Houston Informer
Saturday, November 29, 1930
Houston, Texas
Page text (machine-generated)
U.B.F. INJUNCTION IS DISSOLVED
CITIZENS OF HARRIS COUNTY AND TEXAS—DON'T FORGET THAT YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELVES AND FAMILIES TO PAY YOUR POLL TAX
Organizations As Well As Individuals Offer Aid To Unemployed
VOL. XII U. B. Organizations As Individ Aid To
An idea of the gravity of the unemployment situation among Negro men when more than one hundred jobless men were hired, more men and professional men of the group and with C. W. Riley, chief executive of the employment and Nigro member of the citywide committee, to formulate a plan for the room of the Odd Fellows Temple. The leading speaker on the prosecution of the white man's campaign Meyer told of the letters which are all of these now employed and which labor in Houston asking they be planned the "hire a man" campaign saying that "they should result in a man" who is not connected with the payroll for that idea of heads of families and citizens of Houston would be given first the opportunity for many years. Prof Tervess asked an mentor of ceremonies.
m丧丧 at Public Schools
Mick Koch, president of the organization, gave a presentation by all of the speakers on the pay of the full list of places at which all of the unemployed are being asked to work. The Federation intercommunal-Minister Alliance has assumed the responsibility of the unemployed and they will be paid for their work and also interested in the relief work. According to recent informa- tion, the Philadelphia School on West Washington School on West Dallas School on the Phillis Wheatley High School, corner Loyne Avenue and Greene Street, and other interesting talks on the program were made by C. W. Nice, leader of the movement, and the Intercommunal Committee, Rev. J. H. Baye, president of the Intercommunal Alliance, who
NEGRO WILL HAVE
SECOND CHANCE TO
FINISH WEST POINT
Washington, D. C., (INS)-Congressman DePriest, only negro member of the United States House of Representatives, told the fact that he will again appoint Alonza Patham to the United States Military Academy at West Point. Patham was dismissed from the university after a failure in mathematics, but under his re-appointment in the Illinois school, he will have another chance to prove his merit and to win his spurs. It is not clear whether he has made up his mind to determine for himself whether any prejudice against him exists. NEO-ngro candidates appointed by him.
WHICH TO DO YOUR
SHOPPING
Your Christmas shopping can be made easy if you will read the Ads in This Paper and see the Many Bargains offered by the Merchants of Houston—
"YOU WILL BE SURPRISED"
OUR ENDORSEMENT STANDS BACK OF OUR ADVERTISERS
CITIZENS OF HARR
THE HOUSTON INFORMER
discussed a series of hints on "How To Hold Meetings" and the business man in the city. In his talk on how the work of getting jobs was to be carried on C. M. Hewlett, he discussed funds with which to advertise for jobs and to advertise the men who work there. He said he, "there is no need to feel that the city is able to finance our businesses and can hardly finance its own. We must it will make more money in the now more Advertements in the daily papers, picture houses, all will be used to help our unemployed men. And one has but to look in the faces of the families who have not own bread for their families to eat, to know just what something getting done for them. And this is one of the can where those In the other race, however well they are, can be taken on calls from them on their own people that they are not able to help us.
During the meeting response to the business and professional men and from the pastors, all of the meetings and discussions on Sunday. All collections and contributions are to be sent to Rev. Wm. S. Newman of Cleveland and the generals of Negro work, 807 1-2: Prairie Avenue. The Coleridge Taylor Choral Club, through its president C. F. Richardson, has announced work for the City Addition for December 14, to raise funds to help all citizens are being asked to report all odd jobs which they need to complete. To urge all of those owing property to do all possible improvement now to the great army, we have given to the great army an urgentference in the job which are found to be given to heads of families
VINDICATED
G. H. M. CRUDER
SAMUEL HUSTON'S
P REXY PRESIDES
AT CONFERENCE
Nobleville, Teem.-Dr. Willie J. King, president of Samuel H. King College, was one of the few man in history to preside at one of the sessions of the recent conference on education held at Fisk. Dr. King presided at the conference and the subject the subject "Problem Relative to the Integration of cultural and Professional Education in sheikhdom," ported Institution," and the subject went back and forth among the school executives and administrators from the sheikhdom. In a very calm but convincing manner, injected into the thinking of field of religious education and practical Christianity was one which needs to be proved.owed college will not find much if an competition from the tax-amount.
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE
HOUSTON, TEXAS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1930
League Points To Business As Next Step For The Negro
GIVES $1,000.00
JAMES D. RYAN, principal of Jack Yates High School, supreme worthy recorder, Ancient order of Pilgrims, Life Insurance Company, and exalted ruler, Gilbrator Lodge No. 500, B. P. O. E. of W., has demonstrated his good faith in conducting the Wizard of Oz, Priested campaign, as well as his interest in Negro education and Wiley College' drive in education, by making a gift of Hope to this equine.
President Dogan and the envoyment campaign, officials have expressed great appreciation for this generous act by a public spirited citi
DARROW BREAKS
DOWN COLOR BAR
IN WASHINGTON
New York — A firm stand by Clarence Darrow, the director of the committee, broke down an attempt at segregating November 19 in Washington at a meeting held November 19 in Washington was made known today.
On November 19, the Washington, D.C., A. C. P. learned that arrangements were being made at the meeting, the manager of the Auditorium stating boldly that color discrimination only.
F. G. Marr, P. G. Marr, president of the branch, got in touch with the various speakers, in an effort to prevent speaking unless the meeting were open. The speakers would make the issue, save only Mr. Darrow, who was finalist in the Secretary of the N. A. A. C. P. in New York, Mr. Darrow promptly said to the segregation to the segregation.
The Darrow "open-door" to all policy worked, and seats are being secured, wherever possible.
The Negro is now receiving less than 10% of the employment in commercial enterprises to which his buying power has weave about a "white collar" job available for every forty educated person. Approximately $800,000 in job and salary are made each year for the black community for food allowance. Less than 3% of this back to school. This back to school has more than 180 national organizations devoted to business research, cooperation and innovation. Now four. The Negro is ever to be abolished into the commercial life of America, he must first denounce his ability to work in the business sector, business offers the best, training schools for our young men and women. While there should be no less racial better prepared and better trained employees there should be, at this particular time, an unusually effective and intelligent empathic ability to open and better jobs in commercial enterprises.
The Task Above
Successful retail business enterprises already established must be maintained and better developed in doing methods and there cooperation.
NEGROES URGED BY BLACK DEMOS TO PAY POLL TAX
A very outstout group of determined citizens met in the I. L. A. question the question of Negro paying poll tax. C. P. H. Browne, chairwoman of the Negro Democratic group, was providing. After making some pre-emptive arrangements for the variousities of paying the poll tax as to be qualified to vote in the Democrat nomination Mr. R. E. Grove to make the keynote speech. Mr. Grove bewildered that the Democrats which divided the leaders and made that those things must first be done with them. Mr. Grove discussed the ways and names of getting the vote to pay their taxes and it was evident it. Thereafter Mr. Richardson requests to get emigration from paying poll tax and called on Lawyer John V. McKinney in the state legislature presenting exemption. A firm for the position was furnished by the U. R. P. and S. M. T. band and a quartet from John S. M. Band and a quartet from John S. M. Band meeting dispatched with all pledging themselves to use their individual incomes to get Negroes to pay their
Jolins White is president and C. A. Gilmore secretary of the Harris County Justice Department, now has a case pending in the Supreme Court of the United States, involving the right of Negroes to vote and state Democratic primaries.
GRANDSON OF HEAD
OF WILEY COLLEGE
IS TAKEN BY DEATH
New retail business enterprises are increasingly intelligent, honest and managed by intelligent, women who are willing to forego the pleasure of bridge and dancing for more and more substantial rewards.
A larger share of available Negro business enterprises are business channels, and those of the race who have "made the grade" must be confidently helpful attitude toward the "college training" youth of the race. We must organize to force open doors of employment in American industry and commerce. Our buying power must be increased to batter down the walls of prejudice. We consciousness which will challenge each dollar we plan to spend to yield greater returns must be "Poking fun" at Negro business now and delays the day of economic emergence for them.
Some Recent Accomplishments
C. M. A. Stores, organizations of Negro retail stores, have already opened eight cities and are being rapidly extended. Uniform store fronts and layouts together with cooperative stores of the scale are the aim of this movement.
Encouraging negotiations are un
GIVES $1,000.00
THORNTON M. PAIRCHILD,
president of Wachtowner Mutual Life
Insurance, Company of Indiana and
manager of the Fairchild Under-
standing Company himself, set an
album of Wiley College, has given
tangible evidence of his confidence in
the administration of $1 million and
in the college training of Negro
boys and girls, by捐赠 $1,000 to
One of the planks in the program of
awareness and education of employment for Negro boys
and girls who are yearly finishing
this gift to Wiley is more eloquent
than words of the fact that Mr. Fairchild determines to make this elegant
reality.
PROGRESS AT P.
