Richmond Planet
Saturday, July 7, 1928
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET Virginia State Library.
FIRST DEGREE MURDER!
Sylvester Medley Faces Electric Chair-Believed Crazy Insanity Plea Will Be the Defense----A Graphic Description of the Trage dy
VOLUME XLV, NO. 35
FIF
Sylveste
Insanity PI
(Special by John Mitchell, Jr.)
The following statement published in the Richmond, Va., Times-Dispatch of July 2, 1928, attracted my attention and caused me to seek an interview with the well known fish merchant, William H. Davis, Jr., who is now doing business under the name of the American Fish Company:
After thirty hours' search by Henry County and city police, aided by an armed force of several hundred citizens, Sylvester Medley, 17-year-old Negro killer of one and assailant of three others here Saturday, was captured yesterday in the 3400 block East Marshall Street, by Sergeant I. G. Cousins of the Detective Bureau.
The Negro confessed, police said, to killing Samuel E. Grimmell, 16, John Marshall High School student, and shooting the boy's mother, Mrs. Nellie H. Haskins; his adoptive father, Henry H. Grimmell 60, and firing at Miss Evelyn Haskins, 18.
Arrest Is Spectacular
The arrest was spectacular. Sergeant Cousins was sitting on the front porch of his home, at 3417 East Marshall Street, with his wife. About 12:30 an automobile occupied by two Negro men turned into Marshall St. from 34th St. The officer immediately recognized Medley. The officer had arrested the Negro before on a lionar charge.
Stepping from the porch, the officer stood on the sidewalk and as the car drove up, leveled his pistol, ordering the occupants to stop the car. They complied. At first Medley denied he was the man wanted. Then he admitted he was the one who had shot his employer and members of the Haskins family, at their home on the Bethlehem Road, Henrico County, shortly after 6 o'clock Saturday morning.
Another Negro Released
Sergeant Cousins took the Negro to Police Headquarters. Meanwhile, the other occupant of the machine, who was said to be William H. Davis, Negro, was allowed to go.
At Police Headquarters, it was learned from the Negro that he had worked all day on Seventeenth St., between Franklin and Grace Sts., just under the shadow of First Police Station. Several times, the Negro told his captor, police officers walked past him.
Did Not Know Name
I found Wm. H. Davis, Jr., Wednesday morning in his private office and made known to him my mission. "Did you know Sylvester Medley?" I asked. "I knew him, but not by his name. He had worked for me about two years ago. For an extra help, cleaning and helping around here. On Saturday morning at about 1 o'clock, he came in here and said to me. I see you have changed the name on the window to the American Fish Co.' My business had been the Virginia Fish Co. He said that he wanted some work to do. I told him I had nothing for him to do. He asked me to loan him a couple of dollars. I told him I did not have any money to lend him.
Must Have Work
"Then he said he had to have some work. He finally insisted that I let him work and pay him anything I saw fit. He would work for a dollar. So I put him to work cleaning fish and helping around. Saturday night, I paid him. He came back and said that he was bound to have some money. He had to have a room. I told him he could get a room for the night anywhere for 50 cents. Finally I sent him up to 124 N. 17th Street to get a room. I had paid off the other boy here and he tried to borrow some money from him. He did not succeed in doing so. Then he wanted the boy to go with him, but he would not do so. He spent the night in this house owned by my father, but rented out for a restaurant and a lodging house. On Sunday morning, he came over to my place. I had seen the report in the Times-Dispatch Sunday morning with a description of the man who had done the killing.
(Continued on page 4)
REV. J. ANDREW BOWLER HONORED
Popular Divine Receives Coveted Degree. Virginia Union University Confers the Title.
(Special by John Mitchell, Jr.) Upon the occasion of the Twenty-ninth annual Commencement of Virginia Union University, Wednesday evening June, 9 1928 a signal honor was conferred upon a Richmonder, who for more than a quarter of a century, in an humble capacity has trod the path of duty and won his way practically unnoticed and un sung. Recognized for his worth by those who have known his ability and observed his career, he sprang suddenly in the limelight, appeared upon the stage wearing a cap and gown, and amidst the plaudits of the assembled throng received the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity. I had known John Andrew Bewler during the course of a life-time and I have observed his spotless career. Honor and an upright life have been to him his most valuable assets. As an organizer he has been a surprise to many. As a man of indomitable will, he has been a study. As a student he has won unstinted praise. As a Christian gentleman, he has enjoyed the respect and es. teem of his fellows. His work on Church Hill in the upbuilding of Mr. Olivet Baptist Church is superb. He has seen many dark days and he has hasked in the offulent sunshine he follows persistent effort.
This then brought a feeling of pride to the many friends of this citizen, whose remarkable services had at last been recognized by one of the leading educational institutions in this country. John Andrew Bowler was born in Richmond, Vp. March 1, 1862; his mother being Emily C. Bowler, beloved daughter of Morrissie Bowler. Young Bowler saw the light of daw as the first battles of the Civil War for the possession of this city were being fought. His parents were slaves. Northern teachers took a fancy to young Bowler when he was only five years of age and taught him a speech on. Abraham Lincoln. His voice suited their purposes and he was instructed in singing and became the prize pupil to "show off" when visitors came, by his apt powers of elocution, Miss B. L. C. Canaday, a white teacher tok a marked interest in him during these days. Young Bowler attended the public schools of Richmond first at the Old Navy Hill School and then in the old wooden structure beside the Normal and High School on Twelfth Street. It was known as Miss Hancock's School. He graduated from the Normal and High School on Twelfth Street in 1877. He wanted to secure a higher education and in order to do he blacked boots and sold newspapers on the streets of this city. He entered and completed a course in the Richmond Theological Institute, completing a course there 1861.
It may be well to state that his money gave cut while he was in the graduating class and in order to repleish his funds, he shovelled snow until his hands were frosted. When he received his diploma, his hands were still sore and he had just one penny in his pocket. This was his
M. A. S.
starting point in life so to speak—one cent in cash and two diplomas. He became a boll hop in a New York hotel, 29th and Broadway. The fast life in this city did not appeal to him and he returned to Richmond. Va. He applied for a position in the public schools of this city and was given an appointment at the old East End School, now the George Mason School. January 1 1882 at $30.00 per month. He still occupies that position with greatly different surroundings. For 46 years he has served satisfactorily in this position and is one of the most honored and highly respected instructors in the system.
From the lowest to the highest grades in the elementary department he has served under eleven different principals, all of whom recognized his rare ability for this particular kind of work. He started the first night-school in the East End. He was among the first teachers in the Vacation School in that section and today enjoys the unique distinction of being principal and teacher with 13 teachers and with over 500 pupils in attendance.
John Andrew Boy saving grace of the converted at the ten years. He was bapt Rev. James H. Holme came a member of the Church in 1871. He (Continued on)
Mrs. Fannie M. Dr. to the city after spending in the Middle West. the Commencement University, Wilberlo Alma Mater and also kind and Pittsburgh. burghe was the gui Mrs. Charles A. Per
Charles Kennedy's Baltimore. Mr. Ken resided at 409 E. Clark there now. The ydrowned at the Beth and is holding the reword from his parent.
Mr. Edward J. Coerated upon recently at the Retreat for the again.
John Andrew Bowler found the saving grace of the Lord and was converted at the tender age of nine years. He was baptized by the late Rev. James H. Holmes, D. D., and became a member of the First Baptist Church in 1871. He has filled every (Continued on page 8)
Mrs. Fannie M. Drew has returned to the city after spending two weeks in the Middle West. She attended the Commencement at Wilberforce University, Wilberforce, Ohio, her Alma Mater and also visited Cleveland and Pittsburgh. While in Pittsburgh she was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Perry.
Charles Kennedy's son is dead in Baltimore. Mr. Kennedy at one time resided at 409 E. Clay St., but is not there now. The young man was drowned at the Bethlehem Steel Co., and is holding the remains awaiting word from his parents.
Mr. Edward J. Cook who was operated upon recently for appendicitis at the Retreat for the Sick is at home again.
WASITMURDER?
Noted South Richmond Divine Receives High Honor- Asks Time to Decide
THE BROTHERS
Here is Sylvester Medley, 17, standing between Detective Sergeant Cousins, on left, and Henrico Officer Sodier shortly after his arrest Sunday by Segeant Cousins for the killing of Samuel Grimmell, 16, and attacking Mrs. Nellie Haskins and Henry Grimmell early Saturday at the Grimmell home on the Bethelehem road, near Greendale station. (Courtesy Richmond, Va. News Leader.)
Here is Sylvester Medley, 17, standing between Detective Sergeant Cousins, on left, and Henrico Officer Sodier shortly after his arrest Sunday by Segeant Cousins for the killing of Samuel Grimmell, 16, and attacking Mrs. Nellie Haskins and Henry Grimmell early Saturday at the Grimmell home on the Bethelehem road, near Greendale station. (Courtesy Richmond, Va. News Leader.)
Coroner James M. Whitfield is not satisfied in his own mind that the colored man found badly injured in Fulton was not shoved or thrown from the viaduct. He could have fallen from the trestle. He was
Metropolitan Calls Rev.
Noted South R Receives High Time to
PROMINENT RICHMOND PASTOR CALLED TO WASHINGTON, D. C.
Rev. E. 'C. Smith, pastor of the Second Baptist Church, South Richmond, Va., A. B. from both the Virginia Theological Seminary and College and the Virginia Union University. B. D. Virginia Seminary, has
found Friday morning, June 29th and was alive when carried to St. Philips Hospital, where he later died: his remains being turned over to Funeral Director Robert C. Scott, who is holding the same with the
Bap. Church
E. C. Smith
Richmond Divine
Honor--Asks
To Decide
recently been tendered a call to the pastorate of the great Metropolitan Baptist Church, Washington, D. C. This Church is one of the largest churches of the Baptist connection. The membership is reported to be seven thousand. It was formerly pastored by the late Dr. M. W. D. Norman.
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
ER!
d Crazy
e Tragedy
RDER?
ndition in Fulton.
hope that ha may be identified and his relatives located. The man's head was crushed by the impact of the fall. Any one knowing of any person missing should call up City Coroner James M. Whitfield or Robert C. Scott Randolph 2013.
In receiving this call, Rev. Smith, who is only 31 years old, enjoys the distinction of being the youngest man in the entire connection who has been so signally honored.
The calling of Rev. Smith is the second attempt to secure a leader since the death of Dr. Norman. The first being a Dr. Harrison of Houston, Texas, who was unable to accept as that time.
Rev. Smith has come to no decision as yet regarding the call. The members of his Richmond charge are loud in their plea for him to remain with them. But because of the very large opportunity for service, he said that he would just have to give it his earnest and prayerful consideration.
Mrs. Lizzie B. Hairston, of Brooklyn, N. Y., is in the city with her daughter, Miss Grace Peyton, the guests of Mrs. Luvenia Burrell, 1001 N. 4th Street.
I'VE HAD ENOUGH OF THIS!
CONTROL YOURSELF, POP!
GOSH! I LOVE YOU!
YOU'RE ADORABLE MOLLY DEAR (SIGH)
ARE YOU SURE YOU LOVE ME?
