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About The advocate. (Portland, Or.) 19??-19?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1931)
SATURDAY. FRRRUARY 7. 1931 THREE T lw ADVOCATE Hunger Marchers Raid Grocery Store Spokane Happenings Local (B y K H Slay o ff Date February SPOKANE, 16, 1931, H O LM ES' WASHINGTON Fiast 2208, So. Crescent Avenue American club. ParticuUra later.— Adv. LINCOLN UNIV SINGER TAKE EOOO EOR .1 BE GUEST ARTIS1 INGE In order that no hazard lie placed in your efforts to support the Charity Ball, our See L. A. ASHFORD 32» Wheeler Street — EAst 440* H O L ID A Y BOB W H I T E S IN N Four Doors East of Buckley Ave. on Foster Road S ID E Dinner and Dance $2.00 P E R C O U PLE D O N ’T let it get serious Don't toko chonc*» SU. 5098 with a »o r* throot. At th* first sign o f troubl*, g a rg l* with full strength List*rin*. It kills g *rm s th a t THE IN T E R N A T IO N A L SC H O O L OF LIST ER IN E ST.. P O R T L A N D . O R E . KILLS GERMS IN IS SECONDS JA N . I. 1931. Having Completed Satisfactorily a Four-Year The story concerns the birth in a colored woman's home in Philadelphia of the child of a white girl. A detec tive, a court stenographer and a news paper reporter called at the home pre pared to manufacture race prejudice out of the event. But it turned out that the colored woman had taken in the white girl and cared for her at her own expense, after the white girl's family had cast her off, and that the girl's baby was white. Whereupon the detective, the court stenographer and the reporter filed out and remained silent about the story. D* yM wua the |I m *f b,m. »»»»••< " _ W 'l V . J a --------- me Strongly rat---- -------- •», »,• »,»*••» , •*•»! iC H - B R O W n HAIR GROWER h AN E Q U A L - ! ) . • » far , mi r tri* la i t « N t K N J c 0. 0. IN 6«trR- P1R1« w rMMA Ugna* Mah If • * **»'•*•*• IM P O R T F B O O U C T I ^ O . K. 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EVENINGS AND SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT W HERE YOU CANNOT W O RK! iure n a an w im n u n tatmi HTTTÏÏÏÏTTÏÏTTlIimm a t l i ro m ite a y N e w P h o n e : M L’rd o c k 2 6 2 1 TAPPAN D O N ’T 25 ounces for ¿scents Course in Handicrafts H air g r o W é R* O V E R T O N HYGIENIC CO 361 BENTON STREET lar Infections. Hsols MR. L E O N A R D J. M O R SE W ITHOUT N ext week the article will deal with he failure of W ill H. Hays to Keep lie Promise. DeNORVAL UNTHANK, M. D. tissu*. Announces Presentation of Diploma to G L IS A N Immediately a voluntary unofficia. body was organized to censor films, so ■n 1909 we find what was known as the National Board of Censorship. It was generally thought that this N a tional Board of Censorship was a gov crnmtntal agency inspecting and p ro tectiug the morality o f the films. Foreign countries thought this as well as people in the United States. caus* colds and simi T E C H N O L IG Y O f 1592 E Mrs. Jerome Covington departed for Seattle last Friday. Shreveport, La., Jan.— ( C N A ) — Lermon McDaniel died in a. hospital here after killing two white cops who had blacked their faces and raided hi* store. The raid occurred Saturday night when three cops acting as an advance guard, walked into McDaniel's j store and sent nine bullets through hi* ! hotly. D izzy with torturous pain and covered with .blood flowing from gap ing wounds, McDaniel answered with deadly fire killing tw o o f his assail ants A third escaped only when M c Daniel’s gun jammed. McDaniel fatally wounded lay in a hospital while mobs formed to lynch him But at once, the lynching mob was foiled in its purpose— McDaniel died just as members o f the mob | were ascending the hospital fire es- cape. New Y'ork, Feb. 6— Under the title of "T h e Suppressed Sensational Story," W illiam Pickens tells of the »upprt ssson of new s favorable to the N egro by reporters prepared to pub lish scandal At CALL Mr, Holmes deeply regrets the in convenience and unenviable notoriety growing out of the charges against him, but as he contended, “ he^would