Washington Tribune

Friday, November 18, 1927

Washington, D.C.

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Woman Killed in Tornado NINE INJURED AS TWISTER HITS NORTHEAST AND SOUTHEAST SECTIONS Special Notice to Our Advertisers Special Notice to Our Advertisers The Office of the Washington Tribune will be Closed All Day, Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, November 24th. All Advertising Matter must be in our office Before 12 Noon, Wednesday, Nov. 23rd. FIRST in Advertising and Circulation Vol. VII, No. 16 Wo NINE INJURED HITS NORT SOUTHEAST INJURED A list of known injured includes the following colored: George Thomas, 1225 C Street, S. E. Mrs. Rosa Thomas, 1225 C St., Southeast. Ernestine Thomas, 1225 C St. Southeast. Joseph Thomas, 1225 C Street, Southeast. Alice Thomas, 1225 C Street, Southeast. John Crawford, letter carrier, 1636 Third Street, Southeast. Lena Jones, 518 Eighth Street, Northeast. An unidentified man treated at Providence Hospital. Dr. F, D. Whitby, 1120 South Carolina Avenue, Southeast. Joseph A. Butler, 1624 Capitol Street. One woman, Mrs. Jane Carter, 108 Quander street, southeast, was killed by lightning at First and E streets, southeast, as a tornado hit Washington on Thursday afternoon. The cloudburst and tornado struck the city about 3:30 p.m. The tornado wrought havoc in the southeast section of the city, injuring at least nine colored persons, three of them seriously, and damaging Negro property to the extent of about $50,000. The storm hit the neighborhood of Twelfth and C streets, southeast, hardest. Traveling in a northeasterly direction, the maddened winds and rain hit near the Navy Yard and moved over the southeast and the northeast sections and touched the lower end of Deanwood. It came from Alexandria, Va. Houses Ruined Destruction followed in its path. Roofs of houses were torn off, fronts of buildings were ripped away, trees were uprooted, and debris piled up in the streets. The wind moved at the rate of approximately 100 miles an hour. The tornado swept through, lasting hardly a minute at any point. The cloudburst lasted at least a half hour. St. Cyprian's Catholic Church was in the direct path of the twister. The roof of the parish hall was blown away and nearly every window in the building smashed. The sexton of the church, Joseph A. Butler, 1624 East Capitol street, was injured. He was struck by flying debris. Dr. F. D. Whitby Injured Dr. F. D. Whitby, 219 Florida avenue, northwest, was injured at his office at 1120 South Carolina avenue, southeast. His office was completely wrecked. Dr. Whitby is at home in bed with an injured leg. His condition is not serious. At 1225 C street, southeast, a corner house, George and Rosie Thomas with their three children, Ernestine, Joseph and Alice, were probably seriously injured. Their house was one of the most demolished of the row of houses on the south side of C street between Twelfth and Thirteenth streets, southeast. The east wall was blown away. Mrs. Thomas is about to become a mother. Treated at Hospital At Casualty Hospital, Lena Jones, 30, was treated for a dislocated ankle. Her condition is not considered serious. She was injured at 516 Eighth street, southeast. At Providence Hospital an unidentified man was treated for slight injuries. Special Notice to The Office of the will be Closed All Day Thursday, November 1 All Advertising Matter Before 12 Noon, Wee THE CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY FIRST ST., S. E. Read the advertisements in this paper, they offer many good bargains. om D AS T THEAST ST SECT PUBLISHED WEEKLY man D AS TWISTER HEAST AND T SECTIONS "TIGER" FLOWERS, ex-middle-weight champion pugilist, dies after operation. "TIGER" FLOWERS, ex-middleweight champion pugilist, dies after operation. 'TIGER' FLOWERS TAKES THE FINAL COUNT 'TIGER' FLOWERS TAKES THE FINAL COUNT NEW YORK, Nov. 17—"Tiger" Flowers, former middleweight champion of the world, took the final count Wednesday night. He died in a private hospital shortly after 8 p.m., following an operation for the removal of a growth above the right eye. The operation was performed at 3 p.m. Death came as he was regaining consciousness from the anesthetic. Funeral services for him will be held here. His body will be carried to Atlanta, Ga., his home, for burial, Walk Miller, his manager, said. The operation from which he died was regarded as minor. Flowers was coming out of the ether in "fair" condition. He suffered a relapse and was rushed (Continued on page 9) NORMAN NOTE IS PAID BY WIFE AS ADMINISTRATRIX The note of $1,000, upon which suit was brought in the District Supreme Court by the deacons of Metropolitan Baptist Church against the estate of the Rev. Moses W. D. Norman, was paid Wednesday by Mrs. Ethel N. Norman, executrix of the estate and widow of Rev. Norman. Mrs. Norman made a statement in which she denied having refused to pay the note. She declared that she had delayed payment because such facts as she was able to obtain showed that the note was made at the request of the church deacons in order to straighten out their accounts. She said that she could find nothing to show that Rev. Norman had received any consideration for making the note. Mrs. Norman let is be known that she feels that the services of Rev. Norman as pastor of the Metropolitan Baptist Church should have inspired its members to contribute something toward the expenses of his illness and funeral. To Our Admire the Washington Day, Thanksgiving or 24th. ter must be in Wednesday, No Our Advertisers At Washington Tribune Day, Thanksgiving Day, 24th. It must be in our office Wednesday, Nov. 23rd. Washington Tribune The expenses of the funeral for Miss Mills are estimated at about $8,000 which will be paid out of the estate. The image shows a damaged building with a large crack in the roof. Water is flowing from the crack, indicating a significant water leak. The surrounding area appears to be wet, possibly due to rain or flooding. The building's exterior is partially collapsed, with debris scattered around. The scene suggests a severe structural failure. Walls were ripped off this row of Negro homes at 18th and Berrings road, northeast, when tornado struck. -Courtesy The News NEGROES WIN IN ELECTIONS AT MEMPHIS MEMPHIS, Tenn., Nov. 17.—The election of Watkins Overton as mayor and the defeat of Mayor Kowlet Paine was a personal victory for Robert R. Church, who made a bi-racial combination with E. H. Crump, white, and supported the successful candidate and his entire ticket. Overton defeated Paine by 12,780 votes. The total vote was Overton, 19,806; Paine, 7,080. More than 7,000 Negroes voted in the electing, casting their ballots solidly for Overton and his ticket. Mayor Paine sought to return to office on a wave of racial prejudice. He raised the hue and cry of Negro domination of city elections and declared that unless the opposition ticket were defeated, "those who wish to be candidates for office in the future in this city, like applicants for Federal jobs, will have to 'see Bob Church.'" Church and George W. Lee mobilized the Negro vote. They or (Continued on page 3) FLORENCEMILLS ESTATE WORTH ONLY $33,146 FLORENCEMILLS ESTATE WORTH ONLY $33,146 NEW YORK, Nov. 15.—Florence Mills sang and danced her way from Southwest Washington, D.C. to international fame but to no great fortune. Miss Mills left an estate of only $33,136. She left no will. Surrogate Foley last Friday granted letters of administration on her estate to her husband, U. S. Thompson. In his petition, Mr. Thompson said the entire estate was in personal property and that he and Miss Mills' mother, Mrs. Nellie Winfrey, are the only heirs. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1927 PROFESSOR TIBBS FILES COUNTER CHARGES AGAINST WIFE With both husband and wife charging each other with desertion, the suit of Mrs. Lillian Evans Tibbs, coloratura soprano, against Roy Wilfred Tibbs, professor of piano and organ in the Howard University school of music is ready for trial in the District Supreme Court. Mrs. Tibbs is suing for separate maintenance. In her bill of complaint she charges that her husband abandoned her because of her ambitions for a career, although he advised her to seek cultivation of her voice. She has spent the past three years in Paris studying and in Nice appearing in grand opera. She has returned to the United States each summer, living with her mother, Mrs. Annie D. Evans, 1910 Vermont avenue, northwest, and appearing in concert in various cities. Through Attorne, s Hayes and Davis, Prof. Tibbs has filed his answer denying her charges and reciting a number of incidents which led him to believe that she deserted him in pursuit of a musical career. He also reveals that all was not well in their home prior to her first trip abroad. Silent While Abroad The announcement of his wife that she intended to stay abroad indefinitely, her advice to him to sell property which he had purchased as a home, her silence while abroad, her continued returns to this country without living with him, and the manner in which she treated him while he was ill, all impressed upon him, he states, that she was carrying out her plan of desertion and was definitely of the mind to sacrifice home and everything else for a musical career. Prof. Tibbs denies that the relationship existing between him and his wife was cordial until about the time she first went abroad. For several months prior to her first trip, he says, she had refused to speak to him. Nearly every meal he had, he states, was either prepared by him or secured at a restaurant in spite of his contributions toward the unkeep and maintenance of their residence in the home of her mother. His mother-in-law, he says, took the position that she would not act as a servant for him and prepared meals only for her daughter and herself. His wife, he declares, failed and refused to prepare his meals. With respect to his failure to support her since 1924, he directed attention to her decision to devote her time toward the development of her talent as an opera star. She told him, he declares, that she would be connected with an opera company and would receive for her services a sufficient amount to support herself adequately. To Break up his Home His refusal to receive her in July, he asserts, was because he believed her offer to resume marital relations to be a camouflage destined to do nothing other than break up his home which he is now maintaining at No. 401 T street, northwest. She has at all times, he states, intended to return abroad within a very short while and has never desired to re-establish a home with him. Prof. Tibbs admits that he left his residence when she came with her luggage and their son in a taxi-cab and took quarters in the house. His reason for leaving, he declares, was that he felt her unceremonious entry foreboded an unpleasant scene. When she returned to the United States in 1925, Prof. Tibbs admits, he was ill and living in private quarters. One of her visits to see him lasted about five minutes, he states. After a few causal remarks and an inquiry as to how he was feeling, her questions had to do only with the whereabouts of certain rugs and a console table, he says. She visited him no more during his illness, he states. Prof. Tibbs declares that he is ready and willing to take over the entire responsibility, care and custody of their son. He states that while his wife is absent from this country, he should have the custody of the child. OFFICE: 920 U STREET, N.W. Tornado o struck. —Courtesy The News CARD GAME ENDS IN DEATH OF ONE OF PARTICIPANTS A coroner's jury Monday ordered Reuben Taylor, 39, 314 Dixon's court, southwest, held for the action of the grand jury in connection with the fatal shooting of Eugene Jones, 50, during a drunken brawl in Dixon's court early last Sunday morning. Taylor claims that he killed Jones in self defense. According to his statement to the police of No. 4 precinct, he was leaning against a lamp post in the alley when Jones came up and threatened him. When Jones drew an automatic, Taylor says he beat him on the draw with his 38 caliber revolver. The argument which led to the killing followed a card game in No. 354 Dixon's court. Three others, Joe Cooley and Willie and Maggie Sayles were in the game. They had been drinking. Taylor and Jones engaged in an argument over the game. They went out into the alley, and the shooting followed. Jones was pronounced dead upon arrival of the Emergency Hospital ambulance. Taylor was arrested at his home. The gun was found in the woodshed. "BILLY" KING IS SUED FOR FEES BY LAWYER William H. (Billy) King producer and comedian playing the Howard Teathe this week, was sued last Monday in the Municipal Court by Attorney J. Franklin Wilson for $75 for professional services rendered in the summer of 1926. Lawyer Wilson asserts that in July, 1926, he filed suit for "Billy" King, for an injunction against Earl Dancer, Ethel Waters, A. E. Lightman and Marshall Rogers to prohibit their use of his acts. An agreement was made that none of the acts or plays of "Billy" King would be used by them. He was O U STREET, N.W. orna BOARD PROPOS RESIGNATION ABOUT TO BECO BOARD PROPOSES TO ASK RESIGNATION OF TEACHERS ABOUT TO BECOME MOTH'RS CLINTON T. FLANNIGAN, charged with forgery, to plead guilty. FLANNIG'N MAKES 'GUILTY' PLEA ON FORGERY CHARGE FLANNIG'N MAKES 'GUILTY' PLEA ON FORGERY CHARGE Clinton T. Flannigan, who was indicted on two charges of forgery and uttering in connection with fradulent real estate transactions, was permitted by Chief Justice Walter L. McCoy in the criminal division of the District Supremes Court on Monday to withdraw his former plea of not guilty and to enter a plea of guilty in each case. The case was referred to the probation officer. Flannigan with Albert Thomas Edwards and Lucy A. Taylor, was charged with forging the name of Mrs. Violet B. Warfield, the wife of Dr. William A. Warfield, surgeon-in-chief of Freedmen's Hospital, to five promissory notes, a deed of trust and a check. These forgeries were in connection with the placing of an unauthorized loan on property belonging to Mrs. Warfield at No. 1901 Eleventh street, northwest. Mrs. Warfield had no knowledge of the bocus transaction. Gets Check for $2.114.92 The promissory notes were for $1,000 each. They were secured by a deed of trust on Mrs. Warfield's property. Flannigan put the transaction through a local real estate office and secured from the title company a check for $2,114.92 payable to the order of Mrs. Warfield. The Taylor woman impersonated Mrs. Warfield. Edwards presented the check at a bank for payment and the forgery was discovered. Edwards and the Taylor woman were arrested. Flannigan made a get-away but was later caught in New York City and returned here. Flannigan with Lucy A. Taylor and Arthur White was also charged with forging the endorsement of Wilhelmina Wunder on a check from the title company drawn in her favor for the sum of $1,547.82 in settlement of a loan of $6,000 which he placed upon her property at No. 1322 U street, northwest, without her knowledge. The name of Mrs. Wunder was also forged to a deed of trust and six promissory notes of $1,100 each. The forged deed of trust secured payment of the forged promissory notes. Flannigan put this transaction through a local real estate office and had a settlement with the title company. SPECIAL NOTICE The score by quarters of the Howard-Lincoln football game will be posted on the bulletin board in the window at the Tribune Office. This service is rendered for the benefit of our readers who are not able to be in Philadelphia. There will be absolutely no results given by telephone Thursday. instructed by King to drop the suit. Attorney Wilson claims that he has not been paid for his services. Let our classified column rent that vacant room. Call Potomac 1657. IN WASHINGTON nearly everybody reads the TRIBUNE PRICE FIVE CENTS ado USES TO ASK OF TEACHERS OME MOTH'RS When the question of barring married women from teaching in the public schools of the District of Columbia comes before the Board of Education for final action, Henry E. Gilligan served notice at the board meeting last Wednesday afternoon that he would propose an amendment to require married teachers who are about to become mothers to resign from the system. Mr. Gilligan asked the other members of the board to consider his proposal and be prepared to take action on it. The Board of Education will probably dispose of this question at the second meeting in December or at one of the January meetings. Harry O. Hine. Secretary of the school board, was directed to ask all civic organizations that had not acted on the question, to do so and advise the board whether they favor or disapprove of the proposal bar married women from teaching. The question was submitted to the civic organization on a referendum. The organizations that have already acted, Mr. Hine advised the board, are almost unanimously in favor of having the retention of a teacher in the system u, on efficiency without regard to marriage. Three matters. The personnel committee set next Wednesday as a date to meet to decide whether the board should try Mrs. E. M. Clayton, Mrs. F. S. McLondon and Mrs. G. T. Watson. They are charged with violating the maternity leave rule. When they became eligible for reinstatement, their applications were denied. Counsel for the three teachers contend that the refusal of First Assistant: Superintendent Garnet C. Wilkinson to reinstate them after they became eligible is equivalent to dismissal from the service, and no teacher under the rules of the board can be dismissed without being given a trial. While the question of the trial 'Continued on page 4, column PHILADELPHIA IS READY FOR BIG TURKEY-DAY By Sam Lacy Philadelphia Waits Philadelphia is ready. The stage is all set for the 1927 Fashion Show—the Howard-Lincoln annual Thanksgiving Day football game. Even the Quakers themselves are ready. The city is already alive with gossip of the affair. Men and children are speculating as to "who will win" while their friends and relatives of the opposite sex are wondering, "who" will be there and what they'll "wear." A Gala Day Enthusiasts bearing the Blue and White of Howard and the (Continued on page 8) HAMPTON ACCREDITED AS A TECHNICAL AND PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Va. Nov. 7—Dr. James E. Gregg, principal of Hampton Institute, in meeting of college students and faculty, recently called by Dean William Stark, announced that Hampton Institute is now recognized and accredited by the State Department of Education of Virginia as a standard technical and professional college, a classification which places its teacher-training work on a parity with that of the State teachers' colleges at Farmville, Harrisonburg, and Fredericksburg, Va. LITTLE THEATER PROMOTES TALLADEGA COLLEGE ANNIVERSARY CELE- BRATION PAGEANT TALLADEGA, Ala., Nov. 4. On November 12 great numbers of the alumni and friends of Talladega College will attend what is claimed to be one of the biggest events of its kind ever staged in the circle of Negro colleges. For a period of three days, from November 12 to 14, trustees, faculty, alumni, students and friends of the institution will celebrate the sixtieth anniversary of the founding of one of the oldest and most outstanding colleges of the Southland. Among the friends who will take part are some of the most noted educators, churchmen, and social workers of the country. On the program will be the pageant depicting the progress of Talladega, to be presented on Monday, November 14, under the management of the local Little Theater Players. KNOW FOOTBALL By Dr. Edwin B. Henderson Question—For how long a period must men be stationary in their new positions on coming from a huddle, or on a shift of position? Answer—On coming from a huddle or after completing a shift of two or more men, the men of the huddle and the men who shifted positions must come to a full stop, remain stationary in their new positions, without swaying of the body for a period of approximately one second. This period may be MOO BLU by Ida C MOJO BLUES" by Ida Cox "You may jip out now, Papa, while fipping is grand, But your jipping will be over when Mama gets her Mojo hand". YES, sir—Mama's going to Louisiana herself a Mojo hand—then, B B Papa! You'll get a kick and many out of this new Paramount Blues "Mojo Blues", by the always-popular Ida Cox a scream! Piano accompaniment is good course, because it's by Jesse Crump. As dealer for No. 12540, or send us the c 12540—Mojo Hand Blues Ida Cox; Piano acc YES, sir—Mama's going to Louisiana herself a Mojo hand—then, Billy Papa! You'll get a kick and many out of this new Paramount Blues "Mojo Blues", by the always-popular Ida Cox a scream! Piano accompaniment is good course, because it's by Jesse Crump. As dealer for No. 12540, or send us the c 12540—Mojo Hand Blue Ida Cox; Piano acc Papa! You'll get a kick and many laughs out of this new Paramount Blues "Mbo Hand Blues", by the always-popular Ida Cox. It's a scream! Piano accompaniment is good too, of course, because it's by Jesse Crump. Ask your dealer for No. 12540, or send us the coupon. 12540—Mojo Hand Blues and Alphonsia Blues, Ida Cox; Piano acc. by Jesse Crump. 12551—Chinch Bug Blues and Deceitful Brownskin Blues, Blind Lemon Jefferson and His Guitar. 12530—Awful Fix Blues and Raggin' The Blues, Buddy Boy Hawkins and His Guitar. 12544—Tick Took Blues and Hour Behind The Sun, Elzadie Robinson; Will Ezell at the Piano. 12546—Frisco Whistle Blues and Mean Conductor Blues, Ed Bell and Guitar. 12531 — Half Cup Of Tea and Sweet To Mama, Beale Street Sheeks and Guitars, (Stokes and Sane). Electrically Recorded! 12526—Slow Driving 12539—Awful Fix Blues and Raggin' The Blues, Buddy Boy Hawkins and His Guitar. 12544—Tick Took Blues and Hour Behind The Sun, Elzadie Robinson; Will Ezell at the Piano. 12546—Frisco Whistle Blues and Mean Conductor Blues, Ed Bell and Guitar. 12551—Half Cup Of Tea and Sweet To Mama, Beale Street Sheeks and Guitars, (Stokes and Sane). 12526—Slow Driving Means and Gone Daddy Blues, "Ma" Rainey and Her Georgia Band. Electrically Recorded! Paramount Records are recorded by the latest new electric method. Greater volume, amazingly clear tone. Always the best music—first on Paramount! The New York 1219 Wisconsin A Param The popular aramou REGISTER PAT OFF The popular Race R Paramount Paramount Record Dealers G. B. REID, 1026 U St., N.W. North 1234 RIFKIND'S, 7th & Q Sts., N.W. North 5624 IDEAL MUSIC SHOP, 1303 7th St., N.W., North 76 SOUTHEAST MUSIC SHOP, 919 8th St., S.E., Atlantic 2645 ```markdown ``` conveniently measured by counting one-two-three-four rapidly. The rule makers have also added, that in case of doubt, penalize the shifting team. In all of the big games this year there is a perfected complete stop by the shifted men, in some of the games this year the teams have gotten nervous and have swept out of the huddle onto the ball and immediately gotten off. Doubt should be averted. Q—Can a team huddle twice for signals before drawing a penalty? A.—It is possible but the huddles must be fast. The rules provide for a penalty for failure to put the ball in play 30 seconds after the referee has indicated the time for play. The rules indicate that the continuance of the huddle for more than 15 seconds is to be considered prime facie evidence of unreasonable delay of the game. Q.—May a man attempting to catch a forward pass be tackled when he has barely touched the ball, and before he actually has caught it? A.—When a receiver of a kick or a pass has touched the ball he may be tackled. He may not however, be interfered with prior to the touch and the official must decide on this point. Q.—When should the referee declare the ball dead and blow his whistle on a runner with the ball? A.—The referee shall blow his whistle and declare the ball dead: (a) When a player having the ball goes out of bounds, cries "down," or is so held that his forward progress is stopped, or when any portion of his person except his hands or feet touches the ground while he is in the grasp of an opponent. Q.—May a player who has dived JO HA ES" going to Louisiana to get and — then, BEware kick and many laughs aint Blues "Mojo Hand popular Ida Cox. It's animation is good too, of Jesse Crump. Ask your or send us the coupon. Mojo Hand Blues and Alphons a Cox; Piano acc. by Jesse Crump. 12526—Slow Driving Mean and Gone Daddy Blues, "Ma" Rainey and Her Georgia Band. The New York Recording La 1219 Wisconsin Ave., N.W., Wash REGULS PAT OFF Solar Race Record Paramount Record De The New York Recording Laboratories 1219 Wisconsin Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. PHONOGRAPH HOSPITAL, 1251 7th St., N.W., Franklin 8100 A. DURSO, 1225 H St., N.E. Lincoln 4908 GEORGETOWN MUSIC SHOP 3219 M St., N.W., West 1605 12518—You Shall—and It's A Good Thing Beale Street Sheiks and Guitars; (Stokes and Sane). 12510—Black Snake Dream Blues and Right of Way Blues, Blind Lemon Jefferson and His Guitar. 12509—Whiskey Blues & Back Door Blues, Elazid Robinson; Piano Acc, by Will Ezell. 12513—Lost Man Blues and Pleading Blues, Ida Cox; Piano Acc, by Jesse Crump. 12497—Bad Feeling Blues and That Will Never Happen No More, Blind Blake and Guitar. SPECIAL FEATURE RECORDS by Elmo Tanner, Dixeland Crooning Tenor! 12532—After I Call You Sweetheart, (Piano Acc, by Leendert Van Ryn) and Song of Hawali, (Acc. Palikiko Hawaiian Trio) Tenor Solos by Elmo Tanner. 12533—Sing Me a Baby Song and So Blue, Tenor Solos by Elmo Tanner; piano acc. on a loose ball on the ground get up and run with it? A.—As the fourth question and answer above indicates, yes, if he does not cry down, or is not held. Q.—Is the huddle considered a shift play? A.—Yes. The huddle is a shift play. Hence a team cannot afford to have any of its men in motion after coming out of a huddle. Q.—Can a team legally have a man in motion after coming out of a huddle or shifting them? A.—Yes, provided the shifted man or the men from the huddle come to a full "second" stop before moving. Q.—May a man be in motion obliquely or backward towards his goal and not five yards back when the ball is snapped without penalty? A.—Yes. A backfield man can, but no man may come out of line and not be at least five yards back when the ball is snapped. Q.-Should the timekeeper use his pistol to declare the time ended when the play is in progress? A.