Washington Tribune

Thursday, July 20, 1933

Washington, D.C.

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MD. JURY IGNORES LYNCH ATTEMPT The Most News Cleanest News Latest News DOMAIR Wins Elk Scholarship WOMA Wins Elk Scholar BROADWAY STUDIO of this city who won the Elks' regional oratorical Baltimore last Sunday, in competition with repres delphia, Annapolis and Richmond, Va. Winners contests are awarded scholarships worth $1,000 o to compete in the national contest at the grand lo napolis next month. Miss Luckett is a niece of F. Morris Murray Murray, business manager and treasurer, respect and a granddaughter of F. H. M. Murray, manag Former Sweetie of Sla Says White Girl Was Became More Inattuated When She Lea Fletcher Was Colored and Had Q Go With Member of His Own but the Elks' regional oratorical day, in competition with repressors and Richmond, Va. Winners and scholarships worth $1,000 of national contest at the grand lo- s is a niece of F. Morris Murray, manager and treasurer, respecti- er of F. H. M. Murray, manag- er of Sla- white Girl Was Miatuated When She Lea- Was Colored and Had Q With Member of His Own of this city who won the Elks' regional oratorical contest conducted in Baltimore last Sunday, in competition with representatives from Philadelphia, Annapolis and Richmond, Va. Winners of the six regional contests are awarded scholarships worth $1,000 each and are entitled to compete in the national contest at the grand lodge session in Indianapolis next month. Miss Luckett is a niece of F. Morris Murray and of Mrs. Ethel Murray, business manager and treasurer, respectively, of the Tribune, and a granddaughter of F. H. M. Murray, managing editor. Former Sweetie of Slain Youth Says White Girl Was Jealous Became More Infatuated When She Learned that Alfred Fletcher Was Colored and Had Quit Her to Go With Member of His Own Race By GARLAND MACKEY A former sweetheart of Alfred Fletcher told the Tritune this week why the slain youth took up with Frances Catherine Allen, 29-year-old white woman. The ex-sweetie of Fletcher is now married and does not wish her name used in connection with the sensational slaying of the youth by the infatuated white woman who swore she loved Fletcher regardless of his color or race. For convenience, the former sweetheart will be called Mrs. Smith (which is not her name). "Frances became madly in love with him. She learned several months ago that he was colored as all of us told her he was a Negro. She met his mother and friends. The two attended colored parties and went to colored theatres together. "Knowing that he was colored only served to make her more in love with him, as she wrote telling him that she did not care about his color, all she wanted was him for herself and if she could not have him no one else should. White Girl Jealous Was Friend of Dead Youth Mrs. Smith came to see me Friday. She was quite upset as the daily papers sought to make the affair appear as if Fletcher had been orcing his attentions on the white woman when it was exactly the reverse. "At one time, some three years ago, Alfred and I were very good friends," said Mrs. Smith, who although fair, is decidedly colored. "Alfred wanted to marry me, but I wasn't ready. Finally our relations came to and end. That was over three years ago. Then I became engaged to Mr. Smith and we were married. Through With Women "After my wedding Alfred told me that he was through with women and would never take another one seriously. He seemed to be much upset over my marriage. Shortly after that he took up with questionable women. From personal knowledge I know he met Frances on the street. Vol. XIII, No.12 conical oratorical contest conducted in on with representatives from Phila- Va. Winners of the six regional worth $1,000 each and are entitled at the grand lodge session in India- Morris Murray and of Mrs. Ethel surer, respectively, of the Tribune, curray, managing editor. of Slain Youth Girl Was Jealous when She Learned that Alfred and Had Quit Her to of His Own Race "Frances became madly in love with him. She learned several months ago that he was colored as all of us told her he was a Negro. She met his mother and friends. The two attended colored parties and went to colored theatres together. "Knowing that he was colored only served to make her more in love with him, as she wrote telling him that she did not care about his color, all she wanted was him for herself and if she could not have him no one else should. White Girl Jealous "Then came the time when Alfred met another girl, very color (Continued on page 2) Clyde Jones, 25, of 1524 Sixth Street, Northwest, whose mangled body was found early, Friday, on the tracks near the New York Avenue bridge after it had been struck by a Pennsylvania Railroad train, was buried from his late residence, Tuesday afternoon. A Seventh Street shoe repairer's check was the only clue to Jones's identity. His body was found just north of Florida Avenue, Northeast. Both legs had been cut off and the body badly cut and bruised. A Casualty Hospital physician pronounced him dead. The deceased was the son of Karney and Birdie Jones. He also leaves to mourn their loss two brothers, seven sisters, and other relatives. Washington Tribune SAVIOR OF BANK IS ARRESTED FOR FIRING PISTOL SAVIOR OF BANK IS ARRESTED FOR FIRING PISTOL John Waters Charged With Shooting Revolver in His Home John Waters, 3019 Thirteenth Street, Northwest, was arrested Sunday night by policemen of the Tenth Precinct Station following a report by a neighbor that a revolver had been fired in the home of Waters. Mrs. Irene Waters, was also arrested. Both were released after posting bond. On searching the home of the Waterses, police-men found him in bed with an automatic revolver by his side. Two shots had been fired, according to officers who investigated the shooting. Said to be Wealthy Waters is said to be wealthy and lives in one of the most prestigious homes on Thirteenth Street. He gained considerable publicity last year when he deposited $18,000 in cash in the Prudential bank when that institution was suffering a run on it by depositors. The large deposit helped to stem the tide of the run, and resulted in the bank weathering the storm. Armond W. Scott, attorney, was retained by Waters, but the case did not come up in police court Monday morning. The case is still being investigated by police. No one was injured by the bullets, officers said. Faulkner and Massaquoi, Prominent Liberians, Arrested for Sedition MONROVIA, Liberia. - T. J. R. Faulkner, who opposed His Excellency, Edwin Barclay for the presidency of Liberia at the last election, was arrested recently on two indictments from the grand jury. One charge against him was sedition, and it is believed the other was treason. Heavy bond was made and arranged the same day. Also Monolou Massquoi, former consul general to Germany and former postmaster general of Liberia, was arrested at the same time. Ball was also fixed and arranged. Mr. Massquoi is one of the best educated natives on the west coast. He is a product of the Via tribe and was educated in America and Europe. Mr. Faulkner is American born and has been prominent in Liberian politics for several years, opposing the administration of former President King and Barclay the present incumbent. He has made several visits to America.—Ed. Dr. James McIngham Dead in Lexington, Ky. Mrs. Maggie M. Delnigh m Reynolds, of 445 P Street, Northwest, left Tuesday for Lexington, Ky. to attend the funeral of her brother, Dr. James McIngham, a dentist of that place. The funeral took place from St. Paul M.E. Church, Thursday. Dr. McIngham was a graduate of Wilberforce University and the Howard Dental School. He leaves a widow, Mrs. Mary McIngham, a daughter, Miss Mary McIngham; two sisters, Mrs. Maggie D. McIngram Reynolds, of Washington; Mrs. Betty McIngram Brown, of Nicholasville, Kv., and a brother, George McIngham, of Detroit Michigan. Dr. McIngham will be intered in the family cemetery. GA. WOMAN LICENSED TO MARRY D.C. MAN Miss Annie Brinte, 22, of Waynesboro, Ga. was granted a license last week, to marry Willie Walker, 29, of 1815 Kalorama Road, Northwest. WASHINGTON, D.C., THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 Dismissed Government Workers Informed About Re-employment As announced last week, the Washington Tribune and the Negro Industrial League have begun a campaign to get back the jobs of colored government workers. We need the co-operation of every dismissed government worker. Certain definite results have been accomplished, but much remains to be done. Below is information to help you get back your job. MARRIED PERSONS DISMISSED If you are a married person dismissed because your husband or wife is employed in the government service, and if your husband or wife is receiving $2,000 a year or less, then you are eligible to be placed on a preferential list from which all persons to be employed in the government in the future will be taken. It is important that you get placed on this list. Fill in at once the questionnaire printed in this issue of the Tribune and send it to the office of the paper or to the Negro Industrial League, Room Free Tuberculosis Clinic States Summer Hours The free Tuberculosis Clinic conducted by the Health Department at 301 C Street, Northwest, has hours as follows: for white adults, 1 p.m., Monday, Wednesday and Friday; colored adults, 1 p.m., Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday; white and colored adults 7:30 p.m. Thursday evenings; white children, 9:30 a.m. enday; colored children, 9:30 a.m. Friday. DR. HENRY BAILEY VETERAN TEACH. DIES SUDDENLY Armstrong Instructor Was One of First Colored Graduates of Harvard Levin Bailey, 70 over 40 years, a teacher in the local schools, were held Wednesday afternoon from the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Hally Taylor office officiated. Honorary pallbearers were Dr. John Smith, Francis Smith, L. M. Hershaw, G. David Houston, Garnet C. Willinso, C. S. Shippen, Henry Hunt, Clyde M. Duffie, C. Nalle, John Syphax, and M. Dentes, Bellegarde, minister from Haiti. Active pallbearers were Cornelius Ridgelye, Randall Evans, Dr. Schieffelin clayton, Wilder P. Montgomery, Lawrence Shumate and Bruce Hudnell. Suddenly stricken with a heart attack about 8 o'clock Sunday night, Dr. Bailey was found dead in the kitchen of his late residence, 1633 Nineteenth Street, Northwest, by his wife. He had been in apparent good health prior to the time of the fatal attack, having caught at the Dunbar High School summer classes last week. Was Harvard Graduate Dr. Bailey is believed to be the oldest living colored graduate from Harvard University. He was born in Halifax, Va., July 7, 1866, and went to Cambridge, Mass., at the age of seven, where he received all his education. After finishing at the Cambridge High School, he attended Harvard University from which he graduated with honors in ancient languages in 1889. He was admitted to the Harvard Classical Society. He came to Washington and received his M.D. degree from How- (Continued on page two) Dismissed Informed ELKS' ORATORICAL CONTEST WON BY D.C. SCHOOL GIRL Miss Earleen Luckett Will Represent this Region at National Meet BALTIMORE. — Miss Earleen Luckett, a 17-year-old high school student of Washington, D.C., was winner of first place in the Elks' regional oratorical contest held here in Shiloh Baptist Church, last Sunday afternoon. This region covered the states of Pennsylvania, Delaware, Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia and the District of Columbia. Besides Miss Luckett, three other contestants took part—one each from Philadelphia, Annapolis, and Richmond, Va. Philip Cain, Jr., from Philadelphia, was given second place, making him an alternate national contestant. The winner of this contest will receive an Elk scholarship for $1,000 and the right to appear in the national oratorical contest to be held during the sitting of the grand lodge, scheduled to meet in Indianapolis, Ind., in August. The expenses of the contestants are paid by the educational department of the Elks. The winner of the national contest will receive a cash prize of $500; the one making second place, $250; and the third place, $100. There are six regional districts in the United States and a contestant from each of these districts will appear in the national contest. Each of these contestants are scholarship prize winners. Truly Hatchet, the regional director, had charge of the contest. Husband Loses Pistol, Wife Her Watch, Roomer Held While Mrs. Lucy Henson, of 323 South Carolina Avenue, Southeast, was making complaints to officers of the Fourth Precinct about a wrist watch valued at $5 which had been moved from a dresser drawer, last week, it was also reported that her husband had a .32 calibre revolver, valued at $5, taken from the house. Officers took William McKinley Edelin, a roomer at the house, and held him for "investigation" while they probe further into the disappearance of the articles. Killed by White Lover 5 ALFRED FLETCHER, who was fatally shot by his lover, Frances Catherine Allen, white, early Saturday morning while they were in an automobile. The white woman was ordered held for the action of the grand jury by a coroner's jury which investigated the slaying. REV. N. G. HENRY RECOVERS FROM POISONED FOOD Brother of Famous Evangelists Stops Police Search for Strange Woman The Rev. Nathaniel G. Henry, evangelist, who was given a poisoned sandwich last week by a strange woman, has recovered sufficiently to resume his services at the Tenth Street Baptist Church this week. The minister, who is a brother of the famous Henry Brothers, evangelist, was allegedly poisoned when he ate two sandwiches said to have been given him by a woman who called at his lodging rooms, 1835 Vernon Street, Northwest, last Tuesday, and gave him the food. Minister Collapsed After eating the sandwiches, the Rev. Mr. Henry became ill and collapsed. Dr. Levi C. Whiting, who was summoned, announced that the preacher had been poisoned. Contents of his stomach were sent to the District chemist, but an analysis has not been returned. The alleged poisoner disappeared after she had completed her mis- (Continued on page two) Procedure Explained at Mass Meeting; Reinstatement League Active An enthusiastic mass meeting of colored government workers who have been damified or furloughed from their jobs was held at the Murray Casino last Friday evening under the sponsorship of the Washington Tribune and the Negro Industrial League. Workers representing nearly every branch of the service were present at the meeting. John P. Simpson, white, president of the newly formed Civil Service Reinstatement League, an organization formed to get back the jobs of government workers, was the principal speaker. John P. Davis, executive secretary of the Negro Industrial League, presided at the meeting. Among the other speakers was J. W. Chauleston, president of Local No. 20 of the American Fede- (Continued on page 21) This is a sample text. The actual content may vary. A Hometown Paper of, by, and for Washingtonians JUPITER IS INDICTED AND LYNCH MOB GOES FREE JUPITER IS INDICTED AND LYNCH MOB GOES FREE Charles County Jurymen Refuse to Name Rioters LA PLATA, Md.—The Charles County grand jury, whithe was convened in special session here Monday to consider the case of Page Jupiter, 42-year-old farm hand, who is alleged to have slain Mrs. Evelyn Reifschneider, a white woman, with an axe on July 9, brought in an indictment of first degree murder. Jupiter is said to have confessed murdering the woman. In his charge to the jury Judge W. Mitchell Digges pointed out that the man might be indicted for a statutory offense as well as for murder Referring to the attempted lynching, Judge Digges charged the jurors to "thoroughly investigate" that affair and return indictments if sufficient evidence were produced. He declared the members of the mob who stormed the jail in search of Jupiter were guilty of unlawful assemblage. In this matter the jury failed to issue any indictments. Jupiter in Baltimore As the jury met, Jupiter was in jail in Baltimore, whence he was taken last week for safekeeping. It will not be necessary for him to be returned here during the session of the grand jury. He will probably be brought here under heavy guard during the July term of court to be arraigned. If he does not have a lawyer by that time defense counsel will be assigned by the court, Jupiter will then be tried in November. The jury summoned here for special session Monday served during the May term of Circuit Court. The next regular session of the grand jury is not scheduled until November. Bernard Ades, attorney for the International Labor Defense in Baltimore, has undertaken to obtain for a newspaper man of that city the right to visit and interview Jupiter in the Baltimore jail. He has obtained from Judge Charles F. Stein, of the Baltimore City court, a writ of habeas corpus to that end, and a hearing will be held on the writ Friday morning at 9 o'clock. Asks Tribune Aid in Locating Missing Woman Mrs. Puritan M. Jones, of Tappahannan, Va, asked the Tribune early this week to aid her in the locating of Lizzie Kennedy who has been missing from that little town for four years. The Kennedy woman's local address was said to have been 2102 Seventh Street, Northwest, but investigation proved she doesn't live there any more. Mrs. Jones states that the woman left her home in Tappanhock four years ago without taking valuable furniture. Pest efforts to locate her have been futile. Anyone able to furnish any information concerning the whereabouts of the woman will kindly call or write the Tribune. She can be identified by a picture now in possession of the Tribune. Laborer on Old Census Building Falls 30 Feet Edward Floyd, 38, of G Place, Northeast, employed by a wrecking company in tearing down the old census building fell 30 feet down a stairway, early Wednesday morning. Floyd was removed to Cazualty Hospital in a private auto and treated by Dr. Marlin for possible fracture of the skull and fracture of both wrists. His people were notified of the accident through the Ninth Precinct. Price 7 cents Copy WHITE GIRL LOVED DEAD YOUTH WHITE GIRL LOVED DEAD YOUTH Says She Planned Suicide and Fletcher Died in Struggle for Pistol VICTIM TRIED TO QUIT GIRL, WITNESSES SAY Three attorneys and a coroner's jury pried into the semi-secret inter-racial love affair of Frances Catherine Allen, 29, white, of 1229 Twelfth Street, Northwest, who was arrested when police found her sitting in a damp shade hat dying lover, Alfred Fletcher, 24, of 1607 T Street, Northwest, at the inquest, Monday, while scores of morbid colored and white spectators, unable to gain entrance to the morgue, milled around the little frame structure. Miss Allen testified that she had planned to kill herself on the night of the tragedy, Friday, and that Fletcher was fatally shot as they struggled in an auto over the revolver which she carried. Before the coroner's jury held the woman for the action of the grand jury, it heard testimony from three other witnesses to the effect that Fletcher had been seeking to avoid the white woman, but she kept seeking his company. According to testimony, Miss Allen met Fletcher about a year ago on Massachusetts Avenue, Northwest, having been introduced to him by a white girl friend shortly after her arrival from Binghamton, N.Y., her native home. They became fast friends, Fletcher visiting her almost nightly. Arrest Causes Query Their love affair ran along smoothly, according to the woman's statement and her testimony, until May 2), when Fletcher was booked on a minor charge at the Second Precinct. When she went to arrange a lateral for Alfred and his brother, William, also booked, Patrolman Creele asked whether she was colored. He is said to have told her that the two men had colored blood. Miss Allen discounted the statement of the officer, claiming to him that the two men were her cousins and were from Providence, R.I. Race Was Known Positive denial that Miss Allen did n't know Fletcher was colored was made by: William Fletcher, a half brother; John Dav, an uncle, of 1332 Tenth Street, Northwest; Elizabeth Ball, a cousin, of 1443 T Street, Northwest, and Carrie Price, a friend, of 5504 Foote Street, Northeast. Both Miss Price and Miss Ball declared that upon one occasion the white woman came to the home of the latter on July 4, in search of Fletcher and remarked during conversation. "If he would marry me that would be all I want. If he doesn't marry me, something serious will happen and there'll be no one left to tell the tale." Miss Price, about whose race there is no question, told the coroner's jury that she visited the white woman during a period of illness, upon request of Fletcher. "She asked me if Alfred was colored," Miss Price stated, "I told her if she didn't believe me, to go and see his mother." Miss Allen did go to see his mother but she wasn't in at the time. Color me Bar . Miss Ball testified she was lying down in a middle room when the white woman came to her house on July 4. in search of her lover, and talked with Miss Ball. (Continued on page 2) WW ~—< wy oe 2 : Hy @ l Howard University Gets Heat, Light and Power Plar Sat occ O00 OO Public Works Administration ———— eS eee "RETURN 1 WORK NINE SUFFERIN Gives School Nearly a Million Pee ——_ ee sesh Siete KNIFE WOUN A ET Oat ee FFF ESE OF AIST Wil alke Provide New Chemistry Balding: eee TWO The Public Works Administra- tion, which is to administer the huge sum allotted under the Na- tional Recovery Act for public buildings and projects, under the direction—of Federal “Emergency Administrator, Harold L. Hicks, secretary of the Interior, made its first allotment for construction pro- jects for the District of Columbia, Friday. The total sum allotted for the District of Columbia in this first announcement is $2,545,211. The largest sums allowed are to How- ard University, $948,811, for recon- ditioning and construction. . The items to be covered by tite $948,811 for. Howard University provide for heat, light, and power plant, $469,00; chemistry. building, $390,000; reconditioning buildings, SOR.811. Freedmen’s- Hospital. is allotted RS Coimptaining that. her husband was hot, propeily supporting “her and their’ ‘two-and-one-half-year old child, Mrs, Margaret Haywood, 1761 (Willard Street, . Northwest, filed a petition for a limited: di- vorce “from David: Haywovod;, 8:5 U_ Street, Northwest, an employe of ‘the State Department, jn the District Supreme Court, last week. The petition avers that the two were married in Marlboro Mé., on February 4, 1951, and lived together until June 23° 1933, when Haywood is alleged to have deserted his wife, A child, Geral- dine Kathryn Haywood, born of the tinion, isgow in the’ custody of the mother, “Mrs, Haysvood declared that hex husband was. employed by the State Depgriment and receiyed $81 per. month his services. She claims that he Ras only contributed $8 to the support. of herself and child since.his desertion, After setting out that she has beet a faighful wie, and ie willing to resume living with her hisband, Mra, Haywood requesis.fhe cour to give het a divorce from the bed and board of her husband, also to gant her reasonable permanent alimony. ‘ 1 Wesley. Pastor to Preach Initial’ Sermon, Sunday Having recently effected the pur- hase of the John’ Wesley AML ireh, Fifth Street and Virginia Avenue, Southeast, the Rev. 1. P Herring, former. ‘pastor of the A.M. Chiitch, Garfield, D.C, ill conduct his initial. seevices! in the new building, Sunday, The Rev, Mr. Herring; who js well known for his. pulpit oratory and his singing ability, will-preach at 11 am, on “The Hand Writing on the Wall.” At ® pany the pas tor's, subject ip “Daniel in the Lion's Den.” ‘Sunday. school will be held at 9:30 am. "The chureh, which is located in what is better known as the -Old Masonic Building, is appraised at @ value-of ‘more than $25,000. I contains three stories, a lane base. ment, and a spacious lawn sue. rounds it. } Sg Two Youth Among Five ; Persons Hurt in Falls ‘Two: youths and three adults te: ceived injuries of various parts of the body. in falls, Monday. Lena Smith, 14) of 1114 Shep- herd Court, Northwest, one of the more seriously injured, was de: tained at Freedmen’s Hospital, suffering with a dislocation of.an ankle, joint after having fallen on Ninth, Street, Northwest) 9" Moje Perry, 31, of 1739) Mativh Courts: Northwest, bruised lita ments. in. the ‘region of the -ribe possibly fracturing one of the bones. Emma Henderson, 28, of 65% Mades Cont, Northwest, receiver a ctit of the upper lin ina fall-a her home. i Three-year-old Peggy Andean of 1100 Sixteenth Street, Narth west, rear, received a slight lacera tion of the scalp, ‘Thelma’ Vales, 24, of 432 Frank Tin Street, Northwest, sprained, at ankle ina fall at her home... Bee INFANT FOUND IN SACK >The homicide squad inijated au investigation to the dedth of a gue baby found wrapped in ck, last week, in a woods north @f the Union Terminal Market, Fifth and Florida Avenue, North- eatt, by: Jokn Baynes, of the 1500 block ,of Seventh. Street, North- west. “A piéce of cloth was tightly bound ‘around the infant's neck. Detectives wish to axcertain the wause of the death and uncover any flues “that might “lead “to the ddentity of the parents, $85,000, of which $58,000 will be used for the erection of an internes’ residence, and the balance for re- conditioning and remodeling the buildings, ~ The items for the construction projegts: at Howard University ‘were appropriated by, the Federal ‘Congress, but’ were held under President Roosevelt’s order stop= ping all Government construction except that under contract, and im- pounding all unexpended balances. The allocations now made permit Howard University to go forward with the heating plant so greatly needed, and, the’ chemistry build- ing, which Will be a modern struc- ture full¥ equipped to afford stu- dents of the university every op- portunity for pursuing thir courses in chemistry under Vgreatly im- proved conditions. —$—$_ sagt f | Federation of Parent Teacher Associations. . Organizes , | Under the, leadershipsof its new president, the Rev. J. 0, Pair, the ‘Federation of Parent-Teacher As- sociations has just completed its organization for the forthcoming school term. ‘The following have been appointed to serve on the Executive Committee: “ ‘Atty. W, C. Hueston, commis- sioner of education of ‘the Elks; J, A. Payne, principal of the John F, Cook School; Atty, G. A, Park- er, ex-president of the Federation, and president of the Howard Alumni Association; .R. N. Mat- tingly, “prinvipal vf Cardozo High School; L, R. Ruskéll/hiémber of ‘the fac- ulty Dunbar High School; H, B. Jones, principal of Ambush-Small- wood School; B, T. Montgomery, corresponding secretary, Federa- tion of Ciyie Associations; J, W. Baddy, editor of Parent-Teacher Association Journal; D. E. Wells; Miss E. A. Lyons, principal of Morgan’ “Demonstration School; Mrs, E. B. King, member of fac- ulty’Garnet-Patterson Junior High School; Miss S. R. Quander, mem- ber of faculty. Garnet-Pattersor Junior High School; Mrs. R Chater Mrs, 8. P. Cart, Mis G. H. Rhodes, Miss J.M. Moseby, ‘Miss B, B. Snowden, and Miss E.B. Robinson, _ The headquarters.of the associ- ation will be at the Cardozo Busi- rest High School and all. of its meetings and activities will be held there, ‘The course of study for the train- ‘ing of group leaders in adult edu- eution, which Was conducted. s¢ successfully last year under the leadership of Miss E. A, Lyons o the College Alumnae Club, will b ‘continued the next school term; al so the lecture course in child train. ing, which was instituted last yea by Mrs. E. B. King, of the Colleg Alumnae Club.«, Mrs--Jda_ 8. © Taylor, juvenile court Worker of, the Téderation, i now attending the summer. insti tute! for “social and Fegreations Yorkers at the Atlanta School fo Social Workers, Atlanta, Ga. ‘The new president, the Rey. J. D Pair, has served for many years a pastor of the Mount Zion’ Baptis Chureh of Warrenton, Va., and fo) nine years has been secretary o the Northern Virginia Union Bap tist Sunday School Convention, H has also been a Wader in civic worl for many years, having served fo ‘three years as’ president of th Dunbar High School Parent-Teach er Association, as well as takin, an active part in the work of th Federation of Parent-Teacher As moRtatons. Liberian Liabilities ght) tra a eae aE EE er anee, Reports that the United States is embarking on another imperial- istic adventure incDiberia are rath- er surprising just when there is so much talk about;American nation- alism withdrawing from foreign entanglements,” % The League of Nations covimis- Sion vand “an” American. general meeting in'London have féached a Aecret, agreement » whereby. an American ix to he the chief adviser for Liberia. according to. yeliable reports, Tuat what. Washington ‘expects to stain from getting: deep- rer. into the Liferian: meas is: not clear? But it is elear that, i the grew Powers idsist upon. putting a for- vign boss over that allegedly free land, a representative should be chosen from some country whieh has no imperialistic ambitions in the Dark Continent. Because of the Firestone con- cession and loan, America has the reputation of dominating Liberive If now,-We insist upon an Aueri- can a¥ chief advisér to that Gov- cinmént. il will be difficnlt. te eon. yiner the world that we have no selfish interests to! serve: The Liberian: naturally, do not want an American, They are will- ing to aceapt a Scandinavian, Out Government —shonld~ be only “tas glad to werée to kuch a proposal and thus be relieved of further re: sponsibility iu Liberia) i : : Se ae ose : oS “4 o> ee SOE E - ee i 7 Ae get ; ia 15 PEM hp oe I gece Te one Se ee hey Pe Cat tee eee + ek ok. ae), ak Nag s peat) 4 <2 > ~ ate = Pete Arh a Oe as Pee Tg or ee pe ar dP err ee Fr yea Gas gee ft PT Pre Aa Pee Gg i4aa ee Pe 4 a / a COO Bh ge ag J Ba Fie ee ‘ging Se wiih Ae aes ee i : ae aris ok eG beg tei 2 ae ae ae ‘Architect's drawing of the proposed $7,500,000 housing project for] Ulander J. Smith, who is executive secretary of the corporation, : Negroes, covering 54 acres in the city of Toledo, Ohio, under the ins | by John D, Rhoades, a white attorney and church worker who er of the Toledo Housing Corporation which was promoted by Attorney ! president. Crawford’s Counsel Preparing Appeal to U.S. Supreme Court re, a egaey : Famous Case Cannot be Heard Before. October; Extradition Halted by. Court Order; Vice - Dean Houston Assisting in Boston = BOSTON, Mass.—Counsel — for, “edit District “dudge, Lowel George Crawford, being held here] took.that view and: ordered his re- for extradition to Virginia for trial! Jeade, but, was reversed by the Ap- on a charge of ‘murder, are com: pelipte Court which held Crawford pleting a petition to be. filed oh est would be protected. by ap- the U. S, Supreme Court, 4 abd he be denied. the trial Counsel includes Chatles Het We-wna/entitled to. under ‘the Fed. Houston, vice-dean of the ‘Howard: eral'Constitution. ae University, law school, ‘Washiig-|" Counsel’ for Crawford are’ mak. ton, D.C., and Edward P. Lovett, | ing inquiry preparatory to filing of the same city, Mr. Houston was | petition asking the Supreme Cour! here this week assisting in prepat-| to review the case, ing the petition, On ‘Monday of this week th: The petition will ask a feview of | U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal: the ruling of the First Cire it] granted-a stay of extradition pro Court of Appeals which héld Craw<) ceedings, pending the appeal to th ford for’ éxtradition after the Fed-| J. $, Bepreine Court, The cas eral District Court fori Massachu-| can not comejup before ber ‘setts had ‘released him, op habeas | ince the Supe prt Tims) ad: ‘corpus proceedings. 0% | journed for the sumingr, —* Extradition was foughts6n the}” qhe stay eame in. the nick 0 ground that Crawford would be de-| s/o eo tne removal of Chawfor nied a fair trial in Virginia be- | UMe. for ' calle Negroes would noe peyal-|to “Virginia” had been set for. thi er to serve on the aM. | day the stay was granted. DR. HENRY BAILEY: (Continued trom page -t¥i Se ‘ —— Peg ard University in 1896. OAg teaching at Tuskegee Instity a brief period, he returned sto” city as a teacher in 1890, “snr For a while he served as xuper- yising principal in the tenth school devision but since 1908 he has taught Latin, Greek, Germaa, French and Spanish in the lotat high schools. His pedagogical career started at the Old M Street High and at the time of his death, he was ins siructor in modern languages. at Armstrong High School. He was ‘a member of the” Washington ‘School Club and the Crispus At- tucks Relief Association. After the death of his first wife, Ida Bailey, he married Josephine Clarke in 1909, Besides his widow, she is survived by two. children, son, Henri I. Bailey, a graduate of Hamilton College, N.Y., who is now studying for his M.A. degree in chemistry at Howard, and a daughter, J. Clarke Bailey, who re- ceived her M.A, degree from How- ard in June, sae eqns FORMER SWEETIE (Continued from page 1) ed, and started going with her. Frances heard of this and became extremely jealous, Alfred. tried all he knew how to avoid Frances, but she followed him at every op- portunity, She aske” his friends about his relations with the new girl and swore she would die rath- er than give him up, “Alfred knew who Frances was and when he tired of her she re- fused to let him go. She made life miserable for-him and even sought his brother out jn an attempt to win him back. Daily Papers wrong “My only interest in the matter is to see that the truth is known and to let people know that it was Alfred who wax teying to avoid the white woman and not what Ahe while papers tried to make people believe, that Meatices be: came despondent when she learned that Alfred was colored. “Iam a friend of his mother and family and feet sorry for them. The white-papers tried te build Up # case for the white gir! by Allempling to have people ‘te lieve (hat Frances did not knows Alfred was colored. T's all a lig She knew 11 ax well ag 1 did.” 3 BURNED RY MATCHES A safety box of cue which ee i the hand of Huley Mavs, 26, of 1860 Claydgle Plaeg, North- West, Monday, caused tha xounse man’ to suifer first’ digrae buen ‘of the left hand. * THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 Proposed Apartments for Colored at Toledo, Ohio, nether District . Judge. Lowell took that view and ordered his. re- lease, but was revanned by the Ap: iellpte Court which held Crawrord’ as would be protected: by ap- ‘should he be denied the tria He wasentitled to under the Fed eval’ Constitution. a “Counsel for Crawford ate’ mak. ing inquiry preparatory to filing « petition asking the Supreme Cour: to review the case, On Monday. of this week the ‘U.S. Circuit Court. of, Appeal: ‘Rrantedsa stay of extradition pro. ceedings, pending the appeal to th U.S, Supreme Court, The case ean Tot comeup before @etober tes the Suppeme prt Has ad. jJourned for the summér, ‘The stay came in the. nick. o time, for the removal of Crawforc to ‘Virginia had been set for. th day the stay was granted. REV. HENRY © RECOVERING <* Continued from page 1) gion. ‘According to the father of the brothers, the Rev. John I. Hen- ry, the alleged poisoner, is said to have exclaimed on leaving his son: “Dhey shot Becton, but I got you another way. You will never eat again.” Police were notified that the wo- man could be located in Baltimore through the Rey. 8. H. James, pas- tor of Leadenhall Baptist Chureh, of which she is a member, How- ever, the Rev. John L. Henry, bus- iness manager of the evangelists, told ‘The Tribune that efforts to apprehend the woman had been halted. Woman Comes Back ‘The woman is said to have, fol- lowe the Henry brothers from city to city for several months and no later, than last Friday, three days after the alleged poison at: tempt, she was said to be in the audience at Jerusalem Baptist Church, where the brothers are conducting services. ‘The Rev. John L.. Henry told ‘The ‘Tribune that his brother, Nathan- iel, is not a member of the Henry Brothers, evangelists, but conduets separate services, ; Three brothers and their father have been holding services at the Jerusalem Baptist Church for sev- veral weeks. Each night the audi- torium is packed and hundreds are turned away. Old. Fashioned Religion John L., manager of the gfoup, told The Tribune that his orgati- xation is unlike a number of -evan- gelists who are contucting meet ings in that he carried no orehes- tra and stuck by the “good old fashioned religion.” i The brothers drive a high pri car, dress in the latest fashion and Jook more like “Broadway actors than ministers. There is nothing |in their wenring apparel to indicate that they are’ clergymen, | Th bmeetings are conducted in the camp. meeting style, anid much shouting, singing and clapping of Hiands, On leaving Washington the brothers will open series of meet- ings in Baltimore. They are plan: ning to return here in September \for the entire month, pes. REY. CHARLES H. PLUMMER Higa iter for the Rey Charles HoPhimmer were held Wednes afternoon from. the Conteat Pu Chizch. “Interment was. at Rose PfUritny Ge da iving the local. mi x wie widow, Annie. R.~ a Samet A, and Williait Be mer, brothers; and n sistee, SIAFy Brown, of Annapolis, Mase 20. 1983 Bele Mie. rps Lee a Olander J, Smith, who is executive secretary of the corporation, and he John D. Rhoades, a white attorney and church worker who is president, EOE ae ere tL DISMISSED WORKERS | WHITE GIRL LOVED (Continued from page 1) [+ (Continued from page 1) Tavien..of, Gevernmeny mp. who represented that organization. Plan to Get Back Jobs Mr, Simpson told the, audience what steps had been taken by his organization to secure employment ‘of the workers who had been dis- missed. Speaking of the confer- ‘ence held with President Roosevelt last week, he announced two im- portant accomplishments — which had resulted from that meeting. First, he said, the President had issued ‘an, executive order to the heads of all new departments that employces dismissed. under the economy program must be given preference in employment in the newly created bureaus. Uy A list -is to created by the Civil Service Commission from which employees in the new offices will be taken. On this list will be the namies of persons dismissed _be- cause of the employment of a hus- hand “or rate, in the, iovernment services pkovided that the spouse ana the service gets. $2, 000 a year or less; and, persons Whose efficiency rating are fair, ‘The President's executive order makes it mandatory that all fu- }ture employment by the govern. ment be made from this list. Relief for Low Efficiency Group, ‘The speaker also outlined ac- complishments in aid of those who had been given a low efficiency rating. ‘There has been constitut- éd a Civil Service Board of Ap- peals to wheh all persons contest- ing their efficiency rating will have recourse. A reversal by the board of appeals of the ficiency rating given, will mean reinstatement for the person thus discriminated a gainst. He pointed out that the pro: cedure to be followed in such cases was to prepare a complete state- ment of the case and present i tothe board of appeals in the de partnient where the low efficiency rating Was given. Should there be no favorable result there, the in Jured employee would then have recourse to appeal before the boare of appeals set up by the Civil Ser. vice Commission, No Fees or Charges John P. Davis, speaking for the Washington Tribune and the Negr Industrial League impressed upot his audience the fact that no fe or charges of any sort would be made for the aid given. dismissed government employees by any of the co-operating organizations, He also assured the employees tha’ nothing would be done to embras: them or injure their chance for re employment. Negro representatives were elected at the meeting to serv with white représentatives on com mittees of the Civil Service Rein statement League. Those electe were: Mrs, Lulu Lewis and Me Kinlay Taylor for married per sons; Laurence J. W. Hayes. fo the low efficiency group, and F. W Howard for veterans, On ‘Saturday many of those in attendance at the Friday mas meeting were present and tool part in the meeting of both whit and colored members of the Civi Service Rejnstatemant League @ he ‘American Federation of Lebo uilding at Ninth and Massachu sentis Avenue, Northwest, Anoth eraneeting of both groups is sched led this Saturday at 2 p.m, A cordial invitution to all color ‘ed Workers who have been dismiss ed to attend this meeting was ex ied by John Arthur Shaw, pres ident of the American Federatioy ‘of Government Employees, and bj gio of, president of the Civi Service Reinsiatement League. WATCHES MELON SLICER; CUT While watching 2 man by. the name of “Feb eee on & water. nielog at-3 si a ge. ir. OT, of 151 Streets teveivg A wounil on the left hand, Sunday, when the knife ahead * WHITE GIRL LOVED : (Continued from page 1) She (Miss Allen) asked Carrie if Fletcher was colored. Miss Ball said Carrie told her he was, ‘and the white woman replied, “Col- ox doesn’t make any difference be- ‘cause I can make myself easy with his family.” Miss Allen js also said to have remarked ‘on this occasion that if she couldn't have Fletcher, no one else would. ‘Tried to Break Away Prior to the testimony of the dead man's brother, an uncle, John Day, told of efforts made by Al- fred to “break away” from the white woman by staying away from her. He stated that she would get in taxieabs and hunt for ‘im. A few hours before the tragedy, Miss Allen had driven up to where he and Fletcher were talking with some other people. She got out of her-taxi, walked aver to, Fletch- er and said something. The latter, according to testimony, told thé white woman to go on about her ‘business as he was through with her. Day said the woman krew he was Alfred's uncle and had told him it made no difference. ‘Two Notes Presented ‘Two notes written by William Fletcher, brother of thé deceased, advising’ Miss Allen his brother did not wish to see her, and placed under her door a few hours before the killing, were presented at the inquest. A telegram sent by Miss Allen to Fletcher between July 4 and 7 requesting two brothers to come to see her as she was ill, was also introduced, Visited Colored Places William told the jury Miss Allen could not help knowing he and his brother were colored as she went to colored places with them on several occasions, and that. they had carried friends of theirs to her house. Dr. M. Grant Lucas, 1738' Fif- teenth Street, Northwest, testified that Miss Allen had called at his office on June 27, seeking profes. sional service for nervousness. He treated her subsequently gt her residence, but declared ‘he’ never saw Alfred while making any visit. Dr, Lucas also stated that. the woman asked him whether or not Fletcher was colored. but he turn- ed the question off by stating he did not go into the family history of his patients. What caused Miss Allen to seek his services, Dr. Lucas was Unable to say. He serves both races and there was nothing unusual about the white ‘woman seeking his services, ‘Trouble Two Months’ Old Taking the stand at the fequest of her attorney, Mins “Allen hex tantly unbared ‘her love-life with Alfred. She corroborated previou: testimony as to manner in whick she met the deceased. All testi. mony also agreed that no trouble had been observed between th two prior to May 20, S ‘This is the date when she saic she discovered she had been keep ing company with a colored mah Shé gave no explanation for hav. | ing continued to seeciiie vrith the tite man for an two month up-to the ‘time of the tragedy, Describing the fatal night, Miss Allen declared that she was pre paring to léave home to go off anc Kill herself when igteher drove up. ‘ ~ Radio Hid Weapon “I got the gun from back of 2 radio, I went downstairs to go & way from. the house, as I intendec to kill. myself, Alfred drove: uy ana aed my wbete 1 wan going told him I was going to get: som things at tho dtore for male vide opened ‘the door of the aute aud told me to gat in a he, want ofate talk to me: ‘We rode arounc 2! ate Fiosees |to think of a presceipton whic! [es Agree been filled. hile Al | ed wag gine to Heri tion filed; T “intended th—use: the ee aS a COA Ses TCM apa estat i BEST NEWS OF THE NATION’S CAPITAL HUNDREDS OF WORKERS RETURN TO WORK AS STRIKE ENDS CHICAGO (ANP)—One _ thou- sand five hundred girls and women who went on strike two weeks ago at B, Sopkins and Sons Apron Fac- tory returned to work last week. At a conference, Saturday, be- tween the workers, civic leaders and officials of the factory an agreeable settlement was reached. It is alleged that communistic agitation among the girls caused the strike which paralyzed the five Sopkin factories. For two weeks hundreds milled about the plants as, girl pickets patrolled the area. The girls accused the Sopkins of- ficials of not paying them a decent living wage. They produced time cards to show that they were re- ceiving less than five dollars a week. The Sopkins people denied the charges and said the girls lim- ited their own salaries, They manu- factare aprons by piece work. When the strike was at fever heat, Congressman. Osear DePriest, Alderman Robert Jackson, William Dawson, and the Rev. J. C. Austin sought to effect a reconciliation be- tween the strikers and the com- pany officials to no avail. The crippling of the industry, the long period of unemployment’ for the girls, and the intervention of civic leaders taxed the patience of the dissatistied groups. Finally Raised Pay At the parley held this week B. Sopkins agreedio raise the pay of the girls 17% per cent, They are to work eight and a half hours a day with a half hour for lunch, to- talling 47 hours work for the week ‘This scale is to remain jn force un- til the recent legislation by the U, 8. Government regulating the scale of pay and hous of work for women is in effect, The strikers will not be dis- charged and there will be no dis- crimination. in. the office, Compe- tent colored girls ave to be giver positions as stenographers and bookkeepers whenever vacancies oc- eur. Sopkins and company, how- ever, réserved the right not to em- ploy’ any members of a union 0} organized body. fetter working conditions for the girls were also effected. ‘They wil have a trained nurse and a civic worker appointed to care for the health of the employees. .Sopkins will also provide rest rooms for the convenience of the women. A girl from each factory, to: gether with a social worker, will settle any dispute or grievance of the workers. Upon the faliure of this group to effect harmonious re. lations, a disinterested party. wil be called in from the Citizens Com- mittee headed by Dr. Joseph M. ‘Boras. Plowing Up Cotton Around Boley ROLEY, Okla—Quite a number of farmers met at this. place last Saturday with the county agent and a Dial, representing the Federal Government, to sign up on plowing up % Of their cotton, A latge number signed up, some did not think it advisable and would not sign up. Opfuskee county, as a whole, thinks very favorably of the plan. a Those who plow up their crops will receive a bonus of a guaran- teed price for the balance. “He discovered the pistol and we started to tussle. It went off while both of us had. our hands-on it.” The wounded man_ exclaimed, “Bither I'm shot or I'm hurt.” He ordered the waman to go into the house so as not to get mixed up ‘in the affair,” she said, Miss Allen testified that she was standing outside of the auto when the revolver went off, She then stepped into the car and insisted on accompanying him to the Emergency Hospital. With the wounded man criving, they set out at rapid speed nearly crashing into a tree. Frightened, Miss Al- len applied the emergency brake. AS the car. halted two’ offers rushed up, detained the woman, and removed Fletcher to the hospital, where he died a few hours later, Vigorousiy questioned by Assis- tant Proseeutor Sirica, Miss Allen steadfastly refused to tell where she obtained the revolver. The only statement made.in this regard was that she had secured it from a white man, Asked what she did for a living, the woman told Mr. Sirica, “You found out enough about that in your investigation.” Pid he get any. of your mop. ie?” ag, the, ness quia Sto at No, be was to me,” Mies Allen’ said *” Bullet Plows Downward The autopsy revealed that the bullet ranged downward passing through both lobes of the right long and severing large blood ves- sels. ; “Passing” Denied An unmailéd letter, purported to have been written by Miss Allen to her another on the Wednesday before the shooting was also. of- fered at the inquest. The letter mentioned @ shameful incident in her life, and also exoressed sui- cidal intentions. Fi family vehemently. de- ors fagt the : phir hee frpduatecok the Shaw Jonicr High NINE SUFFERING KNIFE WOUNDS GET FIRST AID Victims of knife wounds inflict- ed by others, nine persons were treated at Freedmen's Hospital for their injuries Sunday, none be- ing regarded as critical. Wilson Evans, 37, of 404 V Street, Northwest, was tréated for wounds of the left gar and right side. of the head. Joe Caldwell, 23, of 57 H Street, Northwest, suffered = atgh wound in the left chest. Leo White, 33, of 1003 New Jer- sey Aveniie, Northwest, was hacked over the right upper eyelid with an ax Charley Richards, 20, of 1854 Ledroit Court. Northwest, was stabbed in the left thigh, Colbert Lucas, 29, of 618 Nine- teenth Street, Northwest, received a wound on the back of his. right hand, ° ‘Two women were slashed with a knife wielded by.