the fact that the Orient down on 'good and proper' was gennual, infatuated with beauty, and had been brought out after she had positively and threatened to met young Albrighton who though married fire the first member of the rule rieved because the girl's sweetness violated the rule after he told them.
Japanese threatened to tell Theodore's, which brings to mind the words of family if he tried to go straight, so an executive of the Fox Film Company, who was a former executive of the movie's grocery. During the melee, the that his organization had had enough Chinese proprietor was shot and killed of colored casts in the making of the movie.
Nearly Went Wild With Irting Foot and Burning
Soles Until He Gutted Last Results from
PALMER'S "SKIN SUCCESS" OINTMEN!
HE SPENT plenty of money on other penalties, but he must
have taken the right steps for all the relief he got.
It took Palmer's Balm to cure his ankle and back pain, that tough
gain trouble. And she showed the great results for his
gain trouble. And she showed the great results for his
gain trouble. And she showed the great results for over 80 years
if he quick and lasted results, where others failed to give
For over 20 years, cooks, butchers, policemen, bakers, man
dens, doctors and everyone else in the community have
been involved in the treatment, healing, cooking and cooling powers arousing
in the treatment of sepsis, anemia, colds, aches, rashes and
influenza.
no one touches it
"the Skin Spice" "Soon always" Watch how light and brightly-patched it is and salting-up smooth, cool and coating it—unintense and heat
with Palmer's "the Skin Spice" allching with skin treatments
looks with Palmer's "the Skin Spice" dorsary and
no one touches it
New York City—The traction team of Frederick Douglass Junior High School, graduated almost entirely of students at Wingate Field, Brooklyn, graduated on its sweeping victory in the annual junior high school championships at Wingate Field, Brooklyn, and won the title by a sweeping 14-0 victory. "Writing of the event, Arthur E. Burke," wrote the Tribune in part: "The well-balanced sound of sprinters, relay and triathlon teams, again overwhelmed by erick Douglass, composed almost entirely of Negroes, again overwhelmed by less competing for New York Herald Tribune media in the annual junior high school championships, scored 68 points, exactly the same to the year ago, in winning the title a year ago."
Los Angeles, CA. (ILN—)A verdict of guilty in Judge Hardy's murder trial against Frank Sharakari, with recommendation of life sentence for the defendant, brought to close a hotly contested trial that involved one of California's
COLORED YOUTH PRIZE WINNERS IN NEGRO STUDY
COLORED YOUTH PRIZE WINNERS IN NEGRO STUDY
Atlanta, Ga.-Glarence E. Hammond of Alken, S.C., a student in the College of Arts and Sciences and I. McKinsey of Morehouse College, Atlanta, were among four students of Southern colleges this week to attend the Commission on Interracial Cooperation for the best paper submitted to the Southside college competition for themes on "Justice in Race Relations." The other two winners were Waldo Berklemk of the University of Michigan and Robert H. University, Atlanta. Forty colleges were represented in the competition, the purpose of which was to focus the attention of the college community on practical phases of the South's race problem. Morehouse College was a winner in this contest last year also, Neal Hughley, one of its students, receiving an award of fifty dollars.
New Orleans - The industrial assets of $150,000. Income for the year 1890, was $80,000, $89,994, polyphylene $78,811, $219,908, $C. Cadoe is present.
Here was where the stage manager was. She was standing young lady walked into the theatre she was met by the manager who was standing young lady was going. He said nothing, but let her go ahead and dress for a regular performance, but when she came down the stairs, she was not alone. This caused her to leave a day's work. She was not the understudy who had her role. This did not occur once, it happened once, and she was the one still stumbling with the earpiece of the cast, many of whom were the stage manager woken. "The Green Pastures" is in for a much needered young lady.
"Hearts in Dixie" and would not attempt any further experiment with the show. "Hearts in Dixie" was a success financially and halted in all parts of the country, but out any adverse criticism. Fox refuses to make further pictures in the show. Broadway showing at a "special" house ended in such a way as to make the show more accessible. But the bitter experiences the management had with the first cast present what happened with the show "Harlem" is history—what happened with the show and caused its closing far earlier than ticket sales indicated. The cast-and a producer and director of a show, there is not a more accurate portrayal of Harlem than Lowell Lea. One girl lost her job in one of his shows, and there were many around the stage door for her. Lea advises of his employees to step down their jobs as he is concerned. The same time he goes back to America in high fidelity.
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HOUSTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1930
HONEY GROVE HUNS ENTER LEAGUE!
