Washington Tribune
Friday, June 2, 1933
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
"HAPPY AM I" DEDICATED TO PRES. ROOSEVELT
DR. STRATTON KILLED IN ACCIDENT
The Most News Cleanest News Latest News
DR. S
FAMOUS PREACHER HOLDS MEMORIAL DAY DEVOTIONS
8,000 Brave Rain to Hear
Elder Michaux Conduct
Service in Ball Park
Despite a pouring down rain a
crowd of 8,000 persons gathered in
the National Baseball Park. Tuesday
night, under the leadership of
Elder Lightfoot Michaux, pastor of
the Church of God and famous
radio evangelist, and dedicated the
theme song of the church, "Happy
Am I," to President Roosevelt and
following the dedication a short
memorial service was held.
The rain and rather cool night caused an hour and 30 minutes postponement of the meeting, which was scheduled to start at 8 p.m. Thousands had entered the park as early as 7 o'clock and waited patiently until the service began. The audience was about equally divided between the races.
Song Sent to President
At a given signal during the service, a messenger boy rode his bicycle into the park, up to the platform, which was situated over the home plate, and received the autographed song and the dedicatory message for the President. The choir of 154 voices sang "Happy Am I" as the messenger rode off the field.
The choir and Elder Michaux left the church, which is located divetly across the street from the stadium, at 9:30. They were dressed in white robes and marched single file to the park under police escort. Seats were arranged on a platform at the home plate for the choir and guests. Loud speakers carried the singing and the voices of the speakers to all corners of the big park.
Bugler Blows Taps
A feature of the program was the blowing of taps by William E. Staples, white, former bugler on the U. S. S. Pittsburgh. Staples was in uniform and had blown taps earlier in the day at Arlington Cemetery. Another feature was the forming of the letters WJSY by the choir members in honor of the station which broadcasts the radio services of the church each day. The letters were formed by the choir by red caps which members wore under their white ones. At the call of a letter a group of choir members would pull off their white caps and leave exposed the red ones, which formed the letter called.
Prayer was offered by Elder Larson, white, and a solo, "When We Say Good Night Here We Say Good Morning There," was sung by Mrs. Michaux, wife of the elder.
Song Fits Roosevelt
In his address Elder Michaux explained the institution of Memorial Day and in dedicating his theme song to the President he stated that the song witted the Chief Executive as he wore a smile despite the trying times and the many problems he has been facing since he has assumed office. The "Street Singers," three small boys who are brothers, and their uncle, rendered several selections. Music was furnished by an orchestra from Newport News, Va.
After the service Elder Michaux stated that he plans to use the ball park regularly if arrangements can be made to hold services there on on Sunday.
MESSENGER INJURED
Knocked down by an auto, William Jenkins, 58. of 1750 Oregon Avenue, Northwest; a messenger in the Bureau of Standards, received cuts on the head, abrasions of the left hand and both ankles, a possible fracture of the left ankle Thursday.
Jenkins was taken to the Freedman's Hospital for treatment by the 'driver of the machine which struck him, Herman Harrison. He was injured at First and Florida Avenue, Northeast.
Detective Paul Jones Gets His Man and Another One Besides
Eye" of Washington Sleuth Serves Him in Good Stead When He Recognizes Wanted Man on Street
First Colored Woman Is Admitted to N.C. Bar
GOLDSBORO N.C.—Mrs. Ruth W. Whaley, first colored woman licensed to practice law in North Carolina, was sworn in here Tuesday by Judge F. A. Daniels. Mrs. Whaley is a native of Goldsboro but studied law in New York and practices there. She was granted a license in North Carolina by reciprocity.
H. U. STUDENT DIES WHEN MOTORCYCLE RUNS INTO AUTO
Machine Skidded 30 Feet Into Halted Car; Handle Bar Penetrates Side CORONER'S JURY LIBERATES DRIVER
Victim Rode Vehicle Here From Oklahoma to Extend His Education
Robert O. Anderson, 18-year-old Howard University freshman, roomer at 742 Harvard Street, Northwest, died at Freedmen's Hospital, Thursday, from the effects of a puncture of, the right abdomen by the handle bar of his motorcycle which collided with an automobile at Tenth and U Streets, Northwest.
Testimony before a coroner's jury, Saturday, which revealed that Anderson skidded into the halted machine of Robert Cabel, 35, of 1520 U Street, Northwest, chef cook at the Catholic University, resulted in the release of the latter. The accident occurred on May 23, while Anderson was going on U Street, and Cabel was going East and attempting to negotiate a left turn.
Brother Takes Stand
Sensational testimony, which was expected to be developed when Alger Anderson. 757 Morton Street, Northwest, brother of the deceased, announced as the jury was deciding the case, that he wished to testify, failed to materialize.
Perry W. Howard, representing the family, explained that as the young man was not on the scene at the time of the accident, he had not proposed to offer him as a witness.
Alger, a taxi driver, told of taking Cabel, who did not know at the time that he was a brother of the injured youth, in his taxi from the accident to the Catholic University (continued on page two)
(Continued on page two)
PHILADELPHIA. — The camera eye of Detective Sergeant Paul Jones, of Washington, was respon-
sible for two men being arrested here last week. Both men are now in washington, having been returned there in Jones's custody. One of them he sought, the other just happened to get within his range of vision. Jones had come here on a "tip" that James Hassler a "con" man
PETER HARRIS
MRS. J. F. WILSON ASKS OUSTING OF N.B. RECEIVERS
Seeks Disolving of Company and Distributing Assets to Policyholders
Mrs. Leah B. Wilson, wife of J. Finley Wilson, grand exalted ruler of the Elks, through her attorney, Henry Lincoln Johnson, asked Justice James M. Proctor for leave to file an intervening petition dismissing the present receivers of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company and to appoint another receiver or receivers and that a final decree be entered dissolving the company, the proceeds to be distributed among those entitled to them according, to their respective rights and interests.
Justice Proctor set Friday as the day for argument on the motion to file the petition.
Has $1,000 Policy
In her petition Mrs. Wilson sets forth that she is a policyholder of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company and has a policy with a face value of $1,000.
She points out that the present receivers, Gilbert A. Clark and Frank B. Bryan, Jr., entered into an agreement with individual policyholders under a so-called modification plan whereby all policyholders were required to continue the payment of the same premiums, but were to receive in return life insurance in such reduced amount as the premium being paid at the date of modification would purchase at the attained age of the insured.
She further avers that the receivers refused to accept premiums on any policy such as she possessed unless it was accompanied by application for modification. She states that she received several communications from the receivers, to that effect and that on October 23, 1932, she was informed that no further premiums would be accepted on account of her unmodified policy of insurance. In order to preserve her rights and interests she agreed to the modification of her policy. The modified face of her policy was $850, and the date of maturity was fixed as of December 23, 1946, although her original policy of insurance would have matured on June 23, 1932.
Mrs. Wilson in her petition states that on April 27, 1933, the present receivers filed their report setting forth that the total amount in cash in their custody and control was $16,590.31 in the follow-
(Continued on page 2)
which the maid of President Roosevelt's physician had been mulcted of $1,030.
In company with Detective Willard Butler, of the 5th Division, Jones searched an apartment in Sixteenth Street near Christian, hunting for Hassler. He was not there, but Jones recognized one of the occupants as "Red" Jones, who was wanted in Washington for a $40 larceny. He was arrested.
Later in the day Jones and Butler were driving through Lombard Street when they saw Hassler in front of a theatre. The detectives jumped from the car and arrested him.
Both men had hearings before Magistrate Henry, waived extradition and were turned over to Sergeant Jones, who took them to Washington.
WASHINGTON, D.C., FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1933
Visits Here
JAMES ARTHUR LU VALLEY,
who won the 400-metre race in
Boston at the I.C. 4A meet. He
was a visitor here Tuesday.
Wednesday and Thursday of this
week.
REV. BECTON DEAD POLICE ARREST MAC C. DAVIES
Manager of Evangelist Held on Fraud Charge for Hearing
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The Rev G. Wilson Becton, noted evangelist, died Thursday at the Graduate Hospital here of wounds received in an alleged gangland death ride on May 21.
The evangelist's business manager, Mac C. Davies, was arrested Saturday night on a warrant charging fraudulent conversion and misappropriation of funds. Davies was arraigned Sunday morning and held under $2,000 bail for further hearing before Magistrate Edward W. Henry.
Slain by Whites
While police were still busy tracking down clues that might lead to the arrest of person or persons responsible for Becton's murder, the following points loomed as all important in the case:
1. The Rev. Alfred A. Campbell and Simon Roulhac were with Becton in the car when it drew up to the Tindley Tea Room, 1506 Christian Street, on Sunday night, May 21. They made no outcry when the two white gunmen accosted them.
2. The Rev. Mr. Campbell told police that while he was still in the car, one of the gunmen put his gun to Becton's head and shot him. Yet neither Campbell nor Roulhac made an outcry when the car sped away with the mortally wounded Becton.
Refused to Talk
3. Becton was still conscious, able to talk and in full possession of all his mental faculties when Detective Charles Belgrove, ace (Continued on page 2)
Cops Probe Shooting of Three at Race Track
The mysterious wounding of three men with charges from a shotgun at the Bowie race track Saturday night, are being investigated by Maryland police and officers of the Second Precinct. The more seriously injured of the men is Walter Nelson, 34, of 616 W. Biddle Street, Baltimore, who suffered wounds in the abdomen, right hand, thighs and legs. He was brought here to Freedmen's Hospital for treatment and detained in an undetermined condition. Sloan Price, 27, of 607 Morton Street, Northwest, a race horse groom, is another also shot. He had wounds of the thighs and legs. Charles Eloc, 65, of New York, is the third victim. He had buckshot wounds of the thighs and legs also.
Tribune March
Well Known Band Leader Dedicates March to Washington Paper
"The Washington Tribune March," composed by Prof. James E. Miller, director of the Community Centers Band, will be played for the first time in public on June 9, when the band opens the park season in Franklin Park, Fourteenth and K Streets, Northwest. The march has been dedicated to The Tribune and is written for bands or piano. Prof. Miller is rated among the leading band masters and composers of music in the east. Besides directing the Community Centers Band he is instructor of the high school band. The Boy Scout Band which has been under his tutulage for four months made its first public appearance on Decoration Day in the memorial day parade. The young musicians were well received and created a favorable impression along the line of march.
Law Group of Howard Plans to Force Apology from Trustee Head
Dr. Abram Flexner, chairman of the Howard University board of trustees, had not replied to a letter written to him last week by the university law alumni in which the association demanded an apology for the "ungentlemanly and discourteous" letter which the trustee head wrote to a group of women students recently.
The alleged discourteous letter was written to the women after they had protested against the dismissal of Dr. Dorothy Boulding Ferebee, who has been notified that her services as physician to women will be terminated at the end of this school year. The students asked that she be retained and the present male physician be placed on part time so as to permit the retention of Dr. Ferebee.
Dr. Flexner, in his letter, stated that if the students put up the money for Dr. Ferebele's salary the trustees would agree to her remaining at the university. He also wrote that those who did not like it could quit the university, students or teachers. The Tribune learned this week that the law alumni is planning to take certain steps in order to force an apology from Dr. Flexner for the so-called "discourteous" letter. Just what action is planned was not divulged by officers of the alumni.
Examiners Announce Principals' Tests
Examination for teachers desiring promotion to teach principalships in the elementary schools will be held on June 17, in the library of the Dumbar High School, Chief Examiner H. H. Long has just announced. This is a written test; the oral examination is to be held at the call of the board of examiners, to those who have satisfactory credits. Candidates are required to fill special application blanks and claim sheets, and file with the examiners by 5 p.m., on June 14.
AUTO KILLS MAN, 45
James Anderson, 45, of the 1100 block of Eaton Road, Southeast, died early this week at the Casualty Hospital from injuries received when he was struck by an automobile in the 1100 block of Summer Road, Southeast.
Roay Kinard, 19, of the 2600 block of Wade Road, Southeast, driver of the machine, was held at the No. 11 Precinct pending a coroner's investigation.
Taxicab Damage Suit Reversed by District Court of Appeals
Court Rules that Try-Me Company is Liable in Action in Which Municipal Court Gave Directed Verdict Against Plaintiff
Former Executive Answer Petition, Claims $10,000 as Pay for Services
DAN GARY'S RENT REPORTS NOT FULL
Insurance Company May Lose Masonic Temple as an Asset
Hearing on the answers of John T. Risher to two petitions filed by the National Benefit Life Insurance Company receivers, Gilbert A. Clark and Frank B. Bryan, Jr., to show cause why he should not be given over $10,000 mortgage loan notes and why he should not make a complete and detailed account of all rents collected from the Masonic Temple tenants scheduled for hearing, Thursday morning, was postponed at the request of the receivers until Friday, June 2. It has been postponed previously at the request of the receivers.
Mr. Risher admits holding the notes and refusing to give them up, in his answer to one petition, but declares they were given him for services in place of cash. He represents the implication that he came into possession of them because he happened to be the president of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company.
Gary Made Agent
Answering the petition regarding the collections of rents, Mr. Risher set out that when he took over the presidency of the insurance company, June 17, 1931, the executive committee of the group later directed the appointment of Daniel M. Gary as rental agent, effective July 1, 1931.
Between June 17, 1931, and September 10, 1931, Mr. Risher further contends that he was compelled to give undivided attention to duties as president of the insurance company in making efforts to avoid litigation and receiverships. His contract as rental agent of the Masonic Temple terminated on June 30, 1931.
Received No Money
Mr. Gary collected the rents from July 1, 1931, to December 31, 1931, the answer states. After Daniel C. Roper had qualified as receiver, he directed Mr. Risher to again assume the responsibility of collecting rents from the temple (Continued on Page 3)
Taxicab Damage by District Court Rules that Try-Me C in Which Municipal Verdict Aga
A decision of far-reaching importance was handed down by Associate Justice Hitz in the District of Columbia Court of Appeals this week, which reversed a decision of Judge Robert N. Mattingly in the municipal court in which the Try Me Cab Company was given a directed verdict in a damage suit. Mrs. Elizabeth Rhone, first block of L Street, sued the company for $1,000 following an accident in which she alleged she was injured. The cab company, which was represented by Attorney George E. C. Hayes, claimed that it did not own the cab, and one Walter Jackson, admitted ownership of the cab in which Mrs. Rhone was injured, but Jackson claimed that he had no liability at the time of the accident because of a contractual arrangement with Joe Williams, driver.
A Hometown Paper of, by, and for Washingtonians
IDENTent Physician Injured When trikes Culvert
Prominent Physician Fatally Injured When Auto Strikes Culvert
WIFE, 2 CHILDREN THROWN FROM CAR Mrs. Stratton Pulls Body of Husband from Water of Creek
The one most severely hurt was Edward Holland, 41, 2201 Second Street, Northwest, an employee of the Bureau of the Census, who suffered cuts of the upper lip, right eye, right forehead, right eye, and of the tongue.
James Britt, 42, of the same address, apartment house manager, received lacerations of the forehead, left cheek, left eye, and none. Both men were treated at the Freedmen's Hospital. Holland being detained for further observation.
White Va. Tutors Get
$1200; Colored $800
Salaries of all public school teachers of Alexandria will be reduced the next term starting in September in accordance with a salary scale adopted by the school board in an executive session, last week.
Approximately nineteen colored teachers are affected by the ruling; they rank in grade up to junior high. Under the reduced scale, the white grade teachers will get from $800 to $1200 a year; white high school teachers will get from $1000 to $1400 a year.
The salary scale of the colored teachers will range from $550 to $800 a year.
Dr. Golan Sampson Perry, one of the leading physicians of Raleigh, North Carolina, died at his home last Sunday night. Dr. Perry was a graduate of Shaw University and the Howard University Medical School, class of 1918. He also served an internship at Freedmen's Hospital.
Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, president of Howard University, delivered the commencement address at the closing exercises of Morgan College, in Baltimore Thursday.
e Suit Reversed Court of Appeals
Company is Liable in Action
Court Gave Directed
ainst Plaintiff
who was renting the cab at a sum of $3.50 per day.
DOES NOT OWN CABS
Attorney Hayes also claimed that Williams was an independent contractor with the passenger and in sole control of the cab at the time of the alleged accident.
It was also argued that the company is not engaged in carrying passengers for hire or that it received Mrs. Rhone as passenger or exercised control of the cab when she was allegedly injured. Mr. Hayes also told the court that the company is merely a non-profit sharing corporation for the purpose of furnishing its members with telephone service, and it does not own any cabs.
In the first hearing Jackson testified that he owned the cab and that he had licensed and registered
Continued on Page 3
---
Two Seriously Hurt In Automobile Smash
Two men were seriously injured Wednesday morning when the automobile in which they were riding collided with a truck at Fifth and M Streets, North est, said by police to have been driven by Daniel D. Welch, white of Baltimore.
DR. JOHNSON SPEAKS
Price 7 cents Copy
Local Physician Dies of Injuries Received in Automobile Accident
Dr. Harold C. Stratton, well known Washington physician, of 721 Earlmont Street, Northwest was fatally injured, his wife, Mrs Edith Brown Stratton, was seriously injured, and their two small children, received minor cuts and bruises when the automobile in which they were riding collided with a culvert one and one-half miles from Charlestown, W.Va., on Sunday afternoon.
Dr. Stratton, who was driving at the time of the accident, was taken to the Charlestown Hospital, where he died Monday morning. Death was caused by a crushed chest and fractured skull, according to attending physicians.
Were Guests of Pastor
Mrs. Stratton received cuts about the head, face and legs and a possible fractured ankle. An X-ray to determine the extent of her injuries will be taken this week. The two children, Harold, Jr., and Mary L., were not seriously injured. Albert I. Cassell, Howard University architect, and close friend of the Stratton family, motored to the West Virginia city Monday and brought back Mrs. Stratton and the two children. Dr. Stratton and his family were the guests Sunday of the Rev. C. Dawson, pastor of a church at Berryville, W.Va. They had attended the service and were returning to Dr. Dawson's home for dinner when the accident occurred. The Rev. Dawson had left the church some ten minutes before the Strattons in order to reach home early and have dinner prepared for his guests.
Thrown into Water
Mrs. Stratton told friends on reaching Washington that she did not know the cause of the accident, but the road was slippery and suddenly the machine which was traveling at a moderate rate of speed suddenly swerded as they were approaching a creek. She said Dr. Stratton made an effort to bring the car back into the road, but was unable to do so. The machine struck the culvert and threw all of the occupants out. Mrs. Stratton and the children were tossed on the bank from the impact, while Dr. Stratton was thrown into the water, and was pinned down by the car. Despite her injuries, Mrs. Stratton had presence of mind to see that her husband was missing and saw only his feet protruding from the water. She partly released him and with the help of some passing tourists she was able to get him clear of the water.
Directed Care of Family
Dr. Stratton never lost consciousness until a few minutes before his death. Despite his own injuries he directed that his wife and children be cared for first. At the hospital he supervised the bandaging of Mrs. Stratton and their children and only realized that he was injured when he began to spit blood. Even while the local physicians were attending to him Dr. Stratton directed them.
Early Monday he was visited by Dr. Simeon Carson, of Washington. The two conversed about the accident and Dr. Stratton told his visitor that the accident was a mystery as he was unable to explain why the car failed to respond to (Continued on page 2)
usted Fraternal Order Still Without Meeting Place
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‘Nations 85000 = = 927. New York Avenue, N.W.
‘TWO
LAY MASONS BEGIN
MOVEMENT FOR A
PERMANENT HOME
In a statement to The Tribune,
‘Thursday, Edmund M. Chaplin,
chairman’ of the St. John’s Day
committee of the Masonic grand
lodge, and acting secretary of the
United Temple Drive committee,
stated that a call has been issued
to lay members_of the Masons to
eet at Ashury AME. Church,
Eleventh and K Streets, North-
west, on Wednesday night, June 7,
to discuss plans for a petmanent
home for the order,
He said that the order is, meet-
ing temporarily at the Scottish Rite
Half, while theswomen’s auxiliary,
the Eastern Stary shas--made ar-
rangements to see meetings in
the Eastern Star rooms in the
Temple,
Mr. Chaplin stated'that the called
meeting is not being opposed by
the grand lodge officers, but this is
a move to start from ‘the bottom
so that all members may - know
what is going on in the order, He
said he was astonished when he
with other members found_them-
selves locked out of the Temple
one U Street. ib
George Ambler, grand master of
thé Masons of the District, stated
that the trustees of the grand lodge
would meet Wednesday night, June
T,-at the Scottish Rite ‘Temple on
Eleventh Streets andwil! then de-
¢ide upon a permanent meeting
place.
‘The receivers of! the National
Benefit Life Insurance Company
locked the doors to the lodge rooms
onthe fourth, fifth and sixth floors
ofsthe New Maxonic Teiple, pre-
venting any meetings being held in
the Jodge rooms, The title to the
temple is now vested in the Nation-
‘pitlanetit Company.
ie a em
Frelinghuysen University
+ Closes this Week
he commencement exercises of
thé Frelinghuysen University topk
place this week with the “bacea-
laigreate sermon, at Metropolitan
AMME. Church,’ Sunday, by. the
pastor, the Rev. W. H, Thomas,
The’ final graduation exercises
were at John Wesley A.M.E, Zion
Chiveh on Thursday night, with
the. pastor, the Rev, W. W. Carring-
to, as the principal speaker. Bish-
opve. D. W. segs addressed the
graduates and awarded diplomas to
the following:
nevis School “ot Embalming—
William W. Beckett, Robert S.
Bowden, Mabelia Cook, Charles C.
Gary, Sherman P, Hall, Luey Car-
lotta ‘Trent.
__ Garson School of Practical Nurs-
ing—Miss Juanita Powell.
John M. Langston School of Law
~CGailey Roberts; post graduates
fourth year-class: William I, Bai-
ley, Thomas C. Bragg, Leon (, Cal-
houn, J. W. Charleston, John D.
Dye, Beverly G. Robinson, A. L.
Taylor, William P. Watkins, Ivory
B. Whittaker, William C, Wilson,
Robert M. Williams,
The university was founded by
the, late Jesse Lewson, in 1906. It
is Gab present located at 201 7
Street, Northwest, Dr. Anna. J,
Cobper is the president.
Hershaw Quits U.S.
Wed., After 43 Years
Under the retirement law, La-
fayette M, Hershaw closed forty-
three years of service with the
government Wednesday, and was
officially retired. :
Mr, Hershaw was a law examin-
er in the general land office, De-
partment of the Interior. He was
a graduate of the Atlanta Univer-
sity and the Howard University
Law School. He resides at 2215
Thirteenth Street, Northwest,
ba se
MIDGET LEAGUE FORMED
A midget league wtih five teams
has been formed at the Dunbar
Community Center. Games will be
Sate on the Walker Stadiuin.
THE CAIRO HOTEL
DISCRIMINATION
~- OCCURRENCE
Miss Fox Describaseinaitionts Con-
Nected with Refusal to Accomo-
date Colored Delegate
| -Abdetailed deceit, of the inci-
dents connection with thé refusal
the Cairo Hotel at 1615 Q Strect to
accommodate Miss Floria Pinkney,
of New York, a colored delegate
to the Continental Congress of
farmers and unemployed, “held
here last month is told in a release
from Norman Thomas, white, can-
didate for the Presideney on the
| Socialist ticket last fall.
| He quotes from a statement by
Miss Mary Fox (white) who with
Miss Anna Caples (white) accom-
Banied Miss Pinkney, to the hotel.
| She says:
“On Saturday night May 7, 1
arrived in Washington with a dele-
| eatin 1 New York to the Con-
renter Conpeaes about 12:40
standard time, At headquraters I
‘Was given reservations for myself
and two” other delegates, Anna
-Caplex and-Ploria, Pinkney at the
Cairo Hotel. Floria-Pinkney who
is.aNegto and I were given re-
servations for Room:307 which we
expected t@ share,
“We got to the Cairo Hotel
‘Whortly after 1 o'clock with many
other delegates who also had re-
servations which had been given
them by the arrangements com-
mittee. The other delegates who
had arrived before us signed the
register and were given rooms.
Porter is Catspaw
“While we were waiting, the
€eKs behind the desks looked re-
pe.tedly in our direction, whispered
together, spoke to a Negro bell-
boy, who came from behind the
desk and approached Floria Pink-
ney, He said, ‘You cannot stay at
this hotel.’ I’ said, ‘she can stay at
the hotel, sh. has a reservation,
“He left us. We waited about 10
or 16 minutes more standing in
line with other delegates. As we
time néarér to the register which
was tto be signed, the clerks be-
came move and’ more uneasy.
Finally, when we were also up to
the register and were all standing
directly in front of the desk in
line, one of the clerks approached
Floris Pinkney who was behind me
and said ‘What are you doing
here?” She said, ‘T have # reserva-
tion for a oom,”
“The eletk said, ‘You't can't stay
here. ‘This is a white hotel” T
said, ‘She ean stay here, she has
& reservation.” The clerk _ said,
‘The room is taken.’ I-said, ‘the
room ig taken by me, the room is
my xodm,’ and” showed him. my
reservation slip for Room 307,
“The clerk became very belliger-
ent and said to Miss Pinkney, ‘If
you stay here jt will cost’ ‘you
exactly $60 for the night: I said,
‘She can stay here and it won't
cost her $50 foe the night, she will
pay the regular charge for the
room.’ The clerk said, ‘She can't
stay here, and then turned to me
and said ‘very welliishe can stay
jhere if you will sleep with her in
| double bed in the basement.’ T
| replied, ‘I do not mind sleeping in
| double bed with her but she does-
n't huve to sleep in the basement,
She can sleep in the room which
was reserved for her. The hotel
cantiot discrimingte against Ne-
gtoes,?
Clerk is Riled
“At this the clerk became very
angry, slammet down his hand
upon ‘the register, picked up all
the sheets which people had been
signing, and addressed the group
of 20 oF 80 delegates who were still
waiting to be assigned rooms,
shouting, ‘All the rooms are taken,
| here is no place for anyone in this
hotel. The books are closed for
the night” :
Mr. Thomas adds: “Among other
things which the clerk said which
was directed st Floria Pinkney was
‘We have never had one of them
stay hete and we won't do it now.
“Phere were a number: of dele-
gates Waiting for room assign-
mehis immediately around the
gFoup, all of whom are witnesses
to thé refusal of the hotel to fill a
reservation which had been giver
toa guest and the refusal was def.
initely based on the fact that the
guest was a Negro,”
After the above described occur.
renee, Misses Fox, Caples ani
Pinkney went to the” Whitelaw
Hotel and registered. All th
other delegates at the Cairo de
manded their money back anc
a ae Tas
T KILLED, 16 HURT,
IN. WASHINGTON,
MEMORIAL DAY
_, While many citizens of the Dis-
trict were paying tribute to the
dead during interludes of rain.
falls on Memorial Day, one boy
was killed ix an automobile acei-
dent caused by wet, slippery pave-
ments and sixteen others received
various kinds of injuries,
In an accident which oceurred in
Capitol Heights, Maryland, William
Owens, 10, of 400 Tenth Street,
Southeast, was fatally injured. He
was pronounced dead upon arrival
at the Casualty Hospital. Wil-
liam’s father,” Norman, 1, and
mother, Mrs. Annie Owens, 30,
ivere severely cut up and bruised.
W. H. Crawford, 50, of 308 Fif-
teenth Street, Southeast, and his
wife, Mary, 49, passengers in the
Owens car, were s4ro severely in-
jured. The Crawfords were treat-
ed at the Providence Hospital.
while the Owens family were taken
to Providence Hospital,
‘Thomas Nelson, 53, of 1231 New
Jersey Avenue, Northwest, was
struck by an automobile at New
Jersey Avenue and N Street,
Northwest, and suffered lacerations
of the scalp. The machine was
driven by C.F. Murray. of the 2400
block of Ainger Place, Southeast.
Car Strikes Woman
Mrs. Caroline Johnson, 48, of
Rosaryville, Md., was severely
shaken when she was in an auto-
mobile which figured in an acci-
dent.
Right-year-old Harvey Nelson, of
621 U Street, Northwest, suffered
abrasions of the right leg when he
was hit by an automobile driven by
G. T. Weinbert, of 1126 Morse
Street, Northeast, near the home
of the former,
Among other persons who re-
ceived injuries on Memorial Day
wore Esther Westficld, 93, of 615
Division Avenue, domestic, who was
struck with a spade by John Hugh-
es, according to Freedmen’s Hos-
pital records, She had a lacerated
head.
Cut With Butcher Knife
Walter Anderson, 45, of 1908
Fifth Street, Northwest, is reputed
to have been cut.on the right hand
with a buteher knife bv Winifred
Butler, of the 200 block of Rhode
Island Avenue,
Mack | Dowlihy, 24, of 1496
Church Street, Northwest, was cut
in the left forehead with a. brick
by a man whose. first name was
given as “Willy,” (
H. L. McPherson, 89, of 405 Onk-
dale Street, Northwest, was struck
with an unknown object by an uns
named person which’ caused laceras
tions of the upper lip, i
Tn a fall in the street at Righth
‘and Florida’ Avenue, Northhess
William Gilmore, 10, of 1827 Sev-
enth Street, sitffered body bruises.
Struck With Wash Tub
Marshall Colston, 63, of 1507
Ninth Street, received cuts’ af the
forehead when he was struek with
atin wash tub by a woman, |
Marie Hargro, 28, of 503 N
Street, Northwest, told hospital of-
ficials she did not know who bit her
on_a right finger,
Mrs, Parlene Sanders, 82, of 1630
Corcoran Street, Northwest, stuck
n pair of scissors in her left hand.
In pre-holiday accidents, William
Butler, Jr., 2, of 2222 Sixth Street,
Northwest, received bruises of the
eft leg when struck ‘by an auto-
mobile at the intersection of Sixth
and W Streets, Northwest.
The Birney Community
Closes this Week
| Birney Center , closed Monday
night with its annual exhibition of
the women's industrial art and
classes of the center, There was a
short program given. by other
clubs of the center, including
one-act play, “His ' Wife's. First
Husband,” presented by the Wis-
teria Dramatic Club and. musical
numbers bythe girls’ chorus and
the boys’ glee club and the piano
class.
The Music Clubs ave under the
direction of Mrs, Edna Dockins.
paresisherae =
DUNBAR POOL OPEN
The Dunbar Center pool opened
Wednesday under the direction of
Joseph Walker. The pool. will be
ucnaa-aaily trow ta Peano
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 19
LEIBOWITZ REPUDIATES THOSE WHO SEEK
TO DISRUPT UNITED SCOTTSBORO FRONT
Says He Stands Squarely with National Action Commit-
tee Set Up to Support I.L.D.; Wants no Pay;
Needs Money for Legal Expenses
NEW YORK (a abit signed
statement issued in the press, Sam-
uel 8. Leibowitz, chiet Seottsboro
trial attorney for the International
Labor Defense, las week, denounced
those elements who have tried. to
set up “separate defense commit-
tees” in the case, and to use him
in the promotion of attacks upon
the LL.D.
His statement endorsed the Ne-
tional Scottsboro Action Commit-
tee, set. up by a conference rep-
resentatives of nealry @ hundred
organizations. to support the fight
of the LL.D. for the Seottsboro
boys, and called for the sending of
all money collected by outside or
ganizations for Scottsboro to the
Action Committee.
The only organization authorized
by the International Labor: Defense
to collect and hold funds for Seotts-
boro defense, it was pointed out,
is the Action Committee, and such
local bodies as may be formed un-
der its direction, Only the LL.D,
as legal defenders of the boys, can
give such authorization,
Funds Needed
Funds are urgently needed to
carry on the defense of the Scotts-
boro boys, the LL.D. pointed out,
and should be sent either directly
to the National Office of the or-
ganization, Room 430, 80 Bast
Eleventh Street, or to the Natinoal
Scottsboro Action Committee, 119
West 195th. Street, both in New
York City. No other organizations
are authorized to receive any mon-
ey for the defense,
Mv. Leibowitz’ statement fol-
lows:
“As chief counsel in the Seatts:
boro defense, I desire to make a
situation clear in no uncertain
terms. I have been and I am now
acting as chief counsel in the
Scottsbora defense. The 11.0). has
rosecuted the appeals to the Ala-
Bema ‘Supreme Court and to’ the
Supreme Court of the U, 8. A., the
Inter to a stecessfu conclusion,
winning for the Scottshoro defen-
dants x new trial.
“Tin association with Messrs,
Sede ft. Meotulcy. ctsktee Sark.
200 National Bank Work.
ers to Meet Next ‘
Wednesday
‘The reorganization committee of
the Industrial Savings Bank will
hold a bi gmeeting of the 200 work-
ers and friends of the bank next
‘Wednesday night at the Y.M.C.A.
The selling campaign to increase
the capital stock to $200,000 and
organize a national: bank is under
way. The following instructions
have been issued to each worker:
» Facts Regarding the Proposed
National Bank
1, The purpose of the proposed
national bank is to provide an. ins
stitution to take over and liquidate
in an. orderly and profitable man-
her the assets of the Industrial
eyings Bank,
| 2. The Industrial Savings Bank
‘s operating on a, retried basis
(under conservation) die to the
general depreciation in the value
of securities, which, if disposed of
in the present low market, would
result in w loss to depositors, A
new bank adequately capitalized
will be able to hold these securities
until a fayorable market for dis-
position exists,
3. The capitalization of the pro-
posed national bank is to he two
hundred fifty thousand dollars
(§250,000), consisting of two hun:
dred. ‘thousand dollars ($200,000)
capital: stock and fifty thousand
dollars . ($50,000) surplus, The
numberof shares will be ten thou-
‘sand. (10,000), having a par value
of twenty. dollars ($20.00) each,
but shall sell for twenty-five dol:
lars ($25,000) in order to provide
the surplus of fifty thousand dol-
lars ($50,000) as a working fund
from the start,
4, Reasons for organizing a na-
iiogat bamke-are a8 “ollows:
(a) Federal governnient charter,
(h) Member of Federal. Reservé
System.
(c). Will enjoy full benefits from
all laws, institutions, and
sother, measures instituted by
the Federal government for
the protection of banks op:
erating under its supervision
5. When the two hundred fifty
thovsand dollars ($250,000) capi-
talination is fully subscribed, and
one-half of this amount paid in, the
national hank may begin business,
the remaining amount being pay-
able in not more than ten months
‘after operations are begun.
6, Subsetibep ave expected ta
pay one-half of their subseriptions
in eash by July 1, 1924, the balance
‘may be paid within ten months,
|G Wf the fall amount. of capital
ig ot faised, every penny paid in
by the subseribers will be returned
no commissions, expenses, or oth-
er charges can be deducted from
the subscribers’ payments.
8. We suggest the purchase of
this stock in blocks of four or more
shares,
PONTIACS VICTORS
In a closely contested game the
Pontiacs defeated the 0 Streeters,
W8, tast Briday, at the Walker
Studitin. ‘The sane (wo team» Will
play @ return game this week,
jand General George W. Chamiee,
of Chattanooga, conducted the trial
of Heywood Patterson in Decatur.
“Since the termination of this
‘trial, various organizations and in-
dividuals have presumed to an-
nounce to the public that they were
forming themselves into indepén-
dent bodies or committees for the
purpose of raising funds to defray
the necessary legal expense that
may be entailed in the carrying of
these cases to the higher courts on
appeal’
Receives no Fees
“I have never received nor am I
receiving nor shall I receive any
legal fees in connection with my
work in these cases. However, there
‘are necessary expenses which must
be incurred in the carrying of these
cases to the higher courts upon ap-
peal such as printing of the record
in the lower court, briefs, ete.
“And [am informed that they
have employed my name as & s0-
called stalking-horse stating that
they will set up such defense com-
mittees with me at the head of
them and work independently of
the LL.D.
“I cannot make it too clear that
I have never given anyone my au-
thority to take such action and that
no one, either organization, com-
mittee ot individual is authorized
by me either directly or indirectly
to make such representations.
“tam working in conjunction
with the LL.D. and the National
Beotietore ee Committee in the
continuance of the effort to liber-
ate these innocent Negro defen-
dants. We have been and are now
working together in the closest
harmony and it is the moral duty
and obligation on the part of any-
one seeking to aid in this noble
cause to make whatever contribu-
tions they ean direetly to the non-
partison committee which has been
‘organized—known as the National
‘Scottsboro Action Committee of
which Samuel C, Patterson is
chairman, the Rey. J. W. Brown,
of Mother Zion Church, of New
York, is treasurer, and Miss Lou-
ise Thompson is secretary.”
REY. BECTON DEAD
Iaaaliaved ter, page 1)
sleuth, reached his side and took
him from the car. Yet the detec-
tive says that Becton would say
nothing to him about the shooting.
4. Becton died intestate; he had
no known bank accounts or insur-
ance policies. He, however, owned
a house at 62 West 120th’ Street,
New York City.
5. The theory that the shooting
was result of an alleged attack by
Becton on the “numbers” racket ir
discounted by police who said that
Becton did not attempt any eru-
sade against “numbers” plaving.
6. The theory that the shooting
was result of jealovsy on the part
of a Philadelphia minister or group
‘of ministers is also discounted by
police who said that while Becton
was drawing large crowds of
church folks, that had not. affected
‘the attendance at any of the
‘churches.
Out-of-Town Gunmen
© 4. While police would not ad-
‘yance any theories about the shoot-
ing, yet it was learned from relia.
ble sources that the gunmen were
not known to them and in all pro-
ability. were brought from some
‘other state for the killing.
“8. A New York angle of jealousy
‘of Becton’s affluence and power is
being held by police as a possible
‘and probable motive,
9. No immediate arrests are pre-
dicted by police and they admit that
despite the fact that the ace de-
tectives of the Philadelphia police
deparment are tracking down any
and all clues, they have reached an
impasse as far as solution of the
ee Roes.
In the meantime, however, the
big question of why Becton’ was
killed. remains unsolved.
H.U. Graduation Exercises
to Be Held in Stadium
‘The annual commencement at
Howard University this year will
be held in the stadium, according
to the office of Dr. Mordecai John-
son this week. However, it was
pointed out that there had been
some objection to holding the ex-
ercises. in the stadium by some
members of the senior class a8 the
tampus gives, « better setting for
exercises, graduates claimed.
Dr, Johnson's gecretary told the
Aitnive ‘Thursday afterioon that
the plan to hold the exercises. in
the stadiim had not been altered,
| ee
J. E. Walker Post to
Present Choral Club
eas
‘The Crescendo Male Chorus will
be presented in recital this
Wednesday night, at 8:15 p.m. in
the Garnet-Patterson auditorium.
The artiste will be acsisted by the
Suevite Fernale Quartet. The pro-
im is being presented tw th
erapices of the Taner f.. nates
Tost of the American Legwn, Mars
Blta dehnson. is the community
caates uestetanyi
Reduced Rent
MURRAY CASINO
From now until the close of
the season rent reduced to
B van | $25.00 | sm
ca s20U Sr, NW.
VICTORY LIFE INS
COMPANY READY
FOR BUSINESS
CHICAGO.—Voicing the opinion
that the Victory Life Insurance
Company is again-in a healthy f-
nancial condition after having been
in a receivership'since 1931, Fed-
eral Judge E. A. Evans pronounced
it ready to do business again as a
mutual company, ‘Thursday.
‘The action came as a result of
remedies proposed by leaders of a
group of loeal insurance companies
which proved to be effective, The
assets of the old company are re-
ported to have been saved and all
the policyholders will be protected.
Cash has heen taised to pay out-
standing claims and a program of
development outlined.
Officials New
Nearly all the officers are new,
although it has been apparent tha:
the organizers wotlld see that each
section of the country containing a
substantial group of policyholders
was represented. Only one position
remains to be filled, chairman of
the board of directors, which has
been offered to Dr. P, M. Hu Sav-
ory, of New York. He is & large
stockholder and policyholder,
Dr. L, K, Williams, president of
the National Baptist Convention,
has been chosen as head. The
other officers are: executive vice-
president, John Holloman, ehair-
man_of the board of directors of
the Pyramid Mutual Life Insurance
Company; vice-president and_gen-
‘eral counsel, A. 1, Williams, attor-
ney secretary, J. E. Mitehem, det-
ing ‘president of the Underwriters
Mutual Life Insurance Company;
J. I. Moorehead, attorney; director
of agencies, J. A. Howard; assis-
tant director of agencies, I. J. Jo-
seph.
Overton Left Out
‘The new diréctors are: Dr. 1. K.
Williams, A. L. Williams, J. BE. Mit-
chem, John Holloman, Dr. 8. W.
Smith, the Rev. J. H. Branham, Dr.
E. H.' Miller, 1, J. Joseph, Sandy
Trice, John L. Dent, H. E. Hall,
J. E. Hubbard, J. A: Howard, Jo-
seph Watson, and J. 1, Moorehead.
‘The name of Anthony Overton,
chairman of the old Victory Life,
is not among the new officials. I.
J. Joseph, one of the founders, is
retained,
Several white companies bid for
the Victory, but Judge Evans took
the view when the case first came
to his attention that the company’s
benefits should bo reserved for {he
colored group if it could. be pos.
sibly done.
MRS. J. F. WILSON
(Continued from page 1)
ing banks: Washington Loan and
Trust Company, $84.49; Security
Savings and Commercial Bank, $6,-
688; Commercial National Bank,
$4,607.14; and the United States
Savings Bank, $5,000. She alleges
that the sums in the two latter
banks are not available as the Com:
mercial National Bank is now jn
process of liquidation and the
United States Savings Bank has
not been opened sincé March 4,
She further states that’ when the
present receivers took over the
company on February 29, 1932,
there was turned oyer to them
money in excess of i500 and
that since their appointment they
have collected a sum in excess of
half a million dollars from policy:
holders and income from aasets
owned by the company.
Huge Sums Paid Receivers
She alleges that huge sums have
been paid to the receivers and their
counsel and points out the insdl.
yent condition of the company and
the receivership.
Mrs, Wilson asks that the receiv-
‘enn bs eeeuicad ts. Caen ates tha
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
‘management and comtrol of all as-
‘seta of the company to receivers to
be appointed and that the present
‘receivers be required to render a
complete accounting for all of the
assets, moneys, property and ree=
ords of the company.
$200,000 in Feed
‘The petition alleges “that not-
withstanding the premises, and the
poor financial condition of the com-
pany, and without regards for the
‘interest of the aforesaid so-called
‘modified’ policies, the said perma
nent receivers have expended great
sums of money, to wit, more than
$200,000 for receivers’ fees, ator
neys’ fees, and actuarial fees in
the District of Columbia alone, not
to mention what moneys or other
valuable assets have been expended
in jurisdictions where ancillary re-
celvers of the defendant corpora-
tion are serving, for similar serv.
ices. all of which have: occurred
with the consent and approval of
the said permanent réceivers.”
It is algo alleged that all of the
Allowances for receivers and at-
torneys’ fees have been on account,
which indicates that further claims
will be hereafter presented by the
receivers and their attorneys for
large fees,
She avers that unless some ac-
tion js taken to conserve the assets
of the insolvent receivership insur-
ance husiness, for the: benefit of the
rights of her and others similarly
situated, she and qthér policyhold-
ers will suffer irreparable injury.
Griffith Trophy Awarded
| to Armstrong High Team
Clark Griffith, owner of the Na-
‘tional Baseball club, presented the
Clark Griffith silver trophy to
members of the Armstrong High
School nine at an assembly at the
School, Thursday. morning.
“the Armstrong team. won the
city high school title. The trophy
stands aver three feet high and
has a figure of a baseball player
‘on top.
Eis re
+H.U. STUDENT DIES
| (Continued from page 1)
following the mishap. He quoted
Cabel, who later learned his iden-
tity, ax stating a willingness to
help defray hospital expenses.
Wound is Four Inches Long
Dr. Marshall 'T. Garrett, of the
Freedmen’s Hospital staff, was the
first witness called.
He testified that young Anderson
was admitted to the hospital about
4:30 o'clock in the afternoon and
appeared frightened and suffering
from shock. He described the han-
dle bar puncture of four inches in
length which had ;penetrated An-
derson’s peritoneum and a portion
of the small intestine, which had to
he removed. The operation was
performed by Dx. Nelson, Dr, Gar-
rett assisting. ' ‘*
Dr. C. J. Murphy, white, whe
performed the autopsy, explained
in medical language, the tissties
cells, etc., pierced by the handle
har.’ He commented on the opera-
tion, saying it had been skillfully
and neatly done.
Officer 'T, Barnett, white, of the
Second Precinct, stated he was in
the Lincoln Luncheonette when he
heard the crash and darted out
He described his work in, directing
traffic and making: observations, af
ter notin that two men were pre.
paring to take Anderson to th
hospital in a passing taxi,
Testimony Favors Cabel
Practically all who testified, un-
| aer a gruelling cross examinatior
| hy Mr. Howard, admitted they knew
| Cabel, and their testimony. tendec
to absolve him from criminal lia
bility in the death,
Simon_ McCullough, -1410. Six
teenth Street; Northivest, a tax
driver, told the jury of having
trailed Cabel from — Thirteent!
Street to the scene of the acci
dent at the rate of about 15 mile
per hour... He further stated tha
marks showed that thé motorcycle
had skidded about 80 feet into the
front’ wheel of the’ automobile,
which was at « standstill.
“{ saw the motoreyélé start up
after stopping at the red light at
the Vermont Avenue intersection,”
McCullough testified, “‘Cabel was
trying to make a left hand turn,
but the motorcycle had such speed
on, Cabel stopped his car and the
man crashed into his front wheel.”
