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'Black Shirts' Watched N.A.A.C.P. Watches "Black Shirt" Move To Oust Negroes From Jobs Denounced by Leading Southern Newspapers and Is Having Rough Sledding Chicago Editor Former Georgian Enters Magazine Field Colored Man Opposes Morrow ANOTHER BEAUTIFUL BUILDING [Photo] THE NEW GREEN STREET BAPTIST CHURCH Make Scientific Study of Lynching Southern Commission Makes Scientific Study of Lynching Atlanta Offers Graduate Course REPUBLICAN CLUB SECRETARY AND POLITICAL STUDENT [Photo] MISS ELIZABETH BARD Miss Bard, who is secretary of the Blue Ribbon Republican Club was born in Lebanon, Ky. She came to Louisville in 1923, entered Simmons University and is now doing post-graduate work in political science at the University of Cincinnati. She is a valuable leader of the Blue Ribbon Club of which Miss Anna N. Tuxum is president; Mrs. R. B. Scott, secretary and Mrs. Vienna Parker, organizer. BUSINESS MANAGER [Photo] MRS. MARGARET RHODES Mrs. Rhodes, who is a popular matron of the Califoria commuity and prominent in the club and fraternal life of Louisville, is general manager of the new Korb Apartments at 17th and Hale, which represent an investment of $50,000. Green Street Baptist Church Opens NEW EDIFICE ON GRAY STREET TO BE DEDICATED SUNDAY Services To Follow All Next Week; Pastor Asks Cooperation Of Citizens - The Green St. Baptist Church congregation plans to go into their new edifice on Gray St. between Jackson and Hancock Sunday, September 28, according to Rev. H. W. Jones, the pastor under whose untiring efforts the community has been given one of its most magnificent churches. Rev Jones announces that the congregation will assemble at the old church Sunday morning at 9 o'clock, that short services of prayer wlll be conducted and then the procession will form a line and march to the new church. Rev. Jones will preach the opening sermon. The choir under the direction of Mr. Augustus Brown will render special musical numbers. A committee with automobiles will look after all the old members of the church, without charge. At 3 o'clock in the afternoon the dedication will take place: Rev. W. P. Offutt of Bowling Green, the Moderator of Kentucky Baptists will deliver the sermon and expressions from all the churches will be heard. Special praise service by the choir and congregation will be the program at 8 o'clock Sunday night: Monday at 10 a. m. the M. and D. Meeting will hold its session; at 8 p. m. the 87th anniversary sermon of the church will be preached. all preachers belonging to the church will take part: Tuesday night will be fraternal night and representatives from the various lodges will conduct the service; Wednesday night is educational and business night. Leading educators and business men will address the meeting which will be interspersed with music. Thursday night the white friends will take part and representatives of the City will give words of encouragement; Friday night the L & N men will turn out and bring congratulations to the church. To all these services the public is cordially invited. Rev. Jones says that he feels that the citizens owe consideration to the congregation that helps every enterprise, religious, fraternal or benevolent, that the new Green St. Baptist church building is an addition to the city to which the public may point to with pride. Radio Station Rules Out Discrimination After Protest Bishop W. J. Walls passed through the city this week enroute to his conferences in Alabama. Drunk Guards Beat Prisoners
Object Description
Title | The Louisville Leader. Louisville, Kentucky, Saturday, September 27, 1930. |
Volume/Issue | Vol. 13. No. 47. |
Contributors | Cole, I. Willis (publisher) |
Description | The Louisville Leader was an African-American newspaper published from 1917 to 1950 by I. Willis Cole in Louisville, Kentucky. There are significant portions missing along the edges of pages one, two, seven, and eight of this issue and page one is very faded. |
Subject |
Newspapers African American newspapers Louisville Municipal College for Negroes (Louisville, Ky.) |
Date Original | 1930-09-27 |
Object Type | Newspapers |
Source | Issue on Reel 3 of microfilmed Louisville Leader Collection. Item Number ULUA Leader 19300927 in the Louisville Leader Collection, University of Louisville Archives and Records Center. |
