Norfolk Journal and Guide
Saturday, December 26, 1925
Norfolk, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
Social and Personal
Miss Mary Hudson Bass of V. N. and I. L. of the Collegiate department is spending the holidays at home with her parents.
Mr. Woodley Lawrence who is attending school in Baltimore arrived at home on Wednesday to spend the holidays with his parents.
Miss Florence Byrd of Jackson College, Boston, Mass., and her sister, Miss Wilhelmina Byrd who is teaching at Beckley, W. Va., are at home for the Xmas. Miss Byrd was accompanied by Miss Odarira Palmer of Beckley, W. Va.
Mr. Wattell Chambless of V. N. and I. L. is at home with his parents for the holidays.
Miss Eva Tucker of V. N. and I. L. is at home with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tucker of Avenue A.
Messrs. Thomas W. Young of Hampton Institute and P. Bernard Young of Ohio State University are at home with their parents for the holidays.
Miss Louise Myers returned to Phoebus, Va. to spend the holidays.
Misses Doris and Helma Dungee are at home with their parents for the holidays. They are college students at Hampton Institute.
Misses Annie and Lygetta Warment of the High school department of V. N. and I. L., are at home for Xmas.
Mrs. Lyman Paey. Mrs. P. Bass and Mrs. Ruth Bass have returned to the city after a most delightful week-end spent in Method, N. C., as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Berry O'Kelley and Mr. Tom White. While there they visited in Raleigh and Durham. They were shown great hospitality both places. They were entertained at lunch by lawyer Andrews of Durham and they saw the city of the city where the kindness of the church and Miss Amy also Mr. McCaulley. In Raleigh they were the guests of Mrs. Gertrude Tucker Higgs at tea.
them at cards and dainty refreshments were served. Mrs. Julia Brown Delaney entertained them with tea on Sunday night and covers were laid for six.
Miss Mattie Garrett who attends the State Normal School at Elizabeth City, is spending the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Garrett on Church street.
Miss Beatrice Foote, daughter of Mrs. Etta Pugh Jenkins of St. Julian avenue has been in Paris for some time. She had hoped to spend the holidays at home but will spend that time in Germany.
Mr. George Thomas came from Philadelphia and the Armour of St. Julian avenue. Mrs. Fannie Thomas of Douglas Park, which was held Sunday at St. Mark's church.
Miss Dorothy Hines and her aunt, Miss Jessie Hines of Battleboro, will be the guests of their aunt, Mrs. Maggie L. Patterson of St. Julian avenue, for the holidays.
Miss Dorothy Hines father will join her here.
Mr. J. A. Stallings, formerly of Norfolk, but now of New York sailed December 19, on the S. S. Murargo, for Nassau, Bahamas.
In Nassau, for Stallings will meet a party and from there they will go to Havana, Cuba.
Miss Flora Boone of Portsmouth was the guests of Mrs. Cotton St. John's street, Lindenwood.
Mrs. Buena Kelley Gibbs is spending the holidays in New York with her husband, Mr. Robert F. Gibbs. While away Mr. and Mrs. Gibbs will spend a few days in Philadelphia and Boston.
Mr. Alvin Alves of Courtney avenue, and Mr. Allen White of Reservoir avenue, who have been ill are improving.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Dunston of 764 Washington avenue, and Thanksgiving Day, a fine twelve pound baby boy. Mother and son are doing nicely. Mrs. E. White of Roscoe street, returned home Sunday from Vickswille, N. C., where she had been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Pitchchard. She also spent a few days in Elizabeth City visiting friends.
Mrs. Katie Hays of Baltimore Md., was the guest of Miss Mariana Lunde of Reservoir avenue, Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Hays was en route to her former home in Smith field.
Miss Hattie Wood was the dinner guest of Mrs. Mildred Crenshaw of Church street Sunday December 20.
Miss Sarah E. Williams, a teacher in the Abraham Lincoln school
If This
Small Space
was ten feet long,
and twenty—
five feet wide,
We could
not wish
your more
than this—
"A
Merry
Christmastide"
GL Hall
DYLAN CO., INC.
257 GRANBY STREET
NORFOLK, VA.
of this city, with her brothers Jas. A, and Samuel R. students of Gammon Theological Seminary and Hampton Institute respectively left the city on Christmas Eve to spend the customary part of the Christmas holidays with their parents of Hickory, Va.
Miss Zenobia Malloy and Miss Helen J. Qurestell left Thursday for Greensboro, N. C., where they will spend the holidays with Miss Malloy's parents.
Dr. Bessie Badham and Miss F. Lenora Badham of Edenton, N. C., spent a part of the holidays in the city.
Miss Evelyn Humbles a college student of Hampton Institute passed through the city Wednesday morning enroute to her home in Lynchburg, Va., where she will spend the holidays with her parents.
Mr. Wm. Kendrick left for Sumter, S. C., to spend the holidays with his mother and sisters.
Mr. George Van Hoy Collins of Hampton Institute, is spending the holidays with his parents on Landing street.
Mr. Boston Brown of Nasawadox is spending the holidays in the city.
Mr. Prince A. Johnson of New York City is spending the holidays in the city.
PARTIES
V. C. E. SOCIETY'S OFFICERS ENTERTAINED
Mrs. Maggie Long of 927 Lexington street, proved a charming hostess to the officers of the Varkish Christian Endeavor Society of the Metropolitan A. M. E. Zion Church who met at her home Friday evening December 11. After the regular routine of business the guests gathered around a table and covered the living room table and covered a delectable repast consisting of Smithfield salad with pickles, crackers, hot chocolate, lemon cookies, strawberry jelly, fruit cake and grape juice.
The spacious home of Mrs. Berry O'Kelly at home, N. C., was the scene of a large and brilliant card party when she entertained the members of her card club and her house guests, Mrs. Ida N. Paey, Mrs. Buss Bass and Mrs. P. B. Young, of Norfolk, Va. The rooms were beautifully decorated with cut and potted flowers, carrying out the Xmas colors of green and red. There were six tables of whist and prizes were awarded to the following: guest prize, a set of solid brass candle sticks with pink candles, was won by Mrs. P. B. Young; the first prize by Mrs. Maurice Watts; and the consolation by Mrs. Louise Hoover McCleenan. The first prize was "a hand embroidered bridge luncheon set and the consolation was a blue lemon plate with ivory fork. After the games, each table was laid with a linen cover, in the center of each table was placed a hand painted bud vase with an American beauty rose bud and fein. Silver was laid for a two course service which consisted of chicken well-cooked with red and green peppers, cream cheese tapped with an English wall cheese stuffed olives, coffee with whipped cream, vanilla ice cream in green comparts decorated with a red cherry, cake and mints. From nine until one Mrs. O'Kelly entertained at curls the members of the faculty of the Berry O'Kelly Training School and her house guests.
Mrs. Katie Gills of East Oincy Road was hostess for the circle Wednesday, December 16. A Christmas program was enjoyed after which the hostess assisted by Mrs. Parker and her daughter Miss Elizabeth, served a tempting reunion of Christmas goodies.
B. B. BOUNCERS JR
Regular meeting was held at the home of Mr. Alvin Smith on Outten street, Sunday, December 20. Officers were elected for 1926 as follows: James, Johnson, president; Witty Gray, vice president; Alvin Smith, secretary; Walter Riddick, treasurer; Alamanus Gregory, reporter.
FRIENDSHIP SEWING CIRCLE
The circle met at the home of Mrs. Hattie Robertson on Anderson street. After business, a delightful repast was served.
COTTAGE BIBLE BAND
The meeting was held at the home of Mrs. Annie Brown. After devotionals, the scripture was read by Miss Essie M. Davis; prayer by Mrs. Connie Davis, after which the president announced the meeting open for discussion.
Mrs. F. Evans was hostess to the members of the club Friday evening December 4th. A large number attended.
Mrs. Ursula James entertained the group, Fridl evening, December 11. This was their social meeting. Games were enjoyed Mrs. Mary Ward and Mrs. Hattie Edmonds carried away the prizes. Each hostess served a delicious repast.
THE LITTLE GENTS SOCIAL CLUB
They held their meeting at the residence of Mr. Willie Murden on Sunday, December 20, 1925, at 3 p.m. Their party will be postponed until January 1. A splendid meeting was held Sunday. Dainty refreshments were served. Their colors have been changed to red and purple.
Kenny's Garden De
Luxe Formal Opening
A Gala Event
On Monday evening a formal opening was held at the Garden de Luxe, 1043 Church St. W. J. Kemp proprietor. Frank Smith and Ben Jones" "Eight Musical Aces" furnished music for the occasion to the strains of which scores of couples tripped the light fantastic toe. Kemp's Garden de Luxe presents a thorough and aptate place of service easily entertained in m n e t. Since moving to the present location, Mr. Kemp has spared no paints to make his establishment one of the most modern in appointment and equipment in the country and is prepared to render efficient and high class service to the patrons who frequent this delightful retreat.
WEDDINGS
WATKINS.CASON
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Cason on Washington avenue, was the scene of a brilliant wedding reception on December the tenth in honor of the marriage of his daughter, Miss Inez Addie Cason to Mr. John C. Watkins. The lower floor was decorated with cut flowers, ferns and Christmas green. The bride looked chumming, gown of sea blue, with gold broached slippers to match. She wore a corsage of pink roses. The groom was attired in conventional evening dress. Mr. and Mrs. Watkins are now residing at 1515 Calvert St.
CIRSON-BELL
Mr. and Mrs. D. Bell announce the marriage of their daughter, Pearl Bell to Mr. Edward Gibson, Wednesday, December 23, at the home of the groom's brother. Both the contracting parties are blind.
LYNNHAVEN
At the usual hour the pastor,
Rev. W. A. Baker fill the pulpit.
Holy Communion was administered
by the pastor.
Mr. Charles Ferebee and his son
Harvey have returned from Glass-
boro, N. J.
Mr. Moses Williams, Miss Edith
Williams and my Lawrence Williams
lear for Donar, Pa.
Miss Lillian L. Lecker left for
Rhode Island on last Wednesday to
spend the holidays with her aunts.
Mrs. Louis Sears has returned
home after visiting her daughter,
Mrs. Lucy Bauer of Ave. B.
There was a very interesting
program given at the M. J. McPherson school on last Monday.
Mrs. Clara Whitehurst is convalescing at the St. Vincent's hospital.
Mrs. Emma J. Simmons and Joseph Ferece are indisposed.
Mrs. M. J. Bright is much impaired.
Miss Annie E. Wilson spent Sunday at home.
Obey, Tailor
Declares He Can
Better Serve Patrons
Obey, tailor, cleaner and presser, at 721 East Freemason street, who is one of this city's old business men, announces in these columns that he is in a better position than ever to serve his customers. Mr. Obey states that, "When it clothes we can make them. We never try to outwit them, but we try to comply with them." Mr. Obey makes all kinds of suits and overcoats and states that he guarantees to fit.
Conway Lodge No. 25, Knights of Pythias, held one of the most enthusiastic meetings of its history Monday night of this week. Notices had been sent out announcing the last quarterly meeting of the year and the regular semi-annual election of officers. The response to the call was very satisfactory and all who attended were in happy mien.
The statements of outgoing officials led the lodge to be in a sound financial condition and to be growing steadily.
The Committee on Charity reported, and recommended a substantial Christmas donation for each of the five widows of deceased members of the lodge, a similar donation to one indigent Sir Knight.
The officers elected to direct the destiny of the order for the ensuing years were as follows: Morrell Watkins, C. C.; Wm. Ridley, V. C.; Preston W. Randall, Prelate; Geo. Williams, M. of F.; Granville P. Quitte, K. of R. and S.; Charles H. Johnson, W. of E.; Wm. H. Tyler
W. W. Forreman, Trustees.
The banding was clouded with a
prayer service led by Sir Marcel
Watkins the newly elected Chanc-
lor Commander, in which all
present joined in giving thanks to
God for having brought the order
thus far, its present prosperity
and the many other blessings
enjoyed by its members.
Dr. D. Cooper
EYESIGHT SPECIALIST
704 CHURCH ST.-COR QUEEN
Glasses $12 a week
N.A.A.C.P.BABY CONTEST GOES OVER THE TOP
The Baby Contest which was staged by the Woman's Committee of the N. A. K. C. P., came to a close on Friday night at the First Baptist Church. A large group of interested spectators was present to witness the program and corollate the winners.
Under the direction of Miss Gertrude Perry a very pleasing program was rendered. The devotions were led by Rev. O. J. Allen, assisted by Rev. D. F. White. Then the Girls Reserves of the Y. W. C. a held their impressive opening service. Love to God, allegiance to the flag and service to humanity were stressed by the colorful pageant. Miss Butler was in charge of the girls.
The First Grade of Lott Care school presented a Health Play under the direction of Miss Louise. The benefits of pure milk for little folks were uniquely stressed. The little folks were appropriately customized and well-trained.
The First United Presbyterian Kindergarten tot's captures all eyes as they rang their bells and sang about Santa Claus and Xmas. They displayed the splendid training given by their teacher Mrs. Margaret Burdin.
The First Glee Club of the Booker T. Washington school rendered several beautiful selections. Miss Ruby King directed the club. They sang Negro Folk songs and Xunas palms with equal ease.
Miss Eunice Bailey gave a very good recitation which was well received. Miss Clarice Peterson acted as mistress of ceremonies.
The address of the evering was delivered by Lawyer David H. Edwards who was introduced to the audience by Miss W. I. Bagnall. Lawyer Edwards held his hearers spell-bound while he portrayed the work of the N. A. A. C. P. and urged his hearers to become actively connected with this great organization. He suggested everyone should ally himself as a member of the final chapter. Mr. Edwards' address was enthusiastically applauded. As president of the best chapter he invited the chair to the next meeting, first Thursday in January, 8 p.m., Bank St. Baptist Church. Miss W. I. Bagnall, chairman of the Woman's committee announced the terms of the contest. The roll was called by Miss H. J. Quetrell, the secretary, and the sponsor for each contest reported to the judges. Dr. G. Hamilton Francis, Dr. S. F. Coppage and Capt. E. W. Gould served as judges. Excitement ran high and wild predictions as to the winners. The final count was announced by Dr. Coppage as follows: First prize—$10.00 in gold Bagbara Brayow Bowling, $19.59, second prize—$5.00 in gold, Warren Wesley Bright $25.59 third prize—$2.50 in gold George Chapman Perry, $36.80. Tokens were presented to the following who came 4th, 5th in order: Emma Cherry, $35.10; Daniel A. Harrison, $33.60; Wilmer Virginia Fons, $31.21.
Keepsakes were also presented to all babies in the contest. Full reports will be published later showing the amounts brought in by all contestants. Over $100.00 was raised stated Mrs. L. R. Hinton, treasurer of the Woman's commit-
Free Christmas Dinner At The Elks Home
A Christmas dinner will be served to all the poor of the city who will come to the Elks Home, 440 East Brambleton avenue, room 5, Christmas day, from 2 to 7 o'clock p. m. by horseback, plus Fig. 1A and L-B. Children are invited to come also. Several baskets of goodies will be distributed.
Royal Arch Masons Elect Officers
Hiram Chapter, No. 8, Royal Arch Masons of Norfolk, Va, held its last stated convocation of the year on Friday, December 4th at their Tabernacle, on Smith street. It being the last meeting of the year, and the nearing of the 45th anniversary of the institution of the chapter, the Tabernacle resounded with speeches from Companions Past Grand High Priest, Thromian Chrank and Robert K. Burgess, also Most Excellent High Priest, Thomas Boyle, Grand Master, Captain. They were listened to with marked attention and won the plaudits of all companions present.
The business of the chapter for the year just ended was one of unbound success, both numerically and financially. It being the last regular convocation of the year and the time for election of officers for the ensuing year was promptly carried out at the time stated and the following named companions were unanimously elected to office for the year, 1926: Allen B. Scales, High Priest; Henry Chambers, King; Baker P. K. Scribe; Nathaniel J. Riddick, Captain of the Host; Milton L. Baxter, Principal Solourner; Theodore Minor, Royal Arch Captain; Henry J. Joseph Scales, Grand Master; Joseph Veil; William Jones, Grand Master First Veil; William A. Pinner, Treasurer; Robert R. Burgess, Secretary; John Chadwick, Chapain; Joshua S. Peterson, Sentinel.
After the election there were numerous congratulations showered upon the companions elect, after which they were duly installed by
BARBARA BYRD BOWLING, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Bowling, who was sponsored by the First Baptist Church, winner of first prize, $10.00 in gold.
WARREN WESLEY BRIGHTT son of Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Bright Jr., who was sponsored by the Colonial Maids and Greater Norfolk Lodge 132, I. B. P. O. E. of W., winner of second prize, $5.00 in gold.
Past Grand High Priest, Throma Clark, upon conclusion they were tendered a sumptuous repast much to the delectation of all present.
Look for the
CLARENCE
COR. PEACH ST. AN
For Candies, Soil
Cigarettes a
The Best Ice Cream
Cream. Quick LU
CLARENCE RU
D.P. ST.
LOOK FOR THE
We Wish
tend th
the
COMPL
of the
and wi
A
Very
Look for the Sign
CLARENCE'S PLACE
PEACH ST. AND JEFFERSON
Candies, Soft Drinks, C
Cigarettes and Tobacco
Ice Cream In Town
n. Quick Lunches A Sp
CLARENCE RUFFIN. Proprietor
2. STOR
FOR THE YELLOW B
We Wish to K
tend to You
the
COMPLIMENT
of the Season
and wish you
A
Very Happy
COR. PEACH ST. AND JEFFERSON AVE.
For Candies, Soft Drinks, Cigars
Cigarettes and Tobaccos
The Best Ice Cream In Town—Crane's
Cream. Quick Lunches A Specialty
CLARENCE RUFFIN. Proprietor
D.P.STORES
We Wish to Extend to You the
COMPLIMENTS of the Season and wish you
Christmas
To Our Many Patrons and Friends
our assets we like to pay one money cannot buy all.
at this Holiday Season you, not as a customer a friend, the Best Wishes year.
Among our assets the only one money good will.
And so, at this Holi tend to you, not as but as a friend, th the coming year.
Among our assets we like to count the only one money cannot buy-your good will.
And so, at this Holiday Season, we extend to you, not as a customer alone. but as a friend, the Best Wishes for the coming year.
J. H. HALE
for Service
DIAL 22820—NORFOLK
for Service
0—NORFOLK 872-W—POR
SUNSHINE
BUSINESS MEN BANQUET HIGH SCHOOL ELEVEN
Booker T. Washington Champions Honored Guests of Local Citizens in Unique Affair At Kemp's Grill Room.
A citizens banquet, sponsored by the business men of Norfolk, was tendered the Booker T. Washington high school football squad, 1925 champions of the Interstate High School Conference the coach, members of the faculty and invited guests at Kemp's grill room Thursday night last. The affair was voted one of the most unique, both in arrangement and in appointed evenness, in this city. It was an amuitionousness a sort of spread staged here recently.
The grill room was exquisitely decorated; the whole atmosphere of the place was one of extreme cordiality, and the guests spent the evening in wholesome bilhary, iterspersed with some mature advice to the members of the team. There was an elaborate mea and an elaborate program. The latter, being in the middle of the room, all staged. Football yells rent the air again as the speakers and team stars were cheered.
Dr. E. D. Burke introduced the master of the ceremony Dr. G. Hamilton Francis, who delivered a characteristic and entertaining speech. S. B. Noble congratulated Mr. Kepp upon the grandeur of his establishment and lauded the success of Coach Wilson and his team. Other speakers were W. M. Rich. P. B. Young. Dr. S. F. Coppage, Prof. C. W. Reynolds, Coach Owen Wilson, Captain Williams of the squad and Frank Vaughn. The business and professional men praised the football squad on its season's success and urged the players to be guided through the season spike. Also, as they had pinned on the gridiron, the coach and team members thanked the citizens for the honor bestowed upon them. Adolphus Williams, member of the squad, read his poem dedicated to the football team. It was what the bays call a houndinger. Before beginning his reading Mr. Williams made a brief speech in which he urged the student body of the school to par-
THE Sign
E'S PLACE
BROAD JEFFERSON AVE.
