Richmond Planet
Saturday, June 14, 1930
Richmond, Virginia
Page text (machine-generated)
THE
RICHMOND PLANET
VIRGINIA
JUN14 1930
STATE LIBRARY
Virginia State Library
REV. TOWNSEND
Preparations Complete For 21st. Annual Conference Of The N.A.A.C.P.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR YOUNGMAN
OF MASSCHUSETTS TO WELCOME
N. A. A. C. P. in SPRINGFIELD
Springfield, Mass., June 6.— Lieutenant
governor williams S. Youngman of Mash-
pects, will deliver an address of
come to the National Association for
Advancement of Colored People at
opening mass meeting of its 21st A-
nual Conference to be held in Spring-
field from June 25 through July 1, it
is announced today. Other welcome
messages will be delivered in behaf-
city of City of Springfield by Mayor
R. Winter; in behalf of the
springfield Chamger of Commerce by
taylor Frederick J. Hillman; and in be-
foil of the Springfield branch of the N.
C. P. and citizens by Rev. William
Berry.
alter White, Acting Secretary and
portral J Seligman, Director of Publici-
cation of the N. A. A. C. P. journeyed to
tungfield on Wednesday to confer with
each officers and with
Committee. Both officers of the
association delivered short addresses
the assembled committee of citizens
the Director's book of the Scaled
Chapin National Bank and were
given a cordial reception. On their
return to New York they issued the
following statement:
"The Annual Conference in the history
of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has been prepared for with greater care and
intelligent than the coming 21st Annual
Conference in Springfield. The leading
citizens in all phases of the City's
leaders, clergyfem, men, and women, are
on the committee, and it is being made a
matter of civic pride in Springfield
to help make the Conference a stirring
success.
Springfield is a relatively small, but exceeding active and progressive place. Its spirit of tolerance and cordial interest is a living thing, and the N. A. A. C. P. Conference will be not merely one event among many, but the outstanding event, during its sessions."
The N. A. A. C. P. also reports the following list of organizations which have been invited and have accepted the invitation to send fraternal delegates to the Springfield Conference: National Urban League, National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools, to be represented by Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, President of Howard University; American Interracial Peace Committee, by Mrs. Alice Dunbun-Nelson; Young Women's Christian Association, by Miss Clara Reed; American Missionary Association, and the National Council of Congregational Churches, both by Dr. Fred L. Brownlee, with W. A. Daniel alternate; Commission on Interracial Cooperation, by Robert B. Eleazer; National Medical Association, National
b. Business League, A. M. E. C. G.
federal Council of Church of Christ
ATLANTA UNIVERSITY, MORE
TOUSE AND SPELMAN TO HAVE
NEW LIBRARY
Word has just been received from New York of a grant of $450,000 from the General Board for the cost of a site and for the erection of a library for Atlanta University and affiliated colleges. After more than sixty years Atlanta has been an important center of education for Negroes. No other city has had five colleges for Negroes, each with its own constituentep but maintaining friendly relationship and mutual respect. A year ago three of these institutions entered into an affiliation which provided that Atlanta University should be developed as a center for graduate and professional courses and that undergraduate work should be conducted by Spelman College and fourhouse College.
The affiliation itself was a notable on in the advancement of education or degrees. In the three institutions enrolled more than seven-hundred accounts of collegiate rank exclusive school. All three colleges came into the affiliation with a hortage of honest achievement behind them. They have a total initial plant of eighty-seven acres of land twenty-eight buildings, and are located in the strategic center states.
SOLDIER ACQUITTED OF CAPITAL CRIME
Fayetteville, N. C.—(CNS)—Thomas Scott, 19 year old soldier, was acquired here last Tuesday by a charge of criminal attack on a young colored girl The jury was out twenty minutes.
New Miniature Course For the West End
the beautiful Miniature Golf Course known as the West End Golf Course, located at 1427-29 W. Cary Street, is one of the greatest outdoor attractions that Richmond people of the city of Richmond have had as well as its easy accessibility adds to its conduciveness. Besides being on a smooth-paved Street, it is within one square of the Main Street Car, and the Church Hill-Byrd Park Bus line is only two blocks away. The brilliant light, equal to any that may be found elsewhere in the city, is a feature which adds splendor. A competent instructor is on hand at all times to render assistance to those who do not know the game.
Prof. Rayford W.Logan Forum Speaker
The Forum of the I. O. of St. Luke held their regular monthly meeting in the assembly room of the Home Office Building, 900 St. James Street. A very interesting program was rendered after the roll call.
The Forum was honored with the presence of the R. W. G. Secretary-Treasurer, Mrs. Maggie L. Walker, who after a few remarks presented Mr. C. V. Kelley who in turn introduced Prof. R. W. Logan in a most eloquent manner. Prof. Logan, using as his subject, "Citizenship", pointed out the many advantages that we might enjoy, but fail because of the non co-operative spirit that exists among our race.
He also pointed in a most eloquent and enthusiastic manner the benefits and privileges accorded to our group in the fourteenth amendment that we are satisfied to see others enjoy.
Cities Subdue Typhoid Commissioner Says
Richmond, June—Why hastyphoid fever virtually disappeared from our large cities Dr. Ennion G. Williams, State question in a radio talk which he just gave. "The cities," he said, "protect their people by giving safe water and safe sewage disposal. This the municipalities can do through public effort; but in rural sections protections must be secured almost wholly from individual action." Dr. Williams made it clear that there must be sofe reason for the great increase in typhoid during the summer months. He said that, if polluted water was the principal agent for spreading the disease, there would be just as much typhoid in winter as in summer. Evidently, therefore, the other method of transmission must be to blame.
If human wastes are accessible to flies there will always be the danger of typhoid fever spreading. Unfortunately there are many people who give no signs of having typhoid but are menaces to their neighbors. These people are called carriers. They may have had typhoid long ago or they may have such a slight case that it was never reconized, nevertheless, they carry the gems; and, if germs for a carrier get to a person they may infect the carrier, that person will have typhoid fever.
So, the health commissioner, urged his hearers to sanitize their homes so they would not imperil their families and their neighbors, and as a futher and necessary precaution he urged them to get rid of flies or screen their houses against flies or trap those dangerous insects.
He pointed out that the decline of more than ninety per cent in the typhoid annual total of Virginia since 1908 shoy what can be done; and he promised that the state could confidently look forward to a time when there would be no typhoid, if our people would generally sanitize their premises, would see to it that all human wastes are sa disposed that flies can not reach the filth and water supplies can not be polluted by it.
Dr. Williams made a big point about flies because this is the season when those insects are most numerous and most dangerous. He expressed his gratification at the interest which is now being displayed in the fight against flies and urged an unremitting war against the pests.
See Negro's Gain, More Than Loss
That the Negro in America has gained more than he has lost in the changing structure was the consensus of opinion of those experts, social workers and economists who assembled here to attend the Annual Conference of the National Urban League. The theme of the Conference Vocational Opportunity for Negro Workers-served as the magnet which attracted a large number of the leaders of both races to what is considered to have been the most successful conference in the history of the Urban League movement.
In addition to the representatives of the Urban League, which included over fifty cities affiliated with the Urban League movement, there were many laymen of both races who came to participate in the discussion of this important question. For the first time in America the industrial status of the Negro was critically analyzed and a graphic of his future place in industry projected. At the same time, a stirring plea was made for larger industrial opportunities for Negro men and women. The general excellency of the sessions which were addressed by many outstanding figures in the field of sociology and economics can be readily seen by the following names which grace the program;
Merdith B. Givens, Research Secretary of the Social Science Research Council; T. Arnold Hill, National Urban League; Willifah Hodson, Director of the Welfare Council, New Yory; Niches Carpenter, Professor of Economics, University of Chicago Settlement; Miss Marp Van Kleeck of the Russel Sage Foundation; Eugene Kinkle Jones, Executive Director of the National Urban League; Franklin Hopper of the New York Public Library; H. Lollingsworth Wood, Chairman of the Executive Board of the National Urban League; Dr. Sadie Alexander, Philadelphia; whose remarkable paper on the Negro woman in industry held the attention of three hundred dinner guests at the Hotel Statler. Other speakers were Ira DeA. Reid, Director of Research of the National Urban League and E. A. Carter, Editor of OPPORTUNITY.
It was generally conceded that the success of the conference in Buffalo was due to the smooth working machinery which was created and developed by William L. Evans, Executive Secretary of Memorial Center and Urban League Inc. and his Executive Board. Among the others in attendance at the conference were George Arthur of the Rosenwald Foundation. Chicago. ILL. Jameg Jackson, U. S. Department of Commerce, Gertrude Brown, Phyllis Wheatley House, Minneapolis; Forrester Washington, Atlanta School of Social Work, Dr. Monroe Work of Tuskegee Institute,
GILPIN REBURRED FOLLOWING
HARLEM FUNERAL SERVICES
New York—(CNS)—Harlem did honor last Sunday to Charles Gilpin, betteran actor who was buried May 12, at interred for a funeral which his friends considered more seemly for the creator of the "Emperor Jones" role. The funeral rooms of Duncan Brothers at 2303 Seventh Avenue were packed with stage celebrities and out in the street hundreds of pevle gathered. Oldroupers who had toured the country with Gilvin and starring in player who had brought distinction to the race. Gilpin's favorite hymn "Abide With Me" was sung and its echo was taken up by the throng gathered in the street. The last song he had bought but had not been able to sing because his fine barytone voice was gone was sung by the flowers were from the Colored Vadueville Benevolent Association, the Rhythm Club, the Clef Club and the Dressing Room Club.
Gilpin's sister, Mrs. A'Lelia Brown, and his son, Paul, was present, along with a number of relatives and friends of the family. Burial was in Woodlawn Cemetary. The earlier funeral services held for Mr. Gilpin was in the Shiloh Baptist Church, in Trenton, and burial was beside his mother, Mrs. Caroline Gilpin, in Riverbiew Cemetary, Lambertville. The actor died on May 6 in the four-room cottage in Eldridge, Park, to which he retired a year ago when he lost voice.
SCHOOL BOY PATROL AWARDS
AWARDS PRESENTED
Washington (CNS) Seven colored youngster of the american Automobile Association's schoolboy patrol in its annual rally last week were awarded medals of valor for saving lives of schoolmates during the scholastic
year.
The boy sare: Lafayette Artis Monroe, of myrtilla Miner Normal School, John Simms, Cleveland; Jno Walker and Eugene Collins, Douglas; John Henderson, Wilson Morgan; Richard Lane, Birney and Jas Frye, Stevens.
RICHMOND, VA., SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1930
Police Think Baptist Auditor Killed By Gunman For Baptist Official
INDIANAPOLIS. June 18—The slaying two months ago of E. D. Pierson, 54, Chicago, auditor of the National Baptist Convention, killed, police said, because he "knew too much" about the jugging of a $62,000 fund in the Nashville, Tenn., office of the negro organization, was solved today.
Under arrest here were the Rev. B. J. F. Westbrook, pastor of the largest Negro church in Indianapolis, and George Washington, 41, described by police as a hired Negro gunman.
At Nashville, police arrested A. M. T. Moore, and deputied by the wealthiest Negro in the country, secretary of the Baptist Sunday-school publishing board and auditor of a Negro bank in Nashville. He was released on $10,000 bond.
The arrests, detectives believed, complete the investigation into the slaying of Pierson, who was found, tied hand and foot and his body riddled with bullets, where he had been tossed into the Muscatatuck river near Snottsburg, Ind., April 16. Pierson was slain as he was returning to Chicago from Nashville, where he had uncovered the discrepancy in the Negro Baptist convention loan fund. Townsend would have been "ruined" by the exposure, detectives said, and plotted the killing to cover it up. Police said that Washington, who was arrested here Wednesday, had confessed to the slaying and said he received a phone call from uncommunicado at city prison under $10,000 bond on a vagrancy charge until the arrest early today of Westbrook. Westbrook, who was acquainted with Pierson, but denied implication in his death, was alleged by detectives to have written a letter introducing Washington to the Chicago man.
At Pierson's Chicago home, Washington presented himself to Edward D. Pierson, Jr., the auditor's son, who is known as a singer. Information supplied by the son, detives said, led to the solution of the slaying.
Young Pierson told the detectives Washington represented himself as a farmr and owner of a chain of Negro drug sores, saying he wanted the auditor to work out a system of bookkeeping for him. Washington then is believed by police to have met Pierson at Louisville, Ky., and driven north towards Indianapolis with him. Near Scottsburg, police believe Pierson was fatally shot and tossed into the river. He was still alive when found the next day, but died before he could be pulled from the water.
Washington, detectives declared, is a gunman of wide reputation, and is said to be wanted at Fort Wayne, Ind., for "shooing up" a crowded courtroom and escaping.
MADLY JEALOUS MAN SLAYS
HIS AFFINITY
Lexington, N.C. (CNS) A prominent law firm here has been retained to conduct the defense of Lee Hargrave, young colored youth, who is in jail here awaiting trial in connection with the murder of Lillie Belle Gilmore, a married woman with whom he accused is reported to have become enamoured.
Hargrave slew the woman by almost severing her head with a razor after successive strokes had cut off three fingers and inflicted other heavy cuts here Decoration Day. The two had been to a dance and were returning home in an automobile with two other persons.
Capt. M. M. Barnard, superintendent of penal institutions for the District of Columbia, who was witnessing his twenty-sixth execution, said he had never seen a man go to his death in such an inspired way.
