Washington Tribune
Thursday, February 15, 1934
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
4,000 FAMILIES ADDED TO RELIEF
EDITOR'S THIRD WIFE BEING QUESTIONED IN MYSTERY DEATH
Houston Among Those to Testify At Hearings on Anti-Lynch Bill
Costigan-Wagner Measure Will Be Held Before the Senate Judiciary Committee on February 20, 21 According to Senator Van Nuys
Shotgun Death Ends Argument in South-
A shooting affray which climaxed an argument over a five-cent piece resulted in the death of one man and the holding of another for grand jury action on a charge of homicide, early this week. Thomas Hampton, 35 years of age, living at 439 Locust Court, Southwest, was the man shot to death by John Bryant, 45, 497 Locust Court, Southwest, during an altercation in the home of the latter. Testimony was to the effect that Hampton and Bryant had argued over the change from a dime the former proffered at the request of the latter for the loan of a nickle.
A huge, single-barrel shotgun was presented by Detective Sergeant J. C. Dalglish, of Police Headquarters, as the weapon used by Bryant. The latter admitted to police that he had used the gun to kill Hampton after the latter had menaced him with a razor. He declared that prior to being threatened with the razor, Hampton had thrown a lamp at him. The dispute terminated in his reaching behind a stove for the gun which he leveled and fired at his antagonist.
Self Defense Claimed
Two other witnesses, Garfield White, and his wife, Mary, 463 L Street, Southwest, substantiated the statement of Bryant to the effect that Hampton had been slain while in the act of advancing on Bryant with an open razor. But Mrs. Maggie Hampton, recently estranged wife of the victim told the coroner's jury that in the 10 years she had been married to Hampton she had never known him to own a straight razor. She declared he always used a safety razor for shaving.
Mrs. Mamie Bryant, wife of the accused man, refused to testify. By so doing she exercised her rights as the wife of a defendant under the Constitution.
A brief deliberation by the jury resulted in a verdict calling the retention of Bryant for the action of the grand jury.
BANK MAY OPEN IN THIRTY DAYS
Depositors Asked to Complete Subscriptions to Capital Stock
With full co-operation of friend- and depositors of the Industrial bank, Eleventh and U Streets, the bank may be ready to throw open its doors within thirty days, according to a statement made this week by the institution's reorganization committee. Steady progress was reported by the committee in its campaign to re-open the bank. It urged that depositors as well as friends call at the bank at their earliest convenience to complete their subscriptions to the capital stock of the new institution.
CENTENARIAN DIES
LUMBERTON, N.C. — Barney Floyd, 106 years old, died Monday near Fairmont.
Houston Among At Hearings on
Costigan-Wagner Measure
Senate Judiciary Commi
According to Se
Hearing on the Costigan-Wagner anti-lynching bill will be held before the sub-committee of the Senate Judiciary Committee at 10:30 a.m. on February 20 and 21,
Senator Van Nuys, the chairman, announced today.
Among those who will testify at the hearings are:
Rev. Russell J. Clinchy, of Washington, for the Congregational Commission on Missions; Arthur Garfield Hays, noted attorney, who will discuss the legal side of the bill; Prof. Karl N. Llewellyn, Columbia University law school, who will defend the bill from the angle of policy and legal engineering; Miss Juanita E. Jackson, president of the City-Wide Young People's Forum of Baltimore;
Mrs. Augustus Carl, representing the Women's Peace Society;
THE CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY.
FIRST ST., S. E.
00 FA
FAMIL
A Hometown Paper of, by, and for Washingtonians
WASHINGT
ITOR'S
ESTION
rd Gets Second
ntence, Denies
n Newspaper
EDITO QUEST Crawford Ge Life Sentenc Story in New
Crawford Gets Second Life Sentence, Denies Story in Newspaper
Slayer of 2 White Women
Pleads Guilty in Murder
of Maid of Mrs. Ilsley
SAYS NEWSPAITR
STORY WAS FALSE
Denies Saying He was not
Satisfied with the Way
Trial was Conducted
George Crawford, who was sentenced to life imprisonment last December for the murder of Agnes Boeing Isley, wealthy white woman, was given a second life sentence by Judge J. R. H. Alexander, at Leesburg, Va., Monday, for the murder of Nina Buckner, white, maid of Mrs. Isley, who was killed at the same time her employer was.
At the time Crawford was given the second life sentence he denied an alleged interview with a reporter for a Norfolk paper in which he is alleged to have stated that he was not satisfied with the way his trial was conducted.
Attorney Charles H. Houston, chief counsel for Crawford, wrote the following letter to the editor of the paper:
"I have just read your feature article in the issue of February 10 entitled 'George Crawford Talks.' Some of the statements therein, assuming Crawford made them, need to be denied; others explained. "In Leesburg today Crawford voluntarily pleaded guilty to the Buckner indictment, and received a life sentence, thereby closing the case. Before we went in court I confronted him with your paper and showed him the article, and he denied the statements. I told him that under the circumstances I would not take the responsibility
Those to Testify Anti-Lynch Bill
Will Be Held Before the
ttee on February 20, 21
nator Van Nuys
Rev. Asbury Smith and Rabbi Edward L. Israel, for the Maryland Anti-Lynch Federation; Mrs. Irvin C. Poley and Mrs. Marriott C. Morris for the Committee on Race Relations of the Society of Friends:
Mrs. Elizabeth Harrington, native Mississippiian, who will speak for the Student Council of the national Y.W.C.A.; Charles H. Houston, Dean Howard University law school and Charles H. Tuttle, famous New York attorney.
The Department of Race Relations of the Federal Council of Churches has promised to have a representative at the hearing and it is expected that Clarence Pickett of the Society of Friends will also be present. Several distinguished white southerners are expected to testify.
(Continued on page 2)
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Vol. XIII, No. 42
(Continued on page 2)
Washington Tribune
WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1934
Counsel for Mrs. Williams to File Answer Soon
The answer of Mrs. Adelia Williams, 1914 Eleventh Street, Northwest, to charges of infidelity filed in a divorce petition, late last week, by Mrs. Florence W. Richardson, wife of Douglas C. Richardson, postal employee, will be filed the latter part of this week. This announcement was made Monday by Attorney Perly W. Howard, who has been retained to represent the wife of the Asbury M.E. Church pastor.
LOCAL MAGAZINE BEGINS FIGHT TO OUST JUDGE COBB
Seeks to Have Democrat to Replace Republican in Local Court
Under the caption, "Judge Cobb Must Go," the Progressive Consumer, a local publication, comes out in a feature article in its February issue demanding that Judge James A. Cobb, of the Municipal Court, be replaced by a Democrat. The article is signed by Theodore S. Botts. The 'allowing are excerpts from the article:'
"Judge James A. Cobb; of Municipal Court of the District of Columbia, term expires in March. He is a dyed-in-the-wool Republican, who received his appointment under the Coolidge administration and reappointed by Herbert Hoover.
"Negro Democrats of the District and their allies in the states are against the appointment or reappointment of any person who, up to the last hour, attempted to defeat Franklin D. Roosevelt for President and John Nance Garner for Vice-President. These enemies of Democracy said and did all manner of things against us, and have no right to eat from or even enjoy the shade of the political plum (vee.
One of G.O.P. Big Five
"All through the campaign Judge Cobb was one of the Republican big five in Washington, who devised plans to tie the Negro vote to the Republican party. His services as well as his money were given to the Republican party to help defeat the Roosevelt-Garner ticket.
"The Republican big five committee's supposedly master stroke to tie the Negro vote to the Republican party was its success in having leading Republicans from all parts of the country to come to Washington at the expenses of the National Republican Committee to take a last minute pose with President Hoover, after his over three-and-a-half years' flat refusal to take a picture with a group of colored people.
"Again we see Judge Cobb functioning on the entertainment committee formed to spur up and instruct the last minute posers to 'go back home and light like hell' (Continued on page 2)
Stars of "Fairies on Parade"
MARIA MAYORAL
ALDEN GARRISON, left, and LOUIS DIOSS, well known Washington twilight boys, who will be the featured attraction in "Fairies on Parade," Thursday (tonight), at the New Albert Auditorium in Baltimore. Believe it or not, both are boys despite their fine feathers and marcel hair. The affair in the Monumental City will draw impersonators from Philadelphia, New York, Atlantic City and other cities to the unique ball.
75 PER CENT OF THOSE SEEKING AID ARE COLORED
Director Halbert Reports Curtailment of Funds and Cold, Cause
Due to the curtailment of Civil Works Administration funds coupled with extreme weather and other conditions, approximately 4,000 families have been added to the District Relief rolls since the first of the year, Dr. Leroy A. Halbert, director, announced this week.
Of this number, 75 per cent are colored, according to a statement by Dr. Blanc, Willeox, director of the Research Department of the bureau.
947 Families Seek Aid "Our records show that either because of cold weather, the necessity for CWA curtailment, or other factors, 946 families have applied to have their cases reopened so that they might obtain aid," said Director Halbert. "Since the first of January, 4,059 families never previously on our rolls have registered, making a total of 5,005 families. These are additional to such as are already receiving aid." He pointed out that every effort is being expended to give prompt aid. Rules and regulations are stretched whenever it is possible to do so in order to prevent suffering. "Social workers" clerks and others are bending every energy to answer the calls for help," Dr. Halbert said.
200 Coal Orders Daily
Normally 200 coal orders are issued per day to clients. On Thursday, February 8, 450 orders were issued; on Friday, 1,000 coal orders were sent out and Saturday morning found 35 trucks making deliveries from the government furls, which is five times the usual number. Delivery of coal started at 7 a.m. Saturday morning and will continue Saturday afternoon and Sunday until all orders are delivered.
Statistically, during the week-
ending, February 3, there were 352
(Continued on page 2)
RADIO MUZZLES BROADCAST OF JOEL SPINGARN
N.A.A.C.P. Head is Not Permitted to Refer to Lynchings
The National Broadcasting Company does not give a "hoot" whether Will Rogers or others use its network to insult Negroes, but it nearly "had a fit" last week when a prepared speech of J. E. Spingan, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, mentioned Lynchings, segregation, and race riots.
All reference to segregation, lynchings and riots were cut out of Mr. Spingarn's speech, delivered Sunday morning on the program of the Southernaires, Mr. Spingarn, as the guest of the famous quartet, had written a speech touching up on the work of the N.A.A.C.P. during the last twenty-five years. The N.A.A.C.P. was organized directly as a result of the race riot in Springfield, Ill., in 1908, and Mr. Spingarn's original speech started off with this fact. But his whole first paragraph was scratched out by the N.B.C. continuity department. He was forced to say, "trouble at Springfield, Ill., which colored people were involved." He was prevented from referring to the Dyer anti-lynching bill of 1922, being forced to say simply "Congressman Dyer's well" (Continued on page 2)
Woman Struck Over Head in Altercation
Julia Green, 32, of 132 Pierce Street, suffered severe lacerations about the head and body when she was struck over the head with a blunt instrument wielded by Freddie Burns, of the same address, Tuesday night. Miss Green was treated by Dr. Turner, of 927 Westminster Street, Northwest, for numerous scalp wounds. Although two stitches were necessary, her condition was reported as not serious.
A.
publisher of the Atlanta World who died last Wednesday from wounds received in the garage of his home on February 6. Mr. Scott was tn only Negro to run a successful daily and he operated a chain of weeklies in several southern cities. A police investigation failed to throw any light on the persons who shot the publisher.
SUIT DISMISSED CO-RESPONDENT IS NOT NAMED
SUIT DISMISSED CO-RESPONDENT IS NOT NAMED
Justice Allows Ten Days for Naming of Offender
Failure to make the co-respondent a defendant in the action resulted in the suit for absolute divorce filed by Victor A. Glenn, of 2813 Eleventh Street, Northwest, against Mrs. Pearl Glenn, of New Orleans, being dismissed in the District Supreme Court by Justice O'Donoghue, last week.
Mrs. Thelma D. Ackiss, attorney for Glenn, was given ten days in which to amend the original bill.
According to the petition, filed on August 28, 1933, the couple was married in Meridian, Miss., in 1928. Glenn declared that he left his wife after about two months when he found out that she was unfaithful. He also claimed that she had been living with Frank Hitson as man and wife in the Bernadotte Coal Yards, New Orleans, since January 1929.
Makes Own Probe
Glenn, the bill further states, learned of the relationship in 1930, and went to New Orleans. He learned, it is alleged, that Mrs. Glenn was known by the name of Mrs. Pearl Hitson, and was living with the man.
Justice Letts appointed Marie McCathran, white, on December 14, 1983, to represent the interest of the absent wife. She subsequently filed a motion to dismiss the suit, January 23, because it was defective in that a party defendant was not named. It was pointed out that the District code provides that where a correspondent is available and can be identified with reasonable certainty, he must be made defendant also and summoned. Justice Letts upheld the motion, as Hitson, the reputed co-respondent was not named in the petition.
Brother-in-Law of Scott's Fourth Wife Arrested in Slaying
District Dawn Boys to Take Part In Baltimore "Fairies" Dance
Alden Garrison and Louis Diggs to Be Featured in Impersonators Ball in Monumental City Tonight at New Albert Auditorium
Family of Dead Publisher Offers $200 Reward for Arrest of Murderer
EDITOR'S 3rd WIFE IS BEING QUIZZED
2,000 Attend Funeral of W. A. Scott, Atlanta Business Man
ATLANTA, Ga.—(ANP)—Just before W. A. Scott, owner of the Scott Newspaper Syndicate died last Wednesday afternoon, eight persons claim that he confided the identity to them of the man who fired a bullet into his back the night of Tuesday, January 30.
He named George Pitt Maddox, son of George Maddox, head of one of the city's most elite families. Father and son are both dining car waiters.
Maddox Arrested
On the strength of the testimony of these eight persons, Atlanta police, Friday arrester Maddox, taking him in custody on a train running from Birmingham to Atlanta, on which Maddox was deadheading. The dining car waiter stoutly maintained his innocence of the crime and claimed that at the time of the shooting he was visiting in the home of Miss Frankie Miles on Cane Street.
Saturday, the coroner's jury convened and in a session which lasted nine hours. Maddox was severely grilled. Maddox, however, held his own and was freed after the session.
Reward Offered
Meanwhile, the Scott family sought to accelerate the search for the slayer by offering a $200 reward for arrest and conviction. The Birmingham World, one of the
District Dawn Bo
In Baltimore "
Alden Garrison and Louis
Impersonators Ball in M
at New Alber
Washington dawn boys will be
the featured attractions at the annual ball of the Impersonators which will be held at the New Albert Auditorium, Baltimore, tonight (Thursday).
Leading the local contingent will be Alden Garrison, well known impersonator, and Louis Diggs, a new comer to the ranks of the twilight brigade.
Others who are scheduled to be at the ball are: Joe Smothers and Boots Layana, night club entertainers; Sugar Martin, Babe Booker, Katie May, Miss White, Milton Baton, Miss Tremble, and Dottie Davis.
"Fairies on Parade," which is the name of the presentation, will be a duplication of the unique affair which was the sensation of Chicago during the World Fair.
Frowned on Here
The annual ball of the dawn boys
member papers of the Scott Newspaper Syndicate, also offered $50.
Maddox, freed by the coroner's jury Saturday, is a brother of Scott's fourth wife, pretty, 23-year-old Agnes Maddox Scott.
Miss Maddox and Scott were married secretly last October, the announcement not being made until December.
Just a short time before his death, Scott and his bride had returned from a honeymoon trip to Cuba.
Received Threats
Detectives questioned Maddox as to his movements the night before the shooting. He admitted he was in the city, but insisted he was at the hoax of Miss Miles in the Fourth ward at the time Scott was shot.
Scott himself is said to have received several threatening letters (Continued on page 2)
Dunbar High Student Dies Following Fall
A certificate of accidental death resulting from a fall was issued Saturday in the case of Horace Rudolph Holmes, 17, of 1407 W Street, Northwest, a student at Dunbar High School. Holmes stumbled and fell to the pavement on March 6. He was admitted to Garfield Hospital at that time, and treated by Dr. Luster.
Tonsils Removed
On March 22, he was admitted to Gallenger Hospital by Dr. Feldman, who removed his tonsils. He continued to receive treatment at Garfield until June 15, and on December 9, was examined at George Washington Hospital by Dr. Shapiro, who recommended further hospital treatments.
On December 11, he was admitted to Gallenger Hospital by Dr. Goffney, and on February 10 he was pronounced dead. The coroner's inquest revealed that death was due to a broken neck sustained in the fall.
boys to Take Part "Fairies" Dance Diggs to Be Featured in Monumental City Tonight Auditorium
and twilight men is an established affair in New York, Philadelphia, and Atlantic City. The local following of the third sex made an attempt to establish a "parade" here a few weeks ago, but police prohibited members from entering the Masonic Temple. Hundreds of men and boys who had gathered on the outside of the building to see the "parade" caught one of the "boys" and ripped his clothes from him.
In Baltimore police are more lenient and the ball has been an annual affair for many years. Society of the Monumental City turns out to see the costumes worn and to get an eyefull of the "sights."
Many Washingtonians are expected to make the trip to Baltimore Thursday out of curiosity if nothing else as the scheduled dance here was a flop and sight seers failed to see what they came for.
Vermont Avenue Church to Honor Famous Pastor
ANNIVERSARY OF LEE'S MEMORIAL TO BE OBSERVED
ANNIVERSARY OF LEE'S MEMORIAL TO BE OBSERVED
Services to Begin Sunday and Continue for One Week
The thirtieth anniversary of Lee's Memorial A.M.E. Church will be celebrated beginning Sunday continuing through February 25. The Rev. John M. Gibson is pastor. The Rev. Mr. Gibson will deliver the sermon at the morning service followed by class meeting. At 6 o'clock a program will be rendered by the Potomac District Councils of the Sunday School and A.C.E. League. John W. Sewell is district president of the Sunday School and Mrs. A. B. Littleton, president of the A.C.E. League. The pastor will preach in the evening. On Monday the Rev. C. E. Walden and the choir of his church, of Bladensburg, Md., will be guests.
The following order of services will be observed during the week:
Tuesday night, February 20—
The Rev. B. Botts and choir, First Baptist Church, Kensington, Md.
Silver Leaf Club night, Mr. Jack Scott, president,
Wednesday night, February 21—
Variety Club night, Mrs. J. W.
Steward, president.
Thursday night, February 22—
the Rev. C. S. Butcher and the Rev. D. A. Wilson and choirs. Pilgrim A.M.E. Church, Washington, D.C. and Bening, D.C. Trustee Voluntee' night, Mrs. Sarah Nelson, chairman.
Friday night, February 23—the Rev. W. H. Thomas and choir and the Rev. Richard A. Johnson and choir. Metropolitan A.M.E. Church, Washington D.C., and Rockville, Md. Trustees' and Stewards' night.
Sunday, February 25, 11:30 a.m.
—Preaching by the local preacher,
the Rev. Robert H. Addison, followed
by class meeting; 6 p.m., program
by the Junior Fellowship Society
of Metropolitan Baptist
Church, Washington, D.C.; Edward
Taylor, president; 8 p.m., preaching
by the pastor.
A.M.E. MINISTER SUES CHURCH FOR $2,990 EXPENSES
A.M.E. MINISTER SUES CHURCH FOR $2,990 EXPENSES
Seeking a judgment if $2,990.17 on account of salary and miscellaneous items, awarded him in the Court of Common Pleas in Philadelphia, the Rev. A. B. Farmer, of 1630 Eight Avenue, Huntington, W. Va., filed suit foh that amount against the A.M.E. Chhrch of Philadelphia, a corsation, doing business at 1541 Fourthcenteh Street, Northwest, this city, in the District Supreme Court, last week. The petition, filed through Max Tendler, sets forth that the A.M.E. Church was ordered to pay him $2,970, October 19, 1933, and to pay the court costs of $20.17. The Rev. Mr. Farmer claims that this amount has not been peid and seeks to collect it together with interest from the date of action, and the cost of the present suit.
According to the bill, the Rev. Mr. Farmer was employed by the A.M.E. Church, through Presiding Elder A. J. Smoot, November 29, 1932, to take over the pastoral charge of Twin Branch and Fall River, W. Va., in the capacity of an itinerant pastor with salary as such. In addition, the minister contends that he was to receive fuel, travel expenses, and house rent for self and family during the conference year.
Dismissed Without Trial
The Rev. Mr. Farmer states that he was dismissed without trial, in accordance with the Book of Discipline, on April 20, 1933. The bill cites the portion of the Book of Discipline which states that the salary of an itinerant pastor shall be $2,000 a year. It is claimed that the Rev. Mr. Farmer received only $30 compensation during the period he served.
In addition, the minister avers that through failure, of the church to make proper provisions he spent $600 a year for house rent and $400 for traveling expenses. The Rev. Mr. Farmer contends that his dismissal, non-payment of salary, and miscellaneous items, are not in accord with the Book of Discipline, therefore asks the court to correct the reputed error by giving him judgment for $2,990.17.
Uzhers' Union to Sponsor Anniversary Recital
The Interdenominational Usher's Union will present the Crescenda: Male Chorus and the Sanvita Female Chorus in a joint anniversary recital at the John Wesley A.M.E. Church, Fourteenth and Corcoran Streets. Friday evening, February 16 at 8:15.
Sunday School Union Celebrates Anniversary
The fifty-third anniversary of the Baptist Sunday School Union of the District of Columbia and Vicinity will be held at the Enon Baptist Church, C Street between Sixth and Seventh Streets, Southeast, Tuesday evening, February 20, at 7:30. Officers in charge are James R. Moss, president of the union; Raymond W. Edwards, general superintendent; Joseph H. Gaines, assistant general superintendent; and Mrs. E. B. W. Brooks, corresponding secretary.
MISSION BOARDS SEEK PROTECTION FOR LIBERIANS
MISSION BOARDS SEEK PROTECTION FOR LIBERIANS
Restoration of Support by United States Urged by Churches
Delegates from eleven foreign mission boards representing a church membership of 5,000,000 Christians and whose denominations own property valued at thousands of dollars in Liberia met at the Y.M.C.A., this week, to formulate a petition to the United States government to maintain its protective policy toward the republic. Those present from New York, Philadelphia, Hartford, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Richmond, and the District represented the following boards: National Baptist Convention, Inc., National Baptist Convention of America, New England Baptist Missionary Convention, Lott Carey Baptist Convention, A.M.E.Z., and A.M.E. Churches, Methodist Episcopal, Lutheran, Protestant Episcopal, Presbyterian, and Friends of Liberia. Following a day's discussion the group urged the following:
(a) that the United States government be urged to resume diplomatic relations with Liberia.
(b) that the League of Nations' plan of assistance to Liberia in her present crisis be thoroughly considered in the light and spirit of Liberia's reservation, and 'at the Liberian government be urged to do everything possible to regain the traditional interest and support of the American government.
(c) that in view of the large investment in Liberia missionaries and money by the respective foreign boards, channels of communication be kept open so that this missionary effort shall remain under the guidance of 'American influence.
(d) that the representatives of the Liberian government en route to America be invited into conference by the above-mentioned boards so that relationships of good will may be continued.
It was also recommended that representatives of the respective boards seek to convey to Negroes of America and to the Liberian government, an earnest desire to help preserve the sovereignty and autonomy of Liberia.
The group expressed the desire that the historical relationships of confidence between the United States Department of State and Liberit be resumed.
Liberia was founded as a colony for freed American Negroes by the American Colonization Society, in 1822.
Officers of the foreign mission secretaries calling the meeting are: Rev. J. E. East, Philadelphia, president; Rev. L. L. Berry, New York, vice-president; Rev. H. T. Meford, Washington, secretary, and Rev. J. H. Randolph, Washington, treasurer.
William Gilmore Dies After Brief Illness
William Gilmore, of 142 Seaton Place, Northwest, departed this life February 11, at his residence after a very brief illness due to pneumonia. He leaves to mourn their loss three children, Ernestine, Harry and Catherine; relatives and friends.
Mr. Gilmore was an employee of the Agriculture Department, having served in that department for the past 19 years.
He was born in Chester, S.C., and attended the Brainerd Institute in Chester. He also attended Johnson C. Smith University and Howard University.
Funeral services were held on Wednesday afternoon, February 14, from Frazier's funeral parlor, the Rev. W. O. Carrington and the Rev. Elmes officiating. Interment was at Lincoln Cemetery.
TABOR PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Miss Nannie H, Burroughs will be the principal speaker at special Woman's Day exercises to be held at the Tabor Presbyterian Church, Sunday, at 11 a.m. Special music will be rendered by a woman's chorus under the direction of Mrs. Estelle Pinkney Webster. The young people will hold their social hour and discussion period at 7 p.m. The Men's Club will meet Monday at 810 First Street, Northwest.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 15. 1934
CHURCHES
CHURCHES
My Prayer
O Thou in whose presence my soul takes delight,
On whom in affliction I call;
My comfort by day and my song in the night,
My hope, my salvation, my all.
MT. HERMON
BAPTIST CHURCH
The Mt. Hermon Baptist Church held its regular Sunday services in the Richardson Funeral Chapel 1700 Vermont Avenue, Northwest. The pastor, the Rev. M. Banks, announced that services will be held at the same place until further announcement. The Rev. Mr. Banks will speak Sunday on the subject, "Kingdom Building." At the evening service the Rev. R. P. Yainey will be the speaker.
FIFTEENTH STREET
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
The Rev, H, B. Taylor, pastor of the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, will have for his subject, Sunday morning, "Christian Patriotism." Music will be rendered by the choir under the direction of Miss Allen, organist. On February 22, at 8 p.m., Miss E. F. Shimm will speak on foreign mirions, and Mrs. Edith B. Morrison will talk on "The American Indian."
JOHN WESLEY A.M.E.
ZION CHURCH
"Deny the Power of Religion" will be the subject of the sermon for Sunday morning by the minister, the Rev. W. O. Carrington. "The Unseen Guide" will be the message to the junior church. At 7:45 p.m., the minister will preach on "The Supreme Aspiration." The sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be administered at this service. Music will be by the senior choir, S. A. Norville, director, and Miss Lucille Mills, organist. Church school is held at 9:30 a.m. Dr. V. J. Tulale is superintendent. Christian Endeavor meeting at 6:30 p.m. S. A. Laurie Norville, president.
MT. LEBANON
BAPTIST CHURCH
At the services, Sunday
tor, the Rev. Edgar Ne
officile at 11 a.m., and 8 p.
The Reapers Club was entertained Monday night at the residence of Mrs. Lottie Albritton,
Miss Catherine Smith is president.
The Interdenominational Ushers Union, of which W. H. Davis is president, held its monthly meeting at M. Lebanon, last Monday.
Tonight (Thursday) the ushers and auxiliary boards will be entertained by Mrs. Daisy Jackson, at 1117 Twenty-second Street, Northwest. The invited guests are the Rev. and Mrs. Edgar Newton, Mrs. Lendo Webb, and Mrs. Gladyee Fitzhugh.
The Rev. James Robinson, pastor of Providence Baptist Church, Remington, Va., occupied the pulpit last Sunday morning and used as his theme "Self Consecration," a request sermon.
At 8 o'clock, the Rev. Mr. Newton selected as his subject, "The Royal Appearance of God's Children."
PJL GRIM A.M.E. CHURCH
The Rev, J. Lee, pastor of the Simms M.E. Church, was the guest speaker at the Pilgrim A.M.E. Church, Sunday morning. His chair and congregation accompanied him. The Senior A.C.E. League which convened at 7:45 was conducted by Nelson Carroll, under the direction of Mrs. Bertha Hill, superintendent of the Juniors. Visitors included Miss Charlotte Conrad and Mrs. M. L. Hawkins.
This Sunday, the schedule of services includes Sunday school at 9:45 a.m., under the direction of Miss Desiree Hall; preaching at 11 a.m., and 5:30 p.m., by the pastor; a meeting of the Junior A.C.E. League at 6:30 p.m., under the direction of Mrs. Bertha Hill, and of the Senior A.C.E. League at 8 p.m., with Miss Desiree Hill presiding. On Monday at 8 p.m., the men's committee will meet at 722 Nineteenth Street, Northeast. A prayer service will be held on Tuesday night. On Friday evening the choir will hold its rehearsal at 7:30 p.m. and at 8:30 p.m., a supper will be given for the benefit of the Sunday school.
THIRD BAPTIST CHURCH
Dr. George O. Bullock, pastor of the Third Baptist Church, Fifth and Q Streets, Northwest, will speak Sunday at 11 a.m. on the subject, "Surrendering All For Christ." At 3:30 p.m., Holy Communion will be held and new members received. At 8 p.m., Dr. Bullock's topic will be "Lifting Up Christ." Bible school will be held at 9:15 a.m.; JR.C.E.S. at 4 p.m.; I.C.E.S. at 5, and Senior at 6. A prayer meeting will be held Tuesday at 8 p.m., and a Young People's meeting Thursday at 8 p.m. A noon-day prayer meeting is held daily.
IO. OF. ST. LUKE PLANS
THANKGIVING SERVICES
The District Advisory Board of the Independent Order of St. Luke will hold a special meeting, Friday evening, February 23, at Tubman's Hall, 1528 Vermont Avenue, Northwest, at 8 o'clock, for the purpose of arranging for the order's annual thanksgiving services. Each subordinate council has been requested to send three representatives to the meeting.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
Revival services will be held at the Second Baptist Church, Third Street between H and I Streets, Northwest, from Tuesday, February 20, to Friday, March 2. The pastor, the Rev. J. L. S. Holloman, will be assisted by Dr. Walter H. Brooks, on February 20. Dr. Augustus Lewis, February 21; Dr. E. L. Harrison, February 22; and Dr. W. A. Jones, February 23. From Sunday evening, February 25, until Friday evening, March 2, the Rev. George J. Garnett, pastor of the Morning Star Baptist Church of Baltimore, will be the revival preacher. Dr. Garnett is known as one of the outstanding preachers of the country.
MT. MORIAH
BAPTIST CHURCH
The Rev. J. H. Marshall, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Southwest Washington, was the guest speaker at the Mount Moriah Baptist Church, Sunday, at 3:30 p.m., at which time officers of the Usher Board and the Ladies' Auxiliary were installed. His topic was "What Is Your Life?" The Rev. J. Harvey Randolph, pastor of the church, preached at the morning and evening services. Music was furnished by the junior choir. Services this Sunday will include Bible school at 9:30 a.m.; preaching by the pastor at 11 a.m., and 7:30 p.m.; a regular meeting of the Junior B.J. P.U. at 5 p.m.; and a meeting of the Senior Society at 6 p.m. Prayer services will also be held on Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
The General Baptist Deaconss Association will hold its monthly meeting at the church Monday at 7:30 p.m. Deacon James Ross is president of the association.
ST GEORGE'S CHAPEL
Two services will be held at St. George's Chapel, First and R Streets, on Ash Wednesday. Holy communion will be observed at 7 a.m., and evening services will be held at 8 p.m. This Sunday, corporate communion will be held at 7 a.m.; church school at 9:45 a.m.; morning prayer and sermon at 11 a.m.; and evening service at 8 p.m. The Rev. A. A. Birch is vicar of the school.
At the Chapel of the Atonement, Fifty-sixth Street, Northeast, of which the Rev. Birch is also vicar, morning prayer and sermon will be held at 9:30, and church school at 10:45 a.m.
CAMPBELL A.M.E.
CHURCH
Next Sunday is quarterly meeting day at Campbell A.M.E. Church The pastor, Dr. P. A. Scott, will preach a special sermon at 11 o'clock, and the senior choir will sing, under the direction of Melvin Weems, with Mrs. Eliza Weems at the organ. The church will be open to receive members.
Sunday night, Dr. Charles H. Wesley, presiding elder of the Potomac District, will speak in connection with a program by Boys' Clubs, when the Boys' Club of Campbell will be host to the club of Garfield, under the direction of Mr. Williams and J. Henry Dale, Jr. This will mark the close of Negro History Week. Special musical features will be a part of this service.
In spite of the severe weather, the attendance was good at Campbell last Sunday morning, and the pastor preached on "God's Commandments More Precious Than Gold." Two young men joined the church.
Several visitors were introduced. Among them was Attorney Harry B. Evans, of Indianapolis, Ind., the advertising manager of the Madam C. J. Walker Manufacturing Company of that city.
Sunday night, the "Night Blooming Series" Club, of which Mrs. Jennie Brown is directress, and Mariann Traverse, president, gave a program and presented the proceeds to assist in the purchase of coal.
GALBRAITH A.M.E.
ZION CHURCH
In the absence of the Rev. W. D. Speight, Dr. H. T. Medford preached at the morning service of the Galbraith A.M.E. Zion Church, on Sunday. His text was taken from the sixtieth chapter of Matthew, first verse, "Take heed that ye do not your alms before men, to be seen of them; otherwise ye have no reward of your Father which is in heaven." His theme was the proper motive for giving, and in his talk he emphasized the fact that giving for mere show, self-pride, self-gain, and the praise of men would not receive divine sanction, but that gifts prompted by a sense of duty to our fellowmen and service to God will earn for the giver the reward which only the righteous Judge of all the earth can give. Music was rendered by the choral union.
Galbraith Sunday school won three prizes at the pep meeting sponsored by the Youths' Council of Asbury M.E. Church, last Friday night, preparatory to the "Institute" to be held at that church beginning February 23. Points were won for attendance, songs, and yells. Mrs. Nellie Burton is superintendent of the school, and Miss Gladys Seldon, assistant superintendent.
TABERNACLE
BAPTIST CHURCH
Declaring that, unlike other institutions the church has stood the test of time, the Rev E. J. Bradshaw, pastor of the Tabernacle Baptist Church, delivered the sermon at that church Sunday morning. The Rev. Mr. Bradshaw's theme next Sunday morning will be "The Immortality of Influence." The Young People's Department of the church, under the direction of Miss Beatrice Suydan, held its first annual banquet at the church last Thursday evening. The program included unusual literary and musical numbers. The Women's Club of the church is presenting the Rev Walter H. Brooks, of the Ninetenth Street Bantist Church, at a service next Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock.
ST. LUKE'S P.E.
CHURCH
The Rev. W. Payne Stanley, of Toledo, Ohio, will be the guest speaker at historic St. Luke's P.E. Church, Fifteenth and Church Streets, Northwest, Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Rev. Stanley is one of the outstanding priests of the Episcopal Church, and is an outstanding figure in religious and civic affairs of Toledo, where he is constantly in demand as a speaker and lecturer. For several years he served as a missionary in Africa and India.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
"Thou Shalt Not Cove," was the topic of the Rev. M. N. Newsome, pastor of the First Baptist Church, at last Sunday morning's service of the church. In the evening the Christian Endeavor Society considered the topic, "Does God Always Punish Wrong?" under the direction of Mrs. Blenge W. Hawkins, the vice-president.
The subject of next Sunday morning's sermon will be "How to Master Temptation." The Christian Endeavor Hour will be held at 6 p.m., as usual.
Dr. S. A. T. Austin Guest Speaker at Union Wesley
Union Wesley A.M.E. Zion Church had the pleasure of having its pastor serve as the leader for Sunday, February 11. The guest speaker was Dr. S. A. T. Austin. The subject under discussion was "Does God Punish for Wrongdoing?" The discussion was shared by Barnett Anderson, William H. Schields, Arghur Brooks, Mrs. Dorothy Brooks and Mrs. M. M. Jones. The soloists were Mrs. Dorothy Woodson and Mirs Wanda Gray. Mention was made of the splendid publicity being given Christian organizations by The Washington Tribune, and the president, Miss Elsie Gray took occasion to express appreciation of the consideration which the Tribune is giving this society.
Joseph E. Dickerson Dies in Lawnside, N.J.
Funeral services for the late Joseph E. Dickerson, a resident of Lawnside, N.J., were held recently from the Lawnside A.M.E. Church in the above named city. He died in his eightieth year. Death followed an illness of nine months. He was well known in Camden and Cape May, N.J. Many of his close friends were shocked at his sudden death. A daughter, Mrs. Bertha Johnson, of Lawnside, N.J.; a son, James E. Dickerson, of Washington, D.C., and four grandchildren survive.
Mother of Raphael Manager Visits in Washington
Mrs. Ella Harris Spence, of Detroit, Mich., mother of the manager of the Raphael Theatre, is in the city visiting her son and daughter-in-law, at their residence, The Oakmont Apartments, 225 Morgan Street, Northwest.
Mrs. Spence is the widow of the late James B. Spence, who died two weeks ago at Detroit, Mich. Mr. Spence was for nearly quarter
of a century employed by the Michigan Central Railroad. He was prominent in fraternal circles. His widow is well known as an active worker in religious, benevolent and social movements.
SOUTHEAST HOUSE SNAP SHOTS
Boy Scout Troop 509, under the direction of Scout Master F. A. Gregory, an instructor at Armstrong High School, had the largest representation of colored scouts to attend the meeting at Constitution Hall to hear the President's message.
Troop 509 increased so rapidly that the gymnasium at New Bell School was secured in October, 1933, for their meetings. Professor Anderson, of the Troop Committee, visited the gymnasium with Miss Conover, the head worker at Southeast House, and was delighted with the splendid attendance of forty-three boys. The Troop Committee with the assistance of the Troop is planning a program for the parents and friends of this troop.
The Leaders' Club gave a program in the Dana Club Room, Saturday, for the members of their various clubs. An original school room shut provided an opportunity for the Leaders' Club to commemorate Negro History Week by introducing many interesting facts concerning outstanding Negroes. The members of the club are Miss Leola Duckett, Howard University, president; Miss Jessie Hughes, Miner Teachers' College, vice-president; Maurice Butler, Armstrong High School, treasurer; Miss Bernice Hudson, Dunbar High School, secretary.
Other members are Miss Mary Rustin, Miner Teachers' College; Miss Kolossa Hughes, Armstrong High School; John Williams, Armstrong High School; Guy Enorl, Randall Junior High School; and Warren Gordon, Dunbar High School.
Miss Edith Bell, a graduate of Miner Normal School, is now assisting Miss Tucker with the Busy Bee Sewing School.
Miss Elsie Hart, a graduate of home economies department a: Howard University, has organized the Junior Dressmakers Club. The following officers were recently elected: Ella Mae Fuller, president; Jennie Adams, vice-president; Mary Spencer, secretary; and Alice Holmes, treasurer.
The Health-Ethics Club, under the direction of Miss Duckett, will soon start rehearsals for a play entitled "The Large Family," written by Miss Evelyn Watts, one of the club members.
Earl Prioleau, 14 years old, was commended at the recent graduation at Randall Junior High School for maintaining the second highest scholastic record in the graduation class. Earl, who has entered Dunbar High School, is a member of Boy Scout Troop 509.
LINCOLN TEMPLE
At the services of Lincoln Congregational Temple Sunday morning, the Rev. K. W. Brooks will speak from the subject, "Making the Second Mile." The vested choir, directed by Henry L. Grant, will render special musical selections.
The Men's Bretherhood will assemble at 10 a.m. After brief devotional exercise, Mr. Emmett Harmon, a native African, will speak to the men of the church and community.
The Young People's C. E. Society will meet and present a program of song and discussion at 7 p.m. The subject to be discussed is, "How to Master Temptation." After the exercises a business meeting for the purpose of electing officers will be held.
The mid-week prayer service will be held Thursday evening from 8 to 9 o'clock. The meditation theme will be, "How Jesus Taught Men to Pray." The public is cordially invited to share all of these services.
