Norfolk Journal and Guide
Saturday, June 12, 1926
Norfolk, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
Dead, 5 Hurt, From Automobile Crash Into Moving Train
Norfolk Journal and Guide
GREGG
FOLLOW
THE GUIDE
IT LEADS TO
PROGRESS
LECT BISHOP
UCCESSOR
O DR. DURKEE
The First Time In The History of Howard University A. Colored Man Has Been Chosen Its President.
H. JOHN A. GREGG IS A NOTED EDUCATOR
(Special Correspondence)
Washington, D. C., June 9—for the first time in the history of Howard University, a colored man has been elected president.
He is Bishop John A. Gregg at the African Methodist Episcopal Church, whose diocese is South Africa.
Elected Tuesday
His election occurred Tuesday
morrow after the board of trusts
of Howard University had
mached a deadlock in the morning
when a boom for the Rev.
Derek Johnson, a pastor, of
Carlston, W.-Va., failed to sweep
into the presidency.
The name of Bishop Gregg was presented by the nominating committee that was appointed to recurrent a successor to Dr. J. Stanton Durke, whose resignation because June 13th this committee was composed of Colonel Roosevelt Roosevelt, Dr. Charles R. Brown, Dr. Albert Bushnell Hart, Dr. R. Hawkins, Dr. Sara W. Brown, General John H. Sherman, General John H. Sherman, G. B. Pierce. His election was unanimous.
Bishop Gregg is said to have previously declined the presidency of Edward University when the institution offered it to him. A committee he appointed to ascertain whether good he will now accept. The members of this committee are Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, John R. McKinley, and Dr. Jesse E. Moorfield.
Bishop Gregg was born in Eureka, Kan., February 18, 1877. He graduated from the Eureka High School in 1896, Southern Kansas Academy in 1897, and Kansas State University with the degree Master of arts in 1902. He married Celia Ann Nelson, of Lawrence, Kan. August 21, 1900.
He taught school in Oskaloosa, 1902-3. He was a missionary of the African Methodist Episcopal Church to Cape Colony, South Africa. 1903-6 He taught mission schools and was principal of the Chatsworth Mechanical and Normal Institute. He served as pastor of the A. M. E. Church in Leavenworth, Kan. 1908, and in St. Joseph, Mo. 1913.
Born in Kansas
he became president of Edward
Wilber College, Jacksonville, Fla.
, 1, 1913. In June, 1920, he
was elected president of Wilber-
reed University. At the general
reference of the A. M. E. Church
Louisville, Ky., in May, 1924,
he was elected to the bishopric and
agreed to South Africa. He is
present in the United States.
1. Lukes Deputy and WifeHurt In auto Accident
1. Lukes Deputy and WifeHurt In auto Accident
S. Collins, state supervising
law for the Order of St. Luke,
Mrs. Collins sustained serious
injuries Saturday between Lee Hall
Richmond which they were riding col-
lins with a telegraph pole. Mrs.
Collins sustained a broken leg and
bruses, while Mr. Collins
died a broken leg, fractured
and scalp wounds.
The best reports of the accident
that the steering gear of the
car which was being driven
Mr. Collins became unmanage-
causing the car to hit the
car and Mrs. Collins are at pres-
sioned to their home in Rich-
mondiously, ill, but attending
insurance feel that their patient's
needs for recovery are good.
Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Norfolk, Virginia.
EGG
Howard's New President
BISHOP JOHN A. GREGG
JOHN L. TYNES IS INDICTED FOR MURDER
June Grand Jury Finds True Bill Against Linden w o o d Man In Connection With Death of Mrs. Lenora Tynes
An indictment charging first degree murder was returned against John L. Tynes by the June grand jury of the Corporation Court Monday, in connection with the death of his wife, Mrs. Lenora Tynes, which occurred on the night of May 6, following an alleged alteration between her and her husband on the front porch of their home, 2422 Middle street, Lindenwood.
The Tynes murder attracted wide-spread attention at the time on account of the prominence of the principals in the trial which is set for June 25, in Corporation Court No. 1 is being keenly watched. It is reported that friends of the accused husband are making strenuous efforts to clear him of the murder charge. The case will be stubbornly fought by both the Commonwealth and the defense, it is rumored.
Tynes has declined to talk to anyone except his counsel since his arrest, and the sort of plea that will be made in his defense remains undisclosed. A crowd of courtroom is expected when the case is called for trial. It is quite generally admitted that the alleged wordings of Mrs. Tynes will constitute the prosecution's trump card, while the failure of anyone to hear the shot fired that killed her or to find the weapon with which she was killed will play an important part in the defense.
POLICE BAFFLED IN EFFORTS TO FIND SLAYER
Police are baffled in their efforts to identify the slayer of Sinclair McLeese, about 30 years old, of 719 Wide street, whose lifeless form was found in an alley beside 981 Smith street at 12:20 a.m. sunday morning. He had been shot to death. Upon investigation Detective Novitzky obtained a statement from the Smith street address, who told the officer that they had not retired when the shooting in the alley occurred. They said just before the pistol shot rang out they heard Sinclair and another man talking in the alley in even tones, there being nothing heard to indicate a quarrel. Suddenly, these people detected the appearance of the pistol was heard in the row of their home and the body of the slain man lying on the ground, but the other person whom she had not seen was
HOV
HOWARD
WILL STUDY ISLANDS AT CLOSE RANGE
WILL STUDY ISLANDS AT CLOSE RANGE
Senate Committee Will Survey Laws and Customs of Virgin Islands Before Action of Civil Government Bill.
MAY HOLD HEARINGS
HERE AND ABROAD
(Special Correspondence.)
Washington, D. C, June 9—By direction of the Committee on Territories and Insular Possessions, Senator Frank B. Willis, Republican, of Ohio, Monday, introduced a resolution providing for a visit of three Senators and three Representatives to the Virgin Islands this summer.
This committee would investigate existing conditions in these islands with a view to determining the practicability and advisability of a change in the form of government.
The committee would be empowered to hold hearings within the Virgin Islands or the United States, to summon "Witnesses" and report legislation at the next session.
At its meeting last Saturday morning, the committee voted not to report the bill providing for a permanent form of government for the Virgin Islands at this session owing to lack of information and instructed Senator Willis, its chairman, to introduce this resolution providing for a visit to the islands.
Carter Declare Deliberately Facts In Elk Richmond, Va., June 8- against him by Harry H. Pace statement last week concerni James T. Carter, grand treasur ment here today declaring that misrepresentation of the facts
Carter Declares That Pace Deliberately Misrepresents Facts In Elks Controversy
Richmond, Va., June 8—Replying to the charges made against him by Harry H. Pace, of New York, in a published statement last week concerning the conduct of his office, James T. Carter, grand treasurer of the Elks, issued a statement here today declaring that Pace "is guilty of a deliberate misrepresentation of the facts."
For the past three weeks there has been an exchange of charges and refutations in the public press between Pace who is a candidate for grand secretary of the Order at the Cleveland convention in August, and Carter, present grand treasurer, precipitated by the former's recent charges that the funds of the Order had not been wisely deposited.
Mr. Carter, in concluding his statement of today intimates that he will, with its publication, withdraw from the controversy in the public press, declaring "I am unwilling to contend with the controversy which most inevitably 'bring reproach upon the Order'. I shall submit my case to the Grand Lodge assembled at Cleveland, and I am not afraid."
His statement in full follows:
"The article which Harry Pace publishes over his signature in the Pittsburgh Courier of June 5th, 1826, (which some one has dignified by styling it an "Answer" to my letter of May 24th) convinces me of the utility of wasting time on one so insensible to the most ordinary rules of fair play. Not one word in his long and puerile diatribe explains why he made the following statements:—
CHARGES PACE
MAKES AGAINST
JAMES T. CARTER
Among some of the things alleged against James T. Carter, grand treasurer of the Elks, by Harry H. Pace, a statement published the Pittsburgh Courier of last week, and which Mr. Carter refutes in this issue of this newspaper are in Mr. Pace's own words are follows:
"I have the right to say, and I herewith say it, that Brother Carter too, has been in his office too long. He too, feels that the position which he did nothing to earn belongs to him, and that the Order of Elks owes him the job. If Brother Carter was the only able man, or the only honest man or the only rich man in the Order, there might be some excuse for his holding office for life. But there are hundreds of men who are
"The Order of Elks has $100,000 in cash. $50,000 of which is on deposit in two white banks in Richmond, Virginia. One of these banks pays no interest whatever on a $17,000-deposit they have had for nearly ten years, while another pays two per cent. on $34,000,000 that has been with them for a long time."
"I have sought for many years to have this money properly invested or to be distributed for deposit among the worthy banking institutes operated by our own people. There are only two obstacles in the way."
Of these is the Grand Secretary and the other is the Grand Treasurer, both of whom have blocked every effort to put any of this money in colored banks."
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1926
Darrow Gives Race Pointers
Nashville, Tenn., June 11—The race problem as it affects the Negroes in the United States, was discussed by Clarence Darrow, of Chicago, before Fisk University students at their chapel here, Wednesday, following completion of the Scopes' hearing before the supreme court.
Mr. Darrow said he disliked to give one advice, but that Negroes might as well understand that they must get education and continue striving for it. He also encouraged them to attempt to start independent businesses.
The outlook is very good," he told the Negro students. "You have something to live for; you have something to work for and that is about all that you can want, anyway."
He deplored existing racial prejudice, and declared that it was almost universal in the south and "little better in the north."
Major Ernest Cox Speaks
In Campostella
Major Ernest Sevier Cox, of Richmond, author of "White America," and prime mover in the Anglo-Saxon Clubs of America, addressed the Campostella Division of the Universal Improvement Association Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. The hall was filled to overflowing and many were turned away. Major Cox gave a speech which some of his hearers have since characterized as splendid. He was presented by H. Sampson Parker.
es That Pace Misrepresents Controversy
Replying to the charges made, of New York, in a published ing the conduct of his office, over of the Elks, issued a state-Pace "is guilty of a deliberate"
CHARGES PACE MAKES AGAINST JAMEST.CARTER
Among some of the things alleged against James T. Carter, grand treasurer of the Elks, by Harry H. Pace, in a statement published in the Pittsburgh Courier of last week, and which Mr. Carter refutes in this issue of this newspaper are in Mr. Pace's own words as follows:
"I have the right to say, and I herewish say it, that Brother Carter too, has been in his office too long. He too, feels that the position which he did nothing to canary, has been in his office. Order of Elks owes him the job. If Brother Carter was the only able man, or the only honest man or the only rich man in the Order, there might be some excuse for his holding office for life. But there are hundreds of men who are just as honest, just as rich, and just as capable of holding the office which he has held as he. And in any fraternal organization when any man or group of men arrogate to themselves the divine right to a life tenure of office and consider it a crime for any other member of that order to oppose them, then that organization getting onto dangerous ground.
"Brother Carter says he has never been a candidate for the office. He has been active career candidate with the White House, who he professes that he is letting the office seek him. Well, I nappe to know that the Riehmann by his local friends and many others "to save Carter," and the fear was that they would change all down the line. "Brother Carter assures that I have never entertained such an assumption, but I do assert that I know as much about the real history of women in the White House. Brother Carter desires to exchange some more statements, with me, I can tell the truth."
PRESIDENT OF HAITI ON WAY TO THE STATES
PRESIDENT OF HAITI ON WAY TO THE STATES
Louis Borno Will Arrive In New York Sunday, From Where He Will Entrain For Washington.
RUMORED THAT LOAN IS SOUGHT
Washington, D. C., June 9—Louis Borno, president of Haiti, is coming to Washington. He sailed from Port-au-Prince last Sunday and will arrive Friday at New York. He will come here immediately, and will arrive probably a suite at the Mayflower, the capital's most palatial hotel has been reserved for him. He will be accompanied by Mme. Borno.
President and Mme. Borno are coming to the United States to pay their respects to President and Mrs. Coolidge and to visit the sesquientennial exposition at Philadelphia, according to State department advices. They may also visit the Eucharistic Congress in Chicago.
Advices from opposition parties in Haiti say that the motives of this president President Borno are being kept secret. There is great alarm all over the republic about this trip, it is said. Some of the Haitians believe that the purpose of this trip is to arrange with New York bankers the floating of another loan of $16,000,000.
SHOOTS AND KILLS HIMSELF
SHOOTS AND KILLS HIMSELF
Believed to have become delirious from prolonged and intense suffering caused by illness, Johnnie Miller, 22, 438 Lewis street, shot and killed himself, Thursday at 12 o'clock, during a moment when his mother had left his sick room to go down stairs for a bowl of soup for him.
The young man had been sick all of the winter, members of his family state, and in the past several days had been confined closely to his room under the canopy of a physician. No one had the least intimation that his mind had been deranged to the extent of putting it unsafe for him to be left alone momentarily.
His body was turned over to undertaker Hale.
Johnnie Miller was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie McGowens and the grandson of Mrs. L. Miller, a well-known midwife.
Rev. Madison's Stand Endorsed By Ministers
At a special meeting of the Interdemonstrational Ministers Conference held at St. John's A. M. E. Church Tuesday the conference went on record as endorsing "Rev Madison's efforts to remedy any and all existing evils." This action was taken by the ministers in reference to the allegations Rev Madison has made concerning certain unnamed school teachers.
The resolution is as follows:
"In view of the stand taken by Rev. Dr. C. P. Madison in sermons recently preached by him, touching upon rumors of unbecoming conduct on the part of certain teachers in our school system, and as an expression of our desire that a higher standard of professional and Christian conduct be maintained in our schools; be it
"Resolved: That it is the sense of this conference to endorse Dr. Madison's efforts to remedy any and all evils existing. Be it further
"Resolved: That we go on record as assailing evil in all high places.
"Rev. M. E. Davis, president
"Rev. Richard H. Bowling, Chairman, committee,
TWELVE PAGES—TWO PARTS
PRES
RESID
Norfolk Girl Wins Honors
MISS VERNICE LUNSFORD
Boyd L. Diggs, completes the four-y
Arts at Howard University, June 11
of Arts degree. She has specialized
Queen of the May Festival held on
attesting her popularity at this inst
a student of Booker T. Washington
a member of the Alpha Kappa A
honored, that she was selected from
day.
Her attendants were from left
Nelson and Miss Thornton.
Car Crashed
On Into Fry
Near Sou
One person was fatally inj
serious and minor injuries wher
by Howard Walson, its owner,
sengers besides himself were
ereens when it crashed headlo
at Carolina Junction of the Bell
road Tuesday, at 2:05 o'clock a
ERNICE LUNSFORD DIGGS, daughter of Mr. B. S., completes the four-year course in the College of Card University, June 11th, when she receives her degree. She has specialized in Psychology. She was May Festival held on the University campus, M. popularity at this institution. Miss Diggs was Booker T. Washington High School of Norfolk, the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority and her son she was selected from their group as Queen of theendants were from left to right, Misses Vera Welc Miss Thornton.
Crashes Head Into Freight Train Near South Norfolk
erson was fatally injured and five others suffer minor injuries when a Durant automobile Walson, its owner, and in which five others himself were riding was smashed to the crashed headlong into a moving freight Junction of the Belt Line railroad on Camay at 2:05 o'clock a.m.
AOV
MISS VERNICE LUNSFORD DIGGS, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd L. Diggs, completes the four-year course in the College of Liberal Arts at Howard University, June 11th, when she receives her Bachelor of Arts degree. She has specialized in Psychology. She was crowned Queen of the May Festival held on the University campus, May 29th, attesting her popularity at this institution. Miss Diggs was formerly a student of Booker T. Washington High School of Norfolk. She is a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority and her sorors feel represented, that she was selected from their group as Queen of the May dur
Her attendants were from left to right, Misses Vera Welch, Nettie Nelson and Miss Thornton.
Car Crashes Head On Into Freight Train Near South Norfolk
One person was fatally injured and five others sustained serious and minor injuries when a Durant automobile driven by Howard Walson, its owner, and in which five other passengers besides himself were riding was smashed to smithereens when it crashed headlong into a moving freight train at Carolina Junction of the Belt Line railroad on Campostella road Tuesday, at 2:05 o'clock a.m.
PYTHIAS OF THE STATE TO MOVE ON TO STAUNTON
PYTHIAS OF THE STATE TO MOVE ON TO STAUNTON
Grand Lodge of Knights Of Pythias and Courts of Calanthe Will Begin Forty-First Annual Meet Tuesday
Knights of Staunton, Vn., will be the host to the forty-first annual session, Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias of Virginia. The Knights throughout the state are anxiously awaiting the sound of the gavel to call the old Grand Lodge to order and from North, East, South and West, the cry is heard, "On To Staunton."
Your delegate and officer is looking forward to one of the greatest sessions ever held in the history of the Grand Lodge.
The order has made rapid strides during the year, having paid more than $20,000 in death claims alone, besides meeting other important obligations. Delegates from Norfolk, Portsmouth, Suffolk, Franklin and surrounding territory will leave Norfolk, Monday, June 14, at 9 a.m. over the C. and O railway. Special coaches will be provided in Newport News for their comfort. Delegates are requested to buy round-trip tickets.
SIDE
DIGGS, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dar course in the College of Liberal Arts, when she receives her Bachelor in Psychology. She was crowned at the University campus, May 29th, institution. Miss Diggs was formerly at High School of Norfolk. She is Alpha Sorority and her sorors feel their group as Queen of the May to right, Misses Vera Welch, Nettie
Les Head
Height Train
South Norfolk
Furished and five others sustained when a Durant automobile driven and in which five other pas-siding was smashed to smithing into a moving freight train at Line railroad on Campostella m.
Dead And Injured
As a result of the accident, O. W. Pozey, whose address was given as the Martha Washington Hotel, Virginia Beach, is dead; Hattie Hill and Howard Walston are badly injured, while Jordan Hill, William E. Gray, and Emma Walston are suffering from bruises and shock. Gray's address also was given as a Virginia Beach Hotel, while Walston and the Hills live in South Norfolk. The men who gave Virginia Beach Hotel addresses are believed to be employed at these hostelries.
Walston, driver of the death car, was placed under arrest by officers investigating the accident and lodged in the Portsmouth jail on a charge of manslaughter. Hill and Gray were locked up as material witnesses, while Pozy died some time after being carried to St. Vincent's Hospital. His body, with one leg and one arm virtually cut off and his head terribly mashed lies in the Norfolk city morgue. All of those arrested have since been released on bail.
Campostella road in the county limits is unlighted and it is believed that the occupants failed to see the passing train at the crossing until too close upon it for the driver to apply the brakes on his car in time to avert the crash, and owing to the sound of the motor they evidently failed to hear the rumbling of the train.
Hit Train On End
The freight train which was drawn by Virginia Railway locomotive No. 127,971 and in charge of Conductor J. S. Brinkley and engineer W. M. Martin, had almost cleared the crossing when struck by the automobile, the car hitting it between the last gondola and the caboose. The impact was terrific and the moving train crumpled the automobile like so much paper. The parry was thrown in the air.
---
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THAT'S WORTH
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PRICE 7 CENTS
PORTER HOOD STILL HERE ON LEAVE
Mystery SurroundsProtracted Stay In This Country of Minister To Liberia; No Explanation Offered.
RUMOR OF FINANCIAL
DIFFICULTIES DENIED
Washington, D. C., June—Solomon Porter Hood, minister to Liberia, is still on leave. That is the only reason the State Department would give for his protracted stay in this country. When Minister Hood first returned to the United States from Liberia, illness was assigned as the reason for his return. The report has since become current that he is involved in financial difficulties.
State Department Speaks
The State Department has no knowledge of any financial difficulties in which he may be involved. If deferred Monday, such matters would be purely personal, it is said, and the State Department would not be interested in them.
Meanwhile there is pending legislation to increase the salary of the minister to Liberia from $5,000 to $10,000 a year. The enactment of this legislation has been urged by President Coolidge.
In the report of the then acting Secretary of State, Joseph C. Grew, it was stated that "with the cost of living at Monrovia for a foreign being in the United States, it is impossible for the American minister, unless he be a man of large means, to meet the requirements of diplomatic life and his family necessities on the small salary now granted to the post."
The State Department does not know when Mr. Hood intends to return to his post in Liberia.
THE O.D.MEDICAL SOCIETY TO MEET IN CAPITAL CITY
The Richmond Medical Society has arranged all details for entertaining the members of the Old Dominion Medical Society in its session to be held in Richmond the week of June 15, 16 and 17, according to reports broadcast over the state.
The committee of arrangements has planned a very unique and instructive program for the occasion, including many modern scientific features. Surgical clinics will be held daily at Sarah G. Jones Memorial Hospital. Interesting clinical demonstrations in Internal Medicine will be presented by prominent members of the profession, whom will be Dr. Lane, Whitby, and Carr of Washington, D. C., Dr. Bowles of York, Pa. Dr. Joseph Bear, Warren T. Vaughn and S. W. Budd, Richmond.
Social functions will be many; and varied; all may be assured there will be no dull periods during the week.
The public is invited to attend the open session to be held at Sixth Mount Zion Baptist Church, Tuesday, June 15, at 8:15 p.m., at which time Dr. G. W. Bowles, York, Pa., will make an address on the "Conservation of Health."
Elks Glee Club In Recital
The Elks Glee Club of the Beacon Light Lodge No. 34 I, B. P. O, E. of W, will feature in a recital at the St. Thomas Baptist Church, Portsmouth, corner Elm and High land avenues Thursday, June 17, 8:15 p. m.
This recital promises to be one of the best of the season and a large crowd is expected. The Elks Glee Club needs little introduction to the music followers of Portsmouth, and all of their members.
City Social and Personal
PAGE TWO
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Davis and Mrs. Maud Williams are now residing at the old family homestead, 805 Avenue A.
Thomas W. Young after spending a few days with his parents left Tuesday evening for Pine Bluff, Camp, Port Jefferson, Mt. Vernon, and he was joined in New York by Michael Turrentine, also of Hampton Institute, who will spend the summer at camp.
Mr. Edgar R. Peters, of St. Paul School, Lawrenceville, Va., is home for the summer vacation.
Mr. Charles Williams and Mr. Worthen, of Union University are in the city for some time.
Missen Corn Campbell and Mabel Palmer who finished the College Course at the institute, are in the city for the summer.
Mr. James Cotton, who is a student at Hampton Institute is the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cotton, of Lexing-
Mr. George Washington Fields and sister, Mr. Gash Gay, accompanied by her son-in-law, Mr. Samuel Scott, electrical engineer, by the city last Sunday with their childhood friend, Mrs. Maria Gatewood Thomas, who was extremely ill at her home, 224 East York street.
Miss Bacille Jiggets, of 825 Avenue B, has returned to her home at Mecklenburg, Va.
Misses Nannie E. Williams and Fannie Riddick, attended the baccalaureate sermon at V. N. I. I. Petersburg, Sunday.
Mr. Louis Snowden, drum major and top sergeant of the Hampton Institute Band, was the week-end guest of his aunt, Mrs. Carrie Billups, 820 Johnson avenue. Mr. Snowden is a graduate of Douglas High School, Baltimore.
Mrs. Olivia W. Clark; formerly Miss Olivia S. White, of this city, now residing at Tuskegee, Ala., where her husband, Mr. Clark, is a professor, spent a few days in the city last week visiting her parents on Calvert street. Mr. Clark has recently opened a website with grounded grounds and reports quite success.
Mr. L. B. Edmonds, of 952 Marshall avenue, who has been confined to his home on account of illness, is able to be out again.
Mrs. Sarah West. 1085 Hayes street, Lindenwood, who recently want to New York been called home on account of business.
Mr. Calvin L. Smith left Saturday night to visit his wife to celebrate of his sick father, Mr. Ephraim L. Smith.
Mr. Harold S. Conaway, of Union University, the summer with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Conaway, on Fourth street.
Mr. Johns, of 942 St. Julian avenue, and Mrs. Martha Riddick, of St. Julian avenue, who have been confined to their homes with illness are able to be out again.
Mrs. Luvenia Jones and her niece, Miss Sallie Jiggetts of $25 avenue B. are homes with illness, Mrs. Sallie Ellison, in jersey City.
Mrs. Eobyn Williams, formerly of this city, now of New York, and Mr. and Mrs. William Skinner, 728-1 Brewer street, called to Philadelphia, the address of Mrs. Eobyn Williams, and Mrs. Smith, who died while surrounded by their relatives. While in Philadelphia, Mr. and Mrs. Skinner and Mrs. Williams were moved to Richmond on Sunday and moved to Richmond on Sunday and Mrs. Thomas McCray, of Clay street.
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Mr. Walter West, of New York, formerly of Norfolk, is spending a few days in the city attending to business.
Miss Fanny M. Larrent, of Tuscaloosa, Ma., is visiting Mrs. M. E. Miller, of Lexington street.
Miss Ailhena Rogers, of Hampion Station, spent the week-end visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rogers.
Miss Christina Elizabeth Wallace has returned from Boydton Institute and will spend the summer with her mother, Mrs. Shelle Mwallace.
Mr. Chas. Bibbins, of 876 Lexington street, met with a painful accident by breaking his ankle. He is much improved at this writing.
Mrs. Rosa B. Bibbins, who has been teaching in Franklin, closed a very successful year and is at home with her family.
Mr. Clifton Cason and Miss Inez Elmonds, students of the New York City College, are visiting their parents of Washington avenue and Chapel street, respectively.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. John C. Watkins, of Calvert street, a son, John Carey, Jr.
Mrs. R. C. Archer attended the wedding of her daughter, Miss Carolyn, in Orange, N. J.
Mrs. Eva Tucker, of Avenue A, attended the commencement exercises at V. N. College, after the graduation of her daughter, Miss Eva Tucker, They will return to the city on Saturday.
Miss Antonette Palmer is in the city with her parents after completing the business course at Hampton Institute this year.
Miss Helen Gentry leaves for her home in Buffalo, N. Y., this week and she will also spend a part of the summer in Boston, Mass.
Miss Helma and Doris Dungee, of the Teachers College at Hampton Institute, are at home with their parents. Prof. and Mrs. J. Riley Dungee, in Wood St.
The Norflok friends of Mr. and Mrs. John Stanford Collins, of Collins, N. Y., who both received broken limbs.
Prof. Kildare, of Virginia State College was in the city this week.
Miss. S. J. Water and family, of Atlantic City, N. J. formerly of this city, swore seven Indianaapolis, Ind. to sell, the graduation of their son and brother, Quentin Waters, who completed it. The students were entertained by Mamie Goodman, Mrs. Lillie Custus, Mrs. Blanche Williams, Mrs. Lennon Cottie, Mrs. Hannah Brooks and Mrs. Delle Raney.
Miss Margaret Lawrence will leave the city Sunday, June 13, to take up her duties as teacher in A. & T. College, Greensboro, N. C., summer school.
Rev. J. R. Custis, formerly of this city, but now of New Hampshire, is in the city this week to the delight of his many friends.
Miss Mary Robinson was the guest of Miss Ada Collins, of Lexington street, for the week-end. Miss Robinson is a student of Hampton Institute, and lives in Frankfort, Ky. She left for her home Thursday evening.
CLUBS
NEEDLE AND THIMBLE CLUB
The Needle and Thimble Club met with Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson, in Middle street, Lindenwood, on June 2. After business the hostess served a delicious repast.
TWILIGHT STRUTTERS (Male)
The Twilight Strutters met at the home of Mr. Milton Best, 605 Princess Anne road. The meeting was opened by Mr. Roger Whitehurst, and important business was discussed by the president, Mr. Bennie Eason and others. Because June 6 was the birthday of Mr. Best he served the club members a very delicious dinner.
FRIENDSHIP SEWING CIRCLE
The Friendship Sewing Circle held its meeting at the residence of Mrs. Mary Irby, 830 Goff street, June 3, with a large number of members present. Mrs. Bibbins and Mrs. Armstead were visitors. After sewing was laid aside the members were served refreshments. They were entertained by Miss Irby at the piano, while Mrs. Bibbins and Mrs. Irby sang solos. Mrs. King and Mrs. Jones assisted in serving.
B. B. BOUNCERS
Mr. Alvin Smith was host for the B. B. Bouncers at his residence in Outten street, Sunday, June 6. After the opening of the meeting, Mr. Samuel Eley made some helpful remarks. Those present were: Messrs. Withy Gray, Alvia Smith, Robert Carbert, Walter Riddick, Samuel Eley, Bernard Beslow, George Chatman, Allmanus Gregory, Wesley Jefferson and Lanston Rose.
GREEN TWIG ART CIRCLE
Mrs. Mary Garris entertained the Green Twig Art Circle at 1322 Church street, on Wednesday, June 2. Plans were made for the club's closing for the summer season. At the usual hour the art work was laid aside and Mrs. Garris served a repast. Mesdames Colden and Capel assisted in serving.
USHER BOARD
The Usher Board of St. John's A. M. E. Church held its regular monthly meeting at the residence of Mr. Thomas Burgess, 876 Fremont street. The meeting was largely attended and the host served a toothsome repast.
COLONIAL MAIDS
Miss Jennie Dudley entertained the "Maids" at her home in Johnson avenue on Tuesday, May 25th. A refreshing repast was served and several business matters discussed. The following Tuesday, June 1, the "Maids" met with Miss
Margret Lawrence. All old business was saved for the year after, which delicious refreshments were served.
THE MAIDS ENTERTAINED
ON Monday, May 31, a congenial gathering of young people vended their way to the home of Miss Annette Harrison, in A avenue. The home was made beautiful by the softly shaded lights placed here and there. The Maid's were the guests of home being entertained by Misses Maxine Ferebee, Lillian Brosier, Amnette Harrison, Thelma Hill, Maria Williamson and Mrs. Gladys Bright.
Music and games enlivened the evening and the only interruption was the service of a tempting repast, after which the president of the "Maids", Miss Marguerite Moseley, presented to each of the six young ladies entertaining, a small doll dressed as a Colonial Maid as a remembrance from the club. The dolls were dressed by Miss Jennie Dudley.
The other invited guests present were as follows: Messrs. E. R. Archer, Allan Brown, Jesse Lewis, George Jackson, Curtis Braswell, David King, Samuel King, J. E. Watkins, Jerome Wilson, Owen Wilson, William Colden, W. H. Webb, C. Fulford, Lawrence Harrison, Euric Peters, Drs. J. T. Cannady, E. D. Burke and F. S. Coppage.
GUIDE NEWSBOYS ORGANIZE
Thirty-four Journal and Guide newsboys met at the Boys' Club on Washington avenue, Wednesday night from 7:30 to 8:30 as guests of the Guide at which time a Journal and Guide Newsboys Club organizer with George Moore, president, Walter Bowers, president; Bernard Bower, secretary; and Thomas Frazier, assistant secretary. Mr. Ernest Walton, of the Guide Staff, will serve as treasurer of the club. Mr. Puryear, also of the Guide staff, assisted the boys in perfecting their organization.
After the business was concluded, which besides organizing consisted of a brief lecture by Mr. Puryear, ice cream and cake were served. The members of the club are: Joseph White, L. Edward Webb, Robert Harris, T. mas Wright, Henry Beslow, H. Henry Brooks, J. Bruce Wright, Milton Baxter, C. M. Hinton, James Holloway, Levi Sutton, James Smith, Milton Austin, V. Goodman, Granville Quill, Johnny Beslow, Richard Owens, Samuel Sears, Walter Owens, Thomas Ward, Pierce M. Thompson, Bernard Hill, Maurice Washington, Nathaniel White, Levi Johnson, Carlton Thompson, John Wood, James Randall, Alvin Gregory and Clarence Sears.
The members of this club are receiving their first lessons in practical salesmanship—the fundamental element in all business—through lectures given them from time to time by P. B. Young, editor of the Journal and Guide, and other members of the staff who have had experience in the business world. These lectures included talks on manner of approach to customers, sales talks, manliness, honesty, self-confidence and good manners. It is the purpose of the Guide to watch very closely the progress of this club and if its members prove themselves sincere, provisions for athletic facilities will be made for them some time later.
In the meeting, the public is especially asked, to remember that everyone of these boys must pay for every paper he distributes and for that reason, when a customer fails to pay a newsboy for his paper the boy himself is the loser.
JOLLIETTES
Miss Jeanette Batts was the pleasing hostess for the members of the club and several visitors, Wednesday, June 2, at her residence, 870 Avenue B. The evening was very pleasantly spent by all present. The evening was spent in playing games. Miss Ida Harris was the winner of the first prize and Miss Hattie Johnson, the consolation. The dainty repast was enjoyed by all.
The club held their last meeting for the season at the residence of Miss Lula Harris, 529 E. Bute street. The time was devoted entirely to the transaction of business. The plans for the coming season were formed and arrangements were made for the annual affairs, following officers were elected: President, Miss J. J. Bats; vice president, Miss H. L. Johnson; secretary, Miss I. L. Harris, assistant secretary, L. Harris; treasurer, M. McCoy; reporter, L. B. Garrett.
