Washington Tribune
Saturday, May 25, 1929
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
Illustrated FEATURE SECTION Washington Tribune
BEN DAVIS, JR.,
Feature Editor
T
THE president of the Safety Insurance Company looked up and greeted Donald Darrington with a look of utter surprise and incredulity. "Are you Donald Darrington, the great detective who solved the murder mystery in San Francisco?" he asked with a note of doubt in his voice.
"Yes," the tall, dark, distinguished looking Negro replied as he seated himself in the proffered chair. "I received your wire the other morning and came right on. I do not pretend to be great but I shall be very glad to be of any assistance to you."
"But," protested the plump little pink-cheeked president, taking off his eyeglasses and wiping them vigorously, "they didn't tell me you were a colored man, and—er—well, it kind of surprised me. You know that sort of makes things different. Of course, (this hastily) I haven't anything against colored people, and I shall be glad to have you work with us."
DARRINGTON ASTONISHES.
Darrington had been listening quite amused with a little sarcastic smile playing around his mouth. He was used to this sort of thing. As a detective for fifteen years on the Chicago police force he had encountered much of it. So he was not annoyed by the fact that the man who
Section 2—Saturday, May 25, 1929
DEN ROI
had wired him to come all the way from San Francisco at the promise of a very large fee for his services should be astonished that he was a black man. Darrington was completely calm—he knew what to expect from such people and thus was never surprised.
"Now, Mr. Sanders," he began in a businesslike manner, "I think I shall be able to get along very well with all concerned with this case. Just give me the full details and when I start out, furnish me with the necessary credentials as an investigator for your company, I am sure there will be no friction. Most Americans are quickly awed by badges and credentials. Now tell me the whole story."
Settling back in his chair, the president began:
"Well, Darrington, the Holden Fur company, a reputable concern in this city, was mysteriously robbed of five chinchilla coats over a week ago. Chinchilla is probably the most expensive of furs and each of the missing coats is worth $20,000. The Holden Fur Company insured the furs with us and naturally we want to try and recover them before we have to pay out that $100,000.
BACK WINDOW BROKEN.
"The company does a wholesale business
Clean,
Wholesome
and
Refreshing
BBERY.
"A half hour later Donald Darrington stood on the roof of the Triplex Building."
and occupies the top floor of a fifteen-story building downtown. All adjacent buildings are from four to six stories high. The five chinchilla coats were placed in a vault at five o'clock on the afternoon of March 13. Next morning when the vault was opened, the coats were gone. The shop doors were locked and equipped with burglar alarms, and the watchman a very dependable fellow, swears that he heard no sound or alarm from six-thirty when he came to work, until eight the next morning. One of the back windows was broken in and investigation revealed that someone had been on the roof. The police, after five days on the case have failed to find a single clue.
"Nobody can explain how the robbery was pulled off nor how the robbers made their getaway off the top of that fifteen-story building. It is certainly a mystery how they got that vault open without injuring it. Only two people know the combination and both of them have ironclad alibis. Still, the case looks too perfect for an outside job. So, on my own initiative, having heard of your wonderful work in 'Frisco, I decided to call you in to try your hand before we pay the Holden Company's claim. There's ten thousand dollars in it for you if you can locate those missing chinchilla coats."
(Continued on Page 11)
LAST WEEK BIG TIME CHARLEY RAN AWAY FROM A CIRCUS BECAUSE THE CHIEF WANTED HIM TO PUT HIS HEAD IN A LION'S MOUTH
A PRETTY GIRL! IVE GOT TO GET ACQUAINTED WITH HER. I THINK ILL SAMPLE THAT PIE AN SEE WHAT KIND OF A COOK SHE IS
DOG, AINT YOU GOT NO SENSE AT ALL?
WHAT IS BIG TIME GOING TO TELL THE GIRL WHEN SHE FINDS HIM IN HER PANTRY?
THIS INTERESTING COMIC APPEARS WEEKLY IN THE ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION.
A Hobby That Pays BY JOHN W. DOUGLAS
```markdown
```
A room of the Artistic Creations of the Goldsborough family
GENUINE PHILLIPS
MILK OF MAGNESIA
For Troubles due to Acid
INDIGESTION
ACID STOMACH
HEARTBURN
HEADACHE
GASES-NAUSEA
Indigestion
Immediate
Relief!
2
THIS story should be of especial interest to those who regard handicraft as only a hobby. Perhaps that was what the Goldsborougs that before they realized the money making possibilities of their work. But when Miss Mayme Goldsborough sold one of her fancy bed spreads for one hundred dollars their attitude changed. Certainly Mr. Edward Goldsborough who recently decorated
GENUINE
PHILLIPS
MILK OF MAGNESIA
For Troubles
due to Acid
INDIGESTION
ACID STOMACH
HEARTBURN
HEADACHE
GASES·NAUSEA
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One tasteless spoonful in water neutralizes many times its volume in acid. The results are immediate, with
ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
"Big Time" Jumps
RL! I'VE GOT TO GET
H HER. I THINK ILL
E AN SEE WHAT KIND OF
COMIC APPEARS WEEKLY IN THE
nat Pays
e Goldsborough family
---
the lobby of the Lincoln Hotel in Atlantic City regards his work as more than a mere hobby. And there is also Miss Helen Goldsborough who can so tint the complexion on a wax figure that it appears startlingly life-like. To complete the story of this gifted family we must not fail to mention Mrs. Edward Goldsborough who paints exquisite designs on silk. Here is a colored family residing in Jersey City, N.J.,
digestion Immediate Relief!
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whose members all possess artistic talent. The surprising thing, however, is the plain every-day materials that are used. Miss Mayme can take a few cents worth of sealing wax, a wire frame, some linen, a handful of beads and create a boudou lamp equal to those in the exclusive shops. Crafftex, used by Mr. Edward Goldsborough for interior decorations, is nothing more than a white plaster-like material, which after being applied, is colored to suit the fancy. Miss Helen, of course, requires only a brush and some colors for her work. They have no elaborate studio. Most likely the work is done as they all gather around the living room table.