Hawkins arose at 5 o'clock and ate a hearty breakfast. He amused himself in the cell until about 7 o'clock, when Rev. Mr. Pinn arrived and took his final statement. Then he was read the death warrant by Col. Peake. Immediately afterward, at about 9:30 o'clock, with the electrocution schedules for 10 o'clock, he called for the colored quartet of the jail to sing to him. They stood outside his cell and sang "Throw Out the Lifeline" and "My Mother's Prayer Will Follow Me." Hawkins thanked the quartet and borrowed one of their song books and began singing lowly, "When Morning Comes." Four minutes after the first flow of current was thrown into the electric chair, Hawkins was pronounced dead by Dr. A. J. Connellly, jail physician.
CRIME PREVENTION GROUP OMITS
NEGRO
New York City—(CNS)—No colored religious leader appears among the list announced as the personnel of the Commission on Crime Prevention Thru Moral and Religious Education which will suplant the work of the two commissions on crime prevention appointed by President Hoover. So far it could not be determined if any colored leader has been asked to join or cooperate with the Commission which held its initial meeting at the headquarters of the Playground and Recreation Association of America here, last week.
The main objective of the organization, according to Dr. J. C. White, the general secretary of the Church League which is fostering the organization, is to "extend moral and religious education though every possible agency to all neglected youth in America now growing up without such training."
Since neither of the Hoover commissions, one on child welfare and the other on law observance andonforement, can deal directly with the religious side of crime prevention, there is a great need for such an organization, Dr. White said. Of colored religious leaders in the light of the large percentage of crime blamed upon Negroes, is beibled to be the result of President Hoover's failure to include Negroes on the original commission on Law Enforcement. HOWARD IN JERSEY, AIDS MORROW Washington—(CNS)—The Republican party in New Jersey, making a strong bid for the Negro vote in the coming ongressional election in which Dwight W. Morrow faces the electors as a candidate for the United States Senate, has selected Perry W. Howard, Republican National Committeeman from Mississippi, to the colored voters in the state for Morrow.
Mr. Howard left Washington several weeks ago and has been extremely active in all of the campaign conferences, on several occasions presenting Morrow to the voters of New Jersey. Morrow, running on a "wet" platform, opposes former Senator Joseph Frolinghuysson and Representative Franklin Fort who are alos aspirants for the nomination. The primary will be held June 17.
OKLAHOMA MOB KILLS YOUNG NE
GRO BOY
Chickasha, Okla. —(CNS) —For the third time within the last month, a mob of nearly 1000 men and boys shot and stabbed to death a 19 year old colored youth last week. Similar rioting took place on Sherman and Honey Grove, Texas, while at the former place the county jail was burned.
Henry Argo, the lynched man was charged with attacking a white woman. A bullet fired by an unidentified member of the mob, pierced the brain of the boy as he was sitting caged in his cell. As the boy was being removed to a hospital in a nearby city, the husband of the alleged attacked woman, stabbed him through the heart.
National guardmen were on the scene but could do little with the mob which cut the light and telephone wires and fired at the guards several times. No harm was done to other colored people of the town.
Virginia Union's Commencement
On Wednesday June 3, 1930, large enthusiastic crowds wended their way to the Chapel of the Va. Union / University at 4 P. M. to witness the commencement exercises, the program of which may appear elsewhere in this journal. The exercises above referred to, reached the high water mark in many respects and those present expressed their entire satisfaction with the program. The address delivered by Dr. Benjamin Brawley of Shaw University, Raleigh, N. C., was full of sound advice. The graduates in the several departments of the University made a splendid showing as they presented themselves to President, Dr. W. J. Clark, who conferred upon them their degrees which they had won by their diligent application to study. Honorary degrees were conferred upon four persons who had won distinction in their chosen fields of activity.
At the close of the program, President, Dr. W. J. Clark, announced two very important things.
1. That the Va. Union University had been given Class A rating by the American Medical Association.
2. That the American Baptist Home Mission Society had voted $50,000 to Va. Union University to enable her to close the $600,000 campaign. When these announcements were made, much enthusiasm was engendered.
$2.00 PER YEAR; COPY, FIVE CENTS
Indian Masses In Revolt Against British Rule
INDIANS Are Giving the Lion's --
—TAIL a Real Twist.----
Chicago, June 6.—(By The Associated Negro Press)—That there may be something to Lothrop Stoddard's eminent terror of the "Rising Tide of Color" is becoming increasingly apparent as the spiritual revolution in India, set in motion by the bronzed asletic, Mahatma Gandhi, resting easily now in a British jail, while his cause goes moving on, grows and grows to confound, confuse and defeat the skillful tactics of British officialdom.
A real spectacle of terror, so far as the British are concerned, is presented by the developments of the last two months.
As Lothrop Stoddard points out in the current issue of Liberty Magazine, India does count—in the world of affairs. Almost one-fifth of the world's total population, or 320 millions of people, are in India. Many billion dollars of English and American capital are tied up in that great country. If India should throw off the yoke of British domination and repudiate its foreign debt and obligations, the financial marts in London, Paris, and New York would be thrown into utter chaos. This makes India important. This makes any great wave of sentiment, wether for independence or just a boycott, a matter of concern to commercial concerns throughout the world. India is where they sell their goods.
For years, Great Britain has trusted to internal conditions in India to maintain her control over the vast empire There are will-known rligious, racial, and political cleavages in the empire, which so far have been unwilling to trust one another, that have prevented any unified action on the part of the natives. If Great Britain fell out with one set, she and her few soldiers were able to line up with another group and maintain the status one.
The two most important groups in India that have forgect other are the Hindus, of which Ghandi is one, and te Moslems, or Mohammedans. There are about 200,000,000 Hindus, and about 70,000,000 Moslems. For many years after the Mohammedans pressed down from the North and conquered India to establish the dynasty of the Great Mogul, the Hindus were held in subjection by he proud, ruling class of the Mohammedans. The Moslems always think of themselves in terms of being the ruling olass, but the Hindus know that India is their lountry, and they resent the colonization of them. England has kept these two groups from coming to blows.
Within the ranks of the Hindus themselves there has operated the pernicious and iniquitous influence of the caste system, making horizontal social divisions of the people. These classes of the Hindus hate one another viciously, and the lower classes and the so-called "depressed class," composed of out-castes, fight any movement that would tend to give the highest class, the Brahmins, any more power. It is the Brahmins who do toe casting out, or ostracising.
In addition to this racial difference between the Moslems and the Hindus, and the religious hates ai between the Hindu casts, there are political obstacles within the empire which keep the people apart. Thus there are quite a fw so-called principalities, ruled by immensely wealthy Indian princes, who exercise 'almost complete sovereignty, under the watchful eye of Great Britain. They feel that they are held in power by this dominance of a foreign power, and would be disposed to hold out against any pro-Indian movement in order to maintain the political autonomy they now exercise.
As long as Great Britain has been able to keep the Hindus and Moslems suspicious of each other, the casts at one another's throats, and these princes as their selfish allies, the British representatives have just sat by constituted different independence movements to wear themselves out against the suffocating effect of internal dissension.
But there is now evidence that the Ghandi cause of "non-violence" is definitely bringing these opposing groups together and welding the great peoples of India behind a movement for the removal of Great Britain's sway that will not be stopped. This conclusion is borne out by recent dispatches to the Chicago Tribune from its far eastern correspondent, Charles Dailey. Mr. Dailey has just concluded a tour of the interior provices of In-
(Continued on Page 6)
193 STUDENTS GRADUATE FROM ATLANTA COLLEGE
Atlanta, Ga., June 5—Five Negro colleges and a theological seminary. located in this city, this week graduated 193 students with bachelors' degrees, and turned out in addition a large number of normal and high school graduates. The total number enrolled in hundred more in the preparatory he college grades of the several institutions was 1,258 and with several grades and normal training.
The six institutions which gave Atlanta preeminence as a center of Negro education are Atlanta University, Morehouse Spelman Colleges, Morris Brown, Clark Universities, and Gammon Theological Seminary. The three first named were recently affiliated to form a single university system, under the name of Atlanta University.
TWO WHO SLEW PRISONER AT
SING. SING CONVICTED
White Plains, N. Y. (CNS) James Steele and John Harris, former vaudeville actors and convicts at Sing Sing prison we were convicted of second degree murder and first degree manslaughter, respectively by a jury here last Tuesday in connection with the fatal stabbing of Reuben Kaminsky, a fellow prisoner in the prison yard last December I. Date for sentence has not been determined, the minimum Harris could get would be twenty years. Ife imprisonment would be mandatory in Steele's case.
KILLER OF SWEETHEART DIES
IN ELECTRIC CHAIR
Washington (CNS) Andrew Jack- his sweetheart, Ruth Watkins, here on December 22, 1829, died in the electric chair at the district jail Thursday morning at 10 o'clock for the crime.
With a show of bravery the like of which never has been witnessed before by jail attaches who have seen a score or more of executions, the slayer took the final penalty before a small group of witnessed composed of jail guards and officials and four newspaper men.
Hawkins literally went to his death with a smile on his face, leaving a statement twitch the jail officials telling them he "forgives all" and asks "to be forgiven." He walked steadily from his cell, the first in "death row."
While he was being strapped in the chair, the Rev. James L. Pinn of the First Baptist Church, 1634 S Street sang the same song Hawkins had been singing in the cell a few minutes before. When The Morning Star stanced the same song, Hawkins kept time with his left hand on the arm of the chair and patted the rubber carpeted floor with his bare feet.
HAITIAN COMMISSION ON EDUCA-
TION SAILS
Washington—(CNS)—Dr. /Robert R. Moton, chairman of the Haitian Commission on education recently appointed by President Hoover, to make a study of the educational situation in Haiti, sails on the steamship Ancon of the Panama Railway steamship line June 10.
Dr. Moton called at the White House on June 6 and announced that he had received final instructions from President Hoover as to the scope of the work which he commission is to undertake.
The other members of the commission selected by Dr. Moton to assist him in his work are Dr. Mordecal Johnson, president of Howard Unibury; Leo M. Favrot, white, field secretary of the General Education Board, Benjamin F. Hubert, president of Georgia State Industrial College at Savannah, and Dr. W. T. B. Williams, of Tuskegee, Alabama.
Accompanng the commissioners are Dr. G. Lake Imes, who has been appointed secretary to the commission; Prof. Alphonso Hennengingb. interpter; W. A. Shields, stenographer; and Percival B. Prattis of the Associated Press and Carl Murphy of Baltimore Afro-American who will represent the press. The commission appointed [ several months ago, found it advisable to wait until the close of school to sail for the little Republic.
CHILDREN'S DAY
Rev. James C. Scott, son of Rev. C. C. Scott of the Fifth Street Baptist Church, will deliver the Children's Day address and crown the queen at Mosby Memorial Baptist Church on Sunday, June 15, 1980.
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The Negro And
The Negro And The Nude Art
By Professor Kelley Miller
The refusal of the art alliance of Philadelphia to place the nude statue of Paul Robeson on exhibition discloses a curious angle of race prejudice.
The statue n question is extolled as a piece of art. There is no stated object to nudity as such, but to negro nudity. The objection is frankly not based on prudery, but on race prejudice. Paul Robeson is one of the remarkable men of his generation. His fame as a musician and actor covers two continents. He is gifted with many talents. An athlete, a musician, a superlative actor of both comic and tragic roles—he is withal a scholar an da gentleman. That last word—ah, there's the erub. Had the bit of sculpture been merely an identified specimen of physical manhoo d ebony, after the patter of Peter Jackson or Jack Johnson, no such objection would probably have been lodged. But Negro gentleman or lady now defends placement in American art. Bert Williams, the inimicable music in cork and costume, relates that a certain society celebrity, even thought well of him, once suggested that he attend his function evening clothes and perform his part as a gentleman. Betr tried it, and was frozen stiff. The Negro must never be encouraged to fee lthat he is as one of us.
There have been literally hundreds of novels, plays and short stories recently written centering about the Negro theme. But in no single instance is the Negro character allowed to get by with the finished qualities of the cultivated lady or gentleman. If high character and genteel qualities are imputed to the colored hero or heroine, he or she must break down at some vital point before the story ends. The method of handling such a situation has become stereotyped. The supposedly colored character of high talent and genteel culture must either break down or prove to be unadultured white blood before the finis.
There is a deep-seated and sinister motive in this method. As there is no place for the cultured and refined colored person in high social life, he cannot be reflected in art. No refined cultivated lady or gentleman under cover of Negro face or features hangs on the walls of our elite parors nor in our saloons and art galleries. The fact must be accepted in life before it can be reflected in art. The Negro is depicted in art only according to the roll he is permitted to play in the prevalent social regime. The
PHILOSOPHY OF CIRCUMSTANCE
By R. A. Adams ----
"Circumstances alter cases," is admittedly true, if we include ethical responsibility as well as resultant effects. In every process of adjuction, in every appraisement or determination of value, in every award for mirt or assessment for crime, justice and equity unquestionably involve consideration of circumstances.
The genesis if circumstances would be difficult to determine, fir, as results are concerned with the ultimate and the ultimate, so circumstances involve both the present and the past, and they unquestionably antedate the life of the individual thus involved. Justice would require thtn, that in every such case circumstances should be considered and weighed in the effort to determine either ferit or culpability.