It Drinks, Cigars
and Tobaccos
In Town—Crane's
Branches A Specialty
OFFIX. Proprietor
FORES
YELLOW FRONTS
h to Ex-
to You
the
IMENTS
Season
wish you
A
Happy
Our Manyasons andends
we like to count
cannot buy—your
day Season, we ex-
a customer alone.
the Best Wishes for
vice
872-W—PORTSMOUTH
About 180 guests assembled and enjoyed L. delightful event. Prof. Reynolds told of the faculty spirit that had sustained the boys on the grifton both at home and abroad. The menu consisted of celery, mixed pickles, green olives, saltine crackers, chicken salad, Smithfield ham, salted peanuts, ice cream and cake, assorted cigars and cigarettes. After the feast, music and Charlesonning were the features of the evening.
LABORER MADE MAYOR
Dunstable, Eng.—Edwin Timms, a railroad laborer, has been elected mayor.
Eighty per cent of all commercial ice and refrigerating plants operate on ammonia.
The Army & Navy Shaving Parlor
HOT & COLD SHOWER
BATHS
Ladies' Hair Dressing Parlor in the Rear
Use JENKINS System
Full line of Hair Preparations On Sale
The Army & Navy
Shaving Parlor
HOT & COLD SHOWER
BATHS
Adults' Hair Dressing Parlor in the
Rear
Use JENKINS System
full line of Hair Preparations
On Sale
R. J. JENKINS, Prop.
408 E. Brambleton Ave.
100
ROB'T OBEY
721 E. Freemason St.
Walk-On
Wishes you
Hearty Merry Ch
and a
Happy and Prosperous
BONNEY AND H
Walk-Over Sh
257 GRANBY ST
S T OBEY, T
freemason St. No
Walk-Over
Wishes you a
Hearty Merry Christmas
and a
happy and Prosperous New
MONNEY AND HUDGIN
Walk-Over Shoe St.
267 GRANBY STREET
ROB'T OBEY, Tailor
721 E. Freemason St. Norfolk, Va.
Wishes you a
Hearty Merry Christmas
and a
Happy and Prosperous New Year
BONNEY AND HUDGINS'
Walk-Over Shoe Store
267 GRANBY STREET
JOHN H. HARRIS
To overlook the opportunity of expressive
season's greetings to our many friends a
render our service for the year incomple
Therefore, to all we wish
A Merry Christmas
A Happy New Year
J. C. BROOKS & CO., Real Estate
526 Brambleton Ave
The Jess Orient
The opportunity of expressing our gratings to our many friends and clients
device for the year incomplete.
all we wish
A Merry Christmas
A Happy New Year
DROOKS & CO., Real Estate and Rent
526 Brambleton Avenue
Mess Oriental So
To overlook the opportunity of expressing our gratitude and the season's greetings to our many friends and clients would seem to render our service for the year incomplete. Therefore, to all we wish
A Happy New Year
J. C. BROOKS & CO., Real Estate and Rentals
526 Brambleton Avenue
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et News, Varoites, Eman Wons-
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Bm,
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CL. Braston, of Marshal aysiu,
the “week-end very pleasantly in
Gorine Covington left Saturday.
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. FLORENCE FLOYD. DEAD
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kya, N.Y, Mrs, Floyd was
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crushing it so badly Gut it had
Famputated as soon us. she renehed
berland Hospital. She also sul=
Hirom a frnetured skull for 21 days.
December 9, in the Cumberland
l Brookiyn, N.Y. ‘The funeral
at the home of her parent, Mrs
well, 1316 Sth street, Newport
Va, on December Lith. |The Cun
forvice'veas conducted by Rev. 8. A.
Dastor of, Wesley Grove Christian
“amined by Rev. J. J. Faulks, of
} Martin’s ‘
Confectionery
E1128 ciluRCH STREET
[We wish onr ciistomers a
eiry, Merry Xmas
BS and a
fappyNew Year
[LS MARTIN, Peaprietor
* NORFOLK,. VA.
ENIUS M. MARTIN, Manacer
Pes WINDLEY, Asst Mee
| Madame
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6 Beauty Specialist and
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Bterms—1465 Chapel-Strect
Antiouncement
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FecDinah B.- Staten, Mrs.
Henley, Miss Beatrice
Bite te c.g
PORO AGENTS OF
a HEAR
MRS. f. MALONE
| Chicago, ill., Dee. 24.—The Chi-
cago Poro Civb held its regular
meeting and election ‘of officers oa
Wednesday night of last week at
Olivet Baptist Church, 3ist and S.
Parkway. There were one thou-
sand members present and, State
Senator Adelbert H. Roberts was
Jone of the speakers. The Senator
was one of the members of the
Upper House of the Ilionis Legis-
lature who opposed the bill recent-
ly passed, requiring hair and beau
ty culturists to register and pay a
fee of $10.00 annually. Although
the bill passed, the Senator stated
that no appropriation had been
made to enforce the bill and that
it was advisable for ail Pao
[Agents to continue their work.
The club was fortunate in having
[Mrs. Anis M. Malone, St. Levis,
Mo,, founder and directing genius
lor the Poro College present. and
speak to the agents. She stated
she bad remained at the main of-
fice all summer working in the in-
terest of agents in the State, of
Missouri, where a similer law. had
been passed, but us te tow, all
were working’ and that the Com-
missioners of her State had visited
Poro College and were highly satis-
fied with the work of the founde:,
demonstrators and instructions. yiv-
‘en those awarded diplomas. Mrs.
‘Mulong prophesized a bright future
for those who are giving intelligent
land painstaking serview as hair and
beavty szecialists. ‘The Poro Chor-
al Club unde the direction uf Prof.
J. A. Mandy rendered musical se-
Iections. Mrs, Birdie Hawkins, a
Jdemonstrittor took part on the: pro-
gram, Mrs. Malone presided ut
the election of officers who were
jus follows: President, Mrs. George
Oliver; Viee President, Mrs. May
me Adams; secretary, dirs. C. R.
Sims; assistant sectelary, ‘Mrs.
Ruth Jackson; treasurer, Mrs. 1
H, Anderson, ‘The club here aftzr
will meet. at the Chicago Sub-St2-
tion, 441} Grand Blvd, Mrs, Ger-
dena Peyton, manager,
Mrs, Malone was the guest of
honor at the Century Whist Club
given by Mrs. Cary 3. Lewis xt the
Appomatiox Club) and was a bos
holder withefriends at thy Roland
Hayes revital at O.chestra Hall.
She was accempanied to Chicago
by her brother, Mr. John 1. Turniso
land family of Philadelphia, Ta.
who have been visiting S:. Louis
Vor several weeks,
Huvfolk, Va. amd Bev. fdlden. ‘The
hoody was motored zu Williamsineri, Vit.
itil laid er eet fae plaaiae Shade Cone
tery,
ike or THAMES
We wish to extend our thanks to our
macy. trende fhe thelr expresien af ayo
fbuschicr wid sieeh, aan tor the Gee
stterehile and Mate
Ms Ba towel and tats
Isrn staRer Sciioor, LEAGKE HOLDS
HEALTH MEETING
Sobool ell a sey interestine martes
inet iran: nfternonne Tie sarc Hoe
evel eer by the hevskte Mes ner
elas gave a hetlth fregeam which, ras
Ser narueive ell se (hectare
are *
Sic alin: schoo nuvies ae thee
preceitel aid disewset the subiet, “ee
erwvight in Chitdven ‘Iv. Cause. EE
fet and erates” Shr tv te eg
five brtotul ces othe comin af
there tw take Detter che af Thee «hel
Tink Mimi, Vinieient Gt
The Manhattan
CLEANERS: AN » DYERS
Work ‘Called for and Delivered.
Tinea Cleaned and slog
22. MEAMDL ETON. AVE,
GWE Mitos, Peon:
Pac boost
] eae TERE * Te
i y i
Till dag e aula
heweallf |
a
Pees ea
Have us save you de:
lay and costly expense by
having those cylinders
welded in this shop.
Our care, skill, expe-
rience and equipment
eliminates any chance of
warping, internal
. strains, etc. Satisfac-
tory work is guaranteed.
Be. Roe Ges CN Reus a
fai gon op ey On Bem eon
FoI CMD UI ea PLLA
Fegan. Sac, Ot Nao CL BSG
RR ol ei tel caa
Cec ate.
Pa re ae
Becaee Bree nee ae
=<" Passes: The-Bar: *°
: pega wee
ee
ge ae
ee a ee
pie ae
| THEODORE LINWOOD TAY-
‘LOR. of Petersburg, a senior How.
ard University law student, who
‘was successful in passing the Vir-
ginia State bar examination held
in Richmond this, month.
“Ted” Taylor is a popular stu-
‘dent and a versatile fellow, and
his friends predict for him a suc-
cessful career at the bar. Attor.
ney Taylor will remaig in school
until June, when he will receive
his Bachelor's degree in law.
Teague, responded to thik aidrees ia. very
Inetting sears and all ators went a-
very feelin a sper rewonsiUtity, Mies
fTastor deferred hee acivese 10 later
ice Seg iis tech er
served by the 4-lt yrade with Miss Slar-
earet. Watkins, as weeher, Quite a ium
i of uive anceaers was present.
| SECOND BAPTIST CHERCH
ee
} At 1 a. m.. the pastor being absent.
Rew. Daniel J. Binek prenehel a seonderful
serum frons the fies Paatins. Hix sermon
was enjoyed hy all present. ‘Thix yous.
oan is prevaing himact to meet the fe
eis of Hie, He is tenting Union Un
versity. Richmond.
ALG Pty the presilert was at his
Jaest. A very” unigue protean was ree
tered, Rev. Buck diaewssed the topic
[Stes tele rudfey “am deasie Bonner
cess rsaponside for the soa program.
pe Taide a lange suienee eajayed he
Comppiina serehe, “Quite 4 number ex
ghee singers een ask
foe bette spared to be ia the lust
Counmanion sevvire of the yrar 1925.
“Th meter wil bw proses next Surlay
anal dcvires the presenter of all of the
[miemlers, Our Staday sehoo! will hold the
Christmas ox-reiaes. Mount, Deeemier
sh
Me. Hardy Whitehewl, one af or bent
memes Iv in the Kiverside Hopital vers
MHS GT. Davis, mupertntendent of the
Stuniiny nekoot im convalleveing
——
Rime. de Bettencourt still plays
st Monte Carlo for sech high stakes
thal now 2s soun as she appears tt
[the ruslette room of the casino, 1
messenger is sent out lo get more
money with which to pay her if
her should wins:
Fer Club Secials—Smokers—
Small |“ Banquets— Recitals—
Private Parties—Breakfast
and Matinee Dances—E(¢.
KEMP’S
Ie THE Place, Get Price
1043 Church St, Phone 26241
Refreshments a ta atte oF full
catering serece
ee NN
Visit Mme. Elliott's
Beauty Salon — *
Porm Sysem taut, Diplamas wean
ii Sarin yng let Arto
Tow hate oe Whitin
rat, stire
can CUMMERLASD. sr.
Old Dominion Line
ean Haare in Aigen Tih
NO eer ae aero ea
Ditect AIL Water Route to New York,
Steamers sal ditiy. exeept Supilag, 7th
beim Steamers ureive Norfulle daily, exe
Soe Manag 280 hm.
Hee "3" West End Raissevain avemte,
“Fieuet Office: 189 Granby street.
Telephane 22760
NORFOLK & WESTERN
RAILWAY
(Tleket Office, 105 Grenby St. Dial 256791
ONLY ALL-RAIL ROUTE TO RICHMOND
Leave Terminnl (Union) Station
8:18,4, m—Dally CHICAGO & ST LOUIS
EXPRESS, Pullmans to Cincinnatl.
Ghiengo. and. Columbus, | connecting
Pullinans ‘to Toledo, Detroit and St.
Louis. Dininy: ear,
9:00 a, m.—Dailey. Fant train to RICK.
MOND Connects at’ Richmond Unior
Biation for Washington, North ane
Fast. Parlor ear.
12:43 p. m.—Daily for Suffolk, Peters.
ure, Lynchburg, Roanoke and local
points.
4:26 p, m—Dally Fast train to Rleb.
mond. “Conneete at Richmond Unior
Station for Washington, North and Easi
Parlor Car.
8:00 p, m.—Dally, for Paternbarg, Bich
mond, Roanoke, Blucfleld, Portsmouth
Ohio,’ and intermediate points,
b:17 p. m.—Daily ST. LOUIS AND CH
CAGO LIMITED, ‘Through Pullmans
Norfolk to Chicago via Cincinnati: Rick
mrond-Petersburg to Columbux, connect:
ing Pulimans to St. Louis, ‘Toledo, De-
trait also Norfolk to Rowtioke'and Rris-
tol, eouneeting Pullman to Knoxville,
Chattanooga, Meinohix. Nashville, Bir
mingham, New Orleans, Shreveport and
ail pats South and. West.
inine arrive Norfolk 7:45, 9:30, 11:93
Sina 3:50, 5:48 and 8:45 p. m.
Schedule—Daily Including
Sunday
Special Accommo-
dation for A uto-
mobiles.
(Double-End’ Ferry)
+, ‘Boats leave Willoughby (16th
street) every hour, on the hour,
beginning 7a. m., to 8 p. may
then 10 and 11:30 p. m.
Leaving Old Point (C. & 0.-
Station) every hour, on the
HALF hour, beginning 7:30 a.
Mas to 8:30 p. m.. then 10:30 and
12, 1
[NORFOLR: JOURNAL “AND: GUIDE
9 Zap Raa, “Qs Yea . ER:
ate aN ® fe) & %
=~ GS ch MONS OPE EE IRD
TSY Vey SEE <i
, PP : $y OS on OV fee NB
. Es SO Of | eee N.
1 E BE. AOR. Io SY ee N.
o fee eI Ge: A) Bg? Be Voges ORY
: : ae , ee 0S IR aiken
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9 ( Po a
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Gt la gga o Gl fa y yo ee | 5
: : . ‘ : j s i We Op
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For nearly 20 years Madam C. J. Walker’s Wonderful Hair Grower me BA)
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growth on scalps left all but bald by protracted illness. Madam C.J, By:
Walker’s Wonderful Hair Grower's notan experiment, it hasstoodthe ;
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Increased Business Demands Larger Factory ie
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MALL CARRIER
ATIRES AFTER
‘95 YEARS SERVICE
On Saturday, December 19, a
unique event océured when the mail
carriers of the local postoffice as-
sembled in the swing room ‘and
were addressed by the szperinten
dent of cairiers, Mr. E. P. Gray,
who after making appropriate re-
marks relative to the efficient co-
operation of the caxriers' in hurdl-
ing the mails during his xdminis-
tration as their superintendent, and
asking for continued co-operation
of the men with their spirit of dili-
gence, especially during the holiday
Tush, referred in eloquent and ex-
pressive langzage to one of the
carriers, who for 25 years ha d
made a most creditable record and
would on that day retire from the
service, .
‘That carrier was Frank S. Tuck-
er, who retired on December 19th.
On behalf. of the currie.s who
Wished to ‘show their love and vs-
teem for Mr. Tucker, Mr. Gray
presented a purse of sold,
Carrier Tucker was taken by
surprise, but fevlingly responded
to this wonderful show of kindness
BERANE Tate hat ot Ts Fa
‘nd-eorbidekation: coming from’ the
stiperintendentwiana those. deay:ib-
oral, heated ealhfddes -with whom
we havo associated an.“ uoved dbr-
‘ing our years of wervice.
“May “Ged'g blescli.’s rest’ vor
Postmaster C. L, Wright, the su-
perintendent of carriers, Mr. E. F,
Gray and all fellow employees of
the Norfolk postofice.”—Frank S.
Tucker, 760 Avenue A-
ete HO ANSHOF Be
CHARLOTTE. N.C.
Charlotte, N. C.—iliss Hattie
Russell was the’ charming hostess
to the Swastika Chub Thursday.
December 10. ‘These taking part
were: Misses 0. Morrow, Beasie
Watkins, Vo Lee. L. Grier, WM,
Redisill, ¢. Williamson, C. Hart
ord C. Martin. Messrs. Te C.
Glenn, 4. T, Douglass, A. Dinkins,
Profs. Knox, Davis and Vaughan.
A toothsome’ fepast was served.
‘The Dramatic Club of Second
Ward High School, made its initial
fall appearance Monday night De-
cember 14, when they successfully
staged “Trial of Hearts,” a melo-
drama in three acts. “The cast
consisted of some of the best dra-
matic talent to he found in the
school. The characters played
their parts excentionally we I.
with Mr. Wilbur Jones playin ths
Joadings role like. seasnxed actor.
‘The newly organized orchestra of
the school under the direction of
Misses Anthony and MeHerry, ren-
dorzd special music for the’ secas-
jon. The Dramatic Club is 4i-
rected by Mesdames Stinson, Hen-
derzon and Bitler.
THE AMERICAN
NEGRO ACAREMY
Toe uwveniy-ninth annual meet-
ing of the American Negn. Acad-
eniy wl be held in Washington,
Morday snd Tuesday, December 28
and 33, 1935,
The ‘Academy, was organized
Seach 5, 1897} its founder’ being
the lamsited, Rev. Alexander
Crmnnwell; its objects, the. promo-
tion of lilerstuve, science and art;
the culture “of a’ form of intellee-
vual laste; ihe fostering of higher
educaticn ; ie publication of sehal-
arly works; and the defense of the
Negro aguirst vicious assault,
The Occasional Papers, cover. ev-
ery phase of tie “Negro Problem”
aiid are on file in all the prineipal
libyavies and. educsttional , institn-
tions of the countzy. Paper, No. 1
“The Shame of Amexiea, or the
Negro’s Case Axainst the” Repub-
Jie.” by AL H. Grimke; and No 22—
“Te Challenge of ‘Lhe Distran-
chived, Plea for the Enforcement
of the’ 13th Amendment,” by J. W.
Croniwell}“are" sow. being’ elrcu-
‘Qronnwell i ares naw being eeu
‘The business “sessions of the
Agadeimy? will’ beheld “in, the li
‘beafy® of the, Mu-so:lit- Club, and
‘the, open, sessions at, the, Cleveland
Community, Center, Eighth aid T
stfeéts, N. W., through. the cour-
ely, of thie dio ofg rien,
*Aimong. those tho, will zeud pa:
pets at.the open sessions 4°¢ Prof,
- Rlain Livoy, Locke} "Rey. Chigrles
D, Martin, of Now York 'City;.Mr.
W. P.. Dabney, of Cinginnati, 0:;
and: President “Avtar "A Sehvom-
burg, of Brooklyn, N.Y.
"Shy offiders of thesealiny are:
pgesident, ‘Aighur A. Schromburg;
vice-presidents, J. R. Clifford, Chas.