It was the writer's privilege to visit the Goldsborough home and see their work at first hand. Edward Goldsborough showed me a marine picture that looked like a genuine oil painting, several decorative wall panels, a table lamp in a rough finish; all done with this plaster-like material called craft-tex. On the table was an unfinished bolster cover similar to those Miss Mayme sells for thirty-five dollars. She showed a bowl made of compressed paper, brightly colored with sealing wax. There was also a vase of artificial flowers. These flowers are very much in demand on Easter and Mother's Day. Another interesting feature of their work is the wax figures which are displayed in beauty shops and department stores. Miss Helen Goldsborough has the knack of "planting" human hair on the head of the figure so that it appears as if it had really grown from the scalp. She tints the base of the figure to resemble drapery of velvet or silk. These wax models are used in many of the New York stores and beauty parlors.
The point of this story is the
Here Is a Family All of Whom Possess Artistic Talent. They Began their Hobby to Occupy the Long Winter Evenings, But Now It Brings them a Steady Income and Artistic Recognition.
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money making possibilities of a hobby. There is a family group that perhaps started this type of work simply to occupy the long winter evenings. Today, however, they have so developed it that they are assured of a steady income. But the real value is measured in terms greater than money. There is a satisfaction that results from a successful attempt to express one's artistic leanings in concrete form.
May 25. 1929
Pan Into the Fire
IT YOU SENSE
IT IS BIG TIME GOING TO TELL THE
N SHE FINDS HIM IN HER PANTRY?
E SECTION.
om Possess Artistic Talent.
to Occupy the Long Winter
ings them a Steady Income
Recognition.
LITTLE THINGS IN MARRIED LIFE
It is said that there is one chance in a hundred that twin babies will be born, one in six thousand that triplets will appear, and one in ten million that . . but we must not continue. There are some things too awful for words.
Pushkin “Made” Russi Li
ushkin “Made ussian Literature
Had ‘There Been No Alexander Pushkin, Rus sia’s Famed. Thinkers, Tolstoi, Dosteievsky, G ogol and Others Might Have Written in French
for want of a language. His great talent made him a court favorite; excited the envy of lis unscrupulous enemies, and later caused his
untimely death, :
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May 25, 1929
Se en ee ee
“yO Count Alexander Serge-
vitch Pushkin belongs the
unique distinction of having
“made” a great European
rovers? Janguage.
Pushkin is known as “The Father
of Russian Literature.” But he 4s
more, He took the half-formed and
neglected Russian language that
hitherto had been used onily by
slaves and the lower classes and
shaped it into a thing of living
beauty. 2
Prior to Pushkin, French was the
language of the educated Russian.
Russia has had many great writers
since. She has had Count Tolstol,
Dostoievsky, Gogol, Gorky, Lenine.
Had there been no Pushkin, Russia’s
famed thinkers might still be writing
in French.
‘When a Russian writes or speaks
his Janguage he is more indebted to
Pushkin than peoples of the Anglo-
Saxon language are to Shakespeare.
Pushkin was a Negro.
He was descended on his mother’s
side from Abraham Petrovitch Han-
nibal, surnamed “The Negro of Peter
the Great.”
‘As to Hannibal his story out-ro-
mances romance. Captured in @
slave raid in Africa, he was taken
to Constantinople and sold. A Rus-
sian officer, seeing him in & seraglio
there, talked with him and found
him so unusually intelligent, that he
stole him and took him ‘to Russia.
Adopted by Emperor
‘There he was taken to the emperor,
Peter the Great, who was so im-
‘gotifather on ‘conversion
Onristianity and sent him, as was
the ‘custom, ‘to be educated in the
best schools m France.
“On his return he was made a-mem-
-ber ‘of ‘Peter the Great's own person-
al Em ‘Later, on the accession
‘of the Empress | Elizabeth to the
throne ‘he ose to be general-in-
‘ehief of the Russian army, and was
promoted to the nobility. At his
besraoad he left several estates, 1500
slaves and seven ‘children.
Pushkin was born st Moscow, June
7, 1799, his father being a member
of the Russian nobility. Like others
‘of his class, his training was ‘en-
tirely. in French; the Russian lan-
guage he picked up from his nia-
nia or white “mammy,” and the
slaves on his father’s plantation.
His “mammy” had come into ex-
tensive contact with Russian high
society, she also knew Russian his-
tory, an~ told him stories that
thrilled him. From the slaves ‘he
learned folk-songs and folk tales. But
the sweetest of all tales, the tales
that did most to fire his youthful
imagination were those told of his
ancestor, Hannibal.
At twelve he entered the Imperial
Academy, where his outspoken: criti-
Gpigrams, and ‘hig poet’ ability at
epigrams, poetic al yal
once created a stir. At fifteen his
first poem brought him immediate
fame, exciting the admiration of
Dorzhavin, then the leading poet of
Russia, This ‘was recited every-
where, so profound an impression did
ft make on all classes of Russians,
high and low. And it was all the
More daring as it had been written
in Russian and away from the con-
ventional French. forms. “With one
cut of his sword,” ‘says a critic,
“Pushkin had freed Russian litera-
ture ‘from -the ties which were keep-
ing it enslaved.”
Was Boy Prodigy
At eighteen ‘Pushkin had ‘become
se eee poet in Russia and the
fe RE a aatig
~p-Tson
them in ® manner that thrilled.
And he was the love poet, _ ex-
wélience. His ‘verses were de-
light of millions .of illiterate peasant
women and slaves. “Pushkin,” says
writer, love un-
‘so ‘many ‘in such beauti-
fil forms and with such @ variety
FLLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
of shades as one finds in no other
‘an expression so refined, so high.
. that his higher comprehension of love
left.as ceep a stamp upon subse-
quent Russian literature as Goethe's
refined women left on the world’s
literature, After Pushkin had writ-
ten it was impossible for Russian
poets to speak of love in @ lower
sense than he did.”
Pushkin was also the poet of Lib-
erty. When Nature, or God, or Life,
‘or whatever you will has some great
mission to perform, it picks not a
black, white, red, or yellow man, but
@ MAN. Pushkin had come upon a
scene of autocracy and slavery. Some
thirty millions of his fellow-Rus-
sians, all white, were held in the
grip of a hard, cruel slavery. And
unlike the Negro, they were of the
soil from time immemorial. Pushkin's
poems had fulfilled the great desire
for self-expression dormant in the
Russian people, now they went fur-
ther; they stirred that spirit of lib-
erty slumbering in the oppressed
masses.