Citation Information | See http://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/description/collection/leader#conditions for guidance on citing this item. To cite the digital version, add its Reference URL (found by following the link in the header above the digital file) |
Collection | Louisville Leader Collection |
Collection Website | http://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/leader/ |
Digital Publisher | University of Louisville Archives and Records Center |
Date Digital | 2012-04-13 |
Format | application/pdf |
Ordering Information | To inquire about reproductions, permissions, or for information about prices see: http://library.louisville.edu/archives/order Please cite the Image Number when ordering. |
Image Number | ULUA Leader 19300927 |
Rating |
Description
Title | 19300927 1 |
Ordering Information | To inquire about reproductions, permissions, or for information about prices see: http://library.louisville.edu/archives/order Please cite the Image Number when ordering. |
Full Text | 'Black Shirts' Watched N.A.A.C.P. Watches "Black Shirt" Move To Oust Negroes From Jobs Denounced by Leading Southern Newspapers and Is Having Rough Sledding Chicago Editor Former Georgian Enters Magazine Field Colored Man Opposes Morrow ANOTHER BEAUTIFUL BUILDING [Photo] THE NEW GREEN STREET BAPTIST CHURCH Make Scientific Study of Lynching Southern Commission Makes Scientific Study of Lynching Atlanta Offers Graduate Course REPUBLICAN CLUB SECRETARY AND POLITICAL STUDENT [Photo] MISS ELIZABETH BARD Miss Bard, who is secretary of the Blue Ribbon Republican Club was born in Lebanon, Ky. She came to Louisville in 1923, entered Simmons University and is now doing post-graduate work in political science at the University of Cincinnati. She is a valuable leader of the Blue Ribbon Club of which Miss Anna N. Tuxum is president; Mrs. R. B. Scott, secretary and Mrs. Vienna Parker, organizer. BUSINESS MANAGER [Photo] MRS. MARGARET RHODES Mrs. Rhodes, who is a popular matron of the Califoria commuity and prominent in the club and fraternal life of Louisville, is general manager of the new Korb Apartments at 17th and Hale, which represent an investment of $50,000. Green Street Baptist Church Opens NEW EDIFICE ON GRAY STREET TO BE DEDICATED SUNDAY Services To Follow All Next Week; Pastor Asks Cooperation Of Citizens - The Green St. Baptist Church congregation plans to go into their new edifice on Gray St. between Jackson and Hancock Sunday, September 28, according to Rev. H. W. Jones, the pastor under whose untiring efforts the community has been given one of its most magnificent churches. Rev Jones announces that the congregation will assemble at the old church Sunday morning at 9 o'clock, that short services of prayer wlll be conducted and then the procession will form a line and march to the new church. Rev. Jones will preach the opening sermon. The choir under the direction of Mr. Augustus Brown will render special musical numbers. A committee with automobiles will look after all the old members of the church, without charge. At 3 o'clock in the afternoon the dedication will take place: Rev. W. P. Offutt of Bowling Green, the Moderator of Kentucky Baptists will deliver the sermon and expressions from all the churches will be heard. Special praise service by the choir and congregation will be the program at 8 o'clock Sunday night: Monday at 10 a. m. the M. and D. Meeting will hold its session; at 8 p. m. the 87th anniversary sermon of the church will be preached. all preachers belonging to the church will take part: Tuesday night will be fraternal night and representatives from the various lodges will conduct the service; Wednesday night is educational and business night. Leading educators and business men will address the meeting which will be interspersed with music. Thursday night the white friends will take part and representatives of the City will give words of encouragement; Friday night the L & N men will turn out and bring congratulations to the church. To all these services the public is cordially invited. Rev. Jones says that he feels that the citizens owe consideration to the congregation that helps every enterprise, religious, fraternal or benevolent, that the new Green St. Baptist church building is an addition to the city to which the public may point to with pride. Radio Station Rules Out Discrimination After Protest Bishop W. J. Walls passed through the city this week enroute to his conferences in Alabama. Drunk Guards Beat Prisoners |
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