Pulled Bar From Side
McCullough and Michael Wright,
of 2150-L Street, Northwest, an-
other taxi man, both narrated how
they pulled the bar from Ander-
son's side as he slumped over the
machine, and rushed him ‘o the hes-
pital.
James Bennett, 773 Hobart
Street, Northwest, a: porter in a
barber’ shop in the 1300 block of U
Street, swore he was walking along
U Street, heard a skid and turned
just in time to see the crath.
Leroy Peele, 1714: Fourteent
Street, also testified he wes walk-
ing along the streei phen he Neard
the skid and turnéd to se: ‘be
crash. Peele and Bennett both »4:°
Cable had conte to a.stop.
Says Youth Was Confused
Michael Wright told the exdm-
iners that the dad youth apparent-
ly became confused when Uabel’s
car stopped, as he was seen’ to
manipulate the handle bars from
side to side just before he crashed
into the automobile. He also stated
that Cabel was making a “sharp
turn.” .
‘On the stand, Cabel told of work-
ing at the Catholic University for
thé past ten years and never hav-
ing had a trafic accident. In his
account he narrated he was trying
to make a turn but saw the motor-
cycle coming with such speed that
he stopped his machine, leaving
enough room for the motoreyéle *9
pass either. in‘front of his machine
or,in the rear.
‘The deceased’s brother was the
next on the stand, permitted to tes-
tify by akreement of the acting
cofoner, Dr, H, M. McDonald, and
counsel, His.statements developed
around conversations. with his
brother at, the hospital, ‘none con-
ficting with the testimony so far
given.
Commends Deceaséd’s Character
‘The body. of Anderson was
shipped to his native home, Mus-
kogee, Okla., Monday. He entered
the etiucational course at Howard
University at the beginning of the
1932-33 session. © He had graduated
from the Muskogee High School
with high honors.
According to Mrs. Lorraine Rob-
inson, of the Harvard Street ad-
dress, with whom Anderson roomed
he rode on his motoreycle all the
way from Muskogee to this city to
enter sehool. She was high in he
commendation of the youth, sayin
he was mannerly and well liked bi
all in the vicinity who knew him.
Definite information as to, sur-
vivors could not be obtained, al-
though it was established that he
has parents in Muskogee, other rel-
atives in New York, in addition to
Hie Weather Ales:
ee aes ete
DR. STRATTON KILLED
(Continued from page 1)
his efforts to bring it into the road.
Reward Graduate
Besides his wife, Dr. Stratton is
survived by his-mother, Mrs, Lil-
lian Stratton, of Doylesvlile, Pa.;
two sisters, Mrs, Inez Harris, of
Philadelphia, and Mrs. Grace Lewis
‘of Doylestown, Pa.; and four broth-
‘ers, Dr. Howard Stratton and Sa-
voy Stratton, of Philadelphig; Pa.;
Charles Stratton, of Doylesville,
and Andrew Stratton, of Reading,
Pa, ~
Dr, Stratton is a graduate of the
Howard University School of Medi
cine and has been practicing here
for a number of. years. He wal
born in Doylesville, Pa. in 1888 and
wes well _known in Pennsylvania
and the District of Columbia.
Funeral service was held Thurs-
day a0 St. Luke BE Church. ‘The
rector, the Rev. Thomas. J. Brown,
officiated. Interment was in Lin-
‘colin Memorial Cometery, Thursdsy.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Negroes and Vitalized Politics
- By THE LIBERATORS
Memorial Day has passed, but during this Democratic rage, we mean age, we should mourn more for the living than for the dead.
* * * * *
Legislation is being sprayed like shot from an automatic bird gun. Are Negroes game, hunters, accident victims, or servants to the game feast guest?
* * * * *
Congressman Oscar DePriest has attempted with copies of the Constitution, kindergarten enlightenment, and has acquired a fair degree of success. However, the pace is fast and if necessary we must in part go through legislative college by going in one gate and coming out the other, grasping what we may by absorption and peripheration. Negroes must find a way to shorten the gap between themselves and the rest of their countrymen.
Our legislative enactment of the moment is the National Industrial Recovery Act. This Act is divided under two titles: (a) Industrial Recovery, (b) Public Works and Construction Projects.
The objective of this emergency act is to reduce and relieve unemployment. This accomplishment is based on the co-ordination of all industry, in respect to the conditions and pay of labor (with the intent of spreading work and increasing purchasing power), plus a Government program of construction.
The duration of this act depends upon whiskey, in other words, the 18th Amendment, if and when repealed, also if revenue therefrom warrants. The success of the repealing this referred to whiskey amendment and its revenue will determine the duration and burden of your taxation, which if satisfactory, then the President will repeal this emergency act.
Title (A)—In general that all business activities shall measure up to the intent of American laws and standards, protecting both employer and employees, alike. Items that should interest Negroes as to applied interpretations are: compliance of employers relative to maximum working hours, rates of minimum pay, and general working conditions.
Title (B)—Creates a Federal Emergency Administration of Public works, which involves highways, parkways, flood control, water power, and other matters.
Government money backs this entire (B) program, which ultimately, directly or indirectly, Negroes will proportionately pay back. In many instances the work will be operated by and through a series of sub-contractors. If and during such, it must not be left to these sub-contractors to determine as to what is a Negro's living wage, or the length of his work day.
Furthermore, petty Government officials must be prevented from working in cahoots with such sub-contractors to the disadvantage of Negro employees. All Government projects at least must maintain standard pay, hours, and working conditions, without any kind of discrimination.
Since the power of regulation now rests wholly with our chief executive, we, the Liberators ask that each and every Negro write to the President, requesting for Negroes equal opportunity to work, equal hours, and standard wages for pay. His address is Franklin D. Roosevelt, White House, Washington, D.C.
****
We understand that had Brother Hoover been re-elected, there would have been a Century of Progress World Fair Negro Commission. As is, are we right, or are we wrong?
****
If a different form of District is being considered, why can't Negroes (representing more than twenty-five per cent of the local population) be included in such contemplation? If a governing staff requires college men, lawyers, ministers, or journalists, we have them.
What is the matter with J Franklin Wilson, F. Morris Mur-
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can be yours at the LOWEST COST. If you only Superior. FOLLOW. Last Summer. Rea NOW. be sure of HEALTH
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SUPERIOR Phone Connction Corp. MET.
BIG ST. N.W. 2495
KASH and KARBY
SPECIAL
All Ladies' Dresses, $1.99
Ties, 8 for 50c
Men's Smiles & Overcoats, 75c on.
Hats Cleaned & Mocked, 50c up
Don't Forget Our Laundry Service
---
ray, William Houston, or the Rev.
Mr. Jernagin? If you think as we do, then propose it to the President now; don't wait until postage stamps come down to two cents.
N. B. L. RECEIVERS
(Continued from page 1)
tenants. He avers that he received no money from Mr. Gary for any rents collected by him from July 1, 1931, through December, 1931.
After Clark and Bryan qualified on February 29, 1932, they instructed Mr. Risher to continue collections, which he did up to December 31, 1932. At this time they requested Mr. Risher to turn over and surrender to them the possession and exclusive charge of the Masonic Temple, which he did.
Asks $1.146 Commission
Mr. Risher contends that he rendered a complete, detailed accounting of all rents collected and invited the receivers to inspect all original receipts. He asks the court to dismiss the receivers' petition and enter an order adjudging him entitled to $1,140 commission on rent, collections and leases. Mr. Risher also requests the court to order the receivers to perform a written promise to him on January 9, 1933, by paying all accounts of creditors of the temple account, the names and amounts due being set forth in the agreement.
In a statement to The Tribune, Mr. Risher observed that nothing had ever been heard of any unreported rent for the period named until he opposed the high fees paid the receivers.
To Oppose Receivers
He also expressed vigorous opposition to another proposal of the receivers to lease practically the ground floor, for the sum of $400, to interests planning to install a department store. According to him, the space is well worth $750 per month. Mr. Risher's plans to fight the petition of the receivers to carry through with the negotiation when it comes up for a hearing.
Masons' Eviction Rapped
Voicing himself on the Masonic situation, the former National Benefit head declared: "I think it outrageous that they were evicted without due process of law. It is true that the lodge was in default but I think there was some equitable ground upon which they can make an attack.
N.B.L. May Lose Temple
"I have always contended that the Masons were not treated fairly by the receivers or the former heads of the National Benefit Life Insurance Company. The building is now on the verge of being lost by the receivers as an asset to the National Benefit Company, because the interest and mortgage notes are in default. The principal was due on February 5; it was not renewed by the receivers, neither was any satisfactory arrangement made with the holder for a renewal."
TAXICAB DAMAGE SUIT
it as a taxicab and that the name of Try-Me had been placed on the license record because of an inquiry at the license office as to the name of the company in which it was to be used.
Dodging Damage Suits
Justice Hitz ruled that it was clear that the cab was engaged in a public calling under license of public authority issued upon the joint application of the company and Jackson and bore the name of the company and was sent out by the company. The court also pointed out that the business was more like a cab calling company and ruled it was held liable in cases of accidents. The judgment of the municipal court was reversed and the cause remanded. Mrs. Rhone was represented by Attorneys Nathan A. Dobbins and William H. Hastie.
It is pointed out by prominent attorneys that other cab companies in the District have been operating in a like manner and dodging damage suits by disclaiming ownership of cabs bearing their names. They have been alleging that the drivers are owners and they are not liable. The decision of Justice Hitz is expected to result in a number of suits that have been contemplated by attorneys, yet have been withheld due to a number of adverse decisions in the municipal court.
National Scottsboro Action Committee Expels Sabotagers
NEW YORK (LLD.)—Expulsion of those members of the National Scottsboro Action Committee who took part in the sabotage delegation led by William H. Davis, publisher of the Amsterdam News, to President Roosevelt in an attempt to smash the Scottsboro march, has been voted by the committee, it was announced.
The Davis delegation, it is alleged, spent $800 collected by the Harlem publisher ostensibly for the Scottsboro Defence, to go down to Washington, without authority, to tell Roosevelt, May 5, that they represented the Negro people, and that the marchers, who were the Negro people supported by white workers, did not.
The move was obviously designed to sabotage the march, it is claimed by the LLD.
The members of the Action Committee expelled were J. Dalmis Steele, Tammany-st. led "mayor of Harlem," and Serand A. Virgil, member of the Afro-Protective League, of Brooklyn.
THREE
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 2. 1933
CIVIC ASSO. ENDORSES
DePRIEST AMENDMENT
Protests to Chief Recent Police Killings; Secures Play Space for Children
ONLY IMMEDIATE ACTION will insure your enjoying a
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The East Central Civic Association endorsed the amendment to the 14th Amendment, offered by Representative Oscar DePriest, of Illinois at its recent meeting at the Dunbar High School. The committee appointed to wait on Major Brown of the police department and protest the indiscriminate shooting of innocent men by the police of Washington, made its report. The report stated that Major Brown appeared to be impressed with their pleas and promised cooperation and complimented the committee for the spirit in which it presented the case.
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The association endorsed Miss Fay Bentley as a candidate for the judgeship of the Juvenile Court. The association has been instrumental in getting Riggs Street, between Fourth and Fifth Streets, Northwest, roped off three times each week for play space for the children of that section. A committee was appointed to oversee the play hours to p-event the larger boys and men from interfering with the children at play.
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The president, Miss Corinne E. Martin announced that this would be the last meeting until fall. The meeting in June is generally a banquet affair and during this depression the last meeting will not be held in June. The money that would be used for that meeting will go to Mrs. Ida Taylor for the association pledge to the Juvenile worker. The executive committee is composed of the president, Miss C. E. Mr. tn, Mrs. E. V. Allen, W. D. Nixon, J. C. Payne, Ray Clark, Mrs. William White and, J. A. G. Lu Valle.
MOREHOUSE QUARTET SINGS AT HOWARD U.
Morehouse College quartet of Atlanta, Ga., who sang for President Roosevelt at the White House last Wednesday, appeared in special chapel exercises at Howard University, Thursday, at noon. The quartet was presented by President Mordecal W. Johnson, himself a graduate of Morehouse College. President Johnson introduced Maynard Jackson, Morehouse alumni secretary, who presented members of the quartet, with Simeon Clements, first tenor; Edward Rodriguez, second tenor; Kenneth Williams, first bass; and Wilson Hubert, second bass.
Before introducing members of the quartet, Mr. Jackson told of the affiliation of Morehouse College, Spelman, and Atlanta University, into the new Atlanta University, with Dr. John Hope as president. Mr. Jackson stressed the importance of extra-curricular activities, indicating that in many instances Morehouse men who had won distinction were active in the various college organizations, with President Johnson as a member of the baseball team and debater; Edward S. Hope, as a basketball star; and the Rev. Howard Thurman, debater, and editor of the college annual; and the Rev. William H. King, as having distinguished himself in tennis.
The numbers presented by the quartet include: "Climbing up the Mountain," "I Am a Soldier," and "Mary's Babe," with solo by Clement; "Passing By," "Pale Moon," Mr. Rodriguez sang "On the Road to Mandalay," as a solo. "Remember Now Thy Creator," from the 12th chapter of Ecclesiastes, was the final number before the singing of the Morehouse alma mater, after which the Howard University students and faculty responded with their own anthem. Miss Camille Nickerson, of the Howard University School of Music, was accompanist. Following the concert, members of the quartet were guests of the faculty of the school of music at luncheon.
During their stay in Washington the Morehouse singers gave three concerts to Washington audiences, appearing before the Southern Baptist Convention, the Northern, and the combined sessions of these organizations. They were heard in a radio program over the National Broadcasting System, from Station WMAL. Other appearances included Nineteenth Street Baptist Church, Dunbar and Armstrong High School, and the Miner Teachers' College.
Dogs Seem Partial to Left Sides of Victims
The hot weather which fell upon the city the past week brought with it the danger of bites from dogs, five people suffering from such wounds in one day, Thursday, all being bitten on the left side.
Howell Howard, 22, of 2246 Fifteenth Street, Northwest, was bitten on the left thigh while walking along near Twelfth and Florida Avenue, Northwest.
Leonard Plummer, 6, of 633 W Street, Northwest, was also bitten on the left thigh, on Georgia Avenue, Northwest.
Robert Diggs, 30, of 607 N Street, Northwest, was bitten on the left thigh in the 2200 block of Twelfth Street, Northwest.
George Branch, 8, of 132 V Street, orthwest, was bitten on the left knee in the rear of his home.
(Carrol Lancaster, 57, of 1735
Marion Court, Northwest, was
bitten on the left arm in front
of his home.
ESIC EDITOR ae ee CACINE
FOUR
WashingioAStihene
Published Weekly at Washington, D.C., by
rub WASMINGION TRIBUNE PUBLISHING
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FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1933
Dr. Flexner Again
Although Dr. Abram Flexner, chairman
bf the board of trustees of Howard Univer-
“sity, may not consider himself to be in a
tight place, evidently some of his support-
ers so regard him.
This attitude seems to be due in consid-
erable part to a feeling that criticism of him
is—or is intended to be—aimed probably at
President Mordecai Johnson,
However, in this case, Dr, Flexner’s of-
fensive dictum that whoever—student or
faculty—does not approve of his way of
running things may get out, is as much a
slap in the face of the president as of any
other employee whose tenure may be de-
pendent upon the favor of the present
head of the board.
Of course there is the apparent inability
of some people to differentiate between
criticising real or supposed faults of “the
administration” and condemning the uni-
versity itself. This attitude is not new nor
unusual. The same attitude existed during
the incumbency of Dr. Johnson's predeces-
sor. Tho feeling that the king can do no
‘wrong extends beyond the limits of the
king’s bounty. :
Moreover, Dr. Flexner’s attitude is not
unique; it is the usual one with self-opin-
donated Nordics when dealing with “lesser
breeds.” Dr. Flexner’s apparent feeling
that young Negro women have no rights or
sensibilities that he is due to respect is more
of a racial obsession than a bit of personal
arrogance.
Of course there are exceptional white per-
sons who do not feel to be innately su-
perior to all other peoples in judgment and
do not regard themselves as God-endowed
with rightful authority to dominate any sit-
uation where white and non-white come into
eontact.
However, the alumni of at least one
branch of the university has shown that
they are not willing to let Dr. Flexner's
ill-manners and bumptiousness pass unre-
buked.
Clifford C. Mitchell Released
Along with many other editors and read-
ers we congratulate and felicitate Clifford
C. Mitchell on his coming release from con+
finement.
The Tribune had the honor—so Mr, Mitch-
ell says—of being the first paper in the
East to use his weekly release, “Digesting
the News.” We have also from time to
time published other articles from his pen,
The Tribune much regrets that a con-
templated laudatory editorial and appeal
for his release has not been published; and,
strangely enough, orly last week a letter
‘was written to Mr. Mitchell promising such
an editorial this week. We are glad it is
not needed and hope that we may be still
favored with his excellent contributions,
As stated in a last minute note with his
article, “Prisons and Prisoners,” last week,
he has been granted a parole by the gov.
ernor of Michigan, effective June 8,
eee cig
What are We Protesting?
A recent release sent out by the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored
People states that a formal protest has been
sent to President Roosevelt concerning the
treatment of the colored Gold Star Mothers.
The letter of protest from Walter White,
secretary of the N.A.A.GP,, said:
The administration preceding _ yours
aroused widespread indignation among col-
‘red Americans and many white citizens by
sending colored Gold Star mothers in sep-
‘arate contingents and on separate and in-
ferior ships to visit the graves of their sons
‘and husbands in French cemeteries. We
note that this most reprehensible custom is
Being continued. We respectfully urgé you
to order this discriminatory practice discon-
tinued immediately.
This release appeared in several papers,
‘and, in most instances, in the headings the
Totter was referred to as a protest against
the jim crowing of the mothers,
‘Now, to The Tribune, Mr. White's letter
did not seem to be strictly a protest against
the jim crowing since he connected it with
complaint about the inferiority of the
ships ured for the colored contingents, It
ms at least as much a protest against the
= ‘of ships on which the mothers were
transported as against the segregation,
“And right there is where our anti-jim-
crow protests usually fail to be impressive
“they are almost invariably so connected
with er mixed with other considerations
an mere discrimination that, like the
woss-eyed man about to shoot, they seem to
| Joo jie ‘one direction and aiming in
~ ‘What are we protesting—discrimination
or inferior accommodations? Would we be
content with separate ships if they were of
equal comfort, speed and elegance? Is a
jim evow car any less such if it is equal in
all respects to other cars in the train?
The same sort of muddled complaints
crop up practically every time jim crowing
in theatres and in other situations comes
up; and many persons exeuse the segrega-
tion on the grounds that our seats or po-
sitions were “just as good.” But we would
naturally expect the secretary of the
N.A.A.CP, to be more circumspect and ex-
plicit,
Jim crowing is separation based on color
—that’s all. ‘The sort of accommodations
has nothing to do with it. Why then bring
that up?
Su A
Littleness Not One-Sided
Commenting on the lack of appreciative
expression in our papers of the enterprise
shown by the Co-operative Publishers in
sending two representatives to report the
Decatur, Alabama, trial of Heywood Patter-
son, one of the Scottsboro boys, FAY, in his
column, “The Moving Finger,” in the Kan-
sas City Call, said:
The shortsightedness of most editors and
publishers, fhe selfish desire to sell them-
selves and not the publication, the selfish
desire to want to see all others in a similar
line of endeavor killed off and their inability
to do anything worth while, themselves, has
been a serious handicap to the old-time edi-
tors and publishers,
The ability to do things very seldom
brings forth a line of praise. Usually it
creates a desire, on the part of some, to
stand behind a wall and plug a brick at
those who are marching on.
During the past few weeks, I have been
watching with interest to see how many
Negro newspapers would comment. on the
splendid work done at Decatur, Ala., by
William N. Jones, managing editor of the
Baltimore ‘Afro-American, and P, Bernard
Young, Jr., managing editor of the Norfolk
Journal and Guide.
‘The Washington Tribune and the Cali-
fornia Eagle so far have seen fit to praise
the work of the two newspaper men. ‘The
‘Tribune, in particular, stepped right out
with a ‘whopping editorial. Other papers
remain silent,
To all of this—including the implied
praise—The Tribune assents, although in
certain passages, not included in our quota-
tion, Fay gives the co-ops more credit than
is rightly their due; at the same time he
fails to state that not all of the papers he
praises for accomplishments were generous
enough or sufficiently broad-minded to re-
ciprocally comment on the credit given to
their enterprise in this instance. Fay says,
toward the end of his article:
‘The Co-operative group thanks the Wash-
ington Tribune and the California Eagle
editors.
While the group, through its president,
as a group, acknowledged our congratula
tions, some of the individual members of it
were—as Mrs. Browning would probably
express it—eloquently silent.
‘The littleness is not all on one side.
A Contrast
The unequivocal, uncompromising spirit
displayed by the white girls who stood up
for Miss Florin Pinkney at the Cairo Hotel
here recently, as related last week, is in
heartening contrast to the alleged pusillani-
mous attitude. of two colored boys in a
school party from Philadelphia which re-
cently is said to have had similar trouble at
another hotel in this city.
It is reported that although the teacher
in charge of the party refused to yield to
the manager's objections to taking care of
the colored boys, the hoys themselves offered
to go to the colored Y.M.C.A., but the white
teacher would not consent. He won outy
finally, and all were taken care of at the
hotel. 5
Sa rr
What of the Future?
By GEORGE 8, SCHUYLER
Se wii ec.
Professional classes cannot survive without
a working class on which to live. That is a
social law. It therefore behooves those of us
who are able to think at all, to get busy and
devise some way out—even half-way out—be-
fore the masses attain that state of mental and
physical stagnation that defeats all progress-
ive plans and policies,
Sad to relate, I know of no important or-
ganization or prominent leader among us yoic-
ing any sound, workable, adequate plan for the
future. The N.A.A.C.P. confines itself to the
legal angle of advancement. The Urban
League is concerned solely with treating ef-
fects and issuing lugubrious warnings of a
dismal future. The ballyhoo boys of the Na-
tional Negro Business League have been clam-
like since the folding up of so many “cap-
stones of Negro business’ and the fatal wast
ing disease aMicting the C.M.A. stores,
Nothing conies from our college presidents
eave moans for more money. Our ecclesiasti-
cal realtors have successfully concealed any
ideas ‘they may have accidently acquired. Our
numerous Doctors of Eeistonhy and Masters
of Arts who profess this and that in our so-
called educational institutions are either sink
in the rut of complacency, are dabbling in “Ne-
gro Art” and amateur theatricals, investigat-
ing the mysteries revealed by Krafft-Ebing or
battling bravely to keep up installment pay-
ments. Our fraternal leaders are mere gassy
Parasites. Of our politicians nothing need be
said.
What is to become of an underprivileged,
slum proletariat whose leadership is incapable
of formulating any sound program to get it
out of the barrel?
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 193
|Kelly Miller Says|
Ce -
The Negro Seeks Succor,
Finds No Trustworthy
Door open to Him
Would Embrace Communism but for
Doubt of Its Ability to Bring Eco-
nomic and Political Security.
All weak peoples must needs Jook beyond
their own strength for vicarious salvation. The
history of the Jewish race furnishes the classic
illustration of this principle, Always weak and
helpless amidst their more powerful enemies
they lifted their “eyes unto the hills whenee
cometh our help.” Being constantly baffled
and buffeted by surrounding gentile nations,
they sought protection from on high. This
hope deferred, kept them in a constant mes-
sianic stato of mind. ‘
By virtue of this vicarious political depen-
dence they were enabled to teach the world
the need of a vicarious spiritual salvation,
They were on the constant lookout for the pro-
mised one who should redeem Israel.
‘They waited for centuries under this salu-
tary delusion for the fulfilment of time. The
prophet is never daunted by the failure of his
prophecy. Mankind became the moral and
spiritual beneficiary of this secular, vicarious-
ness. The promised Savior came in the un-
folding of the Hebrew scripture. The rebel-
lious and stiff-necked Jews rejected him who
was accepted by the Gentiles and became the
foundation stone of the Christian scheme of
salvation.
HISTORY OF JEWS PARALLELS
PREDICAMENT OF NEGRO
Parallelism between the Jew and the Negro
runs on all fours. The transplanted African,
in the land of his enslavement, found no human
hope in this low ground of sorrow but pined for
his heavenly home which was “built on high.”
He drank in the Old Testament scriptures as
the thirsty land drinks in the April showers.
‘The Hebrew scriptures but represent. the
Jewish soul turned wrong side out; the Negro
spirituals but represent the Negro soul turned
wrong side out. In both we find a burning
yearning for a fairer world beyond this vale
of tears. They both look to the skies for
salvation,
After his emancipation, the Negro found
himself in the midst of painful realities. He
soon transferred his dependence from the skies
and sought help mundane and terrestrial. ‘The
great North had freed him, and to the North
he looked for eternal nurture and support, The
missionaries came down to redeem him from
ignorance and superstition. He accepted this
proffer of salvation as ordained of God,
‘The Republican party soon became his po-
litical salvator, upon which he relied as im-
nlicty as the Hebreys of old, depended upon
the God.of Abraham,MIsaac and Jacob. It was
in 1872 that Frederick Douglass uttered his
famous motto: “The Republican Party is the
ship! all else is the sea.”
THE NORTH AND THE G.0.P.
GREW APATHETIC
Great is our disillusionment when we are
forced to feeb that our God has forsaken us.
The North grew apathetic, the Republican
party grew remiss. The missionaries had
‘taught us to rely upon Protestant religion as
our never failing refuge and stay in the time
of need and distress. But now the Church is
disposed to cast us overboard, to sink or swim
with our own weak or strong arm. But we
still look for vicarious succor.
| Some point to the Catholic church whose
historic policy embraces all men without re-
‘gard to race or color. The historic church
senses its strategic opportunity, but stands
‘appalled at the magniude of the difficulty. The
Catholic church is willing to go the limit short
of social equality. This it lacks the courage
to dare in face of the Protestant majority
whose creed cannot cross the color line,
CATHOLICS LACK THE COURAGE
‘OF THEIR PROFESSIONS
The Catholic university in Washington lacks
‘the courage to receive Negro students and
thus incur the odium and taunts which its Pro-
testant sister institution would cast in its
teeth. When in Rome, do as the Romans do.
When among Protestants, do as the Protes-
tants do. The Catholic church lacks the cour-
age to violate that ancient motto and shrinks
from the bold attempt to capture the Negro
race,
Labor and capital are now at each other's
throats. The outcome of the issue is doubtful
but the balance of chance seems to waver to
labor’s side. The Negro would embrace labor
as his salvator, but alas, finds himself repelled
with a harshness greater than that which he
receives at the hand of capital. This re-
pellancy throws him back upon the lap of cap-
italism which tolerates him mainly as a tool
to break the assault of labor, He is willing,
in his helplessness, to embrace any power
‘mightier than himself whence help might
come,
COMMUNISTS BID ‘
HIM WELCOME
Now come the Communists with open and
outstretched hands bidding him welcome and
offering him political and economic salvation.
He hesitates to embrace this proffered salva-
tion only because he doubts the competency of
the self-nssumed salvator, How can they save
others when themselves they cannot save?
The Negro knows little about the doctrinal
basis ahd underlying philosophy of communism
and has no spontaneous care about. these
things. His chief concern is the ability of the
Communists to deliver the goods. If that time
should evar come, and if they then would still
hold out the arms of opportunity, there is not
the shadow of a doubt but that the Negro
would embrace this cult as a means of sal-
vation.
‘The Negro is now in the desperate stage of
barter for salvation. He will.desert the North
for the South, the Republican for ithe Demo-
cratic party, the church for paganism, labor
for capital or capital for labor, whichever of-
fers the best chance for racial salvation.
Such, alas, is the lamentable predicament of
a race or a people who seek sa{vation outside
of themselves,
'Digesting the
News
me Cifferd C. Mitchell
| If I live, and nothing happens
If T live and nothing happens to
‘the transportation facilities, some
time during the day of June 8 (this
year) I shall be Chicago bound.
This has all been made possible,
indirectly, through the co-operation
of each reader, throughout Amer-
‘ica, who has read any of my re-
leases during the past three years.
Directly, my freedom has been
made possible through the generous
‘co-operation given me by the many
editors and publishers, of | both
‘races, who have been so liberal and
generous in their efforts to pub-
Ticise my weekly messages. s
__ Still more directly, my freedom is
‘the result of the scores of influen-
tial Americans, of both races, who
have intereeded, directly and indi-
rectly, in my belief, to our pardon
and parole commission, W, Alfred
Debo, and to Governor William A.
Comstock.
In my particular instance it was
not a question of whether any pro-
minent person was willing to spon-
sor my future efforts, but which of
the many offers to do so would af-
ford me the greatest contact and
give me the greatest opportunity to
continue and enlarge upon my ef-
forts now that I have “found” ny.
self and have proved that I could
be useful.
The parole commissioner event-
ually decided, influenced greatly by
the recommendations of Charlie
Diggs, assistant parole commission-
er of Detroit, that my best contact
was in the offer of Harry H. Pace,
President of the Supreme Liberty
fe Insurance Company, of Chica-
0, who wrote a long personal let-
ter to Governor Comstock in which
he assured the governor that if I
were paroled to Chicago that he,
Mr. Pace, would take a personal in-
terest in my welfare and offer me
every opportunity to make a suc-
cess of my work and to become a
credit to the race through my writ-
ings.
To all Chicagoans I wish to send
& message. All my life my trou-
bles have always come about
through the representation that I
possessed more than I actually had.
Now I wish to start clean. I am
frank to say that I have nothing.
Not only am I shy on worldly goods
but T do not even possess all that
nature gave me—however, a good
dentist can remedy that in short
order.
T do come to Chicago, however,
with a proved ability that I can
make myself useful, and a determ-
ination to erect upon the firm foun-
dation that I have now laid, a struc-
ture of service that Chicagoans will
be proud of and that will reflect
credit upon those who are sponsor-
ing my future efforts.
So many people have contributed
their moral influence in making the
present situation possible and I am
now preparing a complete state-
ment of such efforts, showing in
detail just how each person came
to the “front” for me. in a time
when it was needed. ‘This acknow-
ledgement of thanks will be pre-
pared in pamphlet form and dis-
tributed freely to all my readers,
shortly after my release, June &
Unitl then, just thanks to all of
aaa
AFRICAN CLAIRVOYANCY
DS Dade the New York Times
When one consjders that even
ome educated people are. unable
to resist fortune tellers and similar
charlatans, it is not surprising that
primitive man strives to peer into
the future, declares Field Museum
News, Chicago.
In Afriea many methods are fol-
lowed; for example, throwing bones
and Roting their arrangement when
they fall; ;writing in the sand; ex-
amining the entrails of animals,
and shaking a divination basket,
“In Field Museum js such a bas-
ket used by the Ovimbundu of An-
gola,” says the writer. “This kind
of di¥inatory apparatus is still em-
ployed and two of the baskets from
Angola are among the material col-
lected by the Frederick H. Rawson-
Field Museum Ethnological Expe-
dition in 1929.
*To the accompaniment of g fric-
tion drum the diviner shakes his
basket, then pauses to observe what
trinkets have come to the top, Two
little wooden figures with’ their
mouths close together may appear
prominently.
“At once the diviner says that
two people are whispering, plotting
to Kill by poison. A round piece
of wood comes to the top. This is
an open human mouth;; some one,
probably a woman, has been gos-
siping too freely. ‘A little wooden
snake appears at the top—the limbs
of some unfortunate person will be
tisted ith pain. So the forecast
roceeds with remedies suggested
Prtee diviage”
THE VOICE OF FAITH
I cannot see beyond the veil
With these poor mortal eyés,
But faith shows life en a higher
scale
When I shall severe these earthly
ties.
T cannot see the glory that awaits
‘me there
But if here I do my best,
Faith tells me thepe is 2 God some
where
Waiting to give me rest.
ARCHIE R. SMITH,
2603 Sherman Ave,
The Negro Before
the Courts During
bs Year 1932
By Sania GNRS
appelate courts. Two of these
cases, Nixon y. Condon (286 U, S.
78) and Powell et al v. Alabama
(the Scottsboro Case, 287 U. S.
78,) were decided favorably to col-
ored litigants by the United States
Supreme Court.
‘One case, White v. County Dem-
ocratic Executive Committee (60
F, (2d) 973, the Federal District
Court of Texas decided in part for
the Negro suitor, and partly
against him. In the two remain-
ing cases: County Democratic Ex-
ecutive Committee V. Booker (53
S, W. 123,) and Lee v. (Md, 161 A.
284). the first was decided against
the litigant, and in the sceond, the
judgment below was reversed,
Strange to say, in three of the
cases mentioned the political rights
of the race were involved and all
arose in Texas. Two other cases
concerned “due process” in. crimi-
nal trials and exclusion of Negroes
from jury services.
Nixon y. Condon grew out of
Nixon v. Herndon, (273 U, 8.
536), in which the Supreme Court
held that a Texas statute barring
Negroes from voting in primary
elections violated the constitutional
guaranty of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Following this de-
cision, the Texas legislature passed
s law authorizing political parties
to prescribe the qualifications of
their members,
‘The Texas Primaries
The Texas Democratic State Ex-
ecutive Committee, by resolution,
limited the yarticipation in its
primaries to white voters. Nixon
challenged this procedure, and al-
though defeated in two lower Fed-
eral courts, appealed to the United
States Supreme Court, where by
five to four, that court reversed the
judgments ‘below.
Mr. Justice Cardozo, speaking
for the majority, held that the
Democratic party in Texas was not
a voluntary association like a club,
but was an agency of the State,
and that Nixon's exclusion was the
act of the State, and that under
the Fourteenth ‘Amendment, the
act of the committee was void.
The court said:
“The pith of the matter is sim-
ply this, that when those agencies
(local committees) ave invested
with an authority independent of
the will of the association in whose
name they undertake to speak,
they become to that extent the or-
gans of the State itself, the re-
positories of official power... . .
‘The test is whether they are clas-
sified as representatives of the
State to such an extent and in
such a sense that the great re-
straints of the Constitution sets
limits to their action...
“Justices Butler, McReynolds,
Sutherland and Van DeVanter dis-
sented, in holding that the statute
did not create the Democratic par-
ty as a State agent, but merely
recognized its existence,
‘The Scottshoro Case
In the Scottsboro Case, the facts
show that the nine defendants
were indicted for rape, a capital
offense in Alabama, six days after
the commission of the alleged acts
and were tried on the day they
were indicted,
The defendants, being both poor
and illiterate, had procured no
counsel, and no effectual appoint-
ment of counsel was made by the
trial court until the day of the
trial. No continuance was asked
by counsel nor granted by the
court. Defense counsel attempted
no formal cross examination of
the State's witnesses. The de-
fendants were speedily convicted.
The Supreme Court by seven to
two vote held that this was a vio-
lation of due process under the
Fourteenth Amendment, sinée it
was the duty of the court not only
to appoint counsel for poor defend-
ants in capital eases, but also to
see that adequate opportunity is
xiven for the preparation of the
defense. Delivering the major
opinioa, Mr, Jutice Sutherland
said in part:
“We think the failure of the
trial court to give them reasonable
time and opportunity to ‘secure
counsel was a clear denial of due
process. But passing that, and |
assuming their inability, even if
opportunity had been given, to em-
ploy counsel, as the trial court
evidently did assume, we are of the
opinion, that under the circum-
stances just.stated, the necessity
of counsel, was so vital and. im-
perative that the failure of the
trial court to make an effective
appointment of counsel was like-
wite a denial of due process with-
in the meaning of the Fourteenth
Amendment,
Logical Corollary
“In a cise such as this, what-
ever may be the rule in other cases
ie rigkt to bave ea Gen
when necessary, is a lo,
corollary from the’ constitutional
Fight to be heard by ts,
-_ Justices Butler and McReynolds,
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAI
SFE]
, TURE
dants to properly prepare their
case.
Following the decision of the
Supreme Court in Nixon v: Con-
don, the Texas primary election
laws were twice drawn in question.
To circumvent the decision in the
above case, the State convention of
the Texas Democratic party passed
a resolution excluding all Negroes
‘from voting in Democratic primar-
ies. The State Executive Demo-
‘cratic Committee ratified this reso-
lution, <
Julius White, a Negro, sought to
‘mandamus the executive commit-
tee to compel it to permit him and
‘other qualified Negroes to vote in
‘primary elections. ‘The Texas
Federal District Court held that it
lacked jurisdiction to maintain
‘such an action, but decided that
‘the state convention acted as an
agency of State, and that its reso-
ution violated’ the Fourteenth
Amendment. (See White ¥. Coun-
ty Democratic Committee mention-
ed above.)
In County Democratic Executive
Committee y. Booker, Booker, a
colored man sought an injunction
to restrain the Texas State Demo-
cratic Committee from preventing
him and other qualified Negroes
from voting in Demoeratie primar-
ies, A Texas civil anpeals court
by a two to one decision, held that
the Democratic Party in Texas was
a voluntary political association,
which has the constitutional right
to determine the qualifications of
persons who are to vote in its
primaries,
It is quite difficult to reconcile
this decision with the view expres-
sed by Mr. Justice Cardozo, when
he said that political parties are
“the agencies of the State, the in-
struments by, which government
becomes a living thing.” The all-
‘important question, whether in the
absence of a statute a political
party in Texas can bar Negroes
‘yet to be decided by the United
from, its primary elections, remains
‘States Supreme Court.
‘The Euel Lee Case
In Lee v. State, arising in Mary-
land, the issue of the exclusion of
Negroes from jury service was de-
cided.
Buel Lee, a Negro, was convict-
ed of first degree murder and sen-
tenced to death. Part of the jury
was drawn from the regular panel
and a part from the court room.
No Negroes were drawn for ser-
vice, nor does it appear that any
had ever been summoned for jury
service during the _ twenty-six
years of the service trial judge
Who supervised the drawing of
jurors in that jurisdiction. He se-
lected white persons with whom he
came in contact or’ from names
suggested to him. ?
‘The judgment below was rever-
sed, the appelate court holding,
thatywhile he accused Negro could
not demand a jury composed part-
ly of his race he could demand a
jury from which his race was not
excluded, and where evidence
shows that jury selection had been
restricted to white persons, such
practice amounts to an unconstitu-
tional exclusion of Negroes from
the jury panel of persons summon-
ed to try the accused,
EATS FOR INVALIDS
Te ONE SP ene a
A wise Frenchman who has com-
piled a book of die‘arv menus for
invalids, imaginary and otherwise,
tells them that no diet should be
taken seriously. Not only, says
he, is one man’s meat another
man’s poison, but what js regarded
as poison by one generation is the
nectar and ambrosia of the next.
Within 50 years it was common
for ladies to decline tomatoes,
fresh or canned, stewed or raw oF
fried, because of a notion that the
seeds of cancer lurked in them. It
used to be believed that strawber-
ries were bad for sufferers from
arthritis. Today, says our French-
mas, the ban on them is lifted.
But, if we are not to take our
food too seriousiv, neither should
we swallow the Frenchman whole.
‘There is no gainsaying that
strawberries and lobsters affect
some people unpleasantly. An in-
nocent Welsh rarebit, if it is fol-
lowed by a clear Havana cigar, is
death in the pot for some. And then
there is the diet which, wholesome
beyond a doubt, given no pleasure
at the table but rather exeites vio-
lent distaste.
‘The French author was once per-
suaded to go in for vegetarianism,
juct to see if it made a man more
humane and kingly and indulgent
‘to his wife; if it opened to him a
new heaven and a new earth. For
several weeks he frequented a
vegetarian restaurant, but, finding
that all the vegetarians in the
place “quarreled incessantly and
were covered with pimples,” he
concluded that a cheerful temper
and good looks were largely the
product of fried chicken, Mary-
land style, with candied sweet po-
tatoes and all the other fixings.
This diet he would follow for
two or three weeks and then vary
‘it with the more appétizing cuts
of beef, lamb and pork. In the
season he would have the invalid
‘indulge sparingly or to the limit
in brook trout, fresh-caught sal-
mon and bluefish or soft-shell
erabs,
The rain thing ts not to tollow
any prescribed until it oe:
but to ‘i e £ a
all” oy “ee jt
earth and ei find ur prove,
IN THE REALM
.OF BOOKS
| By C. LESLIE FRAZIER
How the Federal Office of Educa~
tion serves Negro schools is told by
Dr. Ambrose Caliver, in the May
issue of the Southern Workman.
Dr. Caliver is senior specialist in
the education of Negroes for the
Federal Office of Education,
The Federal Government's educa-
tional service to Negroes is re-
viewed by the writer from the time
of the Office of Education's estab-
lishment, in 1867, up to the pres-
ent. The special interest in Negro
education of each United States
Commissioner of Educatiun from
Dr. Henry Barnard, the first Com-
missioner, to Dr,” William John
Cooper, the present coninvissioner,
is explained.
In 1930, the Office of Education:
created a'new section devoted ex-
clmtively to the problems of Negro
education. Various activities of
this new section are discussed. Dr.
Caliver, who has charge of this
work, avers that he does not at-
/tempt to be responsible for all the
‘services whieh the’ Office of Educa-
tion is called upon to give to col-
ored people. On the contrary, his
task is to use as many’ specialists
as possible in the prosecution of
his work, and to focus their expert
knowledge, in their special fields,
on problems coming to him; also to
encourage the inclusion of the Ne-
gro in as many of their regular and
special studies as possible.
In addition to disseminating exe
isting information concerning con-
ditions respecting the education of
Negroes, the Federal Office of Edu-
cation makes regular studies and
special surveys with a view to ine
creasing the fund of knowlwedge
on the subject,
Mr. Caliver in his article states
that ‘sinee 1870 every annual re-
port of a United States Commis-
sioner of Education has contained
something about Negro schools and
Negro education. During this time
nearly 250 such refevences have
appeared in the annual reports, and
14 circulars, special reports and
bulletins on’ the education of Ne-
groes have been published, ‘These
publications are listed jn the South-
ern Workman article.
eee
Two worth while books by the
Macmillan Company, New York,
are:
“Manchuokuo, Child of Conflict,””
by F. K, Kawakami, the author of
“Japan Speaks,” writes another of
his sensationally impartial surveys
of the Eastern imbroglio, this time
taking up the new Manchurian
‘state, its relation to Japan, the
United States and to world peace.
Price $2.00. “
“Joseph Smith—an American
Prophet,” by John Henry Evans, is
an impartial biography of the in-
‘domitable founder of Mormonism
who planned and built cities, con-
quered the desert, covered the
earth with missionaries—all in the
face of, bitterest opposition and
persecution. $4.00,
oe
Opportunity magazine announe~
es that Pearl 8, Buck’s remarkable
speech at the Opportunity dinner
given in her honor is the outstand~
ing feature of Opportunity for
June. "The Road to the Future”
is the title which Mrs. Buck has
given to this, her second address
on the Negro; and it bids fair to
create as great a furor as her
“Race Relations and Race: Pride,”
which was published in the January
issue. :
The Opportunity prize story, “A
Summer Tragedy,” by Arna’ Bon-
temps, is also published in this ise
sue of the magazine.
Melville Herskovits, distinguish
ed anthropologist of Northwestern
University, contributes a brilliant
article, “A’Footnote to the History
of Negro Slavery.”
Henrique Dias, by J. A. Rogers,
is the story of a second Toussaint
LiOverture, who by his military
skill and genius defeated the best
armies of Holland in the battles
for power during the earliest his~
tory of Brazil.
| WORLD WAR NOT ENDED
The depression is “the last battle
of the World War,” Dr. James T.
Shotwell says in his annual report
as director of the divisibn of eco-
nomies and history of the Carnegie
Enddwnment for — International
Peace.
Dr. Shotwell holds that because
the war is the fundamental cause
of the depression, the remedies
must be political as well as eco-
nomic. He, believes that the only
solid guarantee of prosperity lies
in strengthening instruments of in-
ternational policy which are the
substitutes of war, such as arbitra-
tion, the World Court and the
League of Nations.
The notion that war in‘necessary
in order to preserve national honor
is an anachorinistic relic of dueling
dave. It is nothing short of crimi-
nal sentimentaliem to maintain that
an insult to ‘our fog site abe
avenged by, slaughter hundreds
or thousands or millions of met,
women and children of another na-
tion, |“ Morgaver, it is the easente of
iishonor for a signatory
Briand-Kellogg Pact to seek the
settlement of an international dis-
pute by warlike means,—The World
‘omorrow. ~ *
a tempermental digeytive tract
and aré at the same time so allur-
ing that they would fetch » Thom-
as Carlyle at a gallop to the table,
SOCIETY NOTES
JORDAN'S 13th & G
As Much As $25 Trade Allowance
ON A WILLIAMS ICE-O-MATIC
No Down Payment
Cut your electric bill 1/3 with
WILLIAMS ICE-O-MATIC REFRIGERATION
NEW ECONOMY COMPRESSOR
15 Cents a Day
JORDAN'S 13th & G 1239 G Street N. W.
At JORDAN'S 5 LINES TO SELECT
KELVINATOR . $98 up
LEONARD ..... $98 up
NORGE ..... $99 up
MAJESTIC ..... $89 up
ICE-O-MATIC . $114 up
LARGEST DISPLAY IN CITY
NO DOWN PAYMENT—15 CENTS A DAY
Phi Beta Sigma Holds Gala Initiation
By D. G.
Alpha Chapter of the Phi Beta Sigma fraternity held a gala initiation Thursday evening, but dogs Joseph V. Winn, Arthur A. Robinson, William W. Ford, Mervin Parker, J. Richmond Johnson, Arthur A. Edelen, Fritz L. Moorhead, Vernon F. Greene and William Ross did but think otherwise. Yea for were they not sorely oppressed? In parts of course, and how. Much to the surprise of the passers-by of Washington's great white way, was the novel performance of dogs Greene, Ford, Winn, and Edelen.