As a general thing, we are not charitable in our judgements against our fellows. We hear such expressions as "Who would thought it?" "I never would have believed it!" "I have no sympathyl" "Such acts deserve the severest condemnation." I never would do a thing like that!
A woman who has had the maximum of advantages an the minimum of temptations, often is harsh in her judgement on an unfortunate sister who has strayed from the path of rectitude. But the most upright woman would have been a harlot had her circumstances been identical with those of her unfortunate sister whom she so unsparingly and uncharitably condemns.
Few criminals are wilfully so; the major portion are circumstantially so. Many an honest man would have been a theft if his circumstances had been the same as the one whom he scorns. Many a minister of the Gospel would have been a voluntary and a libertine had he been subjected to the same circumstances which influenced the lives of thousands of unfortunate in this matter.
Yes, who ever the individual might be, what ever the principle involved, the circumstances alter cases and circumstances mitigate moral responsibility. Under the same circumstances every one would do the same thing. If you dissent, then study the question more.
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The Nude Art
pullman porter may be depicted with artistic perfection in a railway scene, but never a colored lady or gentleman in the parlor car. The colored servant may be assigned his servile place in the picture. The bare foot Negro news boy may hang on the art gallery. The old fashioned Negro parson with dilapidated high hat and baglike umbrella easily finds artistic portrayal, but not your Negro bishop or ecclesiastical dignitary. No, not on your life. The negro clown and buffoon who furnish amusement for white folks to laugh at are serving to fix the Negro's place in art. The customary and accepted soon form a type pattern for art to portray.
One might ask why does not the Negro set forth his own claims in art. The poet, novelist, story teller, painter or sculptor, we may say, should address himself to this task. But alas, alas, the Negro must needs adapt his art to the white man's taste. If he sets forth a perfect Negro character, outside of his ordained place, the white publisher will not print it, the white reader will not peruse it, it cannot be shown on the screen, the picture will find no place in the art gallery, and the stature will not be put on exhibition. The only Negro qualities that the white public will accept in art are those of the servant, the clown, the mimic or the Uncle Tom. The Negro can hardly create his own standards of taste. Everything worthwhile must be depicted in the white man's image and in his likeness. It was ever so, and ever will be.
When God creates man, He makes him in his own image. Man returns the compliment, and fashions his gods in his own likeness. The white man's art will be white, in outward semblance. No other pattern will be allowed to compete.
The Egyptian civilization has passed away. The Snhynx, of Negro face and features remain to tell a pathetic story. When MacGauley's lonely fisherman shall sit on the arch of Potomac's bridge to sketch the dome of our proud Capitol, he may find the Goddess of Liberty sitting under the similitude of the red India to symbolize the departed glory of the proud empire of the West. But in the one case as in the other these images were but symbolic of the conquerors whose armouristic artistic portrayals in their own image and in their own likeness.
The deeper meaning and significance to the Negro of the artistic disdain of his race and color must be reserved for another release.
THE PLEA OF CHARLOTTE MILLS J
By Maxie Miller
A most pathetic plea against intolerance and injustice was published in the Coopalmagazine some time age. It will be remembered that this girl was the daughter of Eleanor Mills, the woman, with her clerical lover, Dr. Edward Wheeler Hall was murdered in Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1922. Charlotte Mills contends that at the trial for the murder she, as innocent of girl of sixteen, was humiliated and abused. According to her statement she was questioned concerning tre clothes she wore, and there were insinuations that she was not good; that she was dishonest and dishonorable; and that she knew of her mother's sins, approved and abetted. She relates how she was taken from her hoe at midnight and carried to the vace where her mother had been murdered; how efforts were made to induce her father to send her away from home to some institution for incorrigibles; and how persistent were the efforts to hurl into scandal, and destroy her.
She makes the statement that because of circumstances men seemed to think they had the right to approach her with indecent proposals and thus constantly to annoy and insult her. Perhaps the most inexcusable and inhuman part of thesecution was the action of enemy in seeking her out, exposing her identity and hindering her earnest effort to make an honest living. The plea of Charlotte Mills is that the world has no right to make her pay for the mistakes, or even for the sins of her mother. But the world is cold, unsyspathetic, hard hearted, and exacting; therefore it gives little heed to her pathetic plea, "Why make me pay."
In the case of Charlotte Mills there is a lesson for girls, to appreciate home protection and opportunity; for fathers, who should be more just, more courageous, in the protection of their daughters for mothers, reminding them that their innocent children cannot escape the consequences of such misdoings.
The sad plight of Charlotte Mills, and the circumstances of others who face similar conditions are a challenge to the spirit of justice, tolerance, and charity which should characterize relations and actions between man and man, and especially does it emphasize what should be the attitude of the more fortunate toward the unfortunate of all classes.
By auth Lacile Munson, Sweden, Pa. (this paper was awarded prize if $1.00 in national high school contest conducted by the Commission on interracial Cooperation, or Atlanta, Ga. It was one of several thousand papers written by students in this subject—Editor). The human ingredients of this huge meeting pot of ours have always been a source of keen interest to the student of humanity. To carefully analyze personalities, finally labeling and placing them on shelves as representatives of their countrymen, has ever been the delight of psychologist. Of ten Americans, we find nine who fit into their assigned places on the shelf; and the "tenth man" is a Negro—and a problem. Should this tenth man be placed on a lower shelf because his skin is darker than his neighbor's? Is his intelligence inferior to that of others, or is it merely a social aversion for close association with a "black man" that limits his progress? Let us see what we can find out.
To learn that the first Negroes came to our shores not as slaves in 1619, but as explorers fully a century before is somewhat of a surprise. Ancient records show that one of Columbus' three ships, the Nina, was piloted by a Negro, whose name, Alonzo Pietro, suggests all sorts of thrilling explorations and swash-buckling exploits. I like to think of the dusky Alonzo, also changing some weird melody of his native Africa as his brawny arms guide the tiny ship through fearsome darkness to a new world. I would have his arrival in the new land symbolic of his people-sharing responsibility, danger, hardship, glory with their "brothers under the skin". Not as slaves, servile, ignorant, would I have them pictured in your mind, but as a simple, God-fearing, superstitious people whose loyalty and patriotism are shown equal to the white man's in the records of our country's wars.
These people have given us the only claim we have to folk songs - the hauntingly beautiful Negro spirituals whose minor refrinsals sing of love and joy and sorrow, of bondage and freedom
We have profited by their inventions in the field of science, shared their discoveries, benefited by their literature.
Why should not all these things unite white and black brothers in a closer unio Back in Colonial days, Phillis Wheatle's poetry was read in Europe as we as in the colonies; our affection for irresponsible Topsy has "grew" with the years; the heroic yet pathetic Uncle Tom will never lose his influence over our hearts; the simple Brer Rabbit stories delight every generation of children and the Negro's contribution to music will never be forgotten.
And what have we given the Negro return? Merely a grudging place in our affairs. To one who has played an important part in the growth and development of our great nation
owe a chance to better himself, and the offer of ahelning band?
We banished racial prejudice when we placed nine different nationalities on the shelf together. Let us place the Negro there equally, and make them Americans all, united in the common cause of Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality.
When you would judge your fellow man,
And justic sternly mete,
Stop and consider if you can
Sit on the judgment-seat;
When you’re inclined severe to be
Fixing another’s blame,
Just think if you were he, or she,
You’d have done just the same.
When you would mock another’s fate
His sorrows laugh to scorn,
Remember causes antedate
The day when one was born;
He’s not of your own lineage,
And bears another name,
But, if yours were his ancestry,
You’d have done just the same.
So, when you are inclined to be
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Text: And he made him ruler over
all the land of Egypt—Gen. 41:43 Mucun has benn said and written concerning Joseph, Jacob's favorite son, who was into Egyptian slavery, by his own brothers, and who afterward became ruler over all of Egypt, and second only to the king. But the secret of Joseph's victory was in his rulership over himself. All men cannot be rulers over others, as many aspire to be, but every man has a domain in which he may be ruler, and in which he must be either slave or ruler the dominion of his own soul. Failing here he disqualifies himself for rulership elsewhere. Succeeding, he becomes a mighty conqueror; for verily it is true that 'He that ruleth his own spirit is greater than he that taketh a city."
Many men are slaves to avarice and greed. We have many cases of defalcation, emblezlement, betrayal of sacred trusts, banditry, burglary, and other forms of dishonesty, bringing direful results; and all are traceable to avarice and greed. Others are slaves to unrighteous and inordinate ambition, Caesar was ambitions" Brutus claimed, and it was true, Alexander the Great, Caesar, Napoleon, and the German Kaiser are sad examples of such slaves. The insatiable epicure and the unbridled voluptuary are slaves to appetite and to carnal lust which end in destruction. "Eat, drink, and be merry," urges the epicure, as he gluts his appetite and drains his cup! "To hell with tre law and with restraint," is the language of the voluptuary. But surrender to thebaser passions fessures destruction, destruction of mind, body, and soul; and this in time and in eternity. Let every man rise up and assert his rulership and save him self from destruction.
SOME PROBLEMS OF THE MINISTER
By Bishop R. S. Williams
Art. 111 Must Be Called and Sent
In a general and most comprehensive sense, all men have a right to preach and teach Christianity, just as they have a right to teach letters or nufers, so far as their ability extends; but it is the right of Heaven to select fen for the special work of preaching the Gospel of Christ.
In the old dispensation God separated the tribe of Levi to bear the Ark of the Covenant of Jehovah, to stand before and administer unto Him. God said of Aron: "I know he can speak well, and he shall be my spokesman."
On turning to the prophetical office, a still nearer type of the Christian ministry, God said: "I have made the watchman unto Israel, therefore hear the words of My mouth and give them warning." Again: "I will give you passors according to mine own heart, not according to human tastes and human fancies, mark you, and they shall feed the people with knowledge and understanding. I have set watchmen upon thy wall, O Jerusalem, which shall never hold their peace."
In that celebrated pyter which closer his ministry on earth, Christ said. 'Aa Thou hast sent me, so have I sent them into the world.' Notice the specification 'sent'. I send you out as lambs among wolves, he that receiveth you receiveth Me and Him that sent me, I submit, therefore, that the true minister must be divinely called and set avart for the one special business of preaching the Gospel, and it is around such, and only, that the arms of Heaven are thron and honors immortal cluster. Man from personal motives may call, train, and drill; may set up, sterotype, and send out ministers, that is, men in the name of ministers, as is the custom of all the branches of the church and schools, some more and some less, but without the concurrence and sanction of Him whose Gospel is to be preached, all will be in vain.
oarrister, bar-ris-ter (not bar-rist-
galliwick, ba-li-wil (not ball'-er-wik),
n. Jurisdiction or territory—Hisac
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Use of Words
By Sraran H. Freessans
June is here and schools are closing.
On May 31 in the Frist Baptist
Church, nineteen pupils were promoted from the grammar school to the
high school and nine pupils in the
high school were given certificates for
two years work.
Those in the grammar school as follow-
joycey Moore Alexander, Purcell
Alexander, Charles Edward Banks, Ed-
ward Carter, Ezekiel Curry, James
Coleman, Ewen Lloyd Jones, Charles
Woodridge, Carl Edmond
Wiesebee Antonie Carter, Fanny
Elizabeth Craney, Francis Lena Evans
Lucy Elizabeth Franklin, Virginia
Evelyn Gimore, Elen Jackson Hughes,
Bessie Beatrice Lewis, Daisy Elizabeth
Lilly, Alberta Lois Merchant, Nora Marie
Thompson.
The High School graduates were: Alma Harris, Mae Caspar Cisco, Mary Huen, Johnson, Margaret Franklin, Corn Claire, Malinda Claxton, Ruby Franklin, Eloise Cauthern, John Jones, the class standing was not announced. A large and appreciative audience was out to rejoice with these boys and girls.
The students that have been away are also returning. Miss Francis Price graduated from West Virginia Inst., Wednesday and reached home Thursday.
Miss Martha Price attended the commencement to see her sister receive her degree.
Schools and classes for next year: Miss Florence Howard, West Va. Institute—senior college, John Gilmore, Howard University—sophomore college; Alfred Pleasants, Va. State College—sophomore; Miss Gretchen Eastman, graduated from High School department of Va. State.
Others returning from High School are William and Thomas Osborne and Edward Logan from Va. State. Thomas Dock from St. Paul, Miss Virginia Mac Gilliam from Hartshorn.
Others will be reported next week.
Two Lexington women received the Bachelor Degree at Union University last Wednesday. They were Mrs. Cynthia Edmondson West and Mrs. Virginia Alexander Shields. Miss Arimel Alexander spent the week in Richmond attending the commencement at Union. Mr. and Mrs.W. L. Price of Washington, D. C. spent the week end at home.
Miss Jamima reached home Thursday night from North Carolina.
Mr. Samuel Allen, traveling supt. of the Southern Aid Society spent two weeks in Lexington in the interest of the company.
Mrs. Mayme St. Jones went to Christi-ntburg a few days ago to interview the president concerning entering two of her boys in in that institution.
The agent representing the Club Aluminum Company cooking utensils gave a demonstration at Mrs. Julia Washington's on Tucker St., Friday afternoon. Fifteen ladies were invited to see the dinner cooked and served. Beets, white potatoes, carrots and onions were cooked on the top of a coal range without water.