William Stuart Nelson Howard Speaker Sunday
The Committee on Religious Life, Howard University, announces as the speaker for Sunday, February 18, William Stuart Nelson, B.D., president of Shaw University, Raleigh, N.C. President Nelson has had a varied and significant career culminating, at the moment, in the presidency of Shaw University. He will bring the third address in the series, "The Meaning of Religion."
Ladies' Protective League Hold Memorial Service
The Young Ladies' Protective League held its memorial service on Thursday, February 8. Mrs. Minnie L. Wright is president of the league, and Mrs. Maud G. Jones is chariman of the program committee.
Members of the vested choir were Mrs. Samuella Milton, Mrs. Parthenia Curtis, Mrs. Lilly Bundy, Miss Bena Reeder, Mrs. Amanda Forrest, Mrs. Lottie Henderson, Mrs. Mattie Ford, and Mrs. Martha Only.
Mrs. Curtis delivered the eulogy for the deceased members. Miss Ruth Hansby was pianist.
T NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Vital Statistics
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with every modern equipment that Jarvis has bought for the convenience and comfort of your sick? You will be surprised at the very low cost of this splendid service. When your sick must be moved, call
Jarvis Funeral Church
1432 You Street, N.W.
North 3815
1820 to 1924 Ninth Street, N.W. REASONABLE—RESPONSIBLE—SERVICE
Births Reported
Herbert and Louise Lambert, girl
Charles 'and Gertrude Foreman, girl
Charles and Grace Moran, girl
Walter and Emily Evans, girl
Earle and Helen Gay, girl
James Riley, girl
Elmer and Doris Clifton, girl
Albert and Marion Smith, girl
Alonzo and Carrie Smith, boy
James Riley, boy
Earman and Viona Johnson, boy
Lindsay and Lula Robinson, boy
Andrew and Olethia Wood, boy
Thomas and Naomi Gillis, girl
Earman and Joseph Bell, boy
Joseph and Mary Bell, boy
John and Daisy Woodward, boy
Bentiam and Madeine Frye, boy
Levi and Frances Hawkins, twins, boy and
Deaths Reported
Archibald Robinson, 72, 1010 S St., N.W.
Jeremiah Holland, 71, St. Elizabeth's Hospital No. 1.
Henry H. Horns, 60 for Aged and Infirm
Stewart H. Brown, 65, 415 Third St. N.E.
John H. Thomas, 58, 1604 Frankfort St. S.E.
Judith Jackson, 53, Garfield Hosp.
Ida Jones, 49, Garlinge Hosp.
Al Cohen, 42, Casualty Hosp.
Ella Wesler, 40, Gallinger Hosp.
John H. Mosley, 36, Tuberculosis Hosp.
John H. Mosley, 36, Tuberculosis Hosp.
Louella Street, 24, Gallinger Hosp.
Adelina Mosley, 20, 1621 Sixth St. N.W.
Delores R. Rogers, 4, Casualty Hosp.
Harman K. Weedman, 5, Cheeseman Hosp.
Elia Caras, 42, Casualty Hosp.
After 50 Years
What will be the con
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FUNERA
1820 to 1924 N
REASONABLE—RES
Jane Washington, 72, 1744 Kalorama Rd.
Mary Beaver, 58, Gailinger Hosp.
Edmonia Fenwick, 47, 4a N St., S.W.
Mary Beaver, 58, Gailinger Hosp.
Jean Holmes, 4, 625 Virginia Ave., S.E.
Eliza J. Slade, 87, 314 R St., N.E.
James Green, 70, St. Elizabeth Hosp.
Hulda Barnes, 54, Freedmen's Hosp.
Hulda Barnes, 54, Freedmen's Hosp.
Elisha Almond, 38, Emergency Hosp.
Nancy Quick, 26, Freedmen's Hosp.
Elmer T. Cuffy, 25, 1404 Sixth St., N.W.
Emma Powell, 88, 303 Eleventh St., N.E.
Mick Mitchell, 63, 1742 T St., N.W.
William Barham, 57, Gailinger Hosp.
Phillip Manuel, 50, Gailinger Hosp.
Emma Brown, 47, 323 V St., N.W.
Phoebe Ballard, 48, 423 New York Ave.,
Austin Flickling, 84, Garfield Hosp.
Mary Ann Perry, 75, 1749 Eleventh St., N.W.
William Cochil, 50, Providence Hosp.
Maria Nebit, 41, Freedmen's Hosp.
Robert J. Gordon, 38, Vet Adm. Facility
Carrie A. Foster, 28, T.B. Hosp.
William Kinard, 24, 2317 H St., N.W.
Teresa Green, 4 mons, Hosp.
Honor Williams, 61, Home for Aged and
Infirm.
Jessie Barnett, 26, 936 Tallest St., N.E.
Janie E. Smith, 15 mons, Gailinger Hosp.
Infant to Vannie Pinkney, 15 hrs., Galer
William King, 60, 1626 Fifth St. N.W.
William Glimore, 58, 142 Seaton Place.
William H. Hunt
William Bedford, 50, 1490 A South Capitol
Jennie Gray, 40, 60 P St. N.W.
Sadie Bassley, 30, Emergency Hosp.
Willis Robinson, 20, Gallinger Hosp.
William Bassley, 20, Gallinger Hosp.
Amanda Wilkins, 88, Gallinger Hosp.
James Henderson, 70, 612 St. S.W.
Licensed to Marry
Lofton Kennedy, 28, 915 N Street, North-
west Street, Rose, 29, 1774 W
Street, Northwest.
Charles Edward Hawkins, 21, 22, Quincy
Place, Northwest, and Wilnet Adrien, 15,
123 Pierce Street, Northwest.
James Jackson, 19, 827 Ninth Street,
Northwest, and Mary Warren, 15, 4
Blagden Street, Northwest.
Richard Brown, 33, 165 Half Street, Southwest, and Elisie Briscoe, 25, 1624 C Street, Southwest.
William G. Scott, 24, 145 Washington Street, Northwest, and Helen Everett, 21, 1921 Capitol Avenue, Northwest.
John T. Street
Burrell McDowell, 27, 1433 T Street,
Valley, 22, 1628
Nicholson Street, Northwest
Levi Folks, 33, Prince Williams, Va.,
and Annie Bay'or, 25, Ruther Green,
Virginia.
· George Jefferson, 19, 1020 Church Street,
Northwest, and Leola Murphy, 18, 1808
Street, Northwest.
TRICT OBSERVES NEGRO HISTORY WEEK
BEST. NEWS OF THR. N4™ ONS CAPITAL
DR. €. &. WOODSON
NEGRO HISTORY
WEEK SPEAKER
a oe =
Negro History Week exercises
were held in Birney School andi-
torium, inst Monday night, by the
Hillsdale Citizens’ Association, the
Birney Parent-Teacher Association,
the Frederick Douglass Peace Cir-
cle, and the Birney Community
Center.
livery Brown, president of the
Hillsdale Citizens’ Association, in-
trodueed Miss Emma V. Smith,
who acted as mistress of ceremon-
ies, and delivered an address. The
audience sang “America,” and the
Rev. P. A. Scott, pastor of Camp-
bell A.M.E, Church, led in the in-
vocation, The Girls’ Glee Club of
Yirney Community Center sang a
Selection, with Mrs. Edna Dockin-
at the plano,
Douglass Honored
Dr, Amanda Hilyer, president of
Frederick Douglass ‘Peace Circle,
paid a tribute to “The Shrine o:
Douglass,” and plead for aid to
repair ‘and beautify the road and
grounds of the Douglass home.
Miss Anna L, Goodwin, generat
secretary of the Community Cen-
ter Department, sang “So ‘lired, I
Want ‘lo Sit Down.”
The New Negro Alliance was
represented by Attorney B. V. Law-
son, one of its administrators,
DePriest Sends Greetings
Morris Lewis, secretary to Con-
gressman Oscar DePriest, brought
greetings from Mr, DePriest, and
delivered an address on “Evidences
of Prdgress on the Part of the Ne-
gro,” which was followed by a se-
Iection refered by the Birney
Community Harmonizers, with Mrs.
Jennie Green Smith directing.
Dr. Carter G. Woodson was in-
troduced by Mr. Lewis. Dr, Wood-
ison reviewed. the history and
achievements of the Negro through-
out the world.
Miss E. ©, Thornton sang two
spirituals, “A City Called Heaven,”
and “Let My People Go.”
Mrs. Edna Dockins and company
rendered several instrumental trios,
‘and remarks were made by Mrs.
Martha Ellis, secretary, of the Bir-
ney Community Center, and by. Iv-
ery Brown, president of the Hills-
dale Citizens’ Association,
Commends Mr. DePriest
A resolution was read by Mrs.
Ida Berry, on behalf of the Mite
Missionary Society of Campbell
A.M.E, Church, of which Mrs. Vir-
gie Stewart is president, highly
commending Congressman DePricst
for the courageous fight he is waz-
ing in the United States Congress
fon behalf of the rights and gen-
eral welfare of the Negro in Amer-
fea. The resolution was unani-
mously adopted.
‘The meeting closed with the
singing of “The Negro National
Anthem,” Edward Syphax at the
piano, and the benediction by Dr.
Scott.
Boys’ Community Club to
Observe History Weel
The Terrell Junior High School
Community Club for Boys will ho!d
its first annual celebration of Ne-
gro History Week on Thursday,
Februray 15, at 8 p.m., in the audi-
storium of the school.
Carter G. Woodson, director of
the Association for the Study of
Negro Life and History, will ad-
dress the boys and their parents.
Miss Camille Nickerson, of Howard
University, and an outstanding
composer, will entertain the group
Sith some of her own compositions.
ee ee
Philkps School ‘
Mis. M. F. Thompson was the
featured speaker at meeting of
the Parent-Teacher A-sociation of
the Phillips Shool at a meeting
held in the school Thursday night.
Mrs. Tompson's topic was “Stand-
ards.”
Mrs. Daisu Magruder pre-ided
over the meeting and gave a short
talk on Child Trainirg for Use-
fulness.” Mrs, G. Hamm made a
report of lunches prepared by the
teachers and given to needy’ chil-
dren. She also spoke of the Jun-
jor Red Cross activities in giving
clothes, shoes, and toys to the ux-
derprivileged.’ Mrs, G. Reed spoke
of the free lunche: now being
given needy children.
Plans werg completed for a spe-
cial showing of “Alice in Wonder-
land.” This picture will be pre
sented to school children in the
Mott auditorium Saterday morn-
ing at 10:30 o'clock.
‘Mrs. Beatrice Simpton, Mrs, An-
na Beil Lee, and Miss Rosetta Mc-
Daniels were appointed as a com-
mittee to represent the school at
the Federation of Parent-Teacher
Associations. New Officers of the
association aré Mrs, Beatrice
Simpson, president: Mrs. L. Short.
er, vies-president; Mrs. Laura
Jackson, treasurer, and Mrs, Sadie
Gackin-,. secretary.
No. individuals are more fre-
quzatly wrong than those who will
not admit they have made an erro
when such mistake is evident.
| 2 Public School News 2
Cras SERGI © [leuel ae” re Sea Seniesa
re Pe ee ae ee” ek
In order to acquaint the new stu- |
dents of Cardozo High School with
the different clubs which they
might join, an assembly was held
on Monday, February 5. Miss J.B.
Mustapha, assistant principal, pre-
sided, and after explaining the
various clubs of Cardozo, introduc
ed the presidents of these as fol-
lows:
Thomas Yeldel], Gauntlets; Mol-
Jie Buchanan, rl Reserves; Ro-
land Miller, Red Cross; Cordelia
Key, Girls’ League; Romay Lucas,
Amaryllis Club; and Naney Rob-
ts, representing the Honor So-
ciety.
Each of these spoke to the new
students about the activities of his
group, At the conclurvon of the as-
sembly, lists of clubs and activity
cards were distributed among the
new students.
‘The Purple Masque Dramatic
Club will present “Sacrifice,” « one-
act Play of Nexto L:fe, written by
‘thelms M. Duncan, on Thursd.y
‘evening, ‘February 15, in the school
auditorium.
~The cast includes Ruth Washing-
‘ton, John Yeldell, Summer John-
son_and Marie. Tignor. On_ the
staff are Julius Newman, stage
marager; Gladys Holland,’ make-
artist; Thelma Dorry, properties
‘manager; Rowesa Johnson, promp-
‘ter; and Mrs. L, J. Lovett, director.
Music will be furnished by the
Cardozo High School Orehestra,
under the’ direction of Felix W.
Weir and Arthur Smith,
‘The program is planned as a fea-
ture “of Negro History Week for
the entertainment of the Parent-
‘Peacher Association,
In preparation for Negro History
Week, section 11B1 has posted on
its bulletin boards numberous pic-
tures of Negroes who have made
worthy achievements in the world
of polities, business, science, music,
art, and literature.
These include Benjamin Banne-
ker, Carter G. Woodson, Richard B.
Harrison, Mrs, May Howard Jack-
son, Clarence C. White, Henzy 0.
‘Tanner, Dr, Ernest E. Just, Robert
H. Terrell, Colonel Benjamin 0.
Davis, Mathew A, Henson,
Elizabeth Prophet, S, Coleridze
Taylor, Alexander Dumas, Jadge
James’ A. Cobb, Dr. Nathaniel
Dett, Paul Robesom Senator H.R.
Revels of Mississippi, and the fol-
lowing Representatives to Con-
gress:
Fenjamin S, Tanner of Alabama,
Robert C. De Large of South Caro-
lina, Josiah Wallis of Florida, Jef-
ferson H. Long of Georgia, Joseph
H, Rainy of South Carolina, and R.
Brown Elliott'Gf South Carolina,
Miss M..0,,4. Williamson is the
scetion teachers
The Brush ana Palatte Club vis-
ited the Corcoxan Art Galary on
up w-tist; Thelma Dorey, propz:ties
C.W.A. artists that mere on exhibi-
tion there,
‘The members of the club who
took the trip follows: Clara Lee,
Elsie Woodbury, Marie Tignor, An-
drow Mickens, dulius Newman, and
Ernest Gilbert. :
Previously the elub had taken
two trips, one to the Berrett School
to see the paintings by Elmer
Simms Cainpbell, a Negro illustra-
tor; the other to, Shaw Junior High
School to see the display of work
done by pupils of Armstrong, Car-
dozo, and Dunbar High Schools. On
all of these trips the group was ac-
companied by Dr, John B. Washing-
‘ton, sponsor of the Brash and Pal-
ctte and teacher of commercial art.
Creative work done by pupils of
‘Commercial geography is being ex-
hibited in Room. 108 of Cardozo
High School. ‘Thia work includes
illustrations of the story of tobac-
co, corn, paper, cotton, wheat, salt
and rubber, as'well as the uses of
these produits in various forms.
‘These clesses arc in charge of Miss
M. O’H. Williamson,
Dunber High School
During the pest week, the ac-
tivities of Dunbar Senior High
Schoo] were directed toward the
reorganization for the second sem-
ceter after having graduated 62
students at* the mid-year com-
meneen.ent,
Similar accidents, thouzh not at
the seme time, happened to two
members of the senior class. Both
Charlotte Ridgley and Harriette
Peiham, inseparable companions,
were injured in sleighing acci-
dents, Miss Pelham hopes to be
out within .a week, while Miss
Ridgley may be forced to remain
indoors somewhat lorcer.
‘The DJ.R.C. (Red Cross Club)
of Dunbar will present a variety
program on St, Valentine's Day!
Among its unique features will bz
the presen‘ation of an orchestra,
whose director is William-White, a
sophomore, and marionette acts by
Carolyn Johnson, Ann Burwell and
Mildred Thurston,
The American Book Company
has just published’a French text-
book by Will Mercer Cook, How-
ard University professor and 1020
gtaduate of Dunbar. This text, a
compilation of excerpts from great
French. scholars, will be avaflable
within the next few weeks.
‘Miss Elizabeth Catlett, Dunbar
Ereea te ae selected as ae
the. artis take part in
CWA. "art project.
Negro History Week for 1934
was inaugurated at Dunbar with
imprestive exercises in the Ar-
sembly Hall,
‘Miss. Ella Houston, teacher. 0!
English at Howard University ad.
[dressed the fchool on the subjee
ete sper eran
[2 Mian Maes Betopa alave i “Ox
Bended Knees” by the composer,
Hany T, Burleigh,
On Monday, February 12, the
high school teachers. of English
heard an address by Dr. E. P.
Davis, dean of the School of Lit
beral Arts, of Howard University.
Miss Josephine Johnson, teacher
of history, was married’ to Mr.
Scbaeffer Bentley. Mr, and Mrs.
Bentley, are residing at 1018 S
Street, Northwest.
Terrell Junior High School
The members of the Terrell
Community Club for Boys spent
the last half hour of the elub period
Friday, in their first meeting. Mr.
Stinson opened thé meeting with a
discussion of its purpose and an
outline of the program of all fu-
ture meetings, stressing the proper
attitude of each boy toward’ his
‘club and his obligation to attend its
‘meetings, ‘The second and fourth
‘Fridays in each month were set
aside as meeting nights.
Following the singing of “The
Last Round Up,” which was led by
John Herring, appointed chairman
fof the music committee, Mr. Stin-
son introduced Miss V.'E, Chase
principal, who talked on morale.
Each member was given. a chane:
to express himself regarding th:
club and many expressions were
read before the elub,
‘The meeting closed with th:
singing of the Negro spiritual,
“Tis Me, O Lord.” *
Negro History Week
The activities for the celebration
of Negro History Week will conte:
around two main assemblies. Th:
first will be given Thursday for th:
juniors, at which time a playlet
“Booker 'T. Washington,” will by:
presented by pupils under the di.
rection of Mrs. A. D. Gates. The
second assembly, for the senior:
on Friday, will feature the Rev
A. F, Elmes, of People's Consre-
gutional Church, as speaker, Mu-
sic and recitations aporopriate for
the oceasion will be given.
Slides from the visual educatio:
department are being shown in th:
history classes featuring outstand.
ing Negroes, Besides this each
teacher is to discuss in his classe:
in his particular line of work th:
important Negroes in his field an‘
the contributions. they have given
to mankind in general.
Section 8BG has organized a new
clab called “The Secret Eeho.” Its
purpose is to teach worthy use of
leisure,
In. celebrating Negro History
Week, the sponsor, Mrs. L. M. Hill-
man, showed slides of outstanding
Noztoes and talked about™ th:
achievements of each one shown.
‘The celebration included music by
Nogro composers sung by» Negr.
‘artists.
Vocational School
More than 110 néw studeuts en-
tered the school with th begin-
ning of the semester, February 1,
swelling the enrollment far above
the 400 mark.
The assembly held on last Thurs
day served a double purpose. ‘The
Student Council officers welcomed
the new students and explained
the aim of the girls who attend
tke Vocational School and the
funetion of the Student Council.
The officers in charge were Janie
Hedgeman and Ruth John-on.
Roza Lee Mathews recited "No
Chance,” and Willa Mae White
fag a solo. In nddition to the wel-
come {9 new students, the Student
Counei} honored those girls in the
sehcol who held the larget num
ber of merits points during the
last school month.
The honor girls were as follows:
those holding the highest number
of 140 to 208 points designated as
“sages” were:
Evelyn Ayers 208, Rita Thomp-
son, Teresa Smoot, Edith Ware,
Ruth Johnson, Virgia. Sparrow,
Edith ‘Taylor, Corsuclla Wood,
Odessa Stewart, Frances Mini:
field, Thelma Miller, Cecelia Sa-
voy, Elizabeth, Brabson, Frances
Mezdows, Christina Harris, Lillian
Goldman, Croola Kitehings,
Mildred Johnson, Janie ‘Hedge-
man, Frances Clark, Edith Ayers,
Margaret Cook, Bertha Davis
Elizabeth Coleman, Mattie Barnes,
Estelle Anderson, Berdie Holsdale,
Margaret Harar, Ruth Bland,
Georgiana Holloway, and Lena
Adams.
Those receiving from 121-139
points designated as “‘scribes”
were: Blanche Jackson, May Mor-
ris, Pearlina Malachia, Dorothy
Riddick, Adele Harper, Celestia
Pierce, Emma Holloway, Chri:tina
Martin, Beulah Johnson, Ruth
Shorter, Edna Miller, Margaret
Morgan, Ernestine Howard, Ethel
ardnick, Emma Johnson ‘Myrile
Watton, Irene Smoot,
Evelyn ‘Lewis, Thomasine-Salli-
van, Annie Posey, Lauretta John-
son, Hazel Richardson, Catherine
Myers, Anna Biue, Blaine. Adams,
Geralding Primrose, Dorothy Proe:
tor, Adelaide Summers, Sarah
West, Lottie Stewart, Elnora Rob-
inson, Myrtle Jones, Alice Le
Grande, Wilhelmina Anderson.
Those receiving from 112 to 120
points designated as “pazes”
were:
Hazel Howard, Amy Wood, Hat
tie Turman, Grace Price, Mayme
Henderson, “Oreste. Carson, | Kat
rite Mann, .Nsomi_ Faunteroy,
Vinita Gray, Thema. Gray, Odessa
ASHINCTON TRIRIIE TMIPSNAV, FERRITAPY 45.
ces Munley, Ozeil Poxley, Lillian
Russell, Janie ‘Tolson, ©’ Mildred
Duckett, Maude Benau, -
Mac Robertson, Beatrice Ellis,
Bernict Arderson, Alice Brown,
Pearl Williams, "Martha White,
Bertha Brown, Alice Proctor, and
Lula Burrell.
On Friday afternoon, the induc-
tion of girls making A or B aver-
ages into the Honor Society was
held. ¥
The girls in the Honor Society
are?
‘Teresa Smoot, Edith Ware, Ritu
B. Wood, Rernice Stewart, Myrtle
Thompson, Birdie Holsdale, Amy
Hatton, Thelma Jones, Hattle
‘Tarman,
Frances slecdows, Ruth John-
son, Naomi Faunteroy, Mary Nor-
ris, Elizabett. Brabzon, Bertha
Dorsey, and Vranees Manly.
G. BE. Jones's section on last
Wednesday morning with Estelle
Anderson, presiding. After singing
“Holy, Holy, Holy,” Serena Lee
read the Bible after which the
Lord’s Prayer wax recited by the
whole schoo! followed by the sing-
ing of one verse of “Sweet Hour
of Prayer’ with bowed heads. An-
na Blue then sang a solo. “Hew
to Succeed” was discussed by Ed:
monia Clarke, and Francis Clarke.
Pearl Williaens then rendered a
‘solo followed by a recitation by
‘Lillian Goldman.
On Thursday Mrs.\L, J. Ed-
wards’s section gave a very inte:
esting proram with — Elizabeth
Brab.on in charge. Mobtos were
recited by Ruth Davis, Mamic
Stephens, Naomi: Faunteroy, Ros-
sottn Gold=n, Elizabeth Wideman,
followed by a recitation, “Loyalty”
by Maude Benau.
‘The whale section recited “Team-
work? efter which “To Thee, O
Country” was sung by. the whole
sehool, Elizabeth. Brabnon’ then
recited an or'ginal poem by Eve-
lyn Everett, “Our Podge.”
Many plans were made for) a
vory interesting program of ac-
tivities duriny Negro. History
Weck.
‘Randall Junior Bich Schoo}
On Tuesday Dr. D. H. Kress, of
‘The Washington Sanitnium and
Hospital gaye an filustrated lee:
titre to the feculty and student
|bedy on the evil eftects of narcot-
‘icy and aleshol, ‘The following day
‘Mirs Laura Bowman, an actress,
and Edward Harris, manager of
‘the Raphas! Theatve, visited tha
school. Miss’ Rowman entertainet
the students with a. short history
of her Ufe ant travels and also
rerdeved a short radio skit,
The Morning Sing wes conduct
ed Thursday by Section’ 935 under
the direction of Elizabeth Jackson,
chairman f the program commit:
tec, It consisted of a sextette by
Norman Proctor, James Webster,
Nelson Hitdson, Mary _Edelin,
Grace Curtis and Mitiam Brooks;
a quariétte by Vivian Mitchel, Mi-
riam Brooks, Gladiola Powell’ and
Evelyn Shorts; a quintette by
Juanita Johnson, Margutcvite Epps,
Thelma Clark, Catherine Colding
tnd Madeline Brown: a duct by
Annie Bill'ngs and. Mary Edelin;
anda solo by Burnc!] Johnson, The
teacher in charre of this section
ia Mirs BE. R, Clarke,
Mics M. A. Miltor and Miss
N.L. Butcher brought the faculty
sore practical suggestions on
guidanes at theseducational meet
ing on Tue-dav, Mrs, 'P. C, Alexan
der, guidance coordinator, was
present and participated in the dis-
cussion. Mrs. Alexancy also ad-
minstered tevty to the TA pupils
this week preperatory to the ad-
ministration of a controlled expezi-
ment planned by the principal, Dr.
Long, Mrs, Crubbs, and mathe-
matics teachers to determine the
Cfficacy of certain techniques of
teaching mathematics.
The French class, under the di-
rection of Mrs. D. C. Deleon, pre-
tented “Ea Bolle ct la Bete” at the
seventh period on Friday. The pu-
ils taleing part were Gi dys Wise-
man, Lelin Liverpool, Florence
sania elety Ruszell, _ Mrytle
Easton, John Spriggs, William
Wilson, Columbus Hall, Bernice
Matthews, Jonnie, Adams, Ethel
Williams, Elizabeth Hawkins, Ber-
‘nice Chapelle, Rosa ‘Tucke:, 'Mar-
ie Hill, Gertrude Long, and Ne!
Hie Seatt R:
Browne Junior High School
The contest for the sale of tick
ets for the play, “home,” to be
presented by the Deanwood Play-
ers in the Browne auditorium on
Tuesday evening, Februaty 20, is
exciting much interest among ‘te
pupils,” Each pupil wao shalt hav.
sold and mide returns for two
adult tickets by Monday, February
19, will be given a free pupil ticket.
The performance is under the avs:
pices of the Browne Parent-Teach-
et Association, of which Bruce
Stowart is president.
The school has purchased an
‘eight-tube Majestic cabinet radio t)
be used especially for after-lunch-
eon programs in the auditorium.
Electricity has been added to the
curriculum for the second semes-
ter. W. H. Payne, Jr., is instruct-
ing boys interested in this particu-
Tat sho» work,
The principal, teachers, acd pz
pils had as honor quest of the as
sembly Thursday, Miss Leura Bow-
man, internationally known singer
and actress. Miss Bowman, draw-
‘ing frequently upon her el ex-
rier jon stage, screen, ra-
dio, both here and abroad, spok:
at length on the subject of ambi-
Httny agi iggy AONE goto EME HUERTA ARENA AREA HEEFT gE ute 1 |
ao ET ee ee eet vata trast ltt ant Cama eae
UL TU 1d YUIINY.
Now is the time to prepare
for your Spring DANCE or
RECEPTION. Z
There is no better place to
give it than in the beautiful
CASINO |
On U ST. between 9th and 10th
Convenient to Ali Car Lines
“Not too Large Not too Smail-Just Rite”
See MR. LEE or
Cali POTOMAC 1667
: SUN ga apOOPBRNNA Dy cg ADELLENA tgp SSU TALLY G5 rt SFT gyy PEELE ST APEEMNBA Gg id -oohb gy got tASEUNN Egy et" gees! lage TT ge
tian Bsgeane Marri Maerua das eye S legen lye lggggtcasegrtt cas, aby: 49 ge
ultimate venlization, ”
‘The xepresentatives of the va-
rious ots held a “Friday Sale,
selling ‘the idea of lube to the
new members of the student body
Each club representatives usingbis
best <alesmanship, presented” the
atiractive feature of his club and
Solicited memberships for ite 2
The clubs und their representa:
tives were as follows: z
Airplane, Clifford. Baynes; Book
Lover-, Fvancina Bridwes; Camera.
Lillian” Leake;, Danbers,. Liltian
Gargues: Peenth,, Willem ‘Bethel;
Glee, Nac Tillett; Girl Seout,- Nor-
ma ‘Hodzes Girt Reserves, Jose:
phine Hateis; Games (boys), Elva
Noble;
Hostess, Adelaide, Wade; Latin,
Wade Causby; Mathematics, Bon-
jamin Washington Matheratic:
ecrcation, James Rogerss Nei
Achievement, Rose Ann West; Re:
Cros’, Marian Baber; Spatieh. Par:
thenia Ruffin; “Travel, Pilmon
OBryant; Patrol, Kenneth: Cones;
Pessonality. (boys), Lewis’ Queen:
Wootsrafi, — Horace: Robinxoy:
Metal Craft, “Stanley Leveson;
Drarratics, Ruth Proctor.
Night Schoo! Notings -
By ALVEN “CHICK” WEBB
Things are biginning to hum at
ole Cardoso Night School, Schou!
team played itp ‘initial contest
Beainst the “Armetrong Nich
(School warriors, bur wete thrown
Mor a loss, 29. to 2%, in their first
Sifort to “buck the victory (ine.”
No yame is scheduled for this ('}-
day evening, i
All students are “pepped up" for
the presentation of the sel:o01’s ane
neal Nearo History Week ussom-
bly progcam to be held instoa,
however gamessard shhoduled fo
hext Moriday gid Mriday, at whica
time the Carddza aachine will d
battle against the, Penasyivaciia
Red Caps and the Potomac a. C.
fives,
‘A’ five-week ‘courie in Socta!
Problems study has been inaugu-
frated ut the Ninth Streee in=titu-
fion. Problems) that particularly
affect the Negro will bw discussed
in vexular forum nyestings to be
held cach Kriday tupite
As predicted.in thia euliian last
week, the Public Speaiing Claas of
‘this School bus drawn a record!en-
rollment of 60 students up to the
time of this writing, Needless. t:
‘Stale, the class is dominated by
females, Mrs. BE. B, Day is the
instructor, .
‘Two of the moat popular male
students at Gatdoxg Night posses:
‘an identical cogsomen Richard.’
Shcis last tay (are) Fohplon ed
‘ole.
‘This’ columemist’ wonders, if Arfe-
‘Wide sre Ty pursuing any sia
dies at night Sehool. Theve is a
possibility’ that ‘she might have
three ‘stndy “hours” in the audk
tarhim. | Operutor. No, £1845 0¥
tells imo ihat che as constantly seen
there.
o"Ponular Mark Chapman is a ean-
diate for the basketball team,
“As ta “Rich” Jebuson, erstwhile
Washingtan Lead brummel,
Congratulations are in order (be-
lated though thoy may be). to Dot
Hankins, She recently “took the
fatal step.” Lucky fellow.
Witham (Bill) Curry, nomination
(pexcanal) for the lady at Cardozo
hint posserecs class with a eapital
4G." Rachel Maxwell, the. camer
eisisis that John” (Mnncola)
Wee. to Veewine' 9 Roa the
fall of 1034.
Fron (Owls) Butler hal) ins
fobined me that his clitb’s “formal”
was a “screaming” sascess, | How
about prosioling a school dance
Yor uss Frank?
Never sce Blancho Braswell and
Ada. Davis these nights. Wander
what hay become of those “Sal
ies"? :
“And now, Shall clone this: Httle
Blas book.
Biase ps tee
Cordoze High Orchestra
Feature of Assembly
The Cardozo High Seboot Orches-
tra wesia feature of the Freshman
Acsemminy, held on February 6, in
the school guditorium.
Whe oreestea ei macie played
twa selections, “The Minuet” and
*Clage ant sBengty.” | owas dis
vovted by Belix W. Weir and Ar-
thar Smith, In aditition to this,
Blaine Buller demostrated the wie
of the Violin, Gearge Davia the
cette, John Haulin the trumpet,
Clark Carter the flute, Laurenes
Fryo thy bass wolln, Graham Mits
chall the “ttombone, Catherine
Gaitet the €lavinet, and Jasper
Pookrent, the drum,
Re N. Mattingly, principal, tire
ca the fecshmen to Join the Gardo-
zo Hirch- Schoob ‘Orchestra and ‘ex-
plained the metheds by whieh they
could. become members. j
peat
7
Wilberforce to Celebrate
Its 123rd Anniversary
WILBERFORCE, Ohio—Wilber-
force colebrates the 120d birthday
anniversary of Its foandex on Feb-
ruapy 24 and hopes between Feb-
yusty 12, Lineoln’s, birthday und
February 24 to got at least 25,000
named in its “Hook of @ Militon
faune’.” Kvety: pavzon Who, gives
$1 or more has Wi or hor namesin-
seribert fh, the hook untita million
Gain Ate obs ollet,
-live and lean
By JOSEPR GC. OVERTON
- Hiede-ho, everybody! This is
your popular program over the
‘new stition WTO (Washington
Teipune fice) giving you the lat
‘est news ina nutshell. Well here
goes:
| Basketball season is nearly over,
yet all of the teams seem to be
holding ther own. Armstrong's
fast five is showing the old “war
spirit? by, defeating all comers.
Dunbar and Cardozo also. are
(riving to teke the nennant, Even
the ehevr Iesders are mating “pep”
these days, Harold (Stim) Brown
and Little Willie Braxton are using
ail of their wind to. keep the ole
| Armstvong spinit in trime
Ernest Amos’s glee club is fearn-
ing soveral new songs these days,
One ,of them is the “moonshine
song.” It is entitled Pale Moon.”
John Williams. is lending a hand
by. polishing the “jvories,” Keen
it up, John, Remember Duke El
liniton started on the road to fame
by playing on the piano at Tech,
Suecess js, bound to‘eome: Ay
Dunbar's heating pleut sery-
Ing its purpose by ratsitic Use tem-
nevatuce in the school’s suditor-
ium. My, but St ts hot! Too bad
the CWA’ pointers have not seen
the anditoriam,
Freddic Davidson, popular poet,
seems to be looking things over.
| Dunbar has plenty of musical
talent, fame Scott. and” Morris
Murray, dv., are destined to become
great stage artists in the future.
No kidding. Margaret Montgom-
ery, known, as Dunbab's” “Sepia
Kate Smith,” thinks that she is get-
ne thin. (I know she can't sing
off an fat)
peatiatearie tas the New ‘Deal
Did you Know that the letters
CWA’ vepresent Cato W, Adams,
fe mstvong’s dean of boys?)
Now for some common’ sense.
Did you know that: 'A man ean sit
oll day, but his blood has traveled
168 miles while he ts quiet? In'a
normal person the blood cirentutes
at the rate of 621 fext every min-
ute, with a heart beat of 65 @ min-
ute. In year the blood has trav-
cled over 61,000 miles.
Have you heard or seen the
"Voice of the Sky”? When you
see the talking sign carrier in your
vicinity. remember that it is a five-
year-old plane, that its generators
can produce enough current to
Might 100, armall, hemos: tbat. ts
[loud speaker is 1,601,000 times as
lowd asx the human voices that. its
reverberations ean kill butterflies
and sun birds. Its dive operators
und-oilots ure alle to coaversa only
ly telegraph. Those wishing to
ELEVEN
advertise in this spectacular way
may hire this apparatns ‘for $250
an hour.
Mickey Mouse has been admitted
(o full citizenship in the domain of
art. With others of Walt Disney's
cartoons, to. the number of 100,
Mickey has just beon hung on the
wails of the Chicago Art Institute.
He was the feature of the re-open-
ing of the institute for the winter
season. Autographs of Colonel
Charles Lindbergh are said be
more valuable than those of any
other living person, Among: thos?
celebrities whose autographs com-
pare in value are President Roose-
velt, ex-President Hoover, Musso-
lini, Rudyard Kipling, and the
Princa, of Wales.
Kenneth Booth and Clementine
Nash are spending their spare
time together these school days.
Raymond Washington, a graduate:
of Tech, is making good at How-
ard. Mayhea doctor. Furman Lée
is cutting lunch these days, beeause
of a fair co-ed. Lee, you may
starve ig you keep it up. “A certain
lieutenant-colonel was seen walke
ing down U Street, Wednesday, in
company with a graduate of Arm-
strong. Recently two fair co-eds
fought over him. What a. mant
Also it. scems that the graduate’s
sister is interested in a captain,
A case of an armband, I suppose.
I would like to know an answer to
an important question, Who is the
most popular cadet officer in. the
three high schools? _ Especially
among the co-eds, Please «give
your pal an answer. Whom do you
think? A close competition will
‘be had I suppose, Philio Elmore:
is a candidate for first place, I
‘think,
We all wonder why Clarence
(Pep) Holmes has stopped visiting:
[4 certain young: lady’ on Virginia
Avenue. There is a rumor goit
around town that Gorge ‘Knight
and Helen Jackson are to be mar=
‘vied soon, Is it so?
- Blovence Jackson has swapped
fellows it seems. My, but she is
a fast worker. Have vou ever seen
‘a dream walking? Well, she has.
Boy, oh boy! A little bit of hu-
nor’ and a touch of good sense
‘completes my column for this weel
| Adios, folks, adios, May you
have a prosperous week of good
cheer and happiness, Follow this
column every week in The Tribune,
Welcomes New Students
At the February girls’ assembly,
held on Wednesday morning, Mrs.
Orra W. Spivey, assistant prince
pal of Armstrong High School,
welcomed the new girls and disy
cussed other matters concerning
affairs of girls at the school.
Generals Capture 1-Point Verdict From Poet Quint
Dunbar Nosed Out in Desperate Effort To Halt Armstrong
Crimson and Black Wages Vain Battle to Put an End to March of Conference Leaders; Poets Greet Entrance of Big Five With Scoring Spree
Fighting to the last minute, the Dunbar High School basketball team went down, barely nosed out in a 22-21 decision by the Orange and Blue bearers of the Armstrong Technical High School in the third School in the third game of the City Scholastic Series, at the Cardozo High School, last Friday afternoon. The game was a torrid affair from start to finish, and was witnessed by nearly 500 student enthusiasts.
A Sketch of the American Negro In the Squared Circle
Genera
Howard Junior Varsity Cardozo Victims
The Cardozo High basketball team emerged victorious in a 25-14 score over the Howard University Junior Varsity in the Cardozo gym last Wednesday. During the first half, the teams were evenly matched, the score being 13-8 in Cardozo's favor.
Dunbar Nosed O
Effort To Ha
Crimson and Black Wages
to March of Conference
Entrance of Big Five
Fighting to the last minute, the team went down, barely nosed out and Blue bearers of the Armstrong School in the third game of the Citi High School, last Friday afternoon from start to finish, and was witni siasts.
Although he started his "shock troops" as he has done in all his recent games, Coach Edgar Westmoreland, General tutor, saw his strategy nearly prove to be a boomerange. The move, presumably an effort to give his first string team an opportunity to receive final instructions after seeing the Poets in action, almost proved an undoing. It developed that the Crimson and Black machine, played to a standstill by the second team of their rivals, spurred when the "big five" entered the fray. As a result the half ended with Armstrong giving all it had to achieving a 12-12 tie.
Armstrong Forges Ahead
Resuming play, the Techites went
into the van in the first few
minutes on a beautiful fall-away shot
by Hayes and Covington's netter
from near mid-court. But Fenwick,
playing one of his season's best
games at the Dunbar pivot, retaliated with a spectacular follow-up shot and another two-pointed from just outside the foul lines.
Incidentally it was principally because Armstrong was the more successful from the 15-foot mark that victory went the way of the P Streeters. Coach Jacobs's lads were outscored 2 to 1 by their rivals which accounts for the loss in spite of a 9 to 8 advantage from scrimmage.
