Richmond Planet
Saturday, June 20, 1925
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
SEWERS' DEATH TOLL IS HEAVY
Three More Lives are Snuffed Out.
White and Colored Men Take Desperate Chances.--Gas masks Said to be Useless
MAY 17, 1923
VOLUME, XLII, NO. 32
SEWET
TO
Three
Sn
White and
Desperat
masks
Isaac Johnson, who resides at 106 Wood Street, Chelsea Hill, adjacent to the Bowling Green Road, was as phylaxed and killed instantly, while working in a sewer under the Marshall Street viaduct in the vicinity of the city jail. Sam Thomas, 1302 St. James Street, hastened to his assistance, oblivious of the cause that had snuffed out the life of his companion. It was a veritable death-trap and he too succumbed to the deadly gas. Eugene Norris, of 2402 Newborn Street was also a victim in a similar attempt. J H. Newsome, white and Jack Thomas, white, daringly undertook the task of rescuing the three men.
TWO MORE MEN EXHAUSTED
They succeeded in bringing the bodies to the surface, but were in turn exhausted and they were rushed to the Memorial Hospital, where after much effort, they were permitted to return to their homes. The manhole was thought to be absolutely safe, it not being connected with any other sewer. Johnson had gone down into the sewer and was returning, having nearly reached the top, when he fell backward into the sewer. His companions thought that he had lost his footing and went to rescue him, not thinking that sewer gas was the cause of his toppling to the darkness below.
FIVE DEATHS IN THREE WEEKS
The men, who went to his aid carried a long rope. They could give no warning and they died without a struggle. The white men carried gas masks, but they claimed that they were of little use. The men were employed by the Kelly Construction Company, which concern has the contract from the city. This makes five deaths within three weeks as a result of this sewer and its construction. The other two were eight year old colored boys.
DR. CARRIE SUTTON BROOKS ILL
MONTCLAIR, N. J. June 16—Mr and Mrs. Samuel Sutton of San Antonio, Texas are at the bedside of their daughter, Dr. Carrie Sutton Brooks of 54 Geenwood Avenue Dr. Brooks has been extremely ill. She is in the Community Hospital and every possible thing done for her. Her brother John is expected Tuesday from San Antonio.
REV. EVANS PAYNE, D. D., CELEBRATES 45TH ANNIVERSARY--GREAT OUT-POURING OF PEOPLE--MANY CONGRATULATIONS.
1.
Anniversary services of the forty-five years' pastorate of the Rev. Evans Payne. D. D. and of the seventy-third anniversary of the historic Fourth Baptist Church closed Monday night, June 15th, after an elaborate program lasting eight days. Mr. George W. Gilliam, Jr., clerk of the church, in sketching the life of Dr. Payne, says:
"The subject of this sketch was born of slave parents. William and Betsy Payne, about 1849. As soon as he was large enough he was put to work on the farm where he labored until he came to Richmond, Virginia, April 5. 1865. Remaining here for a while he worked at whatever he could find to do, such as carpenter, helper in a blacksmith shop and cooper in a warehouse. He married Miss Sarah Walker of Buckingham County, Virginia, and as a result of this union, he was blessed with two children, Felisco and Virginia V. Payne. He also adopted two of his nieces, Rosa B. and Lillie B. Jackson.
"Rev. Mr. Payne professed religion 'n 1866 and was a candidate for memburship in the Doverme Baptist Church of Goochland, Virginia. Circumstances over which he had no control caused him to be absent from the above named church at the times of baptizing; so that two years elapsed before he could be baptized. Yet he remained under the supervision of the elders of the church. When he settled in Richmond he petitioned the Second Baptist Church for membership. After he was examined by the deacons and the church, he was baptized by the late Reverend William Troy, September 12, 1868. The church soon granted him a license to preach; he was gifted in song, prayer and exhortation and worked hard in preparation for the work that was before him. (To be continued)
Alice Russell, Soprano Charms Ashland Audience
Miss Alice Russell, dramatic soprano of Montclair, N. J. sang before a packed house in Ashland Monday night. Her program gave a wide range for her wonderful voice and the audience was well pleased. This was her second appearance here and the richness and melody of her voice have earned a permanent welcome.
Williams Lodge of Elks is erecting a handsome porch at its home, 4th and Clay Streets. Jones and Isham Russell is the architect. Capital City Lodge has purchased much property adjoining its present site and contem plates making expensive improvements in the near future.
[Picture of a man seated in an ornate chair, wearing a suit and tie, with a mustache.]
Personals and Briefs
An Elk drinks and a car uses gasoline. One needs more attention than the other and that is why W. T. Gray opened up a place of business to look after both the Elk and the car. Prompt and satisfactory service at a price that you can pay. 8 W. Leigh Street is the place.
Five colored dentists successfully passed the Board of Dental Examiners. Among the number was Dr. James A. Chiles. He will locate here
Rev Dr. T. J. King, who has been
ANDERSON—DAVENPORT.
Mr. and Mrs. Jac@ Davenport wish to announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Emma, to Mr. Josephh McKinley Anderson which will take place Monday, the 29th of June at 9 P. M. at their residence, 1804 Jay Street.
Willys Knight seven passenger car for sale. Real leather cushions good as new. All excellent condition. $350.00. Engine good as new. Phone Boulevard 2510 J.
CHARGED WITH MURDER OF HER HUSBAND.
Mrs. Mamie Ellis, of 513 North Seventh Street was arrested last Tuesday night upon the death of her husband, John H. Ellis, who died as a result of a blow from an axe, said to have been struck by her. She was previously under a charge of felonious assault, which has now been changed to that of murder.
E, D. D., C
GREAT O
NY CONGR
s Are Jubila
EVANS PAYNE, D. D.,
of the Fourth Baptist Church.
indisposed is much improved. The plans for the new Fifth Street Baptist Church are now in the hands of contractors.
The Sixth Mt. Zion Baptist Church edifice is nearing completion. They have practically a new church there now, although the expense of the same has exceeded expectations. It will be one of the largest and most commodious edifices owned by colored people in this city.
Miss Mary G. Cogbill, of 114 East 18th Street, was very agreeably surprised on last Monday night by a number of her friends. It was her birthday.
Colored Man Shot in King William Co.
Arm Broken First, Heart Pierced Afterwards.
State Prohibition Officer Alleges Fear of His Own Life----The Colored Man's Family Mourning.
M. B.
REV. DR. EVANS PAYNE Characteristic Pose Influential Divine
Mrs. B. K. Barbee, of Durham, N. C. is visiting in the city the guest of her mother, Mrs. L. G. King
Funeral Director A. H. Henderson, of Elizabeth, N. J. was called the city this week on account of the death of his brother, Mr. Nathaniel Henderson.
Important Notice
If you are in the market for a car don't buy until you see PAUL ENNEMAS. He will have you money. Dr. Drew is a card phone: MADISON 5559 or Blyd. 8022.
FULTON NOTES
(Thomas Page, Agent)
Miss Mamie Nelson and Miss Elaine Lightner received their diplomas at Armstrong High School commencement on the 12th inst.
The Hellotrope Sewing Circle of Fulton held its closing exercises on the fifth day. The work done by the students was beautiful under the guidance of their teacher, Mrs. Rebecca Fleming. Supper was served after a splendid program. Dr. O. B. Sims and C. A. Cobbs were present.
PRICE, FIVE CENTS
Shot
am Co.
art Pierced
Alleges Fear
Colored
rning.
W. P. Claiborne, of King William county, an unarmed colored man was shot twice and killed by State Prohibition officer, R. S. Durrette. Durrette's only excuse was that Claiborne tried to wrest his reviver from him. He fired once, breaking the colored man's arm and then again, shooting him through the heart.
The colored man beckoned to him and when he got near enough to see mash on his overalls, he arrested him and he alleges that the struggle followed. A still was found in the neighborhood. There is much indignation among the people over the killing, which is considered to have been unnecessary.
RICHMOND EDUCATOR WILL
TOUR EUROPE THREE MONTHS
Mr. Robert P. Daniel, of the faculty of the Virginia University and a resident of this city will sail for Europe June 25th on the S. S. Belgeland, out of New York. Mr. Daniel is one of a party of about fifty students on a pilgrimage of friendship to Europe, under the auspices of the Fellowship of Youth for Peace, with the purpose of furthering the political and spiritual federation of the world.
At a formal meeting during the Kings Mountain Student Y. M. C. A Conference held recently, Mr Daniel and Mr. William C Craven were commissioned to represent the men of the King's Mountain Area of the W. M. C. A Field Council on this pilgrimage
Womans Baptist Convention
All persons attending the Woman's Baptist State Educational and Missionary Convention of Virginia, June 24-27, 1925, in Danville, Va. should send their names at once to Dr. W. T. Hall 632 High Street. Board and lodging will be $1.50 per day.