These four dogs equipped with large lanterns did pace many a step in front of Ye good Lincoln Theatre in quest of an Honest Man? Hour after hour, weary, footsore, and the center of attraction, these dogs plodded on and on in quest of a hopeless task. That dogged instinct to keep on would not let them ston.
Of course there were other reasons why they didn't. After 1000 trips which dog Ford counted with a pace tally, in vain did he report, much to the chagrin of the other dogs, the futility of the task. What not even a honest man in our fair city? Away with them to the bottomless pit.
But this and more, were in sooth, light compared to the trip across the burning sands in search for the light. Parched throats, pleas for mercy, were of little avail as strokes of oak, pine and other cellulose did rain down upon them. But once, again, did yee dogged instinct enable them to survive, and attain the great beyond.
"Tis said, "the dogs stood up and became men." Sigma men,
NINEUVUS CLUB
Mrs. Rosa Reed, the president, the Nineuvus Club on Tuesday night at her home, 1525 Q Street, Northwest. The feature of the evening was bridge at four tables.
The officers are Mrs. Rosa Reed, president; Mrs. Elizabeth Gaines, vice-president and treasurer; Mrs. Mildred Cox, secretary; Mrs. Rebecca Johnson, business manager; Mrs. Theresa Clark, chaplain; Mrs. Anna Griffith, sergeant-at-arms.
Members: Mrs. Clara Schencks (honorary member), Mrs. Carrie Mason, Miss Algie Goldsmith.
The hostess had as guests Mrs. Inez Thompson, Mrs. Ellen Dudley, Mrs. Ethel Baker, Mrs. Eva Wilson, and the Schquita Social Club Mrs. Gaines won first prize, Mrs. Clark, second, and Mrs. Johnson third.
Among the guests Mrs. Wilson won guest's prize and Miss Maggie Stevenson won the Schquita Club prize. Mrs. Reed served an appetizing menu. The club will close for the season the last part of June.
Miss Elliott Fetes Friends With Party
Miss Esther Elliott, of 1222 T Street, Northwest, entertained at her residence Saturday with a party, featuring cards, dancing and a repast.
Those present were: Misses Berrice, Dolores and Louetta Myles, Mary Bias, Catherine Yates, Mildred Elliott, Irene Brown, Edith Odrick and Ethel Matthews.
Messrs, Leroy Bias, Malcomb Daniels, Francis Bethel, Harry Harris, of Detroit, Edwin Mills, D. Daniels, Samuel Netter and Billy Foster.
MISS VIOLA KIRKSEY
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY
Miss Viola Kirksey entertained a number of friends at her birthday party on Monday, May 29, at her residence, 1243½ Duncan Street, Northeast.
Those present were Elizabeth Nichols, Bessie Smart, Alberta Alston, Lillian Pascal, Catherine Kirksey, Agnes Crutchfield, Gladys Campbell, Rosa Kirksey, Florence Phillips, Rose Woods, Lillian Pascal, Mr. and Mrs. James Howard, Mr. and Mrs. James Howard, Mr. and Mrs. William Kirksey, William Rogers, Roger Coles, Jessie Kelly, Ernest Gross, Clarence Diggs, Elijah Childress, Rubin James, Mack Dowell, Hugh Kirksey, Earl Williams, Mr. Lewis, and Robert Kirksey.
PERSONAL
Miss Ethel Lemon returned to Washington Sunday morning after a year at West Virginia State College.
Mrs. C. Melendez Murray has returned to the city from San Juan, Puerto Rico, where she spent the winter with her mother.
Miss Addie Marshall who has been matron of Cleveland School for more than five years was recently transferred to Armstrong High School. Teachers and children presented to her an electric waffle iron as a token of their esteem.
Attorney D. W. Perkins, of Jacksonville, Fla., made a flying trip to Washington Sunday and returned Tuesday. He was dinner guest of Miss Lydia G. McIlwaine Sunday; he stopped at the Whitelaw Hotel.
SLAMS BRIDGE CLUB
Miss Ella Mitchell was hostess to the club Monday night at her residence, 2458 Eighth Street, Northwest.
Members present were Mesdames Juanita Conway, Leola Carter, Louise Hurt, Jennie Mills, Bertha Mitchell, Grace Pleasant, Marie Rose, and Miss Ella Mitchell, Mrs. Jessie Conway was guest of the evening.
Club prizes were won by Grace Pleasant, first; Jessie Conway, second; and Louise Hurt, third.
Society Notes
(Continued from page 5)
J. D. Husketh is in Chicago visiting the "Century of Progress." He is a guest at the Brookmont Hotel.
***
Mrs. Grace Dent, of Washington and Detroit, is in Chicago, where she plans to spend the summer.
******
Mrs., M. C. Jones, Mrs. M. E. Melvin, and Morgan Dawkins, all of Newport News, Va., have returned home after attending the funeral of Mrs. Carrie Dawkins, their sister and mother, respectively, who died in Washington last week. Dr. C. C. Cook, of Richmond, Va., also attended the funeral.
******
Mrs. Emma Tate and Miss Virginia Scott, of Girard Street, Brooklyn, D.C., spent the week-end in Winchester, Va.
******
Mrs. Arnetta Taylor, of 529 Harvard Street, Northwest, is spending some time in Connecticut visiting with friends.
CAPTAIN SMITH VISITS NORTH CAROLINA
Captain John Edgar Smith, secretary of the board of trustees of his alma mater, Johnson C. Smith University, Charotte, North Carolina, left the city Monday to attend a meeting of the board which is being held in connection with the commencement exercises. He will also attend the commencement of Scotia Women's College at Concord, North Carolina, where he is anxious to observe the progress made during Scotia's first year under a colored faculty.
TO GIVE GARDEN PARTY FOR
W.Y.C.A. BENEFIT
A garden contract bridge party will be given on the lawn of Dean and Mrs. Kelley Miller, 2225 Fourth Street, Northwest, on June 10. Play will begin at 2:30 p.m. Proceeds will be for the benefit of the Phyllis Wheatley Y.W.C.A.
NITE OWLS
The Nite Owls featured a barn dance Monday, May 29, at the Variety Town and Country Club, 1337 R Street, Northwest. There were two prizes offered for the two snappiest bungalow aprons. First prize was won by Miss Florence Putty; second prize was awarded to Mrs. Ada Minor.
The Four Dots rendered plenty of rhythm. This affair was attended by many clubs, including the Classics, Scorpins, Melody Girls, Janta Girls, Consoling Pals, Aviatrix, Improved, Capital City, and many of the Nite Owls' regular patrons.
Mrs. Lilly Davis and Mrs. Ethel Davis, of 611 U Street, have returned home after a trip to Philadelphia, where they were the house guests of their sister-in-law and aunt, Mrs. Mabel Davis, of North Twelfth Street.
Prof. Maloney of Howard Writes Scientific Article
"An Experimental Investigation of the Treatment of Acute Barbiturate Intoxication" is the title of the article in the Journal of the National Medical Association for May, just issued. Designated as "from the laboratory of pharmacology of Howard Medical School, Washington, D.C., the article is a scientific discussion by Prof. A. H. Maloney, M.A., Ph.D., M.D., professor of pharmacology.
DEANWOOD, D.C.
V. A. Bunch, Reporter
Miss Evelyn Bell, 1212 Forty-eighth Street, Northeast, is publicity agent for the Players' Guild, of The Church of the Incarnation, located on Browning Place, near Kane, Northeast.
Miss Thelma Craig, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Craig, who resides at 4800 Meade Street, Northeast, is returning home after June 1, from Morgan College in Baltimore, where she has been studying.
Mrs. Emma C. Brewer, 832 Forty-eighth Street Northeast, is planning to go on away her vacation soon.
Miss Rea Hyson, 4700 Kane Place, Northeast, is home again after spending the winter at Broad Run, Va., where she taught school for five months.
Miss Josephine Donahue is recuperating from the effects of an accident, when she fell from the running board of a moving car in front of her home. 4601 Kane Place, Northeast.
Mrs. Sadie Harrison has returned to her home at Mitchellsville, Md., after spending some time with her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bolt, of 4604 Kane Place, Northeast.
The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Adams, of 904 Forty-fourth Street, Northeast, was christened at Zion Baptist Church the last Sunday in May, by the Rev. Leon Wormley, the pastor. Miss Majory Wormley stood as godmother to the little newcomer, Majorie Elizabeth Adams.
Suburban Gardens opened Saturday, May 27.
RAIN HALTS GAME
The scheduled game between opposing teams of the Government Financing Office was rained out on the week. The two teams from the fifth floor and the seventh floor will meet at a later date. The winner of the game will play the third floor employees.
"Does your onanaffee ever run down pedestrians?"
"No, but he's great on running up repair bills."
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. JUNE 2, 1933
Public Schools
Cardozo High School
John Yeldell, of Cardozo High received from the Harvard Club, a book entitled "Mark Twain's America" by Bernard D Vooto, for the distinction of being the best all round boy in the junior class. He received this award for his excellence in scholarship, his perfect attendance, and his exceptionally manly qualities. Yeldell is a member of the Cardozo football team, and will be eligible for the letter this year. He is a track man, a member of the Cardozo orchestra, and of the Purple Masque dramatic club. Recently he was winner of the $100 award in the National Oratorical Contest sponsored by a local newspaper.
E. F. Gerish, secretary to the committee on the book prize of the Harvard Club of the District of Columbia, made the award. Mr. Gerish was accompanied by J. A. Jackson, of the small business in the Department of Commerce.
The Cardozo High School Chapter of the National Honor Society gave a party for the new members and its escorts on Monday, May 29, at 3:15 p.m. The newly elected members include: Edna Higgins, Cordelaia Key, Romay Lucas, Bernice Brown, Elease Newman, and Ernestine Greene. Other members are Helen Calvary, Grace Beckwith, Thelma Sands, Marjorie Kerrick, Evelyn White, Edith Williams, Mildred Lewis, Vivian Perkins, Constance Lucas, and Eola Dublin.
Ten cadets of Cardozo High who were selected to go to Arlington Cemetery on Monday, May 29, to help receive the flowers that were used in the Decoration Day exercise, were: Major Frederick Robinson, Captain Roland Fletcher and Luke Webb, Lieutenants Geo. Patterson, Wendell Cones, Stanford Weaver, James Lucas, Virgil Tracy and Edward White; and Sergeant Thomas Yeldell.
As an extension of Negro History Week activities, the school, with fourteen other schools, planted a cedar tree in front of the home of Frederick Douglass in Cedar Hill, Anacostia on Monday, May 29. These trees, that will be planted by the schools, will replace the trees that have died. Each tree is to be appropriately marked by the school presenting it. A short pageant commemorating the life and works of Douglass will be presented by pupils of the fifteen schools. John Yeldell will represent the Spirit of Service in the pageant which was written and produced by Miss M. B. Wade, teacher in Grimke Elementary School.
The committee at Cardozo in charge includes Miss Mary O'H, Williamson, chairman; Miss Helen L. Sparks, and Mrs. R. D. Brooks. The Purple Masque Club held its regular meeting on Thursday, May 25. The program featured two numbers; a recitation of Sterling Brown's, "Sporting Beasley," by John Yeldell and a pantomime on "Gossip" by Genevieve Winston and Gwendolyn Shelton. The nominating committee was selected to bring games for next year's officers to be voted on by the members. All members are leaving suggestions for next year's activities with the sponsor, Mrs. Louise J. Lovett. Two Cardozo students participated in the spelling bee, Tuesday night, May 23, at Lincoln Congregational Church. Helen Proctor, a sophomore, won second prize and Ruth Washington, senior, fourth place.
The Gauntlet Club, composed of senior boys, is completing its work for the year. The club, sponsored by A. L. Norvill, has succeeded in maintaining a high degree of order in the halls. It has done much to temper the attitude of the lower classmen toward the school. The members are attempting at this time to secure emblems for themselves to remind them of their continued responsibility. Among those who are particularly outstanding in leadership are Thomas Tibbs, Kenneth Phillips and Howard Barnes. The greater Cardozo High School Orchestra, under the direction of Felix Weir and Arthur Smith, are planning to visit the Dunbar and Armstrong High Schools the first week in June.
The Girl Reserves of the school sponsored a mother-daughter assembly on May 24, in the assembly hall of the school. The speaker for the occasion was Mrs. William T. Bunnerman, who is in charge of a mothers' club at the First Congregational Church. With other features of the program were: a violin soo "Trees" by Margaret Dishmän; "Mother of Mine" sung by Eunice Quander with a violin obligato by Fayette Long, and two poems "Mothers' Day" and "Mother is Always Your Friend," recited by Junita Upshaw and Naomi Ruffin, respectively. Eola Dublin, president of the club, presided. Remarks were made by Mrs. Ruth D. Brooks, one of the sponsors of the club.
Mrs. L, J. Lovett, of the school faculty, presented a program last week at the Girl's National Reform School on which John Yeldell, Mayetta Long, and Amelia Jones, participated.
Armstrong High School
At the Wednesday morning assembly, Principal G. David Houston presented the stage crew which is directed by Fred Pelham and showed the importance of this unit of vocational training in Armstrong. He reported that Armstrong staff sessions so that they secure positions in nearby eye color colored moving picture theatre in Washington and one in Alexan-
BE SURE TO ATTEND THE
FORTY-FIRST ANNUAL COMPETITIVE DRILL
of the
NINTH BRIGADE HIGH SCHOOL CADETS
American League Ball Park
Thursday, June 8, 1933
Proceeds for Benefit of Cadet Activities
Tickets on sale at Public School Buildings
In case of rain Drill will be held June 9
RICH RICE BEAUTY SALON
At the invitation of Mrs. E. P. Webster, the Morehouse College Quartet, which had appeared before President Roosevelt, sang for the Armstrong music classes on Thursday morning.
The seventh annual mother-daughter celebration held on Thursday night, was the most successful affair in the history of these programs. The auditorium was filled with enthusiastic mothers and daughters. The program began by singing of "Mother, My Dear," by the girls' glee club.
After the welcome to mothers by Rosa Johnson, Mrs. I. T. Perkins gave a special or social hygiene talk which introduced the showing of the motion picture "The Gift of Life."
"The Sun Goddess," a masque of Old Japan, was then presented by 150 Armstrong girls. The play consisted of singing and dancing. The speaking parts were take by Doris Dudley, Eyelyn Johnson, Marcella Moore, Gladys Greenhow, Ella Stokes Dorothy Fountaine, Anna Briscoe, Mamie Thomas, Theresa Smoot, Harriet Slaughter, Virginia Lewis, Susie Perkins and Norma Howell.
The dancers were Gertie Wells, Anna Campbell, Addie Christie, Cecelia Crawford, Beulah King, Thelma Miles, Inez Truitt, Sarah Brown, Lucille Felder, Florence Golden Cathleen Lowny, Elaine Russa, Daisy Scott, Beatrice Smith, Louise Perry, Myrtle Carter, Thelma Clomax, Gladys Hawkins, Theresa Harrison Ellen Jarvis, Alice Reed, Elizabeth Smith, Yvonne Warren and Genevieve Wallace.
The children were played by Pearl Colbert, Louise Cook, Beatrice Foulton, Gertrude Gross, Annie Payne, Annie Plummer, Clarice Skipper and Oneide Spriggs. Other girls took the part of villagers and the girls' glee club rendered two songs.
The assistant principal, Mrs. O. W. Spivey, awarded the prizes for attendance of mothers. Section F5 won the first prize and section H3 won second prize. Girls in these sections were presented with Japanese fans. The junior class had 60 per cent attendance of mothers and was presented a copy of a painting of "Mother" by Whistler.
Miss Francis Brooks, junior class representative in turn presented the picture to Mrs. Spivey for her office. Souvenirs were presented to each mother on presentation of the ticket.
The program was arranged by the following teachers; Mrs. G. C. Brown, Mrs. L. B. Clark, Miss I. M. Hall, Mrs. E. B. Howard, Mrs. K. J. Lane, Mrs. I. T. Perkins, Mrs. B. B. Scott, Miss E. F. Swann, Mrs. E. P. Webster, Mrs. M. E. Whedbee and Miss I. C. Williams, chairman.
Dunbar High School
Clarence William Davis, head of the physical education department of Howard University, addressed the upper classmen on May 24 on the subject of tuberculosis. W. L. Smith, the principal, and E. B. Henderson, director of physical training, made preliminary remarks.
A variety program given by the Dunbar Chapter of the Junior Red Cross on May 25, featured the playing by Reymond Weir of many popular songs on his harmonica, and Virginia Cherry in modern song interpretations.
Other participants were Francese Willis, in a Dutch monologue; Elsie Proctor and Margaret Harris, peasant dancers; Georgette Bryant, a country doll; Andrew Owens and Henry Booker, a piano duet; and Kelsey Pharr, crooner.
Incidental music for the occasion was played by Andrew Owens at the piano and Henry Booker at the organ. Eleanor Lixon, the president of Dunbar Chapter, presided. Under the auspices of the Officers' Club, with Captain A. C. Newman, Major H. O. Atwood, and Major Edward York as instructors, the commissioned officers are preparing a silent drill to be given
BE SURE TO
FORTY-FIRST ANNUAL
of
NINTH BRIGADE HI
American Lea
Thursday, J
Proceeds for Benefi
Tickets on sale at P
In case of rain Drin
RICH RICE B
NELLYE Z. TURNER RICE, Prop.
Slater-Langston Holds Annual May Day Program
Lillian Washington, 1035 Twentieth Street, Northwest, of the 6B grade at the Slater School on P Street, Northwest, was crowned the "Queen of May" during the May Day program held by that school Monday. Mrs. H. G. Dixon is her teacher.
The program was held in the street between North Capitol and First Street, Northwest, which was roped off and several rows of chairs lined each side to accommodate the more than 200 parents who witnessed the program.
The kindergarten, with E. L. King as teacher, followed the queen with two numbers. The first grades, with D. B. Robinson, E. J. Burleigh and P. B. Jordan as teachers, had two numbers.
The second grades with M. C. Buckner, M. L. Brown, and H. W. Taylor as teachers had three numbers, two dances and a game.
The third grades, with D. C. Scurlockk and S. E. Horad as teachers, had four numbers including a Maypole dance. The atypical class under Mrs. M. E. Jones had four numbers from circle bounce to leap frog. The fourth grades under M. L. Syphax and E. B. Gary, demonstrated a walking and rhythmic exercise and a passing bean bag over the head relay. The fifth grades under H. B. King and H. E. Shorter had six numbers including a May pole dance. The sixth grades under M. M. Marshall, M. B. Russell and H. G. Dixon had two numbers. This event has become an annual affair at Slater-Langston and was participated in by every teacher and pupil in the school.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Those receiving marriage certificates in the District of Columbia during the week are:
BERNARD-BERNARD—Frank, 28, 2332 F St. N, W.; Francis Mae, 21, 1114 Lamon St. N, W.
NELSON-LOGAN—Seahaw, 28, 182 Fifth St. N; Dorothy, 20, 2043 Ninth St.
JONES-WHITE—Ocie, 38, 448 Ninth St.
N.; W. Tulip, 46, 418 Gith St. N. W.
WILLIAMS-BOWMAN --- James, 24, 41
Eighth St. N.; W. Edith, 26, same ad
JONES-PARKER -Coy S. 32, 3225 Eleventh St. S. N.; W.R.; 29, 1101 Killeen St. SMALLWOOD-COATES -Maurice. 21, 4 L St. N.; W.R.; Alverta, 19, Shadside, Md. BROWN-RAMSUR -Wendell. 21, 1816 Corcoran St. Helen Ruth, 21, 1812 Corcoran St. N. GARMANY-HAMMON -Guss, 20, 1105 Sixth St. N.; Ethel Mela, 20, 1212
Eighth
GREENBROW—James, 62, 517 Forty-
eighth place, N.W.; Olive, 31, same ad-
ress.
ANDERSON-SIMMS — Kermit, 21, 4246
Benning road, N.E.; Catherine, 20, 228
STUDEVANT-THOMAS—Luke, 21, 1318
W St., N.W.; Nellie, 19, 319 Oakdale
Place, N.W.
JOHNSON-KENDALL — Chancellor,
4 quantico, N.V.; Lottie, 28, Dumphries,
N.W.
GARNET-COLES—Lawrence, 23, 911 Hugh
Court, N.E.; Gladys, 18, same ad-
ress.
SMITH-FORTUNE—Cleveland, 37, 378 P
St., N.W.; Cora, 26, 423 Neals Place,
N.W.
BRISCOE-KINGBURNE—Jagnitus, 26, 2628
SCOEIDEN Road, S.E.; Luche, 19, 2 Rail-
road Ave., S.E.
EVANS-RAILEY — James, 32, Warawaw,
Va.; Elizabeth, 28, same address.
ALBERT-PETTIWAY — Ernest, 36, 1606
Thirteenth St. N.W.; Lillian, same address.
CHASE-POWELL — Calvin, 24, 80 N St.
S.E.; Fannie, 21, same address.
MARTIN-JEFFERSON — Robert, 48, 88
Florida Ave. N.W.; Mattie, 42, 88 R St.
N.W.
FARREL-NOEL — Moss, 125, 1638 Fourth
St. N.W.; Cora, 33, same address.
WASHINGTON-SPRIGGS — Joseph, 22, 196
Highland Park, Md.; Louise, 19, same address.
BERNARD-BERNARD — Robert, 28, 2532
N.W.; Frances Mae, 21, 1111 Lamont St. N.W.
as part of the Competitive Drill on June 8. Heretofeo, only the non-commissioned officers have held these maneuvers.
May 23 witnessed the inauguration of the Dunbar girls' annual intersection baseball tournament. Winning sections now are A2, A3, K3, D4, C8 and E5. All but two sections are to be eliminated before the championship contest. Girls of the mapor physical training classes serve as umpires, under the supervision of Mrs. E. C. Evans, intra-mural manager, and T. L. Robinson, of the physical education department.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
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NEW YORK. — A topic which has received much discussion, pro and con, in the last two years since the Scottsboro cases and the activity in them of left wing groups, will be brought out for discussion in one of the day sessions of the annual conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, in Chicago, June 29-July 2, inclusive. The discussion topic will be "Is the N.A.A.C.P. Line of Attack Meeting the Needs of the Day?"
It is intended that registered delegates from branches of the association will bring to this discussion their experiences in their communities. The discussion is designed to chart, if possible, the reaction of the Negro citizens to recent activities in the field of race relations and to find out what sections of the population are thinking. The association officials declare they are open-minded on methods of procedure and will attempt to hold the discussion to an analysis of methods and not permit it to degenerate into personal mud-slinging. In view of the fact that some people are holding that the N.A.A.C.P. is "too tame" and "too respectable" to meet the needs of the day, while others maintain that it has a sane, constructive policy, the discussion is likely to be one of the high spots of the meeting.
Rayford W. Logan, assistant director of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, Washington, D.C., will speak Friday night, June 30, on the subject, "The Growth of Liberal and Radical Thought Among Negroes."
Dean Slowe at Home to Senior Women June 7
Among the commencement events of Howard University, an "at home" in honor of women of the senior classes, will be given by Miss Lucy D. Slowe, dean of women, from 5 to 7 p.m., Wednesday, June 7, at her residence, 1256 Kearney Street, Southeast.
White High Pupils
Sing Negro Songs
That members of the colored group are not the only ones who imitate other races, as has been charged, was demonstrated by the white Roosevelt High School Glee Club, Wednesday night. In a recital at the school, the club sang Negro spirituals, under the direction of Meea L. Thompson, which provided accompaniment of the "Marching to Glory" dance number in which actual happenings in an old colored church in Southern Virginia were depicted.
PULLMAN NEWS
John W. Burton, 815 Thirteenth Street, Northwest, is improving after a short illness and is expected to be back on the job soon.
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Lancaster, 1504 First Street, Northwest, accompanied by friends were seen in Deanwood Monday.
J. R. Logan has one of the most beautiful gardens on Forty-eight street, Deanwood.
HOWARD UNIVERSITY
COMMENCEMENT
SCHEDULE
The complete schedule of events connected with Howard University commencement is as follows:
Thursday June 1—Graduating exercises, Nurses' Training School, Freedmen's Hospital, Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel, 8 p.m.
Friday, June 2—R.O.T.C. Review Stadium, 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
Sunday, June 4—Baccalaureate: University Stadium. Sermon by Dr. Mordecki W. Johnson, president of the university, 11 a.m.
Tuesday, June 6—Chapel exercises, conducted by graduating students, 12 noon. Senior College class exercises, Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, June 7—Meeting of Law School Alumni, Moot Court Room, School of Law, 420 Fifth Street, Northwest, 8 p.m., Dean Lucy D, Slowe "at home" in honor of women of the senior class at 1256 Kearney Street, Northeast, 5 to 7 p.m.
Thursday, June 8—Annual meeting of the alumni of the School of Religion, School of Religion building, 11 a.m. President and Mrs. Mordecai W. Johnson "at home" to members of the senior classes, alumni, faculties, and friends, 4 to 6 p.m. General Alumni Association, Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel, 5 p.m. The Howard Players, presenting "The Youngest," by Phillip Barry, University campus, 8 p.m.
Friday, June 9 (commencement day)—Class reunions, Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel, 10 a.m. Meeting, executive committee, GenHall, 10 a.m. Annual commencement, Hall, 11 a.m. Annual commencement, exercises, University Stadium, 3:30 p.m. Commencement address by Edwin R. Embree, A.M., president, Julius Rosenwald Fund, Chicago, IL.
The annual exhibition of student work of the Department of Art, Howard University, from June 1 to August 15.
Annual exhibition, student work of the Department of Architecture, Howard University, Applied Science building, daily, June 1 to June 10.
"Open house," Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Engineering Laboratories. Popular demonstrations, June 6 to June 11.
Luncheon will be served in the tea room, Julia Caldwell Frazier Hall, women's dormitory, at nominal cost, from 12 noon to 2:30 p.m., Friday, June 9.
HOPWOODS
LURNITURE
Cor. 8th & K Sts., N.W.
815 H. St., N.E.
All Instruments Taught
Large Faculty
Latest Methods
DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES
813 Tea St.. N.W.
North 8370
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
ALABAMA SHARE CROPPERS GIVEN LONG TERMS
Five Convicted at Dadeville of Attack on Deputies; Appeal Noted
DADEVILLE, Ala.—(LLD.)—Sentences of from 5-6 to 12-15 years were imposed on five Negro share-cropers framed because they defended themselves when deputies and gangsters attacked them, last December 19, at Roelown, killing four other croppers.
An array of special prosecutors, headed by former Senator Tom Heflin, of Alabama, Democrat, was called in to make the railroading sure. Other prosecutors were J. W. Strother, specially brought into the case. Circuit Solicitor Richard Powell, Jr., son of the Tuskegee Institute attorney, and County Solicitor Sam Oliver.
R. B. Eleazer, national secretary of the Interracial Commission, sat up behind Judge Bowling to lend his moral support to the prosecution, as the judge made his charge to the jury.
Case to be Appealed
Irving Schwab, International Labor Defense attorney, and Attorney A. W. Morrison, of Atlanta, Ga., white, who is associated with Geer and Davis in the Herndon defense, defended the croppers. Notice of appeal was immediate filed when the verdict of guilty was brought in. Basis for appeal was laid by the LLLD, attorneys in their motions to quash the indictment and venire on the ground that Negroes were illegally excluded from jury service, in violation of the 14th amendment. Both motions were denied, and exception taken. The LLLD brought forward six witnesses to prove the exclusion of more than 2,100 eligible Negroes from Tallapoosa county jury rolls.
SOUTHEAST HOUSE SNAPSHOTS
The Leaders' Training Course is under way at Southeast House. Miss Conover, headworker at the House, will conduct a series of lectures, which will include the following subjects: a history of the settlement movement both in England and America; the origin, organization, present program and future plans of Southeast House; elements of leadership; problems of leadership, and character building through club projects. John Burr, of Howard University will give the group an intensive course in games. The first project of this L.T.C. will be to supervise the street program which is a part of Southeast House summer activities program. In the fall the members of the training class will develop clubs of their own. The duration of this course will be one year.
A penny carnival was given by the Men's Service League at Southeast House. Professor John Burr is in charge of this group. The Smart Set Club gave a cotton ball at New Bell Auditorium on Friday night, May 26. Phillip Beach and his orchestra furnished the music. "New Garments" was the title of the play given by Southeast House Girl Reserves at Garnet-Patterson auditorium on May 25. Fourteen children took part. There was a large attendance. Miss Vashti Maxwell is in charge of the Girl Reserves. Costumes for the play were made and loaned by Randall Junior High School. Randall also furnished the properties.
lagar Fountain of True Reformers Celebrates 49th Anniversary
Hagar Fountain, of True Reformers, celebrated its forty-ninth anniversary at the Pythian Temple last Monday night.
Grand Worthy Master Lee Trent, of Richmond, Va., was the guest of honor and made the principal address. Samuel E. Day, vice grand master, was the presiding officer.
The program included: welcome address by Mrs. Jessie Corbin; address on behalf of the church by the Rev. G. S. Carter, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Vienna, Va.; on behalf of fraternal orders, by William Coghill; business, Wm. S. Bester; civic organizations, Mrs. Alma J. Scott and John A. Lankford.
A. Langston Taylor, master of the fountain, made the response to the addresses.
Music was furnished by the True Reformers' glee club, assisted by Miss Pauline Robinson. After the program a buffet dinner prepared by Mrs. Katie Thompson, was served.
The celebration marks the turning point in the life of Hagar fountain, the officials announce, from now on the fountain will face the future with a new program of civic development that will include the promotion of Negro business and a wide scope of relief work.
100 MEDICS EXPECTED
Approximately 100 physicians from all parts of the country are expected to attend the annual meeting of the Association of Former Internes of the Expidman & Hospital, at the institution, June 6-8. Dr. George Hill, of Mount-clair, N.J., is president of the association.
Urban League Officials Confer With U.S. Secretary of Labor
Present Evidence of Discrimination Noted by Director Hill in Many Communities; Miss Perkins Expresses Interest, Promises Action
NEW YORK—In an effort to procure assurance that Negroes will not be discriminated against in the efforts being put forth by the Federal authorities to relieve further unemployment and distress, Eugene Kinckle Jones, executive secretary, and T. Arnold Hill, director of industrial relations of the National Urban League, spent two days recently in Washington in conference with Miss Frances Perkins, secretary of labor; W. Frank Persons, in charge of reforestation recruiting; Congressman Oscar DePriest, and other officials of the government.
They also had a conference with Elwood Street, director of the Council of Social Agencies of Washington and other local relief officials. The Urban League, through its representatives, requested unprejudiced, indiscriminate consideration of Negro workers and urged proper representation of Negroes by official appointments to staff positions.
Secretary Interested
Miss Perkins evinced keen concern over the memorandum presented which gave evidence of discrimination shown in many communities among the more than forty recently visited by Mr. Hill in an official investigation of the facts. She stated that she would do all in her power to remove any discrimination shown in activities over which she has authority and would make every effort to carry out the requests made for additional Negro personnel. She reminded Mr. Jones and Mr. Hill that the law establishing the reforestation camps provided that there be no discrimination on account of race, color or creed, and that this provision had been stressed in her conference with representatives of her office who have charge of recruiting the un-employed.
INTERNATIONAL YOUTH CONFERENCE TO MEET IN CHICAGO JUNE 20
CHICAGO, Ill.-The International Negro Youth Conference, with headquarters at 3763 South Wabash Avenue, this city, has broadcast a call for the meeting of the conference here, June 20 to 23, at Good Shepherd Congregational Church, 5700 Prairie Avenue. The primary purpose of the conference as stated in the call is to make a start toward the unification of Negro youth of the world in order that they may carry on concerted action in solving the problems that confront the black race. After enumerating various burdens and disabilities under which black folk labor in America, Haiti, Liberia, South America, the West Indies and elsewhere, the call states:
"The problems which confront the black race will not be solved until Negro youths realize that concerted action is of immediate and utmost importance. Evidence of the beginning of such a realization is at hand. Young men and women of the black race are already becoming organized. Clubs are being formed, leagues are being established, conferences are being held, but an international organization to embrace all Negro youths is necessary."
Any group of Negro Youth workers' organizations, student clubs, civic clubs, fraternities, sororities, and unorganized Negro youths may elect delegates to the conference on the basis of one delegate for every ten members. Interested organizations should communicate with the committee.
Among names enumerated on the committee are George S. Schuyler, journalist, New York; Thomas W. Turner, head of the department of biology, Hampton Institute; James W. Ford, candidate for vice-president on Communist ticket in 1932, William Pickens, field secretary, N.A.A.C.P.; Donald Henderson, executive secretary, National Student League; and many other prominent persons.
Ohio Representative's Bill Would End University Jim Crow Practices
COLUMBUS, Ohio.-A. bill to amend the Ohio laws relative to the powers of the board of trustees of Ohio State University so as to prevent any race segregation or discrimination whatsoever at the school, was introduced May 15 by Representative Chester K. Gillespie of Cuyahoga county (Cleveland). The bill states: "The board of trustees may adopt by-laws, rules and regulations for the government of the university, provided, however, that no by-law, rule or regulation based upon the race, color or creed of a student or students may be adopted. Every student at the university, regardless of race, color or creed shall be afforded all the opportunities, of the university whether they are educational or social."
Mr. Gillespie's bill is the direct result of the treatment of Miss Doris Weaver, Cleveland student at the university, who was denied admission to the home, management practice cottage on the campus.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION DIRECTOR TELLS OF HEALTH WORK
Dr. Rebecca Stoneroad, white, and Miss Anita Turner, physical education director of the Washington public schools, addressed the board of directors of the association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis last Monday on the present status of the child health work in the schools and its results.
After hearing these talks, the board directed its child education committee to confer with the public school authorities as to ways and means of closer co-operation in health work between the association and the schools.
Dr. Stoneroad told of the new plan adopted this year for enlisting the active help of the parents in the homes. This includes a whole page in the pupil's report to parents on health habits, which are enumerated and on which a rating is indicated by the teacher.
The rating is given to each child on such items as cleanliness, posture, hygiene, weight, etc., with a statement as to gain or loss in weight. Another page is devoted to character traits such as self-control, team-work, courtesy, industry and initiative, also with rating.
Both speakers paid tribute to the original work of the association in former years when the health crusade was organized in the schools and when nutrition clinics were operated by the workers of the association, all of which work preceded the adoption of the present system.
The Clinic Idea
Miss Turner explained that "In connection with the early diagnosis campaign, a letter is sent to the principals asking them to select any child that is in need of immediate attention, it may be from mal-nutrition or any disease. After these children have been selected, it has been the policy to have certain sections of the city carry on a sort of clinic. Last year we had about a dozen or more centers. Among the children we had any number who more found to have tuberculosis."
She cited an example as follows: "A child in the Mott School was selected by the teacher as needing special attention. The child was found to be infected, and was reported to the tuberculosis association. A worker went into the home. There were five other children. They were examined and all were found to be infected. The parents got a quart of milk for each child daily. They also had a room for each child. I don't know about the recovery, but they are looking very much better."
Civic Asso. Asks Board to Name Building for James F. Bundy
The East Central Civic Association has written a letter to the board of education asking the board to name the next public school building allotted to Negroes, after the late James Frank Bundy, an attorney, who served as secretary-treasurer for the Howard Law School for 25 years, most of the time without pay.
Mr. Bundy also served six years as a trustee for the public schools of the District before the present plan for membership of the board of education was adapted.
He was a valuable citizen and served in civic and educational advancements. He lived at 403 O Street, Northwest, where his widow, Mrs. Delilah Bundy, now resides.
Metropolitan Life Has Jim Crow Detroit Office
NEW YORK—Additional information on the extent of the jim crow offices of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company is coming in to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 69 Fifth Avenue, almost daily. The latest information is from Detroit, Mich., where it is reported that colored policyholders are required to go to the fourth floor of the Randolph Building, 1306 Randolph Street, to transact, business. Only colored people are accommodated at this office.
Previous complaints on these separate offices have come from St. Louis, Mo., Cleveland, O., Chicago, Ill., Jersey City, N.J., and Philadelphia, Pa. K. C. Einger, appurintendent of agencies, at the home office in New York, has stated to the N.A.A.C.P. that the office policy is maintained for the "best interests and convenience of all Metropolitan policyholders." He is referring to local superintendents of agencies all complaints in their territories.
The N.A.A.C.P. urges colored people to protest to their local offices and to object to paying at a jim crow office or window, and to write protests to Mr. Einger at No.1 Madison Avenue, New York City.
Paliceman (trying to reconstruct details of motor accident)—You say the man on the corner whistled for his dog. Then what followed? Bright Boy—The dog.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1933
RECIPES FOR HOME AND CLUB AFFAIRS
BY GERTRUDE C. FRAZIER
This food page is conducted with the intre
recipes that have been tried and found to
quickly prepared, and economical. You are
in your favorite recipe, or letters of interest to
page is conducted with the intent of offering have been tried and found to be wholesome, fed, and economical. You are invited to send the recipe, or letters of interest to the housewife.
This food page is conducted with the intent of offering recipes that have been tried and found to be wholesome, quickly prepared, and economical. You are invited to send in your favorite recipe, or letters of interest to the housewife.
WARM WEATHER DESSERTS
The old-fashioned custard nicely cooked and frozen makes an ice cream which holds up when frozen and is nourishing as well as refreshing.
Heat one quart of milk and add very slowly to four lightly beaten eggs, three-fourths of a cupful of sugar, one-fourth teaspoonful of salt; cook until the mixture is thickened and smooth and coats the spoon. Cool, add one cupful of heavy cream and one and one-half teaspoonfuls of vanilla. Freeze as usual.
Wash and hull two quarts of strawberries. Chop them and cover with one cupful of sugar, let stand in the ice chest for three hours. Press the fruit through a fruit ricer, add a pint of whipped cream, one-fourth teaspoonful of lemon juice. Freeze in one part salt to four of ice. Freeze slowly at first, pack with more ice and salt and let stand two hours or more to ripen.
k with more ice
and two hours
1 small garlic bud
4 tablespoons fat
¼ teaspoon paprika
2 teaspoons salt
¼ teaspoon pepper
puffs of ripe
2 green peppers chopped
one cupful of
1 small onion chopped
Take three cupfuls of ripe peaches, cover with one cupful of sugar, one-fourth teaspoonful of salt and let stand for an hour or move. The fruit should be sliced very thin. Press the fruit through a colander, add one pint of cream and a tablespoonful of lemon juice. Mix and freeze as usual. Pack the freezer and let the cream stand for an hour or two.
Take one and one-half cupfuls of orange juice, one and one-fourth cupfuls of sugar, one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, three cupfuls of rich milk and two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice. Heat one cupful of the milk and add the sugar stir until the sugar is dissolved. Add the other ingredients and cool. Mix and freeze as usual.
Take the juice of three lemons, one and one-half cupfuls of sugar—two cupfuls if the lemons are large—one quart of rich milk and a fourth of a teaspoonful of salt. Stir and mix well. The mixture will curdle but when frozen will be smooth as velvet. A bit of the lemon rind may be added if desired.
of three lemons,
cupfuls of sugar
the lemons are
rich milk and
moonful of salt.
The mixture
in frozen will be
A bit of the
be added if de-
COOKIES
2½ cups sifted flour
½ cup shortening
½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1¼ cups brown sugar
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 egg
½ teaspoon soda
1 egg
% cup sour milk
% cup chopped blanched almonds
1. Cream butter and gradually add the sugar.
2. Add well-beaten egg and vanilla.
3. Add the flour which has been sifted with the soda and salt, then the nutmeats.
4. Using your hands, mold the dough into a long roll.
5. Let it stand in a cool place over night.
as possible and
e oven $75 de-
res F.
2 cups rich milk
1 cup cream
1½ tablespoons flour
Few grains salt
¾ cup sugar
1½ teaspoons vanilla
6. Slice as thin as possible and bake in a moderate oven 375 degrees to 400 degrees F.
SHREDDED WHEAT MUFFINS
4 Shredded Wheat Biscuits,
rolled.
1 cup flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
1½ cups milk
Usual! test published of the D. C. department gives at Farms Dairy,
As Usu
The latest published report of the D. C Health Department give to Chestnut Farms Dairy the
As Usual!
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French Ice Cream
Strawberry Ice Cream
Peach Ice Cream
Velvet Lemon Sherbet
ICE BOX COOKIES
½ cup butter
1 cup light-brown sugar
1 egg
½ teaspoon vanilla
1¼ cups flour
½ teaspoon soda
½ cup chopped nutmeats
½ teaspoon salt
1 egg
Into Shredded Wheat crumbs
sift flour, baking powder, salt and
sugar. Add milk and well beaten
egg. Mix well and into hot
well-greased muffin-pan. Bake in
a hot oven (425 degrees F.) 20 or
25 minutes. 12 muffins. If
desired. ½ cup of raisins or chopped
nut meats may be added.
GINGER SNAP PIE CRUST
18 Old Fashion Ginger Snaps (rolled fine)
½ cup softened butter
1 tablespoon sugar
Mix snap crumbs with softened butter and sugar and press mixture with fingers firmly against sides and bottom of buttered pie plate. For ready-cooked fillings bake 10 minutes in a hot oven (425 degrees F.) When filed with un-cooked filling bake 25 to 35 minutes in a moderate oven (375 degrees F.)
SPANISH RICE
1 cup white or brown rice uncooked.
2 stalks celery leaves and all, chopped
1 No. 3 can tomatoes
1 cup boiling water
Wash the rice and drain thoroughly. Rub a skillet with garlic; to add an elusive flavor. Heat the skillet add the fat. Saute the rice for 5 minutes, until brown, stirring occasionally. Add the paprika, salt and pepper; stir and cook until well blended. Then add the peppers, onions, celery; saute these 5 minutes more. Add the tomatoes and boiling water. Lower heat; cover closely. Simmer until the rice is tender about 25 minutes; add more water occasionally, if necessary. Stir occasionally with a fork to prevent sticking. Serves 4 to 6.
BISHOP'S BREAD
Sift together the flour and salt, then work in the shortening with finger tips. Add sugar. Mix. Save ¾ cup of this mixture for top crumbs. To the remainder add baking powder, soda, egg, cinnamon, sour milk. Beat briskly until batter is fairly smooth. Pour into cake pan which has been greased. Scatter the ¾ cup of original mixture to which has been added the chopped almonds. Additional cinnamon may also be added. Bake 25 to 30 minutes at 425 degrees.
CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM
1½ ounces unsweetened chocolate (1½ squares)
Scald 1/2 cup coffee with milk
Melt chocolate. Add scalding milk slowly. Mix cornstarch with sugar and add to chocolate mixture.
Cook 10 minutes, stirring until thickened. Cool and add vanilla.
Turn into tray of super freezer and freeze to mush. Fold in whip-
ped cream and return to freezer
until proper consistency to serve.
CHAMPION CHEESE CHOPS
¾ cup grated cheese, or soft
package cheese
Mix all ingredients and shape like chops. Put a piece of macaroni in the small end to give the appearance of a bone. Fry in a small amount of hot butter or fat. 6 chops.
BEAUTY HINTS
By NINA TEMPLE
BALD SPOTS CURE
If bald spots are coming in your head because of dandruff, try this simple and sure remedy:
Make a paste of sulphur and olive oil, massage this into the hair, leave it on one hour, then saturate the scalp with olive or mineral oil, after which, shampoo it.
Be sure to use the oil before shampooing or the sulphur will not be removed. Repeat this treatment three times a week.
MEAL AND BUTTERMILK
BLEACH
A simple country girl famed her her lovely skin, discovered this simple secret:
Make a thin paste of yellow corn meal and buttermilk and spread it on cheese cloth from which openings are cut for eyes, nose and mouth and lay this over the face.
Keep it moist with more buttermilk for half a hour, then rinse the face with ice water and pat it with cold cream.
Your skin will be fair and fine after a few weeks of this treatment
THE PART IN THE HAIR
Some women, wear the part in the hair in the very same place throughout a lifetime. The result is that the hair becomes thin over the part-line and never thickens there again.
Try changing the part and you will not only save your hear but it will perhaps, be more becoming to you.
THE VINEGAR RINSE
Nothing so thoroughly removes the grease from the hair as a vinegar rinse. It also leaves the hair with a silky gloss. Use three tablespoons of vinegar to one glass of cool water. This vinegar rinse follows the regular rinse and it is then followed by another clear cool water rinse.
THREE WAYS OF EGG BEAUTIFYING
There are three ways of using one egg to bring both health and beauty. Use the yolk, beaten with orange juice, as a drink for a body and beauty builder. Use half of the white mixed with your coffee grounds to make clear coffee and the other half as an astringent tonic for the face.
FOR PIMPLES AND ROUGH SKIN
All women desire a smooth fine skin, free from pimples and blemishes and many despair because they find no remedy therefor. I give you a very simple as well as wonderful one. Try this:
1 cup ordinary corn meal
½ cup powdered soap (castile)
¼ cup powdered pumice
Rub the body with this (well mixed) on the bath brush and you will be delighted with results. Use twice weekly.
FOR TIRED EYES
To relax that tired, strained look about the eyes, try this simple remedy:
Have a basin of hot salt water and some cotton pads. Lie down in a dark room and squeeze most of the water from pads and lay over the eyes, changing when they cool for 15 minutes. Then cold cream the eyes and follow with skin tonic. Your eyes will look fresh and lovely and perfectly rested. Try this the next time your eyes show fatigue.
