Washington Tribune
Friday, December 3, 1926
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
MRS. ANNA BROOKS, SUICIDE; FUNERAL FROM LINCOLN TEMPLE
SHOT SELF THRU HEART, HUSBAND DOWNSTAIRS
DR. FRANCIS GIVEN $1,000
MRS. AN
SHOT SELF THRU HEART, HUSBAND DOWNSTAIRS
Mrs. Anna C. Brooks, age 27, talented wife of Rev. R. W. Brooks, pastor of Lincoln Temple Congregational Church, committed suicide in her home, 801 Euclid Street, Northwest, Tuesday, November 30, about 7 p. m. She shot herself through the heart with a 32 caliber revolver. According to the story given the police department, Mrs. Brooks left her husband down stairs, went to his study and called Mrs. Anna Smith of 1418 8th St. over the phone and told her that she was going to shoot herself. Realizing the danger of a moment's loss, Mrs. Smith frantically
MRS. ANNA C. BROOKS appealed to Mrs. Brooks not to do such a rash thing, assuring her that she would come right over to her home to comfort her. However, without anging the receiver up, Mrs. Brooks fired the fatal shot.
Hearing the pistol's fire echo through the house, Rev. Brooks rushed next door to the home of J. T. Bundy, and returning together they went up stairs only to find his wife in a pool of blood with the revolver near. Dr. Simeon I. Carson was immediately summoned and he pronounced her dead. The police department was notified and Coroner J. Ramsey Nevitt, after an investigation, issued a certificate of death by suicide.
Mrs. Brooks left no note or word that would indicate the cause of her act. While it was known (Granted)
"DIKE" MOSES RELEASED ON $2,000 BOND
Following an inquest last Friday in which he was ordered held for the death of James ("Big Sharkey") Washington, 26, 1212 Eighth Street, Northwest, ("Dike") Moses Crawford, 39, 51 Myrtle Street, Northeast, was released in bonds of $2,000 for his appearance before the grand jury.
Shortly after midnight, November 25, "Big Sharkey" was shot in the head by "Dike" Moses. "Big Sharkey" was removed to Freedmen's Hospital where he was pronounced dead upon arrival by Dr. H. D. Harper.
The shooting occurred in an apartment on the second floor of 516 Florida Avenue, Northwest, where several men were playing dice. When the police arrived at the scene, they found "Big Sharkey" lying with his face downward and a 38 caliber Smith and Wesson revolver clutched in his left hand. "Dike" Moses told the officers that he had shot "Big Sharkey" in self defense.
According to the story told by the eye-witnesses, "Big Sharkey" called a four-dollar bet in a dice game, lost and refused to pay it. "Dike" Moses who was running the game, nailed the bet and ordered "Big Sharkey" out of the apartment.
"Big Sharkey" got as far out as the hallway, charmed his mind, drew his gun and started to return. ("Continued on page 2.)
(Continued on page 2)
FIRST
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Vol. VI. No. 28
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DE
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INA BROOK
DR. F
GERTIE W
ILLEGALITY OF RE
REINSTATE MRS.
DENIED BY WILI
GERTIE WELLS' BIGAMY GASE DISMISSED
ILLEGALITY OF REFUSAL TO REINSTATE MRS. HOWARD DENIED BY WILKINSON
Mrs. Edith B. Howard, who is eligible for reinstatement, is not being illegally kept out of a position to which she is entitled, First Assistant Superintendent Garnet C. Wilkinson, through Superintendent Frank W. Ballou, informed the Board of Education at its meeting last Wednesday afternoon in the Franklin school.
The report of Assistant Superintendent Wilkinson was made to the board as the result of a letter from Attorney Granday Mackey transmitting a statement of Mrs. Howard, in which she charges that several vacancies, to which she was entitled to appointment, have been filled since she became eligible for reinstatement. She is qualified to teach English in the senior high schools:
Mrs. Howard was granted a leave of absence under the maternity rule. She became eligible for reinstatement June 14, last since that date Mrs. Howard claims, two vacancies have occurred, one by the retirement of Miss Angelina Grimke on June 30.
(Continued on page 2)
GERTIE WELLS IS NOT PROSECUTED IN BIGAMY CASE
GERTIE WELLS IS NOT PROSECUTED IN BIGAMY CASE
BALTIMORE, Md., Dec. 2—The bigamy charge against Gertie Wells, orchestra leader of Washington, D.C., has been dismissed.
ington, B.C., has been dismissed.
Upon receipt of a letter from her husband, from whom she had not been divorced at the time of her second marriage, States Attorney Edget, who was handling the prosecution, went into court and not proclaimed the case. He told Judge Eugene O'Dunne that he had learned that the indictment of Miss Wells on the bigamy charge had not been brought in good faith, but that the prosecution had been instituted at the instance of her brothers to prevent her appointment as administrator in a will case in the District of Columbia.
Elmer Snowden wrote the States Attorney's office declaring that the brothers had influenced him to make the charge, although he had no interest in her marriage.
Gertie Wells is alleged to have married James S. Perry in this city without obtaining a divorce from Snowden. Her second marriage is said to have taken place October 26, 1925. Shortly afterwards, she was awarded a final decree in the courts of Arlington County, Va.
In a statement, Mr. Edget declared that he was convinced that the charge was a frame-up against Miss Wells and that he refused to be a party to any such trickery. For this reason he asked Judge O'Dunne to not prosecue the case.
a dice
may it.
giving the
ordered
apart-
ear out
mind,
return.
Miss Wells married Snowden
while he was a banjo player in an
orchestra of which she was the
leader. After the birth of a child
the two artists separated, and divorce proceedings were later instituted by Miss Wells. She married Perry before she had been given a final decree, and the bigamy charge was brought.
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Washington Tribune
REV. J. WALDRON HEADS ALLIANCE OF MINISTERS The Ministers' Alliance of Washington and vicinity, held its annual election of officers last Monday at which time Rev. J. Milton
Waldron was elected president. The retiring president, Rev. C. L. Russell, in his annual address, told the Alliance that he had his hands full in looking after the affairs of the National Ministerial Alliance of the United States of American and asked that his name be not put in nomination for reelection. He advised the body to pass the presidency around so that they would get advantage of the leadership of the best men in the body.
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
PETER HARRIS
The full list of officers elected are: Rev. J. Milton Waldron, Shiloh Baptist Church, president; Rev J. C. Olden, Plymouth Congregational Church, vice-president; Rev Farley, Y.M.C.A. Presbyterian Mission, secretary; Rev J. A. Tucker, presiding elder, Washington District A. M. E. Zion Conference, assistant secretary, and Rev D. E. Wiseman, Lutheran Church, treasurer.
PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE
OFFERS PRIZE
PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE
OFFERS PRIZE
By Kelly Miller, Jr.
Dr. Walter A. Bloedorn, professor of medicine, at Howard, has offered a prize to the member of the senior medical class who shows the greatest efficiency during the school year in the practice of medicine.
The prize offered is a set of Nelson's loose-leaf medicine. The reward is not to be placed entirely on actual grades obtained, but takes into consideration the spirit of co-operation and aptitude displayed.
WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1926
SCURLOCK
Photo
HOWARD
Left to right: D. O. W. Holmes, Albert I. Cassell, Louis L. Watson. President Mordecal Johnson, Hon. Martin B. Madden, Emmett J. Scott. Insert: Four of Howard's pepy rooters. Photo by Scurlock
OWNER AND DRIVER OF DEATH CAR ARE ORDERED HELD BY CORONER'S JURY
The funeral services for little Joanne Terry were held from the home of Dr. and Mrs. E. C. Terry. 3217 Eleventh Street. Northwest, Sunday, November 28, at 2 p. m. The services were very simple, and only the immediate family attended. Rev. D. F. Rivers of Berean Baptist Church, read the scripture and made the remarks over the body. Rev. W. A. Brooks, of Lincoln Church, offered prayer.
H. H. THOMAS WANTS MARBIAGE ANNULED
Herman H. Thomas, 1822
Ninth Street, Northwest, filed
t last Tuesday in the District
Supreme Court to annul his
marriage to Mary E. Thomas,
who is also known as Lizzie
Smith and Lizzie Gray.
Thomas claims that the
defendant married him on
August 9, 1917, under the name
of Mary E. Brown without disclosing that she had a living
husband, Charles Smith, from
whom she had not been divorced.
Three or four years after their
marriage, Thomas says, he
learned of her former marriage
under the name of Lizzie Gray
on January 31, 1912.
Thomas is represented by
Attorney William C. Martin.
The body was placed in a vault at Harmony Cemetery until Tues-
LITTLE JOANNE TERRY who was killed by a truck Thanksgiving Day, and her little brother, Elmer, who narrowly escaped his sister's fate.
OFFICE: 920 U STREET, N.W.
FROM L
VEN
SE DISM
on of Howard Stadium
President Mordecai Johnson, Hon.
M LINCOLN
EN $
DISMISSI
d Stadium
HOWARD
Johnson, Hon. Martin B. Madden, Photo b
day afternoon when it was interred.
A coroner's jury Saturday named William Wesley Everhart, 17, janitor's quarters, 407 Third Street, Northwest, as the "hit and run" driver who killed Joanne Terry, 8-year-old daughter of Dr. and Mrs. E. C. Cerry, 3217 Eleventh Street, Northwest, and Charles D. Fowler, white, 1205 Kenyon Street, Northwest, as the owner of the death car.
They were both ordered held for the action of the grand jury. The coroner's jury put responsibility for the death of Joanne Terry on Everhart. Fowler was ordered as an accessory after the fact.
Headquarters Detective Sergeant Paul Jones arrested Everhart. Acting upon information furnished him by Thomas Mitchell, 2005 Eleventh Street, Northwest, he went to Fowler and sought information about the driver of his truck. Fowler told the detective several conflicting stories and finally promised to produce Everhart for questioning later in the day. Detective Sergeant Jones continued his search and located Everhart in Louisiana Avenue. At the time, Fowler was talking with the boy. Mitchell, who was with Detective Sergeant Jones positively identified Everhart as the driver of the truck.
Everhart entered a stout denail, but told several conflicting stories about his whereabouts at the time the truck struck the child. After the tragedy had occurred, Louis Valencia, 15, 3212 Sherman Avenue, Northwest; Wilbur Dishman, 14, 3216 Sherman Avenue, Northwest, and Thomas Mitchell began a search for the death car. About 11 o'clock Thanksgiving night, they located it in Kenyon Street, near Eleventh, Northwest. It is a rebuilt Yellow Cab truck.
At the time of the accident, M't-
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INCOLN
$1,
MISSED
Martin B. Madden, Emmett J.
Photo by Scurlock
chell jumped on the side of the truck, but was thrown off when it swerved around a corner. He got a description of the driver. There was another person in the car at the time, whose identity is still unknown, Mitchell testified at the inquest. Louis Valencia was the last person, to whom little Joanne spoke before she started across the street. She told him that Howard had won the football game, from which she and her parents had just returned. The tragedy occurred about 5:35 p. m. Thanksgiving day. Joanne had been across the street from her home to call her little brother, Elmer, 7 years old, and the two children were returning home for dinner. As she started across Kenyon Street, she was struck and run ever. The driver did not stop. Joanne was put in the passing automobile of John Battley, 1231 Irving Street, Northwest, and rushed to the Children's Hospital.
MAN IS BEHEADED AT UNION STATION
A verdict of accidental death was returned Monday by the coroner's jury in the case of George Quanders, a porter, 28, 1312 Sixth Street, Northwest, who was killed Sunday when beheaded by an electric baggage truck after he had fallen into a freight elevator shaft in the Union Station.
Quanders lost control of the baggage-laden truck, which he was driving. The vehicle headed for the freight elevator shaft and crashed through the gates. Quanders fell approximately 30 feet, and the truck fell on top of him, severing his head.
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Dr. John R. Francis, a dentist, 1230 U Street, Northwest, is entitled to receive the reward of $1,000 offered, for the arrest and conviction of the murderer of Dr. Robert W. Brown, Justice Bailey decided in equity court No. 2 last Tuesday.
Justice Bailey reached this decision on a bill of interleader filed by the National Benefit Life Insurance Company, of which Dr. Brown was the president, and his two daughters, Mrs N. Pearl Curtis and Mrs. Robbie Brown Lofton.
Dr. Brown was murdered at his residence on November 27, 1920. The two daughters of Dr. Brown and the National Benefit Life Insurance Company on December 1, 1920, offered a reward of $1,000 for the arrest and conviction of the murderer. In August, 1921, James A. Frye was arrested and charged with the crime. In July, 1922, he was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. Both Dr. Francis and W. H. Robinson claimed the reward.
r. Francis claimed that Frye;
(Continued on page 2)
FEDERAL LIFE CO. ENTERTAINS AT AGENCY BANQUET
The members of the Board of Directors of the Federal Life Insurance Company, termed by its Secretary Manager, C. T. Taylor, as the "youngest, yet the oldest insurance company in Washing-
ton," entertained its agency force and office employees and a number of honor guests at a banquet in the dining hall of the Whitelaw Hotel Tuesday evening, November 30.
The banquet, which was sponsored and entirely financed by the Board of Directors—no money of the company being used—is to be an annual affair.
Before the dinner was served the master of ceremonies, Mr. Taylor, introduced several speakers, among whom were:
Rev. W. B. Hill, who pronounced the invocation; Simeon Cunningham, assistant secretary-manager of the company, who introduced the master of ceremonies; Dr. Carol A. Brooks, president of the company; Rev. W. L. Washington; Mrs. Julia W. Hamilton, who represented the women's interests and fraternal organizations; Rev. C.
(Continued on page 2)
TWO
MRS. BROOKS COMMITS SUICIDE
that her throat had been bothering her, this was such a minor ailment that it did not prevent her from taking part in the Thanksgiving activities. On Thanksgiving eve she sang at the wedding of Miss Gladys A. Wilkinson. On the day of her death she appeared about as usual. The body was prepared for burial by Thos. Frazier Co., 623 T Street. Hundreds of people viewed the remains in their parlors. Funeral services were held from Lincoln Temple Congregational Church, Eleventh and R Streets, Friday, Dec. 3 at 1 p. m. The eulogy was delivered by Rev. J Noble Pierce, pastor of the First Congregational: Church, which is the church that President and Mrs. Coolidge attends. Immediately after the services the body was shipped in company with the family to Detroit, Mich., for burial Saturday. Anna C. Brooks, daughter of Rev. Arthur R. and Lottie Cook Chandler, was born in Hartford, Conn. Her father is a Baptist minister. The family later moved to Detroit, Mich., where she graduated from the high school and city college.
Possessing a fine voice, her parents gave her the best musical education Detroit afforded. She early won fame as a singer. She married R. W. Brooks, December 22, 1921, who was then pastoring in Detroit.
Mrs. Brooks accompanied her husband to Washington when he accepted the call to Lincoln Temple in December, 1924, succeeding Rev. Emory D. Smith.
Besides her husband, she is survived by her father and mother, and two brothers, all of Detroit.
Rev. R. W. Brooks will not appear in his pulpit according to officers of the church for at least a month. The shock of the tradgedy is weighing very heavily on him and his members are desirous of giving him as much time as possible to recoup his nerves and vitality. Rev. J. Noble Pierce will assist in filling the pulpit during his absence.
"DIKE" MOSE RELEASED ON BOND
(Continued from page 1)
Mrs. Edna Maxwell, who lives in an apartment across the hall, told the coroner's jury that she heard the dead man cursing vilely and threatening to kill "Dike" Moses. As "Big Sharkey" turned to reenter the apartment, somebody yelled to "Dike" Moses not to turn his back on that man, "He's got a gun." At that moment, "Dike" Moses wheel1 and fired. "Big Sharkey" fell across the doorway without pulling the trigger of his revolver.
The eye-witnesses to the shooting are Charles Butler, 2222 Eleventh Street Northwest; Joseph Coleman, 1712 Seaton Street, Northwest; Theodore Whitley, 617 Q Street, Northwest, and William Frazier, 430 Oakdale Street, Northwest. They had been playing "craps."
Attorney Bertrand Emerson represented "Dike" Moses at the coroner's inquest.
"Dike" Moses Crawford is well known in local sporting circles.
BOARD REFUSES TO RE- INSTATE MRS. HOWARD
BOARD REFUSES TO RE- INSTATE MRS. HOWARD
last, and the other by the resignation of Mrs. Clarissa Scott Delany. There have been three appointments made of teachers of English since her eligibility for reinstatement, Mrs. Howard contends. They are the permanent appointments of Joseph Hill in the Dunbar High School and of Mrs. G. L. Wilkins in the Miner Normal School. The probationary appointment of Miss M. Elizabeth West in the Shaw Junior High School has also been made since she became eligible for reinstatement, Mrs. Howard says.
Mrs. Howard sets out in her statement that teachers are being employed in the senior high schools to teach subjects other than the ones for which they hold teachers' certificates. At the Armstrong Technical High School, Mrs. Howard says, Miss Charlotte West, a teacher of history, is teaching one class in English: James B. Hunter, a teacher of history, is teaching two classes in English, and Miss Otelia Cromwell, the head of the English Department, is teaching one class in English. At the Dunbar High School Miss Ruth Weatherless, a teacher of menship, is teaching two classes in English.
In his report to the Board of Education, Assistant Superintendent Wilkinson denied that Mrs. Howard was entitled to be appointed to the vacancy in the Shaw Junior High School to which Miss West was appointed. He says that since the passage of the teachers' salary act of June 4, 1924, eligibility for appointment and restatement to junior high school positions has been distinct from eligibility for appointment and restatement to senior high school positions. He cites the case of Miss Mabel M. Jackson, who obtained a writ of mandamus in the District Supreme Court compelling the Board of Education to declare a position vacant in the Armstrong
Technical High School and appoint her in the place of a teacher who lacked the necessary qualifications under this act to teach domestic art in the senior high schools. The vacancy caused by the retirement of Miss Grinke, says Mr. Wilkinson, was filled by an appointment effective practically nine months before Mrs. Howard became eligible for reinstatement. Miss Grimke at the time of her retirement was on leave of absence. There was no vacancy to which Mrs. Howard might have been appointed upon the resignation of Mrs. Clarissa Scott-Delany September 30, because the Board of Education abolished this position upon the resignation of Mrs. Scott-Delany, Mr. Wilkinson says. Mrs. Scott-Delany taught English in the Dunbar High School. The appointments of Joseph Hill in the Dunbar High School and of Mrs. G. L. Wilkinson in the Miner Normal School were made practically a year before Mrs. Howard became eligible for reinstatement, Mr. Wilkinson declares.
With regard to teachers teaching other subjects than the ones they qualified to teach, Mr. Wilkinson says that it has been the practice in the senior high schools to require a teacher to carry at least 50 per cent of her assignments in the subjects for which she holds a teacher's certificate, but that it has been necessary to assign one or more teachers work in more than one subject in order to meet as nearly as possible the pupil hour requirements.
Acting upon the report of Assistant Superintendent Wilkinson, the Board of Education went on record as favoring the policy of leaving the internal organization of the school system for the management of the administrative officers.
The Board of Education approved the recommendation of Assistant Superintendent Wilkinson of Robert N. Mattingly to be principal of the new Francis Junior High School, which will be opened February 1, next. Mr. Mattingly is a graduate of Amherst College with the degree of bachelor of arts. He is doing work at Columbia University for the degree of master of arts in education from the Teachers College.
Mr. Mattingly has been head of the department of mathematics in division 10 to 13 since 1906 and has uniformly been given the highest rating by his supervisory officers. He served as principal of the Dunbar summer school from 1922 to 1924. He has made special preparation for a junior high school principalship by pursuing courses on junior high school organization and teaching at Teachers' College, Columbia University, and at Chicago University.
Appointments
Other changes in the personnel of the school system were as follows:
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Temporary teachers: R. C. Horner, class 1A, Douglass-Twinging Group; C. W. Colbert, class 1A, Birney School; R. C. Enorl, class 1A, Gidings-Lincoln Group; V. L. Callaway, class 1A, Birney School; R. E. Matthews, class 1A, Giddings-Lincoln Group.
A. F. E. Madden, class 2A, Shaw Junior High; I. L. Denny, class 2A, Randall Junior High.
Temporary military instructors: Lloyd Muse, class 1A, Div. 10-13; H. O. Atwood, class 1A, Div. 10-13; Probationary teachers: Elsie Yerby, class 1A, Cardozo-Bell Group; L. S. Proctor, class 3A, Miner Normal Scholo; L. T. Green, class 1A, Phelps Vocational School; G. P. Black, class 1A, Payne School; E. B. Smith, class 1A, Stevens School.
Promotions: B. T. Brent, teacher from class 1A to class 2A, Randall Junior Eigh.
Terminations: L. S. Proctor, teacher, class 3A, Miner Normal School; L. T. Green, teacher, class 1A, Phelps Vocational School.
DR.FRANCIS GETSREWARD
who did odd jobs for him, came to him in the latter part of July, 1921, and told him he wanted some money to make a quick "get away," because if he were apprehended for the Blake robbery, in connection with which a pal of his, William "Black" Bowie had been arrested, he would likely be identified by some one as the murderer of Dr. Brown.
Upon his questioning, Frye related to him the story of the murder, Dr. Francis claims, and he immediately went to Detective J. T. Jackson and told him what Frye had just admitted. Detective Jackson arrested Frye and took
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him to police headquarters, where on August 16. 1921, he made a confession to Inspector Clifford L. Grant, in which he admitted killing Dr. Brown when the two engaged in an altercation when Dr. Brown refused to prescribe for him for one dollar. At the trial Frye sought to repudiate this confession and implicate Dr. Francis in the crime.