Champion of Freedom
“He made poetry,” says another
critic, “the highest ey of the
human spirit. He, therefore, pro-
claimed the right of human person-
ality to be free. From the very first
words of a creations, he un-
equivocally declared himself a
champion of ”
‘His great Lge was with the
oppressed. was their sufferings,
their ,, their patience, that
had 2° him. At twenty he
suppressed atl spmaeel tis a
was -
ishment to the Caucasus, Even in
the days of slavery in America there
was a certain measure of free speech.
In Russia, however, it was auto-
, pure and simple.
In exile, Pushkin continued his
satires Fg ‘the tulers of his
time. csecret ‘police ‘finally de-
seented on him, =o, ‘had just
enough ‘time ‘to burn his papew, thus
escaping the most dreaded punish-
ment of the time, banishment to
Siberia.
Later, he was given a government
post in the Caucasus under the gov-
ernor, Prince Vorontzoff, but he
wrote a satire on the latter that
caused his arrest, Finally he was
sent back a | gees to his family,
who was held responsible for him.
But his independent ways brought
him into continual quarrels with
‘them and fleeing from them, he went
off to live among the slaves and
peasants on a@ distant estate. Here
he devoted himself to his work.
The next important event in
Pushkin’s life occured in 1826. At
this time a large number of his as-
sociates, who had pledged themselves
to the overthrow of autocracy and
the liberation of the slaves, were
arrested and sent to Siberia, Push-
kin was away at the time, and thus
escapal. When the Czar, Nicholas
I, learned that Pushkin had not
been among the conspirators, he sent
for him,
“We are very glad to learn, Count,”
he said, “that you were not among
those arrested for conspiring against
“
“Your Ma; ,” replied Pushkin,
with his oak frankness, “had 1
been present I would have been ar-
rested for they are my comrades and
friends.”
Accepts Court Position
“and that would have caused us
great sorrow,” replied the Ozar.
“Count, we are highly grateful to
you for ae have done for Rus-
‘sia. We you to be always near
beara name you imperial his-
Pushkin thanked the Czar but ao
clined saying such a post would hin-
der oy "rurther the freedom ‘of his
that time every book printed
‘pce ‘was first, censored.
“In that case,” countered the
‘Czar, “we, ourself, will undertake to
be censor of your works, and you'll
3
find us a most indulgent one.” (That
is, the Czar himself would.)
After such an offer there was noth-
ing else for Pushkin to do but ac-
cept.
But, as will be seen, this offer
was to be Pushkin’s undoing. Nor
was it to be the Czar’s fault, for
he loved Pushkin as a brother, and
spent a great deal of time in his
company. At that first meeting, aft-
er Pushkin had left, he had said to
the Court:
“We have just been talking with
the wittiest man in <ll Russia.”
If Pushkin had been an important
figure before, he was all the more
so nae Editors fought ar) gus Pe.
scripts; everyone sought his auto-
Braphs, he was in the eyes of all.
lowever, he could not have come
into a more unfavorable environment
than that of the Russian Court, or
for that matter, any Court, At once
the jealousy of the members of the
Czar’s retinue fastened itself on this
Sea ths ae ee lia dics
ec! irs aS an are loes
@ candle. Above all he committed
the unpardonable sin of winning
what nearly everyone was striving
a the pe favor of — Czar.
‘0 wate matters shkin
hated attinelality, hypocrisy, and in-
Sata Ft el an bees?
5 (00) ,
he once said, “it is all I can do to
keep from biting them.” His , life
among the slaves and ss had
pe to heighten hatred of
cant
Could Not Hate
But, as one of his friends said to
him: “You have no hatred even
when you bite your friends.” The
oe is ae Pushkin ha ineapable
ysical hurt ‘one.
eee was his son Ga his
genius for repartee. With the keen
rapier of his wit he attacked ey
‘and they writhed helplessly.
(Continued on Page 9)
pee Had oniag
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AVE you ever stood in frent
[Hi of a mirror and studied the
B } outlines of your face? If
Peni) you have you have found
Gait littie lines that you did not
know were there: veu have
found ways to improve your general
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ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
tappearance. Whenever you dress in
_ your best and want to make the best
| possible impression on other people,
you study yourself in the mirror in
order to see yourself as others see
you.
In exactly the s:me way when you
‘sign your name cr. write a letter
you put a reflection ‘or a picture of
the real you on paper.
Your orca shows you just
as you are—your talents, your natural
ability to make a success out of your
life. It shows why you do or do not
have friends. If you have an ugly
temper it will show in your hand-
writing, just as these game pen-
strokes reflect the natural ability you
have. If you have natural qualifica-
tions that if trained will make you
@ lawyer, or a preacher, or teacher,
your handwriting will show them—
and when you know yourself, you
can go ahead. and make the climb
toward success. .
| i
Here in the signature of Mr. W. P.
Dabney, we have an interesting pic-
ture. Mr. Dabney is editor of “The
Union” published in Cincinnati. He
is the author of at least one book,
ard is a brilliant scholar. We ean
get this from other sources, but
here is the picture his handwriting
gives.
OUT OF WRITING
When Mr. Dabney starts to do any
single thing, he does that alone. He
concentrates. He gives all his atten-
tion to one thing at a time. He
Joves to travel, to meet people. He
is not wasteful, but very careful
about details. He believes that he
can do things. He is willing to try.
Instead of saying “I Can't” he says
“I CAN” and means it.
There are plenty of young men and
women scattered over the country
with ability to do things—to become
leaders—and you may be one of
these. For this reason it is impor-
tant that you know the story that
your handwr‘ting tells; it is worth
while to see yourself, your talents,
your strong and your weak points,
so that you can make the most pos-
one. of every angle of your na-
ure,
YOU MAY HAVE A PERSONAL
REPORT MADE OF YOUR HAND-
WRITING IF YOU WILL WRITE
A PAGE, USING PEN AND INK,
Mrs. Jerom
Alimony
| Have you a puzzling love affair on which you need friendly advice?
