PAGE FOU K Tiw F ADVOCATE SA T U K D A V .N O V E M B E R ?S. ISSI LATER DEVELOPMENTS IN PETERSON TRIAL j Increasing Desire T o Know Truth [ B Y C A R T E R C. HOOK i : WOODSON T h e niessacos «lelivered at the an- to the history of this country a s evi nual meetinn of the Association for (fence*) by a scien tific stu*I* of ihc the stn.lv of NY pro Life and History -our.-.*» to which he has been Kivinp h, M in New \ ork City this month, the attention d n n n * re cent years F oil» » most sue , ssful ( onfere nce of the sort Ins him ca m e IT o fess o r Ben jamin in its history, decidedly demonstrated Brawlev who in his highly literary as that there is all increasinit desire of we ll as eloquent sty le e m pha siied ad Nearoes and whites to know the truth ditional ach iev em en ts of the W est In and nothing but the truth Most ot us dian natives, belittled the nonsenn-.il are accustomed to abu se those who attitude *'f ho st ility shown by Ignorant tell ns the truth which we do not like c it iie n s of this country, and urged to hear. During the four days of s e r­ thes e two elem e nts to work out an *f ious discussion some very searchjtig ficient plan for co-operation in things revelations and statem en ts were made literary, religious, so cia l and oo mom by the scholarly persons assembled, ic I doubt that any discourees o - .! s and yet throughout the meeting then vussions at any a ssem bly have don* wore not manifested any evidence of more than these to « r a d i c a l - o n >" feeling or personal differen ces which and to po;'ulari»o a truth which mu so m etim es disturb co nferen ces which he helpful in the re habilita tion of the Negroes n the I ’ nited S ta te s a re snpi>osedly scientific. The ne cessity for more ot "lie truth The large audience assembled at the St. J a m e s Pre sb yte ria n Church on the and the willingness to lab >r i > .-hth-ti Mh to h e a r the Director of the Associ it. too was f u rth e r shown by Pro les an on outline what he thought should sor Maurice K Davie, of Yale 1 n i' - he taught w ith respect to the Negro in sitv. in his account of w na’ is h* .nt the schools of this co untry was agree- done there in the study of tlu N - able surprised lo he ar President J o h n T here w ere re p orts as to -he r. c Hope of Xtlunta I'n iversity endorse es and cours es now being given in > . these ideas and to say that they are gro life atnl his to ry in mos of the a • not too advanced for Atlanta Cnivcr credited univ ersities, but none showed s i i v where he is now trying to produce such progres a s that from Yale In re- a new leadership of the Negro by ac porting a cla ss of 250 students who qiiaintinc him with the his-ory. liter*- crowd a hall th e r e thre e tim es a week l i r e , philosophy, and . . • no nius o f hi» to K a m the truth about the Negi own background. Everybo dy seemed lieving that the tru th will free then-, to feel like praying that the number of from the bias of their fa th ers I entdeM H l- EH r n i E l t a a shown by the Negro him rapidly Increase self in learn ing to understand the in the ,‘. .S( v.ssion of the NlfTO In truth was strikingly dem onst ra ted hj dramatic art led by P rofessor George f rank sta te m e n ts made by Dr. E C. Grant, of Morgan College, equally KYankliu F ra z ie r in d ic ussing the or ground was taken. T h e N. -t igin . the organiza tio n, and the status must learn to appreciate more the of the free Negro family T his social dramatization possibilities in his life unit, like any other, had Its sh ortcom and at the same tim e the m a sses . n u t *„£» ag well as its virt ues T h e r e weri learn to distinguish betw een den some who tried lo m a k e excu ses and tag one as a m em ber of a certa iu race co ver up the truTh with respect to the and portraying him as a human, aa Btorala exhibited by the N- ft pointed out so fra nkly by Miss V a r y which according to history, often had \V. Ovington. when c e r ta in critics ob- ¡{g origin in im m orality of the two je cted to such as the fish fry in raceg; but Dr. F ra z ie r disclosed the "G reen P a stu res " and Cat Fisli How in truth as it was and made no excuses ‘ Porgy Mr. Carl W ils on , a p’a>- f or ¡t just as a s cie n tifica lly trained wright. who was present, made a pro- student should. One Negro partiel- fitable contribution to this discussion. pant tried to defend the Negro in a Out of the discussion of L iberia, too. thrust at the white race , saying that came an unstial amount of valuable in- as a Pullman po rt er his experience formation which will serve to estab- was that Instead of having to resist lish in the minds of the people a new , j j e tempation to rape he had to strug- point of view with resoect to the Ne- Kie to prevent him self from being gro in Africa F a cts set forth by both raped. Another Negro with the sami Mr Charles S J oh nso n and Dr Ray. thought asserted that he is a direct mond >11. who have Invest!