Mrs. M. Waller Richardson, Corresponding Secretary, 2017 Rose St., Lynchburg, Va.
PEEK-A-BOO,
HERE I AM
AGAIN!
CHINESE
DISORDERS
NEWS READING PUBLIC
15,150 lbs.
Hervieu - made a large box ever sold in Chester. This 20 board of pure Chester Whites weighed 121.5 lbs. on average of 40 pounds each.
The animal we fed by B. Vorg. was 6. O. and last 16 months old when placed on the market.
Chester - made a large box ever sold in Chester. This 20 board of pure Chester Whites weighed 121.5 lbs. on average of 40 pounds each.
The animal we fed by B. Vorg. was 6. O. and last 16 months old when placed on the market.
FOLKS IN OUR TOWN
Why Men Go Nutty
By Edward McCullough
AUTOGRAPHER
WELL TO DAY WE GET 5 MORE NUTS IN TH' ASYLUM = ER-R-FER TH' LOVA POTCHEESE WHAT'S THIS?
WHY WHAT'S TH' TROUBLE JENNIE?
MY HUSBAND AN' I ARE SEPARATED BO-HOO-
-HE GIVES YOU ANYTHIN' YOU WANT? THEN WHAT TH' HARRY ARE YER LEAVIN' HIM?
SEPARATED ALREADY AN' MARRIED ONLY A WEEK? AIN'T HE GOOD TO YOU?
YES'S-HE GIVES ME ANYTHIN I WANT?
-HE DOESN'T LOVE ME ANYMORE
No?
NO! HE WON'T LET ME GIT ON HIS LAP WHILE HE'S SHAVIN'-
CAN YOU FIGURE THEM OUT?
Adopts Kitten
2
When "Mimi," a resident of the New Orleans zoo, lost her entire family of monkey babies she grieved and almost starved herself to death. Then she adopted a lone kitten, that had been playing about the zoo. She keeps the kitten in her arms, washes it, pets it, feeds it, and makes a real fight when the keeper makes an attempt to take it from her.
CLE ALGENE RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY TONIGHT?
By A. B. CHAPIN
DRAT THAT BOY!
I WONDER WHERE HE IS?
HERE IS SUPPER TIME
AND HE ISN'T HOME
I SPOUSE HE'S CHASING AROUND
SOMEWHERE WITH THAT
HENRY-WHAT'S-HIS-NAME!
HE'S ALWAYS DISOBEYING ME-
LIKE AS NOT, HE'S SNEAKED
OFF FISHING
I'll WARM HIM GOOD WHEN
I LAY HANDS ON HIM
HE NEVER DOES MIND ME!
MAYBE HE'S GONE SWIMMING
HE KNOWS I PRET SOMETHING-
TERRIBLE WHEN HE GOES
INTO THAT, TREACH ROUSINVER!
I AM AWFULLY WORRIED
NOT WAIT 'TIL I CATCH HIM
OH DEAR — OH DEAR —!!
WHY DOES HE AGGRAVATE
ME SO?
WHY CAN'T HE STAY HOME
ONCE IN A WHILE?
I SIMPLY CAN'T TRUST
HIM OUT OF MY SIGHT!
HORNSBY SOCKS HOMEIR
WHILE CARDS WIN!
BROOK HANDS RELEASE THE
SENATORS TO VICTORY
WHILE THE ATHLETICS
ARE POINTERED ... RAKE
GOTS TIGHTER, AS WHITE RX
PUT ON SPURT ...
GIANTS LOSE AND BROOKLYN
STEPS ALL LITTLE CLOSER TO
THE HEAD THROUGH ITS
BABE RUTH TRYING HARD
TO GET BACK HIS BATTING
EYE ...
Started It All
A. E. H.
FOUR
THE YOUNG
Published Every Saturday by John Mitchell, Jr.
At 811 North Fourth Street, Richmond, Va.
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WE HAVE RECEIVED a copy of the extension of remarks of Hon. Walter F. Lineberger of California in the House of Representatives. February 18. 1925 under the caption "Milestones in the War Against the Narcotic Peril." We are much interested in his deductions and practical conclusion, when he quotes from a resolution adopted at the annual convention in December of the Association of Life Insurance Presidents, which contained the following preamble:
"Recognizing the serious and growing menace of narcotic drug addiction to the integrity of society and the public health; and believing that the remedy is thru education rather than penal or punitive laws, etc."
This applies with equal force to prohibition of intoxicating liquors.. It cannot be eliminated by man-made laws. The work must be done in the home and begin with the babe in the cradle. This will accomplish the practical elimination of the evil and raise up a constituency that will eventually stamp out both evils. The appropriating of large sums of money only corrupts the morals of the electorate and grievously fails to accomplish the basic purpose of the movement.
When will common sense be enthroned and when will reason have its sway? We fear that Mr. Lineberger is appealing to deaf ears. This is an age of detercreation, where men with prejudices and with little minds endeavor to disregard the sign-boards of the ages and look no further than their front gate or the limited bounds of their own neighborhood. Fundamental principles are not only disregarded, but they are forgotten. Abusing white people will not get us anywhere. Praising some of them will help us a long way up the road. SOME PEOPLE are unfitted and unsuited for some jobs and they seem never to find it out.
U DRIVE TAXI-CO.
U DRIVE TAXI-CO.
SEDANS, 12d. per mile. You know the embarrassment incident to borrowing other people's cars and the annoyance in asking favors of those, who own cars. When you rent a car and drive it yourself, the up-keep charges, which usually are much more than the purchase or cost price of a car ceases. The U.Drive Taxi Company shoulders the expense. You'll save money by the process. The rates quoted are close to the actual cost of a car should you own one yourself.
First Street Auto Supply is the
place to serve you for automobile
accesses, gas and oil. If you do not
own a car, here's your opportunity.
If you do own a car here is the place
to secure supplies for it. Polite attent
tion. Supplies furnished at the
most reasonable prices.
U-DRIVE TAXI COMPANY,
403 North First Street.
FIRST STREET AUTO SUPPLY,
403 North First Street.
AN ANNOUNCEMENT.
The Goodwill Baptist Church, 410
N. Monroe street is a new unit to
the Baptist Church, with a very broad
program. Rev. W. E. Bail. pastor
invites the public and his many
friends to worship Sunday, June
14, 11:30 A. M. and 8:30 P. M.
Communion. First Sundays, 8 P. M.
Sunday School. 3:30 P. M. Special
music. All are invited.
REV. W. B. BALL. Pastor.
F. BALL. Clerk.
MONTCLAIR NOTES.
Mr. George Maddox of William St. continues quite ill
ETERNAL JUSTICE.
ETERNAL JUSTICE.
(By Charles Mackay)
The man is thought a knave or fool,
Or bigo plotting crime,
Who, for the advancement of his race,
Is wiser than his time.
For him the hemlock shall distill,
For him the axe be bared.
For him, the gibbet shall be built;
For him the stake prepared.
Him shall the scorn and wrath of men
Pursue with deadly aim;
And malice, envy, spite and lies,
Shall desecrate his name.
But truth shall conquer at the last,
For round and round we run,
And ever the right comes uppermost
And ever is justice done.
Pace through thy cell,
Cheerily to and fro;
Trust to the impulse of
And let the poison be
They may shatter to ear
That holds a light c
But they cannot quench
By any such deadly
They cannot blot thy s
From the memory o
By all the poison ever r
Since time its course
Today, abhorred; tome
So round and round
And ever the truth com
And ever is justice
Plod in thy cave, gray
Be wiser than thy p
Augment the range of
And trust to coming
They may call thee w
And load thee with
Thou wert born five hui
For the comfort of t
But not too soon for hu
Time hath reward in
And the demons of our
The saints that we a
The blind can see, the
So round and round
And ever the wrong is
And ever is justice
Keep, Galileo, to thy t
And nerve thy soul
They may gloat over th
they wring
From the pangs of f
They may veil their eye
The sun's meridian
The heel of a priest ma
And a tyrant work h
But never a truth has b
They may curse it a
Pervert and betray, or
Its teachers for a t
But the sunshine, aye,
As round and round
And the truth shall ever
And justice shall be
Pace through thy cell, old Socrates,
Cheerily to and fro;
Trust to the impulse of thy soul
And let the poison flow.
They may shatter to earth the lamp of clay
That holds a light divine,
But they cannot quench the power of thou;
By any such deadly wine.
They cannot blot thy spoken words
From the memory of man,
By all the poison ever was brewed
Since time its course began.
Today, abhorred; tomorrow adored,
So round and round we run,
And ever the truth comes uppermost,
And ever is justice done.
