Washington Tribune
Friday, December 9, 1932
Washington, D.C.
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Delegation Protesting Against Jim Crow Signs Is Insulted by Official at D. C. Water Works
Committee Told "Don't Bother Me" As They Point Out Signs
SUPERINTENDENT OF DEPARTMENT SEEN
D. W. Holton Says He Will Immediately Launch Investigation
A delegation that protested to W. V. Robinson, an official at the District Water Works, Bryant Street, Northwest, was insulted and told, "Don't bother me," when they called to his attention the posting of jim-crow signs in lavatories in a garage attached to the plant at 204 Bryant Street.
The delegation, composed of A. S. Pinkett, local secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; James A. G. LuValle, editor of the Washington Tribune; and Garland Mackey, also of the Tribune, was told by Robinson that he himself was responsible for the segregation signs, and he asked, "What of it?" Holton to Investigate Later the delegation called on D. W. Holton, superintendent of the water department, at the District Building, who is Robinson's superior. Mr. Holton said that he would immediately launch an investigation. He was told that the Jim crow signs were not only against the law, but they were of defensive and an insult to 135,000 citizens in the District of Columbia.
The posting of the signs was called to the attention of the Tribune and the N.A.A.C.P. Tuesday. The informant said that the signs were recently erected and had been placed on toilets designating one for colored and one for whites.
Robinson Becomes Riled
Robinson lost his head when told that the signs were in the building. He demanded to know who informed the delegation of the signs and said he would not co-operate with the callers unless he was told who furnished the information to the delegation about the signs.
The committee refused to divulge the source of their information as they believed that Robinson would attempt to penalize or discharge the informer.
Robinson, who showed his Southern makeup, took full responsibility for the segregation posters and told the delegation not to bother him any more.
The committee plans to take the matter to the District Commission- era unless Superintendent Holton has the offensive signs removed.
YOUTH HELD IN CONNECTION WITH 60 BURGLARIES
Three White "Fences" Held for Receiving Property Worth $15,000
Leroy Dorsey, 21-year-old youth, of the 1700 block of Eighth Street. was held for the grand jury, Monday, on bond of $25,000 when he was arraigned before Judge Ralph Given in Police Court. The youth is said to be responsible for more than 60 house-breakings over a period of several months.
Had White "Fences"
The cases of three so-called "fences," alleged to have received stolen property valued at close to $15,000 from Dorsey, were continued. The three, Ben Seidel, 24; Mitchell Miller, 25; and Bennie Zedd, 19, all white, all of the 1200 block of Seventh Street, were held under bond of $2,000 each. Dorsey was arrested November 29 by Detective E. L. Dialstrom, third precinct, with a quantity of clothing and jewelry belonging to Fentiss Gardner, 1800 block Vernon Street.
The Detective saw Dorsey running through an alley near Sixteenth and S Streets with the clothing under his arm. The boy was captured after a short chase and all the property stolen from Gardner's apartment recovered.
Police said more than 25 units of :
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Washington Tribune
PRISONER BREAKS FROM GUARDS, RUNS TO CHAIR
Condemned Man Seems Anxious to Meet Death for 1930 Murder
Charles Morris, 35, was electrocuted at the District Jail Friday morning for the murder of Maggie Landon, who was shot during a fight July 27, 1930.
Morris, who has been in jail for two years and five months awaiting death, seemed anxious to get it over. When he appeared in the long, high-windowed room, Morris broke away from his guards and ran at a dog trot to the plain oak chair at the far end. Unassisted, he sat in the death chair while other guards quickly applied the helmet and strapped his arms and legs.
He was strapped in the chair at about 2 minutes after 10 o'clock, and was pronounced dead by Dr. W. K. Angewen, prison physician, and Dr. A. M. Gruder McDonald, deputy coroner, at eight and one-half minutes after 10 o'clock. The current was shot through his body for 1 minute and 56 secs. ds.
Claims He Was Drunk
Morris was accompanied into the execution chamber by the Rev. James L. Pinn, pastor of the Good Will Baptist Church, 1600 block of U Street. The Rev. Mr. Pinn read to the condemned man from the Bible as he was strapped in the chair and as the current went through his body. Morris told prison officials and the pastor that he did not remember killing the woman, being under the influence of liquor at the time of the killing. Col. Williara L. Peake, superintendant of the jail, sait. Morris slept soundly all night. Thursday night, and ate a hearty breakfast, Friday morning. The woman was murdered on the bridge over the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal at Thirty-first Street.
Benjamin Brown, who was scheduled to be electrocuted December 16, was granted a 60-day stay by Justice W. O'Donoghue, last week. The date of execution was set for February 15, to allow for appeals.
D. C. INVENTOR GETSPATENT ON AUTO SEAT CAPE
Unique Garment Attracts Attention During Street
Demonstrations
The U. S. Commissioner of Patents recently issued patent rights under serial No. 552246 to William S. Hawkins, 1030 Euclid Street, Northwest, on an article that will no doubt be welcomed by rumble seat car owners.
The article, a garment known as the "Collegiate Rumble Cape," aside from being a unique and useful article worn with aviator's helmet and goggles, makes an attractive outfit for cold or windy weather.
On the first demonstration tour through the fashionable F Street district during the rush hour, the cape attracted so much attention that it caused a traffic tie-up. A second demonstration by Mr. Hawkins in the same district drew the attention of a daily newspaper photographer.
This is the third inventive attempt of Mr. Hawkins, but is the first patient he has secured. In the other two cases, the articles were covered by prior patents, one having been filed one month before his application.
The inventor, who is the husband of Mrs. C. D. Hawkins employee in the ladies' section of Reid's Store, has had several offi-
Carpenter Finds Lost Screwdriver After 50 Years
MARION, Ky.—Fifty years ago R. F. Elder, a carpenter, misplaced a screwdriver while building a house here. It was part of Elder's first set of tools and he searched for it a long time before giving it up as lost. Last week Elder's abandoned search had its results. He found the screwdriver between the walls of the house while tearing down the structure.
BUDGET ESTIMATE INCLUDES TWO NEW COLORED SCHOOLS
BUDGET ESTIMATE INCLUDES TWO NEW COLORED SCHOOLS
$166,000 to Begin Building at Browne Junior High in 1934 List
Of the five building items asked for by the District commissioners and the board of education for colored schools only two were allowed by the Bureau of the Budget when the 1934 estimates for the District public schools were sent to Congress, Wednesday.
The building items asked for amounted t. $541,000. The amount approved was $271,000. The items not blue penciled by the Bureau of the Budget include $105,000 for an 8-room elementary school in the vicinity of Logan School, and $166.-000 for an addition to the Hugh M. Browne Junior High School.
Although these two items were sent to Congress they were cut down by the budget bureau.
The original amount asked for the building near the Logan School was $123,000, and the sum asked for the Browne addition was $175,000. The total amount clipped from these two items amounted to $27,600.
Bates Road School Eliminated
The building items looped off entirely by the Bureau of the Budget included: $110,000 for a new building on Bates Road, $125,000 for an addition to the Young Platoon School, and $7,500 for an addition to the Margaret Washington Vocational School. The total amount cut from the buildings items in colored schools was $242,000, nearly 50 per cent.
The two land items for colored schools that remained in the estimates were for Phelps Vocational School and the Syphax School. The first represented an amount of $67,000 for additional ground north of the building, while a sum of $25,000 was provided for land near the Syphax School.
Armstrong Projects Stricken
The board of education submitted to the District commissions a total of $2,548,920 for buildings. Of this amount $991,200, or 34.2 per cent were for colored schools.
Items in the estimates which were approved by the board of education and stricken out by the commissioners included the following: a $60,000 addition to the Monroe School, and three items for Armstrong High School, $70,000, $45,000, and $5,000, respectively, and the purchase of land for play space near the old Business High School at Rhode Island Avenue and Ninth Street.
Tango Troubadours in Recital at Shaw Night
Dr. W. A. Cameron's tango troubadours, who style themselves "Los Gauchos," will be heard in recital at the Shaw Night High School, December 15. The troubadours, who broadcast weekly over Station WMAL, will give the recital for the benefit of the school fund.
Dr. Cameron is director, while members include Thomas Batson, Richmond Johnson, Romeo Harris, Sherman Smith, Arthur Smith, Sylvester Thomas, Ralph Tibbs, Waverly Baird and Lester Porter.
Legion Post Meets
The James E., Walker Post
American Legion met Thursday at
the Twelfth Street Branch of the
YMCA.
Hunger Marchers Set Example for Prejudiced District
Cops Become Riled When They See White Women and Colored Men Marching Together and Socializing; Make Insulting Remarks
TAXI STAND NEAR SCHOOL IS CALLED TRAFFIC MENACE
Board of Education Seeks to Have Stand on T Street Removed
Military Instructors Given Permanent Assignments
Calling a taxicab stand on T Street between Seventh and Eighth Streets a menace and traffic hazard to pupils attending the Cleveland School, the Rev. F. I. A. Bennett, member of the board of education, asked, the body Wednesday to send a letter to the District Commissioners and have the commissioners to consider the transfer of the stand from the neighborhood of the school.
The Rev. Mr. Bennett said the cabs endangered the lives of pupils. The board member also pointed out that drivers were reckless in passing the school when children are in the streets. The board ordered the letter sent to the commissioners.
Cabs Called Menace
Cabs near the school block T Street from Seventh to Eighth Streets, and pupils have difficulty crossing the street to school.
The dangerous traffic hazard near the school was brought to the attention of the board following a request by Thomas G. Dade, white, who sought to have the board approve a gas station on the corner of T and Eighth Streets. The board at a previous meeting refused to approve the station and Dade sought to have the board rescind its action. The board upheld its former action.
Military Mentors Assigned
Another action of the board was to transfer Captain Arthur C. Newman, professor of military science in the high schools, from Dunbart to Cardoso High School. Major Harry Alwood was sent to Dunbart, and Major E. York to Armstrong. The board approved these changes.
First Assistant Superintendent Garnet C. Wilkinson reported to the board that six teachers in the colored schools had not made satisfactory arrangements in the matter of paying certain debts that had been brought to the attention of the board. The debt dodgers will be brought before the personnel committee of the board to explain why they have not met their obligations. There were two cases of white teachers who had failed to pay their debts. The board was advised that Miss K. R. Martin, a teacher at Shaw Junior High School, would be retired on December 31. The body was also advised of the death of (Continued on page 2)
Hunger Marches for Prejudice
Cops Become Riled When The Colored Men Marching To Make Insult
By GARLAND MACKEY
Although police stated there were 344 colored men and women here with the hunger marchers, this writer failed to identify more than 10 colored women and 50 men. Police claimed there were a total of 2,199 hunger marchers, of which 294 were colored men and 50 women.
The hunger marchers who invaded the city this week were unlike those of a year ago in that this year's edition was more organized and refused to talk to reporters.
The women looked at me with suspicion when I asked them questions, and the men were frankly hostile. Practically all had stock answers, and every one I asked told me that he or she came here to demand a lot of things from the government.
They refused to discuss the advisability of making such demands, but all stated that there were millions of workers somewhere in the United States hungry, cold and out of jobs. They "demanded" that all of these workers out of jobs be given $50 cash and unemployment insurance.
Refuse to Talk
Many marchers became hostile when I sought to engage them in conversation, and several told me I was a capitalist because I had on a necktie and a clean shirt. One said my face was too clean to understand their alleged plight, and one big 'fellow actually threatened me, but changed' his mind when he saw a big cop hovering in the background.
I also noticed that there were
1920
MRS. EMMA GREEN
winner of the Lightman Theatres
Washington Tribune Popularity
Contest!
MRSEMMA GREENE WINS TITLE OF MISS WASHINGTON
The sixteen prize winners in the Lichtman Theatre's third annual popularity contest were presented with eighteen valuable gifts by Rufus G. Byars, representing the theatre chain, on Wednesday night of this week at the Lincoln Theatre.
The winner of the first place in the contest was Mrs. Emma Greene, 319 Eighth Street, Northeast. She became "Miss Washington of 1932," and received fifty dollars in gold from the Dollar Dry Cleaning Co., a Leonard electric refrigerator from Kistig Inc., and a complete lady's outfit from H. Abramson Co.
The winner of first place received 3,121,000 credits from the votes cast for her. She made a consistent race and held the lead throughout the contest. Her lead was threatened at certain stages by the runners, p, who made consistent gains during the second, third and fourth weeks, but the fifth week brought little competition and allowed Mrs. Greene to gain the commanding lead which enabled her to clinch the first honors.
The runner-up was Mrs. Vivian Turner, of 1716 Second Street, Northwest. She received a total of 2,587,000 credits to win the Philco Radio presented by Bailey's Tire Stores.
Queen of Classic
Miss Helen Eagles received the diamond ring from Chas, Schwartz and Son.
Miss Eagles, it is to be remem-
(Continued on Page 3)
two colored members in the Red Front band. All of the members of this band wore the gray uniforms of Soviet Russia. The two Negro members of the band refused to be civil or even answer a single question.
The colored members of the hunger marchers last year were anxious to talk and practically all admitted that they did not know what it was all about and joined the marchers when told that they would be given food and a place to sleep.
Stock Answers
This year, all evidently have been schooled to repeat a set of answers to likely questions and the teachers did a good job.
Each committee that called on the various departments for relief had one or more Negro representatives on it.
No discrimination was in evidence, for Communists really practice the brotherhood of man. White women and colored men marched side by side while police and whites looked on the scene with boiling indignation. I heard several policemen making insulting remarks when colored and white were seen walking together, especially white women and colored men. The marchers, whatever their faults, certainly set an example for thousands of whites and the prejudiced District. I must say that in many instances the marchers were more orderly and kept their heads better than the police, because I overheard many policemen making insulting remarks to the marchers and a group of officers booed a group of marchers who ignored the insults.
Office: 920 U St. N. W.
MAJOR PERSONNEL CHANGES ORDERED BY H. U. TRUSTEES
Print Shop, Architect's Office and Assistant to the President, Abolished
At the special meeting of the board of trustees of Howard University in New York, Monday, a shake-up was ordered in some of the principal offices of Howard University.
Dr. Abraham Flexner, president of the board, issued a statement in which he said that Dr. Emmett J. Scott, secretary-treasurer, will become the secretary of the board, and of the university on January 1. Virginus D. Johnston, now budget director, will become the treasurer after January 1. This separates Dr. Scott from the treasureship, demoting him in rank and salary.
The board abolished the office of assistant to the president, now filled by Richard H. Hill. The print shop will be abolished on July 1, 1933, as will the office of architect, now filled by Albert I. Cassell. Another significant change is that of publicity, which will be under Dr. Scott's direction. This transfers Emory B. Smith, now publicity director, to Dr. Scott's office. The full statement as sent out by Dr. Flexner is as follows:
"The board of trustees of Howard University, at its meeting on October 25, adopted new by-laws to provide a simpler and more efficient administrative machinery for the university.
"The principal results of the new set-up are to re-distribute official functions more in accordance with best academic practice; to place official duties where they logically belong; to reduce administrative expenses by the careful avoidance of duplicated functions; to free the presidential office from a mass of administrative detail which heretofore has taken time which could be better devoted to the larger problems of the university; to centralize in one office the business functions and affairs of the university.
"The board then appointed a committee to consider and report upon the necessary re-adjustment (Concerning the University)."
POISON VICTIM FOUND IN CAFE DIES HOUR LATER
Found in a Seventh Street lunchroom suffering from poisoning, taken with suicidal intent, Oscar Tobias Bergamy, 45, 1716 Seventh Street, Northwest, died at Freedmen's Hospital an hour later, Wednesday night.
Private Philip G. Alter, of the traffic bureau, found Bergamy in a lunchroom at 1908 Seventh Street, two blocks from his home, and rushed him to Freedmen's Hospital in a passing taxi.
He was found to be suffering from phenol poisoning and was pronounced dead 60 minutes later by Dr. P. M. Ross, of the hospital staff.
A note, addressed to Lorrain Thomas, of an unknown address, found in his pocket stated that he wanted to end it all. Police notified relatives of the man, who said they knew of no reason for his act.
Forced into Alley and Robbed by Armed Bandits
Wardell Beatty, 30, of the 1400 block of Sixth S-treet, reported to police he was robbed of $23 by an armed pair of bandits Saturday night in the 600 block of P Street. Beatty told police of the Second Precinct that the bandits forced him into an alley where they re-lied him of his money and ordered him to walk through the alley to the next street.
Boy Friend Cuts Girl at Kensington House Party
Cut during a house party near her home in Kensington, Md. Bessie Daw, 22, was brought to Freedmen's Hospital early this week and treated for lacerations of the back and shoulders. She told police her boy friend, Robert Edwards, also of Kensington, cut her following a dispute. Her condition was not serious.
Episcopal Priest Sues Own Church Member Who Had Him Jailed
Lawyer Charged with Converting Clients' Money to Own Use
Mortimer M. Harris, member of the District bar, was indicted by the District grand jury, Wednesday, on two counts of embezzlement. One count involved a sum of $222, and another of $327.
Harris is alleged to have received the first sum from Fannie and William Washington at various times during March of this year. The first sum, it is alleged, was $27, received on March 19, a second of $50 on March 29, and a like sum on the same day. March 30, Harris is alleged to have received $95 from the pair while acting as their agent.
During March and April, Harris is alleged to have gotten sums of money from Charles H. Braxton amounting to $327. The lawyer was charged with converting this money to his own use.
WIFE CLAIMS SHE WAS GIVEN BLOWS INSTEAD OF FOOD
WIFE CLAIMS SHE WAS GIVEN BLOWS INSTEAD OF FOOD
Mrs. Bernice Davis Seeks Divorce and Alimony from Husband
Claiming that her husband drove her from their home and that he threatened to kill her if she ever returned, Mrs. Bernice B. Davis, 901 Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest, filed a petition in the District Supreme Court, Friday, through her attorney, John H. Wilson, for a limited divorce and alimony from her husband, Raymond T. Davis, 2466 Ontario Road, Northwest.
Mrs. Davis says that she and her husband were married on May 23 this year at Alexandria, Va., by the Rev. Mr. Adkins, and that they lived at the Ontario Road address for six months. Last November, the petition states, her husband drove her from their home without funds and threatened her if she returned. She says she has not lived with her husband since that time.
Blows for Bread
During the month of October and November, Mrs. Davis said, her husband was guilty of extreme cruelty, abusive language and assaults. She states that on November 28, she was entirely without funds and went to her husband with the intention of forgiving him for his past cruelty and to ask him for food. Instead of heeding her request, she claims that he assaulted her, twisted her arm and threatened to take her life if she returned home.
She said police were called and a revolver was taken from her husband's possession.
Davis is said to be a chauffeur for a rich family and earns $130 per month. He is said to own $4,000 in household property and has two automobiles, one a Marmon.
No.4 Fire Fighters Do Police Duty in Emergency
The entire force of seventeen men of No. 4 Eugine Company, the only Negro fire unit in the District, was mustered into service as special policemen during the stay of the Hunger Marchers in Washington.
Captain J. G. B. Key was sworn in as inspector. The men were assigned to posts near their engine house in Southwest Washington. The men took to their new emergency jobs like veterans. All were glad when their new duty ended as all were forced to work without a rest while the marchers were here.
You can not help but notice the advertisements in the Tribune, the number of them, the sizes of them, and their attractive display. Our advertisers get results, hence they give us big copy. We thank our subscribers for patronizing our advertisers, and appreciate the fact that our advertisers appeal to our discriminating readers.
Prominent Pastor Claims Arrest Hurt Him and Caused $500 Damage MRS. MITCHELL SAYS HE ATTACKED HER
The Rev. S. Henry White, 111 Heckman Street, Southeast, prominent Protestant Episcopal priest and vicar of St. Monica's Chapel has sued Mrs. Pauline Mitchell, 908 Howard Road, Southeast, member of the church, for $500.
The Rev. Mr. White claimed that Mrs. Mitchell had him falsely arrested and had him locked up in the District Jail last September 6, and, as a result, he has suffered in health, credit, and social standing among members of the clergy, his neighbors and parishioners.
Woman Claimed Assault
Bernard M. Chernoff, white, represents the Rev. Mr. White, while Attorney John H. Wilson will appear for Mrs. Mitchell. When the case came up in the municipal court for trial last Thursday, the Rev. Mr. White requested a jury trial.
According to Mrs. Mitchell, who is well known in religious and social circles, in Washington, she formed a girls' club some time ago and sought to have the Rev. Mr. White endorse the movement which was a church organization. Mrs. Mitchell alleges that the pastor stated that she was not a fit person to head the movement, whereupon an argument took place in the church and she claims the rector assaulted her. This took place on September 4.
Rector Jailed
She swore out a warrant for his arrest and two days later the clergyman was arrested and placed in jail. Friends of Mrs. Mitchell are said to have prevailed on her not to press the charges, and the case against the pastor was not-pressed. Mrs. Mitchell is prominent in local society and was formerly Miss Pauline Graham. In his partition the rector claims that he is a priest and that Mrs. Mitchell sought to injure him and his good name and to bring him into public scandal and disgrace.
CHURCH CLERK ON PROBATION FOR ROBBING MAILS
Former Postal Employee Changed Innocent Plea to Guilty One
Robert H. Carter, former postal employee and local church clerk of 1237-a South Capitol Street was placed on probation without sentence by Chief Justice Alfred A. Wheat in the District Supreme Court, Monday, following his change of plea from not guilty to guilty on charges of robbing the United States mails.
Carter, who worked at the city post office, was indicted late this summer, charged with unlawfully detaining and opening the ma is which were entrusted to him.
When arraigned on the charge he entered a plea of not guilty, but later changed it to the one of guilty. He was represented by Attorney John H. Wilson.
Crusaders Charity Club Distributes Garments
The Charity Club of the Heroine Templar Crusaders distributed 361 garments to the needy within the past two weeks. The garments were distributed to the Birney School, Crusaders Guild, Union Wesley Home and the Euclid Street Home for the Aged.
Officers elected by the organization for 1933 are Pearl Getts, president; Anna James, vice-president; Mildred Longus, secretary; Indiana Green, assistant secretary; Henrietta Berry, treasurer; Minnie Conway, chaplain; and Helen G Wills, general supervisor.
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BROKEN MORALE GREATEST MENACE TO CIVILIZATION
Miss Emma Merritt States Poverty of Morale Is Biggest Alarm
Miss Emma F. G. Merritt, president of the District branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, addressed a large audience of parents and teachers, Sunday, in the First Baptist Church, at Liberty, MD. Speaking on "Juvenile Delinquency," Miss Merritt graphically depicted the cancerous spots in the homes and communities, that are destroying the morale of the future men and women. She claimed that the broken morale of modern youth is the greatest menace that threatens civilization today.
"The poverty of morale," said Miss Merritt, "is far more alarming in this period of depression and unemployment than the lack of the bare necessities of life food, clothing and shelter."
She forcefully impressed the audience with the fact that every child is entitled to be well born, wholesomely environed, and to be properly educated so that he might fit into the life into which he is thrown.
Francis Junior High Will Have Christmas Postoffice
Distributed Thirty-three Thanksgiving Packages
Mrs. Ora Weaver Spivey, assistant principal of the Armstrong High School, recently addressed the senior class on the advantage of going on to high school. Mrs. Spivey showed a set of interesting slides on the activities at Armstrong which are very likely to whet the interest of any junior high pupil in senior high school life.
The Christmas Post Office conducted annually by the pupils of Francis will open its 1932 season on December 12 and be in operation for ten days. This postoffice is the joint project of the printing, woodwork, and art classes and the Red Cross Club.
Christmas cards are designed and made into linoleum blocks by the art classes and printed by the classes in printing. The booths are made by the boys in Woodwork, the sale of stamps (Red Cross Health Seals) is promoted by the Red Cross Club.
Helped the Less Fortunate
As an evidence of thankfulness for their own blessings the children of the school made an effort to help those less fortunate than themselves at Thanksgiving. As a result of investigation made by the principal and teachers many needy families were discovered in the immediate neighborhood of the school
To do a little toward relieving this condition the pupils of the school contributed a generous assortment of canned goods, fruits, vegetables and groceries. Members of the Junior Red Cross Club under the direction of Mrs. M. L. Cuney took delight in assorting the groceries into thirty-three packages, which were delivered to the various needy families by several of the teachers. Besides the groceries, clothing was also distributed where it was most needed.
In addition to these contributions Section 7A-3. Mrs. N. C.
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Bacchus, teacher, prepared a large box of groceries, carried goods and provisions of all sorts. This box was beautifully decorated and sent as a Thanksgiving offering to a local orphan home.
Phyllis Wheatley Y.W.C.A. News
Miss Dorothy Guinn, national board Y.W.C.A. secretary in the services division is spending the week at the Phyllis Wheatley Y.W.C.A. meeting with the board of directors, the staff and several committees.
The Girl Reserve, Industrial and Membership Departments are receiving special help in evaluating programs. The public is invited to meet Miss Guinn Sunday, 4 p.m. at the vesper service.
Industrial Department.-The Industrial Committee, Mrs. Beatrice Francis, chairman, held its meeting Thursday evening.
Christmas events include the Christmas party being planned by the Hostess Club for Wednesday, December 28. The industrial department will co-operate with the club on this occasion.
Girl Reserve Department.-The Metropolitan Four L Club will have a party in the gym Monday afternoon. They will have as their guests the members of their classes. The members of the Ever Ready Vocational Club under the direction of Miss Dorothy Green are planning Christmas vespers. The Toy Hospital faces a shortage. A special request is made for contributions of discarded toys—new toys are also accepted to be distributed at Christmas time to our kiddies.
FINDS MONOXIDE GAS CAN ACT IN A MINUTE
State Health Director Tries Experiment and Then Warns of Danger in Garages.
ALBANY, N.Y.—Numerous deaths recently from carbon monoxide gas poisoning, among them those of a boy and girl in a parked car at Minaville, N.Y., have led B. R. Richards, director of State Public Health Education, of New York State to issue a warning to the public.
The State Labor Department is distributing a pamphlet containing instructions for avoiding the gas that comes not only from automobiles but from indoor gas heaters and similar burners.
The deaths of the couple at Minavile caused Mr. Richards to experiment with the gas on himself.
"Just to see how it works, I tried an experiment," he said. Leaving my son to watch outside our garage, waiting for a signal from me, I closed the garage doors and started the motor of my car. This mind you, was in a three-car garage.
"In just a minute I felt a sort of metallic taste in my mouth. Then I got dizzy and drowsy. I rushed to the door just as my son, realizing what had happened, threw it open."
Warrenton Baptist Church Closes 14-Day Revival
WARRENTON, Val—Latest returns from the fall rally conducted at the First Baptist Church here showed that over $200, had been realized. The 14-day revival being conducted by the Rev. J. Edgar Newton, pastor of Mount Lebanon Baptist of Washington, and the Rev. Augustus Lewis, pastor of Jerusalem Baptist, Church, and president of the Ministers' Conference of that city, will close Friday night.
SERMON OF JOHN WESLEY'S PASTOR SELECTED OF 690
Printed in Book of 25 Best Sermons of 1932 Delivery
A sermon by the Rev. W. O. Carrington, pastor of the John Wesley A.M.E. Zion Church, at 1615 Fourteenth Street, Northwest, has been included in the 1932 anthology "prize sermons" edited by four clergymen. Mr. Carrington's discourse was one of 25 chosen from 690 sent to the editors for consideration.
Mr. Carrington was pastor of the John Wesley Church from 1920 to 1924, during which time he also was on the faculty of the school of religion at Howard University. In the summer of this year he returned to the Washington charge. He is a native of British Guiana and was educated privately and in London.
The sermon is called, "A 'Door Opened in Heaven,' and takes for its text a sentence from the story of John the Disciple on Patmos.
John, imprisoned, saw a door opened in heaven, and Mr. Carrington develops this theme as an example of the support to be gained from religion in times of grass. It was written while the minister was at the Main Street Church in Hartford and was delivered at that church.
Other Sermon Published
Referring to a sermon by Dr. Carrington published in Homiletic Review, January, 1932, the Review editor has the following to say:
"We wonder if the Yale and Hartford Divinity students know the powerful preacher near at hand in the Main Street A.M.E. Zion Church, Hartford. This sermon by the pastor of that church will hear intensive study—on a much used text in a practical manner."
For a number of years prior to the Washington pastorate in 1920, Dr. Carrington was dean of Hood Theological Seminary, Livingstone College, Salisbury, N.C., which is the chief institution of learning of the A.M.E. Zion Church. The training and proficiency of many young ministers in the Zion Church and other denominations can be attributed to the work of Dr. Carrington while he served at Livingstone and Howard University.
For more than twenty years he has been regarded as among the foremost biblical scholars and exegetical pulpiteers. The above achievement in sermonic work is regarded as a distinct honor to the A.M.E. Zion Church and the Negro ministry.
Harry Simms Buried at Lincoln Cemetery
Funeral rites for Harry Garrett Simms, for 37 years machinist helper at the Washington Evening Star office, were held Monday from his late residence, 49 Florida Avenue, Northwest. The Rev. R. W. Brooks officiated and interment was at Lincoln Cemetery. Mr. Simms died Friday night after an illness of five weeks. He was a native Washingtonian having been born in Georgetown. He is surived by his widow, Mrs. Mayme Simms and Mrs. Emma Johnson, mother-in-law.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, DECEMBER 9, 1932
Deacons Association to Hold Home-Coming Rally
The General Baptist Deacons Association and its auxiliaries will hold a home-coming and sectional rally at the First Baptist Church, Thursday. The Rev. James Marshall, pastor, will preside. Deacon James Ross of Mount Moriah Baptist Church is president of the association.
SECOND FAMOUS BIBLE NOW IN WASHINGTON
Luther Volumes Locked in Vault; Gutenberg Work in Library of Congress
With the arrival in Washington last week of the Luther Bible belonging to Dr. Otto H. F. Vollbehr, the capital now boasts the two books regarded by bibliophiles as rarest.
First rank is accorded to the Guttenberg Bible, belonging to the Library of Congress, for which the Benedictine Monastery of St. Paul in Carinthia, Austria, received from Dr. Vollbehr the highest price ever paid for a book—$375,000.
Congress bought it, along with 2,999 other Vollbehr incunabula, for a lump sum of $1,500,000.
Bible in Safety Vault
Before storing the Luther Bible in a safety vault here, Dr. Vollbehr took its three volumes from their individual, triple-padlocked wooden cases, turned their heavy parchment pages, and pointed out the many rarities within a rarity which makes this Bible rank so very high.
Printed for George III of Annait, a defender of Luther's reform movement, the Bible was planned as one of the most elaborate and historic of books.
Lucas Cranach, master artist of the German reformation, was chosen to illustrate it. He did so lavishly, with wood blocks and original miniatures, geographically colored, brilliantly illuminated.
"Thirty years I have been collecting, and I have seen no art to compare with this single page" said Dr. Vollbehr of the intricate miniature depicting the contrasting philosophies of the Old and New Testaments.
Has Rare Autographs
The first four pages of each volume were set aside as an autograph book extraordinary for the four great reformation leaders—Luther, Philip Melanchthon, Johan Bugenhagen and Caspar Cruciger.
Taking a page apiece in each volume, they carefully penned religious sentiments in four languages — German, Latin, Greek and Hebrew.
Former D.C. Churchman Buried in Manassas, Va.
MANASSAS, Va.-Funeral services for Edward A. Williams, who for six years was a faithful usher of the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church of Washington, D.C., were held here Sunday evening from the First Baptist Church. The Reverends Henry J. Booker and J. D. Pair, of Warrenton, Va., conducted the crites.
Interment was held in the church cemetery.
The comfortable person to have around is one who minds his or her own business.
PRODUCER NEEDED DECLARES BAPTIST MISSION WORKER
The Rev. T. T. Loveless Gives Instructive Message at Meeting
Crying that the time has come when we must be producers and not mere consumers, the Rev. T. T. Loveless, of Chicago, representative of the Home Mission Board of the National Baptist Convention, delivered the sermon at the weekly meeting of the Baptist Ministers' Conference of Washington and Vicinity Monday.
Addressing the pastors at the Florida Avenue Baptist Church, the missionary worker declared "there are too many ministers who are consuming in God's vineyard and not producing."
Taking a slap at corrupt preachers, he continued, "Preachers, of all men, should be on the level, regardless of the fact that the rest of the world may no chooked."
He concluded: "Ministers must have spiritual backbone. To use high sounding phrases, to relate historical events, to go deep into philosophy and to memorize facts doesn't make a preacher, but to be able to redeem the soul is the thing."
The Rev. Mr. Loveless also outlined the Convention's plans for this year's missionary work.
Scottsboro Talk Heard
Mary M. Grant, representative of the International Labor Defense, in a brief talk asked the conference for its support in the fight being waged by that organization for the freedom of the Scottsboro boys and the Logan Circle trio. She declared both cases were frame-ups and that her organization was demanding the release of the boys.
Visitors to the meeting were Noble Wiley, of Baltimore, a poet, who recited his latest poem, "You Reap What You Sow"; also Mrs. Nettie Beverly, of Virginia, and Emma Mann, an evangelist singer.
Special Services at Lincoln Temple
The Men's Brotherhood of Lincoln Congregational Temple will meet Sunday morning at 9:45 o'clock. John H. Williams will direct the musical program. The inspirational talk will be given by W. H. C. Brown, president of the Industrial Savings Bank. All men of the church and community are urged to attend.
At the 11:00 o'clock service, the Rev. R. W. Brooks will speak from the subject, "The Gospel of the Kingdom." Special musical selections will be rendered by the vested chorus choir. Holy Communion will be observed at the morning service.
The Young People's C.E. Society will hold a union service with the Bethel Baptist C.E. Society at the Bethel Baptist Church, at 6:30 p.m. The subject to be discussed is, "Practicing Brotherhood in Our Own Neighborhood," will be led by Mrs. R. W. Brooks.
The installation service for the officers of the Men's Brotherhood will be observed Sunday evening at 8 o'clock. The speaker will be Dr. A, F. Elmes, pastor of the People's Congregational Church. Special musical selections will be rendered.
Church Club Honors Pastor on 69th Anniversary
While the Rev. A. J. Tyler, of Mt. Alary Baptist Church, was conducting revival services at Friendship Baptist Church, a few members and friends of the True and Tried Club of Mt. Alary, gathered in the private dining room of the church, and there surprised the Rev. Tyler, with a birthday anniversary party and presentation.
At the close of the revival services at Friendship Church, Mrs. Tyler urged her husband to carry her to Mt. Alary Church, presumably to meet her club, but in reality, to meet the surprise party group. Two long tables, laden with food, including two birthday cakes, had been prepared for the pastor, his family, and guests.
Mr. Tyler acknowledged that he was very agreeably surprised at such a token of loyalty, esteem, and affection.
The Rev. R. D. Grymes, of Salem Baptist Church, acted as toastmaster, the Rev. B. H. Whiting, of the Friendship Baptist Church, gave the response, Mrs. Carrie White was the hostess. Mrs. Inez Tate sponsored the affair.
People's Congregational
Loyalty Day will be observed Sunday with a special message at the eleven o'clock service by the minister, the Rev. A. F. Elmes, on the theme "What shall I do with my money?" In connection with this service all members and friends who have signed pledge cards are requested to present their pledges and lay them on the altar. The Young People's hour is 6:30 p.m. at which time a musical program with disease will be rendered. Mrs. Bernice B. Brown will be the principal speaker. Mid-week prayer service is to take place Thursday at 8 p.m.
57th Anniversary Celebrated at Mount Bethel
The fifty-seventh anniversary of the Mount Bethel Baptist Church and the seventh anniversary of the pastor, the Rev. K. W. Roy was observed at the church Monday night. The program was in charge of the Baptist Ministers' Conference of which the Rev. Augustus Lewis is president. Short addresses were made by Attorney Armond W. Scott, the Rev. and Mr. Roy, George Taylor and N. Baker, deacons of the church and R. Berry, church trustee. The history of the church was read by Nelson Brown, church clerk. Mrs. M. Ghassaway rendered a vocal solo and the church choir furnished other musical selections.
Campbell A.M.E. Church Has Men's Day
Sunday was Men's Day at Campbell A.M.E. Church, and one of the special features was a visit by Bishop M. H. Davis, of Baltimore, at the night service. He delivered an address concerning the church and work at Campbell, and his work in the Second Episcopal District, over which he presides. The program was inspiring and successful. The morning sermon was delivered by the Rev. J. C. Olden, and was followed by the Holy Communion administered by the pastor, Dr. Scott, and other ministers.
At 3:30 in the afternoon a message to men was delivered by Mrs. Anita Anderson.
Sunday night a musical and literary program, directed by Mrs. Blanche Parks, featured some of Washington's finest talent. Kenneth Brown, assistant in psychology at Howard University, was the pianist of the evening. Miss Alma Parks and Kelley Brown, of Howard, sang solos. H. Rodney, of Howard, rendered two numbers on the violin, and Miss Mary Simpson gave a reading.
Among the special attractions were a number of selections sung by the Columbia Quartet, which broadcasts over the Columbia Radio every Sunday afternoon. They were called back several times by the applause of the audience.
An interesting talk was given by the Rev. C. H. Parker, of the First Baptist Church, in Deanwood.
J. H. Dale was the chief promoter of this day's program, with Mrs. H. Corrine Rowe acting as general chairman. The financial results of the day were pleasing. Campbell's joint official board met Monday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Dorham, 516 G Street, Southeast, with the pastor, Dr. P. A. Scott, presiding, and considerable important business was transacted. The board will meet at Campbell parsonage next Monday night. Elaborate preparations are being made for the celebration of Christ-school.
Dr. Mordecai Johnson Berean Church Speaker
Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, president of Howard University, will speak at the night service at the Berean Baptist Church Sunday. At the morning service the church will hold its last communion of the year, and the annual roll call of members. Music for the both occasions will be furnished by an augmented choir under the direction of Miss Carolyn Grant.
Junior Players' Guild to Hold Club Debate
The final meeting of the year of the Junior Players' Guild was held at the residence of Andrew Johnson. 1250 Half Street, Southwest, Monday. Jesse Kelly, president, was re-elected for the coming year. Other officers elected were C. T. Briscol, vice-president; Miss V. Kirksey, secretary; Miss Mary Rusten, assistant secretary; R. Cole, treasurer; Malcolm Taylor, reporter; and J. B. Rusten, advisor.
The group organized a volunteer debating team and will debate at the next meeting on the topic, "Resolved, That the Church Will Win Over the Theatre."
Roger Cole and Mary Rusten will argue the negative side while they will be opposed by V. Kirsley and Malcolm Taylor.
Baptist to Hold Bible History Contest
An annual Bible History contest for the District of Columbia, was held at the Metropolitan Baptist Church Friday evening. The program included literary and musical numbers. The winners of the highest honors in the junior section were Luretta Clayborne, and Thomas Bonner; in the senior section, Miss Lounettie E. Raynor and Miss Melvina Bolden. The contest and entertainment were directed by the National Forum Association.
