Amsterdam News
Wednesday, June 6, 1923
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
Grand Exalted Ruler of Elks Hurt in Auto Accident
EX-JOCKEY SIMS SHOT
BLACK STAR LINE HAS $31.12 IN BANK, SAYS ACCOUNTANT
Government Witness Turns Light on Garvey's Funds; Stock Books Missing; Over $750,000 Worth of Shares Sold; Asst. Dist. Attorney Mattucks Rests Case WITH forty or more witnesses uncalled, the prosecution closed its case against Marcus Garvey last Friday afternoon, confident that it had proved, first, that the Black Star Line was a fraudulent concern; second, that the mails had been used to promote it.
George Tobias, to sign "whole rows" of blank checks, for which he, Garvey, gave no accounting; that all of his books were incorrect—for instance, that there was a discrepancy of $75,000 or so between his minutes book and his fiscal book as regards the payment on the Yarmouth; that he had collected $8931 for passage on a ship to Africa that never existed; that $6142 of this sum was not refunded or (Continued on Page Six)
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The outstanding allegations against Garvey may be summed up as follows: That he intended fraud from the start; that he got a ship only when forced to; that when he did buy ships they were worthless, and that he bought and used them almost solely for propaganda purposes; that his former, and later his present, wife controlled the treasury, without giving an accounting to anyone; that Garvey lived highly while on his tours and lost money at the races in Kingston, Jamaica; that he would direct his treasurer
Margus Garvey
ink checks, for
that all of his
he was a dis-
trib book and his
armouth; that
to Africa that
refunded or
Amsterdam News
Arrested For Murder of Twenty Years Ago
MEMPHIS, Tenn., June 5—
After twenty years of liberty,
William Rogers, alias Charles
Poole, is to go back to Opalika,
Ala., where he will face a
charge of murder for the killing
of Daniel Hunt, in 1803.
Rogers was arrested at his
place of employment, where he
has worked for the past 16
years, as a blacksmith. He
is known as a hard and steady
worker, and an honest and
peace-loving man. The officers
making the arrest said they
have been working on the clue
for a number of years.
"The man I killed and I had a little fuse and he called me a bad name and I hit him with my fist and he fell," Poole said. "He never got up. I guess he had heart trouble. I didn't know I hit him so hard. When I saw he was dead I just left. The just goes to show you can never tell. I guess I'll have to go and take the consequences."
Says White Woman Stole From Him
Mes Barner, white, was dismissed without taking the stand, when accused by Walter W. Scott, 60 West 139th street, with stealing five $20 bills and $68 in other bills from his room.
Scott, who said he is employed in a cafe at 187th street and Lenox avenue, told Magistrate Goodman that he had known the white woman for three weeks, and that on June 2, at 2 a.m., she had called at the cafe somewhat intricated. He said that he sent her home, but she refused, and that he finally took her to his room, where he left her and returned to his work. He returned at daylight, he said, and went to bed, while the woman was up and about the apartment. When he awoke at 11 a.m., the money was gone, he said.
Scott admitted that the woman had been to his apartment before that date, and that when he went to bed the door of the room was unlocked. No one was in the apartment, he said, except himself and the woman.
Detective Winterhalter said that when he arrested the white woman in a saloon at 139th street and Eighth avenue he found a $20 bill on her.
Counsel for the defense made a motion for dismissal on the ground that other persons lived in the apartment, and that one of them might have entered the room while Scott was saluting, and taken the money.
Scott gave his occupation as salesman. Under cross-examination he admitted that he was a "bartender," but since the passage of the Prohibition Act "salesman" was the proper title for the dispensers of liquid refreshment.
Sues for $1,000.
John L. Murray, 314 W. 141st street, was knocked down at 137th street and St. Nicholas avenue by an automobile owned by James Lotis. He was severely injured and in ailing Lotis for $1,000.
NEW YORK, N. Y., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1923
Elizabeth Ross Haynes
Gets Columbia Degree in Political Science
Mrs. Elizabeth Ross Haynes received her master's degree at Columbia University recently in political science. She is an A.B. of Fisk University, and the author of "Unsing-Heroes," published by DuBois & Dill. She is a member of the Council on Colored Work of the National Y. W. C. A., of which Mrs. John D. Rockefeller is a member, and also a member of the National Y. W. C. A. Industrial Committee. She is the wife of Dr. George E. Haynes. They have a boy, George E. Haynes, Jr., ten years old, who is attending the Ethical Culture School.
Bullet Shatters Watchman's Hand
Colored Employes of Office Building Come to His Rescue.
James Sherry, white, 32 years old, living at 562 West 148th street, a watchman employed in the office building at 18 East 41st street, was shot last Friday night by a man he alleges was colored, who evidently came to the building bent on robbing.
Entrance was gained to the building by a ruse. Sherry was sitting in the main lobby of the office building at 1.40 o'clock, with the doors locked. Upstairs, on various floors, colored men and women were cleaning up. A tall man wearing a derby hat and dark clothes tapped on the front door. He told Sherry that he had a message for one of the men at work upstairs about the illness of the worker's mother.
Sherry admitted him and was walking ahead of him to an elevator when he grabbed him, swung him around and drew a gun. Sherry grappled with him, inadvertently getting his right hand over the gun muscle in the struggle. The trigger was pulled and the bullet shattered the watchman's right hand.
Sherry dashed for the open elevator, pulling his keys out. He was making for his gun, in his room on the basement floor. Just before he reached the elevator he dropped his keys and the man attempted to kick them up.
Porters on the upper floors heard the shot and rushed down, finding the watchman bleeding profusely. They called Pollockman. Witness of the East 33th street station, who asked for help, as he thought the man was still in the building, and called an ambulance from Bellevue.
SAY FORD BACKS KLAN.
ATLANTIC CITY, June 4. Henry Ford was charged with being the financial backer of the Ku Klux Klan in a resolution adopted by the Grand Lodge of the Order of Britch Abraham in the Hotel Jerome last week.
CORNERSTONE LAID FOR LOCALSCHOOL
Big Civic Step For Harlem; School Children Throng Street; Murray Hulbert, Anderson and Others Speak.
School children captured 140th street, between Lenox and Seventh avenues, last Friday afternoon, to hold it safe from invasion while the cornerstone of the new P. S. 139, now being erected in that block, was being laid.
Detachments of pupils from P. S. 5, 140th st. and Edgecombe ave.; P. S. 68, in 140th st., near Lenox ave.; P. S. 89, at 139th st. and Lenox ave.; surged in from the Lenox avenue entrance, headed by the Boys' Cadet Band of the 15th Regiment. These were re-enforced by a battalion of girls from P. S. 119, 133rd street and Eighth avenue, who entered from Seventh avenue.
It was a great day for the children and a greater day for school extension in Harlem. New P. S. 139 will house 2,000 pupils, which will reduce congestion at Public Schools 5, 68, 89 and 119, thus permitting 6,000 pupils who are now on part time to return to full time. Among the special features of the new school will be shower baths, two shops, indoor playground, gymnasium.
Birmingham Police Fail To Solve Murders
One of the Victims Was a Colored Man; Another Given Prison Sentence.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala., June 4.—An other example of the low mentality of the average Southern police force is given in the pitiful inability of the police of this city to solve a series of axe assaults which have taken place in the last 62 months and have taken the lives of 19 persons and resulted in injuries to 17 others.
The latest victim of the axe assaults is Charley Graffoe, white, who was found dead last night with his skull crushed and his throat slashed.
One of the victims of the axe murders was a colored grocer, Mose Parker, who was robbed and killed on December 21, 1921. Following one of the murders a colored man was arrested, tried and sentenced. The man is evidently innocent because the murders have not ceased.
James King, of 1326 Pacific street, well known in the fraternal circles of Brooklyn, passed away Saturday evening, at his late residence, at the age of 88. He was born in Atlanta, Ga., and came to Brooklyn at an early age. He was a member of the Masons, Elks, Odd Fellows and Fishermen. Funeral services were held at his residence yesterday evening.
Mme. M. M. R. Hardaway, 210 West 63rd street, was case on appeal in Court of Special Sessions. Mme. M. M. Hardaway received full emoration and conviction reversed for errors of law and facts in the Saulebury and Richards case from the arrest at her home, February 13, 1922. The name, Mary M. Hardaway, is completely cleared, as before, and all records destroyed. Emanuel A. Busch, Attorney, 195 West Tenth street
Children See Cornerstone Laid
CHILDREN from all neighboring public schools witnessed the laying of the cornerstone of Public School 139, located on 140th street, between Lenox and Seventh avenues, Friday.
WATCHMAN SHOT IN BACK BY MOTORISTS
Colored Man Lingering Between Life and Death in Kings County Hospital; Refused to Open Gate as Train Approached.
Because George Ashton, 36, colored, a gateman at the Long Island Railroad crossing at Norwood Avenue and Milford Street, did not allow a motor car containing several unknown men to cross the tracks in the path of an approaching train early Thursday morning, he was shot in the back by one of the men in the machine. Ashton, who lives at 1979 West 4th Street, Coney Island, is in a serious condition at the Kings County Hospital. The men escaped.
