The palmetto leader. (Columbia, S.C.) 1925-196?, April 03, 1926, Page EIGHT, Image 8
EIGHT . ^
I. S. L
I ? ,
!| Departm
;; -??BIG LINE OF i
- :: Men; Women & CI
1" A Specialty., She
making and Tailor
meht to select from
at the Lowest Pric
_ :: . r-r?Connected wi
~ . - First jC lass Barber
A Beauty Pai
' ! i i. s.l
*1
II I Departm
| 1131 WASIIINGTO.
I ?H" CQLUM
I
I homeste
1 332 Assembly !
- I SPE
^ : I I- e=V^v o -v cr rr
m . | 'v _ .T* U
Honey Cream Cake, IVul
*'' B????nntl (^n-W. I nr4v &
I Liake'i^c-a pound, and l(
- I - Home?te
- 1332 Asse
ROBERT
' T'Wfe Wi,se
1 1 1 8 Mi
| Wholcsafe ?>ealer
X Findings, Harness
| Wb QleSaJe
X
^ .Auto Top fVlancifa<
| what you want to
% want to Sell. - *
_ _" Npw Vnrlr M#* 3ft At- T
here in the busy City, where ii
is very .seldom.,that I get an}
news from dear old South Cam
lina, I do not thmii?Jt out o:
place to have theralmeFto Lead
~eF1sent~up~hei'e so that I rm
keep informed with the issues o
the day in South Carolna. I an
much interested in the younj
people's Congress-of the Nationa
Baptist Convention which meet:
in Columbia in June with Zioi
Baptist Church, with that matcl
-?^ less leader and preacher, Rey. J
- C, White. I know the best das:
of preachers and Sunday SGhoo
workers of the State are witl
MHaaMiii
lent Store | >
CLOTHING FOR??
V ! j
nilcFren. Boys Suit?|'
es, Millinery, Dress^5 | j
ing. Large Assort- t-j1
and the Best Quality
:es. \ 1^
it'll mil1 Rtorn Is ? ~~
V-* - X~'
? hop for Men and i <
r v- s: t
rlor for~Wbmen f*
eevyI;
tent-Store I'
~ ^ ,r;? "
N ST., PHONE 7567 |,
BIA, S. C. ' ^; 11
1,
. ...... 1
ad "Battery ^
StTColumbia, S.C* | ]
:CIAL : I '
tKStlNtJUU L^lc
t"r'ip Spnnftp Cake, Silver _ S J
dtimoxg 1-ayers, Be^l Pound "
Jli? uf ullnLi1 GOOD THINGS fij 1
ad Bakery - |j
mbly Street I ^
s STUDIO ||<
For Beautiful Photographs g ?
the kind thatL pleases." Have ?
th em made at # 8 0
Roberts Studio ?4
v/ 1119 Washington Street S 1
f ???^ ' - * 8 h
We also Copy, Enlarge and p
Frame Pictures of any kind. Si 1
POSING HOURS:
8:30 Morning to 7 at Night ^ e
Sittings given regardless of Ip"
P^weatKerjcondjlions, > % g-4<
Courteous ,attention and effi-c^
h cieFrt-scrvice-awaits you. -in! 11
-
-Call for a sitting ' ij; -?
" *'To-day"' - r cp
mXK?XX'XvXK"X"X~X*X"X~X~X"> i11
~,<f.. . _ jj?
W: Martin ft
-t r
ampton Avenue " X f
invmiAfS.C tv
jLv
_ ?
in Leather, Shoe -??
, Saddles, Etc.-% ^ -? s
? -^- % (
Hide Buyer | fi
??
cturer. Let us know ; *
. y c
Buy and what you" fi
> ' . :"b
FTmrrno he can let the others go!
j if they don't want to fall in lineTi
i If Go(| is with us, we are sure
t to porho nut n V 4-V_ 1 T
vuv Ill l,ne CUU. I I
I am only too sorry that I am not r
- in the State to help pull my part. :r
^ Frnrmore than thirty-one years ^
- I have tried to do my duty as a
TT member of the Limestone Bap- ff
tist Church at Gaffney, eleven c
i years of which I have the honor ,
? of being the-Sunday School Supt. i?