SWEETHEART--THERE AIN'T NUTHIN' I WOULDN'T DO FOR YOU!
GOOD!
PREPARE TO DIE, DERN YA!
S-S-SIR~ YOU MISUNDERSTAND ME!
M-MINE IS AN UNDYING LOVE!
AUTOCASTER
Peggy Joyce Will Wed Again! Not At All Cynical About Men, Says Ex-Wife of Five
C
New York, June—. Well, here's the answer to one of the world's burning questions. Peggy Hopkins Joyce is going to get married again!
No, she doesn't know just yet who'll be No. 6—such details take care of themselves in Peggy's scheme—but she wants it understood she hasn't lost faith in men.
"I've no doubt that some day I fall fall in love again and let my impulses govern my voice," says Peggy Hopkins Joyce. "I'm not a bit of a cynic even though he may have tried to make me so.
"I am not ashamed of my interest a men nor of their interest in me. Man is woman's natural study, and although she has finally achieved a large degree of emancipation, she is no less dependent upon man than in the days of Moses."
One point is positive, and that is that Peggy will never be a business woman. She thinks they are a bit quarrel. Moreover, she's curious about it. Moreover, she's curious about to bring him to the altar is the daily activity of every woman to her race."
"Any Girl Can Win Any Man"
"A woman's ambitions are unnatural if they do not have their inspirations in her sex," she declares. "When I see so many women aping men, tiring their unsuited bodies in male tasks, blindly ambitious to succeed in business, I feel sorry for them. They are being false to themselves and to their sex. But already some of these business women profess to scorn as who remain feminine. "American women, by neglecting the study of their men, are forfeiting their ¹®rthight. A country is no greater than its women." And, having disposed of that, the
---
Lincoln?
No, this is Roscoe Miles. He lives in Los Angeles and is a wonderful double of the great president. And he is not in the movies!
---
WILLIAMS TEMPLE O. M. B.
CHURCH.
(The Homelikes Church)
S. E. Cor. 19th and Everett St.
Rev. G. E. Carter, Pastor
9:30 A. M., Sunday School; 11:00
A. M., Preaching; 6:30 P. M., Epworth League; 7:55 P. M., Preach:
MT. TABOR BAPTIST CHURCH
(North 23nd Street, Woodville)
Rev. R. J. Bass, Pastor, Residence
15 E. Duval Street. Services: Sunday
11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M., Sunday
School, 9:30 A. M. All are welcome
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sometimes countless, drops a few convictions about men and suggestions on how to catch them. You can be any man if she tries hard enough. Love isn't neces-
Peony Hopkins Joyce
sary, provided she offers the right mixture of flattery and simulated worship. "The smart Set interview asserts, 'The one thing a man will not forgive in a woman is brains. Try to be interested in the things he is interested in. If you do he will mentally stamp you as an intelligent woman. 'Don't argue with him. A woman can seldom argue successfully with a man. She may win her point, but she won't. 'It is very important that you should know his idea of the right sort of wife. And a good way to learn is to ask him pointblank. Man is an unsusicious animal."
A. D. PRICE. 212 EAST LEIGH STREET
1ST BAPT. CHURCH S. RICHMOND
(Corner 15th and Decatur Sts.)
FUNERAL DIRECTOR, EMBALMER AND LIVERYMAN All Orders Promptly Filed at Short Notice by Telegraph or Telephone. Halls Rented for Meetings and Nice Entertainments. Plenty of Room with all Necessary Conveniences. Large Picnic or Band Wagons for Hire at Reasonable Rates and Nothing But First-class Automobiles and Carriages, etc. Keep constantly on hand fine Funeral Supplies. Open All Day and Night. PHONE Madison 577—Man On Duty All Night—Richmond, Va (Residence Next Door)
Rev, W. L. Ransome, D. D., Pastor: Parsonage 1507 Decatur Street.
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
All are welcome.
Funeral Parlor Rest-Room Display Rooms Lodge Rooms Phones-Office Ban. 2973. Residence. Ban. 2703. Amt. Ban. 2089-w ROBERT C. SCOTT, Funeral Director 2223 EAST MAIN STREET RICHMOND, VA.
FOURTH BAPTIST CHURCH.
(28th and P Streets)
Services in charge of the Deacon
Board, pending successor to Dr. E.
Payne, lamented pastor. Visiting
Divines each Sunday. Services:
11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M. Sunday
School, 9:30 A. M. All are invited.
B. Y. P. U., 6:45 P. M.
THE BROWN'S Photographic Studio
ALL OF THE LATEST AND MOST ARTISTIC PHOTOS
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FOUNTAIN BAPTIST CHURCH
Special Attention Paid to (Children, Exterior and Interior Work
Will be Executed on Short Notice. We Specialize on ENLARGING
and SCREENING from CED PHOTOS.
(32nd and P Streetz)
Rev. A. R. Vanlandingham, B. Th.
pastor. Residence, 2800 O St. Our
Worship: Sunday School at 9:30 A.
M.; Morning Services, 11:30 A. M.
Night Services, 8:00 P. M.; Tuesday
night, Home and Foreign Mission,
4:00 P. M.; Wednesday night.
Teachers Meeting, 7:30 P. M.;
Thursday night, Choir Rehearsal,
7:30 P. M.; Friday night, Prayer
Service, 7:30 M. M. Johnson, Clerk
603 N. SECOND ST., RICHMOND, VA.
BE INFORMED--READ THE PLANET
MT. VERNON BAPTIST CHURGE
(1902 Welfare Street)
Rev. M. H. Payne, Pastor, Residence, 1900 Wallace Street. Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. All are welcome.
MT. CARMEL BAPTIST CHURCH,
(1800 North First Street)
Rev. Berryman H. Johnson, Pastor, Sunday 11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M. Sunday School. 9:30 A. M. All are welcome
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH.
(Bryd St. between 1st and 2nd St.)
Pulit in charge of Pulit Committee nending successor to the late Dr Z. D. Lewis. Services: Sundavs.
11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M. Sundav School. 9:20 A. M. All are welcome.
W I. JOHNSO'N'S SONS, EXPERIENCED MORTUCIANS CONDUCT Funerals Flawlessly. Our Many Years of Experience Enables us to Conduct AM Funerals in a Most Efficient Manner. We Try to Give More However by I. corporating in Our Service a Spirit of Sympathetic Understanding
Send your subscriptions to the Planet Office 311 N. 4th St. It is only $2.00 for one whole year.
CONVENTION DEBUTS
I'VE HAD ENOUGH OF
THIS!
GOSH!
I LOVE YOU!
YOU'RE
ADORABLE
MOLLY DEAR
(SIGH)
What Is Really Needed
By Albert T. Reid
STRONGER LAWS TO PROTECT THE FARMERS AGAINST TRESPASSING AND PETTY THIEVING
IT ISN'T RIGHT TO HAVE ANYTHING LIKE THAT AT LARGE
AND THERE ARE THE NICEST APPLES YOU HAVE EVER
Albert T. Reid
AUTOGRAFT
Prince Proves Real Neighbor While "Roughing It" on Ranch
Prazier Hunt, writer and former war correspondent, has bought a ranch for himself in the foothills of western Alberta, where he intends to work in the seclusion of the great open spaces.
Looking over his back fence one morning to get acquainted in neighborly fashion, he spied his neighbor standing there in a fannel shirt, holding his neck, with a broad-brimmed hat—a regular fellow—His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales. The Prince, it seems, pitches hay and helps gather the crops on his big ranch in Canada, when the notion strikes him, or he may go hunting or trout fishing. Not to be outdone in American neighborliness, he invited Hunt in to dinner.
"An hour later when we were seated at dinner," writes Hunt, in recounting the scene "he turned to a winkle in his gray eyes and asked: 'Have you a rawnch or a ranch?'
"How do you mean? I questioned.
"Well, a raunch is something that you support, while a ranch is something that supports you,' he answered with a chuckle. 'I'm not telling which I have, he laughed. Then he said seriously: 'Few people I am trying to understand just to build up and enjure fine improved live stock in Western Canada. I want to do everything I can to help along the cattle and sheep and horse breeder I really mean it.'"
Hunt became well acquainted with his royal neighbor and learned many little-known and interesting sidelights; the young man who in newspaper offices, is generally on-
A.
sidered the most popular personality of international note. His story, which appears in the Cosmopolitan he prefaces thus: "Now the one way really to get to know a man is to be his neighbor. I'm going to tell exactly how he, human being trying to get along is this fairly world, struck me And he does, concluding: 'The Prince of Wales is a regular fellow. should I want a better neighbor.'"
Maken on the porch of the Hoover home at Washington. D. C., this picture shows, the Secretary of Commerce, who is the Republican presidential candidate and Mrs. Herbert Hoover, and, top row, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hoover, Jr., son and daughter-in-law of Mr. Hoover, and Allen Hoover, another son of the Secretary.
OFTAWA, ONT.—Zip of shears will use to a greater volume this year in Canada than ever before in its history, it is indicated in a survey of the Department of Colonisation and Development of the Canadian Pacific railway, just made public here. Practically every one of the nine Canadian provinces showed an increase in sheep population last year, and further increase is certain this year, the survey states. Production of wool in the Dominion in 1927 totalled 18,672,766 pounds, an increase of 662,870 pounds over 1926. Increase in the clip in the prairie provinces of Western Canada, an ideal region for sheep raising, amounted to 1,096,022 pounds, or nearly 25 per cent. The total wool designated to the Canadian Cooperative Wool Grower Ltd. the growers' own organization, with branches in all provinces, amounted to 3,274,615 pounds of which 1,493,181 pounds from Alberta, 691,232 pounds from Minnesota, 611,984 pounds from Canada, and 600,000 pounds from British Columbia.
Wool exports, according to the survey, showed an increase last year over both 1925 and 1926, both the United Kingdom and the United States markets contributing to this. The total exports of new wool for the Dominion in 1927 amounted to 12,303,000 pounds, the present report indicates that this figure is increasing.
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THE OPPORTUNITY OF A LIFETIME You Know What a Good Dictionary Costs You
You know what a Webster's Dictionary for School purposes will cost You. We are quoting you a nominal price. It is to introduce . . .
WEBSTER'S
COLLEGE, HOME
and OFFICE
DICTIONARY
SELF-PRONOUNCING
(EXACT SIZE)
DICTIONARY HAS BEEN A STANDARD PUBLICATION FOR MORE THAN HALF
WE HAVE WEBSTER'S COLLEGE, HOME AND OFFICE DICTIONARY TO OFFER
IS THAT WILL AFFORD SATISFACTION. IF THE DICTIONARY IS NOT
NTED TO BE, WE WILL GLADLY REFUND YOU THE MONEY PAID. GST
AND MAIL IT TO US WITH $1.00 AND 25 CTS. FOR MAIL AND PACKING
WILL BE SENT TO YOU.
Sena us th arly subscribers and we will send you a y free of charge. ) AND 25 OTS. FOR MAILING AND PARCEL POST AND WE HERE IN THE UNITED STATES. WE GUARANTEE A REFUND BOOK IS NOT JUST AS REPRESENTED.