The Rev. W. Herbert King, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, and recent delegate to the United Youth Conference Against War from the Young People's Society of the church was elected associate chairman of the conference at its closing session in New York City last week, at the Rand School of Social Science.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
ROBERT G. McGUIRE & SON
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Ministers' Conference to Hold Mass Meeting for Mission Benefit
A mass meeting and Foreign Mission Christmas tree service under the auspices of the Baptist Ministers' Conference of Washington and Vicinity will be held at the Vermont Avenue Baptist Church Monday, December 26. The aim of the evening is to raise $1,000 for the Foreign Mission Committee of the National Baptist Convention. Services will be held in the morning and at night. The Rev. Ernest C. Smith, pastor of Metroploitan Baptist Church is chairman of the general committee while the Rev. William H. Jenagin is chairman of the program committee.
Tabernacle Baptist Church
"Who art thou. O great mountain? before Zerubbabel thou shalt become a plain" (Zschariah 4:7). The pastor's sermon Sunday morning was taken from the above verse. He outlined the various barriers within the Christian church, and declared that in spite of these obstacles the church's program will go on. The above sermon was offered as a basis for the sermon on next Sunday morning. "Combing for Mountain Climbing." This sermon will be dedicated to the three departments of the church, the children's the youths' and adults' departments. The service is designed to encourage more constructive work in each of the departments.
The Eliza A. Duffield
The regular Sunday afternoon services of the Eliza A. Duffield Service Mission will be held at Trinity Church, Morton Street, between Georgia and Sherman Avenue, Northwest, at 5 o'clock. A cordial invitation is extended to all men and women to join in this hour of devotion and fellowship, speaking and good singing. Elizabeth Duffield Wedlake, director.
Ministers' Auxiliary Hears Rev. Robinson
The Women's Auxiliary of the
Ministers' Convocation turned out
Sunday at the Florida Avenue Baptist
Church to hear the Rev. John
Robinson preach on the subject,
"Press on to the Mark of High
Calling."
A meeting of the auxiliary was
held Monday night to make plans
for the year. Mrs. Mardel Bundr
ant is president.
St. Paul A.M.E. Church
The pastor, the Rev. Oliver Wing preached on the subject, "Moses the Humble Leader," at the Sunday morning service. Ninety-six persons including the Rev. M. Brown, son of the late John M. Brown, of Baltimore A.M.E. Conference and the oldest living graduate of Howard University, communed at the service. Sunday School was led by Dr. J. Frank Blagburn.
Trinity Baptist Church
The pastor, the Rev. J. W. Bundrant will preach on the subject, "The Harvest" at the Sunday morning service. The revival at the church being conducted by the Rev. H. W. B. Colston, evangelist, will close tonight.
A play, "His Old Sweethearts" was presented at the church last Thursday night.
Rev. Walter H. Brooks,D.D., Pasto
Rev. Henry J. Booker, Th.B.
Rev. George A. Parker, LL.B.
11 a.m.—"A Call for Prayer."
8 p.m.—The Rev. Geo. A. Parke
will preach.
First and R Stu., 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.I.
8:00 p.m.—Evening Service.
THICAL SERVICE
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
YOU GET
$15 IN
CASH
FREE
FOR CHRISTMAS
SEE PAGE 8
FOR DETAILS
Letter From Denmark Inspired First Christmas Seal Sale
CLUBS
MONEY MAKERS WHIST
The club, composed of employees
of the Bureau of Engraving and
Printing, defeated the How Coma
Whist Club, Thursday, 347 to 308.
J. A. Upshur is president of the
club.
QUEENS
Miss Beatrice Rainey entertained the Queen Bridge Club at her residence, 211 Flagier Place, Northwest, Tuesday night. Prizes were won by Mrs. Elizabeth Gray, first; Mrs. Catherine Neal, second; Mrs. Josephine Neil, the booby prize; and Miss Gladys Tolson, the guest award.
Others present were Mrs. Clara Craven, Miss Catherine Neal, Mrs. Dorothy Newsome, Misses Anna Cook, and Dorothy Robinson
FINESSERS BRIDGE
The club was entertained Thursday by Mrs. Louise Roberts, at her home, 718 Gresham Place, Northwest. Prizes were awarded Misses Alma Cooper and, Irene Digs, first and second, respectively.
Members present were Misses Florence Graves, Elsie Diggs, Alma Cooper, Irene Diggs and Viola Brown and Mesdames Catherine Goldsby, Louise Roberts, Arcelia Garnett, and Louise Sedgwick.
MADRILLIONIERS
The club was the guest of James F. Ross at his residence, 516 M Street, Northwest, Saturday.
Members present were Messrs. George H. Greenfield, Richard P. Reed, Earl H. Ross, William Coleman, James E. Ross, and Ignatius M. Marshall.
HARLEM GIRLS
The club held its regular meeting Tuesday night at the residence of Mrs. Regina Berry, 71 Second Street, Southwest. All members were present, and after the business transactions the hostess entertained the group.
JUSTAMERE
Mrs. Aida Chambers was hostess to the club at her home, 2026 Fifteenth Street, Northwest, Tues-
YOU GET
$15
FR
FOR CH
SEE P
FOR D
Letter From Den
First Ch
JACOB RIUS
THE first person in the United States to suggest the use of Christmas Seals to raise money to fight tuberculosis was Jacob Rills, the noted author, editor and settlement worker. In an article in the OUTLOOK for July, 1907, he described a stamp he had received in the mail from a friend in Denmark, where they had been sold to raise money for a hospital for tuberculous children. Rils urged the adoption of the idea in the United States. This article came to the attention of Emily Bissell of Wilmington, Delaware, who decided to use seals as a means of raising money for a similar hospital on the banks of the Brandyvine River. She designed the first seal, sold during the Christmas holidays of 1907.
The next year the project became national. After that tuberculosis associations soon were formed in every state and in many cities and towns, until today, as the sale of the 26th Christmas Seal begins, there are 2054 such tuberculosis associations and committees in the country. And instead of less than 200 sanatoria, there are now 633. From coast to coast the seal pays for all-year-round local health work, especially among children, and supports such projects as clinics, nursing
day. Bridge prizes were won by Mrs. Charlotte Burke, first; Mrs. Marie Smith, second; and Mrs. Clarice Prather, third.
Mesdames Alphonzine Andrews, Lola Miller, Ethel Bridgeford and Mary W. Bacon, and Miss Mary Totmare were also present.
PETITE BELLES
The Petite Belles, a newly organized group, were entertained Tuesday by the president, Miss Florence G. Turner, 106 Tenth Street, Southeast. Guests of the evening were members of the Non Nobis Solum Club.
Members of the group are Mrs. Marion Brown, Mrs. Ethel Barnes, Misses Lucille P. Brown, Thelma Dudley, Antoinette Harrison, Ida D. Mack, and Valerie Plater.
BLACK AND GOLD ART
The club held its regular meeting Tuesday, at the home of Miss F. Hearne, 1940 Second Street, Northwest. Those present were Misses Mamie White, A. Colston, R. Dines, and A. Hearne, Mesdames E. Watts, and L. Wallace.
DELTA SIGMA THETA
SORORITY TO MEET SAT.
Alpha and Beta Sigma chapters, Delta Sigma Theta sorority, will have a joint meeting on Saturday evening in the girls' new dormitory No. 2, at Howard University. Introductory remarks will be given by Miss Jaunita M. Howard, representing Beta Sigma chapter, and Miss Grace I. Wilkinson, representing Alpha chapter. Hostesses and committee members in charge of the meeting are Miss Grace Coleman, Mrs. Flossie Toms, Miss Louise Denney, Miss Lillian Smith and Miss Mary B. Jones.
BANKS-STEWARD MARRIAGE
Miss Emma J. Steward was married to the Rev. Marshal C. Banks Saturday at the home of the bride's sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Gainey. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Robert Anderson. A reception followed the ceremony. The Rev. Mr. Banks is the son of Eddie and the late Mrs. Estella Banks, of Virginia, while his bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Steward, also of Virginia.
5 IN CASH
EE
CHRISTMAS
PAGE 8
DETAILS
mark Inspired
Christmas Seal Sale
service, preventoria, and other forms of anti-tuberculosis work. In Jacob Rils' article he explained how successful the idea had proved to be for three years in Denmark. He said that other "charity" stamps had come and gone without finding continuous public favor. "I think I can guess the reason," wrote Rils. "They didn't have the right spokesman. It remained for Hans Christian Andersen's countrymen to enlist Santa Claus."
"What I want to know," continued Riis, "is why we cannot here borrow a leaf from Santa Claus' Danish year book, and do as they have done. Why should we not have a Christmas stamp, printed by a tuberculosis committee, not for the purpose of building a hospital—let each state or town build its own—but for the purpose of rousing up and educating the people in this most important matter? What might it not mean in revenue to finance the cause that creeps along where it ought to run? But, much more than that, what might it not be made to mean as an educating medium in fighting the White Plague? Practically every man who saw this stamp on a letter, or on a postal-card—it is posted on both in Denmark—would want to know what it meant. And when people want to know, half the fight is won. It is because they do not know a few amazingly simple things that people die of tuberculosis.
"I am pleading for the half million poor souls all over the land whose faces are set today toward an inevitable grave because of ignorance, heedless ignorance, and for the friends who grieve with them and for them."
Since the above was published, the death rate from tuberculosis in the United States has been reduced almost two-thirds, which means a saving today of 150,000 lives per year. Despite this fact, one out of every five deaths among persons between 15 and 45 is due to this disease. The war waged with money from Christmas Seals must go on unabated, until tuberculosis is utterly banished.
PAINT AND REPAIR YOUR OLD TOYS FOR POOR CHILDREN'S CHRISTMAS
Get out all the old toys in your home. Go through the play room, the attic, the store room, and see what you have that might be mended and painted to look like new. Something must be done for the thousands of little children who might not have any Christmas happiness this year. There are many who give out Christmas dinners, some who give out coal, but so many people forget that a child's soul and his imagination must be fed also. The bare necessities of life are not enough for children. They want their dreams to have substance.
Only those who have beer forgotten by Santa Claus know the pain of sitting with a wan face glued to a cold window pane, hoping against hope that the grand old Saint will still put in an appearance. Too many little faces have been buried in the pillow on Christmas morning, wet with tears because the stocking they hung up the night before had in it only the hole that was there the night before.
Don't bring in battered toys. Paint things and make them look new. Such gifts should have a holiday look. Take wire, screws, bolts and brushes and make your contribution attractive.
When the toys are ready bring them to the Editor of Woman's Page, Washington Tribune, 920 U Street, Northwest. Don't bring anything that is perishable—only toys. Before Christmas they will be delivered into the homes of children whose great joy on Christmas morning will be your best Christmas present.
GERTRUDE C. FRAZIER. Editor Woman's Page.
Lichtman Theatres' Third Annual Popularity CONTEST
FINAL STANDING
Name Credits
Mrs. Emma Greene.....3,121,000
319 8th St., N.E.
Mrs. Vivian L. Turner.....2,587,000
1716 2nd St., N.W.
Miss Helen Eagles.....1,732,000
1320 S. T. N.W.
Miss Fannie C. Offutt.....1,400,000
3331 11th. T. N.W.
Mrs. Agnes Anderson.....718,000
504 24th. T. N.E.
Miss Agnes Williams.....639,000
1340 U St., N.W.
Miss Catherine Lewis.....502,000
1426 Swann St., N.W.
Mrs. Louise Lewis.....348,000
1339 6th St., N.W.
Miss Katherine Browne.....318,000
1319 J St., N.W.
Miss Henrietta Parker.....193,000
1034 Euclid St., N.W.
Mrs. Edna Gant Jasper.....164,000
1318 Corcoran St. N.W.
Miss Ruth Ashton.....80,000
1252 A Carrolburg St. S.W.
Mrs. Lucy Henry.....54,000
1812 14th St. N.W.
Miss Hazel Carter.....49,000
1719 Vermont Ave. N.W.
Mrs. Rosella Molson.....48,000
654 Green St. N.W.
501 8rd St.....
Miss Constance Dugan..... 45,000
2104 2nd St., N.W.
Mrs. Bertie Plumb..... 39,000
1915 N. H. Ave., N.W.
Mrs. Charity Craig..... 28,000
3002 Stanton Rd., S.E.
Miss Josephine F. Johnson..... 25,000
389 R. I. Ave., N.W.
Miss Melissa Newkirk..... 21,000
1954 2nd St., N.W.
Miss Florence Stewart---- 21,000
411 B St., S.E.
Mrs. Ruth Cumber..... 20,000
1226 U St., N.W.
Mrs. Emma M. Holcomb..... 20,000
1425 T St., N.W.
Miss Ida Milton..... 19,000
524 T St., N.W.
Miss Gautrade Brown..... 19,000
1338 Riggs St. N.W.
Mrs. Hazel Luck..... 17,000
1823 12th St., N.W.
Mrs. Wielmina Wilson..... 15,000
1239 Walter St., S.E.
Mrs. Lottie Richardson..... 14,000
1700 2nd St., N.W.
Mrs. Estelle Young.....13,000
563 24th St. N.E.
Miss Jenobile Gray.....13,000
1634 Gt), St. N.W.
Miss Barbara Ball.....10,000
1433 T St. N.W.
8014 11th St., N.W.
Miss Louise Jefferson..... 10,000
550 25th Pl., N.E.
Miss Beatrice Holton..... 10,000
409 3rd St., N.E.
Miss Ruth Matthews..... 10,000
3301 Sherman Ave.
Mrs. Lovey Crawford..... 10,000
1329 First St., N.W.
Miss Mackaye Taylor..... 9,000
2359 Sherman Ave., N.W.
Miss Elvire Holder..... 8,000
143 W St., N.W.
Miss Helen Hayes..... 8,000
5520 Jay St., N.E.
Mrs. Aince Carter..... 5,000
755 Harvard St., N.W.
Miss Martha Jackson..... 5,000
402 21st St., N.W.
Mrs. Mariella C. Smith..... 5,000
216 S St., N.W.
Mrs. Bernice Wilson..... 5,000
614 Gresham Pl., N.W.
Mrs. Viola Nixon..... 5,000
1231 U St., N.W.
Miss Lucille G. Payne..... 5,000
1613 1st St., N.W.
Miss Bernice Williams..... 5,000
511 23rd St., N.E.
Miss Nellie Holland..... 5,000
1425 T St., N.W.
Miss Catherine George..... 5,000
1319 Q St., N.W.
Miss Louise Overton..... 5,000
519 Fla. Ave., N.W.
Miss Olive Arrington..... 5,000
1724 Oregon Ave., N.W.
Mrs. Sarah D. Bennett..... 5,000
302 I St., N.W.
Mrs. Ala Coleman..... 5,000
33 R St., N.W.
Mrs. Alice D. Dickson..... 5,000
323 7th St., S.E.
Mrs. Mary M. Jones..... 5,000
1129 24th St., N.W.
PAINT AND REPAIR YOUR
FOR POOR
Get out all the old toys in your
the attic, the store room, and see w
and painted to look like new. Son
sands of little children who might
this year. Their
Bush
Bush
only the hole that
Don't bring in battered toys.
new. Such gifts should have a hole
and brushes and make your contrib
When the toys are ready bring
Page. Washington Tribune, 920
anything that is perishable—only to
delivered into the homes of child-
momning will be your best Christmas
GERTRUDE C. P.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, DECEMBER 9, 1932
Prisons and Prisoners
Prisons and Prisoners
Some Prison Administrations Strive to Elevate Rather Than Brutalize the Inmates
By CLIFFORD C. MITCHELL
Prisoners in Michigan prisons have a great many things to render thanks for at this joyful Thanksgiving period. Compare the progress and the accomplishments of our prisoners with those in any other prison and our record stands unsurpassed.
It is not by accident or merely a coincidence that the prisoners in Jackson can show such a satisfactory achievement record. Neither is it an accident or coincidence that certain gardeners can continually win prizes for the beautiful flowers that they cultivate and raise.
The same basic principle is responsible for both. The expert gardener does not travel the world over in search of a particular kind of soil. He accepts the land assigned him, just as nature provided it, and he thoroughly studies his soil, his climatic conditions, the weather reports and other natural and artificial sources of information. Then the gardener plants his seeds, or plants, and studiously and attentively, he cultivates their growth, supplementing nature's gifts in the various processes of tilling, weeding, watering and constant attending which results in producing a flower of such beauty, such fragrance and so conspicuous that it wins for the gardener high honors wherever flowers are shown.
And in like manner the administration of Jackson prison has cultivated and brought out the rare and unknown qualities of many prisoners who did not know for themselves just what they were capable of accomplishing.
Like the gardener, the administration has provided facilities for ascertaining all the pertinent data concerning the material (prisoners) with which they must work. This knowledge is supplemented by searching observations and in time each plant (prisoner) is given an opportunity to grow and blossom out under the most favorable of circumstances.
And when scores of these blooms make their appearance in many diversified fields and in many avenues of progress, to the thinker and observant, the hand of the cultivator is clearly' seen and it is thus a great deal more than coincidence that so many prisoners of Jackson prison are able to make the progressive showing that they have.
So much from the standpoint of the prisoner, but what of the administrators? Succely, they have much to be thankful for also. It is no coincidence that in prisons in nearly every state of the Union and Canada, within the past few years, there have been uprisings, discontent, riots, fires and mutinous insurrections but in Jackson prison these possible disorders have been minimized and hipped in the bud.
Such a state of affairs makes it distinctly evident that an atmosphere of mutual good-will and an amicable spirit of co-operation must pervade within the four walls of the two Jackson prisons, and the good and progressive thoughts easily offset the evil and discouraging ones.
Thus it is seen that in the circle of achievement all are benefited by a system and an administration that recognizes that there is more to a prison than walls, cells and keys, plus thousands of the socially-recognized misfits of life.
We are indeed thankful that we are serving under those who believe that a prisoner has a soul and who are willing and anxious to prove their theory by contacting the soul, giving it every opportunity to grow, bud and blossom into a beautiful being and thus honor its cultivators.
Thanksgiving should mean a lot to us for we have much to be exceedingly thankful for. Personally, I know that I have.
Mrs. Iola N, Sewell ..... 5,000
1522, 10tk, St. N.W.
Miss Elsie Proctor..... 3,000
Mary
MISS SILVIA MEANS, of Richmond, Va., who won the popularity contest at Union University and was crowned "Miss Union" at the Thanksgiving Day game between Morgan and Union. "Syl" likes athletics, she is an excellent archer (as the number of hearts she has pierced indicates), plays basketball, and is making a record with the Virginia Union Players in dramatics. Her participation in the many phases of extra curricular activity is but experience for her life work, which is teaching. She is a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.
of Richmond, Va., who won the po-
and was crowned "Miss Union" at
Morgan and Union. "Syl" likes m
(as the number of hearts she has
and is making a record with the V
Ethr participation in the many ph
but experience for her life work, v
of the Alpha Kap
Washington Clubs
The La Java Club entertained at the Club Prudhom Thanksgiving Day. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Dainel Ball, Mr. and Mrs. William Bland, Mr. and Mrs. Farol Gibbs, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Dawes, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Pratt Davis and Mr. and Mrs. William Hawkins.
Mesdames Fredericka Jones, Ruby Plummer, Costina Weyms, Marguerite White and Sallie Roots, Misses Mae Wheeler and Billie Harris, Messrs. Randolph Jasper, William Brown, Van Matthews, Murray Barton, theodore Sullivan and William Jones.
BANDANNA SOCIAL CLUB
The group held its meeting at the residence of Mrs. Mae Moten, 1832 S Street, Northwest. Bridge playing featured the evening's get-together.
Members attending were Mesdames Julia Anderson, Naomi Ricks, Ada Lucas, Grace Preston, Goldie Marlow, Margaret Coleman and Lottie Barnes.
RITZ BRIDGE CLUB
The club met Tuesday at the residence of Mrs. Elnor Jackson, 2800 Dumbarton Avenue, Northwest. Members present were Sallarthiele Parker, Gertrude Waters, Helen Meredith, Anna Ridgely, Ella Lee, Lauvenia Broughton and Altha Holmes.
Guests included Elsie Miller, Olga Harrod, Thelma Greenfield and Jetta Swayne. Prizes were awarded Mesdames Parker, Ridgely and Greenfield.
The Scoofer Whist Club met the Lone Trump Whist Club Thursday at 508 Twenty-third Street, North east, and were victorious by the overwhelming score of 382 to 285. This week's meeting of the club was held at the residence of the president, C. J. Quanders, 422 Twenty-fourth Street, Northeast.
COLDEN CIRCLE CLUB
Mrs. John Wade entertained the club Tuesday at her residence, 1443 T Street, Northwest. The members discussed and formulated new rules for the organization.
QUEENS
Mrs. Dorothy Newsome, of 149 W Street, Northwest, entertained the club at bridge Tuesday. Members present were Wesedes Josephine Neal, Clara Craven, Beatrice Rainey, Dorothy Newsome, Catherine Niel, Elizabeth Gray and Anna Cook, and Miss Dorothy Robinson.
A group of young ladies met at the residence of Mrs. Ida V. Peters, 2327 Virginia Avenue, Northwest, Monday and organized the Beauties of Nature Girls Club. Plans for the winter activities were discussed.
Officers elected were as follows: Madelene Brown, president; Zelua Clay, vice-president; Ida Mae Minor, assistant secretary; Edith Jackson, secretary; Turula Faxio, treasurer; Lucille Sims, sergeant-at-arms; Francis Ashton, chaplain; and Mrs. Peters, business manager.
Members include Misses Edna Jones, Jaunita Jackson. Argentina Joy, Ellen Tolliver, Leona Bana and Frances Fleet.
The club entertained its friends this week with a chicken dinner at 1013 First Street, Southwest Members of the Sports are Measures. Leroy Kelson, Paul Young, Charles Ransome, Earl King and John Dixon.
Among those present were Mrs. Cecelia Scott, Mrs. Helen Lewis, Misses Naomi Carter, Viola Young,
RITZ BRIDGE CLUB
SCOOFERS VICTORIOUS
QUEENS
NEW CLUB ORCANIZED
SOUTHWEST SPORTS
Pearl Ranson, Alma Gladden, Bessie Perkins, Inez Washington, Mildred Tolson, Gladys Smart, Florence Brown and Margaret King.
Messrs. Lawrence Perry, Clarence Blakey, Leon Carter, Kenneth Lomax, John Alexander, George Carter, William Atkinson, Lawrence Henry, Samuel Hall and Harold Epps.
CONGENIAL NINE
Mrs. Ida Dorsey entertained the club Friday at 2905 Sherman Avenue, Northwest. Members present were Mesdames Grace Jackson, Elizabeth Jones, Edith Davis, Fainie Jenifer, Sophia Turner, Ethel Sesco, Ida Dorsey and Edith Cantley who recently was received as a new member.
The Jolly Nine Bridge Club met at the residence of Mrs. Elizabeth M. Gray, 1907 L Street, Northwest, with Mrs. Teresa J. Scott as guest of the group.
Members present were Mesdames Pauline Eggleston, Elizabeth M. Gray, Esther Syphax and Florine Winthrop, Misses Alma Cooper, Ernestine Diggs and Violet M. Harris.
FRIENDSHIP PLEASURE CLUB
The Tuesday meeting of the club was held at the residence of Harry Toliver, 1719 Willard Street, Northwest. Members present were Mesdames Marie Durrett, Ophelia Fredrick, Maggie Murray, Clara Hill and, Dora Lee Boyd, and Messrs, Joseph Lane and Ernest Thomas.
IDLE HOUR CLUB VICTOR
In a complete upset the Idle Hour
Whist Club defeated the Try Any
Whist Club for its third straight
victory in the National Card
League games last week. The score
was 140-117.
Next week the winners will meet
the Pioneer Whist Club at the Garnet-Patterson Junior High School.
THE ODD CARD WHIST CLUB
The Odd Card Whist Club held its meeting Thursday, December 1, at the residence of the Advocate, Edward Arthur, 136 Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest. During the regular course of business the club considered several challenges, after which the application of Andrew Olfus for membership was approv. ed.
18 Real VALUES
PEOPLES DRUG STORES
CONGENIAL NINE
JOLLY NINE CLUB
"All Over Town"
Card playing became the paramount feature after the regular course of business, the team of Baker and Moten taking the honors. The members are: William Baker, Lawrence Moten, Clarence Vaughn, Boyd Clarke, Mercer Conway, Edward Arthur, Goslee Brown and James Wood.
REGEMUS PLAYS
SANTA CLAUS
The Regemus Social Club, of which Laurence J. W. Hayes is vice-president, recently played Santa Claus to four families, giving a turkey to each family.
D. S. M. BRIDGE
Mrs. Edna French was hostess to the D. S. M. Bridge Club at her home, 1958 Second Street, Northwest, Tuesday night.
Those present were Mesdames Ella Lofton, Jessie Powell, Ella Leechman, Mamie Simmons, Pansy Cox, May Barnes, Alberta Combs, Mabel Jones, Gertrude Davis, Alberta Osborne, and Lillian McDowell.
NINEUVUS
The club met at the home of the vice-president, Mrs. Elizabeth Gaines, 752 Lamont Street, Northwest, Tuesday night. Bridge and whist were played, after which a buffet supper was served. Members present were Mesdames Rosa Reed, Elizabeth Gaines, Corrie Lowery, Clara Schencks, Emma Costa, Rebecca Johnson, Mildred Cox, Theresa Clark.
SEMPER FIDELIS
Mrs. A. Brumfield was hostess to the Semper Fideles Bridge Club Tuesday, at her residence, 1305 Corcoran Street, Northwest. Mrs. Charles Shorter was guest of the evening.
Members present were Mesdames L. Webb, B. Rucker, M. Walton, A. Daughtry, H. Williams, L. Hale, A. Hockaday, W. Dorsey, A. Vass, and H. Sutton, and Miss D. Hamilton and A. Willis.
FAI-HO-CHA
Miss Esther Moore, member of the club, entertained her group at her residence, Tuesday. Members attending were Asterie Gonzales, Helen Hickman, Grace Minor Twyman, Maude Minor Hughes, Helen Moss Underdue, and Miss Moore.
Guests of the evening were Odessa Stewart, Bernice Perry, Naomi Alsop, William Underdue, William Bryant, Amelius Sherman, Granville Moore, Oliver Twyman, David Peters, Leonard Jones, Ward Perry, H. Fletcher, Irving Hall and John Hawkins, Jr.
MERRY MAKERS
The Nine Merry Makers were entertained, Friday night, by Mrs. Rushia Johnson. After plans for a whist tournament were discussed cards was played. Three prizes were awarded.
VARIETY
The members of the Variety Town and Country Club were hosts to a large group of guests Thursday night at the club house, 1337 R Street, Northwest. Many matrons and misses high in social circles of Washington were among those present. The dance tunes were rendered by Colbert Ellis and his boys.
CONSOLING PALS
The meeting of the club was held Monday at the residence of Mrs Helen Smith, of the 1200 block of Delaware Avenue, Southwest. Last week Mrs. Irene Campbell, of 33 M Street, Southwest, was hostess to the group.
SLAMS BRIDGE
Mrs. Delmeta Arthur entertained the club Monday night at her residence, 136 Rhode Island Avenue Northwest., Club prizes were won by Mesdames Juanita Conway and Leola Carter, and Miss Ella Mitchell. Members present were Juanita Conway, Jessie Conway, Leola Carter, Bertha Mitchell, and Delmeta Arthur and Miss Ella Mitchell
STARLIGHT SOCIAL
The club held its last meeting of the year at the residence of Mrs. Bessie Scott, 1101 Twenty-fourth Street, Northwest, at which time plans were made for a Christmas party.
Members present were Mesdames Maude Pearson, Martha Turner, Bertha Henderson, Jane Sedgwick, Gertrude Dawson, Mary Rose, Alice Irvin, Bessie Scott, and Gertrude Young.
"The Better to Serve You"
ELEVEN
Frederick Massiah is Noted Contractor
Frederick Massiah, Negro engineer and contractor of Philadelphia, has won a prominent place in the construction field. While a concrete worker by day he took an engineering course at Drexel Institute at night, and the Mercantile School of Art. In 1927 he won the Harmon Foundation Award for engineering. His work on the Walnut Plaza Apartment ($10,000,000 project) was so impressive that the University of Pennsylvania students in engineering were required to study the work as a model in engineering.
Massiah has been able to secure some of the biggest engineering contracts in recent years, especially those requiring great skill, among them, Bishop White Memorial Chapel at Valley Forge, and at Germantown and Chelten Avenues the new Reading Station. His greatest achievement was the erection of the first elliptical concrete dome ever attempted in the United States.
WHY BE UNLUCKY?
WHY BE SICK?
WHY BE UNHAPPY?
WHY BE WORRIED?
DOWNHEARTED?
WHY BE BAD LOOKING?
WORRIED?
DOWNHEARTED?
WHY BE BAD
LOOKING?
When There Is Help for You at the Old Indian Herb Store
ALL ARE INVITED. NO ONE IS
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COME BUY THE THINGS YOU NEED
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SO IT IS YOUR DUTY.
GET WELL AND LOOK WELL. TO
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CUT RATE SPECIALS
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OLIVE OIL and COCO SOAP, 5c, 6
for 25c
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now 10c
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the bowels and cold all out. 28c.
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Lucky W. L. N. 7-Star Dream Number
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SPECIAL NOTICE. LUCKY TIMES
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The Big Store With Little Prices
LEO S. OSMAN, Prop.
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Dunbar Coach Named President of High School Confer
TWELVE
OFFICIALS PLAYED
AT CONFERENCE
Claims that the South Atlantic
High School Athletic Conference
“has the odor of the underworld,”
that officials “win” games and that
other unsportsmanlike conduct pre-
wailed in many contests, were the
high spots of the fourth annual
meeting of that body Saturday, at
the Armstrong High School in this
city.
Th a short talk at the morning
session, G. David Houston, princi-
pal of Armstrong, told of the many
‘unfavorable reports coming to him
of incompetent officials, or officials
who favored home teams. Mr.
Houston suggested to the body that
outside officials be used in home
games. This will alleviate many
of the unpleasant conditions in the
contests, he said.
Pinderhughes New President
At a luncheon later in the day
At the residence of Mr. Houston,
Charles Pinderhughes, Dunbar
toach, was elected president. He
succeeds Leonard U. Gibson, of
Douglass, High School, Baltimore,
‘who has held the post for the past
three years.
Other officers named were G. T.
Whitten, of Howard High School,
Wilmington, vice-president; Edgar
P. Westmoreland, Armstrong, sec-
Tetary-treasurer; and P. L. Jacobs,
Dunbar, assistant secretary-treas-
urer and publicity director.
Next Meeting in Baltimore
‘The next meeting will be held in
1988 in Baltimore. Douglass High
School will be host.
In its elaim to the association
Howard High, of Wilmington,
stated that in the game with Stan-
fon of Ansagolis, the latter squad
used all of the holds of wrestling
and the punches of bcxers on the
Howard team members. Howard
also stated that cut-throat meth-
‘ods were being used by the asso-
ciation and the conference has the
“odor of the underworld.”
The body took issue with the
Howard statement and ordered the
letter returned to the sender for
etter language and revising.
Howard refused to vote on the mo-
tion to return the statement which
motion was made by Coach Edgar
‘Westmoreland, of Armstrong.
Manassas Associate Member
Manassas was dropped from ac-
tive membership in the eonference
and later reinstated as an asso:
tiate member. Failure of Manas-
Sas to keep schedules was given as
the cause of this action. The Man-
assus coach stated that lack of
finances prevented his team from
Keeping schedules. Teams in the
conference will add the Virginia
team to their schedules when they
have open dates.
Coach Neville F. Reed, of How-
ard High, charged Douglass High
‘with unsportsmanlike conduct dur-
ing @ basketball game in Balti
more. During the game the How-
ard coach ordered his team from
the floor when the vice-principal of
the visiting team’s school told him
to do so.
Says Coach Lost Head
Coach Leonard U. Gibson, of
Douglass, defended his team’ anc
charged Coach Reed with losing his
head. Mr. Gibson also scored the
Yilmington coach for following
the advice of his vice-principal in-
Stead of running the team himself.
Reed said he took his team of
the floor when he saw there wa:
danger of the boys getting injured
as a result of the row f tactics
Being used by the Douglass play:
ers. Gibson said a coach become:
& part of the excitement when he
loses his head. Howard threatenec
to leave the conference, but Inte
decided to continue in the associa
jon.
The conference went on recor
deploring the action of a team thai
leaves the contest before the game
fs ended, or forfeiting games, How:
ever, no penalty was provided fo:
such action.
Coach Duvall Evans, of Cardozo
said he felt personally responsibl
for his team, and if circumstance:
warranted he would withdraw hi
team from play if he saw that th
by were in danger of becoming
jured due to roughness of th
opposing team.
Coach Forgot Game
Armstrong charged Manassa:
with failure to play a schedule
game and when the Manassa
coach was called on the telephon
it was found that the coach ha
forgotten the game and had los
his schedule,
Called Team Off Field
Coach Evans raid that in th
SUITS $
O’coats 18
NOTHING DOWN—
JUST PAY—
$6 in January
$6 in February
36 in March
EISEMANS, 7th& F
NEWS (ou SPORT WORLD
as MACKEY sees it
By GARLAND MACKEY *
Se ee
SPORTS IN SCHOOLS
‘The old eligibility bugaboo came into the meeting Saturday to
plague members of the South Atlantic High School Athletic Confer-
ence at their fourth annual meeting at Armstrong High School
‘The question, When Dees the Conference Season Begin and When
Does it End? caused considerable debate on both sides. Some of the
gentlemen were of the opinion that the season began when school
opened and ended at commencement, while others favored a “season”
that constituted the running of a Ee sport, like football which
begins in September and ends at Thanksgiving.
‘The latter group favored a more lenient attitude towards boys
who wished to play on club teams. A boy who is particularily fond
of basketball and desires to play on his club team could begin with a
club and leave when his school team begsn practicing. This same py
could resume play with his club when the season ended at his school
which is around Easter.
Favor Full Season wie
Then again, a boy who liked baseball and had unusual ability in
that sport could play with his team after school closed and it would
not hurt his eligilbity standing in the conference. is
I agree with the former group and favor the full season; that is,
from September when school opens until June, or commencement.
I have always frowned on boys’ playing on two teams whether the
teams were school or club. For that matter I do not think a player
can render service to two teams and do justice to himself or the teams.
No boy should be permitted to play with outside teams during a
school term. It makes no difference whether the particular season in
the sport in which he is engaged at school has closed.
Schools Do Not Seek to Produce I’vo5
_ Schools are not seeking to produce profe: “>1als and athletic
activities are scheduled so as to produce the greai-:: amount of good
without injuring a boy’s scholastic standing. Af‘er all, the boy did
not enter school to become a professional athlete,
Athletics were introduced in schools to provide healthful exercise,
to build strong bodies and to teach team work, self-reliance and ae
pine ‘Without these no boy is educated and his chances for success
life are minimized.
Club teams are for boys who have been forced to leave school.
‘There are many such teams in the District doing excellent work. When
school boys, who have had the benefit of skilled coaching, compete with
boys who have not had such an advantage or a little of it, the school
boy robs another of a chance to take part in healthful sport,
Double Dose Harmful
The seasons in sport have been arranged to give the boy a maxi-
mum of training in his favorite pe A double foe of thé sport not
only burns the boy out, but will be reflected in his academic work.
There are exceptions where boys appear to thrive on a particular sport
the year round, but for the good of the many it is better to limit the
season in sports to the time the particular sport is played in school
and discourage school boys from playing on club teams, while members
of school teams—and a boy is a member of his school team from the
day he joins the squad until he has played his allotted time or has been
dismissed from the team for other reasons,
ad 8)
Alabama State Juniors
- Score Double Victory
MONTGOMERY, Ale.—After
having nosed out the Southern
Normal Instijute eleven by a 60
Score at Brewton on Tuesday after-
noon, the Baby Hornet agerega-
tion of Alabama State Teachers
Colloge returned home and closed
their home season here by defeat-
ing Stillman Institute by a 12-0
count at Cramton Bowl,
It was the eighth game and the
eighth victory for the, jocal boys
this season which closed at Mobile
on Monday afternoon in *
against the Mobile County Train:
ing School eleven. “
game with Manassas one of his
boys had several teeth knocked out
and another received an injury to
his head. Manassas claimed poor
officiating during the game and
made a counter-charge of unusual
roughness by the Cardozo team.
The Manassas mentor said he did
not think it was advisable for his
team to continue the game and
called them off the field.
It, was voted that a committee
of three, including Coaches Pinder-
hughes, Naylor and Evans, be ap-
pointed to work out a point system
ta determine championsiips.
Seven Titles Awarded
Seven championships —_ were
awarded and plaques were given
to the winning schools in the va-
rious sports. The following were
awarded: basketball, Howard High;
swimming, Dunbar; football, Stan-
ton and’ Armstrong —(co-cham-
pions); golf, Armstrong; baseball,
Dunbar; and tennis, Douglass.
The Stanton High School will be
‘known hereafter as the Wiley H.
Bates High School. A recent
structure has been completed at
Annapolis costing $57,000. The
new mame was in honor of a ¢lti-
zen who has contributed largely to
public affairs and gave a consider-
able sum towards the erection of
the new school building,
Members Present
Delegates and members present
at the meeting were as follows:
Armstrong—Edgar P. Westmore-
land, Tally R. Holmes, Jerry
Adams, Cato Adams; Cardozo—
Duvall B. Evans; Douglass—Leon-
ard U, Gibson and James A. B
Calis; Dunbar—P. L. Jacobs.
Charles L. Pinderhaghes and Frank
Perkins; Howard High—Millard A
Naylor, Neville P. Reed, George T
Whitten, and F. Oscar
Stanton—W. 8. Layton.
Administrative officers presen
wore Robert Io Mattingly, prind
pal of Cardozo; G. David Houston
of Armstrong; and E. B. =
gon, physical director of the
nase Bich Schools.
jewspaper men ptesént wen
Garland Mackey, of the Washing
ton Tribune; and Ce B, Mur
phy, of the 7
1932-33 High School. ,
Conference Schedule
SWIMMING—INDOOR
May 12—Dunbar High School,
SWIMMING—OUTDOOR
June %—Druid Hill Park, Baltimore.
TENNIS
June 3—At Armetrone.
‘TRACK
May 20—Walker ‘Memorial, Staduim.
GOLF
June 10—Washington public links,
BASEBALL—TENTATIVE
pelt 24—Doutlass at. Howard.
Abril 38 Duntar at ‘Howard,
May 1—Dougiass at Armstrong.
May &Armstrong at Howard.
May &—Douriaas "at Dunbar.
May 15—Dunter at’ Armattore,
May 22—Armettong at Douglass
May #0—Armitrone et Dunbar’
FOOTBALL
Sept. 29—Armstrong at Bates.
Oct. ¢—Armitrone at Howard:
Oct. 6—ater at Dunbar,
Oct. 6—Manassas at Dousiass,
Oct 11—Manawan_ at. Dunbar,
Oct. 18—Cardooo at Howard.
