Washington Tribune
Thursday, July 26, 1934
Washington, D.C.
Page text (machine-generated)
GIRL'S ATTACK CRY CALLED "FRAME-UP"
To Preach Dillinger's Funeral
WJSV
well known radio evangelist who will preach the funeral of John Dillinger. Chicago, gangster, over the radio Saturday evening. The Washington minister recently said he received a letter from Dillinger in which the gunman stated that he enjoyed the radio broadcasts of the "Happy Am I" preacher.
Radio Evangelist will Broadcast Funeral of Slain Chicago Gunman
Services to be Heard Over Nation-Wide Hookup at 9:30 Saturday Evening FATHER OF GANGSTER INVITED TO ATTEND Minister Was Called in at Lorton to Help "Soothe" Prisoners During Riot
The funeral of John Dillinger, notorious gangster, will be broadcast over a nation-wide hookup on Saturday when Elder Solomon Lightfoot Michaux, well known radio evangelist, will conduct the services from the Church of God, 2030 Georgia Avenue, Northwest, at 8:30 Eastern Standard time. Dillinger, who met his death at the hands of Department of Justice agents as he left a Chicago theatre, Sunday night recently wrote Elder Michaux that he (Dillinger) listened in on the evangelist's sermons whenever the opportunity presented itself.
Gangster's Father Invited
John Dillinger, sr., father of the gangster, has been notified by Elder Michaux and invited to attend the service.
Elder Michaux is advisor for a number of men on parole from various institutions throughout the country, and his radio program is heard in nearly every prison where radios are allowed. In some prisons, groups that hold religious services among themselves every week, have been formed through the inspiration gained from these broadcasts.
Helped Quell Lorton Riot
One of the chief admirers of the Elder's work among the heads of penal institutions in this country ic Captain M. M. Barnard, heard of the penal institution of the District of Columbia. Last summer after the disturbance at Lorton, Mr. Barnard invited Elder Michaux and his "Happy Am I" choir to go to Lorton to hold services with the 1400 inmates which was greatly enjoyed by the prisoners and helped to soothe their nerves. It is the desire of Elder Michaux that every man on parole from every prison if it is not possible for him to attend this service in person to be sure to tune in to the nearest Columbia Station wherever they may be. The local outlet for the services will be Station WJSV.
Washington Attorney III
at John Hopkins
Thomas A. Johnson, of 1916 Thirteenth Street, Northwest, one of the oldest attorneys in Washington, is seriously ill at John Hapkins Hospital, in Baltimore, where he has been confined for three weeks.
CATHOLIC SCHOOL SUED FOR $9,975
Victor H. Daniel, former principal of Cardinal Gibbons Institute, filed suit for a total of $9,975 against the school, Tuesday at Ridge, Md.
Daniel in his petition sets forth that he has been principal of the Catholic school since 1924 and his wife, vice principal. The amount represents back salary for his wife and money he spent for food for the pupils, automobile expenses and other purchases he has made over a period of time.
He also claimed that a white woman was sent to take charge of the school last year in an attempt to oust him. He says his contract of employment did not end until February 1934. In another attempt to force him to leave he said the school was closed last December. A lack of funds was given for this step.
Daniel is being represented by Attorneys Victor H. Daniel, Augustus W. Gray, Thurman L. Dodson, George W. Evans and Henry W. Daniel, the latter two of Maryland.
"DARKY" ARTICLE BRINGS PROTEST
Washingtonians are up in arms following an article in the Washington Times Tuesday by Helen Essary in which a colored man was referred to as a "nice old Darky" and colored children as "pickanninies."
The article stated in the first paragraph that "the nice old darky, out cutting the lawn, expresses the weather very aptly. He has spent the morning mowing in circles under the trees. Finally, late in the afternoon he had to move out in the sun.
"After two trips around, traveling at the rate of a slow motion picture, he is now moping his brow, casting a reproachful look at the sky and muttering: Sun whah was you las' February?"
Prominent Doctor Begins Term
OAKLAND, Calif., (ANP) — Dr. Oscar W. DeVaughn, prominent Oakland physician was removed to San Quentin prison last week to begin his sentence of five years to life on second degree murder and 1 to 14 for perjury.
The well known physician was first convicted on the murder charge, when a white woman patient died after an abortion act.
Washington Tribune
SLAYING BY COP AROUSES IRE
Cotton Club Fight Results in $7,500 Damage Suit
Skepticism Marks D.C. Lawyer's Investigation Of Maryland Shooting
VOL. XIV, No. 13 z
SLAY Cotton Skepticism Lawyer's In Of Marylan
Expresses Dissatisfaction With Bladensburg Judge's Demand of Victim's Kin WANTED BODY BURIED BEFORE INQUEST Attorney Lawson Guards Against Chicanery; Requests Autopsy
Although Maryland authorities insisted that no inquest had been held in the slaying of Kater Stevens, 31-year-old Washington man, by a white Bladensburg, Md. police policeman, early this week, Attorney Belford V. Lawson expressed dissatisfaction with the turn of events, when approached by the Tribune for a report on his activity in the case.
Attorney Lawson, legal representative for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the New Negro Alliance, both of which intend prosecution of the white policeman in the event evidence shows the killing of Stevens was unjustifiable, remained somewhat skeptical despite assertions of the state authorities that the inquest had been postponed Tuesday night for one week. The local consellor could find no reason for certain steps taken by Maryland state officials.
Traffic Arrest
Stevens, who lived at 942 P Street, Northwest, was arrested, Sunday, on a traffic violation, Ordered to jail by Judge Henry O'Neill, town justice, Stevens is said to have made a break for freedom while en route to the lock-up. According to the story the man attempted to flee while, with other prisoners, he was being transferred to the jail in an officer's car. Town Patrolman Charles F. Flory, in whose custody the man was during the trek to the prison declared that Stevens kicked him in the head and leaped from the automobile. As Stevens ran down a dark alley, the patrolman avers, (Continued on page 6)
TEN-YEAR-OLD LAD DROWNS WHILE SWIMMING
Thomas Dyson Succumbs to Waters of Eastern Branch; Body Recovered
Police of the Harbor Precinct recovered the body of Thomas Dyson, 10 year old, of 544 Twenty-fifth Street. Northeast, from the waters of the Eastern Branch of the Potomac River, Tuesday, the Tribune learned yesterday (Wednesday).
The lad, along with several playmates, was swimming in the waters near the Benning Bridge. Monday. He disappeared from view shortly after friends had seen him get into difficulty. When he did not again appear the youths potified an adult passerby who immediately called police of the Ninth Precinct.
The body was removed to the District Morgue, where Coroner A. Magruder McDonald held that an inquest was unnecessary to determine that death was the result of accidental drowning.
ONLY NEGRO NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Doctor's Testimony Ruins Government Case; Youth Dismissed
Holding that the evidence in the case did not justify his holding Cornell Armstrong, 19, 1627 Third Street, Northwest, for the action of the grand jury, Judge Gus A. Schuld dismissed charges of criminal assault brought against him by Miss Virginia Rankin, 23, 5021 Ayre Place, Northeast, in United States Branch of police court, on Tuesday.
The lad was exonerated after a preliminary hearing of the accusations growing out of a "party" in Deanwood on July 10. By his action the judge insisted that he believed Armstrong to be the victim of a trapped charge.
out of a trained charge.
It was largely through the testimony of Dr. Shaad, Freedmen's Hospital interne, that the tae youth was not compelled to face the grand jury. Dr. Shaad, called to the stand as a government witness, told Judge Schuldt and a crowded courtroom that upon his examination of the girl he could find no traces of violence.
Girl Makes Statement
Miss Rankin had previously testified that she had regained consciousness on the night of the alleged attack to find her clothes torn from her and Armstrong assaulting her.
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Child, 2, Killed by Train; Declared Accidental
Holding that the death, last Thursday, of 2-year-old Marshall Burgess, 700 block Forty-ninth Street, Northeast, was accidental, Dr. A. Magruder McDonald, coroner of the District of Columbia, declared an inquest was not necessary.
The child sustained fatal injuries when a locomotive backed into him while he was playing at the Chesapeake Beach Railway terminus.
Recent Protest to General Cummings
crimination in Recent Texas
Brought Here; Former
Lawyers to Present Protest to Attorney General Cummings
Congressman to Attend
recent Texas primary election not withstanding the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Nixon vs. Condon.
This case decided that a primary election was the same as a general election and under the Constitution there could be no discrimination on account of race or color.
Evans to Present Case
R. D. Evans, of Waco Texas, vice president of the association, will serve on the committee to present the case to Attorney-General Cummings during the sessions of the national convention so that the lawyers of America can take definite action.
A letter has been addressed to the Attorney-General from the president of the association requesting an appointment for the legal committee. It is the purpose of the committee to convince the Attorney-General that it is his duty to take definite and positive action at once to prevent discrimination.
WIFE GIVEN ALIMONY AWARD
Theodore Webb Ordered to Pay Mate $15 Weekly; Claims Trickery
Theodore Webb, a "silk spotter" employed at the Palace Laundry main office, Ninth and H Sweets, Northwest, was ordered to pay his wife, Mrs. Camille Webb, $15 weekly alimony pending a hearing of her petition for separate maintenance, by Justice Peyton Gordon in District Supreme Court, yesterday (Wednesday) morning.
Earlier this week, Attorney Charles P. Henry, white, representing Mrs. Webb, filed a motion asking that Webb be restrained from the use of the home at 1850 Third Street, Northwest. The court, however, denied this when Attorney Perry W. Howard, defense counsel, pointed out that his client had been paying on the home for 20 years, and that he had a daughter living with them who teaches in the local schools. The original bill, filed by Mrs. Webb several years ago, asserted that the plaintiff was entitled to divorce and separate maintenance. Adultery was the foundation used in the petition.
According to Mrs. Webb's original bill, Webb was trapped in an apartment at 1815 Street, Northwest, with another trapped in Mrs. Ottaway Blakey, Mrs. Blakey, also referred to as "Mrs. Mary Burroughs," in the bill, was named as co-respondent. The wife stated in her first petition that she first became aware of the illicit relationship when, in the
(Continued on page 6)
BALTIMORE--Former Congressman Thomas E. Miller of South Carolina and one of the oldest lawyers in America has announced his intention to attend the convention of the National Bar Association which meets in Baltimore August 23, 24, and
PETER H. BURGESS
Hubert Delan
tax commissioner of New
York City, will attend the sessions
of the conventions according to an
announcement received by E
Washington Rhodes, president of
the National Bar Association.
To Present Protest
The president has announced that a committee of lawyers will present suitable resolutions and a brief to Attorney-General Cummings concerning the fragrant violation of the Constitution in the
Sensational Expose of Conditions in the High Schools in "Tin Can"
Washington All Agog Over Prize Story Written by Former Teacher Here DEALS WITH MODERN YOUTH IN LARGE CITY
Sex Affairs Among Students as Well as Ignorance of Principal, Revealed
"Tin Can," the prize-winning story in the literary contest of the National Urban League, New York, has created a stir in Washington school circles. Mrs. Marita Bonner Occomy, the author, at one time an English teacher in theArmstrong High School, has woven into her story what many consider an "abusive lampoon" on a school and its principal.
The first installment of the story appeared in the July issue of Opportunity covering four pages and the continuing parts are awaited with much interest.
Mrs. Occomy is living in Chicago.
Deals with Modern Youth.
The story deals with modern youth in a typical high school in a large city. The setting is not necessarily Washington.
Jimmy Joe is the modern youth who wears sport sweaters, wide trousers and is well versed in 1924 slang, women and gin.
The part that is causing Washingtonians to gossip over tea cups is about the principal who is (Continued on page 6)
TO PROTEST DISMISSAL OF 283
Relief White-collar Worker to Present Petetion to Commissioner
Some 283 employees at the headquarters of the Board of Public Welfare Division of Emergency Relief, Fifth and H Streets, Northwest, plan to present to Commissioner Allen, Friday, against the proposed dismissal of the entitle force.
Practically all of the workers are in the white collar class, about 50 are colored. Some have been working at the headquarters for two years or longer.
54 Receive Notice
Fifty-three received notices that their services would no longer be required after Saturday. These notices were signed by D. H. Reed, personnel officer.
One of the workers stated to The Tribune that the plan at first was to have each employee laid off every fifth week, but this latest move took the entire group by surprise and colored and white are planning to protest the action.
To Care for Those Dismissed
Miss M. Alice Hill, director, stated to The Tribune, Wednesday, that she did not know how many would lose their jobs, but said some would be retained. She also stated that those who were let out would be cared for in other jobs, not necessarily in relief adminis- (Continued on page 2)
(Continued on page 2)
LATEST Washington News NOW ONLY 5C
Vicinity. Elsewhere 7 Cents Copy ES IRE image Suit SUES NIGHT CLUB OWNER FOR $7,500
A resident school and educational camp for unemployed women will open at Camp Clarissa Scott, of the Phyllis Wheatley Y.W.C.A. on August 15, with facilities to accommodate 25 students for a term of six weeks.
must be made to the District ERA. Applicants must be from 18 to 35 years old, and should have at least a high school education or equivalent or its equivalent. Courses will be given in the social sciences, English, a science, vocation.
Mrs. Hamilton guidance and health education. Additional training will be offered in household management in connection with the household routine of the school camp. There will also be guidance in recreation, and for those students who have a talent for work in the creative arts.
and for a talent arts. Group of theek to ap- tator and Wilson R. Tibbs and Chas. A. Brown Sued for Maintenance
---
SCHOOL FOR WOMEN TO OPEN HERE
First Educational Camp for Unemployed Women to Open at Beach
The institution will be financed by the District Emergency Relief Administration. All applications must be made to the District ERA. Applicants must be from 18 to 35 years old, and should have at least a high school education or equivalence or it is equivalent. Courses will be given in the social sciences, English, or a c-i
Mrs. Hamilton Heads Group
The Advisory Committee of the school will meet this week to appoint an educational director and the instructors. Mrs. Julia West Hamilton, president of the Phyllis Wheatley Y.W.C.A., is chairman of the committee.
The other members are: Mrs. Pauline Shereshefsky, white, field supervisor of the social welfare department; Mrs. Mary M. Jones, of the District public Schools; Ambrose Caliver, of the Department of Education; Mrs. W. A. Roberts, white, of the Council of Social Agencies; Miss Nancy Lake, of the Public Employment (Continued on page 2)
4 ABSOLVED IN DEATH OF WOMAN
A verdict of accidental death, returned by a coroner's jury conducting an inquiry into the fatal fall of Mrs. Alice Calzada, 41, 200 block Third Street, Southwest, freed four persons who had been detained in connection with the death, late last week. Police of the Fourth Precinct arrested George Frisby, Walter Smith and Charles Henson, all of the Third Street address, and Gladys Green of the 200 block C Street, Southwest, upon the arrival of their scout car at the house shortly, after the woman's mishap had been reported. Testimony was to the effect that Mrs. Calzada fell down a flight of stairs and thus sustained the injuries which subsequently proved fatal.
Thomas Wallace Claims He Was Beaten in Cotton Club July 4
Claiming he was badly beaten by employees of the Cotton Club, Tenth and U Streets, Northwest, on July 4, Thomas Wallace, Jr. 1752 Oregon Avenue, Northwest, filed a damage suit for $7,500 against the Temple Luncheonette and Drug Company and Louis Hurwitz, proprietor, of the club and lunchroom, in the District Supreme Court.
Wallace who is represented by Attorney Edward P. Lovett stated in his declaration that he visited the night club on July 4 where employees of the club which is operated by Hurwitz, with force and arms, unlawfully assaulted, beat, bruised, wounded, injured, and mistreated him.
As a result of the alleged attack Wallace avens that he received a broken tooth and severe internal injuries which has caused him considerable pain and inconvenience.
Besides he claimed he has suffered "great pain in body and mind and has suffered great humiliation in his feelings and reputation and has been subjected to great shame in the presence of numerous persons" in the place at the time of the alleged assault.
2 HUSBANDS ORDERED TO PAYALIMONY
Two husbands were ordered by Justice Gordon to pay their wives alimony pending hearings for separate maintenance in the District Supreme Court, Wednesday.
Mrs. Mell Myra Tibbs, 344 Twelfth Street, Southeast, will receive $35 monthly from Wilson Roscoe Tibbs, an employee at the Washington Navy Yard following a motion before Justice Gordon by Attorney Thurman L. Dodson.
To Pay Wife $35 Monthly
Tibbs attempted to present his own case to the court and when he was asked how much he was willing to pay his wife he answered, "ten dollars a month, your honor," "Make it $35," said the judge.
Tibbs argued that he received only $5 a day and he worked five days a week. However, he was ordered to pay the larger amount monthly on the first and fifteenth.
Kept Late Hours
According to the petition filed by Mrs. Tibbs, she was married June 14, 1916 by the Rev. W. H. Dean. Of late her husband has been drinking and staying out, at nights. Sometimes he would not come home for two days, she stated. Last June 23 she says he assaulted her and five days later he left home entirely.
Mrs. Tibbs also stated that she has a suspicion that her husband has other lady friends.
Brown Ordered to Pay
Charles A. Brown, 1319 S Street, Northwest, was ordered by the court to pay his wife, Mrs. Clarice Tyler Brown, 1345 S Street, Northwest, $30 monthly pending a hearing on their case for maintenance. The Browns were married De-
(Continued on page two)
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REMEMBER, most of the shops where you deal have telephones. You can save yourself a lot of useless trips if you will telephone for so many of the things you need and have them delivered at your door.
The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co.
723 13th Street, N.W. (Bell System) ME tropolitan 9900
TEN
FEDERATION OF NEGRO CHURCHES TO BE FORMED
Bishop Ransom Issues Call for Leaders to Meet in Chicago
WILBERFORCE, Ohio—A call has been made by the executive committee of the proposed Federation of Negro Churches of the United States for August 22, 23.
Leaders of the leading denominations have already subscribed.
At the meeting held at Washington there were present: Bishops R. C. Ransom and M. H. Davis, representing the A.M.E. Church; Bishop R. A. Carter of the C.M.E. Church; Bishops W. W. Matthews, E. D. W. Jones and W. J. Walls of the A.M. E. Zion Church; the Revs: W. H. Jernagin, H. L. Taylor, S. L. Howard, Walter H. Brooks and others.
Messages were received from President L. K. Williams of the National Baptist Convention; President G. L. Prince of the National Baptist Convention of America; the Rev. Henry Allen Boyd, Bishop J. S. Caldwell, Bishop W. A. Fountain, Ernest Hall, Wilbur A. Page and many other leaders.
The meeting for permanent organization has been called by Bishop Ransome, acting chairman, at Chicago Illinois, Bethesda Baptist Church. All denominations are to be represented by their denominational general officers. Churches are to be represented by their pastors and one layman and one laywoman. The Women's Missionary Societies are especially asked to be present with their representatives.
The five denominations whose representatives approved the federation at the start are: African Methodist Episcopal, with 581,750 members; Colored Methodist Episcopal, 325, 484 members; African Methodist Episcopal Zion, 435,500; National Baptist Convention, 3,510,000, and the National Baptist Convention unincorporated, 1,000,000. Other groups will have an opportunity of joining the federation later.
MISS BURROUGHS TO SPEAK SUNDAY
Women's Day and Pew Rally to Be Observed by Order of Eastern Star
A Women's Day and pew rally under the auspices of the Order of the Eastern Star. will be held at Vermont Avenue Baptist Church; VermontAvenue, between Q and R Streets, Northwest, Sunday. The program will be sponsored by Past Matron Elmira G. Henderson, chairman of the charity committee, and Past Matron Alma B. Parks, assistant chairman. Speakers will be Mrs. Coralie Franklin Cook, former member of the board of education; Miss Nannie H. Burroughs, president of the National Training School for Women and Girls; Past Matron Alma J. Scott and Naomi J. Johnson, grand associate conductress. Music will be furnished by the choral unit of the organization. Mrs. Jennie Brown Lee is grand royal matron of the order and Benjamin F. Arrington, grand royal patron.
Where moonshine comes from is a secret still.
Y.M.C.A. and Church Need Fuller Cooperation, Conference Reports
Increased Number of Activities Which Will Stimulate Imagination of Boys Also Urged by Secretaries and Laymen at Bordentown Meeting
Bible Best Seller Among Books Church Literary Review Finds
Langston Hughes is Most Outstanding Writer of the Present While Dunbar is Greatest of All Time, Opinion of Society Members
ORDENTOWN, N. J. — More than three hundred delegates from fourteen states attended the annual conference of Y.M.C.A. layman secretaries at the Bordentown Manual Training School, Bordentown, N. J., last week.
The principal interest of the conference centered about three features: first, a panel discussion on "Y.M.C.A. Service to the Negro in a Planned Government", second, the presentation of a report of the study of the Y.M.C.A. service to men and boys in cities by George R. Arthur, formerly of the Julius Rosenwald Fund and now executive secretary for colored work in Chicago, third the main address of the conference delivered by President Leslie Pinkney Hill of the State Teachers' College, Cheyne, Pa.
The specific recommendations growing out of the panel discussion and of Mr. Arthur's report include:
1. The Young Men's Christian Association should enlarge its community activities as soon as possible and assure more responsibility for the welfare of the entire colored population.
2. The association should increase the number of activities which will stimulate the imagination of boys, such as music, craft work, dramatics, thrift. A larger variety of games and exercises should be promoted in gymnasiums and nattoriums in order to maintain the interest of the older boys.
3. In the work the associations should determine as far as possible the status of their present program with reference to character-building values. The unattractive boys' lobbies and club rooms in most of those buildings, together with understaffed personnel, tend to retard character growth of the boys and extension of boys' work.
College Graduates
4. Future appointments of secretaries in the association should be made from college graduates, perferably those with graduate
Bible Best Seller Church Literary
Langston Hughes is Most Present While Dunbar Opinion of Soo
By J. CLARENCE REED
Varying the type of meeting to suit their mood these summer days, the Senior Christian Endeavor Society of Third Baptist Church hgld a Mid-Summer Literary Review on Sunday evening at the church. The meeting was in harmony with the topic for the day: "The Best Book I Have Read This Year."
The books reported on and reviewed during the meeting tended to give the Good Literature Committee of the Society a general idea of what the average person reads during periods of leisure. The members lauded the District of Columbia Literary officials in their efforts to give to the book-loving public of Washington the finest the cleanest and the most up-to-date literature to be found anywhere and at any time. Due to their efforts, it is found that Washington is fast becoming a mecca
You can order almost anything by Telephone
training in Y.M.C.A. colleges.
5. At least one full-time secretary should be employed in each of the major divisions of the "Rosenwald" Y.M.C.A.'s.
6. The religious work of the associations need fuller cooperation with the churches, especially as a clearing house for interdenominational young people's activities. Community leisure programs conducted by churches and the Y.M.C.A. are also recommended.
To Study Recreation
7. The aims and policies of the physical education program of the association should be studied, especially in the light of present day tendencies to shift almost entirely from standard gymnasium exercises to recreational games.
Dr. Leslie Pinckney Hill's address was a ringing challenge to youth to have respect for the contribution that age is competent to make through the wisdom of its counsel to the solution of present economic and social problems.
A fitting climax of the conference was a testimonial dinner tended to Robert P. Hamlin, retiring secretary of the states of New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
Valentine President
The officers of the conference for the coming year are as follows: president, W. R. Valentine of Bordentown, N. J.; vice president T. J. Chesson, of Norfolk, Va. W. T. Poole of Pittsburgh, Pa. and Dr. A. Leslie Marshall of Harrisburg, Pa.; secretary W. C. Anderson of Baltimore; treasurer, W. P. Allen, of Montclair, N. J.
The findings committee for next year is composed of Hilmer L. Johnson, Trenton N. J.; Campbell C. Johnson, Washington, and George B. Murphy, Baltimore.
Those registered from Washington were:
Mrs. Ruby M. Johnson, Campbell C. Johnson, Robert C. Weaver, Miss Helen I. Scurlock, Langston Taylor, Horace G. Christopher, Mrs. Julia T. Robinson, F. M. Robinson, Emmett J. Scott.
for critics and writers
for critics and writers.
Books reviewed during the meeting ranged from the popular novel "London Bridge is Falling Down" by Phillip Lindsay to "The Pilgrim's Progress" by John Bunyan. It was unanimously agreed that the Bible is still the best seller and that the Books of the Bible are the most widely read. The society was also unanimous in its opinion that Langston Hughes is the outstanding Negro writer of today and that Paul Lawrence Dunbar is the greatest Negro Poet of all times.
The meeting was presided over by Mrs. Emma Sims, Mrs. Ella Johnson, president of the Alice R. Lee Missionary Society, sang "Oh, Zion Haste!" Other music was furnished by the C.E. Choirs under the direction of Mr. William H. Smith. The members present included:
Mesdames Dorothy Hood, Gertrude Freeman, B. R. Taylor, Emma Sims, Bertha Dandridge Pettrenella H. Reed, Mary Samuels, Fannie Morris-Reed, Lucy Magruder, Rettia Kincaid, P. G. Townley, Elizabeth Green, Viola Gaither, Carrie Beaver, Vinessa Medley, Vivian Artis, Francis Steward, Annie Ricks, Ella Johnson, Sadie M. Hamilton, Francis Loving, Rosa Cromwell, Cora Jackson, Jessie Lyons,
Misses Agnes Johnson, Bernice Jackson, Fannie Jackson, Greta Dandridge, Helen Lyons, Marion Lyons.
Messrs. Edward Carter, John Van Buren, William H. Smith, Gilbert Macroe Hood, E. W. Freeman, W. F. Scott, William H. Guy, W. Clarence Reed, Samuel White, Louis Medley, John Robinson, B. E. Williams, J. W. Lee, F. D. Keys, the Rev. George O. Bullock, James Coleman, Fred Brown, Miss Charlotte Bailey and Mrs. Anthony Butler,
High School Students Form Cooperative Assna
NEW YORK—Five young men attending the Harlem Evening High School and two young women recently formed a national cooperative organization. They seek to have branches throughout the United States. The new organization is called the Negroes' National Cooperative League, with headquarters at 3 East 113th Street.
The officers are:
Philip Boyce, president; Benny Barnett, vice president; Beresford Christie, recording secretary; Livingstone, Gill, financial secretary;
Mrs. P. Boyce, treasurer; Mrs. P. Reid educational director; P. B Ellis, employment director and M Classe, publicity director.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1934
CHURCHES
The Judgment
What man is good—what bad?
Which man is gay—which sad?
Who dares or small aquain-
dance cry.
"There's evil in the fellow's eye," That man is mad.
Measure his strength, his skill, All that is measurable— The love, the lust the pride of him, The thousand things inside of him, Let them be still.
The part of him they know is rare.
The part decay.
CAMPBELL, A.M.E, CHURCH
ANACOSTIA
Special services will be held at this church, next Sunday by the "Sons and Daughters of Campbell." of which club Robert S. Penn is the president and the sermon at 11 o'clock will be delivered by the Rev. Richard Allen Green, and music will be furnished by the senior choir, under direction of Melvin Weems, Mrs., Eliza Weems will preside at the organ, assisted by Richard Smith, violinist.
The sermon Sunday night will go preached by the Rev. J. T. McClennon, when Campbell and St. John Churches will worship in a union service, as they have each Sunday in July. Music will be rendered by the combined choirs, and the St. John ushers will serve at the door.
Sunday, August 5 will be holy communion day, and the Lord's Supper will be administered at 11 o'clock, and at 8 o'clock a union service will be held at the St. John Church under the auspices of Campbell's Willing Workers' Club, of which Mrs. Gertrude Green is president.
Friday of this week there will be a lawn party and auto ride at Campbell Church under the auspices of the Golden Sceptor Club, of which Mrs. Marian Frye is the president. She will be assisted by Mrs. Alice Scott Lewis and other ladies.
There will be a social tea at the home of Mrs. Lucille Dale, 1145 Summer Road, Sunday, July 20, beginning at 4 p.m., under the auspices of the Women's Mite Missionary Society, of which Mrs. Virgie Stewart is the president.
Tuesday July 31, there will be a lawn party at the home of Mrs. Gertrude Green, 2550 Nichols Avenue, Anacostia, by the Willing Workers Club, with Mrs. Green as president.
Wednesday, August 1, there will be a baby contest at Campbell by the Progressive Club, of which Mrs. Ruth Long is the president.
Thursday August 2. Campbell Church, with its many friends will hold a family outing at Sparrows Beach, when bushes will leave the church at 10 a.m.
Wednesday, August 15, a farmer's dinner will be served at the church by the Stewardesses and Trustee Helpers, of which Mrs. Martha Green and Mrs. Jennie Brown are the presidents, respectively.
Mrs. Lucille Dale the delegate, and Dr. P. A. Scott the pastor, attended the meeting of the Electoral College, held ... Havre de Grace, Md., on Wednesday of last week.
The services at Campbell were well attended last Sunday morning, and the pastor delivered a sermon on "Keep, Up Your Courage," Music was furnished by the senior choir, with Melvin Weems directing. The sum of $1.50 was presented the trustees by Mrs. Gertrude Green, for the Willing Workers Club, to be applied on the weekly interest at the Anacostia Bank, and Mrs. Alice Scott Lewis, president of the Mystic Club presented the trustees with the sum of $7.61 to apply on another debt of the church.
Dr. George W. Scott, who entered the ministry from this church a few years ago, and who is now the pastor of Big Bethel the largest church in Atlanta, "Ga., stopped in the beginning of the morning service on his way to Baltimore, and spoke.
Sunday afternoon, at 4 o'clock, the Trustee Helpers held a special club rally and a fine sermon was delivered by the Rev. J. DeWitt Wilson, pastor of the Turner Memorial, A.M.E. Church. He was accompanied by several of his members.
Sunday night the union services were held at the St. John Church, and the sermon was delivered by Dr. P. A. Scott.
ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Sunday, the ninth Sunday after Trinity, will be celebrated with Holly Communion at 7 a.m., church school at 9:45 a.m., and morning prayer and sermon by the rector, the Rey, A. A. Birch at 11 a.m.
The services were well attended last Sunday, both morning and night. The report of the Summer Bible School was good. The
enrollment was above 100 and 75
was the average attendance.
Next Sunday is missionary day.
The Senior Missionary will have
charge. The Rev. W. B. Marsh,
pastor of Beulah Baptist Church
and former assistant of Mt. Car-
will be guest speaker.
Sunday School is held at 9:30
a.m. and B.Y.P.U. at 6:30 p.m.
MOUNT HERMON
BAPTIST CHURCH
"Thy Will Be Done" will be the subject of a sermon by the Rev M. C. Banks, pastor of Mt. Hermon Baptist Church. The services in the evening will be featured by singing by the Temple Quartet. The church is located at 815-S Street, Northwest. Communion is served the second Sunday in each month at 3 p.m.
THIRD BAPTIST CHURCH
Dr. George O. Bullock will preach at both morning and evening services. Sunday. Bible School will be held at 9:45 a.m., Junior Christian Endeavor at 4 p.m., Intermediate at 5 p.m., and Senior at 6 p.m.
The Rev. A. Elmres, pastor of People's Congregational Church, will be guest speaker at the latter service. Prayer meetings will be held Tuesday and Thursday nights.
CHAPEL OF ATONEMENT
The rector, the Rev. A. A. Birch,
will conduct morning prayer and
sermon at 9:30 a.m., and church
school will be held at 10:45 a.m.
MOUNT MORIAH
BAPTIST CHURCH
The Rev. J. Harvey Randolph,
pastor, will preach Sunday at 11
a.m. and 8 p.m., with the Junior
Choir furnishing music for both
occasions.
The Men's League will give an
outing Saturday at Edgewater
Beach, Md. Buses will leave the
church at 9:30 a.m. and return at
6 p.m.
FIFTEENTH STREET
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
The Rev. Dr. H. B. Taylor will have as the subject of his sermon Sunday morning at 11 o'clock "Singing a New Song." This will be Dr. Taylor's last sermon before he goes on his vacation. Music will be rendered by the choir under the direction of Miss Frances Allen. Sunday School will be held at 10 a.m.
ZION BAPTIST CHURCH SOUTHWEST
"The Hope of the Gospel" is the theme for Missionary Day which will be observed at the morning and night services Sunday. The pastor, the Rev. J. M. Ellison, will preach. The Senior Christian Endeavor will hold its services in Cullinns Court, between Fourth and Sixth, G and H Streets, Southwest, at 6 p.m. The Rev. Mr. McKee of the Monut Moriah Baptist Church, will be the speaker.
GALBRAITH A.M.E. ZION
Lindsay Cain of Nineteenth Street Baptist Church was the guest speaker last Sunday for the C. E. Society. He chose for his subject "Know Thyself." He said that self-analysis was a duty to determine capacity and limitation. He next spoke of the duties of parents in rearing their children. To see that they got the proper training in school; that they performed the task of home preparation; that they had the right sort of recreation, and associated with proper persons. In his closing remarks he admonished his hearers not to forget grand-father and grand-mother in their declining years. Charles H. Anderson is president and Dr. W. D. Speight is the pastor.
JOHN WESLEY A. M. E.
ZION CHURCH
The Rev. S. A. Gordon Grant will deliver the message to the junior church members at 10:45 a.m. Sunday.
At 7:45 p.m. the Rev. W. O. Carrington, pastor will preach. Music will be rendered by the second chair under the direction of Miss Lacelle Mills. Church School will be held at 9:30 a.m. with Dr. V. J. Tulane, superintendent, in charge. Junior Christian Endeavor meeting begins at 5:30 p.m. and the Senior meeting at 6:30 p.m.
LINCOLN - TEMPLE
At the services of Lincoln Congregational Temple Sunday morning, Rev. R. W. Brooks will speak, "Am I My Brother's Keeper?" Special music will be rendered by Miss Louise Burge, contralto, solo and a duet by Miss Burge and James Lee, tenor.
The men's Brotherhood will assemble at 10 a.m. After brief devotional exercises conducted by the paester, Dr. E. G. Terry, Howard University Medical School; will address the men of the church and community on the theme, "Preventive Medicine."
The Young People's C. E. Society will present a program of song and discussion on the church lawn at 7 p.m. The discussion theme will be, "Great Missionary Hymns and Their Challenge." The Young People's Society of the 12th Street Christian Church has been invited as guests of the Lincoln Society.
Africans Hold Important Conference in London
LONDON, Eng.—"The Negro in the World Today," a conference held at Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, arranged by a committee representing various societies and organizations of Africans living in London and political religious and missionary societies interested in Negro affairs, got under way here July 13 and was concluded Sunday, July 15.
Dr. Harold A. Moody, of the League of Coloured People, and John P. Fletcher, of the Society of Friends, were the conference chairmen. Discussion of "The Negro in Africa"; "The Negro in North Central and South America." "The' Negro in History." "The Negro in the British Isles as Student and as Worker." "The Negro's Contribution to the World Today," and "Negro in the Future" were some of the subjects before the conference.
Church of God in Christ to Convene at Bluefield
BLUEFIELD, W. Va.-The third National Holy Convocation, of the Church of God in Christ (Pentecostal) shall convene with the Mother Church, at Bluefield, September 21-30 inclusive. The above named church body, is a newly established organization having been organized in June, 1931, at Knoxville, Tenn., and is incorporated under the laws of the State of Tennessee. Bishop C. F. Kruer, senior bishop and founder, is probably the youngest bishop of our race being but 33 years of ago at the present time.
Bishops Simms and Ransom Summoned for A.M.E. Trial
NEW YORK (ANP)—It was reported here last week that Bishop David H. Sims has been cabled by the Rt. Rev. H. B. Parks, of Oakland, Calif., the senior bishop of the A.M.E. church to return from his post of duty in South Africa, to stand trial before a church tribunal to answer charges of desertion and divorce brought by his wife before the Bishop's council at its meeting in Jackson, Miss., last winter.
The Rt. Rev. Reverdy C. Ranson, another bishop and chairman of the trustee board at Wilberforce University in Ohio will, it was stated have to face charges filed by the Detroit A.M.E. Layman's movement, last February 14.
Editorial Commission Revises C.M.E. Discipline
JACKSON, Tenn.—The special Editorial Commission named by the recent St. Louis General Conference of the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church met here Wednesday and Thursday of this week and completed the work of revising the new 1834 Book of Discipline of the C.M.E. Church.
In the organization, on motion of Bishop J. Arthur Hammett, Bishop Randall A. Carter was elected chairman of the revision committee, Prof. W. A. Bell was elected secretary with Mrs. Rosie T. Hollis assistant secretary.
Federated Catholics to Hold Meeting in Philly
CHICAGO—Dr. Thomas W. Turner, president, announced here this week that the tenth annual meeting of the Federated Colored Catholics of the United States would be held in Philadelphia, September 1-3. This is part of the group which was organized in Washington ten years ago, the purpose being to encourage greater solidarity among colored Catholics as a means of obtaining proper recognition in the Catholic church. Two years ago the original group split, most of the eastern adherents continuing to follow the leadership of Dr. Turner and the middle western members choosing Attorney George Conrad, of Cincinnati to lead them.
Speaks in Baltimore
The Rev. William S. Ephrian, evangelist and poet, was guest speaker at the Metropolitan Baptist Church, of Baltimore, last Sunday at 11 a.m. He spoke on "Leadership." The Rev. J. W. Luck is pastor of the church.
OPERATE ON BAPTIST EDITOR
PHILADELPHIA.—The Rev. Dr. J. T. Brown, of Nashville, Tennessee, editor of the Baptist Sunday School publications was operated upon in the Mercy Hospital for a condition which caused the loss of his voice for the past four years. The surgeon, Dr. W. Harry Barnes, is very hopeful for the restoration of his voice.
For Modern Ambulance Service with careful attendants call) NO. 3815.
Vital Statistics
QUIET PEACEFUL LOVELY Visit
LINCOLN MEMORIAL CEMETERY
Delightful Drive Out Pennsylvania Avenue, Southeast.
Ten Minutes' Drive From the Nation's Capital.
FAMILY LOTS SOLD ON UNUSUALLY LOW TERMS
Perpetual Care Perpetual Charter
Call office for information:
City Office—1351, Wallach Pl. N.W.
