Washington Tribune
Friday, April 27, 1928
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
Heroic Rescue Made in $10,000 U St. Fire
FACULTY CENSORSHIP OF HILLTOP ORDERED BY PRES. JOHNSON
FIRST
in
Advertising
and
Circulation
Vol. XII, No. 44
Hero
FACULTY CER
HILLTOP O
PRES. J
By Samuel Lacy
A committee of four students, named by the Howard University Student Council, last week, went before the Faculty Discipline Committee in defense of Walker H. Jordon, a student, who was summoned to appear before the teachers, and give reason for his authority of an article which appeared in The Hillop, a student publication, of April 11.
Jordon's article, under the caption, "Just Rumor?" was in the form of a suggestion that the circulation of a bit of scandal involving several professors was not merely rumor, but as the adage goes perhaps "more truth than poetry."
Teachers Aroused
The charges of the youth and his convictions served to arouse theire of the faculty, and although no particular professor was named, an investigation was begun. On April 14, Jordan was taken before the disciplinarians, and a demand was made of Jordan, that he produce the names of the teachers he alluded to and the nature of the charges against them. This he did with the understanding that what information he gave the committee was not to be divulged.
The Committee
Last Monday, Jordon was again requested to appear before the committee of teachers, which includes Porfe_sor Frank Coleman, chairman; V. C. Williams, J. H. Jones, F. C. Wilkinson, W. E. West and Dean of Women Lucy D. Slowe.
Meanwhile the Student Council had been busy, and when Jordon reported at 3 o'clock Monday afternoon for the "airing," he was accompanied by four representatives of the Council, Gladys Jamison, James F. Goodwin, Robert J. Mance, and William H. Hopkins.
The developments of that meeting: have remained "on the shelf" No, one but those involved actually know what happened. It is presumed, however, that the teachers were advised that the Council is whole heartedly in support of the Jordon article, and that the student body itself is soured on any professor who promises an "A" scholastic rating to young women of the school in return for their acceptance of his attentions.
The Hilltop Muzzling
An attempt to muzzle The Hilltop was made soon after the article appeared. President Mordecai W. Johnson appointed three faculty members as a committee of censors to pass on all news before (Continued on page 2)
STATEMENT OF NATION'L BENEFIT SETS RECORD
The National Benefit Life Insurance Company of this city is the largest business owned and operated by Negroes in the world, according to the annual statement made public this week by the company.
The statement marks the close of the twenty-ninth year of the company's existence. It shows total assets of $5,839,198.62 with insurance in force aggregating $73,897,069; cash in bank is given at $513,863.85; real estate owned by the company is listed at $1,138,272.53; the legal reserve on policies put aside by the company is $4,526,132.
During the year of 1927 the company collected as premium income, $3,418,419.25. During this same period, $39,183,998 in new business was put in force.
The figures presented in the report represent an epoch-making achievement for Negro business. According to a statement made by R. H. Rutherford, president, and S. W. Rutherford, secretary-manager, "no such reservoir of financial resources has ever been before at the disposal of any Negro corporation or of the race.
"It is a dramatic story," says Mr. Rutherford, "of the realization of the ideals of the founder and of his associate officers." Contuing he said, "Negro dollars flowing through Negro business channels will solve for us in the future, as it has solved for all other races, the question of economic advancement."
The National Benefit is licensed to do business in twenty-six states.
Read the advertisements in this paper, they offer many good bargains.
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
Oic Res
ENSORSHIP OF
ORDERED BY
JOHNSON
NSORSHIP OF RDERED BY OHNSON
DARROW PRAISES NEGRO,RIDICULES THE CHURCH
By Louis R. Lautier
Painting a dark picture of the lot of the Negro in America, Clarence Darrow, noted criminal lawyer and champion of civil liberties, in an open-air speech in the pavilion at Suburban Gardens last Sunday declared that the Negro himself must carry on the fight for equality. He predicted success in the end.
The doors of Washington churches had been barred to Mr. Darrow because of his atheism. He struck back in his speech by criticising preachers for their selfishness.
He ridiculed the idea of the existence of a god. If there is a god, he said, he must be white because he witnessed all the sorrow and suffering of black people and did nothing about it.
Bishop John A. Hurst of the A. M. E. Church, who was present, left before Mr. Darrow had concluded. In a statement issued by Neval H. Thomas, he stated that Bishop Hurst told him before the meeting began that he could not remain through the entire meeting because of other engagements. For this reason he sat in the audience so he could leave without molesting the speaker. The daily papers carried stories giving the impression that the bishop left because of what Mr. Darrow said. Mr. Thomas denied this.
Praises N. A. A. C. P.
He urged the colored people to support their institutions. He commended to them the work of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. He praised the late Booker T. Washington and Paul Lawrence Dunbar. He also praised Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, James Weldon Johnson, Countee Cullen and Langston Hughes.
Mr. Darrow was introduced by Nevel H. Thomas, president of the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
There were no devotional exercises at the beginning nor bending at the close. The audience sang "America." Mr. Darrow re-raised seated. Miss Mary P. Burrill read "Abou Ben Adhem." The introduction of Mr. Darrow followed.
A misty rain during the day kept the crowd away. Only 500 persons heard Mr. Darrow speak. They sat on wooden benches without backs which had been provided for this occasion.
EXCERPTS FROM DARROW'S ADDRESS
"Of course, I am aware that the preachers, who not only try to keep the people in midnight but try to take them there, have raised some objections. That is all right. I do not blame them. They are getting a living. They do not want any money to get away from the church, and if the people are willing to follow them and let them put it over, it is none of my business."
God
"If there is a god, he saw the first slave ship come across the water and every other one. He knew all about it. You cannot give him any information. There is nothing I can tell him or nothing that the preachers can tell him that will give him any information. He has witnessed all the sufferings of blacks as well as other people. He has seen you dyin' between the decks on the ocean while you were coming to a land of slavery, not to a land of freedom. He has seen the race suffering for 300 years as slaves in America. He has seen them hanged on scaffolds and on trees and burned at the stake, and he did not have anything 'to say about it. He did not seem to care.
"If preaching and praying would help you, you would have had your rights long years ago. Talk about the preachers telling God something, I do not think there is any of them, black or white, intelligent enough to tell Him anything."
used "Talk about their having any in- tes. (Continued on page 4)
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Washington Tribune
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1928
EXAMS FOR PROMOTION OF TEACHERS ANNOUNCED
The board of education has announced that examinations for promotion of teachers to Group B or Group 5 salaries will be held May 5, at Dunbar High School. Applications and evidence of eligibility must be filled by 3 p.m., April 28.
On June 20, candidates making at least 700 credits out of a total of 1000, will be certified to the Board of Education in separate lists of eligibles by each board of examiners concerned in the order of rank under the appropriate salary classification. The ratings thus obtained will be valid for two years. Promotions will be made in the order of rank, regardless of present salary classification.
MAN PLEADS OWN ASSAULT CASE AND WINS
Pleading his own case before Judge Robert E. Mattingly, in United States Branch Police Court. Wednesday, Samuel Jennings, 411 O street, northwest, completely shattered alleged evidence that he had assaulted Amy Wright, 1023 Fourth street, northwest, Tuesday night.
Mrs. Wright took the stand against Jennings, an employee of Kann's Department Store, and charged that the man was one whom she believed had attempted on several occasions to make a "date" with her. These attempts which were made by phone calls, became so numerous and bother some, Mrs. Wright declared, that she notified police headquarters.
Tuesday night, when one of the calls came, two detectives of the second precinct were at the woman's house. They advised her to make the engagement and go through with it. She did. Leaving her home on Fourth street, Mrs. Wright alleged that Jennings followed her to First and M streets, where the meeting was to take place.
When she stopped at the corner, Mrs. Wright declared, Jennings called out something about her being a "police pimp", and threw a brick at her. The missile, according to the woman, struck her on the arm, and then a bottle thrown by Jennings hit her.
Dver Testifies
Officer Dyer, plain-colthes man, called as a witness, testified that he actually saw Jennings, from his position in a nearby doorway, approach Mrs. Wright and begin pummeling her with an object which he held in his hand.
Jennings brought out that he was a working man of good standing at his place of employment, and that he had five children of whom he was sole support. He asked why he should deliberately attack a woman whom he had never seen nor spoken to before in his life.
Jennings also called attention to the fact that the testimony was conflicting. The policeman declared that Jennings had approached Mrs. Wright by crossing the street from the direction of the triangle at First and M, and that he began pummelling the woman with a brick held in his hand. The complainant said that Jennings had followed her down Fourth street, and had thrown the brick.
Judge Mattingly took his personal bond.
TEACHERS HEAR CHICAGO
EDUCATOR
Last Thursday evening, the teachers and officers of the local colored public schools listened to W. W. Charters of the school of education of the University of Chicago, lecture on "Ideals in curriculum building." Another idea of modern curricula is that students must be given work in accordance with their ability; that the bright pupils must be caused to do more, the average pupils to carry the minimum load and the less gifted pupils be allowed to follow such a course as will enable them to succeed. Leading cities are publishing curricula in loose leaf form so that they may be changed to meet changing conditions. For the past fifteen years Washington colored schools have been doing all the things suggested by Professor Charters, except publishing loose leaf courses of study. The teachers and officers were, however, pleased to have their own findings confirmed by such an au thority as the lecturer.
PERRY W. HOWARD SCORES VICTORY OVER LILY WHITES IN MISSISSIPPI
"If the Zion denomination in other cities had made the progress it has made in Washington during the past four years, it would be one of the richest bodies in America," said S. M. Dudley, church extension secretary of the Zion connection.
"The growth in other cities, however," continued Mr. Dudley,
S. M. DUDLEY, who has been instrumental in the purchase of church property.
church property.
"has been phenomenal." Mr. Dudley is closing his report for the year, preparatory to presenting it to the general conference which meets in St. Louis, Mo., next week.
S. M. Dudley is closing his first term in office as church extension secretary, to which he was elected at the last general conference. Upon being elected he immediately gave up his lucrative law practice here and devoted his entire time to rehabilitating the church property.
Through his efforts the local Zion church has secured one of the finest pieces of property owned by any church in this city. About three years ago he arranged and put through a deal whereby his connection purchased the Windsor Apartment house at 1425 T street, northwest. This is a seven-story modern apartment building. It now houses two of the church departments, the office of the missionary secretary and the office of the church extension secretary.
Among the notable achievements of Mr. Dudley during his four years of service are the saving of the following churches: Walters A.M.E. Zion Church, Chicago, Ill.; St. Matthews Church, Chicago, Ill.; and churches at Jacksonville, Fla. Pine Bluff Ark., Oklahoma City, and at other places.
In Washington through the efforts of Mr. Dudley, practically every Zion church has increased its property holdings during the past four years. Metropolitan John Wesley, Union Wesley and Trinity have now property valued more than $600,000. The valuation of property owned by the entire church in this city is estimated at nearly a million dollars.
At the request of the Board of Bishops, Mr. Dudley was delegated to collect the statistics of every church in the denomination for the United States Census Bureau. This work included the membership—children and adults; the value of each church; the debt on each church; the value of each church parsonage; the debt on each parsonage; the amount raised and expended by each church, and the number of officers, teachers and scholars in each Sunday school.
Mr. Dudley is a candidate for re-election at the general conference. He is making his fight on his record. Mr. Dudley was born in Alabama and has been a member of the Zion church all of his life. He is a trustee of John Wesley church of this city; a member of the board of management of the Y.M.C.A.; national treasurer of the U.M.C.A.; national Order of Helpers; a member of the District Bar, and a member of the Mu-So-Lit Club.
JACKSON, Miss., April 27.—Having found a loop-hole in the injunction restraining them from meeting, the Republican organization, headed by Perry W. Howard, national committeeman for Mississippi, held its state convention here on April 18, and elected a "black and tan" delegation to the Republican national convention, which meets in Kansas City, Mo., June 12. Six of the twelve delegates elected are colored.
The delegation will go to the national convention uninstructed. Contrary to expectations, the convention failed to instruct its delegates to vote for Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover for the Republican nomination for President. The failure to instruct the delegation for Hoover is believed to be an indication that the Secretary of Commerce may lose Mississippi's twelve votes which have been credited to him in advance of the convention. Whether these delegates will vote for Hoover will depend upon his attitude in the "lily white" fight which has been more intense in this state than in any other.
Hoover, who is said to be on friendly terms with the "lily whites" in this state, must reject the "lily white" support and declare his approval of the "black and tan" Republicans. Otherwise Mississippi's twelve delegates may support former Governor Frank O. Lowen.
Perry W. Howard
The convention instructed its delegates to vote for the re-election of Perry W. Howard as national committeeman and Mrs. Mary C. Booze, of Mound Bayou, as national committeewoman.
Resolutions were adopted praising the administration of President Coolidge and the handling of party affairs by the national committeeman and national committeewoman.
Mr. Howard addressed the convention at length. He attacked the "illy whites" for attempting to set up in Mississippi a white Republican party. He predicted the re-
FUNERAL SERVICES HELD FOR GRAVES, CAFEMAN
FUNERAL SERVICES HELD FOR GRAVES, CAFEMAN
Funeral services for Joseph S. Graves, prominent local cafe owner, were held Sunday from the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church. Rev. Walter H. Brooks, pastor.
JOSEPH S. GRAVES, local cafe owner, who died last week.
in delivering the eulogy characterized Mr. Graves as a leader in his field, and as a gentleman. He spoke of the many friendships Mr. Graves had gained while operating Grave's Cafe, at 20 G street, northwest.
Born in Caswell County, N.C., Mr. Graves came to Washington in the late nineties and received an appointment in the Government Printing Office. After fifteen years of government service, Mr. Graves resigned and opened the business, which in the span of its fourteen years of existence has proven one of the most progressive enterprises in the city.
Mr. Graves was a member of the Banneker and Crispus Attucks Relief Associations.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Minnie L. Graves; one son, John A.; one brother, Wesley H. Jones, and two grandchildren, Sterling and Berenice Robinson.
A
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TWO BURNED AS GARDENSTO OPEN CAR BLAZES AT WITH NEW DRESS GAS STATION AND MANAGEMT'T
A report from Freedman's Hospital physicians, Wednesday, indicate that Jesse and Jennie Thompson, husband and wife who were severely burned when their automobile caught fire in front of a gasoline filling station at 306 Rhode Island avenue, last Saturday night, at 8:30 o'clock, stand fair chances of recovering.
While Mr. and Mrs. Thompson, who live at 303 R street, northwest, were sitting in their car waiting for the gasoline tank to be filled, it burst into flame. So quickly did the fire spread that it had ignited the whole car before the man and his wife could get out of it. Mrs. Thompson was burned about the face, arms and body, while her husband suffered burning of his feet and hands.
The flames spread to a nearby automobile, but with the arrival of firemen the blaze was extinguished before it reached the station gas tanks. The origin of the fire, police say, came from a lighted cigarette, but to date, the person who held the cigarette or who was responsible for its presence has not been revealed.
Physicians told a Tribune reporter, Tuesday, that it was inadvisable to talk to the Tohmpsons, because of their conditions.
Mrs. Ora Robinson, 629 T street, northwest, who was operating a passing auto at the time of the accident, carried Mr. and Mrs. Thompson to Freedman's.
JOHN BUTLER MAY BE FREED
George Rhoulac, who confessed to committing the crime for which another man, John Butler, was convicted and sentenced to 10 years, was himself sentenced to 10 years, by Justice Siddons in Criminal Court, last Saturday. Rhoulac confessed to the robbery of Philip Tepper, 4601 Hunt place, northwest, as the latter was leaving his garage on the night of April 7, 1927. The admission followed his arrest by police who were furnished with the information by his brother, Martin Luther Rhoulac, who is serving a life term for the murder of Thomas W. Gill, January 16, last. Steps have been taken by the District Attorney's office to have Butler released from prison.
Let our classified column rent that vacant room. Call Potomac 1667.
ET, N.W.
U Street Fire
Photo by Lacy, Tribune Staff Photographer
GARDENS TO OPEN
WITH NEW DRESS
AND MANAGEM'T
St.
Staff Photographer
TO OPEN
W DRESS
MAGEM'T
Suburban Gardens, in a new dress of white and red colors, together with many improvements on the grounds, will open for the season on Saturday evening, May 12, at 7 o'clock.
Many new and novel features will be introduced with this season's policy. The midway has been cleared of all trees, enlarging the promenade and free-act space. Hundreds of comfortable benches have been added and the picnic grove, as well as the parking space, have been more than doubled in size.
Grounds to be Illuminated
Large 2000-watt flood lights have been installed in the midway, giving sufficient light for one to bring an evening paper and sit in the cool to read.
The children's playgrounds will be well lighted too, so that parents may bring them along in the evenings as well as during the day.
Among the other new features this year will be free open-air attractions, changing every week throughout the season, and music on the grounds during the entire evening, and free parking space.
New and more inviting games will be introduced. Every stand will give away different, as well as useful, premiums to all who play.
For every play, a coupon will be given, which will be redeemable at the park premium store on the way out, for valuable articles.
Admission on Pavilion Reduced
The admission on the pavilion has been reduced to 35 cents. The orchestras playing on the pavilion will be changed from time to time. All drinks and food stuffs will be sold at the popular city prices. It is hoped to have railway busses at the gate of the park at closing time to take passengers to the city, thus relieving the congestion at the railway station. The busses, if used, will cover certain routes, returning patrons through the city.
New Ball Park
A spacious enclosed baseball park is being planned on the company's ground just east of the park. It is hoped that this park will be ready for use on Decora-
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IN
WASHINGTON
nearly everybody
reads the
TRIBUNE
PRICE FIVE CENTS
CLUB BOHEME IS COMPLETE RUIN; STORESDAMAGED
Fire of an undetermined origin, Thursday morning about 11:30, did nearly $10,000 damage to the Lewis Building, 2001 11th street, northwest. So quickly did the smoke and fire envelop the building, that nearly all of the tenants who were on the second and third floors had to be rescued by the fire department.
Simeon Cunningham of 1527 12th street, Assistant Secretary-Manager of the Federal Life Insurance Company, did heroic work in getting the employees of his company out of the building. All of them were on the third floor. Their means of escape was cut off by the smoke and fire which had enveloped the halls and stairway.
Excited and screaming, the women were prevented from going into the halls where they were sure to be killed, by Mr. Cunningham who kept them at the windows and prevented them from leaping out, despite the stifling smoke, until a fire ladder was put up to the window and firemen rescued them, Mr. Cunningham, at the risk of his own life, then made a further inspection of the third floor to determine if any one was still there, before leaving the building himself.
When he was brought out he was rushed to the hospital where after treatment he was dismissed.
Those in the Federal Life office were: Miss Victoris Johnson, 3311 Sherman avenue, northwest; Miss Marlena Hawkins, Morris road, southeast; Miss Gladys Duncan, 3214 Sherman avenue, northwest; and Miss E. J. Miller, 2545 Ontario road, northwest.
Others in Building
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo J. Collins, and Dr. V. S. Green, also on the third floor were rescued by the firemen while hanging from the window ledge. Dr. H. H. Early on the second floor was rescued from a window. A patient in his office was likewise rescued. Joel Blackwell on the second floor also had a narrow escape from the building.
The fire started in the basement of the Lewis Building which was occupied by the Night Club Boheme. How long it had been burning before being discovered could not be determined. However, when it was discovered, it had gained such a headway that when it broke through the door of the basement, within a few minutes the entire building was enveloped with smoke. The stairway leading both downstairs and upstairs caught and made escape through that means impossible. Three alarms were turned in. It was necessary for firemen to don gas masks ni order
(Continued on page 2)
ZION DELEGATES START
SAT. FOR ST. LOUIS
The first contigent of delegates general officers and visitors to the general conference of the A.M.E Zion Church will leave Washington for St. Louis, Saturday afternoon. The delegation will be headed by Rev. W. W. Matthews, Missionary Secretary of the A.M.E Zion Church. Accompanying Dr. Matthews will be the missionary workers and delegates from the foreign fields. There are fourteen from Africa and two from the West Indies. Arrangements have been made with the Pennsylvania Railroad Company to operate extra sleeping cars from New York, leaving New York, Saturday morning, April 28. The Pennsylvania Company will also carry an extra diner in which they will serve a special dollar dinner.
A Second Group
The second Washington group will leave Monday on the "General Conference Special Train," This delegation will be headed by Bishop E. D. W. Jones of this city. This train will be made up in New York and will pick up delegates all the way down. Here the Virginia delegation will join the special train.
Others who will go from Washington are: Mrs. Ida V. Smith, Attorney S. M. Dudley, Rev. E. B. Watson, Rev. H. J. T. Medford, Rev. C. C. Williams, Rev. W. D. Battle, Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Tucker, Rev. F. R. Killingsworth, A. G. Turner, F. C. Johnson, Rev. and Mrs. W. A. Deane, Rev. and Mrs. D. C. Pope and Rev. Henrietta Peters
ee e t
si - Mlashingtone Tribune
i Published Weekly at Washington. D.C. by
wy Liberal re Wasa eT RISE BuBLank
Progeeagites Be 0 ame See Ee rien. ter
SOgtOae Entered a seconi-clasa ‘matin daly 622, i the
Independent, Subscription Rates: One Year, $2.50: Six Months,
fe ee oe
es yn aA Co Ghat Ne or Li" Anas,
TEN
THAT OUR TWO BANKS, IN-
DUSTRIAL AN PRUDENTIAL,
show only steady growth under con-
servative management is due to the
fact that Washington is not in-
dustrial and that our wage earners
and salaried classes draw compara-
fively low pay. Banks buy and
fell credits, but the people must
have surplus to deposit and must
Want to use loans for productive
enterprises, in order to supply the
banks with customers. We need.to
derm the “bank habit.”
ANT AND ROTEL PROPRIE-
‘TOR, literally died in his chair, one
eye open, one closed in_ slecp,
Watching business. That kind vf
devotion is a form of inefficiency;
business must be managed to run
itself under deleg ited authority.
The problem of our business men,
however, is to find people capable
of being selected to act as dele-
gates,
DID THE HAMPTON SINGERS
REACH THE HEART OF PRES!-
DENT COOLIDGE and make him
feel that people like that were
‘American citizens in every fibre of
their being? We wonder! Secre-
tary Hoover applauded the soloists
until he got an encore, thus indi-
cating by a little thing that he
thinks and acts from within out-
ward.
a ee ne ee
Taking our history in large
Sweeps, it appears that we have
had the kind of man we needed
‘when we needed him. It may be
that democracy is capable of se-
lecting the type of men called for
by by the circumstances, Dis-
regarding the real powers at work
in the making of presidents, the
facts are that those powers are
able to work because they are
themselves developed by the condi-
tions which obtain in the nation,
The lindowners selected and
maintained Washington, Jackson
was called to be executive by the
“independent commoners whom he
represented, when the rival poli-
tical leaders could not compromise.
At that time, the iridividual states
had become so powerful through
migration and industry, that they
were able to defy the slowly de-
yeloping federal government. Jack-
son happened to be the only man
im America, who by his service in
the army, visualized the Union
and defied and challenged those
who would have flouted it,
Lincoln as a lawyer at a time
when the rules of law were being
fixed in the lives of the people, and
with a keen sense of the limits and
significance of property rights,
saw most clearly the sophistry in
the reasoning of Justice Taney in
the Dred Scott decision, and the
threat to national sovereignty in
the attack on Fort Sumter.