- ¡¿ sc en d a n t ,,f T h o m a s J e f f e r s n. th< gated conditions in Africa, showed gaei? 0 f Monticello, although he inher- that, without mincing words, we have ¡te(j none of his c h a r a c t e r as property, to admit that Lib eria is a failu re and T h e tlmeIv aiscllssion of the Negro there can be no hope for the co untry Church ag scheduled, was also frank except to dislodge the misguided and and tQ {he ;)0lnt x h e ach iev em en ts unprincipled men who for the last cen- t ^e c k urch were presented by Dr turv have done little more than to fol- H H p ^ ^ , . in clear-cut and force- low the nefarious exam ples of the j u| language and made a favorable im- slaveholders who emancipated their preg sion> He protrayed the institution a ncestors to deport them to Africa. ag a force in the progress of the it 'las been a very difficult task for >;e £ r0 . T h e overlapping, duplication Negroes to get away from slavery in e ffort_ c o m m o n , and the impover- m a tters of religion and government. lsh men t of the people by a ra th e r T h e r e were some persons who did not U r g e and unnec essary churc h organi- like to admit this and loudly applaud- zation were e f f- c t lv e ly set forth by ed Mr. Ben N. Azikiwe. an African, in Dr Vernon Johns, the sch olarly presi- sh'-winc that the League of Nations dent of the Virginia T heo log ica l Sem- [.ermitted forced labor in certain ¡.arts inary. T here were present also such of the world for pubUc works and en- distinguished m in ist ers as Dr. W illiam terprises of great necessity and had Lloyd Imes. Bishop F. A. W a lla c e of left it to such nations to determine , h e A. M E Zion Church. Dr. J o h n W. what are public w-orks and en terprises Lee. Field R epresen tative of the Pres- of great ne cessity. On the other hand, b y t e n a n Church, and Bishop McGuire it was very encouraging to find a of the African Orthodox Church. A large group of scholarly persons of general discussion did not follow these both ra ce s willing to hear the truth addres ses, but Dr. A. Clayton Powell about Liberia and to shape their opin- took occasion to say that he believed ions and policies accord,ngly. the m in isters had rec ently receiv ed a The W est Indian natives, moreover, much deserved sco urging and he hop- were greatly surprised to find that ed that they would learn to do better they were not to be ridiculed and read and co-o;>erate more effi cien tly in the out of the pale of humanity as some rebuilding of the churc h along sane had feared. From Dr. Charles H. lines. Dr. E. W . Moore of Columbus, W esley of Howard I ’ niversity ca m e a Ohio, spoke at length in the same most sch olarly presentation of the vein. large contribution of the West Indian T h e work of the A ss oci atio n as an r Ga sco Briquets G produce more heat than any other solid fuel and leave No Ashes Porticine Gas & Coke Co OF R E V IEW umjg u& h iu tii Pickens Views Furies o f Florida “S I S T E R INDIA" By M E D IT H C K A S K E J QUALITY MERCHANDISE FOR THE HOME AND PERSONAL SERVICE OF E BY W IL L IA M P I C K E N S BIR M IN GHA M Ala N«>v 1» He tails of the fra m e up with w hich the In form ation about one of the moat he side him In " t h e struggle buggy brutal and sa dist ic crim es that ev er and lookltig for all the world like Birmingham co u rt* h«»pe to rallrimd l W B E rdm a ns Pub C o . Grand Rate t«>ok place, even in Florida, lias Just Amos tu thè famous "Friniti All T axi Willie IVt«*r*oti. tub ercular Negro ml ids. Michigan) —— — — — — — — — — — co m e to me thru the malls T h e per* ca b ", he rolled away in searclt of fatue tier, through to a di'Utlt Neiitance on a ch arg e of murdering two while w«e T h e