Telephone, Decatur 3554
BEST NEWS OF
Births Reported
Ernest and Hilda Harris, boy
Wilson and Iretha Hart, boy
Russell and Frances Broadus, boy
James and Frances Horton, boy
Robert and Gertrude Clay, girl
George and Martha Washington, girl
Marina Tayler, girl
Frank and Ruth Ford, girl
Horace and Carrin Smith, boy
Joseph and Eolus Boyd, girl
Harry and Willie Jones, girl
Ashby and Julia Cobb, girl
Marina Tayler, boy
Harry and Cora B. Toliver, boy
Willis and Mary Williams, boy
James and Alma Callahan, girl
Charles and Layene Lester, girl
Stewart and Christina Collins, girl
Marina Tayler, boy
David and Viola Vaughn, boy
Wilson and Berhetta M. Cloud, boy
Cary and Virginia Foster, boy
Norman A. and Anuabel W. Toogood, boy
Anderson and Annetta Brown, boy
Robert C. and Vivian Neal, boy
And Vivian Neal, boy
George and Susie Blassivgame, girl
Daniel W. and Idela M. Johnson, boy
Archer and Francis Hitz, girl
Vernon and Edith Ray, girl
Charles and Florence Jones, girl
Francis L. and Evangeline V. Partello
Ernest and Pheresa Dyson, boy
William and Cordella White, boy
Andrew and Vioa Brown, boy
Benjamin H. and Ruth A. Johnson, boy
Wilbur T. and Fannie R. Givens, boy
Wilman O. and Mamie Kelly, boy
Riddick and Virginia L. Vann, boy
James and Pearl Domming, girl
James K. and Emmett Harris, girl
Andrew and Emmett Owain, girl
John T. and Alma Jackson, girl
Andrew and Janie Lawry, girl
William H. and Alice M. Sothers, girl
Warren L. and Mary E. Settles, girl
Johnnie and Bessie Blocker, girl
John and Caldonia Slaughter, boy
Stanley and Alma Riley, boy
Charles and Mary Hughes, boy
Leonard and Helen Blackwell, boy and
John and Vioia Belk, girl
Lewis and Frederica Williams, girl
John and Anna Curley, boy
Grace and Kevin Williams, girl
William and Vivian Cole, girl
Iaac and Grace Humphries, girl
Larcy and Dorothy Richardson, boy
Benjamin and Ollia Stephens, boy
Grace and Kevin Williams, boy
Leonard and Eleanor White, boy
John R. and Emma T. Moore, boy
Georce and Bertha Bell, girl
Marshall G. and Levefa Morgan, girl
Robert and Eden Raymond and Dorothy E. Quigley, boy
Joseph and Pytha Joyner, boy
Robert and Euzenia Collins, boy
Johnson and Eun Gill, girl
Robert and Eun Gill, girl
Charles and Louise Johnson, girl
Deaths Reported
Isaac Robinson, 73, Gallinger Hosp.
Laura Lancaster, 70, 221 K I St. N.W.
John B. Browne, 70, 191 K I St. N.W.
Thomas E. Jackson, 65, Home for Aged.
Finnell Nette, 63, 199 Fifth St. N.W.
John C. Lewis, 50, 1005 U St., N.W.
Hayward G. Burrell, 39, U.S. Veterans
Marion Levi, 26, Freedmen's Hosp.
Lillian Bell, 21, Gallinger Hosp.
Robert Morton, 80, Gallinger Hosp.
Sophronia Muse, 50, 2134 Eighth St. N.W.
Bishop Hosp, 50, 2134 Eighth St. N.W.
Rosie Dorsey, 38, 51 D St. N.W.
Albert Martin, 25, Freedmen's Hosp.
Odessa Corbin, 5, 1328 Fifth St. N.W.
Bishop Hosp, 5, 1328 Fifth St. N.W.
days, Bishop Julia Cobbs, two
John Williams, 69. Freedmen's Hosp.
Archeie W. Gunn, 69. 1937 Capitol Ave.
John T. Brown, 68. Gallinger Hosp.
Matilda Young, 60. 1751 Seaton St. N.W.
Joseph Lane, 68. 804 Rhode Island Ave.
N.W.
Thomas F. McMaster, 58. 512 D St. N.E.
Otis A. Wilson, 58. Gallinger Hosp.
Ernest A. Liverpool, 44. Gallinger Hosp.
Bessie Maurerr, 42. Gallinger Hosp.
Wallace Stedman, 69. Gallinger Hosp.
Edna Digg, 19. Freedmen's Hosp.
Lillie Mae Williams, 13. Gallinger Hosp.
Jamie Converse, 58. 318 M Place. S.W.
James Covert, 58. 318 M Place. S.W.
Hattie Dillard, 62. Garfield Hosp.
West Wilson, 50. Casualty Hosp.
Martha Nelson, 48. Gallinger Hosp.
Ernest Twyman, 42. Freedmen's Hosp.
Robert Lewis, 34. Gallinger Hosp.
Rhonda Browne, 62. Garfield Hosp.
Laura C. Nesby, 25. 1201 P St. N.W.
Aiton Doub. 18. Gallinger Hosp.
Lila M. Morris, 1. Gallinger Hosp.
Guy P. Gaskins, 83. Garfield Hosp.
John W. Coursey, S2, Home for Aged and
Inflirm.
John Douglass, 64. Freedmen's Hosp.
Viola Bios, 55, 915 Twenty-seventh St.
N.W.
Margaret Smallwood, 52. Freedmen's Hosp.
Buffalo Ruff, 90. Gallinger Hosp.
Marie Savoy, 24. Georgetown Hosp.
Dorthy Perkins, 13, 414 Twenty-third
Place, N.E.
Bernard Sims Vivins, 7 mos. Children's Hosp.
Martha Gross, 69, 445 Six-and-a-half St.
Emmy Kemper, 52, 201 Virginia Ave. S.E.
John L. Carter, 46, 2650 Wisconsin Ave.
N.W.
Thomas Thomas, 43. Emergency Hosp.
Carrie Brisvee, 37. Gallinger Hosp.
Glover Lowery, 38, 40 U St., N.W.
Glover Lowery, 32, 80 U St., N.E.
Infant to Leonard and Edna Ward, 9 days. Gallinger Hosp.
James Simmons, 38. Freedmen's Hosp.
Alice Calzada, alias Alias, 36, 215 Third
Warren Praxier, 25. Freedmen's Hosp.
William J. Thornton, 21. Freedmen's Hosp.
Marshall Burgess, 3. Emergency Hosp.
Infant Brown, 8 days. Children Hosp.
Infant Clark, 2 days. Children's Hosp.
Infant Rink and Mary Parker, 14 hr.
Columbus Hosp.
Infant Pratt, 11, 64. Gallinger Hosp.
Infant to Robert and Nellie Madison, 1 hr.
hr. Freedmen's Hosp.
Rebecca Collins, 89, 1110 Columbia Road.
N.W.
Annie Riley, 88, 220 H St. N.E.
Alexander B. Coleman, 50, en route Emer-
Robert Matthews, 40. Providence Hosp.
Hazel Thomas, 30. 51 D St. S.E.
Daiyu Haynes, 30. Gallinger Hosp.
Joseph Thomas, 28. Gallinger Hosp.
Itsukh Sunders, 28. Emergency Hosp.
Willard Payne, 28. Gallinger Hosp.
Hawkins R. Kool, 28. Callahan Hosp.
Hewkins A. Paitrein, 6 mos. 5423 Bell
Place, N.E.
Licensed to Marry
William Scrivner, 23, 70 P Street, North
Wilmington, Mildred Smith, 21, 3A M Street
Southwest
Edward Carroll, 19, Franconia, Va. and
Nora Jones, 16, Alexandria, Va.
James Banks, 25, 2102 Fourteenth Street,
Northwest. and Lucille Goodall, 19, 1317
Wallash Place, Northwest.
Wilson, 1915 Fifth Street,
Northwest. and Julia Fendall, 28, 913
Fifth Street, Northwest.
Dock Maddock, 37, 1024 First Street,
Northwest. and Gertrude Knox, 26, 318
New York Avenue, Northwest.
Jesse T. Pitt, 22, 1225 Ninth Street
Jesse T. Pitt, 22, 1225 Ninth Street
E. Davis, 21, 1222 Ninth Street
North Parks
McClinton Boyd, 33, 425 Riggs Place,
Northwest, and Minnie Morrison, 32, 425
Riggs Place, Northwest.
Theodore Anderson, 27, 937 O Street,
Northwest, and Fannie Garrison, 21, 1469
Eleventh Street, Northwest.
Samuel A. Jackson, 22, 708 Irving Street,
Northwest, and Robert W. Morton, 1804
Tenth Street, Northwest.
Willie Jones, 83, 510 First Street, Northwest,
and Mary Cheeks, 22, 510 First
Street, Northwest.
Earl Miller, 23, 1731 Willard, Street.
Northwest, and Gertrude E. Holland, 24, 1731 Willard Street. Northwest.
George W. Mitchell, 21, 1019 Twentieth Street, Jackson, 19, 1019 Twentieth Street. Northwest.
Joshua Johnson, 23, 947 Golden Court. Southwest, and Janie C. King, 21, 530 H Street. Southwest.
Major J. Austin, 23, 1014 Seventh Street. Inman and Cora Johnson, 12, 1027 Seventh Street. Southeast.
Donald B. Howard, 25, 1350 Fort Drive,
Northwest, and Mamie P. Macklin, 22,
1445 Rock Creek Ford Drive, Northwest,
Frank Manuel, 43, 495 Cullinan Court,
Southwest, and Annie M. Chase, 33, 320
L. Street, Southwest,
Mamie A. Chase, 24, Charlestonville,
Va., and Christine A. Cosby, 22, Schuyler,
Va.
Joseph L. Smith, 25, 1519 B Street.
Joseph L. Smith, 25, 1519 B Street.
B Street, Southeast.
Henry Carter, 29, 1035 Twentieth Street, Northwest, and Mary Smith, 28, 1035 Twentieth Street, Northwest.
John H. Brown, 21, 1839 Seventeenth Street, Northwest, and Marie Wooden, 18, 1514 Seventeenth Street, E. Riverdale, Md., and Gladys Jenkins, 28, Boyd, Md.
Luther A. Jones, 19, Glen Allen, Va., and Mary Anderson, Richmond, Va.
Henry J. Nichols, 28, 107 F Street, Southwest, and Sarah E. Johnson, 26, 107 F Street, Southwest.
Joseph E. Wynn, 22, 708 Sheriff Road, Northeast.
Horser L. Shetton, 23, 484 Locust Court,
Horser D. Dorothy Lee, 484 Locus
Court, Southwest
Robert Neal, 28, 442 First Street, South-
west, and Rosa Lucas, 24, 448 First Street
LUMBAGO
(Being in the Leaving)
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Phone. North 10312
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FUL LOVELY
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RIAL CEMETERY
Pennsylvania Avenue, Southeast.
from the Nation's Capital.
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information:
Wallach Pl. N.W.
BEST NEWS OF-TBE. NATIONS. CAPITAL
TOVNTO AD | fama
WORTHY STUDENTS Ne
BY SCHOLARSHIPS | Smecesre-
Plan ‘Alea tg Beevide Teams | wnt, ee
ing Table for Football | rant to,se Justice, dom
Team This Year may fire the bosses ire a
“The giving of free scholarships
to worthy students who are finan-
cially unable but who: desire to
enter Howard University this fall
and the definite decision that the
Howard football team shall no
longer suffer from physical handi-
caps as it has during the last 7
years which partly accounted for
its poor showing; are the first two
important steps in a constructive
program the General Howard Alum-
ni Association decided upon at the
national headquarters in Washing-
ton,” said Mishael (Casey) Jones,
Howard alumni secretary.
Speaking about the football
team, Mr. Jones said “The discour-
aging treatment of our footbali
men which began with taking their
training table from them seven
years ago has been almost in-
human, The Alumni Association
has waited patiently for a change
but has now decided to strike a-
gainst this evil and see that every-
thing is done consistent with. good
university ethies to place the How-
ard team in its rightful place in
the college football world.” .
In a news release from the Gen-
eral Alumni headquarters in Wash-
ington is the following statementy
“In speaking of the campaign
for free scholarships to Howard,
the alumni secretary pointed out
that on a day to be soon named
the 50 Howard clubs in various
cities will open @ propaganda pro-
gram with the slogan that “Oppor-
tunity always favors the prepared
man.” During this campaign, funds
for scholarships will be collected.
All candidates for scholarships and
financial arrangements for ‘their
schooling will be handled by the
General Alumnj_ Association, the
alumni office declared.
“The General Alumni Associa-
tion is becoming alarmed over the
low prospect of student enrollment
at Howard this fall and we are go-
ing to do everything possible to
bring it up to normal. The alumni
must assume larger responsibility
to increase student enrollment,” the
secretary stated.
LIBERIA 10 BE
AOED BY U.S
Following three years of futile
efforts by the League of Nations to
bring about economic and social
rehabilitation of Liberia, the Unit-
ed States Monday took the initia-
tive in an attempt to help that
ee stabilize itself financi-
ally.
Assistant Secretary of State
Harry A. McBride was ordered to
Liberia to report on that country’s
financial and social conditions.
MeBride’s report will be used as
a basis for possible resumption of
payments of a $2,000,000 loan
granted Liberia after the World
War by the Firestone Rubber Com-
pany.
Payments were suspended two
years ago. Under a plan devised
by the League, foreign advisors
were to take over the administra-
tion of the Liberian government.
Liberia rejected the plan as an
infringement on its sovereignty.
McBride served as receiver of
customs and financial advisor in
Liberia in 1918-1919. He is now in
Europe) He will sail for Liberia
in August, returning here Octo-
ber 1.
eee eee
Leesburg, Va.
The P. G. Myers will Jeave for
Princess Anne, Md., where he will
conduet classes of religious edu-
cation at the ministerial school,
this week.
Mrs. Ethe! Murray of Washing-
ton was the house guest of the
Rev_eod Mee. PG Myers’ Bi
lay.
‘The Rev. and Mrs. Myers motor-
ed to Richmond to spend the day
with Mrs. E. P. Price Monday.
William Taylor Jr., of the U. S.
Navy. is visiting his’ parents, Mr.
and Mrs. William Taylor.
Mrs. Ella Russ spent the week
end with Mrs. Curtls Allen, Mr.
Allen spent two days in Washing-
ton attending the funeral of his
nicee, Mrs. Laura Cooper Nespy.
John’ Cooper returned with him.
Mr. and Mrs, Herman Gilbert
spent a short. visit at Bulridge
Summiy, Pa. with his brother,
Luther J. Adams.
The Rev. Myers was assisted by
the pastor of Middleburg Church
Sunday.
Mrs. Ethel Bell visited her
friends in Pee ville, Va. this
week.
Mrs. Joséphine Jackson of Wash-
ingion is\ visiting her parents,
Daniel Johnson and Mrs. Eliza
Johnson.
Mrs. William Washington gave
- fown party Test week,
\ll the gold found since the dis-
cozery of America would only make
a forty foot cube.
Federal (Sef
News Notes -——
(Conducted by Wm. L, Jackson during the absence of Mr. Hayes.)
I think the most important news of interest to the federal em-
ployee is the Donovan tase. Every. where people are discussing it, they
want to see justice done, and that is a mighty good sign. We never
know, when we may have to go through the same thing, any day. we
may fire the bosses ire and be kicked out before we can bat an eye. As
a whole we do not put faith in an organisation that is headed by mem-
bers of the other race, but I for one kno¢: that the American Federa-
tion of Government Employees considers all cases regardless as to the
race. I know of many case where Negroes were involved that have
been worked out to the satisfaction of the principals requesting their
aid,
I intended to attend the mass meeting at the Thomas School, I
actually did go to the school but could not wedge myself inside the
crowded auditorium. This goes to show the tremendous recognition
this case has gotten, it also shows the importance of being a member
of such an organization. I agree with Rycraw when he says'“The day
of rugged individualism is past,” we can. only accomplish our ends
through united efforts.
The American Federation of Government Employees is open to all
Federal workers and it should behoove us to invest thirty cents a month
[to have the protecting arms of this group around us.
One reader of this column expressed the op:nion that this column
was being run by the A.F.G.E. ‘I would feel very’ proud if it were.- But
the American Federation of Government Employees has endorsed this
column and I am glad'to know’ thet they take this much interest in it.
Not only are the heads of the A.F.G.E. backing the Negro in the
federal service, they are also offering their assistance to the New Ne-.
gro Alliance. Mr. Michae] D. Schaeffer, District president of the Amer-
‘ican. Federation. of Gqvernment Employees, together with other rank-
ing officials have expressed thei> desire to participate in the Govern-
ment employees night to be held shortly at one of the New Negro Al-
liance meetings. Mr. Bailey another of the ranking officials endorsed
the N.N.A. heartily at the installation of members of Lodge No. 20.
These men face the race problem squarely and are the ones we look to
with pride and anticipation of a better day for the Negro worker,»
There are many examples of the sincerity of these officials, I need
not point them out to you, for they are given due publicity. Those who
complain of not being able to get promotions in grade and salary and
unpredjudiced consideration when qualified for such, and knock the
American Federation of Government Employees, deserve no better fate.
They will forever be the ones to stand in the way, they will forever
be the ones to stand on the outside of the charmed cipcle of a living
Wage and burn with envy at the sight of advancement of others; they
will forever be the ones to poison the minds of the youth, make fittle
of his ambitions, and attempt to prevent him from taking a helpful part
in progressive groups, :
‘These workers are not joining the A.F.G.E. and who knows but
that we are better off without them. We need real men and women, reat
American citizens, the Uncle Tom and Aunt Liza of seventy years ago
can do nothing. but make the work of building ntore difficult. If this
organization has not proven to-all that it will not tolerate a color line,
then none ever will,
T would like to get a post card from every one who is interested in
this connection, I may find some reason why many more employees. are
not joining these organizations. Just a penny post card will do.
Thank You!
eel ese se
A reader wants to know whether I am a Democrat or Republican,
jn as much as I live in the District I can not go on record ay either,
put T can say that I think this administration is doing mote to help the
Negro than any previous one. I'am sure that in the long run werase
Rroup will have more work than in the past at a better salary.
Nour regular editor, Mr. Hayes, was detained in New Orleans by
some matters that he wanted to finish before his departure. I have 5
{heaking idea that he has something in store for us when he reaches
this city,
tee es
I notice that quite s few changes have taken place in the elevator
operators situation. I hope that it is to the satisfaction of all concerned,
George D. Riley, of the Washington Herald column “What's In a
Name" devoted quite a bit of space to the laboring force of the Poe
office Department. It seems that somebody over there is being “dene
frong.” He goes a long way to avoid giving anybody the “worke”
but when he finds it unavoidable, he really gives it to them:
ss
meee
B
ae,
215 STUDENTS AT
MORGAN COLLEGE
SUMMER SCHOOL
BALTIMORE—There are 215
students enrolled in the summer
session at Morgan College, mostly
public school teachers from 14
states. Much interest. is being
shown by the students in the city
and rural demonstration schools.
The latter is a one room school
with seven classes, located in a
typical rural environment.
The summer school will close on
August 3. On August 13 the Sun-
day School and Epworth League
Institute of the Delaware and
Washington Conferences of the
M.E. Church will meet on the cam-
pus for one week. August 22, the
National Bar Association will hold
its anmual conference at the col-
lege. This will be followed by a
school for rural and small town
pastors, which will meet for two
weeks,
Extensive preparations are heing
made for the comfort and enter:
tainment for persons all over. the
country during this summer. Mor-
gan College will entertain the Na-
tional Association of Teachers in
et Schools on Friday, August
Se gee 2
Roscoe Bruce and. Wife to
Manage $300,000 Estate
Lynchburg, Va, (CNS- —Roscoe
©. Bruee, Jr., of New York City,
his wife, Mrs. Bessie Humbles
Bruce, and Mrs. Josephine. Hum-
bles Kyle, have been named exe-
cutors of the estate of Alphonse
Humbles, wealthy Virginian, who
accidentally and fatally shot him-
self. The estate is valued at ap-
proximately $300,000, consisting
of cash; an. $80,000" insurance po-
liey, providing for double indem-
nity for accidental death; a 1200
acre farm and forty-eight pieces
ot property in and sbout Lynen-
burg. Each execntor i: under
a $250,000 bond. Tke Bruees
plan to give up residence in New
York and live in Lynchhorg, where
Mr. Bruce wil] manage the estate.
COLERIDGE: TAYLOR
MEMORIAL 10 BE
HELD AUGUST 15
A memorial program jn honor of
Samuel ‘Coleridge Taylor will. be
held Augyst 1g at the home of
Frederick ‘Douglass, Anacostia, ac-
cording to an announcement by
Harriett Gibbs Marshall, president
of the Washington Conservatory %
Music.
Mrs. Marshall knew and worked
with Coleridge-Taylor both in Lon-
don and in America. The friend-
ship which developed between the
two musicians extended to their
families and formed ties which the
years did not break.
The Washington Conservatory of
Music will present “The Gitano,”
one of the earliest opercttas of
Coleridge-Tavlor at Douglass's
Home. The production is being di-
rected by Shirley Graham, himself
& young composer who shares Mrs.
Marshall’s enthusiasm for creative
art. work.
Coleridge-Taylor was the son of
a well trained African physician
and » cultured English woman, He
was born August 15, 1875 and died
in 1912, It that brief space he
achieved a place among the first
ranks of English composers.
The program is being sponsored
by the Peace Circle of the Fréde-
rick Douglass Shrine.
peed ae
= ,
Progressive Consumers’
League Install Officers
The Southeast branches of the
Progressive Comsumer: League
recently installed the following
officers: -
Southeast branch No. 1; Rev.
R. C. Scott, president; John
Branch, treasurer; M. McElderry,
assistant treasurer; Branch “9. 2
Rev. W. Wright, preside « “F.
Frazier, treasurer.
The officers were installed by
T. Dupont Georges, national. pres-
idewt; Theodore Botts, national vice
president; Sahib Georges, national
seeretary, and Mack D. .Rowe,
rational chaplian and organizer
Fievida had the first orange trees
te Bini reas ari
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1934
Host to National Insurance Association
-e, *
go CW 2 ay ‘i et x4
— ae tigre i.4 €
i i ‘ \ ae
The above group is the. entertainment committee for the fourteenth annual session of the National
Negro Insurance Association, meeting in Richmond, Virginia, July 25. through July 27. _
Standing front row, left to right—Thomas H. Wright, Virginia’ Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Com-
| pany; C. L, Townes, secretary-manager, Virginia Mutual Benefit Life Insuratice Company and secretary of
‘the committee; Mrs. Lillian Bazley, Independent Order of Saint Luke; C. Bernard Gilpin, secretary-mana-
ger, Richmond Beneficial Insurance Company and chairman of the committee; Mrs. Zipporia Smith, Inde-
pendent Order of Saint Luke; A, J. Ruffin, Virginia Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company; H. H. South-
al, Southern Aid Society of Virginia; W. R. Allen, Southern Aid Society of Virginia,
Second row—B, T. Bradshaw, president-treasurer, Virginia Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company;
Walker H. Quaries, Independent Order of Saint Luke, and treasurer of the committee; James T. Carter,
president, Southern Aid Society of Virginia; Sheridan Jackson, Jr., egency director, Richmond Beneficial
Insurance Company, .
Back Row—J. E. Harris, assistant secretary-manager, Richmond Beneficial Insurance Company; B. L.
Jordan, secretary-manager, Southern Aid Society of Virginia; A. W. Holmes, supreme master, National
Ideal Benefit Society.
Callages Produc: Gainer Seeks Title Match| Alexandria Matron Leaves
Re een With Rosenbloom 16 Grandchildren
Cowards Says Hughes |} oy. ah maa a
NEW YORK.—Negro colleges
in America are turning out
young men and women trained
to be meek and “peaceful,”
rather than those equipped to
carry on the battle of the race
for a man’s standing in Amer-
ica declares Langston Hughes,
distinguished young. writer. in
an article entitled “Cowards
from the Colleges,” in the Aug-
ust issue of the Crisis, out July
26.
Other articles in the issue
are “A Wage Differential Based
Upon Race,” by Dr. Robert C.
Weaver, Negro _brain-truster
and assistant to Dr. Clark H,
Foreman in the Department of
the Interior; three short dis-
cussions of ‘segregation by J.
D. Watson, the Rev. Francis J.
Grimke and Ferdinand Q. Mor-
ton; and an article on the Ne-
gro Little Theatre Movement
being developed by Negro col-
lege dramatic classes by Ran-
dolph Edmunds instructor in
dramatics at Morgan College,
Baltimore, Md.
_ DOWNINGTOWN, Pa.—Out of
a field of one dozen applicants for
the position of secretary at Down-
‘ingtown Indastrial School, recently
made vacant by the marriage of
Mrs, U. V. Ross-Mdodana, an honor
graduate of the School of Educa-
tion of Howard University has been
selected.
| The new appointee is Mrs, Lillian
Taylor Mitchell, at present of
Washington, D.C., but a Baltimor-
ean by birth, a Norfolkite by
adoption, and ‘a resident of Con-
necticut ‘by marriage,
7 In 1924 she entered the School
of Education at Howard Univer-
sity, receiving a B.S. in Education
cum laude in 1928. While a stu-
dent there she served as part-time
clerk in the office of Miss Lulu V.
Childers, Director of the Schoo! of
Music,
In Mareh 1934 Mrs. Mitchell re-
turned to her career-work by tak
ing a position as stenographer to
John P. Davis, executive secretary
of the Joint Committee on National
Recovery in. Washineton.
Alabama Citizens to
Fight White Primary
NEW YORK.—The National As-
sofiation for the Advancement of
Colored People announced that its
Montgomery, Alabama branch is
about to challenge the barring of
Negroes from the Democratic pri
maries there, ‘atid has asked for
instructions as to procedure.
Walter White, the association's
secretary, has advised the branch
officials to “have as many quali
fied Negroes as possible to present
themselves for registration and
toting and hav them prepared to
take legal action for writ of man-
voting.and have them prepared to
Negroes for voting in the pri-
mary,” and to get the advice of a
competent and trustworthy lawyer
Mr. White cifed the three Texas
white primary cases in which ef-
forts to exclude Negro Democrats
from party primaries there were
declared. unconstitutional. The
Birmingham branch has been axk-
ed to aid and advise the Montgom-
oxy citizens in their fight.
_ The Post Office Departinent real-
ized eighteen million irs on’ &
— eee eee eee ee ee OOHET@O”"=2-ETE>NT=>a@00w0wWwmmnWmnnnm._]_—-_” OoOnaODkKOOEOoOoama=DEOOT” ‘
to be a Winner of the .
_ TWO VALUABLE LOTS |
at the Popular Summer Resort ,
On the Patuxent
River, 30 Miles
from the City
SII |
The Washington Crile |
Annual Subscription Contest _.
Ending October 1, 1934
eee eee Tee :
RULES OF THE CONTEST a CEDAR HAVEN
eee ae Beautiful rolling land located on what is said
naa ts'eligible to take part im this con- to be Maryland’s most beautiful river—the
‘ Patuxent.
Persons desiring to enter should report to the i : 4
Circulation AMstager of The Tribune at 920 Less than 30 miles from Washington, with
U Street, N.W., any evening from 5 to 7. Sat- excellent roads to the resort. =
urdays from 10 A. M. to 12 Noon. Salt water—affording both crabbing and
é fishing.
if you cannot get to office during these hours, J é
a telephone call, Potomac 1667, will bring More than a half mile of beach with excellent,
representative to your home). safe bathing—just the place for children.
All contestants, whether winner of the grand There are a number of desirable lots for sale
prize or not, will receive a liberal commission in this resort.
for their work. For information, apply Maryland Development
Everybody, therefore will have something to Co., 1420 New York Ave., Room 309. Phone | {)
gain in this big contest. Nat. 0655.
)) A Liberal Commission will be Paid to Contestants who do not win. For Information Call the Tribune Office,
Gainer Seeks Title Match
With Rosenbloom
NEW HAVEN, Conn.—(ANP)—
By virtue of his recent victory over
Lou Brouillard, Al Gainer, New
Haven's up and coming light heavy-
weight, has filed a challenge for
& championship bout with Maxie
Rosenbloom, 175. pound title holder,
it was announced this week. Ganier
also backed his challenge by post-
ing with the boxing commission, a
$2.500 forfeit.
Alexandria Matron Leaves
16 Grandchildren
Funeral services for Mrs, Mary
Day, widow of the late George
Day of Alexandria, Va. were held
Wednesday from the Alfred Street
Baptist Church in Alexandria.
Mrs. Day is survived by . two
daughters, Mrs. W. Matthews. and
Mrs, William H. Ray, three. sons,
Robert, George and’ Ferdinand
Day, a sister, Bell Walker, and 16
grandchildren,
THIRTEEN
LYNCHINGS
Reported Up to Middle of
July According to
LL.D. Survey
Thirteen lynchings have been re-
ported since January 1 this year,
according to records kept by the
International Labor Defense, it was
announced by the organization this
week.
Of ‘the thirteen, all were Negroes.
One lynching was reported from
New York State, two from Florida,
three from Mississippi, two from
Louisiana, one each from Georgia,
Kentucky, South Carolina, Texas,
and Tennessee,
In nearly all these cases, assist-
ance, if not leadership, of officers
of the law in the lynching was re-
ported.
In each of these’ cases, at least
three men participated in an organ-
ized manyer in the lynching. Many
other casés in which lynch-murders
were committed by single private
individuals or by officers of the law,
or by less than three persons act-
ing in concert, are not listed.
1. Unidentified Negro man,
lynched near Bartow, Ga., by a
kang of white men, January 9.
No excuse given.
2, Rex Scott, 20 years oid,
Negro, shot and hanged by
gang of 50 men, at Hazard,
Ky., on January 23. Charged
with striking a white man in a
fight.
3. Robert Johnson, Negro,
lynched near Tampa, Fla., Jan-
uary 30, while in custody of
Deputy Constable T. M. Graves
on:a charge of petty larceny.
“Partial identification” for “at-
/ tack on a white woman” (un-
named), was made after the
lynching for press, purposes.
4. James Franklin, Negro
yard hand, lynched hy employ-
er, Joe Kopman, with assist-
ance of two policemen who held
Franklin while Kopman shot
him, at Bradenton, Fla., April
3. Lynching was part of gen-
eral reign of terror against or-
ganizing citrus workers, but a
story of an “attack” on Kop-
man's daughter was given out.
5. Ramon Elloia, Negro
farmhand, 58 years old, lynch-
ed at Greenville, Miss., April
ELEVEN
22, by W. B. Basket farm
manager; Ben Dildant, sheriff;
and two others. Shot to death,
after argument between Elloia
and Will Moss, Negro foreman.
6. Unidentified Negro, found
with rope around his neck, evi-
dently lynched on golf course
at New Castle, N.Y., May5.
7. Unidentified Negro shot to
death by mob of 300, at Laur-
ens, S.C, May 10.) He was
charged with shooting at and
wounding deputy sheriff K. F.
Johns when Johns beat him
with a club.
& Euchere Pete Sylve, Ne-
gro, m@wed down by police
and mob at Pointe a la Hache,
La, May 11. Excuse later
made up that he was “running
amuck” proved false. He had
refused to be arrested without
a warrant,
9-10, Joe Love and Isaac
‘Thomas, Negroes, lynched at
Lambert, Miss., June 8, hanged
from a bridge. .Charged with
“assault.” Sheriff and two
deputies involved directly.
Il. Son Griggs, Negro, 30
years old, hanged, shot, and
dragged behind automobile by
officers assisted by.mob of 150,
June 21, at Kirbyville, Tex
for associating with white wor
man friend.
12. Dick Wilkerson, 35-year-
old, Negro, lynched by gang
whic destroyed his home also,
after altercation with white
hoodlums invading Negro
dance, at Manchester, Tenn.,
June 24.
13. Andrew MeCloud, Negro,
charged with “attempted as-
sault,” lynched by K.K.K. gang
organized mob of 300 at Bas-
trop. La., July 9. Throat cut,
and hanged. Sheriff and Police
Chief conveniently “out of
town while he was taken from
sail.
MOTHER PROVES HERO;
SAVES WHITE MAN'S’ LIFE
NEW YORK—-When James
Mfkeon, 36-yearold white man
fell on the subway tracks in a
faint at the Morgan Street Sta-
tion Thursday, Mrs, Rosa Me-
Knight, 38, leaped on the tracks
after him, waved her handkerchief
and stopped the oncoming subway
train,
Mre.McKnight, the mother of
ten children, did’ not know the man
she saved. MeKeon told police he
knew nothing of what happened,
emcont that he felt diaey.
Hillsdales Even Score with 9-6 Win Over Winston-Salem Nine
Hillsdales Even Score with 9-6 Win Over Winston-Salem Nine
Tarheels Completely Outplayed in Second Contest at Griffith Stadium; 4 Runs in Two Final Innings Unavailing; Crowd of 6,000 on Hand
TWELVE
NEW HAVEN, Conn.—Exhibiting a relentless attack which was featured by a slashing right-hand Al Gainer, New Haven star, gained an uncontested verdict over Lou Brouliard, white Worcester, Mass., tigger, in the mean 10-round match here last Thursday night.
By Tribune Correspondent
Coupling a powerful batting attack with heads-up base running, the Hillsdale A.C. avenged an earlier season defeat by the Winston-Salem Black Sox of North Carolina by setting the Carolinians back, 9-6, before upward of 6,000 zabid fans in Griffith Stadium, Sunday.
Although off to a bad start, which saw the Black Sox nip him for five hits in the first three sessions, Sam Lacy, pitcher for the Dales, became mindful of the previous defeat of his team and checked the big bats of the visitors for four straight innings during which they failed to gain a safety. He weakened in the eighth and ninth but to little avail for the North Carolinians as his mates had provided him with a comfortable lead, permitting him to coast to victory.
While the visitors were being held in check, the 'Dales were pounding three Black Sox hurriers for a total of twelve hits to earn the victory. After the Sox had tallied twice in their half of the second frame by virtue of Sloppy Lindsey's Texas Leaguer which dropped between Runt White and Bill Fauntroy in centerfield, Hall's single off Lacy's leg and Clarke's one-bagger, the 'Dales came back and took a 3-2 lead.
Locals Gain Early Lead
With one gone Ernie Johnson ambled to the plate and smacked a triple to left. Barty Black was struck by one of Pitcher'Barnett' fast ones, and then, Lacy scored both with a double near the left-field foul line. The hurler took third on the throw to home plate and tallied a minute later as Fauntroy grounded out.
While the visitors were being held scoreless until the eighth, the 'Dales added runs in the third, fourth, fifth and eighth to gain the verdict. Dick Temple's hailful three-bagger to right after Brown walked and was forced by Geechie Williams accounted for the lone run in the third.
Two bunts followed by singles by Willie Hope and Toots Brown pushed across a trip in the fourth.
The fleet Temple chalked up another in the fifth by beating out a grounder to shortstop and rounding the bases as Lindsey threw in to centerfield in an attempt to catch him off second after Johnson had been thrown out at first. The ninth sun came in the eighth after Fauntroy had tripled to right but died at the plate as White hit to second base. After the play at the pan, Marcum tossed the ball to second base and nobody was there, to cover the bag so the former Wilberforce star continued his journey arriving safely at home.
Lacy in Trouble
Lacy got into mild trouble in the eighth when Temple made a great stop of Miller's terrific grounder but hewed the ball over Hope's head, letting the shortstop go to the keystone sack from where he scored on Foots's single through Johnson's opened legs. A ninth-inning rally by the visitors fell short after three runs had come in. A triple by Marcum followed up by two free bases granted Lindsey and Miller, the latter who fouled nine balls into the stands before he finally was hit by a pitched ball, and a single by Hall turned the trick.
The 'Dales' third-inning attack sent Barnett to the showers and Green relieved him only to travel the same route in the seventh. With Green gone, Slick Coleman, the visitors' ace, whose hurling feat was one of the sensations of the Tarheels' victory a fortnight ago, pitched the eighth inning.
The crowd of 6,200 fans is recorded as the largest gathering to witness the Sunday clashes staged by local promoters. With the count now one-all between the two inter-city rivals, it is probable the two teams will play a rubber game in August.
HILLSDALE
AB H R E
BLACK SON
Founty.cf. 4 2 1 0 Miller.ss. 5 1 1
White.2b. 4 1 1 0 Foot.ss. 5 1 0
Hope.1b. 5 1 1 0 Hoston.3b. 5 1 0
Brown.rf. 3 1 0 Campbell.cf. 4 0 0
Will's.1f. 4 0 1 0 Marcum.c. 5 1 1
Temple.cf. 4 3 1 1 Lindsey.sf. 5 1 1
John.m3b. 4 3 1 1 Hail.rf. 5 1 1
black.c. 4 1 1 0 Lindsey.3b. 5 1 0
Jones.rf. 0 0 0 2 Barnett.p. 1 0 0
Jones.rf. 0 0 0 2 Green.p. 2 0 0
Coleman.p. 1 0 0
Total... 36 12 1 2 Totals... 36 8 8
Black Sox... 0 2 0 0 0 1 3 0-6
Hillfield... 0 3 1 3 1 0 0 1 x-5
Two-base hits -Hoston, Lindsay, Lacey,
Three-base hits -Johnson, Temple, Faunt-
roy, Marcum. Stolen bases -Miller, Hall,
Temple. Strike outs -By Barnett, 3; Lacey,
3. Base on balls -Barnett, 3; Lacey, 3.
Innings pitched -By Barnett, 2½; Green,
4½; Coleram. 1. Double plays -Foots to
the ball, 2½; Green, Foots to the ball,
Temple. Losing pitcher -Barnett, Umpires-
Payne, Greenfield and Reynolds.
Mr. Robert Bingham is the U.S.
minister to the Court of St. James.
It is so called from the Palace of
St. James which was the residence
of British rulers since 1697 up to
1837 when the Buckingham Palace
NEWS OF THE SPORT WORLD
Teams Honor Memory of Levi at Sabbath Go
Opposing players joined hands for a full minute during the Hillsdale-Winston-Salem Black Sox baseball game at Griffith Stadium, last Sunday afternoon, as they stood with heads uncovered in silent tribute to the memory of Marion (Smoke) Levi, 'Dale pitching ace who died of pneumonia. Friday, July 13.
Members of the local outfit stopped in their positions after taking their places for the beginning of the fifth inning. Others lined up in front of the player dugout. The visitors also lined up in front of their dugout. All doffed their caps at a prearranged signal.
Levi was about to begin his fifth year as ace of the Hillsdale pitching staff. It was for that reason that the LeDroiters' management specified the fifth inning for the gesture.
PIRATES BOW IN OVERTIME TO COLESVILLE
PIRATES BOW IN OVERTIME TO COLESVILLE
Hammond, Buc Flinger Suffers Undeserved Setback; Game Goes 11 Frames
Willie Braxton's Colesville Tigers took a well played 11-inning game from the fast-traveling Washington Pirates on the formers' diamond at Bailey's Park, Colesville, last Sunday. The Jungalders pushed over the winning run in the eleventh after tying the count in the ninth. Though he lost the decision, Hammond, Pirate pitcher, was easily the outstanding performer of the pastime. The Buc hurler fanned a total of 14 Tiger batters and went the entire route before dropping the verdict. Salty Johnson and Shanklin divided the mound burden for the Marylanders.
