Richmond Planet
Saturday, November 17, 1928
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE RICHMOND PLANET
LOOK LIKE MURDER
Two Men Dangerously Wounded--A Sunday Morning Near Tragedy
A NEW SEGREGATION 15 Yrs. FOR ORDINANCE WANTED MURDER
Attorney Cohen Meets the Issue Explains the Law
More Trouble for Peace Lovers...Alderman Woody Ruptures Friendly Relationship in Richmond
VOLUME XLVI, NO. 2
Two M
A NEW ORDINARY
Attorney C
Exp
More Trouble
man Wo
Relati
Alderman Henry W. Woody introduced a resolution at the regular meeting of the Board of Aldermen last Tuesday night for the purpose of enacting a segregation law in this city. The resolution reads as follows: "Be it ordained by the Council of the City of Richmond:
"1. That in order to preserve the general welfare, peace, racial integrity, morals and social good order of the City of Richmond, it shall be hereafter unlawful for any person to use or continue to use as a residence any building on any street between intersecting streets, where the majority of residences on such street are occupied by those with whom said person is forbidden to intermarry by section 5 of an act of the General Assembly of Virginia: 'An act to preserve racial integrity' and approved March 20, 1924, or as the same may be hereafter amended.
"2. Any person violating the provisions of this ordinance shall be liable to a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five hundred dollars recoverable before the police justice of the City of Richmond as the case may be, each day's violation to constitute a separate offense.
"3. That all ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict with this ordinance be and the same are hereby repealed.
"4. This ordinance shall be in force from and after April 1st, 1929."
To Editor Richmond Planet;
The Times Dispatch and News Leader of November 14, 1928, report that Alderman Henry W. Woody has introduced an ordinance to reconstitute a segregation of the race by law, giving the Racial Purity Act of 1924 as his authority so to do. It would be impossible to frame one that would not run counter to the XIV Amendment of the United States Constitution on. The Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia in the case of Irvine v. City of Clifton Forge decided November 14, 1918, said:
"On the main constitutional question, the ordinance here involved is not materially different from the Segregation Ordinance of the City of Richmond, which was upheld as a valid enactment by this Court n Hopkins v. City of Richmond. 117 Va. 692 86 S. E. 139. Am. Cas. 1917—D. 1114. Since that case was decided, the Supreme Court of the United States has decided that an ordinance of the City of Louisville, substantially the same as the one under consideration, is in conflict with the XIV Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and is therefore null and void. Euchanan v. Warley. 245 U. S. 60. That case was very fully argued by able counsel and several cities, including Richmond. Va., were permitted as amic curiae, to file briefs in the case. The opinion of the Court fully covers the case at bar."
In the last named case it was said:
---
"Property is more than the mere thing which a person owns. It is elementary that it includes the right to ACQUIRE, USE and DISPOSE of it. The U. S. Constitution protects these essential attributes of property. Holden v. Hardy 169 U. S. 366 391."
If property as the Court said has these essential attributes, how can any act of the Virginia Legislature give power to a city to destroy them, when the U. S. Constitution, Treaties and Acts of Congress, are the supreme law of the land?
Segregation may be, of course, brought about, by either race acting as individuals by restrictive covenants against use and occupancy for a limited period placed in deed and made to run with the land, as has recently been upheld by the Supreme Court of the United States of America in the Corrigan Case.
The late Hon. Henry R. Pollard, one of the city's most successful and able City Attorneys, in his memoirs, mentioned his fight to sustain the Segregation Ordnance before the Supreme Court of the United States of America, as one of the hardest legal contests of his life, and with all his ingenuity, he was unable to re-frame a segregation ordinance that would not run counter to the Federal Constitution. I do not be-
The Racial Integrity Act of 1923 is certainly not a warrant for such an ordinance as Mr. Woody proposes and Negroes or white persons need have no fear of such an ordinance even being enacted by the City Council. Such a move as has been made by Mr. Woody has no other tendency than a catering to the prejudices of certain of his constituency and in nowise reflecting any good upon the unity that now exists between the races in residential sect ons of Richmond.
My observar on has been that Richmond Negroes do not like to live in uncongenial surroundings and a whily white neighborhood would not be a place where they would wish to live.
Respectfully,
ALFRED E. COHEN.
POANOKE NEWS
Rev. James S. Hatcher D. D. preached in the morning and at night at Mr. Zion A. M. E. Church. Thomas Thompson was killed instantly by his truck. It turned over on h m. He is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Letcher. He was on his way to work. It occurred last Sunday. The truck was badly damaged. An automobile struck h s truck and the man driving it fled from the scene. Mr. Samuel Dvers has been ill. Mt. Zion A. M. E. Church sent him a donation. Mr. Radford Sanders died here Monday A. M.
Madison Stanfield is still looking
RICHMOND ,VIRGIN1A, SATURDAY NOVEMBER 17,1928
after The Planet sales and he will furnish you with remedies that will ease pain and prolong life. Mrs. Stanfield has a large supply of ready made material for the ladies.
PHYLLIS WHEATLEY Y W. C. A. COMMUNITY ASSET.
The visitor was a young crippled man. "Lady is this the 'Y' building where you take care of girls?" he asked.
Told that it was, he said, 'Just a minute;' stepped outside and returned with a girl about fourteen years old.
He had found the girl wandering up and down East Main Street trying to find her mother. But the address she had was incorrect. Lodging and supper were furnished her, while a telegram was sent immediately to her grandmother asking for the right address. The next day the girl was taken to her mother.
This girl is only one of the many who are helped during the year by the Phlyis Wheatley Branch of the Y. W. C. A.
Clubs for girls and young women, educational and gym classes, supervised recreation, public programs and a summer camp are some or the other features of the work of this organization. There are nearly eight hundred grade and high school girls enrolled in the Girl Reserve Clubs, which are supervised by trained advisors. The Industrial Department has a membership of ninety-five young women who are employed in the various industries in R chmond. The Phyllis Wheatley Branch is considered as a community asset not only for its program of work for women and girls but for its service to the entire community. This is shown through genuine use of the Branch Library which it houses; the number of outside organizations meeting in the building and by the attendance at vespers and other programs.
NOTED CRITIC GUEST OF THE
SABBATH GLEE CLUB.
The Sabbath Glbe Club and as their guest recently, Dr. Sigmund Spaeth, musical critic of The New York Times and nationally known author and teacher.
Dr. Spaeth was in Richmond for the first of a series of six lectures being given at the Woman's Club in cooperation with the Richmond Vt. News Leader. In accordance with
(Continued on page four.)
Murdered Frank Irvin
James Dean, who after a quarrel with Frank Irving, went to his poem and secured a shotgun and opened fire upon and killed Irving. August 22, 1928, placed guilty in the Hustings Court here. Justice W. Kirk Mathews presiding and on Wednesday November 14, 1928 was sentenced to the Virginia penitentiary for 15 years. After being shot, Frank Irving raised himself on his arm and fired at Dean across the street, emptying his revolver, one of the bullets pass.ng through Dana a hip.
THE BAPTIST MINISTERS CONFERENCE.
DR. BINFORD SPEAKS OF
TROUBLE AT CENTRALIA.
The trend of a discussion at the Monday meeting of the Baptist Ministers Conference of Richmond and Vicinity seemed to indicate that some of the brethren who preach Ordination Sermons have the wrong conception as to the duties of church officers.
Rev. A. D. Daly, the highly efficient pastor of Faith Baptist Church urged the Ministers to pay more attention to the matter of attending councils, as much was being taught and practiced in these councils contrary to Baptist principles. Realizing the importance of Rev. Daly's statement, the Conference asked Dr. W. L. Ransome to read a paper at its next meeting on this subject.
Dr. Ransome agreed to do so, and it is the hope of the Conference that every Deacon in the c. y. as well as our rural sections, will be present on next Monday, along with those Ministerial brethren who seem to need enlightenment upon this most important subject.
Some of the brethren when called upon to preach to newly ordained Deacons, in order to make favorable impressions, say things for which they have no authority; then wonder why there is a confusion as to the duties of Pastor and Deacons on their own fields.
Dr. J. H. Binford one of the oldest. Ministers in the city, in point of service, addressed the Conference, as touching his many years of work at Centralia Baptist Church, of Chesterfield County. Dr. Binford spoke of the splendid progress the Church has made, of its beautiful building and equipment, adding that at present the Church debt lacked but little of being cleared.
In spite of the splendid service, Dr. Binford with an unmastakable note of sadness in his voice, led the Conference to believe that there were those within his flock who would ungratefully cast him aside.
It is contrary to the policy or the Conference to have any part in church differences, but the brethren could not help but sympathize with this veteran soldier of Christ, who after laboring thru the years with his people, and now stricken with blindness seems to fear that those who have benefited by his fatherly
advice and counsel are about to throw him out upon the charity of the world. "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is, to have a thank less child." Monday, November 19th, the Conference will meet at St. John Baptist Church, Glen Park as guest of Rev. J. W. Kemp and his good people. O. B. SIMMS. Reporter.
The Community Drive
The Colored Division of the Community Fund Campaign is well organized under the chairmanship of Colonel A. W. Holmes, who has very ably served in this same position in the previous campaign. Miss Laura H. McFall is secretary of the Division. Colonel Holmes is being assisted by Lt. l. Colonel John T. Taylor in charge of Special Gifts and Lt. Colonel W. A. Jordan in charge of General Solicitation Teams. The Chairmen of the Special G for Committee are: B. T. Kenney, Business Firms; B. L. J. Lord, Churches; John H. Mabrey, Fraternal Organizations; W. H. Walton, Individuals; Mrs. Alice H. Harris, Secretary.
The following persons are serving as Majors and Secretaries of the teams that will serve in the districts, District I, S. M. Washington. Major with Mrs. Lucetra Gee Joran as secretary; District II, Lorenzo C. White, Major, Mrs. Mary Cousins, Secretary; District III, David D. Gilpin Major, Mrs. Duschla Gilpin, Secretary; District IV, J. S. Collins, Major w th George T. Walker assisting, Miss Maud Mundin and Mrs. Amanda Smith, Secretaries, District V, Mrs. J. R. Mayne, Major, Miss Lucinda Smith, Secretary; District VI, Benjamin P. Vandervall Major; Church Hll District A. W. Dandridge, Major, Mrs. Elizabeth Knox, Secretary; Fulton, Mrs. Mary V. Pittman, Major, Miss Indiana Dandridge, Secretary; South Richmond, Mrs. Mary V. Binga, Major, Mrs. Ophelia Cogbill, Secretary; Sydnoy, W. S. Banks, Major, Mrs. Mamie W. Allen, Secretary, Mr. C. L. Winfree will have charge of the distribution of publicity.
The opening meeting will be held Friday, November 16th at 8 P. M. at the Community Fund Headquarters, 803 1-2 East Main Street. A special program will be rendered. The public is especially invited to attend.
FULTON NOTES
The anniversary services of the Mt. Calvary Baptist Church and its Pastor will begin tomorrow last one week. Several noted Divines will appear on the program. Rev. C. B Jefferson will preach at the Union Baptist Church morrow. The installation of the Sunday School officers of the Union
The National Ideal Stage a Big Rally The Executive Committee Meets Here
Baptists. Church will take place on the fourth Sunday, three-thirty P. M Rev. L. C. Garand. pastor. Mr. Ellerson Spurlock, Super.nendent of Sunday School. On the day of election there was born to Mr. and Mrs. Willie Washington of 905 State Street, a boy-child, and he was given the name of Herbert Hoover Washington.
DEATHS REPORTED
The following is a list of deaths of colored persons reported to the Richmond Bureau of Health from November 6 to November 13, 1928, with age and date of death:
Jane James, age 54 years; 422 Shafer St.; November 6. ...
William Albert Munford. 1 day;
2303 Everett St.; November 7.
Lee Toliver, 74 years; 1310 N. 32nd
St.; November 7.
St.; November 7.
Robert Link, 54 years; 407 S. Linden St.; November 7.
Baby Miller, 9 days; 600 N. 30th St.; St. November 8.
St. . November
Inse . November 1 days; 1331 N.
17th St . November 7.
Fannie Parker, 40 years; 1005 W.
Marshall St. ; November 7.