Oct. 18—Dougiass at Armstrong.
Oct. 20—Bates nt Cardona,
Oct. 20—Dunbar at Armetrone.
Oct. 27—Howard at Dunbar.
Get. 27—Cardono ‘at Douslass,
Nov. $—Manassan st Armstrone.
Kev: 3beugiae at tower:
Nov. | ¢—Cardaeo at ‘Duntart
Nov: Ammons Cardona.
ov. 1t—Dowplas at poe’
Nov. 17—Cardozo at Manassas.
Nov. 20—Dunber at Armstrong.
Nov, Seen, Se Armee
Roamers of Alexandria
to Battle Plainsmen
The Dunbar Community Center
Sponsors Series to
End Dee. 24
The Dunbar Community Center
is planning a series of t season
football games to be played each
Saturday until the end of the
month at the Walker Stadium. The
series which opened last week with
the Plea-ant Plains, Distriet cham.
pions, playing the Villowtree
eleven, will bring together some of
the best outfits in and around
Washington.
Among the teams to play in the
series are the Roamer A.C. of
Alexandria, an all-star Baltimore
team and an all-star District team,
the latter two scheduled to_meet
weal Concluding game of th
‘ied on Christmas Eve.
catd is ab follows:
ee 10—Alexandria Roam.
ers vs. Pleasant Plains.
Pleasant Plaine
team ¥s, it »
December “24—All. Distriet
team ws. All Star Baltimore teas
eee
Gorilla Jones Victor
|, DAVENPORT, lowa.— Gorilla
Jones, Akron, Ohio, battler, won a
|10-round decision over Willie
lo ter, white, of Chicago, here Fri-
day night.
eens
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, DECEMBER 9, 1982
~ YOU CAN GET STRAIGHT NUMBERS
POSITIVELY NO COMBINATIONS
VELY, XO, COMBINA
Fer (2 Rates) (5-7 Races) Total Steck, N.Y. Bond, Cotter Markel, Stock
‘Arerace, Chicnge and Cincinnatt Cleating Hose, Beltre and Rex Reports.
SUBSCRIBE TODAY—! ‘TOMORROW
WRIE £5 Rubveriotion Fee. vour same. addres and iinet Seon oe
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SULLIVAN
LETTERS NOT BE ANSWERED
‘18 EAST GARFIELD BLYD. ‘CHICAGO, TLL.
CAPITAL CITY
SPORT SCRIPTS
A. striking example Of She sne-
cessity of competent athletic oft
cials in local sandlot games was
lainly evident in the gridiron game
Between the Pleasant Plains foot-
ballers and the Willowtree eleven
at Walker Stadium, Saturday.
The game, a hotly contested one
which the former team won by &
7-6 score, was considerably slowed
up by the continued at
against the decisions made by the
officials on the part of contesting
players who seemingly just could
not agree.
‘The officials who handled the
game included Mr, Jackson, phy-
sical director at Francis Junior
High School, and a recognized
Eastern Board of Officials member,
and Joseph Drew, former Howard
football player and probationary
member of the same organization,
who worked as referee and umpite,
respectively,
The other officials were Oscar
Blue, former Armstrong High
School player and assistant coach,
and a timekeeper whose name way
not reported. Mr. Jackson has
worked in the majority of the lo-
eal high school contests for the
past three years and in many out-
of-town collegiate games. His abil-
ity as a competent official has been
proved.
Both of the contesting teams are
members of the District Foot!
League, whose games yare ust
handled by a corps of aspiring offi-
cials, who are schooled by the mage
competent Eastern Board of Offi-
cials members. These District
League officials are men who, be-
cause of their lack of time and
financial gain from the job, are
naturally not as alert and “on the
job” as the Eastern Board mem-
bers,
Therefore, the sandlot players
are badly handicapped when they
play a game properly officiated by
more technical officials. Having
pied throughout the season with
joose officiating: and then to have
every technicality and violation of
.the rules called would handicap’any
Player or team. So, it seems to
this pillar, that the officials hand-
Ting these post-season games
might use a little more discretion
in calling violations against these
teams until they have had the op-
portunity to become well versed in
the rules.
Only one or two of these sand-
Jot teams are coached by men who
are former football players or offi-
jcials who know the rules, This
very fact was the cause of all the
wrangling in Saturday's contest,
the players in many cases being
ignorant of the rules the officials
charged they violated. In some
cases, the players were not exact.
ly ignorant of a certain rule, but
had gone throughout the regular
season with a misinterpretation of
the rule, and naturally thought the
official calling the violation was do-
ing an injustice to them when a
penalty was given.
As it is remembered, only one
decision showed bad judgment on
the officials’ part. That decision,
however, was ‘so important that it
could have altered the subsequent
result of the game.
The decision came a few seconds
before the first half ended wher
the timekeeper erroneously blew
his whistle announeing the endo!
the period while a Pleasant Plains
substitution was being made.
At the time, the Willowtree tean
had possession of the ball on th
Plainsmen’s two-ya-d line. Th
‘Trees’ captain protested, and th
timekeeper admitted | that | ther
was a few more seconds of pla}
remaining.
On the next play, the Plains
men's line stopped the Tress
thrust and the half was over. Ha
|the Trees scored a touchdown o1
| this play, the result would hav
|| been entirely different, although i
'|is possible that the ‘winner ma;
| have been the same.
| This pillar commends highly. th
}| proposal that an all-District tean
|| play an all-Baltimore team for th
inter-city championship. If th
| pee a fe econ
triet hes snot alreai
| picked, T suggest that the Diftrie
Prague oficials eet together am
> | nabs the eslastian
KID CHOCOLATE
READY FOR BOUT
Kid Chocolate, featherweight
champion of the world, is in be
top shape to defend his ‘title
against Pidel La: Barbs,, Los Au-
geles, in Madison Square Garden,
Friday night.
La Barba, who “retired in 1927”
as undefeated ree champion,
undoubtedly will be a short-ender
in the betting, although he split
decisions with Chocolate in two
previous encounters. Supporters of
the Cuban expect his superior speed
to offset any serenings La Barba
might have in strength and stam-
ina.
‘The clever Cuban won New York
State recognition as featherweight
king in August, when he stopped
Lew Feldman, of New York, in the
twelfth round of a 15-round en-
gagement. His claims are disputed
by Tommy Paul, of Buffalo, who
holds National Boxing Association
recognition, and by Baby Arizmendi
of Mexico, recognized by the Cali-
fornia commission.
Beste
Alabama State Squad Bow
to Tuskegee and Tied
_ by Morris Brown
ieee cs
MONTGOMERY, Ala, — With
seven vietories, oné tie and one de-
feat in nine sti games, and. with
an outstanding team featuring sev-
eral deserving candidates for All-
Southern and All-American honors,
the Alabama State Teachers’ Col-
lege Hornets of 1932 hung. up thet
eats on Thanksgiving afternoon
‘with the distinction of the best ree-
6rd made by a Hornet eleven in the
past fifteen years,
Outstanding non-conference yic-
tories were scored over _ Prairie
View, Southern, West Virginia
State, Alabama A.&M, and 24th
Infantry, while conference victor-
fos were registered over Florida
and Clark.
‘A Tet tie game with Morris
Brown at Columbus on Armistice
Day and a last minute 7-0 defeat
on a 60-yard pass by Tuskegee at
Montgomery on Thanksgiving af-
ternoon are the only two blots
on an otherwise successful record
worthy of national attention.
The victories over Prairie View,
Southern, West Virginia and Clark
showed early the mettle of the
1932 Hornets who were turning in
the +875 performance for their
"gine Mater.
Scores of the Hornets, 1932
Qs Gee: Sean seeeee @
Alabama State, 8: Praitie’ Views... 7
five Bintes 8: Clarks corse.
Aitkema State: 18; Alsbama A636... 8
Aisteme Siste: ‘ts florida Ack Mees:
Rcbems State: 12; Southern sents.
Alabama State, 7: Morris Brown... 7
Risbame State. i Went Virginia.) 4
ASS Bate: Oi Taberwe Sect
Seen
Godfrey May Fight Jack
Sharkey in Title Bout
PHILADELPHIA.—According to
representatives of the Arena Cor-
| eaey they have offered Jack
harkey the sum of $100,000 to de-
fend his heavyweight title against
George Godfrey, of Leiperville, Pa.,
outstanding heavyweight.
The bout may be staged in Phil-
adeiphia next summer, Jess Me:
Mahon, former associate of the
late Tex Richard, called Sharkey’s
manager on the islephone, it was
stated, and offered to pay Sharkey
$50,000 when the articles are =
ed and the remainder one week
fore the fight,
Sharkey's manager, Johnny
Buckley, was quoted as saying he
would talk the matter over. with
the champion before replying.
Benes
Calvin Reed Outpointed
ERIE, Pa—Calvin Reed, of Phil-
adelphia, lost a. 10-round’ decision
to Frankie Bojarski, white, of Erie,
nate Saturday nicki
°
Four Union Players Named on
. .
First All-C.1.A.A. Grid Team
Morgan Gets Three, Virginia State Three and Hamptor
One on Mythical Team Selected by
Richie C. Keller of Richmond
|
AIL-C.1.A.A. Eleven
First Team Position Second Team
Royd (Va, State)....se.-++.RBusssessssess+s2 Poole (Union)
Jenkins (Va. Union)..+.+++,B.T.s.s..»sssss, Peyton (Howard
Unthank (Hampton)......+-R.G..+s+...... Rivers (Hampton)
Lewis (Va. State)...........G......e+... Farmer (Hampton)
Taylor (Va. Union) vs s.ssss+-LsG.sssssse.. Rosedom (Morgan)
Harrison (Va. State)........1 T...... Thompson (Va, Union)
Cottman (Morgan).........:LsBvessssess.+. Seott (Va. State)
Wilson (Morgan)...........Q.B........... Harris (Hampton)
Williams (Va. Union).......H.B,........... Troupe (Morgan)
Conrad (Morgan).....:.....H.B...s+....... Howe (Va. State)
Gill (Va. Union)............F.B.......... Bounds (Va. State)
By RICHIE C. KELLER Quarterbacks. And how to ob-
RICHMOND, Va.—The pe
is deflated, moleskins packed away,
chalked stripes dim and indistinet,
grand stands dreary and deserted,
uprights uprooted and king foot-
ball has ended his annual reign.
The Colored Intercollegiate Ath-
letic Association sponsoring the
grid battles of Southeastern cleat-
ed turf circles boasts a falaxy ot
stars in a highly successful season
and ye olde scribe having observed
the candidates for stardom in ac-
tion is among the pencil pushers
puzzling over the allotment of
searce berths. Let us take an im-
partial peep at the potential play-
ers for our positions,
Five Evenly Matched
‘The Ends. Five evenly matched
ends come in for consideration as
a result of enviable records made
in the skirmishes of the season:
Boyd, Virginia State; Cottman,
Morgan; Poole, Union; Scott, Vir-
ginia State, and Gibson of Morgan.
Boyd and Cottman have a slight
edge over Poole—the receiving end
of the famous Union-aerial attack,
Yancey to Poole. :
‘The Tackles. Speaking of
speedy, scrappy tackles... . well,
above the average they were pret-
ty seare and Union's Jenkins and
Virginia State's Harrison seem to
be about the best exceptions, with
Thompson, of Union, and Howard’s
Peyton’ running close seconds,
The Guards. Need not quibble
about these. Post Season woofers
readily agree that Unthank, of
Hampton, and Taylor, of Union
were exceptional _' contenders.
Rivers, of Hampton, and Rosedom,
of Morgan, with Big Lawson, of
State, and “Fatso” Gadeden, of
Union take mention honors,
Outstanding Center
The Centers. All C.L.A.A. con-
ter Lewis, of Virginia State, was
in his usual form and is unques«
tionably the pick of the crop,
Farmer, of Beatie) Alston, of
North Carolina State; Davis, of
Union; Black, of Morgan, and Ross
of Bluefield come in for honorable
mentions.
Government Employees to
Form Athletic Association
Laurence J, W. Hayes, of the
Department of State, is organizing
an Ne ee Athletic
Associatio® which will sponso.
baseball, tennis, swimming, bowl-
ing, wrestling, boxing, track, and
basketball teams,
Alvin A. Webb of the Depatt-
ment of the Treasury, Joseph
Yearwood of the War Department,
Robert E. Bates of the Interior De-
partment, Alton Carter of the De-
partment’ of Agriculture, Henry
Ingram of the Post Office Depart-
ment, William Clark of the Gov-
ernment Printing Office, Sandy
Garland of the Department of Jus-
tice, Irving of the Civil Service
Commission, and Howard A. Walk:
er for tl jureau of Engraving,
atlas the constitution and -
laws committee. This committee
‘to meet at the home of Mr. Hayes,
935 R Street, Northwest, Saturday
night at 8 o'clock.
WEXT WEEK :
SAMMY 4g WIKO
LEE ; wont
cute Dyw't Miss
‘watcm THESE!:1
123 gw 856
;
om 303
42 251
22 ™
446 om
53 21
Quarterbacks. And how to ob-
tatp the right general for this mul.
tiplicity of line material. We have
a host of candidates . . . . Wilson,
of the Morgan champs; Yancey, of
Union; Harris, of Hampton; Ma-
lone, of North Carolina State; Hall
of Howard, and Howe, of State.
Without quibbling, this little fel-
low Wilson who led his machine to
the title takes the pick while Yan-
cey and Harris Aight it out with
Malone and Hall.
Surplus Backs
_ Halfbacks, Here we have a sur-
‘lus of ball-toters—all with right
jal elaims, For speed around the
ends and pigekin-booting, Ud pick
Conrad of Morgan and ‘Williams
of Union, with Troupe of Morgan
and Howe of Virginia State tying
with Edwards of Hampton and
Robinson of Union for utliity
honors.
Fullbacks, Stop puzzling—with-
out a doubi, Gill of Union takes
the “bull postion." He has bored
through the best lines offered by
the association. Bounds of Vir-
ginia State takes the utility posi-
tion,
pel patie
Kight and Frazier to Lead
: sae
Georgia State Squad in ’33
SAVANNAH, Ga.—During a
meeting of the Georgia State grid-
ders last week, Kight was elected
captain and Frazier co-captain,
Coach Richardson lauded mem-
bers of the team for the fine spriit
of sportsmanship exhibited during
the past season and praised retir-
ing Captain Smith for the manner
in which he handled the team on
the field for the, past three years.
BE A LUCKY WINNER!
LUCKY TIMES
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RAYMOND M. PIPPS
| AT MAIN OPPICR: WESTREN UNION TELEGBAPR COL Pruccepiie, Po.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
30 ANSWER COURT
CALL AT HOWARD
Over thirty candidates answered
the first call for basketball prac-
tice at Howard University this
week. Graduation and the depres-
sion having conspired to play havoc
with his charges, Coach John Burr
is without a single regular from
last year’s squad.
Mickey Syphax, stellar forward
for three yeurs, graduated in Jute,
‘and Sallie Hall, his sensational
running mate, is ineligible because
of a conferetice ruling, robbing
Howard of one of the greatest scor~
ing combinations to represent the
Bisons on the court in recent years.
Outstanding among the thirty
some aspirants are Showboat Ware,
star football player; Emerson
Parker, former Dunbar High School
court star, and several other new-
comers who tower around the six-
foot mark,
A blackboard drill during which
Coach Burr emphasized the new
rules was held Monday. Practice
sessions will be held at odd times
until after the Christmas holidays
and final examinations.
The first game of the season will
be played against the university
‘alumni.
Lucky Numbers
Geatinteed Whastts; wae May seit
life forecast. Send $1 and birthdate,
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DR, M. T, CLEMENTS
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BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
SPORTING NEWS
30 SEEK BERTHS ON COURT TEAM
Graduation Helps Blast Va. State's Chances at Title
at Title
PETERSBURG, Va.—More than chirty aspirants for places on the Virginia State College basketball team answered the call of Coach James D. Barnes for the first work-out of the season last week.
In spite of a large number of hopefuls, Coach Barnes has only gloomy prospects for a successful season on the court, last year's team which lost the championship by only one point having been wrecked by graduation and conference rules.
Graduation has taken Red Dabney, guard and main cog in the defense of last season; Pennington, forward; Mud Johnson, utility man; and Luther Foster, Jr. forward.
Dick Bell, mentioned by many last season, as the best guard in the association, has passed out of the basketball picture via the route of conference eligibility rules, having served his four years of intercollegiate competition.
Of last year's regulars only Scott and Butler, forwards, and Hall, center, remain. Big Six Thompson, Mickie Creamer, King Solomon, Edwards and Teddy Boyd, all of whom saw some action last year, are in the scramble for regular berths. Around these veterans Coach Barnes hopes to build a formidable combination; but the outlook has nothing of cheer in it, according to him.
Among the new comers who show some promise are Hugh Smith, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; George G. Jones, of Orange, N.J.; and St. Claire Miller, of New York.
CARDOZO BEGINS COURT PRACTICE
Graduation Will Rob Coach Evans of 11 Gridders of 1932
of 1932
Basketball practice at Cardozo High School began Wednesday with twenty-three candidates answering the first call of Coach Duval Evans. Three practice sessions will be held weekly at the Garnett-Patterson Junior High School gym until after the holidays.
The Clerks plan to open the season with its alumni. Only one man of last year's regular quint is missing, and Coach Evans has several good players from which to mold a formidable five.
Eleven Footballers Graduate
Graduation will rob this year's outstanding gridiron squad of eleven players, five of which were regulars. The regulars to leave in June are Fred Robinson, Nat Dyson, Rudolph Payne, Stanford Weaver and Edward Coleman.
Other players to graduate are Camp, Odellas, Foster, Harris, Johnson, and Daughton. The Clerks' next year's schedule has seven contests listed as follows:
Oct. 4—Bowie (here).
Oct. 13—Howard at Wilmington.
Oct. 20—Bates (formerly Annapolis) (here).
Oct. 27—Douglass at Baltimore.
Nov. 6—Dunbar.
Nov. 13—Armstrong.
Nov. 17—Manassas at Manassas.
CARLISLE QUINT
READY FOR ACTION
Basketball Team Whipped
Into Shape for
All Comers
The Green and Gold Hurricane of the Carlslef Club Field Club has just completed a hard practice, period and has now whipped together one of the best basketball teams that has ever represented the District.
Coach Keystone Davis and Captain Slim Thomas are responsible for the gathering of the team. The big guns, Jeffries and Gus Tabbs, aided by the Hawkins brothers, Brother Gray, Willie Hope, and Jack Holland are in tip-top shape, possessing an uncanny eye and sensational guarding ability.
The Green and Gold Hurricane would like to book games out of town, especially in Richmond, Norfolk, Wilmington, Trenton, and New York. Clubs in these cities may communicate with the manager, Charles Robeson, 2238 Eleventh Street, Northwest.
Pleasant Plains to Play
Lorton at Reformatory
The Pleasant Plains team, District football champions, will journey to Lorton, Va., Sunday to play the strong Reformatory eleven. Reports have it that Coach Lee is revamping his Plains team for Lorton, and those fans who accompany the Red team may possibly see a
Armstrong and Stanton Place 3 Each on All-Conference Team
Selection Made by Vote of Student Managers of Teams in the South Atltantic High School Athletic Conference
All-Star South Atlantic High School Team
Position FIRST TEAM SECOND TEAM THIRD TEAM
L.E. Johnson (Stanton) R. Williams (Dunbar) Davis (Howard)
L.T. Dixon (Cardozo) Chase (Stanton) Contee (Dunbar)
L.G. W. Williams (Dunbar) Brown (Stanton) Hammel (Howard)
R.G. Stewart (Howard) Brittis Pine (Cardozo)
R.G. Halston (Howard) Bankerville (Armstrong) Nixon (Douglass)
R.T. Brock (Armstrong) Poole (Douglass) Fields (Manassas)
R.E. Henderson (Stanton) Diggs (Armstrong) Henderson (Armstrong)
Q.B. Parker (Stanton) Matthews (Armstrong) Lester (Armstrong)
H.W. Brown (Armstrong) Robinson (Cardozo) Lopez (Armstrong)
R.H. B. Williams (Armstrong) Adams (Stanton) Turper (Armstrong)
R.H. B. Williams (Armstrong) Mitchell (Armstrong) Benson (Howard)
R.H. B. Williams (Armstrong) Mitchell (Armstrong) Benson (Howard)
By P. L. JACOBS
(Publicity Director of the S.A.H.S.A.C.)
No football season would be complete without the usual compendium of individual talent known as the all-star team.
Walter Camp started it nearly 40 years ago and the custom has grown each season until now every man who has seen one game picks his all-star team. Late years the custom has even spread to those who have not seen a game.
This selection, compiled by the writer, is the result of lists sent to me by student managers of each school in the conference. The players are rated on the teams according to the vote received. The six student managers of the various teams sent in lists and I here-with present the compilation.
Final Standing of the Teams in the South Atlatntic High School Conference
Final Standing—Percentage Rating (December 5, 1932)
W L T Pts. Opp. Pet.
Staunton 4 0 1 51 26 1.000
Armstrong 3 0 3 51 30 1.000
Cardozo 3 2 0 51 25 .600
Howard 3 2 0 80 63 .600
Dunbar 2 4 0 57 69 .333
Manassas 2 1 6 44 .000
Douglass 0 4 1 15 56 .000
Leading Individual Scorers
Fd. P.A.T. F.G. Totals
W. Brown (Howard) 8 0 0 48
Lamar (Cardozo) 6 1 0 37
S. Parker (Stanton) 6 0 0 36
B. Williams (Armstrong) 5 2 0 32
R. Williams (Dunbar) 3 0 0 18
H. Benson (Howard) 3 0 0 20
Weaver (Cardozo) 2 2 0 14
M. Robinson (Cardozo) 2 1 0 13
Wright (Howard) 2 1 0 13
Bolden (Howard) 2 0 0 12
Davis (Hbward) 2 0 0 12
Poole (Douglass) 2 0 0 12
Green (Dunbar) 2 0 0 12
Turpin (Armstrong) 2 0 0 12
H. Jackson (Douglass) 2 0 0 12
Lucas (Cardozo) 2 0 0 12
Mathews (Dunbar) 1 2 0 8
Mitchell (Armstrong) 1 1 0 7
Single Point Victory Decides District Football Championship
of Scoring Touchdown
A single point, the narrowest of margins, scored early in the contest when Jim Gray, stocky Pleasant Plains halfback, booted a perfect placement kick, Saturday, decided the gridiron battle between the Plainsmen and the Willowtree eleven.
A few moments before Gray had plunged over the sacred last line for a touchdown and shortly afterwards, Joseph Montgomery, youthful Tree backfield man, plunged over for the eventual losers, making the final score 7-6. The victory marked the Plainsmen's seventh straight win and carried with it the championship of the District football league.
Score in First Period
The Plainsmen started off with a rush, keeping the Trees continually on the defense throughout the first period. Two long passes and a subsequent off-tackle jaunt with Gray toting the oval from the two-yard stripe scored for the winners in this period. The same Gray dropped back and place-kicked the extra point, which later decided the battle.
Using a series of deceptive off-tackle plays interspersed with a 30-yard pass, Strawberry Butler to Lefty Smith, the Trees came right back in the second period with a sustained 85-yard drive which carried them from the Plains 15-yard line to a touchdown in teal plays. Montgomery carried the ball on the final thrust. An aerial for the much-needed extra point was batted down.
A few minutes later the timekeeper's horn signifying the end of the first half halted another Willowtree drive on the one-yard line and blasted the Trees' hope for victory.
Sylvester Butler recovered a pleasant Plains fumble on the 16-yard line. Two off-tackle thrusts and a penalty placed the oval on the three-yard line. Montgomery advanced it to the one, but the half ended on the next play.
Late in the third period the Plainsmen threatened by driving
High School Conference Certifies Officials' List
Members of the South Atlantic High School Athletic Conference voted at a recent meeting on a list of certified officials for all conference football and basketball games. The new basketball rules came in for quite a discussion during the meeting. The conference voted to play all games according to the
the complete without the usual com-
mown as the all-star team.
40 years ago and the custom has
every man who has seen one game
the custom has even spread to
the writer, is the result of lists sent
each school in the conference. The
according to the vote received. The
ous teams sent in lists and I here-
Rating (December 5, 1932)
L T Pts. Opp. Pct.
0 1 51 26 1.000
0 3 51 30 1.000
2 0 51 25 .600
2 0 80 63 .600
4 0 57 69 .333
2 1 6 44 .000
4 1 15 56 .000
Individual Scorers
Fd. P.A.T. F.G. Totals
... 8 0 0 48
... 6 1 0 37
... 6 0 0 36
... 5 2 0 32
... 3 0 0 18
... 3 0 0 20
... 2 2 0 14
... 2 1 0 13
... 2 1 0 13
... 2 0 0 12
... 2 0 0 12
... 2 0 0 12
... 2 0 0 12
... 1 2 0 8
... 1 1 0 7
History Decides Championship
en 7-6 in Walker Stadium;
es Are on Verge
deep into the Trees' territory only to lose possession of the pigskin on the two-yard line as Sylvester Butler intercepted a pass.
P. PLAINS WILLOWTREE
Jackson . . . L.E. Driver
Gordon . . . L.H. Honer
Walker . . . W. Wright
Williams . . . Center . . S. Butler
Thomas . . R.G. Johnson
Brown . . R.T. Carter
Jefferson . . R.E. Smith
Johnson . . Q.R. Warner
Armstrong . . R.H. Montgomery
Chang . . R.H. Watera
Fields . F.B. Collings
Score by periods:
Willowtreet . . . 0 0 0 0-6
Pleasant Plains . . . 7 0 0 0-7
Touchdowns—Gray and Montgomery.
Point after touchdown—Gray.
Substitutions: Willowtree—Mills for Robinson, Samuels for Wright. Pleasant Plains Gray for Armstrong. Levels for Thomas, Barres for Fields, Armstrong for Harnes.
Pleasant Plains, 119; Opponents.....19
To date the Plains have played twelve games, winning ten, losing none, and drawing two 6-to-6 deadlocks. Two hundred and one points have been amassed in these twelve games, as against 37 points for their opponents.
Philadelphia Girls Win
2 Games Over Week-End
PHILADELPHIA—The Tribune Girls basketball team swamped the Lincoln Nurses, Friday, before a crowd of fans at the Wissahickon Boys' Club by a score of 46 to 12.
Ora Washington. Rose Wilson and
D. Hill starred for the news girls.
* The Philadelphia quint defeated the Anthracite Girls, white, by a
16 to 10 score on Saturday at Scranton. The white team is
champion of the coal region.
**TRIBUNE GIRLS** LINCOLN NURSES
| | G | P | G | P |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Hill.f. | 4 | 0 | 8 | Steele.f. | 2 | 0 | 4 |
| Wilson.f. | 5 | 10 | Bethel.f. | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Pontain.f. | 2 | 0 | 4 | Harris.f. | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Davis.g. | 1 | 1 | 11 | Vinson.f. | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Davis.g. | 1 | 1 | 1 | H.Stripland.g | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Mann.g. | 1 | 1 | 1 | A.Stripland.g | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Totals | 21 | 4 | 46 | Totals | 6 | 0 | 12 |
A car, geared to do 260 miles an
hour, will be used by Barney Old-
field, the noted racer, at Daytona
Besch. Fla. next year, in an effo-
tion to break the world's speed rea-
---
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, DECEMBER 9, 1932
ROYALS SMOTHER ASBURY IN DEBUT
Washington Court Champs Down Asbury Club of Frederick, 48-23
FREDERICK, Md.-The Pleasant Plains Royals, city champions from Washington, D.C., opened their season here Friday night by annihilating the Asbury Big Five of this city in the Asbury Church gymnasium, 48-23. The Asbury club put up a strong fight in the opening half, holding the Plainsmen to a 18-15 advantage at half time. Led by Josh Barnes, who tallied a dozen points during the game for high scoring honors, the Royals scored at will during the last half. In the scoring column, Barnes was followed by Butter Hill and Archie Carter, who scored ten points each. Every Plainsman took part in the scoring. Tony Wagner, Asbury forward, and Leakins, center, were outstanding for their team, each accounting for ten points.
ANOTHER HEAVY MENACE LOOMS
Unknown Winston Gains Recognition as Heavyweight Contender
Capital News Service
NEW YORK.—Edward Robert Winston, Jr., of Tampa, Florida, has loomed on the horizon as the new menace of the heavyweight division of pugilistic contenders. While the lot of a colored fighter, in any division, usually is not a happy one, the man who stands out as the current menace can always make a good living. From the days of John L. Sullivan on there always has been a black menace. Jack Johnson was the only one to win the championship, but several have prospered financially in that role. Harry Wills accumulated a fortune playing the role of bugaboo to Jack Dempey.
George Godfrey succeeded Wills in the role and now, though he is trying to do a comeback, the Shadow of Leiperville seems to have lost the position of menace to Winston, who leaped into the limelight recently by knocking out Walter Cobb and Billy Jones and handing a trouncing to Ernie Schaaf.
Winston acquired the sobriquet of Unknown when he made his first appearance as a substitute in Tampa. He scored a knockout over one Popper Stopper and the next day the newspaper account of the fight stated "Unknown Stops Stopper."
A week or so ago Winston offered to box Schaaf in Madison Square Garden and return his entire purse if he failed to score a knockout. He made the same proposition for a match with Max Baer. Since then he has been rematched with Schaaf in Boston. Winston is to receive $27\frac{1}{2}$ per cent for his hit, which is the tipoff as to his standing in Boston. New York managers who have seen Winston box say he is a stiff puncher and game as a pebble, particularly effective against big men, when his speed is an asset. He undoubtedly will break into the Garden this Winter. If he cannot get suitable competition over here he may go to Europe to box Larry Gains, Toronto, who rules the heavyweight roost on the other side.
ROAMERS CAPTURE ALEXANDRIA TITLE
ALEXANDRIA, Va.—The annual contest between the Mohawks and the Roamers for the Alexandria City gridiron championship took place Sunday at Baggett's Stadium and ended with the Roamers victorious, 12 to 0.
The victory also gave the Roamers the Northern Virginia title, they having previously defeated the Bass A.C. of Frenoricksburg.
The Roamers with a heavier and more experienced eleven were expected to pile up a large score but the Hawks put up a strong fight, excelling the Roamers in the punting department and successfully blocking both attempts for the extra points.
The largest crowd of the year witnessed the "Little Classic" which was handled very efficiently by former collegiate stars. Charlie West, Sallie Hall and Bill Bell
Food and Clothing to Be Ticket to Benefit Basketball Game
---
In co-operation with the project of the Twelfth Street Young Men's Christian Association to secure clothing, food and toys for the needy, the Twelfth Street Big Five and a group of picked basketball stars will clash in the "Y" gymnasium, Tuesday night, December 20th. The admission fee will be either a pound of food, a pair of used shoes, or an article of wearable clothing. Toys will also admit anyone desiring to use them. The game will be one of the treats of the basketball season. The basketball fans are not only expected to turn out for the love of the game, but an overflowing gallery is expected to be on hand to make the purpose of the contest a success.
Not only will these young athletes donate their time and skill but each will bring some article of clothing, or parcel of food to help this worthy cause.
Swimming Benefit
The Y.M.C.A. swimming pool
Facts and Fancies
By Clarence Toliver BIRTH CONTROL VERSUS DEPRESSIONS;
Birth control, save in very liberal-minded circles, is a tabooed subject. It is condemned not because people have thought about it seriously and conclusively, but because hypocrisy is prone to condemn anything having a wide departure from conventional social usage.
Nevertheless, birth control is a matter that should interest Negroes just now in view of the exigencies forced upon the group by the depression.
Is it or is it not a fact that Negroes have more children than the social and economic limitations placed upon us seem to justify? Certainly everyone knows there are many capable young men scanning the horizon for opportunities.
The discouraging fact is that many of them must look in vain. With the Negro's business and industrial outlook what it is, many of these young men are doomed to go to waste in jobs as waiters and chauffeurs, simply because the supply is running too high in both trades and professions. On a much larger scale, this condition probably contributes vastly to the general woe of the depression.
The belief of the "dismal science" that depressions are most readily cured by wars that take millions, by plagues and disease that carry off thousands, such as the influenza epidemic of a decade ago, has been proved a false theory. As a matter of fact, our present troubles today are really the aftermath of the war.
In the treatment of disaster today the modern word is "preventive." Birth control is an agency by which governments may take preventive measures to lessen the rigors, if not the very possibility, of future depressions.
Instead of our lax marriage laws which admit the bearing of children without any intelligent regard for their future, either economically or physically, it would be much better for the country, and particularly for the Negro, if a plan similar to the Mendoza law of Mexico were adopted by the United States.
Certainly there would be less strain on the welfare agencies in caring for delinquency and other direful results which are the consequences of persons who enter into marriage without considering the responsibility of probable children.
The Mexican Plan
Down in Mexico, recently, Dr. Salvador A. Mendoza, of Vera Cruz, succeeded in having the government accept his plan, which is to become a law, for birth control. (And the land beyond the Rio Grande is said to be a backward country.) Dr. Mendoza's scheme would prohibit children to the very poor and the incompetent. In the first place, persons desiring to marry would be compelled to submit themselves to a medical board for examination. An inquiry would be made as to the health, income, and general parental qualifications of the applicants.
There is food for thought here for Negroes, and it would not be such a bad idea for sex-conscious America at large.
Probably illegitimacy, gangsters, dementia praecox victims, derelicts, hitch-hikers and piteous examples of humanity would considerably lessen in the course of, say, twenty-five years of birth control. It would certainly lessen the overloaded courts, hospitals, jails, institutions for unmarried mothers and juvenile delinquency, to say nothing of a great load off tax-payers.
The rosy optimism of "love always finds a way," and "two can live as cheaply as one." has been forced into the realm of forgotten fairy stories by the hard fact that when a man and woman are trying
Golfers Take Advantage of Warm Weather
Many local golf fans took advantage of the warm weather Sunday and several were seen on the Lincoln Memorial course. Abhong chose playing with Walter E. Booch, Dr. George W. Adams, Joseph Wheerspoon, William Wheeler, H. Bethea, Dr. Savoy, Dr. Fisher, White and
will stage a Christmas benefit week starting December 12 to 17. During this week admission will be a pound of food or an article of clothing or pair of shoes, which might be passed on to someone in need. The public is invited to assist in making this Christmas a real one for the needy of the city. Classes will be held for beginners. A special appeal is being made to boys and girls who will be admitted by any toy they would like to pass on to some unfortunate boy or girl.
Schedule of Activities
Men may use the pool every night from 7 to 10 o'clock.
Men and women, Tuesday and Thursday nights from 7 to 10.
Boys may swim every day from 4 to 6:30 p.m.
Boys and girls, Tuesday and Thursdays from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.
The pool, recently renovated, is in fine condition. The water is properly heated and the classes are supervised by American Red Cross guards.
to maintain a decent standard of living on an inadequate income themselves, possible children are sure to be handicapped. They are handicapped in many ways.
First of all, living conditions must necessarily be bad. The child, nine times out of ten, is undernourished. Periodical examinations by the doctor, the dentist, the optician, and other child specialists are out of the question.
Even now in our city schools there are a distressing number of parents unable to avail their children of benefits like these of modern life. In the country districts the distress is more appalling. There are many families with five and more children where there is not enough income to decently care for one.
Property Values vs. Human Values
Are such things depressing? Could they happen with birth control? Definitely, no. They could not. Then, why, you ask, is it we do not have birth control? Because our politicians are concerned with property values, not human values. In spite of the fact that the world looks askance at Soviet Russia, she, at least, has had the courage of her convictions, and adopted birth control. Bronislaw Malinowski, in his "Parenthood—the Basis of Social Structure," writes: "It is the function of science to control the future on the basis of a correct analysis of the past and present: knowledge gives foreseen in the light of experience."
That is what Russia has done: that is the theory of her experiment. The hope of Russia, Lenin wrote, is in the children. The hope of the Negro is also in the children, provided we have quality instead of promiscuous quality. Mr. Malinowski's "correct analysis of the past and present" means no effort should be spared and no investigation slighted that we may pass by effects to wipe out causes. In the main, Russia's effort to bring "sweetness and light" to her people, according to reliable observers like Scott Nearing ("The Child in Soviet Russia") is in shifting the political emphasis from property values to human values. And as "knowledge gives foresight in the light of experience," it is the human values that are protected and vouchsafed by birth control.
"Emperor Jones" to Be Given at Hampton Institute
By George A. Kuper
HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Va.
Arrangements have just been completed by the entertainment committee of Hampton Institute to bring to the campus on Saturday evening, December 17, the original Hedgerow Theatre production of "Emperor Jones," with Jasper Deeter and Arthur Rich in the principal role. The company is under the direction of Edwin K Anderson, a director of the Negro Drama League.
The production given at Hampton Institute will be Jasper Deeter's original production, in which he directed the late Charles Gilpin, and later Paul Robertson. His production has just completed a successful run at the Hedgerow Theatre Rose Valley, Pa.
This theatre is acknowledged by the chief authorities on the American theatre to be one of the few significant and interesting repository theatres outside of New York. During the past ten years it has been the scene of the debuts of such now celebrated players as Ann Harding, Rose McClendon, and Edward Rose. Robinson.
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in the
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in the
WASHINGTON TRIBUNE
The Literary Alcove
The Literary Alcove
By ALPHEUS BUTLER
(Continued )
In his "Ars Poetica" or "Epistle to the Pilos," Horace treats the subject in a manner somewhat at variance with the manner and approach of Aristotle.
Aristotle is concerned more with the exalted and the complicated types of poetry. He discourses on tragedy and on epic poetry. After giving a synthetic definition of tragedy, for example, he tells us more in detail of the prerequisites for the writing of a tragedy. We are informed in regard to such matters as the type of person the poet should be, the kinds of music appropriate for the tragic form, the characteristics of the good tragic plot.
Horace deals with poetic matters in a somewhat different manner. We are told by Horace of the prerequisites for a good poem in the first part of the "Ars Poetics." Horace does not confine himself to a discourse on the more exalted forms of tragedy and comedy but begins by stating the rules which govern the construction of a good poem whether it is long or whether it is short. Horace is quite explicit in stating the qualifications of a good poet. He says, for example, that a poet should have knowledge of character, adherence to high ideals, combination of the dulce with the utile, intellectual superiority, appreciation of the noble history and lofty mission of poetry, and above all a willingness to listen to and profit by impartial criticism.
It is rather interesting to note the method Horace suggests for securing wisdom, which is certainly desirable for one who would write good poetry. The poet, according to Horace can cultivate wisdom by studying the philosophers.
"When," continues Horace, "you have first learned from them the valuable lessons of life you should apply yourself to life itself, and then your personages will speak like real living beings."
This passage seems to me to be especially noteworthy:
"Remember the glorious history of poetry, which—as the stories of Orpheus and Amphion show—has from the very infancy of the race promoted the cause of civilization. Then, from Homer on, it has inspired valour, has taught wisdom, has won the favour of princes, and has afforded relief after toll."