Write to Julia Jerome, care of this newspaper, If you wish a personal
[ reply please send a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
-
by, '@ Don’t take what young girls |
. !so seriously. Such remarks are m
from bravado, Alimony is simply t!
way of saying that they want sc
easy money. Well, everybody wa
easy money. Men often dream
getting it in the mest unsocial m:
A gentleman of Manhattan ex-|ne- but speculation upon these thi
presses himself this week. is not to be taken too litera
When a young girl speaks so of :
My dear Mrs. Jerome:— mony she has in the back of
Z mind really an ideal. With assu
I have money and I riced love but money she will, she believes, he 2
Tam afraid to marry, Mrs. Jerome. | to make and keep herself more be
Women these days are so money-| tity! so that she can attract so
crazy that a man can't tell when he |igeal lover—everybody wants 1c
is being married just for alimony. beauty and money. But when |
I have heard so many young girls| cet down from abstract speculat
calmly assert that they were going | to personal action you will find wo
to marry for money then get a di-|en are not coldly mercenary—p
vorce and live on their alimony! I ticularly young ones.
think this a very deplorable thing| Alimony is a transition product
and so unless you ¢an convince me| woman’s past slavery. Not so 1
otherwise I will probably remain a ago women had only privilege <
lonely bachelor. no rights. Depending entirely uw
ALL ALONE.|the male for a livelihood she had
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Di
May 25, 1929.
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Society had to protect her and ali-
mony was the result. So don’t judge
women or this custom too harshly.
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A Negro on Top of the World
A Thrilling and Authentic Account of Matt Henson's Daring Venture to the North Pole with Commander Perry
A Thrilling and A to th
[ By EDWARD H. LAWSON, JR.
CAN a Negro, whose ancestors were probably brought from the torrid climes of Africa, and who has lived in the south all of his life, endure the frigid cold and necessary hardships of life in the arctic circle? Can he penetrate the farthest north, live like an Eskimo, trudge over miles and miles of frozen waste behind a sled, and return to tell the tale?"
The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text or details. It appears to be a black-and-white photograph of a person standing in front of a wall. The person is wearing a dark-colored robe with a high collar. The background is a plain, light-colored wall. There is no visible text or distinctive features that can be clearly identified.
P
1930
Matthew Henson in his furs, taken after his return to civilization. Men love prey girls...and prey
en love pre
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May 25, 1929
There is a living answer to this question. He lives in New York City. He has a small job in the customhouse, lives in a modest home, and goes entirely unrecognized by his coworkers as a hero. Yet that man has the honor and distinction of being the only man to have set foot on the North Pole who is living today. In this day of dirigibles and airplanes, it is still a difficult matter even to reach the Pole. But in 1903, this task had to be done without the aid of modern transportation. Sledges, pulled by fierce dogs over the jagged edges of ice, some five
The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text or details. It appears to be a grayscale photograph of a building with a shadowy figure standing in front of it.
e pretty
Top of t of Matt Henson's Dar Commander Perry
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and ten years old, had to be used, Food had to be taken along. Houses for shelter had to be built at every stop. It certainly was a job for a man with guts, with loyalty, with good health, with strength, and above all, with adaptability to any sort of conditions that might arise.
And, after this wonderful dash, Peary himself complimented that man, Matthew Henson, on these very qualities. Peary said, when asked why he chose a Negro to accompany him on his record-breaking trip: "Matthew Henson, my Negro assistant, has been with me in one capacity or another since my second trip to Nicaragua in 1887. I have taken him on each and every one of my expeditions, except the first, and also without exception on each of my farthest sledge trips.
"This position I have given him primarily because of his adaptability and fitness for the work and secondly because of his loyalty. He is
a better dog driver and can handle a sled better than any man living, except some of the best Eskimo hunters themselves."
Best Suited
It is to Commander Peary's credit that when he found that the man best suited for the position was black and not white, he acknowledged the fact, and gave Henson what was due him. And it is even more important that, in the brave little group that cheered Old Glory at the top of the world, not countries, but races, were represented.
There were the Mongolians, the Eskimos. There was one Caucasian, Commander Peary. There was one Negro, Matt Henson.
Henson was born in Charles County, Maryland, on August 8, 1866. The slaves had been free long before, and his mother was partly white. While still young, the family moved to Washington, D.C. Soon after, his mother died and he was
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taken under the care of his uncle who sent him to the public school for over six years.
He left school after six years, and (Continued on Page Seven)
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In our last discussion of the problem that has been baffling the best minds of two continents for the last sixty years, namely, "Why there exists a strong affinity between the gentleman of the cloth and the offspring of an egg in its adult state."
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ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
ages of History
ATT OF HUMOR
MATTHEWS
Viant Satirist
we traced the history of the American Negro from the Dutch Schooners to the underground railroad which made it look like a report of the department of commerce
While all of this had nothing whatever to do with the question in hand, we will take up where we left off, allowing the readers the privilege of quitting whenever they get tired. No articles dealing with preachers and railroads would be complete without this little historical reference dealing with the early struggles of the African Methodist Episcopal Church.
It seems that a certain deacon went to the office of a railroad official in a small town and requested that he order the engineer on the train that passes through on Sunday not to blow his whistle. The official asked why and the deacon said, "You see our pastor preaches until he hears the whistle and last Sunday that blame train was twenty minutes late."
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History points out that another cause leading up to the Civil War was the writing of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." The only paralleled to this in its devastating effect upon human events was "Noah's Ark." As a little girl, Harriet Beecher Stowe had started to write this great book but her father had discouraged her because he could not see the need of writing a book when they could be bought so cheaply. Another thing that postponed the writing was that Abraham Lincoln had not yet given up his job as a deckhand on a riverboat and there was no use stirring up a war until everybody was ready.
The book vividly pointed out how Uncle Tom was in his cabin on his knees with one eye on his chains and the other on Paradise. Prejudiced historians have attempted to prove that this was a typographical error and that the author had intended to say that he was on his knees with one eye on his change and the other on a pair of dice. This, however, has been proven to be just a lot of bunk. The opposition attempts to prove their contention by saying that if Uncle Tom wasn't shooting crap where do we get that expression about "Roll Jordan Roll"? Of course, it's six on one side and a half a dozen on the other and t twelve is a hard point to make.