Mrs. David B. Bruce, Miss Jeanett Carter, J. M. Polard, Mrs. Gertrude N. Moore, Mrs. Jesse H. Foster, Rev. J. H. William Lewis. West-Hamilton, Robert Nelson, Harry S. McAlp', Mrs. George W. Robinson.
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FEDERAL LIFE BANQUET
(Continued from page 1)
L. Russel, representing the National Ministerial Alliance; Rev. R. F. S. Thomas; Rev. William Brown, and the concluding speaker Jesse H. Foster, first vice president of the Federal Life Insurance Company.
All the speakers centered their talks around the further progress of the Negro, the accomplishments of the Federal Life Insurance Company and their own particular activities.
Members of the agency force who were being entertained were: B. B. Hall, C. E. X. Boisseau, Thomas C. Garnett, J. Edward Young, Phillip F. Brooks, Paul Washington, Rev. William H. Brown, Edward I. Marrow, Willard N. Davis, B. E. Williams, G. M. Rice, Miss Eulah Lewis, Miss E. L. Thurman, Miss L. J. Kennedy, Edward A. Saunders, Miss Adelle H. Scellers, Miss Marteena E. Hawkins and Miss Helen Gains.
The guests were: Hon. J. F. Wilson, Samuel Darrrell, Miss Louise Brown, M. Brown, Mrs. Phillip Brooks, Miss Alice White, Miss Margaret Brown, Miss Mattie Hamilton, Mrs. Julia W. Hamilton, Miss Lillian Rice, Mrs. John Goings, Mrs. B. E. Williams, Mrs. George W. Robinson, Mrs. John M. Barnes, Mrs. Carroll A. Brooks.
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THE HOUSE OF LIBERAL CREDIT
Wear On Payments
925 F STREET N.W.
---
Mrs. B. B. Bruce, Miss Jeanett Carter, David J. M. Polard, Mrs. Gertrude N. Moore, Mrs. H. Foster, Rev. J. H. William Lewis, West* Hamilton, Robert Nelson, Harry S. McAlp', Mrs. George W. Robinson.
The officers and Board of Directors who fostered the event are: Dr. Carroll A. Brooks, president; Jesse Foster, first vice president; Mrs. Minnie B. Smooth, vice-president; Isiah Cunningham, treasurer; C. T. Taylor, secretary-manager; Dr. T. Edward Jones; Prof. David B. Bruce, S. H. Dudley, Dr. Peter W. Price, John M. Barnes, Dr. Thomas G. Smith, W. H. C. Brown and George W. Robinson.
FUNERAL OF MRS. HUMBLE AT METROPOLITAN
The funeral services of Mrs. R. Rylander-Humble, wife of Dr. Oliver L. Humble, Jr., of 1603 11th St. N.W., was held from Metropolitan A.M.E. Church, Thursday, afternoon. Mrs. Humble died at Freedmen's Hospital, Sunday, November 5. Interment was in Har-
This Check is good for $2.50 in Trade at BARTON'S 925 F St., N.W. Washington, D.C.
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Now
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BARTON'S is different from the usual Credit Store. Finer Merchandise, Newer Styles and Easier Payments.
mony Cemetery. The funeral arrangements were in charge of E. W. Bundy.
R. Beatrice Rylander-Humble, was born in Foudouchel Parish, La. At the time of her death, she was 33 years old. She attended New Orleans University and Flint Medical College of that city. She graduated from the pharmaceutical department of Flint in 1914.
She married Dr. Humble, Jr., June 25, 1912. They moved to Washington in 1917 and have been living here since. To their union four children were born and survive her. They are, Oliver L. the third, age 9, Brown W. Lamar, age 5, Goldie LeeMae, age 3 and an infant baby which was born Sunday morning.
In addition to her husband and children, she is survived by a sister, Viola E. Smith and a brother George Rylander, both of Chicago, III.
Mrs. Humble was proprietor of the Novelty Pharmacy, located at Eleventh and Q Streets which was opened last July.
Players Requested to Meet
All of the Council Review players are requested to meet at the Council Review Office at 7:45, Thursday evening, December 2, promptly. Business of importance before the rehearsal.
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T ROLLS & RECORDS FROM
'S MUSIC STORE
Year S North 6487-W
Wall Line of VICTOR RECORDS
of Columbia Records
Hits—65c, 2 for $1.25
'TH'S
'Get Virginia Blues"
'You Done to Make Me Feel this'
1804 7th St., N.W., near S North 6487-W
We Now Carry a Full Line of VICTOR RECORDS
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LOCAL SOCIETY MATRONS RE-
LAX AFTER BUSY WEEK
F The Thanksgiving Holi-
days are ‘over—What next?
Society is resting for a short
while only to take on new
life for the Xmas holidays.
_ Everywhere echoes from last
| Week: are heard expressing
satisfaction and pleasure,
Washington was ablaze with
entertainment—young and
old joined in making it a
| holiday long to be remem-
- bered.
eR eae eee
A very pleasing announce-
ment is made to the public
of the organization of a
dramatic cluby “The Krig-
wa Players” who will work
with the “Krigwa Players”
of New York. . These players
Promise Washington rare
treats along dramatic lines
and hope to render their first
play by a race writer early
in January. They are study-
ing at present “The Com-
promise” by Willis Richard-
son, “The House of Sham”
by same author and “Retribu-
tion” by Mrs. Carrie Clifford.
‘The players include W.
Yennings Newsome, Willis
Richardson, Leander Hill,
Nana Lee Rayford, Costumer
L. Green, Bernard W. Pryor,
Edward B. Saunders, Samu-
¢l Popel, Eleanor Robnison,
Roscoe Evans, Leonard Hill,
Lillian Clark, Kathleen Bing-
ham, Vivian Turner and Mary
Miller.’ Mrs. Carrie Clifford
is President, Mrs. Willis
Richardson, Vice Pres. and
Mrs. A. V. Gray Hilyer,
‘Treasurer. The Krigwa Play-
ers will be presented to the
<Literature Lover's Club at
Y.W.C.A. this Sunday even-
ing at 5 o"clock.
‘Their first production ‘The
Compromise” will he played
by Nana Lee Rayford, Sam
Popel, Vivian Turner, E.
Robinson a.d Mr. Bernard
Pryor.
Norristown Visitors ca
Entertained -
_ Mr. and Mrs, Charles §. Thomas
of 18th Strect, Northwest, enter-
tained at a large card party in
honor of their guests, Miss Rosa
Wilson and Mrs. Sadie Wilson
Mumford of Norristown, Pa., last
Saturday night. The visitors were
also recipients of many other s0-
cial courtesies during their stay in
this city.
Peas
House Guests Entertained
Mr and Mrs James S Ford of 927
'S Street, Northwest, entertained as
their housé guests ‘for the game,
‘Mr and Mrs William Hines of Wil-
son, N. C.; Miss Geneva Cornwell,
a teacher at Smithfield, N. G., and
Miss Phenon Summers, a teacher
at Wilson, N.C. Other out-of-town
visitors included Mr. and Mrs. Dun-
can, Dr. and Mrs. Wilson and Mrs.
‘Oddie Chris, all of Philadelphia;
‘Miss Grooms, a teacher in Balti-
more; Mr. Green of Durham, N.C,
and Dr. Love of Raleigh, N. C.
Celebrate 20th Wedding
On Monday night, November
22nd, the occasion of the celebration
of their 20th wedding anniversary,
‘Mr. and Mrs. George Weems of
1017 1-2 Seventh Street, South-
east gave a surprise party fo
Rev. J. I. Loving, of 1511 Fourth
Street, Northwest, the minister
who married them.
Rey. Loving was presented with
‘ purse, a buffet luncheon was
served. Among those _ present
were: Rev. J. I. Loving, Mr. and
Mrs. George Weems, Mrs. Helen
Carter, Mrs. Rachel Forrester, Mrs.
Fanny Tucker, Mrs, Mary Weems,
Mrs. Elizabeth Elzie, Mrs. Louisa
Davis and J. Thompson.
Wential Meus at Glenerden
‘The nuptial mass of Miss Bea-
trice M. Green ,daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Green, and Mr.
Richard “A. Ford, son of the late
Joseph and Elizabeth Ford
Spriggs, of Huntsville, Md., was
at ‘Theakechine Catholic
on iving morninj
at 10 o'clock Rev. Father Coles,
officiated. It was oe attended
nd the couple were the recipi-
ents of many beautiful and useful
presents. Reception was given at
the home ‘ot the bride's parents,
from 8 to 10 oclock. They will be
637 Third Street, Northeast, apart-
ment 204, :
Entertain Guests
On Thanksgiving day Mr. and
‘Mrs. Walter Coleman entertained
at dinner in their new home. 1607
Sth Street, Northwest, for Mrs.
Sarah Griffin of Philadelphia, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Denton and Mr.
and Mrs. E. J. Simmons.
Besutiful Pre-Nuptial Dinner _
‘Miss ‘Lilian fanner and sss
Vashti Maxwell of Baltimore en-
tertained at dinner on Friday even-
ing at the residence of the former,
inhonge of Rev. Richmond Fairley
of North Carolina, and his fiance,
‘Miss Gladys Wilkinson, niece of
‘Assistant Superintendent Garnet
C. Wilkinson. After 2 short musi-
cale, dinner was announced. The
guests were seated before a beau-
tifully decorated table and served
g@ dinner. , Many ‘toasts were
tei -“_—~. ee eae
made to the bride- and groom-to-
be. After dinner, music and dane-
ing Were featured. The guests in-
cluded Miss Florence Snowden,
Miss Edna Tanner, Mr, Merryn
Coy, Mr. F. E. Parks, Mr. Raymond
Savoy, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gar-
vin, Dr. and Mrs. Merrill Curtis
and Dr. Lloyd Newman.
Mrs. Arthur L, Curtis
Entertains Large Party of
Out-of-Town Friends
MESO SOS, Seneees
Mrs. Curtis had as her guests
last week, Dr. and Mrs, Andrew
Brown, Charleston, W. Va.; Dr, and
‘Mrs. W. H. Washington, Newark,
NJ.;_ Dr." Lawrence Christmas,
Philadelphia; Mre, Mae Ames. Dr.
Chester Ames, William Ames,
Earle Cuzins and Walter Cole, De-
troit, Mich., and Mrs, Azelia Walk-
er-Kennedy’ of Chicago ‘and New
York. Mrs. Kennedy attracted much
attention at the game: in her outfit
of smart Cossack suit of black and
red satin with Russian boots.
ee) ea ae
‘The marriage of Miss Gladys
A. Wilkinson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard’ U. Wilkinson, to the
Rev. Richmond ‘A. Fairley, son of
Dr. and Mrs. L. E. Fairley of
Goldsboro, N.C., took place Wed-
nesday evening, November 24 at
half past seven o'clock at the home
of the bride's parents, 2565 Nichols
Avenue, SE. ‘Tho home was beau-
tifully decorated with palms, ferns
and baskets of cut flowers. | Prior
to the ceremony, Mrs. Robert W.
Brooks sang “Because” accompan-
ied by Miss Mary L, Europe. the
Rev. Robert W. Brooks, officiating.
‘The bride was given in mar-
riage by her father and wore a
gown of white georgette, crept
trimmed in silver beads. She wore
a string of pearls and carried a
‘shower boquet of bridal roses, lil-
Jew of the valley‘and maidenhair
fern.
+ Miss Lillian E. Tanner, of Wash-
‘ington, was maid of honor and
‘wore a boufant gown of blue taf-
feta trimmed in silver lace, and
carried a sheath of pink roses.
Miss Vashti Maxwell of Baltimore
was bridesmaid and wore a hou-
fant gown of canary taffeta trim-
med in gold lace and carried a
sheath of yellow roses. Mrs. Rich-
ard U. Wilkinson, mother of the
bride wore a-- beautiful gown ‘of
white heavily beaded. Rev. J, R
Harris of Patterson, N.J. was best
man and Dr. R. 8. Jason of the
Howard Medical School was usher
Following the ceremony a_ re
ception was held from 8° until 10
The out of town guests were the
Misses Nellie and Elaise Fairley,
sisters of the groom, Miss Theres-
sa B. Wilson of Pittsburg, Rev.
J. R. Harris, pastor of St. Augus.
tine “Prosbyterian Church of Pat-
terson, N.Jy Rev. Harvey A. On-
que of Jersey City, Bishop and
Mrs. L. W. Kyles of Winston Sal-
em and Dr. Goldner, financial sec-
retary of the A.M.E. Church, Wins-
ton, Salem.
The bride is a graduate of the
Dunbar High School and of Ober-
Tin College where she was elected
to the Phi Beta Kappa. She is a
member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha
Sorority and, a teacher of mathe-
maties in the Dunbar High Sehool
of this city. « The bridegroom is a
graduate of J. C. Smith University
and of Lincoln University, he is
also a member of the Alpha Phi
Alpha Fraternity and is now pas-
tor of the Tabor Presbyterian
Church of this city.
Young Matrons Entertain
‘On Saturday evening of last
week, 2 group of popular young
matrons entertained at a reception
for some visitors of the Howard-
Lincoln game at the residence of
Mrs, Mary Fields of 145 S Street,
northwest. The event was one of
the most brilliant affairs of the
week. Covers were laid for fifty.
The hostesses were Mesdames
Mary Fields, Mable Cook, Pauline
‘Turner, Marguerite White and
Marguerite Smith.
Mrs. Todd Entertains at Tea
Mrs. Joseph A. Todd of 2223 F
Street, northwest, entertained at
tea Inst Friday, November 26th,
in honor of her aunt, Mrs. Clem-
entine Parker. Those assisting
Mrs, Todd were? Mrs. Lucinda
Holmes, Mrs. Blanch Clark, Mrs.
‘Minnie Wright. The dining room
‘was beautifully decorated in pink.
At the tea tables were: Mrs. Ros-
etta Miller, Mrs. Jennie Willians,
Mrs. Mary B. Pryor, and Miss
Ruth Watkins.
‘The guests were: Mrs. Dorothy
Stevinson of New York, Mrs.
Gwinn of Portsmouth, Va. Miss
Dorothy Jackson of Philadelphia
Pa, Mrs. Sarah Williams,
Louise Williams, Mr. and Mrs.
‘Thomas Lucas, Mr. and Mrs. Diek-
insons Mr. and’ Mrs. Harry H. Fer-
guson, Mrs. Mamie Clark, Mrs.
Sarah’ Goings, Mrs. Wm. Bryant,
Miss Eleanor Robinson, Mrs. Helen
Martin, Mrs. Elize Brooks, Mrs.
Frank’ Mosby, Mrs. Mose and
daughter, Miss Ella Forrest, Miss
‘Tyler. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. ‘West,
Mrs. Ellen Bently, Mr. Joseph Fos-
ett, Mr. Wm. Marrs, Mr. George
Clark, Str. Chas. Pryor, Mr, Long,
Mr. Miller, Mr. David Wright, Mr.
J. A. Todd, Mr. John Lee, Mr. E:
Jeffries, Mr. T, Clark and Mr. Chas.
S. Williams. :
Phi Beta Siema Entertains
The Alpha Chapter of the Phi
‘Beta Sigma Fraternity gave an in-
formal reception in honor of the
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1926
Visitors” [ru Zoli Fico Socal Cs
Pay aes iin . 4
— ae P E i %
i eee
et See i 2 a 4
ye | ce
: ey
ea oer he
4 ie i ce
Bi on 5 gee.
| Pe r
| : a ‘eh aya ae % .
Yee Beemer ene |
Mrs. LELIA WALKER-KENNEDY, of New York and Chicago;
(right) Mr, Merritt, officer, N.C: Mutual Life Ins. Co, Durham,
N.C, and Atty. Thompson of Durham, N.C.
visiting fraternal members at the |erva Cupid, Irene Burleigh, Mrs.
White'Law flotel, Friday evening, | Ethel Holland, Lillian ‘Tanner,
November 26. The reception was | Alice Bell and Mrs. Louise Hayes.
Pell attended by local and out-of Souvenirs of the Howard-Lincoln
town guests. Among those in game were given each lady pres-
ent were: Dr. Walter S. Gibson, | ent. < a asic
St Louis, Missouri, Dr and Mrs pees)
. B. Cash, Dr. H. P. Edney, Miss | The Trumps Club
Ethel A. Cowling, Miss Beatrice | is’ Entertained
Hughes, and Miss L. M. Johnson| The members of the Trump Five
of Philadelphia, Pa; Miss Peggy | Hundred Club weze guests of Miss
Woods, Miss Enid Lucas, Atlantic Minnie J. Hall Iast, week, at her
Gity, NJ» Miss F, L. Potts, Cam- | residence, 424 Que St. NW... Club
den, N.J., Dr. Maceo W. Brawler, | prizes were won by Mrs. Veola
W. f. Webb, ©. P. Johnson, Charlie | Reid. and Wiss “Alvent | Menard;
Rois of New York City; Miss | quest prizes by Miss Mary | C-
Marie Beckel, Pittsburg, Pa.; Miss | Johnson and Miss Mamie Grant.
Rosa Wilson, Norristown, Pa., Miss | Others present were Grace Dodson,
L. M, Dungee, Richmond,” Va.; | Mrs. Melinger, Alice Peters, Pear!
Miss E. Turner, Peterburg, Va.,|Minor and Nettie Freeland.
Miss Martha ‘Harmon, ' Miss _——
Blanche Fangley, Miss Grace Mun-| Dinner for Miss Rollins
sey, Miss Edythe McMeckens, of} Sunday, November 21, 1926, Mr.
Baliimore, Md., Miss Julia, John-|and Mrs. James G. Barge. gave
son, Miss Julia’Gibson, Mississippi, | dinner ip compliment to Miss Nan,
Shelby Mitchell, Miss Mary L. Per. | nie Rollins ‘The guests who were
17, Mrs. Vesta Kenney, Mise. Jet- | present wore Miss Nannie Rollins,
sie Murphy, Miss Lillian Scott,|Mr. N. ‘Thompson, Mr. and Mrq.
Miss Dorris Ridgley, Miss D. S.| Walter Riley, Miss Louise Riley,
Williams, Miss Althea Neal, Miss |and Miss Margaret Barge.
Edna ‘Thomas, Miss Eltee Waod- sete
son, Miss Roxena Wyatt, Miss |Mrs. Biddle Entertains
Marie Asker, Miss Edna Thomas.| . Mrs. F. Biddle Foote entertained
— quite, a few out-agetown | gust
Mrs. Sylvi -Patterson Thanksgiving nig! me witl
Mrs. Sylvia Piper her home friends. Thése present
‘Mrs. Sylvia Piper Patterson was
hostess to her five-hundred club,
the Fortnightly club and their hol-
iday guests on last Friday. morn:
ing. A very unique party was giv-
en. The aed and guests numbered
over thirty. Prizes of unusual
beauty and charm were given,
while the guests departed with
many comments of praise for the
hostess, who never tired of trying
to entertain and please.
‘The beautiful home of Mr. An-
drew and Mrs. Mickens of Lamon!
Street, N.W, which was decorated
with soft lights and flowers on
Saturday evening, was the scene
of a lovely card party of four
tables in bonor of Mrs, Alice Pow.
ell of Philadelphiay who came down
to tht Howard-Lincoln game dn
Thanksgiving Day, and spent the
Week end being entertained by
numerous friends of Mr. and Mrs.
J. A. Lankford whose guest she
was during her stay.
‘Among those present were: Mrs.
Lillian Toppin and daughter, Mrs
Ferdinand Miles, Mr. and
Clarence A. Gray, Mrs. Travers
Pinn, Mr. Jno. Lloyd of Philadel-
phia, Prof. and Mrs. J. D. Balti
more, Mr. and Mrs. Walter J.
Singleton and others.
Dance Given by Society Matrons
and Maids Quite a Success
‘The dance given by some of
Washington's society matrons and
maids at Odd Fellows Hall on M
St, N.W. on last Saturday night
really climaxed the holidgy festiv-
ities. The decorations and elec-
trical effects were perfectly beau-
tiful. The orchestra hidden by a
cluster of palms added charm to
the oecasion while the latest styles
in evening gowns were displayed
by_everyone present.
‘Those responsible are: Mesdames
Margaret Dumas, Dickey Joyce
Fortune, Alice C. Frye, Euphre-
mia Haynes, Martha MeAdoo, El-
wood C. Rutherford, Eleanor J.
Scott, Mary C. Terrell, Rebecca
West, Mayme Wormley ‘and Miss
Jessie C. Parks.
|_A very pretty dinner party was
given on last Saturday by Miss
Lottie Ruff at her beautiful home
‘Y122 Second Street, N.W., in honor
‘of her holiday guests. Those pres-
‘ent were Mr. and Mrs. Oscar De-
‘Priest and Brascher DePriest, of
Chicago, Tll., Lawyer and Mrs. Al-
{fred Collin, of Washington, Law-
yer and Mrs. John Diggs, of Nor-
folk, Va. and Miss Fannie Jones
of Norfolk, Va. -
Miss Florence Snowden a
Entertains
Miss Florence Snowden of 1109
Rhode Island Avenue, N.W., enter-
tained quite a few of her friends
Those in attendance ‘were, Gwen-
dolyn Hughes, Ida Mae Hall. Min-
Mr. and Mrs. Mickens
Entertain at Home
Miss Lottie Ruff Gives
Dinner Party
AS CaP, ee ee ee
Ethel Holand, Lillian Tanner,
Alice Bell and Mrs. Louise Hayes.