SEVEN
The Only Way
to prove the Quality of Food is to eat it . . . you know then what satisfies your requirements. Thousands Shop daily in their nearby ASCO Store, because they have proven that—
Quality Counts and Your Money Goes Furthest
Follow the newest dietetic advice, and Begin or End one meal a day with canned Pineapple
Reg. 8c Morton's Salt (plain or jodized) 2 pkg. 13
Reg. 35c Window Screens (gal 24x33 in.) each 29
Fels Naphtha Soap.....cake 5c
White Floating Soap.....2 cakes 5c
ASCO Rich Red Tomatoes.....2 cans 19c
Farmdale Stringless Beans.....3 cans 25c
Heinz Tomato
Ketchup
med bot. 10c: big bot 15c
Ritter Fresh Whole
Tomato Juice
2 12-oz. bots. 15c
One of the 57 Varieties
Excellent Quality
CENTRAL
INDUSTRIAL
CENTRAL
INDUSTRIAL
Boneless Cross Cut Roast lb. 19c
Loin Lamb Chops lb. 35c
Center Cut Pork Chops lb. 18c
Fancy Cut Pork Chops lb. 11c
Small Smoked Hams lb.14c Butt Ends lb.16c Sugar Cured Store Sliced Bacon lb.19c
Y.M.C.A. RECEIVES $15,000 THROUGH TWO BEQUESTS
Mrs. Anna Kingan and Miss Frances Young Leave Funds by Wills
The Twelfth Street Branch Y.M.C.A. was the recipient last week of a total of $15,000 left to it by two sisters, white, who died several years ago.
By the will of Mrs. Anna M. Kingan, of Chevy Chase, Maryland, $10,000 was bequeathed "absolutely to the Young Men's Christian Association of the City of Washington, District of Columbia, the same to be used by its board of managers for the objects and purposes of said association and specifically in connection with its branch having charge of the work among colored men."
Miss Frances Young, a sister of Mrs. Kingan, left to the Twelfth Street branch the sum of $5,000 to become available upon the death of her sister, Miss Marian Young.
Miss Marian Young died recently and the money was made available to the Twelfth Street branch.
Building to be Renovated
The completion of these much-needed renovations is expected to make the Twelfth Street branch one of the most beautiful and best equipped associations for colored men and boys in the country. It is expected that the work will begin within a few weeks.
No Increase in Membership Rates
Major Campbell C. Johnson, executive secretary of the branch, has announced that no increase in membership rates is contemplated on account of increased facilities in the association. Although the present membership is over one thousand men and boys, it is expected, said Major Johnson, that with the newly renovated and equipped building as a lure the membership will be more than doubled by fall. Dr. W. O. Claytor and Captain Eugene Davidson are chairman and secretary of the committee of management, respectively.
Miss Joanna R. Houston Final Speaker for the Mu-So-Lit Club Forum
The Mu-So-Lit Club brought its forum season to a close last Sunday with an address by Miss Joanna R. Houston, assistant dean of women of Howard University. This is the second time Miss Houston has closed the forum season, she being the final speaker for last year.
Miss Houston discussed the subject, "Educating the Young Negro for a Future Career." She laid great stress upon character education as being fundamental in the training of youth.
Miss Sadie I. Daniel, teacher of history at the Miner Teachers' College, introduced the speaker. Miss Daniel's remarks were brief yet they proved her to be a resourceful and ready 'speaker.'
Miss Ruth L. Cave, teacher of French at the Dunbar High School, opened the general discussion with a few well chosen remarks that paved the way for a lively discussion of Miss Houston's address. Others taking part in the discussion were Mrs. Ruth W. Hornsby, Wm. S. Bester and Dr. Wm. J. Howard. A musical program under the direction of Mrs. Edward T. Ford was rendered. Those taking part were Miss Joy Wallace, pianist, and Napoleon Wooten, violinist. Several selections were rendered by a new orchestra group that is being developed by George W. Jones.
A. Langston Taylor is chairman of the forum.
"Treatment of Negro Is Shameful," Says Church
NEW YORK.-Declaring that "treatment of Negro citizens almost everywhere in America brings us all to shame," the executive committee of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America said Sunday that "interracial understanding and goodwill have been further jeopardized" by the Scottsboro case. In a public statement on the Scottsboro case, the executive committee of the Church Federation said in part:
"We have viewed with growing concern the developments, attend- ment upon the Scottboro case recently brought again to public attention. Interracial understanding and good will have been further jeopardized and hatred and mis- understanding have been increased. This situation is so crucial that the churche should express their convictions in no uncertain terms."
Charles Drew Graduates With Honors from McGill University
Charles Drew, of Washington, will graduate from McGill University, Montreal, Canada, this week with honors. Drew, who is a graduate of Dunbar High School, was elected to the Alpha Omega Alpha Honorary medical fraternity at the end of his third year. This is the highest honor an undergraduate in medicine can win and he was one of three winning such an award. He was granted a Rosenwald scholarship in his fourth year, and is graduating Magna Cum Laude with the degrees of M.D. and master of surgery. He was an honor student the five years he has been at McGill.
At Dunbar, where he graduated in 1922, he was awarded the James E. Walker Memorial Medal for the best all-round athlete and scholar and a scholarship to Amherst College in 1923. At Amherst he was an honor student in mathematics and winner of the Cobb Pentathlon trophy for the best all round track athlete. This trophy was successfully defended the three remaining years he was at Amherst. In 1924 he was selected at end on the football team and was high point man in track. He missed the Olympics team in high hurdles by one point in the finals at Harvard Stadium. In 1925-26 he was selected on the All Eastern football team and received honorable mention on the All-American. He entered McGill in 1928 and was the only American Negro in the school of medicine. While there he was high point man in Canadian intercollegiate track for four years and held the championship in high hurdles, high jump broad jump and shot put. He was captain of the Intercollegiate Track Champions in 1931. As a coach at Morgan College in 1926-28, he turned out championship teams in every sport. In recent years during the summer Drew was director at the Francis Swimming Pool and has fostered the first official A.A.U. swimming meet in the District.
HONOR TO PETER
SALEM JUNE 18
National Day of Prayer for Scottsboro Boys is Urged BOSTON, Mass.-Stressing the tactical advantages of annually celebrating the anniversaries of great national events in which colored Americans were important characters, thus causing the people to know and realize the considerable service to country by our race, and therefore the gross injustice of denial of rights and protection, the National Equal Rights League has issued its final 1933 "Peter Salem Day" appeal. The observance is in honor of Peter Salem, the battle of Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775, and the other colored soldiers whose valiant fighting is a matter of record in this first pitched battle of the War for American Independence.
"From Bunker Hill to Scottboro" is suggested as the general topic for the celebrations, on Sunday, June 18 (the 17th this year falling on Saturday), to call public attention to the contrast between the race's patriotic service from the country's beginning until now with the gross injustices still perpetrated as represented by the contemplated wholesale legal lynching in the Scottboro cases.
The League also urges that this "Peter Salem Sunday" be a national day of prayer for the lives of the Scottboro colorel lads, with special prayers in all the colored churches and at every public meeting, as well as at every Peter Salem celebration, which celebrations branch league, civic, fraternal, literary, race defense and other race bodies are urged to hold everywhere, those in a given community consolidating in a union meeting where feasible.
The call is signed by M. W. Speu-
cer, of Washington, president;
Bishop W. J. Walls, of Chicago,
vice-president; and Wm. Monroe
Trotter, of Boston, secretary, who
will furnish data on the colored
soldier upon request.
Marion Anderson Pleases Audience in Recital at Shiloh Baptist Church
In her recital at the Shiloh Baptist Church, Thursday night, Marrian Anderson, Columbia broadcasting contralto, gave a fine demonstration of the excellent range of voice when she sang the aria, "Oh, My Heart is Weary," from "Nadeshda," by Thomas. Range, volume and control are hers with dignity and ease. The most impressive part of her program was the joy with which she sings and the ease with which the matchless notes flow forth.
The church was comfortably filled with a number of white people present.
The program had three numbers in Italian, five in German, and nine in English, including four spirituals and there were three encore numbers.
In the fourth series she substituted "He Loves Me So" for "Blow, Thou Wintry Wind" and as an encoфе sign "Halleluiah."
One of the four spirituals was "I Carne Stay Away," as arranged by Roland Hayes.
Miss Anderson was accompanied at the piano by William King.
The concert was given under the auspices of the general anniversary committee of the church.
Scottsboro Has Developed a World Wide Ground-Swell Movement
Charles H. Houston, vice dean of the Howard Law School, spoke before an enthusiastic audience at Lincoln Temple Congregational Church last Sunday afternoon on the far-reaching social phases of the Scottsboro case. Characterizing the consolidation of world opinion behind the effort to free these boys as a "groundswell movement," the speaker cited example after example to prove his point. He pointed to the recent demand of a Negro youth in North Carolina for admission to the State University, with the resultant legal embarrassment to the state. He stated that two Negro lawyers have been retained by the LL.D. to defend two white women in Atlanta, charged with inciting Negroes to riot.
Referring again to the Scottboro case, Mr. Houston disclosed that the crux of the situation resolved itself into a class struggle—white and Negro workers on the one hand, and the ruling classes on the other. He exhibited Scottboro protest meeting placards, printed in French, German, Russian, Polish, and Dutch, which brought home to the audience the world-wide significance of the Scottboro case, and the importance attached to it by the working classes the world over.
George B. Murphy, Jr., president of the local branch of the Scottboro Action Committee, presided.
Miss Sophie Minkin (white) of George Washington University and secretary of the committee, explained the aims and achievements of the action committee.
Miss Frye Crowned Queen at Howard's May Day Festival
The women of Howard University held their Annual May Festival on the new terrace in front of Main Building on Thursday afternoon, May 18. Miss Elizabeth Flye, attended by sixteen Grecian maidens, was crowned Queen of the May.
Graceful dances created by the women students were performed for the entertainment of the queen. Races and other Grecian sports were translated into aesthetic events. The final race was run by Milanion for the hand of Atalanta. The chorus sang the Athenian Festival Song "Eiresione" as processional and recessional. Other musical numbers were "It Is Not Always May" and "By the Bend of the River."
The setting for the festival was ideal—the fountain and the winds giving just the festive and the Grecian background that was needed to make the picture a perfect one.
The success of the festival is due Miss Russell Lightfoot, chairman of the committee on arrangements, and her associates, Misses Hazel Bruce Katrina Butler, Elsie Cain, Aline Kean, Lorella Murray, Alma Parks, Lorraine Robbins, Vivian Simpers and Kathryn Taylor.
The costumes sand accessories were designed and made under the direction of Miss Lois Jones of the art department and Mrs. Madeline Kirkland of the home economics department. The chorue was directed by Miss Carolyn Grant of the music department. Members of Miss Gertrude McBrown's dancing class were the flower girls.
The festival was sponsored by the Women's League under the direction of the assistants in the department of the dean of women.
AUTOS INJURE FIVE ON SABBATH DAY
Struck by automobiles or riding in machines which figured in accidents, five persons were given emergency hospital treatment for their injuries Sunday.
Mrs. Mary Graham, 50, of 206 I Street, Southwest, was given a severe shock but escaped with a shaking up when struck at Vermont Avenue and U Streets, Northwest.
A hit-and-run driver struck William Hanson, 28, of 1524 Swann Street, in front of the Cathedral Mansion, causing lacerations of the right forehead.
Richard Johnson, 22, of Rosaryville, Md., who was in an automobile accident on the highway between Marlboro and Baltimore, received a fracture of the right collar bone.
Girl. 5: Jolted
Little Gloria White, 5, of 1320 W Street, Northwest, was severely jolted when she was thrown against the seat of the automobile in which she was riding. Robert Wood, 611 Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest, was the driver of the machine. Struck with a machine by an unknown driver on Sherman Avenue, Mary Smith, 22, 1324 Sixth Street, Northwest, received cuts and bruises of both legs. She was carried to Freedmen's Hospital in an ambulance, and released after treatment.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1933
Schools-Colleges
COLLEGE
COMMENCEMENTS
College and academic commencement exercises and speakers scheduled for this week and next include the following:
Howard University, Washington, Friday June 9, speaker, Edwin R. Embree, president, Julious Rosenwald Fund, Chicago.
Lincoln University, Pennsylvania, Tuesday, June 6, speakers, Dr. Arthur D. Wright, Washington, D.C., and Dr. Robert R. Moton, Tuskegee Institute, Ala.
Virginia Union, Richmond, Tuesday, June 6, speaker, Dr. Eugene Kingle Jones, secretary of the National Urban League and president of the Virginia Union University Alumni Association.
Virginia State College, Tuesday, June 6, speaker, the Rev, Dr. James E. Ross, of Rochester, N.Y. Hampton Institute, Monday, May 29, speaker James Weldon Johnson, of Fisk University.
Morgan College, Baltimore, Thursday, June 1, speaker, Dr. Mordeca, W. Johnson, of Howard University.
Shaw University, Raleigh, N.C. Tuesday, June 6 speaker, Dr. Eugene C. Carder, associate minister, Riverside Church, New York City. Agricultural and Technical College, Greensboro, N.C. Tuesday, May 30, speaker, P. B. Young, editor, Journal and Guide, Norfolk, Va.
Fisk University, Nashville, Tenn., Wednesday, June 14, speaker, Max Yergan, Y.M.C.A., representative in South Africa, now on leave.
Atlanta University, including Morehouse College and Spelman College, Wednesday, June 7, speaker, Dr. David Harrison Stevens, vice-president of the General Education Board, New York City.
Livingstone College, Salisbury, N.C., Wednesday, June 7 speaker, Walter L. Lingle, president Davidson, College, North Carolina. Florida A. and M. College, Tallehasse, Fla., Wednesday, May 31 speaker, Albion L. Holsey, president, Colored Merchants Association, New York. Kittrell College, Kittrell, N.C., Thursday, June 1, speaker, Bishop M. H. Davis, of the A.M.E. Church, Cheyney Training School for Teachers, Cheyney, Pa., Tuesday, May 30, speaker, Dr. Henry Klonower, director, Teacher Bureau, State Department of Public Education. Downingtown (Pa.) Industrial School, Thursday June 8, Pageant by the punils, "The Negro in Pennsylvania."
West Virginia State College Announces Summer School
INSTITUTE, W. Va.—Due to the fact that there will be no summer school at Howard University this summer, West Virginia State College expects an unusually large enrollment at its summer session. West Virginia State College maintains a nine-week summer term so administered as to form an integral part of the school year. In its organization, the college has adopted the standards of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary School of which it is a member. Especial emphasis is placed on courses in education for prospective teachers and teachers-in-service.
The college is familiar with the requirements for teacher certificates in all the states and is able to advise intelligently concerning the obtaining and renewing of teaching licenses. Fundamental and advanced courses are offered for students who are candidates for the baccalaureate degrees. The college has just completed arrangements with the Central Passenger Association, which controls the various railroad lines throughout this country, whereby all students attending the summer session will be given reduced rates.
The costs of the summer session is very low, and many other advantages make West Virginia State College an ideal place for summer study.
Jas. Weldon Johnson Hampton Institute Speaker
By George Adrian Kuyper
HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Va.
Asserting that "America can actually have no more democracy than it accords and guarantees to the humblest and weakest of its citizens," Dr. James Weldon Johnson, in his commencement oration at Hampton Institute here, declared that whatever progress has been made by the Negro race has been due to the fact that "educational institutions were established in the South, in the midst of the mass of the Negro race." He further stated that the main work of the Negro college is the task of "creating, from within, intellectual leadership for a group so isolated that it must, lacking that sort of leadership, remain leaderless."
The race "problem" is not static, asserted Dr. Johnson, but might be defined as "a series of shifting interracial situations, which demand changes in the approach to the question, and in the means and methods of dealing with it." Dr. Johnson declared that the task of Negro colleges today is threefold: the general education of Negro youth, the special preparation to fit Negro youth for the special requirements, and problems awaiting them; the education of white people.
In concluding his speech Dr.
Johnson, said he could give the graduating classes "only three platitudinous words: industry, intelligence, uprightness."
Three candidates received the degree of Master of Arts: Edward R. Archer, of Norfolk, Va., Joshua G. Cox, of Norfolk, Va., and Estelle B. Jones, of Gainesville, Florida.
The degree of Bachelor of Science was conferred by President Arthur Howe upon 126 candidates. Twenty-five candidates completed the two-year normal course in the School of Education, while forty-three candidates received diplomas from the trades school.
Commencement exercises were brought to a close with the bi-annual meeting of the Hampton Institute Alumni Association.
Virginia State College Entertains Governor
By G. G. Singleton
Fully three thousand people crowded into the Virginia State College gymnasium last Sunday to hear the annual sacred concert in honor of the Governor of Virginia, and to hear the Governor himself speak words of praise for the president of the institution, director of the choral society, soloists, pianist, and the singers themselves.
In presenting Governor John Garland Pollard to the audience, President John M. Gandy told briefly of the history and purpose of the annual sacred concert, stating that "while originally it was inaugurated to acquaint certain members of the State Legislature with the existence of Virginia State College, it now has grown tremendously in its appeal and acquired an inter-racial aspect. A better felling between the races is gained by such contact as this event affords."
Although the Governor did not come to speak, he did not hesitate to respond to President Gandy's invitation to say a few words. Praising the choral society, the Governor said "The harmony of this occasion is so beautiful and the rhythm so complete that I should not attempt to make a speech." Describing the music as superb he expressed his gratitude to the president for the honor thus conferred upon him.
"The people of Virginia are proud of this institution," said the Governor. "Though I am soon to go out of office I want you to know that I am your friend. I want the people to recognize the good work your college is doing and to support it to the full extent of their ability."
The presentation of the Governor's Day program was the second major event in the commencement program which makes the close of the fifteenth academic year of Virginia State College. Other events are:
Friday, 2, Anniversary exercises of Training School; 8:00—Demonstration. Physical Education Department; Saturday, June 3—High School Class Day Exercises; Sunday, June 4, Baccalaureate Address by Dr. John H. Ellison, Research Professor in Rural Sociology, Virginia State College; Monday June 5, High School Commencement Exercises; Tuesday, June 6, Commencement Exercises, address by James E. Rose, D.D., Rochester, New York.
Downingtown (Pa.) School
At the end of May the eighteen members of the twelfth grade had earned or received in prizes from the school $4,753.88 in cash. Most of this money was earned during the summer or through the school term by holding such jobs as farmhands, canners, firemen, cooks, cleaners, chauffeurs, etc. Only two in the 'cass never had jobs.
The greatest earner was Vivian Evans, who was paid $1,001.80 in seven years and was entirely self-supporting for three. Lewis White came next with $789.92, and "was on his own" for four years.
Mrs. "Jay Bee" Davidson, of Elmwood, formerly Miss E. Louise Browne, was a week-end guest of Miss Ross. Mr. "Jay Bee" did a series of crayon sketches at the Osbon Literary on Friday night. Mrs. Davidson taught here in 1923-24 and 1925-26.
The academic teachers at their May meeting decided to award a $50 scholarship again to a deserving student whose character and scholarship are praiseworthy. This will mark the second time this honor has been offered by the group. Last year's scholarship was won by Alfred Webster.
Bordentown School Dairy on Holstein "Honor List"
BORDENTOWN, N.J. — Additional honors came to the Bordentown School dairy farm this week with announcement b. the Holstein-Friesian Association of America of its "Honor List" for New Jersey breeders.
The Bordentown Manual Training School was one of six Jersey breeders to be placed on the list sent out from New York headquarters for the year 1932. A junior two-year-old Holstein cow. "Winterthur. Great Segis Kava," received the individual recognition with a milking record of 3988 quarts of milk and 423 pounds of butter fat in 305 days. The milk had an average test of 4.2 per cent butter fat and the cow ranked fourteenth in her class. For the fourth consecutive year the school herd of 70 registered Guernsey and Holstein cattle won a diploma and place on the National Honor Roll of the National Dairy
Association, with $ r $ yearly production average for 1323 of 350 pounds of butter fat per cow.
Bordentown Wins Judging Contest
Rivalry between the Bordentown Manual Training School and Delaware College was carried into the field of agriculture as the Jersey boys nosed out their Delaware opponents by a narrow margin in the first farm judging contest held between the two schools. A total team score of 2436.2 gave Bordentown a narrow margin of victory as Dover totalled 2298.2. Judging was held on dairy cows, Holstein and Guernsey, swine, brown eggs, white Leghorn eggs, potatoes, corn, Barred Plymouth Rock eggs, and ordinary white eggs.
Willie Barrett, of 1420 S Street, Northwest, who died on May 24, was buried from the Malvan and Schey's funeral home, Saturday, at 2 p.m., interment being in the Harmony Cemetery. A session of sorrow was held by Columbia. Lodge of Elks at the Elks' home, 301 Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest, Friday evening. Mr. Barrett is survived by a wife, Mayme; daughter, Vernetta; two brothers, one sister, and others.
JOHN W. BROWN
Funeral services for John W. Brown, who died at his residence, 3835 Chesapeake Street, Northwest, on Memorial Day, will be held on Friday, at 1 p.m., from the Rock Creek Baptist Church, with the Rev. W. A. Jones officiating.
The deceased leaves to mourn their loss a wife, Jennie; father, William; brother, Harry Roberts; two sisters, Louise Grayson and Minnie Smith.
JAMES MATTHEWS
Funeral services for the late James Matthews, 1002 New Jersey Avenue, Southeast, were conducted at the Friendship Baptist Church, Saturday, by the pastor, the Rev. B. H. Whiting. Mr. Matthews died at his home on the previous Wednesday.
He leaves to mourn their loss a wife, Ida; mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Matthews; two sisters, Agnes and Ollie Matthews; two brothers, Jack and Haywood Matthews, and others.
MISS EDITH HACKETT
Miss Edith Hackett, of 1867 Florida Avenue, Northeast, was buried from the funeral parlors of Malvan and Schey, Saturday, at 11:30 a.m.
Miss Hackett is survived by a mother, Mrs. Mary Anderson; sister, Beatrice Porter; two brothers, James Hackett and Bertram Anderson.
South African Educator Tells of Basutoland Schools
TUSKEEGE INSTITUTE, Ala.
—African educators, Mr. and Mrs.
Ossivein B. Bull, of the Lerotholi
Technical School, Masuren, Basutoland, South Africa, have been guests of Tuskegee Institute for three days.
Mr. Bull, who is director of technical education at Lerotholi, was especially interested in the work of the agricultural department and the extension work which heads up at Tuskegee Institute.
The public schools of Basutoland, between 1500 and 1600, are all mission schools. Thirty-eight per cent of the children are in school for a minimum of 160 days. The school year is 180 days. Seven dollars a year tax is paid into the treasury of the county by every adult male. By request $2.00 of this money goes solely for education even though the largest per cent of the remaining $5.00 is also used for education. The payment of this tax entitles each family to police protection, schooling and medical care, including hospitalization. All teachers in the grades are native blacks. The staff of the teacher training schools are equally proportioned between white and black. No white man may own land in Basutoland, which is governed by native chiefs, but is under the British protectorate. It is a semi-independent country and means no money advantage to great Britain.
Widow Gets Mate's Money; Other Woman Gets Nothing
LOS ANGELES.—Attorney Curtis C. Taylor was the victor in a court battle here last week when a judge on the superior bench awarded the $1200 estate of Jordan Hill to the latter's widow, Laura, after the jurist held the case under advisement for over three months.
Hill was a member of the 10th Cavalry in the United States Army in 1914, and at that time he and Mrs. Hill were married at Fort Huachuca, New Mexico. They later came to Los Angeles, and in 1930 a woman named Virginia Majors came to their door asking for something to eat.
The Hills took her in and later the couple separated. Miss Majors remained at the house and Mrs. Hill returned to Texas, her home state. In 1932 Hill died, and Miss Majors attempted to secure possession of all of the dead man's effects. Mrs. Hill learned of the death and hurried back to Los Angeles. When she was advised of Miss Major's actions, she obtained the services of Attorney Taylor, who successfully fought the case. Mr. Taylor is a graduate from Howard University Law School and for the last six years has been practicing law in this state.
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Unlike many persons who figure in auto accidents, Miss Mable Randall, 23, of 724 Fifty-first Street, Northwest, sucered only from mild fright when she was struck by an auto Thursday at 11 p.m., while in front of the Strand Theatre, Grant and Dix Streets, Northeast.
OFFICER STRIKES MAN
After an officer of the Second precinct had struck him over the head with his espantoon, Thomas Seybuck, 39, of 1246 Fortieth Street, northwest, an unemployed worker, had to be treated at the Freedmen's hospital for lacerations over the left eye and injuries of the left arm. The incident occurred at Thirteenth Street and Logan Circle. Seybuck was returned in custody by police after treatment.
FALLS OFF BANNISTERS
Little 5-year-old Marjorie Hinson, of 1514 Eighth Street, Northeast, cut a deep gash in her head Thursday when she fell from the bannisters in her home upon which she was playing.
SPOON INFLICTS INJURY
While engaged in her work as a domestic in the War Department cafeteria, Mrs. Vivian Sykes, 30, of 4647 Hunt Place, Northeast, painfully cut her left finger upon a steel spoon Thursday.
RUNS INTO TRUCK
Running into a truck parked on Barry Place, Northwest, Robert Jones, 15, of 2042 L Street, Northwest, was knocked unconscious for nearly half an hour about 9 o'clock Thursday. He also suffered a cut on the upper lip.
ERRS IN DRINKING IODINE
Thought to be suffering from alcoholism, Roland Doore, 39, of 1575 Twelfth Street. Northwest, was found to be suffering from the effects of a small dose of iodine he had taken through mistake when his case was diagnosed by physicians at the Freedmen's hospital Thursday. He was given treatment and discharged as out of danger.
22,000 Homeless Men Cared for in New York
NEW YORK CITY—The problem of caring for homeless men is becoming less acute in New York City but there are still some 22,000 whose food and lodging must be provided by the public and private welfare agencies, according to a report made public last week by the Welfare Council.
In the 18 months since the setting up of a Central Registration Bureau for the Homeless at South Ferry, as the co-operative project of practically all the organizations helping homeless men, some 90,000 have been registered. New registrations, the Welfare Council says, have decreased from an average of 149 per day in January to an average of 100 per day in March.
Answering the question "Who are these homeless men?" George Hallwash, director of the Central Registration Bureau, said in his report to the Welfare Council: "85 to 90 out of 100 are white, citizens, and residents of New York State; 63 out of 100 have had no employment in a year or more; 40 per cent are Protestants, 50 per cent Catholics and the rest of Jewish and all other faiths; 62 of every 100 homeless men are native-born; practically all occupations are represented, with unskilled labor predominating, skilled workmen appearing in increasing numbers, and a sprinkling of every profession being present; in the matter of age, 7 per cent are just boys; 21 per cent are in their twenties; 52 per cent are in the prime of life, 30 to 50, and 20 per cent are over 50 years of age."
The facilities for caring for homeless men, the report shows, have been adequate, except in two respects; there are no suitable places for the convalescence of homeless men who have been seriously sick and there is great need of clothing for the homeless.
C. C. White to Receive Honorary Degree
HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Va.—Clarence Cameron White, director of the Hampton Institute School of Music, has just received an invitation from Wilberforce University to attend the Commencement exercises at that school and to be awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Music.
He succeeded Nathaniel R. Dett as director of the local school after a two years' sojourn in Paris, where he composed an opera, "Ouanga," based on native life in Haiti, for which he has been awarded the David Bisham medal.
INSECT STINGS STUDENT
Mark DeLoatch, 16, of Linden,
Md., a student of the Phelps Vocational School, was stung in the right eye by an insect Thursday.
STUDENT SPRAINS WRIST
Grace Richardson, 17, of 1336 W Street, Northwest, a student of the Dunbar High School, received a sprained wrist when she fell at the school building Friday morning.
CUT WITH AN AX
Following an attack with an ax by an unnamed assailant, Luvenia Laurie, 26, of 812 O Street, Northwest suffered cuts on the left arm, right cheek, and of the back Friday about 10 p.m.
BOY CUTS HAND
After cutting his hand on a piece of tin, 9-year-old Paul Miller, of 2028 Eighth Street, Northwest, was treated at Freedmen's Hospital Friday.
PLASTER FALLS ON GIRL
Struck by falling plaster, Emma Johnson, 10, of 4208 Sixth Street, Northwest, suffered abraisions of the right shoulder "Friday afternoon.
ESCAPES SERIOUS INJURY
R. A. Bradley, 33, of 1777 T Street, Northwest, escaped injury Friday night when he was struck by an auto in front of the Republic Theatre. He was removed to the Freedmen's Hospital where he was found to be suffering only from the effects of a shock.
CUT BY BROTHER
Cut on the right side of the neck with a knife by his brother, James Parker, 19, of 240 Bryant Street Northwest, a golf caddy, was treated at Freedmen's Hospital for the slight injury Sunday.
GREASE BURNS WOMAN
When hot grease fell on the legs of Mrs. Willie Mae James, 23, of 425 M Street, Northwest, Sunday afternoon, the woman suffered first degree burns of both the members, also the right foot.
Dr. DuBois to Speak at Fisk Alumni Reunion
NASHVILLE. Tenn. — Monday, June 12, will be taken up with a meeting of the executive committee of the Fisk University general alumni association.
Tuesday, June 13, is the day set aside for the alumni. In the morning, the regular meeting of the association will be held, with the president, Dr. St. Elmo Brady, presiding. In the afternoon at 2 o'clock, the faculty-alumni baseball game will be played on Livingstone Campus. At 5:30, the alumni dinner will be held in Juubilee Dining Hall.
At that time the alumni and graduating class and friends will have the opportunity of saying fond farewells to their beloved English teacher. Miss Dora Ann Scribner, who is being retired this year after forty-one years of devoted work at Fisk.
On Tuesday night the open meeting of the association will be addressed by a distinguished alumnus, Dr. William E. B. DuBois. Dr. DuBois, who celebrates his forty-fifth anniversary of graduation from Fisk, is one of the most prominent Negroes in America today. A daring champion for social, political and economic equality for the Negro, he has been editor of the Crisis since 1910. This year in addition to his work on the Crisis he has been guest professor at Atlanta University, where he formerly taught from 1896 to 1914. Max Yergan, the commencement speaker, is a graduate of Shaw University, Raleigh, N.C. His work as a representative of the Young Men's Christian Association among the natives of South Africa has won world wide recognition.
During the eleven years he has been in Africa he has done more than any one else to help 5,000,000 natives adjust themselves to an entirely different culture and civilization suddenly thrust upon them by 1,500,000 whites. He was designated a few weeks ago as the winner of the Spingarn-Medal, which he will receive this month at the annual meeting of the N.A.A.C.P. in Chicago.
N.A.A.C.P. Scottsboro
Fund $1,810.94
NEW YORK—To date the sum of $1,810.94 has been collected by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 69 Fifth Avenue, to assist the LLD. in paying legal bills in the Scottboro cases. The money is being held in a separate account from other N.A.A.C.P. funds. The total previously acknowledged was $1,424.16.
Contributions have come from churches, societies and individuals from many points, but much more will be needed.
SECOND IF YOUR BOY WANTS NICE, : ‘ f a YOUR READERS ARE ASKED TO —
Gee | | Jconmoraa won| Meh ingtapedaGtihune as esa | | eee |
g Washington
at Random
ee
George 1. Waugh
AND SO, FAREWELL
College days quickly pass, im-
bued with memories fond,
And. the recollection slowly
fades away—
Thus another school year comes
toa close with a ‘sad diminuendo
and again the time to part is come.
To the college graduate—the cross
toads, the time for-cach to choose
his separate path that, in due sea-
son will Icad him to his destiny.
‘Oh! would that one could stay
the march of time, but ’ere we are
aware Fate takes us by the hand
as little children and Jeads us mer-
rily about this strange business—
Life, to what some call success, to
others failure.
Qne looks hack over time and in
that vast procession of caps and
gowns ome sees the graduates of
yesteryears—some who have ven-
tured on’‘before into the purple vale,
others who have made indelible de-
signs upon the tapestry of life, that
stand out to guide us as a light-
house in the dark.
There will be baccalaureate ser-
mons, and commencement address-
es that will attempt. to give us
courage, lest in utter disillusion-
ment. we fall by the way. And as
we greet the new, still exuberant
with the echoes of farewell, may
we find an anchor of hope in. the
German. parting. gesture “Lebe-
wohl.” s
To live well and to enjoy life at
its fullest, one, must be relativels
happy, and as health is the basis
of happiness so then is the basis
of -health—aetion.
THEY, TOO, HAVE
SERVED
Park, lies Mt. Zion, a very old but
now’ deserted Negro _ burying
ground. Here, I'am told, sleep. the
progenitors of many of Washing-
ton’s sepia first) families.
Mt. Zion, an unweeded garden of
crumbling ‘rain and utter desola-
tion stands so. pathetically apart,
yet surrounded on all sides by ul-
iva-modern apartment houses, se-
date homes, and life going 0 com-
placenty on its way.
Troam. in elegiac pensivenss
over forgotten footpaths. reading
epitaphs on toppling tomb-stones,
and upon one I read the half. ob-
Titerated inscription, “Died 1825.’
More than a century of peace—
they sleep there, and the water's of
. the Rock Creek flow serenly by. its
musical: ripples playing a réquiem
to the dead.
At dusk, tenants of the \ apart:
ment houses, who's back yards
overlook: the quiet: little cematery,
see the tumbling monuments dance
as weird and fantastical shadows
against the evening sky.
THE OPEN ROAD
With the closing of school and
the advent of warmer days the de-
sire to escape becomes acute. To
escape the humdrum of narrow ¢ir-
cles, stale conversations—the tire-
some routine of class rooms and
books grow upon one like a moral
arteriosclerosis.”
To change our landscape entirely
and to fill our minds with new
thoughts of people and places, the
adventurous soul must go out and
away—to see what else there. is—
to see how far life will take him if
he dare to go, ~
‘And thus the restlessness in the
youth of today, The seashore and
the mountain retreat beckons and
the vagabond foot aches for the
open trail.
‘Parents should try to understand
that a life to be a Useful one must
be lived to the utmost—to ‘know
that things exist because one has
actually experienced them. The
‘world is fed-up on fakes and is
tired of watching grandstand ges-
tures. A second-hind imitation of
life will not come: half way to the
original.
*"This surimer, a new world open:
for him who will venture forth, and
if our own back yards do not yield
fan “around the corner: lure” then
greener pastures’ are ours for- the
feckibec oc ita
THE SONG IS ENDED
‘With the Alpha dance on: last
Friday. night, and ‘the senior prom
on the Hill this week-end, the swan
Song is sung that officially closes a
very gay social season; and as the
crowd goes about its way—some in
search of more exciting diversion,
others: to hatd honest :work=the
melody of the song lingers on.
‘We have-all laughed, even thongh
at times our laughter was a trifle
hollaw and. mocking, vet laughter
it was—and so aut’ WiederseHien—
we'll nieet. again and dance “the
dance of life tazether.
eee
(WOMAN STABBED IN CHEST
Bir, Uertha Leeper, 26, of 1987
Seventh Street, Northwest, was
taken. to the Freedmien’, Hospital
‘at 1:30 sul, Wednesday, ‘suffering
g stab wound im. the:left chest. in-
fiicted by her husband, Herman,
according to hospital records,
TEACHERS UNION
REELECTS OFFICERS
I roe Fa 9
At the annual business meeting
of the Washington Teachers’ Un-
ion, Local 27, held May 28, at the
Phyllis Wheatley branch ‘of the
Y.W.GA., a review of the activi-
ties of the: ies by the president,
Mrs. Mary M. Jones, showed vital
interest of the union not only in
problems of the teachers, but of
the community in general.
Mindful. of the need of school
children for clothing, the union at
the beginning of the school year
through the proceeds of a rummage
sale helped equip a number of pu-
pils and at the same time donated
materials to the Croome Settlement
School, Croome, Md,
‘New Rating Sheet Studied
Through a special committee, a
study of the proposed new rating
sheet for teachers has been made,
followed by suggestions to the
Teachers’ Advisory Couneil, which
ig studying the same problem.
The union has also urged the
school admniistration to preserve
the standing of those teachers who
fare eligible for application for
Group B, but for which no exam-
inations have been held this year.
The: local has co-operated with
various civie organizations in pro-
testing against all unnecessary
cuts in the school budget and at-
tended the hearing before the Sen-
ate sub-committee on appropria-
tions on this matter,
Likewise the group has brought
to the attention of the President of
the United States the alarming con-
ditions of education, especially in
the South, and has urged him to
give serious consideration to the
question.
Belongs to National Federation
‘The union has kept up its affilia-
tion with the American Federation
of Teachers as well as with the
Central Lahor Union of this city,
jto which Mrs. M. M. Jones, Mrs.
E, J. Jackson, legislative chairman,
and Don Good! e are delegates. At
the annual convention of the Amer-
ican Federation fo he held in Mil-
waukee, Wisconsin, June 25 to 30,
the local will be represented. by its
president, Mrs. Jones.
Local Has Grown
‘The report of the committee on
membership, Mrs. Bertha M.
Clarke, chairman, revealed an in-
Greased enrollment of teachers dut-
ing the year. ‘The plan of building
the organization and of publicity
concerning the necessity’of a teach-
ers’ union accounts for the more
active interest of teachers in the
union.
‘Those members attending the an-
nual supper. meeting of Local 27,
on March 30, caught the spirit of
the union, At this time Edward
McGrady, legislative representa
tive of the A.F. of L., and Miss
Selma Borchardt, legal representa-
tive of the A.F. of L., as well as
representatives of Local 27, made
pertinent remarks.
Officers Re-elected
‘The business of the evening
| closed with the unanimous re-elec-
tion of the following officers: Mrs.
Mary M. Jones, president; Mrs.
Bertha M. Clarke, vice-president;
Miss Linnie R. Smith, secretary;
Mrs, E.R. Lee, treasurer. Com-
mittee chairman were named as
follows: program, Mrs. E. B, Kings
‘membership, Mrs, B. M. Clarke:
legislative, Mrs. E, J. Jackson; fi-
nance, Miss Linnie R. Smith; pub-
Vieity, Miss J. P. Howard.
Later in the evening Profesor
Jessie .C. Lewis, head of commer-
cial department, Howard -Univer-
sity, explained clearly to the group
the plan. of‘establishing a Negro
national bank in the District of Co-
lumbia asa nucleus. Tracing the
historical significance of the Indus-
trial Savings Bank, Mr. Lewis made
an ‘appeal for the support, of this
new business venture, the Negro
national bank of Washington.
Nae here Sse)
Chicago Attorney and
Washington Newspaper
Man to Debate
“Can the Negro Expect Pros-
perity with President Roosevelt?”
js the subject of a debate to be held
Thursday night, June 8, at Mt. Car-
mek Bapist "Chur, between J.
6: LuValle, of The Washington Tr
pune.-and Attorney F. H. Robb, of
Chicago, 1.»
Attorney. Robb, is one, of, the
founders aiid one of the directors
of the Greater Southside Forum in
Chicago. : Attorney. Robby has. made
a comprehensive survey of the
Dioblems involving the Negro in
fos Foote ee Ae ogi life of
fe cohintey, “He hax am array vf
facie ww, present.
Bir, LaValle, is cone of the:found-
tet The elbone, and isa clon
student of Pee ipelitiens and -econo-
mie life of the Negro and a. Roose:
wate
Howard Women Celebrate May Festival
ee ——— eee ye :
eres : i ee ae Gr ee ae | Pa | r
oe ly : a pegs
‘s ES :
. we, 3 of = ca w t
FQ e = ee ice }
$ F ae aed ae = De tesco Y _ . Pe
3 a BS as \
eG; 3 a3 y iy oe Mes hve 2 re €-8 e a aA } a We |
eh we 1 Gn es Sen 4 a= mY Y Bed a Z
ye > 7 ewe rte “
i ¥ a mee) lo eS PU 4
a : — Wa . ow. \ st
aaa a e Ch oe yeaa on! Se i
a AS ae oak ok ae Bie. % :
se Sine eer ee, |, rar cnet io eats 9 ic8
* MER at Oe se ON ai tas fyi oa oe ANS inc : ‘ $e:
Fist OG Piso oot ee Oana ea nea ee
Scene on new terrace in front of main building at Howard University showing ensemble of « Adve. r Grecia aiden
Inset—Miss Elizabeth Frye, the queen.
COUPLE FREED OF
FASE ALARM
CARGES
Charged with turning in a false
alarm, Samuel Queenan and Bertha
Campbell were released by Judge
John P, McMahon. Tuesday, fol-
Jowing verbal tilts hetween defend:
ing counsel, Armond W. Scott, and
the complaining officer.
‘Tho couple were haled into couct
on May 16, the arresting officer
claiming that he saw them stand-
ing near a fire box after an alarm
had been sent in and arrested them.
‘The officer also declared that an-
other witness told him he had seen
the woman break the glass and
turn in the alarm.
On cross examination by. Mr.
Scott, the officer stated he was
about two blocks away from the
people when he saw the woman
break the glass shortly after mid-
night. He further stated that. he
could identify the woman because
she had a red bracelet on her arm.
‘During the cross examination,
the officer asked whether or not he
had to answer Mr. Scott's. questions
‘and attempted to show resentment.
‘The witness was rebuked by the
judge. *
‘On the stand Queenan declared
that he was in the taxicab busi-
ness and that he had never been
arrested before. He stated that he
heard the fire apparatus and out of
curiosity had taken the young wo-
man in the direction where the fire
appeared to be. His statements
that he had never been near the fire
box were substantiated by the wo-
man.
Mr. Scott also brought. out on
eross examination that three sep-
arate alarms had been turned in af-
ter the couple were arrested and a
lookout had been sent for a white
couple driving a coupe.
HOWARD PROFESSORS
A local chaptér of the American
Association of University, Profes-
sors, a nations] organization com-
posed of professors in the leading
colleges and. universities of this
country; has just been established
at Howard University, . with Dr.
Alain L. Locke, as president.
‘The organization has as one of
ius pursoses the study and promo-
tion of the university in tenure,
salary, scale, and other matters of
interest to the universiy and uni-
versity professors.
“ther. officers of the Howard
chapter are Prof. William Bauduit,
vice-president; Dr. Abram 1. Har-
ris, secretary; and. Dr. Charles H.
Thompson, treasurer.
‘The local chapter comprises 17
active and junior members from the
faculties of liberal,arts and. edu-
cation.
a
SEE SON GRADUATE.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah B. Moore,
of 531 U Street, Northwest, have
just returned’ from the West. Vir-
ginia State College, where they
witnessed the graduation of “their
son, Rayon, with @ B.A.-degrez.
= On June 18, accompanied ~ by
Prof, Finley, of the same school,
the young graduate will enter the
Marin. Biological . Iboratory at
Woods Hole, Mass.
MAN, WOMAN SUFFER
BITES IN QUARREL
Following an altercation in the
1100 block of Eleventh Street,
Northwest, Sunday, two persons,
Richard Johnson, 28, of 1523 Ninth
Street, Northwest,’ and Dorothy
Johnson, 23, of the same address,
had to make a trip to Freedmen’s
Hospital to have bites and other
wounds: patched up.
Johnson had been struck on the
left forehead with a glass and bit-
ten on the right thumb. The wo-
man had been bitten on a finger of
the right hand, and her left arm
had been sprained.
James A. Lu Valle, Winner
in [.C.4-A. Meet,
Here Three Days
Leaving Washington in 1925 an
elementary pupil of the _public
schools, and returning here in 1933
as a sophmoore of the University
of California in Los Angeles, ani
its conquering hero in the grueling
400-metre race of the Intercolleg-
fate 4A track mect at Harvard
University, last Saturday, is the
happy experience of Jimmy Lu
Valle, son of J. A. G. LuValle, of
The Washington Tribune. Jimmy
was a former newsboy for the Tri-
bune.
He arrived here Memorial Day
with his team mate, George Jeffer-
son, white, who won first place hon-
ors in a tie of 13 feet 6 inches in
the pole vault at the same meet.
They were the only representatives
from the University of California
at the meet and both are going back
with first honors in their events.
Will See World's Fair
‘They left Thursday evening for
Chicago, where they will spend
four days seeing the World's Fair.
They are due back at the univer-
sity for their final: examinations
on_June 12.
‘The boys spent.two days in New
York City before reaching Wash-
ington. Upon arrival here young
LuValle started a round of visiting
friends, former school mates and
acquaintances. The remainder of
(Continued on page 15)
Train Instantly
Kills Man, Aged 75
Struck by a car of-the Washing-
ton and Old. Dominion Raliroad
near Falls Church, Va., Peter
Blackwell, 75, was instantly killed,
Wednesday night of last week.
Funeral services. for the train
victim were, held on, Sunday at 1
pm, with the Rev. Mr, Fairfas
officiat oe,
According ‘to . information oe
to Sheriff E. P. Kirby by railroad
officials, Motorman. E. S. Hoffman
was uinable.to. see: Blackwell, who
was -walking along the track, be-
cause. of. the blinding rain... Cor-
oner €, A. Ransom, of Falls Church
issued a Certificate of accidental
death,
Surviving Mr. Blackkwell _are
five daughters and three sons: Mrs,
Bertha Allen Mrs. Elnora Webb
Mrs,-Mamie Bailey, Mrs. Clara
Brown, Mrs, Sarah’ West; Julius
John, and David Blackwell.
“John ‘T. Rhines” prepaved: the
pin
‘THREE PERSONS HURT
- IN FALLS, SUNDAY
Three persons received injuries
in falls at their homes or on the
streets, Sunday.