D, Martin, L."G. Jolttsoa, Joseph
J. Franez; recording, secketaty,
Tios. M:Dent; HSrariah, ‘Ty Mont-
‘gomary. Grestory} treasurer, “Lat:
ayette .M. He shaw; executive
committee! John W. Cromwell
Kelly Milles, Alain Leroy, Lpcke,
B. H, M, Marihy,” corresponding
secretary, Robert A, Pelham.”
oo
Man Shot'In
.. An Altercation
Toki’ Bareo,, 664 Chapel street,
was shol in the, leg Monday. night
ly Mack Kellam, following. an, al-
te cation between the two men, ‘ac-
cording 19 reports made ty the po-
lig, ‘The police ‘court, hearing -of
Keilam’was continued dntil Decem-
ker 31, when he was arranged be-
fore Justics.dspinidle Tue:day’ morn-
ing. Barco 18 confined ih St. Vin-
cont’s hospital. Kellam was, ar-
rested by officers Brown and Mus-
‘sick.
woe Mier Ver teks
SS en ais eae
Sha B Ee sea eer
| , ar fa aya
ora o me Chae
Sedat o) Rea a
i eye emma 7 |
WER eee ea
pees BLO cated
Hegereeeyey
ee
MANUEACTERUE to DUYER
” : 8 ois
Qa ye
STANK Money, eS Da.
ONLY ee
$15. "Y SO
CAN BE LOADED AND 2upe" “all
Fongep Wri ovi tas. Ay
ia plier net back fore Ea
et ee tince tar Cunennte, O22 er
gtr natin Pay thie
rive Win PAY, POSPAGE.. atstaes
Lay rimmed er mmenee, aa
iW FORK IMPORTERS CO,
Dept K-81, 200 Mrondway, New York
Trce Calalee
WHY. NOT JOIN
THE FLOWERS:
Gp To Join 1
$1 1We Per Month
Receive a buich each week.
When sick you will. receive
flowers, frait and money éach
week, es
Madam, McAdoo’s ©
Ploral Parlor:, -
1719 Hunter St. Phone 87993.
WEST VIRGINIA
MAKES GOOD
RECORD
By F. A. PARKER
The West Virginia College Institute football team has just finished one of the most successful seasons in its history. Playing the hardest-schedule ever undertaken by this small college, and meeting such teams as Howard, Lincoln and Wilberforce, they not only emerged from the fracas but unnife feated but with goal line unscissored. Wilberforce University may boast that they bestremember the otherwise spotless points of the West Virginia team by scoring against them the only three points of the season, a field goal during the last quarter of that memorable Thanksgiving Day game. Meanwhile the "Coal Miners" managed to amass for themselves a grand total of 108 points. Many Negro football teams boast undefeated elevens this year, but few indeed are there who, having had the brand of competition encountered by Coach Humblin's can, enjoyed in such a record, crowned, as it was, by a victory over their ancient and chief rivals on Thanksgiving Day. The record of team for the
The record
season is ns follow
W.V. C.I. 48
W.V. C.I. 16
W.V. C.I. 0
W.V. C.I. 32
W.V. C.I. 0
W.V. C.I. 7
W. V. C. I. 48 Bluefield Inst. 0
W. V. C. I. 16 Ky. Nor. Inst. 0
W. V. C. I. 0 Howard Univ. 0
W. V. C. I. 32 Simmons Univ. 0
W. V. C. I. 0 Lincoln U. 0
W. V. C. I. 0 Wilberforce U. 0
Totals 103 Outstanding Men 3
There were no "Red" Granges on the West Virginia College Institute squad. But there were about twenty pretty good men full of fight, grit and determination. The most outstanding of these were Capt. Turner, quarterback; Hodges, tackle; Steven, tackle; and Gaithers, end. Any critic who has seen the "Coal Miners" in action can testify to the superb work of these men. Capt Turner's educated toe stood the team well in time of need on numerous occasions. He was not outpunted by any opponent at any time. His handling of punts at opportunity times has added many yards to team's marches down the field. He did not fumble a punt in any game during a season, but caught them either up the field or out of bounds. He throws and catches passes in such a manner that he makes difficult plays look easy. And Negro football has seen no greater field general in many years. Hodges and Stevens have combined to make life miserable for opposing linesmen in general. If ever a man came thru Steven's tackle, it was because Stevens overcharged him. They did not come thru Hodges at all.
The Fighting Bookers
BY NEDOLL WILLIAMS
Brace up Booker T., ease your cramps.
We are now the High School Champs.
We beat Dunbar and Arrestrowe too.
Also Dough and her Crew.
Whipped St. Joseph out of sight.
The Royals edged out, but that's all right.
And poor old Roukane not score,
While Norcom we beat more and more.
Poor Union tried to light our lamps.
Then Huntington made us High School
So cheer up students do not sob. But give three cheers for fighting "Bob" For Tolliver is the fighting guy. Who scores the run that breaks the tie! And Thomas on our own surprise. Proved just a blessing in disguise! Kid Johnson, the 'Berkeley Express' so fast can so perfect a forward pass. He guard ran full forty-yards to down his man. Little 'Lue' Tolliver—can't leave him out. Will be a star next year without a foot man. For Diggs, the hammering six foot man. Will help our little 'Lue' all he can. Diggs who is known to play and cackle Can reach with ease to make his tackle. And Williams, captain of the team Plays hard to make a fair dame scream. While Failon on his way to fame.
For when he starts he gets the man,
and down him on the modern plan;
Then comes *Pap* Tynes, just looking deep
And grabs the ball and starts to creep.
But we've got to hand it to old *Pap*
Cause when he's playing football he's no cap.
Slow but sure comes Kermit Ross.
Whose hair contains a 'haming gloss,
But I'll say as I said before.
Dear, Kermit Ross is slow but sure.
Comes one, 'Ballame' Nottingham.
Who loves the game like a football fan.
Hail I'am you thought that I forgot
That deadly demon, Samuel Hart,
Who grabbed the enemy brave and bold
Just thought they had reached the goal.
And Ferebele, At the night 'Hawk'
Just throws 'em hard and make 'em squawk
We've got to give him what he makes.
He's never made a worthless break.
Coach Wilson, my! he loved to talk.
He'd get 'em heatol and he'd walk.
He'd say, 'now listen, here's a fact
Go out you listen, be the haon beck.'
Would they do it? Ha! you bet
more; they would think lest they forget.
Then, he'd say, "listen, whip that crew,
Or check your fors to you're through.
Watch out for those tikes and kicks,
Show, 'em babies a few of our tricks"
"Tolliver, by Georgo, kick that ball!
Throw your man and make him fall."
Watch your sportsmanship my heart!
matter-
Hey! cheer for the boys when they strike
their rivals
their hall.
Get all the spirit, cheer by name.
So our boys can't lose the game.
Now Booker T. brace up and smile.
And thank your coach for his various styles.
They have won for us, a higher name,
And placed us in the hall of fame.
RED GRANGE
THE WHEATON EXPRESS
JAZZ BRYD
THE FLITTING GHOST
A SENSATIONAL
DASH TO THE
SIDE-LINE, A STOP!
OFF AGAIN AND THE
FIELD'S BEHIND HIM—TART'S BURD!
A SUDDEN STOP—
AND THE WOULD BE
TACKLER IS EVAPED
THAT'S GRANGE!
Are they "Like Peas In a Pod?" And there's another one for you. Harold "Bod" Grange, the Wheaton iceman, the Illinois streak of lighting and the football sensation of the year has been, was and is the bulk of the country. F. Byrd, the Jersey flash, the Lincoln speed demon and the pride of football performers for the past few years is also the talk where football is played.
years, is also the dash. Grange is a ten second men, so is Byrd, both being able to do the dash in a few seconds short of the record. Both are as fine a ball carriers as ever stepped on the field and both have played important parts in the victories of their eleven. Grange is off like a flash and can stop in the blink of an eye and off again at the same gait. Byrd has the same ability. Both can start to the sideline pulling the entire field with them—a sudden stop—off another direction and the entire field is behind them. They can do that thing like no other performers. Byrd can wiggle out of the grasp of a tackler and Grange can also shimmy himself free. Both, Grange and Byrd outthink opposing players, thus evading would be tacklers.
Grange and Byrd fell short on bucking the line like a Ernie Nevers, a dim Thorpe, a Doneghy or a "terrible" Terry, but taking the oval on a kickoff or punt, they are there with the gravy. They the ends too and it takes a good eleven to stop 'em. Against Byrd have outdistanced most, if not all ball carriers against them, when it comes down to long touchdowns in games where other brilliants
No attempt is made here to say who is the best or greatest, but just an effort to show some of the things these men do alike. Under the same coaching and with equal opportunity, whether Grange will outstrip Byrd or Byrd outdistance Grang, I shall not attempt to say. A sudden buffling dash, a likewise sudden stop, off again in another direction and a would be tackler evaded—THAT'S GRANGE! That's Byrd too! A sensational dash to the sideline, a dead stop and off again in the direction whence he came, leaving the entire field behind him—THAT'S BYRD! Likewise and also, that's Grange too!
DeHART HUBBARD'S SPORT REVIEW
By DEHART HUBBARD
World's Bread Jump Title Holder
Howard P. Drew was one of our has done Minnesota double dam-
crest champions of the track All age.
runners are defeated at times, but one could count on one hand the number of times Drew was beaten to the tape. He was considered "perfect sprint" by the jinx that seemed to pursue our runners in the Olympic Games, followed Drew to Stockholm in 1912, and he broke down when
footed at times, but one could count on one hand the number of times Drew was beaten to the tape. He was considered the "perfect sprinter." The jinx that seemed to pursue our runners in the Olympic Games, followed Drew to Stockholm in 1912, and he broke down when victory seemed certain to be his. Sol Butler, our first jumping king, was the next to be hit by the Olympic Jinx. He was monarch of all broad jumpers at the time of the 1920 Olympics, and first place was conceded him by all the experts, but he hurt his leg on the first jump and his championship went glimmering.
Football in Colored Colleges
Thanks to the efforts of our colored colleges and to their growing appreciation of the value of athletics, it is no longer necessary for the colored boy to go to a white university to get his chance for football fame. Some of the players in the colored schools are the equal of any in the country. I cannot state at this time, my opinion on the relative merits of the grid game as played in the white and colored schools. That is a matter for debate, and will require lengthy research. But, the growing popularity of the game in our schools, and among our people, attests to the quality of the game as we play it.
Two recent cases of prejudice in Northern schools have created considerable comment. First is the case of Ted Moore, of Northwestern University ity. Moore's case is deplorable because of the general attitude of fervence of his 'school. There have been other colored players at Northwestern, Payton, Turner, and others have played there, and that makes it surprising that the school would accede to the demands of a Southern college and keep one of her most promising players off the board. Are the Southern schools the best of the Northern schools shall play on their teams? W. & J. said "NO", Northwestern said "YES." Up in Minnesota Dr. Spears of the dear old Southland became coach. Immediately Minn. o't a lost two of her star players. Yes, they were colored. One of them, Shields, who can run 100 yards in under 10 seconds, so Dr. Spears
These cases make it all the more gratifying that our own schools have been able to provice an outlet for the football abilities of our players. It is up to them to foster the game, and cooperate to make football in our schools even better and bigger than it is today. To do this we must cast aside petty jealousies. Can we do it?
I wish to close this series with a request. All foot ball jumps are invited to send me all the All-Coach team, all the team I tried to do it but got into trouble at the start. All who feel qualified send in your selections so we can see who are the best players we have had.
Charley West, Harry Ma r t i n. Gerald Allen, Paul Robeson, Ceil Cook, Charles Drew, Johnny Shelburne, bevy Rodgers, and others have all been champions or near champions. All have made good when given the change.
The mention of Morsd and Martin reminds me of a vace that is still discussed when the old-timer get together. About ten years ago we had four or five sprinters in competition who seemed almost unattractive. One night at Madison Spring, a friend of the fifth fledd dawn were being run. On the starting line were Sol Butler, Howard Drew, Roy Morse, Harry Martin, and Joe Loomis—four blacks and one white. The odds were the colored man would win the race, Loomis was considered good, but not the equal of the others. Ammy, the pistol barked, and the men were off in a flurry of flying feet; across the female line in the wink of an eye, white pelted. But the dope had been upset, and Loomis had crossed the line first, and lots of Hogemoney money changed hands that night.
Lack of space prevents the relating of other tales of the track, but some day I will get together a collection that will relate our progress on the track and in the field. Suffice to say that we have made good on the track, because we have been given a chance.
The Colored Man In Football There have been numerous colored football players in our large Northern universities. Almost universally these schools have opened their doors to the Nogro player who could deliver the goods. Since the days of Jewett, Matthews, Marshall, and others, we have had many good players on the leading teams of the country. Even though cases of prejudice have cropped out now, and then, the general spirit has been one of fairness.
NORFOLK JOURNAL AND GUIDE
WILBERFORCE QUINT'S CAGING SYSTEM UNIQUE
Wilberforce, O.—Coach Dean Mohr is director of basketball at Wilberforce University. He appoints his assistants from the ranks of the varsity players. Each varsity man must coach a team in the intra-mural league. The Wilberforce University Intra-mural Basketball League is a part of the work in physical education and consists of fifteen teams as follows: One Grammar School team; four Academy Class teams; four College Class teams; one Commercial Department team; one Vocational Department team; three Fraternity Pledge Club teams; one Student Y, M, C, A. team.
Each of the above teams plays, in one of the two leagues and the winners of the two leagues play for the championship of the school. More enthusiasm is expressed by the student body at one of these championship games than at some of the regular varsity games. The Commercial Department won the championship last year and several of the members of the last year's team are now out for the varsity team.
Students above the fourth grade of grammar school are permitted to take part in these intra-mural games.
Players of the intra-mural or minor league are called as, Wilberforce, who show any ability, graduate to the varsity or Major League. Sometimes varsity men who go stale or break some training rule are sent back to the intra-mural league to work up again. In this way every varsity player gives his best.
Wilberforce University Varsity Basketball team consists of a squad of twenty players, captained by Wu Fang Ward. The Academy varsity team consists of ten players who are the future University Varsity team.
This explains why it is so difficult to defeat Wilberforce at home and why they have not been defeated at home in four years. Wilberforce can place one hundred players on the basketball floor all trained in the Mohr system.
Perhaps the most celebrated case of the color line in football was that of Charley West of Washington and Jefferson College. When Washington and Lee refused to play against West, his school told them in no uncertain terms that they could go home and stay there. West was one of their mainstays and they stuck by him. Other schools have done the same thing at various times. A fellow will fight harder when he knows his school is with him at all times.
Well soaks-I mean folks.
Haven't been with you so long,
nimost forgot what to call you
Of course, where I've been is my
business. You folks have a right
to your opinion.
Xmas time is
here again and
instead of saying
merry xmas to
the folks, I'm
saying miserable
xmas.
THE SMITHSONIAN
When I reached the office Monday a. m., one of the bimboes said, well it's x m a week at last. He needs to reach
that thing, 'cause that's the way
it's with me.
Many of us will have to do like
the guy who was so tight across
the chest that on xmas eve he went
outside the door and fired his gun
and went back in the house and
told the kiddies Santa Claus had
committed suicide.
JOCK SEZ, THE BEST XMAS
SPIRIT AFTER ALL IS ON THE
HIP.
You know Jock is one of our
budding poets and have contribu-
ted frequently to the poet's corner.
He carries a piece to the boss the
other A. M. and says this piece,
your lordship caused my girl's heart
to miss a beat. The boss says,
well you know one that 'cause we
afford to publish anything
that will interfere with our circula-
tion—and those are that.
My idea of a superman is the
guy who can light a safety match
on a cake of ice.
KEMP SEZ, IF HE KNEW
WHAT HE WAS GOING TO GET
FOR XMAS, HE WOULD KNOW
WHAT TO GIVE.
Candidate for the Padded Cell
The guy who don't fall out with
his sweetie before xmas.
Guy comes in the office raving the other day and I told 'im that there ain't much difference between him and a fool. Only a desk, he yells. 'An' so's your old man.
Cross word mama that off with a xmas horn.
FROM THE PRESS BOX BY WILLEY A. JOHNSON, JR. THE ALL AMERICAN "Wu Fang" Ward—don't
SELECTION
It seems that the All-American pickings fellows looked all over "Bumble" Brown of Virginia Seminary. He was not given mention in honorable mentions of the various selecters and pickers, which looks very bad for some of those fellows. Of course, it's true that the scribes can't see every football player in action, but as most of them said, they were assisted by a corp of conches, writers and experts, which should have been an important factor in placing every player in the country before them.
Anybody who hasn't seen Brown in action, have really missed seeing a fullback of the first water. Brown, one of the quiet, unassuming fellows can do and does everything required of a fullback. By no means does he carry out his assignments in a half-hand manner. He's far above the average and he's not of All-American caliber, there isn't a Chinese in China. "Bumble" is a crashing, hard bucking back that's hard to stop. He cracks the line with a zip and boots the oval with the rest. On the receiving end of a forward pass, he takes his place with 'the best' in the game. Brown's receiving of passes has been an important factor in the victories of Seminary and to leave him out of consideration entirely, is like placing Red Grange on the third team of the All-American selection.
Then comes Pindle of Hampton, there wasn't a better pivot man in the 1925 campaign than this sturdy Hampton griddler, though the C. I. A. A. All-Star committee did elect to place him on their second team. Pindle is one of the unstentious performers. He does not carry a great deal of flash and dash with him, but carries out his work above reproach, thus making himself eligible for a position on any all-star eleven.
In one of the most important games of the year, Pindle played rings around his opposing center, yet the latter was given first consideration. Pindle is there with the goods and it takes a good shot to beat him. Of course he got a position on some of the selections, which doesn't mean very much since none of them seem to cut very much ice.
"Wild Man" Lee placed on a second team—imagine such! Boy! Lee can play 'em ragged, silly and dizzy in the head and make 'em like it. That's the kind of tackle he is. Any time a footballer can go thru two seasons without losing a minute of actual play, carrying on to the end, figuring in every play that comes his way and figuring in a great number that goes the other way, is a player of real merit and sterling worth—well, that's Lee. Laugh that off. If a man like that doesn't deserve first place on any all-star team without a squabble, pray tell me who does.
And anytime a man like "Mel" Whedbee can be left off an all-star team entirely is beyond sensible reasoning. And anytime an unseasoned man like "Tick" Smith can be placed on a mythical eleven in preference to many who are far better, is also beyond sensible reasoning. Smith is a fine fallback, but you can see the green oozing all over him. Another year will really make him of all-American caliber. Julie Martin of Shaw is a far better choice than Smith and he was given second choice after a little deliberation.
Saw a little piece on Jack Dempsey talks on reducing. If there's one topic he knows anything "bout—reducing's it.
He has reduced his ring activities to an infinitesimal specimen of bacteria, whatever that is.
It's strange why the judges ask,
"Why do you want a divorce from
this woman," as if the bimbo wasn't
married to her.
Johnny Rose
Sat on a tack
Johnny Rose
Sat on a tack
Johnny Rose
Sat on a tack
Johnny Rose
Sat on a tack
A
Next time try
Dorsey's Meals
Prices same as the Jap,
Greeks and Chinamen.
544 NICHOLSON STREET
NORFOLK, VA.
Mount Vernon Hotel
JAMES M. HARRISON, Proprietor LAWRENCE NOBLE, Manager
Begs to Announce the Formal Opening of the
The hotel has been renovated and will be conducted as a first-class hostelry, catering to the general public. The name Wheaton is in honor of the late J. Frank Wheaton, of New York, Past Grand Exalted Ruler of the Elks. Prices Moderate—Batlis—Phone 24908
"Wu Fang" Ward—don't make me laugh! If he made the grade—well, he just didn't that's all. Ward is a mighty fine back but was kept back most of the time. His first one on starts were his best one performances during the year and after those he fell like huge drops of rain. Consistency counts, fellows, and Ward had everything else but. Be yourself, this is not inviting an argument.