THE PLANET, 311 N. 4th Street, Richmond, Va.:
Please send me one copy of WESTSTER'S COLLEGE, HOME
AND OFFICE DICTIONARY. Find enclosed $1.86.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND' VIRGINIA
Rew W. H. Stokes, Ph.D., Pastor,
Residence, 1607 Brook Road.
Services: Sundays, 11 A. M. and 8 P. M.
Sunday School, 9 A. M. The public is
invited.
MOSBY MEMORIAL BAPTIST
CHURCH
Rev. J. A. Brinkley, A. B., B. D.
Pastor. Services: Sunday, 11:30 A.
M. and 8 P. M. Sunday School 9:30
A. M. All are welcome.
ZION BAPTIST CHURCH,
(20th and Decatur, So. Richmond.)
Rev. J. W. Dudley, D. D., Pastor;
Parsonage 1715 Everett Street,
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and 8
P. M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
The public is welcome.
Rev. M. C. Ruffin, Pastor, Residence, 611 St. Peter St. Services at Glen Allen, 2nd and 4 Sundays at 1 P. M. At Penelope, services on the 3rd Sunday at 12:30 P. M. Sunday School every Sunday at both places at 11:30 A. M.
MT. GILEAD BAPTIST CHURCH
(Chesterfield County)
Rev. W. H. Liggins, Pastor, Residence, 1835 Taylor St. Services, 1st and 3rd Sundays at 12:30 P. M. Sunday School every Sunday at 10:30 A. M.
FIFTH BAPTIST CHURCH
(1400 West Gary Street)
Rev. A. D. Daly, Pastor, Residence
1412 1 W. Cary St. Services: 11:30
A. M and 8 P. M. Sunday School,
10:00 A. M. All are welcome.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH.
(Broad and College Streets)
Rev. W. T. Johnson, D. D. Pastor,
Residence 621 N. 8th St. Services:
Sundays, 11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M.
Sunday-School, 9:30 A. M. All are welcome.
(Jaqueline and Lombardy Streets)
Rev. E. D. Lewis, Pastor, Residence, 316 S. Lombardy Street. Services: Sunday, 11 A. M. and 8 P. M.
DAY PHONE, RAN. 1808
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PROMPT SERVICE IN CITY OR COUNTRY.
Typical faces with correct lip make-up, left to right:
1. Fat face with thinning make-up.
2. Thin face with fattening make-up.
3. Normal face with normal make-up.
GIVING THE LIP-STICK
Lipsticks are the only big sticks that American women are interested in welding.
The eternally feminine American has discovered that she can do with one of those two inch sticks of cream, oil, and coloring matter that she buys in fancy green or gold containers than a reformer can accomplish with the biggest and best hickory bough in captivity.
Women have long since decided that it is more laudable to appear naturally artificial than unnaturally anemic. Not only have they found that they may depend upon their lipstick to stencil charm, character fascination, allure into their otherwise unattractive faces but, according to their needs, to lengthen their broadest expressions or plump out their hollow cheeks.
In using your lipstick, however, always remember these three underlying principles:
THIN FACES—Extend the corners of your mouth with your lipstick to create an illusion of facial width faintly into your cupid's bow.
FAT FACES—Make up only the center of your lips, emphasizing the cupid's bow as much as possible so as to concentrate attention' on the up-and-down lines of your face.
NORMAL FACES — Follow nature's own lip line' taking care to keep your stick inside rather, than allowing it to slip over.
Lipsticks that closely match a woman's own coloring, when carefully and skillfully applied, will improve the beauty of any face.
First Posed Hoover Family Picture
“90h
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Published Every Saturday by Joho Maes, ds
se M1 North Fourth treet, Richman, Pa
JOHN MITCHELL, JR.....BDITOR
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‘ast communications {nteoded for pubiiostios
eocld be wat to nach on by Wetvenday.
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Entered at the Doak Offer at Richmond,
Virginia, a» second cess matter.
Se
hae Year gevvscseensenansesseee anvensses) 200
Mia Month socsseseccerscnsasesssencennens LO
tires Montha .aseccercnssesesesssnnnnnessey 00
Foreign Subseriptlons os seceenssessseses B80
Foreign Advestimuag Representative, W. B.
2:8 Company, 08 Ueurhorn Street. Chicago;
tm Vietoria Building, St Loui Mo:
(2) Leagacte Building, New York.
SATURDAY.........JULY, 7 1928
Women take more pains to conceal
the upper parts of their anatomy
than they do to protect the lower
part. Isn't there a reason?
Treat colored folks right and most
of them will treat you right, Treat
white folks right and most of them
will treat you just as you treat them.
s THE SITUATION
Beata tet ea Oe ecg 22
nounced that he will not resign his
position as Governor of New York
State. Had he decided so to do, he
would be succeeded by the Lieuten-
ant-Governor, who is a Republican,
‘as the brilliant New Yorker was the
only Democrat elected during that
Republican landslide. He will make
approximately twelve speeches dur-
ing the campaign. By his open dec-
aration upon the liquor question, he
has made it the burning issue and
hhas accordingly made a minor affair
of the oil scandals on which Senator
James A. Reed, of Missouri, would
have depended had he been chosen
the standard bearer of the Demo-
cratic Party.
The effect of inculcating by name
and specification the 18th Amend-
‘ment in the Democratic platform waa
nullified when Governor Smith noti-
fied the Convention then in session
in Houston that his position on this
all important subject had not been
changed and that he would seek to
modify the drastic features of the
Volstead Act leaving to the States
the right to determine the alcoholic
contents of wine and beer. This an-
nouncement horrified the extreme dry
element, which element claimed that
Governor Smith had virtually bolted
the platform, the expressed will of
the Democratic National Convention
and that the members of that Con-
vention had the right and were justi-
fied in bolting him as candidate of
the party for the presidency.
In retaliation, Hoover Democratic
clubs are being organized throughout
the country to encompass his defeat.
As Governor Smith is being backed
in States, which are antagonistic to
the equalization fee of the MeNary-
Haugen farmers’ bill, the Democratic
National Convention found itself im
the same predicament as did the Re-
publicans at Kansas City and could
only make vague promises “spoken
to the ear to be broken to the hope.”
Although a lynching greeted the
delegates at Houston before the
opening of that great organization,
not one sentence appears in the plat-
form denunciatory of this. crowning
infamy of the century. .
No colored citizen appeared inside
the convention hall either as 4 dele-
gate or as an alternate.” They were
Tucky enough to get ifside'as mtenial
servants, As for Gdvérnor. Smith,
he and his managers ‘evidently scent-
ed danger and as a resilt, he re:
mained in New York, where, he smil-
ingly enjoyed the convention exer-
cises over radio. There may*also be
some method and wisdom in the de-
termination not to have him ‘travel
over the country making speeches,
where he is liable to come within the
range of the anarchist or the Ku-
Kluxer.
In view of present conditions, what
‘are his handicaps ‘and what ate the
‘obstructions to his-success? He has
waged a spectacular’ contest for the
nomination, He has won out with-
‘out any suspicion of fraud, deception
or unfair dealing. He’ accepteit’ the
gauge of a two-thirds: vote .and .al-
though he had the®power so'to'do, be
did not change the seat ee
to a majority vote in, order :
cure the nominatibal” Het hasidissi-
pated the propagihda that 4/ttatt's
religion sbail ja bar to his iam
ination as, ceagidate for Pzestdent. ..
Heiss Catholic“and he has
not made any ‘compromising remarks
with regard to his chosen religion, in
order to seetire the honor which has
come to him. So far, so good. Has
“Al” Smith’s frieads depleted their
‘tRouréés; fitlahcial ‘and cotherwiserto
Ving this AUCU, to” Aconiyptish “tie
most wonderful ,achigyement, of; this
or. any other century in the country’s
pistorySPilie) didne can answer this
question: “IsSthere an outburSt, an
suprising of ther-people demanding
that this man of destiny shall“take
théViend as head “ofthe ation and
ead them unto the plains of legis.
lative equality and freedoni, to the
end that the fundamental principles
of the Constitution itself shall not
nly be symbolized, but realized?
We shall see. Governor Smith will
have opposing him, the prohibition
™: ne, which is drawing $40,000,-
000 per year, with its army of work:
ers from the national government.
He will have the open hostility of
President Calvin Coolidge and trained
Heatenants. He will have the money
power of the “Soft Drink” people,
the “Candy and Ice Cream” inter-
ests, The Grocery Combine, The De-
partment Store interests, all of whom
claim that the whiskey interests di-
verted money from the legitimate
channels to the injury of the work-
ing man’s family. He will have the
Klux with the , propaganda
that the Pope of Rome and the Ru-
man Catholic Church are behind this
movement for the election of a Ro-
man Catholic President. He will
have the opposition of the elements
opposed to the Chief Sachem of Tam-
many Hal! organization, the past rec-
ord of which has been a stench in the
nostrils of the nation, even though it
is claimed that the Augean Stables
have since been cleaned and are sweet
smelling and pure today. Last but
not ieast, he must face the bitter
opposition of the wealthy “boot-
leggers” today, who do not want: the
country, other than bone dry. It
keeps the price of the underground
liquor up from 600 to 1,000 per cent.
When you let in beer, it decreases
the consumption of hard liquor. When
you let in wine, it lessens the use of
soft drinks.
It is against this kind of hypocrisy
that Gov. Alfred E. Smith, of New
York, is arraying his battalions. In
this contest, he has the enthusiastic
support of Democrats and Republi-
cans under the organized name of
Association against Prohibition. It
was this support, which he would
have forfeited had he failed to em-
phasize his pre-convention position
and announce that while he would en-
force the law as it now stands, he
would insist upon a modification of
the same, Can Alfred E. Smith and
the rejuvenated Democratic Party
running on an anti-bone dry track
win the race to the White House?
Herbert Hoover of California, Wm.
McAdoo of the same State, J. Thomas
Heflin of Alabama, and hosts of
othiers, inéludirig Bishop James A.
Cannon, say he cannot. You have’
the facts. Ponder them and draw
your own conclusion, |
THE STRANGE CASE OF SYL-
VESTER MEDLEY
A colored youth, now a resident of
this city, but born in Monroe, North
Carolina, is in the Henrico County
Jail in this city charged with mur-
der. The case has some peculiar
phases in that he is a minor and
was in the custody of the Detention
Home officials, which officials held
him under orders of the Juvenile
Court, Judge J. Hoge Ricks, presid-
ing, Henry F. Grimmell, a retired
business man (white) wanted a boy
around his house and coriceived the
idea of securing one of these way-
ward youths to serve him and his
associates.
Mrs. Nellie L. Haskins, who is dig-
aitfied as the housekeeper of Mr.
G¥immell’s home came in direct con-
tagt with this peculiar product of the
developing department of our crimi-
nal system, Sylvester’ Medley was
nagged, abused, ordered and threat.
ened until he became not only unruly,
but stubborn. His ‘efforts: to leave
the place were frustrated by the
strong arm of the probation depart-
merit in its effort.to. make a good
citizen of him. F
‘He nursed his grievances andi in-
cbéised his hatred of the vesbiaaie
ing ‘in this Grimmell home. Adfit-
tedly; he got up early last Saturday
morning andJaid.in..wait.for Mrs.