Mrs. Pearl Rogers, 32, of 30
Fenton Place, Northwest, suffered
‘a probable fracture of the left arm
when she fell.
Five-year-old Marceline Black, of
816 V Street, Northwest, received
a fracture of the left wrist and
abrasions near the right eye when
she was catapulted from a play
board at the Mott School.
After a fall down a flight of
steps at her home, Catherine West,
19, of 467 Ninth Street, Northwest,
was given treatment for hysteria.
. S atemitibeAi
Slater-Langston Float, Made
by Atypical Class, Ranked
First; Crummell, Second
The float made by and represent-
‘ing the Slater-Langston Schoo!
‘group on P Street, Northwest, was
generally regarded as the best in
‘the parade of the school boy pa-
trol, Saturday.
The parade composed of four-
teen divisions, made up of repre-
sentatives of public and_ private
schools in Pennsylvania, Virginia,
and the Dstrict of Columbia, was
democratic in its placement of the
patrols from the various schools.
Six bands and drum corps enliv-
ened the affair with music. One
drum corp was made up of girls
and one band was from the colored
sehools of Washington,
| -“Little Red Schoo! House
‘The float admittedly the best in
‘the parade covered the whole story
‘of the patrol boy. The scene was
built around the little red school
house, labeled “public school.” It
was penciled to represent a brick
structure. There was the school
yard with a grass lawn. Three
irees ‘were well placed in the
grounds, . Sidewalks surrounded the
yard with the street in front. There
were 18 children advantageously
placed.’
‘An automobile was approaching
a well defined street crossing, made
prominent by the. white lines across
the street. Oneach corner stood a
patrol boy, and a little girl was
crossing the street while the auto-
mobile was held back by the up-
lifted hand of the patrol boy.
This float was built by the boys
of the atypical class at the Slater-
Langston schools, under the direc-
tion of their teacher, Mrs. M. E.
Jones, of 309 T Street, Northwest.
‘The boys’ Iaconically ‘said “They
(Continued on page 15)
Dr. Clarence Wright Given
Two Years; License
- Revoked
Dr. Clarence A. Wright was sen-
tenced to jail for performing il-
legal operations and his license to
practice medicine in the District
was tevoked by Justice Daniel W
O'Donoghue, in the Supreme Court,
Friday.
The physician was sentenced to
serve from one to two years in one
case. Ima second case involving
the same-kind of charge, hr wa:
given «straight two-year term
The sentences are to run concur:
eine
ALLISON DAVIS
NOT HEARD FROM
FOR THO MONTHS
ae Breer ener eee
Word comes from Hampton In-
stitute, Virginia, that Allison W.
Davis, of this eity, who is an in-
structor at Hampton, but who for
the past year has been studying in
yep has not been heard from
for thé past two months.
At thetime of the latest out-
‘bursts of Hitlerism, Mr. and Mrs.
Davis were ‘traveling in Germany,
butfor the past two months it
seems they haye been swallowed up
‘in that country, as no word has
been heard from them by anyone
on the campus.
“Mr. Davis is away on a special
fellowship to Oxford University,
where he is studying social anthro-
pology. Last year he pursued post
graduate work at Harvard toward:
his doctor’s degree. He was grant-
ed a leave of two or three months
‘by the English university in order
to visit Berlin and the German pro-
vinces in connection with his re-
search,
Whereabouts is a Mystery
It is not known whether the Da:
vises met harm or embarrassment
at the hands of the Nazis. If they
were in Berlin or any of the larger
cities, the American legation would
come to their protection. It js pos.
sible, however, that, in the height
of the race prejudice engendered
by the Hitlerites, they might have
been detained, or incarcerated, in
some out-of-way German province.
Mr. Davis is well known among
the younger leaders of thought
He has written both verse an¢
prose and has been both lauded and
criticized by different schools of
thought,
He is a graduate of William:
College, Williamstown, Mass., anc
elected there to Phi Beta Kappa
Society. From Williams he wen!
to Harvard. At Hampton he is in-
structor in literature,
In 1981, Mr. Davis and his wife
the former Miss Elizabeth Stubb:
daughter of a prominent Wilming.
ton family, were married in the
Andrew Rankin Chapel of Howar
University by Dr. Mordecai W
Selene.
Pullman Porters Hold
Memorial Services
The Pullman Porters’ Benefit As-
sociation’s memorial service at the
People’s Congrezational Church on
Sunday, May 24, presented a pro-
gram including several anthems by
the choir, solos by Leon J. Leonard,
Ferrol Gibbs, and Mrs. Cora B.
Jones, and a reading by W. H.
Sackson.
The sermon was by the pastor,
‘the Rev, A. F. Elmes, the eulogy
‘by W. 8. Anderson, and. Dean W.
1B. West, of Howaid “University
made an adcress. The Rev. M. C.
Robbins, chaplain, gave the invoca-
tion Other officers are H. E. Lan-
caster, chairmian; D. O. Smith, vice-
chairman; H. Hall, secretary; me-
morial committee, €. H. Jones,
chairman, R. M. Goodwin, and S
B MeCottrey.
pene
HURTS ARM IN FALL
In a fall in the street near her
home, Mrs. Georgia Price, 28, of
2510 Sixth Street, Northwest, suf-
feved w bruised. left arm Friday
pight.
Birney-Garfield Group Hear
Dr. Dorothy Ferebee
on Parenthood
The Bimney-Garfield group, had
its last lecture at Garfield School,
May 24, at 8 p.m., sponsored by
the College Alumnae Club. The
lecturer was Mrs, Dorothy Bould-
ing Ferebee, whose subject was
“The Mental Hygiene of Parent-
hood.”
In this lecture much stress was
laid on the mental attitude which
parents should assume in the train-
ing of their children. The discus-
sion following the lecture made it
quite clear that Mrs. Ferebee had
intensely interested and instructed
those present,
eee
Witness Tells Coroner's
Jury that Boy Lost
His Grip
BOTH LEGS CUT
: OFF TO SAVE LIFE
Death of “Train Hopper”
| Is Termed as Being
Accidental
Three frightened little boys,
ranging in ages from 8 to 11 years,
pupils of the Giddings school,
narrated, Monday, before a cor-
one’s jury, how a series of train
“hoppings” resulted in the mang-
ling to death of a playmate under
the wheels of freight cars, Thurs-
day afternoon.
‘After probing the death of James
Madison Jr., 14, 823 Third Street,
Northeast, who died at the Provi-
dence Hospital, early Friday morn-
ing, the jury brought in a verdict
of accidental death. James’s man-
gled right leg had been amputated
at the hip in an effort to save his
life, while the left was taken off
just below the knee. He had been
run over ab the spur track at First
and I Streets, Southeast,
Claims He Was Shoved
Detective Thomas McVere, at-
tached to the Fourth Precinct, ter-
tified that James related before his
death that he had been pushed by
another boy, causing him to fall
under the wheels. Harold Perry,
10, 3B grade, also declared the boy
had been shoved. Under cross
questioning, the youth stated that
‘a group of boys were hurrying to
get off a moving car to pick up
some wood, and possibly shoved
against the unfortunate lad.
Witness Says Hands Slipped
James T. Wallace, white, an em-
ployee of a nearby firm, was prac-
tically an eye witness of the acci-
dent, He told of observing the
boys riding on the string of eight
cars. According to him, James's
hands slipped and he fell under the
wheels.
Charles Sylvester Green, 11, fifth
grade pupil, told acting coroner,
Brit, M.MeDonald, in part:
“{ knew James Madison very
well. I was playing with him on
Thursday afternoon, but I did nol
see anything happen to him. He
had been on the train, but when I
first saw him he was sitting down
between the rails of the track
erying. I rode on a little further
until the train slowed up. I got
off then and ran to tell James's
mother that something had -hap-
pened to him.”
Fail to Appear
Charles told the examiner that
Joseph Forest, 9, third grade pu-
pil, and Harold Perry, Ernest
Green, and Thomas Makel had also
been on the car before the acci-
dent. The latter two had been aub-
poenaed but did not appear at the
hearing. Dr. McDonald requested
officers to bring them before him
jon nsdoeseey, morning to be ques-
tioned.
‘Joseph Forest testified that he
had first noticed James's sitting in
the middle of the track after the
train had crushed his legs.
“[ was riding on the Inst car,”
he stated. “I did not see anything
happen to him. I jumped off the
train when it slowed down to run
and tell his mother. 1 did not see
any other boys near him.”
Got on Moving Train
Forest also told of seeing the
dead youth get on the train. while
it was moving, and described how
the lads had been “catehing” trains,
Harold Perry told the jury:
“James was playing with’ me
Thursday. There were about six of
us altogether. We went down into
the railroad yard and began to pick
up wood to carry home.”
He stated further that it was
customary for the boys tayget wood
off the cars, pitch it along side the
PROTESTS EXTRA
DRILL TRAINING OF
TeGH, CARDOZO
Cardozo and Armstrong High
School cadets were called off the
field at MeMillan Park, Thursday
morning, when Franklin Adminis-
tration officials were told by an
anonymous person over the tele-
phone that cadets from,the two
schools were drilling during school
hours.
‘The same person called The Tri-
bune and stated that it was against
the regulations of the board of edu-
cation for students to drill during
hours they were supposed to be in
classrooms.
Garnet C. Wilkinson, first assis-
tant superintendent of schools, told
‘The Tribune that the same person
had called his office and he was
conducting an investigation, Later
the cadets were ordered back to
school. They were under the di-
rection of Captain Arthur Newman
and Major York.
Board Gave No Permission
An investigation by The Tribune
disclosed that students are given
permission to drill, during school
hours only by the board of educa-
tion, and the board had not given
permission for a special drill
‘Thursday.
Drgbar has won the drill seven
consecutive years and Dunbar fol-
lowers are of the opinion that the
other two schools were trying to
put over a “fast one” in order to
get in several extra hours of train-
ing.
With Cardozo High School mak-
ing a strong bid for top honors, the
forty-first annual competitive drill
of the high school cadets will begin
next ‘Thursday morning in the
| American League Park.
Cardozo Threat
‘The Cardozo cadets have one of
the snappiest outfits this year that
the school has ever placed on the
field. Heretofore the competition
has been largely between Arm-
strong and Dunbar, but this year
the Clerks will prove a serious
threat.
Cardozo has been competing as
a separate school since June, 1929.
‘The first event will be held at 9
a.m., with Comey, C of Cardozo
taking the field and end in the af-
ternoon with a brigade review. One
of the features this year will be a
silent exhibition saber drill by of-
ficers of the various companies. The
silent drill by non-commissioned of-
ficers will be held as usual,
‘The Dunbar cadets are organized
as the 24th Regiment, consisting
of five companies, designated A, B,
E, F and G,
’Armstrong’s cadets constitute the
25th Regiment, consisting of five
companies—A, B, C, D and E.
Cardozo’s cadets constitute the
10th Separate Battalion—Compan-
jes C and D.
_ The order of drill will be as fol-
Time Co. Organization School
9:00—C 10th Sep. Batt., Cardozo
9:30—G 24th Regiment, Dunbar
10:00—D 25th Reg., Armstrong
10:30—E 25th Reg., Armstronz
11:00—D 10th Sep. Batt., Cardozo
11:30—B.. 25th Reg., Armstrong
12:00 to 1:30—Luneheon period.
1:30—A 25th Reg., Armstrong
2:00—A 24th Reg., Dunbar
2:30—C 25th Reg., Armstrong
3:00—E 24th Reg., Dunbar
3:30—B 24th Reg., Dunbar
4:00—F 24th Reg., Dunbar _
4:30—Silent Exhibition Drill
non-commissioned officers
4:50—Silent Exhibition Saber Drill
—officers.
5:10—Brigade Review.
5:25—Presentation of prizes,
Set eee aera
track, then go back to pick it up.
Harold narrated that the boys were
in a rush to get off the train be
fore someone stole their wood, anc
‘that someone had shoved James,
Hoys Gave Trouble
John 8. Dawson, white conduc-
‘or, declared that ‘there had heen
some difficulty with boys hopping
‘the trains. He told the jury that
hhe had seen two or three. running
‘slong side of the cars, Thursday,
and that he had attempted to pre-
‘vent them from getting on. One,
hhe continued, got on, but he did not
try to make him get off the moving
train, He did not see the accident,
but saw the boy after the wheel:
had passed over him.
Wallace, who was the nearest
sve witness, stated the bogs. were
playing and throwing off wood
about the second or third ear from
the rear of the train. “I saw the
boy disappear,” said _ Wallace;
“there was no one near him. I am
quite certain that his hands
lipped.”
“No, sir-there’s nothing like
‘a wife to: bring out all there is in
8 man.”
“Right, I sunk one fortune that
way.”
Evangelist Refutes Story About Alleged "Near-Rio t"
REV. C. P. DIXON IS IGNORANT OF CHURCH "ROW"
Indignant denial of any knowledge of a "near riot" when he was prevented from occupying the pulpit of the Tenth Street Baptist Church by the pastor, the Rev. Alexander Willbanks, recently, has been made in a statement to The Tribune by the Rev. C, P. Dixon, well-known evangelist, popularly called "Black Billy Sunday." The Rev. Mr. Dixon who carries a large following, stressed that he had been invited by the trustees of the church to preach, so that the financial condition of the institution might be aided. The Rev. Mr. Willbanks was in Florida at the time the evangelist acceded to the request of the church board. He returned just prior to the night agreed upon that the Rev. Mr. Dixon was to conduct services.
Didn't Leave Auto
A statement by the pastor that the Rev. Mr. Dixon would not be allowed to occupy the pulpit was relayed to the latter by members of his own church board. The Rev. Mr. Dixon declared he simply drove up to the church in his automobile, did not alight, and requested his officers to inform the assembly he would preach at his own church, 708 O Street, Northwest, and drove off.
"The Rev. Mr. Willbanks was not gentleman enough to notify me officially that he would not permit me to speak in his pulpit," said the evangelist. "If there was any commotion, I know nothing about it."
Charges Injury Attempt
The Rev. Mr. Dixon was questioned about claims of the Rev. Mr. Willbanks that the latter is the original "Black Billy Sunday," and the charge that he (Mr. Dixon) was not recognized by Baptist organizations.
"Such statements as those are meant to harm me," he proceeded. The Rev. Mr. Dixon took no issue as to who was the original, but produced letters showing that he keeps up an intermittent correspondence with the Rev. William Sunday, the original "Billy Sunday." The Rev. Mr. Dixon has the permission of the Rev. William Sunday to use the name.
The evangelist strongly resented the intimation that he was not recognized. He has not only addressed the Baptist Ministers' Conference, he says, but has exchanged pulpits with some of the ministers of the leading Baptist churches in the city, including the Mt. Moriah and the McKinley Memorial. He is conducting services in Baltimore this week.
Quizzed whether or not it were true as charged by the Rev. Mr. Willbanks that he was taking disgruntled members from other churches, the Rev. Mr. Dixon laughed. "If that is true, it must show that I am preaching the gospel, that the people want," he exclaimed.
Miss Burroughs at First Baptist in Warrenton, Va.
Last Sunday, the First Baptist Church, Warrenton, Va., observed "Women's Day," in three services. At the morning service the pastor, the Rev. Henry J. Brooks, spoke from the subject, "A Manless Meeting," text "We sat down and talked with the women who were there. He said in part, that women's usefulness is being recognized in our national life. President Roosevelt has broken all precedent. He has placed a woman in his cabinet, a Secretary of Labor, a woman as ambassador to Denmark, and a woman as director of the mint. Woman's usefulness in the home, school and church has always been evident. In 'the manless meeting' by the river side, Paul established his first church in Europe.
At three o'clock, Miss Nannie H. Burroughs, principal of National Training School for Women and Girls, spoke in her pleasing and convincing way. The burden of her message was, "Giving—Not Money—But, Unselfish Service." She said in part that the most desirable thing in this life cannot be bought. Friendshin, patience, peace, happiness, and love cannot be bought, but come through unselfish service.
"What you give you will get, and you will not receive any more than you give," she said.
She said that Jesus at the resurrection told the woman to go and tell, and woman has never ceased telling.
The junior choir furnished the music for the afternoon service. At night the women of the church rendered the program, and the captains made reports for the spring rally. The senior choir furnished the music at eleven and at eight. The following announcements were made for June: Eastern Star Day, June 4; Children's Day, June 11; Fathers Day, June 18; Men's Day, June 25, with two preachers from Howard University. L. C. Green is church clerk, Mrs. Lucy R. Madison, financial clerk, Mrs. Rebecca Madison, treasurer.
Ninety-one Children Take First Communion at St. Cyprian's Church
At least six hundred children took part in the St. Cyprian's annual May procession Sunday. The line of march which extended over four large city blocks was witnessed by hundreds of white and colored spectators. The children passing in review, headed by Henry Simmons, a familiar feature in the procession for many years, was followed by the cross-bearer and altar boys in red cassocks. Others in the procession were thirty school boys dressed in white, forming a cross, and three divisions of school girls representing the sorrowful, joyful and glorious mysteries. At the rear of the line came the May Queen, Miss Mary Lillian Curtis, with her maids-of-honor, Dorothy Bowie and Irene Smith.
The Virgin Mary statue was carried in the procession by Misses Justine Curtis, Louise Proctor, Alma Smith and Rita Dyer, and four little girls as angels were Rita Chapman, Constance Proctor, Rose Marie Simmons and Rita Greenfield; train bearers were Alfreda Miles and Helen Curtis.
After the return to the church the Rev. Henry Graebenstein, acting pastor addressed the congregation, and the ninety-one children who received their first communion, the girls were enrolled into the Child of Mary's Sodality and the boys into the Junior Holy Name Society.
Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament was given by Father Graebenstein.
Williams Institute Orchestra at Zion Baptist
On Sunday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock the Williams Institute Orchestra under the direction of Edward Minor, and the Gospel Singers under the direction of W. R. Williams rendered a program at Zion Baptist Church under the auspices of the officers of the church. The program consisted of solos by Miss Juanaita Lee Williams, Joseph A. Weeks, C. R. Frazier and B. A. Judkins, cornet solos by James M. Anderson and H. C. Roberts, with a violin selection by R. B. Henry, piano selections by Miss Sylvia Hill, Romaine Lee and Teresa Smoot, four numbers by the orchestra and five by the Gospel Singers
On Sunday, June 4, the institute will render a program at Liberty Baptist Church, and on June 18 at Turner Memorial A.M.E. Church. The closing exercises of the institute will take place at New Bethel Baptist Church on Friday, June 30.
Violin Students at Howard Play at Spring Festival
The violin department of Howard University School of Music gave its annual spring festivals last Saturday in Andrew Rankin Chapel at the university; the juniors at 4:30 and the seniors at 8 p.m., respectively. The juniors taking part were John Tyler Phillips, Jr., Raymond Thomas, Wilbur Ledbetter, Mordecai W. Johnson, Jr., Joseph Martin Norman Harris, Jr., Charles Tignor, Jr., Darnley Howard, Jr., and Daniel Smith. The seniors participating were: John Pinkard, Franklyn Fletcher, J. Richmond Johnson, Arthur Smith, Ethel Brown, Jesse Woodrow Morton, Emily Atkins, Edmonia Craig, Zenobia Kirkland, Ida Mae Toney and David Haywood. Louia Vaughn Jones is head of the department.
Campbell A.M.E. Church
"The Glory of God Filling the Whole Earth" will be the subject of the sermon by Dr. P. A. Scott, the pastor, next Sunday morning, which will be followed by the Holy Communion.
Sunday at 4 p.m., a special meeting of the chairmen of the missionary convention entertainment committee will be held in the church, with the general chairman, H. R. Queenan, presiding. The following are the chairmen of the several committees; Mrs. Lucille E. Dale, assistant general chairman; Mrs. E. J. Wilson, Mrs. Hattie Robinson, Mrs. Sarah Brown, Mrs. Virgie Stewart, Mrs. Azeal Dyson, Daniel Webster, Ivory Brown, Leonard Mills, Israel Wallace, Roland Dale, Robert S. Penn, Walter Perkins, and Walter Dyson.
Sunday at 7 p.m., a special program will be rendered by young people with Miss Beulah Penn as manager.
Last Sunday morning, the sermon was delivered by the Rev. J. C. Olden. The little Berry Sisters sang a number of selections. They will render a program of drama and songs Tuesday night, June 6, under the management of Mrs. Jennie Brown, for the Trustee Helpers. The Sunday School Institute of the Potomac District held an instructive service here at 4 o'clock, Sunday, under the general management of superintendent John W. Sewell, and assistants. It was well attended. Harrison Littleton presided, and talks and demonstrations were given by Mr. Sewell, Mrs. Rebecca Glover, Mrs. Edmonson, Miss Harris, Miss Thelma Date, the Rev. J. R. Barnum, the Rev. P. A. Scott, and others.
Mt. Moriah Baptist Holds Memorial Services
Memorial services were held Sunday at Mt. Moriah Baptist Church for the members who have died during the past year. The pastor, the Rev. J. Harvey Randolph, preached at each of the services. At the memorial service held in the afternoon, the unveiling of the portraits of the Rev, and Mrs. J. C. Dent, took place. The Rev. Mr. Dent was the founder and first pastor of the church. The eulogy for the occasion was delivered by the Rev. W. D. Jarvis, pastor of New Bethel Baptist Church.
The names of the members who died during the year were: James Ross, deacon; Mrs. Mamie Page deaconess; John Allen, trustee; Mrs. Alberta Robertson, of the senior choir; Miss Audrey Elmore of the junior choir; Mrs. Anna B. Brown, missionary society; Mrs. Alberta Davis, of the Past's Aid Society; John Curry, of the Sunday school and Mrs. Katie Huly, of the usher board.
Music was furnished by the senior and junior choirs.
The pastor will preach at each service next Sunday.
Portraits of the late Rev. J. C. Dent, former pastor of Mt. Moriah Baptist Church, and wife, were unveiled on Sunday afternoon as the principal feature of a memorial service.
The pastor, the Rev. J. H. Randolph, preached at both morning and evening services.
The Sunday school presented the "May Queen" at the church, under the direction of Mrs. Annie Ashton and Mrs. Minnie King, Monday and Tuesday evenings, in which Miss M. Gilliard was May Queen and Miss R. Adams, Fairy Queen. The unwinding of the May-pole and the drill was conducted by Mrs. S. Coates; the music was under the direction of Miss J. H. Randolph. Noon prayer meeting is conducted each Tuesday and Thursday.
Dean Slowe Points Out Duty of Woman
"The confusion in our social order is due to the fact that men and women do not deal justly and honorably and kindly with each other in the spirit of the philosophy of Jesus who we pretend to follow," declared Dean Lucy D. Slowe in an address on the Women's Day program at the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church Sunday, night, May 28.
Taking as her subject Women's Contribution to the Social Order, Dean Slowe pointed out that it is the special business of women to keep the conscience of the world sensitized to the claims of justice and righteousness. She contended that all the laws on the statue books will be of no avail unless there is behind them worthy men and women.
If men and women thought of the value of human beings and less of the value of things, the tworound would be a be better place in which to live.
Men's Day Exercises at Lincoln Temple
Sunday morning at Lincoln Congregational Temple Men's Day will be celebrated. At the 11 o'clock service, Bishop E. W. D. Jones, senior bishop of the A.M.E. Zion Church, will speak from the subject, "The New World That is Being Born." Music will be rendered by a large men's chorus, under the direction of Henry L. Grant.
The Men's Brotherhood will assemble at 9:45. The devotional exercises will be conducted by John H. Williams and Clifton E. Taylor. The inspirational address will be given by Col. West A. Hamilton. The men of the church and community are invited to attend.
At 6 p.m., a musical recital will be given by the Armstrong Choral Glee Club, under the direction of E. R. Amos and Mrs. Estelle Pinkney Webster. The glee club will be assisted on the organ by Master Henry J. Booker Jr.
Zion Baptist (Southwest)
Special Women's Day services will be held at the church next Sunday, both morning and night. At 11 a.m., Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, nationally known speaker and club woman, will be guest speaker. At 7:30 p.m., a pageant will be presented, entitled "Women of the Bible." At both services special music will be furnished by an augmented choir under the leadership of Mrs. Jennie V. Smith, choir director, Each female member is expected to bring at least one woman to one or both of these services.
Tabernacle Baptist
"The Question and Answer" was the theme of the Rev. E. J. Bradshaw, pastor of Tarnaberc Baptist Church on last Sunday morning. He outlined the many false methods which men use to evade their responsibilities. In the afternoon of last Sunday the Reverend Davenport conducted services for the benefit of the primary department of the Sunday school of which Miss Laura Diggs is the leader. At 8 p.m., the choir filled out the day's service with a drama entitled, "God's is Love." The drama was written and directed by Mrs. T. E. Cousins.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. JUNE 2. 1933
MORNING STAR HOLDS ANNUAL SERVICES
MORNING STAR HOLDS ANNUAL SERVICES
Rev. R. M. Williams Tells "Why I Am An Elk"; $100,000 in Property
The twenty-ninth annual sermon of Morning Star Lodge was preached Sunday night at Asbury M.E. Church by the pastor, the Rev. Robert M. Williams. His subject was "Why I am an Elk." He took up the five principles of the order and spoke fervently and forcefully upon them. The Rev. Mr. Williams said that the Elk order is the greatest charitable, fraternal order in the world. He spoke of the educational program as an evidence as well as the caring for the sick, burying the dead, and helping the needy and indigent.
Speaking of fidelity and loyalty, the speaker said these should be inculcated in the hearts of all the people. He asked this pertinent question, "What is the use of sending your boy to Howard or to some other college and train him for a life work unless you are faithful, and loyal to the race?" He added: "You do not need to send your boy to college to shine shoes after he comes out."
Negro Thinks of Heaven
He told the story of a white man dying and leaving each member of his family some property or money. He told of a Negro dying and making this one request. "I want you all to meet me in Heaven."
Regarding the principle of justice, the minister spoke of the Scottsboro case and said that we need to advocate and practice justice and continue to fight for it on every hand. He quoted Clarence Darrow as saying the Negro seldom gets justice anywhere. He said that if the nine Scottsboro boys had gotten a fair trial, they would be free today. "The Elks must continue to cry out to God for justice in the world," said the speaker. He said the Negro has been doing too much praying and not enough contending for justice. He closed the forty-minute sermon on the principle of brotherly love, quoting "Now abides faith, hope and love, the greatest of these is love."
Lodge's History Given
In giving the history of Morning Star Lodge, Cortez Peters, financial secretary, said that the lodge was organized May 26, 1904, by William H. Walker, now past exalted ruler of the lodge. That Forest Temple, the women's auxiliary of the lodge, was organized in 1905. The lodge purchased the lots on Fifteenth Street, Northwest; where the home now stands, in 1919, and two lots on Q Street in 1926. This gave them the Southwest corner of Fifteenth and Q Streets. He said the property owned by the lodge, including the first property purchased in 1911, on C Street, Southeast, is valued at $100,000. He said that the lodge had paid out more than $20,000 this year for charity, sickness and death. He told of the marching club, the band, the baseball club, and the annual charity trip to Blue Plains.
Judge William C. Hueston, commissioner of education for the Elks, told of the drive his department is now carrying on to raise $10,000 in Washington for the scholarship fund for this year.
Many Students Want Help
He said that he had received more than 1300 applications for student loans for this year, and that his department has become so well known that it is a national institution, now requiring outside assistance to care for the big demand made upon it for student help.
William B. Harris is the exalted ruler of the lodge and Mrs. Rebecca Carter is the daughter ruler of Forest Temple. Captain Robert Plummer is the director of the band.
William S. Shields acted as master of ceremonies. Others appearing on the program were Dr. W. H. Jackson, who delivered the welcome address on behalf of the church; Milton Jones, who responded to the welcome address on behalf of the lodge; Lawrence Curtis, assistant financial secretary, rendered a solo; Samuel E. Jones gave a short history of the grand lodge.
Music was furnished by the choir and the choral club of Mt. Airy Baptist Church.
Mrs. Mary O. Swaile, daughter ruler of Columbia Temple, made the presentation to the pastor;
Mrs. Rebecca Carter, daughter ruler of Forest Temple, made the presentation to the choir; Mrs. Efie Stewart, to the choral club;
Mrs. Catherine Clarke, to the janitor; and Dr. J. J. Porter to the church.
15th Street Presbyterian
Dr. H. B. Taylor, pastor of the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, will preach at 11 a.m. Sunday, his subject being "How to Gain Our Heart's Desires."
At 5 p.m. election of officers of the Christian Endeavor Society will take place.
If you need boarders, roomers, apartments, or a situation - use a Tribune Phone Classification. Phone 1-800-752-1655 later.
PETER H. HARRIS
ATTORNEY F. H. ROBB,
of Chicago, who will meet J. A. G.
Lu Valle in a debate at Mt. Carmel
Baptist Church next Thursday
night.
District Ushers Hold Memorial Services
Memorial services were conducted by the Interdenominational Ushers and Auxiliary, Sunday, at the Mt. Zion M.E. Church, the Rev. J. D. Brown, pastor, on Sunday afternoon. The group had as their guests, the Ushers Union, from Baltimore, who were served dinner following the service by the ways and means committee. Among those who participated in the program were: the Rev, L. T. Hughes, the Rev, G. O. Wing; William Ballard, Mrs. Elizabeth Billings, Mrs. Roberta Savage, Mrs. Naomi Miles, Mrs. Whelmilma Johnson, and Mrs. Iez Clomax.
The sermon was preached by the Rev. Mr. Brown; remarks were made by Henry S. Sorrrell, president of the Baltimore Usher's Union, and W. A. Davis, Music for the occasion was presented by Mrs. Olivia Saunders and Miss Mary Lancaster, of Baltimore, and the Usher's Union chorus.
The deceased members are: William Gant, Annie Johnson, Susan Lightfoot, Lucinda Fleet, and the Rev. W. L. Washington.
The officers of the Interdenominational Usher's are: W. H. Davis, president; Emma L. Green, first vice-president; Alfred E. Smith, second vice-president; Alberta Simmons, third vice-president; Jessie Burnett, recording secretary; Inez Clomax, financial secretary; Fred Collins, treasurer; Edgar Bass, chaplain, and Samuel Dixon, chorister.
Zion Baptist (Deanwood)
At the morning service the Rev. Leon S. Wormley talked from the subject, "Religious Ignorance." He defined ignorance; explained the harm and destruction that it has done in history and said that so many people today have the wrong conception of Christianity. He argued this point in detail.
In the afternoon Professor William R. Williams with his Institute Orchestra and Gospel Singers rendered an entertaining musical program. Miss Juanita Williams, his daughter, assisted on the program.
At the night service the Holy City Chorus visited Zion. Each service was well attended.
The benefits of the "Healing Service" which is held every Wednesday at noon are being felt throughout the neighborhood. The pastor and members pray for the recovery of the sick.
On the night of June second there will be a million dollar wedding featuring the children under the direction of A. E. Jessup, superintendent of the Sunday School; a military wedding with the male participants in military outfits, all taking part being of high school age, and an old-fashioned wedding, featuring the adult members of the church.
The last two exercises are in charge of the pastor's wife, Mrs. Marjorie Wormley. This program will close the spring rally.
On Sunday, June 4. Bernard Aulton, a child of nine years, reputed to be the youngest boy preacher in the world will be presented to the church at both morning and night services. This lad is from Baltimore and is especially gifted. He will appear for ten nights. At the morning service Professor Williams will furnish the music. Mr. Frazier is to render solos.
The Reverend Mr. Wormley, his congregation and high choir will visit Tabernacle Baptist Church of Burville in the afternoon. It will be the occasion of the seventh anniversary of the church. The Reverend William P. Marsh has invited Zion's pastor to pearch.
Third Baptist Church
The 75th anniversary of the church, and the 16th anniversary of the pastor will close next Sunday night. Dr. George O. Bullock will preach the closing sermon in the morning and in the evening Dr. Daniel Washington, pastor of First Baptist Church, Mt. Pleasant, will preach. On the following Monday, June 5, a special program and collation will be featured.
REVIVING MEN'S CLUB AT 19th STREET BAPTIST
Prof. Benj. Brawley, George A. Parker and Thomas H. Walker, Speakers
"Christian work is worth so much as Christ can speak through us," said Professor Benjamin Brawley, of Howard University, to the Men's Club of the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church, Monday night, at the meeting of the club. He stated that we must lose sight of ourselves and ask, "What does Christ want of me?" He spoke of team work and said when we work with someone else as a team it is infinitely better.
In speaking of the Rev. Walter H. Brooks, the pastor of the church, Dr. Brawley said it is hard to describe the value and worth of this absolutely unique pastor.
The Rev. George A. Parker, assistant pastor of the church, outlined the service that it is possible for the men's club to render, and suggested that the club buy and present one hundred Bibles to the adult classes of the Sunday School.
Hospital Work Urged
J. A. G. LuValle suggested the forming of a sick committee to visit the hospitals regularly and comfort the strangers who may be there without friends to visit them. He also suggested the forming of an employment committee by the men's club.
The president of the club, John Chapman, suggested that the club have two flower stands built for the rostrum in the main auditorium of the church that will be in keeping with the pulpit furniture.
He said that the club was organized about 25 years ago upon the suggestion of Mrs. Mariiah Adams, to do special work for the church.
He said that the men have fallen away from the church and this renewed effort of the men's club is to inspire more men to attend church and render some kind of service.
Attorney Thomas H. Walker, dean of the colored lawyers here, was present and told of the importance of the lawyer and the service he can render the church and the community.
The Program
The musical program was well balanced by a general singing, a cornet solo by W. H. Randall, a trombone solo by J. W. Lee, Hawaiian guitar solo by W. H. Lewis, a vocal solo by I. E. Conway and Miss Louis McDuffie, and a piano solo by Miss Romaine Browne.
Short talks were made by Benjamin Washington, Horace Wildy, I. E. Conway, Chester Davidson, Mark Chapman, Washington Hamilton, Leonard Randolph, Hezekiah Randolph, Wm. H. Mason, George Jenkins, C. T. Taylor, A. S. Rogers, Randolph Jones, William I. Lee, Robert Sims, Jacob Holmes, Samuel W. Watson, Samuel Holcomb, Paul Hall, Charles Rowe, Turner Gibson, Richmond Milton, Charles Sidney, S. Brown, W. H. Ware, and Mrs. Emma Cabinness, president of the Helping Hand Club.
William Monroe presided and Miss Romaine Browne served at the piano for all of the music.
Blind Evangelist at Metropolitan Baptist
The Rev. Roy Carter, blind evangelist, will conduct a meeting at the Metropolitan Baptist Church beginning Sunday night, June 4, at 8 o'clock. The Rev. Mr. Carter will conduct a series of services lasting probably two weeks.
North Brentwood Has Re-organized Fire Dept.
The reorganized North Brentwood Volunteer Fire Department will install officers on Sunday, June 4, at 3:30 p.m., at the A.M.E. Zion Church, Highland Avenue and John Street.
The program will comprise also numbers by members of the various fire companies in nearby Maryland and Virginia.
MINISTER IN ACCIDENT
Three stitches were required to close the gash in the right cheek of the Rev. Joseph Henderson, 44, of 67 N Street, Northwest, following an auto accident on the highway near Arlington, Va. Thursday.
Nero was being reproved for fiddling while Rome burned, "After all," he retorted, "It is better than harping on one's trouble."—Kansas City Star.
NINETEENTH STREET
BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. Walter H. Brooks, D.D., Pastor
Rev. Henry J. Booker, Th.B.
Rev. George A. Parker, LL.B.
FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST
First and 1 Sts., S.W.
Rev. B. H. Whiting, Pastor
SUNDAY SERVICES
9:00 a.m. - Sunday School
11:00 a.m. - Morning Service.
6:00 p.m. - B.Y.P. II.
8:00 p.m. - Evening Service.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
After 50 Years . . .
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D. C. Catholic Church Activities
B. FRANCIS SPRIGG5
NOTICE.—Send news to Francis Springs not later than Tuesday, or to the office of this paper in care of the Catholic Church. In care of this paper will be added to cover all Catholic churches' activities if you will notify him.
ST. AUGUSTINE'S CHURCH
The annual literary and musical tea sponsored by the St. Augustine's Parish Club for the Sisters held on Sunday, June 11 from 4 to 6 of St. Augustine's Church will be 9 at the new auditorium on Fifteenth Street, between R and S Streets. Northwest.
Mrs. Hattie M. Willis, the secretary of the club has the program in charge.
ST. CYPRIAN'S CHURCH
Sunday evening after the May procession Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Curtis, of 1247 Walter Street Southeast, parents of Miss Mary Lillian Curtis, the May Queen of St. Cyprian's, entertained in her honor.
Included among the guests were: Misses Irene Smith, Lorette Stewart, Carl Wilson, Vivian Forrest, Magdalen Colbert, Edith Proctor, Louie Proctor, Emerline Fishers, Eloise Carter, Dorothy Bowie; Lorette Miles, Viola Hawkins, Catherine Gordon, Myra Tilghman, Bernadette Dyson, Catherine Simms, Pauline Simms, Mary Thomas, Winona Johnson.
Mesdames Marie Thomas, Mary Kelley, Geneva Curtis, Mary Campbell; Mr. and Mrs. James Lancaster.
Charles Garner, Joseph Winters,
Leander Tilghman, Bartholomew
Tilghman, Ellsworth Queen, Leo
Proctor.
Joseph Miles, Ambrose Butler,
Herman Wates, Benjamin Curtis,
Spencer Curtis, Joseph Curtis,
Jerome Wilks, Leonard Wilson,
Wilson Bowie, Melvin Holland,
Jerome Greenfield, Robert Kelley,
Elmer Middleton.
Wilfred, Edith, Helen, Agnes
and Justine Curtis.
* * *
The annual memorial mass of
the Knights of St. Vincent was
held at St. Cyprian's on May 30 at
eight o'clock.
Ninety-one children received first holy communion at St. Cyprinian's Church last Sunday, from the hand of the Rev. Maurice King in the presence of their pastor, Monsignor J. R. Matthews, whose illness has prevented him from appearing before his people for more than a year.
Memorial Day services were held
under the auspices of the Holy
Name Society at the church at
eight o'clock May 30.
The pastor, the Rev. John J. Al-
bert left Sunday for a month's
stay in Mobile, Alabama.
* * * *
ST. VINCENT
DE PAUL CHURCH
The annual May procession held
on Sunday, May 28 at four o'clock
was participated in by more than
four hundred children headed by
the Commandery of Knights of St.
John, Holy Name men and
the Sodality.
CHURCH OF OUR LADY
OF THE PERPETUAL HELP
Our Lady of the Perpetual Help Church, unit of the Catholic Girls of America will present a drama
entitled "Everyman" at Holy Redeemer Church hall on Tuesday, June 6, for the benefit of the Holy Redeemer Church. The Willing Workers' Club's card party and dance will be held on June 8 at the Variety Club, 1337 R Street, Northwest for the benefit of the church. The Sunday school closed for the summer last Sunday.
Ministers' Conference at Hampton June 26 to 30
HAMPTON INSTITUTE. Va.—The twentieth annual session of the Hampton Institute Ministers' Conference will take place on the Hampton campus from Monday evening, June 26, to Friday, June 30th. The annual sermon will be delivered by the Rev. L. K. Williams, D.D., of Chicago, who is president of the National Baptist Convention. The list of speakers includes Prof. H. H. Tweedy, of the Divinity School of Yale University; the Rev. L. P. Burney, of Charlotte, N.C.; Dr. John Finley Williamson, who is head of the Westminster Choir School, and Dr. Forrester Washington, director of the Atlanta School of Social Work. As has been the custom in the past, Hampton Institute will provide registration and lodging free of cost to ministers who attend the conference. Meals will be served to the delegates in the conference dining room at 25 cents each.
The conference, which is entirely undenominational, has been arranged for the purpose of helping all ministers in the fulfillment of their great task.
District Vets Hold Memorial Services
Joint memorial services were held under the auspices of veterans' organizations, Sunday night, at Vermont Avenue Baptist Church.
The principal address was delivered by Morris Lewis, secretary to Congressman Oscar DePriest. George B. Hunt acted as officer of the day, while E. L. Person was master of ceremonies.
The address of welcome was made by William A. Wallace; the response by George H. Rycraw, of the James Reese Europe post. The history of the association was read by Beatrice Hayden. Charles H. Toms read General Logan's order for the observance of the memorial. Lincoln's Gettyburg address was recited by Howard A. Walker. "In Flanders Fields" was recited by John E. Porter.
Musical numbers for the occasion were presented by the church choir; James H. Lomax, Marie Jordan; instrumental trio, Romeo Harris, Edna G. Dockings, and Lawrence Dockings.
The organizations participating were the Grand Army of the Potemac, the United Spanish War Veterans, American Legion, War Mothers, Enlisted Men's Association, the Charles Young Unit of Veterans of All Wars, and the Army and Navy Union.
Alexander Mann was chairman of the general committee arranging the affair.
MRS BERTHA WILLIAMS
Mrs. Bertha Williams, of 429 Franklin Street, Northwest, who died on May 24, was buried on Saturday from her late residence. She is mourned by a husband, Robert; daughter, Bell Williams; mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. William Venney; two sons, Robert and Earnest; sister, Mrs. Mary Herbert; two brothers, James and Oscar Venney.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
THE ADOLESCENT CHILD, SUBJECT OF SEMINAR
Physicians, Teachers, Experts Read Papers on Guidance of Children and Youth
The first seminar ever held here in the colored schools on the adolescent child was held recently at the Morgan School on V Street, Northwest. It covered such subjects as the health, recreation, guidance and understanding, morality and sex changes.
"Adolescent Guidance and Understanding" proved an important topic as discussed and stressed by Dr. Paul J. Ewerhardt, white, director of the child Guidance Clinic," who stressed the factors underlying adolescent problems and what may be accomplished by sympathetic understanding and guidance. He said:
"We cannot separate the adolescent from what precedes and what follows this period. Home is the place where we learn to live and adapt ourselves to others and each person in the home is of vital importance in relation to the adolescent child."
"When ...e can answer the questions of How did the adolescent get that way?" said the speaker, "we can then start with the problems of the home and the community which affect the child."
Study the Child
"During the transition stage of the adolescent," said the speaker, "when passing from childhood into adult life, the physical, chemical emotional and mental processes must be taken into consideration. We must be careful of the sex development at this time and the teacher must be patient, resourceful in her effort to understand each child and help with his or her problems."
"Adolescent Health" was discussed by Dr. J. Hayden Johnson and Dr. C. A. Tignor. Dr. Johnson stated that most authorities agree that the majority of ailments begin in early childhood and the death rate between 12 and 20 years is alarming, for most of the diseases are preventable. He said the death rate of Negro children in Harlem, between the ages of 14 and 20, is 41 per 100.000. That is far too high, and no race can survive as long as such a high death rate among its children exists. In addition to fresh air, right diet and proper clothes, r. Johnson said that the nose is a very important factor in child health. It should be carefully examined, adenoids removed, sinus kept open, abnormal breathing speedily corrected and the tonsils watched and removed when necessary.
Tuberculosis Discussed
Dr. Tignor stressed the high rate of tuberculosis and said it is contracted and developed in childhood and the highest death rate occurs between 30 and 45 years. The teen-age, between 13 and 20, is the dangerous period.
He said the average child does not get sufficient rest, and the child in school should have 15 hours of rest each day. Nervousness should be carefully considered. Once a child, Dr. Tignor, or any one, for that matter, has a nervous break down, he never gets back to his normal self.
He stressed the need of health certificate with each marriage license, stating that every child is entitled to be born well.
Miss Ellen Gardner, white, of the U.S. Children's Bureau, brought out many factors in "The Adolescent—With and Without Adequate Recreation." She said that the home is of the first importance to set the standards that should guide and inspire the adolescent child. Once a child gets hold of the wrong kind of recreation, it is hard to break away from it. She said that the recreation program should be made up of fun for 125 minutes after school, 165 minutes can be given to free play. Facilities should include all ball games, tennis, community center programs, church and parish halls, and libraries.
Minor Sports Important
Attention should be given to minor sports, discussion groups, social affair, picnics, musical and dramatic efforts and above all, hobbies. Every one has the ability to be interested in something. Encourage it. Among the hobbies she named were sketching, poetry, collections of various kinds, scrap book, stamps, flowers, trees, nature study, gardening and what not.
Mrs. Mary A. McNeil, member of the board of education gave an appreciation of home efforts and
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stressed self-control for the adolescent. She said that it is important to arrange for social groups to meet at home or for parents to know the places where they meet. H. H. Long, assistant superintendent of schools, spoke on "Guidance Through Education." He stressed development of the rational powers of the adolescent and self-discovery for the child by early learning to accept responsibility. He said children should not be questioned too closely upon questions that one can not check up on.
Discussion Groups
There were small discussions groups held in the afternoon in different rooms of the building. One group had "Adolescent Guidance," with Miss Mineola Kirkland, supervising principal of division ten, and G. Smith Wormley, principal of Randall Junior High School as speakers. Miss Jennie Mustapha, assistant principal of Cardozo Business High presided. Another group had "The Sex Factor in Adolescent Adjustment," with Ray H. Everett, white, executive secretary of the Social Hygiene Society, and Dr. Elizabeth Kittridge, white, as speakers, with Miss L. C. Randolph, principal of Washington Vocational School, presiding.
Mrs. Pelham Speaks
One group had "Community Resources for Adolescent," with Miss Sibyl Baker, white, director of playgrounds, and Mrs. E. K. Peoples, white assistant director of community centers, and Mrs. Gabrielle Pelham and Mrs. M. H. Winston, principal Young Platoon School, presiding.