In answer to the question: "Is it natural' ability or teaching that makes the poet?" Horace answers: "Both are necessary. However much people may boast of their gifts, ability without training will accomplish no more in writing than in running a race or in flute-playing." "Take a subject, yet writers," advises Horace, "equal to your strength; and ponder long what your shoulders refuse and what they are able to bear. Whoever shall choose a theme within his range, neither speech will fail him, nor clearness of order." "Not enough," continues Horace, "is it for poems to have beauty; they must have charm, and lead the hearer's soul where they will. As men's faces smile on those who smile, so they respond to those who weep. If you would have me weep, you must first feel grief yourself...
"Sad tones befit the face of sorrow; blustering accents that of anger; jeets become the merry, solemn words the grave. . . .
"Of good writing the source and fount is wisdom - Your matter the Socratic pages can set forth, and when matter is in hand, words will not be loath to follow. . . .
"Poets aim either to benefit, or to amuse, or to utter words at once both pleasing and helpful to life. Whenever you instruct, be brief, so that what is quickly said the mind may readily grasp and faithfully hold; every word in excerces flows away from the full mind. . . .
"A poem is like a picture: one strike: your fancy more, the nearer you stand; another, the farther away. . . .
"Often it is asked whether a prairie worthy poem be due to Nature or to art. For my part, I do not see of what avail is of study, when not enriched by nature's vein, or native vein, untrained; so truly does it claim the other's aid, and with it a friendly league." Horace's treatise completes with stimulating passages such as the above, and such as the one discussing the question of whether or not a poet should attempt to keep alive a tradition or whether he should look within his own heart and write.
This passage should be of particular value to the Negro author writing in twentieth century America. For too many are blindly trying to keep up a "tradition" of writing in dialect when, if they followed their normal inclinations and forgot color, they could produce poetry that ranked with the work of any other poet in the history of English and American literature using the same language used by the other masters.
(To be continued)
Helen Bagi and Helen Fodor, both 21 years old, fought a 12-minute duel with sawed-off ten-grains, near Endapst, Hungary, over the love of a handsome ferner. Miss Bagi was killed by a blow which crushed her skull. Miss Fodor's collar bone was broken during the fight.
THIRTEEN
The Part We Can Play During the Administration of the Democrats
The Part We Can Play During the Administration of the Democrats
By Theodore S. Botts
The unprecedented landslide witnessed in the election of the two friends of the masses of people—Gov. Roosevelt and Speaker Garner—served notice of intolerance of greedy, deceptive and selfish leadership in American politics.
The candidates all over the country who were elected, whether they were Jewish or Gentile, rich or poor, Northerners or Southerners, white or black, can truthfully attribute their success to the faith and confidence that the large majority of voters have in them to do their part to effect "a new and fair deal" to all people at home and abroad.
Heretofore, the greed for money or the single desire to secure a political plum muffled and stagnated our so-called leadership in politics. This type of leadership gave little thought to men and measures, and to playing politics in the interest of obtaining the greatest good for the largest number of people in the race and country. They willfully gave self priority over race. They took pride in being narrow-minded instead of racial-minded. They prized highly deceptionism over Americanism. Little did it disturb them to have an equal opportunity to make a livelihood and a chicken in their own pots, while the masses of their race and country suffered from injustices and starvation.
Just as the nation has sounded the death toll of selfish, greedy and deceptive political leadership, so are all progressive thinking Negroes determined to bury this type of political leaders before they are even dead. Fat pocketbooks from selling out the race and muffling political plums are the two main diseases which have caused our leaders in politics to be politically buried before they are dead.
Those of us who are believers and supporters of democracy in the District of Columbia can be of great service to its citizenry. In spite of the District being constitutionally disfranchised, our participation in political activities, and organizations does not make us mere suckers of valuable energy and time.
If we were to stop to realize that the District government is run by both houses of Congress, and the President is the chief executive of the District as well as the nation, and that it takes both money and service as well as votes to bring a party or its representatives into power, we would not speak disparagingly about being active in politics in the voteless District.
Regardless of the inability of most of us to deliver the votes, we can still express our choice for leaders of the nation and fortify our convictions with our money and service to help to get the votes to elect the proper persons or party. This kind of support would effect a strong moral obligation of the leaders or party to the citizenry of the District.
This in turn would create greater consideration and support in materializing adequate appropriations and facilities for our schools; appointment of men of the citizens' choice as commissioners, heads of the police and fire departments, and directors of education; adequate funds to efficiently operate our District government, and give birth to more Congressional champions for District franchise.
Active affiliations with a political party in the District would not only serve as a wedge to break our way through the conduction of our city government, but it would help us to obtain more positions and jobs for our people in the District government in proportion to the population and the amount of taxes we pay.
To those who are progressive citizens and have discontinued wearing civic and political blinders, it is obvious that politics in an indirect way can be, and is, played in the District. Let us then prove our ability to play our part in the reincarnation of the spirit and principles of Jeffersonian democracy under the "new deal" administration.
Commercial PRINTING
session days should make you realize the need of more publicity. You can't afford to depend on the trade that based a friendship. Advertise yourself. Our Commercial Printing will he'p you. MURRAY BROS. 920 U ST. N.W.
Marie Dressler and Polly Moran in Top-notch Form
HOWARD
Week Beginning Saturday, December 10th From Europe to Washington COMES
FOURTEEN
Marie Dressle Moran in Top
Fun in a small town, mothers-in-law in prodigious battles, romance and a bit of drama—these are the elements with which Marie Dressler and Polly Moran mould a marvel in pure entertainment in "Prosperity," Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's mirthful melee of batting mothers-in-law playing at the Republic Theatre for the entire week from Friday to Thursday, December 9 to 15
Marie and Polly are the mothers-in-law. They battle over the married life of their respective son and daughter until they drive the youngsters into divorce and the audience into hysterics. Amid the howls of laughter there are a few heart throbs, too, for a bid of mother love, a sacrifice, and a very tense little dramatic situation are interlarded among the laughs. Sam Wood directed the picture, and the clever young man who directed "Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford" certainly knows his comedy.
Marie plays "Maggie," who gets a job in the town grocery store when the town goes broke, starts a "swap and trade" business, and finally solves the problem of good business. Miss Moran is the shrewish purlorer of pickles—incidentally that scene is a classic in comedy. Anita Page and Norman Foster play the married children, and they in turn have children—played by little Jacquie Lyn and
STRAND
2 Blocks from Suburban Gardens
DEANWOOD, D.C.
Latest All-Talking Pictures
C. J. CLARKE, Mgr.
FRIDAY DEC. 9
"The Painted Woman"
Jerry Tucker. Clever character comedy is contributed by Charles Giblyn, Frank Darien and Henry Armetta. The comedy highlights include the Christmas night when Miss Dressler, Miss Moran and Foster all turn up dressed as Santa Clauses and battle for the honor of officiating at the Christmas tree.
"The Big Broadcast" Star Studded Comedy at Broadway
Bing Crosby, Kate Smith, the Boswell Calloway, the Mills Brothers, Cab Calloway and his band, Burns and Allen, Arthur Tracy (The Street Singers) and Vincent Lopez—all on one bill! Is that entertainment? That's the line-up which Paramount has assembled for "The Big Broadcast," a screen version of the play "Wild Waves," which will open a three-day run beginning Sunday, December 11. It is not to be supposed, however, that "The Big Broadcast" is merely a glorification of the personalities of the various radio stars, for their songs and nonsense are all incidental to a straightforward, believable and amusing story which featured Stuart Erwin and Leila Hyams, of the films, along with the kings and queens of radio.
BROADWAY A LIGHTMAN THEATRE
ADMISSION PRICES
Children, 10c Adults 15c
SUN.-MON.-TUES. DEC. 11-13
Cab Calloway
The Mills Brothers
And a Host of Well-Known
Radio Stars in
"The Big Broadcast"
All the Stars of Radio-Land in a Heart-
Stirring Romance
WEDNESDAY DEC. 14
"The Girl From Calgary"
FIFI D'ORSAY
(The French .can Crawford)
Sings and Shakes Her Way to Fame
THURSDAY DEC. 15
VOTE EVERY SCHNOZZLE!
Jimmy Durante
in
"The Phantom President"
Laughs as long as a honey-moon kiss—the most hilarious tummy laugh of our times.
STUNT NIGHT TONIGHT
FRIDAY-SATURDAY DEC. 16-17
It boils with excitement, adventure—with steaming action, and hot hatred.
Hoot Gibson in
"The BOILING POINT"
"HEROES OF THE WEST"
Chapter No. 10
Coming—Next Week—Coming A Drama of Primitive Passion in the South Seas
"SON OF OKLAHOMA"
Thursday, Friday December 15-16 SENSATIONAL UNDERWORLD DRAMA "Alias Mary Smith" Chapter No.11—"Last Frontier"
CALL HER SAVAGE WITH CLARA BOW AT THE RAPHAEL
The rising curtain at the Raphael Theatre, Friday, will reveal a new Clara Bow. Not the "It Girl of the Screen," or "That Red Head," or "That Collegiate Hoyden," or "The Brooklyn," or even "The Living Symbol of the Jazz Age." Her new film is "Call Her Savage," the Fox production of Tiffany Thayer's novel of the same name.
Well over a year has elapsed since the famous Bow personality has been seen on the screen, a year of refreshing rest and study during which time the famous star stored up the needed energy and vital forces which she is said to release in full-flood during the unfolding of this stirring romantic drama.
In the main, the loveliness of features and expressions that has endeared Miss Bow to the public remains, but to replace the hoyenisms and mad-cap flapper ways that marked her earlier screen portrayals she is reported to possess a new self-control, a poise and dignity that marks that picture as the first triumph of her maturing art.
The plot of the picture relates, briefly, the dramatic struggle of an impulsive girl to control the half-savage temper which is her fiery birthright, and thereby find the one true love she craves.
From a Texas ranch, where she grew up in the wild ways of the open, Clara is expelled to a Chicago finishing school by her wealthy but exasperated father. Her growing intimacy with a handsome half-breed, portrayed by Gilbert Roland, is given as the reason by her stern parent, but in reality his action comes as an admission of weakness on his part to control his headstrong daughter.
From Texas to Chicago
In Chicago, she enters adventure after adventure until an unwise marriage leads her to the brink of complete wreckage.
The depression following her disillusionment leads her, for nearly a year, in a mad gamble
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. DECEMBER 9, 1932
with money and men. This period of her stormy career is rudely broken into by the eshock of a wire from Texas informing her that her mother, played by Estelle Taylor, is dying. Back on the ranch, amid the familiar surroundings of her girlhood, is revealed her mother's indiscretion responsible for the fiery temperament which causes men and women to "Call Her Savage."
LOUIE ARMSTRONG TRUMPET KING AT HOWARD
LOUIE ARMSTRONG TRUMPET KING AT HOWARD
Beginning Saturday, December 10, Louis Armstrong and his band, back from a sensational European tour, will be the featured attraction at the Howard Theatre for a week.
You remember the 1929 edition of "Connie's Hot Chocolates;" well, 1932 brings a bigger and better edition and with the addition of Louie Armstrong to this great aggregation of stars you are in for a real treat in the line of entertainment.
This show is composed of many popular stars including the team of Faye and Hamtree Harrington. New songs, new dances and beautiful girls, all that it takes to make your visit to this theatre pleasant.
R.K.O. presents the screen with a gripping drama of tears and triumph, "Strange Justice." Think of this. His sweetheart believed him innocent, his mother knew he was, but the jury believed the framed evidence and sent him to the electric chair.
As usual there will be a midnight show on Tuesday and Friday.
Annie Hafer, of Chambersburg, Pa., is the owner of a hen which laid a white egg with brownish tinted ends during the recent eclipse of the sun.
The mayor of London, England, recently awarded a medal to each of 250 automobile drivers because they had driven for 10 consecutive years without having had an accident.
RAPHAEL THEATRE
Admission, Matinee 11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.—Adults, 15 cents; Children, 10 cents Nights After 5:00 P.M.—Adults, 25 cents; Children, 15 cents
An Autographed Photo of Clara Bow to the First One Thousand Women to See This Picture at the RAPHAEL THEATER NEXT ATTRACTION----"LIFE BEGINS"
ROCKABYE, WITH MISS BENNETT AT LINCOLN
Whether a woman be good or bad—whether she be lady or vixen—whether she sings torch songs or lullabys, she is at heart, a woman who longs for and thrills to a great, clean, honest love, according to Constance Bennett in "Rockabye," her newest RKO-Pathe picture which opens for a five day run December 9-13 at the Lincoln Theatre.
"Rockabye" is a marvelous story for displaying the talents and personality of Constance Bennett. It is drama that covers its real seriousness with a light, sophisticated touch that once in a while slips very frankly and engagingly into downright comedy, recovers, and then plunges on to very tense moments that make you sniff or haul out the old hanky.
A most intriguing person is Judy Carroll, swinging like a pendulum from the Judy that was born in the gas house district to the Judy whom Anthony De Sola, theatrical manager, has trained, educated and developed into a lady so poised and clever that even the publicity-seeking world of the theatre has not guessed her antecedents.
"The Midnight Lady," the new Chesterfield talkie, which will be shown for the first time locally at the Lincoln Theatre Wednesday, has all the elements of a half-dozen good pictures in one. The audience last evening, when I saw the picture, seemed to agree with me, if
applause means anything, and I would not be surprised to see an S.R.O. sign in front of the box office for the three days beginning Wednesday, December 14.
Edward T. Lowe has taken for the theme of this drama the old story of mother love; but he has presented it in a new and spectacular setting, with beautiful Claudia Dell as the young girl caught in the glittering toils of New York night life, where high society rubs elbows with gangland, where vice and virtue seek thrills together, where everything has its price.
Sarah Padden has never been more forceful than in this role of Claudia Dell's mother, the speak-easy proprietor who whoops it up with the city's playboys, but who loses her hard-boiled manner when the life and happiness of her child are at stake. This is a role unlike any others she had done in many of its aspects, but Miss Padden comes through with a performance that must establish her among the first rank artists of the talking screen.
DUKE ELLINGTON MAKES FAREWELL BOW AT HOWARD
th Duke Ellington, Washington's own favorite son, and his famous orchestra, headlining the attraction Howard Theatre presented a gala revue this week. The Duke, whose orchestra needs no introduction to the theatrical world, made his farewell appearance before sailing for Europe, Ivy
HAEL
streets N. W.
timee 11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.
After 5:00 P.M.—Adults, 2
starting Frida
BACK! And
The New Clara Bow
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Anderson, sensational torch singer, again accompanied the orchestra and added pep to the program with her singing of "Don't Mean a Thing If You Ain't Got That Swing," and "Minnie the Moocher." Besides Miss Anderson, the Duke brought with him Ray Mitchell, who crooned in a delightful manner, "Trees," and "Say It Isn't So."
LINCOLN
A Lichtman
MATINEE—Children u
NIGHT (after 6 p.m.)—Child
Friday-Tuesday
CONSTANCE
AMERICA'S MOST
“ROCK
PAUL
They Took Away Ev
Had and Paid Her
Sat. Only—“Heroes of th
Wednesday-Friday
“THE MIDN
The Story of An Artist W
And of a Girl Who W
Sarah Padden — John
A Picture that Will Keep
THEA
HOME
FIRST TIME
P.M.—Adults, 15 cents; Chi
25 cents; Children, 15 cent
Day, Dec. 9 th
and greater th
A Clara Bow never
displaying new geniu
... a personality elec
nating...as “Dynamite
... alluring beauty of
lation of the secret th
CLA
BO
IN
CALLED
SAV
INCOLI
A Lichtman Theatre
Tuesday December
INSTANCE BENNE
ERICA'S MOST RAVISHING STAR
—IN—
ROCKABYE'
—WITH—
PAUL LUKAS
They Took Away Every Decent Thing She Had and Paid Her in Glitter and Sham
by—"Heroes of the West"—Chapter 1
Saturday-Friday December
THE MIDNIGHT LADY
Story of An Artist Who Specialized in Nudes
And of a Girl Who Wouldn't Pose For Him
Hadden — John Darrow — Claudia
e that Will Keep You Tense with Exc
HEATR
HOME OF THE BEST
FIRST TIME SHOWN PICTURE
ts, 15 cents; Children, 10 cents
children, 15 cents
Dec. 9 to Dec. 11
later than ever
Clara Bow never before revealed
playing new genius as a dramatic actress
a personality electric... vivid... fast
...as "Dynamite" Springer... primitively
illuring beauty of Tiffany Thayer's revival
of the secret things in a woman's life
CLARA
BOW
IN
CALL HER
RAVAGE
Sarah Padden — John Darrow — Claudia Dell A Picture that Will Keep You Tense with Excitement
HOME OF THE BEST FIRST TIME SHOWN PICTURES
A Clara Bow never before revealed displaying new genius as a dramatic actress a personality electric vivid fascinating...as "Dynamite" Springer...primitive alluring beauty of Tiffany Thayer's revelation of the secret things in a woman's life.
From the novel by Tiffany Thayer
Directed by JOHN FRANCIS DILLON
Screen play by Edwin Burke
WITH
GILBERT ROLAND MONROE OWSLE
ARTHUR PIERSON THELMA TOD
ESTELLE TAYLOR
00 LAST FEATURE AT 9:3
LBERT ROLAND MONROE OWSLE
ARTHUR PIERSON THELMA TOD
ESTELLE TAYLOR
LAST FEATURE AT 9:30
hand. The talent which supported the Duke included Conway and Parks with a comic song and dance act, Gallie de Gaston and George Williams, who teamed up as comedians, a singing duo, the "Three Drifters," a clever dancing trio; Clint and Marie, and Charles Ray, who served as master of ceremonies and presented a good vocal number, playing the part of a dope fiend and singing, "Don't Tell Her What Has Happened to Me." Rustina Banks and her mermaids were also with the revue.
A story of a man-hunting maniac who victimized survivors of shipwrecks on an isolated island was unfolded on the screen. The picture, "The Most Dangerous Game," featured Joel McCrea and Fay Wray.
COLN
theatre
Under 12, 10c—Adults 15c
Fren under 12, 10c—Adults 25c
December 9-13
E BENNETT
RAVISHING STAR
LABYE"
WITH—
LUKAS
Every Decent Thing She
in Glitter and Sham
The West"--Chapter No. 11
December 14-16
NIGHT LADY"
Who Specialized in Nudes—
Couldn't Pose For Him
Darrow — Claudia Dell
You Tense with Excitement
ATRE
OF THE BEST
SHOWN PICTURES
Children, 10 cents
To Dec. 15
an ever!
before revealed
as a dramatic actress
etric vivid fasci-
e" Springer...primitive
Tiffany Thayer's reve-
ings in a woman's life.
ARA
OW
HER
AGE
MONROE OWSLEY
N THELMA TODD
TAYLOR
FEATURE AT 9:30
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Inauguration Day Rally Held at Metropolitan
Thomas F. Harper, Republican candidate, was inaugurated as president at the Inauguration Day rally held at the Metropolitan Wesley A.M.E. Zion Church Monday night. The Rev. J. W. McCoy pastor, gave brief remarks. Judges of the event were Jesse Spearman and John H. Dorsey. Other candidates included Mrs. Mattie Ward, Republican; and Eva L. Ball and G. Addison Turner, Democrats.
First Baptist Church
The pastor, the Rev. James H. Marshall will preach at the morning and night services, Sunday. A new rally will be held at the church with the Rev. W. H. Jernagin preaching.
The Rev. Mr. Jernagin, pastor of Mount Carmel Baptist Church, will be accompanied by his choir and members of the congregation.
Liberty Memorial Baptist
The Rev. E, H. Warfield, of Bow-
ing Green, Va., will preach at the
church. Sunday. The Rev. W.
Greecy is pastor.
Mrs. Lena Ware Retires
Mrs. Lea M. W. Mare, organist of the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church, for a period of about thirty-five years has retired from that position by submitting her resignation to the church Friday evening.
For several weeks she has been suffering from strained eyes and a nervous affection which interferes with the proper performance of her duties at the organ, and, upon the advice of her physician, she has resigned. Her successor has not been named.
Her services at the organ have met with very high commendation from various choristers under whom she has served; among them are the late Dr. James T. Walker, Benjamin Baker, Prof. Roy W. Tibbs, Albert D. Smith and Benjamin Washington.
The church in appreciation of her many years of activity did not accept the resignation at once but deferred doing so for thirty days, allowing her to complete the year of 1932.
Civil War Veteran Buried in Arlington Cemetery
Funeral services for Washington Lewis, 86-year-old Civil War veteran, were held Wednesday from his late residence, 1223 Carrollburg Place, Northwest. Burial was at Arlington National Cemetery. Mr. Lewis died at Walter Reed Hospital early Saturday morning after a lingering illness. He is survived by three children, Isabel Turner and Frank Davis, of this city, and Magdalene Parker, of Chicago, and a step-son, Thomas E. Smith.
Five Suits Taken From 11th Street Tailor Shop
Forcing their way through the front door, thieves, Wednesday night, entered the tailor shop at 1647 Eleventh Street, Northwest, and stole five suits valued at $50. The proprietor of the shop, Irving Johnson, of 1501 Twelfth Street, Northwest, discovered the lost early yesterday morning when he went to open the shop.
Girl, 13, Bitten by Dog
Eldove Tobin, 13, was bitten by a dog while playing in the hallway at 1827 Fourteenth Street, Northwest. She was taken to Freedmen's Hospital for treatment and later removed to her home, 1917 Thirteenth Street. Northwest.
PULLMAN NEWS
V. A. Bunch, Reporter
D. O. Smith, the man with the ever-ready smile, has the healthy appearance of one who enjoys the deal of work he covers daily. The veteran porter. H. L. Curtis of the Jersey City District, looks fine, although Father Time is on his heels, every time he makes a trip out of the city. R. E. Miller reports home late for breakfast, his usual custom, owing to the great number of passengers on the new Pullman car of the Federal Express, running between Boston and Washington. J. E. King is still running to Atlantic City where he gets fresh fish to bring back to the Southern part of Washington, D.C., his favorite section of the city.
ALEXANDRIA NEWS
Bank Bookkeeper Gets Reward for Killing Bandit
BOLEY. Okla. (CNS)—H. C. McCormick, the quick-thinking bookkeeper of the Farmers and Merchants State Bank, who shot to death one of a trio of bank bandits, who attempted to rob the bank last week, is the hero of Boley and the entire state. Governor William H. (Alfalfa Bill) Murray was among the first to send letters of praise saying: "Congratulations for your unsurpassed courage in the face of danger. The state will pay you $1,000 reward."
Boy Friend Stabs Girl With Ice Pick 3 Times
Pearl Lee, 23, 1113 O Street, Northwest, was treated at Freedmen's Hospital early this week for
MRS. ALMA P. MURRAY
Alexandria Correspondent
MRS. KATHLEEN M. LUCKETT
Alexandria Representative
The Parent-Teacher Association met at the Parker-Gray School last Thursday. A letter was read from the school board stating the sum of $500 had been appropriated to beautify the school grounds, lay pavement and gutter, but would not be available until January. A number of books taken by parents and friends to solicit money for a hedge fund were reported, and $24.24 was taken in for the fund. About half of the books are still out and since the planting will not be done until early spring, the president wishes all who have books to continue their efforts.
The little playlet presented by some pupils of the home economic department was well done. Carolyn Hollis, who told the history of the class room activities was well chosen for the part. Cook books and samples of brown bread were distributed among those present. The association appointed Mrs. Cecelia Turner to present to the city council a petition protesting the proposed cut in the school budget. The Christmas Seal committee met with Mrs. Taylor Burke at the Parker-Gray School last Friday. Effort is being made by the committee to sell as many stamps as possible. Last year, 1931, the cash received from the Seal sale, white and colored, was $1,000.
About $25 worth of seals were sold by the colored people. Expenses, $105; $250 was sent to Richmond to be used at the two samatoriums. This left $645 to be spent in the city of Alexandria. Of that amount $265 was spent on colored patients and $355 on white. The Lookout Club will hold its regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Alma P. Murray, 124 N. West Street, Tuesday, December 13, at 7 p.m. The club is indebted to Mrs. S. P. Madden for a
three stab wounds in the back, said by police, to have been received during an altercation with her boy friend, Victor Holmes. The man is said to have stabbed her with an ice pick. Her condition was not regarded as serious.
sic and has received a scholarship to Naples, Italy. The chorus is composed of loc. Alexandrians, who have been working night and day to make the cantata long remembered by a who hear it. The football game between t
In a recent editorial published in this paper several weeks past, reference was made to Miss Isabel Miller in which it was stated that Miss Miller was dismissed at the medical school but the two physicians connected with the case were retained. A detailed investigation has since disclosed that this statement was incorrect in every particular. The Tribune apologizes to Miss Miller and regrets having published the above statement on misinformation coming from a source hitherto reliable.
basket of clothing for the needy.
The Bright Hope Tents will meet next Wednesday at the Elks' Home at 7:30 p.m.
The junior Elks' band still needs more boys from the age of 8 to 18.
John Henry Jackson is the director.
The Alexandria Lodge of Elks elected the following officers Monday night for the next term: A. H. Collins, exalted ruler; Edward Washington, esteemed leading knight; Thomas Wallace, esteemed loyal knight; Thomas Wallace, esteemed lecturing knight; J. T. Holmes, financial secretary; Edward F. Brown, treasurer; Philip Evans, esquire; and Doctors Albert Johnson, O. D. Durant and H. G. Chissell, medical advisors. The lodge donated $75.93 to the Alexandria Hospital.
Alexandria Hospital.
The Past Exalted Rulers' Council of Northern Virginia, held its last meeting of the year with the Pride of Arlington Lodge, Friday night of last week. The following officers were elected for the next term: L. H. Williams, of Alexandria, chief antier; Guy Fergerson, Halls Hill, vice chief antier; Robert I. Terrell, Alexandria, chief scribe; R. E. Smith, Arlington, second scribe; Floyd Evans, Falls Church, forester; Jas. T. Holmes, Alexandria, bursar; and T. W. Hyson, Halls Hill, third trustee.
Waldren Green, special deputy of Warrenton, preached at the meeting election.
Dorcas Temple visited the council and made many timely remarks of encouragement, after which the chief antier, L. H. Williams, called on Mr. Points, of Washington, to respond to the remarks of the temple.
The grand exalted ruler, J. Finley Wilson, also made an unexpected visit to the council. He was escorted to the platform by the chief antler who presented him the gavel to continue and close the meeting.
The grand exalted ruler and the council were escorted to the reception room by the temple, where a grand feast had been prepared.
The chief antler appointed Waldren Green as toast master, and he in turn presented the grand exalted ruler, who made the speech of the evening.
The next meeting will be in Middleburg, Va., in January. The membership at present is 101.
One hundred voices will be heard in the only Negro Spiritual cantata, "Heaven's Highway," at the Alfred Street Baptist Church, on Tuesday, December 13, at 8 p.m., under the direction of H. J. Harris, author. Mr. Harris is a graduate of the Boston Conservatory of Mu-
MERRY CHRISTMAS
1932
Wistful and still, on porches, row on row,
We wait and hope and watch life hurry past;
And it is one with us when shadows fall,
And all the same when morning comes at last.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This poem was written expressly for the Christmas sale sale by Victor Croley, who was confined to bed with tuberculosis six years. "After a half-starvation, I was written," he wrote, "was tortured by envy of others' happiness and the ambition to become rich enough to have a vacation, so that after working beyond my strength all day I went to public libraries and at night schools. I was kicked out because I
At one time as got a job singing in a cheap movie show so he could go to high school during the day. When he was eighteen years old weighed under 180 pounds, and had already entered a professional as an advertising writer in New York. Later he was discovered to have a far larger case of tuberculosis. Today, thanks to modern medicine, and is looking forward to a second and happier start in life. "My case should be a warning to everyone who does not know enough to take care of himself," says Mr. Crostie. "Why cannot be taught the need of good health habits against tuberculosis? I hate to think that you should have to go through what
CORRECTION
124 N. West St.
Phone: Alex. 817-W.
821 Queen St.
Phone: Alex. 558
sic and has received a scholarship to Naples, Italy.
The chorus is composed of local Alexandrians, who have been working night and day to make this cantata long remembered by all who hear it.
The football game between the Mohawks and Roamers, at Baggett Field last Sunday was witnessed by a record crowd of Alexandrians and a number of folks from Washington. The game was won by the Roamers, 12 to 0, but was well contested and proved exciting to the large crowd.
The officials were Dr. Charles West, of Washington and Jefferson College; and William Bell, of Ohio State University, assistant coach at Howard University; Sallie Hall, quarterback at Howard University; and Francis Gregory, of Dunbar High School.
Both teams are planning to bring other outstanding clubs here shortly. The Pleasant Plains Club, which is expected to play in Alexandria, Saturday, the 10th, was the guest, Sunday, of both clubs.
If the plans which are on the way materializes, the Olympic Theatre will re-open sometime in the near future. Julian Dove, former superintendent and chief operator, is putting forth effort to foster the movement.
A number of citizens went to the public meeting of the city council to protest the proposed $26,000 cut in the school budget. Henry Brooks represented the Citizens' Association, and Mrs. Cecilia Turner the Parent-Teacher Association. The city council will take the matter under consideration.
The Mol Ears Hood Saving Club met at the home of Miss Elizabeth Taylor on Monday, December 5. Eight members were present. Miss Elizabeth Taylor is president, Miss Lillian Bradford, secretary, and Miss Millie Jackson, treasurer. Friday night, Mrs. Green, of Washington, D.C., will preach at the Beulah Baptist Church. Sunday, December 11, is rally day. Sunday, at the 11 a.m. service, the Rev. T. N. Austain will preach on "The Authority of the Preacher." Text, Mark 3:14. Sunday afternoon he will preach at the Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Arlington. At 7:30, the Rev. F. E. Hearns, pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, and member of Columbia Lodge of Elks of Washington, D.C., will deliver the memorial address to the Alexandria Lodge of Elks.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Wanzer, and daughter, Sallye, of Washington, D.C., and Miss Mildred Ferries, of Washington, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Claybourne, of North Alfred Street.
Among the Sick
Mrs. Lavenia Jackson, of Arlington, is a patient at the Alexandria Hospital.
Mrs. Ellen White continues to improve.
Mrs. Edmonia Islar continues ill at her home on Duke Street.
Mrs. Lottie White, who has been ill for several weeks, is much better. Mrs. Julia Washington is confined to her home by illness.
Mrs. Anna Gains continues on the sick list.
George Turner is sick at his home on N. Payne and Prince Streets.
BEN EDW. WALKER, Representative Clarendon, 6284. Nau. Vau. CARRLES R. LEE, Asst. Representative East Arlington, Va.
BURKE, VA. Little Zion Baptist Church Sunday school had for its subject last Sunday, "Playing Fair With Other Races." Over two hours were spent discussing the lesson. The principal speakers were the superintendent, Jesse W. Wright, the ex-superintendent, the
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Sunday (Dawn Dance) January 1
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pastor's wife, the pastor and Jerry Hamilton.
The Sunday school voted to send Jesse W. Wright as a delegate to attend the Fairfax Sunday School Union which will be held at Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, Fairfax Court House, Fairfax, Va., Sunday.
The morning service subject was "The Christian's Calling." Miss Ruby Hargrove, of East Arlington, and BenEdw. Walker of Nauck were Sunday school and church visitors.
Sunday being a bench rally day, the Rev. J. E. Green, pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Arlington, with quite a few of his members rendered service in the afternoon. His theme was "Faith in God." A large crowd attended and the rally turned out to be very successful. Progress is being made remodeling Little Zion Baptist Church. The pastor, the Rev. Carter Taylor, is doing the work with his members who raised the church and placed a basement beneath it. After having services in the school house for several weeks, they re-entered the church Sunday,
At the morning service of St. John Baptist Church, the visiting minister, the Rev. Samuel Brown, preached from Ezekiel 37:4, "O ye dry bones, hear the word of the Lord." His subject was "What Makes a Dead Church?" He stated that the people who do not obey the word of God help to make a dead church. Rev. Brown then called attention to Israel, whose people were chosen by God. However, they refused to be led and guided by Almighty God and so became spiritually dead.
The Rev. Sylvester Walker, pastor, called attention to the stamps that are being sent out by the Arlington County Tuberculosis Committee and urged that each one buy as many stamps as possible to help wipe out this disease.
Mrs. Hattie Middleton, of Mt. Zion Church, and J. E. Wilks were visitors present in the morning.
Mrs. Hixie Goldman and Mrs. Jas. Baker, old and highly respected members, who have not been out for some time, were at services Sunday.
---
HALLS HILL. In the absence of the pastor, the Rev. N. R. Richardson, of Mt. Salvation Baptist Church, the Rev. Phillip Higgins, assistant pastor of Mt. Salvation Church, preached at 11 a.m., and 8 p.m.
Rev. J. D. Fortune, a former church pastor; Mrs. Edith Chinn, and Mrs. Viola Bolden were church visitors.
A large gathering was present to witness the presentation of the diamond tee pumper given the volunteer fire department of Halls Hill by the county. Roy S. Braden, the county manager, accompanied by Harry A. Fellows, chairman of the county board; Mr. Meadows, engineer, and Mr. Waltham, mechanic, made speeches of presentation.
F. W. Ewell, president of this company, introduced Chief Robert Branch, who made the acceptance speech and introduced the active members of the company, namely, Robert Nickerson, Roscoe Richardson, Nathaniel Springgs, Robert Evan, Horace Chinn, Herman Nickerson, and Sam Weeden.
T. W. Hyson was master of ceremonies. Miss Vandoran Moten played the piano.
Friday, the usher board, under the direction of Mrs. Julia Rickert, had the Boy Scouts of Arlington to entertain an audience with songs, speeches and stunts.
Scout routine was shown in the use of lighted candles, tying knots, carrying sick patients and in other ways. Miss Bessie Wright sang a solo. Miss Hattie Tyler recited, and Mr. Alexander made some remarks. The scout master, Glover, was master of ceremonies. Miss Vandoran Moten was at the piano. Jessie Pollard is assistant Scout Master.
The Elks' organization is asking the community to observe health week. They are working to better this community, using as a slogan, "Clean up, paint up, live up." G. W. Ferguson, E. R. and C. H. Chinn
are on the committee.
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Ewell have as house guest Miss Chase, of Baltimore.
*****
EAST ARLINGTON. The Rev.
G. Z. Brown, of Mt. Zion Baptist Church, preached at the morning service, taking his text from St. Luke 23:34, "Then said Jesus, Father forgive them: for they know not what they do. And they parted his raiment, and cast lots."
Subject, "Jesus and Forgiveness."
NOTICE
Please get your classified ads into the office by Thursday, 10 a.m. Ads will not be taken by telephone.
FURNISHED ROOMS
ONE ROOM with bath for couple or one or two mem. 2008 Fifth St., n.w.
2116 FLAGLER PL., N.W.—Large front room; two or three gentlemen or couple. Reasonable.
ROOM AND BOARD, children or adults. Near schools; a.m.i.; refined neighborhood. 555 23rd Pl. n.e.
O STREET, N.W., 933—Small furnished, heated rooms and bath; also lodging. Men only.
NEATLY FURNISHED FRONT room. Quiet family. Gentleman or man and wife. All modern improvements; convenient to two car lines. 1431 Q St., n.w. No. 4915. Reduced rent.
LARGE FRONT ROOM, nicely furnished in quiet home, with a.m.i. No children. Call Atlantic 5505 after 5 p.m.
ONE LARGE COMFORTABLE front room, with entire use of kitchen. 1107 Kenyon St., n.w.
FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED
LARGE COMFORTABLE FRONT room for refined couple. Rent reduced. North 1955.
LARGE ROOM in high class modern apartment house. Decatur 4431.
LARGE FRONT ROOM; a.m.l. Working couple preferred; use of kitchen. 1336 13th St., n.w.
TWO-ROOM APARTMENT for rent. Heat, electricity and gas furnished, reasonable. 1408 Corcoran St., n.w.
1548 NEW JERSEY AVE., N.W.
Large 5-room and bath apartment; electric lights, arcola heat. Adults.
THREE LARGE ROOMS, private bath; a.m.i. Refined couple. No children. $45.00. Phone, North 2861. 1612 T St., n.w.
APARTMENT—Two rooms, comfortable, newly decorated, electric, gas furnished; no children. Very reasonable to right party. 1349 V St., n.w.
APARTMENTS
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FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED
apartment; two or three rooms
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phone North 1740.
FOR SALE
SMALL LUNCH ROOM, doing fine business, for sale cheap. Party leaving city. 902 Florida Avenue, northwest.
HOUSE FOR RENT
FOR RENT-A very desirable suburban home situated in the Northeast section, near highway, and car line. Six rooms, front and back porches, in good condition; hot water heat, electric light. Rent reduced to $30. Call North 0504.
D DATES
THE NEWLY DECORATED
FIFTEEN
There will be an all day rally at the church, Sunday. The Rev. N. Austin, of Alexandria, will be one of the speakers. There will be three services held.
The funeral of Mrs. Mary Jane Brown was held at the church on Tuesday. The Rev. James E. Green, pastor, officiated. Mrs. Brown died Friday at her residence, 2517 1 Street, Northwest. She is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Lucy Cook and Mrs. Margaret Bruggess, and other relatives.
BOOTH IN BEAUTY SHOPPE for rent, reasonable. Phone, Decatur 3172, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
HOUSE FOR SALE
SLX_ROOMS and reception hall,
hardwood floors, enclosed back
porch; a.m.i.; garage, at sacrifice.
Can be seen after 5 p.m., 1118
Park Rd., n.w.
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs. Hattie Johnson Froe, acknowledges with appreciation the sympathy expressed, the floral designs given, the many kindnesses and services rendered in her recent bereavement.
IN MEMORIAM
BOOTH, MARY—In sacred memory of my dear friend, Mary Booth, who departed this life one year ago today, December 8, 1931. "To love is to be remembered."
BEAUTY SHOPPE, beautifully decorated, in splendid location, near corner Ninth and U Sts. This shop has been established several years, has a good business, modern electrical equipment, low rent, heat furnished. Easy terms to right party. Address Box 33, Tribune Office.
LEGAL NOTICES
I. MELENDEZ KING, R. B. JACKSON,
Attorneys
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT
of Columbia. Holding Probate Court.
No. 44,145. Administration. This is to
Give Notice: That the subcriber, of the
District of Columbia, is the owner of the
District of Columbia. Letters of Administration on the estate of Alnaworth S. Rucker, late of the
District of Columbia, deceased. All persons
having claims against the deceased are
hereby warned to exercise their legal
authenticated, to the subcriber, on or before
the 16th day of November, A.D. 1932; other
whether they may by law be excluded from
all benefit of said estate. Given under my
hand this 16th day of November, Rentree
B. Rentree, 1924. 16th day of November, N.W.
Victor S. Merach. Deputy Register
of Wills for the District of Columbia,
Clerk of the Probate Court.
GEORGE A. PARKER, Attorney
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT
of Columbia. Holding Probate Court.