Mr. and Mrs. Otho Miller and their two children of Wasrington, D. C., were in Lexington last week to attend the funeral of Mr. Miller's sister, Mrs. Pearl Watson.
WARM SPRINGS VA
Childrens Day was observed at Mt. Pisgah Sunday afternoon. Dispise the down pour of rain it was a success in attendance and finance as well. Each participant played their part well. The HarmonizingFour Quartette of Hot Springs rendered several selections which we wriet an asset to the program. Mr. George Stewart ofMarlinton W. Va. was in attendance as also was Mrs. Agnes Prody of Winter Grove, Florida Mrs. Fannie Howard of Deep Water, W. Va. is spendin a few dava visiting
A. H.
She attended services at Mt. Pisgah church Sunday.
Mrs. Rosa Penn and Mrs. Myrtle Dodson of Hot Springs were the Sunday dinner guests Miss Shamrock Morris at La-Morrise.
Mr. T. E. Lindsay who has been disabled on account of some foot trouble is able to be out again, although not entirely well.
Miss Allandra Morris left Friday night to spend two weeks in Marlinton, W. Va. She will also spend a short while in Irvinton, Ohio.
M.S. Morris, reporter
Our school closed Friday night, June 6. The pupils rendered a splendid program. Our teachers, Miss Ellis and Mrs. Mary E. Clayton has returned to their homes. May God bless them until they return to our next session.
Our Sunday School opened at the regular hour 9:45 and was largely attended.
Miss Madlyn Minor has returned home from Harpers Ferry where she has been attending school.
Mrs. Marriah Thomas was the Sunday evening guest of Mrs. Minnie Rucker.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dickerson and Mrs. Sadie Jordan was visiting in Goshen, Va., Sunday.
Miss Bessie Kenny spent Saturday evening with Lula and Dorothy Jordan.
Our Children's Day program will be conducted Sunday, June 15, at 3 o'clock.
Mrs. Estelle Toles was the Sunday evening guest of her father and stepmother, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Jordan.
Little Alberta Toles of Craigaville spent a couple of days with her grandfather, Mr. Samuel Jordan.
The Ladies Aid Society will meet Thursday, June 12, at the home of Mrs. E. E. Johnson.
Miss Georgie Wallace who has been teaching at Bedford City left for Pittsburgh, Pa., last week to join her father.
The Lord belssed us with rain on our gardens and the rain was worth millions of dollars to the farmers.
Mr. Paul Cabel is improving slowly.
Mrs. Lizzie Wright of Augusta Spring entertained a few of the youngsters Wednesday night, June 4. They reported a fine time.
S. A. J. War
Warning.
Warning.
Don't take the wrong package
When you ask for Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Preparations—be sure you get them. clerk hand you the wrong package. people have been deceived—just because to say Dr. FRED Palmer's. The origin Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations their merit and when you buy them, y are getting the best. Insist on Dr. FF Skin Whitener Preparations—AND SUBSTITUTE.
In you ask for Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener preparations—be sure you get them. Don't let the hand you the wrong package. Hundreds of people have been deceived—just because they failed by Dr. Fred Palmer's. The original Dr. FREDer's Skin Whitener Preparations have proven merit and when you buy them, you know you setting the best. Insist on Dr. Fred Palmer's Whitener Preparations—AND TAKE NO STITUTE.
When you ask for Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations—be sure you get them. Don't let the clerk hand you the wrong package. Hundreds of people have been deceived—just because they failed to say Dr. FRED Palmer's. The original Dr. FRED Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations have proven their merit and when you buy them, you know you are getting the best. Insist on Dr. FRED Palmer's Skin Whitener Preparations—AND TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
Ask for and get Dr. FRED Palmer's SKIN WHITENER PREPARATIONS from your druggist
A generous trial sample of the Skin Whitener, Soap and Face Powder sent for 4c in stamps. Asda, Dr. FRED Palmer's Laboratories, Dept. 21, Atlanta, Ga.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
RYD ST. BETWEEN FIRST and SECOND STS.
REV. JOSEPH T. HILL, D. D., PA STOR
SERVICES. SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 19 30.
"Obnoxious Diet" 8:30 P. M.—Anniversary Ex-
cuse of Sheperds and Daughters of Bethlehem,
the pastor delivering the address.
"Literature of the Dust."
and Baptist welcome to all.
GOORE ST. BAPTIST
CHURCH
Leigh Street, between Kinney and Bowe Streets
Gordon B. Hancock
PASTOR
SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1930
M.—Subject: "GETTING THE BREAKS"
M.—"PLAYING TO THE GRANDSTAND"
Dr. Hancock will preach at both services
Come in time for the morning prayer.
SECOND BAPTIST
BYRD ST. BETWEEN FRI
REV. JOSEPH T. H
SERVICES. SUN
11 A. M.—"Obnoxious Diet" 3:30
ercises of Sheperds and De
with the pastor delivering the
8 P. M.—"Literature of the Du
A Second Baptist welcome to a
MOORE ST.
CHUR
West Leigh Street, between
Dr. Gordon
PAST
SUNDAY, JUN
11:30 A.M.—Subject: "GETT
8:30 P.M.—"PLAYING TO
Dr. Hancock will pres
Come in time for the
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
BYRD ST. BETWEEN FIRST and SECOND STS..
REV. JOSEPH T. HILL, D. D., PA STOR
SERVICES. SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 19 30.
11 A. M.—"Obnoxious Diet" 3:30 P. M.—Anniversary Ex-
---
West Leigh Street, between Kinney and Bowe Streets
Come and Worship with Us You are Welcome
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Cleaned and Pressed
2 Ladies Dresses
(Plain)
2 Coat Suits ------------
2 Spring Coats ------------
2 Men's Suits ------------
2 Overcoats ------------
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Which Is Worth More?
IF these two houses, absolutely alike in construction, were to be sold which would bring the higher figure? Exactly—the new-looking one.
Your house is worth more to you—and to anyone else—if it is kept fresh and clean by painting regularly.
Let us brighten up your home and make it look better by twice as much as the job will cost you. We use the best of paint materials including Dutch Boy white-lead.
STAR WARS
No one knows
puts—and puts
hole—like a seahorse
R. L. WEST & SON
Painting and Decorating
General House Repairing
4 EAST HILL STREET
Richmond
Virginia
RAN 1884 L
“Each one
A. D. Price, Jr.
Funeral Director and Mortician
(SUCCESSOR TO A. D. PRICE)
First Class Caskets of Latest Designs. Complete Equipment of the Latest Style. Funeral Cars Furnished either Day or Night on Short Notice. Orders Received and Filled from All Parts of the Country. We Never Close.
PHONES MADISON 577 and MADISON162
212 EAST LEIGH STREET
CO = OPERATION
Individual effort to make the town a better place is good. It may accomplish much if properly directed. But if all the units of industry, business, religion, education and society are harnessed together and set to work for the good of the community, the total result will be a revelation of the power of co-operation.
RICHMOND is climbing up toward the ideal or sliding back into the rut according as it possesses or lacks community co-operation.
You as an individual have power to accomplish almost anything you set out to accomplish. What a man wills to do, that he can do. Just so your own, as a town, can accomplish any thing it sets out to accomplish. Ized efforts in RICHMOND, will bring about practically any condition we set out to develop.
To increase our business and general welfare is first necessary.
Eegally, anyone can spend his money where he prefers, but never less there is an obligation to spend it where you get your money's worth
Get The Economical Spirit
FOR PROMPT CAB
SERVICE CALL
BLUE TOP
MADISON 606
C. P. HAYES
SUCCESSOR to A. Hayes & Son
727 N. 2d St., Richmond, Va.
LATEST IMPROVEMENTS IN FUNERAL EQUIPMENT
Automobiles Furnished for Funerals, Social Affairs or short
and Long Distance Trips. Fine Caskets. Chapel Service Sree
Country Orders Solicited. Prompt and Satisfactory Service
Day or Night Calls Answered Promptly
Phone Madison 2778
ROBERT C. SCOTT
Funeral Director
2223_ E. MAIN STREET RICHMOND VIRGINIA
EDW. STEWART
203 S SECOND STREET
DEALER IN
FANCY GROCERIES, FRESH
MEATS. VEGETABLES,
FISH AND OYSTERS.
Richmond Va. PHONE MAD. 1687
FURNITURE
When you can get FURNITURE and RUGS from an Old Established Home, like JURGENS—that's known to sell friends a good impression. it will give us the greatest pleasure to show you our wonderful mock of homemaking, comfort giving FURNITURE and RUGS and—don't fail to ask our Salesmen about our BANKING PLAN which gives you 5, 10 or 15 months in which to pay for any purchase.
CHAS. G. JURGENS SON
ADAMS AND BROAD
ESTABLISHED 1880.
MORRIS'
Confectionery.
First and Leigh Streets
HOME OF RICHMOND DAIRY
ICE CREAM
P. O. Sub Station No. 32
W. I. JOHNSON'S SONS
FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND MORTICIANS
10 WEST LEIGH STREET PHONE MAD. 686
Day or Night Service Within 1000 Miles When Ordered.
W. I. JOHNSON'S SONS EXPERIENCED MORTICIANS
Conduct Funerals Flawlessly. Our Many Years of Experience Enables Us To Conduct All Funerals In A Most Efficient Manner. We Try To Give More However By Incorporating In Our Service A Spirit Of Sympathetic Understanding.
---
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More Pictures Next Week
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Pres. Senior Class
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Sponsor, “Spirit of Armstrong”
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MR. WILEY A. HALL
Executive Secretary, Urban League
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MR, ALLIE LAURY
Editor of Spirit of Armstrong
EDITORIAL STAFF
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Reading from left to right: John Barco, Edward Williams,
Leola Cephas, Christopher Jones, John Smith, Lemuel
Langhorne, William Lewis, Allie Laury, Junius Taylor.
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Miss La Countess Blaney
Salutatorian
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Mr. David Gilpin
Pres, Older Boys Conf.
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Miss Elsie Graves
Sponsor, “Spirit of Armstrong”
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Mr. H. S. Crawford
Director of Atheletics
Miss Ana May Rankins
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CELL EGE RES
RICH MOND
By Paul D.Morton. and Mary Booker Price.
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FROM PORTSMOUTH tsi I ae eis
|
John cee = Portsmouth visited GRAND TIME
here on Wednesday after a trip to|
pete or Matas y MOF @ SP US) ] The Ononame Whist Club closed
| the season Tuesday evening at the
home of Mr. James Banks of
REYURNS || Washington Park, with musi, re
|| freshments, dancing, and the
‘Allen Gaskins is the guest of his|| awarding of the Grand prize, a
father on West Duval Street. || silver loving cup, won by Mr. Jo-
|| seph 7. Jones,” All friends and
FROM WEST VIRGINIA members should look forward to
|| the fall opening which promises
Miss Lillie Rivers, a former stu-
dent of Virginia ee but now of ao a
West Virginia State College was the .
Quest of Miss Hallie Edmonds of] U* LYNDI 500 CLUB
North Fifth Street i
Se a astny mne| one & iy tata He 3
Been rene from West Virginis| jrellows avditorium on North Thir
satan Eee where they WeT®) Street. Cut flowers and potted. plan
b. - | were used to decorate the auditoriu
Miss Ruby Ransome acted as scor
—— | é
| keeper. Mrs. Edith Hairston receive
MOTORS | the elub prize, Mrs. Mattie Paige v
Sesser dh saan pdbmarr gre peatirie i ent h s
‘Mr. and Mrs, Samuel W. Hartley
and Mrs. Margaret Hill in company
with Miss Virginia Edmonds ‘motored
to Fredricksburg Sunday.
PLAYGROUND
(On Monday the Colored Play-
Ca will open.
"ROM WASHINGTON
Rev. and Mrs. Taylor of Wes
Leigh Street have as their guests
their two daughers, Mrs. Marvin
Hill and Miss Frances Taylor of
Washington.
VISITING HERE
Herbert Davidson of Washington
is visiting here.
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority Dance
‘Nu Chapter of the Zeta Phi Beta
Sorority gave their last dance for
this season at the Elks Home on Mon.
day evening. The ball room was deco.
rated with palms, cut flowers and
ballons, the color scheme was blue
and white. During intermission the
sorority song was sung by the mem-
bers of the sorority,
‘About 250 invitations were issued.
SENIOR CLASS HOP
‘The annual senior class hop of the
Armstrong High School was given on
‘Tuesday evening after the class night
exercises. This affair was given at
Johnson’s Auditorium. The ball room
was decorated with pink and green
colors.
Invitations were issued to members
‘of the younger set. About 400 guests
attended.
VENETIANS BOAT RIDE
One of the most unique affairs of
this season was the boat ride down
the James River which was given by
the Venetian Literary Club on Fri.
day evening. The boat sailed from the
city wharf at ten o'clock P. M.
Their invitations included about
250 guests.
Miss Mabel Scott Entertains
Miss Mabel Scott of West Coutt
Street was hostess at a bridge party
on May 27, in honor of the La
Finesse Bridge Club,
This very pretty was attended by
Mrs. Henry Peters, Mrs. Wilhelmenia
Davis, Mrs. Robert Daniel, Mrs
Alyce’ Charity, Mrs. Clarence Clay
Mrs. Horace Scott, Mrs. Wallace Var
Jackson, Miss Elsie Graves, Miss Lil:
lian Peters, Mrs. W. A. Jordan, 11.
who was awarded the club prize. Mrs
Hannibal Holmes received the gues
prize. Mrs, Henry Peters was con-
soled. Miss Cora Wyche and Mrs
Betty, Dungee.