Samuel Lynn, 52 years; 712 W.
Leigh St. ; November 10.
William Preston Faison, 46 years;
739 N. 5th St.
Mandy Robinson, 60 years; 1723 W.
Leigh St. ; November 10.
GRAVEL HILL NOTES.
Gravel Hill Baptist Church' Rev.
W. L. Tuck. Pastor. At 11:30 W.
C. B. Jefferson of Union Level Bepi
t Church preached from Psalms
50:15. Subject: 'A Christian Remedy
in the Time of Trouble.' The Superintendent of Public Schools
spoke. Miss Virginia Randolph, the
County Supervisor also spoke. They
tried to make plain that we need an education to make an intell gent
Christian.
At 8 P. M. Rev. Edwin Charity
preached for Building Club No. 5.
He brought a good message from
Luke 23:14, using for a subject,
'Jesus on Trial.'
On Sunday night a sacred concert
will be g'ven by No. 5 Club.
J. M. Anderson. Reporter.
The Nation
Stage
The Executive
Meet
Supreme Master
Important Rec
IDEAL SOCIETY NEWS.
The Executive Committee of the Board of Directors of the National Ideal Benefit Society held its monthly meeting a few days ago, with unusual interest. The reports of the officers were especially encouraging. The Supreme Mistress. Mrs. M. E. Overton of City Point, Va. was present and greatly impressed with the general condition of the Order. Mr. A. W. Holmes, Founder and Supreme Master, made several very important recommendations for the further progress of the Brotherhood which were heartily approved. The Supreme Master recently returned from a visit to Philadelphia and New York, where he spent a part of his vacation. He spent some time with his wife. Mrs. A. W. Holmes, who is visiting relatives and friends in New York and other northern points.
Richmond District is now conducting a special MEMBERSHIP CAM
PRICE, FIVE CENTS.
ragedy
Last Sunday morning Robert Hunter, age 18 years and Jerry Brown, age 22 years were shot by Everett Johnson, alas Everett Tucker, age 20 years, as a result of a crap game on West Moore Street. Johnson was shooting at Lancille Chatman, who lives on West Leigh Street. He dodged the bulls intended for her and as a result, one of the youngsters was shot in the eye and the other in the stomach. It looked like a case of murder.
The affair took place at Lucille Christian's house in the 1800 block West Leigh Street. Enquiry at the St. Phillips Hospital $t_0$ which institution the two men were hurried, disclosed the fact that it had not been determined whether either of them were fatally wounded. Both were resting comfortably. Johnson had not been apprehended at this writing.
RICHMOND VOTERS LEAGUE
TO HOLD MASS MEETING.
The Richmond Voters League is doing a constructive bit of civic work among the men and women of our city. The object of this League is to interest our group in the duties of American citizenship. The League holds public meetings in various sections of the city to enlighten the public on matters of civic importance.
Tuesday night, November 27th, a big mass meeting will be staged at the Fourth Baptist Church, 28th and P Streets, at which time Rev. R. M. Williams will be the principal speaker. President Darius Harris states that the immediate objective of the League is to get one thousand persons to qualify for the ballot.
Mr. Isaac Dyson, of Montgomery W. Va. has been visiting his sister at Winterpock Va.
Rev. Junius L. Taylor, D. D., Rector of St. Phillips P. E. Church baptized 16 persons in Hanover County, Va. last Sunday.
The Rev. Mr. Taliaferro, of Charlottesville, Va. will preach at Fifth Street Baptist Church Sunday morning. The public is invited to hear this splendid gospel messenger.
Final Ideal
a Big Rally
ive Committee
is Here
Mr Holmes Makes
commendations
PAIGN. In a well attended meeting a few nights ago in which every lodge in Richmond took part in launching the campaign, interest was at its height.
The local membership is divided into two Divisions: Division No. 1 and Division No. 2. Mr. T. L. Beverly is Chairman of Division No. 1, with Mrs. O. W. Smith, Secretary. Mr. B. W. Perkins is Chairman of Division No. 2, with Mrs. Rosa B. Hicks, Secretary. Great results are expected by December 15. The Union Ideal Carnival ran three nights in the New Ideal Hall. It was a great success. All were well pleased.
Col. A. W. Ho'mes, Chairman of the Colored Division of the Richmond Community Fund, is using every effort to make good its quota by the 26th of November, the closing day of the campaign. He regards the Community Fund as a great blessing to our people throughout the city. He is calling on everybody to help.
Limitless opportunities to help others are within the power of every one who knows how to pray. When Paul could not give direct help where he would or when his little was not enough he always had recourse of prayer. He had written to the Thessalonians "Pray without ceasing" and he constantly practiced his own preaching. The Scripture chosen for this lesson suggests only a few of the many prayer experiences of Paul. Others indicated by the Lesson Committee are Romans 1:8-10; Ephesians 1:15-12, Thessalonians 12:5. In addition there are many prayer references in the thirteen letters that Paul wrote. A fine book for general reading is "The Man Paul," Robert E. Speer, D.D., in which there is an especially helpful chapter on "His prayer life."
Much more is involved in prayer than merely asking for what we may desire. There are conditions that we must meet before we can begin the asking. Jesus offered a safeguard in prayer that we will do well to follow invariably as we also say "Thy will be done." Then there is an orderly sequence as we are having an audience with the Most High God, such as Adoration, Thanksgiving, Confession, Petition and further Thanksgiving before we say "Amen," so let it be. Two books by the late Andrew Murray have been very helpful; "With Christ in the School of Prayer" and "Ministry of Intercessio" Yes, the subject is one for life long study and practice. Paul gives us a helpful start.
Ephesians was written from Rome during the first imprisonment. Paul was limited in the flesh as he was constantly chained to some Roman soldier but his mind and spirit were free to reach Ephesus by way of the throne of Jehovah. He rejoices at the good report he comes concerning the continuing and enlarged church he loved in Ephesus. Then he reminds them of the positive help he is obtaining for them through intercessory prayer. Just as long as one can reach up to God he can, through the power of the Almighty, reach out to any person or place in the world. Such was Paul's habit in maintaining his life work. He did not make self interest the burden of his petitions but asked great things for others through Jesus Christ, for such a joyful privilege was according to the promise given to every one of us. Samuel refused to lay down his parishorship though his judgesship had been taken away by the people when they asked for a king. This prophet said "God forbid that I should sin against Him in ceasing to pray for you." I Samuel 12:23.
Some of the content of one of Paul's prayers is indicated in Eph. 3:15-21. For five verses there is a massing of petitions before we find a single period. His posture is down on both knees, but in mind he faces the Throne. Read that prayer a number of times. Better still, commit it to memory and use it as you seek large blessings for others, and especially for any one who is ill-treaturing you. A fine indicator that you have forgiven you is that he heartedly for the one who has forgiven you. There is no limitation in the love or forgiveness of the Christ, Who can do "exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think." It is mighty to be on praying terms with such a King!
WELL, WELL! HELLO CHARLIE! HOW ARE YOU?
I'VE BEEN IN THE HOSPITAL LEMUEL ~ THEY OPERATED ON ME FOR APPENDICITIS!
I'M VERY SORRY TO HEAR YOU WERE SICK OLD KID
YES, I'VE BEEN IN PRETTY BAD SHAPE LEM. SEE THAT BIG BUMP ON MY HEAD?
YES - BUT WHAT'S THAT GOT TO DO WITH YOUR OPERATION?
~ THEY RAN OUT OF ETHER!
I HEAR THOSE TWO RIVAL DENTISTS HAVE COMBINED OFFICES AND FORMED A PARTNERSHIP
YES, THEY FINALLY DECIDED TO PULL TOGETHER!
MT. OLIVE BAPT. CHURCH
Services: 10 A. M., Sunday School
11:30 A. M. Preaching each Sunday,
3:30 P. M. Lord's Supper each first
Sunday
Rev. J. S. Johnson, A. M., D. D.
Pastor,
James M. Brown, Clerk
MT. TABOR BAPTIST CHURCH.
(North 22nd Street, Woodville)
Rev. W. H. Skipwith. D. D.
Pastor. Services: Sunday. 11:30
A. M. and 8:00 P. M. Sunday
School. 9:30 A. M. All are welcome
RISING MT, ZION BAPT. CHURCH
(1800, Denny Street, Fulton)
Rev. O. B. Simms. B. Th. Pastor.
Residence, 728 Denny St. Services:
Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M.
M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. All are
welcome.
SHARON BAPSTEI CHURCH.
(Corner First and Leigh St.)
Rev. R. H. Johnson, B.D., M.A.
Pastor. Residence 1301 DuBois Ave.
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and
8:15 P. M. Sunday School, 10:00
A. M. All are invited.
(S. W. Cor. St. James and Leigh)
Rev. Junius L. Taylor. Rector:
Residence. 20 West Leigh Street.
Services: Sunday 11 to 12 A. M.
Night. 8 to 9 o'clock. Wednesday
evening services. 8 to 9 o'clock. The
public is welcome at all services.
PROVIDENCE BAPTIST CHURCH
(518 Lady Mile Road)
Rev. J. J. Woodson, Pastor. Res-
idence: 1116 St. John Street. Serv-
ices: Sunday 11 A.M. and 8 P.M.
M Sunday School. 9:30 A.M. All are
invited.
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH (Center Street, Fulton)
Rev S. L. Bush, pastor; residence 97 Center Street, Services Sun
Presching, 11:30 A. M. and 8:30 P. M.
Communion every fourth Sunday, Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.,
day at 3:30 P. M.
Read The Planet. It will be de-
livered to you for 69 cents for three
months with postage prepaid. Send
in your order.
KNOXIT
PROPHYLACTIC
LIQUID
Unnatural and mucous
charges can be avoided by
destroying the germs of infectious
diseases. $1.10 At all druggists
SORE LEGS HEALED
Open Legs, Ulcers, Enlarged Veins, Golfer, Eczema healed while you work. Write for free book "How to Heal My Sore Legs at Home." Describe your case.
A. C. LIEPE PHARMACY.
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AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
PYRAMID PRODUCTS COMPANY
BOX 27, UPTOWN STATION, PITTSBURGH, PA.
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THE PLANET ADVERTISERS ARE RELIABLE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS FOR SERVICE
THE PLANET ADVERTISERS ARE RELIABLE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS FOR SERVICE
LST BAPT. CHURCH S. RICHMOND
(Corner 15th and Decatur Sts.)
Rev. W. L. Ransome D. D., Passor: Parsonage 1507 Decatur Street.
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and
8 P. M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
All are welcome.
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FOURTH BAPTIST CHURCH (28th and P Streets)
Rev. F. W. Williams, D. D.
Poster. Services: Sunday, 11:30 A.
M. and 8:00 P. M. Sunday School
9:30 A. M. B. Y. P. U. 6:45 P
M. All are invited.
Funeral Parlor Rest-Rooms Display Rooms Lodge Rooms
Phones-Office Ran. 2073. Residence, Ran. 2703. Asst. Ran. 2052-w
ROBERT C. SCOTT, Funeral Director
2223 EAST MAIN STREET RICHMOND, VA.
TIME OF SERVICES IN THE
CHAPEL AT CITY HOME.
Rev. F. W. Quarles, Leader and Manager for Charitable Union, 1010 N. Second St. Services Every Sun day from 2:00 to 4:00 B. M. Comunion 3rd Sunday. Union Meetings 4th Sunday.
TIIE BROWN'S Photographic Studio
ALL OF THE LATEST AND MOST ARTISTIC PHOTOS
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Special Attention Paid to Children. Exterior and Interior Work Will be Executed on Short Notice. We Specialize on ENLARGING and COPYING from OLD PHOTOS.
CALL AND SEE US—WORK DONE IN ALL KINDS OF WEATHER.
FLASH-LIGHT Photos A Feature. The Latest Style Developing Outfits. Our POWERFUL LENS Rank with the Best in the Country.
OUT OF TOWN VISITORS ARE WELCOME.
FOUNTAIN BAPSTIST CHURCH
($2nd and P Streets)
(32nd and 1st streets)
Rev A R. Vanlandingham, B. Th.
pastor. Residence, 2800 O St. Our
Worship: School Sunday at 9:30 A.
M.; Morning Services, 11:30 A. M.