Miss Harris proved to be a charming hostess.
CHI BETA CHI
The Rev. L. L. Berry, pastor of St. John A. M. E. Church, was the speaker of the evening at the regular monthly meeting of the Chi Beta Chi held at Juanita's delicatessen on Church street, Thursday evening June 3.
A large membership greeted the speaker with applause after his introduction by president, R. H. Tate, and sat attentively through a delightful instructive discourse. Rev Berry chose as his subject: "Some of the Requisites of a Successful Man", which he handled in a masterly and obsequient manner; naming in order sincerity, fearlessness, selflessness and right relationship with God, he brought out under each sub-topic the necessity it bore to the success of any and all mankind.
The program committee m a yeel well paid for, its efforts in securing Rev. Berry, for the applause that was given at the close
NORFOLK JOURNAL AND GUIDE
For Better Vision Through Optometria Science
Hall Service
Is Your Vision Protection
Delay in Securing
glasses for weakening eyes
is not economizing, but the
costliest kind of folly.
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Since 1901
of the address was reward enough in itself.
Kev. Berry promises to again address the Chis' in the near future on the subject: "When the East Overtakes the West."
Dr. J. A. Byers was host of the evening and the repast was perfect in every detail.
YOU CAN'T GUESS US SOCIAL CLUB
The club held its meeting at the home of Miss Elaine Mae Drew, June 2. The president conducted the devotional service. Each member responded with quotations. The meeting was opened for the transaction of business after which plans were made for the hay ride and the last meeting of the season. Many helpful suggestions were listened to. The hostess served a delightful reapst of ice cream, punch and cake. All expressed themselves as having spent an enjoyable evening.
BAKER'S THRIET CLUB
BAKER'S Thrift Club met at the home of Mr. Mr. Alexander. The following officers were included: President, Mr. N. H. Jackson; vice president, W. H. Edwards; recording secretary, J. A. Jordan; financial secretary, J. R. Amy; treasurer, B. P. Lee; sergeant-atarms, W. Williams; chaplain, McManning; banking committee, L. Alexander; L. Hill, L. Barnes; board of directors, chairman, G. Carter, McManning, L. Hill, W. H. Edwards, B. P. Lee.
A toothsome repast was enjoyed by all, consisting of combination fruit salad, sandwiches, saltines, ice cream, cake, after-dinner mints, salted peanuts, pork and cigarettes. The table was beautifully set with carnations in the center.
INOX WHIST CLUB
The Inox Whist Club held its regular meeting at the residence of Mrs. Georgia Bailey, Wednesday, June 2. Quite a number of the members was present. Plans were made for the closing of the club during the summer months. After the conclusion of business, the hostess served a very toothsome repast.
WALTZ DREAM SOCIAL CLUB
The club held their last meeting at the residence, of Mr. Willie Palmer, 1001 Smith street. T he by the chaplain, Miss Clarine Jenmeeting was opened with prayer kins. At the conclusion of business a delightful repast was served.
ROYAL SHAMROCK SOCIAL
The Royal Shamrock Social Club held its meeting Tuesday night at the home of Miss Minnie Jordan, 403 East Brambleton avenue. The following officers were elected: Willie Nash, president; Miss Annie M. Jordan, vice president; Miss Mattie Stallings, secretary; Miss Minnie Jordan, recording secretary; Miss Lizzie Wright, treasurer; James Robinson, chapman; Owen Crompton, recording committee; James Harrell, sergeant-at-arms; John Brumley, reporter. One member joined the club.
DELHI ART CIRCLE
Mrs. Geraldine Reed, Misses Marie Russell and Maxine Southall were pleasing hostesses to the circle on May 19, and June 2 with pleasing repasts.
On June 2, each member of the circle was asked to bring a pound. A lovely basket was made up of the various articles and taken to Mr. Willie Peacock.
TOUJOURS CARTES
A delightful and well attended meeting of the Toujours Cartes was held with Miss Verna Tucker of Princess Anne road, last Monday evening. Games were played in which Mrs. Lula Strong was awarded the guest prize; Mrs. Geraldine Reed, the first prize and Miss Florie Robinson, the booby prize. Miss Tuckers' guests were: Miss Josephine Moseley, Mabel Fiss, Vivia Cousins, Pauline Langley, Ruth Greene, Mildred Johnson, Louise Alston and Mrs. Lula Strong.
GET-TOGETHER SOCIAL CLUB
The club held its monthly meeting Sunday at 8:15 Princess Anne road. After re-chelting the old officers, the members were served refreshments. One new member joined the club.
LITTLE GENTS' SOCIAL CLUB
The Little Gents' Social Club
hold its regular meeting at the
residence of Mr. Montier Eason,
Sunday. Invitations were sent out
for a party to be given on June 11
at the residence of Mr. Eason, 1012
Wood street. Mr. William Bush,
of Chapel街, became a member.
Messrs. Willie Bell and Roger
Pryor were visitors. The c l u b
members wore red roses and their
colors of orange and purple at
the party.
Sweden, in 1909, was the first
country to experience a general
strike in which the workers in
practically every industry downed
tools.
PARTIES
SEND-OFF PARTY
Little Miss Charlotte Williams,
1030 Carrollton street, entertained
little Misses Audrey Oasin, Vivian
Mertins and Cora Water on
thursday evening with a delightful
send-off party. The rooms
were beautifully decorated and the
guests were entertained by Vivian
Marion Custus and Izzie
interpretation. Dancing and games
were enjoyed by all present. The
guests present were Misses
Jill Williams, Marion and Gloria
Custus, Audrey Oasin, Vivian
Mertins, Cora Waters and Masters
Ennest and Herbert Williams. A
delicious repast was served.
PRE-NUPTIAL PARTY
One of the prettiest parties of the season was given at the home of Miss Oratrice Cotton in honor of Miss Bessie Butler, who is to marry very soon and Miss Mary Robinson, of Frankfort, Ky, who is a college student at Hampton Institute, and a guest of Miss Ada Collins, of Lexington street. The decorations were very pretty, the color scheme used being pink and green, with favors for each guest. Games and music furnished the entertainment for the guests. Miss Mildred Dudley presented the guests of honor lovely prizes, after which dainty refreshments were served.
The guests were Misses Mildred Dudley, Bessie Butler, Mary Robinson, Mabel Fool, Lucille Williams, Emma White, Georgia Brown, Mary Thompson, Mary Wood, Mabel Perry, Gustava Perry, Helen Qurellt, Ada Collins. Drs. Coppage, Burke, Messrs. Forest Williams, S. H. Williamson, C. Johnson, H. Roberts, Wm. Hubbard, Abner Lee, A. Carter, Attys, Peters and Howell. The out-of-town guest was Mr. "Bulldog" Williams, of Hampton College.
PRE-NUPTIAL RECEPTION
A most enjoyable occasion was a pre-nuptial reception tendered Miss I. P. Williams, on Tuesday afternoon, June 8, by the Dunbar teachers. Mrs. Colding, principal, and Mrs. A. W. Triggs spoke briefly, expressing regret at Miss Williams' leaving, but wishing her happiness in her proposed venture. Mrs. I. C. Parham sang a solo, and Mr. Hicks presented, as material evidence of the esteem in which Miss Williams is held by co-workers, a silver vegetable dish appropriately engraved. Mrs. R. I. Hodges, Miss B. M. Turner and Mrs. G. D. Reed composed the committee on arrangements, and Miss C. V. Sheppard acted as mistress of ceremonies.
WEDDINGS
MENEFIELI-ARCHER
Miss Caroyin V. Archer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Archer sr., of Johnson avenue, was quietly married to Mr. Frank Edward Menefield, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Menefield, of Pittsburg, Pa., by Rev. C. M. Long at the home of the bride's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Archer, 216 Oakwood Place, Orange, N. J., June 8, 1926. The bride was prettily dressed in a figured georgette over crep satin with a bouquet of lillies of the valley. Both the bride and groom are well known among the younger set of Portfolk and Portsmouth, Mrs. R. C. Archer sr., the bride's mother, was present to witness the marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Menefield will make their home at 637 Vanilla Way, Pittsburgh.
BROWNE-WALDEN
On last Wednesday, June 2, Miss Flosse G. Walden, the charming daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. G. Walden, of Holland, Va., was quietly married to Mr. Edward W. Browne, of Kimball, W. Va., and Baltimore. Miss Walden is a graduate of Hampton Institute, and Mr. Brown a graduate of Howard University of the class of '22 and a graduate student from the University of Dijon, '24, Dijon, France.
MRS. MARIAH G. THOMAS
Mrs. Maria Gatewood Thomas wife of the late David Emanuel Thomas and mother of D. Gatewood Thomas and Mrs. Alda Malphey Davis dies her late residence York, New York June 8, at 4:20. Her funeral will be held Friday, June 11, from the house.
The Green Ribbon Garden Club is preparing to give prizes for pretty growing vines and well kept gardens, and maybe will kept boxes, shade trees, crapemyrtle and magnolia trees, fashioned gardens, etc. Pens wishing to enter for prizes will kindly give their names and addresses to members of the committee that visit them. The ribbon will be 1st prize; red, 2nd prize and white 3rd prize.
white, SRI president;
Mrs. Mary Jackson, president;
Mrs. L. E. Titus, Virginia Federation Deputy Organizer.
BAILEY PARK
for the Picnic
Best equipped resort in the
nient. Ideal for private par-
etc;
For further information co-
H. C. Young, B
Journal and
711 E. Olney Ro-
Day Phone 23100
MISS ELIZABETH WELSH
BAILEY
PARK
for the
Picnic~
Flowers
Free for the sick. All kinds of flower
designs. Plants for sale.
MME. McADOO
Phone 39530 1719 Hunter St.
Norfolk, Va.
MISS ELIZA
"You Never
Amyth
MISS ELIZABETH WELSH
"You Never Saw Anything Like It!"
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"Why!" she continued. "When I started using this preparation my hair was so unruly, I couldn't do a thing with it. Now it is so soft and straight I can dress it in any style I wish and it stays that way, looking smooth and glossy. My hair has grown longer, too, since I started using Pluko." Men and women everywhere in all walks of life are expressing amaz-
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Hampton, Va.-Mr. and Mrs. Alex. A Santa Cruz entertained a number of friends and classmates of the senior class of '26, Hampton Institute, in honor of their daughter's graduation Tuesday, June 2. Delicious refreshes were served and every one was surprised when their napkins were unfolded and revealed very unique cards enclosed announcing the engagement of their daughter, Helen to Dr. W. S Hart, of Hampton.
The following guests were present: Misses Edna Jordan, Miriam Pride, Jesse Stenhens, Messrs. W. H. Townsend, O. Boone, C. W. Morton, H. C. Goodwin, H. Wilson, P. Franklin, C. Urquhart, Mascos Santa Cruz, Mr. and Mrs. Minkins, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Puryear and Mrs. R. N. Dett.
ANNIVERSARIES CELEBRATED
At the home of Mrs. Luc Burham
and Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher
Hill, the anniversary of the birth-
day of their mother and grand-
mother and the wedding anniv-
ary of their niece and nephew,
Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Abad was
celebrated on Monday evening. In
addition to the members of the
family there were two shipmates
of Mr. Abad and a few friends.
Covers were laid for twelve and a
delightful menu served.
Although cinerate manufacturing
is one of Egypt's greatest
industries no cigarette paner is
made in that country and 1,250,000
pounds were imported last year.
the most harsh, wiry and unruly hair becomes soft, smooth and glossy with almost the first application of Pluko Hair Dressing; and how the continued use of
BLACK AND WHITE CANS 50¢
BIG GREEN CANS 25¢
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this soft, melty preparation actually makes the hair grow long, straight and abundant. The Improved Fluko Hair Dressing is made from rare and expensive hair growing oils, and the finest perfumes, combined in such a manner as to give a soft, fine hair dressing which melts at the temperature of the scalp. You will be delighted with the refreshed and invigorated feeling this delicately fragranced Hair Dressing gives your scalp, the smooth glossiness it gives your hair, and the way its continued use makes your hair long and abundant-
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Fluko Hair Dressing is rare and expensive hair and the finest perfumes, such a manner as to give a dressing which melts at nature of the scalp.
delighted with the refreshorated feeling this delicacized Hair Dressing gives the smooth glossiness it hair, and the way its conakes your hair long and
If your dealer cannot supply you, send us his name along with the price of the Pluko Hair Dressing you want. We will send it to you through him and you save the cost of the additional postage of sending it direct to you.
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Gateways Standardization Sale!
| HOW IT IS DONE! Paints, Varnishes
‘ me Enamel
—— to know the facts and here they are— At from 25 per cent to 50 per cent below
upiinleht ae am arrow from Tere endienes Regular Prices
Profits | and lowest costs of delivery to your nearest , erage
store. ’ k ‘outside House Paints $2.16 to $2.38 per
| sell goods from a great modern factory with vy Gallon
far of pnts and varnshersupplometed by Former Price $3.25 to $5.50 Per Gallon
W that are iugis" fresh. "Up to-the minute distributing Flat Wall Finishes, $1.98 to $2.48 per Gallon
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&:..LOOK.FOR THE ORANGE AND‘BLUE FRONT.
ite Ma eS ieee rege reine oo ited ste Te Lees iia a
MAKES AGAINST
AMES T. CARTER
ee S(Cuaumued from: Page Ono)
Bn Ct Tenant ord than
eegaoee, what any good hintorian ought to
gai mhtocpe a aectrate recor abo
Ewe Sn midnight deal in Brother Car
3 cetetiee in Richmond, last August
sly ‘eauned the Virginia, delexation te
= MCh, is support over night from Steck
serith jon, and 1 know the reason fo
Fe Menge end I know the amount of
att PMavolved. 1 know that. the ran
mateo the Virginia delerates didn
god Many they were suddenly ordered to
AIM aferently trom what they hed been
rae ote, previously, and that back of
JW eho object “to sexe Carter and Kees
= A Stmeney in: Richmond.’
Uameher ‘Carter asserts that be, ha
= Beat any money in a bank that di
a at leant. three per cent interest
BE We francs. are wrong aad T mey
oP mutaken. But on page 46 of the
; ames appears a statement of the banks.
Binge case of the Virginia, Trust, Com.
Bay. tbere was a balance of $38 494.78, 2
Meise of the Pittsburgh session. Ad-
Beeat deposits amounting, to §95.377.88
seach turing the year, making a. to
gue Mane of deposits of $74,488.61
Pat hanes oF ee ge. waka
“ere “ihe year $98,804.85, leaving 1
BEER Of" seksa76 at the ‘time the re
delaras made. Now multiply the aver
Det fance inthe banks by 2 per cent
45 the interest. exrmed is $1040.48, | But
a3 orton this. same page says thit
ME Terese eredited to the account |
Mesos A. nice little difference. | Bu
Frother Carter says that the bank “paid
Bette sper eent interest." Well, may
RUGS did, but i just doesn't ook Tike
Pyar cent to me. :
owe may Task Brother Carter jas"
vrhy he mage these two particular white
Teac favorites that he did, when by
Matt have pul come mare money UNDER
PROPER SAFEGUARDS. in. the other
Teer celored banks in Richmond. ‘Why
steal that he_ had to. concentrate
SF he Bik_money in Richmond or. eve:
Yisinia® “He nscerts thot T oprosed hit
W'Newark in 1922, because of the failure
A Mo tanks in which the grand Tod
MN inds. He did Not state that het!
MN gove banks. thet failed. were in Vir
Solna, T assert that iE is wot bust
seitige to concentrate the funde in ane
tes WorkoF any ome set of hanks or. in
“any one locality. Why didn’t Brother Car-
"ter place some more money in the bank:
oe PES hes resitonts under none
Reavers? Te would have been per
fer natiral and proper. thing to de
Plant be hove confidence in himselt and
Reowg bank? Did ho have more con
Since inthe while banks about. which
MMtrsement he could only surmise? Ne
The reason is very. different and 1. know
thet reason. But T shall await. your nn
«fete na Tater Twill tal the Trother oe
Geiruth of why you dide't,
“ipeother Carter asserts that sehen the
{wo Virginia Banke failed in 1922. thi!
fevmade, cord the. Tost with is personal
flecks Brother ‘Garter iid make apie
felure of deine xa. sind. marhe he fone
Some of the folks then and mase he |
Wine same it them nme. Het Ret
folling sate bolt The trtth, He nestont
{ousay that hie cheek whieh he sent th
rant siereiars was NEVER DEPOSITED
Fe ates: nai Rotes told him in so mae
words io foruet ic" and thnt. chee!
Fever four ite wav flo the rand Toren
Free and ee serandt foto iHealt sustaines
the loss Ae the “historian.” whieh you
- call me “Jieamie™ T koow that ‘sau now
Stu gr ing: when you say ‘yOu paid the
Carter Says
Harry Pace
. Misrepresents
* (Continued from. Pade ne)
‘out of a desire to deceive the un-
thinking and play to the grand-
stand. He dares not attempt to
jusitfy these statements: he evades
the issues he, formerly raised,
namely, as to how the Order's
funds were deposited, as to the in-
terest earned on same and as to
my being an obstacle and had
blocked every effort to put any of
this money in colored banks,
“Pace, (ris to show that the inorest
paid ty the Virgins “Trost, Company om
fhe Grand Lodges deposit in that inst
———————
Fresh Strawberries in our
Cream
42 E, Brambleton Avenue
PHONE 22710
tution is Tess thin” three per vent. per
qanum. He mixht not consider: itu re
flection on ‘his nbillly to remind him, wh
excbanker, that, in esinputinge interent ot
4% checkitie, account, the practice isto
dlo ‘x0 on duily balances. exter than on
the ‘bulanee at the ond of the year, Pace
takes the balance found at the vlove of the
lode year 1925, auld multiplics that ‘by
three ver cont. for the entire year, when,
yn matter of fact, the balance Muctunted
during ‘the entice year and "at one. time
was less than $21,000.00. "I hall not, be
overceritical however, for Pace hug fot
otten fundamentaln and become hope
feuly entangied in the wildrenene of word
with which he has burnedel the Piutsburgh
Courier of this week, “=
“In regard to his criticism as to how
the funds are distributed in banks, 1 wish
to quote from my reply of May 2ith, 1926,
to first attack on me, the following:—
“Ever since I have been Grand Treasur-
et, t have never elected a permanent de-
pository of the funds without yubmilting
the name of the bank or trust company
and any information Thad ax to its con-
ition first to the Grand. Exalted “Ruler
and’ the Grand Secretary for thelr appre
val. This ts also a matter of record both
in ‘the Minutes of the Grand ‘Lodge and
in- the correspondence between. these off-
cera and myself, ...- and such welections
ay ‘were made were “the result of the
unanimous decivion of. these officers,”
namely, the then Grand Exalted ler,
Grand Secretary and myself, afterwards
ratified by each “Grand Lodge Session
0 which such decisions were reported.
“Ie therefore, follows that Pace's criti
ciom of the. banks in-which the Order's
funds ‘are distributed is a. eriticism, nol
ouly of the three officers. named, Ut of
the GRAND LODGE ITSELI.
“'in ‘this. connection too, f invite Mr.
Pace's attention to the following excepts
from my report mau to the Grand Lodge
Fibila! at Newark, N. Ji, August 22rd
“Being, ina amall way. a promoter of
Segro ‘enterprisey, my” fest and. ntroncent
aclinetian, of course, wan to, patronize
anks condueted by Negroes: but realize
‘ng, that, in great organization like
his, there were, naturally, two élements—
inst, those who feared for the safety. of
tr’ funds if entrusted golely” with Ne-
roes, and, secondly, thone who” didnot
favor white ‘inetitations=1 have tried to
‘ater {o. both elementx by putting our
‘unds with both races, Idoking first to
he strength and stability of the instita:
ions in determining the quantity of our
unds to be deposited. in exch: and. this
axplains why the greater portion of uur
fands "haye been deposited” in ‘white in-
‘tutions.
‘in view of the speeches we all applaud
‘tom’ time fo time. urging ‘us {0 support
Negro hanks. PERSONALLY, I take the
ook sou in ihe face had T net patronized
Nege obanks.” PERSONALLY, 1 tute tne
ponilion that we should: be willing to. win
or Tose all the little we have in such ine
stitutions, if we ever expect he race te
acquire a commercial. foothold: ‘but I
realized that ina matter ef this. sort, it
‘fas not my personal wishes, but the with-
‘sand best dnterests af thowe Twas nerve
ing that had to. control my course.”
She Grand. Lewlre: itself ratified these
views by afoptine: this report ssithout the
least’ madiiention.
veep NVESTMENT OF THE PUNDS
The investment of ite funds. iy a pre-
rosative which the Grand Lose denier to
funy. one officer 0% xct of olficers. but re-
serves unto itself. On this subject, hows
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smn)
45 ss YJ
Y eS J
5 ARNG fos é
Me SY
ed
@ Re ps. Only
4 (\g gr $16.50
ea Wing
Pd oe G
Cy gS
O
EASY TERMS IF DESIRED
Virginia Electric &
Power Co.
Electric Building
FRANK MeLAUGHLIN, Vice Pret
Bee ceReERY, Sule ee |
ever, in this same report of August 23rd.
3922, 1 made the following recommenda.
ions (page 8
| “t believe the experioned, above detaited
jnatity’ mein ‘recommending that. the
Grand Lodge shall immediately direct the
Investment of ‘the great bulk of is Tunds
in some safe securities, such as Govern:
ment bonds or real extate whose future
enhancement ix beyond question, because
with the ‘unsettled financial condition. of
this. country. no. one can’ foretell ‘when
‘even somo of our strongest banks, remard-
lene of ‘color, tay. fails if my course an
forrcleetion of banks i not acceptable, then
1 ‘would respectfolly“surxent that the
Grand, Lodge ball. Kereatler: devignate its
‘own depontories if It plans to. contin
large cash Balnnches on hand a8 formerly.”
“the ‘Grand Lodge ordered no. change,
thus “further proving ‘the couree “of the
three oificers above tamed. “Further cont-
ment is unnecessary.
“Pace inwinuatey that there took plnce
in my office during the convention” last
sear’ a certain “mignizht. deal” which
futsed. the Virginia Delegation to switeh
its “support overnight. from Stetle to
Wilson, and that he knows the reason for
that change and the amount of money ine
"do not, ike to violate the proper-
tien of “a public diseussion by the Use of
aifenaive. or abusive language: but twill
Fay that “it Pace means. to. ink me UP
with any such deal, or to soy that T bad
any\ knowledge whatever” that ony” such
deal was" under ‘consideration, had becn,
oF would be proposed to cither of thexe
gentlomen, oc thelr representatives, then
fre'is guilty” of uttering, another untruth.
‘The conference referred to by Pace as &
“midnight deal” (which really took place
ina room provided for the Committe on
Gredentiais "and ‘not in my office) wus
called by Pace himself and had “nothing
Whatever to Uo sith the Virginia Deven:
Uon's: support of ny. eundidate. nor. with
my. candidacy forthe Grand. Treasurer
ship. His statement that back ot it ull
‘was’ the objuet “to save Carter and keep
the money in. Tichmond” is,_ therefore,
a pure invention. IE was, participated in
Uy most of the Past Graud Exalted Rulers
and some of the most distinguished and
highly "respected. members. of the Order:
The conference was purely ‘informal and,
as I understood its object when approached
ly Pace to furnish a mesting place, was
to discuss) matters that. wauld restore
peace and harmony to. Uke “Grand Lodge
of Elka. "I can't belleve thut Hurry Pace,
as reckless ‘as he bax been. in Randling
the truth, would charge that any of thew
men wert willing to neeept a bribe, sell |
{hele Nenbe oF eoule be Tabereind Et the.
J
‘Tea-Hee
A big, cold glass of Che-On 60¢
Tea will make you smile, giggle
and laugh with delight—genuine
80c value! Our Ceylon 70¢ Orange
Pekoe Tea has no superior at any
price Try our Popular 40¢ Coffee
and Famous 45¢ Mixture—Excep-
tionally fine vatues. Phone—we
deliver. C. D. Kenny Co.
Attention
VisrTors 79 SESQUICENTRN-
SIME AT PIMEADELPIVA, Fh
A itNiSovenoen, ree.
SECURE ACCOMMODATIONS
ee abeaxce mmol rie
NOpREN AGENCY. Bone ADAIR.
MERts AND Rooms. TH,
REDFInL.A STREST. PINLADEN
Pitas Phe
Write for Information Licensed
Four-Day
Excursi
Via
Southern Railway
, eo
Friday
June 18, 1926
Danville -----------$6.00
Greensboro --------- 7.00
Winston-Salem -.--- 7.50
Charlotte -----------8.00
Regular Trains—Through
. Cars
Good In Sleeping Cars
Final Limit, Monday 21st.
J. W. CALVERT, T. P. A.
141 Granby Street
23078 «DIAL 26663
5)
. ‘NORFOLK JOURNAL AND GUIDE
Panini
Slap “wn o6 eaimey “involved? shout | yoiea anit aki
‘rhc be alee kovws argthtes.. The Vie-| vat aol of ibe Or
ian Drtetion. tothe Richmond Coa [Yt tm de th
wanton wr erence at eect wa | mart te th
inteliense wad Hones ‘These: xentlomeh
took Grote "ram “ne pecana snd nerve | lites untrue
Br aktory Cay’ citat mature sailors | *U eluarie, ‘a
dono the imaes invelved. fo the, ene | td mneen ei
foster ofthe deleraton bleh, ant inc | aor agate
formed were belt tally during con | CHECKS” ‘HiEag
Sehtlen_ ne" shelRetgemer tah, “Paces | BOERS: aneeae
reference tothe Varuna. Brieation. i | CREDIT ea
an ingut ‘fo ‘every tiue’'Viewttiane an | hry ‘ofits cat
See We, "Sree Lat and sarerioene Lar a8, eat Sos
ing Virginian will resent. further convitt 1
Toneen ln Bonks Wersr tm Good Faith, {the minstrel
inde Good who" has ‘ever
7 come ta: te tet shea statement Hon trottte
mnte“by Pate and thot tnt Ta [ho for the In
make “hfe gesture’ of making sod [ather Bika at he
the loss cuntnngd BF the failure o¢ tee | "tam" untlig
Of the Grand’ odie ‘Beposttaiens, tint | troverny) wit
may be 1 ote ‘edie of the folks:then | repreneh wth
and may be I am “fooling some of them | that Pace’y unwat
none Yue soon” further Sohal mp. check [beat foreads Sete
went 10 the Grand ‘Seertary was NEVER [tort tothe Tocte
DEPOSITED, and tant Bates tot me, | wees
Fina many’ words" to “Target St'y and
thut the “check never found its way into THE Pl
the, Grand Lede Funds ee,
sad yous rat are: te if re sie i
est hiss this Took, piace then he hes |p WOMAN
been maitheul to His oblixation ‘99 a0
Mi th pcsing Bw fee wae ert
Schedule—Daily Including
Sunday .
Special Accommo-
dation for Auto-
mobiles,
(Double-End Ferry)
Boats leave Willoughby 16th
street) every hour, on the hour,
beginning 7:00 a, m, to 10:00
p.m.; extra half hour service
from 10:00 a. m. to 7:00 p. m.
Last hoat leaves Willoughby
11:30 p. m.
Boats leave Old Point (C. &
O. Station) every hour, on the
half hour, beginning 7:30 a. m.
to 10:30 p. m.; extra half hour
service from 10:30 a, m. 10 7:30 |
p. m. Last boat leaves Old
Point 12:00 midnight. |
cneeenenneranerneceneonnenneeed
Old Dominion Line
Eastern Steamship Lines, Inc.
Direct All Water Route ‘To New ark
Passenger and Fesicht Saioy 4330 2 3
Mondays Wednesday: Thurelsy and. Setar
ye eight Only: Tuesday and Friday.
Fice'S* Yt end Bebscrain Avene
Ticket Oitie! 159 Granby St
Qifice: 159 Gran
NORFOLK & WESTERN
RAILWAY
(Ticket Ottee, 105 Grouby St. Dist 26679
ONLY ALL-RAIL ROUTE TO RICHMONE
Leave Terminal (Unlon) Station
8:15 &. mally CHICAGO & ST LOUIS
EXPRESS. Fullmano to Cincinnatl
Chicago and. Columbus, connecting
Pullmans ‘to ‘Toledo, Detroit and St
Louis, "Dining car,
9:00 a. ma-Dally. Fast train to RICH.
MOND “Connects at Kichmond Unio
Btotion for Washington, North av’
Eset, Parlor ear.
1248p. m.—Dsily for Suffolk, Peters
burg" Upsekbure, Hoanoke aad loca
points.
‘4:25 p, m.—Dally Fest train to Bich.
‘mond. “Connects at Richmond Unior
Biation for Washington, Nortt ond Ber
4:00 p. to—Dally, for Petersburg, Ried
‘mond, Roancke, Bluefleld, Portemouth
Ohio,” and intermediate points,
849 p. m--Dally ST. LOUIS AND CHI
GAGO LIMITED. "Through Pullmane
Norfolk to Chicago via Clocinnsti: Rich,
mond-Petersburg. to Columbus, connect:
tng Pullmans to St. Louis, Toledo, De
troit; also Norfolk to Roanoke and Bris-
tal, connecting Pallmans to. Knoxville,
Chattanooga, BMermphig Nashville, Din
malngham, ‘New Orleans, Shreveport and
all points South and West.
Trains arrive Norfolk 7:38, 9:80, 11:89
bm, 3:20, $48 and 2:8 DD
| EXCURSION
| Every Sunday
PETERSBURG
Richmond
§2,00-rovnn-re-$9,00
via
Thats NEW sc:
=a,
ONLY povtiis"Atice LINE
Leave wonpow 8:45 A. M.
eturiog. tickets wil be honored on
pees feociae Blears 135 can ae
THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND
. SPECIAL
Woman’s Day Service, Ist Baptist Churck
JUNE 13, 1926
3P.M.
MRS. M. E. SIMMONS, Presiding
Devotionals
Paper -...----.-.- Mrs. L. L. Berry, St. John A. M, EB, Chureh
ND pers rresstennethnnnamemnnuananenemrconasos i 0.0; OU:
Sermon .........-.--Rev. Mrs. E. H, Hunter, Portsmouth, Vo
Music—Gospel Choir --..-..---.- --.------Mrs. L, E. Hinton
“ (Direetress)
8 P.M.
MRS, HATTIE S. BROWN, Presiding
Devotionals
EE Me
Special Sermon -..--.-..--.---.----------Rev. R. H. Bowling
Special Musie =20.-- 2s -ws sss. --Chureh Choit
Auspices of the
R, H. Bowling Sr., Memorial Circle, Know Nothing Club,
Missionary Society
| BPSTOR
LGOK FOR THE YELLOW FRONTS
QUALITY First
Then Price=We Will Net Sacrifice Quality to quote
Low Prices~Gur High Standard of Quality
MUST Be Maintained
Shredded Wheat, Pkg. . . 1@c
Colonial Herring Ree Large No. 2 Can 49 c |
French’s Mustard taz-ic.. Lic
Rockfield Pride
Peas, yen Elegant Brand BO Qo 2 Cann, 1Oc |
Our PURE APPLE CIDER e
Puebread 10c Vi Tuna F ish
21 Ounce Leaf Ine g a r White Meat--Naval Brand
D.P.Cake |? -—---—-#8)4 can....23e
Sponge, 1 tb Round, 25c Yeveeeee seen BIC
eh et “ 35c| GALLON Ze 3Sc “4 CAN.-...----35e
soht Froit LON 7.......
‘B Layer Cake, Ib.25¢ | GALLON. \C-(~68-|No. 1 CAN..55e
FIG BARS: Filed with Delicious Figs, b.. HB%c
LYE, Hooker Brand, Can ___..__2@c | GOSMAN’S GINGER ALE,Bottle.24c |
SWEET POTATOES, Large Can, 8c | SCHLITZ FAMOUS BREW, BettlexOc
SALMON, Red Alaska,No.1tallcanSc | JAMESTOWNGINGER ALE 22c
GUEST IVORY SOAP, Cake___.4'4c | YORKTOWN GINGER ALE. .._.9c
GALVANIZED PAILS, 10 Quart 2Sc | CANADA DRY GINGER ALE 20c
COLONIAL HERRING, LargeCani@c | C&C DRY GINGER ALE. _248c
e GELFAND’S BK -
Fruit Jars M . |D.P. TEA.
