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THE GUARDIAN VOL. 38, NO. 25 PROMINENT HUB UNDERTAKER DIES speeds Hub NAACP Membership Drive to Re-Wed — Chris Winters Passes — Fight for Utility Jobs UNDERTAKER REID DIES MlBaaML • JEBHR9 n ' |p jf I JOsI V ■■ > ■ / LATE MILLARD FILLMORE REID Millard F. Reid, leading Boston un dertaker, 81 Dartmouth Street, died a', his apartment over his undertak ir- establishment early Wednesday morning after an illness of several a eeks, Death was due to a heart ail ment. He was 43. Mr. Reid died at sometime during sleep Tuesday night or early Wednes day morning and his wife learned of it Thursday morning when she tried but was unable to rouse him. He had been in failing health for the past si veral months but his condition Bapl. Convention May 10,11,12 at Union she seventh annual session of the ' nited Baptist Convention of Massa -1 husetts and Rhode Island will con vene with the Union Baptist Church, Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Thurs day and Friday, May 10, 11, 12, 1939. All the departments of the conven tion will have a full and interesting program, with speakers of national an . le -. Corresponding organizations, and allied conferences will be repre sented bv their leaders. The public is cordially welcome to come and take part. W. H. Hester, D.D., president, •Johnson W. Hill, M.D., corresponding secretary, 365 Mass. Ave., Boston, Mass. Ken. 4137. G Judge Surprised to Hear of Bouncer secon, l session of the Roxbury court today Judge Samuel expressed surprise at the “it that a Tremont St. case has a bouncer” in these modern times. The ,lt.dge was hearing a case of assault and battery which took place in the f s4. n . n f' as k<’d Patrolman O’Connell oi Division 10 how was it the License •■olid did not take some action. The •iC''r replied that no complaint has 1 n made as vet. The defendant was ■mid for the Grand Jury in S3OO bail. ♦ < < < < < < ; , . PHI BETA SIGMA FRATERNITY J Augustine A. Austin of N.Y.; Quest Speaker BIGGER and BETTER BUSINESS CELEBRATION ! MASS MEETING Sunday A£t. APRIL 3 o'clock >< j METROPOLITAN BAPTIST" CHURCH j Shawmut Ave., Boston, Mass. seemed not serious enough to inter fere with his work until recently. Funeral services were held at Zion A.M.E. Church, Columbus Ave at 1 o’clock Friday, April 21 and were at tended by a throng that overflowed the edifice. The pastor, Rev. W. D. Battle, officiated, assisted by Rev. E. E. Thompson and other ministers. There was a profusion of floral trib utes. Undertakers Madison Bland, E. L. Morrison, Norris Davis, led in con (Continued on Page 4) f MS Wf Ml AUGUSTINE A. AUSTIN of New York, outstanding business man who has a special message for Boston business folks at the meeting Sunday, April 23, in Metropolitan Baptist Church under auspices of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Boston Chap ters. Elba ©ratnriral SUNDAY APRIL 23 AT PEOPLES BAPTIST CHURCH The annual oratorical contest spon sored bv the Commonwealth Lodge No. 19 and Phyllis Wheatlev Temple No. 22 of the 1.8.P.0.E. of the World will be held Sunday. April 23, at 3 n.m. in People’s Baptist Church, Cam den Street. Boston. The winner in this contest will be eligible to compete for one of the meny scholarships which the Elks award every year. The public is cor dially invited to attend. DePriest Garage 255 NORTHAMPTON ST. Oil - Gas - Repairing - Storage Now Maintaining the Ford Service Tel. KENmore 8358 H. Thompson. Prop. GUARDIAN, BOSTON, MASS., APRIL 22, 1939 ATTY. DORCH TO WED AGAIN Mrs. Olivia Forrester Johnston, 9 Howland Street, Roxbury, announces the engagement of her daughter Celes tine to Attorney Irwin T. Dorch. The prospective bride is a graduate of Boston University and at this time conducts courses in handicraft at the st. Mark Center in Roxbury. Well known for her unusual ability as an artist, she is rated one of the foremost women portrait painters in the country. Among her recent works are a portrait in oils of Dr. Charlotte Hawkins Brown, and four mural paintings that are hanging in the Palmer Memorial College at Sedalia, N. C. Other works of Miss Johnston have been in the leading exhibitions of the country, including the Harmon Exhibit in New York and a number of leading Boston galleries. Mr. Dorch came into national promi nence a few years ago when as head of the local NAACP he began a series of brilliant fights against the extra dition of prisoners to the South with the result that he is considered person (Continued on Page 5) HUB UNITED FOR JOB FIGHT Boston made history Tuesday night at the Shaw House when over 100 or ganizations were united through their chosen representatives in a movement to secure employment for colored in the public utilities. Many other orgarf izations unable to be present sent let ters of wholehearted support and prom ised action of any kind that was de cided upon by the group gathered. Attorney I. T. Dorch presided. Mrs. Thomasina Walker Johnson told of the beginning of the movement. Seaton Manning spoke on the labor