Atlanta world. (Atlanta, Ga.) 192?-1932, December 11, 1931, Friday City Edition, Image 8
FEATURES ...“‘ ; T &> Seos o e, s NPt AR :;é‘.fg' : ANTA SRS ORLD Al L. SRV ¥ P T E TN Rt o R e ASTNE NV TR T ONA T ' e Mg d MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED NEGRO PRESS W. A. SCOTT Editor and Publisher Frank Marshall Davis Managing Editor PUBLISHED WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY, AND SUNDAY , 210 AUBURN AVENUE, N. E. TELEPHONE: WALNUT 1459 ' SUBSCRIPTION RATKS —- V 1 Year, $6.50; 6 Month: $3.50; 3 Months, $2.00; Weekly, 15 Cents ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE W. B. ZIFF CO., Chicago, New York, Los Angeles . Buying Now Those of us steadily employed whose incomes have not been reduced Ly the depression should find these dayvs the best for buyving in conteinporary history. The necessities of life have fallen in price to rockbottom prices; cars, ri dios and other luxuries are being offered at savings never before dreamed of. Economists have asscrted that in hard times when prices are at the lowest is the period to buy, whether it be a home or a hairpin. Those who have money defeat their own purpose by holding on. {for if they wait until prosperity Yeturns they will be forced to pay many extra dollars over today’s prices. Such buying today would, incidentally, has ten the departure of the depression since an economic crisis appears when ccmparatively few purchase. Meanwhile, the Christmas season is here which means that temporarily, at least, the business of buyving and sell ing is stimulated. This part of the vear will find many a purse string loosened which has been closed all yvear. People buy at Christmas who have Leen stingy betore. It weculd be of much more benefit to evervone if the vendency to buy at Christmas were carried over throughout the year for when people buy, more money changes hands, more gcods go to consumers, and more poeple must be em ployed to grow the raw materials, make them, and finally sell them to others. Opinions expressed in this column, which will appear ocea flonally, are not neceasarily sharved by The World but are purely those of the writer, FRANK MARSHALL DAVIS Monday nigit i read “Slaves Today,” a story of Liberia written by the prince of Aframerican Bad Boys of Letters, George Schuyler. Schuyler, you remember, spent three months in early 1931 in the African republie, and wrote « series of articles exposing virtual slave conditions ¢ .. which caused a verbal war. “Slaves Today” is propagand: fiction. It pa:nts anauseating and vivid picture of the slave traffic which Liberia calls a more cuphe mist.ec name. 1. iate eliigiy de- Beribes nauve lite and o customs. iou feel every word is true. The picture should be accurate since observations were made first hand. Sidney Cooper Johnson. presi dent of Liberia, sits in Monrovia, capital, trying to make govern mental ends meet, [t costs a lot to run the nation and at the same time give himself and members of the Consecrvative party a good fat living. Much money is owed to other nations. Imports exceed exports. The way out 1is graft. Sell the natives to work abroad at so much a head. Force them to work for nothing on governmental projects. Demand and get exor bitant taxes. Punish severely First, be sure that each district had a hard man at its head. Change David Jackson to the First District, Takama is a small village in the jungle, Bongomo, its chief, won ders about the marriage of his 15 year old daughter. Pameta. to Zo. In the dead of night he hunts out Tolo, ancient witch doctor. The signs show the marriage to be good. Next morning. the village learns by an ingenious method of theirs that Pameta went to marriage bed a virgin. The tri takes a day off, feasts. celebrates Much palm wine is consumed. To lo advises a dance in the daytime to ward off evil spirits. : Meanwhile. Jackson. along with three concubines and a small de tail of scldiers, comes to collect overdue taxes of rice and palm oil. Black and cruel with a college education, is Jackson. He is drunk when he reaches Takama He gets in an argument with Bon gomo, gives the venerable leader tte supreme shame bv a public whipping. Bongomo. insane with rage. attacks