GlassTops _ Metal Tops ayONNAlse |, oi.n3 of Orange--Pekoe
_ Pints, Dozen He: 07. India-Ceylon, FreshDaily |
* Quarts, Dam. 3 Z. Jar . E&c Trial Size. . Qc :
1.00 Sc ch ie al
¥Y, Gallon, Dozen 8 Oz. Jar ° 24c 4P ound. . 2Xc |
$1.40 $1.20) _— mf ee
These are the New Style | Pint Jar .. @°9%c|'4Pound . SOc
yenrs and nut having Bates and myxelt
wut out of the Order. The reason for his
niture ty do Uhix 8 too plain for_com:
went. He kuows the statement “i ab.
solutely) untrue,
"L relteraie, most emphutieully, that, {
id make geot the loss referred. to. "The
records of the Grund Lodge, the PAID
CHECKS "THEMSELVES, und the PASS
BOGKS showing the depusitsy “TO ‘THE
CREDIT OF ‘THE GRAND LODGE, now
in my offiee and open to the inspection
of any “ik, sustain. my contention und
further convict Puce, forall time, es
the most unreliable and ireesponsible man
who has ever aspired to. hold high of-
fice. I reverve these irrefutable -revorts
‘ilxo for the inspection of Pace and all
other Elks nt Cleveland.
“Lam unwilling, to continue the con-
troversy which must ‘inevitably “bring
Feprouch upon our order.” “anid regret
that Pace’ unwarranted aitack upon me
has forced me, against my will, to r=
Seek. tw this watibed of dafetos Ox sonnad.
aan of the Grand" Ladge, for, in ity Gnal
Fanalysie (the Grund Lage having each
pou ammroved the, manner I which es
unde were depowfted “und my, account
anil pas books" showings the. dipesit_ of
the chit he attacks), his criticisms, tho
hurl at me nersonally, aed his parle
af the internal affairs of the Grand Lage
inthe ‘wublie ‘neem, are, after alas
‘uh of # reflection upon the Grand Lorie
a8 he trkes to put apon mr. He refuses
{o deal jn the truth of the record and.
thoyeh “ving Hed about, don't det in
* Tis auch a nity, Pace iy, ont of the
ttalking “Machine Business," “he iy ae
‘adept'ih manufacturing “records. Ite
fares to continue pediling yoinip an
playing ‘the role of seandalmonker, hen
hho thal! have the right of way unmotested,
[shall “submit. my cease. tothe. Grand
Lodge assembled at Cleveland, and fam
Bhat settutlyeutiea
expectfully submitted,
JAS. CARTER, Grand Treasurer,
LBP OE of Wo
PAGE THREE:
A GREAT POLITICAL BATTLE
First Baptist Church, Fri., June 18, 8 p.m.
Debate: “Should Women Vote?”
Affirmative; Mesdames P. B. Young, R, M. Hucles
Negative: Dr. S. F. Coppage, Prof. P. I. Christian
Musical numbers will be rendered by the Femoun Tria of Lambert's Point,
Minsen Naomi ond Mary sil Charity, Mr. Weldon Bracy ‘and Mens Mandonis
Welsh Tedoon,
ADMISSION: ADULTS 15c; CHILDREN 10c
1000 SALESMEN AND SALESLADIES ;
Earn $75.00 a Week Without Spending a Penny
Agents may work whole'or part time selling the fast line of
NU -NILE
BEAUTY CREATIONS
Including the famous Bobbed Hair Gloss
Big profits from the start, We give you Frde License to sell in all
states, Send no money,
Write today and be your own Boss for life. Wonderful Terms, |
THE PEERLESS PRODUCTS 2 ee
COMPANY ee
MANUFACTURING CHEMISTS & Syed ae
Ha eo.
460 MALLORY AVENUE = @
Jersey, City, N. J. FORD GIVEN FREE
GOVERNOR'S EDICT ENDS A LONG PERIOD OF WRANGLING
By The Associated Negro Press
Philadelphia, June 10—William H. Rocap, chairman of the Pennsylvania Boxing Commission, who, before his elevation as the head of this state's boxing law, was considered a friend of Negroes as far as sports were concerned, but developed a tinge of hatred as soon as Charles Fred White, a Negro, was appointed on the Commission, was succeeded by Frank Weiner, another white man, as head of the commission.
His advent as chairman was the beginning of a continued row with White, but he seemed to have met his match with the man appointed to look after the interest of his people in boxing matches.
AFRICAN FIGHTER MEETS 2ND K. O.
(By The Associated Negro Press)
Philadelphia, Pa., June 10—Jim Davis, the African fighter, scaling 175 pounds, lost his second bounce by the knockout route, when Sailor George Gennas, white, put him to sleep in the first round of his round scrap at "Kennedy's Three Acres" in West Manayunk Thursday night.
Davis was to be going along nicely and it looked as if he was ready to be the winner, when he walked into one of Gemas' hard right-handers and dropped like a dog.
Davis was cool and took the count, but was still weak when he got to his feet. Gemas tapped him on the jaw again, dropping him once more, and Referee Frank McCracken stopped the fight in order to save Davis from further punishment.
Although beaten, the man from Africa was given a rousing cheer as he left the ring.
RED SOX AND INFANTRY PLAY 13 INNINGS 9-9
Memphis, Tennessee 11 — The
Memphis Red Sox, Southern
League team, and the 24 Infant-
ship team of Fort Banning, played
a 13-inning tie Wednesday in the
third game of the series, the count
standing 9 to 9 at the end.
Trammler, who relieved Vance in
the second, pitched good ball, al-
lowing but seven hits and three
runs in 11 innings. The army
team tied the score in the seventh
and neither team counted after
that stanza.
INTERSTATE LEAGUE
Hilldale ..... 12 4 .750
Harrisburg Giants ..... 7 5 .533
Bacharach Giants ..... 6 7 .461
Allen Dukes ..... 7 9 .438
Camden ..... 6 9 .400
Chester ..... 5 10 .333
Snelling's
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Blood & Rheumatic Remedy
A Powerful Blood Purifier and Alternative, Laxative and Tonic. Guaranteed, or money refunded.
W. E. Snellings
$43 CHURCH STREET
Have your Prescriptions filled at
Norfolk People's Drug Store Inc.
Cor. Brambleton Ave. & Cumberland
Street. NORFOLK, VA.
Prescriptions called for
and Delivered
Send 19 to the SNOW-
BALL KING for formulas to make them right. Make them for yourself or start a snowball business.
Queen St. Pharmacy
Cut: Rate: Druggist
COR QUEEN & BANK STREETS
Announce Removal of Store, to Old Location on QUEEN AND BANK STREETS.
PRESCRIPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY
We deliver any where at any time.
(Everything cut rate)
FOR PROMPT SERVICE
DIAL 28394
This advertisement is good for 5 cents in trade at our Soda Fountain.
Queen St. Pharmacy
Cor. Queen and Bank Street
TAIL-ENDERS BEGIN THEIR WINNING RALLY
TAIL-ENDERS BEGIN THEIR WINNING RALLY
(By The Associated Negro Press
Memphis, Tenn., June 10—
Things picked up in the Southern
League this week when the Montgomery Grey Sox and the Atlanta Black Crackers came to life and broke their losing streaks. For four weeks these two outfits have struggled valiantly to remain in the cellar, with Montgomery, by the hardest, holding the last place.
The worm turned this week and it really turned. Presenting rejuvenated and revamped organizations, the Grey Sox and Crackers played a brand of ball that could not be beaten. Memphis fell before the crushing attack of the Grey Sox twice and Nashville was taken into camp three times. Not to be outdone by their cellar neighbors, the Black Crackers trounced the fast-stopping Albany Giants twice and only the masterly hurling of the veteran pitcher and boss of the Giants, Big Bill Gatewood, stopped them in the third start.
BALTIMORE SOX
CLIMBING BACK
BALTIMORE SOX
CLIMBING BACK
Baltimore, Md., June 10—The Baltimore Black Sox began their climb back to the lead in the Eastern League by annexing both ends of a double bill from the Newark Stars, winning the first game, 8 to 6, and nosing out in the second, 6 to 5. The hitting of Deco with who drove in a hotness the sixth featured, while the seminal playing of Connie Day at second stood out. He handled ten chances, with only two miscues. Jordan hurled a good game for Newark.
Summary: NEWARK
AB R H O A E
Smith, rf 2 1 0 0 0 0
Sears, ss 2 1 0 0 0 0
Hurres, 3b 1 1 0 1 0
Seales, 2b 3 2 1 3 3
Mpson, 1b 4 0 2 3 3
Albey, 1b 4 0 2 3 3
Palge, cf 3 1 0 1 0 0
Gee, e 3 0 0 5 0 1
Gisstutter, p 2 0 1 0 1 0
Kummered, rf 2 0 0 1 0 1
Totals ..... 6 2 4 9
BLACK BOX
AB R I H O A E
Hollowey, cf ..... 5 0 0 0 2 0
Day ..... 1 0 0 0 2 0
Wilson, rf ..... 3 2 1 0 0 0
Heckwith, 3b ..... 3 1 3 0 0
Johnson, if ..... 3 0 0 0 0
Taylor, rf ..... 2 2 1 3 0
Chirk, c ..... 1 0 2 7 0 1
Fiti, ss ..... 1 0 2 7 0 1
Kolley, o ..... 1 0 0 0 2 0
x Rijo, 3b ..... 2 0 1 0 0 0
xx Dallarl, 3b ..... 1 1 0 0 0 0
Double plays: Becwith to Taylor to Clark; Scales to Seny; Seny to Senes to Ahlman; Batters hit by Yokley, Scales, Umpires: Spencer, Cromwell.
Second Game
NEWARK
AB R H I O A E
Smith, rf. 2 2 1 0 0 0
Seay, ss. 2 0 3 0 1 0
Sarris, rs. 2 0 3 1 0
Mason, 2b 4 0 1 2 1 0
Gisitman, ef. 3 0 1 3 0 0
Allen, lb. 3 0 1 2 0 0
Garr, p 3 1 1 0 1 0
Totals 28 5 7 18 4 2
BLACK SOX
AB R H O A E
Holloway, ef 4 0 1 0 1 0
Dallord, lf 4 0 1 0 1 0
Wilson, rb 4 1 2 1 0 0
Beckwith, 3b 4 1 2 1 0
Taylor, lb 2 1 2 8 1 0
Rojo, p 2 0 0 3 0 0
Day, 2b 2 0 0 3 0 0
Fink, st 3 0 1 3 2 0
Bowers, p 2 0 1 0 2 0
Strong, p 1 0 1 0 0 0
FROM THE PRESS BOX
By WILLEY A. JOHNSON, JR.
COLLEGE IDS OLYMN
---
FROM
PRESS
By WILLEYA
Anent The Greatest Middle
weight
In taking a fling at the greatest
midditweight fighter or the greatest
in any line of sports, many
things must be considered.
Some one has placed Tiger Flower, middleweight champion at the top of the list in regards to the greatest middleweight prize fighter. How far Flowers is from this or near to it, yet remains to be seen, despite the fact that he has experienced around eight years of box fighting, and also taken as assists to the canvas.
Since the champion's climb to the top in his class, many glowing tributes have been paid him and many sesquipedalians have been used in the description of his ability. But we see this, only as a result of his singular achievement. Being the first Negro to reach the middleweight championship, one of the few southpaws to enjoy the honor, and the first Negro to a world's title since Jack Johnson held the heavyweight title, naturally would come in for praising. Notwithstanding these facts, the Georgia fighter is a long ways from approaching the realm where the great dwell in the glow and glamor of their past ring achievements.
Flowers can't be placed above such men as Stanley Ketchell, former middleweight champion and the only man of his weight to knock Jack Johnson-off his feet;
OLEGE
Some joins say "Gone But Not Forgotten," while it should be a these modern times, "Corn But Not Forgotten."
At this time of the year, June, when youth is so romantic and many are led to the altar, this advice should be repeated, Girls, don't marry and bring your children up the same way.
Writing
Prohibition has been a boon to many prohibition agents. That's why so many men seek to line up in this game that offers such a paltry sum in wages.
Every man needs a living wage. If he doesn't get it, he bears watching.
The government hires prohibition agents to watch out for bootleggers and now it needs to hire somebody to watch out for the agents.
It's a paying game boys, batter jump in and get rich quick. It's a field of many opportunities, where the money flows as free as the liquor.
It's just like fishing for dollars and getting a bit on every throw. When a prohibition agent catches a bootleger, he catches money.
Who wouldn't want a job like that. You may bet your bottom dollar it, the honest fellows don't stay on the job.
The agent that has kept his job since Volstead acted, in the guy that you can't trust behind a broom straw.
One onlooker at a raiding scene advanced the question, 'Wonder does all the well-goods that's confiscated reach headquarters?
You may lay to that. Most of it always reaches headquarters and headquarters it situated between the region of the belt and the third button on the vest.
It's bounded on the north by the front of the shirt and on the south by the back of same shirt.
It's bounded on the cast and west by the sides of self-same shirt.
That's headquarters. It's the place the makers have in mind when they are a stilling.
THIS WEEK'S WINNER
Tom: "Reverend, why did you run, when you met that bear down in the forest instead of getting on your knees in prayer?"
Reverend: "Let me tell you, Tom, prayer is alright in prayer meeting, but it ain't worth a hurrah in bear-meeting.
—Norman Worthham,
Warrenton, N. C.
He sat at the dinner table
With a discontented frown;
The potatoes and steak were
NORFOLK JOURNAL AND GUIDE
of The Pennsylu
THE
BOX
JOHNSON, JR.
BACHARAC
ALLENTOW
(By The Associated N.
Allentown Pa. Jur
srach Giants steppe
places when they defe
Tommy Rvan. truly a great fighting middleweight; "Philadelph phi a Jack" O'Brien, as good as ever stepped into a prize ring; Sam Langford, he started as a middleweight and was side-stepped by Ketechell, Bob Fitzsimmons, who held three titles at one time—middleweight, light heavyweight and heavy weight; Nonparlain Jack Dempsey and a number of other truly great middleweights. Surely a great fighter and who deserves to reach the top in his class but lacks some of the potentialities of many of his predecessors.
Out of the champion's eight dives to the rosin dust, it is claimed none of them was at the hands of middleweights. Is this to his credit or discredit considering the number of heavier men the past middleweights downed for the doleful count? The Tiger's record is not laden with K. O's. in his class or out. Of course, he has romped away easily to the long end of many decision bouts, and a fighter's greatness is largely measured by the knockouts to his credit. Flowers has also proved that he is quite vulnerable to a hard socking right-hander. It is unjust for anybody to dey a fighter of Flowers' ability and its not just to place him above those who have been proved better. However, this is not to detract from Flowers any of the credit to which he is rightly due.
derdone,
And the break was baked too brown;
The pie was heavy, the pudding too sweet,
And the meat was much too fat;
The soup was so greasy, too, and salt.
Twas hardly fit for the eat.
I wish you could taste the bread and pie,
I've seen my mother make;
They are something like, and twould do you good,
Just to look at a slice of her cake."
Said the smiling wife:
"I'll improve with age—
Just now, I'm just a beginner;
But your mother has come to visit us,
And today she cooked the dinner."
Mrs. S. C. Merritt.
Norfolk, Va.
DIFFERENT THINGS IVE SEEN
I saw a cow-hide in the grass,
A rush-light in the floor;
I saw a candle-stick in mud,
And a bell-pull on the door.
I saw a hore-fly up the creek,
A cat-nip at her food;
I saw a chestnut burr, and heard
A shell-bark in the wood.
I saw a Jack-plane off a board,
A car-spring on the track;
I saw a saw-dust on the floor,
And then a carpet tack.
I saw a monkey-wrench a hat
From a fair lady's pate;
I saw a rattle-snake a bird,
And hogs-head on a plate.
I saw a brandy-smash a glass,
I saw a shooting star;
I heard the corn-talk in the field.
SPECIAL REELS
AND SHOWS FOR
MONDAY—Contin
SPECIAL REELS
AND SHOWS FOR
TUESDAY—Contin
PLAIN "SEX TALK
All Seats
MONDAY—Continuous 1 to 11:30 P. M.
PLAIN "SEX TALKS" AT EACH SHOW
All Seats
25c
No Children
Under 16
THE NAKED TRUTH
nnsylvani BACHARACTAKES ALLENTOWN NINE
BACHARACTAKES K.O. TAMPA DIES ALLENTOWN NINE IN THE HOSPITAL
(By The Associated Negro Press)
Alentown, Pa., June 10—Bishop Glants stepped in place where he defeated the Al-Abdus Dukees here on Sunday, 11 to 7, in an Interstate League game.
By winning Sunday's game, the three colored teams are now ahead of their white opponents.
WILBUR COHEN
LOSES TO HARKO
(By The Associated Negro Press)
Philadelphia, Pa., ..... Johnny Harke, who led of Manhees-
gain in ten-towers over Wilbur Cohen, of New York at the last indoor show of the Cambria Club, Friday night.
The boy from New York, whose cleavness and fast foot-work have won him many fights, could not seem to get going against his opponent, although he was the harder hitter. Cohen scored with some vicious body blows and slowed up Harke in several of the sessions, but the latter managed to weather with flurry of fists that won him the verdict. A record crowd was in attendance.
A pig-ion crow bar.
—By Reynold Harrison,
Cannestella, Va.
ATTREATS THEATRE
Our Artificial Sea Breeze Creates An Outdoor Atmosphere
The original picture of Gene Stratton Porter's
THE KEEPER OF
THE BEES
A Tale of rare charm and distinction. The Best Story the Author ever wrote.
WEDNESDAY
MAJORIE DAW & CLIVE BROOK
in one of the big pictures
See this Picture whether you are a Pargain or Not.
TRURSDAY—FRIDAY
BEHIND THE FRONT
Wallace Beery, Raymond Hatton,
Mary Brian, Chester Conklin
FRED THOMPSON and His Wonder Horse,
SILVER KING
in
THE TOUGH GUY
WOMEN ONLY
Annual 1 to 11:30 P.M.
MEN ONLY
Annual 1 To 11:30 P.M.
ES" AT EACH SHOW
No Childres
Under 16
FLORSHE
Air
Co
O
Skeleton
New York
Tender feet experience real com in Florsheim oxford. Free cir tion of air about the feet keeps the well-conditioned. Florsheims cool and airy because skeleton li
The Frat $10
Florshein Shoe Sto
White House Baker
We specialize in Fancy Iced W
and Birthday cakes along w
standard Bread, Cakes, Pies an
tries.
miss this one if you w
REFRIGERATOR
refrigerator bargain worth while. The famous Harder—mi-
wire shelves with cut out for milk bottle—75-pound
size—top icer, like picture, specially priced at $29.75—g
allowance for your old refrigerator.
SPECIAL
Monday and Tuesday
Here's a Refrigerator bargain worth while. The famous Harder—mineral wool lining—two bright wire shelves with cut out for milk bottle—75-pound ice capacity. Good family size—top icer, like picture, specially priced at $29.75—glass water set FREE, and $5 allowance for your old refrigerator.
$29.75
rs & Tabakin, I
518 MAIN STREET
Agents for Harder "Kleinwell" Cork-
boards Insulated Refrigerators
(By The Associated Negro Press)
Atlantic City, N. J., June 10
Theodore Nolley, 24-year-old middleweight boxer, known in the ring as K. O. Tampa, died in the Atlantic City Hospital here Saturday night. Nolley collapsed Saturday afternoon following a workout.
All visitors, another local middleweight and a close friend of Tampa, with several other boxers worked over the unconscious boxer for almost an hour without success.
Nolley was suffering from spinal trouble and had been under the care of a physician. George Carpentier used Tampa for a boxing partner several times while preparing for his fight with Eddie
All around you is abundant success, wealth and happiness. Much of this war galeted because a lady turns the way of the world to the cause of the man.
GET YOUR SHARE OF LUCK!
Wear one of the finest Chinese Lady Kings. Please wear a necklace and gold time. Please wear a necklace and gold time. Please wear a necklace and gold time. This lady has finished ring of this quality for our joint only $100, paying 10% pay. This lady has finished ring of this quality for our joint only $100, paying 10% pay. This lady has finished ring of this quality for our joint only $100, paying 10% pay. This lady has finished ring of this quality for our joint only $100, paying 10% pay.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1922
14, WRIGHT, BOSTON 301, 32 URBAN SE. NEW YORK
For that smiling gentleman wears the soft and cool Panama Hat and fairly radiates contentment and ease of mind.
Agreeably shapes for every type of man.
425
AND
UP
R and P
Quality Hatters
149 GRANBY STREET
KNOXIT PROPHYLACTIC Is a safe, efficient, dependable preparation. No prescriptions necessary. Why not be cautious. $1.10 at all druggista.
Don't miss
A REF
Here's a Refrigerator
lining—two bright wire s
ity. Good family size—to
set FREE, and $5 allowanc
PITCHER
FREE! FREE!
Nice glass water set consisting of large pitcher and six tumblers. FREE, with every refrigerator sold Monday and Tuesday.
Meyers
51
SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1928
Commission
red Lew
tant ring
another snag when they made their
first appearance at Hilldale Park
and were downed by Ed. Boldey
league leaders by the jug handled
score of 10 to 1.
Huffman. He also trained Lew Tendler for several important ring engagements.
NEWARK STARS
WHITEWASHED
Newark Stars 010 011 009-1
Hildale 011 011 009-1
Shaele hits: Warfield.
Shaele hits: Johnson, Thomas.
Home, run: Campbell.
Sarahie hits: Warfield, Master.
Stolen losses: Johnson, Mason, Paine.
Bare on ball: OffCampbell, W.
Cawley
Philadelphia, June 10—Andy Harris and his Newark Stars continue to find going rough in the Eastern circuit: The new league member with three games on the wrong side of the ledger ran into
Struck out by Campbell, Curt, & Umpire, Mitchell and Lorenzo.
More passengers passed through Southampton than through Liverpool last year.
ERSHEIM
Air
Cooled
Oxford
et experience real comfort
im oxfords. Free circula-
bout the feet keeps them
conditioned. Florsheims are
airy because skeleton lined.
The Fret $10
ein Shoe Store
FLORSHEIM
Air
Cooled
Oxford
Skeleton
Tender feet experience real comfort in Florsheim oxfords. Free circulation of air about the feet keeps them well conditioned. Florsheims are cool and airy because skeleton lined.
210 Granby Street Monticello Hotel Building
House Bakeries
e in Fancy Iced Wedding
y cakes along with our
head, Cakes, Pies and Pas-
Hockenheim
STOLE
White House Bakeries
We specialize in Fancy Iced Wedding and Birthday cakes along with our standard Bread, Cakes, Pies and Pastries.
738 CHURCH STREET NORFOLK, VA.
e if you want
ERATOR
The famous Harder-mineral wool
r milk bottle-75-pound ice capac-
cially priced at $29.75-玻璃水
rator.
```markdown
```
$5 FOR YOUR OLD
REFRIGERATOR
We will allow you in addition to our low prices, and the FREE water set, $5 for your old refrigerator in exchange for any refrigerator in our store.
oakin, Inc.
GREET
"Cork-
restors
LINED
Norfolk Home Sellers Kitchen Cabinet
$1 A WEEK
A-small payment down will send this refrigerator to your home-pay balance $1 weekly.
‘> ee eosthgemrteenperm ns Se SS
A NEW LODGE OF
PYTHIAS SET: UP
AT CLAREMONT
| On Monday, June 7, Grand Vice
Chancellor, .T. E. Puryear, Grand
‘K of R, and S., Eugene West and
Grand Medical Director, T. G. El-
Yiott left the city for Claremont,
‘Virginia, where’ they. established
Claremont Lodge No, 273 Knights
‘of Pythias. ;
District Deputy GC, GW.
Peace of Waverly, Va., who was
the leading spirit in organizing
this’ lodge, met us at the. station
and from’ there we motéred to
Claremont. ‘The above named of-
ficers with the assistance of several
loyal knights from Waverly,
put twenty-six strong and healthy
men through the test that is re-
quired of all who become full
knights.
‘We then retired to another part
of the building in which the ladies
had prepared a tempting repast.
Everyone present seemed to be of
‘one accord that the repast was fit
for a king.
‘The Grand Lodge officers left
Tuesday feeling very optimistic
over the work they had accom-
plished and predicted a great fu-
ture for the Claremont Lodge 273
K. of P.
a
School Gag to be
Fought in Court
New York, June 7—Legal action
will be taken to open the schools
of New York City to speakers and
organizations barred by the Board
of Education as “un-American,” it
is announced by Samuel Unter-
myer, attorney for the American
Civil ‘Liberties Union. This is the
latest delevolpment in the conflict
between the Board and the Union
arising from the refusal of Eu-
ene Gibney, director of Extension
Activities, to permit Arthur Gar-
field Hays, and James Weldon
Johnson to speak at a Peace Week
celebration in the Morris High
School on May 17, and the denial
of the Union's application for a
free speech meeting in the Stuy-
Yesant High School on May 21.
We take this method of extend.
ing sincere heartfelt thanks to kind
friends who so kindly administered
to the needs of our husband, son
and brother, Moses Kelley, who de-
parted this’ life, Sunday, June 5,
during his illness and for their
tender sympathy and flowers at
‘his death.
Signed:
‘Alice Kelley, wite; Irene. Kelley,
‘mother; Joseph E, Kelley, brother.
CARD OF THANKS
I take this method of thanking
‘every one who so kindly rendered
their service in any way, during
the illness and-death of my de-
voted husband, and for the beat
tiful floral designs.
His wife,
Mrs. P. Holley Skinner.
Smithfield, Va., June 8, 1926
In loving memory.” of our’ dear
mother and grandmother, Mrs,
‘Ann Eliza Langston, who departed
this life, June 10, 1925.
One year ago to-day
Dear Mother, you slipped away,
‘The pain still lingers in our hearts
Yet, some day we all must part.
Sleep on beloved and take thy rest.
From her daughter and grand-
children,
Mrs, Pauline M, Cuffey
Mrs, Hallie C. Whitehead
Wellington F. Cuffey
Jeremiah H. Cuffey
Sacred 0 the meri ory ot my
loved husband, Rev. A. N. B. Boyd,
who departed’ this life, June 1st,
1926,
Dearest loved one, thou hast left
me
Left.me yes, forever more,
But I hope to meet my loved one
On that bright and happy shore.
There the tears of earth are dried,
There its hidden things are clear,
There the work of life is tried,
By a more just Judge than here,
By his wife,
Mary J. Boyd
In loving memory of my hus-
band, Rufus Butts, who died June
gth, 1917.
Nine years have passed dear,
Rufus, since you passed away,
How well do I remember,
The sad and dreary day,
While days come to pain me,
With their shadows dull and gray
Dear Rufus, Jesus Christ,
Our pilot, will clear the mist away.
His wife
Annie Butts
Mrs. Amanda Clark of 940 Jeff-
erson Street, who underwent a se-
tious operation at the Tidewater
Hospital under the care of Dr.
Webb, was successful, and is at
her. residence, getting long nice-
ly also wishes to thank her friends
who visited her there, especially
Mrs, Maud Taylor.
a
————$—<————
ATKINS’ PLACE
If in need of Lodging, Cafe,
full line of Groceries, See Allen
‘Atkins, Cor, Jefferson and
‘Strawberry Streets,
~ CAPE: CHARLES, VA.
BPAGE SIX! <7 vere
eee 5
Geen a
|: Classified Rates
Siwo estita @ word tn (this type
i seg Rach Tescrise :
| o2 twenty-five cents minimem
es _ Charge ;
}\CASH" MUST ACCOMPANY
slic’ ALL ORDERS
Lore must be in the office
| ast ‘ter than 4p. m. Wednes
2AM ada signed “Care Journal
end Guide" sity conidential
Oo _ ROR SALE
“MOne lot for sale near corner of
Anderson Street on Chapel Street
#No;' 1488, “fine location. Anyone
Eswishing jto buy, will call at 212
eLawis Street. Ask for D, ‘Little.
ae Terms Cash. - >
bei -* FOR SALE
j,<Cleahing and pressing business,
good location. Owner leaving the
‘Sity.- Will sell reasonably. Act
quickly. “Inquire 610 E. Bramble-
"ton.-Avenue.
a
pa =
SSPREE, FREE $10.00 in Good
“Gack Goods for advertising us
‘among your friends, entire plan 10
cents. Modesta, Box D 26, College
Station, New York.
“MALE AND FEMALE BELP
a WANTED
Samples furnished, 17 guaran-
“teed Hosiery Styles. We deliver.
‘Send: three references for samples.
8. Q. 8. Lexington, Ky.
Se. AGENTS WANTED
“AGENTS: Write for Free Samples,
"Sell Madison “Better-M a de”
“cShirts for large manufacturer
-udireet to wearer, No capital or
‘experience required. Many earn
27100 and bonus. Madison Shirt
Makers, 562 Broadway, Ne W
York,
es
<&. RELATIVES WANTED
ji centile ES
4 Any one knowing the where-
abouts of Gorgigs Fleming, please
“communicate with his daughter,
$Mrs. Elnora Harris, 413 Washing-
“ton Street, Versailles, Pa.
ii. LEGAL NOTICE
VIRGINA: IN THE CLERK'S OFFICE
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY
GF NORFOUK, ON THE 10TH DAY OF
MAY, 1025.
Bilis Williams Complainant
ce In Chancery
Fyances Briley Williams Defendant
Pine object. of thin suit is for the com-
plainent to obtain from the defendant
Bivoree . vinculomatrimonti, on the
grounds of desertion and affidavit, having
Slen"made ‘that the defendant is not a
pesident of the State of Virginla, she in
Fereby required fo. appear within ten days
After due publication hereof, and do shat
aay, be necessary 0 protget her, interest.
‘Texte: cell M. Roberiven, Clerk,
Tw Wiliam pg by Baws La Breen, Jr
‘We are in need of the following to fill
Donliont. for ‘sevoion 1626-27 and must
-Foport their’ names to. school Boards by
Faly tet
2 eachers for French.
{ teteher for Spanish.
3 teachers for Latin.
8 teachers for Mathomattes
‘(teachers for Sclevee
& teachers for History” and English
2 @ Domestle Slence Teachers:
8 Domestic Art Teachers,
& Physien! atning ‘Teachers.
1 Direelor of Industele.
2 PMechanteal and Blettical Engineer,
° § Manual ‘Training ‘Teachers.
+ 8.Gollege Professors. male or female.
3p Teacher Tor Normal Schools
@ Musle teachers. "
1.18 Prinelonle male or female,
STAM the above must bold agrees. Pref-
“grantee, will be given to'ihose Roldlog Bat
fare degree.
‘ito ‘Tenchers, male and female for Rue
zal Schools
2B) ‘Tenchers, male or female for city
SCNSUG need apply sles they bold Tench
*Noue need apply unless rea
ve Cerlincates at lonst First grades sed
Shove for. Rural and” City. sctools’ For
Normal schools’ and. Colleges. must hold
eMfrece positions aro distributed ta
cightoon states, "Salaries rane ftom $20
‘to 4200 per month. "Six to twelve months
‘term, Pree Rexioiration. For farther Jae
‘formation apply, cuclosing stamp tor
HINTERSTATE COLORED ‘TEACHER'S
$01 N. THIRD SPREEN, RICAMOND, V.
, : . VA.
ide H. BLACKWELL, PRD. Manager
ee
<THE WOMAN'S — BAPTIST
STATE, EDUCATIONAL and
‘MISSIONARY CONVENTION,
‘willymeet June 23rd, 1926, at the
Ebenezer Baptist Church, Staun-
ton, Va.
Mrs. M. L. Pannell, President
Mra: M. W. Richardson, Cor. Secy.
cee. OBITUARY
THE PASSING OF A NORFOLK
est CITIZEN
Spe ULIZEN wre:
#-: Prof. ‘T. C. Skinner passed quiet- | band,
ely-and sweetly from this life to | 9th, 1
“Ife Eternal on Saturday, May 29, | Nine
1926, at his residence, 1238 Arm- | Rufu
»strong: Street, after a long illness. | How
“He, was a dutiful member. of ‘The | The.
“Rirst Calvary Baptist Church fo S
forty years, and the chorister of | Whil
‘the’ choir for thirty years. He was | With
highly respected by all who knew | Dear
him: : . | Our x
-; On Tuesday, June, the First, the
funeral was led to First Calvary
‘Baptist Church at 2:30 o’clock by | ——
‘he ‘College Band and several or-
igatiizations. =
"Services were conducted by Rev. | _ Mrs
OJ. Allen, the pastor, who spoke | °rS°t
fof: his quiet, christian character, | TOUS.
"and: how willingly he would always | Hosp!
‘discliarge his duty when called on. | Webb
(Mr. Jerry Anderson rendered the ene
sst-bass solo, taught by Prof T. |v als
Skinner. Mrs. Mable-P. Shell, | WhO
weetly sang a solo.” ‘ ears. |
a A his request (Me shale. did |
fswweetly.‘sing “his. favorite song,
stor ‘Thou Hast Been Our Dwell-
ing Place: The deceased’ is sur-4} If
ived: by a wife, Mrs,Pennie Hol- | full
ley=Skinnér’-and a:host. of .rela- | Atki
ives and friends: He' was’ well |B Stra
engin and'loved by every one. His|)
deat hi-brings : great.‘ sortow: to: his.
