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About The advocate. (Portland, Or.) 19??-19?? | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1932)
THR IT.M’STRATKD FEATURE SECTIO N -M arch 12 , 1932 M W EEKS POEM 111! CO M M O N 111(01 I II It IIOOD |l> <'lim on Scollai«I gut d m lumi In lliul w h rtr through Thru* rippled nmiiy lllttiHC Mrrntii. Glhtm uiiil Plson, rlrtu of hur. Taking (h r dawn and m iiim ‘1 In mil Hum M iner K v r u n i! A ilit lli m iw ( h r g le a m W h e n n u 'it u l tim e u m l tid e b e g a n . T i l l * th in h a * b e r ii ( h r c l t n i i i i r t i d re a m 'I hr ciiintilon brol herhood of limn D«>k down thr vrm* In long review How Inflnltrlv Mid thrv arrml T h r fair firkin * tallied with crimson drw T h r grief* mul agonic.* extreme; T h r narrow* crowd, thr terror* Irrm Wherever wr mav backward Mujif Ifow dim, h o « fm thr di m u irr h dream T h r common brother hood of mnlif Fxasivr (h r un< nptured rlur That Vad* to thin mi rlidlrm (h r me; Though now a rainbow *|x»n* thr blue A T L A N T IC C IT Y ( A B E « M1K IT S JO B LE S S — The tiood W ill Tree l.on/l u m 'h i 133 N. Maryland Avenue, where over 25« people have been fed dally /« poak Histeen week*. This lunch room k sponsored bv Frank Ik n n r lt Austin ( ‘lark. l i i â LOO KING A T T H K STARS !( fade* und U> not what wr deem W r dutch wt K w r VAtnl) M I •• Mi« And whilr with all our powers wr plan Still, »till elude* the dreamer's dream T h e common brotherhood of man. frien d s ENVO I It come, may T IM N t H ilt r A N D T I U the hour BMpffMM T o every class to every clan. T h e realisation of the dream T lie common brotherh<*«d o f man! A THREE DATS’ COUGH IS YOUR DANGER SIGNAL F m ia n il vouch* and eold* lead t* aevtou* (rouble Von ran Won them now with ( rromulkion, an rmulobed rrroaota •bal ia |»le«Mnt in take ( r«« rnuUmn la a hew mrdteal duroirry with two-fold action; it amihri and heala the inflamed aunil r .nr« and inlubila germ growth. 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A l IV » t b islw S a t * • « , Iw l U f i i t t k R I Al THINC fO W I R rU I i n c u l i ■ ACRITICI G IT U IU R S N O V I I mi O K U NT • Now that the Ja|ianr*r and Chlnear are busy slaughtering each other in the Far East. one la reminded of Tim Moore formerly (he leading comic of Blackbirds," and now a(arred In Irvin M ills‘a ‘ Harlem Scandals ’ The story gora that Moore was touring the Orient with a company of girla and entertainer* not long after the Span* i*h-Am erican War. and after leaving Shanghai he embarked for the Philippines, where the American Arm y was keeping the Insurrection ists in check T im look his company into the camp of the colored regiments detailed there and ar ranged to |ssit on his show The first night the home-sick and sc*-starved soldier* crowded the barrlckx to seek "the good looking yaller gal* f from back home W hen the girl* began to wiggle their torso* the soldiers rained gold and sliver coins on the stage and yelled for more T w o day* later several of the git!« failed to rrp o d for duty, 'H irer day* and thr chorus had dwindled to nothing Tim and Gertie found outfit, and spent the day In Baltimore with them last week \ Some of the girls in Teddy Blackman's chorus are sore because I u f l the> were married It n a n ip i * *heir style, they complain a Hamtree Harrington and Sidney Easton are hammy in “ His Woma a flicker Harrington pops his eyes and Easton shows his teeth, but bey that there Is no acting "Lucky Day." the first big-time all-colored musical staged on the e< folded after a six weeks run. while Easterners were waiting for a char to lamp it Critics complained that every scene was a nance and even horse used in the b iu caught the Idea and acted like a pansy • W hich remind* me o f the story o f the patron who tried to get nefce^k to see "T h e Good Fairy. ' now playing the M iller Theatre on Broadwayg When he could not get tickets he was fuming mad * 4 A gentle young man tapped him on the shoulder and said "Oh. don • take on an because you can t see T h e Good Fairy,* look at me I'm go o d .* T h e Green Pastures" was the first play to stay in Milwaukee for tw o week* for many years. TED D Y HIJACK M AN "One, two. three one. two three that's It. hit K now— try that ssmB formation again " Thus a slim young man with a pleasant face lays t .»< kj on the hind leg* o f his chair and calls signals as a troupe of comely ch o rin e « get through their pace* , 1 ( I used the phra.v call signals intentionally, because calling signals CiineB natural to Teddy Blackman, the ballet master, whoae famous A lh a m b fii chorus Is one o f the best trained units on the stage.* because he got in tl)«t habit while quarterback at Howard University not so long ago Teddy is an Omega man. who overcame the handicaps of a frat piQL and made good in the "sho' blxness." 