Foul Failures Disastrous
After a short respite in the scoring, the Generals again went ahead on four successive free tones, two by Logan and two by Glymph. It was at this point that Captain Boot Williams kept his Dunbar tossers in the game by snapping a two-pointer from a distance, and Plummer duplicated with a heave from the side line.
Red Briscoe rang the bell just before his teammate, Covington, went out on fouls, to put the Orange and Blue ahead, 22-20. Brooks's failure to register from the charity strip, and Fenwick's success on only 1 of 2 foul tones proved the nexus of the Jacobites as the final whistle put an end to desperate efforts of the Dunbar lads to turn the tide.
ARMSTRONG DUNBAR
Hayza, f. ... 0 1 G P F F F
Watt, f. ... 0 1 0 Plummer, f. 0 F F
Logan, f. ... 1 2 0 Armstrong, f. 0 0
Anderson, rf 0 1 0 West, rf. ... 0 0 0
Gymph, e. ... 0 1 0 Penwick, e. ... 5 1 1
Westm'f, g. ... 0 1 0 M.Willips, g. 2 1 0
Briley, g. ... 2 0 0 T.Willips, g. 0 1 1
Mack, g. ... 0 0 0
Covington, g 2 1 5 Totals ... 0 3 21
Payne, g. ... 0 0
Totals... 8 6 22
Referee-Lacy.
Windy City Lad Leads in Hornet Wins
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Austin Johnson, veteran sophomore forward and former Englewood High star of Chicago, was the uncanny high point Hornet ace with 25 points, Friday night, and 22 points Saturday night as the Alabama State Teachers' College Hornets continued in high running gear at home to rudely jolt the visiting LeMoyne College cagers, 40-22 and 50-27, after the visitors had come to the campus jubilant over their two initial conference victories scored at Tuskegee earlier in the week.
A Sketch of the In the Squ
BY REGIANLD A. FROE
Will the Negro regain the supremacy of the prize ring which he was held?
When Joe Walcott, the fighting demon, was put away in the psycho-ward of Bellevue Hospital in New York I began to reminisce about the days when Negro fighters were the nemeses of white opponents. This fighter was a member of that dusky battalion of fighters who should have ruled the priz ring. They were Joe Gans, George Dixon, Joe Walcott, Sam Langford and Jack Johnson. Of these, Dixon and Gans died penniless, Walcott is also near penniless. What a plight!
Langford the irrestible demon, was such a ferocious fighter that mere mention of his name would quiet the rage of his caucasian brothers. He never received a chance at any title.
Dixon, Gans, and Johnson were
NEWS OF THE SPORT WORLD
TWO VOCATIONAL LADS NEMESES OF DUNBAR
TWO VOCATIONAL LADS NEMESES OF DUNBAR
Baltimore Pair Garners 23 Points to Lead Scorers; D.C. Defeat Avenged
BALTIMORE, Md.-Putting up a sturdy defense behind the stellar offensive playing of Butler and Gibson, the Baltimore Vocational School basketball team evened the score with its second of three Washington, D.C., high school rivals in the South Atlantic High School Athletic Conference, here last Wednesday afternoon, 31-24.
Counting 23 points between them, this pair of Vocational stars swept the line up of both teams for scoring honors. They also aided in the counting of the remainder of their team's points by their all-round floor efforts.
Plummer and West, with five points each, were best for the Poets, who strove vainly to repeat their last second triumph in Washington two weeks before.
Y Protons Continue to Wing Defeat Miner
The Y.M.C.A. Protons basketball team kept up its winning pace by turning back the Miner Teachers' College Juniors in a 45-30 engagement in the school gymnasium, last Friday afternoon.
Sixteen points amassed by Joe Hall, newly acquired Proton guard, led the individual scoring for both teams. Tibbs and Brown, with nine and eight points, respectively, led the losing team's attack.
PROTONS MINER
G F P G F P
Childs, f. ... 3 0 Carter, f. ... 2 2
Miller, f. ... 0 0 Fibbs, f. ... 4 1 9
Tayler, f. ... 3 1 Brown, c. ... 2 4
Hamilton, f. 1 3 Anderson, g. 0 1
Baskerville, c. 0 1 Wwever, g. 1 2
Martin, g. 1 7
Hall, g. 7 216 Totals. 11 8 30
Shaw Tops Saints
RALEIGH, N.C.—Shaw University basketball team defeated St. Augustine, Friday, in the Shaw gym, by the score of 30 to 27. This victory puts Shaw on even terms with the Saints in the annual series between the two colleges.
the only Negroes of this grup who attained any title. Johnson double crossed his promoters by hammering Jim Jeffries into submission. It is said that this Negro sold his heavyweight title to Jess Willard that he might be allowed to reenter the home of the free and the land of the brave, yet upon his return he was forced to serve a term in Joliet prison. Joe Walcott like an avenging python preyed upon the white fighters to such an extent that he was forced to fight a man almost forty pounds his excess in weight. Walcott lost but one important, to Gans, who to my mind was the greatest fighter of all times in the lightweight class. Gans was a natural fighter who knew all the arts of pugilism. Dixon, the elusive hammered all comers.
These five Negroes, Dixon, Gans, Langford, Walcott, and Johnson would make a formidable array today if they were at their best.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 15. 1934
Ladees and Gentlemen!! Introducing:
8
SAMMY WILLIAMS HEADS MU-SO-LIT BOXING CARD
SAMMY WILLIAMS HEADS MU-SO-LIT BOXING CARD
Local Club to be Entertained by Wrestling and Boxing Show
Cyclone Sammy Williams, although he only weighs 152 pounds, is the perfect type of giant-killer. The Cyclone likes to take on the big fellows, and in his last five fights he has outhit and outfought light-heavies as well as full-legged heavyweights. Not long ago in first round our times by Elmie Baltimore he was dropped in the heavyweights. Not so long ago in first round four times by Elmie Briggs, a light heavyweight, and then came back to win every other round. Not long ago in Norfolk ring he kaoyed Tiger Henderson, 210 pound heavy.
The Cyclone will top the card of the Musolit Club Invitation Boxing and Wrestling exhibition to be held at Pythian Hall on George Washington's Birthday at 9 p.m. Williams has been matched by promoter Albert T. Jones with Jack Perry, a local middleweight of considerable promise. These two boys will go at ten speed for four rounds next Thursday night, Tommy Miles, amateur lightweight champion of Virginia and Pennsylvania, a lightning fast boxer and hard hitter, will don the mitts with Eddie Cooper, of Baltimore. Miles has compiled the spectacular record of 28 consecutive ring victories.
Over two honoured and fifty tickets have been distributed among the members of the Musolit Club for this innovation in Washington sport circles, and from the demand on them by their friends, this all-star card promises to be a tremendous success. Dr. Robert B. Pearson is chairman of the general committee in charge and Dr. J. Edward Trigg is in control of the sub-committee. They are being assisted by Dr. U. B. Martin, Dr. W. A. Goodloe, Dr. S. LeCount Cook, Dr. Henry Freeman and W. A. Reid.
Downie and Dover Girls Meet for Title
For once at least the girls will hold the center of the stage when Delaware State College and Downingtown Industrial School lock hoops on the Downingtown floor on Saturday evening. The feminine set-to will go a long way toward deciding the wearers of the 1934 M3A diedem. The Delaware and Downingtown lads are practically out of the money in the male division, but the fair ones are ready for the question.
Gans had the hardest time. He fought until he was no longer able due to tuberculosis. Gans defeated the lightweight champion, Battling Nelson in forty-two rounds of bloody fury. This fight hastened his death.
Now that the five have been eradicated there is a possibility of white supremacy. They must admit that this quintet would have ruled the ring if there had been any fairness in the manly art of modified murder.
In this corner to the left: FAT JENKINS, captain and crack guard of the World's Champion Renaissance. In the corner to my right: TARZAN COOPER, huge but deadly pivot-man of the same group of ball fingers. And underneath, Fats and Tarzan and the rest of the crowd: Smith, Cooper, Holt, Yancey, Jenkins, Ricks, Saitch and Young.
Fraternity Basketball Feud to be Revived with Omega-Alpha Clash
Colonnade to be Scene of Initial Meeting of College Factions; Game Set for George Washington's Birthday; Dancing to Follow
After a two-year lay-off, due to economic conditions and lack of a suitable place to play, fraternity basketball will make its return bow to Washington, next Thursday afternoon, in a George Washington's birthday feature basketball game and dance. The Lincoln Colonnade has been acquired for the staging of this first of a proposed fraternal series such as the District used to know several seasons back.
Freedmen's Hospital, after dropping the first game of the past week, tripped Liberty Loan for the next two. In these two games the Medicos literally smothered the Bankers under an avalanche of 101 sticks. Their play showed plenty of finese and a world of color. Incidentally all honors, save two, were grabbed off by the Freedmen's team or some of its members as follows:
High team set, 1,536; high team game, 570; high individual set and game, 362 and 155, respectively, both held by Dr. George Adams. Dr. Adams sports the high average of 106-5 for 17 games, is tied with several others with 7 strikes, and is runner-up in spares with 31. Dr. Phil Johnson, a team-mate tops him in this latter department with 32. Step lively, Phil, Capt. George is coming!
The Franklinls finally broke into the win column by upsetting the fast moving maulers of the Adjutant General's Office. The final score being 2 to 1. It looked like a clean sweep, for the Franklinls until M. Robinson, captain and anchor man, started to pile up a 123 score in the last few boxes of the final game.
The chief reason for the Franklinls' awakening is due no doubt to the return of T. Lofty to the line-up. This pin-topper is dangerous in anybody's league. Here's hoping that he will be in for the remainder of the season. G. Tyler, as predicted not so many suns back, is steadily on the up and up. The improvement of H. Hunter of A.G.O., since he has changed teams, is much in evidence. He formerly rolled with the Elites.
The Cosmopolitans eked (yes,
that's the word, EKED) out a 2
to 1 victory over the league-leading
Ambassadors. The former
leaders are chafing no little bit
because they are unable to flash
the old time form that kept them
at the head of the pack during the
past half season.
Freedmen's Hospital
1st 2nd 3rd Total
Dr. J. Payne. . . 97 90 122 300
Dr. Wm. Nelson. . . 90 93 183
Dr. J. Keene. . . 84 . . . 84
Dr. P. Johnson. . 89 110 93 292
Dr. W. Lane. . . 97 102 197 306
Dr. G. Adams. . . 97 110 155 362
Totals..... 469 502 570 1536
Fraternity Basket
Revived with Om
Colonnade to be Scene of
Factions; Game Set for
Birthday; Dan
After a two-year lay-off, due to
suitable place to play, fraternity ba
Washington, next Thursday afterno
day feature basketball game and
been acquired for the staging of
series such as the District used to
Leroy (Hickey) Clay, popular member of the Howard University publicity department, is behind-the promotion of this new series, according to the latest announcements emanating from the hilltop. Clay has signed the two teams which have been identified as bitter rivals ever since the birth of local fraternity basketball. The Alpha Phi Alpha outfit, boasting such luminaries as Lanky Jones, Ted Thompson, Mickey Synhax and Frank Steele, is slated to clash with the Omega Psi Phi combination of Mac Weatherless, Eddie Davis, Red Fowler, and Pete Johnson. The fifth man on the first of these teams is to be picked from
1st 2nd 3rd Total
John Scott..... 86 92 92 270
J. Hill..... 84 90 86 260
C. Carroll..... 117 107 106 330
J. Shippen..... 90 84 ..... 174
A. Demond..... ..... 98 98
J. Jones..... 99 119 97 315
Totals..... 476 492 479 1447
Franklin Business Asso.
1st 2nd 3rd Total
G. Tyler..... 109 98 95 302
J. Dodson..... 105 90 111 306
T. Lofty..... 108 124 88 320
B. Wharton..... 87 ..... 87
B. Johnson..... 80 85 165
H. Thompson..... 103 94 99 295
Totals..... 512 486 478 1476
A. G. O.
1st 2nd 3rd Total
H. Jasper..... 94 85 84 233
E. Davis..... ..... 93 93
L. Haley..... 87 84 ..... 171
C. Wood..... 92 86 89 297
H. Hunter..... 97 103 96 296
M. Robinson..... 92 96 123 311
Totals..... 462 454 485 1401
Ambassadors
1st 2nd 3rd Total
A. Williams..... 78 ..... 78
W. Frazier..... 105 116 211
G. Brown..... 93 83 ..... 175
C. Pollard..... 107 107
T. Foster..... 104 107 101 321
R. Johnson..... 110 103 107 220
J. Roberson..... 103 94 90 287
Totals..... 493 503 532 1428
Football Feud to be
Eega-Alpha Clash
The Initial Meeting of College
for George Washington's
racing to Follow
The economic conditions and lack of a
basketball will make its return bow to
on, in a George' Washington's birth-
ance. The Lincoln Colonnade has
this first of a proposed fraternal
now several seasons back.
the following group of unnamed Alphas: Archie Johnson, Clarence Smith, Lois Williams, and Charles Ware. Omega will call on one of the following to round out their quintet: Dick Temple, Slick Bradley, Joe Byrd, Babe Swift, and Eddie Evant.
Tuskegee High Wins
TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Ala. (ANP)—The Tuskegee Institute High School team defeated the Chilton County Training School, 2S to 7, on the Logan Gymnasium court. Tuesday night.
19
WYNNE STARS AS HOWARD DEFEATS A. AND T., 32-26
Freshman Garners 13 Points as Second Half Play Decides Issue
GREENSBORO, N.C. — Headed by Wee Willie Wynne, sensational freshman forward, who learned his basketball on a Brooklyn, N.Y., Y.M.C.A. court, Coach Johnnie Burr's Howard University basketball team turned back a stubborn Agricultural and Technical College outfit, here, last Thursday night. The final score was 32-26.
Six field goals and a free toss climaxed the efforts of the New York youngster and led both teams in the matter of individual scoring. The floor play of his teammate, Showbowl Ware, who also counted eight points for the visitors, was another advantage the Howardites enjoyed over their Agie opponents. McLean and McKoy, with 11 and 8 points, respectively, led the losing scorers.
At half time the Bisons were on
the front end of a 12-10 score, but
with the resumption of play after
the rest, the Washingtonens forged
ahead never to be again threatened.
Nine Bisons saw action Before
the pastime was completed.
HOWARD A. AND T.
G F G F
Wynne, f. ... 1 1 McLeen, f. 4 311
Wailer, f. ... 0 1 Bawne, f. 4 11
Parker, f. ... 0 1 Conway, f. 0 1
Penn, e. ... 0 1 McKoy, e. 4 01
Bayton, e. ... 0 1 Stewart, g. 0 0
Mearcathr, g. 0 2 Kennedy, g. 0 0
Holoman, g. 0 1 Graham, g. 0 0
Reid, g. 0 21
Walker, g. 0 0 Totals.11 420
Totals.14 432
Bisons Lose to Lions in Philly
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — The Lincoln University basketball team assumed the lead in the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association by defeating the Howard University Bisons, here, Wednesday night. The game was the second of the season between these two ancient rivals, and went to the Pennsylvanians, 41-33. Captain Bus Bergen and Bricklet Wright, aided by the stellar floor work of Martin Prerer, former Dunbar High lad, of Washington, D.C., carried the fight to the invaders. From start to finish it was a heated battle, with the Blue and White outdistanced in the end.
The loss was the third for the visitors and placed Howard below them, Morgan and Hampton.
Livingstone Basketers Win Pair of Games
SALISBURY, N.C.—Both Blue Bear basketball squads found themselves, Friday night, and Living-stone came out on the long end of both the men's and co-eds' game with Favretteville. The co-eds took the curtain raiser only after an extra period by the score of 8-8.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Howard Scores Impressive 30-27 Victory Over Hampton Pirates
Howard Scores Impressive 30-27 Victory Over Hampton Pirates
Conquerors of Morgan Succumb to Sustained Attack of Coach Burr's Bisons; Seasiders Threaten Only on Two Occasions; Ware is Star
By LAWRENCE I. BROCKENBURY
HAMPTON INSTITUTE. Va.—Accurate shooting deciding factor in a contest that brought together smoothly-clicking combinations ever to grace the court when the Howard Bisons eked out a 30-27 victory ov Pirates last Saturday night, in the most furious bu this season.
HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Va.—Accurate shooting proved to be the deciding factor in a contest that brought together two of the most smoothly-clicking combinations ever to grace the courts of the C.I.A.A. when the Howard Bisons eked out a 30-27 victory over the Hampton Pirates last Saturday night, in the most furious battle waged here this season.
MINER COLLEGE 5 WINS, LOSES ON EASTERN TRIP
Falters in Second Half of Bordentown Game After Trimming Dover
Coach Harold D. Martin's Miner Teachers' College quintet won and lost on its two-day trip, last weekend. The Dover State Teachers' College tossers dropped a 40-29 decision to the Washingtonians, but the smooth working Bordentown outfit outstayed the visitors to capture a last minute 42-36 verdict. The invaders went into the van in the Dover game early. McNeil and Talbert, enjoying a good night, accounted for 21 points between them. But it was not their shooting alone which featured the first game of the trip, because the Delaware boys had an ace in the hole also. Molock's 21 points led all individual scorers and tied the efforts of both the Miner attack leaders. Bordentown launched a determined second period drive to overcome a 25-19 Miner at the close of the first half, and to turn defeat into victory as the contest went into its waning minutes.
Talbert's 21 points in behalf of the invading team went for naught as Smith and Young, two Invisides forwards, rang the bell for 14 points apiece.
First Game
MINER G F P DOVER G F P
Talbert, f. ... 4 1 1 Moebek, f. ... 9 2 21
Best, f. ... 1 1 0 Harderle, f. 0 0 0
Cole, f. ... 3 1 1 Ward, f. ... 1 0 2
Mellil, e. ... 3 1 1 Hittet, f. ... 1 0 2
Wars, e. ... 3 0 0 Wonder, g. ... 0 2 2
Anthony, g. ... 3 0 0 Bannon, g. ... 1 0 2
Allen, g. ... 3 0 0 Shilling, g. ... 0 0 0
Horton, g. ... 0 1 1 Schilling, g. ... 0 0 0
Brown, g. ... 2 1 5 Schilling, g. ... 0 0 0
Totals ... 17 6 Totals ... 12 5 20
Second Game
MINER G F BORDENTOWN G F P
Talbert, f. ... 4 1 1 Smith, f. ... 9 2 11
Cole, f. ... 1 1 0 Harderle, f. 0 0 0
Wars, e. ... 3 1 0 Wonder, g. ... 0 2 2
McNeil, e. ... 3 1 7 McNeil, e. ... 1 1 7
Horton, g. ... 0 0 1 Brund, g. ... 0 0 0
Anthony, g. ... 0 1 1 Brund, g. ... 0 0 0
Coon, g. ... 0 0 0 Mitchell, g. ... 1 2 4
Brown, g. ... 1 1 1 Totals ... 19 6 42
Totals ... 11 7 2 Totals ... 19 6 42
Downie Girls Win;
Lose at Bowie
BOWIE, Md. — Although the Downingtown Industrial School court is still at the top of the M3A heap with four league victories, it had a narrow sackback here Saturday night when the Bowie Normal School maws held it to a 20-14 score. The Lomaxmen, however, could not prolong their one-game winning streak and dropped an exiting 25-24 verdict to the Taylorites.
Renaissance Prow
By "Y" Bash
The world champion Renaissan
this city, tomorrow (Friday) morn
1933-34 season on a capital city
Y.M.C.A. will be the host, and wil
ous wins the New Yorkers have e
first appeared here a decade ago.
Renaissance Promised Stiff Battle By "Y" Basketball Quint
The world champion Renaissance basketball team will arrive In this city, tomorrow (Friday) morning for jjs initial appearance of the 1933-34 season on a capital city floor. The Twelfth Street Branch Y.M.C.A. will be the host, and will try to stop the streak of continuous wins the New Yorkers have enjoyed over local teams since they first appeared here a decade age.
Headed by Fats Jenkins, hailed by followers of the game, as one of the greatest figures in sport-dom, the Rens will come to Washington with their full strength. Having just completed a Southern trip which took in every principal city below the Mason-Dixon line, the New Yorkers are expected to be at top form.
For the first time in several years, however, local fans feel that the champions will have their job cut out for them when they tackle the much improved Twelfth Street aggregation. Art Green, manager of the home town box, has gath-
ered a galaxy of stars under the Y.M.C.A. banner. The old nucleus of Slim Thomas and Ev Jeffries has been strengthened by the addition of Lanky-Jones, former Morgan College star; Frank Steele, of the New York Rockland Palace Five, and Tiny Adams, former local independent and college guard.
The Davis brothers, the Hawkins brothers and Pee Wee Gros round out the rest of the Christians' squad.
The clash is slated to be staged at the Howard University gymnasium. Starting time is 9 p.m.
Morris Brown Triumphs Over Morehouse, 35-25
ATLANTA, Ga.-Led by Big Jim Reid, stellar Wolverine "cripshot" artist, the Morris Brown Wolverines turned back the hard-fighting Morehouse Tigers, Saturday, for the second time this season, by a score of 35-25.
Impressive 30-27
Ampton Pirates
crumb to Sustained Attack of
; Seasiders Threaten
sions; Ware is Star
Accurate shooting proved to be the brought together two of the most to grace the courts of the C.I.A.A. a 30-27 victory over the Hampton the most furious battle waged here
From start to finish it was a nip-and-tick affair. Howard holding the lead for most of the contest. Only twice did the Pirates have the lead and only for a short time then. For the first few minutes they were ahead, 1-0, and then in the second half they brought a ray of hope to their followers when for a few minutes they were two points in front of their rivals.
Howard's floor game proved to be smoother than Hampton's during the first half. They also made good more chances under the basket than did the Pirates. For a long time neither team even tried to make a field goal, the defenses being so strong.
The second half opened with Hopson back at center, having been replaced by Owens for Hampton and Lancaster out. The Howard line-up was the same as at the beginning with the exception that Walker was in McArthur's place at guard.
Hopson started the second half scoring with a beautiful one-hand shot from the side. Walker's shot from under the basket countered and a few seconds later made another. He was injured shortly after, much to the relief of the Pirate forwards, and McArthur replaced him. Hooker made a foul and Hopson a field goal to reduce Howard's lead to four points. It was then that Hampton threatened to take the game from the Bisons. The diminutive Chicken Wilson took the place of Hooker, who was rather badly hurt. Hamm, taking a pass from Wilde made it 22-20. Then Wilson, after getting the tap from center, debilled across the center line and tassel the bell half the length of the court to tie the score as the crowd went into an uprush and Howard called time. There was so much noise in the gym then that even the times' whistle could not be heard. Hopson sank another onehand shot and the crowd grew even wild as Hampton was in the lead 24-22.
Showheat. We were walked away with scoring honors with 13 points while taking Captain Cutes Carter to a count foul shot. Hampton missed captain fouls to have gained the victory, making good seven out of their fifteen chances, while the Braun tussled in four of their six. Sewell went in for McArthur at guard for Howard. Foul shots by Were and Pinn had the score. With only four and one-shaft minutes remaining, Were made another basket and Carter a foul. Sewell shot a long one from the side, and Wynne a left-hand overhead toss to make the count 30-25, and Hampton called time. White replaced Owens for Hampton and made a perfect shot from the center of the floor. Howard's semifreeze had the Pirates scrambling hopelessly as the shot of the gun ended the game.
HOWARD G F P! HAMPTON G F P
Womne. f. 5 1 7 Team. f. c. 1 1 5 G F P
Carter. f. 0 0 0 White. f. 1 1 3 W
Waver. f. 6 1 15 Lancaster. f. 1 1 3 P
Pauley. f. 0 0 0 Hosson. c. 3 1 7 P
Pim. c. 0 1 0 Owens. c. 3 1 7 G
Brown. c. 0 1 0 (st. g.) c. 1 1 4 McArthur. g. 0 0 Hosken. c. 1 1 7
Wilker. 2 0 0 Wilson. 1 0 2 Sewell. 1 0 2
Reid. g. 1 1 1 1 2
Total's. 13 43 80
Referee—Hostex. Timkeeper—Fletcher.
mised Stiff Battle basketball Quint
ance basketball team will arrive in
ing for its initial appearance of the
floor. The Twelfth Street Branch
l try to stop the streak of continu-
enjoyed over local teams since they
ered a galaxy of stars under the
Y.M.C.A. banner. The old nucleus
of Slim Thomas and Ev Jeffries
has been strengthened by the addi-
tion of Lanky-Jones, former Morgan College star; Frank Steele, of
the New York Rockland Palace
Pive, and Tiny Adams, former local
independent and college guard.
The Davis brothers, the Hawkins brothers and Pee Wee Gross round out the rest of the Christians' squad.
The clash is slated to be staged at the Howard University gymnasium. Starting time is 9 p.m.
BEGINNING FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16th
HERE
THEY ARE
AGAIN!
The gorgeous girls of "42nd Street", "Gold Diggers"
and "Footlight Parade" All Dressed Up in Fans!...
FASHIONS OF 1934
THE SCREEN'S FIRST GREAT LAUGH EXTRAVAGANZA — with Songs and Music!
A First National
Sensation starring
WILLIAM POWELL
BETTE DAVIS
VEREE TEASDALE
FRANK McHUGH
FOURTEEN
"FOUR SAINTS" IS NEW OPERA WITH A LL-NEGRO CAST
BOSTON.—The opening of the Gertrude Stein-Virgil Thompson opera "Four Saints in Three Acts" in Hartford, on Thursday, February 8, presented one of the Negro singers to prove their musical ability. It is the first opera of note in which the entire cast is composed of Negroes, and it has attracted the attention of music lovers throughout the United States, and the results of the premiere will be watched with keen interest. The uniqueness of the style of the opera libretto, and the use of Negro artists throughout, has so engaged the attention of the public that the Columbia Broadcasting Company has arranged a special broadcast of the premiere.
Among those featured in the cast are: Edward Matthews, baritone; Mme. B. Robinson Wayne, soprano; Embry Bonner, tenor; Miss Bruce Howard, contralto; Abner Dorsey, bass; and Miss Altonell Hines, contralto.
Mr. Matthews, who is to play the leading role of St. Ignatius Loyola, is undoubtedly the best known of the above singers, especially here in Boston.
Beginning on his musical career many years ago in the choir in his home town church in Ossining, N.Y., through tedious preparation and practice he has gradually climbed the musical ladder of fame until he has been recognized by such masters as Roland Hayes, Walter Damrosch, and Serge Koussevitsky.
REPUBLIC
THEATRE
1343 YOU ST., N.W.
Phone North 3000
FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
FEB. 16-17-18
CHESTER MORRIS
GENEVIEVE TOBIN
in
"King For
A Night"
MON.-TUES.-WED.
FEB. 19-20-21
"Rainbow Over Broadway" With an All-Star Cast
STAGE and SCREEN
Look at 'em!—Bill and Bette
BETTE DAVIS and WILLIAM Theatre cinema "Fashions of 1934."
JANE
BETTE DAVIS and WILLIAM POWELL, who star in the Howard Theatre cinema "Fashions of 1934."
Movie Actress's Hubby Gets Jail Sentence
LOS ANGELES, Calif. (ANP)—Cinema actress Theresa Harris played a leading role in real tragedy this week when her husband, Dr. John M. Robinson, Jr., was sentenced to serve a year in the county jail for receiving stolen goods.
Ironically enough, Miss Harris's latest film vehicle was "All of Me." She won international notice for her work in "Baby Face" when she co-starred with Barbara Stanwyck and is being considered for the lead in the film version of Wallace Thurman's "Harlem," soon to flicker on the silver sheet.
Earl Dancer entertains radio listeners with a group of singers he calls "The Phantom Choir" in Black Rhapsodies, on Sunday evenings.
A new commercial over Columbia featuring Eddie South, "The Dark Angel of the Violin." is only 15 minutes once a week at 6 to 6:15 p.m., Eastern Standard Time on Sundays.
POWELL, who star in the Howard
Musicians in Recital at Cardozo High School
William D. Allen, pianist, and R. Tood Duncan, baritone, both of the Howard University Conservatory of Music, appeared in recital at Cardozo High School on Tuesday.
Mr. Allen's selections included Rachmaninoff's "Prelude," Dett's "Barcarolle" and Mowskowski's "Schozwaraltz." Mr. Duncan sang the Prologue from Pagliacci by Leoncavallo, "Thou Art Risen, My Beloved" by Coleridge Taylor, "On Mah Journey" by James Boatner, and "Death Song" by Camille Nickerson.
The artists were presented by the faculty committee on Negro History Week, which included Mrs. R. D. Brooks, Miss Helen F. Sparks and Miss M. O'H. Williamson, chairman.
Etta Moten says that "Carioca" gave her a new thrill because it was the first time she had ever seen herself "all up and down" on the screen. You'll admit yourself that seeing the Moten "all up and down" is an eyeful.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1934
SHOPPING the SHOWS Wherein the Tribune Goes to the Theatre By SAM LACY
Strand Theatre
If the ability to boast of the presentation of the queen of British actresses means anything, then the if I ole Ninth Street playhouse can be vindicated for listing "I Was a Spy," to begin tomorrow.
Madeleine Carroll, recognized as England's greatest actress, has the feminine lead, and she impersonates the character of the wartime heroine, Martha McKenna. Herbert Marshall, last seen in "The Solitaire Man," has the leading role opposite her.
"I Was a Spy" is the story of the heroic young Belgian woman, Martha McKenna, wife of a British officer, who was a hospital nurse during the war and engaged in secret service work for the Allies.
As a spy and a sister of mercy, Martha McKenna spent two years of her life looking after the German wounded in Belgium and conveyed military secrets to Germany's enemies.
The whole of the action of "I Was a Spy" takes place behind the German lines, and many big sets, such as the Square at Roulers, were specially constructed for the picture.
Those of us who saw "Cradle Song" remember how splendid the part of Sister Joanna was played by the newly arrived Dorothea Weick. Miss Weick, co-starred with Alice Brady in "Miss Fane's Baby Is Stolen," begins a six days' engagement at the Lincoln Theatre.
The story, originally from the pen of Rupert Hughes and adapted to the screen by Adela Rogers St. Johns, is a package of feminine dynamite.
It calls for the grief, the terror, the bereavement, the anger of a famous Hollywood motion picture star who has had her adored little boy torn from her grasp by kidnappers.
It calls for the abandon, the joy, the love of a carefree mother who can offer her child everything—before he is "snatched" and held for ransom.
And through it all Miss Weick, adapted for just such a part, comes with color's flying.
Elissa Laudi, Paul Lukas, Nils Asther, and Esther Ralston cast in "By Candlelight;" are headed for the Fifteenth and U Streets movie emporium. They will arrive there Saturday.
Imagine those two dark men in the same picture; ah, girls, don't that thrill? Oh, woe is me!
Suppose you had fallen in love with a beautiful girl. If she had led you to believe that she was of royal blood, and you had entered on a romance with her under this assumption, thrilled and delighted with the friendship of a member of the nobility, wouldn't it make you terribly angry to discover at last that she was only a maid for an Austrian countess?
Imagine the duplicity of the woman! But wouldn't she have some slight cause for anger herself when she learned at the same time that you were not the nobleman she had thought you to be, but merely the butler in the household of the Count Von Rommer, philandering bachelor?
HOWARD
Fresh from the Arcadia Ballroom, Fifty-third (if memory serves ye ole maestro aright) and Broadway, New York, comes Turner's Ar adians to the Howard, beginning tomorrow (Friday).
Emmitt Matthews, one of the season's sensations with the clarinet, can be relied on for feature work with his long, slim tooter.
Doris Rheubottom, perhaps one of the most popular female voices ever to grace a local stage, accompanies the music-makers.
Miss Rheubottom's greatest success was
probably her rendition several years ago of "Dear Old Southland" for which many requests are made on every appearance here.
On the screen will be "Fashion Follies of 1934." Ten great stars, featuring William Powell and Bette Davis. Two hundred gorgeous girls and sixty beautiful models doing the "fan dance." Ha, cha!
Hailed as the most fabulous creation of Warner Brothers, makers of "Forty-second Street," and "Gold Diggers of 1933," Fashion Follies holds much promise.
Our Own Opinion
· Howard
I dare say all I need do is make mention of the fact that THE DUKE was at the Howard last week. ELLINGTON, though looking a bit more dissipated than on any of his previous appearances here, has nevertheless lost none of his personal charm and appeal where the ladies are concerned.
Be it said for the favor of the old home town boy, whether his band is having an "on" week or an "off" week, the piano-player-leader never fails to register: himself
sits the Duke plunking away at the ivories — there is applause. The music stops, and the Duke gets up—there is applause. He walks to the center of the stage and bows—there is applause. He flashes that smile—there is applause. He introduces the next act—and there is more applause—not always for the act.
With Ellington is Ivie Anderson (last week I failed to note change in spelling her name), who offers a catch blues song and a smart little recitation to the accompaniment of the Duke's music. With Ellington is a spectacular dance team which calls itself the "Four Blazers." It consists of as nifty a set of tap dance artists as have ever set foot on the Seventh and T Street's stage.
With Ellington is Bobbie Gaston, slim, enticing creature who issues just the kind of vocal music your writer loves to hear. There are others too, thus affected, because Miss Caston all but stops the slow. There's no question but that she steals the beam from the popular Miss Anderson. With Ellington i a brother and
RAPHAEL
1376 9th & O Streets, N.W. Manager Home of the Best First Time Shown Pictures STARTING SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17th
Starring Madeleine Carroll, Herbert Marshall, Conrad Veidt
EVERY KISS, EVERY
CARESS INCREASED
THE ENEMY
CASUALTY
LIST!
MARTHA
CNOCKHAERT
Who dared
all for her
be loved
BELGIUM
As THOUSANDS KNELT IN
PRAYER—SHE KNEW THE
AIR WOULD SOON BE
BLACKENED WITH THE
WINGS OF
DEATH!
TRAPPED IN
THE SEETHING
HELLOF HER
OWN MAKING—SHE WAS
DECORATED FOR VALOR!
SHE
WOUNDED
THOUSANDS,
THEN
NURSED
THEM BACK TO HEALTH!
ALSO SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS
At the Raphael
A
Madeline Carroll has the highly dramatic role of combined Allied agent and German nurse in "I Was A Spy," the new drama presented by Fox Film.
sister act, which bills itself as Jerd Turk. Their real names I Turk and Jervy Turk, and they are without doubt, master and mistress of eccentricity in dance.
With Ellington is Ristina Banks, another home town product, that is if the old Garnet Graded School is a home town enterprise. Ristina's 12 mermaids leave the usual routine to put on a unique number to the tune of "I'm Satisfied," with Miss Anderson doing the advertising.
No mention need be made of the picture because with, Ellington in toyn the house need not put on a picture—for all the patrons care.
RA
DECATUR
1376
STARTING
press, the role in which he is cast in this inexpensive offering affords him no help whatever toward the end of saving the Raphael's show. The current picture at the Ninth Street house by no means measures up to the par of excellence in entertainment that Manager Ed Harris has been presenting for his patrons recently.
Guy Kibbee, who can always be relied upon to do his share toward putting a picture over, does not fall down in his role as a hick detective. The rest of the cast, which includes Sheila Terry and Arthur Byron as the remaining principals, does well, but the plot is so weak that a critic can hardly find excuses for the screening of it at one of our better houses.
Mary Brian and Bruce Cab combined to make "Shadows Sing Sing" a little different kit (Continued on page 15)
BOOKER T
THEATRE
THE HOUSE OF HITS
1433 YOU ST. N.W.
3 DAYS BEGINNING
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16
'By Candlelight with
3 DAYS BEGINNING
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16
'By Candlelight'
with
PAUL LUKAS
ELISSA LANDI
And NILS ASTHER
Repeating the trick he pulled the week previous, Mark Terrell, manager at the Republic, showed his first-half-of-the-week patrons one type of photoplay, and his last half customers still another type. It went over—but in all frankness one cannot be over enthusiastic about it.
"Cross Country Cruise," screened from Friday to Monday, did a good job of entertaining those of us who sought the movies as a relief from the monotonous daily grind. The parlance and wise cracks were original, and struck the humor-responses of the early week theatre-goers.
JEWELL THEATRE
LINCOLN THEATRE
N.W.
3000
TOM KEENE
BARBER SHOP BLUES
Claude Hopkins' Orchestra
TUESDAY FEB. 20
DR. BULL
Will Eagers, Marion Nixon
THE BIG EXECUTIVE
Ericardo Cortez, Eliz. Allen
6 DAYS BEGINNING
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16
JACK LARUE
in
"Miss Fane's
Baby is Stolen"
with
DOROTHEA WIECK
ALICE BRADY
BABY LEROY
A Daring Expose of the Kidnapping Racket
IPHA
THEATRE
& O Streets, N.W.
Best First Time Sh
SATURDAY, FEB
Vasa S
e Carroll, Herbert Ma
AEL
Time Shown Pictures
Y, FEBRUARY 17th
a Spy"
bert Marshall, Conrad Veidt
HIGHLIGHTS IN A BEAUTY'S
DESPERATE CAREER
EVERY KISS, EVERY CARESS INCREASED THE ENEMY CASUALTY LIST!
VERY
ASED
1215 YOU ST., N.W.
Phone North 3000
Mary Brian and Bruce Cabot combined to make "Shadows in Sing Sing" a little different kind
BOOKER T
THEATRE
THE HOUSE OF HITS
1433 YOU ST., N.W.
Coming Soon
"DESIGN FOR LIVING" with
FREDRIC MARCH
MIRIAM HOPKINS
GARY COOPER
214 Four-and-a-Half St., S.W.
Metropolitan 9475
ARTHUR RANDALL, Manager
SUNDAY-MONDAY FEB. 18-19
CROSS FIRE
WED. THURS. FEB. 21-22
GOOD COMPANIONS
Jessie Mathwa, Ed. Gwann
TOO MUCH HARMONY
Bing Croby, Judith Allen
FRIDAY FEB. 23
Three Cornered Moon
Candids: Colbert, Ben Lyon
THIS DAY AND AGE
Chan, Bichford, Judith Allen
SATURDAY FEB. 24
THRILL HUNTER
Buck Jones, Dorothy Ravier
BRIEF MOMENT
Carole Lombard, George Rewald
Edw. F.Harris Manager
Elisha Almond, Prominent Legionaire, Dies Suddenly
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
LEGION MEMBERS PAY TRIBUTE TO WORLD WAR VET
Deceased was Working in Interest of Comrades When Stricken
Two hourstafter a determined effort to secure for a fellow comrade an equitable adjustment of his claim before the Veterans' Bureau, Elisha Edward Almond, 1327 Wallach Place, Northwest, died at the Emergency Hospital Saturday, February 3, of heart failure. Funeral services were held Thursday at the Metropolitan Baptist Church, the Rev. E. C. Smith, officiating. Members of the American Legion stood guard while the body lay in state, and formed a guard of honor which escorted the funeral cortege to the church. The procession was led by the James Europe Post Drum and Bugle Corps, the Women's Auxiliary, and the Boy Scouts of America, Troup 507.
Native of Virginia
Mr. Almond was a native of Virginia but a residence of Washington for the past fifteen years. He was a member of the Elks, Masons, and served overseas during the World War with the 368th Infantry. He was a past commander of the James Reese Europe Post No. 5 of the American Legion, organized the Boy Scouts of America Group 507.