TUSKEGEE, THE NATIONAL CHAMPS
Somebody has been kind enough to give Tuskegee the National Football title and on what premises, I fain would like to know. Of course, the rampageous Tuskegee Tigers have a brilliant record for the past three years, but what does that mean in this neck of woods. To be plain, the Pittsburgh American awarded Tuskegee the National title, as if that meant anything. We all can't help but admire Tuskegee and her line record on the gridiron. But Tuskegee's performance has been better than the Southland. How she would step up again trusses in these arts, we don't know. She would give a good account of herself, no doubt, but that is on the unavoidable side of the equation. How Tuskegee would go against Hampton, Howard, Lincoln, Wilberforce and West Virginia we don't know and until we do know, no one can justly award Tuskegee or any other school National honors until they have proved their merits in one or more inter-sectional clashes. Tuskegee's clean slate in the South is of no moment to followers of the game in the East and West. HA! HA! FOOTBALL STARS. Is a football star re. by a star? Is every individual who has played really genuinely deserving the honor? There are certain prime requisites that go into the making of a star and it's undeniable fact that a number have reached this so-called stardom through the efforts of others.
Football is a twenty-two man game, eleven on each team making two squads. Each squad is considered a team and team is considered a unit. Inasmuch as this is true, who's the star, one or more cogs in the machinery or the entire aggregate?
What could a star do without the co-operation and all around team play of the other ten men? How far far would any star's individual brilliance carry him without the assistance of the rest of the gang?
No star, regardless how great he was or is, can never do more than his team mates allow. When other stalwarts fall down on the job, the star is without his bearings.
Take Grange, if his team mates say, Big boy, you figure in the dollars now and you get far more than we do, so go on and earn your coffee and doughnuts and well cheer from the sidelines, where would the red head be? He'd be like a ship without a rudder. He'd be greater than his team mates. A star is no greater than his team. A star without the rest of 'em is no more than a mere player.
(UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT)
DEAN MOHR
DEVELOPING
GRID STAR
Wilkforce, O—The public has been wondering about the activities of Dean Mohr, Wilkforce University Athletic Director, during the football season. He has been developing one of the best basketball players in Ohio, in one Ralph-Turner the giant fullback on the Springfield High School.
Turner in his second year to ever to play football has been the star of the Springfield High School team. He is the second colored boy to play on the Springfield team. The first was Olie Gregory who played on the team about twenty years ago and later starred on Wittenberg College football, baseball and basketball. Turner playing his first year of basketball, will play the regular pivot position on the championship Springfield High, School basketball team.
Turner is seventeen years old, six feet tall and weighs 190 pounds. He is a junior in high school and expects to take his college work at Wilberforce and one of the large Eastern professional schools.
AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY IN GERMANY
The automobile industry in Germany employs 300,000 men, and its equipment is able to turn out 100,000 cars annually.
Rickets are due in part to lack of sunshine.
Attucks
Extends the season's
Greetings to our
World of Friends
MONDAY-TUESDAY
Bebe Daniels
IN-
"Lovers In
Quarantine"
WEDNESDAY
Surprise Special
THURSDAY-FRIDAY
Betty Bronson
IN
The Golden Princess
SATURDAY
Double-Feature Day
ADMISSION—10c—20c
'Lovers in Quarantine' Bebo Daniels Late
Bebe Daniels and Harrison Pike—there's a combination which should tickle the comedy-lover's public palate.
These two laugh-makers play posite each other in Bebo's Paramount starring picture "Lovers in Quarantine" "coming to Attacks theatre for a two-run on Monday next.
With who made the Bluebeard" "with Lucky Duck" directed the production which is written for the screen and send Martin and Luther Rowe from Ft. Teenynon Jesse's New stage success, "Quarantine".
The story is one of a ship's bride and in strange - honeymon - Bebe, as Diana Gordon, a dart little society miss who elopes with her sisters' flance. It's fast a start from start to fail. Alfred Lundy in Grey and big stage and screen-lavish appear in the cast.
Howard Sophs Wins Over Freshies
In the annual Freshman Squad more game at Howard University the latter class romped away with the big end of a 19-0 score after a crowd estimated at 3,000. The heavy Freshies were unable to fathom the dazzling speed and pass set by those higher up. The team was pushed out a tally, but they pushed them back and topped scramble without releasing a turn down. Francis Taylor, formerly of Fighting Bookers was in the Somore line, playing a credit game.
COLONIAL
3 SHOWS DAILY: 3:00-7:00-8:00
KEITH
Vaudeville
AND
Feature Pictures
PRICES: MATINEE-100
NIGHT-150
2ND BALCONY RESERVED FOR
COLORED PATRONS
WELLS
THEATRE
ALL NEXT WEEK
Adoplh Zukor and Jesse L
Lasky present
J. M. Barrie's
A Kiss For
Cinderella
A Herbert Brenon Production
—with—
Betty Bronson, Tom Moore
and Esther Ralston
A Paramount Picture
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
Hotel
news of the City of Portsmouth and Suburban Territory
ANOTHER EFFORT
PLANNER FOR
DAY NUISERY
November Campnag Failure
Place Institut's In Very
Embarrassing position;
Community Call To Help.
The Miller Day Nurser and Home Campnag failed during the November Camnag and only $1145.00 have been $1000.00 required to finance the趴ation during 1926 were raised. The操勸 of the Nursery is thereby reased as it will face a deficit $600.00 the 21st of January. The fact is the $100.00 have be raised by pledged otherwise during the month of Janu to maintain the Nursery through 1926.
As a temporary exped, the Board asked the Woman's Lawn organization that had for more a ten year supported the Nursery by proceeds of public entertainments to it to the rescue and furnish the Nurse with the money to tide it over until realize on the 1926 pledges and it there is an opportunity to conduct other canvases.
In response to this call of opener women headed by a Magnolia Johnson in planning a magnolia attraction, amusements, contests, confines and prices common to affairs. Refreshments, suppers, and a valuable thing has extended to all of the organizations an invitation to both them in making a affair a big loss. Information as to the service and the management can be by calling 2642. The merchants of the city asked to give articles that can be sold as prizes in contests and competition. In the public that the seventy-five years narrizing the Nursery are working longest women, desiring only opportunity to work and support them and much pride to ask an individual to their. Their earnings addon exceed dollars per week. Out of this is the rent from one and only one dollar per cent per week. Very often the businesses have less than two dollars in payment of a physician during as many as ten days.
the large number of colored children that die without having the attack of a doctor. These "mothers" will aid from an institution readily, if given the care. Because of the stress under whose women live they do not know that they are in the midst of poverty. An unpaid public knows that with an orchid garden they suffer for the want of heat, food, and the protection of health that the destructive temptations are when fellow power will mourn the death of a child, unless a Christian community to sustain the family until it is itself of poverty's grasp. A failure on the part of the government, the funds in the church open, will mean suffering in the poor under privileged children' s caseliness to many mothers. The management of the human institution to bring to a distress the needy and asks that the public send them as servants in God's help and the freely children as His guests. They ask that we accept you may possibly for them to serve the guests.
PERSONALS
Mrs. and Mrs. N. A. Edwards, of Green Street, Portsmouth, entertained five relatives and friends at a dinner party given honor of Miss Dorey Thomas. Those present included Mrs. and Mrs. Greenshaw, N. C. Mrs. Troftr, of Washington, D. C. and Mrs. Johnson Jr. of Norfolk. Mrs. Dorothy Murner left Tuesday for Philadelphia. She will reside with Mrs. Jesse King, formerly of Portsmouth.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Taylor, of Indi-
national Ind. motorsal here on their hone-
womens trip, visiting their sister, Miss
Judy, and their father, and un-
duly, Mrs. and R. M. A. Edwards.
Dr. C. C. Somerville was in the city
Monday,爵位 to Tampa, Florida, where
he under engagement to lecture.
CLUBS
DELTA-SUMA S. AND L. CLUB
The Delta, Signa Social and Literary
Club of Portsmouth and Jersey, pro-
duced by the University of Jersey, de-
cided the residence of Mr. Raymond Jon-
son. After the opening exercises
the managerial business was transacted,
and the following officers were elected for
the position: vice president, Daniel
Easter; attorney-at-arms; John Arrington;
secretary of Anneette, McCoy, treasurer, Jas-
son; treasurer, after which the meeting ad-
journed to meet at the residence of
Bradley Ward, Glassow street, Sunday
December 20th.
NATIONAL ART CIRCLE
The粗粗 met Thursday evening. December 10, at the home of the president. Mrs. Paddy Cooper, County street. On December 11, with the streets, at the home of Daniels Barnes. After business, the members served for an hour, at each meeting, then was served by the hostess to an adjournance.
GROVE FRIENDSHIP CLUB
Society, lust at the home of Mrs. Patty Mollard, refreshments were served. Those attending Mrs. Eleanor Ebble, Mrs. Paddy Barrett, Messrs. James Stroud, Herbert Boone, John Kelman, Noah Coleman, Daniels Barnes, Mme. Gladys White, Pearl Foulhard and Panny Diggs.
MRS. EDITH E. MARTIN
1234 Glennan Riseat
Agent and Correspondent
Phone 633
ORANGE ROOF SOCIAL CLUB
The club at the home of Mrs. Staten,
Pulaski street, December 10. Three
boys and a girl, true. The loaves
saved a daity repay.
IN MEMORIAM
In memory of our dear mother, Mary
A. Ashler.
To her, our love never forgets
to her bask, we shall never forget
those she has paid the cost. Sleep on
our mother's bed, we loved
her. Love loves you best.
CHURCHES
EBENZEL BAPSTEST CHURCH
Supt. J. H. Dunn opened Sukhay school
in 1910. He taught English and delivered a stirring german on the subject: "A World's Peace." At 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, he taught South Hill, Va., on a great summer on the subject: "How Should We Escape."
MT. VERNON BAPTIST CHURCH
Services were unanimously good. A us
sunday. The pastor, Rev. A. Gomer,
preached to us out of thefulness of his
heart from Joshua 46.2, subject: "The
Messiah." The Spirit was in愈痛.
Mr. Wendell C. Summerville, the younger
son of Dr. Somerville, preached a spherical
sermon from the theme: 'Reconciliation.'
At the conclusion of the sermon two persons
joined the church. Collection was
TRUXTUN
Miss Harriet Johnson, Dr. E. H. Penman, Dr. C. Baldall and Mr. J. Hall motorized to Richmond, Thanksgiving Day, to the Hampton-Union game. Mr. and Mrs. Brown and the son, Wade Brown, played in Lahonda Tucker, Mr. John Whitehurst, and Mr. Daniel Tucker will motor to Blackstone, to spend the holidays with their father. Mrs. Louvenia Hill, of 273 Columville avenue, left Saturday, December 19th. For Pendleton, where she will spend the holidays, Mrs. Whitehurst and the Trustum Athletic Social, Club held in regular weekly meeting at the home of Mr. J. H. Hollow, 178 Key Road. After the usual transaction of business a hearty discussion was entered into the subject, factoring facts were brought out by Master Morris Delahune, who opened the subject. At the close of the discussion a tasty repast was served by the hostess.
BOWERS HILL
Messie, James Edmond and William H. brown made some interesting remarks at school day, Mr. Edmond has recently returned from Philadelphia. He returned to the Grand Worthy Supervisor of the Love and Charity Lodge, spent Saturday night here, the guest of Mr. Jones Long. A dinner dinner was given Sunday in the home of Mrs. Muttie Smith Miss H. Brown, the Supervisor, were Mrs. Little King and family, Mrs. Otis Richardson, Harvey Jones, John and William Taylor and Areopheus Taylor.
YADKINS
MR. ANDREW AULK, DEAD
Mr. Aulk was born at the home of his sister, Mary E. Cuffe, in the vicinity of Deep Creek. Thursday morning, at the age of seventy-five years. He has been a resident of Gilmorran for more than 40 years, in incarceration in a font ferry between Gilmorran and Mount Point and other points along the river.
MT. HERMON
The Chover Leaf Art Circle met with Mrs. Viola Wilson, of Queen street. The previous meeting was at the home of Mrs. Ruth Stokes, of Hamilton avenue. The Teachers' Training Class met with Mrs. Mamie Royer, of Florida avenue. The class is making plans to present Rev. Modaana in a picture on Africa in the near future.
PROVIDENCE A. M. E. K. ZION CHURCH
SAL 11 n. in service, the pastor praced and坐诵学 sermon from Pa. 24.3, or from "Why We Should Go To Church." 7:39 service, the pastor filled his pub-
CHURCHLAND
while a number attended Sunday, Prophets were made for the Christmas express Monday, December 28. Christmas Express, Little's class reported the gift amount. Rev. Wm. Gordon was sent and made remarks. Rev. B. D. Diahoun preached at Bank Hill Church, Norfolk, morning and evening. Rev. Wm. Gordon, St. John Church, Portsmouth, His "The Prince of Peace." Jail Smith will spend the holiday visiting friends in North Carolina. Carrie Flynn and Mr. Powell, who spending St. Paul School, Lawrence are spending St. Mary's home at home. Wendy Weekly will have a new of in the family—a daughter.
Jennie Boswell, who was reported shortly inquiring.
m. December 27, will be the last
mary meeting in the year. Rev.
will preach us usual. The mis-
service follows immediately. Mrs.
Peton, president. Mrs. Mary
IN MEMORIAL
REV. H. L. BARCO
bselep December 25, 1916.
YLORSVILLE
I were insipire at the First Church. Sunday. Sunday school was hour, and the lesson was aaught. At 11 a.m. m. the pastor. H. Harris, praeced to an aunt. At 11 a.m. aunt. At 1 aft. good fight. At 3 aft. seekLittleJohn with his chapel and worshiped. At 3 aft. he undered his second special service youngest in the Valley; Next Sunny evangelist wizened of the in the person of Rev. Thomas V. of New Bern, N. C., pastor. Branch of Church of Old Saint Bap. portmouth. On Sunday night the by-circle present the passtor as a Christmas gift. The Athletic and Social Club held the celebration of Mr. and Mrs. baptism and the regular baptism engaged.
Theille Orchestra met at the residence, Bonnie Montgomery. Business once was transacted, after presentation, Mr. Montgomery left. Wednesday to appease holidays in Baltimore to spend time with friends and spend time in Philadelphia. Mr. Jones will leave for Charlestown.
RICHMOND
JOURNAL AND GUIDE BUREAU
Robt. A. Crump
1212 St. John Street
Richmond, Va.—In answer to our copy in this column last week which we asked the minister answer: Is skilling in life murder in the sight of God, and who is held accountable to God for those slain in war. Rev. K. H. Johnson, B. D. M. pastor of Sharon Martin Church, and answers in this manner: Since God's ways are not our ways and His thoughts are not our thoughts, for as the heavens are higher than our waves and His thoughts higher than our thoughts, it will be doubtlessly an exceedingly difficult task to answer our questions or lasting satisfaction your question. I am inclined to think that the taking of human life under any circumstance, whether justifiably or unjustifiably, violates the Divine flat: "Thou shalt not kill."
MUSIC MEMORY CONTEST
What should be of great interest not only to music lovers alone but to the entire city, is the music memory content as it is being planned by George W. Johnson, the University, which will be held at that school beginning about the first of next year. The content as planned will be for the students alone and prizes will be offered for the winners of the prize. The white have already been asked and many have promised to donate prizes which will be turned into management of the affair to be given the winners. Some, it is said, to have offered scholarships. On the right of the night the students will sine and play the classes from the old Masters, will be required to give the name and author of the piece. Mr. Webb says if his plans are carried out that night should be a great night for the students to have a great musical education value.
BOYS DIDEM CORPS
One of the most noteworthy things and the one that was the finest of all on a day that was crowded with big doings, in connection with the solemn celebration of the memorial services of the Elks, a drum company made up of boys running from the ages of seven to about fifteen years. These boys played with drums of both classics-bass and little drums-trumpets and flute, the city by storm. Being something new and unexpected, they just and the rhythm and step which with these boys played and marched the street. They were the center of attention and there is only one thing needed to make them just what they ought to be: a drummer. They were a leader, a musician, a Needy Freeman, the old drummer of the Municipal Band, and that is uniform. The city should have pride enough for this wonderful addition to its spirited array of community enterprises. It is believed that when the effort is made above will experience no great trouble in doing this.
GET 'FLOWERS' WHILE THEY LIVE
A few years ago some very thoughtful
people started want wait column called
'FLOWERS' to tell them this same
people who had given fone and
fathful service to the public, was remem-
ered and pleasantly surprised by pres-
ence.
OLIVE BRANCH
In loving remembrance of our son Maurice Mauger, who was so deep in 1822, the young boy has passed. A little while though thwarted, Remember, wait and love. Until he comes in glory, let me set above. Gone but not forgotten.
GILMERTON
Miss Lillie May Nixon Geraldine Smith and Mr. Roy Nixon, all of Norfolk, were the guests of Mrs. Lillie Hawkins, Sunday.
Miles Alderman Thomas of Norfolk, was
killed at his home in Norfolk. H. Greensay,
Saturday and Sunday.
PARKER-Gbss
Mr. Joseph Goss, of Philadelphia, announces the marriages of his daughter, Boulda Hough, to Mr. William P. Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Parker, of Gilmore, Va. The wedding took place December 23. Sunday school was largely attended on Sunday morning. The school is making rapid progress and the Christmas presents are being made. Rev A. S. Loomas preached two able sermon Sunday at morning and at night. At high services The Eagle Quartette of Fiddman Heights sang some wonderful Selections and there was a doct. by Mrs. Elizabeth Blount and her daughter, Miss Quita a number attended at the Holy Trinity Church Sunday afternoon and night. Rev. D. D. Wiggins, of Suffolk, preached. Rev. Crump, of Portsmouth, rev. Horton preached an excellent sermon. Sunday. The First Baptist Sunday School is making wonderful progress.
NORFOLK JOURNAL AND GUIDE
son. Among the few to have been remembered and blessed in this way is Mrs. Murguil L. Walker, M.Ellis O. Walker, Dr. Beatrice H. Thries and a few fellows. One other worker who has given luggage and threedriver to the public not only as a teacher in the public schools and an instructor in the dramatic art, but as a singer who has wilfully and unselfishly given her time and money to the arts, in season and out, with the wonder of God given voice that was here, for a score or more years.
Mrs. Fannie Payne Clarke, of whom we speak, is the last about to come into her own and will be partially recalled by the students of the third semester at Third Street Method II Church. It is to be a benefit and a splendid program has been arranged which the public is asked to come and give a tangible experience of the work well merited anything that the folks of Richmond may do for her at this benefit, Sunday, December 27 at 3:30 p.m.
The ever increasing popularity of young Aubrey B. Jones, who has for a long time been an officer and very prominent in Willamina Lodge Elks No. 11, in particular and Ridgman in general, of Willamina Lodge at which time Mr. Jones was elevated to the position of Exalted Ruler, succeeding James H. Ammons, who had held the position for several times. Mr. Jones came in favor of William Ammons, grew in favor in the sight of the members of the lodge because of his independence. As leading Knight under the regime of Mr. Ammons, Aubrey Jones some times found himself in the place of a lodge leader, and took exception to some ruling by the exalted Ruler, particularly when an appeal was made from the ruling of that officer, Mr. Jones was elected with a opposition and a strong opposition at this meeting were: Robert Coots, Reeleden Leading Knight; Stafford Jackson, Loyal Knight; Richard Egerton, Lecturing Knight; Jordan A. Jones, Secretary; J. W. Watts, treasurer; Willamina Lodge, Ware, Jr.; Ware James; James Walters, Tiler.
A Sacred Stone
Richmond, Va.—After preaching to a colored congregation at Sixth Mount Zion church here Sunday morning, Rev. R. Cary Montague (white), an Episcopal minister or connected with Old St. Paul's church, presented Sixth Mount Zion with a stone from the skull of Mount Zion in the Holy Land, where he has not included extensive travel. Rev. Montague's sermon was a graphic word picture of his experiences on his trip.