Braxton's outfit went out ahead in the opening inning when it manufactured a run off two hits and a stolen base sandwiched in between. Another was added in the fifth. The visitors came to life in their seventh and negotiated their first tally. This, however, was duplicated by still another Pirate marker in the same frame.
Three runs in their eighth sent the Washington aggregation ahead, but the lead was shortlived as the Montgomery County champions matched the score in the last of the legal playing time. Two innings later the Colesvilleans garnered the deciding score.
COLESVILLE AB H R E PIRATES AB H R E
Matth.'s.ss. 5 0 0 1 Gardle.cf. 5 1 1 0
H.anb.'3n.b-5.1 1 1 Wehater.s. 5 0 0 0
H.Hoston.1b.5 1 1 Handail.rf. 2 0 0
L.anb.'2er.2b.1 1 1 Sharp.rf. 2 0 0
H.Boston.1b.5 1 1 Djominec.1b.5 1 2
J.John.f.1f 0 0 1 West.c. 5 1 0
E.Boston.c. 4 2 1 Matthews.2b.5 2 0
J Jackson.rf. 4 2 1 Lester.3b. 5 1 0
W.John.p.4 1 0 1 Brown.lf. 5 1 0
Bishop. 2 1 0 Hammond.p.4 1 0
Totals. 44 9 5 1 Totals. 44 8 4 1
Pirates. 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 5
Colesville. 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 5
Two-base hit—Sharp. Three-base
Two-base hit—Sharp. Three-base
14. W. Johnson. 3; Shanklin. 3. Base on bails
—Hammond. 4; W. Johnson. 3; Shanklin. 2.
Innings pitched—By W. Johnson. 7; Shanklin. 4.
Winning pitcher—Shanklin.
Pirates Play Hosts to Massie's Mill Sunday
The first of a series of baseball attractions scheduled for the diamond at Norbeck, Md., will take place Sunday when the Massie's Mill nine locks horns with the strong Washington Pirates in a double-bill, the first game starting at 1:30 o'clock.
The Virginians boast an enviable record, having gained victories over some of the leading teams in the northern part of the state and having already tripped the local Buccaneers in a previous meeting. The Pirate management is wasting no time in idleness during the current week.
Rain Halts the Keed
NEW YORK.—Kid Chocolate's scheduled 8-round match with Buster Brown, of Baltimore, which was carded for the Coney Island Velodrome. Tuesday night, was postponed because of rain to Wed-
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1934
Y RACKETERS WIN FROM BALTO. NET TEAM, 9-4
Y RACKETERS WIN FROM BALTO. NET TEAM, 9-4
Monumental Cityans Great in Staving Off Clean Sweep by Locals
With Ted Thompson, former colored National tennis champion, heading the squad, a team of local stars representing the Twelfth Street Y.M.C.A. swamped the Druid Hill Park tennis team of Baltimore, 9 matches to 4. The winners won six singles and three doubles matches.
The local squad was one of the strongest assembled here in years and at that a score of top notchers were not present. Washington was without the services of such players as Tally Holmes, John Wilkinson, Roscoe Lewis, Sterling Brown, Melvin Lancaster, Dudley Woodward and Eddie Davis.
Ted Thompson opened the contest with a clean victory over Babe Jones to whom he lost a match last week. Perkins, playing number three man, trounced Jack Spencer, 6-2, 6-1, while Duncan, local number two player, blasted the hopes of Dick Whittington to the tune of 6-0, 6-2. Duncan with an uncanny back court game, won the first four games of the fray in record time. Stillwell, Freeman, and Byrd, winners in the other singles matches, won handily over their respective opponents. All matches were stubbornly fought as the Washingtonians visioned a clean sweep of the dual.
Doubles Thrilling
The doubles were thrilling throughout with Byrd and Fisher coming through with comparative ease. Duncan and Perkins encountered plenty opposition from the combination of Wood and Watts, only coming through after dropping a hard fought second set to the visiting youngsters. Superior tennis prevailed in the deciding set. Thompson and Stillman had their hands full in beating Whittington and Weaver. The local pair played bang-up tennis to capture the first set 6-3 with ease and were leading the second by two games when Stillwell, because of a broken racket, had to change causing a let-up of their excellent teaming that was not recovered until the third set. The deciding set was won by a 6-4 count.
Weaver (B) defeated Fisher, 6-3, 6-2-
Ollor (B) defeated Kendrick, 4-6, 6-2-
7-5.
Freeman (W) defeated Bryant, 6-3, 6-4-
Wood (B) defeated Flipping, 6-2, 6-2-
Stillwell (W) defeated Reckling, 6-3-
6-4.
Weaver (B) defeated Jones, 6-2, 7-5-
Bryrd (W) defeated Moore, 6-0, 6-3-
Perkins (W) defeated Spener, 6-2, 6-1-
Duncan (W) defeated Whittington, 6-0-
6-2.
Thompson (W) defeated Jones, 6-4, 6-4-
DOUBLES
Bryrd and Flipper (W) defeated Bryant
and Ollor, 6-2, 6-3.
Perkins and Duncan (W) defeated Wood
and Watts, 7-5, 6-7, 6-3.
Thompson and Stillwell (W) defeated
Weaver and Whittington, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4-
FROGS SUCCUMB
TO D.C. BLACK SOX
FROGS SUCCUMB
TO D.C. BLACK SOX
13-Hit Attack Proves Too Much for Fredericksburg Nine; Shanklin Stars
FREDERICKSBURG, Va.—John Carter's Washington Black Sox took the measure of the strong Fredericksburg Frogs for the third successive time this season, here last Tuesday when they walked off with a decisive 10-2 verdict. At no time did the locals have a chance to threaten. Playing errorless ball behind the steady pitching of Shanklin, newly acquired Sox flinger, the Washingtonians negotiated 13 hits for a total of 10 runs, while holding the Virginians at bay under a 4-hit and 2-run disadvantage.
Two errors behind Dean, veteran Frog right-hander, rendered the visitors a pair of runs that were unearned. Though hit freely, and compelled to make way for a relief pitcher before the route had been completed, Dean might have fared much better had he received the same offensive and defensive support as was accorded his mound opponent.
BLACK SOX
AB H R E
Crawley.rf. 4 2 2 0 Fleming.lf. 4 2 0 0
Fennell.ef. 5 2 0 0 Janifer.3b. 3 0 1 0
Ford.ss. 5 2 1 0 Grimes.2b. 3 0 1 0
Smith.3b. 5 2 1 0 Walker.c. 4 2 0 0
Sand.bhc.1b. 4 2 1 0 Richard.ncf.3 0 0 0
Hendr.1b.4 1 1 0 J.Brown.rf.4 0 0
Payne.1f. 4 1 1 0
Washi.2n.2 1 1 0 Dean.p. 3 0 1 0
Shank.n.2 1 1 0 Willon.p. 1 0 0 1
Cross Winner by Technical K.O. Over Dixon in Lincoln Show
Cross Winner by Technical K.O. Over Dixon in Lincoln Show
Fair-sized Crowd Views Boxing Card at Griffith Stadium; Baby Kid Chocolate, Eliza Lewis and Joe Rucker Other Victors
Tommy Cross, flashy Philadelphia lightweight, battered George (Speedy) Dixon, local favorite, into complete submission to gain a fourth-round technical knockout in the main bout of the boxing show sponsored by the Lincoln Athletic Club at Griffith Stadium, Saturday night, before nearly 1,200 fight fans.
Joe Louis Kayoes First Pro Fight Opponent
CHICAGO, (ANP)—Joe Louis, sensational amateur star of Detroit who won the Golden Gloves, and national A.A.U. light heavyweight championship this year, took exactly one minute and 35 seconds to put away Jack Kracken, white, his first professional opponent, July 4 at Bacon's outdoor arena here. Louis looked exceptionally good against the white boy and seated the latter twice with left clips to the chin before knocking him out of the ring for a 14 count.
Cross Winner by Over Dixon in
Fair-sized Crowd Views
Stadium; Baby Kid C
and Joe Rucker
Tommy Cross, flashy Philade
(Speedy) Dixon, local favorite, in
fourth-round technical knockout in
sponsored by the Lincoln Athletic
night, before nearly 1,200 fight fan
Cross opened the fight slowly but soon found Dixon's weakness and tore into him with fists flying from every direction. He battered him in this manner for three rounds, Dixon finally weakening from punishment. In the third he fell to the floor for the count of nine but the bell saved him. Baldly beaten, but still determined and courageous, the local fighter absently loped back into the ring for the fourth round.
Cross continued to pound him and Dixon's seconds tossed in the towel ending the match after 45 seconds of the round had elapsed.
Baby Kid Chocolate, a stable mate of Cross and a clever puncher, took a fourth-round technical K.O. from Gerald Reeder, Philadelphia, in the semi-final bout which was slated to go eight rounds. Chocolate, with his fast and clever punching, had completely outclassed his opponent when Referee Truitt halted the bout claiming that Reeder was not trying.
Eliza Lewis, Philadelphia, took a thrilling six-round preliminary from Tommy Miller, of Baltimore, gaining the decision, and Jimmy Johnson, Baltimore, scored a technical knockout over Burton Stewart in the third round of a scheduled four-round bout.
In another preliminary Joe Rucker, Wilmington, Del., 145, knocked out Sammy Williams, Jersey City, 145, in the second round with a left hook to the jaw.
DePRIESTS BREAK EVEN WITH CITY CHAMPIONS
Northeast Nine Grabs First Game of Twin Bill; Drops Nightcap, 12-9
The Rajah-DePriest baseball team gained an equal share of the twin bill with Ralph Dorsey's champion Georgetown Athletics in last Sunday's encounter at Sixtieth and Clay Steets, Northeast. The champions dropped the opener by a score of 11-7 before capturing the nightcap, 12-9.
Norman (Slim) Barnes, Northeast underhander, faced Virgie Coates on the mound in the maitinee frolic. The former pitched steady ball, scattering the 9 hits obtained off his deliveries over the route with the exception of a flurry of one-baggers that netted the visitors 4 runs in the fifth. Coates was compelled to make way for a relief finger in the middle of a rally staged by the ultimate winners. Brown, who hurled the second game, finished the task begun by Coates.
The finale saw the Rajahs outhitting the west-enders but dropping the decision nevertheless. An early 5-1 lead was snuffed out by a 4-run Georgetown rally in their third. Twyman, with 4 hits, led the individual efforts in the 16-hit visiting attack, while Holland and Leftwich contributed 3 apiece toward the 18 garnered by the Potentates.
Mercury Club Track Meet Postponed to Labor Day
The Business Men's Twilight track meet, proposed for Monday by the Mercury Track and Field Club, has been postponed until Labor Day it was announced by Alvin (Chick) Webb, chairman of the games committee, late last week. Insufficient funds and a desire on the part of the athletes to have more time for training, were given as the reasons for the postponement.
Technical K.O.
Lincoln Show
Boxing Card at Griffith
chocolate, Eliza Lewis
Other Victors
Philia lightweight, battered George
to complete submission to gain a
the main bout of the boxing show
Club at Griffith Stadium, Saturday
Not Quite Ready
M.
who found the going just a little too fast with the more experienced Tommy Cross, last Saturday.
3 COURTS SET UP AT LINCOLN
Objection to Laying Out of 11 Courts Brings Move; Progress is Rapid
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (ANP)—Preparations for the forthcoming national tennis tournament to be held at Lincoln University under the auspices of the American Tennis Association, the Pennsylvania Tennis Association and Lincoln University are progressing rapidly according to officials here in charge. The meeting will be held August 13 to 18.
Eight courts will be used, it was decided after the Savage Commission objected to the laying out of eleven.
Miss Lula Ballard, for three consecutive years, national singles champion, is returning after a three year absence, it was said. Miss Ora Washington, national woman's champion, will participate as will Mrs. Frances Gittons of New York, and Miss Blanche Winston, also of New York.
Conference Track Meets Start on Playground
Playground tracksters are all agog this week over the conference meets scheduled to open next week between all playgrounds. The card is as follows: Tuesday, August 7 — Western at Francis; Wednesday, August 8-Southwestern at Cardozo; Thursday, August-9 Northern at Payne; and Friday, August 10 — Northwestern at
LeDROIT TIGERS TAKE ON BLACK SOX SUNDAY
Arch-rivals to Clash in Twin-bill on Grounds at 26th and Bennings Sherman Baylor's LeDroit Tigers will play hosts to their arch-rivals, the Washington Black Sox, in a double-header on the former's grounds at Twenty-sixth Street and Bennings Road, Northeast, Sunday. The first game is carded for a 1:30 o'clock beginning.
The Jungaleers have been going through a complete rebuilding process since Baylor acceded to the helm. Several veterans have been released and a host of others have left the ranks of the Tigers at their own choice. When the present manager succeeded Lefty George Smith it was the beginning of a new era with the LeDroiters. Baylor immediately began signing new blood. This combination will get its first test when they take on the strong Black Sox aggregation this coming Sabbath.
The latter outfit, under the leadership of George Ford, all-round diamond star and former manager of the team under Simeon Sheffield, has been going well after recovering from a siege of dissension that struck the ranks during mid-season. A string of victories includes decisions over the Fredericksburg Frogs, Anacostia, Willow Tree, D.C. Cubs, Oriental Tigers and a host of others.
"BLACK IRISHMEN STAR IN TRACK AND FIELD GAMES
CHICAGO.—(ANP)—When the Irish-American citizens held a track meet Sunday over at Ogden Park, several colored gentlemen were invited to take part in the affair as the guests of Division 13 of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. Among those invited were Ralph Metcalfe, Olympic champion; John Brooks, former University of Chicago star; and R. Ruiz, Opal Courtney, Gary high jumper, and Al Harris, spinner. Metcalfe, who ran in Canada Saturday, was unable to be present for Sunday's affairs.
But the rest of the "race boys," although they had difficulty in proving their Irish decent, stepped right in to show the boys from Killarney just what real running and jumping are like.
Harris sped out in front in the 100-meter race to be clocked in 10.4 seconds. Even Metcalfe will admit that that's going some.
Brooks captured the 200-meter run in 21.4 seconds, almost world record time, and came right back to win the broad jump with a leap of 23 feet $5\frac{1}{2}$ inches.
Richard Ruiz, who used to do his running out at Englewood high school, led the way in the 400-meter run, finishing in 51.1 seconds.
In the high jump Opal "Shag" Courtney, former Gary high school athlete, outjumped himself with a leap of 6 feet $4\frac{1}{2}$ inches to tie for first place.
Out of the ten events listed, the "Black Irishmen" captured five first places with plenty of filling in seconds and thirds.
Heat Fails to Stop Ralph Metcalfe
BUFFALO, N. Y., (ANP)
Running with the temperature above 90 degrees on a hot dusty track, Ralph Metcalfe, world champion sprinter, raced home to an easy victory in the 100-meter race Saturday over Ed Siegel and Ben Johnson in the Erle club games at Crystal Beach, Ontario. Metcalfe had hoped to shatter the world record of 10.3 seconds for the distance which is held jointly by him, Tolan and Percy Williams of Canada, but slowed up by the track came in handily in front of the other runners in 10.5 seconds.
Povich Says
Shirley L. Povich, sports editor of the Washington Post, says in his Monday's column, of Columbia Boxing Commission $50 to supervise Saturday's colored bouts at Griffith Stadium. . . the Commission's share of the $600 gate was $30, and referees, inspectors and attendants at each show cost the commission $80 . . . the commission pays its referees $10 each, if they work two to a show. . . unless gates are larger, enabling the commission to work on a sustaining basis, the "take" from the shows in the District will
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Heat Offer Hazards for
Real Club Medal Field
mas and Richard Harris Pull Through with
Lead First 36 Holes; 14 Conceded
Chances to Capture Annual Event
OFFER—24 H.S.—JIMMY WILLIAMS AND—14 p
un-baked fairways and lightning-fast putting greens
cores up in the first half of the Annual 72-Hole Medal
by the Royal Golf Club and played over the Lincoln
arse, last Sunday.
Sun and Heat Offer Hazards for Royal Club Medal Field
Sun and Heat Offer Hazards for Royal Club Medal Field
Jimmy Williams and Richard Harris Pull Through with 131's to Lead First 36 Holes; 14 Conceded Running Chances to Capture Annual Event
SUN AND HEAT OFFER-24 H.S.-JIMMY WILLIAMS AND-14 pf Torrid heat, sun-baked fairways and lightning-fast putting greens combined to run scores up in the first half of the Annual 72-Hole Medal Tourney sponsored by the Royal Golf Club and played over the Lincoln Memorial Golf Course, last Sunday.
BERRY STARS AS ANACOSTIA DOWNS QUICKSTEPS
BERRY STARS AS ANACOSTIA DOWNS QUICKSTEPS
Big Southeast Utility Hits and Pitches Team to Double Victory
ARLINGTON, Va.—Chink Berry, pitcher-outfielder, crowned himself with glory as the Anacostia Athletics added their seventh and eighth straight victories at Green Valley Park here last Sunday afternoon. The Virginia Quicksteps were victims by scores of 13-8 and 12-1.
Berry was the batting star of the matinee affair, connecting for a home run and 2 singles in five times at bat. In the nightcap he not only hurled effectively while letting the Virginians down with 3 hits and a lone run and striking out 5. Berry also contributed two doubles and a single in 3 trips plateaued in the 5-inning game.
The Southeasterners counted all their runs in the second game in their final turn at bat. With the score 1-0 against them until their half of the fifth, the Anacostians unleashed a batting attack that netted them 7 safeties and 21 runs. At the close of the frame, the game was called for darkness.
Although Bill Reid was nicked for 12 hits in the opener, he kept them so well scattered that his mates were able to hold the Quicksteppers in check. Washington, slugging second baseman, with 3 doubles and a home run was the principal offender in this respect.
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In what is publicized as his last California appearance, Young Peter Jackson, state light weight champion and No. 1 fighter on the coast won his easiest bout Tuesday night from Ritchie Mack, heralded as the best in Texas.
Cards of 131 were posted by Jimmy Williams, defending champion, and Richard Harris, the youthful mashie-wielder who has been creating quite a sensation with his sub-par rounds in recent tournaments. These two led the pack with Johnnie Scott one stroke behind.
With 14 par-chasers bunched comparatively close together, next Sunday's second half of play should provide competition of the keenest variety and many thrills for the large gallery of onlookers.
The 14 who are conceded good chances of recovering and cracking down on the game of the leaders are as follows:
Richard Harris, 115; Jimmy Williams, 131; John Scott, 132; George Thomas, 136; Dr. George Adams, 137; Ruben Brooks, 137; William Carter, 138; Hubert Bethea, 140; Dr. A. R. Harris, 140; William Davis, 143; Pleasant Goodwin, 143; Anthony Proctor, 148; Stockton Jones, 151, and James Brooks, 159.
BLACK SOX TO PLAY AT BOWLING GREEN
The Washington Black Sox will journey to Bowling Green, Va., Saturday, for a double-header with the diamond aggregation of that place. The team will travel by bus, leaving the club headquarters at 1843 Seventh Street, Northwest, at 10:30 o'clock.
ANACOSTIA AB H R E QUICKSTEPS AB H R E
Goodloe, m. 5 0 1 0 Finnell, cf. 5 1 1 0
Ball,1b. 3 0 2 0 Thurston,rf. 5 1 1 0
Mason, c. 5 2 2 1 T.Moore,ss. 5 1 1 0
Berry,rf. 5 3 2 1 Wash'g'n,2b. 4 3 3 0
Green,2b. 4 0 1 J.Moore,1b. 4 1 1 1
Tate, c.f. 3 1 1 Casey,If. 4 0 0 0
Gartis'n,ss. 5 2 1 M.Green,c-3b4 1 0 0
Queen,3b. 5 2 1 B.Lee, 4 0 0 0
Reid,p. 4 2 2 Boswell, a. 2 2 0 0
T.Wash'n,p. 2 0 1 0
Bailey,p. 2 0 0 0
Totals .. 39 12 13 5 Totals .. 38 12 8 1
Anacostin .. 1 6 0 1 0 4 1 0 1 0
Quickskops .. 2 0 0 1 2 1 0 2 0 2
Two-base hits - Tate, Reid, Finnell (2)
Washington (2) Bowell, Three-base hits
Washington (2) Bowell, Three-base hits
Berry, B stolen-bases - Finnell (2), goodie,
Berry, B stolen-bases - Finnell (2), goodie,
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
SPORT WORLD
Big League Material
Virginia State College Ready for Tenth Annual Southeastern
Yearly Net Event to Get Under Way at Petersburg Next Monday; Social Calendar to Vie With Sports Card in Week at Trojan School
The East-West game in Chicago between fan-selected teams of the national Baseball Association has wived the old and ever interesting query—"Are There or Have there Been, Any Negro Players good Enough to Play in the White Major Leagues?" A pair of winters back there was considerable talk about the admission of Negro players to the major leagues and the opinions of club owners and others were ought. One club owner told me he Would Gladly Welcome Negro players if certain Conditions could be overcome. He personally had to prejudice in the matter. Similar answers were obtained by other sports writers.
Briefly, the greatest problem men was that of placing men in minor leagues where the hated rejudice of fan and players of the white race could not be felt. As every fan knows, all those who are called to the "Majors" do not once make the grade and they must serve apprenticeships in Leser Circuits. What to do with our players who were good enough to play at the top but who needed further Seasoning?
Obviously, they could Not be sent to Southern loops and to some northern leagues; as the life of baseball is of such structure that actional lines are impossible.
Well, there the matter rests and fill the question of major league ability of the Negro star Persists. My answer to the question is that There Have Been And There are at This Time many Negro layers good enough for the majors.
Some Pass
Some colored men have passed a baseball and more than one man in the present array is suspected if having Negro Blood in his veins. A great pitcher and two leading outfielders to my knowledge, are declared to have Bar minister; that is if a drop of black blood makes you a Blackmoor. The
PETERSBURG, Va.—Everything is in readiness for the Tenth Annual Southeastern Tennis Tournament to be held at Virginia State College, next Monday to Saturday inclusive. Seven crack tennis courts are receiving daily attention under the expert eye of L. T. Pinn, superintendent of buildings and grounds. The four newly constructed courts, that will be the scene of the major portion of the competition rank high with any in the land. Ample seating is being provided spectators along the side-lines.
David W. Cannon, chairman of the social committee, has delved deeply into his proverbial "bag of social tricks" in an effort to pull forth novel and enjoyable events for social program. His committee has been at work for six weeks; and the chairman declares that there will be no dull moments during the entire "Decade of Progress" celebration.
Ideal living quarters in the modern dormitories of Virginia State College will be provided for all contestants and visitors. The College's new $150,000 Dining Hall will greet the Southeastern for the first time. All of which gives assurance that the important question of living quarters, which frequently looms as a bugbear in such events, will be taken care of in each fashion as to please the most fastidious.
In addition to the permanent trophy, the Men's Singles champion will receive legs on four fine three-legged trophies—the Journal and Guide Cup, the North Carolina Tennis Association Cup, the B. F. Hughes Cup and the L. C. Balfour Plaque.
"Ted" Thompson, champion for two consecutive years, 1929-1930, is the only man holding two legs on three of the trophies.
Negro Trackmen Leads White Team to Victory
JOLLET, Ill. (ANP)—Led by Cornelius Hinton, Chicago track star, the Garnet A.C. went ahead to victory in the Benson's track and field championship meet here last Saturday.
Hinton was the only colored athlete of his team but won the 440 yard dash, the 880-yard run and took third in the broad jump. He also ran anchor on the winning half mile relay team.
same is said of a famous catcher Rube Foster, Dizzy Dismukes, of the years agone.
The story is told of a certain man who played on the Baltimore Orioles without trouble until he visited his hometown where colored friends presented him with a floral horse-shoe. That was his End in the big league.
In Their Day and Time this writer believes that Oscar Charleson, John Lloyd, Bill Munroe, Sol White, Pete Hill, Ben and Jim Taylor, Petway, Danny McCellan, Whitworth, Bustamenti, Rogan, Mackey, and Others could have climbed the heights.
Color Alone kept such Cuban stars as Chacon, Joe Mendez, Torrienti, Dihigo Ohms, Mesa, Baro, Oscar, Montalvo, Fernandez, Fabre and Padrone out of the parade.
Getting down to present day luminaries some of whom are in the sear and yellow, I would name as men who would strengthen major league or class AA teams, the following:
Dick Lundy, Bill Wells, Josh Gibbons, Satchell Paige, Creacy, Jud Wilson, Vic Harris, W. Bell, Hunter Leonard, Bill Holland, Jim Willis, Willie Foster, Webster McDonald.
And only a step or two behind them because of their years. Back of experience, or other factors, would be: Mule Suttles Turkey Stearns, John Strong, Larry Brown, Crutchfield, Trent, Streeter, Daltie, Stone, Cooper, Evans, Burbage, Arnold, Byas, Stevens, Britt, Dunn Seay, Jones, Holmes, C. Thomas, Rector, Showboat Thomas, Cannady, Jenkins and Beckwith, Dula, Brown, and Salmon.
Some of the younger players of the two groups above may see the day when Their Services will be sought by what is known as Organized Baseball. I doubt it but let's keep Hoping and Fighting for it. After all, the pioneers never reaped profits from their brain-children.
College Ready for Southeastern
Under Way at Petersburg Next year to Vie With Sports at Trojan School
Chocolate's Earnings Well Managed Says Pilot
Kid Chocolate will never wind up like Jamaica Kid, selling pencils, says Luis Guttierie, his manager. The Keed owns seven houses in Havana not one of which was hit by revolutionary bombs or bullets and has $25,000 in the bank in his mother's name.
Senor Luis says he doesn't want to have people get the idea that he would live on Chocolate's earnings if the Keed showed he can't fight any more so he's going to give Chocolate one more try and if he doesn't make good, Luis will advise him to quit. As proof that he is big hearted, Luis points out that when Canada Lee lost the sight of an eye, he gave the fighter $1,500 and told him to quit.
There is also the case of Black Bill who went blind while fighting for Luis and who received $70 monthly from him while he lived. From this it appears that Luis is almost too soft hearted to be a fight manager. All a fighter has to do is go blind on him and he pensions him off. What a soft racket some fighters have!—N.Y. Mirror.
One school teacher said to another, "Come up to my house, we're going to have a good time tonight." "I can't come, I'm going to see Romeo and Juliet." "That's all right, bring them along with you."
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THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1934
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THE immediate and enthusiastic acceptance of the new Firestone Century Progress Tire started a tremendous wave of buying that is keeping the Firestone factories running twenty-four hours a day to meet this huge demand.
We knew that car owners would replace their thin-worn, dangerous tires if they could get what they wanted in a tire at the price they wanted to pay. We found the answer through ten million visitors to the Firestone Factory at the World's Fair last year. We asked them — "What do you value most in a tire?" — and their answer was — "Give us Blowout Protection, Non-Skid Safety, and Long Wear, at a moderate price."
Drive in to the Firestone Service Dealer or Service Store today! Equip your car with these new Firestone Century Progress Tires, with the massive flat tread, deep-cut non-skid, broad husky shoulders, and Gum-Dipped cords. Tire prices probably never again will be as low as they are today. At these unusually low prices for first grade tires, we make it easy for you to buy not only one tire, but a complete set.
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Professor Willian Dawson, director of music at Tuskegee Institute, arrived in Chicago early this week to join the staff of artists and composers who are assembling the Negro Pageant, "O, Sing a New Song," which is to be presented at Soldier Field, Chicago, on August 25.
A large number of the nation's leading colored music authorities are being lined up for the gigantic effort. Among these are Will Marion Cook, Harry Lawrence Freeman and Maj. N. Clark Smith, the latter two probably best known in western states. Mr. Cook, a native of Washington, D.C., is loved by eastern folk and is a nationally famous figure.
Mrs. Carrie Booker-Parsons, director of music for the Dallas Public Schools, Dallas, Texas, arrived in the city (Chicago) Saturday to render whatever assistance she can to the undertaking. She is also attending the summer school of the American Conservatory of Music there.
Miss Jennie Rowland, of the public school system of St. Louis, Mo., has been assigned the solo work, and will be in charge of that end of the production.
The MILLS BROTHERS
Claude Hopkins will break his the Regal Theatre in Chicago.... two existing models of Thomas A. Menlo Park on July 18th, 1877, in discovered the other original instrument, whose owner had picked the visited the 1893 World's Fair.
Because the radio and motion fame on phonograph records, they the machine and intend to present Washington.... With their three-men the four boys and their guitar sail Ile de France.
Another program of popular be heard over the WABC-Columbia 6:00 to 6:15 p.m. They will sing Writing All de Time," "Sometime "Baby."
Fats Waller and the "Beale St numbers on the Columbia Variety
SHOPPING Wherein the Tribune By SA
:-Howard:-
Preview
Claude Hopkins will break his dance tour next week for a week at the Regal Theatre in Chicago....The Mills Brothers saw one of the two existing models of Thomas A. Edison's first phonograph, built at Menlo Park on July 18th, 1877, in the British Museum in London, then discovered the other original instrument in a Liverpool, England, music shop, whose owner had picked the phonograph up in Chicago when he visited the 1893 World's Fair.
Because the radio and motion picture quartette gained their first fame on phonograph records, they are negotiating for the purchase of the machine and intend to present it to the Smithsonian Institute in Washington....With their three-month European tour just completed, the four boys and their guitar sailed Wednesday for New York on the Ile de France.
Another program of popular songs by the Beale Street Boys will be heard over the WABC-Columbia network, Thursday, August 2, from 6:00 to 6:15 p.m. They will sing "Me and My Shadow," "My Lord's Writing All de Time," "Sometimes I'm Happy," "Mood Indigo" and "Baby."
Fats Waller and the "Beale Street Boys" will offer "Rhythm Club" numbers on the Columbia Variety Hour, 8 to 9 p.m., Sunday.
SHOPPING the SHOWS Wherein the Tribune Goes to the Theatre By SAM LACY
Novelty appears to be the principal ingredient for the show coming to the Howard for a week's run, beginning Saturday, if advance noticees have any meaning at all.
According to the announcements of assistants in charge during Manager Shep Allen's vacation, the stage offering "Town Topics" will include a series of amusing skills on the best known happenings around the streets of Washington, and as nearly as possible the individuals involved in them will be impersonated.
"Town Topics" will include a curse of 50 performers all doing the bit in the novel entertainment that is planned. Several new song bits are promised, and all in the stage show should vie with the screen attraction in making next week: Howard's banner one.
Bette Davis, who has been climbing rapidly since her role in "The Big Shakedown," returns to the Howard screen in "Fog Over Frisco," said to be one of her best. She is teamed with Lyle Talbot. As Frisco Arlene, the queen of the underworld, Miss Davis is said to be captivating.
Scientific
BOOK
"THE HOUSE
1433 U STREET, N.W.
One Week Only Sta
CLIVE BROOK
Scientifically Air-Cooled
BOOKER T
“THE HOUSE OF HITS”
1433 U STREET. N.W. NORTH 3000
One Week Only Starting Friday, July 27
CLIVE BROOK, DIANA WYNYARD
—IN—
“Let's Try Again”
When romance goes out of married life, there are just two things to do. Divorce would be easy, but stupid. They faced all the facts and found the way out!
Saturday Only—Chap. No. 11, “Pirate Treasure”
DUNBAR
Seventh & T Sts.
Northwest
North 5224
THEATRE
RAYMOND H. MURRAY, Manager
SATURDAY-SUNDAY-MONDAY JULY 28, 29, 30
KEN NAYNARD in
“WHEELS OF DESTINY”
Chapter No. 3—“MYSTERY SQUADRON”
COMEDY AND CARTOON
TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY JULY 31-AUG. 1
WILLIAM GARGAN in
“THE LINE UP” with Marion Nixon
Chapter No. 7—“GORDON OF GHOST CITY” COMEDY
THURSDAY-FRIDAY AUGUST 2, 3
FAY WRAY
In “MADAM SPY” with NILS ASTHER
TOM TYLER in
“THE FORTY NINERS”
FOURTEEN
dance tour next week for a week at
The Mills Brothers saw one of the
Edison's first phonograph, built at
the British Museum in London, then
ment in a Liverpool, England, music
phonograph up in Chicago when he
picture quartette gained their first
are negotiating for the purchase of
it to the Smithsonian Institute in
month European tour just completed,
ed Wednesday for New York on the
songs by the Beale Street Boys will
network, Thursday, August 2, from
"Me and My Shadow." "My Lord's
s I'm Happy," "Mood Indigo" and
reet Boys' will offer "Rhythm Club"
Hour, 8 to 9 p.m., Sunday.
the SHOWS
Goes to the Theatre
M LACY
Review
Local talent dominates the stage at Shep Allen's Howard Theatre during the current week, and little is left to ask for in the way of fast, clean entertainment.
Elijah Chapman (that's what he went by back in the days when "sheiking" was popular), of the "Ristina's Mermaids," turn on "o'le home week" at the T Street House. Chapman hits his "high" in audience reception with his rendition of "Little Man, You've Had a Busy Day," and "One Hundred Years From Today." Harris appears as Chapman's stooge during a brief gab-sketch just prior to the song; then returns to team with Joe Byrne in a few old, but well placed jokes. Weakley, who learned his taps in the wings of the Howard while running errands for the theatre-folk, thrills with a lightning-fast number in which his feet take on the appearance of a penny-wheel. Charlie Ray, Edna Harris and the Hardy Brothers Orchestra round out an entertaining scene.
Kay Francis, Warren Williams and Jean Muir are exceptional in the leading roles of "Dr. Monica," the story of a woman doctor whose faithless husband brings unhappiness to all three and finally disaster to the latter.
Air-Cooled KER T SE OF HITS"
STAGE and SCREEN
THE LOVE OF A MAN AND A WOMAN
The stars of "Cavalcade" are again teamed in the picture, "Let's Try Again," at the Booker T., from which the above scene is taken.
is reached when Miss Francis, as a specialist in obstetrics discovers that her husband is the father of the child she is delivering for her best friend.
-:-Lincoln-:-
Preview
Damon Runyon, known to all readers of sports and loved by all who like good short stories, is responsible for the picture, "Little Miss Marker," which begins a week at the Lincoln Theatre tomorrow (Friday). The picture brings to Washington for the first time one of the grandest little pieces of personality the present-day screen can boast. Little Shirley Temple is hailed by "those in the know" as the most promising juvenile the movie industry has ever produced. Just turned five and weighing little more than 40 pounds, the little lassie will capture the hearts of even the most hardened theatre-goer.
'Little Miss Marker' is the latest from the pen of the guy who knows all the answers when it comes to horse-racing, baseball football, etc. A sterling cast is headed by Adolphe Menjou, Dorothy Dell, Charles Bickford, Sam Hardy and a host of others.
::-Booker T.::
Review
"Hollywood Party," in which that prince of originality in humor takes the lead and smacks a derned entertaining film onto the screen at the Booker T during the current week, goes over well at Montrabel Montgomery's little playhouse, Jimmy Durante, as "Schnarzan the Conqueror," affords numerous comical sequences, the type of which he is the master of creation. The picture is the screen version of Durante's dream, and although it boasts of very little in the way of plot, it is saturated with musical scores and a deal of funny situations. Lupe Velez, Polly Moran, Jack Pearl, June Clyde and Eddie Quillan all prove to be great helps in the matter of putting these over. "I've Had My Moment," "Hello," "Singing Wires," and "Hot Chocolate Soldiers," the latter in the form of a silly symphony, are a few of the musical hits which find their way into the film.
Preview
From the beginning of time mated animals have faced the problem of fighting off the casualness that travels hand-in-hand with ageing marriage. "Let's Try Again," Diana Wynyard's and Clive Brook's latest co-starring vehicle, which begins a week's run at the little U Street House, touches that phase of domestic life.
Adapted from the Broadway stage success, "Sour Grapes," the picture tells the story of a doctor and his wife who after having been married for years believe that they no longer love each other. How each of them seeks the romance they believe lost in the companionship of another and younger attraction, and how momentary pleasure is halted by the realization that the real romance exists only between the original pair.
Miss Wynyard and Brook, who teamed to make "Cavalcade" the great success it was, were selected for the roles in "Let's Try Again," because the directors believed their talents and personalities to be ideally suited for the picture.
She plays the dissatisfied wife who looks afield for love that is right in her own home. He portrays the husband who neglects her for his club and his golf.
The boss was looking for his wife and not finding her about the house, asked the cook, "Do you know of my wife's whereabouts?"
"Well, boss, I guess I put dem in de wash."
THE FILM "THE LOVE OF THE WEEK" BY JOHN W. HARRIS AND JAMES H. HARRIS.
A scene from the picture by that name is shown above with Lyle Talbot apparently hynotized by Bette Davis, youthful star of "The Big Shakedown"
THRILLS!
COASTER
DIPS
BRING THE FAMILY TO
THE AMUSEMENT PARK
OF A THOUSAND ...
THRILLS! ..... HAVE YOUR
PICNIC OUTING
AT THE NEW
SUBURBAN
GARDENS
50th & Hayes
Streets, N. E.
New Managem't
★ STAR THRILLS
★ Merry-Go-Round
★ Mammoth Ferris Wheel
★ The Whip
FREE
PARKING &
ADMISSION
*FROZEN CUSTARD
*REDECORATED
*THE TUMBLE BUG
*AEROPLANE SWINGS
*COASTER DIPS
*HIGH GRADE FOOD
*PRIZES 'SWIMMING
*SHOWS 'REPAINTED
*CIRCUS *DANCING
SAVE MONEY
by spending your Summer Vacation
at the New Suburban Gardens
Any District Line Car will carry you
to the gate of the Park
Phone: LINCOLN 9155
FOR PICNIC RESERVATIONS
Louie Lautier of "The Capital Spotlight" said there was no news in old D.C. last week and, Son, you were right. Everything was down to Sparrows Beach, and if you were down there last Sunday you know what I mean?
One evening last week Hooks (alias David Watts) was seen ducking through Bryant Street alone, Now, Son, what were you doing way up there?
*****
And last Saturday The New Deal Whist Club gave an outing at Carrs Beach and stayed over until Sunday, and Mr. and Mrs. Hooks were there, but Sunday afternoon so Shanks Lacy and Kelly say, they raw Hocks jumping over the fence at Sparrows Beach trying to duck that quarter—and, Son, no fooling, who was that pretty little girl in the white bathing suit that you were playing jam up! Mrs. Hooks, you better get you a white bathing suit. Nuf sed.
If you like cocktails see these bozos next Wednesday evening on the good old Madison Hall—Spot Lewis, Bus Thornton, Harvey Strothers, Thomas Holland, Emanuel Carr, Albert Pleasant, and The Hooks.