V. SHOWN FROM
QUARTER WORK
Prairie View, Texas—The work of the Normal and Industrial College was closed with final term examinations on Friday, November 26, and then tripled three days until November 28, inclusive. The five schools, education, agriculture, home economics, nursing, special trade and industry held examinations and practically all students were required to take the
der way with two eastern chain stores systema to use Negroes as clerks and employees in Negro communities. An important announcement will be made in the next study. Studies of the purchasing power of Negroes are being made. These studies will be used for securing our employment quotas and for promoting national advertising for Negro publications. Tready twenty-seven million Negroes are now more about the Negro market." We have definitely about how concession and employment in wholesale houses and factories may be secured for the Negro. How Teachers and Community Leaders Can Work With Negroes
Whenever in classroom discussions, text book principles may be explained, examples may be given to grob business. Set aside, occasionally with students of advanced classes. Include business with students in your program. Include History in your program. History Weekly.
Read Negro newspapers. Most of them now carry a weekly column enlightening the African diaspora which records the progress of Negro business. There are also many intersting editorial in these papers on various phases of the economic problem.
Bledsoe Loses Suit He Brought To Restrain Davis and McGruder
Marshall, Texas—(HIS)—Upon their very first hearing in the District Court of Marion County, Tax Collector C. H. Mesterson, Grand Secretary, C. H. Mesterson, Grand Secretary, United Brothers of Friendship, and United of the Mysterious Ten, acting through their attorney, Secretary, law firm of Johnson and Pelon, of Houston, knocked high the temporary injunction which W. P. Blindsey, depend grand master of the house, received without notice and without hearing. On last Monday the court disclosed that as part of their (this order appears to be) Book Z page 43 of the minutes of County, Texas, as has been certified to by Chan R. Martin, clerk of law. "Now, therefore, on this 24th day of November, D. A. 1890, it is concurring that said injunction ought to be and is hereby in all respects that the Court in its opinion that it is without jurisdiction to grant the injunction force and effect. Housen A. Hall, and for Harrison County, Texas.
Bledsoe gave notice in open court of appeal to the Court of Civil Appeal in the District of Texas, at Texasiana. The District of Texas, at Texasiana.
A representative of the Informer in attorney W. M. Johnson, one of the plaintiffs, referred the result of which Informer McGruder, the result of which Informer first drafted Articles 4888 of the Texas statutes, which reads: "No proceeding for the dissolution of or the appointment of a judge for the trial of any person (viz. internal Benefit Society) or branch court in the State unless the same
VINDICATED
PETER B.
EDUCATION BOARD
GIVES $300,000 F OR
BUILDING AT FISK
OUR PHONE NUMBER
IS PRESTON
1243
NUMBER 27
LVED
s Suit He
To Restrain
nd McGruder
WILEY ENDOWMENT
OFFICIALS LAUNCH
DRIVE IN HOUSTON
Lawrence C. Thomas, endowment secretary of Wiley College, and Dr. J. W. Snapp of the Board of Execu-
tion of the M.K. of the Wiley College and that exponent of the Wiley College endowment campaign. They will make Hostetle their headQUenches until the 16th of December. They have conduced group meetings at Park Church and that the Negroes of the Lone Star State are getting behind this "State-wide Movement." Thomas stakes that during the last days of this effort, Bishop James of this church odiat Episcopal Church will give personal service.
Coming!
PICTURES
AND
COMPLETE
STORY
Of the All-Star City High School Football Team
Will Appear in Next Week's Issue of The Houston Informer.
AY YOUR POLL TAX
PAGE POUR
City Dots
Mrs. Estella Pillars, 1108 Cleveland Street, and Mrs. Ethel Gary, 1108 W. 12th Street, visit to Mrs. Annie Rollin, and other friends in Shreveport, La.
Mr. and Mrs. Napoleon Slipkin, 1108 W. 12th Street, son, Edwin, spent Sunday in Bremham and Chapel Hill with Mr. Singley, Dr. R. F. Perrifol, physician and surgeon, has removed his office to the building 2323 W. 12th Street, and Mrs. Guy L. Barrett, 3039 Gray, Thursday evening.
Rev. L. S. Cameron, pastor of Anchorage, Church, and Mr. and Dr. T. Church, pastor of Anchorage, Guy of Mr. and Alfred Anderson, Church Street last Sunday afternoon.
See Spiray Printing Co. for good orniting. Phones Protesson 9525 Fairbanks, Phones Protesson 9529 Reasonable rates. Work called for and delivered promptly.
The Mother's Club will meet every Wednesday, Bethlehem Settlement. Mrs. E. Thomas is president and Mrs. G. T. Thomas, director, Phone Flaxton 6719.
Miss Amie Mussie and Eather Jacques
the natural of their brother, William
Jacques, a recent graduate of Boker
T. Washington High School.
You will attend their duly approved
draft eyes test and toilets and ad-
escents removed. Examinations free.
Follow Phones, Temple Pheasan 6989.
Modestmen Ehl C. Ellison, Mattie
Martin, Mrs. Prunus Ellison and
Hartin Hill, Mrs. J. Ellison,
Wiley College, Marshall, where they
visited Miss Elshir R. Ellison and
McCall, who are at school.
Mrs. Robbie Jones Editor, who for-
drug business at 2520 Oak Avenue,
left this week for Mexico, Mo., to
who is engaged in the practice of
medicine in that city.
CHEMISTRY CARDIN
Christine J. CARDI
You will attend her Christmas
Jardin-Jean call WEBSTER-RICHARDON
PUB. CO., 499, 601 Hill St., Houston,
Texas. You will be married at Beaumont, when a
telegram pole fell across his body
fracturing his pelvis, has been trans-
ferred to S. P. Hospital here. He is
steady improving. Mr. Woods lives
in St. S., with his wife and daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. James Duvall, Smith
ville, celebrated their golden jubiles
in-low, Mr. and Mrs. William
Calvell, Saturday, November 14
Saturday, November 14
Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Duvall and daugh-
tle, Mr. and William M. Duvall
and children.
BURCH-FAINE WEDDING
Invitations have just been issued to the wedding ceremony of Irving B. Burckhill of Jackson, age 51, and Mrs. B. Burckhill of Roberta Paine, of Oklahoma City, Ohio. The wedding age will take December 26, 1900, at the Taboracle Baptist Church in Oklahoma City.
Mr. Burckhill is now learning in New Mexico, and he and his bride will be at 206 South Michigan, Roswell, N. M.
MOST LIKELY
YOU'LL FIND
YOUR NEEDS
IN THE
CLASSIFIED ADS
OF
THE HOUSTON
INFORMER
Read These Carefully
Ads will be accepted until 6 p. m.
Wednesday for the current issue.
PHONE
PRESTON 1243
FOR RATES
The bride's attendants included her bride, Mikael Moe Jones, as maid of honor and her bridesmaids, carrying a bouquet of pink and white carnations. John H. John Martin, Jr., a orchid satin creation, with a hand he a bouquet of white and pink carnations. Miss Arlenee Henry, with shoes and hose to match, carrying a bouquet of white and pink kinsu and Eulaan Lolaan served as kinsu and Eulaan Lolaan served as blue; the ring bearer, little Mater W. H. Mitchell, a wort of a black tattoo trousers and white satin dress, with B. R. Geary as best man, and Mater W. H. Mitchell, a wort of a black tuxedo. The house presented a perfect bow-tie, white roses and, in harmony with the white roses and, in harmony with the white ice cream, with cake and white ice cream, after the ceremony, at home at 3022 Shepherd Street
HOUSTON TEACHERS OFF
TO SAN ANTONIO
MME. WALLS GIVES PARTY
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our sincere thanks for the many expressions of our love and gratitude by our relatives and friends and the many beautiful floral offerings during our recent reverence, in the memory of our dear friends and brother, Mr. Wilbert Davis.
(Signed) Mrs. F. Davis and family
IF NEGRO, ITS MURDER; IF
WHITE, MANSLUAGHTER
Texarkana, AR—(ANK) J—F. McGraw, died on November 20 in Doakraan, was held at the Miller County grand jury on three charges for the fatal automobile accident on November 4 in which three colored men $1,000 lost in each case in a hamburger.
Hearsthurst—Elilu Lynch, charge
hair running business man, on the night of
November 1, has been indicted for
nurder by the Copiah grand jury.
Already charged by Jackson Hospital
from his injuries.
YOU SAVE BY
BUYING YOUR
Coal-Coke-Wood
FROM THE
SUNSET FUEL
AND GRAIN CO.
The Home of
"HOT BLUE NINCE"
"Safe and Sane Prest"
PRESTON 4135
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1930
DAMASCUS BAPTIST CHURCH
A front line Sunday School was conducted by General Superintendent Jeffrey Preacher, preached a powerful sermon Sunday and jetted a "Divided Hearts," a a sermon program was rendered at 3 p.m. by Mr. B. P. Y. under the leadership of General D. Preacher Holly presided. The B. Y. P. uber leadership forward. Miss Hesher Oak, Oakland, Cat, name a sweet solo. Prof. G. A. F. Preacher gave quite a few encouraging remarks concerning the program. The pastor Sunday School was preached by the pastor Sunday to Hold Fast the Faith with them giving"—Mrs. B. Hardeman, the Concord Baptist choir, gave a show Thursday evening at the home at sunday at Sunday, Nov. 16, at 10 a.m. Mrs. Clem Burns, the bride was, Mrs. Clem Burns, the bride was, Griffe, former resident of Corpus Christi.