Estate of Pannie Grandy, named
Estate of Pannie Grandy, named
Application having been made herein for
probate of the last will and testament of said
deceased, and for letters testamentary on
said estate, and for the probate of the
first day of December, A.D.
1932, that Georgia Moore, 610 West Eighth
Street, Cincinnati, Ohio, and the unknown
heirs at law and next of kin, if any, and
all others concerned with the probate.
10th day of January, A.D. 1932, at 10 o'clock A.M., to show
cause why such application should not be
granted. Let notice hereof be published in
the Washington tribune, once in each of
three successive weeks before the return
day herein mentioned, the first publication
to be not less than thirty days before said
return day. The Probate Court, Theodore
Cogwell, Register of
Wills for the District of Columbia, Clerk
of the Probate Court.
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Social
Discriminators Entertain Cheri Mi and Azure Clubs
The Discriminators entertained the ladies of the Cheri Mi Club and De Azure Club at the home of William L. Patrick, 1021 Columbia Road, Northwest, Monday. Bridge and whist were played and Mrs. Louise Patrick served a repast.
As an added attraction a novelty dance act was presented by Miss Sylvia Carter and Jessie John. Punch was continually served throughout the evening and dancing followed the card playing.
Guests present were Mesdames Edna Ross, Arizona Lane and Gladys Lloyd, and Misses Adella Greene, Anna Mae Williams and Wilhelmina Johnson, members of the Cheri Mi Club.
Mesdames Evelyn Garland, Naomi Newman and A. Tylee and Miss Ruth Arner, members of De Azure Club, and Misses Florence Stewart, Bertha Williams and Sylvia Carter, Mrs. Myrtle Bush and Messrs. Bell Reeves, Jessie Johnson and Howard Scott.
The Discriminators are Messrs. Leon Calhoun, T.odore Matthews, Howard Watts, Peter Hawkins, Walter C. Hughes, Eugene Randall and William Patrick.
BEAUTICIAN RETURNS
Mrs. George Kays, formerly of the Ka Mara Beauty Parlor, has
Barry-Pate Specials
1930 Chevrolet Coach
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1929 Oakland Coupe
$195
1930 Chevrolet Sport Coupe
$295
1931 Chevrolet Spec. Sedan
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1931 Chevrolet Sport Coupe
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1932 Chevrolet Coach
$425
1931 Chevrolet Coach
$325
12
returned to the city after a three-year absence and will be located at 1945 Vermont Avenue, Northwest. During her period of absence she has visited Chicago, New York and parts of Florida.
ENTERTAINS JACKSONVILLE COUPLE AT DINNER PARTY
The Rev. and Mrs. W. S. French, of 1958 Second Street, Northwest, entertained at dinner Wednesday in honor of Mr. and Mrs. George Lofton, of Jacksonville, Florida. Covers were laid for nine.
Those present were Mr. and Mrs. George Lofton, Mr. and Mrs. John Lankford, Medames Ella Leachmon, Mamie Dorrell, and Ella Lofton and Mr. and Mrs. French.
MISS BERTHA HUGHES ENTERTAINED WHILE IN CITY
Miss Bertha M. Hughes, of Media, Pa., spent a week in Washington visiting the Rev. and Mrs. Samuel C. Windsor. While in the city she was entertained at lunch on Mrs. Melvin K. Acty at her home, 311 U Street, Northwest, and by Mrs. Emmit D. Preston 1715 S Street, Northwest. Miss Hughes visited several of the leading churches also.
MR. AND MRS. LAWS HOSTS TO BALTIMORE VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. J. Laws, of 423 First Street, Southeast, entertained Dr. and Mrs. W. Moore and Attorney and Mrs. J. Davis, of Baltimore at dinner Saturday. Bridge followed the dinnir.
GIRL FRIENDS DANCE
The Girls Friends Society of the Saint George's Chapel was hostesses at a dance at Thurston's Cafeterian Saturday. Miss Louise Taliaferro, president of the club, was official hostess.
PERSONALS
Mrs. Alice Burnett Taylor, of Detroit, Mich., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Dorothy Porter, 654 Girard Street, Northwest.
Mrs. W. Thomas is at home after a successful operation at Freedmen's Hospital.
Mrs. A. L. Ballard, the widow of the late Pittsburgh undertaker, is visiting her cousin, Mrs. G. B. Withrow, of 1425 Fifth Street, Northwest.
Mrs. L. A. Pinkney, of 2007 Thirteenth Street, Northwest, has moved to 1228 U Street, Northwest.
BETTER BARGAINS
'32 Ford V-8 Roadster..... $479
'32 Ford Coach..... 439
'31 Ford Phaeton. (radio)..... 259
'30 Ford Sport Roadster..... 99
'28 Chrysler Coach..... 109
'26 Buick Sedan..... 79
'29 Ford Phaeton..... 109
'28 Graham Sedan..... 99
'30 Ford Tudor..... 189
'31 Ford De Luxe Roadster
(2 fender wells, trunk
rack)..... 239
'29 Ford Sport Roadster..... 99
'28 Ford Sport Coupe..... 89
Mrs. Mary E. Minney, of 2531 Georgia Avenue, Northwest, who has been ill for sometimes is now able to be out again.
Mr. and Mrs. Emory B. Smith and their son Emory were recent visitors in New York City.
Mr. William Sharp spent a few days in Cincinnati, Ohio, his former home visiting with relatives and friends.
Mrs. Alice Young, of Baltimore, spent the past week-end in the city visiting with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Wadill and baby daughter, Shirley Elaine, spent the past week-end in Richmond, Virginia visiting relatives and friends.
Last Sunday afternoon the Muso-Lit Public Forum held a special meeting in the interest of organizing the Negro grocery merchants in the District.
The meeting was addressed by James A. Jackson, of the Department of Commerce; A. L. Taylor, director of the forum, and Theodore S. Botts, vice-president of The Progressive Consumera' League.
Mr. Jackson presented facts and figures on the success of organized Negro business groups in various parts of the country and pointly showed the feasibility of such organized groups in the District.
Mr. Taylor stated that in the immediate Northwest section of the city there are 70,000 Negroes, a sufficient number to easily support 80 grocery stores, yet, we have only six.
Mr. Botts pointed out that the selling of food products is the idea emerged from and was first successfully operated in the grocery business.
MASONIC NOTES
The annual session of the Most Worshipful Acacia Grand Lodge will be held on Wednesday night, December 14, at which time officers will be elected for the year of 1933. Grand Master Frank D. McKinney will deliver his annual address, summing up the accomplishments of the craft for the year and reports will be received from the grand secretary and the grand treasurer.
The meeting last Sunday of the masters' and matrons' association was well attended. These meetings on the first and third Sundays of each month have proved very helpful in building up a fine spirit in the order. During the past two months they have presented some excellent speakers, prominent among them being Prof. Bardelen, of Howard University, the Rev. Boaz A. Harris, who has spent 11 years as superintendent of missions in Haiti, Past Grand Master John Edgar Smith, and others.
The Grand Courts of Cyrenes held their annual session at the temple Wednesday, which was largely attended.
Saturday night, the final of a series of restoration banquets was held in the banquet hall of the temple. This affair was put over with a bang, due to the business-like handling by James A. Jackson (Billboard Jackson) who was toastmaster for the occasion.
The principal speeches were made by the Rev. A. F. Elmes, of the People's Congregational Church, Col. West A. Hamilton, John W. Smith, president of the B.Y.P. U. of Metropolitan Baptist Church, and Grand Master Frank McKinney.
The musical numbers were furnished by the Acacia Glee Club, under the direction of the leader, Past Master William A. Clayton, of Social Lodge.
OSCE MADDEN
Furnace and Stove Repairing
ROOFING
Personal Service
1753 T St., N.W. Pot. 5956
LUCKY TIMES
INCENSE BLOCKS
NUMBERS APPEAR IN THE ASHES
25c A Box
A New Supply on Hand at the
OLD INDIAN HERB STORE
1728 7th St., N.W.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. DECEMBER 9, 1932
THE MURRAY CASINO
Depression Prices For Dates
DEANWOOD NEWS
V. A. Bunch, Reporter
Mrs. G. A. A. Pinn, of 4720 Sheriff Road, Northeast, is out again, after a serious illness of several weeks.
The Randall M.E. Epworth League, under the direction of Miss Estella Crewe, rendered an interesting program last Sunday from 6 to 7:30, when the subject "Prohibition," was discussed by the Rev. J. Jones, and Rozier W. Gaddis, of Alexandria, Va.
The joint revival services, sponsored by the Rev. George W. Brent, of First Baptist Church, Deanwood, seems to have awakened a goodly portion of this neighborhood. Participants in the revival are hoping that before it closes, every Protestant church in this vicinity, will join the union.
Hundreds of Alabama Prisoners Paroled for 45- Day Christmas Vacation
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (CNS)—Many Negro prisoners are included in the forty-five day Christmas vacation from prison that has been declared by Governor B. M. Miller for the 500 most obedient and diligent long termers among Alabama's 5,560 convicts. The governor went one up on Santa Claus last week when he began to hand out Christmas gifts providing for release of the prisoners from December 1 to January 15. It was the largest number of Christmas paroles and the longest ones ever granted in Alabama. For years Alabama has granted Christmas paroles to model prisoners. Officials said today that few had violated the confidence placed in them.
Voodoo Doctor Treated Miseries With Herbs
Eugene Harvey, 54 years old, was convicted last week of "failing to have a license to drive away evil spirits with luck charms and curing the 'miseries' with strange concoctions."
Arrested last August after he had treated three women with his strange liquid potions for "the miseries," his remedies when analyzed by Dr. D. A. Donaldson, police chemist, showed that one consisted of quahua of herb, another used as a lotion contained turpentine and soap, and still another had rum extract as a basis.
"Doctor" Harvey told the jury that he had learned to cure "the miseries" from his ancestors of the old South, who in turn had learned from Indians how to concoct liquids from herbs which had great curing powers.
Edward Kennedy (Duke) Ellington, the famous musician, received the 32nd degree at a special rendezvous of Jonathan Davis Consistory No. 1, 32nd degree, Wednesday night, December 7.
answers this question by providing Perpetual Care. Free transportation will be furnished prospective purchasers for inspection without obligation. All Undertakers are its representative. PUBLIC BUS SERVICE.
J. F. HOLLAND ILL
J. F. Holland, of 1919 Eleventh Street, Northwest, has been confined to his home with illness for the past ten days. Mr. Holland is a real estate dealer with offices in the Southern Aid Building at Seventh and T Streets, Northwest.
Negr Schools Give Tribute To State Educators
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (CNS)
—Two veteran North Carolina educators were honored when "J. Y. Joyner Hall" and "N.C. Newbold Training School" were dedicated at the North Carolina State Normal School for Negro Students. Dr. J. Y. Joyner, who was state superintendent of public instruction when Negro education had its real beginning in North Carolina, and Dr. Newbold, head of the state education department's division of Negro education, were the men so honored at the dedication.
Knights of Pythias Grand Lodge Files Bankruptcy
ATLANTA, Ga. (CNS)—The grand lodge, Knights of Pythias, of North America. South America. Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia, an organization working in the jurisdiction of Georgia and maintaining offices at $277\frac{1}{2}$ Auburn Avenue, has filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in federal district court. The petition which was filed without schedule was brought by S. A. Jones as grand chancellor. A petition for receiver was also filed, but none appointed as yet.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.—Dr. George R. Ferguson, who has been a practicing physician for nearly twenty-five years, died at his residence here on Wednesday morning after a long illness.
He leaves a widow, a son, Geo R., Jr., and a daughter, Louise. He is survived also by his father, Wm B. Ferguson, and a brother, Dr. David A. Ferguson, a prominent dentist, both of Richmond, Va. A brother, Wylie, resides in New York; a sister, Mrs. Murrell, in Cleveland; and another sister, Mrs. Minnie Reid, in Richmond.
The funeral will be conducted today (Friday) in Charlottesville.
Convene Here
Washington has been selected as the convention city for the gathering of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity during the Christmas holidays.
Not since 1912 has Washington been host to a convention of this, the oldest of Negro college fraternities. Yet it was here that the second chapter, Beta, was organized in 1907 by Eugene Knickle Jones, after the establishment of the mother chapter at Cornell University in 1906.
Beta Chapter, the local undergraduate chapter, and Mu Lambda, the graduate organization, will be hosts to the eastern regional convention of Alpha Phi Alpha which convenes in Washington December 29 and 30.
Final details of the convention program have not yet been completed but it is generally known that there is to be a public meeting, a smoker, a banquet and a formal dance. Several local organizations among other fraternities and sororities are planning to entertain the visiting delegates. It is expected that this entertainment will probably be confined to sightseeing trips and dances.
Dr. Charles H. Wesley, of Howard University, the general president, will be the official head of the convention although the active administration will fall under the jurisdiction of the regional vice president, Mr. Henderson, of Union University at Richmond.
B. V. Lawson of Beta chapter has been named chairman of the general committee in charge of the entire program, Walter R. Thornhill is the secretary.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
RANDALL-BELL - Joseph, 42, to Marie,
41. Rev. E. A. Christian.
GREENEEL-DG-ON - Robert, 22, to
Steen, T. D. Johnson.
STEEN-JOHN5 - William, 23, to Anna L.,
20. Rev. E. A. Christian.
BANKS-STEWART - Marahall, 23, to Em-
mary.
CABBELL-MUCHETTA - Ralph, 19, to
Dorothy, 17. Rev. B. A. Perry.
EDWARDS-JOHNSON - Dennis, 65, to
Mary A. 50. Rev. W. A. Taylor.
SCOTTY - Joseph, 28, to Mamie, 21.
L. Stewart.
DUVALL-SAUNDERS - Hoptius, 25, to
Bosa, 20. Rev. C. T. Murray.
SLAUGHTER-MORIS - Fred, 30, to Har-
PAULINE-ANTHONY - Hezekiah, 41, to
Viola, 28. Rev. W. L. Washington.
DEATHS
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Copyright by Madame Harrison-Astor for the United States and Canada. Reproduction, in whole or part, expressly forbidden. MADAME HARRISON-ASTOR PHYCHIC PALMIST
I do hereby solemnly swear to make no charge 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 action of anyone, even though miles away. I further guarantee and promise to make you no charge unless you find me superior to any other palmist you ever consulted. There is no hope so fond or wish so great that I can not accomplish for you. I guarantee success where all other palmists fail.
I give never-failing advice upon all matters of life, such as love, courtship, marriage, divorce, business, law suits, speculation and transactions of all kinds. I never fail to reunite the separated, cause speedy and happy marriages, overcome enemies, rivals, lovers' quarrels, evil habits, stumbling blocks and bad luck of all kinds.
I lift you out of your sorrow and trouble and start you on the path to happiness and prosperity, there is no heart so sad or home so dreary that I can not bring sunshine to, in fact, no matter what may be your hopes, fear or ambition. I do guarantee to tell it all before you utter a word to me, and after I am finished if you are not absolutely satisfied and if I do not faithfully fulfill every word and claim above, then you pay me not a penny and I do herewith sign my name to this statement.
MADAME HARRISON-ASTOR.
No fortune telling, my work is mentalism. All business confidential.
Can be seen from 1 p.m. till 8 p.m. excepting Sundays.
Madame Harrison-Astor prides herself of the fact of being the only palmist 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 Avenue, N. W. Second Floor
Next Door to Raleigh Hotel ... Washington, D.C.
FULL LIFE REAPINGS $1.00
Call Potomac 1667 or 1668
William Davis, 76, Emergency Hosp.
Louise Rawsle, 71, 2121 N. St. n.w.
Mary F. Young, 66, Garfield Hosp.
Charles D. Vaughan, 40, Walter Reed Gen.
Hosp.
Charles Foster, 36, Gallinger Hosp.
Walter Liggin, 29, 2424 17th St. n.w.
Lottie B. Hawks, 27, Gallinger Hosp.
Queen M. McQueen, 20, Gallinger Hosp.
mary J. Brown, 7, 2517 I St. n.w.
amuel C. Craig, 29, 2424 17th St.
A. Johnson, 51, 2411 Banning Rd. n.c.
mary Harris, 44, Emergency Hosp.
Unknown, about 40, Found in Potomac
River.
George W. Powell, 38, Walter Reed Gen.
Hosp.
Hazel Hawkins, 8 rows, Chickens's Hosp.
Chuck Thornton, 8 men, Chickens's Hosp.
Infant of Susie Craven, 9 days, Freedress's Hosp.
Lilly Smith, 64, 1245 Maryland Ave.,
Henrietta Blackwell, 54, Stoddard Baptist
Edith Nickens, 7 mos. Gallinger Hosp.
Leroy Harvey, 75, 1414 Corchor St. n, wn.
John M. Swann, 71. Casualty Hosp.
Robert Diggs, 66, 1250 Third St. s, w.
Cleo Smith, 58. Stoddard Baptist Home.
Edward A. Williams, 55, 1514 18th St.
Worth Walston, 41, Tuberculosis Hosp.
Lorenzo Walston, 41, Tuberculosis Hosp.
Chelsea Glasser, 35, N.e. Hosp.
Chelsea Glasser, 35, District Jail.
Alberta James, 35, Freedmen's Hosp.
Wm. M. Scott, 29, R. I. Ave., n.w.
Ernest Ewoll 20, Emergency Hosp.
Ernest Ewoll 20, Emergency Hosp.
Cecelia Thomas, 75, 1335 5th St., n.w.
Martha Grant, 70, 324 Bryant St., n.w.
Mary J. Brodis, 64, 47 R St., n.w.
Maratha Booth, 58, Swan St., n.w.
Maratha Booth, 58, Swan St., n.w.
Alice Bundy, 54, Gallinger Hosp.
Randolph Powell, 49, St. Elizabeth's Hosp.
Frank W. Travis, 46, 1817 1 T St., n.w.
Frank W. Travis, 46, 1817 1 T St., n.w.
Barbara Clark, 66, 4816 Ave.ne, n.e.
James Abe Jackson, 1, St. Elizabeth's Hosp.
Harry Simm, 48, Gallinger Hosp.
Lucy Clark, 47, 2025 Vermont Ave., n.w.
Lucy Clark, 47, 2025 Vermont Ave., n.w.
Monroe Spence, 40, Emergency Hosp.
Julia Olson, 32, Gallinger Hosp.
Louise Boone, 20, Gallinger Hosp.
Harry Wall, 74, Home for Aged and Infirm.
Harry Wall, 74, Home for Aged and Infirm.
Rose White, 60, Gallinger Hosp.
Rachael Miller, 53, 1711 7th St., n.w.
Luvinia May, 52, Casualty Hosp.
Henry Moore, 39, Casualty Hosp.
Amanda Booze, 39, 467 School St., n.w.
Pearl Grimes, 37, 1249 6% St., n.w.
William Queen, 36, 1239% 6th St., n.w.
Harry Toliver, 3 mons, Children's Hop.
Ulysses Dixon, 11 days, 3235 Prospect Ave.
n.w.
Intr. to Leon and Naomi Davis, 1 day,
Gallinger, Hop.
BIRTHS
Richard and Marie McDaniel, girl
Arthur G. and Irene Colbert, girl
Samuel and Cora McDaniel, girl
Gregory and Caroline G.,
Raymond and Charlotte Johnson, girl
Colbert and Helen Brandon, girl
James and Matilda Brandon, girl
Emma and Ann Smith, girl
Spencer and a Mary Claggett, girl
Robert C. and Cleeminta Henry, girl
John and Bessie Waller, girl
James and Milred Millard, girl
Joseph Lloyd
Jarnest H. and Margaret Fravier, boy
irving and Dosher Croom, boy
James and Bessie Tymes, boy
James and the Proctor, girl
Wm. and Oedal Smith, boy
Arthur C. and Aurg Chichester, girl
John L. and Lottie Green, girl
William and Lottie Norman, girl
Samud and Mary Williams, girl
Samud and Mary Williams, girl
Jacob and Ruth Robinson, boy
Samuel C. and Florence Scott, boy
Andrew and Cleo Turner, boy
Charles and Leona Coleman, girl
Benjamil and Florence Slaughter,
John T. and Genevere Scott, boy
Theodore and Elsa Maynard, girl
James and Clara Tasker, girl
Wood and Melissa Brown, girl
Robin H. and Melissa Brown, girl
William H. and Cornelia Digga, girl
Lester and Lula McCrey, girl
James and Helen Taylor, girl
Newton and Josephine Smith, girl
Althea and Sarah Layler, girl
Ralph A. and Elizabeth Briscoe, girl
William and Mary Diggs, boy
Emil and Mary Howard, boy
Emil and Mary Anne Nannell, boy
John and Rena Layler, girl
Ralph A. and Elizabeth Briscoe, girl
William and Mary Diggs, boy
Emil and Mary Howard, boy
Emil and Mary Anne Nannell, boy
John and Rena Layler, girl
Edgar R. and Dorothy Beckley, boy
Chas. W. and Minnie V. Simus, girl
Robert W. and Emma T. Towles, girl
Wayland and Lillian Wilson, girl
John and Rena Layler, boy
Thomas R. and Charlotte Ellenve, boy
Theodore R. and Elise Vowels, boy
Winston and Charlotte A. Brown, boy
Wilbur and Marie V. Green, boy
Raymond C. and Loutie Stevenson, boy
Janes and Naney Kiner, girl
TWO
THREE NEGRO HEROES LIVE IN THIS CITY
Lieut. Thomas Edward Jones, Med. Corps; Ira M. Payne, Sergt., Co. A, 372nd Inf.; and Chas. G. Young, Lieut., 368th Inf., Are Cited.
Under the heading "District Heroes in the War," he was beaten by L. E. Jacquel and now running in the Evening Star of this city, the following articles have appeared recently.
Lieut. Thos. E. Jones
As recorded in the official citation, Thomas Edward Jones, first lieutenant, Medical Corps, attached to the 368th Infantry, 92d Division, American Expeditionary Force, was awarded the Croix de Guerre of France for heroic gallantry in action with the enemy near Binarville, France, September 27, 1918. Lieut. Jones went out into an open area, subject to the direct and intense machine-gun fire, to care for a wounded soldier who was being carried by another officer. While he was dressing the wounds of this soldier, exposed to the fire of the enemy gunners, a machine-gun bullet passed between his arms and chest and killed another soldier standing a few yards distant. The courage and scorn of danger displayed by Lieut. Jones inspired all the men who witnessed his fearless ministrations to the disabled. Residence at appointment, District of Columbia.
Dr. Jones, later promoted to captain, is now resident assistant surgeon at Freedmen's Hospital. His home is at 1505 Twelfth Street, Northwest.
Sergt. Ira M. Payne
As recorded in the official citation, Ira M. Payne (Army sergey No. 2335281), sergeant, Company A. 372d Infantry, 93d Division, American Expeditionary Force, was awarded the Croix de Guerre of France for heroic gallantry in action with the enemy near Sechault, France, September 29, 1918. Having found, hidden in a clump of bushes, a machine; gun which was causing serious casualties to his company, Sergt. Payne crept up, killed the gunners with his rifle and captured the gun, which he promptly turned on the enemy. By his gallant fearlessness and heroism this soldier prevented further loss of life among his comrades. Residence at enlistment, District of Columbia.
Sergt, Payne is now a stationary fireman in the District public school system and lives at 323 Fifteenth Street, Southeast.
As recorded in the official citation, Charles G. Young, first lieutenant, 368th Infantry, 92d Division, American Expeditionary Force, was awarded the Croix de Guerre of France for heroic gallantry in action with the enemy near Binarville, France, September 27 and 28, 1918. While in command of a scouting patrol he was twice severely wounded by shell fire, but he refused medical attention and remained with his men, helping to dress their wounds and evacuate his own wounded during the entire night, and holding firmly to his exposed position, covering the right flank of his battalion. His self-sacrificial conduct and exemplary bravery inspired all the men of his command. Residence at appointment, District of Columbia.
Lieut. Young continues to hold his commission in the Infantry Reserve. He lives at 1812 Rosedale Street, Northeast, and is employed in the Bureau of Public Health.
Boys Arrested Following Fight With 3 White Men
Four boys, the youngest 11 years old, were arrested and held for investigation following the stabbing of three white persons during a fight in the 100 block of Bates Street last week.
The boys held are Edward Thomas Dickerson, 20, 1300 block of Eleventh Street; Truit Benson, 11, 1500 block of Eleventh Street; Herbert Dickerson, 16, and Benjamin Dickerson, 18, both of the Eleventh Street address.
The white men who claimed injury during the fight were: Jack Gerlacher, 19, 5200 block of Conduit Road; Alexander Ramsey, 20, 200 block of Q Street; and Morris Greenblat, 40, 100 block of Bates Street.
YOUTH HELD
(Continued from page 1)
clothes, several overcaps and ladies' dresses were recovered from the pawn-broking establishment on Seventh Street where the three "fences" were arrested.
According to Assistant United States Attorney Michael F. Keogh, Dorsey spent two years at Occoquan for housebreaking and served time in the National Training School for Boys. Among the homes he robbed was that of Mal. Gen. Stephen I. Fiqua, United States Army, chief of Infantry.
Ima: "Leonard's new Ford is very cute.
Lenora: "Yes. You ought to see it play dead on a lonely road."
I.L.D. Martyr and Scottsboro Mother
THE WORLD'S FIRST WOMEN'S FOUNDATION
The late J. LOUISE ENGDAHL, with MRS. ADA WRIGHT
J. Louis Engdahl, national chairman of the International Labor Defense, is shown here with Mrs. Ada Wright, mother of two of the Scottsdale boys, on the eve of their departure, last spring, on the six-month tour of Europe on behalf of the Scottsdale boys. They addressed the workers of sixteen countries, and successfully mobilized hundreds of thousands to join in the mass protest against the Scottsdale lynch verdicts.
Hounded by the police at the request of the American State Department, expelled from three countries, and constantly harrassed by agents of American imperialism, Engdahl was broken in health in his campaign for the freedom of the Scottsdale boys. He died in Moscow, November 21. His ashes will be brought back to the United States by the I.L.D. delegation, of which he was a member, to the World Congress of the International Red Aid.
A mass memorial meeting for Engdahl will be held in the Bronx Coliseum, New York, December 18. Mrs. Wright will be among the speakers. Similar memorial meetings will also be held in Detroit, Chicago, Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Birmingham, Atlanta, San Francisco and Los Angeles.
YOU GET
$15 IN CASH
FREE
FOR CHRISTMAS
SEE PAGE 8
FOR DETAILS
PHYSICIAN HELD ON SUSPICION OF STOLEN GOODS
LOS ANGELES.—Dr. John G. Selby, 47, well known physician and surgeon and owner of a drug store at Jefferson and Griffith Avenues, was booked at the Newton Street Police Station on suspicion of receiving stolen goods. At the time, the pharmacist, Oscar Stokes, 31, employed at the store by Dr. Selby, was booked on the same charge. These men were held by the authorities on the purported confession of Ortigo Armendez, Mexican youth, who was apprehended in the act of breaking into and removing cigarettes and drug sundries from a warehouse. According to the police, the youth stated willingly that he had been engaged for some time in stealing drug sundries and selling them to Dr. Selby and his employee.
This statement has been denied by Attorney Curtis C. Taylor, when asked whether the charge was true, who is counsel for both of the accused men. Dr. Selby came, here from San Antonio, Texas, and is well known in the professional circles. He attended school at Prairie View College in Texas, and it is believed that he received his medical training at Meharry Medical College. His wife, Billie Selby, is considered by many as one of the prettiest women in Los Angeles.
Local Democrats Plan to Banquet Mack Rowe
A testimonial banquet will be tendered Mack D. Rowe, national organizer of Democratic clubs for Washington, at the Masonic Temple, December 15.
The members of the committee fostering the banquet are: James H. Howard, chairman; Mrs. Erica E. Pettis, secretary; C. G. Nicholson, treasurer; Richard Ware, and Edward T. Taylor.
TAXI STAND MENACE
(Continued from page 1)
Norman Dorsey, an employee at Browne Junior High School.
Appointments
Appointments approved by the board were: T. E. Whyte, teacher,
Shaw Junior High School; R. W. Gaddis, and V. A. Walker, Randall
Junior High School; Miss A. C. Woolfoll, Giddings School; Miss
R. T. McLemore, librarian, Miner Teachers' College.
Two teachers advised the board of a change in their names. They were Miss D. J. Ridgley, Mott School, to Mrs. D. R. Moses, and Mrs. M. S. Ellis, teacher at Cook School, to Miss M. E. Stewart.
Mrs. F. S. McLendon was transferred from Payne School to Lovejoy and Mrs. I. S. Thompson from Logan to Lovejoy.
LIFE BEGINS
Coming---Raphael Theatre
9th and O Sts., N.W.
Dec. 16, 17, 18, 19, 1932
FOR ADULTS
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. DECEMBER 9. 1932
Christmas Gifts
This beautiful Houbigant Gift Set contains one large bottle of Bath Salts, one box Dusting Powder, and a large cake of scented Toilet Soap-An Excellent Christmas Gift.
Special Purchase Sale-Perfume Gift Sets-Odeurs From the Most Famous French Makers Exquisitely Bottled-The smart perfumes priced at a small fraction of their value. Every one of these fine perfumes was planned to sell for much more. The exquisite bottles alone, in many cases, can not be bought today for the price we have marked bottle and perfume complete. Take advantage of this Gift Sale and get these choice Imported Perfumes packed in lovely Gift Boxes for Christmas.
This is one of the newest and most attractive Gift Boxes offered to the Christmas Shopper this year. Each box contains four new Odeurs, packed in this attractive Gift Box.
WE ALSO HAVE MANY OTHER CHRISTMAS GIFTS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION FRED W. DARBY SUPPLY CO. ROOM-34 A PRINTCRAFT BLDG.—930-H ST. N. W.
This beautiful Houbigant Gift Set
Bath Salts, one box Dusting Powder,
Toilet Soap—An Excellent Christmas
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(Made to Sell for $20.00)
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MANICURE SETS
Including—
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Candles
This is one of the newest and most attent Christmas Shopper this year. Each box in this attractive Gift Box.
1933 "EVER READ DESK CALENDAR
CANAL
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(Made to Sell for $20.00)
Sale—Perfume Gift Sets
at perfumes priced at a small fraction
bottles alone, in many cases, can not
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Only 144 Boxes
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most attractive Gift Boxes offered to the
h box contains four new Odeurs, packed
100
MANY OTHER CHRISTIE W. DARE
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
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deurs From the Most Famous
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CHRISTMAS
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This Beautiful Christmas Gift Box contains
Pink, Blue, Orchid or Green, with Wash Cl
4 Different Box Styles to Choose From
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(Made to Sell for $25.00)
At Famous French Makers
these fine perfumes was planned to sell
have marked bottle and perfume com-
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This Beautiful Christmas Gift Box contains 5 cakes fine scented soap in Pink, Blue, Orchid or Green, with Wash Cloth to match.
4 Different Box Styles to Choose From. All at the Same Price.
In Medium, Soft and Hard Finish
100 Sheets in Box
Regular Price, Box $3.50
Our Special
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Na | It is not enough that you have the best of
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ora ES | Keep your telephone number before them
Lapa Seats sa in your advertising. On your letterheads.
: F AN | On your bills. On your envelopes.
Oe That. is. ove roed*to more
sg OL and better business for you. +
% Rg gece S| ‘ Sara”
Sethe od thing todo a)
The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone- Company
: BellSystem) ~
$23 13th Street N.W. . MEtropelitan 9900
SENTENGED FIVE
TIMES 10 DIE, MAN
STILL OPTIMISTIC
JACESON, Ga—Tom King, of
Butts County, has ‘established a
record of being the most-sentenced-
to-die man Georgia has produced.
King, who was convicted in 1925
of killing JE. MeNair, a county
policeman, fis ‘been in jail in At
nta_ since that time except when
he has .been~ motoring at the
State's expense between Atlenta
and Jackson, either t be retried
oF sentenced again to die,
* Case to Be Considered
‘The latest date chosen for the
electrocution of King is. Decembe:
% but it can be safely assumed
that he will not. be executed on
that day as his case is still to be
considered by the State Prison
Commission. :
King has been tried three times
before a Butts County jury. Bach
time he has been promptly convict-
sa ond as promptly sentenced to
ie. i
But King has very resourceful
attorneys. They are indeed among
the best criminal lawyers in the
State. When first arraigned the
defendant pleaded ‘poverty—said
he could not engage counsel. The
court assigned two leading lawyers
+6 defend him and they have been
on the job ever since.
Under : ordinary circumstances
King might-have been electrocuted
and forgotten by now.. But. these
lawyers have exerted every. “kink”
of the law to save their client.
They" got. himt two new: trials and
have ‘been “before the Governor
seeking clemency.
Dean of Prisoners
Soon after King was arrested it
was decided by the Butts County
authorities to'send him to Atlanta
for incarceration. This was done
‘oth to save the county money and
* King’s safety. It was feared
ere might be an effort to harm
and it-was equally feared that
might try. to’ get away.
¥So now Tom King is the dean of
prisoners in the Fulton County
tower. He is ‘contented in the “big
Jail house,” where he has grown
fat on prison fare.
‘His folks come over from Butts
County to see him at intervals and
Keep him posted on the affairs of
his. old home neighborhood, and
withstanding he has been con-
eed three times of murder and
tenced five times to be electro-
ehted, he remains an optimist.
He’ has maintained he was in
Ded. and, asleep: when the ‘county
Bpliceman was killed in the course
te prohibition reid.
Howard String Trio
in Cardozo Recital
The students of Cardozo High
School presented the Howard Uni-
versity string trio from the ensem-
ble classes of Professor Louis
Meusha’ Sonesvin recital “xt the
school assembly Wednesday after-
noow., Members of the trio are J.
Richmond Johnson, violinist; Ar-
thur Smith, cellist; and Sherman
Smith, pianist,
The program included Tachaik-
awsky’s “One Who Has Yearned
Alone,” Raff's “Cavatina,” and
Zamecnik’s “Soiree.”
eect
More than 1,200,000 of the pen-
ny Christmas Seals. were cashed at
their par value during the first. full
week of the annual city-wide cain-
paign conducted by the local. Asso-
ciation for the Prevention of Tu-
berculosis. . This represents the re-
ceipt of $12,000 toward the goal of
$50,000 needed to carry on the 1933
program of protective health work.
A’ suecéssfal ending of the -sale
by Christmas- was. predicted by
Mrs. ErnesteR. Grant, president of
the society...
“We are just beginning to fight.’
said Mrs. Grant, “and after 25
years of educational and construc-
tive’ health work’ in Washington,
our association has won the confi-
dence and the generous erp
the public because of results b-
tained.
“While during all those years we
have seen the death. toll from tu-
berculosis steadily declining until
it is now less than half-as large as
it was then, the fact still faces
us that tuberculosis is still here and
holds first rank as a cause of death
‘between the ages of 15 and 45.”
Mrs. J. .N, Saunders, president
of the District of Golumbia Con-
gress of Parents and Teachers,
voiced her earnest endorsement of
the seals campaign) and ‘the: fight
against tuberculosis, in a' radio ad-
dress from Station WRC. Said
Mrs. Saunders:
“Every time we moisten one of
these little seals and place it on 3
letter or package, we are contrib-
uting to the cause of humanity be-
cause we are not just: sealing a
missive, but are thus declaring our-
selves as present day crusaders
pledged to fight the'ravages of our
great enemy, tuberculosis”.
Dr. T. Edward Jones, of the staff
of Freedmen’s Hospital, also made
an eloquent appeal to the public
of Washington in a radio talk from
Station WOL.
During the coming week the
campaign is to be further extended
by the enlisting of a number of wo-
men’s organizations who will con-
duct sales, booths’ in stores’ and
banks. Y
Highland Beach Officials
Tribute Annapolis Judge
The commision of Highland
Beach were -sp@@jal cuests at cere-
monies last week when Nicholas
Green was swam in-as judge of
the Annapolis caf. The new judge
ig a noted attaghey of Annapolis
and. represented the Highland
Beach commissioners in several
legal matters pertaining to the
town.
The commissioners presented the
new judge a flora] wreath.
BRUCE SCHOOL RECEIVES AWARD
Pay eee 4 Vy
Ps ee z Me eg 2
% \ Waermey ;
mo i f a i Dd
‘ i I. Ruy?
STUDENTS OF THE BRUCE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL on Kenyon’Street, Northwest, between Geo
gia and Sherman Avenues, who won the. first notebook prize awatdett to a colored school in the Distri
Sp ead Sheeman Se
F. W. Scott and P, J. Rayford and] “Morgan School—Dorig, Wils
thet corps of assistants in the de-| Lucille Bryant, Marguerite, Lol
paviment of elementary selenee, | Mattie Mason, Della Mae, Green.
and the art department, Sumner Schoal—Eugene Butli
‘On Monday, November 80, the | Lioyd Parker, Valerie Clark, Ho:
TED first prize was awarded to @ group | Daniels, Nancy Broadnick, Li
6¢ children, representing the class | Adams, Lillian ‘Thomas.
of Mrs. E. 8. Hunter, Grade 6A,|" Cleveland School—Ray Ellis,
Brice School. This event occurred | ton “Robinson.
in the auditorium of the National] Yellow Ribbons were awarded
} Museum, where the exhibit was | follows:
held. * |) Cleveland School—Ruth. Cart
The award was made by: Mrs, F.| Edith Desper. Willian! Henders:
— W. Ballou, wife of the superinfeh-| Richard Smith, Syivia, Parker
H : | |dent of schools and the medal Was} Stevens School—Lucille Brown
Highest, Class - Award “in| terracca'on behalf of the class OY | “state Atod = Tawsa St
the City Won by Roscoe Brown, Jr. ., | art, Marguerite Perry Posey,
Brice School “Medals for’ the best individual | 0, Ray Merrill Fisher.
100! books were awarded to Betty Jame}
‘The pupils of Divisions.10 to 13,
constituting the colored schools of
this city, won fotable success. in
the recent annual -contest in mak-
ing. forestry notebooks.
is is an event -where individ-
‘ual pupils both white and: colored
compete for, medals. offered’ by. the
American Forestry Association.
There is competition also for a
medal to the. class, presenting. the
best notebook made by the co-oper-
ative effort of all the pupils in one
classroom,
‘This medal was won by the 6A
grade of Bruce School, Mrs. E. L
Hunton, teacher. This book was
unique ‘in design and constructed
of wood,
‘The class books of the 5A grade,
Simmons School, and the 6A grade,
Slater School, were very close run-
ners up. The teachers of these
classes were Miss M. P. Knorl and
Mrs. HG. Dixon,
The inost gtatitying feature of
the contest was the fact that all
the competition for the class book
medals was between classes of di-
visions 10-13. Books from the oth-
er divisions were not in the finals.
The winning books were selected
from hundreds of individual books
and: scores of class books submit-
ted from pupils of the District of
Columbia ’and nearby Maryland and
Virginia.
‘The work was supervised by Miss
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, DECEMBER 9, 1932
Southernaires Quartette
Famous Radio Stars
~ GRAND CONCERT
; Metropolitan AME. Church
Friday, December 15th, at 8:15 P. M.