* * * *
Here's hats off to the New Deal Whist Club and their two-day outing at Carrs Beach last Saturday and Sunday. Everybody had a stomping good time. Mrs. Smith, of Carrs Beach served meals to everybody, and she knows how to do that thing.
* * * *
And so poor old Jake Handy got a bad break. The Smoke Shop has changed hands. Palmer am now the new owner. Poor old Jake
There are thirty-two girls worrying this column about Edwin Leak. Won't somebody kindly send him down U Street?
****
And so, dear reader, the serial about the Consoling Pals won't begin in this issue because one Consoling Pal asked to hold it awhile. But look for it next week. No fooling.
****
Saw Beadleld of the Navy Dept. last Satdee nite. Said he on his way to New York for a few days, and, he was going to stop on Sugar Hill. That is a new exclusive section where all the big shots stop. We don't know how he is going to stop there.
BROADWAY THEATRE
1515 7th St., N.W. NORTH 3006
SUNDAY-MONDAY JULY 29-30
A Female Frankenstein on
the loose! Deadlier than
Dracula!
"DOUBLE DOOR"
With
Evalyn Venable, Mary Morris
and Kent Taylor
TUESDAY JULY 31
GUY LOMBARDO
With Burns and Allen in
"MANY HAPPY RETURNS"
WEEK BEGINNING SATURDAY. JULY 28th
STRAIGHT AND HOT FROM "SOUTH OF THE SLOT"
THE FATHER AND SON
They do say that little Shirley Temple just romps all over Adolphe Menjou as she steals the show in the coming picture at the Lincoln
That must have been very embarrassing for Kelly and Shanks to come driving in to Sparrows Beach last Sunday with those beautiful creatures that they had in the car and see Hooks jumping over the fence and speaking to them. I want to know, Kelly, was his hair wet?
* * * *
"unny. Just can't get air in in Freek and Alonzo Collins. What is in the wind? Can it be the beauty contest? If so—let Chols send you a couple.
* * * *
Why did J.H. pass G.H. up last Saturday? If G.H. don't stick around, J.H. will be single.
* * * *
James Watts sang a solo the other night, which caused many eyes to run water with joy. They were glad when he stopped.
Milton Hill, please stay out of the sun. Nuff Sed.
Carl Blakey was singing the other day, when something bit him on the head. My—what a time.
T. Derricotte and his brother are known among a certain group, as the Brain Trust. Ha! Ha!
The fashion plates of a certain church in the city are E.L., G.L., and E.L. Keep up the good work, girls.
Bolivia claims victory in the latest Chaco battle but that proves nothing at all. The scoring system in war is defective.—Pittburgh Post-Gazette.
Fifty per cent of the Russian population are under 20 years of age.
WASHED AIR KEEPS YOU COOL AT THE
WASHED AIR KEEPS YOU COOL AT THE LINCOLN
1215 You Street, N.W. Phone, North 300
Boy, when you see Mr. James Watts with his girl, just speak and move on. Remember, No parking. (Love rule No. 13.)
T.D., where is the little girl friend?
R. Carey, so the girls say, looks swell in his clothes. Well is it true?
Miss S.S. plays well, sings well. Well I will be seeing you.
NEW YORK—Three of the four members of The Southernaires, NBC's famous Negro quartet, are college graduates. William Edmondson, bass, was educated at Spokane College Spokane, Wash. Homer, Smith, tenor, is an alumnus of Wilberforce University. Lowell Peters, tenor has an A.B. degree from Knoxville College. Jay S. Toney, baritone, went through high school at Columbia, Tenn.
Trophy to Encourage Dramatics in Schools
RALEIGH, N.C.—Paul Green, noted playwright at Chapel Hill, N.C., has given to Shaw University a cup to be awarded to the Negro high school presenting the best one-act play in a high school tournament, to be held at Shaw University during the next school year. Mr. Green presents the cup in an effort to encourage the development of interest in dramas in Negro schools.
"Presididt Rosyfelt, in one o' them fireside radio talks t' th' American people t' other night, ask if I was better off now than before him 'O yeah! Franklin, I'm better off—better off 'th' earth," said Uncle Elmer this morning as he gave his last year's straw hat the second cleaning of the season
THEATRE
WAYS COMFORTABLY COOL
SURDAY. JULY 28th
EEN-
HOT FROM
THE SLOT"-
ARD THE
ALWAYS CO
WINNING SATURDAY
—ON THE SCREEN—
IT AND HOT
UTH OF THE
comes Frisco Arlene thrill-mad debutante headed for hell with half of Frisco at her heels!
A
M.
One thundering climax topping another in this seething sizzling story of the Barbary Coast-where society's spoiled babies hunt adventure and find damnation!
GOV RIS ON THE STAGE
OVER SCO"
College Singers
Bolivia claims victory in the latest Chaco battle but that proves nothing at all. The scoring system in war is defective.—Pittburgh Post-Gazette.
Fifty per cent of the Russian population are under 20 years of age.
ENTIRE WEEK STARTING
FRIDAY, JULY 27th
NER DADDY HOCKED
NER FOR 20 BUCKS
TO THE TOUGHEST
MUGS ON BROADWAY
Damon Runyon
famed story teller
explores the shadows of
the Great White Way
"Little MISS
MARKER"
A Paramount Picture with
ADOLPHE MENJOU
DOROTHY DELL
CHARLES BICKFORD
SHIRLEY TEMPLE
a B. P. Schulberg Production
Coming—August 3rd
Direct from 3 Weeks
at LOEW'S PALACE
"THE THIN MAN"
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
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 quartar (25c) and a self-addressed, stamped envelope, for my NEW ASTROLOGY HEADING—and receive by return mail. Please advice on three (3) questions. Sign your FULL NAME, BLEH DATE, and CORRECT ADDRESS. Send all letters to Abbe Wallace, case of WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, 920 U Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C.
ALEXANDRIA
MRS. ALMA P. MURRAY
Alexandria Correspondent
Phone: Alexandra.217-W
MRS. KATHLEEN M. LUCKETT
The Alexandria School census started Monday when a force of 12 women, five colored and seven white, started a house to house canyass.
This project is being done by the Federal Emergency Relief under the direction of the Department of Public Welfare.
Those who are taking the census for colored children are Mrs. Jennie Wright, Miss Mary Coleman, Miss Matilda Cook, Mrs. Anna Dixon, and Mrs. Ella Washington.
There will be a joint picnic Tuesday, July 31, by Meade Memorial and St. Cyprian's Churches, of Alexandria, at Holland's Park, Gum Springs, Va. Buses will leave Meade Chapel, at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Music will be furnished by Louis N. Brown's Orchestra, of Washington.
Mrs. Julia Pritchett is attending summer school at the Virginia State College.
Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Johnson and Mrs. Lola Johnson Gurst, all of New York City were in the city this week visiting relatives and friends. Mr. Johnson and Mrs. Gurst is son and daughter of the late Rev. Samuel H. Johnson. Mrs. Ruth W. Doss, of Philadelphia, spent a few days here with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John Pritchett. The Rev. A. D. Adkins is attending summere school at Union University. The second joint family excursion of the Episcopal churches of Washington and Alexandria to River View will be given Thursday, August 2. Boat will leave Alexandria Wharf at 10:30 a.m., 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.
The welfare group is giving a lawn party on the lawn of the Meade Chapel, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights. This group of workers have helped a number of children by giving them shoes and clothing.
Shiloh Baptist Church
At 11 a.m. Sunday morning the pastor, the Rev. F. E. Hearnes, will preach. At 8 p.m. there will be a special sermon. Monday at 8 p.m. the Musolit Quartet of Lynchburg, Va., will render a musical program under the direction of Mrs. Dora Lucas. The convention supper which was given by the Sunday School last week was a success and was repeated Monday night. The supper was under the direction of the teachers. A special sermon will be preached to the railroad men Sunday, August 5, at 3:30 p.m. at the St. John's Baptist Church, on North
YOUR ST
and YOUR
By
ABBE' WALL
Youngest Mentalist on the Ameri
W. L. C.—Would it be a wise idea for me to look the property up that I have had in mind?
Ans.: It appears to me that there is some property advertised yearly for taxes that is in your NAME. I don't see you profiting from this property but if it will satisfy your curiosity to know whose it is, then look it up.
C. J. T. —What do you think about the work I am doing now?
Ans.: I think it swell if you stick to it long enough to become recognized in writing SHORT STORIES. Keep in touch with the magazines that you are writing for now and they will help you to get started into the future.
W. B. —Was it an enemy of mine that took the tap off of my wagon wheel and where did they take it off at?
Ans.: While you were at a banquet at the CHURCH on July 4 several boys took the tap off your wagon wheel just for fun. They are not enemies and did it only to tease you. Have another put on as you will not get the old one back
W. J. —Will I be given a position this coming year and when will it be?
Ans.: You will be given a teacher's position this fall; that you will teach in another state and the location appears to be LENA, LOUISIANA. Put your application in there immediately.
M. A. G.—When will I get a friend and will I be happy with him? I am lonesome now.
Ans.: You will find a friend in a certain man that attends your church and with whom you are already acquainted and a little interested in. You two will spend many enjoyable days together this summer but by fall you will give him up for another man.
L. D. G.—I am planning on taking my kid sister and having her
NOTE: Your question answer
clipping of this column is enclosed
ply—send a quarter (25c) and a
for my NEW ASTROLOGY HEA
THESE advice on three (3) que
BIRTH DATE, and CORRECT A
Wallace, care of WASHINGTON
west, Washington, D.C.
Alfred Street, by the pastor, the Rev. J. G. West. The Morning Star Quartet will furnish the music. The Musolit Quartet of Lynchburg, Va. will sing Sunday at the Second Baptist Church at 3 p.m. and at the Ebenezer Baptist Church at 8 p.m. The Rev. Mrs. Mason Frye of Washington, will preach a special sermon at the Ebenezer Baptist Church, Sunday at 11 a.m. The seventh anniversary of the Zion Baptist Church was a success. The pastor, the Rev. R. D. Botts, preached at the morning service and the Rev. T. N. Austin preached at 3:30 p.m. He was accompanied by his choir and congregation. Sunday morning at 11 a.m., the Rev. T. N. Austin will take as his text "The Great and the Would Be Great Contrasted." And at 8 p.m. his text will be "Finding the Christ."
The church is having a kitchen shower and all members and friends are asked to come out Friday at 8:30 p.m. The celebration of the twentieth anniversary of the pastor of the Third Baptist Church, the Rev. S. B. Ross, pastor, was well attended. At the banquet Friday night the Rev. Mr. Ross was presented with a bouquet of American beauty roses, a purse of $22 and two cakes.
Bethel Presbyterian Church
The Rev. Samuel A. Brown, pastor. Last Sunday evening the pastor preached. Sunday evening a special service will take the place of the regular 8 p.m. service. Among the guest artists to be present will be Mrs. Ruth C. Miller, and her two daughters, of Washington; and Albert Brown, Jr. of Cincinnati.
The Grand Lodge of Royal Order of Mebelik, and the Princess of Abyssinia will hold its convention at Alfred Street Baptist Church, August 1 and 2. On the opening night the principal speaker will be the Rev. J. S. Lee.
Among the Sick
Mrs. Evelyn Johnson who has been at Freedmen's Hospital has returned home.
Malchoir Adams who is confined by illness at his home is better. Mrs. Mary King is sick at her home on S. Columbus Street.
IN MEMORIAM
Alexandria, Va., July 23, 1934. In loving memory of my devoted husband, Howard A. Barrett, who passed to the Beautiful City one year ago, July 25.
Howard, you were a loving com-
napter.
panion,
And we walked daily side by side
But God took you one year ago
today
MARCEL SPECIAL THIS WEEK
Maa's Beauty Shoppe. Poro System is offering a free marcel wave the first three days of next week. Expert Eperations. Mrs. L. M. Duke. Mrs. Mageline Wilson. Mrs. Gertrude Campbell. Phone 2405 1005½ Oronoco St.
live with me but my wife is a little doubtful whether she wants her or not. Will they get along together?
Ans: They will be the best of pals—Take her for she will be a great help to your wife with her children and you will be able to give her the education that she wants so badly. Your children will love to have your sister with them.
L. J.—My business has dropped off considerably this last year. Help me to get it started again.
Ans: You will have to get a better and larger line in your BAKERY if you expect to hold your customers. People get tired of the same kind of cakes and breads and go elsewhere for a change.
L. J. N.—I am thinking of visiting my relatives in my old home town this summer and want to know in what month to go?
Ans.: Go to your home town in August for you will find your GRANDPARENTS will be there and they would like to see you. Your mother is showing her age and is also anxious to see you.
F. G.—I applied for a job last week and I am wondering if I stand a chance to get it?
Ans.: You will be working in a couple of weeks and will be driving a large PACKARD automobile. The people whom you chauffeur for will make a long trip over the United States this winter.
J. M.—Does my sweetheart love me and does he mean the nice things that he tells me over and over again every time we see one another?
Ans.: He means every word that he tells you and if you want him you had better marry him for he is tired of trying to COAX you in to marrying. He will give it up if you don't make up your mind in a hurry. He is more in love with you than anyone he has ever gone with.
tered in this paper—ONLY when aed in your letter. For private re-self-addressed, stamped envelope. DING—and receive by return mailations. Sign your FULL NAME, ADDRESS. Send all letters to Abbe TRIBUNE, 920 U Street, North-
COMICS-IN-ACTION
CIVIL LIBERTIES LEAGUE TO HOLD MEETING FRIDAY
Organization to Make Plans to Fight Discrimination in District
A special meeting of the Civil Liberties League has been called by the president, Joseph H. B. Evans, for Friday August 27, at Twelfth Street Branch Y.M.C.A., at 8:15 p.m.
Local Civil Liberties Leagues have been organized under the sponsorship of the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World in the many cities where the order is established. Participation in the program of the league is not confined to members of lodges and temples, but is open to all American citizens who believe that Negroes should join with one another in fighting all forms of local discrimination.
The Civil Liberties League of the District of Columbia intends, through its committee, to co-operate with all other existing agencies whose purpose it is to see that Negroes get their full and fair share of the benefits that are due every citizen. In addition, the program committee will bring to the meetings various speakers of local and national reputation to acquaint the membership with matters of special significance. In this way, it is anticipated that Negroes will get a definite and workable conception of the many agencies that are a part of the program of National Recovery. The legal adviser, Henry Lincoln Johnson, will discuss at this meeting a program of organizing to fight local discrimination.
I.O. of St. Luke News
Health Unit No. 1, I.O. of St. Luke, headed by the president, Mrs. Marie E. Campbell, and District Deputy J. W. Williamson, made their annual visit to the inmates of the Old Folks' Home at Blue Plaines, Sunday afternoon. Two buses were placed at their disposal. The party arrived at the home just a few minutes before meal time and the more than 700 inmates were served an abundance of ice cream and cake. Later in the afternoon, a brief song and prayer service was held for the benefit of the inmates of the sick ward. The next activity of this kind will be on December 25 when baskets of provisions and wearing apparel will be distributed to the needy. It is hoped that the members and friends of the St. Luke Order will be liberal in their contributions to aid this worthy cause.
The funeral services of the Rev. A. H. Gunn, of Roaes Conley Council, No. 571 were held from the Vermont Avenue Baptist Church Sunday, July 22, at 1:30 p.m.
Fairfax, Va.
The Rev. R. F. Carter if Mount Calvary Baptist Church, choir and members of the congregation were guests at a special service of the Rescue Club of the First Baptist Church at Chesterbrook, Va. Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Anderson ave at Rehoboth Beach, Del., for the season.
Miss Dorothy Anderson of Washington spent Sunday with her grandmother, Mrs. Catherine Andreson.
Mrs. Etta Bailey and Mrs. Clarence Page spent Thursday at Hall's Hill, Va., as the guest of 'Mrs. Grad Fletcher and Mrs. Bernice Page.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Page, Miss Bessie Page and Andrew Funches spent Sunday at Sparrows Beach, Md.
Mrs. Rosamond Montague of Chesterbrook, Va. was the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Page over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Chatman and Mrs. Gaskins was the guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. William Norton.
Women should be barred from primary elections; that they can't pick the best candidates is shown by what they marry.
THIS IS MR. KANGAROO
HE AND I WILL BOX
FOR YOU. DO WE
REALLY MOVE? ILL
SAY WE DO! WE'RE FULL
OF REP AND ACTION
TOO.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1934
CLASSIFIED
```markdown
```
RELIEF RATE HERE
10 TIMES HIGHER
Studies of relief rates here among the 132,000 colored population, just made public by Major Campbell C. Johnson, secretary of the Twelfth Street Branch Young Men's Christian Association, indicate that the rate here is ten times higher than that of any other lo-
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LARGE ATTRACTIVELY furnished
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NEAT FURNISHED ROOM in respectable family. For information call North 2508. Married on single.
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Adults only. Phone N. 3239
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drug store or restaurant. Rents
reasonable. 2700 Georgia Ave.
FURNISHED APARTMENT for
rent to responsible party. Well
furnished room in bachelor's ap-
ment. Apply Apt. 19, 1931 17th St.
N.W., evenings or Sundays.
ROOM AND BOARD
CHILDREN BOARDED—On farm on Lee Highway. 27 miles from D. C. Rates reasonable. Mrs. J. A. Robinson, R.F.D., Box 49 Mamassas, Va.
BOARDERS
HOME COOKING - In private home by week or meal. Price reasonable. Inquire Mrs. A. W. Lee, 1825 Ninth Street, Northwest.
APARTMENT FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED
ONE ROOM kitchen, private bath, back porch. 121 V St., N.W.
ROOM WANTED
TWO GIRLS would like a nice airy room with congenial people. Decatur 3082.
SCIRITUAL SERVICE
CHRIST SPIRITUAL CHURCH
1207 6th St., N.W.
Services—Sunday, Wednesday, Friday,
8 P.M.
1837 11th St—Sunday, 5 to 7:30
P.M. and Thursday, 8 P.M.
Mme. Hattie V. Lewis
Mme. Hattie V. Lewis
CARD OF THANKS
Miss Gertrude H. Ryan wishes to thank her many friends for the messages, cards and floral offerings that helped to console her at the loss of her devoted mother, Mrs. Sallie J. Ryan.
LEGAL NOTICES
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
The object of this suit is to obtain a decree appointing a new trustee in place of J. Barton Miller, who left the District many years ago, his whereabouts being un-
ACTION
cality, according to the unemployment relief census, conducted by the Federal Emergency Relief Office. Relief has been extended here, for a period from July of last year through May, at a rate of approximately 25 per cent for white applicants and 75 per cent for colored applicants. The rate rose as high as 82 per cent for colored in May.
known, and to authorize the said new truce to execute a deed of release to the property conveyed to Isaac E. Shoemaker and J. Barton Miller. Trustees, be a deed among the land records of the District in Liber 338. Folio 335, bejurat 33 in Square 191 promenade. R. C. Nelligan being beneficial in said deed of trust, the whereabouts of said R. C. Nelligan being also unknown, he having left the District
On motion of plaintiff, it is this 11th day of July, A.D. 1894. ORDERED that the defendants, Lane E. Shoemaker, R. C. Nelligan and J. Barton engage in a lawsuit against the defendant hereinafter before or before the first rule day occurred one month after the day of the first publication of this order; otherwise the cause will be proceeded with as in case of default. Provided a copy of the complaint and three successive weeks in the Washington Law Reporter and the Washington Tribune, before the acid day, Daniel W. O. Donoghue, Justice. A true copy, Teek; Frank E. Cummins, clerk, by R. B. Dertzhick, assistant clerk.
L. MELENDEZ, KING, Attorney
1234 U. St. N.W.
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT
of Columbia, Holding Probate Court,
No. 46,841, Administration. This is to
Give Notice; That the subscriber, of the
District of Columbia has obtained from the
Probate Court of the District of Columbia,
Letters of administration on the estate of
the deceased, and that the deceased
Columbia, deceased. All persons having
claims against the deceased are hereby
warned to exhibit the same, with the
vouchers thereof, legally authenticated, to
the subscriber, of the deceased. AD, 1938, otherwise they may be
law be excluded from all benefit of said
estate. Given under my hand this 2d
July, 1904. Lucille Dill Dill,
1834 Vernon St. N.Y. Attest: Thoslie
Cogwell, Registrar of the Probate
Columbia, Clerk of the Probate Court.
J. FLIPPER DERRICOTTE, Attorney
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT
of Columbia, Holding Probate Court.
No. 46,622. Administration. This is to
hold probate of the estate of folle,
Virginia has obtained from the Probate
Court of the District of Columbia.
Letters of Administration on the estate of
Charles H. Lassiter, late of the District of
Columbia, A. J. 1906, asserting claims against the deceased are hereby warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, legally authenticated, to the subscriber, on or before the 24th day of July, 1934, thereby they are by law be excluded from all benefit of said
cate. Given under my hand this 11th day of July, 1934, Anna M. Pole, 639
Dove Corswell, Register of Wills for the District of Columbia, Clerk of the Probate
Court.
THOMAS WALKEN, Attorney
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT
of Columbia, Holding Probate Court, Estate
of Mattle K. Lacon, Decceased, and
Applicant having been made herein for probate of
the last will and testament of said deceased,
and for letters of administration cta.
ordered this 18th day of July, A.D. 1984,
to ordered this 18th day of July, A.D. 1984,
that Coehlle Nixon, James F. Nixon,
and all others concerned, appear in said court
on Monday, the 27th day of August, A.D.
984, such application should not be granted.
Let notice hereof be published in the
"Washington Law Reporter" and The
Washington Tribune once in each of three
heresin mentioned, be received, and the first publication to
be not less than thirty days before said
return day, O. R. Luhring, Attorney At
Law, Cornwell, Register of Wills for
the District of Columbia, Clerk of the
Probate Court.
TIGNOR & PETERSON. Attorneys
624 D. Ft., N.W.
SUPREME Court OF THE DISTRICT of Columbia, Probat Court, No. 46.555, Administration. This is to Give Notice: That the subscriber, of the District of Columbia has obtained from the Probate Court of the District of Columbia, Letters Testamentary on the estate of Wesley Johnson, late of the District of Columbia, deceased. All persons having been warned to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, legally authenticated, to the subscriber, on or before the 100th day of July, A.D. 1985; otherwise they may be may be excluded from all benefit, of valid estate, under my hand this July, 98th S.F. E.S. Attest: Theodore Conewell, Rev. Wills for the District of Columbia, Clever of the Probate Court.
EDMUND M. CHAPLIN, Attorney
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT
of Columbia, Holding Probate Court, No.
46.836, Administration. This is to Give
Notice: That the subscriber, of the District
of Columbia has obtained from the
Probate Court of the District of Columbia,
the deceased Samuel William Lance, late of the District
of Columbia, deceased. All persons having
claims against the deceased are hereby
warned to exhibit the same, with the voucher
thereof, locally authenticated, to the
Probate Court of the District of Columbia,
July, A.D. 1936; otherwise they may
by law be excluded from all benefit of said
estate. Given under my hand this fifty day
of July, 1934. George P. Lane, 3021 114
Henry A. Atter, Attorney S. Merchal,
Deputy Registrar of the District of Columbia.
CHILDREN
and
ROB. LEWIS.
Hi-Di-Hi-De-Ho and He-De-He
Hello everybody. As Bro. Joe
would have it, this is your favorite radio-like columnist greeting you from station G-A-B in the Washington Thibune office and giving you the inside news from about town and all around. As you probably know Bro. Joe (Winchell) has left these parts and is now touring the Northwestern states with a stage show. He expects to be gone about six months or more. With your permission, Bob Lewis will now take up where Joe left off and attempt to do by you as Joe has so reliably done up to this point. Are you ready? Then here goes.
Nat Allen told his Rondalier members that he jacked up Ted, but others say vice-versa. — I hear that Joe Allen walked back from camp. Win's a matter, Joe? Did the heat get you or was it (____) ??? — Bus White what did that copper to you to after so tactfully extradicting your noble hide from the trolley car? Clean clean now, Bus one of your friends saw everything. —
Folks, what do you think of a guy who sits at his girl friend's table partakes of a luscious dinner (corn, tomatoes, n' everything) and then abruptly excuses himself with "I gotta go now!" Jimmy Robinson did just that thing not long ago. Where was he? At Alice of course. — I hear that Carrol and Rose will tie the knot shortly. Wonder if it's true.
—— Irma Colding denies that she wants Clifton but we notice her quite often, inquiring as to his whereabouts. —— I see Bus Black is trying to get back with Willie Mae Westray. Save your energy for another time pal. James is in the money more so than you. —— Anne Smith don't cry. Pick-ford will take you out one of these days. —— Why did Milton Brady of G Street, Southwest get all of his hair cut off his head and a shave to boot? Perhaps you can tell me why. Honest folks, I don't know. —— Wotta man! Wotta nerve! Harry
CH
TRIBUNITE'S PLEDGE
1. I will never us the word "nigger."
2. I will learn all that I can about the history and traditions of my Race.
3. I will use my eyes and cars to detect slander against my Race, and I will champion my Race wherever I may hear such slander.
4. I will be proud that I am a Negro because God made me one, and, being a Negro, I will do all that I can to add honor to my Race.
Answer to Last Week's Cross-word Puzzle
* Here is the answer to last week's puzzle:
puzzle:
Across
1. Area 24. Lit
5. Shot 26. Es
9. FKer 27. Et
10. Heart 28. Ti
11. Lever 29. St.
13. Too 32. Scar
14. Vim 35. Odor
15. Soon 36. His
19. Gale 38. Sand
21. Kit 39. Elk
23. Vicar 40. Star
Down
1. Almost 17. Over
2. Ri 18. Nit
3. Eel 19. Gat
4. Are 20. Arid
5. She 22. Is
6. Her 25. Is
7. O. A. 30. Barn
8. Travel 31. Edit
9. Va. 33. The
10. Tokens 34. Ask
15. Matter 37. Il
---
Barnum, erstwhile lover, visits "I got your man" Louise of Anacostia during weeks, but when Sunday rolls around he drops in right next door to call on the tall lanky gal named Sarah, Wotta man! Wotta nerve! _____ Barrington Jefferson, since when did you go in fo: buying dresses? tsh. And Greasy Carter will find time to tiptoe through the tulips to the garden of poison ivy this year. While wondering I wonder who Beecher likes, Buddy Cowan, Reginald Mathews, or "Dark Fable." Just wondering, folks, just won-off the shim sham. What he does please tell Vivian Reeder to lay off the shim sham. What he does looks more like the old Virginia reel.
Little Miss Myrtle Hatton has gone to visit some of her relatives in the country. Don't cry George. She'll be back pretty soon. — Harry Underdue, stage electrician, painter, pimpstick and greyhound deluxe, visited Lincoln, Md. week before last and had a very fowl time ... Yep. I mean it. He jived all the country chickens within walking distance.
I would like to correspond with the following persons: Alvin "Pick" Ford, Bernard Bell and Miss Laverne Robinson. Yours truly resides at 2443 Nichols Avenue Southwest. Incidently this column is always open to fan mail. Helpful suggestions, comments and what nots being always welcome. — We want facts, not dirt, nor gossip that will hurt anybody.
Eddie Berry, Anacostia's star athlete, plans to marry soon. To whom we don't know, but you can bet your boots he likes the little blonde he lets hold his pocket book. — Why does Audry G. act so snobbish when she meets a certain fellow at Meridian Park?? Just can't understand it that all — Does Merchants transfer pay Spider or does Merchants transfer pay Pearl? Your guess is as good as mine. So help me it is. —
Yours truly plans to visit Banneker Pool next week so I'm warning you, don't do anything I wouldn't do unless you want to see it in print the following week. Syl Smith may not know J. K. Patterson and J. K. Patterson may not know Syl Smith, but you can rest assured that Dot Greene knows them both. — Don't mind
OREN'S NER The Camel
CORNER
Why Pass to the Right?
Many of the things that we do today as habit find their origin in interesting situations. A good example is to be found in our American custom of passing vehicles approaching from the opposite direction on the right.
It has not always been the custom of traffic in the United States to pass to the right. The original colonists brought with them from England the reverse practice, the fundamental reason for which had disappeared even in that early early day.
However, there was a reason at one time, and a blood-curdling one. It was that when men traveled armed on horseback, they passed to the left in order that the sword or pistol arm would be on the side of the horsemen approaching them from the opposite direction.
When men became more peaceful, the reason for passing on the left disappeared, but that was not the explanation for the change which occurred here in early Colonial days. It was something more positive than that.
The Conestoga wagon came along at that time and the drivers of those early freight-hauling vehicles always rode "to the left wheelhorse." They preferred passing to the right because there was better visibility, and less chance of entangling wheels with the wagon coming from the opposite direction.
The wagons made deep ruts in the roads over which they passed, ruts so deep that other traffic had no choice but to stay in them. This may seem like small reason why right-side passing should still prevail in this country, but the United States Bureau of Public Roads, after several years of research, has not been able to find another.
MOVIE CIRCUS
THE MOVIE CIRCUS
CUT OUT THE STRIPS RIGHT THIS MINUTE PICK UP YOUR MOVIE AND PLACE THEM IN IT.
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FIFTEEN
me Pat.
Whew * * * wonder what Joe would do now, sign off or continue to gab. Did you say sign off? All right then I'll do that. Ladies and gentlemen (I hope) you have been listening to the voice of "Bob" Lewis (my mom calls me Bobby) speaking to you in the absence of Joesep C. Overton, well known Washington columnist, who is now touring the Northwestern States. This program comes to you weekly from the Washington Tribune Office located at Ninth and You streets, Northwest. Until this time next week I bid you, So long, see ya latter, pds. Be good and all will be well . .
Believe it or Not, Students Asked That School Remain Open Another Two Weeks
So effective has been the work of the Atlanta University Summer School, which concluded last week, that its students have petitioned to have the 1995 session extended to at least eight weeks. The petition has been under consideration by President John Hope, who in responding to it expressed the University's appreciation of the students' desire to have the summer school program further developed.
Both in numbers enrolled and in the type of work done the 1954 session has set a new standard, according to Director John P. Whittaker, who stated that 1648 person had been enrolled in all classes maintained in conjunction with the school. Of course 455 were registered for college and university work, 71 attended the interdenominational ministers' institute, which was conducted this year at Gammon Theological Seminary, and 38 were in attendance at the FERA workers education training center at Morehouse College. In addition 83 children were enrolled in the progressive demonstration school.
LIBRARIAN ON VACATION
Miss Lula Allan, librarian of Miner Teachers' College, left Saturday for Idlewild, Michigan or Lake Michigan, where she will spend her vacation. She was accompanied by her little niece, Maretha G. McAdoo, who will spend the summer with her.
The Camel
Nature has equipped the camel for desert work. He has broad pads on his feet which allow him to walk upon the soft sand, as easily as a boy with snowshoes walks on the snow.
Oases may be miles apart but the camel can browse upon a dwarf thorn bush which grows commonly in the desert.
A handful of dates will satisfy his hunger. But most remarkable of all, the camel actually 'cause' his own hump. This hump consists almost wholly of fat.
At the beginning of a journey, it will be large and firm. Each day that the camel falls to get proper food in the desert, his body absorbs enough fat from the hump to make up the difference. At the end of a long journey the hump will be flabby and almost invisible, but it plumps up again when the camel can indulge in large quantities of food and water.
The camel has four stomachs through which his food passes. One of these is lined with cells which he can open or close at will. When he drinks, he takes more water than he actually needs and stores the surplus in these cells. He can go several days without another drink by opening one or two of these cells when he is thirsty.
A horse might suffocate in a sand storm but the camel can close his nostrils and wait quietly for the storm to pass.
Camps are often oblastate, some times vicious and uncomfortable to ride on, but in the desert they are invaluable both as beasts of burden and as a practical means of transportation.
The nation consumes six million tons of sugar per year.
SIXTEEN
MAN KNIFED IN SCRAPE WITH PAL
Stabbing Ends 15-Year-Old Friendship; Two "Ate, Drank, Slept Together"
An argument over forty-two cents resulted in the slaying of Robert Matthews, 51, 24 Wonder's Court, Southwest, and the end of a 15-year friendship between him and Alphonzo Cardwell, 43, 814 G Street, Southwest, who wielded the knife which fatally wounded him during an altercation at Second Street and Virginia Avenue, Southwest, on July 14. Matthews died at Providence Hospital, last Friday afternoon.
Testimony at the coroner's inquest held at the District Morgue, Monday revealed that it was during a drunken brawl that the two men who "ate, drank and slept together for 15 years" became engaged in the fight that resulted disastrously for both. Cardwell is being held for the action of the grand jury on changes of homicide.
Were Partners
The two men, according to witnesses and to Cardwell's own statement to Detective Sergeant John W. Wise, became involved in the disturbance when an argument arose over the division of the day's earnings from a car-washing and polishing business. They, it developed and James Middleton, 30 Wonder's Court Southwest, made a small amount of money daily washing and polishing cars in the vicinity of the Union Station.
On the night of the fracas, the trio had divided the day's receipts into three parts of forty-two cents each. Middleton left them, and the other two purchased and consumed several drinks. After this they started to a lunch-room becoming engaged in the rift before reaching there.
Claimed Self Defense
Cardwell declared that he stabbed Matthews in the abdomen and in the arm as the latter raced toward him with a brick. He also stated that a final slash with the knife opened a wound in Matthews' back.
The confessed slayer then asserted that he found Policoman Reuben R. Nichols, attached to the Fourth Precinct and gave himself up to him.
AGED EVANGELIST LAID TO REST
Reverend A. H. Gunn Dies Following 3-Month Illness Here
Funeral services for the Rev. Archer H. Gunn, for 45 years an evangelist-minister in this city and for many years an assistant pastor at Vermont Avenue and Second Baptist Churches, were held from Vermont Avenue Church, Sunday. The Rev. C. T. Murray, pastor of the church, officiated.
Born in Burlington, N.C., the Rev. Mr. Gunn came to this city as a young man and entered the ministry. Death, at the age of 70, followed an illness of little more than 3 months. During that time he had been confined to Gallinger Hospital for three weeks, after which he returned to his home at 1927 Capitol Avenue. Northeast, where he died, last Wednesday.
He is survived by one son, Lafayette, and three daughters, Mesdames Mabel Howard, Bertha Gatewood and Dorothy Holmes.
SWANN'S PLEASURE CLUB
Miss Anna Taliafero, 1719 Fourteenth Street, Northwest, was hostess to the club Thursday. Members present were: Mrs. Helen Jackson, Miss Anna Taliafero, Mrs. Mahaley Brooks, Miss Martha Johnson and Miss Lucy Randall.
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WASHINGTON OWNED AND OPERATED
Emergency and Gallinger Doctors Flayed for Negligence to Wounded Man
PIECE-MEAL TESTIMONY
MARKS MORGUE "QUIZ"
Three Doctors Unable to Testify as to Condition of Victim of Street Brawl
One Emergency Hospital physician and two doctors from the Gallinger Hospital came in for seathing criticism from Attorney James A. O'Shea during an interview between the veteran lawyer and a Tribune reporter yesterday (Wednesday).
The three men, Dr. Virgil H. Dorsett, attached to the Emergency Hospital staff; Dr. William H. McCullagh, and Dr. John J. Pelosi, of the Gallinger Hospital, had been called as witnesses at an inquest into the death of Pendleton Carter, 53, 1810 Florida Avenue, Northwest, earlier in the day.
Died of Skull Fracture
Carter, who died at the Gallinger-er Hospital following a skull fracture received during a drunken brawl near his home, had in all appearances been neglected by the medical men when his condition was brought to their professional attention. None were able to offer any definite description of his injuries, and none could say that he had offered any treatment. Dr. Dorsett, called to the home of Since Douglas, 1816 Florida Avenue, Northwest, who is charged with the killing of Carter, came nearer to proving that he was not totally indifferent as to the man's condition than either of the other two. He stated that he tried to treat Carter but the latter was so irrational from the liquor he had consumed that he was unable to da anything with him.
When asked if he sent the injured man to his hospital, Dr. Dorsett replied that "there" were no beds available" to which Attorney O-Shea merely smiled.
Asked later in the day what he thought of the manner in which Carter had been handled by the doctors, Mr. O'Shea declared that he thought "a dog could have been
REV. JAMES PINN'S SON DIES HERE
REV. JAMES PINN'S SON DIES HERE
Youth Who Was Graduate of Armstrong High School Buried Wednesday
Funeral rites for Luther Conrad Pinn, Armstrong High School graduate, who died Saturday at his residence, 1624 S Street, Northwest, were held Wednesday from Good Will Baptist Church where his father is pastor. Interment was at Harmony Cemetery. The services were conducted by the Rev. William D. Jarvis, Young Pinn, the son of the Rev. James L. Pinn, was 22 years of age. He was a graduate of Armstrong High School where he specialized in radio and art work. Surviving him are his parents, the Rev. Pinn, and the Mrs. Celia V. Pinn, a brother, the Rev. James R. C. Pinn, of Homestead, Pa., a grandmother, Rachel Gaskins, of Warrenton, Va., four aunts and two uncles.
had been offered any treatment.
He further voiced a belief that had the man had any money he would have been handled in a much more satisfactory manner.
Doctors Ignorant
Neither Dr. McCullagh nor Dr. Pelsoi was able to say to what extent Carter had been hurt. The latter physician was unable to state definitely as to whether Carter's wound was still open or had do anything with him.
Witnesses to the brawl declared that Carter was struck and knocked down during an argument with Douglas in front of the latter's home, Saturday night. Inasmuch as Douglas held nothing in his hand at the time of the blow, Carter is believed to have received the fatal injury when he fell to the sidewalk.
Picked Victim Up
After the fight, Douglas picked Carter up and carried him into the house where he attempted to revive the unconscious man by administering cold water to his face and head.
Failing in this Douglas is said to have gone to bed and knew nothing more about his condition until the next morning when he arose to find Carter lying dead in a wood-shed in the rear of the house.
A verdict of death from a blow on the head was returned by a coroner's jury at an inquest, Wednesday. Douglas was released on bond of $2500 pending action of the grand jury.
Baptist Ministers to Elect Officers for Year
The Rev, J. H. Haywood addressed the Baptist Ministers' Conference Monday at the Vermont Avenue Baptist Church. The conference will close for the summer vacation on August 6, reopening the third Monday in September. The annual election of officers will take place at the final meeting.