Souvenirs of the Howard-Lincoln
game were given each lady pres:
at cg
The Trumps Club
is’ Entertained
‘The members of the Trump Five
Hundred Club weze guests of Miss
Minnio J. Hall Inst week at her
residence, 424 Que St., N.W.. Club
Prizes were won, by” Mrs Veola
id and ‘Miss “Alvent | Afenard
mt prizes by Miss lary Cy
johnson and Miss Mamie Grant.
Others present were Grace Dodson,
rs. Melinger, Alice Peters, Pearl
Minor and Nettie Freeland.
Dinner for Miss Rollins
Sunday, November 21, 1926, Mr.
and Mrs. James G. Barge gave @
dinner tpi compliment to Miss Nan-
nie Rollins. The guests who were
present were Miss Nannie Rollins,
Mr. N. Thompson, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Riley, Miss Louise Riley,
and Miss Margaret Barge.
Mrs. Riddle Entertains
Mrs. F. Biddle Foote entertained
quite a few eee guests
Thanksgiving night along with
her home friends. Those present
from out-of-town. were:
Mr, and Mrs. Brown, Miss Shel-
ton, Dr. Edgar Draper, Dr. Truitt,
‘Dr. Cooper, of Philadelphia; Miss
Belle Lewis, New York; Miss Mor-
selle, Mr. Watts, Mrs. Maggie
Smith, Mr. Watson, Baltimore,
‘The home guests were:
| Messrs. Joseph Cooper, Howard
Powell, Chas. Duckette, Boyd
Clarke, Turner, A. Justice’ Pet-
‘tinard, Andianio, Cobb, Carter,
Sheppard, Chas. Jolinson, Cooper,
Biddle, Misses Maude MelIntosh,
Willie Robinson, F. Jackson and
sister, Mis, Jervil J. Phillips, Edith
Johnson, and B. Brandon.
Miss Nannie Rollins. gave a fare-
well Thanksgiving dinner. at the
residence of Mr. and Mes. James
G. Barge. The guests who were
lea 2 were Mrs, Rosa Johnson;
‘iss Viola MeNair of Bevport,
Rhode Island; Miss Eleanor Gord-
on of Franconia, Va.; Mr, and Mrs,
James G. Bafge; and Miss M.
"The decorations were chrysan-
themums and autumn leaves. The
following morning Miss Nannie
Rollins sailed on the Saint George
for Bermuda.
a arte heeaae aks a a
whist party Tuesday evening at
her residence. Among those pres-
ent were Mr. ud tes. Horace
Keys; Miss Mammie Standard;
Mrs. Annie Lewis of Fredericks-
burg, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Clark of
Richmond, Va.; Miss Maude John-
son; Mrs. Arlena Franklin of Lex-
ington, Va.; Mr, Andrew Johnson;
Mr. Charlie Minor, Miss Arnett
Minor played a few musical solos.
Refreshments were served just be-
fore the guests departed.
Mrs. Margaret Heath was a
charming hostess to a few friends
on Thanksgiving night at her
home in 17th St., N.W.
Mrs. Susan Goodrich, 2509 E St.,
N.W. was pleasantly surprised by
a fitting surprise party given by
relatives and friends. Several
beautiful presents were presented
Mrs. Goodrich,
ee eee
eth, Street Baptist Church enle-
bratd etheir 19th anniversary Sun-
day, November 28. The pastor,
Rev. Walter H. Brooks, preached
the anniversary sermon. The mem-
bership is now two hundred.
‘The officers are: Mrs. M. E. Cab-
anis, president: Mrs. Grace How.
pe pee it, aoe —
lontgomery, seco presid-
ent? Mrs. Gertrude Hill, financial
secretary; Miss Irma 0. Rivers,
secretary; and Mrs. Lucy Mar-
shall, treasurer.
|The Orchid Club held its' meet-
ing at the residence of Miss An-
nie Shorter.
CLUBS
I
i |
N ee
a oie (a
SN i
a. >
ches PSPS CSE, m | Ni i }
CY ey eres
p Sy fea
| Do You Want to own
; ° .
| this Beautiful Car?
| ‘The Department of Foreign Missions of the A. M.
4, Zion Church, 1425 T Street, Northwest, Washing-
4 ton, D.C., is offering a new Chevrolet coach as a prize
2 to the successful contestant. The Campaign will close
3 Wednesday, December 15, 1926. So now is the time to
5 enter this race. The Department is out for raising
| Ten Thousand Dollars with which to complete their
§ mission school at Mt. Coffee, Liberia, Africa,
3 The person surreitdering in cash to the offic of the
) Secretary-Treasurer at 1425 T Street, Northwest, not
3 later than Wednesday, December 15, the highest sum
9 above $150 will positively be given this beautiful car.
. OTHER PRIZES WILL BE GIVEN.
: DON’T DELAY. ENTER TO-DAY.
@ For further particulars address a postal card to the
3 Secretary-Treasurer, Rev. W. W. MATTHEWS,
1425 T St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Phone, Poto-
mac 2254.
‘gq _ DON’T READ THIS
ler ea IF SATISFIED WITH LIFE
PRs \ Ay Bat, if unhappy, discouraged, a failure in bus-
REPL \\ A} incss or love, THIS message is for you.
Sa \ | Guarantees to read your entire life, past,
ee ‘S| present and future. She asks no questions,
Py WY but will tell you what you want to know, giv-
ak __| ing names, dates, and facts of business mat-
ES SE ters, love, health, and family affairs.
‘Tells the name of who you will marry and
when. If the one you love is true or false,
what part of the country is luckiest for you
| land just what to do to be successful in life. Brings the sep-
| arated together, removes troubles of all nature so you can win
} and hold the one you love.
| You will be wiser and happier after one visit to this gifted
lady. She does many cures through prayers.
‘MTells the nature and cause of your sickness. Makes you well
and happy (so youstay that way). Satisfaction or no charges.
Life rcadings—one dollar.
Madam Lenora
610 F Street, N.W., between 6th and 7th Sts.
Hours 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. ‘Closed on Sundays
SO eal
The Jolly Fifteen Social Club
‘The Jolly Fifteen and guests,
spent a very pleasant evening Sat-
urday, November 27, 1926, at the
Whitelaw Hotel. Eglin’s orches-
tra furnished music for the gay
dancers. This is the first public
appearance of the Club.
Miss Mathe Smallwood of 783
‘Fairmont St., who has been seri-
ously ill is now recovering. She
is at the home of her brother, Leon
A. Smallwood.
Mrs. Edith DeVaul Williams,
1939 Ninth Street, Northwest, had
‘as her house guests for Thanksgiv-
ing and the week-end, Mrs, Aus-
Beware of Pains
in the Chest
Often Leads to Serious Illness
Aches, pains and soreness in the
chest often result from the heavy,
deep-seated colds as well as from
muscular strains. .
Don't Jet another minute go by
before you give attention to this
condition. Go at once to the dru;
store and get a Johnson's Red
Cross Plaster and put it on the
chest. It warms, protects, and
drives away the aches, pains and
soreness almost immediately. And
more important the remedial pro-
perties which the plaster holds a-
gainst the chest so that its medica-
ion cannot escape in the air is
penetrating into the affected parts,
soothing and helping in breaking
up congestion through stimula
circulation.
Don’t experiment or take chances
with untried treatments when
you have these chest pains; ask the
druggist to give you the old reli-
able big Johnson’s Red Cross Kid-
ney Plaster with the red flannel
heck.’ At drug étores everywhere.
CH eT
find grateful relief in the
exclusive menthol blend
in Luden’s Menthol
Cough
z Drops ic
UDEN
PianoTuning
REPAIRING—REBUILDING
Upkights $3.00; Players $3.50;
Grands, $4.00
G. W. GILLUM, +
Member of Nat'l Asso. of
Tuners, Inc. 4
1331 L Street, N.W. .
‘Telephone, Franklin 7395-W
Writ; for free booklets on care of
cic DAO DANO
et emai
THREE
tin Clark’ and Mrs, Flora Hilliary
of Atlantic City, NJ., who mo-
tored down. Mee her guests re-
turn, Mrs. Williams accompanied
thom gnd fs, their guests in, At-
lantie City, during her stay there.
‘Thomas Young; student at New
York University, covered the
“Classic” for the Amsterdam
News,
(Continued on page 5)
Be a Bricklayer ©
Day and Evening Classes Se
BUILDING TRADES SCHOOL, 710 ° St. NW.
3 A
Moon and Allen’s
Funeral Home
12th St. at Florida Ave., N.W.
Ellis P. Moon Otis F. AL
| Reliable
Competent
Reasonable
PRIVATE AMBULANCE
Phone North 7813 ;
GRAND RECEPTION
To the Federation of
Colored Catholics
in Convention
at the
LINCOLN COLONNADE
MONDAY, DEC. 6, 1926
Dancing from 8 to 2 a.m.
Music—Capital City Serenaders
ADMISSION—50 cents
PRAYER AND DIVINE
HEALING SERVICE
Bvery Friday evening, $-10:30
“They that come believing,
Jesus to the utmost saved.”
Elder J. T. Durbin,
910 Westminster St., N.W.
Sue:
Students’ Aid
2 am selling a magnificent box
assortment of 21 steel engraved,
colored, paneled bordered Christ-
mas Cards and Folders with en-
velopes. Postpaid for $1.00; also
Personal Engraved (with your own
name embossed) for $1.00; $1.25;
$1.50; and $2.00 per dozen.
DON'T WASTE YOUR TIME
BUYING IN OVER CONGESTED
STORES. Order from me, and have
THEM SENT TO YOUR DOOR.
JOHN H. MAYOR
18 Hews Street, Cambridge, Mass.
f F Copyright 1922 by Madame Harrison-Astor for
| the United States and Canada. Reproduction,
Lal sa} () is whole or part, expressly forbidden. ~
Oey Mine. Harri
| Keay Mme. arrison-Astor
YAM) «PSYCHIC PALMIST
oH f Licensed by the District of Columbia
1H
=4 MAKES AN HONEST PROPOSITION —
1 do hoveby woloemnly awenr to make no charges If T do not faithfully fal-
fil evaty, word embodied In this statement. I will tell’ you dust what you
Sant to know: about friends, enemies, or rivals; whether husband. wife” oF
sweetheart is true or fale; how to gain the love of one you most desire:
Control or Influence the actions of ‘anyone, even though miles away. TE
further guarantee and promise to make you no charge unless you find
me nuperior. to any other palealst you ever consultsl. There ls Mo BOD®
to fond or. wish ‘ao ferent that cannot ‘accomplish for you. a
1 guarantes, yuseees whore. all other ‘palmiats. fail
T give nevercalling advice upon all matters of life. auch as love, egurte
ship. marriage, divorce, business; law "muita, epeculation and. tranenetions
fi a vr fall" Pei te" pac, cave ebony and RAB
Marriages, overcome eneinies, rivals, lover's quarrcls, evil ‘hablt, abu
Dlockarand ‘bad luck of all Kinds.
Tee you out of your aocrow and trouble and start you on the path to
appinces “and iprovnerity. Nhe. is no heart a0 sad or. home 40, dreany
that I cannot bring sunshine to, im faet, no matter what may be your hope,
fenr or ambition, I do sunvantee to tell it ail before you alter «werd Bre,
and after Iam finished if you are. not absohitely satisfed and 1 1 de mot
Faithfully fulfil every word and claim nhoce, then you Day not & BeRny
and T'do herewith sigu imy name to thie statement.
MADAME HARRISON-ASTOR
No fortuns tulle. my work fs mentalism. All business confidential.
Gan be aeen' from’ 1 pum, Lill ® pms excepting Sundays,
Madame Hiarrivon-Astor prides herself of the fact of being the ony palme
fut in the world who hes. darinz her stay iq. England. been ‘offeally eon
monad to the St, Jains Palace in London, ‘o head for his Inte majety, King
| Rdward Vi;
| 1113 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., N.Y. Next door to Raleigh Hotel
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Life Readings One Dollar No Readings Given By Mail
What Happened to
Mary and John
They had bad hair and were
worried and~did not know what to
do. They met a friend who advised
them to use the OLD EAST IN-
DIAN PREPARATIONS and now
everyone admires them for their
beautiful hair. You too can have
a beautiful head of hair and be
the admiration of ae a
USE THE OLD EA! INDIAN
PREPARATIONS—they i sat-
isfaction when all others fail.
LUCKY STAR hair trainer and
gloss, 75¢; Grower, 25c; Shampoo,
25e; Pressing Oil, 50c; Coco yee
15e; Cocotaro Pomade, 25¢; Liquid
Hair Tonic, 7c. Ask your drug-
gist first. Agents wanted. Mail
orders promptly filled. OLD EAST
INDIAN HERB STORE, 1728 7th
St, N.W., Washington, D.C.
A few of the Large Number of Prominent
Washingtonians who have installed the Highest
Degree of Home Heating Comfort KNOWN---
Automatic Oil Heat
Carson's Hospital, 1822 4th St., N.W.
A.M.E. Church, Financial Dept., 14th and Q Sts., N.W.
Dr. James Dowling, 1801 Phelps Pl., N.W.
Dr. James Dowling, 1119 U St., N.W.
Mrs. M. M. Harris, 1726 U St., N.W.
Dr. Cerroll Brooks, 1306 Girard St., N.W.
Dr, A. E. Gaskin, 1201 T St., N.W.
Murray Bros. Printing Co., 020 U St., N.W.
F. M. Murray, 420 T St., N.W.
R. H. Murray, 925 Rhode Island Ave., N.W.
Rev. N. W. D. Norman, 1933 13th St.. N.W,
Mrs. W. H. Burrell. 317 T St., N.W,
Prof. G. W. Cook, 341 Bryant St., N.W.
Dr. C. M. Wilder. 226 I St. N.W.
A. Bond, 416 L St., N.W.
L. M. King, 313 John Marshal, PL, N.W.
E. E. Just, 410 T St., N.W.
Dr. W. R. Lewis, 1636 6th St., N.W,
Adams & Smoot, 2425 Nichols Ave., S.E.
Dr. J. A. Bostic, 1323 R St., N.W.
H. W. Davis, 143 Randolph St., N.W.
Dr. J. Francis Dyer, 1107 O St., N.W.
Charles P. Ford. 1913 3rd St., N.W.
Dr. H. W. Freeman, 1510 Q St., N.W.
Mrs. R. M. Powell, 949 S St., N.W.
Eugene Smith. 2209 Flagler St., N.W. >
E. Wheatherless, 2502 Georgia Ave., N.W.
SEE IT TODAY! . |
The operation of this new Silent! epee. x, é
NOKOL in your own heating| (REE? New Guide to Oil Heat
lant is duplicated here today.| Sen frre. new book, and fu
3ee it—and in 10 minutes you) Uoxvop YY Me
aave the whole story of oil heat.
Purchase plan is really attrac-
dive, convenient, No. matter|Name ....ssrcsevevsseessenes
what size your home, or how
Seated, NOKOL ts made in ade-| adress...
quate range of sizes to make an Tne
sflicient, economical installation. House now heated by:
People ‘who believe a home is)
worth heating comfortably will) cb Ree
see this sensational betterment oe °
in home-heating methods. Come| (Tot Air— Hot Water— Steam—
im today.
See the ai
New Silent N6éK6
ew Silen ISKSI
OPEN
evenincs AUTOMATIC HEATING CO.
ee 1719 Connecticut Ave., N.W. N. 627 |
& NORMAL, DIES
y UI
Miss Eloise G. Robinson, 17, of
1713 Willard Street, Northwest,
died at her home after 4 short il.-
ness due to heart affection. She
graduated from Dunbar High
Schoo! in three years as a honor
student at the age of 14 years. She
Was appointed to teach a few
weeks after passing her 17th birth.
Meet having by. then finished” her
work in Normal Scheel. The fu-
neral services were hell Mondsy,
November 22, from St. luke P. BE.
(Ghurch, where she had heen an ac.
‘tive worker. The floral tributes
were numerous.
RUTH WINGFIELD,
MINOR NORMAL
GRAD, BURIED
5
Ruth Wingfeld, 19, of 721 Gi-
tard Street, Northwest, disd Mon-
day, November 29, after a short
illness. Miss Wingficld graduated
‘from Miner Normal Schooi in June,
1926, and was looking forward to
‘an’ appointment in the public
schools here.
‘The funeral services were held
at 1:30. Thursday, December 2,
from the Metronolitan Baptist
Church. Banks of flowers. sur-
xounded the: casket, mute expres-
sions'of the esteem of her friends
She is survived hy her mother
and father, Mrs. Evelyn and Loren.
20 Wingfield; two brothers, Regi:
nald.and Calyin;- and. her grand-
mother who came from Atlantic
Gity, N.J., for the funsral services,
and Mrs. Jennie Taylor Clark.
—— |
CG havch 4 i |
» al ered =
NE es
~~ rt Cana;
% , x *
dig air |
SUNDAY SCHOOL CONGRESS:
TO MEET IN BIR-
MINGHAM
| BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Dec.. 2.—
(Special)—Sunday school workers
and B.Y.P.U., forces received no-
tice recently that the Sunday
School Congress for 1927 would be
held in this city. The dates fixed
in awarding the Congress, are
June 8 to the 13, so that the Sun-
day school workers and B.Y.P.U.
forees will be in session embrac-
ing the second Sunday in June,
which is National Children’s Day.
7 SUNDAY SCHOOL SING
The Sunday. schools of the Dis-
trict of Columbia. held a song ser-
vice on Sunday, November 21st, at
the Shiloh Baptist’ Church. A
large crowd attended. Mirs A, J.
Brown war chairman, being as-
sisted-by M. J. Shelby.
REV, LEWISTALL SPEAKS
IN FREDERICKSBURG
pmeyv. ©. MacRae Lewistall
peetsted 2 sermon at Mt. Zion
ptist Church, Fredericksburg,
Va., of which Rev. Cary is the pas:
tor. Rey. Lewistall: also delivered
SA adipose \betere’ the B. YP
Union held in the Old Side“ Bap-
‘tist) Chureh.
REVEREND STAR TO PREACH
‘AT LINCOLN TEMPLE,
All church. services, will be held
As usnsl at Lincoln, Temple: Cane
tional Church, Sunday, De-
Seber bth. Rev. Harris BF Star,
formerly pastor. of Pilgrim Church,
New Haven, Conmn., ‘and editor of
“American Dictionary and Bioz-
raphy,” will occupy the pulpit dor-
ing the day. The regular vrogram
Will be followed for all other sor-
vices.
JOHN WESLEY
AME. ZION CHURCIT
| 14th'and Corcoran Sts. N.W.
H. T. Medford, D.D., Pastor
Phones: Office, North 10212
Parsonage, North 10458
PREACHING—
Sundays: 10:45 a.m. to 7:'9 p.m.
Mid-Week Service, Wed. 8 to 9:50
is
Young People’s Forum, Fridays 8
ee
Church School, Swidey 9:50 a.m.
V.C.E. Socicty, 6:50 p.m.
True Prophesies
‘The year 1927 will be the biggest
Year in the world’s history. Mon-y
{will be plentiful, everybody willinz
Yo work or attend to business .will
have splendid chances to make good
money. Money will be plentiful
and business will flourish every-
where.
‘Are you anxious to know whet is
‘shead of you?’ ‘Do’ you wish. to
avoid trouble, failures, disappoint-
‘ments, mistakes’. Do. you wish ts
1 ‘the good days, months and
so that you may take advan-
of the good periods and avoid
troubles?. Call for a forceest
it tells everything to your perfect
Satisfaction. Is your {ite “of any
importance to you? hese von-
‘derful forecasts tell about love,
courtship, changes, travel, mar-
riage, vocation, buying and selling
‘property, lucky and unlucky days.
months and years. A wonderful
OF complete life guide and
a ‘only $1.00.
| Will ‘soon arrive in Washington.
DE. ‘Address will appear here as
‘gs arrived.
A New and Ultra-
637 3rd Street, N. E.
\ ; WASHINGTON, D.C.
One and two room apartments inva modern brick building of rein-
forced concrete: hardwood floors throughout, including closets and kit-
chens; high ceilings; two outside windows to évery room; electric fixtures;
modern gas ranges; incinerator; individual mail boxes; reception halls;
dining alcoves; hot water heat; 24-hour hot water service; janitor at-
tendant; a gvilied lobby with pannelled sides and attractive electric fix-
tures; bath; screened windows; shades and awnings furnished; tele-
| * phones connecting apartments.
IT WILL COST NO MORE THAN RENTING THE SAME NUMBER.
OF ROOMS IN A PRIVATE HOME TO LIVE IN THESE EXQUISITE
| APARTMENTS.
Convenient to car lines and bus routes. Reservations now being made.
Apply to Resident Manager on the premises.
Open for Inspection from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m-
HOWARD ALUMNI
PLEDGE SUPPORT
TO PRESIDENT .
While the Howard-Lincoln foot-
beil game was the magnet that
irew thousands of friends and
alumni of the two schools here,
the Howard alunmi took advan-
tage of the: opportunity to meet
the new president ‘and to assure
him of their solid support.
