Richmond Planet
Saturday, February 1, 1930
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE
RICHMOND PLANET
VIRGINIA
FEB 3 1930
PYTHIAN VICE-SUPREME CHANCELLOR MURDERED BY HIS POLITICAL RIVAL-
Volume xlvii No. 12
PYTHI
MU
ERNEST G. T
EVANSVILI
HIS OPP
PO
Evansville, Ind., Jan. 27—(C. N. S.)—Attorney Ernest Tidrington, national known lawyer and politician, was soht to death early Thursday morning, January 23rd, by a disgruntled politician. Tidrington was seated in his automobile with his wife when the fatal shot was fired through his brain from behind with a shotgun at close range. Luther Bell surrendered and said he killed Tidrington because of the latter's political persecution of him. Mr. Tidrington was vice supreme counselor of the Knights of Pythias and grand chancellor of the State organization. He was a member of the Improved, Benevolent, Protective Order of Elks of the World, and was head of the State lodge. Mr. Tidrington was an outstanding figure in Indiana politics. He headed the colored bureau of the Republican State Committee in the 1924, 1925 and 1926 campaign, and was one of three Negro members appointed by President Coolidge in 1925 on an inter-racial commission.
NORTHUMBERLAND COUNTY
NOTES
Rev. Huffman, of Macedonia Baptist Church, preached a splendid sermon last Sunday at Shiloh Baptist Church. Special music was rendered by a large chorus choir.
Rev. Skipworth, of Philadelphia, is conducting the meeting at Rev. H. C. Roane's church, First Baptist.
Rev. H. M. Ruffin was called away to attend his sister's funeral at Bowling Green, King and Queen county.
The remains of Mrs. Elsie Williams were brought down from Baltimore last week and buried in the Hopes Union cemetery. Rev. W. L. Allen, of Shiloh Baptist Church, of Baltimore, Md., preacher the funeral. He was assisted by Rev. Jackson, of Fulton Baptist Church of Baltimore, Md.
Annie Arnetta Dates gave a birthday party at her home on January 21, 1930. It was very well attested by her friends.
Mr. Clarence Dates motored to Richmond last week. He was accompanied by his wife, Eleanor Dates, his son, Mr. Meredith Dates, and Mrs. Alice Jackson, Eleanor, Va. They visited the home city of the Southern Aid Society of Virginia. Mrs. Amner Hudnall returned home this week from a trip to Baltimore to visit her children.
We learn with sincere sorrow that Mrs. Myrtle Jones is quiet sick. We wish her to know that the love and earnest prayers of her friends will abide with her, and that she will soon be restored back to her life again.
Mr. and Mrs. Weldon improving their home by the addition of three rooms and porch.
Mrs. Harriet Wiggins' son and daughters gave her a surprise on her forty-eighth birthday, January 17, 1930, at her home, Horseshead, Va. Mrs. Irene Smith was the guest with the cake, which had forty-eight beautiful candles.
Trenith A. E. Dates.
JUNIOR LEAGUE NOTES
On last Sunday, January 26th, at 2:30 P. M., Miss Estelle Cox, one who has been trained in the League, read a lovely paper to the League on "Thankfulness." The members of the League are making quite a hit on the lovely papers they are presenting every Sunday. This Sunday the members will come prepared for the memory verse from the Bible. You have a special invitation to visit our League.
Mrs. Mannie Carter Burned To Death In Charlottesville Home.
By Beulah C. Coles, 307 W. Main St
Amid joy, Old Man Gloom usually steps in. It was most shocking news, last Thursday, when word came that Mrs. Nannie Sacre Carter had been seriously burned by the explosion of a stove and the home burnt to ashes. This happened at Hickory Hill, Va. She succumbed to her injuries on Friday A. M. Probably some of you will know her better as the mother of Emmit Sacre. His children were in the house at the time, but were fortunately saved by Mr. Carter. It is a most pathetic and sad occurrence and any clothes or solicitations to the survivors will be gladly accepted by Mr. and Mrs. Sacre. Even a word of cheer will help them in these sad hours, when a friendly clap of the hand or a word of consolation means so much. The funeral services of Mrs. Carter were held from the Hickory Hill Baptist Church, Sunday, January 26th, at 2 P. M., with Rev. I. A. J. Kennedy officiling.
Everything seems to be quiet down in Denmark and the weather has been so bad, that home and at work has been my main dwelling place. On last Tuesday night, Mrs. L. N. Burns entertained the "500 Club" at her residence on 6th St, S. W. Although the weather was inclement, the club members responded in full numbers, and we played 500 like 'twas "nobody's business." Dr. W. B. Dabney was the "dark horse," as he came in rather late and started bidding higher and higher. Even ran Mrs. J. Barbour and myself away from table one after we had been comfortably seated for several hands. Anyway he received the men's club prize, and Mrs. Dabney received the ladies' club prize. Wonder if they talked it over before they left home? The other participants in the game were Missella Banks, Dr. and Mrs. G. F. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Compton Tonsler, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Aston Barbour, Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Allen, Mrs. Rosa Faggans, Mrs. Constance Ragland and Mrs. Docia Johnson. We were served chicken salad, and olive sandwiches, and hot tea, which was delicious. Mr. and Mrs. Burns made a lovely host and hostess. Oh yeah! The Orange Blossom was timely and enjoyable.
The "Whoopee Party" at Miss So and So's house, last Thursday, was all in the word of gaiety. Since I am writing about it I must have been there. R. P. missed the right house and went next door, walked in and made himself at home, until the surroundings caused him to make his departure, but Mrs. B. P. saw that he walked in the right home place after everything was over and R. P. wasn't drinking either. Well the main game consisted of dominoes. R. C. came in with that whoopee laugh that is so familiarly known by. Mr. & Mrs. W. really enjoyed themselves, but Mr & Mrs. J. were somewhat quiet. Miss A. J. stepped out, had plenty rouge on. Mr. and Mrs. B. were the life of the party, as usual, while Mr. M. was rather demure, think he had his eye on a certain young lady that was there. Oh yes, and Madames S. and C. came in together and left together, wonder if their husbands were together also? Mr. and Mrs. B. were there in full and I never sow so many "hot dogs" disappear in all my life. Wonder if we all forgot to eat before we left home? There was a certain very little lady that specialized in the "Breaw-a-way," that nearly put her partner out of
RICHMOND; VIRGINIA; SATURDAY; FEBRUARY 1 1930
Second Degree Murder Charged Against Militant Negro Workers.
commission for life. And don't think it all ended at 12:30, because it didn't. We made merry until 2 A. M. Maybe it was later than two, because my watch insisted on keeping foreign time that night. In short, it was a grand party.
The many friends of Mrs. J. A. Jackson were glad to see her at church Sunday, where she has served so efficiently as clerk.
Mr. Augustus Johnson has just received news of the death of his brother in New York City. He has the sympathy of his friends and coworkers.
Before signing off, let me say to all the readers of this paper and otherwise, that I shall be glad to send some news in for you each week, if you will let me have the same by Friday of each week. Send in news and buy your paper each week, so the ball can be kept rolling.
CROZET, VA.
Mrs. Ann Maupin, of Charlottesville, visited Mrs. Mamie Walker last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kimbo, of Proffit, visited friends in Crozet.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wood, of Richmond, visited their parents in Crozet Sunday.
Miss Emma and Annie Belle Wesley, students of Union University, visited their parents in Crozet.
Miss Emma Wesley completed her college course at Union and will remain at home for the present.
Don't forget next Sunday is groundhog day. We have had enough bad weather.
Gravel Hill Baptist Church
Henrico County, Va.
Rev. W. L. Tuck, pastor.
Sunday school convened at the usual hour. At 11:30 our pastor preached a wonderful sermon, his subject being, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." Quite a few were in attendance trying to build up the cause for Jesus. This sermon appealed to us that we should pray for our enemy. At the close of this sermon Pastor Tuck administered unto us the Lord's Supper. At 3 P. M. Pastor Tuck preached a double funeral of Sister Roxie Tyler and her fourteen-month-old baby girl, who departed this life on January 23rd and 24th. At 8 P. M. Rev. J. H. Brown brought a wonderful message, using for his subject, "The Road to the City." We can truly say we had a heavenly feast all day in Zion. My soul praises the Lord. The choir rendered good service under the leadership of Brother W. Trueman.
Don't forget prayer service on Wednesday night. Come praying. J. M. A., Reporter.
FOR SALE
One 4-room and one 10-room house on Howard Road at sacrifice. Call Madison 4299 for appointment. Second De Against Mi
(Crusade News Service)
Chester Penna.—This city, in the center of Pennsylvania's busy Delaware River section, where blood flowed in the streets during a race riot some years ago and where Negro worker sare brutally exploited in the heavy industries here, is now the scene of another case of harsh injustice against a Negro worker.
Man Found Dying on Highway After Visiting His Girl Friend.
His name is Andrew Turner, an truck-drivler, was arrested after a active member of Trade Union Unity motorist drove into the rear of his League and American Negro Labor machin some weeks ago Congress. He is being held for mur- The International Labor Defense der in the second degree at Freehold, is carrying on nation-wide agitation N. J., for two reasons; because he is on behalf of Turner, and has taken a Negro and because of his militan-over the case. J. Louis Engdahl, national secretary of the I. L. D., per-
He is under $3,500 bail, which his sonally visited the district of the acce-
employers, the Hedley Storage Com-ident and will defend Turner to the
pany, refuse to put up. Turner, autumn of the organization's ability.
ROBERT FUGUA HELD AS BIGA
MIST, MARRIED TWO WOMEN
Robert Fugu, of Mint Springs, six miles south of Staunton, was arrested on Friday morning, at the corner of Pump and Central Aves., by Officer H. H. Englemean on the charge of bigamy. He was placed in jail until the next regular Grand Jury meets, when his case will be investigated, by that body.
He nawrested Fquua, was in a taxi and had two dress suit cases, as though he was leaving the city. He was apprehended by Officer Engleman, on the advice of W. Harauen, the brother of Fquua's wife. It is alleged that Fquua married miss with aaruen, of the county and is the father of one child which lives with the mother, at Arbor Hill. Wife number two is said to be Miss Janey McCutchen, or Waynesboro, from our information, which comes from the brother of Fquua's real wife, it is alleged that Fquua, under the alias of Robert Brown obtained license from the county clerk of this county and married Miss McCutchen, of Waynesboro, hence his arrest for burglar. The ceremony being performed by Rev. J. H. Holland.
Fuqua is well known in Staunton, having worked here on several occasion. His parents live at Mint Springs. He has a brother who works in the city at present. Many people will know the man attribute his act to the pure ignorance, not knowing the seriousness of his act. Up until Thursday as we go to press, Fuqua was still in jail, no bond having been procured for him. Fuqua's wife, Mrs. Etta Harden Fuqua lives with her mother, Mrs. Mary Harden, in the Abor Hill section. The family is well known.
The Grahams Will Speak Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenz B. Graham will speak in Richmond three times next Sunday, February 2nd. At 11 A. M. they will speak at Fourth Baptist Church, and at 8 P. M. at Moore Street Baptist Church.
In the afternoon they will address a mass meeting at Sixth Mt. Zion Church, St. John and Duval Streets. Special attention will be given to the history and economic conditions of Liberia. Mr. Graham has made a special study of Liberian problems, especially when he was attached to the American Legation at Monrovia. An opportunity will be given to ask questions at the afternoon meeting.
Mrs. Graham is well known here as the daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Charles S. Morris.
SOUTH RICHMOND
The services last Sunday were very inspiring at the Union Baptist Church. The morning services were in charge of Rev. C. B. Jefferson, the assistant pastor. The pulpit was decorated with beautiful ferns. After the sermon a short program was rendered, with Mrs. Lillian Witt in charge, during which period a substantial donation was presented Rev. Jefferson. The evening services were in charge of the young people of the church and Sunday-school. A grand time was had and enjoyed by all present, including Professor Aldman, one of the faculty of the Armstrong High School. His remarks were very helpful. On the 27th instant the funeral services of Sister Mary Baker were held at the church. She was a faith-in member of the church and missionary circle. The sermon was delivered by the pastor, Dr. Garland. Solos by Mrs. Annie, Jones and Mr. Matthew Dickerson.
Special sermon tomorrow at 11:30 o'clock. Communion at 3:30 P. M. The Richmond Baptist Sunday School Union will hold its exercises tomorrow at 3:30 P. M. at the Second Baptist Church, Dr. Ashburn, pastor; Mr. H. K. Johnson, superintendent of Sunday school. A splendid arranged program will be executed by the schools of Southside Mr. G. T. Walker, president; Mr. J. D. Jefferson, corresponding sec
FULTON NOTES
The services at the Mt. Calvary Baptist Church last Sunday were very helpful. The pastor, Rev. C. A. Cobbs, is yet holding his own at Calvary.
The Sunday School, under the leadership of Mr. John Robinson, is making rapid progress. The B. Y. P. U., under the leadership of Rev. Brown, one of Calvary's own men, are doing a splendid work. The choir is still holding her own under the leadership of Mr. Nathaniel Yates, assisted by Mr. Beverly Valentine.
We shall look for you tomorrow. Morning services by our pastor. At 3:30 P. M. the Lord's supper will be administered by our pastor. We anticipate having a grand time in worshipping and praising our Lord and Master.
NEWPORT NEWS TOO STRONG
FOR STAUNTON BOOKERS
The strong Huntington High School basketball team, of Newport News, on a trip that will take them to Lynchburg and Roanoke, stopped off in Staunton long enough to meet the Staunton's Booker T. Washington High. The score was, 15-19, in favor of the Newport News bunch.
NEWLY ELECTED PASTOR TO TAKE CHARGE SUNDAY
Rev. C. H. Pearson, the newly elected pastor of the Mosby Memorial Baptist Church, corner Idlewood Avenue and Randolph Street, will take charge Sunday, officiating at the services of the day, including communion service at 3:30 P. M.
Rev. Pearson comes fully qualified to fill the pastorate of this growing church, having served as assistant pastor under Dr. L. K. Williams, of Chicago, Illinois. Dr. J. T. Hill, while at Little Rock, Ark., and Dr. A. A. Graham, of Phoebe, Va. He is a graduate with the degree of Bachelor of Arts from the Virginia Union University and with the degree eof Bachelor of Divinity from the University of Chicago. At present he is Director of the Department of Religious Education at the Virginia Union University, which department was created through the generosity of the Abbsyina Baptist Church, of New York City, Dr. A. Clayton Powell, Pastor.