Hprge/cirele-of friends. ooo 5)
PRE eer ene ace OS
“ESSERE UI Se SNES ae ged fT
(For A. N. PD)
CARD OF THANKS
CARD OF THANKS
IN MEMORIAM
MEMORIAL
IN MEMORIAM
SICK NOTICE
THEATRICALS
ISCREEN@STAGE-
At the Attucks
“KEEPER OF THE BEES”
The most beautiful story of the
year comes to the: Attucks for a
two-day run, Monday and Tues-
day, Gene Stratton Porter's “The
Keeper of the Bees.” ft is a
photodrama that will live in your
memory’ as one of the finest stories
of all time. “The Keeper of the
Bees” is the finest story, Gene
Stratton Porter ever wrote—sweet
—warm — fresh — wholesome—
powerful.
WEDNESDAY
There is a big treat in store for
those picture goers who like strong
society dramas, softened with pa-
thos and leavened with laughter,
when “Love's Bargain,” an F. B.
0, picture comes to the Attucks
Theatre on Wednesday.
‘The life of an actress, in and
out of the theatre, is an interest-
ing phase of the story, while tense
drama results from the manipula-
tions of a clever, unserupulous
woman to win back the love of a
man she has lost.
“BEHIND THE FRONT”
Wallace Beery and Xaymond
Hatton, the funniest comedy team
on the screen, appear as dough-
boy buddies in “Behind the Front”.
Who doesn’t remember Beery’s
comedy classic as “Rhode Island
Red” in “The Pony Express?” Or
the combined efforts of the two in
“Adventure” and “In the Name of
Love”? In “Behind the Front,”
they have combined all past per-
formances, retaining the best fea-
tures—plus. Mary’ Brian, Para-
mount’s ‘charming ingenue, is seen
as the girl they both love. Ches-
ter Conklin, as the Scotch laddie,
who entertains the boys with tales
of imagined bravery, heads the
strong cast appearing in support
of the principals.
SATURDAY
Pred ‘Thomson end hix wale
2
Manhattan For Hire
Car Corporation
ox or Sa introduces to the public a
(é Na new and complete Automatic
ee telephone system on which
Na NG you can always reach our
Ye | es P| tice at any time, This new
Gigs R Le | guaranteed Automatic Tele-
|| Moe A} “Z. phone System will give you
\ Oz nS Phone Numbers as Follows: |
Z A ,
ay Nees 22881, 26594, 41152 |
hen See AN] of these are live wires,
Wes Ue’ You don’t avg to lose time
We now as we aod iy able to
2 give you first Mass service
| ay day gr night. IX) there be
Feat, S » any dissatisfaction with any
A EE ot our drivers in any way,
LE EF please report to the Manager
(Ea A of this Corporation,
Thanking you in advance for your patriotic spivit,
JAMES UNDERHILL, General Manager and President
Men’s yl
Pure Irish Oy
‘ * Ae
|Linen Suits “i /
. eS My)
| With 2-Pair Pants Jim); “c\”
Soe
I$ 85 Vi
Tas ji
They are the finest and most fray i
durable cloths for summer wear. [ i |
Every suit full-shrunk and nice- | ig
ly tailored. An unusual we aa
this low price. \ = A
Wonderful Values At With 2 Pairs of Pants |
$ |
$9.85 85
Phone 41008
MEN’S AND BOYS’ WEAR
| 163-7, Bank St. Opp. Courthouse
house, Silver King will feature in
“The Tough Guy,” a thoroughly
tough picture with a tough back-
ground. Fred Thompson and Sil-
yer King are a favorite of the
kiddies and this show comes on a
special day for the children, Sat-
urday, the special matinee day,
‘The artificial sea breeze of the
Attucks creates an outdoor atmos-
phere under which conditions, the
patronage is able to enjoy the
Shows despite the sultriness of the
weather.
ees
7. N.T. at the
Star Theatre
Dealing with a subject not ofien
discussed in public—sex education
and enlightenment—“The Naked
Truth,” produced by the Public
Welfare Pictures Corporation witit
a cast headed by Jack Mulhall and
Helene Chadwick begins a two-
day engagement, at the Star Thea-
ter Monday.
‘At no time during the two-days
will men and women be admitted
together, separate reels being
shown for women and men.
‘Women will be admitted Monday
from 1 to 11 p. m., and men from
1 to 11 p. m., Tuesday.
No children will be admitted to
‘any performance.
| No More gga,
Gray Hair Oe om
ge ey
Larieuse 4 GX
|" Bair Coloring .
1008 application.
Nevan recreate bog
feel PRIUS
‘saouGLTve ez. Raggy
loom, ce a
NORFOLK JOURNAL AND GUIDE
seal B.T. HIGH §
| (GOMMENC!
LES NWINGOFTR |e OF
Coal Phone 24683 ___ Wood Phone 24684
DRY SLAB WOOD—Bright and Sonnd, $3.00 quar. cord
PINE BLOCK WOOD—Solid and Dry, $4.00 quar cord
OAK BLOCK WOOD—Long Lasting, $4.00 quar coré
ANTHRACITE HARD COAL—ALL SIZES—CLEAN AND
WELL SCREENED
Peeahontas Nut, Eggs, Lump, Splint—Soft Coal—Best Quality
C. B. WHITE and BRO, Ine.
Brambleton Avenue and Norfolk and Western R. R.
PHONE 24€88 NORFOLK, VIRGINIA = PHONE 24884
SS SS AC Tee, I Daa DEDITDDDIDODIDDD ZO DIPIIO IED,
THE MARK OF THE By ae > LEADING TIRE STORE
A iy” ’
in t i : G 1
Join the big swing to Generals
af
*s, 3 i f e
. ae ee 5 oF a
5 Our: «,;
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eae -INn-FiaN
Cae, aa
tis e ir 4
ee e :
»,, Makes it easy f;
TR ime , : s
‘ 2D ial
, "eee . sak a 8 os
\Bvery day more cars owners, who have long recognized General’s quality
Jeadership and have wanted the ultimate economy of General’s extra mileage,
are joining the big swing to General through our Trade-in Plan. Tt shows the
public’s approval of General’s policy of not tampering with quality. o
(Using onl the purest friction and tread rubber in. generous quantities “has
\ ig only
jbrought national commendation to General’s policy of absolute maintenance
\of top quality. With the growing use of reclaimed rubber in tires, General
'stands out today, more than ever before, in a class by itself as the quality tire
es 2 TROL — = ee
of the industry. neg _ i gee.
: og ce aca eee.
; \Howxwe ‘make it easy to set ae
. te e 2 2 e Pl See er
4 theitwo biggest savings in tires ‘
Our trade-in” plan” includes” Gen- Now we are making it possible to combiné
eral somplite OE QuALTEY the “first cost” saving’ with the even more
line of tires—6-ply Balloon Cords, * * :
4-ply Balloon Cords and low-pres- woe hate of the lowest cost per mile,
sure cords in all regular sizes. e know that every car owner we start on
Only General gives you these big Generals will be a permanent customer after
advantages: experiencing all of the advantages that only
4 1. Gasoline Saving Generals will give.
"12. Unequaled Riding Comfort Through our Trade-in Plan, we make allow-
3. Dual-Grip Safety ance for the unused mileage in your present
4 Ls Car Life tires, no matter what make or how much or
Se ee how little they have been used. Right there
5. Incomparable Mileage you get the “first cost”” saving and-beyond
Every General Tire is scientifically that you get the real economy of General’s
designed to fit the needs of every extra mileage. It’s the second 10,000 miles
make and model of car. Each that makes the big hi ny
tread design is the result of engi- " le big hit. a 4
neering resco sa fives the a your car with you and let us show you
maximum traction pri ly com- ow easy it is to joi A ae
bined with long-wearing qualities. General,’ “hee the big swing to
TEBE
i oo APE, Bk gag |
SB , : o et |
MERLE iim (ee General Tire Co. |
iat ie. f Norfolk, Ine. -
Hib hee Ue fp Se, SS : ® % (PAT DILLON) : 2
USP ECE (WPT Ne \ ° _-NORFOLN’S LEADIN :
apt POR heey aay Vo oN ji 5 G TIRE STORE =
i b Li ae Be 3 | fa Wa <.* Flatiron Building : Phone 22801
St ee Ae ite VN . *
ZAG FP ea E “i ie | \ ieee 2seeeecerecseecsreezac cers zazerIsTeee
oie ao a THE“ =
tits Jog, (20 Hi 5 fs
he Re NRC !
Be Se _ HIRE
ee Wap Shey ~AREELEETEPEEIPEPTELET IIIS FETEELIIEEEEDEEITOE
—goes-a lone-ence én cnfle Liden dc
B.T. HIGH SCHOOL
Baccalaureate Sermon at First
Baptist Church By Rey. R.
H. Bowling; Monday Class
Night.
Commencement exercises of
Booker ‘T, Washington High School
will begin Sunday morning at
11:30 o’clock with the baccalau-
yeate services at the First Baptist
Chureh, with Rey. R.-H. Bowling,
the pastor, preaching the sermon.
‘The Class Night program will
be rendered Monday night in the
high school auditorium, beginning
‘at 8:15 o'clock. This program will
Notice to, Church
Correspondents
All news pertaining to reli- ..
gious services in churches or
‘otherwise must be in this of-
fice by. Tuesday noon of each
week if it appears in the cur-
rent issue. There will be no
exceptions to this rule in the
future, 1
fee lace
consist of remarks by the class
president; salutatory, Miss Anna
Palmer; class history, Miss Alive
Turner; solo, Miss Christine White;
class prophecy, Winston ‘Tyler;
giftorian, Wayman Whyche; cari-
cature, Joseph Omohundro; piano
solo, Venerable Turner; class will,
Clotee Wright; valedictory, Ben-
jamin MeCoy, announcements and
class song, “Farewell.”
‘Tuesday morning at 10:30 0
clock the commencement program
will begin in the high school au-
ditorium. Dr, Pesavia O’Connell,
Morgan College, Baltimore, will be
the commencement speaker.
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WOMANSWORLD AND OTHER FEATURES
WOMAN'S WORLD
SUGGESTIONS FOR BETTER HOME-MAKING—CHILDREN—FASHION HINTS—THE KITCHEN—PERSONAL PROBLEMS—PUBLIC QUESTIONS
Miss Kathleen Walker Gets Most Amazing Results From Dr.Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener
Advice To Girls
INTENTION, GIRLS: In this column and week, Nami will help you with your problems. Questions on face, love or any subject that are interested in you will be carefully answered and answered. Write your questions and address them to "Nami," the Norfolk Journal and Guide, 711 O'River Road. Nami:
I am 19 years of age and will high school this year. I will two admirers, one lives at my home and is one year younger. So I am, the other lives quite a distance from my home, and is a griefw man. They are both nice.
My parents object to the younger one, and he is the one I am sure that I love, while he is sure that it doubly. I am also sure older one loves me, in fact wishes to marry me, and also admire him and like him as a friend. I do not have that feeling that I believe should exist between husband and wife.
If you wonder sometime if I am misunder about my love for the younger one and do not love him at all, although we have courted for seven years.
Please advise me.
"Flo."
Dear Flo:
Because you have courteed save years does not mean you could not be mistaken in your love. If your parents object to the younger one why I should sit up and notice for so often parents can see some traits you younger ones cannot see.
You are very young to get married. Why not wait awhile and give yourself time to find out the right one, weigh them well and remember that disposition and hab-
WOMEN WANTED
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Miss Kathleen
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Norfolk Journal and Guide
MAN'S WORK
BETTER HOME-MAKING—CHILDREN—PERSONAL PROBLEMS—INDUCTED BY HORTENSE THOMPSON
its are what you will have to live with and no girl wants a lazy husband. Take your time and make the right selection. Naomi.
Dear Naomi:
Your column is the first thing I look for when I get the paper, so I have decided to write to you about myself.
I am a girl 17 years of age, but I am not allowed to have boy company. Please answer these questions.
If a girl loves a well-reared boy should she try to see him if it is against her mothers wishes?
Should a boy come to see a girl once in awhile?
If she wishes to have a boy come to see her should she let someone ask her mother or should she ask for herself?
I know we girls should finish school before we have company and I am trying to finish, but don't think they would be alright if a nice boy came around sometime and acted as he should?
R. B.
Dear R. B:
Not if it is against your mother's wish, but if he is a nice boy and you are far enough advanced in your studies why I think it would be alright to have him come around once in awhile, but not too often and not to stay late. I am in favor of your asking your mother yourself. I am sure she would rather talk to your about it and hear you express yourself. Tell her all that you know about the young man; how you know him; and what she is doing in school and his ambition and then my dear, be guided by what she says as she is there with you and I am sure she has your interest at heart. There now, I have answered all your questions at once.
Naomi.
Dear Naomi:
I am light brown with black hair, small eyes, heavy eyebrows and lashes, 5 feet tall, weigh 116 pounds. I may be considered nice looking by some.
I met a young fellow once during his school holidays and he seemed to like me and I liked him too. He told me of his girl friend, how they had just fallen out. He began to write me quite frequently and I met him several times afterwards. Just before one of his holidays I got a long letter from him telling me that his former sweetheart asked to spend the holidays with him, and he didn't know how to say no, and how sorry he was. He did not see him at this holiday and have not answered his last letter. So many have told me to answer it and so many have told me not to.
I shall await your answer in the next issue whether I shall answer it or not.
Your constant reader.
Buddie.
Dear Buddie:
Well, dearie, I do not feel that the young man has committed any crime by telling you of his other girl or by telling you she was coming to spend the holidays in his city. I presume that is what he meant and not with him and being young, naturally, he wants to stay on good terms with all of you, which is wise.
Walker Gets Results From's Skin Whitener
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Women everywhere are simply wild about Dr. Fred Palmer's Soap and Powder, for it is delightfully fragrant, clings to the skin nicely and has a soft satiny appearance. Wind does not blow it off, it prevents oil from forming on the skin and keeps the skin from chapping in all kinds of weather. Dr. Fred Palmer developed the most marvellous Hair Dressing known to us. It makes the hair straight, soft, long and luxuriant, removes dandruff, keeps the scalp healthy and makes the hair grow. No hair too stiff or crinkly it to improve.
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I see no reason why you should not answer his letter and be friendly.
Next time do not tell all the girls what is in your letter.
Naomi.
Beauty Chats
Edited by Mme. R. Credit-Itle School of Beauty Culture. 470 Calumet Ave. Suite D. Chicago, Ill. Send a stamped old envelope to address for a personal reply.
Says one post: "Black eyes most dazzle in a hall, blue eyes most please at even-fall; the black a conquest soonest gain, the blue a conquest most retain,—then let each reign without control, the black all mind, the blue all soul!"
Many eyes supposed to be black or brown, are in reality a deep orange or yellow-brown when viewed in the sun-light; they are so luminous when compared with the whiteness of the eye that it frequently seems black by comparison. Blue eyes having less strength of expression, are supposed to denote a gentler, more ludigent and philosophical nature, although the steel blue eye can of a certainty be the eye of the coquettish, and often times coldly practical; science gives to the blue eyes the milder traits, and to the brown the more powerful. Eyes combining the flecks of blue and brown, are supposed to blend the sympathy of woman with the forcefulness of man, these eyes are usually described as hazel. The gray eye is the students eye, the judge's eye, these eyes are frequently found in the judges, unbiased, analytical, and of lofty sincerity; it is shrewd and acquisitive.
The transparent eye reveals health and mental strength; the deepen one's eye lustre, the greater one's spiritual gifts. The lusterless eye has but little lustre, in expression and denotes selfishness, and when the rims show a little red, they are people of temper with little control. Eyes placed too close together are declared to be of a nature so conservative and conventional; to be called narrow, while eyes too far apart, prominent, with eyes arching away to a somewhat lifted brow, reveal a clinging vine nature, uncertain, credulous, dependant upon affection and sympathy. The eye of genius and creative power has a well defined upper lid, though slightly narrow, with the vim forming a decidedly straight line across the eye almost covering the pupil. The twinkling eyes, that seem to be merrily dancing, are proof of a witty, as well as an eloquent nature.
HOME & KITCHEN SUGGESTIONS
Edited by MARIAN JANE PARKER,
Home Economics Dept., Calumet Baking
Powder Co.
How to Clean
The porch furniture sometimes acquires a coating of dust which detracts seriously from its cool and inviting appearance after a period of hot dusty weather.
Any amount of washing with cold water will fail to dislodge these layers of fire dust which seem ground into the surface, but they will respond very quickly to an application of soap flake suds which quickly removes the stubborn dirt without damaging the surface finish of the furniture.
To prepare the suds quickly, dissolve the soap flakes in hot water. Add cold water until just comfortable for the hands and whip up to a thick suds. Squeeze a soft cloth out of the suds and rub quickly but vigorously over the surface. Rirse immediately with a cloth squeezed out of clear water. Dry thoroughly.
Wicker furniture may be cleaned with the same suds, applying it with a soft brush instead of with a cloth.
Canning Strawberries
Of all fruits, the strawberry is one of the most difficult to can in order to preserve its color and flavor. It requires a large amount of sugar to preserve its color, but this in turn destroys the flavor. There is no more attractive food to look at than a dish of Sunshine Strawberry Preserves where an equal amount of sugar and berries is used, but many people prefer the plain canned product where less sugar is used. The following method has proved very successful if directions are followed closely:
First, hull and thoroughly wash the berries. In order to preserve the color as much as possible can the berries in their own juice; it is accomplished by allowing the berries and sugar to stand for a short time, forming enough juice to start the canning. Add ona-
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1926
SOUTH LOSES CONVENTION BY SEGREGATION
National Conference On Social Work Declines Invitation of Chattanooga To Hold Fifty-fourth Annual Meet There
Cleveland, Ohio, June 5—The Fifty-third Annual Convention of the National Conference of Social Work, which has just closed in Cleveland, dealt prejudice a severe blow and blasted the hopes of the South for a convention of this organization as long as colored delegates are not guaranteed the same privileges and accommodations accorded others. Thus Chattanooga, although it made a persistent demand for the convention was forced to yield to Des Moines, Iowa,
Has Negro Delegates
This National Conference of Social Work, one of the most democratic organizations, has always accorded Negro delegates just and fair consideration. Once the Executive Committee threatened to call off the conference when they faced New Orleans' attempt to bar Negroes from the meetings less than two weeks before the delegates were to arrive. Eugene Kincle Jones, Executive Secretary of the National Urban League, is a member of its Executive Committee and others including Jesse O. Thomas, Forester B. Washington, George E. Haynes, and Charles S. Johnson are members of division committees. Colored speakers appear on the program each year. The Cleveland Conference heard Charles S. Johnson, Editor of "Opportunity," who delivered one of the most exhaustive panes of the whole conference on the subject, "Substitution of Negro Labor for European Immigrant Labor"; Lawrence A. Oxley, Director of Colored Welfare Work; Forrester B. Washington, T. Arnold Hill, and E. Franklin Frazier. Seventy-five delegates attended.
"The reactions of employers of Negro labor," said Mr. Johnson "while still contradictory has a secure balance in favor of their use. One closely scientific comparison of their skill in the iron and steel industry which might be cited reveals, accordingly to earnings new hour on piece of work by the white workers excel Negroes, 12 processes in which Negroes excel white workers, and 18 processes in which their abilities are the same. They are becoming adjusted to city life and have even lengthened their span by 5 years since moving north."
fourth as much sugar by measure as fruit. Mix carefully and after standing for a while, let boil for three minutes. In order that the berries may have a plum appearance, cover and let stand for several hours or over night; then drain off the juice and pour the berries into hot sterilized jars. Heat the syrup to the boiling point and pour over the berries. Seek loosely and at once place jars in a pan of hot water in a slow oven and cook for one hour. Do move from oven and immediately that the jars do not touch during the oven cooking. Many times during the cold pack process of canning berries or even the open kettle process the berries rise to the top of the jar leaving perhaps a half jar of syrup, but fruit canned in the oven, when done you have a jar of fruit and not syrup.
NEW IDEAS FOR
When making fruit salad try putting the sliced bananas in hot water for a few moments. This will keep them from turning black, and the salad can be kept for 12 hours or longer.
To Clean White Woodwork—Add a little turpentine to the water and it will be much easier cleaned.
A New Chocolate Icing—Use the following proportions and you will have a delicious and different cake icing: To one cup of confectioner's sugar add six tablespoons of cocoa, one-fourth teaspoon Calcium Baking Powder and one-half teaspoon of vanilla. Add a thick, smooth tape to make a thick smooth paste and spread on cake.
To Drain Spinach—In removing spinach from the kettle in which it has been cooked, use a skimmer instead of pouring off the water. In this way the sand that has not been removed, will drop to the bottom of the kettle.
How To Porch Eggs—When poaching eggs put a teaspoonful of vinegar in the water and cover the pan. The vinegar keeps the white of the egg from spreading, and the covered pan makes the white cook over the yolk.
To Make Graham Flour—When graham flour is not available, graham crackers make an excellent substitute. Put the crackers thru the food chopper, using the finest knife, and use the resulting powder in cookies, cakes or q u i e k breads.
Windows Washed in Sun, Dry Streakd—Never attempt to wash your windows when the bright sunlight Is on them. Under the conditions they will look streaked when you get through, no matter how much elbow grease you apply.
Colored America Weighs National Administration In Scales And Balances And Finds It Wanting
Washington, D. C., June 9—(Staff Correspondence for The Associated Negro Press). Has Negro America made net gains in the more than five years of Republican national rule? Not nationally; some locally. Nationally, two Republican Presidents and both houses of Congress have kept disappointment to the political hopes and dreams of Negro America.
Will Negro America ever get a national political foothold again? Not until there is a revolution in political thought, and from somewhere in America, Negroes are entitled to Congress again! Until that day, Negroes of America will be nothing less than political footballs, to be kicked about at will, and used, occasionally, to "make the goal."
Hark back to 1918, when the Armistice was signed, and when Negro America had 500,000 of their kind in khaki, with nearly as many in France as make up a good size modern city. It was declared that, "The time has come when we will go justice." There has been little done, and little was expected under the Wilson administration, Democratic. Then, with the war, "politics adjourned,"—some. Eyes were turned to 1920, when there would be a national election, and "We are certain the next president will be a republican, and whoever he is, he will give us justice." That was thought, it was believed in, and prayed for, even at the very doorsteps of Warren G. Harding, in Mason, Ohio, after he had been named in a hotel at 1:40 a. m., in Chicago.
Harding Promised But Slipped
Harding, with the solemnity of a judge and the eloquence of a Daniel Webster, raised his hand to high heaven, in the presence of Negroes from every important state, and promised he would "not only give the Negro what he had had under former Republican administrative powers." But he did not. Life took on another hue from the Whites House in Washington, than it did from his house, at Marion.
Then he went to Birmingham, and told the world about Stoddard's "Rising Tide of Color." He threw fear into white America, and disgust into Negro America, and so did those about him, and so did Congress. The Negro became bitter and bolted the party in local election. This alarmed the Republicans, and they made peace and more promises, for 1924, after President Harding had gone to his reward, and President Coolidge was before the nation. The Negroes believed President Coolidge, New England, and National Chairman Butler, ditto, would certainly "turn the trick." And so, once more, except in Indiana, and a few scattered locations, Negro America marched under the banner of the Grand Old Party to victory, and promises.
"They're all alike when they get in," said a quiet citizen in a busy little city, and he seems to have sensed the opinion of the big majority. President Coolidge has eloquently preached the gospel of good-will and toleration, but he has eminently failed to back it up by determined action. He believes all things righteous—on all righteous things—but he does not turn his beliefs into political action. "President Coolidge has failed Negro America, and so has the third Republican Congress and Senate." This is the unqualified opinion of the national thinking Negroes in every state.
Needed; Self-Assertiveness,
/ Unselfish Leadership
The President is cordial; he agrees with all committees and leaders who call to lay complaint, that "something should be done," but nothing is done. He cautions "patience." Have ever people been more patient and trustful than Negro America?
There is Congress, both the House and the Senate. Their concern in Negro citizenship is
The reason is that the sun dries the cleaning mixture so quickly that it dries uncleanly. The quick drying process also causes the cleanser to become more or less fixed before you can remove it.
Household Hints
To brighten the rugs for summer if you are not taking them up, why wipe them off with a nail of water using a handful of salt in the water.
Wheen cooking certain vegetables with a disagreeable smell, just a pinch of sugar on the stove will kill the scent.
A pinch of salt in the water in the vase for cut-flowers will make them last longer.
You should open canned fruit an hour or two before it is needed for use. It is richer when the oxygen is thus restored to it.
shown in the voting down of the report on the Anti-Lynching Bill, cold turkey. There were four for it in the committee, three Republicans, and a Democrat, two of the Republicans are candidates for reelection in states where Negro votes count. But Congress, and the Republican Administration at large, have their fingers crossed on Negro America. They are not going out of their way to exercise any lofty statesmanship regarding Human Rights and Citizenship — Negro America has neither the organization or means to force the issue.
Take the case of James A. Cobb for District Judge. A Republican Senate has permitted a Democratic Senator from Mississippi, elected because of votes of disfranchised Negroes, to hold back the final confirmation for months. And Cobb's appointment is not a net gain but a mere retention of place.
There is significance, therefore, in the declarations of Homer Phillips, of St. Louis, who comes out for Congress, in the district of present Congressman L. C. Dyer; and of "Nick" Chiles, of Topeka, who comes out as a candidate for United States Senator, for the place now occupied by Sena a Curtis. This police colleague now could well file for office in every state in America where there are numbers. The time to sit idly by is passed. If they fail of nomination or election they will at least have the lacking of a principle.
Unselfish Leadership Needed
"There is need of unselfish leadership. It is the most distressing situation with which I have to deal," declared one of the outstanding men of the Negro race to the Associated Negro Press. Continuing, he said: "There is much to be done, and no few of us can do it all. But practically everyone who comes to the front in a cause, or is urged to lead wishes to know. What am I going to get out of it." Democrat, Republican or Independent is not the question foremost in consideration at this time; the big thing is Political Assertiveness. Negro America must be effective and audible politically in a national way, regardless of affiliation, according to the belief of leading thinkers everywhere.
Out of the Negro masses there must come men and women who will throw aside the cloak of political oppression and take their positions on the mountain tops of justice, and cry aloud, and declare "I will be heard." That the tendency is in the direction of a new day, a new deal, and a new voice, is obviously indicated of a new day, is obviously indicated by newspapers from every section, by the assertions of all those who speak, and by the general trend of the times. Negro America in a national political way is in a sorry mess and knows it. In the fact of knowledge, lays the hope.
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ighs National Scales And Is It Wanting
SLAYER OF HIS COMMON-LAW WIFE CONVICTED
Petronius Don Henderson, of Washington, Found Gulity Of Stabbing Young Woman He Claims He Was to Marry
Washington, D. C., June 9—A jury in criminal court No. 2, J. Wendell Wendell P. Stafford presiding, last Thursday found Petronius Don Henderson guilty of second degree murder for the killing of his common law wife, Matilda Beatrice Jackson, on March 25, last.
The verdict carries with it punishment by imprisonment for life or not less than 20 years.
Stabbed With Pocket Knife
Henderson stabbed the Jackson girl in front of 929 French street, Northwest, where they were living as man and wife, with a pocket knife, the wound penetrating the heart. She had gone to a party against his wishes and failed to return by 10 o'clock, as she had told him. She left him lying in bed. He got up, dressed, and went into the streets and returned three times. As he started out the fourth time, he met her at the door. The stabbing followed.
Henderson carried the fatally wounded girl up the stairs to their room where he ripped open her clothes from the neck down. He bathed the wound, and then went for Dr. Charles B. Fisher. When Dr. Fisher reached the scene, the girl had been removed to Freedman's Hospital where she was pronounced dead upon arrival by Dr. Howard Jackson.
Henderson took the witness stand at the trial and denied that he intended to kill the girl. He testified that he intended to marry her on April 1, 1926, and was anxious about her welfare but not angry with her at the time of the tragedy. He claimed that he prilled her to him and she accidentally fell against a finger nail file which he was holding in his hand at the time.
Deputy Coroner H. E. Martyn, however, testified that his autopsy showed two deep wounds, which were made by a sharp instrument, and the police officers, who investigated the killing, declared that there was no blood on the finger nail file but that the knife which they found at the scene was bloody to the hilt.
INSURE NEGROES
Chicago, June 9-The Travelers
Insurance Company has issued an
edict declining to insure or to re-
insure Negro railway employers.
The reason for this action was
that the loss of money through
logus claims made the business un-
profitable.
TS
nical Co.
GEORGIA
PAWO VIRGINIA CAROLINA NEWS EDITORIAL PAGE
U. S. TREASURY TO DROP SIXTEEN COLORED WOMEN
Order Of Suspension To Become Effective June 30; Causes Discrimination Charges To Be Revived.
Washington, D. C., June 9—Harry V. Speelman, Register of the Treasury of the United States is again charged with discrimination against colored employees of his office.
This charge is based upon notice to sixteen of them that their services would no longer be needed after June 30. All of these employees are women.
20 Per Cent Reduction
The report is that orders from the Treasury Department called for a 20 Per Cent reduction of the force of the office of the Register of the Treasury. There are but 37 colored employees in this office. Sixteen of them were notified of their probable dismissal.
Among those listed for dismissal is Miss Georgia Jones, who was given a probationary appointment in the office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue under the civil services rules. Miss Jones is very fair and at the time of her appointment Government officials did not know whether she was white or colored. While she was serving her probationary period, it was discovered that she was colored. She was immediately notified that the work which she had been selected to do was completed and her services would no longer be needed. Political influence was brought to bear, however, and she was transferred to the segregated section.
Four of the employees who were notified of their dismissal will be transferred to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing on per diem work. They are Miss Elizabeth Burfield, Mrs. Josephine Gregg, Mrs. Carrie Leech and Mrs. Charlotte Hall.
The employees, who will be dismissed outright, are Mrs. Francis Davis, Mrs. Lou Ethel D. Martin, Miss Loonie H. Byrd, Mrs. May Tyson Baker, Mrs. Marvelline Hoffman, Mrs. Nellie Vaughn, Miss Vida Porter, Miss Lillie E. Burke, Mrs. Linnie Lowe, Miss Georgia Jones, Mrs. Monen Gray and Mrs. Amanda Murray.
WAVERLY
Waverly, Va.-Miss Sarah Bell Taylor, arrived Saturday morning from the North Carolina State University Taylor, "Miss Sarah Ricks is here visiting relatives and friends." Miss Laura B. Ficklett, will leave tomorrow for Philadelphia, Miss Bertha Jones, "The Stork visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Parham Reed and baby are getting along nice." Miss Lou Sylvester, who has been quite sick at her home, is able to be out again. Miss Marcia B. Ficklett, "Miss Mamie V. Peace and Miss Myrtle Z. White are home. Miss White is in school." Miss Robert Robert, Robert J. Jr., was shot through both thighs Saturday night. He is getting along about as well as could be expected. Miss Marcia is very inspiring on Sunday. "Mr. Arthur Miller spent a few days here visiting his mother, Miss Lloy McUlloyd, of New Street.
The former's czar's executioners received as much as $15 an execution.
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a Doge Oe a DIVE. pe) wi fe ry y 1 ) 7 i KE
ge or et . . : wn ; 7 s Do hee
S 7. IRERURIATATORA AAA RANA NA RATATAT IAMAATAMAND: (06 F AUANATANONA TARTAR WANAUATATAA RAIA TATAIATA UAT AT IATA AIAN nN UOT TATU mate
a ee thes eet etinn en en ————_— ay mvonmny pwoy ome DTI aalen.
: WRB. EDITH, Z. MARTIN’ | Training School, and Mrs, Mayyie] VOLUNTEER WORKERS However, the Sunday school B. Y. R Riddick, Mary Cooper, Delma Fel- HYAGINSIT ENJ
ds Glasgow Btrest {ye "Billups, who has been teuching| The Volunteer, Workers’ Glub ath ?. U, and church fought zealously HUNTERSVILLE ton. - 1 AROUND RICHMOND |
iy Agent and, Corcenpendest Toe Rees whe Ae Gaded School | Thire Baptist. Chureh held its! all day in the defense of the mas-| , ‘The Little Grove Baptist Sune adie Gatling who has| Members of .the Hyacinth Ath-
- "5, Phone, 623. jars returned home where they| nieeting last Tuesday evening in ‘ter’s Kingdom. “What Shall We | Cay Fehool was very, well attended] Mrs. Addi Gattling, wit 1 jetie and. Social Club enjoyed a
ES | wilt renin a few days and, then} the’ chapel: Many members were ; Do With Jesus?” was the: question Sunday. Deacon Hdgat Johnson] keen teaching at Zuni, Va for the! trip tg Righmond and Petersburg, | SC
PERSONALS | will go & Petersburg to enter’ sum-|présent ‘anid a pleasant time spent. ‘asked by Kev. Mr. Jones, who | tercher of the Bible Class was! past term has returned home. ‘on Memorial Day, where they were j
ts! TRS will go to F prisent and a pleasant time spent. asked by Rev. Mr. Jones, whol Fiehiy complimented by Rev. |" "iis. entrice Saunders returned) the guests of Mrs. Byrd, 1222
7 highly compiimentes wy Mey: ders returned) the guess octersbure. They} AWFRAL BENAnen,
Mrs. Gertrude Brown anc tans
jy, 680 Bart street, left-for: Brook:
ign, N. ¥., last Monday for an in
eefinite stay.” :
My. C. H. Llewellyn has severed
his:cornection with National Bene
fit Insurance Co., and has accepted
a position in Philadslphia, Pa.