‘The honesty of Grover Cleveland
made it impossible for him to com- |
promise on any form of money less
than the best, and upon any fed-
eral procedure other than legally
right.
Roosevelt, with a sensitive social
conscience, Jeft and expressed the
unspoken wishes of the people
grown to purpose and national
destiny, while Woodrow Wilson’
acted as head of the nation of his
dreams as he wrote and taught)
American history.
Today, the complexity of the re-
lations of this country, the de-
pendence of all the world upon it,
the magnitude of its resources, the
rapidity of its exchanges and the
ease with which the economic maze
may outgear the entire national
enterprise, demand an engineer.
Herbert Hoover may not be chosen
to be president, but the destiny of
the presidency hints that it is both
wise and necessary to have a man
of his training and experience, at
least until the executive control of
the nation is modified to meet its
unprecendented development.
CLARENCE DARROW ON
PRAYER AND THE
CHURCH
‘That Mr, Darrow is an able
Jawyer, « humanitarian and a cou-
Fageous thinker, brooks no denial,
Dut when he attempts, even with
the best possible motive, to advise
the Negro to pay less attention to
prayer and the church, he is wrong.
Ap the first place, Mr. Darrow
joses sight of the fact that the
has been the Negro’s sole
light and civilizer for a long
That the church has not
that whole bill in every par-
ticular is due to the fact that it is
a humanly administered institu-
tion, and it has been compelled to
use what material it could get—
some of it pretty poor. But the
church has given the Negro the
ideas by which he could guide him-
self amidst the complexities of a
situation for which he had no
guide; it gave him his music; it
gave him his social bonds; it gave
him his language, and it.gave him
the means by which he could edu-
cate himself and his children. in
some slight degree, before he had
schools Supported by public tax-
ation.
When, it comes to. denying the
efficacy of prayer, Mr. Darrow is
entirely out of his ken, and yet. as
a lawyer, he must have frequently
drawn-very. carefiliy his “prayers”
to the court in behalf of his
client.
‘There. is. something about the
personal relation between a. Ne-
gro and his spiritual hope, that
few. white men understand. Even
in Afriea, men who have spent
long years among the natives have
heen unable to clearly understand
the spiritual life of the Negro,
though they were aware of its
existence and potency.
It is no far stretch of the imag-
ination to find in the radio some
material basis for the possibility
of the efficacy of prayer. Surely,
if man by a few wires can gather
from the air the sounds of human
voices and musical instruments
thousands of miles away, hearing
clearly what they say together
with attendant noises, other men
are justified in believing that their
thoughts and voices sent out on
the air may reach to the very cen-
ter and heart of the universe and
be gathered in the Infinite.
In fact we may go further and
say that it is not too much to be-
lieve that voices and even thoughts
sent out into the world may achieve
their own results in the movements
which they creave and which must
register somewhere,
Careful study of the Lord's Pray-
er will reveal that it is designed
to produce confidence, and then to
lead the suppliant t0 labor to real:
ize in his own life and labors what
he prays for, or to find that it has
eventuated in a, result better even
than that he hoped to realize.
Mr. Darrow may be right ‘in
criticising our waste of money in
the church as an institution, but
the fact is, as yet, we do not real-
ize what an agency exists in the
church for that co-operative life—
economic, political, civie and social
—which we should live by reason
of our relation to the church as a
practical, tangible expression of
our belief in the brotherhood of
man and the fatherhood of God,
THE 14th, 15th AND 18th
AMENDMENTS
‘The second article in the series
of three from Liberty magazine on
the South's nullification of the 14th
and 15th amendments, and the de-
sire in the North to do the same
thing with the 18th, is, if anything
more explicit, than the first.
By an analysis of selected cases
brought by Negroes who had been
denied the right to vote in: elec-
tions in the South, the author finds
both specious.reasoning by the su-
perior courts of the Southern
states and by majority decisions
handed down by tho United States
Supreme Court, and outspoken de-
termination on the part. of the
South, through spokesmen like
Senator Carter Glass of Virginia,
to defy the North to enforce the
amendments.
Repeatedly, Negro defendants
have shown that they were denied
the right to vote or even to pay
the® poll tax prior to voting, solely
because of their race; yet the U. S.
Supreme Court has found suc heon-
duct, by adminisie-s of the laws of
the state, was not a denial-by the
state, and thet hence there was
nothing for that tribunal to decide.
Senator Glass ridicules the idea
of the intent of Congress to grant
the franchise to the Negro. It was
never intended, says he, that “brut-
Supreme Court has found such con-
rupt blacks not one per cent of
whom could pretend to read, should
dominate and control white su-
premacy through the ballot box.”
Seriator Glass" further put him-
self and the South on record as de-
fying Congress to emact the pen-
alty for placing restrictions upon
the ballot by changing the number
of Congressmen to agree with the
changes in qualified voters. It
‘would reduce the representation of
°
What Segregation
’ Costs the Negro
By Prof. % contact. with the consuming pub-
Social Schon, rmatrane Tech-|B,,We must, manulacte an
nical pie SO raw materials, in order to realize
juat people who wish to live,
and desire to live as well as pos-
sible, do not organize for a_de-
‘termined — and continuous fight
against, segregation in all phases
of public service, is difficult to un-
derstand, “One ‘reason why it is
impossible to get unanimous sup-
port for a fight against the vicious
practice which _ discriminates
against a person because of the
color of his skin, is that a few
businesses and professions have
prospered because of it. But the
‘time has come ‘when the effects of
‘scgregation must be thought
through and the gonéequences rec-
ognized.
It should be noted at the outset
that the segregation which pros-
pers the business’ and professional
People, in no way injures the ecorio-
mic success of the white man -who
Practices it. The businesses which
we patronize all get their supplics
of every kind from the white many
facturer and. distributor. _ From
the buildings and the materials of
their structure, ou down to the pa-
per in which the goods are en-
closed; from the paint for the
signs, to the books trom which the
business men learn and in which
they keep their records; from the
ink and paper of their letterheads,
to the fixtures’ for their offices and
banks, all are designed, manufac-
tured and sold by white men.
Negro business, so called, is but
a middle agency, often obliged to
add an additional cost ‘to enable it
to: realize any profit upon the
transaction. The Negro business
man carries all the risk of failure
and all the cost of doing business,
but he enjoys none of that profit
which flows to the entrepreneur,
«1 originator and manager of the
enterprise from the production of
tke raw materials to the sale of
gcods to the customer.
Not by reducing costs by mass
production or by ‘intelligent man-
agement, does the Negro make
profit, as profits are usually made,
but solely by acting as middle man
for manufacturers and distributors
who themselves opcrate by mass
production or efficient manage-
ment,
John Jones may seem to profit
because he is in Lusiness supplying
goods and services to Negroes, but
the race itself pays more for its
goods when Jones buys as a single
enterprise, and the buying power
of the racial group is not recog-
nized economically; that is, the
goods and services are supplied
primarily by white men who get
the major share of the profits.
Jones simply comes into direct
bom arith Ar RUAN FO SSUES GT
Northern states, said he, and wil
never be done. Congress alone-has
the power to remedy these condi-
tions, and Congress’ can. not he
punished for failing to. exercise
that. power. _
We would remind Senator Glass
that the failure of the South to
provide adequate schools and fa-
cilities for Negroes, is responsible
for many- of the shortcomings
which he notes in the Negroes he
describes; slavery is responsible
for others, and the denial. of op-
portunities to learn civil practices
by engaging in them will account
for the balance. All the blame is
to be placed at the doors of Sen-
ator Glass and his forbears and
fellow citizens.
Goaded into a frenzy bythe re.
minder that the abserce of police
power. in the federal, government
to enforce the 14th and 15th
amendments had been diametrically
opposed in giving the police power
to the federal government to en:
force the 18th amendment, Senator
Glass displayed his ‘unvarhishe¢
tyrrany and that despotic unfit
ness for any place in the delibera-
tions of. our government, by de.
claring:
“The people of the‘original thir
teen Southern states curse and de-
ride and spit upon. the Fifteentt
Amendment—and have no inten
tion of letting the Negro vote,”
“White supremacy ‘too precious
. thing to surrender for the. sake
of a theoretical justice tat would
Yet a brutish African deem him.
self the equal of white men and
women in Dixie.”
To a situation like this one
there is but one reaction, the Ne-
gro must form his cwn political
party, elect his own state and fed-
eral officers; and contest-the elec:
tion of every opponent especially
such an“one. as Senator Glass
who, we are informed, never. pre
sumed to meet’ the requirements
of the election laws of Virginia ir
the campaign. in which John Mitch.
ell, Jr a Negro, ran for senato
against Glass and Colonel Ander
son, a lily-white Republican.
No government can survive, hal
just and half unjost; the mere tet
ter of the law mak:s for lawless
ness, but the spirit of justice pros
‘pers a people and blesses then
with peace.
‘The supremacy of the white mai
over the entire globe is thrvatene:
when tyrants announce that colo
is a bar sinister to-equal rights
and that white justice is a shame
ful lie.
"HE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, . FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 19
produce, advertise and sell, even
raw materials, in order to realize
profit from business genius.
Negro Business Obliges
White Men a
One reason why undertakers,
druggists, barbers and lunch room
proprietors haye made the great-
est strides in numbers among us,
is that the kinds of services ren-
dered in such businesses’ demand
intimate contact with Negroes in
large numbers. The white man
has been known: to go so far as to
finance such businesses in order to
have the Negro sate him from di-
rect contact with the masses,
He doés not object to doing bust-
ness with a single Negro, but he
finds the reactions of many of
them annoying, their language
idioms peculiar, and his tendency
to resent their curt orders and an-
swers a possible excitement to. hos-
tile feelings. which may lose trade.
One reason why: the foreigner
has. been sucessful in.- business
among Negroes, is that he seldom.
resents the equality which the Ne-
gro feels.or assumes when spend-
ing his money. The foreigner,
himself, has no social yardstick
by which he: and his family are
measured, He leses no. easte: by
doing business with Negroes, as
the ‘native white man may. ‘His
children -will not be taunted °with
“your father keeps a N—— store,”
or some such epithet. ‘The foreign.
er ie aiming to make money and to
that end he subordinates all else.
It may be noticed that foreigners
who have families which’ attend
‘Segregated public ‘schools ‘tend to
sell their businesses when their
children reach’ their ‘teens, and to
move into “white” neighborhoods.
Other foreigners take their places,
usually more recent emigrants, or
those with younger children.
Race Pride Shou'd Demand
Negro Clerks
Any ‘careful consideration of
segregation in its effect upon the
economic life of the Negro would
lead the people to demand that
some of their girls and boys be
employed in. stores which enjoy
Negro patsohage, “Knowing, a1.ve
do, that the white man ges most
of the return from all Nogro busi-
ness, and that he dislikes doing.
business with Negroes, the wisa
reaction would be to demand that
he employ, Negro men and women
in those establishments where the
proprietor himself does not have
the contact, such as department
stores, but his employees are pow-
erless to protest.
Any observant buyer among Ne-
groes must have noticed that there
is always a certain white clerk in
the departments which he patron-
‘izes who makes a specialty of Ne-
gro customers. It may be that the
Negro is fooled or flattered by the
fact that that particular clerk “is
intimate or seeks him out when he
enters the department, but the fact
is, he is there for that Epo, and
to save the other clerks from the
annoyance.
Any visit to a woman's store
where. shoes, suits and children’s
wear are sold, or to a man’s store
where haberdashery, shoes, or
suits are sold, will serve to prove
this contention,
Even where clerks are working
on commission, there are white
clerks who will avoid seeing a col-
ored customer, or serving one, if
possible. People who wish to re-
move segregation should employ
some one to check up on the col-
ored buyers at the various depart-
ment stores in their cities, and on
the strength of the numbers and
the computed buying power, urge
upon the managemeuit the employ-
ment of colored clerks. Of course
they should follow that up with
an urge to the’ colored buyers to
ask for and to patronize that clerk,
thus they would get calls for other
clerks from rival business houses.
Failure to think segregation
through leads some people to cry
“Jim crow,” when they see or even
think of a colored clerk in a white
establishment, but the time has
ome when it should be driven
home that every penny paid to a
white clerk where it might be paid
to a colored clerk, is finding its
effects in starvation all along. the
line among colored people. It hurts
the colored hair drescer, the ‘colt
ored newspaper, the colored church,
the colored bank, the colored baby
‘as yet unborn and the self-respect
of the colored individual and of the
race.
The kind of segregation we must
learn’ to fight is enforced segrega-
tion. | It is the segregation which
puts us into a group and then gives
Us inferior services, goods, =.
opportunities and ' consideration
because we are in that black group.
__ Directly opposite to segregation
is race pride, and that we want to
foster. Every time we get the
sameor superior service from a
colored clerk, we should feel proud
for our race and of it. Every time
we make our dollar buy respect for
some member of the race, we
ought to feel’ proud that the econo=
mic buying power of the Negro is
being recognized. Not until we
come to feel more pride in tite fact
Shine ee ee Drie in the fect
KIDDIES’ CORNER
TRIBUNITE’S PLEDGE
1. I will never use the word
tigger
©. I will learn all ‘that T 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 Racr wherever I may hear
such slander.
4.1. d be proud that:l 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: |
FOR THE CHEWERS OF
BUM Be
(Qne of the most useless, and
disagreeable habits, is’ that ' of
chewing gum.’ It is very. annoy-
ing to those who have to listen to
you who chew. This little story
which appears in the current-issue
of “The Armstrong Torch” is very
timely —Ed.)
A GUMMY ESSAY
By Margucrite Taylor
One day last week, after I had
finished my lunch, I put one of my
indispensable sticks of . chewing-
gum in my mouth and began to
chew. The fifth -hour bell rang,
and, as 1 was going down the hall
I stopped a moment to. say some-
thing to a teacher. But I didn’t:
get very far, for the teacher inter-
rupted me: “What's that you have
in, your — mouth—chewing-gum?
How can you stand that big wad
in your mouth?” she asked. ‘You
ought to see yourself.” As I jour-
neyed gn, still chewing, I wondered
why some people, especially teach-
ers, did not like’ chewing-gum.
Sitting at a desk writing part
of my homework, and unconscious-
ly chewing my gum, I was startled
to hear someone say: “What are
you doing? Chewing gum?”
“Yes, ma'am,” I answered.
“Do ‘you. mean to tell me you
are sitting up in my room chewing
gum? -Have you ever stopped to
think how ugly you look chewing
gum? Don't you know that your
whole face: looks very ugly when
you are chewing? — Moreover,
school of all places is not the place
for gum chewing. You should
wait at. least unit! you are in the
privacy of your own room.”
I fidgeted in my chair and ‘n-
wardly wondered when the lee 2
was going to end. It mad> m2
feel ashamed and little, so’ that ‘I
was only too glad to deposit it in
the waste basket. And. I won-
dered if chewing-gum was really
worth my pennies.
I thought about it so much that
when I went to sleep, the first
thing that grabbed me, was a fe-
rocious stick of chewing-gum. ‘Then
chewing-gum. men began. to de:
scend upon’ me from all directions,
wielding gummy clubs and spears.
Screaming, I pulled myself free
and ran toward a dense forest in
ment. of public service has in it
competent, efficient Negroes, who
are not being paid proportionate
salaries. We make no protest;
possibly from envy anda feeling
that he ought to be satisfied,. but
the time has come when we should
feel a peg in the fact that some
Negro has been promoted. It re-
flects itself in your own salary and
value; Negroes are seen to. be
worth more, hence you are worth
more to your employer. “It should
mean more money all along the
Hine of the racta! lie. “Segregation
carried to its end, means starvation
in the event of an attack, with
our buying power unorganized.
Let Negroes who now: feel it
necessary. to wear and to have any-
thing they want and can get, come
to feel that they are obligated to
get rid of segregation. Let them
decide not to buy anything until
segregation is destroyed, and
watch segregation disappear.
‘The time has come when we call
for a show down! Have the Amer-
iean Negroes character strong
enough to refuse to enjoy person-
ally what every. other Negro may
not have? Have American: Ne-
groes sense enough to see that
they are keeping themselves at
low wages by not throwing all their
buying power into the hands of
Negro employees of white con-
cerns?
‘Will Negro churches buy and
build only through Negro archi-
tects and contractors?
‘Will Negro householders buy on-
Hy grout, thoes deslers ‘who employ
a Sherr Mt
Wi legroes patronize only
—_ nace where they vs
jegroes arge of work wi
they are competent to do?
‘Will Negroes demand that their
youth be employed in public serv-
ice for work other than as janitors
and messengers?
‘The buying power of the Negroes
in any city and above all in the
South where ‘they are in so great
Rumbers may be made" the lever
to destroy segregation. Race pride
gan offset segregation. No form of
eonsideratiqn which is at the end
where your money is taken, can be
considered as race equality; only
when you receive the consideration
that your buying power deserves in
your pay envelope, your profits and
your salaries, havé you the kind of
@quality which alone counts. for
American rights. The right to life,
liberty and happiness proceed from
‘and are based upon the right te
property juced by your labor or
purchased by. your pay.
Study: the economic phases of
segregation and discover that you
are being slowly staryed to death.
tending to lose myself therein. But
as my feet. touched the ground,
to my horror, T found ft tobe
great mass of sticky black gum.
‘The _ chewing-gum men — drew
closer; and, screaming for help, 1
grabbed‘ at a tree limb... and
it too was. gummy. Then the
chewing-gum men. fell upon me,
and I sank down, down, down, and
was about to be swallowed up in
the black gum, when J opened, my
qyes.and found myself.in . . -bed.
Shuddering, I resolved, .no more
chewing gum for me.
But my punishment was not
complete, for, as I sat in class
next day, trying to concentrate up-
on my lesson, I heard chew, gulp,
smack, smack, gulp, and all kinds
of gutteral sounds pouring in my
ear. I turned around, with much
disgust to find. one of’ my class-
mates chewing gum at a rate of
speed that would, put to shame the
speed of a high powered motor.
Herexpression. as, she’ opened
and .closed her lips .and exposed
her teeth and. gums with machiti-
like regularity, appeared suddenly
to me to be menacing and almost
hideous, so that. 1 _ instinctively
drew. back. I-longed to clap my
hands over. my. ears and plaster
my - gicl friend's mouth up with
apiece of that gum, but I’ man-
aged. to. live: through that period
with hope that I would neither see
nor<liear any, more chewing that
day.
‘Then; on, my. way to-my next
dass, T;aceidently- ran into a fel-
Jow-student and upon. looking. up
to excuse myself, I saw,a mouth~
ful of gum. Quickening my steps
1 entered my class room, . Another
student » turned around , to say
‘something, ard E felt. myself faint;
jng away. for he was chewing
am.’ “What is the matter?, You
feo kind o’ faint,” he said.
With an effort’ I pulled myself
together and answered, “Oh, noth-
ing.” But I resolved ‘then and
there “never no” chewing-gum for
me again. I had learned my les-
son; I realized how through my
careless gum-chewing habit I had
been making myself disgusting and
annoying to those around me.
A LINE OR TWO
Dear Editor: Just a line to say
hello to you,
Just a line’to say that I am true,
Just a line to say to you I know
You wonder why I do not write
no: more.
fell tlh Baltot, T must to you con-
fess
That-I feel just like a little pest,
Becatise I failed to write to you,
But’even then I still am true.
‘Your pal,
Pauline E. Rivers (14)
Dear Editor: Some time ago you
asked us-to send in letters. telling
you about our pets. “At that time
Ldid not have one. Now I have a
fine police dog. His name is Roy
Roy, an odd mame you say. At
first we called lim Royal, but my
baby sister calls him Roy Roy, and
so-do all of us now. He does not
know any tricks, He can open the
kitchen door to get in or out. He
knows when it is time to go out
at night. Just before mother and
father get, ready to close up the
house at night, Roy Roy is ab the
duor to wad bia deupd:tight: ia is
very kind and full of fun. He is
strong enough to push me down.
T wish that other children would
write and tell of their pets. I
wouldn't take anything in the world
for Roy Roy.
Joseph McK. White (10)
—Don't Say Nigger—
VACATION TIME
Dear Editor: Excuse the slang—
but it can’t be long now. Just sev-
eral more long weeks and then va-
cation time. Vacation time will
mean more to me this year than
ever before, because my parents
are going to Blue Ridge Summit,
Pa., this summer, and they are go-
ing to take me with them. I have
never‘been out of Washington, but,
oh, boy, it can't be long now.
Louis Carter (12)
THE VITAPHONE
Dear Editor: I) saw and heard
Al Jolson on the Vitaphone last
week ,and I heard Sissle and Blake,
two colored men, over the Vita-
phons this week. I was so proud
when I saw and heard them. Their
first selection was a war song. Mr.
Sissle recited part of the ‘song—
and it was fine. They did not have
their ot Gece They didn't
say anything about nigger, craps,
shlekens, watermelons, or vghotte
‘They really were good. And I am
sure that when ‘white people see
and hear them, that the race will
pee aero by what they do.
Iam so tired of our actors who
seem so ridiculous on the stage.
If Sissle and Blake had only not
ssid’“show”’ for “‘sure” and “am”
for “is’ they would-have been just
as funny, and they would not have
Poked fun’ at their own race. But
they were good.
T hope that you saw and heard
tham—Dut T know that you did.
Teressa C, Turner (15)
——Den’t Say Nigger—
"| JOHN WANTS TO ARGUE
Dear Editor: What about a con-
test with the boys" against the
girls? You always: spring some-
thing good on us, why not have a
contest of an essay where the boys
and girls compete against each
other? . Even when a’boy wins the
main prize he could give it to the
kil ‘who bad the beat essay for the
girls. Girls are never no trouble.
John Summers (13)
HIS PET
—Don't Say Nigge:
—Don't Say Niscer-
ae :
ca SALE!
We) yas
2) ‘TRUSSES and LA
ELECTRIC GOODS —
At Stores No. 2; 7th & E Sts., N.W.; and No. 7, 11th & G St., N.W. Only
Listed below are a few low prices’taken from our truss ant?
elastic goods departments. All other goods prices proportionately.
Lady and gentleman attendants at either store ready to be of service
to you. Satisfaction is guaranteed.
\ i RY oad $2.00 Linen Anklets
$2.00 Elastic Tradses 5 Pe en
$2.75 Elastic Trusses $2.00 Linen Knee
ee Caps.--..... $1.39
PIR Dee ete at 3 $3.50 Linen’ Leggins
$7.50 Single Trusses ‘ ee
$5.49 i. $4.00 Silk Garter
34.25 Single Steel ~~ i Stockings . ..$3.29
‘Trusses . .....$3.29. We A $4 Ki ‘a ela
Spel soy \ ach Babdare. 42.29
$5.00 Abdominal 4 $1.98 Crutches, pair
Belts. ....... .$3.98 ln $17
TIT Be
TL) 2) BPA
Vs SE ELEM
BA HT TRC ALES
Legh ivy EP fea}
“All Over Town” :
ee a Tia ote tis. sat Otel Sh ea SLs
PHONE, DECATUR 1376 PHONE, DECATUR 1376 |
Gaskins Auto Repairing |
Rear 309 T St. N.W.