1 So I for one endorse the Con-j*
* greys' coming to.South Carolina, j8
i It will be such a help to' our Sun-1
i day School; teachers, qo I htfpe f
1 every Church will send out at ^
3 least two of its teachers to this
1 Congress, so when the Congress
l Is over, we will have tome one in
THE PALME1
every community that knows
ust how to present the Sunday
School lesson to the. class.
We have some nice Churches
lp here with well prepared
>reachers, but the Sunday School
lave to move'up some to be any;hing
like South Carolina^- As
[ see it, the Church or the Leaders
here have not the race pride
south, yet they claim to be the
eaders of the nation.
I attended preaching service
it the Great Abyssinia Baptist
Church. This is said to be one
)f the greatest religious Churches
in the U. S. I spent six
Tjonl hs. here in 1923,~and 1 came
jack here la?t Oct,, and at'only
)ne service have I seen the pas;w
open the doors of the Church
>ut what there were from two
:o fifty-seven persons join the
Dhurch.
Last Sunday as- we all know
>vas Palm Sunady, I have never
leretofore given the day much
houghy but as we weregoing
;o the breakfast table, my daugh
;er said to me, "Papa, this is
Palm Sunday and every body
wears a green sprig of some
dnd." I just replied to her, "well
[ don't. care"very much about
hese big days, they don't mean
rery much." But do you know
'111'.' 1,11 l.lrrl riir whan ihr nnifl,
'"^Vhy don't you remember about
l026"years ago, that Christ came
iding along and the people
;pread their cloaks and hraneh(s-of-the
Lr^es 'down for him to
ide over," so'l shw^T^Was^Jeafair
n the argument so I gave up.
^p-Ttnrii Ahy?in.
lin rhiirph at ITWHrn. rrp Thf>
Church was packed:?More than
1,000 people were in the audience
)r. P. W. Powell, pastor and the
Assistant pastor. Rev. ISlieplieid
it the same hour, preached ,to
nore than 3,000 people in thO
>unday School Room. The choir
f 61 members marched froih the
Community House of the .Church
o the choir stand which is just
lehind the preacher.
" Singing, "All ha-il the power
f Jesus' name." Prayer by the
lastor, followed by singing the
Plid1. Hi 1 1 ~nn"yf ^rnflinr',.
sa. 52nd Chapter, then singing
lymn 126, "In the crossSt^glbry."
>ible reading by the pastor ."John
2th chapter. '"Prayer by Prof.
Moriara, then announcements,
tc. A solo by Mrs. L. G. Smith,
Where He Iead5~rrre?P^ill fol>w.
was-very touching.
Pi Pom 11 I lion aro'-.n and an
lounced the tbxt of his morning
ermon, John 12:32, "And if I
e lifted ud. I will draw all men
Tito me," from which" he showed
low important that all Church
nembenT live a pure lifurHho
pe&ker sighted at one time his
weakness in advising the Church
o do wrong by preparing a pool
oom for its young men and 90
>er cent of those young men
fent astray, So from that time
Lntil now he has kept his hando
>f wicked advice. HereOfTatg;
jr. - Powell has been preaclh^"
ome of the old-time gospel. This
Church will not "forget soon the
lermon he preached here a few
Sundays ago~drT short dresses
ind bobbed hair. W^hen riding
in" The street cars at times one
vill have to shut his eyes on
tccotmt of the -vulgar dresses,
>h, such a sh&me,?i?
ion, she pledged $2,000 to one
school. The pastor stated at
he morning service, they did not
leed the money?she has just
>ought a home for her old peo)le
which costs $80,000 and in
.923, she built a Church that
i. ?OfA AAA T i , . . ?
uaw foou,uw anci it is claimed
lere th&t 95 per cent of the coined
people from the South come
lere and get together and bein
to d<? business..