Plod in thy cave, gray Anchorite;
Be wiser than thy peers;
Augment the range of human power,
And trust to coming years.
They may call thee wizard and monk acco
And load thee with dispraise;
Thou wert born five hundred years too soon
For the comfort of thy days.
But not too soon for human kind;
Time hath reward in store;
And the demons of our sires become
The saints that we adore.
The blind can see, the slave is lord;
So round and round we run,
And ever the wrong is proved to be wrong
And ever is justice done.
Keep, Galileo, to thy thought,
And nerve thy soul to bear;
They may gloat over the senseless words
they wring
From the pangs of thy despair.
They may veil their eyes, but they cannot l
The sun's meridian glow;
The heel of a priest may tread thee down,
And a tyrant work thee woe;
But never a truth has been destroyed:—
They may curse it and call it a crime;
Pervert and betray, or slander and slay
Its teachers for a time;
But the sunshine, aye, shall light the sky,
As round and round we run;
And the truth shall ever come uppermost,
And justice shall be done.
Pace through thy cell, old Socrates,
Cheerily to and fro;
Trust to the impulse of thy soul
And let the poison flow.
They may shatter to earth the lamp of clay
That holds a light divine,
But they cannot quench the power of thought
By any such deadly wine.
They cannot blot thy spoken words
From the memory of man,
By all the poison ever was brewed
Since time its course began.
Today, abhorred; tomorrow adored,
So round and round we run,
And ever the truth comes uppermost,
And ever is justice done.
Be wiser than thy peers;
Augment the range of human power,
And trust to coming years.
They may call the wizard and monk accursed,
And load thee with dispraise;
Thou wert born five hundred years too soon
For the comfort of thy days.
But not too soon for human kind;
Time hath reward in store;
And the demons of our sires become
The saints that we adore.
The blind can see, the slave is lord;
So round and round we run,
And ever the wrong is proved to be wrong,
And ever is justice done.
Keep, Galileo, to thy thought,
And nerve thy soul to bear;
They may gloat over the senseless words
they wring
From the pangs of thy despair.
They may veil their eyes, but they cannot hide
The sun's meridian glow;
The heel of a priest may tread thee down,
And a tyrant work thee woe;
But never a truth has been destroyed:—
They may curse it and call it a crime;
Pervert and betray, or slander and slay
Its teachers for a time;
But the sunshine, aye, shall light the sky,
As round and round we run;
And the truth shall ever come uppermost,
And justice shall be done.
And live there now such men as these—
With thoughts like the great of old?
Many have died in their misery,
And left their thought untold.
And many live, and are ranked as mad,
And placed in the cold world's ban,
For sending their bright far-seeing souls
Three centuries in the van;
They toil in penury and grief,
Unknown, if not maligned;
Forlorn, forlorn, bearing the scorn
Of the meanest of mankind;
But yet the world goes round and round
And the genial seasons run,
And ever the truth comes uppermost,
And ever is justice done.
Shave Without a Razor
Magic Shaving Powder will give you a clean, healthy shave without using a razor. It will also remove razor bumps and pimples from your face.
Get it from your druggst or send us 30 cents in stamps for a half pound can by mail, postpaid, enough for 15 shaves.
SHAVING POWDER COMPANY...
Savannah, Georg'a.
EVERY HOME BUYNS AND USES
Goods like we sell, Big Profits.
Pine Repeaters, Quick, easy sellers.
Write for our big offer quick. SANO
MFG. COMPANY, 4508 Central Ave.
Cleveland, Ohio.
AGENTS—YOU CAN NOW SECURE
the Famous Aztec Indian Medicine
on the trust plan. Write today for
our wonderful offer. Be quick before
others get ahead of you. WASH.
BURN LYLE DRUG COMPANY.
Memphis, Tenn.
Subscribe to The Richmond Planet.
Only $2 per year in advance
---
old Socrates,
thy soul
low.
with the lamp of clay
divine,
the power of thought
wine.
looken words
man,
was brewed
began.
orrow adored,
we run,
tes uppermost,
done.
Anchorite;
mers;
human power,
years.
zard and monk accursed,
dispraise;
undred years too soon
dy days.
man kind;
store;
sires become
dore.
lave is lord;
we run,
proved to be wrong,
done.
ought,
to bear;
e senseless words
thy despair.
s, but they cannot hide
glow;
y tread thee down,
hee woe;
seen destroyed:—
and call it a crime;
islander and slay
ne;
shall light the sky,
we run;
or come uppermost,
done.
WARNING TO
Don't take the wrong package! When you ask for Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations, be sure you get them. Don't let the clerk hand you the wrong package. Hundreds of people have been deceived, just because they failed to say Dr. FRED Palmer's. The original Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations proven their merit, and you buy them you know you are getting the best Insight Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations, and take no substitute. For sale by druggists carrying preparations demanded by race people. Free samples will be sent if you write Dr. Fred Palmer's Laboratories, Dept. W-1, Atlanta, Ga., and enclose 4c for postage—(Adv.)
Reasonable rates and prompt service is always guaranteed at W. T. Gray's popular automobile station. A car opped suddenly last Wednesday on Leigh Street, in the middle of the street, almost at the door of this we'll known station. No exact cause could be assigned for this's. The car knew the place if the chauffeur did not. 8 W. Leigh Street, this city.
THE RICHMOND PLANET RICHMOND VIRGINIA
RACE PEOPLE
---
COLORFUL NEWS "MOVIES"
With a high temperature and rapid pulse, Howard University wearily lies upon a bed of pain and sickness. Specialists have been called in and Howard alumni have proffered their curatives, but the big school which has so long been a heaven of knowledge for Negro youth, is the victim of an epidemic of dissension and unrest, the final effects of which may leave wounds for time and tolerance to heal. The student strike which seems to have been won by the protestants has apparently innoculated other Howard elements with a feeling of restiveness, and internal and external groups, perhaps sincere and perhaps otherwise, have filled the university organization with educational antidotes—mostly painful ones.
We have no arguments to advance which involve the Howard organization in detail. We do not know who ought to be at Howard, or what man, woman or child should be hired or fired in order to return Howard to the educational vigor which the University at one time enjoyed. However, there are those essential facts concerning Howard, which we do know. (1) Howard was created primarily for the higher education of Negro youth, and as such its past history is enviable in the annuals of Negro education; (2) Howard is a quasi-public institution in that funds from the public treasury are appropriated yearly by the People's representatives in Congress for the maintenance of the school; and (3) Howard is an eyesore to many members of Congress, who believe that higher education for the Negro should by no means be fostered and preserved.
It follows that the dissension and strife now present on Howard hilltop are spectacles happily observed by "I told you so" enemies of Howard, who may during the coming year have a say in the dispensation of public funds. The days of President Wilbur Thirkield should be hastily recalled as exemplary days at Howard, when peace, harmony and unity made Howard what it was yesterday. The education of Negro Youth should be the paramount item for consideration by Howard's well wishers, and the cooperation of the public should be courted rather than jeopardized by all who would see Howard rise to the
HOWARD IS ILL.
HOWARD IS ILL.
With a high temperature and Howard University wearily lies of pain and sickness. Specialist called in and Howard alumni have their curatives, but the big school so long been a heaven of knowledge, gro youth, is the victim of an dissension and unrest, the final effort may leave wounds for time and heal. The student strike which have been won by the protestantently innoculated other Howard of a feeling of restiveness, and internal groups, perhaps sincere otherwise, have filled the university with educational antidotes—ful ones.
We have no arguments to act involve the Howard organization. We do not know who ought to be or what man, woman or child should or fired in order to return How educational vigor which the University enjoyed. However, there essential facts concerning Howard do know. (1) Howard was created for the higher education of Negro as such its past history is envisions of Negro education; (2) quasi-public institution in that fur public treasury are appropriated by People's representatives in Congress maintenance of the school; and (3) is an eyesore to many members who believe that higher education gro should by no means be fostered.
It follows that the dissension and present on Howard hilltop are spilly observed by "I told you so Howard, who may during the have a say in the dispensation of The days of President Wilbur should be hastily recalled as exe at Howard, when peace harmon made Howard what it was yesteryducation of Negro Youth should amount item for consideration be well wishers, and the cooperation lie should be courted rather than by all who would see Howard.
The Weather
No More Guessing
AUTOCASTER
H. H. Clayton of Canton, Mass., for years at Blue Hill Observatory, has a new and scientific method for predicting weather according to variations in the sun's heat. He has never failed in tests at Canton.
EDW. STEWART
203 S. SECOND STREET
DEALER IN
FANCY GROCERIES. FRESH
MEATS. VEGETABLES,
FISH AND OYSTERS.