Entrance on 3rd St., between T and U Sts.
We wish to thank our many customers for our success. We
are now able to overhaul your car, give you 8 to 6 months to pay.
Auto and Radio Battery service. We leave you a fully charged |
Radio Battery and recharge yours for $1.25. Grind Valves on all |
4-cylinder cars, $3.50 to $6.00. Grind Valves on all 6-cylinder |
ears, $6.00 to'$7.50. Give us a ring for Brake prices and over- |
haul jobs. Ambulance touring truck at your service.
Our Prices and Work Guaranteed Satisfactory.’ _,
CONWAY J. GASKINS, Prop. Near as: Your Telephone.
Residence, 392 U St, NW...
: Just received
4 Direct from Smithfield ;
A Shipment of—
Genuine Smithfield
Hams, Shoulders & Sides
WE ALSO ANNOUNCE PRICE REDUCTION OF
“Collins Pure”
Pork Sausage Meat
THIS FAMOUS SAUSAGE NOW SELLS FOR
35 Cents per pound :
We pledge you the’same high grade sausage which we
formerly sold for 40 cents per pound.
‘D. D. COLLINS
94 & 95 O Street Market
26 & 28 Park View Market
I Pay
artons | =
Barton
HOUSE OF LIBERAL .CREDIT Way
High-Class Ladies’ and Men’s
WEARING APPAREL
ON LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS
Ask Your Friends about Barton’s
They will tell you all about us.
“We Strive to Please Every Customer”
That's Our’ Motto.
CHARGE IT AT BARTON’S
A’SMALL DOWN PAYMENT
BALANCE WEEKLY OR MONTHLY
You Will Always be Pleased at—
BARTON'S
925 F Street, N.W.
OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M.
READ THIS, JOHN
Dear Editor: I know that my
brother, John "Summers, is going
to write you a letter. He. seems
to think that girls can't do anything
as good’as boys can. Although my
marks. at school are better than
his, he says that the teachers favor
me. He is a big t2ase—but I wish
that you ‘would do as he suggests.
Tf you do I know that the girls will
give the boys an exciting time...
Lucille J. Summers (14)
—Don't Sey Nigger—
NEVER, NEVER, NEVER
No matter how much you argue,
No matter how much you figure,
Be sure to keep your self contro!
‘And never use the word “nigger.”
nnereemcreemnrmrmmeme ee DR ee ae ee Oe Ree Cae Ga Caee Cae Cae Uae Sew Cae Cae Cae Sad Cae Cay Cae Cae Bae Sew Cad Bae Uae Cad Cad Sad Cas Uae One Gas ban aD
RAI R RRS ee a ER eee aE RUE CARER AAR ROMPURETR TR PENAURE OPER ENEE 2 OCR eeREDSREEREMMT Se
IN . 2
Phone North 1234 REID’ & ( Open Evenings until 9:30
THE LATEST DANCE NUMBERS and SONG Lith & U Streets HAVE RECORDS DELIVERED ANYWHERE |
;
HITS PLAYED OVER YOUR PHONE Lee Morse: 5 Clig Bawards: IN THE CITY. FLETCHER HENDRSON,
1303-D—Let a Smile Be Your Umbrella 1254-D—I'm Cryin’ Cause I Know I's Losing You ETHEL WATERS, AND ALL THE STARS AT |
Cc Il N h There Must be a Silver Lining oe After My Laughter Came Tears : youd. cA.
a orth 2044 1276-D—Keep Sweeping the Cobwebs off the 1295-D—Mary Ann ee
Give Me a Good-Night Kiss Moon Together DELIVERED BY AUTO !
‘ Ethel Waters:
LISTEN AT HOME Sa 14297-D—I'm Saving it All for You 1/02 |
Fletcher neeieon :
1059-D—I’m Coming Virginia . j
> @ GI ! Columb Whiteman Stomp fi Co lumb Tas |
l ay at ea a4 Seer a co Sie |
\ ae LO MBIA |
ANS Viv
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JIA AS - L R |
PREPREDLS TSE E Le Pee ARRON RO 5 TD) PRET PEWS EPTA PRR TS RAN SE TES SISIT SI RUSS RRR TT ETSI IDE” GERD STE RD Rea RIO RUST eee eA
pO
HOWARD FACULTY 10
CENSOR HILLTOP
‘(Coatined Seal paseea’
being published in The Hilltop.
‘While this action was taken as soon
‘as the investigation started, Bax-
ter Don Goodall, editor-in-chief, of
the paper, did not receive official
notice of the executive's action un-
tii last Friday. This advisory
committee is of long standing, but
had stopped functioning until re-
cent developments,
‘The notice came in the form of a
letter from Prof. FE. C. Williams
who was appointed chairman of
the Censorship Committee. It ad-
vised Goodall of the action taken,
and told the editor that all copy
mst be’ submitted to the’ commit-
toe before its release in the paper.
Goodall’s Answer
Goodall’s answer to the commit-
tee was sent in the following let-
ter, addressed to Prof. Williams:
“Dear Sir: Your letter of April
15 received, and contents carefully
noted. My reply has been late be-
cause of several reasons, said rea-
sons being stated blow. May
state, it is not in a spirit of wilful
‘disobedience that I must answer
‘unfavorably to the request of
President Johnson, asking the sub-
mittal to the committee appointed
by ‘him of proof sheets of The
| Hilltop for its final decision before
going to press, but with a spirit I
feel and believe justifiable to the
| two thousand students which The
Hilltop represents, and 1 as their
servant, am responsible to.
} “The Hilltop as a student publi-
eation under faculty censorship
would cease to be a student, publi-
cation. This, gentlemen, would
sean the muzzling of freedom of
thought and of speech a5 well as
gpinion among the ‘student, body.
Since The Hilltop is supported by
funds from the student body col-
lected as extra curricula fees, the
above step would he unwise as well
as unfair,
“Out of twenty-five students of
‘whom the question, “Do you think
‘The Hilltop should have a faculty
commitige of censorship?” was
asked, twenty-four replied nega-
tively. ‘Thus you can. see that a
large ratio of the student body is
eee faculty interference with
‘the students’ publication.
“Finally, I placed the matter of
Rents gommittee Sensarahip be:
Se singin Gounell the oficial
.xepresentative body of the students
ref the university, for its decision,
and after a thorough discussion of
the President's request, the Coun-
‘cil voted that The Hilltop be free
from faculty supervision’ and in-
terference..
ts ln closings ir. Williams, may
Task that you kindly convey to the
Committeo on, Student Publication
and through them to President
Jotmron, the contents of this let
Hor. Wishing for the continued
growth of Howard University i
08e ital principles whieh
all led men, and: women
ye ave leading the fight against
jorance and superstition are in-
quicating into the lives of the pres-
Gxt, day yputh of the world—love
of truth, freedom of thought, and
building of character.”
FIRE DOES $10,000
“DAMAGE TO U ST. BLOG
(Continued from page 1)
eee
to lanter the building. ey
wat Were porred into the base-
‘ment béfore it was brought under
control,
. Club Boheme
| The Satproon it of the Club Bo-
heme was 4n entire loss. On the
first floor, the office occupied by
the North Carolina Mutual Life
Insurance Company, numbered
1020 U street, was damaged by
smoke and water. Charles Fear-
ing, local manager estimated. his
damage at about $300.
The Fearing Electric Company
on the first floor, at 1023 U street,
‘was completely ruined. All stock,
and fixtures were destroyed or
damaged by fire and water. Rob-
ert W. Fearing, owner, stated that
his loss would exceed $3000.
George W. Taylor who operates
a jewelry store on the first floor,
at 1025 U street, suffered losses
estimated at $2000,
‘The drug store located on the
first floor at the corner of U
street and 11th, suffered practical-
ly no damage. William H. Da-
vis, the proprietor, stated that the
shioke was prevented from pour-
ing into his place largely because
of the tile floor.
‘The offices on the second and
third floors were damaged slight-
Jy by, smoke. As some of the of-
fices were locked, it was necessary
for the firemen to break the doors
open.
‘The building is owned by the
Lincoln Mortgage and Investment
Company. Clifford T. Taylor, sec~
retary-manager of the Federal
Life Insurance Company, is the
rental agent,
Mr. Taylor stated that he esti-
mated the damage to the building
at $10,000, all of which is covered
by_ insurance.
The blaze attracted thousands of
people and completely tied up traf-
fic on 1ith and U streets,gg....
fe on lth street and U street for
nearly an hour. Although many
had narrow escapes, no one was
seriously injured.
STRUCK BY BRICK; MAN
IMPROVES
Robert Gordon, 32, 229 Liberty
street, northwest, who was found
‘unconscious in Union Court, narth-
west, last Sunday by police of the
eighth precinct was in a much im-
Proved condition et Freedmen's
jospital, Thursday.
ling to policemen Gordon
struck in the head with a brick
rarled during 4 fight with an uy
“man.
THE DISTINCTIVE AFFAIR
OF THE SEASON
The Portias and Bassanios
ANNUAL
SPRING CLASSIQUE
LINCOLN COLONNADE
‘a MAY 4th,
ba
— Branson’s Society Orchestra
Entree - - 75 Cents
Hear the KING of SYNCOPATION
General Admission - 75 Cents
Call North 3279 for Boxes and Reserved Seats
SUBURBAN GARDENS TO OP-
EN WITH NEW MANAGE-
MENT, NEW DRESS, AND
NEW FEATURES
(Continued from page 1)
tion Day, May 30. Abraham Gates,
a director of the company, is pro-
moting the park feature,
‘The gate admission to the 2
musement park will be ten cents
for adults, children free at all
times.
The park is under the general
management of F. Morris Murray,
who will be assisted by John A.
Hyder in charge of rides, Charles
F. Lee, in charge of pavilion, and
B. B. Parker pronioting and man-
aging the game stands.
Under the re-organization of
the Universal Development and
Loan Company, owners of the park,
in January, the controlling interest
in the company was acquired by
John A. Hyder, president; George
A, Robinson, vice-president; A. S.
Pinkett, secretary-treasurer; W. H.
©, Brown, chairman of the board
of directors, and F. Morris Mur-
ray.
Mrs. Annie Piper, of New York
City, spent Sunday as guest of
her ‘parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Coghill.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE; FRIDAY. APRIL 27, 1928°
SCORES IN MISS,
(Continued from page 1)
turn of the Republican party to
Power, notwithstanding the Teapot
Dome scandal.
District conventions were held
before the meeting of the state
convention.
The delegates from the state at
large will have a half vote each in
the national convention. ‘They are:
Perry W. Howard, 8 D. Redmond
and W. L. Mhoon, of Jackson, eol-
ored; E. E. Robertson, Collins;
John Ht. Cook, Clarksdaley George
F. MeLelland, Newton; Loyal G.
Reese, Madison Station, and N. D,
Ropinson, Columbus, white.
‘Their alternates are: Mrs. Mary
©. Booze, Mound Bayou; Mrs. An-
nie E. Mhoon, Jackson; Rev. A. J.
Brown, Vicksburg, ‘and E,W.
Barnes, Canton, colored; and’ Mrs.
E, E, Hale, Natchez; Mrs. Allene
G. Pettis,’ Okolona: Charles M.
| JOINTHE (i Qi
| AT THE aoe” F Ps Pe
|
SUBURBAN GARDENS
!
|
| AMUSEMENT PARK
|
Sm. SAT., MAY 12
| DAY eo
:
| aay smpovemeta tvs tom mae on Oe ponte tx | BIG FREE OPEN AIR ATTRACTION
| Zinonsa rele cnn | Lae CONLEY FRIO
| children. A Sensational and Thrilling Big
! Hair-Raising Pole Performance ‘
ect Si aeiaceaai st alas tae de hte
| ADMISSION TO PAVILION MANY NEW GAMES
| REDUCED TO 35 CENTS WITH NOVEL PRIZES
| WHITE BRDS. ORCHESTRA | ic rumasurceasonet
Feiner bl cine Ao icone monic ge gt gest tee SA ST
| FREE PARKING GATE ADMISSION 10c CHILDREN FREE
Hayes, Hattiesburg, and Gaston
Therrell, Aberdeen, white.
The district delegates are G. B.
‘McCuen, white, Brookville; G
S. Goodman, colored, Holly
Springs; Eugene P. Booze, col
gred, Mound Bayou; W,, W. Phil
lips, col ‘osciusko; IS le,
white, Meridian; Thomas 1. Keys
colored, Ocean’ Springs; F. S.
icimed ccleel soe" Et Boe
ton, colored, Jackion one-half vote
eae
‘The district alternates are I. G.
Simms colored, Aberdeen; A.M.
Patterson, white, Como; Fred Mil-
ler, colored, Mound Bayou; D. Mf.
P.’ Haley, colored, Kosciusko; -C.
J. Burns colored, Laurel; FT.
ale, ‘white Natehec. _
INDERSON and HIS COLUMBIA
i LY RECORDING ORCHESTRA
_ TUESDAY, MAY Ist = 47mm"
a LINCOLN COLONNADE ™,92
A, ME ZION, TREKS
TO ST. LOUIS
ST. LOUIS, Mo—The general
conference of the AME. Zion
Church will convene in this city,
Wednesday, May 2, All. sessions
will be held in the Coliseum.
‘The conference will open with
the procession, headed by all: of
the bishops, followed by the gen-
era] officers and workers on the
foreign field. Senior Bishop J. S.
Caldwell will preside,
‘After devotions, the quadrennial
sermon will be preached by Bishop
L. W. Kyles. The conference will
then We organizéd and all commit-
tees appointed.
Bishop G. C. Clements will de-
liver.the quadrennial address. This
address is to be the keynote of the
conference;
Governor to Speak
On Wednesday night, thevofficial
weleoming exercises wilt be ha
Th> governor of the state, and the
mayor of St. Louis will speak.
Special traing from all parts of
the country will bring to the eity
nearly five thousand delegates and
visitors who are to attend the con-
ference. The conference is expect-
cd to make history in the passing
of reform legislation. It is prac- |
tically conceded that the lay dele
ee ie ie oe
tion has been won. Many other re-
forms are practically. assured, es-
pecially laws governing the finan-
cial departments of the church.
‘A strenuous fight will be made
for the election of new bishops.
where is a strong undercurrent
against electing any new bishops
at this conference. It is now gen-
erally conceded, however; that one
new bishop will be elected. The
fight for- this bishopship lies be-
tween Dr. W. W. Matthews of
Washington, D.C., and Dr. F, M.
Jacobs, of Brooklyn, N.Y., with Dr.
Matthews conceded ‘the advantage.
HOUSES VOR SALE AND FOR
RENT IN OUR CLASSIFIED COL
ENDORSES PRINCIPALS’
ACTION ‘
The Northeast Public Interest
Association, through its president,
Dr, G. H. Richardson, endorsed
the action of Principals W. 1.
Smith and-G. David Houston, of
Dunbar and Armstrong Hizh
Schools, in ee to enter their
schools’ in the national oratorical
contest held by the Evening Star
recently. :
The two principals would not
permit their schools to enter the
contest because the conditions
which they would have to accent
would force upon them racial dis-
elintialien;
Society.
Newark SHOE STORES CO.
913 Pa. Ave. 502 9th St., N.W. 711 H St., N.E.
Stores in All Principal Cities
THE HOME OF MRS. WILLIAM GRAYER WILLIAMS, THE SCENE OF TWO VERY PRETTY PARTIES
Mrs. William Grayer Williams of 1709 Second street, northwest, entertained with a bridge-guest party on Monday evening. A very enthusiastic group of people were assembled, forty in number and competed for the very beautiful prizes given to those having the highest score.
Those present were Misses Pearl Adams, Edith Chandler, Muriel Milton, Mesdames, Thelma Amos, A. H. Burwell, Mesdames Beverly, L. Brady, R. Banks, S. Carson, William Crusor, H. Clayton, T. Clarke, C. Curry, J. Cowan, Helen Curtis, Mary Downing, Hattie Edwards, Henry Freeman, A. Gaskins, Gertrude Johnson, G. Johnson of New York, Emory Smith, A. Lewis, J. B. Lee, F. D. Lee, Hamilton Martin, Jesse Powell, Peter W. Price, C. Pryor, E. Scur-
Announcement
To Our Patrons:
The EARLS CLUB, INC., will feature their 12th Annual Black & White Revue, Friday, May 4, 1928. This, marking the close of our season of Frivolity until the Fall of '28, we are preparing for you a night of Greater Pleasure; with Branson's Classical Orchestra rendering the Euphonic Sounds of Rhythm for the indulgence of the Terpsichorean Art. Novelties will be in abundance. Subscriptions may be obtained from the Boulevard Pharmacy, 918 U St., N.W., or any Club Member. Yours for a night of pleasure, THE EARLS.
CASH
The Plitt J
1330 7th S
MEN'S POCKET W
ELGIN WALTHAM
The Smart
wear the
Newark
van toes
Leather
Sandal.
ASK FOR NO. 4519
An Adorable Creation
in a Patent Leather T
Strap Cut-Out Sandal
Spike Heel.
Newark
913 Pa. Ave. 502 9th S
Stores in All Pr
WASHINGTON GIRL GOES
SOUTH
P
Mrs. Elizabeth Norton, of 421
First street, northwest, left April
22, to visit her mother and relat-
ives in Atlanta, Ga.
lock, M. Scurlock, Robert Spivey
A. Scott, R. Savoy, William Stevenson, William Simms, E. Williston, R. Wilson, William Waters,
illiam McLaurin. Prizes were won by Mrs. L. Grady and Mrs. R. B
by Mrs. Barron Mrs. T. Amos,
Mrs. Helen Curtis, Mrs. L. Grady,
and Mrs. R. Banks.
Mrs. R. West, Dorothy Scott and B. Mitchell, acted as score keepers and time-keepers.
Sorority Serves Tea
One of the most delightful arranged teas of the season was given on Saturday afternoon, April 21, by Beta Sigma, the Washington graduate chapter of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority at the Delta House on Howard University Campus in honor of Miss Estelle Pinkney, Mune. Florence Cole-Talbert, and the latter's accompanist, Mrs. Goldie Guy Martin.
Many prominent women were among the invited guests who
CREDIT
Jewelry Co.
street, N. W.
WATCHES $18.50 up
HAMILTON ILLINOIS
Best Women
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and SAVE!
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ASK FOR
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A true Paris
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No. 4195
Women who know shoe style recognize the Parisian touch in Newark shoes and appreciate the Newark prices which give them two pairs for the ordinary cost of one for such style. We sell direct to you—eliminating the middleman's profit. That's why you save a dollar or more on every pair of Newarks.
R SHOE STORES CO.
t., N.W. 711 H St., N.E.
principal Cities
were received by Miss Juanita and Mrs. Elsie B. Smith.
Mrs. Coralie F. Cook and Mrs. Gabrielle Pelham, honorary members of the sorority, poured tea.
Baskets of sweet peas, roses and cherry blossoms decorated the parlors.
The members of the entertaining chapter are: Margaret Alexander, Dorothy Beckley, Helen Brown, Grace Coleman, Ruby Collins, Louise Denny, Roberta Dent, Louise Gardner, Helen Harris, Edith Howard, Juannita Howard, Elsie Hughes, Ruth Kemp, Josephine Luck, Louise Pack, Dorothy Robinson, Harriet Robinson, Helen Savoy, Esther Shaw, Jennie Shief, Eliza P. Shippen, Elsie Smith, Sara Speaks, Anna Thompson, Wilma Williams.
Society to Dance
Last week there was an interval of rest from dancing. This week, however, there are three dances on the social calendar. The week was ushered in with the Washington alumni and Xi chapters' dance at the Lincoln Colonnade on Monday evening. The Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity had its annual prom at the Colonnade, Wednesday evening. The Phi Delta Kappa sorority is having its dance at the Murray Palace Casino this Friday evening.
Mrs. Norman Harris Entertains
Mrs. Norman Harris entertained at bridge at her home, 1735 S street, northwest, Wednesday evening. April 18. Prizes were awarded Mrs. Walter Garvin, Mrs. Sevellon Savoy and Mrs. Mark De Leon. Those present included Mrs. Merrill Curtis, Mrs. Gwendolyn Higginbotham, Mrs. Mark De Leon, Mrs. Robert Wilson, Mrs. Charles H. Houston, Mrs. Walter Garvin, Mrs. William G. Lofton, Mrs. James E. Scott, Mrs. Frank Jones, Mrs. Pete Tyson, Mrs. Madeline Tucker, and Mrs. Sevellon Savoy.
Entertain at Greenlease
Miss Edith Lee entertained her bridge club at Greenlease's Cafe, Thursday evening, April 19. Guest prizes were awarded Mrs. Louis Cornish, Mrs. John Cromwell and Mrs. Thomas H. R. Clark, Mrs. Emma Wormely, Mrs. John Cromwell, Mrs. Bauduit, Mrs. Olga Reld, Mrs. Williston, Mrs. Kelly Miller, Mrs. Lynier Grady, Mrs. W. L. Board, Mrs. George Young, Mrs. Cornish, Mrs. Armond W. Scott, Mrs. Frank Davis, Mrs. Eula Grey, Mrs. John Washington, Mrs. Elias G. Evans, Mrs. J. Hayden Johnson, Mrs. William Warfield, and Mrs. Mabel Scurlock.
Dr. Marie Lucas Hostess
Dr. Marie Lucas was hostess to the S Street Neighborhood Club at her residence, 1738 Fifteenth street, northwest, last Friday evening. Those present were: Mrs.L J. Moss, Mrs.E. G. Muse, Mrs.P. H. Ford, Mrs. John A. Lankford, Mrs. William L. Houston, Mrs. Daniel Edmonds, Mrs.M. Wilson, Mrs. William Wilkinson, Mrs. Augustus W. Gray and Miss Caddie Parks.
Coachmen's Union to Give Ball
Coachmen's Union to Give Ball
The Coachmen's Union and Aid
Association will hold its forty-
sixth annual reception and ball at
the Lincoln Colonnade, Thursday
evening, May 3. The ladies' auxiliary will assist. Music will be
furnished by Ike Dixon's orchestra
of Baltimore. The officers of the
Coachmen's Union are George M.
Johnson, president; J. E. Hawkins,
vice-president; Charles H. Robinson,
financial secretary; Joseph S. Hood, recording secretary; W. M. Eatman, treasurer; James R. Marshall, chaplain; Edward N. Simms, advocate; James A. Jackson, warden, and Thomas M. Gladden, marshal.
Mrs. Talbert and Miss Pinkney
Honored by Sorority
The Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, graduate chapter, entertained in honor of Mme. Florence Cole-Talbert and Miss Estelle Etelka Pinkney, Saturday afternoon, April 21, from 4 to 6 o'clock, at the Delta house. Mrs. Coralie Franklin Cooke and Mrs. Gabrielle Pelham poured tea.
COSMOPHORA
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. APRIL 27. 1928
Mrs. Mary Butler-Irving Entertains
Mrs. Mary Butler-Irving entertained her 500 club, Tuesday evening, 120 Seventeenth street, northwest. Those present were Mesdames Glenn, Fay Goodwin, Helen M. King, Rosa Slaire, Lottie Smith, Jessie Price, Inez West and Miss Ida Devitt. The first club prize was awarded to Mrs. Helen M. King, second, Mrs. Glenn, and the third to Mrs. Lottie Smith.