He devoted many years to welfare work assisting destitute and disabled ex-service men and their families. He had made a special study of laws pertaining to veterans, prosecuted numerous claims and fought the injustices and discriminations, practiced against, Negro veterans, and less than two corps before he died he was at the Veterans Bureau in an effort to get consideration for a needy veteran. Ex-service men express a great loss in the death of their friend and comrade.
Was Law Graduate
A eulogy was read by Maurice W. Spencer, national president of the Equal Rights League, of which Mr. Almond was corresponding secretary. Attorney Melendez the cochair of the John M. Langon School of Law, of which Mr. Almond was an honoree graduate to embarked the deceased.
Past Department Commander arlain Wood of the American Union office of the support, travel and loyalty given him to the deceased comrade, during a term of office.
Mr. Almond is survived by a widow, Mrs. Lucile Almond, a mother, Mrs. Ollie Frank, of Duncan, New York, and a sister, Mrs. Summer, of Springfield, E.J.
Interment was at the Arlington National Cemetery.
A sudden cold wave and hint of snow in the air pressed the Alpha Keppu Alpha Snow Dance at alladale College on February 9. The interior of Callanan Gymnasium looked as though a blanket of snow had recently fallen. The ceiling and ends of the room were white and placed at intervals about the room were evergreen trees covered with snow and white moss. Bare white branches sparking with snow dust hid the walls, from the ceiling strips of cotton dung giving the effect of icicles and falling snow. At one end was a snow house in which the associate sorors and their escorts played bridge. At the other end the Alabama State Revellers made merry.
In the center of the floor stood a huge snow man with black buttons and hat and gay red how. Immediately after the intermission, to the strains of a grand march the couples circled around the snow man and each one picked up from his feet a souvenir which was cunningly wrapped as a snow ball or a snow flake. When the souvenirs were opened the young ladies found small silver clip compacts engraved with AKA and the young men found silver book marks engraved with AKA.
Gay serpentine and white confetti balls added zest to the evening together with a snow battle with snow balls found in the snow man. Cups of pineapple ice refreshed the joy revellers.
The young ladies were all charmingly gowned in white which made a striking contrast with the dark suits of their escorts.
TENNESSEE ELECTROCUTES
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Joe Emory, convicted wife killer from Knox county, and James Swann slayer of Abbie Rainwater, were electrocuted here Monday.
WOMAN BURNED TO DEATH
NEW BERN, N.C.-Mrs. Hannah Harrison, 44, was burned to death, Sunday morning, in a fire which destroyed her home on End Street, and all her possessions. Three other occupants of the house escaped injury.
Federal News Notes
by LAURENCE J. W. HAYES
"Blessed is he that expecteth nothing, for he shall not be disappointed."
Thus spake pessimistic Paul (NRA) McGowan, when the writer told of his experience in regard to some five or six extra dollars to be received on March 1 as the result of the pay restoration bill now before Congress.
At this writing, definite assurance that 90,000 government employees in Washington will receive checks or cash for a five per cent pay restoration at the end of this month was given by the Senate Appropriations Committee when it reported the independent office supply bill.
The committee wrote into the House measure a provision specifically stating restoration of one-third of the 15 per cent salary slash is to date from February 1.
In view of the fact that the bill will not be approved finally in time for paymasters to include this restored 5 per cent in salary envelopes Thursday, the mid-February pay day. Federal employees here and throughout the country can look forward to receiving the additional money for a four-week period at the end of this month.
Ere long, we shall know.
Interdepartmental Lodge No. 20 of the American Federation of Government Employee, which is affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, held its regular meeting at the home of Mrs. E, Busey at 1916 Eleventh Street. Northwest, on Saturday night, February 10. Mr. E. H. Bailey, President of the Potomac Park Lodge and National Vice-President of the American Federation of Government Employees, installed the following newly elected officers: President, George H. Rycurw, First Vice-President, J. W. Charleston; Second Vice-President, Harvey L. Bean; Third Vice-President, W. R. Lea; Fourth Vice-President, L. J. W. Hayes; Secretary-Treasurer, L. Slade; Chaplain, C. S. Jones and Sergeant-at-arms, William L. Staples.
Messrs. Langston Taylor and Alvin Webb who have come from the now defunct Federation of Federal Employees are to be named to chairmanships of important committees.
William (Commerce Dept.) Jackson, chairman of the Social Committee is seriously considering a house warming for members of the Lodge. He has recently leased a newly furnished and decorated apartment on Florida Avenue, Northwest.
Since the National Treasury of the National Federation of Federal Employees fell so low that they were forced to discontinue their weekly paper "Federal News," the A.F.G.E.'s weekly publication "The Government Standard" is going over the top rapidly.
Alvin (Treasury Dept.) Webb, newly appointed Publicity Director of Lodge No. 20, calls the attention of its members and prospective members to the contest sponsored by the American Federation of Government Employees to which two $100 prizes are offered for an acceptable name for the paper.
Here are the details of the contest to name this, our new newspaper. Two one hundred dollar prizes are offered.
Everybody can compete except employees of the National Organization and their families.
$100 FOR THE BEST NAME.
$100 FOR THE PERSON FILING THE MOST NAMES FOR THE NEWSPAPER.
The word "THE" will not count in the title.
The following words are barred from the contest as well as derivatives of these words:
"FEDERAL," "FEDERATION," "NATIONAL," "EMPLOYEE," "NEWS."
The name "GOVERNMENT STANDARD" is barred from the contest.
The contest closes March 31, 1934. Entries will be accepted if postmarked before mid-night March 31, 1934.
* * * * * *
More information about this chance to make a couple of hundred dollars, will be given in these columns postmark.
MYSTERIOUS CALL SENDS BOY HOME
A mild urry of excitement was stirred up at Armstrong High School Tuesday morning when a mysterious call received by the principal's office, requesting that one of the students be sent home at once, was found to be a hoax. Soon after school had opened, a woman called the office and, giving a spurious name, asked that Oswald Wines, a junior be sent home at once because his mother, Mrs. Juanita Dawson, of 748 Irving Street, Northwest, was seriously ill.
A note was sent to Wines' teachers asking them to excuse him from further recitations in order that he might go home. Wines, knowing that his mother had been well that morning, called her by telephone and asked what had happened. To his surprise he found that she was still perfectly well.
When this information was conveyed to G. David Houston, principal of the school, considerable alarm was felt for the boy's safety if he should be allowed to go home unaccompanied. Mr. Houston therefore summoned a police squad car and sent the boy home in this. Meanwhile all efforts to trace the mysterious call failed.
No efforts were made to harm the boy as he rode home and back to school under police guard.
Given Six Months for
Six months is the penalty which James Harris, 54, of the 900 block of Fifth Street, Southeast, will pay for the sale of a pint of liquor without first having obtained a license. Harris was sentenced this week by Judge Gus A. Schuldt in the first case to be tried under the new District law regulating the sale of whiskey in the District of Columbia.
A police officer testified at the trial that he bought a pint of whiskey from Harris, and confiscated an additional quart which he found in his possession. The judge gave Harris ninety days for the sale without having first obtained a license, and 90 days more for the possession of whiskey intended for sale without license.
The case was prosecuted by Edward M. Curran, assistant corporaton counsel, appointed by the Commissioner to take charge of the prosecution of cases in Police Court which are less than felonies under the new law.
Unknown Man Hits
Claiming that she had been hit with a lamp by an unknown colored man in a house on Second Street near G, Southwest, Miss Reba Duvall, 22, of 1325 $^2$ Neil Place, Northwest was treated at Freedman's Hospital Wednesday morning for lacerations to her scalp, right shoulder, right arm and hand. Her condition was reported by Dr. H. W. Williams, who attended her, as not serious.
TWO WOMEN FOUND SLAIN BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Slain with an axe or hatchet, two women were found with their heads crushed, Sunday, in the servants' quarters in the rear of 1700 Bush Boulevard. The victims were Mrs. Fadie Bell Lagron and Miss Geneva Mims. Dave Williams was seized as a suspect by the police.
Our Own Opinion
(Continued from page 14) of mystery drama. The erection of a composite photo $ \mathrm{o} $ from a mind picture of the wrongly accused hero is cleverly done. Incidentally this is worked into the solution of the crime.
Lincoln
"Fats" Waller, the over-sized senegambian piano-plunker, continued to appease the appetite of the Lincoln customers. Together, Waller and Ethel Waters, featured in a short sketch entitled "Bubbling Over," all but steal the show from the Fay Wray, Nils Asther and Noah Beerly, stars of "Madame Spy," the screen offering.
The picture depicted the actions of an exotic spy who braved wartime Europe in the interest of her country. You know, the old story of the beautiful piece of feminine espionage material who is ready to die for her country but won't give up the man she loves. You also know—everything turns out all right.
Booker T.
"Berkley Square," lifts Leahie Howard, who seems to touch the heart-strings of local theatre-goers, out of the present and drops him into a past 100 years old. It finishes this lifting process tonight (Thursday) when the curtain falls on this Fox Studio production which co-stars Heather Angel with Mr. Howard. If one can forget how utterly impossible the theme is, and can accept the play as the work of art it really represents, "Berkley Square" can be enjoyed to the utmost. Make no mistake about it, the picture is one that is "worthy of its salt," if I know what I mean. Unique in plot, it is also as elaborate as "Cavalcade."
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 15. 1934
ALEXANDRIA NEWS
MRS. ALMA P. MURRAY
Alexandria Correspondent
124 North West St.
Phone. Alexandria 317-W
The deadline for paying city licenses, business, professional, automobiles and trucks was February 15. After that date the members of the police department will make a check-up and bring all delinquents into court.
Many delinquent dog owners are now paying their licenses. The time for payment expired February 1.
Additional contributions totaling $146.50 have been recently received by the Alexandria United Charities. The citizens who have not yet donated are urged to send in contributions to the headquarters at 102 South Washington Street.
The work of the city school board in starting its rental system of books was commended by C. W. Dickerson, Jr., supervisor of text books for the State Board of Education, it was announced at the last meeting of the school board.
All persons who wish to purchase new or used books must go to the Maury School. That is the only school selling new or used books.
There will be a free clinic during the week of February 19, at the city health office for the diagnosis of tuberculosis children by a specialist of the State Health Department. This clinic will be under the city health department and in cooperation with the physicians of the city.
On Monday, February 19, children who have been in contact with active cases of tuberculosis, and others sent in by physicians, will be given an examination and the tuberculin test for the disease.
On February 20, a clinic will be held for contact cases among adults recommended by the directors or by the nurse, with the family physician's approval. Adults will be X-rayed on this day if it is found necessary. February 21, the children tested on the previous Monday should return for a reading of the test and for an X-ray of the chests of those who are found to show signs of the disease. Another test will be given those who do not show tuberculosis on the first tests; these will be read on February 23, and the chests X-rayed if necessary.
On Thursday morning, February 22, adults and children will be examined by appointment and consultations held with local physicians in regard to their patients.
No patients are to be admitted on Thursday afternoon, February 22nd.
Since all cases are referred back to their family physicians for treatment all who desire to have this examination must consult their physician and bring a written request signed by him or make arrangements before the day of the clinic with the visiting nurse, otherwise they cannot be examined. The purpose of the clinics is to show people how to prevent the development of active tuberculosis. A. W. Boehringer, Federal director of public works here, urges all persons who have vacant ground that can be used for early spring planting to communicate with him. A request for the listing of vacant land was received here from W. A. Smith, State Emergency Relief Administrator.
If sufficient acreage can be obtained plans provide for farming it out among persons who can devote some time to planting crops. A canning factory may be established and the canned products distributed among those who were instrumental in raising them.
Elk News
The Alexandria Lodge of Elks will hold its regular meeting Monday night. Israel Temple will hold its regular meeting on Wednesday night. The temple is conducting an official bazaar at the Elks' home all this week, which will close Friday night. The Star of Bethlehem Lodge, of Gumsprings, Va., held an initiation last Saturday night. Marching clubs are being formed and other units of all the lodges of Northern Virginia are planning to attend the Virginia State Association of the Elks which will convene in Warrenton, Va. May 15, 16, 17.
Roberts Chapel M.E. Church
The lady ushers held their regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Laura Holland, Tuesday. After the business session the members were served by Mrs. Holland and her daughter, Mrs. Mabel Bolden. Mrs. A. I. McDowell is president. Mrs. Lena Harris is secretary. The Heart and Hand Club will give a chicken supper at the home of Mrs. Rebecca Gaddis, on N. Patrick Street, Thursday, March 1. Mrs. A. I. McDowell, president; Miss Cora Taite, secretary. It will be for the benefit of Roberts Chapel. Men's day will be observed at Roberts Chapel, Sunday, February 25. Ernest Jones is chairman. There will be a good speaker and special music for the services.
At the fourth quarterly conference last week, the church made good reports and the district superintendent, Dr. A. Hall Whitfield, was pleased with the work accomplished. Dr. Whitfield was paid in full for the conference year. The conference will convene in Richmond, Va., Wednesday, April 11. Moses Simms, the lay delegate, will accompany the pastor.
MRS. KATHLEEN M. LUCKETT
Alexandria Representative
907 Pendleton St.
Phone, Alexandria 559
the Rev. T. N. Austin, to Richmond.
Sunday morning, the Rev. T. N.
Austin will take as his subject,
"What Have We Left?"; and at
7:30 his subject will be "A Religion of Joy."
Those On the Sick List
Mrs. Anna Cooper, of S. Fairfax Street; Eugene Shanklin, of N. Payne Street; Mrs. Lillian Stuart, of S. Royal Street; Mrs. Mary Virdear, of S. Alfred Street; Mrs. Hattie Davis, of S. St. Asaph Street, are all among the sick. Charlie Bell is improving at the Alexandria Hospital. Mrs. Nannie Rector who has been confined by illness, is slowly improving at her home on Duke Street.
Deaths
Mrs. Ella Walker, daughter of Mrs. Ella Smith, died in New York, Thursday of last week, and was buried in Alexandria, on Tuesday, February 13. Funeral services were held at the home of Mrs. M. F. Potter, 325 S. Alfred Street, the Rev. T. N. Austin officiating. She is survived by a husband, two sons, a mother, who has been in New York for the past two weeks at her bedside, and two sisters, Mrs. Bessie Burgess, of New York, and Mrs. Esther Green, of Washington D.C.
The parent-teacher association of Parker-Gray School is feeding free hot lunches daily to needy school children. The association has very little money, but depends upon the donations from the public to carry on this work. Any one wishing to contribute may send food or money to Mrs. M. E. Evans, president of the association, or to Mrs. Jannie Wright, who is in charge of the preparation of hot lunches. Albert Smoot, Jr., is making a weekly contribution to the lunch fund.
Mrs. Etta Bell, who will be in charge of the sewing which will be done under the CWA project for the poor, went to the Washington center last week with Miss Mamie Lindsey. The sewing will be started as soon as the money is available.
The Federated Club needs old men's and boys' shoes. Send articles to Mrs. Evans.
The Alexandria Citizens Association will hold it monthly meeting Friday, February 23, at the Parker-Gray School, at 8 p.m. A Lincoln's Day celebration was held on Sunday, February 11, at Roberts Chapel M.E. Church, featuring a patriotic program. Colonel West A. Hamilton was the principal speaker. Special music was rendered by the Roberts Chapel choir, assisted by the Alfred Street Baptist Sunday School Orchestra.
Shiloh Baptist Church
Sunday morning at 11 o'clock, the pastor, the Rev. F. E. Hearns, will preach. At 3 p.m., the regular monthly covenant and communion will be celebrated. There will not be any night service. "The World Day of Prayer" will be observed by all denominations, and the service will be at the Zion Baptist Church, Friday night, February 16, at 8 p.m. Members of all churches are invited to be present and take part in these services.
Ebenezer Baptist Church
The Rev. N. Howard Stanton, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, and the Rev. T. N. Austin, pastor of Roberts Chapel, exchanged pulps last Sunday. They were received cordially by the officers and members of the churches.
Sunday, February 18, the Rev. N. Howard Stanton will take as his subject "Regeneration." There will be a fifty-cent rally at the Ebenezer Baptist Church, Sunday.
Arlington News
THE ARLINGTON BURZAU
Arlington News
THE ARLINGTON BURZAU
Funeral service of Edward Walker, of Nauck, Arlington, Va., was held Tuesday from the Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Arlington, Va., with the pastor, the Rev. James E. Green, officiating.
He was born in Chase City, Va., later moved to Arlington, where he made his home for over 22 years and became a member of the Mt. Zion Baptist Church, where he served faithfully until death.
Ministers who spoke were the Reverends Charlers H. Veney, assistant pastor; Carter L. Taylor, pastor of Little Zion Baptist Church, Burke, Va.; and Howard Fields, of St. John Baptist Church. Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Hattie Walker; one daughter, Mrs. Florence Green; four sons, James H. Arthur William, BenEdw., and Ernest H. Walker; one sister, Mary B. Walker; and other relatives and friends. He was laid to rest in the Odd Fellows' Cemetery.
St. John Baptist Church. On Sunday morning the pastor preached from 2 Peter 1:8: "For if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ." Theme, "The Great Christian Virtues." The visitors were Mrs. Saunders, of Washington, mother of Mrs. Roslyn Brooks, Mrs. Coleman and her little daughter, and the Misses
Margaret and Inez Harris, daughters of Mr. Samuel Harris. Little Zion Baptist Church. On Sunday at 11 oclock, the Rev. Carter L. Taylor and his choir of Little Zion Church rendered service at the Shiloh Baptist Church, Oderich Corner, Va. The choir turned out in full. Later they went to Cartrville Baptist Church, at which time communion was served.
HALL'S HILL, VA
Mrs. Levenia White, of Hall's Hill, made a brief visit to Philadelphia, Pa., Sunday, bringing her mother back to spend some time with her.
Mrs. Fannie Patterson, of Philadelphia, Pa., has returned to that city after having been the house guest of Mrs. White for the past two weeks. Mrs. Patterson was well entertained by Mrs. White's friends and relations during her stay here.
ST. PAUL BOWS TO MORGAN, 60-24
ST. PAUL BOWS TO MORGAN, 60-24
BALTIMORE, Md.—The Morgan Bears ran wild over a scrappy St. Paul quintet as their machine clicked on all cylinders to pile up a 60-24 score, here Friday night. Troupe opened a scoring barrage for the Bears that continued throughout the game. During the entire first period, the visitors were permitted only one field goal. The Bears presented a system of lightning-like passing that completely bewildered the visitors and kept the ball in scoring territory throughout the period. Conrad and Troupe repeatedly fired away at the basket and clocked up a series of double deckers that gave the Bears a 28-4 lead.
The St. Paul aggregation returned to the boards, and, following Martin's lead, tried to check the rapidly mounting score of the Bears. Their rally was brief, however, for the Morgan five soon fell into a repetition of their first period action that bewildered the already weakening visitors. With the ball almost continually in St. Paul's territory, Troupe banged away at the basket and piled up the final score of 60-24.
MORGAN
G F T
Conrad, f... 5 1 11 Butler, f... 1 2 4
Backett, f... 3 0 Martin, f... 1 4
Mary, c... 1 2 4 Troupe, g... 2 0 4
Troupe, f... 1 2 3 Burrell, g... 0 0 0
Wilson, g... 15 2 12 Brown, g... 0 0 0
Crawford, g... 1 0 2 Jenkins, c... 0 0 0
Sturgis, g... 1 0 2 Williams, 0 0 0
Strahyhorne, 0 1 1
Totals ... 27 6 90
Totals ... 10 4 24
RED CAPS MEET THEATRE TRAIN
The Union Station Red Caps met another train successfully, Wednesday morning at 2 o'clock, in defeating the Lichtman Theatre Five on the Y courts by 32-20 scores. The winners continue to lead the Twelfth Street Y Commercial Basketball League. The first quarter was air-tight with both teams caging a basket anpiece. The Red Caps gained a nine-point advantage in the next quarter with the half ending 16-7. The second half was nip and tuck with the winners adding three points to their advantage. Mark Terrell, of the Lichtman, and Crews of the Red Caps, divided high scoring honors with 12 points each. Lichtman will meet Freedmen's Hospital Tuesday night at 12 o'clock, postponing the-scheduled game for Friday, February 16.
G F P G F P
Crews, f... 5 0 12 Barnes, f... 0 0
Fleming, f... 6 0 12 Barnes, f... 0
Brown, f... 5 0 10 Ferrell, c... 6 0 12
Posey, c... 0 0 10 Johnson, c... 6 0 12
Posey, c... 1 0 2 Wallace, g... 1 2 4
Berry, g... 2 0 4 Brea, g... 1 2 4
Hall, g... 2 0 4
Totals... 16 0 32 Totals... 9 2 20
Y BIG FIVE DOWNS HARRISBURG
The Twelfth Street Y.M.C.A. continued its winning streak by handing the Forster Street Y.M.C.A. of Harrisburg, Pa., its first defeat of the season on the local court last night by a 51-26 score.
For the first five minutes, the play was thrilling with both teams exhibiting air-tight defenses. The local aggregation, however, went ahead when its offensive began to click with regularity. The Twelfth Streeters held a 26-13 advantage at the intermission.
The winners started the second half with a rapid fire scoring spree, amassing 17 points in the third quarter. Its attack was slowed up in the final quarter only by frequent substitutions. The entire line-up of both teams shared in the scoring. The Y passing was exceptional and clicked with a precision that resulted in clear baskets time and again.
Otis Rene has rigged up an attachment between his baby's cradle and a washing machine. It rocks swell.
CLASSIFIED
Simply Phone POT. 1667. For Results
Clubs
ENTERPRISE SOCIAL CLUB
Murray Casino was the scene of the Enterprise Social Club's dance Wednesday night. Girls and boys galore were in attendance. The success of the affair assures the followers of the club that the Casino will be the scene of the next E.S. dance.
SATURDAY NIGHT WHIST CLUB
The Saturday night Whist Club was entertained by Mrs. Marguerite G. Parker at her residence, 1114 G Street, Northeast, Saturday evening.
The usual business session followed card. Prizes were awarded as follows: Mrs. Lottie Jones, first; Mrs. Emma Benton, second; and Mrs. Mary Caxter Brown, third.
Club members present included Mesdames J. Butler, president; M. Diggs, vice-president; H. Brown, secretary; M. Carter Brown, treasurer; E. Dent, V. Griffith, C. Butler, C. Young, S. Wheeler, L. Jones, E. Bemston, and M. G. Parker. A repast was served.
DuBois-Crisis Split Patched Up
NEW YORK—(ANP)—Although there has been no public announcement concerning the matter, friends of interested parties to an alleged controversy involving the management of The Crisis magazine, intimate that Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, editor of the magazine since its founding, had signified his intention to resign recently, that his resignation was written and later withdrawn when certain demands which he made were compiled with. These friends state that differences of opinion exist between Dr. DuBois and the members of the board of management for the magazine which was formed last year.
It was noted in the January Crisis that Dr. DuBois had taken a more particular stand in respect to segregation than has been true of the officers of the Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
FURNISHED FRONT ROOM for desirable single man in apartment with refined couple. Clean, plenty of light and air in respectable neighborhood. Call Potomac 5788.
FURNISHED ROOMS
HALL ROOM, third floor front and second floor middle room; h.w.h. electricity, 1614 15th St., N.W.
ONE LARGE ROOM in quiet family; comfortably heated; employed lady preferred. Call North 9012.
TWO FRONT ROOMS—One for single and one for a couple; steam heated, in refined homes, 1700 Florida Ave., N.W. Decatur 3110-J.
FIFTEENTH STREET, between U and V, Northwest. Large light double room for one or two men. North 3268.
FURNISHED ROOM in quiet family; suitable for one or two. Noar three car lines, 1321 Florida Avenue, Northwest.
ROOM to a neat man in a well- kept home; a cheerful room. For more information call Columbia 7448-W.
MADAME DORIS
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She will reveal to you the most amazing secrets about your enemies, rivals and friends. Whether your husband, wife or sweetheart is loyal or deserving your how to win the love of your partner, she will give advice on all subjects of any nature whatsoever: marriage, divorce, Courtship.
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CASH FOR YOUR SPARE TIME
Whether experienced or unexperienced, in salesmanship, or canvassing, there are many profitable opportunities for readers to cash in on the use of speciality items among your relational friends and acquaintances, especially during the next few weeks before the holiday. Enclose stamp for full particulars, or twenty-five cents, coin or stamps, for an actual sample of a fast-selling item, or for an item also be placed on our mailing list to receive every opportunity that is constantly coming to us from hundreds of manufacturers of specialty items.
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Tuskegee Drops Pair to LeMoyne College 5
TUSKEEGE INSTITUTE, Ala.
—Inability to cash in on charity
chances cost the Tuskeege Tiger
quintet the first of a two-game
basketball series with LeMoyne
College of Memphis, Tenn., in Logan
Gymnasium here Wednesday
afternoon. The score was 29 to
27.
Second Game
TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Ala.
—The LeMoyne College Yellow Jackets, flashing a fast and alert team that packed power in their scoring attack, were the victors again Thursday, defeating the Tuskegee Institute Golden Tigers, 49 to 47.
GIVEN TEN DAYS FOR ATTACK
ON WOMAN--COLORED
RALEIGH, N.C.-North Carolina has a law to protect women which enables the state to send a Negro to his death if a white woman says he attacked her and the state can so much as prove that he laid a hand on her.
But the law is elastic where colored women are concerned.
Junius Watkins was found guilty in city court here of an attack on a colored woman and sentenced to pay the costs or serve ten days.
WAR VETERAN HELD FOR KILLING
TEXARKANA, Ark. — Roy Barnes, World War veteran, charged with murder in connection with the death of Henry Griffin, early Sunday morning, was held for action of the grand jury without bond following a hearing in Justice court at New Boston, Tex., Tuesday.
White theatre managers in a rivalry to see who can get the best colored shows down in Dallas, Texas, revealed an interesting little bit of by-play recently when Skippe James Cherry, white, of the Palace, saw that "Emperor Jones" was at the Melba and "Going to Town," a colored revue at the Majestic. He laughed a little then adventured that he had the only "white show" in town. One of his strongest competitors announced the production of "Porgy" with an all-Negro cast.
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board. Apply. 26 Florida Avenue,
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CARE OF CHILDREN
26 FLORIDA AVE. N.E.-Good home to care for children. Call Decatur 0759-J from 8 to 9 a.m., of 6 to 9 p.m.
NOTICE
CAN ACCOMMODATE one or two semi-invalids. Quiet home, good home cooking. Diet attended to. Box 215, Tribune, before February 25.
ment Agency. References required. 1827 11th St., N.W. Must stay nights.
LEGAL NOTICES
L. MELENDEZ KING, Attorney
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT
of Columbia. Holding Probate Court.
Estate of Mamie Carr, Decaused. No.
administration Docket 92. Application
batains of the last will and testament of said
deceased, and for letters Testamentary on
said estate, by L. Melendez King, it
ordered that 25th day of January, A.D.
2014, the Court of Appeals, Thomas,
2997 Georgia Ave, N.W., Washington:
Adell Snowden Long, 2438 Ninth
St. N.W., Washington, D.C.; Isbell C.
Payne, 270 Lenox Ave., New York City,
Philadelphia, A.D. 1905 Stes. St.
Philadelphia, Rock Point, Maryland, and all others concerned appear in said court on Monday,
the 5th day of March, A.D. 1934, at 10 o'clock
A.M., to show cause why such
publication should not be granted. Let notice
be given to the Publication Reporter and The Washington Tribune once in each of three successive weeks before
the return day herein mentioned, the first
publication to be not less than thirty days
after the first day of publication.
Attest: Theodore Cogwail, Register
of Wills for the District of Columbia.
Clerk of the Probate Court.
JOSEPH N. JONES. Attorney
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE District of Columbia. Lillian Rid Mills, 915 O Street. Northwest. Plaintiff v. Reservoir Mills. Defendant. No. 56444. In order to obtain a decree of annuition of the marriage of plaintiff and defendant, and for other relief. On motion of the plaintiff ordered that the defendant. Reservoir Mills, cause his appearance to be entered on or before the fourth day, exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays, occurring after the first day. In order; otherwise the cause will be proceeded with as in case of default. Provided, a copy of this order be published once a week in the Law Reporter, in theashington Law Reporter, and in theashington Tribune before said day. Daniel W. O'Donoghue. Justice. A true copy test, Frank E. Cunningham, Clerk. Harry M.
BUSINESS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
MRS. ROOSEVELT IS PLEASED WITH EVANTI RECITAL
First Lady Greets Famous Singer Following White House Program
Mme Lillian Evanti, noted lyric coloratura soprana, sang at the White House last Friday afternoon. Mme Evanti was the guest artist at a luncheon given by Mrs. Roosevelt in honor of Miss Mary Dawson, head of the woman's division of the National Democratic Committee.
The First Lady congratulated Mme Evanti on her program, asked her for an encore and personally announced to her guest this final number.
Sings in East Room
Mme Evantil's concert took place in the East Room of the Executive Mansion at the conclusion of a luncheon, in state for guests of Mrs. Roosevelt. Mme Evanti was dressed in pose de mediac, wore black jewelry and a black rose. She carried in her hand a bouquet of gardenias, which she gracefully laid on the piano before she began her program. She was accompanied at the piano by William D. Allen of the music department of Howard University.
Mme Evanti's program was varied and served to bring out all the effectiveness of her enchanting voice. She sang "A Pastoral" by Veracini, "Das Veilchen" by Mozart; "Quilla Voce" (Puritani) by Bellini; "Lord, I Want To Be" by Burleigh; "Didn't It Rain" by Burleigh; "Vocalize" by Rachmaninoff; "Sea Shell" by Carl Engel; "A Otras Playas" by Anglada Ochoa; and "Aria" (La Tracina) by Verdi.
Mrs. Roosevelt Congratulates Immediately after the conclu-
would and immediately turned to the group and herself announce the encore by Mme Evanti.
Mme. Evanti Impressed With First Lady
Mme Evanti expressed herself as being most impressed with the wonderful personality of the First Lady and the hospitable welcome which she received.
Mme Evanti was the recipient of many telegrams and telephone calls of congratulations as well as many flowers from her friends and admirers.
On the Air
By ALICE M. MARTIN
Earl Dancer's Southern Rhapsody Choir of 90 voices was heard from Los Angeles last Saturday night on the Pontiac program. Let's tune in on this program this Saturday night at 9:30 over the CBS network and hear this choir sing W. C. Handy's jazz classic, "St. Louis Blues," and the spiritual, "Walk Together, Chillun." This program is known as the "Surprise Party" and will feature George Raft, film star, Raymond Page's orchestra, and many others.
****
The Mills Brothers are going abroad—but not until spring. We shall be able to hear them on the air with Bing Crosby a while longer before they appear at the Palladium Theatre in London on the seventh of May, and the swank Mayfair Hotel for four weeks.
The Philharmonic Symphony Society of New York is appealing to the radio audience for $500,000 which it needs to assure the continuance of its concerts for three more years. Mrs. Roosevelt, Mayor or La Guardia, of New York, and Dr. Nichols Murray Butler, of Columbia, are among the speakers
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Program Varied
Phi Beta Sigmas Hold Regular Meeting
A regular meeting of the Phil Beta Sigma Fraternity was held Saturday, February 3, at the residence of Professor Livingstone Smith's mother, 4627 Dean Avenue, Northeast. Professor Smith, Professor C. A. McCane, and James Jones acted as hosts. Among the members present were Walter L. Carter, Dr. Pinyon L. Cormish, Dr. M. T. Walker, Dr. H. L. Bryant, Dr. John A. Turner, Dr. J. Edward Jones, Professor W. A. Baltimore, Sr., Professor C. A. McCane, Professor Livingston Smith, Dr. Verdie M. Jones, Professor C. W. Williams, Attorney Jegse W. Lewis, and Attorney Lindsey E. Caine.
Maloney to Address
Y. M. C. A. Forum
Dr. A. H. Maloney, professor of Pharmacology and Taxology in the College of Medicine, Howard University, will be the featured speaker at the forum of the Twelfth Street Branch, Y.M.C.A., to be held at the University, Tuesday evening, February 20, at 8 p.m. Dr. Maloney was formerly a professor of Physiology and Philosophy at Wilberforce University. The meeting is open to the public.
sion of the program, Mrs. Roosevelt rushed from her seat and warmly shook hands with the prima donna. She said that her guests had enjoyed the program and asked Mme Evanti if she would sing once again for them. Mme Evanti asked her if she would like to hear "The Lesson of the Fan." Mrs. Roosevelt said she would and immediately turned to the group and herself announced the encore by Mme Evanti.
Mme. Evanti Impressed With First Lady
Mme Evanti expressed herself as being most impressed with the wonderful personality of the First Lady and the hospitable welcome which she received.
Mme Evanti was the recipient of many telegrams and telephone calls of congratulations as well as many flowers from her friends and admirers.
who will make appeals over the radio for contributions to be sent to the headquarters of the society at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York.
*****
From the many reports of music critics it appears that Gertrude Stein's "Four Saints in Three Acts" was a great success. The opening of the third act was heard on the air last Thursday night from Hartford, Connecticut. And don't forget that this is a colored cast presenting this opera, and it appears in New York this week.
*****
Oh, what lovely weather we're having to stay in and listen to the many interesting programs on the air.
The revolt in Austria, involving street fighting and bloodshed in Vienna and other centers; and the airmail situation in the United States, including the Senate investigation, the McCracken affair, the Army's preparations for continuing the service and the Lindbergh incident, will be among the dramatized news highlights of the "March of Time" broadcast over a nationwide WABC-Columbia network, Friday, February 16, from 8:30 to 9 p.m.
Events in France; Nila Cooks' deportation from India; the episode in which a Susquehanna, Pa., editor refused to pay his water bill; the CWA situation and the theological questionnaire submitted to 500 Chicago ministers are other items which may be treated during the current events re-enactments.
5 RADIO PROGRAMS EVERY WEEK
MON-WED-FRI-"FRANK €JIM"
WJSV
TUES-THUR-"CROMWELLECRIST"
WILKINS
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***
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY FEBRUARY 15, 1934
THE BROADWAY JAZZ ORCHESTRA
THE DUKE, a hometown boy, comes unto his own and his own receives him—how. Duke and his orchestra proved to be as popular as ever at Howard Theatre last week.
YOUR STAR and YOU By ABBE' WALLACE Youngest Mentalist on the American Stage
NOTE: Your question answered in this paper—ONLY when a clipping of this column is enclosed in your letter. For private reply—send a quarter (25c) and a self-addressed, stamped envelope, for my NEW ASTEOLOGY READING—and receive by return mail FREE advice on three (3) questions. Sign your FULL NAME, BIRTH DATE, and CORRECT ADDRESS. Send all letters to Abbe Wallace, care of WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, 920 U Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C.
KRIGWA PLAYERS TO REPEAT THREE PLAYS TONIGHT
To commemorate Negro History Week, the Krigwa Players, under the auspices of the Community Center of Garnet-Patterson Junior High School, will repeat by request in the school auditorium on Thursday evening, February 15, at 8:39 o'clock, the three plays, "Ti Yette" by John Matheus, "The Broken Banjo," by Willis Richardson, and "The Peacock's Feathers," by Willis Richardson.
The cast of "Ti Yette" includes Bernard Pryor, Vivian Turner, Philip Atkins, Llewellyn Scott, David Strange, and Joseph Johnson.
"The Broken Banjo" will feature Leander Hill, May Miller, Lowry Barnes, Llewellyn Scott, and Joseph Johnson. In "The Peacock's Feathers" will be seen Bernard Pryor, Lillian Clarke, Helen Ogle, Percy Waddill, Roy Sorrell, Shirley Richardson, Estelle Evans, Ruby Coleman, and Raleigh Foster.
Mrs. Carrie W. Clifford, Mrs. M. E. Richardson, and Mrs. A. V. Gray Hilyer are the officers of the Krigwa Players.
It is not a fact that laws aiming to do justice are not invented but usually grow up out of circumstances.
YOUR STA
and YOU
By
ABBE' WALLA
Youngest Mentalist on the Ameri
A. M.—When an. I going to leave this place?—Where is my grandmother?
Answer: A young man will take you out of this ORPHANAGE to become his wife. Your grandmother, isn't alive for if she were you would have left this HOME long ago.
N. R. B.—Will I realize my ambition?
Ans: Partly—you will gain some recognition as a BLUES SINGER and you will live a good part of your life in New York City—but—your desire to become an orchestra leader will never by accomplished.
* * * *
I. B.—I want to know if I will pull through my case O.K.
Ans: The stars reveal no serious trouble ahead. It is my opinion that your fears are groundless—I BELIEVE THE BABY WILL BE BORN ALIVE.
D. F. S.—Does my sweetheart still care or should I consider him a closed book?
Ans: Apparently your sweet-heart has decided the outcome of the affair between you and he already, for I vision him—NOW LIVING WITH A WOMAN IN NEW YORK. I suggest that you consider him a closed book in your life.
* * * *
M. L. S.—Please tell me the cause of my son not coming to see me?
Ans: Your present husband appears to be the chief reason—he and your eight year old son do not hit it off so well together. Your husband is somewhat jealous of the affection you show toward your boy.
N. W.—What is the matter with me? I can't get along with money matters and I cannot be successful in anything I und ttake. Will his man come back?
Ans: The trouble with you is that you are too free hearted. You are always helping people out and in a great many cases YOU ARE THE ONE WHO SHOULD BE GETTING THE HELP instead of them. If you expect to get any-
NOTE: Your question answer
clipping of this column is enclosed
ply—send a quarter (25c) and a
for my NEW ASTROLOGY REA
FREE advice on three (3) ques
BIRTH DATE, and CORRECT A
Wallace, care of WASHINGTON
west, Washington, D.C.
GoldHeaded Cane Symbolic of Oldest Citizen is Carried by Former H.U. Dean
Professor George J. Cummings, who was dean of the Academy of Howard University until its discontinuance in 1919, and also Professor of Latin and Greek at the time of his retirement in the same year, is now a resident of Andover, Massachusetts.
He is approaching his 96 birthday. He and Mrs. Cummings recently celebrated their sixty-fourth wedding anniversary. Professor Cummings has attained greater longevity than any individual ever connected with Howard University. He and his wife are also the oldest living graduates of Kimball Academy, of which he is the oldest living ex-principal. He is further the oldest living citizen Of Andover, Massachusetts, and carries a gold-headed cane which is owned in perpetuity by that city and is reserved for use of its oldest living citizen. Professor Cummings and his wife are both in good health and in full possession of all their powers. Professor Cummings taught many of those now connected with Howard University in professional capacities and is greatly revered by the Alumni of the university.
KILLS INTRUDER; JUSTIFIED
PINE BLUFF, Ark.—A. J. Nichols, 42, was killed here Monday by Lee Carson, 26, when he sought to force entrance into Carson's home. A coroner's jury held the killing justifiable.
where in this world you will have to be MORE HARD BOILED. The man who owes you for a back board bill—will never show his face around your home again. Let this be a lesson to you.
* * * *
J. L. R.—The woman I am in love with—Does she care for me?
Ans: The MARRIEL WOMAN who claims to be in love with you is using you for a sap. Can't you see that she's a money grabber? Her husband doesn't give her the things she wants—so she turns to you.
* * * *
K. C. B.—I would like to know if my mother is living or dead.
if my mother is living or dead.
Ans: If you will communicate
with your mother's sister (Dorothy)
she will give you your mother's address. She is very much
alive.