Richmond, Va. PHONE MAD. 1637
"By "THE CAMERAMAN."
career. Conserva- tion, with the big idea public welfare as a constructios which may would quickly be pre- nrest and agitation reversed by making life and by making education.
going on through the heroic endeavor. Negro press. The facts must be fa- cial all people must realize that American I are thinking in terms of modernis- heated modernism, but safe sane mo- dealing with the naked truth and seeing as the rest of the modern world. white brown and red see it. The transition commended by all honest people, who reciprocally call a spade a spade and tinue attempting to deluge the Negro veneered surface of American ever American hopes.
rapid pulse, upon a bed has been proffered which has led for Negro education of acts of which tolerance to heights of its longed-for career. Concitive and substantial thought, with the bible. Negro education and public welfare foundation for any reconstructions which be needed at Howard should quickly be scribed in the stead of unrest and agitation. The situation should be reversed by no molehills of personal strife and by no mountains of Negro education.
hights of its longed-for career. Conservative and substantial thought, with the big idea c. Negro education and public welfare as a foundation for any reconstructions which may be needed at Howard should quickly be prescribed in the stead of unrest and agitation. The situation should be reversed by making molehills of personal strife and by making mountains of Negro education.
The increasing power of influence of Negro press is nothing short of marvel and the alertness of Negro editors, with their editorial pages with a plain talk coining current events marks a new day of moulding of public opinion among the groves of America. No longer are new galleys filled with mere words. Quite contrary, they are laden with modern or built by an honest straightforward and of everyday affairs—affairs of vital importance to the hundreds of thousands of Negroers who yearn for the truth and are skilful of the propaganda so widely dispensed in years by a large percentage of whitepers and periodicals. The results of wide-awake attitude of the Negro press becoming more and more noticeable as assisters and their associates calmly absorb opinion of Negro editors.
The day of fooling all the Negroes a time has become Medieval, as thoughtful scribers of the Negro press become infiltrated by wages, employment, legislation, statistics, education, health and dozens of dried topics of everyday effect upon Negro in America. It is almost safe to assume the philosophy of reason which accompanies the effectiveness of Negro journalism stronger than that of racial group contenders of the colored people, who are working just how much of the real truths the latter are absorbing through the media printers' ink.
It follows then that the Negro press helping the Negro to outgrow the skilful thought which a great part of the white man has so long thrown about the former, are parallelism of opinion must ultimately emerge from the journalistic evolution which it
The increasing power of influence of the Negro press is nothing short of marvelous, and the alertness of Negro editors, who fill their editorial pages with a plain talk concerning current events marks a new day in the moulding of public opinion among the Negroes of America. No longer are newspaper galleries filled with mere words. Quite to the contrary, they are laden with modern opinion built by an honest straightforward analysis of everyday affairs—affairs of vital importance to the hundreds of thousands of Negro readers who yearn for the truth and are skeptical of the propaganda so widely dispensed in past years by a large percentage of the white papers and periodicals. The results of the wide-awake attitude of the Negro press are becoming more and more noticeable as readers and their associates calmly absorb the opinion of Negro editors.
and now comes Senator Royal S. Land, of New York and for a plea of that "sectional occupational and religiousferences of the Democratic Party" thrown upon the scrap pile of disuse. And the rose would have been as any other name, we think. Nevertheless Senator's hopes are encouraging, and are materialized, there'll be peace on and good will toward men.
Geography, creeds and skin tint wielded so much power through all that we wonder, at times if the new nation has so very much on the old, differences trickle through all the ones named by the good Senator, and if occupations and religions can mend triances and smoke the pipe of peace sincerity, then racial differences will go to the scrap heap with all the banefences named by Senator Copeland. The of course depicted by the Senator is a human one and it will be necessary, all, for him to secure the hearty coo of his confreres below the Mason and line, where the church south is alienated the church north; where history begins the Battle of Gettysburg; and where tensions frequently suffer from the interest of practices which challenge law, or Christianity.
There's virtue, though even in a hot there can be consummation of that hope good old preamble of the U. S. Con can be stamped into the minds of it claim the right to its inspiration and the fit of its protection.
The day of fooling all the Negroes all the time has become Medieval, as thoughtful sub-scribers of the Negro press become informed of wages, employment, legislation, history statistics, education, health and dozens of kindred topics of everyday effect upon Negro life in America. It is almost safe to assume that the philosophy of reason which accompanies the effectiveness of Negro journalism is stronger than that of racial group contemporaries of the colored people, who are wondering just how much of the real truths of life the latter are absorbing through the means of printers' ink.
It follows then that the Negro press is helping the Negro to outgrow the skein of thought which a great part of the white world has so long thrown about the former, and that parallelism of opinion must ultimately emerge from the journalistic evolution which is now
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going on through the heroic endeavors of the Negro press. The facts must be faced and all people must realize that American Negroes are thinking in terms of modernism—not heated modernism, but safe sane modernism dealing with the naked truth and seeing it just as the rest of the modern world. white, yellow brown and red see it. The transition is to be commended by all honest people, who should reciprocally call a spade a spade and discontinue attempting to deluge the Negro with a veneered surface of American events and American hopes.
REFRESHING HOPES
And now comes Senator Royal S. Copeland, of New York and for a plea doth say that "sectional occupational and religious differences of the Democratic Party" must be thrown upon the scrap pile of disuse. Eureka! And the rose would have been as sweet by any other name, we think. Nevertheless the Senator's hopes are encouraging; and if they are materialized, there'll be peace on earth and good will toward men.
Geography, creeds and skin tints have wielded so much power through all the ages that we wonder, at times if the new civilization has so very much on the old. Racial differences trickle through all the elements named by the good Senator and if sections-occupations and religions can mend their variances and smoke the pipe of peace in all sincerity, then racial differences will go along to the scrap heap with all the baneful differences named by Senator Copeland. The task of course depicted by the Senator is a superhuman one and it will be necessary, first of all, for him to secure the hearty cooperation of his confreres below the Mason and Dixon line, where the church south is alienated from the church north; where history begins with the Battle of Gettysburg; and where occupations frequently suffer from the intervention of practices which challenge law, order and Christianity.
There's virtue, though even in a hope; and there can be consummation of that hope if the good old preamble of the U. S. Constitution can be stamped into the minds of all who claim the right to its inspiration and the bene fit of its protection.
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FIVB
ee ee = 1 Sele ee ana ae ee real
| Tabloid Magazine |
ee
HINTS HILARITIES EAPPENINGS . HELYS
i This Week
\ Le f
2 aes AL i
By Arthur Brisbane
“SOMETHING WRONG,” GARY.
FLYING, DIVING, A NEW ERA.
FORD'S NEW PLAN.
RAIN, CORN, PRICE.
Judge Gary or eae is some-
‘thing wrong with business condi-
tions, and the something is LACK
OF CONFIDENCE “the abnormal,
unnecessary and TIMID, ill poised
mental attitude of managers, in-
cluding ourselves.”
—
“That’s as sound as a steel ingot.
‘Our troubles are mental. Put a
plank six inches wide on the
ground, and of a hundred people,
every one will walk the length of
it without fear of falling Put the
same plank fifty feet in the air,
and two in a hundred, perhaps,
will be able to walk it,’ Put your
plank up two hundred feet, and
fof one in a thousand will try to
cross it,
Yet, leaving out feur, it is as
easy to walk such a plank a thou-
sand feet up as it is flat on the
ground,
‘The height of our national pros
perity makes sowe citizens dizzy.
This is a new age, and the things
we do would have surprised not
only $f HYandfathers, but our-
396 a few yeaTs back, :
Young gentlemen studying | at
Annapolis ‘are told that hereafter
an oficer and a gentleman must
know how to fly.
"And out in the Pacifie Ocean,
down among the coral lanes, near
the Galapagos Islands, scientists,
with diving helmets on their heads,
their otherwise naked bodies well
oiled, are sitting under the water,
studying the fish that come, wide-
‘eyed to study the men.
For the first time in his several
funded thousand years of exist
en-- on this planet, man ean truly
‘ac the earth is his and the fal?
p ereo’. He goes up into
or ss
i > dose eS
me ee _
ae 2 ~\"
Nie Pes ns *
HA Lad “
ie Ss
be eae
ib eel xa
Peete ea
ene Oe
LS see er. a
President Coolidge, this time on a special train, as he arrived
in the northwest. He was received with open arms by great crowds
at St. Paul and Minneapolis. He addressed a crowd of 100,000 at
the Norse Celebration at St. Paul. In the picture, left to right; Sec’y
of State liogg, Mrs. Coolidge, the President, Senator Lenroot and
private rverett Sanders.