Night Services, 8:00 P. M.; Tuesday
night. Home and Foreign Mission,
7:00 P. M.; Wednesday night.
Teachers Meeting, 7:30 P. M.;
Thursday night. Choir Rehearsal,
7:30 P. M.; Friday night. Prayer
Services, 7:30 M. V Johnson, Clerk
BE INFORMED--READ THE PLANET
MT VERNON BAPTIST CHURCH
(1902 Wallace Street)
Rev. M. H. Payne, Pastor, Residence, 1900 Wallace Street, Services:
Sunday: 11:34 A. M. and 8 P.
Monday: 9:30 A. M. A. A. are welcome.
M.T. CARMEL BAPTIST CHURCH
(1300 North First Street)
Pulpit in charge of Deacons,
pending availd of Rv. Fohhimtympd
pending assumption by Rev. F. W.
Black, recently called to pastorate.
Sunday. 11:39 A. M and 5 P. M.
Sunday School. 9:30 A. M. All are
welcome.
DAY OR NIGHT SERVICE, WITHIN 1000 MILES
L. J. HINSO'S SONS, EXPERIENCED MORTICIANS CONDUCT Funerals Flawlessly. Our Many Years of Experience Enables us to Conduct All Funerals L. J. Most Efficient Manner. We Try to Give More However by Cooperating in Our Service a Spirit of Sympathy Understanding.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
(Bird St. between 1st and 2nd St.
Rev. Joseph T. Hill D. D. Pastor
Residence: 1219 Idlewood Avenue.
Serv ces: Sundays 11 A. M. and 8
P. M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
All are welcome.
THE FUMBLE FAMILY
WELL, WELL!
HELLO
CHARLIE!
HOW ARE
YOU?
Just Waiting for the Door To Open
By Albert T. Reid
CONGRESS
FARM
PROBLEM
Albert T. Reid
AUTOCASTER
THE INTELLECTUAL LIFE
It is refreshing to note that a memorandum from the Student Council has been addressed to the university authorities at Yale formulating a series of reforms upholding the proposition that a college is primarily a place for study, and only incidentally for social and athletic recreation.
This will be refreshing to a number of fathers who are digging in to pay the expenses of their sons at school and heretofore have been worried because those sons seem to be more interested in sports and in social advantages than in intellectual improvement.
Of course every healthy boy is interested in athletics and is anxious to learn proper social connections. But the general impression prevails among teachers that boys ought to go to school to improve themselves from the chin up and from the chin down.
It has been too often the case that boys have attached a social stigma to those who get class marks higher than C. Those who go in for study have been asteroided as "sharks" or "grinds". Reference to one's studies in social life has been looked upon with disdain and the only thing to be boasted in a place on the football team or the rowing crew.
Of course a boy is a healthy animal and it doesn't care to be subjected to intellectual snobbery, but at the same time, this New Haven memorandum asserts, a college finds its reason for being and its prestige in the achievements of the intellectual minority among students.
It has been generally presumed that the youth of the country is somewhat wild and is out for a good time only. Those who emphasize the things that are intellectual in any group of people must necessarily be in the minority, but it is refreshing to see that this minority has been coming in to better sepute during the last fifteen years. There are probably quite as many serious-minded youths in the country as there ever were. Youth is not at all out for a wasterrel life. There still remain quite a number of the elect. And on the whole the prospect for a better world in the future is bright. This memorandum suggests that after the first two years the men who are insubious in their studies are to be separated from those who are going in for a good time and barely enough study to get by. The honor men's institutions should be largely tutorial and they should have the best men on the
* It is needless to say that this proposal of the undergraduates has the entire sympathy of the faculty.
A Few Possible Title Winners in Beauty Contest
AUTOCASTER
Here are seven of a number of girls that the judges are pondering over in selecting "Miss Small Town America" in the Nationwide Beauty Contest. They are left to right: Miss Isabel De Lap, Norris City, Ill; Miss Dippe Baker, Farmville, N. C.; Miss Willie Lou Jones, Forest City, N. C.; Miss Dorcae Bdna, Port Allen, La; Miss Lucille Brusie, Millerton, N. Y.; Miss Erin Godfrey, Chipley, Fla.; Miss Eleanor Grimm, Arlington, Neb.
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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 . . . THE PLANET
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Visible from beginning to end everywhere in the United States, there will be a total eclipse of the moon early in the morning of November 27th. The chart above provides a graphic time-table of the eclipse.
AUTOCASTER
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND' VIRGINIA
CHURCH DIRECTORY
EBENEZER BAPTIST CHURCH,
(Leigh and Judah Streets.)
Rev. 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.
MOS8Y MEMORIAL BAPTIST
CHURCH
Idlewood Ave. and Randolph St.
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.
MT. SALEM BAPTIST CHURCH,
Rev. M. C. Ruffin, Pastor, Residence, 611 St. Peter St. Services at Glen Allen, 2nd and 4th Sundays at 1 P. M. At Penola, services on the 3rd Sunday at 12:30 P. M. Sunday School every Sunday at both places at 11:30 A. M.
MT. GILHEAD 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 Cary Street)
Rev. A. D. Daly, Pastor, Residence
1412 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.
(Lequeuln and Lombardy Street)
Rev E. D. Lewis, Pastor, Real
Jeber 216 S. Lombardy Street, Ser
ves, Sunday, 11 A.M. and 8 P.M.
A Few Post
THE HOTEL
700 N 17TH STREET RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
PROMPT SERVICE IN CITY OR COUNTRY
With the completion of the five million dollar Royal York Hotel Toronto will have the finest hostelry in Canada.
The hotel has a thousand rooms nearly all of which have private baths. A hundred and sixty thousand cubic feet of variegated limestone has been shipped from the quarries of the Indiana Limestone Company for the exterior of this mammoth hotel. Shipped to Canada in the rough block, the stone is cut up, worked and fabricated by Canadian workmen. This practically making it man-made, can also be used in quarry production methods of the company, coupled with the location of the Bedford-Bloomington quarries, makes this fine natural stone economically and structurally
DAY PHONE, RAN 4903
practicable for every type of struc
ure located anywhere.
Artistically designed by the architects, Ross & MacDonald, the Royale York Hotel has a massiveness and distinction that reflects not only beauty but also the stability and permanence of its owners, the Canadian Pacific Railway Co. Because of its situation just opposite from the hill, the hotel has earned a profitable income through the increased number of guests who will soon find Toronto a most convenient and enjoyable stop-over. Lawrence H. Whitting, banker and chairman of the board of the Indiana Limestone Company, characterizes the erection of this colossal hostelry as further evidence of the fact that distance is no longer any obstacle in building purposes for building purposes everywhere on the North American continent.
Incorporated
R AND EMBAL SLP
Bathings and Entertainment
AAREROOMS
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
TY OR COUNTRY
Contest
In selecting "Miss Small Town
Isabel De Lap, Norris City, Ill;
N. C.; Miss Dorcae Edna, Port
Bay, Fla.; Miss Eleanor Grimm,
Heaviest Family
The "largest family"—in pounds—has come to Los Angeles from Topeka, Kan. It is the West family, and its 6 members constitute "1,322 pounds of family." Shown in the picture are Bernard, Jessie and Leonard.
OND PLANET
High Lights in Burroughs' Case Here.
Instructions
Every homicide in Virginia in the absence of other evidence, is presumed to be murder in the second degree, and in order to elevate the offense to murder in the first degree, the burden of proof is upon the Commonwealth and in order to reduce the offense to manslaughter, or to show justification or excuse, the burden is upon the accused to introduce evidence to snow extinguating circumstances, or justification, unless it appears from the evidence of the Commonwealth.
(2)
The Court instructs the jury that malice in law may be inferted from the use of a deadly weapon. (8)
The Court further instructs you that to constitute a willful, deliberate and premeditated killing, it is not necessary that the intention to kill should exist any particular length of time prior to the actual killing; it is only necessary that such intention should come into existence for the first time at the time of such killing.
The Court instructs the jury that the law of self-defense is the law of necessity and the necessity relied upon to justify a killing must not arise out of the prisoner's own misconduct.
The Court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that W. B. Burroughs, the accused killed Sharpe under a reasonable belief that his own life was in danger and that such danger was imminent or that he was in danger of serious bodily harm, as the facts and circumstances reasonably appeared to him at the time, he was excusable in so doing, although such danger was unreal. The question for the jury in case was not whether the taking of the life of Sharpe might have been safely avoided, but whether the accused under the circumstances might reasonably have believed and did believe, it was necessary to shoot at he did resulting in the death of Sharpe, in order to save his own life or avoid serious bodily harm; and in that event the jury should find the accused not guilty. The jurors are instructed that if they believe from the evidence that the accused started firing at the deceased in self-defense, then they are further instructed that the accused had a right to continue to shoot at the deceased as long as it reasonably appeared to him from his standpoint that there was still danger of losing his life or suffering serious bodily harm at the hands of the deceased. The accused is to be judged by the circumstances and conditions as they reasonably appeared to him at the time.
(6)
It was not necessary that such d'armes d'id in fast continue to exist provided they believe from all the evidence that it reasonably appeared to the defendant from his stairpoint to the danger it induced to exist. (7)
The Court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the accused was discharging what he reasonably believed to be a lawful duty and engaged in a lawful act, he did not present but may impel force he would be need to be to the extent of saving his adversary. This is justifiable defence.
(8)
in this connection, the Court tells you that if they believe from the evidence that Officer Burroughs approached James Sharp for the purporting him and informing him that he was a police officer then the evidence of the said James Sharp to submit to the officer even Sharp had commit- the officer had no just reason for arresting him as a
(9)
The Court instructs the jury that an officer in the performance of his duty as such stands on an entirely different footing from an individual.
He is a minister of justice and is therefore entitled to the peculiar protection of the law and the respect of citizens as such.
---
The Court instructs the jury that in order to convict the accused as charged in the indictment, the evidence must not only be consistent with the guilt of the accused, but it must be inconsistent with every reasonable hypothesis of the innocence of the accused, and if said evidence is consistent with any reasonable hypothesis of his innocence, then they must find him not guilty.
No amount of suspicion of guilt, however grave or strong, is sufficient to find a verdict. Nor is it sufficient that the evidence shows a preponderance in favor of guilt, the burden being upon the Commonwealth to prove every necessary element of the crime charged beyond a reasonable doubt—and if after consideration of all the facts and circumstances in this case, you have a reasonable doubt as to any of these matters, it is your duty to give the accused the benefit of such doubt and acquit him. (19)
The Court insists the jury that in order to entitle the accused to an acquittal on the ground of self-defense, the accused is required to sustain his plea of self-defense only to point the evidence in support of it when considered along with the other evidence in the case raises in the minds of the jury a reasonable doubt of his guilt.
---
James Sharp, a respectable, he killed by Officer Walter B. Burr August 3, 1928.
Sharp had committed no crime for his arrest or warrant to search.
Burroughs was chasing boys (Juvenile Department of Virginia only in the Juvenile Court here, Ricks. These boys had committed loitering on a corner and when Burroughs mistook James Sharp boy, William Branch and he killed him with a blackjack and shot own house, the length of a roo.
Burroughs was in citizen's clo of authority and he did not read was too dark to see a badge and to read.
What do the liberal minded wing and what will they do about
James Sharp, a respectable, hard working colored man was killed by Officer Walter B. Burroughs in his (Sharp's) own home August 3, 1928.
Sharp had committed no crime and Burroughs had no warrant for his arrest or warrant to search his premises.
Burroughs was chasing boys (juveniles) who are under the Juvenile Department of Virginia and subject to trial for offenses only in the Juvenile Court here, presided over by Judge J. Hoge Ricks. These boys had committed no crime. They were seen loitering on a corner and when spoken to ran from the officers.
Burroughs mistook James Sharp, a man fifty years of age for a boy, William Branch and he killed Sharp. He admitted he beat him with a blackjack and shot him three times inside of Sharp's own house, the length of a room from the entrance.
Burroughs was in citizen's clothes. He did not display his badge of authority and he did not read a warrant to James Sharp. It was too dark to see a badge and he had no warrant with him to read.
What do the liberal minded white citizens think of this happening and what will they do about it?