* * * *
S. W. P.—I have done all in my
power to help my sick mother and
there is no improvement. Do you
think she will get well?
Ans: I am afraid there is little
any doctor can do to restore your
mother's health. Her MIND IS IN
SUCH A WEAKENED CONDITION
that only an ACT OF GOD
can restore her to normal mental
condition.
* * * *
N. H.—Why is it that I have so
much trouble with my church
affairs?
Ans: There is a CERTAIN PERSON in your church who is always finding fault with everything you do. This party is jealous of your prestige.
* * * *
H. F. S.—If I stop school will I find work?
Ans: Don't make this foolish mistake. You can find work as easily by continuing your education—hundreds of boys and girls are walking the streets today, who quit school and then could not find a job.
* * * *
A. K.—How long will I live in D.C.?
Ans: Not over two months. You will be RE-CALLED TO NORFOLK.
wered in this paper—ONLY when a used in your letter. For private rea self-addressed, stamped envelope, READING—and receive by return mail messages. Sign your FULL NAME, ADDRESS. Send all letters to Abbe N TRIBUNE, 920 U Street, North-
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THEY FOOLED BANK EXAMINERS
Even Examiners Paid by the Government were Fooled by Extravagant Claims of these "Strong Banks!"
After All--Results Count
The Tribune carries more LOCAL DISPLAY Advertising than any other Negro Newspaper IN THE WORLD. You won't find Hair Straighteners and Fake Skin Whiteners in THE TRIBUNE
Merchants Appreciate
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The High Quality as well as the Quantity of the Tribune's Advertising, and depend on this paper to reach the Negro Market of Washington and Vicinity.
The Tribune has Steady Home Delivered Circulation NOT FAIR WEATHER Hit and Miss Circulation
THE TRIBUNE MANAGEMENT SEES THAT THE TRIBUNE IS DELIVERED TO THE HOUSE, REGARDLESS OF WEATHER CONDITIONS.
Only consistent results keep these merchants' advertisements in the Tribune from week to week. Don't be fooled or mislead. THE TRIBUNE is the only Washington paper published in the District other than the Sentinel. All Tribune employees live in Washington and spend their money with Washington merchants. None of this money is sent out of the District.
Washington Tribune
Voice of 157,000 Negroes in the Nation's Capital WASHINGTON'S ONLY NEGRO NEWSPAPER OF 16 PAGES OR MORE. A 100% WASHINGTON INDUSTRY!
Before President Roosevelt's bank holiday so-called Strong National Banks were "as strong as Gibraltar."
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BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
"I'm the proudest woman in the world to be the winner of this Beautiful Chair...
JURY ON'SHORE FREES JONES OF
MURDER CHARGE
Prisoner Astoundel When He is Exonerated of Slaying White Woman
PRINCESS ANNE, Md.—(ANP)
—So accustomed have colored citizens become to the bloodthirstiness of their white neighbors in Somerset County, that Samuel Jones, 55, was dezed Tuesday by the verdict of a jury that he was not guilty of killing Mrs. Margaret Brumble, white, less New Year's Eve. For more than two years Princess Anne and Somerset county have been the scenes of incessant attacks by the whites against the Negro population. Early in Noseized from the jail here and burn-vember George Armwood was ed on one of the principal streets, Ecclesiastical to punish the lynchers, made by the state, were repulsed by the white natives. While the county was still upset over the Armwood lynching, Mrs. Brumbley was murdered. "Find a Negro' became the slogan of the police and Sam Jones was lodged in jail charged with the crime.
In spite of themselves, there was no way to convict him and in the midst of courtroom grumblings Tuesday, he was adjudged innocent. Jones was dazed by the verdict. He had to be told twice that he was a free man. Of course, the real culprit had escaped while the county authorities have been trying to make a case against Jones.
Scottsboro Boys' Guards Sign Registry Slips; Steal Packages
NEW YORK.-Definite charges that guards and wardens at Jefferson County jail in Birmingham have signed postal registry receipts for parcels addressed to the Scottsboro boys, and kept them, were made by the International Labor Defense this week.
The charges are based upon evidence gathered by a friend of the Scottsboro boys in the Middle West who sent parcels containing new shoes and stockings to Eugene Williams, who with Roy Wright, is kept isolated from the other boys. The parcels were sent January 11 and January 13.
Two weeks later, when no direct word had been received from him, the friend, thinking lack of stamps might account for his silence, sent a letter to him enclosing seven stamps.
On February 8, she received a reply, thinking her for the parcels, and signed not by Eunice Williams, but by someone who forged the name of Andy Wright, with whose signature the friend is familiar. Action to force the wardens and guardes to disguise this and all other parcels which they have stolen from the Scottiboro boys will be started immediately, it was announced.
Seven Indicted for Kentucky Lynching
HAZARD, Ky. (ANP)—After examining more than 200 witnesses during a seven-day period, the Perry county grand jury, Wednesday, returned indictments against seven white men in connection with the lynching here, January 24, of Rex Scott.
The men named are: Petie Carroll, Lee Gibson, Ed Bentley, Bill (Wooden) Kinser, Ordley Fugate, George Watkins, and John Watts. Warrants for the arrest of the men were placed in the hands of the sheriff immediately after the true bills were returned.
Scott, after whipping a white man, was lodged in the Perry county jail. A mob of whites took him from the jail shot him thirty times and hanged him from a tree in a graveyard.
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744 Gresham Place, N.W."
Denies First Lady's Maid Arranged for Appearance at White House Recital
Madame Lillian Evanti who sang before President and Mrs. Roosevelt last Friday, denied this week that Mrs. Elizabeth McDuffy, maid to Mrs. Roosevelt, had arranged for her appearance at the White House.
Madame Evanti stated that her appearance before the President and the First Landy was arranged by a New York organization and Mrs. McDuffy had nothing to do with it.
A release from the Crispus Attucks News Service last week stated that Mrs. McDuffy had been instrumental in securing the appearance of Madame Evanti, Duke Ellington and Etta Moten at the White House.
NAACP PROGRESS TRACED IN RADIO BROADCAST
The progress of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, since its organization 25 years ago, was traced by Dr. Joel Spingarn, president of the organization, in a brief talk over a nation-wide hook-up of the National Broadcasting Company network, Sunday morning. Dr. Spingarn, donor of the medal awarded annually for the purpose of denoting the most outstanding individual racial achievement, spoke on the program with the Southernaires, quartet.
Beginning with the year of 1900 when a small group of interested American citizens organized in the city of Springfield, Ohio, the pretold of accomplishments during sent leader of the organization, the quarter of a century of its existence. He cited the case of Steve Green, an ordinary layman who was brought into the national spotlight by the vigorous efforts of the stat. of Arkansas to extradite him from Chicago, and the equally as vigorous attempts of the then comparatively weak N.A.A.C.P.
The part the group played in getting the Dyer Anti-Lynching bill pass the House, although it failed to survive the Senate fire; the efforts bent toward prevention of the formation of "Black Ghettoes" throughout the nation, and the success enjoyed by the Supreme Court's corroboration of the argument that trial in a court dominated by mob influence was unfair, were listed as a taw of the movements in which the N.A.A.C.P. had participated.
Dr. Spingarn wound up his talk with an appeal for more membership, the accomplishment of which would be conducive to greater activity and more frequent successes. A large national headquarters on Fifth Avenue. New York, he declared, governs 378 branches in all the principal cities of the country.
ANTI-LYNCHING STATEMENTS IN CONGRESSIONAL RECORD
Senator Edward Costigan, of Colorado, co-author of the Costigan-Wagner anti-lynching bill read into the Congressional Record of February 2 more than two pages of anti-lynching statements. These included a lengthy resolution adopted by the City Council of Cleveland, O., urging passage of the Costigan-Wagner bill; H. L. Menken's column favoring the measure which appeared in the Baltimore Evening Sun of January 15; a news account from the Rocky Mountain News of Denver, Col. reporting the conference of Southern women which urged drastic action against lynchers; a favorable editorial from the N.Y. World-Telegram, and the text of the Costigan-Wagner bill itself.
POLITICAL CLUB OF WOMEN PLAN NEW MOVEMENT
Dr. Julia P. Coleman Heads League in N.Y. to Elect Woman to Congress
NEW YORK CITY (ANP)—The Harlem Congressional League, a group of women recently organized to sponsor a woman for Congress in the coming fall elections, completed its organization and announced the ten points of its platform at a recent meeting. The organization has pledged itself to insist upon the equal recognition of women in public affairs.
It also plans to urge the redistricting of Harlem so that a larger number of Negro votes may be concentrated in one area.
The fight for redistricting has been carried on by male politicians for a number of years without success.
Dr. Julia P. Coleman is president of the League. Associated with Dr. Coleman are Mrs. Rescoe Cooklin Bricke; assistant resident manager of the Dunbar Apartments, who is vice-president of the league, and Dr. Alma M. Haskins, chairman of the executive board. Mrs. Ross Lampkin Denniston is chairman of the committee on political action. Dr. Coleman was formerly a business woman of Washington.
Court Appoints Prosecutors for Euel Lee's Lawyer
BALTIMORE, Md.—J. Craig McLanahan and Eli Frank, Jr., have been appointed by Judge William C. Coleman of District Federal Court here, to prosecute Bernard Adei, L.L.D. attorney, on disbarment charges based on his defense of Euel Lee.
The hearing on the disbarment proceedings will be held before Judge Morris Soper of the Circuit Court of appeals in the U.S. District Court here on February 28.
On behalf of Adea, a motion has been filed demanding the dismissal of the disbarment charges, on the basis of illegality of the proceedings, as well as an answer, filed under protest, to the charges themselves.
Judge Coleman is reported as preparing to railroad the charges by conducting the hearing on both these actions at the same time.
The International Labor Defense, the American Civil Liberties Union, the International Juridical Association, the Socialist Lawyers' Association of New York, and other organizations have formed a defense committee, and have called for nation-wide protest against this attempt to disbar an attorney for defending the rights of Negroes.
A brilliant array of lawyers, headed by Chas. Houston of Washington, and dean of Howard Law School, will conduct the legal defense of Ades, while masses of workers and many lawyers throughout the country are being mobilized by the LLD. to protest against the attempt by the federal court, supported by the state bar association, to out-law working-class defense in courts.
URBAN LEAGUE TO SURVEY
TALTIMORE SLUMS
BALTIMORE. Md. (ANP)—The local branch of the National Urban League, of which Edward S. Lewis is executive secretary, has completed plans for the survey of the slum sections of Baltimore. Ida De A. Reid, of the National Urban League office, will conduct the survey. A similar survey conducted a number of years ago by the Urban League under the direction of A. Maurice Moss, former secretary, resulted in the city elimination of a large section of the slum area between Druid Hill Avenue and Pennsylvania Avenue, and the erection of playgrounds, public bath house and a modern well-equipped grammar school.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 15. 1934
The Rev. E. C. Smith, pastor of the Metropolitan Baptist Church, will be the principal speaker. The call was sent out by Mark D. Rowe, organiser of the Allied Democratic Clubs.
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TO TRY WHITES FOR MURDER
OR BUS BOY
RALEICH, N.C.—J. L. and Frank Perry, brothers, will be tried at the present team of the criminal court for the murder of Thomas Watkins, a bus boy. The white men were alleged to have chased Watkins into an alley and scabbed him to death. J. L. Perry, an exconvict, is charged with being the actual killer, and his brother with being an necessary before and after the fact.
Consists of Metal Bed, guaranteed Coil Springs and a soft, comfortable mattress.
COOKING STOVE
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Dormitories of the Diaglossa have been issued a call to meet Thursday evening at 7:00 a.m. at 1014 Thirteenth Street, Northwest.
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BOYS MAKE TRINKETS AT
WILMARA CENTER OF
ROWARD UNIVERSITY
The Boys' Activity Club of South
East House here, regularly organized by L. O. Tallbert and O. Burke, both teachers in the public schools, long a member, p. of 21 enthusiastic boys.
The best uniject is a jewel bar
made out of cew berries.
Mr. Burke is cleaning the desig
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the word carving.
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New Negro Alliance Officer to Address Freedmen's
Dutton Foreman, one of the organizers of the New York Alli-
nage, will be the principal speaker.
The Faculty's Nurse's Forum
Friday, February 18, at the nurses
research at 3:20 p.m.
Special music will be by the
Nurse's Glen Club.
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THREE
INE BLUF HELPS N.A.A.C.P.
PINE BLUF, Ark. (ANP)—This city is planning to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of the N.A.A.C.P. on February 17.
The speakers include Dr. W. E. Waters, president of the State College, and Dr. Light, members of the committee include the Rev. Robert Monty, and Merrys, W. M. Morrish, Preston Carlyn nr. L. D. Polkland.
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FOUR
CURRENT TOPICS
Washington Tribune
Published Weekly at Washington, D.C. by
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE PUBLISHING
COMPANY, Inc.
920 U Street, N.W. Potomac, Potomac 1667
Entered as second-class matter July 7, 1922, at the
Post Office at Washington D.C. under the
Act of March 8, 1879.
Subscription Rates: One Year, $8.00; Six Months,
$1.50; Three Months, 75c. For sale at all news
stands, 7 cents per copy. Advertising rates fur-
mished on request
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1934
Suppressing the News
Negro newspapers are often criticized for the types of stories they carry and the amount of attention given them in the matter of position. Bold lettering for the purpose of carrying screaming headlines are especially pointed to as practices that should be condemned according to many of these critics.
Quite frequently colored newspaper editors are importuned by leaders in various fields in an effort to suppress certain news articles. The "influence" they evidently believe they have (although there is no such thing as "influence" in the properly run newspaper office) is oftimes used in an endeavor to "soft pedal" stories which they have learned are to be carried. Invariably these items are permeated with the stench of scandal.
Very often the average colored editor's comeback is "these people ought to know how to behave themselves."
The Tribune has had its share of visits from individuals high in the religious, social and educational fields. It has had its experiences with these attempts to "hush it up." Repeated refusals have caused friends of the involved parties to refer to the paper as a "scandal sheet." Some have cast it aside as just another "rag."
But always the Tribune has sought to vindicate itself for the publication of the article in question. It does not believe that "these people ought to know how to behave themselves," because none of us are capable of that in spite of a reluctance to admit it.
The fact that the leading paper circulating in the nation's capital carried such headlines as it did in its issues of February 8 is a responsibility that rests with the readers themselves—the same people whom these "influential" parties delegate themselves to represent.
If this type of news is so distasteful why is it literally "eaten up"? And if we feel that it is something worth reading, why is it we insist on condemning the publishing of it"?
And to make the problem all the more complex, the observant Negro editor will find his most militant critic selecting from a newsstand where all the daily papers are resting the product of the most powerful "yellow-journalist" organization in the country.
Negro newspapers are often criticized for the types of stories they carry and the amount of attention given them in the matter of position. Bold lettering for the purpose of carrying screaming headlines are especially pointed to as practices that should be condemned, according to many of these critics.
Quite frequently colored newspaper editors are importuned by leaders in various fields in an effort to suppress certain news articles. The "influence" they evidently believe they have (although there is no such thing as "influence" in the properly run newspaper office) is oftimes used in an endeavor to "soft pedal" stories which they have learned are to be carried. Invariably these items are permeated with the stench of scandal.
Very often the average colored editor's comeback is "these people ought to know how to behave themselves."
The Tribune has had its share of visits from individuals high in the religious, social and educational fields. It has had its experiences with these attempts to "hush it up." Repeated refusals have caused friends of the involved parties to refer to the paper as a "scandal sheet." Some have cast it aside as just another "rag."
But always the Tribune has sought to vindicate itself for the publication of the article in question. It does not believe that "these people ought to know how to behave themselves," because none of us are capable of that in spite of a reluctance to admit it.
The fact that the leading paper circulating in the nation's capital carried such headlines as it did in its issues of February 8 is a responsibility that rests with the readers themselves—the same people whom these "influential" parties delegate themselves to represent.
If this type of news is so distasteful why is it literally "eaten up"? And if we feel that it is something worth reading, why is it we insist on condemning the publishing of it"?
And to make the problem all the more complex, the observant Negro editor will find his most militant critic selecting from a newsstand where all the daily papers are resting the product of the most powerful "yellow-journalist" organization in the country.
Relief Complaints
Much unfavorable comment has been made lately on the conduct of the various agencies under the Relief Bureau as to the treatment of our people. Criticisms are hurled right and left charging unfair treatment of those employed and unfavorable consideration for those not employed. Specific cases have been brought to our attention. Invariably on investigation we find little foundation for the charges. If there are cases of meri we would like to hear them. Our effort will be directed to see that justice is done. But we have no space nor time to take up petty jealousies and internal business friction within these many agencies working under the Bureau Our readers are urged to realize that events in our national reform are moving so rapidly that mistakes are going to be made—but that, in our opinion we will get a square deal.
Much unfavorable comment has been made lately on the conduct of the various agencies under the Relief Bureau as to the treatment of our people. Criticisms are hurled right and left charging unfair treatment of those employed and unfavorable consideration for those not employed.
Specific cases have been brought to our attention. Invarably on investigation we find little foundation for the charges. If there are cases of merit we would like to hear them. Our efforts will be directed to see that justice is done. But we have no space nor time to take up petty jealousies and internal business friction within these many agencies working under the Bureau. Our readers are urged to realize that events in our national reform are moving so rapidly that mistakes are going to be made—but that, in our opinion, we will get a square deal.
The Taxi Menace
Elsewhere in this issue, there appears a letter to the editor calling attention to the menace created by the number of, and the manner in which tax cabs are operated. For some time we have been of the opinion that they should be some protection for the public against the wreckless and careless way that many taxi drivers charge through the streets. Other motorist should be protected from the utter disregard of their rights by these careless drivers. They literally pull up on the sidewalk if it looks like they can get here. They stop dead in front of at
Elsewhere in this issue, there appears a letter to the editor calling attention to the menace created by the number of, and the manner in which taxi cabs are operated. For some time we have been of the opinion that there should be some protection for the public against the wreckless and careless way that many taxi drivers charge through the streets. Other motorists should be protected from the utter disregard of their rights by these careless drivers. They literally pull up on the sidewalk if it looks like they can get a fare. They stop dead in front of other cars without regard to whether it is at the curb or in the center of the street. They honk horns unnecessarily frightening children and elderly people. Their motto seems to be "get out of My street, I'm coming." Accidents are many from this practice.
The police department should see to it that these drivers are tamed down and made to respect the rights and lives of other people.
Our Readers' Opinions
Readers of The Tribune are requested to send in letters expressing their opinions on subjects of general interest. Confine letters to 200 words or less, sign name to show good faith and give address and telephone number. Names will not be published if so requested.
The Howard Theatre Has Already Cancelled All Will Rogers Pictures.
To the Editor:
It has come to my attention that Will Rogers' picture, "Mr. Skitch," is playing one of the down town movie houses this week. As I know it is the policy of the Lichtman Theatres to bring to the Negro the latest film productions it is also likely that the management of these theatres might consider bringing this movie to U Street.
I desire to protest against this film or any future film in which Will Rogers is featured.
Any thinking Negro will realize that the attitude as expressed by Mr. Rogers over his recent broadcasts is distinctly biased. Such an attitude does not warrant the patronage of our theatre-going public.
Readers of The Tribune are requested to send in letters expressing their opinions on subjects of general interest. Confine letters to 200 words or less, sign name, address, and number. Letters must be numbered. Names will not be published if so requested.
The Howard Theatre Has Already Cancelled All Will Rogers Pictures.
It has come to my attention that Will Rogers' picture, "Mr. Skitch," is playing one of the down town movie houses this week. As I know it it is the policy of the Lichtman Theatres to bring to the Negro the latest film productions it is also likely that the management of these theatres might consider bringing this movie to U Street. I desire to protest against this film or any future film in which Will Rogers is featured. Any thinking Negro will realize that the attitude as expressed by Mr. Rogers over his recent broadcasts is distinctly biased. Such an attitude does not warrant the patronage of our theatre-going public.
A. W. JONES.
Says Taxicab Drivers are Menaces to Life on
U Street at Night
To the Editor:
Mr. Editor, can't something be done about these taxicabs on the streets of Washington? It is especially dangerous at night when thetheatre are letting out on U Street. I must say that colored drivers are far more reckless than white.
Mr. Editor, can't something be done about these taxicabs on the streets of Washington? It is especially dangerous at night when theatres are letting out on U Street. I must say that colored drivers are far more reckless than white.
These uncouth fellows will stop in the middle of the street suddenly and run the risk of having a car following them to crash into the rear end of the cab unless other drivers are extremely careful. Then again, police permit taxicabs to speed up and down the streets when officers would arrest a mere private operator of an automobile for going half as fast.
When seeking a passenger cab drivers will creep along at a snail's pace and hold up a string of cars while the driver looks up and down the streets for a prospective fare. Why not start a drive to rid Washington of these menacing taxi drivers?
These uncouth fellows will stop in the middle of the street suddenly and run the risk of having a car following them to crash into the rear end of the cab unless other drivers are extremely careful. Then again, police permit taxicabs to speed up and down the streets when officers would arrest a mere private operator of an automobile for going half as fast.
When seeking a passenger cab drivers will creep along at a snail's pace and hold up a string of cars while the driver looks up and down the streets for a prospective fare. Why not start a drive to rid Washington of these menacing taxi drivers?
WILLIAM DUPONT.
Tries Cooking School Recipes and Says That She Enjoys Them.
To the Editor:
This letter is to let you know how much I enjoyed the cooking schoo which The Washington Tribune sponsored recently.
I have tried some of the recipes and expect to try them all. It would give me great pleasure if you would continue the school again next year.
Will you kindly see that a boy brings he paper to my address each week?
MISS C. E. BEASON.
1433 S Street, Northwest.
Says Most Barber Shops Here Are "Blinds"
for Numbers Writers
To the Editor:
I have been living in Washington for three years and would like to know where I can find a barber shop without having the barber try and force me to play numbers. Every shop I have been in is a "blind" for numbers writers.
A barber doesn't have time to cut hair as he is too busy collecting numbers slips. Where are the police when these shops are run so openly a blind person can detect what's going on in them? I would like to know of a clean shop in the city where numbers or gambling of some form is not going on.
A barber doesn't have time to cut hair as he is too busy collecting numbers slips. Where are the police when these shops are run so openly a blind person can detect what's going on in them? I would like to know of a clean shop in the city where numbers or gambling of some form is not going on.
RALPH McALLISTER.
Protests Against Photograph System in Civil Service
To the Editor:
The photograph and the fingerprint system are used by the Civil Service Commission to identify employees in the Federal Service. A comparison of these two systems will show that the fingerprint system alone is sufficient to identify federal employees. It will also show that there is no foundation to any argument in favor of the retention of the photograph along with the fingerprint system. One system, the photograph, is inefficient; the other, the fingerprint system, is sufficient as a means of identification. The objective of all methods of identification has been to establish the identity of a person with a completeness precluding a possibility of mistaken identity. Any system which fails to establish an identity with such completeness can be recommended solely on its value as a means of partial, not complete, absolute, and final identification.
The photograph is a useful, but by no means an absolute method of identification. Sight recognition depends upon the ability of one to recall features and the expression. There is no need to discuss the latter, however. The features are characteristics caused, directly, by the peculiar individual shapes of the bony structure underlying the flesh and muscles of the face. Many changes can take place which will make it almost impossible to recognize a face formerly well known. Disease, physical change, and hard living sometimes render a photograph useless. Disguise can be as simple as shaving off the mustache or growing one where the subject in the photograph has none. Dyeing the hair is also a means of disguise in some cases. The commonest fault with this system is the prevalence of mistaken identity on account of a similarity of appearance that some people have to others. This slight resemblance, to the uninitiated, is taken as evidence of positive identification.
One cause for mistaken identity that even the experienced cannot guard against is that one person may so strongly resemble another that person actually take the double for the person he so closely resembles.
The disadvantages of the photograph is, obviously, the number of distinguishing characteristics that may be present. It is just as obvious, also, that the most distinguishing mark is color. There are others, such as scars, moles, a dimple, a cast in the eye and so forth.
The fingerprint system is the only method which is absolutely reliable. This system has none of the faults that the photograph has. From birth until death fingerprints remain the same. There is no possible means of disguising fingerprints.
The loss of a hand or even all but one
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1934
Kelly Miller Says
The Germans Abandon the God Of the Jew
If Christ should next Sunday morning come to America and seek to worship in any Nordic church which He died to ordain, in the guise of a Negro, he would be ushered to a back seat or invited to take the door.
The Germans, unlike their Anglo-Saxon cousins, display brutal frankness and unfinishing courage to enforce their accepted logic. The Anglo-Saxon is noted for his bad logic but good sense, while his German cousin is equally noted for his good logic but bad sense. Blind adherence to the rigid formulas of logic unrelieved by enlightened judgment and practical sense leads to all forms of grotesque and absurd results. If the Germans affect to despise the Hebrew race as baneful upon the course of human progress they might justly feel bound to eradicate every trace of Semitic influence upon German culture.
When the great Mohamedan destroyed the Alexandrian Library, the destruction was justified on the ground that if it contained anything that was contrary to the Koran it was pernicious. On the other hand, if it contained anything that was in the Koran, it was redundant, a perfect piece of reasoning, if once you accept the premise.
Why should a great nation go on continuing to worship God after the pattern set up by a people whom they despise? But let us see in what a maze of absurdity this logical consistence involves them. In chafing under the galling yoke of their spiritual inheritance they unwittingly betray their own spiritual poverty. Why do they not divorce themselves of their alien religious inheritance altogether and formulate a brand new religion autohonous of their own blood and genius? Is it because they dare not bare their spiritual poverty to the gaze of mankind?
The Germans, unlike their Anglo-Saxon cousins, display brutal frankness and unfinishing courage to enforce their accepted logic. The Anglo-Saxon is noted for his bad logic but good sense, while his German cousin is equally noted for his good logic but bad sense. Blind adherence to the rigid formulas of logic unrelieved by enlightened judgment and practical sense leads to all forms of grotesque and absurd results. If the Germans affect to despise the Hebrew race as baneful upon the course of human progress they might justly feel bound to eradicate every trace of Semitic influence upon German culture.
When the great Mohamedan destroyed the Alexandrian Library, the destruction was justified on the ground that if it contained anything that was contrary to the Koran it was pernicious. On the other hand, if it contained anything that was in the Koran, it was redundant, a perfect piece of reasoning, if once you accept the premise.
Why should a great nation go on continuing to worship God after the pattern set up by a people whom they despise? But let us see in what a maze of absurdity this logical consistence involves them. In chafing under the galling yoke of their spiritual inheritance they unwittingly betray their own spiritual poverty. Why do they not divorce themselves of their alien religious inheritance altogether and formulate a brand new religion autohonious of their own blood and genius? Is it because they dare not bare their spiritual poverty to the gaze of mankind?
PROTESTANTISM PROTESTS
AGAINST ITSELF
The Nordic races have never produced a religion which gained any vogue or satisfied the spiritual needs of man. These have all come from the soul strivings of the Semetic folk. The race Nordic abounds in intellectual geniuses but have never shown any spiritual originality.
The only addition which the German has contributed to religious culture is Protestantism spurred on by hisinate disposition to antagonize Latin predominance in the spiritual domain. They sowed the seed of protest which has continued to protest against itself till it has split into two hundred fractions and is still a-splitting.
These Nazi zealots would revert to the old tribal religion, a prototype, originated and abandoned by the Hebrew four thousand years ago. They would set up the conceit of being God's chosen people, a culture lag, long since discredited by both scientific and religious thought. Even in literary talent and lyric genius they recognize their inferiority to the despised Jew. They do not undertake to write their own Psalms redolent of their nation myths, traditions, and folk thought, but content themselves by adapting the Psalms of David, the Jew, to the Nordic peculiarities and idiosyncrasies. The copyist unwittingly pays tribute to the one who sets the copy.
The Nordic races have never produced a religion which gained any vogue or satisfied the spiritual needs of man. These have all come from the soul strivings of the Semetic folk. The race Nordie abounds in intellectual genius but have never shown any spiritual originality.
The only addition which the German has contributed to religious culture is Protestantism spurred on by his inate disposition to antagonize Latin predominance in the spiritual domain. They sowed the seed of protest which has continued to protest against itself till it has split into two hundred fractions and is still a-splitting.
These Nazi zealots would revert to the old tribal religion, a prototype, originated and abandoned by the Hebrew four thousand years ago. They would set up the concept of being God's chosen people, a culture lag, long since discredited by both scientific and religious thought. Even in literary talent and lyric genius they recognize their inferiority to the despised Jew. They do not undertake to write their own Psalms redolent of their nation myths, traditions and folk thought, but content themselves by adapting the Psalms of David, the Jew, to the Nordic peculiarities and idiosyncrasies. The copyist unwittingly pays tribute to the one who sets the copy.
PREACHING ALTRUISM;
PRACTICING HATRED
But, after all, it must be said of the brutally frank German that unlike his Anglo-Saxon cousin, he does not incur the reproach of hypocryc by preaching one thing and practicing another. The orthodox Christian professes to believe in the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. This creed imposes upon all who accept this to treat, without discrimination, all those who belong to the same household of faith.
Let not the American Christian upbraid his German cousin for his brutal treatment of the Jew. The most brutal treatment received by the Jew at the hands of the Germans is but an act of mercy compared to what off-colored Christians receive at the hands of their co-religionists in this country. If Christ should next Sunday morning come to America and seek to worship in any Nordic church which He died to ordain, in the guise of a Negro, He would be ushered to a back seat or invited to take the door.
When the Negro sees an American churchman hold up his hands in holy horror over the brutal treatment, Jew by German, he can hardly refrain from quoting the Master's words, "Thou hypocrite, first cast the mote out of thine own eye!" German propaganda is foredoomed to self-defeat because it is out of harmony with the progress of this age. If there must needs be a German God, why not a French God, an Italian God, and a Japanese God, and an English God?
But, after all, it must be said of the brutally frank German that unlike his Anglo-Saxon cousin, he does not incur the reproach of hypocryc by preaching one thing and practicing another. The orthodox Christian professes to believe in the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. This creed imposes upon all who accept this to treat, without discrimination, all those who belong to the same household of faith.
Let not the American Christian uphraid his German cousin for his brutal treatment of the Jew. The most brutal treatment received by the Jew at the hands of the Germans is but an act of mercy compared to what off-colored Christians receive at the hands of their co-religionists in this country. If Christ should next Sunday morning come to America and seek to worship in any Nordic church which He died to ordain, in the guise of a Negro, He would be ushered to a back seat or invited to take the door.
When the Negro sees an American churchman hold up his hands in holy horror over the brutal treatment, Jew by German, he can hardly refrain from quoting the Master's words, "Thou hypocrite, first cast the mote out of thine own eye!" German propaganda is foredoomed to self-defeat because it is out of harmony with the progress of this age. If there must needs be a German God, why not a French God, an Italian God, and a Japanese God, and an English God?
VARIETY AND SUB-VARIETY
OF TRIBAL GODS
Ingersol, paraphrasing Pope's great line, declares that "an honest God is the noblest work of man." Every race and nation is prone to fashion its God in its own image and likeness. If the Nordic must needs be white, why not the Nordic God; the Asiatic God, yellow or brown; the African God black; and the Indian God, red? There would not be room enough in the Pantheon to accommodate every variety and subvariety of tribal Gods. The old Hebrew philosophy contains the first and topical wisdom for religion—"Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image or any likeness in any similitude whatever." The abstract essence which must make the universal appeal must be divorcecable from figure, form and feature, and virtue must not be confused with visage.
finger, would not prevent identification. Likewise any disease or other mishap would not effect the value of this system.
Ingersol, paraphrasing Pope's great line, declares that "an honest God is the noblest work of man." Every race and nation is prone to fashion its God in its own image and likeness. If the Nordic must needs be white, why not the Nordic God; the Asiatic God, yellow or brown; the African God black; and the Indian God, red? There would not be room enough in the Pantheon to accommodate every variety and subvariety of tribal Gods.
The old Hebrew philosophy contains the first and topical wisdom for religion—"Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image or any likeness in any similitude whatever." The abstract essence which must make the universal appeal must be divorcecable from figure, form and feature, and virtue must not be confused with visage.
finger, would not prevent identification. Likewise any disease or other mishap would not effect the value of this system.
EDMUND LEWIS
5632 Blaine Street, Northeast.
Varying Conceptions of History
By CARTER G. WOODSON.
of Washington D.C. Editor of the "Journal of Negro History" and author of "The Negro in Haiti: History and the Haitian Man" and "The Negro Professional Man."
VARYING COCEPTIONS OF
HISTORY
In offering four hitory prizes annually, the Association for the Study of Negro Life ad History has had the opportunity to learn much of what some people consider history. A prize of one hundred dollars is given for the best article contributed to or published in the Journal of Negro History prior to the first day of October each year, and fifty dollars for the next best article. A prize of fifty dollars is given for the best review thus submitted or published and twenty-five dollars for the next best review. The varying conceptions of what should constitute the subject of such articles and reviews and the method of treatment followed show what we as a rule consider to be history and how we believe that it should be written.
In the first place, these prizes are offered to stimulate interest in research and in an appreciation of the productions of investigators thus engaged. In selecting a field in which to write, however, some of the contestants chose poetry, others drama, and still others mythology without giving these any historical connection. Evidently a considerable number of people think that almost anything is history.
Not a few of these contestants, sociologically inclined, write on the race problem. They take up such questions as the "Proper Name for Our Race," the "Nordic Myth," the "Genealogy of the Negro," "Race Attitudes," "Cush as a Son of Ham," and "Religious Trends Among Negroes"—topics which may have little connections with maeasures and men in the making of the past from the modern point of view. In a popular magazine or in a newspaper devoted to propaganda these treatments may find a place, but they cannot be considered suitable for a scientific periodical. Unfortunately, too, some of these articles and reviews do not even show original thought in the field in which they lie. The articles frequently sketch what several have better presented in easily accessible books. Many of the reviews are based upon works which are not historical, and even then the writers usually fail to bring out what the authors treat and how well they do their task.
Suggestions Offered for Historical Articles
It is advisable, then, to offer some suggestions as to what new fields may be profitably invaded. In the case of reviewing books no suggestions may be given except that they should be works of history of sufficiently recent production as not to be as far back in the past as the poems of Phyllis Wheatley. With respect to articles, however, we can readily suggest neglected topics which are crying for scientific treatment. If these are selected and properly developed we shall not only elevate the tone of the articles now appearing in the Journal of Negro History, but we shall at the same time influence the public mind with new thought, with the truth scientifically set forth, and therefore telling its own story without bias or prejudice. In this way we hope to prevent to Negro from becoming a negligible factor in the thought of the world.
No field can be more promising to the investigator of the pest of the Negro than that of the period prior to the Civil War. We have almost forgotten that 488,070 people of color or practically half a million Negroes were already free in 1860 and had taken their places in the life of the nation. Inasmuch as they faced hardship and suffered from disabilities greater than those we encounter today their careers may supply us with very much needed lessons in meeting present day emergencies. Some of these free Negroes in certain places a hundred years ago had among them more mechanics, artisans, and business men and owned more property than Negroes in those very places have today. Reading what they said and wrote at that time, too, one is compelled to conclude that their leaders had more courage than we have today.
Net Race History
Some investigators should let the race problem rest long enough to make a research and set forth the achievements of the Negro house servant of long ago—the seamstress, the maid, the cook, the washerwoman, the butler, and the valet. In sections where free Negroes were not allowed to develop these classes stood on the highest rung of the Negro social ladder. Coming into more direct contact with the whites than did the field slaves, they learned the languages, the customs, even the airs of their superiors and therefore easily lorded it over the other slaves. We of this age cannot imagine the favorable impression these "well-dressed and properly-speaking" Negroes made at that time unless we can forget for the moment the presence among us of higher classes developed since those days.
Some scholar of penetration, too, should stop trying to prove that Harding was a Negro and set forth the status of the Negro mechanics and artisans of the ante-bellum period. They produced almost everything useful and beautiful in the South. You can still find there garments which they made, furniture which they manufactured, and mansions which they supplied with thigs ornate and beautiful. Baltimore, Norfolk, Wilmington, Charleston, Savannah, Mobile, and New Orleans team with striking relics of the art and skill of these workers of long ago. Looking back at them today, the descendants of the owners of these precincts have developed an appreciation of their beauty; and, as in the striking case of Charleston, South Carolina, they are employing Negro artisans to restore these mansions in their original splendor.
Negro Business Good Field for Research
Some highly-trained Negro should stay away from indignation meetings long enough to write on the successful Negroes in business before the Civil War. From their record we may learn something to encourage the present-day Negro crushed by the crashes which have all but ruined us. In that day it was not uncommon to find a Negro the leading tailor, the best grocer, or the most reliable furniture manufacturer in town. These successful men developed largely by getting the trade of whites and sometimes made a contribution to the solution of social and economic problems in employing white and Negro workers together. Things have changed, we say, and we cannot do this today; but just as they did these things at that time in spite of handicaps we should be able to do something else just as efficiently in meeting the present emergency.
Some Negro historians should stop writing on the errors of the reconstruction long enough to make a research into the Negro in politics prior to the Civil War. The one-seventh of the Negroes who were already free, were not idle cowards. They availed themselves of every opportunity to participate in national affairs. Negroes voted in restricted fashion throughout the colonial period, and they excercised the right of suffrage even in North Carolina and Tennessee until 1834.
Referring to a Few Ante-bellum Notables
One reason for disfranchising the Negroes in Tennessee at that time was that a certain representative in the United States House of Representatives had been elected from a district in that state largely by the free Negro vote. We should remember also that ante-bellum Negro leaders like Charles Lenox Remond, Samuel Ringgold Ward, Henry Highland Garnet, and Frederick Douglass attended and took an active part in the conventions of the Free Soldiers and the Liberty Party. These forward-looking Negroes questioned the compromises of Henry Clay, exposed the weakness of Franklin Pierce, denounced the straddling policy of squatter-sovereignty, defied the fugitive slave law, and combatted the Dred Scott decision. Frederick Douglass was such a figure in the campaign of Lincoln in 1859 for the Senatorship in Illinois that Stephen A. Douglass, the Little Giant of the West, became very much irritated at times because of what Frederick Douglass was saying and doing. The ante-bellum Negro fighter made an impression.
A Creed for Youth!
by G. Byron Ulp
I'll be honest, I'll be true,
Careful of the things I do,
I'll ever strive to worthy be,
And thus success may come to me,
But if success shall pass me by,
It shall not be said, I did not try.
If success be not for me,
Then I will just a worker be,
Ever striving with my might,
To keep my thoughts adjusted
right
I'll keep my mind open and free,
To vision life as it should be,
I'll always gladly lend a hand,
And if some one can truly say,
I helped a little as I passed this
way,
Then I'll be glad.
This and That
Let us remember we can never see this world in its true light unless we consider our life in it as a state of probation and discipline for we are moving from the cradle to the grave.
Is it not true that when we learn with pleasure we seldom forget.
Good manners are truly a part of good morals, and it is our duty as members of the human family to practice both.
SPECIAL FEATURES
The following self-pitying, sycophantic, poetic prattle appeared in one of our papers last week.
"What will become of us?
Can we but know?
Must we be treated thus
Where e'er we go?
Is there no law for us
We who are weak?
What will become of us?
We, whom you seek?
What will become of us,
As things now are
Is there no help for us,
Near or afar?