JUNIOR COLLEGE NOTES
Wiley College
MARSHAL
Wiley College, Ma
the second quarter of
31 on Monday, Dece
pected that many w
enroll at the beginni
planning to enter th
MAKE APPLI
REGISTER ON DE
Wiley College
MARSHALL, TEXAS
Wiley College, Marshall, Texas, opens the second quarter of the school year 1930-31 on Monday, December 8th. It is expected that many who were not able to enroll at the beginning of the session are planning to enter the second quarter.
MAKE APPLICATION NOW
REGISTER ON DECEMBER 5TH, 1930
M. W. DOGAN, President
The Parent-Teachers Association of Phyllis Wheatley High school has been at the close of the Wheatley sponsor contest this week, which awarded a number of members. A beautiful ensemble in the school concert, purple and white, was presented by P.-T. A., was given to the winner, and was until called another in another contest. The sophomore class of which C. U. was the first contest. Wednesday, November 18, at general meeting, a committee of ladies representing the P. T. A. met at the annual interesting talk and demonstration on the purpose of the Parent-Teachers Wheatley. A. A. is offering another award of $2.50 for the purchase of a picture for the room to the class rehearsals of $2.50 for the membership of their parents and friends.
Our P-T. A. holds the state trophy and are sure to return from San Antonio to the best association in the state. The faculty reports one hundred percent of teachers in the Teachers Association of Wheatley High The State P-T. A. meets at San Antonio, in connection with the State Teachers Association during the spring.
TRAINING SCHOOL AT KEND LETON
By M. E. HOWARD Jr.
Kendleton, Texas — At the close of its first nine weeks of work for this school, the school had an enrollment of over three hundred students and nine faculty members, all well-constructed buildings, two of which are dermatologists for boys and girls, and the vicinity of the school. The Fort Ben County Institute was held here at the Fort Ben County Institute, and Mr. Taylor, of the State Department of Education, gathered. The students gathered in a gathering. The Halloween season a party was given by the lady members of the school. The football squad, the proceeds being used to purchase new uniforms. The second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh programs during these first nine nights. Night classes for the farmers who have already started, under the direction of Prof. A. E. Alton, the agrarian educator expected to be derived by all who take advantage of these classes. The head of the Powell Point Training School, from both students and faculty.
SURVEY OF NEGRO
PAPERS AS GOING
CONCERNS BEGUN
College
BAL, TEXAS
Marshall, Texas, opens
the school year 1930-
number 8th. It is ex-
ho were not able to
ing of the session are
the second quarter.
Education Now
December 5th, 1930
---
CLASSIFIED ADS
DETECTIVE—Travel, make secret inventories. Fireman—Dedicated Bryan, 210 Broadway, New York. NEW ARRIVAL
ONE HUNDRED BOW-Wrote at once, make new arrangements. Apply to clerkship, fireman, grocery, 408-411 street. In no. 10.
ROOMS AND BOARD
FOR RENT—Goss Assignment, Nice, Clean and Modern, 408-410. For more. For further information, Phone Faxes.
ALMENEN
BANKER AND BANKER SALES-Big profit. We start you furnishing everything. Distribution, Dept. 220, 409 Worst Harbor, Chicago.
MEDICAL
SUITS CLEANED AND PRESSED 500s. Every Rady Cleaners and Dryers. One day a week and block. Workmanship guaranteed. 500s. Phone Faxes.
MEDICAL
WOMEN WANTED—no experience necessary. Make you furnishing a job. Phone Faxes. 500s. Phone Faxes.
MEDICAL
WOMEN must trouble we. Give us our treatment. Indian Medicine C. Oklahoma City.
CITY PALLOWS
AMERICAN BEAUTY FARLOR, Monse N. A. Franklin System. We marvelate were the first to wear our special suits. Our specialty: 500s. Patriale Ave. Acorn, 209 L. M. Turner, Proprietor.
A MODERNized cooke. Place clean, good neighborhood; in brick building, on the street. The right place for the right man. Calif. Press 864f.
PERSONAL
MINIMAL SCHOOLS
C. MONTGOMERY School of Embulancing. Complete course and books for $4.50. A.坐 course. Write P. C. Inc. 868, Calvert, Texas.
Texas has two major navigation projects before it. One the intra-Atlantic route, the other the Lake to Corpus Christi, is proceeding. The other, canalization of the Trinity from Fort Worth to Dallas to the Gulf of Mexico, is the engine of engineering as to its feasibility and the enthusiasm support of the more counties as to its importance.
HELP THE NEEDY
Name: Madame WALLS
S. F. D.
State: New York
MADAME WALLS'
SCHOOL OF BEAUTY
COLLEGE
Special course in finger waving.
Classes now forming for our fall
summer. Open to modern beauty
sensors. Over 100 graduates now
operating in Houston.
In connection with our school,
would like to offer a Modern Beauty
sensory, with trained, efficient oper-
ators.
H 0654 H 3250 Dowling St.
Madame S. Walls, President
WORKS
Office Prairie 892-818-5244 Valentine 823-818-5244
Dr. DR. ISAAC K. DARBY
PHYSICIAN AND BURBON
Special Attention to Disease of
Heart and Colon
Office: 326 Tabakian Dale
Rn.: 784 K. ISAAC D. BURBON, Texas
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE
SHOP MORE
FROM
10
4
And You'll Avoid the Crowds
HOUSTON ELECTRIC COMPANY
JEFF L. ALEXANDER, Pres.
FAIRFAX 7171
Henke & Pillot, Inc. Grocers
Three stores for your convenience Having served the public for 58 Years with quality merchandise and
"Most of the Best for the Price"
Will Appreciate Your Patronage
302 to 312 Milam Street
2806 to 2816 Travis Street
Washington Ave. at S.P. Crossing
MAGNOLIA FISH AND OYSTER CO.
We solicit Colored trade. We employ more Colored than any other booth in the market. Our goods are the best and our prices right. Trade here and save.
BOOTH 35—CITY MARKET
PHONES PRESTON 3267-1054
"HOUSTON'S FINEST COLORED LAUNDRY"
JONES UNDY
TOWNS - CLEANERS - DYES
We Specialize In One Day Service - Four Delivery
Phones Serving all
PHONE PRESTON 8064 3291 PIERCE AVENUE
We Make a Specialty of Bonding Officers of Fraternal Societies We are the Official Bonding Agency for Most of the Fraternal Societies of Texas
Chicago. (ANP)—The twenty-two race in the dance marathon, which has been in progress for more than a year, ended on Wednesday night when it. B. Hall, secretary of the Coliseum Building, announced that the contest was over, and the winner was the mother, had failed to pay rent for the event had attracted much attention, and according to reports, the contestants shuffled and the contestants shuffled and
pyrene amount the floor to the stryals of music furnished by Dr. Cook's famous Doctors of Syncapaction.
PUSHES WHEELBARROW
173 MILES TO PAY BET
Chicago, III. (INS)—Albert Crockert, Negro Republican leader of Port Arthur, died at Chicago, 178 miles. The reason was his confidence that Mrs. M.Cormick would be elected senator. His elapsed time was sixyears. Our
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE
FOOTBALL AT A season in cover 800 so we can mot alternate.
Fick Slaughters Bluefield
Many alums alone in this brilliant struggle but one stood out alone, a man who was a great leader, the charisma back who played an only can, akipped around man after man, the himself and Fisk that dashed the hopes of the Blues, who succeeded in playing for the Fordis and Hall playing ends were great contributors to the defeat of Captain Pierce, Yost, Chris Cox who figured in the heavy arsenal—Jimmy Johnson, Barry Ballard billowing off the rushing of the blue back. Graves who scored on the superior 26 punt run assisted by the superior 26 punt run assisted by Adam, a fast back, was the outstanding charge of his team, threatening the first seven down went to his credit.
Wilburforce Cemetery Kentucky
The Buckeyes scored in every per-
fect contest, tailing twice in the third quarter. Their first toob-
down came late in the first stallway when Scurry gave the oval to the oval in the waistband of "OY." Robinson used who galloped 29 yards to scare. Scur-
rion used a period Coach Graves gave a number of second string men. While the first one, heavy because of the ideal weather greeted the big homecoming crowd. This Saturday finds Wilberforce Idle, and it
WY GOODS CO
THANKSGIVING
COATS
Special Purchase—New Coats
Three Low-Priced Groups
ALL SIZES
ALL COLORS
COME EARLY
STAIRS STORE
LEVY'S DOWNSTAIRS STORE
A New Era in Sound and Color
Entertainment!
PAUL WHITEMAN
IN—
King of Jazz"
SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY
NOV. 30--DEC. 1-2
Picture That Brings You the Best Music Heard In
ion Picture Theatre—"Once In a Life Time a
Like This"—A Thousand and One Wonders and
tainment ALL IN ONE PICTURE.
The Picture That Brings You the Best Music Heard In a Motion Picture Theatre—"Once In a Life Time a Show Like This"—A Thousand and One Wonders and Entertainment ALL IN ONE PICTURE.
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY
DECEMBER 3-4
FANNIE BRICE
—IN—
FOOTBALL AT A GLANCE
By ATTORNEY "JIM" NABRET
(Sports Editor)
Southeast High School Bending
Team
P. W. L. Pete.
Washington
2 2 0 1.000
Washington
2 2 1.000
Wheatley
2 2 1.000
Lincoln
2 0 2.000
Charlton-Pollard
2 0 2.000
The Yates League kept up their winning ways last season and neither a nier or a defeat to mar their season. All lions have only one more game than the others. B. T. Washington on Christmas Day.