Before killing, the accused mus veniently and safely can, in order to invite a continuance of the as of shedding human blood. But i treat, but the assault, as in other gerous. If the party slaying mad combat and retreat as far as he s will make the killing excusable, possible by the adversary's fierce city, which he himself wrongfully
This is the law that did not g Burroughs' case, the accused bei Sharp after he had invaded his admittedly had committed no criant, and in a house, for which h roughs was acquitted.
Before killing, the accused must have retreated as far as he conveniently and safely can, in order to avoid the assault, and that not to invite a continuance of the assault, but from a real tenderness of shedding human blood. But in his own house one need not retreat, but the assault, as in other cases, must be immediately dangerous. If the party slaying made the first assault, he must quit the combat and retreat as far as he safely can. Otherwise no necessity will make the killing excusable, even though retreat is made impossible by the adversary's fierceness. He cannot allege a necessity, which he himself wrongfully occasioned.
This is the law that did not go to the jury in the Walter B. Burroughs' case, the accused being charged with killing James Sharp after he had invaded his home in search of a juvenile, who admittedly had committed no crime and for whom he had no warrant, and in a house, for which he had no search warrant. Burroughs was acquitted.
"Equality and Rights of Men: equally free and independent, a which, when they enter into a s any compact, deprive or divest t ment of life and liberty, with th ing property, and pursuing and o
The above is an extract from Virginia and not from the Am the United States. It was not re case, concluded Wednesday high dict of acquittal.
(Constitutioh of Virginia, Bill of
"Equality and Rights of Men: That all men are by nature equally tree and independent, and have certain inherent rights, of which, when they enter into a state of society, they cannot by any compact, deprive or divest their posterity; namely, the enjoyment of life and liberty, with the means of acquiring and possessing property, and pursuing and obtaining happiness and safety.
The above is an extract from the Bill of Rights, Constitution Virginia and not from the Amendments in the Constitution of the United States. It was not read to the jury in the Burrough's case, concluded Wednesday hight, October 24, 1928 with a verdict of acquittal.
(Constitutoh of Virginia, Bill of Rights Article I, Section 8)
(4)
This is the law. Did the alleged necessity to kill James Sharp arise out of the prisoner's (W. B. Burrough's) own misconduct? By his own sword testimony, stenographically reported it did. Legally, he could not get on James Sharp's premises without violating Article 1. Section 10 of the Constitution of Virginia. This was misconduct on his part. He had neither a general warrant nor a search warrant. He wore citizen's clothes and he did not display his badge. Section 23 of the State Prohibition Act reads:
23. WHEN OFFICERS MAY BREAK AND ENTER HOUSES.
"If any house, building, boat car or other place as in herein before mentioned, the sale, storing, or exposing for sale of ardent spirits is carried on clandestinely, or in such manner that the person or persons engaged therein cannot be seen or identified by the officer or officers charged with the execution of a warrant, under any section of this act any such officer may, whenever it is necessary for the arrest or identification of the person or persons offending, or or seizing such ardent spirits, break open and enter such house, building, boat, car or place, or any room or part of any of them." (Code Section 4619; Id. Section 29.)
(5)
This is the law, but it is applicable to a legal arrest made elsewhere than in a citizen's own home, where a citizen is surrounded by the guarantees of the Constitution of Virginia and those of the Constitution of the United States, which entitle him to protection in his life. Liberty and pursuit of happiness "with none to molest him or make him afraid." H's and G. and M. p. 95 says "if the party slaying made the first assault he must quit the combat and retreat as far as he safely can.
"Nothing herein contained shall be construed to permit the issuance of general warrants whereby an officer may be commanded to search suspected places without evidence of a fact committed, or to seize any person or persons not named, or whose offense is not particularly described and supported by evidence." (Code Section 4612: 1916 p 215; 1918 p 577. Section 22 ).
(6)
This is the law.
(7)
This is the law.
(8)
This is the law. See Article 1
Section 10 and H's G. and M. p.
95.
(9)
This is the law. It is also the law that a citizen who has committed no crime and who has not been suspected or having done so by any evidence present or implied and who is resting quietly after night-fall and after a day of honest toll as such stands on an entirely different footing from an individual who has habitually violated the law... Section 17. "It shall be unlawful for any person knowingly to resist, impede, or obstruct, or in any manner to hinder or delay any legal officer having in his hands any search warrant, issued by any officer of this State having the right to issue the same, under the provisions of his act, in the execution of such warrant. Any person so resisting, impeding, obstructing, or in any way bindering or delaying any officer in the execution of a legal search warrant in his hands shall be guilty of a misdemeanor." (Code Section 4614 Id. Section 23 1.2.)
---
respectable, hard working
Valter B. Burroughs in his (
quitted no crime and Burroug
burrant to search his premises
chasing boys (juveniles) wh
out of Virginia and subject
the Court here, presided over
had committed no crime.
mer and when spoken to ra
look James Sharp, a man fifty
ch and he killed Sharp. He
back and shot him three time
length of a room from the en
on citizen's clothes. He did n
he did not read a warrant to
e a badge and he had no
eral minded white citizens t
they do about it?
(H's. G. and M. p. 95)
he accused must have retreated to can, in order to avoid the advance of the assault, but from blood. But in his own hour,ult, as in other cases, must he slaying made the first assault as far as he safely can. Otter excusable, even though the adversary's fierceness. He can self wrongfully occasioned. that did not go to the jury. he accused being charged invaded his home in search ofmitted no crime and for whic, for which he had no search.
(Article I. Section I.)
rights of Men: That all men independent, and have certain center into a state of society live or divest their posterity; property, with the means of ac cursuing and obtaining happie extract from the Bill of Laws from the Amendments in It was not read to the jury Wednesday hight, October 24 Virginia, Bill of Rights Article
(12)
THE RICHMOND PLANET. RICHMOND. VIRGINIA
This is the law and it might be added that W. B. Burroughs, according to his own statement was a minister of injustice and by his own illegal act was not entitled to the peculiar protection of the law and the respect of citizens as such. But this was a question for the jury to decide and it was decided in the light of the information before them.
This is the law. W. B. Burroughs statement, stenographically reported will clear up this phase of the situation. The specific provisions of the State Prohibition Law settle it. Here it is:
"If there be no complaint on oath that ardour spirits are being manufactured, sold, kept, stored or in any manner held, used or concealed in a particular house or other place, in violation of the law, the justice of peace, policeed, circuit or city judge and mayor of any city or town to whom complaint is made, is satisfied that there is reasonable cause for such belief, shall issue a warrant to search such house or other place, the property of a public service corporation such warrant shall describe with reasonable certainty the baggage, container or package to be searched.
"If any person shall knowingly and wilfully make any false complaint under this section, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined not less than $50 nor more than $500 for each offense.
This is the law. The preponderance or evidence was overwhelmingly against Burroughs, not being even supported by the testimony of his Brother Officers, for they were not present at the time of the tragedy.
(13)
This is the law.
ARREST BY OFFICERS, WITHOUT
WARRANT.
..By Section 4789. "It shall be the duty of every conservator of the peace to arrest without a warrant for felonies committed in his presence, or upon a reasonable suspicion of felony and for breaches of the peace and all misdemeanors of what ever character committed in his presence."
Section 3925. "Before entering upon the duties of their office the persons so appointed shall take an oath to support the Constitution of the State and faithfully to discharge their official duties. (Code of Virginia.)
hard working colored man was roughs in his (Sharp's) own home
and Burroughs had no warrant in his premises.
(juveniles) who are under the and subject to trial for offenses presided over by Judge J. Hogeeed no crime. They were seen in spoken to ran from the officers.
up, a man fifty years of age for a red Sharp. He admitted he beat him three times inside of Sharp's m from the entrance.
thes. He did not display his badge d a warrant to James Sharp. It d he had no warrant with him
white citizens think of this happen it?
it have retreated as far as he conto avoid the assault, and that not assault, but from a real tenderness in his own house one need not re cases, must be immediately dance the first assault, he must quit the safely can. Otherwise no necessity even though retreat is made imness. He cannot allege a neces- occasioned. o to the jury in the Walter B. ng charged with killing James come in search of a juvenile, who me and for whom he had no war e had no search warrant. Bur-
That all men are by nature and have certain inherent rights, of state of society, they cannot by their posterity; namely, the enjoy-e means of acquiring and possess-btaining happiness and safety.
the Bill of Rights, Constitution endments in the Constitution of ad to the jury in the Burrough's ht, October 24, 1928 with a ver-
Rights Article I, Section 8)
(11)
(12)
"That no man shall be deprived of his life, or liberty, except by the law of the land, or the judgment of his peers."
This section was not read to the jury in the Burrough's case, concluded with a verdict of acquittal, Wednesday night, October 24, 1928.
(Article I, Section 10)
"General Warrants of Search or Seizure Prohibited. That general warrants, whereby an officer or messenger may be commanded to search suspected places without evidence of a fact committed, or to seize any person or persons not named, or whose offense is not particularly described and supported by evidence, are grievous and oppressive and ought not to be granted."
This constitutional guarantee was not read to the jury in the trial of Walter B. Burroughs, concluded Wednesday night, October 24, 1928 with a verdict of acquittal.
413 N. 4th St. Richmond, Va. Blacksmith and Wheelright, Horse-shoeing, Lawn-mowers sharpened and all other work in connection with the black-smith and wheel-right business. Quick service guaranteed. Call.
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WHERE TO BUY THE PLANET.
Sam Thomas' News-stand, 613 North
Southern College
Second Street.
Confectionery, S. E. Corner Second and Leigh Sts.; Miller's Hotel.
West's Newsstand, Near Corner of 17th and Main Sts.
Dandridge's Newsstand, S. E. Corner Clark and Duval Sts.; opposite 6th Mt. Zion Bapt. Church
Dandridge's Newsstand, Broad St., North side Broad St. opposite Foushee St.
Thompson's Newsstand and Boot black Parlor 320 W. Leigh St.
Shain's Confectionery, N. W. Corner 5th and Leigh Sts.
Planet Office, 311 N. 4th St..
John Mitchell, Jr.'s residence, 515 N. 3rd St.
Tom Byrd, News Vendor; delivered on order.
Thomas Page, News Vendor; delivered on order.
Walker Pleasants. Colored News Stand, Broad Street Station.
MISSING.
M/SSING.
Mabel Rhyne, 18 years old, dark brown skin, large eyes, dark hair, weight, 140 pounds; wearing a brown coat, fur collar and cuffs. Left Bennett College, Greensboro, N. C. October 18. 1928. Any one knowing or her whereabouts will notify Police Headquarters.
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"That no man shall be deprived by the law of the land, or the juvenile. This section was not read to conclude with a verdict of acquittal, 24, 1928.
(Article I, S)
"General Warrants of Search and Warrants, whereby an office is to search suspected places wetted, or to seize any person or person is not particularly described and ous and oppressive and ought not to be granted. This constitutional guarantee trial of Walter B. Burroughs, conder 24, 1928 with a verdict of acquittal."
C. E. B.
413 N. 4th St.,
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AN ANNOUNCEMENT.
The Goodwill Baptist Church, 410
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program. Rev. W. B. Ball, pastor
Columbia
"Magic Notes"
"Organ Grinder Blues" Sung by ETHEL WATERS
Here's the song about the wonderful organ grinder man—put over as only Ethel can do it. He's just the organ grinder you've been waiting for. Invite this record in today. The coupling is "West End Blues."
Record No. 14364-D, 18-inch, 75c
With Tears in My Eyes I'm Laughing at You
I'm Looking for Tulips to Kiss My Troubles Away
Vocals—Jesse Cryor
(Piano and 'Cello Accompaniment)
Ask Your Dealer for Latest Race Record Catalog
Columbia Phonograph Company, 1819 Broadway, New York City
invites the public and his many
friends to worship Sunday November
4, 11:30 A. M. and 8:00 P. M.
Communion 1st Sunday, 8:00 P. M.
M Sunday school, 10:00 A. M. Special
bunda. All Are Invited.
PAGE FIVE
Wonder Blues"
EEL WATERS
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5-D, 10-inch, 75c
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Animent—Clarence Williams
CAR RECORDS
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values
Vocals—Sonny Porter
D-D, 10-inch, 75c
I'm Laughing at You
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Vocals—Jesse Cryor
and 'Cello Accompaniment)
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DO YOU KNOW HIM?