Miss Goldie Parker, after a suc
cessful year's ‘teaching, is at how
for the summer months.
‘Miss Goldie M. Ballentine is =
member of the graduating class «!
WEN, and ff. this vear.
‘Mr. and Mis. Henty’ Hunter of
Philadephia, and Mra, Jarvi-
Hunter of Suffolk were the guest
of Mrs. Hamilton Jackson, Tues
day of las: week.
Miss Lucille Reid, who is « stu
dent of Hampton Normal Schoo
was home for a few days, and lef
for Ashland, New Hampshire, fo:
the. summer. Her brother, Mr
Russell Reid, who completed th
high school course at Lawrenc.
ville, will leave soon for Wate:
Hil, LL
1 ''Misses Sylvia Shepperd, Sara!
and Diana, Edwards, students 6
Kitoxville College, are at home fo
the summer.
"Mrs, Olivia Allen Hall, who hi:
“been teaching in the Smithfiel
Do You Hear Me?
Iam shouting how good our
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Tiave yoo, fort were you obtained
ine fellening 0?
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Grebe “Giktment” the Far ant forme:
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We are, manatactarers of all af the
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(ight Sione in the ight Maced
Foitishiotist Va.
enema
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Ute twlrvating detly which whe
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etosPrtnion “naa” Sent sektch mee
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AGENTS
Urice 50 Cents Hee Jar
DR. JOHN JONES
rion: 663
1806 Green Se “Pertemasth. Vee
Edward F. Hodges
Special Prices on Wond:
Slab wood, $2.50, per fond; Coré
+ wood, $3.50 per load;-Oak woud
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We solicit your patronage and
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Lee Ave. & Sth St Phone 1376-:
ce
W..M.. GROGAN
Funeral Director
and Embalmer
Hearses and Carriages for Hire
Notary Public — Automobiles
823 1.ONDON STREET
PORTSMOUTH, VA.
| QUALITY MEAT
| 3: MARKET
| Do you know where: the best
| meats of all kinds come from?
| Give us a call and receive
|“ Courteoiis: Serviee
] FRED TYNES. Proprietor
228 Green St. Portsmouth, Va.
“Why Be Sick?”
ASK MOSBY ABOUT HIS
MUTUAL, PRESCRIPTION
Se SERVICE.
This plan saves-you the: wor-
rypf wondering how. you are to
et, yout prescriptions, Glled.
A‘small stm put dosvp, for
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year, + ae |
Mosby’s: Pharmacy.
Cory Glangow St. and Mt. Vernon. Ave.
Station for Bus-Line; Suffolk
J.P. Lane. & Son:
Cafe, ~
541 CRAWFORD STREET
"PORTSMOUTH, VA.
White waiting for. your Bus
foryar idys, sections, stop.at our
Café for’ nice rooms, meals and.
soporte wating Foo,
(pen trom 6A, t6't'A My *
* :BRICES REASONABLE
‘Training School, and Mrs. Magirie
V. Billups, who has been teaching
in the Branchville Graded School
have returned home where they
will rimiafn a fow days and. then
will go {9 Petersburg to enter sumn-
mer school.
ee
CLUBS
The Priscilla Art Cixele held its
closing ut the spacious-home of the
president, Mrs, Alma 8, Harris, on
Effingham street, The color
schema of pink and gresn wad
tautifully enrried ‘out. Prognes-
sive’ whist was played. Mrs.
ftelia W. Jackson Won the, lady’:
prize and Mr, W. Meninefictd,: the
noobs.
Music was furnished by Messes.
K. Dunston, A. Hair, and J. Coop:
ex, Dainty refroshmints we re
Served. Amon those prisent were
Mrs. Lettie Reid, Miss. Or
Harris, Mr. and’ Mrs. P. Hodsden,
Mr. G. Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. 1.
Boone, ars. Austin, Mr. and Mes.
1, HW Brown, Mis “Mande Seur-
lock, “Mrs, Otelia Jackson, Miss
Marion Wratt, Mr. and Mes, 1.
Jackson, Mrs. WL Byrd, Me, Chics
Si. Harris, Mtiss Elen Hill, Mr.
Maurice Scott, Mr, W.-Mennifield
Sir and Mrs. d, bevy, Mr. J.T.
Dunston, Mrs. 1. Timus, aliss Olivia
Andersen, Miss Jovephine Light-
ner, Mr, and Mrs. W. Creekmur.
Miss Bessie Churchill, Mrs. 0. Gos
prey, Dr. and Mrs.) As dobnsoi,
Mrs. S. Henderson, Miss EB. Rox:
Sys, Mrs, M, Norcum, Mr. and Mrs,
Smith, Mr. and Mrs, J. Laws,
Mr. and Mes. J. Corpiew, Mr, ane
Ars, Thomas Reid, Miss Charlotte
Reid, Mr. Horace’ Gray, Miss
Reid, Mes Willard Hagkans, Ds.
ind 'Mrs. MeGriff, Dr. and’ Ales
Reid, Mrs. B. Birchett, Mrs, f°
Lynch, Mrs. CutfeeMr."and Mrs
W. Smith, Mrs. Foster, Mrs. Fan
aie Ashe, Mr. and Mrs, Walkies.
Mr and Mrs. ‘Turner, Mrs, Annic
Ichnson, Miss Fannie Mae Colding
Ars. R. Webb, Me. and Sirs, Thos
A. Newky, Prof. W. BL Riddick
and Mr. it. £. Creekmur.
iad aba bar en tale le tence erat
The Virginia Art Circle met last
Thursday evening in the home ot
Mrs, Ruth Sparrow; ;Glasgow St
Business was discussed, afte:
which the members sewed for ax
tour, A dainty repast was served:
Meeting adjourned to meet with
Mrs, bola Hasskins, Green street
In Memoriam
GEORGIANA WRIGHT
Died June 5, 1924
Daughters. ‘Son and
Grandchildren,
peepee
dohn H. Corprew.
Funeral Director.
Undertaker and
Embalmer
Iady Acsistant In Atlendance
sat Giateew gir vartmenti Nn
Meera eta ating heer
tia ts ube Sut De
rtwDate. Basipment
Dy and Sight Calle Anowered
Phone axes
“Service Above Self”
JOHN ELLIOTT
Funeral
Director
and Embalmer
806 COUNTY STREET
PHONE, 2645
, PORTSMOUTH, VA.
(ee
Keep The Flies.
~~ Out
SPECIAL PRICE ON
Window and
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H. H. Myrick & Go.
HARDWARE
County and: Effingham Sts.
jut tl. MYRICK Me BI, ADAMS
en ae: ot
thousands “Wave Ween ‘Relieved,
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1o10 Banham Shy Portsmouth, Va.
ics
Let Us:Dai
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| SERVICE —
| Shoe-Repairing
While Ya. Wait © =
iigervteo" OM Motto:
WILGIAM HULL: Prepetetor
517 EFFINGHAM STREET
| VOLUNTEER: WORKERS
|The Volunteer. Workers’ Glub: of
‘Third Baptist Chureh held its
‘migcting last Tuesday evening in
‘the’ chapel.” Many members were
present arid a pleasant time spent.
Riter the vexular routine of bus-
Fines, the president made some in
teresting remarks, All are asked
ts be prosent nt the next meeting.
IMPERIAL SOCIAL, CLUB
‘The Imperial Social Club met at
the home of Mr. Pete Robinson,
3000 “Effingham street, Sunday,
May 20. After « very active and
interesting meeting the members
were ushered into the dining room
Where refreshments. were servd bv
Mrs. Robinson, wife of the host,
and. Shs, Daisy, Randall, Mv
Lewis Smith and Me. William Bur-
niette were new. members. ‘The
club met Sunday, Juce 6, at, the
home’ of Mr. Clarence Copeland,
720 Nelzon street. A very interest:
ing meeting was held.
PUNBAR ART CIRCLE
ENTERTAINED AT THE
el La
‘Tuesday evening of this wiek.
the Dunbar Art Circle was enter-
tained at the Douglass Blue Tea
Room with Mrs, Sylvia Walker as
hostess. Shortly after nine o'clock
the guests were ushered into the
‘Tea “Room, that had been tazte-
fully decorated for the occasion
with palms, ferns and cut flowers
while the centerpice: for each table
was a vase of roses, intermingled
with maiden-hair fein. While the
mests wer? being served, music
from the Douglass orchestra filled
the air and added to’ the pleasure
of the guests.
The vepast, which consisted of
the season's ‘delicacies, was pre-
parsd and served by the personnel
ef the Douglass Tea Room, and
won for them the praise of all
Afier the repast was over and
another social hour had been spent,
the gests departed for their Homes
voting Airs, Walker a very charm-
ing: hostess and the Douglass Blue
Tex Room an ideal place for
prompt and courteous serview.
Mesilames Briggs «al Ahrens,
ave the proprietors.
THE ART CICCLE
The Art Circle, «f Portsmouth,
‘dosed the 1925-26 season with an
informal dance and vt exhibit al
Tidewater Hall, Friday -evening,
June dth. With’ a large gathering
to enjos the festivities, the even:
was a most enjoyable ‘one.
‘The beautiful specimens of art
on display, showed _ conclusively
that the circle was not idle durin
the season just ended. ‘The exhibit
\wjts excellent in’ both wouknianship
and arrangement.
‘Mr, Benjamin Jones and his or-
esta enlivened the oceasion with
their entrancing music and the
xuusis reluetanily departed for
Sheir homes in the wee hours uf
he morning. Light refreshments
were served during intermission,
——
FUNERAL OF EDW, PIERCE
The funeral service of Mr. Ed-
ward Pierce who died at the resi-
cience of his daughter, Mrs. Bessie
Pierce, King street, Friday of last
week was held fiom Emanuel a,
M. EB. Church, of which he was 2
“nembcr for many years standing.
Sunday at 1:30 p,m,, the pastor,
Kev, J. A. Young spoke very fit:
ingly’ of his Christian life in the
chuveh and community and with
cogret will be missed by hoth. Oss
account “of the close following of
another funeral service, Rev. Hal-
ey committed the body. A” large
aumber were out to pay the last
syibute of respect to his memory,
The floral tokens were many and
Senutiful.
GIRARD WATTS
The funeral servic of Mr. Girard
Watts, formerly, of this city, hut
for manys years of Charleston S.
C, died at tile latter place Friday
cnorning of last week his body: was
brought to the city Sunday morn
ing, and the funeral service con-
ducted trom Emanuel A. MM. F.
Church, Sunday afternoon at 3
Gelock.” “The pastor, Rev. J. A.
Young officiated: Having served
in the Spanish War, was buried
with national honors. ‘The Ordei
of Reindzer. and the Buffaloes,
af each of whieh he was x member
were. in attendane:. The oral
tributes were numerous and beau-
tiful,
——__+-_—_—_
CHURCHES
MBENELOR BA Tot CHURCH
The service ue. Ebenezer was very
Fwoll attended last Sunday. The
cctieral spirit. of the members is
to go forward.” This they have
dore in a way commendable. The
serviews have hud a good attend.
ance for about four years, with +
spiritual atinospheré. that’ is fay-
orable for growth, . The Home ard
Forign Mission fnterert is deep-
‘cning amon the ladies to say the
Teast. “It is hoped to carry to the
Lott Carey Convention which meots
at Brooklyn a handsome. amount
for the work,
ST, JOHN'S BAPTIST CHURCH
Services were par-excellent last
Sunday. The Sunday school is pro-
xvessing, angd the Superintendent
Coles “and teachers are working
zealously for. its advancement. ‘Thy
Progréssive, Biblo, Class, of which
the “pastor, Rev. William Gordon,
a the'téachér, extends to all an in?
vitation, “At ‘IY"a.'m., “The Pro-
gram of Jesus,” was the eubject of
the sormon preached by the pastor.
B. Y. P. U, convened at 6 p. mi,
June 13,, ..Special-Childgen's Day’
exerdises: will be held at night,
MT, OLIVET, BAPT, CHURCII
Because of the pastors absence
from the city last Sunday the serv
eos were somewhat. abnormal.
However, the Sunday school B. Y.
P. U, and church fought zealously
all dag. in the defense of the mas-
ter's Kingdom. “What Shall We
Do With Jesus?” was the: question
asked by Kev. Mr. Jones, who
preached here at night.” And
many appromiaie answers were
given, hue whether the folks wil
ive up to their answers, Gime wil
tell,
‘The Spring xevrvat will begin
on the second Sunday. Rev. De.
Griffin, pastor Central Baptist
Church, Berkley, Va, will preeh
each night.
ee cepts
TRIXTUN
On Monday, May 31, the ©, %.
‘g, Class of the First Baptist
Church went on its anual outing
to Elizabeth City, N. C., where the
tnembers had a very” pleasant time,
‘The happy bunch was made wel
come to the grounds and buildinss
of Roanok: Collegiate Institute,
and there had luncheon. Some ef
the party explored the city, while
vihers visited ‘State Nofinal and
Mill others visited friends: and old
Requaintances. Some of the hems
visited were those of Rev. Dr. C. M
Cariviright, Mrs. and Miss Per:
kins, of Speed street, and Mr. and
Airs! Peakins, of South Road street.
The party left Elizabeth City x!
f:15 o'clock and arrived here at
7:30.
On Sunday, June 6, St, Mark's
Mutual Aid Society held its sixth
anniversary services al the First
Buptist Church here at 3 p.m,
Rev. L, Sharp, the pastor, preached
the ‘annual sefmon, On June 35,
the same Order will hold its an-
nual setting at this church, On
this night the public is cordially
invited to altend the services.
Some prominent speakers are ex-
pected, and the C. N. T. Class of
the church will render choice mu-
sical selections.
Dr. S. A, McCoy, who has re-
cently completed his course at Me-
harry, Medical College, has re-
turned home, where he’ is visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs, A. Me-
Coy, of Faitsvilie,
SHOULDERS HILL
Scervices were very inspiring
here on Jast Sunday. The Sunday
school experienced a wave of spitit
ual enthusiasm. AL the hour. of
services Rev. Mr. Thompson held
the congrcgation’s attention as he
discussed the text found in Ro:
mans 1:12. Mis. BLE, Gordon,
field seerstary for the.” Woman's
Baptist State Convention, was
present and spoke in interest of
the work, A collection was giver
te her. Immediately following the
services the Missionary Society
held its regular monzhly__meeting
with Mrs, Oliver Taylor presiding.
Forerai services for Mr. Henry
Wright, who died June 2, were held
un dune 3, with Rev, Mr. White
pastor of New Hope Church, of-
ficinting. Silver Star Lodge No, 7,
R. S. of G. Sj Rescue Lodge No.
sod, G. U. 0. of O. F. and the
Ancient Order of Knights of Jevu:
salem, of which the deceased was
& tneniber were present in bodies
to render honor to their departed
comrade. Solos were touchingly
sung by Mesdames Pollie Palme:
und E. d. Taylor.
ee ee
DEEP CREEK.
Serviecs at Rehoboth 4. al. &.
Church were very inspiring as
Sunday. In the Sunday school the
iesson was interestingly taught by
the various teuchers. At the 17
e'clock serviecs the pastor, Rev. R.
T, Watkins, preached an’ eloquent
sermon from Phil. 5:15, subject.
“Let the World Sez Jesus and
You.” Holy Communion was ad-
ministered, 3
Services at the Divine Baptist
Church were good last Sunday, be-
xinning with the Sunday school.
‘The lesson was most instructively
catachized by the pastor, Rev. W,
BE. Smith. At 12 o'clock, the Rev.
Mr. Smith preached from Matt.
16:18, subject, “Peter’s Confessiva
About Christ." The regular com-
munion service was observed. At
night there was a pew rally at this
church undzr auspices of the Wil-
ling Worker's Clube Rev S.A.
Brown, of Portsmouth, preached
the sermon from Roman 8:19,
“God's Glory Revealed in the
Christian Character.” A paper
was read hy Mrs. Grace Owens 7
“Duty of the Individual Church on
Kingdom Building.”
The stork visited the home of Me,
and Mrs. Robert Sheppard ‘Thurs.
day night, June 3, and left a boure-
ing baby itl, weighing 12 pounds.
Mother and baby are doing fine,
Mr. Willie Muller and Miss Lu-
cile Smith motored to Bell's. Mil
Sunday night, June 6, and were
married at 7:30 o'clock by Rev.
Me. Alexander.
Mrs. Ella Washiagton suffered
a paralytic stroke a few days ago
«nl her condition has not im-
proved sinee.
Miss Anna Fuqua, of Nassawn-
dox, Va., is visiting Mrs. Julia
Wright at the home of her parents,
Mr. and. Mrs, V. L. Richards.
The condition of Mr.. Lewis
Young steadily improves.
‘The closing exercises of Ship-
yard Public School were hcld Tues-|
day and Wednesday of last week.
Tussday evening, the graduates
had their program at the Rehoboth
A.M. E. Church. Rey. W. E, Wil-
lis, prineipal of Truxtun public
school delivered an interesting ad-
ress. to the class and patrons.
Wednesday evening,’ the pupils of
he entire school rendered two de-|
ightful cantatas at the Divine
Baptist Church. Mrs. Bell Allen
Walters of Newport News served
*$ pianist on this occasion. Grad-
mates: Misses Annie B. Owens,
Flossie Butt and Sophronia Butt’
Teachers: Mrs. F, B. Melvin, Mrs.
tuth B. Mason, _
HUNTERSVILLE
The Little Grove Buptist Sun.
day school was very, woll attended
Sunday. Deacon Hdgaé Johnson,
teacher of the Bible Class was
vey highly complimented by Rev.
J. Ringold, of Norfolk, for having
darth the. lesson £0” inspiringly.
ke | Ringold also spoks at length
“nthe lesson. Rev. John Baker
Viidon Hinton and the superin
tendent also spoke. At 12:15, Rev,
Ringold preached’ a sermon’ long
to be remembered. At night he al
50 preached a stitring sermon.
Bro. Weldon Hinton, MY.
Ward, Alice V. Wright and Olivia
Wright attended the Grand Lodge
of Love and Charity which was
held in Portsmouth last week. Mr.
Daniel &. Wright attended the
bunquet.
a
OLIVE BRANCH
The ‘services at Olive Branch
were good all day though nol large.
ly atterded on account of threat
caing weather. The pastor
preached & sermon to the juniors
as usual on the first Sunday morn-
ing. The sermon was an illus.
trated one on the subject, of “Hab.
its.” ‘The older p2ople seemed as
much interested as the children.
AL two o'eleck the funeral of Mz.
Willie Edwards, who died Friday
morning at his home on Florida
avenue, was held at Olive Branch.
Th: pastor officiated, and spoke
very touchingly from John 14:1.
Ar. Jamzs Elliott sang, “Nothing
Between,” and Mrs. Roberta It
Smith played an instrumental solo.
‘The deceased leaves a wile and six
children, four brothers, one sister,
and a host of other relatives to
mourn their loss. Floral tributes
were large and beautiful, At four
Welock this congregation wor
shipped with the Grove Baptist
Church, Churebland. ‘The pastor
preached 2 very inspiring sermon,
and the choir sang some of ite
choice music. The oeeasion that
called over there was the first an-
riversary of the pastor, Dr. Mdo-
dana. Me. J. Nathan ' Levy and
Miss Dorothy Burrell, were quietly
married Sunday, May 30th, at the
home of the Rev. A. S.'Hourd.
Bride and groom ave living in this
community.
——_—_+—___§_.
BOWERS HILL
Mrs, Dlaty Pauls died at her
residence Monday evening, after
heing ill for only a short while
She was a faithful member of
Little Zion Baptist Church and a
most helpful worker in her: Sun-
day school, being a teacher of the
givls’ class. Her funeral was held
Thursday at the church with the
pastor, Rev. W, A. Baker, of-
ficiating. Rev, Baker beautitully
culogized ‘the life of the deceased
Sh ix survived by four sisters, ore
brother and two adopted children.
Interment was in the Loving Char-
ity cemetery.
Mrv. Mary Brinkley attended the
«om menecoment exercises at St,
Paul School, Lawrenceville, trom
which her son, Clarence Thornton.
ximduated last week. Messrs.
Clarence ‘T. and Arthur Brinkley.
hth stedents of St, Paul, are home
with their parents,
Mx, Junius Jones, who hag been
spending some time in Baltimore.
Md., is here visiting his father.
Mr.‘John W. Jones, and friends.
oe eee ee
WEST NORFOLK
Serviczs were very well attended
Sunday at the First Baptist
Church, where the pastor, Rev, B
8, White, preached interesting Ser.
mons. ‘The Holy Communion wa:
administered.
Mig acola agains, of Ingle
side school, is spending’ her vaea.
tion here with her parents.
Miss Martha Gilliam left Mon.
day to attend summer school a!
State Normal, Elizabeth City,
Rev. B, S. White was the dinner
guest of Bir, and Mrs. B.C,
Wheeler, Sunday.
Mr. William Stanley was at
home to visit his children, Mr. and
Mrs. William, Stanley, Sunday.
An entertainment was given in
the home of Mr. and Ars. Freddie
Powell for the henefit of the Sun-
day. school, Those present. were:
Mesdames Indiana Diggins, Rebec
ca Bowman, Katie T. Deans, Sarah
Boulding, Elexez:na ‘Mason, Misses
Sallie Thomas, Estell Weal, Al-
terdia Jones, Elsie V. and Daisy
1. Nixon, Gracie Elliott, Mrs.
Freddie Powell, Messrs, Lee Mar-
shall, Johonis ‘Hoggins Burke
Mumford, Barron Letchficld, Rev.
Koger Petaway, Wm. Stanley, War.
Johnson, ‘Tom Roberts, fohn Wil-
kins, Willie Hardy, Freddie Pow-
cll, Samuel Pullum. After play.
ings games the juests were all
served cake erzam and punch. All
loft having said they enjoyed them-
selvies,
iat
GILMERTON
ane Sunday school wae woll at-
tended at the First Baptist Church
en Sunday last. ‘The lesson was
instructively reviewed hy Miss
Mary Copeland.
Services at the A. M. EF. Zion
Chureh were excellent, beginning
with a well attended’ Sunday
school, - The classes were inter
estingly taught by the teacher, Mr.
J. W. Gary, while the lesson’ was
catachized by Miss Helen Faulks
At 11 o'clock Rev. W. H. Haugh-
ton preached an able sermon on the
rubject, “Sowing.” At 3. o'clock
the Golden Crown Quartette was
resent and rendered selections.
Mrs, J. B, King entertained the
third grade pupfis at her home
Friday afternoon. After games,
the guests were servzd refresh-
ments. ‘Those present were: Mel-
vin Gregory, Willie Wilson, Eddie
Smith, Leslie Wilson, Elijah Cope-
jand, Charlie L. Gatling, Julia Al-
len, Marie Allen, Helen West, Mary
stiddick, Mary Cooper, Delma Fel
ton,
Mrs, Addie Gattling who has
een teaching at Zuni, Va for the
past term has returned home.
“Miss Bentrice Saunders returned
home from the Boykins Institute
at Boykirs, Va,
“Miss. Mary Copeland and Ars,
Alice Steveson’ have relurned home
after going to Zuni, Va., to wit:
ness the commencement exercises
ut Mrs. Addie Gattling’s school.
Rev. Jacob Randolph of Farm-
ville, Va., was the guest of Mr. Ed-
ward Miller Saturday algo Rev. J.
C, Diamond, of Berkley, Va-
Mrs, Agnes Allen, ‘wife of Mr.
‘Thomas Allen died al her residence
Thursday night after a long ill-
ness. She was a membcr of the
Firs Baptist Church. She is sur-
vived by her husband and three
small children. Funeral services
were held Sunday afternoon at one
o'clock. During the services, Miss
issie Nixon sang a solo, “Sweet
Hour of Prayer,” and also Mrs.
Pertha ‘Thrower, subject, “Feaven
is My Home.” Rev. A. 5, Lomax
officiated. Burial was in Deep
Creck cemetery.
Mrs, Hazel Pevebse and Master
Melvin Gregory left for Philadel-
phia Saturday to visit her sister.
Mr. M. E. Corprew visited his
cousin, Mrs, Lillie Hawkins Mon-
day’ afternoon.
‘Miss Hattie Downing and sisters,
Moudessa and Willmer, and son,
Herbert, were guests of their cou
sin, Mr. Downing at Bell's mill
Sunday.
"The Girls’ Industrial Club and
the. Young Men’s League, of Bell's
Mill, rendered a program at the
First Baptist Chureh Sunday
First
| BRIGHTON
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Services were largely attended
im last Sunday. Sunday school
was held at 9:30 a, m. 11 a. mn
crmon by pastor, Rev, F. M. Ty-
ree. At 3 p.m. funeral of Mr.
Freeman was held and was largely
attended. 7:30 p.m. the Holy
Communion was administered,
ST. JOHN'S BAPTIST CHURCH
Serviecs were excellent during
‘the day, The Sunday school is in
ths central line of progress. The
superintendent, Mr. M. J. Coles
jand teachers ave working zealous-
ly. At 11:30, the Traveler’s Guard
and Guide, was the theme of the,
sermon, preached by. the pastor,
Riv. Wm, Gordon, “3 p. m., the)
Pastor's League held its session.
Gp. m 8. ¥. PU é
ST. THOMAS BAPTIST
Services Sunday were very in-
teresting and inspiring. 11 a. m.,
sermon "by Rev. Gray was spirit-
ually cnjoyed. Preaching at 7:30
the pazior officiated. The pastor
will be at his post of duty on the
second Sunday.
Mr, and Mrs. B, J, Pruden and
‘Mv. and Mrs. Powell motored tc
Raleigh, N. C., Saturday and spent
the week-end.
ENTERTAINED
Mr. and Mrs. James Lawrence
entertained at ja reception given
in honor of thtir daughter, Miss
Lelia Lawrence, a graduate of the
State Normal School, Elizabeth
City, N.C., Tuesday, June 1. The
liouse was” Veautifully decorated
swith cut flowers. Games and mu-
sie were indulged in. A delightful
repast wax served: Tee eream,
cake, salted peanuts, fruit punch
and after tea mints.
—
TAYLORSVILLE
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Seivices were full of inspiration
at the First Baptist Chureh, Sun-
tay. Sabbath school was held at
its usual hour, and the lesson was
beautifully portrayed. At 11 a.
in, & small congregition greeted
the pastor, Rev. W. H. Harris,
Prior to the sormon, the pastor
eve logical talk, after which he
tendered “his resijmation, whieh
was accepted with much regret.
Rev. Haris came to this church,
September, 1924, and has don ¢
much for” the development and
progress of the community as well
ws the chureh during his career as
vastor, He will preach his fare-
well sérmon on the second Sunday
in August. He chose as his morn-
ing subject: “I Believe I'l Go
lack Home,” which was _ timely
is well as interesting. At 3 p. mi.
Holy Communion was administered
at Which time Rev. Barnes, of
Newport News, officited. At night
the pastor again preached. He-se-
lected for his subject, “Peace to
All Mankind.”
HYANCINTH ATHLETIC CLUB
ene, Hivaveinth: Athiatic and So-
Gia] Club held its regular geting
at the residence of Mr, Elbert
Johnson, Sunday. After regular
devotionals and business of impor.
tance, the host served a pleasing
repast. Visitors present wore th
Misses Vernila Maben, Lillie Mae
Lawrence, and Elizabeth — Eley.
‘The club met Sunday, May 30, at
the home of Miss Martha Davis.
After transaction of business the
meeting adjourned,
ORCHESTRA CLUB
The Taylorsville Orchestra Club}
met at the residence of Mr. B.
Montgomery, 124 Philip avenue.
Busincss of,importance was trans-.
acted, after which the meeting ad-
jourred.
GLEAMING LIGHT SOCIAL
CLUB
‘The Gleaming Light Social and
Literary Club met at the residence
of Miss Ruth Davis. After regu.
Tar devotionals and business, the
mecting adjourned,
HYAGINTIY ENJOY TRIP
AROUND RICHMOND
Membors of .the Hyacinth Ath-
Jetie and Social Club enjoyed
trip (6 Rihmond and Petersburg
on Memorial Day, where they were
the guests. of Mrs. Byrd, 1222
Rome street, Petersburg. The y
were. sgadiy welcomed and high
ly etertined: Mes. Byrd made
fimely and interesting talk to the
members, to which several of the
members responded, In Richmond
they. visited Miss Majorie Darden
+ former member of the club, who
is taking training in nursing at
St, Philip Hospital. She was sur-
prised ay well as pleased for the
visit.
Misz Catherine Carvia has _re-
turned after a short stay in Rich-
mond, visiting her parents, Mr.
and Mrs, Charlie Broadway.
Miss Hanrah Jones will Jzave
next tesk for Philadelphia, where
she will sperd Fer summer vaca:
tion.
Mis. Fillen Davis, of Norfolk.
was the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Juhnson, Sunday.
Master Earl Macon left Satur-
day for, Mountain View, N.
where-he will spend his vacatioa.
ee ee
, Miss Maggie Mumford, who has
been ill for two wecks i=’ row able
to be oat.
Sunday school was largely at-
tended at Grove, At 11:30 a.m,
Dr. A. A, Graham, of Phoebus,
corresponding secretary, of Lott
Carey Convention, preached the
first"annizerwary ‘sermon of Rev.
D. B. Mdodona, as pastor of the
Grove Chureh." Re. Noble and
Rev. Goorge Burwell assisted. The
Communion serviee followed the
morning servie2. ‘The choir ren-
dered suitable selections, also the
Morning Star Quartette, Chureh-
land. Mrs, Willie Mdodona, in a
retrospect of the year's activities.
showed ca:eful thought.
Mrs. W. Mdodona spol on the
program at Bark Street Church,
Norfoit:. “Mes. Julia Pitt “served
as ‘organist, Mrs. Paige being in
Richmond cn alumni business.
At 3 o'clock, Rev. A. S. Hoard,
president of the Ministers Union,
with a large number of his mem.
bers of Mt. Olive Church, and
choir, made the day worth while.
The ' first anniversary services
closed Sunday.
Thursday night, the conecrt by
the Roland Hayes Glee Club called
forth much applause, After the
concert ice cream, strawberries and
ercum were served the clad by
choir ladi:s. Friday night, Rev.
Gordon and congregation were re-
sponsible for the program.
Misses Mabel Thomas, Gregory
fones and Mr. Goodwyn, of Noi
folk, were the-sruests of Miss M. E
Gibson, Sunday.
Mesdames Ellen Pitt, Julia Pitt,
Naney Tar:, Messrs, Dunbar, W.
T. Pitt, Dunean, Willie Stanley,
returned Friday ‘from the annual
session of Love ard Charity meet
ing in Portsmouth,
Ars, Emma Hollomon was. the
guest of ner sister last weck at
Hodges Ferry. .
MT. HERMON
Mrs. Reba King, 2763 High St.
and party motored to Beaufort and
Morshead City, N. C., and while
there were the’ guésts ‘of Mr. anc
Mrs. Savage.
Mrs, S, Sumler, 2704 Glasgow
Street, and Mrs, W. H. Knight.
2682 Glasgow, spent May 31, in
Newport News with her nephew.
Rev. Watts, and friends,
Mrs. Susie S. Hale and littl
Dorethen Hale left last Monday
for Mt..Clair and Plainfield, N. J..
for an indetinite stay.
The Miszes Lillie Mae and Julin
A, Daughtory spent a pleasant day
visiting relatives and friends. in
Hampton, Va., on Sunday.
Mr. Riddick, of Cofiled, N.C.
was thy very welcome guest of
his children, ‘Mr. and Mis. Thad
Parson and’ Mr. and Mrs, Jesse
Anderson and Miss Glennie Rid:
dick.
Mrs, Cherry Beamon, Glasgow
streot, returned after several
months? stay in the North,
“Miss Essie Brown, who has jus!
compléted the high ‘school at Kit-
tvell College, is home for the sum-
mer,
Mesdames Fannie Easton, H. B.
Lawson, S. C. Deans, Miss’ BE. V.
Deans. and Mr. Walter Easton at-
tended, the graduating exercises at
Suffolk school last week,
Mrs. J. D. Ward, of Norfolk,
was the weck-end guest of Mrs.