Franklin
MRS. MARY ASHE
Agent and Correspondent
All persons having news for the Journal and Guide bring it all or send it to the office of A. T. Tanner and Co. on Second Avenue. Montague, not later than 1 p. c., if your news happens, in his left out don't miss it. If not interested in it, I am only glad to send it for you.
Services at the Piney Grove Baptist Church were good Sunday. Rev. J. W. Baskell preached a strong sermon at 11:30 o'clock to the delphi of all his hearts. At 1:30 he delivered another sermon. Sunday morning about 6 o'clock the cottage gita of Mr. D. A. Holland, on Mechanicville street, was destroyed by fire. Just how the fire originated is unknown. Mrs. Minnie Perkins, who has been at the church since 1915, Mrs. Kelton Myrick Jenkins and little daughter, Doe, left Monday for Battil
STRANGE POWER!
Grace Gray De Long, "The Little White Mother", America's Illustrious Advisor says: "Worry and fear can cause distress, disease and discord—I can help you conquer this evil." If business, domestic, love affairs or health conditions trouble you write this beloved woman freely, frankly and confidentially—make request for information and advice pertaining her relief methods. No hurt nor harm can result and you may bless the mother. Address letter to:
MIAMI. FLORIDA
A Baby In Your Home
A mother and baby
WOOD AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE
Special Price for Special Merchandise
DIAL 1737-6
LEE AVE. & FIRST 5TH
PURSHTOWN, VA.
nose, Mk. after spending several days visiting relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Curtie have moved into their beautiful new home near Hays Spring.
Mr. and Mrs. the members of the Missions Society of the First Baptist Church and friends pounded Mr. and Mrs. Goodman, in Garden Street, Thursday night, December 17th.
Family Tapier, who has been confirmed as her bed for several weeks, is greatly improving.
Mr. Isaac Baker left Wednesday f or Philadelphia, Pa. where he will reside indiscretely.
Mr. B. Bookins spent Sunday in Burkitt visiting her aunt and Mrs. Phinamer.
Mrs. R. D. Lanter was called to the bedside of her mother, Mrs. Bowie, who is very ill at Winchester.
Mr. Bowie attended Baptist Church Sunday school and church are growing at 11:30. Rev. R. D. Lanter preached from Lake 2:34.11. This german was enjoyed by all his hearts. At night, Rev. R. M. Lewis preached a strong sermon
Rev. C. W. Moore, pastor of M. Zion Second Baptist Church, is rendering great service in Franklin At 11:30 the pastor preached from the doorway. His hearsen enjoyed a Christmas service as never before. Sunday night he preached from the text: "Thou Art weighed in balance and found wantin'. Two members were added to the exchuse of the Sunshine Band was held Monday night at M. Zion Second Baptist Church. Each child of the Sunshine Band received a nice prize for Christmas. Christmas saving tree will be held on Monday night. There was a program read by the seniors and middle classes Friday night at the Normal school. The attendance was very good. The parquet went to Denver Sunshine and since at the Second Baptist Church, of which Rev. R. L. Heck is pastor. The primary grades wondered a program at the First Baptist Church Tuesday night, before the direction He makes. G. Haleiws, M. Hawks. Sheldon spent Sunday in Drewsville in interest of the school.
NEW HAVEN
New Haven, Comm.-The annual meeting of the N. A. A. C. P. was held last Tuesday, evening in the spacious Odd Fellows Hall, where Dean Pickens, nationally known orator and educator, spoke to a vast assemblage.
Mrs. E. T. Butler, returned missionary from Hinterland, Liberia, W. A. Luehn, Ind, Mission, working under the National Baptist Convention, spoke at the Immunale Baptist Church last Friday evening to a fine crowd. Her talk was easy interesting and many-fine works also interesting and many-fine works of life work and every one was happily pleased with her work.
To the delight of his many little friends, Master Vernon Barnett, who has been continued to the New Haven hospital for some months, has been discharged from that in-
FLETCHER'S PLACE
FLETCHER'S PLACE
Also
Groceries, Tobacco,
Cigars, Cigarettes
AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES
1013 Chestnut St., Portsmouth
Child Should Know
Children, do you know that cash register receipt from Mosby's Pharmacy are valuable?
Valuable prizes given every Thursday night at 7 o'clock.
Gee, it's lots of fun bibbing for the prizes. Come out and sge.
GLASGOW & MT. VERNON AVE.
Portsmouth, Va.
John H. Corprew Funeral Director, Undertaker and
Lady Assistant in Attendance
90 Shawnee St.
Morton St.
Portsmouth
who fail to sleep, soothing bereavement
with quiet sleep, prompt attention
with the delicate Dale
Up-to-Date Equipment
Day and Night Answered
Phone 1282-
THE NEW YORK INSTITUTE
SANTA MIDY
MUSEUM OF BLADDER
GUARD YOUR HEALTH
SANYKIT
PROPHYLACTS for MEM
Attends Ural Protection
After Intensive Fracture
Large Tube No. Kit (14) II
Clarke Lab. Laboratory
Jenkman St., New York
For Circuits
EDWARD B.
—DEALS
WOOD AND GENER
Special Price on Cord Lots of W
DIAL 1376-J
LEE AVE. & FU
Hutton, and gave a birthday party last Monday in honor of his 4th anniversary. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Barnett are very pleased to have him home, after a long absence.
Mrs. Herbert Jones, of Chapel Street, left last week for Summit, N. J., where she will remain over the holidays.
Miss Curtte Tribbett, of Foot street, had as he, week-end guest, Pauline Vaughn, of Cambridge, Mass.
The Campaign Fund Drive for the Rozer's Trade School, has been extended for another month in an effort to get the full quota of the amount wanted.
East Rock Lodge No. 141, I. B. P. O. E. of W. held their memorial exercises at the St. Paul Union Church, last Sunday. Rev. Jackson, pastor, a member of the order, preached a helpful and forceful sermon, driving home many truths. Rev. J. B. Pharre, pastor of Immannel Baptist Church, made a short trip to New York City a few days ago and visited a few of the members of his church. Mrs. Jno. A. Bowman of 95 Webster street, has gone to spend the holidays in Atlanta, GA, as the guest of her brother and his wife, Mrs. W. J. Anderson. Kate Fletcher, of Orchard street, former president of the N.H. High School, in the city visiting friends and relatives. He is a student at Lincoln University, Edgar Campbell is in the city for a few days after being in Chicago for the last few years.
Mrs. G. B. Mayo, of 121 Dwellw
venue, will leave soon for parts
of Virginia where she will remain
over the holidays, returning about
the first of the year. She is the
popular wife of Mr. G. Bep Mayo,
leading Guide booster.
Rev. S. G. Spottswood has left
the city for his new pastorate at
Wilmington, N. C. His many
friends are hoping for him great
things in his new field.
Prepare For Those Cold Days—
We can furnish you with
Wood Stoves, Oil Stoves,
Stove Pipe and Elbows, also
Hardware, Paints for or
Wall and Furniture. Give
us a Call.
Going out of tiny business—all
sold at Half Price
H. H. Myrick & Co.
Dial 2366
Portsmouth, Va.
Effingham and County Su
W. M. GROGAN
Funeral Director
and Embaliner
Hearties and Carriages for Hire
Notary Public—Automobiles
823 LONDON STREET
PORTSMOUTH, VA
Mason Printery
1501 COUNTY STREET
Printing
Of All Kinds and Public Type
Writing
Prompt Service - Hensonable Phones
Work Council and Delivered
PHONE 6651
Next To Home SunshineCafe
817 HIGH STREET
PORTSMOUTH, VA.
Meals Served in 1-A
Style at all Hours
At All Hours
Beauty Parlor
TRY
TRY
PORO SYSTEM
OF HAIR DRESSING
It's the First-Class System
Scalp Treatment, Facial
Massage. Preparations for
the Skin a Specialty. See
Mme. Hettic Hair
927 County St. Portsmouth, Va
Life Dreams' Waltzes
The outstanding hit of the season
Voral 40c
Piano Ward Roll $1.00
All Mail Orders Promptly Filled
T. J. Harris Pub. Co.
529 E. Gay St.
Columbus, Ohio.
KNOXIT
PROPHYLACTIC
Is a safe, efficient, dependable preparation. No prescriptions necessary. Why not be cautious. $1.10 at all druggists.
F. HODGES
MER IN—
SPECIAL MERCHANDISE
Hand, Country Produce a Specialty
FIFTH ST. FORTSMOUTH, VA.
Most Cherished
among the Gifts bestowed by the
Passing Year
is the memory of the pleasant relations
with those whom we have been
privileged to serve.
And so it is most sincerely
that we wish you a
Merry Christmas
and a
Happy New Year
PORO COLLEGE
PORO HAIR AND TOILET PRODUCTS
HERE'S FLAG CONTEST
BRAZIL
—The government has offered a prize of $125 for the best design for a South African National flag
YOU SHOULD BURN
ORIENTAL LUCK INCENSE
IN YOUR HOME
ORIENTAL
LUCK
dense
This incense was used in all places of worship in ancient d. y.a.; it works with two-burner theodine of binum planets. A boiler inside the box will tell how powerful it is and how to use it. Made in Cinnan, upper Egypt, the
ORIENTAL
LUCK
Incense
This income was used in all places
of the world and in
client d x y z i j
work with two
the zodiac of his
own phoenix. A
box will tell how
powerful it is not
how to use it
Made in Canaan
upper Egypt, the
city of Jacob.
Size box, 4x2½" price $2.00
SEND EMAIL
WRITE ONCE
STOP ASTHMA
IN CONFORT
Choking, Wheezing, Gasping
and Short Breath
If you have a cough from Choking,
Wheezing, Gasping Asthma or Catarrh,
you will be glad to learn that your suffering
can be ended and that you can
supply All Your Needs immediately.
I want to send you a full size $1.00
bottle of Florence Formula absolutely free.
Users commonly report this issue
with twenty-four hnits. No obligation if
you are satisfied to tell other sufferers--that's all I ask. W. H. SHEARER
Dept. 56A A, 2233 Grand Avenue
Kansas City, Mo.
A Baby In Your Home
Magic Stripping Powder will give you a clean, healthy shave without using a razor. Will allow you razor bumps and pimples from your face. Get it from your drugstore or department store, or send us 20 cents in stamps for a gift. Powder will multiply, package paid, cough for 15 shaves.
THE SHAVING POWDER COMPANY
Savannah, Georgia
No More Gray Hair
Lariseuse
Hair Coloring
makes it a Lustrous Black
Hair Coloring
one application.
$15.00 FIRSTAID
Codefor. Mfg. Co.
DEPT 2.
8508 OLIVE ST.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
TARIEUSE
No More Gray Hair
Larieuse
Hair Coloring
makes 1 & Lustrous Black
hair in 16 inches and the
application.
$1.15 FIRSTPAID
Godefroy Mfg. Co.
DEPT 2.
8500 O. L. ST.
ST. LOUIS BO.
TARIEUSE
FEMALE TROUBLES
Write For
FREE BOOK
New Treatment
Proves Successful
If you suffer with FEMALE TROUBLES
such as creatinine Pain, Pain in the lower part of your
Your Stomach, Beating down Pains, Pain in the chest,
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If you have that type of pain, you should
you down feeling so common to stomach. If you
have that type of pain, you should
even the right hair have more thickness and shade.
You may BE MAY BE WELL
AND STRONGER THAN YOU MAY BE.
J: Just send your name and address to TBH
K: Send your name and address to TBH
and they will send you a free booklet describing
health and happiness to so many others
and happiness to so many others
and happiness to so many others
—not patient unkind. Write it down.
territory
At a height of 1000 feet, one may see an object 36.36 nautical miles at sea.
Sale of Dresses
2 for $298
for both
Wool-Finish Serge
SIZES: 32 to 53
Bust
NEWEST FALL STYLES
MONEY BACK BUST ANTEE
Just to make cataloged custom-
wonderful dresses for the price
of one, we offer offered. Both
dresses are made of strong woven
wool and finished with Dye.
near postal script in the new cost effect with work
and postal script in the new cost effect with work
strings. The other is enveloped with silk and is
suitable for oil literature and for year around wear.
SEND NO MONEY. Collections are delivered payable
only $25 and a few delivery charges. If not
paid, the collection will be charged to the
Nevan Johnson Co. Dent, T2-7416. CHICAGO
Do You Have Neuralgia?
Why be miserable, when this plaster will quiet the pain?
The severe suffering, that sharp pain that sometimes is felt with neuralgia, can be quickly relieved by the simple and harmless use of Johnson's Belladonna Plaster. It helps to quiet the pain and cests so little. For the relief of bacchuse, kidney, turtle troubles, cramps, pains in the chest and local pains in any part of the body. You will find that they give added support to the muscles, resting and gently rubbing the weakened parts, due to the way in which the muscles move while the plaster remains in place. At the same time the medicines in these plasters are effective. Just ask your druggist for the famous plaster with the Red Cross made, by Johnson & Johnson, New Brunswick, N. J., U. S. A.
A Baby
of
Your Own
if you yearn for that
tiny area reaching up
to your knees and
loves life--if your home
seems empty and lonely due to the absence of
your home, then you need a new
look which is being sent Free to thousands
of children women.
Baby book contains the use of Nurture 'Berry
Big' Geospand, a simple Home Treatment which
women all over the country praises for its
attracting toxic influence in raising functional
The charm of motherhood is the greatest treasure a woman may possess and she owes it to her heart to learn what this little body reveals. No charm is too beautiful. Just your name and address to
THE NERVANO COMPANY
323 New Nelson Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
Pep-Elixo
Tastes Good & Ace Quickly in
Dyspepsia
Heartburn
Nervousness
Rheumatism
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Dyspepsia
Heartburn
Nervousness
Rheumatism
Stomach
Trouble
Swollen
Intimidity
Sleepiness
Nausea
Saline or Modify Akin,
Hippea, Blotches, Flares,
Nerve Pain,
Irritability
Klimps, Bladder Trouble,
Bliston,
and many other ailments due to
Constipation
If your dealer cannot supply you, give us his name and address and we will mail you a copy.
KING MEMORIAL
Dept. 47-F
N. Louis, Mo.
ost Cherished
PERUSE Asim ySTy rigs mrt ee 4 eee “OY RRA eee yaa aN BEGOIDN od £POE SS MON ROTC RSS ARSED BD
CRI re I Sf i 1 NORFOLK JOURNAL ANT GUIDR i seorstcisn ‘ ei Nee a
pe Ss 7 Tos ia ple ee Rie! a To SRS EE a RT
Bepseanis x pt TRCN TLIC URC ONCON CUE UCTN NCVER TUBA INS ET AON TR ITT EN TA OA TIAL EVE ICT Ta
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SUFFOLK
=— AND SURROUNDING: TERRITORY =
Rees OO i Re $
Gift Suggestions At
# 9@
GHENRY'S |
Gut-Rate Sundry Store |
FE JOE M. COPPEDGE, Mhotegropher, Mere FE |
Victrola and Six cca (Gimr or rach magmenie, This svife wo
pert tr at a Maced ch ieautak osed Candy an Welt aper.
Pee roe ae ST at lane ie uit aeiny ethers How foraet er
“se lar wale
Paneer ie atactate Sorin) Merier, Dap it stem
¥ i JOE AT GHENRY'S:
8 (Sext doar to Maen anid
phono 2198 SEL Sekai Suge Vieni |
ae ee: eg
LO PF oO fBe
As EY) 21 0, Be
pea ON RIS
FE BEN
ee Se CC
nibh eet A he Sinn bse b4,
" W. G °
~Aimas Greetings
~ We take this opportunity of extending
to our Clients and Friends our very
best wishes for a
Merry Ximas
and :
Happy New Year
TIDEWATER FAIR ASSOCIATION
INCORPORATED)
CROCKER AND BOYKINS
- UNDERTAKERS
(INCORPORATED) 7
W. H. CROCKER
Real Estate Broker
NANSEMOND DEVELOPMENT CO.
x CINCORPORATED)
BREED PAAAARaRRARDA
oe Gee CA.
{ Suffalk,:Va.—-The.Colden barber-
shop: force, led by Mr. Colden, anal
Followed: by Messrs Hicks, Evans,
tooke-a day off the other day, ard
pat sitn Norfolk, on business.
‘No ‘one knows the nature of their
‘busitiéss: | And. no one cares, since
icy “are readers‘of the Guido.
\s':you know that the “Kinz
Sut? -bakber shop, has, removed
from’ its ‘old place at 360 to 340,
|diagonally:across E. Washington
Istveet, arid the proprictors, Messrs.
Barnes and Hans await you. $ do.
Other ‘first class barbers are with
hime =
“Mr. and Mrs. James. Evans, 16
‘Bute street, who have been ill for
‘some time, are somewhat improved.
Mr, J! H, Eure, who has been
speriding, several months with his
son in Philadelphia, Pu., returned
Sunday : morning. “Too cold up
thete for me,” he says.
Mrs, Sallie Roberts, of Bute St,
fs at hoine.from Atlantic City, N.
Jato spend the winter.
‘Mrs. Alphonso Eley, of Kill,
Va, spent Sunday in the city, at
tending thé funeral services of \Uhe
‘lute Rey. Wilkins. :
"Me. J. W. Richardson, president
of the Phoenix Bank, is spendicy
the holidays on one of his farms ir
Dinwiddie county, hunting. hi
rents, and all other good thinsz:
upon which he can get his hands
‘The Phoenix Bank is a great
snecesz. It ranks highly among
the best in Tidewater Virginia. It:
Christmas Savings accounts. ar
over $10,000 this year, Its patror:
‘are among both coloced and white
The president, cletks, and | th
Board of Dircetors ace ull busi
ness. people. 1
“Paylor and Jones” send tect
ings to all their customers andjen:
er friends in this columu-this week
‘They ave among the best tailors
pressers. and cleaners in the city
They are two of our very bis
young business men. ‘They are p
tronized by both white and cole!
See their card of greeting:.
““O'Henvy’s” is with us agai
with all his. drug sundries and oy
er good things witit Me. Joo 1!
Coppedge, manager. Sez O'li:nrs”
ad on this page., This store i.
worthy of all, patronage finite
people. See “Joe,” next to fw
DMJ. Fe JORDAN
Silk sepesenttfe
‘PHONE a6
Office: 148 ‘Tynes Sirvet
Lt
nix luenks,
A The Midway Colossal Motel, Mr.
AU. G. Packer, proprietos, asks your
attention, Ste ad, ‘The Montiel
ly Cafe. near the race truck on
Norfolk Blvd, will sopn Ket you
Krnaw about itself ‘
CARD OF THANKS
We -extend our’ mbet sincere
thane’ nadegraditunte tf cur many
[iriends who so very kinjlly assisted
Hus during the long illness, and Che
‘death of our dear Willig, | We
[most espieially Uiank Dr, Renite
| Mendez, who so carnestjy ant skill:
ius fought until there was
life.
bo Mike Wiehe enor ‘and Sons.
Slit dha tre A ae coer Sane aa
‘The Curerad service | uf the kite
Rev. We TL. Wilkins, db Boston,
who died December i wa eat
Gueted at the St tai Teaptist
Chureh, Boston, Surat Uae 29, hy
Rev. Mr. Vann, pasts o? the Mis:
sour burch at Kilby Va of
Which he was 4 faitivel mente,
Beautiful solos, and thang cuadel
ences were sung, tind, cane From
mary friends, His pistor save
feautifal picture of his svwcet, Tite
Interment wae in Resemant: Cenis-
fag. Croker sad Eegkiny fun-
Cal discctecn. Hin Gye brothers
eon Waris county, Ne Co and
Kees W, M, Grtint, of South’ Nov:
fall’ attended. }
td
| SHSSIONARY MBETING
‘the president, Mrs, Annie Hol:
land. of the Womans Home and
Foreign Missionary Gonvention of
the Christian Churehj held a Hay
jvest Home. Gleaning® meeting xt
‘Zion Ciistian chore} on the 28th
Fane speakers were, Miss Blanche
Johnsun, of Newport News, Va. on
SiVenan's Fist,” Mfrs. Leg urs
Hodes, on “Home Missions” Mrs
ii A. dordan, “Foreign diissions”
Thice Trea Sufolk were Mesdames
Bela Larker, D, Daughtry, Bd
na Chatman gnd Mrs. H. A. Jor:
dan. ‘Phe wud offering, $10. The
Rey, J. B, Joues is pastor.