-Yes. He should fire the gun when the time has elapsed, regardless of any other circumstances. Players should always remember that they play the ball in the field of play until the referee sounds his whistle. BORDENTOWN TRIMS STORER HARPERS FERRY, W. Va.— Rivals met here last Saturday. Storer College played Bordentown. Bordentown won. The score was 26-15. It was a football game. The visitors scored a touchdown in each of the first two quarters, then added 2 more shortly after play was resumed after the rest period. Storer, on the other hand, matched the New Jerseyans touch- AND MOJO A Dealers OLD RELIABLE MUSIC SHOP, 3067 M St., N.W., West 2988-w GEORGE H. RAILING, 818 King St., Alexandria, Va., Alexandria 819 SOKOLOVE'S MUSIC STORE, 1909 7th St. N.W., near Fla. Ave. Decatur 2856 Buy Your Paramount RECORD NOW from your dealer THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1927 HOWARD'S TEAM LEADER LOUIS L. WATSON, brainy tutor of the Howard team. HOWARD'S TEAM LEADER LOUIS L. WATSON, brainy tutor of the Howard team. T Touchdown—Bordentown, Kees- Wilson, T. Jackson, Tillman, Storer —Hill, Lee. Field goal—Lee. Goal from touchdown —Bordentown, Waples, Williams, Umpire—Cham- bers, Referee—Pinderhughes. Head linesman—Griggs. Time of quart- ters—15 minutes. APPENDICITIS TAKES COOPER FROM TALLA- DEGA SQUAD TALLADEGA, Ala., Nov. 10. —A gloom went over the entire Talladega campus this morning when the news following a diagno- sis of Talladega's stellar quarterback made known the fact that a sudden attack of appendicitis was the case. Following this information the officials of the school together with those connected with the football team set out to make the very best preparations preparatory to the operation suggested by the medical authorities. By twelve o'clock all plans had been made and by one o'clock a successful operation had been performed. The absence of Cooper from the football team will be a great loss to the Talladega machine while the games yet to be played are against Fisk, Clark and Tuskegee. But the big concern is that of his own personal recovery. BIG TIME PLANNED AT ACADEMY OF MUSIC PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov. 17. —Elaborate arrangements for the official reception and dance following the annual football game between Howard and Lincoln universities on Thanksgiving Day have been completed by the students' reception committee, composed of students of the two rival institutions. Fletcher Henderson has arranged a special program of Broadway's latest dance successes, as played by his orchestra nightly on the Great White Way. According to advance sales, box reservations will be exhausted long before Thanksgiving. The list of box holders so far contains the names of such prominent persons as Attorney William N. Lewis of Boston; Mass., Dr. Paul Collins, New York City; Frantz (Jazz) Byrd, former Lincoln University football star; Miss A'Lella Walker, New York City; Aaron Mossell, Philadelphia, Pa., and DeHart Hubbard, New York City. The committee has arranged for bus, services from the Academy of Music to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad station for patrons of the excursion. A CLASSIFIED AD IN THIS PAPER IS A PROFITABLE INVESTMENT [Picture of a man in a suit with a tie and a lapel pin]. RUFUS G. BYARS, who has been named general manager of the chain of Lichman's thetres. 49c Pound Jar These remarkable candies have thin, crispy sugar shells and are literally stuffed to bursting with selected walnuts. The delicious, true black walnut flavor is sure to please all the family. Packed in special moisture-extracting jars that keep the candy fresh and tempting. OPLES STORES. PEOPLE DRUGSTO PEOPLES DRUG STORES TELL YOUR CHILDREN TO READ THE KIDDIES' CO REPU ES' CO EPU KIDDIES' CORNER REPUBLIC Continuous, THANKSGIVI Continuous, NKSGIV Continuous, Daily 2 to 11 P.M.----Sunday; 3 to 11 P.M. a Paramount Picture AMCLEW ZUKOR JESSE L. LASKY PAULSON RICHARD DIX IN "SHANGHAI BOUND" WITH MARY BRIAN Prices for "Shanghai Bound" MATINEE to 6:30—10c NIGHT—20c; SUNDAY, 20c (6:30 to closing) (All day) Florist Clarke MADE-MT-HONE BROOKWALD, POTA ONE POUND KEY W E. L. Sanford, Mgr. ER 2 to 11 P M. Thursday, December 1, at 8:15 ARMSTRONG TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL Admission .....75 Cents Watch for the Opening of the New Broadway Theatre Palace Barber Shop Mr. George Brown, Manager Mr. W. H. Pierson Mr. Clarence Brown Mr. F. L. McLeod Mr. Douglas Yarborough Mr. Henry Lewis Appointments by Phope—North day, 3 to 11 P.M. Show Starts at 12 NO nesday, Thursday Friday and Sat November 23, 24, 25, 26 Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday November.23,24,25,26 HANEY, the man of a 1,000 in his most amazing picture. " Russia in the midst of revolution. A SUPER-SPECIAL PICTURE. LON CHANEY, the man of a 1,000 faces and a 1,000 arts, in his most amazing picture. "Mockery," a story of Russia in the midst of revolution. A. Entire house newly decorated and only the best pictures will be shown. Mr. JAMES F. LEE has been appointed manager of the New Broadway Theatre and will welcome his many friends on opening night. Mr. Lee has been connected with the Broadway Theatre for more than four years. by Phope—North 4302 THEATRE U Street near 14th Austin J. Balasco, Organist to 11 P.M. events at 12 NOON y, Thursday, y and Saturday ber.23, 24, 25, 26 LON CHANEY Мостory the man of a 1,000 faces and most amazing picture, "Mockery, the midst of revolution. SPECIAL PICTURE ELEVEN 920 U Street, N.W., Phone, Potomac 1657 cultured as second class matter July 7, 1922, at the Post Office at Washington D.C., under the Act of March 8 1879 Subscription Rate: One Year, $2.56; Six Months, $1.28. Delivered by carrier 5 cents per week, collected monthly. Per rate on all newstands, each per copy. Advertising rates furnished on pages. TWELVE Liberal Progressive Independent THE CITIZENS' ADVISORY COUNCIL The Citizens' Advisory Council has been made to appear in its true light—that of a body representing citizens' associations, instead of a body having quasi-legal functions and obligations. This has been brought about by the discovery that there was probably no legal authority for administering an oath to its members, and by the decision not to administer the oath in the future. This is as it should be. It is fit and proper that the citizens' associations should have a representative body to present their wishes to the governors of the District—that is, to the Commissioners—if they choose to have their voice expressed in that way. An oath is, or rather should be, a very serious and solemn thing, to be administered only by warrant of law. To use what is called an oath without such warrant is to cheapen the true oath, and to deprive it of its real sanction. From the beginning, the attempt to make it appear that the Citizens' Advisory Council was endowed with legal official duties, and had an organic relation to the Commissioners of the District was little less than grotesque. To one familiar with the elementary principles of the District government, it must have been clear that the District Commissioners were without authority to create offices. Only Congress could do that. Now that the Citizens' Advisory Council serves simply as the representative of citizens' associations it exists in its true light, and the average citizen when he approaches a member thereof, must know that he is not talking to an officer of the District government, but to a representative of the citizens' associations. DEMOGOGIC PATRIOTISM "Why the demagogue?" "Because." That probably is as good an answer as any, and yet the demagogue crosses our path so often that he cannot be dismissed with a simple." "because." His ubiquity is something positively impressive. We usually look for him in the political arena, and it is the political demagogue upon whom the greatest odium is heaped. However, he is not only a politician, he is also an ecclesiastic, a pedagogue, a physician, a roving lecturer, a scribbler of newspaper and magazine articles, and many other things. The demagogue is as often as not a woman, and in the form of the female appears in the most revolting aspect. One of the most usual forms in which the present-day demagogue appears is as a defender of the "flag," of "Americanism," of "the Declaration of Independence," or of "constitutional rights." Recently Mayor Walker of New York went over into Brooklyn, to the Nazarene Congregational Church, Rev. Dr. Hugh H. Proctor, pastor, and indulged in the usual oratorical pyrotechnics of demagogy. He did not, however, utilize the occasion to deny that he had protested against black people dancing with white people in cabarets in Paris and Rome'. So far as his address is reported, he waved the flag, talked Americanism, and made vague references to the Declaration of Independence. One of the rights enumerated in the Declaration of Independence is that of "the pursuit of happiness," which conceivably embraces the right of people of different races to dance together not only in Paris and Rome, but also in AFTER WARTIMES . Looking back over it, I am sure the reader will agree with me, that it was no small matter for young Timothy, just over the legal age of sixteen years to receive an appointment to be a mail route agent from the Postmaster-General at Washington. It came about quite in the usual way, however, Timothy was a favorite of Congressman William J. Purman, who came up in the Marianna and Tal- Washington Tribune FIBERATED Weekly at Washington, D.C., by THE WASHINGTON POST PUBLISHING COMPANY. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. New York and New Orleans. We have no disposition to make a political issue of Mayor Walker's bibulous aberrations while abroad, but we do express amazement that the Rev. Dr. Proctor should have let the mayor get away with his flag waving act. THE CHURCH AND POLITICAL PARTIES The address of President Johnson of Howard University at the convention for amity in inter-racial relations—if the quotations from it carried in the daily press are correct—was a notable and unique if not an amazing utterance. The addizess may thus be characterized for two reasons: first he asserted that the church as a force tending to draw men together in the bonds of unity and amity had "collapsed"; second, that the Republican party was in like manner, at this time, quiescent in the matter of race prejudice. There is here no attempt to quote President Johnson's words as published, but rather to restate his thought in our own language. The thing about the address which will impress many thinkers is that President Johnson links the church and the Republican party as moral influences; in a measure, saddling each with responsibility for the absence of moral considerations in present day human relations. Historically man existed before the church. In the order of creation, as recorded in the Book of Genesis, we find no mention of church as being among the things created. We do find that the time of rest and worship followed the creation of man. From this it follows, as a logical sequence, that the church was made for man and not man for the church; that the church has no unalterable, immutable standards; that its standards vary from age to age and from generation to generation, adjusting themselves to the changing needs of man; and that, in spite of the assertions of preachers and theologians to the contrary, the church is a strictly human institution reflecting unmistakably the vices and virtues, the strength and weakness of mankind. In a monarchical country the church is monarchical; in a republican country it is republican; in a slave holding country, it upheld and supported the institution of slavery; in a non-slave-holding country it was opposed to the institution of slavery. Today the church in America is the most impregnable stronghold of caste, race prejudice and race proscription. It is also the sure foundation of the elements preparing for the next war. The Ku Klux Klan finds its strongest support among white Baptists and Methodists, just as slavery found its strongest advocates in the same communions. As to the Republican party, it is not old enough to be credited with divine origin. Men are now living who recall its strictly human beginnings. It may be that by the year 1956, the candidate of the Republican party who will be at that time running for president of the United States, will appeal to the Negro voter on the ground of the divine origin of the Republican party, and it would not be beyond the range of probabilities for him to get away with it. After all, we conclude that President Johnson has shown logical, psychological and philosophical insight in marrying the church and a political party. lhassee days with Emanuel Fortune as his political associate and Joseph Raines, of Monticello, a very capable young man of the race, was serving as mail route agent on the J. P. and M. Railroad, when his car left the tracks above Monticello Junction and he was crushed to death. Timothy left Jacksonville on his trial trip in the shadow of this tragedy. The railroad bed and tracks had been allowed to run down to the worst condition, the ties being as defective as the rails. The East Florida soil is very sandy and in wet weather it was necessary to run the trains at a low rate of speed to prevent them from jumping the tracks. As it was, it was rough going, with accidents always possible at any time. On the return trip to Jacksonville from Chattahoochee, as far as the road then reached, the change of cars had been made at Live Oak to the heavy train of the Atlantic and Gulf road from Savannah, and the big car was piled high with rail. Timothy was making rapid assortment of it. It was rather cool, and early in the morning; the stove was roaring hot with pine knots. Timothy went to one of the doors on the right side, and slid it back, after leaving Sanderson, then pulled it to and chained it. This saved his life. As the train moved up grade to the Olustee tressle, and fifty yards from the woodwork, the big mail car turned over on its side and slid down the steep embankment. Timothy fell forward into the door he had chained and was only stunned. Frank Eppes, the fireman, crawled on top of the car and broke a window in the side of the car, and in answer to the clamor of the onlookers, Timothy sat up in the door and answered: "No, I ain't dead." There was great rejoicing among passengers and crew. Timothy gathered up his big mail, which was scattered and littered everywhere and the crew and passengers proceeded to Jacksonville in a freight car. There was no certainty when he should go out again and Timothy went home to bed as fast as he could. About 2 o'clock he was notified to report at once, and he started on the out-trip with the mail in a freight car. Soon after leaving Baldwin, the first station out, the freight car jumped the track and straddled it without turning over. Timothy got a bad shake-up and a bad fright and much jumbled mail, and he did some tall thinking about his new job and whether he wanted to keep it. The two accidents in the same trip made him think rapidly. He decided that he liked the big job and would stick to it. After awhile the train moved on towards Chattahoochee and there was no more mishaps of that kind. It took two nights and a day to make the round trip. He had to sleep in the coaches at Chattahoochee as there were no houses there, and he had to keep the coaches sealed tight as the mosquitoes, bred in the swamp, were the most numerous, able-bodied and ferocious ever known before or since. All the agents in Florida were Afro-Americans—three on the J. P. and M., and three on the Florida railroads. On Timothy's run were B. F. Cox, one of the finest young men he ever knew, and A. B. Osgood, a real gentleman. There was a special agent with headquarters at Atla, who had a strong prejudice against Afro-American agents, and all he could to annoy them as they got them into trouble, so they all combined to give him trouble, and by "Old Man" Dale of the A. and G. road, one of the best white men I ever knew, and who enjoyed the confidence of C. J. French, the District Black and White Circle Club, In invites you to a BREAKFAST THANKSGIVING MURRAY PA Admission Branson's Black Club O HELP! I Have HE SHOULD HAVE DANIEL G. MONROE, Pendleton Buildin Fire—Plate HEALTH—ACC OFFICE EQUIPM Automobile Insu Get Our Prices—It Will P HELP! I Have No Insurance! HE SHOULD HAVE BEEN INSURED BY: DANIEL G. MONROE, INSURANCE BROKER Pendleton Building, 1216 U St., N.W. Fire—Plate Glass—Liability HEALTH—ACCIDENT—BONDS— OFFICE EQUIPMENT—FURNITURE Automobile Insurance Our Specialty Get Our Prices—It Will Pay You Decatur 4314 SINCE 1845 Justa Step Syom "Seventh and the Avenue" BUTLER-FL Paints—Glass BUTLER-FLYNN Paints—Glass Butler-Flynn Paints are good Paints, used by thousands of Washington house-owners. 607-609 C St. N. W Paint Phone Franklin 151-15 607-609 C St. N.W. Paint Phone Franklin 151-152 Superintendent of Chattanooga. Each trip the agents all had a complaint to lodge against Walker. Here are some examples of him and his ways: He dropped a letter, unsealed in Timothy's car box at Live Oak, addressed to a party at Lake City, three stations beyond. Timothy looked into it and found a ten dollar bill in it. He made the mail messenger at Lake City sign for it and got a receipt for it from the postmaster. Another time, at Live Oak, just after he had transferred to the big A. and G. mail car, he was standing at the door looking on, with the chain up, when Walker swung on the steps (they were high up) and began pulling himself up. Timothy put his right foot under his chin and sent him sprawling. He jumped up fighting mad, exclaiming he was a special agent. "You can't bolt into a mail car. It's against the rules. How do I know you are a special agent?" said Timothy, innocent like. While they were disputing the train pulled out and Walker had to scramble for it to get into a regular day coach. It was the business of the mail agent to verify and keep a record of the weighing of the mails for a certain number of days as taken by the railroad officials. The following morning, on reaching Jacksonville, Walker bolted into the weighing room and interfered with the weighing of the mail. Timothy gave him to understand that that was his job and if he insisted on interfering he would leave it to him and so report. The railroad agent also objected and he had to step out. Then he tried to get into the mail wagon to ride to the post office but. Timothy objected and the driver whipped up the team and left him fuming at the station. All these doings of Walker were promptly reported to Superintendent French, and coupled with the reports of other agents they had the effect of separating Walker from the service and the payroll of the government. NEGRO COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN TO PARTICIPATE IN WORLD MEETING AT DETROIT ON MISSIONS NEW YORK, N. Y.—The Tenth Quadrennial Convention of Student Volunteers of the United States and Canada will convene at Detroit, Michigan, December 28, to January 2. This is a foreign missionary, convention made up almost entirely of college students—men and women. Of the 1,000 colleges and schools of North America that will send delegates, nearly 100 are Negro institutions of learning, mostly in the South. ST DANCE MORNING—10 to 2 PLACE CASINO —50 Cents and White Circle Orchestra Have No Insurance! BEEN INSURED BY: INSURANCE BROKER ng, 1216 U St., N.W. Glass—Liability DENT—BONDS— MENT—FURNITURE Insurance Our Specialty Pay You Decatur 4314 -FLYNN Glass St. N.W. ranklin 151-152 THE SIGN OF GOOD DANCES KIDDIES' CORNER CHRISTMAS SEALS (The National Tuberculosis Association, member of the National Heath Council, has begun its twentieth annual Christmas seal sale. Most of the readers of the Kiddies' Corner know its motto: "All for Health—Health for all". Its sale of Christmas seals is worthy of your assistance, whether it be to sell the seals, or to buy them. You can get an idea of the nature of the work done by the association by reading the story, "Polly's 'Choose' Story" which follows.—Editor.) POLLY'S "CHOOSE" STORY By Elizabeth Cole "Well, what do you choose to have your story about tonight?" asked Mother. Polly wrinkled her nose and aquinted her eyes, because that was the way she could think better. "Let's see," she began, "I choose a knight—and a little boy and—a peck of potatoes and—um, some cows." "Oh!" said Mother, "you want a story about a knight of the olden days, do you?" "Yes, all about the olden days when you were a girl, Mother," exclaimed Polly who was eight years old and thought it must have been a long time ago when her mother was that age. Polly's mother told her "choose" stories as they called them—what ever Polly chose, her mother had to put into the story. Mother smiled and said, "My, those are hard choices tonight. Let me think—." Then she began her story: "Well, you see, there was once a handsome knight who rode on a snow white charger and protected the land against robbers and enemies. He was loved by the good people and feared by the bad because of his justness and bravery. "Now in his village dwelt a little boy whose name was Thomas. Thomas was a poor boy and lived with his mother in a cottage beside the meadow. In the meadow were pastured many cows that belonged to a rich squire of the land. Thomas watched the cows munching the green clover and thought what fine milk they were making. But his mother was poor and could not keep a cow to make milk for her little boy. She did have a small garden in the yard though and here she had planted some potatoes. It was Thomas' pride and job to weed and wee the green vines and to water them every day and watch them grow. "In those olden days you must know there was much sickness in the land. The poor people did not have enough to eat and the rich had too much, which is often just as bad for one's health." Mother looked at Polly and Polly grinned for she remembered Thanksgiving day when she had had a dreadful pain and had to take castor oil. Mother went on with the story, "Now Thomas and his mother did not have enough to eat, while the fat squire had far too much. Thomas would watch the squire's man milking the cows and long for some of the white creamy milk. He knew that much of it would go to the pigs and make them fat and rich for the fat and rich squire to eat. The squire's man looked out from under his broad brimmed farmer's hat and saw the little boy's longing eyes peering over the fence at him. He feared the squire who was a hard master with never a kind word for anybody. He could not allow his workmen to talk or chatter in the manner of friendly people. "Poor little Thomas, his body became quite thin while his mother grew tired and pale, because they did not have enough to eat. "But the potatoes were growing and growing down in the ground and one day his mother said, 'I think it is time to dig the potatoes, Thomas. We will get up at sunrise tomorrow.' "But alas, when sunrise came, Thomas, and he actually smiled to sick she could not get up. Thomas; went out to the garden and dug and dug the potatoes until he had filled a sack. Then he ran to the fence and called across to the squire's man, 'Oh, sir, would you be so kind as to exchange this peck of potatoes for some of your white creamy milk? My mother is ill for want of food.' "Now it chanced that the cruel squire was riding by and he heard what Thomas said. He saw the sack of potatoes which Thomas could scarcely hold up—he was so weak and tired from digging and from having so little food. The squire did not want Thomas' peck of potatoes—he had bushels and bushels of them but he did want to hear what his man would say. 'All right, my lad,' said the squire's man. 'I will give you a nail of milk for the sack of potatoes.' "Oh, thank you, sir," cried Thomas ned he actually smiled to think of his mother's joy at seeing the creamy milk her Little boy would bring her. He hurried into the souire's meadow with his peek of potatoes. "Just a moment," cried a voice and the squire rode up to Thomas. He smote the potatoes from the kid's hands and they fell all over the ground. "So you thought you would bargain with the little beggar," orarmed the squire, to his man. Take that! And he was about to crack his whip on the poor man's back when—what do you suppose happened? "The knight rode in," cried Polly delightedly. "No, sir," said Mother, "it was the cows who came to the rescue. TRIBUNITE'S PLEDGE 1. I will never use the word "nigger." 