“Don’t miss this Great Treat”
FE. W. Scott and P. J. Rayford and
their corps of assistants in the de-
paviment of elementary science,
and the art department,
On Monday, November 30, the
first prize was awarded to @ group
of children, representing the class
of Mrs. E, S. Hunter, Grade 6A,
Bruce School. ‘This event occurred
in the auditorium of the National
Hazen where the exhibit was
held. -
The award was made by Mrs, F.
'W. Ballou, wife of the superinten-
dent of schools and the medal was
accepted on behalf of the class by
Roscoe Brown, Jr.
“Medals for’ the best individual
books were awarded tp Betty, J
leggers, of Grade 6, Murch School,
and to Norman Wertleb,. of” |
6th grade, Madison School,
white, eat
‘The final judges were Miss Flor-
ence Ward, of the Department of
Keticutture; Colin’H. hivi
first president of the Boy Sc
of America; and Dr, W.-B. Bell,
of the Biological Survey. ©
‘The: contest was sponsored by
Mr. Collingswood, of the American
Foresty Association, together with
the aid of the District Congress of
Mothers and the District Federa-
tion of Parent-Teacher Associa-
tions. i
Books of vinusual merit were
awarded ribbons, Blue ribbon
books were submitted by:
5 Horse ee aaa lit.
fordfo: rguerite igh
athy ‘Coleman, Elizabeth ‘Noasdied:
Eugene Hayes. zi
eMorean School—Catherine Col-
rt. VCE
|. Blue Ribbons’ for class . books
were won by:
Syphax School—Miss 8. L. West,
grade 5.
Lincoln School—Miss J.. §.. Wil-
lis, grade 5B.
Slater School—Miss W.F, Brown,
grade 68; Mrs. H. G. Dixon, grade
Morgan School—Mrs. E.G. Mur-
ray, grade 6A.
Simmons School—Miss M. P,
Knorl, grade 5A.
Red Ribbons were awarded as
follows:
Monroe School—Maurce E. Tay-
lor, Oliver Terrell, George Hatton,
Evelyn Morse.
Harrison School — Herman
Tarrdd, Earl Swann, Oscar Dun-
more, ‘Mildred Chaplin, Rosalie
Williams, Annie Brooks, Mildred
Madison. Glovia Mitchell, James
Lyles, Eldora Tobin, Frankie Cald-
well, Lawrence Pettis, Frank John-
eon.
cay
esi
Gio oh N
I Aes i x
LO
2 pica oo
Guy Christmas Seals
| “Morgan School—Dorig Wilson,
apes Bryant; Marguerite Lyles,
‘Mattie Mason, Della Mae, Green.
Sumner School—Eugene .Butler,
‘Ljoyd Parker, Valerie Clark, Hazel
Daniels, Nancy. Broadnick, Lois
Adams, Lillian-Thomas.
Cleveland School—Ray Ellis, Al-
ton Robinson,
‘Yellow Ribbons were awarded as
follows: . ¥
P Gleveland School—Ruth Carter.
Edith Desper, Williani Henderson,
Richard Smith; Sylvia Parker.
Stevens School—Lucille Brown.
Hesse School—Teressa Stew-
art, Marguerite Perry Posey, .Ma-
-rion, Ray, Merrill Fisher.
|. Ambush School—Mary Warren,
Margaret, Lucas. .
Lovejoy School—Rosalie Engram,
Vivian Mannis, Orsie. Carson, ‘Mar:
gery Baker, Howard Bowman, Wil-
iam Pierce, Winston Lark, Mildred
Smithy.
worse School—Arlene Waters.
ilitary “Read | School—Laura
Jeffries, Margaret " Scott, Elling
Stewart, Geneva Baker.
Harrison School—Verna Pogue,
LerukaTarrdd.
Logan. School—Elizabeth. Mal-
ory, Ralph’ Pryor.
WILLIAM LLOYD
"GARRISON
Serer lass
“But why ‘so vehement? so
unyielding? so severe? Because
the times and the cause demand
.vehemence. An immense ice-
“berg larger and more impene-
yee than ‘any whicn floats in
the ‘Arctic Ocean, is to be dis-
solved, and a little extra heat is
“not only pardonable, but abso-
lutely necessary....How, then,
ought I to feel, and speak, and
write, in view of a system which
is “red ‘with’ innocent tlood,
drawn from the bodies of mil-
lions of my countrymen by the
scourge of brutal drivers?
“How ought I to fee! and
speak? “As a man! as a pa-
triot! as a philantiropist! ax a
Christian! My soul should be,
as it is, on fire. T should thun-
der—tI should lighten. I should
blow the trumpet of alaria. long
and loud, I should use just such
language, as is most descriptive
of the crime.
“I should imitate the example
of Christ, who, when he had to
do with people of like manners,
called them sharply by their
proper names—such as, an adul-
terous and perverse generation,
a brood of vipers, hypocrites,
children of the devil who could
ot escape the damnation of hell
+++;1 will not waste my strength
in foolishly endeavoring to beat
down this great Bastile with a
feather.” — From Makers of
Freedom.
Coming—-Raphael Theatre
9th and 0 Sts, N.W.
Dec. 16, 17, 18, 19, 1932
FOR ADULTS
Driver Found Guilty of
Manslaughter in Fatality
ROCKVILLE, Md.—Karl Brown,
26, of Washington, was found
guilty of manslaughter by a jary
in the circuit court here Thursday.
Brown was arrested last May 30
following an automobile accident
fat Hyatistown which reseulted in
the death of Walter E, Early,
white, of Washington.
Brown's ‘car eollided with an-
other machine going in the same
Girection, upset, skidded across the
road-and struek Early, who. was
standing beside his own car mak
ing some repairs. y
Sty
.
“MISS WASHINGTON
Ne a ee ee
bered, was selected from the. en-
tire group of contestants to. be
Queen of the Howard-Lincoln foot-
Bal ‘classic, Miss . Eagles... repre-
‘senting the best collegiate type,
piad: Ber, share of popularity, fin-
shing third among the 69 contes-
tants who finished.
Miss Fannie C., Offutt received
an all-electric Motorola autoniobile
radio from. the. Manhattan Auto
and Radio Stores.
‘As fourth prize winner, Miss Of-
tutt received 1,400,000 credits, mak-
ing the strongest finish of any of
the contestants. Her ¢ount was
nearly double that of Mrs. Agnes
‘Anderson, whose ‘fifth place win
gave her-the double studio couch
presented by the Nachman Furni-
ture Co... y
‘The sixth prize was awarded tc
Josephine Scott, who received the
twenty-five dollars in gold that was
presented by. the Lincoln -Deliea
tessen.
The next ten, prizes were. pre
sented by the Pridom Taxi Service
Each of these ten young ladies re-
ceived five dollars. Three of the
Soung ladies were: not: present. t
receive their awards, while another
being. sick, was represented by 4
Substitute.
|. Those winning: the awards were
as. follows: 7th, Miss Agnes Wil:
liams; Sth, Miss Catherine Lewis
Oth, ‘Mrs,’ Louise Lewis; 10th
Miss Katherine Browne, 11th, Mis:
Henrietta Parker, 12th, Mrs. Mabe
Spencer; 13th, Miss Mamie Plum:
mer; 1th, Mrs, Edna Gant. Jas
per 15th, Miss Ruth Ashton; anc
16th, Mrs. Luey Henry.
The entire project. went off ac;
cording to schedule. All prize:
were awarded exactly as adver
tised. The rules of the contes|
were published weekly during: the
period and were strictly enforce
at all times,
‘The contest. was a co-operative
venture with a three-fold purpos
—to increase the popularity of th
Washington Tribune, to gain mor
patrons for the Lichtman Theatres
and to attract new. customers te
the places of business of those pre
senting the prizes.
HOWARD PERSONNEL
(Continued Jrom page +?
to meet the new requirements, This
committee reported at the meeting
held today, and after full consider-
ation of its various recommenda-
tians, the board made the follow-
Ing Hertonnel changes:
“Dr. Emmett J. Scott was: ap-
pointed to be secretary of the board
of trustees and secretary of the
university, effective January 1,
1933, On and after that date the
following duties are specifically as-
‘signed to the office of the secre-
tary, in addition to such others
as the board may hereafter ap-
point: .
“AN secretarial duties of the
board of trustees; al! secretarial
duties of the executive committee;
‘official keeper of the records and
archives of the university; in
charge of publicity; maintenance
of a bureau of official information
of the university; all arrangements
for reception and entertainment of
visitors and guests of the univer-
sity; arrangements for meetings of
the board; arrangements for com-
mencement exercises; in charge of
promotional activities, . especially
the development of a supporting
constituency aside from Congress-
ional aid, and assisting and co-o)
erating (with the-/several schodls
and divisions in their student cam-
paigns; yore of the univer-
sity catalogue, and the bulletins of
the several schools and depart
ments, and other official docu-
ments. .
“These. duties, of course, like
those of all other officers, will be
undertaken in co-operation with
and under the supervision of the
president of the university. | Dr.
Scott accepted the appointment to
the new position.
“Inasmuch as the bureau of of-
ficial information of the university
has been assigned to the office of
the secretary, Emory B, Smith, as
director of public information, has
been t ferred eee office of
the secretary. and will be under the
direction and supervision of that
officer. Thie transfer is also effec-
tive January 1, 1933,
irginius D. Johnston, who is
St present: serving the: university
as director of budget, hes been ap-
pointed treasurer of the university,
effective January 1, 1933. A sur-
vey of the treasurer's office for
ore of a
ti upon the centrali-
setton of ait of the business of the
university therein, is now being
made by Thaddeus Hungate, finan-
cial director of Teachers’ College
of Columbia Teeter who has
been loaned to H: University
for this service. There will be no
internal changes in this office until
the survey" by Mr. Hungate has
been concluded.
“The position of asristant to the
oslten of the university has
abolished. -Mr. Hill, who is
now temporarily filling this posi-
a been transferred to the
eat the Ontoker” meciiae, the
aot ordered that the construc-
ar Se eens ee
RRNA RAR Rico Ste
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been-made be proceeded with at
once. Upon completion of these
buildings, the board will in the fu-
tyre relate architects’ services to
building projects as and when ap-
piopriations for the same are
made, and will treat each such pro-
ject as a separate, financial en-
tity. Under this policy, and in
the face of a large and growing
deficit, the board voted to discon-
tinue, ‘the architect's office at the
elose of the fiscal year in June,
1933. “y
“The annual budget for this de-
partment. on. its present basis. is
approximately $25,000, The action
of the board in respect to this of-
Hfice is not based on personal con-
siderations. On the contraty, it is
the disposition of the board, others
things being equal, to give the
present university’ architect the
preference in the employment of
architectural services for future
buildings. :
THRE®,
—_$————
“Tha same necessity for re
trenchMent c-mpelled the board af
its October meeting to discontinue
the printing office a* the close of
this fiscal vear: nd to discontinus
and liquidate the bovk store imaw
diately.
“Hereafter the whole roster uf
appointments tu adminirtrative anc
teaching positions in the university
for the succeeding year. will b
presented to che full board of trus
tees at its annual meeting in April
‘The only exception to this rule wil
be appointments to vacancies o¢
curring subsequent. tothat meet
ing, and to offices created thereat
and also to vacancies for whick
suitable candidates haye not beer
found by that date. ‘These. exeep-
tional cases will be left to actior
by the executive committee of the
board ‘as heretofore. This actior
does not affect employees oth-t
than administrative and teaching
offices.” 3
| EDHORIALFEATURES
FOUR
eee
Ne
e Washinglond Gtihune
aay Lefbioral, ME rattstes werty at mubinston D.C, by
Peouteualfe = vasuhgu tamas Ponaiave
rogressly’ 920 U Street, N.W. _ Fhone, Potomac 1667
Sh ind: Nel Enteped ty second-class meatier duly 1. 1822, at ‘he
ae Soa ees a
y pen ‘Act of March 8, 1879
seers Ra SOT al
‘ea $1.50; Three Months, 7c. For sale at all news
fe. ee ee
re eee
Pert: “sEetinne nernsserranive
W. B. ZIFF CO., Ciheago, New York, Los Angeles
Be Rae ae
THE PRESS BE DAMNED.
The following letter from Dr. Abraham Flexner, presi-
dent of the board of trustees of Howard University, is a
clear demonstration of his attitude toward the Negro press
and his opinion of the Negro. It came to us unsolicited and
is quite a revelation as to the type of man heading the trus-
tee board of this Negro university. The full letter follows:
New York City,
> » November 12, 1932.
i shington Tribune:.
To the ete one identity 1 do not know or even suspect has
sent me a copy of an editorial which you printed Friday, Novem-
ber 4, entitled Trustees Repudiate President.
T did not read the whole of the editorial, for its tone and sub-
stance did not seem to me helpful, disinterested, and impartial,
nor do I intend as Chairman of the Board of Howard University
to go into-the details of any controversy or dispute originating
in the past,
I could not but wonder, however, why a newspaper should
take any different attitude towards Howard University than the
press of New York would take towards the universities here or
the press of Bostén towards the universities in Boston and
a. ‘any event, as long as I am Chairman of the Howard Board,
the conduct of the institution is not going to be influenced in the
slightest degree by press commentt I am absolutely certain
universities cannot be run by or under the hammering of news-
papers. I should be happy if you could bring yourself to take
‘the same view.
Tf at any time you have anything of interest or importance
to say respecting the institution, I shall consider it courteously
and imuartially, but denunciation in the press will have absolutely
no jnfluence whatsoever.
With all good wishes,_
‘ Sincerely yours,
‘i ABRAHAM FLEXNER.
‘This letter was answered on November 23, but so far,
Dr, Flexner has not seen fit to reply or even acknowledge the
receipt of the answer. :
We are surprised at the attitude Dr. Flexner takes to-
ward the Negro press, and must confess that we were not
aware of the fact that there is a public institution in this
country which is not amenable to public opinion. Nor did
we realize the greatness of the president of the trustee board
of Howard University. He is so great and so powerful, so
autocratic that he is above being impressed or influenced by
public opinion as expressed in editorial comment of a Negro
newspaper. That is an arrogant attitude that even Presi-
dent Hoover would hardly dare assume.
Dr. Flexner says:
“Tn any event, as long as I am chairman of the Howard
Board, the conduct of the institution is not going to be in-
fluenced in the slightest degree by press comment.””
Could the old Czar of Russia or the former Kaiser of
Germany assume a more arrogant attitude than is expressed
in that sentence?
Regarding Dr. Flexner’s reference to the press of New
York and Boston toward the colleges of those cities we say:
First, the cases are not altogether the same. Howard Uni-
versity is a semi-public institution receiving most of its sup-
port from the Federal government, which comes from our
taxes. Columbia and Harvard do not.
Second, Columbia and Harvard have trustee boards,
made up largely from the honorable alumni of the univer-
sities, who have a keen interest in the success and welfare of
the schools. Howard has not.
Third, Columbia and Harvard have educators as presi-
degts. Howard has not.
Fourth, Howard University has been in turmoil for
meny years without any manifestation of interest on the
part of the trustee board. Columbia and Harvard have not.
The morale of the faculty and student body of Howard
is all shot to pieces because of this turmoil. That is not true
at Columbia nor at Harvard. The student body was on the
verge of an open rebellion at Howard, Friday, and appointed
a committee of six to draw up and present their grievances
to the president.
Dr, Flexner is reported to have formed his decision to
fire Dr. Julian, wholly on the press report of Dr. Julian’s
associations with “white” women while in Europe. He fell
for that press report. Why?
Dr. Flexner should be consistent. : If press réports will
have not the slightest influence with him, why does he main-
tain a publicity man at $2,600 a year with a stenographer?
Why did he send out a three-page release this week purport-
ing to give an account of the action of the board of trustees
of Howard at the special meeting in New York, last Monday?
Dr. Flexner may be all-high and mighty but the Con-
gressional committees who hold the purse strings of How-
ard’s big appropriations are amenable to public opinion. The
Secretary of the Interior, to whose charge Howard has been
committed by the Federal government, is not callous to pub-
lic opinion and press comment and the “Great I am,” Dr.
Flexner, will find out before he has finished his assign-
ment as president of the board of trustees of Howard that
“press comment,” yes, even NEGRO press comment, has
weight in the conduct of Howard University.
“DON’T BOTHER ME.”
judice is much in evidence in
in the city of Washington, the
posedly most advanced civilized
all the world.
judice is so rampant in this, «
eeps the Washington Tribune «
very hand, morning, noon and
eks ago we were fighting a jir
Treasury Department. This \
in a garage of the District Wa
binson of the water departme:
eet, Northeast, ordered “Colore
n toilets in the garace under hi
Race prejudice is much in evidence in the District of
Columbia and in the city of Washington, the beautiful capi-
tal of the supposedly most advanced civilized and Christian-
ized nation in all the world.
Race prejudice is so rampant in this, our fair capital
city, that it keeps the Washington Tribune on the job com-
bating it on every hand, morning, noon and night.
Three weeks ago we were fighting a jim crow parking
order in the Treasury Department. This week we face a
jim crow sign in a garage of the District Water department.
W. V. Robinson of the water department plant located
on Bryant Street, Northeast, ordered “Colored” and “White”
signs placed on toilets in the garage under his charge at that
lace.
, A committee called on him Wednesday to ask him under
what authority he had officially established and labeled segre-
gation in the District. He asked for the name of the com-
mittee’s informant and when given a negative reply, said
“Give his name and I will co-operate with you; until then,
go ahead and do not Bother me.”
When Ghd 3: ae Sim! 2" conclave of the =
trict government, a servant people, if you please, wi
is paid by your taxes and mine, could not be approached and
interviewed regarding an abuse of authority and power in
the office for which we pay him?
- In coming in contact with _ government em-
KELLY MILLER Says:
race prejudice. Nothing but an inferior, low bred, hungry-
for-power, ill-mannered white man has the time, desire, in-
clination or intention to humiliate, subjugate, segregate and
demonstrate unjust thinking toward another human being
because of the color of his skin,
Mr. Holton, superintendent of the water works depart-
ment, received the committee in a manner far different from
his underling, Robinson. Blood will tell.
‘We do not propose to let any ill-bred, prejudiced-ruled
white man in minor official capacity segregate, jim crow and
humiliate us without a strenuous protest.
If it “bothers” a little pin-headed, narrow-hearted, prej-
udice-loving man like Robinson, as an official, we are sorry
for him and shall endeavor to “bother” him very much until
someone can see the righteousness of our protest and grant
the relief sought.
THE HUNGER MARCHERS vs. THE POLICE.
Major Brown, superintendent of the police department
of Washington certainly made a deplorable showing of his
men and his department in his treatment of, and attitude to-
ward, the visitors here early this week labeled “Hunger
Marchers.”
Those people came to Washington for the specific pur-
pose of presenting a petition to their President and to their
Congress.
They were peaceful, unarmed citizens. Certainly they
had the fundamental American right to come to Washington
to present a petition to their government. :
No man, whether he be a police officer or not, has any
right to treat peaceful citizens as Major Brown and many
of his policemen treated those people.
It is to Washington's everlasting shame that President
Hoover drove the “Bonus Army” out of Washington by fire
and force. It is also to Washington's shame that the visi-
tors this week to our city were manhandled by our police
force. The display of tear gas bombs, even machine guns,
was a discredit to our law enforcement ability. It was a
clear demonstration that our police force was frightened out
of a es afew air peaceful, — citizens seek~
ing eir fundamental right to petition ir government.
Where was the need for all this display of brute force?
Washington sadly needs a man of sound reasoning, good
judgement and a spark of humane treatment in him for
police superintendent. ‘ sh —
, ’
Anyway,
* aa #
Lily-Whiteism
Is Dead
Dean Miller Thinks That Ev-
ery Negro of Whatever Po-
litical Affiliation Will Gladly
Add a Stone to the Heap on
Its Grave.
| It is an ill wind that blows no-
body good. The late election swept
the political circle clean, and left
havoc in its wake. President
Hoover's poficies upon which he
relied with so much assurance have
been scrapped, except in so far as
Governor Roosevelt may see fit to
adopt and adapt them.
‘The Grand Old Party has been
put out of commission for at least
@ quadrennium, perhaps for a d2-
cade—it may be for a generation,
and it may be forever. The Demo-
cratic party re-enforced by recal-
citrant Republicans is nonplussed
by its over-success. Old political
foundations are being broken up.
‘The new day calls for a new deal,
Roosevelt has the opportunity, of
the age to succeed—or to fail.
‘The Negro politician of the old
G.O.P. type, like Othello, finds his
occupation gone and himself slated
to recruit the ranks of the unem-
ployed. | Will the mew crop of
mocratic leaders be an improve-
ment over their Republican coun-
terpart? or will they follow in the
train of sycophancy and greed? A
little time will tell.
THE RACE HAS GAINED ONE
UNDISPUTED ADVANTAGE
But whatever else happens the
race has gained one undisputed ad-
Vantage of indisputable value—the
lily-white variety has been uproot-
ed from the political flower garden.
Lily-whiteism is anathema to ev-
ery variety of Negro political opin-
jon. It is equally repugnant to
standpatter and progressive Repub-
lican or Democrat, regular or non-
partizan.
If there is anything which the
old line, died-in-the-wool Negro Re-
publican hates worse than a South-
ern Democrat it is a Southern lily-
white Republican,
Several weeks before the election
I stated that the defeat of Mr
Hoover was essential to the eradi-
cation of this adventitious growth
on the Republican body politic. The
good President had set his ae
on his lily-white policy as o1
his noble experiments. His objec-
tive had been all but accomplished.
Every ambitious Negro leader in
the South had been crushed or sub-
ordinated with the sole exception
of Howard and Booze of Missis-
sippi.
Limitation of space forbids’ a
catalogue of names, Ben Davis, of
Georgia; Cohen, of Louisiana; and
Levy, of South Carolina, head the
Aist. Perry Howard constitutes the
solitary outstanding stumbling
block. After enduring the slings
and arrows of outrageous fortune
aimed at him by the head of the
Republican party, the wonder is
that he is still politically alive,
PERRY HOWARD SAVED
BY THE OLD GUARD
‘The President did not desist ir
tic attemnt at destruction even at
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, DECEMBER " 1982.
the Chicago convention. Howard
was saved from utter annihilation,
despite the avowed purpose of the
President, by the Old Guard wit
whom he is personally popular, and
who have never been enamored of
Herbert Hoover. a
ly an overwhelming defeat
could cause the President to desist
from the prosecution of his pur-
pose. Perry Howard is indeed. a
jorseman who cannot be unhorsed,
Now that the shattered fortunes
of the Republican party must be
reorganized, the Old Guard
seek to take charge of its rehabili-
fan: ne ts 9: Se
liberal and progressive clement
within the party will succeed to
the leadership. Hoover and his
policies—excellent as they were
caleulated to be — have been
scrapped for good and all, His
lily-white policy goes along with
the rest,
Let it be hoped that the South-
land will not revert to its former
status as a fruitful hunting ground
for presidential delegates by ean-
didates with a plethora of cash anid
poverty of conscience,
COMPETITIVE PARTIES
A DESIDERATUM
‘Two competitive parties in the
South, without reference to racial
lines, is still a desideratum, But
white Democratic primaries and
strictly white Republican nomin-
ating conventions are twin political
iniquities equally abominable in the
sight of true statesmanship,
| ‘The outcome of the election will
undoubtedly bring about a better
political approachment between the
races in the South as well as in
the North... White Democratic Pe
maries have already been struck @
death blow by recent decisions of
the Supreme Court. Negroes are
being cautiously admitted to the
right to vote in Southern states.
The alarmers of “White suprem-
acy” and “Negro domination” no
longer alarm and arouse racial pas-
sion as they were once wont to-do.
Good sense and manly propitiation
must be relied upon to secure the
Negro his rights in the South, He
may no longer expect to have them
forced by outside compulsion,
ROOSEVELT CAN PROMOTE:
‘A MODUS VIVENDI
Much will depend upon the ad-
ministration of Governor’ Roose,
velt. His is the opportunity to
more to promote a modus vivendi
between the races than all of his
Republican predecessors _ since
Grant, No other feature of his
administration is of more impor-
tance or calls for a higher brand
of statesmanship than this. He is
in a pesition to lay propitiating
hands upon! the head of the North,
the South and the Negro.
Let it be hoped that the incom-
ing President will not be so deeply
engrossed with things concrete and
material that he will not find time
for things moral and human. For
after all, material well being
should not prevent righteousness
and justice according to the Amer-
ican’ ideal.
‘Mr. Hoover is about.to retire to
private life. All good Americans
wish that joy may go with him and
peace behind him. In envisaging
his political career in retrospect, I
ween, the part which he will least
care to have remembered will be
his lily-white Southern policy and
his treatment of Perry Howard.
We Are Victims
of Propagandist
ecernes
We Can Hardly Believe That
Africans First Domesticat-
ed Animals and Taught the
Use of Iron.
By CARTER G. WOODSON
Editor of the Journal of Negro
Miter
ee reer) glee OE so ee
Negro school. “We have so many
weeks to observe that when we
have given our attention to all of
them we have no time left to add
another featuring the Negro.”
In other words, there is no room
in the schoo! for the Negro. The
Negro has time to learn about oth-
ers, but he must not take the time
to learn something about himself.
“We desired to participate in the
observance of Negro History
Week,” said another head of a Ne-
gto school, “but these white folks
in this section are so peculiar that
they might not like the idea of
directing the attention of Negroes
to things that might make them
too -haughty.
“The races are getting along
well here now, and it will never
do to disturb these peaceful inter-
racial relations.”
‘This is to say that when the Ne-
gro is cowed and is kept in a cor-
ner by his oppressor he is in an
ideal state which should not be
disturbed by Negro teachers.
WILL HISTORY WEEK MAKE
“GOOD” NEGROES “UNSAFE?”
A white superintendent of schools
of this point of view, on receiving
Negro History Week Literature,
called upon a “race leader” to give
an opinion concerning Carter G.
Woodson, This school man desired
to know the antecedents of this
promoter of a movement which is
now stirring the Negro mind. Is
this man Woodson safe? Can’ he
be certified to as a good Negro
who will teach his people to stay
in their place?
Evidently this race leader could
not endorse the undersigned be-
cause the work of the association
has never been warmly supported
in that city.
‘These timorous persons, how-
ever, have failed to keep abreast
of the times. In patching, the Ne-
gro to keep him in his plage they
have gone even farther than some
of their co-workers consider neces-
sary. Like the man who was told
to stand erect, they have gone so
far the other way that they are
now bent backward. 2
The large majority of the, cit
superintendents of schools and the
heads of the state departments of
education, North and South, ap.
Prove the celebration of Negré
History Week and assist in dis.
tributing among their teachers the
literature for this observance
Those who object to this and cor:
related movements are not consid.
ered representative of the best
thought of either race in this coun-
try.
In appreciation of Negro History
Week, therefore, men of distine
tion have spoken in most flattering
terms. H. W. Peet, a Londor
Rewspapet man, carried with hin
to England a lasting impressior
Jot the Negro History Week exer
cises at Tuskegee Institute wher
he was visiting that institutior
three years ago.
Writing about the work of the
Association for the Study of Ne
gro Life and History in Englanc
this summer, Mr. Peet mentioned
this particular feature as_ im:
pressive and significant in giving
the Negro a new thought as to his
status and in convincing # hostile
public that the achievements of
Negroes are not to be despised,
WASHINGTON TEACHER
PRAISES THE MOVEMENT
Looking at Negro History Week
at closer range, a teacher in the
District of Columbia said:
“I wish we could have something
like this all the time. These exer
cises haye improved my pupils on
hundred per cent. Discipline ha:
become an easy problem. Inspire:
by the noble examples of the rac
set before them, these boys anc
girls have become ambitious t
make the most of themselves; and
being thus so seriously concerned
they have no time for the triftes
which often draw so heavily upor
|the time of the youth.”
Professor Benjamin Brawley, of
Howard University, looking at the
celebration from the same point o'
view, most heartily approves th
effort and annually participates by
making as many addresses ax poe
sible at strategic points in th
wat thi momént ‘ebés
the Negi “Moule think Re ee
egro.
gusty of himsalf, Pramenee Brae
ley_believes _fhat we should mak
& redoubled effort this year to mak
| Seere History Week more signifi
; than ever. Every city, coun
'|ty and state should be reached t
secure a goes for the romanti
|| account of the Negro of today ant
| yesterday.
| DR, WESLEY SAYS HISTORY
| ASS'N DESERVES SUPPORT
| Dr. Charles H. Wesley, » distin
: historian of the race, re
urges that we do ee
: ania donation to ch
ee
I am taking this means of re-
plying to at least fifty different
inquiries that have come to me
during the past few months for a
list of book publishers who have,
within the past few years, pub-
lished books either by or about
Negroes, ér at least the themes are
(of interest to Negroes,
The list as published here may
not necessarily include every such
‘publisher, for I am listing those
only who have forwarded one or
more of their books to me for re-
view or comment. The list also in-
cludes a half a dozen publishers of
purely statistical data, and a few
authors who sent their books to me
direct.
| teas
| ‘These names are not given either
in alphabetical or geographical or-
der but are listed in the order that
they became co-operators with me.
Space will not permit my giving
local addresses and every name
that is not followed by a specific
city is presumed to be in New
York.
sees
George S$ Schuyler (author);
Harper & Bros.; Harcourt, Brace &
Co.; Meador Pub. Co., Boston; Wet-
zel Pub. Co. Los Angeles; 'R. R.
Rosamond, Hollywood; Farrar &
Rinehart; Christopher Pub. Co.,
Boston; Bobbs-Merrill Co., Indian-
apolis; Minton, Balch & Co.; New
York Book & News Agency: Yale
University Press, New Haven;
Robert Mallory (author), Minne~
apolis; New Pub. Co. Chicago; C.
W. Merriweather (author), Hop-
kinsville; A. C. McClurg & Co.,
Chicago; Stanley. Newman (au
thor), Hartford; Modern wWibrary;
J, L. Nichols & Co., Naperville;
Macmillan Co.; E. P, Dutton & Co.;
Henry Holt & Co; the Lantern
Press; Negro Year Book Co,, Tus-
kegee Institute; Columbia Univer-
sity Press; Wm. B, Eerdmans Co.,
Grand Rapids; Grossett & Dunlap;
Manual Arts Press, Peoria; Thomas
Y. Crowell Co.; Doubleday, Doran
gro Life and History during the
Second week of February, In this
way the work may be enabled to
go on with renewed vigor which
fnereasing financial support will
make possible. :
If we are to prevent the Negro
from becoming a negligible factor
in the thought of the world, we
must give of our means that in-
vestigators and writers may: set
forth in scientific form what the
race has thought and felt and at-
tempted and accomplished,
‘As we go forward with this cele-
bration from year to year, then, we
become more and more ‘conscious
of the wrong done the Negro race
in reading it out of the pale of
humanity and neglecting to teach
the youth the important role played
by the African before the days of
slavery and segregation.
‘At the same time that we sce
the evil wrought by such a propa-
ganda attitude of our teachers of
history, too, we can appreciate how
effectively we can counteract these
undesirable efforts by unstintedly
supporting the organization which
is constantly ‘bringing the Negro
into the picture with the other
members of the human family.
This celebration, then, is to be
not so much a Negro History Week
as a History Week. There-is no
fuch thing ‘as Negro history or
Jewish history or Chinese history
in the sense of isolated contribu-
tions, The relations and interre-
ations of races, the close communi-
cation of peoples, and the wide-
spread diffusion of ideas have made
it necessary for one group so to
depend upon the other that it is
difficult to have any particular cul-
ture ear-marked.
History, then, is a recorc of the
progress of mankind rather than
of racial or national achievement.
For convenience we have labeled
the record of the Negro as the
history of this particular race be-
cause it has been omitted from the
general histories. In this way we
are trying to reincorporate it into
tik Geevieela.
‘CIVILIZATION HAS SPRUNG
FROM MANY SOURCES
No particular race can claim
credit for the present, day civiliza-
tion. ‘The important contributions
to civilization have come from va-
rious sam are such vie-
tims of pro} lists masque:
ing as teachers that we can hardly
believe that Africans first’ domes-
ticated the sheep, the cow, and
Roat, Rave the stimulus to Pas
Art thro ithiopia al 2
and ta) he the wal the most val-
able of all gifts, the use of ifon.
Negross fet mutating them. it
jegroes for itating tl
these critics ‘would Skink of the
daily uses they make of iron Soey
would appreciate just how m
they imitate Negroes.
‘We seldom think of the fact that
the ostracised Chinaman on our
shores came from the land that
ave the world such boone és the
mariner’s com}
gunpowder. We Would be ait but
shocked if we sat down and figured
out how suueh ‘we owe to the de.
spised Origntal for our knowledge
Ssd'atbemelice Se
Most so-called intelligent
people Stal of these things as dis-
coveries recently worked out by the
agents now exploiting the modern
& Co. Garden City; Cokesbury
Press, Nashville; the Viking Press;
Smithsonian Institute, Washington;
International Pocket Library, Bos-
ton; Frank D. Fitzgerald, Lansing;
W. P. Dabney (author), Cincinnati;
the Stratford Co., Boston; Legis-
lative Reference Bureau, Spring-
field; George Sully & Co.; Arizona
Year Book Co. Phoerix; U. S.
Dept. of Commerce (James A.
Jackson), Washington; W. A.
Wilde Co., Boston; John C, Win-
ston Co., Philadelphia; Rosicrucian
Brotherhood. San Jose; J. A. Rog-
ers (author; F. A. Stokes Co.;
Frank A. Johnson (author-de-
ceased); All Sports Record Book
Co.; Vanguard Press; Ethiopian
Press, Oklahoma City; Mrs. Myr-
tle Thompson Claybourne (author).
Columbus; R. M. McBride Co.; the
Meteor Press; John Day Co.; Pe-
gasus Pub, Co.; Stanley Rose, Ltd.,
Hollywood; Sociological _ Press,
Hanover; Prof, A. H. Gordon (au-
thor); Funk & Wagnalls; MaCaul-
yy Co.; Dial Press; Cexton Print-
‘s, Ltd., Caldwell; William Faro,
Inc.;. the Bahai Pub. Com.; Ray
Long & Richard R. Smith; National
Home Library Foundation, Wash-
ington; Lex Pub. Co., Seattle; Eu-
dora V, Marshall (author), Duluth;
Freedom Pub. Co.; Joseph 8.
Klinepeter, Toledo; Fisk University
Press, Nashyille; Mrs. Katherine
Ash (author); Charles A. Battle
(author), Newport; D. H. Smith,
Brooklyn; Frederick M. Water-
bury; Biographical Research So-
ciety; George F. Robertson (au-
thor), Clover; Brewer, Wacren &
Putnam; Georgie Press, East River;
Norman W. Henley Pub. Co.; An-
nie Nathan Meyer (author); the
Bibelot Bros. Inc.; the Kingdom
Press, St. Petersburg; Alfred H.
King, Inc.; John H. Paynter (au-
thor), ‘Washington,
In addition to the above eighty-
five publishers or authors who have
furnished me with copies of their
books a score or more of others
have furnished pamphlets which I
have not classified as books.
Week-End Mosaics
By Algernon B, Jackson, M.D.
CURING PEE BUUIVE © Bik
Under the above alluring title,
he following editorial appeared re-
ently in the New York Herald
Pribune. ‘The article is passed on
or what it is worth,
Eminently sensible—so sensi-
ble that one wonders why it was
not thought of and put into ef-
fect long, Jong.ago—ia the plan
whereby doctors will collect
their fees in installments, via a
central agency,
‘About a fHousand dentists,
hysicians and surgeons in New
York bave become merabers of
such an organization, the Mu-
tual Professional Plan, Ine., to
which we wish success. It is a
two-way plan, offering relief to
both parties involved on the fol-
lowing basis:
The patient, before sitting in
the dentist’s‘chair or lying on
the operating table, agrees upon
the amount of the fee, signs a
note and’ pays it off in’ monthly
installntents geared to his in-
come, plus interest of 6 per cent,
to the central agency, which in
tura advances immediately to
the physician one-half the total
amount of the fee.
Such a plan would cure—at
any rate, alleviate—the peculiar
and usually high irregular finan-
cial relations of patient and phy-
sician. Doctors do not like to be
demanding, as theirs is a vital
service which should always be
given, when really necessary,
regardless of reward.
And the public is incredibly
lax and mean where doctor's
bills are concerned, putting
them at the bottom of the
monthly pile, delaying them, a
good part of the time never pay-
ing them at all.
it always seems harder to pay
for repairs than for acquisitions,
‘and patients—unless they sre
visibly the richer by a handsome
set of gold teeth “dislike part:
ing with money for a state of
health which they feel should
be theirs by natural right.
It is to be hoped that the plan
will succeed as it deserves and
be extended until the most im-
portant service one man can
perform for, snother is on a
is at least as secure and ac-
cepted as the ownership of a
vacuum cleaner or an ¢lectric
Poets
To One's Self
Two favors, life,
Tonight I beg of thee—
~~. by the day's ée-
Acquained with death's magic
Make me most thankful as each
day completes_
‘Open my eyes to work's immensity
For I have wealth in my powers
untried —
To please man's loftiest majesty;
Whilst sweet eagerness with ef-
forts abide.
By J. Reginald Beason.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAG
IN THE REALM
OF BOOKS
| By @ LESLIE FRAZIER
ook tor Discussion
Sears Publishing Company (New
York), asserts that in two weeks
six women’s clubs have selected
“Death Rides the Dragon” for dis-
cussion at their next meetings.
‘The Ladies’ Literary Club, of
Spring Valley, New York, writes:
“'The book has been selected by the
committee because it seems to Us
an outstanding example of the
blending of exotic color with
smoothly flowing action and sus-
tained interest.”
‘This novel by Eugene Thomas is
an ideal book for club discussions,
and will also prove satisfactory as
a Christmas gift, Price $2.00,
aeer
For the Juvenile
From the house of Harper &
Brothers come “Nancy,” by Mil-
dred Wasson, a story of a girl of
the younger set. Although Nancy
is in her ‘teens, she shows her
mother that she can shoulder re-
sponsibility, and displays unusual
courage for a girl in her circum
stances, It is an amusing and de-
lightful tale full of exceeding good
humor and has some sound philo-
sophy in its pages.
‘The story could be laid in any
American town to any class or race
of American people.
eeee
“Respectfully Submitted”
“Respectfully Submitted.” by
Harold G. Aron, an internation
ly recognized successful New York
attorney (George Press, East
River, Conn.), more than any vol-
ume on economics that I have yet
received, described and analyzes
our present day economic ailments.
‘This book, undoubtedly, was
written between November, 1931,
and February, 1932, and in light of
certain happenings during the
year 1932, particularly the various
Propagandized panacens that were
30 widely spread durisgr the recent
political campaign, mees the read-
er respect and give edditional cre-
dance to th: theories of Mr. Aran.
It is not hard to believe, and be-
come convinced, that “Respectfully
Submitted” is ‘one of those rare
masterpieces that will grow more
valuable as time passes. The book
has to be read and re-read to be
thoroughly appreciated.