“Thanksgiving evening, a special
meeting of the alumpi’ was held
in Rankin Memorial Chapel which
was largely attended and was en-
thusiastic in its spirit. Dr. Mor-
decai W. Johnson, president of the
University, addressed the gather-
ing. §
- Atty. A. S. Pinkett of the ‘local
chapter of the alumni, was selected
to make the address for the alumni,
His remarks were taken to cm-
body the new policy of the alum-
ni toward the University.
In outlining the views of th:
alumni Mr. Pinkett said:
“For more tkan twenty years
alumni have been beating back 2
persistent sentiment to lower. the
educational standards of Howard
University.
‘The ebb and flow of the tide. of
battle finds us at the close of a
bloodless revolution.
It is my pleasant duty tonight to
rect a young man who has been
caught up in this revolution and
stiddenly called to the most stra-
tegic, and at the same time, one
of the most difficult positions of
trust now open to men of our ra-
cial group. ‘
His call ‘to: this" position, ushers
in, we hope. a: new day, not .only
for Howard University, but for the
whole gvoup of which’ we form a
part,
His success will be influenced in
a large measure hy the relation of
the alumni.of Howard University
to his plans. And that relation
will, in turn, be influenced by his
appraisal of the place of alumni
iv the, life and activities of alma
mater.
‘This young man comes to his new
and difficult tasks _ exceptionally
well fitted to grapple with them,
and already’ has evinced a genius
for leadership which inspires con-
fidence.
Grave doubts’are entertained by
some lest we, on,the yerythres-
hold of victors, be°robbed of her
rewards. Can’ any” nian, — these
doubters ask, take the helm at
Howard University, steer the old
ship true to her traditional course
and survive? Every alumnus. an-
swers, by that’ course only can he
survive. i
“The vision of ‘this new leader
‘surveys the heights and sounds
the depths, and fixes no limitation
for aspiring youth short of his
fullest capacity.
He has suggested that Howard
University could he maintained, if
‘the test came, on dollars con-
tributed by the mothers and fathers
of our own group. An. ambitious
Suggestion, to say the least.
‘The trail-blazers in the strug-
gles of Howard University share
this faith, and would never com-
Promise on a program to: lower
her standards.
To make available the plice the
‘new leader now commands has re-
quired courage and faith. and the
‘sacrifice of blood, money and tears.
‘Some ‘who had ‘this faith, made
‘these sacrifices and paid this
price, share with us tonight_these
festivities. Some like the ‘great
Hebrew leader, -Moses, were per-
mitted to-view, but not to enter
the Land of Promise.
Fellow alumni, preservers of the
traditions of this institution, as
you greet our leader, will you’ not
understand that you are sentinels
on guard for him and alma mater?
|, Remember this, the hand which
forced upon the willing lips of Soc-
ates the hemlock, was not the
hand of the seeker after trath.
“Socrates. must die, not because
of lack of vision or failure to ,.re-
sent the truth,-but because he ‘had
vision and dared present the truth.
‘Though cyeles of years have
Passed since Socrates, men are yet
stiffling the truth and selling their
birthright for a mess of potage.
See to it: my college brothers
and sisters, that neither this man
nor our alma mater is betrayed in-
to the hands of the enemy; see to
it that there is no departure from
the ideals of the founders.
With your help. he can’ stand,
without it, he may.
John Ri Mott his dafined a.
loader as ‘One’ who” knows" the’
way, keeps ahead, and. persuades!
others. to follow" si
The gentleman whom we have
now at the head of Howard meets
these specifications in every. par-
ticular, He knows the way, keeps
ahewl, and persuades athers’ fo fol-
ow?
BAND TRAINED BY KIDNAP-
PED PRIEST PLAYS
HERE
‘The parishioners of the Church
of the Holy Redeemer was enter-
tained by the Norfolk Band and
Orehestra in a musical concert’ and
minstrel show, Monday. night, No-
vembet 29, at 8 p.m,, Father War-
ren, pastor of St. Joseph Chutch,
Norfolk, Va., trained these boys
and has been warned about his ac-
tivities with the race. It was just
a few months ago that he Was
kidnapped, while watching his band
at Rn concert. Z
THE WASHINGTON. TRIBUNE FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1926
a RE Re VS Pr
BR ‘
reve aaganenes «eff REAL ESTATE ;
many years of absence while visit-
ing relatives, during the past week | 4
were Mrs. Janie Willet of Sats- | SSiusuumsumnimiuapysuynnesyenenumeuainsusnueaueiiey
dale, N.Y ahd Mes. Ethel’ G. er :
Wooten of Stanford, Conn. After . ROOM for coupl
& pleasant week's ‘stay, both left || FOR RENT of” kitchen; ho
for their homes on Wednesday? | ¢#————————_———_—| ences; ‘reasonabl
‘The beautiful home of Mr. and FURNISHED ROOMS | NW. North 203
Mrs. Ivory Brown of Stanton WO neatly furnished rooms; | THREE pooms. I
Head, Southeast, was Uhrown opm | BNO, et ae ST gu RW: | THREE rooms
on Thanksgiving day’ for_an sh | Seon om; nesionabley 162i] Sk. WoW Peank
tertainment for the benefit of. the |RONT ee Weer Tae 21) SE, NW.4 Franis
Non-sectarian Hoine, founded -by een. By NW Morth, 140: «..+|/2 UINEURNIS!
the late Mrs. Mary ‘Webster. The ‘ROOM to refined lady; apply 18104 — Gera BLE
attendance was large. Music and|/t St., N.W.; North dz. _ | COMPORTABLE
dancing and refreshments were | LARGE front. room; steam heat; orted, hw-h.
served. A nice sum for the hoe | adies preferred; 1902° Vt. Ave.,| Pls bing ry Gi
was realized. NW. Apt. 31. sonable. Tas
irs. Louise Craig Jones, public ree ar tor ladyer man, | ONE room ani
school teacher of New York City,| BEDsitting yoom for lady or man.| ight and heat; §
was a visitor with her parents\on ‘another picts with man employed | North 6842,
flanfon: Road over the Thanksgiv-)otenight. Apply for both at 1004| LARGE front»
ing Polaye A Tat, DW | couple; heat and
MEN'S CLUB BINOUEI NG LURE root? SRE NW call Meee Se
The annual banquet of the Men's
Club of Union Wesley A. M. £.
Zion Church on Twenty-third
Street was held last Wednesday,
November 24th. A feature of ‘the
banquet was the novelty presents-
Hon of sataric inbs over the tie
phone, patterned after the Grid-
iron Club's feature, The’ ¢lab
voted to admit ladies next year.
‘The ladies of the church under
the direction of -Mrs. Mary Wil-
liams served a fine banguet after
the ceremonies. ce
The officers ‘of the clubs aré:
Levi Williams. president; Lee
MePhearson, vice ‘president; Bd-
ward F. Harris, secretary; James
A. Terrell, assistant — secretary,
and Richard’ Curt's, treasurer, The
committee in charge of the’ belt
augt-was composed uf W.A, Wat-
cony chatimans he eats Wi
liam Burke, ‘Charles. Jones’ and
Samuel H. Hatton.
FIFTEENTH. STREET
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
| sunday, Deeember» 5, will be
‘Women’s Day at Fifteenth Street
Presbyterian. Church. The setv-
ces will le under the auspices of
the Women’s Home’ and Foreign
Missionary Society. of this church
‘Th principal: speaker at. the:11
o'clock services will be Mrs, Ro-
sett Lawson with’ a five-minuse
talk by Miss. Viola Robinson, pres-
ident of th Christian Endeavor So-
ciety. A full women’s choir under
the direction of Miss Johephine
Muse. will render: the musical s¢-
lections. y i
Sunday night Miss J. LeBerta
Gray ‘will present home ‘talent in
readings and songs.
NICELY furnished comfortable
front room for respectable lady, in
quiet private family. 1741 13th ‘st.
NW.
REAL ESTATE and CLASSIFIED §
FOR RENT! |
_ NEW BRICK HOMES
- $2.Q50
a : 39 per month <
. Capitol Ave. and Providence’ St., N. E.
Five fooms and bath; hot water heat; electric lights; gas range !
i and water heater; school and churches near; bus transportation.
The bert rental proposition br Washington
ees
CAYWOOD BROS. & GARRETT. Inc.
915 New York Avenue Main 982 {
‘Buy Now Before It’s Too Late
GO SEE 719 EUCLID STREET, N.W.
PRICE $4,750
C h 200 $52.26 per month
as includes everything
8 SOLD, 4 LEFT
Your Last Chance to own one of the finest new brick homes
: in the exclusive northwest
HOT WATER HEAT MOVE IN AT ONCE OPEN 9 A.M. to 10 P.M.
Home Savings Company "Phans Colunbis 9863
FOR RENT
FURNISHED ROOMS
TWO neatly furnished rooms;
steam heat, clec.; 1731 T St, N.W.
HRONT room; reasonable; 1627
Corcoran St., N.W., North W4c.
‘ROOM to refined lady; apply 1810,
ig St, N.W.; North 1424.0
ARSE front. room; steam heat;
dies preferred; 1902" Vi. Ave.,
Ws: Abt Ble coh Ae 2
BED-sitting room for lady or man.
WANTED: Young man to shave
another room with man employed
at*night. Apply for both at 1004
Best. NAW eres oe
‘ONE room; 1717 S St, N.W.; cal
after 5 p.m.; Pot. 1968.
TWO neatly, furnished middle
Yooms; Ai:i., home privileges; ref-
erences; North 8784.
GOMFORTABLE, nicely furnished
front room for respectable lady in
‘quiet home; 1741 18th St, NW.
LARGE front room, well furnished,
for 1 or 2 refined’ men; 1231 8th
St, N.W.; Franklin 7856-3.
LARGE ‘room; a.m... reasonable;
2006 loth St., N.W.5 Pot. 327,
ROOM for man; heat, light and
bath; reasonable; 70 0 'St. N.E.
COMFORTABLE room for 1 or 2
men; Whitelaw Apt. 205.
ROOM, kitchen and bath; a.mi.,
heat and light furnished; $22.50;
1809 12th St, N.W. North 4801-W.
NICELY. furnished front room,
well héated; hall room; suitable
fap eounless: 170B: 9 BENW- ABE
WARM front room; suitable for 2
refined men} $2.50 per week; North
i ee a nnn
TWO neatly” furnisHed * Foonis;
a.m... home privileges; 2900 1th
st. N.W. g oon say
FRONT room, walking distance |
government printing office, “and
hion station; plenty: of heat; con-
venient to all cars; 113 R St.,.N.W.
North 3634. 7k
THREE large rooms, tempter: or,
separate; suitable for’ I.Hukc.; con-|
venient to % car lines; call after 3!
pan,; 1818 13th St.; NW. |
NEATLY furnished room; 1731 T
St., Apt. 4. nd
PURNISHED or UNFURNISHED
(0 communicating front rooms;
use of kitehen and phone; plenty of |
boat and hot waters cheap; 1757 |
illard St., N.W.; Pot. 5108.
ROOM, am.i, use of entire howc;
015 Fairmont. St. N.W.; Col.|
OBJ, By
FRONT room, h.w.h. jelce.; also|
tice room in basement, suitable for
iflice; very. reasonable; 609 Fla,
ven N.W.; North 10418 or North
INE» large’ front and one small
pack oc, fat man ar Jalen; elec;
i213 11th St., N.We =”
"ARGE front room; h.w.h.. else. |
North 4231-J; 217. S'St, NW.
LARGE, light middle room, a.m.ii'
reusonable: call after 5 p.m.; 2047,
thie DEW |
'WO rooms: steam heat; 615 Mor- |
on St., N.W.
ROOM for couple; elec., h.w.h,, use
of” kitchen; home-like; | conveni-
ences; ‘reasonable; 1849 13th St,,
N.W.; North 2036-W.
THREE rooms, h.w.h.; can be used
as apartment; use of phone; 408 M
St, N.W.: Franklin 4198-W_
ONE room and kitcHenette: a.m.i.;
Tight and heat; $22.50; no children;
North 6842,
LARGE front room; suitable tor
couple; heat and light; 614 Q St.,
NW. :
APARTMENTS _~
FIVE-ROOM apt., bath, hiw.h,,
elec. and gas; Houston and Hous-
ton, 615 F Su, N.W.; Main 7058.
WANTED: Girl or single woman
to share two-room apt.; rent~re&-
sonable; 414 Elm St., N.W.
THREE. rooms and bath; new
building, a.m.i,; rent reduced; im-
mediate’ possession; see janitor;
1018 Girard St, N.W.; Adams
GG Neekin eee
THREE rooms and bath; hoch,
gas, elec.; 1527 8th St, N.W.
¥HE COOLJDGE, 1724 T St., N.W.
Apartments, Best location in city.
Four rooms, reception hall, hard
wood floors, tile bath. See Jani-
tor-or phone North’ 7696-W.
TWO large rooms; desirable loca-
tion, near 12th St. ¥.M.C.A.; call
Mrs. Katie Hungertord.-1822' 12th
‘St.,_N.W.; North 2408-1.
THREE large rooms and bath,
elec, within 1% block ‘af Dupont
Circle; 1408 Hopkins St.,-N.W.; be-
tween’O and P, 20th and 21st: rea
sonable; call Ambrose Shief, North
7630. ¥
THREE. rooms .and .bath; sprivate
home; janitor. services font very
reasonable; as. eloc., steant heats
See janitor; 1018 Girard St,, N.W.
UNFURNISHED apt; two! rooms
and kitchenette; steam heat, gas,
tlec.; 1739 U St, N.W.
THREE-room apt.; newly papered
and painted; unfurnished; cal! af-
ter 5 p.m. at 9 Myrile St., NE. or
all day’ Sundays. Sie
HOUSE FOR BENT
HOUSF. 1929 th St. NW: 10
rooms, bath, elee., h.w.h.j $75. per
monih,
HOUSES FOR RENT
8229 11th St, N.W.: 10 rooms &
bath. elec... hav.h.: $75 per pron:h;
apply R. H. Smith; North 2457, |
222 Jay. St, N-E.: 5-room hons>,
elec,; call “Mr. Toyer, Fraklin
ORNS SS ore
SIX rooms and bath; first-class
condition;.clec. gus, cellar, front
and back: yards; $65. per month;
North 10418 or North 9230.’
—————“ > RENT xt
1545 North Carolina Ave., N.E.,
$60; six rooms, tiled bath, h.w.h,,
electric lights,
STONE & FAIRFAX
804 17th St. N.W., | Main 2424.
FOR SALE IN MEDIA, PA.
1 e
” a ‘
es a eS
: got TT
es os : ved i :
at SORE, FPR sy >
AOR re ni 1 ei eer Af Bae 7
se bc See Be gs Si os ia ah, San
at 4 ae a
SIE SES ENE RE RIE 8
This beautiful 6-room bungalow of Stone and Frame, with
Colonial Vireplace—lot 60 x 150.-—
PRICE $7,500—TERMS.
THOMAS REALTY CO.,
ard and Olive Streets, Media, Pa.
ZHREE Tooms and bath; 2905 1ith
St, N.W.5, $50.50.
FOR SALE
2 dresses; 3 double beds, 1 black
& 2 white enameled; 3 bed springs,
1 Duofold; 1 dining-yoom suite:
reasonable; 1431 @ St, NWN
4915.
FOR RENT
NORTHWEST:
518°; 718 Morton
Apartments: a.m.i.
NORTHEAST: 1202 Md. Ave.
FOR SALE
514 Morton; 1334 T; 1220. W;
718. Morton.
J. F. Holland, 1901 7th Sti, N.W.
North 3527
5 rooms and bath; hw-h., elees, gas
-AGENTS—new plan, makes’ it
casy to earn, $50 to $100 weekly;
selling shirts direet to wearer; no
capital or experience needed; rep-
resent a real manufacturer; write
for FREE samples; Madison Shirt
Makers, ‘562. Broadway, New York,
ROOM and board for 8 Howard
students. at $25 per month; 755
Gresham PI, N.W.
CURTALSS stretched; 1682 6th St,
N.W.; Pot. 5763. ate
MOTHER'S CARE given children
by day, week or month; rsason-
able; will take them to school; san-
itary conditions; North 1651, 400 T
St.,_N.W.
FIRST-CUASS table board: price
reasonable; 1327 Corcoran St..N.W.
AGENTS WANTED to sell Dr. Link's
Ker Stcaighe Heiy Dresser. $158, pee
oven, 30e seller.” Write for free. samples.
Dr. dink Medicine’ Co,, 2645 Elm St,
Dalins, Tezase
MOTHER'S care given children by
the day or week; 1112 Ist St. N.W.
YOUNG man, wishes position as
typist; one year's experienee in
lawyer's office; “good referenees;
Pot. 5047 between'8 and 1l p.m.
LAUNDRY business for sale, in-
cluding equipments: will rent tor
$30 per month; 1219 9th St., N.W.
WANTED—Chiliren to care for by
day, week or monih; 1909 Vt. Ave.,
NM NgiNe syel eee couyes
WANTED Experienced “howe.
Souse galesneonie; good saonsv; O'd
Indian Herb Store; 1728 7th St,
N.W,
WANTED: man to share room
with another; niesm heat: elec.;
$9: a month; ‘call’ Pot. 4072.
ROOM and’ Board for. 8 Howse
students for S25 per month; 765
Gresham Pi, N.W.
BE YOUR OWN LANDLORD.
OWN YOUR HOME, SEE—
REAL ESTATE LPANS
INSURANCE sus
1529S Strcet, NAY.
Phone, Nerth 4779)
JONATHAN DAVIS CONSIS-
TORY MEMORIAL SEPVICES
‘The annual memorial services
for the deceased members of Jo-
nathan Davis Consistory, 32 De-
gree Ancient and Accepted Seott-
ish Rite of Freemasonry, Southern
Jurisdiction, U.S. A. were held
Sunday. evening, November 28, in
the Consistorial’ Chamber of the
Temple, 1633 Eleventh Street,
Northwest.
The principal address was de-
livered by the Rev. L. G. Sheafe.
The committee having charge of
the arrangements for this occasion
consisted of B. F. Arrington, chair-
man; F. W. Alston and. Dr.
Walter T. Dixon, the latter also
acted as master’ of ceremonies.
LEGAL NOTICE.
wtcned ruetett ciih terach eae
SUPREME COURT OF THE DIs-
trict of Columbia, Holding Pro=
bate Court. No. 35,163. Adminis-
tration.
_ This is to Give Notice: That the
subscriber of the State of South
Carolina has obt.ined from. the
Pzobate Court of the District of
‘Columbia, Letters of Administra=
tion on the estate of Andrew D,
Tillman, late of the . District of
Columbia, deceased. All :persons
having claims against the deceased
are hereby warned to exhibit. the
same; with the vouchers, thereof,
legally authenticated, to the sub!
seriber, on or beforé the 11th day
of November. A.D., 1927; othe=
wise they may by law be excluded,
from all benefit of said estate.
Given under my hand this 11th day,
of November, 1926. John PR. Till.
man, Heath Springs, S.C. (Seal).
Attes:: James Tanner, Register of
Wills for the Dis:rict of Columbia,
Clerk of the Probate Court.
Home Owners & Buyers-
| DO YOU NEED MONEY?
—te pay your interest or taxes
—to put in your coal supply |
—to ‘improve or ‘remodel your
home :
| —to re-finance it or for any pur-
pose, we cait help you.
| 1 to 10 years to pay
—phone WEST 1910—
and out tapresentative will catl; |
LET ME HELP You ovr.’
OF YOUR FINANCIAL
RIFFICULTIES
on remedel'ng pregercy and short
term Loans.
EASY. TERMS ;
Call Me Todey—
ROBT. L.. EVANS,
G13-F St. NAV.
Main 6328
10 Room Hous: For Rent
Piece :
10-ROOM HOUSE, newly decor:
ated: electricity, gas; best reside.
tial section; has to be seen to b>
appreciated; for information ¢all-
North 5477; 2201 Second Street;
J. L. Britt.
(Continued from page 3)
Billy Pierce, well known among local theatrical and sport followers, was a visitor in the city last week. Mr. Pierce is now head of a booking and producing agency with offices in New Yok City.
Mrs. J. W. Clark of 1023 Euclid Street, Northwest, had as her guests for the Howard-Lincoln football game, Miss Bernice Nelson and Miss Ida May Griffin, of Chicago.
Among the many Philadelphiaans visiting the game and inspecting the Tribune office were: Mr. S. H. Nesbit, Mr. William Martin, Mr. Edward Williams, Miss Lillian Dix, Mr. McKinley Edwards, Miss Elizabeth Warren and Miss Mary Fisher.
Rev. J. B. St. Felix Isaacs, pastor of the First A. M. E. Church of Kansas City, Kansas, was in the city last week as representative of the Kansas City Call.
Dr. H. Doddford Dismukes, surgeon-in-chief at Harrison Memorial Hospital of Kimpall, W. Va., and formerly of this city, was a visitor here over the Thanksgiving holidays.
Lawyer L. M. Poe, her children, and mother, Mrs. F. Baughus of Newport News, Va., spent their Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. George Fleming, of 1323 Wallach Place, Northwest.
Mrs. Corinne E. Williams of 2816 Georgia Avenue, had for her Thanksgiving guest her niece, Mrs. Mamie Webb. Philadelphia. The Misses Susie Wiggins and Mamie Young, teachers at Fredericksburg, Va., were the guests of Mrs. Bell Lucas their aunt at the same address.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence A. Bradford are domiciled in their cozy new home at 1203 Kenyon Street.
Mrs. Hattie M. Brown of Brooklyn was the guest of relatives for the Howard-Lincoln game.