My best wish to [my many
riend??; the Masons and the K. of
LoT clear old South -Garolma.
S. J. Lipscomb, . v
128 St. Ann's Ave.,
New York City.
1 '{* '5
' ;_v . \ , , \ J . "* *"f-4
ITO LEADER
' i ??ea*
f The M
I I
V
1??? -4
' rr '
| Jhe-M
I i
MPW tinn/ a nn c rtirtrvr
? iiu M iiuK AUU o^nuuij
ACTIVITIES
- ? /
The opening of Spring deruands.the
attention to the luxuries
of "out-of-doors,-" so "outt
f-doovs" a11ractedaZgreat crOWd j
to the opening of the playground
at New Howard School on Wed. i
.afternoon, the 24 of March. One j
could not witness thd mirth and j
glee of the children without tak- j
j^ing a backward look into child-j
hood days and becoming inflected
i with laughter and merriment. j
Mrs. H. N. Vincent, president
of the Parent-Teachers' Associrn
Master of Ceremonies
to this event. The opening
began with?.the Negro National
A nt'hbTrr T olio wed by prayer
by the Rev. Brown, pastor of
St. Luke's, Episcopal Church.
Mrs* Dendy presented a beautiful
'-^d, white and blue" in behalf
of the Parent-Teachers' AsKnrifltinn.
Little Willi emen la
Roberts~aTid Eleanor Veale re-'
ceived and responded in behalf of
me pupus oi iNew Howard School
After the flag was erected and
-began to wave its story of PuriQnr]
.Tm.fjr'P fpr all
the children saluted and pledged
! allegiance ' to the republic for
wh|<4t-4^-^tapHq .
| Supt. W.j H. Hand addressed
the audience in that manner by
Which he is well-knpwn?someWong
the?many--Ihmga-he .left.
"with the boys and gills the message
of respect and obediehce" to
teachers, the message, <TPlay fair
and you will learn to play the
-game of-Kfe fair and square."
I; Councilman Sweeney won the
hearts of all J- parents, teachers,
boys and girls alike are grateful
to him for the apparatus* givJen
to develop health physically,
mentally and morally. Council
| v^ppnov hplieves that a|
sound bodymakesTnkHindiwMl^
I Councilman Killingsworth, Mr.
'Cook, Supt. of buildings and
grounds, both made interesting
;talks to the boys and girls. r^-j?
Miss Adele Minehan, supervisor
of city playgrounds has shown
much interest in procuring for
our children the apparatus presented
them. She too, with a,
!winsome smile gave a message
jto New Howard School. Principal
Dendy thanked the City and
the Parent-Teachers' Association
for the invaluable gifts,'after
which the audience safig "America"
and the "Star Spangled Denner"
The children were then die
* - ' , V <
arshall-Tati
.450 Main Stree
^ t
^ MA1
" You Have Never 1
We are sometimes asked \
' priced articles in certain lines,
don't carry them because the;
: That a fact. Take~ a sui
There are things that have to
opera-lions, certain materials?
of wear or-satisfaction. These
are represented in the price,
get?well, you know what yoi
_ . They cost more than they're
The reason th&t- we feature
that they're really inexpensive
- get: ...
arshall-Tati
450. Main Stree
^4 1
^r**??cua]C8axas^
|~ Gef Be
| Consult The
* j.
^?Hgir Culture, Facial I
1 - 4ng, Hair
JlL._L All done better
1- -By
y Mmes. Addiel.yle3 ^
I " Poro Beai
f I. S. "Leevy's De
J 1131 Washington Street
THER
j J SATISFY
Lin 01
B WORKMANSH
p seec
SPRJN<5&
L ALL WOOL
"i wonderful val
L - OWENi
1 1 17 WASHING
CALL6963FOI
s , ;
-ml&sed and lliey scampered ttway
eargerly to eriioy their gifts (
It was as if Old SantarOlaus had returned
in early Spring. Little ^
kiddies slid and swung and enjoyed
themselves until the sun ^
hid itself from them.