« woman by the name of Carrie Carter, according to hospital records, One, Mildred Johnson, 40, of 1149 Burton Court, Northwest, received wounds, in the back and left arm. She was given treatment at Sibley’s Hospital be- fore being transferred to Freed- men’s. The other, Gertrude But- ler, 36, of 1149 Burton's Court, Northwest, suffered slight cuts: in the body. Harry Meissner, 52, of | 1404 Swann Street, Northwest, suffered a stab wound in the back. Francis. Curry, 23,. of 211 Eleventh Street, Northwest, receit’- ed treatment for a stab. wound in the left temple. ANOTHER SERVANT OF JEFF DAVIS'S KILLED RICHMOND, Ind. —_ Robert Schools, who said that in the early days of the Civil War be was a servant in the family of Jefferson Davis, President of the Confedbr- acy, was shot and killed last night by his son, Ben Schools. % Schools, who was 90. years old, said he served in the Union Army as a messenger later in the war and was wounded while eerzpe & message from his colonél to Gen. U. §. Giant. r es | oe aaa } ps me ‘ec! ee Be Sar of 4 o ow as / - ome ca PRMPM The boas called = x up today and . said they are put= ting on ten men, ‘ I'm one of them.”* ne H , eed 5 si Os Y eY) be <a 4 <a 4 ‘ : ‘ A % = oe a bes ¢ Sa | te e Pi 4 “Fine! But you wouldn’t be if we hadn't kept our : telephone in.” Eu Propte with telephones get jobs first. A tele= - phone number on an ~ employment application blank almost always a sures a call when'a job is available. It's wise - ecbnomy to put in, and * : keep im, a telephone. - ME tropoliton 9 9.0 -0 WILL TAKE YOUR ORDER The “Chptghaghs. and Potatac ts Ralaphone ° Commany. 5. Y <= hak sytem) 77S BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL DEMOCRATS MEET TO PERFECT STATE CONTROL PLAN National Organization Establishes Headquarters on D Street District and state leaders of the Democratic party met here Wednesday and perfected plans for a proposed setup in practically every state with headquarters in Washington. The National Democratic Voters' League, of which Armond W Scott is president, seeks to build a powerful machine throughout the states with a central and controlling office here. Mack D. Rowe, national organizer, will leave Washington at an early date for a tour of the principal cities of the South. The plan is to set up an organization composed of local men and women in each city. This group will have control over its particular field but will be directed from the national headquarters. Those present at last week's meeting were John H. Clinton, of Texas; James H. W. Howard, Alexander H. Underdown, Maryland, treasurer; Mrs. Catherine Hart, Edward C. Taylor, Kentucky, secretary; Mack D. Rowe, Armond W. Scott; Howard was made chairman of the executive committee. Executive Committee Members of the executive committee include, beside the chairman: Fred Garner, Arizona; E. V. Crane, California; E. L. Bramwell Connecticut; Dr. Lewis Taylor, Delaware; Arthur R. Barber, Idaho; Adam E. Patterson, Illinois; Thomas Smith, Maryland; John Lewis, Minnesota; Dr. M. L. Perry, North Carolina; Dr. I. N. Young Oklahoma; W. Justin Carter, Jr. Pennsylvania; A. Payton Cannell Rhode Island; William Grennwall Utah; N. N. Thomas, Virginia; R. L. Ryan, Washington; E. L. Powell West Virginia. Women's Division Dr. Ora M. Fisher, of Indiana, is chairman of the women's division. Others on her committee are Mrs. E, D. Baker, Missouri; Mrs. Bernice Clark, New Jersey; Mrs. Minnie Kennedy, Minnesota; Mrs. Harriet Smith, Connecticut; Mrs. Mable Worthy, Massachusetts; Mrs. Ethel M. Williams, Maryland; Mrs. Pearl C. Harvey, Mrs. Juanita Rowe, and Mrs. Ella D. Howard, Washington, D.C. Headquarters of the league will be maintained at 505 D Street, Northwest. Newly-elected officers are Underdown and Taylor. Scott Slated fro Judge Attorney Scott, who has been prominent in Democratic politics for many years, is slated for the judgeship of the Municipal Court to succeed Judge James A. Cobb, who was appointed under a Republican administration. Judge Cobb's term ends next July. White Veteran Seeking Brownskin Love, Robbed Jacob Barnett, white, of the Soldiers' Home, who accepted the suggestion of a colored man he met to go to see a girl, lost either $85 or $4.20; for his eagerness, early Wednesday morning. Barnett told officers of the Fourth Precinct he met an unknown dark man under the influence of liquor at Four and Onehalf Street and Maryland Avenue, Southwest. The man asked whether or not he wanted a girl, to which proposition Barnett was agreeable. The two proceeded up an alley near Maryland Avenue and C Streets. Safely out of sight, the supposed panderer held up Barnett. The latter told officers that he was robbed of $85. The proprietor of the store where Barnett called police said Barnett told him he had $4.80 taken from him. Despite the disparity of the reports, police are searching for the footpad. College of Pharmacy at Howard Has Added Facilities Vice Dean Charles J. Führman, of the College of Pharmacy, Howard University, reports that a larger number of requests than formerly is reaching his office for information regarding the four-year course in pharmacy now being offered. Beginning with the year 1932-33, another year was added to the course so as to meet the requirements of the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy and the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy. The physical equipment has been greatly improved during the past year; newly equipped pharmacy, pharmaceutical chemistry, research and preparation laboratories, with store rooms and offices, have been installed, and many new instruments of precision have been added. The college is now better equipped and prepared to give instruction in the four-year course leading to the degree of B.S. in pharmacy, than in former years. HIT WITH WRENCH Struck over the head with a monkey wrench, Martin Curris, 23, of 1231 Alton Court, Northeast, received a cash which required three wittches to close, Sunday. Washington Lawyers Interview Alleged Maryland Axe-Slayer Attorneys Houston and Lovett Permitted to Visit Prisoner on Orders from Judge; Say Accused is of Low Mentality; Negroes on Juries in County COURT AWARDS AUTO VICTIM $100 DAMAGES Howard Professor Contributes Article to Medical Magazine BALTIMORE, Md. — (CNS) — Armed with an order from Judge Diggs of the Charles County Court, Attorneys Charles H. Houston and E. P. Lovett, of Washington were admitted to talk with Page Jupiter, 40-year-old colored man of La Plata, Md. who is held on a charge of slaying with an ax a white farm woman of La Plata. The lawyers were at first refused permission to visit the man by his Baltimore jailers. Jupiter, whom a mob of over fifty whites, attempted to lynch last week has been taken to Baltimore for safe keeping. After the mob scare, he was taken back to La Plata for a hurried arraignment and then rushed back to the Baltimore jail. When interviewed, by Messrs. Houston and Lovett, Jupiter who can neither read nor write, denied having committed the crime. He is alleged, however, to have confessed to killing the woman to white police officers who questioned him shortly after his arrest. No Signs of Third Degree The alleged slayer bore no signs of scars from beating. He is re- One hundred dollars damages were allowed Lemuel Allen, an elderly man, of 1009 L Street, Northwest, by the District Supreme Court, last week, for personal injuries received when he was struck by an automobile driven by a white woman, May 22. Allen was going south at Twentieth and K Streets, Northwest, when the machine operated by Miss Mary Moran, white, fo 1429 Columbia Road, Northwest, mounted the curb, knocked the pedestrian and dragged him for a considerable distance. Allen was treated at Emergency Hospital for minor injuries and allowed to go to his home after treatment. Miss Moran contended that she fainted just as she turned the corner and lost control of the machine before it mounted the curb and struck Allen. Examination by George A. Parker, attorney for Allen, brought out the fact that Miss Moran did not faint until after the automobile had struck Allen, whereupon the court awarded Allen the $100 damages. Man and Two Boys Hurt, Horse Dies in Car Crash Two boys, a man, and a horse were severely injured when their delivery wagon collided with a street car at Third and T Streets, Northwest, Friday. The horse was so badly wounded that he had to be shot. The three occupants were treated at Freemen's Hopital, where James A. Walker, 13, of 411 Richardson Street, Northwest was found to be suffering with concussion of the skull. Edward Lindsey, 12, of 1827 Fifth Street, Northwest, received numerous cuts and bruises of the right elbow, left arm, and hands. James Williams, 28, of 408 Richardson Street, Northwest, was treated for lacerations of the right temple. Raymond F. Payne, 49, of the 3800 block of Tenth Street, Northwest, motorman of the car, said the horse was driven in front of his car. Pocketbook Game Costs Woman $65 That Barnum was right when he said one is born every moment he was again proved true when Mrs. Ruth Carter, of 1622 Corcoran Street, Northwest fell for the old wallet flim-flam, Tuesday of last week. Mr., Carter told police that she was approached at Seventh Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, by two men, who claimed they had found a purse containing a fabulous sum of money. They told her they would give her $700, if she would give them some money as a guarantee that she would not tell the police. Eager to acquire the sum, Mrs. Carter handed over $65 as a guarantee that she would not turn informer. The couple disappeared. Officers have a description. Two Pass District Dental Examination The District of Columbia Board of Dental Examiners announced last week that two colored dentists had successfully passed examinations to practice. The two successful candidates were: Dr. Percy Alexander Fitzgerald and Dr. William T. Randall. Dr. Fitzgerald is a graduate of Northeastern University in 1924 and is at present an instructor in the Dental School at Howard University. Dr. Randall graduated from Howard Dental School in the class of 1931. Dr. Randall's home is Homelyville, Va. TOT HURT IN FALL Running at her home, three-year-old Jeanette Harris, of 1342 Cedar Court, Northwest, fell and cut a slight gash in her forehead, Saturday. ported to be of low mental capacity, incapable of clear understanding of his predicament. No lawyer has yet been retained to defend him, it was learned, and there is likelihood that the court will have to appoint one when he is brought up for trial. A brother of Jupiter is also mentally deficient. Information unearthed so far indicates that an aunt of the alleged slayer had been committed to an asylum and that his mother was also stated to have been "queer" by those who knew her. A plea of insanity seems likely. Negroes serve on both the grand jury and on petit juries in Charles County where Jupiter will be brought to trial so there will probably be no light in the court on this issue. A Negro is now serving on the grand jury before which Jupiter's case will be presented. Other colored persons have served on petit juries in the county. Bernard Ades, white, International Labor Defense attorney, has interested himself in the case and may volunteer his 'services. The School Physicians' Bulletin, published under the auspices of American Association of School Physicians, at Albany, New York, carries an article, "Promoting Health Consciousness Through Visual Education" in its issue of June, 1933, by Dr. E. H. Allen, director of health service Howard University. Dr. Allen points out that "the entire problem of health conservation must definitely include health education in the scheme o. instruction." "The formal classroom teaching of hygiene," he says, "in a large number of schools by the physician and the teacher with varying degrees of training in health and physical education, is in all probability the most direct health education movement at this time. Another potent trend is the establishment of the many school services with their comprehensive programs. "In addition to the development of health insight, many general rules of hygiene here are also incorporated. A clear appreciation of professional medical care may be the fullest outgrowth of this setup. Certainly efficiency consciousness as well as health consciousness should be followed." He calls attention to the fact that European nations have gone far in this direction and states that there are indications that health education will be more formally incorporated in the education programs of this country in the future. Japanese Foster Son of Former Howard Head Writes from Tokio An adopted son of Dr. J. E. Rankin, president of Howard University from 1889 to 1923, has written from Tokio, Japan, to President Mordecai W. Johnson, acknowledging receipt of an invitation to be present at the commencement exercises of Howard University held June 9. Dr. Rankin was also pastor of the First Congregational Church of Washington, D.C., and author of the hymn, "God Be Wit! You Till We Meet Again." During his period of service as president of Howard, a residence was erected for the president and the Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel, a memorial to the brother of President Rankin, was built by funds secured from private sources. The writer of the letter, Jenichiro Oyabe, also stated: "I used to live in the house where you are now living. Down floor was my picture drawing room. The pictures (at Howard) of Professor Bassom and Andrew Rankin (Dr. Rankin's brother) were my drawings." Mr. Oyabe graduated at Howard in theology in 1894, and received his master's degree, also from Howard, in 1898. Court Refuses Rehearing in Logan Circle Slaying The Court of Appeals last week refused a rehearing of the Logan Circle case in which three youths are sentenced to die next month for the slaying of Park Policeman Milo J. Kennedy in Logan Circle in August, 1932. Chief Counsel John H. Wilson filed the petition two weeks ago following a decision of the Court of Appeals upholding the District Supreme Court. However, the higher court granted a stay of mandate which postpones the execution of the sentence pending the filing of an application before the United States Supreme Court. Mr. Wilson stated this week that every effort will be made to carry the fight to save the youths to the highest court. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 SUPERIOR ELECTRIC REFRIGER GRUNOW AT THE World's Fair THE MICROSCOPE Grunow SUPER-SAFE REFRIGERATOR EASY TER ASY Crea TERMS EASY Credit TERMS A Few Cents a Day Pays for It. 1214 U ST. Across from LINCOLN THEATRE, IN JOYNER'S ELECTRIC SHOP 1214 U ST. Across from LINCOLN THEATRE, IN JOYNER'S ELECTRIC SHOP Washington's Only Negro Refrigerator Store Phone NORTH 10196 for a Demonstration 1214 U ST. MAIN STOR --- Ristig INC 1214 U ST., N. W. EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL NORTH 10196 MAN STORE: 1350 H ST., N. E. LINCOLN 0148-01 49-0150 THE only refrigerating unit in the Hall of Science at A Century of Progress (World's Fair) Chicago. "There's a reason." Grunow is super-safe, has a SAFE refrigerant that you can see, smell and hold in your hand, and operates without pressure. Shown as one of the wonders of modern science—operating largely under glass. Millions will see it and realize how SAFE, how DEPENDABLE, and how SIMPLE and EFFICIENT the Grunow refrigerator is. If you cannot visit The World's Fair you can see this Grunow unit operating right here in our store. It's a thrill to watch it and make the amazing "safety tests." If you do visit The World's Fair see the Grunow unit in the Hall of Science, at Part I, Section F, Exhibit No. 13. SUPER-SAFE REFRIGERATOR washington's Only Colored Refriger ington's Only Used Refriger Washington's Only Colored Refrigerator Store Located at 1214 U ST., N.W. Across the street from the Lincoln Theatre) for Your Convenience Phone: NORTH 10196 for A FREE DEMONSTRATION EASY Credit TERMS THREE CE THE Safe erator ATORS THE SALES FORCE OF RISTIG, Inc. "U" STREET STORE A. THE BROTHERHOOD A. C. A. PRATT 生國國 I. L. Welch F. T. Green H. J. Evans or Store Credit MS Day Pays for It. 214 U ST. cross from LINCOLN THEATRE JOYNER'S ELECTRIC SHOP Washington's Only Negro Refrigerator Store Phone NORTH 10196 for a Demonstration FOUR CURRENT TOPICS Washington Tribune Published Weekly at Washington, D.C., by THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE PUBLISHING COMPANY, Inc. 920 U Street, N.W. Phone, Potomans 1687 Entered as second-class matter July 7, 1922, at the Post Office at WASHINGTON, Under the U.S. Act of March 8, 1979 Subscription Rates: One Year, $3.00; Six Months, $1.60; Three Months, 75c. For sale at all news stands, 7 cents per copy. Advertising rates furnished ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE W. B. ZIFF CO. Chicago, New York, Los Angeles THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 Mr. Lemus on the Codes In an article in the New York Age, Rienzi B. Lemus expresses the opinion that the Negro's interests in the set-up of the various industries under the Industrial Recovery Act will be fully cared for by the head of the American Federation of Labor. In his opening paragraph Mr. Lemus says: Negro workers have no occasion for fear that they will be left out of the reckoning in the application of the provisions of the President's Industrial Recovery Act. They will fare infinitely better from the result of the efforts of the president of the American Federation of Labor on behalf of labor than could possibly be so with respect to the race presentations of Negro leaders and professional uplift institutions. Since Mr. Lemus is the head of the Brotherhood of Dining Car Employees, and an experienced and successful labor leader, his opinions are worthy of great respect; nevertheless, The Tribune does not share his optimism nor his faith in the interest and high idealism of William Green, the president of the A. F. of L. As to this organization and its head he says: I do not like the American Federation of Labor. It has never been able to rise above the level of the bickerings and fratricidal strife of the International Unions, each sovereign in its sphere. President Green has no more to do with the race discriminations of the several internationals than has the editor of the Age; but he is individually bigger than their smallness, of statesmanesque calibre, and is struggling to rid the organization of its bias and itsisms. All this may be true—Mr. Lemus is in a strategic position to know what he is talking about; yet although the papers gave considerable space to Mr. Green's presentations and protests at the hearings on the textile code, we did not notice any references he made to the exception of the cleaners and outside workers from the benefits of the minimum wage and minimum hours scales. Obviously, the bulk of the relatively few Negroes employed in the industry are in these classes which did not seemingly get the benefit of Mr. Green's solicitude. This failure, however, may not have been due to race bias, since Mr. Green was evidently much occupied with a struggle for higher minimums and shorter hours. Mr. Lemus says further: When Mr. Green speaks in the conferences on adoption of the industrial codes, he speaks for all labor because the act itself admits of no discrimination against groups or races. True, the act prohibits discrimination against races, yet the textile code which has been adopted, indirectly does just that thing. If and when a code is adopted covering railway employees, the dining car cooks and the waiters are excepted from its provisions, it will not be racial discrimination on its face but it will be as a matter of fact. When the railway workers' code is under consideration, Mr. Lemus undoubtedly will be alert to see that his organization is protected, as is his right and duty. And the Negro Industrial League, the Urban League and all other racial bodies that have any influence owe it to the race to have representatives on hand with data and argument to protect the unorganized workers of our group—assisting Mr. Green and other white spokesmen for labor and the consumers, but not wholly depending upon them. And with the highest respect for Mr. Lemus and his knowledge and sincerity, we are moved to register disapproval of his disdainful blanket reference to "professional uplift institutions"—futile and fictitious as the activities of some of them are. Merging Denominational Schools The recent statement in the press concerning the closing of some and the merging of other schools and colleges maintained for colored youth by the Presbyterian Church serves to call attention to the plight of the schools maintained by the all-colored denominations and the contrasting dilatoriness of these colored church officials. For several years there has been discussion in the ranks of clergy and laymen in various all-colored denominations looking to the merging of weaker schools and colleges with a view to strengthening the system and developing better equipped and better endowed institutions. These discussions have been particularly urgent in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Taking account of the agitation and growing difficulty of keeping up even a show of educational work in some of the institutions, the general conference of the church, in May, 1932, authorized the merging of certain schools. That was over a year ago, yet a reading of an account of the meeting of the board of bishops in Cleveland last month indicates that little if anything has been done about the matter. An account published about a month ago gave a summary of the matters dealt with in the bishops' address, including the matter of merging schools. Quoting from the address as published in the Pittsburgh Courier, we read: Our last General Conference specifically named which schools were to be merged. Death by slow starvation is too great a menace to the property and the spark of life that still survives in our schools and colleges to delay action in heroically applying the remedies that for a brief space may still be possible. The president and secretary of the board of our Department of Education were directed to proceed at once to acquaint themselves with the facts, obstacles and opportunities, relating to merging our schools and further, that they apply all the resources of co-operation and council at their command to aid the different boards of trustees to arrive at agreements leading to decisive action. All were admonished to banish self-deception, to submerge personal ambitions and to approach the problem with open minds and with willingness to compromise in the larger interest of the highest good of all concerned. Just why this sort of pleading for action is necessary in the face of the diminished and diminishing income of the church would be difficult to determine. Very recently, Western University, in Kansas, one of the two colleges—universities so-called—of the denomination in the former free states, has gone, it seems, completely out of the control of the church. The other, Wilberforce, is in the throes of a muddle with authorities of the state which has been supporting a department or section of the school. Besides this, the existence of the college proper hangs in the balance due to lack of means. At various points in the South there are schools and colleges of the denomination gasping for breath, yet the bishops' council must plead for the banishment of self-deception the submergence of personal ambitions and so on. If the bishops are impotent and the school authorities stiff-necked and self-seeking, how will it end? Hitler's Grandmother a Jewess Now comes the news—reasonably well substantiated—that Hitler, the present dictator and Jew baiter of Germany, is himself descended from a Jewish grandmother. The Nazi decrees have outlawed persons of Jewish descent much further removed than the third degree—which would seem to put Herr Hitler in a hole. However, the news comes from Vienna and will, of course, not be allowed to appear in any newspaper published in Germany, nor is it probable that anyone will dare publicly to raise the question. So, officially, it will probably not come up so long as the Hitlerites have a strangle hold on Germany. Commenting on the matter, the Jewish-owned New York Times says: It is hard to see why anybody should be anxious to prove that Hitler has Jewish blood. If this should turn out to be the case, there will be just as little satisfaction in it for the Jews as for Hitler. This statement, considering its source, seems strangely cryptic, especially in view of the heading of the note—"Both Stand to Lose." Of course in a spiritual sense the Jews will regret that Jewish blood, even so far removed, can fall so low; but the discovery, if verified and established, will put a bruise on the head of the snake of race prejudice and intolerance. Recent advices from Liberia indicate that negotiations which have been carried on for several weeks seem destined to result in substantial concessions to Liberia and an amicable agreement with the Firestone interests. The Three Rings I met a girl at Seventh and T. Her eyes were damp and dim; She wore three rings, her rosary Of showy brummagem. No, two were cheap as chalk, and shone As though fresh from their mold; But one was free of set or stone, And glimmered like wet gold. Two rings upon her slim brown hand She wore, with sets of glass, The third was just a thin, pale band That held no hint of brass. But when again I chanced to pass, Two rings were all she had, And both were brass, with sets of glass, And I was very glad. She'd learned to keep the mean and cheap As each must learn who cares; Forget the things that make us ween orget the things that make us weep And dim our days with tears. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 20. 1933 PAGE Editor Vann Is First Fruit of Negro's New Political Hope Editor Vann Is First Fruit of Negro's New Political Hope The Editor's Relatively Early Selection Indicates Democrats Will Not Disappoint the Colored Converts. Rebert L. Vann, editor of the Pittsburgh Courier, recently appointed special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, has become the first fruit of the Negro's new political hope. Mr. Vann's politics have recently undergone kaleidoscopic changes. He may be described as late Republican, later Non-Partisan, and latest Democrat. He wrote me when he abandoned his non-partisan affiliation for his new found Democratic faith. Oscar DePriest, the high priest of the Non-Partisan movement, reverted to his first love during the last campaign while Mr. Vann, an ardent disciple, veered off in the opposite direction. But let us not chide Mr. Vann for the suddenness of his conversion, nor question the sincerity and genuineness of his newly avowed political devotion. The Democracy of three of Mr. Roosevelt's cabinet members bears a vantage as brand new as that of the Pittsburgh editor. The wisdom of the policy of the Non-Partisan League is confirmed by Mr. Vann's good fortune. Any one-party group in a two-party country shows short-sighted political wisdom. National politics is like a game of see-saw—the competing parties are sometimes up and sometimes down. Woe be to that group which has been in persistent opposition to the party that wins. The Negro's one-sided devotion to the fortunes of the Grand Old Party for the past sixty-five years has well nigh ruined him as a political entity. Robert L. Vann, editor of the Pittsburgh Courier, recently appointed special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, has become the first fruit of the Negro's new political hope. Mr. Vann's politics have recently undergone kaleidoscopic changes. He may be described as late Republican, later Non-Partisan, and latest Democrat. He wrote me when he abandoned his non-partisan affiliation for his new found Democratic faith. Oscar DePriest, the high priest of the Non-Partisan movement, reverted to his first love during the last campaign while Mr. Vann, an ardent disciple, veered off in the opposite direction. But let us not chide Mr. Vann for the suddenness of his conversion, nor question the sincerity and genuineness of his newly avowed political devotion. The Democracy of three of Mr. Roosevelt's cabinet members bears a vintage as brand new as that of the Pittsburgh editor. The wisdom of the policy of the Non-Partisan League is confirmed by Mr. Vann's good fortune. Any one-party group in a two-party country shows short-sighted political wisdom. National politics is like a game of see-saw—the competing parties are sometimes up and sometimes down. Woe be to that group which has been in persistent opposition to the party that wins. The Negro's one-sided devotion to the fortunes of the Grand Old Party for the past sixty-five years has well nigh ruined him as a political entity. PREACHED WISDOM OF DIVIDED VOTE During the last campaign, I preached in and out of season, the wisdom of a divided vote. The old line Republican leadership branded as traitors to the race those who aligned themselves with the Democratic opposition and even those who counselled independence. One of their most venerable orators declared that all such Negro traitors should be sent to Hell. In such event, I fear that a majority of the race would be found in the hotter place. Politics is not a matter of sentiment, but of sense. Let us pitch our argument on the lower plane of political loaves and fishes. Other things equal, that party which offers the most jobs will get the most votes. While it is true that principle is more than policy and justice is a higher consideration than jobs, yet as far as the Negro is concerned, I have often said that honors, or rather dishonors, are even. There was every assurance during the last campaign that the Democratic party, if victorious, would raise the Republicans' ante by going them one better. Bitter experience makes the Negro wary concerning political promises. The promise to the Negro was secured by the common sense and sagacity of the leaders. They know full well that the Negro vote in the Northern and border states is essential to the future triumph of local and national candidates. A broken promise at this critical political juncture, would seriously jeopardize the national fortunes of the Democratic party in the years to come. During the last campaign, I preached in and out of season, the wisdom of a divided vote. The old line Republican leadership branded as traitors to the race those who aligned themselves with the Democratic opposition and even those who counseled independence. One of their most vehement orators declared that all such Negro traitors should be sent to Hell. In such event, I fear that a majority of the race would be found in the hotter place. Politics is not a matter of sentiment, but of sense. Let us pitch our argument on the lower plane of political loaves and fishes. Other things equal, that party which offers the most jobs will get the most votes. While it is true that principle is more than policy and justice is a higher consideration than jobs, yet as far as the Negro is concerned, I have often said that honors, or rather dishonors, are even. There was every assurance during the last campaign that the Democratic party, if victorious, would raise the Republicans' ante by going them one better. Bitter experience makes the Negro wary concerning political promises. The promise to the Negro was secured by the common sense and sagacity of the leaders. They know full well that the Negro vote in the Northern and border states is essential to the future triumph of local and national candidates. A broken promise at this critical political juncture, would seriously jeopardize the national fortunes of the Democratic party in the years to come. PATH OF G.O.P. STREWN WITH PROKEN PROMISES On the other hand, the Grand Old Party's path is strewn with broken promises to the black ally. Official recognition has grown ugly less from Hayes to Hoover. The wily leaders were ever prone to fall back with sure reliance on the ancient debt of gratitude which the Negro owed to Lincoln, Sumner and Stevens. But this net can never again be laid in the presence of the crafty black bird. Nothing but the utter failure of the present administration to treat the Negro with assured justice and generosity can ever again drive the race like dumb driven cattle back into the folds of the party which has fooled them for forty years. During the last campaign I followed the Negro Republican spellbinders with a careful degree of closeness. They did not advance a single constructive present-day reason for supporting the party of their advocacy. Their entire reliance was placed on condemnation of Democrats in general, and Jack Garner in particular. The ever keen, clever and alert-minded Perry Howard and his political partners in distress are keeping a keen lookout for Democratic sins of omission and commission against the new Negro converts as dramatic material for the next campaign. So far, no encouragement has been given them. They are still watchfully waiting and waiting watchfully. Roosevelt, to say the least, has done as well as Coolidge or Hoover up to the corresponding date. On the other hand, the Grand Old Party's path is strewn with broken promises to the black ally. Official recognition has grown ugly less from Hayes to Hoover. The wily leaders were ever prone to fall back with sure reliance on the ancient debt of gratitude which the Negro owed to Lincoln, Sumner and Stevens. But this net can never again be laid in the presence of the crafty black bird. Nothing but the utter failure of the present administration to treat the Negro with assured justice and generosity can ever again drive the race like dumb driven cattle back into the folds of the party which has fooled them for forty years. During the last campaign I followed the Negro Republican spellbinders with a careful degree of closeness. They did not advance a single constructive present-day reason for supporting the party of their advocacy. Their entire reliance was placed on condemnation of Democrats in general, and Jack Garner in particular. The ever keen, clever and alert-minded Perry Howard and his political partners in distress are keeping a keen lookout for Democratic sins of omission and commission against the new Negro converts as dramatic material for the next campaign. So far, no encouragement has been given them. They are still watchfully waiting and waiting watchfully. Roosevelt, to say the least, has done as well as Coolidge or Hoover up to the corresponding date. HOOVER'S FIRST APPOINTMENT LATER THAN ROOSEVELT'S Mr. Hoover, as I hastily recall, made no Negro assignment until the beginning of the mid-administration election, and then had his subordinates designate three distinguished Negroes to important subordinate posts, obviously with the purpose of influencing the approaching election. Having failed in this, he paid no further heed to the Negro clamor until that famous co-ordinating conference at the White House, which its sponsors should be glad to forget. If the appointment of Mr. Vann to such a high post is an earnest of Mr. Rebevevlt's purpose to keep the faith with his black allies, the division of the Negro vote for the future is assured. The work of the Non-Partisan Negro League will not have been in vain. There still remains the hope and expectation that the pleases once held by Republican Mr. Hoover, as I hastily recall, made no Negro assignment until the beginning of the mid-administration election, and then had his subordinates designate three distinguished Negroes to important subordinate posts, obviously with the purpose of influencing the approaching election. Having failed in this, he paid no further heed to the Negro clamor until that famous co-ordinating conference at the White House, which its sponsors should be glad to forget. If the appointment of Mr. Vann to such a high post is an earnest of Mr. Roebelt's purpose to keep the faith with his black allies, the division of the Negro vote for the future is assured. The work of the Non-Partisan Negro League will not have been in vain. There still remains the hope and expectation that in filling places now held by Republican Negroes by Democratic substitutes or in breaking official new ground, Mr. Roosevelt will search for Democratic or independent candidates at least as well qualified in caliber, character and accomplishments as their Republican counterparts and prototypes. Mr. Vann measures up to these requirements in every particular. The Liberian Crisis BY HENRY LITCHFIELD WEST President, American Colonization (Extract from booklet published by the society.) The United States and Liberia, once the closest of friends, are now at dagger's point. There is at present no sign of reconciliation. It seems strange that Liberia, which has everything to gain by continued friendship with the United States, should deliberately sever the ties which for so long have bound the nations together. The first break came when the United States brought to the attention of the world the slavery conditions in Liberia, which Secretary Stimson regarded as "shocking." Liberia resented this action. It argued without foundation that the United States exploded a worldwide scandal to the everlasting shame of Liberia, and did not quietly warn that country that certain damaging facts had come into the possession of the American government and that it should have requested Liberia in a friendly manner to eradicate the alleged evils, thus acting the role of a kind father to a wayward son. The Republic Was Derelict As a matter of fact, I am informed that Liberia, before the report of the Slavery Commission was published, was afforded an opportunity to discount the disclosures by declaring that although forced labor had existed, it had been abolished. The offer was declined and the exposure which followed startled the whole world. Even then the breach between the two nations, although it had become threatening, might have been healed if Liberia had made and executed definite promises of reform. Its failure to do so led to Secretary Stimson's decision to discontinue diplomatic relations with the Republic. When that action was taken the hitherto narrow rift became a chasm and an anti-American sentiment was displayed by the Liberian administration which continues to the present day. Up to that time, however, there had been no overt act on the part of Liberia t owhich the United States could take offense. When the Liberian government negotiated the loan of five million dollars from the Finance Corporation of America, it represented that it needed the money not only for the adjustment of its outstanding indebtedness but for the construction of certain public works in the form of roads, bridges and wharves, and the development of harbors and communications; the encouragement and development of agriculture; the creation of a sanitary organization, including the establishment and maintenance of hospitals; construction of schools and the encouragement of education among the peoples of the Republic; the maintenance of the Frontier Force, and the general development of the country. Here, then, was a program which augured well for the future of Liberia. Money spent along these lines would be a capital investment. It meant permanent improvements absolutely required to place the Republic upon a solid foundation for substantial progress. It proposed a long step forward in the direction of ideal conditions. It was a loan thoroughly unselfish, for Liberia was to be the sole beneficiary. According to the loan agreement, dated September 1, 1926, "the Government covenants that both principal and interest of the bonds will be paid promptly as they respectively become due." Liberia was to pay all expenses incident to the service of the loan and "as an additional guarantee of the prompt payment of the loan and to ensure the efficient organization and functioning of the Liberian fiscal service," it was agreed that the President of the United States should designate a Financial Advisor, the appointment being subject to the approval of the President of Liberia, but this Advisor could not be removed except upon request of the President of the United States. Provision was also made for a Supervisor of Internal Revenue, and bonded auditors to handle the finances of the Republic. They were to be removable only for cause. The whole project was buttressed by numerous safeguards, including the creation of a budget. The latter was to guarantee that the expenses should not exceed the revenues, and it was expressly declared that "no sum shall be disbursed in amount greater than those provided for in the budget." The government funds were to be deposited in a bank approved by the Fiscal Agent, the institution finally selected being the United States Trading Company which succeeded the Bank of British West Africa when the latter willdrew from Monrovia. EDITOR'S NOTE. + Concerning the conditions attached to the lean, Prof. Ben N. Axi-kiwe, in his article in the Southern Workman (to which reference was made in our issue of June 20 19s: "The Finance Corporation of America in its agreement with the Republic stipulated that fifty per cent of the original $5,000,000 loan would be available to Liberia. Out of this, the Republic must have a staff under the loan regime and be paid as follows: $42,000 for salaries of fiscal officers, $8,000 for military officers, $35,000 for sinking fund, and $175,000 for interest charges—an aggregate of $260,000 per annum! In other words, the services under the loan regime have been more than half of the expenditures of the national budget since its inception." Think It Over By BEATRICE M. MURPHY Here within this narrow space, your humble scribe attempts, by giving you her reaction on some of the main issues of life to help you to interpret your own life and perhaps find some of the answers you are looking for. It is a big job, for no two lives are the same, and none can call himself or herself a competent teacher or guide. It is a big job because it places a great responsibility upon the person who would take up the task. Guiding—or at- tempting to guide—human lives is serious business. Your problems and questions are important to you. There may be—and probably are—thousands of people in the world with the same problems, who are searching frantically for the answers to the very same question—that you are, yet your paths never cross. Perhaps if they did, life would be easier,—from out of your combined experiences, you might derive an answer. I would have you feel that my message is written to you and you alone; that I realize the importance of your particular problem to you and try to find the answer to fit it. Perhaps there is some particular problem or phase of life on which you would like to have another's viewpoint. Write your editor or the author and tell him or her. Neither will pull down Plato from the shelf and quote him to you, but either will do his or her best to make the situation clearer, in so far as they are able. I would have yo remember, first of all, that the ultimate answer to every question that you are seeking in life will come, finally, from within yourself. You search the world over and experience things that scar your soul, broaden your horizon, and change your whole outlook, only to learn the big lesson—that you are the key to the situation; what you learn from life only helps you to unlock the door to yourself. When you have mastered the correct use of that key, you have solved the mystery of life and won a battle. You have passed within sight of the infinite! You have learned the beauty and mystery of the biggest thing in the universe—a human soul. I would have you remember, also, that to a very great extent, you make your own life, and no matter where the scene is laid, there is beauty there if you can find it. There is God. No soul can really thrive without either. Further, the more you suffer in life, the more will grow upon your consciousness the fact that life is a great big joke, but it takes a big person to view it thus. You will laugh, not because you want to, but because you have to, and thus turn the joke upon the gods instead of upon yourself. Think it over. Our Mail The Tribune welcomes letters of comment or receipt to consideration they should not exceed 200 words. We haven't the time to boil down long, argumentative communications. Write one side of the paper. Letters must be signed and address given, though not necessarily for publication. - Editor. EDITOR'S NOTE.