Ashton had lowered his gate on receiving a signal of the approach of a Jamaica-bound train. When the men in the motor car saw no train in sight they tooted the horn of the machine and commanded the gateman to let them pass. He refused, and received a valley of verbal abuse. After the train had passed, Ashton, before raising the gates, went to the middle of the tracks to see if any train was coming from the opposite direction. Seizing none, he raised the gate and signaled for the motor car to cross.
Ashton made no answer, and was about to enter his shack when a shot was fired, and he dropped to the ground. The motor car disappeared in a cloud of dust. Patty Delargue, of 18 Shaw avenue, Woodhaven, a gateman at the Montank avenue crossing, heard the shot and hurried to Ashton's aid. Finding him unconscious, he sagged a train bound for Flushah avenue terminal, and asked if there was a doctor on board. There was near, but Patrolman-Busble of the Gates avenue station, who was one of the passengers, administered first aid to the wounded gatesman and summoned an ambulance from the Bradford-Street Hospital. The surgeon who responded said that if Ashton lives it it will be due to the efficient manner in which the patrolman stopped the flow of blood from his wound. The injured man was then removed to the Kings County Hospital.
During the World War Ankton served as a servant in the Medical Corps.
YOU CAN BUY AND SELL MOST ANYTHING IN THE AMSTERDAM NEWS
EXTRA!
J. FINLEY WILSON INJURED
J. Finley Wilson, editor of the Washington Eagle and Grand Exalted Ruler of the Elk, was injured in an automobile accident while making a trip to Sallebury, Mid., Friday when the car in which he was overturned. He was carried to Sallebury Hospital.
SMITH REPRIEVES BLACKSTONE
ALBANY, K. Y., June 4.—(Telegram) Governor Smith today reprieved the death sentence of Robert J. Blackstone.
MOBILE Ala. June 4—At
tending to prescribe his brand
of Christianity upon an appa-
rently disarmed old Ibishu
dog get Rev. J. E. Metcalf,
white, into trouble today.
The dog accompanied its owner, Earl Smee, to church services. When the congregation started singing the dog also got the "spirit" and wanted to limitate the sum singing of a cracker congregation. The pastor, Rev. Metself, kicked the dog out, fearing the effect its vocal efforts might have on the congregation.
Smee defended the old hound dog and attacked the Christian shepherd of his fleck, and a charge of assault and battery, to which Smee entered a plea of guilt, brought a fine of $55 and costs.
K.K.K. INCORPORATES TO AVOID NEW LAW
In an attempt to dodge the rigors of the Walker law, which will bare the secrets of the Invisible Empire, the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and their women's auxiliary, the Kamelia, filed certificates of incorporation with the Secretary of State. The objects of both organizations are declared to be "purely benevolent and social."
State authorities hold that the effect of the incorporation is to bring the Klan more surely under the Walker Act.
LINER BRINGS $0 NEGROES.
The liner Munargo, or the Munson Line, which reached here last week from Antilla, Cuba, and the Island of Jamaica, brought ninety colored passengers. Most of them were West Indians.
FAMOUS TURF JOCKEY SHOT BY COUSIN
"Willie" Sims Critically Wounded by Forrest Sims, His Cousin, Following Quarrel; in Asbury Park Hospital.
ASBURY PARK, N. J. June 4. — William Sims, at one time considered the leading jockey of the American turf, lies in the Asbury Park Hospital with a wound through the chest which may cause his death. Forrest Sims, 30 years old, a cousin, with a wound through his right hand, is held by local police without bail. On a feeble charge of felonious assault.
The shooting occurred shortly before noon yesterday at 12:30 Washington Street, the home of William Sims, better known to followers of the racing track as "Willie" Sims. According to the police, Furrest, who gives his residence as 1709 Banga Avenue, went to the home of "Willie" to get some letters, and an altercation started.
A 25-calibre automatic revolver owned by "Willie," was breached into the argument by one of the
JAMES C. THOMAS
TALKS TO FRATERNITY
RICHMOND. Va. June 4—I
doubledly one of the most valuable
entertainments in the history of
Virginia Union University and
the "Frat" breakfast of George
Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, held last Sunday in Mem-
tin E. Gray Hall.
Mr. C. L. Franklin, the president of the chapter, was teammate. Short addresses were made by Dr. W. J. Clark, president of the university; Dr. J. R. Simpson, Prof. M. W. Conner, teacher at the university; Dr. J. M. G. Munson, Dr. J. H. Blackwell, Jr. Prot. T. Kervil, Mr. J. H. Henderson. All of them with the exception of the first two are members of "Gamma."
Miss Hazel Wells, instructor at Hartborn College, was sponsoring for the indices present. The principal address was delivered by Hon. James C. Thomas, member of the Alpha Chapter, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, who is attending U. S. attorney for Southern District of N. Y.
In the Courts
Frank Capella, white, a chauffeur or the Shaw Taxacab Co., was held in $3,500 ball, charged with running war Muriel Charles, age six, child Mrs. Paula Charles, 144 West 89th street, at 138th street and seventh avenue at 2.30 p. m. on Sunday. Muriel is now in the Harnam Hospital seriously injured. Carria was arrested by Patrolman Thomas Brishane of the 38th Pro-duct.
Wholesale dismissals of policy cases by Judge Rosalyski did not wall in the case of Mrs. Lillian McMennon, 100 West 139th street and arrearice, Alice Richardson, of the same address, when arraigned in he Washington Heights Court on Monday before Magistrate Goodman.
Detective J. J. Dunning of the Third Inspection District charged that when he entered the apartment at 10 a.m. he saw Mc. McDonnell writing numbers, a large sheet of which was produced in court. He said that she admitted that they were policy slips and that she would reveal the names of the bankers if he would let her go. Mrs. McDonnell emphatically denied that she had written the numbers, and said that she was cleaning the house at the time. Attorney Richard L. Cunningham, who appeared for the two women, issued a dismissal on the ground that Judge Rosalysk had ruled that she ing the numbers in a pot of illicit paint there was no drawing, but his motion was denied and they were held in $1,000 each for the Grand Jury.
Joe Edmond, 41 of 143 W. 135th street, a tailor, was also held in $1,900 bail when arraigned by Officer Lafferty of the Third Inspection District.
Daniel Kitchener, 156 West 144th street, when arraigned by Detective Armistead of the Third Inspection District was more fortunate. Magistrate Corrigan dismissed the charge without hearing it, and reprimanded Armistead. "Don't you bring any more of these cases to me," warned Magistrate Corrigan, "or I will prefer charges against you."
William Keser, janitor, 23, of 27 West 133d street, was held in $5.00 ball charged with the theft of $4.50 from Samuel Millerton, 330 East 23d street.
Raymond Thomas, 2317 Seventh avenue, was held in $25.00 bail when charged with burglary by Stephen Kelley, 502 West 133d street. Thomas had been out on parole. He waived examination.
Charged with operating a taxi-cab without a license by Detective Patrick A. Ottanasio of the Headquarters. Division. the following were fined $50 or 10 days each: Louis Buglioni, 22 white, of 973A Myrtle avenue; David Shapero, 24 white, of 531 Cauldwell avenue; Daniel Clarke, 32, 2 West 129th
Telephone: NOTARY PUBLIC
Harlton 8533
LOUIS A. LAVELLE
Attorney and Counselor-at-Law
420 Lenox Ave., (N. E. Cor. 131st
St.) New York
GEO. B. KNOX
CIVIL & BAIL BONDS
INSURANCE
Office Phone Aud. 8465
Residence Phone Aud. 6586
230 W. 141st St. N. Y. C.
DIVORCES
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HAVE YOU A TRADE?
There are always plenty of good positions open for trained men.
The Harlem River Auto School is making a special offer to men dealing to become expert automobile mechanics. It will be to your advantage to investigate this offer.
We have a corps of expert instructors who teach you to repair or drive any make car or truck. You get the actual practice with long road lessons.
MADISON AVENUE AT 135th STREET
Phone Harlem 0718
street, Thomas Peston, 30, 252 West 129th street, and Arthur Oliver, 30 West 126th street. Oliver pleaded that she was only a poor married man." "What of the poor married man that gets hit by a taxi, and the police cannot check up because the driver has no license," asked Magistrate Goodman.
Richard Jones, 28, clerk, 48 West 129th street, was sent to the workhouse for three months when he was convicted in Jefferson Market court of disorderly conduct.
Julian Garrett, 35, 507 Lenox avenue, convicted of bookmaking, received a sentence of 30 days in the workhouse yesterday from the justices of Special Sessions. Sentence was suspended pending good behavior.
A complaint of grand Jarceny made against Harry Brown, 22, 60 West 129th street, on which he was held by Magistrate Goodman in $1,000 bail has been dismissed by the Grand Jury.
Detectives Winterhalter and Nekon of the West 135th Street station arrested Thomas Thompson, 22, a guard, 11 East 108th street, and Arthur McGovern, 37, 264 West 135th street, upon complaint of Monte Lucas, and chaufeur, aged 24, 270 West 135th street. He says the men kicked and heat him when he asked for pay for a ride. Lucas is in the hospital.