Miss Nannie H. Burroughs has returned to the city after a successful tour of several northern states.
Mrs. Ora Brown Stokes of Richmond was a Thanksgiving visitor en route to Philadelphia.
Dr. J. H. P. Coleman of New York was the guest of Miss Jeannette Carter for the football classic.
Prof. Wm. H. Ferris, editor of "The Spokesman" was in the city for the game.
Mrs. Addie R. Clarke had as her guest for Thanksgiving, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Boarden, D. and Mrs. J. J. Green of New York; Dr. Strickland of Philadelphia; Dr. Bailey of Germantown, Miss Hilda Storekane of Brooklyn and Mr. Smith of Chicago.
Dr. and Mrs. McKilvey of Long Branch, N.J., were the guests of Colonel and Mrs. West Hamilton.
Dr. and Mrs. Smith of Wilmington, Del., were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. B. F. Scott of 1751 T Street.
Mrs. Robert Queen, the wife of Attorney Queen of Trenton, N.J., was in town for the game.
Mr. Rienzi Lemus, president of the Brotherhood of Dining Car employees was in the city for the game.
Mr. Dale of Dale Hotel, Cape May, N. J., was here for the game.
Miss Adela Parks had as her guest, Mrs. Edrearner Gillespie and Mrs. Iona Trice of Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hicks of 3010 Eleventh Street, Northwest, had as their guests for Thanksgiving, Misses Spriggs, Thompson and Simbly; Messrs. Murphy, Bowers, and Lowe of Baltimore, and Mrs. Avis Robinson of Norfolk, Va.
Miss Rosa Wilson and Mrs. Sadie Wilson Mumford daughters of Dr. and Mrs. D. A. Wilson of Norristown, Pa. were the Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Thomas of 13th Street, Northwest, for the Thanksgiving holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Grant of 3011% Sherman Avenue, Northwest, had as their guest during the Thanksgiving holidays, their niece, Miss Marguerite Valentine, of Harrisburg, Pa.
Miss Valentine who is attending the school of art in Philadelphia left Monday morning to resume her studies.
Miss Lillian Rudisil of Charlotte, N.C., spent the Thanksgiving holidays here visiting her father, Mr. J. Rudisil.
Mrs. Al A. Andrews, 1301 T Street, Northwest, is in Louisville, Ky, on business, and will visit her sister, Mrs. Alice Freeman Branch, in Cleveland, Ohio, before returning to Washington.
After the football classic, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall L. Thomas of 1931 15th Street, Northwest, had as their guests to Thanksgiving dinner, Miss Martha Harmon of Baltimore; Mr. Lewis Harmon of Lincoln University, Mrs. Mahn and Mr. and Mrs. Jarrot Lee.
Mr. and Mrs. William O. Walker, of 1911 8th Street, Northwest, had as their guests for the Howard-Lincoln game, Miss Alice Mundy of Lincoln, Md.; Miss Pearl Vincent of New Yok City; Dr. Bishop of Baltimore, Md., and Mr. Henry Scott of Staunton, Va. Miss Mundy returned to Baltimore Sunday and Miss Vincent to New York City, from which place she will sail within a few days for Spain where she will study for a year.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tolson of Baltimore spent the week-end over Thankskiving as the guests of Mrs. Neil.
Miss Hope A. Gray of 1732 Vermont Avenue, Northwest, spent the week-end visiting her parents in Providence, R.I.
Among the out-of-town guests witnessing the Howard-Lincoln football classic were Mrs. Gertrude C. Perkinson of New York City the house-guest of Miss Elsie M Cameron and her sister, Mrs. Alfreda L. Pitts of Luray Apartments.
Mrs. Alonzo Tancil, and daughter, little Vashti Tancil and Mrs
1
1
Christmas special, six Platino Cabinets $5.00 Other styles in attractive mountings and finishes, $3.00 and up per half dozen. Place your order at once. Phone, North 1364 for appointment The SCURLOCK Studio
Sol Shields, all of Chicago, are visiti
Sol Mrs. Tancil's sister, Mrs.
Joseph Walker of 1834 Eighth
Street, Northwest. Mrs. Shields
left for Monday, while Mrs.
Tancil and daughter will remain in
the city several more days. Mrs.
Tancil is being extensively entertained
while here.
Mr. Harry H. Pace, head of the
Northeastern Life Insurance Company
of Newark, N.J., was a business visitor in the city this week.
Mrs. Julia P. Coleman formerly of Washington but now of New York City, was guest of relatives during the holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cornell of
1836 V Street, Northwest, had as
their guests, Miss Katherine Beaulian of Trenton, N.J., and Mr. Rawley Rice of Harrisonburg, Va., who spooled en route from Philadelphia, Pa., where he had been to visit his son.
Mrs. Ellis, from Sharon Hill, Pa., accompanied by Mrs. Frank Ellis of Los Angeles, Cal., are in the city visiting Mr. and Mrs. Abram Ellis of Fourth Street, Northwest.
Dr. Leon Reid from Richmond, Va., and Dr. Edmund Presby of Clifton Forge, Va., were guests of Mrs. Margaret Heath during the holidays.
Miss Jane Bosfield had as her guests for the holidays, her sisters, Miss Edith R. Bosfield and Mrs. Rose Jeffries both of Boston, Mass.
Prof. and Mrs. E. T. Johnson of Berryville, Va., attended the Howard-Lincoln game last week during which time they visited their sons, Edward T., and 'Clarbourne C. Johnson who are attending school here.
Dr. and Mrs. Sherwood Catlett of Plainfield, N.J., were house guests of the former's mother Mrs. James Catlett of 947 S Street, Northwest.
Mr. John Pearson of Durham, N.C., was a visitor in the city last week.
Mrs. Minnie Sumner Patterson of her sister, Mrs. Sadie Eugene and mother, Mrs. Sumner, 42 M Street, Northwest, during the holidays.
Miss Beatrice Miller, the charming daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Miller, formerly of this city, but now of Piedmont, California, was the house-guest of Miss Alice J. Dodson, 119 S Street, Northwest, for the Howard-Lincoln game. Miss Miller returned to Philadelphia, Pa., where she will resume her studies at Temple University. Miss Sadie Jones of Berryville, Va., was in the city attending the football game.
Father Norman Duckette, the newly ordained Catholic priest was dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Teague, Sunday last.
Mr. William E. Winkler and Dr. A. A. Alleney of Atlantic City, N.J., who were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Scott of 658 12th St., Northeast, for the Howard-Lincoln game returned to their home, Saturday.
Miss Helen Starkey, teacher in the public schools of Wilmington, Del., who was house guest of Mr. and Ms. W. H. Leach King of Arlington during Thanksgiving returned home.
Miss Naehl V. Johnson had as her house guest for the Thanksgiving week-end. Miss Thelma Forrester, violinist and teacher, of Bridgeport, Conn., and Miss Viola Hill, soprano, from Philadelphia, Pa.
Miss Catherine Wardleton of 750 Harvard Street, who is teaching in Westchester, Pa., came home for the Howard-Lincoln game and Thanksgiving holiday season. She had as guest Miss Marie Brock of Westchester.
Mrs. Louise Hall of New York City is visiting relatives in Washington.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Cusberd of Jersey City, attended the Howard-Lincoln football game. They were the coaches of Mrs. M. E. Cabanis. Miss Thelma Mickens motored to the Teachers' Convention at Saulsbury, N.C.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred T. Smith of Jersey City, N.J., accompanied by Miss Marguerite Brown of that city, motored to the game on Wed-
nesday and were the guests of their sisters, Mrs. Travers B. Pinn and Mrs. Walter J. Singleton . Mrs. Vellmar H. Ramos, came down to the game on Thanksgiving Day from New York City, where she is teaching in the public schools, and to visit her son, Edward. While in the city she was a guest of her sisters at 1814 13th Street, Northwest. Mr. and Mrs. Stanfield R. Mason of Leonia, N.J., who was the house guest of Mr. Bennet D. Dean, during the past week, residing at the home for Mr. and Mrs. Egair L. Kenney. 1457 S Street, Northwest, left for their home Sunday evening. Miss Rebecca McCoy and Miss Elizabeth Prince of Philadelphia, were holiday guests of the latter's parents at 1313 Riggs Street, Northwest.
Miss Cornelia Bishop of Baltimore, Md., spent the holidays visiting Mrs. Ione Lane, 1316 U Street Northwest.
1316 U Street,
of 2212 Secst,
who has
only improving.
les Randall of
were in the
days, the guest
dwn. 1807 Secst.
race and Mrs.
Ladelphia, Pa.
city, the guests
Walter Turner,
Northwest.
Kimball West,
days in the city
d. Rev. John-
needmen's Hosse
was the
La Hilzer, 1833
Northwest.
city of 1824 T
was delightful-
ly the holidays
ware.
of Thomas
"UP FROM THE
A DRAMATIC PAGEA
By W. P.
Under the
DUNBAR HIGH CO
—A
DUNBAR A
THURSDAY, L
8
Every section of the city w
talent possible. This monster s
the progress of the Negro in
Agriculture, War, Art, Science,
ness. A wonderful spectacle o
Carrie J. Knox,
Comm. See'y
Miss Clare Ware of 2212 Second Street, Northwest, who has been quite ill is slowly improving. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Randall of Atlantic City, N.J., were in the city during the holidays, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Brown, 1807 Second Street, Northwest. Mrs. Elizabeth Pearce and Mrs. Laura Weems of Philadelphia, Pa., spent Sunday in the city, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Turner, 1716 Second Street, Northwest. Mrs. L. Johnson of Kimball West, Va., spent the holidays in the city visiting her husband, Rev. Johnson, who is ill at Freedmen's Hospital. While here she was the guest of Mrs. Amanda Hilyer, 1833 Vermont Avenue, Northwest. Mrs. Sadie Murphy of 1824 T Street, Northwest, was delightfully entertained during the holidays in Wilmington, Delaware. Miss Ethel Lanier of Thomas Street, who has been ill is gradually improving.
Mrs. Lucille Randolph accompanied by Miss Celia Lacey and Mr. Thomas Ruttedge spent the holidays, as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Abram Ellis, Fourth Street, Northwest.
A Greeting made to order
A Gift that your friends
Something that does not price nor carry an obl
Your Photo
al, six Platino Cabinets
active mountings and finished
dozen. Place your order at
North 1364 for appointment
URLOCK Stud
Mr. and Mrs. O. De Priest of Chicago, Ill., accompanied yb Mr. Brascher De Priest and Mrs. Fannie Jones of Norfolk, Va., enjoyed a delightful motor trip here for the game. During their stay they were the guests of Miss Lottie Ruff, 1722 Second Street, Northwest.
The Misses E. Smith and V. Early of Cleveland, Ohio, were holiday guests of Mrs. Emma Wilhoyt of Fifty-fourth Street, Northwest.
Miss Etha Collins spent the week-end in Philadelphia and New York City.
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Brown and Miss Anne Shelton motored from Philadelphia to the game and were guests of Miss Clarice Tibbs and Mrs. Francina Biddle.
Mrs. Maggie Smith and party motored over to the game from Baltimore.
Miss Vashti Smith of Baltimore was the guest of Miss Ethel Langley, formerly of Baltimore.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Watts, of Baltimore, were over for the game. Miss Morsell was a week-end guest visiting friends.
Mrs. Belle Freeman Lewis, formerly of Washington, who is now making her home in New York, was the guest of her mother and friends over the holiday.
Dr. Oscar Cooper, Dr. Truitt, Messrs. Benley, Blue, and Turner motored from Philadelphia to the game.
Dr. Edgar Drajer of Cape May, N.J., was here for the week-end. Lawyer Thompson, of the class of '23, metored here from Durham, N.C., where he is practicing.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Foote were called to Trenton, N.J., at the death of Mrs. Foote's brother, Lloyd Dewey Gilmar, of Washington.
Mrs. Minnie Lawson has as her guest: her sister and brother-in-law from Lynchburg, Va.
Mrs. Roscoe F. Lee was home for the holiday from Winston Salem, N.C., where she is a teacher in the Public Schools.
Mrs. Annie Lewis of Fredricks-
mas special, six
styles in attractive mo
up per half dozen.
Phone, North 1364
he SCURL
A Greeting made to order--
A Gift that your friends cannot buy Something that does not suggest a price nor carry an obligation-
You Street at Ninth
---
---
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1926
burg, Va., was the guest of Mr.
ar! Mrs. Lucy Minor. She will
leave Friday for N.Y. to spend
the winter with her daughter.
Dr. I. H. Young was over from
THANKSGIVING BASKETS
DISTRIBUTED
Learn
Earn
Three tical in
Elks to hold Memorial Services
Columbia Lodge, No. 85, and Columbia Temple, No. 422, of I. B. P. O. E. of W., will hold their annual memorial services at Metropolitan A. M. E. Church on Sunday, December 12, at 8 o'clock. The speakers will include Rev. Charles Stewart of Metropolitan A. M. E.; Attorney Richard R. R. Horner, Rev. James Chapman, Dr. Walter T. Dixon, Mr. Robert Wilson.
Branch and Attorney John H.
Solos will be sung by Mrs. Katherine E. Deane and Mrs. Butcher.
Other music will be rendered by the choir of Metropolitan Church.
"UP FROM THE DEPTHS"
DUNBAR AUDITORIUM THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9th
Every section of the city will be represented by the best talent possible. This monster show in three episodes delineates the progress of the Negro in America in Religion, Education, Agriculture, War, Art, Science, Literature, Invention and Business. A wonderful spectacle of over one hundred persons.
Carrie J. Knox. Mrs. Gabriel Pelham,
Comm. Sec'y Gen'l Sec'y
ADMISSION—50 cents
Tickets On Sale at Reid's—11th and U Sts.
Can Be Combed and Dressed
Also Transformations, Switches, Straightening
Combs and Everything in the Hair Goods
Profession
Making Wigs Since 1905—Send for Free Catalog
ALEX MARKS 662 86th Ave. N.Y. Dent, U.
The District of Columbia College of Osteopathy 1826 9th St., N.W., Washington, D.C.
Will matriculate a Mid-Year Class on January 16, 1927. A Department of Laboratory Diagnosis has been added to this School, under the instruction of a Specialist in Laboratory Diagnosis from the Parent School of Osteopathy in Kirksville, Missouri. Dr. T. Theo. Parker, Pres. Dr. G. Amanda Parker, Sec.
Franklin 3892 GRAVES All Night
Hot Bread every day from 6 p.m. to 12 noon the next day
Big Midnight Dinner, starting at 11:30 every night
16 & 18 G St., N.W.—Opp, Gov't Printing Office, Rooms for Rent
Special for Sunday: Roast Philadelphia Capon, Prime Ribs of
Beef, Spring Lamb, Roast Loin of Pork, Green Peas in
Cream, Steamed Rice, Rice Custard, Pudding, Mint
Sauce, Home Made Pies and Cakes.
Roast Turkey, Oysters any Style
Columbia Conservatory of Music
Wellington A. Adams, Director
1000 EUCLID ST., N.W., Cor. Sherman Ave.
Music Branch at
Mrs. JULIA MARSHALL'S, 1778 Willard St., N.W.
PIANO, VOICE, VIOLIN, STRINGS, and
SPECIAL COURSES
DIPLOMA AND CERTIFICATE AWARDS
Splendid Student Body, Recitals and Social Features
FALL AND WINTER TERM NOW OPEN
Call or Write for Particulars
Your Photograph
P
THANKSGIVING BASKETS DISTRIBUTED
THANKSGIVING BASKETS DISTRIBUTED
The Queen of Sheba Missionary Circle of the Friendship Baptist Church, under the presidency of Mrs. Anna L. Dorssey, cheered the hearts of the old members Thanksgiving Day by distributing among them four baskets and twenty-four dollars in money.
The Home Department, No. 1. of the Sunday school, under the leadership of Mrs. Irene Jones, gave a farmers' exhibition on November 17th, raising the sum of $75.11.
The church officers are Wm. H. Minor, Chairman of Deacon Board; Edward Snow, Chairman of Trustee Board; Sadie Redman, church clerk; Mamie Hawkins, Editor.
THE DEPTHS"
NT OF AFRO-AMERICA
L. SMITH
Auspices of
COMMUNITY CENTER
T—
UDITORIUM
DECEMBER 9th
15
will be represented by the best
show in three episodes delineates
America in Religion, Education,
Literature, Invention and Busi-
f over one hundred persons.
Mrs. Gabriel Pelham,
Gen'l Sec'y
REAL HUMAN HAIR MADE TO
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everything in the Hair Goods
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8:15
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MME MATTHEE RUPHERS BROWN
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BIG US A DAY OFF.
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MME. MATTIE R. BROWN,
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189 "Choice Products"
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John F. Cole, Distributor
Soft Hair In Latest Style May Be Yours
This girl's beautiful, lustrous, hair was once very harsh and unruly. By the very easy way of applying
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CATHOLICS OPEN
CONVENTION WITH
COLORED PRIEST
Rev. Norman A. Duckett, color deine pres, will preach the opening sermon at the Convention of the Federated Colored Catholic of America, Sunday, December 5, when the delegates will assemble at 11 o'clock at a solemn high mass to be celebrated at St. Augustine's Church, 15th Street, Northwest, and the mixed choirs will sing. All sessions of the convention will be held in the basement of St. Augustine's Church. Dinner will be served the delegates after the mass. A band concert will be given by the Community Centers Band, Professor James Miller, director. Vocal selections will be rendered by Mrs. Katie Dean and Miss Helen Sernby. Miss Carolyn Thornton will be the accompanist. Senator David I. Walsh of Mass., will be the principal speaker. The convention will close Monday night with a reception at the Lincoln Colonnade.
CATHOLICS GIVE TESTIMONIAL
A testimonial reception that was given Mr. A. C. Monahan, the executive secretary of the board of directors of the Cardinal Gibbons
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FIVE
Institute and Mr. William A. Prater, chairman of the Washington branch of the Cardinal Gibbons Institute Committee, was held in the basement of the Holy Redeemer Church, last Sunday evening at 5 o'clock, with Francis Spriggs as master of ceremonies.
Addresses were made by Mr. G. B. Mahoney, Mrs. Charlotte Luckette, Father Tobin and Eugene A. Clark, Mr. Monahan and Mr. Prater. The East Washington Male Chorus and Mrs. Katie Dean sang. The Church of the Holy Redeemer through their pastor presented a check for $40.00, a voluntary collection was taken up which netted $28.50 for the school. Reshensmen's served were donated by the Church of the Holy Redeemer in charge of Mrs. Lena Morris and the Holy Name Men.
Council Gives Card Party
The card party given by the St Mary's Council was a grand success. The first prize, an electric lamp, was won by Mr. Benjamin Jones; the second prize, a hand embroidered towel, was won by Miss Maddie Johnson; the third prize, an automobile vase, was won by Mrs. Lena Dabney. The Council will meet Wednesday, December 7, at Miss Edna Dade, 2001 H Street, Northeast.
Notice
Kindly get all news matter for the Catholic Column to the Council Review office by Tuesday evening before seven o'clock.
J. CARTER, Secretary
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SIX
STONEWALLS WIN CITY TITLE
Southeast Boys Win on Ebenezer Misplay
Ebenezer presented a victory and the city football championship to the Stonewall A. C. last Sunday before a crowd of some 1200, after having outplayed the Black and White machine throughout the game. With 2 minutes left to play the church boys through "Nappy" Henderson practically gave victory away on a silver platter, and Stonewall won 6-0. Neither team had scored. The timers announced that there were 2(?) more minutes to play. After 9 of those minutes had been consumed, Henderson, Ebenezer center, moved back in kicker's position with instruction to hurl a long forward pass. The Stonewall cohort came charging in and when the Ebenezan momentarily fumbled, J. Brown, Southeast center, picked up the oval and ran 49 yards for the deciding touchdown.
In the resulting stampede the writer was smallwood up, and his discretion told him that safety from injury could only be found outside of the celebrating melee. Reports reached him, however, to the extent that the touchdown was sufficient for the Stonewall team and no attempt for the extra point was made.
Line-up:
Stonewall(6) Ebenezer(0)
Hawkins . . . L.E. Jones(c)
Shade . . . L.T. Chase
Courtney . . L.G. Mason
J. Brown . Center Henderson
Price . . . R.G. Gibson
Fillmore . . R.T. Bowen
Driver . . R.E. Lucas
O.Brown(c) Q.B. F. Brown
Mason . L.H. Dinsley
West . R.H. Dorssey
Gross . F.B. Ashton
Touchdown; J. Brown. Uumire, Wallis, Stonewalls A. C.; Referee, Dixon, Tech.
Substitutes: Ebenezer — W. Brown for F. Brown; Labat for Lindsay; Dickerson for Dorsey; Allen for Ashton; Smith for Chase.
MORRIS BROWN TIES A.I.
ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 25.—The Crimson hurricane racing with its fury met the Morris Brown whirlwind in a mighty clash today at Spiller's Field before eight thousand wild and enthusiastic fans and after sixty minutes of fierce fighting neither had gained an advantage, so the great conflict ended in a 6-0 tie. Both mentors rushed in fresh recruits but neither would give way. The Southeastern Classic left the names of several emblazoned upon the pages of history. Fathers will tell their sons how Ray, Stanley, Sheppard smashed into the whirlwind line only to be brought down by Smith or Clark. Sheppard also made great efforts to run back punts but could never make any long gains. McPherson kicked beautifully but this great running back was watched too closely and was smothered.