Garnet C. Wilkinson, first assistant superintendent, who was to preside was not present at the opening of the seminar and A. K. Savoy, assistant superintendent, presided. Music was furnished by Mrs. Virginia Quivers and Levington Smith, who sang solos with Roy Tibbs at the piano.
Miss Edith Lyons, principal of the Morgan School, and vice president of the Federated Parent-Teacher Associations, under whose auspices this seminar was held, was chairman of the general committee responsible for the program.
Colored Veterans Meet President and Wife at Garden Party
Colored Veterans Meet President and Wife at Garden Party
By Laurence J. W. Hayes
Soldiers and sailors of color, some fifty-five or more in number, were entertained by the President and Mrs. Roosevelt last Friday evening. The place being the green White House lawns and the event being the annual White House garden party for the war casualties in the service hospitals around about Washington.
Head-butterer Fields, Thomas Roach, Louis S. Myers, John Brown, Harry Mickey, Arthur Brown, Harry Carnell, Bushrod Hutchison, Eugene James, James N. Cox, James Latney, Robert Neal, Walter Tate, Learn Thompson, Albert Burke, and William Bowen—all of whom are colored White House aides on this occasion—saw to it that the fifteen hundred or more veterans had adequate sandwiches, ices and cakes to assist them in enjoying that event.
Although the guests assembled promptly at 4 o'clock, it was nearly 5 o'clock before the President could break away from conference with Japan's delegates with whom he had been closed. He came straight from his office clad in a grey summer suit and met Mrs. Roosevelt at the little garden gate. They then took their stand under a great tree with U. S. N. Captain Walter Vernou to make presentations, and an army aide stood nearby. The procession then began. The President and Mrs. Roosevelt gave a warm and friendly greeting to each one. Three colored women were on the 'grounds but none of them wore nurses' uniforms. One of the convalescent colored soldiers wore his overalls. President Roosevelt found a chair under a tree where he sat in conversation with Senator James F. Byrnes, after his guests had been greeted.
Some of the cabinet officers who recognized and spoke to some of their colored personnel at the party were Secretary Wallace. Agriculture; Secretary of War Dern; and Secretary Roper.
One who witnesses many White House parties now-a-days marvels at the pomp and ceremony which was arranged for the disabled veterans in contrast with the informal parties recently given there.
The two colored women mostly in evidence were Mrs. Marion B. Seymour, who is a superior at Freedmen's, Hospital, and Miss Bessie Cobb, who is a Social Service worker, who has charge of the Disabled Veterans at Freedmen's.
Randall Wins Playground Ball Ninth Grade Title
The final series of playground hall between the ninth grade home room winners in the junior high school was played Tuesday. Randall Junior High School triumphed in the inter-school tournament. The preliminaries recorded victories for Terrell Junior High over Garnet-Patterson, 11-10; Randall over Francis, 6-4; Randall over Shaw, 10-1. The final event brought Randall a 21 to 1 victory over Terrell. Officials were Wedlock, Dr. Cupid and Carter. The entire series resulted in Francis High winning the seventh and eighth grade championship and Randall winning the ninth grade title.
Astonishing
Negro Hater Suggested to Defend Scottsboro Boys
Negro Hater Suggested to Defend Scottsboro Boys
GET TOM HEFLIN TO DEFEND THE SCOTTSBORO BOYS!
Rub your eyes and read that over again.
That amazing suggestion has actually been made—and by a Negro.
Writing in the Sunday edition of a local daily newspaper, L. F. Coles, well known in radical circles here and in New York City, advances this startling idea.
Coles, like many another Negro, does not want to give the Communists credit for what they have done in this case. He cannot forget his dislike of Communism and the Communists long enough to give them credit for what they have achieved.
It was a mistake, it added "mis-
tery to insult." to have Jewish law-
yers defend Negroes in a Southern
court, Mr. Coles asserts; and
he would undo the error by rai-
ning money to get "the best Southern
lawyer who could be had, say
ex-Senator Tom Heflin."
Of all people, Tom Heflin! Bitter
Negro graphobe, hater of Catholics,
Ku Klux Klan sympathizer,
Jew-baiter. "Those whom the
gods would destroy they first make
mad." One more suggestion like
the above from Mr. Coles, and his
friends ought to insist on having
his head examined.
WHITE BAPTISTS, NORTH AND SOUTH, GETTING TOGETHER
For the first time since 1845, the Northern and Southern branches of the wwwhite Baptist Church met together here last week and made what is called the first gesture in the uniting of the two widely separated branches. While no united Baptist Church is expected within the next few years, a gradual consolidation, which would affect large economics, is expected some time. In the early forties when the discussion in regard to slavery became acute, there arose the difference which resulted in the two white wings of the Baptist Church; the Northern Convention which now has 7,611 churches and 1,289,966 members; and the Southern Convention with 23,374 churches and 3,524,378 members.
Colored Baptist Conventions
In 1886 the greater portion of the Negro Baptist churches of the country sent representatives to a meeting in St. Louis, Missouri which meetings organized the National Baptist Convention.
In 1915 at the meeting of the National Convention in Chicago, there arose a division in regard to the National Baptist Publishing Board which had been created in 1896. This board withdrew from the National Baptist Convention and was followed by a considerable number of delegates, mostly from the far South, who organized and named their organization the National Baptist Convention, Unincorporated.
The census data for 1926 reports 22,081 active Negro Baptist churches with 3,193,623 members. These figures include, the National Baptist Convention, U. S. A., Incorporated; the National Baptist Convention of America, Unincorporated; the Lott-Carey Missionary Society, formerly the Lott-Carey Convention; and a number of independent Negro Baptist churches, which affiliate with the Northern Baptist Convention.
Southerners Withdraw
The Northern churches were strongly anti-slavery; the Southern churches were; if not always pro-slavery, certainly not anti-slavery. A crisis was reached when the question was raised whether the General Missionary Convention (called also the Triennial Convention, because it met once in three years) would appoint as a missionary a person who owned slaves. To this a very decided negative was returned, and since that involved a denial of what was considered constitutional rights, the Southern churches withdrew in 1845 and formed the Southern Baptist Convention—as an organization for the direction of the missionary and general evangelical work if the Baptist churches of the Southern States.
What effect this consolidation will have on the Negro churches connected with the Northern wing is not at present quite clear. Prominent among those churches are the Second Baptist Church of Detroit, Michigan, that sent Mrs. Mattie Grisby Anderson as a delegate to the recent gathering in Washington and the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church of this city, the Rev. Walter H. Brooks, pastor.
MRS. ELLA BAILEY
Funeral service for Mrs. Ella Bailey were held at Occoquan, Va. last Wednesday. Mrs. Bailey was a retired school teacher and was well known in Washington. She was the wife of the Rev. L. H. Bailey and sister of the late Jennie Dean, founder of the Manassas Industrial School. The survivors are children. Annie E. Carroll, Everett H. Bailey, Manetta H. Bailey, Lewis H. Bailey, aster, Mrs. Nettie Williams.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1933
THE WOMEN'S HOLIDAYS
These two courageous young musical artists decided to brave the well known depression and essay a concert tour this season. They are concluding their itinerary after successful appearances in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina, and as far west as St. Louis, Mo. Wherever they have appeared, music lovers have been singing their praises.
Miss Lassiter, a graduate of the Juilliard School of Music in New York City, studied the piano under Helen Hagen Williams, Roy Tibbs, and Helen McKellar. Miss Collier, also from the Juilliard School, possesses a lyric soprano voice of most beautiful quality. She has studied exclusively with Mme. Lillie Sang Collins. The pair are concluding the season with engagements at Coatesville, Pa., Summit, N.J., and Draw, University, Madison, N.J.
Brooklyn Tax Official Bemoans Lack of Segregation Ordinance
Says Negroes are Spreading Everywhere and Real Estate Values are Dropping; N.A.A.C.P. Gives Him Some Information
VESTILLA LASSITER
These two courageous young music known depression and essay a concluding their itinerary after success Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, No Louis, Mo. Wherever they have arising their praises.
Miss Lassiter, a graduate of the York City, studied the piano under and Helen McKellar. Miss Collieri sesses a lyric soprano voice of most exclusively with Mme. Lillie Sang the season with engagements at Drew Universi
Brooklyn Tax O Lack of Segreg
Says Negroes are Spreading Values are Dropping Him Some
NEW YORK—R. Lincoln Bernstein, deputy tax commissioner for the borough of Brooklyn, grew a little sad last week when being interviewed by the New York Herald-Tribune on depreciation in real estate values and decline in tax income. Mr. Bernstein was sad because Negroes have rushed into Brooklyn to the tune of 75,000 and he was sadder still because these Negroes, instead of segregating themselves, have scattered into many areas, and into three big areas.
"It is not like Harlem," wailed Mr. Bernstein, "because in Manhattan, most of the Negroes live in a compact section in Harlem. Over here they have moved in everywhere and real estate values are dropping. They have taken over some of our best streets and best apartment houses. Houses that formerly sold for $14,000 they are getting for $7,500. [If this is true it is the only place in the United States where Negroes take over white property at reduced prices—usually the price is hiked 25 to 50 per cent.]
Liberal Prof.
Let Out at Ohio State Gets Lectureship at Bryn Mawr
OBERLIN, Ohio (CNS) — Dr. Herbert A. Miller, of this city, who was dropped from the faculty of Ohio State University two years ago because of his broad views on racial matters, has been appointed a lecturer at Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania.
Two years ago, Dr. Miller, then an instructor in sociology at Ohio State, was "let up" by the board of trustees, who refused to renew his contract, because of Dr. Miller's broad racial views and his ex-emplification of them at Wilberforce University upon the occasion of his last sociological study-visit there accompanied by a class of white students from the State University. Some of the students danced with the colored students at Wilberforce and on complaint of the incident, Dr. Miller was dropped.
RED CROSS HELPS TO TRAP NEGROES FOR FARMS PEONAGE
BIRMNGHAM, Ala. (CNA)—How the Red Cross in this city uses the misery of the starving unemployed to recruit peon labor for white planters, was revealed when a jobless Negro worker turned in desperation to the Unemployed Council. Within the past week, six families in one neighborhood have been cut off the Red Cross relief list because they refused to go to Mississippi plantations to become virtual slaves for white planters there. The Red Cross officials painted the prospects in glowing colors telling one Negro worker that he and his family would be able to clear $500 by Christmas if they would pack up and go to Mississippi.
Anyone who knows the conditions of the Negro croppers and farm-laborers in the South today knows that this can be only a downright lie. What this family is likely to clear, if it goes to the Mississippi plantation, is $500 worth of debts, which will effectively chain it to the land for years to come. When the six families, scenting the lie, refused to leave the city, the Red Cross officials stopped painting pretty word-pictures of ideal conditions on the plantation, and told these workers bluntly that they would receive no more relief.
VIVIAN COLLIER
local artists decided to brave the well-pert tour this season. They are con-fulish appearances in New York, New South Carolina, and as far west as St.peareed, music lovers have been sing- the Juilliard School of Music in New Helen Hagen Williams, Roy Tibbs, also from the Juilliard School, pos- beautiful quality. She has studied Collins. The pair are concluding Coatesville, Pa., Summit, N.J., and y, Madison, N.J.
Official Bemoans Negation Ordinance
Everywhere and Real Estate
g; N.A.A.C.P. Gives
Information
"We Should Have—"
"There ought to be a law. We should have started early. It is too late now to pass an ordinance segregating them into districts because they have spread out so much that the consolidation of their holdings into segregated areas would mean turning over too much property to them."
The gloomy Mr. Bernstein was informed by the N.A.A.C.P. that not only was it too expensive to make segregated areas by ordinance in Brooklyn, but it was illegal as the U. S. Supreme Court in 1917 ruled such ordinances unconstitutional in deciding a case from Louisville.
The N.A.A.C.P. added further to his sadness by telling him the highest court had not changed its mind since it had reaffirmed its 1917 decision in 1927 in a case arising in New Orleans. From the depths of his sorrow at seeing colored citizens secure decent homes for themselves, Mr. Bernstein has made no answer.
COLUMBIA LODGE, ELKS NEWS
By FLOYD W. ROBINSON Reporter
The Blue Plains committee of Columbia Temple and Columbia Lodge of Elks, Daughter Ruth Chambers, chairman, Thomas Holland, vice chairman are making preparation for their annual Sunday Sunshine Day at Blue Plains on Sunday, June 11. Dinner including ice cream, cake, candy and will be given the inmates of that institution.
Monday night, June 5th the senior annual election of officers and delegates will be held at the home, 301 Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest. The delegates elected at this meeting are to represent the lodge, at the grand lodge convention the last week in August. in Indianapolis.
George R. Miller's funeral was held at the Elks' home last Sunday afternoon. The Rev. Dr. D. E. Wiseman, of the Lutheran Church officiated. Burial was at Harnony Cemetery
Mr. Miller, who died Friday, May 26, was born in Hagerstown, Md., and was a member of Columbia Lodge for thirty years, also a member of a Social "L" Club consisting of members of Columbia Lodge who acted as pallbearers. Harry Morningstar chief of electrician, at the Navy Yard, spoke of how efficient he performed his duties and the esteem in which he was held by his coworkers. Two sblos were rendered by Thomas A. Heathman and Clarence Johnson respectively. George Clarke, esteemed leading knight and Cortez Peter, financial secretary of Morning Star Lodge joined the lodge during the burial services. The Emma V. Kelley Junior Temple is holding its meetings at the home.
Samuel Evans, now stationed at the U. S. Soldiers' Home, visited Columbia's home. He hails from Golden Grain Lodge, Vicksburg, Mississippi.
Willie Barrett, an old member of the lodge was buried Saturday afternoon from the Malyan and Schey funeral home.
Among candidates who were initiated into Elkdom last Saturday night was Dr. Arthur Curtis one of Washington's prominent physicians.
Playing the Market
"Do you ever play the stock market?"
"Only in a detached sort of way," answered Senator Sorghum. "I often find it desirable to play the stock market up when I am making speeches about 'predatory wealth.'"
---
Federal
News Notes
TODAY IS THE
TOMORROW
YOU WORRIED
ABOUT YESTERDAY
by LAURENCE J. W. HAYES
I'll gladly buy you the things
So prettily displayed.
Fine furs and costly diamond rings
The smartest dresses made.
The most expensive luxuries
To wear and to adore.
I'll gladly buy you all of these
In 1944.
* * * *
McCeney Werlick (white), third secretary of the United States Legation in Costa Rica, has been appointed consul general in Liberia.
Bill George, charge d'affaires at Monrovia, according to my friend and pal, the Sideliner, is on his way home.
* * * *
Louis (Justice Dept.) Mehlinger's nephew, Clarence (Chick) Coleman, who is the managing editor of the Carolina Times, was in town Sunday to see James (Commerce) Jackson to secure data for a series of stories which he will write preparatory to the opening of the National Negro Business League Convention which begins August 16, at Durham.
Trezzvant (P.O.) Anderson, who is a writer of no mean ability, has announced his candidacy for editorship of the Postal Alliance Magazine.
* * * *
Mrs. Elsie Hitchens, Mrs. Edith E. Lumpkins, and the Misses Eunice Morse, Eunice Diggs, Macleta Brown, and Freddie White, all from the Commerce Department Building, were prominent among the guests at the Phi Beta Sigma and Alpha Phi Alpha dances.
* * * *
Studious (Congressional Library) Mahoney, who is doorman (on Sundays) at the main reading room called the following Clown magazine joke to my attention:
"Iimmediately after the first shock of the recent Long Beach earthquake was over, a certain family sent their little boy to an uncle who lived out of the danger zone. A da yor two later they received a telegram: 'Am returning your boy—send earthquake.'"
Bourke Cockran, writing in Elbert Hubbard's Scrap Book, says:
"There is but one straight road to success, and that is merit. The man who is successful is the man who is useful. Capacity never lacks opportunity. It cannot remain undiscovered, because it is sought by too many anxious to use it."
John (P.P. & P.B.) Henry, who resigned a messenger's position for an elevator conductor's job, says:
"Mr. Cockran was evidently not acquainted with many colored government employees."
Mrs. Julia West Hamilton, ex-register of the treasury clerk, who recently retired after more than 31 years of service, was prominent among those present at the Saturday morning (mid-night to you) show at the Howard last week. Mrs. Hamilton, who is president of the Phyllis Wheatley Club of the Y.W.C.A., is assisting Mrs. Virginia R. McGuire in completing arrangements for Camp Clarissa Scott (for girls) which is located at Highland Beach, Md., on beautiful Black Walnut Lake.
George Linnard (G.P.O.) Hardman, baritone songster, had a recital at John Wesley A.M.E. Church Thursday night. The cosmopolitan and appreciative audience included Elis Sampson, former head butler of the White House, now of the Treasury; Louis (State Dept.) Myers, Forster (War Dept.) Harris, and Frank (State Dept.) Hawkins. Mr. Hardman sang unusually well and I predict a great future for him in music.
****
The National Amusement Bureau, of which James (State Dept.) Jackson is a ranking official, has taken over Suburban Gardens and solicits the patronage of federal employees. Local No. 71 of the National Federation of Federal Employees is planning a picnic and dance there, the date of which is to be announced in the very near future.
---
Mrs. Jennie B. Lee, president of the Royal Oaks, a relief association of government employees which was organized May 22, and is open to government employees, will receive the surprise of her life if she will get in touch with me not later than Saturday, June 10.
The other officers of the association are William B. Harris, vice-president; Mrs. Marie Johnson, financial secretary; Miss Elizabeth Cole, treasurer; Mrs. Mildred Jones, recording secretary; and Miss Shelley B. Covington, chaplain.
David (State Dept.) Haywood participated in the annual spring recital sponsored by the violin department of Howard University's school of music. Dave is a junior
H. H. Conway, writing in the News, says: 'One wonders if even the enforced retirement of all 30-year government employees would not after all, play a very small part in the coming reorganization. Just what percentage of the total number of employees affected by the retirement act have actually had 30 years of service? One suspects it to be so small as to make little difference; if they were all retired."
Percy (State Dept.) Evans; when his attention was called to the fol-
60c Dethspray Insecticide, pt., 49c
Cedar Chips, 10 oz. box . . 10c
50c Lysol Disinfectant . . 39c
$1.10 Azurea Face Powder 67c
35c Cleansiline Dry Cleaner . 29c
$1 Angelus Lip Stick . . 67c
30c Carbona Dry Cleaner . 23c
50c Colgates Tooth Paste . 34c
75c Peoples Floor Wax, lb., . 45c
Delaware Grape Juice, qt., . 29c
PEOPLES DRUG STORES "All Over Town, the Better to Serve You"
lowing advertisement which appeared in a local daily said: "If you write that up, it will be something worth while." Here it is: GOVERNMENT POSITIONS The complete, official and authentic list of nearly 150,000 non-civil service positions which may be available by appointment, with instructions as to proper procedure in making applications, can be obtained for $1.00. Call or write
The writer, who was being considered for the position of associate editor of the Federal News (the official organ of the National Federation of Federal Employees) lost out—as he expected—to Leslie C. M'Nemar. The writer's only qualifications were a year as associate editor of a college paper, three or four years' experience as a columnist on Negro weeklies, six months' experience as a feature columnist for a white weekly, and an incomplete correspondence course in journalism from the Newspaper Institute of America in New York City.
Mr. M'Nemar, who is not only president of the Navy Department branch of local No. 2, but also a delegate to the District Federation, is a graduate of Eureka College, a post-graduate of the University of Chicago, a member of the bar in the District of Columbia and Virginia, and was for six years a professor of international law and political science at George Washington University.
```markdown
```
Myron E. Andrews, writing in a recent issue of the Federal News, wrote a very interesting article, part of which I am reproducing for the benefit of my readers who do not read the News: "Grade 1 clerks in the Federal service now receive only $13 a year more than is considered necessary to maintain a family of five on charity. Such is the startling conclusion reached when the salary of a Grade 1 clerk, less 15 per cent, is considered or compared with the results of a study made by the University of California.
"The entrance salary of a Grade 1 clerk in the clerical, administrative and fiscal service is $1260 per annum. When the current slash of 15 per cent is made, the net salary is only $1071. The study of the requirements for a dependent family of five, referred to above, shows that about $1,058 should be the minimum allowed by social welfare agencies.
"The net salary of the Grade 1 clerk, or $1071 is only $13 in excess of $1058. Federal employees certainly cannot be accused of exaggeration when they point out that a large proportion of their number are forced down to a poverty level."
The writer's entrance salary, before his promotion from elevator conductor to messenger, was $1080, and there are hundreds getting now and many $900 or lower. It is no wonder that "loan sharks" grow rich on money made from colored federal employees.
We are the last ones hired, given the most menial jobs, discriminated against if we show a little intelligence, find it virtually impossible to advance above a messengership—examinations creditably passed notwithstanding—and the first fired on the slightest pretext. Yet we are the hardest people on the face of the globe to get to intelligently organize ourselves and will not give those who attempt to leave the "heaten path" even moral assistance. We SHOULD wake up.
*****
THE NEWSHAWK KNOWS—
What is going on in the various departments and promises to spill the dirt at the proper time. Space is inadequate for this issue.
*****
Send your news to the writer at 1921 Eighth Street, Northwest. Telephone Potomac 2836 or Metropolitan 9403.
That Jesse Jones, the head of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, wanted to have separate elevators installed for the colored and white personnel?
ELEVEN
WASHINGTON
SOCIETY
Blackand White Club
Entertains With Party
Members of the Black and White
Circle Club, incorporated, entertained members of the La Petite
Club with a surprise party at the residence of Charles Lee. "1610
Third Street, Northwest, Tuesday
evening.
Cards was played, La Petite Club
defeating the Circle group with a
score of 131 to 119. Dancing and a
banquet followed.
Members of the La Petite Club present were Misses Verette Posey, Majorie Collins, Flora Woodward, Leona Wright, Jessie Samuels, L Gardner, Dolly Mitts, and Irene Williams.
Members of the Circle Club present were Messrs, Frederick Myers, Edgar Bell, James Lyles, Henry Wood, Howard Reynolds, and Elmo Peyton.
Mrs. M. Mannings Fetes Small Group of Friends
Mrs. Mary Mannings, of 2719
Sherman Avenue, Northwest, was hostess to a small group of friends,
Monday, whist playing and dancing being the diversions.
Those present were Mesdames
Pearl Thornton, Susie Dixon, Ruth
Semby, Sarah Pruitt, Mary Weston,
Messrs. Silas Washington, E. Aston, Charles Hogan, A. Colcman,
and John Minor.
MISS FLORINE HARPER
HOSTESE AT DINNER TO
WEST VIRGINIANS
Miss Florine Harper was hostess
at dinner to a group of West Virginians at her home on P Street
Sunday.
Among the guests were Misses Louise Harper, Dorothy Brown, Laura Willis, and Christabelle Jackson, all of Charleston, W.Va.; Miss Katherine McMechen, of Baltimore; A. Sparkman, of Boston; Miss Josephine Davies, Messrs. Erskine Taylor, Charles Tibbs, Earle Bougle and George T. Waugh, of this city.
MRS. MAUDE TURNER ENTERTAINS AT THE WHITELAW
Mrs. Maude Turner was hostess at a luncheon at the Whitelaw Hotel, May 25, given in honor of Mrs. Maude Montague.
Guests present were Mrs. Ellen Staunton, Mrs. Addie Buck, Mrs. Millie Willis, Miss Matilda Willis, Mrs. Georgia Roane, Miss Carrie Bloise, Mrs. Matte Williams, Mrs. Annie Green, Mrs. Annie Gresham, Mrs. Julia Coates, Mrs. Priscilla Brown, Miss Wilder Mitchell, Mrs. Viola Coates, Mrs. Clarice Wheeler.
WASHINGTON FAVORITES
Mrs. Margret Jones was hostess to the club, Thursday, May 25. The guests, which were Mr. Richie, Mr. Shore, Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Curtis, and Mr. Chapman, were entertained by card playing and dancing after the meeting.
Miss Lillian Dotson, who has been confined to her bed for the past weeks, is soon expecting to resume her duties at the Southwest house as assistant to Mrs. Alma J. Scott, director of the house.
RICHMOND
and South
6
EXPRESS SCHEDULES
DAILY
leaving Washington at
3:30 a.m. m., 3:50 a.m.
10:30 a.m. m., 11:30 a.m.
e 6:145 p.m. m. and 11:45 p.m.
De Lute, concludes Beelin-
ing chairs, FREE
LOWS and Porter Service
LOW RATES—THRU SERVICE
RICHMOND ... $3.00 Atlanta, Ga. ... $16.70
Petersburg, Va. ... $3.50 Savannah ... $17.25
RALEIGH, N. C. $8.00 Jacksonville ... $20.00
Charleston, S. C. $14.40 MIAMI, Fla. ... $30.00
UPTOWN OFFICE
1106 U St., N.W.
Phone, North 9802
L. M. Brannie, Mgr.
THE
MARINE
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SYSTEM
Needs
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Cary Hurls No-Hit, No-Run Game as Tech Takes Title
TWELVE
LONE DUNBAR MAN
REACHES THIRD
‘Armstrong Annexes City
and Conference Titles
by 6-0 Victory
By A. MANTEL CARTER
Raymond Cary, Armstrong High
School's southpaw ace, carved his
name deep into the high school ath-
letic hall of fame Monday when he
hurled a brilliant no-hit and _no-
run game against Tech’s ancient
rivals, Dunbar, on Walker Stadium.
‘The score was 6-0.
Toiling with the ease and confi-
dence of a veteran, Cary, in. mak-
ing this bit of athictic’ history,
‘completely silenced the heavy wat
sticks of the Poets, failing to grant
a blow that bore any semblance of
fa safe hit. The victory. clinched
both the South Atlantic High
School Conference and District
baseball championships for the
Generals.
Cary’s feat marks the first time
in local high school history that
such a pitching performance, the
aim ofall hurlers, has been ac-
complished. ed
One Man Reaches Third
So baffling were Cary’s curves
and so near perfection was his con-
trol that only a trio of Red and
Black swatsmen did as much as
trod the base paths, one reaching
the far corner and the other two
stopping. In the last half of the
opening inning, Pree, lead-off man
for the Poets, got as far as second
when Clarke, Tech third sacker,
threw wild to first after making
a stop of his grounder. Again, in
the eecond frame, a Poct batter ad-
vanced as far as the keystone sack,
Thomas took first after one of
Cary’s shoots curved into his. side
and moved over when Belcher bunt-
ed toward first.
Thomas, the only Poet to get on
twice, walked in the ffth, stole sec-
ond and third, but died ‘a natural
death as Cary fanned both Belcher
and Jase and forced Washington
to ground out to third. The dimin-
utive Tech flinger turned the Poets
back in 1-2-3 order in the third,
fourth, sixth and seventh innings,
In accomplishing this feat, which
will live long in the memory of 300
fans whose privilege it was to wit-
ness the greatest pitching perform-
ance recorded by a high school
hurler, Cary fanned four Dunbar-
men, allowed two base on balls and
accepted without error five chanc-
es.
Generals Have Big Inning
Playing what will perhaps be the
Jast game under the guidance of
Coach Cato Adams, who plans to
vetire from baseball next year, the
Generals gave Cary a five-run lead
in the opening session, and added
another marker in the fifth just for
good measure.
To start hostilities, Hayes sin-
gied to right, stole second, while
Goodwin, Poet linger, was napping,
and then a trio of doubles by Hen-
ry, Clarke and Beverly netted as
many runs and drove Goodwin to
the showers. , W. Washington was
sent to the mound by Coach Perry
Jacobs. A single by Hager and
Thomas’s error sent the Armstrong
total soaring to five, where Wash-
ington held them at bay until the
fifth when Clarke singled, advanced
on an infield out and took third
when P. Cooke tossed wildly to sec-
ond, and then tallied as Washing-
ton fumbled Hager's slow roller.
eee we eras
AB HR E) ABHRE
Pree.th.... 8 0 9 OBrownef.. 410 0
Iackson, ve 3.00 OFayn.2... 4 1 1 0
Wim, 3.0.9 OHenryse. 3 1 10
Mathews.c. 3.0 0 Olclarke.Sh.. 4 2 1 1
P.Cookeib. 3.0.0 IiBeveriysit 3 1 2 0
Thomar.2b. 0.9 0 1Chisley.rf.. 4 0 0 9
Belgherrf. 10 0 Offagerc.. 4 11 0
Tareel.. 2 0 9 O\ACookeib. 3 2 0 1
Goodwin.p. 0 0 9 0\Carey.p.... 3 0 0 0
WWhnp 200 0
‘Stripling. 1 0 0 0)
pean yen 9 10) Bl AOR eR Se
“Batted for Thomas in seventh
Seore by ings
Diecidue 8001 8 Oe
Bama IT 8a 8 0008
MTworbase WiiaHciry. Clarke, Reverir
Bunce bunts “Hinyers Brown hS'A. cone
er arken Birks. cote oF
Wasnineton, 1: by Cary, 4. Base on bale
rer eee at off Wasninatan 2 names
pitts By Goolwtne sa. hy” Washington,
Big. Double plnse“dackeon _(unaaslstes
Whanine pitcher Gals. Losing: pheber
Goodin, Umpire Sem Lacy.
isos pak cedll
Former Tennis Champs to
Barnstorm Western Cities
‘Ted Thompson, former national
singles champion, and Eyre Saitch,
also a former singles title holder,
will leave on a barnstorming trip
this month which will carry them
to many of the larger mid-western
cities.
They plan to leave next Thurs-
day and will visit Pittsburgh,
Columbia, Wilbeforce, Indianapo-
lis, Chicago and St, Louis. The
pair will meet all commers in the
Various ctiies, and will give exhi-
te esatchen,
‘Thousands of winners say my_system
ia the best in the world. Sure hits on
bit Races, Stocks, Bonds, Butter & Er,
Peliey, Cubs, Polita, or any other. Just
send 41.00 and birth date, also stamp
for r6ly snd state what you play.
Your winner -will be rushed to, you.
DR. M. 1, CLEMENTS
163 N.W. 31st St, Miami, Fla.
Physical Education
in Negro Colleges
and Universities
By JOHN H. BURR
Professor of Physical Education
at Howard University
PHLSICAL EDUCATION--Hed up
EDUCAT
Some very difficult problems in
the ay of athletics have
appeared from time to time, such
as the using of ineligible players,
the whole problem of athletic
scholarships, and “professional
ism” generally, ‘these _adminis-
trative boards have endeavored to
handle these matters with a rigid
hand and in most cases have
drawn up definite rules and regu-
lations by which the whole pro-
gram of athletics is controlled,
It is known, of course, that in
some of our institutions such prob-
lems still exist and the necessary
steps to meet ‘is situation will
have to come from the individual
schools. for at prescnt there is no
one organization that has a board
of arbitration for such cases to
which all Negro colleges and uni-
yersities belong.
Such organizations as the Color-
ed ae Athletic Associ-
ation, the Southern. Intercollegiate
Athletic Association, the National
Physical Education Association
and the Eastern Boarg of Officials
have done much to raise the stand-
ards of athletic administration to
higher levels. The constitutions
of some of these organization, giv-
ing their aims, objectives and pur-
poses, are found to contain desir-
able views and such organizations
should be encouraged to even
greater service.
‘On the whole, it ray be said
that the general administration of
athletics in colleges and universi-
ties has improved a great, deal in
the ‘last decade.
In the modern program of phy-
sical education, we find that the
trend is toward the development
of an intramural program to furn-
ish recreation for the entire stu-
dent body rather than for out-
standing inviduals, and from the
questionnaire and catalogue study,
made by me, it js noted that many
more of the colleges ond universi-
ties are conducting intramural
athletics than are conducting a
definite physical education pro-
gram. Their programs stress com-
petition in such sports as football,
basketball, baseball, tennis, vol-
ley ball, ete.
It is noted, too, that some of the
institutions provide intramural ac-
tivities for the women as well as
the men, and in most cases tennis,
field hockey and girls’ basketball
are the most popular activities.
‘The trend showed that about 60
per cent of the students were par-
ticipating in this type of activities.
It can be expected that greater
popularity and stronger leadership
and organization for “intramurals”
will be noticed in the next few
years, for we find that 40 per cent
of our institutions are planning to
enlarge their plants and 47 per
cent their physical education staffs,
and from our professional schools
we can expect trained leadership
to give more color and service in
the developing of an all-round in-
tramural program for the student
body:
In the organization and admin-
istration of the teaching of both
general and professional courses,
we find that the physical educa-
tion staffs have a real task con-
fronting them to so organize a
program that it will be most bene-
ficial to the students and at the
same time as economical as is
necessary to remain within the
budget allotted for this part of the
program,
With the improved organization
and administration, as well as the
to-operating efforts of other de-
partments, the teaching of physi-
cal education in Negro colleges and
universities will take its rightful
place in the curriculum and will
offer its definite contribution to the
Hield of modern education,
(Editor's Note—This series of
articles will end next week with’ an
article on the history of officiating
by Mr. Burr.)
Ping-Pong Tournament
The Twelfth Street ¥ Ping-Pong
tournament will get underway Fri
day night at the Y parlor. Those
interested can secure blanks at the
Y. Chairman Frank Perkins is ex-
pecting a record entry list with
some of the best ping-pong seen ff
this part of the country. Entries
will be received up to Thursday
night.
A NEW DEAL IS ON
Here your man, Prof, Jose Dal
Hara, who is here to help sou all with
your number problems. I give straight
Timbers ech dap for a tessouais tes
of only: 6.00. ‘During the past many
Race wanted to have someone thet they
tan dopund on, ao please forget te Tot
snd Sew me togasy
i Yave Neonneetions with all Race
Teach 1, £08, 8-7 rhein, N.Y. lente
ine. Butter" and. Baer Chicago. Stock,
N¥y Bond, Cineineati Clesringn: Chi
Cage and Tatroil Polley, Caan Bolte,
Stnsk Averomes, Total Stock, Seles
Tut wre your system apd hit tomor-
rows Yau" wire ime only $00 out of
SB te oe Gauss Wide
Postal Telegraph Offices. Please do not
write mega faim too hun to answer
nail "Wire at once and help. suursel?
Bisel your any needs
Yours for better service,
JOSE DEL. HARA
WASHINGTON, D.C.
LU VALLE WINS IN
AOO-MIETER RACE
BOSTON, Mass. (Special to The
Tribune)—Jimmie LuYalle, the
striding sophomore quarter-miler
from the University of California
in Los Angeles, jn his first appear-
ance as a varsity runner in the
inter-collegiate 4A field and track
meet in the Harvard University
stadium here Saturday, won the
400-meter race in 46.9, with four
other contestants. ‘This is the sec-
ond fastest time on record and is
within seven-tenths of a second of
the record of 46.2 made by Billy
Carr, of Penn, at the Olympics last
August.
LuYalle Not Pushed
When Carr made that sensation-
al run in Los Angeles, the sport
writers predicted that it would be
a long time before cny one ap-
proached the record, if ever. Lu-
Valle came very close to it and he
was not pushed in his race, for he
ran a front race from the gun and
finished five yards in front of the
field with Howard Jones, of Penn,
second; Karl Warner, the Yale ace,
third; Eddie Ablowich, of Southern
California, fourth; and Thompkins,
of Southern California, fifth,
Young LuValle is the only Negro
quarter-miler of any consequence
in the United States today. He up-
set the hopes of the Eastern col-
leges and sport writers, for they
had doped Wriner, of Yale, to win
the 400-metc: race. He justified
the faith his coach and school had
in him to send him as their lone
track representative all the way
across the continent to win that
race.
Takes Lead
With a hip-swinging motion that
reminded veterans of the track of
the great Maxey Long, LuValle ran
steadily with Howard Jones follow-
ing a stride behind and Eddie Ab-
lowich third, and Warner of Yale
placed fourth until after rounding
the bend.
Coming into the stretch, LuValle
moved outside slightly, Jones made
his try for leadership, but failed to
overtake the “western whirlwind”
when with 120 yards to go, LuValle
seemed destined to win. Karl
Warner, the hope of Eli, made his
bid here and he too failed to over-
haul the California flash,
Young LuValle’s 46,9 victory in
the 400-meter run is one of the
outstanding bits in American tyack
work this year. Easy gaited pow-
erful and a front runnexp:thig: Los
Angeles lad taught the field-a)rcal
running lesson when he faced, home
in a sparkler final. Had he been
pressed he might easily have
touched the world record of 46.2,
Gave Team Five Points
His field mate, George Jefferson,
tied for first place, with four oth-
ors in pole. vaulting at the height
of 18 feet 6 inches. This gave the
University of California in Los
Angeles eight points; LuValle made
fiye and Jefferson three. These two
lads were the only representatives
from the University of California
in Los Angeles at the meet. The
University of California in Berkley
was not represented.
LuValle made the best time in
the trials and semi-finals, Friday,
when he ran a front race in the
first heat of the 40-meter trials in
47.5, leading the field of 15 con-
testants by 10 yards. They were
Blackman, Standford; Adams,
Bates; Healey, Pennsylvania; and
Gilmore, Columbia, in the first heat
with LuValle,
Attended D. C. School
LuValle is the son of J. A, G.
LuValle of The Washington ‘Tri-
bune, He attended the Garnet.
Patterson elementary school in
Washington, D.C., for four years.
He went to Los Angeles in 1925
and finished the McKinley Junior
High and the Polytechnic Senior
High Schools there.
He was awarded a gold medal
for winning the 400-meter race.
‘This is the thirty-third medal tc
be awarded to him in his three
years on the track—two years ir
high . school and one in college
meets. Three of the medals are
silver and 30 are gold. This is his
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('HE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 193:
Trials and Anxieties of a Baseball Coach
———————— By CATO W. ADAMS ————_——_——
EDITOR'S NOTE.—Mr, Adams has
Deen identified with coaching activities
for about twenty-three years, ‘His ext
reer began as a teacher in the ele-
mentary schools of Wasbington, when
he assumed the duties of conch of base
Kethall, baseball and track at the Bins
ney School. He was also one of the
officers of the old P.S AL. (Public
School Athletic ° League): ” He has
couched baseball at “Armstrong for ten
Years, in which ‘time his. school. haa
Jost the baseball championship through:
actual participation but once—last sea-
son, In 1080, after sweeping the series
‘Tech players "was deoared’ figs
and the series was forfeited,
One of the hardest tasks assign-
ed to a coach or any person direct:
ing a baseball team is to make
substitutions for pitchers’ wher
things begin to get ungomfortable
for his team. To be even more ac-
curate, it is a hard task to juggle
a line’up when once a game has
begun and an injury to player
should occur, or an erratic player
begins to play upon the nerves of
the "kind public that knows 0
much about baseball or so much a-
bout just the proper change to
make in a given crisis. *
A baseball coach is less favored
than coaches in the other high
school sports in that when once a
baseball player is withdrawn from
a game he can not return,
When Jake Stahl was managing
the Washington baseball team in
the old baseball park—a mere shoe
box with first base so close to the
wooden bleachers that the fans
could take hold of his shirt and
ask: “Say, who told ya, ya was a
manager? 3
I once saw him so tnnerved
that he just paced back and forth
from first base to the pitcher's box
where old tall Fred Falkenburg
was having | troubles a plenty.
Some yelled, “Take ’im out!" while
the other chorus yelled, “Give "im
a ‘chanet’ ta settle, Jake, ‘Thass
wy We can’t win!”
Just such a situation contronted
the Armstrong coach early in
April, 1927, when the team was
playing an all-star nine composed
of some ex-high school players and
experienced sandlotters in the ear-
ly days of the Walker Stadium,
With Levi pitching what looked
like a no-hit shut-out, Armstrong
was leading 3-0 when’ the opposi-
tion took its last turn at the bat.
Only two had reached first—one on
a walk and one by a cross between
an error and a scratch, hit,
Pirates Score 22 Runs to 7
by Black Eagles Team...
The Washington Pirates won a
double attraction. from. the Black
Eagles last Sunday by a record
score of 22 to 7, in the first came,
and 7 to 3 in the six-inning night
cap. The games were played at
Jackson Park, Colesville, Md. For
games with the Pirates write E.
Braddock, 615 W Street, North-
west.
PIRATES __) BLACK EAGLES
AiR Hl AMEE
Marshatiate 2 3 Orowentt, “Ct 8 8
Bauenabee 6 8 otuckersh,. $11 8
Palllonss. @ 2 2 lronderb. 8 12 8
Pew: § 5 4 baerdondh. 8 12 8
Semon. 6 4 3 Gtenes $12 8
wend $3 3 teehee” $11 8
omuih. 6 3 2 OWinone. § 01 8
Sumer 8 32 ORamdyet.. S118
dere 8 12 eked P08
wees 2 8s Othemar. £008
J.W'ms,2b. 0 0 0 O\Harrivon.y 60 0 0
Harrie’. 108 8
Boe 098 8
totals. 492227 0) Total. 4 711 0
‘Score by innings: 4
Be so 00111017
Wick Rites ccf 82 OL eas mae
SR
Tigers Claw Occoquan
Nine By Score of 6-3
‘The Oriental Tigers defeated the
Occoquan nine last Sunday on the
latter's diamond by a score of 6
to 3. The Tigers are anxious to
book a Saturday game with a team
that ha sits own field. Call H.
Coates, Atlantic 4910.
‘TIGERS | OCCOQUAN.
ABH RE ABH RE
Mickel... 41-2 OHutch’s'n tt 60 1 6
Craig abee (12 OPesernrf 3 1 0 8
Washitinas 11 1 Oetfersone 81 0 8
Norse. 8 4.1 1Monconah. 61 0 6
facknonstb § 2 0 Olsoineth... 21 LE
Brookrl..- § 2 0 OBuehib. 410 0
Tuck.2b... 3 0.0 O\Nealet. 421 6
Myeref... 4.0.0 OBranda... 39 9 8
Holmenp.. 4 0 0 OCasterp 210 0
Tilman. 10 9 ©
Totals), 711 6 1) Totals, 28 OE
Tigers sceeseeseeee 29106078 EE
Gouieey Ot Leteeee
Two-base hits—Hicks, Norris, Threw-tuae
niet Crale, defterson:” Stolen” mame Pete
tint Moar, Golo Nel, liste. Gone
Herta ducksonLesoke, " Wtsive eos
Meret St by Motmes, 12. fase om ball
| SOM Carter, 2: off Holmes, 4
ee
| FOR A HI re
Ses us @ self-addcented stamped ent
velope {large alse) ‘and two days lates
you will spell NOW. the’ other “way
round, WON.
ONCE AGAIN WE HAVE A piper
Wye are heck In New York tram: toe
rack and have made direct connestions
sith onnerh and oficial ay the Marge
\t Sad and Kentucky tracks and ean there
| ‘ore eontinue to keep our client wine
| vies.
| Por the past weeks we have had then
| talent aly and’ here: they are as ve
ave thom last week” Fics second and
Sica "tae and S00, Thrte, fee and
sven, 804 and 800.) N.Y and N. Bae
uy Sau adbs Subs 080, Stocks 20, 11h,
H} 154 gen’ Ronde and Butter and ‘Bese:
|} ate, 97m, 859, 660.
We are in direct contact with a staff
ot caatact "men and also Jo, business
ius several owners who. can always
Taraiah the sight number if paid for te
‘Get ut, yonr seif-adsreued stamped
anvelope touny. Pi
24 West 20th St. New York, N.Ys
Re ee aishs ccd Marea oa a rat
Johnson, now at West ’ Virginia
State, momentarily fumbled a hard
hit ball to short and his hasty
throw pulled Bogan off first. By
a narrow margin the runner was
declared safe. The scorer called
iy an error so tie ambitious Levi
was. bearing down with all he had,
in order to get credit for every
pitcher’s dream—a no-hit shutout,
The first batter of the ast in-
ning bunted and the entire infield
Was caught flatfooted, ‘The next
batter bunted and “Smooth Scott”
at third overran the ball. The third
bunted and Levi slipped as he at-
tempted to field the hall.
What a situation with the fans
calling like mad and the bases fill-
ed with none out! Of course the
spectators were divided as to opin-
ion, The tying run was on bases
and anything was in the offing,
Much to the disgust of Levi's
sympathizers and to those who
‘really “know” baseball, I waved
‘Levi out. “Wacher know ‘bout ’at,
‘They ‘aint’ made a clear hit off’n
‘da kid and that‘... ’ yanks ‘im
for nothin’. He oughta get back
in the cradle,” was one of the least
offensive of the many remarks
heard. .
Only two other pitchers were
present that day and both unknown
and heretofore untried—Smith and
Lynn, I gambled on Smith who
‘was the rangier and speedier.
If one directing @ team makes @
bad guess, it may look like strategy
par excellence if the opposition
obliges with a co-operative weak-
| ness or fails to profit by the guess.
In this case the batter received
Smith's first pitch in the ribs and
a runner was forced in and the
baces were still full with none
out. The relief pitcher further
accommodated the “howling mob”
by being too cautious and walked
the next batter making the score
8-2, none out, and the bases still
packed.
Out came Mr. Smith and in the
chest of the coach came a feeling
that he, the coach, wished. that
he had died whén he was a baby.
But on the back of it came Lynn
who was thoroughly warmed up
and bubbling over with confidence.
“Minnie” Green went behind the
bat and began to call Lynn every-
thing, yet admonished him not to
forget ‘to pitch. Lynn threw six
straight strikes on the next two
haters. During the excitement,
the runner on third had strayed
too for off and Green's snap throw
trapped him. Then ensued one of
the most spectacular run-downs in
which every member of the team
engaged with the ball going to
every base and the plate. Finally
Red Dabney who had come in from
left field fo join the “‘cireus” got
the put out and the game was
saved.