Club Gives Dance
The Club Sans Souci held its first dance, Saturday, April 21, at Murray's Palace Casino. Branson's Orchestra rendered the music. The members of the club are Mrs. Francina Foote Biddle, James Jackson, Robert Lewis, Mr. Sembury, Clarence Brown and Fred White.
Monday, April 23, Mrs. Gwendolyn Brown was hostess to her bridge club at her residence, 2221 Twelfth street, northwest. Among those present were Mesdames Teresa Scott, Anita Matthews, Marie Briggs, Elsie Hogan, Mattie Curtis, Nettie Johnson, Leola Loxam, Mamie Ross, Isadore Spaller, Emma Tate and Catherine Boyd. The prizes were won by Mrs. Mamie Ross, Mrs. Marie Briggs, and Mrs. Isadore Speller.
Hostess to Junior Bluebirds
The Junior Bluebirds were entertained by Mrs. Pansy Cox, Tuesday evening, April 24, at her residence, 1636 Third street, northwest. Prizes were won by Mrs. Josephine Jones, Miss Ethel M. Gray, Miss Lillian Walton and Miss Valerie Chase. Those present were Mrs. Beatrice Lancaster, Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. Louise Chase, Mrs. Elinor Scott, Mrs. Katie Dean, Mrs. Christine Holton, Miss Alice Smith, Miss Valerie Chase, Miss Ethel Gray, Mrs. Thelma Wauls, Mrs. Helen Brooke, Miss Josie Brown, Mrs. Teresa Joyce Scott, Mrs. Josephine Jones, Mrs. M. B. Boyd and Miss Lillian Walton.
PERSONALS
Mrs. Florence Stokes Matthews, wife of Samuel Matthews, a teacher in the public schools of this city is improving and recovering from injuries received in an accident.
Miss Viola Carroll was hostess to the Gardenia Club, Tuesday evening, April 17, at her residence, 2133 L street, northwest. The evening was spent in five hundred. Those present were Miss Etta Coates, Mrs. Margaret Marshall, Mrs. Vernetta M. Hubert, Mrs. Rose Lean Manley, Mrs. Edith Barnes. A repast was served.
Mrs. Rachel Tolson Wall was given a birthday surprise party by her mother, Mrs. Lydia Tolson and Miss Harriet Greenleaf, Monday at her residence, 1719 U street,
WHERE TO DINE
JAMES' DINING ROOM
1914 13th St., N.W.
Breakfast 6 to 12 noon
Dinner 2 to 7 p.m.
North 9967
Harrison's
CAFE
455 Florida Ave., N.W. North 6438
New Liberty Hotel
New Jersey Ave., and D St., N.W.
(New management)
HOME-COOKED MEALS
Neatly Furnished Rooms
By day ..... $1.50 up
By week ..... $5.00 up
Steam Heat—Electricity
Phone, Lincoln 6167
Former patrons solicited
Mrs. Mattie Johnson, Prop.
Howard Cab
LOWEST RATES
Potomac
142
Superior Safe Service
DRIVERS: OWNERS
Dr. Delano's
COCO-TAR
Hair Grower
For sale in Washingtonian
— Only at —
BLUMENTHAL'S
DEPARTMENT STORE
1814 Seventh St., N.W.
"All Delano Preparations"
northwest. Covers were laid for twenty guests. Dancing and whist were the features of the evening. The prize winners for whist were Mrs. Callie Frances, Clarence Wesley, Ford White, and Leonard Washington. Mrs. Wall received many gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thomas, 1818 Vernon street, northwest, entertained informally with five-hundred, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. William Smith, Mr. and Mrs. John Whitney, Mr. and Mrs. William Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. James Perkins, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis L. Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis, Mesdames Beatrice Lofton, Katherine Robinson, Ada Rose, Grace Grace, and Elmo Tyler. Dancing was enjoyed the latter part of the evening. Mrs. B. M. Boyd, 724 Fairmount street, northwest, was hostess to the "Won't Don't" Bridge Club on Wednesday night. April 18.
Miss Alaveta Menard entertained "The Trumps" at five hundred at her home, 2623 Eleventh street, northwest, last Saturday night. Prizes were won by Mrs. K. Boyd, Mrs. Ann Green, Mrs. Alice Moore, and Miss Minnie Hall. Those present were Mesdames Cox, Smalls, Boyd, A. Green, Blackburn, Reid, Tardt, Moore and K. Green Misses Minor, Hall and Freeland. The Washington Kindergarten Club, Group III, gave a five hundred card tournament at the residence of Miss Grace Dodson, 1901 Third street, northwest, Saturday, April 14.
The members of the Gardenia Sewing Circle entertained their husbands during the Easter Week, at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Wilkes, 717 Irving street, northwest. Cards and dancing were the features of the evening. A buffet supper was served.
The Daffodil Club entertained with a musical tea, Sunday evening, April 22, at the residence of Mrs. Katie King, 601 T street, northwest. Miss Madoline Parson rendered music for the evening. Other participants on the program were Paul Blackwell, Miss Minnie Pataway, Mrs. Katie King, Miss Amanda Parker, Miss Katherine Pyles, Miss Edna Jenkins, the Union Wesley quartette. The club includes Mesdames Helen Brown, Katie King, Lula Bacon, Mary Coates, Lillian Russell, Pearl Leonard, Willie Williams, Dorothy Thompson, and Effe Wims, Misses Pearl, Laura, and Julia C. Murray, Messrs. Joseph Bell, William Russell, Charles King, William Johnson, Allen Eaton, and Perry O. Leonard.
Mrs. Helen Brown was hostess to the Daffodil Club, Thursday, April 12, at her residence, 2713 Eleventh street, northwest, and Mrs. Mary Coates was hostess to the same club, April 19, at her residence on Lee Highway, Falls Church, Va. Both served repasts.
Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Gordon, brother-in-law and sister of Misses Hattie and Lydia McIlwaine, 132 D street, southwest, after having passed the Easter holidays here, have returned to their home in
Beauty Shoppe DIRECTORY:
Consult
This List
BEFORE
Making an
Appoint-
ment.
```markdown
```
Mme. ORA S. CAUSBY
1109 O St., N.W.
Potomac 2596
Hawaiian System of Scalp & Hair Culture
The public's constantly growing preference for Hawaiian Treatments makes the agency of this great system a choice and profitable business venture for all women who have courage, vision and will-power. WRITE for Further Information. Our training will bring you big earning power, prestige, recognition and influence in your community.
Mary E.
Address all mail to Mme. T. G.
Bramlette, 1530-32 7th St., N.W.
Washington, D.C. A two month's
trial treatment sent anywhere for
$2.00
Mrs. Ferdinand D. Lee entertained a bridge party at her residence, 9923 R street, northwest, Wednesday evening, April 18. The guests were Mesdames Kelly Miller, P. W. Price, Emma Bauduit, Mabel Scurlock, J. Hayden Johnson, John W. Cromwell, Belle Pride, T. C. Smith, J. A. Lankford, Robert Spivey, Henrietta Burwell, Armond Scott, Lillian Williams, Marion Butler, George Sydnor, Laura Aden, Jennie B. Lee, Marcella Beverley, Mamie Hall, Mamie Simmons, Robert Ashton, Lula
REID
11th
GEN
"GIRL OF MY
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and ha
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REID'S
11th & U
JUS
GENE
GIRL OF MY DREAM
PARAMONA"
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Sale Continued
$10 FOR
Rega
---
REID'SCORNER 11th & U Streets, N.W. JUST OUT BY
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WE IS WORTH $10 in this sale, for
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EFFICIENCY AND BEAUTY is what every woman wants in a gas range, and our-ranges have both! We offer a selection of the most modern ranges from well-known standard manufacturers—every range guaranteed, and our prices are low—beginning at $50 (oven heat control $10 extra) easy terms of payment arranged to suit you. REMEMBER YOUR OLD STOVE IS WORTH $10 in this sale, for we will allow you $10 for it as partial payment on the purchase of a new range. DON'T WAIT! Come in tomorrow and—
Take advantage of this special sale!
Washington Gas Light Company New Business Department
MISS NATIONAL
Washington
Sales Office
419
Tenth St. N.W.
Main 8280
---
Chester, S.C.
Inspect the new models now on display
Leachman, Ellen J. Brown, J. D. Baltimore, Sylvester McLaurin, Mamie Simms, Nettie Powell, Roscoe C. Clayton, Mamie Gordon, Effie Bostic, Nettie Jackson, Marion Crusor, Bertha Chase, Lynier Grady, Richard Osborn, and Mamie Smott. The honors were awarded to Mrs. Priée, Mrs. Simmons, Mrs. Grady, Mrs. Chase, Mrs. Crusor, Mrs. Gordon, Mrs. Osborn, and Mrs. Scott. Mrs. Lee was assisted by Mrs. Harry Ferguson and Miss Cora Mason.
Mrs. Chester A. Reavis of Duncan street, northeast, entertained
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---
—phone Main 8280 Ask For "PHONE SERVICE DEPARTMENT" for dinner suggestions, recipes or the solution of any home cooking problem
THREE
the Stitch and Chatter Club on Thursday night, April 19. A repast was served. The members present were Mesdames Bertha Bennett, Ethel Fraction, Annabelle Curtis, Isadore Speller, Creed Hall, Ida Smith, and Annie Reavis.
Mrs. Sallie Johnson of Danville, Va., returned home after a visit with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Moore and her younger daughter, Miss Evelyn Johnson, who is attending Dunbar High School.
LOCALS—
(Continuca on page 9)
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Go to ChurchSunday
WEEKLY SIBLE VERSE: "Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers."—Ephesians 4:29.
Nineteenth Street Baptist Church
Nineteenth Street Baptist Church
Nineteenth and I Streets, N.W.
Rev. Walter H. Brooks, D.D. Pastor
Rev. Henry J. Booker, Th.B., Assistant
Rev. George A. Parker, LL.B., Assistant
SUNDAY SERVICES:
11 A. M.—Missionary Day; Sermon by Rev. G. A. Parker.
8 P. M.—Special Program, auspices of Missionary Society.
Always a Smile for the Stranger
Third Baptist Church
Fifth and Q
Rev. G. O. Bullock
SUNDAY SCH
9:30 a.m.—Sunday School.
11:00 a.m. & 7:30 p.m.—Preaching.
6:00 p.m.—Christian Endeavor.
"YOUR CHURCH
People's Congrega
M Street, between
Rev. A. F.
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m.—Church School.
11 A. M.—"John the Baptist—The V
6:30 p.m.—Young People's Society
Thursday evenings at 8 p.m.—Pray.
"A Place of Faith
Tabor Presbyter
2nd & S S
Rev. R. Alvin H
SUNDAY S
9:30 a.m.—Church School.
11 A. M.—"Our Unseen Helper."
Rev. R. A. Fairley.
5:00 p.m.—Junior Christian
Endeavor.
Lincoln Congreg
Fifth and Q Sts., N.W.
Rev. G. O. Bullock, D.D., Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
9:30 a.m.—Sunday School. Every 3rd Sunday—Communion.
11:00 a.m. & 7:30 p.m.—Preaching. Tuesday & Thursday, 8:00 p.m.—
6:00 p.m.—Christian Endeavor. Prayer Meeting.
People's Congregational Church
M Street, between 6th and 7th Sts., N.W.
Rev. A. F. Elmes, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
9:30 a.m.—Church School.
11 A. M.—"John the Baptist—The Voice in the Wilderness."
6:30 p.m.—Young People's Society.
Thursday evenings at 8 p.m.—Prayer meeting
Tabor Presbyterian Church
2nd & S Sts., N.W.
Rev. R. Alvin Fairley, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
9:30 a.m.—Church School.
11 A. M.—"Our Unseen Helper."
Rev. R. A. Fairley.
5:00 p.m.—Junior Christian
Endeavor.
6:30 p.m.—Young People's Society
8 p.m.—Evening Worship.
Thursday, 8 p.m.—Mid-Week Prayer
Service.
Lincoln Congregational Temple
11th and — Sts., N.W.
Rev. R. W. Brooks, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
11 A. M.—“Christianity’s Acid Test.”
6:45 p.m.—M
8:30 a.m.—Sunday School. Wednesday
4:00 p.m.—Junior Christain Endeavor. Psalter
Salem Baptist Church
Street bet. 9th & 10th Sts. N.W.
Rev. R. D. Grymes, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
6:00 a.m.—Sunrise Prayer Meet-
ing
11:00 a.m. & 8 p.m.—Preaching
6:00 p.m.—B. Y. P. U.
Communion 3rd Sundays, 3 p.m.
Prayer Meeting, Tuesdays, 8 p.m.
Preaching, Thursday, 8 p.m.
Friendship Baptist
First and H Sts., S.W.
Rev. B. H. Whiting, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
9:30 a.m.—Sunday School.
11:00 a.m.—Morning Service.
6:00 p.m.—B.Y.P.U.
8:00 p.m.—Evening Service.
First Baptist
Warrenton, Va.
Rev. Chas. P. Harris, B.D., Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
11:00 a.m. & 8:00 p.m.—Preaching.
Central M. E. Church
O St. Armory Auditorium,
708 O St., N.W.
Rev. J. A. Jackson, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
9:45 a.m.—Sunday school.
11 a.m. & 8 p.m.—Preaching
Second Baptist
Third St. between H & I Sts., N.W.
Rev. J. S. L. Holoman, A.M. Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
11:00 a.m. & 8:00 p.m.—Preaching.
RANDALL MEMORIAL
M.E. CHURCH
1010 Browning St., N. E.
Rev. Barnes, Pastor
9:45 Sunday School.
11:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. Preaching.
6:30 p.m. Epworth League.
St. Paul A. M. E.
8th St. between D & E Sts. S.W.
Rev. J. A. Dames, B.D. Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES:
0:30 a.m.—Sunday School.
11:15 a.m. & 8:00 p.m.—Preaching.
Mt. Zion Baptist Church
Fredericksburg, Va.
Rev. W. H. Cary, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES
11:30 a.m. & 8:15 p.m.—Preaching
Men's
2 Sts., N.W.
Bock, D.D., Pastor
SERVICES:
Every 3rd Sunday—Communion.
Tuesday & Thursday, 8:00 p.m.—Prayer Meeting.
"CHURCH HOME"
Elegational Church
On 6th and 7th Sts., N.W.
L. Elmes, Pastor
7 SERVICES:
"Voice in the Wilderness."
Society.
Prayer meeting
"Fish and Fellowship"
Emerian Church
Sts., N.W.
Fairley, Pastor
SERVICES:
6:30 p.m.—Young People's Society
8 p.m.—Evening Worship.
Thursday, 8 p.m.—Mid-Week Prayer Service.
Elegational Temple
Sts., N.W.
Brooks, Pastor
SERVICES:
6:45 p.m.—Senior Christian Endeavor.
Wednesday noon & Thursday 8 p.m.—
Prayer Service.
TWELFTH ST. CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Twelfth St., bet. S and T Sts., N.W.
Rev. H. D. Griffin, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES
10:00 a.m.—Sunday School.
11:30 a.m.—Preaching and
Communion.
7:00 p.m.—C. E. Society.
8:00 p.m.—Preaching.
ISRAEL BAPTIST CHURCH
11th St. bet. F & G Sts., N.E
Rev. A. B. Fisher, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES
9:30 a.m.—Sunday School.
11:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.—Preaching.
6:30 p.m.—B.Y.P.U.
Mt. Carmel Baptist
Third and I Sts., N.W.
Rev. W. H. Jernagin, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES;
11:00 a.m. & 8:00 p.m.-Preaching.
9:30 a.m.-Sunday School.
12:00 to 1:00-Free Clinic Daily.
Wednesdays, 6:30 p.m.-Week Day Bible
School.
Tuesdays, 8:00 p.m.-Prayer Meeting.
NOON DAY PRAYER, DAILY
Daily, 12 to 1
General Mass Meeting and
Stereopticon Pictures
of R. W. GRAND COUNCIL'S
DEPARTMENTAL WORKS
of I. O. of ST. LUKE
MONDAY, APRIL 30
At 8 P. M.
THIRD BAPTIST CHURCH
5th and Q Sts., N. W.
Rev. G. O. Bullock, Pastor
The Legal Reserve Division will
be thoroughly explained. The sixty-
day drive for new members will
be launched. The pictures are to
be exhibited and illustrated by J. S.
Collins, Supervising Deputy of
Virginia. St. Luke members and
the public are cordially invited.
ADMISSION FREE
District and Grand Officers:
Mary J. Smith, District and Organizing Deputy; Marie E. Campbell, Organizing Deputy; M. M. Peace, R. W. Grand Trustee; Elizabeth D. White, R. W. Grand Chief; Maggie L. Walker, R. W. Grand Secretary-Treasurer.
Tribune ads bring Results
sMee
Liberty Baptist Church
23rd St. between H and I Streets, N.W.
Rev. H. T. Gaskins, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES: Sunrise Prayer Meeting, 6:30 a.m.; Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Preaching, 11 a.m. Subject:
11 A. M.—"The Fatherhood of God, and the Brotherhood of B.Y.P.U., 6:30 p.m.; Preaching 8 p.m. Man."
Missionary, 1st Sunday, Communion, 3rd Sunday, 8 a.m.
Missionary Circle, 1st Sunday; Communion, 3rd Sunday, 3 p.m.; Prayer Meeting, Tuesday, 8 p.m.; Preaching, Thurs., 8 p.m.
Church and Sunday School
WARRENTON, VA. CHURCH NEWS
sionary Society is to present unusually interesting program a p.m. Miss Mabel N. Thurst special worker of the Presbyt of Washington City, is the speak On Friday, May 4, at 8 p.m., primary department of the chu school will wind the Maypole, present a program of recitation
In the absence of the pastor last Sunday morning, Rev. H. B. Chapman, a student of Howard University, acceptably filled the pulpit of the First Baptist Church. The pastor, Rev. Charles P. Harris was present and preached at the evening service. On the coming Sunday Rev. Harris will preach at his home church, the First Baptist of Franklinton, N. C. There will be no service at the Warrenton church in the morning, but in the evening Rev. J. H. Jenkins of this city will preach. Rev. Harfis will be back in his Warrenton pulpit on the first Sunday.
PEOPLE'S CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Rev. A. F. Elmes, the pastor of the People's Congregational Church, will begin a series of sermons next Sunday on "John the Baptist," his first topic during the morning hour will be "The Voice in the Wilderness." The Young People's Christian Endeavor will discuss "The Right Attitude toward the Religion of Others," at 6:30 p.m. The Sunday school, under the supervision of Miss E. V. Campbell, is increasing in membership. The pew rally given Sunday evening by Team, No. 4, of which Miss Alice A. M. Lewis is leader, was successful and drew a large audience, the receipts being $120.98.
LINCOLN CONGREGATIONAL TEMPLE
At Lincoln Congregational Temple, Sunday morning, Rev. R. W. Brooks, will speak from the subject, "Christianity's Acid Test." The choir will render special music. At 8:45 p. m., the Senior Christian Endeavor Society will meet. The subject for discussion is, "Religious Tolerance."
THIRD BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. George O. Bullock has returned from Winston-Salem, N.C. His topic at the Third Baptist Church, Fifth and Q streets, northwest, at 11 a.m., "Heavenly Citizenship." His topic at 8 p.m. is "Prepare to meet Thy God." The Junior I. C. E. Society will discuss at 4 p.m., "How far must I forgive?" The Junior C. E. Society will discuss at 5 p.m., "Brave adventures for Christ in India." The Senior C. E. Society will discuss at 6 p.m., "Right attitudes toward religions of others." Prayer meeting Tuesday, 8 to 10 p.m. Young people's prayer meeting, Thursday, 9 to 10 p.m.
SALEM BAPTIST CHURCH
SALEM BAPTIST CHURCH
The morning service was well attended when Rev. George Carter, a son of the church and now pastor of two churches in Virginia, filled the pulpit last Sunday morning. The funeral services for the former church clerk, John King, were held at 1:30. Rev. R. D. Grymes, officiated. The pastor, Rev. Grymes, preached the Sunday evening sermon, which was in honor of the Auxiliary of the church. On the fifth Sunday, a special missionary program has been arranged for morning and evening.
JOHN WESLEY A.M.E. ZION
CHURCH.
The pastor, Rev. H. T. Medford, will fill the pulpit at 10:45 a.m., at John Wesley A. M. E. Zion Church, Fourteenth and Corcoran streets, northwest, next Sunday, and will leave with other Washington delegates Monday afternoon to attend the General Conference of the denomination in St Louis, Mo., May 2 to 23.
At 3:30 p.m., a sacred drama entitled, "The Beautiful City," will be presented by the Ladies' Usher Association. At 7:45 p.m., the fifth Sunday evening hour of music will be featured by the presence and rendition of the Contee A. M. E. Zion Choral Club, under the direction of Miss Eva V. Johnson. Dr. Medford, the pastor, expresses the desire to see and have opportunity to shake hands with all members Sunday prior to his leaving for the General Conference, Monday afternoon.
TABOR PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
At Tabor Presbyterian Church,
Second and S streets, northwest,
Rev. R. A. Fairley will speak at
the 11 a.m., service on "Our
Unseen Helper." The Woman's Mis-
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. APRIL 27. 1928
sionary Society is to present an unusually interesting program at 8 p.m. Miss Mabel N. Thurston, special worker of the Presbytery of Washington City, is the speaker. On Friday, May 4, at 8 p.m., the primary department of the church school will wind the Maypole, and present a program of recitations from Dunbar.
BEULAH BAPTIST CHURCH
Beulah Baptist Church has just closed a very successful ten-night revival service. The pastor, Rev. William B. Marsh, conducted the meeting himself, preaching each evening. Fifteen persons were added to the church; seven of this number were candidates for baptism.
METROPOLITN B. Y. P. U.
Group No. 3 of the Metropolitan B. Y. P. U., held its regular monthly meeting at the residence of Mrs. Lizzie Ballard, Apartment 405, Whitewalt Hotel, April 19. Mrs. Ballard, the group leader, was unanimously elected to attend the Sunday school and B. Y. P. U. Conference to be held in Milwaukee, Wis., June 20. Sunday, April 22, was B. Y. P. U. ushers' day. A program was rendered. Mrs. Alice McAdoo is president of the ushers.
CONDUCTS REVIVAL IN SOUTH
Rev. G. O. Bullock, pastor of the Third Baptist Church of this city, has returned after having conducted a most successful ten-day revival at the Shiloh Baptist Church of Greensboro, N. C. This was one of the greatest revivals of this great gospel preacher's career. There were eighty conversions at a single meeting, and more than two hundred conversions in all. Rev. Bullock left the Shiloh Church with about one hundred and fifty new members.
L. K. WILLIAMS IN BALTIMORE
The Washington Baptist Ministers' Conference was invited to attend a mass meeting which was held at the Morning Star Baptist Church of Baltimore on Thursday, April 26. The meeting was held under the auspices of the Maryland Co-operative Convention, Rev. L. K. Williams of Chicago, president of the National Baptist Convention, was the main speaker of the occasion.