For Chief Aiken, the tie was a defeat. So sure was he of a crushing victory that he started his second team against the Whirlwind aggregation. For Whirlwind Johnson the tie was sweet victory. Everybody expected him to lose. After the game Coach Johnson said "My luck still holds. I haven't lost or played in a losing game in all my football career on Thanksgiving Day.
The referee, Rivers of Talladega,
and umpire, Kendall of Talladega,
had to appeal to police for protection
after the game. They had an
off day to A.U.'s advantage, acc
ording to some of the spectators.
Morris Brown; Atlanta University
Nicks, (c) .L.E. .A. Jones
Donnigan .L.T. .Lamar
Nicholson .L.G. .Ford
Saunders .Center .Moody
Warren .R.G. Slaughter
Webster .R.T. Riley
Spruill .R.E. Clay
Stephens .Q.B. McPherson
A. Clark .L.H. Green
Williams .R.H. Sheppard
Smith .F.B. Stanley
The Manassas Industrial Institute football team under the tutorship of Washington's own Ted Chambers has just finished one of the most creditable grid seasons of its existence. Chambers is justified in being proud of victories over both of our local high schools. At no time has such a marked improvement been more noticeable in an institution than since Mr. Chambers' appointment at the Virginia school. Following is a record of the 1926 schedule:
Manassas—
3—Armstrong 2
3—Douglas 0
7—Dunbar 0
7—Jefferson 6
0—Booker T. 20
20—Bowie 0
Three of his first string men Woodson, Waddell, and Chambers will be lost by graduation this year. The former intends entering West Virginia Institute while the latter two are to register at Howard in 1927.
THE SPORT REVIEW
SAMUEL H. LACY, Sports Editor
SCHWEDER PHOTO
JUST A BIT OF ACTION in the Howard-Lincoln game. Jack-Coles with the ball tearing through Lincoln's line for a long gain.
ALCOES PRY OFF
BASKETBALL LID
ALCOES PRY OFF
BASKETBALL LID
Local basketball will get under way Thursday, December 9, at the Colonnade when the champion Alcoes tackle the Monmouth Lodge Elk 95" of Asbury Park, N. J. Grand Exalted Ruler J. Finley Wilson will be on hand to welcome the visiting Elks and toss out the ball to be used.
With the exception of Tommy Jackson, former Tech star, the locals will present a veteran combination.
The return of Archie Berry and Willie Hope has greatly strengthened the Purple and White Tossers.
The preliminary engagement will feature the Community A. A. Yellowjackets, therefore offering a double attraction beginning at 8:15 p. m.
63-YARD PASS DEFEATS FISK
7-6
ATLANTA, Ga., Nov.—The pigskin oval as it itailed between the uprights for the point after touchdown wrote defeat for Fisk across a Turkey Day sky here this morning. The educated toe of Howard Archer turned the trick. The lone Morehouse tally came in the second quarter when Archer chunked 63 yards to Dezon who raced the remaining 22 yards across the goal line for a touchdown. It was here that Archer's toe defeated Fisk. The pass, one of the longest ever completed in the conference traveled 46 yards from the line of scrimmage, the tosser standing 17 yards behind when it was uncoiled. Fisk was not to be discouraged, however, and Brewer recovered a fumble by Robinson, Morehouse fullback on the 40 yard line of the latter. A 20 yard pass, Wood to Matthews was completed, Ghee then received a 11-yard pass from Woods and pedalled off the remaining 9 yards for a touchdown. Ghee missed the extra point from placement.
Fisk threatened seriously in the first quarter when she gained possession of the ball on the fifty yard line, and carried it to the Morehouse 8-inch line. Here Ghee on the fourth down attempted to hurdle the strong Morehouse wall, but was met in midair by backhack Robinson, and Fisk's hopes for a touchdown were blighted. Morehouse also threatened in this quarter, when Quarterback Moseley, marched his pony backfield, composed of Blackburn, Robinson, and Saunders, 65 yards through the Fisk line, only to lose when Robinson fumbled a pass from center, and again in the third quarter, when Archer made a beautiful drop-kick from the 42-yard line which missed the uprights only a few inches.
For Fisk, the ground gaining of Yost, and Woods was a feature, while the splendid running and accurate passing of Ghee drew repeated cheers from the stands. Archer and Dezon, ends playing their last game under the Maroon and White were clearly the highlights on the Morehouse team. Archer's toe, and his dexterious passing were death-dealing to Fisk, while the pass grabbing of Dezon, and his repeated breaks through the Fisk interference kept him in the limelight as one of the best ends that ever donned cleats. The line-up:
PRESIDENT
Dezon . L.E. Hunter
Davis . L.T. Evans
Sieglar . L.G. Brewer
Webster . Center. Scott
Cooke (c) . R.G. Watts
Lattimore . R.T. Johnson
Archer . R.E. Burton
Moseley . Q.B. Woods(c)
Saunders . R.H. Ghee
Blackburn . L.H. Yost
Robinson . F.B. Davis
Officials: Referee, Taylor (Northwestern); umpire, Collins (Hampton); linesman, Gunn, (Atlanta JI). Timers: Warner and Kindle.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1926
CARLISLE SEASON OPENS
DECEMBER 20
The Carlisle Field Club will open its 1926-27 basketball season against the Omega Psi Phi Delta Big "5" at the Lincoln Connadeon on December 20. The Blue and White Squad, with the acquisition of Simms from Miner Normal and Henderson of the 1925 Armstrong team, has been considerably strengthened. With Mike Jones in good shape and the converting of Ed, Davis into a guard, the defensive game promises to be better than that of 1925-26. Captain Bradick is also back in the fold.
A schedule is being devised by Matt Taylor whereby a number of well-known teams will be brought here. The Indians' management has arranged for games with the Athenians of Baltimore, the Chicagoans, the Buccaneers and Vandals of Atlantic City, and the Philadelphia Scholastics, here. Besides these home affairs the 1024-25 champs will go on a tour this month through Atlantic City, Orange, N. J., Philadelphia and Germantown. In February a western trip consists of games in Chicago, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and Dayton. All home games will be played at the Lincoln Colonnade, where the seating capacity has been enlarged and a better lighting system is to be installed.
In quoting Mr. Taylor than, "So far as the Carlislets are concerned, Washington is in for a big basketball year," we may see that he is very much pleased with his team and its prospects.
TUSKEGEE DEFEATS
SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY
TUSKEEGEE, Ala. Nov. 25.—The Tuskegee Tigers made their final bow to the home fans for this season in the Athletic Bowl, Thanksgiving Day by defeating the Southern University, Louisiana, team 23 to 0. The second team started for the Institute and Tuskegee scored its first touchdown after an exchange of pnts, and a series of line punches by Steward.
The second quarter opened with cheers from the grandstand as the first team threw off their blankets, and gave up the benches to their juniors. The unevenness which was expected from the visitors because of the change did not materialize, and they played with the same skill evidenced in the first quarter. Tuskegee passes were intercepted and blocked, line plunges were held for no gains, and end runs were cut off by the plucky visitors. A spectacular field goal, against the wind, from the 40-ward line by Stevens brought the score to nine points, and the crowd to its feet.
The second half opened with Stevenson's 35-yard kick-off which was returned by Captain Edmond for 49 yards. Most of this period the ball was held by Tuskegee in the visitor's territory, but without any significant gains; Shanklin, however crossed for the second touchdown. Stevenson added the extra point by kick from placement.
Beginning with the last quarter, the first team was gradually replaced by second and third string men who opened holes for Shanklin's line plunges resulting in a touchdown by Nash. Harris added the final point by a place kick.
The outstanding players for Southern University were: Washington, center; A. Harrison, guard; and J. Harrison, end. While the work of Steward, Smith, Stevenson, Shanklin, Kitchen and Tadlock for Tuskegee was noteworthy.
The lineup:
PETERSBURG DEFEATS ST. PAUL
PETERSBURG, Va., Nov. 25—Dodging, finting, sprinting, the nifty little quarterback Epps, fought his way to victory over St. Paul aided by the full efforts of all of his teammates notably, Coley, Shelton, Payne and Tynes. The game was one of those gala events with nearly 5000 attending to wilt-Institute, and if not the greatest, little quarterback in the history of Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute, and if not the greatest as great as any in the C. I. A. A. On an attempted punt, Cotman, the big Peters left tackle, broke through and blocked it. Lacey, Petersburg end recovering. After two tries Epps went over for a touchdown. The try for goal failed. The play was wholly in St. Paul's territory for the rest of the game and the last Petersburg touchdown came in the last quarter.
Epps shot a pass from the 50-
yard line to Payne who caught it
on the St. Paul 14-yard line where
he was downed. Another pass.
Epps to Royal netted 10 yards and
after two tries, Epps carried the
ball over for a touchdown.
The line-up:
Va. Normal St. Paul
Lacey L.E. Goods
Cotman L.T. Pierce(c)
Coley L.G. Williams
Edwards Center. Boykins
Thompson R.G. J. Oliver
Tynes R.T. Williamson
Payne R.E. Baker
Epps(c) Q.B. Hall
Royal R.H. Dean
Wiggins L.H. Smith
Chambers F.B. Hudson
Referee: Gibson.
Y. W. C. A. GIRLS WIN
FIRST LEAGUE GAME
Before a capacity crowd at the Phyllis Wheatley Y. W. C. A. Coach "Soup" Turner's National Benefit "5" succumbed to the superior playing of the older and more experienced Y. W. C. A. Quint last Tuesday night. 13-4.
This game was the opener of a league consisting of teams representing Howard U., Shiloh Baptist Church, National Benefit Insurance Co., and the Y. W. C. A. Every Tuesday there will be an attraction beginning at 7:15 p.m.
Anita Gant was the outstanding player of last Tuesday's contest, scoring 9 of her teams total of 13 points.
Line-up:
Y. W. C. A. (13) Nat'l B'fit (4)
Fleming ..... L.F. ..... Augustine
Patrick ..... R.F. ..... Bruce
Gant ..... C. ..... Downing
Duffy ..... L.G. ..... Allen
Marshall ..... R.G. ..... Pitts
Substitutes: N. B.-Hawkins for Augustine, Blackstone for Bruce, Smith for Blackstone, Mitchell for Pitts, Y. W. C. A.-Frazier for Marshall.
"SLIM" HENDERSON
MAKES STATEMENT
Henderson Says He Is Not to Blame for Ebenezer Defeat (Much controversy has arisen over the action of "Slim" Henderson, star Armstrong center of 1924-25, playing for Ebenezer in the city championship last Sunday against the Stonewall A.C. Members of his team, as well as a number of fans have taken different sides as to whether or not Henderson was directly responsible for the Stonewall touchdown.) Questioning Henderson the Tribune Sports Editor got the following statement:
"I am no alibi artist, but I have been charged with the loss of Ebenezer's football games with the Stonewalls for each of the last two seasons. Concerning the game last Sunday in which I was apparently responsible for the Stonewall victory, I wish to state that throughout the game when I was called on to kick, the pass from center was bad. Each time I was forced to move out of position to catch it and then hurry my punt. On this final play I had no chance to recover the ball, and charges to the contrary are unjust."
—Photo by Scurlock
ALL-HIGH FOOT-BALL SELECTIONS
ALL-HIGH FOOT-BALL SELECTIONS
# By Sam Lacy
Fowler (D) .....left end
Simon (D) .....left tackle
Lonesome (A) .....left guard
Hawkins (D) .....center
Coates (D) .....right guard
Ford (A) .....right tackle
Mavritte (A) .....right end
Beason (A) .....quarterback
Hill (D) .....halfback
Dabney (A) .....halfback
Sewell (D) .....fullback
Selections and Reasons
The above selection of the All-High football team for Washington has been made through the writers' belief that these fellows deserve mention on this mythical eleven.
Ends: Fowler should be recognized without the slightest doubt as the outstanding high school end of the season. Not only is he the leading wingman of the two local high school teams, but he is way above those of any of the Conference eleven. Mavritte, at right end is somewhat weaker than his running mate due to his lack of experience, but is next in line in the rating of local scholastic ends
Tackles: Simon is the Red and Black representative in the tackle position though were this selection including the entire conference, it is hardly likely that he would receive mention. Ford, on the other hand, 13 like Fowler, in that he is without a superior in his position. Captaining a team considered the under-dog in the Scholastic Championship his presence in the line-up on the 22nd of November was continually felt. No All-Conference eleven could be complete without Ford in a tackle. Guards: Lonesome, without his attitude of self satisfaction, could be a much better guard. However, his work against Dunbark makes him a candidate. Coates is good. His offensive as well as his defensive ability gives him recognition as the other guard.
Centers: The high schools were weak at this position. Not either of the two, Dunbar nor Armstrong were strong here, however, due to his superior defensive play, Hawkins gets the call, as I look at it.
Quarterback: Here I expect all sort of criticism, as I have placed a halfback at the helm of my team. Beason is undoubtedly the speediest back in either school, and his broken-field running against Dunbar leads me to choose him. I am confident that he has no peer in running back punts. Some may say he is weak at tackling, but he made some fairly good ones on the 22nd.
Halfbacks: Dabney played a stellar game through the season, and besides being a speedy ball carrier, he is also an exceptional passer. Hill, though naturally weak offensively, is a good passer and a sure tackle. With him and Dabney, likewise a defensive man of no mean ability, backing up the flanks any team would be a tower of strength.
Fullback: Sewell, is best though he will be far better with more experience.
Honorable Mention: Beckwith, with the exception of his bone against Armstrong would have undoubtedly been chosen. Janifer, had he played longer against Dunbar had a good chance, as did Johnson.
FOOTBALL PICTURES AT HOWARD
The Howard Theater had as an added attraction all this week the moving pictures of the Howard-Hincoln football game. This was the second theater to show the pictures, they being shown in Baltimore a day after the game. The scenes of the game were, in most instances, very good as well as were those of the crowds. While many important persons were left out, especially Dr. Johnson, president of Howard University, the picture as a whole, was by far better than any previous efforts. The filming of the picture was under the direction of Dr. Charles S. Johnson formerly of this city.
C, I, A, A, MOGULS HOLD 16TH ANNUAL MEETING
PETERSBURG, Va.—The C.I.A.A., will hold the sixteenth annual meeting this year at A. and T. College, Greensborough, N.C., on December 1 and 11. The members of the association are Hampton, Union, Virginia N., and I. Institute, Virginia Seminary and College of Lynchburg, St. Paul, Shaw University, A. and T College and Johnson C. Smith University. The practice of arranging the football schedule and appointing the officials for all games, which was so satisfactory this year, will be continued and also introduced in other sports, such as basketball and baseball.
A report will be made by a special committee appointed to select the all-star team and also to select the man considered the most valuable to his team for 1926. The committee is composed of J. Wiley Johnson, sporting editor of the Norfolk Journal and Guide, Garland Mackey, L. U. Gibson, Dr. F. S. Coppage and R. E. Clement. The special trophy to be awarded to the player considered to be most valuable to his team is given by Dr. James P. Darden of Petersburg, Virginia. This trophy is to become the personal property of the player receiving it and is given with the hope of developing better team play among college and university teams.
There will also be interesting reports and addresses by the various representatives. President T. L. Puryear will preside at the meeting and will also give a review of athletes in Negro colleges for 1926.
WILBERFORCE AFTER
EIGHT YEARS CONQUERS
W. VA. YELLOW JACKETS
Ritehie Kicks Field Goal as on Last Thanksgiving, But This Year His Dependable Foot Brings Winning Points, West Virginia Given
By P. Bernard Young, Jr.
NEIL PARK, Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 25.—Through the murky haze of a November afternoon and upon a field on which torential rains beat a gloomy tatto for three and a half periods of play, Wilberforce after eight years of ties and defeats, pounced upon the Yellow-jackets of the mountains of West Virginia for a 3 to 2 victory. Wilberforce's margin of triumph came suddenly, and it was as dramatic as it was sudden, because for the first scant minutes of the struggle West Virginia held the whip hand, but only for a few brief moments.
The Ohio phalanx had the oval: a few thrusts at the line and then Wilberforce executed its only forward pass of the game so precisely and so beautifully that on the next play it was lining up under what, on a clean day, would have been the shadow of the West Virginians' goal posts. Ritchie had gathered in Turner's punt on Force's 20-yard mark and streaked back to the 50-yard line, from where he plunged on the first play for four yards. Following a one yard gain which Campbell harvested, putting the ball on West Virginia's 45-yard line, Ritchie shot a pass to halfback Moore, who had just substituted for Reid. Moore gathered the cowhide in over his shoulder, then crouched slightly and sped for the open. Two Yellowjackets waited to sting him into sub mission before he could reach the goal.
Ten yards Moore raced; and then ten more than these. From somewhere a green-jerseyed teammate shot in front of Moore—it was Mendenhall, a fine halfback, who once played at Otterbein College, converted, into a fine end. One of the Yellowjackets sprawled and had its sting taken out of it as this Bulldog hurled himself forward as interference, but the other halted the brilliant run of Moore, but not until he had galloped to the 13-yard line.
In the collegiate vernacular, it was some pass and some run. Today, Wilberforce, under the fine tutelage of Coach Graves, was perched on the peak of its season's form; co-ordination was evident and where earlier in the fall interference had been lacking, it was now functioning with the effectiveness of a championship organization.
On the first play Campbell ripped into the line for four precious yards. Here Referee Bergman of Notre Dame detected the backfield in motion and spotted the Ohlans 5 yards as a penalty. On a long end run Harding got three yards back, but West Virginia, under Coach Hamblin, was taught to fight hardest when the going was the roughest. Captain and tackle Hodges nailed Ritchie on the following play for a 6-yard loss, the bell now on the 21-yard line.
Ritchie signaled for the ball and drop-kicked it over from the thirty-yard line. It was directly over the center of the crossbar and had plenty of height. The first quarter of today's game was not over and yet Wilberforce was leading by three points, but the West Virginians could not be convinced that Johnson, who soon entered the fray, would not again be the minute man to bring victory. However, Wilberforce never threw another pass in this game.
How Safety Was Made
Turner punted 47 yards to Wilberforce's twenty but the ball bounded over Ritchie's head and rolled to the twelve-yard line. As the third quarter ended, West Virginia, in the strength of despair.
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had in three downs thrown Force backs for losses until the ball rested on the one-foot line. Here the third period ended. As the fourth quarter began, Williams dropped back (he had substituted earlier for Harding) as if to try a kick from behind his goal. There were two possibilities: a kick or give the other team a safety and try to maintain the one point lead. In the situation that existed the odds were in favor of an unsuccessful punt. Should Wilberforce intentionally give West Virginia a safety, it would be Wilberforce's ball on its 3-yard line and with four downs to gain, ten yards or get off a successful punt. Brainy football would take the safe route of intentional safety.
This being the case, Coach Graves rushed Harding in for Williams with instruction to do anything but kick or pass, which meant in other words to make the intentional safety. Harding received the ball, advanced a few yards and allowed himself to be downed and thus West Virginia made its two points. And more than likely this play kept the Yellowjackets from scoring. Coach Hamblin, standing near us on the sideline, said that as far as his team was concerned an attempted punt would be the best thing in the world.
With the ball now on the thirty-
yard line, Harding punted to the
50, and some mud covered Yellow-
jacket returned it 15 yards. In quick succession came several
chances for West Virginia to score,
but they could not or would not,
so they did not.
The line-up:
Wilberforce 3 West Virginia 2
Redden L.E. Turner
Calloway L.T. Riggs
Bickett L.G. Crawford
Buchanan (c) Center. L.J. Johnson
Kyle R.B. Anderson
Slater R.B. Hodges
Mendenhall R.E. Gaithers
Reid L.B. Lowery
Campbell R.B. Branch
Harding F.B. McConnell
Ritchie Q.B. Robinson
Substitutes: Wilberforce—Williams for Harding, Harding for Williams, Moore for Reid, Ward for Campbell, Terrell for Mendenhall, Mendenhall for Terrall, Campbell for Moore. West Virginia; H. Johnson for Robinson, Saunders for Crawford, Johnson for Lowery, Nash for Johnson, Riggs for Hodges. Referee: Bergman (Notre Dame); umpire: McCray (Cineinnati); Linesman: Weimer (Ohio State); field judge: F. A. Young (Chicago Defender); timer: P. W. L. Jones (Kentucky Normal.) Oversee: 19-15.
HAMPTON DEFEATS UNION
HAMPTON INSTITUTE. Va
Nov, 25. The Big Blue and White Machine of Hampton Institute marched victoriously over the Union University Pawing Panthers before a throng of 5000 on Armstrong Field for a score of 10-0, which makes them champions of the Colored Inter-collegiate Athlet
ic Association, possessors of the Frank Young Trophy and possessors of the Slaughter Trophy. The game was full of thrills and excitement from start to finish. Both teams showed wonderful spirit and fitness. Hampton, however, had a little edge on the Red and Steel Eleven by virtue of the fact that the backfield jabbed Union for 13 first downs. The game was played by Hampton without a single substitution while Union made 21 changes. The Red and Steel backheld was swift as lightning, but Hampton's forward wall seemed to sift through and break up plays at will. There were two dangerous fumbles made by Byrd of Hampton in receiving Breaux's punts that put Hampton in a dangerous position. Each time Breaux failed to kick for a field goal.