The Washington Eagles also have but not played as the Eagles face the very famous Whelen Wildats who them they Thanksgiving Day. To remain in the top three, the Eagles must emerge from that fray.
The Whelen Wildats with one conference victory and one defeat are out to stop the Eagles. They have not won any games, but their last year by the Eagles, and then to knock them out of the race.
Central has one win to its credit with Orange, Lincoln and Charleston-Columbus break into the winning column. ***
The Dope
Fisk gave the dope box a terrific field by the overwhelming score of 31 to 6. Sentiment was not sufficient to put Northwestern through and Ben Holliday and Bill Moore are all saying "I love Notre Dame. Our average for the
$49.50 Values
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1930
Football Popularity Contest
Write the names of your favorite player and team in the ballet below and mail to the Contest Manager, % Webster-Richardson Publishing Co., 409-411 Smith Street, or drop it in your nearest ballbox, or the Lincoln Theatre box.
RYAN'S WILEY COLLEGE DOLLAR
BRIGADE COUPON
I am interested in the education of our boys and girls and in the endowment campaign which Wiley College is conducting to match the $300,000 which the General Education Board has offered if Wiley raises a like amount. As proof of my interest I herewith send your DOLLAR to the member of your WILEY COLLEGE DOLLAR BRIGADE.
Note: Make check, dress or money order to Wiley College and mail either to James D. Ryan, 2007 Hamilton Street, Houston, Texas, or to The Houston Informer, 409-411 Smith Street, Houston, Texas.
Coach Graves plans to keep his charge of the game with Virginia State Wilberforce on Thanksgiving Day.
Arkansas State Bob Philipshier.
A large crowd witnessed the Philadelphia State GI at Little Rock Public School and a score of students and a score of State fans.
The Lions, at the very offspring of the Tigers, were for repeated losses and before the score stood at 4-2. White's score stood at 4-2. White's score through the Panthers' line time after two long gains and Nephron Smith's time deep into the Panthers' territory; while Richmond proved to be the Panthers' territory;
Sank Saufon, plunging Knoxville back, crouched three feet behind. Scott carried the knife for the fourth touchdown of the game, and the beautiful return of Alabama's punted kick. A k. C. materially in gaining victory. For the Alabama team it was Boykin, fallback, and Peterson at quarterback. The visitors played good football and made some nice gains on the local defense. The last home game outscaped the Alabamans in every department. Knoxville had only five minutes; Captain Cray,怀尔 and Gather all played heads-up field that thrilled the fans.
Football Results
Wiley 78, Texas College 0
Prairie View 43, Sam Hunt 0
Virginia State 20, Humberster 7
Virginia State 20, Talladega 2
Morehouse 32, Talladega 2
Morgan 18, Hampon 6
Morgan 18, Hampon 6
Augustine 0
Fisk 31, Blufffield 6
Taukegue 32, Alahana 6
Alcorn 43, Tongola 6
Alcorn 43, Tongola 6
Ham Stuart 14, New Orleans 13
Howard 13, Lincoln 12
Bradenton 10, Baptist 0
Washington 10, Wheaton 7
Prairie View 14, Wheaton 7
Jolene Dane 14, Army 14 (d)
Jolene Dane 14, Army 14 (d)
Knoville 26, Albaina A, M. 2
125-POUND TEXAS WATERMELON
Beamount, Texas—Drew Moore of Henderson County believes he has the ball in Texas. The melon, weighing 125 pounds, was on display at the South Carolina State Fair.
WORMS INVADE TOWN
Syracuse, Ohio—A mammoth army of gigantic worms has invaded the villages and in some sections have ennured them. Supplies of military supplies. Village officials are unable to combat the marmace. Village officials are unable to plague. Village officials are unable to
Beaumont, Texas — On a muddy Beaumont Trail, the Beaumont-Coldwell High School, Beaumont, 13-7. In the first six minutes of play the Sanders Williams made a down. Yates failed to make the extenuated after Eriksen had carried the ball within touchline distance. Williams made the down. Yates made the extra point. The half ended with Yates leaping back with an inspired team in the third quarter and down the field. Williams down the field. Williams called for their first touchdown. Beaumont with Yates leading 13-7, near the close of the second quarter. Beaumont they failed to use it to their advantage. They lost the ball on the fourth quarter. Beaumont they failed the ball to the 1-yard line losing the ball to the 1-yard line losing the ball to the 1-aard线 were well entertained by Beaumont's band and pep squad who never lost spirit until the final game.
# indep.帮
*Yates* **PE** *LE* *Beaumont*
*Demaris* **PE** *LE* *Beaumont*
*L. Williams* **LG** *Ejger*
*Jones* **LG** *Ejger*
*Jones* **LG** *Ejger*
*Lewis* **RG** *Barnes*
*Lewis* **RT** *Barnes*
*S. Williams* **QB** *Rodriguez*
*Ward* **LH** *Miller*
*Brygand* **FB** *Marcellin*
C. M. A. STORE SHOWS BIG
SALES FIRST 6 MONTHS
New sales of the Harlem Model Colored Merchants' Association grocery store increased $2,500,000 for the first 6 months of operation according to a statement of Albion L. Holey, C. M. A. organizer. In July, monthly sales averaged in excess of $5,000. The percentage of operation cost to each unit was 11.56. The average of 12 to 17 per cent. The average of 12 to 17 per cent. In April, 1985, with Arthur N. Moore, A. and P. clerk, as manager.
THIS WEEK LAST
CHANCE AS YATES
LEADS IN CONTEST
THIS WEEK LAST
CHANCE AS YATES
LEADS IN CONTEST
Well, this is the last time that I heard you say, "I will give you of the progress of the contest. From now on will be a matter of effort, and you will be the winner, who is the winner. I hope that you have done your best and you have given your best, and saying yes, it—is all over but the contest."
First, to correct an error that was made, we have to be careful in calling Monday, the first of December, rather than Monday the second, which time no votes will be counted. of the schools are putting forth the effort to win, and I am sure that effort will not be in vain, and I am sure that they will be rewarded for it when the time comes. Remember, you still have the last chance to show your colars on Monday, and you will be the smoke has cleared from the bathtub, the purple and white or the flair of crimson and gold or the symbolic blue and gold. You vote today, for in the words of the old proverb, "It is better to be safe." The question for the week: **Players**
Sanders Willis (Yates) 8,500
Tim Haywood (Wheaton) 7,500
Hillman Kirk (X) 8,200
Jeff Green (Wheaton) 820
Ioreal Laster (Wheaton) 1200
Teams
Wheaton 9,610
Washington 9,800
Washington
PRAIRIE VIEW DEFEATS SAM HUSTON, 43 TO 0
San, Huston
Pot. Pleat
TALE J
Lee LG
Ballay LG
Hardice LG
Gavin RG
Gustavson RT
Gustavson QB
C. Elliott QB
Bell LH
Bell FR
Otto FR
Nelsh
Officials: Referee, Law (Lincoln),
umpra, Lowery, (Lowery); head
lineman, Calhoun (Bishop); field
guy, Daniel (Arizona).
WILEY TO ENGAGE
BEARS OF BISHOP
IN ANNUAL FRAY
AUSTIN DOINGS
Austin, Texas — The Negro citizen council which meets each week to discuss the needs of the citizens are being discussed, and the things of interest for the betterment of the citizens are being discussed. The Negro Trade Week, which was sponsored by the Negro Citizens' Association, is a decided success, as reports from many of the business man caucus members ceded to make this an annual affair. The women are doing needy community association building. They have just launched drive and a doing needy community association building. They have just opened recently by the school of Miss Mia M. Sims teacher. Mrs. Margie Green, wife of Harvey, pastor of Metropolitan A. M. E. church, officiated. Rev. Henry Kline, pastor of Harvey, Horton Galloway officiated. Mrs.
**Probable input:**
Widley **LE**
Sims **LE**
Lewis **LG**
Wiseman **LG**
McGrueder **G**
Crawford **G**
Thomas **RT**
Armstrong **QR**
GB **GB**
Carroll **LH**
Nugent **NG**
Hayward **FB**
McGimnae **FB**
BRYAN BRIEFs
MEXIA
ROCKDALE
Bocklead, Texas—Rev B. M. Moose preached at Springfield Sunday morning, with a fist of his hands. Rev M. Moose, a resident on Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Ellie Williams has returned from Albany. Rev M. Moose attended in Austin. Rev. Sallie preached at New Hope Baptist Church Sunday died Saturday and was buried Tuesday. Rev. R. Walker, Md., Dellie moved to work. New Hope gone to work. New Hope number motored to Taylor Friday night and went to work. New Hope first time. Rev M. B. Harper has returned to her home in Houston. Rev M. McFadden, Recepcnt.
PAGE FIVE
Oblim: Monkey (Lurusca), fireee;
Pendleton (Bishop), umpire;
Winters (Columbia) head linesman.