authoress, in writing this he r The thought of »elf. * e ’f*pr esorva son who sen t the Informât loti w as a ami fortune, whlle the wlfe and two tn«'ii. a r e <*xpo*ed lu u le tter received first book, has given to the reading fraid to sign his name and only indica little sona walimi ut home for bis re U param ount In the Ilf«» of «very a n i­ by tb«* Inlet nutliuiul Labor lie fense public a biographic sketch of one. l*r mal. It has to I k * or the a r t m a 1 oouM ted his Identity to me by indirection lutti wltli the giad tldlugs M Brown, of England, a Very learned 11«' traveled ahotit Ho mlles finn» fr«un a prominent llirtiiiiigliani a t t o r ­ not survive boeauae this law belong* T h e person is well known, is very in ney T h e letter tells how th«« sta te s sch olar, who. forty y e a r s ago. co n s e ­ to the naimal kingdom hut 1.*» inexcu­ telligen t ami one hundred p e r e e n t home; dreamltig gretti dre am *, w ben solicitor, aw are that P eterson I* th«« crated her life to missionary work in the old ( « r , Irne to il» sp ecie *, bevuti sable when allowed to dominate the trust w orthy fur away India And 1 must white, and how 1 wish 1 to get very utirwly. ami collided with wrong man. still "led the Grand Ju ry human ra ce full well Today, at l.udhtans. India, a modern T h e to an indic tm ent knowing Man with high Intellect, his reason could write about som eth in g el se to- a ca r driven by a white woman that he was indicting an innocen t medical co llege (for women), hospital ing powers, his ability to think and day from Florida, the land of f lo w e r s ’ woman was not injured, neither was Negro." and school thrives ami from which form ideas, his imagination and ideal- But they keep an unafraid black man her c a r damaged, and taking the road It reads In part hundred of Indian girls have g rad ua­ i*m. and his power to tra nscend all In this country so busy fighting for again sh e drove mi he r way T h e d r "O ur assoclat«« went Into the full ted and gone to outlying parts of In­ nature s laws thru his intel ligen ce to the sh e e r r u i n to live and br eath e the c u m s t a n c e * and little e\e I l e nt e it t fa« Is an«! to his surprise found that dia where they have establish ed many b e tter the living conditions of his that he has little tim e to co nsid er the would have furnished only am use m ent schools, hospitals and dispens aries And ytt they p ret ml to won to anyone with a se nse of humor, but neither ill«* offic ers «»f the city or kind, is able to turn his thoughts from flow ers county believe they have identified T h e forty years struggle that l 'r himself, his ow n co mfort, happiness tier why black American writers ami not to the Impromptu inob of white the right Negro T h ey are right Miss Brown has had to ach ieve su ccess, and repose, to the hap piness atnl wel th in k ers do not spend more tim e tits men who had gat hered at the *i»ot and in this instance su ccess does not cu ssing Inte rstellar Space. E th erea l None of them knew the old Negro ot Williams has »tir«dy pick»«! the wrong fare of others mean wealth, luxury or continued T h e off!« ials »if the S t a l e of W av e- Form , or the leagues of notions what he was about None of them m Negro This power of the mind is the pleasures, but. a wealth measured in this T h e solicitor qulretl None of them cart'd They Alalmttm know crow ning ac h ie v em en t in the develop of th e League of Nations knows it, yet he went on and led hi* needed loving, expert and professional m eat of man to be forgetful of self 1 was Just shari*enlng my pencil to took him in hum!; amt as he offered se rvice to India's womanhood, m akes Gran«! Jury to an Indictmen t knowing and thoughtful of others, atnl to c o n ­ writ«- so met hin g on Thomas Alva Bdl ,l" r e s is ta n c e and they «maid fin d no full well lie was Indicting all lutloceiit an interes ting ro man ce of real life and sider a no ther's well being before his son. under the title of T * t T h e r e He ex cue to shoot him. they beat hint into man adventure. own. L ig h t " and In honor of the man who inenslblllty with the butts of their re B attlin g against every form of Ig­ " W illie P eterson has told them T h is is the holiday spirit to I k * was literally " t h e light of the world", so lvers and threw him into