TO STAGE FINANCIAL DRIVE
The Union Baptist Convention of Washington will stage a financial drive at the Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Thirteenth and C streets, northeast, on Monday evening, April 30. The object of the drive is to aid struggling and weak churches of the convention. All churches which are members of the convention are asked to take an offering on the coming Sunday and bring the same to the Mt. Zion meeting Monday evening. Rev. G. O. Bullock will preach the sermon of the occasion. Rev. A. Sayles is president of the Union Convention.
WOMAN TO PREACH AT FRIENDSHIP
Mrs. Mary Hagler, a woman evangelist, will speak at Friendship Baptist Church, First and H streets, southwest, at both the morning and evening services. The services will be under the auspices of the Missionary Circle of the church.
DISTINGUISHED PREACHESR
AT ST. MARY'S
CHURCH
The pulpit of St. Mary's Church, 23rd street between G and H, northwest, will be filled by distinguished out-of-town clergymen beginning April 29, and for three successive Sundays thereafter, the rector announces. These preachers are of nation-wide renown in Episcopalian circles and their sermons will be of interest to the parishioners of St. Mary's, as well as the general public, who are cordially invited. The Rev. George F. Bragg, Jr., D.D., rector of St. James Church, Baltimore, will preach at the eleven o'clock service on next Sunday morning.
REV. TAYLOR'S SERMON INSERTED IN RECORD
The funeral sermon delivered by Rev. H. B. Taylor, pastor of Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, over the body of Aaron Russell, aged employee of the House of Representatives, was published in the Congressional Record. The sermon was put in by Hon. Clarence MacGregor, Representative from New York.
WEEKLY SERMON
"BECAUSE I LIVE, YE SHALL LIVE ALSO."
By Rev. Leon Wormley
Our text is taken from John 14:19.
Christianity is not a theory, but a reality. Yes, truth made practical by faith, love and service. Jesus' advent, suffering and death was to give life more abundantly. Throughout His earthly career, we find Him giving aid, comfort, healing, restoring sight to the blind, casting out evil spirits, and even raising the dead—never losing an opportunity to do service.
"Because I live, Ye shall live also," what a promise? In it we have a guide for righteousness; a reward for faithful service. Let us analyze it. What is to live? Is it to have breadth, health, and comforts for oneself? No. It is more than that. It is unselfish service in the interest of the poor and needy; it is to remember that we are our brother's keeper. We are to exhibit a sympathetic and helpful spirit for our neighbor.
Because I have bread, ye shall have bread also. Because I have comforts of life, ye shall have comforts also. This exemplifies the spirit of Christ. It is the interpretation of our Saviour's final words to the children of men. "Because I live, ye shall live also." Every act of Jesus shows the depth, genuineness and unselfishness of His love for those whom He came to pay the price for their redemption. Christianity is founded upon the established fact of Christ's resurrection. No fact in proclaiming among men the reliable proofs. He has committed unto His followers the duty of proclaiming among men the reality of His incarnation, His atonement for our sins, and the assurance of immortality, due to His resurrection.
Christ in his final message to His disciples impressed upon them their obligation to establish the kigdom among men. He told them to wait for power from on high and then to be witnesses of His gospel of the resurrection and life, which established beyond question His Messiahship, and demonstrated His power to save
In asking for permission to print the sermon, Mr. MacGregor praised the 58 years of service rendered by Mr. Russell.
BALTIMORE MINISTERS EN-
TERTAINED HERE
The Baptist Ministers' Conference of Baltimore was the guest of the Baptist Ministers' Conference of this city on last Monday. The Baltimore ministers were welcomed on the part of the Washington ministers by Rev. L. T. Hughes, the response being made by Rev. Junius Gray of Baltimore. The main speaker of the occasion was Rev. D. A. Scott, a very able young pastor of Baltimore, who used as his subject, "The Secret of a Successful Ministry." He made preparation and spirituality his main points. The address was responded to Rev. Walter H. Brooks. A most elaborate and well prepared dinner was served at the conclusion of the program.
A CARD OF THANKS
PINKNEY—I wish to thank the neighbors and friends for their expressions of sympathy and for their floral tributes on the occasion of the recent death of my sister, Annie Pinkney.
To Give Musical Tea
Invitations have been issued for a musical and Literary tea, to be given by Gethsemane Chapter, No. 3, O.E.S., on Sunday evening, April 29, at the residence of Mrs. Mamie E. Gates, 777 Fairmount street, northwest.
PETER H.
Rev. LEON WORMLEY, pastor of Zion Baptist Church, Deanwood, D. C., who writes this week's sermon.
all who would repent and believe in Him.
The first duty of every Christian is to go preach the certainty of His salvation and the power of His resurrection. To follow Christ we are to do as the early Christians who went everywhere preaching the word—the Lord working with them. We are to follow the practice of the first disciples. We may think we are weak, and not fit to preach His gospel, but we have a message of power that will stir men to seek salvation today, as it did in the first days of Christianity. If we will go forth in His name, praying, trusting and believing. Our gospel is the only faith that is based upon and testifies to the reality of a future life. Christianity has a message calling for men to seek those things that are above, and to live daily a life free from sin, that would testify to all everywhere the saving power of the gospel of our risen Lord, who has assured us that "Because I live, ye shall live also."
MASONIC NOTES
Monday—Getthesemane Chapter,
No. 3, O.E.S. (special).
Tuesday—Meridian Lodge, No.
6; Daterley Court, No. 1, Heroines
of Jericho.
Wednesday—Warren Lodge, No.
8; Prince Hall Chapter, No. 5,
Royal Arch.
Thursday—Social Lodge, No. 1;
Henderson Commandery, No. 2,
Knights Templar; Miriam Chapter,
No. 4, O.E.S.
Friday—Ionic Lodge, No. 17;
Mount Vernon Chapter, No. 1,
Royal Arch; Naomi Chapter, No.
9, O.E.S.
Eastern Star Degrees
Stimulated by the exemplification of Eastern Star degrees by picked teams composed of officers of the several subordinate chapters, under the direction of Grand Lecturer Sallie Hunt, last Tuesday night, all chapters are planning to confer degrees during the coming month. Three chapters will do degree work next week. At a special meeting on Monday night, Royal Matron Gertrude B. Smith and Royal Patron Benjamin F. Arrington, of Gethsemane Chapter, No. 3, will confer the first and second degrees on a large class of candidates. On Thursday night Royal Matron Della Ashton and Royal Patron James T. Diggs will confer the first and second degrees for Miriam Chapter, No. 4. The first degree will be conferred by Royal Matron Alcinda Lyles and Royal Patron Fred W. Alston, of Naomi Chapter, No. 9, on Friday evening.
and Visitors to
General Conference
in Chicago May 7,
Welcome
To the
COLLEGE BRANCH
Facilities, Guest Rooms,
rooms are available to you.
Visitors for Visitors
or Ladies and Gentlemen
GO BRANCH OF
COLLEGE
e, Founder and Owner
Chicago, Ill.
: Oakland 4101
FINAL MEETING of the SEASON
Speaker: Prof. WESLEY D. ELAM
Principal, Public School, Alexandria, Va.
"The STUDENT in RACE RELATIONS"
THE KAPPA SIGMA DEBATING SOCIETY
Presents
Northwestern
VS.
HOWARD
IN
Inter-Collegiate Debate
Armstrong Auditorium
First and O Streets
Friday, May 4
AT 9:00 P. M.
Selections by
Miss Avis B. Andrews,
SOPRANO
and
Howard University
Men's Glee Club
General Admission 75 Cents
Tickets on sale at office of the Student Council, Howard University; office of Dean of Men, Howard University; Reynold's Pharmacy, Georgia avenue at Euclid street, northwest.
Y.M.C.A.
Daughters of Isis Entertain
In spite of inclement weather many guests were present at the spring frolicque given by the Grand Court of the Daughters of Isis on Monday, April 23, at the residence of Imperial Deputy Ida Jones, 2220 Ninth street, northwest. This was the first of a series of entertainments to be given preparatory to attending the annual conclave in Columbus, Ohio, next August.
To Confer Third Degree
Social Lodge, No. 1, the "mother" lodge of this jurisdiction, will confer the degree of Master Mason on a group of candidates at its regular meeting next Thursday night. The work will be done by Worshipful Master William A. Clayton, assisted by the officers of the lodge.
Gethsemane Chapter Officers
Entertained
Officers of Gethsemane Chapter. No. 3. Eastern Star, were the guests of Mrs. Estelle V. Hawkins at her residence, 1709 Fifthenight street, northwest, on Friday, April 13. Those present included Royal Matron Gertrude Smith, Royal Patron Benjamin F. Arrington, Lena Smith, A. Belle Sprague, Mary F. Brooks, Mary E. White, Mary Moore, Martha Wilkins, Clarissa Chapman, Frances Colbert, Pearl Leake, Sadie Dean, Minnie Smith, Ernestine Diggs Grace P. Howard, Genevieve Lawson, Ida Price, Sadie T. Henson, Addison Chapman, and Lawrence Leake.
Heroines to Confer Degrees
First and second degrees of the Heroines of Jericho will be conferred by Datcher Court, No. 2, H.J., next Tuesday evening. Mrs. Amanda E. Newton, M.A.M., and William Perkins, W.F.J., will direct the degree work.
Pageant Given by Cyrenes
A large audience witnessed the spectacular Pageant of Nations given by the Grand Court, Order of Cyrenes, at Union Wesley A.M. E.Z. Church on Monday evening, April 16. Various nations were represented by Mesdames Clarissa Chapman, Tillie Jones, Janie Washington, Anna Jones, Ruth Hornsby, Rosa Carter, Anne Burleigh, Lillian M. Tyler Alice Marshall, Mattie Overall, Georgia Taylor, Rowena Patrick, Mary M. Honesty, and Bessie Clay, each being escorted by a member of Simon Commandery, No. I, Knights Templar, in dress uniform. First prize was awarded to Mrs. Anne Burleigh and Sir R. B. Covington; second prize to Mrs. Rosa Carter and Sir Rudolph Washington, and third prize to Mrs. Alice Marshall and Sir Wililia Bell.
Shriners Entertained in Baltimore
Officers and members of Mecca Temple, No. 10, Mystic Shrine, were royally entertained by Jerusalem Temple, No. 4, in Baltimore, last Sunday evening. After enjoying a banquet arranged by Illustrious Potentate William M. Cornish, the local Shriners attended divine services at Fountain Baptist Church, in East Baltimore, where Rev. J. R. Coed, D.D., delivered the annual sermon of Jerusalem Temple.
THAT COLLEGE WOMEN should not all crowd into teaching was the advice given by Professor A. Montgomery Gregory, at their annual meeting in Atlantic City. It seems as if the Tribune said something like that last week.
FIVE
FINANCIAL DEPT. A. M. E. Z. IS O.K. SAYS COMM.
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — Six members of the board of finance of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church met here Wednesday, April 18, at the office of the board, and received the report of the financial secretary.
The statement issued by the committee stated: "We found that the rumors circulated in the Negro press charging that Bishop L. W. Kyles and Dr. W. H. Goler, the chairman and secretary of the board of finance, had paid themselves a bonus on certain amounts secured by them for the church, was entirely without foundation and that neither the chairman nor the secretary had at any time received any bonus on any of their financial transactions during the quadrennium."
The report was signed by Benjamin W. Swain, Boston, Mass.; H. R. Hawkins, Newbern, N.C.; J. M. Branch, New Haven, Conn.; R.L. Briscoe, Knoxville, Tenn.; S. W. Weller, Middletown, Conn.; J. H. Thomas, Lynch, Ky., and J. B. Holmes, Montgomery, Ala.
The report further stated that the books having been audited by expert accountants and all the facts ascribed and classified that they had very little difficulty in making the examination.
The committee reported that $693,135 was raised during the past four years. They further stated that they were perfectly well pleased with their findings and gave their unanimous approval of the report which is to be presented to the general conference.
Bishop Jones' Statement
Immediately on the receipt of this release, a reporter of the Tribune waited on Bishop E. D. W. Jones, of 1739 S street, northwest, to find out the exact status of this meeting, Bishop Jones said, "There is nothing much for me to say. The secret meeting of an immunity committee in Philadelphia amounts to virtually nothing. The high officers of our church are laughing at this bunglesome attempt at white-washing."
"The finance of Zion Church is now in the hands of the board of bishops. This board has ordered an official audit. Only the board of audit can report to the general conference its findings." The Bishop further stated, "The name of Rev. S. W. Weller as one of the signers of that comic, invalidates all of its action at once, for he is not a member of the finance committee. The further fact that not a bishop's name appears, is significant in our church because no legal board meetings can be held without a bishop, or one designated by him to preside over its deliberations."
He added, "It is a high carnival day for dishonesty when a pamphlet must be published and circulated to establish the integrity of a church official whose handling of the people's money had been publicly challenged."
ALEXANDRIA, Va. — During the month of February, a large number of citizens of this city met in the Parker-Gray School and organized the Alexandria Citizens' Association. The association aims to foster the educational, social, moral, and civic welfare of the citizens of our group. Its prime object is co-operation.
Through the request of the association, street signs, regulating traffic in front of the Parker-Gray School have been placed. The association has recently contributed funds to the playgroud committee to help repair some of the equipment torn down by the tornado. It has joined in with the Mothers' Club, and the Parent-Teacher Association of the Parker-Gray School, trying to improve the attendance of the children in the Parker-Gray School, by employing the part-time service of someone to look up the children who do not take advantage of what school opportunities they already have. At the present time the association through the churches of the city, is urging the colored citizens to pay their poll taxes on or before May 7. This is a civic duty.
"We may talk about our rights as much as we please, but unless we do our civic duty first, we can never demand very much," assert the president of the association. In the near future the associations to have a membership campaign. Attorney Alfred H. Collins is president, and James A. Howard, secretary.
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Grands, $4.00
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ALEXANDRIA. VA., NEWS
William H. Carter
Alexandria Correspondent
610 South Washington St.
Parker-Gray School Notes
On May 4 the children of the
Parker-Gray School will present,
as their spring concert, the operetta,
"Golden Hair and the Three
Bears."
Tuesday, May 1. will be observed
as health day. Special programs
emphasizing the essentials of
health are being planned, and
parents are cordially invited to
attend these agains. The program
for the primary grades will be
held at 11:30 a.m., while the upper
tend these affairs. The program
at 2:30 p.m.
Among the outstanding problems of the school at the present time is that of attendance. Scores and scores of our children are out of school each day. Through the thoughtful co-operation of the Mothers' Club, Parent-Teacher Association, and the Alexandria Citizens' Association, Mrs. Anna G. Dixon has been engaged to give some of her time toward looking up those who do not take advantage of their opportunities in school.
Marshall Phillips is still confined to his home under the care of his physician.
The Whatsoever Club's reception scheduled for Monday evening in the lecture room of Roberts Chapel was postponed because of rain.
William Nickens is quite ill at his home in Gibbon street.
The Ladies' Foreign Missionary Society served a chicken salad supper Tuesday evening, under the supervision of Mrs. Rachel Scott. Rev. Charles S. Briggs, former pastor here, now of Baltimore, was in the city recently and was the guest of the Carter family and Mrs. Hester Smith. Rev. J. Milton Waldron of Washington, preached at the Zion Baptist Church on South Lee street, Sunday afternoon. A literary program will be
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given Sunday, at 3 p.m., under the auspices of Unity Club No. 1, at the Pitt Street Second Baptist Church. The Roberts Chapel choir will furnish music.
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Webb have purchased the house and lot on Duke street, formerly owned by ex-Superintendent Sweeney of the public schools of this city. Thy intend to make their home there.
A literary program will be given Sunday night at the Roberts Chapel M. E. Church, under the auspices of the Sunday school. Music will be furnished by the junior rev. J. U. King, district superintendent of the Alexandria district, and former pastor of the Asbury M. E. Church, Washington, will preach at Roberts Chapel, Sunday morning at the 11 o'clock service.
The annual contributions to the firemen are now being made. The support of all good citizens is expected.
Mrs. Costello Burke Horn is ill at her home, 606 South Columbus street. She is reported slightly improved.
A week of prayer will begin Monday, April 30, every night till May 4, at Laurel Grove Baptist Church, Franconia, Rev. W. A. Price, pastor.
Mrs. W. A. Price and her daughter, Mrs. Mattie P. Coleman, with Mrs. Annie Gordon, are visiting Mrs. Price's brother, Perry R. Felton, Sr., in Philadelphia for several weeks.
Dr. T. B. Blue, has returned from Carson's Hospital, where he underwent an operation two weeks ago. He is now at his home in Fredericksburg. He will be at his office for duty on and after May 1.
Mrs. Carrie Nickens Jackson was in the city Friday, at the bedside of her sick brother, William Nickens.
The Philharmonic Club, of Roberts Chapel, will present "The Finger of Scorn," a drama in four acts, by the Southeast Dramatic Club of Washington, Friday, May 25, at the Community Building. The Mothers' Club meeting, which was to have been held at the residence of Mrs. Daisy B.
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Kings, 614. South Washington st., Thursday, April 26, has been postponed to Thursday, May 3.
Alexandria will be well represented at Richmond, Va., Sunday, May 6, when Morning Star Lodge, No. 40, I.B.P. O.E.W., of Washington with the auxiliary, invade the city.
Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Carter have rebuilt their store after the cyclone, and are ready for business, at 901 North Patrick street.
A calendar rally and literary program was presented at the Alfred Street Baptist Church, Sunday, April 22, at p.m., given under the auspices of the Parsonage Club.
Claude Cooper, of 801, Madison street, is confined to his bed. Mr. Cooper is bass singer in the popular Humming Bird Quartet of this city.
NEVAL THOMAS TO SPEAK AT THE PLAYHOUSE
Neval H. Thomas, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People of Washington, and a member of the national board of directors of that organization, will speak before the Washington Open Forum at the Play House, Connecticut and N streets, northwest, Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock on the subject, "What the Negro Deserves, Desires, and Demands of His Country." The Open Forum is an organization of progressive whites who invite colored people to membership and to all meetings.
On Sunday, May 6, Mr. Thomas will address the N.A.A.C.P. in Providence, R. I., on "The Kingship of Citizenship."
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Webster, who motored from New York through the south to California, 5800 miles, have just finished a trip to Tia Juana and Juarez, Mexico. They spent five days in San Francisco. After seven weeks in the West, they left for the East, Friday, April 12. They will return by way of Phoenix and the middle west.
FORMER ALEXANDRIAN DIES IN JERSEY CITY
JERSEY CITY, N. J.—Funeral services for Mrs. Florence Chapman Jackson, formerly a teacher in Alexandria, Va., and ex-secretary of the Parker-Gray Club, were held Monday, April 23, from her residence. She died Friday, April 20, after a short illness.
She is survived by her mother, husband, A. B. Jackson, also a former Alexandria, one daughter, one granddaughter, three sisters, and one brother. A resolution from the Parker-Gray Club was read at the services.
H. UNIV. DEBATES NORTHWESTERN HERE MAY 4
The Kappa Sigma Debating Society will present Northwestern vs. Howard in an Inter-collegiate and interracial debate at Armstrong auditorium, Friday evening, May 4, at nine o'clock. The society aims to make this debate one of the greatest intellectual events of the season. Robert E. Dandridge and Robert Burrell will represent Howard in defending the negative side of the question: "Resolved, That the principals of the Baumes Act of New York be enacted by the several States." Northwestern's team is composed of high scholarship—one is a Phi Beta Kappa man, the other is a senior law student.
Miss Avis Andrews, who is noted for her soprano voice, and the Howard University Men's Glee Club will render selections.
Among those included in the guests' list are President Coolidge and his aides; Vice-President Charles Dawes; Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson; Secretary Herbert Hoover; Chief Justice William Taft; Postmaster General Harry S. New; Rev. D. Phelps Stokes; Rev. Dr. Jason Pierce; Hon. Harlan Stone; Rev. Dr. William Darby; Deans Lucy Slowe and William West; Miss Lulu Childers; Miss Nannie Burroughs; Hon. Hubert Work; Professor Roy Tibbs; members of the board of trustees; and Dr. Emmett Scott.
BEASON HONORED
George T. Beason, former member of the Citizens' Advisory Council, was guest of honor at the annual banquet, held Wednesday night in Calvary Parish Hall, by the Federation of Civic Associations.
Mr. Beason, who was succeeded this year, by William H. Lewis, when the former refused to become a candidate for re-election to the council, was feted by nearly 100 persons, representatives of the various constituent associations and other local organizations. Many speakers paid tribute to Mr. Beason as a civic leader and an organizer. Chief among those who praised his work in the Georgetown Citizens' Association, which association he represented while a member of the council, was Rev. W. L. Washington, pastor of Zion Baptist Church.
Dr. George H. Richardson and William H. Lewis, the two colored men now serving on the advisory council, spoke on the Federation and its good work.
Other speakers were Dr. J. J. Porter, Captain H. D. Queen, the Rev. George W. Fisher, Dr. C. H. Marshall, Jr., Samuel W. Watson, J. C. Payne, Huyer I. Brown, E. H. Lawson, J. C. Bruce and A. S. Pinkett. Musical numbers were furnished by Mrs. Enoch C. Gray, Morrissey S. Koonce was toastmaster.
AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
EMPLOYEE ENTERTAIN
Approximately 600 persons were the guests of the employees of the Department of Agriculture at a reception and dance given last reception evening at the Colonnade. Officers of the Agriculture Employees Association are: Raymond J. Weir, president; John T. G. Carpenter and Mrs. Josephine Sneed, vice-presidents; Mrs. Isabella Towles, treasurer; Mrs. Mary J. Nightengale, financial secretary; and Frank W. Howard, recording secretary.
JOHN DAVIS VISITS ALMA MATER
John P. Davis, publicity director at Fisk University, was a visitor to Washington, last week.
Davis, who is a graduate of Dunbar High School, in the class of 1922, spoke to the undergraduates at the assembly period, last Wednesday.
ing strictly with the Mississippi primary statutes and the Republican party held its convention April 18.
NEVAL THOMAS TO SPEAK AT THE PLAYHOUSE
Neval H. Thomas, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People of Washington, and a member of the national board of directors of that organization, will speak before the Washington Open Forum at the Play House, Connecticut and N streets, northwest, Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock on the subject, "What the Negro Deserves, Desires, and Demands of His Country." The Open Forum is an organization of progressive whites who invite colored people to membership and to all meetings.
EAGLE HARBOR RESIDENTS TO MEET
Residents and property owners of the summer colony at Eagle Harbor, Maryland, will hold a mass meeting at eight o'clock next Monday evening, April 30, at the Moses Hall, 1421 T street, northwest, to discuss plans for repairing roads and improving the bathing beach facilities at the popular summer resort. John T. Stewart, president of the Eagle Harbor Association, will preside.
On Sunday, May 6, Mr. Thomas will address the N.A.A.C.P. in Providence, R. I., on "The Kingship of Citizenship."
SENTENCED TO EIGHT YEARS
Pleading guilty to three house-
breaking charges, Thaddeus O.
Gay was sentenced to 8 years in
prison by Chief Justice Siddons,
in Criminal Court, Saturday.
LILY WHITE CASE ARGUED
BEFORE MISSISSIPPI COURT
JACKSON, Miss. April 26.—The question of whether an equity court has jurisdiction over a political controversy raised in the Republican political fight in this state was argued in the Supreme Court here Monday.