Must we be victims of
A white man's hate?
What will become of us
Sooner or late?
What will become of us,
The Negro Race?
Must we be subject to
Every disgrace?
Shall no one lend a hand
To right the wrong?
What will become of us?
How long! How long?
Well, Mr., Mrs., or Miss Hazel,
you talk like a dear little child.
You pity the Negro's condition and
beg the white man to have mercy
on him. Mercy? Don't you know
that people who pity themselves or
wince under blows are set upon and
beaten by their adversaries.
Tim2 Wasted Begging
You don't know the white man. In fact, you don't know human nature. It is human nature to either eschew or kick around or walk over whinners and beggars. That's why the Negro is treated thus. But you will say this is a Christian nation and it should show mercy. Would to God that it were, but it is the most lawless and desperately wicked nation on the globe. Therefore, we will have to take it as it is. So don't expect to be given quarters.
You are wasting time begging the white race for mercy. In fact, the Negro does not need mercy. He needs common sense—that's all. You ask in a pittacious tone, what will become of us? Not one whit more than we ourselves choose to become.
Bulldogs Get What They Want
Figuratively speaking, there are five classes of Negroes; mud sills, door mats, stepping stones, hound dogs, and bulldogs. What will become of those five classes? Get ready t weep, Mrs., Mr., or Miss Hazel, because the mud sills will be walked over; the stepping stones will be walked upon; the hound dogs will be kicked around; and the bulldogs will get what they go after.
The poet does not seem to realize that the American Negro has enough weapons in his own possession right now, to use effectively, to serve notice on the world that he is taking himself seriously and means to fight his battle, with the only weapons he has—Ballot and Dollar—And, take it from me, those weapons can be used effectively.
The Negro has enough ballots in his hands, and enough spending change in his purse to get what he need; and to get him where he should go. The ballot and the dollar are the shield and the sword for any people in a democracy. If they do not learn to evaluate them and use them to protect themselves and to fight their battles, they will always be mud sills, door mats, stepping stones, and hound dogs.
Use the Ballot
When the Negro has the ballot, he has the one thing that the white man fears. When he has the dollar he has the only earthly thing that the white man worships. The ballot is the Negro's sacred, blood bought heritage; the dollar is his economic, sweat bought possession. Instead of whining about what the white man is doing to him, the Negro can take his ballot or do undo him at the ballot box. Instead of fussing about what the white man is not doing for him, he can spend his dollar where he can be employed to do something for himself. It isn't what white people are doing to the Negro that counts against him half as much as what he is not doing for himself with what he has.
Negro Has Weapon
Mr., Mrs., or Miss Haze asks poetically, "Shall no one lend a hand". No! The Negro has his two hands and from now on he will get what he wants. Fighters for his emancipation did lend hands when his hands were chained. They did not stop until they were unchained and a weapon (the ballot) was put into his hands, with which he could defend himself.
Do you recall that when Israel lived in the midst of a strong race that they complained all the time about their burdens. Finally, God had a talk with Moses, Israel's
Let Us Read--
By C. LESLIE FEAZIER
In the face of the blanket endorsement which the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has given Julia Peterkin's latest book of the Negro, "Roll, Jordan, Roll," Sterling A. Brown, literary contributor of Opportunity Magazine, in his column, "The Literary Scene—Chronicle and Comment," in the February issue of that magazine subjects Mrs. Peterkin's book to a severe critical appraisal.
In an article entitled "Arcadia, South Carolina," Professor Brown assails Mrs. Peterkin's assumption that she is writing of "the" Negro in the following language:
"Julia Peterkin's 'Negro Life in the South' needs greater explicitness; the section she deals with is very much in need of definition. At times she mentions a 'county' and one imagines her to be writing again of Blue Brook plantation and its environs. At other times she speaks generically of the Southern Negro. Perhaps for 'Southern' Mrs. Peterkin wishes 'South Carolinian'. Yet even this view can not be supported entirely, for in her narrative of 'The Dreamer', she repeats, with only minor changes, the legend which Carl Carmer published in Opportunity for March, 1932, under the title 'The Prophetess of Eutaw'. According to Mr. Carmer the setting of this legend is around Eutaw and Demoplis, Alabama. The reader of 'Roll, Jordan, Roll', is perplexed as to his whereabouts; signposts would be much in order. As it stands it is risky: for the unyear, who may be misled, and for the knowing, who may be startled.
"Yet even if we place this River Jordan geographically, setting it in the part of South Carolina that Mrs. Peterkin obviously knows, we do not believe a 'full picture' of Negro life of the vicinity has been given—not if the word full has any suggestion of completeness. The types shown are for the most part simplified: loyal, fatalistically resigned uncles and aunties, mistrusting civilization as much as Mrs. Peterkin herself, suspicious of the printed word; the old share cropper, who had thirty 'yard' children with an indeterminate number of others; the old auntie who forgot how many children she had but remembered, by their given names, every one of the many white children she had nursed; the young servant who worships his chivalrous master; the wild bucks, the girls who slash or conjure their errant lover.
"These primitive folk 'do not build or run machines, they have no books or newspapers . . . radios or moving pictures . . . but they have leisure to develop faculties of mind and heart and to acquire the ancient wisdom of their race.' . . . 'Better to be poor and black and contented with whatever God sends than be 'vast-rich and white and unrestless.' runs their philosophy.
"All of these items are demonstrably true, but that does not mean that Mrs. Peterkin's pictureurization is full. And so it is with her generalizations about Negro character. 'The children are precocious up to fourteen, then they lose their aptness.' Mrs. Peterkin might tell us something of their opportunities for schooling at that age. To her, the Negro has a 'short memory for sorrow' and is endowed with a blessed lightheartedness. It is possible that in their cabins at night, when the lady of the big house is not around, they remember their grief. What might be the underlying causes of Negro character as she expounds it, other than divine fiat, she does not tell. When Mrs. Peterkin started writing, she was expected to go beyond Thomas Nelson Page.
"... In her personal dealings with the people on her plantation she is in all likelihood a kindly mistress. But kindliness is not enough. These people pay for their quaintness by them—at best—semi-enslavement. And even for quaintness, this is too much to ask."
great leader. Moses's excuse was that his people did not have weapons with which to fight their battles. God asked Moses only one question—"What is that in thine hand?" and Moses sail, "A rod, Jehovah commanded him to use it. The rod seemed so insignificant that Moses hesitated. Finally, he decided to obey God. Israel was delivered.
Must Use What He Has
The Negro will have to do the same thing. When the Negro learns to use what he has, he will get what he needs and get it more abundantly. Not until the Negro stops spending his money with anybody and everybody who grins at him, and stops giving his ballot to men who will not give him an equal opportunity, to learn and an equal opportunity to earn, in exchange for it, will he get anywhere or be anybody.
That's all there is to this whole Negro problem. Dollars and Ballots are more deadly than bullets and hot air, or more life giving than any other balm in Gilead.
Revenge is sweet, but only to the extremely few who like revenge.
Popular Local Clubs Active With February Dances and Receptions
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Leading Social Clubs Offer Brilliant Affairs
Leading Social Clubs Offer Brilliant Affairs
By VIVIAN T. TURNER
Each week-end we find a differ- claiming the attention of social W the Simps entertained at the Linco- ated artistically with numerous ball were set free at a specified time an if possible. A scramble to get the from bursting them caused untold a While the Simps were frolickin other popular club of the capital cit at the Masonic Temple for their f to divide their time between the two This Friday the Sags, a club of holding forth at the Colonnade. T most enjoyable the season has offer The Pals of Pleasure will also o evening at the Masonic Temple. A of entertainment have been planned Mrs. Nettie Powell, Mrs. Etta K. Miles, Dr. Ernest Hardy, and Joseph
Each week-end we find a different club holding the spot-light and claiming the attention of social Washington. On last Friday, evening the Simps entertained at the Lincoln Colonnade. The hall was decorated artistically with numerous balloons of various colors. The balloons were set free at a specified time and guests were allowed to catch one if possible. A scramble to get them and a scramble to keep persons from bursting them caused untold fun and merrymaking.
While the Simps were frolicking at the Colonnade, the Owls, another popular club of the capital city, were keeping the "fires burning" at the Masonic Temple for their friends. Many persons were forced to divide their time between the two dances.
This Friday the Saps, a club of popular school maids and matrons holding forth at the Colonnade. The dance promises to be one of the most enjoyable the season has offered.
The Pals of Pleasure will also feature a "showe rdance" on Friday evening at the Masonic Temple. As usual, many surprises is the way of entertainment have been planned by the club which is composed of Mrs. Nettle Powell, Mrs. Etta K. Mason, Mrs. Alpha Fears, Charlie Miles, Dr. Ernest Hardy, and Joseph A. Walker.
Mrs. Walter Mazyck, who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Campbell Johnson, of 1125 Columbia Road, Northwest, returned to her home in Charleston, S.C., this week. She will stop at Rocky Mount, N.C., en route home.
* * * * *
Mr. and Mrs. F. Woodard, of Philadelphia, will be the guests, this week, of Mr. and Mrs. Venton Cox, 1636 Third Street, Northwest.
* * * * *
Mrs. Irene Lewis, wife of Morris Lewis, was the victim of a painful accident when she fell as she stepped from a street car in front of her home in Chicago last week. While Mrs. Lewis is confined to bed it is hoped that she will be able to join her husband here in about two weeks.
The Mother and Daughter Club of Armstrong High School will meet on Monday evening, February 19, at the school, with Mrs. G. David Houston as principal speaker. Mrs. Houston will discuss "The Future of the Pupils Who Will Not Enter College." The girls' glee club will furnish music. Mrs. Ruth Cornell Armstead is chairman of the committee sponsoring the meeting with Mrs. Geneva Brown, Mrs. Gertrude Watkins, and Mrs. Maxine Whedbe assisting.
* * * *
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Wilkinson, of this city, are both ill at their home in Dean Avenue, Northeast, with the grip. Mrs. Wilkinson is a teacher in Upper Marlborough, Maryland.
* * * *
William Spangler is in the city for an indefinite stay.
Mrs. Addison Richmond, wife of Prof. Richmond, of Howard Universit, who has been indisposed for several days, is improving.
Mrs. Cora Cooper was hostess to the Ladies' West End Whist Club on Friday, at her home, 2900 Dunbarton Avenue.
After the regular routine of business cards was the diversion of the evening after which a dainty repast was served.
First prize was awarded to Mrs. Lillian Cushenberry, second to Mrs. Clara Hawkins, third to Mrs. Gertrude Johnson, and booby to Mrs. Mary Yates.
First guest prize went to Mrs. Kathryn Neal.
Other members present were:
Mrs. Malinda Ezell, Mrs. Mabel Ambler, Mrs. Gladys Johnson, Mrs. Ethel Bolden, Mrs. Bessie Kelly, Mrs. Nettie Fisher and Mrs. Janie Bryant.
Guests were Mrs. Kathryn Neal, Mrs. Kathryn Patton, Mrs. Anna Cook.
The next meeting will be held at the residence of Mrs. Lillian Cushenberry, 1611 Twenty-eighth Street, Northwest, on February 23.
The Pandora Bridge Club met Thursday at the residence of Mrs. Fannie M. Mackey, 2533 Georgia Avenue, Northwest.
Club members present were: Anna Mae Hines, Dora Johnson, Rena Sayles, Blanche Moten, Anna Reeves, Madeline Parham, and Virginia Reeves. Guests present were Robert Parham, Walter Reeves, Jr., James Murphy, William Reeves, William Johnson, Claude Smith, and Garland Mackey.
Club prizes were won by the following: Blanche Moten, first; Madeline Parham, second; and Rena Sayles, third. Walter Reeves won first guest prize; William Reeves, second; and William Johnson, third.
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MME. W
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Prompt Se
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It Pays to Visit
MME. W. R. DUDLEY'S BEAUTY SHOPPE
MARCEL WAVING
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465 Florida Avenue, N.W.
NORTH 8149 Hours: 9 to 9
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to Ladies' Whist Club to Ladies' Whist Club
Mrs. Fannie Mackey Host to Pandora Club
event club holding the spot-light and washington. On last Friday, evening in Colonnade. The hall was decorations of various colors. The balloons and guests were allowed to catch one cam and a scramble to keep persons fun and merrymaking. Being at the Colonnade, the Owls, anny, were keeping the "fires burning" friends. Many persons were forced to dances. Many persons maids and matrons of popular school maids and matrons the dance promises to be one of the creed. feature a "showe rdance" on Friday is usual, many surprises in the way by the club which is composed of Mason, Mrs. Alpha Fears, Charlie b. A. Walker.
Mrs. Lewis K. Downing was hostess to the Irish Bridge Club on last Wednesday evening. The first club prize was won by Mrs. Eva Honesty, the second club prize by Mrs. J. Bate, and the guest prize by Mrs. Colleen Williams.
J. A. Lankford gave a very interesting and instructive lecture on Benjamin Banneker to a large and appreciative audience, at the Y.M.C.A. on Tuesday evening. Mr. Lankford was full of his subject and was able to bring many worthwhile facts concerning Negro history to his audience.
Mrs. J. A. Lankford, of 1750 S Street, Northwest, was the winner of the grand prize, a Royal vacuum cleaner, on Monday evening, at the Food Show, now being held at the Washington Auditorium by the D. G. S. Food Stores.
Miss Marion Butler has been
confined to bed for several days on
account of illness.
***
Duke Ellington and his orchestra
were entertained on Monday night
by the Musketeers, at 1 Iowa
Circle.
***
Masters Hugh and Hughston
Washington entertained a number
of their friends on the occasion of
their birthday, Wednesday afternoon,
February 14.
***
Mrs. Eckstein, who has been visiting
her daughter, Mrs. Maxine E.
Whedbe, has returned to her home
in Pittsburgh, Pa.
Clarence Conoway, known to many of his friends as "Pee Wee," formerly of this city, but now of New York City, was called to the city this week because of the death of his aunt, Mrs. Josephine Malayan.
Miss Mary White Ovington Guest of Miss Burrill
Miss Mary Burrill entertained Miss Mary White Ovington, of New York, last Sunday afternoon. Other guests included Dr. Otelia Cromwell, Mrs. Eva Burrill Holmes, Miss Mary Cromwell, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Wesley, Dr. H. Weaver, Misses Carolyn Grant, Madeline Coleman, Miss Camille Nickerson Mr. and Mrs. Sterlring N. Brown, and Miss Lucy Slowe.
Mrs. Mary Brooks
Hostess to Chatterboxites
Last week the Chatterbox Bridge Club was entertained by Mary, Mary Brooks, 1826 Vernon Street, Northwest. Guests included Mrs. Lavinia Broughton and Mrs. Irene Brown. Members present were Gertrude Harrison, Mary Scott, Annabel Rhodes, Louise Boone, Agnes Williams, Mabel Cooke, Beulah Ramsey. Prizes were awarded Gertrude Harrison, first; Louise Boone, second; and Mabel Cooke, third.
This week the club met at the home of Mrs. Annabel Rhodes, 1930 New Hampshire Avenue, with Mrs. Louise Boone as hostess. All club members were present. Two new members were added to the club's roster. Mesdames Lavinia Broughton and Jessie Hall.
Mrs. Boone's guests were Mrs. Marvelle Cunningham and Mrs. Wilhelmina Conley. Prizes were won by Mesdames Agnes Williams first: Annabel Rhodes; second; and Marvelle Cunningham, third.
BUFFALO VISITOR HERE
Mrs. Sara Evert, 163 Hickory Street, Buffalo, N.Y., was the guest of her daughter and granddaughter, Mrs. Velda Dickson and Clea Brown, of 1843 Fifth Street, Northwest, last week. During her stay Mrs. Evert was the honor guest of Miss-Ana D. Bell at a dinner on February 5. Mrs. Evert left for Buffalo on Wednesday afternoon.
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Clubs
CONSOLING PALS
The Consoling Pals met at the residence of Miss Ruth Smith, of 1203 Third Street, Southwest, last week, and made plans for their dance to be held at 1337 R Street, Northwest, March 19.
Those present were Mrs. Helen Smith, Mrs. Juanita Reed, Mrs. Bernice Mallory, Miss Hele nHopkins, Miss Ruth Smith, and Miss Lillian Smith.
The next meeting of the group will be held at 334 M Street, Southwest.
THE BLACK AND WHITE
CIRCLE, CLUB, INC.
The club held its regular meeting on last Thursday evening in its club room in the Lewis Building. On Saturday evening the members of the club were honored with a dinner tendered them by the members of La Petite Social Club, at the residence of the latter's treasurer, Miss Flora Woodward, 1753 S Street, Northwest. Cards was enjoyed, followed by dancing. The Black and White Circle Club members present were Messrs, Edgar Bell, Howard Reynolds, James Lyles, William Smith, John Wood, Alvin Smith, and Frederick Myers. La Petite Social Club was represented by Verlette Posey, Marjorie Collins, Listerine Gardner, Flora Woodward, Dolly Metts, Jess Samuels, Katie Stockton, Lillie Mae Cheeks, and Irene Williams.
MERRY MAID ART CLUB
The Merry Maid Art Club held its first meeting of the year at the residence of Mrs. Louise Watson. The following meeting was held at the home of Miss Dorothy Boice, vice-president. Last week the club met with Mrs. Montrose Edloe, president, Miss Florence Jackson, secretary, was hosts at the meeting this week. A tacky dance will be held at the residence of Mrs. Edloe, 1340 Corcoran Street, on Friday. Miss Edith Lee, financial secretary, was hostess to the club at its last meeting.
LA GARNET BRIDGE CLUB
La Garnet Bridge Club held its weekly meeting at 520 T Street, Northwest. Mrs. Rupert Edwards was hostess. Cards was the feature of the evening. Officers and members present were: Mrs. Catherine Mansheld, president; Mrs. Gertrude Roan, vice president; Mrs. Ida Jackson, Miss Wilkie Roberts, Miss Ardell Grice, Mrs. Rupert Edwards, Mrs. Harriett Keebler, Mrs. Fay Gooden, and Mrs. Carrie Early were reported ill. The next meeting will be held at the residence of Mrs. Gertrude Roan, 520 T Street, Northwest.
THE HOW COME WHIST CLUB
The How Come Whist Club and guests met at the residence of the business manager, Henry Bolden, 1810 Corcoran Street, Northwest. Jessie Baker is in first place. Alfred Selby defeated Charles Williams for second place, putting Williams in third. Harris, Rutch, Bolden, Tolliver, Tolbert and Wooten are next.
The guests of the club were Mrs. Henry W. Bolden, Mrs. Vella Ruddock, Mrs. Harry Tolliver, and Mrs. Alice Wilson. After the games Mrs. Bolden served the club a repast. The next meeting will be at the residence of Lloyd Dutch.
BLACK AND GOLD
ABT CLUB
Miss Robie Dines was hostess to the Black and Gold Art Club at her residence, 1103 Q Street, Northwest, on Tuesday. Those present were Mrs. E. Watts, Miss A. Colston, Mrs. M. Mason, Miss L. Alexander, Mrs. L. Wallace, Mrs. E. Lang and Miss M. White.
DREAM GIRLS
Mrs. Ruth Wilson was hostess to the Dream Girls at her residence, 1924 Seventeenth Street, Northwest, on February 8. At this time, arrangements were made for a matinee dance which will take place on February 22. Bridge was another feature of the evening.
The members present were: Mrs. Virginia Smootz Reeves, Mrs. Fannie Hoover, Mrs. Frankie Caldwell, Mrs. Constance Greer, Mrs. Natalie Muse, Mrs. Inez Murphy, Mrs. Mildred Mills,
Mrs. Reeves won the first prize and Mrs. Greer, the second prize.
Mrs. Charlotte Stigrave Worthy won the guest prize. An attractive repast was served.
PRO-BIS-SO
BRIDGE CLUB
The Pro-Bis-So Bridge Club was entertained at the residence of Mrs. Ethel Johnson, 1728 S Street, Northwest, last Friday evening. First prize was awarded to Charles A. Cornnish; second prize to Mrs. Annie M. Grady; and third prize to Mrs. Maude C. Moman. Among those present were Mrs. Katherine Brown, Mrs. Annie M. Grady, Mrs. Maude C. Moman, Mrs. Marie B. Schanks, Mrs. Geneva Woodward, Mrs. Maude L. Reed, and Mrs. Ethel Johnson; Dr. William T. Grady, Dr. Adolphus Woodward, Joseph I. Johnson, Theodore Brown, Walter L. Reed, Charles A. Cornish, and Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. Murdock were club guests.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 15. 1934
PEARLIE'S PRATTLE All About Lovely Ladies and Big, Bold, Wonderful Men
Do please somebody tell cute little Mrs. Self of 1601 Fifteenth Street, Northwest, to rush on over to the Shaw art gallery, Seventh and Rhode Island Avenue, and put up some of her paintings. That is if she has not done so already.
No, I'm not a judge of art or anything else, for that matter (couldn't draw or paint a straight line if I tried). But Mrs. Self's pretty place does actually seem so much "alive" with her manifold works of art that I was just simply wondering.
* * * *
Since there wasn't an earthquake, a fire or a flood last Sunday, it must have been a trip to Baltimore that kept Mr. and Mrs. Norman Cruat from attending the reception for the Rev. William L. Lane at St. Augustine's Auditorium.
Are you among the lucky ones who know the lovely little retired school teacher with the mile-wids smile, whose name is Miss Georgia Brooks? At 41 R Street, Northwest, you will find her. The smile is contagious, too. If you don't believe it, the very next time old Demon Discontent gets you under his control, ask some kindly soul to lead you to that "sunshine dispenser" and then try to stay "blue" in her presence ten minutes.
I say try because you can't. In less time than it takes to tell it, you will "catch" that "infectious fever" and soon there'll be "miles of smiles" all round.
Miss Brooks has a nephew named Stanley Brooks. A delightful singer is he. And sometimes when I see the aunt smiling I wonder if she isnt thinking just then of the soft, sweet songs of her nephew.
Saw Mrs. Vincent Thomas, wife of the popular U Street druggist, in the business district the other day. In a fluffy fur coat and a jaunty hat (gaily springlike and green) she was really quite charming. But when she put aside her coat you found it difficult to tell whether she looked smarter in the brown and white checked jacket dress or all wrapped up in the warm fur coat.
Seen leaving a theatre the other evening were Dr. Jackson L. Davis, 1219 Q Street, Northwest, and slim smiling Miss Emily Minor. They had been viewing a picture called "Counsellor at Law." Dr. Davis would be interested in a movie like that (and Miss Minor being the lovely lady that she is would naturally acquiesce) for although he is practicing dentistry now, Dr. Davis was once a learned lawyer. A versatile fellow is the dentist anyway. Have you heard about the trigonometry and stuff he used to teach?
Derby Club Hears
Attorney George Hayes
Attorney George E. C. Hayes was the guest speaker at the fifth annual smoker of the Derby Club, held at the Whitelaw Hotel last Saturday evening. Attorney Dewey M. Carr, secretary of the club acted as toastmaster and introduced Dr. John Turner, president of the club, who spoke briefly.
Attorney Charles M. Toms spoke on the history and organization of the club. Dramatic readings were rendered by Samuel Howard, and vocal and violin solos by Rexford F. Overton and J. Richmond Johnson, who were accompanied at the piano by John H. Sharpe. Professor Walter Daniels closed the program with brief remarks.
The program was in charge of the committee on arrangements, which consisted of Messrs. Dewey Carr, James E. Jones, B. F. Scott, and Adolphus Woodward.
Among those present were: Charles H. Fennel, Dr. Pinyon Cornish, Edward L. Hargett, Odent H. Fisher, Jessie Lewis, Attorney Armand W. Scott, Dr. William A. Goodloe, Dr. William J. Pinkard, W. T. Washington, C. A. Cornish, William E. Stevenson, Dr. J. C. Brazier, William H. Sayles, Fred E. Jolie, Dr. Jackson L, Davis, Dr. William T. Parker, Douglass C. Richardson, Attorney Edward W. Howard, J. Albert Wheeler, Dr. O. J. Williams, Sidney Washington, J. Chaucey Walker, Otis S. Boyd, W. Anson George, Thomas C. R. Brägg, Ernst R. Johnson, Dr. J. T. Phillips, Charles D. Barnres, Kermit Ross, Willis Richardson, James P. Kelly, J. St. Clair Price, and Harry C. Honesty, Jr.
Entertains Friends at Buffet Supper
Mr. and Mrs. William Griffin,
2110 Second Street, Northwest, entertained at a buffet supper on February 4.
Among those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brown, Mr. and Mrs. William L. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Carroll, Mesdames Elizabeth Yarborough, Mary Carter, Carrie Bolling, Esther Crump, the latter hostess. Maurice Pointer, Sherman Baylor, Albert Chase, Mr. and Mrs. Coley Davis, Jesse Butler, William Scott.
If I were a cat (no, not the kind that says mean things, but the pretty black or gray fur-footed ones, that purr away on the parlor rug), I'd like to belong to Mrs. J. A. Lankford, of 1750 S Street. Then I'd be sure to share the happy fate of little "Kitty Lankford." Never heard of her? Then go quickly and get yourself introduced to the biggest, yellowest, best-educated cat you ever saw, "Kitty" can even tell the time of day (or night either) without looking at the clock. If you doubt my word go to the Lankford's any night and stay until 12 p.m., and you'll find that same feline a-hunting up her mistress for her midnight bowl of milk.
---
I know you were wondering about all the hustle and bustle at 1718 U Street, a week or so ago. Talk about the crush of the rush hours. That's nothing. You should have seen the mother, the grandmother, grandfather, aunts, uncles, cousins, and all darting hither and thither about that big home getting dapper James Walker off to school. With so many loving relations you'd naturally think that young James would be spoiled. But don't you believe it. He's an ever so likeable fellow.
Not all the fluttering hearts belonged to relatives either. There were quite a few others (feminine ones to be sure) that quickened their beats at the knowledge that "dear little Jimmie" was leavening for the gav old "Turpentine State" (Shaw University, Raleigh, N.C.)
With young Wallace P., Jr., and Duplaine Gant making their mark in the city schools you are not surprised that Mr. and Mrs. Wallace P. Gant, 1258 Columbia Road, are interesting themselves in parent-teacher associations. Matters scholastic should fascinate them anyway. For a little more than a decade ago Mr. Gant was teaching more mathematics to more pupils in less time than—well you should have known him in his pedagogue days down in old Mississippi. (Handsboro, I think they called the town.) And if you want to make a hit in that hamlet rush right in and say you're glad to know the Gants. As for Mrs. Gant, she is a former teacher, too. But no little "boros" or "burghs" for her. No sir! But down in the old French town—gay New Orleans, with ts Pan-American air races, horse races, and merry mardiragas—you will find many wills heads filled almost to overflowing with knowledge, and if you take time to search the records you'll see that among those who helped to pack those self same heads so nearly full of learning was the clever Mrs. Gant.
Abbie Mitchell to Sing at Premiere of Amytis Theatre
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (ANP)—Complimenting the premiere of The Amytis Theatre, Sunday, February 18, in the famous Poro College Building, St. Louis, will be the initial appearance of Abbie Mitchell, internationally known soprano, in recital. The Amytis Theatre, which will be amongst the finest in St. Louis and a model for other sections as well, from the standpoint of general appointments and the latest in sound equipment, is primarily a cinema house. But the management plans to introduce and present at various intervals some of the most outstanding musical and dramatic talent, local and national.
Raphael Employees Fete Laura Bowman
The Raphael Theatre cashiers, the Misses Mary Lee and Dorothy Wedge, tendered a social hour at their residence, 1124 Sixth Street, Northwest, last Thursday midnight in honor of Miss Laura Bowman, screen star who was making personal appearances last week in conjunction with her latest film, "Drums o' Voodoo." Among those present were: Mrs Bowman, Mrs Estelle White, the Misses Ethel Lee, Agnes Lee, Melissa Lee, Kathryn Bell, Elena Crowder; Messrs. Charles Turpin, Ralph Robinson, Leon Downing, Pelham Johnson, and E. R. Harris, manager of the Raphael.
Celebrate Fourteenth Wedding Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. William Reeves, of 1106 Columbia Road, celebrated their fourteenth wedding anniversary on last Saturday. Several friends were present and the evening was spent playing cards and dancing.
Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Whiting, Mrs. Teddy Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Reeves, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Delafox H. Green, Mr. and Mrs. J. Randolph Branson, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Winkler, Mr. and Mrs. William Payne, Mrs. Pearl Ellis, Mrs. Blanche Moten, Mrs. Annie Mac Hines, Mrs. Margaret Arnold, Mr. Homer Saunders, and Claud Smith.
Clubs
PALL MALL WHIST CLUB
Mrs. Margurite Jones was hostess to the Pall Malls last Thursday, at her residence, 41 Quincy Street, Northwest. After the business meeting bridge was played, after which a repast was served. Those present were Mrs. Margurite Jones, Mrs. Bernice Lucas, Miss Nadyne Washington, Mrs. Eva Whittington, Miss Madelyn Austin and Mrs. Serena Cooper.
NEW DEAL WHIST CLUB
The New Deal Whist Club held its weekly meeting on Saturday at the residence of G. Glascoe, 2205 H Street, Northwest. Refreshments were served and Edward Means because a member of the club.
Those present were:
Phillip Hansborough, president; Louie Keyser, vice-president; James Rich, secretary; Francis Bethel, assistant secretary; Ollie Green, treasurer; Alphonza Neal, Leroy Bias, Nathaniel Campbell, Laurence Moten, Morris Garrett, Charles Robinson, Jackson Robinson, Edward Means and David Watt, business manager.
CHERRIO WHIST CLUB
The Cherrie Whist Club met at the residence of J. T. Bell, vicepresident. Cards followed a business meeting at which time plans were discussed for the club's dance and party.
JUSTAMERE CLUB
Mrs. Marie Smith was hostess to the Justamere Club and its guests, Monday night, February 12, at her residence, 1117 Columbia Road, Northwest. Bridge was the feature of the evening, and a repast was served by the hostess. Guests present included Mesdame Lena Jones, Etta Mason, Beatrice Lancaster, and Vera Fultz, and the Misses Corrine Pumphrey, Idella Ford, and Julia Gant. Members present were Mesdames Ada Chambers, Ethel Bridgeford, Charlotte Burke, Clarice Prather, Jesie Andrews, and Mary W. Bacon. First guest prize went to Mrs. Lena Jones, and second prize to Mrs. Etta Mason. Club prizes were awarded to Mrs. Clarice Prather and Mrs. Mary W. Bacon.
At an earlier function, Mrs. Ethel Bridgeford entertained the club and a group of her friends at tea at her residence, 1903 Fifteenth Street, Northwest. On the evening of February 4, Mrs. Willie Collins poured tea for the guests. Decorations were red, white and blue.
PIGNEERS WHIST CLUB
The Pioneers Whist Club is at the home of Mr. Henry Keith, 2214 Twelfth Street, Northwest, Monday evening. Whist was played after a brief business meeting. Members present were Eva Smith, Lewis Barnes, Savanna Johnson, James Minn, Catherine Lane, Wilkie Tucker, Marguerite Hyman, Dallas Johnson, Florence Weaver, Irving Thompson, and Henry Keith. The next meeting of the club will be held at the home of Mr. Thompson, 1912 Twelfth Street, Northwest. The club is open for challenge.
NON NOBIS SOLUM
WHIST CLUB
The Non Nobis Solum Whist Club defeated the Merry Makers by 135 points, on Monday. The club was scheduled to engage the Cimarrons, Thursday night. It is open to further challenges through its business manager, Leon Herbin, of 1909 L Street, Northwest. Members of the club are W. Arthur Tate, Stephen Williams, Nat Proctor, Leo Robinson, D. P. Jackson, Madison Williamsons, A. Williamson, James Shorter, William Webb, Richard Lomas, Roscoe Jones, James Johnson, Mack Smith, Hamilton Proctor, and Leon Herbin.
THE DEBUTANTES
The Debutantes held their first meeting of the season at the residence of Miss Madge Gray, 1102 R Street, Northwest, this week. Members present were Miss Mattle Barnes, president of the club; Miss Madge Gray, vice-president; Miss Lola Gray, secretary; Miss Lillian Morris, treasurer; and Miss Marier Morris, business manager. After the business meeting a repast was served.
THE MADRILLIONERS
The regular meeting of the Madillioners was held Saturday evening, February 10, at the residence of the club's business manager, William M. Coleman, 1720 New Jersey Avenue. Invitations are now in the mail for the club reception, which will be held on Friday, February 23. Patrons who have not as yet received their invitations may obtain one by calling George H. Greenfield, of 1111 Columbia Road.
LENNINTEE
WHIST CLUB
The Lennintee Whist Club held its weekly meeting at the residence of Mrs. Irma Walker. Members present were; Anna Cornrish, Ethel Sunner, Lillian Glover, Mabel Reeder, Blanche Lewis, Kate Crossby, and Irma Walker. Card playing and dancing were the features following a business meeting.
PERPETUAL WHIST CLUB
The Perpetual Whist Club held its weekly meeting at the home of Mrs. D. C. Kilpatrick, on Monday evening, February 12, at 8:30. Members present were Mrs. Louise Myers, president; Miss Durilla Kent, secretary; Miss Algie Goldsmith, treasurer; Mrs. D. C. Kilpatrick, business manager; Miss Beatrice Goldsmith, chaplain; Miss Rosa Fox, hostess; and Miss Ethel Mills. The club met the Royal Dukes, Wednesday night.
BLUE MOON
WHIST CLUB
Mrs. Eva Moss was hostess to the Blue Moon Whist Club, Monday evening, at which time Miss Mary McKinney was welcomed into the club as a new member. After a brief business meeting the evening was spent in cards. First prize went to Mrs. Margret Scott, and second prize to Mrs. Mary Price. The club is planning to give a whist tournament at the home of Miss McKinney, 1327 Q Street, Northwest, on March 6.
HI-DE-HO CLUB
The Hi-De-Ho Social Whist Club held its weekly meeting at the residence of its social secretary, Miss Eric Hill, 1826 Fifteenth Street, on Tuesday evening. Because of the absence of the club's president, Mrs. Rosa L. Manely, the chair was filled by Mrs. Harriet Ray, vice-president. Members present included Mrs. Rosa Hill, Mrs. Vivian Turner, Mrs. Alice Blakeley, Mrs Eunice Perkins, and Mrs. Ellen Ivry.
THE DIPLOMATS
The Diplomats held their last meeting at the residence of the financial secretary, Emory Richardson. Invitations are now being distributed for the club's mid-winter prom, which is to be given at the Masonic Temple on February 17th. The members present were Walter Muse, William O'Neal, Charles Galley, Emory Richardson, Lester Williamson, Howard Shelton, Aloysius Brown, and Lloyd Pauls.
EVER READY
WHIST CLUB
The Ever Ready Whist Club won three games within three weeks. They were victors over the Try Any Club, winning by two points; the Nobi Solum Club, winning by seven points; and the Pioneers, winning by six points.
HAPPY BUDDIES
Mrs. Allene Price was hostess to the Happy Buddies, Thursday evening, at her residence, 729 Park Road, Northwest. After the business meeting a repast was served. Among those present were Mrs. Virginia Dent, Mrs. Marion Ralston, Mrs. Blaise Harrington, Mrs. Eunice Smith, Mrs. Rosa Hatton, and Mrs. Anna Davis.
SOCIAL WHIST CLUB
The Social Whist Klub was entertained, Wednesday night, by its president, Charles Cardozo, and its treasurer, Mrs. Louise Cardozo. After a brief business meeting during which the coming dance was discussed. Members of the club played cards. The team of Thomas and Cardozo took honors for the evening, with the team of Brown and Smith taking second place.
Honored guests at this meeting were Reginald Parker, Mrs. Florence Brown, Mies Martha Drew, Edward Barnes, and Joseph Dyer.
CLUB UNIQUE
William Sutton was host to the Club Unique at its weekly meeting on Thursday at his residence, 1815 S Street, Northwest. A short business session was held, after which whist was played.
Members present were: D, Clyde Hall, Jr., president; Lee Daughtry, vice-president; James T. Vass, secretary-treasurer; Mitchell Dorsey, servant-at-arms; Walter Clarkson, Quender Jenkins, Floyd Jones, Louis Ruckan, William Stevenson, and William Sutton.
ZONATA BRIDGE CLUB
Mrs. Alma Daughtry was hostess to the Zonata Bridge Club at its regular weekly meeting at her residence, 1705 Thirteenth Street, Northwest. The entire evening was spent in making final plans for a dance to be given at Thurston's Cafe on Thursday, March 1. Officers and members present were Mrs. Armetta Vass, president; Mrs. Alma Daughtry, secretary; Mrs. Dorothy H. Hall, treasurer; Mrs. Willie Mae Dorsey, sergeant-at-arms; Mrs. Hattie Williams, Mrs. Gladys Sutton, Mrs. Mary Jones, Mrs. Blanche Rucker, Mrs. Flossie Terry, Mrs. Evangeline Stevenson, and Mrs. Marguerite M. Edwards.
SELF CULTURE CLUE
The Self Culture Club met at the residence of Mrs. Irma Smith, 1439 T Street, Northwest, on Tuesday, February 13. The newly elected officers were installed by the Rev. H. T. Medford, who was guest of the evening. They are: Miss Grace L. Addison, president; Dr. K. Francis, vice-president; Mrs. Flora Chase, secretary; Mrs. Alberta Sumerville, social secretary; and Miss A. Eliza Bell, treasurer. Musical selections were furnished by the club trio. A Valentine repast was served by the host-
FIVE
Newlyweds Entertained in N. Y. City on Honeymoon
Mr. and Mrs. George Dines, who were married in Washington last week at the St. Augustine's Church and who are spending their honeymoon in New York City, have been very extensively entertained by their numerous friends in Gotham. Mrs. F. K. Williamson, formerly principal of the Washington Business College, but now living in New York City, entertained with a dinner party in with a breakfast in their honor in honor of the couple on last Friday. Mrs. Mary Saunders entertained her beautiful apartment on W. 145th Street. T. Edward Ross, was host at a brilliant party honoring Mr. and Mrs. Dines, at which time several young couples met the visitors, and enjoyed dancing and cards. Also, Fred Norman, a member of Claude Hopkin's orchestra entertained in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Dines. The honeymooners returned to Washington this week where they will make their future home.
Dunbar Teacher's Marriage Announced
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Frazier, of 389 Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest, announced this week the marriage of their niece, Miss Josephine Frazier Johnson, to Mr. Schaffer Bentley, of Cincinnati, Miss Johnson is a prominent teacher at Dunbar High School, while Mr. Bentley is a well known midwestern business man. The couple are now residing at 1618 S Street, Northwest.
THE MAESTROS WHIST CLUB
The Maestros Whist Club came out victorious over the Whippi Whist Club by a score of 368 to 287 points in a match played last week. The club is now laying plans for its annual spring tournament and dance, which will be held April 17, at 1337 R Street, Northwest. Challenges may be arranged through Captain N. W. Walker, of 933 N Street, Northwest.
THE FREELANCERS
The Bloomingdale Whist Club fell into a complete washout at the hands of the Freclancers in a match contested last week. A business meeting was held at the club house before the match, with Messrs. Harrison and Blackwell serving refreshments.