WAVERLY
| Waveriy. Var dvs, Bact Seutt wh bs
lg er furs: Me wg
Seige be Suering trom the cee ot
Goin than sine. Ani Caesar a
fecctinwe tw impos, “Sunday school of
ther Pst Tpit] Chuseh. wae ell ate
fete tele ama pups ane bere
paving Cor" thf Christians Trew exer
ves whics with be eka
ener 26. erence ot the. ilies
Jit Carle wry inert,
factory ess KH conn, preach apie
| Hones, Vas ‘the Somay School Vis
eovevened with ne Byrew Church, Sunlay,
|Wcemier 20, at pe ane Miss Pauline
[sdacheyar ronreschted Wethel Chureh: Mis
ie Freeman nresented Union Chapel:
ive arta Rees. Bane and Mis
ie Sone pe pete te Pot
nc enh Ae Ml Ht, Me
Wk ‘Maton sf evs 2 Te Ano a
Lecantoad tlie mueetifas. "Cue irninte ix progeeer
ing uae eee fe Me
\iiekorsun. Tie Willing Workers Cll
Linc wath ess flary Ke Hlaeri Thurs
| ates. aay a athe Si ecm i
[the ulfie af aeperal plese, Si 3
Het Clark surf her alot resent
[Sy lie Prepon te vecateries #1,
1. i Anthuny greavied ut Bi, Bprew. ost
‘sunday. tssinye for his text, 1 Car, 21.
‘sRtiows Lucy ahd Ha Kae Wood arrived
SHecay ie sonfel the Buidays with thee
criche sirs haley Wo
Te stford, Ve-—The Happy Hearts
Social Clu: pruet gt the hume of
Miss Florine Nicholas, Friday night
‘December Uf After the business
‘session, the jmimines and guests
decorated difiaz, rar and served
ia delicious repast oF ainbrasix, cake
land wine. “Mis. X. dohason was
jealled to Nepivik “sies week te a
tend the funjza! of her sister, Mrs,
[Levy Thomskor, whieh was held at
Bethel Chureh, Sursiay, December
8. Rev, Listiter officiated and
Mes. Lave | satya solo. Mrs.
ithree: stan vy, ore sister and 3
‘brothers. ire, famaie Sutton, of
New Jersey} Rev, and Mrs. Lassi-
lter and a fient mewstred to Bliza-
jbeth City, Sunday aitereoon, Rev.
[Williams mdtored £. Osk Hill San-
ity. to brs hel st ths church he
jpsstone there,
iors these
| JACKSON
sit Mier Maky dune Getatch are ill
SMe. Sutein Mutter, ater mes teens
|reat ites. thakas Fedwcety onal Nev. Wal
tage tf backson. ns annie rive.
jnorty at tee font FeflesIfall,Soaa
IVANHOE
‘the thicd qzarterly confer:
ines of Fetimhoe cnet was eid 37
‘fusion Chapel A. 3B. Chereh,
hove. Fries Va, fiveember Hk
1935, Rov, T. W. Cotten, PB. pre-
sidinge, Devotional service was Gu
‘tasted by the privat! pe cider and
tire. J, & Taylors abies, Taylos
was deeied eerste. Cory ene
couraying remusice “= ¢ “ade by
the elder, “After che of the
conference the ea tach an able
sermon, AM >. were, ocd
eer Oh Pes
DAVIS US LINE
aameen
Portsmouth - Suffolk
suet BOUND
sare eave Arrton
Pertimouth Drivers Bata
Tram. BHOAM, Se aM
AGES ERAN SS5 8M
flea: See fom. "Gang
twee Ter SaRe
EAST. BOUND
Love Leave dreiné
Sefoth Drivers Pertsmenth
WIEALM. 0AM, Jolt a
TaeP AM, LPM, “ao Pa
AGP b:60PM, eo.
000 PM. IOASPLM 1abPL
F STATIONS
Zereanauth—cor, igh and Ornwtord wi
cere, weakens Soa hele eae
For Service Go To The
MIDWAY COLOSSAL HOTEL
Ihc. PARNER, Veo.
sor 122 65 Comer fatto and Bast
Wesnlaclon sree
Someta Diner on Sanday
Seas AAT ileus
owns 16 ihr scart on DAY
SUFFOLK, VIRGINIA
GREETINGS ~
Wishing you a Merry Christmas
and a Proscerous New Year. We
thank vou for your patronage of
the past, and gratefully solicit
yours of the future,
We are yours for the best serv-
ico
Taylor and Jones
118 BE. WASHINGTON St.
Recital At Manassas
i Industrial School
Manassas, Va., Dec, i—Mr,
Stanley Brouks, lyric tenor fram
Washington, D. C,, entertained the
Manassas Industzial School with a
very colorful recital. Dessite the
Jinclemeny-of the Weather, , many
patrons snd the student hody filled
the school auditorium and were
leaptivated by the volume and
geulity of Mr. Brooks’ voice, In ad-
dition lo thea:tist’s cantribations,
Miss Almira Streets, uecompanist
lund director of music at the Manis.
tie industrial’ School, arvanged
some excellent numbers that were
rendered by the famed Double
Quattette and Gitt's Trio of the
school. ‘This support as well ts
the ‘main progiam rendered the oc-
feasion ‘memorial to the Musi
pore in Manassas and vicinity.
ph ella a
WINTON
bac RMIT at ee a aie
Sch Glow Chub, under the direction uf
tse Tay i Yecten are eral ft
trek nt Whaieellfe Vee The Mart re
ive several seietion tat iy
Ja the, court fone Windior, Ne Cs
Soe Baie Garin oan vale oe
Sturdy: wn aeeount othe death fh
ste who. ced in New dersey.*Mia
vie Reene and Ale, Talli Niekews
sre ih Sort font Soveday sine te
Elviotman chopping hacer Erest Whe
ee at aurtreiore: Ne Go. wat Oe
forskcut es We Aiba froin Moyster
TMs Salle te Werf ety Wlatan
ce facines tax wink, "Mn Beat
Mace sea Aloe Swe atte wor
North ent Satay Aloe sh Kei
sea ay Nol Satara. *The Lau
Iselonney tal unter thease
Miss Chaat Weaver ill give pera
ithe hid sell sation December
2 foe ae pure uf helping fori a
ion ‘Bach pra th and pay shu
itp tor mame African op ett the
‘sian schowte tw tale. 2Cet the
{fournat aid Guile thie wed asl
Pee te Maa tones Prot, Bees wil
teeny tries year, Aa
wht Ati
hide heli pwnd the bly
SALEM
Salem, Va.—Rev, 'T. W. Coitin.
D:D, the presiding officer of, the
feurtiy district, held his third
quarte:ty conference of Beth:] A.
M. B, Church, Salem, December
The conference was well attended.
Ail reports were good, Owing: tn
4:¢ short quarter we only raised fo,
all sai poses $287.68, Sunday fore:
Ijon Elder Cotten was xt his best,
He preached a wonde:fa) sero,
He chose for his text Romans 1:
24, 23. His subject was, “God's
Lave." Rev, Shaw, the pastor, is
marshalling «his little force on
Pe
—__+—____
-| MURFREESBORO
| ‘Murfreesboro, N. C.—The Mur-
ifieesboro Bridge has been complet-
Ig ‘and is naw opzned to tratie, ‘The
fold bridge has been torn down and
hauled off. ‘Tourists need no longer
idread narrow bridge hitherto used,
for it hus been replaced by. seton-
did steel brickge.
Mr. Alfred Law-enee: made a
short Grip te Norfolk last (Satur-
tay.
A delightful program was given
hy the Willing Workers Sunday
school clase and ethers, Several
selections wers sung by the Come
iQuartette. and the Murfieesboro
jJanior Quartet. A large crowd
gathered to witness the program.
The program was under the diree-
tion of Miss Claudie Reid.
Misses Irene Royster, Albesta
Txe and Madge Murghy, trachers
jin the graded school, have returned
ome foy the holidays. School clos-
je for Ehren, December 2d
‘There will b> a program rendered
Jat the graded school auditorium on
January Ist. We urge all citizens
to be present,
IN MEMORIAM
In memory of my husband, Mack
Rowson, who died December 21st,
1924.
Although you've gone before,
"This is my earnest prayer:
Don't erown him, Lord of Joris,
"Till J, your wife, am there,
| Mrs, Maria Rouson and family.
|Columbix, N.C.
me gay
EDENTON
| Edenton, N. C.—Mrs, Nellie
‘Sawyer and dasghter, Miss Vir-
Irinig Sawyer have returned from
‘Naw York City, where they spent
the Semmer. A reception was giv-
len in honor of Rev. and Mrs. J. M.
Branch on Tuesday night at’ the
home of Mrs, Eva Bembry. *Rev.
J. M. Branch aad family left on
Wodnescuy Ys.ng for New Hav-
co Conn, wh ors be was appointed
ty tor of Vacick Memorial A. M.
fe. 2, “heh, "Mes. Wettie: Rem:
bre why heg heen ill for, several
months, died at her residence in N.
Oakem street. Her funeral wi.)
be Sunday. este taal
+
PLYMOUTH
Plymouth. N. C.—Rev. C. S.
Burke, of Ede*>n, NC. has been
‘called to pastor Now Chapel Bap-
tist Chureh, Rev. Burke formerly
pastoied in Virginia. He was ac-
companied by “#38 wife and they ure
the guest of Mr.and Mrs, W. H.
Ellis. °Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Ax-
um, of Rocky Mt, spent Wednes-
day in town, °Mrs, Cottie Lee has
returned from New Yark City.
*Mrs, Kate Moore, the wife of Mr.
Samuel Moote died Tuesday very
sunddenly. Mr, Willie Moore. san
Jaf Washington, D. C.; Mr. Glaute
Forrest, brother, of Baltimore, Md,
were present at the funeral serv-
ices which were held on Friday.
Rev. John_ Long officiated. *Mr.
‘Thomas Exum arrived Sunday
from New York City. *Lawyer P.
IH. Bell and Mr. George Smith at
tended the Grand Lode of Masons
which convened at Rocky Mount,
N.C. Mrs. Minnie Cherry: re:
turued Monday. from New York
City and’ Mr. ‘Thomas Cherry, ol
Norfolk, Va. °Mr. W. II. Holland
Dr. B,C. Cooks and Mir. John Ber-
rv, of Bligabeth City, NL C., were
the guests of Lawyer’, i}. Beli on
Senay. °Miss Otelin’ Cobb has
returnel from Philadelphia, Pa.
SLuwye; P. Hl. Bell uecompanied by
Messrs. d. 4. Smith and C. 8, Stew:
luct motorsd to Washingtoa, N.C.
Sunday. *Mr. Willie A. Nichols
Frotuyned Mor lay. after spending
the week-end at’ Norfolk, Vit 2
the quest of his mother, Mes, Ruby
Fisher. °Mes. Robert’ IH. ‘Taylo;
unived Saturday from Phila:
hia, Pa. He was called home on
aceoent uf the serious iflness of
his wife, Sirs. Eva G. Taylor. ®Miss
elew Lee left Friday for Washing.
ten, D.C, where she will: spend
the’ holidays, “The monthly. re-
port of the High School shows only
the “names of Misses Blondena
Nichols sind Beatrice Spruill ov the
honor roll, An average of 90 is
requited on both conduct and sub-
jects to make the honor roll, °Mre,
Delta A. Allen spent the week-end
here asthe guest of her mother,
Mes. Sesan Webb, °Dr. and Mrs
L. S. Mitchell and Lawyer and Mrs
P. HE, Bell motored to Williamston,
IN, Ci, Monday and vers Une ues!
Uf Mr. and Mas. Alen. “Phe fol-
lowing students. of Elizabeth City
State Norma} have returned home
fur the holidays: Misses Olivi
Johnson, Margaret Heath, Ailene
Nclliy and’ dete Kine
WILLIAMSTON
GIN the te Ore
Whitley, a member of Queen St.
‘Baptist Church, Norfolk, died here
Decomber 12, sind her ftineral_ was
preached att’ Mt. Shiloh Buptist
Chureb, December 13. She was
buried in the Odd Fellows’ Ceme-
tery. Rev. G.‘T, Tlill officiated,
Mrs. Georiia Minson, a. member
‘of Ceday Landing Baptist Church,
[Bertie County, died here at the
home of her mother, December Li,
Jand her funeral was preached on
1th at the residence. Her remains
jwere ‘interred in the L. and C.
Cemetery.’ Rev. G. T. Mill, of:
ficitted. Mes. Minnie Douglass
lurid her daught::. Miss Lassie
Douglass, of Washington, N. ¢.,
attended ‘the funeral of Miss ‘Def.
ara Whitley. Mrs. Alice Harris,
of New York City, is home to spenl
‘cristinaes with her sister, Miss Re-
beeen Hyman and her brother, Mr.
jand 3.8. G. W. Ayman, on Hyman
trod. Rev. and Mrs. A. Haw-
Rinafiote Feiday morning for Pet-
ersblny, whore they will spend the
‘Christmas holidays with Mrs.'Haw-
kins’, parents, “Several teachers
jof difiecent parts of the country
‘were’ in town Saterday to attend
the extension Work “Association
Eondieted by Rex. J. T. Doles, ot
ithe State Normal, Etizah:th City.
‘Among them were: Miss Hattie A.
Beet, of Plymouth; Miss If. 2.
Maughter, of Rover; Prof. F. N-
|Modica, Robersonville. 2A _ large
‘audiener greeted, Rev. ES, Ei:
warts, the newly’ appointed pastor
lof Williams Chapel A. M. Zion
Chureh, Sunday. He preached 1
[very jawervul sermon from th e
schiect: “Walking With God.”
1
jRev. Branch Leaves
| Edenton For North
| Kenton, N. C.—Dr, J. M, Branch
pastor for two years of Kedesh a.
ME. Z, Chareh, has been trans:
Tersed to Variek’ Memorial A.M.
[H. Zion Church, New Tiaven, Gunn
[Revs Branch's pastoringe in this
leity has met with much. szecers
‘nod only in the church itself, bu!
[ts the community. As a mark of
appreciation for his. services: ven-
ldeved here, Dr, Braneh and Mrs.
|]. Branch were gussts of honor al
[3 reception extended them im Tues:
diay evening, December 15, at_the
[home of Mis. Eva Bembry, East
Chureh Street, from 9 until’ 12:30
‘clock, given “hy tie members of
the choir, trustees and others, ‘The
ucsis were richly served punch,
‘chicken salad, eclers, pickles, e:ae-
lkers, ie cream and eake.
| Those present were Rev. P. Me
Donald, pastor of Pleasant. Grove
Station; E. Hl. Halsey, chairnian of
trestze board, Kedesh station; Mr.
T. S, Sharp; Mrs. Besie Love, Mrs
Aggie Taylor, Mes. E. H. MeDon-
ald, Mrs, F. 8. Sharp, Mrs. J. A
Luton, Mrs. ALO. Freeman, Mrs
IE. C. Bdnex, Mes, Eva Bembry, Dr
land ‘Mrs. J. M. Branch. Quitea
|namber of those present made ex-
[pressions of tepret al the suing of
Hii. and Mrs, Branch, both — of
ikon appeared to feel very mu!
[aece,-ad hy the profuse expression:
lof jraixe. They in turn. declared
they hated to leave their friend
eee,
| ry =
CREEDS
Creeds, Va—Rev. C. D. Griffin,
ef Berkley, preached ‘a soul-stir-
ring sermon here Sunday. The
large congregation which attended
seemed «leenly touched by his snir-
vital appeal. Sunday was Mission-
‘ary Day. The sermon was preach-
eal by-Rev./W. H. Bell. oilection
was raised by Miss Eva Lawrence
‘and Miss Lillian Porter. Sunday
school was opened at 10 o'clock by
the Supt., Mr. Jesse Smith. Th
osson was interestingly discussed.
NOTICE!
| Mr. G. W. Johnson, who has
heen giviny tie oid eale cinrer
several. years on New Year's Day
will be out of the eity at that time,
He will donate ts them in money
on his return,
imi t
Do. | ge \ i
ine i | Bee | d
Be a A: alte y i !
ae Phe angus . et LaF N
ery / ee 2 ee ba PZ , KO
BL Yo VRS A @ IS
ee aie RR A Yifex. NUE ISS
- Ae i on hy Oh bo ye Wir
OO A eR ka aN |
LU ar an? er
ty eet Be Es Wal E
: HN gS A % S At & Mesh #
Ae Gl Gy yc) Baa. |
a) Ry i ane ING 2 we i
. fi SARIN HO | Laan 7 eS |
iad Ja plete? NON ue ol ie Manet fi My
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ae REE) ied iB he |
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: - ;
= FOR YOUR WIFE-YOUR CHILDREN--YOUR DEPENDENTS
a i
: It is the plain duty of every man no matier what his sta-
ag _ tion in life, to protect the safety, happiness, and future
2 ot those dear to him. i
ja = LIFE: INSURANCE offers an easy ceritin way which 4
: every man can afford. i
= ‘vhe North Carolina Mutual Life Inswance Company,
gz the largest-and strongest Negro Compmny in the world,
a with over forty-five million dollars worth of insurance in
fs! fore, invites you to join its army of happy. contented ei
fi policyholders. Look for the North Carina Mutualman
a in your town or write us for insuranceinformation. i
et . i
: Ca;
North CarolinaMutual —
: i i
1 Life! Co. |
ie i s K i
: Ire Insurance LO. |
i : wae eae se . ph
: Durham, North Cirolina i
a ©. © SPAULDING | S.MOAVERY. |B R. MERRICK i
iui President Vico-President-Secretary ‘Treasurer i
BP amanemmseenaeenennennceater etcetera reece cata eat
PHOEBUS
Nelvices #2 Sin Bap Severe
jwere well attended last (Sunday
‘throughout the day. ‘The Concert
iven at night by the Hamston 4.
sttcte Quirtette under the aus.
pices of Mrs, Mary Wainwright
jwnas much enjoyed by the large
laudience.
Miss Lillian Carter and Mise
IC. Burrow, teachers at the New
York County\‘Praining School, of
Yorktown, Va, spent the week-end
‘at hurne. \ ;
| My. Alvin Moore, Hope strest,
Hhas installed « beautiful fustio in
his home, and ears wonderful eon
certs, every night.
Mrs, Mary. Harpole and little
‘Miss Cora Williams, of | Sulfulk
spent the ween as, guests of
Mrs, D. D, Askew, of Libby stree
Mt. B,J. Harrison and My. J. 8,
R, Waters, who have heen employed
at Hou Springs, Va, have returned
home.
My. Edward J. Young, of Mon-
treal, Can., formerly of Phoebus
hep arrived in Palm Beach
Fla,
Mr, Matthey Tyler, of 29 Booker
street, who has had quite 2 long
‘experience in plumbiyy, is, iow
icense plumibes, Hg is. thy only
colores fieense 1 plumber in thy
city. {
ONirs, Addie Yeenge Jarvis under.
went st slight operation at the Dis.
fe Hospital lust wesky She is re.
ported as doing nicely.