Change Your Luck!
Change Your Luck!
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Lucky Kuro Ring
Black Cat set in
blue oval Egyptian
stone. Has horse-
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jibbone and Four
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Two of the three judges on the bench indicated that Chancellor T. Price Dale, of Hattiesburg, should never have issued the injunction restraining the Perry W. Howard group from holding their convention here March 14.
symbols of good luck. Roman gold finish.
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ECONOMY SUPPLY HOUSE
New calls were issued conform-
Copyright 1922
the United St
in whole or p
Mme.
PSYC
Licensed
MAKES A
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
Licensed by the District of Columbia
MAKES AN HONEST PROPOSITION
I do hereby solennly swear to make no charges if I do not faithfully fulfill all word embodied in this statement. I will tell you just what you want to know about friends, enemies, or rivals; whether husband, wife or sweetheart is true or false; how to gain the love of one you most desire; control or influence the actions of anyone, even though miles away. I further guarantee that unless you find me superior to any other palistin you ever consulted, there is no hope so fond or wish so great that I cannot accomplish for you.
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I lift you out of your sorrow and trouble and start you on the path to happiness and prosperity. There is no heart so sad or home so dreary that I cannot bring sunshine to, in fact, no matter what may be your hope, fear or ambition, I do guarantee to tell it all before you utter a word to me, and if you make me satisfied and if I do not faithfully fulfill every word and claim above, you pay not a penny and I do herewith sign my name to this statement.
I do hereby solomly swear to make no charges if I do not faithfully fulfill every word embodied in this statement. I will tell you just what you want to know about friends, enemies, or rivals; whether husband, wife or sweetheart is true or false; how to gain the love of one you most desire; control or influence the actions of anyone, even through miles away. I will tell you that you must never miss your friend, you find me superior to any other palestine you ever consulted. There is no hope so fond or wish so great that I cannot accomplish for you.
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I lift you out of your sorrow and trouble and start you on the path to happiness and prosperity. There is no heart so sad or sad so dreary that I cannot bring sunshine to, in fact, no matter what may be your hope, and that I cannot guarantee to tell it all before you utter a word to me, and after I tell it all, you will be 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.
MADAME HARRISON-ASTOR
MADAME HARRISON-ASTOR
No fortune belling, my work is mentalism, business confidential.
Can be seen from 1 p.m., till 8 p.m.
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Madame Harrison-Astor prides herself of the fact of being the only palm-ball in the world who has, during her stay in England, been officially summed up to the St. James Palace in London, to read for his late majesty, King Edward VII.
1113 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., N.W. Next door to Raleigh Hotel WASHINGTON, D.C.
Life Readings One Dollar No Readings Given By Mail
Madame Harrison-Astor prides herself of the fact of being the only palist in the world who has, during her stay in England, been officially summoned to the St James Palace in London, to read for his late majesty, King Edward VII.
1113 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., N.W. Next door to Raleigh Hotel
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Life Readings One Dollar No Readings Given By Mail
EASTERN CITY
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 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.
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 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.
Madam Lenora
610 F Street, N.W., between 6th and 7th Sts.
Hours 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Closed on Sundays
16 Years Experience
Phone, Decatur 3455
ADAMS, MORROW & HARRIS
FUNERAL DIRECTORS & EMBALMERS
Quality, Service, and Prices to Satisfy
Funeral Parlors - R Street at New Jersey Ave., N. W.
Branch Offices:
904 44th St., N. E. (Deanwood)
Phone, Lincoln 5334
2722 Olive Ave., N. W. (Georgetown)
Phone, North 3585
FUNERAL DIRECTORS & EMBALMERS
Quality, Service, and Prices to Satisfy
Funeral Parlors - R Street at New Jersey Ave., N. W.
Branch Offices:
904 44th St., N. E. (Deanwood) Phone, Lincoln 5334
2722 Olive Ave., N. W. (Georgetown) Phone, North 3585
Personal Service
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.
Funeral as Low
$100
John T. Rhines & Co.
Funeral Directors & Embalmers
901 3rd Street, S.W.
Private Ambulance
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.
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Funeral as Low
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John T. Rhines & Co.
Funeral Directors & Embalmers
901 3rd Street, S.W.
Private Ambulance
Phone, Franklin 3108
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OSTEOPATHY
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COLLEGE OF
Next Term begins September 24, 1928 OSTEOPATHY is the New, and Recognized School Medical Practice which teaches to treat and cure the diseases of the human body and system without it internal medication. Write for particulars.
DR. T. THEO. PARKER, President
JOHN H. HARRIS
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 fa
them of all the worry of it
minor details.
Our Phone is at your service or
and see you.
Business Phone: N. 8180; Resid
OPEN DAY AND N
L.E. MURRAY & SON FUNERAL DIRECTORS
A. B.
FUNERAL COMPLETE FROM $100 UP
Our quality and service reflects proficiency,
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.
Business Phone: N. 8180; Residence: N. 8778
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
THE STATE MUSEUM
We carry out the wishes
the burden of bereavement
procedure politely and effie
we guarantee.
There is no taste so delicate
not comply with.
THOS. FR
Graduate Embalmer
723 T ST
Residence Phone, N. 1213
McGuire's Fun
SINC
"Quality at
1820 Ninth St
Telephone,
LICENSED IN THE S
carry out the wishes of loved ones so a
den of bereavement. Personally directi
are politely and efficiently, is the kind of
guarantee. Lady A.
is no taste so delicate or wish so exacting th
only with.
THOS. FRAZIER CO.
Graduate Embalmer and Funeral Direct
723 T STREET, N.W.
ce Phone, N. 1213 Office Phone,
Guire's Funeral Hos
We carry out the wishes of loved ones so as to ease 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.
Residence Phone, N. 1213 Office Phone, N. 7796
SINCE 1912
"Quality and Service"
820 Ninth St., Northwest
Telephone, North 3747
ENSED IN THE STATE OF MARYL
Bundy's
Funeral Home
"Quality and Service"
1820 Ninth St., Northwest
Telephone, North 3747
LICENSED IN THE STATE OF MARYLAND
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.
You should have Bundy's Service. Complete Cost $125 and up.
STEEL VAULTS $85.00
E. W. BUNDY
649 Florida Avenue, N.W.
North 5750
You should have Bundy's Service. Complete Cost $125 and up.
STEEL VAULTS $85.00
E. W. BUNDY
649 Florida Avenue, N.W.
North 5750
A beautiful funeral need not he 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 Jarvis Co.
W. Ernest Jarvis Co.
"As close to you as the nearest telephone."
2222 Georgia Avenue, N.W.
Phones: Office, North 3815;
Residence, North 6878
WEST END PARLORS
28th and Dumbarton Ave., N.W.
Phone, North 8868
MURRAY & SON
SERIAL DIRECTORS
2105 12th St. N.W.
SERIAL COMPLETE FROM $100 UP
quality and service reflects proficiency,
sability, experience and reliability.
No: A service to the family, relieving
of all the worry of important and
details.
He is at your service or we will come
and see you.
Phone: N. 8180; Residence: N. 8778
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
ATTENTION TO EVERY DETAIL
Established 1917
of loved ones so as to ease
it. Personally directing every
efficiently, is the kind of Service
Lady Attendant.
AZIER CO.
and Funeral Director
STREET, N.W.
Office Phone, N. 7796
Funeral Home
ECE 1912
and Service"
St., Northwest
North 3747
STATE OF MARYLAND
have Bundy's complete Cost stand up.
ULTS $85.00
BUNDY
Avenue, N.W.
th 5750
SAMUEL H. lick Sports Editor
EDGAR LEE, TECH RUNNER, STAR OF TWO RACES
Tribune League to Lift | TRIBUNE, LEAGUE TO HOLD | Eastern League Magnates
Baseball Season Lid) r= vi, x sn swransn: | Agree to Disband
ey
| SUNDAY, MAY 6, T0 USHER
IN OFFICIAL SAND-
LOT SEASON
The Washington Tribune Lea-
gue will open the official 1928
sandlot baseball season, Sunday,
May 6, with the following
games:
Class A—
Anacostia ys. Black ‘Barons at
Anacostia’ ©
Huntsville vs., Hecht Co. at
Huntsville .
Forestville vs. Columbia Cubs
at Forestville
Arlington, vs, Elite Panthers at
Arlington
Class B—
Colesville vs. Anacostia Hills-
dales at Colesville
Nationals vs. Potomac Giants
at Monument 8
D.C. Specials vs. Md. White
Sox at Lakeland
Brookland vs. Washington Pi-
- rates at Brookland,
Managers are requested to
mail or bring in the names of
their battery choices for open-
ing games.
‘The Union Baseball League will
Jaunch its sixth campaign, Sun-
day, May 6, according to announce-
ments made by President Hayes
Jones, Tuesday.
The circuit is made up of six
‘clubs. Besides the Oriental Tig-
ets, Washington Giants, Myrtles,
and LeDroit Tigers, the Union
League has two new entries. The
Hannibal A. C, (Police and Fire-
men) and the Southern Stars have
obtained franchise.
The champion Oriental Tigers
‘will enter the season with pretty
much the same line-up as the one
which won the title last year. If
seiting the “Prides of the Point”
may added strength in several
ghey es
up Turner, infielder, Sam
Lacy, Reese and Willie Hope,
general utility man, have been
signed by the Tigers. All of these
youngsters ‘are former LeDroit
players. Turner and Lacy spent
last season with the Washington
Black Sox.
The LeDroit Tigers
The LeDroit Tigers will take
the field with a fairly representa-
tive nine. Burrell Kenner will be
‘back on the job at his shortfield
sition together with several of Ris
veterans. Sherman Baylor, the
stellar guardian of the hot corner,
the Jefferson brothers, slugging
outfielders, and a host of promis-
ing newcomers are in the fold of
‘the LeDroiters.
Andrew Allen is optimistic and
declares that in spite of the losses
suffered through, jumping players
he expects to have a winner.
The Washington Giants who
boasted of their hard hitting team
Jast.year enabling them to take
4 games from the Champion Ori-
entals out of six games played
have lost one of their hardest hit-
ters, Jimmie Williams, who goes
to the Black Sox in company with
‘Leroy Barker. However, the man-
‘ager says that he has signed up
some of the huskiests players in
the city and expects this year to
relieve the Orientals of the burden
of ‘carrying around the name of
champions. c
‘The southwest oats is present.
ing to Union League fans a second
team; some Southern Stars.
This group, re. is scrap-
Py, and much, trouble from them
is expected to be coming to the
older clubs.
Police and Firemen
‘The Police and Firemen Team,
arg ae the name of the
ki A. Amott create much
interest in Union League
games as most of their men are
x-players -of. ome school or good
team. It is said that McGuinn has
played under the»management of
Pop Watkins. Scott was once a
member of the well known Teddy
Bears. -
Mills, Johnson, Saunderson,
Crawford, King, Carter, Briscoe,
Green and Manager Bush are ah
ex-players of good teams.
Fox, former St. Cyprian left
wing ace, Ed Brown, amt ex-profes-
sional, formerly “of the Cuban
Giants, Richardson and the Bush
brothers make up a team which
should be troublesome.
‘The Myrtle A. C., minus Leroy
Barker is going to be a source of
question. While the northeast
feam is by“1io means a “one-man-
ner” Barker has always served
‘as the main, cog around which the
machine was built. Whether his
Toss will be. serious handicap to
the Myrtles-or not has yet to be
seen.
GAMES.
May 6
Giants vs. aaa oe o'clock,
Quemtale wx igers—3 o'clock.
vs. Hannil 2 games
ipetios- vs, -aaenibels—2 somes
With Eo weather prevailing,
the Washington ‘Tribune Baseball
League will swing. into its 1028
campaign, on Sunday, May 6.
Sixteen teams will come ee
er in 8 games on 8 diamonds to
inaugurate the opening of the sec-
ond season of Washington's larg-
est circuit,
The loop boasts of the reen-
trance of 18 of the 24 teams which
operated last season. ' Still an-
other new club is applying for a
place in the league, to make it a
three-cornered affair.
‘The 1927 season was a most stc-
cessful one, with teams from every
in town and out-of-town commun-
ity. Represented in the Tribune
Leaguo is Anacostia, Arlington,
Va,; Alexandria, Va.; Brookland,
Colesville, Md.;’ Forestville, Md.;
Huntsville, Mdj and Iakeland, Md.
‘The league will be divided into
two sections; Class A, and Class
B. The first named division was
headed by the Elite Panthers, from
the neighborhood of Fourth and N
streets, northwest, avd the latter
class title went to the Colesville
Tigers. In the play-off, for the
trophy Marylanders ‘took the ver-
ict.
‘The Monarchs, Myrtle Preps,
Southern Stars, Togans, Washing
ton All Stars, Hillsdales, Army
War College and Brightwood with-
drew from the 1927 loop. Of those
teams the Togans, Hillsdales and
Monarchs have applied for reen-
trance, but unless a quota of 8
teams ‘can be raised. so as to per-
mit organization of a third sec-
tion to be known as Class C, noth-
ing can be done. ‘The Tenleytown
‘A.C. has also filed application for
so tert:
WASHINGTON BLACK SOX
PLAY CUBAN GIANTS
George Ford and the Washing.
ton Black Sox baseballers wail
swing inte action for thelr 3928
ne"Brookiyn Cuban Giants at Un-
ion League Park, Sunday.
In all probability “Spike” Bland
or Lefty Smith will toe the slab
for the locals, with Ed Davis on
the receiving end. Ford's crew
with several additions to the roster,
Fre teains ie intends toring
here this season.
HOWARD TRACK & FIELD
DATE ANNOUNCED
The Fourth National Open
Championship and Scholastic Track
and Field feat, condoctad ‘by, the
Department of Physical Education,
Howard University, will be staged
on the university campus, Wednes-
ady, May 30, beginning at 1 p.m.
Open Champi =. Events
100-yard dash, ard dash,
adcyard dash,” runing broad
jump, 16-pound hammer throw,
80-yard run, 1 mileerelay, 1 mile
run, running high jump, javelin
throw, discus throw, 2 mile run,
20-yard high hurdles, 220-yard
low hurdles, 16-pound shot put, and
pole vault,
Interscholastic Championships”
Events
100-yard dash, 220-yard dash,
running broad ’ jump, 440-vard
dash, 880-yard dash, running high
jump, 120-yard low hurdles, 1 mile
relay, and 12-pound shot.
Prizes Offered
‘Handsome first, second and third
place, prizes will be given for each
idual event. Each member of
a —< relay, team will recsive
a medal. Tae winning scho-
lastic relay (cam will also receive
‘a team trophy. A team point tro-
phy will be awarded in both the
open and scholastic events.
‘An entry fee of fifty cents # man
foreach event must accompany
each entry. For relay races, five
men’ constitute an entry for a fee
ef two dollars. All athletes of
‘amateur athletic standing are
urged to participate in this meet,
as it is one of the biggest and most
important meets of the year.
The office of the clerk of the
meet is in the New Gymnasium
Building, Howard University,
Washington, D.C., where all com-
munications should be addressed.
VIRGINIA SEMINARY DEFEATS
LINCOLN IN DEBATE
LYNCHBURG, Va—The debat-
ing team of Virginia Theological
Seminary and - College defeated
Lincoln University of Avania
in a debate here last Thursday.
The subject was the same as that
used in the debate a few weeks
ago when Lincoln defeated , the
niversity of Pennsylvania, “Re-
solved, That the United States
Should Protect the Capital of its
Citizens Invested in Foreign Coun-
tries.” The decision was unani-
mous. re zs
~~“ QHE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1928 ©
TRIBUNE LEAGUE TO HOLD
IMPORTANT MEETING
There will be an important
meeting of all managers of Tri-
bune League teams, at 920 U
Street, NW. at 6:30 o'clock p.m.
sharp, Monday, Matters of im-
portance are to be discussed,
and those who have the interest
of their teams at heart cannot
Sewn ter oe
Several | suggestions were
made at the initial mecting,
Monday in regard to handling
the umpire situation which gave
Se'much trouble last year. These
will be put before the general
eect
Besides this there are other
matters which will involve vari-
ous phases of Tribune League
baseball, to be discussed.
HOWARD RUNNERS PLACE
THIRD AT OHIO RELAY
CARNIVAL
The “Flying Four” of the
Howard University track team,
left Friday morning for the
University of Pennsylvania
Games, to bg held at Franklin
Field, April 27 and 28. The
team is composed of Thorne,
Jones, Langston and Walker.
The Bison eye ran third
ir. the Collegiate Mile Relay at the
Ohio Relays, held in Colunibus, last
Saturday.
In spite of the muddy track and
the continuous rain, the race was
fast. Wooster and Ohio Wesleyan
took first and second places re-
spectively. Wooster’s time was
3.38; Howard’s time was 3.34 The
world’s record time for the mile re-
lay is 3:16.4.
"The following track schedule was
sanctioned by the Board of Ath-
letic Control, last Thursday.
April 21, Ohio Relays and Balti-
more Murathon.
April 28, Penn Reatys.
May 5, Intra-Mural Meet,
May 16, Lincoln-Howard Meet.
May 19, Lincoln Open Meet.
May 30, Howard Open Meet.
“y” VOLLEY BALL SERIES TO
BEGIN
‘The Baltimore “Y” will play the
Washington “Y” a seven-game ser-
ies in volley ball begisining at the
‘Twelfth Street Branch Y.M.C.A.,
Saturday, April 28, at 8 p.m. ‘The
teams are about equally matched
and the interest is running high.
‘Volley ball has become a very
popular sport among the business
‘and professional men throughout
the country. The local “¥" team
is rapidly rounding into shape as a
serious contender for Eastern As-
sociation honors.
‘The probable line-up for the
game is: L. Brickhouse, Dr. Walk-
er, Captain Ferrell, Mark Hil, F.
Green, and E, W. Biair.
GIRLS SWIM MEET
‘The Physical Education Depart-
ment of Dunbar High School an-
nounces a Girls’ Swiraming Meet
to be held, Thursday, May 3, in
the school tank,
Phil Edwards, the most out-
standing middle distance runner in
the United States during the past
indoor season, has consented to run
a special 880-yard race in the
Howard National Open ‘Track and
Field Meet xt Howard University
Stadium on May 30.
Local followers of the cinder
th have not been treated to an
Bo- ard race by the country’s best
since Sandy Evans ran s eres,
mal race here in 1924, wards,
by his record, is a much more capa-
b. performer than Evans. was and
is virtually assured of making the
Olympic team.
ja Tis, Howard, meet, management
making special efforts to secure
other Olrarie team eoitaene to
appear in this meet. All athletes
of amateur — are invited to
participate in open
reeeriey Pacmag tie ated
students are invited fo participate
in the scholastic events.
For informatie, sadeess Louis
L. Watson, Director, How-
ard University, Washington, D.C.
CUBS TO PLAY COLESVILLE
The Columbia Cubs will play the
Colesville Lions, on the
tiged te report at the club house
‘at the ¢
wet ee
Lieglbe! ip rgynen Be ge
Club would do much toward
ening the field of local athletic
activity. . We're for it, hook, line,
and sinker.
Let's do some bowling, folks.
Believe me, it’s fun. =
Eastern League Magnates
Agree to Disband
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—At a
meeting of the remaining clubs in
the Eastern Basebal 1League in the
offices of Alex Pompez, Cuban Star
boss, last Thursday night, it was
decided that the loop should dis
‘Those in attendance at the gath-
ering were Edward Bolden and
Ceorge Mayo, for Hiildale; Alex
Pompez for Cuban Stars; James
Keenan for the Lincoln “Giants;
George Rossiter for Baltimore
Black Sox, and I. A. Washington
for the Bacharach Giants, of At-
Jantic City. BY
‘The Brooklyn Royal Giants, con-
trolled by Nat Strong, were not on
hand and the Harrisburg Giants
quit the league several months ago.
Several weeks later Hilldale ex-
ploded bombshell when Ed Bole
» Who organized the league, an-
nounced his club's withdrawal,
The withdrawal of these three
teams left President. Ike Nutter's
cireuit with only four clubs, the
Paltimore Black Sox, Cuban Stars,
Jincoln Giants yand Bacharach
Giants,
It was at first thought that the
league would function even under
its handicap, but last Thursday's
developments coming like a thun-
derbolt from a clear sky, threw a
bolt in the works,
Bolden Likes League
Bolden still favors organized
baseball, but not the way the
league has been coriducted for the
last few years) ,
“I am always in. favor of
league,” said the Darby pilot.
“I sponsored it and still believe
it is the right idea. When one man
quits this week and then comes
back a few weeks later and when
one team plays forty home, games
and another four, then it is time
for a halt.
“Hilldale made plenty of money
in the days of independent base~
ball and that is the reason we havg
fone back to our old eet (iat
ear the club dro 000.
ra eh ee
ie whie ope will be in
existence some aye, 4
SOMETHING SAID” ABOUT
PETER JACKSON
am the New York World,
Jy Forest, veteran trainer
of fighters, a recognized authority
the world over, and perhaps one
of the “squarest shooting guys"
in the ring game today, declared
that the greatest of ‘the great
fights of Peter Jackson, sensation-
al Negro heavyweight of the nine-
teenth century, was the 61-round
draw with Jim Corbett. DeForest
writes:
“Who was Peter Jackson? When
did he sigs ‘These questions,
asked ee » Whelan, who ran
across grave of the famous
Negro pugilist, brings to mind one
of the test boxing matches
ever hela between Sereeh.
‘Mr. Whelan, a New Yi ir, trav-
eling abroad, copied the following
lines from a tombsténe in the
‘West London and Westminster
Cemetery:
Had “Lion's Heart”
“In truth, Peter Jackson had ‘a
lion's heart, a giant's strength,’
and ‘symmetry adorned his
frame.’ He was born near Porto
Rico, West Indies, on July 3, 1861,
and ‘he ees his fighting career
in Sydney, Australia, in 1882. Af-
ter fighting a draw with Jack
Hayes, he knocked out this oppo-
nent in a return match in seven
rounds. He then kno¢ked out Sam
Britton in 20 minutes for @ purse
of $50, and after he had put away
Mick Dooley in three round?, Jack
Burke, 2 local star, réfused to fight
him
“Soon after this he mét his first
reverse in the ring when he was
Knocked out by Bill Faenan in
Melbourne, in thres rounds. ‘They
fought for 8500 a side, and Far-
nan’s experience was too much for
Jackson. However, Peter and his
backers were’ satisfied that Far-
nan’s victory was a fluke, and
they were immediately rematched.
‘The return meeting-took place in
Melbourne, and they wére- going
at it hammer and tongs with Hon.
ors pretty even W! ice
intervened in the tixth round, the
contest ee in a draw, That
was in 1884. Two roe later Jack-
som dome Tom Hor (6200
and Se us
tralia, and won in rounds.
Rigs 1888 Jackson came to. Amer:
arriving Francisco in
April of that year and boxing Con
rdan in the old Cremorne The-
atre there. Poor old Con; he’s been
dead these thirty-odd years now!