Haskins. “When shé came down, his
pent-up feelings were-imevidetice and
he shot her. He then proceeded to
shoot and kill Samuel“E. Grimméll,
He fired and struck Henry F. Grim-
mell and fired at, -but missed Miss
Nellie Haskins. Was Sylvester ‘Med-
ley responsible for his act?” Does, the
fact that he is a minor and wa:
practically under the ‘charge-‘an¢
supervision of the Juvénilé Court’ of
Richmond mean: that the-arm of: the
law. governing minors’ canbe exert-
dt hisbehalf? = = 4
"His “admitted crime was a/ plait
case of first »degree~ murder, : ‘fa
‘Which the’ Virginia: statates provide
ddath Th the electric chai? pean
Prisanment, in sthe . Virginia, penitin-
a ‘Those, who'seenv Ria
BANE ‘potei 8 Eno bay that
ane tales are the, Ones oy
cide>this: question. The-qriote,‘ia: a
“Rethdws!ane-dut of the ordinary #Kat
the average mind will hasten 1
conclusion that he is a lunatic. If
he is, he will spend the remainder of
his days behind the walls of an‘ in
sané asylum, now called hospitals in
this State.
If he is’of normal mind, his days
HE RICHMOND PLANET, RIJHMOND’ VIRGINIA
THR ee ene CoN oitoa Gas,
OY Cag tS Brea oe nme cou A Ly
ume VETERE Suace arg teteer bol
qared or more SPINKG Yb vhayjot
fow many these "days, shall be than
thosetin the cotinty in which ‘the Grime
was committed. He’ must first” be
deait with as a minor and then this
department can commit him to a re-
formator#“0#"tD ‘an‘asylumn-or tear,
send him to a criminal court of reg-
ord to be tried”k$ amature citizen,
In the meantime, Medley,is the most
unconcerned person in-the world, al-
though his mother is apparently
heart-broken, 5
Tt may be well to state that not
even a whisper of lynching has been
heard here and the white and colored
people ave going. their wey with
arcely thought as to: what the
cutcome of this peculiar case will be.
The knowledge that the law is oper-
ating and that all phases of the situ-
ation will be considered end the mat
ter and bring about a feeling that
full justice will be done all parties
in the long run. When the full truth
is brought out, it may be that Syl-
vester Med’ey, the boy murderer may
appear in a more favorable light.
First Degree tiurder
Wore a Blue Shirt
“L noticed that this boy wore a blu
shirt under the white one, He had
two revolvers of 88-calibre. On Mon:
day, he came in again and I had tc
go to Churchhill. He got in my cat
and went over there with me. Wher
I turned into 34th and Marshall
Streets, Detective Sergeant Cousins
arrested him. Medley had plenty of
nerve. He did not have any of the
pistols on him when he was arrested
You understand my position. I have
no desire to take away from Sergeant
Cousins any of the credit for the
capture of Medley. Some one had
called from below. W. H. Davis, Jr.
answered, He had _a youngster pre-
paring shrimps to fill several orders
which ran up to five gallons.
Brief Session
“He was having a time to do this
and I Jaughingly went down th
steps, after thanking him for’ the in-
formation and was soon in the Po-
lice Court, which fad adjourned
after a few minutes session with only
one lone colored man to. be ‘carried
down to the City Jail’ on this’ Fourth
of July morning. A’ for Judge John
L. Ingram, he’ was ‘in’ good "humor
and some others were in the lobby
discussing T. Gray Haddon’s chances
to succeed the popular-jurist as jus.
tice of this samo police court, Tdi
not linger long and after a briét visit
to Coroner James M. Whitfield’s of
fice, I was soon again in’ the Planet
Office. r
Medley was docile and unconcerned.
Ho had left the Haskins’ home after
the crime and had ridden: on the
horse toa spot about~a mile away
from the scene of the shooting, in
a wood just above the Deep Run
Hunt Club, on the Broad Street Road.
There he ‘had changed his clothing
and tied his horse to a tree, long be-
fore this. was discovered about 4
o'clock in the afternoon Saturday.
Then Came to City
After walking up the road some
distance he caught a street car and
came to the city, getting off at th
and Main streets. Then he went
to a fish market on 17th Street. He
said a Negro by the the name of
William H, Davis employed him to
work for the day. He said he had
known Davis some time.
At no time during the time he was
at the fish market, however, accord-
ing to his story, did he give any
hint of what he had done. As for
that matter, he did not volunteer the
information to anyone he met or
talked with until he was captured
he said.
But while he was working Satur-
day night about 8 o'clock, a friend,
Reuben Scott. Negro, who lives near
his home in the 900 block of Mosby
street, came to him. The friend, he
said, had read an account of the
shooting in the paper and came to
see him about it.
“You had better give yourself up
to the nolies: they will cateh vou any-
way, he said the friend advised him.
He said he agreed with Scott that
he thought the police would get him
eventually, and thought he would
surrender.
Scott also advised Medley to go to
his mother at the Mosby Street ad-
dress, according to the assailant.
Then’ the friend said he would bring
Mediey’s mother down to the fish
market later.
Medley! told different stories as to
where he spent the night. First, he
said he ¢aught a car and went out
to the end of the Westhampton line,
where hei spent the night in a wood
He: said, he came to Richmond in the
morning at about 1 o'clock and went
to the home of Davis, on 17th Street
near Grace. Then he went riding
with Davis, he said.
‘Asked whether he had planned to
eave the city, the Negro replied that
he had not.
Planned to Surrender
<I was just going to stay here ot
give myself up,” he said.
Interviewed at the jail, the Negré
told the’ story as follows:
“L got up about 5:30 o'clock and
went to'the kitchen to make the fire.
I waited around in the room until
Mes. Haskins came down. I was
standing’ near the kitchen cabinet
‘when’she entered the room. I sav
the gitivstanding, against tho cabine
ind sbttéthing told me to take it an¢
sto6t the woman. T don’t know why
{afd Ie’'1 had not planned to shcot
en
© “THeH'-I walked out into the hall
‘did saw the girl and the boy. I sho
at her first, but she ran upstairs
[Shot the boy. I did not By
tage, dystairs. I did not fear I would
\"shot.By Mr. Grimmell. But, when
‘Mr. Grimmell appeared at the head
of the afairs, I shot him.
% that, I left the house, 1
hea saipistl shot and T knew Mr
immell was trying to get some
hody's attention. So T got my clothe
‘on a fast as I could, then the horse
and rode away. I saw a man come
up in the yard, but I could not, shoot
because I had Jeft the gun in the
house. : ‘
after bhangine gay élothes “and
Lepr oie c . 5 ype
Mi 4 : ‘\ a
‘Moore St. Bapt. Church, :
West Leigh St., between Kinney and Bowe Sts :
Ba (lia anek 3
Dr. Gordon B. Hancock, s
PASTOR. 5
| Sunday, July 8th 1928. :
{1:30 AL M., “Pulling Ourselves Together.” 2
8 P.M, Candle Light Servet ‘
YOU ARE WELCOME. :
to town on a street car and went
down to the fish market, where I
went to work. I did not tell anybody
what I had done. I stopped work
at about 11 o'clock Saturday night.
“That night I rented a room on
17th Street, where I spent the night.
The father of the man I worked. for
that day, William H. Davis, Jr., lived
in the same house.”
Medley then was asked if he had
any, motive for the shooting. | His
story concerning this point, follows:
Flashes Across Mind
“{ don't know. It just ‘lashed
across my mind to shoot when Mrs.
Haskins came downstairs. I did not
hear them getting out of bed.
“The older folks were all the time
after me about something. I could
never have any peace around them.
Tt was first one thing and then an-
other, and I just et tired of it. I
wanted to get work somewhere else,
and several. times I left them.
Every time I left them they came
and got me and there was no
way of getting away from them. 1
was only making $5 working for
them. What's $57 That wasn’t
enough, and I couldn’t get away to
make more. I didn’t know how to
get away; they wouldn't let ms go.”
Medley slept in servants’ quater
on the Haskins’ place. The polite said
that, usually, he was called by some-
gh atthe ‘house in, the morning.
jut Friday morning, he had. gane te
the house before being called and
before members of the household had
arisen. eo
Medley was born at Monroe, N.C.
He came to Richmond with his
mother when he was 2 years-old and
has lived at the Mosby street ad-
dress since. |
The police said, Medley has been
arrested before on liquor charges.
The man, whose name is not
known, who’ drove up to the house
as Medley was leaving, spread the
alarm of the shooting to the police.
After finding the wounded’ people, he
drove to the Second Police Station,
and police soon followed him to the
scene. :
With the aid of neighbors, the
wounded were taken to the hospital.
Samuel E, Grimmell, 16-year-old
John Marshall High School student,
died a short time after reaching
Johnston-Willis hospital, where he
was rushed after the fatal shooting.
His mother, Mrs. Nellie L. Haskins,
is in the hospital shot through the
stomach and expected to die, while
Henry H. Grimmell, 60, retired Rich-
mond plumber, is in a serious con-
dition,
‘Armed with riot guns and aided
by bloodhounds, police of Richmond
and Henrico county are searching
for the assailant. Sylvester Medley,
19, formerly of Mosby street. The
Negr, when last seen, was headed
for Richmond on a horse he had
taken from the Grimmell stable. He
had been employed for the past two
years by Grimmell.
Sheriffs of all adjoining counties,
the chiefs of police of all nearby cit-
ties and towns, and railv-ad ¢-tec-
tives of al! surrounding lines have
been rotified and are aiding in the
man hunt acerting to T. Wilsn
Seay, sheriff Henv'en.
Med’ey is coser’bed as bain vow
black, § fect. ® inches ta'l and we'gh-
ing about 140 nounds. He hay “wo
front teeth missine. and was wear-
ing a blue shirt, 'ght pants and a
blue cap. :
Mr, Grimmell said: i
“Ms. Haskins went dovmistairs 9
open up the-house at aboat a dlgrter
to 6, When she went out on’ the
porch. the Négresfired at_her with: a.
double - barreled. shotgun. She
screamed and Samuel, the boyywho js
her apn, ran down to help her. The
Negi? shot him.
{put on: my: artificial leg to go
dows to see what ithe: trouble was:
Tamia cripple. When I reached the
head of the stairs to go, down, I.seen
him standingy there with the ‘gun
through the screen door. When I
started down the steps, he opened
the door and fired at me,
“Hee hit me in the right side. 1
fired at him, I don't know whether
I hit him.’ I crawled up the steps
and got tomy room. I fred my pis
tol out of the window to) ‘get the
neighbors’ attention. When they
came I asked them to telephone to
Richmond for the officers and the
ambulance. ‘The police amo promt
iy.
“pkey took Mrs. Haskins and the
boy, to the hospital in the ambu-
Tatoo, I came after in a car. The
Negro's name is Sylvester, about 18
ori years old. 1, can't give any
Teason at all for what he did. No
words pasted. Ho must have been
craay.