Time passes as time always does and Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglass began to run for President. Although these two men were very bitter enemies in public life, in private they were the best of friends
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as this little incident will prove.
Abraham wrote a letter to Douglass and handed it to a friend to read before mailing.
"That's a very nice letter," said the friend, "complimentary and inoffensive, but there there is only one T in dirty and you spelled 'cock-toach' with a C instead of a K."
Lincoln would have lost had women been permitted to vote because Douglass was as handsome as a matinee idol and Abe did not have enough sex appeal to lure an old maid out of a burning building. He succeeded in ascending to the presidency, however, and the Southern states began to secede in rapid succession. This caused the Civil War and Grant was selected to engineer the Northern offensive, making him the first Civil engineer.
Sherman got sore and said "War is Hell." and when he died he couldn't enter the pearly gates until he repented for cussing. Sherman tock it all back, but he had no sooner entered the gates before he turned to another angel and said, "But
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The North was represented by the stars and stripes and the South by the stars and bars. The slaves were all set free, but soon as the war was over they started locking them up again putting them in stripes behind the bars and pinning the stars on deputy sheriffs to watch over them. This led to the filming of the great movie, "The Birth of Incarceration." And still we haven't quite proven just why preachers are fond of chicken, but there is no use of explaining this natural phenomena until your minds have been cultivated to a point to understand it. Don't become impatient if you thirst for knowledge; just r-member that heights of great men reached and kept were not obtained by sudden flight, but they while companions slept were making homebrew in the night.
MACKEREL WITH LEMON BUTTER
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A Negro On Top of The World
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ie = ie a.
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Henson, after his long journey to the Pole. The effect of
the hard life can clearly be seen on his face.
May 25, 1929
(Continued from Page 5)
shipped out of Baltimore as a cabin-
boy. Thereafter he became an able-
bodied seaman, and sailed to many
foreign ports, including North Afri-
ca, Russia, France, Spain, and Japan.
An Engineer
Thus it was that, in 1888, Henson
attracted the notice of Lieutenant
Peary, an engineer in the U.S. Navy.
He was only 18 when he accompanied
Peary, as a personal servant, to
Nicaragua. Since that time, he has
accompanied aed on every impor-
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has made.
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terrific, frigid temperatures of the
Arctic, while the Eskimo, _ living
naturally in temperatures as low as
60 degrees below zero, is not able to
stand the heat of even the tem-
perate zone.
- The first trip to the far north,
“The North Greenland Expedition”
left port in June, 1891. Seven more
times Henson visited this cold, barren
‘land of ice and snow, finally climax-
ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
ing his career in the discovery of.
the North Pole, a prize sought for
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The Roosevelt
In 1905, the “Roosevelt,” a new
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its course for the Arctic. In spite
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ords for travel into the North, The
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Returning north in 1908 with the
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the expedition set out once more.
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tempt. ‘
_ The group reached Etah, took on
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Sledges
Inventing sledges was a small part
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to solder alcohol tins which had be-
come leaky through jolting on the
sledges. That may sound easy, but
in the North, that is as dangerous
as any job could be. The alcohol
{CONTINUED ON PAGE 11)
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ANE, PRS NT ERT AIL 9. AEE SE SERN A LIE OE TEINS
Chats about BOOKS and Authors
---
New Novels
Another Novel on Negroes.
THE DEVIL BEATS HIS WIFE.
By Ben Wasson. Published by
Harcourt Brace & Co. New York.
Price $2.00.
This book tells of the gradual change that is everywhere evident below the Mason-Dixon line. To be sure, the Negro has undergone tremendous treatment at the hands of the many novelists throughout the country. This work is no exception to the rule and again tells in an unconvincing and rather mercenary manner of Negro life on the Mississippi around Memphis and adjacent towns. We have the traditional tale about white children being reared under the tender care of black womanhood. Rehearsal again is
Cut This Out It will not appear again
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CONTENTS - HOW TO PLANT BY THE MOON
BEST FISHING DAYS, BEST BAIT, WEATHER FORCET
HOW TO MAIN MEDICINE FROM ROOTS AND HERBS
HERBALIST P0 BOX5 HAWKWIND, IND.
DON'T
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by BILL JOHNSON'S
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Brunswick race record no 7067
A gin party gone wrong, with a Jones law raid that sounds like business. "GET THE 'L' ON DOWN THE ROAD" is just as full of hokum and whoopee! Hear it today! Don't Drink It In Here Bill Johnson's 7067 Get the "L" On Down the Road Louisiana Jug Band 75c
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the antipathy borne by southerners for officious and intruding Yankees. All of this is the old story told in perhaps no commandingly different manner. In spots the author shows a fair insight into racial life as in the chapter where he depicts something of the conflict between the old and new generation of Negroes. At more frequent times Mr. Wasson does not convince us of a sufficiently thorough understanding of the southern situation. Nevertheless, the author has written an interesting book and it deserves reading.
"THE CONJURE WOMAN."
The Conjure Woman. By Charles W. Chestnut, 229 pp. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company, New York. Price $2.00.
This is one of Mr. Chesnutt's earliest novels. It is a simple, beautifully told folk tale revolving about a colorful exceedingly real character named Uncle Julius. The old Negro type finds an accurate description here. Yet withal it is intensely interesting from beginning to end.
Mr. Chesnutt is one of the race's
BOOKS nthly Review of Import
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foremost authors, having long gained a well-recognized place in the literary world. In the "Conjure Woman" he employs the rich southern dialect to an amusing advantage.
Superstitions Explained
THE STORY OF SUPERSTITION.
By Philip F. Waterman. Illustrated.
307 pp New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
In this book we are told why guests at a wedding shower rice on the bride and groom. In the past it was customary to do this in order to appease the gods, who often envied human happiness. Further on, we learn that the full name of Santa Claus is Saint Nicholas and that this saint was Bishop of Myre in Lycia and later died a martyr to his faith. Many other popular legends and notions are explained and traced to their source in this very interest book.
Mr. Waterman has treated his su-
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ject matter very scientifically and manages to make a very serious analysis of any number of theories and notions that are ordinarily regarded to have only a humorous significance. Ideas on such "tabooed" subjects as sex-worship are handled very frankly and witchout the slightest tendency to be either puritanical or erotic.