Officers for next season were elect
ed according to the scores which they
made this season. They are Mrs. Jor.
dan, president; Miss Peters, secre-
tary; Miss Mabel Scott, treasurer.
TUESDAY EVENING
In the home of Mrs. James Poin
dexter of North Seventh Street,
the Tuesday Evening Whist Clut
gave their Inst affair of this social
season. The living rooms were deco:
rated with ferns and cut flowers.
Those attending were Mrs. Juanits
Peterson, Mrs. Mattie Paige, Mrs
Carrie Mitchell, Mrs. Madoline Moss
Mrs. Fannie Fradford, Mrs, Wilhel
mina Anderson, Mrs. Elena C, Jones,
Mrs. Frances Roane, Mrs. Ollie Lew.
is, Mrs. Mercer Ramsey, Mrs. Ine
Clarke, Mrs. Robert Coles, Mrs. Uni:
Foster, Mrs. Ione Edgar, Mrs. Annie
Coleman, Mrs. 0. H. B. Bowser, Mrs
J. C. Eason, Mrs. Pansy James, Mrs.
Olden Sharp, Mrs. Samuel Jefferson,
Mrs. Pearl V. Robinson, Mrs. Edythe
Hairston, Mrs. Lemuel Eggleston
Mrs. Cora Love, Mrs. Olivia Smith
Mrs. E. Warren Jackson, Mrs. Flor-
ence Taylor Mrs. Rosa Peterson, Mrs,
J.B. Early, Miss Estelle Ward, Miss
Susie Jenkins, Miss Fannie Baker,
Miss Deborah Patterson, Miss Gold:
bug Norrell, Miss O. Graves, Miss
Cornelia Ward, Miss Roy Howard
and Miss Marie Harris.
‘The usual monthly meeting of
and Embalmers was held on Tuesday
evening at Slaughter’s Cafe in the
private dining room. After the regu-
lar business meeting was over an
Their guests included representa-
elaborate supper ‘was served.
tives of various insurance companies.
J. 0, West of the Southern Aid Soci
ety; C. B. Gilpin, J. J. Carter, J.
Edward Harris, ' represented ' the
Richmond Beneficial Insurance Com-
pany; B. T. Bradshaw, the National
Benefit Insurance Company; J. B.
Nebletf, the Vietory Lite Insurance
Company; J. B. Deaus, the North
Carolina Mutual Insurance Company
and J. A. Jones from the Elks. Att,
J. R. Pollard was also present.
The members are: H. G. Randolph,
L. A. Randolph, A. D. Price, J. A. C.
Johnson, W. I. Johnson, C. P. Hayes,
F. H. Hayes, C. S. Cunningham, E. F.
Mimms, H.R. Minor, J, R. Meekins,
L. B. Henry, Moses Forcey, A. D.
Price, pres., H. L. Minor, sect., L. A.
Randolph, treasurer. C. P. Hayes,
chair. executive board.
GRAND TIME
The Ononame Whist Club closed
the season Tuesday evening at the
home of Mr. James Banks of
Washington Park, with music, re-
freshments, dancing, and the
awarding of the Grand prize, a
silver loving cup, won by Mr. Jo-
seph T. Jones. "All friends and
members should look forward to
the fall opening which promises
Le LRINDI 500 CLUB
On June 4, The Le Lundi 500 club
closed with a card party at The Odd
Fellows avditorium on North Third
Street. Cut flowers and potted plants
were used to decorate the auditorium
Miss Ruby Ransome acted as score
keeper. Mrs. Edith Hairston received
the club prize, Mrs. Mattie Paige was
the recipient of the guest prize. Miss
Anette Hucles won the yearly club
prize, The consolation prizes were
awarded to Mrs. Daisy Hardley and
Miss Elmer Jackson. Misses Con.
stance and Olga Smith, Geraldine
Wilson, Maxine Miles ‘and Emma
Scott acted as hostesses for the club.
‘The guests and members present
were: Mrs. Lavinia Banks, Miss
Blanche Coles, Mrs. Alice H. Harris,
Mrs. Erma Hill, Miss Ruth Deane,
Miss Goldie Norrell, Mrs. Julia Mal-
lory, Miss Grace Threat, Mrs. Rosa
Galvin, Mrs. Lucy Hayes, Mrs. Lu-
cretia Jordan Mrs. Viola Cogbill,
Miss Florence Smith, Mrs. Lelia
Jackson, Mrs. Lucille Reed, Mrs. Ed-
wina Sharp, Miss Sydney Mayo, Miss
Inez Cosbill, Miss Elizabeth Gray,
Miss Bessie Fields, Miss Rosa Meade,
Mrs. Edith Hairston, Mrs. Ora Win-
field, Mrs. Daisy Hardley, Mrs. Mat-
tie Paige, Mrs. Maria Booker, Mrs.
Erma Burley, Mrs. Regina Taylor,
Misses Beatrice, Hallie and Virginia
Edmonds, Miss’ Mary Branch, Miss
Gertrude’ Chambers, Miss Ernestine
Harris, Mrs. Erma’ Gee, Miss Sadie
Wilson, Mrs. Olivia Smith, Mrs. Rosa
Knox, Mrs. Wilhelmina Davis, Mrs.
Erma Harris, Miss Carrie Gaines,
Miss Sadie White, Miss Ethel White,
Miss Mattie Freeman Mrs. Bertha
Taylor, Mrs. Frenchiola Harris, Miss
Nellie Lipscombe, Miss Fannie Baker
Mrs. Ruth Crawford, Miss Ethel
Drummond, Miss Iva Thornton, Miss
Susie Jenkins, Miss Alto Johnson,
Misses Estelle and Cornelia Ward,
Mrs. Pauline Banks, Miss Ida Book-
er, Mrs. Mary Williams, Mrs. Jean-
ette Graves, Mrs. Emma Spencer,
Mrs. Alma Chapman, Mrs. Thelma
Scott, Miss Florence Shelton, Miss
Naomi Thornton, Miss Ruby Ran-
some and Mrs. Pearle V, Robinson
who is the president of this club.
Richmond Colored Funeral Directors
Bee cae eae eae r)
Last Thursday night the com:
mencement exercises were held at the
Effinger High School. Four senior
high schol graduates received their
diplomas. They were, Mary Frances
Awkard, Walter Kent Frances, Ed-
ward Leonard Harris, and Neta Ray.
The Rev. E. D, McCreary, Pastor
of the Mt. Zion Baptist Church of
Staunton, delivered the commence:
men taddress, while brief remark
were made by Mayor John W. Mer-
rison, city ‘councilman ‘James 0
Stickley, and Sut. of Schools W H.
Keister. After two musica numbers
Neta Ray and Leonard Harris read
essays.
Tt was announced by Principal W.
N. P, Harris that Norris Atkins, sor
the late Isaac Atkins, and a graduate
of Effinger school a few days xo,
received his degree as doctor of den-
tal surgery at Howard University,
Washington,
Mrs. Rachel Wilson entertained 2
number of her friends last Thursday
night at a social given in honor of
he graduates,
Miss Golda Francis has returnec
home from North Carolina where she
has been teaching
Th estudents returning home from
‘school were, Misses Maxine Harper
Eva Dickerson, Golda Mosby an¢
‘Carlotta Newman, Messrs. Austin
‘Harris, and Arristelle Elis,
| Mrs. Emmaline Carter is visiting
her neice, Mrs, J. R. Webb.
2R. GANDY DELIVERS
IMPRESSIVE ADDRESS
TO GRADUATES
The baccalaureate address of the
Virginia State College was deliv-
ered to the graduates on Sunday,
June 1 at 4 o'clock in the College
Chapel to a packed throng of ps
rents, friends and admirers. This
cceasion, as usual, was very im-
pressive. The procession of of-
ficers, faculty and students
marched in to the tune of War-
ren’i National Hymn. They pre-
sented a most attractive appear-
ance. After the invocation and
offertory, the Choral Society
sang the Gloria in Excelsis from
Mozart.
Next in number was Dr. Gan-
dy’s baccalaureate message. His
subject was the Pathway to and
the Value of Truth. It was based
upon the Sist and 82nd verses of
the 8th chapter of John: “Then
Jesus said to those Jews which
believed on Him, ‘If ye continue in
my word, then are ye my disciples
indeed; ‘and ye shall know the
truth and the truth shall make
you free.”
Dr. Gandy pointed out tat these
words were significant because
they were spoken by Christ, one of
the world’s great personalities and
accepted, despite the unpopularity
of the teaching of Jews and pub-
liely proclaimed by his disciples.
“The first significant fact,” Dr.
Gandy said, “to be found in this
utterance is that knowledge is the
pricary condition and the first step
toward freedom. Knowledge is the
result of the process of knowing.
It is the culmination of a striving
and reaching after understanding
sea
DR. KING RESIGNS
Atlants, Ga. June— The Board of
Gammon Theological Seminary has ac-
cepted the resignation of Prot. Willis
5. King, D. D., to become effective Oct:
ober 1 For the past twelve years Dr
King has been professor of Old Testa
ment History inthe seminary. He iv
now abroad on a Rosenwald Feliowship
studying at Oxford and in the Holy
Land, whence he will return about Jul
1 Dr. King’s plan for the future hav
not been announced.
| 5,000 REGISTERED NEGRO VO-
TERS IN RICHMOND
Richmond, Va. (CNS) Out of a to
tal of 52,723 registered voters tn thi
city, 4,934 are colored. Classified ac
cording to wards—1,708 in Lee Ward:
287 in Clay Ward; 1871 in Madiso
| ward; and 1068 in Jefferson ward.
| The Berean Valley Baptist Associ-
ation and the Western District Sun-
day School Convention held their
official board meetings in Staunton
last Thursday June Sth, The Associa-
tion board met at Ebenezer Baptist
Church and the Sunday School board
met at Mt, Zion Baptist Church. The
pastors of these respective churches,
the Rev. R. C. Pannell, the moderator
of the convention welcomed them to
Ebenezer and the Rev. E. D. Me.
Creary, welcomed the Sunday Schoo
board to Mt, Zion. After brief cere
monies the board got together and
made out the programs, for the an-
nual meetings. The Berean goes tc
Yatcey Mills this year and the Sun-
day School convention comes to Mt.
Salem this city.
From all reports the people of Mt
Salem are makng preparations now
for the entertainment of the dele
gates, The S. S. Convention met last
year at Covington, at the church pas-
tored by the Rev.'C. C. Cabell. ‘The
Association met at Low Moor, at th
church pastored by the Rev. C. C
Wilson.
Those attending the meeting her
from out of the city were Deacon Eg
bert Carter, Waynesboro, Rev. C. C.
Cabell, Covington.
Rev, William Steward, Waynes
boro; Mr. W. A. White, Covington;
Mrs. Florence Williams, New Hope;
Mrs. Rosa Johnson, Craigsville; Rev.
Robert Steward, Pastor Mt. Salem
of this city, but of Waynesboro; Mr.
Emmett J.’ Porter, Mt. Salem;’ Rev
R. C. Pannell, this city; Rev. 'E. D.
McCreary, this city and the corres
ponding sec'y, William Ellis, The
president J. H. Hardy was not in at-
tendance, he is now located at Hot
Springs, Va., owing to this the sec’y
was advised to go forward with the
preliminary work of the Sunday
School Conventon, letters will be
mailed shortly, besides the usual ap-
peal will be made ‘thru the church
paper, The Staunton Tribune, to en-
courage the work. And, to organize
the forces for a financial drive, The
Sec’y declared to the boards that ow-
inging to need of the Seminary, and
other expenses, that there was. dire
need for more funds for both the
Convention and the Association.
A visitor of the two board meet-
ings here was M. L. Brown, a forme:
President of the Sunday School Con-
vention. Several other people of the
cty called in to pay their respects to
the two boards while in session here
Both, Mt. Zion and Ebenezer Baptist
are members of the Sunday Schoo!
Convention, as well as Mt. Salem
where the convention will be enter-
tained.
George Williams
Laid To Rest
George H. Williams, 65 yrs. old, of
Saal died Thursday morning.
/Mr. Williams, had been a long but
[patient sufferer. He was buried: Sat:
urday from the Methodist Church,
the Rev. A. L. Watkins, officiating,
being assisted by the Rev. Sylvester
Brown. The services were held at
3 o'clock. The deceased professed the
faith, some time ago, and thereby
died in it.
The deceased was not a native of
Greenville, but had lived in the com-
sanity for a number of years. He
taught school once in the county and
also worked at S. M. A. He married
the Miss Gertrude Allen, of this place
‘daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Allen. He is survived by his
wife, Mrs. Gertrude Allen, and two
sons, George A., and Raymond T., ull
of Greenville. The funeral was large-
ly_attended, there were many floral
tributes. One very beautiful one com-
ing from a brother-in-law in Chicago.
The burial was in the Greenville
Cemetary. The pallbearers were:
Messrs George Harper, June Perry,
C. Smith, Moffett Porter, James
Thompson, and William Hawpe. The
honorary pallbearers were: Messrs
Howard Harper, Otis Martin, Will-
iam Banks, and Herbert Perry.
| STAUNTON, VA.
A fire eseape is being built this
week on the Elks Home of the Lilly
of the Valley Lodge No. 171, on N.