The public is cordially invited to worship with us on so momentous an occasion in the history of our church.
For several years the Religious Education Committee of the Phyllis Wheatley Branch, Y. W. C. A., has had the privilege of presenting the Sabbath Glee Club in recital during the Vesper season. This group of Richmond singers under the direction of Mr. Joseph Matthews, has become nationally famed for its musical ability. In fact the Sabbath Glee Club is no longer regarded as a group, but as an institution of which Richmond is justly proud. On Sunday afternoon, February and the club will appear at the Branch during the Vesper hour, from 5 to 6 o'clock. The program will in- nee several selections. The public is invited to attend.
The annual meeting and supper of the Branch was well attended on Wednesday evening, January 22nd. At this time, the following members were elected to the Committee of Management, for a term of three years: Mrs. Ernestine D. Galloway, Misses Beatrice C. Edmonds, Anne B. Ellis, Bessie M. Finney and Mrs. Maze E. Johnson.
LEXINGTON DEFEATS STAUN
TON BY DECISIVE SCORE IN
LIVELY BASKETBALL GAME
The strong P. P. P. basketball team, of Lexington, met and defeated the Chisolits "Big 5," by a decisive score on last Friday night, in Staunton. The score at the finish being Lexington P. P. P., 38-Chisolits, Staunton, 18. The Lexington team outclassed the Staunton team in passing and team work. The Lexington team played the last few minutes of the game with four men, on account of several of their men being banished from the game for fouling. Lexington's team had several new faces, besides their usual mainstays, Big Dick Jones, George Davis and J. Harris. Devil Becks umpired his usual good bame.
The line-up.
Lexington
J. Harris.....R. F....C. Jones
Davis.....L. F....Fountaine
Johnson.....C....Brent
Jones.....R. G....J. Gaines
Ware.....L. G....Thomas
Subs: Alexander, Ware, Lexington, Carr, W. Johnson, Staunton.
Referee: Devil Becks.
Scorer: Dr. John Chile.
Timer: Kenneth Jones, Red Gilliam.
PRICE FIVE OENTS
LOR RIVAL. highway Friend.
LEWIS CASE STILL REMAINS
MYSTERY; NO ARREST AS YET
The case of Leroy Lewis, who died from a blow on his head near Uniontown Sunday night, January 19th, still remains a mystery. Lewis, who had been visiting his girl friend in Uniontown, was found on the highway near this village, in an unconscious state, he died in Kings Daughters Hospital the following Tuesday without regaining consciousness. According to information received from the boy's grandfather, William Franklin, it is alleged he left the house with three men, who were the last to see him alive, according to our information all have been questioned in an effort to throw some light on his death. Sherif Wilson, and the Commonwealth Attorney are working two clues, it is said; one, he was run down by an automobile, and the other that he was hit with a blunt instrument. It is stated that th authorityes are doing everything possible to clear up the case.
STAUNTON HAPPENINGS
Social Lull
With the holidays as memories, the social realm has sunk into a lull. There is practically nothing going on except a few impromptu card games. The clubs or the city that entertained lavisily during the holidays, are not expected to do much entertainment now until after Lent.
Valentine Wedding
The students of Booker T. W.
Hamilton High School will give a Valentine
wedding and Fan social, at Mt.
Zion Baptist, during the month of
February. The date will be announced
at a later date.
Mr. Andrew Gilliam
Mr. Andrew Gilliam, national known athlete trainer, of Lexington, accompanied the 3 P Club to Staunton, Friday night, when they played the Chisolips Big "5."
Marriage Announcement
Mrs. Mary Tate has announced the marriage of her daughter, Catherine Virginia Trimble, to Mr. Russell Turner, Jr., of Harrisonburg. The marriage took place Monday, January 20th, in this city, Rev. A. Hall Whitfield, officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Turner will live in Harrisonburg.
Mary B. Talbert Club
The Mary B. Talbert Club met at the residence of Miss Miser Miller, January 4th, on Rose Street. After the usual transaction of business the hostess served a delightful repast. The next meeting of the club will be on February 1st, at the residence of Miss Rosalie Cook, at 1009 Johnson Street.
Greenville Miss Entertains
Miss Minnie Martin, entertained Friday afternoon, in the honor of Miss Julia Ross, of Brooklyn, N. Y. Among those presene were; Mr and Mrs. J. S. Perry, Miss Julia Ross, Miss Virginia Pryor, of Staunton, and Mr. Howard Harper, of Greenville.
Sixth Anniversary
The Sixth Anniversary of Queen Esther Bible Class will be held, Sunday February 2nd, at Augusta Street M. E. Church, at 3 P. M. A program has been arranged that will bring together some of the outstanding Bible students of the city, both white and colored. The program follows: Scripture lesson, Rev. A. Hall Whitfield; Prayer, Mrs. Sylvia Jones, Son Bible Class; Bible lecture by Prof. Hoge, of Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind; Selection, Mrs. H. E. Baylor; Song, Bible class; Selection, The Juniors; Bible selection, Rev. Mr. Burns; Address, Miss Minnie Bumgardner.
GLAD TIDINGS OF GREAT JOY
FROM PAINTING BY PLOCKHORST
Directory of Churches,
Rev. W. T. Johnson, D. D., pastor;
residence, 2504 Brook Road.
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M.
and 8 P. M. Sunday School, 9:30
A. M.
AH income.
FIRST CHURCH, SOUTH
RICHMOND
(Co and Decatur
Streets)
Rev home, D. D., pastor;
p Decatur Street.
Ser 11:30 A. M.
and 9:32
A. M.
All home.
SECOND CHURCH
(By Between First and
Streets)
Rev Hill, D. D., pastor;
residue Wood Avenue.
Ser 11 A. M. and
9:30 A. M.
3 P. School, 9:30 A. M.
All home.
SECOND CAPTIST CHURCH
(South Richmond)
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and S. P. M.; Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.; R. Y. P. U., 6:30 P. M. All are welcome.
RICHMOND CHURCHES
LBENEZER BAPTIST CHURCH
(Loigh and Judah Streets)
Rev. W. H. Stokes, Ph. D., pastor
residence, 1607 Brook Road.
Services: Sunday, 11 A. M. and
8 P. M.; Sunday School, 9 A. M.
The public is invited.
FIFTH STREET BAPTIST CHURGH
(Fifth and Jackson Streets)
Pulpm in charge of the officers.
Visiting Sunday.
Service Sunday, 11:30 A. M.
and 8 A. M. in School, 9:30 A.
M.; B. in P. M.; Prayer
Service Thursday night.
All are welcome.
PULPM IN CHURCH
(1133 Church Street)
pastor.
Service Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and
8 B. in School, 9:30 A. M.
All are welcome.
MOCHIE P. P. BAPTIST
(1133 Church Street)
Rex G. Hancock, A. M.
pastor, Virginia Union
University.
Service Sunday, 11:30 A. M.
and 8 B. in School, 10 A.
M.
All are welcome
MT. OLIVET BAPTIST CHURCH
(Twenty-fifth and "S" Streets)
Rev. J. Andrew Bowler, D. D., pastor. Residence, 112 E. Leigh Street. Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and 8 P. M.; Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. All are welcome.
ST. PHILIPS P. E. CHURCH
(S. W. Cor. St. James and Leigh)
Ken Dulais: L. Taylor, rector;
residence, 20 West Leigh Street.
Services: Sunday, 11 to 12 A. M.
night, 8 to 9 P. M.; Wednesday evening
services, 8 to 9 P. M.
The public is welcome at all services.
LEIGH STREET M. E| CHURCH
(N. N Cor. Fifth and Leigh Streets)
Rev. R. M. Williams, pastor; res-
dence, 616 N. Fifth Street.
Services: Sunday, 11 A. M. an
8 P. M.; Sunday School 9:30 A. M.
the public is invited.
(The Home-Like Church)
(S. E. Cor. 1925 and Everett Sts.
Rev. W. D. Davis, wood, pastor
9:30 A. M. Sunday School; 11 A.
M. Breaching; 6:30 P. M. Epworth.
League, 7:55 P. M., preaching
SHARON BAPTIST
CHURCH
(St. John and Duval Streets)
Rev. A. W. Brown, pastor; parsonage, 809 St. James Street.
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M.
and 8 P. M.; Sunday School, 9:3
A. M.
All are welcome.
SHARON BAPTIST CHURCH
(Corner First and Leigh Streets)
Rev. R. H. Johnson, B. D., M. A.
pastor; residence, 1801 DuBois
Avenue
Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. and 8:15 P. M.; Sunday School, 10 A. M.
All are invited.
FOURTH BAPTIST CHURCH... MT. VERNON BAPTIST CHUR
(1902 Wallace Street)
Fourth Baptist Church, corner
Twenty-eighth and P Streets, Dr. F, Rev. M. H. Payne, pastor. Rev.
W. Williams, pastor. Sunday School, dence, 1900 Wallace Street.
9:30 A. M. Morning service, 11:45 Services: Sunday, 11:30 A. M. an
A. M. Night service (one hour), 88 P. M.; Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
to 9 P. M. A sincere welcome awaits All are welcome.
Parsonage, 601 N. Thirty-first Street.
Phone Randolph 3485.
For Field Secretary call Randolph 920-W.
RISING MT. ZION BAPTIST CHURCH
(800 Denny Street Boston)
pastor.
Residence, 728 Denny Street
NION LEVEL CHURCH
(Streets)
Rev. L. J. Ruff
Resi
8. Compensation for Sunday
day, 8:30 P.M.
The public is welcome.
RIVERVIEW BAPTIST CHURCH
(Jacquelin and Lonnie Streets)
Rev. E. D. Lewis of Residence, 316 S. Lombardy Street. Services; Sunday, 11 A. M. and 8 P. M.; Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
Rev. M. H. Payne, pastor. Re-
ence, 1903 Wallace Street.
Services: Sunday, 4:13 A. M. an.
P. M.; Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
All are welcome.
Moore St. Baptist Church
West Leigh Street, between Kinney and Bewe Streets.
Dr. Gordon B. Hancock,
PASTOR
Sunday Feb. 2, 1930
11-30 A. M.
'Living Under The Great Strain.'
Second Baptist Church
Byrd Street between First and Second Streets
Rev. Joseph T. Hill, D. D.,
PASTOR
SUNDAY, Feb. 2, 1930
REGULAR SERVICES
A Second Baptist Welcome To All.
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MORNING STAR BAPTIST CHURCH 317 E. 5th St.. South Richmond
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FIFTH STREET BAPTIST CHURCH
THE NEW PASTOR WILL TAKE CHARGE OF
THE PULPIT SUNDAY.
Dr. C. C. Scott will pre ach morning and night. Presentation Service for Mrs. Scott at 3=30.
THE RICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
PLANET - TRI
Choose the Pr
Send in Coupon
Select You
LADIES WILL BE
SEE THE 4-PIEC
Now on Exhibition at
311 North Fo
PLANET - TRIBUNE OFFER
Choose the Present Desired. Send in Coupon and You May Select Your Choice.
LADIES WILL BE DELIGHTED.
SEE THE 4-PIECE BUFFET SET. Now on Exhibition at THE PLANET OFFICE 311 North Fourth Street.
What To Do.
Send Two Hundred and Fifty Planet and you may select any Job Work brought in to the for when completed will entitle
Send Two Hundred and Fifty Coupons clipped from The Planet and you may select any one of the Presents Offered.
Job Work brought in to the amount of $25.00 and paid for when completed will entitle you to any one of the Presents Offered.
Five Annual Subscriptions to The Planet will entitle you to any one of the Presents Offered
Here Are the Presents: A FOUR=PIECE BUFFET SET.
IN VERY ATTRACTIVE PATTERN. It consists of a SCARF. 50 by 15 inches and a three piece VANITY SET to match. These Sets are made on Ecrue, Linene Cloth, elaborately embroidered in silk to be had in Rose or Basket Design and finished with a fine quality, heavy lace. Each Set is packed in an attractive gift box 15x25 inches.
DR. KELLY MILLER'S AUTHENTIC HISTORY OF THE NEGRO IN THE WORLD WORLD bound in cloth and gold. Fully Illustrated. Over Six Hundred Pages. Published by the Austin Press Company, of Washington, D. C.
WEBSTERS' COLLECTION HOME AND OFFICE DICTIONARY. A valuable aid in the home. Each family will be valuable for the children attending school and for the student at College.
.FROM BOUQUETS EVEN TO BIPLANES:
That's the range of load the modern commercial automobile is called upon to carry. In the past twenty years attention has been paid only to the progress of the passenger vehicle, while its hardworking brother has been slighted. To remedy this situation, the Reo Motor Car Company this year is sponsoring comprehensive "Progress in Transportation" shows in New York and Chicago, where the great national automobile shows are held. Thirty leading automotive manufacturers are participating in the exhibits, which were planned to celebrate the fifteenth anniversary of the Speed Wagon. Every conceivable body style and size, designed for hundreds of different special purposes, is on display. With the huge fund of knowledge acquired by research engineers of both chassis and body building companies, it is today practically impossible to present a commercial hauling problem which is incapable of solution. In cases where two distinct mechanical operations are required, separate motive power is provided for each function. Above are shown two of the latest models. (Herbert)
I'm going to accept the best jingles sent in by boys and girls and print them in "Pinky Dinky Jingles" with the names of the lucky contributors
Get your name in the paper, and besides—
Each and every successful jingle writer gets the original of the comic strip in which the jingle is printed with the compliments of the artist. Terry Gilkison and myself. . . Adores me care of The Planet.
Poetically yours,
PINKY DINKY.
PHYSICIANS' DIRECTORY.
M. M. and 8 P. M. Sunday School
Herbert A. Allen, 418 I Clay Street.
Iwin E. Bassett, 1715-A. Main Street.
B. H. Bower, 613 F. Adams Street.
SERIES AT LEIGH ST. M. E.
Board of Leigh Street Methodist
Episcopal Church, Fifth and Leigh
Streets wish to announce to their
friends and citizens in general a
series of sermons by their pastor,
The Reverend Robert Moton Wil-
iams A. B.; B. H.; D. D. under
the general theme: "Finding God."