Tn an early issue Mr. Adams
will tell of a break which together
with a disputed decision caused a
play-over of a game which Dunbar
had apparently won 7-6,
Barons Take Early Lead
To Defeat Willowtree
The Washington Barons grabbed
an early lead in the first two in-
nings to finally score a 14 to 7 vic-
tory over the Willowtvee nine last
Sunday.in the ball yard at Sixth
and R Streets, Southeast.
Johnson, Willowtree " keystone
ace, hit two home runs. The Bar-
‘ons scored four runs in the first
inning and five in the second to
take the lead and they. were never
headed. A bevy of hits in the
fourth and fifth innings added six:
tallies to the ‘Trees’ score.
WILLOWTREES |. WASIL. BARONS
AMIR Y Mk
Rob's'p.p.1f 8 101 Olryter.tt. '120
Haenrda $11 OGucben 188
Botllerce 8 1 1 Ogee S120
Feumonai 42 2 Opeeret 823 8
MeGriffine 4 1 0 OlWestssab. 401 2
Mater ie tonennm $085
Bete tel iene saa Sl
feos 110 OWilameet C13 6
Toomanif, $10 onoaniee 0808
case tele
Totals... 39 9 7 2] Totals. 43 914 2
fore by innings:
Wittrirees ws 0003901007
Wasblogion Barons (8113000 0-14
Pieetese: Nile Frise Schesea, Dasha
Tyrachare bite Wilms, Thomas. “Howe
Poecdameean (3), Bick. Ske ones
By Banks. 3, by Roberton, 31 by. Cony,
©. by toes 6 Tostees * ptanas ey
Banks, 2: by, Riberuens’': "by Gari
Bebe Browra, 4. Wiesing glisher—Carity
Fiat piches—Banta. " pashan
Losing ‘pit
SURE HITS
“INSIDE INFO"
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Tart week delivered stromeer, dope than
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Gor "INFO" forthe week wan 385,
say, 688 for the t races: 3. and T was
S71, 44, 972. “Foe the § & 7, 112, 28h
S54, 728. ‘Stocks, 08, 801, 016." Bonss
Butter and Baro, 909, 218, 286, 217
‘Averanse, 748, 150.
‘These wart “inaige controlled” and were
sure things. Our System is the Best Known.
We are the only ones Known to have wives
the number six consecutive days, 39, HIT%
Inve weeks. Our fathes ace bused on di
fect inside’ information thst. we pa" bi
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‘ru of horses that win and with prople whe
work at Stock and Bond Headquarters, We
a ete: jem. that we kngw out
ites By eandloe yous
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LEE ESTABLISHES
NEW RACE RECORD
With a pace that was killing
throughout, Edgar Lee, of the
‘Twelfth Street Y.M.C.A.. won the
fourth annual ‘Twelfth Street
Y.MC.A. trans-city three-and-a-
half-mile run for the third time
and gained permanent possession
of the Lichtman Theatres trophy.
A field of 22 men started the event.
It was Lee’s race from the start
and at no time during the event
was he headed, Lee covered the
distance in the record breaking
time of 18 minutes and 40 seconds,
clipping 20 seconds off the record
which he already held.
Sharp Street Wins Team Trophy -
William Rozzell and Arthur
Johnson, of the Sharp Street Com-
munity /House, were, second and
third, Yespectively. Team honors
were captured by the Sharp. Street
Community House of Baltimore
with a low score of 9, while the
Twelfth Street Y was runner-up
with 13 points. The Neighborhood
Circle Club of Cambridge, Md., was
third with a score of 27.
The contest was one of the best
staged by the Y from the viewpoint
of classy contestants and smooth-
ness of organization. Arthur A.
Greene, physical director of the Y,
gives full credit to the following
persons for the success of the af-
fair: race committee, John R. Pin-
kett, Col. H. 0, Atwood, John
Young, Atty. James Tyson, Capt.
Arthur Newman, Dr, Wm. 0. Clay-
tor, Atty. Raymond Clark, and Gar-
land Mackey. Checkers—Howard
Dungee, John Hall, Robert Jackson,
Lancaster Howard, Joe Johnson,
Henry Wedlock, 8, Morris, Charles
Scott, Earl Brown, R. Washington,
T, E. Lee, Joe Hall, L. McBride, 0.
W. Balthrop, 0, Hill, J. A. Weise-
ger, Oswel Glymph, Emerson
Brown, and G. L, Lewis.
Winners Awarded
‘The work of Dr, George Adams
as examining physician was com-
mendable, Dr. Adams examined
the entire group and did splendid
work along. the course. Visitors
from out of town included Miss
Juanita L. Gorham, executive sec-
retary of the Sharp Street Com-
munity House of Baltimore, and
Edward S. Lewis, executive secre-
tary of Baltimore Urban League.
The Twelfth Street team trophy
was presented to Miss Gorham by
Dr. William 0. Clayton,’ while the
medals were presented by John R.
Pinkett, to those qualifying.
Order of Finish
IEDGAR LEB, Twelfth Street YMCA.
2=WM, ROZZELL, Sharp Street Com
3-ARTHUR JGHNSON, Sharp Street
‘LEON kiNe, ‘Sharp Street Commanity
5—CLINTON TAYLOR, unattached.
DAVID MASON, Sharp” Street” Com-
T-ROUIS “GILBERT, Neighborhood
Cirete: Cluh
S-JOHN ELLIS, Tweltth St, YMCA.
SOSCOTTY. “GARDINER, Sharp Street
Community. House.
10—WILBERT RICHARDSON, Sharp St.
Community House.
MAWILIAM KIAH, Neighborhood Cis-
NORMAN WALKER, Sharp Street
18-ALBENT J. PATION, Twelfth Street
YMCA,
MAWILLIAM | BRAXTON, —Armatrong
1S-CLARENCE” HUGHES, Neighborhood
‘Cirele Club.
16-SIDNEY BAILEY, ‘Twelfth Street
11 JOSEPH SUDLER, Neighborhood ir-
1sWiiBUR HENRY, Neighborhood Cie
1-HONEW? CHESTER, Neighborhood
Circle Chub.
LUCKY HITS |
BANKERS
THINK THIS OVER
it sou here t Bather wd were bit
nee Sines in inree days, would you
ORDERS Well anne ts Just
See ena Um ask necks Me
Haan rere TAREE STRAIGHT
Hos, Sitaysteme:inat_week. For
MUP net here they ates Check up. on
2 menatkout:'3 Races, BA, 208, 932
sega ces Sone 808, aBk. NY
ant soot 60h, S01. NB 8 ant
BosPang, 340, “Bait,” Stock, R66, 207,
2 oP tseochn 18g get" 113.” Hut:
Be ON een Mo, sibs BBS Monde,
i, Bb S18” Bink Averages, 216, 336;
ue
My association with owners. train=
era ant’ mesisahers “mean that you
ort Sameer Information from
Ti, isons as the “INNER CIRCLE”
Ent her "horoughiy now chet sie
to GW RATT WILL, HAVE
Ae" rgaSt TWO. STRAIGHTS THIS
Week.
EEE. really want to have a hit or
tlt hie week ttymy spntem for youre
LST Si Send sou heft hase
“fun send your same snd sels
deat, Mtaseaonnslope Tors. tree
deere Shes ateaiont workout you
Siar daw in gut it
ROLAND GUIDEL,
3701 N. BROAD 8T. SUITE 901
eee ropa; PA,
EXT WEEK
SAMMY wine
LEE wona
Says Says
Combine Der’t Miss
‘WATCH THESES
ann Ne aut
os =
a8 416
715 =
202 138
231 wk 21
BEST NEWS OF TAE NA‘ION’'S CAPITAL
FREE NUMBER > straicut onty
CODE FRE uae quate
= piss THIS susive clienerety that
DONT Miceds of 88 Re feeling OF wish
ain wunoik it aDREETENER a8 MAS the KOS? nd
cars? @xPtEENES to YoU tne ADF Pog do OOD ENVELE
ag ye cal vege Shite INDE este gen
wh Maformatichies FROM Tec y-ADUE WAVE THE
soc nem coMay Us, ve we
4s sale CODE—SEIe Key to
fon atiea THE OBSERVER
‘4 NUMBERS
gti .
Bi 1933" yee Direct from Race Track
ne ye RAC And Stock and Bond Market
Fone 2-HITS WEEKLY—2
S2/ BR3>) BY SPECIAL TELEGRAPH
eek From A BONAFIDE HORSEMAN
Zee AS Pay After You Win
Basen Wek T can furnish you with two (2) hite weekly
Calpe for tne rest of the summer provided you da not
PindiN Stes relay the information to others. ‘The bankers have
ees heen hit. to, heavily during. the past few: meek
. 1394 " they have warned some writers to refuse plays for
io persons denling, with. me.
1 GAVE 2 STRAIGHT LAST WEEK
‘To my clients Inst week, I wired several dave in advance to pack up_an
the following igita: Inv 2 and. 3 races, 888, 209. In 3, 8.and 1 800, 300.
In'No¥, sand 1. 800, 609. "In NE. Sand 7, 600, 020, in New York Stock,
113, 620, "Balto, ‘Stocks. 184, 207 In Stock ‘Averases, 330, 825. Far Bonds
and Butter and Baws, 96, 979, 883, 068.
OWNER-TRAINER—AT THE TRACK DAILY
My office is riguton the track at the scene of action. 1 personally. own
one of the lartest stablen in America, I'am up bright and early each morning
Tookibe ect for the tntervat of wey own hoetes ahd wayne (or fafsonntiod dae
thy ellents who pool bets th slant title We generally know several daya tn
Advance which jorees are toll to. wn and exactly what they will pay. thle
is how we find gue just whst the NUMBERS will be'on certain days,
WIRE TODAY—HIt TOMORROW
You must wire divect to my NEW YORK office for your number, But you
will ket it direst from me at the Track £30 A.M. exch mornings ‘This is done
in omer to make & dooble check on scratches or inte changes
PAY $50 APTER YoU mir
‘There are no strings tled io this offer, I must haye $50.00 for each
amber that I send you. Wire men membership fee af $0400 ‘ee guarantee
Sf wood faith and that You wil pay for all messages that I send you from the
Track or New York,
STOCKS, BONDS, BUTTER AND EGGS, ETC.
1 have direct comtact and an exchange of information with men at the
mercantile exchanges and can furdish you Stocks, Bonds, Averages, B. & EB.
Bice. Lottery or other NUMBERS 48. hours tn advance,
USE COME WHEN WIRING
When witing for information, tvs the special code for privacy. or y@0
can Jurt sive the initials for sour system.
copy CODE
1-2-3 Races..........-0. T. T, Music Total Stock Salas... ....7. 8. Music
B-S-T Bates... .s.0.....T. F. 8. Music Cuban Boletts...........€. B. Music
BT Races. so... .cee--.. FB Musio New York Clesrings _.N. ¥. C. Musio
$5 Racee 20 LE & Music Cinsinnen Cleanings. / G6 Musle
New York Bond......N. ¥. B. Music — Ttalan Lottary Bank ...1. T. Music
Butter and Eegs.........B. E. Music Chicago & Detroit Poliey.C.D.P. Music
Pittsburgh Machine......P.M. Music Stock Averages..........5. A. Music
Chicago Stock.....0. s+. S Musle ‘Dice Number ss.2-.1-D. 8 Mune
DO NOT WRITE—NO LETTERS ANSWERED
ust wire 48.00 for membership and send alons cous for sour system, This
$5.00 ie as a guarantee of good faith and aa a guarantee that You will pay fOF
{he telegrams” ewetnber, cs aot wte, bo feitere answered: “Send telegraton
Marvin Sales
1192 BROADWAT=SUITE 47 NEW YORE Nf.
Send No Letters, They will Positively Re Returned Unopened.
SEND TELEGRAMS ONLY. F
Georgetown Athletics Win
Twin Bill from
Coleville
The Georgetown Athlefies went
on a hitting spree last Sunday to
turn in a brace of games by defeat-
ing the Colesville team by a score
of 10 to 5 in the first game and
earning a 9 to 2 victory over the
same club in the five-inning night
cap.
Wooden, Georgetown center
fielder, hit a circuit blow in the
second contest that added to the
score of his mates. The Athletics
will clash with the Black Barons
Sunday at the Green Valley Park.
For games with the Georgetown
team write David Eisby, 2708 O
Street, Northwest,
GEORGETOWN | COLESVILLE
ABH B| MPH RE
Comenct AB 1 1 Oioatat'wans 0-0 0
Heuer) 3 0-9 Suomrse 2 1 0 L
Aintordart $00 leBostonah 4 40 0
Dawes 22 2 Opsomnnct 3.0.0 0
Woolenet 311 Oeyacksone 4 1 0 0
Hiutiento 2 11 giRdackn ib 0 0 0
Hoodse'-- 42 2 WBaronci-. 211 0
Dorsey.c... 3 2 1 OlOukep.. .. 00 4 0
Paseo. 311 OWdeminié 210 0
Bhotong. F148
Totals.. 2510 9 2| Totals.. 23 521
Sieve es Inalags:
Geearlonn seltrens Hie AN LESS
GERRI ose Sintec eRe Be yoy
Lalas ga Dg faeces AOS "Fat
ey, rasies. ome runs—Wooden, Stolen
Sagat ea sees
ane eee
He
B.Colbit2h 6 1 0 OlMornesty,th 5 1 1 0
kas WRG] tach, ET
Pee ae
CT ee ee es wee ee
Colesville 2. 00000012 1-5
‘Tworbasehits—Costes, R. Colbert, 0.
Ratler, D. Colbert, “Stolen bases Ashford
Dorsey. (2), Wooden, Bell, Hughes, 0. But
Ter (3). Strike ouis—By Huthen,. 62 by
Johnson. 3: by Burton 2.” Base on bails-~
Of Husiies, 13 of Johnson, 7. Tnnings
Ditched=By’ Hughes, 9: by Johnson, 6: by
Burton, 4.” Double. plays—Johnon, ior.
nesty, B, Colbert, HH. Butler, Hoghes, 1H.
Butler, Winning piteher Hughes.” Losing
pitcher—Johnson, Umpire=Lee.
: i
The cry of race pride is the
swan song of mediocrity.
oe ee
ALL STRAIGHT ONLY
Just send us twa e stamps for
‘our dope.
THE MERIT SERVICE
Atlantic City, NJ.
Winning Streak of Team is
Halted as First Game
is Lost, 9-8
The winning streak of the Ana-
costia Athletics was checked in the
first game of a doubleheader ‘with
the Huntsville nine last Sunday.
The Athletics bowed by a 9 to 8
seore,
In the second contest the Ana-
costia sluggers went ona batting
spree to win a 10 to 5. decision,
Berry and Robertson on the mound
were the opposing hurlers and
pitched exellent ball. ‘The former
was a little wild, ‘he hit three
Huntsville batters, allowed 12 hits,
and struck out 10,
Robertson issued 11 hits and
fanned 8 Chang Duckett hard-
hitting second baseman of the A’s,
was the outstanding batting hero.
In four trips plateward he slammed
‘sat three douwtes,
ANACOSTIA. ,| HUNTSVILLE
AB HR E) ABHRE
Goodioeef. 4 1 2 OS Hawk'sth 4 1 3.0
Greene... 3.1 3 OP.Ham'n2b 1 0 0 6
Hailth..) 2 1 8 Olrumpan. #2 1 0
Duckoti.2. 4 8 0 IRandolphe, 5 2 1 0
Bllisit<- § 2 8 OiMonrogsh.. § 2 2 2
L.Bervy.rf, 40.0 OAHam'njé 4 0 0 0
Eery.p.. 4 2 0 OBHKs.2brt 4 3 1 0
HGar'ndh 3 0 0 OAN'ksonef 3 2 0 0
Smiths... 4 10 IPordef..-.. 2 0 0 0
1A.Gar'son 1 0 0 OlRob'tsonp, 4 0 0 0
2Dale..... 0 0 1 O1C.H'm'net 3.01 0
SMason.... 1 0 0 0)
Totals. 9511 8 2) Totals.. 4032 9 8
Score by innings:
Huntsville. -.....6 10202200299
Anacostia 00.0.0... 10108010 2-8
‘Two-base bits—Duekett. (8), Ellis, E. Bere
vy, Randolph(2), B, Hawkins” Home runs—
Crump. Stolen. bases—Goodloe (2), Green,
S. Hawkins. Strike outs—By Betry, 107
by Robertson, 8. Base on balla—Off Berry,
2; off Robertson, 4. Innings pitehed—By
Berry, 9; by Robertion, 9. Double plays—
Ball lunnisisted). Winning piteher—Rob-
grtson. Losing pitcher—Berry. Umpire—
“Tiiatted for Green in ninth.
| BBatted for Ball in ninth,
Batted for L. Berry in ninth.
: 4Ran for D. Hamilton in thitd.
ecstasy
PREXY AWARDED LETTER
ATLANTA.—Special honors were
paid at the annual “M” Day ob-
servance at Morehouse College to
President Samuel H. Archer, when
he was awarded the Morehouse
“M” for his services as coach of
the football team from 1905 to 1915.
WIN EVERY DAY
WE SHOW YOU HOW
No losing days with us, Mail two
stamps today for fast service.
PROSSER METHODS
Atlantic City, N.J.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
SPORT WORLD
TIGERS DEFEAT HILLSDALE TWICE
LeDroit ..... 6 0 1.000
White Sox ..... 3 1 .750
Rajahs ..... 4 4 .500
Hillsdale ..... 3 3 .500
DePriest ..... 2 4 .333
Giants ..... 1 7 .125
Where They Play June 4
Rajah, vs. DePriest at Sixty-first
and Clay Sts., N.E.
White Sox vs. Hillsdale at Halls Hill, Va.
(Doubleheaders. First game called at 1:30.)
The LeDroit Tigers continued their march pennant-ward by defeating one of their strongest rivals, the Hillsdales, in both games of a doubleheader, Sunday, 13-5 and 6-5.
The first game started out as a tight contest between the two teams. In the sixth inning the big bats of the Tigers began to ring and continued doing so until they had piled up a lead that the 'Dales never dared to threaten.
The pitching of Lefty George Smith, who is staging a come back after a two-year lay off, was the feature of the first game, although Powell, who replaced Smith on the mound, was complete master of the situation from start to finish. Williams, Brown and Payne were the big sluggers for the Tigers.
The second contest was a thriller throughout with M. Levi pitching a wonderful game for Hillsdale, but the relief pitching of Powell, who had just relieved his mate in the previous game, was too much for Hillsdale to overcome, and the game ended with Hillsdale on the short end of a 6 to 5 contest.
Sox Split with DePriest
The White Sox took the DePriest team into camp in the first game of a doubleheader by the score of 10 to 5. N. Barnes, the submarine twirler of the DePriest team, was wild and ineffective throughout the game, while Wills, pitching for the Sox, had such a comfortable lead that he was never required to exert himself. However the DePriests were out there to avenge themselves in the second game. Jackson starting on the mound for the White Sox was completely routed in less than one inning. When the DePriest clubmen fell upon them with a barrage of hits that netted them five runs before Lewis was sent to his rescue. Lewis completely baffled the DePriest men throughout the remainder of the game, allowing two hits and one run in eight and one-third innings. Roberts, pitching for DePriest, exhibited a rare brand of pitching and held the Sox to two hits and two runs throughout the game.
Giants Register First Win
Behind the superb pitching of Stroman, and with the timely hitting of the team in general, the Rajahs easily defeated the Giants in the first game of a double-header by the score of 11 to 2. After allowing one run in the first inning Stroman settled down and pitched an excellent game of baseball. Scott and Barber were the fielding stars for the Rajahs. Scott making a back-handed catch of Harris's drive near second base, drew wild applauds from the crowd, while Barber made a running one-handed catch of Mohop's line drive that certainly robbed him of an extra base hit. Mohops at short stop and Fisher at first base played up-to-date ball for the Giants.
The second game started as a pitchers' duel between Vick, of the Rajahs, and Hawkins, of the Giants. Vick, pitching his first game for the Rajahs, completely baffled the Giants until the sixth inning when, after an error by Scott, he allowed four runs before he was relieved by Addison.
Hawkins' pitching for the Giants was a complete puzzle to the Rajahs. Always when danger threatened he had so much in reserve that he kept the Rajahs guessing what would be next. The Giants have made several additions to the team that have strengthened them noticeably and are expected to be touch foes to all opponents.
The Tigers and the Giants have open dates next Sunday. The Tigers will play exhibition games over the week-end around Norfolk, Newport News and Portsmouth, Va.
At 53rd and Ames, N.E.
Firstgame: R. H. E.
Halls Hill 10 8 0
DePriest 5 7 0
Wills and P. Lewis; N. Barnes
and J. Barnes.
PEOPLES DRUG WIN AND LOSE
Panthers Nosed Out, 7-5 But Washington Cubs Subdue Peoples, 11-7.
By DONALD F. WEBB
Victors and victims.
So goes the record of the fortunes Mentor Hill and his People's Drug Store nine, Sunday, in a twin bill.
Tallying three times in the first and third frames, the Peoples performers nosed out the Panthers, 9-5 in the opener, but succumbed to the onslaught of the Washington Cubs in the nightcap, 11-7, when an eighth-inning retaliation fell short of its mark.
Simmons Hits Homer
Led by Simmons, who with a homer, triple and two-base clout, was the most dominant figure in the People's win. William Davis flanked his mate with a masterful piece of mound work. The lanky right-hander permitted but seven well-scattered bingles to be gleaned from his slants, while he set down eleven Panthers via the strike-out route to bring his total in two games to twenty. The nightcap, however, brought about the opposite and losing tactics of Manager Hill's gladiators.
Davis to the Rescue
Simmons started the fray and was knocked from the hill in the sixth by a barrage of hits that could do no less than spell "showers" for him.
Davis, nevertheless, emerged from his haunts around the initial sack and whiffed two men to quell the uprising. With the aisles packed and his team six markers behind, Louis Valencia strode to the batting tee with a look of determination that caused Talbert (who was hurling for the Cubs) to shudder. Valencia won out, when he socked the white pellet to deep left center to clean the sacks. Pill Pierce, formerly of the Washington Blue Sox, scored something of a moral victory against his erstwhile team mates when he checked in with a double and two one-basers, to share baton honors with Lewis Bird of the winners, who found the combined offerings of Simmons and Davis for four safeties in five attempts. Russell, Thomas, along with Harper, McNeely, Williams and Adams were others who were pre-eminent in smacking the horsehide with the hickory.
PEOPLELS
AB H O A
Hill.f... 4 1 1
Wimms.ns.ib 4 1 0
Strother.as 4 1 0
W.davs.i 4 1 0
R.Davis.c 4 1 1
R.Davis.e 4 1 1
R.Davis.h 4 1 2
R.Tb.as.rf 4 1 1
R.Tb.as.3b 4 0 2
PANTHERS
AB H O A
Johnson.lb 1 1
Chap. 5 1 0
Strother.bb 4 1 2
Walser.as 4 1 2
Parnel.fl 4 0 1
Dirt.rf 3 0 0
Paul.bl 2 4 0
Hanb.rsy.b 4 1 0
A.Wash.nc 2 1 9
Totals.. 31 9 27 9 Totals.. 35 7 24 11
Score by innings:
Panthers .. 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 3 - 5
Peppers .. 3 0 3 1 0 1 0 1 0 - 9
Runs - Simmons (3), W. Davis (3), Valencia (3), Dirty (2), Hansberry, A. Washington (2), Errors-1, ill, Strother, T. Thomas, Walter. Strother in -R. Davis (2), G. Washington, A. Washington, Simmons, Valencia, Johnson, Paul, A. Washington Chappell. Two-base hits - Simmons, Valencia. Three-base hits - Simmons. Home run - Simmons. Home hits - Simmons (4), Valencia (5), B. Davis, Dirty (2), A. Washington (8), Double play - Simmons to G. Washington. Left on bases - Peoples, 3; Panthers, 5. First base on bases, 3; Panthers, 3; off B. Davis, Struck out - By W. Balls by Hansberry, 8. Hit by pitched ball - By Hansberry, Valencia, R. Davis.
CUBS
AB H O A
Haller,3b. p. 4 2 3 0
Talbert,p. 3 1 2 1
McNy'ly,as. p. 5 2 1 1
Luke,1b. 5 1 1 1
L.Bird,2b. 5 2 1 1
William,caf. p. 5 2 1 1
Adamil,rf. 5 2 1 1
O.Bird,rf. 5 0 0 1
Bailey,cf. 5 0 0 1
Totals. 39 15 27 15
Score by inning:
PEOPLELS
AB H O A
Haller,cf. 4 1 2 0
Allen,rf,1b. 5 1 3 0
Strother,as. 5 1 3 0
Bromma,pa. 4 2 0 0
Valencia,fi. 1 1 0 0
D.wis,la,fp. 4 0 5 0
Smith,3b. 2 0 0 1
T.Thom's,3b. 2 0 0 1
Wash't,n,2b. 4 3 2 0
P. 3 9 2 2
Totals. 34 11 24 9
Peoples ..... 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 4 7
Cubs ..... 0 1 1 2 1 3 1 1 x-11
Runs—Harper (2); McNeely, Luke, L.
Bird (4); Williams, O. B., Bird, Bailley, Allen,
Strother, Russell, Ashley, L.-Bird (2);
Strother, T. R., Bird, L.-Bird (2);
Strother, W. Davis (2), Washington, Runs
batted in—Adams (3); Harper (2), McNeely,
McNeely, Bailey, L., Pierce, Pierce
,based on—base-ball, two-base-ball,
McNeely, Luke L. Bird, Williams, Adams,
Pierce, Three-base hit—Harpen, Valencia.
Stolen bases—L. Bird, Allen, Simmons.
Simmons, Allen, Simmons.
4. Fletch on bats—Off-Talbert; 4; off
Simmons; 2. Struck out—By Talbert; 7;
by Simmons; 8; by W. Davis; 5. Hits—Off
Simmons; 4 in 5% innings; 8. hit by pitcher
Simmons (Bailey). Losing pitcher—
Simmons.
TIGERS TAKE TO ROAD
Manager Burrell Kenner, of the LeDroit Tigers, will leave with the club this week to play in Portsmouth, Va. Saturday. On Sunday the team will play at Berkley, Va. and on Monday in Norfolk. A three-game series has also been arranged for the Tigers with the Black Hornets at Charlotte, N.C.
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THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. JUNE 2. 1933
Firestone
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Royal Golf Club Members Play on Philly Course
William Davis, Reuben Brooks, Crosby Peterson, and Anthony Proctor, members of the Royal Golf Club, spent the week-end in Philadelphia, where they played a special match on the Cobbs Creek Golf Course.
The Philadelphia course is one of the best public courses in the East as well as one of the most difficult. Thomas H. Edwards and Walter E. Booth met in the weekly match of the Royal Club last Sunday on the Lincoln course, with Edwards emerging the winner. This week's match of 18 holes will be between William Davis, Murphy Leach and James A. Williams and John Scott.
Pirate Coach Honored
HAMPTON, Va.—At special exercises held in Ogden Hall on the eve of the twelfth annual C.I.A.A. track and field meet at Hampton Institute, a special award was made by Charles H. Williams, director of the department of physical education at Hampton, by the C.I.A.A. asta token of their appreciation for his more than twenty years of effort in the field of Negro collegiate and scholastic athletics.
CLIFFORD C. MITCHELL NOTED COLUMNIST GRANTED PAROLE
Gov. of Michigan Releases Him Under Sponsorship of Harry H. Pace
JACKSON, Mich. — Clifford C. Mitchell, who has won nation-wide fame as a writer while confined in prison, was given a parole from the Michigan State prison at Jackson, Michigan, by Governor William Comstock. He will be released on June 8.
At a hearing before the board of paroles and pardons in the prison last Wednesday, Mr. Mitchell, who had served a number of years on an indeterminate sentence of 1 to 14 years, was recommended for parole by the board, one member of which is W. Alfred Debo, colored.
Officials of the prison told the board that Mr. Mitchell was a model prisoner, and they also were loud in their praise of his writings.
Harry H. Pace, president of the Supreme Liberty Life Insurance Company, vouchered for the future conduct of Mitchell, who will live in Chicago and continue writing.
Among the many prominent persons who appealed for Mitchell was James A. Jackson, of the U. S. Department of Commerce. Many editors joined in the appeal.
He was born in Minneapolis, Minn., about 41 years ago. At an early age his parents moved to Edmonton, Canada, where he graduated from a business college. Later he moved to Detroit, where he became involved in difficulties which led to his imprisonment.
Has Large Library
While in prison he has completed correspondence courses in several universities. In his office in the brush factory, he has a library worth in the neighborhood of $1,000. The books were furnished partly by the publishers for him to review and some of them were purchased from his own limited funds. The officials arranged a light in his cell so that he could work as late as he cared. He was granted every privilege possible for rehabilitation.
Chicago Opens Bureau of Information on South Side
CHICAGO.—(Southecenter Service)—For the convenience of out of town visitors, as well as Chicagoan's, a bureau of information for the World's Fair has been opened in the South Center Department Store, 421 East 47th Street, second floor front, with J. D. Carr, member of the official speaker's staff and bureau of information for the World's Fair, as director, and Miss Corine Johnston as secretary.
This bureau of information is complete in every detail, giving information concerning coming conventions, meeting places, dates and announcements of places of interest to visit, churches, lodges, state, fraternal and social clubs, hotels, restaurants, barber shops, garages, department stores, women's clubs beauty shops and business affairs for the ladies, business information and motor car service for driving visitors about the city.
All visitors are requested to register and announcements of same will be forwarded to both local and out of town papers.
A semi-monthly booklet, namely, "Chicago World's Fair Crusader" carrying information to local and out of town readers with complete news of the World's Fair and city activities and photographs of outstanding men and women, is an important feature of this department. Contributing writers are: Rufus C. Dawes, president of "A Century of Progress"; Joseph D. Bibb, former editor of the Chicago Whip; Attorney Patrick B. Prescott, Ja.; Bishop William J. Walls of the A. M. E. Zion Church, Maude Roberts George, music critic; the Rev A. Wayman Ward, pastor of Greater Amani A. M. E. Church; Elliayn Grantford Williams, editor for the Illinois Colored Women's Clubs; Judge William H. Harrison and Valina B. Harris.
Raphael THEATRE
9th & O Ste., N. W.
DECATUR 1376 CHARLES E. BURTON, Manager
Home of the Best First Time Shown Pictures
ADMISSION: Matinee, 11 A.M. to 6 P.M.; Adults, 15e; Children, 10e.
Nights: After 6 P.M.; Adults, 25e; Children, 10e.
Sundays and Holidays Same as Week Day Prices.
JUNE 4-5-6-7 Sun.-Mon.-Tues.-Wed.
Kidnaped!
With what dreaded ransom do missing girls buy their freedom?
Don't miss —
"GIRL MISSING"
with Glenda Farrell • Ben Lyon
Mary Brian and THE VANISHED BRIDE
JUNE 8-9-10 Thurs.-Fri.- Sat.
"STRANGER IN TOWN"
Warner Bros. Comedy of REAL FOLKS with
"Chip" Sale—Ann Drosek—David Maners
Lyle Talbot—Noah Eerry
ALSO SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS
W. L. Pct.
Boys' Club . 5 1 . 830
Alli-Stars . 2 1 . 666
Garfield . 2 3 . 400
Eagles . 1 4 . 200
St. Vincent . 0 2 . 000
MYSTERY—COMEDY—
THRILLS GALORE—ON
RAPHAEL SCREEN
MYSTERY—COMEDY—
THRILLS GALORE—ON
RAPHAEL SCREEN
Marriage may be a lottery, but when it threatens to become a tragedy within twenty-four hours after the honeymoon has begun, as it does in "Girl Missing," the Warner Bros. production which opens Sunday, June 4, at the Rapehla Theatre, the lover of mystery tales can be certain of exciting entertainment before the finale is reached.
At last a picture of real people—of real folks minus the sophistication and the affectation that mark the average resident of a big city—has been brought to the screen. We refer to Warner Bros.' latest picture, "Stranger in Town," which opens at the Rapehla Thursday, June 8.
"Chie" Sale, Ann Dovorak, David Manners, Noah Beery and Raymond Hatton playing the leading roles. It is a picture with romance minus sex—a fight minus gangsters—and comedy of the finest type which the entire family will enjoy.
Robeson Returns to Appear in Motion Picture of "Emperor Jones"
NEW YORK CITY—(CNS)—"I plan to perpetuate Negro plays in Europe by forming the Robeson playhouse in London," said Paul Robeson as he walked down the gangplank of the White Star liner, "Olympic," on Wednesday, May 10. Robeson, the noted actor and singer returned from Europe to appear in the motion picture version of the "Emperor Jones."
Mrs. Eslanda Robeson, who is his business manager accompanied him. Apropio, of Robeson's return from abroad, O. O. McIntyre in his New York Day by Day column in describing a recent talkfire says:
"And at the Algonquin, they were discussing Hitler's nationality. 'Whatever it is,' someone voiced, 'I am certain he has a touch of race prejudice.' To which Geo. S. Kaumann mildly blurted: 'I hear Paul Robeson has a touch of Negro.'"
THE BROADWAY HAS "VIRTUE" FOR TWO DAYS
The public today demand realism in its motion picture entertainment, according to Robert Riskin, noted playwright and screen writer who adapted Columbia's "Virtue" to the screen, with Carole Lombard and Pat O'Brien in the principal roles. The picture will be the feature at the Broadway, Sunday-Monday, July 4-5.
Carole Lombard in the role of Mae, a girl to whom virtue is a luxury she cannot afford in expensive New York, finds herself under arrest, brought before the Magistrate in the Women's Night Court and confronted with a choice of returning to home and mother or spending sixty days in Welfare Island.
This picture is not for children under 16.
RAMON NOVARRO IN "THE BARBARIAN" AT LINCOLN
As a change from the overflow of stories concerned with city life, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer brings to the Lincoln screen starting Saturday, "The Barbarian," starring Ramon Novarro and described as a romantic comedy laid in the colorful, atmospheric background of the Nile River and Egyptian desert. Novarro is seen as a resourceful rogue ostensibly occupied in the legitimate business of guiding tourists through the picturesque pyramid sight-seeing country, but more subtly engaged in the more romantic activity of impressing wealthy widows with his charms.
It is a new kind of "racket" and one said to be as diverting as it is ingenious. Into the story enters Myrna Loy as a young English girl who has come to Cairo to marry the somewhat slow-witted engineer of a new aqueduct.
PLENTY OF JAZZ AND AN ALMOST PERFECT CRIME AT REPUBLIC
A re-edited, and revised "King of Jazz" will be seen at the Republic Theatre for five days beginning June 2.
Such outstanding artists as Paul Whiteman, Bing Crosby, John Boles, and Jeanie Lank make "King of Jazz" one of the most outstanding productions of the year.
Rufus Byars supervisor of the Republic, states that "King of Jazz" will be found to be one of the most thoroughly satisfying pictures of this season.
Is it possible to plan a murder so cleverly that the chances of punishment are so slim as to be negligible? Not according to the Columbia ill "As the Devil Commands," a dramatic masterpiece founded upon the so-called perfect crime theme, and powerfully acted by a superb cast headed by Neil Hamilton, Alan Dinehart and Mae
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. JUNE 2. 1933
THE FEDERAL POLICE DEPARTMENT
EDWARD G. ROBINSON, at the right in the above group, tries to beat the law in his latest screen triumph, "The Little Giant," which is to be shown at the Howard Theatre for a week.
LINCOLN
A LICHTMAN THEATRE
ENTIRE WEEK BEGINNING
SATURDAY JUNE 3
GREATER THAN "THE PAGAN"
RAMON
NOVARRO
IN
THE
BARBARIAN
He Knew only the Law of the Desert—To take what
He Wanted
INSTALLATION OF WIDE RANGE SOUND SAT. JUNE 3
Hear the Life-like Reproduction of NOVARRO'S VOICE
As He Sings "MOON ON THE NILE!
Stage Show
Gala Owl Show Every Thursday Night at 11:45
EWD. G. ROBINSON IN "THE LITTLE GIANT" AT THE HOWARD
EWD. G. ROBINSON IN "THE LITTLE GIANT" AT THE HOWARD
"Jazzamania," the snappy musical revue promises to be one of the season's most entertaining shows when it opens at Howard tomorrow (Saturday).
Manager Shep Allen asserts that there will also be the singing and dancing team of Rivers & Brown, the Three Yorkers, and the sensational Louis Armstrong rival—Dolly Hutchinson in a new musical act. Forty others complete this show including The Sun Tan Hotcha Chorus.
The screen attraction offers Edward G. Robinson in his recent success "The Little Giant." This picture is an expose of the racketeering menace. It is based on a story of what happened to the racketeers after beer was legalized.
Amateur night is every Wednesday at which time four cash prizes are offered.
Clarke, which opens at the Republic Theatre Wednesday, June 7.
Theatrically Speaking
Local theatre-goers have been given the best menus they have had on the local stage bills during the past two weeks, thanks to the introduction of vaudeville at A. E. Lichtman's U'Street Lincoln Theatre, thus causing the performers at both this house and the Howard, the Stiefel unit, to put forth their best efforts to please the patrons, and that is just what they are doing.
Well worth comment is the added fact that the District of Columbia will now become the mecca for Negro stage talent, since it is one of the few cities in the East which now offers real first-rate houses for colored performers. This mean more work for the professionals, and new opportunity for the amateurs, who want to go on the stage. The managements of both the theatres are to be congratulated upon the improved types of programs being 'staged' now. And it is safe to say that the operation of stage shows by the two concerns will not mean any loss in patronage to either one, for both the theatres had crowded houses on last Sunday night, as well as throughout the week.
This clearly shows that Washington is plenty big enough for TWO vaudeville houses, for neither is losing patronage by the other's presence. It rather seems that the score is in favor of the fans.
The Howard
With Doris Rheubottom and the Washboard Serenaders headlining a well balanced bill, the Stiefels staged a snappy revue this week, titled "Hi-De-Ho," with Eddie Sandifer's orchestra, from Boston, in the pit. Carolyn Snowden, the much touted movie actress, failed to live up to her advance notices, at least to the mind of local observers, and your critic. It seemed that Miss Snowden's voice was suffering. Her talents as an actress may be great, but as a blues-singer she is rather weak. Three Ginger Snaps, John Mason, Putney Dandridge, late of Boiangles Robinson fame, worked well in their bits, with Shorty and John Mason supplying unlimited comics, in a highly satisfactory manner.
The band was fair, occasionally drowning out the voices of the singers with too much volume. Al Thomas, a new M.C. was pleasing, as also was cute little Dorothy Saunders whose dance number with one of the Washboard Serenaders was a dandy. But to Miss Rheubottom and the
JEWELL
THEATRE
214 Four-and-a-Half St., S.W.
Metropolitan 9475
MR. ALBERT P. SCOTT, Manager
SATURDAY JUNE 3
Big City Blues
Joan Blondell; Eric Linden
SUNDAY-MONDAY JUNE 4-5
The Gallant
Fool
Bob Steele
TUESDAY JUNE 6
Face IN THE Sky
Spencer Tracy, Marion Nixon
WED.-THURS. JUNE 7-8
Hard to Handle
James Cagney, Mary Brian
FRIDAY JUNE 9
EVEVINGS
FOR SALE
Herbert Marshall, Sari Maritza
REPUBLIC
A LICHTMAN THEATRE
Friday-Tuesday June 2-6
GLORIOUS! IMMORTAL! SENSATIONAL!
King Of Jazz
—WITH—
Paul Whiteman Bing Crosby John Boles
One of the Greatest Musical Pictures Ever Produced! Hear It
With New Wide Range—And Marvel at Its
Entertainment and Music!
Wednesday-Thursday June 7-8
As The Devil Commands
—WITH—
Mae Clarke — Neil Hamlton
A Gruesome Murder for a Fortune—Detected by the Hatred of
the Woman He Loved!
RIVERS & BROWN 3-YORKERS-3
What's Happened to the Racketeers Since the Return of Legalize Beer? See it all Exposed in this Great Picture
Serenaders go all the palms for they were the mainstays of the show.
The Howard will offer a new show, entitled "Jazzmania" beginning Saturday, and starring Jackie Mabley, known as the best colored comedienna in the business. With her will be the due, Rivers and Brown, songsters, and an elaborate show. The screen will offer Ed. G. Robinson, in "The Little Giant," touted as Robinson's best flicker.
The Lincoln
The younger stage house offered a glittering mass of color in a gorgeous chorus, which came intact from the Broadway hit, "Flying Colors," and swept its way into the fancy of local fans. Leonrad Reed as M.C. helped add to the show, while Tommy Myles and his band, who played the Howard last week, were exceptional in a new rendition of the "Farewell Blues." The sparkling humor was supplied by Pigmeat Markham and Johnny Lee Long, who did their numbers with their usual gusto. Marie Pervail, sang, while one Mr. Russell Lee, well known and liked by local lovers of music sang his way to the fore again.
The crack team of the Two Miller Brothers, whirlwind novelty tap-dancer, from the Cotton Club, in N.Y.C., were on the bill, and their presence alone was worth the price of admission, for these two lads danced in a manner never seen here before. One elastic lad sat in a chair and did every step in Bill Robinson's repothea, the other climbed atop a boardwalk (one
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Female Trumpet Sensation Dolly Hutchinson
foot wide) and whilred into acrobatics difficult to even imagine. The chorus was unusually good, as might have been expected from an Addison Carey chorus. The screen showed Ralph Bellamy and Fay Wray in a stirring sea underwater melodrama. Midnight "Owl" shows every Thursday night. Saturday will find several local favorites back at the Lincoln, for the first time since 1927. Garbage Rogers, Tiny Troy Brown, the 400 pound dancer, William Bryant, expartner of Leonard Reed, Dewey Wineglass' No, One Chorus, including Ristina Banks, Helen Pinn, the Vincson sisters, Bobby Dade, and the other high-stpepers, Charley Ray, and the gymnastic Gaines Brothers will also be on the bill.
The Raphael
The Raphael, where Charles Burton holds forth, gave its flicker fans, a most excellent picture in "Broadway Bad" with Joan Blondell, and will offer the balance of this week, James Dunne, and Boots Mallory in their first picture together:
The Republic played Joan Crawford and Gary Cooper, destined to be a popular team, in "Today We Live," which is being followed by the great musiganza "The King of Jazz," with Paul Whiteman, Bing Crosby, and others.
The Strand
Out in Deanwood, for the edification of those who cannot come to town, Albert Scott is offering "Central Park," another Blondell picture, and on tonight (Friday)
he will again stage his weekly Fri-
day night. vaudeville show. T.W.A.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
‘Fairyland Flares in Light
Chicago World’s Fair Fantasy
Z8E MURRAY CASINO
NEWLY DECORATED
i “Washington’s Most Beautiful Hall”
| - NOW BOOKING DATES
| For BREAKFAST DANCES
| MATINEES
NIGHT RECEPTIONS , |
| DAWN DANCES |
Depression Prices For Dates Call Potomac 1667 or 18
Prisons and
Prisoners
‘Mr. Mitchell has been grant-
¢d & parole by the governor of
Tr and will released
June 8.
EDITOR'S NOTE <The teticine
article is from the pen of Clifford C.
Mitchell. whose weekly release. “Di-
Se es eras ose
Telense, Me. Mitehell yan) inmate of
patty Poe tawik Mun okey
hy is editor of, or makes a regular
Mtogee ue ks. sae
hoa Nee Wyle nt ate
Gh Setet sre in, ketenes
Pecnehe Rue tem te he
Recetas nes shal nes se:
ee
Recently, in a New England
State, the former president of a de-
funct bank, in which thousands of
depositors. lost millions, was con-
victed of a felony and sent to pris-
on. After he arrived at the prison
the newspapers “played up” the
story for severgl days because the
ex-banker was immediately made’a
trusty ‘and placed on the honor
farm.
We ate not so much concerned
MAGIC city of dazzling
Ate: with fantastical-
ly-shaped buildings sil-
houettéd against the night
sky by beams from myriad
Pinca Aemret ee sein-
tillators, floodlights, - spar-
Kling colored fountains,
glowing neon tubes, with
brilliant fans and plumes of
light overhead.
‘This is the ipl that will
blaze like s jewel with a million
facets every night at Chicago’s
1933 World’s Fair—A Century
of Progress, which opens on
May 27.
Inst as the architeeture of the Ex-
Position has transcended all previous
attempts in the creation of new and
startling effects, the night illnmina-
‘tion will eurpass anything ever be-
fore attempted. Foremost electrics
engineers and illuminating expert
‘ef the nation have eombined to pro
‘dneé the moet spectacular of all nigh
pageants of color and light,
‘Tho Pair will dramatically demon
strate to the millions of visitors tha
Muminstion in the past century ha
made startling advancement, Wel
into the century being celebrated, of
‘and gas were the sonrees of light o7
whith night-time activity depended
Expositions in the early days closei
their gates at sundown.
‘Tho first attempt to provide nigh
entertainment for Pair visitors wa
‘at Philadelphia in 1876, and then th
ofitial closing was at dusk. Th
merchants of the city banded to
gether, however, and made an effor
te earry the carnival spirit into th
aight by installing thousands of ga
jets and by sponsoring firework dis
playa
‘Use 16,000 Lampe
‘Pwo great electrical manufactu
ext, General Electris and Westing
‘Ronse Electrie & Manufacturing
Rave pooled thelr forees under th
Girection of Walter D’Arey Ryat
for years direttor of GE's illum
nating engineering laboratory,
produce lighting effects heretofor
‘unseen
eee, ei €
a 4
4 AS i
ee ee
fe we ee me ‘
Bees ee orl )
0 BN UE BPRS so ae
ORE a 65 aoe Gee een 1 .