‘He seemed all right last night. He
must have come in the out, gut the
double-barrel shotgun and a box of
careiges ad Anil taal for us
6 n employed on the place
Thou two years” pam Ss
The Negro was calm aftér’his‘ar-
rest and not reluctant to talk. Yet,
he “old, varying, stories as to’ the
reason for the shooting. Apparent-
ly, there was none; unless the Negro
had-been brooding over some minor
GiMerences awith. his. employer .and
‘At first he said he had lain in his
bed during Friday night and planned
the murder. Then, he said, he was
seized with an impulse to’ use the
gun, just as Mrs, Haskins entered
the ‘kitchen of the home, where he
was waiting for the fire to burn up.
Another story he told was that he
had become dissatisfied with work-
ing at the place, but, though he had
threatened several times to seek other
employment, was always “forced” by
his employer to return. This last
story he told his counse!, Charles W.
‘Moss, who visited him at the jail yes-
terday.
To Sergeant Cousins the Negro
told the story as follows:
‘Story of Shooting
“I got up yesterday morning at
5:30 A. M. and went to the kitchen
to make a fire. I pulled all the cur-
tains down in the kitchen. I got
behind the kitchen cabinet and wait-
ed for Mrs. Haskins to come down
stairs, When she came down I shot
her. Then I ran around in the front
of the house and shot the rest of
them. I don’t know whether I hit
them or not, I had three shells in
the gun.
“One Sunday in May Mrs. Haskins
hada man at the house whose name
was Miller. She cooked’ some meat
that day. Later members of thé fam-
ily left the house, leaving me there
to wash the dishes, ahd. pat, things
away. Before leaving Mrs. Haskins
told me not to eat any ‘of the meat.
I washed the dishes“ and read the
paper after they’had gore, Then I
went out in the yard-and left the
door open. =
Two dogs got in the kitchen and
ate the meat. I wanted to show it to
Mrs. Naskins when she came back,
but Miller (the other man’ who had
come to the house) insisted on cut-
ting the meat. He said hs would tell
her how it disappeared when she re-
turned.
“When Mrs. Haskins came back
she jumped on me about the meat,
She also jumped on me about not
paying a bill,
“That morning (the morning of the
shooting) I lay in wait for her, and
something told me to kill her. T shot
Mrs. Haskins first, then I shot at
her daughter and son next, and then
I shot Mr. Grimmell.
“A man came up in a car after the
shooting, but I did not shoot him. I
left the gun in the kitchen. Later I
cot my clothes and rode away on a
horse.
“Sometime later I caught a street
ear and came to Richmond, going
down t> 17th Street”
(Continued on page 8)
et =h a
; x - | |
ed aia
Li
Be Sat ae |
ak a
\ a ee
4 On |
Rien 2 yy
(ce “Rem ae +
« Rey: Géorge-Ly Rollins, D. D.. pas-
tor of the Mt. Sinai Baptist Church
at}Hallsbero, .Va,, preached a won-
derful ‘sermon at the Pilgrim Baptist
Church Sunday, July ist, at3 P. M.
A large crowd was out to enjoy the
discourse. Rev. Réllins is a great
preacher. Words of congratulation
were ‘extended to the great man of
God for. his ‘effort. L.
Mr. William Bradford, of Balti-
more, Md., was in the city for a short
while this week.
IDEAL ‘ANNIVERSARY CELE-
BRATION
The 16th Anniversary of the Na-
tional Ideal:;Benefit ;Society of Rich-
mond District will be celebrated Sun-
day, July 15, 1928, ati3:80 P.Miiat
the ‘sixth Mount Zion Baptist Church
corner Duval and St.- John streets
The pastor, Rev. A. W. Brown, wil
deliver the ‘Anniversary ‘sermon.
‘A’ spicy address will be made by
Mr. A. W..Holmes, founder, . Subject
“The Growth of the Order.” The
National Ideal Choir will render spe
cial. music, for ,the occasion, The
MALE, members ‘will please meet at
the Idéal Hall, 210°R, Otay St, at 2
o'clock and march to the church. ‘The
female members are asked to.meet/if
the basement of the church at 2:30
P. M. ALL: MEMBERS ARE RE-
QUESTED TO WEAR REGALIA.
A live program will be rendered, The
Sublic 49 cordially invited.
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meciding to. all rag p>
wT em &
‘aetyre Aye: Bt
IMPROVEMENT NOTED :AT. ss
Mr. L. J. Bayéen, |
224 West Broad street, |
Richmond, Va *
I reestved your treatment O. =
and I have started to taking
eireaty: fora few devm ead i
atréady, bene ‘to: lexprors wy
ment se lam conding to:you for
more La A wettest
pided. I have spoken to many ot
fring end ‘they: my they so
to, send tor ‘ trentmant, I culah |
ro iy cme tt waa wo
a omy mae at we
Jitikik ‘PEOPLE | hubs
YOU NOW BY YOUR
Wheo you can ge FrRNtTt RB eo
A008 trom au Vid Bxcanuisamt Hoa:
tke JURGENS—thar's Kavu t eat
he best quality goods. Jast as reasou
able as elaewhete—why oot give you
(riends 8 good tmpression = (t wt!
Give a tbe/gteatent pitwsare to ebue
rou our wondertal etnck of Dom»
Geking;-comfer-giving. FURNITURS
404 8008 an4—doa’t fail to sak on»
salesmen about out BANKING PLAN
which ‘gives you, 10 of 16 months
‘which to pay tor say parctiass.
CHAS. 6. JURGENS SOM
; a Ue
A RBTABLISHED 1880. -
-ADAMS. AND BROAD
—————
ea eee,
VIRGINIA:
In the Hustings ‘Court; Part’ IY,
every Orang.
Yours truly,
EDWARD BRYANT,
Dougias, Arisona.
Camp Harry J. Jones,
Co. D, 25th Intamtry,
FOUND GREAT RELIEF,
Power, W. Va, Feb. 9, 1926,
L. J. Hayden,
224 West Broad Street,
Richmond, Va.
Dear Sir: I received your medi
cing and I must say that it has dome
me ao much good and t makes me
teel so much better. I am writing
you to plese seul me some more
a9 you sald in your letter that it
would Sian aes om treatment
to relieve 8 person of his trouiie,
Thanking you, Iam,
324 West =
MARY Gnocm,
Bower, W. Va.
—.. t
= MOR WANTED.
Der recrite Bus Maren 25, 1925.
Mr. L, J. Hayden,
224 Weet Broad Street
Richmend, Va. a)
Dat sie; Flees amd me ese
ee, ste rm
‘te bs eemy gee Ge
cow for 00.080. Ram apo
ame ee 2 pail os
% a
ees —
a “-—. Saewettia Pa.
1928.
Willie Pegram sous Plaintiff
against
Agnes Fegram .............,.Defendant
Oraer of Publication.
The object of tnis suit is obtain
a. divorce from the bond of matri-
mony by the plaintiff from the de-
fendant, Agnes Pegfam, upon the
grounds of desertios.
‘An afidavit having been made
and filed that the said defendant,
Agnes Pegram, is not a resident of
the City of Richmond, State of
Virginia, and her last known ad-
dress was Philadelphia, Pa. It is
therefore ordered that Agnes Pe-
gram do appear here within ten
days after due publication of this
order and do whatever may be
necessary to protect her interest
in this suit.
A Copy—Teste:
W. E. DUVAL,
Clerk,
WM, F. DENNY, p. a. i
119 East Leigh Street,
Richmond, Va.
i
AN ANNOUNCEMENT.
‘The Goodwill Baptist Church, 410
be Monroe Street {9 a new unit to the
Beptist. Care with 9 very broad
Dregram. . W. R. Ball, pastor
fovites the public aed hie many
frignasettohiworshin. Sunday.” July
3. 11:30 A. M. and 8:00 P. M.
Communion 1st Suudays, 3:30 P. M
Sunday gchool, 1¢:00 A. Mt,’ Special
music. All gre tnviged. *
Thi ¥ ch nee
his is Your Last Chance.
By special arrangements we are able to offer you
a cloth-bound copy of Kelly Miller’s
Authentic History of
The Negro in the World War
on terms that betoken a slaughter in book prices.
A detailed description may be found in another column. Here is the coupon:
THE PLANET,
SILN. 4th St. :
Richmond, Va.
Please find enclosed $1.25 for Kelly Miller’s History of the
Negro in the World War. This order is tye coupon required,
Signed: ‘ i ‘
Nae Go ee eas : :
Se ake es Peon Uo Bena .
Read The Planet. It is $2.00 5 $1.10 for si . Writ 1's termes.
LLNS a 8 92.09 pr: $10 ord moth, Wit for Agents tam
300,000 Negroes crossed the Atlantic during the Warld War. . :
This book tells you all about it. If you; find not as repre- 2 Zz -
sented, the $1.25 will be cheerfully refunded. Send 3 yearly F ee | 2 a
subscriptions and the jHietory will be mailed you apes The Richmond Planet,
free of charge. i ’
em TH OLR RICHMOND,. VIRGINIA
i eee hae AA ot one | Qe a | Gees AOL) cn 4 Oe Te eee ie
CIMERIVCAS VIO LOR UW PSILLS DURE DYOCALLU!F KED UUDS °°
f snl RA
Lo =
poe AS nee eo
Be Ns : 4
SS a
OR es ee a
Oe See sae ee rae
: 1 Yemen)
> ., NATIONAL PARK 2 &
Atte af Se me \ am
Re ce ee et pee? =
Saye f ee ew Bh
ioe = oN ee
* 2 lw ‘Cre Rae os Rates:
Sop MD Foe a in Ai MO ae Pia
ee (ee | ee ES? Bean onda
tye aS z SB oe het dadee qe
sy ae ate . a de i eh
iar Ge ee 8 Ge ] Ww A bck oer
vo i He se oe Ae oe
a ee de eee Ae :
CHiCaul—Amertca bes become «
land of motor gypsies. Possession of
‘an automobile, whether it be w “tin
faa” of selon model. and a few
ollare for guecline, “red hote” ead
‘alter, givee the motorist a chalee of
gayriad vacation paradigns ranging
from the Vermont lakes, the Maine
comat and the Catailis 10 the Ouarts
atid Southern California: from Renter
NaMonal Park in Woehiagton to
Miami, Ploriday from te North
‘Woods of Atinnssota and Wisconsin
to the Quit Coast, and from the
Cumberiand valley to the Bleck Hilla
and the Tallowstone.
‘The coming. season, rcoording to
eget sade oy the American e-
searoh, Fouridation, will bring out
more tin 19,000,000 tourteta who
wMt-invest a billion and @ half dol
lafeturwendry,, tresh alr, and hie
vorical’ traditions.
Of these, nearly 3,000,000 wil! visit
one of more of the many national
parks, of which the Yosemite perk
with ite huge sequoia trons seams 20
be the moet popular. Platt National
Rack in Oklahoma will attract about
306,000 tourista. Almost a many
more will find thelr way to Rocky
Mountain park in Colorado, to the
Yellowstone and to Hot Springs, Ark.
tn the heart of the. picturesque
Guarks. Sequola, Mi. Ranier, Grand
Canyon, and Zion National Perk in
Utah, also will absorb thetr share of
the tourist trade.