2. I will learn all that 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 that I am a Negro because God made me one, and, being a Negro, I will do all that I can to add honor to my Race. They turned out to be heroine cows indeed. As the squire's whip was waving in the air the startled cows dashed upon his horse and frightened him so that the whip fell from his hand and he was thrown from his saddle. There he lay sprawling, sputtering, and clutching about amongst Thomas' potatoes." Polly and her mother laughed at the discomfiture of the squire, then she asked a little disappointed, "But where was the brave knight?" "Ia-Ha," laughed Mother, "You shall see. "The squire's man ran toward his master. He looked down at him and shouted in a big booming voice, 'You're a bad ignorant man, your people are starving while you grow fat, with rich living and laziness. Take that, you brute,' and he gave him a kick with his boot. "Now comes the surprise—ne pulled off his broad-brimmed farmer's hat, took off his farmer's smock and there stood—" (Continued Next Week) THE IRON HORSE By Sarah M. Frazier Recently I overheard one little girl remark seriously to another, "Why do they call engines iron horses?" This question led me to ask myself, "How many children know the actual facts surrounding the development of the train?" For the benefit of those who are ignorant concerning the origin of the railroads, and who failed to see the unique fair of the Iron Horse, held recently at Halehorp, near Baltimore, Md., I am writing this article. In the early days travel in America was very crude indeed. The first means of travel was the pack horse, ineffective and slow, employed by the Indians. Next came a rough form of read wagon used by the pioneers. Later followed the covered wagons about which we read so much in our histories. Suppose we had to travel in those wagons now. Then came the first coach pulled by horses and named for George Washington. A gala event was the coming of the memorable pony express. So ended the primary means of transportation. Realizing the ineffectiveness of their present means of travel a body of men met in 1827, exactly one century ago, for the purpose of discovering better methods of tr importation. They consulted England, the mother of railroads, and formulated certain plans. Gradually their plans began to take form and in 1829 the first railroad was begun. At first horses, those reliable and dependable beasts, were the motive power of the railroad. In 1830 the first steam locomotive was built in America by Peter Cooper. It weighed only two tons, but it proved its value. Imagine only two tons! The electric locomotive with its third-rail presented itself in 1895. The third-rail system is now used in tunnels which are thereby kept free from smoke. The railways passed rapidly from one stage to another and now in 1927 our trains typify everything that is desirable and up-to-date. Nowadays some trains weigh as much as 330 tons and are capable of carrying 68,200 pounds. The next time that you go on a train, just stop and see how huge and magnificent it is. "I THANK YOU" Dear Editor: I am writing to thank you for the Tribune which I have received regularly. I find it quite interesting. I think all Negroes should read it. I won a subscription to the Tribune as a prize offered by the Kiddies' Corner. Again I say "thank you." DOROTHY MOORE 2682 Nichols Ave., S. E. ARE YOU A LUCKY BUDDY? If you name appears in this list upside down you are entitled to a ticket to a matinee show at the DUNBAR THEATRE. Lucky ones are to come to the office any day before 4 p.m. and asl: for Mr. Frazier. William Alexander, age 10, 1516 P street, northwest. Frank Armstead, 14, 1611 12th street, northwest. Thelmma Armstead, 14, 1116 1 T Ashton Brown, 13, 1308 T street, northwest. Bertha Hazel Bryant, 14, 2118 Tenth street, northwest. Artie Barnes, (?), 1543 T street, northwest. Elisa Chapman, 9, 1817 Tenth street, northwest. Agnes Gibbs, 15, 45.3 Washington street, northwest. 'annie Granton, (?) , 2228 Cleveland place. Helen Hall, 11, 2712 Dumbarton avenue, northwest. Shermont Jackson, 8, 2320 L street, northwest. Osteopathy as a H WHAT EXPERIENCED MEN SAID Carl P. McConnell, M.D., D.O., O. C. Science and Art of Osteopathy has been its details, based on actual experience sults." Percy N. Woodall, M.D., D.O., B. I. am thoroughly convinced that Osteo- independent system of healing the h Manipulation. It successfully treat- chronic diseases." W. Kelman McDonald, M.D., D.O., I. 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Man McDonald, M.D., D.O., Edinburg, Scotland, Great said: "Indeed, I firmly believe that Osteopathy is a rich, a great discovery, and that it supplies the most effective method of handling the sick, and that it is the most natural system of healing imaginable." One and only Colored School of Osteopathy is District of Columbia College of Osteopathy 1826 Ninth St., N.W., Washington, D.C. Mid-winter class begins January 3, 1928 Write for information, or Phone, North 10312 Dr. T. Theo, Parker, President FLORIDAJAN CAFE 207 FLORIDA AVENUE, N.W. A Full Line of Delicatessens, etc. We Specialize in eating Dinner Parties. Open from Dawn till Dawn. Dining Room North 4030 Latest Music Hits Wm. Vance, Mgr. COLLINS' PURE Pork Sausage Meat Made and Prepared by DAVID D. COLLINS Stands 94,95, O Street Market 40 cents per pound Carl P. McConnell, M.D., D.O., Chicago, Ill., said: "The Science and Art of Osteopathy has been perfected in many of its details, based on actual experience and splendid clinical results." Percy N. Woodall, M.D., D.O., Birmingham, Ala., said: "I am thoroughly convinced that Osteopathy is a complete and independent system of healing the human body by Scientific Manipulation. It successfully treats all curable acute and chronic diseases." W. Kelman McDonald, M.D., D.O., Edinburgh, Scotland, Great Britain, said: "Indeed, I firmly believe that Osteopathy is a great truth, a great discovery, and that it supplies the most satisfactory method of handling the sick, and that it is the most sane and Natural system of healing imaginable." The one and only Colored School of Osteopathy is Mid-winter class begins January 3, 1928 Write for information, or Phone, North 10312 Dr. T. Theo, Parker, President We Carry a Full Line of Delicatessens, etc. We Specialize in Serving Dinner Parties. 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WALKER'S WONDERFUL HAIR GROWER AND TETTER SALVE 50 cents per large tin AND WORTH IT MADRID'S LOWWALKERS TESTIPAKE WITH MADRID'S LOWWALKERS WITH MADRID'S LOWWALKERS 50 cents per large tin AND WORTH IT These and Mine. C. J. Walker's other Preparations for Sale by Agents, Drug Stores and by mail The Madam C.J. Walker Mfg. Co. 640 N. West St Indianapolis - Indiana --- James R. Johnson, 12, 1020 Fifth street, northwest. John P. Johnson, 14, 3215 Elevenh street, northwest. MADAMS WINERY 50¢ Everywhere Society. MRS. SAVOY HOSTESS AT BRILLIANT CARD PARTY One of the most brilliant card parties of the season was the one given by Mrs. Sevellon Savoy at the National Capital Country Club on Wednesday evening, November 9. She entertained the Junior Matrons and a number of invited guests. Bridge was played. The club prizes were won by Mrs. Norman Harris and Mrs. Mortimer M. Harris. The guest prizes were won by Miss Caroline Calloway, Mrs. Louis Mehlinger, Miss Jessie Parks, Mrs. Sallie Clarke, Miss Irene Miller and Miss Muriel Milton. Those present included Mrs. Euphemia Haynes, Mrs. C. Curry, Mrs. Vincent Thomas, Mrs. Madeline Tucker, Mrs. Violet Thompson, Mrs. Charles West, Mrs. Eleanor Wheatland, Mrs. Ethel McKimney, Mrs. Bobbie Scott, Mrs. Frank Jones, Mrs. Estelle Williams, Mrs. E. D. Williston, Mrs. Merrill Curtis, Mrs. Mortimer Harris, Mrs. Louis Mehlinger, Mrs. Norman Harris, Mrs. William Wilson, Mrs. Carol Carson, Mrs. Charles Wilder, Mrs. Percy Bond, Mrs. Rosina Adams, Mrs. Estelle Coffey Carr, Mrs. Perry W. Howard, Mrs. Mary Cottrell, Mrs. Theresa Connelly, Mrs. Dorothy DeLeon, Mrs. M. O. Dumas, Mrs. Hattie Gordon Edwards, Mrs. D. Fortuna, Mrs. Beatrice Francis, Mrs. Leonora Freeman, Mrs. Alice Fry, Mrs. Daisy Glenn, Mrs. Olga Hamilton, Mrs. Lanier Grady, Mrs. Phyllis Goines, Mrs. Isabel Hall, Mrs. Nellie Henderson, Mrs. Charles Houston, Mrs. Benjamin Hunton, Mrs. William Hurst, Mrs. Viola Smith, Mrs. C. L. Simmons, Mrs. J. Hayden Johnson, Mrs. Mriam Lewis, Mrs. Charles Flagg, Mrs. Robert Ogle, Mrs. Nettie Powell, Mrs. Sallie Clark, Mrs. P. W. Price, Miss Hallie Queen, Mrs. Narka Rayford, Mrs. E. Scurlock, Mrs. Marion Robinson, Mrs. John Rector, Mrs. E. Young, Mrs. L. C. Steward, Miss Bernice Simms, Miss Mayne Lewis, Miss Effie Simmons, Miss Jessie Parks, Miss Caroline Calloway, Miss Charlotte West, Miss Irene Miller, Miss Ella Perry, Miss Muriel Milton and Miss Bessie Russell. MRS. BOND ENTERTAINS MATRONS Mrs. Percy Bond entertained the Matrons at bridge at her residence, 1316 Q street, northwest, on Thursday evening, November 10. The club prize winners were Mrs. Geo. Young and Mrs. Audie Lewis. The guest prize winners were Mrs. Eula Gray and Mrs. Thomas Clarke. Among those present were Mrs. M. O. Dumas, Mrs. Charles West, Mrs. W. L. Board, Mrs. Thomas Clarke, Mrs. George Young, Mrs. Eula Gray, Mrs. Louis Cornish, Mrs. Henry Bailey, Mrs. Audie Lewis, Mrs. P. W. Price, Mrs. Lanier Grady, Mrs. A. Taylor, Miss Ruth Weatherless and Miss Edna Gray. MRS. WEST HOSTESS AT BRIDGE Mrs. Charles I. West entertained at bridge at her residence, 924 M street, northwest, last Friday evening. The club prizes were won by Mrs. Eula Gray and Mrs. Perry W. Howard. The guest prizes were won by Mrs. P. W. Price, Mrs. Louis Cornish and Mrs. E. D. Williston. Those present included Mrs. Henry Freeman, Mrs. Emma Wormeli, Mrs. W. J. Bauduit, Mrs. Louis Cornish, Mrs. Ann Johnson, Mrs. Hayden Johnson, Mrs. P. W. Price, Mrs. Lanier Gray, Mrs. E. D. Williston, Mrs. L. C. Steward, Mrs. Theresa Connellly, Mrs. Estelle Mayer, Mrs. M. O. Dumas, Mrs. Maude Brown, Mrs. Ocea Marshall, Mrs. P. W. Howard, Mrs. Percy Bond, Mrs. D. Fortuna, Mrs. L. H. Burwell, Miss Edith Lee, Miss Janie Page, Mrs. Bertie Page and Missella Perry. SURPRISE PARTY FOR MOTHER Rozier D. Brown and wife gave a surprise birthday party in honor of his mother, Mrs. Emma A. Brown, at their residence, 1319 Street, northwest. November 9. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Lucas, Mr. and Mrs. Dewitt Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bowman, Dr. Paul E. Piper, Mrs. Cora Piper, Mrs. Hattie B. Piper, Mrs. Florence Givens, Mrs. Florence Ward, Mrs. Harriet Minor, Mrs. Annie Brown. Miss Mergie Ward, Mrs. Selena Honesty, Mrs. Jane Beasley, Miss Corne Givens, Miss Catherine Brown, Mrs. Ethel Menard, Miss Viola Jackson, Mrs. M. E. Thomas, Preston Ward, Maurice Ward, Charles Alden Brown, Master Rozier Brown, Charles C. Brown. Many presents were given to Mrs. Brown. A delightful repast was served. MRS. FAY GOODING ENTER TAINS AT FIVE HUNDRED Mrs. Fay Gooding, of 1206 T street, northwest, entertained her five hundred club on Tuesday, November 15. The club guests were Mrs. Parson and Mrs. Helen M. King. The members present were Mesdames Georgia Battle, Ethel Bridgeport, Willie Collins, Mary B. Irving, Marguerite Lancaster, Jessie Price. Ruth Robinson, Grace Walker and Mrs. Ida E. Hunt. "Sunshine Sammy" Entertained Ernest (Sunshine Sammy) Morrison, and his Little brother, Charles Morrison, were guests at a luncheon given by Horace, Harry and John Landers at their residence, 629 A street, southeast, on Saturday afternoon. November 12. Those present were Adline Webb, Belle Sadgwar, Bernice Breckenridge, Elsie Dodson, Emma Greene, Eunice Landers, Gladys Landers, Inez Landers, Ora Landers, Mildred Thomas, Olga Beckwith, Pauline Breckenridge, Thelma Lane, Henry Edwards, Robert Murray, and Bruce Hudnell. The afternoon was spent in dancing. PERSONALS The Daniels' Music Club held its monthly exercises at the Asbury M. E. Church, Sunday, November 13, at 4 o'clock. The president, Mrs. Eumie Fantroy, was unable to be present on account of illness. Miss Clandin E. Peace presided. A program was rendered. Mrs. Marietta Harvey, Alexander, a music teacher, who was seriously injured several weeks ago by an automobile, has improved sufficiently to be out again. Mrs. Gladys Giles was hostess for the Jolly Dozen Five-hundred Club on Thursday evening, November 10, at her home on Linden street, northeast. The club prizes were won by Miss Beatrice Cooper, Miss Ethel Gray, and Miss Ollie Cooper. Mrs. Eleanor Foster was guest for the evening. Dr. and Mrs. LeRoy Toliver gave a Halloween party at their residence, 2036 Flagler place, northwest. The hostess was assisted by her sisters, Mrs. Ella Smith, Mrs. Sara Bryan, and Miss Gladys Sellman. Their guests included Mr. and Mrs. Jeffies Flipping, Mr. and Mrs. Vernet West, Mr. and Mrs. James B. Smith, Dr. and Mrs. Clarence Browne, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Pope, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee, Mrs. Janie Beckley, Misses Mae Colen, Kathleen James, Louise Holmes, Edith Pinn, Gladys Smith, Messrs. Harry Robinson, Nathaniel Slaughter, Samuel Bryan, Dr. Luther Wiseman, Elmer Toyer, Chauncey Parker, Calvin Smith, et al. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. R. Clarke had their mother, Mrs. P. J. Webb of Petersburg, Va., and Mr. Monroe Trotter of Boston, Mass., as their dinner guests on Sunday, November 6. Mrs. Webb had been visiting her son, Mr. Otho Webb of New York City. Joseph H. Maxwell, proprietor of Maxwell's Book Shop, 2018 Georgia avenue, northwest, spent the weekend in Philadelphia, Pa. Mortimer M. Harris, real estate operator, 613 F street, northwest, was confined to his home three days last week on account of illness. Major R. R. Wright, Sr., of Philadelphia, Pa., was a visitor here last Saturday for the Howard-Atlanta universities' football game. Mrs. Lucy Brooks Lewis, wife of Attorney George W. Lewis, of Richmond, Va., is the guest of her brother, Rev. and Mrs. Walter H. Brooks of T street, northwest. Mrs. Alice Waddleton Lee has been removed to her home, 152 W street, northwest, after a successful operation by Dr. S. L. Carson. Samuel Harris, of 601 T street, northwest, is confined at Freedmen's Hospital. Mrs. Thomas W. Clarke, who has been convalescing from a recent operation at the home of her mother in Thomas street, northwest, has recovered sufficiently to be brought to her home, 1716 Second street, northwest. Roger M. Brown, who has been quite ill is able to be back at his post of duty at the Government Printing Office. Miss Julia J. Jenkins, of 1443 S street, northwest, gave an impressive interpretation of her poem, "Eventide" on last Sunday at the 45th anniversary of the pastorate of Rev. Walter H. Brooks at the 19th Street Baptist Church. Mr. and Mrs. James B. Walker, Sr., received announcement of the birth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. James B. Walker, Jr., of Detroit, Mich. The little daughter was born on Armistice Day. Dr. M, O. Dumas has returned from a trip to Talladega. Ala. Mrs. Fannie Archer Winkler of Atlantic City, NJ., passed through the city on route to Richmond and Amelia, Va., and was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Julia Archer Scott and Mrs. Sadie Archer Scott, 658 Twelfth street, northeast. Mrs. Lillian Carter entertained a number of artists of the stage and friends at the "Haven," 1836 Ninth street, northwest, on Tuesday evening, Mrs. Nora L. Gibson, senior partner. Mrs. Letitia Burrell Lewis, wife of Rev. E. T. Lewis, of Montello avenue, northeast, is still confined at her home on account of serious illness. Dr. Mattie D. Warde, former civic and social leader of Lynchburg, Va., who is now located in Alexandria, Va., was the guest of relatives in this city and Mrs. Ida Cummins, of Baltimore, Md. Mrs. Elizabeth Pearce, of Philadelphia, spent Sunday in the city visiting relatives and friends. While here she was the guest of THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1927 A Mme. LILLIAN EVANS TIBBS, (Madam Evanti) whose marital differences are to be aired in court. Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Turner, of 1716 Second street, northwest. Mrs. Ray Randolph Arrington, of 1240 Kearney street, northeast, who has been confined to her bed for the past week, is slowly im- proving. Mrs. Rebecca Powell, of 949 S street, northwest, who has been visiting in New York City, return- ed home this week. Amos Howard, of Philadelphia, was the guest of Mrs. Annie Martin and Mrs. Hattie Washington, Sunday. The Universal Social Club entertained the club officers at the residence of Clarence Rabb, 1750 Willard street, northwest, Sunday evening. Those present were Messrs. Henry Carter, Lawrence Paige, James Rabb, Benzie Jones, Everette Adams, James Albany, and Walter Barnes. Mrs. Iola Mason, of Third street northwest, had as guests Thursday evening, Mrs. Alice Jefferson, Alberta Cunningham, Misses Melba Freeman, Arlette Bloogood, in honor of Mrs. Evelyn Goode, of New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Owens have moved in their newly purchased home, 1724 Second street, northwest. Mrs. Kate Harris, 1846 Third street, northwest, has just returned from a two weeks' trip to New York City. Mrs. Harris has been sick for the past few months, but is improved since her trip. Mrs. Elizabeth B. Douglas, formerly of 114 W street, northwest, is ill at her new residence, 2108 Second street, northwest. Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Sidney, of 1835 Oregon avenue northwest, have as their guest, Mrs. Lennie Parker of Hampton, Va. Mrs. Louis Bryant entertained the Ladies' Social Club at her residence, 3140 Woodley road, northwest, Friday evening. After the business meeting, a dainty menu was served. Those present were Mrs. Verdi Fisher, Mrs. Frances Hawkins, Mrs. Hattie Morgan, Mrs. Mattie Smith, Mrs. Mary Davis, Mrs. Neville Cushenberry, Mrs. Louis Ambler, and Mrs. Louis Bryant. Miss Maggie Berryman entertained the Twilight Club of the I. B. P. O. E. of W. Monday evening, November 14, at her residence, 351 H street, southwest. Covers were laid for thirteen. The home was artistically decorated with yellow and pink, and white chrysanthemums. Mrs. Pearl Withers announces the marriage of her daughter, Jessie Rosa Lee to L. Key, to take place on Wednesday, November 23, at the residence of the groom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. Key, 38 N street, northwest. The couple will leave for the Lincoln and Howard football classic at Philadelphia, and will make their home in Brooklyn, N. Y., at the home of the bride's aunt, Mrs. H. H. Ham, 1088 Dean street. The Apprendre Art Club had a Japanese tea and musicle Sunday evening, at the residence of Mrs. Nettie O'Brien, 1232 Florida avenue, northwest. Music and literary selections were rendered by Misses Taylor, Praither, Cornell O'Brien, Jessie Carter, George O'Brien, Mesdames Emma Holmes, and Nettie O'Brien. The members of the club are Nettie O'Brien, president; Dollie Crayton, vicepresident; Mabel Cater, secretary; Laura Hardy, assistant secretary; Clara Henry, treasurer; Pearl O'Brien, chaplain; Julia Mitchell, sergeant-at-arms; Susie Gross, Minnie Slaughter, and Emma Holmes. Samuel Sheiff, who has been employed at Garfield Hospital for more than three years, underwent an operation for appendicitis. He is improving steadily. EDITOR VISITS SOUTH William O. Walker, managing editor of the Washington Tribune, visited two conferences of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church in South Carolina last week and this week. He accompanied Bishop E. W. D. Jones, who presided over these conferences. Gordon's 710 Seventh St., N. W. LATEST STYLES IN HATS $198 to $495 Unexcelled Values BE SURE OF EXTREME COURTESY AT Gordon's 710 SEVENTH STREET, N. W. Come In and Get Acquainted LADY ANDRES Quinine--Sulphur--Sage and Tar Compound For Information Call North 3184 Buy from these Pharmacies ALBERT BROWN RITES HELD Funeral services for Albert Brown were held at his residence 1146 Lingers court, northwest, last Monday afternoon. He died November 10. He leaves a widow, Mrs. Mamie Brown, and five children, Albert, Jr., Louis, Lawrence, James and Margaret Brown. He was a member of Morning Star Lodge No. 40, Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World. CHICAGOANS VISIT HERE The delegation of Chicagoans visited here with Mayor William Hale Thompson in the interest of flood prevention in the Mississippi Valley included Roscoe C. Simons, Oscar De Priest, Major R. R. Jackson, Louis B. Anderson, George T. Kersey, E. D. Green, Charles Jackson, A. G. F. Sims, Sr., Charles Ferrill, and H. A. Watkins. On Tuesday these members of the delegation were presented to President Coolidge at the White House by Perry W. Howard, Republican National Committeeman for Mississippi. While here they visited the Arlington National Cemetery and placed a wreath on the tomb of the Unknown Soldier. MRS. RAYFORD INJURED IN AUTO ACCIDENT Mrs. Narka Lee Rayford, an employee in the office of the Recorder of Deeds, was injured in an automobile accident last Saturday morning when her automobile which she was driving turned over or the Defense Highway. Mrs. Rayford was on her way from her home at Ardmore, Md., to her work. She was treated at Freedmen's Hospital for lacerations and bruises. GORDON 710 Seventh LATEST STYLES IN HATS $1 Unexcelled Values BE SURE OF EXTREME Gordon's 710 STRE Come In and Get A LADY AN Quinine--Sulphur- Tar Compa ```markdown ``` MARY Lady Andres Quinine-Sulphur- Sage-and-Tar Compound for the Scalp and Hair For Man and Beaut Recommended in the treatment of Ring-worm, Tetter, Bald Spots, Falling Hair, Shedding of the hair or hair line, Sorborex or Dandruff, Paragastic and Sorborexie Eczema, Acne, Ichthyosis, Alopecia areata, senile and premature Alopecia, and Alopecias of the anatomy of the scalp and hair, following Tremor Fever, Influenza, and other acute and chronic diseases, that affect the hair. PBICE—60 cents Copyright 1927 By Lady Andres Perfumers Washington, D.C., U.S.A. NOTICE: Cleansse the scalp and hair thoroughly with Lady Andres Cecos- nut Oil Shampoo Syrup before using. For Information Call Buy from these F Simmons' Pharmacy, Em 21st & L Sts., N.W. 10th Bacchus' Pharmacy, Sm 9th & P Sts., N.W. 154 Walker's Pharmacy, Jac 2501 Nichols Ave., S.E. 3rd Southwestern Drug Co., Hui 2nd & H Sts., S.W. 900 Reynold's Pharmacy, Empi 2600 Ga. Ave., N.W. 2901 Butcher's Pharmacy, Thom 501 Fla. Ave., N.W. 12th Burwell's Pharmacy, Colum Vt. Ave. & R St., N.W. 143 F Twine's Pharmacy, Wiser 1319 H St., N.E. 3rd & "SUNSHINE SAMMY" GUEST AT MU-SO-LIT CLUB DEBATE "Sunshine Sammy" Morrison and his brother, Charlse, were guests at the regular monthly meeting of the Mu-So-Lit Club last Friday night. There was a debate on prohibition, Dean Kelly Miller upholding enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment and Attorney William L. Houston arguing in favor of nullification. Prohibition stunts were arranged by Morrissey Koonce, Robert Pelham, Walter Singleton, Henry P. Slaughter, and L. R. Mehlinger. The program was arranged by the following members of the executive committee: Perry W. Howard, Dr. A. M. Curtis, Augustus W. Gray and Dr. C. C. Fry. SUNSHINE SAMMY VISITS CHILDREN'S KOSPITAL "Sunshine Sammy" and his brother, Charlie, accompanied by Robert Murray and Marguerite Taylor, visited the Children's Hospital Saturday, November 12, and gave the kiddies a pleasant surprise. The doctors and nurses were as well pleased as the children. RITES FOR MRS. HOLMES HELD. Funeral services for Mrs. Annie F. Holmes, widow of Talley R. Holmes, were held at 1345 T street northwest, last Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Holmes died November 9. She is survived by her daughter, Mrs. Hattie Holmes Hill; her son, Talley R. Holmes; two sisters, Mrs. Josie C. Henderson and Mrs. Susie Clayton, and two brothers, John L. Thorne and William G. Thorne. don's n St., N.W. $198 to $495 EME COURTESY AT 710 SEVENTH STREET, N. W. Get Acquainted ANDRES hur--Sage and impound FOR GLOSSY BLACK Luxuriant HAIR 60c LADY ANDRES MEDICATED SKIN TO SCALP SOAP FREE Call North 3184 e Pharmacies Empire Pharmacy, 10th & R Sts., N.W. Smoot's Pharmacy, 1548 N. J. Ave., N.W. Jackson's Pharmacy, 3rd & H Sts., N.W. Hunton's Pharmacy, 900 U St., N.W. Empire Pharmacy 2501 Sherman Ave., N.W. Thomas' Pharmacy, 12th & U Sts., N.W. Columbia Pharmacy, 143 Fla. Ave., N.W. Wiseman's Pharmacy, 3rd & Elm Sts., N.W. pealing to race prejudice was run in the daily newspapers. The question was, "Shall Crump and Church rule through Overton?" Mayor Paine himself defined the issue to be: "Shall candidates for office in this city run on their own merit and qualifications or shall they be compelled to obtain the indorsement and support of Mr. E. H. Crump, the white boss, and Bob Church, the Negro boss, in order to be elected to office in the city of Mmephis?" On Wednesday night preceding the election the Beale Street Church was bombed while Mr. Church was addressing a mass meeting in it. Mayor Paine had an enlarged picture of Mr. Church in his headquarters and under it was printed: "Will Southern white men and women allow this Negro man to name the next mayor of Memphis and defeat a Southern white woman for office?" On Wednesday night preceding the election Mayor Paine made an inflammatory speech. Mr. Church's comment on the results of the election was, "It was a bitter campaign but a great victory." LOOK! READ! DO YOU WANT IT? HOWARD'S BARBER 643 Florida Avenue, N.W. 2nd Floor—Ladies' Barber Shoppe and Fur Our hot oil steam and electric vibratic shampoo, make the hair grow, rid it of dand stop it from falling. Shampoo & Press—Children, Bobbed Hair, 1 Ladies, Bobbed Hair, $1.00; Long Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. daily; Sat. 9 We have installed private booths. For appointments—if you can not make North 10163. 1st Floor—Men's Barber Shop—Ex Free lilac steam with each hair cut Madam Howard's Special Grower Hair Straight, Glossy and Soft— Mr. Benj. Thomas, Mgr. Madame T. G. Bra INCREASING DEMAND FOR BRANCH SHOPS TO FOURTEEN Built on Merit---H WANT IT? LONG HAIR. CARBER SHOPS Avenue, N.W. Oppe and French Beauty Parlor artic vibrations, given with each aid it of dandruff, oil, dryness, and Jubbed Hair, 75c; Long Hair, $1.00 $1.00; Long Hair, $1.25 daily; Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. private booths for ladies. Can not make these hours—call er Shop—Expert Service each hair cut and shave. Special Grower Keeps the dy and Soft—50c a Box Thomas, Mgr. G. Bramlette Servi MAND FOR HAWAIIAN TREAT SHOPS TO BE OPENED IN MANY FOURTEEN YEARS OF SERVICE Merit---Has the Public's LOOK! READ! DO YOU WANT IT? LONG HAIR. HOWARD'S BARBER SHOPS 643 Florida Avenue, N.W. 2nd Floor—Ladies' Barber-Shoppe and French Beauty Parlor Our hot oil steams and electric vibrations, given with each shampoo, make the hair grow, rid it of dandruff, oil, dryness, and stop it from falling. Shampoo & Press—Children, Bobbed Hair, 75c; Long Hair, $1.00 Ladies, Bobbed Hair, $1.00; Long Hair, $1.25 Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. daily; Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. We have installed private booths for ladies. For appointments—if you can not make these hours—call North 10163. 