Robert S. Conn, who came to Richmond has secured a scholarship from New York U. and is wanted to come home at once and secure it. Address Rev. Lawrence Smith. 128 W. 132nd St. New York. N. Y. at once. Young Conn does not wear a hat, his hair being combed back and he is of yellow complexion. He wears nondress glasses, is very plain and roughly dressed. Any one knowing him will give him the information so that he may return home at once.
DO YOU KNOW HIM?
Information is desired concerning an old colored man, named Joe Hunt. Some well-to-do white people, who know him and wish him well, desire to get in communication with him at once. It is desired that enquiry be made in the churches and societies for him. Any information concerning him will be gladly received at this office. Persons desiring to know more about the matter can call up the Planet Office, Randolph 2213.
EDW. STEWART
203 S SECOND STREET
DEALER IN
FANCY GROCERIES, FRESH
MEATS, VEGETABLES,
FISH AND OYSTERS.
(21) BROADWAY. VA. PHONE MAD. 1627
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Photo shows Adriane Richards, daughter of Vincent Richards,
American profesional tennis ta, ‘who wields the racquet with con-
{gocamate skill and seems to be gure tennis stag, When Richards
‘victorious at Forest .¥, Adriane, aged three, ran ou i
Gyskoers to congratalate hin and proceeded to demdostrate. ber
Junior Worle
Greeted by H..
TTT BS
a leah, Le
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Kad Fs: +4
NUQGE LANOIS WITH JUNIOR
WORLDS SERIES CAPTAINS.
Montgomery Wards of
Oakland, Calif., Win
Two Games to Clinch
Championship.
Otmaxing a rourncin:3 orlginat’y
snyolving more than 200.000 Amer
ean youths under 17 years of aze
fourteen hardy. suaburacd sons 0:
the Pacitlc coast swept trough sl
‘opposition to win the Juni weil:
aeries championship at the White Sos
“baseball park in Chicago. Prior to
the final two games of the American
Legion's elimination junior cham.
fonship the Montgomety Wards of
Oakland, Calif.and the Worcestt
Mase,, teams "were tntroduced te
Kenesaw Mountain Landis. high com.
missioner of organized base*all
Baseball's chiet executive cong-aru
tated the eastern and vestern cham-
plons upon their fine ro.o.ds, and
had a personel word or two with the
‘eaptains of the contending tea:p-
Lancione of the Montzomery Ward=
‘and Ambrose of the Worcesters.
By winning two straight gomes
from the easterners, the Onion”
team - became undisputed — jun'o:
world's champion. Many of bescic!i':
‘afred C Bossom. acted interns
Donal architect. desiner of ment
emerican skyscrapers, 1s running to:
porllament a& a conservative condidace
for Central Hackney, London, ccord-
(ag to felends in New York It was
‘az Bossom, they say. who frat cought
ta the architecture of the Ione van-
fshed Stayan Indians of Yucatan
siginal American -metives. mattiny
tant Amerlen did not need architec-
sural inspiration from Europe. H
Suggested that the step-back arch?
tecture of New York skyscrapers cor
respond to thelr aboriginal Aniezicrr
Grototspes, and that @ remocation o
She ancient Moyan City of Tikel
Aguaternts gitrsie et feet tho
‘unite @ifth Ave., New York
Mr Basiom tneorporated his idea
to advantage in many city buldins>
mong them the 2i-story Petroleu:n
Building tn Houston. and others i
jsuffalo and New York City. He gave
pelzes for a contest. through the In-
fernational Art Center tor the oe
arehitecttral designs based on Ant:
dean motives
‘fo promote a better understandine
ssnong British architects, of Americ:
‘aims, Mr. Bossom institured a Travsi-
‘ang Fellowship under the auspices
of the Royal Institute of Britis!
‘Arehitects whereby —_prize-winni..
voung architects of Great Britain ai
sven a tour of Amorica for the stud
‘f American architecture and con
struction
‘Asa tachi pt the Arehite ©
teucne of New York le encans
entitint Langue aati? tate:
ws Care as
ie
— a 7A
eee a Reet ee eernn «MNT
OAKLAND CALIF. TUMOR WORLDS
oamaons 6 2 0 8 oO
high officials, including Judge Landis,
President Barnard of the Americar:
Teague, President Heydler of the Na-
tional league, President Veeck of the
‘Chicago Cubs and several White Sox
officlats, Joined with officials of Stent
gomery Ward & Co. in cheering the
contestants in thelr important series
“Both teams played excellent basc-
ball,” said G. B. Crandell, vice-prest-
dent of Montgomery Ward & Co... the
big mail-order house, which spon-
sored the Oakland champions, “and
their work afield and at bat woul:
have done credit to mary minc>
fengues, even though the boys were
not yet 17 years old. 1t was a tex
pleasure to know that the Montgor:-
ery Ward team had fought tts way 72
the championship in an elimination
serles which found thousands of
teams entered.
“Ward & Co. always has had te
welfare of American youth at hear.
and we believe the junior w rie
sertes Was a great success in all re-
spects, The future ‘greats’ of cuse-
all are found in the making of suca
teams as fought it out for the cham-
plonship in Chicago—and a cleaner.
more gentlemanly lot of boys cannot
be found anywhere.”
‘All fourteen members of the Oa:
land Montgomery. Wards wero re-
cruited from Oakland high schoo!:.
whet: much ofthe credit for their ser.-
sational success 1s due to the effor's
of LeRoy Sharp, former University c:
California football, baseball ‘an
basketball star, who acted as coac:
and manager.
; on
7 7.
i ae 5 ,
OS Ae Bossoun ie
To promote good citizenship Dy
pensared the Bossom medals for ¢0-
peration m government which are
awarded to New York ~High Schoo
students who demonstrate a capacity
for citizenship by coopemting in
school affairs with thelr fellow stu-
dents. 1% ts said that 500,000 students
are yearly inspired by the spirit of
“For Use good works Bossom 1s
ceatly missed," said a member of
tho League. “We wish him success
but hope he will return to New York
where he has practiced architecture
for 23 years and still has an office
Ho understands the American point
of view so thoroughly that his ideas
cave been taken up by Americans
{have come realities, Few men
3 uik of life nave dane 20 much
ead the apirit of tnternations!
cn 40h Uae Gs Urn? arabs
______THE RIQHMOND PLANET, RIGHMOND’ VIRGINIA
Care of Food by Wives ck To2n;
Lifts Health Rate ef Entice > ~ca
Sie remedy
ae @ 3 pa SaET ve
aa . ES wa a
4 ee. | perth’ pea 1
& Hees PB ce Be] |
Pee |
MVR BS rie re tl
rt eres ne
pee 4
Sse
SOS fe
Housewives today are sorlous stu-
dents of health, nutrition and_the
acientific preparation of foods. Such
edtication ts alded by radio, the pres
and movies ‘They have, “moreover,
Incorporated every modern contri
vance for the betterment of the home
Praitle mothers and city mothers
alike share in common the responsl-
bility of the family health. ‘Through
home economics study they are learn-
sing that aside from the colossal waste
involved, improperly handled food ts
the cause of much of the preventable
ailments which make a million per-
sons {ll dally. Bacteria, which remain
fmert at a temperature of 50 degrees
or less, are destructive little plants
‘hat attack foods tn overwhelming
numbers when moisture:and warmth
fre furnished. Deconiposition sets in,
and then the food becomes: danger-
ous, .
“There is only one way to bombard
this army of health destroyers,” says
©. 0; Williams, maker of the Ice-0-
Matic electric refrigerator and bead
ad ae laraua¥ion Bina aa TCLORT:
Old Barber Chair
\ exer |
; 7 oe
RY 3 38 H
_ | Oe Ny.
ea ‘
Y aS a
fli
J. Parker Lyon, Pasadena, Cal.,
owns this old time barber's chair
which was used in California dur-
ing the Gold Rush Days from 1848
to 1860. Many notables of those
days were given haircuts and
shaves upon this chair,
FINANCING AIRSHIPS
OUR PROPERITY
THE “BEST” SPEAKEASIES
REMOVES OWN APPENDIX
Dr. Eckener and his fellow offi-
gers of the big Zeppelin, hope
American capital will interest, it-
"self in the building of five airships
for trans-Atlantic flights.
)"A big New York bank is said to
be interested.
‘AIL are interested in the develop-
ment of aviation. Every useful new
thing helps general prosperity. If
we can't build the airships our-
Selves, the next best thing is to
finance them.
Mr, Alfred P. Sloan, Jr, of Gen-
eral Motors, and his associates will
sooner or later get into ithe air-
plane field.
MeClintic, Marshall—a firm of
Pittsburgh now constructing
ready-made steel frames for houses
—might well turn from steel to
duralumin to build all-metal diri-
gibles and frames.
Great demand for automobiles,
keeping all plants at capacity pro-
duction, is one proof of prosperity
‘The Northwest and Middle-West
report good business.
| olf we were much more prosper-
[pose could hardy stand it, That
to say, some of us could hardly
Stand ie” But itis not so with all,
unfortunately.
In New York.a man, fifty years
jold, having vainly sought a job
‘open to gray hairs, tried to hang
himself from a thiry-story window.
Je did not, succeed in hanging
himself, but fell and was kill
Mr. Roy Howard looks before he
leaps and decides not to leap, after
having alcoholic drinks analyzed in
many of New York's “best” speak-
easies.
In eight “high grade” establish:
ments his agents purchased liquors
actually deadly. Only two or three
places out of twenty-eight sold
whiskies non-poisonous.
‘And they also were poisonous,
since alcohol, as fools use it, is
always a poison.
| Something new in modern sur
‘ery.
Dr. Robert Meals, young surgeon
of Hollywood, thought tat shock
thier surgical operation is caused
by anaesthetics, not by the opera-
tion,
‘To test his theory he removed
his own appendix, lying on the
gperating table propped up, ashing
‘assistance-of a brother Sur-
BERRA, EE ee)
At an even temperature, Metiyle
‘chloride, the coldest and safest re-
frlgerant practical for domestic use,
ts employed in the 1ce-O-Matic, which
maintains an average temperature of
48 degrees. Its even. dry cold is tur-
ther maintained by an automatic,
thermostatic temperature control.
‘Thus crisp vegetables, sweet milk,
dainty, desserts: and attractive salads
‘can be kept appetizing ana free from
taint for long periods.”
Besides saving doctor bills, electric
refrigeration 1s a saver of time. It 1s 6
boon to the busy housewife who does
her own work, and to the one de-
Pending on domestic help which ts
Inclined to permit waste. Delishtful
dishes can be prepared hou s Lofare
meal time There ts no fast minuie
messy kitchen rush The Ice-O-720:1¢
food compartment has. ample sioiase
room, And only, three hours is re-
quired to freeze either large cr si. it
cubes, é
Pure ice, clean floors and safe foce
storage are aseured With proper elec-
trio veliitibetion.
Mak
i aa. .
| cy
eee
The owner of this slice of a,
house at East Milton, Mass., which
was ¢ut in half for the purer ‘of
widening the street on which it
stands, is fighting for damages
against the town, The owner re-
fused the offer for the propertyy
‘but the town cut through anyway.
geon only in locating tne appendix”
and removing adhesions.
A fine display of self-control and
“courage.”
Local anaesthesia was employed,
but could not prevent internal pain.
This operation again raises the
question, “Weat IS courage?”
Tt reminds us that not long ago
before anaesthetics were used, all
‘operations were ‘accompanied by
terrible pals
‘The clergy said it, was a shame
to use anaesthetics because it de-
feated the will of God, who desired
his creatures to suffer. That opin-
ion has been abandoned.
Alcoholic drinks under prohibi
tion are various. In the South
“white mule,” powerful alcoho
made of corn, is Ropalae,
In the Middle West “needled’
beer is drunk by workmen, It i
“legal” beer, orginally containing
no alcohol, but brought up to 4
high alcoholic _ percentage by
“needling” it with alcohol, pro
cured by redistilling denatured’ ak
cohol bought at gasoline stations
New York City speakeasies, sur.
rounding newspaper and othe
plants, sell “smoke,” a deadly al
Coho! “vith a little ether added tc
me the cloudy, “smoke” effect
‘his dink is well described a:
follows: “Three shots and | you
know nothing until next day.”