do the same thing again if he had to, in order to save his nephew from the stigma and disgrace of a penitentiary sentence. And he feels consoled in the assurance o f the prosecuting attorney, "that he had done nothing criminal, and that he. “ the prosecuting attorney, would have done the same thing that Mr. Holmes did to protect his nephew. As far back as 1908, Mayor McLlcl- .an of N ew Y ork City, after a public nearing, revoked all movie license* on the ground that the motion picture* were unclean and immoraL PICKENS IN W ORLD TOMORROW F R E D M cC l.E A R , Chan. R E S E R V A T IO N S sion were dismissed upon motion of the deputy prosecuting attorney, Carl Lange, Jan 23, by Judge G. W Stocker. T h e trial of the young men nvolved in the robbery continued until Jan 30. On account of the prosecuting attorney being in San Francisco in at- • »"dance upon the Use case, the trial will again be postponed Friday. On ac count of the extreme youth of the boy» •id this being their first offense their names have been withheld, and their friends are working hard to keen them from going to the penitentiary. Negro Dies Fighting SENSATIONAL STORY' BY 1 has been post poned by the officers, to a date to be announced later. FOR The producers o f motion pictures Master Joseph Green, orphan, is now have broken pledge after pledge thai residing with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Lee. they would reform the industry and He could not have secured a better give wholesome and desirable films. home. Some of the Broken Promises will be explained in this article. The charges against E H Holmes of having stolen goods in his posses First Promise— Takes T w o W ith DANCE HAND Article No. S and Keep W e ll! The UNIQUE CLUB of GOODFELLOWS LEFT The N. A. A. C P. held its monthly meeting the fourth Thursday in Jan uary at Calvary Baptist church. w e a u th o riz e ou r lo c a l d is trib u to r, A T T E N T IO N S P E N D Y O U R L IN C O L N P IC T U R E S IT U A T IO N (B y Chaster A. L y o n ) Spokane, Wash.— (Special to Advo The Sun Cafe, open day and night— cate)-- Political meeting of the Repub Chinese and American cooking, at 322 lican Club at which election o f o ffi cers will be held, postponed to first W illiams Ave. Phone Lnacaster 1882 Thursday in F'ebruary. Rumor hath it that there will be a general house J. D. Emery, M gr.— Adv. cleaning accomplished by charges and Oklahoma City, O k la, Jan 30- (Kcprm t from the Hall nuore counter charges. (( N A ) Having vainly waited month» Mrs. K. U Lusher is reported ill or the city to "d o iom ething'’ about Afro-Am erican) at her home in Montavilla. The Elks will put on a public smok hr unemployment problem 500 ilarv er neat Friday night, to which the ng worker» led by the Unemployment Unitoli, Ma»i., Jan 31— When III Mr». Ruth Mann, who sustained m public is invited. ouncil ignored the promise» of city f a m o u i m u s ic a l a it k t " K ‘ < " " i ftniu Lin uthuritir* and raided a grocery »tore jur.es to her body and and lirnbs a few coin University spprar» ill Jorilau lia i weeks ago when run down by an Pat Harris is feeding six or seven ot far from city hall. to unie iti lin t Unitoli «c u la i, W ii Williams Avenue liujidred unemployed men daily at the " I t '» too late to bargain with Ui, ’ I automobile near liant A lly il H ill, tenor, youngest h i Motel McCink Good wholesome food lie hunger marcher» »limited, a» they ! was removed frum the Emanuel ho» hei ha» been provided by the city and ot Ur. and M i». Uanicl li. Mill o tripped the »helve» to feed their p.tal Friday, January 30th to Uallunore, a giaduute ot Douglas Mig tarvitig fanulie» The effort» of the aunt's home, Mrs. Bertha Kirk, 295 county and generous citizens. In ad icliool, Lincoln Uinvcraity and one o ore manager to restrain the »tarving W illiam » Court. Mrs. Mann is »till dition the men have nice warm quar under the care of a physician and is ters in which to sleep. the four Lincoln i>ocl», will ba prricn orker», proved unavailing, and finer cd aa gucit