—It is with regret that we feel obliged to lay aside many of the well-intentioned communications, essays, sermons and attempts at poems that come to our desk. The Tribune is fortunate in having the services of several regular writers who cover various features, we think, well, hence we can not spare space for more of the same sort. We have on hand, for example several essays in the form of advice to graduates—all good, but all alike and all of the self-same trend and tone as the speaches delivered at school closings. Our writers will please remember that, as the saying goes, advice—even good advice—is cheap; but space is dear. "If countries will only lay aside 'nationalism' and 'internationalism' and substitute in their places a world-wide principle of co-operation, that form of co-operation which you have demonstrated to be so effective in the erection of this building, I feel confident that their efforts would be many times repaid." John D. Rockefeller, III. SPECIAL FEATURES IN THE REALM OF BOOKS Ernest J. Yancy, eldest son of the former vice president of Liberia, and honor graduate of Wilberforce University, has completed a book on his country entitled, "Historical Lights of Liberia's Yesterday and Today," and is seeking a publisher to handle it. This book begins its discussion in 1820 and ends with the present developments in Liberia. Special attention is given to foreign loans, Firestone concession, forced labor, slavery, native life, customs and religion. Mr. Yancy says "My only aim in writing this book is to give the reader the opportunity to discover some facts and conditions of Liberia which have not been brought to light in a detailed manner." His book is centered around what he calls four major shaping forces of Liberia. Because of Mr. Yancy's relation and position, he has been able to present Liberia in a somewhat different light, and his book is an interesting piece of history both for its style and material. This book was passed upon by the following members of the Wilberforce faculty: Dr. Gilbert H. Jones, Miss Geraldine Jackson, Professor W. H. A. Booker and F. A. McGinnis. Mr. Yancy completed this work in his senior year, and graduated on June 8, receiving his A. B. degree with the honor of cum laude. He is contemplating further study in this country before returning to his native home. His address will be Wilberforce, Ohio, until otherwise anounced. What can the Negro Expect from Communism? is discussed in the July Opportunity by Asbury Smith, prominent in interracial circles in Baltimore. Bishop Wilbur P. Thirkield, former president of Howard University, writes a challenging article on "The Périal' of the Negro Church." "A Possible Triad on Black Notes" by Marita O. Bonner, which received honorable mention in the Opportunity literary contest, is a story which strikes a new note in fiction of Negro life. Joseph H. Willits, director of the Wharton School of Finance, University of Pennsylvania, writes "Some Impacts of the Negro in the Depression in Philadelphia," a paper which was read at the Rosenwald Conference on the Economic Status of the Negro. Elmer A. Carter, the editor, describes "The Negro in College Athletics," an appraisal of the past and present of the Negro college students who have excelled their felows on track and field. This Week BY HAROLD G. EATON The Negro Flies The Ethiopian Prince's Visit The Great Divide Marmelade Hole On Massachusetts Holds On The Negro is in the race for aerial honors. With headlines of General Balbo crossing the Atlantic and Wiley Post attempting to girdle the globe in record time, we are proud of our two birdmen. C. Alfred Anderson, of Bryn Mawr, Pa. and Dr. Albert E. Forsythe, of Atlantic City, who are attempting a cross-continent flight of the United States. The whole race wishes them success. **** Prince Desta Demtu, son-in-law and special envoy of Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, who was guest at lunchmen of President Roosevelt, Wednesday of this week, probably thought this to be a womanless country. He and his party were entertained entirely on the masculine basis. The President's luncheon was ladyless, so was the dinner at the Pan-American Union. The prince was almost stagged to death. (The American Negro has a word for such hospitality.) The prince's visit was to repay the United States for the respect shown Ethiopia in 1930 during the coronation of Emperor Selassie. * * * * Last week Page Jupiter killed his white co-worker, Mrs. Evelyn Reifschneider, with an axe because, he said, she begged him "do it after she heard that he was going to leave her husband's employ. This week we had another murder somewhat the opposite. Frances Allen, white, accidentally killed her colored sweetheart, Albert Fletcher. Because she found him to be of Negro blood she said she sought to kill herself. She got in Fletcher's car to attempt the suicide, and in a scuffle to prevent her from achieving her end Fletcher was shot. Jealousy was probably the root of both murders. Jupiter, jealous of Mr. Reitschneider, and Miss Allen, of Fletcher's colored girl friends. There is said to be a law called the Great Divide. Probably it does KEEPING A PROMISE Back in my prison days (over a month ago now) I promised to use this column for the balance of my life in an effort to help the Negro in business, for I am convinced that every wrong affecting the Negro today can be righted if the Negroes, as a group, will just quit chasing will-o-the-wisps and concentrate on building up a strong economic group. Favors of any kind can best be secured by that group who know how to control and use their purchasing power. If you don't believe that is true, just put a small want ad in your favorite white paper advising that you have some money to invest. The many people who answer your ad and seek your funds will be so courteous, pleasing, promising and docile to you that you will even forget that you are black—such is the power of possession. Since being free, the very first step I have taken towards helping the Negro in business is to ferret out all the little leaks that waste the energy, and sap the financial vitality out of our economic system. For years, in prison, I recorded every significant fact and now I am checking these facts—as best my meagre funds will permit me. And while a prisoner I wrote many an article on the wastefulness of our people chasing rainbows through following the leads of questionable advertisers. The very spot in our economic system that is worse than a cancer is the fact that many of our publishers, in their zeal to achieve a revenue today without realizing the effect it will have on their own revenues tomorrow, or on the race as a whole, use the questionable, and, yes, in a great many cases, fraudulent advertisements that are plastered all over the advertising columns of some publications. That circumstance is the very worst spot in our economic condition today. How can we as a race expect to build ourselves up on a sound economic basis when the advertising columns of our papers lead the readers to believe that all one has to do is to buy a rabbit's foot, lucky charm, snake ring, incense powder, confidential tips, or whatnot, and sit back and wait for lady luck to do the rest. I am frank to state right here that every publisher who encourages this sort of procedure, regardless of what he may extol in his editorial columns, or how public-spirited he may be, is positively dragging his own race down and is positively making it harder for his own paper to secure the advertisements of strictly legitimate business firms. Our publishers are continually harping on co-operation, but talk to one of our paper's readers about co-operation and you will be forced to wait until he "hits" the number or a lucky charm has brought around his ship, for such a reader spends his earnings in such quackery while his legitimate business needs are neglected and honest debts are ignored. ```markdown ``` How any publisher can ride around in his swank car knowing that he is playing the part of a common "steerer" to a more common and despicable "racket" and not permit his conscience to hurt him is beyond me. During the past few weeks I have checked up on some of my previous compilations and in my possession I now have facts on many of these questionable advertisers and I have definite proof of the worthlessness of their efforts. In some instances their mail has been definitely prohibited through a governmental fraud order, and yet our publishers run their advertisements permitting them to use the telegraph to further mulct our people. From time to time, through this column, I shall expose in concrete form some of these many propositions, naming the papers in which such ads are run and the method in which they are secured, and why they are run. It goes without saying that the guilty publishers will not run such releases, but I am grateful to know that there are sufficient number of other reliable publishers who can see far ahead and are willing to help a fight that will eradicate the cancer from our economic system and which will, in time, mean a larger and more reliable flow of advertising revenue from legitimate advertisers—after the illegitimate advertisers are first chased to oblivion. make some difference in interracial leve. The state of Massachusetts refused again to turn George Crawford over to the state of Virginia. Federal Judge Bingham, of the United States Court of Appeals, has stayed the extradition pending an appeal. The Crawford case now goes to the United States Supreme Court, which sits in October, Bravo, N.A.A.C.P!. Visitor—Your son is making good progress with his violin. He is beginning to play quite well. Host—Do you really think so? We were afraid that we merely had not used to it—Opinion. REST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL eee eee — — — — — — — — — — — F ful Social Quiet - But Little Disturbed By VIVIAN TURNER The peaceful quiet of Washington's social whirl has been disturbed very little during the past week. Many who have enjoyed an early vacation out of town have returned only to become extremely bored by the sameness of the daily program. Those, who have not yet been able to pack up, bag and baggage, and migrate for a few weeks are eagerly awaiting the time to make their exit. Quite a few of Washington's elite are planning to attend the Cen- tury of Progress Exposition in Chicago, Many physicians are making it two in one by waiting until August, when the National Medical As- sociation will hold its meeting in that city. Soon the local physicians will meet and elect delegates, ot course, many plan to, g0, who will not be delegates. : Those who attended the dentists’ convention in Atlantic City last week retutned very much pleased with the hospitality accorded them, A large number Was in attendance and many problems discussed in private sessions. Dances, breakfasts, dinner parties, and beach par- ties were all social featuxes which were enjoyed after business sessions, ‘The joint family excursion given by the eight Episcopal churches to River View, Md., on Wednesday, proved to be quite an enjoyable so- cial affair. Many of the older citizens joined in making the affair a Success and reviving the spirit of former years when these excursions were given quite often, Remember, this Friday we are all to meet at the Omega's Barn Dance at Suburban Gardens, At least, it will break the monotony of the daily grind and will be a refreshing innovation at the present time, ‘The peaceful quiet of Washington's social whirl has been disturbed very little during the past week. Many who have enjoyed an early perce out of sere tye returned only to become extremely bored y the sameness of the daily program. Those, who have not yet been able to pack up, bag and baggage, boy migrate for a few weeks are eagerly awaiting the time to make their exit. Quite a few of Washington's elite are planning to attend the Cen tury of Progress Exposition in Chicago. Many physicians are making ‘it two in one by waiting until August, when the National Medical As- sociation will hold jts meeting in that city. Soon the local physicians will meet and elect delegates, Of course, many plan to, g0, who will not be delegates. : Those who attended the dentists’ convention in Atlantic City last ‘week returned very much pleased with the hospitality accorded them, A large number Was in attendance and many problems discussed in private sessions, Dances, breakfasts, dinner parties, and beach par- ties were all social featuxes which were enjoyed after business sessions, The joint family excursion given by the eight Episcopal churches to River View, Md., on Wednesday, proved to be quite an enjoyable so- cial affair. Many of the older citizens joined in making the affair a success and reviving the spirit of former years when these excursions were given quite often, Remember, this Friday we are all to meet at the Omega’s Barn Dance at Suburban Gardens, At least, it will break the monotony of the daily grind and will be a refreshing innovation at the present time, ow wee pe tecumseh Brad- shaw were hosts to a small party of friends at bridge, last week. In- cluded among My? and Mrs. Brad- shaw’s" guests were Mr. and Mrs. K. Renfro. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Robinson, Dr. and Mrs. J.B. Trigg, rs. Ida Mae Bugg, and Mrs. Edna Perry, tees _ Mrs. Almiter Clinton Foote and little son, Robert, accompanied by Fred Clinton and son, William, mo- tored from Cleveland, Ohio,” and were the guests, Sunday, of the Misses Lydia and Hattie McIlwaine of 1714 Second Street, Northwest. They were en route to Lancaster, South Carolina, Dr. and Mrs. Phillip Lewis, of St. Michaels, Md., are visiting Mrs, Lewis's parents in this city. * weet Dr. Norman Harris, Mrs. C._Y, Harris, Dr. Ralph Stewart, Dr. Roscoe Brown, and Mr. and’ Mts. .Emory Smith’ were among the Washingtonians who attended the funeral of Dr, Aldrich Burton in Philadelphia last week. : eee 4 Mr. and Mrs, Oliver Perry and ‘Mrs. Wilkinson were euests of Mr. cnd Mrs. Hall, of Glenarden, Med., last Sunday. sees Mrs. Askew, mother of Mrs. Em- ma Haron, of 1728 U Street, North- west, is quite ill, wees Mrs. Viola Smith and little son, Emory, Jr.. returned to. the city, Sunday. Mrs. Smith has been vis- iting her parents in Philadelphia, Pa., and Emory, Jr., has geen vis- iting in New Jersey. wees Mrs. Lottie Richardson is back in the city after a pleasant trip visiting friends in Chicago, Ml., and other Western points, sees Mrs. Hortense Turner, formerly of this city, but now operating a beautiful tea room in Baltimore, Md., is in the city visiting her daughters, the Msses Valerie and Vermelle Turner, of 1328 Montello Avenue, Northeast, tone Bryn Milton, young son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Milton, of 1607 $ Street, Northwest, is home from college, and spending his vacation here and at the Miltons’ summer home in Highland Beach. Mrs, Algernon Jackson, wife of Dr. Algernon B. Jackson, of 213 Florida Avenue, Northwest, has re- turned to the city after a delight- ful visit with her mother:in Media, Pennsylvania, tee Mrs. Henrietta Shepherd, of 1748 $ Street, Northwest, is visiting her daughter, Mrs, W. A. Campe, in Jamaica, N.Y. ster Jesse Powell, the popular florist of 1800 Second Street, Northwest, spent a week in New York visiting friends. sees Mrs. Mable Reeder, of 2553 Nich- ols Avenue, Southeast, a teacher in the Margaret Washington Voca~ tional School, was operated on at Carson's Sanitarium this week. eee Miss Edna Deaver, of Baltimore, and Washington, after a pleasant Gross-country trip, arrived. this week in Los Angeles, Calif., where she will be located indefinitely, eee Mrs, Justine Greene, of 1708 Second Street, Northwest, who has been recovering from x throat op- @ration, is Very much improved, Mrs, Thomas H, R, Clarke, of 125 T Street, Northwest, spent the Week-end in Petersburg, Va,, visit- fag her family. : tees Mr. and Mrs, Harvey MeGuinn, of 1209 Park Road, Northwest, are spending a few days at Brandy, Va. tee Mr, and Mrs. Roger Browne and Mr. ‘and Mrs. Hervey McGuinn spent last Sunday at Carr’s Beach. J./Stewart Harver, a Baltimor- gan, but well known in Washing- ton, is managing po _ ood tertginment in the Delia ia Room of the Penn Hotel in Balti- = tees . Louige Colbert Wilpon is in ancl renéwing old acquaintanc- ‘and visiting friends. Yay Clifford, formerly of Wash- ington, but now of New York City, ‘was_in the city on Monday en route to Highland Bedch, where he. is spending a short vacation. P oe Lucien Peterson is confined to his home on account of illness. a ws The Rev. E. T. Johnson, princi- pal of Clark County High and Training School of Burville, Ve., ‘was the guest of his son, Claiborung C, Johnson, 1443'S Street, North- west, last week. wees _ Mrs. Jeanette Baltimore, of 1435 'S Street, Northwest, is spending ‘Some time at Highland Beach. wees | Mrs. Dorothy Wright Atkinson, of 1721 T Street, Northwest, and hes young son, Rimski Rubard, Jr., ‘and Mrs, Minnie Green motored to Brooklyn, N.Y. They will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Fer guson. Before returning home they will visit friends and relatives in Jersey City and othe points. eee Mrs. Florence Colbert, of 119 R Street, Northwest, is out after sev- eral weeks’ indisposition, eee The Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Rob- inson, of Buffalo, N.Y.. stopped over in the city with Mr. and Mrs, Walter Jones, of 1728 U Stren, Northwest, en route to Richmond, Va, The Rev. and Mrs. Robinson were forced to Ymmediately return to Buffalo on account of the sud- den death of their daughter. sees Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Wesley, of this city, but now of. Aldie, Va., are visiting the latter's sen, Law- yer Robert G, Wesley Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Seo*s, of 2617 Sherman Avenue, Northwest, accompanied by their. daughter, Muriel, are enjoying the Century of Progress Exposition in Cineago, Minois. SiS Miss Mable Freeman, of Oreren Avenue, Northwest, is spending the remainder of the summer as guest of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Cabuniss, of Cleveland, Olio. . Miss Liilian Washington is im- proving after undergoing an opera- tion at Carson’s San‘tarium, ‘The little Misses Frances and Sarah Johnson, daughters of Dr. and Mrs. I. Moten Johnson, of 1915 Eighth Street, Northwest, have returned to their home afte: a de- lightful visit with their grand- parents in Alexandria, Va, Robert Weaver Gets Harvard Doctorate Robert Clifton Weaver, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer G. Weaver, last _week, successfully completed his final examination for his doctor of philosophy degree in economics from Harvard University. Weaver passed a difficult oral examination before the heads of the economic depertsnent at Harvard, lis degree will be awarded him at the next mid-year convocation of the board of overseers, ‘The young doctor of philosophy has made a brilliant curricular and extra curricular record. He xrad- uated from Dunbar High School here with honors and matriculated at Harvard College, from which he was graduated cum laude in 1920. ‘As an undergraduate he received several speaking prizes. He was also a member of the Harvard De- hating Council and served as secre- tary of that organization 1928-20. In earlier years he was one of the three men to receive keys from the Eastern Debating League in recog- nition of Harvard's undefeated sex- son in the league. In 1981, Weaver recgived his master’s degree from Harvard, The following year he was professor of economics at A. & T, College, in Greensboro, N.C. In recommend. ing him for that position Professor W. Z. Ripley, who had been chair- man of this board of examiners, said: “I consider Mr. R. C, Weaver an exceptionally good man. He is very engaging personally ax well His examination showed excep- tional ability.” Last year Mr. Weaver was an Austin Scholar at Harvard. At the present, Weaver is serv- ing at Director of Research of the Negro Industrial League, He has appeared before hearings under the National Reeovery Act in the Se ett er Rate, erie z bi may son “Let Harvard and the universi- ties of America keep the doors and the gates open, without reference to race, creed or religion, to every young man, every ambitious young man that pledges loyalty to the Gonstitation S84 the fing, of out country, and it makes np diferense what happent—the United States is bound to be saved.”—Alfred E. Smith, ~ « ES ES si cenit tee a oe Sy i] ran Sey a nes 7 ‘ Ny 4 boas Fi ea ee a a ie ats Enivhe the Bes (caren. bee. 7. ok .SCS:SCS:*C*~C~CSCS joying the Bree Celebrate 15th Anni George H. Clark, Theatre Manager, —______.______—/ Celebrate | >th Anniversary ‘f ST aed to Wed Miss Estelle Hayes, Teach ie Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Clinkett | ements — “y. [eelebrated the fifteenth ° anniver- sary of their marriage, Monday ~ siciaealeeiiete evening at their home, 1216 Roose- “lg Be velt Avenue, Arlirgton, Va. a The happy couple received many i " ‘ ©. | beautiful and useful gifts. “or . ow i Among those present were: ro Oe ped # " ica sve » Mr. and Mrs, Harry Mitchell, aoe ae y 5 | Mr. and Mrs. Opie Grayp Mr, and a | ; Oe cea Ww Mrs. Morris Carter, Miz’ end. Mrs; eas | 4 > Bryant, Mr. and Mrs, Henderson, a a a4 Babs con a ‘| Mr. and Mrs, F, Goldman, Mr, and aa € ' ook Mrs. Parks, ‘ al Be SD) § ; 5 Mr. and’ Mrs, Vincent Corbin, ee ae r ‘ Ps , Mrs, Julia Jackson, Mrs. Josephine oe ane? = 14 Tyler, ‘Mrs. Emma Veney, Mrs. 3 nt) = aa Francis Green, Mrs. Elizabeth ~ Baad ‘ . Mitchell, Mrs, Lucy Wills, Mrs. El- Wek _ | la Riffin, Mrs. Alice Thomas, - >, z\ | Mrs, Blanche Reed, Mrs. Eloa i Brooks, Mrs, Edna Vollin, Mrs. Re a Anna Kenny, ‘ ———— cemme | Mrs. Janie Derio. Miss Ethel twee MISSES THELMA WORMLEY and EULA LEE FICKLING, two Washington belles, seen on the beach of the Patuxent Pleasure Club at Eagle Harbor, Md. CONSOLING PALS ‘The club members were hostess- es at a crab feast given Tuesday at 1230 Second Street, Southwest. A’ meeting was held’ Monday at the residence of Miss Lillian Smith, 40 H Street, Southwest, Members ‘of the group are, Mes- dames Bernice Mallory, Irene Campbell, Helen ‘Smith, Helen Hopkins,” Juanita Reed, Ruth Campbell and Miss Lillian Smith, BLACK AND WHITE CIRCLE CLUB The regular weekly meeting was held Thursday evening at the resi- dence of the business manager, Mr. Charles Lee, 1610 Third Street, Northwest.~ CARNITION ART CLUB Mrs. Alethya Berry Williams, 287 O Street, Northwest, was host- ess to the Carnation Art Club Fri- day night, |, Clud members present were Mes- dames Mildred Crawford, Lottie Jones, Agnes Taylor, Hattie Lee, “Marion Colbert, Touise Bingham, Cordelia Thompson, Mabel Reeder, Hattie Williams and Lena Hackett. Guests were: Mrs, Naomi E. Wash- ington and Miss Emma B. John- son, /MASQUERS CLUB The weekly meeting of the club was held at Wilbur Washington's residence, 316 Florida Avenue, Northwest, Wednesday night, Im- portant business was transacted, Those present were: Luther Nell, president; Gilmore Walker, vice president; Fréderick Young, secretary; Harold Cousine, treasurer; Shellie Mitchell, busi- ness manager; ‘Also. Wilbur Washington, Daniel Jackson, Charles Smith and Mauri- co Wooden. CARNATION ART CLUB ‘The club js planning a crab feast for Friday night, at 1404 8 Street, Northwest. Members in charge of the affair are Mrs. Crawford, pres- ident; Mrs. Agnes Taylor, ‘treas- urer; and Mrs. Marion Colbert, chaltman. JOLLY EIGHT CLUB The club held-its closing meeting of the season at thé residence of Miss: Ida Campbell, 420. First Street, Northwest, Monday, The group will resume sessions in Sep- tember. i tees ‘ALGONQUIANS Mrs, Rita Mayfield entertained the club and it sfrionds at the resi- ‘deneé of her sister, Miss Inez Ma: son, 74% O Street, Northeast, on Thursday evening. Guests on the occasion included Mrs, Julia Brown, Bake Booker, Georwe Buck, Bernard Curry, Leo- nard Mason, Mrs. Alice Rollins, Herman Waiers, Charles Washing: ton, Randolph Wilder, and Henry Strong, STROLLERS-CLIMBERS WHIST CLUB The club war hott at a whigt party at the residence of Mrz. Aa- na Smith 728 Pairmoat Sweet, Northwest eae Mrs. Jennie Gordon was hostess to the club Tuesday, at her resi- dence, 1205 U Street, Northwest, Members present were Louise West, Carrie Bailey, Irene Branch, Anna Smith, Carrie Twyman, Em- ma Randall, and Lillian Johnson. THE DUKES So eee Yan ec cisese ik Bea wat held at thé residence of David Hales, 913 N Street, Northwatt, Members. nrecent ware Vincbnt Frasier, David Haley, Forest Ryd- itell, Phere: ei Reward Joba. gon, Thomas Matthews, Surustus V wels, and Pert fee The elyd fae 4 complimentary dance aftet the meéting. NINE OF HEARTS CLUB The Nine of Hearts Club met at the residence of Mrs. Ruth B. John son, 1829 Ninth Street, last week. ‘The mecting wax the Boal one fot the season. asent i sis tt et . Johnson, Julia McCain, ia Graves, Ollie Mason, Nancy Jack- son, and Thomas Anderson. iff WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 19 Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Clinkett Celebrate 15th Anniversary Mr: and Mrs, Isaac Clinkett celebrated the fifteenth ° anniver- sary of their marriage, Monday evening at their hoate, 1215 Roose- vel Avenue, Arlington, Va, ‘The happy. couple received many beautiful and useful gifts. ‘Among those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mitchell Mr. and Mrs, Opie Gray» Mr, and Mrs. Morris Carter, Mr.’and Mrs. Bryant, Mr. and Mrs, Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. F, Goldman, Mr, and Mrs, Parks, : Mr. and’ Mrs, Vincent Corbin, Mrs, Julia Jackson, Mrs. Josephine Tyler, Mrs. Emma Veney, Mrs. Francis Green, Mrs. Elizabeth Mitchell, Mrs, Lucy Wills, Mrs. El- la Riffin’ Mrs, Alice Thomas, Mrs, Blanche Reed, Mrs. Eloa Brooks, Mrs, Edna ‘Vollin, Mrs ‘Anna Kenny, Mrs. Janie Derio, Miss Ethel Pleasant, Miss Emma Brooks, Miss Ella Pleasant, Miss Estelle Collins, Miss Sarah Dabney, Miss Mary Johnson, Miss Mary Jones Mr, Jessie Smith, Mr. Edward Coleman. Mr. James Steward, Mr. Watts, Mr. Charles Williams, and Mr, Randoiph Tanner. | Plymouth Congregational Church Pastor Feted The members and friends of Plymouth Congregational Church tendered their pastor, the Rey, William Herbert King, a reception ‘on last Friday night at which time he was presented with a watch, a pevellor bag and a belt, The Rev.. Mr, King is leaving this month for a charge in Detroit, Mich, and to study at Oberlin Col- ie ‘he presentation on behalf of the church membership was made by LM. Hershaw. Mrs, India King Lee, sister of Mr. King was remembered jn the series of testi- monials offered and received a gift in appreciation of her valuable services jn the church, See bales Willing Workers Club Holds Musical and Tea An appreciative audience wit- nessed a musical program and tea given by the Willing Workers Club of the Golden Link Household of Ruth, at the residence of Mrs H. Armstrong, 1435 Swann Street Northwest, Sunday. Mrs. Victoria Bain who served as mistress ‘of ceremonies, was introduced by Mrs. Maud Ingram, president of the club. Recitations were given by Mrs. Flora M. Chase, Willie Nickens, and Miss Minnie Dorsey; an instru- mental solo was rendered by Miss 8. Chase, while solos by Mrs. Dick- erson and W. Ingram conclitded the program, Ti i eeeatn MATTHEW E. THOMPSON HAS BIRTHDAY PARTY Matthew E. Thompson, of 1017 Sixth Street, Southwest, was host to a birthday party on Friday, July i. The table had for a center piece a large mirror which held a bowl of pink roses, at each end of the mirror tall pink candles were placed. ‘Those present were: Mrs, Matthew E. Thompson, 1 sister, Miss Ellen Thompson who Was visiting from North Carolina; Mrs, Thompson's father, Thaddeus Me. Collum; Mr. and and Mrs, Me- Kenzie Boyd, Earl Betters, Misses Alieen and Vernese Jackson, Wilson Briley, Bradshaw Vowels, Mrs. Hattie Clark, Miss Resserlee Covington, Miss Martha Mason, Stanton Lomax, Willie Johnson, Lawrence Bell, "Mr. and Mrs. Clearance Staunton, Mr. and Fran- cis Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. George Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Lew Watts, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Eaton, Mr. and Mrx Perry Legnard, Mrs, Es- telle Lewis, Willie | Woodward, — Leonard Jones, William Taylor, Louis ‘Muggs, Miss I. Nelson. heel BROADMOOR HIST CLUB Mrs, Madeline Christian enter- tained the club Thursday at her home,.1712 Third Street, North West,” Club card honors were re ceived by Mr. Ernestine Cooper first; Mrs, Alville Dorsey, second And ‘Mrs, Bertha Fillmore, third Rena Contee and Mrs. Lena Buvler Were revjpiente of first and second guest honors, respectively. Among those present were Mes- dames Maggie Jorden, Esther Rob- ingon, Minnie Smith, Edith Smith, Lida” Smith , Loretta Johnson, Louise Contee, and Mrs. Christian. HONORED AT BIRTHDAY PARTY Mit Mary E. Grean was honor- ed ee at a birthdey party civen by her sister, Mrs. Irma Young, at her residences, 2001 Cleeratt Street Ee greeny Thursday signe ie Sbaedinn included Mr. wa. Iigm ‘Young, Mr. and f Ming, Al i fiees, Mrt. Ruth Wylit, ova Wilton, Mrs. Janie Jameson, Miss Mae Willis, Mrs. aura Blakel, Mrs. Alexander Pope, Mr. and Mrs. Alphonso Young, Misk Ernestine Young and Miss Vivian Reynolds, who inci- seas, was alng celebrating her ay et. Harold Reyncide, Arciut Carter, Perey Brown, Leonard Wilson and Leroy Holland also at- tended. George H. Clark, Theatre Manager, to Wed Miss Estelle Hayes, Teacher | George H. Clarke, popular manager of the Lincoln Theatre, will be united in marriage with Miss Estelle Hayes, a teacher of the Meck- lingburg Training School, located in South Carolina, the first week in ‘August, according to information received by the Tribune, this week, The ceremony will be performed at the palatial home of Mr, and Mrs. W, H. C, Brown, Miss Hayes ix a native of Williamsburg, Va., and the daughter of the late principal ot the Willlamsburg High School. She is a graduate of the Virginia State College, Petersburg, Va. The groom-to-be is a native of Newport News, Va., but has prac- tically made Washington his home since early youth. He has been in charge of the Lincoln Theatre for the past five years, Following a honeymoon, place not announced, the couple will take up their abode in this city, td Pere. Queene! A surprise party in honor of the Rey, J. N. Beaman’s birthday and retirement from the Government Printing Office, after thirty years of service was given by Mr. Eleice V, Wise, at 907 Westntin- ster Street, Wednesday night. A collation was served in buffet style. The guests departed leaving the Rev. Mr, Beaman still surprised. Many useful gifts were ‘received ‘Among those present were: Mr. and Mrs, John Edwards Mrs. John Edwards, J», Mr, and Mrs, Lenwood Wise, Mr. and’ Mrs. Wm, 1, Beaman, Mr, ‘and Mrs, P. A. Beaman, Mrs, Mary Robin- son, Mrs, Emma Smith, Mr. Ed. ward -W. Beaman, Miss. Alice Hunter, ‘Miss Madeline A. Loving- good, re Mis. Theresa Akears, Miss Viola G. Greene, Miss Agnes Hall, Mr. Melyin M. Wise, Jr, Miss M. Louise Wise, Miss Whartoi, Miss L. Lillian Carter, Mr. R. Earl Smith, Mr, and Mrs, Charles Me- Williams, Mr, Phillip Carter and Mr, Eugene E, Wise. acento Howard Campus Scene of Surprise Wedding On the picturesque campus of Howard Unversity, Monday night, Miss Marion Grace Conover and Edward 8, Hope were married by President Mordecaj Johnson at his home. Those who witnessed the ceremony were Mrs. Mordecai Johnson and daughter, Carolyn, Mrs, Jane Lyons, aunt of the groom and Miss Wendella Conover, Youngest sister of the bride, The marriage came as a, str- prise to even the most intimate Erighis of oth bride and groom. ing Conover js a native of Bos- ton, Mass. She is a graduate of Simmons College School of Social Work and the Portia Law School both located in Boston. Mr, Hope is a genduate of More house College of Atlanta, his home, and the Massachusctts Institute of Technology, Miss Conover. Is headworker at Southeast House in this city, Mr. Hop. is superinten: dent of the maintenance depart- ment at Howard University, JE ar earaeearaae Junior Civic League — - to Sponsor Beach Party The Junior Civie League is spon- soring a beach party to be held at Ue Francis Swimming Pools, ‘Twenty-fifth and N Street», North west, for the benelit of « North: West settlement house, on Saturday night, July 2% beginning at 11 o'elogk. The following ave members of the leagues Benes Williston, ty nating Cordove, Dorothy Houston, Alyce Colbert, Geo. Lawrence, Laura Lee, . Jean Westmoreland, Robert Coates, Evelyn Bond. Swimming, dancing and refresh: ments will be featured. For fur ther information call Columbia 9873 or North 4097. Siete STAGE GROUP ENTERTAINED AT DUDLEY'S HOME ‘The yetetay showkan, &. H. Dudiey, and the, ng Calloway cpotatinet the Silas Show mpany, which played at Alexan- dria, Va., Monday night, at the fornier’s palatial country ‘home in Oxon Hill, Maryland, Sunday af- ternoon, ~ Inelnded in the group ‘were Charles Collier, 3. H. Dudley, Ing Mian C Hoptense and ss:er, aft, ate ttenians astended ie ‘3 fgrtiance in Aiecaneeles Ww. erest Jarvis, Mrs. Calloway and James A. (Bille board) JacksofA were among them. m ae FF a =. Mrs. Gladys Lloyd entertained some friends on a twilight card cruise down the Potomac, Friday, Silas Carter's Southerners fur. nished the music, ‘Among. those present were: Mrs. Daisy Ellsworth, Hattie Hills, Lottie Barnes, Hattie Green Myrtle Bush, Elsie’ Balton, Clara Powell, A. Freeman, Lottie Bland Ruth Rustin, Queenie Aston, Ma: mie Dickson, W. L, Johnson, Mr, and Mrs. John Waters, Mr and Mrs, Alonzo Collins, Me: ane Mrs, David Wyatt, Mr. ‘and. Mrs Wm, Patrick, Mr, and Mrs, Simor Weber, Mr. and Mrs, Talley, Mars Wm, Roberson, Misses Anna Ma Williams, Grace Marshall, Addie Whittingham, Agnes Wil Tiams, Jewel Jenifer, Bernice John son, | Gladys Brown, — Blanche Wright, Marie Dodson, Margaret High, Edith Dade, Messrs. Harvey Strother, Buster Thornton, Thomas Holland, Bil Reeves, William Branson, ' Peter Hawkins, Lester James, William Friend, Raymond Colbert, William Lancaster, Mr, and Mrs. Hansbor- ough, BS a pe els MRS. MAYBELL LEWIS HOST. ESS AT BIRTHDAY PARTY Mrs. Maybeli Lewis entertained at her home, 618 Harvard Street, Northwest, Thursday afternoon, in honor of ‘her birthday, Mr, and Mrs, J. A, Askins, C, Warren, Mrs, Victoria ‘Dickerson, M. Gaither, Mrs, B. Johnson, Miss G. L. Addi- son and John Lewis were present. een eal ae : Society Notes A card tournarient and garden party was given on the lavin of the home of Miss Pearl Denney, 1903 Third Street, Northwest, last Sat- urday, for ‘the benefit’ of Saint Mary's — Protestant. — Episcopal Chufeh. Miss Gertrude Ryan, dulin Davis, and Pearle Denney’ were chairmen of groups sponsoring the affair, a ENTERTAINED WITH : RUFPET SUPPER. Oe el ae eR Dr. John S. Mitehell, of Wash- ington, was a visitor in German- town, Pa., during the past week fas the house guest of Mist Jenesse H. Davis, During hin stay there. Dr, Mitchell was honored with. a buffet supper given by Miss Davis. Other guests from the eapital eity chuted Mise Lulu V, Childers, Mist Alma L. Tibbs, and Prot, Roy | W. Tibbs ue | Mr, and Mrs, Emory B. Smith were visitors in Philadelphia dur- ing the past week, and were the xuests of Mrs, Sinith's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Harris, Sr: Miss Ellen Seott, of Washington, left the city last Saturday for Bos- ton, Mass., where she will spend the remainder of the summer visit- ing her aunt. Miss Elisabeth Miller, of Cam den, N.J.. was in the city latt week vititing friends. wees con Nestearie Waihingean Vo: ne a a oa tional Sehocl, lest the sity lest week for Crots River, N.Y., where ashe will be located until the onen- ing of school in September. eae Frederick Dougiazs and Henry Booths, both of Washingion, mo tored to Greengbofo, N.C, a short Bile pott to AMtend the North Gargline Frete Tennis Megy. On their return trip they also visited Piockatt. nd wikis 4. chart stop in: Society Notes PHILADELPHIAN Among the out-of-town friends who attended the funeral of the late Dr, Aldrich Burton in Phila- delphia. last week were Mr. and Mrs. Emory Smith, Dr, Norman Harris, Dr. Roscoe Brown, Dr, Gus- tave Auzenne, Dr. B. Price Hurst, and mother, Mrs. John Hurst, of Baltimore, Perry W. Howard and U.S. G. Bassett. ‘Dr, Burton died in London, Eng- land, about two weeks ago, where he was visiting, prior to his going to Vienna, where he was to have studied, is Mrs, Willa Carter Mayer, Mrs, Hilda Johnson Evans, Miss’ Mar- garet Parks, Mrs. Anna J. Cooper, and Miss Georgianna Simpson are among the Washingtonians who will attend the, conclave in Chica- go of the Alpha Kappa Alpha So- rority during the first week in Aug- ust, Miss Edith M. Coates is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Lewis and family in Chicago for the sum~ mer. tees A party of Kansas City teachers, including Irene Everett, Loretta Maidee Campbell, Florence Kiser, and Parizadee Jones, were visitors in the capital lust’ week. ‘They were in route from the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago, and they plan to visit many cities in the East before returning to the Mid-West. ; “Mickey” Syphax is spending the summer vacation in Ocean City, New Jersey. Miss Alyss Mae Hershaw spent several days in New York City as the guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Dr. and Mrs. James T. W. Granady, of the Dunbar Apart- ments, sees Miss Irene Davis, of Philadel- phia, spent a few days in the city last week as the guest of Mrs. Bes- sie T. Barber, of 71 R Street, Northwest.» Miss Davis was en route from Smithfield, Va., where she was called to attend the fun- eral of her mother. 2 tees Miss Carrie Manns is visiting in Philadelphia and is the guest of Dr. and Mrs, Maceo Morris. eeee || Mesdames A, A. Price, Jr. Wal- ter Shivers, Allen Robinson, Rosa Galvin, and Addie. T. Donnell, all of Richmond, Va., have returned home after a visit in Washington with ffiends. atte Miss Larue Dymond spent the week-end in New York City as the guest of the Misses Julia and Lu- cile Johnson. sees Arthur L, Barbre, of 71 R Street, Northwest, was called to Youngs- town,, Ohio, because of the illness and subsequent death of hi broth- er, He returned to the city this week. sees Mr. and Mrs, John E, Daugherty and daughters, Misses Alice and Mary Helen, of Indianapolis, Ind., are visiting relatives and friends in Washington. i tear Mrs, Louia Vaughn and little daughter, Grace Louise, are spend- ing the summer in Cleveland, Ohio, with the parents of Mr, and Mrs. Jones, Mr. and Mrs, 1, 8. Jones ‘and Mr, and Mrs, Edward Lomax. @oreee Mise Muriel Allen and Miss Tris DeSosta, both of New York City, ‘Ave expected in the city, within a few days, where they will be the guests of Dr. Charles Allen, an unele of Miss Allen. Goorge Clarke was a visitor in Newpart. Va., last week, where he visited with his parents and grand- mother. Misa Aileen Harris and Miss Rosa Montgomery have réturned from New York City, where they visited with friends. Miss Juanita Howard, accompan- ied by Kenneth O, Pack and H. A. ‘Thomas, spent a few days in Hin- ton, W.Va, a# the guests of Mr, cud Mis, B. B.\ Anilerton, Me, Pack Je a brother of Mre, Ander ton Mr, and Mes, Benjamin Moore and Mre, Hattie Martin were ex- tensively entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Washington and Jesse Herndon on their recent visit to Richmond, Va, Sees Miss Johnnie Turner and her sis- ter, Miss Daisy Turner, of 2219 Thirteenth Street, Northwest, are spending the summer in Wildwood, N.J., and in the mountains of Penn- sylvania, i: s Among the Waahiaospiens who ware gnépta at the Metal Olga in New York City iant weak wee Mr. and Met. G Dunlap. Miss Cae tins Ferman, Frank Hignt, J. A: Brown, and Met. M. 8. Johnean. sees Garnet C. Wilkinion, assistant superintendent of schools, visited an exhibition of the work of forty colored women at the Deanwood School, The exhibition represent- ed the canning from produce grown in their “unemployed gardens.” The exhibition was viewed by @ jatge group of membate of both vaces. noes \ Altorney George HM. Woodson, WASHINGTONIANS, ATTEND FUNERAL OF PHTTANDELPHTAN the oldest colored practicing lawe yer in the state of Iowa and fope mer deputy collector of custome and founder of the National Bar Association, died last week at -his home in Des Moires, lows. Mr. Woodson graduated from the law school of Howard University ‘in 1895, Among the many Washington- ians who are visiting in New Fork City are Miss Charlotte Atwood, Dr, and Mrs. Abram Harris, Miss Alice Bell, Mrs. Georgia Douglass Johnson, Miss. Alyss Mag Haeshave Miss Peggy Williston, and ‘Baward E, Dorsey... Mrs. John Leak (nee Miss Irene Taylor) is recovering from a seri- ous operation performed last week at Provident Hospital in Balti- more. Mrs. Leak was taken ill at her summer cottage at Highland Beach. sees A large group of citizens of both races paid high tribute to the late Dr. Thomas Conrad Unthank, deat of Kansas City physicians, on last Sunday at an outdoor memorial service held nq the plana of, the General Hospital, No, 2 Mord than 500 persons were in attend- ance. ‘The late Dr. Unthank was a graduate of the Howard University medical school, class of 1898. Mrs, Jeannette J. Matthews and daughter are ysiting William Vana Jackson, in Richmond, Va. Mr. Jackson is the father of Mra. Mat- ee DEANWOOD.NEWS The Antioch Baptist Sunday Schoo! picnic was held on the lawn of Mrs. Mary Hamlin, in, the 4900 block of Meade Street, Northeast, Tuesday, July 4, from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The children amused themselves by playing dodge ball, while the elder people sat under shade trees hiding from the heat of the sun. The children were served with ice cream, cakes and Temonade, There was a dollar hunt ‘and a peanut grab biven by Mrg. ‘Amelia Bagby from 7 to 1:30 p.m. ‘The Willing Workers’ Club of the church will give aa entertain ment Saturday night, July 29, from # to 11 p.m., on the lawn of Mrs. Hamlin, The Rev. J. A. Wheeler fs hastor, and Mrs. Pleasie Rogers, clark. Ga. Ave. and Girard St, N.W. Reduced Rentals in WASHINGTON’S MOST EXCLUSIVE APARTMENT BUILDING . 