1st Floor—Men's Barber Shop—Expert Service Free lilac steam with each hair cut and shave. Madam Howard's Special Grower Keeps the Hair Straight, Glossy and Soft—50c a Box Mr. Benj. Thomas, Mgr. Madame T. G. Bramlette Serving the Public INCREASING DEMAND FOR HAWAIIAN TREATMENTS CAUSES BRANCH SHOPS TO BE OPENED IN MANY CITIES. FOURTEEN YEARS OF SERVICE A. Mme. T. G. BRAMLETTE business. Hawaiian agents will be found in all cities from Providence, Rhode Island, to Tampa, Florida, operating on both large and small basis. These Hawaiian branch shops insure the public the best service given under strictly sanitary conditions and they furnish training and employment to the young girls of the cities in which they are located. As the demand increases and the organization expands, the operators who prove themselves capable are given opportunities to manage branch shops. The success of the Hawaiian System of Scalp and Hair Culture is due to the fact that the service is different from the usual run of treatmentts given by other systems and individual hairdressers. Hawaiian System Service is given on a strictly scientific basis where every scalp is given a thorough examination and treatment with special Hawaiian System tonics for whatever may be the illment that would prevent the best results from the service. --- (Continued from page 1) organized the West Tennessee Civic and Political League and started a campaign for the registration of Negro voters. They demanded Negro firemen, Negro policemen and admission to all city parks and the zoo. Downright Prejudiced Mayor Paine answered that "there will be no Negro policemen, no Negro firemen, nor removal of the restrictions now governing the admission of Negroes to the white parks of the city, including Overton Park Zoo, as long as I have any voice in the control of the city government." Church and his organization decided to oppose him. They endorsed the candidacy of Mr. Overton. A bitter campaign resulted. A full page advertisement an- Beginning back in 1913 in the city of Indianapolis, Indiana, by making a house-to-house canvass with her entire stock of supplies in a hand grip, Madame T. G. Bramlette started the foundation of a business that was destined to gain national fame through the finer quality of her products. Although handcapped in many ways, but possessed largely with those God-given inner qualities that make for success, such as FAITH, SPIRIT, FORE-THOUGHT, AMBITION, DETERMINATION and with the ability to smile in the face of those who cast insulting remarks, Madame Bramlette has fought unceasingly against every obstacle, and after fourteen years of continuous effort can begin to see the realization of her ambition. In her efforts she has had the encouragement and assistance of her four sons and husband. The Hawaiian System of Scalp and Hair Culture is a growing organization that guarantees one hundred per cent service and satisfaction. It is the great purpose of Madame Bramlette to make it possible for as many persons as wish the Hawaiian System Service to be able to get the full benefit of these treatments under the best possible conditions. To insure the public that the genuine Hawaiian System standards of service are carried out by every agent, each agent is required to sign an iron-clad contract. Any proven report to the contrary means that the offending agent loses her connections with the organization. The reputation and prestige won over a period of fourteen years is too precious to lose through the operations of unreliable persons. While the Hawaiian System is not the oldest or biggest in the country, it has the distinction of being recognized everywhere—the service given being the BEST SYSTEM in the WORLD. Hawaiian agents hold the confidence of the public by their ability to bring out pleasing results on customers who failed to get satisfaction elsewhere. In the years of 1915 to 1917 inclusive, Madame Bramlette with Mr. Bramlette toured the eastern and southern states establishing agents. The first branch shop was opened in Charleston, W.Va., in 1918. Two years later a branch shop was opened in Washington, D.C., and the New York City branch followed in 1923. With the bulk of business extending from New York to Tampa, Florida, it was decided to change the headquarters from Indiana to the national capital. A suitable building located at 1530-1532 Seventh Street, N.W., was taken over and the removal was accomplished in September, 1924. During the present year shops have been opened in Baltimore; Md., Philadelphia, Pa., and Newark, N.J.; and in addition many Hawaiian agents have opened beautiful shops of their own in many cities over the country and are carrying on a splendid Church Bombed THE MASTER OF HER ART Mme. T. G. BRAMLETTE VETERANS RETURN FROM PARIS Stephen D. Miller, assistant adjutant, and Geogre H. Gray of the James Reese Europe Pct. of the American Legion, returned to the city Sunday after an absence of two months in Europe where they attended the National Convention of the American Legion in Paris. Mr. Miller was an alternate from the Department of the District of Columbia and served on the life membership committee. Official report and personal observations of their tour will be made at the regular meeting of the Post on Tuesday night. CHRISTMAS Photographs YOUR ORDER PLACED NOW WILL AVOID THE RUSH AND WILL BE AS-SURED OF EARLY DELIVERY. A Small Deposit will start the Work. Sunday Engagements may be made from 12 to 4 o'clock. The SCURLOCK Studio U Street at Ninth ing the Public MENTS CAUSES CITIES. s Confidence ```markdown ``` The high standard of workmanship of the Hawaiian System Operators is quickly noticeable in the excellent appearance of the customer's hair when completed. Each strand of hair on the head has been serviced from the scalp to the very end giving it a natural soft texture and glossy appearance. Only the extra fine quality of Hawaiian Hair preparations permits such exacting workmanship and results. Our women of the National Capital are especially noted for their beautiful hair and Hawaiian System treatments are accountable for this condition. A two months' treatment will be sent to any address on receipt of $2.00, and agents are given instructions through mail. All letters of inquiry should be addressed to Mme. T. G. Bramlette, 1532 Seventh Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. The Headquarters shop has six chairs; and customers are given immediate service at all hours. Shop open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily, and 9 p.m. Saturday. FOUR Alexandria Correspondent Miss Catherine Bentley 720 North Patrick St. Phone, Alexa, 1658-W Valuable lots in the heart of the City sold with a deposit of $10 DOWN and $10 PER MONTH When the lot is paid for the house will be built and you pay for it like rent. Out of 43 lots; I have only a fw left. For information, see— Lawyer A. H. Collins, 1508 King St., Alexa., Va. TODAY AND GET YOURS William S. Dogan, Sr., died at his home, 810 North Columbia street, Monday, November 14. He was the husband of Mary Dogan and the father of Mrs. Marion Jackson and William Dogan, Jr. He was the brother of Herbert G. Dogan, of Jersey City, N. J. The deceased was a plasterer, and was known by his friends and acquaintances as "Ghost" Dogans. Funeral services were held Thursday, November 7, from Roberts Chapel M. E. Church. Mrs. Ada Gibson entertained Friday at the residence of Mrs. Joseph Lomax. Those present were Mrs. Charley Chisley, Mrs. Kate Ware, Mrs. Bessie Moore, Miss Ada Addison, Mrs. Julia Barbour, Miss Bessie Burbour, Mr. and Mrs. Rosa Bogans, Mrs. Balkins and Mrs. G. L. Davis of Washington, D. C. Arthur Hyden, a former resident of this city, but now of Philadelphia, was visiting friends in Alexandria and Washington last Sunday. Attorney William McKinley Murray delivered the principal address on the Musical and Literary program held at the Shiloh Baptist Church, Sunday, November 13, at 8 p.m. Mrs Katie Franklin was mistress of ceremonies. The program, given for the benefit of the church rally, included selections, instrumental solos, and recitations. Rev. F. E. Hearns, D.D., is pastor of the church. Mrs. Tessie Dogan is quite sick at her home in North Columbus Street. The What-so-ever Circle met at the residence of Mrs. Margaret Evans in South West Street on Monday evening. The feature of the evening was candy-making. Prizes were won by the Misses Nellie Jones, Bertha Skinner and Eunice Diggs. Representing the Parent-Teacher Association of the Parker-Gray School, a committee composed of Mrs. Rich, Mrs. McDonald, Mrs. Evans and the principal, Mr. Elam, held a conference with the school superintendent on Wednesday afternoon. The problem of the overcrowded conditions and short hours of the primary grades were called to his attention. However, on account of the fixed budget for the year he held out little hope for any immediate relief of the situation. The Ureka Social Club met at the residence of Miss Inez Howard last Thursday. The Parker-Gray School celebrated American Education week last week. The main objective was to acquaint the citizens of Alexandria with the actual work and needs of the school. Scores of parents paid their first visit to Parker-Gray during the week, and especially was this true on Wednesday, "Know Your School Day." Special news story of damage done by tornado in Washington and Alexandria on front page. MRS. TERRELL EN ROUTE HOME Mrs. Mary Church Terrell is on route home from a visit with her children, Dr. and Mrs. Leon Tancil in Chicago. She is stopping over in Memphis, Tennessee, for a short visit with relatives. Barry Farms News An old-fashioned Thanksgiving dinner will be given at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Ivory Brown. Stanton road. Friends throughout the city are expected to attend. The proceeds are for the non-sectarian home. Stereopticon lantern slides shown by Mrs. Gabrielle Pelham, assistant director of the Community Center department, featured the meeting at St. John C. M. E. Church last Sunday evening. Goode Tailoring Co Cleaners and Dyers Talk---Don't Walk CALL NORTH 913 Valet Service We Call For and Deliver BEST WORK Furs Remodeled and Refined 251 FLORIDA AVENUE. N.W. SOLD BY L. E. GRAVES The Only Race Man in the U.S.A.. to Sell this High-Grade Machine Store at 12th and H Sts.. N.W. Phone, Franklin 7517 For Free Demonstration An Ideal Xmas Gift ```markdown ``` The orchestra classes under the direction of Mrs. Gregoria A. Goins meet every Thursday evening. New members are still being accepted. There were sixty-four present at the dinner given at the "Y" by the Literature Lovers in honor of Mrs. Coralie Cook of this city, and L. P. Hill, of Cheyney, Pa., Saturday evening. The Y. W. Business Girls' Banquet will be given at the "Y." November 22, 7 to 9 p.m. All business girls of the city are invited. The membership social will be held Thursday, November 17, instead of Thursday, November 24. Among the recent visitors were Miss Violet S. Makanya and friend of South Africa. These ladies were sent to America to study social service conditions. For the week-end, Miss Jean Louise Pace, Girl Reserve secretary of the Y. W. C. A., Baltimore, Md., was a visitor. The first class in furniture painting was held Tuesday at 3:30 o'clock. HOWARD MEDICAL NEWS HOWARD MEDICAL NEWS By Kelly Miller, Jr. DR. BLOEDORN SPEAKS TO MEDICO-CHIRURGICAL SOCIETY The Medico-Chirurgical Society, of the District of Columbia, met Thursday, November 17 at 9 p.m. at the Mu-so-lit Club, 1327 R street, northwest. Dr. W. A. Bloedorn, Professor of Medicine, in the College of Medicine, Howard University, read a paper on "Digitalis." The discussion was opened by Dr. J. W. Mitchell, Professor of Materia Medica. There was a large number of members of the club and guests present. PASTEUR MEDICAL CLUB The Pasteur Medical Reading Club of the District of Columbia met November 16 at Harrison's Cafe as the guest of Dr. E. J. Watson. The subject of discussion was "Diabetus Mellitus." Dr. J. A. Keene acted as quiz master, and Dr. J. C. Dowling, Professor of ophthalmology, discussed the eye conditions. After the meeting supper was served, Members and guests present included Doctors Harold Stratton, LeCount Matthews, George Johnson, William Tignor, Walker Savoy, E. J. Watson, J. A. Keene and Charles Allen. DR. CHAS. WILDER ENTERTAINS MEDICAL READING. CLUB The Fourth Medical Reading Club of the District of Columbia held its monthly meeting at the residence of Dr. Charles Wilder, 226 I street, northwest, Monday evening, November 14. The discussion for the evening was "Cerebral Spinal Meningitis" and many interesting phases of this disease were discussed. After the discussion an elaborate supper was served to the members and guests of the club. The members and guests present were Dr. Charles Wilder, A. A. Phillips, Nelson Thomas, Willis Johnson, Hugh Simmons, Charles Harris, Lloyd Newman, M. T. Walker, Edwin Williams, Paul Piper, Edward Trigg, Herbert Marshall, William Lofton, Frank Jones, and Kelly Miller, Jr. John T. Rhines & Co. When the grim spectre of death stalks the air; when comes the hushed tread of solemn feet, and the intermittent sobbing of the bereaved; when the pleasures and beauties of nature are dulled and the whole world in general takes on a dreary and hopeless aspect, it is then that the soft hand M. B. H. of sympathy is laid upon the shoulder of the sorrowing widow, the orphaned child and the prostrate parents. This is the province of the undertaker. It is his stern duty to prepare the mortal mains of the departed for the lone one-way journey to that "bourne from which no traveler eturneth," and to comfort the relatives and friends of the deceased. Among the most efficient and noted undertakers in the Capital City may be mentioned the name of Mr. John T. Rhines, of John T. Rhines & Company, whose establishment is located at 901 Third street, southwest, who has been engaged as a funeral director for years and has during that time acquired a well-earned reputation for quality of service and at a reasonable cost that is second to none. He is an expert embalmer and a master of those little details, the neglect of which causes such untold suffering to the bereaved ones, and is a courteous, dignified appearing man whose presence as a funeral director lends dignity and solemnity to the most pathetic of occasions. He caters to all classes of people, arranging his price to suit the needs of his patron's pocketbooks, indeed, it is proverbial in his neighborhood that many a person too poor to pay the charges involved has been furnished a Christian funeral by Mr. Rhines. Mr. Rhines is well known in civic, social and fraternal life of the city and has many friends and acquaintances in all parts of the city. H. U. ELECTION IS MARKED BY ROW OF FRATERNITIES Baxter Don Goodall, of Charleston, S.C., a junior in the college of liberal arts at Howard University, was elected editor-in-chief of "The Hilltop," the official student publication of the university, at a special meeting called by the Student Council, Tuesday, by a vote of 153 to 132. He was opposed by Anthony Pierce, of St. Louis, Mo., also a junior in the college of liberal arts. The election smacked of a political battle because of the fraternity conflict which developed. The election was made necessary when the former editor-in-chief, Booker T. Sirmans, dropped out of school. Goodall, at the time, was associate editor, and upon Sirman's resignation, took up the duties of editor-in-chief. Unable to hold both positions, Goodall resigned the associate editorship, at the suggestion of members of the Student Council, and became a candidate for editor-in-chief. It is claimed, that when this action was taken, members of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity conceived the idea of opposing Goodall for having "broken his pledge" last year and becoming a member of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. Frat Politics Pierce, a member of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, was put up for the position. He apparently received the support of his own fraternity brothers as well as of the Omega group and of one of the sororities on the "Hill." At a meeting last week, about which Goodall claims to have known nothing until a few minutes before it convened, Pierce was elected. The election, however, was declared illegal by the school authorities, and another meeting was called for the past Tuesday. Directly following the first meeting, at which time the illegal election was held, a student circulated a letter under the caption of "Muddy Noses." In this letter, he pointed out that charges of corruption and fraternal conspiracy were an aftermath of the election. In elaborating upon the corruption, which it is said prevailed, the letter stated: "Baxter Goodall was notified of the meeting a few minutes before the hour. One man, being interviewed, got warm, and unwittingly admitted that he knew of the meeting a week before; and had been asked to vote for the elected man (Pierce). "Here's the secret; Goodall has had a fraternal misunderstanding. Investigate for yourself. See who the nays were. Ask their views. And those views will have nothing whatever to do with the editing of a college paper." The second meeting took on all the aspects of a political convention. The adherents of the two sides gave rousing cheers for their candidates after the speeches of nominations and "seconddings" were made. Goodall was nominated first, then Pierce. Each received an ovation. Just prior to the second meeting, an anonymous letter, signed by "The Harmony Four," was circulated, stating that all the "hullabaloo" about fraternal conflict was untrue. It says, in part, speaking of the first election: "The Student Council knows that student opinion as to the editor-in-chief of 'The Hilltop' was expressed to the tune of 98-84. . . "You have the results. Well, what about it? What did the differences between fraternities have to do with it? Nothing, simply nothing. Any man, fraternal or non-fraternal, has a right to vote for whom he pleases." But the second meeting reversed the decision of the first election, and the increased total vote showed the growing interest in the issue. Goodall's Statement After the election, Goodall made a statement: "I appreciate the student support given me, and I shall endeavor to serve the student body, regardless of fraternity or clique." George Johnson, a junior in Liberal Arts, was elected over Miss Gladys Jameson, a senior, as associate editor, to fill the position left vacant by the resignation of Goodall, by a vote of 176 to 105. DR. JOHNSON SPEAKS ON RISE OF NEGROES ELMIRA, N. Y.—President Mordecai W. Johnson delivered a lecture here, Wednesday afternoon before the meeting of the Baptist Convention at the First Baptist Church, on the "Entire Task of the Church." In his address, he pointed out the rise of the Negro race and declared that the task of the church was to close the chasm between the races. He advocated the elimination of the segregated churches and stated: "The Negro must be accepted into the white man's church as he is accepted into the white man's school and life." Dr. Johnson interspersed his address with the anecdotes of his personal experience with the Negro both in the missionary field and at his college, where the faculty is made up of both colors and works with a spirit of cooperation, rarely seen elsewhere. New Maternity Rule May be Set-up by Board (Continued from page 1) of these teachers has been pending it has become known that the rule regarding maternity leave is more rigidly and arbitrarily enforced in divisions 10 to 13, which comprise the colored schools, than in divisions 1 to 9 which comprise the white schools. Counsel for these three teachers are prepared to take advantage of this discrimination. The board voted to extend an invitation to the Playground and Recreation Association to hold its summer institute in 1928 in Washington. The use of the Armstrong Technical High school will be tendered. This action was taken at the request of Mrs. Gabrielle Pelham, assistant director of the Community Centers. Holiday December 23 There will be no school on Friday, December 23. The board voted to make this a holiday. The board continued Miss E. V. Smith, a teacher in the Birney School, in her position until June 30, 1928. Miss Smith had reached 70 years of age and would have automatically retired except for the action of the board extending her service. The deaths of Miss V. C. Conrad, a teacher in division 18, and Miss M. V. Ruby, a teacher in the Shaw Junior High School, were reported to the board by Assistant Superintendent Wilkinson. The board approved the following personnel changes: Appointments Probationary appointments — Miss M. E. Jenkins, teacher, class 1A, grade 1, Giddings-Lincoln group, and Miss L. I. Anthony, teacher, class 1A, grade 1, Briggs-Montgomery group. "The Greatest Negro Business EDUCATION is Protection In Case D LIFE INSURANCE—So if will never be cheaper, lower the rates. The Old need for Protection. Many a man has discovered ingy slight ailment has ba Protection that LIFE IN that is why "Putting Off" TOMORROW may prove Yes, DELAY IS EXPENS Do You Carry All the LIFE Now, TODAY, is a good tintion—while you are a "GO INSURE to the Safety Write us at the HOME OF BENEFIT agent within co The National Ben EDUCATION is Protection for the Future —So is LIFE INSURANCE LIFE INSURANCE—So far as you are concerned—will never be cheaper. The Younger you are, the lower the rates. The Older you are, the greater your need for Protection. Many a man has discovered too late that some seemingly slight ailment has barred him forever from the Protection that LIFE INSURANCE affords. And that is why "Putting Off" the insurance problem until TOMORROW may prove to be a grievous mistake. Yes, DELAY IS EXPENSIVE. Do You Carry All the LIFE INSURANCE you should? Now, TODAY, is a good time to ask yourself that question—while you are a "GOOD RISK." INSURE to the Safety Limit. Write us at the HOME OFFICE or see a NATIONAL BENEFIT agent within convenient reach. Company 609 F Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. "Not for Power and Prestige, be New Low H Finest New Apa 760 Girard Street "Not for Power and Prestige, but for Service" New Low Rents Finest New Apartments Reception Hall 3 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH-$37.50 Hot Water Heat, Large Front Porch, Pantry and Private Laundry Tubs, Electricity 763 Morton Street, N.W. Reception Hall 4 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH—$45.00 Water Heat, Immense Porches, Private Laundry Room, Electricity, Large Closets 717 Euclid Street, N.W. 4 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH—$45.00 Reception Hall Immense Porch, Hot Water Heat 1A. Cardozo-Bell group. 1A, Cardozo-Bell group Transfers—Miss E. E. E. McGinnis, from teacher 1A, grade 6, Sumner- Magruder group, to teacher, class 1A, grade 7, Sumner-Magruder group; Miss Marguerite Jetter, from teacher, class 1A, grade 1, Briggs-Montgomery group, to teacher, class 1A, grade 4, Sumner- Magruder group, and Miss M. F. Allen, teacher, class 1A, grade 4, Sumner-Magruder group, to teacher, class 1A, grade 6, Sumner- Magruder group. Night school appointments—J. L. Hunter, Armstrong; Technical High. SCHOOL NOTES SCHOOL NOTES By Lanier R. Covington ARMSTRONG Wednesday, November 16. Mr. David G. Houston, principal, turned the assembly over to the football team and the student body. Mr. Clifford, chairman of the Athletic Association, explained the reason for the taking of the athletic tickets at the last game. The reason was that the student body was allowed until November 15, to pay for the athletic tickets and those that have paid in full can get their tickets back. They are entitled to a twenty-five cent discount at the Dunbar-Armstrong game. Several sections are one hundred per cent members of this association among which are sections C-1 and C-7. Mr. Westmoreland, Armstrong's grid coach, was introduced. He lauded this year's football team. It is a custom, this year, for the winning team to take possession of, the ball after the game. Armstrong has come in possession of several balls. In the seven games this season Armstrong has scored 100 points to the opposing teams' 12 points. "The Armstrong Torch," was again issued Thursday during the assembly period. Dr. Thomas E. Jones, assistant surgeon-in-chief of Freedmen's Hospital, addressed the entire student body on Armistice Day. He related the experiences he had on re-visiting the scenes of the recent World War. Sergeant Ira Payne, one of the outstanding heroes of the conflict of 1914-1918 was brought before the school and given an ovation as a mark of admiration for him by the students. REAL ESTATE and CLASSIFIED (Term commencing September 15th) Piano, Vocal, Violin, Clarinet, Flute, Saxophone, Oboe, Bass, Piccolo, Cornet, Trombone, Baritone, Basses, Drums, Instrumentation, Arranging, Conducting, Tenor- Banjo, Mandolin, Guitar, and allied subjects. Certificate and diploma awarded. Registration for Wind instruments, Oct. 3rd, 3 to 9 p.m. JOHN J. BRICE, graduate Army Music School, added to faculty WELLINGTON ADAMS, Director DO YOU NEED MONEY? —to pay overdue taxes or interest? —to paint, paper, or repair your home? —to put in electricity, new roof or garage? —to take care of old hills that have been worrying you, or to refinance your first, second, or third trust? Room 319, Bond Blog, 14th & N.Y. Ave., N.W. Ph. M. 2490 TWO LIVE REAL ESTATE AGENTS—intelligent, of good appearance, and able to furnish high-class references—can make big money selling houses and soliciting loans. A good proposition to hustlers. No telephone calls. Come in to see me. MORTIMER M. HARRIS 613 F Street, N.W. LARGE front room, suitable for two; gentlemen preferred; apartment 205, Whitalew, 13th and T sts., n.w. 16-tf TWO rooms, second floor, suitable for L.h. st., electric light, h.w.h. 952 L.k. st., nw. North 4918. 4-11-18-25 NEATLY furnished room, electricity and hot water heat, convenient to Howard University, 751 Giarre st., nw. Phone Adams 4576. NEATLY furnished room at 25 Quincy Place, northwest, reason- able with modern conveniences. LARGE front room, heat and light, 39 Q st., nw. $17.50 per month. THREE large, cheerful rooms, can be used as an apartment or se- parate. All modern improvements, excellent location. Five minutes walk to principal government buildings. Rent reasonable. 1744 K st., n.w. 18-25 NEATLY furnished rooms, with plenty of heat and electricity. 539 Florida ave., n.w. 18-25-2-9 115 T ST. N.W., two rooms, neatly furnished. Reasonable. QUIET home, large bright room, suitable for men or couple. H.w.h. elec.; also single room. Convenient to cars and bus. Call 6 to 8 p.m. or all day Sunday. North 4980-J. LARGE front room, suitable for two or three; also middle room. Bath, steam heat, electricity. 40 G st., s.W. Ph., Franklin 6077-W. FOR ANYONE desiring clean home; two nicely furnished rooms, for employed friends or gentlemen. 1612 First st., n.w. Phone. North 2863. 18-25 COMFORTABLY heated, communicating rooms, a.m., for teachers and departmental people, with board. 121 T. st., n.w. North 3784. TWO rooms, single or together. 