Jackson. The chief and many villagers are killed in cold blood. The town is fined. Jackson sees Pameta, likes, steal her. = : Takama thinks it a curse he ranse someone has done wrone. Tolo. who is. incidentallv, skepti calpof his own witcheraft. oravely was the whipping test. Zo is «in pled out. Disgraced. he leaves for Boloba to rescue his bride, He pets into the governmental quar tars, finds where his bride is hid den. enters there just as Jackson drunk. goes to her room. He tviés to escape with her. is caueht, péaten. has- his wounds ' rubbed swith «alt. is placed in prison. When Jackson goec to Pameta a #neond time. she hits him with o vace. wounds him. He admires = five. = 20 is sent ostensibly to rarrv tax = to Monrovia, the wonder citv to e natives, but really to be sald into wo voar slavery. With him are B0 pthera. He becomee friends ith Soki. They try to escape but aré v i when Zo stops to 1y ni from a swamp. Tak-: » Jwonrovia, they are ru.\-he.“, .o Fernando Po, Spanish cocoal and coffee -ettlement. in a stink-| ‘ng ship. Formality keeps sla | Ly another name. | At Fernando Po, they work f a few dollars a month, have hal taken for the ‘‘protection’” given by Liberia’s consul. Pay day, th bosses send around women and trinkets to get the native’s m - ev. Zo saves his rather than deal with the diseased prostitutes. | Trusted. he finds a sensuous wo man in the town. plans to escape spends money and is caught | supposed friend. He then has a woman each payday like the re-t Fever gets him and he goes to the hospital where he finds bad treat ment. mates afflicted with vene real diseases. He recovers. Comes the day to return home. Soki ‘“insults” an overseer, is forced to remain. Zo leaves, ar rives in Monrovia with better than %35, his savings, He is picke by police. fined every cent, Bit ter he leaves to hunt Pameta. Pameta has fallen a vietim to Jackson and social disease. Jack son's wife. educated in an Ameri can Negro college, realizes she is little more than head concubine, She takes out her spite on her ser vants, actually slaves. Pameta be comes deathly sick. Jackson has been commissioned to build highways. With no mon ev. he forces the natives to labor. Zo. leaving Monrovia walks acci dentally through camp. is arrested. put to work. He escapes. Jack-! son, drunk, has sought out Pame ta, sobers when he learns she has a dread disease. leaves her on the roadside. Here Zo finds her. dy ing. Insane. he steals to .Tack son’s home, stabs him to death, is himself killed by a rifle bullet. Saunders. editor and leader of the opposition party which is nev er successtul because of the crooked elections. is seek ng an in vestigation by other nations. The attorney general, disgusted, final ly comes to his side. Exposes of conditons are always carried in Saunders’ weekly paper. President Johnson, re-elected. is glad of Jackson's death. Jackson had been boomed as a rival for the presidency, He appoints ano ther to Jackson’s place and busi ne ¢ goe: on as usual, The author minces no words in h's 200 page volume. Me writes simely and well and gives a vivid portrayal of the horrors and in justices and slavery under a gov ernment founded by free bluack Amorican: to perpetuate freedom. If what he says is true. then Li beria is a disgrace to nations. her exploitation of weaker peoples something to be learned by eve “the mo=t hrutal countries, and her | government a discredit to Ne , Brogs everywhere, { It is a hook that in purpose ani content ranks with “Uncle Tom's o e L e e . v - bt LS Mt oo oot e 7 Secamamyro (7O R s e e e g AR, il . : ¥ € id s LR G g il R T 3 it ke e i s S ok Bid 23 * e ; : : i L L, li‘rl l)e(' I ‘ "ff H # q g g m—— e ——— o gt 0. oens St ~ e e e S ——— e = T e e ha l;f_S afl‘ . : Au burn gr .. Avenue Ao 1 8ays W 1”': ".' ’i':f"lg : ANy 1.P.REYNOLDS HiNSELF" | SOME OF the equipment re commended for a Deacon attend ing @ conterence: 1. A bullet proof vest 9. A machine Suf 2 Two good revolvers. i 4 Al Capone as a bodyguard -5 A supply df tear gas bombs | 6 Dynamite in _case of being teanged.” 9. Have teelh fixed by Pr 4 [.. Kelsey so you can bite in a tight place for Dr. Kelsey’s dental work can be depended on. 8. A hat that you can get hold of in case you leave in an emer gency. 