The Grand Jury has indicted Jas, Jenkins, 27, 121 W. 134th St., for felonious assault, on the complaint of Joseph Richardson, 126 W. 134th street, who alleged Jenkins had stabbed him during a fight on May 6. Jenkins is in the Tennis awaiting trial.
Minnie McKenzie, 20, 149 West 149th street, has been indicted on the complaint of Latha Chamson, 133 W. 140th street, for felonies assault. She pleaded not guilty to the indictment and was remanded to the Tombs for trial. The Chamson woman alleges the McKenzie woman stabbed her in the breast during a row, May 10.
Two Harlem young women, Mabel Muller, 17, 39 W. 133d street, and Mary Hall, 22, 53 W. 139th street, are awaiting sentence for petty larceny on June 1. Each pleaded guilty to stealing articles of personal adornment from downtown department stores.
A jury has acquitted Harry Jones, 24, 224 W. 134th street, for carrying a revolver without a permit. Jones was arrested May 19 at 268 W. 135th street by Detective Elwin Cooney, of the Third Inspection District.
George Woolley, 28, 55 W. 131st street, has been indicted on the charge of grand larceny. He pleaded not guilty before Judge Nott, in General Sessions, and was released in $1,000 bail pending trial. Edward Griffin, 8 W. 133th street, accuses Wooley of stealing part of an automobile from a vacant lot at 125 W. 139th street. May 17. Geoff Sandford, 20, 11 W. 137th street, employed as a porter in the silk establishment of Robert Lebow, 119 W. 25th street, has been sentenced to the penitentiary for not less than six months and not more than three years by Judge Mulqueen in General Sessions. Sandford pleaded guilty to the theft of a roll of silk valued at $20 from the place. Howard Coles, 26, 53 E. 133d street, was held for the Grand Jury when arraigned before Magistrate McAndrews, Harlem Court, on a charge of robbery made by James Bofeullette, a baker, 117 W. 141st street
John Wackman, 35. 25 W. 144th street, indicted last December for assault on the complaint of Policeman George Kager, of the Special Service Squad, and released in $1,000 hall, has been discharged by Judge Mulqueen, in General Sessions.
U A TRADE?
Are Automobile Business?
of good positions open for trained
School is making a special offer to
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OLDEST SCHOOL IN HARLEM.
ER AUTO SCHOOL
QUE AT 135th STREET
Harlem 0718
OOL. 151 W. 54TH ST., N. Y.
we are 5th, but this month only we have
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THE ARENA AUTO SCHOOL,
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CORNERSTONE OF SCHOOL LAID
(Continued from Page 1)
lunch, commercial and music room and open-air classroom. The ceremonies were opened with a prayer by Dr. A. Clayton Powell, pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church.
Among the speakers were Murray Hulbert, president of the New York Board of Aldermen; M. S. Stern, vice-president of the Board of Education; Dr. Wm. J. O'Shea, associate superintendent of schools; Hon. Chas, W. Anderson, Collector of Internal Revenue; Martin J. Healy, Alderman of the 19th District; Geo. W. Harris, Alderman of the 21st District; Jno. M. Royal, president of the Civic League, and Assemblyman Henri W. Shields-Chas, W. Anderson, Collector of Internal Revenue, glorified that an institution was being projected which would be one more link in the chain with which civilization would eventually bind the god of war.
Mr. Jno. M. Royall, president of the Clyde League, followed with an impassioned address in which he called attention to the clyde duties and obligations of the community in general and to the need for more human relationship between teacher and pupil in particular.
Alkali in Shampoos
Bad for Washing Hair
Many soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much free alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle.
The best thing to use is Mulstifed coconut oil shampoo, for this is pure and entirely grenseless. It is inexpensive and heats anything else all to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for months.
Two or three teaspoonfuls of Mulsified is all that is required. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to manage. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. Be sure and ask for "Mulsified" cocoanut oil shampoo.
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Telephone—Morningside 1344
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Among other prominent people present were; Dr. A. K. Krause, principal of P. S. 5; Miss Harriet Tupper, principal of P. S. 119; Jacob Ross, principal of P. S. 89; Miss Grace Campbell, member of the local school board; Miss Aspinall, former member of the local school board; Mrs. Gertrude McDougal, vocational counselor; Dr. R. M. Bolden, Secretary Taylor of the Y. M. C. A. and Mr. C. C. Allison.
*Pupils from Public Schools 5, 68, 89 and 119, accompanied by Boy Scouts' band, furnished music.*
Dr. Jno. A. Ferguson, chairman of the Building and Sites Committee of the Board of Education, presided.
Stomach Troubles Are Due to Acidity
Stomach Troubles Are Due to Acidity
Teils Safe, Certain, Speedy Relief for Acid Indigestion.
So-called stomach troubles, such as indigestion, gas, sourness, stomach-ache and inability to retain food are, in probably nine cases out of ten, simply evidence that excessive secretion of acid is taking place in the stomach, causing the formation of gas and acid indigestion.
Gas distends the stomach and causes that full, oppressive, burning feeling sometimes known as heartburn, while the acid irritates and inflames the delicate lining of the stomach. The trouble lies entirely in the excess development or secretion of acid.
To stop or prevent this souring of the food contents of the stomach and to neutralize the acid, and make it bland and harmless, a teaspoonful of Bisurated Magnesia, a good and effective corrector of acid stomach, should be taken in a quarter of a glass of hot or cold water after eating or whenever gas, sourness or acidity is felt. This sweetens the stomach and neutralizes the acidity in a few moments and is a perfectly harmless and inexpensive remedy to use.
An antacid, such as Bisurated Magnesia, which can be obtained from any drugstreet in either powder or tablet form, enables the stomach to do its work properly without the aid of artificial digestents. Magnesia comes in several forms, so be certain to ask for and take only Bisurated Magnesia, which is especially prepared for the above purpose.
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Estimates Cheerfully Given
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[Image of a monk in a meditative pose, wearing a white robe and a long necklace with a pendant.]
STUDIO
13s W. 199th St., Apt. 1 East
NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
In his closing remarks he praised the efforts of the Hylan administration to provide a seat for every New York school child, and said that another elementary school, a high school and a trade school for girls are on the schedule for Harlem. The school is on part of an estate which was famous at the time when Houston street was the northern limit of New York City.
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I come to me, before gals please. No matter how slight or serious your sickness in, I will cure you better, quicker and cheaper than any other Specialist. For the last 25 years I have curated thousands of sick men and women, and I can do the same for you. I treat each patient personally, and give immediate relief and lasting results. No matter what treatment you have taken, call to see me—I cure where others fail. I use the best remedies, Electrical appliances, and intravenous injections (Medicine injected into the vein of the arm), also (606). Patients who live hundreds of miles away from New York, call at my office for treatment.
X-Ray Examination Free
The X-Ray is the only sure method in locating deep-hidden diseases that can not be discovered by an ordinary examination. Thousands of men and women have been saved from unnecessary operations through these wonderful examinations. Call and be X-Rayed, free if necessary, in the only office that has an X-Ray machine.
I treat: Lost Power, Weak Nerves, Pains in the Stomach or Back, Indigestion Constipation, Headache, Rheumatism, Blood Disorders Skin Diseases Pimples, Eczema, Sore Throat, Asthma, Bladder and Kidney Trouble. Advice Free.
Notice Results after first treatment.
DR.FALK.SPECIALIST
58 WEST 51ST ST. NEWYORK
BETWEEN 51 AND 52 AVENUES
Office Hours from 11 A.M. to 7 P.
M. Daily. Sundays and American
Holidays from 11 A.M. to 1 P. M.
If You
FROM ANY BLOOD DISORDER
STOMACH, HEART OR LIV
BLADDER TROUBLES, RHE
YOU WILL HAVE THE BENE
EXPERIENCE (14 IN LARGE
ATTENTION AND MY SERVI
THE SMALL FEE OF TEN D
SPECIAL AILMENTS CA
HOURS 10 A. M. TO 8:30 P. M
ANDREW
168 W. 23RD ST.
MEN
KONG
POB
STANLEY
MOSCOLI CENTER
Lancaster, Pa.
FROM ANY BLOOD DISORDER, ULCERS, SKIN DISEASE, STOMACH, HEART OR LIVER DISORDERS, KIDNEY OR BLADDER TROUBLES, RHEUMATISM, DO CALL ON ME. YOU WILL HAVE THE BENEFIT OF MY FORTY YEARS EXPERIENCE (14 IN LARGE HOSPITALS), MY PERSONAL ATTENTION AND MY SERVICES UNTIL CURED FOR $10 THE SMALL FEE OF TEN DOLLARS.
SPECIAL AILMENTS CAREFULLY TREATED. OFFICE HOURS 19 A. M. TO 8:30 P. M.; SUNDAY 19 A. M. TO 1 P. M.
MEN' WHY NOT?
KONGOLENE
W. MARLSON, NJ
POSITIVELY
STRAGHTERS MAR
KONGOLENE 91-91-91 JAR
Lincoln Avenue No. 23
RHEUMATISM
Why suffer with rheumatism
lived permanently by using SCH
refunded if not satisfactory. It is
best results. Try it—you lose no
a bottle; 6 for $5.00. Mail orders
WILLIAM SCH.