prison norance. prejudice, uncleaulines s and where he was and how lie has d«>ne ca rr ie d out throughout the year, to he — when he re co m es this tale of d a r k ­ As days tutssed, his condition grew for more than a year back deep religious c a s t e system. Dr. T h e off! Brawn, won the co nfidence, respect of service ra the r th a n to he served» ness out of F l o r i d a , - d i m m i n g niv Bd- steadily w orse; his mind had been up rs have check«'«! It back and fouud ami to give ra the r than rec eive If Ison tho ughts and eclipsing anything set ami they had kttnck«'d his memory and admiration of all cla sses, and It to be true He was never even Into a blank At last they decided, arrested be fore and lias tM««n sick f«»r brought the spirit of Christian relig ­ ea ch individual would live up to these else. principles the world would be chang with brutal lelsurelineaa, to make ion and love to the sisters of India. We can no t undo the brutal deed y ear* W e even found the white mutt This book dwells ext en sively on wo­ ed ov er night, but only a few souls which was done Just a few »lays ago some inquiries and find out where he who had known him Intim ately for at the holiday se ason a re awakened belonged anyway. #*p«pclally to get mans' plight in India and brings to lu Florida, and we doubt w he th er a n y ­ the last t«’ii >eurs. and he c«irr(diat«'d atnl enriched to the e x te n t that they light much knowledge on thei r child body will ever he punished for it. but rid of the nuisa nce of a "sick n ig g er" th«* Negro lu every detail Th«* young never again retro gra de back to the m arriages and their causes. Our wo­ we ca n tell a million read ers about it on thei r hands and to avoid the thr«*at holy coubl not have missed the Negro old se lf ish n e ss of the past. so the men, of color, in America, who think And wo hope they will ttll ten million euing expense of a «lead one T h e a u ­ m ore ." world only m ak es a little spiritual t ho rities su cceeded lu I«>«'utlng his their lot a hard one. should read, ' S i s ­ others. P ete rso n wus pirktHl up on the progress each year ter India." You have heard much of Daytona wifi' and fold he r that he was in thei r s t r e e t s *»f Birm ingham by Nell Wll ja il " s i c k . " They did not tell he r what ________C L I F F O R D C M I T C H E L L . liatus and "Id entified " through a hut B e a ch In the city of Daytona, not far NEGROES ST IL L S E R F S Identification to net Miss Williams from the famous Negro school dwelt had made him sick Sh e was t«dd that agency delving during the last sixteen uf little Negro family of four; father, if sh e would call for him at ntght, that $.1.300 P eterson was later shot in Jail years into the inn ermost r e c e d e s of they would permit him t«» leave tht by D e n t Williutns. br o th er of one of * Concluded from page one) the past was outlined in a most sch ol­ published in the magazine. cl early m other (who is a hopeless co nsu m p­ prison and would then clrt'ulate a re­ th«' slain girls T h e trial has been arly fashion by P ro fe ss o r E v a rt s B. show that while some cities have t i v e ! . and two little boys T h e r e was port that he had "ecsnpe«!"; and that, postponed while P ete rson recovers Greene, of Columbia I ’ niversity. who made sin ce re attem p ts to take ca re of no more harm less little family In all in consid era tio n for his being " s i c k " , from the wounds T h e 1LD Is o r g a n ­ has been a const ant read er of the pub­ their black unemployed oth ers dis F l o rid a ; they lived In the direst pov­ th«*y would simply drop the ca se and izing a P eterson d efe n se co m m ittee lications of the associatio n and a sup­ played an attitude of indiffere nce leav e rty but were by no means lazy nr un­ do nothing to re captu re him ........ 