Workers All Set For: Playground Outing
Arrangements are complete for the annual outing of the playground workers at Underdown's Estate in Elks Grove, Md., Saturday. The climax of the program will be the address of "Play as Education" to be given by Miss Sybil Baker, supervisor of District Playgrounds. Ping pong, horseshoes, baseball, croquet and an exhibition will fill out the program.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
GEORGETOWN
Last Sunday was youth's day at First Baptist Church with services at 11 a.m. The program was conducted by the young people of the church exclusively. The principal address in the morning was made by Miss Helen Z. Alexander and at 8 p.m., the Rev. Charles Pryor delivered a sermon on the "Youth of the Church" followed by an address by Mrs. Eva A. Gibson who used as her subject, "The Challenge of Youth Today."
RETURN TO CITY
Mr. and Mrs. William S. Hawkins, of 1030 Euclid Street, Northwest, have returned to the city after a week-end motor trip to Atlantic City where they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Mills.
man was running away with you
Wife: What did you say to him?
Hubby: I asked him why he was
running.
Hubby: I dreamed last night a
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 26, 1934
RITES HELD FOR LOMAX AME ZION CHURCH FOUNDER
The funeral service of Wallace Boswell of Nauck, Arlington County, Va. was held from the Lomax A. M. E. Zion Church. Wednesday, July 18 with the pastor the Rev. J. J. Robinson, officiating.
Mr. Boswell died July 15 at his late residence.
Born in Prince William County, he later moved to Alexandria County, which is now known as Arlington, Va., at an early age. An outstanding citizen of Arlington and a life long member of Lomax A. M. E. Church he was the purchaser of the present site now occupied by the church, a member of the first trustee board and at the time of his death an honorary member of the present board.
Resolutions were by Mrs. L. V. Allen, the Steward Board and Solomon Thompson spoke in behalf of the church and board.
Surviving him are 11 children James S. William W. Theodore Otto J., Roscoe L. Herman W. Charles S. Mrs. Blanche Brown Mrs. Nettie Peyton, Mrs. Maud Peyton, Mrs. Florence Russell; 2 grandchildren; 4 great grandchildren, one sister-in-law and 3 son-in-laws.
Arlington News
THE ARLINGTON BUREAU
The Reporters' Union of Arlington met at the residence of Mrs. Esther I. Cooper and elected the following officers: Mrs. Esther I. Cooper, re-elected president; Mrs. W. Lewis, re-elected vice president and secretary due to the resignation of Miss Eloise Wood; Jackson Ager, chaplain, and Ben-Edward Walker, acting treasurer. ST. JOHN BAPTIST CHURCH. At the morning service the acting pastor, Rev. Bernard Brooks preached. The visitors at this service were Nathaniel Carroll of Washington and Mrs. Jeannette Mosely of Mt. Zion Church. In the afternoon at communion, preaching was by the Rev. J. S. L. Holloman, pastor of Second Baptist Church and president of the Baptist Ministers' Seminary. The visitors were Janie B. Holts and Annie M. Penn.
PENROSE. Miss Nora Drew has been placed on the certified list of eligible candidates for teaching in the Intermediate Grades of Washington public schools.
NAUCK. Miss Bather Edwards, registered nurse of New York City, visited her sister, Mrs. Virginia Carmichael, of Washington, and spent the weekend with Mrs. Natalie Jackson and mother, Mrs. Julia Herbert, and Mr. and Mrs. Tate of 615 Glebe Road.
HALLS HILL. Mt. Salvation Baptist Church on Sunday, the Rev. N. R. Richardson with his junior choir, officers and members rendered service at the Second Baptist Church, Falls Church, Va.
Rev. Mr. Moten preached at Mt. Salvation to a large crowd. Many visitors were present.
Rev, N. R. Richardson preached prior to serving communion. Among the many visitors were Rev. and Mrs. Richardson of Washington, D. C., Mrs. Watts and daughter of Baltimore, Md. who are the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mooney, the latter's cousins and the Rev. Webster, of Baltimore.
The Ministers' Conference of Virginia held its monthly meeting on Monday night with many visitors present. The sermon was delivered by the Rev. Mr. Hearns whose subject was "What Think Ye of Christ."
MACEDONIA BAPTIST Church. On Sunday the pastor officiated at the morning and night services.
The Rev. E. K. McFadden has been away for 10 days in Ports-
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mouth, Va. where he conducted services. He returned last Saturday and left Tuesday for Salem, Va., as he was appointed a delegate for the Lomex A. M. E. Zion Church Usher Board. Macedonia members rendered service at Lomax Church last Sunday. Mrs. Mabel Hall will leave for Atlantic City Saturdays for a two week trip. Mrs. Dorothy Johnson and her daughter have been spending their vacation with their mother, grand mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. James Hall. The Rev. Carter L. Taylor, pastor of Little Zion Baptist Church, Burke, Va., had their dedication services last Sunday with the Rev. Augustus Lewis, of Jerusalem Baptist Church, Washington, as speaker. H9 was accompanied by many of his members.
Bach Choral Club Completes Organization
The Bach Choral Club completed its organization on Tuesday night at the residence of Mrs. Bessie T. Barbre, 71 R Street, Northwest. The aim of the club is to study and perform the chorals and other compositions of John Sebastian Bach, and to endeavor to establish in other cities similar organizations, in order to spread understanding and appreciation of the works of Bach.
The first telephone message was sent across the Atlantic, January 4, 1927.
MRS. ELIZA CROPP. CATHOLIC WORKER. DIES AT HOME
MRS. ELIZA CROPP. CATHOLIC WORKER. DIES AT HOME
Prominent Church Woman Was Pioneer in Movement for Segregated Church
Mrs. Eliza Cropp, one of the pioneers in the movement for the creation of the first colored Catholic Church in Southwest Washington, is dead. The devout woman dled last Sunday from a heart attack while sleeping.
High requiem mass was conducted by the Rev. Father Daniel Rice from the St. Vincent De Paul Church last Wednesday morning. The Rev. Mr. Rice, pastor of St. Peter Claver's Church, was assisted by the Rev. T. J. Duffy, and the Rev. Vincent Assing.
Mrs. Cropp had been in failing health for more than a year during which time she suffered several severe heart attacks. For 22 years, she headed the Sodality of St. Vincent De Paul Church and for years was secretary of the Dominic Society. Modest and unassuming she labored hard for the good of the church. One of the leaders in the movement years back that finally concluded in the establishment of
the St. Vincent De Paul Church for colored Catholics. Mrs. Cropp was well known by fellow parishioners. The Knights of St. Job and the Ladies' Auxiliary of which she was a member held rites for her last Tuesday night.
She is survived by a widower, Charles W. Cropp, and a daughter, Mrs. Blanche Dver.
Y.W.C.A.NEWS
Among the visitors at Camp Clarissa Scott last week was Garnet C. Wilkinson assistant superintendent of schools. The campers report much pleasure given them by boat and staw rides. Through suggestions of Mr. Wilkinson they anticipate a corn rush this week. Mrs. Bunrant who was also a camp visitor on Saturday found all the campers out on a hike. The eagle who is a year-round camper, was on guard high up in the tree on her nest.
The following left for camp on Monday: Jennie Mae Campbell, Dora Davenport, Bernice Ferguson, Ruth Green, Dorothy Harris, Sylvia Jefferson, Thelma Johnson, Thelma King, Bernice Matthews and Evelyn Tymous.
Informal "Sings" are held in the Social Hall of Phyllis Wheatley Y.W.C.A. every Saturday evening from 8 to 9. They are planned by the Music Appreciation Club under the auspices of the industrial department, Mr. Carroll is the director. The Women's Club meets every Thursday from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m. for arts, crafts and sewing—In
strution is given by capable teachers. There is an adult swimming class every Thursday evening from 7 to 8 at the Dunbar pool, personally supervised with a competent teacher. Register at the Y for this class. An additional class will be formed for Friday night using the Bannaker Pool at soon as there is sufficient registration. Mrs. M. F. Thompson membership secretary who has beer absent for some time due to indisposition will soon be at her place. The girls of the residence gave her a "Cheer-up — Get-well Quick" post card shower last week end. The varied sentiments were beautifully encased in flowers. The general secretary, Mrs. M. A. McAdoo, started her vacation on Wednesday, she is headed for Florida.
Mrs. Frances A. Handy Buried at Mt. Olivet
High requiem mass for Mrs. Frances Agatha Handy was held at the Redeemer Cotholic Church, Wednesday followed by incarnent at the Mount Olivet Cemetery. The Rev. John Albert is pastor at the church.
Mrs. Handy expired Sunday at her late residence, 1809 First Street, Northwest, after an illness of almost three weeks. She was 40 years old. She is survived by her parents, James and Sarah Handy, and two sisters, Magdalen Handy and Mrs. Irene Colbert.
Down in Old Kentucky where they get the blues.
When the captains kill the colonels and the colonels kill the booze
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BECKLEY'S ARREST
THOUGHT SOLUTION
10.37 ROBBERIES
The errest of Edward Beckley,
24, of the 4400 block of Fairmont
Street, Northwest, by local police,
last week, is believed to have solv-
ved the mystery of at least 37 rob-
beries of parked automobiles in the
District. E
Beckley, arrested about ten days
ago, was held for investigation un-
ti Dectectives Paul Ambrose, Hat:
old Johnson and H. G. Wannamak-
¢r and Policeman W. D. Shotter,
all of the First Precinct, investi-
gated his activities. After the com-
Pletion of an extensive investiga-
tien, 37 larceny charges were plac-
ed ageinst him, and the officers
said they expected to file others.
Loot valued between $10,090 and
$15,000 was obtained by Beckley,
Police said. They. recovered jewel
ry, automobile accessories and oth-
er loot with a total value of ap-
proximately $4,000 in a house ia
the downtown section,
Beckley, officers declared, had
been specializing in thefts. from
parked cars, sclling the loot thru,
various agents in Philadelphia, |
So a
Serves on Jury “
‘Alexandria Va.—Herbert P. Tan-
cil served on a jury of the United
States Court for the Eastern Dis-
trict of Virginia Jast week. Judge
Luther B. Way, presided.
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.-Fights : Discrimination
ia fa
a Me
_ ATTY. OLIVER W. HARVEY,
of Detroit, Mich., who recently
won a victory in the Muncie, Ind,
courts against the Riv@li, Pheatre
of that city and ‘two local. white
policemen.” A Moore purchaseda
ticket at the Rivoli and took a seat
on the main floor. The .manage-
ment sought to ejoct him and call-
ed two policemen who abused Mr.
Moore and took him to jail.
t
(Continued from page 1 ).
Service; Mrs, Anna Goodwin, of
the Community Center Depart-
ment; J, S. Coage, ex-recorder of
deeds; Mrs. M. C. Callis, of the
District ERA; and Dr. I. E. Warf.
First Camp for Colored
Educational camps for unemploy-
ed women have won considerable
personal interest from Mrs. Frank-
Hin, Roosevelt. There are 36 of
‘them already. \:operation in-differ-
ent sections or the country, Mrs.
Hamilton said.
“But we are establishing the
first one for unemployed colored
women,” she also stated. “We are
sorry our lack of facilities won't
allow us to accomodate more .than
25 students.
“So many ‘of ouF -unemployed
young women need just something
of this kind to give them a new
outlook upon life.”
‘To Enter Training School
One, of the important aims of
the canip, she said, is to build up
the morale, health and_ initiative
of young women who have been
subjected to- the ills of unemploy-
ment and idleness.
When the* camp .xchool. closes,
efforts will be made to haveall the
students placed: in regular training
schools, Whére.they will be given
courses in.something practical that
will better them to earn a
fiving and be an asset to the com-
munity.
STUDYING AT COLUMBIA
Mrs. Antoinette Sampson Weav-
ex, teacher in the Browne Junior
High School of this city, is taking
a summer course at Columbia Uni-
weretier
STREET MOVIES
DRAW 1000 AT
SOUTHEAST HOUSE
Over’a. thousand persons, young
and old, were present at the sound
picture show held in the strest in
front of the Southeast House, Mon-
day night, as part of the summer
recreational program of the House,
The projector equipment and pic-
taxes were supplied-by the Chesa-
peake and Potomac Telephone Com-
pany, Through the courtesy of the
MeGuire and Frazier funeral
homes, chairs were provided for a
large number. Many others brought
their own seats,
The regular play program of the
House begins at 6 o'clock everr
evening and ‘includes: volley. ball,
paddle tennis, base ball, soccer and
# complete schedule of organized
games for children of all ages, Fol-
fowing this play period, varied
programs are presented each eve-
ning outside the House.
On Wednesdays and _ Fridays
Miss Louise Burge of the Schoo! of
Music of Howard University, leads
the group in community singin,
The Glee Club made jts first ap-
pearance last Friday.
Mrs, Ceroline Bond Day, director
of the House, expects to continue
the program through August 17.
The’ director ‘of the summer, staff
of trained leaders is F. A. Gregory,
instructor and coach at Armstrong
High School. Harry Parker, ex-
pert in recreation and physical edu-
cation from the University of Pitts-
burgh, is the assistait director.
The other leaders are Misses Leole
Dukett, Bernice Hudson, Elizabeth
Johnson, Murmur Johnson, Isabell
Williams, Nora Rasby and’ Messrs,
Carrol Miller, Elmer Tyler, John
Butcher, Edward Fletcher, Maurice
Butler, Douglass Williams, Warren
Gordon, Sterling Watts and Vin-
cent Gordon.
BOY PLAYS HUNCH
ON TOA 101 SHOT
AND WS $1872
SALEM, N. H. (ANP) — Obie
Walker, 18-year-old stable boy
went down to the bank the other
day and drew. $18, representing
his life savings to play on a hunch
As a result he won $1,872,
Young Walker. as most race
tract devotees are, is an. addict
to hunches, and to “feelings,” s0
afflicted by one of those pyschic
moods, he placed his last $18 on
‘Monk's Star, the four-rear-olt
mare owned by W. F. Axton, Dixie
tobacco king, running in a race
at. Rockingham track.
Now the mare was practically
unknown here. She was shipped
here from Kentucky and was rid-
den by Jockney Sammy Vail, who
also was a strange rider in this
part of the country. This unknown
horse paid $209.50 for a $2 mutuel
ticket, setting a new track record,
Pay-off to place was $108 and to
show the mare paid $34.50,
Now this is no invitation to folks,
immured under the load of the
current depression, to play a hunch,
neither is it a bid for cxpressions
in dollars and cents of that “feel-
ing” that fact remains that Mr.
Obie Walker, 18 years old. sron't
have to “tote” buckets any more
and neither will he have to apply
curry combs, He played his huneh,
a 104 to 1 shot and the shot hit
the mark.
(Continued from page 1)
cember 15, 1939 by the Rev, JH.
Randolph. They have one minor
child. She charges inhuman treat-
ment, cruelty and failure to sup-
port.’ She avers that her husband
has only contributed $55 to her
support since 1933. He is employ-
ed as messenger at a salary said
to be $1,600 a year.
Mrs. Brown says he owns his
own car and lives in luxury while
she is forced to depend on. her
mother for support for herself and
child,
Mrs. Brown is represented by At
torney Augustus W. Gay while
Attorny Allen Fisher, white,
represented her husband.
WHEN
CALL & oe
THOMAS FRAZIER
AND COMPANY ©»
B80 RAVE, , Nl 1223
723TST.N.W Nzze
Re ore tne aegis
and Sailors for 1934-35
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1934
: te ay 4
ae La
cf res ‘ 1 } oN :
: =k, Ys ; tea be
Dr, R. R. Moton, president of Tuskegee Institute end Miss Etta Moten, screen and radio star, viewing
a record catch of fish made recently by their party on the York River at Capahosic, Va., near Dr, Moton’s
beautiful summer home. ‘The party of four caught 130 fish in three hours.
Miss Moten, enjoying her first experience in deep water fishing, caught 26 and in her own words was
“thrilled beyond expression.” \ 2
Dr. Moton whois noted as one of the most expert anglers in the entire Tidewater section, is spend-
ing a great deal of time during his vacation this summer following hiz favorite pastime of fishing. The
outdoor life has enhanced his health and his friends ate rejoicing to see him feeling so fit and to observe
the return of his accustomed vigor and abundant good spirits, e
liebe ix Sse a baer Ret ea a
‘ and Mrs. Louis Brown, Mr. and
H Gay Lawn Party Honors - | Mra “Jemes Rabb Mr. and Mrs.
New York Visitor | autha Brown. Mr. and Mrs, Lev-
one ington Smith, Mr, and Mrs,
Miss Bertie Fontaine of New |Founcine Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. R.
York, who is the house-guest of | Deye, Mr. and’ Mrs. Alonya Tay-
her cousin, Mrs. Margaret Swann |lor, William Malner and Miss
Taylor, 8821 Eleventh Street,| Perry of Norfalk, Va.
Northwest, was given a lawn par-| | Dr. Arthur Gaskin Mrs. Fran-
ty at Mrs. Taylor's suburban |cina Biddle, Mrs. Marie Walker,
; home, 203° Forty-ninth Street, | Mrs, Pauline Turner, Mrs. Mayme
Northeast, Saturday, Peck, Mis. Estelle Fenwick, Mrs
Enchanting lights’ of all colors, | Margurite White, Reginald Cole
ae . «| tables placed among palms and|of Roanoke Va., John Fontaine,
Only 155 Whites Live in]'se bushes made the place a pic-| Harty Carter, Johnie Herbert,
‘Al coe tunesqua vidw. — Thansingl, pool | Routhford Mason, Robert Barnes,
ley Dwellings in playing end cards were the even- | Jewle Young, Paul Corom and
i ing amusements.” Drinks were | Art a
Washington beervelcoatinamente. ere | Arthur Queen, 2
More than 6,000 colored persons,
as contrasted ‘with 155 Whites,
form the alley population of this
city, it fs revealed in a report
just’ made public by James Ring,
vent survey research assistant.
Several families living in one
small. shack are reported to be
common in the alleys of the Dis-
trict. The average number of in-
habitants per room is put at 1.05.
Houses were found to contain,
in usuaj cases, four small rooms,
‘without basement or attic, | Only
77 of ‘the 2,063 dwellings ' wert
found to be equipped with water
and toilet inside the house. Gas
was found in only 61, electricity
in 47, bath tubs in 108, and cold
running water in 932. The ever:
age siiptly rents was found to
be $12.85 for houses and $10.45
for flats or coe
District officials are reported
to be studying at present several
projects for riddance of the city
of these slum-dwellings. It is
reported that the FERA admini
stration wil] finance two low-cost
housing projects in corgunction
with the proposed District Rthabi-
litation Corporation, The PWA
housing division has already set
aside $4,300,000 for the project in
Washington and Congress has aw-
thorized the President to spend
$500,000 more in the elimination
ef local ‘slums.
YOUTH FREED
ee se fe
According to the story, Arm-
strong with several other friends
had gone to the home of the Ran-
kin girl's sister in A Street, North-
cast. There they had inate up aw
party during which a quantity of
liquor was consumed. Near the
close of the affair, Armstrong is
ailegee to have lured the sir! out-
tide tke house and int> a nearby
wood. Government witnesses held
that the attack followed.
‘The defense conducted by At-
toraey Perry W. Howard, contend=
ed that the youth had sisde eer
taig. promiaes £9 the viel which he
‘waa thable to Keep stier he had
Secoinpished his preposs. Attor-
néy Howard argued to the court
that $ was in an agerieved state
that the girl made up the allega-
tions. when. Armstvon;'s short-
comings were revented.
_ Ac disraissal of the charzes and
discharge of thé defendant ensued.
te
Washington Teacher
Dies Suddenly
“Dr. Alexander B. Coicman, o
teacher at the Ambush School,’ in
Southwest Washington. died sud-
denly Jast a, Funeral ser?
Viees were.held on Wednesday from
the MeGuiré Funeral Home, with
interment. in Harmony Cemeterte
Dr. Coleman is survived by a sige
ter, Mrs. Daisy C. Arucld; and hy
two brothers, Joha H. Coleman, af
Chicago. and Robert W. Co!aman,
of Baltimore. ’
all aaa ay
PARES : .
7 ye
mit)’, las bl
a er ‘ : p c
“Se VOUGi f. a
— 7 :
‘ eee Le ee al | tae
This is the Spacious Bath House at
CEDAR HAVEN
Now open for the season under the manazement of Edward J. Edwards, Jr.
One-half mile of excellent, clean beach fronts this bath house
For further information, ‘sai ; 2
[THE MARYLAND DEVELOPMENT Co.
ROOM 309 EVANS BLDG., 1420 NEW YORK AVE., N. W. ~
: WASHINGTON, D.C.
A True Fish Story
|Gay Lawn Party Honors _ |’
New York Visitor |.
| Miss Bertie Fontaine of New |!
York, whe is the house-guest of |!
|her cousin, Mrs. Margaret Swann 1
Taylor, 8321 Eleventh Street, |)
| Northwest, was given a lawn par-
ty at Mrs. Taylor's suburban | ¢
||}home,- 203 Forty-ninth Street, | |
Northeast, Saturday, q
Enchanting lights of all colors,
tables placed among palms and |,
rose bushes made the place a pic- | |
turesqua visw. Dlanzingl, pool |)
playing and'cards were the cven-
ing amusements. Drinks were |.
served continuously,
‘Those present were:
Mr. and Mrs, Charles Akers, |
Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Harper, Mr, |
p2aQ
; d “4
and Mrs. Louis Brown, Mr. and
Mra James Rabb Mr, and Mrs.
Autha Brown. Mr. and Mrs, Lev-
ington Smith, Mr. \and Mrs,
Founcine Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. R.
Deye, Mr. and Mrs. Alonya Tay-
lor, William Malner and Miss
Perry of Norfalk, Va.
Dr. Arthur Gaskin Mrs. Fran-
cina Biddle, Mrs. Marie Walker,
Mrs, Pauline Turner, Mrs. Mayme
Peck, Mrs. Estelle Fenwick, Mrs.
Margurite White, Reginald Cole
of Roanoke Va., John Fontaine
Harty Carter, Johnie Herbert,
Routhford Mason, Robert Barnes,
Jeasie Young, Paul Corom and
Arthur Queen, 7
gee
Composite portraits were origina.
téd by Francis Galton in the last
century, ~
HN P- DAVIS TD FEAR OF ARRES
SPEAK AT N.Y. | ORES DOCTO
'Y PONFERENE! TO KILL HIMSL
NEW YORK CITY.—At a com-
mittee meeting Wednesday night
the tentative Sa the thir-
teenth Annual tional Con-
ference, sponsored by the 135th
Street Branch YMCA, was accept:
ed. The program which had been
previously: planned by a_ steering
commitiee of eight members was
thus approved and chairman of
several committees were empower-
ed to go ahead with completing ar-
rangement for what is expected to
be the most constructive fact-find-
ing ‘conférence of the organiza-
tion's existence. :
The conference general theme is:
“The Negro in the Social Revolu-
tion.” Three evenings, August 9,
10 and 11, the conference will con-
vene, The first evening the dis-
‘cussion will be on the cultaral role
of the Negro in the Social Revolu-
tion, the second evening the eco-
nomic and the third and last even-
ing the political role will be. dis-
cussed with a summary given te
the ‘conference that is to be adopt-
ed in the form of a fact-finding re.
port.
Several speakers have accepte:
invitations to address the confer:
ence. For the first night the key
speaker has not: yet been secured
On the second night John P. Davis
executive secretary, Joint Commit
tee on National” Recovery, wil
speak on the subject: “Does tht
| Negro’ Need a New Economie, Pol
tiey?” Frank Crosswaith, labor
lender and Arthur Reid, leader o
125th Street Consumers’ Boycot
| will also speak on the second night
[Channing H. Tobias will lead th
Summary, discussion on the las
[night on “What Should be the Ne
|ro's Program for Effective Socia
Control?” “What Shall Be the Ne
| ero’s Political Policy 2” will also b
discussed the last night. A Phili
[Randolph will also. speak,
(Continued from page 1 )
tration, but in other projects
‘Miss’ Hill said that the office is
undergoing a reduction in foree
which made jt necessary to reduce
the office help. When a Tribune
reporter went to the building Tues-
day night the employees, colored
and white, were making plans to
protest the “wholesale” dismissals.
Some of the workers complained
that they were being _ replac-
ed by “friends” of the higherups
at greatly increased salaries..
FEAR OF ARREST
DRIVES DOCTOR
TO ALL HIMSLEF
Had Pevionned egal Op
ETE CITY, Okla.—
Fearing arrest for having perform-
ed an abortion on a white girl, Dr.
Edward A. King, 52, physician here
for the past 25 years, committed
suicide by drowning himself in the
Katy lake north of the city Mon-
day afternoon shortly after he
learned that police were conduct-
ing investigations at his home,
"The girl, Hazel Tilley, 19. of
Alluwe, Okla., in southern Nowata
county, is in Muskogee General
Hospital seriously ill of an infee-
tion as the result of the operation.
Meard Woman's Screams
The alleged father of the prema-
tare child, Lowell Johnson, and a
companion, Kelly Davis, both white
men of Tahlequah, were being held
in th city-federal jgil along with
‘Mrs. King, wife of the physician,
after their arrest in th city by John
Wolsey, chief of city detective
Davis, about 27, confessed erally
to Ben Bolton, chief of police, and
the detective chief, that he was the
one who made the arrangements
with Dr. King to perform the op-
eration and brought the girl to the
doctor's residence here last Thurs-
day night.
City police first became aware
that ee was amiss when an
anonymous telephone call, presum-
ably conan from neighbors of the
King residence, 683 North Fifth
Street, informed them that a wu-
man was screaming and shouting
for help in the doctor's home,
Short Call Officers Walter Pitts
and Fred Birdsall, assigned to in-
vestigate, were accosted at the door
by Mrs. King who nervously: en-
deavored to explain that there was
a sick girl there who had gone. in-
to hysterics, but that she was “ail
right, now.”
The physician's body was drage-
ed from the lake several hours
later. %
RITES FOR MRS.
2 REBECCA COLLINS
Funeral rites were held for Mrs.
Rebecca Collins, who died at her
late residence, 1110 Columbia Road,
Northwest, Saturday, from the
home Tuesday afternooy.
She is survived by her mother,
Susana Collins and a sister, Miss
Edith M, Collins. She is the
daughter “of the late Rev. Levi
Collins.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
LABOR INSTITUTE DISCUSSES NEGRO UNDER THE NRA
Emmet Dorsey, Foreman, Schuyler, and Walter White Speakers
NEW YORK.—A Labor Institute was held for the purpose of discussing the National Recovery Program in relation to the Negro Friday and Saturday at the 135th Street Library. Some of the country's most prominent men and women in the labor movement, the government and university life, dealt with subjects that covered a wide range of interest.
NRA Discussed
Speakers at the institute included Professor John P. Troxell, of Duke University, who talked on the "Economic Background of the NRA;" Spencer Miller, Jr., of the Worker's Education Bureau of America, whose subject was "The NRA; What it is and how it Functions;" the discussion of this session was led by George S. Schuyler, author and journalist, and the Rev. William Lloyd Imes presided. Clark Foreman Speaker The second session began with an address by Ira Reid, research director of the National Urban League. He was followed by Dr. Clark Foreman, special advisor on Negro affairs for the Department of Interior.
They spoke on "Economic Consequences of the NRA for the Negro" and "The Social Consequences of the NRA on the Negro." The discussion of this session was led by Aaron Douglas, artist, and B. F. McLauren presided.
Oxley Talks on Labor
The third session began with a speech on "Labor and the NRA" by Fannie Cohen, educational director of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. The second speaker was Licut. Lawrence A. Oxley, of the Department of Labor who talked on "The Government, Negro Labor and the NRA." The discussion of this session was under the leadership of James H. Hubert, executive director of the New York Urban League, and Walter White was the chairman.
H. U. Professor Talks
"The Future of the Negro Under the Recovery Program" was the subject of Professor Emmet Dorsey of the Department of Political Science of Howard University in the final session. He was followed by an address by Dr. Gustav Peck, executive director of the Labor Advisory Board of the NRA, on "The Philosophy Back of the NRA." The leader of the discussion at this session was Frank R. Crosswath, noted Socialist leader and lecturer. Mrs. Gertrude Elise Ayer served as chairman.
Randolph Present
The institute was opened with a statement of its general purpose by A. Philip Randolph, national president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Those organizations which sponsored the institute in co-operation with the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters were the Union Mechanics' Association, the New York Urban League, Worker's Council, People's Educational Forum, Young Women's Christian Association, Young Men's Christian Association, Young People's Forum of St. James Presbyterian Church, Virgin Islands Civic and Industrial Association and the Workers' Education Bureau of America.
Relief Association Holds Ninth Anniversary Fete
The Henry Lincoln Johnson Relief Association held its ninth anniversary celebration last Tuesday with members from Virginia and Maryland in attendance. An interesting program was rendered under the direction of Mrs. Mattie Ford chairman of the program committee. Mrs. F. O. Clark is president, Mrs. Jennie Smith and Mrs. Mary Craig, chairman and secretary, respectively, of the Board of Guardians of the Association. The Juvenile Department of the Association an auxiliary held its closing meeting Sunday at the Y.M.C.A. building. The children participated in a singing and reciting program and then were treated to ice cream and cake by the Board of Guardians of the senior group.
The association was organized in the summer of 1925 by Mrs. F. C. Clark for the purpose of organizing a benvolent association to include some provision not advanced by similar organizations. The principal one is the payment of one-half of the death benefit in 24 hours after receiving notice of the decease of one of its members. Hon. Hery Lincoln Johnson, a national leader and defender of the civil rights of his race, died during the organization period of the group so the club was named in his memory.
Maryland Parent-Teacher Body to Hold Confab
PALTIMORE, Md.—The National Congress of Parent-Teacher Associations will hold its annual convention in this city July 28 to August 1, inclusive.
Last chance to SAVE $20 to $35 on a New 1934 ESTATE Gas RANGE
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After July 31st these Estate ranges will be $20 to $35 above present sale prices, one of the biggest reasons why you should buy now. But even at ordinary selling prices the presence of one of these ranges in your kitchen would pay for itself over and over again in summer kitchen comfort, more ease in preparing meals and, because of the accuracy of automatic controls, more healthfully cooked foods.
Come in and inspect the various models and features and, if your present range is more than three years old, buy one of these new Estates before prices go up.
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FIND STOLEN SAFE
IN SCHOOL HOUSE
THOMSON, Ga.—A. 600-pound
safe was stolen from the office of
the Coca-Cola Botling Works, re-
cently was found in a schoolhouse near here Tuesday. Two hundred dollars in cash and some valuable papers alleged to have been in the safe, were missing.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1934
ENDS these two GREAT SALES
"Stevedore" to Continue NEW YORK (ANP)—Announcements was made Wednesday that the run of "Stevedore" at the Civic Repertory Theatre would be continued indefinitely.
to SAVE
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w 1934
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One of the popular models of the famous Estate line, the Table Top. All models have automatic top burner lighting, cool kitchen oven insulation, oven heat control and pull-out broilers. Until July 31st the model illustrated can be purchased, financed and installed complete for less than
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a day
$20 to $35 above present sale should buy now. But even at of these ranges in your kitchen summer kitchen comfort, more accuracy of automatic controls, and features and, if your present one of these new Estates before
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Eskaye, a fraternal order. His wife was sentenced to two years in the Women's Federal Industrial Institute at Alderson, W. Va., on each of the six counts.
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We would feel better about present statesmen's assurances that their nations will not start war if all other wars had not been between countries simply forced into 'em.—Dallas News.
FOUR
The Washington Tribune
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THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1934
Specialists and Jim Crow
Washington is full of special Negro assistants to the Assistant This and That these New Deal days. Colored people are peculiar in many respects. While DePriest is leading a fight backed by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to prevent the government from putting its stamp of approval on segregation, this same government is undermining the whole affair by appointing so-called Negro specialists to deal in Negro affairs. There are no special Jewish assistants to look after Jews and there are no Greek specialists to intercede for the Greeks.
These appointments in themselves segregate the Negro in a special class. They are called SPECIAL, but a better word would be JIM CROW. Why so many specialists for Negroes? Since we are Americans, why not be included in the general scheme of things and stop being labeled special Negro this and special Negro that. The streets of Washington are becoming cluttered with so-called Negro specialists who, after all are no more than ordinary works in some third assistant's office.
The "Secret Hundred"
If you "weave recklessly" through city traffic or fail to obey a traffic signal light or stop sign, don't think you are getting by because a policeman is not in sight.
The chances are you have been "spotted" by one of the 100 "Secret Hundred" traffic observers who are instructed to report just such traffic violators. Of the 100 observers selected by Major Ernest W. Brown, 20 of them are colored men and women.
Don't be surprised to receive a warning after you have passed a light without "being seen." One of the secret "eyes" of the police force will send you a neatly written letter telling of the offense and a veiled hint of what will follow if the violation is repeated. There is plenty of work for the "Secret Hundred" on U Street between Seventh and Fourteenth Streets. May they work impartially and thoroughly.
In loving your neighbor as yourself remember that everybody in your community is your neighbor.
This strike business is getting popular now. Sarasota has started one away down in Florida.
No one ever hurt himself bubbling over with enthusiasm for some movement good for his community.
Mr. Farley says Republican strongholds will be battered. Have been battered, he meant to say, maybe.
It will be a big thing if we do get the better housing project a-going or a-coming.
Hitler seems much alive over in Germany.
Fowls are born, but they are made after wild.
Keep cool during July and the rest of the year will take care of itself.
"Lady Moore" with her loud colorful and amusing garb, walking the streets of Sumner, S.C., poking into garbage cans for whatever she may find, may be a comical sight to annotated visitors to the city, but to the folks who know her, she is a wealthy woman who has her own peculiar conception of earning an independent livelihood, owns an entire street of colored dwellings.
Her own home, built of scraps of wood and rusting tin, gleaned over a period of many years of busy effort on refuse heaps, presents a bizarre appearance as its two story structure rooms into the vision of the casual visitor to "Moore's Lane," as her "street" is called. People say she bought the houses that line the unique street solely by collecting discarded objects of value and by bartering with junk dealers with them.
Most of the homes she owns were bought up when they were put up for sale for taxes and "Lady Moore" employs a lawyer to collect her rents from the tenants.
Now "Lady Moore"'s age is something no man will allow himself to be quoted on. A fekek might guess and tell the truth and then break out "Lady Moore" and shake his head in excitement. Life is a closed book. She talks about the street with her curious hands, gnarled and dirty, in her strange pursuit of something, which might or could be a material fortune. Philosophers compare her to the old woman making the streets of New York picking up pieces of broken glass and bits of stone and rock who told an inquisitor that she was only holding up objects that might bruise the heel of some innocent and young person on his way to the ladder.
I never did, and never shall indulge in one word of criticism of Howard University. If my left hand should indicate a word of criticism, my right hand would cut it off.
Howard University has been styled the "Capstone of Negro Education." The highest peaks catch the sunlight first and reflect its rays longest.
For several decades Howard University has been in the spotlight of turmoil and commotion. I have been connected with the institution during all of this time. I can candidly say both in the light of observation and of retrospect, that these constantly recurring outbreaks have not been in the main the result of muddled administration, and might have been void by the requisite understanding, prompt action and sound judgment on the part of those in supreme control.
Instead, petty internal dissensions and disagreements have been allowed to accumulate and intensify, causing these frequent eruptions and change of administration.
Recently I contributed an article to the alumni journal, which was further elaborated in an address at the alumni reunion, in which I engaged to comment on this deplorable state of things. I have been overwhelmed with a flood of commendations for the courage and forthrightness with which I attacked a situation which all agree is intolerable, and cannot much longer continue.
THOSE WHO MISCONSTRUED
MY INTENTIONS
Naturally enough, there has been some criticism and unfriendly comment. Some have sought to construe my attitude into one of hostility to the administration of President Mordecal Johnson. My purpose is wholly impersonal.
I hardly think that I need repeat my appreciation of and attitude toward President Johnson. I was profoundly impressed with his prophetic endowment and spiritual mission long before he assumed the presidency of Howard University. I kept pace with his most ardent partizan advocates when his tenure was seriously jeopardized by the charge of communism. I have studiously refrained from all captious or obstructionary tactics during his administration. I repeat I am as good a friend of President Johnson as I know how to be. But my loyalty to my alma mater transcends all personality.
If Howard University can be saved to carry out its high function and mission by the retention of Dr. Johnson as its head, I fain would advocate that; if it must needs be saved by eliminating him, I would reluctantly advocate that procedure; if its welfare can best be preserved by retaining President Johnson for the present and eliminating him later, then I would advocate that.
Merely changing the personnel of the administration would not bring the needed relief without more far-reaching reform. The university has already experienced frequent administrative shifts without improvement of the evils complained of. The roots run deeper; the remedy must run as deep as the roots.
I NEITHER PRAISED
NOR CONDEMNED
In my analysis of the situation I neither praised nor condemned, but simply ascribed. The man who tells you the plain unvarnished truth is always a more genuine friend than the self-seeking sycophants who are ever declaiming how wonderful you are. No one of my critics, so far, has attempted to dispute a single fact or refute a single conclusion which I deduced from these facts, but they have resorted to the lower method of vilifying the advocate when they could not contest his contentions.
They have said that I overstepped the bounds of propriety, that I was wanting in tact and taste, that I was peeved by disappointment, and that I was ungrateful and ungrateful. Even if I am so unworthy a person as the aspersions imply, that would not in the least impair the integrity of a mathematical formula by denouncing the mathematician.
Let me ask my critics to assume a nobler mood and accord me the ordinary credit due a loyal alumnus. No one owes my alma mater a greater debt of gratitude than I. She has nourished me from my youth up. For fifty years, as boy and man, pupil and teacher, my life has been interwoven into the woof and warp of her structure. She has afforded me a field for a career.
For more than four decades I have been intimately related to the inner workings and outward relations of Howard University. I have had five children to earn her college degrees. She has afforded me a basis and back-ground for whatever public influence and reputation I may have attained outside of her mural jurisdiction.
If there is one man alive who ought to style himself a bred-in-the-bone, born-of-the-spirit son of Howard, I am that man.
I never did, and never shall indulge in one word of criticism of Howard University. If my left hand should indicate a word of criticism, my right hand would cut it off; if my tongue utter one such word, my teeth would sever it from its root.
FIGHTS FOR HOWARD'S AIMS AND IDEALS
But I reserve the right to criticise any management of administration which would seem to frustrate her aims and ideals. I have criticised in the past at the price of my own advantage and attainments. At least four administrations have resigned by suggestion or request because they were found wanting in the requisite understanding or suitability. To point out the faults of my administration for the sake of remedying them, if possible, is far different from destructive or obstructive criticism. The republican party is now bitterly denouncing the party and personnel now in charge of the federal government, but the Grand Old Party would be self-branded with treason, if it should say one word against the government itself as ordained by the Constitution. It is a painful task to chastise those whom you love, or to criticise the management of an institution which you cherish and which has nourished you. But my supreme consolation has been that I have not criticised to destroy, but to fulfill.