Mission of Mercy
' Oe
Se ERR,
oes
| ee oe 5
Lok ae
| ee
me. %
ne cae uel
nie
Ee -t g
a tae
Ye aN
Gar aad
ce oo a
* AS, “a
Aree —
fil, Geccneres)
Mrs. H. W. Wade, formerly of
‘New Orleans, is now in New York
from the Philippines to champion
‘@ million dollar drive for the leper
colony in the islands. Her hus-
band, Dre Wade, is acting chief
am
rapidly, who knows but men may
Suddenly find a way to live on this
earth without cutting each others’
throats in war.
President Coolidge, it fs said,
will cut twenty-five millions a
year from the cost of the United
States army—a good idea. Sol
diers marching over the ground in
future war from the air will be
about as useful as so many rabbits
‘han eagles, attack them,
The President's economy will
be twice as valuable if ‘he. will
arrange to spend the twenty-
millions cut from the army a the
building of more fiying machines,
Henry, Ford will use United
States ships, if he gets them, to
take cars ‘South and around Into
the Gulf of Mexico and bring fruit
and vegetables back to the north.
J"That: programme would be wel-
‘coined by millions. It would help
to salve one problem of distribu:
tion and develop the great produ-
cing regions of the South as. they
should be developed.
Messrs. Fall, Doheny and Sin-
clair have been re-indicted for con-
spicacy by @ Grand Jury in the
Distriet of Columbia, If you find
anybody ‘anxious to, bet that Mr.
Pall will 4, to jail for selling the
people's off land’ and secret
pooplent for the sale, TARE THE
Ber, We don't jail the really big
criminals in this country. Little
criminals, yes. It's a dangerous
country for them, if they're caught,
It has been raining in the corn
belt and that has cheered the farm-
ers. The corn crop suffered for
Tack of rain.
Immediately the price of corn:
fell more than 5 cents a bushel, De-’
cember corn dropping 98% to 98
cents. The weather does somes
thing to cheer up the farmer, and
then the grain speculators to cheer
him DOWN again.
‘At Yucaipa, California, all_mem-
bers of the First Methodist Church
witnessed the el of a Bible-read~
ing marathon,
Tt was a noble reading. all out
loud, every word ‘distinctly pro-
nounced. The pastor, the Rev. R.
D. Raley, stayed awake and read
‘or listened throughout the 69%
hours. x
More delierate reading, es-
pecially of Job and Isaiah, would
Pe‘preferable. But any Bible read-
ing is better than none.
In Thibet you can give a few cop-
pers to a pagan priest with his
prayee mill. You go your way
comforted, he grinds out 10,000
prayers for you on his little mill.
These pravers are believed to do
although verbal praying from
avt may be better,
=
‘ = y
[Kurocatrer}
John T. Scopes, professor of
biology at Dayton, Tenn. high
school, on trial there for violating
the “‘monkey-law” — or, changed
with teaching the theory of evolu-
tion. It is a test caze watched with
‘a great deal of interest throughout
‘the country.
He Is “IT”
THE RIGHMORD PLANET, REGHMOND, VIRGINIA
oem
9
Ca
ae
Uncle Johni SS)
He se fente
in the EAE show, ppt he
Ihe tye for a ticks: to Be
Fre weap ttn ‘slong with
ae rn
spite of his
e’s the salt
y fing!
He's
oe
porkery fe
Pim a King tp. the s
Se ree
y
enti sensed oe etal
class, there aint no statutes pro-
See fer cou ae mere
finds contentment in. whlabers
a eet eee conlan ba cok
Tae corhinat, By cieckal
(aa
§ Ee fa
ay” NERS
PDs da
Uh, : 3 =
“ag 0
RICH PEOPLE KIN TAKE—
CASTOR OIL WITH A GOLD
SPOON — BuT IT TASTES
JES' THE same /
Kea
QA
i Sorc /®
rae
We 4 ng
ed ee of eH
eset bos fa
ct Vy Fo (SS
latabasloti tl NN |
Cow Eats Bankroll .
2g \
' 3
eg
og ee
ok ae “
Joe Ps
‘gtr os
Ps
Ve
phd
/} (Avrocacren) ml
Johnny Shuing of Salisbury, N.
C., left his coat with a $200 bank-
roll hanging on a fence. While he
worked a cow ate the coat, John-
ny, just as hungry for money as
the cow, promptly shot the animal.
Then, scorning all rules of carving
he knifed his way towards the
money, but he couldn't find much
in the cud. Now the Treasury de-
partment is using a magnifying
glass trying to get a rebate for
Johnny.
“Monkey Law” Judge |
a & 5
s/t J
= {
a, (GrcasreR)y
Judge John T. Raulston of Rhea
County, Tenn., who is presiding 2t
Gey aE Be scones, chatoed
with pviclaeay the state law, in
teaching the theory of evolution in
Bites. SS oe actin
. Bryan lon and
eet nce tac octaie.
‘TlaNERVOUS
a I US LoS. Rath
Try Your Luck With This Deep One
You will ge: the most fun out of this puzz’e by making a speed
contest out of it. There isn't one hard word in it. Do you think
you can do it in 17 minutes? If you can, you are dog be:ter
than the arranger, Nr. W*‘liam Sberrit, thinks you can. He gives
you 20 minutes; and thinks you “re good if you can complete it,
in that time. -
Te Tf > hee Te Ma
tao | eee | si
Oe TED
& ms
se ee a cw
Mises ‘ga!
Tees Ce |
' | Soa a | er 2
5 eager? aS et tea” ae at
i eae Eee hee cen
tener Sara ce a | Eee
1 Re | oseseicy
io" ges a aan |
t Se ail fut. Lite
ii | ame > ef
a ea i
‘3 orp STEN eR
a | Se eeeaay |
Bhi te i vei
iD ees
k a =: a |
BEGIN HERE TODAY
‘9 “Nervous Wreck,” an eccen-
ung easterner, is driving Sally
n from her father's ranch t0
station when they run out, of
Hine, At the point of a gun the
ck: takes five gailona from a
cing ear.
hey are held captive at a ranch
bd by ‘Mr. Underwood, who was
the car which they held up. ‘They
aly ‘eseape from the raneh, run
to a camp of real bandits, are cap-
ed a stcond “time, then escape
tin,” Fleeing from the bandit
mp, they are suddenly confronted
‘Skerift Rob Wells, Wells, who 1g
tiy's lance, 1 at the head of 4
se searching for the “bandits”
D. held up. Underwood. Sally
‘Ug! off ner engagement with the
wort and. says she is going to
“tery the Wreck. ‘The Wreck, with
le upper hand, orders the sheriff
4 hig men to’ put his overturned
Fon its feet.
SOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
CHAPTER XXV
—Apd The Flivver Rolls
THE Wreck bossed the job. He
2 took an arrogant tone, particu:
larly toward the sheriff, and
iy was glad. She was glad be-
the Nonaing job gave the Wreck
nothing to do, and in its perform:
co he forgot ns embarrassment
it oft: things at least tempo-
‘e was terse and confident in his
sands, Not a finger would he
‘aimself; he ‘had four men work
forg him.” It took thelr united
agth to put the fityver on four
is. Bob Wells wanted to get
ver with and be on the trail again,
Sot that way!” called the Wreck,
ply, “Want to buckle a wheel
me? You can't push ber side-
a"
iliy Tstened to this with a sense
sattstaction.
he filvver was back 4n the aban-
od road, but Henry Williams was
through with his helpers. ‘They
_ ceted that he would fill up the
oline tank, turn the crank and
goodby. ‘But he said {t would
oto be rolled for quite @ distance,
saps all the way to the main road.
sheriff scowled.
‘vou ran her in here, didn’t you?”
inquired. “Why can't you run
out?”
Ran her in here in the dark,”
the Wreck. “Didn't know what
aces I was running. Won't run
‘again, Roll her.”
We haven't time.” rf
‘0? ‘Well, 1 have.”
‘they roiled her. The Wreck
ended to sit In the filvver
they rolled the thing up a
© grade, with Bob Wells sweat-
and cursing under his breath
. the members of this posss'slléfit
endiig themselves to the humfli:
5 task.
1 the down grades the Wreck
sounted and let the posse do the
ving. ‘Then it was that he found
self walking tehind, with Sally
can at his side, Proximity gave
‘2 queer thrill. He stole glances
her, when he thought she was
ware of it, Engaged! He blushed
cnever he" remembered it. Of
se, It was all a mere makeshitt.
there was no filuston about the
wsing of her engagement to Bob
2, if ft had ever really existed.
‘with that broken, Sally was
afflanced to nobody, except
retlcally to himsels. Perhaps it
1d be necessary to have e formal
: about it, He dreaded the
sht. He Was not a coward in
< vhings, but in this he was an
craven.
«de matters a great deal worse
> ho had achieved @ discovery
ia mot know how he was going
along without Sally Morgan
‘s care of fim, It was one of
‘nsidious influences that fasten
» defore you are aware of it.
sedfon her. She might not
“hat he did. Of course, he
ke St off after he returnes
HORIONTAL,
1 A riding costume, ;
4° Water strongly impregnated with
salt: as the sea.