1 room, kitchenette, dress- ing room and bath, $30.00 1 room, kitchen, dining alcove, bath, $35.00. 2 rooms, kitchen, dining al- cove, bath, $42.50, Modern, fireproof building; 24-hour elevator service. Frigidaire on house eur- rent. : MRS. R. G. MOLSON Resident Manager Apt. 111. Phone: Columbia 8882 nee Competent Management nines _ ROCK INN CuICKEN DINNERS > PARTIES 4, Hou drive, Tom Waobiogte, TU ges hen” ge Route ht (yee Bn Baa. Boapristie Wenn. Marnaen SERIF ‘BARD aa -_ - cage? ‘tanee i SPECLAL All Ladies’ Oresses, $1.00” Ties, € for S00 Mon's Suits & Overceats, T5e os. Rats Ctoaned & Blookéd, 96 ap -a-_auiainmnnionmmemmaia eaiaetf Don't Forget Our Latenitry Service FIVE Highland Beach: Election Set Ss for Saturday of Next Week Incumbents Have No Opposition So Fay; Chairman of Commission Makes Annual Report; List of Elgible Voters Appended SIX held July 29, according to an an- nouncement by Haley G. Doug- Jass, chairman of the board of com- missioners of the conimunity. . All of the incumbent commis- sioners are ‘candidates for re-elec- tion, No position slate has ap- peared so far. The present offi ciais are: Haley G. Douglass, chair- man: Talley R. Holmes, treasurer; Dz. John E. Washington, secretary Dr. William A. Wells, and Mrs. Fannie H. Douglass. Commissioner Dougiass in his annua! report sets forth the growth ‘of the community after forty years as an al!-Negro settlement, and poinis out that a recent decision by the Court of Common Pleas, Baltimore, set aside a judgment and attachment when one of the residents of Highland Beach proved “that he was a resident of Anne Arundel county. ‘The case involved an automobile accident in which a beach citizen's car was in a collision witha ma- chine owned by a Baltimore man. The Baltimore man sued in the seourts of that city and received sjudzment, but it was set aside When it was brought to the atten- tion of the court that the person sued was a resident of Highland “Beach, Anne Arundel county. “The report of Commissioner “Douglass follows: Annual Report of the Board of = Commissioners July 12, 1933, “The Community of Highland Beach has completed its fortieth year of growth and improvement, sand its eleventh year as an incor- eporated town whose facilities are for the exclusive use of its property ‘owners and their house guests. This line of development has been ‘persistently opposed and the ordi- maances of the town violated by the Sroving element of pleasure seekers ‘Ayho, investing their money in au- ‘tomobiles rather than in real prop- ‘enty, follow good roads and tres- ‘pass wherever law enforcement is Weak. ©"“The Board of Commissioners chas again found it necessary to di- wect the atterition of the county Police authorities to the numerous Wisorderly ‘parties which have re- -eently invaded Highland Beach and iuring the night disturbed the speace of the neighboring water- ‘front. We have appointed a con- stable to patrol the beach and parties undressing and bathing from autos will have their tag numbers phoned to the state police. ‘The pleasant relations which have ‘existed between Highland Beach’ and nearby communities demand ‘this action. Property Rights “To further protect the property tights of cur citizens, the Maryland legislature strengthened our char- ter with respect to ‘the qualifica- tions of voters and to provide for the method of proposing amend- ments to the charter of-the town of Highland Beach and for the ‘method of proposing the incorpor- ating of Highland Beach with any surrounding town. (Chapter 119 of the Acts of 1933, State of Mary- land.) “We are gratified to note a re- cent decision by the Court of Com- mon Pleas, Baltimore, Maryland, Setting aside a judgment and at- fachment, when one of our readers proved that he was a legal voter and resident of Maryland. We, therefore, urge all of the citizens ‘of Highland Beach to avail them- selves.of the privilege of qualify- ing as legal residents and voters in the State of Maryland. “Our road commissioner through fireless and efficient effort has with limited funds met the expensive problem of road building and has ‘early completed our slag and tar- Via highways. During the coming Year we expect the completion of Walnut Drive, Bay Avenue, and Wayman Avenue. Financially Safe ~ “Our secretary, in addition to his regular duties, kas conducted our legislative program and handled our court cases with rare ability. Despite the fact that many towns have lost their funds in a year of Dank failures, our treasurer has been able to save and have avail- Abie every cent of our money, _ “The board of commissioners at its last meeting accepted the beau- tiful pavilion which was built by a committee of wouien of the High- dand Beach Citizens’ Association “out of contributions collected dur- ing years of enthusiastic effort, We trust that it will long endure AS x monument to their devotion and that the residents and guests Sf onr community will at all times Stotect it from improner” ure. “We are glad to note that the Founger members of our town have formed an athletic accociation and that they are mindful of the splen Hid opportunity for wholesome de- yelopment afforded by our town, “The board of commissioners i= deeply grateful for the support and bo-operation of the citizens’ as:0- Voters Must Pee Real Hetate The notice of election sent out oy the town clerk, Dr. John Wash- ington, states: “To be a voter the person's namie must appear on the deed to the property owned in Highland Beach.” ‘A list of persons eligible to vote is appended. However a clause in the clerk’s notice states: “New voters and others who are eligible to vote but whose names are not recorded in the list below must present their credentials to the town clerk before the opening of the polls, Saturday, July 29, 1933, or their votes cannot be counted.” The list of recorded voters is as follows: - List of Voters Irene Leake, Rachel Bell, Carroll Brooks, Mrs, Carroll Brooks, Nan- nie Burroughs, Hartford Burwell, Mrs, Hartford Burwell, _Vietor Daly, Edward Dickerson, Evelyn Douglass, Haley Douglass, Fannie Douglass, Walter Dyson, Mrs. Walter Dyson, Carolyn “Evans, Armstrong Claytor, Roseoe Evans, Edith Claytor, Milton Francis, Henry Freeman, Mrs. Henry Free- man, Eula Grey, Lonise Guy, Sarah Hall, Richard Hall, Mrs. Richard Hall, Grace Harris, Dorothea Fran- cis, Edwin Henderson, Nellie Hen- derson, Tally Holmes, Harmon ‘Howard, Marietta Howard, Audie Lewis,“ ‘Alice Lewis, Kellene Lewis, M. Grant Lucas, Sr., M. Grant Lucas, Jr, LeCount Matthews, Mrs. Le- Count Matthews, Edith Minton, Henry Minton, Ethel Murray, Bth- ‘el Rattley, Graham Reid, Elinor Russell, Herbert Scurlock, O. N. Sinimons, , Mrs. 0. N. Simmons, John: Matthews, Mable Matthews, Osborn Taylor, Mary ‘Terrell, Beatrice Walker, Richard Ware, John Washington, Virginia Wash- ington, William’ Wells, Lillian Wells, Erma West, Rebekah West, Ulysses Wharton, Mrs. Ulysses Wharton, Lena White, Jennie Wil- der, Mrs, Thomas Williams, Imo- gene -Wornlley. : DEMANDS JURY - - ~ INVESTIGATION. * OF WORLD FAN CHICAGO, (ANP)—Coming to the aid of the Chicago branch of the N.A.A.C.P. in its fight to stop discriminations at the World’s Fair, 2 joint resolution introduced by Representatives Jenkins, Brooche, Gaines, King, and Warfield was passed’ last week calling upon State's Attorney Thomas Courtney to conduct a grand jury investiza- tion of the violations of the rights of colored citizens by certain con- cessionaires on the World's Fair grounds to the end of finding out if there is not a criminal conspiracy to discriminate against colored peo- ple on the part of some or all of the concessionares, Will Press Charges A. C. MeNeal, president of the local branch of the association, stated that'all complaints that have heen received will be pregented to the state’s attorney, and © delega- tion will call upon Mr. Courtney asking him to act upon the demand of the state legislature. Should Mr, Courtney either delay or fail to act within a reasonable time, the law provides that the attorney gen- eral of the state may appoint a special state's ‘attorney to conduct such a special grand jury. Lawyers of the branch are now studying with the end in. view of asking for an injunetion closing all of the concessions at the World's Fair on the rounds. of. a public ‘nuisance, Colored people are urged to insist while at the fair to go where they please and where they are able to pay and report at once any violation of their rights’ as long as the fair remains open to the pabwe. MAN SLASHED ACROSS CHEST WON'T PROSECUTE Fighting in front of 7 Allen Court, Southwest, Jesse Gray, 28, Was cut across the left side of the chest and on. the left. shoulder with « knife, dy Wesley: Johnson, 26, address unknown. Gray was treated at Providence Hospital for his. wounds, which were not regarded as serious, ‘The wounded man told officers of the Fourth. Precinct he would not prosecute Johnson. RUNS BIKE INTO AUTO Running his bieyele into the side of an auto, Nathaniel Harris, 18, of 308 M"'Street, Northwest, re: ceived minor “bruises of the: body anda muscle sprain of the left wri, Monde ‘The driver of the machine, J. B. Rinker, of Stephens, Va., took the injured youth to Freedmien's Hos- pital, where he was released after negative examination for a nossi- ble fracture or dislocation of any ee gee No Plaxo tue Libs. | Dad, are there lions in Africa?” “Yes, son.” eve So gat «S992 Mo They have no Hg” “Then what do they do with the lions?” — Frankfuyter Mlustrierte (Frankfurt), EXTENDS FIGHT FOR BLRAGIAL PARK GAMES EVANSTON A were completed last week for 1 community-wide mass meeting, t be held at Masonic hall’ this week, to protest th jim crow rule put in fore by the Evanston Park Board, barring mixed games fron the city’s parks. The meeting is being called. bs Alderman Jourdain, of. the fittk ward who last week sponsored ‘city council investigation into the | proposed segregation, and.demand. ed repeal of the rule. ‘The baseball situation isthe sec: ond controversy which Alderman Jourdain has had this summer with the heads of the city’s recreation department. For years the bureau of recreation has followed a cus- tom which prevailed while ex-Al- derman Peter U. Jans (white) was in power, of having a jim crow/ex- amination for life guards‘for the city’s bathing” beaches, Under Alderman Jans, the cus- ‘tom had been to have the examina- tion for-white life guards at the Patten gymnasium of: Northwest- ern University, and then to have a separate examination for . dark- skinned ‘life guard candidates at the Emerson Street Y.M.C.A. branch, Plans were made this year for carrying on the custom.) . Segregation Flayed Alderman Jourdain - interfered, threatening at first to air the whole matter on the floor of the council, and whey that did no good, to move on the couneil floor to have the city of Evanston cancel the sum which was annually voted out in the city’s budget to Northwestern University for the use of the Patten gymnas- ium swimming pool for the exam- inations, on the ground that-candi- dates of all races were not allowed to take the exams there. Upon the fifth ward alderman’s protests, the superintendent of the bureau of recreation finally agreed to see to it that the jim crow. tra- dition would be broken, and that all candidates, regardless of race, would be given the same examina- tion at ‘the same time at the same pool. ‘The fifth ward alderman’s posi- tion on the present attempt at dis- crimination is being backed by At- torneys Howard Bell and Nelson M. Willis, who. are heading a: spe- cial legal’ defense committee which Alderman Jourdain‘ is organizing. “We have no intention‘of sitting by and letting: the \inswlt go) unre- buffed,” he declared. “We. are: or- ganizing-a defense, and. if neces- sary we are going into the highest ‘courts of the state with the case.” Southeast House Has Picnic at Camp Pleasant Southeast. House Day was “ob- served at Camp. Pleasant on Fri- day, July 14. ‘Two bus loads’ and several cas full of children. spent a delightful day there. The group comprised the singing ard ..ant classes of’ the activities, school which are in charge of’ Levington Smith and Miss: Lojs‘Jones,: the di- rectors of the supetvised play=pro- gram and some of the ‘junior’and senior leaders, :5 The children had a good.tinte: all day hiking, swimming,’ playing games and. blackberrying., Fifty quarts of milk were ‘furnished’ by the playground department. = It is the intention to. have the primary and Kindergarten children of the activities school go on the next pienie, Mise Ruby. “Stevens and Miss Ruth Ferguson. are. in charge of these ‘children, For. the next five weeks some group oft activities school will have-a pienlc each Friday, Camp Pleasant, overlooking” the Potomac River, is an ideal: plac for picnics. Mondays’ and: Tues: days are still available, for chuteh ‘club and fraternal. organizations by telephoning Miss SibVL. Baker, OF the pleveiiaa acoeraeie BOSTON - LL.D. EXPELS MAN FOR WHITE CHAUVINISM BOSTON, Mass—(ILD) Frank Nichols has’ been expelled from the International Labor Defense. for white chauvinism, it was, announe- ed by the Bastern New England Executive Conumittee, The incident leading up to the expulsion of Nichols, the commit- tee announced was # statement on his part that “all Negroes. are thieves. and crooks.” When’ ques- tioned about this statement /at a meeting of the district: execitive committee, he admitted making the remark and confirmed his deep rooted white chauvinistic tenden- cies, practically refusing to admit the seriousness of this insult to the Negro people and to the’ whole working class, making only a hy- pocritical statement that in the fu- ture “Iwill guard my tongue lest anything T might say might be construed against .¢.” “The LD, which carries on\ a continuous struggle for Neg Fight agains, white chauvinistie acts, discrimination, jim-crowism, and all other white ruling. class at- lacks on the Negro cannot tolerate the existence of contemed white chauvinism within its own ranks,” the exestiye ‘cymmittee State ment’ gaig. “This dgcigive agtign is partofa figuras campegisioe heinig: conducted shy. the ‘11D, to stamp out all tendencies of “white ‘chauvinism. kK “ie Ti "tHE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 Personals visiting friends in Cincinnati, Ohio, ‘Mrs. Archie'J.: Morgan, of At: lantic City, “Na. is“ inthe city, ‘called here by the continued illness ‘of her’ mother, Mrs, Emmett J. Scott, of 1711'S Street, Northwest. Mrs.'Morgan, the formes, Miss Le- nora Scott, graduate \éf- Dunbar High School and of the Miner Nor- mal School, Washington, has been ‘a teacher in'the public Schools of Atlantic City during the past eight years. Mrs, Scott js reported to be improving, Miss. Lillian Smith, of “French Street, has aa her guest, MissiEve lyn Vaugh, a teacher in the pub- lie school of Greenfield, Dr. Merrill Curtis is pursuing special courses, in eye, ear, and throat, troubles, at the University of Chicago.” His wife Mrs, Pearl Curtis, recently left’ the city to be with her husband. Mr. and Mrs, Walter Morgan, of 1101 Seventh Street, Northeast, had as guests last week, their nieces Mrs, Arthur, Whetsel, of New York, Mrs, Thomas Wheeler, of Jersey City, and Miss Gladyee Saunders, a friend, of Jersey City. Miss Carrie Mann, lgcal_ school teacher, is house guest of Dr. and Mrs. Maceo Morris, in. Philadel- hia. , Pip. John’ Si Mitehell has been visiting ‘in Philadélphia, as guest of Miss Jenesse H, Davis.» Mrs, P. Flack, house. guest of Dr. and Mrs, St, Elmo Brady, plans,to remain in the city until the last of the month. a **Mis, ‘Ruth B. Brown, teacher in the Bast St, Louts, IIl,; schools, is spending vacation lays .with her patents, the Brinkleys, of 932 T Street, Northwest. ‘Miss: Lulu .V. Childers, Howard University, is spending come ‘time in Philadelphia, Mr. and Mis. Emory Smith, and son, are visiting Mr, and Mrs, Ed- ward “Harris, parents of “Mrs. Smith, in’ Germantown, Philadel- phia. Meryin Jones, Howard medical student, js summering in Albany, N.Y., after making a brief visit with’ his: mother, in Burlington, NY, Dr.John Mitchell, of Freedmen’s Hospital staff, has’ returned from a’ motor trip to New Yo:x, Mr. and Mrs. Jabez Lee, of 1732 Vermont — Avenue, Northwest, Washington, D.C., attended. the thirty-fourth International Chris- tian Endeavor Convention which held sessions in City Auditorium. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 8-13. The Lees: were the house guests of Mrs. Mattie Gant, 2961 N, 9th Be - Mrs,2 Carries Stuckey; 211. Fifty- first’ Street, “Northeast, underwent an opetation -at’F reetimen’s’ Hospi- tal,-Monday. - ‘Phe: Rev. ‘Alice L..Waytes: sup- exvisor jn, the Emergency Bureau in’ New-York City, was.a delegate to 'the. National Woman's. party, meeting yhere. Saturday, Yeturning touher Wome: Sunday: sight. White here, she Was, guest’ of) Mr,. V. Thompson, |» (Mas. J..D. Augustine, of Cam- bridge, Mass..:is visiting her nieces Miss S.J. Jenifer: and Mrs, I. Ledbetter. and nephew, Ed, -and John Janifer,‘at 1116 Sixth Street, aera hie Miss Isadore \C. Williams, teach: er ofsEhglish in ’Armstrong High School, sailéd’ ‘last week on’ the S)S., Augustus ’forya month's tour of: southern: Europe and ‘the: Holy | Land. Among” other. “Mediter- | rainean-plgces of classical interest, her; itineraty “will cinclude Geneva ‘Rome, Palernio,” Athens, Crete and Palestne.'y Before: sailing, Miss Williams.“spent seyeral days ir New" York "City asthe guest of Mrs, ‘Johni=Doleg, ‘formerly Miss Naw Manis, of this’ city. frs..:Mae; Hall Greenfield “anc ‘| her littlestiaby:girl are. spending the summer at- Benedict, Md. ]" Mrs. Helen” Moss: Underdue i: i sending ‘afew days vacation it "| Philadelphia. 4 | .The:Civic Leagueiof Mt, Winnas | Maryland, sspent®'a day at the || Patuxent: Pleasure’ Park at Eagle Harbor, bathing, fishing, and crab bing... : Me ands Mere, Wallace Jenkin: and son were the iwerk-end guest: of-Mr. antl Mrs..William Thomas 157 P Street, Northwest. | Miss Susie R. Quander, who is attending: the University of Penn. sylvania, spent the’ week-end wit) her mother, Mrs. H. B. Quander of. Fairmont ‘Street,“Northwest. Among the. visitors to" the cits last, week"were Mr. and Mrs | Charles C. Quander and sons | Charles.P.vand-Howard W., an¢ | Mrs. ‘John: P. Quander of” New | York City... ‘The party motored here enroute to and from Norfolk Virginia; the honie of Mrs. John P Quander, formerly. Miss “Ethelene | Turner. . | While in the city they spent 2 few.days’as guests of their mother, Mrs, H. B. Quander, of Fairmont Street, Northwest. 5 | <The Young ‘Ladies’ Club of Lin- ; Le Columbia Lodge Elks’ The band and the'lodge’s special band committee w.ll.give a moon: Tight excursion down the river Sat urday night. Allen AC. Griffith is chairman of the group in charge of affairs. - ‘A ppe-conventios drive for 600 myinbers Was” ovened? thie week. The gyal is expeyted to be reached by Augagt 15. Tot cniy, are many ngW members igiting. bute large number of ‘old njeribers are com: ing back into Rikdom, according to the -reports from: the - Columbia Lodge secretary, * « Mrs. Ellen Pethel’s Pupils in Recital "Mrs, Ellen N. Bethel, presented ‘a-group of her pupils ina piano ‘Fecital at her studio, 1111 Colum- a Road, last Wednesday evening. Compositions of Bach, Beethov- Sen, Rubinstein, ‘Tschaikowski, Cho- pin and others were included in the program. Pupils taking part were Merle and Juanita Pendergrass, Sonovia Cooper, Juanita. Beyerly,” Lorraine and Meveedes French, Alease Lu- ‘eas, Thelma Jackson, Mary Wash- ingion, Gladys Harley, Evelyn Can- non, and Josephine Simons. ‘A feature of the program was fan exercise in, rhythmic drawing, demonstrated by ane of the pri- mary pupils. "AC the close of the program, Mrs. Rebecca. J. Gray addressed the class. She made an. appeal to the students to do honest and conscien- tious work, Bis 1h oes 2 ! Personals — Mr. and Mrs. James Marshall, of 1209 Fifteenth Street, Northwest, motored to Sparrows Beach for the week-end. Boating, fishing and Swimming were enjoyed, Mrs, Sarah E. Thomas has re- turned to the city after spending the past two weeks in Chicago and Milwaukee, Mrs. Thomas attended the Christian Endeavor Convention in: Milwaukee,, and the World’s Fair in Chicago during her visits. Billie (Wiggles) Thomas is the proud father of a fine baby boy. Mr, Thomas ‘is’ a member of the ‘Avalon Players and the mother, the former Bettie Coates, is a former ‘Avalon Piayer. Mr. and Mrs. J. Oliver Morrison, of Kansas City, Mo., are in the city for a brief visit, They are at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Johnson, of 1840 Thirteenth Street, Northwest. Mr. Morrison is a former graduate of Howard Uni- versity, and has been a teacher in Kansas City for fourteen years. Mrs. Morrison (nee Alma Clark) is'a former graduate of New Or- leans University. Both are active in civie affairs. eg ee MISSES NORMA AND ALMA MURRAY RETURN TO CITY Mrs, Amanda Murray, of Third Street, Northwest, motored to New York ‘City, Sunday, ‘to bring her two daughters, Norma and Alma, home. They ‘have been visiting Miss Olivett Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Irving C. Miller, for the past two weeks. s Miss Miller accompanied the trio on the trip and will he the house guest at the Murray home for a week. or BIRTHDAY PARTY GIVEN FOR CHARLIE WILLIAMS Charlie Williams was the hon- ored “guest at a birthday. party, Monday night, at 1703 Tenth Street, Northwest, Among those present were Mr. and Mrs, Melvin Colbert, Miss Julia Jackson. of Philadelohia; Mrs. Mil- dred Crawford, Miss’ Florence Nutt, Miss Alberta Mack, Mrs. Minnie Lawson, Mrs. Adella Ellis, Edward Johnson, William Hall, and Miss Mary Simms. VIRGINIANS MARRY HERE Mrs, Beatrice Davis, 35, of Alex- andria, Va., was licensed to marry dria,. last week. ‘Oscar Venney, 38, also of Alexan- Mabel—Why did Belle break the engagement? | Edith—He was so untrust- worthy. She found he was engag- ed to four other girls and he had only. told her of ‘two.—Brooklyn Daily Eagle. How few, like Daniel, have God and gold together—George Vil- liers. SUNDAY MENU Dinner Served from 1 to 9 P.M. ere I} Sweet Potatoen, Candied — uttered Gee ers cn ‘Apple Ple — Blackberry Short Cake The service at Whitelaw Cate ie PATUXENT PLEASURE PARK Eagle Harbor, Maryland Via Anacostia, Clinton, T.B., Brandywine, Aquasco (where turn left at Duke's Corner Oil: Station to the Beach), art fears ee td WARE’S, HOTEL Double room and board, $10 week Single room and board, $15 week Week-end, $2.50 a day Pott Office Address WARE’S HOTEL Highland Beach, Annapolis, Ma, Phone 1855-F-24 mI Ay eccues | | Mew | Are You ee iy Be ———— e ; A ‘a be | Hija, | Interested an i ae ee yh eee | in the Truth? Paeaaee | ea | FOR: THIRTY-THREE YEARS, NORTH g ee | CAROLINA MUTUAL LIFE ‘INSURANCE “HOME OFFICE BLDG, | COMPANY HAS STOOD THE TEST. . It Has Come Through the Present Economic Stress. Without Criticism It Stands Today as a Company—- Financially Strong—Conservatively Managed and Promptly Meeting Every Obligation to Policyholders North Carolina Mutual is.a Progressive Company, Offering Policies for Every Life Insurance Need. It Offers Its Services to the Insuring Public With Full Knowledge of Its Ability and Responsibility. LET US’ARRANGE AN INSURANCE. PROGRAM FOR YOU ITS-WASHINGTON REPRESENTATIVES ARE CHARLES H. FEARING, Manager. MAUDL. REED, Cashier-Clerk . . ’ JOSEPH F. HARRIS, Assistant Manager Benjamin Piper and Paul S. Crane, S pecial Ordinary Representatives D. H. Hancock — Robert L. Berry —— Winfred Mundle — Fred Harris Roswell N.Pinckney — Douglas L. Monroe — Charles. H. Fearing, Jr. / John P. Young — Lottie Ball Home Office: DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA C..C, SPAULDING, Presipent , eee Branch Office: 715 Florida Avenue, \y. W. NO HOME COMPLETE. WITHOUT A NORTH CAROLINA: MUTUAL POLICY Youth’s | Corner Sevag CRIS aa Friendship ys. Money It was either, an ancient: sooth- sayer or @ modern philosopher that has been credited with the follow- ing “pearl” of wisdom, to. wit— “Money is the leveler of all friend- ships.” : ‘There is more truth than poetry to that sentence, How true it is. Money is'the leveler of all friend- ships.” In these days of ‘economic distress -the realization” of this truth becomes’ more and: more ‘ap- parent with each succeeding in- terval. Probably you, too, have caught the irony that is. evident in that “pa- thetic but tuneful melody “Buddy, can you spare a dime?” © Often times that “buddy” to whom a fervent appeai is pitifully made is devoid gf ‘ail sympathy and ap- preciation for past favors. and deeds rendexed by his panic.strie- Ken comrade in the not so distant past; for, “Money is the leyeler of all friendships.” How ofter have you -and you and you become acquainted with the type of “friend” wha. persists in boasting of how much, he thinks of you, what he wouldn't do for ‘you ete—and when ‘te is put to the test, falls down miserably.» Now-adays, if you are desirous of “breaking” a well-cemented “friendsnip,” all that is nc.essary for you to dc is to’slep your “pal” fon the back and whisper: sof*.v into his eac “Listen, buddy, T’ am up against ite; can wyou slat -me have a five spot until pay day (if you have a pay day)? After you have. made the (plea, be sure to note the sudden expres- sion of mingled disgust and sulki- ness that will encompass his manly countenance. It is then that you will realize thet -the modern defi- nition of friendship can be best explained in terms of commercial evaluation. Now I know that there are some who will say “Well, I have friends to whom I can go to when I am in need, and they are as good as gold.” But to them I will reply, those friends of that calibre are rare “species” and are gradually becoming as extinct as the Ameri- can’ Indian. To you who seek genuine companionshiy and com- araderie, I might advise, endeavor as best you can to forbid any com- mercial aspects to wedge them- selves between you and yours—for the result is inevitable—“Money is the leveler of all friendships.” eee They Tell Me ‘That— The recent. notoriety given te the Allen-Fletcher mixed murder case will do nothing at all towards cementing any ‘spirit of friendli ness that may now exist between Nordies and Negroes.:. as a mat- ter of fact, it ix infamous publicity of this nature that tends to destroy any fraternity between the tw racial groups. It is quite incidental that ye ol scribe happened to “elucidate” or BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CATITAL this ‘same particutar phase . of moral... bad ‘newspaper morals” ‘at that, in;last week's treatise... it is a_great~ wonder that the N.A.A.C.P. and - other ~race-con- scious’ organizations .would _not concentrate on a united fight against this antagonistic attitude ‘of. the “average”’ run of white dailies. ‘They. specialize in’-using the word “Negra” when such t person can be linked up with some atroci- ty." for instance, murder, robbery. rape, cl al... yet when ‘some ve- markable deeds are performed by eolored persons little or no: credit is given to them, and seldom if any at all is the, name or appellation displayed as prominently as when circumstances are the reverse. ‘As an ‘example. it took me a considerable length of time to as- certain whether or not Cornelius Johnson( famec Negro high school track star) was colored or. white s+. oF whether Eva Taylor! (fam- ous colored blues singer on che radio) was of Negro: blood or not vee ib was not until our colored weeklies divulged this “info” that I was able to ascertain’this knowl- edge. These and other innumerable in- justices are too flagrant~and out- spokento be disregarded’ and ignored... and it” is. time’ that something ‘be’ done about’ it, Laurence J. W. Hayés has changed his plans and decided to remain in. these precincts... he evidently is working “under-cover” ..for even his best friends won't tell me-of his plans and where: abouts. It, is the plan, of. the Colored Departmental Basketball League to. stage a- banquet and lection ‘ere the frost and wintry breezes set in... this. should-be interesting... so wateh and wait. vsAda Davis. hag reminied., non- committal. about last week's sketch ‘on her life; past present and. fu- ture... (aside to the lady) Here's hoping you liked it. Blanche Braswell is nestled un- der the devasting scenery of Rocky Mount, N.C... (aside’ to that lady) Don't forget old friends. Murray Richardson, erstwhile political dabbler, _ procrastinator Jand commentor js contemplating a return to night school this fall... he intends to specialize in English a. subject that. will. provide him with ample opportunity to test his forensic: skill. ; My old “big city” buddie ‘was plenty sore at me for failing: to show up jn New York on the morn- ing of the eventful Fourth, He went to the trouble of getting up at four o'clock that morning. to welcome’ his long ‘lost buddie.... only to find that yours. truly. had changed his mind. Td Better stay away for all time... for he is one angry “colonel”... sorry, Wendell, 1'l make up for that... I'll send you a copy of this paper with my open and extended apology... and that’s enough of this.... until next week EDITOR'S NOTE:—"Youth- ful Personalities” sketch will be deferred until next week. It will also be. the privilege of the writer to turn over this column to my “Guest Colum- nist.” I promised. not to di- vulge (his; her) identity until this -“staf” shall” appear.:in print. Incicentally, this brief interval will allow me to pro- duce that long proimsed “pho- to” for the amusement of my readers. So, you see there will be lots of fuin awaiting you in the next three weeks, sees One-Word Descriptions of Interesting People Robert (Smitty) Smith, precise: Vassar Gibson, critical; William Steen, studious; Ada Davis, yolup- tuous; Blanche Braswell, deep; ‘Murray Richardson, showman; John Taylor, versatile; William ‘Ratcliff, popular; Beatrice Mur- phy, prolific; Laurence J. W. Hayes, dignitary;' John Lacy, ‘pe- tite; McKenzie Perrit, ambitious, | Seles ‘Do You Remember When (To. the men) You wore your first. “knickerbockers.” how you struggled to tie the end of each trouser leg, so that it would fit neatly? Some of the less fortunate of us had considerable difficulty making them “bag” just right—our legs weren't just plump engugh.. Boy, and weren't we ticked to throw off those stove-pipes that hugged our knees until we thought ‘they were sewed on tous. Boy, but those were the good old ‘days! (To the ladies) Do. you‘remem- ber the fad that bowled the men over about five summers ago? Right! . Rolled stockings below the knees. How grandmother did shriek with consternation and sur- prise when she’first saw that sight, “What are, these young ‘uns. com- ing to?” and expressions of similar tone and tenor were flown into the ears of these startling daughters until .the~ style gradually’ outlived its popularity: But, you women can have the ‘satisfaction in: know- ing that the lower limbs had the “freedom of expression” for a few summiers ‘at least. (To all of us) Who can forget the “pajama” craze that took the country by storm ‘a few summers ago? ‘There were pajamas for men and pajamas for women. At first cries of ridicule and. mockery greeted the pioneers of this fad, but gradually the number in the pajama wearing ranks increased to a considerable figure, Consequently there was in- creased . competition among. the wearers to “outpajama” one an- other by seeing which ones could display ‘the most expensive and most luxurious looking pajamas. This fad has remained with us to some extent, and while men” women do not go in for it as con- spicuously as they did a few years ago, it is-not unusual to witness 4 display of pajamas at the home, the beach, at parties and’ other more informal social gatherings. _ Junior Elks ‘The Emma V. Kelly Junior Tem: ple of Elks held its installation of officers at its regular’ meeting Sat- urday. Daughter Fair, secretary of Columbia Temple, presided. The juniors held their picnic at Sparrows Beach. BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL For Information DGS DISTRICT GROCERY STORES 1920 CALL MET. 4662 ★ STAR SPECIALS ★ 'TILL SATURDAY'S CLOSEING SPECIAL COMBINATION 2 lge. cans PHILLIPS PORK and BEANS 1 lge. can PHILLIPS VEGETABLE SOUP ALL 3 CANS 25c SCHIMMEL'S PURE JELLY 2 32-oz. JARS 39c Four times as much jelly as in the 10c size glass LIPTON'S TEA 1 lb. 2 pkge 35c The World's Finest Tea BEE BRAND INSECT SPRAY ½-pt. 21c Can 39c Pint A delightful cedar odor Kills quickly and effectively KIRKMAN'S SOAP 6 Cakes 25c SET OF SIX Large Cups and Saucers for 100 Kirkman Coupons RINSO 2 large pkgs 39c Soaks Clothes Whiter LIFEBUOY SOAP 3 Cakes 19c Removes "B. G." Beech-Nut Coffee lb. 29c Rare Flavor From Tropic Heights THE MME. WALKER MEDAL WILL BE DISCONTINUED Has Been Awarded for Nine Years Through the N.A.A.C.P. Associate Negro Press NEW YORK—The Mme. C. J. Walker Medal has been discontinued, according to an announcement made Monday at the offices of the N.A.A.C.P. which annually awarded it. Dean William Pickens, who had charge of that phase of the work said, "In 1924 I secured from the Mme. C. J. Walker company of Indianapolis; Indiana, an annual award of one gold medal and two scholarships for highest achievements each year among those striving to help the American Negro through the N.A.A.C.P., and not being connected with the national office as paid employs. "After a few years, the scholarships were discontinued but the medal has been given annually, the last one for 1933 going to Dr. O. A. J. McPherson of Birmingham, Ala., for his courageous work in connection with the Scottsbore and Willie Peterson cases and for reviving the N.A.A.C.P. in Birmingham against great odds. "Dr. McPherson sponsored several large mass meetings to be addressed by the field secretary of the N.A.A.C.P. at a time when feeling was so intense that most people in Birmingham were afraid to be responsible for such meetings. "Dr. McPherson is the ninth and the last person to receive the Mute, C. J. Walker Gold Medal, as the company finds it necessary to discontinue the annual donation temporarily. But it is expected that the N.A.A.C.P. will continue the annual award of a gold medal, perhaps an N.A.A.C.P. Gold Medal; to the member rendering the best service, as usual." Chicago Wilberforeans Plan to Welcome Alumni Associated Negro Press CHICAGO—The Chicago Wilberforce club of which Mrs. LeUrsa Snelson Hendrick is president, has completed plans for entertaining visiting Wilberforceans according to announcements made by chairmen of various committees here. Headquarters of the alumni have been established in the new Urban League Community Rooms, 510 E. 51st Street. Visitors are requested to register there any afternoon between 2:00 and 6:00. Hostesses will be on duty on certain days to meet and greet visiting alumni and put them in touch with personal friends. This will also be the headquarters for the Wilberforce committee which is sponsoring the "Memory Book of a Million Names." This book which is perhaps the largest in the country, was designed especially for the Wilberforce financial campaign. Negro Cotton Mill Workers Not Benefited by New Code Will Lose $3,600,000 Annually in Pay Increases Under New Textile Code; No Reduction in Hours; No Additions to Employed That the 10,008 Negro cleaners and outside employees in the cotton mills of the South will lose more than $3,600,000 annually in pay increases given to other classes of labor under the cotton textile code approved recently by President Roosevelt, was one of the conclusions made in a statistical analysis of the code prepared by the Department of Research of the Negro Industrial League. The survey of the effect of the cotton textile code on Negro labor revealed other important facts concerning Negro consumption of cotton. General facts as to the effect the increase in the cost of living will have on Negro buying power were also contained in the report "While the figures for 1930 are the only official reported ones," said the survey, "fragmentary reports for 1933 indicate that the ratio for white and Negro cotton mill workers has remained substantially the same. Generalizations, therefore, upon the 1930 Census figures, while not giving a complete picture of conditions, will give an adequate view of the plight in which the Negro cotton mill worker finds himself under the new cotton textile code as approved by President Roosevelt." 10.000 Negroes Affected "The new code," continues the survey, "affects the wages of more than 400,000 workers now employed as well as of more than 100,000 who will be added to the present force. Of those employed in 1930—and the number will serve as an index of the 1933 situation—13,961 were Negroes; and, of these 10,068 will receive no benefits in higher wages or shorter hours under the code. The result is that these workers will be denied pay increases totalling $3,664,752 annually. "If this group is compared with an equal number of white cotton mill workers included in the beneficial provisions of the code, the following results: the 10,068 Negroes for working 604,080 man-hours a week will receive $50,340 weekly, while the same number of whites, who will be required to work only 402,720 man-hours a week, will receive $120,816 weekly. "Moreover the fact that Negro workers are still required to work 60 hours a week will mean that the 201,360 man-hours they work in addition to the man-hours worked by an equal number of whites will prevent increases in Negro employment. If this extra time were parcelled out, as has been done in the case of white labor, there would result the employment of an additional 5,034 Negro workers on the basis of 40 hours a week. Increased Negro Income The additional income derived by these now unemployed Negro workers would be $60,428 weekly, or $3,142,256 annually. The refusal, therefore, of the President to include Negro cleaners and outside workers in the benefits under the code will mean a consequent loss In Negro buying power of nearly $7,000,000. "This when it is realized that the cost of living will rise in the next few weeks more than 10 per cent and has already appreciably increased, the significance of this loss in buying power becomes marked." The survey also drew attention to threatened increases in the price of feedstuffs and other products of the farm and factories. "Not only will continued curtailment of Negro buying power result in widespread human misery among colored families," said the report, "but as well a failure to realize the need for increasing this buying power along with the buying power of the white family may well result in a complete paralysis of the present administration's plans for national recovery." Code Approved Conditionally Some progress was made by the league, however. The code as approved by the President was conditioned upon the establishment of a minimum wage and maximum hours of service scale for these classes by January 1, 1934. In the interim the President reserved the right to modify the code to include these classes at any time. Officials of the league announced this week that they would begin at once preparation of a brief for presentation to President Roosevelt requesting immediate inclusion of the execved classes in the beneficial provisions of the code. It is planned to support the brief with facts as to the cost of living of Negro cotton mill workers, wages paid them, and hours worked by them each week. It was pointed out that the code itself is approved for four months only, but that cotton mill owners have been given six months in which to prepare a minimum wage and maximum hours scale for Negro employees. Speaking for the league, John P. Davis, its executive secretary, expressed keen dissatisfaction with the code as at present approved. He said: "President Roosevelt has declared his policy to be to put people back to work, to raise the wages of employees and to increase the buying power of the working man. Whatever may be the results of the cotton textile code, it can not be said that as now approved the code contains any benefit to the bulk of the black labor employed in the industry. "As the code stands, for the next six months, the Negro cotton mill worker must still work 60 hours a week and more, while the white employee works only 40 hours; must still receive $5 a week and less while the white worker will receive $12 a week and more. Moreover there will be no increase in the jobs available for colored un-employed." Mr. Davis also warned that unless there was immediate organization of forces among colored associations interested in this cause, similar injustices would crop up in other codes, which would adversely affect hundreds of thousands of Nero workers. NORTH BRENTWOOD HOLDS MUNICIPAL ELECTION Julius Wheeler Reelected Mayor for Two-Year Term of Office NORTH BRENTWOOD, Md. James V. Wallace was elected councilman from the First ward of this all-colored town in the annual municipal election here Thursday. July 6, defeating Councilman Peter Randall, 51 to 18. This was the lone contest Julius. Wheeler was reelected mayor, receiving 76 complimentary votes, and Mrs. Sadie P. J. Ingram was chosen treasurer, getting 68 complimentary votes. Mrs. Ingram succeeds Jerome Thomas, who decided not to stand for reelection. By a vote of 34 to 9, the amendment to the town charter passed by the last Legislature, extending the terms of the mayor and treasurer from one year to two years, was approved, and Mayor Wheeler and Mrs. Ingram will serve two-year terms. I.L.D. Files Bill of Exceptions in Herndon Appeal ATLANTA, Ga.—The bill of exceptions in the appeal to the Supreme Court of Georgia against the conviction and sentence to from 18 to 20 years on the gang gang handed down against Angelo Herndon, young Negro organizer of the unemployed, was filed July 11 by John H. Greer, young Negro attorney, who, with Benjamin J, Davis, Jr., is retained by the International Labor Defense in the case. Last week Judge Lee B. Wyatt, refusing to grant a new trial to Herndon, and holding that the evidence against him, which consisted entirely of possession of working-class literature, was "sufficient to warrant the death penalty" set the date for filing of an appeal forward from the customary twenty days allowed in Georgia. This rushing of the attorneys, on the excuse that the judge wanted a vacation, was obviously for the purpose of causing a default, which would enable the authorities to railroad Herndon to the chain gang to serve his sentence. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 Pure Fo Three Recipes that Rice Lovers Will Like Rice and Chicken Soup Wash the rice and cook slowly in the chicken broth and water or milk. As soon as the mixture reaches the boiling point, add the onion and celery. Cook t he ingredients until tender. Remove the onion and celery, add the minced chicken, butter and seasoning and cook ten minutes longer. This will make five or six average servings. Spanish Rice Slice the onions and cook until tender and slightly browned in the melted fat. Remove them and add the rice, which has been washed and dried. Cook the rice in the fat until it is browned, stirred constantly, then add the cooked onions, tomatoes and chopped green peppers and salt. Turn the mixture into a baking dish and bake until the rice and peppers are tender. Race Waffles % cup of cold boiled rice 1 1/4 cups flour 1 1/2 cups milk 3 teaspoons baking powder 1/4 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon melted butter 2 tablespoons sugar 2 eggs Mix and sift the dry ingredients, combine them with the rice care- fully, add the milk, egg yolks, well- beaten, butter, and the stiffly-beat- en egg whites. Cook the same as for other waffles. Serve with ma- ple syrup or honey. On the Air Paul Robeson will be heard on Rudy Vallee's Fleischman Yeast hour tonight at 7 o'clock. During Mr. Vallee's broadcast last week he said he had talked with Mr. Robeson recently and was informed by Mr. Robeson that he listened to his programs regularly and enjoys his work on the air very much. At this time he suggested that Rudy should play and sing "Deep River." Rudy attempted to sing it but the spiritual of the Negro is not the type of song for him to sing. Rudy Vallee appreciates good artists regardless of color. Columbia gave radio listeners a real treat last Sunday evening when they picked up Professor James Mundy and his choristers for a quarter-hour from the Hall of Religion on the north lagoon at A Century of Progress. The ovation that was accorded Professor Mundy by the work announcer was par with excellence. He related also how the professor was the first director to bring a Negro choir into the famed Orchestra hall here in Chicago fourteen years ago. William F. Stevenson, chairman of the board of the Home Owners Loan Corporation, will discuss the plans of this new Federal agency over the WABC-Columbia network on Monday, July 24, from 7:15 to 8:30 p.m. The H.O.L.C. is an organization designed to help those debtors whose homes are burdened with mortgages they are unable to pay off. Like the farmers, home owners will be able to arrange easier payments and still remain in possession by cooperating with the H.O.L.C. Chairman Stevenson, formerly a member of Congress from South Carolina, will face the microphone in the CBS studios at Washington. He is a member of the President's newly formed Executive Council. Eva Taylor, heard in several programs each week over NBC networks, literally fell into a stage career. When she was only two years old, Eva was one of a number of colored children who were being looked over for a vaudeville act. Before it came her turn to perform, she fell down some steps leading to the stage and cut her head. Afraid to cry, she tried to stifle the pain by hopping up and down, as a child will. The manager of the act, seeing her gymnastics, took it for granted she was dancing, and was impressed to the point of signing her up at once. Late news bulletins report that the return of Duke Ellington has been set back to August. Following his third week at the Palladium, London, he plays four concert dates in Holland and then the weeks of July 21 and 28 at the Rex, Paris. Present plans has the Ellington unit boarding the Majestic August 5 for the trip back. Foods It is always good to have cake in the house. Try some of the following recipes to please the men. Sally White Cake ½ cup milk from fresh cocoanut 2¾ cups flour 3 teaspoons baking powder ¼ teaspoon ground mace ½ teaspoon salt 1 small cocoanut, grated ¼ pound blanched shredded almonds Cream the shortening and sugar until light and fluffy, then add the eggs, one at a time, beating each in well before adding the next. Now put in the cocoanut milk, then the flour, baking powder, mace and salt sifted together twice. Last of all add the grated cocoanut and the almonds, mixing these ingently. Turn into a large pan which has been lined with greased paper and bake fifty minutes in a moderate oven. Two-In-One Cake 7 tablespoons shortening, preferably butter 1 cup sugar ½ cup milk 1 teaspoon almond extract 1¼ cups flour 2 teaspoons baking powder ½ teaspoon salt Whites of 4 eggs Cream the shortening and sugar, add the milk and flavoring extract, then the flour, baking powder and salt sifted together. Beat the whites of eggs until stiff, fold them gently into the batter, turn the mixture into a large deep, weil-greased and floured layer cake pan and bake twenty-five to thirty minutes in a moderately oven. Yellow Portion 6 tablespoons shortening, preferably butter ½ cup sugar Yolks of 4 eggs ½ cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 1½ cups flour 3 teaspoons baking powder ½ teaspoon salt Cream the shortening and sugar, also the yolks of eggs, add the milk and vanilla, then the flour, baking powder and salt sifted to together. Beat thoroughly, turn into a large, deep, well-greased and floured layer cake pan and bake twenty-five to thirty minutes in a moderate oven. Cool the cakes in the pans, then put the layers together with tart jelly and ice with butter frosting. White Loaf Cake ½ cup shortening 1 cup sugar ½ teaspoon almond extract ½ teaspoon vanilla extract 1½ cups flour Whites of 3 eggs Cream the shortening and sugar, add the extracts, then the flour, cornstarch, baking powder and salt sifted together, alternately with the water. Beat thoroughly, then fold in the whites of eggs which have been beaten until stiff. Turn into a greased and floured loaf cake pan and bake about forty-five minutes in a moderate oven. Black Cake 3 cups flour 4 teaspoons baking powder ½ teaspoon each ground cinnamon and mace hamon and mace ½ teaspoon salt ¾ cup cold black coffee 4 eggs Cream the shortening and sugar thoroughly together, add the chocolate melted over hot water, then the flour, baking powder, spices and sifted together, alternately with the coffee. Drop in the eggs one at a time, beating each in well. Bake in a large well-greased and floured loaf cake pan about fifty minutes in a moderate oven. Cool in the pan, then turn out, ice and sprinkle the top thickly with chopped pecan nuts. Chocolate Layer Cake 2 squares (ounces) cooking chocolate 2 cups flour 2 teaspoons baking powder ½ teaspoon salt % cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla Cream the sugar and shortening the eggs, one at a time, then add the chocolate which has been melted over hot water, and next the flour, baking powder and salt sifted together alternately with the milk to which the vanilla has been added. Beat well, turn into two greased layer cake pans and bake about twenty minutes in a moderate hot oven. When cold put together and frost with plain white frosting. In spite of what God knows about us, and that is more than we know about ourselves, he loves us. Special Tomato Dressing 1 1/2-inch slice of bread 1 clove garlic Drain the juice from a can of tomatoes and reserve for another purpose. To pulp, add oil and vinegar, and season to taste. Rub garlic of garlic into bread and allow to remain 30 minutes. Remove garlic, add bread to tomatoes. When soft, lift out crust and beat. Chill. Serve on lettuce, romaine, or endive. Cheese Dreams Slice butternut bread 1/4 inch thick and cut in rounds or fancy shapes. Spread with strained soft cheese, seasoned with salt and paprika, and bake in hot oven or under broiler until cheese is melted. Serve at once. Mexican Salad 1 clove garlic, or 3 slices onion ½ cup diced celery 1 pimento 1 cup diced potato 1 tablespoon chili powder, or paprika 2 tablespoons vinegar Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil, add garlic or onion, then bread cubes, and cook until light brown. Remove garlic, add remaining oil, vegetables, seasoning and vinegar. Serve with lettuce or watercress. Stuffed Park Cheops 2 cups soft crumbs 6 pork chops. 1 inch thick 1 chopped onion 2 tablespoons chopped celery 1 teaspoon salt Split chops through the center to the bone, making a pocket to hold the stuffing. Brown the onion in melted butter; add green pepper, celery, salt, and crumbs, and enough water to moisten. Fill the chops with stuffing, fasten with toothpicks, and place in pan with enough water to cover bottom. Bake in moderate oven, 350° F. until tender. Old-Fashioned Stuffing (For Meat, Fish or Fowl) Mince onions, and cook 2 minutes in fat. Mix seasoning with crumbs and stir into fat. Cook 2 more minutes, stirring constantly. If a moist stuffing is desired, add a little water. For fish stuffing, use lemon juice to moisten. Potato Stuffing 4 cups fine, dry crumbs 4 cups hot mashed potatoes ½ cup melted butter ¼ cup sausage or bacon fat ½ cup sausage or bacon fat ½ cup cooked, chopped giblets Salt, pepper, and sage Mix in order given....Partieus larly appropriate for chicken or goose. BEAUTY HINTS BY NINA TEMPLÉ A NEW EYE HINT If you do not care to use the eye shadow for your eyes, use this simple hint to make your eyes more attractive: Just put a touch of oil on the inner corner of the eyelid. This gives the eye a youthful look. CUT WITH KNIFE Mrs. Sarah Lattimore, 27, of 608 N Street, Northwest, suffered a wound of the left shoulder, eight inches in length, and another in the left side of her back, six inches in length, when she was slashed with a knife by John Lattimore, Monday, according to records of Freedmen's Hospital. The wounds were not deep and Mrs. Lattimore was permitted to go home after first-aid treatment. He that will be angry, and not sin, must not be angry but for sin. —John Trapp. Play days are here today (Grunt food mildly strong bodied) Schindler's fresh roasted Peanut Butter --- Louella SWEET CREAM BUTTER WEEK Louella FRANCE BUTTER Fresh Pigs Feet...doz. 25c Daisy Cheese .....1b. 20c Long Horn Chicken .....1b. 20c Freshly Ground Beef lb. 15c Swifts Brookfield Cheese Spread .....4-10c pks. 25c Fork Loin Boast. lb. 12/2c Center Cut Pork Chops 17c End Cut Pork Chops lb. 11c Firm Yellow Onions ..... 4 lbs. 19c Large Ripe Bananas ..... doz. 25c Best Green Cabbage ..... lb. 5c Large Juicy Lemons ..... doz. 23c Crisp Icelberg Lettuce ..... 2 heads 19c P&G White Naphtha Soap 3cakes 10c The Largest Selling Laundry Soap in the World SEVEN Bella CREAM BUTTER WEEK until Sat. closing lb. 31c Reg. 17c ASCO Pears 2 big cans 29c ASCO Flakes...2 pkgs. 13c Kell'gs Flakes...2 pkgs. 15c Quaker Crackles...pkg. 10c Puffed Rice...pkg. 13c Reg. 12c ASCO Strawberry Preserves 2 16-oz. jars 25c ASCO Grape Juice.....pt. 13c Fruit Salad.....2 cans 25c ASCO Tomato Juice.....can 5c Grapefruit Juice.....can 10c Reg. 10c ASCO EIGHT BOYS ENJOY BIG WEEK AT CAMP The boys at Camp Lichtman located in the George Washington National Forest, Shenandoah, Virginia, are having the time of their lives. The lads are hiking daily and the various groups are priming for the regular mid-period track and field meet. Director Lee W. Johnson announces that the meet is expected to surpass that of previous years. One thing that is delighting the boys more than anything else is the fine athletic field upon which they stage their daily baseball tilts. One of the most popular sports of the camp is swimming. The campers take their regular plunge with much delight. The Councilors, under the direction of "Fats" Walker are training their boys in preparation for the big tank meet. Last week's feature was a baseball game between the Biceps and the Gastrocnemius teams in which the two outfits battled to an eight all tie. The line-up for the two teams is as follows: **BICEPS** | **GASTROCNEMIUS** Sutton, c | Dandridge, c Brice, p | Wells, p Butler, 1b | Daugherty, 1b Carroll, 2b | Nelson, 2b Watson, 2b | Reyes, cs Humble, 3b | Carpenter, 3b Stuart, rf | Prior, rf Teed, ef | Greene, e Zilhot, lf | Sharp, lf Fu Manchu, umpire. Prisons and Prisoners ON PAROLING OF PRISONERS Although I have only been in the free world a month (on the day this is written) I have already received many communications from readers of this "Prisons and Prisoners" column. These communications have been received from points in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, Tennessee, New York, Massachusetts, Maryland, Georgia, Louisiana, Kansas, Oregon and California. Some are from prisoners themselves; others from relatives of prisoners; and quite a few from readers of colored papers who are merely interested in the subject and have been followers of this column. The majority of the letters, however, are written in the belief that I can give some magic advice that will result in others being given their freedom, and while I try to answer all letters as best I can, this release is sent out for the purpose and with the hope that it will explain to many of my readers just what is necessary to assist in securing the release of loved ones in prison. Assuming that the prisoner is otherwise on the eligible list to receive parole consideration, most authorities during these times of universal change and depression are reluctant in releasing any prisoner until they have had, in writing some satisfactory assurance that the prisoner will not be forced back into illegal ways of making a living. This assurance is secured in several ways, the most acceptable of which is the written promise of steady employment from a reliable employer; but such an assurance is now hard to get with thousands of free citizens in constant competition for every available job. Now and then a prisoner will possess some outstanding ability that will attract the eye of some favorable employer, but, unfortunately, the average prisoner is handicapped by the fact that he possesses little but a willingness to work at anything provided and a natural desire to secure his freedom under any circumstances. The question then of securing some assurance of a job from a reliable employer becomes more or less a philanthropic problem to the employer, but indeed a worthy one if the reclaiming of men is of prime consideration. Relatives or friends of prisoners should first attempt to contact some reliable employer and gain in writing the promise of a job for that is the first and biggest step in securing the release of any prisoner and under almost any circumstances. Assuming that there is no immediate job available, it is yet possible to aid prisoners in securing their releases if a promise in writing can be secured from some reliable citizen who will agree to become responsible for, morally and financially, the paroled prisoner until such time as he can shift for himself without having to resort to questoinable means of a livelihood or becoming a ward upon the community. This method also makes it necessary to contact individuals of a liberal, philanthropic disposition, unless—which is very rare—the prisoner himself has relatives of sufficient financial and moral standing to make their sponsorship satisfactory to the paroling officials. Without considering extenuating circumstances, or the merits or demerits of the prisoner's parole application, it should be remembered by every friend or relative interested in helping the prisoner gain his freedom that one of the two above explained assurances MUST BE secured before the average prisoner can secure his release even after a parole is granted. It is hoped that this article will help some prisoner, his relatives, or friends, to get started in the right direction toward securing that much valued and ever sought-after freedom. It is better that we know "The Rock of Ages" than "the age of rocks." Rich Gold Discovery Made by Colored Man in Colorado Experienced Eye Induces Him to Dig Three Days; Rewarded by Big Find; Miners Swarm to Locality COPPER GULCH, Col.—Because gray-haired Robert Hoard, colored, became lost on a mountain-side, there's a new stream of glittering gold and silver wealth flowing out of S.uthwestern Colorado. For forty-seven years Hoard scratched out of the mountains a scant living for himself and wife and their children. A few weeks ago "Old Bob," now 61 years old, left his family in Canon City and started toward Westcliffe, hoping to get an outfit of tools and supplies (a grubstake, the miners call it), as he been doing for years. young Klondike. Miners are camped almost as thick as the pines in the canon, most of them living in tents, a few in crude "lean-tos." All day long they drive their shafts—slow and tedious work with only picks bars and sledges to break the ore and bucket windlasses to hoist it to the surface. Easterners abound in the mining camp. Without money, equipment or knowledge of mining, they watch and learn and take miners' promises of a "plit" in return for their labor. At night, around the camp He took through the mountains a short cut which led into unfamiliar surroundings. The surface formations of the region caught his experienced eye, and the more he picked around in the rocks the surreer he was that he had found real "pay dirt" at last. Ignoring hunger—he had brought along only meager provisions—Hoard stayed three days, digging. Satisfied, he gathered up a bag of ore samples and, half-starved, hurried back to Canon City. His "nnd" was verified. "Old Bob" had hit rich gold. His samples assayed $80 a ton and more. When his discovery became known, the trails to Copper Gulch swarmed with miners, and every foot of ground within several miles of Bob's "hole" was soon staked out Notice to Government Employees (Continued from page 1) 206; Prudential Bank Building. We will get you on the list. LOW EFFICIENCY GROUP If you have been given a low that this rating is not fair, you Board of Appeals set up in the you have been dismissed. If not ten before this board, you may board's ruling to the general Cippeals created by executive order. There will be hundreds of su COMPLAINT IN AT ONCE SPEEDY HEARING IN YOUR FILL out the questionnaire p return it to the Tribune office of League, Room 206, the Prudent service in preparing and docketing given at the Negro Industrial Le OTHER GROUPS Plans concerning other gro worked out. These groups should printed in this paper. Informa sons desiring it at the Negro Inc FOR INFORMATION The following offices will give any information or help desired in getting back jobs: The Negro Industrial League Bank Building, 717 Florida Aver and 2 p.m. daily except Saturday The Civil Service Reinstate the Ouray Building, 817 G Street p.m. daily Read the Washington Trib information. you have been given a low efficiency rating. Appraisal is not fair, you may appeal first. Appeals set up in the department from the dismissed. If no satisfactory result, this board, you may then appeal to the general Civil Service Board, by executive order of the President. We will be hundreds of such appeals. GIVE IN AT ONCE IN ORDER TO HEARING IN YOUR CASE. Outside the questionnaire printed in this paper to the Tribune office or to the Negro Industrial Room 206, the Prudential Bank Building, in preparing and docketing your complaint, the Negro Industrial League Office. GROUPS is concerning other groups have not been put. These groups should fill in the question in this paper. Information will be given during it at the Negro Industrial League. FORMATION following offices will gladly give without information or help desired by governmental back jobs: Negro Industrial League, Room 206, Building, 717 Florida Avenue, N.W., between daily except Saturday. Civil Service Reinstatement League, Royal Building, 817 G Street, N.W., between the Washington Tribune each weekion. If you have been given a low efficiency rating and feel that this rating is not fair, you may appeal first to the Board of Appeals set up in the department from which you have been dismissed. If no satisfactory result is gotten before this board, you may then appeal from the board's ruling to the general Civil Service Board of Appeals created by executive order of the President. There will be hundreds of such appeals. GET YOUR COMPLAINT IN AT ONCE IN ORDER TO GET A SPEEDY HEARING IN YOUR CASE. Fill out the questionnaire printed in this paper and return it to the Tribune office or to the Negro Industrial League, Room 206, the Prudential Bank Building. Free service in preparing and docketing your complaint will be given at the Negro Industrial League Office. OTHER GROUPS Plans concerning other groups have not been fully worked out. These groups should fill in the questionnaire printed in this paper. Information will be given to persons desiring it at the Negro Industrial League Office. FOR INFORMATION The following offices will gladly give without charge any information or help desired by government workers in getting back jobs: The Negro Industrial League, Room 206, Prudential Bank Building, 717 Florida Avenue, N.W., between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. daily except Saturday. The Civil Service Reinstatement League, Room 704, the Ouray Building, 817 G Street, N.W., between 5 and 6 p.m. daily Read the Washington Tribune each week for more information. NOTICE TO DISMISSED COLORED GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES Fill in the questionnaire bel ately to The Washington Tribu west. Name..... Address..... Last Position held..... Bureau. Efficiency Rating: M In the questionnaire below and return it to The Washington Tribune, 920 U Street (Mr., Mrs. Telephone. Position held. Department. Efficiency Rating: May 15, '32. Fill in the questionnaire below and return immediately to The Washington Tribune, 920 U Street, Northwest. Use separate sheet to state irregularities in dismissal, or discriminations practiced against you. CAPITAL VIEW DePRIEST VILLAGE BEAUTIFUL HOMES and BUILDING SITES HOMES $4,950 and up BUY NOW BEFORE PRICES GO UP CASH $250 and up Own Your Home in Washington's Prettiest Subdivision BY AUTOMOBILE-Drive straight BY STREET CAR-Take New York on Benning Road, Northeast, to Central BY STREET CAR-Take New York Avenue or H St. car and get off at 48th St. 50th St. or Division Avenue. Avenue to property. BY BUS—From Eleventh St. and Pennsylvania Ave. north to Massachusetts Ave., east on Massachusetts Avenue to New York Avenue, east on New York Avenue to Florida Avenue, east on Florida Avenue to 15th and H Streets, Northeast, east on Bennons Road to Central Avenue young Klondike. Miners are camped almost as thick as the pines in the canon, most of them living in tents, a few in crude "lean-tos." All day long they drive their shafts—slow and tedious work with only picks, bars and sledges to break the ore and bucket windlasses to hoist it to the surface. Easterners abound in the mining camp. Without money, equipment or knowledge of mining, they watch and learn and take miners' promises of a "plit" in return for their labor. At night, around the camp fires, they listen to the old miners' tales, with awe. The tenderfoot saw some gun play among the early arrivals in camp right after Hoard's discovery. An argument developed over naming the place. Some wanted it called "Hoardville," others "New Deal." The compromise selected was Copper Gulch, after six-shooters had been flourished and heated debate had taken place. "He turned me down when I applied for the job, but I found out what kind of a wife he has," said Myrtle. "Yeah?" yawned Gert, "how-cum?" "He said I was too pretty to risk taking me on," she replied—Cincinnati Enquirer. low efficiency rating and feel you may appeal first to the department from which no satisfactory result is got may then appeal from the Civil Service Board of Apper of the President. Of such appeals. GET YOUR USE IN ORDER TO GET A YOUR CASE. Free printed in this paper and free or to the Negro Industrial Essential Bank Building. Free marketing your complaint will be at League Office. Groups have not been fully should fill in the questionnaire formation will be given to per-Industrial League Office. I gladly give without charge hired by government workers League, Room 206, Prudential Avenue, N.W., between 9 a.m. day. Statement League, Room 704, Street, N.W., between 5 and 6 Tribune each week for more below and return immedi- dibune, 920 U Street, North- .....(Mr., Mrs., Miss) .....Telephone..... .....Department..... : May 15, '32....; May THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 THE RAILWAYS His Highness, Prince Ras Desta Demtu, son-in-law of Haile Salassie I, Emperor of Ethiopia, is shown here as he was received Tuesday at Union Station by high Government officials. Reading from left to right, Ato Paulos Mammano, Ethiopian consul general at Jerusalem; Prince Ras Desta Demtu; Acting Secretary of State William Phillips and Marvin McIntyre, secretary to President Roosevelt. His Highness, Prince Ras Desta Demtu, son-in-law of Haile Salassie I, Emperor of Ethiopia, is shown here as he was received Tuesday at Union Station by high Government officials. Reading from left to right, Ato Paulos Mammano, Ethiopian consul general at Jerusalem; Prince Ras Desta Demtu; Acting Secretary of State William Phillips and Marvin McIntyre, secretary to President Roosevelt. The Negro Worker and Industrial Codes President of the Brotherhood of Dining Car Employees, in the New York Age. Negro workers have no occasion to fear that they will have left out of the reckoning in the application of the provisions of the President's Industrial Recovery Act. They will fare infinitely better from the result of the efforts of the president of the American Federation of Labor on behalf of labor than could possibly be so with respect to the race presentations of Negro leaders and Negro professional uplift institutions. The lines of demarcation provided in the Recovery Act are industrial, not racial. The thing is administered by President Roosevelt's representative, General Hugh Johnson. Labor is protected by the Labor Advisory Board, appointed by the Secretary of Labor, who sits with the board. There should be a Negro on the board. That there is not is no fault of Secretary Perkins. All but two of the board are officials of the different international unions of the American Federation of Labor, entirely proper; forasmuch as there was no other organized labor group from which selections could have been made also. Those A. F. of L. officials on the Labor Advisory Board are white; but were not appointed as white persons. They represent the third generation of those who sweated, fought, bled and died for group recognition. Had they depended upon government, church, race, and bally-ho, as Negroes do, they and all labor would be still victims of the greed avarice, ruthlessness of organized industry—which isn't black The "brain trust" of the board consists of Dr. Wolman, of Columbia, Father Haas of the Catholic Welfare Council, and Secretary Perkins. The only types of Negro fitted for such company—men like Dr. Chas. S. Johnson, of Fisk, or Dr. Charles H. Wesley, of Howard, probably could have been got in it, but the Afric Democratic leadership was chiefly concerned with getting "recognition for the race" through appointment of each of its personnel of four to some federal position. The hopes for the restoration of business through the processes of the Recovery Act lie in adoption of codes for the several industries in conferences of the representatives of both groups. The miners' code would include all miners, among them several thousand Negroes—whether union or non-union. President Green, of the parent Federation, and President Lewis, of the affiliated United Mineworkers' Union are right there to get the best possible conditions for miners, and they will apply to all. Carter G. Woodson is the only Negro leader who ever was a miner. He is now self-supporting and engaged in another field. Need of race leadership putting the width of the continent between itself and the conference in which the Miners' Code shall be formulated and adopted is therefore appalling. And that goes for race leadership all way down the line, or up. When the Seaman's Code is adopted, the terms got by President Green, will apply to all seamen, union and non-union; and it should not be forgotten that one of the astute A. F. of L. leaders is a Negro, David E. Grange, of the Seaman's International. A goodly number of Negroes are longshoremen, members of the Federation of Labor's International Longshoremen's union, an international Vice-President of which is George E. Miller, of Norfolk, a Negro. Yet, when the longshoremen's code is adopted, with President Green, of the A. F. of L., leading the battle for the very best terms to be got, it will apply to all—black, white, union and non-union. I do not like the American Federation of Labor. It has never been able to rise above the level of the WASHINGTON OWNED & OPERATED TIRE Headquarters THOUSANDS ARE BUYING U.S.TIRES ON Bailey's Budget Basis NO MONEY DOWN 6 Months to Pay CHECK THESE LOW PRICES (U. S. Peerless) 4.50x21... $5.60 4.75x19... 6.05 5.00x19... 6.55 5.25x18... 7.35 5.50x19... 8.50 PHILCO BATTERIES with your old battery $395 up The Best Battery in the world, yet it costs no more. Bailey's TIRE STORES 14th and P Sts. N.W. 7th and Pa. Ave. S. E. 9th and H Sts. N. E. 14th and Col. Rd. N.W. 2250 Sherman Ave. N.W. bickeringes and fatricidal strife of its International Unions, each sovereign in its sphere. President Green has no more to do with the race discriminations of the several internationalists than has the editor of The Age; but he is individually bigger than their smallness, of statesmanesque calibre, and is struggling to rid the organization of its bias and itsisms. When Mr. Green speaks in the conferences on adoption of the industrial codes he speaks for all labor because the act itself admits of no discriminations against groups or races. President Green would have every laborer a union man in his craft sphere, regardless of race; the Negro leaders would "bureauize" all Negro workers within a race sphere regardless of craft. What Green desires is practicable and probable, and what the race leaders want is impossible. Craft unions are organized from within, never from without; craft unionism is the only kind that has succeeded thus far in this country. They cannot be organized overnight. President Green therefore is a Negro laborer's "best bet," now. British Brutality in Africa Exposed LONDON, England—(CNA)—Exposure of the brutal treatment and terrorization of natives in the British African colonies was forced in Parliament by the Welfare Association. The case of the public flogging of Victor Eulaka, a native tailor in Buruka, Northern Nigeria, for nonpayment of taxes was made the subject of interpolation in the Hous of Commons on the insistence of the Association. The colonies' secretary was forced to admit the flogging but tried to shift the responsibility to the native chief of the village, who is also the government tax collector. The government made the usual promise of undertaking investigation, but at the same time, announced it would collect ten per cent more taxes from the impoverished natives. GIRL SPRAINS ANKLE While playing at her home, Vera May Watkins, 8 of 313 New York Avenue, Northwest fell down and sprained her right ankle, last week. Trust reposed in noble natures obliges them the more—Dryden. Edisto Island Inhabitants Bury Man by Congo Tribal Rites EDISTO ISLAND, S.C. (CNS)—He died a fighting man and didn't have time to pray, so his family buried him "cross the wold" just as his forefathers were buried in the muck lands of the Congo while the tom-toms rolled a requiem and the tribe wailed its songs of death. Edisto Gullah Negroes have never forsaken the ways of their ancestors and when a man died a violent death recently the old folks saw that the customs of his tribe were followed. He was a boxer. He worked his way up from back alley scrapes to a preliminary fighter, and, to the Gullahs, he was a hero. Death came to him in the ring. His body was taken to the seaside. Strangers in those parts noticed later that the grave lay north and south instead of east and west, as most graves do. They noticed artificial flowers on the mound instead of bits of glass and broken bottles, orments dear to the Gullah heart. Under the flowers was a tin can with a bit of red string attached. An old woman explained. The flowers were sent by city folks who admired the boy. He was buried "cross the wold"—north and south—because he died a fighting man. And the can was his protection. He didn't have time to pray and the can—so says the Gullahs—will attract the slayer to the grave and then the spirit of the deceased can clutch the string and pull his enemy into the earth. DRIVER BADLY PRUISED Struck by an auto, W. H. Mundy, 53, of 409 U Street, Northwest, driver for a local laundry, received numerous cuts about the body, last week. Mundy was treated at Freedmen's Hospital for a fracture of the right ankle, wound of the left chest requiring six stitches to close, laceration of the left elbow and upper lip. N.Y. COUPLE LICENSED Frank W. Robinson, 22, of Saratoga, N.Y., was granted a license to marry Miss Alice Johnson, 21, of New York City, here, last week. Seldom does anybody learn how to make money by watching another man make it. BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL Religion of African Prince Delays White House Luncheon Ras Desta Demtu Refuses to Accept Repast Arranged by U.S. State Department Officials for Wednesday, His Fast Day Received with majestic pomp and splendor on the previous day, Ras Desta Demtu, the Ethiopian prince here to bring the greetings of his emperor, Haile Selassie, changed the White House program, Wednesday, when he declined luncheon with President Roosevelt. The luncheon had been arranged by the State Department, but it appears that the latter did not take into consideration, or had not been informed of, the prince's religion which forbids eating meats on Wednesday. has a dignified and royal demeanor. The prince is the husband of the Imperial Princess Tanagawork oldest daughter of Emperor Selassie. The princess is declared to be a direct descendant of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. When the prince arrived at the Union Station from New York late Tuesday, he was accompanied by a retinue of attendants garbed in native costumes. He wore tight fit ting white pants, black silk cloak patent leather slippers, and his head piece was a white helmet The prince took coffee on Wednesday morning, but returned delicacies sent to his apartment, untasted. He refused to slight his religion even to eat with the President of the United States, and so the luncheon had to be postponed until Friday. In the meantime, the prince visited the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington Cemetery, later motoring to Annapolis. On Good Will Mission It is a good will mission which brought his royal highness to America from the African empire in return for the honor this country showed Ethiopia when it sent a mission to attend the coronation of the present emperor, in 1930. Ras Desta is 40 years old, portly and, swarthy of complexion, He Hampton Summer School Enrolls 548 HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Va.—The first session of the Hampton Institute Summer School had drawn to Hampton 548 students (92 men and 546 women) from sixteen states and the District of Columbia, distributed as follows: Virginia, 265; Maryland, 104; North Carolina, 100; Delaware, 23; Georgia, 11; Alabama and South Carolina, 7 each; West Virginia, 6; Kentucky and Mississippi, 5 each; Florida, 4; Tennessee, 3; District of Columbia New Jersey, and Texas, 2 each; Oklahoma and Pennsylvania, 1 each. There are 372 Summer School students living in the institute dormitories the teaching staff includes the following: Mary R. Allen, Howard University, Washington, D.C.; Charlotte W. Brenan, Cornell University; Mabel R. Brooks American Federation of Arts and Carnegie Corporation; Elizabeth W. Chandler, Middletown, O.; Muriel Cox, Massachusetts School of Art, Boston; Charlotte P. Goodale, formerly principal of Hamilton Institute for Girls New York; Nancy C. K. Lansdale, formerly teacher of advanced clothing and press design, State Teachers' College, Buffalo and Pratt Institute, Brooklyn; Sarah M. Mott, Ethical Culture Schools, New York; Edna B. Mullins, State Teachers' College, Terre Haute, Indiana; B. E. Myers, Connervys Ind.; John W. Riley, Howard University; William L. Sanders, Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, C.; Marion F. Thompson instructor in home economics, Baltimore; Miriam B. Underhill Teachers' College, Columbia University; Edith L. Van Syckle, help teacher, Salem County N. J.; Elizabeth G. Whiting, Wittier School, Miss Fifteen Hampton Institute instructors are also serving on the summer school staff. The George P. Phenix Training School opened on Monday, June 26, for an eight-week session. It will provide teaching facilities for the student-teaching classes, as well as observations and demonstrations for the methods classes and, indeed, any other classes that may profit from the teacher-training organization. There will be five groups of pupils. One room will be used for the first grade; three rooms will each have two grades in them; and the fifth room will be used for a consolidated group, covering grades one to seven. The teaching staff will include Foster L. Blount, formerly instructor in the Green County Training School, Snow Hill, N.C.; Lydia B. Chew, Garrison Demonstration School, Washington, D.C.; Harry J. Hunt, Booker T. Washington Junior High School, Baltimore, Md.; Beulah M. Spellman, George P. Phenix Training School, Hampton Institute; and Phyllis Jones Tilley, formerly teacher, State Normal School, Fayetteville N.C. Graduate students working for the degree, of Master of Arts are offered the following courses: in research, measuring results in education and problems in secondary education. Special paint. Extras include 6 air wheels and tires. well fenders, trunk and rack. 2 spot lights and pilot light, metometer, clock and oil gauge, side shields, mirrorscopes, several horns, radio, specially designed top, special heavy duty battery, ball-bearing shackles and equally as many more not listed. Originally cost over $2,000; sale price now, $485. has a dignified and royal demeanor. The prince is the husband of the Imperial Princess Tanagawork, oldest daughter of Emperor Selassie. The princess is declared to be a direct descendant of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. When the prince arrived at the Union Station from New York late Tuesday, he was accompanied by a retinue of attendants garbed in native costumes. He wore tight fitting white pants, black silk cloak, patent leather slippers, and his head piece was a white helmet heavily adorned with gold. He was first greeted by Acting Secretary of State Phillips, who shook the royal hand and said: "Delighted ... Your Highness ... Cordial Welcome." The party passed through a double line of marines with presented arms. The Army Band played the Ethiopian national anthem as he emerged from the station with his retinue which included Jefferson Patterson, of the State Department procotol division, and Ato Paulo Manamano, the Ethiopian counsel general at Jerusalem. The prince's party arrived in New York early Tuesday, on the steamer Majestic, and will return to that city Friday, after the White House luncheon, for embarkation from American shores. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE Washington's Only Negre Newspaper of Sixteen Pages and More See Just What You Want In THE ADS NOW! MENTION THE TRIBUNE WHEN BUYING BARRY-PATE Washington's Oldest Chevrolet Dealer CHAUVREL 1932 Chevrolet Coach.....$395 1932 Ford Sport Coupe.....395 1932 Chevrolet Coupe.....395 1932 Chevrolet Spt. Rds.....385 1932 Chevrolet Sedan.....445 1931 Chevrolet Spt. Rds.....265 1931 Chevrolet Coupe.....295 1931 Chevrolet Coach.....315 1931 Ford Tudor.....195 1930 Ford Sport Coupe.....175 1930 Oakland Coupe.....250 1930 Chevrolet Coach.....215 1930 Plymouth Sedan.....125 1929 Pontiac Coupe.....195 75 Others, $35 Up Easy Terms—Trade 2525 SHERMAN AVE., N.W. 1369 Park Road, N.W. A LITTLE DOWN BALANCE TO SUIT A LITTLE DOWN BALANCE TO SUIT Down '32 Ford De Luxe Sedan ... $125 (1983 Motor Improvements) '32 Ford De Luxe Roadster 105 (New Paint) '31 Ford Cabriotet ... 54 '31 Ford De Luxe Roadster 59 '31 Ford Tudor ... 69 (Factory Rebuilt Motor) '31 Ford Town Sedan ... 69 '30 Plymouth Coupe ... 55 (New Paint) '30 Ford Tudor ... 49 '29 Pontiac Coach ... 49 '29 Essex Sedan ... 39 '28 Ford Std. Coupe ... 29 (Rumble Seat) Tred New Car Other 'OWN YOUR OWN CAB' 1932 Chevrolet Sedans $50 Down Liberal Terms See Mr. Kahn 610 H St., N.E. SEVEN ACRES OF WASTE CITY LAND DEVOTED TO FOOD CROPS SECOND SECTION TION'S CAPITAL ACRES O BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S C SEVEN AC BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL W. ERNEST JARVIS, head of the undertaking firm which bears his name, who celebrates the twelfth anniversary of the founding of the business Friday, July 21. A suit arising out of an automobile accident and requesting a total of $25,000 damages was filed in the District Supreme Court, Monday, by Joseph Douglas 1508 Columbia Street, Northwest, against the Irving Cab Company, 2104 Fourteenth Street, Northwest. The petition avers that one of the drivers of the fleet of cabs operated by the cab company carelessly struck the bicycle Douglas was riding, from the rear, at Tenth and P Streets, March 19. As a result Douglas claims he was thrown to the pavement and suffered serious physical and permanent injuries. The victim also claims that he has undergone at least two operations at Freedman's Hospital where he has been confined since the accident, and it is not known whether or not he will be able to work again. Up to the time of the accident, Douglas says he earned $85 per month, which income has been cut off. In a bill of particulars filed also, Douglas makes the following requests: $251 for hospital bill; $200 for physician; bicycle; $38; clothing which was damaged, 25; loss of earnings to date, $325; and $24-441 for permanent injuries, pain, and miscellaneous items. He is represented by Mrs. Thelma D. Ackiss. "Con" Man Kicks W Thwarts His Scheme ks Woman Who theme to Get $100 "Con" Man Kicks Woman Who Thwarts His Scheme to Get $100 boss who would say a good word for him. Anxious that the $700 not slip her hands, yet suspicious, Mrs. Smith allowed the flam-flammer to lead her to the building at 921 Eighth Street. After climbing to the third floor, the man struck Mrs. Smith in the chest knocking her down, following his blow with a kick, and fled out of the building. With fears about the safety of her $100 in the man's possession, Mrs. Smith quickly arose and gave chase. Private Covell on duty in the vicinity, joined the woman and overtook the would-be flam-flammer in the yard of 711 I Street. The woman accomplice was arrested by Private Hayden a short while later. They gave their names as: Dennis Daniels, 33, and Emma James, 28, both of 357 I Street. The $100 of Mrs. Smith's was recovered. Isaac Tillman, 764 Irving Street, Northwest, reported to police of No. 10 Precinct Station, Sunday, that his 10-year-old daughter, Beatrice, was attacked by a dog in front of their home. The girl who was said to have been playing in front of her home, was knocked down by the animal. She was taken to Children's Hospital where she was treated by Dr. Alexander Simon for bruises of the left hip. Police reported that the dog is owned by Philander Washington, 752 Irving Street, and was unlicensed and unmuzzled. WHITE OFFICER IS INDICTED AS ROBBERY HEAD Two Colored Men Also Named as Accomplices in $185 Holdup Accusations by the government that he planned the hold-up of a gas filling station at Sixteenth and Taylor Streets, Northwest, which netted the trio $185, caused Private John F. Patton, white, until recently of the Tenth Precinct, and his two alleged colored accomplices to be indicted by the grand jury. Wednesday. James Mason and William Wood are the men who are said to have carried out the robbery under Patton's directions. The crime occurred on June 21, and the government contended that Patton drove Mason and Wood within a short distance of the gas station, where the robbery took place, then helped them to escape. Patton was arrested and suspended from duty after Mason, held in another case, was said to have confessed. Chauffeur Accused Other indictments turned in were two against Frank H. Van Buren, chauffeur, charged with grand larceny and embezzlement. He is alleged to have taken approximately $2,000 from a box belonging to George D. Horning, Inc., where he had been employed fifteen years. One indictment charges him with stealing money from a box he was supposed to have delivered, and the other accuses him of having taken $1,115 from a box belonging to William E. Burke, of South Washington, Va., who had delivered it to the Horning Company. Haitians Demonstrate Ability at Government, Says American White NEW YORK—(CNS) Tha'i Haitians who have taken control of their government relinquished from American supervision last year have amply demonstrated their ability for self-government was the opinion expressed here last week by H. P. Davis, white, former secretary of the American Chamber of Commerce of Haiti. Mr. Davis, who flew with the Haitian aviator, Captain Errol Boyd and Robert Lyon last month in the bellanca monoplane Columbia on the first-stop flight from New York to Haiti, returned here recently by steamship after an extensive tour of the island Republic. "The public works department, the sanitary service and technical service are now completely Haitianized and are being admirably conducted," said Mr. Davis. Eagerness to secure seven hundred dollars for the sum of one hundred dollars, came near costing Mrs. Agnes Smith, of 919 Howard Road, Southeast, some hard-earned money, Saturday, which was only saved after a chase and struggle with a flim-flammer and quick work by officers of the Fourth Precinct. Mrs. Smith was at the corner of Eighth and G Streets, Southeast, when a strange woman approached and began to tell fantastic tales about finding a job for Mrs. Smith. As they were discussing the job situation, a male accomplice walked up with a wallet which he told the two women had dropped from a passing auto and contained $2,100. The tricker offered to give each woman $700, but demanded $100 from Mrs. Smith as a sort of bond that she would keep mum about the find. With vignions of $600 profit, Mrs. Smith hailed a passing tab and went with the strange woman to her home where she secured the $100, which would entitle her to share in the small fortune. Becomes Suspicious When she returned to Eighth and G Streets, the male confederate was awaiting his prey. Mrs. Smith turned the $100 over to the man, but had some misgivings no sooner than she had done so. She asked the man to return her money. As he turned around the corner, she grabbed his coat to prevent further flight. With promises to prove that he was all right, the man told Mrs. Smith he would take her to his IF YOUR BOY WANTS NICE, " CLEAN PROFITABLE WORK. HAVE HIM SELL THE TRIBUNE Celebrates Anniversary 1930 $25,000 DAMAGES SOUGHT IN TAXI ACCIDENT Joseph Douglas Underwent Two Operations; Fears He Can't Work Again Child Knocked Down and Injured by Stray Doy F WASTE Southwest Unen Gardens to R Herndon B. Jones, Admin Project, That Enables 115 Gardens on Southwest Unemployed Given Gardens to Raise Vegetables Southwest Unemployed Given Gardens to Raise Vegetables Herndon B. Jones, Administrative Principal, Directs Project: That Enables 105 Persons to Plant 115 Gardens on Seven-Acre Plot A number of unemployed persons of Southwest Washington have in a large measure solved their food problem by taking advantage of a project which enables them to raise enough vegetables for their various families by having gardens on a municipal plot, donated by the city and many are making extra money by selling some products to other residents. The