Maggiz Sutton, Mt, Vernon ave-
nue,
CLOVER LEAF ART cipcre
ja woth interesting meeting was
hold at Miss Bailey's, on Monday
evening, May 2ith, and a called
meeting at Miss Stephenson’s, May
26th. Business of great impor-
tance was transacted relative to
the club's closing for the term.
atits; Mdodona, Mrs. Ridegway,
Mrs. Deans and Rev. Powell were
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Moses
Whitlock, Churehland, Va,
_ THE MU-SO-LIT cLUR
the ap resulat business: meeting of
the club was held with Miss Ar V.
Bailey, ‘on Wednesday, May 26.
Around fifteen were out. The us-
ual opehing.was had. Mr. Emory
Redmond was lected president of
the club and Mrs. Lenora Mum-
ford, sectetary. The club closing
will be at. Mrs, Cain's, Wool aves
nue, Wednesday, June’9,
HOME-COMING DAY AT
- TEMPTS 4
‘and aay: May. 30, was missionary
and home-commg. day all through
BUILDING NEW
SCHOOL HOUSE
AT W. NORFOLK
B Reawtllat baie tent tay:
ing is heing construe 1 in Wee
Norfolk after ton ur nine sages
fous youre of tibur wf teed coarhae,
and patens, “This buiicng ae
completed will en isi! inure ae
rooms, two dunnesti selosin pat
aand four cloak rem-. V13> gage
mul) to the health ant veges
of the children uf this rumen
A large playground js st
vided as the Fite exis: up Me
eres, situated in ie eu
well as heautiful bentins. soar iy
West Norfolk buulevarn Te
community is ruising find gh
place new furniture sh inf
ing when isis comole: d.” keg
thing seill Me in readin 35 3
tember 1. Miss MOK. stumiel
the principal is ue ino engg
for her lung and yr ier sere
toward bringing alu chi ctu.
tional movement,
The pastor and tmtei. re sd ey
First Baptist Churel,, Wree Sp
fal, ave analy 2 apa
forthe seound Sauise ape
month. The oitees ot hl ape
is to rimode! the chutes ag
Rev, B. BL White Sind share d
this’ field evervbiuiy hace toon ay
nee Nite. ‘The Sanday ool od
B.Y. PU, are sorting oo came
Lefore. Two chures ciui> haw
ieoz formed, one ainwmy th yoaey
men and oie smong che Seaag
women. The cusaitg oi ine ae
pastor has meant much i thea
tire coramunity. Ja taking by
pluns, he says much is ty i di,
sed the peopl vi Wet Nurhel
ure Keing to sce that thee plat
sve but oxer.
A Musical and
Elecutiona! Program
There wilt he x Musiva! acd Bie
cutional Program vise ute
Mme. ©. J. Montgomery. Fridsp
night, June 11, 1928, a: Ebene
Baptist Church, fev. M. Mi. Nem
come, Pastor, Davis Bros. Vilin
ist and pianist; Henzy Hal. lay
orator and Smail Girl Prima pecrs
en the program. Com
———E—e
IN MEMORIAM
An sad but loving mesic
of our dear son and feasier, Hs
ty Faulk, who depersed shis i
June 6, 1921,
We loved him, yes we doze iim
But Angels loved his ct»
And they have sweetly etilel his
To yonder blissful shez,
From the Fart:
the serviess ut the Temple at
9:30 a. m., the superinsesiart wi
his teachers ard olficers wore s
their “post. Much ines. ws
manifested, and th: superiz:vnles
Mr. Jas, E. Ellioti. so bestifells
eatacized the lesson isd gat
stories on it, whieh -ceie! so bit
interested the children 0-3 simi
At 11:30 a, m, the Bev. A.A
Watts, preached.” The vss! fare
of opzning was had hy the eit
with special musical selectins
Prof. J. Williams was muster o
geremonies. In htizzing em
Mr MF. Gibson, frisad of Ret
Watts, introduced the -Hqiet
Vary ‘commendatle thie see
said of him in his address. The
Rev, Watts us.d as his vheae. "Ua
Vim With Thee Even ta the End ¢
the World.” Miss Essie Brows
rendered a solo, ,
At 3:80 p.m. Mrs. tavige.
India, gave am adiiy.ss ott ihe eas
foms and habits of six vaple a
Tadia, “This was vory incerstite,
Mrs, B, P. Harris was mistres of
zeremonies. — Speciil missionary
Music was rendered by: thy elie
A female qaurtette fection 8
gendered by Mesdames Laws
Deans, Easton and 3:30 p.m
‘The regular B. Y. DP, U. sett
was held under its president, sie
W. J. Nicholson. An supreiatte
attendanes was out wil mach it
verest manifested, «
“At 8 p.’m., Mr. Walter Sia
back was master of ¢.remmuaties, A
inissionary paper... rer I ME
Idella. ¥. Ward captivated the
yudience. Mrs. T. 1. le, Nor
folk, gave one of her choice tea
ings.-which was superb. ua
quartette Kelzetion, “wie r-mkl
ey Messrs, Burner Turne*, Cut
ard Gibson. ‘The anwnt aiel
by the Divisions of tho Missing
Cirele was $420.00. Mrs. 0. ©
ones in unique t:rm> made che
presentation to the chute. Me
Sadis’ Harcison, th: resid
maude the elosinys remark: in thle
ng all that made the vay wor
white,
The pastor, Dr. 0, (Jars
ery graciously accepted it
Attire words.
PROVIDENCE A, M. &. HO*
CHURCH
Sunday school opened at it#
gal hour with the superincendent
in charge. ‘Th: lesson was beavtl
fully discussed. A large, ume
was present. The school is rapit:
ly progressing.
At the mouning service the PM
tor, Rov, A. C, Littlejohn, ile
the pulpit, “He used for his 5H
ject, “Why Jesus Cam.” Lott
‘At 7:30 the pastor again ill
the pulpit. At this time Holy Com
munioh was administered he
pastor used for his subjects “The
Foolish Virgins,” Matt. 25. AU
o'clock, an appreciative udienet
was. present.
‘The services und collection
the day. were good. “
SUFFOLK, FRANKLIN, NEWPORT NEWS--OTHER VIRGINIA NEWS
NEWPORT NEWS
SUFFOL
NEWPORT
MRS. GUSSIE L. BANKS
Agent and Correspondent
1801 Marshall Ave.
News, Va.—Mrs. Lillian F.
of Chester, Pa. is the guest of
Sher. Mr. J. Walker, and her
F. Pierce.
Mr. J. Hicks, of 19th Street has resided since Elizabeth City City, Canada, on business at his daughter, and in him there him and will sometimes with her cousin, Misa Gallie B. Free is reported to be her home on Hampton Avenue. William James, of Emporia acres and with his daughters, Madames and Hobbs. E. Jones has returned from Larch, Pa. to revival for K. Murray, Lechels A. Linday, of Madison, to sit at her home on Madison and Mrs. Edward Hicks, of Norwere here last week, the guests of teacher, Mr. E. Briggs, in Eighth Winston. B. Harris was married to a young lady in faith, where she is making him home is the son of Ola S. Morrison Boss Carter died at her home in last Thursday evening, and service for her was held at the Baptist Church, Jefferson Avenue.
Rev. Rep. and Mrs. C. E. Jones and Mrs. H. R. Young, of Upper Acre, are the teachers at their home on Marshall Rev. and Mrs. Young were in marriage last week and are here aged 64. Mrs. Young was Miss Frances Edmunds, of Prof. and Mrs. Edmunds, of Van. Va. While Rev. Young, of the Dr. Van. Va. will graduate from Union University at this Commencement. The couple is receiving congratulations and wishes from a host of new acquaintances.
J. H. Roberts and Children Visiting
Mary and Hir. Meyers
Mr. and Mrs. Meyers
J. B. Roberts, a visiting
physician of Roanoke,
deans of Mr. and Mrs. C. A.
James in Marshall Avenue and will
back back to her home in Roanoke
married by Mrs. Meyers, who will
tour or five weeks visiting in Roanoke
natural and Yellow Sulphur Springs.
TWENTIETH CEUTURY CLUB
TWENTIETH CENTURY CENTRAL DANCE
The Twentieth Century Social Literary Club holds its closing dance at the Elks on Tuesday, June 1. The hall was clad in decorated with the colors of the Elks and felt that he could afford to miss one dance. At intermission Mr. Will Cook rendered a wonderful solo for the guests. The punch was also served at this time, the guests present were friends to Einkatha City, N. C. Hampton and the guests of the affair and enjoyed them until late the evening. The Twentieth Century Social Literary Club is the youngest club in the city, having been organized only a short time.
CROIR MEMBERS SURPRISE
MDE, PIN EV
and recently the choir members of the choir of Carver Memorial Presbyterian Church sprang a surprise on their way to the Rooftop. After meeting her in a combination brief case on roll, the ladies carried with her to her home on this occasion a load of prepared dainty which they then used to express her gratitude to the forks of respect for her and the surprise.
HILLEY SOCIAL SAVING CLUB
the club met last Tuesday evening in 22nd hour of Mrs. Mamie Carter in 22nd after transaction of business the obsequious into the dining room a dinner will be served. Port will be with Mrs. Mary Johnson 22nd Street.
D. L. F. Palmer is leaving Sunday Menburg to teach in the Summer
HALAL ORDER OF MENELIK AND
NENNESS OF ABBYSSINIA HOLD
INVITED
he more named order of which Prof.
Lee is Right Honorable Supreme
Society held sovereign his anniversary ser-
vice of Baptist Church Sunday
at 3 Colonel Thee. He is by
the pastor, Rev C. E. Jones.
good literary program was ren-
eed.
BAZAAR CLOSES
samar has that has been conducted
in the baskets of the St. Mary's Guild
of the Episcopal Church in Bremen
friday with the very favorable
Mrs. M. E. Melvin, the president,
in raising the highest奖
morning of the first prize
was a beautiful quilt. Other
were also given.
and Mrs. William Knox, of 20th
12th Sunday morning for Staun-
where they will probably make
were the greatly missed.
was very prominent among the
mass of this city.
MICHAELAUREATE SEMSON OF
HUNTINGTON GRADUATES
Burkeley Grove Christian Church in
Burkeley was crowded Sunday at the
school service to witness the bacca-
cer service which was presided by
Rev. S. A. Howell to the
ninth-nine graduates beautifully
in their caps and gowns and pro-
cee the faculty, marched to the
where the following program was
meeted:
by by Church Choir.
by Reading.
By Burden Upon the Lord," by
Burden Double Quartet.
by Rev. S. A. Howell.
Quartet.
By Barts That Are Weary."
Poll My Vow." Girls Glee Club.
DAVIS BUS LINE
Between
Burtsmouth - Suffolk
WEST 30UND
North Leave Drivers Arrives Buffolk
A.M. 8:14 P.M. 8:15 A.M.
A.M. 11:55 A.M. 12:30 P.M.
A.M. 3:55 P.M. 4:30 P.M.
A.M. 7:40 P.M. 8:15 P.M.
EAST BOUND Leave Drivers Arrives Fortsmouth
A.M. 9:50 A.M. 10:30 A.M.
A.M. 1:50 P.M. - 2:30 P.M.
A.M. 11:10 P.M. 5:50 P.M.
A.M. 10:35 P.M.
STATIONS
North Cor. High and Crawford Sts.
Cor. E. Washington and Main Sts.
SUFFOLK -
DR. J. P. JORDAN
Buffalo Representative
"PIONN 314
OFFICE 119 TYNE STREET
Officery,
"I'm So Glad," Girls Glee Club.
Benediction.
ZION BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunrise prayer meeting was well attended and a great spiritual meeting was held.
Sunday school was also well attended and in the absence of the superintendent, Mrs. R. H. Banks, presided. The lesson was very instructive. Collection was up to the Mrs. R. H. Banks, and Mrs. R. H. Young were visitors.
At the morning service, Rev. Jones selected his text from Exodus 20:20-23, and then from Exodus 20:23-24, after which Rev. H. R. Young had the pleasure of baptizing his wife, Mrs. Young, who was being connected with
Group No. 1. Mrs. Arline, leader, was the banner group.
At 8 o'clock, Rev. H. R. Young enthused his audience with a great intellect! He thanked the faculty at St. Mark S. 52. The Uncleen Spirit! Those who heard him are rejoicing in the thoughts of this masterly discourse. They will meet on Wednesday meeting would begin Monday night, June 17. Rev. J. A. Brown of the Queen Street Baptist Church, Hampton, will conduct the meeting.
Mrs. Lucy Garner, of Philadelphia, and Miss Ada Jennings, of Brooklyn, will present four weeks very pleasantly here with their aunt, Mrs. S. J. McBrayer. They visited Hampton Institute, last Wednesday.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH (Median Avenue)
By invitation the Newport News reporter and agent for the Journal and the above named church last Sunday am. On arriving there we found the pastor, superintendent teachers with which the above named church minded of the shopkeepers feeding the lambs. The children now being baptized the pastor selected a text, 2 Cor. 6:16, subject, "Helping God to Put Over His program." He spoke of the attendance and stated that now is a greater time for helping with this program than ever. He asked the pastor to help the program over, first by receiving his grace; second, by being a shining one another. All present certainly enjoyed a great spiritual feast. After the collection the reporter for the church and asked represent the paper which she was very pleased to do. The pastor is in great sympathy with the paper and urges his members to subscribe.
ST. PAUL A. M. E. CHURCH
*P.O. BOX 1200* Sunday morning and talked to the men of the church briefly after the regular morning services. He is a brilliant speaker remembered by a famous church.
Suffolk, Va.-Dorothy Willis, of Goff street, Norfolk, was the Sunday guest of her schoolmate, Emma Barnes, of Jackson avenue, Suffolk, and Emma Barnes has returned from a visit to Dorothy Willis, her schoolmate, in time to meet her several subscribers in this city.
Misses Castine Parker, Janie Bald, Ruth Parker, her schoolmate, in time to meet her several Collins, are at home from the Virginia Seminary for the summer. They are a happy bunch. Ruth Parker is a recent graduate of this institution.
Miss. Nannie Epps has returned from the commencement exercises of the Lyrical School from Suffolk her daughter, Miss Pearl Ryland Alphin, was a recent graduate of the normal department.
Miss Esther Lassiter, of Trutton-Portsmouth, one of the teachers in the Rocky Mount, N. C. high school, was a recent graduate of Mrs. Vila P. Jordan, at the S. N. T. School, in Tynes street.
The 2014 annual session of the Women's Bethany Convention will be held with the Home Mission Circle of the Spring Hill Baptist Church in county, county, the is the corresponding secretary.
The pastor and people are expecting all of their great days at the Tahlecine Baptist Church. The program begins at 11 o'clock. Rev. J. C. Bellamy, the pastor says "The lion will roar, the security and the host have made them speakers from Elizabeth City and Rocky Mt. C. n.a. that bus line arrangement have been made to us with Sufolk. One thousand people may be accommodated.
The famous singers of the St. Paul School, Lawrenceville, will be at the Elk Home auditorium this Monday night. They have been here Mr. Mark's Mission under whose auspices they came, should congratulate itself for securing them for this city.
Mr. Hugh Holland, a student at the Hampton Institute, is spending the summer with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Holland, in Johnson avenue.
Edward Rainey, who has been attending school in Falmouth with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Rainey, in Pine street.
Miss Margaret Smith, and little Elizabeth, are confined to their home on ac
His many friends will be glad to learn that Mr. Z. J. Tate, who is undergoing treatment in a local hospital, is some-what improved.
NO CERTIFICATES
The Booker T. Washington graded school has stopped giving classes in the first semester and gaken the initiative in adding the full junior high school work. The ninth grade JOCK will begin the next session. This school, and the S. N. T. school are the only ones with the same grades. One is a public school, and the other is a private school.
NEW OFFICERS
At an election held the other night, the following named officers of the B. P. O. E. of W., were the ensuing year. The officer Colding, Exalted Ruler W. M. H. Crocker, Equalled Leading King; Mr. James H. Evans, Lecturing Knight; Mr. Arthur.
At 3 o'clock the Sons and Daughters of Peace hold their annual sermon which he attended by Rev. G. G. Taylor, the pastor. At 8 o'clock the funeral of Mrs. Cane, a most beloved member was held. Her funeral was on Monday morning at Raleigh, N. C.
CARVER MEMORIAL CHURCH
The inclement weather did not deter a goodly number from making their apology for the worship. The pastor used as a text for his discourse Galatians 6:15. Except the Christian common immunity, Dr. Laurence Fenninger wished him. Dr. Fenninger wished him to his trip to the General Assembly of the Church which convened in Baltimore, Ma. He urged all to carry on in the service. He wished the great Church. Dr. Fenninger will in the near future preach a sermon to the entire school. During the service the Junior Chair rendered very appropriate and inspiring music which added greatly to the entire lesson period in the Sunday school, Atty. R. H. Pree in a masterly manner, and Dr. Fenninger enjoining all to practice the spirit of forgiving one another according to the example there was a large number present at the Christian Endower Society. At the young people entered carefully, and were made to them by Mrs. C. P. Hedric and the pastor. An unusually large number attended the service at which time the pastor spoke.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH (East End)
Rev. A. W. Watts, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson, Mrs. Eilee Fulkham and Nissie Johnson, Dr. Robert Fulkham University, Richmond, last week. They report a d-lightful trip.
Our sick members are improving slowly. Messrs. W. Thomas Bradley and Harry L. Tucker, who have been matriculating at Virginia Union University returned to school.
Loyal Knight; and Mr. L. Holland. Si-
sistle is strong. He is also at arms
[n]umber, purpose and work.
OUT OF WORK
Fire raised the Montgomery Lumber Company Plant Friday night and did much damage. She played there, and are now out of work. This may work a great hardship upon the whole community. Already, she has all things have taken a look on the dark side of the summer. All of us are dependent on her. And the least failure of them affects us most seriously. The plant will be rebuilt immediately, it is said, and we may soon hope for the best.
Miss Teaster Goodman, who has been teaching in Ivor, Vn., and who has been at her home in 6th street, Jericho, is much improved.
Miss Maggie Goodman, who has been assistant teacher in Montgomery County. Training School has concluded her term.
Mr. John Vicke of 51st street, Jericho, is still on the sick list.
Miss Maggie Goodman wishes to thank her many friends of her life for illness three. She had for her guest from Ivrs: Mrs. Cora Parker, Muses Lauer Carr, Lavinia Parille, Muses Lauer Lila Purp, Mrs. Charles Holman.
Mrs. L. V. Bland, of Smith street, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Susie R. Wiliams, in Charlottesville, Va.
Mrs. A. B. Magee and children, and Miss Beulah M. Mace, left Monday to spend some time with relatives in New York.
ENTERTAINED
Dr. J. F. Jordan has returned from Gates County, N. C., where he was the guest of honor at the Old Dominion University her beautiful home, on a well-kept farm. This home is near the place where this very devoted pair were sora, she, 66 years ago, was an entertainer, and then together for the first time within the last five years. This was his birthday, and Mrs. Orr was entertained, fashioned country dinner was served in his honor. Among those present were Dr. Jordan, of Suffolk, Nelson Jordan, of Norfolk; Mrs. Goldic Jordan Jones, and Mr. Davis, "Baldie," of Portsmouth, Vn. A. Lassie, and Doree Mr. and Mrs. Alex Eure and Mr. and Mrs. The daughters of the Daughters of the St. Marks A. M. Church in the Basilian mid-year conference which was held in Petersburg on June 11, 2014. Education by the pointed student has succeeded in raising her amount of $25.00. She also visited the Dinwiddie School while away. Dr. Pierce is expecting to be absent from the city next week to attend the Old Dominion Medical Society Convention, to be held in Richmond, on June 15 through the 17.
Mrs. Maude Taylor spent the week in Newport News, as guest of Mrs. Gertrude Harmon. While there she also attended the closing dance of C. V. Dudley Art Circle Friday, June 4.
Mrs. Sallie Davis has returned to her home in Emporia after having completed a successful school term.
The famed bazaars of Calcutta were compelled to close because of riots.
NANSEMOND INST. CLOSES
NANSEMOND INST. CLOSES
Dr. T. J. Johnson, Principal, Delivers Baccalaureate Sermon; Prof. C. F. Graves, of Roanoke Institute, Commencement Speaker.
Suffolk, Va. — The Commencement exercises, ending Tuesday evening, June 1st, brought to a close the most successful series of exercises in the Normal and Collegiate Institute.
The Baccalaureate Sermon, preached by Dr. Johnson, was the high point in the series of exercise which followed. This sermon was profound, yet simple. Takings were made, and the students felt positively. 26:16. "Whereupon, O King Agrippa, I was not disobedient unto the heavenly God, and I felt festively showed the importance of following a vision. Those who heard him will not soon forget his burning message."
The class exercises of the high school department were held on Monday evening May 1st, in the institute Chapel. These first each member of the class participating On Friday night, June 1st, the throng began to fill the Pine Street Baptist Church, Church of the Lord, and the organizing exercises of the High School Department and of the Grammar Grade Department. Finally at 8 o'clock, the processional began, headed by Dr. T. J. Johnson and the two guests of honor, Prof. C. F. Graves of Runnake Institute, and F. M. Graves of Nunsenland County, the members of the faculty marched in. Then followed the prospective graduates of the 5th grade, headed by Miss Catherine White, bearing their class flower. Following the 6th grade graduates, headed by Miss Catherine White, bearing their class flower, the School Graduating Class, bearing their class flower, the "American beauty Rose." The other members of the class followed. The 5th grade, Solutation by Miss Rebuh Pierce, Miss Ira Irca Green spoke on "Some Special Phases of a High School课堂," on "Some Cultural Information," on "Jessie Pattillo sang, "Good Bye," Miss Alex Roberts played an instrument, and Miss Joahann Conner was valedictorian.
It was stated by those present, that they had never witnessed a finer display of talent than one provera of those young people, one provera equal to those young people. The address to the graduates delivered by Prof. Graves of the Ronanoke Institute, Elizabeth Upshaw of the International Provera, Mona Pham of the International Provera, and Sam will soon forget this address. His plan for en-operative efforts along the line of men enterprises was a challenge to the after the address by Prof. Graves, Mrs. Griess, Troy in a highly befitting maneuver addressed by Prof. Graves and delivered to them their certificates of graduation. Johnson in well chosen words presented the diplomas to the high school graduates. ten were ten graduates from the High School, the names of whom were flows: Joannah Vivian Connor, Ira Theo Christina Langston, Reban Virginia Green, Dorothy Dean Gregory, Sal Pierce, John Reid, Marchee Rekalah, Alain Kanaor Wiggins, Jesse McLaughlin Patillo. There were twenty-four graduates from the high school.
DANVILLE, VA.
63 GRADUATE FROM SEMINARY
Virginia Theological Seminary and College closed its 38th Annual Session with its Commencement Exercises, Tuesday June 1st. The exercises began Friday, May 28th, with Class Day Exercises, followed Sunday, May 30th, by Baccalaureate Services with Dr. David E. Over, Pastor Union Baptist Church Baltimore, Md. These exercises were proceeded by the usual Academic procession including faculty and graduating classes.
Monday evening the closing exercises were presented and Normal Department were observed. Honor students were presented and the two ranking students from each department made addresses. The speaker of the occasion was Mr. C. C. Spaulding, President of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, Durham, North Carolina. Mr. Spaulding used as his theme, "What Kind of Education." He emphasized preparation for service and a life of
large usefulness, setting forth the importance of that kind of education that meant service in co-operation. His address was replete with information and admonition to the graduates as they face the problems of life. 63 graduates were awarded diplomas; 44 from the Academy and 19 from the Normal Department.
Tuesday evening, June 1st, the Commencement exercises of the College and Seminary departments were observed. The ranking students were presented to represent their respective departments as speakers. Dr. C. H. Wesley, Head of the Department of History, Howard University, delivered the address to the classes. Dr. Wesley spoke on the "Educated Leadership of the Future," bringing into bold relief the fraternity of scholars, pointing out that the leadership of the future will be the prepared leaders coming forthwith from the colleges and universities of the nation equipped for the service that the Nation needs. His was a brilliant address and was enthusiastically received by a capacity audience. 21 graduates received diplomas, 16 with the degree of B.A., 1 with B.S. and 2 B.T., and 2 from the Normal Professional Department. 14 of the college students graduated with the runk "cum laude."
The honorary degree of D.D. was conferred upon Rev. W. Ehner Brown, assistant pastor of the Metropolitan Baptist Church, New York City, Rev. W. H, R. Powell, pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, Philadelphia, Pa., and the Rev. A. C. Matthews of Brooklyn, N. Y.
EASTVILLE
Eastville, Va. — Mrs. Tach was carried in Dixie Hospital last Tuesday for medical treatment to Dixie Hospital Sunday, *Mrs. Rebecca Flicchett, of Norfolk, died Tuesday in the home of Shindyld, *Mrs. and Mrs. Elissa Clark and Mrs. Maud Godwin, of Cape Charles, spent Sunday in Eastville, *Mrs. Henrietta, of Charlottesville, spent Sunday with Charlottesville Church Grand-Lodge, has returned home and reports a delightful session, *Master Robert, of Charlottesville with Master Pope Wright, of Kendal Grove, *The services at Union Baptist Church were largely attended Sunday, at the morning services.
New School House
Courthand Va.—A new school building for the colored children of this town is assured for this year, according to statements given to J. N. Darden and C. W. Brown, who appeared before the county school board for the Patrons' League recently. These men were assured that a four-room Rosenwald school will be built, probably in time for the opening of the next school term.
CAPE CHARLES
"The graduating exercises of the high school of Tidewater Institute on May 28 were very good, delivered by Miss Lucy C. Morris; oration; "Self-Help Essential to Success"; Miss Patricia C. Banks; oration; "The Graduation of Your Life"; Miss Alice Mapple. The address to the graduates, Misses Morris, Mapp and banks, was delivered by Prof. W. E. Robinson, principal; and Sunshine of Your Smile, was sung by Miss Julin Johnson; solo, "What's the Use"; Miss Olivia Bailey. On account of an accident happening to her, she was boarded, Mr. South Collins, of Eastville, Rev. C. H. Morton, of the same place, awarded the diplomas." "The Last Good Burleigh, was sung by the school chorus."
COURTLAND
Courtland, Va. - Services at the First Baptist Church were good on last Sunday, when Mrs. Mary B. Owens, by Mrs. Mary B. Owens, at 11:30 o'clock the pastor, Rev. J. E. Spruntley, at 11:30 o'clock the services were several visitors at the services were Deacon Smith and Jones, at 11:30 o'clock again preached, "Mr. William Powell, powell of this place, now of Washington, D. C. here is visiting his parents and other relocation street, Norfolk, spent Monday here in the home of her sister, Mrs. Dora visited her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Blow.
The following named persons contributed to give free space will offering for free space building buildings
Bessie Bryant, Dora Brown, Romine Rau, Robin Beechen, Brown Ernie, Gray Louise, Gouin Addie Bryan, Vimie Downy, Clausen Chau, Danny Downy, Savannah Darden, Lilian Ridley, Gobert Turner, Rubie Hardy, Hilda Hardy, Gobert Turner, Rubie Hardy, Wigara, Julia Faille, Vorgie Hardy, Bessie Stewart, Mudie Freeman, Aggie Johnson, Lether Parker, Page Brown, Gershon Addie Williams, Susie Turner, Ellen Byrd, Eva Bowe, Bertha Johnson, Susan Washington, Marzella Hamblin, Fannie Brown, Clyde Darden, Emily Turner, Odelia Thouas, Sarah Scott, Rebecca Hill. Mrs. Dora Brown Courtland, is agent of the Darden Guide, and has copies in sell each week. For all business matters see Mrs. Brown.
Franklin, Va.-Sunday school and church services were very good all day Sunday. The school was supervised by the superintendent, W. M. C. Duke, in charge of the Sunday school. The lesson was reviewed by the pastor, R. Joseph, in the morning, the hour, the afternoon preached from the passage of scripture, "I am the Way, the Truth and the Life." The pastor, R. Joseph, Vanhank preached a splendid sermon from Matt. 6-13. "Father, forgive them for they know not what they do," after which Mrs. Louis Vaughan, Lenzie B. Clark and Mrs. F. L. Arlington and Mr. R. P. Arlington preached. P. Y. U. Convention at New Bebel Baptist Church, Boykins, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. Charles Plummer left Saturday for Brownsville, M. Y.
Bridgett.
Miss. Jessica Doke and Mrs. Rena Bisha
teachers in the Franklin graded
school, left Tuesday for their homes in
Iowa, and Norfolk.
Mrs. Lou Simms returned from Lakeview Hospital Hospital to the home of Rene and Mrs. C. L. Lewis and left a bouncing baby boy. Mother and baby are doing
Mrs. Emma Williams, of Newport News, spent a few days at the bedside of her brother, Mr. Lewis Holland, who died. Mr. Gray and Rev. M. C. Holland motorized from Waverly Wednesday to visit Rev. Holland's sick brother, Mrs.
Mrs. Odell S. King and little daughter, Coleline, and mother, Mrs. Ida Stoneall, jacqueline relatives and friends in Gloucester, Va. Mr. Willie Ricks, of Pensylvania, is visiting the Belle Morris, Helen West, Mrs. Elizabeth Price and Mr. William Carr motored to Zuni, Va. We guest of Mrs. Dela Williams attended the graduating exercises at the Belle School, where Mrs. Dela Williams a graduate. While there Mrs. Williams was a guest of her son-law and daughter, and spent two nights in Nortok visiting friends, and spent several days in Suffolk visiting her daughter.
Mr. Joe Robertson left Saturday for Newark, N. J., to attend Moses, Mrs. Robertson. Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Hines are visiting their mother, Mrs. Murphy, in Newark, Mrs. Bone Hines was called to the heels of her sister-in-law, Mrs. Lila
Mr. Robertson and Miss Rosa Edwards were quietly married on May
51. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Richardson were called to Woldon, New York, to attend the
funeral Lilie Matthews is visiting her friend, Mrs. Dougless Ford, in Capron, Mr. W. A. Boyle, his friend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Boykins, Hall street, Rev. W. J. Hines, of Camden in accident on the ground, while enroute from Petersburg
BLACKSTONE
Blackstone, Va.—Mr. and W. Waverley Cartwright, of Baltimore, are visiting the University of Maryland, spending several days in Norfolk as the guest of her sister, Mrs. Carrie Peace. *Mr. Thomas Edward Dosswell is home in York, N.Y.* *Mr. T. W. Growder, of Petersburg, preached masterly last Sunday morning at Oak Grove Baptist Church. "For B. Sox nine and a local team of Dendron have played a scoreless tie. On Decoration Day at Dendron the two teams fought an eight-seven innings to a deadlock of 5 to 6.
MRS. MARTHA M. RHODES, Prop.
WM. ADAMS, Caterer
Yellow Sulphur Springs
ONE-QUARTER MILE FROM VIRGINIA RAILWAY STATION, YELLOW SULPHUR, THREE AND ONE-HALF MILES FROM NORFOLK AND WESTERN RAILWAY STATION, CHRISTIANBURG
THE NATIONAL IDEAL BENEFIT
A live Progressive Fraternal Organization, Founded, July, 1912, Richmond, Va.
The object is: To help the Sick, Bury the Dead, Relieve the Distressed.
To teach Unity, Economy, Thrift, Industry and for the Mutual Protection of its members.
Lodges are organized with twenty or more members.
Live Workers Wanted, good fields and abundant opportunity for promotion.
Why not organize a Lodge? "Your satisfaction is our success."
For further information write A. W. HOLMES, Founder, and Supreme Master, No. 210 E. Clay Street, Richmond, Va.
THE PORO AGENT RENDERS A DISTINCTIVE SERVICE
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PORO Products are amazingly effective. That PORO satisfies is evidenced by the fact that over THREE MILLION PORO patrons were served with PORO Treatments and PORO Products by more than SEVENTY-FIVE THOUSAND PORO AGENTS during the year just passed.
Wherever you live, you may use PORO and enjoy matchless satisfaction.
There's a PORO AGENT nearby who will cheerfully serve you.
If you don't know her name, write
PORO COLLEGE
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ST. LOUIS, MO., U.S.A.
IN
MRS. MARY ASH
Agent and
Correspondent
to his home when the car in which he
was riding over, near Carrsville,
Tuesday night. He was taken to the
home of his sister, Linda Haley,
Franklin, where he remained until
able to be removed to his home.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
There was a large number present in the Sunday school on last Sunday. The lesson was interestingly discussed by the preacher an inspiring sermon at 11:30 o'clock. At 3 o'clock, Rev. S. B. Harrell, pastor of St. Clare church, preached an inspiring sermon this church. The anniversary of the Second Baptist Church began Sunday and will continue for ten nights. On Sunday night the pastor preached another inspiring sermon.
FRANKLIN LIGH HIGH SCHOOL CLOSES
"One of the most influential communal manors in the majority of persons describing the majority of persons attending the commencement of Franklin High School." From Sunday, May 30th, at 11:30 a.m, at which time, the Rev. Dr. T. J. Johnson, of Suffolk, during the baccalaureate sermon made the last number on the night, the program moved with clock-like precision, the night before, the graduates with their parents and teachers as guests were honored at a reception given by the principal, Rev. M. C. Allen, and the reception was unespecially enjoyable that it is still being discussed. The program on the night of commencement was an follow-up to the reception. "Nathan Ryan."