PHYSICIANS' DIRECTORY.
A. M. and 8 P. M. Sunday School
Herbert A. Allen, 412 I. Clay Street.
Edwin E. Russell, 1715-A. Main Street.
O. B. H. Bower, 512 E. Adams Street.
J. H. Blackwell Jr., 1832 Hull Street.
L. D. Blaney, 1 E. Clay Street.
Fred D. Brown, 740 N. Fifth Street.
Walter Walker, 901 N. 27th Street.
C. O. Cook, 1068 1-2 W. Leigh Street.
D. W. Davis, 221 E. Clay Street.
James O. Dawson, 1215 Denny Street.
Nathaniel Diffard, 1719-A. Main Street.
William H. Dixon, 900 State Street.
Joseph B. Early, 114 W. Baker Street.
Miss Z. G. Glipin, 102 W. Leigh Street.
R. J. Goffin, 790 N. 328 Street.
Vernon J. Harris, 1105 N. 29th Street.
William H. Hughes, 508 St. James Street.
A. A. Jackson, 1729-A. Main Street.
E. R. Jefferson, 706 N. First Street.
Marie M. Jones, 986 N. Third Street.
The topics will be announced weekly in our church ad. The choir, under the direction of Mr. Claiborne Dickerson, is preparing special music to accompany this series. Dr. Williams is taking a special reading course under the direction of the this series. We cordially invite you also to attend a pageant, "The Books of the Bible," Sunday 8 P. M., under the auspices of the Pastor's Aid Society, Mrs. N. E. Logan, manager. A happy welcome awaits you.
J. T. Moore, Chairman Steward Board.
Nettie Y. Kier, Chairman Steward-ardess Board.
THREE
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Editorial Page
Election Laws Under Strutiny
One of the contraversial matters that was discussed in the last state campaign was—the simplification of the ballot in Virginia. That, this matter which at times grew bitter between the Democrats and Republicans, has not gone altogether unnoticed, is shown by the fact the Gov. Pollard in his message to the General Assembly, that the state proposed to amend in our voting laws. The general assembly acting on this advice has already under consideration relative to simplifying the ballot in our state.
It has always been the contention of the Republican party that the ballot has been too confusing. This has been borne out to some extent, perhaps, by the fact that thousands of ballots are thrown out at each election. It would now seem that the Democratic party is determined, through their leader, Governor Pollard, to investigate this charge, and remedy the situation. Several bills are under consideration, relative to this situation. One would have a voting machine, another would have a method to use a cross mark opposite the party, the voter intended to vote for, signifying his intentions for that party in full. There is also under consideration a bill to require the Republican party to hold a primary the same as the Democratic candidates are required to do. From all of this it would seem that it is a foregone conclusion, that Virginia is to have two parties in the future. Fortunately our group in the Valley have little trouble in getting on the books. And, they hold fair elections here too. Seemingly, our greatest hold-back is to get our people to nav their taxes and register.
Pay Your Subscription
There are many whose subscriptions have become due since the first of the year and some that were carried over from December. We are trying hard to give you a standard newspaper, it can only be done by your co-operation. Your newspaper cannot carry your subscription mail out many over-due subscriptions anymore than your grocer can carry your bill, on-and-on. We shall again soon, if you care to have the paper continue. PLEASE PAY UP. Thanks.
Thoughts of a Subscriber
Unles the Negro can learn to cooperate on a large basis the RACE will meet serious obstacles in the very near future.—Dr. Vernor L. Johns, President, Virginia Seminary and College.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
She is a fish and race land;
Crawls a fresh and safe land;
She is a dear and rare land,
This native land of mine.
No more than hers are braver; )
I love women's hearts in or water;
I love to die to save her;
I think my lot divine.
She is a dull oil land;
She is a warm and hollow land;
She is a true and old land,
This native land of mine.
Cold beauty over ground but
And wrist still reward her;
Not she would cross her border;
She friend within its gown.
Oceans a fresh and fair land,
Oh, they're love and care land!
You're a pure and fair land,
Oh, they're love and care land of mine.
HUMORETTES
Sister. We have been married a
week and you come home as have
as tails.
Fear. Very my love, it took me all
that time to tell the yellows at the
club how happy I am.
James: There goes the old resent
who swindled me out of $80,000.
Peter: How did he do that?
James: He wouldn't let me marry
his daughter.
Mother: Why didn't you call me,
Doris, when that young man tried
to kiss you?
Doris: I didn't know you wanted
to be kissed, mother.
"Have you any oysters?" asked the dinner.
"No, sir," said the waiter.
"Any lobsters?"
"No, sir."
"Any prawns?"
"No, sir. The only shellfish we is heggs, sir."
TODAY AND TOMORROW
BY FRANK PARKER STOCKBRIDGE
TODAY
AND
TOMORROW
FRANK PARKER
STOCKBRIDGE
CORNSTALKS
Just as the invasion of the European cornboer has pit up to every farmer in the corn-growing regions the problem of how to get rid of his cornstalks and hold the pest in cheek, new inventions for the utilization of this farm waste for making paper and also a substitute for lumber have been perfected.
Now capital in large amount has been subscribed to finance industries which will contract with farmers for their stalks, after harvest, send their own machines into the fields to gather them, and hand them to central points where they will be manufactured into useful products. This will help conserve the forests and will also add, to the profits of the corn growers.
GAS
The International Red Cross is preparing for the next war. One of the certainties about the next war on any large scale is that poison gas will be used on a larger scale than ever before. War is no longer an affair of kings and hired armies; it is whole nations against whole nations. The aggressor in the next great war will
Hear an
'The
Hear an Interesting Story of an Adventurous Life--- 'The Man Who Would Be King' The story of the life of John Mitchell, Jr. by Roscoe C. Mitchell.
The Bridget Club met at the home of its president, Miss Bessie Carter. Quite a few were present.
Bridget Lucy Norris came home after attending the Davis-Burks wedding. She reported a fine time.
Mrs. H. J. Adams was called to Roanoke, Va., to see her brother, who was so ill.
Miss Margrese Barber and Virginia Harris spent the week-end in Iron Gate, Va., visiting Miss Leftwich.
The First Baptist Church is planning a men's day and women's day, so let us women stick together again in peace and harmony.
Rev. C. W. Ingram preached one of his fine sermons Spend morning. The B. Y. P. U. was fine.
Mr. and Mrs. Hilliard Norris are visiting their daughter in Glen Ferry, W. Va.
Mrs. Eva Warwick is on the sick list.
Mrs. Maud Harvey is feeling fine these days.
LYNDHURST, VA.
Messrs. Irvin and Maurice Awkward were the Sunday afternoon guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Reid. Mr. Paxton Waler, of Waynesboro, was the Sunday guest of Mrs. Ruth Morris.
Misses Clara and Mabel Awkward gave a birthday party on the 15th in honor of their brother, Mr. Maurice Awkward, of Elizabeth, N. J. Games and music were enjoyed by all until a late hour, when refreshments were cerved. Those present were Misses Rheba and Ora Pryor, Eunice Reid, Blanche and Mary Broks, Messrs. Theodore Briscoe and John Johnston, also Miss Nellie Johnston.
COVINGTON, VA.
Watch for Date.
mas. The Elite Art Circle has had
two meetings. Mrs. Geneva Williams
entertained the circle on January
15th and Mrs. Mayne S. Jones, on
January 29th.
Mrs. Eliza Walker has returned
from Burkayville, Virginia, where she
has been taking a treatment for
several months.
Mrs. Lilly Fields Carter has
gone to Pittsburgh to take a position
in that city. She plans to spend
the Winter and Spring.
Mrs. Rena Alexander spent the
week-end in Roanoke, Virginia.
Mrs. Edha Eaves, of Charlotte, N.
C., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Henry
Mathews, on Diamond Hill.
Mrs. Rosa Hale, who has been
away for some time, is at home for
the winter.
Rev. Cook and family, spent Saturday in Lynchburg on business.
Mrs. Edlow Morrison, of Washington, D. C., is with her mother-in-law, Mrs. Louise Morrison, on Ruffs Lane.
Dr. A. W. Pleasants was called to Roanoke a few days ago to see Mr. W. H. Preston, who at this writing is very ill. Mr. Preston is a Lexington man, he is now superintendent of the Roanoke Division for the Southern Aid Insurance Company.
Little Dorothy Fielding, the daughter of Mrs. Gertrude Russell Fieldings, was fatally burned at her home on Diamond Hill, Sunday morning January 26th, and died at Jackson Hospital Sunday night.
Dorothy was about five years old, an attractive and promising looking child. She seems to have caught fire while trying to get warm, and her clothes became ignited. She ran for help and her mother made every effort possible to extinguish the flame, but not until the child was burned all over did she get the furious fire
not wait for the enemy to assemble an army but will try to wipe out a whole city by dropping poison gas from the clouds.
What the Red Cross is looking for is some means of detecting the most minute trace of poison gas in the air. A prize of $2,000 is offered to the successful inventor. And we call this a civilized world.
Anger, fear, worry, especially the latter, kill more people than "real" diseases, according to a report recently made to the New York Acaday of Medicine. There is no such thing as overwork, either of body or mind. The body, given sufficient nourishment, will quit of its own accord when fatigue becomes too great, and a night's sleep will put it back into trink again. Probably no human being has ever used his brain to its full capacity. Men who have studied that subject say that most of us use less than a quarter of our power of thought.
But let worry, jealousy, fear of losing one's job, one's money or one's sweetheart, creep in, and the whole picture is changed. The emotional tension tires both mind and body, which cannot go on without violent stimulation, and the process of decay is hastened. Most of the deaths from heart disease and kidney trouble are the result of emotional tension rather than any real defect in the physical organs.
With all the talk about the increased average length of human life, the age of seventy still remains the normal limit for the human being. So Dr. Louis Dublin, medical head of one of the great insurance com-
KING DAVIDS SHOW REMARKABLE PROGRESS.
THE IMPERIAL ORDER OF KING DAVID'S ANNIAL STATE:
At the close of 1929 all claims were paid except the claim of James Pettus, whose mother, Mrs. Mamie Pettus Craft, died two years ago, in February. She was a member of Star Hope Lodge No. 112. Prince Edward County, Virginia. We have advertised for him four times, but he has not been found. Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Mr. James Pettus will please notify him that the Imperial Order of King David is still holding $100.00 for him, the death claim of his mother. Every death claim was paid promptly, some within 24 hours after notification. The Imperial Order of King David lost during the past year 93 members. Total amount paid $8,825.00. We have added to the Order 1,278 new members. We have a balance to our credit in the various banks of Richmond over $19,000.00
We take this opportunity to thank all of our members, co-workers, and deputies, whose names are too numerous to mention, for their faithful work and loyal support, and pray that God's riches blessings will rest upon them.
Mrs. A. G. Thompson Taylor,
Grand Worthy Ruler,
Miss Mary M. Scott,
Grand Worthy Scribe,
Mrs. L. P. Southall,
EMOTIONS
panies, reports. Only exceptional individuals live beyond 70, and in America the proportion who die between 65 and 70 is increasing. Yet the average American lives longer than those of his father's genera did, much longer than in his grandfather's time. That is because it a illness which used to kill off babies, children and young people of both sexes are not so prevalent as formerly. Every American baby born today has a reasonable chance of living to 55, which is the average length of life in this country, as against 43 in most of Europe. But the man who reaches 50 cannot count on more than fifteen years more of life with any degree of certainty, and the chances are that he will pass on in ten years. COAL
Geographies of the Pacific South Pacific Expedition have given the land in Antarctica. Great Britain takes occasion to remind the United States that considerable parts of the land there are under the protection of the British flag. Trouble-makers, especially the senational newspapers which preter war to peace because war is more "newsway" are already trying to lay the foundation for international strife.
If we ever do go to war against Great Britain it will be over something far more important than a coal-bed located where the temperature is always below freezing and usually 49 degrees or below zero. Even if the coal was portable it would not be worth it to burn it in an economic scheme of mining the oil has become the principal treaty to the world's natives so well as to merchant marine.
us Life---
King'
, Jr.
YATES—In memory of my dear wife and our mother, Minnette Yates, who departed this life one year ago today, January 28, 1929.
We greet you for you when all is still. May God with you shine!
Our mind is filled with sad regrets
As on the day you died.
Dearest wife and mother, thou hast
left, p.
We cannot see thy face no more;
Nor hear thy gentle voice
Until we reach the other shore.
Farewell, Minnetta, how we love you.
How we miss you move and more.
But God will keep you in His bosom
Until we meet you over there.
Husband, A. Yates, and Children.
XATES—In memory of my dear
daughter and our sister, Minnetta
Yates, who departed this life one
year ago today, January 28, 1929.
Deep in our hearts that aches with
the repression.
And strives with plentitude of bitter pain.
There lives many thoughts that clam-
ors for expression,
And spends its undelivered force
in vain.
But after while our tears shall cease,
And sorow shall give way to peace;
The flowers shall bloom, the thoughts
shall die,
With faith in Christ, shall see
our loved ones by and by.
IN MEMORIAM
It is a concensus of opinion here that something is dogmatically wrong with the colored group in Rich mond; noted particularly when an attempt is made to get unanimity of action for proposed social, economic or community movements. It is also noted that there seems to be too much division in thought, as well as in action. We make this our concern for this week because we consider it of prime importance.
Let us give some attention to the historical background for this division or lack of cooperation. Subsequent to the War Between the States, the Negroes of Richmond developed more rapidly in education and business than Negroes in many parts of the South and their rapid rise in the cultural and bvsiness world was a wonder of that day: When there were only 10 colored banks in the United States, we had four in Richmond, and our cultural life was the model for other sections. The pioneer work done in the old Richmond High and Normal School was largely responsible for this.
Our large uneducated majority naturally allied itself to the few educated leaders and soon found itself divided into several camps, with two main groups which grew in power. A natural antipathy developed between these groups and all of our community efforts became partisan. Although the original Richmond Negro is almost extinct here, a good bit of this jealousy has seeped through into this generation and this is primarily what we see today in our lack of cooperation.