Not only will such arteries ss the
Lincoln and Dixie highways, the Yel-
lowstone and the Custer Battleteld
highways and the Susquehanna trait
soon be dotted with vacation-bound
motorista, but the smaller trails and
byways penetrating the heart of
wanda Gud: diaiiinios gist Go
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
AN ADIRONDACK Raker
roartous trout streams, or winding in tour would b
and out among the bills and valleye| Motorist
of smiling farm land and sections of| leal traditio
America, such as the Old Dominton| the Amerion
‘and the Cumberland, rich in legend | suggests, wou
and tradition. toure to. the
More than 10,000,000 ‘tourtate' wilt| the friendly
take advantage of the tent and cot-|drick Hudson
tage camps soattered 20 plectifully age in the
slong main-traveled routes, aid in| Washington
the latest type of cottage of “bunga- | tion for th
lotte” camp, they will Bnd such com-| Winkle, the 5
Yenlences sa hot and cold ranaing| ican folk ta
water, shower baths, ‘gas stoves, éleo- | Adirondacks
frie tons, electric washing mactines, | are rich in
playgrounds, souvenir ahope, poss of- | variety ot soe
fices, and in some instances, even a| Another #u
police station, ‘Washington,
Nor will the modern gypsy, mo mat-| tiontsts, thro
ter bow far he may stray, over find | capital of the
himself more than a shor} distancé | to the North
from the ubiquitous gasoline filing | the Polomuc
station, without which an extended |oridge and wi
5 Se : 4
ee bo aa?
Ce c ’ mae pe ea?
=) Se ‘ou SS ae
A ee ee
& Rees vr * oe a fe
Re er | Re ee ner
i a ; ioe or oy
Mice ae ‘ So a Eee
a s aOR gr eager
en ie cana: Ne a Capes.
ee eet c eee (ae
Bice: ae rae ares es Bs
rent 3 ee ree, (
ay ey 4 ee ae
aa cm Seema [
Cs ed eee eee. ed G mes
s Oa Pai | st, ee Crt
eS fee 8 Aimee 72
INTHE VOSS Mire gp MI oon, sR
tour would be impossible.
Motorists seeking to revive. histor
foal traditions, x bulletin saved
the American Research | Priiadatio
suggeeta, would do wal to direct tet
tore to the dreany Caailie, where
the frlendly indians wolcomed eu
rick Hudson on bis memorable voy
fage tn the Halt Moon, and wher
Washington Irving fond bis imap.
‘Hon fer the legecd of Rip Vaw
‘Winkle, the most dolighi tut of Amar
foan folk talon, Now Engin, th
Adirondacks wad the Barkabltes lx
fre rich In‘ memoriée ‘and offer 1
variety of scetiic én¢hantment.
‘Another suggested tour leads trom
‘Washington, always a micca of vaca-
Honlata, through Richmond, tne ola
capital of the Confederacy, and south
to the North Carolia Ube, vos
the Potomac over the aew Meme
bridge and winding tn and out among
RS “AOS aS
gh Gees
§ eae,
Seven Fairs, Co.cRavo
2) SPRINGS, CvACvcamee!
Virginia hills through “sysection of
the country enriche. p-.our’ bee!
ectonial traditions = Y %
The Susquehanna trail, leading
from Washington to Bufdlé-andedl-
agera,, an unbroken yonerete ribboN
of 450 miles, will take the, moterist
througn Gettysburg, where Picke!,
made bis famous charge, and along
the Susqueliunoa valley where every
ture «nfclds a panorama of blue ills
and misty, pine-clad , mountains
Leaving the national ‘capttal,. the
tourls: may pause at Prederick, sd,
to pay honor to the birthplace of
Prancis Scott Key and Barbara
Fritchie, and, leaving Gettysourg to
ita yalinat memories, pass on to Har-
er's Perry, the scene of John Brown's
sotivities,
‘he East, however, has uo mo-
nopoly on historical traditions, sad
the motorlat, reaching Joplia, so.
from the Last on U. 8. Highway 66,
of from thy nortk oF south on U. ¥
Highway 71, will fod bimeeif at we
gateway of! the Ozarks, lana of 4
thousnd wonders and “a militon
miles,’ the stage of Harold Bet:
Wright's romauce, “The Shepherd ot
the Hilla,” and of te Civil war =
ties of Poa Ridge and Wilson Creek
which saved Missourt to"the Onion
Locked within these hills, more-
over, 1s © sportamen’s paradise with
deep pools in the backwaters of the
rushing “streams in which the
speckled beauties lurk, and chains ot |
ttle takes which effer some of *he|
Fost Siahing jo America. ater: tcips-
ti ik
“ie a C (
ge w ager on emily ~
s i squeegee hth 8
4 Bes canta at eget
ARMS Ng ORE ae ae
bs SAT ct ae, f A PO ANS
os eae Wh.) key. apaauetemanees |
rsh ite EA Whe oii a elgagyl
Bet |i a Sears
Sait | Mercian. SEN Minas ete 5
Fee, |Pae konadl eee |
Rie gg oe
| ee
| oe IS oo.
= eS Lae fe
B ‘ Oe Ee Omer > 6H
ee 1M Wisconsin's NorRTHLAND ® @ 2 @
sy eA BUR CON INS CONGR ON Dee
RES oe
eh Eo ii te ca A esa aaa
da. a eer ere
ee: ee ea ee aan geil igre
SR en 2 eS ee
Cae ica Sh ake
ges. | ne te Sn oil
oc oe gel RR Orn tng ea
Soe oe item cgmmeg. Oa ee
Be Seeger
Poe erent Ca
ants Ste ere a Vea en
ee SEM wer, 5
LONG THE YELIOWSTONE TRAIL @ © © OO!
remarkable for their scenic revels:
tions start trom the little town of
Brandun on 0, 8. Highway 65, tuoked
away in the heart of tho “Shepherd
of the Hills” country. And no motor-
int should mies a trip to:Palry Cave.
The great north ‘woods of -Minse:
sota, Wieconain, and the Michigas
entnsula, easily accessible by molar
car, lkowlse will attract: the sporta-
man, Arriving tn Chleago over the
Dixlo highway from the south or thr
Lincoln highway from the east, ope
may follow 0. 8. Highway 44 to such
fMahing resorte aa Boulder Junction
Wolt, Boulder, Crooked and. Wild ‘Cat
Unkoa, axle River. the Lac dit Flam
eat indian ceservation, sanstowiai
Tomahawk, and on up {nto the woods
Wisconsin with ita 6,000 letle lakes
ond winding channels, seems to hare
‘boon made to order for the fsherman,
‘and the state is famous for ite per-
fectly built and maintained roads.
Following the A. ¥, P. aod Custer
Battlefirid highways from Chicago vis
Dubuque. Siowe Falls and Mitchell to
Rapil Ciiy and Deadavod, the motos!
an, WS perenne sere ee
Jcountry, an enchanted iand, hallowed
by Indian fegend asd by the spirit of
fe Wane snares Joma the
outdoorsman, tena ot ble
enchanted-tand, ‘aoe fram Rapid
‘City, stake: the, ree any
‘atural wanders, auch 40.the:Neodice
or cathedral ren sid are,
Crystal: cave, Dofille tower end piven
‘inke ceatding among’ the.niile.at Oue~
tor State park, which Ja mnotuary,
for big yamie. 5
rom ‘the plotuteeque-mining..otty
at Deadwood, the ¢raliteade dn to the
Yollowstane, where the wortd ie still
in a proreen of fermation and whete
the wery ground weethes and bubotee.
A tour of this wondertand will in-
clude Old Patthtul, Yellowstone lake,
Grand Canyon, Dunraven pass, Tower
falla, Maiamoth Hot Springs, nad the
North Geyser Deain.
‘The park ism sanctuary of tld
life, ®-a0plogical garden on a vest’
stale, while the lakes and streams)
offer something unusual in the way?
Of Doble” ~ costwais. ps cone
Women Leaders at Texas Convention
3.
2.
5.
4.
Among the women playing presidents pants in the Houston, Tex., Democratic National Committee are the following presidents above: Mrs. Jane W. Hickman of Maryland, the chair of MNO women voters as the vice president of the committee; & Mrs. William A. Do Pay the Deputy President of the committee; & Mrs. Dennis D. Moore president from Missouri; & Mrs. Ruth Black Newell of Missouri, presiding officer of the National Committee; & Mrs. Jessie E. Scott, of the Paul, MN, Georgia National Committee-woman and official reporter for the 19th national convention.
W. F. Knudsen, Chevrolet president, offers cheerful news of General Motors. In May his company turned out 140,700 Chevrolet cars. On one day, May 28, the product was 7,075 finished cars and trucks. May, 1928, is 25,000 cars ahead of May, 1927.
That's good production, but high General Motors officials should bear in mind that the machinery in their brains is more valuable than any other asset of General Motors. Men like President Sloan of General Motors and Raskob, head of General Motors finance, work themselves as they wouldn't work any piece of machinery.
They take the night train from New York to Detroit, begin work there at 8 in the morning, work through the whole day, eating sandwiches at noon, still working, and take the night train back to New York.
No machine can stand that, and no duty to stockholders justifies it.
Dr. Walsh, of Fordham University, tells young man "The world is confronted with more mysteries than ever before. Science solves only a few problems."
Yes, indeed. Why does the hydrogen atom have a single proton in the centre, and a single electron revolving around it, why does the helium atom, first sheer, the sun through the spectroscope have four nuclei with two electrons revolving around them, and how does the formation of four grammes helium, from hydrogen, produce energy as great as though eighty tons of coal were burned? There are some mysteries for you.
Everything is a mystery if you go far enough into it. And the greatest of all mysteries is thought, which has no proton or electron so far as we know and is driven by an energy that has no more practical name than "soul" or "mind."
A $20,000 prize is offered for the best ending to Schubert's "Unfinished Symphony." It won't be worth $20,000.
To finish Schubert's symphony you would have to be Schubert. To restore her arms to the Venus of Milton or to show how the winged Venus looked before she got into that night, you would require the
Women Leaders at
Among the woman playing pro
Dames the National Quarter
I. Mrs. Jane W. Wardman of the
voters as the vice president of
the Dames of Edinburgh A. H.
Daimoreth James F. Ferguson, he
Newall of Middlesbrough, the
Jessie E. Scott of the Paul Miles
women and official reporter for the
Proposes Smith
AUTOCASTER
Thomas L. Hickey, San Francisco lawyer, and an ardent supporter of Alfred E. Smith, who made the speech nominating Smith president at the Democratic National Convention at Houston, Texas.
Girin and the feeling of the artist that made the statue. Every mind ever born is absolutely different from every other.
James A. Farrell, president of the United States Steel Corporation, will visit the plant of the New Haven Wire Company today. When he was sixteen years old he worked there twelve hours out of every twenty-four for $4.65 a week. If you stick to your job, even that kind of job, you can get somewhere.