The thoughts are so analyzed
and expressed that we wonder why
our present-day economic evils per-
jist in existing when there is such
‘a simple solution for all of the ail-
ments.
‘Negroes will appreciate the book
because the author specifically
stresses a system of simple justice
that does not recognize race, color,
class or creed, and at the same
time allows a proportionate reward,
not in terms of general equality,
but in terms of equal ability,
Every reader who is interested
in the readjusting of our present~
day economic ailments, sufferings
‘and inequalities should read “Be-
spectfully Submitted.”
—Clifford C. Mitchell,
sees
Daly's New Novel
Victor R. Daly, author of “Not
Only War,” announced this week
that his new novel, “Shadows in
the Valley,” has been accepted for
publication in the spring.
Mr. Daly’s first novel, “Not Only
| War,” had a title that would in-
trigue you enough to arouse your
curiosity or interest, but the sé-
lection of the name for this book is
‘so common place, carrying no such
curiosity appeal, that Mr. Daly will
find the sale of this book far be-
neath that of his first book unless
it is exceptionally worth while.
sees
A Late Book
“Alone,” by Eleanor Martin, to
be published by William Godwin,
Ine, December 21, promises to ke
one @ most interesting depres-
sion novels yet published. It is a
poignant and human true story of
the “white collar” woman, young
and well educated, who has been
led. to believe that a job is ber
rightful heritage.
sees
Literary Contest
The’ one hundred dollar award
for the best short story or essay
of 5,000 words or less offered by
Oppertanity Magazine will close at
ight on December 31, accord-
ing to.an announcement from the
magazine's offices, 1133 Broadway,
Nast year the prise
year the prize was won
ate ete, od Cece
West Virginia. The judges were
Dr. Rudolph Fisher, author of “The
Conjure Dies;” Edward J.
O'Brien, editor of Anthology of the
=e dean of the Buller School
rhe judges for the 1932 contigt
1
will be announced later.
sees
New Books -
New Books
Some interesting new beoks to
appear soon are!)
Lady" Eager’ Wallace. “(Doable:
day, Doran & Co.) January.
“phe “Abiding ot Une" “eait
A. Sawyer. (John Lowell
December.
“Greater Love Hath No Woman.”
Howard . (Mgcaulay Com
a ee Brown Omnibus.”
say Se oe RS
BEBE wee OP rue WATiON? £4 pear :
WASHINGTON SOCIETY
Pee
By CAPITOLA
Naturally enough, Washington was, socially speaking, a “Deserted
Village” last week and this week, excepting the brilliant recital of
Abbie Mitchell and the traditional Derby Dance, which -broke the
monotony. >
‘As the Christmas holidays draw near, one hears inklings of numer-
ous affairs to be staged in and around the capital, with the Alpha Phi
Alpha conclave taking the lead,
Bridge can always be depended upon to supply the missing links
of boredom and the weekly and bi-monthly gatherings for its indul-
eS serve as timely interventions when everything else seems to
ve fled.
Charming Delta Girl |The Barons to Hold Dance
Weds Virginia Minister rages
Miss Violet T. Anderson became
the bride of the Rev. DeWitt S.
Dykes, Tuesday, November 29.
e marriage was solemnized in
the Jobn Wesley ME. Church,
Bristol, Va., amid an artistic ar-
Yangement of ferns and flowers,
‘with only immediate members of
both families present, and the Rev.
E._H. Forrest officiating:
Miss Shields Weatherton per-
formed at the piano, rendering the
following instrumental selections:
“0 Promise Me,” “Until,” and the
Wedding March. Dr. D. V. Estill,
uncle of the bride, sang “Ah, Sweet
Myre of Life.”
ie bride was beautifully attir-
ed in traveling clothes, with a
lovely dress of dark brown crepe,
trimmed in satin back crepe, with
accessories to match. She wore a
corsage of pink rosebuds and ferns.
Immediately. following the cere-
jnony a reception was tendered the
bridal party and immediate mem-
bers of both families at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bell, 28
Buchanan Street, Bristol, Va., aunt
and uncle of the bride.
‘Miss Anderson is a graduate of
the Morristown N. & LL, Morris-
town, Tenn., and received the A.B.
Degree from Morgan College, Bal-
Himore, Md.. where she beearge 8
member of the Delta Sigma Theta
Sorority. She has since taught
two years in the High School of
Grisfield, Md., and has been a gov-
ernment’ employee, Washington,
D.C., for the past two yeras.
‘The Rey. DeWitt 8. Dykes, form-
ealy of Newptrt, Teun. ib & goad
uate of Morristown N. & LI., Clark
University, Gammon Theological
Seminary and secured his Master's
Degree at Boston University, Bos-
ton, Mass., June, 1932. He was re-
cently ordained’ an elder and as-
pee pastor of the M.E. Church,
farion, Va.
He ig a member of the Alpha
Phj Alpha Fraternity.
A bright future is predicted for
the happy young couple, inasmuch
as the bride, with her amiable dis-
ition, is an accomplished pian-
Tye, a valuable feature for a ‘min
ister’s wife, and likes to do social
service work.
Under a torrent of rice and
laughter the couple left immediate:
ly following the reception for the
sonage, No. 7 Main Street
Sierion, 'Va., where they will be at
home to their many ‘Telends ant
relatives, A ‘
Out of town guests included
Mrs. Willia E. Anderson, mothe
of the bride, Bluefield, Va., Mra
Jennie Estill, maternal grandmoth.
r of the bride, Meadowview, Va.
Sir Walter Powell, Mr. Landot
Powell. Meadowview, Va., and Dr
and Mrs. D, V. Estill and littl
daughter, South Boston, Va.
MRS, HELEN DAVIS HOSTESS
Mrs. Helen Davis was hostess to
the La Java Club at her residence,
224 I Street, Northwest. Members
ent were Miss Mamie Whevler,
one Nan Ball, Beatrice
Bland, Florence Brooks, Inez
Pewee, Louise Self and Lillian
Gibbs.
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The Barons to Hold Dance
The Barons Club was ae
ed by Miss Carrie Benson at her
residence, 1034 Euclid rao
Northwest. A Pa was serve
by the hostess. The club then held
its regular meeting.
The club has announced its ini
tial formal dance of the. season
which is to be held at the Masonic
Ballroom, Thursday, December 15.
‘The Barons have invited many of
their friends and are planning one
big, glorious night.
e club wishes to announce
that the “Black Sheep” are not the
prigina] Barons. The members of
‘the. Barons Club are: Messrs. Rich-
ard Caunaday, James Edmonds,
Eugene R. Andrews, Lewis. Mc-
Laughlin, Osear Washington, Har-
vey Strothers, James Grayson,
William, Jennings, Johnny Frye
James Harmond, William Hackney,
and Alphonza Logan.
jada! eae
Alphas Entertain
Mu Lambda, graduate chapter of
Alpha Phi Alpha, held its monthly
smoker at the fraternity house last
Thursday night. Eugene C. Holmes,
of the department of philosophy at
Howard University addressed the
chapter, on “The Philosophy of
Humor.”
Victor R, Daly read excerpts and
outlined in general the theme of his
new novél “Shadows in the Val-
ley” which was accepted for pub-
lication in the spring.
Rayford Logan acted as master
of ceremonies.
Among those in attendance were:
Messrs. Smallwood Ackiss, James
C. Arnold, George E. Cobron, Vie-
tor R. Daly, Russell A. Dixon,
Lewis K. Downing, Joseph H, B.
Evans, Wm. Leo Hansberry, Nor-
man W. Haitis, J. V. Herring,
Charles H. Houston, Howard Long,
William F. Nelson, Robert Ogle,
Addison E. Richmond, Ferdinand
L. Rousseve, James N. Saunders,
Emory B, Sinith, Charles Thomp-
son, Walter R. Thornhill, Julius E.
Williams, John H. Williams, Em-
mett J. Scott, Dr. Charles Thomp-
son, and J. W. Riley.
i metieesppe
MR, AND MRS. GASKINS
~~ CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs, Conway J. Gaskins
celebrated their fourth anniversary
at their residence, 1116 Columbia
Road, Northwest. Mrs. Gaskins
was preeanted @ set of sterling sil-
ver by her husband.
Atco ‘heas present for dinner
sere, i od He, John White,
ir. and ‘Mrs. John Strong and Mr.
and Ms. Bliss Plane,
———.—__
* MRS. GRACE ERESTON
‘HOSTES:!
‘Mrs. Grace M. Preston enter-
tained a group of friends Friday
in honor of her birthday at her
residence, 1224 Eighth Street,
Northwest,
Among those present were Mrs.
Martha Johnson, Mrs. Douzalettie
Amos, Phillip Clark and J. H. Ran-
dolph. The Misses Iris and Bud-
die Preston assisted the hostess.
3 5 4 v
ear :
ners, ¥ Pe
peer Vic : +o Sal
a a
Mr. and Mrs. Maceo Howard University Municipal Literary Dr. Unthank Dies
Thomas in the Represented at Art Exhibit and Musical Club i." Wane Oe URE
Nation's Capital] anes a. Fain, icra, i Holds Stacker) wiv iitaes Guy uss co
4 wie ; 3. e art department al Tee jiddle Wes found f
Chilton and Thomas, who in pri- | versity hee on exhibit ee Benn: | The Muncpigl Literary and Mu- Sie arepital ia: oe ea Giy wh
a ife are Mr. and Mrs. Maceo | svivania Academy of Fine Arts, in| sical Club, recently formed by @|j- controlled and operated by p
jomas, that renowned ening Philadelphia, a pastel drawing call- | grozp of colored employees of the | fessional Negro men and wom
team, who have captured the world | eq “Bronze Figure.” Mr. “a District Building, held a smoker | dies last week.
with their skill and technic, are | the only Negro, artist repepagniad | Saturday night at the home of] Dr. Unthank. who was a gr
gracing the nation’s capital this |in this exhibition, whicl srtted Percy Burton, 1845 Florida Ave-| uate of the. Howard Univers
ee aes ee Fos pind Novem 1% ae continued | nue, Northwest, ‘Nearly fifty were | school of medicine in the class
* | throug! is week. _ resent, ] rt
tre downtows) ee PSRVA seriarid. mide iy Franc) |Frcancay Racial Gee coe
Maceo and Carol, as they are re) Miss UTZ ENTERTAINS — | Wells, who spoke on organization, |fowing, made a number of last
foo to by their most intimate — Stanly Bender on social contact, | friendships ingthe capital.
riends, are an ideal couple. They Miss M. L. Utz, wes hostess to a Greed Sayles on the subject of the nenellnsneceechants
have won for themselves fame, ex- | number of her friends on Priday | club, Sylvester R. Woodfork spoke] wasHINGTONINAS ENTE
Prerions oe ee ee mix Ls home, 5818 Field |on soed-tillowiblp, and also re-| "tAINED IN PITTSBURGH
- | Place, Northeast. cited two original poems. "
rope, the nobles of England and Those present were: Mr, a1 Ernest Jones, Charles Shorter y,
the élite of America, but they aré | Mfrs. B. G. Henry, Mrs. H. D. x and Reginal Briscoe rendered sev- | 4 Digan’ Mrs. Creed W. Parl
still the plain, simple and modest | jand, Mrs. B, J. Fleming agd Mrs. /eral piano selections, followed by | notored to Pittsburgh ove
ie ene ae ae ie se Wert cate ae Mis (R2? dance specialty by Wm, Brad- | Patgees ty Visit. Mrs. Parke
tt a id isses Mildren bas ry | ley. 7
fomething to remember them by.” Jane Clark, Mary Henky, Thalnit| “Arrangements were in charge of peeie ieee er eed
saree Robinson, Norma Murray, Alnis | a committee composed of Sylvester | it" brenktast guests of S.J. Wy
DRAMATIC TEACHEP HOSTESS | Murray, | Doris Jones, Helene | Woodfork, chairman, Percy Bur- | ('°;>"eScest guests of ©. 9. ily
Miss Parthenia McBrown enter-
tained a group, of, youngsters at
the Parthenia Studio of Dramatic
Art Saturday. Miss MeBrown told
original stories and read poems
while Mrs. Darnley Howard, Misses
Lois Jones and Flaxie Pinkett join-
ed in by playing gam.s and pus-
ales.
‘Among those present were Char-
lotte Pinkett, Beverly Meblinger,
Dolores Dabney, Darnley Howard,
Charles Pinkett’ and Howard Mac-
key.
eg ae
THE 0.C.0’s ENTERTAIN
Miss Thelma King, of 720 Girard
Street, Northwest, was hostess to
the 0.C.0.’s last week at her home.
Those present were: Lillian Adams,
Ernestine Bomar, Iris Greene, Pau-
line Murray, Alberta Bidgeley,
Elizabeth Walker, Lucille White,
Plaucide, Washington, Georgia
Brown, Phyllis Bailey, Vivian Bur-
ton, Yvonne Jones, Mabel Jones,
Helen Miles, Edith Menard, Fran-
cis Pinkett, Virginia Quivers, Caro-
yn Ramsey, erell Smith, Edna
yhomas,
Gerald Wilson, Charles Branch,
Edward Brooks, William Bullock,
Warfield Clark, Louis Cook, Jesse
Foster, Robert Hawkins, Russell
Hines,’ George Jenkins, LeCount
Johnson, Thaddeus Mitchell, Moir
Olden, Perey Pitts, Charles Pinder-
hughes, George Scurlock, Chester
Rieves, Rodney Savoy, William
Williams and Harry Whitlock,
Ber SRE
DR. R. FRANK JONES
CONFINED TO HOME
Dr, R, Frank Jones, a prominent
hytician in the city has béen con-
fined to his home for several days
because of illness.
eee hae
ACCEPTS POST IN
* NEW ORLEANS
Dr, John W. Anderson, a grad-
uate of Howard University has
been added to the staff of Flint-
Goodrich Hospital of Dillard Uni-
versity in New Orleans, La.
ete peer
MONROE | SCHOOL TO_HOLD
BRIDGE TOURNAMENT
A bridge tournament under the
guspieps of the Monroe Parent-
"eacher Association will be held in
the school, Columbia Road near
Georgia Avenue, tonight. The tour-
‘ney is scheduled to open at 8 p.m.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, DEUEMBER Y, 1982
Howard University
Represented at Art Exhibit
James A. Porter, instructor in
the art department at Howard Uni
veralty hae on exhibit at the Ben
sylvania Academy of Fine Arts, in
Philadelphia, a pastel drawing call-
ed "Bronze Figures” Min Porier i
the only Negro, artist, repress
in’ this’ exhibition, whie Sapna
November 12, and continued
through this week.
ae ee
MISS UTZ ENTERTAINS
Miss M. L. Utz, was hostess to a
number of her friends on Friday
night at her home, 5818 Field
Place, Northeast.
‘Those present were: Mr, and
Mrs, B. G. Henry, Mrs. HD. Gk-
land, Mrs. B. J. Fleming and Mrs.
Warren; :
Misses Miliren Barton, Mary
Jane Clark, Mary Henry, Thins
Robinson, Norma Murray, Alnis
Murray, Doris Jones, | Helene
Brooke, Muriel Kellogg, le
Moss, Louise Johnson, Elise and
Elizabeth Dowling, Alexina Todd,
Evelyn Brown, Nellie Barnes and
Evelyn Brown;
Messrs, Walter Jackson, Al.
Burwell, Ed. sens Bus Shank,
Walter Johnson, ‘oodley = Law-
rence, Iven Frasier, Gil. Edwards,
Paul ‘Kelly, Everett White, Gray-
son McGuire, Wallace Wormley,
John Francis, George ‘Wormley,
David Utz, Jim. Richardson, Phil.
Beech, Arthur Boles, and’ John
Ragbir.
‘The feature of the evening was
dancing, after which a buffet sup-
per was served.
a ee
MISS MARTHA BELLE 8
AT FIRST BIR’ re rere
Miss Martha Belle, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. R, W, Horad, of 1736
Vermont Avenue, Rarthneaty cele-
brated her first birthday last Wed-
nesday. Rattlers, horns, balls,
doljs, autos and toy animals kept
the children amused,
Those present were Misses Bev-
erly Ann Grant, Mary Virginie
Budd, Aurelia Roberts, Lorraine
Tylor, Ann Taylor, Yvonne Tibbs,
fate Ann Whaley, Carolyn
Cobb, Roseland Brown and Wanda
Thomas.
Masters Richard Atkinson, Ulys-
ses Jerome Houston, Cedric Tay-
lor, Raymond Waters, Jr., Wash-
ington Horad, Jr., Clarence Davis,
Ir., Clarence Webster, Jr. and Car!
Webster,
ee
SeYRRAE HUNDRED. aa,
MERRY AT DERBY DANCE
They were there last Fri
wight ‘by thé hundreds—to” make
inbery And gay af the annaAl form.
al of the notéd Derby Club, whieh
was given in the beautifal ‘niain
ballroom of tht Masonic Temple.
There were about 400 fuests all
in all, and every one Seemed as
happy as, lark,
1¢ club members, which include
men of the various walks of the
business and professional folks of
the capital city, made regular and
capable hosts, and they saw to it
that each and every guest present
enlerta himself.
5 tae
MRS. BLACK HOSTESS
gilts: Nancy Black, of 144° Adams
Street, Northwest, entertained in
honor of her sister, Mrs, Elsie
Cook, of Montclair, New Jersey
Saturday night, Bridge was play-
‘Those present were: Mésdames
Josephine Niel, Dorothy Newsome,
‘and Cook, Miss Mabel Johnson,
‘Lenster Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. Clar-
ence Black, T. Taylor and Dr. and
Mrs. Fitgerald, the latter three al-
so of Montclair.
——_.—__-
DEAN SLOWE IN NEW YORK
Miss Lucy D. Slowe, dean of wo-
men at Howard University, was
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe
C. Bruce, of the Dunber apart-
ments in New York City last week.
ee
By NINA TEMPLE
A Lip and Cheek Hint
A young woman whose lips and
cheeks were always so perfectly
matched and blended in color was
the wonder of her friends. None
could quite arrive at her perfec-
tion until one day she was big-
hearted enough to tell her secret.
She said:
“I found jt so difficult to match
my cheek coloring with my. lip-
stick that I stumbled on this plan.
I paint my lips, and than take
enough color from my lips to color
my cheeks, and presto: I have it.”
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Municipal Literary
and Musical Club
Holds Smoker
The Muncpial Literary and Mu
sical Club, recently formed by.
grove of colored employees of the
istrict Building, held a smoker
Saturday night at the home of
Percy Burton, 1345 Florida Ave-
nue, Northwest. Nearly fifty were
present.
| Brief remarks made by Francis
Wells, who spoke on organization,
Stanly Bender on social contact,
Greed Sayles on the subject of the
club, Sylvester R. Woodfork spoke
on good-fellowship, and also re
sited two original poems,
Ernest Jones, Charles Shorter
and Reginal Briscoe rendered sev-
eral piano selections, followed by
} tap dance specialty by Wm. Brad-
ey.
‘Arrangements ware in charge of
a.committee composed of Sylvester
Woodfork, chairman, Percy Bur-
ton, Ernest Jones, C. Whitting-
hath, Perey’ Webster, | Ernet
learns, and Joseph Walker.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs, Pearl Chapman, Mrs. Mamie
Bradley, Mrs. Lilin Starks, and
Mrs, Waatrice Braxton,
PANDORA BRIDGE. CLUB
| MEETS
Mrs. Reba Sayles, of 1898 Fif-
‘teenth Street, northwest, was host
ess to the Pandora Bridge Club at
her home Tuesday night. Those
present were: Ars, Virginia Reeves
rs, Edna Winkler, Mrs. Anna
Reeves, Mrs. Blariche Moten, Mrs,
Francing Robinson, Mrs. Beulah
Miller, Mrs. Pearl Ellis and Miss
Anna die Hines.
Beau fa pres ‘were won by Mrs,
Winkler, Mrs. Robinson and Miss
Hines,
1 Nee
MISS CHAMBERS ENTERTAINS
Miss Naomi Chambers was host-
fas to $ group. of flende Friday
at her residence, 1770 Willard
Street, Northwest.
Among the merrymakers were
Misses “Ruth Dabney, Caroline
Howell, Helen Moorehead, Frances
Brown, Margaret Arnold, Cecelia
Crawford, Thelma Hill and Edna
Thomas.
Messrs Charles Davis, Curtis
White, Leroy Turpin, Theodore
Reid, Arthur Davis, William Arch-
er, Clarence Barnes and Patasio
Tdvior,
Attend Trustees’
Meeting in New York
Dr, Mordecai W. Johnson, Em-
mett J. Scott, John R. Hawkins,
G, H. Pope, Vietor Deyher and Dr.
Ulysses G, B. Pierce, all of Wash-
ington, attended the special meet-
ing of the trustees of Howard Uni
versity in New York City last Mon-
lay.
The annual meeting of the stock-
holders of the Federal Life Insur-
ance Company will bs held at its
insurance office, 2001 Eleventh
Stret, Northwest, Room 207, Tues-
day, January 10, 1933, vetween the
hours of 8:30 and 9:30 p.m., for
the election of a board of trustees,
and the transaction of such other
business as may properly come be-
fore the meeting.
C. T. Taylor, Segretary.
Teese genes
ORCHIDS
The regular meeting of te club
was ‘held ut the residence of Mrs.
Minnie Lawson, of Howard Manor.
Bridge featured the evening. Miss
Esther Patton was the club's guest
of the evening.
Mrs. Lulu Swann and Mrs, Ruth
Moss, members of the club, are out
of town on a short vacation,
Dr. Unthank Dies
Dr. Thomas C, Unthank, fore-
nest figure in the medical profes-
sion of Kansas City, Mo., and, the
middle West and founder of’ the
city hospital in Kansas City which
{: controlled and operated by pro-
fessional Negro men and women,
dies last week.
Dr. Unthank, who was a grad-
uate of the Howard University
school of medicine in the class of
1898 and who served as interne at
Freedmen's, Hospital the year fol
lowing, made a number of lasting
friendships inathe capital.
pi De
WASHINGTONINAS _ ENTER-
TAINED IN PITTSBURGH
Dr. and Mrs. Creed W. Parker,
Miss Ella Lee and Edwin Greenlee
motored to Pittsburgh over the
holidays to visit Mrs. Parker's
parents, Me. and Mrs, L. Pol-
lard. While in the city they were
the breakfast guests of S. J. Wynn,
8. J. Robinson and Doug Robinson.
They attended the Matrons’ and
Maids’ dance, the Inter-Collegiate
dance, the Inter-Fraternal and Au
Revoir dances, and returned to the
city last Monday,
ee ee
JOHN R. HAWKINS ATTENDS
FUNER‘L OF BISHOP JONES
John R. Hawkins attended the
funeral of the late Bishop Joshua
H, Jones, of the African Methodist
Episcopal Chureh, in Wilberforce,
Ohio,
one ere
ANOTHER BABY ARRIVES
A son, their third, was born to
Dr. and ‘Mrs. Edwin’ Paul Beckley
several days ago. The little new-
comer, is the grandson of Mr. and
Mrs, Robert A. Pelham.
els, he soe
APPLE BLOSSOM BRIDGERS
The Apple Blossim Bridge Club
met at the home of Miss Wilkie
Roberts, 700 Twelfth Street, North-
east, Thursday, with the president,
Miss. Lillian Hill, presiding.
Ms, J. Mansheld’ wont highest
honors in bridge for the night.
Pees 20 ee ay
Williams Institute
Of Music
AIL Inctroments Taught
pe desalty
DAT AND NIGHT CLASSES
813 Tea St.. We
See
Mme. W. R. Dudley’s
[| Beauty Shoppe
igh H} Special # ou. totinsr', Sen: $1.00
afl Marcel Wave 75 cents. Reset FREE.
he b Prompt Service. 5 Expert Operators
" 465 FLORIDA AVENUE, N.W.
e J North 8149. Howrs 9 to 9
Use Mme, Dudley's Preparations for Lovelier Hale and Skip
NOTICE
Reliable and energetic
men and women to do
special work in devel-
oping an organization
of highest standing in
community,
Big Returns
Earnings Paid
Daily in Cash
Apply between 10:30
and 7 o'clock to
MR. R. B, RENFROW
2001 11th St., N.W.
Room 107
KLVE
NOTICE ;
TO ALL PATRONS OF THE cox
"MUNITY SOCIAL CLUBY |
We, the members of the Com
munity Social Club, desire to
form our friends and patrons,
Mr. Chas. Hughes, a oneeti
member of our ordtolvatlany,
established @ social club kngwn
“The Original Communit, .~
take this occasion to advise
friends through the columns of
newspaper that this “O)
Community” is in no manner
form connected or affiliated wit
the “Community Social Club)
We will have a DAWN DAN
on New Year's night at th
‘sonic Temple, Januaty 1, 1989.
Conveying to all of our triends,
the season's greetings, we ares
Eugene Allen, Ethel Turner,
sie Harrod, Goldie Lewis,”
Johnson, Cecelia Small, Viola
ker, Edna Simmons, Otis Ne
Alfonsa Small, Pleasant Ba
Charles Robeson—the Conimul
Social Club. oe
Coming---Raphael Theatre
9th and O Sts, N.W.
Dec. 16, 17, 18, 19, 1932
FOR ADULTS
KASH nha
=” aoe
|xanny esas
SPECIAL
All Ladies’ Dresses, $1.00
Ties, 6 for 500
Mon's Suits & Overcoats, 75 ea.
Nats Cleaned & Blocked, 500 up
Don't Forget Our Laundry
Service
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
The Good They Do Depends on You
1. Free clinic for tuberculous children.
2. Home care and instruction by trained workers.
3. Summer camp to protect tuberculous children.
4. Safeguarding the health of adult workers.
5. Promoting better housing conditions.
6. Advocating necessary health laws.
7. Public information about care, cure and prevention of tuberculosis.
CHRISTMAS SEALS SAVE HUMAN LIVES
Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis
1022 11th Street N.W. Telephone District 8311
BANNEKER-JONES PUPILS PRESENT "IN SANTALAND"
Officers of Year Installed at Meeting of Parent- Teacher Association
A playlet, "In Santaland," written by the administrative principal, Mrs. Elsie P. Derricott, was presented by the pupils of the Banneker-Jones School, Thursday night at a meeting of the school parent-teacher association.
New officers for the year 1892-33 of the association were installed by Mrs. Derricott, who in a brief speech asked for close co-operation of home and school to make the children the best citizens of tomorrow. A mothers' club was formed to assist in this movement.
Officers installed were Mrs. E. V. Allen, president; Mrs. L. Payne, vice-president; and Mrs. B. S. Anderson, secretary-treasurer.
$5 Thanksgiving Baskets Given
The school gave 55 baskets to the needy families in the community, Thanksgiving. The baskets were filled with groceries, meats, vegetables and fruits.
Fupils who participated in the playlet were Jamesie Lee Wilson, Golden McCoy, Gertrude Desper, William Earbour, Paul White, Thelma Bowie, Rowena Morse, Ralph Bosman, Preston Hymes, Thomasine Williams, Bernice Jett, Carlie Charry, Frederick Thomas, James Gladden, Winston Patterson, and William Clyburn.
Junior Red Cross in Colored Schools Makes Report
The report of June, 1932, showed the Junior Red Cross enrollment to be 100 per cent in thirty-eight schools; three irregular enrollments; $875 contributed for enrollment and activities; and 24,058 pupils enrolled.
The 100 per cent schools and their contributions for the year are as follows: Armstrong High $61.37; Cardozo High $7.00; Dunbar High $8.11; Francis Junior High $10.50; Garnet-Patterson Junior High $15.00; Randall Junior High $15.00; Shaw Junior High $31.95; Washington Vocational $6.00; Phelps $4.00; Bruce $8.00; Garlion $10.00; Military Road $2.00; Monroe $7.50; Morgan $8.00; Phillips $4.00; Reno $1.50; Stevens $9.00; Summer-Magruder $7.00; Toner $4.08; Wormley $4.00; Bannaker $4.08; Jones $4.08; Cleveland $2.50; Morse $4.50; Cook $9.00; Crummell $3.50; Douglass $5.00; Simmons $4.00; Mott $12.50; Slater-Langston $6.50; Bowen $7.00; Burville $10.30; Deanwood $8.00; Garfield $2.00; Giddings $5.00; Lincoln $8.50; Lovejoy and Randall Junior High Amex, 11.50; Payne $7.45; Smothers, $4.00; and Syphax $3.50.
Disbursements:
Remittance to National Headquarters for subscriptions to Junior Red Cross News and High School Service.
For local activities .....
Some Activities Participated
In by the Various Schools:
All enrolled schools sent representatives to the Junior Red Cross Council meetings.
Eight hundred thirty Thanksgiving and Christmas menu covers to U. S. Veterans' Hospital at Tuskegee.
Eight schools sent Thanksgiving and Christmas cards, 279 cards coming from two schools.
Eight hundred seventy-nine Tuberculosis Seals were sold by two schools.
MERRY CHRISTMAS
10 CENTS
1933
Fifty Christmas packages were sent to the veterans at Tuskegee, Morgan School sang Christmas Carols.
Francis Junior High School featured a Christmas Port Office.
Eight schools collected and made toys.
Thirteen schools contributed clothing, 125 articles coming from 7 of the 13.
Seventeen schools supplied food, 184 baskets and boxes coming from 15 of the 17.
One hundred eighteen cans and jars of fruit and vegetables were donated by four schools, also three baskets of fruit.
Two hundred ninety-five Easter cards were sent by two of the three schools which sent cards.
Ninety-eight hen eggs and ten pounds of candy were donated for Easter.
Fifty canna illies were made by one school for Easter.
Forty-seven Easter baskets were filled by two schools.
Six schools made carnations for Mothers' Day. 184 carnations coming from three of the six. Three schools sent cards on Mothers' Day. Syphax sent original poems on Mothers' Day.
Francis Junior High School collected 72 pounds of tinfoil; Morgan School collected quite a bit.
Two hundred fifty place cards were sent to Tuskegee for George Washington's birthday.
Some schools held membership programs.
Armstrong High School promoted a moving picture to raise funds.
Bicentennial and Negro History Week programs were given.
Several schools presented "Radio Joe" at programs.
Hospitals, homes and charitable institutes remembered were: Freedmen's and Children's Hospitals.
Stoddard Baptist Home, St. Anne's Home, Children's Home, Central Union Mission, and Associated Charities.
Dunbar High School collected shoes for the "Old Lady-in-the-Shoe."
Undernourished children were fed at Bowen School.
Dunbar High School adopted a child, gave clothing, food, medical care, etc. Flowers were collected for Memorial Day at Garfield School.
Synaph School made bird boxes for birds.
Reno School made Health Posters.
Lecture on "First Aid" it Armstrong High School.
Reports of Convention and monthly meetings. Syphax Junior Red Cross members assisted at Parent-Teacher Association meetings. Francis Junior High School held meetings from 9 to 12 each day during the summer vacation. Old clothes were renovated and some new ones also made. Christmas, the Girls' and Boys' Glee Clubs of the Armstrong High School sang a t-St. Elizabeth's Hospital. Forty-five students and three teachers made the trip in a bus provided by the District Chapter.
One hundred per cent membership from every school in Divisions 10-13 is looked forward to for this year. Activities spread over an even wider scope than here reported, and participation in these activities by more of the schools is also expected.
Capital View News
Robert Glanton, husband of Nettie Glanton, of 66 Fifth-third Place, Southeast, died Thursday after a long illness. Funeral services were held at the Capital View Baptist Church with the Rev. C. H. Johnson officiating. Wayland E. Jones, Julia E. Jones, Gertrude H. Jones, Maggie Wade and Fannie Jamison, of Raleigh, N.C. motored to the city to attend Mr. Glanton's funeral. Mrs. Eliza Williams, of 1433 T Street, Northwest, mother of Mrs. Malissa Johnson, of 60 Fifth-third Place, Southeast, died Monday. Captain Charles Gibson, Bruce T. Stewart and W. Anson Long attended the testimonial banquet given in honor of Dr. George H. Richardson, retiring Civic-Association president.
Bath tubs, basins, sinks, etc. may be relieved of ugly spots by scraping same with a razor blade. Mix a small amount of soda to a larger amount of salt and use for cleanser in case of emergency. This will remove stains and circles.
WAFFLES AND GRIDDLE CAKES COME INTO OWN
Waffles for breakfast, luncheon or supper! It is true that the waffle started its career as a breakfast delicacy but today we find the waffle used in combination with other foods for luncheon or supper dishes or served hot from the iron with butter; maple syrup or honey. In mixing griddle cakes or waffles, a mixing bowl may be used, of course, but if one has a wide-mouthed pitcher with straight sides from which the batter may be poured the batter may be mixed directly in the pitcher. This saves the washing of an extra dish plus the convenience of having the batter in the pitcher so that it may be poured easily onto the hot griddle pans or waffle iron. The pitcher must have a large enough opening to take a good-sized egg heater.
The hatter should be thin, and one can tell if it is thin enough when cooking the first griddle cake or waffle. If the griddle cake will hold its shape on the pan, enough flour has been used.
White flour is usually used in the standard recipe of either griddle cakes or waffles but delicious waffles and griddle cakes can be made by using buckwheat, graham or whole wheat flour. Sour milk makes very tender cakes, and when using milk, soda is used.
In making griddle cakes and waffles the shortening is melted and added last. It is well not to skimp with the amount of shortening used because the shortening adds flavor to the waffle and helps to prevent the griddle cake or waffle from sticking to the pan or waffle iron.
Standard Waffle Recipe
2 cups flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
14 teaspoon salt
1 1/4 cups sweet milk
4 tablespoons melted shortening.
Enough more milk should be used to make batter the right consistency.
Mix and sift dry ingredients.
Beat egg yolks until lemon colored and add with milk to dry ingredients. Add melted shortening.
Beat egg whites stiff and fold into batter.
**Spice Waffles**
6 tablespoons shortening
1 cup brown sugar
1 egg
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
Cream shortening and sugar, add beaten egg. Sift flour, baking powder, salt and spices together and add alternately with the milk to the first mixture. Drop by spoonful on each section of the waffle iron and bake three minutes.
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
Put molasses and butter in saucepan and heat to boiling point. Removes from heat and beat in the soda. Add sour milk, well beaten eg, and the dry ingredients, flour, baking powder, ginger and salt which have been sifted together three times. Cook on waffle iron egg, and the dry ingredients, flour, sweetened and flavored to taste.
Cheese Waffles
Use regular waffle mixture, add $ \frac{1}{2} $ cup grated cheese.
Waffles with Bacon
Use regular waffle mixture. Put two slices of hacon on lower grid, and cook one minute. Pour in butter as usual.
36 Griddle Cakes
$ 2 \frac{1}{4} $ cups flour
4 teaspoons haking powder
$ \frac{1}{2} $ teaspoon salt
2 cups milk
1 egg, beaten
1 tablespoon melted butter
1 tablespoon sugar
Mix and sift dry ingredients.
Add milk slowly, then beaten egg
and beat about a minute, until
smooth. Add the melted shortening
and beat another minute, then
cook on a hot griddle. If you like,
substitute brown sugar for the
white, or use syrup instead of sugar.
Any griddle cake batter may
be cooked in a waffle iron, extra oil
being used to insure brown.
Cereal Griddle Cakes
1 cup flour
1 cup cold cooked cereal
1½ cups sour milk
¾ teaspoons soda
1 egg, beaten
Make like griddle cakes in standard recipe above.
The best way to lose weight is to cut down on your food. You can lose weight safely and quickly merely by eating less food—but in cases of extreme overweight, it is wise to consult a doctor before undertaking any treatment at all.
The flavor of grits can be improved by beating lightly while cooking. This also produces smoothness.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, DECEMBER 9, 1932 Pure Fo
Onion Soup Tops Menu Prepared for This Week
By Gertrude C. Frazier
Onion Soup
Lamb Chops a la Maintenon
Asparagus Butter Sauce
Moulded Carrot Salad
Spiced Baked Apples
Whipped Cream
This onion soup is taken from an old French recipe and is a full luncheon or supper in itself, if a generous portion is served and a cooked egg is added, as is often done. That is something I must tell you about, as it is not included in the recipe.
The soup itself is most simple; just a plain meat stock. Usually, beef is used, and if one does not have any beef on hand, the soup can be easily made from boulon cubes or from a meat paste. To the meat stock add one pound of onions which have been cooked to a delicate brown in the fat; cook onions in stock until tender. Into each serving of soup, place a slice of dry toast and sprinkle with grated cheese (Parmesan).
If one desires, the egg can be dropped whole into the soup as if for poaching, and allowed to cook slowly with the onions until done. The egg will be hard cooked. The addition of the egg, of course, adds nutriment to the soup and should not be included unless soup is to be used as the luncheon or supper dish. Allow one egg for each person, placing it in soup dish under the slice of toast. I have seen this soup served in casseroles, after having been baked in the oven the last thirty minutes instead of being cooked on top of the stove. If this method is used, set oven heat regulator at 350 degrees and cook for thirty minutes.
3 tablespoons shortening
Toast or French bread
Grated Parmesian cheese
Peel and slice onions. Cook in hot shortening until brown, add stock and cook very slowly for thirty minutes, or until onions are tender. Season with salt and pepper. Serve in deep soup bowls with a slice of toast or hard French bread. Sprinkle grated cheese on top. Serve extra cheese if desired.
A generous portion makes a hearty luncheon or supper in itself.
Lamb Chops a la Maintenon
6 lamb chops 1 inch thick
1 tablespoon minced parsley
½ teaspoon salt
f. g. paprika
2 tablespoons minced onion
Method for Forcemeat
Put the veal through the meat
chopper twice, using the fine knife.
Melt the butter, cook onions and
parsley in butter for five minutes,
but do not brown; add flour, stir
well; add milk and cook until mixture
thickens. Add seasonings and
chopped real.
Method for Chops
Sear chops on both sides in hot
frying pan. Spread each with the
forcemeat and pile over it hot
mashed potato, place in shallow
baking dish or back into skillet,
pour in the gravity made by thick-
ening the juices in the pan; set
oven heat control at 350 degrees
and bake for thirty minutes.
Add two cups of water to juices in pan. Thicken with three table- spoons of flour mixed to a paste with cold water. Cook until gravity thickens, add salt and pepper to season.
Spiced Baked Apples
$ \frac{1}{4} $ pound cinnamon candies
4 slices lemon
Pare and core apples. Place in
a baking dish. Pour over them a
syrup made by boiling the sugar,
water, candies and sliced lemon
together until candies are melted.
Set oven heat control at 340
degrees preheat for ten minutes and
bake apples until tender, being
careful not to cook too much so
that they will lose their shape.
Baste occasionally or turn apples
to get a nice rosy color. Serve
with whipped cream.
There is not any scientific rule to determine how much a person should eat. The proper amount of food varies so widely for different people because of different individual characteristics and circumstances that there is no general rule laid down. If you are uncertain about whether you are eating food that is proper for you the only thing to do is to talk it over with your doctor and let him study your own special case.