El Edison Medal Som
fe ;
At @
ak, <i é
oy
a f
— » i
Es. 8:
Bo \)
eee TOASTER)
The obverse and reverse of the
cial Gold Medal authorized b
Congress and especially struck of
in honor of Thomas A. Edison. Bt
was presented by Secretary Mello
in & celebration in honor of the in-
yeptos at Bast Orange NL |
Famous Atlantic Liner to Make Her Pacific Debat
uunean, ms: = ve =
yor te re 7
{fs %, a in
‘¢ % ee, Ke
2 * et
ee ‘eke = 5 ae .
= ope = |. 4
: Lim = |
% cas ||: aa
THREE AONIRALS sd
NGmacess on be owpewanes
memes 9 Be Tape
“2 ft phe 4 >
4 ; Roe
bee \ é ha
fe ee i
Sie eS Sone ee
a arin si eae oan ae eal
Lissah apse d
Oo Geen Co ee
in this modern age, epced ts of
paramount importance, whether it be
over land, on the sea, or in the air
Busy executivce and perishaole com-
modities must arrive at their desti-
nations 1a as short a time as possible,
‘And all modern sclence and human
ingenuity have been devoted to this
end. In this connection {t ts inter-
e-ting to learn that the ‘Canadian
Pacific liner “Empress of France.” the
fastest pacsonger veesel tn regular ser-
vice between Canada and Europe. has|
bcex, transferred to the Pacific where
she will vie with the White Empresses
for the speed record between Van-
eotiverand the Orient.
ee geo eee
RN
eee
% Be Ea
SF
et
..
ee
Ruth Dixédn of London is famed
in the United States and England
both ag an international beauty and
a tennis star of the first rank
.The most important news in the
World has nothing to do with the
flection, or the intlizene, of the
modern “flapper” highly prized by
‘educational authorities, The year’s
Emportant news tells of a giant tel-
escope, with a 200-inch mirror that
Swill reveal to the eyes of men bun
\dreds of millions of new stars and
‘distant “universes.”
Appalling to man’s feeble intel-
lett fa thin fostrument that will
bring within reach of our eyes the
Iiight of nebulae ina far off uni-
verse, light that has been traveling
throvgh apace one bilion years, at
speed of 186,000 miles @ second,
Mr. Raskob, a brilliantly able
business man, said, probably out of
politeness to’ please political asso-
ciates, that our prosperity is not
genuine. The ‘General. Motors
Company, for ‘which he has done
{good work, seems not to share his
pinion, judging by the price ofits
{stock and the size ofits earnings.
q.Mr. Mellon, Secretary of the
\Treasury, thinks.our prosperity is
found chough and so do others of
financial ability.
Mr. Frederick Ecker, Vice-Presl-
dent of the Metropolitan Life Tn-
aurance Company, says the main
tient in prosperity is the wage
learner's “back log.”
Workers in this country earn
about ONE HUNDRED BIL-
LION dolars a yea.
‘There 1g a ggod deal of extrava:
nce and ‘waste, but in spite of
fat not more than 85 per-cent of
ithe earnings is spent. This means
Mat Whe people ean, cach ear
FIFTEEN BILLIONS more than
they spend,
John D; Rockefeller, Jr, in mem-
ory of his mother gives to the Unis
Iwersity of Chicago $1,000,000 "to
Promote the teligious idealism. of
Students of the university.”
Those, unfortunately numerous,
that do exist WITHOUT religious
idealism, never lifting their eyes
from the ‘ground, to conten late
and question the heavens and the
glory that they declare, are like
the men living in. Plato's cave,
their backs to the light, knowing:
only shadows on the wails
“Young Mr, Chung Ji-mi
Chinese" lawy student, rarcied Wal
Tung Sui, daughter of a rich mere
“Tennis Beauty
‘THE GREATEST NEWS *
FIFTEEN BILLIONS OVER
RELIGIOUS IDEALISM
ENGLISH JUSTICE
During the World War the “Em-
Press of France” was chosen because
Of her speed to be flagship of the
10th Auxiliary Cruiser Squadron of
the British Navy. Under the com-
mand of Admiral Sir Dudley de Chair
she tatercepted nearly 10,000 vessels
plying betweon Canada and Europe
and prevented tons of contraband
materials from falling jnto the hands
of the enviv, Early this year the
“Empress” cist w cruise from New
York to South Amezizo and Africa,
touching et the Jonely :.le of Tristan
da Cunha ex route, but another ves-
sel of her fleet, the “Duchess of |At-
oll” of 20,000 gross tons, will make|
(E a
et ‘
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ee
[esrocasrer) lea
M. Claude Anet, French novelist
now in New York who is known as
Bae of the world’s authorities on
love, has received invitations from
many cities t oid “love clinics”
hhere the all-absorbing topic: wil)
be discussed from every angle.
‘chant; "took her to England and
there’ murdered her.
Mr. Chung made his mistake
when he went {o England, They
Sil hang afew days, in
Spite of his ingenious story, about
mysterious Oriental assassins
committing the crime.
In England when you kill any-
body, they hang you without loss
of time, excuses and explanations
are not accepted, It is in this
oungey. thet murderers’ in great
numbers go froe, and even those
caught and convicted have two oF
tiiree years to think it over.
(Ales COSI TON
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\Peasdly Secrets” 4
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CLS SAECO, «sl
By Helena Rubinstem Helena Rabintive
‘Love “Authority
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“CIT TLE FATHERS HONG KONE
this “cruise of contrasts" in 102%
The “impress of France” is of 12.3:
gross registered tons and wes twice
chosen by the Prince of Wales tc
carry him to Canada, en roe 19
“E-P Ranch” near High firs A.
arta
First Air Stowaway,
‘7
e. Be
ae eS .
a
es, j
Cees. :
i
Here’s Clarence Terhune, 19. of
St. Louis, who "stowed away” on
the Graf Zeppelin and made the
trip across. Discovered as the chip
was speeding on its way on the re-
turn frit £0 Germs s, the south
was pul to woik washing dishes
a ee,
NI ge
emg
fae
Thomas Tusser, born mas, which we find memorably d
ere Shakespeare, wrote, scribed in the writings of Dicke
About Your Health
Things You Should Know
by John Joseph Gaines, M. D.
Sudden Deaths
Such announcements as the sudden death of a neighbor, often sets us to wondering whether we are not harrowing some hidden enemy that may strike up down without warning—and shudder a little, and dismiss the pleasant thought from our minds quickly as possible.
Now, listen: There is no fatal alli- nist that strikes us without warning. Bear that in mind. The fellow that dropped dead at his work bench, had plenty of warnings, but he ignored them. He neglected that little keen gin that he left in the left breast from time to time—that always wore away so quickly. He didn't heed the "diry spells" or the misty spots before his eyes when he ate pretty freely of fresh meat or veal leaf for supper. He was too absorbed in his work to attend to a bowel that had been clogged for years; he saw no more than just annoyance, when his kidney go him out of bed five or six time each night. No, my dear sir and madness— you are always warned— warned plenty—before a sudden attack strikes you down. Heed the warnings, however slight, if you do not understand symptoms perfectly. It will pay in length of days, maybe. If you do not understand, go to the physician who does. A visit to the doctor is many times cheaper than a funeral! The capable physician will tell you that neglect in matters that pertain to life and health is simply inexcusable—worse than a height of folly. It doesn't cost to have the urine analyzed— to be the means of prolonging every delightful sojourn of yours to the living.
a rather sad reflection that I
would—that more than
others were preventable.
Victoria to Kav
Thomas Tusser, born in Moore Shakespeare, wrote At the oars, play and make good beer. Christmas comes but once a year, he made certain the success of "The Farmer's Daily Diet," a grandparent of "Boor Richard's Almanac" filled with sober agricultural lore and sober maxims of thrift and honesty. Englishmen have needed no urging to follow Tusser's welcome advice, and have celebrated joyously the "Twelve Days of Christmas," except during the Reformation and under the regime of the Ironies when such festivities were founded upon it. It remained for Dickens and Washington Irving in America to revive with their magic pens the old Walt Disney spirit. We in the States have long fashored our Christmas celebrations on the model of the old English Christ-
---
Hints for the Home
The holidays are approaching and it is time to think of Christmas and New Year's Greeting Cards—new designs are on display now and it pays to make selections early, while the variety is good and orders for engraving can be comfortably filled before the grand rush.
And have you seen the newest styles in cards—the modernistic motifs in which the Christmas story is told in brightly colored triangles—discs or geometric designs symbolizing Christmas trees, toys or candles or stars or snow flake?
In the old favorite designs the same urge for brighter color results in bigger, holder cards, although colorful simplicity—the very keynote of Christmas cards.
Remembering past seasons when friends failed to receive the card you sent—be sure this time to write your name and address on the envelope flap. It will serve both for a return address and to notify the recipient of your latest address.
Meatless Menu
Vegetable Gumbo
Cheesed Rice Escalled Cabbage
Tomato Salad
Apple Cake
Non-Stimulating Drink
Peach and Pimiento Salad
Drain a can peaches, add one tablespoon vinegar and enough water to make a pint. Heat juice to boiling point and dissolve in it one package lemon-flavored gelatin. When cool and about to thicken, add the sliced peaches and one pimento shredded finely. Mold and serve on shredded lettuce with mayonnaise or cream dressing.
Eggless Sugarless Cake
Mix ¾ teaspoon soda with 1 cup
sour milk, add one cup molasses.
Sift together 2-2/3 cups prepared
flour, 2 teaspoons ginger, one of
cinnamon, half-teaspoon cloves, half
teaspoon salt. Add ¾ cup melted
shortening to milk and flour mixture
and beat well. Pour in shallow
buttered tin, bake in moderate oven
30 or 40 minutes.
Spanish Corn
In bottom of baking dish put layer of canned corn, sprinkle over it a little mixed green pepper and onion,
we an Old English
mas, which we find memorably described in the writings of Dickens and Irving. But during the county Christmas the festivities hallowed six centuries of English tradition will come alive as never before; and for their setting they will have the city of Victoria, B. C., which has been called "a corner of England on the Pacific coast." Here, in the Empress Hotel, an Old English Yuletide Festival is to open on Dec. 22. The holly and ivy and rosemary, celebrated in English song, all flourish in Victoria, and will furnish the traditional setting for the caroling the wasting, the mumming, the wailing, the Nicky Christmas, the Yule log, the mistletoe, and the other delights that warmed Geoffrey Crayon's heart. Harold Eustace Key, director of Canada's major music festivals, is arranging the musical programs for the nightly concerts at the Empress
---
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Magazine Page
season highly with temperate and dot with out. And slice tomatoes and treat so continue until dish is till wither of tomatoes on top. And grated cheese and lake in moisture oven.
Quick Way to Bake Potatoes
Allow potatoes to stand in hot water for fifteen minutes before baking and it will take only half the usual time to bake them. This saves both time and fuel.
So the Step-Ladder Won't Slip
Nail a piece of rubber on the bottom of the legs of your step-ladder and it cannot slip. This has prevented many a painful fall.
"Uery Latests"
By Cecile
NELL KY—vivacious little bronze-haired star of "Ups-a-Daisy" at Shubert's—choose emerald green for this smart costume featuring the "cardigan" sports motif in sill. And isn't it chic? The loose pleating of the skirt gives us the circular office, and is a fascinating change from the spandex-and-ceeled that have come to look rather stiff to us. A soft cream velvet black velvet tie and big acorn buttons in black velvet with greca tips are the trimming motifs used. And of course a hat of emerald felt is worn over Titan locks! Almost any girl's wardrobe would welcome a costume so practical and colorful and, withal, so charming.
The Vogue for Astrakan
Each year has its Fashionable Fur. This season it's astrakan—either black or grey—astrakan collars, cuffs, bands, strips of astrakan edging skirt, the tips of pockets of astrakan in every conceivable way, grey, gray or black, and pants that selfs particularly well to the use of this modish fur. And many of the smartest coats employing it are in various weaves of Oxford gray.