8 Iron Cross (abbr.)
9 Indefinite article.
10 Resentment.
13 Pieture.
15 Kind of automobile.
16 Consume.
18 Small horse,
to Pittsburg; but he could not de
sure. He walked behind the flivver
fn @ pleasant but forbidden dream,
with Sally walking at bis side.
“Hey, you boneheads!” He would
rouse himsclf Ike that. “Keep het
in the road. What are you trying
to do; put her up @ tree?”
‘Then he would look at Sally, his
mood would soften and the old em
barrassment would descend on him
like a shroud.
“We'll get out of here all right,
Sally. Don't you worry.”
“I'm not worrying.” i
“Tmean about—" He caught him:
self.
“About what, Henry?"
“about afterwards.”
“On”
Sally had tong sflences hersett.
‘She wished it were all over:*that
Bob Wells and his posse would hurry
up and take themselves off and van-
ish absolutely out of the pleture.
She found we joy whatever in the
peonage to which the sheriff and his
pomse were subjected; she believed
that mom of it was unnesessiry,
cvem trem the standpoint of punish:
ment But ai the same time she did
Lar coun Gaba Salt alosia alee Eiaane
Liye —* 5
I AS
MWe
NG i 4
camer ile ewonteneers
‘Williams. ‘That was the woman of
eae
“Don't you worry,” repeated the
‘Wreck, suddenly bold. "You don't
have to—Hey! Don't you know
which way to turn the wheels on a
cruve? Want to upset her again?
Fant to wreck her?”
Sally looked at the Wreck.
“I don't have to what” she asked.
von.” He was caught unawares.
“Why, you don't have to—That is,
unless—That’s not it, either. What
I mean {s, you're not really engaged.”
It was @ reckless speech and he
felt instantly that he ought not to
have mode it, Sally was looking
straight ahead.
“Ot course not,” she sald, in a
low volce.
‘The Wreck cursed himself. He
knew that he was clumsy, and yet
he was desperately groping for an
understanding.
“What I mean,” he said, “is that
it's working backwards, 3f you can
understand. First we were supposed
to be married. ‘Then that's off. ‘Then
we're supposed to be just engaged.
And then that's—For the love of
Mike! Don't put your shoulder
against that mudguard. You'll bend
it! Get hold of the body. And shove.
Shove! Don’t they grow any brains
in Montana?”
‘The sheriff and the posse glared—
‘and shoved.
“and then?” remarked Sally.
‘The Wreck remembered that he
had started something.
>*why, then the engagement’s off,
19 Preposition
21 A point of the compass.
22 New England State.
23 An exclamation.
25 Ex'st
27 Addit‘onal writing (abbr.)
80 Sick.
32 Towards the stern.
34 English Standing Army (abbr.)
36 Melis.
38 System.
40 CoMege degree (abbr.)
42 For example (abbr.) .-
43 Exhausted.
'Y ‘sO ppose,” Yio’ aald, af fe glared at
the posse. “Which leaves every-
thing exactly where it was at the
tact” e
‘There! He hed reached the sub-
foot at last. He had dealt with it
boldly, perhaps roughly; but he had
not dodged . Sally's eyes had a
queer, uncertain look. There was
something blurring, even when she
looked at an object as plain and
familiar ax the fiwver. Silty, of
course; but she could not get the
Dlur out of her eyes unless. sho
rubbed them, and she scorned that,
with the Wreck at her elbow.
“Let go of that steering wheel”
commanded the Wreck. “Can't you
see that she'll stay in the ruts? All
you've got to do is to get busy and
shove. You act lke you were push-
ing a fiveton truck. No. No! Tho
other way. Are you trying to bust
a spring? If you haven't got any
‘brains, can't you have @ little beef?”
‘He came back from the bossing
Job with a glance in the direction
of Sally. What? Sho was crying?
He could feel his soul squirm. She
was crying, but {t was 80 unobtru-
sive, 90 nearly tearless, that the
Wreck knew he was not expected to
oboorve it.
“rm sorry everything has gone
busted,” ho sald.
“Oh, nothing much 1s busted,”
said Sally, quickly. “That's all
right.
“Oh.”
He stole another glance. She was
not crying, after all; at least, not
now. Strange people, women. You
nevar could tell how long they were
going to stick to one thing.® Still,
if there was anything he could do
for Sally Morgan, all she had to do
was to say the word. os
Ot course, we con't :
the sheriff 1: aii of" 1
denly.
tes
“What's the use of #101 ‘
satisfaction? We couid >
pai
He broke of in acry of iczs
fisver was diving ama oe
again and th: pote smd
to stop it, He imped to as it
slammed on the emersency i oh
broueht Wie aantanuerotls iis 19
a halt vnd fel a orads de 0. oo
nunciatlon. Dut it was moe iw
ing to see that they nut only enéciva
it, but followed his directions «out
pitting the car back on the rozd.
When he came back to her eo
hastily smothered a laugh. Not for
the world did she want him to i:now
that he amused her.
“They don't get anything right,
he complained.
“Sul, I think they're trying ” she
said generously.
“But they don't understand ”
“Lots of people don’t understand
things.””
ee
‘Sho meant something; he felt cer
tain, Did she mean that there were
ome things that he did not ner
stand? Well, if so, what wer “ny”
“whut don't they undeoiaad?
demanded the Wreck.
“All kinds.”
“Now you're just talking nosscns:
—in circles.”
“1 suppose so." said Sally
"Do you mean me?” ho <sked
sharply.
“Oh, don't let's quartel ec: 5."
“I'm not quarreling. I never suar-
rel, My nerves may get on else,
but I'm always pleasant. I'm al:
ways—"
‘They were doing something wrong
with the flivver.
Eventually they got it rieht again
and once mare resumed painful pros
ress toward the méin road. They
were not fer froin it now; almost
to the top of the last rise. When
the Wreck returned to Sally he was
mopplig his foreheud.
“Excuse me,” he said, “but they
get me all worked up. Once we get
to the main road, we're all right
Plain sailing then. We'll be almost
at the end of this foolishness.”
“Yes,” agreed Sally.
“1 bet you'll be glad.”
she bit her lip until it made her
wines, He was probably the most
impossible person in the world.
“Get you home In no time after
we hit the road,” he added.
‘ema an @lacpherein
(Rasta: ee lel aman roel camatn pe
1 The central organ of the body-j32 Whi'a
2 An intolerant’ person. 33 Net'ng motion toward.
3 Congealed*water. 35 Same as 21 hor zontal.
5 Male sheep. 37 Form of the verb No be’.
8 Silly. * 129 A corded dress fabric.
7 4 pla‘nrive poem. g A
11 Point of the compass. oo
12 Prefix denoting repetitton.
13 A pronoun. y Sostoate RO
14 Southern State, Wortontectontectoatecloateeieostoateste
17 Proposition , :
20 Unresiigd metal, . {Subscribe to The Planet
1 Undermine. =
24 The same thing repeated. RR RR
25 To find fault wth | seatoefeateateeteatesteatefoateatoete
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLE
ISM T ]eTs lo ln Mal]
BEES “one oanoe
sfal-luly Mic Ml a[s fefe [Nn]
[le Mim sle le MT Al)
{URE H[o [NR O}
[s/o] [DMAINIO ME RIE [No
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(Tle[Almim Tle lAMM CIAIL [kK]
7 0 BBe G2
IF] 7 NI] 1S By Ms}
ifelo|Nly MMi [sft fr]
[SlolsJoMMelele MEN| ILE}
[rfy Me [opp [nie Mil [7}
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26 On the condition.
28 Coarse grass growing in swamps.
29 Welzht for weighing precious
stones
31 Position on football team (abbr)
32 While
33 Net'ng motion toward.
35 Same as 21 hor zontal.
37 Form of the verb to he’.
29 A cordea dress tabric.
Woriociecionieaiosiocioeieaioaiociosss
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tRoanoke Items
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ARMREST Mime =
OFLA,
ASHE SORGME CURD)
‘CDRA O apa TON y 8
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jae . oe :
weigh’ ee
chal
(Mad con Stanfield. Agent)
ROANOKE, VA., June 17—Rev,
W. R. Howerton delivered a most
toticling Sermon from Genesis 18:18
This was children’s day in the A. M
F. Chureh as set forth by Rey. C. §
Sinith at Cape May N. J. The evening
services closed with a very unique
Pilieat program rendered by the
Sunday School children.
Mr. and Mrs. S.C. Edwards mo
tured to Burkeville, with two broth
ers and Miss S. Jennings and Miss
L. Scott to see Mr. George W. Wade.
‘They report a very pleasant trip and
fod him improving nicely.