1 Teddy set out to become an electrical engineer and majored in n.atheJ mattes at H U toward that end W hile in New York trying to gather sheckle?4 to complete hi* education, he got a job in a night club as a waiter, but row f This was a kick upstair* because he left iLjy themselves alone and thrv had to join * white fired for dancing too much company to get home All o f 111* chorus girl* culinary* end and joined the entertaining force as a dancer From then on| His first big show was "4-11-44 " He later bc-\ had married soldier* and remained in the P h ilip Teddy has been a hoofer l l m Maure pine* came the prtdocer at thr Alhambra It was there that his famous choiuw ■ Teddy praises Addison Carey f<-i* When Tim reads about the happening* in the Orient today he can pic danced out two hundred pairs of shoes his advice and assistance given in the pioneer days. He calls Goldsboro,l ture many o f the place* now In dl*pute Beside* traveling In the Par Y a«t • - ' hi* comic antic* have carried him around the world on xrveral nreaslpn* N C . home and fir I» one o f the h w comic* who have aptamred in blackface In a Chine*«' theatre and made than) like It A N IG H T C LU B DANCER AND A R A C K E T E E R • • • • v Those in the know are watching with interest the ».allant fight b ein ^ Bt i K AND III A k T R O N O M FR H made by little Arthur Bryson to stage a comeback. T w o of the funniest fallow* you'll find on the singe today are Buck A few years ago at the age o f 20. he was scaling the top as an enter«* and Bubble* the comic pulr of top-notrherx with a style all their own but tamer and dancer appearing in Runnin W ild." "R an g Tang. Earl Car-*’ I'll bet you ten to one vou'11 find them a thmiMind time* funnier off roll * "Vanities.' "T h e Florida G irl." and the Nest Club JuM where John flupplrtt. the elongated member o f the rombo got It was at Texas Oilman's club a few years ago that he was dancinjr hi* tag of "Rubbles" l* a mystery to me. but that the name i* quite fitting when he a m d rn la fly struck the chair o f a white woman Her racketeer I ran well attest "Bubbles," u big over-grow n boy, literally bubbh* all escort. Mikeal Campóla, one o f the big shots of the New York underworld, over himself pulled out a gun and shot him three time* in the leg When not dancing, singing or thinking up new gag* ‘ Bubbles** yprnris The story as given out was that Arthur was trying “ to get fresh with fc his time studying aMronomy and trying to devise a method bv which he white w om an.' and nothing was done to the gangster can make a trip to <of all p iares• Mar* Plenty was done to Arthur, however. He war black-balled out of th«v He flow has It all doped out He figure* that If he can get a rocket R K O houses which he had plaved for three year*. He could not get a jobr pa>t a certain given point In Use stratosphere and can get hi* rocket headed In the night clubs, and things on kc pretty bad for h ti. Arthur is on the» In the right direction, it will be easy to reach Mars in no Ume or any other up grade now, and here's wishing him luck. planet that he take* a notion to visit "T h e trouble has been explain* Bubble*, drawing elaborate plan* on the back o f an old envelope showing the hN'atkm o f Venus. Mar? Jupiter and other world* In their relation to the earth, "that the scientist* and astronomer* don't realise that until they can make w rocket strong enough to go against the earth s revolution that they won't get anywhere All along they have been sending airplanes and rockets that turn the same wu\ the earth 1* turning and the earth turn* so fast that the rocket get* caught in the cycle o f air that l* stirred up and ran t get out • « ^ ¿. • » "T h a t l* win if you stait at a given point In an airplane the world will swing you around until \<*«i get right back where you started from ’ Now. my plan Is to send off a plane that will go beyond the forre of gravity In the direction opposite to the way the world is turning And oner I get hexnnd the pulling power o f the earth. I won't have anything to worry about * • Bubbles has blue prints of hi* rocket plane, and will send them to the patent office Hr also ha* plans when by he ran sit In one place and con trol the whole world by pushing an electric button but that's another long 2 - and complicated story* W hile Bubble*’ explains his discoveries with the use o f high sounding scientific names. Buck looks on wklc-eyed and merely G »nu^ » Blacli and W h ile Bleichlng Cream it made D O U BLE say* "Uh huh They both agree that scientists past and present, are a lot of dumb egg* not to have figured these things out for themselves. S T R E N G T H . It qoei right down to the fourth layer of your thin W YOUR HIT EIN S K /N in a t H A A R L E M O IL C A P S U L E S ■ivU* By M A TT H U G H ES T M i l l I IG M TS F a il (Bnnkehips * Tucker and Bessie Dudley*, who had n fist-feast before she quit and joined Dusty Fletcher In "Rhapsody In Black," have mad« up and are dancing together again In a new vaudeville experiment at W arner s <N Y.» Theatre Broadway Is going wild over "T h e Black Tow er," a new mystery play, whlcl? reminds one that "T h e Dark T ow er" was the name given to the late A l»ellu Walker's town house in Harlem, which served ns a rend cavo us for hungry Harlemites who pretended they liked the grand dame and fiaMerrd her to cash In on the freebies. It also served as a tag for Oount«e Cullen's pi flit in the < 'i isis. • Duke Ellington Is an Inveterate gambler they tell me and spends his spare time dropping nickels In Bingo machine... H r spent $16 in the lobby o f the Penn Hotel while playing the Hippodrome here, dropping little balls into holes from 12 until 4 a m. ( ‘oleridge Davis, piano plunker for the Hardy Brothers Ork. Is also a Bingo fan 11c gets as great a kick out of losing as winning And, by the way. he swears that marriage to Harriet Calloway was not a phoney story, and they'll be together In W ashington soon. Rimer Calloway. Cab's brother, who is the music-maker at the Club Prudltom, Washington's slay-up late place, ia a pal o f the Hardy Brothers /2 t h e t h e t i m e c o s t where coloring il regulated, thereby whitening your com ploion H it. o/utl jn r o f (pemtine In half the time. That'* why H’» to /Hark ant/ W h ile //leach economical too. The jar it big, tho ing ( ream is only 50c* at your fa vorite t/tng store price low, and if * *o effective you o r to ile t jr tu tti * counter. d o n 't h a v e to use a* m u c h . 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