The first score of the battle came in the second quarter when Hampton was held for downs on the 2-yard line and Union was forced to kick after receiving the ball. Breaux was to kick the ball out from behind the goal posts, but in kicking he stopped outside the end zone, thus counting a safety for Hampton. Union's punt was short enough to allow Baker to drop-kick from the 40-yard line. The Union Pawing Panthers, however, were not without stars, for Breaux and Shields in the back-field were constant menaces. Breaux's punting was good, and Shields was always a good ground gainer. Capt. Tobin and Ruffin on the line were bulwarks of strength.
ROAMERS STILL WINNING,
PLAY EBENEZER SUNDAY
ALEXANDRIA, Va., Nov. 29.—The Roamer A.C., of this city defeated the Fort Myer eleven on last Sunday, 32-0. The soldiers were no match for the Alexandrians. The fast Ebenezer football team will journey to Alexandria Sunday, December 5 to play the undefeated Roamer A. C. of that town. The Ebenezev team is reputed by the best sport critics to be the best independent team in the District of Columbia, being composed for the most part of ex-high school stars. The Stonewall A. C. of this city was scheduled to meet; the Roamers Sunday, but the game was called off by the Stonewall club, assigning as their reason the fact that a number of their men were injured in the Stonewall-Ebenezer game of last Sunday. Be this as it may, it seems t) the Alexandrians that the Stonewall club is deliberately dodging them.
High School All-Conference Selections in next issue of "THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE."
1
THEATRICAL
ACTRESS WHO TAUGHT THE PRINCE OF WALES THE "BLACK BOTTOM" COM- IN TO HOWARD
For the week starting Monday, December 6, "Doc" Straine and his company of thirty people will occupy the stage of the Howard Theater.
The management is not sparing any expense in bringing this aggregation to this city. The costumes and scenery are worth seeing, and the cast of the following performers will substantiate what we say: Doc Straine, Claude Collins, C. J. Davis, Helen Stokes, Floerne Dade, Anita Buch, Clifton and Beattie, those dancing boys so well known, and Theresa West. Miss West has the distinction of teaching the Prince of Wales, while she was in Europe, how to do the "Black Bottom."
On the screen for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, is offered a Universal Jewel, "The Perch of the Devil," with Mae Busch. The last four days Columbia Pictures presents "The False Alarm," with Ralph Lewis, Mary Carr, George O'Hara and Dorothy Reyner. The barrel of fun on Saturday nights is the talk of the town.
"BAD MEN" AT REPUBLIC
The Wm. Fox, super-production,
"3 Bad Men," will be shown at the
Republic for four days, Sunday,
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday,
December 5, 6, 7, 8. This is the
latest, greatest and most elaborate
of all epic pictures of the West.
It has made moving picture history
throughout the world. "3 Bad Men"
was one year in the making.
Into a land of terror, a land of
gold-maddened men and frenzied
women, rode a slip of a girl—and
three bad men. They were border
terrors—killers, who settled disputes
with the shooting irons, but
they formed a protecting trio for
this transplanted desert flower and
they rode into eternity with a smile
that she might realize the secret
of her dreams.
"3 Bad Men" is the mightiest of all great dramas of the early West. George O'Brien, Olive Borden, Lou Tellegen, Alce B. Francis, Tom Santschi, J. Farrell MacDonald and 25,000 others are in the cast. Extra added attraction—chapter 4 of "Bill Grimm's Progress" with Al Cooke and Kit Guard.
"Kosher Kitty Kelly" a great Trish-Jewish story with Viola Dana, Vera Gordon and Nat Carr, will be shown on Thursday and Friday, December 9, 10. It is a better picture than "The Cohens and the Kellys." On the stage on Thursday and Friday will be presented Young and Co., the master mystery in "A Night in the Orient." Young and Co., present the most alluring array of tricks, illusions and oriental problems in the history of the world, featuring Princess Famada, the physic wonder. Fanada tells your past, present and future. Young and Co., will give a matinee and two evening performances on Thursday and Friday.
On Saturday, December 11, the feature picture will be "The Midnight Kiss" with a star cast. Talent will be presented at 7:30 and 9:30.
"THE, WALTZ DREAM" AT THE BROADWAY
Starting Sunday until Monday, the Broadway Theater will present the sensation of Europe "The Waltz Dream" with an unusual cast of foreign players. It is the type of picture that we cannot tell you about, you will have to see it for yourself to be convinced. On Tuesday, Betty Bronson and Ricardo Cortez in "The Cat's Pajamas," don't let the title fool you for in it you will see one of the season's best offerings. Wednesday and Thursday, Sally O'Neil, John Patrick, and Bert Roach in "Don't." It is the story of a flapper's rebellion against parental authority and as usual the base when a woman gets what she wants then she will end on Friday and Saturday doesn't want it. While the week with everybody's favorite, Irene Rich and Clive Brook in a high class mystery drama "The Pleasure Buyers" Bill Reeves' original Peacock band will furnish the melodies.
LINCOLN THEATRE REDUCES
PRICES
Beginning Sunday, the Lincoln Theatre will inaugurate a new scale of prices and change of pictures. At night-time and on Sundays and holidays, adults will be admitted to any seat in the house for 20 cents and children will be the same as the daily matinees, 10 cents. Daily matinees for adults will be 15 cents.
The picture program for the week will be: Sunday and Monday, Gilda Gray, the highest paid dancer in the world, will be seen in a dramatic story "Alomo of the South Seas." For Tuesday and Wednesday, Leatrice Joy appears in a Cecil B. DeMille production dealing with a sensational expose on modern marriages, "For Alimony Only."
Thursday and Friday, Edmond Rostand's immortal love drama made into a screen masterpiece "Cyrano de Gergacar" with the great French actor Pierre Magnier and a cast of 5000.
For Saturday only, the picture will be "The Flame of the Yukon" with Seena Owen and Arnold Gray. It deals with strong men and frail women of the great northwest. Manager Pinchback announces that he will soon resume the former popular talent nights and that applicants should get in touch with him at once. Try-outs will be on Thursday nights.
ALEXANDRIA, VA., NEWS
Phone 1141
MISS JULIA D. BURKE
Graduate Nurse of Providence
Hospital, Danville, Va.
Lisbonia, Darwinia, 517<sup>1</sup> S. Columbus St., Alexa., Va.
Best Game of Season Sunday
The football fans of Alexandria are looking forward to Sunday, December 5, as the day for the hottest contested football game the Roamers have presented this year. Their adversaries will be the all-star team of the Ebenzeer A. C. of Washington, D.C., whom all the newspaper critics say is the best aggregation of independent amateur football players that Washington has ever produced. The Alexandrians say the same about their team, so therefore, the great stir. The game will start promptly at 2 o'clock.
Mr. Robert Johnson, son of the late Edgar and Elizabeth Johnson of 321 North Pitt Street, died Saturday evening after a long illness at his residence. He was buried Tuesday, November 30, from his home. He leaves a mother and brother.
Mrs. Evelyn Johnson of North Patrick Street has been rapidly improving. She will be able to resume her duty as a teacher in the Parker-Gray School in a few days. Mr. Albert Tarceli visited his brother Mr. Herbert Tancil of Prince Street during Thanksgiving holidays. Mrs. Mary Cook of Atlantic City visited her cousin, Mrs. Mattie Wilson of Queen Street for a few weeks. She has returned to her home. Mrs. Elizabeth Harford has returned from Oxford, N.C., and other points South after a delightful stay. Mr. and Mrs. John Paige and family of Mayonna, N.J., motored down for the game and visited her mother and grandmother, Mrs. Susan Carter, 313 North Alfred Street.
Misses Sutton, Jonathan, Messrs.
T. R. Lovelace and Forrester of Howard University, and Mr. Warren Wair were guests of Rev. and Mrs. G. O. Dixon, Sunday, November 28th from 4 to 6 p.m.
REPUBLIC
SHOW STARTS EVEN
W. E. L. Sanford, Manager
4—DAY
Sun., Mon., T
December
WILLIAM
3 BAY
Cast of 25
GEORGE O'BRIEN
Extra—Chapter 4 of THURSDAY & FRIDAY—
A great Irish
"KOSHER
KELI
(Better than "The C
with VIOLA DAN
and NA
Thrills!—SATURDAY, Dec. 11—On the Screen—
"The Mid
---
"UNCLE TOM'S CABIN" BEING
FILMED IN MISSISSIPPI
NATCHEZ, Miss., Nov. 30—(P. C.N.B.) During the past week this city has been the headquarters of Kate Adams. Daily she has left this port in order that certain river scenes might be taken, but returning in the evening.
Never before has the Southern Negro had the good fortune to be selected to take part in a clean-cut motion picture as have some of the participants of "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
The Universal Company has made wonderful provision for the happiness and comfort of every individual takig part in the picture on this particular trip, regardless of color. Every extra is being duly and regularly compensated, whether he works or not. They are receiving the best of food, clean, comfortable beds and medical attention, all of which brings about harmony, and the work seems more like play.
BROWN AND BROWN IN MACON
Herman Brown and Eva Brown, who played the Frolic Theater in Birmingham, Ala., last week are playing the Doughlass Theater in Macon, Ga., this week.
300 NEGROES USED IN
PRODUCING PICTURE
HOLLYWOOD, Calif., November 30.—(Pacific Coast News Bureau.)—$2,250 cash per day is salary paid to the three hundred colored "extra" movie actors being used by the F.B.O. Studio in filming the jungle scenes of their new feature production "Tarzan of the Golden Lion."
Establishes a Record
The order for three hundred colored extras is the largest order for colored actors received by the Cinema Auxiliary, the only Negro film casting office in the country, within the past two years. The three hundred actors were assembled at 5:30 a.m. and transported in automobile stages at the expense of the studio to Santa Ana Canyon some sixty miles away; where the men, women and children aided by six live lions, will be used to reproduce the jungle scenes.
Of the six assistant managers necessary to handle such a crowd, Nathan Curry of the Auxiliary Office was the colored representative. Aside from the extras used in the mob scenes, four more experienced Negro actors, Rufus Brown, Jack Prayor, J. B. Morrow and Ernest White will be given parts.
COMMUNITY CENTERS
BAND TO PLAY AT
HOWARD, SUNDAY
On Sunday night, December 5, the Community Centers Band, will be an added attraction on the Howard Theater, bill. The band will appear one night only. Two concerts will be given, one at 1 o'clock and one at 9:45. The band, which is composed of fifty pieces will be under the direction of Professor James E. Miller. Under his leadership this organization has gained wonderful recognition. It is made up of strictly local men, most of whom were trained by Prof. Miller.
LADY HENRIETTA DAVIS TO
SPEAK HERE
Henrietta Vinton Davis, assistant president general of the Universal Negro Improvement Association just returning to America, from Great Britian, will speak Sunday evening, December 5, at 3:30 o'clock, at McKinley Memorial Church, 4th and L Streets, Northwest.
On Monday, December 6, at 8 p.m., she will speak at Turner's Memorial Church, 5th and P Sts, Northwest. These meetings will be held under the auspices of the Washington Division, No. 183, Universal Negro Improvement Association, Local, of which Dr. L. C. Whiting, is president, and Miss K. E. Jenkins, secretary.
ST. LUKES PLAN TO SOON ERECT NEW BUILDING
The Independent Order of St. Luke, of the District of Columbia, in a convention held Tuesday night, November 3, organized a Hall Association for the purpose of purchasing suitable building to accommodate the sixty-five lodges, comprising, 3,000 members in this city. Over $3,000 was subscribed to be paid by January 31, 1927. A board of directors was elected. The association will be incorporated in the District of Columbia.
The officers elected were Mr. Ferdinand D. Lee, president; Mrs. Mary J. Smith, vice-president; Mr. Samuel C. Smith, financial secretary; Mrs. Mary Craig, recording secretary, and Mr. Thomas H. Norman, treasurer.
Mrs. Maggie L. Walker, R.W.G. secretary-treasurer of the St Luke Order, who is interested in securing a hall, will address the St Luke mass meeting on Wednesday night, December 8, at the Vermont Avenue Baptist Church, at which time 1,000 new members will be initiated in the order.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1926
PUBLIC U St. near
NEW STARTS EVERY DAY AT 3 P
ford, Manager Phone
4-DAYS-4
, Mon., Tues. & W
December 5, 6, 7, 8
VILLIAM FOX pres
BAD M
SHOW STARTS EVERY DAY AT 3 P. M.
W. E. L. Sanford, Manager Phone, North 7956
Cast of 25,000 with
THE OBRIEN ~ OLIVE BOX
Chapter 4 of "Bill Grimm's
Y & FRIDAY—Dec. 9, 10—
A great Irish-Jewish story!
OSHER KITT
KELLY"
than "The Cohens and the
VIOLA DANA, VERA GORE
and NAT CARR
Thrills!—Tears!—Pathos!
Y, Dec. 11—One Day Only—
On the Screen—STAR CAST in
the Midnight K
Extra—Chapter 4 of "Bill Grimm's Progress"
THURSDAY & FRIDAY—Dec. 9, 10—
(Better than "The Cohens and the Kellys")
with VIOLA DANA, VERA GORDON
and NAT CARR
Thrills!—Tears!—Pathos!
SATURDAY, Dec. 11—One Day Only—
On the Stage
TALENT at 7:30 and 9:30
JURY ORDERS MAN HELD IN PISTOL SLAYING
JURY ORDERS MAN HELD IN PISTOL SLAYING
A coroner's jury last Tuesday ordered James A. Allen, 29, 2316 Eighth Street, Northwest, held for the action of the grand jury in connection with the death of his brother-in-law, Frederick Griffin, 24, of the same address.
Griffin was shot through the heart with a .38 caliber revolver by Allen during an alteration last Sunday evening at Eighth and Barry Place, Northwest. Allen was taken to Freedmen's Hospital in a passing automobile and was pronounced dead upon arrival by William H. Wright. Allen was arrested and charged with murder. At the inquest it was testified that the two men engaged in a quarrel when Allen came home and remonstrated with Griffin about beating his sister, Sarah Griffin, wife of the dead man. The two men met later at Eighth and Barry Place and the fatal shooting followed.
The Fireside Singers of Washington will entertain the public at Roberts' Chapel M. E. Church, on Monday evening, December 13, at 8 o'clock. Admission 15 cents.
Mr. Fred T. Smith of Jersey City, made his annual pilgrimage to Alexandria, Va., on Thanksgiving Day, to visit his aged father. Mr. Smith and wife with the members of his family. They returned home early Friday morning.
Mrs. M. J. Baker an Alexandrian by birth, has returned to this city after teaching school in Virginia for a number of years. She is now taking up song writing and we hope our pepole will patronize her. See advertisement below.
Have you Heard the Big Love Song Hit? It's a Waltz
"MAKE MY DREAM COME TRUE"
By M. J. Baker
"The "Love Song Queen"
Piano Word Rolls—$1.00
421 Princess St., Alexandria, Va.
PUBLIC THEATRE
U St. near 14th
EVERY DAY AT 3 P. M.
enger Phone, North 7956
—DAYS—4
,, Tues. & Wed.
number 5, 6, 7, 8
FOX presents
AD MEN
The latest, greatest and most elaborate of all epic pictures of the West. One year in the making! Special Music Score Austin J. Balasco, Organist
of 25,000 with
EEN ~ OLIVE BORDEN
of "Bill Grimm's Progress"
DAY—Dec. 9, 10—
Irish-Jewish story!
ER KITTY
KELLY"
(the Cohens and the Kellys")
DANA, VERA GORDON
I NAT CARR
—Tears!—Pathos!
—One Day Only—
een—STAR CAST in
midnight Kiss"
---
PARKER DIVORCE OFFICER DAVIS CASE IS UNDER AGAIN INDICTED DELIBERATION IN MURDER CASE
CLIFTON and BEATTIE
CLAUD COLLINS, JACKIE YOUNG
HELEN STOKES, FLORENCE DADE
ANITA BUSCH, HARRY MEYERS
and THERESA WEST
THIS SUNDAY NITE AT 7 & 10 p.m.
Community Center Band—Added Attraction
Justice Bailey of the District Supreme Court took under advisement Thursday morning the suit for an absolute divorce brought by Mrs. Zenobia Parker, 811 Delaware Avenue, Southwest, against her husband, John Parker, 47 Ivy Street, Southeast Miss Nan Nichols, a clerk in the offices of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company, was named as co-respondent. In taking the case under advisement Justice Bailey stated that he was influenced by the fact that the defendant and the co-respondent had made several trips to Colton, Md., with Miss Nichols knowing that she was going with a married man, and that he thought the only thing lacking was an opportunity and that there had been testimony by Mrs. Opie Hill to the effect that she had seen them leave a hotel together at 4 o'clock in the morning.
Mrs. Parker charged that her husband had committed adultery with the co-respondent at Colton, Md., in August, 1923.
Mr. and Mrs. Parker were married December 22, 1915. They have one child, Alice Victoria Parker, 9 years old, who is in the custody of her mother by an order of the court in a limited divorce proceedings. Mrs. Parker was granted a limited divorce July 24, 1918.
Mrs. Parker was represented by Attorney Fred B. Rhodes. Mr. Parker was represented by Attorney John H. Wilson, and Attorneys Benjamin L. Gaskins and Robert J. Bowler appeared for Miss Nichols.
NORMAL GRADUATE WINS
PRAISE
Miss Alice V. Boone, a graduate of Miner Normal, class of '25, and now teaching in St. Marys County, Maryland, was the youngest delegate to the State Teachers' Association recently held in Baltimore. Because of her youth, Miss Boone attracted much attention. Her work as a teacher was highly praised by the officials.
LINCOLN
MATINEES DAILY—2 P.M.
THE BEST IN
THE LOWEST
ANY SEAT IN
NIGHTS, SUNDAY
ADULTS 20c;
DAILY MAY
ADULTS 15c;
Continuous fr
SUN., MON.—
GILDA GRAY in
"Aloma of the
South Seas"
See Gilda Do Her World-
Famous Dance
TUES., WED.—
LEATRICE JOY in
'For Alimony Only'
A Sensational Expose on Modern Marriage
The Intimate Playhouse
HOWARD
THEATRE—T St. at 7th
Samuel M. Graham, Mgr.
MIDNITE RAMBLE FRIDAY
One Week Only B
Doc St
—AND
"VARI
—WITH
CLIFTON and
CLAUD COLLINS,
HELEN STOKES, I
ANITA BUSCH, H
and THERE
AND 12 CHOCOLA
On the
MON. TUES. WED..
Mae Busch in
"THE PERCH OF THE DEVIL"
THIS SUNDAY NITE AT
Community Center Be
The grand jury Thursday returned a new indictment against Policeman George S. Davis, charging him with first degree murder in connection with the death of Mrs. Desdemona Barnett Dudley, September 21, last.
Attorney Bertrand Emerson, Jr., representing Davis, had attacked the old indictment, returned October 29, on the ground that the grand jury which brought it was illegally constituted.
The trial of Davis was slated to begin Wednesday before Justice William Hitz, but Attorney Emerson withdrew Davis' plea of not guilty and entered a plea in abatement. Attorney Emerson told the court that Davis should not be compelled to stand trial on the first indictment because one of the grand jurors, John Hantzmon, had pleaded guilty August 4, 1921, to a charge of illegal possession of intoxicating liquors in violation of the prohibition law.
Attorney Emerson contends that Davis should not be compelled to stand trial on the indictment for the reason that the grand jury which returned it was illegally constituted. He alleges that one of the grand jurors, John Hantzmon, pleaded guilty August 4, 1921, to a charge of illegal possession of intoxicating liquors in violation of the National Prohibition Act and was sentenced to pay a fine of $50. Attorney Emerson argued that the commission of a felony or of a misdemeanor involving moral This re-indictment of Davis raises the way for an early trial.
Davis shot Mrs. Dudley five times and then attempted to end his life by shooting himself through the right temple, completely destroying his right eye. The 'shooting occurred in the Dudley apartment, 1316 U Street, Northwest, immediately after Mr. and Mrs. Dudley had affected a reconciliation. A suit for an absolute divorce had been filed in the District
LN THEATRE
U Street, N.W.
SUN. and HOLIDAYS 3 P.M.
IN PICTURES
T IN COST
THE HOUSE
YES, HOLIDAYS:
CHILDREN 10c
ATINEES:
CHILDREN 10c
from 2 to 11
THURS., FRI.—
Edmond Rostand's immortal love drama made into a screen masterpiece
"Cyrano de Bergerac"
SAT. (only)—
"The Flame of the Yukon"
with SEENA OWEN
ARNOLD GRAY
Admission Scale
MAT. (all seats)—25c
EVE. orch., 40c; Bal. 25c
Continuous Performance
3 SHOWS DAILY
Beg. MON., DEC. 5
utraine
O HIS—
"ETIES"
TH—
nd BEATTIE
, JACKIE YOUNG
DFLOREENCE DADE
HARRY MEYERS
ESA WEST
ATE BABY DOLLS
THURS. FRI. SAT. SUN.
"THE FALSE ALARM"
—with—
Ralph Lewis, Mary Carr,
Dorothy Revier and
Geo. O'Hara
T 7 & 10 p.m.—
Fand—Added Attraction
OFFICERS OF KAPPA PI NAMED
By Kelly Miller, Jr.
The Kappa Pi, an honorary scholarship society at Howard University, having as its aim the promotion of high scholarship in the college of medicine, elected its officers last week.
The officers are automatically filled by the ranking students of the senior medical class. The signal honor of heading the organization goes to Robert Craft, whose marks entitled him to the presidency, having received the highest average scholarship.