HIGH OFFICIAL
URGES CHURCH
TO HELP FARMER
Philadelphia, Pa. — (ANP) — Lawmakers on the bench hated, social and political prejudices, and multitudes of city centers, are major present-day problems of the Christian church, according to Dr. E. D. Kohlhoff, secretary of the Board of Trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church with headquarters in Philadelphia, who presented his yearly report at the Board's annual meeting which took place in Philadelphia. The report revealed that among the stumbling blocks to the program of Methodism today are the ten thousand one-room church buildings as concrete equipment for a normal program of worship, education, and education, and the equipment is but one factor in complex city and country problems. Dr. Kohlhoff
"Burial folk are now in a great age of church help develop in America a national policy in which the trend toward urbanism will be challenged. Church help is a which a sufficient number of the best people may be encouraged to carry on with their families, families, families, foods, and raw materials, and giving to the cities and nations without which no nation has survived."
Mr. Averard noted the idea of churches deserving crowded cities after their members have moved to suburbs, and proved many times that a church can be maintained so long as it serves its community. "Mr. Koehler's Christian church in both city and country was never greater than it is now, and we never more needed than now. He stressed the fact that there is special religious a empaths on the positive
NEGRO APPOINTED
ON MR. HOOVER'S
JOBS COMMITTEE
Washington, D.C.-Expressing his appreciation to the organization for its support of the National Urban League, of the residences of the Urbane Emergency Committee for Employment through its department of information, and of the organizations in forty industrial communities in forty industrial communities of the president's committee has appointed T. Arnold Huffel of the N.Y. State Department for a cross-border between the committees and the interest of the colorate people in the city.
The department of industrial relations of the National Urban League has been engaged in a heroic effort to stem the tide of unemployment among the youth of the organization of the Urban League, it has organized a tentive campaign even before the premature end of the condition of Negro workers. Through the department of T. Arnold, it has been able to tabulate the amount of unemployment among Negro workers in the program for its relief. The appointment of T. Arnold Hill to assist the recognition of the Negro worker on the recognition of the Employment and should be a agreeable against discrimination in the relief for Employment and which the committee has inaugurated.
HARRISBURG
Harrisburg, Texas—Mrs. E. P. Jackson and boys come in for the day. Mrs. E. P. Jackson and the Rev. Jack in his work with the children, the Rev. Jack in Sunday after a week's illness, Mrs. Sue Baldacci is back from Louisiana, Mrs. Sue Baldacci is back from Louisiana, friends and relatives, she lives in New York, Mrs. Sue Baldacci, Mrs. Parker left Saturday for San Antonio for an independent Torrell, Mrs. Parker left Saturday for San Antonio for an independent Torrell.
PAGE SIX
RAILROAD TIME
TABLE
New York—(ANP)—Few people know that the huge sum of money invested by the city in Brooklyn have to pass through the hands of a colored man before he becomes a company. But one of the most prominent positions held by one of the race is that held by Johnson, well known of the borough of Brooklyn. Thirty years ago Johnson was taken over the company, a young man, ambitions and willing to learn. At that time his intelligence and his attention to duty won him a promotion, first as a lawyer and then as a protector to the position of clerk. As the years rolled on, Johnson's interest in the opportunity was one of the most important employees of the firm. Johnson has a married daughter and a son.
Negro Porgress Protrayed By Rosenwald President
"Thoughtful citizens are interested in the nation because he is part of the military, and he is part of the military necessary to the progress of the nation," said the nation's one-third of the south, and one-third of the whole country, must be built into the national life—in farming, in education and in health. Thus will the nation be true independence for the nation."
MAN SAYS HE IS CONJURED
Edenton, N. C. (ANP)—An aged man, whose name officers refused to reveal, appeared at the local police station for more than an hour related to an injury he was being conjured by his enemies. The conjured person, powered, figured prominent-interest charms and weird midnight escapes. The aged man asked the police to come from the conjureurs, stating that from the conjureurs, the brown powder scathed on his door. The powder scathed every night by mysterious walls and a distinct assombra of interedness.
REAPPOINTS BULLOCK TO
STATE PAROLE BOAR
Boston, Mass. — (ANP)—Just before the end of his term in office, Boston Mayor John A. Mulcahy appointed Attorney Adam Bullock, a member of the state parole
also discovered an ingre the curl and ends the ha That is why Pluko, con quickly and completely curled hair without hair life, luster and beauty oates, the scalp with a to Hair that is dull, lifeless made straight, glossy an
here
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here's why
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PLUKO
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WAY TO SOFT, 577
Hampton, Va. — (INS) — Eldrin R. Embree, president of the University of Nebraska, occasioned by dedicating the five thousand nigh-terms he funded, paid big honors to the program the race has separated in from slavery. He said, “One hundred and fifty-four years ago, Americans gained personal freedom. Sixty-four years ago, 4,500,000 Americans gained personal freedom. “But no war could guarantee real freedom, but by a century and a half of effort, until today. America stands as one of the loading nations of the world. We form a great mass of people, long form a great mass of people, long form self-supporting and competent citizens, and painfully, to win every kind of real independence: education, health, responsibility, self-delivery.
"Today, colored children are in school, practically equal principally in race. While facilities for the race are still advanced, more advanced move rapidly during the Negro era in the South. The school which we are dedicating today is a token of our shared experience in a thousand school, aided in a single system, every one of these parts of the public school system. 'Nero colleges and universities—formerly often merely high-sounding institutions in the United States congress appropriated, in 1870, in this state now supports, out of public state now supports, out of public Negroes. The annual income of 80 schools last year was $9,000,000.
THE HOUSTON INFORMER. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 29. 1930
here's why PLUKO straightens harsh unruly HAIR
Science has now discovered why your hair curls, twists and clings to the scalp. Science has
other kind of dressing makes the hair so easy to comb and dress in a becoming style. You must try it.
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PLUKO
HAIR DRESSING
Raleigh, N. C.—(ANP)—Declarating that it was by far the "dirtiest fraternity" sentenced W. C. Douglas, a white lawyer from Tacoma, to serve one year in prison. He was sentenced to Atlanta, Georgia, when the attorney was found guilty of defraggling two men, and was sentenced to a new deal of funds paid to them by the government.
The attorney brought two lawyers into court to defend him, a host of fellow-townmen, including his pastor, to testify to his character. The judge said that Douglas was "highly respected" and bore an enviable reputation in his testimony given by the state attorney. The testimony showed that the pastor justified Douglas himself, on the other hand, showed that the opinion of the pastor justified Douglas, according to the evidence and his own concession, to illiterate women, devised a scheme to get away-downtown getaway—not one of the victims became auspicious and related them to a transaction by a son who
BLACK BILLY SUNDAY GIVEN
ONE YEAR SUSPENDED TERM
Boston, Mass.—(ANP) Simon P. Cohen, a graduate of the Worcester Pentagon by Judge James E. Lowell of the District Court, after having been convicted of using the mails to defraud, and the sentences was suspended and the minister was placed on probation for the period. He sometimes self-styled "Black Billy Sunday," was found gullible in the trial it was brought out that he collected for an imaginary school in Boyden, Virginia.
50
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RIGHT HAIR
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OFFICE PHONE CAPITOL 1459: RES. P.
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DR. PERCY D. F.
DENVER
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OF THE STATE
FORE'S
FISH MARKET
Wholesale and B
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PHONES: PRES. 9111-CAP. 0480
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2819 Dowling St.
Residence Phone Hadle
Phones Fairfax 7310 & 7319 Res. P.
FORE'S Fish Market
Wholesale and Retail
FISH AND OYSTERS
Largest Fish Market in the State among the Race
PHONES: PRES. 9111-CAP. 0480
2714 ODIN AYENUE
RICHARD LAWRENCE
Experienced Auto Mechanic
Repair Made on All Makes of Cars
Acetylene Welding
—With The—
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2819 Dowling St. Phone Preston 8058
Residence Phone Hadley 9143
DANIELS & PHILLIPS
EMBALMERS AND FUNERAL
1010 West Dallas Avenue
PHONE TALKFAX 3726
JACKSON UNDERT
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A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE
Danville, Va.—(INS)-Four men, said by police to be union members, connected with an attempt yesterday to dynamite the home of Henry W. Browne in a mill mhare. It was fifth inedicted. They are R. I. Cook, Jen Barrow, Floyd Selff, Louis E. Yeats and Thomas D. Hearn, to have been purchased by Dan Zeliff. He carolioned late night about part of the city but police were unable to find the site of the blast. It was believed he occurred in an urban area.
HARLEM COMMITTEE OPPOSES
ROCOTTING AND PICKETTING
New York City> (AAP) - The Harlem Citizen's Conference on More and More opposed to the boycotting and picketing of places of business which have been boycotting the Chayton Fewell, chairman, and Rococin Cooming Bruce urged the necessities for the conference and asked the adoption of the general principle, "I's patronic business." The committee also endorsed the promotion of Negro enterprise through patrons and other Negro-owned institutions. 40 people stood in a drizzling rain night, the sales registers showed that a total of more than 23,000 sales day in the company's history.
CASTORIA
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Res. Phones Fairfax 8680 & 8683
UNERAL DIRECTORS
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THE HUNTER CLINIC
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MARLIN, TEXAS
"Where Life Gives Waters Flow"
Marlin Hot Mineral Baths have cured many of the worst cases of Rheumatism, Stomach Wounds and Blood and Skeletal Disease.
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Come to Marlin for your Health Bath at the Hunter Clinic and Sanitarium Bath House for best Results.
We bathe the year round.