A pinch of salt added to candied sweet potatoes will improve the flavor.
If the flexible part of the hauls of shoes is pressed inward each time before putting on and likewise after removing them from the feet, they will hold the original shape longer.
Onion Soup
1/4 cup milk
Method for Chops
Method for Gravy
6 firm tart apples
1 cup sugar
2 1/2 cups water
Put this Away Until Christmas Week
If you are looking for an extremely decorative, easily handled holiday cookie, here is one whose attractiveness demands attention. You will have a fine, yellow cookie dough, made nutritious by concentrated evaporated milk. When the dough is thoroughly chilled, anyone can handle it in a pastry tube. The angelica used on top of the cookies is readily obtainable. It is a kind of crystallized decoration, somewhat after the manner of citron in texture. It is fun to use, if you have not made its acquaintance before.
1 cup sugar
1 egg
2 tablespoons evaporated milk
¼ teaspoon salt
Have pans and oven ready so that cookies can be baked immediately after mixing. Cream butter and sugar until sugar granules are dissolved. Add egg, milk and vanilla. Stir until thoroughly mixed. Sift flour, then measure. Resift with soda, baking powder and salt. Stir into first mixture. Chill dough and press through a pastry tube, in the shape of a holly wreath, onto greased baking sheet. Decorate tops of wreaths with bits of angelica and candied cherries. Bake in a hot oven (400° F.) 10 minutes. Yield: 4 dozen cookies.
This is a cookie most of your friends have never made. Even fancy bakeries hardly ever have them. You are certain to enjoy many appreciative remarks from your family and friends.
Modern youth respects old age only when it comes in bottles.
963
958
963
PATTERN No. 963.—The soft
cealing any excess avoidpoys abo
seams do wonders in slenderizing
to give that smart fitted look wh
women.
Pattern No. 963 would be ideal
in crepe with contrasting color for
Designed in sizes 36 to 52. S1
or 4½ yards of 39 inch fabric for
material for trimmings.
ALLURING I
PATTERN No. 958.—It is in
model as the above can be made at
unusual decorative effect is achie
waistline is defined by a soft sash,
age offers a final touch of sophist
When made up in a soft pasta
PATTERN No. 963.—The soft revers are an excellent aid in concealing any excess avoidupos above the waist, while the slanted skirt seams do wonders in slenderizing large hips. This dress is cut so as to give that smart fitted look which is the aim of all well dressed women.
Pattern No. 963 would be ideal for innumerable occasions made up in crepe with contrasting color for rever and sleeve trimming.
Designed in sizes 36 to 52. Size 40 requires $4\%$ yards of 36 inch, or $4\%$ yards of 39 inch fabric for dress; and $4\%$ yard of contrasting material for trimmings.
ALLURING NIGHTGOWN
PATTERN No. 955.—It is indeed a rare treat when so lovely a model as the above can be made at home inexpensively, and easily. An unusual decorative effect is achieved with the pointed seams. The waistline is defined by a soft sash, and the lace trimmed "V" decolletage offers a final touch of sophistication.
When made up in a soft pastal shade of flat crepe, this model becomes a truly swanky gown.
Pattern No. 958 is designed in sizes 32 to 46. Size 36 requires 2½ yards of 36 inch or 39 inch material.
Simplified illustrated instructions for cutting and sewing are included with each pattern. They give complete directions for making these dresses.
To get a pattern of this model send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins. Please write very plainly your NAME AND ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE of each pattern ordered.
Address all orders to THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, 920 U Street, Northwest.
Enclosed is 15 cents for PATTERN No. 938 Size......
Enclosed is 15 cents for PATTERN No. 963 Size......
Print name clearly......
Street and Number......
City and State.....
Foods
TRIBUNE PATTERNS
FLATTERING FOR FIGURE
Washington Tribune Pattern Department
920 U St., N.W., Washington, D.C.
Self-rising Flour is Big Aid to Modern Cooks
Modern industry has come to our aid with numerous mechanical devices to lighten the burden of manual labor and has also produced and marketed old foods in new ways so that we may more easily serve adequate foods to our families.
Nutritionists speak of balanced diets, protective foods, vitamins, and minerals, terms once only for the use of the scientifically minded.
Now they have become familiar friends to all of us. Where our grandmothers administere molasses and sulphur as a spring tonic, we serve vegetables and fruits all year round and watch to see that the proper minerals and vitamins are included every day.
When our grandmothers were granddaughters, paleness and peplessness were laid to growing or to family tendencies. Today we know better and feel that we are at fault if teeth are poor and small bones are weak. Among the most important minerals for bone building are calcium and phosphorus. We are constantly on the alert to see that proper amounts of these are included in the foods of the everyday menu. One of the easiest ways to help take care of this is to use one of the most modern foodstuffs—self-rising flour.
Self-rising flour carries not only the nutritious natural protein and starch of the wheat, but in addition it has mono-calcium phosphate which has been added together with salt and sodium bi-carbonate. Thus it is pre-leavened at the mill and is ready for use in your modern baking.
No more bother with measuring and sifting flour, baking powder and salt. Biscuit made by the following method are truly modern and delicious:
Plain Biscuit
Milk (fresh or buttermilk if you prefer it)
Sift flour once before you measure it. Then cut in the flour with a "dough blender" or a table fork Add the milk to make a soft dough Turn out on a floured surface. Pat out to about one-half-inch thickness. Cut, place on an ungreased pan and bake in a hot oven (475°) for ten minutes.
958
crewers are an excellent aid in con-
cee the waist, while the slanted skirt
large hips. This dress is cut so as
which is the aim of all well dressed
for innumerable occasions made up
fever and sleeve trimming.
Size 40 requires 4% yards of 36 inch,
dress; and % yard of contrasting
RIGHTGOWN
need a rare treat when so lovely a
home inexpensively, and easily. An
need with the pointed scams. The
and the lace trimmed "V" decollet-
ation.
shade of flat crepe, this model be-
AMERICAN STORES CO.
Big 19c Sal
Home Needs—just what you use everyd
very special prices which will save you 1
Fine, fresh Merchandise you will be g
have on your shelves, and the savings yo
glad to have in your purse.
c Sale you use everyday-at will save you money. you will be glad to the savings you'll be
Big 19c Sale
Home Needs—just what you use everyday—at very special prices which will save you money. Fine, fresh Merchandise you will be glad to have on your shelves, and the savings you'll be glad to have in your purse.
Cut Stringless Beans
Tender Lima Beans
ASCO Cut Red Beets
3 cans 19c
All new pack 1932 crop vegetables.
Choice Seedless Raisins . . . 3 lbs
Manning's Hominy . . . 2 can
Wet Pack Shrimp . . . 2 can
Hershey's Cocoa . . . 2 can
Morton's ( Plain or Iodized ) Salt . . 3 pkg
Vitamont Dog Food . . . 2 pkg
French's Bird Seed . . . 2 pkg
ASCO Brand Finest
Macaroni or Spaghetti 4 lb. box 2
Nutritious Food at a Saving.
Delicious Calif. Apricots . . . 2 tall can
Delicious Calif. Peaches . . . 2 tall can
ASCO Choice Peaches . . . 2 tall can
ASCO Fine Grape Jelly . . . lb.
ASCO Finest Mince Meat . . . .
ASCO Finest Baking Powder . . lb. c
Holland Belle Vanilla Substitute . . . b
Calimyrna Figs . . . 2 pk
Choice Seedless Raisins 3 lbs 19¢
Manning's Hominy 2 cans 19¢
Wet Pack Shrimp 2 cans 19¢
Hershey's Cocoa 2 cans 19¢
Morton's ( Plain or Iodized ) Salt 3 pkgs 19¢
Vitamont Dog Food 2 pkgs 19¢
French's Bird Seed 2 pkgs 19¢
asco Brand Finest Macaroni or Spaghetti 4 lb. box 25c
Delicious Calif. Apricots ..... 2 tall cans 19c
Delicious Calif. Peaches ..... 2 tall cans 19c
ASCO Choice Peaches ..... 2 tall cans 19c
ASCO Fine Grape Jelly ..... lb. jar 19c
ASCO Finest Mince Meat ..... lb. 19c
ASCO Finest Baking Powder ..... lb. can 19c
Holland Belle Vanilla Substitute ..... bot. 19c
Calimyrna Figs ..... 2 pkgs 19c
Phillips Delicious Spaghetti
Phillips Delicious Pea Soup
Phillips Delicious Veg. Soup
ASCO Tomato Soup
Ritter Tomato Soup
4
caps
19c
Keep your pantry well stocked.
Cooked Corned Beef. lb. c
Prim Brand Tomatoes. 3 No. 2 ca
Princess Mustard. qt. j
Hom-de-Lite Mayonnaise. pt. j
ASCO Fancy Stringless Beans. No. 2 c
California Sardines. 2 ca
Our Choice Brooms. ea
10-qt Galvanized Pails. ea
Tune in Station WBAL-1060 Kilocycles—each Thursday over
8:30 to 9. Listen to the sweet refractions "Around the Melodian"
Cut Stringless Beans
Tender Lima Beans
ASCO Cut Red Beets
ASCO Sauer Kraut
SEVEN
=, @ribune:|:|:| Haase FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MOI
FEATURES
ey aot )
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S$
Wrce):\aeants
! PPT eS ant eis aaa P
Nahi rAd oer aan
Lomplete ms - Se ee Tuxedo Shirts
312.50, RNS Vries $1.95
G08? HOSE —~_
hc gine cos Eyeery S [ ITS
OO nO eel S/
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Merna : 0 ywoog ua eel
Seillitecrs| > , | ESR ITs}
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Bought Gi OBE CLOTHING SHOP INC.-741 Seventh St,
EIGHT
Evening Frocks
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THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE; DECEMBER 9, 1932
ES io co eat wr tt ote tne tometer | &
zmmnoe |THE TRIBUNE $10 IN CASH TO THE PERSON
| WILL GIVE CHASE FROM ANY MERCH
JEAN’S Shop
706 7th Street, N. W.
SHOP EARLY FOR CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL @
SALE wos 4)
«= 94ce i
RAYON PAJAMAS STEP-INS Y “H
“SPECIAL SALE!
"= Hose. 39el “s
SPECIAL RADIO VALUE
FOR CHRISTMAS
Qa: = 14°
FULL coco HOUSE SETS
Motorola &PHILCO TANS
LISTEN IN nti ot
MANHATTAN
AUTO € RADIO CO.
RCE Re ee
“ BUY
TODAY
AND
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aN
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SEE ABOVE
OFFER
to the Person Making the Second: Largest
$5 Purchase Before’ 10 P:M., Decsmber 23.
Buy Now and Get'$15' Cash for Christmas
La N Ss 804 7th St., N.W.
SSS
Ideal CHRISTMAS GIFTS of
MILLINERY and SHOES ;
New |: Something New! Lan’s Has
Mibhic.- sy It'In Gray and Brown
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Satins 7 CS. 53
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HAT, SCARF and ve tinsnw 98
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SETS ee comnination | Ser e‘totm: J Pumps ana
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OTHER OF FOUR a |HARRS DEFEATS. Freedmen’s Hospital Surgeon NAME SCHOOL THRE CENT FAR
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SELLING WHISKEY sssirs=srsieci:| MQDNINE CTAD|NabeneRiageees ee —/ ner TeMpry esate] ¢709 ON EAR
Samuel J. Knights Says at
One Time Wife Threw
Liquor on Him
Because of her continued boot-
Tegging activities for which she is
now serving a 30-day sentence,
Samuel J. Knights, 601 U Street,
Northeast, a clerk in the Navy De.
partment, filed a petition for a lim-
ited divorce from his wife, Mrs,
Sarah ‘P. Knights, 24%4,-Q. Street,
Northwest,
Knights also seeks. the, custody
of his three minor children.
According to the petition filed
by.Mr. Knights the couple was mar-
ried November 18, 1908, by the Rev.
Lawrence Spiegier and have four
childzen, onc 2. grown’ married
daughter.
He states that. his family life
was happy until 1928, when his
wife engaged in the sale of liquor
atid’ conducted her business at their
home. He says she continued hoot-
legritg over: his protest, and’ on
rh B1, 1930, their home-was
raided and liquor found on. the
premises.
Wife Arrested
The petition, says’ that at thet
time «Mrs. Knights was arrested
and fined $100. The fine and coun-
sel fees cost him $250, he alleges.
As a result of the raid, the land-
Jord made them move, so they took
up residence at 204 R'Street, where
Ais. wife ‘contingpd het unlawful
acts. C
In August, 1982, this place of
residence was taided, "liquor was
found, -and his wife was sentenced
to jail, where she is Aow,seryingya
sentence, ie t ea ha
nights. 5 im,
that eet every 3 ne
vent hix wife from r
activities, and at one time when
he remonsttated with her she is
alleged to have thrown a glass of
whiskey in his face, pushed him
ge of doors and locked him out.
(@ said he was-forced to! remain
out all’night and was.not admitted
until 10 ‘the next morning, despite
the fact that he was -due ‘on his
job at 8:30,
Life ‘Pkreatened
» The husband declares ‘that he is
in constant fear. of losing his posi-
tion and of being xalded by ary of-
ficers. ‘He says he. is in position
pede 5 tous for his family,
t his wife's refusal ‘to stop sell-
ing liquor and her continued ac-
tivities among. certain. of her
friends make. ane home an ong
Place. for, the minor children. He
said at one time his wife threat-
ened to get him out of the way “if
ie ate perpen (6. foe
job.”
Knights-asks the conrt for a lim-
ited divorce and permanent custody
ote 1 ‘Lisenby sents
ttorney’: I.» Lis represent
Knights. 3
Robbers Get Gold Watch,
Police of the ‘Second’ precinct
ently:thid week rere searching for
‘@ tall, light brown skin’ woman
Who is reported to have robbed
Mrs. Alice Hale, 440; P Street,
Northwest, Friday bvdciing of a
gold watch, bracelet_and diamond
Gar rings valued at $1000. Fifteen
dollars in cash were also taken.
‘At the time of the robbery the
woman was allegedly accompanied
by a man whom Mrs. Hale couldn't
describe.
eo hag Sees
Man in Hospital After
_‘Tth Street Altercation
An altercation’ on Seventh’ Street
between R and S Streets, North-
west, early this week, resulted in
the treatment of George Jackson,
25. of the 400 bloek of H Street,
Northwest, at Freedmen’s Hospi-
fal for Incerations of the head. Po-
dite say the man was hit with a
stick by Roy Chase, 25, of the 1600
Block of Third Street, Northwest.
sagas ae #
Husband Thwarts Young
+ Wife’s Suicide Attempt
An attempt to commit suicide was
thwarted early this week when
‘Wade Wyatt, of 1943 Fourth
Street, Northwest, knocked a bot-
tle of lysol from the hands of his
wife, Elizabeth Wyatt, 20.° The
sasmen: bad swallowid o.pettion Af
‘tHe poison, however, when her
= abruptly ended her suicide
ie caine Ore ae
ment by Emergency Hospital am-
‘bulance phzvicians and later re-
peoved to the hospital ~~
Fatally Injured When
Automobile Strikes Pole
William Foster, 82, of the 300
Galinger ‘Hospital Monday. tight
asa result of injuries received
SQUTHERNAIRES,
RADIO QUARTETTE,
IN D.C. CONCERT
Duke Ellington. Purchased
100 Tickets to Assist
Unemployed
‘The Southernaires, famous quar-
tette of radio rhythm makers, will
appear in a grand concert at the
Metropolitan A.M-E. Church, 1518
M Street, Northwest, Friday, De
cember 16, for the benefit of char-
ity,
‘Phe'quartet, William Edmonson
Homer Smith, Lowell Peters, and
Jay Toney; have just closed a suc-
cessful’-season over Station. WRC
and have begun a personal tour of
the country. Their appearance ir
the capital will mark the opening
engagement of this tour.
Duke Ellington, premier jazz. or.
chestra leader, playing at Howard
Theatre this week, purchased 100
tickets for the concert ard has
given instructions to the sponsors
of the affair. to. distribute the
money among unemployed persons
gt eda oan
eee. ae
for Joseph er's
Death, Jury Finds
Police are combing the city and
nearby places. for Arthur Green,
80,"alleged resident of 1245 Sev-
enth Street, Northwest, who a cor-
onex’s jury at the District Morgue
yapterday (Thursday). beld Fespon-
sible for the murder of Joseph Pal-
mer, 40, 25 Congress Court, North-
west.
Palmer. was” fatally wounded
when struck over fhe head with»
bed post and cut 6n the lower lip
daring an altercation at the Con-
Court...address, Saturday
might. ‘The-man was found by po-
lice lying in the alley in the rear
of the house bleeding profusely. An
Emergency’ Hospital ambulance
physician pronounced him dead on
arrival at the scene. Death was
caused bya fractured skull. ted
romaine hemorrhage and. shock.
and Groen had’ apgaed eadiy' Sat
ren a earl
urday morning dver an alleged
false message carried by Green to
Palmer's common-law wife. The
two mien were said to have drawn
knives on each other at this time,
but inter patched things up and
shook hands.
Later that night, James Penson,
pe! Court told the ju oF that Pal
gress: e jury it -
mer returned 2 the Ee: Ssh
terrupted a card game
a second argument with Green. On
this- occasion, Palmer. is. said to
have drawn a knife on Green and
forced him out of the back door.
As Green reached the end of the
yard, witnesses said, he picked uP
‘gn old bed post which was lying
the Yard, and struck Palmer: over
the Green then fled down
the alley and has not been located
since. :
When police arrived om the scene
Palmer was found with a penknife
still clutched in his hand.
Alexandria Resident Dies
Suddenly in New Jersey
ALEXANDRIA, Ve: — Funeral
Fisldtat who died in Allcaweed
Sater re
Arnold Funeral ‘Parlor with the
Rey. James E. Green officiating.
Burial was. in the "Odd Fellows
_ Surviving Mr. Burrell are his
Sider, Me. Bumndine Barrel: be
Iulia and Katherin; his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F."Bur-
dogs Suse sue Sie Nettie, B
ethane: and a brother, r> Thomas
HARRIS DEFEATS
HOLTON, HEADING
MORNING STAR
John T. Rhines Declines to
William B. Harris, secretary’ of
the trustee board of Morning Star
Lodge of Elks, defeated Leo Hol-
ton, Tuesday night, at the semi-
annual election for exalted raler.
Both of th2 « mdidates were past
‘exalted rulers.
John’ T. Rhines; the present. éx-
alted ruler of the lodge and. ne-
tional athletic director of the Elks,
declined. to run to succeed himself.
‘This is his third semi- annual term.
Herbert E. Jones district dep-
uty, conducted ‘the election. The
results of the election follow; For
exalted ruler, William B.. Haris;
153; Dr. Leo’ Holton, 37.
For estesmad' loyal knight, ¥,.B.
Parker, 61; C,.0. Swett, -75;. and
J.B. Simms. 75", Sime ‘won’ in a
rint off with Swett.
For esteemed lecturing knight,
Morris. Wooden, 126; Charles Da-
vis, 79.
For one trustee, Charles: Grant,
77; J. L. Gingham, 46; W. H.
Newman, 35, Maurice Spencer, 19;
Charles ” Richardson, 16; Alfred
Selby, 15; and Joseph Imes, 11.
Dr. J. J., Porter was appointed
trustee to’ fill out the unexpired
term of William B. Harris,
The lodge voted not to defray
the expenses of delegates to. the
next grand lodge in Indianapolis,
Ind. The band and drill team have
committees working to raise money
for, the purpose.
‘The exalted ruler of the. lodge
was: in Coatesvile, Pa, Saturday
night, attending the Past Exalted
Rulers’ Council, in. the interest. of
his-national athletic program,
He epent Sunday in Chester and
Philadelphia.
| oe
Files Suit Against Husband
| for Support and
, Maintenance
Bb
Mrs. Harriet E, Johnson, 1340
Corcoran Street, fled a suit. for
support and separate maintenance
in the district supreme court,
Wednesday, against her husband,
Henderson L. Johnson, an employee
at a downtown department store.
Mrs. Johnson states that she is
60-years of age and is unable-to
earn a living. She says that she
and Mr. Johnson were married on
July 2, 1907, and lived together un,
% a deesrted her September 28,
I
She states in her petition that
she became ill September 1, this
year, and bas not been able to earn
a living since. Mrs. Johnson claims
that her husband, who earns $24 a
week, left without paying the rent
and she is foreed to live off the
chavity ‘of. her landlady.
Banneker Center
Sponsors Recital
The spacious studio at the Ban-
neker Community Center was fille
to its capacity Sunday evening at
four o'clock, the occasion being a
recital given by the pupils of T. S.
Cherry, the director: of. the depart
ment of music aud aesthetic
ing:
"Toe primary pupils of piano were
prevented. Among. those were:
farjorie Perry, Ada Mason, Jen-
nie rong, Constance Murray,
Catherine Elms, Virginia Davis,
Anvie White, Pauline Murry,
Elishe Lombre, John Haynes, Ker-
mit Mehlinger, Julian Williams.
The advanced vocal students
pleased the audience highly in their
interpretation of songs. _ Thexe
‘ere Mrs. Thompson, Mrs. Davis
Mes, King, Messrs. Haynes, an
White. .
airciss of Re Community Coster
om :
Mrs. Gabrielle Petham, with &
emp of boys singing Christmas
The Rev: E. F; Elmes, pastor of
the People’s Congregational Charch,
(gave a brief lecture on the appre-
ciation of music.
‘Mr. Cherry, will present his
‘dancing class in & recital’ to the
public on December 20th, and the
Toraneed piano recital January 29,
‘the studio of Banneker Center.
‘The habit of minding ones" own
is wisdom, whether natur-
al or acquired. } ee’
Freedmen’s Hospital Surgeon
Makes Christmas Seal Appeal
STATION WOL) |
Making an appeal for the sale
of tuberculosis ‘Christmas seals,
Dr. T.. Edward Jones, assistant
surgeon: in chief of. Freedmen’s
Hospital, delivered an address over
Station WOL Saturday morning at
11:45. 2
Dr. . Jones said among other
things: 3
“In the United States in the year
1981, - approximately 67. out of
every 100,000 persons. died» from
tuberculosis—known: also as con-
}sumption. In the District, of ‘Cole
umbia 120’ persons , out of every
100,000 “died from this. dreaded
disease.
oie these deaths in the
District of Columbie from a racial
standpoint, we find that for the
mike! race, 6D ont of apety 00ND
died ‘from this malady. while
colored persons out of every 100,
000 succumbed to its rayages...\Tn
other words there was a total of
590 deaths—237. whites, 858).color-
od. ‘Teis interesting ud eneairegs
ing, however, to. note that the
ored death rate decreased one’ per
cent, .
Funds From Seals
{Zou cannot arrest — control ain
tuberculosis on’ a fa 1
inadequate for the simplest \te-
quirements of food, cuthing ae
ing, and the necessities ‘of life, no
matter how much you spend on
medical diagnosis, medical nursing
supervision, and’ medical treat-
ment, or sanitarium- and. hospital
care.
“The National Tuberculosis Aa-
sociation has for its purpose, the
prevention, diagnosis and treat:
ment of this disease. This organi-
zation depends upon the funds de-
rived from ‘the: sale of Christmas
seals for its support. The ee
of its work surpasses. adequat
estimation.
“A: gigantic network of health
protection, which includes’ medical
Treatment for. the sik preventive
measures for 'thoso in mediate
danger of disease attack, and
also safeguards the well, has been
brought into existence’ largely
through the power of a penny
sticker.
“The American’ public’ volun
tarily contributed about $5,000,000
in 1925 to keep the scourge, from
its doors through: the sale of s
the ‘now universally ‘known Christ:
mas. Seal. :
esl, sanatoriay clinics,
open air schools, preventoria, as
Well as a progaeay ‘of public health
education, are able to carry’ on
from year to year by means of
billions of little stamps that deco-
rate lettets, boxes and bundles at,
holiday time,
History of Seal
“The story of the Christmas
seal is the story of a dream come
true. And the name of the man
who conceived it deserves to be
recorded among the great humani-
tarians of) our age.
“It was in 1903 that Einar Hoel-
bell, then an obscure postal clerk
in Denmark, hit upon the idea -of
selling’: Christmas stamps to ‘re-
COLUMBIA LODGE
RE-ELECTS EPPS
The election of officers of Colum-
bia Lodge of Elks took place Mon-
day night at the Masonic Temple.
Herbert E. Jones, district deputy
jand past exaited ruler of the lodge,
presided over the election. Cap-
tain-Sylvester H. Epps, present ex-
alted ruler, and his entire cabinet
was re-elected.
‘Officers re-elected for the next
six months are as follows: Sylves-
‘ter H. aa exalted ruler; Allan
A.C. ih, esteemed leading
knight; Howard A. Walker, ¢s-
teemed loyal knight; Harry C.
Smith, esteemed lecturing knight;
Clarence H. Akers, esquire; An-
drew Allen, inner guard; Joka W.
Swails, tiler; Lee Sern finan-
Sods wectoiare; Mian I Eat
seccetary; Wiliam. Ye
man. treascrer; Aaron-J. Geskins,
trusteg; end ‘Edward. W. Bundy,
of the house comn.ittec.
‘The anaval memorial gervices of
the lodge wi"! be beld on Sunday
evening, December lu. at Francis
Jrnior High Schoyj. Finmitt Tho-
mas is chinman of the committee
on_atrangements.
‘the Past Exalted ufers’ Coun-
@ No, 4 will hold their election
as aoe en Monday, pera
at . Her-
Ecomlateapiene i
council -
Margaret: “Are you a one arm
driver?”
“Iwan: “Naw, I take = taxi and
axe both.”
Broadcasts Appeal
i
ee
Ba
i
3
toed
Ld
DR.(T: EDWARD JONES,
sutgeon ‘in ‘chief at : Frecdmen’s
Hospital, who made’an ‘appeal for
the sale of Christmas seals for the
benefit. of 'the “National Tubereu-
losis “Association over Station
WOL.
ee
lieve the sapftermnge of tubercles
tients. Copenhagen needed
fi jital for tuberculous. children;
at Hoelbell was daily canceling
thousand of postage stamps on
holiday greeting cards."
“Why, s0 he ‘reasoned, should
not this flood of mail sent, out: ir
the spirit of “Peace of earth, good
will to, men” do a. triple. service?
Every missive bore a postage
stamp of tribute to the govern-
ment, arid merry. wishes to teiend
for the holidays—could it not also
earry = much neeged Christmas
gift to the sick?
|. “He enlisted the co-operation of
the Danish royal family and of in-
fluential officials out of which came
in 1904, the first -wide ie
ciulosis ‘Chriatmas sésl. sale,
résponse to the appeal was ot
whelming, infact, 50 success:
was the ‘undertaking . that other
European countries speedily adopt-
ed the idea and within-a few years
Christmas seal ‘sales became an
established custom’ on’ ther conti-
nent.
“Miss Einily Bissell of Dele
ware, thought of applying the
Christmas seal’ idea in the United
States. Her own particular’ prob-
lem: at the time was to raise’ funds
for x peal tuberculosis’ sanator-
fum in Delaware.
tn the inale of the penny ntick-
she saw the solation of her
diiculty. So, in spite of discour-
ment, ‘she undertook to or-
ine and conduct the first tuber-
if Seal sale ever held in this
country.” Her receipts ftom. this
vera seachod whet was then a
amazi ; namely, three thou-
sani dollars
“Christmas seals have ° done
much more than to -raise dollars
for the relief of active cases of
tuberculosis, worth while as this
function is. More powerful has
been the stimulus to establish new
epessications dedfenthi. to educa
al preventive: work -which,
it. is; hoped, will: ultimately eradi-
cate the’ white plague entirely.”
BETTER CITIZENS
COUNCIL ADOPTS
CONSTITUTION
oe Gog!
The election’ of offi-
cers will be the onder of the day
at the mécting of the Better Cit
Weienay” at, the oon. Carmel
. ai jount
Sta oe ization
8
ete tatiied and adopted at 8 re
‘The: chairman, the’ Rey. Willism
H. Jernagin, expressed the hope
eatly hls week that the organize
may completed at once in
order tha The couaeil isimediatl
undertake its problem re-
senting the Negro before the Con-
gressional committees.
fr 0 dtl gall Regge
Sia tere at rent
| eid before the Senate Dis
‘ee mathe: and Tex the aim of
body te continue fe-guar
sd remap the oh Ne.
eee the problems of federal
TO NAME SCHOOL
IN HONOR OF LATE
JUDGE TERRELL
The old M.Street .High School
building .will be known as the Rob-
ert H. Terre]! Junior High School
when’ students of, Cardozo . Busi-
ness High School are . transferred
tothe building at Ninth Street and
Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest,
this winter,
‘The name. for the junior high
schodl was favored after a long
list had been submitted, The name
was approved by the board of edu-
cation.
Distinguished Jurist
Judge Robert H. Terrell grad-
uated from Harvard University in
1884, cum laude, and. was among
the seven honor men in.a class .of
300. He was the first colored stu-
dent graduating. from Haryard’ to
deliver'an oration at the commence-
ment.
He was teacher of physics at the
M Street High School for a: term
of years, and was principal of the
school from 1899 to 1901.
He was justice of the peace for
the District of Columbia from 1902
to 1909. He served as judge in the
municipal court from 1910 until his
death in 1985, having been mppoitt-
ed successively by — Presidents
Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson, Harding,
and Coolidge, e
Grimke Honored
‘The elementary. school to be lo-
cated in the same building with
Cardozo. on Rhode Island Avenue
will be named in honor of Archi-
bald H. Grimke.
Ms. Grimke was, distinguished
aduate of Harvard University.
&e zained. a creditable: place Jn
aetns
‘Throughout his life he was x
advocate of equality of
“Yor “underprivileged
‘One of the founders of
the National Association for the
‘AEVincement of Colored People,
Aut served for years ns president
¢ local branch of that asso-
ciation, Mr, Grimke for a term of
years served as United States
Consul in Santo Domingo.
STREET CLEANER
FATALLY INJURED
A coroner's jury investigating
tha’ dood of Wilko, Mactowen
SE-venr-old street cleaner, of 1636
Beile Court, Northwest, returned a
verdict. of accidental death at the
District Morgue, yesterday (Thurs-
day), clearing Simon Kline Mark.
ley, white, driver of the ear which
rick Masterson of all Blame,
terson, an e1 loyee the
District for a number of years, was
fatally, injured when. the heavy
three-ton truck driven by ‘Markley,
an employee of the D.C, Refuse
Department, collided with Master-
son's cart in front of 1511 Wiscon-
sin Avenue, Northwest, Wednes-
day. The ‘collision knocked the
cart on to Masterson, who was
standing between the cart and the
curb, fracturing his left leg.
He was first taken to George-
town Hospital for treatment, later
to the Public. Health Clinic, and
finally to. Providence Hospital,
where he died about 8:30 Wednes-
day night
‘accident occurred around 7
o'clock in the morning.
ee
Reid’s Corner Donates
Shoes for Needy Children
The Federation of Parent-Teach-
er Association announced this week
that G. B. Reid, of Reid's Corner,
has donated fifty pairs of shoes
for needy children, sizes to
eight. Applications Sag. tgs Woson
may be made by calling at the
Mott School, Tuesday or Thursday
between’ 1:30 and 3:30 o'clock.
ee ees
Lightning Kills Man,
Babe In Arms Unhurt
MAGNOLIA, Miss (CNS) —
While walking with his wife and
a baby in his arms
Siaeck: by teething ona tentoaats
killed two miles east of Magnolia/
‘The woman and the baby were not
Armstrong High School
P.-T. Ass’n to Meet
The next ‘meeting of the Arm-
strong High School Parent-Teach-
er Association will be held in the
Anmstrong Auditorium on Thurs-
Gay, December 15, at, 8:15 o'clock.
There will be a short program of
importance which. will be followed
by conferences with all teachers.
pet eee
Parent-Teacher Groups to
Feed and Cloth Pupils
in Schools
ee ee oy crepe fs
the public. schools of. the District
were. suttuies ‘at the monthly meet-
ing of the Federation of Patent-
Teacher, Associations. which was
held Thursday at the Garnet-Pat-
terson. Junior High School.
A recent survey revealed that
there are many, children attending
the schools without. proper clothing
and undertiourished. ‘The Federa:
tion passed a resolution to have
each Parent-Teacher’ Association
to appoint a representative to the
Students’ Aid Committee. iis
latter committee will . co-operate
witha like committee from civic
associations for the purpose of. aid-
ing needy children. Funds are to
be raised through public contribu-
tion,
‘To Care for Needy Children
Garnet C. Wilkinson, first assis-
tant ‘superintendent of schools,
urged each parent-teacher group
to have a committee appointed to
care for the needs of its respective
community.
‘The federation ailépted a, new
constitution which provided-for a
‘more extensive program Jor ioeal
associations. Ohe of the provisions
provided that assistant superinten-
dents of colored schools, retired
Principals and teachers be ex-offi-
cio members of the federation.
Officers elected for the year were
the Rey. George A. Parker, presi-
dent; J. C. Payne, first vice-presi-
dent; Miss Edith’ A. Lyons, prin-
cipal of Morgan School, ‘second
Vice-president; B.%. Montgomery,
treasurer; J, C. Wells, i
secretary; the Rey. J. D, Pair,
chaplain; Miss Susie R.° Quander,
historian,
Miss Ida Taylor, who was named
Juvenile court worker by the execu-
tive committee, was elected secre-
tary of the committee on juvenile
delinquency. Plans were also made
to have the Parent-Teacher Jour-
nal serve the needs of the District,
Maryland and other states in edu-
cational work, §
, The new conatiention provided
for an. executive secretary, w'
its Sed ae ae
. L. EB. Crouse: a’
Garnet-Patterson Junior
High Preparing for
Annual Christmas Rally
The students of the Garnet- Pat-
tetson Junior High School are pre-
paring their third annual Christ-
mas r@lly. This annual event con-
sists of contributions of toys,
clothing: and: non-perishable foods
which are brought in by the stu-
dents and teachers. The Art De-
partment arranges the gifts on the
stage where they may be viewed
by ‘the: school and. by parents at
the noon, recess’ on Wednesday,
December 21, |
These materials ate used to re-
lieve cases of distress within the
school and the remainder is divid-
ed among such outstanding charity
grganizatione as, the Associated
a ivati Army, Soutb-
east Community House, ‘Harriet
Tubman Home for the Blind, ete.
In the past, hundreds of contain-
ers of food, large numbers of toys,
hundreds of pieces of a: have
been donated. It is not known
| what success the rally will achieve
‘this year because of economic con-
ditions; nevertheless, the attempt
‘is being made to reeat what has
become one of the institutions of
‘thin school,
| Members of the public who may
may be interested in viewing the
‘display are invited to enter the
auditorium of the school’ at Ver-
Avense and V Street, be-
tween 12:10 and 12:40 on the day
eee red
NPL. Elects New Treasurer
James T. Sutton, emploree of
the Government Printing Office, re-
signed this week as treasurer of
the, Notional Erometiog ond.1s
vesting Company because
cee private business. Theo.
R. Ray, of the Bureas of
Engraving, was elected to the of-
fice vacated by Mr. Sutton,
THREE-CENT FARE
SAVES D.C.PARENTS
630 EAR
br Seat Chien
‘The three-cent car fare for
school children saves District pa-
rents $163,664 annually, it was re-
vealed early this week in a letter
written by J. C, Wright, “Father
of the Three-Cent. Car Fare,” of
514 T Street, Northwest, :
Copies of the’ letter conveying
the’ information were sent to, Set-
ator Arthur Capper, chairman ‘of
the District Committee of the Sen-
ates President Hayden Johnson, of
board of education; Frank Bal-
lou, superintendent of school#; and
Garnet C. Wilkinson, first’ assistant
superintendent: of schools.
ir. Wright stated that the. re-
duced ‘rates for school children is
being hailed everywhere ’as a, city-
wide economic blessing in these an-
precedented times of utemployment
and depression. Meanwhile, : the
case of the car companies, who ate
séeking to have the Public Utilities
Commissioner’s order rescinded
was still pending in ‘the’ Distrie:
Supreme Court. :
ir, Wright's letter says: , ,
“According. toa brief
filed in the District Supreme
by the people's counsel and sj
counsel for the Public Utiti
Commission, the street railwage
and buses operating within the Dis-
trict of Columbia sold 3,607,358:
three-cent school fares in trans-
porting school children to'and from
school during the yaar ending Sep-
families 20, 4982, “for, whe deh. cheik
ruggling parents pal 920,
"Hor the year cited he epitel
Traction Company sold 1,18 648
school faren; t he, Wakhiagton, Fal:
way! lectrie Company
Bateau, ‘school etm and the
Washington Rapid Transit Com:
pany sold 71,364 school fares, Un-
der the regular street car token
fare and the 10-centebus fare, it
would have cost $271,585 for. the
school children involved to ride to
and from sehool.
“The three-cent school fare en-
abled parents to'save $163,664 .dur-
ing the year aforesaid;’ increased
street car and bus patronage by
school children 25 per cent; and re-
duced the profits of the Capital
Traction Company only % of 1
per cent, the Washington Railway
and Electric Company and the
Washington Rapid Transit -Com-
pany about 4% of Lipes ene
respective of other gains or losses)
as set forth in the. brief ‘herein
mentioned. toa
“Indeed three-cent ear fare for
Washington school . children, is
hailed everywhere, as on city-wide
Tay blessing in. these, unpre
jented times of unemployment
Pe: sree
* #On behalf of parents and
children’ of Washington 1 ‘hen
you for your kind interest.”
Duncan and Allen
in Lecture-Recital
‘The Literature Lovers: pi
n, Todd Duncan, assisted by Wi
liam Allen, in a lecture-recital,
Sunday, at the Y.W.C.A.
‘The program of the music of
Johannes Brahms, rendered by’ Mr.
Duncan was an unveual treat. ile
‘ope the program telling
audience something sont the ite
and, music of the componer Briere
anniversary 1001 ,
is being celebrated throughout the
wocld this year. ;
He proclaimed Brahms as esen-
tially a song writer having set the
poems of seventy-iive individual
poets to music in over two bun-
hundred sony ey
ir. incan's excellent ini
tation of five Brahms ae eee
included “Du bist meine Kornigin,”
“Mein Liebst ist Blume,” and the
well known cradle song, was a tri-
bute to the great musician.
William D. Allen, who accom-
pia ae Duras, ee the
rabms Rhapsody in D Minor,
which emphasized the intellectual
treatment of the rhapsody in com-
tradistinetion to that of Frans
Liszt's impulsive treatment... . +
Hartwell Cook’s Program
For WRC Friday
- Hartwell Cook's Casino. orches-
tra broadcasting each Friday af
ternoan from 3:43 to 6:00 siclock
over station WRC, is proving as
terta traction.
"The compeien for today is “Sen-
limental Gentleman from Grorgia.”
aud “t's Gonna Be You” A" re
Saw ° ty ay my
: *
then “Margie” “Tune fe at. 5;
this afternoon ever WRG.