Muffs Return to Favor
When the first biting days appear, then you shall see the muff in all its glory, staging a triumphant comeback after an absence of many years. As to shape, the newest version is the round muff, made soft, and just large enough to be comfortable for the two hands.
Hat Brims are Anything But Even.
It may be longer on one side than the other, short in front, turned up here and down there—almost any irregularity you want—but the smart hat of the season must NOT have an even brim.
Yuletide Festival
Hotel. He has in hind a representation of "Wardle's Christmas Party" as immortalized by Dickens in the Pickwick Papers. This is to have a running commentary of Puffin's music to set off the charming for its lovably hudorous characters. Dr Healy, the author of the companion essay of the composé for the occasion incidental music to "The Chester Mysterious" a Christmas play selected from a group of medical-pagements which used to be enacted by the trade guilds of Chester, England, dealing with the timeless theme of the shepherds and the Babe of Bethlehem. The first performance of these Mysteries was in 1328, exactly six hundred years ago.
---
THE LAST OF THE DUANES
by ZaneGrey
Illustrated by Verne C.Christy
WHAT HAPPENED BEFORE
Buck Danne, quick on the draw, kills Cilin in self-defense and finds himself an outlaw. Flying from pursuit, he meets Luke Cain and his crew. Luke narrowly escapes capture and Danne is shocked to find his brother outlaw severely wounded. Then he goes on to his camp, where he gets into a fight with a man called Bosomer and wounds the outlaw. A band called Eulrich, who gets him of Mrs. Bland and the girl Jennifer.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
"Wal, I got it this way. Mebbe it's straight an 'mebbe it ain't. Some years ago Benson made a trip over the river to buy mescal an' other drinks. He'll sneak over there once in a while. As I get it he run across a gang of greasers with some gringo prisoners.
"I don't know, but I reckon there was some barterin', perhaps murderin'. Anyway Benson fetched the girl back. She was more dead than alive. But it turned out she was only starved an' scared half to death. She hadn't been harmed.
"I reckon she was then about fourteen years old. Benson's idea, he said, was to use her in his den, sellin' drinks an' the like. But I never went much on Jackrabbit's word. Bland seen the kid right off an' took her—bought her from Benson.
"You can gamble Bland didn't do that from clavity. I ain't gamed it, however, but that Jennie is better off with Kate Bland. She's been hard on Jennie, but she's kept Bland an' the other men from treatin' the kid shameful. Late Jennie has grown into an all-fired pretty girl, an' Kate is powerful jealous of her. I can see trouble brewin' over there in Bland's cabin.
"That's my I wish you come over with me. Bland's hardly ever home. His wife's invited you. Shore if he gets sweet on you, as she has on—wal, thet complicate matters. But you'd get to see Jennie, an ambe you could help her. 'Mind, I ain't hintin' nothin'. I'm just wantin' to put her in your way. Yet. You can. I just want her. I just a baby girl once, an if she'd need she be as big as Jennie now, an boyish I wouldn't want her in Bland's camp. 'Tlg you, Euchre. Take me over."
replied Duena.
Euchre knocked upon the side of this door.
"Is that you, Euchre!" asked a girl's voice, low, hesitatingly.
"Yes, it's me, Jennie. Where's Mrs. Bland?" answered Euchere. "she went over to Deger's. There's somebody sick," replied the girl.
somebedy sick," replied the girl.
Euchre turned and whispered something about luck. The snap of the outlaw's eyes was added significance to Dionne.
"Jennie, come out or let us come in. Here's the young man I was tellin' you about." Euchre said.
"Oh—I can't! I look so—so—"
"Never mind how you look," interrupted the wail in a whisper. "It ain't no time to care for that. Here's young Duane. Jennie, he's no rustler, no thief. He's different. Come out, Jennie, an 'mubbe he'll—"
Euchre did not complete his sentence. He had spoken low, with his glance shifting from side to side.
Euchre went away through the cottonwoods.
"I'm glad to meet you, Miss—Miss Jennie," said Duane. "Euchre didn't mention your last name. He asked me to come over to—"
Duane's attempt at pleasantly halted short when Jennie lifted her lashes to look at him. Some kind of shock went through him.
His gray eyes were beautiful, but it had not been beauty that cut short. He seemed to see a tragi- strangle struggle between hope and doubt that shone in her piercing gaze. She kept looking, and Duane could not break the silence. It was no ordinary moment.
"What did you come here for?" she asked at last.
"To see you," replied Duane, glad to speak.
"Why?"
"Well—Euchre thought—he wanted me to talk to you, cheer you up a bit," replied Duane somewhat lamely.
The earnest eyes embarrassed him.
"Enchere's good. He's the only person in this awful place who's been good to me. But he's afraid of Bland. He said you were different. Who are you?" Duane told her.
Duane: "You're not a robber or rustler or murderer or some bad man come here to hide?"
"No, I'm not," replied Duane, trying to smile.
"Then why are you here?"
"I'm on the dodge. You know what that means, I go in a shooting scrape at home and had to run off. When it blows over I hope to go back."
"But you can't be honest here."
"Yes, I can."
"You fought Bosomer the other day?"
"In self-defense I crippled him."
"Oh, I know what those outlaws are."
"Look at me—straight in the eye. There are decent men. Haven't you a father—a brother?"
Yes, you're different." She kept the strained gaze upon him, but hope was kindling, and the hard lines of her youthful face were softening.
Something sweet and warm stirred deep in Duane as he realized the unfortunate girlwalls experiencing a birth of trust in him.
"Maybe you're the man to save me—to take me away before it's too late!" Duane's spirit leaped.
"Maybe I am," he replied instantly. She seemed to check a blind impulse to run into his arms. Her check flamed, her lips quivered, her bosom swelled under her ragged dress. Then
"Look at me—straight in the eye. you a father—a brother?"
the glow began to fade; doubt once more assailed her.
"It can't be——You're only—after me, too, like Bland—like all of them."
Duane's long arms went out and his hands clasped her shoulders. He shook her.
"Look at me—straight in the eye. There are decent men. Haven't you a father—a brother."
"They are dead—skilled by raiders. We lived in Dimmit County. I was carried away," Jenna replied hurriedly. She put up an appealing hand to
"Forgive me. I believe-I know you're good. It was only-I live so much in fear-I'm half crazy-I've almost forgotten what good men are like. Mr. Duane, you'll help me!" "Yes, Jeanne. I will. Tell me how. What must I do? Have you any plan?" "Ok, but Take me away."
"I'll try," said Daean simply. "That won't be easy, though. I must have time to think. You must help me. There are many things to consider. Horses—food, trails, and then the best time to make the attempt. Are you wached—kept prisoner?" "No. I could have run off lots of times. But I was afraid. I'd only have fallen into worse hands. Euchre has told me that. Mrs. Bland beats me, half starves me, but she has kept me from her husband. She's been as good as that and I'm grateful. "She hasn't done it for love of me, though. She always hated me. And lately she's growing jealous. There was a man came here by the name of Spence—so he called himself. He tried to be kind to me. But she wouldn't let him. She was in love with him. She's a bad woman.
"Bland finally shot Spence and that ended that. She's been jealous ever since. I hear her fighting with Bland about me. She swears she'll kill me before he gets me. And Bland laughs in her face. Then I've heard Chess Alloway try to persuade Bland to give me to him. But Bland doesn't laugh then.
"I just lately before Bland went away things almost came to a head. I couldn't sleep. I wished Mrs. Bland would kill me. I'll certainly kill my self if—Duane, you must be quick if you'd save me."
"I realize that," replied he thoughtfully. "I think my difficulty will be to fool Mrs. Bland. If she suspected me she'd have the whole gang of outlaws on me at once."
"She would that. You've got to be careful—and quick."
"What kind of a woman, is she?" inquired Duane.
"She's brazen. I've heard her with her lovers. They get drunk sometimes, when Bland's away. She's got a terrible temper. She's vain. She likes flattery. Oh, you could fool her easy enough if you'd lower yourself to—
"To make love to her?" interrupted Duane.
Jennie bravely turned shamed eyes to meet his.
"My girl, I'd do worse than that to get you away from here," he said bluntly.
"But—Duane," she faltered, and again she put out the appealing hand, "Bland will kill you."
Duane made no reply to this. He was trying to still a rising orange tumult in his breast. The old notion—the rush of an instinct to kill. He
---
亦
UANES
neGrey
by Verne C. Christy
"Chess Alloway will kill you, 'I Bland not,' went on Jennie, when her tragic eyes on Duane's.
"Maybe he will," replied Duane. It was difficult for him to force a smile. But he achieved one.
"O. better take me at once," she said. "Save me without risking so much—without making love to Mrs. Bland!"
"Surely, if I can. There! I see Eucheme coming with a woman."
"That's her. Oh, she mustn't see me with you."
"Wait—a moment," whispered.
There are decent men. Haven't
Duane, as Jennie slipped indoors,
"We've settled it. Don't forget. I'll
find some way to get word to you, per-
haps through Euchre. Meanwhile
keep up your courage. Remebler I
save you somehow. We'll try strategy
first. Whatever you see or hear me do
don't think less of me——"
Jennie checked him with a gesture
and a wonderful gray flesh, of eyes.
"I'll bless you with every drop
of blood in my heart," she whispered
passionately.
It was only as she turned away into
the room that Dana saw she was
hume, and that she wore Mexican sandals, and over bare feet. He sat down upon a bench on the porch and directed his attention to the approaching couple. The trees of the grove were thick enough for him to make reasonably sure that Mrs. Bland had not seen him talking to Jennie. When the outlaw's wife drew near Duane saw that she was a tall, strong, full-bodied woman, rather good-looking with a full-blown, bold attractiveness. Duane was more concerned with her expression than with her good looks; and as she appeared unsuspicious he felt relieved. The situation then took on a singular pest. Besche came up on the porch and awkwardly introduced Duane to Mrs. Bland. She was young, probably not over twenty-five, and not quite so possessing at close range. Her eyes were large, rather prominent, and brown in color. Her mouth, too, was large, with the lips full, and she had white teeth.
Duane took her proffered hand and remarked frankly that he was glad to meet her. Mrs. Bland appeared pleased; and her laugh, which followed, was loud and rather musical.
"Mr. Duane—Buck Duane, Enchre said, didn't he?" she asked.
"Buckley," corrected Duane. "The nickname's not of my choosing."
"I'm certainly glad to meet you, Buckley Duane," she said, as she took the sent Duane offered her. "Sorry to have been out. Kid Fuller's lying over at Deger's. You know he was shot last night. He's got fever today." "When Bland's away I have to mose all these shot-up boys, and it sure takes my time. Have you been waiting alone? Didn't see that slattern girl of mine?"
She gave him a sharp glance. The woman had an extraordinary play of feature, Duane thought, and unless she was smiling was not pretty at all.
"I've been alone," replied Duane. "Haven't seen anybody but a sick-looking girl with a huckle. And she run when she saw me."
"That was Jen," said Mrs. Bland. "She's the kid we keep here, and she hardly pays her keep. Did Euchre tell you about her?"
"Now that I think of it he did say something or other."
"What did he tell you about me?" bluntly asked Mrs. Bland.
"Wal, Kate," replied Euchre, speaking for himself, "you needn't worry none, for I told Buck nothin' but compliments."
Continued Next Week
---
SEVEE
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 Aflame—Why Americans Entered the War—The Things that Made Men Mad—The Shaking 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 Barbarity and Merciless Methods Employed to Satisfy the Ambitions of the Kalser and His Imperial Government. The Ruthless Submarine 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 Billion of Dollars 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. Mangacious guns that shot for miles. Rudal and Medieval weapons that again came into play. The plans of the Hohenzollers 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 the Negro Everywhere in the World War—How He Did His Duty.
A NEW REVISED BOOK WITH
In every capacity—from right up in the Front Line Trenches and on the Battlefields—Clear Back to the Work of Keeping the Home Flies Burning: On the Farms: In the Mills and Munition Plants: On the Railroads and Steamships: In the Ship Yards and Factories. Men and Women with the Red Cross, the Y. M. C. A., Y. W. C. A., the War Camp Community Service, the Liberty Loan Drives, etc., etc'
This Volume tells the world how the Negro has won his place and his right to a voice in the hearts of mankind against prejudice, ridicule, race hatred, and almost insurmountable obstacles. Many striking testimonials from the Secretary of War and Army Officers of high rank and reputation are set forth in no uncontainable terms. The following ringing words of Major General Bell, addressed to the famous "Buffaloes," the 367th 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 salt.