In New York a young man brought into court by his father admitted that he had an income of $400 a week, and employed his father as hostler to take care of his saddle horses. His excuse was that the father had not led a moral life. The Japanese religion, that includes twenty different kinds of hell, probably would find one especially prepared for him, that wouldn't include any saddle horses.
A visitor to the White House feeling important said to President Coolidge: "Mr. President, I must tell you I did not vote for you." "Well," replied the President, "some did."
The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company insured a man part time for $1,500,000. A few gossiping ages, when the second biggest city in France had no inhabitant over fifty years of age, such insuring would have been financially solvent. Man live longer, intelligence counts. A wise man at fifty is a safer risk than a fool at twenty-five. And the Metropolitan has promoted longer living by intelligent health advertising.
President's Son
AUTOCASTER
Here's a closeup . . . of John Coolidge, son of the president, as he proposed in cap and gown during his graduation from Ainherst.
Texas Convention
2.
national party in the Houston, Tex., and the following, presented above:稚稚, the chairing of 200,000 women; S. Mrs. William A. Do Pay; Mrs. James M. Thompson, National Committee; A. Mrs. Emily Blank of the National Committee; S. Mrs. Dempseyia National Committee-1600 national convention.
Chairman
Here's Clem Shaver, Chairman of Democratic National Committee, who swung the gavel at the convention at Houston, Tex.
THE BIGGEST PLANE, MOSTLY WORLDWIDE
Magazine Page
9
Leaves Race
AUTOCASTER
Governor Albert Ritchie of Maryland, who withdrew his name, is a candidate for the Democratic Presidential Nomination. Asserting that personal advancement should not be allowed in interfere with Democratic success, the suggested that Maryland's 16 votes be cast for Alfred E. Smith.
Beats Robby Jones
Johany Farrell, professional of Mamaroneck, N. Y., who won the National Open Golf Championship for the first time by defeating Bobby Jones, the Atlanta, Ga. wizard. The tension and excitement of the game can best be illustrated by the score: 163 to 144.
Chief Doorkeeper
R. Lee Barnes, chief doorkeeper at the Democratic National Convention at Houston, Texas. They didn't get past him or his aids without proper identification!
"City of Sunshine," Host to Many Notables, Erecting Solariums for Invigorating Sun Baths This Tail
MAYOR
JOHN N. BROWN
ST. PETERSBURG, FLORIDA
WHERE THE 'SUN BATHING'
VOGUE WAS ORIGINATED.
HENRY MORGANTHAN,
EX-AMBASSADOR TO
TURKEY
JOHN WHELAN,
MILLIONAIRE
SUN BATHER
SHE WANTS
HEALTH INSURANCE
CYRUS H.K.
CURTIS,
WHO
APPROVES
FAD.
COATS OF TAN ARE THE RAGE
Hotels are erecting private solar
hits on their roofs for the use of
guests seeking health insurance and
many will be ready for the seasons.
SCOTTISH
PIPE BAND AT
BANFF
ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. — Social leaders who sojourned here last season started something when they launched the sun bathing fad in this city of considerable sunshine.
From one end of the nation to the other, sun bathing has swbpt the country and is the most discussedogue of the last decade.
So popular has become the health insurance edict that City officials have appropriated funds for the erecting of Solarums where Sun Bathers may enjoy the invigorating treatments in privacy.
John N. Brown, millionaire mayor,unself a believer in the health restoring and body building rays of Oleo Sol favors enlarging accommodations for the free use of a vast army of solarums inside the "Sunshine City" from every state in the union this fight.
Famous medical men who visited St. Petersburg proclaim it the ideal location for sun bathing. They found that the sun beans upon little Pinel-
"Stands Scotl
SWORD DANCE
IN
CANADIAN
ROCKES
"Standa, Scotland, where it didt"
Yes, except during the period, from August 31 to September 3, when it will seem to have been transplanted overnight to a new Highland haunt in the Canadian Rockies. The occasion is the Highland Gathering and Scottish Music Festival, to take place a second time at Banff, Alberta, with headquarters at the Banff Baronous Hotel, Songs that the Scot has sung, for seven centuries, and
las Peninsula on an average of 360 days every year. They are recommending sojourns here for operation convalescences and for the middle aged, declaring that "daily sun baths will add ten years of youth" to their lives.
"Sun baths tend to relieve the congestion of internal organs and the body of moisture," said one eminent physician who made a thorough study of climatic conditions in St. Petersburg. "The number of blood cells increase and the kidneys are stimulated to fuller and better action. The depth of breathing increases and the blood becomes richer in oxygen," he said. "All of these effects are most beneficial to the body in that they help to restore, to maintain and to improve health."
In the bright, clear and refreshing soilded air of St. Petersburg, thoussands are daily following the vague rhythms of the day, costing clothes, loiling on the magnificent stretches of wide sand beach that almost totally surround the city.
Island Where It Did?"
SCOTTISH
PIPE BAND A
BANFF
martial nagippies he has played even longer, will again rebound in the Canadian Rockies, making Banff resemble its namesake in Auld Creek. Initiated last year under the patronage of the Prince of Wales, this festival has quickly established itself as a Canadian institution, with regimental piping contests, athletic games, folk songs and Highland dances—all as old as Scotland herself. Notable among the musical features arranged by Harold Eustace Key, musical director of the Canadian Pacific Railway, is the special performance of the Jolly Boggars", a song by Burt Munroe, or Sir Henry Bishop, the daily concerts in the hotel palace room notable Canadian jorther will sing the folk songs of Scotland, and Scotish Canadian issues will join their jaddies in the Highland fing, the sword dance, the sailors' harpie, the Scotch reel and the graceful seam trubhue.
The programs of Scottish music are drawn up in historical sequence, beginning with the old ballads of the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries, followed by groups from the period of Mary Queen of Scots, the Stuarts and the Jacobites, scholars from the songs of Burns Sir Walter Scott, Lady Niarne and Christopher North, as well as the Hebridean music recently made popular by Margaret Kennedy Praser.
COATS OF TAN ARE THE RAGE
Hotels are erecting private solar
runs on their roofs for the use of
guests seeking health insurance and
many will be ready for the season's
first arrivals in September.
On one of the smaller island
canvas walls stretched through the
stately pines and waving palms, pro-
vide but another of the many sun
bathing spots for devotees.
Last Spring members of the New York Yankees and Boston Brave baseball teams, in training here, went into sun bathing and were bronzeed in Indians when the season opened April while fans were bleached white. St. Petersburg boasted of many nationally famous men as sun bathers last season including Cyrus H Kurtis, multi-millionaire publisher Henry Morganthan, former American Ambassador to Turkey; John Whelan United Cigars stores multi-millionaire Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis baseball czar; E. S. Barnard, president American Baseball League; Jacob Rupp, owner of the New York Yankees Clarence Darrow. Dr. John H. Weber, Dr. George Crile, John Hays Hammonds, George Olvany, Tammany Hall chieftain; Lee Powell, president Seaboard railroad; John Trumbull, governor of Connecticut, and many others.
d?" Aye, Laddie!
PIPING FOR FIRST PRIZE BANFF
At the same time the Alberta Amateur Championship meet will crowr the victors in the flat and hard races, weight-throwing, tugs-of-war high and broad jumping tossing the caber shot putting and an invelin throwing The momenta piperes from all over - *Diamond* will compete for the prizes offered by K.W. Thompson.
KELLY MILLERS' AUTHENTIC
HISTORY OF
NEGRO IN WORLD WAR
A GREAT NEW WORLD WAR HISTORY
In addition to its containing a graphic account of the War, includes many chapters on subjects of vital interest. Following are a few of the subjects treated: The Flash that Set the World Aname - Why America Entered the War - The Things that Made Men Mad - The Sinking Submarine - The Eyes 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 information upon all subjects which have their bearing upon the World Conflict, as well as an authentic account of the Great World War.
The Book also includes the following subjects: The Horrors and Wonders of Modern Warfare, The Barbary and Mercelless Methods Employed to Satisfy the Ambitions of the Kaiser and His Imperial Government. The Ruthless Submassine Warfare Waged to Starve England and France into Submission. The Story of the Hardships and Horrors which the Belgians and French were Compelled to Suffer. The Billions of Dollarls Required to Carry on the Awful Struggle. The Terrible Loss of Human Life and the Desolation of Countries. The Weird and Wonderful Methods of Warfare. The New and Strange Devices that have come into 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. Marvellous guns that shot for miles. Feudal and Medieval weapons that again came into play. The plans of the Hohenbollers to create a World Empire, which drew upon them the wrath of Nations. The Nations Involved. The Armies and Navies and what they represented in Men and Equipment.
This Great Book tells all about this
World War War
How He Pid. His Duty
A NEW REVISED BOOK WITB
In every capacity—from right up
the Front Line, Trenches and on
the battlefield—Clear Back to the
Work or Keeping the Home Fires
Burning; On the Farms; In the Mills
and Munition Plants; On the Rail-
roads and Steamships; In the Ship
Yards and Facilities; Men and Women
with the Red Cross, the Y. M.
C. A., Y. W. C. A., the War Camp
Community Service, the Liberty Loan
Prize etc. etc. etc.
This Volume tells the world how
the Negro has won his place and his
right to a voice in the affairs of
mankind against prejudice, ridicule.
the littoral and most insurmountable. Many striking testimonies from the Secretary of War and Army. Officers of high rank and position are sent forth in no uncertain fashion following ringing words of Major General Bell, adressed to the famous "Buffaloes," the 50th Regiment, are typical of the high regard and respect of American and European officers for our colored troops. Every private in this regiment and most of the officers were Negroes. The General said—
ST. MARK BAPTIST CHURCH,
Rev B. J. Ruffin, pastor. Residence, 705 State Street. Services: Sundays, 11:30 A. M. and 6 P. M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. All are welcome.
FTH STREET BAPTIST CHURCH
(Pitt and Jackson Streets)
Rev Charles B. Morris, D. D. Peer. Residence, 1461 Idlewood Ave. services: Sundays, 11:30 A. M. and P. M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. 4 Y. P. N. 6 P. M. Public invited.
WT. OLIVET BAPSTECH CHURCH,
(25th and 8 Streets)
Rev J Andrew Bowler, Pastor,
residence, 112 E Leigh Street,
services: Sunday, 11:30 A.M. and
P M. Sunday School 9:30 A.M.
all are welcome.
LEIGH STREET M E CHURCH
N E Corner Fifth and Leigh St.
Rev R. M. Williams, Pastor, res-
dence 116 North 5th Street.
Services: Sundays, Sunday School 9:20
A.M. Morning service, 11 o'clock;
Evening service, 8 o'clock. The
public is invited.
NORFOLK AND WESTERN R. B.
(Broad Street Station)
Leave for Arrive from
9:00 am . Norfelt ..... 7:00 pm
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The Nor. and Lynch. Local 9:40 pm
The Planet will be sent to you for
one year for $2.00; 3 months for
60 cents. Phone in your order and
we shall send and get the money
and send you The Planet.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
We Print
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The Richmond Planet, 311 North 4th St.