4$ Having no Job for wages, porter of its effo rts. He emphasized ing the colored citizen s to shift for interestin g T h e frantic mother and he r two lit­ the man made a bare living by rep a ir­ ELKO SINGERS PLEASE the important truth that while the them selv es. ing stoves which he culled for and tle b o y s ’ In their «lire poverty they work of national bodies in pre serving Editors Commend DuBois brought back In a little home made had not even the m eans to transport and writing the history of the country E U G E N E . O r e . Nov 26 T h e Elko Dr. W K. DuBois. n i c e leader and box wagon He and his two 1 it 1 1«* boys them selves ov er the twenty miles, to from the tradition al point of view is Edito r of the Crisis, is to be co ng ra tu­ Sin g ers gave a musical progrum In the re etern ally busy, ami aroused a reach the fa th er who «luring the flush of gre at se rvice to scholarship, it is lated on the position he has taken in es in the dark ness of his tna«iness had auditorium of the First Baptist ch urch also necessar y for sm a lle r o rg a niz a ­ advising Negroes to c r e a te for them so rt of amused admiration in the co m ­ Wednesday «'Venitig at 7 30 o'clock 1 to send urgent appeal* for tions dealing with neglected groups se lves an eco nom y that will mitigate munity by their unique resourceful- mating« l^her. were se lect ions by the band, to co me t«» him HymraUhetle In making .i living One > i.«v the his wlf and races to prese rv e thei r own re­ the e f fe c ts of this d egression and de­ rt- ne ig hbor* ftAally colb'ct«*«l the (run* tin* o r ch es tr a male quartet, sexte tte, ne ig hbors notice«! that to the ass. cords and so popularize them as to pressions to come, say editors of lead A double male qu a rtette sang On Oct ob er the 16th etc ment of junk which steadily grew in p«»rtatl«>n fe e s show the necessity for tolling the ing ra ce weeklies. severa l Negro spirituals T h e group had sh«» reached (ho jail w her e L«■ * fens their back yard, this little family whole truth about things ra the r than Josep h D. Bibb. Edito r of the Chi­ added a hug«' **«d«l bu ss " of an automo- ban«! had been botiml as a raving man pres<'iited a program Monday evening continue as victims of tradition. at the First Ch ristian c h u rch and were ca g o Whip, one of the first publica­ bile T h e ingenious jun k man put this lac t«» his prison ««»t Atnl as sh«' sat etithusiasti« ally received T h e annual m eeting made such a tio ns to udvocate jo b cam paigns a- in ru nning order. an«l some wit am ong * ith he r i s o little boy*. waiting on favorable impression upon the people mong Negroes, praised Dr. DuBois for the neighbo rs christ ened It the drug the front porch «»f the prison, they of New Yo rk that two important re­ the fight he is now making as did H BIG S H O T S T A K E N FOR A RIDE gle buggy." Approaching a bit nea rer brought out the fath er *»f the family sults immediately followed. Steps G Mudgail. editor of the NVgro World In acq u a inta nce the neighbo rs l«*arned and to her th«*y delivered him DEAD were taken to or ganize at on ce a N A P IE I tV I L L E . Ill N o v 26 N e w * At last reports, the colored p«*«>;de th«* man was the proud " in v e n tr " of br anch of the work in New York City some sort <»f co ntrivance . which he of the commun ity were "aruuse«l"; has Just reach«*«! Th«* Ad v oc ate that J to make a scien tific study of the neg­ O IX IE S I N G E R S A P P E A R IN SA L E M T H U R S O A Y boasttnl that s» veral "whit«* folk- hail that Is. they were taking up money to L Nichols A Co of Nuph'rvlllc. 1111 lected aspects of th a t local life and co nceded to have so m e merit, und offer a bit of t« inporary relief to this history It was most encouraging, ber«*av«*d widow and these fath erless toils are publishing a 1 i«*w «'«litloti of too. that principals of schoo ls teach- S A L E M . On* . Nov. 26 T h e old time with which he hoped s«*m«* «lay to T h e o f f i c i a l History o f Th«* N e g r o ing numbers of Negro ch ildre n sought Negro melodies were sung In the real sta rtle both fa m e and money out of a children, and also to prepare for th«* dead a decent funeral ser vice, thru Race. the a ss is ta n ce of the Directo r in bring- old Negro way by the Dixie Ju b ile e believ ing world. On O ctober 2. 