9. Have prayer with Rev. E. G Clements. 10. TL.ast but not least have a talk with JESSE. HANI BEY the undens taker who you may need if tho conference runs true to form. . SHERMAN SAID ‘war was hell” but that, putting it mildly from reading the last issues of the paper and the doings in some of the lo cal churches. A Bishop in Alabama arrested for bastardy, and a dea con cut to death in: church. A sorry example to show the world and if the news is not trde then the paper should be taken to task if it is then the members shoulkd not “holler” but go silently to work aving the lost XMAS HOLIDAYS right on us and [ am about as far in the "hole” as I was the—=last Xmas but any-: how the merchants are g‘tlin",i \their wares ready for the “deur| public® Thercs VYATES A N I)l MILTON with some article in| stock that will suit anybody 5| pocketbook as a Xmas present | There's JORDAN with his stock ui'i dry pods and all accessories that | vsoes to satisfy Xmas shoppers | CURRY AND HALL ulso is ready | o serve the public like wise, thed | the diferent dining rooms uare pre- | paring to wvie with each otner i dve us good serviece during the holidays, there's the JAMES | HOTPEL: MRS SCOTT SUTTON | ThHEE BCONOMY DELICATAS: | SEN. T WAL SHOR . gl many - others: that are ready . (o cavyn. No excuse to not enjoy | o RERY Dest elars of at the Royal Theatre on the “Av ' ot all times. A cozy place to spend ! the aftenocn While there the oth | er night 1 saw a sigaificent adver l ilisement ' oh tho SCIOER: W) dadt [ like this THE ROy AL WW %C(_)MI".S ¥OuU THRONGH - THSY }FR()N'I‘ DOON--In my way. of { thinking that advertising scored o I point. I leave this fact with you Lehe best of pictures and you a ¢ ‘]welcomed THREE - "PHE - FRONT | DOOR. . FOR GOOD reading that con tains beautiful thoughts read ti» Ivy Brothers ‘ad’ in the Sunday | ' WORLD. The beautiful thought are selected by Miss Estella Ivy a gister to the Ivy Brothers the Un dertakers. . A LADY CALLSB the office and ‘says that I am disgracing 'Dea cons: in my cartoon. 1 disagro with her. 1f is impossible for 1 to disgrace the church of the t« God or a christian deacon.— If thr deacons or the church can be d graced then she should start in f! church where a DEACON was KILLED or take Bishop Grant Alabama to: task for JLEBECTD MACY and who was arrested in conference. The church criticizes us poor ‘‘devils” so we must stand silent even it some of the officia’ see fit to walk into our homes ar rob daughters of their virtue. We tnust not mention it through th~ press when a DEACON KILLS | ANOTHER IN THE CHURCH. '~ BONES THE fish sandwich mon says don’t care how manv DEA CONS are slain he is still pre paring the best fish sandwich in town on Piedmont around the cor ner from Auburn Avenue. TALKING ABOUT accidents and injuries with Br. J B 'Pran sou the other day he informs me that he can be got at a minute's notice to any Deaeon if he happens to get wounded in church warfare From the looks of the *“Waestern front” he can stay late at his office on church conference nights. Just call him. From what has happenerl lately a doctor should be at church gatherings "us they are football taames Cabin' While it is apparent that the author does not oot as much drama out of manv situations a: he might and uses few phrases to be long remembered, he does get his message across and tells a storv not quickly forgotten. 1 doubt whether anvbody could read the book without fecling the ut most sympathy for Zo and the other natives. while at the same time feeling a desire to give President Johnson and his aide a vood =hooting. t In this book Schuvler does n laurh for the subiect is grim | reads with the smoothness and truth of a star reporter writi | facts. Evervy Negro shonld it . “Slaves Today” is published b Brewer, Warren and Putnam of | New York. sells for $2 50. and wa lreleased Nov, 18. Cherchez La Femme BY WILLIAM PICKENS (For The Associated Negro Pegess) Theodore Dreiser, under the aus pices of a committee for the de fense of political and labor-case prisoners, went down into Kentucky to investigate the awful murder and denial of legal rights which have taken place during the miners strike. As a