Mr. John T. Lindsay, of Ninth Ave
nue, whe underwent a serious oper:
ation at the Burrell Memorial Hospi
tal te reported as getting along as
well a could be expected.
Mrs. M. K. Stanfield has just open-
ed @ dry goods and millinery estab
lishment at 630 North Peach Road.
whtre she will be pleased to furnish
the people with a fine line of ready-
to wear apparel. Call and examine
her stock before going elsewhere. A
fine line of toilet goods, also many
of the articles handled by Madison
Stanfield.
Rev. George (. Taylor was seen «n
the city last week on business, as he
hurriedly moved around the city.
‘Mr, Irvin W. Howard, 302 Seventh
Avenue, N. W. is somewhat improved
at this writing.
Mrs. Sarah C. Brown, who under
went a serious operation at the Bur
rell Memorial Hospital for a tumor,
had a successful operatton and is
getting along nicely.
Miss Catherine Howard is home
Jcom schoo! looking fine, having don”
nicely this term.
WYTHEVILLE ITEMS.
NS eee.
WYTHEVILLE, VA., June 17—
Children’s Day was observed Sunday
at the A. M. E. and M. © Churches.
‘The exercises were creditable. It was
a great day for the children. Finan
cially they were extremély successful
Rev. T. W. Hebron was at Rural
Retreat Sunday. Two excellent ser-
mons were delivered.
The Wytheville Ball Club is a crea
4t to the town. Out of town engage
mehts are desired. Mr. W. R. Gibson
expects to pass thru the season un-
defeated. “ ~
ae nee nk CRN
‘The dark cloud that once hung
wrer the school sttuatio has been
spelled. Let us pull together and
put our program over = =a
v- — ~
* Miss Lizzie Sirt. who is erecting a
‘hall on Seventh Street, says she will
move to her new building in a few
GAPE eve: agen ise se de Seiiseeie
Prof. J. Thad Hill has been elected
principal of Pikeville graded school,
Pikeville, Ky. Go it Thad.
—e-—
PROM MINNESOTA.
MR. GRANT DEFENDS DR. KELLY
“MILLER.
Stillwater, Minn., May 30, 1925.
Mr. John Mitchell,
Editor The Planet,
Richmond, Va.
Dear Sir: Having read the letter
of Mr. I. S. Moore, of Bahia, Brazil
in your issue of May 16th inst. and
his references to some modern Ju-
dases, I am writing this to ease my
mind from a sence of aberration.
Away out here I have two superlative
interests; the unity of Christians in
my sense of Christianity and the
unity of the American Negro.
Mr. George Schuyler, writing * in
the Pittsburgh Courier of May 16th
shakes my interest in assaiting Prof.
Kelly MVler on his stand’anq advice
on the Negro sftuation. Mr. Schuy-
This Weck
(By Ernest Rice McKinney)
| ALL THE VARIOUS
sorts of hends that are
going along with Mr.
Bryan in his drive on
the Theory of Evolution
should look long at Rol-
In Kirby's cartoon in
the New York Worla for
June 12. This cartoon
is a phillipic im a few
words as only Rollin can
do it.
‘There ik a cave with
a very dark interior
showing plainly. A
scrawny barefoot over-
alled bareheaded boy is
just entering the cave.
‘An old hag of a school
teacher, thm, wrinkled,
flat-footed and thin fin
gered stands in front of
the cave ringing\ the
schoolbell. A row of
anaemic, stoop, should:
ered. stringy | headed,
skinny legged half-fed
children are marching
up to the cave to the
tune of the bell.
On the eave is an old
board sign. On this sign
in eave-man lettering is
the following Bryan}
esque inscription: “NO
EVOLUTION TAUT IN
THIS CAVE”.
A 4
| ‘When Mr. Bryan sees
this cartoon he will pro-
bably exclaim “Amen”.
It tH related that the
jackasses held a conven
tion recently. The meet-
ing was called to consid
er the case of Mr. Bryan.
It was moved, seconded
and carried that Mr.
Bryan be refused mem:
bership im the body and
that each member of the
‘convention eavenant to
refrain from any and all
association with the
thrice stung candidate.
|!
Whfch brings up to
‘Tennessee, the law <-
‘gainst the teaching of
‘evolution, Mr. Bryan as
chief prosecutor and
Prof. Scopes.
In the first place Mr:
Bryan knows nothing
about the theary of evo
lution, the principles of
pedagogy or any of the
‘things that the modern
intelligent world is con-
‘corned with, As proseet:
‘tor in the Scopes case he
[will be a complete fizzle.
The state's attorney is
all the prosecutor need:
ed. There is no question
about Scopes ha ving
broken the law. The law
as passed by a very
“granite” headed legisla-
Be and it is the law of
darkest Tennessee. This
law forbids the teaching
ot the theory of evolu-
tion in the state schools
and, Prof. Scopes broke
this law. He admits it.
‘The court will fing him
‘guilty; as it. should.
When a man breaks the
law he should be pun-
ished no matter how ass-
imine the law.
on
eek ake Bivwan fa not
ler should be branded as being il-
Liberally inclined and as another one
of the Judases and the public would
be wise to nore his criticism.. When
Mr. Schuyler has lived as long, trav-
eled as much, and has acquired the
persp:city that Prof. Miler has, he
will find a cause for recision of some
‘of his blab-blab stuff against Prof.
“Miller.
“He will find that the Negro immi-
‘erant to the North should continue
Jin the voontion he has the most
Jsnowledge, mostly farming, and deal
sparingly fn such manufacturing en.
terprisés as “Kink No More”, “Smell
/My Feet”, a nd “Make You White
|Creams”, When our farmers are
“scattered Some and their crops di-
| versified and they learn to call on the
land bank fnstead of the money
}sharks, then we will be in a way
to solve the unemployment concern-
ing the Negro. Cabarets, dance pal-
‘gees and jazz halls, such as Mr.
|Schuyler boasts of in New York City
tend only to make us more idle and
degraded. A little better treatment
‘and we will stay on the farm in the
South.
Let Prof. Kelly Miller alone and
‘maybe he will cmvert a few of us
lazy northern, eas'ern and western
Negroes into producing from Mother
Barth again, to the benefit of our
selves and our country. Yes, the
economic system will be regulated
too. George can’t do it, so give w
more Kelly Millers.
Yours truly,
ROBERT GRANT,
Box 55, Stillwater, Minn.
COLORED PRINCIPALS FOR OUR
‘COLORED SCHOOLS.
Richmond, Va.. June 9, 1925.
Dear Editor:
| Every Negro must have felt proud
mhen he saw in the Journal ant
Guide of a few months ago the pho-
Have
Ghe PLANET
Delivered to
You. Only $2
per Year.
concerned with the break
ing of the law per se.
It Prot. Scopes had com
mitted murder he would
not be concerned. His
only concern is to try
wh all his might to
return the American
youth to the status of
the cave man intellect.
ually.
He is against the the-
ory of evolution, freedom
of thought, intellectual
honesty and truth. He
doesn't believe that owe
youth showd have an
opnortunity to fight the'r
sway ‘through the dark:
ness, He doesn’t believe
that’ they should search
for the truth unhamper-
ed and unafraid. His god
is Precincelved Opinion.
He knows nothing of the
Iong struggle to develop
what little sclentific
method we have, Our
soventiic men don’t
know a great deal about
the universe but they
mow more than the best
of our ancestors and_in-
finitely more than Mr.
Bryan.
|The theory of evolu:
tion as well as all the
rest of our theoretical
‘and experimental accom
piistments are here to
stay. ‘The pillars of ig-
norance, represented by
‘Mr. Bryan, cannot pre-
vail against the intellect
ual progress of the
World.
tos of some of the women who stand
at the head of the Negro schools of
Norfolk. These women represent in-
telltgence, character and leadership
and one must congratulate the city
of Norfolk for recognizing these
qualities and amply rewarding them.
‘A complete review of the Norfolk
teaching force would add to. this
number well prepared men who are
‘holding positions as principals of the
larger elementary schools and the
high school, the latter school repre-
sents the largest outlay which any
[Southern elty has made for Negro
jeduca:ion, AN thete schools, .are
Jdoins thelr work well.
Now, Mr. Editor, I am anxious td
xtlow why should Richmond be so
far different in this respect from all
other cities in Virginia and the
South? Is it due to the fact the:
there are no Colored persons in the
ely competent to assume tha princ
paiship of these schools? Have not
the city schools in all these «days
been able fully enough to inspire
men. and ‘women to complete such
courses as would ft them for there
Ipositions? The writer believes that
‘there are men and women In Rich
mond just as capable in all respects
as are these persons who are 0
successfully conducting the Norfolx
|schools. And even if there were not
may they net co found somewncre?