1931. this prize lnv»*n which they no doubt sat tearfully and ing before the ed ucational authoritie s quartet Thursday night at > .'ll» «»clock T h e book is «*all«*d P R O G R E S S O F sang the importance of adopting as text in the auditorium of the F irst Method tion. w hatever it was. was considered " P r n l s e God from whom all bless A R A T E and is by W H Fro gm an, ready to be sprung upon the waiting certa in books which give the back- 1st ch urch. W ell matched vocally and LL.D and J 1. Nichols. AH, * l t h an ings f l o w ------------ " ground of the Negro. T his m a tter is admirab ly trained in q u a rtette work public. T h e black Inventor loaded it Introduction by U It Moton of Tusk«»- now being taken to the New Yo rk the united voices of these four m»*n g««e Institute T h e r e ar«' special a rt ic ­ Board of Education. had the qu ality and volume of organ In his le tter to J A. Brown, grand les by Mr* Booker T Wa shington. tones. T h e y featured the old time G R E E N S U S P E N D S SO UTH chuucello r. Mr Gr«-«-n conclud«-* the W M Dugan, r M MHden. Attain L favorites, but thei r re p ertoire included CAROLIN A P Y T H IA N HEADS suspension no tice with th«? «>r«*r "to llolsey , and oth«-r noted writers 475 severa l groups of solos and a number turn ov er to S i r K F Floyd, grand graving* t«-ll the tab* of Race P rog re *s of humorous readings from the work* A P P O IN T S NEW C H A N C E LL O R vice ch ancellor, ail funds, docuntiuit*. i of Paul L a w r en ce Dunbar. E v ery man us it bus never been told before books, property and rec ord s h<>loiig- in the qu artet is a vocal soloist. The W h e re c a n you find more thrilling ing to tb«- grand iodg«* In your posse* co ncert was sponsored by the Young heroism than was dl*pluy««d by one SlOIt." une > (Corn hided from page People's Epworth League of the First UristjrUM A tta ck s In the famous Boston L«-wl«' and Wilkinson a«** directed to M a ssa cre? Or IV ter Sab-tn at !tunk<’r Methodist church. |hold the grand lodge propertte* In / y reciti Especially for This grand lodge to the supremo lodge. The Hill? Or Major J e f f r e y in th«* c a m ­ tax»*« imposed by the suprem e lodge their (HiNseHion until thei r su ccessors paign of Mobile? Or J o h n Wall and E N C O U R A G E S E N D E A V O R IN S e nspaper a re ch osen whet) they a re to deliver MU SIC A L C O M PO S IT IO N laws w«*re held to be exo rbitant by the Wllllum Carney at F ort W a g n e r ? Or them to these su ccessors leader* of th«* grand lodge* Mr Floyd. up«*n assum ing o ffic e of Capt. Catltoux at I’ort Hudson? Or Although ta k en by su rp rise by tin- Prizes offered to Musicians of the Ne ro race by Captain J o h n Wana action of the So u th Carolina lodge of­ grand chan« »*llo!-. la directed to Issue Quinton llande ro in th«* Cuban W a r? SA ficers. the su prem e chancfdlor c o u n ­ a procl am at ion a Wising the Htihordln- Or I’rivates Roberta and J o h nso n, tb«« maker, Jr. T he Rodman W a n a m a k e r Competi­ t e r e d quickly with the necond move in at«- lodges of that fact and «>f his up- Tlrst A m erican* t«> r«-< •«Iv«* the c«»vet«'d tion for Negro Composers of Music ith e a erie* by direct ng these offlc«TM (Miintni* »its to fill th - positions Yarn- Croix «!«' Otierre In the World W a r ? X, a : l l l a I which term inat ed in Ju ly 1931 brought to pay ov er to th«* sti;»r«*rne keoper of led by th«* supremo ch a n cellor's huh Why. beside tin* glorious achlev«*ment | six aw ard *, in thre e c l a s s e s ; the prize : re cord * and se als. K K. Underwood, p«*nslon order. It is impoHMihl«* to predict at this of such men the modern gang warfare winning compositions co m in g from al and to the s e c r e t a r y of tht* Pythian T em p le co mm ission. Edward Gr«-«-n. film- which side will m ak e th«> fourth sec tion s of the United S t a t e s , f Al Capon* ami his notorious gun­ If the s i s i A fourth cl a s s in this s a m e co m peti­ all mon te* co llected under »uprem«* mov«> in the imbroglio. lodge order* by No vember 16, under pended South Carolina offlc«-rs refuse men look like a Sunday Scho ol C lished."— T. J . Joh nso n, Prln. Sh elby b ie a m a h ap p y who Is continuing this a ltr u ist ic un i hslge, or that th«* money collected m o t h * r a . I f you Inst. dert aking in loving m em ory of his de- j may have been squandered for other w ill «end m * r m ir "I>«'serv«'H a place In «»viTy lib rary." nam a and addreaa ceas ed fath er, was co nvinced that I purposes. I w ill * bully «arid many new lovers of music- must b e ! In asm uch as Mr. G r e e n s ultimatum i (). II B ernar d, Tenn. S t a t e Agent. you a t r e a t m e n t ea g er to add thei r noms de plume to Iio the South Carolina offic ers had j , and a cony o f my " T h e best I have ev«?r exam ined.’