NATIONAL CARD LEAGUE
At a meeting of the National Card League, held at the Garnet-Patteron School. Thursday evening, the Free Lancers won over the Bloomingdales, 210 to 161, and the Harlems were defeated by the Eclipse Club, 207 to 95. Another meeting of the league will be held next Thursday, and all clubs are invited to send representatives.
SYNDICATE WHIST CLUB
The weekly meeting of the Syndicate Whist Club took place on Tuesday night at the residence of James Cheek, its president, 800 T Street, Northwest. The club accepted into membership E. D. Presson, of 1517 S Street, Northwest.
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Clubs
Boca. ae Sener
L CLUB
*_The™ Fleur-De-Lis' Social Club
“Was entertained “by its treasurer,
Miss Inez Whitlock, at her resi-
dence, 2222 Q Street, Northwest,
on Monday evening.
Members present included Mes-
dames Sarah Taylor, _ Mildred
Diggs, Florine Ashford, Eisie Bak-
er, Eleanor Eisbey, and Mary Whit-
lock, and Miss Mildred Spriggs.
BROADMOOR
‘The Broadmoor Whist Club was
entertained by Mrs. Laura John-
son, of 1216 C Street, Southeas:,
Thursda yevening. Cards followed
@ brief “business meeting, with
honors going to Mrs. Alville Dor-
sey, Mrs. Louise Contee, and Mrs.
Ethel Holmes.
Members in attendance included
Mrs. Madeline Christian, Mrs, Min-
Rie Smith, Mrs, Lida Smith, Mrs.
Constance’ Hill, Mrs. Ernestine
Cooper, and Mrs. Bertha Filmore.
The club is open for challenges,
which should be arranged through
Mrs. Madeline Christian, of 231 S
Street, Northwest. |
SCOOFERS CLUB
The Scoofers will meet the Royal
Dukes at bridge, Thursday ngiht,
at 905 R Street, Northwest. The
club is open for further engage-
ments, which should be arranged
through its business manager, at
1819 Corcoran Street.
MERRILY FOUR
‘The Merrily Four Whist Club
held its seventh mecting of the
year at 3003% Sherman Avenue,
Northwest. Miss Sylvia Hardy
was hostess, Club prizes for whist
were awarded to Edith Brooks and
Louise Peoples, first, and Priscilla
Marshall and ‘Cecelia Holly, sec-
ond, Miss Fannie Hoover was ap-
Pointed business manager of the
club for the coming year,
Among those present were Edith
Brooks, Olivia Thompson, Priscilla
Marshall, Fannie Hoover, Amy
Johnson, Cecelia Holly, Louise Peo-
ples, Pearl Patterson, Earlrine Har-
per, and Sylvia Hardy. The next
meeting of the club will be held at
the home of Miss Amy Jackson, 412
© Street, Northwest, on Wednes-
day, February 21.
POINSETTA SOCIAL CLUB
The Poins:tta Social Club was
entertained by its vice-president,
Mrs. Catherine Brannum, of 1706
U_ Street, Northwest, Saturday
Breeiog: Among thore present
were Mrs. Beatrice Besard, presi
dent; Mrs. Carrie Mahony, secre-
tary; Mrs, Gussie Staley, trezsur-
er; Mrs. Dora Mahony,’ financial
seerctary; and Mrs. Jessie Wil-
Eams, business’ manager.
FUTURISTIC NOVELTY CLUB
‘The Futuristic Novelty Club
celebrated their third anniversary
at the home of its recording secre-
tary, Mrs, Louise Cassis, 63412 L
Street, Northwest, last’ Sunday.
Several well-known clubs were
present.
Officers of the club are Miss
Zelma Corttman, president; Miss
Alice Thomas, vice-president; Miss
Agnes Kelly, treasurer; | Mrs,
Louise Cassis, recording secre-
tary; Miss Edith Mitchell, financial
secretary; Mrs. Leola’ Morris,
business manager, and Mrs, Gus"
sie Greenleaf, chaplain.
Soaerr Vores ©
. Charles E. Mitchell, former min-
ister to Liberia, returned to his
jhome in New York City last week,
[after a stay of several days in the
Capital.
eee
Mrs. John R. Hawkins is ill and
confined to the Graduate Hospital!
| in Philadelphia, Her daughter, Mrs,
lin Philadelphia at her vedside,
tenes
Miss Estelle Coleman, of 1409
S Street, Northwest, and Leon
Proctor, of 41 H Street, Northwest,
‘were married in New York City
last week,
eens
Mme. Lillian Evanti was heard
‘in a brilliant recital at Tuskegee
Institute, last week. She was en-
thusiastically received by both stu-
dent body and faculty of the school,
together with scores of others who
came from near-by communities tu
hear the celebrated soloist,
eeee
Dr, Carter G. Wosddson, director
of the Association for the Study of
Negro Life and History, was the
guest speaker at the St. Paul
A.ME. Church, in St, Louis, Mo.,
last Sunday. The occasion was the
Allen's Day Celebration, which is
observed annually by the Sons of
Allen——While in the midwest, Dr.
Woodson, will imake several other
addresses before retirning to the
city.
sees
Mr. and Mrs. T, M. Dent, of 329
U_ Street, Northwest, celebrated
theiv forty-fifth wedding anniver-
sary_with their family on Sunday.
sees
JeeMaurice Gates, militant Com-
mianist, and Writer, spent the past
week-end in New York City as the
guest of his fiance’, Miss Theresa
Loving,
sees
Boy Scout Week was observed
by the, 1,800/scouts.of the District
of Columbia on Sunday with spe-
‘cial programs. Charles Thomas, of
the. Armstrong: High School, and
Col, West A. Hamilton were the
principal speakers at a program
which was given by Troop No. 506,
at the Tabernacle Baptist Church.
James R, Cousins, scoutmaster,
presided.
sees
Edward Henry, magistrate of
Philadelphia, accompanied by his
wife stopped in the Capital for a
brief visit with friends this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry were en route
to Hot Springs, Ark., where they
will enjoy a recreational and health
rest. gree
William Gilmore, of 142.Seaton
Street, Northwest, died at his home
this week, The late Mr. Gilmore,
was a well-known and prominent
citizen of Washington, and was em-
ployed in the Agriculture Depart-
ment for many years.
John T. Rhines and) Thomas, T.
Frazier, both prominent ‘morticians
in Washington, ave vacationing. in
Hot Springs, Arkansas,
Congressman and Mrs. Oscar
DePriest have issued invitations to
a Patriotic Musical, on Sunday
afternoon, February 18, to be given
in the House Building Auditorium,
3 ever
J. Finley. Wilson, grand exalted
ruler of Elks, is completing plans
te attend the Annual Convention
By Capitola
of the Pacifie States Association
of the Improrved Benevolent Pro-
tective Order of Elks, which order
consists of California, Arizona,
Utah, Washington, Oregon and the
Republic of Mexico, The conven-
tion will convene in Bakersfield,
California fyom March 28 to April
lL
tees
«The twelfth “Race Relations
Sunday” was observed at Asbury
MLE. Church on last Sunday night.
Bishop William Fraser MeDowell,
retired bishop of the Methodist
Episcopal Church; Dr, Russell J.
Clinehy, pastor ‘of ‘the Mount
Pleasant Congregational Church;
Dr. Benjamin Brawley of the de-
partment of history, Howard Uni-
yersity, and Rabbi ‘Abram Simon,
of the Eighth Street Temple were
the main speakers. Special music
was furnished by the choirs of
Mount Pleasant Congregational
Church and Asbury M.E. Church.
Dr. Rovert M. Williams, pastor of
the Asbury Church, presided,
Dr. Maloney,’ of Buffalo, New
York, and brother of Dr. A, H.
Maloney, professor of Pharmacolo-
gy in the Medical School at How-
ard University, has arrived in
Washington, and plans to remain,
where he will continue the practice
o= medicine in the District.
sees
A celebration of Negro History
week was held on Wednesday night
at Garfield Community Center, the
Garfield School and Garfield Citi-
zens’ Association taking part, Dean
W. D. West, of Howard University
delivered the principal address,
On Thursday night, the Garnet
Patterson Community’ Center will
hold its observance of the week,
with an appropriate program spon-
sored by Mrs, Hilyer.
seee
Emmett J. Avery, president. of
District No. 8 of New York City,
attended a mecting of the execu-
tive commitice of the National
Alliance of Postal Employees,
which met in Washington on Wed-
nesday and Thursday of this week.
weer
Mrs. Narka Lee Rayford spent
the past week-end in New York
City visiting with friends,
eee
The Musolit club will celebrate
Lincoln-Douglass Day with an
elaborate program and banquet on
Friday night of this week, Henry
Murray and John P. Davis will
deliver the principal addresses,
Miss Nancy Anderson
Weds George Dines
Miss Naney Anderson, of Ports-
mouth, Va, and a product of the
schools in that city and also of
Hampton Institute and the Wash-
ington Business College of this
city, was quietly married on Feb-
ruaty 7, at 8 p.m, in the Rectory
of St, Augustine's’ Chureh, to Me.
George Dines, of Washington, Miss
Eunice Moss acted as brides-maid
and Mr. Robert L, Dines, brother
of the groom, was the best man.
The bride, for two years has been
a teacher in Virginia, The groom
isan employee in the Navy De-
partment of the Federa] Govern-
ment. Roth are very popular in
social cirles in Washington. and
are members of the widely known
“Whiffipy” musical and card elub,
Only intimate friends and_ mem:
bers of the immediate family at-
tended the ‘wz eling ceremony, Mr.
and Mrs, Dina: left directly after
the ceremony for New York City
to spend their honeymoon.
pie AE Ra
MR. AND MRS, IVERY BROWN
ENTERTAIN
Mr, and Mrs, Ivery Brown, 2604
Stanton Road, Anacostia, enter-
tained at an elaborate and artistic
dinner in their home last Monday
evening, in honor of the opening
of the celebration of Negro His-
tory Week, with the following per-
Sons as guests:
Morris Lewis, secretary to Con-
gressman DePriet, and his son and
daughter-in-law, the Rey. P, A.
Seott, pastor of Campbell A.M.E.
Church; Mr. and Mrs, Robert S.
Penn, Mr. and Mrs. John Simmons,
Miss Emma V. Smith, Mrs. Mar-
tha E, Ellis, and Mercus Dale. Mrs.
Brown was assisted in the serving
by Mrs. Lula Hansborough and
Mrs.’ Viola Simpson.
eee tee
CINDERELLA PAGEANT HELD
AT, ST. AUGUSTINES
Baby Sterling Boulding, Jr., Miss
Marie Dickson, and Miss Doris
Carter were the stars of a Cin-
derella Pageant held last week at
St. Augustine's Auditorium.
William Ford, a member of the
famous Sanctuary Choir and solo-
ist at the church, rendered several
selections.
——.___-
JAMES STEW ART ENTERTAINS
FRIENDS AT PARTY
James Stewart entertained a few
of his friends at a cocktail party
at his residence, 1017 Euclid Street,
Northwest, Sunday night. Those
present included Mr. and Mrs.
James Johnson, Albert Peacy, Mrs.
Jessie Samuels, and Miss Mildred
Ferris.
eee = |
SPWING CIRCLE ‘TO GIVE
MUSICAL PROGRAM
The Capitol View Sewing Circle
will spontor. a. literary and’ mu-
sital’progann at the Beulah Bay.
tise Church on Sunday, February
18, at Spm. The program will be
open to all;
wae tan
A rose by any other name will
Sratag tie aitiew vacieriy,
HE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 15,.1¢°°*
EO ————_—_—_—_—eeoeon oleae ee
ee ee eae re
% | Continues Triumphs in Sweden III
i+
Fae AN
MISS MARIAN ANDERSON, famed contralto. singer, whose ar-
tistic tritmphs on the concert stage in Sweden have made her the idol
of audiences there. Mics Anderson's success was so remarkable that
Minsiter of Justice Zable denied her the privilege of giving another
concert on the ground. that her earnings were so great, the government
did not wish: foreign artists to take'so much from the country. The
ban was later rescinded and Miss.Anderrson Has given other concerts,
The music criti¢s of the country have'hailed her as possessing the finest
contralto voice extant. r
eer meciesshaech coe
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SAN) cote patn at ieee he stews cane at
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CAPITAL CITY
SOCIAL CLUB
Miss Virginia Reed was hostess
to the Capital City Social Club az
her home, 4918 Deane Avenue,
Northeast, last week. Club prizes
went to Eline Curtis, first; Mrs.
Ruth Rhodes, second; and Mrs.
George Price, third.
Members present included “Mr.
and. Mrs, William Ennis, Mr. and
Mrs, Lewis Rhodes, Mr,’ and) Mrs,
Clarence Stanton, Mr. and Mrs,
George H. Price, Mrs. Isabella
Walker, Miss: Thelma Stark, Miss
Clara ‘Nonteiss, Elmer Curtis,
Clyde H. Cavanaugh, and Garfield
Cavanaugh. Guests of the evenin;
were Mve. Alberta, Randolph aad
Sergeant Smith.
‘The club will hold its first whist
tournament and dance at 388 G
Street, Northeast, on February. 21.
PETITE SOCIAL
WHIST CLUB
The Petite Social Whist Club en-
tertained the Black and White Cit-
cle Club at the residence of Mis:
Flora Woodward, 1753 S Street,
Northwest, last week. The eve-
ning was ‘spent in playing cards,
and a repast was ‘Served by” the
hostess.
‘Those present were Edgar Bell,
Charles Lee, Alvin Smith, Harold
Reynolds, Frederick Miles, John
Wood, James Lyles, and William
Smith; Mesdames Verlett Posey,
Lesterne Gardiner, Irene Williams,
Lily Mae Derreak, and Jesse Sma-
els; and the Misses Katie Stocé-
ton, Dolly Metts, Flora Woodward
and Marjorire Collins.
STRAIGHT LIGHT
BRIDGE CLUB
Mrs. Hattie Wood was hostess to
the Straight Light Bridge Club in
her spacious home, 1234 Fourth
Street, Northwest, on Tuesday,
February 6. The members present
were Mesdames Gilliam, Girrado,
Jones, Ward, and Fisher.
We truly hope’our sick members,
Mesdames Jackson, Hollomand and
Chisholm, are improving.
‘The guest of the evening was
Mae. Jennie Smith.
THE RAMONA .
BRIDGE CLUB
The Ramona Bridge Club held
its weekly meeting at the residence
of Miss Lydia Du Bissetts in How-
ard Manor last week. Arrange-
ments were completed for a card
tournament to be given at 1845
Vernon Street, Northwest, on Feb-
ruary 15,
Members present included Mrs.
Mary Ford, president, Miss Ella
Taylor, treasurer; Mrs. Mabel Mil-
ler, secretary; Mrs. Thelma Rog-
ers, business manager; Miss Agnes
Brumfield, Miss*Annie Willis, Miss
Lydia DuBisette, and Miss’ Bea-
trice Clark. i
THE WHIST SPORTS
Isaac Butler, of 1229 Duncan
Street, Northeast, was host to the
Whist’ Sports at their regular
meeting this week. Cards and a
repast served by the host, followed
a brief business meeting.
Officers of the club are Stewart
Hardy, president; Sally Hilton,
secretary; Roger Coles, treasurer;
and Clarence Hilton, assistant bus-
iness manager.
CLUB LE PARADIS
The Club Le Paradis gave a card
tournament at the Moses Home on
T Street, last Wednesday evening.
Six prizes were awarded to. the
winners. The tournament was well
attended,
TWELVE DEMONS
| WHIST CLUB
| The Twelve Demons Whist_Club
held its weekly meeting last Mon-
day evening at the residence of
Miss Estella V .Edds, 2448 Ontario
Road, Northwost. ‘The group re-
cently defeated the Pioneers Whis:
Club by a margin of 53 points.
PORO CLUB
The Poro Club held its regular
meeting at the branch office of the
Bore Conuany lait week Pigie
were discussed at that time for a
spring dance which will be given
in April. The next meeting of the
club will be held on February 20.
BEST NEWS UF THE NALION SS CAPITAL
Personals
| | \ Combination Sale! | —s
| ® __ One Package of : VANITAR’
| OE | eee
SANICO JELLY | || WISSLY |
mo 23e | eeeoer
Exceptional Vorkoss’ |
Mrs. Marie Plummer Orset
former Washingtonian, was in the
city recently ‘for a short stay tc
visit her mother, Mrs. J. O. Plum-
mer, 1500 First Street,. Northwest
On her return trip to Jacksonville,
Fila., Mrs, Orset will stop in Ra-
leigh‘and Durham, N.C. to visit her
father, Dr. J. 0. Plummer.
Mrs. Josephine: Dillard left the
city Saturday for Glen White,
W.Va., her! home, where she will
pass several days, returning to the
capital early next week, 7
Dr. Mordecai W.. Johnson, presi-
dent of Howard University’ spoke
last Sunday. ‘evening in | Boston,
Mass, on {ithe Conuest of Lynch-
ing: the Nooze, the Law and Pub-
Hie Opinion.” Dr. Johnson discuss-
ed the snocking reversion to prim-
itive brutality of recent months.
B. R. Robinson, of Laurens, S.C,
is visiting his daughter and son-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Har-
rison, of 1412. Columbia Street,
Northwest.
Mrs. A. Ferena Brown, 1924 G
Street, Northeast, who only recent-
ly returned home from Mt.. Alto
Hospital, where she underwent
treatment for a fractured wrist, is
convalescing: Mrs. Brown a typist
in the Navy Department, sustained
the arm’ injury when. she-fell on
her way to work, February 2.
‘PURE CANE SUGAR 10 ™ 7c
[PEAGHES "gun 2 1h
‘STANDARD TOMATOES. 3°: 25c
LANG'S SAUERKRAUT 2°s.”'9fe
PHILLIPS TOMATO SOUP 3<-,13c
‘White Star Tuna. . . 2 «= 29¢
Sardines intorsis sou, , Qova ine 1 56
| Stokely’s Tomato Juice. 2 33° 15¢
Stokely’s REFUGEE BEANS | | D tis 296
(Stokely’s warts. 2 ths 259
Sanico Pancake Flour 3 >= 20¢
‘Super Suds... . . Sr 22¢
‘Sanico Peas... . . 2%! 27¢
Our Famous Green Bag Coffee" 2c.
Land O'Lakes Butter........"° 35e.
Jumbo Roll Butter..........."" 30c}
Vermont Maid Syrup...... 2% Ie:
Sanico Ginger Snaps......2'* 25¢
Jumbo Bread... 2.0.2... yi Ze.
| Sanico Carton Eggs.........°* 25e!
| Certified Breakfast Eggs...° 28¢)
im. * |. =
THE NUTZ CLUB
Miss Elise Millersentertained the
Knutz Chub last Saturday after-
noon at her home. Bridge and ten
were features of the evening, The
guest prize went to Mrs. Lydia
Du Buisetts, while Misses Helen
Meredith and Elaine Ridgeley’ cap-
tured: first‘and second club. prizes,
respectively,
Guests present included Misses
Pauline Wallace, Beatrice Gray,
Frankie Taylor, Elsie Jones, Doris
Brown, Naomi Alsop, Beatrice
Clark,’ Marionne Smallwood, and
Delilah Lewis; Mesdames Lawrence
Smith Ozier and Lydia DuBuisetts,
and Messrs. Charles Ozier, Frank
Harrison, Bus Schank, Kicky Clay,
Warren Smith, George Handy, Clif.
ton Jones, Charles and Lawrence
‘Shumate, Frank Blackburn, Vin-
gent Cephas, Horace Christopher,
Bill Smallwood, Roscoe Orme,
Franz Harris, Larry Grymes, Jim:
my Brewington, and Bertran Stark,
Club members. present were the
Misses Viola and Beatrice Flem-
ing, Evelyn Peyton, Helen Mere-
dith, Elaine Ridgeley, and Armeta
Schey, and Mesdames Helen Ea-
gles Miller and Mrs. Mamie Stew-
art.
HIGH ACE BRIDGE CLUB
Mrs. Effie James was hostess to
the High Ace “Bridge Club at her
home, 5100 East Capitol Street,
Northeast, last Tuesday evening.
Those present at this meeting
included Mesdames Frances Tho-
mas, Alpha Salter, Thelma Stew-
art, Marie Tasby, Beatrice Davis,
Willie Barnes, Elizabeth Bizelle,
and Effie James,
Prizes: were awarded to Elizabeth
Bizelle, Alpha Salter, and Beatrice
Davis. Next week the club will-b2
entertained by. Miss Leonora Pinck-
ney. Plans for the annual Spring
dance are as yet uncompleted.
PRODUCE DEPARTMENTS
TEXAS BEETS
FROM THE
VALLE
a. “OC |
Gece vee | COLLARDS ||
eer : ov - i
DALIFORWIA CARROTS 2 boo. 182
“MEAT DEPARTMENTS |
LA MYSTIC CLUB
‘The La. Mysties met! last week
at°b10 Forty-eighth Street, North-
east, for the \purpose of complet-
ing plans for their dance, which
will be given February. 15 at 1527
Ninth’ Street, Northwest.
Members. present wete Mesdames
Mary’ Thompson, Hattie Davis,
Jessie: Simmons, ‘and Lillie Davis,
Miss Caprollcand Meesrs. -Madeo
Richavdon, William’ H: Davis; and
Sol Berhbrgy.-.
GOLDEN CIRCLE CLUB
‘The Golden Civele Club met ‘on
Tuesday evening, February. 13, at
the ‘home of Mrs. Connie Funcha,
when final. avrdngements were
inade ‘fora: dance to- be held Mon-
day evening, February 19, at. 1507
U ‘Street. Bridge followed ‘the
brief busitiess meeting, after which
a 'repast was Served’by the hostess.
/PETER FOX TUR‘ EYS ™ 25c
PRIME RIB ROAST .. ™ 2lc
JUNE CHEESE .4.5.. 5™-23¢
OYSTERS. 2 23c, * 45e
FRESH HAMS. ... ™ 18c
FRESAH SHOJLDERS. . ” 12c
SANICO HAMS Simi 6 0 17c
CHUCK ROAST ... ™ 14c
BsEF LIVER: 30%.) 7. bese
Sliced Halibut .............™ 29c
Ree BRB OSS Snails op AOS
Fresh Croakers ............% 12c
Spanish Mackerel ..........." 17c
EMet of Haddock. .......5.... 20
Buck Shad MCh, ies oe ane
SANITARY’S SPECIAL
2 LBS. 35c
r of 10 Says Husband is Cruel; Seeks Separation
i
29 YEARS OF
MARRIED LIFE
ENDINCOURT
After 29 years of married life in
which 10 children have been born
to the union, Mrs, Olive Morris, of
513 Rhode Island Avenue, North-
west, has filed a pet'tion in the
District Supreme Court requesting
that her husband, James Morris,
of the same address he ordered to
permanently support her and five
‘minor cffspring.
In the declaration, which was
presented to the court by Edward
P. Lovett, last week, Mrs, Morris
Stated that for the past six years
Mr. Morris had failed to contri-
‘bute to the support and mainten-
ance of her and the children. She
also averred that she is now get-
ting feeble and unable to support
herself and the minor children,
Mrs. Morris not only accused her
husband of non-support but elaim-
ed that he is unbearably crue] and
‘often threatens to do her bodily
harm, and drinks excessively. No
Tater than December 30, 1933, the
wife claims that her husband
drove her anc the children out of
the home into the colh anr-snow
‘Ghe states that she had to solicit
the aid of the police to regain en-
trance to their home,
Fears Bodily Harm
Mrs. Morris also asserted in her
petition that at the oresent time
she is afraid Jo slcep in the same
room with her husband through
fear of “hodily harm. She claims
that quite frequently she sits up
most of the night in the room of
hep mother, whi also lives at the
acdress.
Morris, according to the petition
4s a bricklayer and stone-mason,
and is now employed at the Zoo-
Togical ‘Park, under the supervision
of Dr, W. M. Mann, white, super-
intendent, ‘earning $36 a weck.
‘The Morrises were married at
Florence, S.C., September 8, 1904.
Their fie minor” children ‘range
in ages from 15 down to 6 years.
FORMER CHIEF
MISTICE OF
LIBERIA DIES
MONROVIA, Liberia—(By Ot-
towa J. Saunders for the Associ-
ated Negro Press)—Hon. ¥. E. R.
Gohnson, former Chief Justice of
Liberia, died at his home here the
16th of November, after a long ill:
ness. Liberia paid great tribute
to one of the last surviving mem-
bers of Liberia’s historical famili-
es,
Br. Johnson had held almost
‘every important, position in Liber-
ia but that of its President. He
was the youngest man ever to be
called to the bar, and rose up from
a clerkship in the Supreme Court
to be its Chief. He was also
County Attorney, twice Attorney
General, Secretary of State, Post-
Master ‘General, Judge Advocate,
was commissiened to America, un-
der the King Regime, also to the
World Court and League of Na-
tions, and to England,
He was a descendent from an
old family in Virginia, U.S.A, His
grandfather was Elija Johnson,
who figured so prominently in the
founding of Liberia, and who made
that immortal statement, “Here
‘Ne are and here we shall remain.”
His father, Hiliary Johnson, was
‘one of the early Presidents of Li-
beria.
He was born in 1862 in Monrovia
and had traveled extensively and
was an authority on international
Jaw.
Consul Genera] Gabriel Johnson
of Fernando Port is the only sur-
viving brother, he also leaves two
daughters aad one son.
Te, ee
LINCOLN PARK, MD. TO
GET COUNTY ROAD
"The inspection committee of the
County Commissioners of Price
Georges County, Md., recommend.
fed to the commission last week,
that a road running through Lin-
eoin Park from the Defense High-
“Way to the intersection of Lincoln
and Maryland Avenue be taken
yer as a county road, and a 40-
foot paving be laid. This will cov-
fa distance of upproximately one
mile, passing the school, church
and a number of homes.
For many years the people of
this community have struggled
hard to maintain sve sort of out-
Jet to the main highways, and only
Deeaune of the determine’ effort of
& small group who held together,
Kiss this comM@anity teen vlc to
‘enjoy 2 smallimeasire of relict.
The date has not been set for
‘construction of the road. yu:
vexpected to be slate for an
H.U, Law Grad Sentenced
to 2 Years for Burglary
LOS ANGELES, Calif—(ANP)
—Hilbert Rozier, Inw graduate of
Howard Universit, and son of the
Rev. W. H. Rozier, pastor of one
of the largest Baptst churches in
the city, was sentenced to serve
two years in the county jail’ this
2 ona burglary charge by Su-
perior Court Judge Robert Scott.
Be Rae ek He
* . |
Specific Instances Pointed
Out Despite Secretary's
Denial
Sc a
Citing. spe nces of seg
vegation in’the Interior Despart
ment, Miss Gretchen fcRao,
former emploxée in the “depart
ment, took issue with Seeretars
Harold Ickes, this week and point
ed out jim-crow setups in bureau:
under his supervision.
In reply to a letter that Secretary
Ickes wrote, last week denying scx:
regation Miss McRae answered a:
follows:
Tt you will visit your De-
partment, you will find colored
adjudicetors still segregated
in one, end. of a room in the
General Land Office. You will
pass through section after sec-
tion; division after division;
and bureau after bureau which
employ. not one colored clerk,
showing that colored clerks are
excluded from appointment in
these sections. Colored tax-
payers and voters cannot per-
mit such conditions of exclu-
sion and segregaton .0 con-
tinue.
In propagating the policy of
segregation, Dr. Foreman is
not satisfied to Set up a Ne-
gro Affairs Section in the
Interior Department, but is dil
igently urging the ‘other de-
Bartmente. to follow. kit ex:
ample. What right has he to
propagate ‘His Taha Oh nade
regation jn the other depart-
ments? :
The Negro Affairs section
is in principle a paralel to the
Indian Affairs Bureau.
Full-tledged colored Ameri-
can etizens do not envy the
plight of the Indian jn this
country, though they art the
only real Anterieans. Who-
ever attempt: to reduce the
status of these colored Ameri-
cans to the status of wards
should hang hs head in shame,
Mr. Burlew handled the pro-
tests of colored clerks in 1928,
and was hostile to their having
their rights’ under the Civil
Service,
Therefore, I repeat my. re-
quest for the removal of these
officials from important ad-
ministrative duty.
Pelham’s Auto Found in
Cache of Stolen Cars
Some months ago, just after
Fred Pelham; well known electri
cian and expert stage. mechani-
cian bought a new Chevrolet run-
about, the car disappeared from
Benedict, Md. one Sunday morning,
to be found the next Tuesday, a-
bandoned in front of 605 F Street,
northwest,
Around 7 o'clock. one evening, 2-
bout three..weeks, ago, Pelham
drove up. to the Lincoln Theatre
and parked. his car in the. alley
just east of this. theatre building.
When he came out an hour Iater,
the car was gone,
Last Saturday night, he receiv-
ed a telephone call at ‘the Lincoln
Theatre, His caller, a young man
named Brent told’ him he had
heard his lost ear described over
the radio and that he had seen
such a car going in and out of a
garage near Third and R Streets,
Northwest,
Pelham and a friend at once hur-
ried to the lace mentioned and
found his cay and another. stored
in a garage in the rear of 231 R
Street. His car hore a different
D.C. plate from hi: own and the
other, a Virginia license plate?
The police were called and took
the two cars and a quantity of car
acessories found in the garage
They expect to clear up a goodly
number of car disappearance:
from “the leads? they will get
from raiding this cache of stolen
cara.
Dr. Mordecai Johnson on
Speaking Tour
President Mordecai W. Johnson,
of Howard University, has recent-
ly filled the following speaking en-
gagements:
Friday and Saturday. February
9 and 10, at Mount Holyoke Col-
lege, South Hadley, Mass.; Sun-
day, February 11, in the afternoon,
the Publie Foram of Providence,
Rhode Island; the evening of Feb
ruary TL the Pord Hall Fora,
Boston, Mass; an encagement he
filled annually for a number of
Years;the evening af Monday, Feh:
ruary 12, the Public Forum at
Probate Law Expert
=
| a |
H oe i)
| a
b7
: ATTY. JOSEPH P, HARRIS
Twenty-six years ago, Joseph
Py Harris was given a job’ as as
sient janitor by Judge Charles
“W, Holtcamp, who at this time is
presiding judge of the Probate
Court of St. Louis. Harris servet
‘in’ the capacity of ‘a janitor. for
about three and one-half years.
During that time he enrolled
with the American School of Law
at Chicago, IIL, and shortly theré-
after was appointed by Judge Holt-
camp as a deputy probate clerk
and assigned to work as assistant
to the judge, which position’ he now
holds and fills with credit,
After finishing a three-year law
course, he was licensed by the Su-
preme Court of the State of Mis-
sourri to practice law jn all the
courts of record in the state.
Attorney Harris was born in the
city of St, Louis in 1874, and re-
ceived his early education in the
public schools here. He is recog-
nized as an expert in probate law
and procedure.
INTER RAGL
DINNERS HELD
IN KNOXVILLE
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Political
science students of Knoxville Col
lege and the University of Ten-
nessee are holding a series of week-
ly dinners at a down-town hotel
in the city this winter,
Speakers sent out by the League
of Industrial Democracy. are ad-
dressing the group each week, Re-
cent speakers have included Dr,
James Yard and Dr, Maxwell Stew:
art, authorities on the Orient and
Russia,
The dinner mectings were pro-
posed by students of the Interna.
tional Forum. of the University of
Tennessee. From. thirty to forty
students and professors from. the
two Knoxville institutions have
been gathering weekly, In spite
of administrative disapproval from
the University of Tennessee the
leaders in the movement are going
ahead in the formation of a per-
manent organization for such af-
fairs,
At the last meeting, addresstd
by Dr. Maxwell Stewart, of the
Foreign Policy Association of New
York City, J, Webster Smith, of
the Knoxville College senior class,
was the presiding officer. Profes-
sor J. Herman Dayes, of the K. C.
faculty, is one of the leaders in
the sew: group,
Gold Prize Offered
for Easter Poster
A gold prize is being offered by
Lambda Rho Gamma of Asbury
M.E. Church to the person who
makes the most attractive poster
advertising their spring fashion
show, which will be given at the
church, Eleventh and K Streets,
Northwest, on Avril 3 at 8 pam.
The contest is open to anyone in-
terested in art and poster-making.
‘The aim of the poster should be
to present a summary of the facts
to be advertised and to group and
interpret them in such « manner
that they will be quickly grasped
by the spectators and remain im-
pressed upon their memory. The
poster should contain the wording,
“Easter Parade, April 3, 1934, ai
8 p.m., by the Lambda Rho Gam-
ma, Asbury M.E, Church, Eleventh
and K Streets, Northwest. Admi=
sion, 25 cents.” The lettering
should be simple and legible,
‘The two words “Easter Parade’
should be emphasized on the po:-
ter, the design of which should be
fine in line and color arrangement
The dark and light pattern used
should attract attenton, The pos:
ter should be fourteen by twenty-
two inches in size.
All posters must be*presented at
the church Sunday, February 25
between 12 noon and 1 put. Revix
ation of contestants may be
ale by mail to the Lambda Rh
Gamma, Asbury M, E.. Church
Eleventh and. K. Streets,” North.
| west, or by telephone to Mrs. Roxi¢
_ THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1934
Willie Peterson Case Brings
Forth I.L.D.-N.A.A.C.P. Stories
Subsistence Homestead Project Suggested
To be Built Near Tuskegee Institute
NAACP Announces _ that
Patterson is to Get
a New Hearing
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Willie
Peterson, convicted of murder, was
granted a new lease on life’ here
this week when Governor B. M.
Miller granted a stay of execution
from February 16 to March 30.
At the same time the governor
announced that a’ clemency heax.
ing would be held on March 6. y
J. W, Altman, chief counsel re-
tained by the National Association
for the Advancement. of Colored
People to defend Peterson, is in
charge of the presentation of eyi-
dence and pleas at the clemeney
hearing. It is expected that ‘new
evidence establishing Peterson's in-
nocence will be presented at that
time, *
‘The famous ease took. another
sensational twist this week when
former Chief of Police Fred Me-
Dutt “about faced” on his previous
statement that he thought Peter-
son was innocent. Mr. Altman im-
mediately challenged the change of
face of face of McDuff and re-
vealed the latter had agreed to go
to Montgomery and tell Governor
Miller he thought the state was
about to execute the wrong man,
It was intimated here that Me-
Duff changed: suddenly due to the
influence of powerful friends of
the dead girl’s family who have
been pressing for execution of
Peterson in order to: close up the
case once and for all. McDuff is
also said to have political ambi-
tions,
‘Sheriff James Hawkins, 0 far
JOHN Y. CRICHTON
DEAD IN PARIS
Relatives ‘here have annoanedd
the death in Paris of John ¥. Crich-
ton; for many years widsly: known
‘in theathical ciycles. "He! Wiéd "in
the American Hospital, in Neuilly,
France, 6f pneumonia, December
27, at the age of 49.
“The deceased with his brothers,
‘Haity, also deceased, and Page and
Delwiir, were big attractions on
the American and European stage
in’ their specialty vaudeville act,
“Hoopville,” a hoop rolling and
juggling act, For stage purposes
the brothers became known as the
Kratons.
After the death of Harry in Lon-
don fen years ago, John went to
Paris, where he conducted a news-
paper and shoe-shining concession
in thé American Express Building.
He was a colorful figure at the
French capital,
The, deceased was a member of
an old, and well known Lynchburg,
Va., family. His neavest surviving
relatives “are Julia C. Delaney,
Daisy C. Bruce, and. Franeis D.
Grichton, here in Washington; Page
W. Crichton, of Roanoke, Va.; and
Gay C. Simon, Nannie’ Montero,
Emma and Delmar Crichton, of
Brooklyn.
Beast EE
Seek to Interest Maryland
Farmers in Art, Recreation
James F. Armstrong, of Seat
Pleasant, Md., and county agent, is
interesting farmers. in’ southern
Maryland in recreation, music ap-
preciation, _ handevaft, — painting
and the various other-arts as sup-
plementary interests to agricul-
ture and homemaking.
‘The attention of farmers is call
ed to a series of radio broadcast:
that the American Federation of
Arts has announeed on “Art in
America from 16QP to 1885” to be
given over a coast-to-coast net.
work,
It is rumored that a subsistence
homesteads project is being ar-
ranged for on land in Macon Coun-
ty, Alabama, on the Montgomery
Highway, about two miles from
‘Tuskegee. Institute.
‘The Subsistence Homesteads Di-
vision of the Interior Department
is to be requested to advance funds
for a demonstration project on land
to he purchased in the vicinity of
Tuskegee Institute.
The demonstration praject calls
for the construction of modern
homes with from two to five acres
of land for each family suitable
for gardening, fruit trees and poul-
try raising and the production of
other foodstuffs for home consump.
tion. The homes will cost about
$3,000 each, and will become the
property of the settler under a long
term purchasing contract,
+ > Towns to be Rural
The settlement will Le self-gov-
‘erning with administration pat-
terned after the usual town-meet-
poner ts: “Schort facilities will be
IL. D. Force Stay for
Willie Patterson in
New Hearing
MONTGOMERY, Ala.—Yielding
again to the mass pressure of thou-
sands of resolutions and letters of
protest’ from white and Negro
workers and sympathizers in Ala-
bama, Governor B. M. Miller has
extended the scheduled execution
of Willie Peterson from February
16 to March 30. The clemency
hearing for this framed-up Negro
coal miner and war veteran has
been set ahead from February 6 to
March 6.
Peterson's death sentence for the
alleged killing of a Birmingham
society girl has been upheld by the
Alabama Supreme Court and the
U. S. Supreme Court, while the
National Association for the Ad-
vancement of Colored People lead-
ers jockeyed the legal asnects of
the case, aided in the suppression
of evidence, and attempted to stifle
mass pressure.
The first stay of the execution
came from. the. governor shortly
after Mrs: Henrietta Petersou, the
condemned Negro’s wife, had
zsked the International Labor De-
fense to dovble their campaign of
protest and mass defense to save
her husband. x
as is known, is standing by his
‘declaration to Governor Miller that
Peterson is the wrong. man. It
was on the strength of this plea
from the sheriff that the governor
granted the first stay from Jan-
uary 12 to February 16.
First Time Such a Victory
Has Been Won in
a Lower Court
» EL PASO, Texas—For the third
po in os Pere co yess ee
forts to bar oes: frym the Tes-
ie Deinocrati€ Pithariea were de
feated when Judge Boynton of the
ogeral District coe pete handed
lown ‘a wecision. | Wednesday, a+
warding data Dr. L. A. Nix.
on-fov his having been denied the
right to register and vote in the
spring primary. of 1933.
This is the first time such a vic-
tory has been won in a Texas case
in a court lower than the United
States Supreme Court. The first
two cases, in which Dr. Nixon wa:
also the plaintiff, were won in the
highest court in 1927 and 1932. The
Nationa} Association for the Ad-
vancement of Colored People has
financed and handled all three
cases,
Sage teas
N.A.A.C.P. Branches
Celebrating Birthday
NEW YORK.—The nearly four
hundred branches of the National
Association for the Adancement of
Colored People are planning to
celebrate the birthday of the asso-
ciation oa February 12, with either
a mass meeting, a ball or a banquet
held on that day or shortly after-
ward,
The Pine Bluff, Ark., branch will
hold its celebration on February
17, where Dr. W. E. Watson, pres-
ident of the State College, will be
the: principal speaker.