182 First Ave., Cedar
Health, Str
For MEN
MORE VALUE
The richest man in poor he
his treasures to regain his
method of Physical Treatment
Strength follows, health once
Why suffer with rheumatism, lumbago, etc., when you can be relieved permanently by using SCHAPIRA'S LIQUID ANTIDOL. Money refunded if not satisfactory. It is used by well known physicians with best results. Try it—you lose nothing and gain your health. Price $1 a bottle; 6 for $5.00. Mail orders attended to.
WILLIAM SCHAPIRA PHARMACY
182 First Ave, Cor. 11th, N. Y. City.
The richest man in poor health would gladly sacrifice any of his treasures to regain his health. Health is restored by my method of Physical Treatment and Direct Blood Injections. Strength follows, health once obtained, Energy must be the final outcome. When you have attained these you will be as thankful and happy as many others who are willing to personally testify to the results obtained from my methods. If you have any newly contracted or long standing complicated aliment and need the service of an Experienced Physician you can make no mistake by calling on me.
ONE WEEK'S TREATMENT
After my careful examination and one week's treatment you will be convinced why I get quick and lasting results even in cases where many other treatments have failed.
IF YOU SUFFER
from Nervous Disorders, Dizziness, Weakness, Blood and Skin Diseases, Floating Spots before the eyes, Poor Memory, Weak and Unsteady Nerves, Biepessiness, Pain in the Neck and Back, Resistance of Stiff Joints, Gore Throat, Bladder and Kidney Troubles, Stomach and Abdominal Troubles, Neuralgia Pains, Coated Tongue and Constipation. COME TO ME.
Consultation
Absolutely
FREE
Come
Today
YOU CAN HAVE
STRAIGHT, SILK HAIR
By using "Suaveline," the delicately perfumed lotion which straightens and strengthens the hair, makes it soft, silky and billa. It removes deadruff, cleanses the scalp; does not discolor the hair or injure the scalp; no ironing nothing to wash out contains no grease; guaranteed absolutely harmless.
At your Drugstore, or write to us.
SUAVELINE MFG. CO.
150 Kassan Street, New York, N. Y.
Design Supplied—Agents Wanted
Suaveline
Tel. Morningside 8266
MME.
Effie C. Norton
HAIR AND BEAUTY
CULTURE
209 WEST 130th ST.
is the most speedy remedy we know for Constipation, Billiousness, Colds, Headaches and Malarial Fever
Suffer
DER, ULCERS, SKIN DISEASE,
VER DISORDERS, KIDNEY OR
MATIAMIUM, DO CALL ON ME.
BENEFIT OF MY FORTY YEARS
IN HOSPITALS), MY PERSONAL
INCENSES UNTIL CURED FOR $10
DOLLARS
AREFULLY TREATED. OFFICE
M.; SUNDAY 10 A. M. TO 1 P. M.
EGAN, M. D.
NEAR 7TH AVE.
WHY NOT
GOLENE
WITH MILK
INTELLECTLY
TREATS MAR
9 P.M. TO 1 P.M.
JAN
25TH A.M. TO 2 P.M.
h. lumbago, etc., when you can be re-
HAPIRA'S LIQUID ANTIDOL- Money
is used by well known physicians with
nothing and gain your health. Price $1
attended to.
HAPIRA PHARMACY
r. 11th St. N. Y. City.
length, Energy
and WOMEN
ABLE THAN GOLD
health would gladly sacrifice any of
health. Health is restored by my
a list of patients I can refer to
acted teeth to their complete
Mischer, 2455 8th Ave.; Mr. and Mr.
Miss Lille Devall, 179 W. 138th St.
M. Johnson, 230 West 141st St.; M.
St.; Edward Anderson, 224 W. 141st
OPEN DECORATION DAY
ROSENTH
FAMOUS DENTAL BURGEON
ST 125TH ST. (Corner 8N
8 P. M.
Sundays 9 A.
Examin
IF-U-DON'T-C
CONSULT
OPT
EXPE
EST. 1902
SETS OR
THAT S
Bridge Work the
comfort and serve
SPECIALITY of C
From the mount
labeled, there is a
tion and confidence
in the view
of the thorough
with extracted carefully and a NEW set ro
of Teeth, Bridgework, Gold Crowns, Filling
carefully Made at Reasonable Prices.
Following is a list of patients I can refer you to, for whom I extracted teeth to their complete satisfaction and surprise.
Mr. and Mrs. Fischer, 2455-8th Ave.; Mr. and Mrs. Chase, 258
West 124th St.; Miss Lille Dawson, 178 W. 136th St.; Paul White,
62 W. 140th St.; M. Johnson, 230 West 124th St.; Mrs. C. Merrill,
161 West 128th St.; Edward Anderson, 224 W. 141st St.
IF·U·DON'T·C
CONSULT
KAPLAN CO.
531 LENOX AVENUE
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10014
OPTICAL
EXPERTS
EST. 1902
DR. BLOOM
103 EAST 125th STREET—
(OVER, LOFTS CAN)
740 LEXINGTON AVE.—
(OVER LIGGETT'S D
169 EAST 34th STREET—
HOURS:
DAILY...TO 6
TUES. and THURS...TO 7
SUNDAYS...TO 8
SICK AND
MEN AND W
IF YOU SUFFER from Nervous Dlce
Blood and Skin Diseases, Spots bef
weak and Unsteady Nerves, Sleeppe
Each, Rheumatism or Stiff Joints,
Abdominal Troubles, Neuralgic Pain
pation—COME TO MR
FREE Consultation
Examination
Modern
Methods Used
If you have failed to
obtain a cure for your
Allergy, Don't Give
it's Call and be ex-
cused FREE. I have
had 26 years expri-
ence and practice of
Medicine of Surgery
in treating Dlcees
and Chronic Diseases
I see and treat you
personally each time
you call.
Office Hours
9 A. M. to 8 P. M.
120 East 29th St., bet. 4th & Le
RO-
A FACE I
THAT REALLY
Another HIGH
Toilet Prepa
Harmless, but
effective.
Ro-Zol also clears the
blemishes. Keeps the
fresh and youthful looking
125th STREET—Corner P
(OVER, LOFTS (CANDY STORE)
BINGTON AVE—Corner 39th
OVER LIGGETT'S DRUG STORE
ST 34th STREET—Corner T
URS:
Broken Plain
WHILE YEAR
BK AND AIL
N AND WOR
MR from Nervous Disorders, Dishe
a Diseases, Spots before the Eyes,
Sleepy Nerves, Sleeplessness, Pains in
tism or Stiff Joints, Sore Throat,
Tubes, Neuralgic Pains, Coated Tong
TO MR.
E Consultation and
Examination
used
led to
for your
Dive
be ex
I have
experiences of
dervous
disease
al you
time
P. M. DR. LEWIS
9th St., bet. 4th & Lexington Aves.
RO-ZO
ACE BLE
REALLY BLE
other HIGH - BRO
toilet Preparation.
unless, but surprising
effective.
also clears the complexion
area. Keeps the skin smooth
and youthful looking.
IF YOU SUFFER from Nervous Disorders, Distress, Weakness, Blood and Skin Diseases, Spots before the Eyes, Poor Memory, Weak and Unsteady Nerves, Sleeplessness, Pain in the Neck and Back, Rheumatism or Stiff Joints, Sore Throat, Stomach and Abdominal Troubles, Neuralgic Pain, Caned Tongue and Constipation—COME TO MR.
THE
ORIGINAL
ROZOL
COMPLEX HEARPIER
BILLS
THE PREPARED BY
THE ORIGINAL INSTITUTE
OF CHICAGO
OVERTON LINES
IF IT HURTS YOU YOU ARE THE JUDGE!
I can refer you to, for
our complete satisfaction
Mr. and Mrs. Chase, 282
6 W. 138th St.; Paul White,
141st St.; Mrs. C. Morris,
224 W. 141st St.
TION DAY
ENTHAL
SURGEON
(Corner 8th Ave.)
Sundays 9 A. M. to 1 P. M.
Examination Free
NT-C
OPTICAL
EXPERTS
02
SETS OF TEETH
THAT SATISFY
Bridge Work that endures, gives
comfort and service, in a street
VALLEY of Owatonna.
From the moment the work is
filed, there is a sense of solitude
and confidence.
It is NEW STRONG—general
of the through medication of food
a NEW set ready to wear in a
Gold Crown, Fillings of Gold, Pure
Pleasure.
CORNER PARK AVENUE
INDY STORE)
—Corner 59th Street
(BUG STORE)
—Corner Third Avenue
Woken Plates Repair
While You Walt
AILING
WOMEN
borders, Distress, Weariness
are the Eyes, Poor Memory
menses, Pain in the Neck and
Sore Throat, Stomach and
Ans, Coated Tongue and Count
and Treatment
A thorough examination is most important. My examiner asked me to look through; wigs need very heavy Blood, Urine and Sputum. I asked her to examine the skin, which is aided by a large modern electric equipment. Includes pains and helpful in many cases where operability cannot break you, will tell you as. Can to me and do it together always are da perous.