*— specified that the co llection be turned j ♦ ^ b o n h la t. ' A Ilal.y mauscript yet to be born. Y o u r llo m * . • I). C. Drayton, Pres. Alabama C h rist­ lover by November 16. the failu re of Hence a F u r th e r Co ntest i t Hereby rhlrh talta h o w to n a a ft a n d m anjroth«-r thin^a these o f f ic e r * to obey the order Issued , niarrind ian Inst. woman should know. Moth w ill )»a »ant announced. to them forced th«j su prem e c h a n c e l­ f r r e In plain w rapper. W rlta t/vlay. I>r. II. W ill T h e s e a re the p a rticulars: "1 would not be without it." - —J . I). I I I - F , 7th A V ail«. UC J a a r p h . Mat lor to ta k e the third move In the m a t­ Class I Songs with words. Hill, Pres. C K S. Haii 1 1st College. ter. Class II— Plano compo sltons. Two prizes of $250.00; one to be a- Y O U 'R E ON T H E S P O T warded in each class . Here I* a ch a n ce for y«>u to ob tain Compositions to he sen t to the Rob- thl* precious volum«« at half price I er t Curtis Ogden Association in the F IN L E Y ’S without your first sending a cent. J o h n W a n a m a k e r Store , Philadelphia, E 3511 on or be fore J u l y 15, 1932. Simply mark and mail the hand coup­ 'T O All compoltslons to he written es­ on below. Instead of the re gula r price Trade Mark Emblem is the / > ' pecially for this co ntest. of $2 90, pay tin* postman only $1.45 T o be submitted in ink on printed plus a few c e n t * postage. You will music paper. Tree of T o be marked plainly with the cla ss then have for your v«‘ry own the latest . In which the respec tive composition is IMMORTAL L IF E and best R a ce History Am erica has en tered. ««ver seen. If not satisfied, your mon­ A GAY FA S H IO N F O R T o he signed with an assum ed nam«- U se O ur New Parking Sp ace P or Pun ey will be refunded Instantly. A L IT T L E TO T T h e co m po ser's r«-al nam e in a s«*al- ed envelops to ac com pany the» compo- But only n limited number o f copies IP flN IlY h S O N eral C «r* at Pourth end Montgom ery The soft frock for the little girl I sit ion. M O K I I« IANS a re avai lable at thl* rem a rk a b le sa v­ who isn’t always dressed in pi. y S treet* T h e competitio n limited to com pos­ clothes, should have a great deal of ing, so put you rself on the spot today. ers res id en ts of the United S t a t e s or femininity in its lines, but carefully ----------------- H ere’s T he S p o t ----------------- its territories. •void snv fussiness or ornamentation R ig h ts of public perfo rm an ce of the J . L. Nichols A Co., Inc as this one docs. It relies solely on winning composition* to he vested in Napli'rvllle, Illinois. the delicacy of the fabric and the the R obert Curtis Ogden Association S i r s : Bend me the lah'Ht edition of chartritng soft lines of the design. for a period of thr«*e m on ths a f te r the The i'tt’/- rape collar is scalloped, and P R O G R E S S O F A R A C E for a week's aw ards are made. the same graceful line is carried out examination. I will pay th«« postman Our read ers will note th a t there is in th«- v ?v that the waist is attach* d still opportunity to compet e for the $1 45 th«? bargain price and postage. at the Lont. Grouped shirring pro Five Hundred Dollar Prize of Class vide* i llness for the skirt. A sash If It does not plea*e me I will return F our of the 1931 Contest. ties t* t! r back. Sashes, f»»r some It and you refund the $1.45. Also, that the new C o n test for 1932 reason 4«*gys suggest parties to lit- Nam e ............................................................. Is bu t Just now opened. f*e < ri./ A flowered organdie or SIXTH & OLISAN 8TR&ET8 St. A No.............................................................. Full details will he furnished on re­ rt>«ill cr lawn would be very nice f jt quest by the R obert Cu rt is Ogden . City .............................. state ................. *his lit’ Je model. PORTLAND. ORE. "Where Young Men Huy” Assoclat if>n in the Joh n W a n a m a k er If you c a r e to sa ve posing«* send Kxcella Pattern No 3511. Sizes 4 Sto re, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. to 12 j ears, 20 cents. «»nly $1.35 ca sh . BY NANCY L E E Üpto-thc-Minute Modes A Baby in Your Home We Sett For Less Because We Seti for C ash COMPLETE NEW STOCKS ffirlp fu l 1i rad ford Clothes $25.00 to Shop $45.00 AUSPLUND DRUG STORE