“On August 24 of the year of
his iyal here, Jackson’ met and
defeated George Godfrey before
the California A. C. in nineteen
Sackeow's vicley ao impressed the
Ss 80 imy le
officials “of the cammieion that
they matched to fight Joe
McAuliffe. ae the purse
was. $3,000 came 0}
on December 27. ne Rt ct weigh-
BRUCE FLOWERS TO FIGHT
TERRIS
NEW YORK. — Promoter
Humbert J. Fugazy announced
last Monday night that, be had
Bigned Bruce Flowers, the New
Rochelle lightweight ' sensation
to meet Sid Terris, white, for
& 10-round bout at Ebbets
Field, Brooklyn, for June 6.
Terris, for a’ long time has
been one of the leading aspir-
ants for the lightweight crown,
and long has been considered a
dangerous rival for Sammy
"Mandell, the titleholder.
The fight with Flowers ‘wilt
be the first match engaged in
by Terris since the latter's
Knockout defeat suffered at the
hands of Jimmy McLarnin, Pa-
tific coast boxer.
Flowers, on the other hand,
ix touse the bout with Terris
as his comeback fight after
breaking his hand in a match
with Billie Petrolle, March 16,
‘
STRONGER THAN IN '27
Coach Duvalle Evans of the Dun-
bar High School baseball team,
déesn't seem to be much worried
‘over the outcome of the approach-
ing diamond season, in so far as
his Poct nine is concerned, | In
fact, Mr. Evans has joined the fold
ef “contented coaches.”
. With eight of his 1927 varsity
squad back in uniform and no less
‘than six promising recruits, there
¢an be no reason why'the Red and
Black mentor should not be op-
timistic, Tate, Glover, Brown,
Harlan, the Gitmores, John and
Melvin, Grafton Daniels and Newt
Jackson are the players which form
‘a strong nucleus around which Mr.
Byans might, work
| The infield will be somewhat
jbolstered in the addition of Helme,
‘stellar first sacker of the 1927
Shaw Junior High nine. Newt
Jackson has becn shifted from
‘third base to the shortfield, last
‘season's outstanding weakness. A
newcomer, Jack Steele, is at pres-
‘ent showing promise at the third
corner.
The Dunbar booking so far, in-
eludes Shaw, Randal and Phelps
Junior High schools, Manassas In-
dustrial Institute, Howard Fresh-
men, and the Bowie Normal School.
‘The Armstrong-Dunbar titular
series will take place on May 10
and 17, with a third date, in case
‘of a-tie, to be decided later.
ed 212 pounds, but Jackson, whose
weight hovered between 192 and
200 pounds, scaled an even 200
for the contest. It was a slashing
battle, but Jackson got the upper
hand ‘finally and knocked out Joe
in the twenty-fourth round,
“Jackson followed this with a
victory over Patsy Cardiff in April
of the following year, and again
the California A. C. offered a purse
of $3,000. Jackson won in ten
rounds. After a few more minor
fights Jackson set sail for Eng-
land, and on November 11 he de-
feated Jem Smith, winning $4,000,
the vietor’s end of a $5,000 purse.
Returning to the United States the
next year, 1890, Jackson fought
other bouts and then sailed for
Jackson battled Joe Goddard for a
‘Australia, where, on October 21,
$2000 puree, split, 75 and 25 per
cent.
“The battle lasted eight rounds
and at the finish the Judges dis-
agreed. Professor Miller, the ref-
eee, declared the contest a draw,
though in trath Jackeon was best
¢d by his opponent:
Jackson's Greatest Fight
“And then came Jackson's great-
est fight, the one with James J.
Corbett.” This took place in the
California A. C. on May 21, 1891,
with Hiram Cook, the regular elub
referee, in there as third man. As
everyone knows, this fight lasted
Sixty-one rounds, when the referee
stopped the fight and declared it
‘no contest’—all bets off.
“This came as a terrible blow to
Corbett and his friends, for they
had bet heavily that Jim would
last anywhere from ten to twenty-
five rounds, Jackson was a favor-
ite at 5 to i to whip the young
boxing instructor of the Olympic
‘A.C. Peter had a big advantage
EF the weight over Combet, bi
than’ ‘the, announced ringside
weights, which were: Jackson, 198
pounds; Corbett, 182. Cortiett
might ‘have sealed the poundage,
but if he did, it must have been
in full ring regalia, for he cer-
tainly looked much lighted.
“The fight itself was a classic.
Jackson was the heavier hitter,
but aoe Corbett was a streak
of greased lig! , and the men
showed not only boxing skill of
the highest order bat show-
ed ring generalship and quick,
cagey thinking such as never be-
fore had been shown in @ prize
ring. ee
Local Boy Shows Way to
Two Cross-Country Fields
STIMORE, MD.—Thundering
into the fish’ ahead of 16 om
trants, here last Saturday, Edgar
Lee, 16 aot old, of the Arm-
strong Technical ' High School,
Washington, was declared, winne
of the Fourth Annual Health Mar-
athon. Lee's time was 20 minutes,
24 4-5 seconds.
‘Due to the slippery pavement
caused by a drizzling rain the
course was slow, and the Tech lad
labored under a serious handicap.
Three sya go to Lee. They
are: the Afro-American gold med-
al, one leg on the Royal Theatre
cup, and a bronze medal offered by
eecpees Committee to the
high school boy to finish. Rob-
inson, of Virginia Union, was sec-
ond, and John Carroll, winner for
three years, finish:d in third place.
‘Virginia Union University, Rich-
mond, Va., won the meet. it was
closely pushed by the, two, Wash-
ington entries, Howard University
and Armstrong High School.
Order of Finish
1 ir Lee, Armstrong High.
2. J. L. Robinson, Virginia Union
8. John Carroll, Celtic A. C.
4. Perey C. May, Howard
5. Wm. P. Witt, Washington Y.
MGA.
6. Bast W. Campbell, Decatur
7. Alfred H. Bell, Virginia Union
{. Roy C, Lightfoot, Howard
10. Robert Lee, Don Juan Club
11. Wade Carter, “Armstrong—
a, Night.
12, Walter L, Smith, Morgan
‘Sete, pe Went te Tecan Gancen
1, Va. Union Uniy. (2-8-16).. 26
2, Howard Univ. (4-9-15)..... 28
8 Armstrong Wigh (1-13-18). 32
4, Colties (3-14-17)... 0... 34
6. Morgan College (7-12-32). 51
T.,Decatur (6-36-28)......... 60
8 Dunbar High (21-27-30)... 78
9. Douglass ae (19-31-40)... 90
40. Stanton High (80-42-57). .133
Li. Armstrong Night (11-73-74) 158
POLICE INFORMER SEN-
/ 'TENCED J
A_ police informer, Walter
Smith, who is said to live at an
address in Morgan street, north-
east, was sentenced to serve a
year and a day and fined $150, in
Seleical Court, Monday, for per-
jury.
Smith is alleged to have furn-
ished police with false informa-
tion in eed to the purchase of
liquor. He is said to have been
sent by police to a certain address
in the northeast section for the
purpose of buying whiskey. Al-
though he failed to obtain any li-
quor from the house, Smith is al-
leged to have sworn to a warrant
for the arrest of the occupant.
Another Negro, John Walker,
1260 Linden street, northeast, is
awaiting sentence on an identical
charge. Walker was arrested by
police of the Ninth precinct two
‘weeks ago, when he swore to false
information that he had purchased
liquor at a house in Brewer's
Court.
U.S. SPANISH WAR VETERANS
NOTES
Sergeant Geor, Berry, Camp
No. 10, U.S, Spanish War Veterans,
Department of the Potomac, is
holding its meetings on the first
Monday of each month at Scottish
Rite Hall, 1631 Eleventh street,
northwest., Camp Commander Wil-
liam E. Sinith, presiding.
The camp will be honored at the
May 7th meeting bv a visit of
Department Commander Albert
Michaud, who will address the
Gamp on pending legislation a
fecting Spanish War Veterans. All
veterans are cordially invited to at-
tend, and bring a recruit.
“In telling about the fight in
later years, Corbett said he was
bothered most by Jackson's fierce
uppereut, a blow that had uever
Peas sre
i g ex-bank cleri
several rounds to fathom and foil
the punch,
“It was in the thirty-fifth round
that Corbett complained to, Billy
Delaney, his second, that his “arms
were getting tired.” Imagine any
of our boxers today battling thir-
ty-five fierce vounds before their
‘arms got tired.’
Corbett Coming Fast
“Corbett was coming fast with
a last dying, effort when the ‘ight
ras stopped in| that sixty-frt
round, Going to. his dressing
room, Corbett says, he saw Jackson,
who had preceded ‘him, fall on his
face in the runway going to hi
dressing room. It was then that
Corbett decided he had been
bed.’ Nevertheless, Corbett, fa
also that Jackson was the
magnificent specimen of physical
manhood I ever saw. At that,
Jackson was beautifully built. He
was one of the greatest exponents
of the ‘one-two punch’ that I ever
saw and he was one of the first
fighters I ever saw use the com-
bination punch.
“He fought a couple more fights
after this one with Corbett, then
sailed for England, where he
knocked out Frank Slavin for a
heat at en
ustralia
Following this fight he came. to
America and made his debut in
“Uncle Tom's Cabin” at Santa
Ross, Cal, He toured in this play
a lowing year, negotia-
tions for a return match with Cor-
bett pene through, he went to
the West Indies and on to Eng-
“In his memoirs, Corbett, speak-
ing of Peter Jackson, sa73!
The fought Jackson
thought him @ great fighter. Six
Pog h ty by kageed
fight, I thought him a great fight-
er. “And now, thirty-five years af-
ter, 1 still mai he was the
greatest fighter I have ever seen.”
ea le. 6 anne oe. ee le
Phone JOSEPH S. Open
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Lettuce and Tomato Salad
Home Made Strawberry Shortcakes. Hot Rolls.
, Choice of Desserts: Ice Cream and Home-Made Dessert
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824 CONNECTICUT AVE., N.W.
By Lanier R. Covington
Leading a field of 41 long dis-
tance runners ae Dunbar
and ‘ae ligh Schools, Ed-
gar Lee, of Armstrong, wou the
annual cross country run_heid
Wednesday in 20 minutes. 57 sec-
onds.
Starting in front of the main
entrance to Armsfrong Lee took
the lead and was never overtaken.
Armstrong runners finished, 1, 2,
5, 6, and 7, making a total of 21
points, while Dunbar finished 3, 4,
12, 18, and 17, totaling 61 points.
The team with the lowest aggre-
gate is considered winner,
Running two blocks behind Lee
was anothr Tech representative,
Carter, who has been striving to
win the event for three years. The
first and second Dunbar runners to
finished were next, Wooden and
Jefferson, respectively.
The race last year was won by
Reo Jefferson, Dunbar, who
finished fourth this year.
How the First Five Finished
1. Lee, Armstrong
2. Carter, Armstrong
3. Wooden, Dunbar
4. Jefferson, Dunbar
5. Fields, Armstrong
SON OF HALEY DOUGLASS
SERIOUSLY HURT—UNDER-
GOES OPERATION
4 Douglass, 10-year-old son
v? Haley S. ‘Douglass, local Ls
school teacher, and Evelyn D.
Douglass, art and gift — pro-
prictress, is in Curtis’ Private
Sanatorium recovering from an oe
eration for fracture of the skull in
three places as the result of a col-
lision between two vehicles. ‘The
boy, who was a bystander, was the
only person to receive # serious in-
jury.
‘The accident occurred at noon
last Saturday, «The child was. on
his way from his home, 1782 Fif-
teenth street, northwest, to a near-
by store when “ce reaching the
intersection of Fifteenth and S
streets, he stopped to await an op-
portunity to cross.
Joseph turned in response to a
hail by one of his neighborhood
playmates, and in the instant
motorcycle, owned by the Packard
Motor Co. and operated by Joseph
Rodano, white, of 417 Randolph
street, came onto the sidewalk and
knocked him down,
Skull Fractured
An automobile, it later develop-
ed ,owned and operated by William
Wood Wells, 191644 Sixteenth
street, northwest, traveling south
‘on Fifteenth street, had collided
with the motorcycle which was pro-
cceding west on S street, The im:
pact caused the smaller vehicle te
egver the curbline and strike the
child,
Rushee to Garfield Hospital ir
tho Wells’ car, little Douglass was
given first aid. Two hours later,
Lar econ) notified, removed him
in, their car to Curtis’ Sanatorium
‘The operation, in which several
pieces of bone were removed from
the child's skull was performed,
Sunday afternoon,
Joseph is a student at Shaw Jun.
ior High School,
MOTHER-CHILD CENTER TO
GIVE CONCERT
In an effort to raise funds to as-
sist in carrying on its charitable
work daring the coming summer
months, the executive committee
the Mother-Child Center has ar-
ranged a music recital, to be given
a’, Tabor Presbyterian Church, Sec-
ond and § streets, northwest, on
Tuesday evening, May 15. Miss
Avis Andrews and Miss Lillian
Mitchell will be the feature artists
on the program. The Mother-Child
+
SEVEN ~
$$$
Center conducts a home at 628
Third street, southwest, wheré in-
a and children of mothers who
re forced to go out to work are
ee for by nurses and competent
itendants.
a
MINER NORMAL SCHOOL
NEWS
J._Arthur Turner, the
of Miner Normal choad epeet
‘Thursday, Friday and Saturday of
last_ week, in New York City at-
tending the Third Annual Goring
Conference of Normal Schools
Teachers Colleges under the aus-
— of the Normal School and
Now Work Gotety for the Exper
jew iety
mental Study of Education.
‘Mr. Turner gave a detailed ac-
count of the sessions in his reports
a at the faculty meeting:
ednesday, April 25, and the stu-
dent assembly, Thursday.
Last Friday, the library school of
Hampton Institute, Va. accom-
panied by its director, Miss Flor-
ence Curtis, visited the Miner Nor-
mal School.
‘The members of the present sen-
ior class are meeting the medical
examiners for their physical exam-
inations, this week.
Forestry Week was celebrated
by the students of the Normal
School and the children of the
practice school in the assembly
hall. Moving pictures showing
care and preservation of our for-
ests were shown,
TO HAVE,
on Every Birthday, a Com-
plete Ehysical Examination,
insures
MORE BIRTHDAYS,
Better Heath and Greater
Peete of the Days to
YOUR DOCTOR
Prof. George
ED ower
A: Your Name
pee
y Fae
If you are in trouble, sick or un-
lucky’ ‘and want to know whether
your wife, sweetheart or friend is
true or false, don’s fail to consult
Prof. W. A. George, the “World's
Greatest "almist and Crystal Ga-
ze,” “Can bring together and sep
arate the ones i desire, Will
tell you just what you want to
know and call your name without
a single question, I also call the
names of your enemies, I was
bo-n with this wonderful gift that
I might tell you the past cee
ent and future. Since then I have
read for famous people, such as
congressmen, mayors in different
states, lawyers and doctors and
many professional men. If out of
town, write,
35 Eye Street, Northeast
Washington, D.C.
Phone Franklin 4076-W
Office Hours: ’
9 to 12 a.m; 4:30 to 9pm. *
THEATRICAL
EIGHT
THEA
"DRESSED TO KILL"; "GIRL IN
EVERY PORT" AT THE
REPUBLIC
Those Pullman Porters and Van and Scheck on the Vitaphone. The feature picture for the first four days of the week at the Republic Theatre, Sunday to Wednesday, April 29, 30, and May 1 and 2, will be the thrilling underworld story "Dressed to Kill" featuring Edmund Lowe and Mary Astor. "Dressed to Kill" has just recently completed a two-week run at the Roxy Theatre in New York and is one of the outstanding pictures of the season. It is a colorful melodrama of the actual happenings of today and proving that the inhabitants of the underworld of the present are the extreme opposites both mentally and physically of the bad men of other days.
"A Girl in Every Port" in which the star, Victor McLaglen, takes you on a personally conducted tour of the world, will be the feature attraction on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, May 3, 4, and 5. McLaglen will be remembered for his role of Captain Flagg in "What Price Glory" and more recently seen at the Republic with Dolores Del Río in "The Loves of Carmen." See the world with McLaglen on the ship of adventure sweeping the seas of romance. He fights men and loves women with the same intensity. On the Vitaphone will be seen and heard those Pullman Porters, a colored quartet who is billed as the Kings of Harmony. The quar-
THOSE PULLMAN PORTERS
Vikaphone Stars
tet is composed of W. A. Hann, bass singer; E. A. Caldwell, first tenor; George Jones, baritone, and the other tenor is F. B. Graden. Hann, the leader of the quartet, is the former stage director of "Shuffle Along" and at one time was the director and soloist of the Amphion Glee Club of Chicago. The Pullman Porters will present a program of Negro spirituals and popular numbers. Another act is Mary Lewis, the beautiful soprano of the Metropolitan Opera Company who will be assisted by a male chorus. The third act will be the Morrissey and Miller Vitaphone Review, with John-Agee's Black Backhorse.
"NEVADA" AT THE BROADWAY THEATRE
A Zane Grey thriller, "Nevada," and William Powell, will be the feature attraction on Sunday and Monday. Zane Grey knows the West as does no other writer. He knows every inch of the country about which he writes. "Nevada," like all of Zane Grey's stories, is faithful to the West. It has all the dash, thrill and romance of the
"BEST BY TEST"
TRY ME
HAIR DRESSING
Keeps the hair in place longer than any other Hair Dressing.
FREE A Bottle of HAIRTONE
With Every 50-Cent Jar of
TRY ME
OLD INDIAN HERB STORE
1728 Seventh St., N.W.
Agents Wanted
"Cling to thy Home!
It shall provide more heart's re-
pose than all the world besides."
"You want your family to inherit a home,—not a mortgage."
MORTGAGE INSURANCE guarantees that, no matter what happens to you, your family will inherit your property free of all obligations. It is the one method of automatically balancing accounts, should the unexpected happen.
For detailed information about Mortgage Insurance, call North 7705, or
write
Mr. J. G. Guiles,
Washington Supervisor
LIBERTY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
HOWARD THEATRE
HOWARD THEATRE
World Champion Bounding Act Animal Act
Also Many Novel and Entertaining Circus Features including
ACROBATIC DOGS - PONIES - CLOWNS - DONKEYS - MONKEYS
THIS WEEK UNTIL SUNDAY—CHAPPELLE & STINNETTE
Big Midnight Ramble Friday Night, 12:15 Sharp
Western frontier country in the days of two-gun men, brave sheriffs, picturesque cowboys, villainous cattle rustlers and lovely heroines.
For Tuesday, the feature picture will be "Tell it to Sweeney," with Chester Conklin and George Bancroft. It is a story of railroad life, and is filled to the brim with pep, action and real comedy. There are thrills, too, and there is romance. The picture has everything audiences want.
For Wednesday and Thursday the screen attraction will be "The Country Doctor," with Rudolph Schildkraut and Gladys Brockwell. This story tells of a self-sacrificing country physician in rural New England who is on duty day and night and whose efforts frequently are rewarded with the gift of a sack of potatoes or turnips. There is a charming love theme, between the daughter of a "scarlet" woman and the sor of a small town tyrant which leads to a pathetic tragedy, through the efforts of the doctor, all ends happily.
For Friday and Saturday, the feature picture will be "Ranger," the marvel dog in "The Swift Shadow," a story of an outlaw dog and his vicious owner, both of whom have a price on their heads. The dog, through an accident, falls into the hands of a man who has sworn vengeance on the outlaw. But when the dog sees his old master, he does not know whether to follow the old or the new. Out of this situation is evolved a thrilling climax. Thursday is talent day with three cash prizes for the best talent.
Saturday is country store day, and on Sunday from 7 to 10 o'clock, the Black and White Orchestra will play.
ELINOR GLYN'S MAD HOUR AT
THE LINCOLN THEATRE
NEXT WEEK
Elinor Glyn has discovered still another chorological title to glorify in "Mad Hour." Robert Kane's First National Picture, which opens its local engagement at the Lincoln Theatre, three days only, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, April 30, 31 and May 1.
Which hour of the day or night is "mad hour"—the hour of madness and gladness, when men propose and women accept; when troths are plighted; engagements made and marriage dates settled?
Is it after midnight? In the moonlight? In sunlight or electric light? At dawn or dusk? Noon, forenoon or afternoon?
When?
As an added attraction for Sun-
VISIT
THE WILSON HOTEL
UPPER MARLBORO, MD.
High-Class Hotel Accommodation
Maryland Chicken Dinners
Our Specialty
Also Service for Dinner Parties and Banquets
OPEN DAY and NIGHT
PHONE, MARLBORO 66
THOMAS E. WILSON, Prop.
day, Monday and Tuesday, April 30, 31 and May 1, the Lincoln Theatre has secured the exclusive showing of that great, flight picture, "40,000 Miles with Lindbergh." This is a film which might be called an historical document in which the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Company reviews the spectacular aironautical career of Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh. Beginning with his preparations for the New York-Paris non-stop flight and ending with his return to St. Louis, after a successful termination of the good-will tour through the Central American republics and the Caribbean Islands.
The place of love in business and of business in love is charmingly and entertainingly told in "The Latest from Paris," a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer production, starring the beautiful Norma Shearer, which will be shown at the Lincoln Theatre Wednesday and Thursday, May 2 and 3.
It is a drama, supplying Miss Shearer with one of those roles in which she excels.
Miss Shearer is supported by a notable cast, including Ralph Forbes as leading man.
Those who have visualized Jack Holt in western type pictures have a treat and surprise in store for them in Columbia Pictures production, "The Tigress," which will be shown at the Lincoln Theatre on Friday and Saturday, May 4 and 5. In this screen story Holt forsakes western garb and portrays a British nobleman residing in the mountains of Spain.
Opposite Holt is Dorothy Revier in a difficult and picturesque role, that of a gypsy.
On Saturday only, in addition to the showing of Jack Holt in "Tae Tigress," will also be seen on the screen the Universal Chapter Play, "The Haunted Island," featuring Jack Daugherty. Also at 9 p.m., the Opportunity Contest will be held, at which time three cash prizes will be
VISIT
THE WILSON
UPPER MARSH
High-Class Hotel
Maryland Ch
Our Sp
Also Service for Dinner
OPEN DAY
PHONE, MA
THOMAS E. V
RD TH
ENTH STREET at T, NORTH
Telephone North 3000
beginning MON
Greatest Shaw Ever O
CHRONICLE
ON THE STAGE Day's FEATURING
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. April awarded the winners as selected by lincoln the audience.
CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN "THE
CIRCUS" ON THE SCREEN
AND "CIRCUS DAYS" REVUE ON THE STAGE AT
AT THE HOWARD THEA-
TRE ALL NEXT WEEK
The Howard Theatre for the week beginning Monday matinee, April 30, and continuing through the entire week, will present "Circus Days" Revue, featuring Slim Thompson and Hilda Rodgers, who are ably supported by Angie Mitchell, Henry Williams, Gross & Jackson, Milinda and Alberta. In addition to this cast, there are also many circus novelties and features, the outstanding of which is the Murray Brothers' Bouncing Act The Murray Brothers are the world's champions in this art. Then there is the famous Roberti Animal Act, as wel las a score of acrobatic dogs, ponies, clowns, monkeys and donkeys. In addition to the features named above, there will also be a chorus of twelve beautiful girls.