ST. MARK BAPTIST CHURCH,
(Glen Allen, Va)
Rev. B. J. Ruffin, pastor. Residence, 708 Stale Street. Services: Sundays, 11:30 A. M. and S P. M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. All are welcome.
FIFTH STREET BAPTIST CHURCH
(Fifth and Jackson Streets)
Rev Charles S Morris, D. D. pastor. Residence, 1401 Idlewood Ave. Services: Sundays, 11:30 A. M. and S P. M. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. B. Y. P. E. 6 P. M. Public invited.
MT. OLIVET BAPTIST CHURCH,
(25th and S Streets)
Rev. J. Andrew Bowler. Pastor. Residence, 112 E. Leigh Street. Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and S 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. residence: 616 North 5th Street. Services: Sundays, Sunday School 9:30 M. M. Morning service 11 o'clock. Evening service 8 o'clock. The public is invited.
MORNING STAR BAPTIST CHURCH
(317 E. 5th St. Southside)
Rev. Thomas W. Smith, Pastor.
Residence, 916 N. 4th St. Services;
Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.; Regular Services. 11:30 A. M. and 8:15 P. M. The public is invited.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
(South Richmond)
Pulpit temporarily in charge of
Deacons, pending a call. Services:
Sundays. 11:30 A. M. and 8:00 P.
M.; Sunday School. 9:30 A. M.; P. Y. P. U., 6:30 P. M. All are
welcome.
ea cn
——— MERA Ree ee eet RE Cc, Noe ev RNCREN __ THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRQI
Well-Known Home Economist Makes
Neighbors of Millions of Women
<i S cee Sec
‘TRAN-BLAZERS AND “HOMESTEADER™ . &
BRIGHTEN “FARM AND HOME HOUR” | FRRRBEggE §
CO, 2 e j 3
| Cee er Was ee py
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4 ae , ee
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PLE LE HELE HELP!
HELP COMMUNITY
‘DRIVE!
GIVE TOTHE WeRKEES
In dOing this, you help yourselves.
Col. A. W. Holmes leading the army
GIVE! GIVE! GIVE!
ee
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“Alice and Lloyd,” the newlyweds,
tnc~-luced to radio audiences by Mrs.
Hua Stevens Fisher, have become
ne!" vors to millions of women all
‘over she United States.
yne Alice and Lloyd” ser!.« 18 Just
one of the unique worrn's features
tnitiated by Mrs. Fisher home ¢co-
nomist, and director of all womea’s
programs of the “Farm ria Hore
Reve” sponsored by Montgomers
Ward & Co, and put on the atr dally
except Saturday and Sunday. over
petwork of stations covering the
nation.
Alice and Lloyd are real people anc
Mrs. Fisher makes them seem real. 80
real that hundreds of housewives
from Maine to California write her
‘with thelr suggestions for the young
couple.
‘All the latest methods of house-
keeping, of child care, of tnterior
decoration, all the special subjects
women are interested in: “Women 1n
SABLA ZERS Gy HOMESTEADER,
Politics"; “Women in Law,” are pre-_
sated by Mrs. Fisher in an especial
ip appealing, human manner, in lec~
ture, dialogue and playlets, She knows
the ‘seasonal topics that women are
{interested in.
‘She knows children for she has
worked with them intensively in con-
ection with 4-H Club work all over
this country. She knows Just the
problems presented by the Hallowee'n
party, the ways of making tafly ap-
ples, the thousand and one perplex«
ties of home life, as well as the bigger
problems. She talks on any subject
Which occurs to her as apt, which
will interest women primarily.
‘Mrs, Fisher invites authorities on
various subjects as special guests to
talk during the noon period. Dr.
Herman Bundesen, nationally known
authority on health subjects, will tall.
uring child health week. A woman
lawyer will speak on the legal aifl-
culties which confront women.
‘The unique appeal of Mrs. Fisher,
known as the “Little Home Woman,”
who must stand upon a Ward cata-
ogue in order to reach the micro-
phone, is her intimate knowledge of,
the home, and its problems. :
Interspersed with home and farm
talks are musical numbers presented
by the Trail-Blazers, one of the most
popular orchestras on the air.
“phe Homesteader” is official mas-
ter of ceremonies for the "Farm and
Home Hour.”
Stations from which whe Ward hour
ts broadesst are KDKA, Pittsburgh:
KYW, Chicago: WCCO. Minneapolis;
WOO, Davenport, fowa: WHO, Des
jase Towa: WOW, Omaha; KOA.
Denver) KWK. St. Louis; WDAF,
Kansas City; KVOO, Tulsa, Okla-
home: WPAA. Dallas, Texas: WOAl.
San Antonio, Texas; WHAS, Louls-
Ville; WSM. Neshrille, ‘Tennessee:
WSB, Atlanta, Georgia; and WLW,
‘Giarinnatls Obie,
Snake Once Pet Now Head Dress
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For three years Loretta Braveman
treasured the company of a faithful
pet, a tame alpina karung, Almost
daily during the hot summer months
she and her friend Elizabeth Wright,
both living in a New Jersey resort
town, brought this welrd Indian pet
(i ts a snake known in India as
alpina karung) tn a basket onto the
warm beach at a nearby lake. While
they swam, the karung dozed peace-
fully in the sun never making an
effort to escape, though occasionally
he made a little inspection trip to
the edge of the woods and water, al-
ways returning without being called.
He had some sort of an attachment
for Loretta and Elizabeth that was
almost uncanny. Once he was pols-
fonoug and deadly but surgeons re-
‘moved the fangs and with them went
is jungle ferocity At home he would
ELIZABETH Wit THE STUFFED
ARBINA KARUNG ABOUT HER Har
ee <m_ s4C"
often arch his spotted body over the
doorway and remain in that position
for hours while the girls read, sewed
and played. He loved music and tt
‘was not uncommon for him to twine
hhis body around a tall loud speaker
horn with his head far down into the
opening.
‘One afternoon ho slept on the
beach and never awakened. Today
he is entwined about a hat owned
mutually by both girls. He ts stuttes
Loretta has even purchased a alpina
karung spotted dress to wear ‘with
the hat. In the photo she 1s shown
with “Bombs” (Bombay). and in
the tnset is Elizabeth wearing the
hat which has set the whole town
agog. And to cap it all a hat maker
in Paris has evoked from this tragedy
a new style which he predicts will
cause a rlot when it makes its ap-
pearance this winter. It is a hat with
a replica of “Bomby” twined about tt
and is designed to accompany other
Ecilis citean mass now so: poplilas:
In Boudoir! anc |
LC? Fi
—
Poe . Ike!
If our S7es COU TN ee pe.
edly ther Grt cords would De
Spon ve so rough!” For. from the
first moment you ru> them cwake 1p
the mozzing until they fall wearily
Closed at nigat. existence for them 1
gust cae owtrsge cfc anomie
eyes cre 00 much mse ecMeHive te
those ca any ether part of the oay
that the best-intentioned forefinger
in the world, unless zonlously
Watched 1s Iikely te mjure them to
the pe.nt of breaxdown And that
nears iimes. cromstect, and those dis
figur:ng pags of Mesh
No cnc over sixtcen can afford the
“tuxurs of rubbing her eyes open 0
the morning And an evening mas-
foge tre is neavier than the ctrest
Sta pe Sager is fatal to mature
beaut
To ts.at the eyos properly. cares
fully cleanse the skin ebout them
fand the lide above them with cleans
Ing cream. always being sure to re
move the dirt with a soft cloth. cot-
ton, or tiscies. Then lightly sap
With cotton peds sacuscted in a ton
ing lotion. Finally. Quger print in
Iittle nourishing cram and leave 9p
all nist
Bye coms are escentisl Nov anit
do they revive the optic nczves but
they siso restore tie lustre While
there are oci:2! splendid ones on the
market, 1 cficn ixcw my OED eve:
qash—hot weer to which I nave
added a teaspoonful of boracie acic
or a pinch of salt. First. place pads
of cotton wrung out of these solu
tons on the eyes, and relax ten min:
utes, Then use the eye cup.
‘Through the subtle and discree!
use of make-up, the most fatigue
eyes will take on new life and lustre
‘Young eyes require little outside aid
<But the charm of those which hav
‘seen much may be greatly enhance
by shadowing the lds with shados
‘cream—blue, brown, or bicck, accord
ing to the color of your eyes — 0m
tinping the eyelashes with mascary
The Fashionable Figure Tee tear
Follows the Pacchall Curve
rae eo
f a 4
Leos ape tty. Ty a
foe agape? 728 ~ pK
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THE WHITE HOUSER
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payin: Ooh ane
Po aint actin |
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‘, SOMEWHAT DIFFERENT VIEWOP THE,
WHITE HOUSE, OFFICIAL HOME OF THE.
PRESIDENT, AS IT APPEARS FROM THE
TREASURY BUILDING. THE WING THAT
HIDES THE ORIGINAL FACE OF THE
BUILDING HERE, IS A COMPARATIVELY
| RECENT ADDITION TO THE STRUCTURE,
| IT HOUSES THE OFFICES’ OF SOME OF
| THE PRESIDENT’S OFFICIAL FAMILY.
nae Ree
What sexo? Nop Piten pulls
fest one ait! 793 £2 Lavehall <@ bor-
nine faze! The great American
game has iupittd lot of things be-
sides hee rons, aud the new great
‘American figure ts one of them, ac-
cording te the Hgts expects,
‘The mew cuuves ct Le modern tady
of fashion are noting new at ll—
but Jus: thy old baseball curves ex-
prose i: figiues, uccording tc
Kathrya Cantungain, whe has ding-
nosed 1. :toaats of fivures In the last
fen yess 2s silef designer for the
seers 2) yucel Industries,
cig Goa tli eutye 43 the
ine uf the vtriclly modern fcainin
Soe kee “CReangtNG oP CP
OUR NEXT
CHIEF EXECUTIVE
PN Nh. Bae
ae ee 4
rae
<WERBERT CLARK HOOVER,
ENGINEER, HUMANITARIAN “AND
‘ORGANIZER, HAS CARRIED THE
BANNER OF THE G.0.?. TO VIC.
TORY IN THE GREAT AMERICAN
QUADRENNIAL POLITICAL SWEEP-
STAKES, AND WILL: HOLD. THE
HELM OF THE AMERICAN SHIP OF
STATE FOR THE NEXT FOUR
YEARS. MR. HOOVER WAS BORN
(AT. WEST BRANCH, JOWA, AND
HIS CAREER HAS BROUGHT HIM
‘FO THE FAR CORNERS OF THE
EARTH.
group of designers in a style confer:
see held recently i Chicego,
phe exicoth ‘ous end ‘ry eurees
the selentific piteners er he
tne we try to achieve in cut hc
tepere’ waist which is s9 mur the
vogue all over Europe and America,
‘some of the curves of the plump
Acure—what we used to call the
‘grylish stout’ before the advent of
the modern foundation garment --
dereribes just the bulge and sudden
curve of the famous baseball ‘our
Srop’ and "in-drop’ curves.
“The too-slim sims, the demode
copper-types, have what you might
‘ail in baseball the ‘fadeawny’ curve
wih vey betle deviation from the
tht Mme.
: \: iionable figure ‘mixes ‘em
up’ with some slow some fast, anc
A “TWIN VIZIONED CYCLOPS®
SEES WASHINGTON
a ry A
ee, Ue
phates, Wg
aa ee
‘he '
at EMD
THE AMERKAN CAPITOL 1 &
SCINTILLATING | AND. BEAUTIFUL
PILE AT NIGHT, AND THERE ARE
FEW AMERICANS WHO, ON GAZING
ON IT. UNDER NOCTURNAL CONDI
TIONS,” DO NOT WISH THAT THE
BUILDING WAS. -OR WERE - TWINS.
‘THAT WISH 1S HERE GRATIFIED. ©
SHOW. TWO NIGHT VIEWS OF
CAPITOL, BY THE SAME PICTURE.