Another unfortunate thing happened. We lost a large number of the second and subsequent generations that graduated from the old high school: They went to New York. Philadelphia and other Northern cities and in their places we received thousands of Southerners, who had not had the advantages we enjoyed. Richmond's cultured group failed to encourage contact with these Southerners and denied them a splendid opportunity to imbibe our spirit, and this created a group hostile to native Richmonders
These conditions are being gradually remedied. The educational institutions here are moulding this heterogeneous group of ours into one in culture and habits and points of view. In time this will give us a citizenry which will know how to cooperate:
In the meantime, the greatest need of the present is a loud-speaker to amplify the voices of our leaders If the populace could hear plainly the voice of our leadership, they could more readily respond. There is enough profundity of thought and calibre of ability in the leadership here to accomplish the task of placing Richmond in the forefront of colored communities in America, if we only had a journal of sufficient power to command and rally the folk in big majorities.
Our alliment of non-cooperation is caused largely by the lack of a sufficient mouthpiece. The Planet is committed to the task of giving Richmond a loudspeaker to be used by any and all interests for the forward march that we believe in ours for the future
Glen Wilton
In loving memory of our dear
and brother, Lloyd R. Lloyd,
departed this life six years ago, February
3rd, 1923.
Where sleeping, but not dreaming.
Lies the one we loved, but could
not save.
Peaceful be thy rest dear son,
It is sweet to call your name.
In life we loved you dearly,
In death we do the same.
The moon and stars are shining,
On a lone and silent grave.
Bencath lies one we dearly love,
But one we could not save.
2JANUARY 25 1930
union here that something with the colored group in Rich men an attempt is made to our proposed social, eco-ments. It is also noted that division in thought, as this our concern for this bit of prime importance. notion to the historical back-ack of cooperation. Suben the States, the Negroes are rapidly in education and many parts of the South cultural and bvsiness world. When there were only 10 United States, we had four in natural life was the model for our work done in the old School was largely re-majority naturally allied it-readers and soon found it-amps, with two main groups natural antipathy developed all of our community ef-though the original Rich-inct here, a good bit of this high into this generation and see today in our lack of co-ing happened. We lost a old and subsequent genera- the old high school: They Philadelphia and other Northern we received thousands of had the advantages we red group failed to encour-southerners and denied try to imbibe our spirit, and able to native Richmonders. acting gradually remedied. us here are moulding this cours into one in culture and In time this will give us a new how to cooperate: greatest need of the presentify the voices of our leaders plainly the voice of our readily respond. There is right and calibre of ability in implish the task of placing or colored communities in journal of sufficient power folk in big majorities. operation is caused largely mouthpiece. The Planet is being Richmond a loud- and all interests for the calling in ours for the future
Published cyery Saturday by R. C.
Michel one at 311 N. 4th Rchindv Ma
All communications extended for publication
would be sent to reach us by Wednesday.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond,
victoria, as second class matter.
New Year ...
\ NS i. G'WAN /\\ t : LOW ME ANG. )| Siar el ae eS
ee ioe \ ue sor aly Noe ) Tare — THs stare } 4 { a Soa a
7 AT REMEMGERINY mines, ) [oe ice ee EMO ; BS
- ae ees arenes SY) TENG || 3
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: Veo Keay ball ae bes EGro Ati Say ek ao irl) | |
t f 3F epee Creae few’, _< Sais eet , & ae ; A 4 we
pou fo Sy Slee ee gov CL Say | ase
! ; 6) |S pe Pes f& Ue) Se Fee ee || 2902 =
reese ON eral Ba | fel yale exp Oe Se || iB weee:
21S eS Te pea]! icp SS, foo By RO le a [ey eect
ce 1K =e CS REE “aa Sad be es
soar Gee HM | ase movins over Le
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SS Se yd SS Ee SSR aoe
BN ste sly oly ook Leh eta Gir staal ay
ye ye
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4 ¢ E oe ees a hee
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< 1 aid Bary Ecker Pic’ ES
Sede. ARSEBaLS 2a aes
s
s = Pleasants, S, E. Patani, Harry S&t
The Alpha > | So daylor ALA. Tennant, J. A.
entrain any Re By Saino, Gearge Atl
January 24th, 5 rg M s Gwen?
Brook Road. ola Brown, -Martha Chiles, Overa
Oe dant a Storie. The prizes for 600 were
as given y Nine BA. Pollard ant
this semester. T 2 W. Hi Clarke end J. P. Smith
==... —..
carl, Robinson, of 511
Marshall Siveet, gave a card
norty in honor of the Le Lundi 500
Club.
‘A Buet supper was served. Her
guests were: Mmes.) Rosa" Knox,
Fatty Wood, Consuelis Archer, Ai.
Paige, . Lucretia — Jorvan,- ‘Carri:
Deans, Erma Burleigh, Rosa Galvin,
‘ary Price, Helen Campbell, Regenia
faylor, Ethel Baker, Viola Coghill.
Lucy Hayes, “Pansy James, dich
jul Misses Annette’ Hueles,
Inola Frye, Rosa Meade, Ernestine
Harris, Gertrude Chambers, Naom
Thornten and Ruby Ransome.
‘The club prizes were given Misses
ete Hucles and Inola Fry, booby.
t prize, Mrs. Carrie Deans and
the guest boody was given Miss Ger.
sue Chambers. The uniqde fea.
of the evening was thé draw
»: which was wen by diiss Rosa
Mig. W. J, Fettis has a3 her guest;
bes Sictery Mrs. Aurelia Smith, of
UEalanoegay Tenn,
Carrington R. Conley. spent the
ereen here fs the guest of his
mother, dirs. Constance F. Conley,
of the West End.
Harry Smith’is passing some time
here from Chase City.
TAU CHAPTER OF SIGMA GAM-
MA RHO SORORITY
ESTABLISHED
Strolling to Chapel cne beautifa’
November day, when Nature, her-
self, was in full bloom and prosperity
was in th eair everywhere, a: member
of the Junior Class saw ‘that some-
thing was missing on the campus of
Virginia Union University. It was
pot long before she discovered that
it was the need of a chapter of Sig.
ma Gamma Rho. This Junior was
none other than Miss Thelma Woo!-
folk, formerly a student at Wilber-
force, and a member of Kappa Chap-
ter of this sorority. She at once
expressed the need and also her de-
tire for a chapter here to the authori.
ties, which met their approval.
This, sorority | was | incorporayed
December 1, 1922. Within selen
years this sorority has made lea\:
znd bouds. This sorority has. the
same standards and is on par @ith all
other eoleginte sororities,
Having met the approval of the
members of the faculty, Miss Wool-
oll began at once to selec her girls.
in order to secure a co-operative
group it was necessary for her-to
consider all types of personality.
‘Phirtven types were chosen as char-
ter memburs of this chapter. . They
Min. Mary... Prige, Misses
Cozhili, Irma V. Fares, who
© undoubteltiy chosen’ beeatae 0%
‘ely foal eft, Antoinette Hamilton:
Ches"ine Wade, Marie Johnson and
Mamie Brown, because of their seri
us oltitudes, Violet Bailey: snd: Mil
dred Lee, hecause-of their vocal abil-
. Ruth Robinson. and: Alice ‘Sco!
because of thele charming disposi
tions. a
hove ginls were brought into th
nds of th Greek world by
; Tholma Woolfolk and Nel
Lee ct dawn, Jaguary 25, 1930.
= Mrs Matida” Hamilte:
the ify: hve) 6
SUNY Dave
vy (CHES DARCIS
The Alpha Phi Aipha Fraternity
fenteriained the boskelo«: tam
poms Unversity, at 9 dange, 01
anuary 2ath, at the frat houte, on
Brook Road.
On Jauvary 2ith, emosher: dance
was given by this fraterivy, boaoe-
Gg tho co-eds woo avers Union
this'semester. Theis guests at bath
Of these. ailaits were she jotce.
seliool set.
MERS. MAILC.Y EXTEATAINS
Qn January 2t, Me. Baie 6
Mallory, of ics Las lal ‘
enterti.ved the LW ka Whist Cub
and a few other friends st 2 card
part, =
rs. Mallorg had as her guest, Mmes.
Janie Hayes, Kaphacl Harris, Olivia
smith, Lela Topnani, Ernestine Cal
foway. Carrie Deans, Loonaa Udver
Fannie Bealtor, Jc
Nellie Robinson, Peuchis sein x
Mary Exgiesion, sion ‘
Knox, wio hal ve hishest score,
Alberta Brown, sit Lair tox
Asma Mosh y wis A: Ha Hudeon,
Marion Csphas, ftelte Ward, Smma
Longston, Ince Coghill and Ethe!
Ransome.
JUNIOR R.ATCNS
ENTERTAINED
On Januuy 28, Mrs. Freterick
Brown, of Norch Pith Street, we
hostess to the Junior Matron Britg
Club. Mrs, Brown’s guest inciuded:
Mmes. R.C. Esker, L. S. Rogue, R.
HE. Sampon, A. D. Hrice, Jr, W. A.
Gordan, Jr, Do A. Fergusson, D. C.
Deans, W. J. Poti, 0. 5. Lowser,
LA. Reed, RCS N. Rab
gon, Jr, doseph ie Hay is, CALC
vin, AWA. ennent, Lian Payne, H.
©. Heles. Lemuel bs 5 ston, ue accen
Jackson, James Jackson, S. ‘U. Cailo-
Way, 0. A. Gnox and sles. J.B.
Darden and Cscar Jobason, of Pe-
tersburg, and A. Smith, of Chata-
nooga, ‘Tenn. The guest prize was
given Mrs, JAB. Darien, of Peters.
ung and Mrs. D, C. Dean won the
elub prize.
MRS. CARRIE LEWIS
“ENTERTAINS.
‘The Wednesday evening 500 clu
was entertained by Mrs. Carric
Lewis, of West Jackson Street, on
January 22. Her guest were Mmes.
Mildred Pettis, Rose Walton, Mazzic
Wells; Janie Hayes, Antoinette Fer-
gason, Hazel Wests, Rose- Galvin
lorence Taylor, Willie Dabney, Mat
Green, Lilian Payne, Irma Morris,
Raphael Harris, Alice Bowser,
Frances Roane, ' Druscilla Gilpin,
Aurelia Smith, of Chatancoga, Tenn.,
Lelia Tennant, Ernestine Calloway,
‘Annie Gordon, Josephine Taylo’,
Lillie Smith, “Alberta Howell an!
Miss Maude Mundin, who was award
ed the gue:t prizey Mrs. Gordon re-
-eeived the club prize.
TEA PARTY
hur Paul Davis, of Vir
‘nive civ, entertained
tier miother, Mins Winn, ot Rea
ga ber hes, Mrs. Winn, of New
York City, on January 27, from
oP. M. ; nee
Mrs. Davis had as her gitest, 3/10
John Moore, Henvy Hasle, @. Py
Hayes, H. J. MeGulon. L. W. Davis,
FB. Simpson, KR. C. Scott, D.C.
Deans; J.-R. Mayme. J. T. Car'or,
ROW, Logan, GB. Lacock, Samu!
Barksdale, Nathaniel Diliare Y.
Hareo, W. Van Jackson, W. |
Muges, S. E. J. Watson snd *
Blizabeth Johason, 3 a
ean Pace end Laura 3x Fall
pe MRS. QLIVERENTERTAINS
ee ce
irs. A.C. Oliver, of West Chey St,
seutto: meds aunibar of viva. at f
ora party on Januery 27. The
BSKE Wehios piovnt car's Were! Yoon,
PD Gallawes, AB. Gaen R. A.
een OC. Cook WE ks
pemah Rradiord; Geo. W. Brown, J.
Bvooihy SS. Fills) RS Kesey
Me Alden Sharpe, 0. PL Hayes
bugles: Gordan. E.S. Nasnc, t. F
SUPEET SUPPER
HERE FROM. CHATANCOGA,
TENN.
SPENT WEEK-END HERE
VISITING HERE
Pe at et
hess 8 Sos
eas eo.
aia ac
BS te, =
Reise
1 RC AGe REM Cie ay
: HR
: a neigeee
; ee a
pees oo wee
|
TIVE
iA tVE
: aad light.
* to 529 lighten and soften the/dark-
{ Gettin clear up peaples, blotches
. ris,:8 ¢ entirely does
He 7 t “oily, shiny” look.
, u of this preparation
4 with the other Dr. Fred
: ex Skin Whitencr Prepara-
: keeps your skin soft and
| De Tred Pater's complete line
. wists of Dz. Fred Palmer's
* Skin Whitener Ointment; Skin
‘ \hitener Soap; Skin Whitener
> Face Powder; Hair Dresser and
+ HID Deodorant, Sold at all drug
{ sicies for 2g¢ cach, or sent post-
¢ peid. ypon receipt of price. Dr.
} Vicd Faliner's Laboratories, Dept,
fea inti een ene
Vitec ee iui
} ___ De. Fred Palmer's
{IN WHITENER
‘ us your complexion youthful”
BLUE CIRCLE CLUB OF HAR:
RISONBURG HOLDS ANNUAL
BANQUET
The Blue Circle Club, Harrison:
bury’s civic and social organization
held their annual banquet at theie
ub “room, on East Wolf Street, last
Thursday” ‘evening, with fitty-six
guest present, the club room wa:
Gecorated in their colors, orange an¢
blue, and the tables were decorate:
with fancy Virginia turkey, roaste:
Virginia ham, and many other things
that go to make up a real feed
Every chef cook in the city is a mem-
ber of this organization, so nothing
wes left unturned,
The pastors of the various
churches were guest and are Honor
aiy members aco, the school faculty
Were also among the guest, as were
many other citizens of the city. Dr.
¥. Dickerson acted as toast-master
and played the part as Graham Me-
Namee does for the National Broad.
casting Company.
Interesting talks were made along
civic lines, Rev. G. A. Newman, in
terestingly talked on several suojects
aud enued his speech with the words,
“Guar dyour gateway,” which man:
much to ‘any organization. Talks
were made by Prof. W. N. P. Harris,
of biinger School, Revs. B. W. Hol-
lands, A. B. Leo, J. H. Davis and C.
0. Gaines.
P. S. Mitchell, counsellor adviso:
of the club, spoke very forcefully on
many important issues, Percy R.