1638 New Jersey ave., n.w. Call after b o'clock. ROOM, New Hampshire Apartments, 1628 Swann st., n.w. Apt 20. Phone North 8859. ROOM, for gentleman. Call Sunday afternoon. 916 S. st., n.w. Apt. 3. TYFEWITING, STENOGRAPHY : and MIMEOGRAPHING S.E. Cor. Vt. Ave. & U St., N.W. Phone, North 10485 Reasonable Rates— Prompt and Expert Service TYPEWRITERS REPAIRED Office Hours: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Daily Mrs. ALICE C. JOHNSON A Native of Haiti WILL GIVE LECTURES ON THE LIFE and CUSTOMS of THE HAITIANS By Appointment For information; Apply— 1115 Rhode Island Ave., N.W. or Call North 10201 HAVE YOU THOUGHT— Have you ever thought how much more appropriate it would be to publish your cards of thanks, notices, and memoriam in papers that "your" friends and acquaintances read? STUDY MUSIC COLUMBIA CONSERVATORY 1000 Euclid Ave. (Term commencing Piano, Vocal, Violin, Clarinet, F Piccolo, Cornet, Trombone Instrumentation, Arrang Banjo, Mandolin, Guit Certificate and d Registration for Wind instr JOHN J. BRICE, graduate Arms WELLINGTON AVE. Furnished or Unfurnished TWO rooms for gentlemen or couple, suitable for light house keeping; a.m.i., Linecoln 959-W. ROOMS, to refined people, three rooms, private bath. Apply 1237 Girard st., n.w. Call after 3 p.m. for inspection. 18-25-2 APARTMENTS FOR RENT UNFURNISHED, three rooms and bath, second floor, elec., gas, and heat. $40 per month. Only desirable adults. 1612 T st., n.w. North 2861. THE COOLIDGE, 1724 T st., n.w. 4 rooms, reception hall, tile bath, hardwood floors, best location in city. See janitor, or call North 7896-W. tf THE CATHERINE, 1442 Covoran st., n.w. Modern comfortable apartments, 4 rooms, bath; $50.00 and $55.50. Janitor service. Apply: 1408 10th st., n.w. FOR SALE BEAUTY Parlor chair and Sterilizer, for sale at 425 M st., ne. Mrs. J. W. Ridley. HOUSE FOR RENT 635 FAIRMONT st., n.w.—six rooms, bath, furnace heat, newly papered. $50 per month. N. L. Sansbury Co. 1418 I st., n.w. 1901 7th St., N.W. North 3527 CARE OF CHILDREN CARE given to children while mothers work; day, week, or month; licensed by government; prices reasonable; 400 T st., n.w. North 1651. AGENTS WANTED AGENTS—WE START YOU IN BUSINESS and help you succeed. No capital or experience needed. Spare or full time. You can earn $50 to $100 weekly. Write Madi- son Products, 666 Broadway, New York. HOUSTON & HOUSTON, Attys. IN THE SUPREME COURT OF the District of Columbia, Holding an Equity Court. In Equity No. 46999. Carralean Milford, Plaintiff, vs. 31 Mamie Herbert Banks, 32 Clifford Somerville, 35 A. Zembonia Richardson, 36 Ruth Coleman Walker, if living, and their unknown heirs, devisees, next of kin and legatees, if dead, et al., Defendants. Order of Publication The object of this suit is a decree establishing of record in favor of plaintiff, life tenant, as against the defendants above named, to wit, Mamie Herbert Banks, Clifford Somerville, A Zenobi Richardson, and Rutha Coleman Walker, if living and their unknown heirs, devises, next of kin and legatees, if dead—said jamed defendants themselves being sued as the heirs at law and next of kin of certain specific legatees and residuary devises also named as defendants, of the late George W. Milford, a lien on the following described real estate situate in the District of Columbia: Lot 41, Square 3694, with improvements thereon known as premises 471 Florida Avenue. Northwest, to secure plaintiff the amount of the principal indebtedness heretofore secured on, said real estate by the testator George W. Milford, afore said, which plaintiff since the death of the testator at her own expense has discharged or hereafter may discharge in protection of her said life estate. Upon motion of plaintiff, it is by the Court, this 7th day of November, 1927, Ordered, That the defendants Mamie Hertzert Banks. Clifford Somerville, A. Zenobia Richardson, and Ruth Coleman Walker, if living, and their unknown heirs, devisees, next of kin and legatees, if dead, cause their several appearances to be entered on or before the fortieth day, exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays, occurring after the first publication of this order; otherwise the cause will be proceeded with as in case of default. Provided, That a copy of this order be published once a week for three successive weeks in The Washington Law Reporter and The Washington Tribune before said day, longer and further publication being dispensed with for satisfactory and good cause shown. By the Court: WILLIAM HITZ, Justice A true copy: Test: Frank E. Cunningham, Clerk; by M. Lee Ashford, Assistant Clerk. HOME BUYERS Stop paying semi-annual interest. Finish paying for your home by the Building and Loan method. Monthly payments including interest at 6 per cent. Loans up to 70 per cent of the value. Phone for an appointment. VICTOR R. DALY Prudential Bank Bldg. 715 Fla. Ave., N.W. North 7277 LEGAL NOTICE ANDREW D. WASHINGTON, Attorney SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT of Columbia, Holding Probate Court. No. 36,588, Administration. This is to Give Notice: That the subscriber of the District of Columbia has obtained from the Probate Court of the District of Columbia, Letters of Administration on the estate of Claude W. Pogue, 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 subscriber on or before the 25th day of October, A.D., 1928; otherwise they may by law be excluded from all benefit of said estate. Given under my hand this 4th day of November, 1927. Peter C. Pogue, 6 R Street, N.W. Attest: Theodore Cogswell, Register of Wills for the District of Columbia, Clerk of the Probate Court. SYLVESTER L. McLAURIN. IN THE SUPREME COURT OF the District of Columbia. No. 47,333. In Equity. The trustees of the First Baptist Church of Deanwood, D.C., Plaintiffs. vs. The Unknown Heirs, Alienees, and Deviees of WILLIAM SAUNDERS and ROBERT HOLLIDAY, Defendants. Order of Publication The object of this suit is to obtain a decree establishing a record by adverse possession of Plaintiffs' title to all of parts Lots 6 and 7 in Burleigh's Subdivision of part of the Sheriff Estate called "Whittingham" as per plat recorded in Liber Governor Shepherd folio 5 of the Records of the Office of the Survey of the District of Columbia, now known as Lot 301 in Square 5157, in the city of Washington, District of Columbia; beginning for the said part: Parts of Lots 6 and 7 in Burleigh's Subdivision of part of the Sheriff Estate called "Whittingham," as per platt recorded in Liber Governor Shepherd folio 5 of the Records of the Office of the Surveyor of the District of Columbia, described as follows: Beginning for the same at the end of the two following courses and distances North 88 degrees, 15 minutes West, 218.31 feet from the Southeast corner of said Lot 7; thence North 15 degrees East, 116.98 feet to the beginning of the property to be described; thence North 15 degrees East, 60 feet; thence North 75 degrees West, 100 feet; thence South 15 degrees West, 60 feet; and thence South 75 degrees East, 100 feet to the place of beginning and also designated as Lots 5 and 6 in William Saunders' Subdivision of parts of said Lots 6 and 7 in said Burleigh's Subdivision recorded in Liber 1739 folio 349 of the Land Records of the District of Columbia; now known for taxation purposes, as Lot 801 in Square 5157. ```markdown ``` Upon consideration of the Bill of Complaint filed herein and representations of counsel it is, by the Court, this 2nd.day of November, A.D., 1927, ordered that the Defendants, each and every of them (The Unknown Heirs, Alienees and Devisees of William Saunders and Robert Holliday) cause their appearance to be entered herein in or before the 40th day, exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays occurring after the day of the first publication hereoff, otherwise, this case will be proceeded with as in case of default, provided a copy thereof be published once a week for three (3) consecutive weeks in the Washington Law Reporter and the Washington Tribune. TUNGAR BATTERY and Electric Service Prest-O-Lite and Ford Batteries sold on the easy plan payment Radio Batteries Called for and Delivered 701 R STREET, N.W. PHONE, POTOMAC 3562 Howard Cab LOWEST RATES Potomac 142 Superior Safe Service DRIVERS: OWNERS REV. BROOKS TO PREACH AT NINETEENTH STREET CHURCH Rev. Walter H. Brooks, will occupy his pulpit Sunday morning, and has selected for his subject, "A Bible Message to Parents and Children." At the eight o'clock service Rev. Henry J. Booker, assistant pastor of the church, will speak from the subject, "A Sure Thing." On Thanksgiving Day Rev. Brooks will preach in Richmond, at the Ebenezer Baptist Church, where he has made an annual pilgrimage for more than twenty years. The church will hold its services at eleven o'clock Thanksgiving Day, and Rev. Booker will deliver the Thanksgiving sermon. Big Opportunity Want to make big money quicker and easier than ever before? Want to give your full time care time and be handsomely paid for it? BECOME A PORO AGENT POOR COLLEGE or a nearby PORO AGENT will teach you M quickly at small cost, and show you how. There are openings for enterprising, ambitious Race representatives, to supply the nation-wide demand for TOILET PREPARATIONS AND PORO TREAT- reach the PORO SYSTEM OF HAIR AND BEAUTY We are earning big money through PORO So Can You! Write today for full information. ADDRESS PORO COLLEGE 4300 St. Ferdinand Avenue ST. LOUIS, MO., U.S.A. NDOTTE CLUB COFFEE Combination of the Finest Coffees Grown AROMATIC DELICIOUS All-known Label Stands for Something COFFEE ROASTED IN HUNTINGTON Huntington, West Virginia Your Big C Do you want to make a quicker a Do you want to give you or spare time and IF SO, BECOME PORO COLLEGE or at the PORO SYSTEM quickly at small There are openings for Women, as our representatives, to PORO HAIR AND TOILET PREVENTIONS and to teach the PORO SYSTEM CULTURE. Thousands are earning GUYANDOTTE A Combination of the MELLOW AROM The well-known Labe THE BEST IN COFFEE Huntington, Your Big Opportunity Do you want to make big money quicker and easier than ever before? Do you want to give your full time or spare time and be handsomely paid for it? PORO COLLEGE or a nearby PORO AGENT will teach you the PORO SYSTEM quickly at small cost, and show you how. There are openings for enterprising, ambitious Race Women, as our representatives, to supply the nation-wide demand for PORO HAIR AND TOILET PREPARATIONS AND PORO TREATMENTS and to teach the PORO SYSTEM OF HAIR AND BEAUTY CULTURE. Thousands are earning big money through PORO So Can You! Write today for full information. ADDRESS PORO COLLEGE 4300 St. Ferdinand Avenue ST. LOUIS, MO., U. S. A. THE BEST IN COFFEE ROASTED IN HUNTINGTON Huntington, West Virginia DON'T READ THIS IF SATISFIED WITH LIFE But, if unhappy, discouraged, a failure in business or love, THIS message is for you. Guarantees to read your entire life, past, present and future. She asks no questions, but will tell you what you want to know, giving names, dates, and facts of business matters, 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 to be successful in life. Brings the sepremoves troubles of all nature so you can win you love. User and happier after one visit to this gifted many cures through prayers. and cause of your sickness. Makes you well (u stay that way). Satisfaction or no charges. e dollar. Madam Lenora N.W., between 6th and 7th Sts. 7 p.m. Closed on Sundays But, if unhappy, discouraged, a failure in business or love, THIS message is for you. 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 Tells the n when. If the what part of and just what to do to be suc arated together, removes trouble and hold the one you love. You will be wiser and happy lady.* She does many cures thre Tells the nature and cause of and happy (so you stay that w Life readings—one dollar. Madam 610 F Street, N.W., between Hours 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. and just what to do to be successful in life. Brings the separated 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. Tells the nature and cause of your sickness. Makes you well and happy (so you stay that way). Satisfaction or no charges. Life readings—one dollar. Copyright 1922 by Madame Harrison-Astor for the United States and Canada. Reproduction, in whole or part, expressly forbidden. Mme. Harrison-Astor PSYCHIC PALMIST Licensed by the District of Columbia MAKES AN HONEST PROPOSITION only swear to make no charges if I do not faithfully ful- mor your friends, enemies, or rivals; whether husband, wife or or false; how to gain the love of one you most desire; and the actions of anyone, even though miles away, and promise to make you no charge unless you find greater that I cannot accomplish for you. and where all other allopaths fail. give advice upon all matters of life, such as love, court- force, business, law suits, speculation and accusations to remit the separated, deceived and happy and needed rivals, lover's quarrels, evil habits, stumbling of all kinds. your sorrow and trouble and start you on the path to there. There is no heart so and/or heart every so and/or heart every you believe in your hope, so guarantee to tell it all before you utter a word to me, as if you are not absolutely satisfied and if I do not try word and claim above, then you pay not a penny ignify my name to this statement. MADAME HARRISON-ASTOR I, my work is mentalism, my confidential. I will still serve theurging Sunday. Antor writes herself of the fact of being the only palm- no, has during her stay in England, been officially sum- I do hereby solomly swan to make no charrises if I do not faithfully fulfill every word embodied in this statement. I will tell you just what you or want to know about friends, enemies, or rivals; whether husband or sweetheart is true or false; how to gain the love of others desire; control or influence the actions of others; how to mend miles away. I wish superior to any other palmiti you ever accomplish. There is no hope so fond or wish so great that I cannot accomplish for you. I guarantee success where all other palmiti fails. I give never-failing advice upon all matters of life, such as love, courtship, divorce, business, law suits, special and transactions of all kinds. I never fail to ensure the separated are speedy and happy marriage, overcome any adversity, lourds a quarrel, evil habia, astumbling and bad luck of all kinds. I lift you out of your sorrow and trouble and start you on the path to happiness and prosperity. There is no heart so and or home so dreary that I cannot bring to you. I cannot bring to you what I do; I do guarantee to tell it all before you utter a word to me, and after I am finished if you are not absolutely satisfied and if I do not faithfully fulfill every word and claim above, then you pay not a penny and I do herewith sign my name to this statement. HARRISON-ASTOR No fortune telling my work is mentalism. All business confidential. Can be seen from 1 p.m. till 5 p.m., excepting Sundays. Can be his Marrison-Harrison-astrides herself of the fact of being the oystal man in the world who has, during her stay in England, been officially summoned to the St James Palace in London, to reaf for his late majesty, King Edward VII. KONKRONYA KONKRONYA, N.W. Next door to the King's Hotel 1113 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., N.W. Next door to Raleigh Hotel WASHINGTON, D.C. Life Readings One Dollar No Readings Given By Mail CHURCH NEWS ```markdown ``` H ```markdown ``` 10 TO RESUME HIS SERMONS ON THE BOOK OF THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES Rev. J. Milton Waldron, pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, will take up on next Sunday, his sermons upon On The Book of the Acts of the Apostles, using at 11 o'clock the subject, "Help from Unexpected Sources," and at 8 o'clock at night, he will preach upon the subject, "The Word of God a Lamp Unto our Feet and a Light unto our Pathway." Rev. Dr. Over, the pastor of the Union Baptist Church of Baltimore, spent Sunday night and the remaining nights up to Saturday, in preaching special sermons at Shiloh. Cantata and Doll Contest The ladies of Shiloh Church, under the direction of Mrs. M. M. Waldron, will hold, early in December, a doll contest and Christmas bazaar. Mrs. Waldron be- ing assisted by the members of her own church, and by persons in other churches in the city. ARMISTICE CELEBRATION AT CHURCH OF OUR Armistice service was held at the Church of Our Redeemer, Lutheran, Eighth street near Barry lace, northwest, at 8 o'clock, Sunday, November 13. The church's service flag contained twenty-six stars, two of which were gold stars. On the program, the speakers were J. M. H. Graham, Lieutenant George H. Rycraw, Captain Sylvester H. Epps, and Dr. Charles H. Marshall. J. R. Anderson was master of ceremonies. Rev. D. E. Wiseman is pastor of the church. SUNDAY. SCHOOLS' THANKS- GIVING SERVICES TO BE HELD The Thanksgiving services committee of the Sunday schools of the city have selected Plymouth Congregational Church, Seventeenth and P streets, for their services to be held Sunday, November 20, at 3 p.m. Every superintendent with his school is expected to be represented. Miss A. J. Brown is president and Victor J. Tulane is secretary. A song service of three hundred voices will render Thanksgiving music. THE MT. AIRY-BAPTIST CHURCH The Sunday school of Mt. Airy Baptist Church is in a very good condition and the new teachers are stirring up great interest in their different departments. The young folks read some very timely papers on the lesson study, which was found in Hosea. Rev. Coleman, of Baltimore, preached last Sunday. The Mt. Airy Male Chorus rendered a very beautiful selection at the close of the service. Five persons were added to the church in the morning service. In the B.Y.P.U. the various classes discussed the subject, which was found in the tenth chapter of Hebrew. Mrs. Mattie M. Davis was present and gave a shout talk at the close of the program. The Emergency Club celebrated its second anniversary in the night service and the pastor preached the anniversary sermon from the subject, "Suffer it to be so now, for thus it become us to fulfill all righteousness." The days' collection was four hundred seventy-seven dollars and twenty-one cents. The roof has been completed on the new building. CENTRAL M. E. CHURCH At a meeting held November 15, at the Central M. E. Church, $358.89 was collected to be added to the New Church Fund bank account. All the members and friends of the church are expected to make their reports in the near future and swell the total to even larger figures. Rev. J. Alfred Jackson is minister of the church. STUART NELSON TELLS OF ORIGIN OF RELIGION "Religion has not come to us in its present highly developed and beautiful form, but has gradually evolved through the life experiences of the human race," said Professor William Stuart Nelson at the Wednesday evening religious discussion group at the Y.M.C.A. last Wednesday evening. This question on the origin of religions is the first of a series being presented by Prof. Nelson in his 12-weeks' course on the Problems of Religion. This religious discussion group which is being sponsored by the Y.M.C.A. is proving very popular, drawing men from all sections of the city. The meetings are being enlivened by enthusiastic discussions. Enrollment in this course is free. All men are invited. MASS MEETING AT WALKER MEMORIAL CHURCH A farwell mass meeting will be held at Walker's Memorial Baptist Church. Thirteenth street, between U and V streets, northwest, where Rev. L. E. Keiser, D.D., is pastor. The meeting is for Dr. F. D. Dewalt, who will sail for Africa, November 26, as a missionary under the National Baptist Convention. Dr. Dewalt is a native African who came to this country and completed the dental course at Howard University, and has been selected by the National Baptist Convention to take charge of the dental department in the Baptist Hospital at Liberia. FIFTEENTH STREET The Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary Society of Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church are having a "Harvest Home Festival" in the lecture room of the church, beginning Tuesday evening, November 22 and continuing through Friday, November 25. The programs will be furnished by the Armstrong School faculty, Tuesday evening; by the Miner Normal School Wednesday evening, and Friday evening by Howard University and Miner Normal. A Thanksgiving dinner will be served Thursday. CHURCH CLUB ENTERTAINED The November meeting of the Helping Hand Club of the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church will be entertained by the November Group, Wednesday, November 30, at the residence of Mrs. Mary Green Simms of the Lenman Apartment House, 52 Quincy place, northwest. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1927 Write for this FREE Book How to Make Beautiful Lips Arrange your hair like this— at worn by Miss Mary Lagen Is Your Hair Becoming? Is Your Hair Becoming? Is it soft, and silky? Will it stay where you put it? Can you arrange it in the new styles? The regular use of Nelson's Hair Dressing will make you proud of your hair. It will become soft and easy to arrange—whether it is short or long. Ask your druggist for a copy of our FREE book, "How to Have Beautiful Hair", showing by description and photographs many new ways of hair-dress. Decide which is the most becoming to your type of beauty. If he cannot supply you, wire us direct. Nelson's Hair Dressing is sold by druggists everywhere. NELSON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, Richmond, Va. NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING Be sure you get the original—Nelson's. Packed in a metal box in a cardboard container. ZION BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday, November 20th, will be Men's Day at the Zior Baptist Church, F street between Third and Four-and-a-half streets, south-west. At 11 a.m. the pastor will speak; at 3 p.m. Campbell C. Johnson, secretary of the Y.M.C.A., will lecture, and at 8 p.m. a literary and musical program will take place. The services for the entire day are under the auspices of the Men's Club, of which Oscar Quivers is president. The Right Reverend James E. Freeman, Bishop of Washington, will administer the holy rite of confirmation at St. Luke's P. E. Church, Fifteenth and Church streets, northwest, Sunday evening at eight o'clock. DUNBAR ALUMNI HOME COMING PLANNED A home-coming and re-union reception of Dunbar graduates since 1919 is planned for the coming Easter holidays by J. C. Wright of the Dunbar High School faculty. Each class from 1919 to 1927 inclusive, is at work circulating a formal questionnaire with a view to securing data for use in a complimentary souvenir to be presented on that occasion. It is planned to make the souvenir attractive in make-up and design. It will give a detailed review of alumni achievements of the classes that will take part in the re-union. An interesting program and elaborate decorations are planned. Women, Weak, Tired Rundown and Nervous ar who overtian owen pain, pain in the lower part of the stomach, bearing down pain, female weakness, headaches, backache, melancholia, despondency, nervous disengements, flushes of heat, fleeting and indesate pain, whites, painful or irregular periods, should write to Mrs. Ellen M. Lawrence, M.D., of the Miami Institute. She will entirely FREE and without charge to the inquirer advice of a convenient home method whereby and other women say they have successfully relieved similar troubles. The most common expression of these pain is "I feel like a new woman." And others, "I don't have any paines whatever anymore," "I can hardly has done so much good for me in such a believe myself that your Wonderful Method short time." Write today. This advice is entirely free to you. She has nothing to That Baby You've Longed For Mrs. Burton Advices Women on Motherhood and Companionship "For several years I was denied the blessing of motherhood," writes Mrs. Marzaret Burton of Kanea City, "wrote a letter to my husband and subject to periods of terrible suffering and malaise. Now I am the proud mother of a beautiful little daughter and a true companion and im-apiration to my husband, and fields of children like to know the secret of my happiness, and I will gladly reveal it to any married woman who will write me." Mrs. Burzoa offers her advice entirely to charge her in writing. She is addressed to Mrs. Marzaret Burton, 244 Massachusetts, Kanea City, Mo. Correspondence will be strictly confidential. Piano Tuning Uprights $3.00; Players $2.50 Grands, $4.00 Estimates for REPAIRING REBUILDING C. W. GILLUM. Telephone, Franklin 7395-W Free booklets on care of the piano. Write for this FREE The Men's Club of Union Wesley A. M. E. Zion Church will hold its second annual banquet at the church, Wednesday evening, November 23. The women will be the special guests at this meeting. The principal speakers thus far announced are Garnet C. Wilkinson, assistant superintendent of public schools; B. C. Dodson, president of the Federation of Men's Church Clubs; Rev. H. T. Gaskins, W. O. Walker, editor of The Washington Tribune; and Capt. Campbell C. Johnson, executive secretary of the Y. M. C. A. The Western Union Telegraph Co. and the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co. will install instruments to be used during the gridiron sessions of the banquet to broadcast the speeches and music. The committee arranging this affair is composed of E. F. Harris, chairman; W. A. Watson, Levi Williams, Charles R. Jones, and Thomas Fletcher. Sam H. Hatton is president of the club, and Rev. C. C. Williams is pastor of the church. WOMAN, EX-SLAVE DIES AT 106 ROCHESTER, N. Y., Nov. 17. Mrs. Harriet Thompson, who spent one-third of the 106 years of her life in slavery in Virginia died here Monday. She was born near Culpeper, Va., and with her parents and twelve brothers and sisters served on a plantation until the close of the Civil War. YOU CAN WIN In love, business, home, social life. If you are undecided, in doubt, troubled, unhappy—writes to the Little White Mother, America's Illustrious Adviser—state your case clearly and make request for informatiom, advice and assistance. 