garden project is a part of the health week program sponsored by the Ambush-Smallwood Parent-Teacher Association, of which John S. Lucas is president. Jones Behind Movement Herndon B. Jones, administrative principal of the school, is the directing force behind the movement which grew out of the health program of last May. He has secured a plot of ground between R and S and Half and First Streets where the experiment is meeting with hugh success. The plot consists of nearly seven acres with 115 gardens. There are 105 persons working plots 50 feet WIDOW WILL BUY MATE'S CLEANING BUSINESS Justice Orders Property Sold to Mrs. Ella R. Foster for Sum of $165 A petition for authority to purchase the personal property, including the cleaning establishment of her late husband, Jesse Foster, located at 1937 Eleventh Street, Northwest, for the sum of $165, was filed in the District Supreme Court, Monday, in behalf of the widow, Mrs. Ella R. Foster, through Henry Lincoln Johnson, attorney. The administrator of the estate of the deceased, Clyde C. Dalley, had formerly been authorized to sell the personal property for $250, the value set by the court appraisers. When it came to the attention of the administrator, however, that a Ford delivery included in the appraisal, had a lien on it, Mr. Dalley requested a revocation of the first order. This action was approved by Theodore Cogswell, register of will and Justice Luring ordered that the Ford's price be deducted and the property sold for $165. The court order declared that for this price, Mrs. Foster be allowed to buy the business including the good will, all fixtures, and paraphernalia belonging to the establishment, with the exception of the truck. Mrs. Foster's petition followed as a matter of legal procedure. Mr. Foster died instate on July 14, 1982 Playground Directors Announced The following are the directors on school playgrounds open during the summer: Banneker School—Mrs. Louise Lockhart. Burville—Ethel Cox, Warren Cawhorne. Crummell—Florita Roy, 10 o'clock to 2; Emma Van Rooyan, 2-6. Emma Van Rooyan, 2-6. Francis Junior High—Louis Stokes. Garnet-Patterson—Mrs. Regina Chandler, Mr. E. Henderson. Lovejoy—Mrs. Elnathan Early. Morgan—Miss Marvelline Hoffman, 10-2; Miss Mildred Terrell, 2-6. Montgomery—Mrs. Madge Carey. Shaw Junior High—Alice Fry Brown, 10-2; Evelyn Washington, 2-6. Smothers — Hildreth Thomas, 10-2; Josephine Brinkley, 2-6. Stevens — Nellie Smith. Dunbar Stadium — Clarence Pendleton. Other directors are: Ridge Street — Miss A. Simmons. Camp Pleasant — Elijah Williams. East Garfield Park — W. Waters. The following are assistants on summer playgrounds: Cardozo, Miss A. Todd; Rose Park, Miss W. Phillips; Barry Farms, Miss V. Kenney; Monroe, Miss R. Maybee; Willow Tree, Miss W. Bowl. Washington Tribune WASHINGTON, D.C., THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 Tribune Out on Thursdays In the future THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE will be off the press ready for delivery to newsboys and news-stands on THURSDAYS at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Correspondents, Feature Writers and others submitting matter for publication will take notice of this advance of a day in publication. Local Club, Social and Church news should be in our office Tuesday evening to be assured of publication. square. Some few have more than one plot. All of the seeds used were furnished by four agencies: the Board of Public Welfare, the Associated Charities, the Catholic Charities and the Council of Social Agencies. The public welfare board had the land plowed and tools were loaned by the District commissioners thru the same agency. To Can Surplus Plans have been made to can all surplus vegetables and the use of the Ambush-Smallwood School has been given for that purpose. One of the features of the project is a plot of ground where school boys are raising a garden. A 10-year-old boy has one of the best in that section. Principal Jones has promised a 10-pound ham for the best garden. Mr. Jones is trying to get other citizens to give prizes to the gardeners. He stated that only unemployed are permitted to have a garden and to qualify one must be a resident of the Southwest. ALBERT BROOKS ASKS DISMISSAL OF $250,000 SUIT Seeks to Have Peter Richardson Prohibited from Law Practice Here Albert N. D. Brooks, 1700 block of Willard Street, Northwest, asked the District Supreme Court, Tuesday, to dismiss a quarter-million-dollar suit against him and four other defendants. The suit which was for the largest sum ever asked of a colored person in the District, was filed by Peter P. Richardson, attorney, who was convicted of false pretenses and sentenced to two years at Lorton Reformatory. Richardson has been paroled and claimed in his suit that Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. William Terrrell, 1260 Columbia Road; Joseph Holland, real estate dealer, 1901 Seventh Street; and Mrs. Syme L. Jennifer, notary public, 1243 New Jersey Avenue, all had perjured themselves and caused him to be sentenced to imprisonment. Brooks, who is a teacher at Shaw Junior High School, is the first of the defendants to file an answer to Richardson's suit. He claimed that he testified truthfully when Richardson was being tried, before the grand jury, and before United States Commissioner Needham C. Turnage. Richardson was convicted by a jury after it was testified that he switched a fee simple deed for a deed of trust in an action in which he loaned Brooks a sum of money. The property was owned by Mr. Terrell, brother-in-law of Brooks. Brooks also asks the court to force Richardson to pay the cost of the suit. MISSES ROSE AND JACKSON ENTERTAIN Misses Helena Jackson and Catherine Rose entertained a few of their friends at a luncheon at the residence of Miss Jackson, Thursday. Those present were Thelma Greenfield, Harry Dyson, Eugene Leake, and Roy Dagent. Heads National Body PETER H. DR. M. D. WISEMAN who headed the board of the National Dental Association at its annual meeting last week in Atlantic City. Robber Shoots at Prey Who Battles Over $2.06 Police of the Fourth Precinct are alert to capture a dark-skinned man named Green, who is reported to have robbed William Flood 24, of 1239 Fifth Street, Northwest, of $2.06, while the latter was sitting in a parked automobile, then shot at the victim who tried to save his money, Monday. Flood told officers he was sitting in the automobile in front of 302 F Street, Southwest, about 2 a.m., when Green accosted him. Flood stated that Green took his money, and in a struggle for its possession, he was cut in the scalp by his assailant. Green is then said to have gone into a nearby house and secured a pistol with which he returned and fired at Flood. The bullet went wild. Flood received a minor cut on the forehead, inflicted by the knife, and told officers he would secure a private physician. Odd Fellows Building to Be Dedicated July 30 Dedication of the new Odd Fellows Building, Ninth and T Streets, Northwest, will take place Sunday, July 30, according to officials of the order. The handsome three-story structure is one of the most imposing of its kind in the East. The first floor will be occupied by a lunchonette, while upper floors will be used as lodge rooms. Forest Temple The installation of officers of the Forest Temple of Elks was held Wednesday night. The following officers were installed: Blanche T. Jones, daughter ruler; Carrie S. Jackson, vice daughter ruler; Louise Naylor, assistant daughter ruler; Bertha Gaines, chaplain; Viola Jackson, doorkeeper; Maud Johnson, gatekeeper; and Daughters Mary Coleman, Susie Dodson, Beatrice Herndon, and Daisy Montgomery, escorts. After the installation ceremonies, a musical program was rendered. The mistress of ceremonies, Lillian Long, was introduced by Past Daughter Ruler Rosa Conley. The program included an address by Daughter Ruler Jones, a solo by Clarence W. Lewis, remarks by Allen Griffin, exalted ruler of Columbia Lodge; J. J. Porter, past deputy of Morning Star Lodge; Elizabeth Gordon, past deputy. Presentations to the officers were made by Daughter Frances Green. Congratulatory remarks were made by Daughter Grace Rich and Mamie Wheeler, daughter ruler of Magnolia Council. OUR READERS ARE ASKED TO PATRONIZE THE ADVERTISERS IN YOUR PAPER DR. M. D. WISEMAN HEADS DENTAL ASSOCIATION DR. M. D. WISEMAN HEADS DENTAL ASSOCIATION Washington Society Gives First Gavel to National Organization ATLANTIC CITY.—Dr. M. D. Wiseman, of Washington, was elected president of the National Dental Association during the annual meeting of that body here, July 10-13. Dr. Wiseman is the first Washington man to head that body. Other officers elected were: Dr. Charles W. Dorsey, president-elect Philadelphia; Dr. W. S. Wiley, vice president, Newark, N. J.; Dr. Jas, A. Jackson, secretary-treasurer, Charlottesville, Va.; Dr. Sevillon D. Savoy, assistant secretary, Washington Dr. Q. Bernard King of Washing, was elected a member of the board of governors for a term of two years. The national association is the outgrowth of the Tri-State and Inter-State Dental Associations founded in 1913 and 1918 respectively. Meet in Nashville At the invitation of the president of Meharry Medical College, Nashville, Tenn., the association voted to hold its twenty-first meeting in that city next July. Dr. Jackson L. Davis, vice president, presided at the meeting in Atlantic City in place of the former president, Dr. D. A. Ferguson, of Richmond, Va., who had to leave soon after his arrival on account of the death of his father in Richmond. The association was welcomed by Mayor Harry Bacharach. The response was by Dr. Elwood D. Downing, past president of the Inter-State Dental Association. Dr. Adolphus Walton, head of the Prosthetic Department, Howard University Dental College, conducted a forum on practical dental problems at the Monday afternoon session. Dr. Roscoe Brown also of Washington, delivered an address at Monday evening's public meeting at the New Jersey Avenue school building. Presented Gavel The Robert T. Freewan Dental Society of Washington, presented the first gavel to the national body. Among Washingtonians seen at the various meetings of the Association were: Dr. and Mrs. F. P. Barrier, Dr. and Mrs. Roscoe Brown, Dr. and Mrs. John Alfred Turner, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Godden, Dr. and Mrs. M. D. Wiseman, Dr. and Mrs. Adolphus Walton, Dr. and Mrs. Sevellon Savoy, Dr. and Mrs. Q. B. King and Dr, and Mrs. R. B. M. Wilson. Washington dentists taking part in the program were Drs. John Alfred Turner, Adolphus Walton, Emmett Julian Scott, Jr., Sevillon Savoy, Joseph Henry Nicholson, Eugene E. T. Mayrite, Perry A. Fitzgerald, C. Thurston Ferebee, Roscoe Brown, Frederick P. Barrier, Russell A. Dixon and Clarence Greene. Three Cut, One Shot, Kept in Hospital Three persons applying for emergency treatment for knife and gunshot wounds in Freedmen's Hospital were detained for further observation. Tuesday. Geneva McGee, 22, of 232 K Street Northwest, had numerous knife wounds in the chest and left arm. Mrs. Annie Lancaster, 20, of 2234 Twelfth Street, Northwest, had four knife wounds in the loin, thumb, forearm, and shoulder. James Eaton, 22, of 1231 First Street, Northwest, was suffering a gunshot wound in the right hip. ITALIAN ARMADA USED "STANDARD" GASOLINE J. Z. Walker, the manager of the local branch of the Standard Oil Company, calls attention to the fact that in their magnificent flight from Orbetello, Italy to Chicago, General Italo Balbo and his companies used Stanavo Aviation Gasoline which product is produced by the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, the makers of Essolene. Mr. Schubert also says that of the fifty-six successful trans-Atlantic flights to date, forty-nine have been powered with Stanavo. No trans-Atlantic flight with Stanavo has ever failed, which is a remarkable performance. This record of course speaks for itself. Fleet Walker, catcher with Toledo of the old American Association, was the last colored ball player to play in the big leagues. TO FOOD Community Centers Band Plays Friday Evening at Judiciary Park The Community Centers Band, James E. Miller, director, gives the seventh of its summer park concerts, Friday evening, at Judiciary Park, at half past seven o'clock. The program follows: March—Men of Ohio (Fillmore) Invitation—A La Valse (Weber) One-Step—Selection Selection from Wagner's Tannhau ser (Meyrelles) ser (United March—The Washington Tribune (James Miller) Overture—Barber of Seville (Ros. (Fillmore) The Star Spangled Banner Highland Beach News By Norma D. Murray The picnic of the Washington Bar Association here last Saturday, was quite a success. There as a baseball game for the men and bridge for the women. Attorney Augustus Gray is president of the association. The H.B.A.A. dance was not what it was hoped to be, but even so, it was a financial success. Among those present were Mrs. Alice Francis, sponsor of the H.B.A.A.; the "juveniles," Betty Francis, Nina Scurclook, Mercedes Murray, Ullysses Wharton, James Henderson, Paul Ridgely; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Burke; Bee Walker, Louise Syphax, Dottie Milton, John Francis, Dorothea and Helen Scurlock, Mavis Wormley, and Edith Wormley. Venice Beach is giving a dance Saturday. It may be recalled that Venice Beach had a series of dances every other Saturday last year. Winners of Gam of Lawyers Members of Local Bar As Pastime at Venice Bea by "Common" Consen Winners of Game During Outing of Lawyers Still in Doubt Members of Local Bar Association "Abuse" National Pastime at Venice Beach; Teams Stop Playing by "Common" Consent, Members Exhausted The Washington Bar Association held its annual outing at Venice Beach, adjoining Highland Beach, on the Chesapeake Bay, Saturday, July 15. Some forty members and their wives and friends motored down to the beach during the forenoon. Those who did not carry picnic baskets with them ate at Ware's Hotel or at the home of some friend. The day was replete with a variety of amusements: bridge, swimming, bathing (for Gus Gray), boating, hiking, dancing, spooning (Nick and Beaubian), and baseball. baseball players of all shapes forms, sizes, and descriptions canvorted on the municipal diamond on this ideal Saturday afternoon as the lawyers of the District of Columbia abused the national past time. After seven innings of assorted baseball—with occasional intermissions while all eyes looked for the lost ball—the players quit by common consent, induced by exhaustion. The score was 24-23 or 23-24. Repeated recounts and check-ups have failed to determine which stade scored the 24 runs. Those "stylish stouts," Dickie Most honorable mention goes to Perry W. Howard for opening up his spacious home and making it the headquarters of the group, and to Mrs. Howard for her charming hospitality. An excellent job was put over by the outing committee in arousing enthusiasm and making arrangements for the occasion. Memburs of the committee were: Nathan A. Dobbins, chairman; Frank Adams, George W. Peterson, Edward Howard, Thurman Dodson, Perry W. Howard, and Ollie M. Cooper. Among those present other than baseball players and participants were Misses Lula Jackson and Eloise Fletcher, Mrs. Virginia Peters, Atty. and Mrs. A. W. Gray, Atty. and Mrs. E. W. Howard and son, Atty. and Mrs. Ambrose Shief, Atty. and Mrs. William A. Lee, Jr., Atty. and Mrs. Charles Toms, Atty. and Mrs. Louis R. Mehlinger, Atty. Armond W. Scott, Atty. Thela M. Dackiss, M. Grant Lucas, Perry W. Howard, Jr., and Henry E. Austin. Among those conspicuous by their absence were Attys, Ollie M. Cooper, Isadore Letcher, Thurman L. Dodson, Timothy W. Fisher, Charles H. Houston, and Domingo A. Lanauze. The two teams lined up as follows: Right Wing—Cigar Brown, Pete Tyson, Red Jefferson, Line Johnson, Kid Hayes, Nat Dobbins, Ike Lisembey, Mauve Clifford, Bee Vee Lawson, Banker Pollard. Left Wing—Leffty Artis, Frankie Adams, Bill Hastie, Skee Brown, Eddie Lovett, Dickie Tompkins, Casey Coleman, Mal Daniels, Freddie French, Nel Nichols. All of the fun and frolic, the big event of the day was the baseball game between the so-called Right and Left Wings. The game started promptly at 3 p.m., on an improvised diamond consisting of the "commons" and the Simmons's front yard. The teams took their work-out in searching the community for a suitable space or spaces for use as a diamond. Everything ready, the game was on. Ex-stars, has-beens, never-was's. THEATERS SPORTS NINE D CROPS Game During Outing ers Still in Doubt Bar Association "Abuse" National ce Beach; Teams Stop Playing Consent, Members Exhausted SEVEN ARE INJURED IN WEEK-END ACCIDENTS SEVEN ARE INJURED IN WEEK-END ACCIDENTS Seven persons, including three youths, received injuries in auto accidents about the city Sunday. Allie Vincent, 45, of 426 L Street, Northwest, knocked down by a taxicab on L Street, between Fifth and Fifth Streets, received numerous lacerations of the left forehead. Running in front of an automobile, Audrey Broadnax, 7, of 1735 Tenth Street, Northwest, suffered burns and bruises about the body. Struck by a machine at Fourth Street and Massachusetts Avenue, Northwest, Billy Gray, 3, of 812 Fourth Street, Northwest, received a possible fracture of the skull. The youth was detained at Freedmen's Hospital for further observation. Falls from Auto Falling from an automobile which had just been started up, Alfonso Jones, 6, of 219 Morgan Street, Northwest, was bruised about the body. George Mills, 39, of 1501 Seventh Street, Northwest, suffered wounds of the right hand, left thumb and bruises of both knees and right shoulder. Struck by a machine, S. J. Inman, 30, of 1106 Sixth Street, Northwest, received cuts about the left leg and left hand. Charles Plummer, 29, of 2831 Eleventh Street, Northwest, suffered sprained ligaments of the right shoulder when the automobile in which he was riding overturned near Laurel, Md. baseball players of all shapes, forms, sizes, and descriptions cavorted on the municipal diamond on this ideal Saturday afternoon as the lawyers of the District of Columbia abused the national pastime. After seven innings of assorted baseball—with occasional intermissions while all eyes looked for the lost ball—the players quit by common consent, induced by exhaustion. The score was 24-23 or 23-24. Repeated recounts and check-ups have failed to determine which side scored the 24 runs. Those "stylish stouts" Dickie Tompkins and Nat Dobbins, gave great exhibitions of how third base should not be played. Home-run Lawson made the longest hit of the day. He also struck out the other two times at bat. The twirlers, Terrible Tyson and Frankie Adams, remained in the box because of lack of volunteers to replace them. Both teams played a "tight" defensive game. "Larceny" and lesser crimes of umpiring were committed by Jedge Hill, Ben Gaskins, Will Houston, Ed Beaubian, and Jamie Eaton, who called the balls as they saw them, and whether they saw them or not. Judge Cobb, seated in the shade of the old apple tree was an appreciative spectator. Asked his opinion of the game, he replied: "Ben Gaskins should not have led trumps." At the close of the game the two teams retired to the home of Maurice Clifford who served them refreshments while he launched his spacious family yacht. Only those member of the bar accompanied by their wives remained over for the dance Saturday night. Atty, Gus Gray, president of the bar association, was one of those who remained. Struck on the left side of the face, early Monday morning, Ada Tate, 34, of 1248 Delaware Avenue, Southwest, was treated at Casualty Hospital for a possible fracture of the jaw. The woman told officers of the Fourth Prescinct that she had been struck by Morris Raymond, 39, of First Street, Southwest. She also declared her intentions of securing Raymond's correct address and seeking a warrant for him. Jim Taylor's Detroit Stars have been strengthened considerably for the second half of the Negro National League and are playing whirlwind ball, both afield and at bat. FLOERMICHUAK DRAWS CROWDS: 1 BLP Under a clear sky with ‘several thousands of both races watehing from the stands in the American League baseball park, Elder Light- foot Michaux the nationally known evangelist, who is heard every morning over a local broadcasting station in & radio program, preach ed from the subject, “Which is the Right Church?” : The elder declared that the right chureh ig the one built upon’ the faith which inapired Peter to ac- knowledge Christ as the Son of God, This type of chureh woukt he -‘non-denominational, non-see= tarian, having one Lord, one faith, one: baptism, and practicig \ the Fatherhood of God and the Broth= erhood of Man. The members of. .this church would have to live sin less lives and love everybody, Marching from his. churgh, which i situated across the street, “the elder led“his choir of 156 persons into the ball park to the tune of. “Hearthe Tramp, Tramp, Tramp,” while traffic on Georgia “Avenue paused. At 8:30, he introduced the musical feature of his program, which was followed by # spirited sermon. His wife also. participat- ed, rendering a solo entitled “What is He Worth to, Your Soul?” Every Sunday night since June 25, these services have been con- ducted at the ball park. Attend- ance has increased from 1,500 the first night, to 8,000 last Sunday. night. People of both races ‘and ali creeds: attend. these . meetings and manifest great interest in the ‘elder’s messages which cover ev- ery fundamental principal of Chris~ tianity. ‘Services during the week ar® held. at night in the big tent on Sherman Avenue, near Garfield Hospital; in the morning the. broacast services are held in his church on Georgia Avenue, oppo- site the ball park. ._ The elder states that his subject Sunday night, July 23, will, be’ “Does a Man Go Straight to Hell or Heaven at Death?” An added feature will be the unveiling of the cerucifix. BAPTIST PASTORS HOLD. ANNUAL CONFERENCE Revs, Jernagin, Holloman and J. H. Crawley on Pro: The annual Baptist Ministers’ Christian Workers’ Conference of the District of Columbia and vi- cinity closed a two-day session at Storer College, Harpers Ferry, W.Va., Wednesday. © ‘The’ opening address was deliv- eted by=the Rev. E. 1. Harrison, pastor of the Shiloh Baptist Church of this city. Other speakers at the gonférence included: the Revs, Dr. W. H. R, Powell, of Philadelphia; E. W. White and S. H. James, of Baltimore; W. 1. Campbell, of Harrisburg; J. L. S. Holloman’ ani W.R, Taylor, of Washington, Among white Baptist. ministers ‘appearing on the program were the Revs, E, E, Richardson, of George Washington University; Samuel J. Porter, pastor of the First Baptist Chureh; J. T. Watts, executive secretary of the Mary- Jand Baptist Association, Balti- ‘more. ‘The Rev. W. H. Jernagin of the Mt, Carmel Baptist Church , is chairman of the conference; the Rey, J, A, Crawley, secretary. ares ELKS REFUSE CHICAGO OF- FER OF $2,000 FOR SESSION -, The antlered herd will mest ‘August 20 to 26 in Indianapolis despite flattering offers received by a. Finley Wilson from the Chicago Elks to hold the convention there. The grand exalted ruler is reported to have turned down a cash guar- antee of $2,000 made by a commit- tee of Chicago Elks, headed’ by Congreseman Oseay DePriest and James Cooper of the Windy City Lodge, Guy W. Blaine. general chairman of the indianapolis grand lodge committee stated this week that the Indianapolis Elks had com. plied with every requirement of the proclamation issued by the Grand exalted ruler on June 1. “We can say no more,” said Mr. Blaine “than that the antlered herd wil meet in Indianapolis, the cross roads of America, Therefore every loyal Bik is Indianapoli bound.” Although past years have wark ed a decline in the numbers Kiks in atiendance at (ie couven tions, the conclave in Indianapoli promises to he one of the larges ‘ever held beeause of its central); located .position. 4 Chicago Elks who sonzht « shif of last’ vear's agreement to hole the convention in Indianapolis, av ged that the presence of th ‘orid’s Fair in Chicago made the Windy City the only logical meet: ing place for this year’s meeting. - Father Divine Coldly Received on Second Visit This Summer Few in Attendance Besides His Regular Following but they Make Plenty of Racket; White Disciples Lack Enthusiasm it MRC) co ceg Te Father Divine, “Holy of Holies and the ‘True and Living God” ac- eording to his followers brought his flock to Washington last Thurs- day for the second time this sum- mer and held an old fashioned re- vival seryice in the auditorium of Pythian Temple, Washington, too busy fighting the depression to pay much atten- tion to “the messae from” paid little attention tothe faith heal- er. nly a few were in attendance beside the regular followers of the self-styled’ Messiah. But those vontributed much to the noise and din of the meetipg by their fre- quent. exclamations of “Peace Brother!” and “Thank you, FPath- er. It's Wonderful,” ‘There were'frequent testimonies of “sinners” who ‘had: been healed of sin-sickness and other more worldly ailments, One youngwo- man declared that “the merciful father” had healed her of her flat feet_and fallen arches but there was an indication that the eure had been only temporary. “Here Comes God” After ‘interminable sincing and shouting “and dancing and jump- ing Father Divine, accompanied by his satellites, white and Negroes, entered the. hall. “Here comes God,” shouted his followers, but no aurora hung over the head of the Messiah end he seemed more like a tired little colored man accom: panied by a host of racketeers than*an angel clothed in spotless white.” | Obituary | ROBERT K. BROOKS Final rites for Robert K. Brooks, who died at his late residence, 410 O Street, Northwest, Sunday, were held Wednesday from the Ruth Dabney Funeral Home. Interment was at Harmony Cemetery, Surviving Mr. Brooks are his mother, Mrs) Julia G. Brooks. He was the soh of the late William ‘H. ‘Brooks, oe CHARLES 8. GOODLOE. Charles S$. Goodloe died at his late residence, 821 Third Street, Southeast, Sunday night. Funeral services were held Tuesday from the First Baptist Church of South- west and later at the Shiloh Baj- tist Church of Bowling Green, Va. where burial took: place. Blanche A. Goodloe, the widow; John Goodloe, a brother; and Laura Grannison and Marion Brown, . sisters; ssurvive’ the de- ceased, S i JOHN COHEN John Cohen, member of the Col- vmbia Lodge of Elks, of 469 M Sueet, Northwest, died Saturday. His remains. rested at the funeral home of Walter Wood until ship- ment to Chester, S.C. where burial services were held. ZION BAPTIST CHURCH, SOUPHWEST ‘The Rev. Frank E, Hearns, pas- tor of the Shiloh Baptist Chureh, Alexand¥ia, will/oeepy the pulpit, Sunday mording, at the Zion Bap- tist Church, -F~ Street, between ‘Third and Four“and-a-half Streets, Southwest, “He “will “preach the morning sekmon, and will adminis- ter the Holy Sacrament. at the Fame. service, ‘The Christian Endeavor — will hold its regular sout-door meeting at 6:45 in the evening, The night services will be conducted by the Rev, Emmett Starks, formerly the pastor. of the Emmanuel Baptist Chureh, Garfield, D.C, Nye sas TS PEOPLE'S CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. | ‘The second in the seri¢s’of sum- mer’ messager on the. jreneral theme “Old Téstament Portraits,” will be presented: by. the minister, the Rey. A. F. Elmeé, this Sunday at’ the morning hour, his subject being, “The Man who lived in front of Ged.” The young people's. society will meet at 6:30 p.m. with song and discussion. Midweek prayer service Thurs- day at 8 pm. ES tee Revolt at Forest Camp Brings Arrests PORTSMOUTH, Ohio. Fifteen members of a colored Civilian Con- rervation Corps working in Shaw= nop Forest, Scioto County, were held in jail here. as.a.result of a rebellion against “certain new aut leaders. Fhe men were held for. investigation, The “rouble started Monday when officers began to reorganize the camp. by assigning new aquad leaders, sume uf whom, Were oe peste to some of the mens pieacesbeirzei SS | LOUIS GRIMES NAMED | CHIRP JUSTICE MONROVIA, - LEBERIA—(Spe- cial to the ANP) ‘The ‘ton, See- etary of State, Uamix Grimes, has heen named the Chief dustice of Liberia, Mr. Grimes. is, new. in Geneva for the fourth time in the interest of Liberia, On his return, he Will take up hie new duties and Will preside during the November Seskion, vf the supreme courts “Whatever his holy qualities, they were not apparent to any but his flock, for he seratched his bald shiny head, pulled at his ear and blew at his nose just like any other man whose head itches and who has a cold. His action eaused one to won- der whether he bad not caught some of the worldy ailments which he had exorcised from those of his flock, whom he, it was claimed, had so miraculously cured, Whites Rather Listless Evidently the “spirt” has not at- tacked his white followers ax much as the colored members of his flock. One white woman sat on the platform during the entire pro- gram unmoved by the blessings he bestowed on the multitude. Anoth- er young white man, whose bearing was that of a card sharp rather than one of the “holies” took part in| the ceremony with marked difficulty. All in all it was apparent that the Washington publie was much too skeptical a group to. furnish good pickings for the faith healing racket. : = One of the wigeacres gave as a reason forthe’ cold reception xiven him the fact that some time. azo the Father came héré and blessed one of Washington's colored lawe years. Shortly. after the lawyer found himself in jail. “When the Lord gets the lawyer ‘out of jail, maybe people here will believe in his blessing, but until then he has a-slim chance of working his rack- et,” said the speaker. BISHOP VERNON WINS POINT IN COLLEGE ROW TOPEKA, Kans. (ANP)—The chureh has lost another notch in the fight to keep the-state part of the Western University from oper- ating after the A.M.E, Church had withdrawn its support. and sus- pended operation -of the church section. An opinion handed down by State Attorney General Roland Blanton. stated that the control of the school would be in the hands of the state through its committee and that the state could operate its sec- tion of the school with the power to determine what subjects should be taught yested in the hands of the board, ‘The ight began when it was charged that there was too: much control by the church on-the state department of the school and that there should be a non-sectarian board handling the affairs. The fight was renewed after. the ap- pointment of former Bishop, W, 7. Vernon, former register. of, the treasury and suspendéd bishop in the A.M.E, Church, who is now aupaiin andent:, D.C. Christian Endeavorers Achieve Honors at Convention A dozen local Christian Endeay- orers, led by James A. Brown, president of the Golden Rule Union, are attending the con~en~ tion ef the International Society of Christian Endeavor in Milwau- kee. Word has been received that the local union received first prize for registration, : President Brown has been nomi- nated by the Endeavors of the city for membership on the board of trustees of the international so- ciety to fill the vaecaney created by the death of Dr. W. t. Washing- ton, former pastor’ of the Zion Baptist Chureh here, Among the highlights of the convention is the parade and the address of Dr. Daniel A, Poling, president of the international so- ciety. Mrs, Clark, the eighty-two- years old widow of the founder of Christian Endeayor, traveled all the way from her home in Boston to be present at the convention. The group of local folk will re- turn by way of-Chicago and will spend some time at the Century of Progress Exposition. When they reach home, echoes of the conyen- tion will be heard for the benefit of those whe did not make the trip tu Milwaukee, Neel Reena Funeral Services Held for Mrs. La Rubia Parks Final rites for Mrs, La’ Rubai Parks, of 2208 Flagler Place, Northwest, were held Tuesday af- ternoon from the Asbury M. E. Church, where she was a member of the choir. The Rev, R. W. Wil- liams, pastor, officiated with the assistance of the Rev, Ernest J. Green. Interment was ‘at the Har- Hospital, Friday, afteroa brief ill- mony Cemetery. Mrs. Parks died at Columbia ness.. Born in Washington jn 1891, she was educaied.in the city sehools and in 1914 moved to New Haven, Coun. where she spent most of her time during the past two decades: She wax well-known in local and New Mayen chiurch civeles, having been a member’ uf the Asbury Church befcre taking residence in New England, She ‘attended , the local church and served -on’ the choir whenever she was in the city, Surviving her area widower, Clarence Parke; a mother, Carrie eaeenn; a child, Mrs. Thelma Parks Butler; a brother, Chester ‘Mansfeld; and three sisters. Mes: damier Ravnell Rider, Alva Hudeon, and Viola Armstrong, THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 a | CHURCHES | ; Three Baptist Churches, | 3 {pvist’ cuURCH ‘ ut! One Methodist, Holding ai Behold he Lain ot Gad” was § Bible Vacation Schools|{sritiott fetauars sermon Three Baptist churches, and one Methodist church here are holding Bible vacation schools duzing the month of July. Shiloh Baptist and Zion Baptist churches opened their schools on July 3. The Jerusalem Baptist and Asbury M.E, churches opened on July 5, Shiloh Baptist Church has the largest, enrollment, 185, — Miss Grace Coleman is principal and has as her assistants Miss Marian Bowden, Mrs, Marguerite Robin- son, Miss Burlina’ For‘une, Miss Florence Chichester, Mrs, Olive English, Mrs, Marian Fisher, Mrs. Frances Neally, Mrs, Grace Brack- enridge, Miss Mamie Young, Miss Nellie Gray, and Reginald Green, ‘The adult Bible institute is held from 10 to 12 o'clock each school day, The children meet at 9:30 am, A clinic is also conducted jn con- nection with the school, with Dr. C, Walwin, Dr, C. ¥, Harris, and Dr. M. T Walker in charge. The Rey. E/L, Harrison is the pastor. ‘The Asbury M. E. schoo} has the second largest enrollment — with more than 100 pupils attending daily, Mra, T. J. Anderson is the principal, and she has eight teach- ers assisting her, The Rev. R. M. Williams is the pastor. Zion Baptist has-78 enrolled, with Mrs. Louise Pack a& principal, and six assistant teachers. Thischurch has no pastor at this writing, ‘Phe. Jerusalem Baptist Church has 34, with Miss Marie Price as principal. The Rey, Augustus Lewis is pastor. CAMPBELL A.M.E. CHURCH - “Success Assured oe the Peo- ple Have a Mind to Work,” will be the subject of the pastor, the Rev. 'P. A, Scott, at eleven. o'clock, next Sunday morning, when special musical features will be furnished py the choir, under the direction of Mrs, Lucille Dale. At 8 p.m, the pastor will: deliver a picture sermon, with music by the Choral Club, under the diree- tion of Mrs. Jonnie Green-Smith. his service will be for the benefit of the Walter Perkins rally club, Campbell people are wide-a-wake in the interest of the star rally that began the second Sunday. in duly, with twenty-five hundred dol- lars ‘as the goal. It will conclude with the celebration of the sixty- seventh anniversary of Campbell Church, in October. Last Sunday the congregation was unusually large both morning and night. The pastor's morning theme was “The Certain Aceom- plishment of the Purpose of God.” Mrs, Florence Harris sang a solo, Dr. and Mrs. Porter, and many other prominent persons, including the Rev, Mr, Bunn, with hia father and mother, were present, and were introduced. Sunday, at 7 p.m, the A.CE, League rendered a fine program, with the president, Mrs, Hattie Robinson, presiding. Miss Sara Jones presided at the piano, and the following were the partici- pants: Supt. Herman P. Socks, Lincoln, Md. Miss Mary Davis, Vista, Md.j the Rev, L. S. Penn, Seaton Mem- orial Church; Walter Webb, Ebe- nezer M.B,. Chureh; Miss’ Julia Robinson, Twelfth Street. Christian Church; Mrs, Mamie Childs, and eH. Dale, Jr. Dry Scott gave a picture-sermon of “Joseoh, and--his Work in Egypt)? at §:30 o'clock, with stere- omtieén slides: MINISTERS’ WIVES HAVE OUTING ‘The Ministers’ Wives’ Interde- nominational Council, met in the final meeting for the yenr, at the residence of Mrs. Threlkeld, wife of the Rey, Threlkeld, presiding elder of the C.M.E, Church for the Washington District, ‘The annual address of the presi- dent, Mrs. W. W, Matthews set forth. the aims, purposes and accomplishments ‘of the council during the past year. The year's activities were closed with an out- ing of the council at Sparrow Beach on Inst Wednesday at which a large number of members and invited guests Were present. Mrs, Matthews, who is the wife of Bishop W. W, Matthews of the AME, Vion Choreh, hasbeen 4 zealous and efficient’ president. of ‘the couneil and through her efforts donations have been made to sev- eral charitable agencies in the city besides being of great help and in- spiration to the members of the council, GOOD SAMARITAN MISSION The Good Samaritan Mission is beginning a special revival meeting July 24, at Fourth and L Streets, Northwest, in the lecture room. Preaching” each evening by. th Rev, “H.C, “Mack, the evangelist preacher and singer fom Payette- ville, N.C, The Bible study. Class Fviday evening, the 21, will be given a fifteen ‘minutes’ sermonette from Psalm 1:2 by Brother William Waller. All ave welcome, She oe SHILOH, BAPTIST OPENS VACATION: SCHOOL More than 100 children haye en- rolled in the Bible vacation school at Shiloh- Baptist Church, “The school is under the direction of ‘Miss. Grace Coleman, assisted by Miss Marian Bowden. The school opened last week and will continue Through July, § MT. LEBANON BAPTIST CHURCH “Behold the Lamb of God’ wa: the subject of the pastor's sermor at the 11:00 am, service last Sun. day morning, Among the visitor: was Mrs, I Hatchet: from the First Berne Church of Newport News ‘0, At the 8:00 p.m service the pastor used for his theme “God's Remedy for Sin.” Tuesday evening the regular prayer and praise service will be held, after which a trial sermon will be delivered by Mrs, Beatrice Washington, a member of the chureh. A Buffalo Supper will be given Wednesday evening by the Repairs Club of which Mrs. Catherine Smith is president. On Thursday night, the Rev. M. N. Newsome, pastor of First Bap- tist Church (Georgetown) will de- liver a sermon fo the Faithful Few Club, Miss Grace Jennings, presi- dent. The First Baptist choir will render the musie. The installation serviee of the pastor, the Rev, Edgar Newton, will begin Sunday. evening, July 23, The keynote will be sounded by the Rey, N. R. Richardson, pastor of Mt, Salvation Baptist Chureh of Halls «Hill, Va., accom- panied by his ehoir and congrega- tion. The opening night will be under the auspices of the usher board and its auxiliary, with Mrs. Daisy Jackson presiding, ‘The installation program will be as follows: Monday, 24th, the Rey. F. C Bundy, pastor of Morning Stat Baptist Chureh, wnder the auspices of the Willing Workers’ Club of which Miss Marie Atkins is presi- dent. Tuesday, the Rev. L. R. Frazier, pastor of ‘Alexander Memorial, in the interest of the Faithful Few Club. Wednesday, the Rev. J, T. Har- vey, pastor of Gethsemane Baptist Church, for the Repairs’ Club. Thursday, the Rev. R. Anderson, pastor of Mt Pleasant Baptist Church, for the Pastor’s Aid Club. Friday, the Rev. B. Gibbs, pas- tor of St. Paul Baptist Church, under the auspices of the Senior Choir and Pulpit Committee, Sunday, July 80, the Rey. J. D. Pair, pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Warrenton, Va. will preach at the 11:00 am. service and at the 8 o’clock setvice in the interest of the Missionary Circle. Sunday at 3:00 p.m., the Rev, A. Lewis, pastor of Jerusalem Baptist Church, will preach to the Sun- light Club. Monday, July 31, will be banquet evening, with the Baptist Minis- ters’ Conference of Washington and vicinity, conducting the pro- gram, GALBRAITH AME. ZION CHURCH Last. Sunday was “Simplicity Day” at Galbraith, ‘The Rev. W. D. Speight. pastor, dressed in overalls, the men following suit and the women in their service clothes, preached on “Lavor and Its Rewards.” The services were well attended, It had the effect of promoting spiritual equality, and of bringing all into # closet and friendlier relationship, Phillip Dines, president of the G.BS., spoke on the topic, “Our Need of Friends,” “He began by telling what he saw at the hospi- tal, among other things a group ‘of small colored hoys, playing cards on the Sabbath. | Said he, “They need friends to teach them better. They need a guiding hand through life,” “Forty per cent of the crimes are committed by youth under 25 years of age,” he said. “If the youth had the right’ sort of friends, erime would be reduced to the minimum, Sometimes a pat. on the back with a kind word spoken, will change one from a wrong to ‘a right course,” Mrs. Sada Hayes read the Serip- ture lesson. William H. Anderson, assisted by Miss. Sylvia Chase, pianist, conducted @ lively sons ey MT. MORIAH BAPTIST CHURCH The services last Sabbath were unusually interesting, it being the forty-eighth anniversary of the church, Several new members joined Bible School and were wel- gomed by the superintendent, James Gillard. At 11 am, the aster preached, subject, “Ou femorial to God for Guidance and Help.” A short historical. survey of the church was given by the clerk, James Gillard. Special musi¢ was rendered by the senior choir. At 8 pan., shovt ‘sermonettes were given by the ministers of the church, followed by song service. Next Sunday will mark the twenty-third anniversary of the pastor. Bible School 9:30; 11 a.m. preaching by Rev. A. J. Tyler, pastor of the Mt.” Airy Baptist Chureh; special music by_ senior choir, 8 p.m, sermon. by the pastor; music by the senior and junior choirs, followed by financial report of all clubs, Tuesday, 8 pan, preaching by the Rev, J. LS.” Holloman, ae- companied by his choir, ‘Thursday, 8 p.m. preaching by the Rev. E. ‘M, ‘Tyre, pastor of the Rehoboth Baptist ‘Church, accompanied by his choir, Noon prayer meeting Tuesday and Thursday. An outing to Sparrows Beach, Md., will be given by the Men's Club on Monday, July $1. © Buses Teave the church Third and L Streets, Southwest, at 10.a.m,. All members and friends are asked to participate. Tickets $1.10, Chil- Does hattfeee, - A.M.E.Z, Bishops Council Meets in Chicago ‘CHICAGO— (ANP) — Members of the Bishops .Couneil of the AME, Zion churen were guests of the city at Walter's A.M.E, Zion Church from Wednesday to Satur- day of last week, Several of the city’s outsta’ ding leaders welcomed the bishops, A= mong them were Wap ew Os- car DePriest, Deputy Coroner Clit- ford Wheeler, who appeared in be- halt of the thayor, State, Senator Adelbert H. Roberts, Alderman ‘William L, Dawson and Represent- ative Harris B. Gaines. ‘The regular meetings of the council were devoted to reports on the church work which showed ad- vaneément being made in all direo- tions. ‘The following bishops and high churchmen were in attendance at the conference: Bishops W. J. Walls, chariman-elect; C. C. Alley-. ne, E. D, W. Jones, J, B, Caldwell, I.N. Kyles, B. J. Shaw J. W. Mar- tin, W. W. Matthews, P. A, Wal- lace and J, W. Wood, Saturday the delegates were taken on a sight-seeing trip to the World Fair. Seema MT, CARMEL BAPTIST CHURCH The Sunday School, last Sundey, with Mr. Hunter in’ chargé, was devoted to a Children’s Jovenent Meeting. At 10:45, the Rev. 8. 