If there be any obloquy in this ungriecious task, I am willing to endure it. I have never covered the role of a reformer but I may be forced to seek the reformer's only consolation: "Do guess what that I was sent to set things aside."
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1934
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 numbers. Names will not be published if so requested.
The Modern Way to Reach Church Groups is Through The Tribune
To the Editor:
I want to thank you and your staff for the way you are handling our church Christian Endeavor Society news. The whole society is reading The Tribune now. Since I began sending in our news to The Tribune our attendance has increased, services are prepared in advance by our leaders and in fact, I find your paper a great asset to any modern Christian Endeavor Society. The pastor, the Rev. George O. Bullock, is heartedly in favor of The Tribune publishing all news of the Third Baptist Church. On every hand we hear the expression, "I see by The Tribune that we are"——
CLARA REED
I.L.D. Ask $30,000 be Raised by August 31 to Aid Scottsboro Boys.
Editor, of the Tribune:
The decisions of the Supreme Court of Alabama and Georgia, decreeing death for two of the Scottsboro boys and for Angelo Herndon, handed down within a few weeks of each other, mean the ruthless wiping out of every right of life and liberty of the broad masses of the people, white and black—if they are allowed to stand!
The Alabama Supreme Court now crowns the outrageous, frame-up lynch proceedings with this ominous death decision, to be executed on August 31. The Georgia Supreme Court delivers Angelo Herndon—the noble, 19-year-old Negro youth who sought relief for starving white and Negro workers—to the tortures of the chain-gang for 18 to 20 years on August 3.
We must appeal these cases to the U. S. Supreme Court. For the Scottsboro case, $10,000 is required. For the Herndon appeal, $2,000 is needed; to prevent Herndon from being rushed to the chain-gang torture, $15,000 must be raised within two weeks! Cash and liberty bonds for this urgent bail will be held strictly as a loan, to be returned as soon as this bail is released.
With your aid, we have succeeded for over three long years in saving the nine innocent Scottaboro boys. Six times we have defeated the legal lynch sentences. It has cost over $55,000 and heroic, world-wide mass struggle—yes, even the lives of devoted workers, white and Negro. We have just won a stay of execution, but this only gives us a short breathing space in which to file the appeals and develop the urgent defense struggle.
Can we fail these boys now? Now when fascist terror rises against the bitterly oppressed Negro people and against the impoverished white masses as well? We cannot!
The very thought is appalling—that we should fail now, that, these nine innocent tortured boys should burn after all—for lack of a few thousand dollars. Yet that is just what threatens—unless every true friend of justice and freedom for the oppressed responds at once in an extraordinary manner.
You will respond, we confidently hope, to this crucial emergency appeal. Please send the very utmost that you possible can. Do send it quick—Today, to the National Office of the INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE Room 430, 80 E. 11th Street, New York City. Sincerely, and with deep appreciation.
What Other Papers Say
The Only Answer
(From the Columbia, S.C. Record, July 2, 1934)
(From the Columbia, S.C. Record, July 2, 1934)
In the closing hours of the first New Deal congress Senators Wagner, of New York, and Costigan, of Colorado, made a determined effort to get the Wagner-Costigan anti-lynching bill up for action.
It was too late however and the simple objection of Senator Ellison D. Smith, of Carolina, was sufficient to defeat the effort.
It is possible that the bill might have been passed had it been taken up. The Dyer anti-lynching bill, which was the model for the Wagner-Costigan measure, passed the house some years ago and was defeated in the Senate only by one of those eleventh hour fillibusters that the Senate rules provide for.
But the opponents of federal intervention in the lynching problem cannot go on indefinitely depending upon adjournment to save them. The time may come when adjournment will not save. And it will come unless the states themselves demonstrate their ability and willingness to deal with lynchers as all murderers should be dealt with.
The only convincing answer to the arguments of the advocates of the Costigan-Wagner bills and similar measures that the states can and will do nothing about lynchings, that coroner's juries in lynching cases only bring in verdicts blaming "unknown persons," that grand juries will not indict and petit juries will not convict is the arrest, trial and conviction of lynchers when lynchings occur. And not incidentally this is also the way to discourage lynching.
Invictus
Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may be
For my unconquerable soul.
In the fell clutch of circumstance
I have not winced nor cried aloud.
Under the bludgeonings of chance
My head is bloody, but unbowed.
Beyond this place of wrath and tears
Looms but the horror of the shade,
And yet the menace of the years
Finds and shall find me unafraid.
It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the
Over half the farm dwellings in Virginia are valued at less than $1,000, placing the Old Dominion 30th on the list, but still ahead of all southern states.
Over 50,000 farm families in North Dakota are on federal relief rolls as a result of the drought.
More than $1,000 tons of mixed grasshopper bait was delivered to the hopper infested states of the midwest this year.
Tuberculosis among colored people in the large cities has increased over 300 per cent in the last two years.
The NRA An Interpretation
Public Opinion is the Most Powerful Force, Says Roque
This guide has been compiled as a means of assisting the discussion of the aims, methods, and accomplishments of the National Recovery Administration. It may be used either by individual or their own information by adult classes already organized for study. The NRA is itself a forum for the consideration of a variety of points of view. It works largely by means of conferences, and it is one of these deliberations come ways and means of cooperative action.
The NRA is thus a process which uses democratic methods. It provides the means whereby men and groups of men can decide fair rules for the conduct of business. It further sets up machinery whereby the rules may be revised from time to time.
The guide presents a brief interpretation of what the NRA is and also gives information about methods for organizing study groups and forums and other useful data. Inquiries for further information will be welcomed. The values of the great American NRA are be fully and fairly tested only by whole-hearted participation on the part of the people.
1. Why Do We Have the NRA?
"A stricken nation in the midst of a stricken world" was the way President Roosevelt described the country in his inaugural address on March 4, 1933.
"Thedesperate business situation." These were the words used by a group of independent economists describing conditions early in that year.
Nearly all the people were weary, anxious, uncertain. The great depression had affected every man, woman, and child. Millions of workers in industry could find nothing to do. Indeed, according to reliable estimates, 12,000,000 to 15,000,000 were idle. Thousands of others were on part time at low wages. Thousands of young people who never had jobs were eager for their first chance to earn their living, but they did not find it easy to get started. Men with families were given preference. States and cities were breaking their backs, trying to pay the cost of unemployment relief.
As time went on, between 1929 and March 1933, competition between individuals and organization became more keen. Wages were reduced. Prices were cut. In many plants the quality of the products suffered. Sometimes wages and prices were cut more than would have been necessary. Unscrupulous men took advantage of honest and public-spirited men. Industrial standards created during decades had to be abandoned.
“Yet our distress comes from no failure of substance. Plenty is at our doorstep,” the President had said in the inaugural. Distress and plenty—the combination of the two stirred the minds and the hearts of the people. Every community had those who still wanted to do nothing, just let things drift, just trust to “the natural forces.” But their number had been decreasing rapidly.
"I have changed my mind. I believe we ought to try something new and vigorous." Many of us heard friends say it—or perhaps we said it ourselves. "Action and action now"—the words of the President expressed the demands of the people. They wanted recovery, and also a trial of new methods to achieve greater security in the future. The human cost of the old methods had been too great. Congress, in the first sentence of the National Industrial Recovery Act, approved by President Roosevelt on June 16, 1933, described the situation as follows: A national emergency productive of wide-spread unemployment and disorganization of industry, which burdens interstate and foreign commerce, affects the public welfare, and undermines the standards of American people, is hereby declared to exist.
By MANUEL R. ROQUE
Political Analyst and Writer
Major political parties under our elective form of government are the most exacting and most, complicated of human mechanisms.
Although as we know the parties today no outward sign of activity is visible except in times of political stress such as a national or a congressional campaign, their work goes on from day to day, quietly behind the lines with the mechanical precision of an army deploying its forces for a surprise attack on the enemy. And from this there is no let up even after victory is assured and within the grasp of one or the other contestant. Practically every citizen who enjoys the ballot at one time or another is part and parce] of these great organizations.
About the only thing that wields any influence with these organizations is public opinion. Party policies and strategies can be easily altered by this. In fact, public opinion literally dictates just what course a political party is to steer if it wants enough support to get to the home plate ahead of the other. For this reason political leaders of both major parties, and sometimes of the minority parties, are constantly gauging public sentiment to make an issue and a need of support during the heat of a campaign. They either take the offense or the defense as the case may be, but always turning to their own advantage.
What the People Want and Think
The party that knows what the people are thinking has the greatest tool at its command. A party that knows what the people want has the greatest chance to win. Only in isolated cases, especially in local contests do we see wilful avoidance of this fact, and that is in localities where管辖ed cor-
2. The Aims of the NRA
In section 1 of the title 1 of the act, Congress further declared its policy to be—
To remove obstructions to the free flow of interstate and foreign commerce which tend to diminish the amount thereof; and
To provide for the general welfare by promoting for compensation of industry for the purpose of cooperative action among trade groups.
To induce and maintain united action of labor and management under adequate governmental sanctions and supervision.
To eliminate unfair competitive practices.
To promote the finest possible utilization of present productive capacity of industries.
To avoid undue restriction of production (except as may be temporarily required).
To increase the consumption of industrial and agricultural products by increasing purchasing power.
To reduce and relieve unemployment.
To improve standards of labor.
Otherwise to rehabilitate industry to conserve natural resources.
The NRA is one of the governmental agencies engaged in the battle against a great depression. It is also a venture in human cooperation. It asks groups within industry to work together as never before. The NRA tries fully to harness and direct the power that lies in groups of men, in order to attain both recovery and reconstruction.
The NRA aims to carry on economic planning in "a unique and American way." It asks industry to take steps to govern itself, with Government guidance and supervision. Planning in industry is not new in the United States. Every business man has to plan within his own establishment. Various trade associations have functioned for a long time. The new element is that planning has now been begun on a wide scale—that individuals and organizations shall cooperate in dealing with the large and important matters which affect their lives.
"The abundant life" is the aim of the program, the President has said. In practical and immediate terms, he put the purpose as follows: "The law I have just signed was passed to put people back to work—to let them buy more of the products of farms and fectories and start business at a living rate again."
What does this mean in terms of John Doe, who works in a factory which makes shoes? The aim is to give him higher wages and shorter hours. He can then buy more good food, or put his home into better repair, or send his boy to a leisure course. But this does not help John Doe alone. If he can repair his home he assists a carpenter, who in turn assists the lumberman, who in turn buys a new radio, and so on. If the wages of John Doe are raised, something has been done to the whole economic structure. For we are dependent upon one another.
Higher wages, shorter hours, more opportunity for those out of work to start earning again—here are some central purposes.
But there are others perhaps equally important. Destructive and predatory practices are being wiped out and fair competition is being fostered. New rules of the game are being drawn. Greater decency in the way men and groups of men treat each other is being established. Mutual aid is being exalted among men. These aims are being sought by flexible methods. "New constitutions" are being written industry by industry, and varying conditions are reflected in them. (See Bulletin No. 1, National Recovery Administration, Statement by the President of the United States of America Outlining Policies of the National Recovery Administration.) (Continued next week.)
porate interests hold a heavy hand over the popular will of the people with the aid of unscrupulous and subservient politicians. Even in this day and age we have glaring examples of this where the old regime still holds sway over the political rights of the people.
On the national scene no such trespass is possible, although it has been tried unsuccessfully time and again. Shrewd political leaders know only too well that anything that cannot withstand the strong, searching light of public opinion is something to be left alone lest it throw the whole organization out of line and bring the party into disrace
Superficially, almost everything done by a party or a party's administration is dictated by the force of public opinion. The adoption of a platform at a party convention; various orders issued by the President; decisions of courts; rulings of commissions; and even Acts of Congress come as the result of this force.
Party Must Have Persistent Action
However influence strong enough to dictate the policies of a party and a government does not come from singleness of purpose alone or from a single spurt of action. It comes, rather, from consistent and persistent action from day to day and from year to year by well organized bodies of somee sort or other. Social, civic, and trade associations are the most influential agencies at the present moment, each striving to bettear the conditions of the particular group they represent, and "Team-work" within their ranks make this possible when other things fail. Almost every organization of this kind has representatives, sometimes called "lobbyists", in the national capital, and even in the country
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Dead Hand of Authority is Cause of Lag in Education
By Prof. Chas. M. Thomas
If you will accept a word upon your query as to the confusion in education, and the different programs offered by the Negro press and racial leaders among us. I would suggest:
1. Education lags behind the changes in social order because of the dead-hand of authority. Having benefited by the application of science to industry, we use the modern appliances, but do not change so easily our mode of thinking. Since earliest times among organized governments, some man's opinion conflicted of challenged that authority, punishment was quickly dealt out by methods which have varied through the ages. In some instances, the one who dared was killed outright, in others, he was merely offered up as an horrible example to the others of what would happen should any imitate him. It was lynching, and continues even by methods not so brutal as those merely physical but just as deadening to the spirits of men.
Authority rests upon sanction, and so long as the people submit to it, it grows by what it feeds upon. Revolt, by ballot, by, protest, by increasing solidarity among the people affected, and by increasing knowledge and the birth of new generations shakes loose the dead-hand. It is, however, replaced by another promising better end, but soon becomes as irksome as the former.
The history of education is marked by such occurrences, just as the other phases of history, and we are passing through a period of shaking loose such a dead-hand. Men in positions of authority still talk of and think of scholarship, a term applied to a period of shaking loose in the 13th century, when the number ready to receive and apply the
seats telling officials and legislators how they can promote wellbeing for the members of the organization, and votes back home for themselves, if they pass or cause to be passed this or that piece of legislation. The circumstances varies in accordance with whatever may be involved.
An outstanding example of the range of influence of these organizations can be had by looking back a few years when the Anti-Saloon League and the Temperance League of America made constitutional history. For many years these organizations labored day and night to have the government and the American people enact a constitutional amendment prohibiting the manufacture, sale and importation of intoxicants. That they succeeded is a matter of official record, but the case in point is that behind their efforts there was public sentiment as a bulwark. Public sentiment made the people and the government accept what was then considered a much needed reform.
The N.A.A.C.P.'s Strong Action
In our own ken we have the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which reached the pinnacle of its influence when it caused to be set aside a Presidential recommendation for an appointment to the Supreme Court of the United States. In this case, as in many others, massed public opinion turned the trick for the organization by preventing what the organization and its sympathizers believed to be an insult to the colored race.
But these organizations can go so far and no farther. Their success depends largely on the worthiness of their cause and on the benefits that would be derived from whatever they sponsor. There are many of these organizations which do not take the public good for their standard, but who want to further their own interests. These get little or no consideration because what they seek is privilege and privilege is one thing that avoids the spotlight of public opinion.
All of which brings us back to political organizations which are the ones which really respect and appreciate public interest in their workings. We have seen how organized influence is brought to bear on the formulation of party and governmental policies. Wise party men take hold of the prevailing sentiment and begin to analyse it and shape it up for the use of their respective political organization. If the sentiment is of national import, the national committee takes hold of it and begins to apply it to a platform of the party at the next convention. If the sentiment is of state interest the state committee whips it up in readiness for the state convention; and if it is a question confined to the county or to the city, the city and county committees bring it up for consideration at their meetings and information passed up to the state body for additional action.
All these political committees know within their own sphere just how the people feel about certain things politically, which affects them every day, and gauge their possible influence on approaching contests. They leave nothing to chance.
A glimpse behind the lines of political party's organization will give an idea of the tremendous amount of work involved in keeping the machinery in working order from day to day so as to preclude any possible upset or defeat. It is this intelligent green-
discoveries, was very small. But some did apply it, among them Christopher Columbus with what consequences now known even to children. This age calls for mastery. 2. Science has given us an age of mass production, and though we enjoy its products, we do not as yet realize its meaning in the effect upon our lives. Though it was prophesied 1900 years ago in the doctrine of "honor and fame through service", and the call to individual and social efficiency coupled together, we are still striving to over-reach the other fellow in order that we may survive and prosper. Here too we must shake loose the dead-weight of personal selfishness and think in the spirit of co-operation.
"Except ye be as little children", is difficult for habit-formed men and women to realize in action, thought or relation to each other. Co-operation implies just what Henry Ford has proven it to be in giving the masses, the employees and himself more than they had ever before from the same thought and action.
It is the belief that any one of the classes involved can in some way get more than the other, or more than it gives, that prevents the operation of a plan easily spoken, but carried on only by finding the facts, facing the facts, following the facts in sincerity and in truth. That each has a different, but essential part is seen. Thus both education and the economic order are undergoing a readjustment, and the growing pains create an ugly mood. Failure to exercise may prevent the pain, but it will stunt the growth.
All through history social changes have been so affected. Procrastination and postponement are more fatal to progress than prematurity and over-haste of former but such is the attitude of authority. ing of situations, of getting into the mind of the people, and into their heart if necessary, and finding their horrs and needs which has kept only two parties in the forefront of American national politics.
The brains of a major political party is the national committee, which is composed of one man and one woman from each state and territory. They are the ones who steer the ship o their party through the storm of election and through the calm of the intervening three years. They watch at all times over political conditions throughout the country and carry on all affairs of the party by acting as an executive body to the whole organization.
Thee national committee is entrusted with the raising of funds for the campaign and with the responsibility of constantly building up the party on the theory that political victories are not won by a single, last minute outburst of oratory, but by gradual, consistent development from day to day.
In the national convention the committee is the ruling head. It makes practically all the decisions for the seating of the delegates, on which the success of the whole convention depends, and decides time and place for holding the convention. It also performs the all-important task of choosing the temporary chairman and the steering of all committees set up carry the work of the convention over. In other words, the national committee virtually selects the nominee for the Presidency, which if elected will to a large degree carry out the mandate of the people.
By WILLIAM PICKENS
(For A.N.P.)
A line of "relief" victims standing all day in the sun or raining, stretching from the old Y.M.C.A.A. building on 135th Street between Lenox and Seventh Avenues and then up the avenue to 136th Street and beyond. These victims of legal robbery are required to stand for hours and hours, shifting from one sore foot to the other, under the eyes of the police, waiting to enter the old Y.M.C.A.A. building and get a piece of bread. Some of these people are ill; some women carrying babies; some old; some weakened by starvation. But there they must stand, keeping in line for a day, with the thermometer at 90, being punished like a rounded-up gang of felons. Their poverty is a crime, but they did not commit it.
What we want to say is: Every person in that line could be let into the building to wait. The old gymnasium and auditorium and adjoining rooms would hold everyone of them. If you go inside the building you will find a lot of officials, functionaries and chairwarmers occupying space uselessly, cutting their precious red tape inch by inch, while this line of humans outside as if they were being herded there to be fingerprinted, mugged and jailed instead of to be fed a dole of bread. It would be less of a public crime if it were not true that there is plenty of space inside for this waiting line of the victims of enforced poverty. Just let some of those desk-sitters and cushion-warmers move over a little and the people can come inside. Here's something for Harlem newspapers to crusade about. No money in it but a lot of good to be done.
The difference between Rip Van Winkie and most colored folks is that Rip woke up.
BEST NEWS OF THE NATION'S CAPITAL
Wilmington Guests Honored at Cocktail Party
Miss Bernita White gave a cocktail party in honor of Dr. and Mrs. John L. Davidson, of Wilmington, Del., Sunday afternoon, at her residence, 14 Q Street, Southwest. Dr. and Mrs. Davidson are both formerly of this city, the doctor being at one time a druggist in the Southwest section. Guests on the occasion were Misses Mae Harrie, Lillyanne Plummer, Florine Wedge, Marie Crosby, Alma Cooper, Lustine Mosby, Rosa Williams, Mr. and Mrs. William V. Gordon Mr. and Mrs. William Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. David Robinson, Mrs. Elna Howard, Mrs. Jennie White, Messrs. Roger Cole, Henry Nayes, Nelson Poindexter, Roosevelt Sloane Arthur M. Carter, Evelyn Chisley and James Hawkins. Dr. and Mrs. Davidson departed for their home, Monday.
Postal Employees' Wives Hold Grand Beach Party
After an active and prosperous year, the Wives of Postal Employees Club closed for the summer with a beach party Thursday at Sparrows Beach, Md.
The party assembled at 10 a.m. and were conveyed to the beach by a caravan of twelve automobiles. Among the activities of the day were boat riding, games, swimming and feasting on prepared lunches.
Incidentally the day was also the birthday anniversary of the club president, Mrs. Iola Twine. Mrs. Twine praised the club for its unity of spirit and co-operation during the year. The club will convene in October again.
Those present at the resort were Mrs. Iola Twine, Mrs. Grace L. Jackson, Mrs. Maggie Nelson, Mrs. Betty Henderson, Benjamin Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Larry DeLeon, James DeLeon of Philadelphia, James Newman, Edmund Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Jordan, the Rev. and Mrs. Richard Rembert, Mrs. Jennie Evans, Miss Famie Costin, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hackley, Mr. and Mrs. William Westray, Mr. and Mrs. Erskin Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. J W Lucas. Mesdames Bettie Laws, Mammie Jones, Helen Norville, Ida M. Dawley; Misses Dorothy Nelson, Pearl Newman, Elizabeth Tucker, Geraldine Westray, Antoinette Westray, Ethel Norville, Eva Norville Doris Hackley, James, Clayton, Artis and Kenneth Westray, and Russell Hackley.
VISITS NEWPORT NEWS
Mrs. Mattie Jonathan Thurston accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Cora Jonathan, went to Newport News, Va., via the steamer, "District of Columbia." Mrs. Jonathan has been confined to her bed with illness but is now improved. She was the guest of her daughter and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. McEachin while in the Virginia city.
MADRILLIONS
The club held its weekly meeting at the residence of the vice-president, Mrs. Marion Frye, 1426 Twelfth Street, Northwest, Friday night. Cards was the amusement of the evening after plans were made for a trip to Sparrows Beach. Members present were Alice Williams, Marion Clarke, Mildred Smith, Eloise Thomas, Hortense Richardson, Ellena Schields, Plume Richburgh, Thelma Whiteside, Minnie White and Louise Thompson. Honorary members in attendance were Mrs. Ruth Carey and Mrs. Ruby Norton.
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Garrison of Philadelphia, Pa., also attended the Rev. Mr. Gunn's funeral. Several friends from Washington were highly entertained with horseback riding, fishing, hunting games (croquet and tetterball) swimming, and several parties at the country home of Mr. and Mrs. William Tynes at Rectortown, Va. Some of the guests were Misses Elizabeth Lewis, Emma Allen, Dr. and Mrs. Allen and their son Charles, Mr. and Mrs. E. Lewis, Mrs. Lucelle Tipton, Rev. James, and Rev. and Mrs. Gainey.
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Hot Weather Sends Many to the Beaches
By VIVIAN TURNER
Despite the very hot weather for several weeks, short week-end been frequent; picnics at suburban outdoor fetes and card parties have hysteria which accompanies hot weather. Last Saturday evening, a very boat ride and enjoyed a most definite a few who love sports were a number of boxing matches staged Jarvis and John Carter on the same Bids have been issued by the Barbecue at the palatial home of Saturday, August 11, 1934, at 1 p.m of our professional and business given many swanky affairs during make this outing one of the outsta members are Rufus G. Byars, press and Robet Harrison, treasurer; Jer James A. Cobb, Oscar DePriest, C.W. Ernest Jarvis, Capt. Benjamin I. Parks, Tiffany Tolliver, and Garnet
Despite the very hot weather which has held the city in its grip for several weeks, short week-end trips to cool watering places have been frequent; picnics at suburban resorts have been numerous and outdoor fetes and card parties have all served to dispel the nervous hysteria which accompanies hot weather.
Last Saturday evening, a very congenial crowd attended the Kappa boat ride and enjoyed a most delightful cruise down the Potomac. Quite a few who love sports were entertained at Griffith Stadium by a number of boxing matches staged by Dr. W. A. Goodloe, W. Ernest Jarvis and John Carter on the same evening.
Bids have been issued by the DePriest 15 for an Old-Fashioned Barbecue at the palatial home of Jerry Barnes in Forestville, Md., Saturday, August 11, 1934, at 1 p.m. The DePriest 15; made up of many of our professional and business men are well known and have given many swanky affairs during the winter. They are planning to make this outing of the outstanding affairs of the season. The members are Rufus G. Byars, president; S. S. Fletcher, vice-president, and Robet Harrison, treasurer; Jerry Barnes, Dr. S. L. Carson, Judge James A. Cobb, Oscar DePriest, Capt. C. E. Gibson, W. L. Houston, W. Ernest Jarvis, Capt. Benjamin Keyes, Dr. Herbert Marshall, F. E. Parks, Tiffany Tolliver, and Garnet C. Wilkinson.
Enjoys Outing at Colton, Md.
The well-known and popular Odd Card-Whist Club held its annual summer outing at Colton, Md., last Tuesday. The club members with their wives and friends left the city early last Tuesday morning and spent the day boating, swimming and playing horseshoes and baseball.
After dinner, card playing and dancing were featured.
Warren E. Jones acted as master of awards to the teams standing first and second for holding the highest scores during the year. Clark and Vaughn captured the first award and Arthur and Brown, second award.
Those present included Mr. and Mrs. William Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Vaughn, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Arthur, Mr. and Mrs. Mercer Conway, Mr. and Mrs. William Frye, Goosele Brown, Andrew Olfus, Mr. and Mrs. T. Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Mitchell, Sumner Brown, Miss Beatrice Myers, Miss Thelma Fraction, Miss Jaunita Thorne, Miss Ella Mitchell, Mrs. Irene Kerr, Warren E. Jones, Milton Edwards and Laurence Williams.
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The Senior Choir of Second Baptist Church will close their season, Sunday night, July 29, at 8 o'clock with a song service assisted by the following: Mrs. Maggie W. Smoot, contralto; Oberlert Holmes, tenor; Harry Booker, organist. The annual outing will be held, Saturday, August 11, at Sparrows Beach. Pearl M. Flipper is organist and W. Scott Mayo is choirmaster.
Many prominent Washingtonians were seen at the closing exercises of the R.O.T.C. at Fort Washington, Md., last week. Among those present were: Dr. W. Thompkins, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Houston, Dr. Ulysses Houston, Dr. and Mrs. Walter Simmons, Dean L. K. Dowling and family, J. A. Lankford and family, Miss Julia Davis, Mrs. Rosetta Robinson, Mrs. Luella Cox, Mrs. Bessie Patterson and mother, Mrs. Justine Greene and Mrs. Ruth Armstead.
Messrs. Harry Brown and William Paul, prominent business men of Jamaica, N.Y., were in the city, last week attending a Code Meeting at the Washington Hotel. While here they were the recipient of many social courtesies.
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Lankford,
their daughter, Mrs. Josephine
Johnson and her two children were
seen enjoying the breezes at Highland Bach, last Sunday. Mrs. Johnson was quite stunning in one of the latest style rubber bathing suits.
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Simmons entertained a number of friends at a delightful beach dinner party, last Sunday. Among those present were: Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lankford, Mrs. Lula Leachman, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gordon and niece, Mrs. Edna French, Mrs. Mattie Handy and Charles Sagar.
Prof. Addison Richmond, instructor in the Engineering Department of Howard University has returned to the city with his wife and son after a delightful motor trip through Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, visiting relatives.
Mrs. Margaret Jetter Adams, of 1719 Second Street, Northwest, has been indisposed for several days this week.
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which has held the city in its grip trips to cool watering places have a resorts have been numerous and we all served to dispel the nervousather. congenial crowd attended the Kappa sightful cruise down the Potomac, entertained at Griffith Stadium by l by Dr. W. A. Goodloe, W. Ernest e evening. DePriest 15 for an Old-Fashioned Jerry Barnes in Forestville, Md., m. The DePriest 15; made up of men are well known and have the winter. They are planning to ending affairs of the season. The dent; S. S. Fletcher, vice-president,ry Barnes, Dr. S. L. Carson, Judge apt. C. E. Gibson, W. L. Houston, Keyes, Dr. Herbert Marshall, F. E. C. Wilkinson.
Bishop John Gregg was in the city, last week, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lankford. Bishop Gregg came over from Baltimore where he officiated at the funeral services of Bishop Sampson Brooks.
Mrs. Algernon Jackson, of 213 Florida Avenue, Northwest, who has been in Media, Pa., on account of the illness of her mother has returned to the city.
Dr. Jocelyn Mitchell is back in the city after several days vacation in Atlantic City, N.J.
The New Orleans University Club have planned their annual outing for August 4, at Sparrows Beach. Boyd Clark is president, and Samuel Anderson, business manager.
Mesdames Bessie D Vaughn and
Carrie Boyd have returned from a
pleasant trip to Chicago, Ill.
Dr. J. E. Trigg, of 1248 Fairmont Street, Northwest, has been confined to his room for several days. He is improving rapidly.
HI-HO GIRLS CLUB
The club met at the residence of Miss Leona Bana, 2227 Virginia Avenue, Northwest, Wednesday. Those present included three new candidates for membership, Misses Naomi Jones, Thelma Hull and Audrey Shields. A repast was served by Misses Ethel McCain and Sarah Fuller.
DIPLOMATS CLUB. No. 1
The second monthly meeting of the Diplomats Club, No. 1, was held at the 1 Street home of Mrs. Mattie Toliver, Friday evening. Members present were Mrs. L. Patrick, M. Robinson, C. Young, F. Greene, S. Dodson, M. Toliver and G. Rich. Regrets were expressed over the illness of a member. Mrs. Rosa Conly. The next meeting will be held August 8rd at the residence of Mrs. Tillie Brown, 4220 Lane Place, Northeast.
HIGH ACE BRIDGE CLUB
Mrs. Frances Thomas was hostess to the club at a lawn party at her home, 212 Fiftieth Street, Northeast, Saturday. Those present were Mesdames Ruth Walsh, Elsie Horton, Alpha Salter, Effie James, Beatrice Davis, Marie Tasby, Elizabeth Bizzell, Marguerite Cooke, Frances Thomas, Misses Irma Cliff and Rose Connellly. The prizes were awarded to Marguerite Cooke, first, Effie James, second, Alpha Salter, third, and Elsie Horton guest prize. The next meeting will be held at the home of Marie Tasby.
HOW COME WHIST CLUB
The How Come Whist Club held its regular meeting at the residence of Henry Bolden, 1742 Gresham Place, Northwest. Jerry Tolbert was the leading member of the club. Lewis Smith became a member. The club will hold its next meeting at the residence of Lloyd Dutch.
FLEUR4DE-LIS SOCIAL CLUB
The club held its weekly meeting Monday at the residence of Mrs. Eleanor Elsby, 301 R Street, Northwest, at which time a date for a crab feast was set. The feast will be given jointly by the club and the Georgetown A. C. on August 2. Members present were Miss Mildred Springs, Miss Inez Whitlock, Mrs. Sarah Taylor, Mrs. Mary Whitlock and Mrs. Florine Ashford.
IMPERIAL SOCIAL CLUB
The club held its regular semi-monthly meeting Thursday at the residence of its secretary, Vernie Rucker, 1741 T Street, Northwest. Amongt hose present were William Dunn, L. A. Paige, Vernie Rucker, Margaret Rucker, Doretha Mart, Catherine Dotson, Inez Thompson, George McKenney, James Braxton, Victoria Callahan, and Theodore Copeland, the latter two guests.
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THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1934
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Jordan, 1901 Fifteenth Street, Northwest, was in the city over [the week-end. Mrs. Jordan is attending summer school] at Lincoln University while her husband, Mr. Jordan, is at Virginia Union University.
Mrs. Ethel Harris Grubbs, head of the mathematics department in the local public schools spent the week-end here. Mrs. Grubbs returned to Teachers's College University, Sunday.
Mrs. Willie Newlin of this city is recuperating at the Minis Cottage at Highland Beach, Md., after several weeks' illness. She is accompanied by Mrs. Alice D. Anderson and her two little daughters, Jean and Alice, 724 Columbia Road, Northwest.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Oger of Brooklyn, New York were guests in the city a few days, visiting his parents and friends. They were on their way home after spending a considerable length of time at the World Fair in Chicago. They were entertained very highly while here in the city by their many friends.
Mr. Fernando Oger of this city, who has been attending college at St. Augustine's College, Raleigh, N.C., was in the city for a few days visiting his mother and family. Mr. Oger is a senior at St. Augustine's College and is a member of the Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. While in the city he was honored at many affairs given by his friends and some of his fraternity brothers.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Dickerson spent the past week in Pittsburgh, visiting their son who is ill.
Ernest Edwards has just returned from a week's vacation in Pittsburgh.
Mrs. Laura Elizie of New York City, and formerly of this city, spent the week-end with her sister, Mrs. Daisy L. Booker, 402 Sixth Street, Northwest.
James Cain and his son, James, Jr., left Sunday evening for Fayetteville, N. C. where they will spend two weeks with Mrs. Cain's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter McLaurin.
Vincent Augustus Bunch, Jr., 831 Forty-eighth Street, Northeast, left last week to spend the summer with his grandmother at Darlington, S. C.
Mrs. Ruby M. Johnson and son of 1125 Columbia Road, Northwest, left Thursday for Jacksonville, Florida, where they are the house guests of Mrs. Naomi Grant Peek. Mrs. Peek was formerly Mrs. Walter H. Mazyck.
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Ezell entertained recently at the Republic Garden in honor of Dr. and Mrs. J. S. Wells, of Kansas City, and Dr. and Mrs. H. L. Stevens, of Washington. Mrs. Stevens has recently returned from Georgia State College where she taught winter and summer school.
Dr. and Mrs. J. S. Wells, of General Hospital No. 2, Kansas City, spent their vacation visiting his father and brother in Chester, Pa. and relatives in Washington. While in the city they were the house guests of Mrs. Rosa Reed, of 1525 Q Street, Northwest. They will visit the World's Fair in Chicago before returning home.
Miss Beulah J. Gambrell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Gambrell, who spent two enjoyable weeks with friends in New York is now at her home, 1241 Irving Street.
Messrs J. Wallace Brown, Stanley Riley, Edward Lucas, Mr. and Mrs. William R. McKeeven, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Grace, Mrs. Carrie Twyman, Mrs. Grace Riley, motorized to the latter's home in Spring Hill, Virginia, last Sunday, where they held a picnic. The company included Mrs. Isabelle Lewis, Miss Catherine Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. James Lewis.
Miss Virginia Fowler, 1507 6th Street, Northwest, who was vice president of the June graduating class of the Dunbar High School, is spending her vacation on Lookout Mountain, Tenn. with her uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. Fred D. Hudson, 209 Wautauga Lane. Before returning home, she will also visit relatives and friends in Marletta and Atlanta, Georgia.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmore W. Bradford and daughters, Vivian and Herline, motored from Florence, S. C. to visit Gerard Bradford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bradford, and Mr. Bradford's mother, Mrs. Eliza Flager, at 1423 Q Street Northwest. They spent two weeks here with relatives and friends. Walter Grisby, of the Brown Buddles Social Club, has returned to the city after an extended vacation visiting friends in New York and New Jersey. J. Lewis of New York and Herbert Lindsay motoring back to the northern city stopped in Washington to visit Miss Fontaine and Mrs. Swann Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Akers, 802 Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest, have Mr. Milner and Miss Perry of Norfolk, Va., as guests this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Holmes of Tallahassee, Fla., motored here to attend the funeral of Mrs Holmes's father, the Rev. Archer H. Gunn.
Social Affairs
By CAPITOLA
shingtonians to Cedar Haven
Many Washingtonians Motor to Cedar Haven
ycles, 11.4
Mrs. Valentine D. Waddill and her little daughter Shirley Elaine, of 2223 Thirteenth Street, Northwest, left the city this week for Lynchburg, Virginia, where they will spend a portion of their vacation.
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Mr. and Mrs. Charles, Pegram, accompanied by their daughter, Mrs. Rosebud P. Manhood, of Petersburg, Virginia, motored to the city last week and spent a few days as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Burrell.
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Dr. Numa D. Adams, dean of the Medical School of Howard University, motored to Norfolk, Virginia last Sunday. While there he met a group of Norfolk physicians and visited the Community Hospital. He made a short talk to the doctors on the present trends in medicine. Dr. Adams was the guest of Dr. H. Hamilton Francis while in Norfolk.
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Miss Zenobia Madison, who has been the house guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs R. W. Finney, of Norfolk, Virginia, has returned home after a pleasant vacation.
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Mrs. Marie Lomax is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A Allen, in Norfolk - Virginia.
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Dr. J. Maxwell Allen, a graduate of the Howard University Dental School, class '31, recently passed the examination of the Virginia State Dental Board. Dr. Allen is a native of Newport News, Virginia, and plans to practice in his home town.
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Attorney and Mrs. E. L. Johnson of Indianapolis, Indiana, who were called to Washington because of the illness of their aunt, Mrs. Martha A. Johnson, returned home last week.
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Mr. nd Mrs. George H. Clark and little George, Jr., spent a brief vacation in Newport News, Virginia, visiting with relatives and friends,
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Mrs. Virginia Smootz Reeves, Mrs. Inez Murphy, Mrs. Ruth Wilson and Mrs. Ellen Caldwell spent several days last week in Philadelphia, and Atlantic City, where they enjoyed the beach and several of the night clubs. The party made the trip by motor. While in Atlantic City, they were the guests of Magistrate Poole.
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Raymond Marshall of Kansas City, Mo., returned home last week after a visit with Dr. William J. Thpomkins, recorder of deeds.
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Mrs. Mary Butcher and daughter Doris, attended the wedding and reception of Miss Eunice Kinney who was married to Isaac Fleets in Detroit, Michigan.
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J. Finley Wilson, grand exalted ruler of the Elks of the World, will be the special guest of honor Virginia, at the annual emancipation celebration, being sponsored by Otha Boon Lodge, No. 931, in Boston Mass., next week. Lodges from New England, New York and New Jersey will also be represented The celebration will take place at Crescent Park.
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Miss A. Roberta Smootz and Mrs. Virginia Smootz Reeves received word last week that their step-father, Edward Holland of Huntington, West Virginia, had died suddenly. Mr. Holland was a
Many Washi Motor to C
Many Washington people motorized to Cedar Haven during the past week to visit friends and to enjoy a swim in the Patuxent River. Miss M. C. Hall, of Washington and New Jersey, was the guest of Mrs. Gertrude Edwards and family at their lovely cottage.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Budd, Mr. and Mrs. Norwood and little Miss Rose Marie Norwood, Norman H. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Nixon Mr. Fisher and Mrs. Reid, were guests of the Wood-thro-lite Club Miss Riss Moore, of Harrisburg Pa., who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Fields for the past two weeks, returned home with Mr. and Mrs. Fields who were called to Pennsylvania by the death of Mrs. Fields's father.