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Insist on HILL'S, in the red box. 30 cents it all drummists. HILL'S Cascara - Bromide - Quinine PASTOR The members and friends of the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church met Monday night to honor their pastor, Rev. Walt H. Brooks, who on November 12, completed forty-five years of service as the pastor of that church. The principal address was made by Miss Nannie H. Burroughs, president of the National Training School for Women and Girls. In concluding her speech, Miss Burroughs said that she would like to see two things accomplished on Dr. Brook's 50th anniversary: a trip around the world for him, and a building erected to house the educational activities of the church. Greetings were brought from Howard University by Dean George W. Cook; from the Y.M.C.A. by Campbell C. Johnson, executive secretary; froi the public schools by Assistant Superintendent Garnet C. Wilkinson; and from the Methodist Church by Rev. C. C. Williams, pastor Union Wesley A. M. E. Zion Church. Presentation to Dr. Brooks of a gold watch fob and chain, on behalf of the church was made by Mrs. Bernice J. Worrell and Miss Nora Drew. Mrs. Brooks was presented with a beautiful basket of flowers by Miss Yulae Ficklings. Flowers were also presented by Mrs. Carrie Kenney. Responses were made by Dr. and Mrs. Brooks. At the conclusion of the program, refreshments were served by a committee of ladies in the lecture room. PULLMAN PORTER TIPS Alexander Richardson and party will spend Thanksgiving in Philadelphia, witnessing the Howard-Lincoln football classic. Afterwards, the party will spend a few days in New York as the guests of Mrs. C. C. Simons and Charles Harding. Twenty-five new porters were employed by the Pullman Company last week on account of the pickup in business. This is just a beginning for new life in the winter program. Charles Wilson is leaving for New York to visit his sister, Mrs. Florence Jackson. Before returning, he will stop in Philadelphia for the football classic. Robert McCoy, of Pittsburgh, Pa., is in the city for a few days. W. R. Tolliver, of Philadelphia, is visiting friends here. W. K. Banks, chief investigator for the Pullman Company is back from a tour of the Southland. William Patterson, of Philadelphia is visiting his friends, Alexander Richardson, for a few days. World's Famous Seer and Clairvoyant "The Man Who Knows" 608 12th St., N.W. PRIVATE STUDIO AND RECEPTION ROOM FOR EACH CALLER Announce- ment of New Location, 608 12th St. N. W. Over Wool- worth's 5n & 10c Stair This strange man sees the way and tells it all. Just what your life has been, just what it will be. Tells you when and whom you will marry; whether husband, wife or sweetheart is true or false. Tells as to changes, travel, lost or absent friends, divorce, wills, deeds, whether it is best to buy or sell. He tells the good and the bad. A visit will convince you if his won derful power. 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THE MURRAY PALACE CASINO 920 U St. North 667 --- SIX Lucille Drummond, 2-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Drummond, 1812 L street, died at Emergency Hospital late Monday afternoon, as a result of having been overcome earlier in the day. Two other children, William, 3 years, and Cleveland, a 6-month-old infant, were rescued by their mother but William ran back into the burning house, and fireman G. T. O'Brien of No. 2 Truck Co., was forced to make the second rescue. Origin of the fire was not determined, police reported, and the damage to house and contents was estimated at $500. Coroner Nevitt conducted an investigation and gave a certificate of accidental death in the case of the child. The three children were taken from the scene of the fire to Emergency Hospital. What Glasses Will Correct DO NOT NEGLECT YOUR EYES Blindness is the greatest woe. Consult— Dr. T. THEO. PARKER, Licensed Optometrist, (20 years experience) 1826 9th St., N.W., Wash., D.C. 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Central Dept. 8 Agent's Outfit 1 Hair Grower, 1 Temple Oil. 1 Shampoo, 1 Pressing Oil, 1 Fillment, Distribution for Selling, $2.00. 25c Extra for Postage. tion for Selling. $2.00. 25c Extra for Postage. Oklahoma City, Okla. Social Fratern Sororit → --- The Wilberforce guarantee of $1,350 for its football game with Howard University on November 12, which Wilberforce forfeited when the team was withdrawn from the field has been held up. Although the Howard University officials have refused to pay Wilberforce its guarantee, there has been no refund of admissions to patrons who attended the game. There were six minutes remaining for play when C. F. Points, Jr., chairman of the athletic council at Wilberforce University withdrew his team. A decision by Referee A. Kiger Savoy declared legal a touchdown by "Tick" Smith. Coach H. C. C. Graves rushed on the field and protested. He contended that "Tick" Smith had been legally downed and had got up and run with the ball. A clause in the contract between Howard and Wilberforce universities declared that forfeiture of the game would be considered a breach of the contract and the team forfeiting the game also forfeited its right to share in any way in the financial benefits of the game. Without funds the Wilberforce team was marooned on Sunday and Monday, November 20 and 21, until funds with which to return to the school were wired by President Gilbert Jones. The refusal of the Howard university athletic authorities to pay Wilberforce its guarantee presages a break in athletic relations between the two schools. CLEVELAND PUTS THREE NEGROES IN CITY COUNCIL CLEVELAND, O., Nov. 17.—Three Negroes—one a staunch Republican, another an independent, and the third a Democrat—were elected to the city council in the election of November 8, final tabulation of the votes here Saturday showed. Their election was the climax to one of the most spectacular local political fights in the history of the city. The men are Thomas W. Fleming, Republican, who was re-elected for another term; Clayborne George, an attorney, who was elected as an independent, and Dr. Eugene J. Gregg, who had the Democratic endorsement. Attorney George defeated Mrs. Helen H. Green, who had served two terms. The final tabulation gave Mr. George 4,537 votes and Mrs. Green, 4,203 votes. Many Negroes supported Fielder Sanders, a white man. Dr. Gregg, who was supported by the Democrats, received more votes in the third ward than Tom Fleming, the Republican machine candidate. Clayborne George is a graduate of the law school of Howard University. His wife, who aided him in his campaign for election, was formerly Miss Enola McDaniel. Prior to her marriage she taught physical culture in the public schools of the District of Columbia. LET THE TRIBUNE FOLLOW YOU By Louis R. Lautier An exhaustive investigation of disfranchisement practices in southern states is being made preparatory to the fight over the seating of Senator-elect William S. Vare of Pennsylvania and Frank L. Smith of Illinois, it was learned Monday. Republicans, who are supporting Senators-elect Vare and Smith, already have their agents collecting evidence to show that the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments are flagrantly violated in southern states. While this evidence is to be used to coerce southern Democratic senators into withdrawing their opposition to the seating of Senators-elect Vare and Smith, incidentally, it is believed, it may aid in the enfranchisement of the Negro in the states where he is denied the right to vote. Opposition to the seating of Senators-elect Vare and Smith is based principally upon the expenditures of large sums of money in the Pennsylvania and Illinois primaries. Senators, who are opposed to the seating of Senators-elect Vare and Smith claim that the primary is an integral part of the election and the Congress has the right to regulate it. The Primary Issue Senators, who favor the seating of Senators-elect Vare and Smith take the position that if the primary is a part of the election and the Congress has the right to regulate it, it must be regulated in accordance with the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments. Such regulation on the part of Congress, they believe, will nullify the rule of the Democratic state committee in each of the southern states that only white persons may participate in their primary elections. A mass of evidence showing the suppression of votes in southern states has already been collected. An analysis of the election returns from southern states made by Senator David A. Reed, Republican, of Pennsylvania, shows that Democratic Senators from these states are elected by a total vote of less than two per cent of the entire population. In South Carolina in 1926 Senator Ellison D. Smith, Democrat, was elected by a vote of less than one per cent of the population of that state, only 14,560 votes being cast for him. The estimated population of South Carolina in 1926, based on the Federal census of 1920, was 1,826,021. The election certificate of Senator Thomas H. Careway, Democrat, of Arkansas, shows that he was elected in 1926 by a vote of less than two per cent of the population of that state. Only 28,800 votes were cast for him. The estimated population of Arkansas in 1926 was 1,903,048. The suppression of votes in these two states is cited as typical of other states. In the Presidential election of 1924, Montgomery, Alabama, is taken as a typical southern city, Tabulation of the election returns shows that only 14 votes were cast for President Coolidge. Montgomery had a population of 43,000 persons in 1924. Among them were 19,800 Negroes. Corruption Charged Charging corruption through the suppression of votes, Senator David A. Reed says that the fact that only 14 votes were cast in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1924, for President Coolidge gives rise "in my mind, at least, to a suspicion that some of those colored people might, by some methods which could be but have not yet been inquired into, have been prevented from casting the votes for the Republican candidate for the Presidency which their general disposition toward our party would lead one to suspect they would cast." Qualifications for voting in southern states include the payment of poll taxes and the ability to read the Constitution and explain any section in it to the satisfaction of registration officers. It is these provisions it is believed, that prevent the Negro from qualifying and voting in general elections in the South. When Congress convenes an inquiry may be proposed and the whole question is likely to be debated when the question of seating Senators-elect Vare and Smith comes up for consideration in the Senate. VOCATIONAL SCHOOL TO OPEN WOMEN'S EXCHANGE The Margaret Washington Vocational School hopes to open its "Women's Exchange" very soon and much interest is being displayed by principal, faculty and students toward raising funds with which to start this enterprise. A rummage sale will be held the week of December 12, and a "better baby contest" will be held in connection with the Christmas exhibit December 20. Keen interest and a lively rivalry are being manifested in the baby contest. The affair will be held in the John F. Cook School auditorium. Besides three substantial prizes for the most popular, babies, each baby contesting will be given a memento. An added prize will be given for the most perfect baby. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1927 TWO KILLED, ONE HURT BY TRAIN AT CROSSING Arthur Bell, 49 years old, an employee of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and Harry West, 50 years old, of Kensington, Md., were killed instantly early Tuesday morning, when they crawled under the lowered gate of the Kensington, grade-crossing directly in the path of the eastbound Capitol Limited of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. Mrs. Bell, who walked around the end of the gate instead of following her husband, was thrown clear of the tracks, sustaining cuts about the head and hips, but no serious injuries. Bell, according to the story told by Mrs. Bell, was on his way to the home of a justice of the peace to obtain a warrant for three men who, he claimed, had held him up and robbed him on the railroad tracks Monday night, and West was showing him the way to the magistrate's home. Bell. a Trackwalker Bell had been employed for many years as a trackwalker, and was one of the best known residents of Randolph, Md., near Kensington. Neither body passed under the wheels, but both were badly mangled. After she had bene given first aid, Mrs. Bell was taken to Georgetown University Hospital. The death of the two men brings to seven the total of fatalities at this crossing in the past year. OLD RESIDENT, 108 YEARS On Wednesday, November 9, at 6 p. m., at the Stoddard Baptist Home, Mrs. Henrietta Tascoe, one of the oldest citizens of Washington, died. She was the grandmother of John T. Tascoe and great-grandmother of Mrs. Hattie Tascoe Womack, of New York City. She was born at Travelers' Rest, Spottsylvania County, Va. in 1819, and came to Washington in January, 1865. In 1884, she became a member of Third Baptist Church, and remained connected there until her death. 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She can help YOU, no matter who or what you are. No matter what your hope, fear or trouble is, come and see this great woman and have your mind put at ease. Reading strictly confidential. Tells you how to have success in business, love, marriage, divorce, health, law suits and speculations of all kinds. 704 7th St., N.W. Readings $1.00 GUARANTEED TO CALL YOUR NAME GUARANTEED TO CALL YOUR NAME PROFESSOR GEORGE will tell you just what you want to know, and calls your name also without asking a single question; will tell you whether your wife, sweet- heart or husband is true o- false. Know who is your enemy and why you cannot have good luck. Gives luck for all purposes. PRICE— $0.95. If someone has stolen any- thing, I can tell you where it is. "On the other hand, resistance to the enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment and the statute enacted in pursuance thereof is not designed to avert crime, but to facilitate it. Glass Raps 14th. 15th, Upholds 18th Amend't Glass Raps 14th. 15th, Upholds 18th Amend't No Enforcing Statute "I shall be obliged if either you or the newspaper you approvingly quote will point me to the statute providing for the enforcement of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, which you and that paper say the people of the South violate and thus render themselves amenable to your characterization of them as null ficationists. Of course, neither o you can do this, for the very good reason that there is no such statute. Senator Upholds Dry Amendment, Nullifies 14th, and 15th. The conundrum of how Southern Democrats reconcile their demands for enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment with their nullification of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth is playing a big part in politics at this time. Senator Carter Glass, Democrat, of Virginia, last Tuesday in replying to an editorial which appeared In The New York World declared that there is no analogy because statues to enforce the Civil War sections of the Federal Constitution in the South have never been emacted by Congress. "Any group of persons in the country dissatisfied with the Prohibition amendment or the Prohibition laws has a perfect right to move for repeal or modification. "When a public man protests against sending Federal santraps to supervisi. State elections, for which there is no sanction of law, it is rather silly to suggest that such a proceeding would have a preceden. and parallel in sending Prohibition agents, under full sanction of law, to suppress the traffic in liquor. There is no semblance of analogy, and it might as well be understood that no State is going to abandon its lawful fight against illicit liquor under this threat of unlawful Federal control of election." The World in its editorial commented upon the inconsistency of Senator Glass's opposing the sending of Federal agents to supervise the State election in Kentucky while standing for the despatch of Federal agents everywhere to enforce the Prohibition laws. "The attempt to draw an analogy," says Glass in reply, "between the attitude of the South on the question of Negro suffrage and the position of persons intent upon nullifying the Eighteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution is simply stupid. If one were to impute literal truth to the alleged analogy, the conclusive answer would be that the South's resistance to the Fifteenth Amendment was intended to overt the wretched consequences of the unspeakable crime involved in the adoption of the amendment. The question has also broken out in correspondence between Senator Edge of New Jersey and Senator Borah, who recently demanded that the coming Republican National Convention quit fooling and make a platform declaration on Prohibition that means something. "You say," writes Senator Borah, "why confine a platform pledge to protect the safety of the Constitution and compel law enforcement to the Eighteenth Amendment? I have no desire, Senator Edge, to confine the platform pledge to the Eighteenth Amendment. If you, or any one else, desire to include the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, you will find full cooperation upon the part of those who are in favor of incorporating the pledge to the Eighteenth Amendment. I venture to say that there is not a supporter of the Eighteenth Amendment, North or South, but will be pleased to co- "It was done in the passions of war and constituted an attempt to destroy white civilization in nearly one-third of the Nation and to erect on its ruins an Ethiopian state, ignorant, profligate, corrupt controlled by manumitted slaves, not 1 per cent, of them semiliterate, and these led by a band of white miscreants, execrated figures in the nightmare of reconstruction. Demand BAYER ASPIR SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on the getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin pr lions and prescribed by physicians ove Colds Headache Neuritis Pain Neuralgia Toothache DOES NOT AFFECT TH SPIRIN SPIRIN" - Genuine Cross" on tablets, you are not Aspirin proved safe by mil- sicians over 25 years for Neuritis Lumbago Toothache Rheumatism FECT THE HEART Demand BAYER ASPIRIN Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over 25 years for DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Safe Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets. Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggista. Personal Service The personal element is equally in conduct of a funeral, as proficiency quirements. Tact and sympathetic must go hand in hand with profession You will find our service admirably desirable features. We strive to give vice that precludes any possibility of barassing delays. this equally important in the proficiency in technical res sympathetic understanding with professional skill. We admirably combining these strive to give the kind of ser- ossibility of confusion or em- The personal element is equally important in the conduct of a funeral, as proficiency in technical requirements. Tact and sympathetic understanding must go hand in hand with professional skill. You will find our service admirably combining these desirable features. We strive to give the kind of service that precludes any possibility of confusion or embarrassing delays. John T. Rhines & Co Funeral Directors & Embalmers 901 3rd Street, S.W. Private Ambulance Phone, Franklin 3108 ```markdown ``` --- ```markdown ``` V Borah and Edge V operate with you in including the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. "I assume from your interview that you are entirely satisfied to have a specific declaration in favor of upholding and maintaining the 1910 L. E. MURRAY & FUNERAL DIRECTOR 2105 12th St., N.W. FUNERAL COMPLETE FROM Our quality and service reflect amiability, experience and re Our Motto: A service to the far them of all the worry of in minor details. Our Phone is at your service or and see you. Business Phone: N. 8180; Reside OPEN DAY AND NIGHT L.E. MURRAY & SON FUNERAL DIRECTORS amiability, experience and reliability. Our Motto: A service to the family, relieving them of all the worry of important and minor details. Our Phone is at your service or we will come and see you. TOMBSTONE Attention to Every Detail Establish We carry out the wishes the burden of bereavement. procedure politely and effec we guarantee. There is no taste so delicate o not comply with. THOS. FR Graduate Embalmer 723 T STR Residence Phone: 0. 1213 McGuire's F SINCE Established 1917 carry out the wishes of loved ones so as men of bereavement. Personally directi- cate politely and efficiently, is the kind of guarantee. Lady Atte no taste so delicate or wish so exacting tha- tway with. THOS. FRAZIER CO. Graduate Embalmer and Funeral Directi- tion 723 T STREET, N.W. E Phone, N. 1213 Office Phone, Guire's Funeral Hos SINCE 1912 We carry out the wishes of loved ones so as to case the burden of bereavement. Personally directing every procedure politely and efficiently, is the kind of Service we guarantee. Lady Attendant. There is no taste so delicate or wish so exacting that we cannot comply with. THOS, FRAZIER CO. Graduate Embalmer and Funeral Director 723 T STREET, N.W. Residence Phone, N. 1213 Office Phone, N. 7796 McGuire's Funeral Home McGuire's Funeral Home CANDLELIGHT "Quality and 1820 Ninth St Telephone, LICENSED IN THE ST "Quality and Service" 820 Ninth St., Northwest Telephone, North 3747 INSED IN THE STATE OF MARYLAND "Quality and Service" 1820 Ninth St., Northwest Telephone, North 3747 LICENSED IN THE STATE OF MARYLAND FUNERALS A Service for All We are prepared to serve all members of the community, regardless of their means or individual tastes. We can offer a service as elaborate as may be desired, or plain enough to suit the simplest of tastes. Both in the goods we supply and the service we render we can satisfy the wishes of all classes of patrons. E. W. BUNDY FUNERAL HOME, 649 Florida Ave., N.W. Phone, North 5750 --- M. Eighteenth Amendment if there is included in the platform at the same time a similar declaration with reference to the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of this be true, there is no difference to adjust between you and me. A beautiful funeral need not be a burden to those who must assume its responsibility. Our modern livery is in harmony with our well known policy of distinction. We offer for your service and inspection our ambulance equipped with totally new combinations of features and greater riding ease. We are also featuring our new white hearse, the only one of its kind in Washington. W. Ernest JarvisCo. W. Ernest JarvisCo. "As close to you as the nearest telephone." 2222 Georgia Avenue, N.W. Phones: Office, North 8315; Residence, North 6378 WEST END PARLORS 28th and Dumbarton Ave., N.W. Phone, North 8686 MURRAY & SON GENERAL DIRECTORS 2105 12th St., N.W. GENERAL COMPLETE FROM $100 UP ity and service reflects proficiency. ility, experience and reliability. : A service to the family, relieving all the worry of important and tails. is at your service or we will come and see you. Phone: N. 8180; Residence: N. 8778 OPEN DAY AND NIGHT formed 1917 of loved ones so as to ease Personally directing every patient, is the kind of Service Lady Attendant. wish so exacting that we can- AZIER CO. and Funeral Director STEET, N.W. Office Phone, N. 7796 Funeral Home EST. 1912 "and Service" St., Northwest North 3747 STATE OF MARYLAND --- let, although colored, was the first professor of physical training of Harvard University. Judge Hewlett studied at the Boston University and practiced in the North for three years before coming to Washington. He has been a member of the bar for forty-eight years and is reputed to be the senior member of the bar in the District of Columbia. Among the friends who honored him on his seventy-seventh birthday were Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Horner, Augustus Gray, L. Melendez King, Miss E. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Hemans, M. Grant Lucas, Dr. Marie B. Lucas, Paul Scott, Franklin Wilson, Miss Urseline Brooks, Miss A. Wade, Mrs. Malvin, Miss B. Malvin, A. Jackson, Mrs. I. Prisby, Mrs. S. Williams, Mrs. G. Brook, Miss Edith Scott, Mrs. Scott, Mrs J. B. Morris, Miss Julia Smith, Miss N. M. Quander, Misses Nannie and Thelma Lane, Mrs R. Neal, Mrs B. Prather, Mrs Ellen Praher, Miss M. Beckett, Mrs Marion Gordon and daughter. r Dancing Now ace Casino , Northwest this Delicious TODAY Select Your Dance Dates Now Murray Palace Casin 920 U Street, Northwe 920 U Street, Northwest GRAINED BREAD YOU will notice the difference at once! Delicious Wonder Bread is the finest loaf that skill can make. You'll like its appetizing flavor . . . its fine, even texture. Extra milk and sugar make it more nourishing, too. Order a loaf of Wonder Bread today! Your whole family will enjoy Corby's new split-top loaf. WONDER BREA CORBY'S BAKERY— Continental Baking Co PRESCRIBE Compounded by M Something at S (Drug Store Proprietors, who are more apt to be Better compounded by clerks one store to For Genuine Patronize the Drug Store in BETTER DRUGS PRESCRIPTION R BREAD Continental Baking Company SCRIPT funded by Men w something at Stake- prietors, who have not to be Better than funded by clerks, who d one store to another For Genuine Drugs Drug Store in Your M DRUGS LOW SCRIPTION PREC WONDER BREAD CORBY'S BAKERY- Continental Baking Company PRESCRIPTIONS (Drug Store Proprietors, who have Capital Invested) are more apt to be Better than Prescriptions compounded by clerks, who drift from one store to another. For Genuine Drugs Patronize the Drug Store in Your Neighborhood. EMPIRE PHARMACY, 2901 Sherman Ave., N.W. Columbia 9755 "UNTON'S PHARMACY, 900 U St., N.W. North 1087 BOARD'S PHARMACY, 1912½ 14th St., N.W. North 2221 D. BOULEVARD PHARMACY, 918 U St., N.W., North 985 --- JUDGE HEWLIT IS ENTERTAINED ON HIS BIRTHDAY Judge E. M. Hewlat, was the recipient of a surprise birthday reception last Tuesday evening upon the approach of his seventy-seventh birthday. Among the tokens of remembrance were a large basket of fall flowers, a mammoth pie, several cakes and boxes of candy and a variety of fruits and flowers. For several months, Judge Hewlett has been unable to go to his office and appear in court on account of ill health. During his career he has been a fearless fighter for justice and equality. He comes from Boston, and his father, Professor Molineaux Hew- SIMMONS' PHARMACY, 21st & L Sts., N.W., West 1453. BACCHUS' PHARMACY, 9th & P Sts., N.W., North 2440 SOUTHWESTERN DRUG CO., 2nd & H Sts., S.W. Franklin 2840 ALEXANDRIA IS HARD HIT BY TORNADO ALEXANDRIA, Va., Nov. 18.