At the celebration held by the
Asheville, N.C. branch on Febru-
ary 28, Attorneys Tyson and Lov-
‘ett, of Washington, D.C., who aid-
‘ed in the defense of George Craw-
ford, will be the featured speakers
Other branches are making elab-
orate preparations for N.A.A.C.P
birthday. meetings,
‘The Pittsburgh, Pa., branch is
holding a mass meeting and birth.
day dinner which will honor its
preskiene somer S. Iirewn..
Attention of the Subsistence
Homestead Division has been called
to the suburban project worked out
during the past three years by
Profeséor J, U. Mundy, an acidem:-
ie teacher at Tuskegee, Purchas-
ing a three-acre tract about three
years ago on the Montgomery
Highway about ten minutes ride
from. the institute, he erected a
suitable cottage, with all modern
improvements, 6n a. sloping hill-
side overlooking this well-paved
highway. The initial cost of the
Mundy plant ‘was approximately
$6,000,
Later an additional forty-eight
acte tract of land adjoining the
home site was purchased and th:
farming equipment augmented to
cover the Si-aere tract of which 25
acres are now under cultivation.
Of the 193% crop, twe acres of
coufon were plowed up under the
ANA cotton reduction. sebeme aud
in its place peas were planted. In
addition to the farming projects
thore is a Near round gardemwhich
‘aqheanaaibieln: Nxelnt hire: bie
Highest Architectural
Degree
ae aN
fae ed
es
aS oe
aad ' “er
4 Ay é if :
G. MACCO JONES
Notice has been received "by G.
Macco Jones, assistant professor in
architecture at Howard University,
that he has been recommended to
the graduate school by the com-
mittee at the university of doctor
of philosophy jn civil engineering.
It is believed that Mr. Jones is
the first Negro to receive-this de-
gree which is held by less than two
Score white persons in the United
States,
Mr, Jones earned his degree by
writing a thesis called “A Study
of Various Methods for the De-
termination of Wind Stresses in
Tall Buildings.” Final examina-
tions were held just before the
Christmas holidays.
Mr. Jones received the bachelor
degree in architecture and archi-
tectural engineering in 1924, and
the master's degree in architecture
in 1925, both at the University of
Michigan.
Noted Jazz Orchestra Lead-
er Has Company of 7
Colored Entertainers
By CHARLES ISSAC BOWEN
That Ted Lewis, big-time. show-
man_and band Jeader, is a true pal
to colored artists and entertainers,
is without a doubt,
“The High-Hat™ Tragedian of
Jazz,” as Ted is referred to by the
theatrical scribes of the country.
has had with his show for the past
five years little Charlie Whittier,
booked as “Snowball” Whittier.
Ted thinks a lot of this kid and
Charlie thinks the world of Ted,
You should see them back stage,
between shows, on the train, or on
the streets. They carry on like big
brother and little brother, or vice
versa, When in New York, Charlie
is invited to Ted’s residence as a
member of the family,
“The Dixie Four,’ another col-
ored team that is now with Ted,
has been with the Lewis aggrega-
tion for 28- months, When: asked
what they thought about the Lewis
chap, they joined in unison in say-
ing, “He's a very fine fellow, and
You can’t find anyone else any bet-
ter than Ted.” “The Dixie Four”
are Harlemites, and their names
are Herbert (Lefty) Benson, Chick
Fisher, and a pair of twins, Wil-
Tiam and Charles Emmett.
The little fellow that sings,
dances and sometimes directs the
band is none other than Teddy Me-
Daniels, who Ted proudly titles
“Ted Lewis, Jt.” He, too, has been
with the show for more than two
years.
Within the past year Ted has
added another colored face in his
company, which totals seven. He
‘is little Paul (Corn) White, abou:
the size of “Teddy, Jr.” Paul sing:
and dances also.
During their travels from coast
/to coast and back again, the boys
‘claim that more than once Ted has
been asked to cut the “jigs” from
his show, and he is quoted as hav-
ing said, “They play where I play.
and that’s all to it.”
On the other hand he has had
offers for himself and band, or the
colored entertainers only, to ap-
pear as stellar attrections in hotel
cafes and night clubs, but he re-
fused also to break his unit in that
manner, too.
Last “summer the entire show
played at “The Dells,” popular road
house out from Chicaga, and broad-
cast twice nightly. The colored
entertainers were constantly fea-
tured on the broadcasts and gen-
erally “broke up” the ahow.
Kansas City Newsmen
Visit Tribune Office
C. A, Franklin, owner of the
Kansas City Call: Frank A. (Fay)
Young, news editor, and Fred
Brown, superintendent of the me-
chanical department were in the
eity Wednesday and Visited the of:
fice of The Tribune.
The group motored here from
Kansas City and expects to visit
Baltimore, Philadelphia and_ other
seilbhiy Cities.” pebowe cote araties
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION’S CAPITAL
News ofFraternals
Columbia Lodge
By Cc. A. CORNISH
Columbia Lodge No. 85, of the
District of Columbia has accepted
an invitation of the Marching Club
of Monumental Lodge No, 3 of Bal-
timore, to attend the twenty-fifth
anniversary celebration of that
Todge, which will be held at the
Sharp Street Chureh, Baltimore, on
Sunday, March 4.” Howard’ A.
Walker, esteemed leading knight of
‘the lodge, is. in charge of arrange-
ments.
The’ lodge will attend ‘the ‘me-
morial sgrces in honor of the late
‘Emma V: Kelly, supreme mother
and founder of the Grand Temple
of the World, on Sunday, Febru-
ary. 18, at Zion Baptist Church.
The following members, of the
lodge have been reported sick by
‘the visiting committee, of which
RMS, Deans is chairman:
Brothers Richard Butler, 813
New Jersey . Avenue, . Northwest;
Joseph Williams, 1635 Third Street,
|Novthwest; Bernard Henderson, 31
Hanover Street, Northwest; Young
Summers, 813’ Q” Street, | North-
west; Richard Gibson, 2222 1
Street, Northwest; Roy Cherry, 16
D Street, Southeast;
| Henry’ Lyles, 2708 0. Street,
Northwest; Clarence Nichols, 1523
Eighth Street, Northwest; Henry
Coats, 500 Second Street, North-
west; David Brown, 1039 Euclid
Street, Northwest; Emmett Smith,
744 Harvard Street, Northwest;
Arthur Frisby, 1921 Thirteenth
Street, Northwest;
James Miller, 1341 Vermont Ave-
nue, Northwest; Charles Ridout,
Freedmen's Hospital; John Alexan-
der, 3003. Eleventh Street, North-
west; William Dougass, 417. N
Street, Northwest; Leroy’ Harding,
413 R Street. Northwest; George
Despert, 64 Pierce Street, North-
awast;.and, James Nickens, 1754
‘Willard Street, Northrwest...
White Cop Forced to
Marry Colored Girl
ST. LOUIS, Mo.—Nearly four
years of ducking and dodging a
tape charge by” Joseph. Matha,
white ex-policeman, ended this
month when Matha married Doro:
thea Foote, 17-year-old. colored
mother of child of which she
claims Matha is the father.
The case has been kept alive by
the St. Louis branch of the NsA:A.
C.P, whose: legal staff has been
pressing for tritl of Matha on a
charge of rape. Following’ the ac
cusation of Matha in 1930 he was
discharged from the St, Louis: po-
lice foree. »
-—-His-trial was postponed vight-or
nine times and then hiss wite di-
vorced him. Finally hiswcase was
called for January 11 and in the
Jcourtroom his attorney’ asked_ the
charzes be <ropped because Mis:
Foote was now the wife of Matha
and could not testify against -him
A marriage apr iee plac-
ed into the records showing the
couple had been married in Venize,
ML, on January 8, 1834." Inter’
racial marriages are unlawful in
Missouri, but legal in IHlinois.
‘At the time of the alleged as-
sault Matha. was’ walking a beat
in the neighborhood where Miss
Foote lived. The child is two years
old.
COASTER VICTIM
PROVED, ML
RETURN T SHO
Having reached a state of al-
most complete recovery from in-
juries she received in an accident
while coasting, last Saturday night,
Miss Charlotte Ridgely, 17-year-old
daughter of Dr. Albert Ridgely, is
expected to return to school next
week. Miss Ridgely is a senior at
the Dunbar High School.
According to reports, the girl
was sleigh-riding in the vicinity
of Connecticut Avenue and Calvert
‘Streets, when the coaster took an
unexpected’ swerve and threw her
from it. She sustained abrasions
of the head and face and a badly
wrenched back, At Emergency
Hospital, where she was taken in
a police scout car, Miss Ridgely
was administered first aid, and lat-
er returned to her home ‘at 950 §
Street, Northwest.
pes haa AS
Chinese Ban Census
Work for Women
BOSTON, Mass. (ANP)—Chinese
Bern in this iviad pire sa
it it is improper for their
ters. to. be employed as. census
enumerators under the CWA and
for that reason the local. Civil
Works office has been faced «with
the problem of obtaining men who
can speak Chinese.
Government rules forbid. two
zirls making the census rounds to-
gether, and Chinese mothers fear
gether, and Chinese mothers fear
Order of Eastern Star
The exemplification of the Eas-
tern Star degrees and the Queen of
the South degree was held. Friday,
at the Scottish Hall, 1611 Eleventh
Street, Northwest, under the direc-
tion of Grand Lecturer Bertha C.
Anderson. The work was perform-
ed by members of the various chap-
ters,
Worthy Patron Alvan Shépherd,
representing Martha Chapter, pre-
sided in the Eastern Star degrees,
and Worthy Patron Raymond KE,
Colbert, of Datcher Chapter, pre-
sided in the Queen of the South
degree.
Distinguished guests _ present
were: Past Grand Patrons Henri
Gordon, Elias G. Evans, Edward
Weyms, and Past Grand Matrons
Marie L. Johnson, Bertha Gray,
Ethel Jenifer, Josephine E. Butts,
Lulu U. Lewis, Past Grand Lectur-
er Elizabeth Dickerson, Grand Ma-
tron Jennie B. Lee, Grand Patron
B. F. Arrington, Grand “Associate
Matron Phyllis Byrd, Grand Con-
ductress Anna Brooks, Grand -As-
sociate Conductress Naomi V, John-
son, Grand Points Essie Hickman
and. Kathleen Tate, Assistant
Grand Lecturer Sadie T. Henson,
and Past Matron Olive Brooks. A-
bout 175 members of the order
~vere present,
Brief addresses were given by
the visiting honored ladies and sir
knights, complimenting the grand
lecturer and the members who com-
posed the teams.
‘Thrift Chapter No. 12, observed
its Sth birthday Tuesday, February
6. After business, a short pro-
gram Was rendered, refreshments
served and a social hour held. Past
Grand Matron Minnie B. Smoot is
the organizer.
Redemption Chapter No, 14 Keld
vits: meeting and. fifth birthday
party Wednesday, Feb, 7 After
the ‘close of the busivess. session
members were entertained with
readings, vocal and piano selec-
tions.
Among those given recognition
were:
Past grand Interstate Patron
William A. Baltimore, Past Grand
Patron Henri Gordon, Grand Ma-
tron Jennie B: Lee, Grand Condue-
tress Anna Brooks, Grand Associ-
ate Conductress Naomi V. John+
son, Grand Lecturer Bertha C: An-
derson, ‘and royal matron of Prince
Hall Chapter, Cornelia V, Lewis.
Past Matron M. K. Kelson is the
organizer of Redemption Chapter
and presided at its birthday. Mar-
ret’ Chase, royal matron, and
William Kelson, foyal patron,
An Egyptian tea will be-given
by Queen of Sheba Chapter No. 2,
Friday, February 16, at the resi-
dence of Honored Conductress Mol-
lie B, Hall, 1906 Vermont Avenue,
from 8 to 11 p.m. Edith W. Davis
is royal matron,-and Lawrence Cur-
tis, royal patron.
A card tournament will’ be given
by the officers of Datcher Chapter
No. 7, Friday, February 16, at the
| residence of Mrs. Susie E. Wallace,
1204 Kenyon Street, Northwest, at
9:30 p.m,
Lottie W. Jones js royal matron,
and Raymond E, Colbert, royal
patron.
| Capitol View News |
at a rate a ae
A combination wedding anniver-
sary and surprise birthday party
were given at the home of Mr.
and Mrs, R, Dorsey, 40 Fifty-third
Place, Southeast, last Wednesday
night. The party was given ‘by
Mrs. Mable Dorsey in honor of her
husband, who was celebrating his
birthday, and Mr. and Mrs, Frane
cis Dorsey, whose atniversary it
was. “Aniong the guests present
were Miss Annje Willis, Mr. Alex-
ander Green, Miss Christine Willis,
Miss Florence Willis, Edward
White, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Stew-
art, Miss Viola Willis, Mrs. Mary
White, Mrs. Adele Dorsey, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Robinson, and Master
T. Dorsey.
George Beasley, Inspector Head-
ley, and Woolsey Hall will be the
guests of the Capitol View Citizens’
Association, Monday night, Febru-
ary 19, at its regular monthly
meeting.
The Rev. John Franklin, of East
Capitol Street, spent the week-end
in Richmond, Va., with his mother
and father.
Mrs, S, 8. Fletcher has been ill
for the past several days and is
confined to her bed.
Mrs. Eva Rodger has been in-
disposed for several days with a
severe cold”
Social Worker Visits White
House
Miss Helen C. Williams, former
medical. social .worker connected
with the Washington Tuberculosis
Assoiation, attended the meeting
of the association held las. week
at George Washington University
and visited the White House with
a. group of social workers who
were in the city to attend the-in-
stitute.
‘Dr. Allen, medical advisor at
Howard University, presented a
taper on “Tuberculosis Among
Negroes” Wefote the Association,
while Dr. Victor ¥. Cullen, of the
Maryland State Tuberculosis Hos-
pital, was another featured ben
er, tracing ancient, midieval,
rota nan ech hat eet waa ae Reine pae
Bae | ees | : aes "tte THEATERS |
BERRA | Mohingioas.ctihune | ee
District Has Greatest Increase
in Married Women of 53 Cities
Bureau of Census Announces Distribution of Negro
Population in Selected Cities of 15,000 Negro
Population by Marital Classes
PROTESTS WHITE
NEN ACOSTING
COLORED WOMEN
A protest was lodged: with Lieu-
tenant Lauten, of No’ 2 Precinct
Station, ‘Tuesday, against the ac-
costing’ of colored women in the
Northwest section of the city by
white men,
The latest protest was made on
Tuesday night by W. H. Hawkins,
who occupies offices in the Masonic
Temple. Tenth and U Streets. He
reported that a young woman in
his office was followed by a white
man from Eleventh and U Streets
to her home.
. Followed Home
Although she boarded a car at
the corner she found on alighting
near her home that the man had
followed her in a taxicab. He is
alleged to have made several in-
decent proposals to her while -she
was waiting for the car,
- Mr. Hawkins asked the lieuten-
ant to post several «decoys in the
Northwest section. in order to trap
these men and break up what. is
said to.be a wide spread menace to
girls alone at night.
Tt has been reported that white
men eruise up and down Fourteenth
Street at night in automobiles and
accost colored girls and women who
are on the street. ‘The police seem
to be unable to cope with the sit-
uation, ness a white, woman is
molested By colored man,
Civic Association Protests .
Will Rogers’s Broadcast
Disapproval of the Gulf Refining
Hour, commercial radio program
broadcast each Sunday night over
Station WRC and featuring Will
Rogers, comedian, was expressed
at the regular monthly meeting of
the Bast Central Civie Association,
held in the Dunbar High School
auditorium, ‘Thursday evening,
A committee of the association
was appointed to take ‘before the
district commissioners the request
that Negroes be mepreneaiad on the
Liquor Board at the same time..
Dr. Carter G- Woodson, editor
of the Journal of Negro History,
was guest speaker of the-evening,
Several new members were added
io the roll,
prot ote
Dr. E. P. Davis Addresses
Teachers of English
Dr, E. P. Dayis, dean of the Col-
‘ove of Literal Arts of Howard Uni-
versity, addressed the teachers of
English of divisions 10-13, on the
ubject “Our Speech Inheritance”
at their regular meeting, held on
Monday, in» the Cardozo. High
School library. Mrs. L. J. Lovett,
resided, Miss. Mary Louise Strong
-< the director.
The Bureau of the Census an-
nounces the per. cent distribution
by marital condition of the Negro
population 15 years old and over,
by sex, for the 53 cities having
15,000 or more Negro inhabitants
at the Census of 1930. In 1930,
Kansas City, Kansas, reported the
highest, percentage of married
males, Tulsa, widowed, and Beau-
mont, divorced males. For females,
Gary occupied first rank in the per-
centage married; Augusta with wi-
dowed, and Beaumont with the
highest percentage of divorced.
Thirteen of the 53 cities reported
decreases in the percentage of mar-
ried males, as compared with de-
creases in 37 cities for married fe-
males. Atlanta, Birmingham,
Charlotte, Knoxville, Los Angeles,
Macon, Mobile, Montgomery, Nash-
ville, Portsmouth, Va., and Savan-
nah showed decreased percentages
for both married males and fe-
males. Montgomery reported the
highest percent decrease of mar-
ried males. during the ten year per-
iod, and Dallax and Miami the
highest increases, Por married fe-
males the greatest: decreaves, were
reported for Macon and Savannah
Georgia, and the greatest per cent
increase for Washington, however,
three of the New York City Bor-
ezughs, Bronx, Brooklyn, and
Plans for the NRA
es
4 — |
wes
ae —— Pa
td
ae Le . ~ ANP
/ DR. ROBERT C. WEAVER,
associate of Dr, Clark Foreman in
the office of Economic Advisor or
Negro Affiairs, under the National
Recovery _ Administration. Dr.
Weaver's ‘splendid service in de-
véloping the statistics which were
‘used by. the Joint Recovery Com-
mittee’ in’ its appearances before
‘the NRA Code Boards led to his
selection for his new post.
“Dr. Weaver, who. is but 25 years
a end a native oe ie District of
Columbia, ited last year from
Harvard eT with the de-
‘gree of doctor of ‘ecoriomics, the
first of the group to receive. ths
degree. from that institution.
50 High Graduates are
Candidates for Free Tuition
The names and schoo} recrds of
fifty graduates of Cardozo have
been sent to the registrar of How-
ard University as eanidates for the
frep scholarship, sponsored by the
University in co-operation with the
Civil Works Administration.
‘The largest enrollment. figures
for the Cardozo High School show-
ed a total of 767 students, This is
an increase of 128-over the enroll-
ment taken at the:'same time last
year. one
Because of the demand for book-
keeping, typewriting and short-
hand courses at the Cardozo High
School, only post-graduate students
who expect to remain the full two
years of the post-graduate course
‘were admitted this semester.
eee
Mothers to Meet Monday at
Armstrong High School
The mothers of,,all Armstrong
High School girls are urged to bt
present at. the manthly ; mothers
meeting to be heli’ on Monday,
Febrtiary 19, at-8 o'clock, in. the
Armstrong High School Auditor-
ium,
‘This meeting is sponsored by the
Mother-Daughter Committee under
the chairmanship of Miss I, C. Wil-
liams.. The speakers: will be Mrs.
G. David Houston and Mrs, Mary
Church Terrell, ‘who will addreds
the mothers on’“The Future of the
Girl "Who: Is Not Going to Col-
lege.”
‘Musical numbers will be rendered
by the Girls’ Glee Club.
Queens, showed greater per cent
increases than did Washington.
Widowed Males Increased
Led by Tulsa and Fort Worth
widowed males increased in 36 of
the 58 cities for which there is
comparable data, and decreased in
only 12, including, Atlanta, Balti-
more, Dallas, Los Angeles, Mont-
gomery, Nashville, and New York.
Widowed females increased in 31 of
these cities, and decreased in 16,
including Atlanta, Baltimore, Cin-
cinnati, New Orleans, New York,
Philadelphia, Tampa, and Wash:
ington,
The greatest increase in the per
cent of both divorced males and fe-
males was reported for Beaumont,
Texas. Cities reporting the high-
est percentage of divorced males
were, in the order named, Beav-
mont, Houston, San Antonio, and
Isa. ighest percentages
divorced females for this group of
cities were reported by Beaumont,
San Antonio, Dallas, and Houston,
all jn the state of Texas, and Little
Bock, Los Angeles, and Tulsa. Of
the 53 cities, 46 showed an increase
for divorced males, while 47 re-
ported an increase for divorced fe-
‘males. Miami and’ Mobile showed
‘a decrease in both divorced males
and females, >
LAWYER'S APPEAL
CHEATS CHAIR OF
HATCH MURDERER
ee
With the fingers of three accom-
plices pointing at this man as the
actual murderer of Geofge Hatch,
prominent local. sportsman, and «
Jury of ten white men and two
white women weighing the evidence
presented by the government in
support of a first degree murder in-
dictment, Attorney Belford V, Laws
son launched into ‘his final argu-
ments to save Milton E, Terry
from the electric chair, in District
Supreme Court, last Thursday.
The youthful attorney, just out
of law school, offered a brilliant
closing argument in defense of his
client to sway the all-Caucasian
panel toward a second degree con-
viction, and the 25-year-old lad
away from the electric chair. The
second degree conviction carries
with it a penalty of from 10 to 20
years’ imprisonment.
. Four Convicted
‘The four convicted youths were:
Carroll W. (Bunky) Broadus, 218.
Bryant Street, Northwest; Melvin
W. Strothers, 2210 Sixth Street,
Northwest; Arthur Leigh, 1827
Seventh Street, Northwest; and
Milton E, (Poop) Terry, said to
have fired the fatal shot.
Lawson, the only colored lawyer
in the case, drew what barristers
call the “deuce” among the four
lads on trial. The expression has
to do with that one individual
among the several on trial who is
said to have been the actual per-
petrator of the crime for: which
they are being tried,
Killed During Robbery
The murdey of Hatch was the.
climax of an attempted hold-up and
robbery of John Waters, 3019 Thir-
teenth Street, Northwest, on the
night of November 29, 1938, Hatch,
who was with Waters as the latter
left a pool-room in the vicinity of
Seventh and T Streets, Northwest,
received. a bullet in the abdomen
while one of the four held him at
bay so that another: could safely
frisk Waters.
According to the testimony at
the trial, and statements made to
police by the-four youths~shortly..
after their arrest, Terry was the
gunman who sent the bullet into
the body.. of Hatch, and Broadus
was the companion who took a lit-
le over thirty dollars from Waters.
The four were of the opinion that
Waters had a much larger amount
f money on his person, Hatch,
hey «believed, was with him for
rotection.
Gunman Nervous
Testimony revealed that the
hooting was an accident, perpe-
rated by the nervousness of Ter-
y. After the affair, the quarte:
f youths sought refuge in a house
n the Southwest,.then went to the
ome of Broadus, then to the home
f Leigh, pointed to as the leader
n the intended stick-up. Here
hey separated,
Upon learning early next morn-
ng of the death of Hatch, Leigh
nd Terry left the city and went
o Baltimore. The other two re-
nained in the city. and were ar-
ested, In the short space of a
eek, the two who fled the city
ad lived at three houses in the
fonumental City. “They went first
0 a house on McCullough Street,
hen to a residence on Madison
venue, and then to the place on
irgyle' Avenue, where _ police
ound them,
Other Lawyers White
‘The case was heard.in Criminal
division of the District Supreme
sourt, Justice Peyton Gordon pre-
iding.
‘Other lawyers in the case were:
Attorneys Alfred Goldstein, Jobn
). Sadler, and Max Shulman. As-
istant United States Attorney
Attorney Irving Goldstein conduct-
Se ited maker =
Student Members of Junior
Red Cross Visit Museum
Mrs, M. J. Matthews met the
Junior Red Cross representatives
at the District Building and con-
ducted them to the Red Cross Mu-
seum in the headquarters building,
last. week.
‘The following sheolos._rm-ceff|
The following scheols were rep-
resented: John F. Cook, Annie
Mae Houston and Jewel Miller;
Morse’ School, Madeline’ Truehsrt
and Naomi Duck; Wormley School,
Mary Jane Harris (visitor); Mar:
garet Murray Washington Voca-
tional, Virgie Sparrow and Frances
Minefield; J.T. Reno, Margaret
Watets ani: Valigs Murky
Congratulations in Orde:
ee }
ee ae pecs! |
i TUBERCULOSIS MORTAL TY iv THe eee
Ee Peo CHORD RACE INTHE US ANDIN Zea
‘< > PORTO RICO FoR i984
E m ee fi
cs. = £
=,
co x
a |
“ . ,
MRS. MARY’R. FORDHAM, only“colored student at the Tubereu-
losis Institute at George Washington University is’ shown. bere being
congratulated by Dr. Elijah H, Allen, director of the Howard Univer-
ity Health Service, last week. Mrs.’Fordhara js a trained nurss and
tuberculosis worker in Anderson County, S.C.
AUSTINFICKLING —/H-U. WOMEN'S CLUB
Was Member of Second|Meeting Held to Arouse
Baptist Church for Interest and Increase
66 Years Membership
The funeral of Austin Pickling,
107: W Brest, Northwost, was
held Sunday at the Second Baptist
‘Church, the fe TPS. Holloman,
pastor, officiating.
Brief tributes were given by the
Rey. Walter H. Brooks” and the
Rev. F. L.A. Bennett,
Mr. Fickling died. Thursday at
Garfield Hospital. “He was born jn
Lynehburg, Va, in 1850-and was 31
years of age at the time of his
death, He was the husband of the
late Mary Ross Fickling,and. the
late Cora Fickling. One son, Doug-
lass Fi¢kling, resulted from the
Jatter marriage.
Chureh Members’ 66 Years
He left Virginia at an early age
and came to Washingto i where hz
spent the greater part of his life.
‘or many years he was’ head wait-
er of the Metropolitan.and Arling-
ton Hotels. when they» Were the
leading hostelries in the. District.
In those positions he became ac-
cuainted with many of the leading
officials in the government,
He was'a member of the. Second
Baptist Church for 66 years and
served on its board of trustees and
deacon, board, His last employ ment
was at the Army Medical Colleze
of the War Department... It was
while serving in this. position, that
he was stricken with an apoplectic
stroke while on his way home from
work. i
Civic Bodies Observes
.Negro History Week
The. Hillsdale Citizens“ Associa-
tion; Birney Parent-Teacher Asso-
ciation, Frederick Douglass Peace
Circle and Birney Community Cen-
ter celebrated Negro History Week
Monday, February 12, at the Bir-
hey Community Center. . The audi-
torium was. well crowded with an
appreciative audience. mee guest
speaker was Carter G. ‘oodson,
founder of mate History Week.
Other spenkers were » Morris
Lewis, secretary to. Congressman
Oscar DePriest; L. V:-Lawson, rep-
resenting the Negro. Alliance; Dr.
Amands’ Hilyer, president of the
Douglass Peace Cirele; and Mis:
Anna L. Goodwin, general secre-
tary of the Community Center De-
partment. —
Preceding the speaking, a dinner
was give,at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ivery Brown, of Stanton Road,
in honor of the guest speakers. A
sumptuous repast was served to
more than fifteen guests, Accom-
Jonring Mr Lewis were Mr. and
fs ‘Lewis, Jr
HU WOMEN'S CLUB
HEARS DEANSLONE
Despite the coldest’ weather. in
years Howard) Women's Club
alumnae and undergraduates,
tikened ogt~in-eomstdoritleafimbe>
on lust Friday evening for a mas:
meeting at. the Garnet-Patterson
Junior High School auditorium
Dean Lucy. D. Slowe, the guest
speaker, urged the women to. be-
come intimately. acquainted: ‘with
the work of the university toward
perpetuating helpful idedls and
traditions. She insisted that th>
university’ in its larger sense is it
graduates @ well as its-undergrad-
tates.
Miss Audrey Mosely, °a senior
who lives jn-the dormitories, gave
a detailed account of varied activi-
ties in which the women: student«
engage during the school year.
Mrs. Rutt, of- the Conseratory 0°
Music, rendered the music for th>
evening with three vocal numbers
This: meeting’ was sponsored by
the membership committee of the
Howard Women’s Club for the pur-
pose of arousing interest in many
of the local alumnae toward. the
end of inereasing membership in
the club so that the club can carry
out, its program more effectively.
Congressman Oscar DePrierst
was among those who attended the
meeting, 7
eee teec ae 6
Daniels School of Music
Club Presents Program
A special’ program, rendered by
the Music Committee of the Dan-
iels School of Music Club, was a
feature of the regular monthly
meeting of the club, held at’ the
Asbury. MAB. Church’ last Sunday.
Those conteibuting to the program
were: Timothy Ward, Jr., guest
soloist; the Rey. W. N. ‘Holt, of
East: Falls Church, who presented 2
reading, and Miss Lois Craven, of
Minor Teachers’ College. who de-
livered an essay on “The Value of
Music.”
Selections were alxo rendered by
pupils of the Daniels School in
cluding Geraldine. Brewer, Jose-
phine Tertell, Bernice Carroll,
Tavern , Edna White,
Mamie Wie Contnie Jackson,
Esther Harley, Helen’ Lightfoot,
‘Audrey . Contes, Randolph Bell,
Jennie Johnson, ‘and Stella Feldon.
——»___
HELD AS WIFE SLAYER
TEXARKANA, Ark:—F. L. Tho-
mas, Garland City, has been lodged
in the Miller ‘econuty jail on a
tharge of wife murder. It is_al-
leged that following # quarrel Fri-
day. nigbied drew a revolver
and shot his. wife through the
heart: 214 cee
SAYS 25,000 18.
DEATS YEARLY
ANG NEGROES
It remained for Dr. Elijah. Hy
Allen, director of the Howard Uni-
versity. University Health Sorvice,
in an’ address, bristling with facts
about the whys and wherefores of
the high and. rising tuberculosis
death rate of the Negro popualti
tion, to electrify the members. of
the ‘Tuberculosis Institute at the
George Washington University and
to point the way to a possible solu-
tion of the problem on which hing-
es the whole effort for the: control
‘of tuberculosis for both white and
colored ‘aces.
Dr., Allen with the aid of graphic
charts based: on. official statistics,
showed that 25,000 Negroes die ans
nually in the United States from
tuberculosis and that. there are at
a given time approximately 400,000
active eases of this communicable
disease among the Negroes of this
country, Also he stated. that the
tubereuiosis death, rate of Negro
children: is, now- ten times. greater
than among white children in cor-
tain sections, j
Blames Slums
“Negroes all too frequently,”
said Dy, Allen, “have all the dis-
advantages of’ primitive: living in
our modern cities. If they are ,t9
continue to live and work in these
cities, proper provision in the way
of sanitary houses, without the
overcrowding due to. prohibitiv:.
rentals, must be provided.”
One of the many ways in, which
this matter of doing away with the
city shims and alleys here so largé-
ly used by « portion of the Negro
population bears inditeetly on. the
spread ‘of tuberculosis amone the
white face was attributed to the
fact, that so maby Negro domestic
workers go from these unsanitary
homes: into the homes of their
white employers. “It has frequent-
ly. becn shown,” remarked Dr. Al-
fon, “that in a’ white family which
had no case of tuberculosis from
three or four generations, when a
Nogro domestic suffering. from this
communicable disease. is’ employed
Cuberculogis, then #preads. through
the whole white family,": ‘The
speaker ealted attention to’ the fact
that tuberculosis was’ comparative-
ly unknown among Negroes during
the’ slavery ‘period, sayinig "that ic
was found cconomical. for their
owners to keop them al’ the highest
degtee of physical fitness, He also
asserted that only 2 par cent of the
Negrozs in the interior of Africa
have tuberculosis, although on the
¢oast regions the number so suf-
fering runs as high as'22'per cent.
"Cites Need of Education
As for the remedy, Dr. Allen
pointed to education as the basic
tnctor, but insisted that this would
not avail unless additional hospital
beds for active cases are provided.
Citing the latest available official
reports, he said that there are now
in the whole country. 60,000 beds
for tubereulous whites and only
4,000 beds for tuberculous Ne-
groes.
Dr, Phillip P. Jacobs, conductor
of the institute, commenting on the
lecture by Dr. Allen, said:
More Beds Needed
“It is evident that until the alley.
slums where disease breeds in un-
sanitary, overcvowded living quar-
ters are elimniated, and’until more
hospital beds are provided in Wash-
ington, D.C, for tubsreulous pa-
tients, the death rate from this
communicable disease will not be
reduced. If Congressmen who
must be cognizant. of these condi-
tions are awakened to this fact and
do something definite about it, the
nation’s capital city will then be-
come a healthful as well ax a beau-
tiful city in which to live.”
Social Workers Sponsor
Forum on Marriage
Dr. L. Foster Wood. secretary of
the committee on marriage and the
home of the Federal Council of
Churches:in America, and Mrs, El-
gin Sherk, director of the marriage
clinie at Old Stone Church, Cleve-
land, Ohio, will be the- principal
speakers at a special forurm to be
held at the Lincoln Congregational
Temple, Eleventh and R Streets,
Northwest, Wednesday evening,
February 21, at 8 o'clock.
Dr. Wood's subject will be “The
National Recovery in. the Home,”
while Mrs. Sherk will speak on
“Preventing. and Mending Broken
Homes,’ The forum is sponsored
by the Washington Coun¢il of So-
cial Workers, of which Major
‘Campbell ‘Cx Johnson is; presiiants
Sings Role in Opera
Sse
- “NA
i
: G. q
ey
EDWARD MATTHEWS,
baritone, who is a former director
of music at Fisk University. He
travelled several seasons in Europe
with the celebrated Fisk Singers.
He appears regularly with the
Capital Theatre Radio Hour on
N.B.C.. Mr, Matthews, who is
credited with having one of the
finest baritone voices in America,
without regard to race, is leading
character of “Four Saints in Three
Acts” opera which had its world
premiere in Hartford, Conn., Feb-
ruary 8, with an all Negro cast.
A New York appearance and a tour
of principal :cities is scheduled to
follow.
Final Rites Held for Old
Citizen of Falls
Church, Va.
William Henderson, a# resident of
Falls Chureh, Va., died on Friday
morning after an illness of several
weeks’ duration. f
He was born in Natchez, Miss., at
the close of the Civil War, and was
the only «on of Shardtick and Eliza
Henderson. At an early age ‘he
was. brought to Washington and
some time later attended Howard
Academy. Later he enlisted in the
U, 8, Navy for several terms,
He married Louise Mars, of Wil-
liamsburg, out of which union
three sons were born. They are:
Edwin B,, William 4., of Falls
Chureh, and Mrs. Annie E. Briggs,
of Atlantic City.
He was a member of the Second
Baptist Church, a charter and ac-
tive member of the N.A,A.C.P.
branch, and supported all local and
some national. efforts to improve
conditions for the Negro. Long af-
ter his physical condition warrant-
ed, he persisted in registering his
vote on local and national matters.
He has maintained his home on
a spacious site, adjoining the Old
Falls Church, of which George
Washington was a member in an
attractive manner. Ho was highly
respected by the citizens of both
races in the community.
Funera! services were held at his
home, and interment made in. the
family lot in the Galloway Ceme-
tery. Beautiful floral tributes were
xent as tokens of sympathy by his
friends, and those of his wife and
children.
* eee, | it
‘Chapman to Address
| Interracial Committee
Ag. aba cable Dear Chapooss
assistant secretary of the Depatt-
‘ment of the Interior, will be guest
speaker at a dinner to be held un:
der the auspices of the Interracial
Committee of the Women's Inter.
national League for Peace and
Freedom, at the Whitelaw Hotel,
Monday ‘evening, February 19, a:
7 o'clock.
Mr. Chapman, in his address, will
outline the program of the Interio;
Department for Hawaii, the Virgin
Islands, Alaska, and the American
Indians. Miss Dorothy Detzer, ex-
eoutive secretary of the Women's
International League, will preside.
Misses Margaret Jones and Ber-
tha*MeNeill are respectively chair
man and secretary. of the Inter-
racial Committee.
eee
Dr. Adams in Chicago
Dr, Numa P, G. Adams, dean of
the School of Medicine,” Howard
University, is in Chieago this week
attending the meeting of the Con-|
gress on Medical Mascation and|
ie ae, es oars ap
sociation, ‘Phe meetings
were held February 12, 13 and ie
SAYS JOBS DUE
RAGE ON BASIS
OF POPULATION
The recently apypied Alcoholic
Beyerage Control Board had among
its first duties the appointment of
a corps of aides and clerks to as~
sist. In the proper administration
of the duties confided to them bi
rerent liquor legistration.
Taking time by the forelock,-Dr.
Emmett J. Scott, of Howard Uni-
versity, called attention to the fact
that the colored population of the
District of Columbia should be giv-
en representation in the make-up
of the board’s corps of assistants.
Dr. Scott, on February 5, wrote
as follows to Isaac Gans, of the
Aleoholic Beverage Control Board:
“Aside from the duties confided to
you by the legislation setting up
the Alcoholic Beverage Control
Board, one of the first’ questions
the board is likely to meet is that
of recognition of the various ele-
ments that make up the cosmopoli-
tan population of the District’ of
Columbia, The official figures in-
dicate that the total. Populatioa of
the District (Census 1080) | was
486,869, of which number 182,068
was colored, constituting a bitymore
than one-fourth (27.1) of the total
population, :
a0 bas Deen SM Secepted | pree~,
tice in the District of Columbia to
give the colored population due
Fepresentation in’ the,» vatioun
boards, including, as you well know,
the Board of Education, upon which
three colored members serve; tl
Board of Public Welfare, upon
which one member serves; and the
Board of Indeterminate. Sentence
and Paroles, upon which one col-
ored member serves. ‘Also’ in the
various civic organizations, repre-
sentation, even if not always pro-
portionate, is given,
“Without suggesting eandidates
for apy of these places, I would
earnestly uige that que considera-
tion be given by your Board to the
appointment. of at least one cor
poration counsel and two inspec
tors.
“Without urging the suggestion
at length, it’ must be obvious that
constituting a tax-paying unit, and,
constituting at the same time, as
Lam sure will be true, a propor-
tionate.ratio of the-consuming-ele-
ment of beverage in. tho District
of Columbia, it is but fair and just
that consideration herein. men-
tioned be taken note of in the for-
mation of the personnel whieh, is
to function with the:members of
the A.B.C. Board.”
Mr. Gans’s prompt response, pro-
mised due consideration to the en
tire matter,
THEATRE CANCELS
SCOTTSBORO PLAY
Because white Washington thea-
tre-gocrs protested 50 vigorously
against the proposed: showing: of
the play, “They ‘Shall Not Dig” «
drama dealing with the Scottsboro
case, the management of the Na-
tional Theatre has withdrawn it
from the season's schedule, it was
announced this week. *
First word of the oe:
came from the office of Manager
Steve Cochrane, of the National,
who gave as his reason for the
cancellation the fact that three
children in the cast would be barred
from acting in the District because
of their age. Later, however, word
trickled down from New York that
the real reason for the cancellation
of the play was the terriffie howl
of protest which Washington thea«
tre Guild patrons raised when they
heard that the final play of. the
subscription season dealt with a
Negro theme and the Scottsboro
The National Theatre manage-
ment was flooded with indi;
oes, ae peat aa ton pee
sry announcement was made. “We
jon’t want to see a play about the
Scattaboro ‘case,” a swarm of-fa-
vous patrons, ered:
So, in place of exléy play,
ee brceiee BAe ot the sea-
‘on’s hits in New ‘, prejudiced
Washingtonians, wil view. 6 gee
le, amusi sat
The Seek ee tates seman