Welis, president of the club, stated
in Kis remarks that the banquet was
not held merely tor say we had a
banguct, but was to exchange ideas,
probably awaken us to the fact that
se doors of opportunity are slowly
ut surely closing on us and some-
thiag a! done to rectify this
mr while we are sitting
legislature ig debating
2 bi rectly at us, one is a
aber p dill, which, if passed as
he author has it, will put every col-
bred shop out ‘SE existence, that
al hi trade, in ten years.
the annual ir egrity bil
inform us that we will be black fn
9 ere in 1920, this bil
t caui be used as a good
y to help condi if properly
ut to use He spoke of our secret
zanisations which were at one time
EON a Mar LOP HP HE HPL CONN ON LU OH OHO Tt NOUNS
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2223 E, MAIN STREET RICHMOND VIRGINIA *
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Ro toste te Moke to Mee detects tote Matesatetededess deeded
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- 727 N. 2d St., Richmond, Va.;,
- LATEST IMPROVEMENTS IN FUNERAL EQUIPMENT {
Automobiles Furnished for Funerals, Social Affairs or Short e: 4
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Phone Madison 2778, Day or Night Calls Answered Promptly. i
one of our strongest assets, Dut the
leaders of our National organizations
have and ave playing us so unfair
that i is only a matter of time, in
fact, “the hand writing is on the wall
for Negro ,secret organizations,”
while this is a broad assertion, it
seems almost a reality.
The | ladies organization, The
Frogs, were out in a body and many
of them spoke on things of interest.
‘The Blue Circle Club has been very
active in civie work and are recog-
nized 9s a eivie organization by the
city officials and white civie organi-
zations of Harrisonburg, and are do-
ing much good work for the better-
ment of the colored race.
The music was led by Miss Eloise
Wake, of the Effinger School. The
program opened withthe Negro na-
tional anthem and closed with Amer-
ica. Invocation was asked by Rev.
A. B. Lee, of the Baptist Church.
Committee on arrangements were H.
W. Sellers, J. W. Johnson, Frank
Mitchell, J. E. Black, Robt. Strother.
L, McCarthy, Dennis Bunday and
George Francis.
WAYNESBOR NEWS
Mrs, Nancy Louise Brock, prob:
ably the oldest person of Waynes
boro, died on the 2ist, after an ill
ness of six weeks, The funeral ser.
vice took plate at the Pleasant
View M..E. Church. She was 3
inember of the Monmhental A. M. E.
Church, and her pastor, Rev. Ro T.
Watkins, assisted by Rev. G. |W.
Stewart, Rey. J. H, Holland, and
Rev. E. D. Wilson, officiated. A very
appreciative audience witnessed the
ceremony. ‘The remains were de-
posited in the church. She leaves
here, two very loving granddaugh-
ters, Misses Beulah and Louise
Brown, whom she raised, and whom
ever stood by her, and’ played the
part of real grandchildren.
BM. John Brown, a son-in-law, of
hrs. Brock, residing in Elizabeth,-N.
j., aprived bere to witness the fun-
eral and burial. The remains were
jaid to test in the Riverside Come-
ery. Mr. Holmer Alexander, fun-
eral director, in charge.
‘The Union Revival closed at the
Stewart, pastor, on the 2ith, It was
Union Baptist ‘Church, Rey, G. W.
decided on that night, that the re-
vival would not be stopped, but will
be held another week, at the Pleas-
ant View M. E. Church, Rev. J. H.
Holland, pastor, this week. It ‘will
close out wit hthe first week in Feb-
ruary, at the Monumental A, 3. E.
Church, Rev, R. T. Watkin, pastor.
Service at Shilo on Sunday last
were exce.cnt. At 11 A. M., the
pastor, Dr. C. H. Harris, preached
from Matt, 18-26, At 7:30, from
Amos. 4:12, Conimunion followed.
The Non Such Club was enter
tained at the home of Rey. E. D.
Wilson, on the 2-st. The meeting
was a Success.
Mr. Moses Crawford, Mr. Georg:
Vest, Mrs, Douglas Crawford, an¢
Mrs.’ Virginia Crawford, of Nelly’:
Ford, made several trips here to see
Dr. P. A, Hilton last week. Mr.
John W. Vest drove their car,
‘The Rose of Sharon Club enter-
tained at the home of its president,
Mrs. W. G. Stewart, on the 23rd.
Many of these various clubs formerly
met in the Shilo Baptist Church, but
are now meeting.in various homes,
Mrs. Mary Lewis was stricken with
paralysis on the 24th, so far it seems
to have been very slight. We hope
this will prove true.
Rey, E. D, Wilson and Rov. R. L.
Stewart were ont of:town, at thei
respective charges, on Sunday, lot
The former at Wrightsville, and’ the
latter at Christian.
Dr. F. P, Diggs served at the Be
eley Minor Buplist Church, Brand,
nm Sunday last
Rev. W. P. Esced preached at 7:30
P.M, at the Pleatant View M. ©.
Church, on. the 26th. An appreciu:
tive audience was present, A ma
ng chased by the officers Sunda:
evening, at service time, escaped to
the Shilo Baptist Chureh, and found
eovuretthere
TE ae aR
Wags
NAY oe
PYF bel ae oF |
ZED ICE-RAGTONS
“TEATS ar ae x re
Whew a Log Wnams Mure Chen Tis Bets?
654 sa EN EO RRMA DS NORE tS a Raa LAS aL He BRET fy
k 1 Gure would have been a very d’g-rent history if “"
] .coln, age sixteen or so, had been guided by the wisdou
> :mas Lincoln, age thirty-six.” E
"Now, Abe,” we can iniagine him saying, “don’t waste
time readin’ them books. Readin’ never done mé any good,
and what was good enough for-me’s gool enoygi 152 you.”
Lincoin knew more than his father. 1; was a divin2 dis-
obedience that led him to close his ears to the man who had
Brought him into the world, and open his husrrto te vision
that was to help him conquer .the world,
‘The boy who has not some firm convieti ms ante “hig:
ness to defend them, even“against the argumea sof these
older than himself, is not likely to amount to much,
ut there must be convictions, not mere prejudices, not
selfish impulses or passions. '
I know two men who “knew more” than their fathers,
One boy is the office manager of a large manufacturing
concern, and his salary is $40 a week. :
“Better go on in school,” said his father to him when he
was seventeen years old, “Better go to college: better get all
the education you can while you have the chance.”
But the boy quit school arid went to work.
“You see that man?” said the president of his concern te
me the otlier day. “There is a man who might have become
general manager of this business if he had hada college edu
cation. His salary might » been $20,000 a year: instead
it’s $2,000, He's reached limit.” What a sh ne
hasn't education enough to go on.”
He “knew more” than kis father. And bis + is
acy is costing him $18,000 a year. &
“Keep yourselt clean, my. son,” said the father of anothae
hor. “You'll never regret it. And some day you'll thai
Leaven you did,” ae
tthe hoy knew more thon fis father. He knew that
‘ ig tan who is wordh Lis s.k must sow his wild
cat
So Le sowed right merrily.
i saw him the other day. Te came to me about getting
2 job.
T could not give lita a job: no man could. God knows
what will become of hin. As
YOUTH is the mainspring: of the world: ee
Tis insurgency, its inquisttiveness, its eagemess to, try
+i unteicil and do the impossible, drives the world forward
if, spite of the conservatism of age.
Fortunate are those of us who recognize the divine impor-
tase oi! youth's cocksureness and conceit, and yet know how,
gencly and apprecintively, to temper it with the riper judg-
ment of added years, bee Neca fi $
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hk BUOY
COMMON METER ::
(It Makes Your Pulse Throb!)
By the
Brilliant Negro Novelist
RUDOLPH FISHER
Author of "Walls of Jericho."
"Name her or I'll drop you
and jump in your face, I
swear to—"
Lovers of fine, clever writing will not miss this thrilling story based on the intrigue and romance of Harlem's Night Club Racket.
NEW BOON TO BABY-CHICKS IS FOUND IN ANCIENT MILK-FOOD
4
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A chemical product which is expected to revolutionize theories of nutrition in poultry and animals has been derived from the most ancient of all foods, milk, according to an announcement recently made by F. H. Clicker, Professor of Nutritional Research of Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N. J., in the department located at Newark, and special research chemist for the Kraft-Phenix Corporation, Chicago.
The chemical derivative which Prof. Clicker has evolved after several years of experiment is the powder of whey, named "Kraco" in honor of the Kraft-Phenix Corporation, on whose foundation experiments have been made over a period of years at Rutgers University, and in laboratory and field tests throughout the United States.
Prof. Clicker's experiments in the
There are always feature of startling interest in the ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION, which comes weekly with this newspaper. Be sure to get your copy!
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use of "Kraco" have disclosed it to be a powerful reagent against the two most prevalent poultry diseases, coccidiosis, and leg-weightness, the latter disease being comparable to rickets in human beings, which suggests the formulas probable for medical as well as commercial usefulness.
The commercial loss of millions of chicks caused annually by these diseases can probably be reduced to a minimum by the use of his new milk-derivative. Dr. Clickner's report states Dr. Clickner summarizes his formula for "Kraco" as containing all the soluble minerals of milk particularly phosphorus, and a record high percentage of milk-lactose—seventy-five per cent. Heretofore 50% has been considered by scientists the maximum milk-sugar content obtainable from milk-derivatives.
GUNMAN'S BLUFF
Master Mystery Writer
Edgar Wallace, most prolific of all authors, who has written nearly a hundred detective stories and whose latest, "Gunman's Bluff," will appear serially in this paper. Mr. Wallace has lately visited America.
GUNMAN'S BLUFF
BY Edgar Wallace
COPYRIGHT BY EDGAR WALLACE
Most Accurate Typist
Miss Liberda Claing of Springfield,
Mass., who is a student at Boston
University, wrote 20 words a minute
for fifteen minutes, a total of more
than 1,000 words without a single
erger.
The content of the Sermon on the Mount, Matthew 5, 6, 7 will be more familiar after these three lessons therein. This time the entire seventh chapter should be read with care, or better still, commit it to memory. This lesson is the quarterly one on Temperance and the text is finally adapted to that application. This subject is one of the most popular ones of the day. The newspapers have some outstanding reference in almost every issue. There is need for citizens of the Abraham Lincoln type to work out the national problem, for this nation cannot exist half wet and half dry any more than it could advance being half slate and half free.
The Golden Rule, verse 12, is possible of the most extensive application and surely has a direct import to the question of selling alcoholic liquor to others. The bootlegger would resent it if he was done by as he seeks so persistently to "do" others. Amos R. Wells says, "The Eighteenth Amendment is simply the Golden Rule put into our national constitution." There is one word in this verse 12 that needs particular attention. It is the "therefore." Because God is so good to us always we should invariably seek to treat others up to our utmost ability. A negative statement, such as can be found in the writings of Confucius, is not good enough. Neither is negative religion. Now is the time for those who believe in righteousness to be positive in the defence of truth which will be a blessing to mankind.
The lies of those who are eager to evade the Constitution and the enforcement acts are akin to the false prophets and those who appear in sheep's clothing. They are wolves indeed, and for personal gain will undermine life itself. Right now youth seems to be the target for attack. It is the adult simmer who helps forward hip-to-steep on the part of your men, who in turn dare the girls to portake.
The declaration of Jesus is most testing: "By their fruits ye shall know them." By this determination reach your conclusions about any alcoholic beverage. Keep in mind that alcohol is a POISON and the reaction is always the same. A good character or worthy conduct can never be built up by the use of intoxicating drink. The very onsite begins to result with the first glass. Life insurance statutes shorten sufficient evidence for any one to be in danger of death and conduct. The records of courts and society are full of accounts of destruction so nothing that deals with permanent construction as a result of using liquor as a beverage. Big business is beginning to understand about the "fruits" and is now demanding sobriety.
The closing parable has reference to the entire content of the Sermon on the Mount as well as to the theme in hand. The two houses may at first have looked equally well. First came the gradual wearing away and lessing of foundational strength by the stress of years. Then the awful storm broke and it was that force which brought complete destruction after the long-continued weakening process. Both physically and morally we must be able to withstand the long-time wear and tear, as well as the emergency when the blow may come so unexpectedly. There is a rock foundation that will stand any stress and upon which we can build our life structure. That sure Foundation is Jesus Christ and His teachers. He did not deal with affairs in the abstract but in vital life problems that still face us as individuals.
This latest photograph of Mustapha, Kemal, president of the Turkish Republic, does not look like the traditional Turk. Kemal has the title of "Pasha" and is one of the most progressive men of the time.
Vacation Ca
As Leisure
Vacation Camps L
As Leisure Become
Vacation Camps Lure Rural Women As Leisure Becomes New Farm "Crop"
THE FARMER'S WORK
Many thousands of farm housewives all over the United States will gather next summer in vacation camps. Leisure is a new crop on the farm. Women have learned how to have spare time for themselves and vacation camps have gained popularity so fast that six were required for 5,000 farm women last summer in Idaho alone. Practically every other state had one or more, where farmers wives mothers and daughters got together for rest, recreation and interchange of helpful ideas. "The makers are learning so many ways to gain leisure that it now is easy to show their husbands how the house can run a few days without mother," said the household research bureau, Peoria, Ill. conducted by the makers of ABC washers.
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Predicts World Peace
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, a leader of the long struggle for nine rights, as she preached on the Conference on the Cause and Cure of War at Washington, predicted the end of all warfare within a century.
ps Lure Rural Women
comes New Farm "Crop"
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"Some farm women in Oklahoma wash cream separators in one-third the time used by others. Equally old time cuts are made in clothes-washing. Farm women clean garments faster by swishing them in a porcelain tub and spinning them dry for the line in the attached water-extractor saving all the old wringing time ABC Spinner washers. it has been proven frequently, thus are one of the farms greatest time savers, even speeding up troning time, too by ending the need for creases left by the old-time wringer.
"Kansas surveys show women on large farms have more than those on small ones and that women in modern-equipped homes average 30 per cent more spare time than those in old-fashioned houses."
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She stood there. her hands gripped,
he: breach coming quiealy wed nize
quickly, and heard him override the
protets which came from the other
Gio Ge the wire. Preselitly he hax yp
te home aud turned to her, a sail
Oi cineiph on his flushed face.
“Voor are Maddiscn’s!” ke said)
gr. “Lock, stocks, and barrel, dar-|
Bag | bm geht ott Bind calls a’ehitd
© we”
eo she eal + realize that he
‘win speaking pronbesically.