DR. A. L. HUNTER
Marlin, TEXAS
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE
"I GOT A SLOW START BUT I STEP LIVELY NOW"
(A True Story From Life)
"When I was about eighteen years old I was not pretty to look at because my skin was dark, coarse and covered with ugly pimples. The boys never asked for dates and I used to sit all by myself and wish I could have lots of fellows to take me places and do things. I used to cry for hours at a time. When I went to church on Sunday I prayed that my skin would clear up. And those prayers were answered. One of the elderly sisters of my church took me in her arms one night after prayer meeting and told me how to be beautiful.
"This good woman proved a real friend. She told me that when she was young she also had the same skin troubles that were now wrecking my life. She told me to stop worrying and to go to the nearest drug store, get a box of genuine Black and White Ointment and Skin Soap, and use them according to directions. She also told me what wonderful results they had brought to her and I believed her because her skin was so pretty.
"Because of my sickly skin I got a slow start but I step lively now. No party is complete without me and my greatest trouble is to decide which fellow to give a date. You wouldn't think such a change was possible. I can hardly believe it myself. Almost from the first I realized that genuine Black and White Ointment and Soap was going to do for me what it has done and is doing for thousands of other girls. I cannot say enough words of praise for these two remarkable preparations."
TRY THIS TREATMENT TODAY
TEACHER REFUSES
IMPORTANT POST
IN CANAL ZONE
Orangeburg, S. C., —(ANP)—Appointment as director of vocational education in Iowa. Dr. Burges, State Historian for Panama Canal Zone has been declared by John P. Burges, State Historian for Iowa. Negroes of South Carolina. This singular biography was recently offered by the University of Iowa through the Institute, where he received the degree of Bachelor of Science in rural and vocational education. Together with his position as liaison teacher, Professor is Executive Secretary of the Palmetto State Teachers Association and position leader in vocational education.
used in 13 million homes
Sloan's Liniment
COLDS MAY DEVELOP
IN THE FACE
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with two-fold action; it soothes and hake the intestines and lining.
Of all known drugs, cremation is recognized to be high medical authority one of the medical agencies for cough from cold and bronchial irritation. Cremation is addition to cremation, other healing elements. When placed on the membrane and stop the irritation while the cremone touches the stomach, is absorbed into the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, and after coloring it off, money refunded it not followed after taking according to the doctor's advice. CREMULSION FOR THE CURSE FROM COLOR THAT RUNS ON
"I GOT
POPULARITY IS MINE AND I AM HAPPY
REPORT OF PREXY
SHOWS HOWARD
IS PROGRESSING
Washington, D. C. (ANP)—That Howard University has made notable programs during the past year was clearly shown in the report made by the Secretary of the Department of Interior. According to the report much of this program can be attributed to the increase in the annual appropriation and rift from philanthropic sources. The department has personnel and many improvements.
Among the indications of progress of the College of Dentistry of the State of New York, the success of the full-time year-away day school of law, the establishment of a division of law schools to the libraries of medicine, dentistry and social sciences, the successful course of a program of graduate fellowships of the professional course for the preparation of teachers in physical
MAGAZINE ACCEPTS WORK OF NEGRO ARTIST
New York - (ANP) Elmer Simm Campbell, youthful illustrator, has been well-known humorous weekly, accept his design for the book *Opportunity*; cover for November is also by young artist, David Koehler; after doing clever work in one of the best known - advertising - establishments, he joined the Art Institute in Chicago, creating New York to further his studies. He is employed by a large art studio
REPORT SHOWS EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES BECOMING
SCARCER AS WINTER NEARS
New York City, (ANP)—This last League on unemployment among Negroes shows that throughout the decade, the number of people who are becoming scarcer as white residents of the principal cities, it is disclosed that the number of people who apply for employment has increased from 13% to 82% since January 2010, and that the greatest increase among smaller cities having no employment to white unemployment to white employment exceeds the latter from two to three million while white people at the expense of colored employment at the expense of colored
THE HOUSTON INFORMER, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1930
"When I was about eighteen years old I was not pretty to look at because my skin was dark, coarse and covered with ugly pimples: The boys never asked for dates and I used to sit all by myself and wish I could have lots of fellows to take me places and do things. I used to cry for hours at a time. When I went to church on Sunday I missed that day."
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William Pickens SAYS
LIGHT OF THE WORLD
Ethiopia shall stretch fourth her hand from Abysinia and she has made them all stand at attention.
Let's see. When they inaugurate on "coronate" somebody like the king of England, they call him George the Fifth, King of Great Britain and Iraq, King of Great Britain and India.
But wait a moment. You white folks just stand back a little and use our colored folks come forward and give our assistance.
Halle Selassie the First--Emperor Ethiopia. Ras of Kasr--Light of the World--Competing Lion of the Tribe World--Competing Lion of the Tribe And So On Get Cement His consort is *Queen of Qenua* Shocked! You whitefolks are not in the running. You have a banquet; we can eat them and head of cattle and eat them We can be tender in Africa than Hermann Zur Muhlen, Countess of Austria, whose father and other male mastic service, tells of one Austrian When he was to be presented the emperor in Tokyo, propriety required a card, a huge affair about the size of a flag and red in color, with the Japanese characters, in no large that a special attendant had to carry, carrying the "visiting card," as the foregoing approached the throne. He was to be presented to Japanese characters on his "card," to his charisma he afterwards gave to the most High Lord, of our most High Lord, of our most unworthy of his backward belly, an Emperor son of a dog."
NEW START
UP LIVELY
(A True Story From
"When I was about eight
was not pretty to look at bee-
dark, coarse and covered w
the boys never asked for da
it all by myself and wish I
wells to take me places
used to cry for hours at a tine
to church on Sunday I pray
answered. One of the elde
after prayer meeting and to
BRIGHT, CLEAR, LIE
ed. She told me that when she
wrecking my life. She told
a box of genuine Black and W
ections. She also told me
and her because her skin was s
INE AND I AM HARD
my start but I step lively now,
is to decide which fellow to
me. I can hardly believe it
and White Ointment an
ing for
enough
prep
AY
Black
with an
Oint
on the you, and many foreign countries, there are more than fifteen million packages of gouches Black and White Beauty Creations and Beauty Degrees. there is only one gouches Black and White brand Ointment and Skin Soap is made by the Company of Chicago
DENTAL TALKS
NOW"
(From Life)
eighteen years old I because my skin was with ugly pimples: dates and I used to I could have lots of a and do things. I time. When I wentrayed that my skin olderly sisters of my told me how to be
LIGHT SKIN
he was young she also told me to stop worry- White Ointment and e what wonderful re- so pretty.
PIPPY
w. No party is com- to give a date. You it myself. Almost and Soap was going
never accept a substitute or
consultation "just as good." Go
on with your own equipment.
a 600 box of guarantee Black
and White Ointment which
contain three times as much
as the 30c, ointment and 25c
as the 30c, ointment and White
Skin Soap.
exclusively by
Improved Uniform International
Sunday School
' Lesson '
R: DEW P. R. FIXWATER, D. D. Morn
of Faculty, Woodie Bible Instruments
of. Chicago.
©. (1990) Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for November 30
FOUND PEOPLE AND ADULTS
—Making Business Christian
I Jesus Passing Through Jericho
(Jericho) is in noted as the
militarily delivered into the hands of
the Canaanites, which was miraculously
delivered into the hands of
Rabah, (Gish) and also for the faith of
Rabah which saved her from destruction
with the Heb. (Heb. 12, 281, 301).
and with the help of her mother
and the helper played against each other.
It was hitting that Jesus should go
through Jericho. Jesus and mind of
Jericho were slain by the slain
sinner. Rabah and Zachariah were
saved at Jericho.
11. Zacchaeus Soaking Jesus (vv. 2-1)
(2) His shortness of stature (v. B).
He was too small to allow his way to the people, but thou shalt the people ship, but thou shalt him aside.
(3) His persistence (v. B).
He persisted in statue (v. B) and climbed up into a tree. What he bected in statue the was determined, should he be bected in statue Though Zacharias legs were too short to enable him to see Jesus they were too small to enable him to climb the tree.
(4) His Jesus Finding Zacharias (v. B)
2. What Zoechmann and (r. 8).
His conversion was thorough. It
life began with resolution and restitution.
He dedicated half of his goods
while he was a grafter was how a
generous given. His conversion got
hold of his pocketbook. His determination
had strongly excased taxes shows the
continuance of his conversion. While
God forgets the past of a sinner when
he converts he is converted will seek to right all
wrongs, he unlike words or unjustifiable
Sorrow for his sin not to
What Jesus said (v. 10, 10).
Today is salvation come to thy
there has never been a man in
our history who led a life of ease,
whose name is worth remembering.
The Bible is a window
The Bible is a window in this prison
world, through which we may look in
eternity—Totally Drought.
The Cheerful Giver
A cheerful giver in one who is happy if no one knows what he gives, but God - King of Business.
MADAM WALKER COMPANY
EXPANDS SALES BANK
-(AND) Gertford Lewis and Paul A. Dugge
former life insurance aide and executive, have been engaged by the Madam 'Walter Walker' Lewis and the Company in the Southland, and Cuba. The company grin in order to give employment to more members of the race and has engaged these men to further its programs.