Miss Cortney Thomas, of Washington, was the charming hostess to a party of 32 guests at the La Vonne Inn. The Inn was formerly the Cedar Haven Hotel. The Rev. and Mrs. Gooden, of Washington, and Dr. and Mrs. Coleman, of Brooklyn, N.Y., were recent guests at the Inn.
The Progressive Club of Campbell A.M.E. Church, spent a delightful day on the beach and visited the Inn for dinner, last Tuesday. Among those present were: R. Long, president; B. Penn, secretary; E. Harrod, treasurer and E. Ball, R. Stewart, J. Taylor, A. Dale, E. Jones, J. Smith, G. Lyles, T.
prominent figure in Republican circles throughout the state of West Mrs. Callie Gerald of 1316 W Street, Northwest, left Monday for Florida and the Gulf Coast, where she will spend her vacation with relatives and friends.
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Mrs. Robert Anderson is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Trent, of Long Island City, New York.
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At the testimonial dinner given in honor of R. P. Hamlin, retiring State Y.M.C.A. secretary of New Jersey at Bordentown last week, Campbell C. Johnson, of the local Y.M.C.A., and George B. Murpry of the Baltimore Y.M.C.A. were named members of the Findings Committee, to serve with Hilmar L. Jensen, secretary of the Trenton Community Y.M.C.A.
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Mrs. James Thomas has returned from Woodville, Virginia, where she spent several days visiting with her cousin James Taylor, Sr.
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Miss Florine V. Bell, of Boston, Mass., is spending her vacation in the Capital as the house guest of Mrs. H. J. Canley, of Forty-fourth Street, Northeast.
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Mrs. Mollie Lewis Keelan, formerly of Washington, died in New York City, last week. Mrs. Keelan who was at one time a school teacher in Boston, Mass., lived for a number of years on T Street, in the Capital, and made the acquaintance of numerous friends while here. She leaves a daughter, Hattie, and a son, Harry, who also lived in Washington, attending the public schools of the District.
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Dr. Charles E. Burch, associate professor of English at Howard University, is spending his vacation in Bahama, shark fishing.
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Dr. Alonzo DeG. Smith, former pediatrician in New York City, and now on the faculty of the Medical School of Howard University, is studying this summer at Columbia University. Mrs. Smith plans to join her husband in New York before the close of the summer session.
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Miss Phinicie Mene Skinner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Skinner, of Detroit, Mich., was married last week to Robert Thomas, of Washington. The wedding was solemnized at Hartford Avenue S.D.A. Church, the Rev. J. H. Laurence, officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas will make their home in Washington, where Mrs. Thomas is employed in the public school system of the District. Mrs. A. E. Webb, Miss Vernon Henry and Fitzgerald Jenkins, all of Washington attended the wedding in Detroit.
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Miss Effie P. Simmons, her niece, Josephine E. King; Mrs. Lillian Curtis, her daughter, Mildred; Mrs. Rebecca Talbert, her daughter, Jackquelyn; and Dr. Q. Bernard King will motor to East Brooklyn, Mass., this week, where the girls will attend Camp Atwater, during the month of August. Dr. King will return to Washington immediately.
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Mrs. Theola Robinson is spending an indefinite vacation in Boston. Mass., as the guest of Mrs. Ella Whiting.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Clarke and son, and Mrs. J. C. Wilkerson were recent guests at Parker Lodge, Montrose, N.Y.
Dale, J. Weems, M. Ball, L. Mc. Pherson, B. Mayo, H. Penn, M. Grandy, L. Penn, J. Penn, and S. Socks.
MANY DINE AT
BRINKLOW INN
Many Washingtonians dined at the Brinklow Inn, located in Maryland just a few miles drive from the city. Sunday. Those included were Dr. and Mrs. Hamilton S. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Grayer Williams, the Rev. and Mrs. Leon Wormley, Dr. and Mrs. John Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Montero, Grayer Williams, Jr., and Miss Dorothy Simmons, Leonard Hill and Miss Addie Bruce.
CLUB CARLTON
Members of the Club Carlton held their annual outing last Tuesday. The committee in charge consisted of Anna M. Washington, Nettie Glanton, and Andrew Garnett. officers of the club are Harrison Washington, president; Nettie Glanton, vice president; Gertrude Dunlap , secretary; Andrew Garnett, treasurer; Maurie Robinson, business manager; Florence Logan, social chairman; Thelma Glanton, chaplain and Anna M. Washington, sergeant-at-arms.
EAGLE HARBOR BEACH EAGLE HARBOR, MD.
Surprise Party Tendered Arthur James by "Gang"
Bv WASHINGTON TASBY
Arthur James was surprised with a birthday party by his wife, Mrs. Arthur James of 5100 East Capital Street, Capital View, Friday.
A phone call for Mr. James to play cards at a nearby neighbor's home took him away and that is how it all began.
The house being lighted aroused no suspicion on his return to the "House of Seven Gables." He could not convince himself that it was his birthday.
The dining room was beautifully decorated with cut flowers. A huge cake graced the table inscribed "Happy Birthday." All went well until "Doctor" Brown arrived with his medicine. The highballs, cocktails and what have you were his guaranteed remedies and were they pleasing and palatable.
Mr. James seemed to get more and more interested in his party as the night grew older. To show his gratitude to his wife, he sang the refrain of two old favorites, "When My Hair Has Turned To Silver," and "Darling I Am Growing Old." Many of the "our gang" party graced the dining room, the ladies in the latest of fashions. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Cousins of the "our gang" came back to the fold and made a solemn vow to never again go astray.
The others wishing Mr. James a long, happy, and prosperous life were Mr. and Mrs. Tasco Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bizzell, Mr. and Mrs. James Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Allen, Mr. and Mrs. James Salter, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Allan, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Dickerson, Mr. and Mrs. W. Tasby Ernest Salter and J. Scott.
Easy Aces Hold Outing ..... at Brinklow Inn .....
The Easy Aces Bridge Club held an outing at the Brinklow Inn in nearby Maryland Saturday. In a setting of yellow and green colors, the group played bridge until dusk and then enjoyed a dinner. Guests were Mrs. Nona Walker, Mrs. Queenan, Powell, Mrs. Eva. Green, Miss Hattie Minkins, Miss Frankie Stanley and Miss Mattie Ridley. Club Members present were Mesdames Arnette Fagan, Lillian Paxton, Ida Jordan Florence Miller, Mabel Ridley, Alma Jones, Leola Kennedy, Eleanor Rhine and Miss Essie Hebbron.
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Mrs. Carrie Stuckey was the hostess at a birthday party given in her honor by her family last Monday at her residence, 211 Fifty-seventh Street, Northeast.
The guests enjoyed dancing and cards. The color scheme of the decorations was pink and green.
Mrs. Stuckey received many beautiful and useful gifts among which was a new Ford car presented her by her husband.
Among the guests were:
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. Austin Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dorsey, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Bracey, Mr. and Mrs. George Clipper, Mr. and Mrs. William Studivant, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Atkins,
Mr. and Mrs. W. Smith, Misses Ida Roberts, Rosa Williams, Edith Stevenson, Francis Dorsey, Nettie Bell, E. Wiley, Mary Burton, Manuel Davis, James Funches, Calvin White, Charles Green, Allen Colbert, A. Stewart, J. Maker, P. Brooks, J., Zander Lee Ingram,
GIVES BIRTHDAY PARTY
A party in honor of his fortieth birthday was given by Harry Richards at his home, 1426 First Street, Southwest, Saturday night. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. John Ellis, Albert Barton, Austina Smilar, Miss Florence Miles, Jordan Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth West, Melvin Jackson, Leon Taylor, Walter Jennigan, Alfred Jackson, Charlie Young, Helen Murd, Robert Rich and Harold Reynolds.
TO GIVE OUTING
The Allied Democratic Clubs of the District of Columbia will give their first outing at Surburban Gardens on Labor Day. Speakers of both races will take part on the program, according to Mack D. Rowe, general manager of the organization.
SURPRISE BIRTHDAY PARTY
A surprise party was given in honor of the birthday of Mrs. Virginia Dent at her apartment, 1326 M Street, Northwest. The home was beautifully decorated and many useful gifts were received.
TEETH
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$10 - $85
EXTRACTIONS
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Fillings, $1 up
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MODERN PAIN PREVENTING
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DR. HARRIS
1342 U St., N.W. North 2123
Opposite Republic Theatre
Tribune Guest Tickets
If your name appears on the society pages of The Tribune followed by an asterick (*), call in person at The Tribune Office, 920 U Street, Northwest, before Tuesday, and you will receive a ticket to any of the theatres listed free of charge. Theatres which you may visit on these tickets together with the names of the pictures or stage shows are as follows:
Lincoln—Joan Crawford in "Sadie McKee."
Booker T.—Anna Sten In "Nana."
Dunbar—See week's bill on theatre page.
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Nemderoloc Social Club Inc.
will be held on Sunday, July 29th, 1934, at the Spacious Club House located at 1602 Vermont Avenue, N.W., at which opening the public is cordially invited to attend and view the spacious and commodious quarters of the Club. This club was incorporated for the social and educational enjoyment of the members. Friday nights have been designated as "Ladies' Night," at which time the members of the club may bring their wives and friends, and enjoy the hospitality in dancing and card playing.
The membership being limited, it is advisable that an early application may be filed. Cards for such may be obtained either by calling at the club house or by addressing a postal to the ManagerMr. E. W. Dale, at 1602 Vermont Avenue N.W.
SIX
HAMMER ATTACK ON WOMAN CAUSES MAN'S ARREST
Police Hold James Walker Pending Outcome of Injuries to Mate
Police, Sunday, booked James Walker, 28, of an address in Prather's Court, on an open charge of investigation following his arrest in connection with an alleged attack on his wife, Mrs. Sarah Walker, during a siege of drunkness and jealousy, earlier in the day.
Until Wednesday, no definite charge had been recorded by police of the First Precinct, where Walker is being held. Police are awaiting the outcome of Mrs. Walker's injuries.
Dr. Virgil Dorsett (white), Emergency Hospital physician, declared at a late hour Wednesday, that the woman was in a greatly improved state, and that little fear was held for her complete recovery.
Headquarters Detective Clyde N. Strange, assigned to investigation of the case, told The Tribune that Walker attacked his wife with a hammer. He stated that the man set upon the woman during a state of inebriation, accusing her of relation with other men. She was found, severely beaten, by a First Precinct patrolman who was attracted to her house by her groans. The detective further state that he doubted that Mrs. Walker would prosecute her husband.
SKEPTICISM
SKEPTICISM
(Continued from page 1)
he fired a shot which felled him.
None of the other witnesses have
was drunk at the time of the at-
inquiry.
The inquiry set for the Bladens-
burg Fire House, Tuesday night,
was postponed on order of Judge
O'Neill. Mr. Lawson, accompanied
by Mrs. Robert L. McGuire, presi-
dent of the N.A.A.C.P., was on
hand at the postponement.
Lawver Becomes Suspicious
Wednesday morning, however, when Stevens' family was notified to go to the District Morgue and claim the body, Attorney Lawson immediately began an investigation of the affair. According to him, it is very unusual for the government to demand that a body be claimed by relatives for burial before the coroner's jury has had an opportunity to view it and conduct an inquiry.
Attorney Lawson is guarding against any possible trickery. He stated that he believed Stevens was drunk at the time of the attempted escape and the ensuing shooting. In that case, he held, the officer's fire would not have been justifiable.
In his anxiety to determine whether or not Stevens had been drinking, Mr. Lawson requested, late yesterday (Wednesday) that an autopsy be performed at the District Morgue where Stevens' body is at present.
A great many people go to church in Chicago—most of them are pall bearers
The best time to win freedom by good behavior is before you get in jail.
Mrs. Elizabeth Gray Buried in Rocky Mount, N. C. CONDITIONS IN
Last rites for Mrs. Elizabeth Gray, who died at her late residence, 1421 S Street, Northwest, Saturday were held Tuesday from the Mount Gilead Baptist Church. The body was shipped to Rocky Mount, N. C., for burial immediately after the funeral.
Mrs. Gray is survived by a son, Charles L. Jones; four grandchildren, Christine, Elizabeth, Wilhelmina and Charles Jones; a brother, Carmel Grant, and eight nieces.
VETERAN TEACHER STRICKEN WHILE RIDING TROLLEY
Dr. Alexander B. Coleman Dies on Way to Hospital from Intense Heat
Funeral services for Dr. Alexander R. Coleman, far the past 40 years a teacher in local schools, were held Wednesday from the McGuire Funeral Home, 1820 Ninth Street, Northwest, followed by burial in the Harmony Cemetery. Dr. Coleman died suddenly Saturday while en route to the Emergency Hospital. Stricken while riding a street car at Seventh and F Streets, Northwest, the 50-year-old teacher was taken from the car and rushed to the hospital but succumbed on the way. Heat prostration is belived to have been the cause of his death.
Dr. Coleman, who lived in the 1480 block of Q Street, Northwest, was a native of the city, educated in local public schools and Howard University from which institution he received his degree in pharmacy. While he has been employed for sometime in that profession, he was most widely known as teacher, having served last at the Ambush-Bushmallwood School. He had been a member of Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church for 40 years. He held membership in Eureka Lodge No. 5, of Masons, Surviving him are a sister, Mrs. Daisy C. Arnold, and two brothers, John H., of Chicago, and Robert W. Coleman, of Baltimore, Md.
WIFE GIVEN
(Continued from page 1 )
spring of 1927, she intercepted a letter from the co-respondent to her husband. This relationship, she said, continued until the fall of 1931 when it became so intolerant that she was compelled to take steps to protect herself and her daughter. The first measure of redress in the courts was sought shortly thereafter.
National Parent-Teacher Association to Meet
BALTIMORE—During the week July 29-August 4, the Congress of Parent Teachers' Associations will meet here. The program includes general sessions in the mornings and evening and departmental sessions afternoon. An entire floor has been reserved for exhibits by publishers and dealers in school supplies, and a special exhibit of magazines and other students publications in colored schools.
SCHOOL EXPOSED
SCHOOL EXPOSED
(Continued from page 1)
known in "Tin Can" as Black Bass Drum. In describing he holds his job the author writes "by licking the boots above him and kicking the backs of those below, and by never walking upright where it would gain him a point to crook his spine physically, the black principal gained and held his job."
Was Leading Negro
"He prided himself on three things: that he was a leading Negro—that is to say—he had been placed at the head of a school; he could never cease to marvel that though his skin was jet black his children had managed to be born with tawny skins, slightly darker than their fair mother's. Finally, he could not forget that he was the first black man born in a certain college town to graduate from a famous college.
"Anything that did not contribute to these conceits, simply did not exist to the Black Bass Drum." "You could not make him understand that something besides formal speeches should be done about the fact that there was a gang of boys in his school who stole everything from everybody. No teacher could persuade him that instead of sending in inflated reports full of absolutely nothing—to the higher ups—somebody ought to appeal to someone to stop the growing morace of the spread of social diseases among students. He closed his eyes to the annual crop of unmarried mothers in the senior class, blamed the teachers because the general scholarship was unsusceptable low—and never admitted that he had any vital part in all these problems but to lead where his narrow soul dictated.
A Fool Ostrich
"He was not so much a black bass drum as he was the fool ostrich, sticking his head into a hollow hole—the height and depth of his particular brain capacity—while an overwhelming world and ocean full of a million new conditions were sweeping up on him." Then Mrs. Occoy describes the girl in "Tin Can" who was going with Jimmy Boy. "This Caroline was not fair. She would have been just white girl if she had been. Instead, she was a golden reddish brownish shade. She was dimpled and smooth and clear. Her eyes were black and thick-lashed and her mouth took rouge with a pouting insolence. She dressed beautifully, neatly, smartly and daintily though she got her clothes by the nastiest possible means.
"And her love affairs—or affairs of sex—it would be far better to call them—had given her a subtle languor as well as a confident seductive dash—and a body well filled with unmentionable disease." The second installment of "Tin Can" appears next month and is awaited with abated breaths in Washington. The story is a sensational expose of conditions in high schools in large cities.
CATHOLIC NEWS
Preparations are going on in Philadelphia for the coming Convention to be held there September 1, 2, 3. The Washington chaper of the Federation is holding a special meeting August 5 at the Holy Name Guild. All delegates are urged to be present. St. Cyprian's alumni sponsored a lawn party Tuesday night on the lawn and hall of St. Cyprian's A large crowd turned out, and the affair was quite a success. St. Cyprian's Parent School Club will make its usual trip to Baltimore. It is an annual affair of the club to pay a visit to the Sisters at Francis Convent, the mother house of the Oblate Sister of Providence. The date is Sunday, August 5.
The Father Burgess Chapter of the Federated Colored Catholics at a special meeting deigned to hold the annual outing at Sparrow's Beach, on Sunday, August 19. Miss Addie Marshall, who is the chairman of the Committee of Arrangement reported that the Community Center Band will accompany the chapter. Buses will leave from various churches. Further information will be found in later issues of The Tribune.
TEETH
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$1.00 Per Week
Act TODAY as only a Limited
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EXTRACTIONS, $1.00
DR. H. W. HARRIS
1342 U. ST., N.W. N. 2123
Opposite Republic Theatre
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THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1934
American Civil Liberties Union Makes Report
Serious hardships to Negroes are reported in "Liberty under the New Deal," the recently published annual report, from June, 1933 to June, 1934, of the American Civil Liberties Union.
"Negro workers under the NRA," the report says, "find themselves at the disadvantage of being unable to organize in many of the A.F. of L. unions and therefore being unable to bargain collectively with their employers. Further, the New Deal has established a wage differential in the South with lower wage standard obviously based on keeping Negro workers in their place."
Two of the most shocking cases of injunction in the country, cited by the report, involved Negroes days for violating which, Herndor young organizer of the unemployed rests in prison under the longest conviction for political opinions since the war." Six other organizers, two of them Negroes, are out on bond awaiting trial in Atlanta under the statute of reconstruction days or violating which, Herndor was sentenced to from 18 to 20 years. The Scottsboro Negro boys, the Union declares, remain "international symbols of 'black justice in southern Courts.' Both these are being handled by the International Labor Defense with the A.C.L.U. co-operating in publicity and fund raising.
The Union took an active part in the fight against lynching and mob violence. A leaflet supporting the Wagner-Costigan federal anti-lynching bill was widely distributed and members of the American Civil Liberties Union were urged to press for the passage of the bill.
LOCAL DELEGATES TO LEAVE FOR CHURCH COUNCIL
Bishops Matthews, Jones Among Group to Go From District
The Connectional Council of the A.M.E. Zion Church will meet in Asheville, N.C., August 1 to 3, and the General Church School Convention at Knoxville, Tenn., August 7-12.
Among the delegation going from Washington are the following:
Bishop and Mrs. W. W. Matthews, Bishop E. D. W. Jones, Dr Thomas W. Wallace, Dr. H. T. Medford, Dr. T. W. Alstork, Mrs Ida V. Smith, Dr. and Mrs. W. O. Carrington, Mr. and Mrs. George L. Fauntleroy, Miss Amelie R. Harris, Mrs. Elizabeth Brooks, Mrs. Mamie Stokes, Mrs. Daisy Grimes, Miss Myrtle Jackson, Prof. C. H. Anderson, and Dr. and Mrs. Victor J. Tulane, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brooks, Mrs. Nellie Burton, Miss Gladys Seldon, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, Miss Sylvia Chase.
These Connectional meeting will call together the church leaders, the youth and patrons interested in youth leadership and betterment, from all sections of the country.
PILGRIM A. M. E. CHURCH
The order of service for Sunday will be Sunday School at 9:45 a.m., preaching by the Rev. A. C. Carroll at 11 a.m., and a sermon at 8 p.m. by a speaker who will be announced.
Women's Day was observed at the church Sunday when the Rev. Mrs. M. Green speaking on the subject, "Daughters of Zion." Miss Nan F. Cade of Georgia also participated on the program. In the afternoon a musical and literary program was rendered with Mrs. Annie M. Turner serving as mistress of ceremony. Others who took part were Mrs. Hattie Smith, Mrs. Gertie Green, Mrs. M. Johnson, Mrs. C. Lewis, Mrs. S. Madge and Mrs. Lula Hunter.
At night, the Rev. Mrs. L. Smith preached on "As an Eagle Stirs Her Nest." Mrs. M. A. Porter, Mrs. S. Nash, Mrs. M. Fisher, Mrs. E. Carroll also were on the program. Mrs. B. B. Butcher, general chairman and Mrs. Inez House, Mrs. Ida Colbert, and Mrs. Lottie Ayers, assistant chairman reported a realization of $107 from the effort.
The Rev. C. S. Butcher pastor, is visiting his parents in Pittsburgh over the week end. The regular week's program with prayer meeting Tuesday, class night Thursday, and choir rehearsal Friday will be carried out. Beginning Saturday the stewards of the church are giving a watermelon feast each week.
Bulgaria having turned Fascist,
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Victor Emmanuel.—Wichita Eagle.
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JERSEY PHYSICIAN DIES HERE AFTER A LONG ILLNESS
Dr. John T. Williams of Morristown Was Graduate of Yale University
Funeral services for Dr. John Taylor Williams, 58, for years a prominent physician in Morristown, N. J., were held from his late residence, 804 Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest, Tuesday afternoon, with the Rev. Halley H. Taylor, pastor of Fifteenth Street Presbyterion Church officiating. Interment was at the Lincoln Memorial Cemetery. Dr. Williams died Saturday after an illness of nearly four years' duration. Stricken in Morristown in October, 1929, Dr. Williams suffered in a hospital of that city for sixth months, later returning to his home for recuperation. Three months later he came to Washington and took residence at the home of Mrs. Lottie Taylor, 804 Rhode Island Avenue, Northwest, where the end came.
A native of Frankfort, Ky., Dr. Williams received his elementary education there. He later studied at Harvard College and graduated from Yale University. He also held a degree in medicine from the University of Marquette.
SOUTHEAST GROUP FORMS SELF-HELP UNIT AT GIDDINGS
Committees Named at Opening Meeting; Miss Ivy Taylor is Chairman
Over 200 persons were present at the first meeting of Southeast citizens at the Gittings School, Tuesday night, when an organization which will come under the self-help programs to be developed by the District Rehabilitation Corporation was formed. Miss Ivy Taylor, case worker for the emergency relief division of that section, acted as chairman. Owen Woodruff, of the FERA, addressed the gathering. Committees were formed along occupational lines, including carpenters, bricklayers, and others, and plans were discussed for house repairing, sewing and other activities. Those present were on the relief rolls, but hope to free themselves by engaging in some of the cooperative enterprises to be developed by the corporation.
The development of an educational program for the members, including the elementary academic subjects and vocational training was also discussed at the meeting. A second meeting will be held at the school, Third and G Streets, Southwest, Tuesday night at 7:30 o'clock. A program of violin solos, piano renditions and singing was presented by the unemployed persons and their children. Refreshments for the meeting were furnished by the Colonial and Favorite Dairies.
PEOPLE'S CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
The fifth in a series of summer messages on the general theme "Little Journeys with Jesus in His Home Land", will be presented by the minister, the Rev. A. F. Elmes, Sunday at 11 o'clock, the theme being "Fruit Trees Without Fruit."
The midweek prayer service Thursday will be in charge of the minister.
AMERICAN WOODMEN
Georgetown Camp, No. 4, American Woodmen held its regular meeting at Odd Fellows' Ha Ninth and T Streets, Northwest, last Thursday evening, with an unusually large attendance. Several new members were admitted to the camp as well as some of the former members re-obligated. The returns from the lawn party given at Dr. L. C. Whiting's residence were favorable. The camp is having an old fashioned chicken dinner Tuesday, September 18.
The juvenile, Colonel Young Tent No. 4, met at Mt. Zion Community House, 2910 O Street, Northwest. Sunday and installed its new officers for the year. Mrs. Evelyn Minor was the successor to Mrs. Matilda Roberts who has led the juveniles for four years as worthy guardian. Miss Evelyn Hynson, the assistant worthy guardian, invited the Tent to her home in Merrifield, Va., for their annual outing Tuesday.
An excellent day of pleasure was had by all who attended at this quaint Virginia home with its spacious lawn and beautiful flowers, as well as large shade trees. The party lasted until nearly midnight and was a two-fold affair. Miss Hyson left after the party for a two weeks tour through the mountains of Pennsylvania by way of Harrisburg and Pittsburgh.
ALSTON BURLEIGH TESTS METTLE IN "STEVEDORE"
Local Artist Called on for Double Part in Broadway Stage Play
NEW YORK.—(ANP)—Alston Burleigh, general understudy for "Stevedore," the Negro drama at the Civic Repertory Theatre, hung up some kind of a record when he played the principal roles at the Tuesday performances. At the matinee he went on ten minutes notice as "Blaksnake Johnson" the vigorous, roaring role played by Rex Ingram, when it was found that Ingram had lost his voice. He was dressed for the same role in the evening when Leigh Whipper, who plays the gang captain, "Jim Veal" was taken ill.
Burleigh had never rehearsed the part of Jim Vcal, since he has been with the company something less than three weeks, but he went on and did a letter perfect performance. He is the son of Harry T. Burleigh, the distinguished Negro composer.
Ingram played the Tuesday night show with ice in his mouth and a stagedge waiting to tie an ice pack around his throat every time he left the set.
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HARPERS FERRY. W.Va. The third conference of Baptist Ministers and Religious Workers held here at Storer College, has just adjourned. The conference continued three days and all the addresses and discussions centered about the theme: "Jesus Christ in a Suffering World."
Among the prominent speakers were the Rev. R. J. Langston, D.D., Philadelphia, Pa.; the Rev. Joseph Watts, D.D., executive secretary Maryland Baptist Association; the Rev. Frank A. Smith, D.D., executive secretary American Baptist Home Mission Society, New York, N.Y.; the Rev. George A. Crawley, chairman; the Rev. J. H. Marshall, Washington, D.C., president; H. T.
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McDonald, Storer College, and the Rev, Albert J. Green, Baltimore, Maryland.
The conference adjourned to meet next July at the same time and place.
Strongly worded resolutions were passed condemning the unwholesome and immoral moving pictures, and protesting their patronage.
A board of twenty-five were selected, representing Pennsylvania, Maryland, District of Columbia, Virginia and West Virginia.
The officers of the board are, the Rev. W. H. Jermagin, D.D., president, Washington, D.C.; the Rev. R. J. Langton, D.D., vice president at-large, Philadelphia; the Rev. George A. Crawley, secretary, Baltimore; the Rev. Augustus Lewis, treasurer, Washington, D.C.; Dr. Henry T. McDonald, executive secretary, Storer College; the Rev. J. P. Nichols, Washington, D.C.; the Rev. A. J. Green, Maryland; the Rev. T. Washington, Pennsylvania; the Rev. William Craven, West Virginia, and the Rev. E. T. Johnson, Virginia.
The reason there are more motor accidents than railroad accidents is that the engineer never hugs the fireman.
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Didja see Marion Davies and Gary Cooper in "Operator 13?" What do ya think of it, huh? Say what you please, but after all's said and done it was nice, yes, very nice indeed. It's a pity that Marion Davies isn't colored by birth. The opinion has been voiced that she made a much more beautiful servant girl] than she did a white intelligence operator. Anyway, what's more pleasing to the eyesight than a beautiful brown, nicely formed feminine creature, with coal black, wavy hair, pearly teeth, ruby lips and sparkling eyes? Take it from us we men folks have pph-lenty to be proud of, or worried with. Don't we Harvey Early?* * * By the way, we are enjoying the picture,
Operator 15, when a certain mary... comes in and takes the seat beside us. Nothing was wrong with that but guess what followed? First she enjoys a nice, juicy sour pickle. Failing in the first attempt to satisfy her hunger, the young lady goes out to the automatic vendor (candy rack, to you) and returns with a bag of peanuts. Had there been a gas, pipe organ playing or crowds yelling, "Give it to 'im," you would have thought that you were attending a "101 Ranch" demonstration or a wrestling match. Such a cracking of shells and a crunching of teeth, you never heard. Too bad the Lichtman theatres haven't installed a "peanut gallery". *
* * *So! Home isn't big enough
eh? Or is that it isn't private
enough? Mary Jones took advantage
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Alice was because of her devotion
to Alice——but, you can't be right
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all the time. * * *Papa decides to go to New York. Mama decides to go out for the evening. Daughter decides to give a swinger—during their absence. All the guests are notified secretly. Mama decides to change her mind and stay home for a quiet evening of rest. Daughter nearly passes out when last minute efforts to inform guests of the sudden change nearly fails. Ah! these modern madens. Their kingdom for a party! * * *Buy a pass and save gas. The street car companies have made a hit with Alex Merrit—he was seen taking Jean Brown for the usual ride, on the street car. Not a bad idea, think we'll try that one. Flash! — Marie Dixon came out with flying colors following a "battle royal" held between the members of her "bunch" (that mob would make Dillinger lose some dress) over the question of who dress) over the best. * * *See— Adelade Cromwell with her girl friend from New York accompanied by four admirers. Four, mind you, four! You is Adelade or the girl friend, huh? * * *Marie Tignor makes a date with a fellow at Sparrow's Beach—then asks him his name. You'd better be careful, Dillinger went in for hairdying, face-fitting and so on. Now wouldn't it be a mess if you ran up on one of his boys. They tell me that his mob is from Indiana and they don't like us colored folks out that way. * * *Thanks B. P. and B. M. for the letter. * * Alexandria seems to be the favorite summer-stopping-off place for many folks from prominent places. During the present time there are visitors from Philly, Roanoke, Va., New York and other junctions north and west. By the way, a very charming young lady from Roanoke wants you to know that she is very unhappy (sounds like brother Crawford) and that she likes cocktails too. She's a ready number, I'm tellin' you. * * *After the storm the land was bathed in the quiet slumber of night. After the talent show at the Capitol Theatre folks were able
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to breathe a sigh of relief. First prize was given to Cecil McMillan, comedy sketches——second prize, Courtney Dean, tap number and last but not least, Herman Lewis, "Emeline".
PRISON CHAPLAIN TAKES $100 "GIFT" FROM PRISONER
White Minister and Guard Resign Following Expose
RALEIGH, N. C. L. M. Goodwin, State's prison chaplain, morale and welfare officer for about 12 years, and T. B. Leake, a guard at the prison, have resigned following the revelation that they accepted money from a c/ victim for whom they recompended executive clemency. Chairman E. B. Jeffress of the Highway and Public Works Commission announced today that the two men resigned yesterday after a lengthy hearing attended by Governor Ehringhaus, Parole Commissioner Edwin M. Gill and prison officials.
The charge against Goodwin and Leake was that the chaplain accepted $100 and the guard took $10 from Tom Hayes, a colored prisoner, after the convict's term had been commuted from life imprisonment to a sentence of from 20 to 30 years by Gov. Ehringhaus.
Hayes said he gave the money to the men out of gratitude for the services he felt they had rendered him. The man was sent to prison from Greene County on conviction of being an accessory before the fact of first-degree murder.
Community Center Band in Concert at Tenth and U
The Community Centers. Band under the direction of James H. Miller will give a concert at Tenth and U Streets, Northwest, Friday; starting at 7:30 p.m.
The program is as follows: "Washington Tribune March," a waltz, "Beautiful Washington," both written by Mr. Miller; one-step, "Morendo in E Major" by Professor Miller; march, "Joyce 71st Regiment"; symphony overture one-step, "Adoration," march "Washington Grays" and the "Star Spangled Banner."
...whether you are Expert or Inexperienced
...you'll find
RUMFORD
ALL-NOSSPHATE
BAKING POWDER
THE TWO-TO-ONE LEAVENER
absolutely uniform in raising cakes,
pastry, biscuits, hot-breads. It brings
out the full flavor of good ingredients
and never wastes them—
The Whiskers
RUMFORD
BAKING
POWDER
Sift flour, baking powder, and salt.
Blend fat, egg and milk, and add gradually to the dry ingredients. Fill well oiled muffin tins $ \frac{3}{4} $ full. Bake in hot oven (400°F.) about 20 minutes. 33-1
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. JULY 26. 1934
ALABAMA MASONS PRAISE WORK OF F.D. ROOSEVELT
Walter T. Woods Reelected Grand Master, at 56th Annual Session
MOBILE, Ala.-The fifty-sixth annual session of the Grand Lodge, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons of Alabama closed here Wednesday after one of the most interesting meetings in the history of the organization.
The Grand Lodge opened Tuesday morning, July 17, with Walter Thomas Woods of Birmingham, presiding. The outstanding feature of the session was the annual address of Grand Master Woods, who reviewed his official acts during the past fraternal year, and warned the craftsmen of the unsettled condition of the country, urging them to exercise patience and forbearance. He paid tribute to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and expressed approval of his policies to bring the nation back to a normal state. The Grand Master was heartily cheered throughout his message.
Walter Thomas Woods of Birmingham was re-elected grand master by a vote of 381 to 125 over F. G. Manley of Tuskegee Institute. Other officers re-elected are Charles V. Hendley, Huntsville, deputy grand master; F. G. Hill, Montgomery, senior grand warden; A. P. Mack, Tuskegee, junior grand warden; A. H. Williams, Union Springs, grand treasurer; P. D. Davis, Birmingham, grand secretary; Dr. E. T. Belsaw, Mobile endowment treasurer, and G. W. Peters, Birmingham, endowment secretary, Dr. A. W. West of Montgomery was an addition to the trustee board.
The next session will be held in Demopolis, Ala., on the third Tuesday in July, 1935.
The poison hemlock which killed Socrates is to be exterminated this summer from Aspen, Colo.
The lowest suicide rate is in the countries where Catholicism prevails.
There is a bath powder which is very inexpensive as well as easy to make and which serves a double purpose. It not only makes the body fragrant but first takes away all body odor that might conflict with it.
Just mix these ingredients and pour a little into your bath water: 3 ounces common soda, 2 ounces tartaric acid, 5 ounces cornstarch, 5 drops oil o f flemon and 11 drops oil of pine.
Foods By Gertrude C. Frazier
A Toothsome Bit for the Bride
One of the most important things connected with a shower for the lovely summer bride is the food. It should be excellent. It should be unusual. It should be appropriate.
Garnished with candied orange blossoms what dainty or more appropriate dessert could one serve than the orange coupe below—or where could one find a more delicious Bride's cake than the last recipe?
Try them both if you are fortunate enough to officiate at a bridal shower this month.
Bride's Cake
(10 to 12 egg whites)
3/4 cups sifted cake flour
1/2 teaspoons combination
1 1/4 cups egg whites, unbeaten
½ teaspoon vanilla
½ teaspoon almond extract
Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder, and sift together three times. Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar, gradually, and cream together until light and fluffy.
Add egg whites, 1/2 cup at a time, beating about 3 minutes after each addition. Add flour, a small amount at a time, beating well after each addition. Add flavoring and beat vigorously.
Turn into 10-inch tube pan which has been greased, lined on bottom, sides, and around tube with heavy paper, and again greased. Bake in slow oven (275° F.) 1 hour; then increase heat slightly to 300° F. and bake 50 minutes longer, or until done.
Insert favors, if desired, wrapping each in waxed paper, and pressing into small slits cut in cake. Spread Ornamental Butter Frosting smoothly on top and sides of cake. Decorate with simple borders, festoons, and rosettes of Ornamental Butter Frosting, and trim with silver dragees. Serve on silver tray or platter surrounded with delicate sprays of fern, cosmos, or bridal wreath. Place special bridal favor on top of cake; or tie small welding bells or other favors to white ribbons and interwine through sprays.
BUCK ROGERS
Rocket
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49c
Revolving
GLOBE
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With
Shade
98c
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PEOPLES
DRUG STORES
"All Over Towa"
BUCK ROGERS
Rocket
Pistols
49c
Interstate
BATH
SPRAYS
For Only 69c
(Fits Most Faucets)
Revolving
GLOBE
LAMPS
With
Shade
98c
Attractively Colored
MODESS VACATION
SPECIAL ... 39c
2 - 30c Boxes of Twelve
1 Special Box of Four
Soft, absorbent, comfortably
fitting... Easily disposable
PEOPLES
DRUG STORES
"All Over Town"
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Easy Terms
THOMPSON
FURNIT
1220-1226 Good Hope Road
ANACOSTI
THOMPSON BROS.
Ornamental Butter Frosting
4 tablespoons butter
5 cups sifted confectioner's sugar
Cream butter; add part of sugar gradually, blending after each addition. Add remaining sugar, alternately with egg whites, then with cream, until of right consistency to spread.
Beat after each addition until smooth. Add vanilla and salt. Spread frosting smoothly on top sides, and inside center opening of Bride's Cake.
With remaining frosting make borders, festons, and rosettes on cake, using pastry tube.
Fill tube only ½ full. Decorate with silver dragees. Makes enough frosting to cover 10-inch tube cake and to use for special decorating.
6 slices canned pineapple
6 large stewed prunes
6 blanched almonds
$ \frac{3}{4} $ cup pineapple juice
Melt butter, add sugar and saute pineapple slices until delicately brown. Add liquid and simmer until liquid is absorbed. Stuff prunes with almonds, and place one or around roast or baked sliced ham.
Grated rind of one orange
1 cup meat gravy
2 tablespoons sherry flavoring
$ \frac{3}{4} $ teaspoon salt
$ \frac{3}{4} $ cup sugar
2 cups raspberry or loganberry juice
1 quart water
% cup sugar
Orange slices cut in small fancy shapes for garnish.
Blend ingredients thoroughly.
Serve very cold. The orange slices should be cut from clean-skinned, needless oranges. Serves from 12 o 16.
Interstate
BATH
SPRAYS
For Only 69c
(Fits Most Faucets)
MODESS VACATION
SPECIAL ...-39c
2 - 30c Boxes of Twelve
1 Special Box of Four
Soft, absorbent, comfortably
fitting...Easily disposable
SLEY
CTRIC
ERATORS
$99.50 Up.
The sensational Shelvador (shelves in the door) increases "usable" capacity about 50%. Being just the place for butter, bacon, eggs and other small food items, your "reach-and-hunt" days are over. Open the door and THEKE it is, instantly findable. Other features include the Shelvabasket, Storabin, Shelvatray and Ventilated fronts. See the improved Crosley before you buy.
ON BROS.
ITURE
road LIncoln 0556
TIA, D. C.
flavor and exquisite bouquet—popular for Iced Tea.
K or Mixed 1/4-lb pkg 7¢: 1/4-lb pkg 13¢
Fine quality blends—delicious flavor.
Of Killarney 1/4-lb pkg 15¢: lb tin 55¢
Orange Pekoe—Very economical—makes more cups.