WIS
Sundays
to A.M. to 1 P.
Exington Ave., New York
ZOL
BLEACH
BY BLEACH
I - BROWN
duration,
surprisingly
complexion of all skin smooth, firm,
ing.
black-heads, liver
splotches, tan,
and, freckles.
Also removes dark rings and marks on the neck and arms caused by collar, furs, etc.
FOR SALE BY
ALL DRUG-
GISTS
BUSINESS MEN TO HOLD EXPOSITION
William H. Roach Heads Committee of Business Men Who Will Stage a Commercial Show in the Renaissance Casino.
The colored business men and women of Harlem will have an opportunity of bringing to the attention of the community and the city at large the growth and progress of their commercial activities at a commercial and business show to be held at the Renaissance Casino, 138th Street and 7th Avenue, July 23rd to July 27th, inclusive. This commercial and business show promises to be the equal in artistic display to that which is given annually at the Grand Central Palace. The exposition will be given under the auspices of the Renaissance Casino, with Mr. William Roach as general manager.
It is expected that colored manufacturers and business men throughout the country will avail themselves of this wonderful opportunity to display their particular lines in the atmosphere of the beautiful Renascence Casino. The booths for exhibit purposes will be beautifully decorated, and everything will be in keeping with the well-known and highly admired artistic effect of the Casino.
Mr. Roach does things in a high-class manner, and all of the business men and women, professional and otherwise, feel confident that, for the first time in their career the same opportunity will be given them to display their wares as is given the white business men at shows given in the Grand Central Palace.
Colored manufacturers, business men and women throughout the country are urged to make immediate application for exhibit space to the chairman, William H. Roach. Renaissance Casino Building, 148 West 138th Street. New York City, or to W. H. W. 2308 Seventh Avenue, New York City.
Prominent business men of Harlem are in the exposition.
TWO MEN FREED
Magistrate Corrigan, in the Heights Court, discharged from custody James West, 23, 142 West 121st Street, and Samuel Jordan, 22, 48 West 130th Street, who had been arrested on a charge of grand larceny. West and Jordan were arrested by Policeman Symmers in the southbound subway station at 135th Street and Lenox Avenue, where they are alleged to have robbed Leonard Pitsa, 600 West 122d Street, of $410 and a silk handkerchief. A silk handkerchief, which the complainant identified as similar in pattern to the one he lost, was found on West, but Pitsa could not swear that it was his property. The court granted the request of Attorney Freak W. Stanton to dismiss the complaint, although he expressed his resistance to do so.
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M. H. H.
Mullan-Gage Repeal Reduces Court Docket
Only One Bootlegging Case Tried in Heights Court on Monday.
With the repeal of the Mullan-Gage Act, the dockets at the Washington Heights Court have been considerably reduced. Last Monday there was a single bootlegging case, the result of an adjournment. The Heights Court had furnished a large proportion of the 12,000 or more recent cases, of which, according to Magistrate Corrigan, but 12 resulted in convictions. Violators of the Volstead Act will henceforth be tried in the Federal courts, thus removing from the State the burden of the many hundreds of dollars that each prosecution entailed.
Among the more noted cases arising out of this act was that of Officer Horrod McLeod of the 38th Precinct, who had been arrested, charged with illegal arrest of the white wife of the proprietor of the Wolkina drug store. 2216 Seventh Avenue, for alleged violation of the liquor law. Officer McLeod is now being sued for $10,000, under violation of section 816 of the Civil Practice Act, by Mrs. Wolkina.
McLeod, when asked about his case by a reporter of the Amsterdam Town, refused to talk, but seemed downhearted at the suit, which is still pending in the courts. Speaking shortly after his arrest, McLeod expressed the conviction that his arrest had been due largely to lack of backing after his arrest of Mrs. Wolkins had been made. He said at the time:
"Due to the laxity of some District Attorney's in conducting prosecutions, many bootleggers escape. The officer is sent out to do his duty, therefore should he not have the fullest cooperation of the court, in order that he may do that duty well?"
"I am not trying to change the opinion of the judge, nor do I wish to persuade the bootleggers. I should like to point out, however, that, as the operation of a warrant costs about $300, the citizens are now considering a heavy burden in that place of political prostitution known as the Mulian-Geve Act. I do not wish to be too rigid or too lax about the matter."
Boy, Six, Run Down.
Robert Phillips, pix, 6 W. 125th street, was run down and slightly injured by an automobile at Leson avenue and 125th street. He was treated for contusions of the scalp and was taken home.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1923
Cleveland Combed for Murderer
(Cleverland News Service)
CLEVELAND, O. June 4—Feeling is running very high here against John L. Whitfield, escaped slayer of Patrolman Dennis Griffin and captor of so many white women's hearts. It is now claimed that Whitfield is a mulatto, and, as this report is more widely circulated, the more anxious white people here become to capture him. On Thursday the city council voted a reward of $10,000 for the capture of Whitfield. Mayor Fred Kohler retood the measure, saying that it was, or rather would be, an absolute waste of money and would not do anything to cause or hasten the capture of a murderer about whom there is no mystery.
The search for Whitfield has now entered the 25th day and the whereabouts of the fugitive is even more of a mystery now than when he made his flight from here.
WASHINGTON. D. C.
The Colored Baptist Seminary was dedicated on Wednesday, May 30, at Fort Perry, Va. The property is in the recently developed Dougain Park. Among the guests who delivered addresses were: Rev. R. L. Bradbury, of Detroit, Mich. Rev. Wm. Wose, Rochester, New York, Dr. J. H. Boddy of New York City, Dr. S. B. Butler, of Indianapolis, Ind. The Community Center Band furnished the music.
Boscow Cochling Bruce has recognized his position as superintendent of the Colored Schools of McDowell County. West Virginia, to enter Harvard Law School. A big mass meeting was held at John Wesley Church, Sunday afternoon in the interest of the Cardinal Gibbons institute. The principal speaker of the day was Rev. Ignatius Smith of the Dominican House of Studies, Catholic University. Mrs. Mary Church Terrell, Mr. John N. Paynter, and others spoke. Miss Nannie Burroughs a member of the Board and President of the National Training School for Girls, presided.
Boy Scout Troop, 508, organized in St. Augustine Parish, held special exercises in the basement of the Church Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The Daughters of the American Revolution gave the troop an American flag, which was presented by Mrs. L. S. Lipecomb. A special program was arranged by the boys' activities committee, which has charge of the troop. The Community Center Band, Prof. Jas. F. Miller, director, furnished the music.
The Graduate of Night School.
In his address to the graduates
at Dundas High School, Dean Kelly
Idress to Follow That of Tennessee Congressman.
BOSTON, Mass., June 4.
Final arrangements for Boston's official celebration of the 148th Anniversary of the Battle of Bunk Hill, June 17th, and use in honor of the colored men who fought valuably that June 17th, 1775.
I will enable the colored orals, including Hon. Wm. Lewis, to follow Congressman Garrett of Tennessee, who will be the city's orator. The National equal Rights League will honor Peter Salem.
At this first regular battle for American Independence Peter Salem killed British commander, for which he was commended the Legislature.
Miller, of the Howard University, predicted that in the future the Night Schools would be only evening classes of the Day Schools, which would be conducted 12 hours each day and 12 months of the year. He told the graduates that the aims of education were the promotion of culture and service. Garnet C. Wilkinson, Assistant Superintendent of Public Schools, told the graduates that the diplomas had been awarded them by the Board of Education as an honor and that the board would expect them to live up to the standard of their education.
FAMOUS TURF JOCKEY SHOT
FAMOUS TURF JOCKEY SHOT
(Continued from Page 1.)
men. A turtle ensued to obtain possession of the weapon. Forrest received a wound through the right hand. He then obtained possession of the weapon and turned it on "Willie," shooting him through the right breast. Officer Trues arrived, followed by Officers Reid, Willis and, later, Chief Byram. Forrest was placed under arrest and "Willie" was rushed to the hospital. He was able to walk, but examination at the hospital revealed that the bullet, instead of taking an upward course, had gone downward and pierced the right lung.
Forrest was arraigned in city court this morning and entered a plea of not guilty to the felonious assault charge. He was represented by Attorney William Andrew. Forrest was committed to jail without bail to await the outcome of his cousin's wound.
According to police Forrest and "Willie" lived together at the Washington Avenue address, but a short time ago Forrest moved to the Bangs Avenue address. Sunday morning he went to the home of "Willie." He had been drinking, police believe, and started an argument which resulted in the shooting.
"Willie," who is about 50 years old, 20 years ago was the premier jockey of the American track. He rode many winners and was much in demand. Shortly after attaining the peak as a jockey, he was ruled off the New Orleans track because he was involved in a "fixed race."
TO MOTHERS
Instead of using horrid castor oil, which children dislike so much, give delicious "HARLYBIRD LAX-ATIVE." Induced by eminent psychoiologist, 30 and 500 per bottle. All Draggists.
ASBURY PARK, N. J.