unions and how they might affect the movement. Impromptu speeches were then made by many persons on just what coopera tion could be expected, from the group assembled, in the movement, among them. Attorney Matthew W. Bullock, J. Caswell Smith, Rev. S. L. La vis count,, Rev. M. J. Minor, Rev. D. Leroy Ferguson, Dr. Marron Fort, Victor Bynoe, Miss Edna Shelton, Mrs. Gratia Terrell, Joseph Nelson, Mrs. Catherine Averett Lawson, Onnie Jordan, Ed ward Dixon, David Kenney, William A. FETE N.Y. BEAUTY SPECIALIST The officers and members of the Apex Beauticians Club honored their guest demonstrator, Mrs. Dorothy Chapman of New York, with a delight ful banquet Monday night in the ban quet room of Estelle’s Case. Mrs. Chapman is managerand teach er of the Apex School of Beauty Cul ture, located at the corner of 7th Ave nue and 135th St., New York, vice president of the National Beauty CuL turist League, President of League 26 of N. Y. C., Educational Adviser of Modern Beauticians in the state of N. J., and also a licensed undertaker and embalmer. She came here to demonstrate to local beauticians the latest develop (Continued on Page 4i CW* WL ’X* j « • i -jj thb- wnf KT <> < t *' ' - ' ; ■ ' ■< ■ *> GREATER BOSTON MEN’S CHORUS To be presented by Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Sunday, April 30, 8 p.m. at St. Mark (Congregational) Church CHRIS. WINTER PASSES FRATERNAL LEADER AND PROMINENT CITIZEN Christopher Winter of 15 Warwick St., a familiar Boston figure during the forty odd years he had lived here, died at his home April 15, at 8:30 p.m. In failing health the past two years, since the passing of his wife, Mrs. Nellie Winter, April 11, 1937, death came to the well known citizen as the result of a shock on Good Fri day. April 7. The funeral was held on April 19, at 10 a.m. from St. Augustine and St. Martin’s Episcopal Church on Lenox St., with Father Fitz officiating. Solos were sung by Dorothy Richard son. The pall bearers were: Herbert Donaldson. Edward Moore, Dr. E. S. Nairne, Walter Isaacs, Benjamin Jones. Interment was in Forest Hills Cemetery in the family lot beside the grave of deceased’s late wife. Norris Davis was the undertaker. A son, St. Clair Winter, grandson, Willard Win- (Continued on Page 5) Morgan, Mrs. Harriett Hall, Morris Taylor and many others. A committee was elected to have a conference with the president of the electric company who has made an ap ybintment for sueh a conference and to meet with the gas and phone com panies as soon as a conference can be arranged. I. T. Dorch, attorney, presi dent of the local NAACP, of the Geor gia-chain-gang cases fame and Mrs. fhomasina Walker Johnson, graduate social worker, one of the most civic minded of the younger set and a form er teacher in the Manual Training School of Bordentown, N. J. are mem bers of the committee ex officio. Seaton Manning Industrial Secretary of the I rban League and a scholarship stu dent graduating with honors from Har vard is chairman; Mrs. Olga Ferguson Jackson, fromer director of St. Mark Center, Rev. S. L. Laviscount one of the most liberal and militant pastors in the city; Dr. Marron Forte, Ph.D. of Harvard and who has an outstand (Continued on Page 51 fnr Eiwrgntw — On Thursday evening, June 1, at 8:15 o’clock, in Brown Hall, New England Conservatory of Mus'c, 'Dons and those of us who mus j c w ju have an oppor unty to hear one of the greatest Opera Artsists and Singers. The n-’r " nmn-e will be given by William Rhodes Opera Society, a group of twenty-seven selected well-trained singers supported by a Concert Orchestra. Mildred Jenkins has been chosen as guest artist. Opera Acts from “Dei- Freischutz,” Weber, “Das Rheingold,” Wagner, and “Er minie.” bv Jakobowski, will be per fo med. William A. Rhodes, Composer r n I Music Critic, will conduct the performance. John Powell is Business rvisor, and James W. Henderson, is stage director. Other prominent nv-mbers of the Opera Society will be mentioned in next week’s “Gua’dian.” Rush seats 85 cents, reserved seats sl.lO and $1.65 including tax. NAACP SPURS DRIVE “Unless all thinking citizens get be hind the fight for full citizenship rights for the race now, at a time when democracy is being assailed on all sides, we will find that democracy will soon be denied to all our citizens.” This was the statement by George B. Murphy, Jr., at Metropolitan Bap tist Church Monday night, when the Boston branch of the National Associ ation for the Advancement of Colored People opened a drive to enroll 2,500 members. Mr. Murphy, publicity director of the national organization in New York, is here to manage the local campaign which runs from April 17 to May 8. He pointed to the fight for the Anti-lynching bill, the support given the federal government’s plan for broader health protection to all citizens, the national drive to equalize white and colored teachers’ salaries in southern and border states, battling discrimination in public places, the supreme court decision opening up the University of Missouri to colored students, the full support given to the drive to eliminate discrimination in WPA, and the fight against job dis crimination at the New York World’s Fair, as examples of the wide front on which the N.A.A.C.P. is fighting. Attorney Irwin T. Dorch, president of the local branch, urged citizens to support the drive, and pointed to the OFFICER BANKS STRUCK BY AUTO * 3 OFFICER LUCIUS BANKS Who escaped serious injury in an auto collision. BOSTON, (KNS) — When Lucius .'V ?