Jo coat Sant to sce 2 angi named
Ly sli,” Stiles esked Maddison,
“iewing? Whe is he?” .
From Me. Stiles” expression of dis-
pursgeme.t he gathered tat Lewisg |
Was not of any great account, |
haw Busi”
mam who followed Stites into
th oom eas tall and spare of build.
1, jcemset eyes had im them a fur-
th. cs Gat was almost animal. He
gisccel quickly around the room, aaa
H not scemed to. Luke that he was
pricins every article within view
against the night when he might ente=
aid take away sich movables as would
shiv him a profit. |
*Mornin', sf.” {
Tie held” his" head* downwarts and!
sideways, looking up from under his)
heauy and untidy’ eyebrows,
“Like to speals to you private, sic,”
he said in his husky ‘voice. .
Tuke ghnced at the manager and |
siiiled him to leave the room. Mr. |i
Suls Ieft with the greatest reluct-|1
ance. — ‘
*Sit down, will you?” 1
Not sing Us eyes from Luke's
f “Ss Sisftor. stretched out a hand |
= odcew a chair to him, a
P tor sat down,
, it three moon for bein
%. ‘The Gunacr’s appeaiin’ to tx
“Ee has. got. thr het hard
lator and is appalirg he
Geis off. Did he serd yeu *
Lewing nodded slowly. HL | the
appearance of a man who was lying
aid expecied to be found out at any
nioment.
“Yes. A few quid would do him a
bit of good. He wants a mouthpiece.
‘The Sparrer says he'll get off—au’ the
Sparrer knows.”
“Who is the Sparrow?”
A slow smile dawned on Mr. Lew-
ing’s face.
“He's a busy—a detective. Bird by
name—
cake nodded. He remembered Mr.
© arrow, whose activities were appar-
exatly not wholly confined to inquests.
“[ was: inside meseli—for_ breakin’
an’ enterin” confided Lewing, “but
they couldn't prove nothin’ so I got
out, But me an’ the Gunner's like
brothers. He was in the next cell to
me at Brixton an’ he told me to pop
So an have a talk ‘with you—a few
quid would help him.”
Luke was puzzled. His acquaint-
ance with the redoubtable gunman who
called himself Haynes was a slight
fone, but it had struck him, during
their brief interview in the Carlton,
that the Gunner had the manners and
certainly the vocabulary of gentle
many and that this mean sneak-thief|
who was looking at him stealthily
from the other side of the table was|
brrdy the ove of man in whom the
jenner would confide his commissions.
Luke felt in his pocket and took out
@ few pound notes.
“T suppose you know Mr. Bird very]
well?” he asked as be connted the|
money. :
©The man grinned.
“The Syarrer?, I shovld say: sof
He's always goin’ on akomt the chil-
dren’ of the poor—hut he's always Iag-
gin’ "em! Hle pretends there's log of
Boor people who are suilerin’ decatse
Of the likes of-—” he was about to say
Sime” bit changed fis sind—"oE fel-|
Bers who go en ghe crook, That's silly.
TE you can't do Wi: you've gat to dof
Sorcething: you can't starve. ‘The last
time the Sparrer started talkin’ to me|
about it T says: ‘Look here, Mr. Bird,
why don't you go after the children off
the rich an’ make ’em pay their whaek|
to these children of the poor? He]!
couldn't answer me. He was dumb-
founded, I'm always beatin’ people in|
argiments.”” .
He seemed rather proud of this ac-
complishment; was not without his
vanities, even he had to lie about|!
bis triumphs.
_ “Hege i ten poundg. Give that tals
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your frend 2 can't help him och
Tore like kaon ase hanpen
|ec him, and he can write to me here.”
coo
Luke, tine in the room of that ¢
dlthine fad ever catered: thave conion:
+] plece portals
SS Oe at discamaceees
Jane questicos that were put to. her.
=| With shud felt the ring sh
i sake ny wtickly thet she
pee eee ee ne cee
her vengeance w2s played, Some-
[body put a pen into her hand, aid a
squat forefinger showed her the place
where she must eu her name For a
foug tine she held the pen, and when
she wrote it wavered in her fingers
and the scrawled signature looked like
nothing she had ever seen.
Leaving for Pari: that night—the
Meurice, or was it the Bristol? There
was some confusion in hier mind about
these details; anyway, they did not
matter if she kent her courage. The
two o'clock weddinie had heen an in-
spiratign, She went back 19 her
house—Like was cours to dinner;
they were to Ieave irr tity. after
to catch the night boat iso South-
ampton.
> fee $ trenmious, The
einer pretty litte drawiny
and he was’ sitting by her sid
aria arowud her, She was ver
I aad un yielding, but he “though
| . Luke was bubbling over with ex
Jefisateut—he was like a boy who. hi
received a new aud woitderdul present
| “I say, did you see that queer-look
g rin standing on the pavement a
| wt? A fellow named Lewin
| —< thie’ of some kind. T wonder if hi
pick po. kets? TH bet he id
[ts his hat 20 me as Tame ox”
‘She was not listening, and, after he
Had could remember nothing tha
he had said except something abou
Res. It wos indecent of him to men
tion the boy. Danty rang her up, bul
‘she would net see or receive him. She
mst go through now without help
Luke was coming at seven, At six sh
ealled him on the telephone, ai hat
fone fanicky moment when she {eared
that he had already leit his ffst and
could not be found, Then sh. heard
his voice.
“Darling, isn't it odd? os't be
lieve it—I still think of myse!i as a
crusty. old Bachelor—"
“Luke, Lwant you to do someshing
for me.” She found her voice at last.
“No—no, don't interrupt. It’s a big
thing. I don’t want to go away to-
night, not for a day or twé, T-want
to be alone, not to see you. My nerves
are in a terrible state: I think I am
on the verge of a breakdown.”
As she went on he Tistened with a
growing sense of ‘alarm and dismay.
And yet he was not thinking of him-
self.
“Pe been a selfish brute, Of course,
darling, T quite understand”
The conversation did not occupy five
minutes of time; he could hardly real-
ize what was happening, to what be
was agreeing, before he was sitting at
his writing table staring blankly at the
clegraph forms by which he was to
eancel so many pleasant arrangements.
Danty, waiting at Waterloo Station
with a full view of the barrier,
varched the mail-boat passengers filter
hrough to ne platform. He saw the
barrier close and the red tail lights of
he trai disappear into the darkness,
and went home humuning a little song,
or Mr. and Mrs. Luke Maddison were
jot among the passengers
Luke did not even trouble to see
Margaret at once. Before lunch he
emembered and telephoned.
“I want to see you, darling,” he
ean,
“Why?” Tt was difficult to disguise
he suspicion she felt.
“T want you te sign a little docu:
nent,” he said gaily
So that was it! Panty had warned
ef. Only she had never dreamed that
he would be asked to renounce ber
marriage VOFtiOW 42 490K
TEE kKICHMOND PLANET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Magazine [page
able!”
“A document?”
| “E want you to. aster some money
to me,” be sai’ “Ht is the merest
Jormatity—T've viscovered that 1 have
rather less than I need.”
| She thought quickly.
“Very well, come to the house at
three ofetock.”
He forgot that the bank closed at
three-thirty and agreed, After 1}, it
did not greatly matter $f the check: as
retuned, Tt was merely a tran. re
efice: fron his: neckonal account tec ike
bank's.
He was, trve to his methods, five
minutes Tate, when he was shows to
her little sitting room. ‘The first tag
fiat struck him was that she vas
cessed. -Heyhad pictured her_pestng
‘in her negligée—in bet! even. £ as
not as pale as she hal he 8
when he went to take fer in a3
that he had his frst shoe's,
“Don't kiss me—please !”
Tt was tot a reqeust; it was a por
euiptory command.
“Why—what is wrong, darling?” .
She shook her head impatiently,
“Please tell me what you want.”
Her toe turned him cold. ' was
hard, almost ant «Be could
hardly believe the evidence oi his
seuses.
}, Stammering like a schoo! * J¢ told
|her in disjointed sentences 0 (uc situa
{tion which had arisen, and she lis-
tened and did not speak until he
stopped.
“Ninety-seven thousand pounds,” she
said. “A tenth of that would’ have
saved Rex”
He could onty sure at her uncom-
prehendingly.
“Tt was rather dreadful to see a
man make a god of money, Luke, and
jto know that for its sake he is will
ing to sacrifice even a young life.”
To him her voice sounded like the
clang of a bell; to herself it hardly
seemed that it was she who was speake
ing.
“And to accuse this poor dead boy
of forgery—to add that infamy to the
other ”
| “you are speaking of me?” he
said in a whisper.
She nodded.
“Oi you. I kmew that you were
lcoming to get your money. back—that
is why I did not go with you to
France. I wanted it to hanpea here,
‘Here, where I have frienus and can
meet you on even terms.”
‘A pause, and then:
“Luke, Tam giving you ro 0.
‘You gave it to me—it is mine. Not
a eee au have—not a penny!"
he wished he would speak during
the silence that followed. She wished
he would rave, curse her, do all the
things that were consistent with her
pistire of him, | But he sai nothing
fe was not even looking at her, but
was studying the pattern of the carpet
Presently he jerked up bis head.
“Good-bye,” he said, and turned on
his heel.
‘She beard the door close on him,
and then there came to her a realiza-
tion that made her brain reel. She
loved him.
Why ‘he gravitated to the Embank-
ment he could never tell; it seemed a
natural objective. He had no thought
of suicide, no intention of finding that
zross way to forgetfulness. Walking
slowly by the parapet, he came to a
halt before Scotland. Yard and eyed
that Gothic building incuriously. That
big detective was there, the Sparrow—
he Sparrow, who righted so many
wrongs, could hardly disentangle tng
problem which deadened the mina of
Luke Maddison. The “children of the
poor!” He smiled mirthlessly. ‘Te
was one of the children of the poor,
he natural charge of that big man,
To protect the children of the poor
snd punish the wrongdoer. Who had
fone wrong? Margaret? He tried
nard to apportion all blame to. her,
o hate her. He shook his head and
walked slowly back toward Black
riars,
Continued Next Week
ae 4
ae hide
siseliaianan ‘
Tiousanis cf ic. Chuveles Needed
FE aa aaa
Sa
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homes Hes dia
oo ly Lo A ey se oe Oy
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Bk es
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VA” «ONEW SG,000 000 PErtPLE —v
Amsrica neets 165) new churehes
f your to replace rdsolete strictures
11 is estimated 20 per cent. or 23.090
of the old churches now being ita
have been outgrown. It would tek
‘tiyenty years to replace them, buildin
1.60 new edifices a year.
This is the estimate of Presttent
‘AB, Dickinson of the Indian fone
wone company, who has “provided
1 ve stone for use im churches in the
pet year than ever before.”
Strensth, bentty and prectionbittty
Coovacterlze new churches. They are
Hoult with the security of a fortress
2 @ aew Temple Emunu—Fl. Fifth
Pvontie and Sixty-Fifth Street, New
York, with Its gorgeous lacy stone
front, typifies the new era In church
budding, Mr. Dickinson says. Its ince
LPC ILILE LILO IIE IIE, STRANI Ae TIE
j Se ie ? ii a
| ere, Thisis the Age of Woman’s Success in Business
ia a 7 Te
c Rei. (Mrs. Saratiaey ea Bae : ey be ee Se
TS, Oars) CE eae ea ‘4 oe |
1 OS | age RN RD Be
med ‘ Larter nos 4. ‘ 6 cS ons
Soa Gag np rer 3) WY pe 84
ce ge Eo Pee a Laceat &
iss Mary Dillon EE. OM, Ai ce Foote MacDougall 328%.
“33S eee gre TR es
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| ae | Sens S38 Mrs, Marie Ryan } poe oS
| Ae Dy A. eet bat ies Ae Wa
Aes, George R. Van Namee §.Aliss Therese'Helburn ‘Miss Eva Le Gallienn. beens ck :
Here are eight women who have proved their equality with men by their success in operating vreat New Yurle
Jomness enterprises. Mrs. Van Namee heads one of the largest floral establishments in the worid. Mrs, Muce
1 gall operates a chain of high-class restaurants. Miss Dillon 1s President of the Brocklyn firmgh (0s ms
f Mrs. Ryan’s business runs to $100,000 a year Miss Le Gallienne manages New Yorks tat. sim fi
t Miss Helburn heads the Theatre Guild, which produces the city’s best plays. Mrs. Bowinan is tie ct
0: « large advertising company Mrs De Forrest manifactures varnish on an anternational scale.
“erocious Monsters of the South Seas
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se sea-elephants weigh about 6,000 pounds each, They were brought
les from, the Teland of Guadehipe-and will he Keot ma tanle fap
putjvsis. They are cenimen i ie wid waists evolu
oe PEERS Bre Se eRe eS Oo PR ae OS RTA SR Gee Heh
SENDA EL Gi FOR 3
Weed 9. Vistive Cards
‘he Flaret, Sth St..&! R chmond, Va.s
THE STAUNTON TRIBU ‘1 N. Augusta St., Staunton Va.
iccutre ele an adept a oft
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tenet Oy the Fas and ab
Cen of ory ad Soulan Vt
‘Pos racial proostion ve tua?
fhieents Tue. qxcior ie variessted
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favs Toe gew temple et whieh os
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JOHN JOSEPH GAINES, vid.
WASTING TIME
The good physician son:chow fo~'s that time is a mighty
Precious commodity iat cveryoody has, and, that it sauuld
not be ruthlessly thrown away. To waste tims, ¥5 to equanter
something that can s<ver ve retrieve, 31 os sho ot. f
ain trying in my toes) voy. Pony i of
divelities that}. .suusmdeva pore -
tions, as follows:
Thave fount ite <1 footet ors ta cet oe see
that she should kecp ner wet warm, ar! hoe hued el: in
oiher words, that she shoul! nut vrp i co fer elas 3
worth of furs xbout licr necis,.29° 0 4 mperde 4
with her legs clad in thin sill si .tgs,ac | at Fn Dall
room sandals,
And, I have wasted many a yor! 17> t'92 i took
to say them, in telling yore wort. Vlleeissor
astonishing altitude, are most umnaiure ly & Rk, Con “ey
to all laws of common sense—that ti.) Lewy CRS
generations with mental and physic I. delingvcncy, it not
worse.