Before the ink was dry on last week's issue of The Informer, in which we took the position that the actions of the Sherman mob would encourage and stimulate mobrocats in other communities to pull off similar stunts, Honey Grove made an effort to "Shermanize" an American citizen of color, and thus for the second time within one week Texan White Growd was disgusted before the chase and went on to intimidate and bluff the Negro into the unfortunate Negro was not accused of "attacking a white woman," but of engaging in a deadly combat with a bullying landlord, who sought to intimidate and bluff the Negro into remaining on his plantation, as is the custom on numerous farms and plantations in Texas and other Southern states.
According to newspaper reports, this black man had decided to attack a white landlord and obtain work elsewhere, and when this information came to the landlord, in true Dixie fashion, he went to the Negro's cabin to force him to stay on the job.
In the encounter which followed the white farm owner was fatally wounded and when the report of the shooting reached humili and hellish Honey Grove, peace officers organized a posse (police name for mob) and began to trail the black man; finally the barricaded himself in a house and shooting the Negro to death.
Whether the Negro was shot to death while barricaded in this shack, as per daily press accounts, or whether the officers and mob shot him as he was running from the scene of the trouble, has not been divulged.
Of course, a Negro accused of criminal attack upon a white woman or of shooting, fighting or repelling the attack of a white man, was not guilty. The court is given a chance to give the accused Negro a fair and impartial trial before a jury of his peers.
Every time some Negro is accused of a criminal outrage upon some white girl or woman, the charge is not true; as the recent case in Houston demonstrated when the girl in inception later repudiated her attack charges, resulting in the Negro's liberation but not until police officers had beaten him dimerically in an effort to make him confess that he committed the attack. The police were able to do the destruction of physical property through the application of the torch, simply because a Negro had been accused of attacking a white woman, it is now charged that the woman's husband and the Negro had a misunderstanding due to the white man's failure to pay the black man for his labor; that in the tussle between the two men the white woman tried to aid her husband; that the white man, observing some scratches and bruises on his wife's arms after the mule, sounded the alarm that the Negro had outraged his sick wife, and the heathenism and human barbarians of Grayson and New York, caused him to be arrested. When it is borne in mind that most of the Southern sheriffs organize a pose (mob) of 200 and 300 men to assist in catching one Negro accused of some crime against some member of the dominant race, it is small wonder that these same peace officers are too cowardly and conning to even attempt to protect their black prisoners from the hungry and howling mobs. Of courses, the black men at Sherman and Honey Grove were dead before the mobs burned their bodies and dragged their life-fellows to the city jail, where they were incarcerated, in a futile effort to terrify and cower the Negroes, all of which goes to show how "brave" and "superior" the average Nordic mob is.
Hundreds, ye, thousands of brave men, women and children—even mothers with infants in their arms and all members of the supposed "superior race"—burning the body of a lifeless Negro and then dragging the remains over the community as a sort of festival, reads more like some story about heathen in some nighted land than about inhabitants of a supposed enlightened land. For the past several years Texas had made marked progress in combatting and routing lynch law, and its entry in Judge Lynch's League, Inc., had been making a poor showing during recent years; but Shorman and Honey Grove—just fifty miles apart—tired of the state's poor showing in this mobocratic circuit and thus they have staged such heathenish and hellish orgias as to place Texas at the top of the loop's percentage column, and it begins to appear as if the Lone Star State will land the 1806 peninsula, where the state's native people not only have these two mobocratic communities and Texas been disgraced shamefully and shockingly before the civilized world by these two recent barbaric outbreaks and domestic disorders, but the South and entire country must feel the chagrin and humiliation such reversals to savagery, barbarianism and incendiation bring upon the country at large and the proud Anglo-Saxon race. Such savage stunts and hellish horrors not only are calculated to weaken the Negro's faith in the white race and its sense of fairness and justice, but to disrupt whatever amicable relations have been established between the people from the scene of such dastardly and diabolical demonstrations. What is worse and more provocative of such outbreaks in the attitude generally assumed by the law-enforcing officers and the called "good white folks," who make no efforts to upbraid
The Houston Informer
and punish the guilty culpits, but merely pass it off as a closed incident.
Whenever any mob takes the law into its hands and destroys human lives and physical property, such action is a criminal outrage upon law and order, an undermining of American ideals and institutions and an overthrow of constituted authority. These agencies are far worse sufferers than the unfortunate, hapless blacks who chance to be the victims of the mobs' Hindish fury and hellish horror.