—A 120-mile-an-hour gale swept through this city Thursday leaving destruction in its wake. Coming from the southwest, the twister tore roofs from houses, shattered windows, blew down trees, overturned motor cars, wrecked places of business and destroyed electric wires which for a time left the city in the vicinity of North Henry from Wythe to Montgomery Streets, in total darkness. Few Hurt Though there was an estimated property damage of $200,000 and the number of injured persons was placed at 125, only a few victims were colored. Two colored persons were injured seriously. They are a 6-year-old lad, Willie Carter and an aged women, Mrs. Phoebe Sorrell. The boy is suffering with a fractured skull, and Mrs. Sorrell is suffering from a fractured hip and shock. They are at the Alexandria Hospital. Hotel Hit The Jackson Hotel, the only colored hotel in the city, operated by Washington Jackson, at King and Peyton Streets, had its north wall completely blown down. Several persons passing at the time narrowly escaped serious injury and possible death. The remaining walls of the building are still standing. The entire structure will have to be torn down. The block in King street in which the hotel is situated was directly in the path of the twister. A row of houses on the same side of the street had the roofs blown off. School in Path Mr. Elam, principal of the Parker-Gray school was confronted with a serious problem when over 700 pupils were nearly frightened into a panic. With an exceptional presence of mind the principal personally guarded the door of the school and kept the children from leaving the building. No one was hurt. Windows of the school were broken and all the houses in the vicinity were damaged, some demolished completely. Old Folks Home Demolished The former Old Folks Home at Montgomery and North Henry Streets, was completely demolished. Five families living there miraculously escaped injury. It is reported that three men were pinned under Carter's store, located on the 900 block North Patrick street. This store was completely destroyed. Colored Section Damaged The 300 block of North Payne street was directly in the path of the gale as was the 1300 block of Queen Street. On North Payne Street the homes of Mrs. Fanny Jackson and Mrs. Maria Harris had the entire fronts blown off. The people were at work and escaped injury. Persons who witnessed the coming of the twister described it as a black cloud followed by a wind of enormous velocity, and with the coming of the wind, lasting only three minutes, all of the damage was done. The known seriously injured colored persons are: Mrs. Phoebe Sorrell, Lamond's Lane, fractured hip and shock. Willie Carter, Lamond's Lane, fractured skull. Mrs. Grace Littlejohn, 607 N. Henry Street, fractured knee. William Littlejohn, same address, broken arm. dress, broken arm. Anna Peterson, same address, bibbed, mashed leg. Chas, Jackson, Columbus Street scalds. ATIONS who have Capital Invested) Prescriptions drift from r. Neighborhood. VER PRICES VISION EMOOT'S PHARMACY, 1548 New Jersey Ave., N.W., North 3463 REYNOLD'S PHARMACY, 2600 Georgia Ave., N.W., Columbia 10329 BUTCHER'S PHARMACY, 501 Florida Ave., N.W., North 3178 BURWELL'S PHARMACY, Vermont Ave. & R St., N.W., North 9469 EMPIRE PHARMACY, 10th & R Sts., N.W., North 9852 THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1927 William H. Gant, 85 years old, who resides at No. 1 Ridge road, Bennings, and earns his living by basket making, married Amanda Jones, 58, at the home of the Rev. James L. Washington on Wednesday night. The best man at the wedding was Gant's oldest son, a "boy" of 65. The Rev. Washington officiated. Gant was born a slave on the plantation of Martique Plummer in Prince Georges County, Md., where he resided 24 years before his emancipation. He is the father of 14 children, the eldest of whom was his best man. WOULD MAKE IT 'HOT' FOR WIFE, SHE ASKS DIV'RCE Through Attorney Charles E. Hemans, Mrs. LaRuby Morrison, 2104 Flagler place, northwest, filed suit in the District Supreme Court on Monday for a limited divorce from John L. Morrison. She charge her husband with desertion and failure to provide for his family. On October 13, last, her husband ordered her to leave their home, Mrs. Morrison says, and told her if she did not he would make it so hot for her she would be glad to go. The couple were married in Fairmont Heights, Md., November 28, 1923. They have one child, Vincent Morrison, 2 years old. Mr. Morrison is employed as a night watchman at a salary said to be $35 a week. LIGHTS OUT FOR CABARETS SAT. BY MIDNIGHT Night clubs were forced by the police last Saturday night to close at midnight and remain closed until Sunday night. The Night Club Bohemia was the only club permitted to operate after midnight. When police from the eighth precinct called to warn the proprietors to close at midnight, they were shown articles of incorporation, and the Bohemia was permitted to stay open. The cabarets that were forced to close included the Oriental Gardens at Ninth and R streets, northwest, and the Cafe De Luxe at Seventh and S streets, northwest. A dance given by the Sphinx Club, pledgees of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, on the third floor of the Cafe De Luxe was hit by the ban. This dance had just begun when police ordered it to end at midnight. As a result of the closing of the other cabarets, the entertainers and patrons and the guests at the dance crowded the Club Bohemia. A city ordinance forbids the operation of amusement places on Sundays except between the hours of 2 and 11 p.m. Major Edwin B. Hesse, superintendent of police, said that a number of complaints had been made to the police department that the night clubs were operating early Sunday mornings. LEPER PLEADS GUILTY TO MURDER CHARGE BATON ROUGE, La., Nov. 16. —Edward Peyton, inmate of the United States Leprosarium at Carville, La., pleaded guilty in the United States District court here Monday to a charge of second degree murder for killing Lloyd Richardson, a fellow inmate. Both men are colored. They were ex-service men and had long been enemies. Peyton fatally shot Richardson during a quarrel. Ten lepers were brought to court as witnesses. They were kept in ambulances behind the post office until sentence was passed. They were then returned to the colony at Carville. Federal Judge Burns sentenced Peyton to 10 years in the Federal leprosarium where he has been since it was found he was a leper several years ago. Attorney General John G. Sargent had ruled that the leprosarium was the only place in which Peyton could be confined without endangering public health. INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE PARTY STUDIES HAMPTON AIMS AND METHODS HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Va.—A party of eighty foreign students from the International Institute, Teachers' College, Columbia University, visited Hampton Institute Monday and Tuesday, November 7 and 8, for the purpose of studying educational methods and aims at that institution. The foreign visitors spent the second day visiting class-rooms, meeting in the afternoon for a special conference with the staff workers, where educational problems were discussed and questions provoked by the party's visit to Hampton answered. The party left for Baltimore, there to conclude its program of inspecting notable educational institutions in the East. Consolidate the Mortgages on Your Home I offer you a Service that cannot be duplicated anywhere else in the city. ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` BIG MONEY! 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A telephone call will bring one of our Representatives, who will advise you as to the best way to rent your property. Call Us Today. Pay at your Convenience 5 Your Home e else in the city. EASY TERMS NEW PORCHES PAPERING CEMENT WALKS LANDSCAPE GARDENS STUCCO An Expert will call to see you tions Move ```markdown ``` 4=ATHE SPORT REVIEW 23 Unbeaten Elevens Clash in High School Title Battle Antiquated Play Beats Bisons -- Teddy Bears Win | SicuT “# : & Unbeaten Antiquatec TECH-DUNBAR 60 IS CARDED FOR | MONDAY Two of the strongest football teams that haye represented Dun- bar and Armstrong High Schools foc the past several years will clash in annual “blood battle” at the Howard University Stadium ‘Monday. A crowd of nearly 3000, includ- ing the entire student body of each school as well as a large number <f interested outsiders, is expect- ed to assemble to see the initial kick-off when these two teams, both undefeated so far this year, begin hostilities, A glimpse at the season’s rec- ords gives each an even chance to cop the bunting. Armstrong boast: of a decisive win over Booker 7.-Washington High School ‘of Norfolk, a team which held Dunbar to’ scoreless tie. The First Streeters, on the other hand handed Douglass a 15-8 trimming while the Techites barely escaped with a 7-6 triumph over the Ducks. Manassas was outclassed by both ‘the local teams by very nearly the same score. Results—Dunbar: 12, Manassas 0; 15 Douglass 8; 0,’ Booker §. 0; 6 Bowie 0. Armstrong: 18, Alumni 0; 13, Bowie 0; 13, Manas- sas 0; 12, Norcum 0; 31, Booker T. 0; 6, Huntington 6;'7, Douglass 6. A. ANDT, STOPS HAMPTON TAKES 6,1, A. A, TITLE HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Va. Nov, :2.—The A. and T. Bulldog Aggies grabbed two chances to ie kent foualt seracehs os * fought on vem it the strong Hampton Blue and White team to the tune of 13-0. In the first two minutes of play A. and T's cen- ter, Patterson, broke through the Ting and blocked King’s pant; Coles, A. and Ts left tackld, dropped on the bail behind the ‘goal line for the first touchdown, | while Coleman “made a placement. for the extra point ‘The touchdown was made in such a short space of time that the spectators hardly realized what had happened. The second touch- down was made in the same way. ‘This time Patterson, the Aggies’ center, slipped through the line and blocked King’s punt, and Miller, A. and T's star guard, cov- ered the ball behind the line to Score. The second touchdown came Jast about three minutes after the hind quarter had begun. e A. and T. Aggies changed their tactics somewhat and resort- ed to the air game. They were, -however, successful in only a few ‘of their attempts. There was very little line bucking by Lane and Coleman. Orly a few times did they drive through the line for “substantial gains. The most con- sistent pee in the backfield Were Coleman and Lane. On the line there was Miller, the All- C. 1 A. A. guard and Captain Hester, and Patterson, the tall ‘bulky center. Hampton A. and T. Bradby .....R.E....... Streeter Lee oeoese RTs... LaneW. ees RG......... Miller Gates .....Center..... Patterson Hil .........LG....... Kornegy Hunter .....L.T.......... Coles ae eeeeee-LeE......... Hester Syrd ..++4..-Q.B...... Henderson Guest .......R.H....... Coleman King = 2+.+.-LHL........ Wilson Williams ...-F.B.....°.- 2 Lane,J. Substitutes: “Hampton — Robin- son for Hill; Baker for King; Ear- ley for Bradby: MeMasters for ay Jones ze inset a ~ '—Downing for Kornegy; Foul for Downing; Lee for W. Lane; Rayford for Lee. Referee—E. C. Westmoreland (Howard). Um- ire—C. H. poate (Howard). Lineeman—R. E. Clements (North- western). INTER-SCHOLASTIC CHAM- PIONSHIP RECORDS FOR PAST 5 YEARS Five years of battling on the gridiron have resulted in two Yictories and a tie for each of the high schocl* teams ‘in titu- lar clashes. The Dunbar-Armstrong grid elash approaches. On Monday, each team will attempt to break their deadlock. 1922—Armstrong 6, Dunbar 0. 1923—Dunhar 27, Armstrong 0. 1924—Armstrong 5, Dunbar 0. 1925—Dunbar 13, Armstrong 0. 4926—Armstrong 6, Dunbar 6. ee ERED +. SER ae aa : | Annual Football Reception | After the | -\ Danbar-Armstrong Game MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21,8 tol Lincoln Colonnade Handsome Trophy to-Winners wa Free Cloak Room Service . Di al “Community” | Kampus Knights—Surprises | Over 700 Attended Last Year oe ea A, U. USING OLD PLAY WINS 6 - 0 secrecy aN ee Mite and oitgeneraled the Howard Bi- gons went down to stinging. de feat at the hands of the Atlanta University eleven, from Atlanta, Georgia, at the Howard Stadium last Saturday afternoon. A color- ful crowd of some 2500 persons moaned as the local team, by no means a replica of the 1926 ma- chine which established nation- wide reputation, was subdued 6-0, A play, no doubt invented back in the days when: Fritz Pollard was learning the game, spelt de- feat for’ the, modern “Blue and White squad.’ A double fake, the quarterback standing backed a- gainst the center while the half- back Faced across in front of him, opened the Bison forward wall s¢ that the third man could be hand- ed tho ball and run at will. ‘From. the opening kick off to the final whistle the game was re- plete with thrills. The long run, the long and short pass, the neat take out, the flying tackle and the long spiral punt each found its way into the contest and had its share in making the battle well worth the two hours and ten min- utes it consumed. Coach Aiken started his second string backs and these worthies played through the entire first quarter. The opening of the sec- ond period, however, found the Bisons facing Atlanta. Dairersiye ball carrying aces, Whedbee, Me- Pherson} Jones and Stanley. From that point on it was a real battle with the invaders on the better end of the argument. While Atlanta made only 11 first downs to Howard’s 10 the visi- tors made the best of their op- portunities. They completed 5 passes, Howard was successful with 1 attempt. The Georgians’ punts were longer and their ball toting yardage greater. A CAPABLE BALL CARRIER “a 7 4 THE MOST dependable back on the Howard football team is JACK YOUNG. Ross, Smith, Ewell, and Hawk- ins starred for the ‘local squad while McPherson, Whedbee, Jones and Stanley were outstanding stars for the invading pee Howard Position Atlanta Harris ......ReE.......+< Smith Rainey ......RcT..s...0, Clay,W. Kelly .20002/R.G..02525(C) Ford Martin (C) Genter....-..., Cobb Hawkins ....1.G......., Warren Miller ...000.000..0.00.. Simon Mask .......LE........ Claydy Goles .......QB....++ Edwards Ross .2...... IaH. .c..s2-+ Jones Smith 0000R80277! “Bikekburn Brown /.....F.B.......... Mays Substitutions: Howard—Vernon Smith for Rainey; James for Har- ‘ris; Tyson for James; Payne for Coies; Ewell for Dan Brown; Jack | (Continued om page 9) eh ee isiahibeete adam. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER %8, 19z7r ; g | 5 Sub Ss eae 0 2 ts a eae re ee ge ey ign aie Sam eo eS i See a ig ie nee : Ay a eae a 6, ‘ a sy ay : ae 2 Res " fe i em pss ok oe" os cafes, Lae ee] Oy te a ta Tas oe alll 3 rok ya ee a pe oe pea DISTRICT GRIDDERS TAKE MEASURE[canuistes Lose aren OF ROAMERS AS CHICHESTER STARS|COURT GAME TO GREE MONUMENT LOT GRIDIRON. Strategy turned to tragedy as the strong reddy Bear machine faced and overwhelmed an even stronger Roamer team here last Sunday by the close proximity of a lone point. The score was 7-6. Fortune smiled on Lonnie Chi- chester, quiet, unassuming and lit- te heralded all-round performer of the winning aggregation. It fell to the lot of this sandy-haired youngster to turn defeat into vic- tory for the west end eleven. With ‘his teammates rie 6-0 through. out 3 puarters, Chichester, who played every position end to end, and from quarterback to fullback broke are the line, fell om a Toose ball behind the goal line for the tying touchdown, stepped biick to the 15-yard strip and booted the oval end over between the up- rights for the extra ey which spelled the margin of difference at the close of the game. Eight times Johnnie MacTatum’s Teddy Bear gridders threw themselves against the forward wall of Wil- lie Mack’s Roamers and eight times they were thwarted. Eight times the locals smashed at the line of the Virginians with all the speed, weight and craft they could summon and eight times they were stopped with the same amount of turf remaining between their goal and the ball. Then it was thatva nifty piece of headwork failed. e ‘Tt was through the very closing stages. of the third quarter and the first 8 minutes of the final pe- riod that all this occurred. The Alexandrians had scored early in the game on a blocked kick and were leading 6-0. The ball was deep sin Roamer territory and had changed hands several times. Hav- ing been unable with three kicks to send the pigskin from the shad- ow of their goal posts the visi- ‘tors elected to allow the scoring of a safety. With instructions to be tackled behind his goal line, Georgie Brooks, Roamer quarter- back, fumbled the ball, and Chi- chester dived on it, What was in- tended to be a safety was made a touchdown and a score that woulc have been 6-2 became 6-6. Chi- chester added the extra point b3 placement kick. - Though the game was held uf bon numerous occasions while th officials attempted to clear th field, and in spite of the fact that it consumed 2 hours and 8 min utes, searcely a dozen of the es The Tribune Football Directory Teams, Managers and Addresses: Washington Pirates, E, R. Braddock, 91714 Barry Place, N.W. Stonewall A. C., Musco West, 636 L St., S.E. Buffalo A. C., B. Edw. Whittaker, 1230 Wylie St., N.E., Phone, Lincoln 3823. Teddy Bears, John M. Tatum, 2100 17th St, N.W., Phoné, “Steve,” M. 6400, Branch 68 before 4:30. Alexandria Roamers, Wm. McK. Murray, 920 U St. N.W., Phone, Pot. 1667. Willowtree A. C., Walter Smith, 360 K St, S.W., Franklin 6468. Ebenezer Church A. C,, Louis Chase, 1719 New Jersey Ave., N.W., Phone, N, 10265. , 5 timated crowd of 8,000 persons who witnessed the game left be- fore its conclusion which conelu- sion was battled out in the fast approaching darkness. : ree players easily starred, Scott and Poindexter af the Roam- ers, and Chichester of the Bears, Bears Roamers Hamilton ....L.E...B, Williams Dublin .......L-T...... Hawkins Ricks ........L.G....W. Jackson Dent .......Center....R. Stillard Proctor ......R.G...s..+044 Scott Lynch .......R.T.,....... Miller Chichester ...R.E....... Strange 'S.Williams(C) Q.B....Brooks. (C) Mills ‘........L.H.... Poindexter Conrad ....,.R.H........ Clark Blue ....,....F.B..... Robinson Touchdowns Smith, Chichester. Goal from touchdown, Chichester. First downs, Roamers 7, Teddy Bears 5. Umpire, N. D. Murray. Referee, S. H. Lacy. Timekeeper, C, Langhorne. Head linesman, N. Slaughter. Time of quarters, 15 minutes. Substitutes, T. B.—Grisby, Dod- ‘son, Berry, Barner, Brown. Roam- ers Burke, Sheppard, Miller, Shanklin, Taylor, Stillard, Sam- uels, Lumpkins, Smith, W, John- son, Evans, Wright and Wanzer. WILL BEAR WATCHING Co ow sigh Ci / a P Par: “SNAKE” EWELL, unless careful- iy covered may do some effective running against the Chester team Thursday. BUFFALO GRIDMEN READY FOR ROAMERS SUNDAY The Buffalo Athletic Club will play for, the second time this sea- son the fast Roaher A.C. of Alex- andria, Va. The game will be held on the Buffaloes’ field in Ivy City at 2 pim., Sunday, November 20. DUNBAR DOWNS BOWIE The local Dunbar eleven defeats ed the Bowie Normal and Indus- trial School 6-0 at American Lea: gue Park Tuesday. A blocked punt, late in the third quarter re« sulted in the Red and Black vie- ca CARLISLES LOSE OPENING COURT GAME TO GREEKS ,BALTO., Md. — The Carlisle Field Club, locally known as Con- way’s Cheeks, went down to der feat in their first game of the 1927-28 basketball season, here last Friday night when Ike Wright's new Athenian quint con- auered over them by a 24-19 score, Both the Capital City aggrege- tion and the Groeks presented prac. tically new teams. Davis, Jones and Hawkins were the only Wash- ingtons left from the 1926 Car. isle machine while Jackson and Veney stood alone of last season’s Athenians. ~ Very little real basketball was exhibited. Both squads showed the lack of practice. Passes were erratic, shots were wild and drib- bles were untrue, Neither team seemed sure of itself and while the District combination appeared to be better balanced the presence of the home town rooting section did much to aid the Gold and Pur- ple cause, ‘The Wrightmen consist of a number of youngsters, John Lew- is, Chink Wyatt, Bishop, Hackett and Powell Shefty, the ‘latter of Morgan College fame are among those who wear the Greek uni- forms. Along with Ev Davis ‘and Mike™ Jones, Conway's two vets the Signpainters have “Son- ny” and Bob Hawkins, “Hooks” Simms, Georgs Adams and Wallie Smith.’ Smith is a ball player, a member of the Washington Black Sox, who has returned to the court game after & 2-year lay off, Carlisles gf Athenians = f S.Hawkins,f 0 0 Powell,f ...3 3| Smith,f .....2 OLewisf .....1 4 Davis .....3 1 Hackette ...1 1 R. Hawkins,c 0 0 Jacksong ...2 0) Tinnen,c ....1 0 Veneyig. ...1 0) Jones.g .....10 —| Adamag ...10 Totals ...8 8) Simmsg ...10 Totals ....9 1 TO BE RESPECTED on ’ vg cy ; “LITTLE CROW” ~ HAWKINS, whose play at guard on the Howard team this season is de- serving of decidedly more men- tion than has been given him. PHILADELPHIA READY FOR BIG TURKEY DAY ; “ Announcement New Liberty Hotel MILTON C. FREDERICK / Well known in Hotel Circles of New York City - | ANNOUNCES THAT HE HAS PURCHASED THE NEW LIBERTY HOTEL i | —and has had the same thoroughly renovated, and is | able to offer to the public high-class accommodations i with neatly furnished rooms at reduced rates, with high-class cafe accommodations, Huropean and Ameri+ ean plans. ' LARGE BALL ROOM FOR RENT—Private Dances $15 Per Night. « ROOMS $1.00 and Up 1 Dinner Dancing a Specialty Private Dining Room : New Jersey Avenue and D Street, NW, i : Phone- Lincoln 8167 MILTON ©. FrevERICK, Prop. (Continued from page 1) Orange and Blue of: Lincoln will be pouring into Philadelphia from Monday morning until after mid- day ‘Thursday. ~ Visitors will, ars rive on spectal trains from New York and Washington as well as in a catavan of motor cars which wends its way to the scene of the Fall Classic ench year, By Thors- day the por ‘ity will take on the aspects of a huge college cam- pus. Entertainment After the stnoke of the football game: which 3s the qgeuse given for being there, has cleared away and the grand rush for din- her de over and--ineidentally after the Sie gown has been donned, dancing will hold forth until the wee small hours. ‘The Academy of Music and the Commercial Museiim will both, no doubt be packed to capacity. ‘Teams Have Poor Records ‘The game this year will bring together two mediocre teams, ite: ing by their season’s records, How- ard has won 1 game of her 1927 Proram. She defeated’ Wilber- orca 1-0 after having lost te Blue- field and West Virginia Institute. Later the Bisons were trimmed G0 by Atlanta. A fame with Morgan College scheduled for No- ymeber 19 is still remaining on ‘the Blue and White card. —Lin- coln has also. won only a single contest. The Lions have been de- feated by A. and T. College, Un- jon, Hampton, Virginia Seminary, West Virginia Institute and Tus- kegee. Gafte Should, Thrill These disastrous performances, however, may have little of no bearing on the class of = that will be exhibited Thutsday. How- and, it is known, has been suffer- {ng & mental handicap which has existed since the abolition of the football trainit.g table and result- ant disturbance the first of the fearon, Lineoln, on. the, he hand, is coached by “Doo” Mor- rison. ‘This, the writer believes will fully account for the Lions record to date. ‘The decisive 83-( lacing the Orange and Blue team handed Shaw last Saturday, is by no means surprising. We’ know from past experiences that Mor son holds back, and points to the Turkey Day game as. the lone ob jective, With this in mind the wise heads can safely predict game Thursday which will be re. plete with thrills and saturated with every ingredient. that helps to make: football palatable, Lincoln has won 9, Howard 6 while there have been 7 ties. Game: have been played regularly fron 1604 to the present vent with th exceptions of 1903 and 1915. The history of the classic, t this year is as follows: ene ee our \. LS yr ze iy \. WY Doll A © a \ ( Rey ) ° te GO ; is worth (P ! moreat \. <= Ne ey eval ke’ AN (44 1404 Po ZN Ba EN (Ne a BS (RRS peer } NN OF (mre L Gon eat fond 4 Big Factories | or sTeehing ste Wl With A Production P| nee Taran f) Canty oF |p| Ea 18,960 Pairs ME $ ed Daly! | d Funny, how ma ‘il at find who can serike's aivewd @ QO bargain in their own line—and yet when it comes to shoes— < “— Hell out about double their __ a | real worth! Buying Newark ha Shoes is just common sense os ON applied to shoes. Come in PSSc\\l \ today and eonvinee yourself Fe NSW Ww fake a look at the styles. ee \ Es NOW Try ‘em on for feel and com- Ke NORGE MeRA tort. You'll be amazed! And RM Ye NON __ tll they'll den: vour pocketbook BI EN, eNO >. for is $3,50 or $4.00, Any P SER NYS RAN Qo pair in the house. y . \ Se No, 9341-7 RN DD xe tm mm, Se oe gage NC WEATAN storsico 913 Penn. Ave. 502 9th St., N,W. 711 H St,, N.E. Howard Year Lincoln Guanes esac BOD se stenccnne O.scsevees 1904 .....5.4. 0 Docccecees 1905 ...cscee. B Oe ic eecens 1907 wiscd.ees B. Boyeiecves 108 oo... 8 rite: |... mereerer pe) Bevececees 1010 cecsceeee O Weccveonse OM ocerscaes OD eee) Seine | O....00.26 20IB vi..c.c.. O Qesececcce WDIG vecsceeciD Mo ceicceee WIG .6..468.. O OQ. cceeet. IMT isis. sa 6 Qo ceccces BIB decscee eek’ Oreecicees 1919 ici. O AZo cecccee 19080 o...56... 