While on the screen for the entire week will be seen the world's famous, comedian, Charlie Chaplin, in "The Circus" with peanuts, sawdust and wire-walkers. This new comedy was two years in the making and is the first Chaplin comedy since "The Gold Rush."
Charlie plays a wandering lad who is mixed up in a series of hilarious adventures, chasas, arguments and ovations that land him in "The Circus" as a very fine fellow. Merna Kennedy is his leading lady; she makes her screen debut in the role. Others in the cast are Harry Crocker, Henry Bergman, Betty Morrissey and Allen Garcia.
On Friday night, the regular Midnight Ramble will be held.
VISIT
LSON HOTEL
MARLBORO, MD.
Hotel Accommodation
Chicken Dinners
Specialty
Dinner Parties and Banquets
DAY and NIGHT
E, MARLBORO 66
E. Wilson, Prop.
HEATRE
NORTHWEST
PRICES:
MATINEE, All Seats—25c
EVENINGS After 5:
Balcony—30c
Orchestra—50c
MONDAY, APRIL 30
Offered
Screen
in
“The
CIRCUS”
THE GREATEST LAUGH SHOW IN THE WORLD!
Revue"
Hilda Rodgers
berti's Famous
SUNDAY AND MONDAY—"NEVADA," with Gary Cooper and Thelma Todd. Comedy, "Kid Speed."
FRIDAY, SATURDAY—"RANGER" in "The Swift Shadow"
Comedy, "Winning Happy Days" Country Store, Saturday
Lincoln Theatre
Direction A. E. Lichtman Phone, North 3000 Rufus G. Byars, Supervisor
Sun.-Tues., April 29 to May 1 She Loved not wisely, but too well
ELINOR GLYN'S
"MAD
HOUR"
First National Pictures
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer PICTURE
Actual motion pictures of the flights of the greatest hero of the day—LINDBERGH.
FRIDAY. APRIL 27. 1928
By Wellington Adams
Henrik Ibsen's "A Doll's House," was presented before a full house by the Howard University Players, directed by M. Franklin Peters, James Vernon Herring and Herbert Rogers, Thursday evening, April 12, in Rankin Chapel.
The cast included: Towald Helmer, Samuel H. Popel; Nora Helmer, his wife, Ella V. Haith; Dr. Rank, Cecil Marquez; Nils Krogstad, Curtis Todd; Mrs. Linden, Louise M. Black; Anna, a nurse, Jessie M. Graham; Ellen, a maid, Gladys A. Fitzgerald; the Helmer children, Ivar, John Tyler Phillips, Jr., Emmy, Caroline Peterson and "Bobbie," Patricia Stewart. Scene: sitting-room in Helmer's house (a flat) in Christiania. Time: the present day, Christmastide. The action takes place on three consecutive days.
As an amateur production it went over big. The plot was comical and dramatic in places where emotional acting was a factor in the drawing out process. Samuel Popel as the "husband" won admiration in the fluent characterization of his lines and at all times made the role a living one. Ella
V. Haita as "his wife—Nora" was a serious study in emotionalism when drama was demanded, carrying the role with star acting although her exit from the scene at the close of that intense letter-fued with her "husband" might have been more dramatic in character. She was the spotlight of the play, however, and carried the part through in a fitting manner, winning high approval. Louise Black as "Mrs. Linden" was a little too reserve we think but did well altogether. Cecil Marquez as "Dr. Rank," and Curtia Todd as "Nils Krogstad," fitted their roles nicely, especially the latter named, he being realistic.
The scenery and scenic effect were both excellent and tasty and the Howard Players deserve commendation as well as do the directors of the play.
W. C. HANDY TO APPEAR AT CARNEGIE IN NEW YORK
NEW YORK, N.Y.-W. C. Handy, called the "father of the blues," is appearing at Carnegie Hall, here, with an orchestra and a band of jubilee singers, presenting several new and little known Negro compositions, spirituals, blues, and jazzes. His orchestra consists of
Her Very New Ladship (who is arranging to give a party at a furnished house she has taken)—"And there will be enough silverware, Parker?" The Butler (taken on with the furniture)—"Yes, m'lady, at the beginning of the evening, anyway."
THE FORTY-SIXTH ANNUAL RECEPTION
Given by
Coachmen's Union and Aid Association
LINCOLN COLONNADE, THURSDAY EVEN
Assisted by the Ladies Auxiliary to the Coachmen's
ciation No. 1. Music by Ike Dixon's Orchestra, of
and enjoy good dancing and promenade. 8 P. M.
50 cents. George M. Johnson, president; Otto
Chas. H. Robinson, chairman
ANNUAL RECEPTION AND BALL
Given by
and Aid Association No. 1
HURSDAY EVENING, MAY 3, 1928
to the Coachmen's Union and Aid Asson-
son's Orchestra, of Baltimore, Md. Come
menade. 8 P. M. to 2 A. M. Admission
president; Otto H. Branic, secretary;
obinson, chairman.
THE FORTY-SIXTH ANNUAL RECEPTION AND BALL Given by
LINCOLN COUNMANDE, THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 3, 1928
Assisted by the Ladies Auxiliary to the Coachmen's Union and Aid Association No. 1. Music by Ike Dixon's Orchestra, of Baltimore, Md. Come and enjoy good dancing and promenade. 8 P. M. to 2 A. M. Admission 50 cents. George M. Johnson, president; Otto H. Branic, secretary; Chas. H. Robinson, chairman.
DUNBAR THEATRE
Admission
Children 10c
SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS—ADULTS, 18
Program for Week of
SUNDAY, MONDAY—Wally Wales
ATE COURAGE.”
Jack Hoxie in “Heroes of the Wild,”
TUESDAY—RIN-TIN-TIN in “FIND
Universal Comedy Pathe New
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY—Bob St
RENEGADE”
“Mark of the Frog,” No. 4 Educ
FRIDAY—All-Star Cast in “A MAN”
Fox News Comedy
SATURDAY—Buffalo Bill in “SADDI
“Dangerous Adventures,” No. 6
Theatre
at 12th
North 3000 Rufus G. Byars, Supervisor
Wed. & Thurs., May
norma SHIA
The LAT
from DA
1 pm.; Sundays 2:30 p.m.
Nights, after 6 p.m.—15c
Adults 1 to 6 p.m.—10c
WS—ADULTS, 15c ALL DAY
Week of April 29
-Wally Wales in "DESPER-
s of the Wild," No. 9
TIN in "FIND YOUR MAN"
Pathe News
SDAY—Bob Steele in "RIDIN'
No. 4 Educational Comedy
t in "A MAN'S PAST"
edy.
Bill in "SADDLE CYCLONE"
es," No. 6 F.B.O. Comedy
rs., May 2 & 3
LATEST
from
PARIS
SUNDAY, MONDAY—Wally Wales in "DESPER-ATE COURAGE."
Jack Hoxie in "Heroes of the Wild," No. 9
TUESDAY—RIN-TIN-TIN in "FIND YOUR MAN"
Universal Comedy Pathe News
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY—Bob Steele in "RIDIN' RENEGADE"
SATURDAY—Buffalo Bill in "SADDLE CYCLONE"
"Dangerous Adventures," No. 6 F.B.O. Comedy
Wed. & Thurs., May 2 & 3
Norma Shearer plays that charmingly self-reliant, modern figure, the traveling saleslady, in a picture where love and business meet to the entertainment of everyone. Even better than "His Secretary."
METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PICTURES
Fri. & Sat., May 4
Jack Holt
IN
"The TIGRES"
, May 4 & 5
k Holt
IN
GRESS"
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer PICTURES
Fri. & Sat., May 4 & 5
Jack Holt
WITH
Dorothy Revier
SATURDAY Only
UNIVERSAL CHAPTER P
"The Haunted Island
with JACK DAUGHERTY"
Also, 9 P. M.—OPPORTUNITY
3 Cash Prizes
CHAPTER PLAY
"anted Island"
DAUGHERTY
PORTUNITY CONTEST
ash Prizes
SATURDAY Only
UNIVERSAL CHAPTER PLAY
"The Haunted Island"
with JACK DAUGHERTY
forty musicians and singers.
Handy, it is claimed, is the originator of the blues. He is the composer of the "Memphis Blues," "St. Louis Blues," and the "Yellow Dog Blues."
7th and T Sts.
Northwest
Phone,
North 5224
REPUBLIC THEATRE
You St., near 14th
"Home of the Vitaphone"
CONTINUOUS, DAILY 2 to 11 P. M.
SUNDAY, 3 to 11 P. M.
Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed.
APRIL 29, 30-MAY 1, 2
WILLIAM FOX presents
DRESSED TO KILL
A Marquess of the Underworld
WITH
EDMUND LOWE-MARY ASTOR
CHARLES MORTON - BEN BARD
Song by WILLIAM CONDONMAN and IRVING CUMMINGS
COMEDY & WILDER STANLEY
IRVING CUMMINGS PRODUCTION
An Underworld Picture!
Thurs., Fri., Sat.
MAY 3, 4, 5
WILLIAM FOX Presents
Victor McLaglen in
A GIRL IN EVERY PORT
A personally conducted tour of the world by the Roaming Romeo McLaglen
You See them!
ON THE
VITAPHONE
You Hear them!
THOSE
PULLMAN
PORTERS
KINGS OF HARMONY
The Morrissey
and Miller
VITAPHONE REVUE
MARY
LEWIS
Soprano of the Metropolitan Opera
Co., with a MALE CHORUS
A BROADWAY SHOW
AT THESE PRICES
Matinee
2 to 6 p.m. 15c
Nights, after 6 p.m.
Sunday, all day 25c
(Continued from page 3)
(see page 3)
Mrs. Gladys Green, Mrs. Amanda Ross, and Mrs. Anita Matthews entertained the Nullo Five Hundred Club on Thursday, April 19, at the residence of Mrs. Green, 1725 T Alice Smith, Mrs. Liqueuse Chase, Mrs. Prisilla Wilkes, Mrs. Edna Perry, Mrs. Berrice Brown, Mrs. Eva Webb, Mrs. Thelma Wauls, Mrs. Antionette Taylor, Mrs. Marie Briggs, Mrs. Mayne Askins, Mrs. Ethel Ellis, Mrs. Mattie Curtis, Miss Susie Holton, and Miss Pauline Butler. Prizes were won by Mrs. Justine Green, Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. Eva Webb, Mrs. Hogan, and Mrs. Briggs.
Mrs. T. J. Hopkins, Jr., and her two sons are visiting the parents of Mr. Hopkins, in savannah, Ga. Mrs. L. A. Williams, of 805 Euclid street, northwest, entertained her bridge club, Tuesday night. The club prizes were won by Mrs. Noble, Clayton, and Mrs. Shippen. Mrs. J. E. Reid and Mrs. Mary K. Reid, of Winton, N.C., have been the house guests of Prof. and Mrs. Daudit, of 1913 Thirteenth street, northwest, for the past two weeks.
Joseph Settlers, 403 E street, northeast, entertained at five hundred, Saturday, April 14. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Curry, Mr. and Mrs. David Brandon, Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Trigg, Ernest Porter, Miss Maynie Lewis, Jack Fortune, Mr. and Mrs. John Lewis, Dr. and Mrs. A. Russell, J. M. Hunt, Miss Grace Dodson, Mrs. Anna Brown, Mrs. Bertha Stewart, Burrus White, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Winfried, of New York. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. K. C. Deane, Dr. Russell, Mr. Curry and Mrs. Ruth Cornell. A repast was served.
Mrs. Lucille Warren entertained the Primrose Sewing Circle last Tuesday evening, at her residence, 403 Florida avenue, northwest. Those present were Mrs. Maryolia Green, Mrs. Blanch Curtis, Mrs. Bettie Kennedy, Mrs. Mary Pierce, and Mrs. Hazel Queen.
Mrs. Iola Sewall was hostess at a post-lenten and literary tea given for the benefit of Ruth Chapter, O. E. S., at her residence, in Quincy place, northwest. With Mrs. Marie Jumper at the piano, vocal selections were rendered by James Lomax, Charlie Lomax, and Mrs. E. Johnson. Miss Margery Gant gave several instrumental numbers. Mrs. Sewall recited two of her original poems. Several numbers were given by Miss Elaine Weyms. Refreshments were served. Bishop and Mrs. C. C. Allyenne, resident bishop of Africa, were in
the city to address the John Wesley A. M. E. Zion Church, members and friends.
John Hall, of Baltimore, spent Sunday here as guest of his sister, Mrs. Ella Coghill.
Miss Olga Robinson, a teacher in the public schools of Philadelphia, was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Akers last Sunday.
Carroll Boyd, of New York, was a week-end guest of his mother and sisters.
Dr. Robinson, of New York City, was the guest of Ernesto Merico, and was entertained last Tuesday by the Orchid Klub.
Mrs. Lawson and Mrs. Colbert entertained the Orchid Klub last Tuesday. The club met Tuesday, April 23, at the residence of Miss Eloise Hazel. The evening was spent in cards and dancing. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lewis, Messrs. Powell and Mackey, Miss Genevieve Saunders, Anthony Bradly, Ernest Adums, Mr. Cox, Mr. Merico, Winston Willoughby, Mr. Leonard, Mr. Ernest Foote and Mr. Biddle, Mr. Parker, Mr. White, Mrs. Louise P. Coates, Miss Pauline Mullen, Miss Dunlope, and Mr. Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Burrell and Mrs. K. A. Burrell as their guests over the week-end, Professor and Mrs. J. W. Holmes, Dr. Peter Roberts and V. C. Hamilin, who motored here from Raleigh, N. C.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Quintin Hanks, 1832 Eleventh street, northwest, entertained at five hundred, Friday, April 20. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hardy, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. W. Howard, Miss Dyer, Mr. and Mrs. R. Revells, Mr. and Mrs. H Brown, Miss Hardy, Mr. and Mrs. T. Parker. The ladies' prizes were won by Mrs. Hardy and Mrs. Revells. The men's prizes were won by Mr. Revells and Mr. Parker. Miss Hardy won the booby prize.
Last week the "Merry Makers" entertained their husbands at Mrs. William Grayer Williams. Those present were Dr. and Mrs. H. W. Freeman, Dr. and Mrs. R. West, Dr. and Mrs. Hamilton Martin, Dr. and Mrs. Iverson Mitchell, Dr. and Mrs. E. Wiggins, Mr. and Mrs. William Grayer Williams. Guests present were Mrs. Helen Allen, of Alexandria, Mrs. Shackleford of Alexandria, and Mrs. Jesie Powell. Ladies' prizes were no by Mrs. Henry Freeman, Mrs. Hamilton Martin. Gentlemen's prizes were were by Dr. Henry Freeman, Dr. I. Mitchell and Dr. E. Wiggins. Guest prize was won by Mrs. Jessie Powell. Dr. P. F. Roberts, Professor and Mrs. John W. Holmes, Joseph C. Bond, Master Val C. Hamlin, Jr., of Raleigh, N. C., the week-end guests of Mrs. Roxy A. Burrell and Mr. and Mrs. Hayward Bur-
rell of 1854 Second street, northwest.
Mr. Bridgeford and family wish to acknowledge with sincere thanks the king expression of sympathy from the many friends and relatives shown us during the illness and at the death of our dear mother, Emma Bridgeford.
Little Miss Ida Mae Stewart is convalescing at Curtis' Sanitarium. William Davis of 214 Lowry place, northeast, Deanwood, D. C., is still ill.
Mrs. Elizabeth Govern of New York City, has been the guest of Mrs. S. P. Buckner, of 629 Acker street, northeast, for several days.
The Federated Clubs of Washington and vicinity are presenting Mrs. S. L. McCann of Howard University, assisted by a quartette from the National Training School for Girls, Sunday, April 29, at New Bethel Baptist Church, Ninth and S streets, northwest.
This is one of a concerted effort to raise funds to entertain the National Federation of Women's Clubs which meets in this city in July.
Mrs. Nan Ball and Mrs. Beatrice Bland entertained the La Java Art Club, Monday night with supper at Harrison's Cafe. The club members are Mrs. Beatrice Bland, president; Mrs. Irene Fletcher, treasurer; Mrs. Annabelle Montgomery, secretary; Mrs. Lillian Gibbs, chapain; Mrs. Lillian Gray, Mrs. Reta Ricks, Mrs. Edith Turley, Mrs. Gertrude Robinson, Mrs. Costina Barton Weyms, Mrs. Beulah Jones, Mrs. Ruth Bryant, Mrs. Mary Mundy, Mrs. Ernestine Diggs and Mrs. Nan Parker Ball.
Mrs. Julia A. Hill, of 1451 W street, northwest, entertained at dinner for Mrs. Roper of Philadelphia, Thursday, April 19. Those present were Mrs. Mary Cooper and son, Joseph, Parker Hill, Miss Fannie J. Hill, and Lucial W. Hill, Jr.
Mrs. Willie M. Davis, of Birmingham, Ala., was the guest of Mrs. E. Norton, the past week, at 421 First street, northwest.
Dr. Carter G. Woodson entertained at luncheon in the private dining room of the Wage Earners' Association, for the Hampton Librarians, comprising seven ladies.
Judge William H. Harrison, assistant attorney general of the state of Illinois, was a visitor at the Wage Earners' Association last week.
Thornton A. Jackson Court, No. 4, Heroines of Jericho, was tendered a surprise at its regular meeting, April 13, by the president of the Triangle Club, Past High Priest Allen Sheppard, and High Priest William Martin, of Markwell Chapter No. 12, H.R.A. M., in the presentation of a neat sum of money for the purpose of making purchases needed by the
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1928
Mrs. Alice Days of Newark, N. J., who came to attend the funeral of her sister, Mrs. Emma Bridgeford, is ill at Freedmen's Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Edner J. Scott, of 132 S street, northwest, have opened their country home, "Rosedell Manor" at Glendale, Md., where they will be pleased to welcome their many friends.
Mrs. Julia Brown Clark of Indianapolis, Ind., came on to accompany her mother, Mrs. C. W. Brown, to her home.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Johnson, 1601 Sixth street, northwest, entertained Miss Martha Harris of New York, N. Y., their week-end house guest.
Mr. Tracker M. Archer, prominent real estate man, owner and manager of Miller's Hotel of Richmond, Va., was the guest of his sisters. Mrs. Oscar J. Scott, formerly Miss Julia Archer and Mrs. Sadie Archer Taylor, 658 Twelfth street, northeast. Mrs. Isadore Letcher returned to the city Monday last after spending the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Armistead of New York, N.Y. Miss Julia J. Jenkins, 1443 S street, northwest, spent the week-end visiting friends in Baltimore, Md.
Barry Farms News
The Rosebuds of the National Sewing Council of the Nonsectarian Home, were recently entertained by Mrs. Anna M. Garrett. A literary program, followed by a Juncheon featured. Mrs. Etta W. Hawkins presided.
Two ministers of the suburb, by the action of their church conferences, held last week at Washington, D. C., and Richmond, Va., have been returned to their former charges. Rev. M. Wilcox is back at St. John's C. M. E. Church, and Rev. Charles H. Wesley is at Campbell A. M. E. Church.
Motoring to the recent C. M. E. Church conference, held at Richmond, Va., from this section, were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moxley, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Garrett, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Garrett.
MME. COLE-TALBERT ENTERTAINED BY MRS. M. L. TIGNOR
Mrs. William L. Tignor, 921 St street, northwest, entertained at bridge, Friday evening, April 20, in compliment' to Mme. Florence Cole-Talbert and Mrs. Goldie Mar-
THE CAPITOL
The balance sheet below is probably the most impressive, from the standpoint of financial weight, ever rendered by a Negro business institution.
Marking the close of the twenty-ninth year of this Company's existence, and its entry into its third decade of service, with an unprecedented reservoir of resources, it is presented with some justifiable pride.
But the fact that each dollar of the more than five millions of dollars of assets set out below, and every dollar of the more than seventy millions of dollars of insurance in force there represented, are working in the interest of Negro advancement, in the double capacity of creative energy and protective force, building up and fostering op-
tin, of Chicago, her house guests. Guest prizes were awarded Mme. Talbert, Mrs. Rebecca Hord, of New York, Mrs. Reed, of Winston, N.C., and Mrs. Johnson, of New York.
Those present were Mrs. J. W. Cromwell Mrs. Mary C. Terrell, Mrs. Elfride Taylor, Mrs. Belle Pride, Mrs. Emma Williston, Mrs. Evans, Mrs. Kelly Miller, Mrs. Emma Bauduit, Miss Janie Page, Miss M. Smith, Miss Birdie Page, Mrs. Hayden Johnson, Mrs. Lula Leachman, Mrs. Emma Wormley, Mrs. Etta Young, Mrs. Narka Lee Rayford, Miss Ella Perry, and Mrs. Lillian Wells.
FORDS HAVE A "SMASHING GOOD TIME" IN WRECK
Twas a merry time that the Ford family had at a "slippery picnic" held at New Jersey avenue and K street, northwest, last Monday morning, beginning at 9:45 and ending a few smash-ups later. According to police of the second precinct, Grace E. Collins, 28 years, who was 27 years and 1 month old when she began driving, living at 1229 Duncan street, northeast, was proceeding southward on New Jersey avenue, when upon reaching the intersection she noticed the front of a Ford roadster protruding out of K street directly in her path. Jamming on her brakes, the Ford sedan which had its birthday in 1927, began a "charleston." One of the kicks to the right landed on the left front shin of the Ford roadster.
"Skating" over to the left side of the street, the Ford with the "charleston" mania, connected with the starboard side of a Ford touring, owned and operated by Henry Ford Spencer, 126 Randolph street. Still "hitting on all fours," the 1927 graduate of the "Detroit Foundry," proceeded to kiss the rear end of a Ford truck. The new Ford then began a buck-and-wing which came to a sudden cessation when the car was unable to penetrate the side wall of the grocery store of Nathan Blendman, 1001 New Jersey avenue. The driver, or rather the lady in the car, received a slight cut under her left eye. The youngest Ford has escaped reprimanding because of its condition. It is laid up with contusions, lacerations, bruises, internal turbulence and several fractures.
Mrs. Margaret Murdock Montgomery of Chicago, Ill., is visiting Mrs. A. S. Churchman, of 1502 13th street, northwest.
The
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LOCAL YOUTH HONORED AT DARTMOUTH COLLEGE
The name of Charles I. West has been placed in the "Record of Men of Distinctive Scholastic Accomplishment," a Dartmouth College publication, released following each semester, and including the
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Negro progress, in which is involved the hope of every individual Negro for himself and his individual family, is not being achieved by any magic formula or by any combination of fortunate accidents or good luck.
It is being achieved by the force of Negro dollars flowing through Negro business channels, of which the most important and far-reaching is the insurance channel.
Put your dollars with other Negro dollars for your protection and your family's protection and the growth of opportunity for all.
names of students whose scholastic rating for that semester is above the average. West is the youngest son of Dr. Charles I. West, 924 M street, northwest, local surgeon. He is a graduate of the Dunbar High School. The noteworthy fact about West's achievement is that he is
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one of the twenty-four sophomores in a class of 650 who made at least three A's for the semester passed. West is the lone Negro in the group of twenty-four.
Two sisters of West, Mrs. Charlotte West Strickland and Miss M. Elizabeth West, are teachers at the Armstrong High School.