On several ceeasions I have fooled avvey good advice and
the time it took to give it, on the barber ‘iat uses a common
hair brush on his customers, unquestionably carrying rubbish
from diseased scalps to healthy ones. Along with the brush
go¢s the public comb, equally effectivein do'ng harm, Maybe
you could persuade the good pcblic servant to keep a jar of
antiseptic solution in which to submerge lic vs. 1 «ad ‘comb
between customers—I just can’t,
I have perhaps, squandered more tine ~~ “+ the ix
o'clock dinner than on any other deadly encmy oi our bush ose
men; I ean only convince, when I am appealed to by a vi.»
of tie custom, who comes to me with failine cred - a
threat of apoplexy, shortness of breath, excess af w t
diseased kidneys—these at the age of fiity or sixty, e
shoud be at his very best.
af
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Ge iar erst aaa
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|
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' IMPROVE YOUR EVERYDAY
ENGLICH
» BY JOINING THE
EF E (‘| 5
OFM = Ulass
One hour per week will accomplish
'g0o@-resuits in a short time, Many
‘have been benefitted by our method.
Lack of schooling tg nu bar. We
oxo help you. On the other hand,
high schoo! graduates end school
lteachers can be helped in the per
ifecting of a snooth use of English
= a uebful vocabulary,
Visitors Are
iw RAT eae |,
Welcome.
(2 E
[sce R, @, Mitchell, 515 N.Third wt.
|
PLIES
oe er feet
SEqgN
‘ne! eZ
N 5 N f
N . = ig N one. N
N True Stories { ° N Clean Fiction \
N N N N
N . N N N
[| Achievement | 1e Rienmon ANCE | Haman Interest |
N ° N : N N
N Stories N N Features .,\
N N ‘ N N
Sram OON Serer
|. B. Zi ff Co., 608 S. Dear i.» Chi hy Piet in the Mlustrated Featu re Se tion were ed, BEN A) v1S, Ita
Rs aa icaue mesteectaes ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION—February 1, 1930 Pietures in the) silustrated Fnture ess eo eaphonsd. Feature EAHer
Obeyed Orders at the Risk of His Life
eo eg A cs gua Text by ROLFE DELLON
| The Stormy Career of Jack Johnson--No. 14 Drawn by FRED B, WATSON
By GEORGE JONES
What happened when a
faithful employee obeyed the
orders hastily flung at him
by his employer, who left
him in charge of a fortune in
diamonds.
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MOSE MORTON, the unassuming
young fellow, whose daring surprised
and thwarted a dangerous thief.
OSE Morton, formerly
M of Cape Girardeau,
Missouri, lived
ae VA ALISO UE, sie ¥en SM
through a terrible ex-
perience when his master in-
structed him-to guard the
priceless diamonds he left
behind in an enormous house
near Egypt Mills. In_ this
small town Mrs. Andrews,
sister of the employer of
Mose Morton, resided in the
winter months. In fact, the
experience was so unusual
that Mose had stepped, al-
most before he realized it, in-
to the spotlight of the state.
‘All eyes are on him, and no
‘doubt, before another month
has passed, Mose will in some
way be rewarded for his
faithful services. It is known
that the employer, Tom
Waite, is now planning to
surprise his brave employee
with a nice sum of money.
For not only did he save the
fortune in diamonds that
were left in his hands, but he
was instrumental in captur-
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On the day of the Jeffries-Johnson fight, After the famous Jeffries
the su. was violently hot. But th’s in no his wife, then the former Et
way affected the crowds nor the actual ring for London and Paris. In |
battle. At no time during this battle did insistent demands for Jack’
Johason lose his “golden smile” as he de- music halls and other house
cisively put an end to the fast “white hope.” At these places he often mad
I en ae ee anne a ee ieee a wee
gang, as well.
That night when Mr. Waite took
his departure from the house, bound
for a country dance, he said to Mose:
“Tf any suspicious characters ap-
pear here, shoot, and shoot to kill.”
Mose nodded his head, manifesting
that he would obey instructions.
And he did not hesitate to do it
when the occasion came up a short
while later.
Just how Mr. Waite happened to
leave the diamonds in care of his
employee is uncertain, but it is es-
tablished that Waite is a jewelry
salesman who sometimes takes his
valuables home with him over the
week-end. Be that as it may, he was
visiting his sister in the big brick
house, with a fountain in the yard,
flowers, summer houses, tennis courts,
and everything. And Waite had all
the jewelry he carried on his selling
trips, in his possession.
Sometimes Waite had to take back
defective gems that his customers
had sold only. to have brought back,
and besides these, he usually car-
ried a fine display of samples. At
any rate, on this particular night, he
had something like thirty thousand
dollars in diamonds which he gave
to Mose to look after.
Mose didn’t step into Waite’s con-
fidence over night. He had been
working in the family for a long
number of years. Mrs. Andrews had
testified that he was absolutely
honest. Moreover, she had often
spoken to her brother about Mose.
She felt safe living alone there in
that big house, with this venerable
colored lad: to look after her. She
believed that if the occasion present-
ed itself, Mose would make the su-
preme sacrifice for her rey.
Mose knew he was in the favor of
Mrs. Andrews, and this, of course,
put him in the respect of all the help
in the house. Everyone had im-
plicit confidence in Mose.
But Mose was going away. Mrs.
Andrews was to be gone South for
approximately three months, during
which time the big house at Egypt
Mills would be closed. In the mean-
while Mose was to be with Tom
Waite, and he was packing his
things to leave with his new em-
ployer the next morning when Waite
stepped unobtrusively into his room
with a black traveling bag in his
hand.
“Mose,” he said quietly, “there's a
fortune in diamonds in this grip, and
I’m going to leave it with you to
guard. Also, I’m going to give you
an automatic pistol. Can you
handle one?” >.
Mose was not excited, although he
could not help but realize the weight
of the responsibility that had been
placed on his shoulders. Poe
“T never did use one much, sir.”
he confessed stoutly. “But I can
certainly try.”
Waite handed him the gun.
“This bag is in your care. Guard
it with your life. Don’t let it out of
your sight for a single moment.
And—if any suspicious characters
loom up around here, shoot to kill.”
The words ‘vent whirling through
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After the famous Jeffries fight, Johnson,
his wife, then the former Etta Duryea, sailed
for London and Paris. In Paris there were
insistent demands for Jack’s appearance at
music halls and other houses of amusement.
At these places he often made short speeches,
Mose’s head. “Shoot to kill.” It
meant considerable to kill somebody.
A human life was something that
couldn't be given back.
‘The gun felt heavy in: his hand.
‘Sure enough, he had the bag of dia-
monds. It contained a fortune in
diamonds. And he had been instruct-
ed to guard it at the expense of hu-
‘man life.
He heard the roar of a motor out-
side, knew the folks were leaving,
heard the car thud its way down
‘the gravel path. The sounds became
uae’ by distance, and eventually
died out completely. Nasty job, he
had. But the orders he had received
had come from the man he respect-
ed and worked for.
| Mose felt that he was duty bound.
‘They might do anything to him, but
‘as long as he lived, they couldn't
take that bag- of diamonds from him.
He determined to die before anything
of that sort could happen.
Mose was alone in the house. All
the other help had gone to the
dance. The house was still. Not a
sound. Nothing to be heard, save
the whisper of the wind, and the
creak of a board blown back and
forth. Mose remembered having
nailed this strip above the garage
door that morning, to stop up a
‘crack through which snow sometimes
fell.
He carried the black suitcase with
‘him,
There was an enormous fireplace
‘made of crude stone, and a large log
in the grate, burning cheerfully.
Here Mose stood, with the mantel of
the fireplace being above his head,
holding the gun in his hand. He
‘set. the grip down at his feet. He
waited. He didn’t know for what.
But he felt a premonition tha} he
‘was waiting for something. He had,
in other words, one of those nerye-
racking presentiments, :
‘Hours passed swiftly until, sud-
denly, he heard a sound at the front
‘door. It was shoved open. It slam-
‘med back against the wall. A pic-
ture was jarred off, clattered to the
floor, broken in many pieces. A
‘strong draft of cold air swept
‘through the red walled room. Then
ee the sound of slithering feet.
Mose knew somebody was approach-
ing. him. He whirled about. His re-
volver was ready for instant action.
Mose cursed himself for leaving that
door unlocked. However, it was the
‘custom of this community to leave
the front door unlocked.
“Stop!”
Mose shouted the command to
halt. But the dark bulk continued
eo advance toward him, drawing
nearer and nearer. Then, without
‘waiting, Mose fired twice. The first
bullet cut the robed figure to his
‘knees, the second cut him to the
floor, but while he was on his knees,
‘the man in the black robe fired one
shot at his opponent, sending him
‘staggering into the enormous grate.
When Mose fell into the grate he
burned his hands. His clothes caught
on fire. The black bag was scorched,
for Mose had picked it up before
firing a shot. But he managed to
remove himself from the flames,
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Johnson, When he went to London, the Coronation Jacx soon returned to Chicago and opt
ea, sailed of King George was in progress, but despite an elaborate night club. It was krow1
here were this fact, whenever Jack’s car appeared on the Cabaret de Champion. The opening
arance at the London strects, the King was forgotten one of the most spectacular ever seen in
nusement. by the crowds as they struggled for a glimpse country. His friends from all over ‘he w
speeches. of the black champion. took part in this eyent, 2
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The band of robbers made their headquarters in the railroad tunnel (pic
tured above), Three of them waited here while the leader slipped up to the
house, believing that the black robe would frighten the colored lad, The
band pueennee to hide the diamords in a hole made in the wall of the
tunnel,
and with the bag in his hand, ap-
proached the fallen man who had
worn a black robe and opened a door
without knocking. Mose felt that
he had done the right thing. He had
carried out the orders that had been
hastily flung at him. He hadn't kill-
ed the man. He saw a thread of
blood staining the black robe, mak-
utes angen
» Mamba’s L
“Tcaumannoeousasnteamneegt eH
Mamba’s Daughters -
THE LAST INSTALLMENT
Seven years after her arrival in”
New York, Lissa makes her debut,
which is a phenomenal success.
When Wentworth recovered irom
his trancelike absorption the house
was applauding; the large Negro
chorus was taking a curtain call. The
demands of the audience became
deafening. Lissa’s great hour! She
advanced to the footlights and bow-
ed. Now, in the full light she was
plainly visible for the first time, a
mulatto, a little above medium height,
and of superb proportions. Went-
worth noticed that she wore no make-
up except a slight darkening of the
lips that made them seem fuller,
more deliberately Nesroid. This struck
him as significant. From the light
bronze of her face her eyes looked
out, large, expressive, and extraordi-
narily_brilliant—Mamba’s eyes — yes,
and Hagar’s. Now, for the first time,
he noticed that she appeared self-
conscious, anxious to be away. She
bowed for the second time, and with-
out waiting for the curtain, withdrew
among the chorus.
But the audience would not let it
rest at that. They got to their feet
and cheered. They kept the clamour
going with a sort of mad persistence.
After five minutes of it the curtain
was seen to move, rising slowly on a
Jacx soon returned to Chicago and opened
an elaborate night club. It was krown as
the Cabaret de Champion. The opening was
one of the most spectacular ever seen in this
country, His friends from all over ‘he world
took part in this eyent, eacial
EN
ing a little crimson line against the
black silk.
‘That was a terrible adventure, and
the story of it reads like a chapter
from a sensational novel, but Mose
Morton can testify that it is true.
Yes—Mose had a close call and a
terrible experience, but he obeyed his.
employer's instructions.
bright vacant stage.
Lissa stepped from the wings, and
the clamour plunged into silence. The
trace of embarrassed self-conscious-
ness was gone. She seemed detached,
oblivious of both herself and her au-
dience. The conductor rose and look-
ed upto her for his cue. Apparent-
ly she did not see him, for she gave
no sign. Instead she stopped where
she was just out of the wings, and
unaccompanied commenced to sing
the National Anthem of the American
Negre.
Apparently most of the audience
had never heard of it. Wentworth
never had. From the first note he was
aware df an absolutely new sensation.
Against his perception beat the words
of James Weldon Johnson's inspiring
poem swept forward in the marching
rhythm of Rosamond Johnson's
music:
“Litt eyery volce and sing
Till eatth and heayen ring,
Ring with the harmonies of Liberty:
Let our rejoicing rise
High as the list'ning skies,
Let it resound loud as the rolling sea,
Sing a song full of faith that the dark
past has taught ws, _
Sing a song full of the hope that the
present has brought us:
Facing the rising sun of our new day
begun,
Let us march on til, victory fs won.”
(Continued on page two) t,
Myce a
5 led q
} A\\ Ais
i \N IS ae
MAMBA'S DAUGHTERS DU BOSE HEYWARD By
BEWARE THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON
CREOMULSION FOR THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON
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2
(Continued from Page One)
Wentworth, listening, felt suddenly the impact of something tremendously and self-consciously racial; something that had done with apologies for being itself, done with imitations, reaching back into its own origin, claiming its heritage of beauty
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Peterson's possesses such remarkable healing and soothing qualities that minor: pimples and blackheads go like magic—that obstinate cases of burning Eczema are gone after a few days treatment. First application takes out itching and burning.
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BEWARE THE COLDS THA
Coughs from colds may lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Of all known drugs creosote is recognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for coughs from colds and bronchial irritations. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing
CREOM FOR THE COUGH FROM
ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION—February 1, 1930
from the past.
On the stage, as the song progressed toward its conclusion, the singer commenced to sway—sway as Mamba always did toward the end of a spiritual. Only in this young voice to which art had brought discipline there was a difference. It wasted nothing in hysteria, but released the fu. torrent of its pent emotion into the words and music. Now she was singing the final stanza:
"God of our weary years,
God of our silent tears,
Thou who hast brought us thus far on
the way:
Thou who hast by Thy might
Led us into the light,
Keep us ever in the path, we pray.
Lest our feet stray from the places, our
God, where we met Thee.
Lest our hearts, drunk with the wine of
the world, we forget Thee;
Shadowed beneath Thy hand,
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True to our native land."