The People's Lyceum was packed to its capacity Sunday. Under the direction of A. H. Haynes, music director, a memorial program was rendered. Special music of 16 pieces was played by the Lyceum orchestra. The Frederick Dempsey Post No. 268, American Legion, turned out as a body with Commander J. W. Harris, Mr. Sidney Gill, President.
At the regular meeting, Friday evening, of Monmouth Lodge of Eksa No. 122 the following officers were elected to serve during the ending year, J. Lawrence Minyard, H. Robinson, Lawrence Stuward, C. Charles Gardner, Charles Wilson and Walter Hunter. Delegates to the Chicago Convention; W Harvard Jones and C. Lawrence Minyard.
Mrs. Josephine Peterson, of Avenue A, who for some weeks has been confined to her home with illness, was again surprised on Friday evening when the Lady Ushers Club of the St. Stephen A. M. E. Elon Church paid her a visit.
Mr. Charles H. Vanderveer, a veteran, and an old resident, suddenly passed away at his home. Springwood and Union avenues. Saturday morning. He was a loyal Elk. Funeral arrangements are not yet complete.
Counsellor E. R. Havnes is suffering from a strained ankle.
Mr. Montgomery Jones of Myrtle avenue is on the sick list, and accrding to his physician will have to undergo an operation.
Summer visitors are arriving daily in large numbers from all parts of the country. Already the main thoroughfares, hotels and restaurants present a midsummer scene.
What has been received of the illness of Rev. H. Jenkins, President and founder of the Jenkins Orphan School at Charleston, S.C. Rev. Jenkins is widely known because of the great work he is doing. He has many close friends in Ashbury Park.
YONKERS, N. Y.
Mrs. Magalline Clausen has opened a nice, clean and attractive ice cream parlor at 227 New Main street.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson paid a visit to her sister in Newark, N. J., and spent the remainder of the day touring through New Jersey.
Mrs. L. Davidson was the week-end guest of her daughter, Mrs. B. Wilson, of 3 Cottage place.
Mrs. Arthur Childers, of Schenectady, N. Y., spent the week-end with her daughter, Mrs. William M. Paulkner, of 564 Sawmill River road.
Miss M. Thornton was married on Saturday evening at the residence of Mrs. Jarvis.
Mrs. Hubbard was married on Thursday at the parsonage on Wood place.
Miss E. Brown and Mrs. L. For-
ter and daughter Grace visited
Cash or Installments
RADIO
Installed & Repaired
MACHINES MADE TO ORDER
WITH OR WITHOUT
OUTDOOR WIRES
John T. Williams
267 WEST 140TH ST. Apt. 4-1
CANT SEE HEY?
SERVES YOUR RIGHT
I TOLD YOU TO GO TO KAPLAN AT 531 LENOXAVE AND HAVE A PAIR OF GLASSES FITTED—YOU WOULD SAVE MONEY AND BE SATISFIED—HE IS RIGHT OPPOSITE THE HARLEM HOSPITAL
A
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Rev. Powell's church on last Sunday.
The tennis club enjoyed itself at Alpine, N. J., on Decoration Day,
On Sunday last the Misses Winfred Webb, Doris Seay and Elizabeth Adams attended the evening services at the St. Clements Episcopal Church, in Mount Vernon.
A large number of the younger set spent Decoration Day climbing the Palisades.
Miss Dorothy Riddick, one of Yonkers' leading young ladies, won the Egyptian scarf presented by Miss E. Sinto, at the King Tut's masquerade ball, to the beak dressed.
JAMAICA NEWS
Members and friends of Amity Baptist Church recently paid honor to Roy, B. E. Simmons, the Pastor, just before he went on a vacation for the benefit of his health. A program was given in the auditorium, after which refreshments were served. On Saturday, May 26, Mrs. John B. Lark, of 12 State street, entertained, at luncheon, the Jolly Nine Whist Club. Mr. and Mrs. Bryant and Miss Theresa Cooper, of New York City, were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Miller Wednesday evening. May 30, at their residence, 218 Washington street.
Mrs. Ellen Johnson, of 218 Washington street, Jamaica, N. Y., has just returned from Greenfield, Mass. She was the guest of Mrs. Walter Scott
Miss Ardinia Revells of Atlantic City spent the week end in Jamaica. N. Y., as the guest of Mrs. Ellen Johnson.
"When You Feel the Need"
Don't doze yourself with coffee,
tea and drills. When you feel
down and out and all your "pop"
is gone, try
Dr. Siegert's Angostura Bitters
Made since 1884 from the same formula. It will pull you together and you get no bad effects.
For Sale by all Drug, Delimitessen and Grocery Stores.
Send for free sample
J. W. WUPPERMANN
12 East 40th St., New York City
Latest Ways of Making Dentistry Pleasant
In this age of progress dentistry has not lagged behind. Science has especially favored the comfort and mental ease of the patient. Besides our specialists are decidedly human in their sympathetic tender treatments. Codes nothing to find out.
Brady J. A. K. by I. R. K.
Consultant Dentist
DR. DONOERIO
Surgeon Dentist
Northeast Corner of
125th St. & Lenox Ave.
Sutton Station and All Cars
On the Drive.
Tel. Morningside 1783
E. PENEUX'S
Express and Delivery
Daily Trips Down Town. Special
Trips to Rockaway and
Coney Island.
Stand Cor.
135TH ST. AND 7TH AVE.
GEORGE F. NAZEL
Harlem's Reliable Jeweler
2207 7th AVE., bet. 1228-1328 St.
Wedding Rings, 14k, 18k and
22k. $5.00 up. Fully guaranteed
with other gifts in jewelry,
silverware, eta.
WE CARRY BARGAINS
Expert watch and jewelry repairing
Also Victrolas and Talking Machines
Repaired.
Give us a trial and be convinced.
hel Furniture Co.,
Inc.
CASH—gooc WEEKLY & UP
ALL BRING THIS MACHINE
TO YOUR HOME
hel Furniture Co.,
Inc.
ಸಂಶ್ಲಿಷ್ಟವಾದದಲ್ಲಿ
A. S. LEVY — 2162 Seve
SPECIALLY PRICED
FOX AND WOLF S
PLATINUM, DYED
BROW
Furs in Cold
for the Sn
All FURS stored
insured and guarded
Moths, Loss, Fire, and
FURS remodelled
the Spring and Summer
be stored FREE.
A. S. LEVY — 2162 Seve
PROF. AKPAN
PROFESSOR OF AFRICAN AND
OCCULTISM, PSYCHIC SCIENCE
AND BLACK MAGIC, B
NATIVE OF AFRICA
PSYCHIC AND SCIENTIFIC RE
ADVICE GIVEN. — EGYPTI
AFRICAN FORMULAE
Studio: 206 West 129
62 Seventh Ave.
BY PRICED
GOLF SCARFS
NUM, DYED, BLUE AND
BROWN.
in Cold Storage
for the Summer
OURS store with us will har-
and guaranteed against
Loss, Fire and Theft.
Remodelled by us during
and Summer months will
and FREE.
62 Seventh Ave.
KPANDAC.
AFRICAN AND ORIENTAL
MICIC SCIENCE, WHITE.
MAGIC, ETC.
OF AFRICA.
INTIFIC READINGS AND
— EGYPTIAN AND:
FORMULAE USED
West 129th St.
I. S. LEVY — 2162 Seventh Ave.
SPECIALLY PRICED
FOX AND WOLF SCARFS
PLATINUM, DYED, BLUE, AND
BROWN.
Furs in Cold Storage
for the Summer
All FURS stored with us will be
insured and guaranteed against
Moths, Loss, Fire and Theft.
FURS remodelled by us during
the Spring and Summer months will
be stored FREE.
I. S. LEVY - 2162 Seventh Ave.
PROF. AKPANDAC.
PROF. AKPANDAC.
PROFESSOR OF AFRICAN AND ORIENTAL OCCULTISM, PSYCHIC SCIENCE, WHITE AND BLACK MAGIC, ETC. NATIVE OF AFRICA.
PSYCHIC AND SCIENTIFIC READINGS AND ADVICE GIVEN. — EGYPTIAN AND: AFRICAN FORMULAE USED
Studio: 206 West 129th St.
Phone Morningside 3305
consulted him, as a mark of the pridence in his abilities, and above evo enjoys deep satisfaction in having an ing peace, harmony, happiness and joy. Having: just a limited time now, he is urging all those seeking his advice
consulted him, as a mark of the profoundest confidence in his abilities, and above everything else he enjoys deep satisfaction in having succeeded in bringing peace, harmony, happiness and joy where absent.
back of the profoundest confl
and above everything else he
in having succeeded in bring-
iness and joy where absent..
time now, before he sailed, lea-
g his advice to call now..
Having just a limited time now, before he sails, he is urging all those seeking his advice to call now.
This may be your only chance—
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Hours g A.M. to ro F,M.
A.