With ane week of stiff practice
alrendy ‘closed, the Basket Balt
‘teain of Une Phoebus, Athietic Clu’
has already set their cye sn the
goals, und ina short thne will bs
Teady. to give a good uecount, of
Uremselves on the flov: aygainst
‘ny loca} qaint. Manager Loxan
Johuson has at wee exmerieneed
buneh from which tolpiek his five.
‘Those who have already shusvt thts
they can play the sanne are Cy at
W. Mann, allen, Chancey and Mer
cy, forwards; Stanley, Iirden, und
Wilson und Henderson, guards.
Jonzs and Dawes, center, | Manager
Johnson has not completed. bis
‘sehedgie, and any high school jor
Jub desiting games should get fn
jaueh with im at once. Aareds,
Login Johnson, Phocbus, Va, |
| “THe Zion Baptist Sunday sehbol
jeuchers met last Thursiay night
sith] Mrs, Surah Richardson, fn
Htowhed xtreet, }
‘Tije: Parent Association of Whit-
ier Schoo} will meet at the school
jen Kriday evening, '
Mjs. Leroy Sprigis, of Arm-
strony street, who hus been con:
‘fined to the house for the past west:
lon account of illness was able to
ihe out Sunday.
| ee ee
| ELIZABETH CITY
| Elfabeth City, N-C.--Mrx. Ellen itaw-
json fote Theradty” for’ Norful wy “undyrns
Aresgment at St. Vinewnt's Hompiual. “Aten
ir Whe feturaed te Mortal Toe
iy alter sndoy: tee ‘atand la
cid The falling wees were chee
joe Bu Sueno Suy. ica for BEG:
Re einen he el
lave “watmcae’ eaprrooecunts fe
Genin, Mournit, eccreury Robert i
Ick netant acres We are
Sr pecnieing aeTaryy ts be Sieh
[ivaturers cha gar irelan s
i a chore es Hired Free
lista #8 feber ©, Davis ond is
{Mar Davee of Norte econ
tf the tate Mr Reet 0. Dass
‘iia ity. Bittle Lossie Sle Soll fle
a2 ike hime iy habe seve Sunday De
Commer 20, after woven] say less. 02.
elfen
cE in fom ds Walon tet
bee CM, taniweten epee
‘Rie duh Dusit ond ice
tat at Sh fd tet om aero oF
in" Sst Harta Gabe tied Sofeme
StI) at ioe mene ig Showrd. ewe
Facial rere were bel at, Bho,
ouh Ress AL M4 Be Zeun Church Se
Slifer Do shins chartine Howearh. of
Se chy ees eue tthe eon
devhumt of the death’ of er sinier, Mra
iidia odes ‘Sve, “onrcie debe
A fC hee he iter sie pic
haf Perey turned Saturday [rm
Ett where che eahing 0 pent
te lhetitese with hee eothers Mess Bd
Perla: Sim hfoud sts ese Hoe
Byte at Wastinnase Dees fis
fet co up the Ghee Inbar
tif her bree sr desu Pr
seh ?
CARD OP rHAaNKa’
wey atten dee ee
shoved kindnovwn ‘tie theta
death ut gue’ mothirag alaPU ud
2 ppb ehingghe os
is “5
Winere yuu: volnaill? To. the aig
Soe” Pe at the "Gh oe
SIO ao Cholla ou “get Yon oe
Se SIMA Eine okt
Meals arr wervedot oleracea
GEORGE MITH, Prop. |
MUKPREEBOKO, N.C.
———_———
—————
! z
AllezSands
| for fmt. loon’ mint Wallpaper
Eien Rr
iPro Sane aia
[or RB, se
———
——_
| rine goer fetioat Wis ws me
Wea the edie aly hon
Sisecunt an sb ate be
Loot omiee {te Share
See saber wat” ied tet
om
JACOB RUFFIN
f suneressuoxo, x. ©.
SUITS and
Before buying your fall and:
winter. suits anil overcoats
don't forget to see me Lefore:
going elssthere. |1 e2n save
you money. Genuifie wiil suits:
and overtoats chin be had
for only $23.50 dach. French
cleaning and sree of all kind
of goods and alterhtion of gar-
ments a specialty) 1 can make
‘old suits look lik new ones.
Don’t fal to callfand eee me
J. W. HALL
‘fle Modern} Tailor
MURIREESBORO, N. C.
wy cents a word in (this type)
Each indication
Twenty-five cents, minimum
Charge
Copy must be in the office not later than 4 p. m. Wednesday.
All ads signed "Care Journal and Guide" strictly confidential.
HOUSES FOR SALE
2 NEW 5-ROOM HOUSES FOR
e. Sewerige and city water
systems. J. Moser, 230 Mol-
lon street, Campostella, Norfolk,
Va.
HOUSE FOR RENT
FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED. Hot and cold water a n d
baths. Electric lights. Located in
Lindenwood, 1010 Summett avenue.
Inquire at Guide Publishing
Co.
GIRLS WANTED
LOOK GIRLS, make money copying names for us. Send 10 c in scrip tions. P. I Body, Box 5, Nashville, N. C.
Rogas Complaint in Chancey
Ro Rogas Defendant
he object of this suit is for the com-
mand to obtain from the defendant a
ce vincolo matrimonio, on the
lands of desertion; and affidavit having
meet that the defendant is not a
member of the State of Virginia, he is
by required to appear within ten days
due publication hereof, and do what
he necessary to protect his interest.
Teate: C. M. Robertson, Clerk
grene Diggs p. q.
GINIA: IN THE CLERK'S OFFICE
THE CIRCUT COURT OF THE CITY
NORFOLK, ON THE 1ST DAY OF
OEMBER, 1926.
the object of this suit is for the command to obtain from the defendant a notice vinculo murrimonio, on the ends of adultery, and affidavit having made that the defendant is not a member of the State of Virginia, he is required to appear within ten days, due publication hereof, and do what necessary to protect his interest. ceste: C. M. Robertson, Clerk. jacqueline Dinga, p. o. GINIA: IN THE CLERK'S OFFICE OF THE CIRCUM COURT OF THE CITY NORFOLK, ON THE 11TH DAY OF MAY, 1925.
a object of this suit is for the command to obtain from the defendant a notice, mutilation, on the ends of desertion; and affidavit having made that the defendant is not a agent of the State of Virginia, he is required to appear before the judge due publication, and do what he necessary to protect his interest. Teste: C. M. Robertson, Clerk *Harrison* p. q.
GINIA: IN THE CLERK'S OFFICE THE CIRCUT CQURT OF THE CITY NORPOLK, 'ON THE 2ND DAY OF EMBER, 1925.
Bertr Chase Defendant
the object of this suit is for the complaint to obtain from the defendant a license a vinculum matrimonii, on the basis of desertion; and affidavit having made that the defendant is not a member of the State of Virginia, he is required to appear within ten days due publication hereof, and do what he necessary to protect his interest. Teste: C. M. Robertson, Clerk Harrison p. q. by Edw. L. Breeden, D. C.
FORD TRUCK
SUANTO TO THE TERMS OF A
certain Deed of, Trust from D. S. Hannon,
to the undersigned truster, dated the
day of July, 1925, and at the time
of the holder of the note thereby
received, default having been made in the
condition of gain note. I shall proceed to
at public auction, to the highest bid,
on the premises. 1012 Granby street,
city of Norfolk, Virginia, on Tue-
day December 29th, 1925 at 12 noon, the
wing described property. To-wait: 1
Truck, Motor No. 882183, Title
133214 with all equipment thereon or
erected threeto.
Terms: Cash.
Ralph H. Daughton, Trustee.
Con-Briggs Auction Co., Auctioneers.
ANNOUNCEMENT
A. J. Cousin, the Cleaner, has
kept from his business, 1026
arch street, five weeks on ac-
count of illness. Will return to
work Monday, December 28, 1925.
---
To The Good People Of Norfolk
who have accorded us such a friendly reception, who have cooperated with us heartily and given freely of their confidence, WE EXTEND OUR BEST WISHES FOR
A Christmas and a New Year Full of Joy and Happiness
We are very grateful for the privilege you have given us of serving you. As we stand on the threshold of a New Year we behold an opportunity for GREATER SERVICE in a territory rich in promise.
Va. Electric & Power Co.
GOD REVEALED IN COMMON PLACES
Rev. Bowling Declared That Divine Revelations Can Be Found In Every Day Occur-
"You will find God most frequently revealed in the commonplace," said Row, Richard H. Bowling in his sermon last Sunday morning at the First Baptist Church. "Paul," he declared, "was spoken to in the Hebrew language' which was for him a very familiar tongue. Hebrew was the language of his particular racial and provincial group, the language of his boyhood home, the language of his first religious impressions. The first name for the Divine which he had ever heard was the Hebrew name Jehovah. All that he thus far knew of God had been mediated through this familiar language. And this is now the language through which there comes to him a new revelation of God. 'And when we were all fallen to the earth, I heard a voice saying unto me in the Hebrew language.' * * * * *
How God Speaks
"This finds frequent illustration
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IN MEMORIAM
In memory of our beloved brothel, Samuel Blount, who died December 22, 1924.
The month of December is here, to us, the saddest of the year. We write these lines in sad regret—to show we never shall forget.
In our hearts your memory lingers sweet, tender, fond and true.
Wife, mother and sister.
IN MEMORIAM
In sad but loving remembrance of our dear mother, Louise Grant; who departed this life one year ago, December, 22nd, 1924. The flowers we lay upon your grave may wither and decay. But the love for our dear mother will never pass away. How sue the name, mother sounds to us who feel so sad; To speak of friends upon the earth, mother was the best we had. She wore a crown of patience, thro the years she struggled on. Those hands that rest forever are the hands that made our home. We will meet you in glory. Her children, Annie, Sarah, Louis and Bettie Grant.
iii Bible history. The bush that burned God into the heart of Moses was a plant common to his daily haunts; David saw God's providence in a spider's web. Elijah heard God best not in usual phenomena of nature but in a 'still small voice'. Even Jesus sensed his mission when catechised in the temple as other boys of his age and when submitting to baptism as wore the rest who looked for a new spiritual era.
"So God speaks to most of us, in a familiar language. - Religious revelations are mediated through previous ideas. In one community the spirit drives people recently converted to run out of the church and tell their experience. But this always happens in a community where people have been led to believe that only thus may one be truly converted. In another community people never 'get religion' that way. This illustrates strikingly that God speaks to us in the language we can best understand.
What God Says
'I glean that we need not despair of knowing God, awaiting miraculous confirmation. There is sufficient revelation in the commonplace. To Paul God revealed through his old mother tongue his last word in manifestaed love, Jesus the living Christ. That little persecuted crowd that believed on Jesus was not a mere group of enthusiasts. It was Jesus himself. So for us Christ is present in the everyday institution, relationship, experience, that incarnates his ideals, his way of life, his high faith.'
BANK ST. BAPTIST CHURCH
The morning and evening congregation at Bank St. listened to two very fine sermons by Rev. D. R. Mdodana, D. D., of Grove Baptist Church, Churchland. Dr. Mdodana captivated his hearers by his power and eloquence. "The Love of Jesus" was the subject of the morning discourse. In the evening Dr. Mdodana preached on the subject, "Bebold, The Lamb of God." On Sunday coming, Rev. G. R. Malloy will fill the Bank St. pulpit during the morning and evening services. Visitors are cordially invited to be present at these services.
Bible Lecturer
Coming Here
Dr. D. W. Pugh, (white) president of the Bible Institute, Pennsylvania, will be in the city Sunday, December 22. under auspices of the Norfolk School of the Bible, and will speak in the auditorium of Faith Tabernacle, 840 East Oley road, morning and evening, 11:30 and 8 p.m., until Thursday, December 31.
Dr. Pugh is one of the leading Bible teachers of the country and will bring to the people of this city a series of spirit filled messages. The public is cordially invited to attend these services.
THE CANDLE
"Dawn Of Xmas"
By Bank Street
Choir, Sunday
A a嵌ed Gnanti: "The Dawn of Christ
man" will be rendered by the Bank Street
Baptist Choir, Sunday night, December
21 at 5:30 P.M.
MT. LEBANON BAPTIST
CHURCH
Very good services were held at this church Sunday last. The early morning prayer meeting was marked by spiritual fervor. All Sunday school classes made good reports, the Bible clas winning the banner. The pastor preached at 11:30 o'clock. In the afternoon Rev. D. Jennings of the First Baptist Church, Lambert's Point, preached. His choir rendered excellent music. A good program was rendered in the B. Y. P. U. n the afternoon. Services will be held at the church Christmas Day at 12:00 o'clock.
ANTIOCH BAPTIST CHURCH
The prayer meeting Sun day
morning was not largely attended
as is usual. 11:30, the pastor,
Rev. J. M. Johnson, preached from
the text, Luke 22:32, "When thou
art converted, strengthen, thy
brethren." It was preached with
power and everybody enjoyed the
gospel message. 3:30 Communion
service was largely attended. The
right hand of fellowship was given
to five. At night Rev. A. D. Dickerson
preached from the subject,
"Come Down." It was a wont-
erful sermon.
MACEDONIA CHRISTIAN
A large crowd was present in the Sunday school. The lesson was very interesting. Next Sunday will be the election of officers. At 11:30 the attendance was small; nevertheless a wonderful message was delivered to those who came. Service at night was well attended. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Cullen, of Jamaica avenue, accompanied by their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lomax, left Thursday morning for an extended motor trip to New Bern, N. C., to spend the Xmas holidays.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Quite a number of the regulars were in attendance of the sunrise prayer meeting.
Dr. R. H. Bowling had an appreciable audience that braved the cold rain and wind to listen to the subject, "A Familiar Language" Acts 26:14. The speaker asserted that religious revelations are meditated through previous experiences. He spoke of the sufficient content of the revelation and Paul's re-action to this revelation. This was as usual a well prepared and thoughtful message, one that contained information, comfort, and inspiration. Following the morning services was the funeral of Mr. McWilliams, a very faithful and exemplary young man. He was a devout Sunday school worker and attendant.
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The meetings of the organization are to be held on the first Monday in each month at the Community Center and all parents and teachers of students in the high school are asked to be present, for the aim of the organization is for a better, higher and more influential high school in Norfolk. To arouse interest and to become better acquainted the meeting for January will be held in the auditorium of the high school at 3 p. m.
FREEZES WIFE TO DEATH
Vienna.—Karl Boeren locked his wife in their mountain cabin near Innshruck without fuel, and she froze to death.
ing the regret of the bench at his death.
Chief Justice McCoy, who is president of the Harvard Club of Washington, declared that the career of Judge Terrell had been an honor to Harvard. While he had never practiced before the Municipal Court, the chief Justice said, he had always heard prairie of the honorable manner in which Judge Terrell conducted his court. He
Monday—Church Meeting at 8 P. M.
Tuesday—Christmas Tree at 7 P. M.
Thursday—Watch Meeting, 9 to 12 P. M.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. RICHARD H. BOWLING, Pastor
"A Church People Like To Attend"
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In the affection the class. Communion of the year was celebrated. The attendance was good and the presence of the Holy Spirit was evidenced, and hand of fellowship was extended to three new members.
At night the ordination of Bros. N. A. Overton, Edward L. Mason, and Harrison Edwards to the Deaconate was held. Many of the Deacons from sister churches were present and a fine service was held, very impressively Rev. R. H. Bowling, the pastor, preached the ordination sermon, subject, "High Standards for the Deaconate," I Cor. 4:5. This was said by many to have been the best sermon for the occasion ever heard.
The Sunday school and B. Y. P. U. enjoyed splendid services, as both organizations are busily engaged with their Christmas programs.
The workers Council held its reg ular meeting Tuesday night with a large representation present and outlined a very helpful year's program for the various auxiliaries of the church. Mr. Gordon L. Tay lor though a leading business man is the head of the Council, and finds time to put much thought on the ways and means of having the Council function in a constructive way.
Parent-Teachers Association of High School Formed
A Parent-Teachers' Association of Booker T. Washington High School was organized December 16 at the Community Center. Those present were: Mrs. Lila Reid, Miss Thelma Hill, Profs. Curtis, and Reynolds, Mrs. Flora Barber, Miss Fannie Jones, members of the school committee. Others were: Mrs. Vessie Banks, Prof. and Mrs. Dungee, Mrs. Willie Givens, Mrs. Skinner, Miss Elinora Ruffin, Mrs. Aliene Diggs, Rev. A. Hobbs, Mrs. Geo. S. Collins.
After prayer by Rev. Hobbs, Mrs. Lila Reed, chairman of the school committee, who had called the meeting of 27 parents, one to represent each room in the high school, opened the meeting.
Prof. Reynolds told of the objects of such an organization and the benefits to be derived therefrom. After remarks by Mrs. Diggs, Rev. Hobbs, Prof. Dungee, Mrs. Givens and Mrs. Reed, the following offices were elected: Mrs. Vessie Banks, president; Mrs. Dungee, vice president; Mrs. Gee S. Collins, secretary; Rev. Hobbs, treasurer.
Noted Jurist Succumbe To Hemorrhage
IN LEADING ROLE
A.
W. H. GR..J
P
cil of Churches, 105 East Twenty-
second street, New York City.
All written matter or other
material-submitted with an application
must have sufficient postage
for delivery or must be prepaid by
express. No manuscript or other
material submitted will be returned
unless full postage or express
charges are enclosed.
Annual Prize For Goodwill Achievement
Further detailed information will be available from the sam address or from literature available at many schools, colleges, churches and similar places.
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LAST WEEK IN 1925
Sunday—Services at 11:30 and 7:30
Monday—Church Meeting at 8 P. M.
Tuesday—Christmas Tree at 7 P. M.
Thursday—Watch Meeting, 9 to 12 P. M.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. RICHARD H. BOWLING, Pastor
"A Church People Like To Attend"
First Play Given By The
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A BIBLICAL DRAMATIC
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THE ACTS
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DRAMATIC PAGEANT
2 ACTS
DIRECTOR
day Ever Given
First Play Given By The Pastor Of Second Calvary Baptist Church
A. Abraham On M. Morrish.
A Midnight Wrestling Match.
Petitbih and His Daughter.
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"All I'll Call is the Power of Jesus"
"Name." Singing of Christmas Carols.
The Nativity.
MME. M. JACKSON, Assistant Director
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(Continued from Page One)
those are no entries in any class
having this outstanding character,
no award will be given.
Applications and recommendations
for next year, 1926, may be
filed on and after January 1, and
must be filed not later than June
1, 1926 with Dr. George E. Haynes
at the offices of the Federal Coun-
THE ACTS
A. B.
C. P. MADISON,
D. D.
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ESTABLISHED 1892
Merry Christmas, one and all.
The Mississippi bar association recently issued a broadside against, lynching, and alimbed before the link got dry on it a Mississippi mob lynched a man who had been acquitted of murder. But that will double the determination of the good citizens of that state, to end mob rule.
The Trustee Board of Howard University has justified all and several of the acts of President J. Stanley Durkee, after an exhaustive presentation of their case by the Alumni Association, through their lawyers. This includes the dismissal of four instructors sometime ago, among them Alain Locke and Kelly Miller, all of whom will cease to have any relations with the university after they cease to draw their salaries for the year ending next June. The trustees find for President Durkee on every count. It is said that protestants of the Alumni Association will carry their grievances to Congress, without a big appropriation by which the university could not function.
The Dead Miners in Alabama
Mine disasters are common. Those who go down into the earth like those who go down into the sea may come out again, but there is nothing certain about it. With the multiplication of automobiles in the large cities at least those who go out into the streets are much in the uncertain position of those who go up in the air and down into the earth and the waters. That is to say, the agencies of death have been much multiplied by science. Have the agencies of life been multiplied in like degree? We rather think so. Man manages to keep abreast of the destructive by the invention of constructive agencies. If it were not so the immoral forces in our life would submerge and destroy the moral forces and we should relapse into the negative personality of the Occidental Indian, the Malays of the Pacific and the Asiatics and the Africans, all of whom are arrested in their mental if not in their physical development, and live only animal existence. Why this is so we are all struggling to ascertain.