A True Account
Rope and Faggot. By Walter White. Published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York. 276 pp. Price $3.00.
The "truth and nothing but the truth" compels the attention of the reader from the first paragraph in this new book by Mr. White. Startling, gruesome facts crowd the 276 pages of accurate painstaking treatment that comprises perhaps the most authentic account of the racial situation in the South that has ever been written. A book of this sort was published some 20 years ago but it is now out of print. However, there can be no doubt that it did not record the perennial Southern problem with either as much interest or authenticity as is to be found "Rope and Faggot."
The graphic accounts of atrocity amply show the risk that the au must have assumed to obtain hand data.
Mr. White's style is exceeded direct and well adapted to his la book. He is another of the col writers who almost overnight commanded the attention of rea everywhere. Years of study I been combined with experience render this work without a pee its field.
No Negro should fail to read Its bibliography make it invalus a source book as well.
witching B
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ors
One can easily imagine the iest and enthusiasm with which Waterman has pursued the pop superstitions when it is calzed the book was written primarily reaction to his own childish and apprehensions of the superural. This book will make very inti ing and informative reading.
The graphic accounts of atrocities amply show the risk that the au must have assumed to obtain hand data.
Mr. White's style is exceeded direct and well adapted to his la book. He is another of the color writers who almost overnight commanded the attention of read everywhere. Years of study he been combined with experience render this work without a peer its field.
No Negro should fail to read Its bibliography make it invaluable as a source book as well.
Beauty
lexion
ays
PALMER'S KIN TENER
oe 99
, PUSHKIN “MADE” RUSSIAN
(Continued from Page 3)
at was left to’ them was to mockopenly his enemies now bt
im about his Negro ancestry. whisper tales of his private ‘1
They would point to the crisp,} to circulate anonymous letters
rly hair of his head and whiskers,|kin had been married to one
is dark skin, and his full lips, cry-| most beautiful women in Rus:
ig, “There is the Negro.” Or they) tales began to fiy, chargir
ould refer to him as “a black man} with infidelity. One day, }
dly whitened.” Because he WAS] received an extremely emba
vely in his movement, they would|anq insulting bit of correspc
eclare that he inherited that trait i i ife’
ym the apes of Central Africa. ee His | wife's ‘untaity
e 7 ‘ sung by this insult he sou
At last his enemies formed a union th he di i thie ane
ainst him. At its head were Count Bank ecaree : ce ag
varoff, Minister of Public Instruc- Sees a
ion, and Count Benkendorff, Chief ied in Duel
ff Police. Unable to attack him} The two met on a wintry
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Vepcy as enemies now Regan Ww.
whisper tales of his private life, and
to circulate anonymous letters. Push-
kin had been married to one of the
most beautiful women in Russia, and
tales began to fly, charging her
with infidelity. One day, Pushkin
received an extremely embarrassing
and insulting bit of correspondence,
alleging his| wife’s unfaithfulness.
Stung by this insult he sought out
the one he deemed the culprit—Baron
D’Anthes—and sent him a challenge
Killed in Duel
The two met on a wintry field in
the morning of February 8, 1837,
ned with pistols. Pushkin, who,
was said, was incapable of harm-
ing anyone, advanced to meet his
antagonist with lowered weapon. But
D’Anthes fired, the ball lodging in
the poet's intestines. From this
‘wound he died in great agony two
days later.
On hearing of the injury to his
favorite the Czar was furious. “Never
shall I forgive,” he swore, “those
who have killed my beloved Pushkin.”
D’Anthes’ life was spared nly by
Pushkin’s intercession, who. with his
last breath asked the Czar to pardon
his enemies. D'Arthes. however, was
strinped of all his wealth and exiled.
while jhis father and others of the
conspirators were driven out of of-
fice.
So great was the indignation of
the people. that the Czar ordered: a
private funeral fearing an uprising
|The Carr, bimeelf, vndertook to pai
ell of Pushkin’s debts, which were
{cnormeus, for Pushkin. like Dumas
wes the spirit of generosity, an¢
spent money like water. 2
As to his writings they will live
as long as literature lives, for, in the
werds of Eichenwald, the noted
critic:
Critic Eulogizes Him
“Pushkin is ‘he echo of the world
6n obedient and melodious echo,
which moves ‘rom realm to realm,
passionately responding . to every-
thing so that no cne significant tonc
in. the life of the universe may van-
ish without leaving a trace... . .
“There was such a limitless amount
‘of beauty in his soul that it could
.find “relief, consonarce. and inner
rhyme only in the virility of nature
and in the boundlessness of humat
existence. His all-responding soul
was like a many-stringed instrument
and all the Universe playing on it
extracted the most marvelous songs.
Listened Eagerly
“Pushkin, the great Pan of Poetry
listened eagerly to the call of the
eky, the earth, the throbbing of the
heart. . . A giant of the spirit, full
of burning curiosity, full of restless-
| ness and sounds, Pushkin embraces
all, sees, and hears everything. With-
out boundaries or limits, knowing no
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distance or past, always in the. pres-
ent, everywhere alive, a contem-
porary of overnight, he moves about
space and above time, from age to
age, and nothing is alien to him.”
Pushkin, the fiery, the passionate,
the vehement and irritable; Pushkin,
the generous, the enthusiastic, the
faithful friend, the ovat adversary,
the bitter foe of falsehood and in-
justice, was one of the completest
human beings who ever lived. On
the centenary of his birth, his mem-
ory was honored by ational cele-
| brations.
A curious fact worth noting here:
It was a white woman, Harriet
Beecher Stowe, whose writings lit
the torch for Negro freedom in
America; it was & Negro, Alexander
Sergevitch Pushkin, who lit the torch
for white emancipation in Russia.
(Editer’s Note: Write the editor
of this newspaper and express your
opinion of these articles. You can't
afford to miss any one of them.
They gre interesting, inspiring and
informative!)
y ae ae
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A BALANCED MEAT DISH
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Name * x wih € oo wesc bee tec by Pew cencee
Toussaint L
were transferred to
ance, and as he stood
disappear forever
PON a
separated fr
Who Has Contribu
Progress of the
BE SURE YOU
Ballot, No Signature
No Obligation—Just
of your choices—Ma
newspaper.