resuit, Dreiser and a woman, who was doubtless on the same mission. have been indicted by a Kentucky “grand jury’ on the charge of associating together in a Kentucky hotel. Just whit Dreise: and the woman did, or just how this “jury” found out what was done, has not been explained to us. s far. But what interests us. is that Dreiser is finding out what e¢very black man of the south knows; tha when you get after that section about its savagery and murder and lynching. it will do its best to “red herring’” the trail and to "“change the subject,” by injecting, or even framing, some entirely irrelevant matter. Whnen Negroes try to exercise civil rights, they are met by: "We¢ propose to dafend white woman hood!"” or some such irrelevant non sense. When DNegroes c¢r y out against lynchers. they are met wiin a2 pretext about that rare Neivro maniac who may have attacked a white woman sometime somewhoere When colored people object to dict l’archml or toasted ? N09 Sil‘! € AvikLs are FRESH! TIIIC bedrock of Camel popularity is the inherently fine quality of the tobaccos that go into our cigarette. These tobaccos are notably mild, full metlov, delicately flavored by nature — the finest Turkizh and mild, sun-ripened Domestie tobaccos that money can buy, To safeguard the essential goodness of these fine tobaccos we exercise every care lo conserve thieir natural moisiure and natural flavors. R o o o R S e e KA LA b R R e L 5 RS " -:1:3;1:.“??-:-5:-1.-:3:331;5::- o .{.:c:",‘,.;é&o.“gf_::{. 5 £ 2 TN I B R ) 3 R s R R S A i SRR o '%f::::::'::-?:s::' B R T o B i P e L R S .-\.}.}53’5’@.:1'1:‘:':5:-. 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G /9\' R > : e, SR ‘_v.-.‘I::(.j-',;v;‘-.', T O e TR 5, - SR R e I PR e b S b B 0 A0 3 e acae” o ot R ¢ B e s g 2 R QY ey o - F . T R SRR R R S AR SR SR oot e A el PR Made FRESH—Kept FRESH jim-crow cars and try to demand Pullmaon accomodations when they have to ride 24 hours or more on a southern train, -they aie opposed by the crookedness or idiocy of talk about secinl equality as il any white person were expected to ride in the colored person's berth. When we expose the giving ol the coloved child one dollar to the white child's ten doflore in educationyl fands, we are treated (o a discusiaon of Yrace superiority as 1 the inferior had to be robbed in order 4o keep him irferior, Dreiser went dewn to investigate the wholesale murdering and im prisoning of Kentucky working peo ple and behold! the “grand jury e Arving to shitt (hee malter 4o 4 trial of Dreiser’s personal morals and mannors. The Porand quegrs who haven't indicted anybody for the horrible murders and beatings cdministered to b own “poor white” workers, hu\'{fi\‘u"!‘a('ti ta dndiet Dreiser for a relatively trivial some thing o f which perhaps every “grand” juror was long since guilty. Perhaps. however they will help ius ta beat it into Dreiser’s head. what we mean when we tell him and others not to carry communism tand politics into the defense of those nine Negro boys in Alabama The Ku Klux element of the south would just love to have the batlio chifted from the queston azs {o th cnitt or innocence of the bovs to the qQuestion of “radicalism’ and other such blah-blah! If they could not prove the boys guilty, -they couid easily prove to their fetlow-idic! that “communism” is guilty, and therefore kill those niggers!” oth Theodore Dreiser and Lincoln Stef fens, bright as they seem to be in some other matters, have “gone off half cocked” with the communi s on the Scottsboro cases, and scem entirely incapable of understanding the average colored’ man's objcction to having this dangerous political handicap added to the almost i sufferable racial handicap of thoo nine boys while in jeopardy of theit lives. \Of oovurse, the first fair pledges of the Communists caused others besides these two gentlemen to be fooled assto the real intention of their propaganda, but Dreiser und Steffens seem to stay fooled When vou get hot on the trail of the guilty, they will run off into other issues if vou leave them any accessible loopholes. Perhaps Ken tucky may teach even Dreiser or Steffens to beware of this trick. BIRMINGHAM. Ala.. Dec. 11 Persons congjeved in the RRecord er’s court