Augusta St. Much favorable com-
ment is being expressed by people
who pass the building. As it recalls
very vividly the disasterous fire and
destruction of the former Palace
Auditorium, which could have been
many times worse had it occured dur-
ing the dance that was going on that
night, which was filled with high
scool children. At the presen: time,
the Elks hall is the only place that
can be used for any public function,
the floor space is limited, All of this
only goes to show the need for a pub-
lic place of meeting of a larger de-
mension,
WE KNOCK THE SPOTS OUT
OF THINGS |
adies’ and Men's Garments Cleanes:
Dyed and Repaired in a Superior
Manner.
Send us your Garmruts and have
them Cleaned Clean.
Work ealled for and deivered.
FULTO"I CLEANING WORKS
507 Louisiana St, Richmond, Va
©. A. Brewer, Mgr.
Now Open
Foot of St. James Street
Swimming - Dancing And All
Kinds of Amusement
Don’t Fail to See
Eddie Lemons and His Big All Color-
ed Girlie Musical Show Under Canvas
Special Sattirday Night
FIREWORKS and
BAND CONCERT
MINTSPRINGS, VA.
Rev. W. P. Essex of Waynesboro
filled his pulpit at Bright Hope Bap-
tist Church Sunday morning, , ‘He
preached a stirring sermon on “The
Pe" Mi Sia Vaughn accom
panied him.
‘The Woman’s Day program at
Bright Hop eyesterday afternoon was
quite a success. The women played
their parts well. A neat sume was
realized. :
The choir of Free Will Baptist
Church will give a recital the night
of June 22nd at the above named
church.
Messrs. Baxter Johnson and Hous:
ton Perry of Middlebrook were visit
ing relatives and friends here Mon:
ay night,
Mr. and Mrs. Withrow Johnson
Mesdames Emily Johnson and James
Porter were in Greenville Wednesday
evening on business,
Misses Lizzie Mae and Nellie John.
ston, Messrs. Briseoe and John John:
ton attended the singing contest at
Pleasant View Church, Wednesday
night.
‘Mr. Carl Pryor spent the day with
his mother, Mrs. Marcella Pryor in
Stuarts Draft, who is sick.
‘The Missionary circle met with
Mrs, Lee Johnston Thursday evening
at the regular hour. After business
oof importance the hostess invited the
guests into th edining room and 2
delicious two-course repast was serv:
cd. She was assisted in serving by
her daughters, Misses Lizzie Mae anc
Nellie, Visitors were: Mesdames
mEmanuel Hunter, Baxter Johnson
Henry Thompson, Misses Allene Mad
ison, Helen Fifer, and Mildred Hun:
ter. The meeting’ adjourned to mee
with Mrs. Lee Madison, July 8rd.
Misses Allene Madison has re
turned from Booker T. Washingtor
School in Staunton.
‘Mrs. A. L. Crawford attended th
funeral of Mr. George Williams iv
Greenville Saturday evening.
Mintspring boys played ‘baseball
{with Middlebrook boys Saturday even:
jing. A large efowd witnessed the
| gante. Among them were people
| fom Raphine, Middlebrook, Saunton
Stuarts Draft, Haddons Pond, anc
Greenville. Middlebrook won.
| Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Reese of Au
gusta Springs was a visitor ther:
yesterday.
Master Robert Hunter entertainec
a few of his friends at his birthdas
dinner yesterday.
Mr. Lee Johnston and Master Ear
li eHenry were in Staunton on busi
ness this morning.
BISHOP CANNON SUGGESTS IN-
VESTIGATION OF COLORED DEMO.
CRATS' FUNDS
Washington -(CNS)— Bishop James
Cannon, Jr. of the Methodist Episco-
pal Church South, whose activities
during the recent campaign are being
probed by the Senate lobby committee,
defiantly hurled the colored question
into hearing of the committee last
‘Tuesday when he demanded to know
why the inquisitors had neglected tc
inquire how colored democrats Spent
their money.
“Why is there no investigation of
the Smith for President Colored
League expenditures, to which the Nat-
ional Democratic Committee gave
$1500,0002", he demanded. No one ven-
tured any answer.
Indian Masses
In Revolt
green tri-color of the Iadian nation-
alists.
“The tour convinces the Tribune
correspondent,” Mr. Dailey writes
further,” that the movement is be-
yond question of national scope, with
the raids on the salt plants of the
Bombay presidency merely an ex-
pression of one phase of the situation,
“Two points stand out clearly be-
sides nationalism: First, attendency
for the removal of the caste system
and untouchability, and second, the
entire movement is on seemingly dem-
ocratic lines. Although the. Moslems
comprise one-fifth of the population,
the fear to a certain extent is that
they will be oppressed by the Brah-
min majority. Yet it is found that
at greai Moslem mass meetings they
are crying for a Nationalist victory,
through most Moslems prefer do-
minion status, which some of the
Mohammedans believe Gandhi will
accept as a compromise,
“Twenty thousand Moslems met at
Delhi at the time I was there, the
meeting lasting until wo o'clock in
he morningt Resolutions were adopt-
ed urging all Moslems to join in the
struggle for freedom. At Agra last
Tuesday, both the Moslems and Hin-
dus jointly attended a mammoth
meeting at which Pundit Nehru, act-
ing President of the national con-
gress, spoke.
Another striking feature of the
‘campaign was the boarding at one
station of eighty high caste girls be-
tween 15 and 20, all finely dressed.
‘Their purpose is to carry out the eam-
paign at the temples, where untouch-
ables have been heretofore barred
from worship. Th high caste girls
rlanned to call such outcasts as wish
to worship into the temples.”
It has been reliably reported that
Communists are working with the In-
déans in the present campaign, and it
is known that they have given encour-
agement to some of the Indian cam.
paigns in South Africa, where Ghan-
di was active:some years ago, Inde.
pendence for the Indians, a fighting
people, with a proper conception
among her leaders of the responsibil-
ities of modern civilization, might at-
‘tract the cooperation of the Japanese
“who so far have remained aloof and
| apparently unsympathetic to alien
problems of color. An entente that
would unite the interests and aims of
Moscow, Tokio, and the leaders of
the Indian nationalists would prob:
ably demand a rearrangement of
world racial relations that woulé
shake the present world system to its
foundations. In the background of
these three powers are China and
Atria, ‘both asleep, with one eye
‘open, for a chance to fight themselves
out from under the heel of white dom-
ination and the red rag of Nordic su:
periority.
‘The Bishop then declared that he
refused to admit the jurisdiction of
the committee over either his political
or personal actibities and walked out
of the hearing leaving the committee
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Richmond, Va, (CNS) A total of
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1259 ar enrolled. The total num-
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TESTS CCESESCES *
VIRGINIA:
| in the Circuit Court of the City
jof Richmond, on Wednesday, the
[2st day of May, 1930.
Cotherive Giammatteo, Plainti®t.
Sgainst
| Hoscules Giammatteo, Defendant.
| she object of this suit is to ob-
tain a divoree from the bond of
matrimony by the plaintiff from the
}jefendant upon the ground of adui-
tery. An affidavit having been made
and filea that the defendant, Her-
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of the State ofVirginia, it is or-
dered that he appear herein within
fifteen days after due publication
of this order and do what is neces-
sary to protect his interest in this
suit,
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The prettiest flowers sometimes flaunt their glory from the unsightliest trash heaps. A precious diamond is often found in the clutch of foul, blue clay. A valuable pearl is frequently taken from the cold, clammy shell of an oyster. And so it is that we sometimes are pleasurably surprised to find a girl of wondrous beauty amid the flotsam and jetsam of civilization. Who has not walked through the teeming ghetto or hastened past foul shacks in a meandering alley, and then suddenly espied a some door or window a face whose beauty halted its progress?
It was so with Verna Nash. When people saw her they stopped open-mouthed in their tracks and blinked unbelievingly. What an apparition! And what an environment! Tall, graceful, and shapely with an aristocratic coquettishness that drew all and everything to her, even as a magnet attracts a steel shaving. When she glanced through long curving lashes of unusual luxuriance and startling blackness, one became spellbound. Her satiny brown skin that had never as yet known the caress of paint, powder-puff or lovesick swain, was as flawless as the finest mahogany. But her crowning glory was her long, black curly hair that clustered around her shoulders and the large, black eyes that pierced you through and through, made you pause, made you want to linger. Such was Verna.
Clean Fiction
Human Interest
Features
W. B. Ziff Co., 608 S. Dearborn St., Chicago,
Advertising Representatives
By
WALTER GLASTON
CHAPTER ONE
The prettiest flowers sometimes f
glory from the unsightliest trash heaps.
diamond is often found in the clutch or
clay. A valuable pearl is frequently take
cold, clammy shell of an oyster. And so
sometimes are pleasurably surprised to
of wondrous beauty amid the flotsam and
civilization. Who has not walked through
ghetto or hastened past foul shacks
dering alley, and then suddenly espied to
or window a face whose beauty halted
It was so with Verna Nash. When people
stopped open-nouthed in their tracks and blinked
What an apparition! And what an environment!
ful, and shapely with an aristocratic coquettish
all and everything to her, even as a magnet attrac
ing. When she glanced through long curving las
luxuriance and startling blackness, one became spat
satinny brown skin that had never as yet known
gaint, powder-puff or lovesick swain, was as flawless
mahogany. But her crowning glory was her long, b
that clustered around her shoulders and the large, b
piered you through and through, made you pause, n
to linger. Such was Verna.
An Amazing Beauty
If ever there was a perfect specimen of femininity, it was that girl. All Norrisburg knew her. All the young men of Norrisburg worshipped her. Every man in Norrisburg gazed at her admirably and covetously. And yet Verna lived in positively the worst section of town a foul trash-strewn aley called Billy Goat Lane, where death and disease lurked on every side. where virtue walked hand in hand with vice where pleasure was nourished in the lap of pain where poverty thirsted hopelessly for pelt and
The Richmond Planet
ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION—June 14. 1930
where indigence left effort only to its imagination.
Here in a tumble-down three-room snack, un-painted and beaten by the elements until it was almost black in color, lived Verna and her family. And what a family. Old man Nash, black, lazy and snaggie-toothed, a great talker. a man with a touch of romance in his soul but a man who had surrendered to privation and indigence.
(Continued on Page Two)
True Stories Achievement Stories
Pictures in the Illustrated Feature Section were posed, and do not depict principals unless so captioned.
Then out of the darkness hurtled an athletic figure, and a fist swung against Dick's jaw.
Then out of the darkness hurtled an athletic figure, and a fist swung against Dick's jaw.
BEN DAVIS, Jr.
Feature Editor
THE most entertaining moments can be spent in following clever, well constructed detective stories with plenty of suspense. They make the blood tingle as well as furnish the mind with delightful action in following the unexpected maneuvers of arch criminals. Gruesome crimes and the most ingenious tricks provide the unusual thrills of "Baffling Murders." It will be genuine pleasure to read the clean-cut, non-chalant, true murder mysteries related by Hubert Holcomb, master detective.
This is an exclusive Illustrated Feature Section feature provided for your entertainment. Look forward each week to "Baffling Murders."
THE CARLISLE MURDER CASE
By BROWNING STREAT
PART ONE
When members of my family suggested that we spend our annual vacation at a place called Eagle Rest, in the Virginia mountains, last summer, I put in a protest. The very name of Eagle Rest struck me as being a trifle dull. As a rule I like my vacations to be rather spicy—theaters, dancing, the popular shore resorts, and all that sort of thing. Consequently I could not imagine being able to enjoy these things in a little summer camp situated approximately twenty-five miles south of the Norfolk and Western railroad. So, as I say, I protested—although in vain!
In other words, the end of June found us high up in the mountains, with the Shenandoah Valley literally spread at our feet like a vast green garret. my cigar. In a few minutes we were embarked on a gruesome tale of a Chicagoan who came upon death violently.
Again, at the end of two weeks, my family prepared to return to the city—a course which I also objected to! In short, I protested going into the mountains, then, after two weeks.
We had formed a sort of crime-analyst Trio.
of it, refused to leave—all of which would indicate that my general makeup is akin somewhat to that of the stubborn ass.
modest little woman, about forty-nine years old, quietly but well dressed, the wife of one of the wealthie Negroes in and about South Parkw
Yet, seriously, I had a very good reason for wishing to remain at the mountain camp a little longer, for I had become acquainted with two very interesting men during the day; and tho g. I probably could have managed to pull myself away from Ralph Miles. I found myself drawn more and more to the personality of the other man; to such an extent, in fact, that I flatly refused to leave Eagle Rest under at least another week.
The point is, that one does not become acquainted with Hubert Holcomb, former crack member of the Chicago Police Department, and easily forget the man; certainly not after listening to his version of the Carlisle Murder Case, the Mitchel Murder Case, the Simmons Murder Case, the Collins Murder Case, and the Griffin Murder Case—the first of which I shall reconstruct here for your entertainment, as accurately and as briefly as possible, just as Holcomb related them to us.
The three of us, Holcomb, Miles and I, soon formed a sort of crime-analysts association, and when other vacationists congregated on the south veranda, or went trekking among the pines, or any of a hundred things, we would betake ourselves to a certain darkened corner, on the north veranda—a broad corner, away from the crowds, and equipped with three rather comfortable chairs—and analyze.