The parents and children ex- a
tend their inexpressable gratitude
teethe-Gity^orthe-appara* tus,
and the school will ever be
grateful to the parents for Old f
| IN MFMOPI A am
In loving memory of our deaf,
mother, Mrs. Mary Ann Branch, l
who departed this life one year 6
ago, March 22, 1925^J . |
Mother dear how we miss you
though only one year ago you
left us for heavenly realms un-J
known. > 3
i
Life is not the same "withoutryou '
""And many a tear is shed, l
For the one we love so dearly, 1
Is resting with the dead.
Sleep on dear mother, ' c
We shell meet you onoe mere)
"""r_! ?^
~?^^Mayj\pril 3, 192C - ?^
im Co. I
e? Y
t : T
. Y
tEE j
rhought Of This
vhy we don't carry lower LA .'. ....
It's a fair duesttoixr~Wc?'-~~t
Y
y are too Expensive.
It of clothes for example.?
=?=- x &
he put into a suit?certain J -?
t '
-a 11 is to give any khiu ?
! things cost money. They ?
Leave them out and you :: ~
1 get. And it's not value. &
worth. Too expensive! ^
. gaiety Brandilpthes js >
__
3. .Measured by what you X
; v .
im Co, I
% .
c ?? -Z^f~
--V
MOOo.oi>aio 0:01^0 aoooo^aoxi.aoob'^
antiful ?*??^
5 Specialist | "j
Passaging, Manicur- | *
Bobbing ~~ ~~frthan
the best - *'
: . -r- , : "a "
fc Geneva Houston
aty Shop 1 ~
partment Store $ ?
Columbia, S. C. 3f
[& IS
lCtion
UR
IP ^FRyirp |
>ur. " "^zjzzz
summer? 1
SAMPLES |
_r T **1 ?- '.
UES AT $30 & $35 j_ 1
it PAUL _j
TON STREET
< SALESMAN? f~ *
Wtffro o aa o o oooo^oooouuuuEH-Htt
Where there'll lie~y6~paTtmg7??
)n that Celestial shore; '
Your 3e^Fchildren
tfrs. Frances Knights, Mrs. M.
f. Thompson, Mrs. Lillie Martin,
fliss Martha, Lula and David
branch. ?
/ ^ . "
SOUTHERN R All .WAV
p SYSTEM.
^LimKin 5^C. offPPtivp n|-, g|
Arrive No. Between No. Depart. ~*
9:50 a 31 N. Y.-AucUsta 31 10:00 a * !
4:52 p 32 AuRusta-pK Y. 32 5:00 p
l:30p 27 Charleston-Cin. 27 1:45 p
4:50 p 28 Cin.-Charleston 28 4:55 p
0:45 p. 10 Columbia-Cin. 9 6:55a
:20 a 24 Columbia-Jaxv'le 23 ll:00p
0:30 p 20 Columbia-Aug. 19 7:00 a
0:15 a r ColurnBTa-Aufr. 7 5:45 p ,
1:40 p 14 Columbia-Sav. 13 10:20^0^
9:30 p 23 Columbia-Char. 24 5'^^HL/
9:45 a 13 Columbia-Char. 14 2:257^N^
0:25 p 11 Columbia-Chas 12 5:10a
5:20 a 15 Columbia-Chas. 16 2:?0 a V
1:45 p 2 Columbia-S'bprg 1 4:00 p
0:20 p 16 Columbia-Green. 15 6:40 a |
0:55 a 18 Columbia-Sen'ca 17 6:l5p y'
5:40 p 113 Gola.-Char. .114 ? /.V:
Via Camden and Rock HilL
j\Vy tiekat office, 1807 Main Street,
'. Telephone UM . ^ -