Prof. Akpandac takes this method of informing his numerous clients and the public generally of his intention of leaving for West Africa in a few weeks. He feels exceedingly gratified over the successful results he has been able to achieve and accepts the hundreds of testimonials he has received from men and women all over the country, who have
en nant i —'° nn see an ee! UU!!! £ * Gee,
eS-. i: TH SPORT #25, -- Ss
‘ —: Baseball ; Track and Field ==
Football m—e ney | ay ByROMEOL. povcHERTY . :—: ‘—: :—: Events-- Billiards
ii eran ; Bp
= — McK. King, Cyat
Philadelphians Again Take Lead in |[j Post Meek June |Carllon Loaes to Highland tri tt ts a ata
ic ; | Dance Merry Affairl tne cantor ics their trat|®204, 20 Bie antely when "hite/talnelect for 1884, Where
rai as Th tive ight : league game Saturday to the High-| he Highland Park twivier aeveral | North Long Branch, N. J.
Sizzling Game Staged at Darby ¢ resins ace of Pst Mooi | SE REE SB ae |e Bu Tee | Mae in ee Sar.
No. 103, African Blood Brother Be wore ve cioeee teat bis opponents scoreless until the |on the'basis of three or more pol
a —_—_—_—_—_ hood, held last Saturday night at ting most of thelr big faa. a c oth, we i Meg fe va scared daring ino pee Five
John i Fraternity Hall, 75 West 134th . _praduated
1 Henry Ltoyd Unlimbers and Hangs Bat on Sphere jayiina of AMERICAN TENNIS ABSOCIATION FOR SEABON 1922 | treet. oroved a ‘oerry adie and o| ad ove to Ge nih. Browse the [pisces Bro ta, the SARL Tomy | FORE: oped that the
That Brings Home the Bacon For Fast Begs Paanciel auceas, | Carlton's rack, young, southoat [tines men scored. a. the math att hoped that the materi
Going Boys Under Bolden. FIRST TEN (in order of rank) Tae dance, purposely held tn the) AO oreylous starts, was oa, the| jemand bunched four hits, wit) | be In position to regain the tw
si “<ss PA DOUBLE. WEABER
eae
BA FAST RACE | GIANTS
AY GATHOLIG PHOTESTORY GVAL
PAGE FOUR .
b e
Philadelphians Age
Sizzling Gan
John Henry Lloyd Unlimbe
* _ That Brings Home
. Going Boy:
John Henry Lioyd and his big bat
put Hilldale back into the lead in
the league race here Sunday when.
with the Cuban Sters@lcading by
‘the score of 3 to 0 in the 8th Inning,
two men out and 2 mun on first
base, be hit the first bull pitched
over the center fiell fence ror a
home run, scoring Stevens ahead of
him, tielng the score at 2 ull. In
the ninth before n man had been
Tetired, Hilldale pushed over the
winning counter. when Mackey
opened with a double and came
Rome with a single to right field.
which Baro allowed to scoot past
him. Mackey scoring with case.
Oscar, the star of the Cuban's
ataf, was on the mound and before
Captain Lioyd got in his timely
wallop had held Hilldale scoreless
for'26 Innings, and until the, Sth
mning had allowed them but three
hits, one of which was a double,
Hifaale having difficulty solving
Ris'delivery when they had men on
the bases.
Cockrell, who oppored Oncar.
also was In good form, allowing the
Cubans but seven, hits on which
they garnered but two runs, tho first
coming In the third, when Fernan-
dex walked, was sacrificed to sec
ond by Oscar and came home on
Nesia’s single through the pitcher's
box. In the 5th successive doubles
by Dihezo and Fernandez scored
their second run.
‘The Cubans pulled a wonderful
play in te Sth. With Briggs on
firat, the result of a single. Warfield
Mt to Oscar who, whirling aronnd.
threw hich to Chacon, who covered
second, but Feran backed Chacon
up, caught the bail, relaying the
same to Chacon in time to get
Bricgs sliding into the bag.
‘Wen arava:
Hitidate 7
R. H. O. A. E.
Briggs. rf. ....---0--0 2 2 0 0
Warfleld. 2b .......0 9 11 0
Stevens, 2 .......-1 0 9 9 0
Lloyd, s8 ..........1 1 22 0
Thomas, cf .......-9 1 2:10
Mache’. c .......5--7 1 6 1 0
G. Johnson. If ....9 1 9 9 0
J aenrson, 3b... 8 ToT 8
Allen, 1b ...---..55.0 010 1 0
Cockrell, p ....:-...9 2113 0
Totals .......-...3 72611 0
dam: +-Cuban Stars
i RH. O. A. E.
Nesia, Mo... 1 10 8
Portuondo, 3b ......9 © 2 2 1
Bato. rf .....-00-00 D1 OD
Omer cf oO 230 0
Chaco, se eee. 0 1 34 T
Toran, 2b... OT TO
Dihego, fb ........-1 110 0 6
Femandez. c ......-1 1 4 3 0
Ovear, pve 00-4 0
Totals ......cc02.-2 72413 3
Sterens ran for Warfela in the
Sb. inning.
Chacon cut, hit by batted hall.
None out when winning run
scered.
Cuban Stars. 9H 1 A100 A A-2
Billdale .....090000021-—3
Bacrifice Hits—Warfeld, Allen.
Btolen Bases—Nesla.
‘Two Base Hits—Mackey.
Thomas. Baro, Niheso, Fernandez.
Home Run—Lioyd.
Double Playa—Thomas to J.
iJokgson.
Y Btruck Out—Cockrell, 6; Oscar,
5. Bases on Balls—Cochretl, 2;
Oscar. 1.
Umplres—Burton and Locke,
rae
Cétored Athletic Ass’n
Issues List of Officials
BAMPTON, VA., June 3-—The
Colored Intercollegiate Athletic
Association, at its Hampton Instl-
tate-mesting. approved the follow-
tog names for officials:
Football ‘
Benjamin Washington; Hubert
A. Taylor; GN. Lew: Fred D.
yn; ‘William Wright: M. E.
3 G, A. Keyes; Eddie Niles;
Gm. Lightner; Dr. W. EB. Morrt-
J. “H Laws: C. L. Pinder.
2b. T. Pino; J. W. Ander
Ls U, Gibson; Dr. Frank
Cokpage: Charles H. Williams; 5.
@. Dougiass; H, B. Henderson; C.
B.-Elder; Joseph Trigg; Clarence
Jackson; F, T, Wilson; and C. V.
Bellinger.
Baseball,
aire Nixon; A. L. Jackson, F. J.
Jamison; Dr. Hargrove; Richard
Loteett; Dr. George Jones; C. P.
Hayes; ‘Fred D. Lawson; J. H.
r Basketball.
R. Martin; Fred D. Lawson;
PAL. Keyes; L. U. Gideon: Ben:
Washington; EB. B. Hender
oat Neville Reed.
e following institutions wore
Fapreoented at the Hampton called
1g: Lincoln University, Shaw
University, Virginia Union Unt
versity, Virgina Normal and Indus-
trial Institute, St. Paul Normal and
Industrial School. and Hampton [n-
stitute. W. A. Rogers of the Vir-
ginta Normal and Industrial foe
tite at Petersburg presided.
The Association voted that offi-
cials must be competent or they
will not be employed. Charles H.
Williams, secretarytreasurer, was
Instructed ta write each institution
and emphasize the importance of
having the rules carefully studied
and the decisions given without any
bias. Letters were addressed to
several institutions calling for the
development of a spirit of true
sportsmanchly and fer the playing
of contracted games,
Harry Wills Starts to Train
At last ft looes gy thouch things
have about shaped themselves #0
(hat Wills, the bronze panther.
wi'l have a chance at the title, It
Is said that he Is a favorite among
the Jong<toremen, Hix fellow-
workmen paid him a high tribute
when he laid down the handles of
his truck last Saturday night and
announced to them that he was
going into trataing preparatory for
a tile hont with Jack Den vey—
he bout for which he has been
watchfully walting for years.
Wills and his manager, Paddy
Mullins, ars satd to have taken lit-
erally the promise of Jack Kearns,
Dempsey's manager, that the title
holder will meet Wills next, pro-
vided he is champion after he
meets Trminy Gibbons The State
Boxing Commission, it is under-
stood, 1s preparing to give a decl-
sion on the proposal to hold the
bout in this State. Wills, started
training Friday.
The Negro fans in Harlem say
that in a bad sign. Wills should
net have started training on Frt-
day. They declare that it fe an ill
omen, He will never fight Demp-
soy. und, If he does, something will
» wrong, Wills laughed at this
expression of superstition on the
part of his many admirers. He
‘old them the main thing was to
train, Start when you will. But
the superstition of the fight fans
still goes on.”
Siki Turns Down $10,000
When Battling Siki received Tex
Rickard’s offer of $10,000 to fight
Kid Norfolk late in June or early
in July he coldly retused the offer.
‘Then he added that the reason
for refusing the American offer is
that he is to meet Marcel Nilles
‘a Parts on July 8, but the French
battler confided to his friends that
he would never again fight outside
of continental Europe. He claims
that what he has seen of American
white people In France makes him
feel that he would not be given a
square deal in America. “Why, just
lock how I was treated in Dublin
when [ fought Mike McTigue, and
they tell me that Americans hate
Negroes, and 1 believe It, because
every time I go Into a cafe where
they are over here they try to snub
me.”