Finest Family
Our 12-lb bng 53¢: 24-lb bng $1.05
H-O (Assorted Fresh Fruit Flavors) pkg 5¢
Made Tapioca 4-oz pkg 5c: 8-oz pkg 10c
Vanilla bot 17c
Rice bot 7c
Rest Rice lb pkg 10c
ASCO Cornstarch pkg 7c
Chocolate Dessert 4 pkg 19c
Ice Cream Powder pkg 10c
omalt 1/4-lb can 21¢: lb can 39¢
Meat pkg 18c
Meat 2 pkgs 19c
Fleischmann's Yeast cake 3c
Puffed Rice pkg 13c
FREE — 1 can Heinz Boston Style Beans with each 2 can purchase of any variety
Heinz med can 9¢: big can 13¢
Beans Some of HEINZ “57”
Heinz Assorted Soups 2 pt can 23c
Spaghetti 2 21-oz can 25c, 2 13-oz can 17c
Mustard jar 10c: Vinegar 24-oz bot 15c or W.D.
De-Lite Mayonnaise pt jar 17¢
Belle Salad Dressing pt jar 15¢
Anchor Opener with each purchase of the following items
Prepared Mustard jar 10c
Press Prepared Mustard pt jar 10c
Wood Jellies 11-oz tumb 12c
Plain Olives bot 10c, 20c
Stuffed Olives 11-oz bot 25c
Fruit Preserves 2 12-oz jars 25c
Peanut Butter lb jar 13c
Peanut Butter 2 lb jar 25c
De-Lite Jellies 12-oz tumb 15c
BREAD—Save Time Work and Money
Bread SUPREME 15-oz loaf 10
Rye 24-oz loaf 12¢
Victor 16-oz loaf 7¢
plain or with seeds.
febuoy Soap 3 cakes 19c
Inso 3 med pkgs 23c: big pkg 21c
big pkg 15c: S.O.S. Cleanser 2 cans 25c
Sh Meats Finest Quality Reasonably Priced
Smoked Hams lb. 21c
Chickens lb. 31c
Cold Cuts for Picnics and Lunches
DO LUNCHEON MEAT ... 1/4-lb.
ON MEAT ... 5c
LOGNA ...
N BOLOGNA ...
ans Glenwood
E SAUCE ... 25c
Sh Produce Delivered Daily to Our Stores.
Rinse all flavor and exquisite bouquet—popular for Iced Tea.
Black or Mixed 1/4-lb pkg 7¢: 1/4-lb pkg 13¢
Flax quality blends—delicious flavor.
Pride of Killarney 1/4-lb pkg 15¢: 1lb tin 55¢
100% Indica Orange Pekka—Very economical—makes more cups.
Assorted Cold Cuts for Picnics and Lunches
PIMENTO LUNCHEON MEAT ...
LUNCHEON MEAT ...
HAM BOLOGNA ...
LEBANON BOLOGNA ...
1/4-lb.
5c
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables!
es...3 for 25c Lettuce...2 heads 15c
Onions 4 lbs. 19c Tomatoes...2 lbs. 15c
E-IN To the 1200 Orchestra and the 650 Tenor
over Station WJSV every Friday, 10:30 a.m.
Share Prices Effective in Our Stores and
Student Markets in Washington and Vicinity.
Cantaloupes...8 for...25c Lettuce.....2 heads 15c
Yellow Onions 4 lbs. 19c Tomatoes.....2 lbs. 15c
TUNE-IN To the 1230 Orchestra and the 0-99 Tenor
over Station WJSV everyFriday, 10:30 a.m
COFFEE
Teas are young tender leaves, picked in the season when they are richest in flavor. That is why, no matter how much they are chilled,
Teas always retain their delightful color and refreshing goodness.
Orange
Pekoe
or
India
Ceylon
13 : 25
pkg
pkg
Eastern Shore White Potatoes 10 lbs. 15c
REV. W. W. HENRY IS FINED $10 ON DRUNK CHARGE
Preacher Appears in Court With Head Bandaged Following Fight
BOSTON—With his head swathed in bandages as the result of a policeman's club, the Rev. W. W. Henry, minister of the Holy Trinity Baptist Church, was given a private trial in the Roxbury Court on Thursday. He was found guilty on alleged charges of drunkenness and destruction of property. He was fined $10 on each count. The case was appealed. Attorney William S. West appeared for the minister.
The Rev. W. W. Henry is one of the hell fire evangelistic Henry brothers. It was learned that last week Friday in the afternoon, Rev. Henry was booked at Station 10 on the charges, the arrest being made by Patrolman Parker Coleman. Some time that afternoon Patrolman Coleman received a complaint from a Mr. Johnson of the theft of a dog and the breaking of his hat, in consequence of this he went to Rev. Henry's home, and then tha fun began.
The patrolman explained his mission, and it was further learned that he was invited in by Rev. Mr. Henry, who asked him if he had a warrant. Coleman, who is a colored officer, said no, and Henry told him to get out. Being tardy the minister attempted to hasten the exit of the policeman. Witnesses were brought out who declared that the minister was heard to shout for his gun. In the altercation the minister was whacked on the skull. The police wagon was summoned and Rev. Mr. Henry was taken to the calaboose. Police officers testified that he was drunk. The minister vigorously denied he was drunk and his attorney, William S. West, by clever questioning-attempted to establish innocence of his client. The court, however, found Rev. Mr. Henry guilty and imposed the fines.
MRS.FOSTER HEADS
VARICK CHRISTIAN
ENDEAVOR SOCIETY
Group to Hold Neighborhood Gathering at Church
Sunday Evening
At its annual election of officers, the Varkir Christian Endeavor Society of Union Wesley A.M.E.Z. Church, of which the Rev. Frank W. Alstork is pastor elected the following for the ensuing conference year:
Miss Beatrice F. Foster, president; Mrs. Callie Williams, vice-president; Edward Frost, recording secretary; Mrs. M. M. Jones, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Cloe Blackwell, assistant recording secretary; Mrs. Lee Conner, chorister, and Mrs. Evelyn Clark, pianist.
Mrs. Sarah E. Mason was elected to succeed herself as chairman of the alumni department. Mrs. Marion Gray, and Barnett Anderson to head up the intermediate department, and Miss Rhudine Gary and Mrs. Minnie G. Young, the junior department
The meeting on Sunday, July 22, was led by Mrs. Dorothy Harris Garrett, and the guest speaker was Albert Gilmore, of Shiloh Baptist Endeavor Society.
On Sunday, July 29, the alumni department, under the direction of Mrs. Sarah E. Mason, will hold Christian Endeavor at 8 p.m. The meeting will be a neighborhood gathering and to that end all citizens of the immediate community are invited.
The Men's Community Club will be present.
Some suggestions as to community health will be discussed by Dr. S. A. T. Austin, and the spiritual message of the evening will be given by Bishop E. D. W. Jones, Music will be rendered by the Senior Choir of the church, under Mr. Rodgers and by the Golden Rule Chorus of the Golden Rule Endeavor Union of which James A. Brown is president and Miss Elsie Gray, chorister.
"BIG BOYS" SLUG GUARD AND FLEE
ATLANTA, Ga., July (ANP)—"Big Boy" Jones and "Big Boy" Campbell, 23-year-old chain gangsters on the state highway at Soparton, escaped Monday after they had slugged a guard and taken his pistol and shotgun. Both Jones and Campbell were six feet, three inches tall.
RESCUED FROM MOB
RELEIGH. N. C.—Booker Watson 17 years old, was snatched from a mob of 300 persons last Sunday near Nashville and carried to an unannounced section of the state. The boy had been arrested for killing a white farmer who took sides against him in a quarrel which Watson had with the farmers son.
LOS ANGELES (ANP)—Announcements were received here from Prague, announcing the ordination to the priesthood of the Roman Catholic Church of Max E. Murphy, born in Dallas, Texas, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murphy. The Rev. Murphy began his early studies in the Sisters Institute of Dallas, under the care of the Holy Ghost Sisters. He later entered St. Augustine Seminary at Bay, Saint Louis, Mississippi and four years later transferred to St. atrick's Seminary at Pale Alto, Calif. After two years, he was sent to the monastery at Prague.
H. U. PROFESSOR AND WIFE AMONG 4 TO GO TO INDIA
H. U. PROFESSOR AND WIFE AMONG 4 TO GO TO INDIA
The Christian Student Movement of the colleges and universities of India have requested of the American Student Movement that they send a group of Negro representatives to lecture in their colleges. The National Student Councils of the YWCA and YMCA, have answered the request by selecting four colored Americans who will be sent in the fall of 1935. The tour will be financed by the Student Movements of the United States and India. The request is distinctive and significant, in that it is the first of its kind to come from one of the national movements affiliated with the World's Student Christian Federation.
The Parson selected to be chairman of the group is Howard Thurman, associate professor of Christian Theology, and chairman of the committee on Religious Life, Howard University.
With Mr. Thurman will be associated Mrs. Howard Thurman (Sue Bailey); Mrs. Grace Towns Hamilton, and Edward Carroll of Baltimore.
Mrs. Thurman, a graduate of Oberlin College, was for two years an instructor of music in the Teachers' College of Hampton and general secretary of the Student YWCA.
Mrs. Grace Towns Hamilton who has been on the staff of LeMoyne College, is the wife of the dean of the college and is a graduate of Atlanta and Ohio State Universities.
Edward Carroll is a graduate of Morgan College and of the Yale Divinity School. He is the pastor of the Wesley Methodist Episcopal Church of Salem, Virginia, and instructor in the Addison High School, Roanoke, Virginia.
Dr. Will W. Alexander Protests Lynching Wave
ATLANTA, (ANP- — Dr. Will W. Alexander, executive director of the Commission on Interracial Cooperation, today gave to the press the following statement: "An epidemic of five lynchings in the last five weeks — in Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee and Texas — points the need of redoubled vigilance to avert further crimes of this nature. "Southern sheriffs and other peace officers can prevent such occurrences if they will. Many faithful officers are demonstrating that fact. In nearly every lynching there is either official indifference, sympathy or actual connivance. Southern governors although in some cases without special authority, can do much through the influence of their office to strengthen the hands of local officials in putting down mob rule.
"The increasing majority of citizens who are sensitive to the evils of this situation should bring their influence to bear upon their officers and hold them strictly responsible for the protection of society against such outrages."
One-third of Students at School Self-Supporting
DOWNINGTOWN, Pa.—Of the boys and girls enrolled at Downingtown Industrial School during the school-year 1933-34, over one-third were partially or entirely self-supporting and earned a total of $2,769 to apply to their school-bills.
Of this number five were entirely self-supporting. Nathaniel E. Crump, of Charleroi, led the way with $205 by working on the farm in the summer and tending poultry while school was "in." Augustus A. (Lanky) Taylor with $173 came next. He, too, was a summer farmhand and then had charm of the pump. Raymond G. Ford, of Phoenixville, collected $172 as a carpenter and farmaceteer. Lewis T. (Big) White, who has been appointed assistant commandant of boys for 1934.35, was paid $168 as a farmman, fireman, and milkman. Ella M. Stevens, the only member of the fair sex to pay her own way, took in $152 as a kitchen-helper.
THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 26; 1934
THIRD GROUP OF CAMPERS BEGIN 2-WEEK VACATION
The second party of campers has been discharged from Camp Pleasant after a successful vacation of two weeks. The party consisted of 161 campers, being mothers and their children ranging in ages from three months to twelve years of age.
There were 25 mothers, 61 girls, and 75 boys. The campers are weighed upon their arrival at camp and upon their discharge. Figures showed that the mothers gained a total of 99 pounds, while the children gained a total of 213 pounds. One mother gained 9 pounds.
The third party arrived Tuesday for a two-weeks vacation. The regular program of this party will be rendered on Friday evening. August 3 at 6:30 o'clock. The public is invited.
Work Done by Children
The program of the second party which was discharged on Monday, July 23, was given on Friday evening on the main pavilion of the camp, and consisted of songs, dramatic skits, dances, stunts, and recitations. The art and craft work was exhibited in the studio.
This work had been done by the boys, girls and mothers under the direction of Jeanne Westmoreland. The program was arranged by Nora Drew, Leonard Allen, Vivian Jenkins, Roberta Parker, Ralph Brooks, Ruth Washington, Grace Dodson, and Virgil Heathcock, all councillors at the camp.
The first Friday evening after the arrival of a party, a "talent night" is staged when everybody attempts to do something. It is during this performance when much talent is discovered which is used on the regular program on the second Friday night.
Blue Ribbon Winners
Blue ribbons are given out on Saturday night prior to the discharge of the party. These awards are presented to campers for meritorious attainment and excellence in conduct while at camp.
Those receiving ribbons were:
Mothers: Amanda Mozan, Effe Phillips, Mary Greene, Mary Bell, Emma Smith, Ozale Manigo and Virginia Whittiker.
Children: John Whittiker, Leander Smith, Leonard Jackson, Ernest Jackson, Ernest Crosby, Felix Whittiker, William Cephas, James Higgins, Samuel Cradle, Charles Manigo, Frazier Long, Steward Lucas, Charles Otley, Douglas Coghill, Albert Coghill, William Whittiker, Edward Lomax, Eugene Lomax, Hattie Montague, Dorothy Roy, Margueret Gordon, Helen Crosby, Mary Wharton, Oscar Manigo, Geneva Jackson, John Jackson, Charles Williams, Charles Whaton, Samuel Wimbel Stokes.
WILKINS NAMED TO MANAGE CRISIS
NEW YORK—Roy Wilkins, assistant secretary of the National Association for the advancement of Colored People, was named Friday by the NAACP board of directors at a special meeting to be managing editor of the Crisis until the regular September meeting of the board, which will be held September 10.
In addition to finishing up the August issue, left in mid-air by the resignation July 15 of George W. Streator, Mr. Wilkins will have charge of the September and October issues.
Assisting Mr. Wilkins and sharing responsibility for policy will be an editorial board consisting of Dr. Louis T. Wright, chairman, Lewis Gannett, James Weldon Johnson, J. E. Spingarn, and Walter White
Bluefield N.A.A.C.P. Has Big Educational Program
.BLUEFIELD, W. Va—Mrs. T. G, Nutter, chairman of the Charles-ton Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, announces the following program for the year 1934-1935: September—Honorable Guy D. Kump, Governor of West Virginia. October—West Virginia State College Alumni Association. November—Phi Delta Kappa Sorority.
December—Play, "Death Takes a Holiday," promoted by Mrs. C. B. Payne.
January—Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority.
February—College Alumnae Club of Charleston, Kanawha County.
March—Omega Psi Phi Fraternity.
REV. FAIR JONES SPEAKS
The Rev, Fair Jones was the guest speaker Sunday at the Lilly MemorialBaptist Church, New Jersey Avenue and R Streets, Northwest. He spoke on "God's Insurance."
The pastor, choir and congregation of Mount Calvary) Baptist Church visited the New Hope Baptist Church at Bristol, Va. and
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participated in the services of their annual rally. The Rev. Jasper Bowles was the minister in charge. Mrs. Emma Moore of Philadelphia, Pa., the guest of her sister, Mrs. Georgia Chambers last
week. The two accompanied by Miss Ella Overton motored to Pendelton, during the week.
Mrs. Susie Bowles and William Page continue on the city's sick list.
AL FUR
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IT IS a fact. The Norge Rollator Refrigerator will make ice faster as the weather gets hotter. And no matter how blistering hot your kitchen may get, it will continue to make ice—and to keep your foods fresh and wholesome in the protecting cold of Rollator Refrigeration.
THE ROLLATOR IMPROVES WITH USE
Beautiful as it is to see—convenient as it is to use—yet the most important advantage of the Norge is its cold-making mechanism—the famous Rollator. With but three slowly moving parts—surplus powered—very saving of current—almost everlasting—the Rollator, by actual factory test, improves with use.
Choose Norge for its lasting beauty
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NORGE
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THE N
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The Payne Brothers quartet visited the Baptist Church at Gainesville Sunday where they rendered an interesting program. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Anderson and Miss Naomi Anderson who
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were home on their vacation returned to Washington for work Saturday. The Fairfax County Citizens' Association met Wednesday at the Little Zion Baptist Church at Burk.
THE ROLLATOR e Smooth, easy rolling power instead of the hurried back-and-forth action of the ordinary refrigerator mechanism. Result: more cooling power for the current used. Only Vorge has the Rolllator
By (S222): sahtanton Aaah ae THEATERS,
i bs ‘3 CTl fe} HAVE HIM me | Washiiiiiea Tribune im IN foun PA ope | SPORTS .
Special Notice to
Tribune Readers
; The Management. of ‘the Washington
Tribune announces a change in its sys-
tem of circulation. The new system
is being inaugurated in order to better
serve TRIBUNE Readers,
In making this change our boys will be
unable to cover the entire city imme-
diately,
Avnewsboy may not come to youdpgan
next week. ae
We are asking loyal readers of the:
WASHINGTON ‘TRIBUNE to “purchase
copies of the. paper. from: their NEAR-
EST Newsstand until 1 permanent
system: of circulation.is put into. effect,
39 BOYS LEAVE |
FOR A FOUR-WEEK
CAMP VACATION
‘A Jubilant crowd of 89 boys de-
parted from the Twelfth. Street
Y.M.C.A., Monday, for Camp.Licht-
man, located in the George Wash-
ington National Forest, Shenan-
doah, Virginia, for a stay of four
weeks, The campers were given
rousing send off by parents and
buddies,
It was a jolly bunch that waved
adieu, not only to the anxious par-
ents ‘and. buddies, but. to the hot
asphalt and cement streets of the
city, To some the picturesque
trails of the Blue Ridge Mountains
will be new, while .to the second
and third year campers, the moun-
tain hikes, camp fire meetings will
be only a repetition of life's an-
nual program to manhood.
Camp Lichtman was made pos-
sible by ‘the gentrosity of A. E,
Lichtman of the Lichtman ‘Thea:
tres Corporation, and is conducted
under the auspices of the Twelfth
Street Branch, Y.M,C.A. The camp
is supervised by. Lee’ W. Johnson,
camp director, and Robert McGraw,
hhead counsellor.
‘The gampers making the “trip
were: ,
Robert Paige, Clarence Griffin
(Baltimore), "Herbert Johnson,
Rupert Scott, Reginald Beaver,
Howard Puree, Earl West. Jack
Elliott, Juan Mundaray, William
Saunders, Harold Jennifer, Jr.,
Walter Gant, Jacob Hopkins, Al-
phonzo Roulhae, Frederick Hatcher,
Henry Hatchery Roosefelt” Taher,
Raymond Bronson, William Cash,
Earl Bolden, Richard Hill, William
Phifer, Rudolph’ Roulhac, Elmes
Dandridge. Carol Shorter,
Eugene Shorter, Otis Maxwell
Obadiah Maxwell,’ Raymond Han-
dy, Joseph Handy, Sydney .Gray,
Frederick Randall,’ Harrison Park-
er, Charles McLane, Earl Henson,
Paris S. Purce, Hughland. Jones,
Edgar I. Porter, James S, Reed
Glasses, Bullets Fly in
Lunchroom Altercation
During an altercation at a
lunchroom, 128% Seventh Street,
Northwest, between "Clarence
Jones, employee of the restaurant,
and Kenneth Davis, 1215 Seventh
Street, Northwest, glasses and
bullets played an important part,
one person being injured,
Walter Banner 29, 911 N Street,
Northwest, was struck on the head
by a water glass, allegedly tossed
by Davis. He received treatment
at Freedmen’s Hospital. . Jones,
police say, shot? several tinies at
Davis but nong of the, bullets hit
their mark. Davis was later ar-
rested at the Second Precinct,
eae
Lad Fatally Injured
When Hit by Locomotive
A two-year-old boy was fatally
injured Thursday when a backing
locomotive of the Chesapeake
Beach Railway struck him. sever-
ing his right leg. The lad, Mar-
shall Burgess, who was playing
near his home, 720 Forty-ninth
Street, Northeast, was taken to
€asunity Hospital where he died
several hours later.
‘Coroner-A. Magruder MacDonald
and Eleventh Precinct police are
investigating the accident.
Friends Contribute
to Southeast House
A recent unsolicited gift to the
Southeast House was an unpainted
breakfast table and two chairs,
from Mrs, Ray E. Ellis and forty:
eight fiends who contributed small
sums to the amount of $7.50,
The gift came as a complete sur-
prise to the House bat in response
to an obvious need which some
friend had casualiy mentioned. ‘The
letter of greeting and good wishes
‘with the name of each donor whien
‘accompanied the table seems highly
sigdificant of the confidence and
appreciation of the people. of tht
community in the services of th
House.
This table is one of the two
folding tables which transforms the
living room and office of the House
once 'arday into a dining room fo
staff, teachers and Emergency Re
lief workers who lunch there.
paar OE ala
Mt. Bethel Baptist Associa-
tion to Meet Here
Next Month
The W. Bishop Johnson Memoria!
Missionary Circle of the Second
;Baptist- Church held. its regular
monthly meeting Wednesday eve-
ing, July. 18: In the absence of
the president, Mrs, Roxie A. Bur
rel, the vice president, Mrs.’ Hmma
J. Hall, presided. :
Scripture lesson was. read by
Mrs, Ella M, Gibson and prayer by
the Rev. J. L. 8. Holloman. After
e brief song and prayer service,
the. topic “Howto Receive the
Blessings-of God” was discussed by
the pastor and J. W, Williamson.
‘The chairman of the sick com:
mittoe reported: the following sich
persons: Mrs, Nancy Blackwell,
Mrs. Carrie S. Alexander, and Mrs.
Henriette Harvey, sed del
1c following Were eleoted dele-
gates. to the Mle Bethel Baptist
Association which meets in the city
in August: Mrs. Roxie Burrell
Mrs.. Emma J, Hall, Mrs. Ella M.
Gibson, “s
Tender and loving words of sym-
pathy were spoken on behalf of
the president, Mrs. Roxie A, Bur-
rell, on the death of her only son,
Hayward, on Saturday, July 14.
The funeral obsequies ‘were held
from St. Mary's Episcopal Church
Tuesday, July 17 at-1 p.m. The
floral tributes were many and beau-
tifal, Mr, Burrell was a vestry-
man and treasurer of the church.
Interment was at Arlington Na-
tional Cemetery.
The circle will observe mission-
ary day Sunday, July 29 at 3:30
pm. The sermon will be preached
hy the Rey, W. D. Speight, pastor
of Galbraith A.ME. Zion Church.
Local Delegates Attend
| Lawrenceville School
The Summer School of Religious
Education held at Lawrenceville,
Va., during the week of Jily 16
was largely attended by delegates
from the various dioceses which
comprise the third province. St.
George's Episcopal Church of this
city had four delegates: in atten-
‘dance,
| Lawrence A. Oxley, chief of the
ie of Negro Labor in the U.
S. Labor Department, Dr. William
Stuart Nelson, president. of Shaw
University. and W. E. Woodyard.
principal of Dinwiddie Normal
and Industrial School, were among
the speakers to address the classes
Self-Help Unit Aids 554 Families
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| The Richmond, Va: self-heip center aids 554 families, colored amd white.” At the top is shown the Citiz/
ens Service Exchange. The building was formerly a public school building. Below :is the wood yard and
‘aw mill next door to the Exchange. Timber is cut into cord wood for fuel or dressed for lumber to be used
for farnitiee
The majority of the 554 members of the unit go to the Exchange each day and put in six hours’ work
for which they are paid scrip. The rest earn their scrip pay by outside work under Exchange direction,
uch as cutting timber, building or repairing homes. As a result of the unit members can buy practically
everythink’ necdéssary for ‘life excentataplés auchias Mubar, Witter icoffee, eth
MARYLAND GIRLS
DEATH BELEVED
DUET ABORTION
"Kane of cn Who
Efforts by police to learn the
name of the person who allegedly
performed an illegal operation on
Edna Diggs, 20, of Croome, Md,
who died at Freedmen’s Hospital
Thursday proved futile this week.
The young girl was admitted to
the hospital July 1 after treatment
by emergency staff physicians whe
said she had had an operation per-
formed. She denied that any op-
eration of that nature had been
performed. After remaining at the
hospital for ten days she was dis-
charged.
Her condition became worse and
she was readmitted to the hospital
July 14. She failed to rally to the
treatment given her, and died on
Thursday. During her stay at the
hospital she repeatedly refused to
give any information concerning
the alleged operation. She told
hospital physicians that, she had
applied for treatment at the offices
of two prominent Washington phy-
sicians but the first sent her to
another; and the second refused
her because of the lack of funds.
Police express the opinion that
she performed the operation her-
self.
SS eens
Drunken White Men Shoot
4 Men and 3 Women
| SPRINGFIELD, Mo., Seven col-
‘cored persons, four men and three
women, were shot ard wounded
one of the women por<ihiv serious-
iy, byacangota,... drunk-
en white men here Satura ight.
Bolice” wera. informed” “several
‘hie mén challenged a greup o!
saci: hae bad bese atceaing
‘a.dance and one aljengers
With Shoulder Blade
Amputated, Man Still
Has Use of Arm, Hand
NEW YORK-—A rare operation
the amputation of a. man’s shoul-
der blade while saving the arm
was performed. on. Terrence Van
Dunk, 28, at the Memorial Hospi-
tal for the Treatment of Cancer
ant Allied Diseases, Sunday.
Van Donk, an Albino, who is
employed ona farm at Eagle Val-
ley, N.Y. is soon to: be discharg:
ed hospital authorities announced.
This is believed to be the first
such operation of its kind ever pev-
formed.
The patient's shoulder blade had
to be removed because a cancer
affected the bone. He now has
some use of his arm and complete
use of the hand and fingers, it was
reported. Following the operation
50 patches of skin were’ grafted
to the shoulder,
ol age ee
Federation of Men’s Clubs
to Hold Outing August 2
The sixth annual outing of the
National Federation of Men's
Church Clubs will be held at Carr's
Beach on Thursday, August 2.
Buses will stop at. the following
churches: Third Baptist, Zion
Baptist Alexander Memorial, Mt.
Jerracl, Asbury M.E,, Tabor Pres-
byterian, Metropolitan, Wesley A
M. E. Zion and Enon Baptist at
8:30 a.m,
B. C. Dodson is president of the
federation ‘and George W. Rag-
land, chairman of the committe:
in charge of the outing.
eee
ay :
Girls’ Dormitory to Be
Furnished by Auxiliary
BALTIMORE, Md—The Wo-
men’s Auxiliary of Morgan Col-
lege had a.very enthusiastic mee!
ing Wednesday. As soon as sum
‘mer schoo] is. over, the auxiliary
‘will furnish wall’ paper, drapes
and other improvements ‘for the
girls’ dormitories. y
“in. dition +9 there “improve-
Tents, che auxiljagw will furnish
Fecr = ii -roomit Lor = the girl:
|where they lounge and rest,
TEMPLE INSTALLS
MARION JONES AS
DAUGHTER RULER
ALEXANDRIA, — Va.—Member:
of Israel Temple of Elks here, me
at the Elks’ ows ‘and the follow.
‘ing officers: were installed at a cal
meeting recently: Marion Jone:
daughter ruler; Annie B, Carroll
vice diughter ruler; Esther Neal,
acsistanb daughter ruler: Kati
Franklin, chaplain; Isabel ' Majors
organist; Wealthy Taylor, escort:
Bessie Webster, door-keeper; anc
Susie Armstrong, gate-keeper.
the new daughter raler made s
strong jee speach pledging
her ‘beat efforts to Israel Temple,
as did her corp of officers.
‘The retiring daughter ruler,
ne Carroll, pledged her anne
to her successor and the Temple.
After the regular routine of
business, refreshments were sérv-
ed under the direction of Daughter
Edna Smith, mistress of social ses-
sion, During this period a pre-
sentation was made to the retirinz
daughter. ruler;-“Helen Carroll, and
also to Daughter Martha Ball for
her interest and. efforts ,in the
Temple:
Special Deputy “Mary Williams
presided at the’ installation
All’ are cordially invited to at-
tend a tea. at the Elks Home on
Henry Street, Tuesdhy, July 31, for
the benefit“of the Art and Craft
Club.
The Junior Elks are having 8
picture shown at the Capitol Thea-
tre, August 16°and 17.
CHAUFFEUR KILLED
CUEVELAN' ND, Miss., July 24
Miss., .
(ANP)—Julliua” Robinson, cheuf-
feur for Joseph’ K. Grahain, young
white. bdsiness | man, wes killed
Sansiag When the automobile in
which they were riding was s:ruck
HU. AND MINER
CLLEGE STUDENT
TO RECENE AD
Twelve per cent of the total en-
rollment at Howard University
and Miner Teachers’ College will
be permitted to receive student aid
through the Federal Relief Admin-
istration for the coming academic
year, it was announced this week.
Colleges and universities in the
District will receive approximately
$7,000 a month from the. $13,500,-
000 student aid fund being financed
through the FRA.
Last year Howard aided 109 stu-
dents while Miner Teachers’ Col-
Jege helped 53,
Each school is entitled to 12 per
cent of its enrollment to apply for
aid through this fund, Dr. Emmett
J. Scott, secretary of Howard said
Max Meenes is chairman of the
School Student Aid Committee at
Howard.
Last year the colleges were ee
‘mitted to assist 10 per cent of theit
enrollment.
The assisted students will be al.
lowed to earn up to $20 a month
‘each, and the total allotments tc
the colleges will be based on ar
average of $15 a month for eaci
student helped. The colleges arc
to finish the jobs ip addition
to these college tasks, the FERA
has made it possible for students
to be assigned next year to teach-
ing adult education and extension
classes, supervision, of recreational
activities and other services of
similar nature. am
THREE PASS D.C.
DENTISTRY TES
Three Howard University grad.
vates were among the names of 22
dentists who successfully _passe¢
the June examinatoin of the Dis.
trict Board of Dental Examiners as
announced Thursday.
Those who passed the examina
tion and were authorized to prac-
tice dentistry were:
James E, Bowman, 20 N Street
Northwest; Roland C. Groomes
5708 Foote Street, Northeast; and
Adna L, Spencer, 301 T Street,
Northwest.
Dr, Spencer is a native of Union-
town Pa., and graduated in the
Howard Dental Sehool class of ‘30,
He expects to open offices here in
the near future, Doctors Groomes
and Bowman received their de-
grees in classes '26 and ’31 respec:
tively.
Dr. Chester A. Baker was elect:
ed presen and Dr. C, Willar Ca-
malier, both white, secretary-treas-
urer, at the annual election of the
board,
pee aes
Hutradenas Distribute
Cigarettes to Patients
Members of the Hutradena Club
visited Mount Alto Veterans Hos-
nital and distributed cigarettes
among a number of the patients
Thursday. In the visiting group
were W. H. Burnette, Stephen 5.
Madison, J. W. 'H.'€mallwood,
Sylvester R. Woodfork, L. J. Scott
Albert Pleasant, Clarence G. Slig-
er, Robert L. Smith and George
Thomas,
The club is composed of World
War veterans who received their
initial military training at How-
ard University, serving Inter with
combat units in France
Sees
Lamba Rho Gamma Glee
Club in Need of Singers
The Lambda Rho Gamma Glee
Club has vacancies in organization
for altos, tenors and bass divisions
it desires to have filled before the
regular rehearsals for fall. pro-
grams are resumed, it was ‘an-
nounced this week by Julius S.
Carroll, director.
sania an
at Ti pm. at
Wheatley ¥.W.C.A- ;
ean
| A young lady applied at the Tri-
bune office for a job.
The boss asked her, “Can you
write shorthand?”
She replied, “Yes, but it takes
me longer to do it,”
Five Orphaned Children Making
Fight for Health at T.B. Camp
Mrs. Blanche McDuffie, Toner Health School Principal
Presents Gift of 100 Books to Small
Patients; All Gaining Weight
Lad Tries Suicide By
Drinking Red Ink
Apparently in a suicide at-
tempt, Samellar Gray, 14,
drank’ a bottle of red ink ‘at his
home, 1430 T Street, North-
west.” First aid. was ‘adminis-
tered by Dr. C. A. Walbury,
Freedmen’s Hospital staff phy-
sician who responded .with the
hospital ambulance, The boy
remained at home, his condi-
tion not being serious, ~
Wilkinson Elected Presi-
dent of Unit Which
Will Open Sept. |
‘A. new settlement house to. be
known as. the Northwest Settle-
ment House. located’ at Sixth and
ees nee
rest, will be
ormally openec
n PBeptanibae 1
ccording to an-
ouncemente
aade this week.
Garnet C. Wil-
sinson, —_assis-
ant. superinten-
ent. of schools,
ax been elected
resident of the
sew unit, ‘The
institution,
vhich is spon-
hedist- Phen opi ais ord
vest, will be
wrmally opened
oe, Ee
5 A ccording to an-
a ouncemente
: aade this week.
TEE Garnet C. Wil
inson, _assis-
Fv siperinten-
ent of schools,
as boon elected
vesident of the
ew unit, The
institution,
vhieh. is _spon-
tC. Whikeeeu. sored by the In
ternational Commitiee or Social
Agencies, and the Tuesday Evening
Club, will serve asa, teaching clin-
ic for students at thy Miner Teach:
ers’ College.
Other officers chosen were: I, A
Letcher, vice president; Judge
James A, Cobb, treasurer; Miss
Lucy D,” Slowe, secretary. ‘The
members of the board of directors
are: Mrs, William Adams Slade,
Mrs, John Jay O'Connor, Mrs. E.
C. Jackson, Miss Mary Thon.pson,
the Rev, A. F. Elms, Dwight 0. W.
Holmes, George E. C. Hayes, Miss
Fay Bentley, the Rev. Dr. Paul
Furbey, Dr. Ferdinand D. Whitby,
Mrs. Marion D. Butler, Judge Jag,
A. Cobb, Mrs. Letcher, Miss Mat-
garet. Jones, Dr, Dudley Willard
and Captain Rhoda Milliken,
Famous Elk Lodge in
| Chicago Closes Its Doors
| CHICAGO (ANP). Pasting of
“for rent” signs in the front win:
‘dows! of Fort Dearborn home of
Elks at 2920 South Parkway, last
Thursday, marked conclusion to a
history seldom rivalled in the an-
nalg of fraternal organizations.
Fort Dearborn Lodge, No. 44,
I.B.P.0.E.W. set the pace for fra-
ternal groups in Chicago, if not
elsewhere, but true to the same
old story, it was stated, interna:
bickering, strife, inability’ to satis-
fy petty ‘greed ‘and personal am-
bition led it to an inevitable end.
caer ‘® brave fight for health
five amall children whose mother
died in the Tuberculosis Hospital
are patients at, the Children’s
Health Camp of the Tuberculosis
Association at Fourteenth and Up-
shur Streets, Northwest, as having
the same disease in its enrly and
curable, stage.
The children were taken under
the care of the association on. the
same day their mother died. With
plenty of food, fresh air and sun-
shine, and mothered by Miss Ge-
neva Bryan, a registered nurse and
camp counsellors, the quartet is
showing a gain in weight and
health since becoming patients at
the camp. ‘The ages of the child-
ren are 3, 4, 6, 8 and 10,
Gain in Weight
With sunbrowned bodies from
their outdoor living and brighter
eyes due to long hours of daily
rest, nightly sleep and meals con-
taining plenty of fresh green rege
etables, fruit and all the pure milk
they want, the 160. tuberculous
boys and girls cared for in the
camp at the end of their third
week lined up for their. weekly
clinic examination and weighing
Saturday.
Practically all of them displayed
improved physical condition and
TEACHERS ASSN T0
HOLD CONVENTINN
INBALTIMORE
Sty tM Ro
_ BALTIMORE, Md.—The- thirty-
first annual session of the National
Association of Teachers in, Colored
Schools will convene here July 31
to August 3, inclusive.
The first general session will be
held in the Douglass High School
Tuesday evening. Dr, F. M. Wood,
director of schools, Baltimore, and
past president of ‘the association,
will preside and introduce Govern-
or Albert C, Ritchie of Maryland
and other ‘notables. Joseph C.
Parks, executive secretary of the
Maryland State Teachers will de-
liver the weleoming address, and
President John W. Davis of West
Virginia State College, will re-
spond. ‘The Gity Colored otchestra
and the City Colored chorus will
render music, conducted by W.
Llewellyn Wilson.
‘To Discuss ‘New Program
“A New Program of Education
for Colored Schools in Building:
New America” will be the central
theme of the meeting. Prominent
educators of both races will dis-
cuss subjects relating to this
theme.
‘That the education of the Negro
is receiving serious consideration
by educational organizations
throughout the courftry is evi-
denced by the fact that the Na-
tional Education Association in. its
recent, meeting in Washington, en-
dorsed the tentative program of
the National Association of Teach-
ers in Colored Schools ax drafted
by @ special committee of that as-
sociation. Thit program. ingludes
the following’ points: ”) r
Ist. The equitable distribution
of public tax funds in communities
having separate schools, without
regard to race,
2nd. Federal subsidies for qdu-
cation shall be earmarked in the
substantive legislative enactment
hy the Congress of the United
States guaranteeing to the Negro
iy proportionate share of such
on the basis of the ratio that the
‘Negro bears to the total popula-
tion in the subsidized states.
Srd. Stories of Negro life and
history to be adopted for use in all
public and private schools,
4th. The equalization of salaries
of white and Negro teachers with-
out. differentiation except on the
basis of training and experience,
5th. The making of adequate
provision for buildings and equip-
ment for Nogro children in segre-
gated school systems,
Dr. M, Grant Lueas and Dorothy
Inborden Miller, both of Washing,
ton, will be among the many, prom-
inent speakers to participate on the
‘program. as
A beach party for the delegates
to be held at Shadyside, Md,, Sat-
urday, August 4, will conclude ac-
tivities for the conference.
the great majority registered
nfarked gains in weight,
‘On Sunday the usual schedule of
‘meals, rest and play periods, show-
er bathe and games, was varied by
Sunday School teaching and sing-
ing in the afternoon,
Receive Gift of Books
A gift of 100 books for the use o
the children was announced during
the week from Mrs. Blanche Mc-
Duffie, principal of the Toner
Health School.
Saturday afternoon the camp
was visited by the Catholic Univer
sity class in public health nursing
composed of graduate nurses from
all sections under the leadership of
Miss Mary C. Connor, of the staff
of the Instructive Visiting: Nurse
Society. Other visitors at camp
were Mrs, Whitman Cross, pi
dent of the local Visiting Nurse So-
ciety and a director of the Tuber-
eulogis Association and Dr. Willian:
J, kins, recorder of deeds.
Some of the children have been
promised joy rides in cars volun-
teared for the purpose by friends
of the camp during the ree
week. Any person wishing to help:
in this service with an hour's se
of @ car may communicate’ with
Miss Olive Ward, _aperintendent_
of the camp, Columbia 10361, ~~