The song ceased, and the curtain descended. In the auditorium the audience paid it the tribute of a breathless silence. Then they rose
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Jordan and Norman
OKek
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quietly and filed out into the street. It is a Saturday in late May, and Mamba, happy in the gifts that the gods have left her, sits upon the doorstep of her crumbling mansion and lets the new and altogether mad world go hurtling past. Beneath her feet the muiti-coloured flagstones
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Thedford's BLACK-DRAUGHT For Constipation
Cottonfield Blues
parts 1&2
Vocal with Guitars
by
GARFIELD
AKERS
Vocalion Record
No1442
Folks, have you heard this big hit? If you haven't, just take yourself down to your nearest Vocalion dealer and tell him to put on "Cottonfield Blues" by Garfield Akers. You'll say you ain't heard such fine singin' and guitar playin' in a long, long time. And Part 2 on the other side ain't no different. Don't miss hearin'
Cottonfield Blues 1442
Part I 75c
Cottonfield Blues
Part II Vocal with Guitars
Garfield Akers
Electrically Recorded
Vocalion
Records
Mamba's Daughters
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
(Continued from Page Two)
have given place to a cement pavement. Before her eyes the old cobbles have been superseded by an asphalt roadway from which the heat quivers visibly upward, shaking the geometric perfection of lines that converge toward vanishing points northward and southward. Upon the buildings to her right and left the restorers have been at work. It is now several years since this army of invasion appeared, determined, and zealous, to restore the district to its ancient high estate. Strangely enough, Mamba recognises among the invaders faces of those who, earlier in the century, came to tear the cobbles from their century-old beds, to smash the flagstones to atoms and haul them away. But now they are bent upon a frenzied quest for the antique, buying the ruined mansions,
Pertussin For Coughs CONSTANT coughing uses up energy more quickly than strenuous exercise. Check coughs at the start with Pertussin.
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"For three years I was feeling weak, miserable and very poor in spirit. I read other women's testimonials in the papers and so I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It has helped me to sleep at night, I have a good appetite and feel better in many ways. I work every day sewing for other people and I recommend your Vegetable Compound whenever I can. If women writetome, I will answer them."—Mrs. Mattie Hester.
Lydia E. Vegetable
Lydia E. Pinkham Med
ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION—February 1, 1930
banishing the Negroes, and preparing the street for white occupancy. Only the great four-story structure where Mamba sits and suns herself, and which is said to contain some of the finest Georgian panelling and ironwork in the city, is impregnable, for its title stands in the name of one Lissa Atkinson, and Saint Julien Wentworth, who manages the property, states definitely that it is not for sale.
Unmindful of the direct rays of the morning sun, Mamba is sitting, as is her custom, to watch the New York steamer put to sea. As though in mute protest against the invasion of law and order, she is attired in an old wrapper-like garment, faded and far from immaculate. Her legs, thrust straight out before her, are stockingless, and her feet disappear into disreputable-looking men's shoes. An old clay pipe juts at a rakish angle from between her toothless jaws, and from it smoke fumes in a lazy cloud about her face and drills away to offend the sensitive nostrils of the white passers-by, who are becoming more and more numerous as the houses fall one by one into the hands of the restorers. Her age is a matter for speculation, as it is a subject up-
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D HOUSEWIVES
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"I was always tired and kept going to sleep and I did not feel like doing any work. My husband saw Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound advertised in the daily paper and got me a bottle. It helped me wonderful. I feel like myself and I am recommending it to my sister."—Mrs. Sadie R. Anderson, 1613 N. Dallas Street, Baltimore, Maryland.
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N 122
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on which there is no one left to speak with authority. Her body is shrunken with the actual physical contraction of age. Under the tired flesh the bones are commencing to assume undue prominence, foreshaowing their grim survival. Through gaps in the sparse gray hair the skull shows in sharp outline, and the brows are ridges beneath which the eyes are lost when the head is lowered. But this inevitable physical mutation which in another would denote senility has, instead of diminishing the force of her personality, in some strange way intensified it, so that those who speak to the old woman as she sits there feel it in the air about her like an aura. The Negro children who come and go sense it and grin delightedly at her word of affectionate abus.. The cur now lying beneath her knee with only his muzzle showing under the folds of the wrapper knows it, and has gone there for refuge from a world that has no pity upon an unlicensed mongrel.
Mamba has at last accomplished what she believes to be her final adjustment to the changing exigencies of life, and she has no complaint with Fate. The old room one flight up where Lissa was born, and from which Hagar was led to her banishment, is again her stronghold. But now how different in appearance! Papered with pictures of Lissa—Lissa at a steamer's rail, off to Europe—Lissa smiling from the centre of a rotogravure page in the costume of her latest opera—Lissa in a hundred poses, a hundred settings.
But Mamba, scorner or limitations, has at last learned the necessity of their acceptance, for only by so doing can she project her memory back into a past shared by her daughters. Across the way, where the muddy beach once lay, where the mosquito flee was wont to dock, and where
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YOU'LL GET HOT the minute your ear catches the boilin' tunes turned out by the Dixie Rhythm Kings. Just listen to that wicked clarinet, moanin' tuba and tricky piano, and your feet just won't stay put. On the other side this snappy band plays "EASY RIDER" which you'll agree is a winner, too. Hear this record today!
Brunswick RACE RECORDS "Get'em-cause they're HOT!"
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ELECTRICALLY
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Ask your dealer to play this record for you today. If he can't supply you, write to us direct.
RACE
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she moves her gaze ever so slightly to the north it encounters the long line of a modern pier; to the south, and her happiness is ambushed by (Continued on Page Four)
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BALL"
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THE DIXIE
RHYTHM KINOS
Direction of
OMER SIMEON
nswick
record no. 7127
LET HOT the minute your ear catches
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EASY RIDER" which you'll agree is
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The Dixie Rhythm Kings
(Under the Direction of Omer Simeon)
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THE BRUNSWICK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO., Chicago 4635
Mamba's Daughters
4
ROUGH TRADING MARK
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"I was married and longed for a aaby every day with all my heart, but was denied." writes M. S. L. Scheller, Indiana, "so I sent for your description. While taking the second box I was unable to express my happiness. I never had a sick day
1930
became the mother of a fine 8½ pound baby. God only knew our Joy. I hope every woman longing for motherhood will take your medicine. You are welcome to use this letter and picture for publication. Thank you." "Married 11 years and doctors told me I would never have any children," writes Mrs. White. Pa. "I Now I am to be a My dearest wish real-
Baby Scheller
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Dr. DePew's treatment, based on Glandular activity, has been used with such results by thousands of women that for the next 30 days he offers to send a full dollar treatment, postpaid, no C.O.D., no cost, no obligation, free to every woman who writes. Dr. DePew has set aside 1000 free treatments for both mothballs and write-toothpaste. He will also send a free booklet. "Childless Marriages Explained."
Simply send name, a postcard will do, and remedy will be mailed in plain wrapper. Dr. DePew believes you will be surprised and delighted. Address Dr. DePew. Suite LU Coates House, Karsas City, Mo.
1
Student Was Run-Down
"I THINK Cardui is the best builder on the market—I can say this for it was a help to me," writes Miss Margaret Burris, 802 E. Vine Ave., Knoxville, Tenn.
"During the last year in high school, I felt very weak and run-down. Several of my friends told me about Cardui and suggested that I try it. When I went to college I weighed 95 pounds, so I decided to try Cardui, and when the school year was up, I weighed 130 pounds.
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"After taking the Cardui, I am not nervous any more, and I am in the best of health." CARDUI Helps Women to Health
ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION.—February 1, 1930
How to Make Powder Stay On
9
PORO FOR HAIR AND SKIN
yachts belonging to rich Yankees who have invaded her familiar precincts. And so she had schooled her eyes to span the distance and dwell unimpeded upon a rectangle of sunny harbour. Beautiful, familiar, unchangeable, it lies as always mirroring the first dim fires of dawn or sparkling in the bright windy afternoon. And across it, as they used to do when Lissa was a baby, the New York steamers come and go, bellowing their deep hails and farewells.
Over the hot roofs come the meas-
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GENUINE PHILLIPS MILK OF MAGNESIA For Troubles due to Acid INDIGESTION ACID STOMACH HEARTBURN HEADACHE GASES·NAUSEA Too Much ACID
ured tones of St. Michael's chimes announcing the hour of ten. From behind the pier sound shouts and commands. Mamba sits forward, tense, expectant. Then majestically, across her rectangle of harbour moves the loft, cut-water of the New York steamer, folding back the flat blue into a thin green line lipped with white, drawing after it the steep, black wall of the hull, the high, gleaming superstructure. This is the moment for which Mamba has been waiting. Now that the vessel has drawn its full length into her sphere of vision she sees in it more than the form of a familiar friend out of a loved past. It is no longer a great and mysterious adventurer putting forth from her little world into a vast unknown. No. Today she is watching a sure voyager of
GENUINE
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MILK OF MAGNESIA
For Troubles due to Acid
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HEADACHE
GASES·NAUSEA
Many people, two hours after eating, suffer indigestion as they call it. It is usually excess acid. Correct it with an alkali. The best way, the quick, harmless and efficient way, is Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. It has remained for 50 years the standard with physicians. One spoonful in water neutralizes many times its volume in stomach acids and at once. The symptoms disappear in five minutes. You will never use crude methods when you know this better method. And you will never suffer from excess acid when you prove out this easy relief. Please do that—for your own sake—now. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years in correcting
Make
that fabulous distance which lies between. the wish and the rainbow's end—between her first fantastic dream for Lissa and the consummation of that dream.
Now from the whistle a plume of steam is blown against the stark blue of the sky, and a hoarse, baying note wakes the echoes along the waterfront. Far below the crowded decks, the soaring funnel, on her own private doorstep. Mamba draws herself together, and her eyes light with a gleam of her old impudent spirit. "Git along, den," she says patronisingly. "Git along. Ah ain't holdin' yo'. An' when yo' get whar yo' is goin', 'member what Ah tol' you' an' gib my gal huddy fuh me."
THE END
Too Much ACID
excess acids. 25c and 50c a bottle—any drug store.
"Milk of Magnesia" has been the U. S. Registered Trade Mark of The Charles H. Phillips Chemical Company and its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875.
GLEAMY WHITE TEETH
and a Sweet Breath
Try Phillips' Dental Magnesia Toothpaste just once and see for yourself how white your teeth become. Write for a free ten-day tube. Address The Phillips Co., 117 Hudson St., New York, N. Y.
POORO
VERBOKING
VARNISHING
WAXES
POORO
VERBOKING
VARNISHING
WAXES
Use Poro Vanishing Cream
It's annoying to powder up for the day and then find that in a few hours the shine is back again. When you use Poro Peroxide Vanishing Cream first you avoid this trouble because this cream gives smoothness to the skin and prepares it so that powder adheres much longer. Also contains pure medicinal hydrogen peroxide—an efficient and absolutely harmless bleaching agent.
Sold by Poro Agents Everywhere or Order Direct from
4300 St. Ferdinand
St. Louis, Mo.
4415 So. Parkway
Chicago, Ill.
SKIN
FOR AN EDUCATIONAL, UPLIFTING RACE
FAPER, YOU SHOULD SUBSCRIBE TO—
THE NEGRO WORLD
America's Leading Race Weekly. Brim-full
of National and International News, Sound
editorials, feature articles, that are of wide
interest. No home is complete without the
weekly issues of this carrier of the highest
quality. High quality of training of race
leaders. Domestic rates, $2.50 per year, for
foreign. $3.00. Write in for free sample copy
at once. THE NEGRO WORLD, 355 Lenox
Ave., New York City.
When Your Cough Hangs On, Mix This at Home
When Your Cough Hangs On, Mix This at Home
The best cough remedy that money could buy, can easily be mixed at home. It saves money and gives you the most reliable, quick-acting medicine you ever used. The way it takes hold of stubborn coughs and chest colds, giving immediate relief, is astonishing.
Any druggist can supply you with 2½ ounces of Pinex. Pour this into a pint bottle, and fill up with plain granulated sugar syrup or strained honey. It's no trouble at all to mix, and when you once use it, you will never be without it. Keeps perfectly and tastes good—children really like it.
It is surprising how quickly this loosens the germ-laden phlegm, and soothes and heals the inflamed membranes. At the same time, part of the medicine is absorbed into the blood, where it acts directly on the bronchial tubes, and helps the system throw off the whole trouble. Even those severe coughs which follow cold epidemics, are promptly ended.
Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway Pine, containing the active agent of creosote, in a refined, palatable form. Nothing known in medicine is more helpful in cases of severe coughs, chest colds and bronchial troubles. Do not accept a substitute for Pinex. It is guaranteed to give prompt relief or money refunded.
Know the Joy of a White Complexion by tonight
At last the way has been found to easily make all types of brown skin from 10 to 20 shades whiter in the shortest possible time.
Why bother with slow actors when one application of this wonder-working great new discovery will turn brown skin 20, shades whiter in a few seconds- make the skin soft and smooth as velvet and keep all trace of gloss and shine away for hours.
And why should any man or woman continue to have a color of complexion they do not like or have a coarse, shiny skin when the remedy that acts almost instantly can be easily procured? SPANOLA not only makes tan or brown skin 10 or 20 shades whiten in a FEW SECONDS, but it protects and beautifies the skin. SPANOLA is easy to use. You simply smooth it over your skin like a lotion and
gently massage. It vanishes in a few seconds and leaves the skin gorgeously soft and smooth to touch. If you whitenen, look in your error after using your SPANOLA, when it means to make your skin 20 shades whiter- 3d with so little effort. Just notice how much better your skin feels and looks, for besides whitening the skin 20 shades with one application, SPANOLA is a fine choice. All three are freckles for dark spots disappear as soon as SPANOLA is used.
TEST NEW DISCOVERY
DON'T RISK A CENT!
Would you like to see how much better you would like your complexion 20 shades whiter? Will you test SPANOLA without risking a cent? Mall payment below today. Send no money. Pay postman only 898, plus postage, on arrival. See how SPANOLA will whiten your skin 20 shades in a few seconds. If you are not delighted with results, send it back and we will immediately pay back your money.
Spaniola Co., Dept. 52
P.O. Box 1200, Chicago, Ill.
Sand me one bottle of Spaniola. On arrival I will pay postman only 980 plus postage. If not delighted after I make test, I will return it, and you will at once refund my money.
(Use pencil—ink will blot. Please print)
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