- po P u N r patrolman attached to D : v sien 10. Roxbur’’ Crossing, started •— -'S'- th? intersection at Mass. Ave. n 1 Columbus Ave. on Wednesday n n™ of last week during the snow '"m. little did he realize that at the "’V spot where he directed traffic for "rs while he was attached to Divi : n 4 ; n the old days, he would be t u-k bv an automobile. However, v-rs. and suffered a concussion of 'o b -sin and a la-ration of the face, i’-'s happening on his day off. T * was taken to the office of Dr. B A McCurdy, who stitched the <n his face and saw to it that ’ - ' eh- d his home at 119 Har sh"ff St . Roxbury. ' ’ " e ' Bonks as a traffic officer at 'h > above intersection did so well that ■■ "s called on° of the best, if not the best traffic officer in Boston back in 1920. At last report Mr. Banks is up and around and “raring” to go. PRICE FIVE CENTS work of the organization in Boston. Other speakers included: John S. Bourne, president of the Congress for Equal Opportunity, and Albert G. Wolff, president of the National Equal Rights League, both of whom pledged the support of their organizations in the local campaign; Rev. M. J. Minor, pastor of the Metropolitan Baptist Church, who is campaign manager; Edward Dixon, a campaign worker; and Rev. S. L. Laviscount, pastor of St. Mark Congregational Church. Heads of campaign committees in clude: Rev. M. J. Minor, Dr. John B. Hall, Oscar Fitzallen, Louis E. Pasco, Mrs. Minnie T. Wright, Mrs. Nellie Harris, Everett Yates, Nathaniel Cot ton, and Victor Bynos, who heads the youth division. Other ersons who are enlisted in the drive are: Mesdames Sarah Martin, E. Gilbert, Ruth Pasco, Carolyn D. Jones, Ruth Stewart, Fannie Eubanks, Helen Perkins, Thelma McNaire and Florence Lewis; M. Bernard, Dr. Wil liam Cox, Hayes Alexander, James Jones, Reynold Costa, Sumner Mills, Mathew Coles, William Morgan, Mil ton Snowden, Francis P. Hazel, Lloyd Howard, and Charles Hibler. Mr. Murphy stated that the first campaign workers’ meeting will be held Monday night, April 24, at 8 p. m., at campaign headquarters, 454 Mass. Avenue. iKirharbsmi Saib tn Sent Little ( Frapcev » ( .se Richardson, (laughter of Mr. and Mrs. Martin D. Richardson, a child of rare intelligence and charm, whose untimely passing Thursday of last week brought grief to all who knew her, was buried during all the rain on Tuesday afternoon, April 18, from the John A. O’Brien Funeral Chapel with interment in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Touching was the service for the cherished one, nestling amidst flowers she loved, beautiful in her final sleep. Mildred Jenkins Haughton sang sweet solos, “Abide with me” was sung by the assembled friends and Rev. S. L. Lavis count of St. Mark Church conducted in adequate manner, reading the following exquisite obituary of an un usual and exquisite child: OF JOSE It is not for Man to understand the ways of the Almighty. We often find ourselves in wonder, therefore, that the Creator takes from among us those that we thought we should have almost forever. Such a one was Frances Jose Rich ardson, whose remains lie here before us. Brilliant and talented far beyond her years and with a generous loyalty and love for her parents and friends, and loved by nearly everyone who knew her, she had known scarcely an un happy moment in her whole brief life. Due to the jealous care of her de voted mother, the child had enjoyed al most phenomenal health until a few days before she left this realm. Even in her last few days she was spared nearly every pain by a merciful uncon sciousness in her illness. There is little more to say of one whose opportunity to bring sunshine and light into the world was cut so short by a Wisdom we can so little un derstand, yet cannot doubt. We can only say on behalf of those who loved her most that if she could come to us for another time even so brief, and we had to again endure all the pain of losing her, we would still welcome her for this little while. It is with this attitude that we com mend her soul to some higher Power. Left to mourn, beesides father and mother, are: baby brother, Martin I). Richardson, Jr.; grandmothers, Mrs. Bertha Richardson and Mrs. Frances Watt, several aunts and uncles and other relatives, godmother, and many friends. They are grateful to all for sympathy extended in their great be reavement. Delta Sigma Thsta Sorority Presents the GREATER BOSTON MALE CHORUS Dorothy Richardson, Director ST. MARK CHURCH Townsend St., Roxbury Sunday, Apr. so, 8 P.M. Committee: Dorothy Jones, Vivian Hodge, Myrtis Andrews Admission 25 Cents