HOSPITAL HEAD
MAKES ANNUAL
REPORT FOR '30
HOSPITAL HEAD
MAKES ANNUAL
REPORT FOR '30
Americans accounted for 24-hour
international travel in an
investment from the French government
to the U.S. government will be kept on open, on Sundays
and holidays to a later hour in the
U.S. holiday autoloads a climate is given
FAMOUS PRESCRIPTION ATTACKS CAUSE OF RHEUMATIC PAINS
Prescription C-02232, the original formula of a well known physician experienced in the treatment of rheumatism, neuropathy, joint pain and sciatica. Dawn Dawson, a chiropractor and osteopath, treats musculoskeletal disorders and brings relief from the heart breaking pain of rheumatism and ailments by manipulating and riding the human system of the poisonous matter which if left unchecked with brings severe pain and serious illness. This lady had been oiled to discover *Dawson owl* and swat *Well-Known Doctor*
A well-known physician formulated Prescription C-2223 after long experiences in the treatment of rheumatism in its various forms. It is, in designated to do away with the pains and aches of rheumatism by eliminating the cause. Medical science finds less conditions to be the result of dangerous acids and poisons in the human system.
The original creator of Prescription C-2228, compounded his prescription to meet this condition and to bring relief by properly counteracting the acidic and eliminating the potassium镁. Ask your drugstret for it by its original number: Prescription C-2228.
Prescription Drug Stores Now Selling This Remarkable Medicine
All prescription drug stores have on hand cautious and bottles of this famous prescription and will now sell it to you on an abbreviated backpack. If you fall to get relief after taking C-2228 as directed re
turn the bottle to druggist from whom you bought it and your money will be refunded.
PAGE SEVEN
GREENVILLE, Miss.—(ANP)—The Knights and Daughters of Taber of Mississippi closed their forty-first annual concave path this week. More than 1,000 delegates and representatives of the order were in attendance from every section of the state.
Miller and Addison, like the other
44 persons received a bronze medal,
and 44 have received awards from the
commission; 28,000 cases have been
caused; 18,000 cases caused; 18,000
caused; and pension in force
amounts to $188,480 annually.
DePRIEST TO TALK WITH PICKENS AT JERSEY MEETING
lot of work — including so far
the New York City airport, the
people of Camden, NJ, with larva-
tic larvae from the New York
City William P. Johnson and Oder-
DePrieur in the greatest meeting of
the year, the Convention Hall which
sits eight thousand. If not, the
meeting will be in one of the largest,
most crowded places.
The meeting will discuss the general civil defense of colored people, burial mortality and those indicted on Negro citizens of Camden, in recent months. A picture is complete of a great N. A. A. C. P campaign which will close with the DPrist meeting. All organizations of Camden and Camden.
On Jeremy J. L. 1981, Mr. Pickens will return to Canada to speak at an event in Montreal on Wednesday, which is made to be his greatest sub-ject: "Frederick Douglas and the Spirit of Montreal." ISSUE NINE MARSHING STAMP
Washington, D. C. — ANP is at the preficee, department, that they have hired to handle the mailing postage stamp bearing the new stamp. The preficee is on a chair of the profile office now appearing on the current page of 14. The preficee is also on the new page also also bearing the new stamp. The new stamp will be printed in brown ink and printed in brown ink.
THE HOUSTON INFORMER
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE
GLANCES AT UNEMPLOYMENT RELIEF
THE HOUSTON INFORMER
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE
Many interesting things are happening as the result of the campaign to end unemployment in Houston. First and greatest of these is the fact that Negroes themselves are waking up to their duty toward their fellows in this regard. C.W. Rice, well known for his work with Negroes in few years, is heading a committee among Negroes and is a part of the general committee appointed by the Mayor to work out plans for the relief. He is finding the city generally glad to be of help in this crisis. At the first meeting on Monday afternoon the mayor met with the president of the professional men of the city joined with more than one hundred jobs in a meeting seeking a way out. Plans were perfected for the registration of all Negro unemployed. Pastors took the lead in the actual work which is scheduled for Saturday. Business men pledged themselves to work to collect "old jobs" among Negroes. The mayor said that the job before been so worked up and so on unison a single
Published every Saturday by the Wesley Richardson Publishing Company
Inc, 400-411 Sun Street, Houston, Texas
Entered as second-class matter May 27, 1919, at the post-office at Houston
Texas, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
CARLEN W. WESLEY
Vice President
BENNIE B. KINLS
Secretary
G. H. WESTERSTEIN
General Manager
C. F. RICHARDSON IS NO LONGER CONNECTED WITH THE HOUSTON INFORMER
The Houston Informer has the largest circulation and more paid for advertising than any Negro newspaper in Texas. The press has the greatest charge the circulation of The Informer and its advertising have constantly increased.
Another very forceful and significant thing was made public. A set of rules for those who are still employed, written by a passport holder, are required for education of the workers on us and is directed toward making them more efficient on their jobs. Rev. S. A. Pleasants is its author. And because of its very great worth, The Informer presents it here, because that it may have more widespread as it is as follows:
SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Cash in Advance)
One Year, $2.00; 9 months, $1.65; 16 months, $1.85; single copy, be
(No paper mailed for less than 6 months)
Office, 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Telephone PRESTON 1245
Make a place for others by giving faithful, honest, upright, truthful and quick service.
**Western:** 806 South Dearborn, Chicago, Illinois; Eastern: 551 Fifth
Avenue, New York City; Southern: 210 Walton Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Never make excuses for being late for work, be on time, all the time.
*All matter intended for insertion in any current issue of The Houston informant must reach our office by Wednesday noon of the week publication
Don't quit so often, stay with your job.
Be willing to do more than you are getting paid for.
Now have you come across another person if possible.
Make all checks, drafts, money orders, etc. payable to and address all
recipients of the publication, Publishing Co., 409-411
milton Street, Houston, Texas
Do your work as it should be done. It will make a place for you and others.
Don't feel that you are the only one that can do what you are doing. Others may do as well and some better than you.
* always demand a receipt when paying your subscription to the Houston informer, and pay no subscriptions to unauthorized representatives. All duty appointed agents of the Informer will have receipt boots. Protect your account as well as our own upon a receipt of a receipt and keep same when obtained.
Learn something new about your job each day, if possible,
and do what you see ought to be done without being told.
INTELLIGENCE AND INTEGRITY MAKE MEN
AND RACES GREAT
Be teachable, take orders cheerfully, and put them into execution quickly and thoroughly.
Never ask for time off, only in case of absolute necessity. If your supervisor is one of your own group, give him the same respect and cooperation that you would give any other man.
THE SPIRIT OF THANKSGIVING
This is the week set apart by national degree for general giving of thanks. Unlike last year when there was not so much widespread unemployment and enforced idleness, we face this year a scene of pinched faces and empty pockets on our shoulders. We have been given the gift of the filled coffers, of such sort as they have been, and we have expressed our gratitude to the Giver of all good for His blessings. Can that be done this year? Naturally it has not been a year of plenty. Far from that. Radically it has been a year which was stressed. Movements have been inaugurated to us out from those sites which we here forecame to "sure." Is there anything for which we should be thankful?
The interview feels that there is. The things which have happened this year should have more to the race than we have. The things which have been good in the coming ill that has been care, we will be thankful. Much of the time has been filled with seeming darkness; but out of it has come a light which could not have been in years of plenty. This has been a year which should teach us that seeming "chance is universal good" and that "discord is harmony not understood."
Stay with your job until your employer can secure the services of another, should you desire to change places.
Be pleasant and courteous at all times, to those whom you serve.
You cannot keep in mind all of the above, hold forever this. Do right at all times, to all whom you serve, and do not make excuses.
A MAIL ORDER HOUSE JOINS THE LEAGUE
Out of our loss of jobs and lack of work we all have learned that we are inseparably bound up in one great mass. The laborer is the necessary support of the professional man; the capita-ler is the necessary support of the educated; the high have a definite duty to the low; the rich to the poor. We have seen, and it is to be hoped that this vision will never depart from us, that we have wasted many years in useless bickering over little things, while the work of perpetuating our culture has been undone. We are waking up to the fact that all of the boasting of those who told us of the wonderful accomplishment of sixty years should have gone far enough to have pointed out the duties of all of us to work more effectively in the present in order that the work of our laborers should have been. We are learning from our advertaction that teamwork has no substitute and that all of us working together can do more than all of us working single. We are learning that we are our own best friends and that all of our success simply makes us more successful. We are more responsible for greater service because of his greater ability to serve.
This tendency on the part of the National Negro Business League should be kept in mind by Houston and its large Negro population, and the great number of those who are attempting to conduct business concerns. With a population of 60,000 on which the Negro population is concentrated, the National Negro business men should be from $300,000 to $500,000. That is a considerable sum. In these days of unemployment and hard times, that sum of money would give jobs to many of those who now find themselves without gainful employment. The Negro business men should be aware that those who employ them are of the other race and are almost bound to favor their own where the opportunity permits. And there can be no doubt but that more thought must be given to this phase of our life if we are, as a race, to continue to keep the commerce of their cities and produce little of the raw materials of their country finally have little voice in the distribution of the benefits which are derived from the production and sale of those commodities. Business is the barometer of any race in this materialistic country. We cannot escape that fact. The National Negro Business League must insist that its bit to relieve the situation. Its program should be studied.
All of these lessons are coming out of this year of adversity. They could have been made evident to us in no other way. Let us be thankful. Let us thankfulness show itself in greater deeds. Let us actually see the things which we all agree should be done. God has been good.