0 Toceceeces VBL secceess Ad TB. on seee ee WB sstveecedd Coceceecee 198B wosceeees B Grencesses, TMM caer geared Ds ciivcece SPMMOGeestee a, Ce | nn acct see e genes Continued on Page 9 ANNUAL FOOTBALL CLASSIC HOWARD vs. LINCOLN (Washington) (Pa.) THANKSGIVING DAY, NOV. 24th 4 SHIBE (Philadelphia Athletics) PARK Near North Philadelphia Station | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | ‘ GAME BEGINS AT 2:00 O'CLOCK SHARP | TICKETS: Box Seats $2:50 each. Reserved Seats $2.00 each. General Admission—$1.50. Tickets on sale at Dr. Wm. L. Smith’s—809 Florida Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. ee For General Information, write— zs \ H. F. Grim, Lincoln University, Pa. \ Dr. ‘W. G. Alexander, Graduate Manager é SS THE ASSEMBLY OF THE CLASSIC (Official Reception) 7 Under the patronage of the Alumni Associations of . Howard University and Lincoln University and the | Professional Club of Philadelphia, = | Thanksgiving Evening, Thursday, Nov. 24 _ At COMMERCIAL MUSEUM | 84th & Spruce Streets, | | ADMISSION—$1.00 2 Orchestra and Band | Alumni and General Public cordially invited to be present at all of these games. Through an Unexpected Negotiation of our Graduate Manager Leave WASHINGTON (Union Station) ..8:30 a.m. Leave BALTIMORE (Camden Station) ..9:20 a.m. Returning Leave Philadelphia (Chestnut St. Station) ACADEMY of MUSIC direct to B. & O. Station has been arranged, running every ten minutes from midnight till 3:30 a.m. —Tickets on sale at— Thomas' Drug Store, Cor. 12th & U Sts., N.W. Johnson's Drug Store, Cor. 3rd & F Sts., S.W. Morse's Drug Store, 19th & L Sts., N.W. Hunton's Drug Store, Cor. 9th & U Sts., N.W. University Barber Shop, Georgia Avenue. Candy Booth, Main Hall, Howard Campus. A. U. USES OLD PLAYS (Continued from page 8) Young for Tick Smith. Atlanta University — Robinson for Cobb; Moody for Clay; Whedbee for Mays; McPherson for Blackburn; Stanley for Edwards; Spruell for Smith; Pierce for Moody; Wiggins for Stanley; Slaughter for Warren. Referee—A. K. Savoy. Umpire — Benjamin Washington. Head linesman—C. Jackson. Field judge — Haley Douglas. FIRST QUARTER Coles' kick off struck Cobb, visiting center, on the shoulder and bounded back into the arms of the Blison quarterback. He ran the ball to the Atlanta 40-yard line. Brown took off a yard at left tackle. Smith failed to gain and on the next play Ross' pass to Coles was knocked to the ground by Maise. Coles punted, and Blackburn was downed on his 15-yard line. The visitors elected to kick immediately. Blackburn's boot was low and Coles was down field alone, but the Howard safety man fumbled. When he received the elusive oval he was tackled. On a reverse buck at right tackles Ross annexed 2 yards. Brown stumbled and failed to gain on a play sent at the visiting right guard. Coles kicked and the ball was A. U.'s on her own 22-yard line. Edwards ran from a kick formation and gained 3 yards. On the next play, Edwards punted, the ball going outside on the Howard 45-yard strip. Ross failed to gain. Coles made 2 yards at right guard. A forward pass, Ross to Mask, was intercepted by Maise. Jones hit the cen- ```markdown ``` ter of the line for 3 yards. Blackburn failed to gain. Jones fumbled and Atlanta ta recovered, and on the next play Ed- wards kicked outside on the Howard 31- yard mark. Dan Brown, on 3 plunges at the center of the line, got 7. 2 and 4 yards for a first down, the first of the game. On an attempted end run, "Tick" Smith lost 3 yards. A pass, Ross to Coles, failed. Ross lost 2 yards on a reverse back, but Atlanta University was offside. Coles punted outside on Atlanta's 27- yard line. Edwards running the ball, A. U lost 6 yards at right end. Blackburn kicked to Smith, who was stopped on the Howard 38- yard ribbon. Ross failed to gain. Coles peeled off 3 yards at left tackle and on the following play kicked. The ball travelled 50 yards, and Edwards was unable to run. Two passes, Edwards to Maise and Ed- wards to Blackburn were unsuccessful. Blackburn the ball on surface on Howard's 14-yard line. Two thrusts by Coles, one for 6 yards and the other for 4 netted a first down. Smith added 3 yards at left tackle and Coles came back with 2 more at center. A 6-yard penalty for off-side play gave the Bisons another first down. Smith gained 2 yards at center as the quarter ended. Score: Howard, 0: Atlanta, 0. SECOND QUARTER Coles made 5 yards at right tackle, then 4 yards at the opposite side of the line. He made 6 yards at center and 5 yards at left tackle, but on his fifth successive attempt in advancing the ball Coles lost 4 yards. Ross throw a forward pass, but Slaughter intercepted it. At this point Coach Aliken inserted his shock troops. McPherson, Wiggins, Moody, Stanley and Wheedle rushed into the fray. A forward pass. Edwards to Jones accounted for 22 yards. Another pass, Jones to Blackburn netted 7 yards. Blackburn made 2 yards at left end. A pass. Wheedle to Jones was unsuccessful. 'A double fake and delayed buck with McPherson carrying the 'hall netted 2 yards. The next play, which was of the same type added 16 yards. A third THANKSGIVINC NIGHT, November 24 Introducing the Howard and Lincoln Teams—Cheering Squads and Stars and presenting THE GREATEST ORCHESTRAL COMBINATION ON BROADWAY TODAY Fletcher Henderson NATIONALLY CELEBRATED ORCHESTRA OF THE CITY OF N. Y. 18 Scintillating Syncopationists Rendering their Greatest Dance Program Staged and Promoted under For Reservations phone, write or call at Academy of Music Ticket Office HONORARY BOX HOLDERS LION MAINSTAY 1 DICK TEMPLE, Washington lad, playing a stellar role as wingman on the Lion machine. time the play was repeated and McPherson ran 22 yards. With the ball on their 5-yard line the Bisons found themselves in a ticklish position. The fans on the Howard side were chanting "Hold that line" while the cheering section across the field was pleading for a touchdown. McPherson struck—his body went flying at the center of the line. A mass of humanity piled up. The referee darted in. The whistle-flow. The pile unplied. The Atlantans had gained—only a few inches, but nevertheless it was a gain. An off-side penalty placed the ball on Howard's 2-yard line, half the distance nearer the goal. In an effort to catch the locals, who were now watching McPherson, by surprise Whedbee called on Stanley. The lines met. They swayed. An inertible force met an immovable body. Foremost is the heap on the ground and 1-yard nearer the goal line was the head of Stanley. It was a battle of brawn and brain against strength and skill. Whedbee crouched under the center. A hidden back, with the invading quarter-back to the oval, failed. With 3 feet to go to goal, 2 feet to go it with and 1 down to go it in, McPherson elected to try an end run. The play was smeared. The stands were wild with glee. It was Howard's ball. Coles kicked out. The ball was caught by Jones who was downed in his tracks on the Howard 50-yard line. Stanley got 1 yard at center. A pass. Wheebie to McPherson was incomplete. A second pass, this time to Stanley netted 12 yards. The ball was on Howard's 17-yard mark when the entire A. U. backfield pulled the "Alphonse-Gaston" stunt and allowed the pass from center to go untouched. When Whedbee recovered the ball he had lost 11 yards. Here Whedbee opened an aerial game. Three forward passes, only the first of which was successful netted a gain of 8 yards and a penalty of 5 yards for 2 incomplete tries. Coles got 4 yards at left tackle. Smith lost 1 at center. Ross made 2 yards at right end. Tyson came into the game for Harris and kicked the ball to the Howard 40-yard line where Smith downed it. Score: Atlanta, 0; Howard, 0. THIRD QUARTER Jones received Payne's kick-off and ran the ball to the A. U. 35-yard line. McPherson got 5 yards at left guard, then 7 yards at center. Stanley gained 3 yards through the center of the line. Following an unsuccessful attempt to pass Whedbee punted, the ball traveling long and high to Payne who was downed on his own 6-yard mark. Ross made 4 yards at right tackle, but on a thrust at the other tackle failed to advance. Tyson kicked 55 yards to Whedbee who was stopped on the Atlanta 45-yard line. Jones annexed 4 yards at right guard. ter, made a poor pass, the ball striking the ground and bouncing past Payne. The ball changed hands. Atlanta marched. Uncorking a series of double fake and cross bucks, the Georgians carried the ball 62 yards to the zero mark. Stanley made 2 yards, McPherson 15, Jones 6. McPherson 5, Stanley 28, McPherson 2, Jones 1, and McPherson 2 yards in successive rushes using the same identical play throughout the advance, only the carrier being changed. The ball was by that time on the Howard 1-yard line from which point Stanley dived through right tackle for the touchdown. McPherson's placement kick was blocked by Tyson. Ford kicked off. Miller received the ball and ran 20 yards to the Howard 45-yard chalk mark. Ross was tackled without gain. A pass, Ross to Payne netted 4 yards, but a second pass was intercepted by Whedbee on the A. U. 28-yard line. After McPherson had gained 4 yards, he fumbled. Bob Miller recovered. Jack Young, now in the game, took off 3 yards at right tackle. Two Ross to Payne passes were unsuccessful and Howard was penalized. A third pass, Ross to Payne was incomplete and Howard was again penalized. McPherson was thwarted in his thrust at right tackle, but his The Atlantans recovered Wheedbee's fumble, but when on the next play McPherson fumbled Tyson dived on the pigskin. At this point Howard startled her first real offensive. Smith took off a yard at right tackle. Ross got 6 at left guard, Ewell slid through the middle of the line for 12. Ross added 3 and Smith made 6 more at right tackle. Ewell towed the ball 10 yards through right tackle, Ross made 1 at left guard, 8 at right tackle and 3 more at the same place. A penalty of 18 yards inflicted for holding stopped the Bloons and after unsuccessful attempts to pass they relinquished the ball. McPherson gained 5 yards at right tackle and Wheebed added 2 more at right end. Payne took Wheebed's punt and was downed on the Blue and White 29-yard strik. Smith got 1, Payne got 3 yards at the left side of the line. Ross gained 2 yards through right guard, Tyson kicked. Hawkins drew the ball on the Atlanta 34-yard line. Stanley took off 5 yards at centrue. Jones and McPherson failed to gain: Wheebed advanced 1 yard before being down. Score: Atlanta, 0; Howard, 0. FOURTH QUARTER Wheebed punted 59 yards to Payne where the Bison quarterback was tackled on his own 8-yard ribbon. Ross advanced 6 yards through left guard. Ross again carried the ball, this time for 20 yards outside the Atlanta left flank, Ewell got 2 yards, then 12 through the right side of the opposing line. On this last play McPherson was detected kicking and otherwise roughing Tyson while the Howardite was on the ground. Atlanta was penalized 15 yards. Tick Smith, on successive rushes, gained 2, 4 and 2 yards through right tackle. Ross and Ewell added 3 yards each through center. It was now Howard's ball on the Atlanta 20-yard line, second and 7 yards to go. Ross fumbled but recovered with the loss of 1 yard. A forward pass, Ross to Tyson was incomplete. Payne moved back for an attempt at scoring a field goal by dropkick. Ellison, playing cen- ter, made a poor pass, the ball striking the ground and bouncing past Payne. The ball changed hands. Atlanta matched. Uncorking a series of double fake and cross bucks, the Georgians carried the ball 62 yards to the zero mark. Stanley made 2 yards, McPherson 15, Jones 6. McPherson 6, Stanley 28, McPherson 2, Jones 1, and McPherson 2 yards in successive rushes using the same identical play throughout the advance, only the carrier being changed. The ball was by that time on the Howard 1-yard line from which point Stanley dived through right tackle for the touchdown. McPherson's placement kick was blocked by Tyson. Ford kicked off. Miller received the ball and ran 20 yards to the Howard 45-yard chalk mark. Ross was tackled without gain. A pass, Ross to Payne netted 4 yards, but a second pass was intercepted by Wheden on the A.U. 28-yard line. After McPherson had gained 4 yards, he fumbled. Bob Miller recovered. Jack Young, now in the game, took off 3 yards at right tackle. Two Ross to Payne were unsuccessful and Howard was penalized. A third pass, Ross to Payne was incomplete and Howard was again penalized. McPherson was thwarted in his thrust at right tackle, but his team benefited by a 15-yard penalty for Howard slugging. After Stanley had failed to gain McPherson made 2 yards at left tackle. The whistle blew with the ball in A.U. possession. Score: Atlants. 6; Howard. 0. COMMUNITY YELLOWJACK ETS OPEN CAMPAIGN IN BALTIMORE DECEM- BER 2 The Orange and Black of the Community Athletic Association will make its 1927-28 basketball debut at the New Auditorium on Friday night, December 2, against the Baltimore Elks. The team, which gained prestige throughout the East by its achievements last season, will present practically the same team which represented the club in 1926. The lid will be pried off of court activities in this city on Monday, December 12, when the Monumental team with Scrappy Brown, Herb Keller, Dennis Simpson, Soup Turner and a host of others make their bow before District basketball fandom. WILEY BEATS PAUL QUINN WACO, Tex., Nov. 11.—The Wiley Wildcats took another step towards the Tex-Conference championship by bowling over the Paul Quinn Tigers here today by the decisive margin of 25-6. Inspired by recent victories over Prairie View and last year's champions, Sam Houston, the visitors, after being held to a scoreless tie during the first half, rose to the occasion and completely smothered the local Tigers. Ray Sheppard's youngsters fought the big purple and white eleven from Marshall to a standstill during the first half, but their supreme efforts told upon them All Years Appointed Cor. Broad and Locust Streets Capacity 8,000 DANCING from 8 p. m. 'till 3 a.m. TIONS IN AMERICA all Classic N November 24 during the last two periods, and great ball-toing by Ben Cavil and Reynolds, behind perfect interference proved the locals undoing. GARRISON WINS MOST VALUABLE PLAYER HONORS Alex Garrison, star outfielder of the Anacostia Athletic baseball team, was selected by the Anacostia fans, as being the most valuable player to his team, for the 1927 season. He received 32 votes, while his closest rival, Clifford Greene received 22. Coates and Reed, received 18 and 16 votes for third and fourth honors, respectively. Garrison, will be presented with a silver loving cup at the beginning of the next baseball season. SEMINARY WINS FROM ST. PAUL LAWRENCEVILLE, Va.—With the Washington trio of Davis, Fowler and Henderson starring, Coach Hurt's Virginia Seminary eleven triumphed over the already much-triumphed-over St. Paul squad here last Saturday by the score of 36-7. Both teams used the forward pass to much advantage. St. Paul completed 6 heaves of 10 tries and Seminary was successful in 5 of her 9 throws. Seminary St. Paul Fowler . . . L.E. . . . Goode Jeffres . . . L.T. Williams(C) Taylor . . . L.G. . . Jones Walker(C) Center . . . Blunt Tucker . . . R.G. . . Coleman Raney . . . R.T. Williamson Henderson . . R.E. Nelson Davis . . . Q.B. . . Baker Bates . . . L.B. . . Connor Watson . . . R.B. . . Smith Bradley . . F.B. . . Toliver Touchdowns: St. Paul—Smith. Virginia Seminary—Watson, 3; Henderson, Raney, Fowler. "Tiger" Flower s Takes the Final Count, Dies (Continued from page 1) back to the operating room where he failed to rally. Blows received in some of his 150 fights caused the growth which necessitated the operation. Dr. W. J. Fralick, at whose hospital Flowers died, explained that the frontal bone had been fractured, making necessary the removal of loose bone fragments and osteo-plastic deposit. Utters Prayer When he walked into the operating room Wednesday afternoon, Flowers wore the famous "Tiger" bathrobe that has appeared in rings all over the country. After a few breaths of ether he murmured his last words, a prayer: "If I should die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take." Flowers was one of the most amazing boxers in the history of pugilism. In the ring the sheer fury of his attack had earned for him the title of "Tiger," while in his every-day life, his gentleness and piety caused him to be a church deacon. He was one of the three left-handed boxers ever to win the championship at any weight. Al McCoy and Johnny Wilson, also The Remarkable Influence of a Doctor's Prescription After Years of Cruel Disappointment You Can Try it Free Hundreds of married women, childless for years, audibly find themselves in a state of the most bizarre anticipation due to the influence of a doctor's most wonderful prescription, Mrs. Annie M. Middleton, Gloucester, N.Y., write: "I know just what Dr. Elders' prescription can do as I had longed for a baby and two years ago I took a six weeks' treatment and now we have a fine baby boy. He is eighteen months old. I haven't words to express how much this medicine has done for me." Every married couple who really want children should at once write to the doctor and get a free trial of this prescription together with his invaluable book of instruction. For your convenience fill out the coupon and mail it today. PRESCRIPTION COUPON Dr. H. Will Elders 548-A Ballinger Bldg. St. Joseph, Mo. Please send me a free trial of your treatment for Sterility and Instruction on how to use it. I enclose 10c for postage and packing. Name St. Address or E.F.D. City State south-paws who gained titles. Boxing experts claim that the "Tiger" was one of the fairest and cleanest fighters who ever have stepped into the ring. He abhored clinching, and never held on if he could help it. Being lefthanded, his natural fightin' position was a near-crouch with the right foot forward. This permitted him to use the full force of his body in delivering a left hook, left jolt or left cross. The left hook was his most formidable blow. Claims Many Knockouts Speed and cleverness won most of his fights. However, from 1918 until 1927 he had won 47 of his 131 heats by knockouts. He gained decisions in 52 fights, was knocked out eight times, lost three decisions, fought two draws and engaged in 19 no-decision bouts prior to 1927. Flowers won the middleweight Pullman man Dilemma Overhood filed its petition to investigate the fines and tipping system of the Pullman Commerstate Commerce Commission, the Pullman that the Commission had no jurisdiction, of the Government, the United States Medi- up to handle such matters. Think of if! g that it is now facing a general expose by the Commission, seeks to hide behind theiation Board, the very Board which it ar- flatly refused to abide by when it recom- oment of the dispute between the Brotherhood company. Since the United States Medi- tion over wage questions, why doesn't the obey its recommendations? The reason is States Mediation Board cannot compel the to arbitrate, but the Interstate Commerce mandatory powers over the rates of the Pull- all other carriers. The Company knows that abide by the decisions of the Commission, and excuse to avoid an investigation. nor the public will be deceived by the evasive company. The Company cannot fool all of the time. ma of the Company is that the Brotherhood's to raise the wages of the porters, and the rate because it cannot prevent the Brother- the credit for the increase, and should the refuse to raise the wages, it will meet with of an enraged and informed public. So the is between the Devil and the Deep Sea.ion, it has instituted a brutal, bullying, brow- of intimidation with a view to compelling the bankrupt Company Union and sign bogus actions against the porters' interests. save the Plan. It is dead and the Brotherhood now giving banquets through its discredited. Tom porters with the old slave master's be- d a Negro, then you can rob him and get him fi- ce. But even banquet feeds can't defeat the in the Company will soon learn this. Overhood man resolve to hold the standard high never let it touch the ground. And, Brethren, you, remember that a quitter never wins and itss. The Company is nearing the end of its brotherhood marches proudly toward victory. Every man function 100 per cent by paying his ion and attending the meetings. Keep your eat things are likely to break any day. Be because is just and win you must, if you fight. Pullman money cannot defeat you, because IS NOT FOR SALE! VICTORY! Pullman Dilemma When the Brotherhood filed rates, finances, wages and tips pany with the Interstate Company answered that the since another arm of the Govation Board, was set up to hail The Company seeing that it is an investigation by the Comm United States Mediation Board rogantly defied and flatly re-famed the arbitration of the and the Pullman Company. S Board has jurisdiction over w Pullman Company obey its re that the United States Med Pullman Company to arbitrate Commission has mandatory pman Company and all other ca it is compelled to abide by the hence it seeks an excuse to av But the porters nor the pub tricks of the Company. The people all of the time. The other dilemma of the C fight is driving it to raise the Company is desperate because hood from getting the credit Company try to refuse to rai the rising wrath of an enrag Pullman Company is between Thus, in desperation, it has beating campaign of intimidation men to vote for the bankrup petitions and statements again But this won't save the Plan is burying it. The Company is now giving hand-picked. Uncle Tom portel lief that if you feed a Negro, to sign away his life. But even Brotherhood. Even the Comp Let every Brotherhood man in the breeze and never let it again let me say to you, remen a winner never quits. The C ropes, while the Brotherhood Let each and every man fundes and subscription and att ears open, for great things as assured that your cause is just and keep the faith. Pullman your Organization IS NOT FORWARD TO VICTORY! But the porters nor the public will be deceived by the evasive tricks of the Company. The Company cannot fool all of the people all of the time. The other dilemma of the Company is that the Brotherhood's fight is driving it to raise the wages of the porters, and the Company is desperate because it cannot prevent the Brotherhood from getting the credit for the increase, and should the Company try to refuse to raise the wages, it will meet with the rising wrath of an enraged and informed public. So the Pullman Company is between the Devil and the Deep Sea. Thus, in desperation, it has instituted a brutal, bullying, brow-beating campaign of intimidation with a view to compelling the men to vote for the bankrupt Company Union and sign bogus petitions and statements against the porters' interests. But this won't save the Plan. It is dead and the Brotherhood is burying it. The Company is now giving banquets through its discredited, hand-picked, Uncle Tom porters with the old slave master's belief that if you feed a Negro, then you can rob him and get him to sign away his life. But even banquet feeds can't defeat the Brotherhood. Even the Company will soon learn this. Let every Brotherhood man resolve to hold the standard high in the breeze and never let it touch the ground. And, Brethren, again let me say to you, remember that a quitter never wins and a winner never quits. The Company is nearing the end of its ropes, while the Brotherhood marches proudly toward victory. Let each and every man function 100 per cent by paying his dues and subscription and attending the meetings. Keep your ears open, for great things are likely to break any day. Be assured that your cause is just and win you must, if you fight and keep the faith. Pullman money cannot defeat you, because your Organization IS NOT FOR SALE! FORWARD TO VICTORY! Your faithful servant, A. PHILIP RANDOLPH, General Organizer NATIONAL LECTURER NATIONAL NATIONAL LECTURER Mrs. Lelia Williams Bankett, who was officially connected with the Independent Order of St. Luke for more than twenty-four years, is now serving in the official capacity of National Lecturer for the National Ideal Benefit Society, a fraternal organization, headed by Mr. A. W. Holmes, Supreme Master, with headquarters at 210 East Clay Street, Richmond, Virginia. Mrs. Bankett finished her Commercial Training at Smith's Business College, Lynchburg, Virginia, in 1902. She taught stenography and typewriting, successfully, in the Armstrong Night High School, Richmond, Virginia, for more than four years, being one of the first instructors to teach the course. She is one of the few women of Richmond chosen by the Upsilon Omega Chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority as one of its patronesses and is vice-president of her club. In her newly chosen field, the citizens of her home-town have pledged and are giving their loyal support. This has already been demonstrated in her first effort in organizing a new lodge of the National Ideal Benefit Society, which consisted of eighty members, gathered in two weeks. It is composed of some of the leading business and professional men and women. JOSEPH S. CAFE Open BRAVES' All Night day from 6 p.m. to 12 noon the next day Dinner, starting at 11:30 every night -Opp. Gov't Printing Office. Rooms for Rent Roast Philadelphia Capon, Prime Ribs of umb, Roast Loin of Pork, Green Peas in d Rice, Rice Custard, Pudding. and Duck, Chicken al a King, villed Hard Shelled Crabs Private Dining Room is Now Next Door Phone JOSEPH S. Franklin 3992 GRAVES' Hot Bread every day from 6 Big Midnight Dinner, start 16 & 18 G St., N.W.—Opp. Gov't Special for Sunday: Roast Phil Heef, Spring Lamb, Roast L Cream, Steamed Rice, Rice Long Island Duck, Deviled Hard Our New Private Dining Phone Franklin 3992 JOSEPH S. CAFE GRAVES' Open 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. Long Island Duck, Chicken al a King, Deviled Hard Shelled Crabs Our New Private Dining Room is Now Next Door Claims Many Knockouts Dear Brethren: 1. NINE title from Harry Greb at Madison Square Garden on February 25, 1926, after 15 rounds of fighting. He successfully defended the title against Greb on August 19, 1926, and lost it to Mickey Walker on December 3 in the same year. Greb, incidentally, died a year or more under much the same circumstances as Flowers. Flowers was 32 years old. He is survived by a widow and one child. PAYS $60 ALIMONY Chief Justice Walter L. McCoy last Friday ordered Herbert W. Brown to pay Mrs. Lillie B. Brown, his wife, $60 a month for her support and their two children, John Herbert and Lenora Elizabeth Brown. Mrs. Brown was represented by Attorney William O. Davis. Mrs. It is the desire of Mrs. Bankett to thank her friends far and near for the loyal support given her at all times and on every occasion and invites their cooperation in her new field of endeavor. She may be communicated with by writing to the headquarters: 210 East Clay Street, Richmond, Virginia.