4. Young, assistant pastor, gave the kinder. garten departmént a surprise ice eream party, Mrs. M, Sanders spoke in the interest of the Cen- tary of Progress moving picture which was shown at Mt. Carmel last Friday night. At 11:80, the pastor, the Rev W. H. Jernigan. preached, subject “The Results of Knowing.” fohr 4:10, “If thou knowest the gift of God,” The B.Y.P.U. Miss Wilfork in charge, met at 6 o'clock, ‘The program was rendered by members from South Carolina, Mis, Bar! and childrex from Spartansburg had charge of the program. ‘The Earl Family Quartette, with Mrs. Earl at the piano, was the prin- cipal feature of the evening. Communion was observed at § o'clock. A large congregation was present. Visiting ministers were the Rev. Mr. Epps of Secon¢ Baptist, the Rev, Mr. Mitchell. of Ohio, the Rey. Mr. Spriggs, a Mt. Carmel. The senior choit rendered music during the entire day, Flemming Brown, director, The summer Bible School closed last Friday at noon, The B.Y.P.U, and Sunday School are h ving their annual pienie tomorrow ai the Zoo Park. Dr. W. H. Jernigan and a num- ber of ministers fren. this city left Inst Monday for a three-day visit to the Ministers’ Educational Conference which convened at Harper's Ferry last. Monday. eve- sisi LINCOLN TEMPLE CONGREGATIONAL ‘The quartet of artists will rend- er special musical selections at the morning services of Lincoln Con- gregational Temple. The Rev, R. W. Brooks will speak from the subject, “The Need of a Superior Righteousness.” This service will Jast only from 11 to 12:15. The Men's Brotherhood will as- semble at 9:45 am, After brief devotional exercises, an inspira- tional address will be given by Attorney Emory B. Smith, whose subject will be, “Playing ‘the Game.” The men of the church and community are invited to at- tend, The Young People’s C.E. Society will present a program of song and discussion at 7 p.m. The aub- Ject to be discussed is, “The Prob- lems of Friendship.” “This discus- sion will be Jed by W. K. Billings- ley, George Washington Universi- ‘ty. The music will be directed by Miss Louise Burge, Conservatory of Music, Howard University. The mid-week prayer service will be held, ‘Thursday, evenime from 8 to 9 o'clock, ‘The medite- tion theme will be, “Who Is Our Neighbor?” The public is invited to all services. Ce pon eae Fins RAPTIST CHURCH, GEORGETOWN Sunrise prayer meeting at’ 6:30 a.m, every Sunday, Sunday Schoo! at 9:30 a.m, ‘The pastor, the Rev, M. N. New. some, will preach Sunday, at 11 a.m., subject, “When Man is at His Best.” At 5 p.m. the Intermediate an¢ Junior C.E. Societies will meet. The Senior C.E. Society will meet at 6 p.m, with Deacon John Harris presiding. The topic, will be, “Problems of Friendship.” Master Wendell Richardson rep- resented the juniors at the C.E Convention in Milwaukee recently and Misses Lillian Jones anc Gladys Worrell were delegates for the intermediates. Others present at, the conventior were: Mee, Helen Carpenter, dele. gate; and Mrs. Helen Martin, Mrs Mary Bolden, Mrs. Ivory Hamil: ton, John Harris, Merrick Hamil. ton, and Herman Harris. Convention Kehoes 5 and 6 p.m. ‘Sunday, At 8 p.m, the pastor, the Rey. Mr. Newsome, will preach a special sermon. ‘The Doreas Missionary Society ‘will hold its twentieth anniversary at 11 ‘a.m. and. 8 p.m, Sunday, July. 30. Mid-week services Wednesday and Friday night at 8 o'clock, PROPRET SPARKS TO CLOSE REVIVAL AT FRIENDSHIP Revival services conducted by Prophet. Milton Sparks of New York. will come to a clost Sunday night at the Friendship Baptist Church. ‘This serviee will conclude S eaal's - rewivele ‘BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPIPAL After 50 Years.... What will be the condition of your family burial lot? THE answers this question by providing Perpetual Care Free transportation will be furnished prospective purchasere for inspection without obligation. All Undertakers are its representatives. PUBLIC BUS SERVICE City Office—1351 Wallach Place, N.W. Phone, Decatur 3-5-5-4 ae In Case of Death Gis Call MALVAN & SCHEY pre eo. . Princes of Cut Raters Ce ae ia This $300 Complete $ .00 Funeral for only 1 50 New Methods, New Prices, New Undertakers with New Hearses, Cars and Ambulances | ve amet coer Pawste SEO. | “WE BEAT ANYBODY'S PRICES” MALVAN & SCHEY — New Jersey Avenue & R St., N.W. North 0063 NEW MINISTER IS INSTALLED AT WARNER CHURCH ee Over seventy-five pastors, mem- hers of the Baptist Ministers’ Con- ference of Washington and Vicini- ty, journeyed to Baileys Gross Roads, Virginia, Monday, | where the conference met for the instal- Intion of the Rev, W. Ear! Costner as pastor of the Warner Baptist Chureh, ~The Rey, Mr. Costner is a grad- ‘uate. of the Washington Baptist Seminary and also. pastor at the Mount Zoar Baptist Church of Hughesville, Va. Listing in his installation ser- mon, laziness, selfishness and sin as the three great evils of the world, the Rev. J, L. 8, Holloman, pastor of the Second Baptist Church and president, of the Wash- ‘ington Baptist Seminary, declared ‘that these are the things that handicap the church as. well as everything else, Selecting as his subject, the “Great Commission,” the Rev. Mr. Holloman charged that “the church and preachérs are not sufficiently militant; they are too much con- ‘cerned with the non-essentials of life.” He urged the new pastor ‘to go forth and preach the gospel to every creature regardless of the ‘obstacles that will confront him. The Rev. Mr. Holloman eohelud- ‘ed his thirty-minute sermon with ‘thanks to God for the lack of ‘Segregation in heaven, The Rey. Augustus Lewis, president of the conference, presided. Ex-Pastor Speaks ‘The new. pastor was introduced to the congregation by the Rev. N, R. Richardson, ex-pastor of the church, who ‘now pastors at Halls Hill, Va. In delivering the charge to the chureh, the Rev. Sylvester Walker, pastor of the Saint John Baptist. Church, asked that the church let the Rev. Mr. Costner be pastor as long as he was in the Position of pastor. Dr. Alexander Wilbanks, pastor of the Tenth Street Baptist Chureh, in his charge to the pastor, urged that he be faithful, honest to himself, to God and to his fel- lowmen and preach the gospel. He declared that the gospel was the only cure for human ills. Words of welcome were said by Walker Power, deacon of the church, while the Rey, K, W. Roy, viee-president of. the conference, gave the hand of fellowship and the Rev. W. D. Jarvis, ex-president of the conference, gave words of greeting. Others who spoke were the Rev. R. D. Botts of Alexandria, the Rev. E. H. §, Johnson of Manassas, Va. and L. MeLean, also. a deacon at the church, After the services the ministers ‘were quests ai dinner served in the church yard. JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH, ‘The prograin for Sunday. fol- lows: 9:30 a.m., Sunday School; 11:00 a.m. and 3:30 p.m., preach- ing by the Henry Brothers; 6:00 pm, B.Y.P.U, Hour; 8:00 p.m, preaching by the Hen- ry Brothers. ‘The Henry Brothers will conduct services each week-day night from Monday to Saturday. Daily Bible School 9 to 12 noo each week day. FIFTEENTH re PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH At the Fifteenth state Presby- terian Church, the Rev, HB, Taylor, pastor, will preach Sunday at 11 am, on “Improving Pros- perity.” Special musie by the junior choir of twenty voices under the direction of Miss Allen will be rendered. eee BAPTIST CONVENTION MEET- ING PLACES ANNOUNCED CHICAGO, Ill—Ebeneser Mis- sionary Baptist Church, located at Forty-fifth Street. and, Vincennes Avenue, is now secured ‘for the Women's Auxilisry to the Nation- al Baptist Convention of America, The men of the convention, mak- ing up the-parent body, have al- ready been ascured that the Eighth Regiment Armory, located on Gilet Avenue near Thirty-fifth Street, will -be their meeting place. Board at $2.00 a day proyides for lodging and two meals, and is expected to be the maximum charge fo: incoming messengers, except where they select: their own quarters in hotels and boarding houses, _Representatives ‘from the na- tional convention are to be in the city next week to go over-other de- tails: with the local committee, 10-DAY SERVICE ENDS AT WARNER BAPTIST The ten-day service in celebtge tion of the installation of the new pastor, the Rev, W. Earl Costner, At the: Warner Baptist Church of Baileys Cross Roads, Va. conclud- ed Monday with a meating of the Baptist Ministers’ “Conférence of Washington and Vicinity at the church, Among the pastors’ who preach- ed during the period were the Reverends 8. B. Ross of Alex- andria, Oliver Hall, James Greene, Howard Barnes, E. Newton, G. 0. Bullock, J. W, Robinson, J. W. Cattlet, Phillip. Higgins, C, Le Parker, William H. Waller and N; R, Richardson, former ‘pastor of the church, Sees pli THIRD BAPTIST > CHURCH Dr. George 0. Bullock's tapie for the morning service at the chureh Sunday will be “All for Jesus,” while at: night he will preach on the subject, “The Rejected Stone.” Bible Seligol and prayer meet ings will he held at the usual time. ete peeps ZION BAPTIST, SOUTHWEST At the 11 o'clock service Sunday the pare will be filled by the Rev. Frank E. Hearns. Following after morning worship Holy Communion will be celebrated. At 8 o'clock the Rey. Emmétt Starks will preach. The Christion Endeavor Society will hold “its. outdoor meeting at 6:00 p.m. in O’Neil’s) Court, be- tween Second and Third, F and G Streets, Southwest, ay Seeger HOLDS TENT MEETING William ©. Jones, elder. of the Chureh of Christ, and Paul Mac- key, evangelist from Howard, Pa., are conducting tent meetings in the 1800 block of Vermont Avenue, Northwest, this week. NINETEENTH STREET BAPTIST CHURCH Rev, Walter H. Brooks,.D., Pastor Rev. George A. Parker, LL.B. ‘Assistant 11. a.m.—“The Cancelled Record,” 8p.m.—Christian Endeavor Ex- ercises, FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST ner'B. Heiwhiting, Passe SUNDAY SERVICES ite aise Marthe Berrien: Fee ere ancclie BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL FIRESTONE LOSES BIG FIGHT IN LIBERIA Englishman Wins $200,000 Damages from American Rubber Company MONROVIA, Liberia (Special correspondence to ANP)—The civil suit of Peter Davidson vs. Firestone Rubber Corporation of Liberia ended during May in the circuit courts of Liberia. Judge Russell presided and awarded damages to Mr. Davidson to the amount of forty-five thousand pounds sterling, approximately $200,000. Mr. Davidson, an Englishman, was formerly employed by the banking institution of the Firestone interests here in Liberia, and it is alleged that he was dismissed illegally because he was too friendly with the Liberian people. In cross-examination, Mr. Davidson said that there were certain blind-plots on the part of Firestone to usurp the remaining power and authority of the black Republic. The defense made an appeal to the Supreme Court, which will make the second time that this case has been aired out in the highest judiciary body in Liberia. The case is of international interest, especially in Europe, and since the Supreme bench has recently been reorganized, no comment relative to the outcome can be made. INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE ATTACKS N.A.A.C.P. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (ILD). Alarmed at the prospect of a mass defense to snatch Willie Peterson, tubercular Negro veteran, from the electric chair in which he is sentenced to die August 26, on a framed charge of murder, the white press of the South and the N.A.A.C.P. attorneys have joined hands to demand that International Labor Defense withdraw from the case. Following announcement by the ILD, that it would rouse mass protest against the frame-up system which operates in Alabama against the Scottsboro boys, Willie Peterson, and hundreds of Negro and white workers, Walter S. Smith, N.A.A.C.P. attorney in charge of the Peterson "defense", issued a statement in Peterson's name demanding that no mass protest be made. "It is highly improbable that Willie Peterson ever knew of the announcement of the I.L.D. or that he knew of Mr. Smith's statement," the L.L.D. Southern district office said. "Peterson knows that the L.L.D. has now four times saved the Scottsboro boys from the most determined efforts of the legal lynchers. He knows that mass protest has done this—unless his attorneys and the prison authorities have succeeded in keeping all knowledge of what goes on in the world outside his miserable cell from him." The Williams murder, it was pointed out, was used as a springboard for a reign of terror against Negroes that was countrywide. It is estimated that at least seventy-five Negroes were murdered in Birmingham and Alabama as a result of the lynch incitement around this case by the police and newspapers, including the Chattanooga News. It was the I.L.D., it was also pointed out, which in August of 1931 prevented the extradition to Alabama from Chicago of Elsina and Leroy Thompson who were proved to have been in Chicago on the day of the murder, but were "identified" by Nell Williams as her sisters' murderers, just as she later "identified" Peterson. Liberator Editor Arrested Because Mistaken for White Liberator Editor Arrested Because Mistaken for White NEW YORK CITY (CNA) - Cyril Briggs, militant New York editor of the Liberator, was the center of a demonstrative incident in Harlem last week when he was arrested because he "looked like white" and was seen in company with a Negro woman. According to testimony given before a magistrate last week, Briggs walked home with a woman member of his Staff, and upon reaching the house where his companion lived was accosted by a policeman who asked if he lived in the house. Upon telling the officer that it was "none of his business" a fight followed. During a second hearing the magistrate dismissed the charges of "disorderly conduct" which had been placed against the Liberator head, but upheld the officer in carrying out orders that "white men seen with Negroes" are suspicious characters. The workers of the Liberator and their friends staged a demonstration in front of the court room before the case was heard. INJURES SIDE AND ARM WHILE CARRYING STOVE While carrying a gas stove down a rear® stairway, Joseph Shorts, 55, of 336 Clarks Court, Southwest, fell and injured his left arm and right side, last week. Shorts was carried into 336 Clarks Court, and later removed to Gallinger Hospital for treatment. No bones were broken and his condition is not regarded as serious. Elk Leader Repudiates Plan to Grab Convention for Chicago Percy Ash, Head of Great Lakes Lodge, Says Soliciting of Funds to Entertain Grand Lodge Done by Irresponsible Persons Vital Statistics CHICAGO—(ANP)—P. Ash, exalted ruler of the Great Lakes Elks' Lodge, one of the three lodges in this city, denied emphatically here this week, that the Chicago lodge would entertain the grand lodge. His statement was made in face of the fact that solicitors have been visiting merchants and citizens soliciting support toward a guarantee fund. "The grand lodge," said Mr. Ash, "voted to go to Indianapolis at the Atlantic City convention last summer. Chicago also bid at that time but the honor was denied. About two months ago the opinion of the grand exalted ruler was that Indianapolis could not deliver and he asked us to determine whether the session could be held here. "A joint committee from all Chicago lodges, meeting with Past Grand Daughter Ruler Ellen Berry and District Deputy Harris B. Gaines met and declined because the expense was too great. "Now who are these Elks attempting to make personal venture of the grand lodge?" I recognize only about four names in the list published last week in the Chicago Defender as active and financial Elks. Others are strangers. Births Reported Licensed to Marry MALLOY-COLBERT - Julius. 31. 1823 Twelfth St. - Clotilda, 22. 210 Thirteenth **STREET-NOLE** - George, 27. 1638 Fourth St.; D. Dorothy, 18. 争 address. **TOMS-GOLD** - James, 30. 1508 T. St. N.W. Elizabeth, 30. 1036 Nineteenth St. SHERMAN, 30. 1035 - Simon, Jr. 24. 2000 Nineteenth St. N.W. Jdn, 24. 1148 Belmont St. N.W. VENENY-DAVIS - Oscar, 38, Alexandra Batrice, 35, Alexandra. WILLOW-RALE - Mitchell, 15, 340 Morris Road, S.E., Molly, 18, 1409 Morris Road, S.E. WILLIAMS-DAY-Hyter, 43, 526 Twenty- six stl. C.; Carrie, 32, 526 Twenty- six stl. LINDSYE J-ACKSON J. 37, 652 HARVARD Ph. P. N.; W. Grace, 19, 1123 Harvard Ph. P. N.; W. Grace, 19, 1123 Harvard WALKER-BRADT—Willey, 29, 1816 Kalo- ramane RD., N.W.; Annie, 22, Waynes- boro, GA. ROBINSON-JOHNSON — Frank W., 22, Saratoga, N.Y.; Alice, 21, New York Gas. JENKINS-SHORT — Ulysses, 28, 2214 JENKINS-SHORT — Ulysses, 28, 2214 Sheridan Rd. S.E. Margaret, 10, 2633 BUTLER-BRUCE-Ralphe, 66, 5416 addresses. THIMES-GARRETT-Lev, 13, 1830 Ninth St. N.W.; Annie, 22, 1514 Ninth St. N.W. ANDERSON-DICKENS-William, 26, 1232 Eighth St., N.W.; Viola, 19, 925 O St. N.W. STEVENSON-WILSON-James,*20, 12 Logan N.W.; Beatrice, 19, 821 Fourth St. DUNLAP-BESS-John, 32, 3271^D St. N.E.; Bessie, 33, 643 Acker St., N.E. EPPS-WILLIAMSON-Odell, 25, 407 York Ave., N.W.; Hattie, 24, 1812 Fifth St., N.W. SWANSON-SIMSON-Walter, 26, 1237 twenty-third St.; Annie, 18, same ad- dress. BUTLER-CHAMBER - George, Jr. 21, 1412 Half, N.E. S.; Gladys, 18, 631 Pickford DAVIS-FITTSIMONS - William, 38, 527 New Jersey Ave.; Annie, 52, same ad- BURGESS$ SAUMELS - Sammig, 37, 615 Dalarew Ave. S.W., Eilabath, 28, sams SMITH-COMACK- James, 34, 4540 Dt. St. N.; Clalest, 19. Brandon, Miss. JOHNSON-LENON- Samuel, 21, 167 Eleventh St., N.W.; Ethel, 18, 165 ad "We do not wish to be put in the position of appearing before the country as attempting to deprive Indianapolis of its meeting after all the effort put forth and money expended. The lodges of Chicago have declined to entertain the grand lodge this year and are not responsible for the efforts put forth as recently published." W. T. Brown, recently elected exalted ruler of Fort Dearborn lodge, declined to state whether in his opinion the Chicago lodges would seek to secure the grand lodge or whether it would meet here. "I would not contribute a nickel to bring the body here," he said in response to an inquiry about the current report that he had agreed to put up $1,000. "I was drafted practically to head up Fort Dearborn," said Mr. Brown. "My election was not contingent in any manner upon the grand lodge's movement." Mr. Brown did not care to comment upon the men who were soliciting support for the convention. He stated that Grand Exalted Ruler Finley Wilson was in Chicago in conference at this time but declined to reveal his stopping place. Efforts to locate Mr. Wilson failed. Deaths Reported George Mickey, 67, Freedman's Hops Elizabeth Branson, 61, 448 8th St., a.w. Louise Crocker, 60, 244 56th St., n.e. Wm. A. Wood, 51, 142 53st. n.e. Wm. A. Wood, 51, 142 53st. n.e. Nile Harris, 36, Gallinger Hosp. Raymond Dorser, 36, 1346 29th st., n.w. William S. Brooks, 31, Gallinger Hosp. Lre Roy Hunt, alias Hunter, 27, St. Elizabeth's Hosp. Welder Wade, 22, Gallinger Hosp. Theodore Brock, 6, Gallinger Hosp. Robert Council, 2 mos., Children's Hosp. Emil McHeenny, 89, 229 Hst., n.e. Jasper Holmes, 54, Provident Hosp. James Carter, 52, provident Hosp. B. Sims, 51, Twelfth St., n.e. Emma Nelson, 49, Gallinger Hosp. Clifton Dixon, 32, T. B. Hosp. James Wise, 1, Casualty Hosp. Dolores E. Day, 3 mos., Gallinger Hosp. Karry B. Brisley, 26, Gallinger Hosp. B. Sims, 51, Twelfth St., n.e. Henry Johnson, 51, 161 St. Elizabeth's Hosp. Sarah H. Washington, 40, Gallinger Hosp. Fred McCoy, 30, 1326 Ust., n.w. Henry Minnis, 24, Gallinger Hosp. Brooke W. Killingworth, 10, 1802 Seventh Elizabeth Coleman, 75, 1400 6th St. n.e. Augusta C. Bowen, 54, Garfield Hosp. n.e. Sarah Simmons, 54, 1824 Florida Ave. n.e. Georgie West, 53, Gallinger Hosp. n.e. Ellen E. Hollis, 65, 705 12th St. n.e. Harry Reed, 57, New Casualty Hosp. Jennie Pointexter, 55, Gallinger Hosp. Noble Davis, 46, 611 Y St. n.e. William Hickman, 45, enroute Emergency Olberta Springg, 40, Gallinger Hosp. Glodine Marian Young, 39, 1812 Rosedale St. n.e. John M. Taylor; 38, Gallinger Hosp. Edgar R. Hassler, (Gallinger Hosp.) Ivan Hayward (alias Holcomb) 32, 400 block New York Ave. n.e. Willie Luke, 26, Gallinger Hosp. Bossie Wade, 28, Gallinger Hosp. Clyde Jones, 25, found on R.R. tracks Fonnie Nelson, 24, 44 Fenton Pl., n.l. Constance Hurt, 12, Gallinger Hosp. Jack Edwards, 3 mos., 1382 C St., s.e. Infant of Beulah and Beulah Williams Downingtown Students Work their Way DOWNINGTOWN, Pa.—A visitor to Downingtown Industrial School might think at first glance that a summer session was in progress. After more careful inspection, however, he would find that the numerous boys and girls still at the school are busily engaged in various kinds of work by means of which they are earning money for an education. To be exact, six girls and fourteen boys are "vacationing" at Downingtown. Evangeline V. James, commercial graduate in '32 and postgraduate student this past year, is serving her second summer as secretary hoping to pay her way to Hampton. Esther C. Smith, commercial 33 also headed Hampton-wards, has temporarily denoted the apron to help with the canning. Under Mrs. Anna Spencer, of West Chester four other girls are engaged in this work—Ernestine Foust, Gladys Green, Mildred James, and Elizabeth Thompson. Many Repairs Being Made Colier C. Lewis, carpentry teacher, is heading up a gang which is bringing about many much-needed changes in the plant. Ray Ford, Oliver Nichols Robert Pollard, Eddie Washington, and George Whitherall have already remodeled the school's offices and an apartment for the new bride and groom. Principal and Mrs. Waring. William Cox is school-chauffeur. In addition he is "general handyman"—cutting grass, trimming hedges, etc. Farm Manager Hayes has Lanky Taylor, Henry Tompkins, and Nat Crump to help him raise the 1933-34 crop of beans. Then there are some "summer boarders"—Pop Webster, Sam Taylor, Randy Range, John Reid, and Earl Pillard who act as chambermaids, cherry-pickers, grass-cutters, and what not. By doing odd jobs they pick up a little cash here and there. Heartfelt Eloquence Henry—Did you all evah speak befo a large audience, Gawge? Gawge—Ah low ah did, once yowsah. Henry—What did you-all say? Gawge—Ah said, "Not guilty."—Farm Journals. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 Federal News Notes by LAURENCE J. W. HAYES Robert Lee Vann, Pittsburgh newspaperman and attorney, a native of Ahoskie, N.C., who was recently appointed as a special assistant to the Attorney General, granted the writer a forty-five minute interview last Tuesday evening and discussed everything from political science to mob psychology. millions of jobs could not create another forgotten class. He has merely to give the word that when Government employees are dismissed from the old line agencies they are to be given first choice of the jobs in the newly created bureaus. "That will solve the problem and will retain in the Government ser- Most of the information which was given to the writer is not for publication. I can state authoritatively, however, that Mr. Vann has not been appointed, and does not wish to be the spokesman for the Negro Democrats of the United States. The gist of his replies to my questions in connection with his appointment and its significance may be had from a reprint of the statement which he made after he had taken the oath on July 7. He said: "My appointment is proof positive that if the Negro does something for the Democratic party, that party will do something in recognition of him." Mr. Vann will not bring his family to Washington. **** Robert (ex-Commerce Dept.) Pelham was almost as much amused as John Risher, when I showed him a group photograph of the Republican leaders at the Executive Committee conference which was held in Washington, in September, 1928. The amusing part is that Robert L. Vann and Joseph L. Johnson, who are now the two ranking members of the Democratic "Big Four," are shown in the group with Col. West A. Hamilton, Claude Barnett, John R. Hawkins, John T. Risher, Emmett J. Scott, Raymond Pace Alexander, Fred Moore and other stand-pat Republics. It is to laugh. **** Karl (Labor Dept.) Phillips, who is Commissioner of Conciliation of the Department of Labor, seems unperturbed at the fact that Lieutenant Lawrence A. Oxley, of Raleigh, N.C., director of the division of Negro Welfare and Federal Relief in North Carolina, is moving heaven and earth to get his job. I don't know Mr. Oxley personally but I do know Mr. Phillips. My friend, the sideler, tells me that Mr. Oxley is not so hot. I know Mr. Phillips is all right. We shall see, what we shall see. ***** Willis (War Dept.) Ward, who has just returned from Chicago, tells the Newshawk that the Howard University exhibits, consisting of a baloptician exhibit, is one of the most popular at the Century of Progress Exposition, World's Fair, there. There are seventy slides of various activities of the University, along with pictures of the founder and first president of the university, the present president the first medical faculty and a group of slides illustrating the work of each college and division of the university. Mr. Ward brought back a gadget with a bed pan at one end and an automatic commode at the other and the statement "A Century of Progress" written in between. So it is. 10 15. * * * * John (State Dept.) Savage, who was dismissed with the writer from the State Department, says: "You can't keep a good man down." John now has a semicritical position in the Industrial Control set-up. I hope someone gets to him before he draws out his refund. If he leaves it in and pays his retirement quota into it each month he will be eligible for a retirement check-in two years for the rest of his natural life. Since Colonel Donald H. Sawyer, who is expected to be continued as permanent director of the public works program, has said: "Every effort will be made to execute the Industry Recovery act without discrimination," the writer agrees with the N.A.A.C.P. which says: "Negro workers should register at once for these jobs in order that no alibis can be presented when the actual hiring begins." * * * * Olga Hopkins is the name of the new attraction at the Iclele, the frozen punch shop at Vermont Avenue and U Street, Northwest, Pearl and Jessie are on their vacations. * * * * The Washington Times, in an editorial last week, made some pertinent observations which I shall reproduce for those who missed it. Here it is: "Thousands have been arbitrarily dismissed from positions which they had every reason to believe were safe during good behaviour "Heads of various agencies have determined upon those to be fired by no general rule, but simply, it seems, as the whim struck them. (Amen.) This policy of demoralization must cease and the man who can and should stop it is President Roosevelt. There is little sense in spending billions of dollars to put men and women to work while the government discharges thousands more, not only in Washington but throughout the country. "Unless all signs fail, President Roosevelt will move quickly and effectively to restore a humanitarian policy in the treatment of Government employees. "The man who remembered the "Forpotten Man" and put him into millions of jobs could not create another forgotten class. He has merely to give the word that when Government employees are dismissed from the old line agencies they are to be given first choice of the jobs in the newly created bureaus. "That will solve the problem and will retain in the Government service trained and loyal men and women." **** Morris (Congressional Library) Lewis's sister, Caro, recently sent the writer a letter telling all about the Negro Youth Conference which was recently held in Chicago where she now is. Among other things she said: "Some of the problems considered were lynching, education, the economic inequality of the Negro peoples, the church, crimes, imperialism, and discrimination and disfranchisement. "Although no particular political philosophy was adopted, the use of mass technique and the question of race consciousness versus national patriotism was discussed. "The meeting closed with speakers from the Communist, the Socialist, the Republican and the Democratic parties." The writer agrees, in part, with Ishmael P. Flory, who, in reporting the Conference for the ANP, says: "The conference, in the writer's mind, throws itself open to criticism in that it refused to sit Negro delegates that represented the Young Communist League, thereby destroying the united front nature of the conference. "The Young Negro Communists, making up a large percentage of the delegates coming from points distant from Chicago, left because of their opposition to the undemocratic nature of the conference. It seems to me also that the movement runs the risk of being too racialistic, failing to comprehend the close relationship of all groups in modern society." The writer has not, as yet, gotten his organization credentials. We Washingtonians will show the colored folks in Chicago what an International Negro Youth Movement should be. (If I am here.) The Post Office clerk, who is telling folks confidentially that Melvin Chisum, through Senator McAdoo, is going to place Tom Smith, in the office which "Billboard" Jackson had, is all wet. The Newshawk knows what is going to happen to that office but his tongue is tied for the time being. * * * * Dr. D. A. Williston is anxious to learn the name of that Treasury employee who told the Newshawk that when Mr. Farley came out of his office Williston said: "You know me, don't you, Mr. Farley?" This employee wondered why a man who had set up a national organization would have to ask the administrative assistant of his party if he knew him. The doctor told the Newshawk that it was not true. The Newshawk wonders whether that postal clerk, whose car is frequently seen parked on R Street, Northwest, and who was recently embarrassed by having his wife meet his girl friend at the latter's house, knows that he is slated for the spot? Well he is. Reported intentions to reinstate lower-paid Government employees who have been dismissed under the married persons clause developed the fact that the Economy Act, definitely in some cases and inferently in others, forbids such appointments. Section 213 of that act, the married persons clause, provides for prior dismissals of employees whose wives or husbands are also in Federal service, and further requires that in appointments to the "classified service" preference shall be given to persons whose wives or husbands are not governmentally employed. So much for that. **** Some of Uncle Sam's sepia sons are receiving pure and particular unadulterated hell at the hands of practically all departmental personnel officers. So help me. I know where I speak. Some say that the rating boards are usually dominated by Democratic influence and that a concerted prearranged effort is being made to dismiss Negroes holding first grade jobs so that their jobs might be filled by white "deserving Democrats." Others say that certain reductions had to be made and the white bureau and division chiefs are availing themselves of a good opportunity to freeze out "smart" Negroes. Still others say that the $5,000 to $10,000 boys, who usually control these departmental rating boards, rather than accept a 9-to-90-day fourlough themselves—along with the rest of the personnel (which would be the human thing to do) met and decided to deprive some score or more of poor devils, making $1200 or less, of jobs (usually those who are persona non grata to them), balance their bureau or division budget and at the same time retain all of their fat salaries. The writer contends that what is happening is a combination of the three aforementioned factors with especial emphasis on "getting" the independent and seemingly prosperous Negroes, knowing that the registered Democrats a NORTH CAROLINA FRAME-UP HALTED BY THE I.L.D. Win Sixty-Day Reprieve for 18-Year-Old John Edwards CHARLOTTE, N.C. (ILD)—Winning of a sixty-day reprieve for John Lewis Edwards, 18-year-old Negro boy framed on a murder charge and railroaded to a death sentence is the first victory of the International Labor Defense in a campaign to save his life and expose the legal lynchings which have become the order of the day in both North and South Carolina. Edwards was indicted, tried and convicted in 72 hours, for the murder of W. Brown, a white street car, motorman, who was killed Saturday night, March 9. He was sentenced to die July 7. There were no witnesses to the murder. No money was stolen. Two shots were fired, one of which hit Brown in the head, killing him instantly. A white woman told a newspaperman that two white men ran past her and told her not to go near the scene. Forty-five minutes later, another motorman, on another street car line, shot and killed a Negro named Winifred, who was on his way to work. Police refused to permit the body of Winifred to be taken to the hospital in a private ambulance, and ordered the undertaker to whom it was taken after they had taken it to the hospital themselves, not to let anyone see it. It was discovered, however, that Winifred's face showed signs of terrific beating. The motorman said Winifred and two other Negroes tried to hold him up, and the police closed the case. Had to Be Negroes The Southern Public Utilities offered $1,000 reward for the capture and conviction of the murderers of Brown, and police announcing that the murderers were Negroes, set their frame-up machinery to work. During the two months following more than 100 Negroes were picked up on the street, taken to the police station, accused of the murder of Brown or being the companions of Winifred, and third degreed. Many more Negroes were beaten up on the streets of Charlotte. Shortly after the crime, three Negro boys, Earl Rattarce, 14, Featherstone Mandelhall, 16, and Edwards, were picked up like the others, beaten, held for four or five days and then turned loose. A few days later Edwards was arrested on a trumped up charge of stealing cigarettes and sent to the chain gang for a year. Wednesday night, May 17, police kidnapped Mandellah at 3 o'clock in the morning, took him out to the chain gang where Edwards was, asked Mandellah if he knew Edwards. When he said he did, they took both back to Charlotte, and charged them with the murder of Brown. Rattaree was also arrested and held as a material witness. Mandellah Next day, Thursday, Mandelhall and Edwards were indicted. Asked for Mercy Friday they were tried by an all-white jury. Saturday the jury acquitted Mandelhall, found Edwards guilty, and recommended mercy. Monday, Judge Ogelsby sentenced Edwards to die in the electric chair July.7. "Confessions" the police said they had extracted from the boys were the only evidence produced. J. D. McCall, white lawyer appointed by the court to "defend" Edwards and Mandelhall, produced no witnesses, accepted the police story entirely, and asked "for mercy." During the trial, the International Labor Defense called on the lawyers, who said a notice of appeal would be filed and a stay of execution obtained while the I.L.D. would prepare a case. Witnesses were found who can prove that none of the boys were near the scene of the crime. The lawyers appointed by the court deliberately refused to make use of this defense. No appeal was filed. Learned from Papers "All. I know about the case is what I read in the papers. I don't know if an appeal was filed or not." McCall told LL.D. representatives. The International Labor Defense obtained the services of Conrad O. Pearson, of Durham, N.C., an attorney who re-opened the case by obtaining a filing application for a reprieve. The indignation of the Negro and white workers of Charlotte was organized into mass protest by the LL.D., and the reprieve won. The sixty days reprieve obtained will be used to further organize on a mass basis the campaign to save Edwards's life, while legal steps are taken around which the campaign will be built. Impetuous Young Man Plutocrat (to young man asking for his daughter's hand)—And have you said anything about this to my daughter? Would-Be-Suitor—Not yet, sir. You see it was only last night that I heard you had a daughter. London Opinion. mone them is negligible. A Negro, to get a job in one of the newly created Government agencies, must have courage, contact, and credentials, these three, and the greatest of these is credentials. I know where I speak. Kingman Park Extensive Schools, Parks and Numerous Suburban Advantages with City Conditions. No Better Time to Buy than Now. Have few desirable homes in community $40.00 and up. See Sample House, 541 Twenty-third Place, N.E., or call NAtional 0036 for free automobile Service. COAGE'S OFFICE HAS THREE NEW IMPROVEMENTS Records Covering 100-Year Period Can be Found in 5 Minutes By E. W. Baker A new system of indexing corporations records in the recorder of deeds office, superseding the one established in 1868, now makes it possible to search a corporation for a period of 112 years in five minutes. Under the old system, such a process would require hours or days in which to make a tracing. The new system was installed by Jefferson S. Coage, recorder, after a long period of analytical study of the situation, and has been praised by patrons of the office. According to Mr. Coage, in changing the systems, many duplications, or corporations with the same name were found. This is a violation of the corporate laws of the District, and has been eliminated by the installation of the new system. The change entailed no extra expense upon the public funds. Government Saved $4,000 Under the reorganization plan, another progressive step has also been made in the recorder's office, which has saved the government $4,000. The old copying and comparing departments have been abolished, and in the new organization are replaced by the Copying and Comparing Unit. There is one head and two assistants. Have Merit System A third step has been the inauguration of the merit system, under which each employee keeps a record of his own work. At the end of the year, each certifies as to the amount of service he has rendered. Figures recently made of the recorder's office reveal that it had handled 25,807 realty papers at the end of the fiscal year, June 30, an increase of 700 over the previous year; 29,960 titles, increase of 300; incorporations recorded, 541, increase of 33; certified copies, 909, decrease of 33. The records also showed that the revenue of the office this year was $85,000, as compared with $93,000 the previous year; appropriation, $100,000, last year, $136,500; miscellaneous office expense, $10,000, last year, $12,000. The seven-story building rente for $14,000 last year, but Congress appropriated only $10,000 for rent. Mr. Coage succeeded in getting the owners to accept, that amount, hence the office will not have to seek new quarters. RICHMOND and South 6 EXPRESS SCHEDULES DAILY ...leaving Washington at 3:30 a.m. 7:30 a.m. m. 10:30 a.m. 1:50 p.m. 4:45 p.m. and 11:45 p.m. Do Lute coaches. Reclining chairs. FREE. GWS and Port Services LOW RATES—THRU SERVICE RICHMOND $33.00 Atlanta, Ga. $6.75 Petersboro B. V. 3.50 Savannah $2.00 Charleston B. V. 3.50 Savannah $2.00 Charleston B. V. 3.50 Miami, Fla. $2.00 UPTOWN OFFICE Phone, North 9802 L. M. Brannic, Mgr. THE short Line MAIN LINE SYSTEM Kingma 23rd Street and E New Home FIFTH ANN 1200 TO 1500 Extensive Schools Parks ELEVEN Net Champions Receive Ovation JACKSON, Fla.—The arrival of the Tuskegee Institute met them, the well-known and popular Jackson brothers in Jacksonville, enroute to the Bahamas was the occasion for an enthusiastic demonstration on the part of the large number of Tuskegee graduates who are succeeding in this city. Friends and admirers of the famous Alabama institution joined in the demonstration. Tuskegee's who is a team to take in Jackson courtyard during this Clive L. Abbott, crafty football coach, companying the tennis island, is well-known ville and was extended tesies, by his friends brief stay in the city. 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LUCKY GYPSY INCENSE-POWDER A lucky number, free in every box. A lucky number, free in every box. LUCKY LODESTONE INCENSE POW- DER, $1.00 box reduced to 80c for the price. A lucky number free in every box. LADY LUCK NUMBER CARD, 10c. LUCK TIMES RED SEAL NUMBER CHEST BY TEST BY TEST, 10c and 25c PAT. COPY. LUCKY STRIKE INCENSE BLOCKS. Numbers appear in the ashes. 50c a box. A lucky number free in every LUCKY TIMES NUMBER INCENSE. Numbers appear in the ashes. 25c a box. MORDOE INCENSE SQUARES. A number free in every box. 25c We have a large variety of other helpful goods--ROOTS and HERBS. Number Dream BOOKS too numerous to mention. THIS IS YOUR STORE YOU ARE INVITED TO CALL, look around, buy what you need, be pleased and benefited. All are invited; no one can be excluded. All are day and evening, also Sundays. We served your friends and family years, years, years, so call and let us serve you too. LEO S. 08MAN, Proprietor 1728 Seventh St. N.W. Between R and S Streets, N.W. In the middle of the block. an Park penning Road, N.E. Development NIVERSARY RESIDENTS and Numerous Suburban Conditions. No Better than Now. ,$5,950.00 up 0 Cash and up RENT community $40.00 and up. See y-third Place, N.E., or call see automobile Service. . SAGER Natl. 0036 BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL SPORT WORLD Trials and Anxieties of a Baseball Coach By CATO W. ADAMS In recounting some of the freak and unusual plays seen in high school games, I want to first pay tribute to the boys that made up the respective two teams, Dunbar and Armstrong, in the first game played on the "embryonic" stadium, April 29, 1926. Some of my readers may recall that parts of houses still stood, telephone poles, trees, stumps of trees, furrows, ditches, jagged piles of brick—well, if simultaneously, an air raid from bombing planes, a creeping barrage from siege guns of heavy artillery, and deep laid subterranean mines went into action, the war-like combination would have been indeed very envious when it found how far it was behind the frightful condition of that field on this day. The stadium "rescue squad" did its best—but what could "best" mean under those conditions? But it was a great novelty to play in "The Stadium." These are the starting line-ups that will always hold my respect: For Dunbar—Middleton, third base; Boyd, left field; Williams, center field; Johnson, center field; H. Robinson, first base; S. Brown, catcher; Snowden, pitcher; Wilson, second base; Tate, right eld. Armstrong — Sonny Robinson, third base; Carter, short stop; Dabney, left field; Mavritte, center field; Wallace, right field; Ford, first base; Scott, second base; Frank Johnson, catcher; Bailey, pitcher. The game was one of those "wotta game" affairs with both pitchers fearful of bad bounders and "breaks" going against them. At that, Armstrong made but three errors and Dunbar only one. It was reserved for Dunbar's half of the ninth—nine innings were played in those days—to see freak conditions. "Speed" Bailey had held Dunbar to a 5-2 score, and none of the Dunbar runs were earned—the three errors being costly. Bailey got H. Robinson in the ninth for the fourteenth strike-out victim, but Sherman Brown landed on one that went in the direction of Robinson at third, struck a root, bounded at a sixty-five degree angle and passed between shortstop Carter and the middle sack. Snowden hit one toward short, and as Carter started to his left the ball sought a little furrow and passed under a little bridge made by some trash. The shortstop and third baseman felt that the ball had become tangled there, but it wounded up in left field. Brown scored on the play. A pinch hitter for Wilson made Bailey's fifteenth strike-out victim. Tate up, spanked one toward the interval between Robinson and Carter. Both started to a spot to head of the course of the ball. This time the ball stuck dead in some soft earth. Middleton came up next and hit a fairly slow groundward toward that vulnerable space—that between third and short. Robinson and Carter played it very much in the same way that a safety man plays a shifty and slippery hip ball carrier. Each of these infielders slightly off balance, waited for something that did not happen—because this special roller happened to be as well behaved a grounder as one would want to find on any field, and it continued to left. This scored another run, and Dunbar was but one marker behind. But Jack Boyd, good old Jack, obliged by becoming Bailey's sixteenth victim, and Armstrong got credit for the first victory staged at the Walker Stadium by a 5-4 score. Another freak occasion was in May, 1931, on the Monument Grounds, in a game that Armstrong did not expect to win from the Bureau of Engraving. Hank Williams was mostly responsible for this 4-2 victory for Armstrong. Armstrong made but two hits, both homers, and each following a base on balls. Welbourn Wilson hit the first and Hank the second. In order to protect this 2-ball lead Hank was extending himself to the extreme. In Bureau's sixth the first two hit and stole second and third, respectively. The third batter hit a terrific clout that soared The above NUMBERS are sure to HIT this week. They can't miss. PLAY THEM AT ONCE. We have the information direct from the "INSIDE" and can guarantee them to be STRAIGHT. CODE SENT FREE If you have a phone number to above CODE, and us a self-addressed stamped envelope and we will forward it to you at once FREE OF CHARGE. WE TAKE CARE OF YOU--YOU TAKE CARE OF US--NUF SED. UNEQUALLED SERVICE Our service is of tremendous value to NUMBERS PLAYERS all over the country. We have maintained business. Our degrees have been won in the hard school of EXPERIENCE — the ACADEMY of HARD KNOCKS. You receive the benefit of our excellent teachers and the high calibre of information that we buy from other sources with ample capital. Be sure to send self-addressed stamped envelope. THE OBSERVER 1107 Broadway Dept. Z New York THIS WEEK ONLY A. E. H. CATO W. ADAMS, baseball coach. Armstrong Technical High School. high and mighty as Amos Brooks in center started to chase it, and then seemed to lose his bearing. He stopped, looked bewildered, and started backing with short quick steps with his face toward the diamond. As the ball started to descend, it was plain to see that it would fall behind Brooks, so the base runners left their bases without fear. It may be a secret of Brooks's, but when the ball struck his hands, they were locked over his shoulders, and as near down to his waist as his tensed muscles could possibly allow—an amazing position. When he turned, all present thought that he was chasing the ball, but this was to get in position for return throw. Everyone except Williams seemed to have been petrified. Players and spectators stood agast. Hank took the return, and all the members of the infield went dead from their gums, "north." Mr. Hank had to go over and touch third, and then march to second and kick it. Now, folks, look anywhere and inquire to see if a centerfielder and a pitcher have ever completed a triple play with no other help. In his final release of this series of articles, Mr. Adams will cite a few more unusual plays, including an inning in which seven lusty hits, including a double and two triples accounted for only one run. He will also risk naming an all-star high school nine from players of the last decade. Jackson Brothers Sail for Nassau Court Tourney JACKSONVILLE. Fla. — Nathaniel and Franklin Jackson, Tuskegee Institute students, who reached Jacksonville early Saturday morning, by motor, took passage on the Steamer Belize, sailing at noon for Nassau, Bahamas, B. W. I. At Nassau the crack Tuskegee netmen will take part in the International Lewis Tournament sponsored by the Florida State Tennis Association. Nathaniel Jackson is the present national inter-collegiate champion, and his brother, Franklin, is the present national junior champion. The Jackson brothers will play in the singles and doubles. Clevle L. Abbot, physical director and head football coach at Tuskegee Institute, accompanied the players. Dr. A. R. Harris, prominent local dentist, finished ahead of a select field of golfers, gathered together in the Open Championship Tournev held at Westfield, N. J., last week. NUMBERS 96 Hits in 18 Weeks SAMPLE SYSTEM FREE After months of intensive research work and check-up, we are proud to present the surreal, safest, and simplest method of HI-TING THE NUMBERS This system contains an automatic fool proof SAFETY VALVE, which protects your investment and assures absolute safety. REMEMBER, you can't HIT by guessing, you must get connected with some one on the inside. 