This is important as it will rev
ion as to its greatest benefacto
Write plainly the name of each
dicated below.
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I CAP FRANCOIS the Toussaints were transferred to the warship Hero, bound for France, and as he stood deck, he watched his beloved hills disappear forever:
Ballot, No Signature, No Condition, No Obligation—Just write the names of your choices—Mail at once to this newspaper.
This is important as it will reveal the race's own opinion as to its greatest benefactors.
Write plainly the name of each of your choices as indicated below.
The individual in your state who has contributed most to the progress of the Negro race.
The individual in the entire United States who has contributed most to the progress of the Negro race.
You may your state out this f vote will
In order the state here
a Million cuts Use
BE it is so simple to u makes it soft and lo screen contains only t turn the hair red. J separation, and all you are using. That's th
g Hair Straight on the Market
.00—but it
TIVES---
You may also write the names your state on a separate sheet out this form. Forward it to the vote will be counted just the s
In order to tabulate by states, state here
Million Poreen
Used Yearly
two simple to use, straightens harsh it soft and long, giving a brilliant contains only the purest ingredients, hair red. Just one or two treat- and all your friends begin to ad-ing. That's the reason Poreen has
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At OUR Expense
You may also write the names of your 2 choices and your state on a separate sheet of paper with or without this form. Forward it to this newspaper and your vote will be counted just the same.
In order to tabulate by states, write the name of your state here
Over Ten Million
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Why? BECAUSE it is so simple to
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Why? BECAUSE it is so simple to use, straightens harsh hair and makes it soft and long, giving a brilliant lustre. Poreen contains only the purest ingredients, will not burn the scalp or turn the hair red. Just one or two treatments of this wonderful preparation, and all your friends begin to admire you and ask what you are using. That's the reason Poreen has grown to be the Largest Selling Hair Straightener and Beautifier on the Market Today.
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Who Has Contributed Most to the Progress of the Negro Race? BE SURE YOU VOTE!
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ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
saint L'Ouverture
PON arrival in France his wife and ch
separated from him and he was carried off a
Is Contributed Most to the
gress of the Negro Race?
BE SURE YOU VOTE!
No Signature, No Condition,
ration—Just write the names
choices—Mail at once to this
er.
tant as it will reveal the race's own opin-
reatest benefactors.
the name of each of your choices as in-
U PON arrival in France his wife and children were
PON arrival in France his wife and children were separated from him and he was carried off alone.
to write the names of your 2 choices and
a separate sheet of paper with or with-
. Forward it to this newspaper and your
counted just the same.
Cubulate by states, write the name of your
Send me at once FREE sample box of Poreen and your Beauty Catalogue without charge.
(If you desire to represent us in your territory check (K) here)
Name
Address
City State
Keystone Laboratories
Memphis, Tenn., P.O. Box 2026, DeSoto Station
ly
Text by GEORGE S. SCHUYLER. Drawn by HAZEL KEELER.
E WAS taken to the Fort of Joux, near in the Alps, a cold and forbidding pile of
aken to the Fort of Joux, near Basancon, is, a cold and forbidding pile of stone.
E WAS taken to the Fort of Joux, near Basancon.
E WAS taken to the Fort of Joux, near Basancon, in the Alps, a cold and forbidding pile of stone.
Erratum
In our issue of May 11 we mentioned that Mrs. Effa Danelson of the Occult Digest was the author of our column on Dream
Be a SUCCESS
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Be
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Be a SUCCE
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However pleasing your personality may be, however bright and well dressed you are, you cannot hope to reach the full heights of popularity and social success unless your hair is long, soft and silky.
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Interpretation. This was an error which occurred the composing room Mrs. Danelson is not the author of the column.
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A Negro On Top of The World
y 25, 1929
(Continued from Page 7) ced, and the hot soldering irons it afire. The temperature was y-six below zero. the irons were hard to hold with heavy mittens on his hands. He off the mittens. His hands froze soon as they touched the tins. the same time he was in danger being burned to death or frozen death. It was a man-sized job. ally, the tins wereOLDER.
In Camp
commander Peary arrived in camp, soon the command was given, forward March." Henson was ordeed to take the lead and went ad to his goal. Repairs to his age caused him to fall behind, but he was up ahead again, leading way.
Seven Days
ey were held up fully seven days—in days of ideal weather—by a t gap of water, over a mile wide.
The Thin Woman Gained 15 Pounds In 5 Weeks
en and women, weak, thin and rable, are urged to put on weight get back their health and both with McGoy's Tablets
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R LEG HEALED AFTER 16 YEARS
J. D. Jackson, R. 1, Pineland, Texas, was entirely healed of leg sores after ing 16 years, urges all afflicted pero write Dr. H. J. Whittier, 18 West-Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo., for his free copyrighted book which explains a treatment for leg sores, varicose ulcers varicose veins that quickly stops the and heals. There is no cost or obli-—Adv.
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Finally, the water freezing over, the party proceeded on sledges and again took up the unblazed trail northward.
A few of the parties began to turn back, taking with them the men and dogs not deemed fit for further travel. Only four parties remained. One was commanded by Captain Marvin, of the "Roosevelt," the second by Commander Peary himself, the third by Captain Bartlett, the fourth by Matt Henson.
Captain Bartlett turned back. Soon after, Captain Marvin returned, only to be drowned in the icy water on his return journey.
Final Dash
Six men started on that final dash. They were Peary, the four Eskimos, Ootah, Egingwah, Segloo, and Ooqueah, and Henson. The time had come for action! The last lap was the hardest.
They marched and marched. They pulled heavy sledges over snow drifts. They fell down in their tracks, got up and staggered on again. They forced themselves onward—onward to that elusive goal.
Both Henson and Peary had the shivery experience of crashing thru the ice, no mean experience at 57 degrees below; it was even too cold to change the garments that rapidly became cakes of ice.