We must have presented the appearance of three Negro politicians on those nights—Holcomb, powerfully built, with a strong dark-skinned face: Ralph, tall cocoa-brown, a handsome devil, and I. I recall that we were talking about detective story writers that first night, Miles putting in the complaint that they were becoming too standardized in style. And Holcomb. . .
"Those chaps." Holcomb remarked, settling deeper into his chair, "are all right; but for myself, give me the raw stuff . . . cases that are on file in every police department in the country. Yes sir, gentlemen, truth is much more fascinatin' than fiction. For instance, you take the Carlisle murder case."
Holcomb fumbled for his pipe. Miles fired a cigarette. I reached for WEYERS'S Sur-Cay Keeps Hair Combed Helps It Grow SUR- LAY, is a greaseless liquid hair dressing which millions use because a few drops will control stubborn hair and keep it combed all day—also helps hair grow. SUR- LAY gives appearance which helps bring success. Application At All Barber Shops
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my cigar. In a few minutes we were embarked on a gruesome tale of a Chicagoan who came upon death violently.
On the morning of January 18, 1918—so the yarn went—at around ten o'clock, a Mrs. Jasper Carlisle called at headquarters and sought out the Missing Persons Bureau. She was a
```markdown
```
modest little woman, about forty-nine years old, quietly but well dressed—the wife of one of the wealthiest Negroes in and about South Parkway at the time.
Once alone with the officer on duty, Mrs. Carlisle lost much of her reserve, and, in tears, told a very strange story.
Jasper W. Carlisle, her husband,
Continued on Page Five
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ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION—June 14. 1930
VERNA, The Irresistible
(Continued from page one)
Old lady Nash, a fat, foul-mouthed washerwoman who seemed perpetually to be standing over a tub of wet clothes or presiding over the rusty cookstove in the kitchen, a greasy-faced woman who never stopped laundering other people's clothes long enough to clean her own, a massive, dynamic woman with baleful gray eyes concealed in the fat of her yellow cheeks who, when she was not sighing with bitter self-pity over her lot, was denouncing her shiftless and neer-do-well brood with waterfront oaths. Like an avenging evil genie, she would swoop through the alley, armed with a clothes' stick and an evil-smelling clay pipe, seeking one of her numerous brats or like a grotesque character out of a Shakespearean play she would soliloquize in the gloom of her dingy kitchen.
In all there were six Nash children and Verna was the oldest. As in most Southern towns, there were no truant officers rounding up the colored children, so none of the Nash offspring had troubled themselves about school. They scampered through the trash heaps, weeds and bypaths of the grotesque Billy Goat Lane, getting into all sorts of devilment, fighting, thieving and making themselves generally obnoxious. Mr. Nash could not and would not do anything with them.
Mrs. Nash, with all of her aimless bluster, was equally helpless. The neighbors dared not say anything to them for fear of their mother's terrible tongue. So it was generally agreed in the environs of Billy Goat Lane that the Nash family was absolutely impossible and lost without redamption. Their lowest neighbors avoided them as a plague. By all standards known to society, the house of Nash was hopeless.
Conscious of Her Charms
Nor was Verna much different at first. With the rest she ran and romped, her rags flapping in the breeze, wallowing in the mire with the other children, contentedly eating the greasy fat pork and corn bread that was the family's almost daily fare, and imagining that heaven consisted of an eternity of such existence. But that was only until she was thirteen. Then a combination of circumstances radically changed her. First, her mother, weary of taking care of her, put her out to service with a rich, white family on the other side of town. Secondly, she began to change from a long-legged gangling boyish creature to the gentler, fuller curves of budding womanhood. Thirdly, everybody raved about her. Fourthly, she found a big section of mirror on the dump nearby, one
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ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECIIUN—ZJune 14. 1930
‘ : a See : ee ee oe Re
i Se Oe a ae eer
ie *: US aecctaks.. ee Ee LON ORC ae see
a ee a —-
St we EO sy ae te
Sere — ~- a fe *
a ea — mii ger
. ¥ . a LOE Pe,
Sm. ‘ % ed
Ae Pel ey: oy Boe Se ee
ok 6 : Sf. free Me a sane os
a co oe ‘ were E pee Pe BOY eae sg oa
S pie Sf wy ee foe Si ee
ee fe A a ae RS ee aa
Re i — es
eee See kl th ee oe ie ee
ae a ke a BE Be ae eae
ES OCIS eens cas ence 8 MC Ra eg
ee ee ee, ee
eo oe eee ee ee eee ee
SES Se ee ee ee ee
BERR eee Uf ee ten k Ge ae eee
Se eo fe ee ee 2 ee
Beg Sk See he Et ee, Se oe BES ce meagre «°c ata aa irs en
1 RRS eee OR Pe Cats Rie ee ie. sete i ee OF CO Ree ae Be
ee 5 ‘ Bs Poe Ge oie Ea
oe co es ae Sy
Lee wes ee
Fe oe RS & x oS Se sEBikc ae
So ees Re : See See Fee OMe rE ee Se Be
oar Pate bi iar eeu eae oe Seatac: es Ce eager
ee RS ae % et Ce ee ee
ae mes ‘ s oe Rene ee Dass lame 5 ieee eae
bee Sc ad : oct i My ogee, 3
sie s ; : eo a es ee
a. — ee ee
ak, Seer fees eo Se eee x aga ae or
sor tae Soc ae a oe ee
‘THIS BEAR was captured when a cub near the Suwanee River in Florida, In
1927. Bears are often found in ther swamps along the banks of the Dreamy
River,
THE SUWANEE COUNTRY QUARTETTE mentioned in the story accompanying this picture. 1927. Bears are often found in the swamps along the banks of the Dreamy
River.
one . . j ° . .
The Story of William Jones, the Singing Merchant, is as Romantically Interesting as
> ey 9 °
Florida’s Dreamy River
VER since “Way Down Upon de Swanee Ribber” was ealaee aon (euacasttie Galt: s eee a a
composed by Stephen Collis Foster many years ago, it deer graze and wild turkeys scratch ee ~ e = ee eo 2S ae
has been the best medium of expressing the longing of ‘°F tidbits on its banks. In 1927, | EF Sie a Goa Ge
& . Es . twenty-nine bears were killed along BOON Sy PP Sis 0 a eect ge ae #2.
a homesick heart. No group of singers can render it more the Suwanee in Florida, near the |%i4* "+" OS A ay oo EM
artistically or more expresively Chan the enlored singers of ee oe
ive Oa asper, and Lake City, Florida, all of which are in ber operations — in keefeenokee |) 1 xe Bais ee oe ty co”
the aaa Rivor territory. | : Fvanip drove the animals mero ate 2 ae Bee eer e nw ae i ot ee a
BR A RE, OE ING Oa PO 2 a PII SS ORE coe eee:
ae ee ge AO
Z ee ee puypbnnes *
BEN SS A a oo Sa reece ee ar
when TE we aS es LR 7 oc ar
eee TE, Eger ——.
Spe a EF Salk he teeta eg ree
. be aye Ra Ee. eet es a
LER ee 5 a fo Ao é
pe ee a, eer i
And of the Negro songsters of the
Suwanee territory, none can sing it
with more genuine expression than
William Jones, a Negro merchant of
the Suwanee river country, and his
two daughters; for William was born
and reared on the languorous banks
of the Suwanee, and once knew in its
most acute form the, nostalgia, or
homesickness, for the home of his
boyhood.
Before we tell William Jones's
story, it is well to learn a bit about
this fascinating part of the South.
Everyone knows the song and every-
one has unconsciously formed pic-
tures in his or her mind of the ro-
mantic stream. It has been pictured
as a place where life is easy-going,
the sun warm, the air soft and balmy;
wild flowers and fruits on its banks,
gorgeous birds in the wayside trees
and the dark water moving lazily
towards the sunny Gulf of Mexico.
Mees pictured thus. it is a true pic-
ure.
In the song, the river is spelled
“Swanee” because the composer
wanted a word of two syllables; while
on the maps it is spelled “Suwanee,”
and in Suwannee County, Florida,
which is bounded on ail sides except
the east, by the tortuous convolu-
tions of the stream. it is spelled with
two “ns.” “Suwanee” is an Indian
word meaning, winding river.
The Suwanee rises in the Okeefee-
nokee Swamp, a large swamp in the
southeast part of Georgia. and ad-
joining Florida. On the old maps,
the name “Suwanahoochie” is given
that part of the river between the
Florida tine and Okeefeenokee swamp.
It winds its crooked way in a south-
westerly direction through Florida to
the Gulf of Mexico, near Cedar Keys,
the great fishing ground of the Gulf.
Much of the country through
which the Suwanee flows is still
primitive and unsettled, while some
of it was in cultivation a hundred
NEAR THE MOUTH of the Suwanee, alligators may be scen. This one did
not seem at all pleased at having his picture snapped.
aac sone are well pot ene Indian chief, flows into the river. Ac-
prings, a nat fountain cording to local tradition, it was
ph herent heal ee OWE an across the river from White Springs:
Florida, is reputed to be the fountain that Osceola was sitting when his
of eternal youth that Ponce De Leon little child was mysteriously shot
sought, Near White Springs a stream in its back, while playing. Accord-
called the Salmarie after the colored ae en
wife of Osceola, the great Seminole Continued on Page Four
|: BR Ae a sigue
< aes — & Nes . k ee Mes a ee
Re gs ee Be
ee a ee i te ee
oe Pert ae te A bie, aes
ee Ee a ae Te. as eT Ae eee ee ea
Ie Ne ke in Flea ir sear ee)
. PE ee gt a a a ee
oe oy Smee <ccinsspmsimagel nO GR te COI | Alaa Gees ae
Sy Be + ig aE pba ae eee
OE I Mg 4 8 rene ~ "TE Se ae
ees Rea S&F oe ign: a eiiemiaese t tae << Maem as ¢ Be
a a oy ee Go i ee ee
ie Be ee 28 mb * Ve Be Wier So Me) eee ag
ee a4 Mime fe a ee ee
“I Sigs Ome me Ne os BI Nl Pe
Sees & a By ghee a ee
ER ort aM: Se Cig ae é REND S Beat coe.
NE eee Bas Re eR ag Rs
tag: SR ee Geos 1 en
ae eater tere Ne eet 2 ES oh ae Wy ete CE en
OR ance See 4 c eg RE Ro oe
ee eae ee ORR AER ances ats
A PICTURE of the Rath House at White Springs, The Suwanee River was high when this picture was mai
Oe
i a
| Uae m |
\sx
WP \y
Ce 4
iis
| aw a
pp
MR. JONES, the singing merchant of
the Suwanee Country, and his two
daughters. The daughters are well
educated and are splendid musicians.
years ago. Down towards the Gulf,
deer graze and wild turkeys scratch
for tidbits on its banks, In 1927,
twenty-nine bears were killed along
the Suwanee in Florida, near the
Georgia line—anc this is one of the
oldest settlements in the state. Tim-
ber operations in Okeefeenokee
Skemp drove the animals across the
ine.
The water of the stream is dark
and dreamy-looking; streamers and
wreaths of Spanish moss from the
overhanging trees almost touch the
water; wild huckleberries, blueberries,
dewherries, pecans, and cabbage pal-
mettos grow on its banks; here and
there is a cozy and peaceful little
farm with happy little children play-
ing on its banks. The river possesses
all of the lure and homelike quali-
ties the song implies.
Even if the river had not been
made famous by the song, its historic
3
Re i LE PS ae
om Li ee ye
Bae amen nl ie ge
ge is, Pere ae ae e
pe SC ee
eC
: oS ee si tiga Fo ae
be OL ee
fe
es is Ee as ee
ee 3 G3 ts He be ee
ee, Pt
ee as | ee.
ae ee
& ee a org’ eee ae st ee oe
Brine mm eer 3. se a
ee ts a ris emer eis |, I ee iia
= Os oe ae ee oe
aS ek ee
ic ae eee eee
4 So ea eg
| eC ;
| Ge e
OR ig Ee Fh) a
jee i es Benches
ee oe j Boe ee Be es .
ee Be tae
e ee a
f ee dd #
Indian chief, flows into the river. Ac-
cording to local tradition, it was
across the river from White Springs:
that Osceola was sitting when his
little child was mysteriously shot
in its back, while playing. Accord-
Continued on Page Four
On the Banks of the Languorous Suwanee
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(Continued from Page Three)
ing to Suwanee River tradition, Os-
ceola vas born near the river in
North Florida.
This was the background, then. of
the homefor which William Jones,
when a yeung man, suffered a tre-
mendous attack of homesickness. He
was a long ways from it at the time.
It was at least ten times worse than
seasickness. he admits. Mr. Jones is
now @ prosperous merchant in the
Suwanee country and is a well-
educated man. Let him tell the
story in his own words.
“I was born.” said Mr. Jones, “on
the banks of the Suwanee River
about ten years after the close of the
Civil War. My folks owned a good
little farm near the river. We raised
cotton, the joint sugar cane that
grows in the South, tobacco, corn and
peanuts and hogs. There was plenty
of fish and game. We got along well
and lived a happy. carefree life.
“By and by, after I became a young
man like, I became fed up, you might
say. on the somnolent life and the
monotonous existence on the little
farm. Like lots of young lads, I
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ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION—June 14. 1930
pwanted to see some of the world. I
‘rambled about quite a spell.
| “I got a job, after a while, with an
extra-gang on a railroad. The work
finally carried us to New Orleans.
| “After one of our pay-days, some
other young fellows and myself cele-
brated a little. I never was any hand
to funnel liquor down and I've not
touched a drop for a long time now,
but I did drink some then. when
out with other boys. Some of the
boys said it was against the law to
crink water in New Orleans at that
time. There was no danger of the
place drying up and going to staves.