30 HITS IN 100 DAYS After 30 of 18 weeks (108 playing days) our SAFETY VALVE system gave 74 straight HITS and 22 in combination. Telegrams and Telephones from the sources of supply advise us to be ready for the biggest deal of the year which is sure to happen. 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We make of Battery FREE. $5.60 and your old battery ES THIRTEEN fibers cotton heat. winning the price your O BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL CONTESTS LISTED aoe FORPLAYGROUND | acy fo" Baseball League and Track| cHicaco (Ans Meets Scheduled for |3i'Srgan, aspect Summer Season aa elteanea By Thos, J. Anderson the sweeping red Pleasant last week, an intensive exhibition and competetive pro- gram got under way on- Monday @f the current week. ‘Local track and field meets which include a sprint, high jump, broad jump and relay race in five divi- sions according to weight for boy and four divisions for girls are be- ing contested on both municipal and school grounds, ~These meets ate preliminary to the dual, con- ferénce, and city championship meets which are to follow in con- secutive order, ‘Other athletic features of the week include the opening of the school playground baséball league on Monday and Wednesday at 2 p.m, Twelve teams are entered in the league and games are played regularly at Walker Stadium, Ban- neker Center, Ivy City, Francis and Rose Park, The second round, ot the municipal tennis tourna- vent continues on the ten grounds, A permanent fireplace is being ‘rected in the woods adjacent to Camp Pleasant which will facili- tate the evening “Round-up” pro- Flams which are being sponsored y several organizations. Groups from the various play- grounds of the city make weekly Visits “to the ‘camp ‘on Mondays Tuesdays and Saturdays. The graduate chapter of Zeta Phi Beta sorority, Mrs, Anita Anderson, president, sponsors the groups us- ing the camp on Wednesdays; the Southwest House, “1, Alma Scott, director, on. Thursdays and the Southeast Hous> under Miss Marion Connover, om. Fridays. The ladies auxiliary of Rote Park playground, gave a luncheon on Tuesday afternoon, to raise funds for the transportation of groups. representing the play- ground during the summier. The luncheon was preceded by a Tom Thumb Wedding. The competition in the baseball Teague, which began this. week, will pursure the following schedule, beginning Monday. July 24—Montgomery vs. Rose Park. Rose Park; Montgomery vs. Stevens, Francis; -Banneker Cen- ter vs. Morgan, Banneker Center; Garnét-Patterson vs. Shaw, Walker Stadium; Crummell ys, ‘Dunbar, Ivy Gity. July 25—Lovejoy vs. Banneker, Walker Stadium. July 27—Montgomery vs. Rose Park, Rose Park; Garnet-Patier- son vs. Banneker Center, Bannéker Center, Stevens vs, Frances; Crum- mell vs, Lovejoy; Ivy City; Dun- bar vs. Banneker. Walker Stadium, July 28—Morgan vs, Shaw. Walker Stadium. July 31—Stevens vs. Rose Park, Rose Park; Montgomery vs, Fran- cis, Francis; Banneker Center vs. Shaw, Banneker Center; Garnet- Pattersnson vs. Morgan, Walker Stadium; Crummell vs. Banneker, Ivy City. ‘August 1—Dunbar ys, Lovejoy; Walker Stadium, August 2— Francis vs, Rose Park, Francis; Montgomery vs, Stevens, Rose Park; Banneker Center vs, Morgan, Banneker Cen- ter; Garnet-Patterson vs. Shaw, Walker Stadium; Lovejoy vs. Ban- neker, Walker Stadium, ' August 3—Crummell vs, Dunbar, Walker. Stadium. August 7—Montgomery vs. Rose Park, Rose Park; Garnet-Patter- son vs. Banneker Center, Banneker Center; Stevens vs, Francis, Fran- cis; Crummell vs. Lovejoy, Ivy City; Dunbar vs. Banneker, Walk- er Siadium, August &—Morgan vs, Shaw, Walker Stadium. August 9—Slevens vs. » Rose Park, Rose Park; Montgomery vs. Francis, Francis; Shaw vs. Banne- ker Center, Banneker Center; Garnet-Patterson vs. > Morgan, Walker Stadium; Crummell vs. Banneker Center, Ivy City. ‘August 10—Dunbar ys, Lovejoy, Walker Stadium. August 14—Francis ys. Rose Park, Rose Park; Montgomery vs Stevns,- Francis, Banneker ker Center vs. Morgan, Banneker Center; Garnet-Patterson vs, Shaw, Walker Stadium; Crummell vs. Dunbar, Ivy Stadium. August 15—Lovejoy vs, Banne- ker Center Walker Stadium. Sectional winners will meet in a Mayof from August 16-26, and a three-game seri¢z for the city title, between the municipal and schoo! playground champions, will be played August 29, 30 and 31, School and municipal dual track meets will be held from July 24-29 ax follows: Burrville vs. Smoth- ers, Burrville; Crummell vs, Logan Logan; Payne va, Lovejoy, Payne; Barry Farms ys. Lincoln, Barry Farms; Cardozo. vs, Willow. Tree, Cardozo; Howard vs. Rose Park, Rose Park; Monroe vs. Banneker Center, pss. pene vs. Stevens, » fe Frames, Brame Banneker Center Shaw, Dunbar and Gartet- Pattersen will Stic meet July 25 st Walker t meets will be held as Chicago School Retrenchment Will Cripple Colored Schools Several Negro Teachers Likely to Be Dropped in Non- Academic Departments; Two Physical Education Instructors to Go CHICAGO (ANS)—According to reports from the offices of William J, Bogan, superintendent of schools. more than 1,400 persons, or 10 per cent of the Chicago teaching staff, will lose their positions through the sweeping reductions ordered this week by the school. trustees. This will be resorted to in order to comply with the $5,000,000 econo- my program adopted by the school board last Wednesday. ‘The method of eliminating in- structors in the departments of household arts, manual training, physical education, kindergarten, band leaders, and others, will af- fect a great number of colored teachers. In abandoning completely the junior high school instruction, pu- pils in the seventh and eighth grades will be returned to their elementary schools to fill hundreds ‘of vacant rooms. Colored Schools Burdened This. plan will have. difficulty. in working out in the Negro. neigh- horhoods for the reason that in these districts the schools are al- ready taxed to capacity, and addi- tional hundreds would make things ‘all: tha sore iieeraile: TRAFFIC OFFICER IS REPRIMANDED Howard M. Overstreet, a traffic policeman who is usually stationed at Ninth and U Streets, North- west, admitted when he was haled before Inspector Lamb last week that he forced Charles B. Murray, 2585 Georgia Avenue, a taxicab driver, to buy a §1 ticket to a ball game. Following the hearing béfore the inspéctor, Overstreet stated that he would give Murray the dol- Jar back on the first pay day, Murray reported to A. 8. Pinkett, local secretary of the National As- sociation for the Advancement of Colored People that the officer stopped him and insisted that Mur- ray buy a ticket to a policemen’s benefit baseball game. ‘The taxicab driver in an affidavit aici aes he told ae of- cer, that hewdlid not have the mon- deeice sbdiSEran threatened to ar rest him. + passenger was in the cab at the!time and, bought the ticket. Thematter was reported at police headquarters and Overstreet tried to get the ticket back. Murray does not plan to take any further action against the po- liceman, bugijmerely wanted police officials to pew to what length of- ficers were Ming to sell: baseball tickets. Ogprstreet “was repri- ‘danded (i Mts superior, OFFICER MISSES FISHING TRIP BUT CATCHES FUGITIVE, 16 Sergeant Robert M, Carroll, vet- eran police officer of the Fourth Precinct, started out on a fishing ‘trip to Eagle Harbor, Md., Sun- day, but he did not reach his des- tination—and js he angry? ‘The story of the officer's failure to have that fishing trip, for which he had planned one whole week, is ‘related here briefly. | Shortly be- fore reaching T. B,, Md., a speed- ing coupe, driven by a youth, side- swiped Sergeant's Carroll's auto- mobile, badly damaging both ma- chines. Detaining the boy. until Mary- land state. police arrived, it was discovered the boy was "Frances Washington, 16, who had escaped from the National Training School Saturday morning, and that the au- tomobile he was driving had. been stolen. According to police rec- ords, it is the property of H. R. Gray, of 2230 Minnesota Avenue, Southeast. Despite the fact he was instru- mental in apprehending a fugitive, Sergeant Carroll, who js usually of a jovial disposition, grumbles when he talks about the fish he might hhave caught, barring the accident. ‘Then, too, there's the little item of damagex to his automobile, which has set him in arrears for approxi- mately $50. _ shia teney ee a POLICE CARRY CUTTING VICTIM TO HOSPITAL Taken to Freedmen’s Hospital by police of the Seeond Precinct, Laura Coleland, 43, of 1116 First Street, Northwest, was found to be suffering with two stab wounds in the back, = wound over the right eye, and bruises of the left chest. The injuries were said to have been inflicted by a person bearing the name of Fermas Williams. The cutting victim was released jn cus- tody of police after emergency treatment, itor coln and Willow Tree, someting Angust 9, Northwasters, Walker ae with Banneker Cextes, Patterson, Aowisa, Montoe and Seay _ competing, Augest. 34, Vestern, Francis with Satin. lmtacuee see The quota of grammar school principals will be greatly reduced wtih half going back: to teaching and the remaining 50"per cent be- ing in charge of two or more schools, The fate as to Mrs. Mau- delle Bousfeld’s position is uncer- tain at present. She is the only colored principal in Chicago. Two Instructors To Go In tho slashing in half of the physical education department probably two colored instructors will be included. Walter Dyett, band leader at Phillips Senior High School, is certain of losing his job. When asked what effect the dras- ‘tic cut would have on his position. Benj, H, Mosby, athletic director jat Phillips, said that since he was mainly in the social sci¢nce depart- ment and that coachng was in ad- dition, he would just be- relieved of extra curricula activities. Being the only Negro coach in the Chicago high school system, he has become increasingly popu: lar with school board officials. Re- cently, he was appointed chairman of the board of control, the body that makes out the schedule charts of all athleties for the Chicago achools. | Arlington News ‘Charles R. Lee, Bast Arlington, Va. BURKE, Va.—Little Zion Bap- tist Church. The Sunday school met at the usual hour with the superintendent in charge, The tes- son was taught by Mrs, Nannie Wright., This being the regular meeting, Sunday, the pastor, the Rev. C. L, Taylor, was present and took his text from Psalm 22: 23, subject, “Thou Hast Heard Me.” The ‘sermon was brief but inspiring. Communion was served by the pastor at the conclusion of his sermon. ‘On Sunday, the pastor and con- gregation of the Israel Baptist Church, Washington, will conduct service. This being’ sponsored by Mr. Hamilton. An all-day outing will be held on Saturday, July 22, at Sideburn, Va., Fairfax County; proceeds for Isvael Baptist Church, Buses will leave Israel Baptist Church, Elev- enth Street between F and G Strepts, Nottheast, beginning at 9 ‘a.m, All invited. eee Kemper School NAUCK, Va.—The parent-teach- ér association and the community at large have expressed apprecia- tion of the work which has been done by Mrs, Bertha 8. Kelly, chap- ter representative of the Arling- ton County Chapter, Anterican Red Cross. ‘A course in “First Aid to the Injured” has been given during the year, and it has proved helpful to those who received the training. This organization has also been ac- tive in providing food and clothing for the destitute families of the community. They have given 1,150 pounds of flour and material from which three dozen or more garments were made and distribut~ ed among needy families. These garments were made by the Will- ing Workers’ Sewing Cirele of Lo- max Church, ‘The Arlington County Welfare Association, under the direction of Mrs, Mae Jacobs and the Rotary Club also rendered valuable assis- tnace by donating milk and cloth- ing for the same cause. In the health line, Dr. P, M. Chichester, Arlington ‘County health officer; Mrs, Norma R, Davies, public health nurse; and Dr. D. A. Butler are due credit for their work among the school children. ‘The teachers of Kemper School have taken leading parts in com- munity work and in buying sup- plies for the school. The teachers are Mises Lillian Smackum, prin- cipal; Vivian Hoffman, Naomi Hall, and Elizabeth Hicks. Lomax A.M.E, Zion Church, At the morning service, the pastor's text, was taken from Genesis 22:23, subject, “Does Your Action Square With What You Say?” Several visitors were present, among whom was Lillian Muse, a teacher at the Washington Conservatory of Mu- sic. She gave a short talk on the activities of the school and plans fo open a class in this community. The night service was conducted by the Home Foreign Missionary Society. | The participants were Mrs, Lula Rhone, Mrs. Gertrude Jones, Mrs. Bartley, and Mrs. Es- ther I, Cooper, and Mrs. Butler, of Penrose, also Misses Ruby Bullock, Dorothy McFadden, Eloise Woods and the male chorus. Closing re- marks were made by the Rev. E. K. McFadden, The president 1s rs. Mae J. Bullock. The Buds of Promise Missionary Society held its regular meeting at the residence of Mrs. Grace Watts, Sunday evening, with m large at- tendance, ‘The Sunday school pic- nic will be held on July 26. ‘Miss Dorothy Jones left Satur- day to spend a week in New York City with friends, Mr. and Mrs. James Hall, of Douglass Park, tog fo ate ‘week- os ants Mrs. B. John- gra Gloria Johnson, aad Mr. ‘Baie daugh- &. John Baptist Church. At the service @ visiting min- ster the Rev. Toh Past Nichols, af the Metropolitan Bay is Ones text ‘ap their eves, | TRE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 they saw no man, save Jesus only.” ‘Theme, “Seeing Jesus Only.” He stated that if we wish people to know that we are children of God: we should love one another. He also stated that the — Biblo ‘teaches us how to live in Christ and die in the Lord, Charles Green, son of the Roy. and Mrs, J. EB. Green, of Mt, Zion Church, was @ visitor. sees HALLS HILL. Mt. Salvation Baptist Church, The Rev. Phillip Higgins preached at 11 a.m., using “The Endless Day” as his subject. ‘The Rev, Mr, Tallifer preached at 3 pm, using “What Will a Man Give in Exchange for His Soul?” for his subject. ‘The Rev. N: R, Richardson, pas- tor, has & mind to visit in answer to an invitation received on Friday night as he preached at the War- ner Baptist Church for the Rev Mr. Costiner. On Sunday at 3 p.m., he preached at Chantilly for the Rev. Olivet Hall. The junior choir furnished music on Friday night and the sen. ior choir rendered music at 3 p.m. at Chantilly. Mrs, Blizabeth Wil Tiams is the organist for the senior choir, and Miss Vandoran Moter for the junior choir. Miss Adaline Penn, a missionary for the Manassas Industrial Schoo! was a church visitor and was low in her Macedonian cry. Robert. Clark, with F. W. Ewel and Raymond’ Jackson, returne from a motor trip in North Caro lina. The Volunteer Fire Departmen carnival was a success. Re ee Morton is on the sicl ist, Mt, Zion Baptist Church, A. gen eral review was held on the Sun day school lesson, subject being “Deborah,” with 67, present, ‘The Sunday school will have it picnic on the lawn of the charc! on the 12th of August, At the morning service, the pas tor’s text was taken from Job 7:37, “If any man thirst, let hin come unte me, and drink.” He stated, regardless of race or colo or creed, rich or poor, Woman © gr man or boy, let him come unt jesus and drink. The Rev, Mr Smith was present. Communion was held at, 8:30 ‘The pastor's text was from 2 Cor inthians, 9:15, subject, “The Great est Gift’ of the World.” The Rev Mr. Marshall presided over th communion table. Several visitin ministers were present. The Twi light Four wiil be at the church. o1 July 24th. The pastor attended the Mt Bethel Baptist Sunday School Cen vention that was holding its thir ty-fitet annual session at the Ful ton Baptist Church, Baltimore Md., last Tuesday. DEANWOOD NEWS Vincent” Augustus Bunch, Jn, son of Mr.and Mrs, L, D. Bunch, 831 Forty-eighth Street, North- east, left the city to spend the summer with his grandmother at Darlington, 8.C. Mrs. Emma Chapman. Brewer, 832 Forty-eighth Street; Northeast, has also left for a summer vaca- tion. Mrs, Eliza Donahoo spent a pestent evening at Sparrows each, Saturday. Misses Olive, Frederick and Charlotte Barksdale, daughters of Mr. and Mrs,’ Fredrick Barksdale, Jeft Deanwood Sunday to spend the summer at Culpeper, Va. Miss Sarah Hamilton and Mrs. Sands were dinner guests of Miss Roberta Tinner, of 4516 Sheriff Road, Northeast, Sunday, ‘Mrs. Florencia’ Stevenson and son returned to New York City af- ter a two weeks’ vacation with her parents, Mr, and Mrs, J. Hassell of S18. Forly-fifth Street, North- east, While here on the visit she took a motor trip to Wilmington, Delaware. ss Broken Hip Causes _ Fatal Complications Lobar pneumonia which followed complications due to a fractured hip proved fatal to Miss Alba Mor- ton, 38, of 26 Patterson Street, Northwest, in Freedmen’s Hospital, Monday. Miss Morton was leaving the home of John Mills, of 50 Patter- son Street, op February 21. As she descended a flight of outside Steps, Miss Morton tripped. She fell to the landing, her left leg crumpling under her, and causing fractures of the bones above and below the knee, ‘The injured woman attempted to rise but could not. Friends took her to the hospital, where she has remained ever since. Following a consultation, of physicians, a diag- nosis on June 16, revealed that Miss Morton had contracted pneumonia, which ultimately caused her death. ‘The deceased was a native of Standardville, Va., but had been in the District for the past fifteen years. ee Hammer User and Victim Held by Police in Fight Following their private fight in the Southwest section of the city ‘one opponent wax charged With as- sault with a dangerdus weapon and disorderly conduct, Monday, whil the other was charged simply wit! being disorderly. The brawl raged at the home of Willis Wilson, 45, of 223 Four-and- a-Half Street, Southwest, who is acensed of striking Calvin Chew 34, of 408 First Street, Southwest on the head and face with « ham- Police ‘of the Fourth Precinct took Chew to Provident Hospital for treatment in their patrol wa- gon, After this done, both rere charged with Paving. cteatr tain harge for bang jitional ‘charge use ee ate in cee MRS, ALMA P. MURRAY MRS. KATHLEEN M, LUCKETT Alexandeia Correspondent ‘dlesandria, Represintative TEC Narth West Bt. 20t, Pendleton St, Phone, Alesandria a17-W Phone, Alexandria $59 The Alexandria Department ob Public Welfare started operations Monday, with its offices located in the City Hall. Albert W, Boehr- ‘inger of Washington, D.C. has been made head of the department, assisted by Mrs. Nettie Garner ‘Thompson, both white. All new Applicants’ for velief will’ be inter viewed and if investigation shows persons applying for relief are actually in need and worthy of help, aid will be furnished: All persons who. have received help from the Alexandria United Charities in. the past, will, from now. on, make their’ application to and receive aid from the Départ- ment of Public Welfare. ‘The relief funds, made available by! the Federal Government, are intended for citizens of Alexandria, and will be distributed to. those who can show legal residence in addition to adequate reasons for réceiving aid. The Alexandria branch of the Antituberculosis association, in con- junction with the state association, will hold an appointment chest clinic, Wednesday, July 26. Those who wish to attend the clinic must make the appointment throweh their physician. ‘Theclinie will he conducted by Drs. H. A; Latane and Llewellyn Powell’ in the city health office, Parker-Gray Playgrounds ‘The doll show of the playground jas quite a success Inst Friday. ‘Thirty dolls were entered and. rib- bons ware awarded as follows: The prettiest and best dressed dolls, first prize, Gladys Ware; second prize, Georganna James; third prize, Mary Gunthrope. The Most unusual doll, first. prize, Re- fina, Butler; second prise, Millie for; and thind prise, Avery Archer. The tackiest doll, first prize went to Mary Bently, and second to. Emma Jane Archer. During the past week the total attendance of boys was 278. Four representatives, of organi- zations of the city met the new superintendent of schools, T. Cy Williams, last Wednesday and dis- cussed the needs af Parker-Gray School, Mré. Margaret Evans, represented the parent-teacher as- sociation; Mrs. Alina P, Murray, the Lookout, Club; Henry Brooks, the Citizens’ Association, and tho Rev. T. N. Austin, the ministers of the city. Elk News Mrs, Mary Williams, district deputy of daughter Elks, with the assistance of Mrs. Irene Terrell, past daughter. ruler, will set up anew Temple in Gansprings, Va. in a few weeks, Tt will be known as the Star of Bethlehem Temple, Mrs, Estelle J. Evans, the Vir- rinia State Organist of Elks, con- tinues to improve, Hy Social and Personal ‘The Bohemian Social Club aet last Tuesday at the home of Mr, Porter, on South Royal Street. ‘The members voted to donate $10.00 to the Alexandria Hospital. ‘The next meeting will be held with Fred Howard. Officers include: C, Holland, prosident; W. Browne, vice-presi- dent; J. Claybourn, financial seore- tary; A. Jennings, recording sec- retary; Fred Howard, treasurers L, Jackson, sergéani-at-arms: C. Siokes, business manager; 1, Nel- son, club reporter. ‘The Rose of Sharpn Club met at the home of Mrs. Gladys Stokes, last week, The next meeting will be with the Misses C. and E, Nel- son of South West, Street. Mrs, Edna Smith, of North Pat- rick Street, entertained x group of young people on the birthday of her daughter, Miss Marian, last ‘Thursday, The evening was spent in dancing. Miss Ethel Jackson was at the piano, Mrs. Smith was assisted by Miss Lillian Tyler, Mrs. Sallie Parker, and Mrs. Ber- nice Williamson of Washington, Miss Smith received many beauti- fal gifts, Little Miss Alma Murray was hostess to a large group of her nursery school friends and a few out-of-town gfiests last Friday, when she celebrated her sixth birthday with a party on the lawn, Dr. J, A. Jackson, and two sons, Mrs. Helen Mitchell Carroll, of Welle Street is improved after sev- eral weeks’ illness. Elliot and Franklin, of Charlottes- ville, spent a few hours with Dr. and Myx, H. G. Ghissell of South Royal Street, last Wednesday. Dr. Jackson’ was returning from the Dental Association Convention, Which moat tm: Atiantic City. Iss Ellen Carter hax gone to Hampton Institute to attend sum- mer school. neh Jehion, of 805 South Fair- ax ‘at Conservation Camp Opa eee, Vermont. and Mrs, 8. W. Madden and ‘get hhaetos Btnue Murray. and. ‘MRS. KATHLEEN M. LUCKETT ‘Alesandria, Representative 7, Pendleton St. Phone, Alexandria $59 and ‘is* spending a few days in Alexandria. ‘Mr, and Mrs, C. ©, Murray, and daughter, Miss Madeline, and Ralph Lane motored to Peidmont Sanitarium, Sunday, to visit Mrs. Clara Lane who went to the spii- tarium Zor special treatment ten days ago Mrs. Lane teturned home with them Sunday evening. ‘Mrs. Ophelia Jones and daugh- ter, Miss Marie, were the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs, Norman Roy of Seminary, Va. ‘Mr. and Mre. Philip Webb, Mrs. Lucy Washington, Herbert Rogers, Miss Josephine Wallace, Mrs, Rose Lucas, Randolph Thompson, Little Jacquiyn Butler, of Alexandria, and Mrs. Maud Smith and Mr. Lynn of Washington, motored to Winchester, Va., last Sunday, CHURCHES Roberts Chapel ME, Church The tally at Roberts Chapel was quite a success. last Sunday. ‘i captains have not reported, but up to date the: following amount has been turned in: Miss Eunice Diggs, $39.75; Mrs Clata Croder, $17.55; Mrs, Lucille Sutton, $86.92; Mrs. Jennie. Hy: man, $35.98; Mrs, Florence Madél- B. $40.00; Mrs. Sadie Baker, 79,60; Mre, Bessie T. Austin, $130; Mrs. Grace Coleman, $1.00, Total collected by captains, 3423.57, ‘The ‘Lady Ushers, Mrs. A. I MeDowell, president, . $20, the Heart and Hand Club, $15, making ‘a grand total of $458.57. Regular services at 11 am, Sunday. At 3 p.m. the union of church clubs ftom Gunsprings Baptist Chuveh, Laurel Grove Bap- tist Church, ‘Woodlawn, M, &, Church and’ the Roberts Chapel ME, Chureh will have & sermon préached to them by the Rev. W. A. Triplett of Bethlehem Baptist Chureh, Gunsprings, Va. ‘The Epworth League was well attended last Sunday; subject “What. Can Our Churches Do To: gether?” The Rev, Mr. Austin and Mrs. Bessie Austin, led the discussion, Lloyd Luckett sang two solos which were so, pleasing to all present that he was invited to sing at the night service. Baptist Churches ‘The Baptist Sunday Schools of the city and vieinity met Tuesday night to perfect plans to entertain the Northern Baptist Sunday School Convention which will meet here at the Third Baptist Church in August, Beulah Baptist Chureh ‘The Woman's Evangelistic civele meets at the Beulah Baptist, be day, July 23, at 3:30 pam. The Rev. ‘Carrie’ Brooks, president, Glinton Jackson, clerk, ‘Tépt Revival vAt. the corner of Quéen and Rayette Streets, a tent which will he known as the Gospel Taber: nacle, is being pitched and pre: pared for evangelistic purposes, At this point J, Gershom Dasent ‘of Washington, D.C., evangelist ‘and lecturer, will conduct, services. He will be assisted by Mra. C. B, Dasent, Mrs, Ethel Nell and Mr, Monroe Burgess, all of Washing- ton, Among the Sick Miss Grace Coleman of South Columbus. Street, is sick. Mrs, Jennie Williams of South Colum hus Street, continues sick. Mist Maud Lyles, who was ‘operated upon at the Aléxandria Hospital, is better, Mrs, Hattie Green con- tinues the same in Petersburg. Miss Ruth Holmes of Gibbon Street, who was operated upon at the Freedmen's Hospital, is better. Deaths Clarence Green, a well known citizen of Seminary, Va., didd in the Alexandria Hospital Saturday after a brief illness. Funeral services were held from Arnold's Funeral Parlors, Tuesday. He leaves one sister, Mra. Hattie Hyman, of Washington, D.C, MRS, LULA BRUCE TO MARRY THIRD TIME After having outlived; two hus- bands, Mrs. Lula Bruce, 52, of 5416 Bell Place, Northwest, was granted a license to marry for the third time, Ralph Butler, 66, of 5416 Bell Place, Northwest, is his recent choice, U. P. NUMBERS epiahe Gata: tallies ialteieeies Within the past eleven mosthe ie out Prgms af ts ett hae Peeeee tear ea ‘We bave the connections. The information Be hae te eatin See tie Cree te ne veis ok we ete floor who know what it ie all “ABOUT.” Sor eae ae ae oe St scutes eh rere Sicse roe eee eee, Or ts vaioa thane game sce 598 and 316 im 3, 5 and 7 races; 653 and som ba oP eet ces ok sa Seadeds Sergemeteaaat als out 8 in- Bonds. We never send out guesses, epee nb gore asad hea eae pie oe tact man Tesockes DAVES, senst- tonal vider of 1928, eee sere ae ese eto eS ease be one heen BIT WITH US THIS WEEK FREE re a ace eee ree ee 2 Send « self addressed wieace envelope bene a ine eee ata ‘UPSAL PRESS 24 W. 20th Se. New York, N.Y. t Way é am H Sitply Phone POT. 1667; For Results SCALES FALL ON MAN A: phil df séAles whieh fell on John Bidekitone, 42, of 440 N Street, Northwest, while he was ina buitlap shop, fracturéd the man’s. tight shoulder, Saturday Blackstotie; was, detained at Freed. men’s: Hospital for treatment. eT cae en esl See FURNISHED ROOMS | pena nen 1201. QIST.AN.Wi, ‘pb. 204—Nicely furnished room for quiet girl or couple. Can be seen any time, Po- tome, 3075, NICELY futnishéd middle room for rent, 1820 6th St., now.. neat cat linesi\” Phone North 0865, eer ae NICELY furnished room, Reason- able. Call. after 4, Décatur 2888. ROOMS: in a clean, refined home for employed couple or gentle- men, Réduiced prices, pleasant sur- roundings:, Phone Potomac 6152-W. ROOMS for rent—reasonable. Clean) respectable home. Call 710 Rhode Island Avenue, nw. ; ONE LARGE FRONT ROOM with three: Windows'am.i, One mid- ‘dle room. 2202) 13th Stréet, nw, LARGE, neatly furnished yoom ‘or rent, "$3.00 per week. North eta > FURNISHED, or UNFURNISHED * ROOMS — | FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED yoomsei824 15th St. mw. Apt 2. North, 2497. = ‘ONE LARGE, room for rent, rea- sonable, 1908 Irving Sty. .W. | Columbia/2108¢W, (ROOM) AND BOARD ROOM AND: BOARD. Cultured gentleman, in refined home. Homélike; atihosphere. Wholesome, well-balaniced:meals. Rates reason- able. Reply; Box 164, Washington ‘Tribune, Offiee. " JAPARTMENTS ee TWO ROOMS AND KITCHEN a.mii.; telephone, Refined, quiet family. \Noi children, $85.00, Col- umbia 2765, after 4:30, 1224 Fair- montySt.) TW. APARTMENT--1714 Fitteenth St,, n.w.p, Four rooms kitchenette, bathaand,rear poreh room. Phone Potomac, 2098. TWO,ROOMS, AND KITCHEN on secbiidsfloorsy haw-h., electricity, 1614, Riftéenth St. nw. pil a a ne 3 LARGE toons and bath—all modérn improvements; quiet cou- ple préférred—Low rent. N, 4915; 1431 Q\Stionw. WACHT FOR HIRE 60-FOOT ,YACHT for charter. Moonlikbt jor week ends. Prices moderate, « Apply Mr. Christopher, 12th Street Y.M.C.A, Se agp eek ar BOARDERS WANTED ssi gtin ee ———— WANTED—Boaiders on farm, 27 miles om D.C. on Lae a way, near Hull Run battlefield. Ratdeseansohablg, Children ebpec: iallys MigadascA- Robinson, RFD, 3, Box, 49,;Manaéshs, Va, ROOMS FOR RENT acta nme 210 8° STREET, N.W.—One large room with, porch, one single room, both aity;, quiet home, De- catur 4438. "CARD, -OF THANKS AEBS" naakecttallcla ne SS BOOKER, John 0.—We with to thank .our many relatives and friends,fory the ‘beautiful floral tributes, and’ kind expressions of sympathy yduting the illness and death of ur beloved husband and ‘deathvor/our Deloved hi 1 GIVE ONLY ONE NUMBER A WERK 1 send out only one NUMBER at ine'and We ievatdays URATGRT one lane T specify iatherwiae. My. Arm te nt aldage INIRO™ concern in the buss rsa st eho th ham ra on ee ‘overs {rom BOMEON, fed 1 CAN MAKE MONEY FoR YOU v4 Cagphy Oe, vbn% Wien Fatt om tne tind winding crane! The bankers seas hocalonetiongl ena. often: aunt of theca ri ‘ninety ebesistane mc tne Site abe called “POIBON.” My con. vietone otek th ak excel. POnsOTOk IN RiBTOR. COMMIBEION NUMBERS We have one ‘commistion NUMBER tert week ‘This one fe STRAIGHT ‘ta"has. stn O.K. thas, sill make tt itt we hard, the blow. will be” ele all ave tous, ore IN TOVCR WITH Me ~ ar once. a to cash (a on ibs ee ON! Ste ue ae % war oot AN OF wiry Like Pas. ANTONIO GONZALES | 1006 Viclery Bldg, Philadelphia, Pa. Pires rer re CUTS SELF WITH RAZOR After lying down on a straight razor blade, John Smith, 23, of Sixth Street, Northwest, suffereda cut on the left forearm, last week. Smith sought treatment at Freed- men’s Hospital, but refused to per- mit stitehes to be taken in the wound, Ui é ) i e 667-3 For Results i tarireibabainee mere Sey a ee ae. CARD OF THANKS a ‘The kind expressions of sympathy are deeply appreciated and grate- fully acknowledged by the husband arid family of the late Mrs. Lucy Shaw Frazier. ERNEST C. FRAZIER and Family. TIGNOR & PETERSON, Attorneys G34 D Street, NW. SUPREME COUNT OF THE DISTRICT Colm. eine “Propane Court, Now Alby Administration, This is to Give Notice: ‘That the. subscriber, of the Disteiet pt Columbia has obtained tom the Probate Court of the Distriet of Columbim, Lattare tesiamentary en. ahs estate. of Loulaa F. Parker, late ot the District ot Columbia, deceased. All. persons. havin latme. acainst the ecessed are hereby srarned “in "exhibit the samoy rth, the Youchits thereot, legally nuthentieated, the anbeeriber, cn or before the 14th day bf June, ALD. 1884: ntherwise. they. mace by law be excluded. from all benefit of tala “estate, “Given under. my hand thie Tih fay ot June, 1933. Carenee W, Ties nor, 63% Ste NAW. Attest Theodore Gogawell, Resisine of Wills for the. Dit- feet "ot" colmbia, Clete of the Probate our. ‘J. PRANKLIN WILSON, Attorney 2008 11 Bireet, NAV. SUPREME COURT OF THE bisnkior of Calutbig.alding ‘Pranate Court No. 45.136, Agiministration. ‘Thin_is to Give Notice: Prat the diacribar of ths Bistejet of Columbia hs obtained trom the Probate Court ef the District of Columbia, dlrs talamentary on he svate of BR Ranks Wallace, alot the Diarict of Co. lumbin, deceased, All persons having elaims daninst the deceased. re hereby warned be Exhibit Che same, with the vouchers herent irene authenticated, te ve Aubseriber, om ar before the 1th day of June, A.D, 1984: pinerine hey’ may iby aw excluded from Lil henett o€ agid estate. Given under my hand this 14th day of June, 1993. Sohn W, Bunk, T8088 Sireet, Northwest. AC tats “recdre Comal, Rexinter of Will forthe District of Columbin, Clerk of the Probate Court Aen te eta eAinises: ‘cx, SEATS. Atternes SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT ‘of Columbig. Holding Probate Court. No. 46.18, ‘Aaministration. This ih to fire Notied; ‘That the subscribers, ofthe istrict of Columbia, have obtained th: the Probate Court of the Distriet, of Co- Iumbid, Letters testamentary on thé estate of imme F. G. Merritt, late af tha Distriet ‘of Columbia, deceased.” All persons having elainih agninst, the deceased are hereby warned "to exhibit the sama, with the Youchers thereof, legally authenticatad, 2 the subseribers, om or before the 12th day of donk, A.D.’ 1984: otharwmine, they, maz Boyle be excluded fro All ena of said elite, Given under our Mande this 19th day of June, 1083. Brima FG. Howard, 160 Tenth" St. N.W.r Gertrude EM. glace, 1630 Tenth St, NW. Attest: Vietne &. Meradh, Deputy Renister of Wills for the District of Columbin, Clerk of the Probate Gourt. L, MELENDES KING, Atterney SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT ‘of Columbis. Holding Probate Court No. 45:226, Administration. This is. to Give Notice: That the subscriber, of the Ktate af Viewinia, has. obtained from the Probate Court af the District of Columbia, ‘Ancillary Latters of administeatjon on thé late of Mary Thompson. lata of the State of Virginia, deceneed. Ail parsons having laims. against. the deconsed are hereby warmed “to exhibit the same, with Ue Vouchers ‘thereof, legally guthanticated. ta ther tuluriber, in on bafore the th day fof July, AD. 1901; otherwise they may by Taw be’ axcluded fcom all Benefit of nid eatate Given under my hand this bth day of diy, 04k, “Mazz Web 1018 Tenth Bt ag ANE inter is for. the Distriel Me Cauinbd, Cenk of the Probate Court EDMUND M. CHAPLIN. Atiorner SUPREME COURT OF TH. DISTRICT ‘ot Colambin, Molding Prodete Court. No. 45,204, Administration. This ix to Give Notigs: That the, pubveriber, of ube District of Columbia, hhs obtained from the Probate Court of the District of Co- lamba. Cattars of administration on the stata ot Chatieh G, MeDaniel, Inte of Ut District of Columbia, Aecensed. All. per sons haying elaims against. the deceated fire. hereby warned. to exhibit the samt. With the vouchers thereof, legally wuthen- Heated, to the subseriber, ‘on ne. before the Sd day at July, AD. 1914, otherwine. they may by law he excluded from all benefit of tld aint: Given under my hand this 3h ay of July, 1983. Cariettn MeDani¢l, 1187 Sizth Street, NB." Attest: Victor |S. Merseh, Deputy Register of Wills for the Diatriet of Columble, Cietk of the Probate ae Houss TEN ROOMS, all private; gas, olectrieity, hot water heat, large back yard. In good condition and any additional necessary re- pairs needed will be made. THOMAS WALKER, Attorney 506 Fifth Street, N.W. Washingtor., D.C. MET. 7437 eee ALL STRAIGHT ONLY SEND TWO %e STAMPS FOR WORKOUT DOPE THE MERIT SERVICE ‘Atlantic City, NJ. WIN EVERY DAY 2, HOw ZOU How Ke iaine dave with as. Mail tees “sampe today for fast service. PROSSER METHODS Bex f ATLANTIC CITY, BJ. ke ag einai We Congratulate the Booker T Theatre ON ITS GRAND RE-OPENING WE ARE PROUD TO HAVE INSTALLED THE COOLING SYSTEM With Blowing Capacity 45,000 Cubic Feet of Air per minute Also an Occilating Air Diffuser Driven by a Century Motor—Diverting Cool Air to All Seats in the Theatre. J. H. Dusman Co. 213 N. Calvert Street Baltimore, Md. We Are Proud to Have Decorated tht Booker T. DRAPERIES - CARPETS - DECORATING ACOUSTICS Originators of the Real Work Shop on Wheels 25 Years of Dependable "JUST" Service ALL WORK GUABANTEED CONVENIENT TERMS ARRANGED Lowest Prices for Quality Work WE CO PREPA Shop an 400 V 71 RECEIPT 200 J. C. FLOOD COMPA WE CO PREPA Shop on MOV V ST RECORDS 2000 C. FLOOD COMPA WE COME PREPARED 'Shop on Wheels' 405 V ST. RECORDS 2100 J. C. FLOOD COMPANY 1405 V ST., N.W. DECATUR 2700-2701 TUSKEGEE IS READY FOR ANNUAL NET TOURNEY TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Ala. —The annual Southern Open-Sectional Tennis Tournament will be held at Tuskegee Institute, August 2 to 5. The championship events listed are men's singles, men's doubles, ladies' singles, ladies' doubles, mixed doubles, junior singles WE COME PREPARED "Shop on Wheels" MORE ST. RECORDS INC. (open to boys who have not reached their eighteenth birthday before January 1), boys' singles (open to boys who have not reached their fifteenth birthday before January 1), girls' singles (open to girls who have not reached their eighteenth birthday before January 1). Ranking Players to Attend Many outstanding players throughout the nation are expected to be present. Douglas Turner, former national singles champion and winner of the 1932 Southern Open Tournament; Charles Lewis and other other tennis luminaries will represent the Texas group. Nathaniel Jackson, Tuskegee junior national intercollegiate champion and second ranking player of the nation, who won the North Carolina Open this month. Booker T Theatre Booker T Theatre COOL AND COMFORTABLE Coming Hits Made on Broadway Peg o' My Heart BOOKER T Summer Prices ADULTS Matinee Night 15¢ 20¢ CHILDREN (under 12), 10c At All Times JOHN BARRYMORE In His Finest Role—AS A Mad Lovable Swagger- ing Prince! DIANA WYNYARD Impudently Daring — Who Took Her Husband's Advice and Had An Affair! IN “REUNION IN VIENNA” Entire Week Beginning Friday, July 21 -: For Your Patronage :- is working out daily. Franklin Jackson, national junior champion, winner of the 1932 Georgia State Open Tournament, is also being groomed for this meet. The Jackson brothers have just returned from Nassau, Bahamas, where they participated in the Lewis International Open Tournament sponsored by the Florida Tennis Association. The following players specialize in one-hand play: Oscar Charleson, Show Boat Thomas, Dick West and Devil Wells. Our Classified Advertisements are 100 per cent investments. Our reasonable rates, our liberal plan of advertising now and pay later is in keeping with the conditions of the day. Call Potomac 1667. Ask for Miss Martin. THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1933 Call POTOMAC 1667 before 5 P.M. or DECATUR 5913 after 5 P.M. JARVIS COMPANY CELEBRATES 12th ANNIVERSARY The W. Ernest Jarvis Funeral Company is fortunate in being awarded the United States Government's contract for the burial of soldiers and sailors again this year. Coming at this time, the occasion of the firm's twelfth anniversary, the award constitutes a most opportune anniversary present. Beginning with a small business in 1921, the establishment has been built up to be one of the city's largest. The spacious funeral home located at 1432 U Street, Northwest, is modern in every de- tail. Besides the business office, a chapel with a seating capacity for 150 persons and two large parlores are on the first floor. The chapel is equipped with a piano and pipe organ for funeral purposes. Amplifiers which carry the music to all the rooms on the lower floor have been installed. On the second floor, three show rooms where caskets of every size and type are displayed and a private room for out-of-town guests are found. The garage in the rear of the home will house 20 cars and has sleeping quarters on the second floor which are used by those employees who care to use them. 15 Staff Members A staff of 15 people including five women are employed at the establishment. Four of these employ- Washington Spring Works Oldest Spring Works 1410 CHURCH ST., N.W. Bet. P and Q Ph., DEc. 0840 NEW SPRINGS IN STOCK FOR ALL CARS for all makes of Cars and Trucks Bumper Parts for All Cars SPRINGS HOWEVER Why buy a new spring when we can repair the broken one and save you money? THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE Washington's Only Negro Newspaper of Sixteen Pages and More See Just What You Want In THE ADS NOW! Nine funeral cars, three hearses and an ambulance are a part of the company's equipment. The ambulance is equipped with hot and cold running water for the comfort and convenience of patients and only experienced men are employed for this service. Tomorrow, Friday, marks the twelfth anniversary of this progressive business. According to latest reports, the Kansas City Monarchs have won twenty-seven straight games. The roster includes such players as Niles, Allan, Josephs, Rogan, Dwight, Duncan and others. BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL Store Hours: 7 A.M. to 5 P.M.-Saturdays, 1 P.M. "RENOVIZE," through Reilly's Week-End Special New Beauty for Walls and Woodwork Free! I CAN OPENER I PAINT PADDLE TURPENTINE Reilly's Pre-Tested Enamel-Gloss Washable IVORY Hugh Reilly Co. 1334 New York Ave. N.W. 1 Gal. Reilly's Enamel-Gloss Paint 1 Pint Pure Turpentine 1 3-inch Rubberset Brush Regular Retail Price, $4.00 Reilly's ENAMEL-GLOSS PAINT isb for Kitchen and Bathroom work. "IT'S WASHABLE." HUGH REIL Established 1888 PA "Ride to Reilly's"—FREE Parking 1334 New York Ave. and C 'Phone NAt. 1703 George M. Barker MEL-GLOSS PAINT is the en and Bathroom Walls WASHABLE." H REILLY 1888 PAINTS Reilly's"—FREE Parking at C York Ave. and CLAREN M. Barker & Reilly's ENAMEL-GLOSS PAINT is the ideal finish for Kitchen and Bathroom Walls and Woodwork. "IT'S WASHABLE." Established 1888 PAINTS—GLASS "Ride to Reilly's"—FREE Parking at Capital Garage 1334 New York Ave. and CLARENDON, VA. Phone NAt. 1703 Phone CLar. 375 1523 7th St., N.W. 649 N. Y. Ave., N.W. LUMBER AND MILL ER AND MILL LUMBER AND MILLWORK Established 1921 W. ERNEST JAHL Invites you to inspect their build week of their Twelfth Ann Government Contract for Bur- and Sailors NEST JARV to inspect their building of their Twelfth Anniv Contract for Burial and Sailors W. ERNEST JARVIS CO. Invites you to inspect their building during this week of their Twelfth Anniversary. Government Contract for Burial of Soldiers and Sailors When the Sick are to be moved, call for our Ambulance. Any part of City 1432 You S NORTH 3 West End Park 28th and Dumbarton Licensed in States of Maryland You St. NORTH 3815 West End Parlor and Dumbarton Ave., in States of Maryland and West End Parlor 28th and Dumbarton Ave., N.W. Licensed in States of Maryland and Virginia PROMINENT BOXER DIES IN NEED CHICAGO (CNS)—Bob Armstrong, one of the best boxers of his time and the coiner of the pugilistic slogan, "Bring home the bacon," died July 6 in the charity ward of a local hospital at the age of 58, after an illness of more than a year. Bob Armstrong, Negro heavyweight boxer who trained Jim Jeffries, Jack Johnson, Peter Jackson, and many other stars during a long PAINT is the ideal fin- room Walls and Wood- E." EILLY CO. PAINTS—GLASS Parking at Capital Garage and CLARENDON, VA. 'Phone CLar. 375 ker & Co., Inc. MILLWORK dated 1921 JARVIS CO. their building during this twelfth Anniversary. for Burial of Soldiers Sailors be m- city $4.00 St. N.W. H 3815 and Parlor Marton Ave., N.W. Maryland and Virginia career and known as the "Gymnasium Champion," could outbox any of the fighters he met in training quarters. In the ring, however, before a crowd he was too tender hearted to put across the punches that might have brought him pugilistic renown. He trained almost all the most famous heavyweights from the time that Joe Choynski prepared for his fight with Peter Maher at the old Broadway Athletic Club. He worked with Jim Corbett, Bob Fitzsimmons, and "Gunboat" Smith and helped to introduce Jim Jeffries to the New York public. Jeffries was to fight two men in the same ring on the same evening. Steve O'Donnell, a widely known heavyweight, was one, and Armstrong was selected the other. Special for This Week End Only $2.99