this week for violating the liquor law are John Henry Mosely, Palm Leaf Hotel, who had two pints of corn liguor in his bootblack stand, 825 and costs; Flora Cornwell, 41221 First avenue, carrested for her first offense and { who had three pints and one quart in a trap in the floor; Annie Parker | 2427 Ninth Court north, four guarts and one half pint, $35; and Nathan iel Hall, 1120 8th avenue, north. ar rested by Officers Collier and Per » kins, one quart, $25 and costs World Readers | 1 S . ay: SHE GOT HER TURKEY : Atlanta World; ! Editor | Bir: ‘ Please acceept thi helated | acknowledgement of my receipt of I the turkey won in your Thanks iving Contest Dileé 1o our pre vious: plans for Thanksgiving, the| tirkey is steutting proudly in my' vard gobbling with. glee Over | escaping the block on 'l‘h:mksyu\'--l ing Day. Poor follow! He hasn't tie Lightest Kknowleage lh‘.l‘! Christmas is just over the way, | and at that time we will be just :lsi grateful to the “World” for fur- | nishing our Christimas dinner Mis. C.H Connally 126 Walnigt Steect. 5 W Atlanta, Georgia, | . i Holdup in Day E BIRMINGIIAM. Ala., Dee. 11 . Three bold daylight - robbers - walked into the wall paper store . of W. M. Haygood, 1920 Fuurml wenue, north, Tuesday and asked the manager if he would show them ( some wall paper. As Mr. Haygood woent to the rear to get some S.um—l pies for the customers, the three cmbtied the money till and escaped. Officer Propts and Lewis investi ited. They are never parched or toasted— the Reynolds method of scientifically applying heat guarantees against that. That’s why we say Camels are made fresh to start with — and why the Camel Humidor Pack can bring them fresh to you, in prime smoking condition. If you want to know what a blessing that means in unalloyed smoke-enjoy ment, switch to Camels for just one day —then leave them—if you can. . Don’t remove the moisture-proof wrapping from your package of Camels after you open it. The Camel Humidor Pack is protection against sweat, dust and germs. In offices and homes, even in the dry atmosphere of artificial heat, the Camel Humidor Pack can be depended upon to deliver’ fresh Camels every time gt - ) © 1931, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company TOPICS | e R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY R Winston-Salem, N. C. : “Are you Listenin’?” R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY'S COAST-TO-COAST RADIO PROGRAMS CAMEL QUARTER HOUR, Morton Downey, Tony Wons, and Camel Orchestra, direc tion Jacques Renard, every night except Sunday, Columbia Broadcasting System . PRINCE ALBERT QUARTER HOUR, Alice Joy, “Old Hunch,” and Prince Albert Orchestra, direction Paul Van Loan, every night ex. cept Sunday, N. B. C. Red Network See radio page of local newspaper for time ey ') s A 00 < JA R < <t e ‘-‘,’(’ P S < e ”;,;’f/ - / Sy o /" ,,—\."\H' r‘ c‘,g,g;sf el ,»’l?;.- ",\",!"‘;‘. iy i NS S P, wf o Al I, I, RS e AN e, Wi g S i it i Sy e 2O ol ) 10 S N SNy el NN L i P B | il AN u.-ll,f:;: ’]‘. ’} ™| ",“!,““{I;”“ ] il i | N s </ . Uil £ S '.?/(4“\*.,’ /fi 274 X s — . ity i ’ \ 5 : o ’,44 K (/ // : R i 4 BIRMINGHAM. Ala., Dec. 11— Arrested early the morning of November 29, Roman William, Rtgg 9 Shades Mountain, was brought tc% trial Wednesday morning before Judge Martin on charges of driv ing a car while intoxicated and reckless driving on one count and carrying concealed weapons on an other. Williams, who is chauffeur for Mark Hanna, was stopped about two thirty that morning after Of ficer Gilbert chased him some ten blocks on First avenue as the man was travelling in a large sedan with a4 number of companions at a speed estimated at between fifty and sixty miles an hour. According to Officer Gilbert wno finally caught the fleeing automo bile on Fourth avenue, the defen dant was drui € and staggering, very impudent refusing to submit to a search when his turn came. A gun was found concealed on him in a scabbard. Mr. Hanna testified that the car had been loaned by him to his driver but that the weap ~on had been taken without permis - sion. | Williams was given a fine of fifty dollars and costs and thirty days in jail in one case and a like fine and sentence in the other.