No, sit. :
“After a while I got separated from
the others and wandered alone down
to the river front. The river and every-
‘thing else looked big and rosy to me,
for then I had big ideas.
“A big ship was anchored at the
wharf and it was loading on hun-
dreds of mules—big husky-looking
animals. I was well-acquainted with
mules and I stood and watched them
‘put them on the ship.
| “By and by I said to one of the
roustabouts leading mules onto the
‘ship: ‘Where are you going with all
them mules?’
| ““Taking them to Africa to the
Boer war,’ the roustabout said. __
“While I was standing there, a big,
tough-looking white man walked up.
“‘Boy,’ he said, ‘want a good job?
Give you_a job tendin’ mules to Cape
Town. Good wages, good grub, good
time. see the country. worth a mil-
lion dollars to you.’
“Finally I let him talk me into go-
ing on the ship. When that New
Orleans ‘rotgut’ died down I wished
I was back on dry land again, yet
I didn’t care so very much—at first.
When we got well out to sea—excuse
Pe language—it was hell and hali-
‘ax.
“A tropical storm struck the ship,
the mules bawled, it was hot as
blazes,.the ship smelled ten times
worse than the biggest stockyards in
the United States, and in addition,
the mates were meaner than Old
‘Scratch himself. Tough is no name
for the whole trip.
| “I was up against it when the ship
reached port and the mules were un-
loaded. No money would have hired
‘me to go back to New Orleans on
that ship.
| “So I followed the mules out to
where the British army was camped,
‘and got a job as mule skinner, haul-
ing ammunition and supplies. I did
‘not enlist as a regular—wished I had
later on, as I might have received a
pension eventually—but just worked
yby the day. I don’t know how they
managed it, but somebody paid me
off quite often.
“One day I was following the army,
which was moving to some other
camp, with a load of provisions, when
a fight started out in front. A bat-
talion, brigade or some kind of body
of Boers had made a surprise attack
on the cavalry column I was fol-
lowing.
“I stopped when the rifles and field
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Continued on Page Six
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Baffling Murders
(Continued from Page Two) well-known in both Chicago and Detroit business circles, had left home the preceding evening in a car driven by the Carlisle chauffeur. He had apparently disappeared. When he did not return as usual, she had phoned in turn, his office, his club, then several of his friends. Beyond the club management's assertion that Carlisle had left there about ten o'clock, no one seemed to have seen him.
Contact with Detroit by wire had netted her the same result.
"My better judgment urged me to inform the police immediately," Mrs. Carlisle said, "but he always resents my intrusion into his affairs; yet when he did not return this morning, I was convinced that something was wrong."
Mrs. Carlisle buried her face in her handkerchief again. The officer on duty regarded her appraisingly.
"And the chaufeur?" he questioned, "did he return?"
"Oh yes," she said hastily. "Bright has the car outside now." "Officer Mead!" "Yes, sir!"
"Yes, sir."
"This lady's chauffeur—bring him in—a man named Bright."
"Yes, sir."
In due time, the chauffeur was corted into the room—a tall young man, with a clean-cut, honest face. Hi. story added a bit of mystery to the case. He had driven Mr. Carlisle downtown and put him on the sidewalk in front of the old Transportation Building, where his employer's only unusual action was to say, "I'll drive back with friends. Bright," instead of the usual. "You needn't wait, Bright." For his employer's failure to return, he could offer no explanation whatsoever.
After putting this into the records along with a minute description of the missing man, Mrs. Carlisle and her chauffeur were dismissed with a promise of quick action.
Because he was known to have an uncanny way of getting quick results, Detective Hubert Holcomb was handed this case, though he arrived at headquarters nearly two hours after Mrs. Carlisle's departure.
Chief of detectives Mason glanced at the report sheet on his desk and halted Holcomb as he was leaving the room. "Telephone reports from both city and Detroit hospitals say 'not here,'" he remarked. "Sounds like a funny case. Holcomb. Go to it!" "Yes, sir." As a first step, Holcomb drove the Department car across town toward the stately building that housed the Carlisle apartment. He liked to get at the bottom of things. He had learned not to accept surface indications at face value.
In other words, he would not have been greatly surprised if Mrs. Carlisle herself turned out to be a heartless murderer; he would not have been surprised to find Mr. Carlisle's body dismembered and stuffed into a laundry basket. He would not have been surprised at anything — he thought!
Yet, as Holcomb passed through the revolving door and approached the elevator operator, none of this
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ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION—June 14. 1930
VERNA, THE IRRESISTIBLE
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(Continued from Page Two) dress or deport themselves in keeping with their peculiar charms, never really examining themselves objectively and carefully, never attempting to improve what charms they possess, but vainly crying in anguish because no gay Lothario comes wooing. Whatever men said about Verna's beauty and about the magnetism of her personality and about the hypnotic compulsion of her wide, black eyes, she drank it in and locked it safely in the vaults of her memory, not to gather the dust of age and inaction, but to be used to her advantage, again and again.
Her job as maid of all work for the Richland family helped in the development and education of Verna. The Richlands were the wealthiest people in Norrisburg and, indeed, in the whole county. Their stately 14-room house stood on a landscaped was reflected in his race. He was the congenial chap now, over-friendly at once, talkative—albeit shrewd beneath it all.
"By the way," he said carelessly, as the lift moved upwards, "have you seen Mrs. Carlisle lately?"
"No sir—that is," the operator added, "not since she went up about two hours ago."
"And Mr. Carlisle—have you seen him?"
The young man expertly brought the car to a stop at the fourth floor. "Haven't seen him for a week," he added, "but then, he uses the stairs most of the time."
Holcomb chuckled lightly. "The lady prefers the lift, and the gentleman prefers the stairs, eh?" "Nine out of every ten times," the operator returned, and fell swiftly out of sight.
Hubert Holcomb rang the doorbell of apartment sixteen, and studied the pattern in the carpet at his feet. He would have a little talk with Mrs. Carlisle. Already he was wondering what sort of a person she was—a good actor? — crafty? — or really harmless?
Yet, even as these possibilities passed through Holcomb's mind, he became conscious of an awful silence; a different kind of a silence. No footfalls came from within; nor twist of the knob—just silence! It was suddenly as if some great tragedy lay behind that door; something that was already tugging at Holcomb's sense of adventure.
He produced his pipe and stood there. By all reasonable deductions, Mrs. Carlisle should have been in her apartment; she should have, unless she used the stairs lately, responded to her doorbell. And if she had used the stairs within the last two hours—why?
Holcomb turned and descended the four flights of stairs to the recep-
Continued on Page Six
eminence across town from the noxious Billy Goat Lane. From the upper windows of their house, Verna could pause in her dusting and scrubbing to straighten up and look down and across town at the mean little settlement she called home.
The comparison of the way she and her family lived and the way the Richlands lived made her thoughtful. Why should there be such a difference? None of her employers seemed to raise their hands to do a bit of work of ...y kind, and yet they had everything they desired. She slept between blankets while they slumbered: mid perfumed linen. Her bedchamber, shared with her five brothers and sisters, was a junk shop of rags and trash of all kinds, while their boudoirs were emaculate, glistening, airy and tastefully decorated.
"Miss Richland," she asked the oldest daughter one day. "do you think I'll ever be able to have pretty things like you all got here?" The young lady smiled indulgently and patted her maid on the shoulder. "Why, of course you can. Verna," she replied, "if you want to have the... You're so beautiful, Verna, that I should say you could have anything."
"What do I have to do, Miss Richland?"
"Develop yourself, child. Learn to dress, to make the very best of what you possess; and keep a cool head. Don't give in to the first man that comes along. Remember, Verna, you've got a long life ahead. You can always get a man, my child, but it is hard to get the right kind. Don't be satisfied with anything less than the best, and men will see that you get the best. Keep them all at arm's length, examine them all closely and then choose the one with the most money. Because you can't have fine clothes and pretty surroundings unless you have money and plenty of it."
Verna thought about that a whole lot. It thrilled her to picture herself the mistress of a palatial home with servants at her beck and call and a closet full of shimmery, sparkling gowns and dainty little painted shoes.
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At such times her mind would return with loathing to the mean little cottage in Billy Goat Lane. How could she ever get to be anything there? Had anyone in Billy Goat Lane ever amounted to anything? Had anyone down there ever acquired anything except a jail sentence? Her thought-
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BAFFLING MURDERS
(Continued from Page Five)
tion hall, then, being careful not to attract the attention of the operator, went out of the street door and onto the sidewalk. It WAS queer!
He sauntered along the avenue toward the next corner, rounded it, then quickened his pace. Half way toward the next corner was an alley. He gained it and disappeared. Presently he was at the rear of the building he had just left, where he took the fire escape to the fourth floor and entered the enclosed porch of apartment sixteen.
He knocked loudly upon the door; he tried the knob—silence; silence tempered with the rawness of a cold January afternoon.
Up to now, Holcomb's actions had been almost leisurely, but now he suddenly became as active as a cat, in spite of the huge overcoat that tended to hamper him. The one window now became a means to an end. His powerful arms tackled it and, with increased pressure, it slid up an inch two three.
Finding himself in a small pantry, Holcomb stole cautiously into the kitchen, the dining room. Silence, deadly silence prevailed in these well-furnished rooms. Passing through a door into a long hall, he came upon three open doors grouped together in an alcove—two bed chambers, with a bath between them, the bedrooms, with the overturned chairs, the opened dresser drawers, the things strewn over the floors, giving the appearance of a recent typhoon!
Holcomb clutched the automatic in his coat pocket, some instinct telling him that he was not alone. . . At this point in Hubert Holcomb's narration of the Carlisle Murder case we, Miles and I, were, as you probably are, thoroughly in the spirit of the thing. Certainly Holcomb himself must have guessed this, because he paused, chuckled in his own queer way, then leisurely fired his pipe again.
"I'm telling you, gentlemen," he reflected, "it was one raw case!" "But my Lord, man!" came through the semi-darkness from Miles, "don't stop there! What in the name of Hanna did you find? Did Mr. Carlisle get a bullet—or a knife?—or did you eventually find his body stuffed into a laundry basket?"
Holcomb's pipe began to draw nicely again. "Neither," he drawled. "Briefly, it all simmered down to this: Continuing along the hall toward the front door. I entered the living room—which was also in an awful mess—and came upon one of the most gruesome sights in my career. The body was lying on the floor in a pool of blood, an ugly gash open at the temple, and a heavy metal book end—obviously the instrument of death—on the floor near by, bloody—"
"Knocked out, eh?" Miles cut in. "Who got him?"
Holcomb suddenly leaned far forward. "It was not Mr. Carlisle," he countered slowly. "It was the body of his wife—the woman who only a few hours before had been a visitor at headquarters!"
Miles suddenly leaned forward; I gasped: Holcomb just sat there. It might have been his sense of the dramatic; or perhaps he was taking those few moments to recall more clearly the events which followed that surprising discovery—anyway, it was several minutes before Hubert Holcomb continued to unravel the mystery of The Carlisle Murder Case.
END OF PART ONE
(To be continued next week)
ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION—June 14. 1930
On The Banks of The Languorous Suwanee
Continued From Page Four leg was broken by the fall. Reinforcements came up from the rear just then and drove the Boers back. "My leg was rather severely fractured, and it was three or four months before I could get around much. Then the British assigned me to a ship bound for London with a multitude of wounded and crippled soldiers. They gave me a paper to take to some department in London, where, they said, I would be provided transportation to New York.
"The next night after the ship reached the big city. I came to a theatre where a sign advertised American Negro minstrels on the program. Immediately I entered. Sure enough—boys from Dixie! I could see that they were the genuine article.
"Finally they commenced singing 'Down on the Swanee Ribber.' When they came to the line which says 'Far from the old folks at home,' I couldn't stand it any longer.
"Let me out of here.' I velled, and made for the door. I found my way to the dock and a ship was getting ready to leave for New York. I slipped
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on board. I didn't wait to get the transportation promised.
"When they found me, I got off easy—it was a British ship and I showed them that I had been with the army in Africa. I helped the cook on the way across.
"At New York. I boarded a steamer for Jacksonville and worked my way to that place, which was near home. I came back to the Suwanee country and have been here ever since."
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VERNA, The Irresistible
VERNA, The Irresistible
(Continued from Page Five)
or what he thought was the answer.
For five years he had been gazing
longingly at Verna, thinking of her,
wanting her. Three years her senior,
he and his family had moved into Billy Goat Lane when she was ten and he had immediately fallen under the spell of her beauty. He had begged pennies, sold bottles and done odd jobs just to buy her little presents which she accepted in an indifferent manner. He had taken her often to the dingy gallery of the local moving picture house, to parties and Continued on Page Seven
ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION—June 14. 1930
ROBERTA ALI, a very clever and important figure in stage dancing. She is well
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JESSIE CRAWFORD, an international stage dancer, who won fame in London, Berlin, Paris, Rio De Janeiro, New York and other world capitals. Note the intriguing personality!
DOROTHY BOYD, one of Harlem's attractive and younger damsels, who recently "fell" for the stage after her graduation from Wadliegh High School in New York.
8