[A transfusion of new blood often
stimulates growth,
‘The question, Mr. Editor, which
finatly forces itself upon me is thie,
Do ithe Colored people of Richmond
really want colored leadership in
thelr publfe schools? Have they felt
|{me neea of the stimulation both
Jthe'r children and to the community
large which competent Negro mer
jand women could give? Have they
felt that many doors of opportunit:
for leadership are closed to the rae
bi this one which rightly belong)
to #t under the laws of the Southerr
States should be held by it? Do the,
‘know that every city in Virginia ant
acy -
ye ON
=.
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we :
re a
° f
Ww ‘ ,
a Fe
ine Se Or
SASesherfeese acess ossessenseese season eee ere ser Mehr ee oe Mee Nt Or og Nee
” Kelly Miller's Authentic History of
THE NEGRO
IN THE
WORLD WAR
A Great New War History.
Cutout this Coupon and _ send us $2.98 and
we will ship you Kelly Miller's Negro in the
World War, - -_ - $250
The PLANET, One Year, 2.00
$4.50
| $4.50 for $2.98.
b THE PLANET,
‘ 3ILN. 4th St., Richmond, Va.
ie oe
PeSpeseaetesteatestontectecrcreteeteate Seatertostedtedoetrtretrtoaed
SS
|
Bi ee
i = Kd ca "
; es. a
* an ae
bce ie ee iA
| In addition te its containing a
| graphic account of the War, includes
many ehapters on subjects of vital
interest. Following are a few of the
aubjects treated: The Flash that Set
the World Aflame—Why Americans
Entered the War—The Things that
Made Men Mad—The Sinking Sub:
marine—The Byes of Battle—War's
Strange Devices—Wonderful War
|“Weapons—The World's Armies—The
World's Navies—The Nations at War
'—Modern War Methods—Women and
‘the War. A volume of general in:
formation upon all subjects which
Hhave their bearing upon the World
‘Conflict, as well as an authentic ac
‘count of the Great World War.
‘The Book also includes the follow:
ing subjects: The Horrors and Won-
ders of Modern Warfare, ‘The Bar-
barlty and Merciless Methods Em-
ployed to Satisfy the Ambitions of
the Kaiser and His Imperial Govern:
ment.” The Ruthless Submarine War
fure Waged to Starve England and
France Into Gubmission. The Story
of the Hardships and Horrors which
the Belgians and French were Com:
pelled to Suffer. The Billions of
ee Required to Carry on the
Awful Struggle, The Terrible Loss
of Human Life and the Desolation of
Countries, The Weird and _Wonder-
ful Methods of Warfare. ‘The New
and Strange Devices that have come
finto being. ‘The great “tanks”, the
“blimps”, the submarine, the gas and
poison bombs, and the marvels of
science. Things about which you may
never have heard. Marvelous guns
that shot for miles. Feudal and Me-
dieval weapons that again came into
play. ‘The plans of the Hohenzollerns
fo create a World (®mpire, which
[drew upon them the wrath of Na-
tions, The Nations Involved. The
Armies and Navies and what they
Represented in Men and Equipment.
This Great Book tells all about the
[Negro Everywhere in the World War
How He Did His Duty,
In every capacity—from right up
in the Front Line ‘Trenches and on
the Battlefields—Clear Back to the
Work of Keeping the Home Fires
Burning: On the Farms: In the Mills
and Munition Plants: Qn the Rail
roads’ and Steamships: In the Ship
Yards and Factories. Men and Wo
men with the Red Cross, the Y. M.
©. A, YW. ©. A, the War Camp
Community Service, the Liberty Loan
Drives, ete., ete”
"This Volume tells the world how
‘the Negro has won his place and is
right to a voice in the affairs of
‘mankind against prejudice, ridicule,
‘race hatred, and almost insurmount-
lable obstacies, Muny striking testi
monials from the Secretary of Wat
und Army Officers of high rank and
reputation ate set forth in no uneer
tain terms. The following ringing
words of Major General Bell, ad
dressed to the famous “Buffaloes”,
the 367th Regiment, are typical of
the high regard and respect of Amer
ican and European officers for out
colored troops, Every privata in this
regiment and most of the officers
were Negroes. ‘The General said:—
“his is the best disciplined and
best drilled and best spirited regi
ment that has been under my com
mand at this cantonment. I predict
ed last fall that Colonel Moss would
have the best regiment stationed here
and you men have made my predic:
ton come true, I would lead you in
battle against any army in the world
with every confidence in the out:
come”.
THgp NEGRO IN THE NAVY.
More than fifty pages of the Book
devoted to the Achievements of the
Negro in the Ameriean Navy—Guard
ing the Trans-Atlantic Route to
France—Battling the Submarine Per.
il—The Best Sailors in any Navy in
the World—Making a Navy in Three
Months from Negro Stevedores and
Laborers— Wonderful Accomplish-
ments of Our Negte Yeomen and
Yeowomen,
‘As we lave fought for the rights
of mankind and for the future peace
and security of the world, the people
want to be correctly and fully in:
formed of the facts concerning OUR
Heroes—and this is THE Book they
are looking for,
THE ONLY HISTORY THAT WILL
FULLY SATISFY\ THE AMERICAN
COLORED PEOPLE,
This Book appeals to the Colored
People. They are eager to buy it
‘Why—Because it is the only War
Book published that thrillingly, graph
jeally, yet faithfully describes the
wonderful part that the Colored Sol-
dier has taken in the World War and
is absolutely fair to the Negro.
It relates to the world how 300,000
Negroes crossed the North Atlantic,
braving the terrors of the Submarine
Poril, to battle for Democracy.
‘The loyalty and patriotism that
characterized the black man’s nature
his sublime self-sacrifice, his indis
pulable bravery, the wisdom of Negro
Officers in command of their own
troops, ie
we tte
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TT) REN AINT ae CLaee CO.
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1426 E. Main St. Richmond, Va.
| 9 ~
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: i Pure Herb Medici
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220, W. BROAD STREET, RICHMOND, VIRGINA
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was the only chance for me. I was
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+ Down He Goes
i
OS ‘ i
co?
\
‘Sa
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=
i (RioeneTER)
|, = gp emis earl Rela SIS TN re:
Lower picture shows the veteran
‘Tom Gibbons of St. Paul, down for
the count when knocked out in the
12th round by Gene Tunney at N.
Y." last week. Tunney (above)
says he is now ready for Dempsey.
ee
MITCHELL DEFENSE FUND.
J. H, Johnson .....eeeseeeeee 30
John W. Southall ......e-+++ 60
W.8, Adams ....c.ceeeeeere 100
Lunch Jackson »....-ssseees OF
Tnomas Jackson ......-+--+- 60
Wr, BOE se scssseceeweosee , OD
GAM sie soe sss essere) eee
Wm, Bowles s..esecseceesees 100
GW! Cookielicicccseeceoeson 2B
Nolem Johnson -sseseeseeee+ -28
Mrs, F. J. Moore s...e++ee- 50
A Friend ...eccecce veeceees 25
Charles Miller .....--+e00e++ 80
AlBriend) .oseccesceerceses 0
Mt. Zion Lodge No. 18 A. F.
REMPAG Ms ees fone 68D
G A Newman, Jr, seeeessere 25
©. W. Taylor se.eeseeevseeee 1,00
L, W. Swann ceecccseeeesee 50
Wim. Bilis vceeeeereese--e5+ 0
‘William A. Pinner, Portsmouth 26
‘Yours truly,
‘A. C. MABREY.
‘Mrs. Gillie Bolling ......---- 1.00
I was cured of a very bad case of
Rhevmautiam by two bottles of L
J. Hayden's wonderful Herb Med’
cine, after suffering a long time with
the dreadful disease, J was unable.
to move hand or foot, and efter 7
‘nad taken three doses of the med
{eine I was able to get out of mr
ded and walk across the floor sn@
only two bottles of the medicine bar
made me a perfectly well man i»
every respect. I cannot give Mr. L
7. Hayden too much praise for what
he bas done for me. 1 bave vent
many other suffering ones to him.
and they gave alo gotter curad. My
dgaehter was eleo cured of Rheuma
tism and Indigestion by L. J. Hay-
den's Herb Modicines at No. 220 W
Broad Street, Richmond. Va. I re
commend Mr. L. J. Havden as ome
ot the grestest healers of the nie®
sn earth Respectfully.
J. D. TAYLOR
2419 @. Grace St., Richmond. Va.
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‘i aot
2 ee |!
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WANT NOTICES for persons desia
ing employment will hereafter b
Morgan B. Norris M, D. Kil-
marnock,, Va. .--.se-eee00 2.00
Tend sisceocessooreccnsoss OG
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