Sage, J. Intervention, Rev. Allen Shelton of the F. N. and L. I. Male Chorus. "Sailing." Owen, "Walt of Tomorrow", Clarence Owen.
Oration, "Victory Crowns Patience," Calvin
Waddell, Williams.
Oration, "Survival of the Fittest," Alfred Albright Outlaw, "Oration," William James Morrison, "Oration," Out of the Harbor Into the Swell, "Willie James Morris," William James Morris, "Oration," William Arthur Ricks, Oration, "Gold Lies Deep," the Monster, "Oration," Violenty, Address to Class, Prof. Sterling Brown, "Oration," Phi Beta Kappa, (William James Morrison)
PAGE NINE
parment of Virginia Seminary and
College, Lynneburg, M. F. N. Harris,
M. D.
Graduating Sonic, by the Class.
Prof. Brown's and counsel was a scholarly
and proficient urge to make commencement
but a keystone to the route of
service which is the measure of the
worth of one's life.
Fitting tribute to the late: Prof. Harry
R. Logan, was paid by Dr. F. N. Harris,
during the remarks preceding his
That Baby You Longed For
Mrs. Burton Advices Women on Motherhood and Companionship.
"For several years I was denied the blessing of motherhood," writes Mrs. Mara Burton of Kansas City. She was terribly nervous and subject to periods of terrible suffering and melancholia. Now I am the proud mother of a beautiful little daughter and a true companion and inspiration to my husband, who has blinded me of the world would like to know the secret of my happiness, and I will gladly reveal it to any married woman who will write me. Mrs. Burton offers her ad vertically without margin has nothing to sell. Letters should be addressed to Mrs. Margaret Burton, 266 Massachusetts, Kansas City, Mo. Correspondence strictly confidential.
FREE BOTTLE
PEP
Elixo
TASTIS GOOD & ACTS
JUNCKLY IN
Burrow Springs
COUNTY, VIRGINIA
VIRGINIA RAILWAY STA-
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NEWS OF INTEREST FROM NORTH CAROLINA TOWNS AND CITIES
BENNETT COLLEGE
BECOMES SCHOOL
FOR GIRLS ONLY
Co-educational Status of Church Institution Abolished; Now To Be "A" College For Young Women.
Greensboro, N. C.—Bishop Robert E. Jones, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, speaking at the commencement exercises of Bennett College Friday, May 28, announced that henceforth Bennett College would be to be a co-educational institution, but would operate as an A college for girls by the Board of Education and Home and Foreign Missionary Society of the M. E. Church jointly.
Two other notable features of the commencement exercises which began Friday, May 21, and ended Friday of the following week, were the dedication of the new girls' dormitory by Bishop Wilbur P. Thirkield and the announcement by Dr. I. Garland Kirk, that the resignation of Dr. Frank Trigge, which was tendered two years ago, had been accepted and that President Trigge was now retired from active service after serving ten years as president of Binnett College. There were sixty-one graduates. On Sunday morning, May 23 in St. Matthew's Church the memorial ceremony held by teacher Gillard H. Caldwell, pastor of Temple M. E. Church, Ashville, and former dean of Bennett.
On Monday night the senior class of the Junior College held its class exercises. The annual musicals of the music department was held on Tuesday night. This program was preceded in the afternoon by the class day exercises of the senior class of the high school. On Wednesday night the Teacher Training Department staged a two-act play to the delight of a large crowd. On Friday morning at 10:30 o'clock Bishop Willur P. Thirkind officially dedicated the new girls' dormitory, training it for Bishop Robert E. Jones, colored bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
ELIZABETH CITY
EDENTON
LUMBERTON
GREENVILLE
Greenville, N. C. Services were very good at the various churches Sunday, "Mrs. and Mrs. Morton, Mrs. Pass, Mrs. Merrill, Mrs. Emmett Brown and Mrs. Jessie Brown went to Wedding Saturday to attend the funeral of Mrs. Betty Ritter May 25, in his home on Twelfth street. His funeral was held at Sycamore Hill Park Church and Inmemorium was in Council with the I. R. P. R. O. E. of Wonorens. Rev. J. S. Shaw officiated, Mr. Alyzah Jenkins of Philadelphia, Dr. Robert F. Foster of father, "Mrs. Emmett C. Brown entertained the Twilight Stunts Club at their club rooms on Pitt Street Wednesday, "Mrs. Emmett C. Brown presented the hostess a repeat, "Mrs. Mattie Morris entertained the club Wednesday, may 15, "Mission Church, where the hostess returned Saturday from Elizabeth City where they attended school, "Messers, Bruce Paulen, Henry Towe, Johnna Ginsburg, of Washington, N. C. were here
SEGREGATION HEADS PROGRAM OF N.A.A.C.P.
SEGREGATION HEADS PROGRAM OF N.A.A.C.P.
Annual Convention In Chicago To Make Residential Restrictions The Main Topic Of Discussion.
New York—The issue of residential segregation in America will be one of the foremost topics discussed at the Seventeenth Annual Conference in Chicago, June 23 to 20, of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which has made public the general program for the Conference.
The Conference opens Wednesday night, June 23, with a welcome from Mayor Dever of Chicago, an address by Senator Dennen, of Illinois, a message from Moorfield Storey, president of the N. A. A. C. P., a welcome to the conference by Dr. Harbert A. Turner, president of the Chicago Brown University an address by Fickens, president of the M. A. E. Church, a vice president of the N. A. A. C. P. will preside.
The entire day sessions on Thursday, June 21 are to be given over to discussion of segregation in its various forms, with Arthur B. Spingan, of New York, vice president of the N. A. A. C. P. and Chairman of its National Legal Committee discussing the recent Supreme Court decision on segregation by white property owners' agreements and the steps to be taken in continuing this fight; while F. B. Ramson of Indianapolis and Dr. F. B. W. Lucas of New Orleans, discussion attempted segregation by municipal ordinance in violation of the Supreme Court's decision of 1917.
Address By Dr. John Hope
On Friday evening; there are to be addresses by John Hope, president of Morehouse College; representative Martin E. Madden, chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the House of Representatives; and by Judge Albert P. George.
Saturday is to be given over to a right-seeing oneyear by the entire conference. On Sunday afternoon, in the Chicago Auditorium Theater, seating 4,000 persons, with Mr. Spingarn presiding, there will be addresses by Clarence Darrow and by James Weldon Johnson, National Secretary of the N. A. A. C. P.
Monday night's mass meeting will have for its features addresses by Representative L. C. Dyer, of Milwaukee, father of the Anti-Lynching Bill bearing his name, Bishop Carey and Robert W. Bagnall, N. A. A. C. P., Director of Branches.
Tuesday night, June 29, the closing night of the Conference the Spinarn Medal will be prescheduled for Rev. John Haynes, University Church of New York, with Miss Mary White Owington, Chairman of the N. A. A. C. P. Board of Directors presiding, and addresses by Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, editor of the Crisis, and by the recipient of the Medal.
PLYMOUTH
AHOSKIE, N. C.
Abadie, N. C. Miss Clarice L. Holl and Prof. Samuel F. Lewis l.owed to guests of Miss Jesse Rold. *Miss Adile L. Collins* was in N. C. Rold. *Miss Adile L. Collins* was in N. C. Lockwood Smallwood. *Gerrick G. Glam and J. Whitted Bond were visitors on Miss Abadie-Winton Boulevard last week. Miss Abadie-Winton Boulevard last week. Winton last week as the guest of Miss Amorz Jeyner. The following young ladies visited Miss Abadie-Winton Boulevard last week for Philadelphia to spend the summer. *Miss Ella P. Lovely of Abadie, with her two children, Logan Sunday with Mrs. and Mrs. J. H. Lovely* *Mrs. J. F. Hall and family with Miss Mary E. Silk of Abadie* *Miss Mary E. Silk of Abadie* *The Stork visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Crace Newsome of near Union, N. C.* *He be also ready for his approach.*
NORFOLK JOURNAL AND GUIDE
WINDSOR
Selma, N. C.
Three Year Old Child Chronic Pipe Smoker
Kinston, N. C., June 11—Little Hope Radkins, aired three, smokes a pipe it is said. She is said to be the youngest smoker in this state, perhaps in the country, and is the only child of a couple living in the eastern section of Kinston. Persons who saw the child toldling about the yard smoking a pipe investigated and was told that she had been "at it" shortly before her second birthday. It is said that one day an uncle passed his pipe to the child and instead of grasping and cringing, the girl took readily his pipe and begged to keep it. Shortly afterwards, she is said to have become a habitual smoker. The child's mother says the girl declined to have cigarettes and cried for the pipe four or five times daily. She has never been ill from the effects of tobacco. Physicians are observing the unusual child.
MURFREESBORO
COLUMBIA
Columbia, N. C.—There was a splendid interchange in Sunday School on last Sunday, and the pastor, Rev. W. H. A. Stallings, who at the regular service hour preceded in Sunday, had also preceded in Monday. "On last Tuesday, we had a passion play given in the school auditionation by C. C. "Mr. William Hurtle and Mr. M. C. Baker left Sunday for Jerry C. Carrion as the guest of S. M. R. Rech. "Mr. Harriet Merceer, a student of Earlham High School, is at home to spend the day with Mr. William Merceer." Mr. William Merceer. "Mr.
H CARO
FINALS AT STATE NORMAL SCHOOL
FINALS AT STATE NORMAL SCHOOL
94 Graduate From Elizabeth City School With Norfolk Student Leading.
Elizabeth City, N. C.—The State Normal School has just closed its 16th annual commencement exercises under the leadership of Dr. P. W. Moore, who has served the school as its principal for the 35 years.
Ninety-four graduated from the high school department, while there were 48 normal school graduates. For the high school class Mr. Norman M. Parker, of Jacksonville, N. C., was salutatorian and Mr. Raymond Purnell, of Casswell, was valedictorian. For the senior normal class Miss Agatha Engenia Gallup, of Norfolk, was valedictorian, while Miss Rosa Lee Suggs, of LaGrange, N. C., was salutatorian.
There were several visitors in attendance, many of whom the reporter would gladly mention except for the lack of space. Among the visitors were Miss Gertie Garris, of Garsyburg, of Montreal, Houston of New York; Mr. Bud Hornsie of Scotland Neck and Mr. L. H. Liverman, of Gum Neck, who gave their subscriptions to the Journal and Guide.
WILLIAMSTON
RELHAVEN
Bolhaven, N. C. The Free Will Baptist Church held its union meeting at this church from Thursday, May 27, to Saturday, May 30, during the meeting, and a large number of people attended. An excellent program was rendered on Sunday right under the roof of the church, and the festival is in progress at the Free Will Baptist Church this week, being conducted by R. Kirkle, the teacher, at Rehman, R. Kirkle, "Miss Hardy, Mrs. Midgett, Mr. Bunch and Rov. Windley and Rov. Kirklen motored to Hoyle College Training School Thursday.
MONROE
Monroe, N. C.-Rev. H. H. Moore, of Darham, will provide a few days on business recently. "Services were well attended," Church Sunday, "Hev. J. T. Newby in attendance," Mrs. Little R. Sigurrows, of St. Louis, M. is here spending some time as the guest of her parents, "Mrs. Maggie of Augusta, Ga., and Mrs. Levena Grant of Sumter, S. C., are spending some time here as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ibun, M. and Mrs. Emmon Houston have returned from Oxford, where they were students at Mary Potter Institute, where Ella Klinn was a student, and May 28 where she attended Commencement Exercises at Livingston College, where Livingston College has been located, where he spent a successful session.
J.C. SMITH HOLDS COMMENCEMENT
Charlotte, N. C. — The 58th commencement exercises of Johnson C. Smith University closed one of the most successful years in the history of the institution.
The exercises began May 30th with the baccalaureate sermon by President H. L. McCrorey. A feature of this service was the rendition of "My Task" by the University quartet. On Monday evening the Junior Prize Contest was held in Biddy Memorial auditorium. This contest is conducted by the university among the six best speakers of the Junior Class, who have been selected by the faculty from the preliminary contest. A gold medal is awarded by the Alumni Association to the best speaker in the contest. Mr. J. T. Douglass, of Chester, S. C., was
PR
GOOD
WEAR THE BUCKEYE AND RABBIT'S FO
winner of this much coveted prize,
Dr. A. W. Scott, '96, who is also
a winner of this medal, made the
presentation. The Class-Day ex-
treises were held Tuesday afternoon.
Tuesday evening witnessed one of the most brilliant features of the commencement season at which time the Alumni Association held their annual banquet in the University Refectory. The dining hall was beautifully decorated with red and black in a very artistic design. Dr. A. W. Scott, '96, of Washington, D. C., president of the Association, who acted as the toastmaster for the occasion, directed the visitors with a cordial welcome. Dr. S. J. Hargrave, '89, mentor of the evening, delivered a very inspiring message to the Association, using for his subject, "Vision, Vigor, Victor."
He urged the Association to get a greater vision for service that they might be more useful to their beloved Alma Mataze. President McCrory, '93, in his message to the Association spoke in very high terms of the co-operation that his administration is receiving from the Association. He pointed out the need of a graduate school in the south where the bulk of Negroes are educated, he said, "the day is not far distant when Johnson C. Smith University will be able to offer courses leading to the Doctor and Master Degrees. The Association presented the Association with the portrait of the likeness of the late Dr. Sanders, first Negro president of Johnson C. Smith (formerly Biddle). The gift was received by Dr. W. L. Metz, '95.
The commencement exercises came to a close Wednesday morning when 17 men from the School of Arts and Science and four from the School of Theology received their diplomas. Mr. Alexander Murdock, of Pittsburgh, delivered the graduating address. Rev. Jno. Riley Dungee, A. B., was speaker from the School of Theology, using for his subject: "Upon This Rock." Mr. Samuel C. Johnson, of the School of Arts and Science, Magna Cum Laude, was the salutatory of the class. Mr. Johnson spoke on "Golden Sorrow." Mr. George L. Allen, also of the School of Arts and Science, Summa Cum Laude, was the valedictor of the class. Mr. Allen used for the subject of his oration, "The High Way." Dr. McCreory in presenting the diplomas to the college graduates and delivering his firewall address urged them to go forth and work. He pleaded for greater growth and unity that is offered them. He said, "The day has come when the New Negro must get a broader vision of life and a greater incentive for service in order that he might become conscious of the possibilities of the race." In concluding he urged them to live up to the ideals of their Alma Mater and to set a standard in the world that shall be worthy of emulation by generations yet unborn.
The following awarded prizes:
Prize in Sacred Theology, Mr. A.
H. Prince, A. B., in science, Mr.
Warren Russell.
The conferment of Divinity Degree
was conferenced upon the following:
Rev. J. E. Jackson, Rev. L. B.
West, of Charlotte, and Rev. G.
H. Byers, of Johnson City, Tenn.
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of Nursing were held in Address Rankin Memorial Chapel of Howard University, Tuesday evening June 1st, at eight o'clock. A special feature of the exercise was the appearance of the United States Naval Orchestra and the principal address delivered by Major Julia C. Stimson, Superintendent of the Army Nurse Corps Dean of the Army School of Nursing, and President of the District League of Nursing.
FINALS BEGIN AT HOWARD UNIV.
FINALS BEGIN AT HOWARD UNIV.
Inspiring Baccalaureate Sermon Delivered By Dr. J. Stanley Durkee.
Washington, D. C.—The annual Baccalaureate Sermon by President J. Stanley Durkee in the new Gymnasium-Armory Building on the University Campus marked the opening of Commencement Week at Howard University Sunday afternoon, June 6th. The University Faculty appeared in full academic costume and marched in procession at the Carnegie Library to the Gymnasium-Armory Building where the Baccalaureate Exercises were held.
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President Durkee in his charge to the graduating classes said: "Young men and women of the graduating class, I am speaking under the strain of a real impulsion today. My thought is touched by the truth that this is my last word to you as a class, a college, and a people. In the words I have just spoken, you have caught the message I desire you to carry thru life, and you have visioned, I trust, the kind of graduates I long to have you be.
"You will grow to your best, and you will guide your world truly, only as you follow the teachings and reproduce the character of the Master teacher. Your successes will be finally measured by what you have done by whom you have striven to do. The intention of your souls will be marked infinitely higher than the accomplishments of your hands.
'All the world's coarse thumb
Thoughts hardly to be packed
And finger failed to plumb
Into a narrow act.
Fancies that broke through language and escaped.
"All you could be, all men immore in you, that will you be worth to God, and that will you be worth to your world; so rot is only the dreamer in righteousness who can pilot the people to pence. Go ye, therefore, and disciple the nations (for from many inns you come) and make the Greatest teacher of your friend to the end of your days." The annual Graduation Exercises of the Freedmen's Hospital School
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NEWS OF THE CHURCHES
BANK STREET
BIBLE SCHOOL
CLOSES DRIVE
The past six Sundays will indeed be remembered in the Bank Street Baptist Bible School. The fire for New Members was successful beyond expectations and every member of the school seems to have been bubbling over with enthusiasm to do their best. The school feels proud of what it was able to accomplish during this time. More than one hundred new members were added to the school while several old members returned to the fold. The two directors, the Blues and the Reds, by Miss M. A. A. C. K. Wallace. Both of the directors certainly proved themselves capable of leading their divisions. They handed their divisions with as much ease as veterans. The Reds won the Race by close margin with the Blues winning by a few seats behind. Saturday morning photographs were of the two groups, and many dancing faces were seen as they looked for the camera. Those who were to secure photos of either group will see Miss Dudley, Mr. Palace of the superintendent, Mr. West.
M. 210N BAPTIST CHURCH (Dickinson and Lincoln Streets) "And they went and told Jesus," was the topic discussed by the pastor, Rev. J. M. Doughlass, at the midlock services, Sunday. At midlock, the pastor and congregation worshiped at Mt. Lebanon apostle Church, Rev. James Bills pastor, at which time the Mr. Doughlass preached a stirring sermon from the suburban Wanted Wall, and an night while the pastor preached at Mt. Lebanon, while the pastor, who is a danger to many of the churches in the city, was at First Calvary enjoyed a wonderful sermon by Rev. O. J. Allen.
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH
Services were well attended all day at this church on last Sunday. The Sunday school is at its height of progress, with extremest interest being manifested by the teachers and scholars. At 11:30 we pastor preached an able sermon from "The Folly of Self-Conference." Prov. 28:26, "He that rests in his own heart is a fool." The sermon was very inspiring. B.Y.P. U. is doing good work and its meetings are very interesting. At 8 o'clock, Rev. V. V. K. takes, the pastor, preached an instructive sermon on "The third Gold," "I counsel thee to my of me gold tried in the fire that mayst be rich," Rev
Bishop Thomson
At Grace Church
The Rt. Rev. A. C. Thomson,
co-adjuditor of the Diocese
Southern Virginia, will be pres-
sident Grace Church next Sunday
going at the G o'clock service
and will administer Confirmation
in a class and preach. Bishop
Thomson always brings helpful
messages and you will do well to
him. All of our friends will
welcomed.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
in the absence of the pastor, who
served the laceauleurate ser-
vice at Shaw University, Dr. R.
Walker, the converted gambier,
and the pupit for both services.
11:30 in the morning, Dr. Wal-
selected as a text, Matt.
seemed, "The Poor in Spirit." He cared that those who were poor spirit were hopeless beings, for those of the right spirit and vision were marred and happiness could be found, but those who devised their spirit and adjusted themselves to conditions by seeking and serving Christ theirs would be the Kingdom of Heaven. Mr. Frank Shutterbrand, of the origin islands, rendered a clarinet to "Brecuse," from Jocelyn, to delight of all. M. 7:30 p. m., an eager, crowd trained to hear Dr. Walker on the Eagle Stirring Her Nest," Deut. 32:11. This was a very interesting message. Mr. Shutterbrandt favored again with telephone solo, "The Rosary," which was well rendered.
in the Sunday school was at its
bed in both attendance and lesson
assessment. The musical numbers
the B. Y. P. U. were rendered
numbers of the Jerusalem B.
P. U. "How to Create and
read Happiness" was very
sightfully and logically discuss-
ly the president.
ST. MARK'S COMMUNITY
CHURCH
Julian and Courtney Avvs.) Following an interesting and upward Sunday school lesson, which are effectively reviewed by the Mr. Gaston, of Mt. Olive church, a stirring and touching lesson was preached by the Rev. Budd, on "Making Friends the Enemy." This church has been without a pastor thirty days has unanimously held the Rev. L. T. Watson, D. D. its pastor, who will assume a charge on June 20.
JAMES F. COLLINS, SUNIT.
LIEUT. J. M. COLLINS, who was recently elected superintendent of St. John's A. M. E. Sunday school for the 34th consecutive year. It is not the length of service alone, however, that marks Superintendent Collins as a remarkable leader in Sunday school work, but it is his capacity to keep abaest of all that is modern in methods and to adopt these methods quickly. It is said that it is this particular trait in Lieut. Collins that makes his leadership alert today as it was the first day of his superintendency.
St. John's Sunday school is the largest in the Virginia Annual Conference of the A. M. E. Church and one of the most progressive. On each Sunday morning when its various departments are functioning it presents a veritable beehive of activity.
CONVERTED GAMBLER TO CONDUCT REVIVAL AT MT OLIVE, CHURCH
CONVERTED GAMBLER TO CONDUCT REVIVAL AT MT OLIVE, CHURCH
On next Sunday night, Rev. Dr. R. H. Walker, the converted gambler of New York City, will begin a great spiritual campaign in Lindenwood at the Mt. Olive Baptist Church, of which Rev. Harvey X. Johnson is pastor.
Dr. Walker is an evangelist of rational reputation and recently closed a long series of meetings in Richmond, where hundreds were converted and great crowds greeted him on every occasion.
The meetings will continue for one week and every person of Lindenwood, Washington Heights, Hunterville and the adjacent territory is cordially invited to avail themselves of the opportunity to hear this powerful preacher, the exterior meeting of church building is about completed and all are highly pleased with the same.
All departments of the church are moving along in peace and harmony, every on is being busily engaged in efforts that will mean much for the kingdom.
Our pastor, Rev. Johnson, delivered an electrifying sermon on last Sunday and a tide of spiritual enthusiasm swept the entire audience as he forcibly delivered a message from Dan, 12:16. The pastor also preached an instructive sermon at night. On Monday night, "The Road to Heaven" was presented to an appreciative audience. This church is growing by leaps and bounds and a splendid spirit of co-operation prevails.
MARKED INCREASE IN Y.M.C.A.'S
Four Campaigns Recently Instituted Net More Than $600,000 For Buildings.
New York—The addition of more than a half million dollars of property values to the colored Young Men's Christian Association of the country in the past six months is a record breaker among Negro organizations according to a statement just issued by Channing H. Tobias, Senior Secretary of the National Y. M. C. A. work for colored men and boys aggregating a total valuation of nearly $600,000 to which colored people themselves subscribed $81,000,000 and Julius Rosenwald of Chicago gave $50,000. The cities to benefit by buildings are Little Rock Ark., Buffalo, N. Y., Ohio, and Germantown, Pa. Several cities that have buildings are planning annexes to branches. Kansas City, Mo., will erect a $100,000 annex and St. Louis a boy's work building. Philadelphia has organized branches in the north and west sides of the city in addition to the splendid Christian Street Branch. Robert B. DeFranz of the National Council is the building campaign director of the Colored Men's Department.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
(Rolling Brook)
Services were well attended at this church on last Sunday. The pastor, Rev. E. T. Kee, has returned from North Carolina and occupied his pulpit at each service. At 3 o'clock the Grand Lodge No. 36, Knights of St. Mark, assembled at the First Baptist Church in its 18th annual session and listened to a stirring sermon preached by the pastor. At 8 p.m., the pastor preached from the subject, "Christian Watchfulness."
A senate judiciary subcommittee decided Coolidge order federalizing state officers as dry agents was legal.
MADISON WIDENS ATTACK ON "SIN IN HIGH PLACES"
Includes Doctors, Lawyers, and Business Men In Charges Similar To Those Brought Against Teachers.
Sensitive to the preponderance of criticism, compared to the support accorded his attitude in preaching exorcizing sermons on alleged unbecoming conduct of some of the local school teachers by those who have commented on it in the public press, but none the less in a fighting mood, Rev. C. P. Madison continued the fire last Sunday in a third sermon in which he declared there would no let up in his cruse until something definite comes out of it.
Crowd Smaller
The crowds which have filled Second Calvary, main floor and galleries, to hear his previous teacher sermons, dwindled to the point where the main floor and a few seats in the galleries were filled Sunday. It was impossible to det rime whether the somewhat smaller crowd was due to waring interest in the pastor's crusade or to the threatening weather that prevailed at just about church-going hour. According to the amens he got, however, it was evident that he is still holding a good following.
In this third sermon, Dr. Madison widened his range of attack on "sin in high places," as he termed it, to include lawyers, doctors, business and professional people and local "high society." He charged that some of the supposed best young men of the city, lawyers and doctors, he emphasized, are purposefully contributing to the moral ruin of unsuspecting young girls.
Dr. Madison's sermon subject was "What to Expect and What Not to Expect in my Crusade for Morally Good Teachers in Norfolk." In this connection, referring to the seemingly growing criticism of his manner in making general charges which he has so far failed to lay against any individual teacher to be proved or not, he says, "I'll prove the uniformity of some of the school teachers of Norfolk, but I see now that I'll have to do it alone. The public may expect the facts specified and proved, but not in a moment. They will get them, however, if it takes twelve months to furnish the proof."
Public Evasive
He stated that the public knows as much or more about the conditions he arrains as he does, but has shown no signs that it is willing to support his stand. Not even one of the best school teachers has accorded him encouragement in his fight to lift the stigma from their profession in this city, he said. Showing no signs of being taken back, however, Dr. Madison vigorously asserted that he did not begin his fight upon the advice of any man, nor would the advice of any man deter him in carrying it on, "but," said he, "if you who know the truth would be brave enough to come out and tell it, this fight would be quickly concluded."
The Rev. Mr. Madison stated that he has received a number of letters from out-of-town writers supporting his stand and declaring him to be right, but asking at the same time, "why is Norfolk so silent on the matter?" He also stated that numerous local people have visited and furnished him with some of the most startling and revolting information, or alleged information concerning some teachers whose names have been mentioned, but his informants insist that their names be not used in connection with the alleged information, thus tying his hands, he said.
One of the most serious allegations yet brought against Norfolk school teachers by Rev. Mr. Madison was made when he asserted that he had positive information that in some out-of-town districts that school teachers from this city are positively unwanted, on account of what local patrons charge as their unwholesome influence.
Added to all the other general charges and insinuations he has brought against some of the local teachers, without naming them. Rev. Madison on last Sunday charged moral persecution, asserting that some of the women are guilty of unspeakable conduct with other women. This loathsome practice he declared, is not confined to certain school teachers, but is invading the homes of the people the church and extending all over the city. It is most reproducible, he shouted and harkens back to the days of Sodom.
Widens Attack
Widening his assault to include local "high society" as he called it. Dr. Madison declared that some of the doctors and lawyers of this area are out to make harmless of any young woman, regardless of her standing in the community, "Mothers and fathers," he continued, "you must get on the job if you are to save your daughters from ruin. I am not afraid of the protistate or degenerate who ostracizes
NORFOLK JOURNAL AND GUIDE
S SEEK TO ARE THE CHARGES TRUE OR FALSE?
Editor Journal and Guide:
We personally, take issue neither pro nor con in the 1972-a-date, but we would like to get at the cool of the situation, and readily admit that there are unclean preachers, unclean lawyers and doctors in the professions and unclean employers and workers, who will agree that all will agree with us when we say that poverty and vice abound to a great extent in the slums and in the semi-urban areas, and that there is a fertile field where "Moral Uplift men" might reap a beautiful harvest. Moreover we, the understudied, believe that the moralists, the folk, who heartily cancer with us when we voice the sentiment; teachers should be given liberty and not license; already many of us have been on the verge of a charity being on going in Norfolk; and teachers, probably more so than any other class of public servants, cannot afford to be moralists; morals should they rebel against public opinion, surely they cannot hope to escape the result of their actions, whether the public indulge in implication or whether it be protection.
According to the general, local, current System are openly defying public opinions as we infer from Dr. Madison's sermon. System are openly defying public opinions as we infer from Dr. Madison's sermon. Teachers should be cut off from all pleasures of life; or whether, they, if important, should be allowed to choose whether or not whether Dr. Madison or any one else had a right to publicity domesticate an individual. These assuctions are questions which we should not quibble, the real question to our minds being this: Can these assuptions be questioned?
I require we as citizens have a right to
inquire into the morals of our teachers so
bring us their morals affair or have a
tendency to ask about them.
Sincerely yours,
C. Augustus Austin and James R. Corriveau
117 Martin Street,
Austin, TX 78701
Please allow our space in your valuable paper to say a few words on the Madison "Build Teacher" article in your issue of *The Madison* with the exception of the letter, "What Are the Facts?" by Pro Bom Publication. Repositions to facts, no true Christian teaching, there is a way to meet the matter without matter. There is a way to meet the matter without matter. Mr. Madison has leisure. There are many ways to a leader he can be of help to our students. There are several thousand taxpayers, but much less that number among our race that are qualified tutors. That we want good and efficient teachers, but what steps are you preschoolers taking to place our boys and girls when they come out of school? We have a teacher in our area who takes several thousand others as peers. It is not themselves as others needs. It is not noise when in action. The day is far smell and gone when our students are pointing to us as they want our leaders to lead and do so as they want age they are. This is a showdown at age they are.
I do not know whether amazement, judgment or sorrow are uppermost in my mind, as I read the tempest in a teapot stirred up by the feathers and faithful prowling of Rev. Dr. G. P. Madison, who速干 question his right to speak.
Mount Olive H
(UNDER
THIS SUNDAY
AND CONTINUE
DR. R. H. WAKE
(THE CONVER
11:30 SERMON
3:30
All Are
REV. HARVEY N.
A GROWING CHURCH IN
Mount Olive Baptist Church (LINDENWOOD)
HONG KONG
MEMBERS SEEK TO RETAIN SERVICES OF THE REV. DR. A. HOBBS
The members of Jerusalem Baptist Church, whose pastor, Rev. A. Hobbs, was recently unanimously elected pastor of Union Baptist Temple, Atlantic City, N.J., are putting forth their best efforts to retain the services of Dr. Hobbs.
JOHN H. BROWN
On last Sunday before the entire membership the following statement from the Deacon Board expressing the sentiments of the members was read:
"In view of the feet that Dr. A. Hobbs present mentor of the Jerusalem Baptist Church has been recently elected to the pastorate of the Union Baptist Temple, of Atlantic City, N. J., the deacon board with the entire official staff and the church as well take this method of publicly expressing our sentiment relative to the moritorious work done by him. When Dr. Hobbs came to us a little more than eleven years ago the financial status of the church was direful. Our spirits had dropped, our faith was at ceb because all seemed darkness and despair. But in the midst of our broodings he brought hope and cheer, feeling that nothing is impossible with God as leader. He has fought this financial struggle to a new finish. His value as a preacher has been manifested at every stage in the progress of the church and in recognition of his value a friendship has been cemented that has endured him to us.
"He has so organized the church is to put it on a firm working basis, all auxiliaries working harmoniously together like a unique piece of machinery. He has done much for social and moral uplift. He has increased largely the church membership by baptism and otherwise. As a result we are moving on in a prosperous way with a booster future before us. Therefore we are extremely desirous of having him remain with us.
Done by order of the Deacon Board.
W. F. Patterson, chairman.
Stacey Roberts, Clerk.
A UNIQUE AFFAIR
Each Tuesday evening at 7:30
clock from September to June
each teacher, in the Sunday
school of the Jerusalem Baptist
Church, has welcomed the hour to
sit in a semi-circle and hear the
coming Sunday's lesson discussed
by the able instructor, Rev. A.
Hobbs. They not only received
a message to take their classes,
but gained personal help that
enabled them to meet courageously
the problems of life. We close
during the summer months, thus
we will miss the happy gatherings
On June 1st, our instructor invited us to his spacious home in Boul. ward Terrace to spend a social evening. Being a man with a vision he has inspired us to do greater work. Plans and methods for broadening our Sunday school work were discussed at length. We then changed our program to a less serious one and enjoyed the remainder of the evening socially. A delicious repas was served. The Sunday school teachers of the Jerusalem Baptist Church unanimously acclaim their instructor as the best in the coun-. At a late hour we left, still cherishing the memory of the pleasant evenings spent together, and looking forward to the first of September when we shall re-semble.
himself from good people and advertises his status, but it is the society lizard, the society drunkard, the society moral rascal who has access to the best homes who is the most dangerous secondhand to the community.