arliil. rncy t<|uad», hastily »umtnonrd, u»ed I far frum being completely recovered, Spokane is experiencing one of the Mr. Mill who ii a iludciil of nino ■e tit limit brutality in dispersing the | a c c o r d in g t o i n f o r m a t i o n r e le a s e d t h is mildest winters in the memory o f the . - ululer William L. Wlntiiey, of N e» orker» who refuted to starve. oldest of the old timers. The tempera York and Uoelou »crvrd for a »Imi The raid on the grocery »tore wa* . Mrs. Beatrice H Cannady, editor of ture has not descended below 10 above Die Advocate has been invited to de lime alter Ilia graduation frum Lu ie culmination of a hunger march to freezing The snowfall the lightest in coin on the editorial »tail of tli ity Mall where fat bellied official» liver an address on the subject of many years The farmers are fearful Race «e la tio n » before the Epworth Uallilllore A lto American rged the hungry worker» to patient- that lack of moisture will greatly af l-.d. Note William Allyn Mill it ■ v await the coming of "prosperity " League tomorrow evening in New- fect this years’ crop. berg. Ore. The invitation was extend- , Oklahoma City. Jan. 20— Eatra brother of Rev Uamel U. Mill o I ed through W . S Gleiscr, president i gard» bub* pbuud ufouud lb I'ortland and Ricliard Mill who wi Ed Winlode, the oldest pioneer of Ity Jail today to prevent the unem- I of the Oregon Conference Epworth graduate in June from Harvard an. loyed worker» here from receiving ' League Council. Mrs. Cannady receiv- the race in Spokane in point o f resi who will enter Yale in September oi heir 29 comrade» jailed in the hunger | cd »everal requests for addresses be dence ,is confined to his home with an a »rholafilii|i to pursue lu» 1*1». U fore various white audiences in the awful lame ankle. H e is reported some march. degree in the field of religion. city. better, as is also C. U. Lee and G. L. Bordon, both musicians, who have both DR N O R M A N F. C O L E M A N been ill in hospitals. Dr Norman K. Coleman president of Reed College who will deliver an address on Japanese Culture and lead the discussion at Pacif c College this Join the . . . afternoon. Dr. Coleman is a leader in Pacific relations and has a deep The public and visitors are cordially sympathetic understanding of the people of the orient. His addrees protases invited to attend Sunday service at PRUDENTIAL HOSPITAL Bethel A U. E. and Calvary Baptist to be not only interesting but highly illuminating. churches in Spokane. Rev. G. S. Allen and E B Reed, pastors ASSOCIATION FORMAL THE m o t i o n This implied promise of an cfieclive censorship was broken, snd was acknowledged in 1916 when the N a tional Board of Csntorship changed Its name to the National Board of R e view. 1 hat organization still continues to deceive some of the public, but in the trade it is a J O K E . So, we tind that the First Promise— T o have an actual national censorship of films, was broken by the motion picture in dustry. Second Promise— T o reform them selves by censoring their own films was the second promise. This promise was brought about by the New York cgislative motion picture investigation n 1917, which showed that immoral pictures were being produced. Because of these conditions, during ¡he first part of 1919 the National As- .ocution of the motion picture indus try in N ew Y ork started a movement which they insisted would result in producing only clean films. In April, .919, this association voted to reform hemselves by censoring their own .ilms. Did they keep tbeir promise? t would hardly seem so lor Chicago ensors that year eliminated 70 whole ,ilms and 110,834 feet from other films, nost of them produced after the N ew York meeting. Y IM T « B HEAT A l i . O A Y .J O V MRS. E. D. C A N N A D Y ]* > • Pacific Coast Distributor ! 312 Macleay Building, Portland, Ore. Ü T uh T t o to m e AMt, O AFPftEciA-ra the "W itatioh / A M O A u -T H A T , A V X fttA ccY , , OVC. M A N , I T H IN K I '» tSrra ft st a y h e r « : i T n I mmk & * avy the same * j I 1