There was a mine disaster near Birmingham, Ala., December 11, in which 53 of 56 miners lost their lives. Forty-three of the bodies recovered were those of colored miners and seven were white. Among the former was Rev. A. C. Collins, "Negro pastor of the White Hill Baptist Church," who must have been supplementing his salary by working in the mines, and an unnamed Negro who saved his life by grabbing the tail of a mule, which was rushing out of the mine, and was thus dragged out of the pit. The New York World report says: "The color line was obliterated; white and Negro were united in a common grief, and each tried to assuage the other's loss."
Now, a peculiar thing about this mine disaster is that the Associated Press appears to have reversed itself in reporting the news where Negroes are mostly concerned, by giving numbers and stating names and admitting mutual grief and sympathy incofar as to "obliterate the color line." That is as it should be but not as it is always made to appear by the Associated Press, which covers the South more than any other news agency. And the statement that 43 Negroes and 9 white miners were working together and died together in the mine is not without significance.
As Clarence Darrow said in his New York address, "To determine whether you are black or white depends upon how far you go back."
Education In Virginia
When Mr. Harrington Waddell, principal of the Lexington high school, asserts that "the most pressing need for public education in Virginia today is the rural elementary school," in an open letter to Governor-elect Harry F. Byrd in reply to the suggestion of Dr. E. A. Alderman, president of the University of Virginia, that a $1,500,000 be set aside from the state road fund for higher education, he raises no new educational issue. Mr. Waddell simply calls attention, to a patient-fast, which is likely to be lost sight
of in the belated zeal to do something for the state university.
Certainly the state should find a way to aid the University of Virginia to maintain its lofty prestige among America's institutions of higher learning, but let no one conclude that higher education is suffering at the expense of elementary education in Virginia. The commonwealth has a long way to go in both directions. It is distressing to neglect higher education; suicidal to neglect elementary education.
"There is food for thought in Mr. Waddell's assertion "that 95 per cent of the children of Virginia have never had a ghost of a chance ever to attend one of the state supported colleges.
"When the masses of the people living in the rural section of our state are in dire need of elementary schools is it fair or just to think of placing higher taxation on them for the support of our higher institutions of learning?"
This newspaper stands wholeheartedly for the upbuilding and support of higher education, but it stands for education for the masses first always.
The Passing of Battling Siki
Any man who stands in the way of the progress of his race must first stand in his own way, and he is to that extent a dangerous man. No man lives to himself. Each is bound by the laws of his nature to other creatures, and he can only accomplish anything by cooperating with others. The greatest general is helpless without soldiers, and the greatest manufacturing or financial genius of the age can get nowhere unless he has a body of well drilled people to second his plans and help to materialize them. In like manner one man can illustrate the genius or the deprivacy of his race or nation, as the case may be. George Washington illustrating all that is best in our national life while Aaron Burr all that is worse. They each served a useful purpose, the one in the Hall of Fame and the other in the Hall of Infamy. American youths are free to select which of them they will as example for emulation. Afro-Americans have Frederick Douglass as their greatest example of a man, but they have also so many leasts that a representative Congress would be unable to single out the least.
Louis Phal, better known as "Battling Siki," a native of French Senegal, is dead in New York. He was shot to death by parties unknown in one of the tough districts of Harlem, where he was well known as a provoker of wrath and other things which required the interference of the police. Siki was a prize fighter. He gained much reputation in Europe before he became a world figure by knocking out Georges Carpentier, the heavyweight champion, in Paris. Then he went to Dublin and McTigue took the crown away from him. Then he came to New York, where he has done no serious fighting, although taking part in many engagements, and he had come to be regarded as a fistic joke, a sort of fistic clown. He frequented the lowest and toughest resorts and was constantly in brawls of one kind and another, out of which he always managed to squirm.
Battling Siki helped to make it hard for the race in seeking to recover its standing in the boxing game, which John Arthur Johnson had dragged low by his excesses with white women and wine and doubtful conduct in the ring, and we had been better off, and he might be living, if he had remained in gay Paris. He was an irresponsible creature, with much of the savage in him and not a little of the spoilt child, but his capacity for mischief was greater than for good, and he was, therefore, a misfortune to himself and to the African race, and there will be a few to mourn his going away into the dark from which he will not return.
Mr. Darrow Says We Are Too Pious
And Politically Subservient
Mr. Clarence Darrow, the great Chicago criminal lawyer, one of the greatest in the country, as his conduct of the Scopes' case at Dayton, Tennessee, when he joined issues with William Jennings Bryan and other giants in testing the law against teaching evolution in state controlled institutions, showed together with his conduct of the Sweet case in Detroit, recently, when he saved his clients from conviction and got a new trial, for defending the home of Dr. Sweet from mob attack and killing one of the mob, spoke in Harlem, New York, recently, to overflow audiences, under the auspices of the Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The Afro-Americans of Harlem showed by their numbers and enthusiasm that they appreciate Mr. Darrow, and he showed by his plain and direct speaking that he appreciated those whom he
Norfolk Journal and Guide
addressed. We appreciate what he said although we cannot agree with some of it. He thinks the race is too pious and noncombative and that it was wasting its greatest weapon of protection, which is the ballot, by blind adherence to party. He said, for example, that "The sooner Negroes find out that they can't depend upon Daniel and the Lord and get busy for themselves the better off they will be," and that "If the Lord were going to do anything for you He would have done it long ago." But Mr. Darrow overlooked the fact that the Lord only helps those who help themselves, and judged by this rule; we think the Lord has done a great deal for the Afro-American people and that He will do more as they do more for themselves: The saving influence in the life of the Afro-American people is and has been their faith in the Lord and the building of churches and supporting them as agencies to offset the building of saloons and brothels and gambling dens of vice that make for destruction. Mr. Darrow was speaking from the narrow and facetious rather than the broad and serious side of the race's faith in the Lord and doing things good to be done in His name.
Mr. Darrow maintained that the "only badge of equality" we have in the North is the ballot, and that we have foolishly thrown it away. If we owe the Republican party anything, he contended, we have paid the debt, and should now look out for our own interests in casting the ballot. All that he had to say on our political possibilities and the way we should use them was of vital concern to us, and which we will better understand after reading the text as it appears in the JOURNAL AND GUIDE.
Decline In Negro Crime
Judge Schenck of Guilford County, N. C., Superior Court, after disposing of his docket the other day, glanced at the race designations opposite the names of the offenders that had been before him for the term and remarked: "I want every white man in court to take notice of this. Only three Negroes have been sentenced thus far and here the Anglo-Saxon race has 17 representatives in the list of felons. It did not use to be this way in the Guilford courtroom." At the judge's remark the solicitor was moved to explain it was that way in every court in the judicial district.
In this connection the Greenshore Daily News observes: "Yet we doubt if anybody has any real idea of why there are more white youths in court now—if that is the case—or why there are less Negroes."
Why there are more youthful white felons before the courts of North Carolina in late years does not admit of a definite explanation, we agree. In the absence of scientific data, the most that can be offered in the way of explanation is the mere generalization that the state, being one of the American Union, is to a natural degree sharing in the national crime wave which is now seriously engaging the attention of the National Crime Commission.
But as to the decline of youthful Negro felons in North Carolina, and we believe that to be the case when her capita is considered, the explanation is ready. It comes down from Raleigh. The Department of Public Instruction, backed by the state's late governors and legislatures; its taxpayers and public sentiment daily afford the explanation. In dealing with the young Negroes, the state's educational system, admitted the best to be found below the Mason-Dixon line, is winning out in competition with the county sheriffs.
The excellent school houses the state is building in every village and hamlet are denying the convict camps of good Negro labor, and saving the counties the expense of convict board. Self-respect, moral firmness to shun petty crimes, training in the practical art of earning a decent livelihood, ambition to become worthwhile citizens and to count for something—products of education, all—are more and more motivating the lives of the young Negroes of the state, and, of course, Guilford county and all other of North Carolina will continue to witness a decline in Negro felons. And we know of no agency that has been more instrumental in bringing about better educational and living conditions for Negroes in North Carolina than the Greenboro Daily News itself, thus becoming partly responsible for Judge Schenck's remarks.
And after all, it is probable that the increase of youthful white felons before North Carolina courts in late years is alarming only in contrast with the decline of Negro felons, and not in its disproportion to the same condition in other parts of the country. But when the people of the state admit they are witnessing a decline in Negro petty crime, they are paying themselves the highest possible compliment, and vindicating their own educational policy.
SPIRIT OF THE PRESS
Should the Poor Have Children?
From The Dearborn Independent.
The very interesting president of the University of Michigan is reported in the press to favor, among other things, the decrease of children in the families of the poor. He says that in other families the deliberate limitation of offspring is already practiced. It is not a new proposal, but somehow it fails to lose, even with excessive repetition, its power to mansacre the reason. It is always the poor! Yet nobody defines the poor. The poor are those who live in the back streets. But the boys of the back street usually become the bosses of the boys raised in the front street, fifteen years hence, and the girls are likely to be the wives and mothers of a race virile enough to save the country from the shrinkage in morals and energy that will come upon it through "limited families." For selfishness is the great immorality.
Where are the poor? And what have the other classes, who can give their children "all the advantages," to promise for tomorrow? The poor of yesterday are in the seats of power today, and the families of yesterday that "had all the advantages" are going to seed. It may be something in a boy's favor that he has to go to work at fifteen (if the Constitution of the United States continues to permit him that much liberty) and thus escape the University, which more than any industrial system molds men down to robots. Forbidden all the "advantages" he may have a chance to make his way in life.
It may be possible one day to compel the poor to cease having children, but it is greatly to be hoped that no law will be proposed to compel the other classes to make up the deficiency. For the impression one gains from all this talk about limitation is that those who deliberately effect it are thereby conferring great benefit on the country. Those who can be brought into that camp downwell by society in leaving no descendents. Meantime the "school of hard knocks" will continue to have the most distinguished sons and daughters,
Coolidge and The Press
Negro press reaction to the portion of the president's message relating to the Negro has varied between wide extremes. Some Negro editors have contrived to read into the presidential mind thoughts that they hoped were implicit in the text of the message. But other Negro observers are less credulous. Some are not more so than The State, which said of the message the morning after it was read in congress, that in places it plainly conceded calculated a sop to political expediency, "as when he hands to radical Negro demand for the bread of recognition and practical aid, a stone, in the form of a paragraph of pious platitudes, promising definitely nothing."
William Pickens, for example field agent for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People—one of the brightest of the Negro journalists, born 41 years ago in Anderson county, South Carolina—says that the president "utters a good homily," that is "worthy of New England good-heartedness"; but Pickens periveses that "his words for 'states' rights' in the first part" may hear against his definition of congressional duty toward the Negro, as laid down further along in the document. Pickens reads into the message a presidential lukewarmness at least toward the anti-lynching bill: "The first part of the message seems to say that what a state can do, congress should not do, even it the state does not do it." * * He does not make it clear, under his tangle of words, whether it is the business of congress to do a needed thing, like breaking up lynching, if the states will not or cannot do it." The best that Pickens can find to say of the message is that it "will do no harm, for it is much more of a sermon than a state paper."
There is a group of Negro commentators, led by the radical Chicago editors, who resent the references of Mr. Coolidge to sympathy, kindness and helpfulness toward the Negro as asking too much of "gratitudous paternalism." Then again, "there are many who feel that the president" has patted the (white)
Saturday, December 26, 1925
Darrow's Advice To The
Clarence Darrow is a dynamic American. He speaks in no uncertain tone. His declarations are clear—his pronouncements are plain. He stands upright and down straight upon the fundamental doctrine of human equality. He has the courage of his convictions. No voice now heard above the common din is now speaking as loud as his in behalf of the rights of man. There is no race nor color in his creed. Mr. Darrow is by nature a reformer. Broody speaking, mankind may be divided into two classes—those who conform and those who transform. Those of weaker wiles and more timid mind always conform to existing social standards and customs. Those of vigorous robert mentality are ever prone to break away from the traditional mind and reshape society according to what they conceive it ought to be. In all of the ages of the world, the radicals have been protesting against existing order. This is true from the very nature of the case. The Protestants, protest the Catholics; the agnostics against the Protestants. It was due to that remarkable group of English agnostics composed of such men as Darwin, Huxley, Tyndall and Herbert Spencer, that we have today the theory of evolution. Darrow's belong to the protestant type of mind. He leads the Modernist in their onslaught against the strong hold of Fundamentalism. Bryan and Darrow stand for two widely contrasted types. Bryan was the embodiment of the conformists, while Darrow stands for the transformists. They met at Dayton, and Darrow survives. The world greatly needs its Darrows, especially at times of reaction. But the world cannot use many Darrows at a time. The great bulk of mankind must be conformists, else there could never be peace and tranquility on earth.
When the case of the Negro seemed dark and dreary, when it appeared that there was no niply in the clouds of the white world to look into the bottom of our grief, it was Darrow who all but volunteered to argue the case for us at Detroit. There is not probably a conformist or a fundamentalist in the United States who would have stood willing to risk so much for the rights of the Negro race. All honor to Charlene Darrow.
Mr. Darrow consented to address the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in New York City. Ten thousand people clamored for entrance to hear this champion of human rights fresh from the field of a great legal victory. His advice to them was true to his nature and to the motive that actuates and dominates his life. He urged his hearers to cease trusting in God and to learn to trust in themselves. The motive is pure; but the advice is mischievous. Mr. Darrow with all of the pent up passion of his dynamic nature would advise the Negro to curse God and die. For that in effect would be the result of accepting and acting upon his ardent advice. I fear that Mr. Darrow was trying to visualize the Negro problem thru his own medium of power and determination. Religious reliance has been the Negro's mainstay during all of the years of his captivity and sojourn in the Western world. It sustained our
South on the back and said in effect: 'Now, we must recognize the advancement and welfare of the Negro, but don't worry, we are not going to reach down in your hallwich and interfere with your established customs of segregation, disfranchisement and oppression, for these have 'long had the sanction of enlightened society.''
Mr. Coolidge has already had his chance to clean up his own party in the South, a process necessarily precedent to any other far-reaching measures in this region. But his New England conscience remains conveniently insensitive to Republican rottenness in the South. He may be depended upon not to disturb, seriously a state of affairs by which he and his party so long have profiled, but may be expected to deliver now and then, for the acclimation of Negro voters in the North, "pious platitudes, promising, definitely, nothing." Some Negro leaders, but astonishingly few, appraise at its practical worth the presidential lip-service.
fathers and mothers in the dark days of slavery. It sustains the great unexphisticated heart of the race today as it is now passing through the Red Sea of trial and tribulation. If the race should release its grasp upon the religious verities, what has Mr. Darrow or any one else to substitute in its place? Any helpless people must seek succor outside of their own strength. Hitherto the Negro has looked to the faith of the fathers to sustain him when his own powers failed. Shakespeare says "thrice armed is he who has his whisper just"—The strength of the Negro's cause has hitherto consisted in the deep seated belief that God Almighty was on his side. He felt in his innermost soul that all of the attributes of the God Head were aligned in his favor. A clever humorist has somewhere said that God Almighty was compelled to be on the side of the Negro, else he would lose His power when he been overwhelmed with might that seemed to leave us without hope. No, no, Mr. Darrow. Your well meant advice would lead to quick destruction. Let the Negro indeed rely more and more on himself, according to the measure and limitation of his power; but let him not forget that all of the artillery of the weak, is fortified by righteousness. The Negro's fighting area is limited. He is surrounded by ten times his own number of people who hold in their hands the machinery of power. Our appeal is mainly to the conscience. The only effective power we have is in the political field, and that has to be used wisely and prudently subordinately to the white race which holds the reigns of power. We call upon them to act justly and rightly by us in the name of God whom we all adore.
Let me now put the case up to Mr. Darrow as a practical concrete proposition. The majority of the white people profess to believe in God and to rely upon his providence. Any declaration of disbelief on part of the Negro would hurt their religious sensibilities to the point of causing them to lose patience with us and to regard us as inimical to the Christian religion which lies at the foundation of our social structure. The Christian religion, as imperfect as it has been in its application to the Negro race, has been the chief agency in planning away the differences and smoothing out the diversities of race. Let us suppose that the Negro had adhered to his ancestral religion which he brought with him cross the sens, can Mr. Darrow or any one else believe that he would be tolerated as an equal American citizen? Should he now disavow this religion and in dominant numbers become agnostic, even as Mr. Darrow is, he would thereby harden the heart of the American people against him. By sticking to the old religious moorings, even when the white race seems to forsake them, the Negro clothes himself with a great moral advantage.
When the black man receive treatment not in harmony with the standard of the Christian religion, he can hold up his hands and declare that the white man is a sinner against the very religion which he professes to embrace and against the God whom he affects to serve. No people can for long stand the moral chastisement by being unbraided with the charge of hypocrisy. The Negro would deprive himself of the greatest weapon at his disposal by now rejecting God and relying upon himself, in this day of his imitence.
The Negro today is the most religious element in our cosmopolitan population. There are over four million members of the several religious denominations. These people are shepherded by forty thousand ministers of the gospel, who devoutly believe in the verity of the Gospel which they preach.
The great heart of the Negro race would be wounded to the bleeding point by the bare suggestion that the race must now turn away from God. It would destroy their faith and paralize their energies. You cannot hold masses of people together except upon some principle of cohesive union. You cannot build up a race on the basis of protest alone. As long as the evil exists the protest in some form or
other will be forbearing. But what will be the commutative principle when the grievance is removed. Religion is the strongest bond that binds the human race together. If prejudice of race is ever to be removed, it will not be through the compulsion of power but through the subtle influence of love, the very heart and center of religion.
I urge upon the Negro, even at the darkest hour of racial prospect, to cleave closer and closer to God and to the Christian Church. Even if the white man abandons its principle, yet should not be. To the white race in the day of its power, the Christian religion may indeed seem to be as foolishness or as a stumbling block in the way of its triumph. But to the defenseless Negro, it is in truth and indeed the power of God unto salvation. I do not believe that I am superstitions or possess one iota of religious pruriency, but as a practical proposition I deeply believe that Christianity is the only hope of the Negro in the midst of a professional Christian environment. I further believe that it will be Negro, in his unsophistic character, that will bring Christian world back to the man principles laid down by a great founder in the Sermon on the Mount and in the Good Rule. Spiritual and moral forms come from those who are most. Christianity for appeals most powerfully needs and circumstances of the Negro race.
We thank you Mr. Darrow for lending us your great powers and talent in our legal defends. We are in deep debt to you for your consistent stand on the fundamental platform of human rights. But we cannot allow when you would advise that we turn our back on God who has brought us safe thus far. It is related that a colored man who was handy at chicken flesh executed a very skillful get away with a bag of fowl when the whole family was present about the place. On being convicted by the judge, his honor could not refrain from complimenting the thief on his cleverness. "The me, John, inquiring his honor "how did you succeed in extirpating those chickens in full view of the family?" "Your honor," replied the convicted one, "when you want to do any rascale, I advise you stick to the law with which you are familiar, and let the chick business alone." Mr. Darrow, I know will fix it kindly, when I advise him that he will be of greatest service to the Negro race through his wonderful grasp upon the principles of the law, and leave out an on religion with which he felt neither sympathetic nor familial.
The Poet's
The Star of Bethlehem
The night, that night, a siliant lay
Like benediction over the land
A hush as noigeless as comet day—
Sa-h-h, little one, sa-h-h
Out, out of the purple night
Shepherds did not understand
A star, a star of wondrous light