"Education does not make people morally better. If one has the devil in him in high school, he comes out of college or the professional school with a wiser and bigger devil in him," the pastor declared. "Practically every social function given now-a-days," he went on, "is a drinking party."
READERS COMMENT
ON REV. MADISON'S
TEACHER CHARGES
"A CHALLENGE TO CHRISTIANITY"
*Journal, and Guide*
Now that the tempest now rew, Madison's charges on some NORFOLL public teachers is partly silent, I am forced to draw from observation.
I must command Dr. Madison for the holdiness of attack on sit in high places; however it would get best results if the minister would prefer a large group some teacher or member of the public support to help the good minister to clean house and do it quietly. No man is preferred and a conviction registered.
Now, to the Baptist Union of Tidewater: Is your city the public institution of the Baptist Ministers did not start the ministers' publishes from defenders of the teachers constitute a challenge to the Baptist ministry of Tidewater, and certainly let the ministers as a Union or individually come out in defences of a "brother" who draws on own conclusions. An unfit public school teacher is a public liability and menace; also a minister who is afraid of the minister's critics and a sad disappointment to lead. Will the challenge go unchallenged?
G. J. SOMERVILLE
Portsmouth, Va.
Olive Baptist Church
(LINDENWOOD)
SUNDAY AT 8 P.M.
ED CONTINUING ONE WEEK
H. WALKER, of N. Y.
THE CONVERTED GAMBLE)
GMON PASTOR
LORD'S SUPPER
All Are Welcome
HARVEY N. JOHNSON, Minister
CHURCH IN A GROWING COMMUNITY
11:30
High School Baccalaureate
3 O'CLOCK
Woman's Day Service
8 P.M.
"The Woman Who Served
Deceitful Food"
THIS SUNDAY AT 8 P. M.
AND CONTINUING ONE WEEK
DR. R. H. WALKER, of N. Y.
( THE CONVERTED GAMBLER )
11:30 SERMON
3:30
PASTOR
LORD'S SUPPER
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
KEY. RICHARD H. BOWING. Pastor
K. T.
Great National Baptist Sunday School Congress Holding ForthIn Columbia
Five Days Will Be Spent In A "Summer Sunday School of Methods," With 30 States Represented.
Columbia, S. C., June 9th—(Congress Headquarters—Benedict College and Allen University Campus)—"More and Better Sunday Schools" was the theme in the opening session of the Sunday School Congress which convened in this city at high noon today. Columbia, the state's capital, South Carolina, the Palmetto State, are giving welcome that would challenge the admiration of the heralds of victory and the representatives of a righteous cause that represented South Carolina in the stormy days preceding and after reconstruction.
This city, one of the playgrounds of the late Woodrow Wilson, this city, that has witnessed excitement as well as pomp and ceremony during the days of Robert H. Small, Robert Brown Elliott, Benjamin Pitchford Tillman and others, has seen a new day in construction as program building in this present school known as the Sunday School Congress.
Vanguard Arrives Tuesday
Messengers began to arrive here Tuesday evening when the north, the Middle West and the far East emptied their cargo here, and from that time on until the official Sunday School Congress train arrived this morning there was a constant stream of inflow of workers. Thirty states were represented when the official announcement was made that the closing hours will be spent in what they term here as a "Summer Sunday School of Methods."
Welcome were given by His Excellency, the Governor, His Honor, the Mayor, the Secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, the Board of Trade and leaders in several denominations. Dr. J. C. White, the pastor of the largest congregation in Columbia, is the general chairman who is responsible for bringing the first rational meeting among the colored people in the history of the city. Presiding
Rev. J. P. Robinson Presiding
The Congress is presided over by
as a wachman on the wall. "If he sees
the sword come and blows out the trumpet,
the people will be afraid to require at the wachman's hands." Again, God commands the preacher to cry about and sparre the people of the land, and to trample the transgressions. And those who through prudence maintain a guilty silence God calls "Dumb but good" can crumble and the wrong championed and will not come on God's side. God says to the help of the Lord God against the minority. The minister of the people knows that the moral situation is the basis of moralugence. From time immemorial when moral situations imperilled the life of a people God always summons out at what ever risk. It was so when Moses, the commandments, mook to the warrior in the ground of the golden calf. It was so when Nathan confronted the guilty David who had taken a colored man's wife and pardoned
It was so when Elijah met a kindless nation on Mr. Carmel who had given themselves over to怠懒势的 Angels of the earth, but his wife thundered in the car of her quilty king fireed before all his appalled pupils to teach them, awards and it ought to be so in Norfolk when teachers who are first of all to be examples then teachers,介导的, to be examples of Virtue so far for forget those lives so to privately or publicly engage in conduct becoming good taste and good conduct, a peculiar and peculiar influence with the poorest a perchant than even the minister. When they set up examples they were more than any other person has power to do and if they are publicly warned by a faithful teacher, it is not for reformation but to drumm over the phone and attempt to diagnose him through the stupid and silly letters of the whereabouts and representatives they are ought to notify them that they can drink, smoke, dance and discuss, but they must disconnect themselves with the pay, and the state's teaching force, and individuals and not as part of the great mob, all influential body of public school teachers, the great majority of women are to quit, and not degrade their pupils.
REY, DR. CHAS. S. MORRIS
Norfolk, Va.
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Rev J. P. Robinson, D. D., of Little Rock, Ark. The Secretary of the organization, who has put it on the map as an international gathering, is Rev Henry. Allen Boyd, of Nashville, Tenn. officials are Rev G. B. Taylor, vice chairman, Nashville, Tenn. Rev D. J. Hull, Arbitrator, Nashville, Tenn.
There are twelve subjects supporting the theme of this religious gathering. Those subjects will be handled by the outstanding religious men and women who are masters of thought and sentiment in their respective denominations. Every day the same hours are observed. The key which opens the Congress daily is the Bible. Conference. This is followed by the Home Department Section, with general lectures and demonstration; then comes the session proper, that have been prepared by the workers who have their Sunday School and Young People's Societies. Then comes the Teacher Training Section, which concludes the morning session, after the superintendent has shown what a Teacher Training Course is.
The Congress then divides itself up into fourteen departments or sections from 2:30 to 5:30. Then, Cadet Boys run riot with their stunts undr their government officers who saw service over seas. Following these day exercises comes the night and evening religious song service, and a great big chorus that has been rehearsing and training for several weeks, the air in making music, singing practically from their own song books.
Throughout this week this concludes, with a special feature each night. Tonight was Columbia's welcome; Thursday night will be Literary Night, Friday night is Organized Class Night, Saturday afternoon and evening will be Boy Cadet; Sunday is the biggest day of the Congress; there will be a Model School Sunday with the Squadrons. Vigil ministers, volunteers, all pupils of every demonstration. There will be a street garage and demonstration, followed by a Mass Meeting. Then the closing will come Monday, and by Tuesday the twelfth-first session of the Sunday School Congress will be history.
Prominent Minister At Grace Church Sunday Morning
Prominent Minister At Grace Church Sunday Morning
Rev. Julian Perry, leading Episcopal Minister, pastor of the Episcopal church at Brunswick, Ga., will preach at Grape P. E. Church. Sunday A. M. Rev, Mr. Perry is an unusually interesting speaker and always gives his hearers a forceful, thoughtful message.
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THE ST. PAUL
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Introducing THE ST. PAUL SINGERS FROM THE ST. PAUL SCHOOL
an Institution for the training of Negro Youth, located in the Black Belt of Virginia, Lawrenceville, now closing its 38th year, whose Principal and Founder is Archdeacon James S. Russell, D.D.
For several years THE ST. PAUL SINGERS have traveled in the interest of the School, in order to supplement its budget and to aid in the current expenses, as well as to advertise the School, hence we are on the road this Summer during June, July and August. There are ten of in party, four females and six males, and we travel by automobiles
If interested will you not write the Rev. J. Alvin Russell at once that a date may be arranged for you.
JOHN H. HOONY
Elect Officers
Of St. John S. S.
A the regular meeting of the
Sunday School Board of St. John
A. M. E. Church recently the following officers were elected and installed by the pastor, Rev. L. L. Berry, D. D.:
Surp. James M. Collins: Ast. Surp.
C. D. Thomas: Ast. Surp. M. Almora
E. Miller: Ast. Surp. W. Edward Robinson.
Adult Division. W. H. Soblen, Jr.
Surp. Young People's Division. Minn.
Mary E. Brown.
Supt. Children's Division, Miss Sophron
in M. Hamlin.
Seys, Seyy, Namiine B. Ducker
Seys, Seyy, Namiine B. Ducker
Seys, Seyy, Namiine B. Ducker
L. Jones; Seyy, Miss Eibel G. Goldin-
s, Senior Dent. Miss Loisen B. Al-
soc, Senior Dent. Miss Loisen B. Al-
soc, Senior Dent. Miss Loisen B. Al-
soc, Intermediate Dent. Miss Annette
G. Harrison; Seyy, Seyy, Eibelon G. T
unner; Tumier. Dept. Mrs. Zooninia A.
Frouch; Seyy, Seyy, Mary P. Pode.
Seys, Primary Dent. Miss J. Sadie J.
Seys, Primary Dent. Miss J. Sadie J.
Seys, Beginners Dent. Miss Annie E.
Gatou; Seyy, Seyy, Annie B. Collins.
Seys, Urlaub. Roll Dept. Mrs. Janie E.
Stanback; Seyy, Seyy, Minnie T. Gard
Supt. Classification, Miss Willie A. Winston; Scey, Walter D. Stephur; Asst. E. Emmanuel Robbins; Stenographer Wiley T. Torrema; Troman, Charles S. Forbear.
Birthday Scey, Miss Bertin L. Dougherty.
Pocket Testament Scey, Mrs. Zabel H. Hammers.
Family Altar Scey, W. H. White, Librarian Scey, Alfred W. Wright, Asst. Librarian, Alba Makedy.
Asst. Librarian, J. Fletcher Dozier.
Asst. Librarian, Joseph A. Munley, Chairman Scey, W. M. Miller.
Asst. Chairman, W. W. Miller.
Pinist. Rudolph Charlson.
Asst. Pinist. Louis H. Ligustre.
Constructor of Grobstein, Benjamin Jones.
Athletic Director, Alben D. Brown.
Grammarist, Louis H. Tyrion.
Dougery, James O. Johnson, James Robinson.
Dougery, Joseph H. Hopkins, Benjamin Sups. Alben, Andrew J. Jerigen, Roger A. Pryor.
**COMMITTEERS**
Allen Life Guard, Louise H. Tyler, Miles M. Yount.
Athletics, Alen D. Brown, S. Bureau
Robinson, Winston L. Tyler.
Courtney, Assistant Superintendent.
Crable Rud, Mrs. J. E. Stickle, Ms.
T. G. Garder, Mrs. Roe P. Palmer,
L. M. Johnson, Rosa Roberto.
396.
Decoration, Mrs. Esther E. A. White,
Mrs. Nunnie Macie A. Taylor, Miss. L. A.
Dammess, Mrs. S. J. Cotton,
Miss. Misonery, Mrs. Mary L. Lone, Mrs.
Miss. Misonery, Mrs. Mary L. Lone, Mrs.
Pierceum, Mrs. S. M. Ummid, Miss.
Thulman Hill, Mrs. Estebil Robinson,
Reid, Mrs. O. E. Grimsted, Mrs. S.
Misonery, Mrs. E. A. White, S. L.
Tarley
Society, W. Edward Robinson, Mrs. M. E. Miller, Mrs. J. E. Stainback, Mrs. Alison Wilkie, Chus, N. Fowler, Social Service, Mrs. M. L. Stoutje, Mrs. Dorie Cattan, Mrs. Annie L. Grimes, Temperance, Mrs. N. E. Doxter, V. C. Bodges, C. C. Dugan.
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Introducing
MUL SINGERS
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SCHOOL
training of Negro Youth,
bit of Virginia, Lawrence-
th year, whose Principal
seacon James S. Russell,
PAGE ELEVEN
JOE, A. JONES
Norfolk Journal and Guide
SOUTH'S BEST WEEKLY
Published by THE GUIDE PUBLISHING CO., INC.
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Voters who joined in the Republican re-frain, "Keep Cool With Coolidge" are now getting all "net-up" trying to do it.
Dr. Wallace Buttrick
It is not good to allow a man of the character and service of Dr. Wallace Buttrick to pass on and out without paying a tribute to him. He died in Baltimore, May 27. He was seventy-two years old. He was a successful Baptist preacher when he was called to be secretary to the General Education Board in 1902. He became president of the Board and a member of the Rockefeller Foundation, in 1917. He was intensely interested and sympathetic towards Afro-American education and was in a position to be of the greatest service. He was one of the best and most helpful friends Dr. Washington had, and he relied much upon Dr. Washington for advice in distributing the large benefits at his command for Southern education.
Dr. Buttrick was a great big Christian and he did a great big work for Christian uplift and betterment.
The Grand Army Veterans Thinning
A very noticeable feature of the memorial services in all parts of the country was the very few members of the Grand Army of the Republic who were able to take part in the celebration. And all of them were old men. It was sixty-five years ago that they turned their faces towards the South to help save the Union of the States answering the call of Abraham Lincoln, President and Commander of the Army and Navy of the United States. The few survivors of the grandest army which ever fought the battles of the Republic, second only to the veterans General Washington led in the great revolution that freed the colonies and made the United States possible, commanded everywhere the respectful reverence of those who watched the line of march of the veterans of all our wars, because of their fewness and feebleness and above all because of the imperishable, the heroic service they rendered in saving the Union and freeing the slave.
Soon the last member of the Grand Army of the Republic will answer the final call, but they will always hold the supreme place in the affections of the American people. Why? Because they rendered a service which no other army of the Republic can be called upon to render. They saved the Union and they destroyed the slave system. The Union may again be threatened in its life, but slavery is dead and there will be no resurrection of it in our system of government.
Another Opportunity Lost
Negroes lost another opportunity Tuesday to make an impressive showing in an election which vitally concerned their welfare. Last year when the referendum election on the transportation ordinance took place the race had a financial interest in a transportation system at stake, and failed to back up their money with their votes. Tuesday they had an opportunity to register a dignified and righteous protest against mobocracy and economic repression, and they failed utterly. There are over 525 qualified colored voters on the books. In the twenty-first precinct, where the great majority of them vote, there were only 74 ballots cast. Some of these were white. The colored votes, probably fifty in all, were divided between the tickets.
In the one or two other precincts where there are some colored votes, less than fifteen were cast, according to observers.
There are numerous reasons for this lethargy of the colored vote, and the most important one of them is the sycophantic attitude of persons who are unfortunately in a position to exert some leadership. There are business men, lawyers, physicians, preachers and teachers, who pretend to the masses of their people that they want an honest, equal chance for them in the race of life; that they want protection against mob violence and security in their property rights, but when the time to vote comes around they betray and sell out the masses by working and voting for men who do mob violence, who stand for mob violence and who practice every possible form of proscription and discrimination against the race. These men do not deceive the masses, they deceive themselves. The masses stand off and look at them in their stupid deception, and are confused. They do not know whether to vote or not to vote, when their preachers, their bankers, their lawyers and their doctors tell them to vote for people who have excused them over and over again.
The higher-ups are immune from many of the disadvantages, economic and civil, from which the masses suffer. And the subtle flattery of the politicians often showered upon them in the eleventh hour of a campaign, never fails to seduce them into betraying their people. Some day the masses are going to wake up and repudiate these sycophants who betray them. The wonder is that they have not already done so.
Editorial Page of
Great Progress in Haiti Is Claimed
The American Occupation of Haiti is resented by a group of intelligent Haitians, many of them journalists, who protest against the American usurpation and dictation in the affairs of the country, the President of the Republic, it is claimed, being a creature imposed upon the country by the American Commission, at the head of which is General John H. Russell. The intelligent Haitians claim that the Americans have been guilty of many crimes against citizens of Haiti, and they are loud in protest; but what do the mass of people think who have been benefited by the law and order which the Americans have introduced with the building of a thousand miles of paved roads?
A booklet in French has been issued and is being distributed in which it is claimed that, "this progress has been particularly noticeable during the administration of the present chief executive, President Borno, a report in the booklet made by the Haitian minister of public works. His administration also has seen the construction of fourteen schools, thirteen hospitals and eleven lighthouses; installation of an automatic telephone system, and material progress in irrigation and canals. Since 1921, there has been an increase of 350 per cent in the number of telephones in use, and the telegraph system has been augmented and improved."
Of course, we think that Haiti ought to be free, as it was for a long period of years, and we think that it would now be free if it had made the most and not the least of its incomparable advantages and opportunities, giving no foreign power excuse for depriving it of its freedom. But the United States has need of Haiti to safeguard its interests in the Panama Canal and we do not think that it has any disposition to return to the Haitian people the independence of which it deprived them in the Administration of President Wilson. It is too bad for the Haitians, but that is the way it looks to us.
A Cbinaman Excels at Yale
It is of general interest to the readers of the JOURNAL AND GUIDE to learn of any new or unusual thing which affects other race groups than their own but rated as they are by the Christian law and public opinion of which they may be a part, and hampered on account of race or religion or place of nativity. They may all be citizens of the Great Republic, and entitled to share equally in all of its privileges and immunities and yet be separate and apart and compelled in one way and another to fight for everything that is theirs.
The Afro-American and the Jew have contributed as much in their way to the upholding of the nation as the New England Puritan and the Southern Cavalier, and they are all of equal standing in the constitution as citizens; but difference is made in the application of the law and the opportunities attaching to citizenship, denial of enjoyment of which makes citizenship a meaningless thing.
It is quite remarkable how much success the Jew and the Negro and the foreign born have forced from the reluctant grasp of restraining laws and hostile public opinion. They have had to fight for what they have got and they have to fight to hold on to it, but this very fact of having to fight explains much of their success. And they will keep on fighting until they break down all of the barriers placed in their way.
The Chinaman has no place in our citizenship but he manages in a fugitive way, and with his limited numbers, to make both ends meet as satisfactorily as the most favored. So do the Japanese among us, and there are not a few of them. The daily newspapers have made much of the fact that Dana Yung Kwai, a Chinaman, has been chosen class orator for the graduating class of the Sheffield Scientific School, of Yale College. In June last he was voted the most brilliant man, in the senior class by his classmates. His father is secretary of the Chinese legation at Washington. He is undoubtedly a very brilliant man, but that is not anything unusual with Chinese students in American schools in the past. In common labor, in trade, in our schools, the Chinese have shown that they can hold their own with the best of Americans.
It is generally claimed that the Chinese are arrested in their mental development; that is, they have gone so far and can hope to go no further. That may be a fiction. There is a movement on foot in China, fathered by a Chinaman educated in America, to modernize the Chinese alphabet and simplify the vocabulary to the ordinary and necessary uses of the people, and the movement is said to be meeting with marvelous success among the common people, who have been shut out from an education by the old alphabet, and like hindrances, with the years it has taken to master what is called Chinese education. With a simpler alphabet and a properly balanced vocabulary there is no reason why the average Chinaman should not have a liberal education and take his place with the progressive races.
Yale and Harvard both have many Afro-American graduates, and some of them have done good and brilliant work; and this in the face of the old theory that an Afro-American was incapable of mastering the higher education, a theory which has been blown all to smithereens by the facts in the case. The late Judge Robert H. Terrell of Washington was a Harvard man, and among the outstanding graduates of that school now living, Dr. W. E. B. DuBois has made a very high place as an author and journalist and William H. Lewis of Boston is rated high as a lawyer and orator. "There are no inferior races; there are races with inferior conditions; they may be black or white; they are at times both." Dr. John W. Hamilton declared in his splendid
address at the Gammon Theological Seminary's "Congress on Africa," at Atlanta, in 1895. And there is heart of hope in Dr. Hamilton's viewpoint for every race which is now hampered with "inferior conditions." We salute Dana Yung Kwai. May his tribu increase.
THE GUIDE POST
By RICHARD H. BOWLING
THE GUIDE POST
By RICHARD H. BOWLING
How many children so couple expect to have born reply to this question must of necessity be indefinite. There are so many variant factors to be considered. Not any, may be the correct reply in one case. One, may be the reply in another case. In still another case the proper answer would be, ten.
A. B.
The saddest case is that of the couple whom all sensible persons would advise to expect no offspring whatever as a result of their
over as a result of their marriage. Lawfully married, living together, the call of nature ringing in their ears, but only barrenness facing them for all their lives. No little hands reaching up to them from bassinet or crib, no happy moments of watching the first efforts to walk or listening to the first attempts to talk, no sounds ever of little innocents saying after them: "Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray Thee, Lord, my soul to keep." The prospect of childlessness is indeed a sad one, and yet it is in some cases certainly wise. To be frank, no child should be born of parents either one on both of whom are victims of a communicable and dangerous disease. Venereal troubles, chronic kidney and lung troubles, mental abnormalities and other deep seated ills are danger signs against traveling the road of parenthood. Under the circumstances economic loss, chronic sickness, early death, untold misery are almost certain.
There is another case where wisdom dictates one child and only one. This is the case where the first experience of motherhood indicates extreme danger for the mother because of some peculiar physical weakness or some malformation beyond medical or surgical remedy. This applies also in the case where the first experience of motherhood reveals the presence of some dangerous and communicable disease hitherto unsuspected.
We come now to consider the couple normally healthy and living under average condition. It is their privilege and duty to expect from four to six children. Why not? If health and comparative economic stability are not to be used thus in the furtherance of the family, the nation and the race, of what real service are they? Are we such paragons of perfection that our line could end in us, there being no higher heights to be reached, no improvements to be made? The birth pangs of countless ages and unnumbered ancestors, just that we might exist and selfishly enjoy? The probabilities of splendid physiques, great characters and world-shaking idealism to be forever unrealized simply that we might escape sacrifices and the duty of providing for them? All things considered, our childless intelligentsia are both shortsighted and rebellious. There is a Divine urge to parenthood in man as in all the rest of God's animate beings. And only a wilful interference can prevent its normal consummation in conception and ultimate birth.
There is, finally, the case where the family may well be increased by ten or twelve. This applies to those living in the great open spaces where the cost of living is low, the social demands are not so exacting, the care of children women's chief business. It is here that the need of man power for the conquest of nature and the very preservation of the family makes well nigh obligatory the rearing of large families. Again, imagine birth control as practiced by the intelligentia of our cities duplicated in the open country by the hardy pioneers. The backwoods is lonely enough as it is. Life would be unbearable for scattered groups of not more than three or four in a group. How many children? Consult your physician, your common sense, and your conscience.
Spirit of The Press
Manliness Under Race Prejudice
Rev. A. L. Scott in Southwestern Christian Advocate.
The first duty of the genuine man, to my mind, is not to whine, but to ACT. One subtle harm that prejudice may do is to create a chronic sense of wrong which gives rise to an exaggerated, morbid sensitiveness. The victim of prejudice, if he be a weakling, is too apt to ascribe every inconvenience and every failure to that source; to become thin-skinned and defiant; to lose his clear, unbiased judgment; to fall a victim to the mania of persecution. He minimizes the abundant good will that surrounds him on all hands; he becomes a sorrowhead, plagued with suspicious harborings and complaints, whose injured vanity and smarting wounds obstruct his usefulness by crowding out every other consideration.
To brood over one's wrongs is to fall into one of the worst mental diseases, a disease which does move than simply put an ashen pall over God's fair sky, but harms us most by making us pity ourselves, and robs us of two of the greatest things in the world, namely, the capacity to love mankird and the joy of service. Let us not permit the consciousness of prejudice to blur our sight and envenom our hearts; let us fight with ourselves to preserve our moral balance, our sense of proportion, our objective, unbiased judgment, our wholesome instincts of fellowship. Do not allow the little cloud, on the sunlit horizon to be magnified by the jaundied eyes of fear and sensitiveness until to the morbid fancy it overcasts the sky, and elipses the sunlight.
Readers of the Journal and Guide are invited to express their views upon public questions in this column. Letters should be addressed to the publisher, with 250 words. The publishers do not assume responsibility for the views herein expressed.
Girls of Today
In your paper of May 22, there appeared a letter on "The Girls of Today," in which the writer takes us back to times long passed. To take the girl of yesterday and compare her with the girl of today is not fair to either. I would like to know if the girls of today are not what the men want, if not why don't the men leave them alone, and you would see how quick a change would take place.
Moreover, can a girl find a clean honest young man any quicker than a man can find a like girl? And the mothers of today. What is wrong with them? God saw to it that they were right yesterday, today and days to come. Men, don't crush these mothers of ours. The writer said that few mothers of today have the time to sit down and instruct their children. He is right, for too often they are out at work trying to keep the home together.
We cannot measure morals by one's dress. Didn't women of years ago use tobacco. They did. And if they must use it today, let us take away the cuff and give them the cigarette. The writer stated that there are more girl mothers of today than of yesterday. If so, I would like to know where are the fathers and brothers in this drama. Show a fallen woman who was not aided in her fall by a man and show a miracle. If our girls are not right, whose fault is it? They cannot rise higher morally than our men will allow them to. Let the men set a standard on character and women will measure up to it. Most girls dream of the day when they will be beloved wives and mothers. If one should have the faith that you are her choice and should trust you, don't break her heart and cause her to shed tears of shame. Remember, it is the desire of the feminine heart to please whom she loves. Believe it or not, when you gain her love and confidence, and then betray it, she is a different girl.
Give us brave men. Men who will not broadcast to the world that the colored girl is morally wrong. Her fight is hard as it is. Look about you and see what she must fight to preserve her honor. May God grant the day to come when our men will cease to attempt to hide their shortcomings behind our women, but will look the world in the face and let it know that Negro men are going to defend, protect and honor Negro women; men who look the world in the face and say, teach me that sixty-seconds make a minute; one hundred cents make a dollar and sixteen ounces make a pound. Help me to so live that I can lie down at night and sleep, not grant. Grant that I can earn my meal ticket on the level, and in earning it that I may measure my acts by the golden rule. Deafen my ear to the tingle of the dirty dollar and the rustle of unholy petticans. Blind mine eyes to the faults of my fellows, and open mine eyes to my own shortcomings. Guide my footsteps so that each evening at the dinner table, when I look at my wife who has been a blessing to me I shall have nothing to conceal. Keep me young enough to laugh with little tots, and sympathetic enough to be considerate of old age. Then when comes the day of lowered shades and soft footsteps and the smell of tuberoses, all can say with the truth ringing clear, he was an honorable man.
GEORGE CLARK
Norfolk, Va
Who Are The Debtors?
By R. A. ADAMS
Addressing a class of graduates a speaker said, "Soon you are to be graduated and leave your alma mater; soon you are to face the world in which you are to make your way; you have done well; you have merited the honors soon to be conferred upon you; but, as you go out, I admonish you not to go with the false idea that the world owes you something because you have graduated; for the truth is, you are the debtors."
All who can reason will agree as to the soundness of this philosophy and will urge graduates to accept it as 100% sound, for nothing could be frather from the truth than that graduates represent the creditor class rather than the debtor class, and the world must bow down to them and say, "These are the gods who brought us out of the land of Egypt and the house of bondage."
Saturday, June 12, 1926
MONARCH OF ALL HE SURVEYS
THE GRADUATE
Have We A New Dred Scott Decision? By KELLY MILLEP
Some time ago when the Supreme Court decided that persons of the Mongolian race were not naturalizable, I characterized the action as a new Dred Scott Decision. This decision set up a sharp discrimination between persons based purely on race and blood. This doctrine was
sons of the almon-golden race were not naturalizable, I characterized the action as a new Died Scott Decision. This decision set up a sharp discrimination between persons based purely on race and blood. This doctrine was wholly alien to American law previous to the judgment in the case of the Missouri Negro whose name the Supreme Court has immortalized.
The recent decision of the Supreme Court is in no sense parallel to the Dred Scott Decision. In fact the decision involves no racial features as a purely judicial action. The Negro feature of the case is only incidental. The legality of the covenants in question, as attorney Marshall argued before the Supreme Court, might as well have included Catholics and Presbyterians as well as Negroes, so far as the legal aspect of the covenant was concerned. It is true that the Negro is the intended victim of the restricted covenants. It is also true that the racial inference of the decision militates against him. The segregation ordinances based frankly on the grounds of race have been declared unconstitutional. Neither state nor city
Yes, the graduates are the debtors. The world owes them nothing because they had sense enough to stick to their work and cultivate their own minds. They are the debtors and the world is the creditor.
Graduates are debtors to their parents whose sacrifices and sufferings made their accomplishments possible; to the taxpayers whose hard-earned money supports and sustains our great educational institutions; to teachers who patiently toil in their efforts to inspire the desire for knowledge and to direct its methods of acquirement. And whether they believe it or not, to all of these contributing agencies graduates owe a debt which they never can renay.
A young man in straightened circumstances secured a loan from a friend of his father, and when he tendered the amount in payment, this friend said, "I do not need it, so I have decided to use it as an investment in humanity; you keep it until you find an individual in the same condition you were when you came to me, then you will deliver the amount, with interest, to him, with the instructions to do as I am directing you, and thus this money will be a perpetual blessing.
So every graduate is required to discharge his indebtedness by helping others as he himself has been helped.
Dr. Miller sees nothing in the Supreme Court decision disclaiming jurisdiction in the Haven Curtis-Corrigan property covenant to parallel the Dred Scott Decision. "In fact, the decision involves no racial features as a purely judicial action," declares Dr. Miller. He states that there was nothing in question before the high court except the legality of the covenants and the Negro feature of the case was only incidental.
There are still other approaches of attack on these restrictive covenants, Dean Miller observes, and asserts that the recent decision will constitute a defeat to the race only if Negros accept it supremely and fail to renew the fight.
can legally restrict the use of property on racial grounds. We may naturally expect that the several communities will experiment with all variety of devises to accomplish segregation without violating the Supreme Court decision. The duel will be a continuous one as long as the white race holds its present sentiment. Fresh contrivances will be continuously brought forth which the race will continuously combat. The whites have won the first battle. The covenants have not been declared unconstitutional, and therefore will stand until some more effective effort has been made to upset them. The attorneys in the first instance deemed it wise to test these covenants on the ground of race discrimination, and have lost. It might be well that this expedient should have been resorted to in the first instance. The ground has been cleared. The future fight must be based upon other considerations. The Supreme Court did not close the door of hope. The way is still open to attack these covenants on the ground of restrictive use of property without reference to the narrow issue of race. It might be well if the N. A. A. C. P. would undertake to foster a test case in which neither the Negro nor the Negro issue should figure at all. It is very risky to hazard favorable or affirmative action either by Congress or by the courts on the race issue in face of strong countervailing public sentiment. The Negro must judiciously tie up his fortune with that of the general welfare. Some time ago, I cautioned the race not to feel too jubilant over the Supreme Court decisions negativizing residential segregation by state or municipality. This was secured at a time when public policy was dictated by war emergencies. It can not, I advised, be taken as representative of the normal attitude of the American mind, nor serve as a gague of future expectation.
In the meantime the race should not fail to commend the courage and determination of
the colored men and women who jeopardized their own selfish interests to test the validity of these restrictive covenants. A number of our high-minded colored citizens deliberately purchased property in the covenerated block perdling the trial to test the validity of the restrictions. They risked a clouded title to their own property in order that racial tight of residence might be legally tested and determined. Nor is the credit less to be accorded because the case has failed. James A. Cobb who largely through his own initiative and enterprise pushed the case to the Supreme Court deserves a special vote of racial thanks. He used his best intelligence, and judgment, and secured the best advice and consultation which were locally and nationally available. They brought the case to the Supreme Court on the issue which in their judgment was the best calculated to win. The court took a different view. The same thing happens in as many cases as not where the ablest counsel are involved. No one can forfeit how any judge is going to decide any case. Every judicial decision disappoints as many people as it gratifies.
Very little headway can be made against these exactions of race prejudice until we can precipitate public opinion in our behalf. It has been suggested that the race through use of the franchise have laws enacted in the several states for bidding segregation on account of race. This would indeed be the most effective way of accomplishing the desired result, if it were only feasible. There is no possible hope of effecting such action in the Southern border states. It is exceedingly doubtful if such action could be secured in any state with a considerable city element. It is at present unthinkable to essay such legislation on a national scale. Congress could hardly be induced to enact such legislation. The Negro vote is not sufficiently numerous nor has it the requisite discipline and direction to focus upon such definite proposition. The question could not be made a party issue. For the issue of residential segregation has no partisan feature. The feeling is as strong with Republicans as with Democrats. The issue is as keen in Detroit as in New Orleans. The only reasonable hopes lies in the courts. I will still persist in the belief that it is in the Supreme Court of the United States, notwithstanding recent discouragement. The policy and practice of segregation is nation-wide. The relief, if relief may be hoped for, must be through a remedy as broad as the evil.
Following the adoption by the Prince of Wales of the long cigarette holder, London dealers have had their stocks of such smokers' articles exhausted.