SB eae ;
Ph eee) ok
I OO
bh) aie is AN re a en ae cass es
Elaborate mushroom-like refiéctors which will light the psths st
L Gace eh SHEE
in the fact that a rich banker was
convicted of a felony; or in the fact
that he actually reached prison; or
in the additional fact that he was
immediately made a trusty, but we
‘are concerned, as a writer on the
subject of priscns and prisoners, in
the conclusions the ex-banker
reached and which the press liber-
ally quoted. :
‘The ex-banker expressed the
view that it was not necessary for
him to defend himself for securing
every privilege that was within his
power to obtain. To use his own
thought further, he stated that if
there was any criticism to be made
that it should be made against s0-
ciety. for it is so organized that
only those with money and in-
fluence are able to specify what
they. want and demand it.
When the press reporters. re-
minded the ex-banker that the pro-
secution had threatened to send
many other bankers to prison, the
ex-banker retorted by saying that
if they just sent his own’ acquaint-
ances who were practicing the same
methods he was found guilty of,
that they had better turn loose half
of the petty offenders now in pris-
on.
Regardless of the fact that the
ex-banker- was made a trusty one
hour after he reached prison, when
Lighting plons for A Century of
Progress call for the ate of more
than 15,000 incandescent lamps,
ranging in size from 10 to 8,000
watts, for exterior illumination
lone. It is possible only to guess
the number that will be used within
the great exposition buildings and
by concéssions. A single battery of
twenty-four art searchlights will
have a total light outpnt of 1,500,
000,000 eandlepower for one spee-
tacular effect. Thousands of feet of
neon and mercury vapor tubes will
add their soft glow to building ex
teriors,
Tt Ys ‘estimated that 2,100 kilo-
watts of electrieal energy will be
required for the outdoor lighting
effects,
‘Three electrie fountains are being
installed in the lagoon, just off the
eat shore and north of the Twenty:
third Street bridge. With 507 water
jets, sprays and nozzles in ench, it
will take 8,600 gallons of water per
minute te produce the eight distinet
water displays of which each foun
tain is capable. A 75-recond period
is required for each water effect
and a complete eyele that inclade
the many combinations will take ter
fininutee, At the climax of the dem
he made the above stgtement he
touched the heart of every prisoner
in that prison—and every other
prison. If the prisoners in that
Eastern prison are like the thou-
sands of other prisoners I have con-
tacted, I know there is not one that
begrudged the extraordinary privi-
leges the ‘ex-banker received, for
the latter not'only recognized the
fact but he publicly expressed it,
that half of the prison’s population
were but petty offenders who had
paid the price of their folly and
were ready to be turned loose.
Since I first entered Jackion
Prison there have been over twen-
ty-two thousand other prisoners
who entered; quite a few of them
were men of prominence, but I have
not. yet seen one so prominent or
so influential, like the eastern ex-
banker, who could specify what he
wanted and demand it, immediately
‘on entering prison.
If such a prisoner should arrive,
however, and should he receive the
same degree of newspaper profi-
nénce as did the eastern éx-bankér
and like him, throw out the chal-
lenge to the public showing how
rare it js for a man of much in-
fluence to reach prison, and fur-
ther show that half of the men in
prison are mere petty offenders
without any influence whatever,
onstration cycle, water will be
eponted eighty feet in the air.
In the eontér fountain, harmoni-
ous gradations of eolored light, in-
cluding soft pastel shades, will bé
provided by seventy special food-
lighting projestora equipped with
red, green, Blue and amber lends,
Each of the twe onter fountains will
employ thirty-eix floodlights with
clear lenses,
Sctntitiator Display
‘The scintillator will be located
on the shore of Lake Michigan south
of the Travél and Transport Build-
ing. With a railroad track located
nearby, two gigantic locomotives ean
be run in to generate steam and
shoot clonds of it high in the air.
‘Tho brilliant colored lights, eperated
by # squad of specially trained men,
‘will be played on the steam and on
dlouds of smoké exploded high in the
‘alr by smoke bombs
Brilliantly colored fans and
plames of light will be thrown hnn-
dreds of feet into the aky, and a fery
battle of serpesita will be aymbolized
in the nightly displays In thelr
initial position, the searehlights will
form an intensely bright aurora over
‘hs cnbee cee.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1933
a
5 balan MERE
Speaks at Alma Mater | Y h’
ogee | LOULRS ,
| ; x
Hgts Corner
po z
ro — oe
Co By Alvin (Chick) Webb
co oe
fo SUMMER HEAT AND
eee e PERSPIRATION
a One-of the inevitable a¢compani
fF | ments of summer is excessive pet
wo f > | spiration. ' Perspiration may be
pi 3 boon to the laundry business, bu
BR when the fémale element, is cor
xe ce neck” to the average working ‘mi’
ee Summer is'one period of the yer
. when. the female eleemnt is cor
= | stantly harrassed and embarrasse
. 4 by the well known B.O; . In spit
x of the warnings of the enterprisin
“< soap advertisers many of Us cor
: stantly nauseate one’ another, wit
a none too pleasant odots arisin
a from excessive body. warmth.
ed Nothing is so plastiti tovth
: eS, human eye as is the pletare of
woman, resplendent ecked
Dr, We E. B, DUBOIS cool, white summer linen, | Equall
who will deliver address on alumni ee acoichae aes a, hs
day at Fitk University, on. 45th /nvace of well laundered white duel
niversary of his graduation. | yo; a) this attractiveness and gla
then I, for ont, would gladly, if
such were possible, serve part of
such a prisoner's time for hint,
‘The longer I remain in prison
the sicker at heart I become when
I learn ali the “inside” faéts con-
cerning the cases of certain prison-
eré; expecially is this 0 when these
facts are compared with the cases
of some more influential prisoners;
and still further sickening when
compared with some of the cases
of men who never even reach
prison, And such conditions are
typical of prisons evérywhere,
Sometimes 1 seriously wonder
whieh type of prison has the worst
effect on men—the type of prison
which resorts to physical cruelty
and torture, or the type that pér-
mits of no cruelty but neither does
it allow for any form of self-x-
pression. Fortunately, in Michi-
gan, prisoners énjoy a liberal de-
gree of self-oxpression which
Serves, to some extent, as an anti-
dote to an otherwise’ bitter pre-
scription.
RES
TWO STRIKING FLOATS
(Continued from page 9)
will not let us be patrol ‘boys, but
we can build the fleat.”
Miss Lanra G. Arnold is, prin-
cipal of this school group and Miss
Louise Syphax has charge of the
patrol.
The float regarded as the sec-
ond best representing the patro!
idea was that from the Crummel!
‘School, of which Mrs. Mary V.
Brawner is principal. It portrayed
the protection of the playground
and was not as comprehensive at
the Slater-Langston float. It had
the school building and playground
combination with the patrol hoys
on duty’ in the street in front of
the building. ‘The automobile was
lacking to carry home the full pur-
pose.
This float was made under. the
direction of the firemen at No, 4
engine house.
‘The John F. Cook School on P
Street, Northwest, had the; imita-
tion of an ostrich for its float. The
dragon, signifying danger. was en-
tered ‘by the Sumner-Magruder
gro at Seventeenth and M
Streets Northwest.
Rain Marred Parade
A heavy rain came a few min-
utes before three, just as the pa-
rade was about to start from John
Marshall Place down Pennsylvania
Avenue. Many of the boys were
soaked. However, the parade went
on, une it rained even after
it 'was under way. The colored
hoys made a fine showing for all
were in the various uniforms. Maay
hice earn aad.
Youth’s
Corner ~
iy alc COR Wreebs
SUMMER HEAT AND
PERSPIRATION i
One. of the inevitable a¢compani-
ments of summer is excessive per-
spiration. ' Perspiration may be a
boon to the laundry business, but
when the fémalé element. is con-
neck” to the average working man.
Summer is-one period of the year
when the female eleemnt is con-
stantly harrassed and embarrassed
by the well known B.O; . In spite
of the warnings of the enterprising
soap advertisers many of us con-
stantly nauseate one’ another with
none too pleasant ‘odors arising
from excessive body: warmth.
Nothing is so. pleasing. tothe
human tye as ee pleture of
woman, resplendently ‘ked_in
cool, white summer linen, Equally
attractive a picture ais: that which
presents a man Who affects a suit
made of well laundered white duck.
Yet all this attractiveness and gla-
mour will quickly vanish if the
faintest unpleasant odor is detected
by your friends and admirers.
So to use the words of the wk.
advertisers—“if your best friends
won't tell you, use our soap"—and
rest assured that your summer will
leave no unpleasant memories
among your dearest associates.
wees
YOUTHFUL
PERSONALITIES
Miss Ruth Baker
Beginning with the year 1929,
when the depression began to make
its heavy fist felt among. all of us
human beings, a band of New York
school boys and girls put up their
papers and pencils, and made use
of their respective talents on the
vaudeville stage, Had not this cir-
cumstance been brought about by
‘an economic crisis, many of these
youthful entertainers would today
bo found in thé seats of higher
learning.
‘Among this youthful genération
that wedged themselves on the
stages of our Iand was Miss Ruth
Baker.
‘Miss Baker, an attractive looking
brown skin, in & graduate of the
Phyllis Wheatley dr. High School
‘in New York City, and also attend-
ed the George Washington High
School for threé years. Incidental-
ly, the writer ix an alumnus of said
school, Miss Baker is also a. for-
mer pupil of the renowned Grace
Giles dancing school. This school
has graduated any number of its
pupils to the vaudeville stage.
Ruth was one of the star mem-
bers of the chorus in the initial
show at the Lincoln Theatre this
past week, She tells me that she
has been in the city since the win-
ter months, and was with the Club
Prudhom for a while. She returns
to Washington in two weeks.
Her hobbies are swimming, at.
tending the movies, and of course
dancing to the tune of a red ho!
song. Has a “crush” for George
Raft and admires Joan Crawford
Her greatest ambition is to leave
the stage and settle down. *
Like the evergreen tree, Ruth
will never change. She evidently
will always retain the same baby
drawl—even when her hair begins
to turn to silver.
‘The Three Little Habtis
‘This sensational dancing act: of
Kenneth Martindale, Henry Mat
thews, Benny Roberts, whi¢h drew
down’ the house at the Lincoln
‘Theatre last week, boasts of having
as its personnel three typical Inds
from underneath the Harlem moon
‘They are Ken, Henry and Benny
Their novelty ‘act is smooth, fast
and graceful, All of these boys are
former pupils of the famous Dong:
lass Junior High School in Harlem
To Speak at Fisk
“ee
ae
. “i
Ds te
ott eg |
ae
MAX YERGAN
who will be commencement day
speaker at Fisk University, June
14, He has recently returned from
eleven years’ Y.M.C.A. work in
South Africa.
—s school that has produced con-
sistent champions in every branch
of athletic endeavor,
I fondly remember Kenneth (in
particular) a& he was one of the
gang of diminutive sheiks who
used to “take in” all the social af-
fairs about and around town, Ken
was somewhat of an athlete, and
dabbled considerably with track
and that popular Harlem sport,
“atick-ball.”” He was always fond
of tap dancing and it did not sur-
prise me when I saw him appéar-
ing at the Lincoln Theatre with his
two team mates.
Kon is still a regular fellow,
good-natured and ambitious in
every sense of the word. When I
interviewed him back. stage last
week, we spent an enjoyable hour
going over former escapades, and
liscu! i! former mutual asso-
ciates. Devoid of any sentiment, I
am venturing to predict that Ken's
‘act will “knock ’em cold” before
long, and that that worthy gentle.
man will realize his fond hopes to
leave the stage and enter into some
prosperous field of business,
eeee
REMINISCING
Whén the writer was actively én-
gaged jn track athletics in the city
of New York, several opportunities
presented themselves to me to ob-
tein a thorough insight on the at-
titude of white people towards the
Negro, Through my athletic in-
tercourse with them on the track
and field, I was able to “see them
as they actually existed” under cer-
tain peculiar circumstances. Here
are some of the questions I was
able to answer:
Does-the white man ever admire
the Negro for his unusual physical
prowess?
Does the Nordie’s attitude change
suddenly whenever he discovers
that a Negro is his mental mas-
ter?
Does the average white student
actually believe that his Negro
classmate is his social equal?
‘To the first question, I will un-
hesitatingly answer, vee. In. the
particular institution that I attend-
I had occasion to observe the
adulation and worship that was
heaped upon a certain colored ath-
ete who completely dazzled his fel
low athletes by his skillfulriess in
playing baskethall and football.
Whenever that colored lad left
one class room to enter anothér
he was flanked on every side. by
white hero worshippers and admir-
ers. ‘They ate their lunches togeth-
cr, attended the theatre together,
and even. visited one another's
homes, Such situations are com-
mon in the mixed schools of the
East, and cause no unusual com.
ment.
‘As regards the second question,
I will also reply in the affirmative,
‘The average white student usually
treats his colored classmate with
contempt and derision until said
student evidenees unusual ability
for accumulating knowledge and
disseminating facts, Then a tud-
den metamorphosis oceurs. The
white student inevitably. cultivates
a warmth of feeling and « friénd
liness or menner that is in itsel!
remarkable.
To the thitd question I shall also
reply in the affirmative. The aver-
age white student who is devoid of
the usual prejudice and wiitte-su-
perierity complex: readily welcomed
is fellow colored student after the
true mérite of the Negro has beén
demonstrated. As previoully stat-
ed, their. social trails are so often
parallel that they frequently enter-
tain each other at the theatre, the
home and other places.
‘The wrier has had the oppor.
tunity of visiting the homes of
white students, and was constantly
invited to speak at the. leading
white churches in the city. It ds
my firtn belief that after the white
man brégks down hie stupid “wal!
of ee sees hit ee
oughly appraise Bs ood that
Hes im Blbek, men’ soul, einer
tably aceepts him as his social
equal.
eee
THEY TELL ME THAT—
"The N.A.A.C.P. should be severe-
ly criticised for failing to campaign
among the masses... There is a
Junior N<A.A.C.P. organization. lo-
cated somewhere inthe city. .-in
spite 6f persistent efforts to locate
itp me no one seems-ts
at ai! about it...
feat
fexto p approxima’
185,000, but 2,000 of that number
aré connected with the lecal branch
of the NvA's...and something
should bé done about it....
T could popularize this “Youth”
could, popularize this particular
feature much more by spilling dirt
a la. Winchell...but after, noting
tin eninhes af: abun, Wiarhalle
Simply Phone POT. 1667. For Results
humble scribe will continue on his
merry way, & la Webb, and con-
‘tinue to hope. :
‘Anyhow I am saving my neck
from the wrath of exposed hus-
bands and flirtatious wives...and I
can boast of having half a dozen
readers every week, come what may
+++80, is everybody happy ?...No
harm done... There are others
who are desirous of seeing their
names in constant print, and get
“hot and bothered” if I do not com-
ply with their requests...to them I
say “by your good deeds shall men
know you”,..when your name is
printed here...rest assured that
you shal! have earned it. . . possibly
this may prove to be & prize pack-
age or a prize laugh to you. ..de-
pending on what you think of me.
Beginning with the next issue,
yours truly will present his “mug”
above this column, which I trust
will cause you to make no com-
parisons with Boris Karloff, Bela
Lugosi, or all the other handsome
characters of thé cinema. . anyhow
1 hope you'll like it...but as a
parting shot, remember that you
may pléase some Of the people
some of the time, and you may
please all of the people some of the
time, but. never expect to please
‘em all, all of the time,
Born
Spiritualist
BRING YOUR TROUBLES
TO ME
KNOW THE TRUTH AT ONCE
I Will Tell You and Help You
CALL TODAY.
REY, C, SAMUELS
1837 Wallach Place, N.W.
ee ee eee
LARGE, COMFORTABLE fur-
“ished room for quiet peoples
am. Low rental, Convenient to
two car lines, 1431 Q St, nw.
North 4915,
TWO LARGE well furnished bed-
rooms with home privileges; cen-
trally located. Phone Dec, 4864-J.
1714 Thirteenth St,, nw.
NEATLY FURNISHED ROOM to
refined gentleman or couple, 213
T St. n.w. Potomac 3807.
1758 U ST., N.W.—Man to share
neatly furnished room with an-
other gentleman, References ex-
changed. $9.00 a month. Pot. 5261,
NICELY FURNISHED ROOM for
couple or single, 1725 T St., n.w.,
Apt. 2. Potomac 2860.
ROOMS in quiet home with ami.
Men only. Convenient to car
lines and-bus. 282, Fourteenth St,
se. Atlantic 5505, after 5 p.m,
FURNISHED, comfortable room
in refined, quiet home, Redson-
able. 1741 Thirteenth St., n.w,
1418 T STREET, N.W., Apt, 23—
Beautiful furnished front’ room,
suitable for refined married couple,
FURNISHED ROOM for employed
couple or single person; am.t.j
rent reasonable, Potomac 1560,
TWO ROOMS. Refined gentlemen
to sharé a room, and employed
couple—for quict people. 814 R. 1.
Avenue, nw. Decatur 1576-3.
FURNISHED ROOMS. 1413 T
Ste, TW
R STREET, near Fourteenth—
Large. front room, suitable for
two. North 8944, evenings.
FURNISHED ROOM tor man or
woman, Opens on large back
porchs rent reasonable, Phone
incoln 8272,
enema tnort
ROOM, kitchenstt® and bath, Plen-
ty Hight and hot water. Rent
reasonable. North 3477.
UNFURNISHED ROOM
En eee reel
ROOM for one or two; first floor
corner house, 1737 T Sty nw.
Apt. 1
FURNISHED or CNFURNIBAED
ROOM :
LARGE FRONT ROOM, second
floor, furnished or unfurnished;
for refined, quiet gentleman. No
others need apply. 1616 T St., n.w.
ROOM=Second floor; use of kiteh-
en. Reasonable terms. Conven-
jent to ear tings, 4840 AS da
‘Bt, mw. Phone, North 4591,
ROOMS Onder two, for rehned
ible or one or tres men.-Novth
a 14624 Q at, nw.
“APARTMENTS ©
123 § STREET, -NW.—Twalarce
tooms, hall, bath, kitchen “and
back porch, "Entire second floor;
heat, electricity, gas. Call North
1726.
THREE ROOMS, Kitchenette, bath
a sleeping porch; rea-
sonable. 2121 N St, A ate
1398. j
Ee innate aaa
ROOM WANTED
eg as
QUIET CATHOLIC GIRL would
Tike to mak her home with Cath
atic family, Reasonable rent. Call
Tribune Offee, 929 U St, n.m.
1867.
Wh a
HOUSE FOR RENT
ii ROOMS, BATH AND TOILET,
h.w.h, electric; 4-room apartment
_ bw.h, electric; 4-room sparsmeéen
_ FIFTEEN
400-METER RACE
ee ee eee Ee
Tuesday from 3 p.m. was thus
spent.
Wednesday, the boys had break-
fast.with Mr, and Mrs. J. W. Ross,
1003 Irving Street, Northwest. The
remainder of the-day was spent: in
visiting the Capital, Congressiona)
Library, White House, and other
places of interest to tourists. ir
Washington. This is young Jef-
ferson's first visit to the nation’s
capital.
They were the dinner setts,
Wednesday, of Miss Sarah Frazier
at her home on Fairmont Street,
Northwest. From seven to nine
they attended a card party at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Archer,
‘as the guest of Mr, William Archer,
Among those present were Mr. and
‘Mrs, A. Burrus, Miss Blanche
Kyles, Miss Lois ‘Robinson, Miss
‘Thursca Cuffee Dr. Bessie Patter-
son, Mr. and Mrs, Patterson, Pur-
vis Williams, and Andrew Archer.
Rrom ten to twelve, Wednesday
night, they attended a dance at the
home of Mrs, M. E. Jones on T
Street, Northwest, where they met
several moré young people. eae
them were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hill,
Miss Roberta Pettroes, George Pet-
tross, Mrs. Bessie Pettross, Miss
Rernice Caldwell, Alonzo, Caldwelll,
the Misses Inez and Fay Williston,
Miss Bertha Jervey, Miss Hazel
Felton, Miss Enola McKethan and
Miss Ruth Griffin, Messrs. E. M.
Booker, Qceola Thornton, Lester
Brown, John Jefferson, James
Gibbs, and Ralph Lynch,
‘Thursday wax spent in, visiting
the hich schools, Teachers’ College
and Howard University.
“He came, he saw, he conquoyed.”
can well be ee to the trip East
of young LuValle, who aspires to
be a member of the next American
pare team in Berlin, Germany,
in 1998,
CARE OF CHILDREN
CARE ee
WiLL CARE FOR TWO childrén
in prey suburban. ere ae:
jorarily or permanently. ress
Box 141, Trbune Ofc
| HELP WANTED
POPE D. 1 Nh lean De
SALESMAN to sell electric refriz-
erators. Liberal commission.
Must be well educated and neat ap-
pearance. or, to Mr. Presson
between 9 a1 11 am, Williams
Dolor LT Souspetnih Boe
foster ipenne etre! PR
eae als
OULIR M, COOPER, Atthener
‘420 Fitth Street, N.W.
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT
ME Columbin.. Holding Probate Court
No Te Kéministeation. ‘Taio Give
Notice: ‘That the aubseriber, of the Dis~
Uist Columb, an obeained. from the
Probate Court of the Distriet of Columbia,
Letters Testamentary on the estate of Es-
Uaie'G. ‘Mieka, inte of the Distiet9€ Co-
Hee Moectaeds “AIT portons having
Lime’ against: the Aeceased are. hereby
Seen Eemtune dhe mma with Oe
Schers “hereet, legally, authenticated to
Teeentiteribers an, befoee the. 10th day
See rank: eoherwine they may Ny
MeetBe! exch from all heneRe of said
wersue “Givwn under my hant thin 10th
day of May, 198%. Lucinda Hicks, 929
Hamat Ant, Rasen of Wil for, the
: vise for. the
Biiri AColumbin, Clerk. of the Probate
Cour
THOMAS WALKER. Atiorney
OMAS WALKER, Atter
BUPREME COURT OF hate’ Court.
‘at Columbia. Holding Prokats Court.
No. 44,088, Adminiatration. Thi. ie to Give
Novice: ‘That the subscriber, af the Dis-
felct ot Columbia, has obiainad from the
Probate Court of the Distriet af Columbia,
Tattern. of Adminiateation on the estate at
Lite Tomes, Inte of the Disteiet of Colum:
bin, deceaned. All. persons having elaime
eninet one doconved are haraby warned 19
Eahibie the same, with the rouchers thereof
‘iognly_auventicatd, to he anbseriber, on
or betnre the Sth aay. of May, A.D. tht:
@therwise they may hy Tae be txcluded
From all beneht of said estate, Given un-
der'my ham dials BOY day of May. 1953.
det Taoen 1i0e Fourin Bett NM:
i: 4 Copusrall, Register of Wills
forthe Bigtriet ef Columbia, Clerk of the
Probate Court.
ine
TAMUEL D MATTHERE, Attorner
Tin Fiat Beet,
SUPREME COURT OF TRE DstgicT
‘of Columbia. Holding Probate Court,
Non UdaT Adminintration. This is to Give
Notice; That uve subscriber, of the Diss
Erlet of Columbia, hag obtaindd from the
Probate Court of the District of Colambia
Letters, ot Admaniatration om the estate of
Sareh Williams. also known as Sarah
Tones, Tate of the Distriet of Columbia, Ae
Zenved"AIl parsons Raving claims againt
he dncedsed are hereby warned to axhibit
the sume, sith the vouchers Usbreo?, leaally
urhemticatad, to the wubseriber, on or he-
fore tha 120 day of May, A.D. i084: other.
trlve thay may by lam be exclafed from sll
Benen at anid tate, Given, mada my
Bag Ale 120 ay of aay. IRB Sara!
Dr'Matthews, 1811 Plevt St. LW. Attar:
Theodore Cogteel, Register of Wille for
the District of Cohimbia, Clerk of the Pro-
hate Court.
ne Ae hee
SUPREME COURT OF cents Court.
‘nf Columbia, Kolding Probate Court
Na. 45.032, Administration. This ie 10
Givs Notice: That. the subseriners, ofthe
District of Columbia have obtained from
the Probate Court of the District of Co-
fambia, "Letters. Testamentary an the #s-
tata of Katherine B Martin, late of the
Bistrioe af Columbia, decanted. All per
tenh having clams againat the deseased
sre hereby, warned. to exhibit. the adme,
fwith the vouchers therect, legally authen-
Tented. to the tubseribers. on or before
the 2ard day of May, A.D. 1984: otherwise
they may by Jaw be exeluded trom all bene-
ft of seid estate, Given under our hands
this 2rd. day of May, 1933, Corinne F.
Martin, 310 New York Ave, N.W.: Thomas
Walker, Sos Fifth St. /N.W. Attest:
Theodore Coxswell, Register of Willa for
the District of Columbia, Clerk of the Pre-
hate Court.
re
suena CoUnr OF Tile DIS
0
PRE Waller ‘Peas Gare
No 44465. Administration. This ie to
Give Notice: ‘Peat te vabsciider, of, the
Birt of Colmha, has obainad, fre
the Probate Court of the Digtist of Cala
Hie, Lateere Tetamaneary om the. tate of
Kerned Moranek inte othe @
eSumbis, deceaved. All partons having
tinimes, againat the dacenaed are hereby
‘rarned “tn azhibit the same, mith the
Touchers therent, Ineally authenticated. to
the subserihber, on o before the 23rd day of
May. A'D. 1834: otherwise they may by law
bercacined from all bet of alt est,
ven under my hand this 2ied
May, 1993. L. Melondes King, 1204 0
StL N.W. Attest: Theedare Conswell, Rex
inter of Willa for the District of Colimbiay
ieirk of the Probate Court.
ALEXAND
ALEXANDRIA NEWS
MRS. ALMA P. MURRAY
Alexandria Correspondent
MRS. KATHLEEN M. LUCKETT
Alexandria Representative
The Parker-Gray School will hold its closing exercises Friday morning, June 9, at 10:30. The Rev. Howard Thurman, professor of religion, Howard University, will deliver the closing address.
The program this year will center around activities within the school. Members of the high school graduating class will discuss "Our School." Annie Douglass will state the "Aims of the School." Sallie Lewis will tell something of the school equipment. Mary Clayton will tell of its program of studies. Laura Luckett, the work of the pa-
GENERAL
903-N-N.W. BRA
$4.50
Ford 4 or 8
FOUR
Chrysler
$875 De Soto
Dodge
Plymouth
OUR LININGS GUARANTEED TO
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DEC. 5483
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Ford 4 or 8
FOUR WHEELS
COMPLETE
including..
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Lining, Labor
and
adjustments
$4.75
Chev.
Chrysler
De Soto
Dodge
Plymouth
Buick
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Studebaker
$9.75
Brakes relined, 4 new brake drums complete, including lining, labor and adjustments.
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GOOD USED
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All Types, Models and Styles as Low as
Remember, every car is Guaranteed! You are not buying a "Pig in the Bag when you buy at Manhattan, one of the oldest and most reliable concern in the city. We are here to take care of you and give you a fair and square deal at all times. MANHATTAN
Auto & Radio Co.
1706-10 7th St. N. W.
SIXTEEN
rent-teacher association; and Vincent Lee will state some of the needs. The highest ranking student of the high school is Theresa Adkins, who will sing a solo. The highest ranking of the elementary classes is Herbert Chissell, who will speak on "Our Class." Special music will be furnished by the chorus and the school. The last free lunch for needy children at the school was served on Friday, May 26. For three months the parents and friends under the leadership of the Federation
AKE SERVICE
DEC. 5483
30-31 $4.75
Chev.
WHEELS
Buick
Nash
Oldsmobile
Studebaker $9.15
HOLD-WET or DRY-HOT or COLD
EK ONLY — SPECIAL
ED CA
Buy N
REDUCED
BARRY-PATE
Washington's Oldest Chevrolet Dealer
CHEVROLET
DEPENDABLE
USED CARS
LOW PRICES—EASY TERMS
1932 Chevrolet Coach.....$375
1931 Chevrolet Coupe.....275
1931 Chevrolet Sedan.....265
1931 Ford Sport Coupe.....235
1931 Chevrolet Sport Rdstr.....275
1930 Olds Coach.....235
1930 Oakland Coupe.....250
1930 Marquette Sedan.....195
1930 Chevrolet Coach.....195
1930 Shevrolet Sport Rdstr.....165
1929 Nash Coupe.....165
1929 Buick 5-Pass. Coupe.....277
75 OTHERS, $35 UP
2525 Sherman Ave.
1360 Park Road, N.W.
Quality Cars That regularly would be priced much higher
'32 Ford V-8. Std. Coupe. $399
'32 Ford Sport Coupe. $349
'31 Ford De Luxe Rdst. $229
'31 Ford Tudor. $229
'30 Ford Sport Coupe. $199
'30 Ford Tudor Sedan. $199
'30 Ford Tudor Coupe. $199
Chevrolet Coach. $239
'29 Ford Std. Coupe. $109
Chrysler Coach. $99
'29 Ford Panel Delivery. $150
'30 Ford 1/2 Ton Truck. $269
Flat body, closed cab, dual wheels
28 Dodge-Graham Truck...$99
EASY TERMS—BIG TRADES
STEUART MOTORS
6th and New York Ave.
Open Evenings and Sundays
11 SMASHING
VALUES FOR THE
WEEK-END
'93 ROCKNE COUPE—Company
official car. Never sold. New
car guarantee. Cost $787.50 $593
'92 PONTIAC SEDAN—Absolute-
124 N. West St.
Phone: Alex. 317-W.
821 Queen St.
Phone: Alex. 666
of Women's Clubs and the Parker-Gray parent-teacher association, have prepared and served at the school hot lunch for fifty-five to sixty punks daily.
Mrs. Margaret Evans, who is president of both of the above organizations, is given great credit not only for what these organizations have done, but for the untiring service she has given personally in seeing that every needy child brought to her attention was fed and clothed.
Principal Wesley D. Elam spent the week-end and the Memorial Day at Hampton Institute, where he attended the bi-annual session of the Hampton Alumni Association and the commencement exercises.
The Lookout Club has received clothing during the past week from the following: Mrs. Connie Mason, Mrs. Georgianna Byrd, and Miss Anna Townes.
Garnet C. Wilkerson, first assistant superintendent of the Washington schools, will deliver the address to the first graduating class at the Hoffman Junior High School Friday, June 9, at 8:15 p.m. The entertainment given at the Elks' home last week by the educational committee for the educational fund was quite a success. Rosier Thompson is chairman of this committee. Albert Albright, who has been employed as an electrician for the Virginia "Public Service Company for several years," was electrocuted by a live wire in Centerville, Va. Monday afternoon. Mr. Albright was a member of the Alexandria Lodge of Elks, his former home was in North Carolina, but he has lived in Alexandria since he was employed by the electric company
The Rose of Charon Club met with Miss Helen Heyes last week. The next meeting will be with Miss Ruth Gilliam, of South Columbus Street. The Jolly Jester Social Club met with Miss Esther Nelson last week. The next meeting will be held at the home of Miss Ruth Lindsey, of 221 South West Street.
Order of Eastern Star
The Esther Chapter will hold its Star Day and memorial services at
'OWN YOUR OWN CAB'
1932 Chevrolet
Sedans
$50 Down
Liberal Terms See Mr. Kahn 610 H St., N.E.
SEE
TAYLOR
Motor Co.
FIRST
Better Used Cars
—ALWAYS—
CHEVROLETS
'29 Sedan (Good car).....$149
'30 Coaches.....225
'30 Sedan (Gen. con. O.K.)...245
'31 Coaches (2).....319
'32 Coaches (2) Beauties.....419
'32 Special Sedan (New
Tires and Battery).....459
OTHERS
'28 Olds De Luxe Sedan...$195
'29 Pontiac Coupe and
Cabriolet...225
'30 Chrysler Coupe...225
'30 De Soto Sports Rdstr...235
'31 Ford Sport Coupe
(New Tires)...245
'31 Ford Victoria Coupe
(De Luxe)...295
'30 Marquette Sedan...295
60 OTHERS—$45 UP
Whippet, La Salle, Lincoln,
Kissel, Buicks, Oakland, Peerless
Nash and-Studebaker
Taylor Motor Co.
Authorized Chevrolet Dealers
1835—14th at T—1901
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1933
Alfred Street Baptist Church, Sunday, June 4, at 7 p.m. The Rev. A. W. Adkins will preach the memorial sermon. Music will be furnished by the junior choir of the church, directed by Mrs. Mattie Adkins.
Mrs. C. N. Nelson, Sr., of South West Street and Mrs. J. B. Hyman of Princess Street, were among the guests at the mother and daughter exercises of the Armstrong High School in Washington, D.C., last week
Jennie Dean Club, sponsored by Mrs. Mary G. Taylor, was observed at Mt. Olive Church last Sunday. The participants were Mrs. Mary V. Brown, who told of the purpose of the club; Mrs. Edna B. Howard, president, giving the principal address; H. W. Ball, response; Miss Natalie Moorman, address; Mrs. Herna Klinger, solo; quintet by Mrs. Belamy and company; the Reverends Messrs. Green and Hunter, remarks; music by Macedonia Church choir, Mrs. Grace Watts
The closing exercises of the Spring Bank School were held at the Alfred Street Baptist Church last Monday night. The confidence and self control exhibited by the children indicated that their teacher, Mrs. Mattie Adkins, had spared no effort in training them for the occasion. The program was instructive and interesting from beginning to end. The graduates were Emmett Quander, Gladys Quander, and Lillian Coleman.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Skinner, their daughter, Miss B. V. Skinner; Dr. W. H. Skinner, Benny Mason, and the Rev. T. N. Austin motored to Bristol, Va., to attend the funeral of Mr. Skinner's sister, Mrs. Amanda Shears, who died in New York, Friday, May 26.
Mrs. Rebecca Gaddis and Mrs. Julia Tyler spent Memorial Day in Leesburg, Va.
Mrs. Bell Coleman, of Orange, N.J., and Mr. and Mrs. James Reese, of New York, who motored to Bristol, Va., to attend the funeral of Mrs. Amanda Shears, sister of Mrs. Coleman, paid a short visit to Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Skinner, of St. Asaph Street.
Among the Sick
Gilson Spence, of Middleburg, Va., formerly of this city, who went to the Alexandria Hospital last week for an operation, is convalescing.
Mrs. Anna Gains, of Commerce street, is sick. Mrs. Hattie Green, who has been in the Alexandria Hospital for treatment, has returned home a little improved.
Mrs. Addie Buckner, of Cameron Street, is confined to her home by illness. Mrs. Emma Simms continues ill at her home on South Royal Street. Mrs. Jennie Williams, of South Columbus Street, is better. Mrs. Alice Cash, of South Columbus Street, continues to improve. Carl Young, the little two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Young, of South Alfred Street, is able to be out again.
The program at the Alfred Street Baptist Church last Sunday night, sponsored by Mrs. Esther Neal and Mrs. Ruth Lyles was greatly enjoyed by all present. Both local and out-of-town talent rendered numbers.
Bethel Presbyterian Church
There will be a new rally at the Bethel Presbyterian Church, corner Wythe and Patrick Streets, Sunday, June 4, at 8 o'clock. The Rev. Mr. Garriet, the blind preacher, will preach at this rally. There will also be several vocal selections rendered.
Roberts Chapel M.E.
Sunday morning, the pastor, the Rev. T. N. Austin, will deliver a short communion address, after which will be the administration of Holy Communion.
The Epworth League will present a pageant and dramatization at 8 o'clock. Mrs. B. T. Austin is local president. Howard Barrett is district president.
Zion Baptist
Men's Day was observed at Zion Baptist Church all day Sunday. Attorney J. Byron Hopkins, Jr. Attorney J. Byron Hopkins and Samuel Tucker Jr. were speakers.
DEATHS
Mrs. Kate Stewart, the wife of John T. Stewart died at her home on 914 Pendleton St., Tuesday. Funeral services were held at the Third Baptist Church, of which she was a member, Sunday, the Rev. S. B. Ross officiating, assisted by several visiting ministers.
Mrs. Stewart is survived by her husband and a daughter, Mrs. Katie S. Hicks; two sisters, Mrs. Sarah Jackson and Mrs. Jannie Homes, of Boston, Mass., four nieces, Mrs. Estel Crost and Mrs. Irene McCorkle, of Boston, Mrs. Sarah King, of Alexandria, and Miss Mary Homes, of Lewes, Delaware, also one nephew, Albert E. Homes, of Detroit.
Among those in attendance at the funeral were Percy Palmer, Sr., of Philadelphia; William Cole of Brooklyn, N.Y. and Mrs. Beatrice Garland, of Jersey City.
Arlington News
THE ARLINGTON BUREAU
BenEdw. Walker, Clarendon 821
Charles R. Lee, East Arlington, Va.
At the morning service of St. John Baptist Church there was preaching by the Rev. G. Z. Brown, of Tenth Street Baptist Church, Northeast. His text was "Whom do men say I am?" Subject, "A Challenging Christ," in which he brought out a new interpretation of religion. Mrs. Jennie Boone, of Mt. Zion Church, Arlington, and Mrs. Anna Hawkins, of Mt. Zion Church, Northeast, were the visitors.
Communion was at 4 o'clock. A collection was taken for Manassas Industrial Training School. Mrs. Sadie Yarborough, wife of Deacon Yarborough, attended church Sunday after being ill for a long time.
'PENROSE—Charles Drew, of McGill University, Toronto, Canada, has arrived home for the summer after being awarded the medical prize of $500.
'The Reporters' Union, composed of Tribune representatives, from the various churches in the county, will give a musical and literary program at St. John's Church, on Sunday, June 18, at 8 p.m.
'The second-anniversary of the
The second anniversary of the
IT'S HERE
ON SALE FRIDAY, JUNE 2nd
A CHALLENGE TO
ALL GASOLINES!
Essolene
Only the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey
dares challenge with a new motor fuel that
Guarantees
SMOOTHER PERFORMANCE
IN ANNOUNCING ESSOLENE, on sale June 2nd, the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey issues this challenge and makes this guarantee of smoother performance with a full understanding of the importance of such a statement by this company The public is accustomed to fantastic and exaggerated claims in gasoline advertising. It has heard of so many "Super" gasolines—seen so many words piled upon words about "anti-knock" properties, "mileage," "quick-starting," etc., that all such descriptions have, quite properly, come to mean nothing As leader of the industry the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey recognizes a double responsibility to the public First, the responsibility of more than half a century's standing of pioneering in improvements and new developments, at however great expense Second, that of putting out over its name no product until that product has proved its worth, and the validity of every statement made about it Such is the position we take about Essolene. We stand
Jennie Dean Club, sponsored by Mrs. Mary G. Taylor, was observed at Mt. Olive Church last Sunday. The participants were Mrs. Mary V. Brown, who told of the purpose of the club; Mrs. Edna B. Howard, president, giving the principal address; H. W. Ball, response; Miss Natalie Moorman, address; Mrs. Herma Klinger, solo; quintet by Mrs. Belamy and company; the Reverends Messrs. Green and Hunter, remarks; music by Macedonia Church choir. Mrs. Grace Watts was mistress of ceremonies.
ROSSLYN.—"Thine Was the Kingdom" was the subject of the pastor of First Baptist Church. A representative of the C.E.A.'S Stores of New York City was present.
The Rev. Mr. Mattingly officiated in the place of the Rev. Augustus Lewis at the evening service. His theme was "God, the Provider," followed with a solo entitled "There is Joy in Heaven," by Mrs. Lewis. At night the Rev. Jesse Anderson was in charge. His theme was "Christ Encouraging His Church."
***
EAST ARLINGTON—The pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist Church preached on the subject, "Prayers What're Answered." There was one baptism. At night the Rev. G. Z. Brown preached.
Hubby—I see a judge has ruled that a woman should spend no more on clothes than her rent.
Wifey—Well, then, we shall
have to pay a bigger rent.
STANDARD OIL CO INTRODUCES NEW GASOLINE
The introduction of the new motor fuel Essolene to the public at Esso Stations on June 2 is one of the major steps in a new marketing program which is involving the expenditure of several million dollars and giving employment to many workers, according to J. Z. Walker, local manager of the business of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. The program involves the identification of some 30,000 outlets as Esso Stations, located from Maine through Louisiana, and includes a large advertising expenditure, much of which will go to newspapers.
Concerning Essolene, Mr. Walker says, "I naturally am enthusiastic about all of our products, but in Essolene I am positive we have a highly unusual motor fuel. The tests indicate that it is the best regular-priced fuel on the market. The anti-knock quality is higher than in any regular gasoline and, among other things, Essolene ac-
IT'S HERE
Standard Oil Company of New Jersey issues this guarantee of smoother full understanding of the statement by this company customized to fantastic and ex-gasoline advertising. It has "Super" gasolines—seen so on words about "anti-knock"ge," "quick-starting," etc., options have, quite properly, being As leader of the industry company of New Jersey recognisibility to the public First, of more than half a century's long in improvements and new however great expense Sec-out over its name no product has proved its worth, and theement made about it Such like about Essolene. We stand
ON S
A C
ALL
d Oil Company
with a new
guarantee
FOR PERF
GULAR GASOLINE
ne 2nd, the
issues this
of smoother
ing of the
this company
atic and ex-
sizing. It has
seen so
anti-knock"
ing," etc.,
the properly,
the industry
serey recog-
public • First,
a century's
squarely b
ment • Au
ly in the la
not kept p
ent motor
mind. The
basically s
few except
Try]Essole
it, in any
line you h
itself. You
Colored
AT REGULAR GASOLINE PRICE
"STANDARD"
Esso
STATIONS
P
TION
N.W.
PHILIP A.
The Station of
5th & R S
Phone, NO
PHILIP A. TOLS
Station of Personal Sec
5th & R STS., N.W.
Phone, NORTH 9654
tually reduces gummy deposits in an old engine.
A red-and-white color scheme will distinguish the Esso Stations. All the pumps are being re-painted to conform to this plan, and new signs are being erected. All of this work gives employment to many men and, in the opinion of Mr. Walker, is an indication of his company's attitude toward the future.
Esso and Essolube, as well as Essolene, will be available at all of the Esso Stations.
Peg—I'm going to do my bit,
dad. I'm getting a dressmaker to
teach me how to cut out frocks.
Dad—I don't want you to go that
far. But I think you might cut
out cigarettes and $10 hats.
—Sydney Bulletin.
Arthur—Somebody told me today
that you are handsome.
Alice—When was that?
Arthur—Today.
Alice—No, I mean when were
you handsome.
Daughter—Did Mr. Sapp call on
you today, frer her?
Her Dad—Yes, dear.
Daughter—Well, what followed?
Her Dad—Two doctors and an
ambulance.
ON SALE FRIDAY
A CHALLENGE
ALL GASOLINE
Company of New
a new motor for
antees
ERFORMA
ASOLINE PRICE
squarely behind it as a great
ment • Automobile engines h
ly in the last few years. Gasoline
not kept pace. Essolene was d
ent motor problems and futu
mind. The result is a fuel in a
basically superior to all regu
few exceptions, all premium
Try!Essolene. Get it at any Ess
it, in any car, with the perfor
line you have ever used. Ess
itself. You can supply the sup
Colored Orange to Prev
squarely behind it as a great motor fuel improvement Automobile engines have improved rapidly in the last few years. Gasoline improvement has not kept pace. Essolene was developed with present motor problems and future motor trends in mind. The result is a fuel in advance of the times, basically superior to all regular priced and, with few exceptions, all premium priced gasolines Try]Essolene. Get it at any Esso Station. Compare it, in any car, with the performance of any gasoline you have ever used. Essolene will speak for itself. You can supply the superlatives. Colored Orange to Prevent Substitution
"STANDARD"
Esso
STATIONS
A. TOLSON
Personal Service
STS., N.W.
ORTH 9654
BELT
11th
PH
8 A.M. U
TODAY
Guaranteed
Smoother
Performance
'BACHARACHS VICTORS
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — Night baseball was ushered in Thursday night when the Bacharach Giants defeated Eddie Gottlieb's Phasin in an arch light battle on the Giants' home field at Forty-eighth and Spruce Streets, before a large crowd, 11 to 8.
Magistrate Edward W. Henry helped celebrate the occasion by throwing out the first ball which cut the plate for a 'strike.
Scottsboro Stamp
SAVE THE
SCOTTSBORO
BOYS
119.9
ONE CENT
Reproduction of the Scottsboro penny stamp, issued by the International Labor Defense, in sheets of 1.0, at a penny each, to raise money for the Scottsboro appeal.
Y, JUNE 2nd
NGE TO
OLINES!
New Jersey
fuel that
ANCE
motor fuel improve-
have improved rapid-
ine improvement has
developed with pres-
ure motor trends in
advance of the times,
clar priced and, with
priced gasolines •
also Station. Compare
performance of any gaso-
solene will speak for
superlatives.
event Substitution
Easolene, Easo, and Easolube-the 5-Star Motor Oil, are sold at Easo Stations and Dealers owned, operated or supplied by the following companies: the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, the Standard Oil Company of Pennsylvania, the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana, and the Colonial Beacon Oil Company, Incorporated.
JOHN S. REECE
SERVICE STATION
" St. bet. 7th & 8th Sts.
Cross From "O" Street Market
Phone, NORTH 10195
TRAN BARKER
h & V STS., N.W.