Still they pressed onward,—northward. Straining every muscle to its utmost—pushing the heavy sledges—guiding the dogs—onward they pushed
April 6, 1909! Henson caught up with Peary, who had stopped in his tracks and had taken out a silk flag brought for the purpose. The Pole was reached! They were on top of the world! Old Glory had conquered the farthest north, carried there by four Mongolians, a white man, and a Negro!
Henson says that when he saw Old Glory waving in the breeze, "A thrill of patriotism swept over me, and I raised my voice to cheer the starry emblem of my native land. The Esquimos gathered around and, taking the time from Commander Peary, three hearty cheers rang out on the still, frosty air, as our dumb dogs looked on in surprise."
After taking observations and building an igloo at the pole, there was nothing to do but to return over the same tedious route over which they had traveled.
The strain of the hard task was beginning to tell on the men. After the first two marches, Commander Peary was nothing but a dead weight. It was Henson that kept up the break-neck pace that landed them all safely back at the ship in record time. They were greeted with cheers at the "Roosevelt," and the next few days were given over to rest and sleep, after which the homeward voyage was begun.
The United States was greeted with a love that only long-enforced absence can bring. They were home once more! The Stars and Stripes were "nailed to the pole."
Henson's reward has been far below his due. He is 63 now, has been given a silver cup as a token of appreciation, has been recommended for the Congressional Medal of Honor, and will probably be honored in the Negro Achievement Building authorized by Congress, but is this the reward of a man who is the sole survivor of the only expedition to reach and claim the North Pole?
Years After
Probably, like most other great men, his true greatness will not be appreciated until years after his death. And then men will honor him and say, "Here is a Negro who was not afraid to face death for his country, whose unswerving devotion leads us to speak of him as the pioneer in the field of endeavor in which the Negro is destined to have an increasing part, and as the first of that newly born race of people, The New Negr:1"
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ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION
The Holden Robbery
(Continued from page one)
"Now," snapped Darrington, "I understand the situation fairly well but I must have a little more data. Who saw the coats placed in the vault?"
"Mr. Alvin, the president of the Holden Fur Company; Mr. Timothy, the cashier; Tom Johnson, the porter, and Jim Speed, the shipping clerk."
"Who was last to leave the office?"
"Timothy, the cashier."
"Who knows the combination of the safe?"
"Only Alvin and Timothy."
"Only AVRIL and TINCE,
"You say the value of the five chinchilla coats is $100,000?"
"Yes."
"How many chinchilla coats did this firm have you insure last year?"
"Just a minute. I'd never thought of that. Oh, Miss Levinsky. Find out how many chinchilla coats the Holden Fur Company insured last year."
"Well, while we're waiting for that information," continued the sleuth "tell me about the president—what sort of a man he is?"
MR. TIMOTHY SUSPICIOUS.
"Well, he is really one of our leading citizens. He took over the presidency of the Holden Company about ten years ago and has been rather successful. He belongs to several exclusive clubs, is married, has a beautiful home in the choiceest residential district and is highly esteemed in the community. I don't think heh ad anything to do with the robbery but I do have my suspicions about Mr. Timothy. He is an old employee and has been with the Holden Company for over fifteen years. Nevertheless, and despite the fact that there is nothing against him, I am a little suspicious because we have learned that he plays the races and occasionally the stock market. You know people who gamble are liable to get in tight places financially and then in their desperation they are lured into crime."
Just then Miss Levinsky, a plump young miss with blondined hair, entered and laid a pencilled report on Mr. Sanders' desk. He glanced at it quickly and frowned. Dismissing the girl he turned to Darrington.
"We insured only two chinchilla coats for the Holden Company last year," he informed Darrington.
"Now tell me," the detective asked, "what has been the status of the fur business this year? Has it been worse or better than usual?"
"Why I should say it has been better."
"How does Alvin stand financially? I suppose you have made the usual examination of his bank accounts."
"Oh, yes, and everything is oken in that direction."
"What do the police know about him? Has he any skeletons in the family closet? Does he ever step out with the scarlet ladies, or anything like that? Is he one of these tired business men who spends his evenings in cabbages?
ALVIN IS VINDICATED.
"No. Alvin is a home man and
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there isn't a blemish on his character so far as we have been able to find out."
"Um-hmm," grunted Darrington, stroking his chin meditatively. "Well, Mr. Sanders you get those credentials ready and I'll see what I can do."
A half hour later Donald Darrington stood on the roof of the Triplex building, the top floor of which was occupied by the Holden Fur Company. As soon as the superintendent unlocked the door of the penthouse and left the detective to his own devices, Darrington stroked his chin and looked about. Going to the edge, just over the back windows of the Holden company, he whipped out his magnifying glass and went carefully over the edge of the cornice. Glancing quickly around he noted that the smokestack of the building was directly behind him. Near where he sat the gravel of the roof was disturbed as if some people had been scuffling up there. The black man took a toothpick out of his vest pocket and picked his mollars reflectively. Then, as if with sudden resolution, he retraced his steps to the penthouse and examined the lock of the door. After a minute or two he walked to the front of the building, looked over the edge of the roof into the busy street below and shaking his head doubtfully, returned to the penthouse and descended to the offices of the Holden Company.
Making himself known to Mr. Alvin, the president, a shrewd-looking fellow with slightly graying hair and piercing blue eyes, he asked him to call all of the employees into his office. In five minutes the entire group, about fifteen, were lined up around the walls of the room. Mr. Alvin then informed them that Darrington was a great detective, and had been retained as investigator by the Safety Insurance Company. "Do just as he says," the president admonished, "and answer any of his questions." All of them nodded acquiescence.
A STRANGE METHOD.
Darrington had each one given a pencil and a piece of white type-writing paper. "Now just write on your sheet," he commanded, "a complete account of the manner in which you disposed of your time from the hour you left this office on the evening of March 13 until next morning. Don't omit anything."
Then turning to Tom Johnson, the Negro porter, who had just begun like the rest, to put pencil to paper, he said "Come with me, young man."
The porter's eyes opened apprehensively but he followed obediently. When they had reached the workroom, Darrington had the man show him over the entire place very hurriedly. He glanced curiously at the safe, noting that the wash bowl was directly in front of the other side of the room, and that a large mirror hung over it.
(Does Darrington's roundabout method of solving this mystery avail anything? The last installment will answer this question.)
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