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Columbia
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Rev. J. Andrew Bowler.
position in the Sunday School of this church from Assistant Librarian to that of Superintendent, inclusive. He served as a member of the church choir. He has served as President of the Richmond Sunday School Union. He served as deacon of the First Baptist Church. Being called of God, he was licensed by the Church to preach the gospel in 1894 and he entered upon his calling. In 1899, with only 14 persons in a hall, he started what is now known as Mt. Olivet Bapt. Church. It was a frame structure and was erected at a cost of $1,000. It became delapidated and was unsafe. It was pulled down and three lots on the corner of 25th and S streets were purchased, a brick structure was erected at a cost of over $5,000.00.
The membership continued to increase and the building was extended at a cost of $12,000.00. This debt is now around $5,000.00 and is being steadily reduced. Then came a unique and satisfactory happening. The Monumental Episcopal Church donated to the Mt. Olivet Baptist Church its old organ, which it was replacing with one of the most modern kind. The strange part of the whole business was that it was the organ that Rev. John Andrew Bowen had pumped for that church, when he was a boy for he lived in that neighborhood.
On December 22, 1887, Ray. Bowler decided to change his mode of life and as a result, he led the charming and popular Miss Elynn Flournoy Keen to the altar. Six children have bossed this union. The following are alive and well today: John Andrew Bowler Jr., Elynn H., Antouette E. Bowler. To support this family, every summer he would leave his family and bell-hop at some northern summer resort, in order to have enough money to "tide" him over the winter months. He continued this practice until 1900, when he was able to make enough money to keep him and his family in good circumstances.
Rev. Bowler's first church was at Watch Hill, Rhode Island, where he was employed as a bellman. On Sunday nights, he was given the opportunity to preach to the employees on the hill, in the basement of the Chapel. Many of the guests would attend. They joined in the song services. At the conclusion, the preacher would don his uniform and become a bell man again. During the presidency of Hon. Gregory W. Hayes at the Virginia Seminary and College, he was accorded the honorary title of A. M.
Rev. Bowler has written some poems of note and the "What Has The Negro Done. "Race Pride." "Give Credit To Whom Tis Due." "Get Down and Walk." and "1911—The Old Normal School." have attracted and won favorable mention.
EIGHT
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He has reached the zenith of his glory, the crowning act of his life's work, when he extended his hand and received the recognition due to the culmination of his work in the form of that parchment appraising, acclaiming and according to him the degree of Doctor of Divinity. He is active in body and mind and appears to be in the meridian splendor of a well spent life. God bless him and may the years of the future bring and even greater pronounced blessings to him and his family.
First Degree Murder
(Continued from page 4)
(Special by John Mitchell jr.)
The killing of Samuel E. Grimmell and the dangerous wounding of his mother, Mrs. Nellie L. Haskins on the Bothelehem Road in Henrico county, near this city early Saturday morning created a sensation here In the Police Court last Monday morning, Attorney Charles W. Moss who represents the accused, when questioned stated briefly but emphatically "The boy is crazy." He was then on his way to Henrico County Courthouse, where a preliminary examination had been arranged before Justice A. Taylor Pitt. I lost no time in trudging down there
Except for two small groups of colored men on the outside the place was practically deserted. As I entered the Justice's courtroom, I saw Attorney Moss in Justice Pitt's private office conversing with him. No one was inside of the court-room idolishing, where I entered and took a seat on one of the crude benches reserved for spectators. The time set was 10 o'clock, but no witnesses appeared. Later a slender brown-sk n woman of middle age entered and sank down on the further end of the bench on which I sat. It took only a glance to see that she was in distress. I approached her and she told me her story:
"I am Sylvester Medley's mother. He was born on Monday, March 20 1911; 5:30 o'clock at Monroe N. C. He has never been a bad boy but just mischievous. He always had a child's mind, even though he had grown older. He was sent to Mr. Henry Grimmell from the Juvenile Court of Richmond, being placed there by Mr. Phillips, the probation officer. He tried to get away from there as he could not get on with Mrs. Haskins, but they would not permit him to do so. The statement he made in the morning's paper (Times-Dispatch) is the truth. "My name is Queen Wakkins. I am from Chester. S. C. I live at 907 Mosby street. I will go out and bring my husband here." She did go. When Wakkins entered he recognized me and explained to his wife just who I was. A few moments later Attorney Moss entered
Vocals-Clint Jones
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
and announced that the case had been postponed until Friday morning at 10 o'clock. Mrs. Watkin's husband's name is John Watkins. She says she was born in 1893. Her age is approximately 35 years.
SIXTH MT. ZION BAPTIST
CHURCH
Rev. F. W. Williams, new pastor of Fourth Baptist Church, will conduct the Communion Services for our Church Sunday, 8:30 P. M., July 8th His congregation will also worship with us. Everyone is asked to hear him.
Rev. I. H. Hines will also preach for us Sunday night at 8:00 P. M.
FRANKLIN NORMAL SCHOOL
CASE NOT WON BY THE
MINORITY TRUSTEES
In view of recent articles appearing in several newspapers, the executive committee makes the following statement of facts relative to the Franklin Normal & Industrial Institute:
The Franklin Normal and Industrial Institute, founded by Mrs. D. I. Hayden, is now being operated by the trustees of the said institution headed by Dr. John M. Gandy, and of which board Rev. M. C. Allen, Dr. F. N. Harris, and W. R. Thomas, form the executive committee.
Notwithstanding statements to the contrary, the name of this institution has never been changed and is in no sense the recently organized Hayden Memorial Institute.
The law suit instituted by minority trustees—Rodgers, Bess and Ashburn—has not been won by them and the rumor current that the school has or will revert to any group aside from the present trustees is absolutely false and ridiculously absurd.
The Supreme Court in reversing and remanding the decree of the Circuit Court of Southampton has upheld every contention of the majority trustees. This court sets forth that there has been no violation of a trust on part of the majority trustees, and that the claim of the minority trustees, that the work of this board is that of a special and continuing trust cannot be maintained.
The Supreme Court states, that without prejudice the case is remanded to the Circuit Court for the one purpose of having proper construction placed upon the proposed lease, which such lease the trustees have the legal right to make.
Pending filing such lease, the Franklin Normal and Industrial Institute will open on its usual date and continue operation as heretofore. The transfer or change of possession of the Institution from the present trustees to an co-operative board has not been and will not be an issue in the court proceedings at all and the rumor to that effect given currency by those who hope to profit thereby is a culpable delusion practiced upon a sadly credulous following. In substantiation of the above statement, the attention of the reading public is directed to full text of the opinion of the Supreme Court which will be ready for distribution in the next few days. Executive Committee of Trustees Board, Franklin N. & I. Institute, F. N. HARRIS. M. D., W. R. THOMAS, M. C. ALLEN.
Boy's Frightful Injury Results in Death
Henry Flowers, a school boy met his death June 27th (Wednesday) by playfully jumping on a truck at 9th and Turpin Streets. It is presumed that he missed his foothold on the step and his body was thrown against the tire of the wheel. His muscles on his left leg up to the thigh were ground almost to a pulp. The boy was 12 years and 2 months of age. His father's name is Knowledge Flowers and his mother's name Cora Taylor Flowers. They hail from North Carolina.
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SHEPHERD NOTES
SHEPHERD NOTES
Berkley's Progressive Fold will hold its anniversary Sunday, July 8 3:30 P. M. at Mt. Olivev Baptist Church, 25th and S Streets. Rev. J. Andrew Bowler, Jr. will deliver the annual sermon. The Shepherd's Band and the military units will be out. All members of the Order are invited to attend. The Fold at Midlothian recently organized by Mrs. Lillel E. Baskerville is making it known in no uncertain way that it is an important part in the great forward looking program of our Order. It was an among the first to respond to the appeal of the Grand Shepherd for a donation for Headquarters Fund. The Folds responding to this call thus far are as follows:
Pride of Midlothian . . . $5.00
St. Elizabeth . . . $5.00
Philadelphia Zion Travelers . $5.00
Silver Leaf . . . $5.00
Rev. Wm. Thomas Memorial $5.00
Bloomingfield . . . $5.00
Simon N. Philadelphia Unity $5.00
Cery's . . . $5.00
Sunlight . . . $5.00
Pride of Leonis . . . $5.00
Wm. H. Stokes . . . $5.00
Shepherds Chorus . . $5.00
St. Elizabeth Fold opened this contribution. It is very gratifying to note the way this contribution is coming in.
Rev. R. T. Parson of Newark, New Jersey reports satisfactory progress in establishing a branch of our Order in his city. He has gone about it with the tenacity, pluck and push which guarantee to him success in this undertaking.
Deputy Fannie B. Taulton has focused on herself the great spotlight of fraternal admiration by reporting a new Fold for Braddock Park, Po.
MISSING
MISSING
Ira M. Rusk, age, 21 years; height, 5 feet 10 inches; weight, 165 pounds; color of hair, medium brown. Has a birth mark the size of dime on back of head where hair is lighter in color. Been missing three years up to April 9, 1928. His mother is Mrs. Rusk, 4210 Oakenwald Avenue, Chicago, telephone Oakland 1408. Thanking you, we are Yours very truly, ERWIN GREER.
DEATHS REPORTED
The following is a list of deaths of colored persons reported to the Richmond Bureau of Health from June 26 to July 3, 1928, with age and date of death:
Martha Clay, age 41 years; 7 Pink St. St.; June 24.
Ella China, 51 years; 3822 3412 St.; June 25.
Doc Graham, 21 years; 512 N. 4th St.; June 25.
Roberta Lawrence, 17 years; 5510 Grove Avenue; June 26.
Infant of Hcwella James Stevenson 5 days; 829 N. 29th; June 27.
Ella Gray, 47 years; 1318 N. 32nd St.; June 25.
Henry Flowers, 12 years; 916 Turpin St.; June 27.
Julia Jackson, 56 years; R. F. D. Box 148, So. Richmond; June 26.
Gladys Annie Soay, 27 years; 906 1-2 N. 8th St.; June 27.
Charles Davis, 5 months; 602 1-2
Norton St. : June 29.
Berneda Harris, 4 months; R. F. D.
5 Box 126: June 28. .
Mary Harris, 43 years; 3116 N St.;
June 28;
Alice Goode Johnson, 69 years; 1424
W. Moore St. : June 30.
Virginia Gallego, 63 years; 608 N.
28th St. : June 28.
Mory Berry, 31 years; 2014 Bates
St. : June 26.
Order the Planet sent to you by the week, month or year. We have a means of delivery.
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and a Juvenile for her own town,
Donora, Pa. The brotherhood rojoices with her in this accomplishment.
The Shepherd's Excursion Committee was full of pep and enthusiasm last Friday night. Satisfactory activities were reported by all of the committees. Ardella's Fold under the leadership of Shepherd A. D. Daniel won the prize of $2.50 for reporting the first largest amount for the sale of tickets. Ten days more and we will be on our way to this much talked of Bay Shore where we expect to spend a day of real rest—a day freighted with enjoyment and pleasure.
Look out for the Shepherd's Band in your section of the city on the evening of the 14th. This appearance will be a reminder of the Shepherds Excursion on the 17th.
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