These recent mobocratic depredations in Texas and the South will most likely revive the agitation for a federal anti-lynching measure, but as long as the South, or any other section of this country, maintains a double standard of citizenship and decietizes Americans through class legislation because of their color, so long will this section and country witness such atrocious horrors. The members of those two mobs (and this is true with all Southern mobs) knew in advance that nothing would be done to punish them for their participation in these lynching orcies, due to the fact that the lynched persons were members of a race which has no voice in the election and selection of judges, prosecutors, sheriffs, peace and constabulary officers, and the fact that the black race is denied its elective franchise rights, through certain political devices and schemes, would be favorable to their cause and thus their set about their devilish and damnable task without the formality of trying to conceal their identity.
Really, isn't it strange and rather inconsistent that the United States will go to almost any length to protect the life of an American citizen within its own domestic confines?
Until the Negro becomes a political factor and helps to elect or oust public officials; until the black man becomes, in fact as well as in name, an American citizen and exercises such citizenship functions without lattice or hindrance, he will continue to be the hapless victim of both legal and illegal lynchings. In the face of such happenings, which are almost daily occurrences in the South, it seems a pity and tragedy that Southern Negroes are not more concerned concerning their own physical welfare, and that they will spend their energy in intra-racial fights, instead of combating and opposing, through orderly organized efforts; those forces which are so hostile and antagonistic to the race and so diametrically at variance with the provisions and warranties of the federal constitution.
ALL HOUSTON SHOULD JOIN HANDS
The local movement, sponsored by the Houston Business Men's Club, to raise sufficient funds to make possible a goodwill tour of the North by the Coleridge-Taylor Choral Club during August, appears to the Informer as an undertaking on which all Houston schools participate. This musical organization is neither professional nor commercial, having given unstintedly of its services for various causes in this community for the past seven years.
Whether the program is a benefit performance for some local Negro welfare agency, some white or colored church or entertainment for guests of the city, this choral organization has given its services unselfishly, without money and without price.
During its seven-year career, this club has raised over $10,000 in benefit concerts, according to the officers of the organization, with the major portion of this neat sum of money going to various charities. All Houston owes a debt of gratitude to this Negro musical organization, which can never be paid in mere dollars and cents; yet the financing of this proposed goodwill tour by the colored and white citizens and organizations of Houston—the first and only thing of its kind ever attempted by any group of Negro singers anywhere in the United States—will go a long way in showing the importance of this program to the part of our citizenry to have such a musical aggregation sing Houston's praises in other sections of the country.
The novelty of such a goodwill junt, together with the type of music the club is capable of rendering for any and all occasions, would do much to place Houston on the map from an all-together different angle. The 60,000 population is given at 290,811 or nearly 300,000, and it is safe to say that there are upwards of 60,000 to 65,000 Negroes included in this latest enumeration.
On a whole, the relations between the two locations here are very cordial and amicable, and what would be more fitting than to send a group of Negro singers to certain centers of the North and East as a concrete example of the wonderful spirit which has made Houston the most outstanding city in the entire Southwest? To add to this, the Federal Bureau of the Houston Business Menn's Club has voted to invite the National Negro Business League, meeting in Detroit during August, to hold its 1931 session in this city, and the Coleridge Taylor Choral Club will be used in this endeavor—provided the citizens of Houston rally to this cause and raise sufficient funds for this proposed trip.
With a finance committee, headed by H. P. ("Horse Power") Carter and with such able assistants and workers as I. M. Terrell, Henry L. Mima, Alphonse Mills and G. W. Ries, the Informer can be expected to objectively should not be attained before the present month expires.
The Houston Chamber of Commerce, through Vice-President and General Manager W. N. Bibton, has endorsed the proposed tour and is giving the undertaking its whole-souled backing and support.
Negro business and professional men, racial organizations and enterprises, will be expected to help in this project, and if all will join hands and work cooperatively, the proposed tour should become a reality.
With the club's recent spring musical festival was given for the express purpose of raising money for this proposed goodwill tour, sufficient funds were not realized therefrom to finance such a trip.
In fact, the promoters did not expect to raise all the money through such a channel, but to make a nice beginning (which was done) and then ask the Houston public, whom this musical organization has served so faithfully and unselfishly all these years, to augment sufficient money to assure the trip. As the club will not be on a concert tour, strictly speaking, and that the money will not upon receipt from any contemplated programme en tour, sufficient money must therefore the trip must be obtained before the organization leaves Houston. While the club does not plan this trip until August, it is very necessary that the money be realized at once, so that definite arrangements can be made in advance both by the singers in getting off from their jobs and in working out details for stops and other matters incident to the trip.