Clarence O. Hilton, the second highest, gets the secretaryship; others given offices were: Anderson Scott, vice-president, Edward Swift, treasurer; Kelly Miller, Jr., editor; Alfred Jackson, Chaplain and Sarah Lewis, corresponding secretary.
Tribune Ads Bring Results
Real Cut in
ion Prices
Finest House in the
now the
PEST
OUR ORIGINAL TALENT
ARE TO GO ON, SEND
TRYOUTS THURSDAY
Sensational Cut
Admission Pri
The Largest and Finest House
City is now the
CHEAPEST
WE WILL RESUME OUR ORIGINAL
NIGHTS, SO IF YOU CARE TO GO ON
NAMES TO MANAGER. TRYOUTS THE
NIGHTS.
Sensational Cut in Admission Prices
WE WILL RESUME OUR ORIGINAL TALENT NIGHTS, SO IF YOU CARE TO GO ON, SEND NAMES TO MANAGER. TRYOUTS THURSDAY NIGHTS.
LINCOLN THEATRE
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1926
BROADWAY THEATRE
1515 7th St., N.W. RUFUS G. BYARS. Mgr.
Open Daily at 2:30 P.M. Sat.—Sun.—Holiday.
Week Starting Sunday, Dec.
SUNDAY & MONDAY—The sensation of
with an entire foreign cast in "WALTZ
Extra—Bill Reeves Original Peacock O
TUESDAY—Betty Bronson and Ricardo
"THE CAT'S PAJAMAS."
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY—Sally O'N
Patrick and Bert Roach in "DON'T."
FRIDAY & SATURDAY—Irene Rich and C
in "THE PLEASURE BUYERS."
LY THEATRE
G. BYARS. Mgr. North 7255
Sat.—Sun.—Holidays—2:30 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 5
"The sensation of Europe
cast in "WALTZ DREAM."
Original Peacock Orchestra.
on and Ricardo Cortez in
WAS."
SDAY—Sally O'Neil, John.
Oh in "DON'T."
Irene Rich and Clive Brook
BUYERS."
1515 7th St., N.W. RUFUS G. BYARS. Mgr. North 7255 Open Daily at 2:30 P.M. Sat.—Sun.—Holidays—2:30 p.m.
Week Starting Sunday, Dec. 5
SUNDAY & MONDAY—The sensation of Europe with an entire foreign cast in "WALTZ DREAM." Extra—Bill Reeves Original Peacock Orchestra.
TUESDAY—Betty Bronson and Ricardo Cortez in "THE CAT'S PAJAMAS."
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY—Sally O'Neil, John Patrick and Bert Roach in "DON'T."
FRIDAY & SATURDAY—Irene Rich and Clive Brook in "THE PLEASURE BUYERS."
DUNBAR
E
M. M. TAYLOR, Asst. Mgr.
Adults 2:30 to 6—10c
Nights 6 p.m.—15c
ADULTS, 15c ALL DAY
Week of Dec. 5
SEVELT in
"Min' Galoot"
Short Subjects
MADGE BELLAMY in
"VOC"
Comedy
NES in
"Cyclone"
Interactions
Arwood's Drama
"Door Opened'
Fox Comedy
THEATRE
R. H. MURRAY, Mgr. M. M. TAYLOR,
Admission Adults 2:30
Children 10c Nights 6 p.
SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS—ADULTS, 15c ALL
Program for Week of De
SUNDAY
MONDAY
BUDDY ROOSEVELT in
"The Ramblin' Galo
Comedy Short-Subj
TUESDAY
GEORGE O'BRIEN and MADGE BELLAS
"HAVOC"
Program for Week of Dec. 5
"The Ramblin' Galoot"
Comedy Short Subjects
TUESDAY
GEORGE O'BRIEN and MADGE BELLAMY in
"HAVOC"
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
BUCK JONES in
"The Gentle Cyclone
Added Attractions
FRIDAY
William Oliver Curwood's Drama
'When the Door Open
Fox News Fox Com
SATURDAY
BUCK JONES in "The Gentle Cyclone" Added Attractions
William Oliver Curwood's Drama
'When the Door Opened'
Fox News Fox Comedy
SATURDAY
BILLY SULLIVAN in
"The Speed Champion"
also "FIGHTING WITH BUFFALO BILL"
Champion"
H BUFFALO BILL"
"The Speed Champion also "FIGHTING WITH BUFFALO BILL"
WOMENS CLUBS PURCHASE
HOME HERE
Mrs. Mary McLeod Bethune with a committee of ladies of the Washington and Vicinity Federation, on Friday morning of last week inspected the property at 1114 O Street, N.W., recently purchased by the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs for their headquarters.
It is a magnificent three-story red-brick building on the southeast corner of 12th and O Streets, with a sixty-foot lot on each street.
Those on the committee were: Mrs. Julia West Hamilton, Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, Mrs. J. U. King, Pr. Clara Talliferro, Mrs. Pollard, Mrs. Susie R. Saunders, and Mrs. Marian D. Butler.
It is expected that the property will be turned over to the Association by the first of January.
Supreme Court by Mr. Dudley but was to be withdrawn. Davis had been named the co-respondent in this case. He is said to have become riled when Mrs. Dudley returned to her husband.
SUNDAY
MONDAY
Felix Comedy
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
SEVEN
7th and T Sts.
Northwest
Phone.
North 5224
Published Weekly at Washington, D.C., by THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE PUBLISHING COMPANY. INC.
980 U. Street, N.W., Phone, Inc. 1667 Entitled as described, July 7, 1922, at the Post Office at Washington, D.C., under the Act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription Rate: One Year, $2.50; Six Months, $1.25. Delivered by carrier 5 cents per week, collected monthly. For sale at all newsstands, 5 cents per copy. Advertising rates furnished on request.
Liberal Progressive Independent
It is really lamentable the way the question of race finds its way into every conceivable situation and relation of life. The superstition of blood has succeeded the superstition of witchcraft. In colonial times they hanged witches in Massachusetts, and burned them at other times and in other places. In these days people suspected of no crime, charged with no crime, are isolated, segregated and put in reservations and ghettoes merely because of their race—their blood. In the Hall-Mills' murder trial in New Jersey, the "pig-woman" testified that one of the persons whom she saw at the scene of the murder was a colored man and on identification she pointed out Willie Stevens, a brother of Mrs. Hall as the person so described.
Now the Stevenses were born at Aiker, South Carolina, and it is a fact testified to by the laws and the decisions of the courts of South Carolina that there was much mixing of the white and black races in that state, so much in fact that it was found necessary statutorily to define the term Negro, and the term white. During the constitutional convention held to disfranchise the Negro, it was proposed to deal with the perplexing question as to what is a white, and what a Negro, in a section of the Constitution, but Benjamin Tillman, fire eater and hater of Negroes that he was, demurred on the ground that hundreds of families in the state would be blasted, and the matter was dropped.
It is a blot on our boasted Christian civilization that men and women should be estimated by blood standards rather than by intellectual or moral standards. There is no question but that there are hundreds of thousands of people in the United States passing for white people who are blood kin of the African race. But what of it? Why inquire into it? Why become fanatical and intolerant about it? A man, or a woman should be judged by his, or her conduct and achievement, and not by any accident of blood. It makes no difference at all whether the Stevenses have, or have not African blood in their veins. They should be judged by the other and more enduring standards. The human race, after all, is a long way down hill, and has a long grade to make before it reaches the top.
REVIEWING REVIEWERS
The discussion that commenced three months ago on the cabaret phase of Negro life in Harlem, entitled "Nigger Heaven" is apparently entering upon its final phase. The book has attracted a degree of attention far in excess of its importance whether viewed as a purely literary production. as a study of a slice of life which does not constitute a topic of conversation in cultivated circles, or as a sociological study.
Now that the reviewers have had their filing at the book, an Huber Harrison of New York City, has taken it upon himself to review the reviewers of whom he himself f.
HAMPTON INSTITUTE. Va.
Noy. 26.-Discussing economic conditions in Africa, Miss Mabel Carney of Teachers College, Columbia University, and a well-known authority in the field of rural education, stated to the faculty and students of Hampton Institute in her address here Wednesday evening, that it is not only the territory of Africa that the European governments want, but that they want Africa's trade. For this reason she believes Europe is jealous of the American hold on Africa.
Although America owns no land in Africa, commercially she is supreme. This same situation of European jealousy over Africa was one of the chief causes of the world war she claims.
"The war was not fought so much to make the world safe for democracy, as to make Africa sale for European powers," stated Miss Carney. "Germany now wants back what she had to give up, and Italy is looking for something that she can call her own." "The native thinking people of Africa are awakening to the realization that the country is out of their control; they feel their racial inheritance has been slipping away
Washington A Tribune
Washington A Tribune
one. In last week's Amsterdam News, Mr. Harrison expands himself to the extent of several columns to make it plain that he thinks well neither of Mr. Van Vechten's book, nor of the reviewers thereof, except his own. If the state of mind disclosed by the reception of the book in certain quarters were not a matter of such serious import, it would be the most laughable thing imaginable. If Mr. Van Vechten is endowed with a sene e of humor, he must be in a state of constant merriment.
In The Pittsburgh Courier of last week, Mr. William H. Ferris has an article dealing in a most comprehensive and understanding way with the subject of criticism in general. "Mr. Ferris has much to say that is vitally important, and no one who has not equipped himself by a thorough study of philosophy, psychology, and literature, should not fail to read it, especially if he essays the roll of literary critic. As frivolous and frothy as "Nigger Heaven" is, it will not have been issued in vain, if it results, as it should, in turning the thoughts of those who have noticed it, to more serious and worth while books.
This matter has been referred to herebefore in these columns, and reference is again made to it with a view to enforcing the principle that a sense of proportion should be present in all our efforts. In other words, as much effort is not required to be expanded upon a matters affecting "vanity fair," as upon matters affecting the economic social, and political well being of a people. The club of Hercules should not be used to kill a gnat.
AN AMERICAN MUSSOLINI?
No group of people in the United States has a greater interest in the pre evasion of liberty of speech and freedom to thought than the Negro group. No group of teachers has a greater concern than the Negro group, in the question that has been brought to the public attention by General Fries in his protest to the Board of Education against Professor Flury's definition of racism when appended in the "Forum" for October. Professor Flury is an instructor in the Eastern High School Very promptly and very decisively the Superintendent of Schools Dr. Ballou, and the Board of Education upheld Prof. Flury in his exercise of the right guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States. In any circumstance, it would be offensive for any officer of the Federal Government to attempt to interfere with a citizen's exercise of his fundamental rights of freedom of speech and of thought. For a military officer to take such action is not only offensive, but extremely omnious, and indicates that all citizens should awake to the necessity of repressing militarism.
General Fries is a diminutive edition of Mussolini and will bear watching. Dr. Bailou and the Board of Education are entitled to the sincere commendation of the community for the manner in which they have handled this question.
from them and they are unhappy over it."
Speaking of the feeling towards America, Miss Carney said that the Africans look to America as a good and which will give them everything they need. They are eager for more missionaries; they want educationally, but most of all they look to America to help them solve the race problem. "Because we have Christianity and education here in America they feel that we should lead them in the matter of race adjustment. That is our obligation to Africa."
Miss Carney travelled 25,000 miles on her trip which took her along both the West and East coasts of Africa and some distance into the interior. She was particularly struck with the cleanliness of the natives, their generous spirit and their unfailing interest in America.
CHARLES V. DATCHER
LODGE AT PEOPLES
CONGREGATIONAL
"The Abiding Word" will be the subject of Rev. A. F. Elmes, of the People's Congregational Church Sunday. Sunday evening Rev. Perkins of Mt. Zion M. E. Church, Georgetown, will deliver the sermon for the Charles V. Datcher Lodge No. 15 and its chapter, F. A. A. M. The services will be under the auspices of Team No. 9. Miss E. V. Campbell, leader.
ROLAND HAYES BLAZES TRAIL FOR NEGRO ARTISTS
(By Wellington Adams, Editor Music Forum)
The Negro's musical voice? Ah, listen to Queen Marie of Roumania who while touring the States visited Kentucky: "I went to the 'old Kentucky Home' and I understood its poetry, while I listened to the Negroes' songs—deep voices singing in pathetic strains Southern melodies full of nostalgia, which take hold of one's heart strings and make them quiver."
The Negro's musical voice? Ah, listen then again to the whole-some flairy of local white music critics on Roland Hayes' singing: "He proved himself a consummate master of the vocal art. Imprisoned in his voices is the very soul of melody itself and all the pathos and sentiment of his race. A master of phrasing, . . . his dietion was a thing of beauty, . . . He touched the heart of his audience as well as its musical and artistic senses, and no singer can ask for a greater success."—The Post.
"Roland Hayes' voice and excellence in tonal control and diction are already accclaimed by authorities all over the world. However, the vividness of his personality and his sense of treating each tone as a beautiful gem which he lays before his audience for enjoyment cannot be left without mention. He is an increasingly fine artist, and his accompanist, William Lawrence, is also an artist."—The Evening Star.
"If there is any better native American tenor than Roland Hayes, I have never seen him and don't know who he is. This remarkable colored vocalist has made remarkable progress in the last few years, and his recital was one of the musical events of the season. In addition to his wonderful voice, Hayes has a perfect enunciation and an unaffected manner that is most appealing."—The Times.
Now we reach across the blue seas and listen to Baruzi of Paris: "I heard anew this voice so clear and shadowy, which has the purity of a swift mountain stream, the accent of origins unaltered and unsounded, a supreme, imploring gentleness, and suddenly, at times, after this gentleness, a sort of impersonal bitterness, of a harshness held in abeyance, an unconscious half-sob, of deliverance from trouble."
We come back to America to hear what "Vanity Fair" has to say: "We nominate for the Hall o. Fame: Roland Hayes. Because—he brings to his recitals not merely a lyrical voice and a gracious and compelling interpretation; because he puts to shame the average vocal artist by a positive mastery of the five languages in which he sings."
Ah, the Negro's glorious voice is coming into its own after years of denial by America's aristocracy. And why not? Every door of hope was closed almost in his face because of race and previous condition but the day King George V of England, bring himself a white monarch, summoned Heyes to sing at Buckingham Palace, that assured his fame with white Americans. Certainly France and Germany embraced him in his art and took him as a model for their own singers. No wonder Queen Marie of Roumania was charmed by the golden voice of Negroes singing down among the winding plains of old Kentucky.
This conclusion seems irresistible just now; music seems to be the meeting-ground to break down the barriers of American prejudice between the races. Religion isn't doing it because the white clergy preaches one doctrine to his pewholders and practices another doctrine in every day life. Education isn't doing it completely nor is wealth exactly, nor is science. But music seems to merge the temperamental elements to a larger degree and dissolves the imaginary line of races more or less for art's sake.
Roland Hayes' singing takes all the crimp out of the word "Negro" and makes apologizers within the race want to apologize again for trying to be other than "colored." The Negro race is one of the greatest musically gifted races in the world. Time shall vindicate us, and Hayes is our daring crusader in the realm of music.
Merit and good fortune are close
ly united.
A fly must have a dizzy feeling
As he crawls along the ceiling.
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RAILWAY BOARD TO HEAR PLEA OF PORTERS' UNION
NEW YORK, Nov. 26—Arrangements for the hearing of the Pulman porters' case before the United States Mediation Board are being perfected, according to a letter received by the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car porters from the secretary of the board, it was announced from the Brotherhood headquarters this week. Edwin P. Morrow, member of the board, has been appointed to make the necessary preliminary investigation for that body, preparatory to a formal hearing, according to the letter.
The Brotherhood of the Sleeping Car Porters requestel the Mediation Board to attempt adjustment of wages and working conditions of Pullman porters on October 15, after all attempts to secure a conference with the Pullman Company officials had failed. With a membership of over 5000 porters, or more than half all those in the United States, the Brotherhood appealed its case to its governmental agency, in order to force recognition from the Pullman Company of the right of the porters to organize themselves and engage in collective bargaining, and to obtain improved working conditions and better wages.
In making use of the Railway Mediation Board, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters is therefore following the course by which other railway unions have obtained important convictions. With the appointment of Morrow to give attention to the Brotherhood's case, prompt action is expected.
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THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1926
KIDDIES' CORNER
C. LESLIE FRAZIER, Editor
JOIN THE TRIBUNE
POSTAL CARD CLUB
The Tribune Postal Card Club can be joined by any child who is interested in Race advancement. Write your name, address, age, and parents' or guardians' names on a postal and send it to the Kiddies' Corner, Washington Tribune, 920 U Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C., and promise to observe four simple rules: The Tribunites' Pledge
The Tribunettes Pledge
1. I will never use the word "Nigger."
2. I will learn all I can about the history and traditions of my race.
3. I will use my eyes and ears to detect slander against my race, and I will champion my race wherever I may hear such slander.
4. I will be proud I am a Negro because Go! made me so, and, being a Negro, I will do all I can to add honor to my people.
Your Editor would like to have at least twenty members for the T.T.P.C., so that whenever we present the first postal card message we shall have a representative membership.
This feature will prove inspiring, educational, and entertaining; join now and get your friends to join.
All applications MUST be written and sent in on postal cards. The names and members will be published as the cards are received. Each week a postal card talk will appear here by some prominent Negro—that is, a message sent on a postal card will be printed.
A Prize of Two Dollars
A c. so two-dollar bill will be given to the member of the T.P.C.C. who submits the "best" original 400- or 500-word Christmas story to the Kiddies' Corner by December 17. Only members of the T.P.C.C. can compete. This is a personal gift from the editor of the Corner, so if you are not a member of the T.P.C.C. join now. All stories must be in the office by noon, Friday, December 17.
A second prize of four tickets (two to the Dunbar Theater and two to the Broadway Theater), and a third prize of two tickets will also be given by The Tribune.
You may send in either a story or a poem. Write on one side of paper only.
Join the T.P.C.C. now, if you are not over sixteen years of age.
Address: Christmas Contest, The Washington Tribune, 920 U Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C.
Notice
D. W. and L. W.: The contest deals with the Emancipation Proclamation, not with the Declaration of Independence. You have time to send in an essay dealing with the proper subject.
MOTHER NATURE
Brightly shines the sun
Wherever I may run.
Very hard comes the rain
And beats upon my window pane.
After a very hard rain
Then the sun comes out again.
All the little children say,
"Mother, may we go out to play?" Then the wind blows with it.
Then the wind blows with its breeze.
breeze.
All the leaves off of the trees,
Blows them all upon the ground
Nice and jolly, round and round.
(Note-Dorothy attends Crum-
mell School. She is in the 7-B
grade. M. V. Brawner, is her
teacher.)
When in doubt, be merciful.
THE PORO AGENT RENDERS A DISTINCTIVE SERVICE
PORO HAIR AND TOILET PRODUCTS stand out from the crowd of competition with character strikingly their own.
PORO Products are amazingly effective. That PORO satisfies is evidenced by the fact that over THREE MILLION PORO patrons were served with PORO Treatments and PORO Products by more than SEVENTY-FIVE THOUSAND PORO AGENTS during the year just passed.
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There's a PORO AGENT nearby who will cheerfully serve you.
If you don't know her name, write
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SCOUT OFFICERS MEET
By Purple Pride
On November 16. William L.
Tancil, president of the Executive
Committee of Colored Boy Scouts
of Washington, held his first
officers' meeting at his residence
with a banquet. The subject of
discussion was "The improvement
for the advancement of colored
Scouts." The officers of the committee
are: William L. Tancil, president;
Norman S. Kaiser, vice president;
Clarence T. Brooks, secretary; Oswald T. McIntyre, treasurer; Percell Pride, publicity manager; H. K. Howerton, director court of
honor and review.
There will be a Court of Review
of Scouts at St. Mary's Chapel on
Twenty-third Street, Northwest,
Saturday, December 4, at 7:30
Letters to Santa Claus may be sent to him in care of this paper. Address, Santa Claus, The Washington Tribune, 920 U St., N. W., Washington, D.C., and we will see that Santa Claus gets it.
Dear Santa Claus: Will you please bring me a doll baby and something else. We are poor and maybe you won't come to see us. My little sister, G. May Battle, wants some toys and a doll baby. My brother, Grover, wants an air rifle and anything else that you will bring him. Percy says just bring him anything. Please, Santa remember that daddy and mother are so poor that we will be glad for anything that you may bring mother if you can. Let us know if us. Also remember daddy and you are coming to see us.
2320 L. St., N.W.
Dear Santa Claus: Please bring me a flash light, some more tracks for my train, a transformer, a steam shovel, a painting set, a drum, a saxophone, a pair of cordoroy pants, a pair of tan shoes, stockings, blouses, and a dump truck.
SHERMONT JACKSON
Five dollars in gold will be given to the boy or girl under 16-years old who writes the best essay or poem of not less than 100 words on "Why should we celebrate the Emancipation Proclamation?" that is, tell why we should observe the anniversary of our emancipation, giving the date and cause of the issuing of the Emancipation Proclamation.
A second prize of $2.50, and a third prize of $1.00 will also be given.
All compositions must be delivered not later than December 14, 1926, at one of the below addresses: The Tribune, 120 U St., N.W.; The Sentinel, 1353 U St., N.W.; or Dr. P. H. Bethea, 1330 R St. N.W.
Quite a few Tribunites have sent in compositions. It is not a matter of "the early bird catching the worm" but to send in your composition now means that you will have more time to join the Postal Card Club and also enter the Christmas Contest. You have eight more days from today to get busy and send in your composition at once.
ADDIE P. BATTLE
EIGHT
Dir.
25
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