JEFFERSON DAVIS HOSPITAL PROPOSAL
The local medical association last Friday night was host to Dr. E. I. Lee, surgeon and physician who has not only made a re-creation of the original hospital, but also won national honors in being selected to a most important position in the annual clinic held at the hospital in Tukuea. During the encounter a proposal was made, and favorably set up by the hospital to provide care to Davis Hospital for the Negro unit of the proposed city-county hospital. A resolution is now being prepared for presentation to the proper authorities. The Informer feels that the movement
TWO HOUSTONIANS GIVE TO EDUCATION
Aumouncement is being made this week by The Informer of the gift of $1000 each by two Houston Negro citizens toward the endowment fund of Wiley College. One of the donors is James D. Ryan well known civil leader and educator, who several years ago, because of his outstanding accomplishments in educational endeavors, was named the recipient of Prof. Ryan is now heading a "dollar" campaign in the interest of the school. T. M. Fairchild, president of the Watchtower Mutual Life Insurance Company, the first old line legal reserve insurance attempt on the part of Texas Negroes, and the president of the Fairchild Understake Company, is the other donor. Mr. Fairchild, while not an alumnus of the college, is ardently interested in the perpetuation of Negro schools of outstanding merit in Texas.
It realizes that the funds from which the units of the proposed hospital will be built will be public funds; and it knows that the money of Negro tax payers will go as largely toward that purpose as the money of white tax payers; it just doubles it but doubles that there will be sufficient weight attached to the resolution to cause immediate action and favorable action on the proposition. Not because those presenting it have not worked it as it should. Not because the correctness of their views is as it should. Not because the problem is unattributed. Not because there is any argument as to the necessity of a unit for Negroes. Not for any reason, as The Informer sees it, but that Negroes in this city have no political weight and will be felt to such an extent that groups which do have political weight will be felt to such an extent that granting of the request of our people will not be seen as desirable.
It seldom happens that individuals among us reach the point of being in financial position to make gifts of such a size. We have to be careful not to overestimate the size of whose accumulations have reached the point of surplus. And still more seldom found are those among us who, having reached a position of comparative financial security, feel their duty toward their fellows strong enough to give as unintentionally as have been the case with the other members of our group need no commendation aside from the satisfaction which is theirs in the knowledge of deeds well done. The Informer, nevertheless, does that the opportunity to bring Houston and the other group into the limelight and conceptions of Our group in this city could profit from a thousand like them. They have had the vision to accumulate and they now have the Christianity and love of their fellowman to the extent that they
The Informer, in expressing these opinions hopes that it will not be misunderstood. It is heartily in favor of the proposal, if it is correct. The Informer would also believe that it would be much more sure could it but happen that the resolution was backed by the recognized ability of thousands of Negro voters to help in the selection of those whose opinions would work in the medical association and all others of the Informer feels that the medical association and all others of the Informer are interested in bettered conditions for the race along the lines of health, recreation and in all other civic fields, would do well to think seriously over the proposition and lend their mutually supported vision now being made to give to all Houston citizens the right to vote.
Review of Crime
AND VITAL STATISTICS
BY J. M. NABRIT, Jr.
HIGH DEATH RATE SAPS NEGROS PHYSICAL INJURIES
In discussing the recent survey among Houston Negroes, Jesse O. Thomas, Southern field director of the National Urban League, who made the survey, said: "In addition to the deplorable fact itself, that there was a significant population in the city of Houston that there were births for the year 1928, many of those people died unaccompanied, the situation were set out in our article which appeared in last week's Information section of the work has discovered, through investigation, that 50% of the Negroes are from preventable diseases. It means that 50% of our people die naturally in the conversation, the occupation, Mr. Thomas said: "the cost of sickness and death must have to invest in avenues where employment opportunities are available. When you add to the cost of create funerals you gain some coneption of the heavy drains being made from these sources, thus limiting to a great extent the power in more productive fields."
An intense and relentless fight must be waged within and without the men's condition, less sapping of our man-power and this determined wasting of our meager funds may be summarily slammed down. Houston. Negroes could have been Health Care held in Washington a few days ago. The results of such a conference might be the means of changing the condition which is in our midst.
INVESTING FOR PROFIT
BY CATTERY N. WESLEY
**ARTICLE XIV**
What are men in school preparing to start life? How can they prepare so as to make the best life for them? This life! This life! This life is dedicated to students. Nevertheless fact during these times when the entire business world is readjusting itself to a new way of life, they can rise above the rank and file in any profession or business not only by being willing to master a particular field. Too many young men have an idea of what they want to do and do nothing to prepare themselves for grasping it when it comes. To give jobs to young men who are apparently ambitious and have to let them go because they are unprepared. There are thousands of men who are good workers, who who never seem to progress. They have learned it thoroughly, and sticking to a masseut success lies in specialization—in selecting one branch of business, learning it thoroughly, and sticking to it.
Many men who read these articles know about any field of work they have finished college, they are ready to learn anything away with which to invest. In most cases it is because they don't know enough about any field of work they have finished college, they are ready to learn anything well while they are learning. Every man in our group should face the responsibility of preparing a will for himself and every student should face the responsibility of preparing a will. True still that a man can save and invest without even having finished school. But it is also true that they should school without knowing what they expect to get out of school. They just want to learn and they finish it. But when it is finished they can only join the army of education wages. They invest in the one and energy is the biggest asset one has to invest. Surely in investing in such newer training as accounting for profit. One so investing in profit but doing nothing to profit. Young men, invest a Little of your time in the study of accounting, enrolment, actual practice or merchandising, pay hard profits. But best of all you come into your job to invest you will have something to invest. You already assumed for that field.
RACE RIOTING IN BERMUDA
Hamilton, Bermuda—(ANP) - So it upon avenging an allied attack on a British convoy, the soldiers of a West Bermuda regiment stationed here, armed with clubs and rifles, were badly beaten and on the streets here both were badly beaten and the fight was rapidly assuming the proportions of a real race riot when the police were out and quelled the trouble. The warring troops were placed under arrest and the entire regiment was confined to the centre of the investigation by civil and military n-
TESTED TRUTHS By ELLIE ALMA WALLS
GRATITUDE
Some have met and cannot eat,
And some had eat that want it.
Some have met and cannot eat,
Let the Lord be thankful—Burns.
For what are men bettle than sheep
That contain a blind life within the
brain.
If having God, they lift not
hands of prayer.
Both for themselves and those who
call them friend?—Tamyson.
Both for the nobile Caesar saw him
Ingratitude, more strong than traitor's arms
Quinquenquished him; then burst his heart. Thanksgiving Day; for life, for food, for clothing, for shelter, for family, for gratitude. But how have you felt grateful today? But how have you felt grateful today? But how have you helped materially or spiritually some one whose supply is less than you have. How have you gratitude to someone who a long time ago, or recently, gave you food?
FISK LIBRARY DEDICATION IS GALA AFFAIR
FISK LIBRARY DEDICATION IS GALA AFFAIR
Nashville, Tennessee. "A library connotes knowledge made accessible," said Demer Hawkes of Columbia and Demer Hawkes of the address of dedication at Fisk University on Thursday, November 20. Demer Hawkes' discussion of "The Modern College and the Impender's dedication exercises. Greetings were wished by Nashville Adam Strombacher, president of the American Library Association, G. Lake Inees, representing the Tennessee Library Association, the librarian of the University of North Carolina, Herbert Herbert Dehran, dean of the University of North Carolina, Reservoir and Louis Shores, librarian at Fisk. The building was pre-commissioned and accepted by Paul D. Cravath, chairman of the Fisk Board of Trust.
White Man Says That He Prefers The Cannibals
New York, N. Y. —(ANP) The theory that仲裁 in Africa were for women Tuesday night when W. C. Seabrook white author, who had just returned from Africa, was kinder than the new Yorkers he met on the trip to the canadian country to new Jersey. Mr. Seabrook, who is the author of *The Adventures of a New Yorker*, went to Africa to obtain material for a new book on Voodooism and magic. I "landed a year at Grand Bassam on the ivory Coast and went to Africa to study the borders of Liberia. I rode a canoe and was at times carried in a palanquin. I "found the native worship was Voodooism and the magic as called it. I found it was comparatively cool, where I found cannibals living on a mountain. They eat human flesh only when they are really a very kindly people. I had foe in Timbuktu and was ill two months. They took excellent care of me and were at all times concerned with my welfare and in bringing me back."
PRINCIPAL BANKS
IN WASHINGTON
AT COLLEGE MEET
Washington, D. C.-Haworth University acted as host to a 3-day meet from November 15-30. Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, president of the university, was in attendance. W. Johnson was made by J. B. J. Loe, J. Clark, John W. Davis and R. S. Wiliam. Other sessions were held in the Department of the Interior. Other sessions were held in the Department of the Interior. The "Training of Negro Extension Workers" by Dr. E. H. Shin, H. H. Shin.
Cimbee's Ramblings
K
"The Negro Land-Grant College
Building - Program." "Our Require
measures and our Services Organisation
Negro Land-Grant College." R. S. Wilkinson. Other prominent speakers. The Department of the Department of the Interior. W. J. Cooper, and G. O. Sargent. Principal W. B. Ranks of Presi-
dency College.