"Heavenly Houston" has never failed nor fallered in any movement which it has undertaken, for advancing the cause of this community, and designee that this is a rather novel and interesting film. The Infinite, the assistant musicians of both races will rally to this cause and raise such goodwill trip by the celebrated *COLORIER-Taylor Choral Club*, known as "Heavenly Houston's dancersizer" and rated as the "premier musical organization of the South."
OUR POLITICAL PARSONS
By KELLY MILLER, Howard University, Washington, D. C.
leadership of this new religious body will devote itself with singleness of moral and spiritual purpose to the betrayment of the race, it is easy to prophesy a glorious and glorious future. But if the politically ambitious leaders utilize this more perfect union of the church, they will fortune, then the more powerful the union, the more pliable the plight of the church and the race.
I don't know just what Dr. Hawkins' newly organized National Negro League hopes to accomplish, but I don't know what he would for the clerical contingent. I would utter this word of citation: "Watch your spiritual steps."
INVESTING FOR PROFIT
By CARTER W. WESLEY
The possibilities of investing for profit based on the long time pull* of $3,000 in Union Pacific stock in 1870 and $5,000 in Central Railroad of New York would now be $30,000 and $30,000 in Northern Railroad. Of course, the $3,000 we have been left in these stocks. It would have been low in 1870 and high in 1872, but in the bank until the panic of 1878 we have been sold in 1878 when the ket was up and carried a interest of 1878 when stock went down. In 1879, when stock went down, it will be noticed that the cycles are from about two to four years. The increases in the purchases and sales would be at the highest and highest prices, and the purchases and sales would be high and high of the respective years.
Through study and knowledge an investment can be multiplied many times. The principal investment is very little risk and without any speculation, indicated before, banks, insurance companies and widows, who are dependent upon what they have must be invested in. His class selects bonds but bonds of at least Bbb rating. Though the appreciation in the interest rate is with good stocks, there is greater assurance that the principal invested in the income will be paid regularly.
The wet and dry issue is threatening the moral life of the nation. The Negro is the easiest victim. It is the most vulnerable. You can stand aloof by, and look on this holeau of destruction with indifference. All other issues now before the nation sink into moral inallegiance as compared with law or law enforcement. We were devoted to the standard of human rights as it used to be, this clerical zeal would be understandable. But experience of the past two years has shown that the human rights issue is trendy in the mind of the G. O. P.
The two great Negro Methodist churches are now on the eve of merging into one gigantic religious body. This is a significant movement in the sphere of Christianity endower. It is hoped that this union will not run in numerical augmentation, but rather in the growth of the organization. The waning influences of the life of the race have calculated significance. If the unanticipated
The aging graduates of Yates High School and the Houstonan Social Club are the honor guests of Spencer B. Grassi and the 7:11 class, at Pierce Inn Gardens,
Dun Lea
An dat dinner, Lee, twens ar hm-dinger. I wint dere thinkin dkat in be set down ter or meel or vritie sitin maybe, or erole tuff chickin, an sun mats be set down ter or meel or vritie sitin down wid. But I ant never so no better cooked chickin, an bleve an Oreer Green had awl awl side dishes what malka or chickin dinner an puffick we koodent hardly git up, an dn tired ter de parer where we snapped out we felt lack we tanned do hole run wart. Trun or grate Sandy will up, we felt lack we tanned do hole run in de way uy my spun ernüshie erite ter set wet dem wiedm ergin.
Well, Lee, when nix? Wht kind
stunt man de nex nix town pull off?
he man de nex town pull off?
now watch out dat dey doon cook an
et nex ux. No uy noow, ever town
ux. No uy noow, ever town
il mordo horribil de den law inj, in
ordermo ter put dere kermurium k erl
ibruv de ree.
No uy noow, ever town, dit dey is gr
kuntry, an Teixis is gr, grain stait.
Ever paper in Texin is jis dien wint
soil over occurrences, an jis id
snowbumdum g竿 g竿 gurniff der try ter
in gotter be did, but yn wint taw wellt
sumbody g竿 gurniff der try ter
in gotter be did, but yn wint taw wellt
see how deeply dee sain papera
put er quelette in sich capen it,
but how hard sum uv des sain monera
ft ergn de passidge uv de Dyer antiln
law. milk me bleave, Lee catt
foken wid anw de merhembery ter
malk de laws anw de soljers anw
de olnifs de law anw, caint brake anw
peacee in dignity uv de stait en des
2 las olnifs esnes uv de atur Shur-
fool sum uv de soljers but yu slink foo
in Gimbee no, not winn ill fitt.
An jis margin, sum uv de soljers
pokin fun a Sheeerburg wid her
gamperets. Et daint alce plane has
uv de pet tjern tjern call de jis