AT PROTECTORY OVAL
Another double-beader tn the se
ries for the eastern cdlored cham-
plonship will be played at Protec
tory Oval, East Tremont avenue,
near 180th street, on Sunday after
noon next. The visiting team will
be the famous Bachatach Glants,
of Atlantic City, .who will make
thelr first appearance om these
grounds this year when they ‘meet
thelr old rivals. the Lincotn Glants.
‘The Bacharschs are one of the
bestbalanced and strongest col
ored teams now playing: baseball
and, ag intense rivalry exists be
tween the Bacharachs and Lin.
colns, It is expected that two of the
best baseball games of the year will
be seen when these two teams face
each other. Lindy, the celebrated
shortstop, is captain of the Back-
arachs, and he fs confident that his
team will win both ames from the
present colored champions,
Homestead Grays Lose
+ (Preaton News Service)
WILMERDING, Pa, June 6.—
‘The Homestead Grays suffered de
feat by the Valley A. C. teem, of
Wilmerding, last Friday afternoce
by 8 score of 74, ‘A home ran by
Cartoxzo featured. The clevér
Cannady was on the mound for the
Grays. The local team used twe
pitchers. o
[ELT Soom Soe
le Bs Se ef
RANKING OF AMERICAN TENNIS ASSOCIATION FOR SEASON 1922.
FIRST TEN (in order of rank)
1.—E. @. Brown, Indianapolls, tnd.
2—Talley Holmes, Washington, D, C.
3—Bylvester Smith, Washington, D. C,
4.—0. 8. Willlams, Chicago, tl,
5—John Wilkinson, Washington, D.
6.—B, M. Rhatta, Baltimore, Md.
7.—E. G. Saitch, New Vork, N. Y.
&.—Frank Jones, New York, N.Y.
9.—W. W, Walker, Baltimore, Md,
« 10.—Dr. J. MeGriff, Norfolk, Va.
; SCORE SHERI MENS SINGLES,
/1—E. G. Brown
Winner of (a) Western Championship Tournament.
Winner of (b) New York Open Tournament.
Winner of (c) A. T. A. Championship Tournament,
2.—Talley Holmes
: Winner of (a) Baltimore Open Tournament. .
Winner of (b) Washington Open Tournament.
: Runner-up A. T. A. Champlonship Tournament. .
Winner of (c) Washington Local Tournament.
3.—8ylvester Smith
Runner-up Baltimore Open Tournament.
; Runnerup New York Open Tournament.
t Runnerup Washington Local Tournament.
| Sembfinalist A. T. A. Championship Tournament,
| 4.—0. B, Willlams
|" Runnerup Western Championship Tournament.
, Semi-finalist A. T. A. Championship Tournament.
John Wilkinson
| Runner-up Washington Open Tournament,
; Sem/-finalist Baltimore Open Tournament.
Semi-finalist Washington Local Tournament.
_ Semifinallst New Yerk Open Tournament. :
¢.—B, M. Rhetta
‘Winner Baltimore Loca! Championship Tournamant,
| Semifinallet Baltimore Open Tournament.
High clase performance in A. T. A. Tournament.
T.—E. G, Saltch
Winner New York Local Tournament.
High class performance in A. T. A. Tournament. ‘
High class performance in New York Open Tournament.
8—Frank Jones
Runnerup In New York Local Tournament.
High clase performance in New York Open Tournament,
High class performance in A. T. A. Tournament,
9—W. W. Walker
High class performance in Baltimore Open Tournament.
High claes performance In New Yerk Open Tournament.
High class performance in A. T. A. Championship Tournament,
Sembfinalist in Baltimore Local Tournament,
10—Dr. J. Griff 5
High class performance in New York Open Tournament.
High clase performance in A. T. A. Champlonehip Tournament,
Winner Virginia Championship Tournament.
NOTE—The following three groups are arranged in alphabstica
order only. Their positions do not indicate relative ability as ordered
by the American Tennis Asseciation.
SECOND TEN (in alphabetical order and net ranked within thie group).
1—F. J. Acoeoe, New Yerk City.
2—Norbert Bal, New Verk City. 7
2—Sterting Brown, Washington, D. C.
4—Clyde Freeman, Pittsburgh, Pa.
B—L. P. Hinten, Brocklyn, N.Y.
6—Richard Hudiin, Ot. Louie, Me.
7—Dr. J. Jamison, Witmington, Del,
&—£, M. Pollard, Washingten, 0. C.
$—L. E. Spooner, New ‘York City.
10-~Theodera Thempeen, Washington, D, C.
.
MEN'S SINGLES,
THIRD TEN (lm alphabetical order and not ranked within this greup)
. teRobert Allen, Philadelphia, Pa
2—James Bain, New York City.
+ dad. N. Cardoza, Baltimers, Md s
4--L. P. Gordon, Philadelphia, Pa,
S—Harry 8. MoCard, Baltimore, Md.
6—J. @ MeRee, Baltimere, Md.
7G. Smith, New York City
‘&.—Thes, Smith, Annapeti, Md.
9—Dr. Strange, Philadelphia, Pa,
10—Raymend Williams, Washingten, D. C. 3
MEN'S SINGLES,
etical erder and not
a City, Me,
tarbury, Conn,
Roanoke, Va,
rN, Je
timore, Md,
w York City.
Washington, D. C.
ington, 0. C.
w Yerk City.
telair, N, J.
FOURTH TEN (in alphabetical order and not ranked within this group).
1—W. Avery, Kansas City, Me,
2—R. B. Costa, Waterbury, Conn.
3—Dr, €. Downing, Roanoke, Va.
4—@. Hill, Mentelair, N. J.
*SanM. E, Hillen; Baltimore, Md.
6—E. K. Jones, New York City. ‘
7—Richard Lewis, Washington, D. C. '
one Shiota New York cht
10-—A. L. Terry, Mentelair, N, 2, :
LADIES’ SINGLES, 1
FIRST TEN (in order of rank)
1—Miea Isadera Channels, Chicage, Ill. ‘ |
2—Mra, LB, Wade, New York City. z
3—Mine N. A. Crawford, New York City. 5
4—Mrs, 8, Madison, New York City.
S—Mre, &. Leonard, New York City,
€—Mra. @. Burnett, Montelair, N. J,
7—Mre, Glass, Kanese City, Me, |
B—Mrs. Coniok, New York City,
O—Mies E. Aleten, New York City.
10—-Mise O. Vaughn, Newark, N. J. |
SCORE SHEET—LADIES SINGLER,
‘1—Mive Channels ;
‘Winner (a) Western Championship Tournament,
Winner (b) A. T. A. Championship Tournament,
2—Nre. L. 8. Wade :
Winner New Yerk Open Tournament. 7
Runnerup A. T. A. Championship Tournament,
2-10 Inctusive
Rating determined from a careful anaiysie of the esere chests.
‘The erating committee wee net ordered te rate the double teame but
‘The rating committes wee not ordered ote rate the deuble teams, bet
was experianced In rating these tenme besauce of the fast that very
few palred’ together eencietentiy during the playing seaven. Thie ar
plaing the limited number rated in these groupe. .
MENS DOUBLES. ”
FIRGT FIVE TEAMS (in order of rank).
1mTalley Holmes and Syivester Gmith, Washington, 0. C.,
2—H. @ Srewn, indianapells, Ind, and E. K. Jones, New Verk Clty.
3—B. M. Rhetta and W. W. Walker, Baltimore, Md. .
4—Jamee Bain and Norbert Bala, Now York Clty, :
B—Dr. J. MeGrtff, Nerfelk, Va, and Dr, W. Cewling, Reaneke, Va. .
MIXED DOUBLES,
cs oes = mmmnerenneaen
1—tales leaders Channels and Dr’. 8; Willlame, Chleage, IH,;
fohn ees New York City, and Sytvester Smith, Washington,
JUNIOR GINGLES, Me
rineT : i
‘Theedere Thempeon, Washington, D. C. ”
All rated from eeore sheets. Net ordered by Ex, Committes A, T, A,
LADIE® DOUBLES,
fe t—Mesdamen woos, and seaare ee ‘Yorks. ‘.
S—Wien chaneete, Cnieene Tie gaa ru, Rasertdom, Kansan. Oy
Web
Be
0
he
_ WHENIS YOUR NEXT DANCE 7
Let The Tempo Orchestra, Inc., Make.it a Success
‘William H. Dever, Jr. Musical Director "
Phone Harte tan. 27 WERT TENTH STs WW. APTS
Cate es. | ew aa
PIANO PLAYING
UN RE eet, orci
7 ae +> i” 4 i!
are Vs t .
Vamos aba ba
ee, Tre en Sey Cee ce
Post Menelek June
Dance Merry Affair
‘The June dance of Post Menelek,
No. 105, African Blood Brother
hood, held last Saturday night at
Fraternity Hall, 75 West 134th
street, proved a merry affair and a
fuge financial success.
‘The dance, purposely held in the
| very centre of the workers’ diatrict,
brought s splendid response from
‘the Harlem proletariat, and by 10
‘o'clock the hall was packed, 1p
| spite of the fact that it was Satur
day night and marketing time.
‘The post officials and members
were elated at the fine response
from the working class, and in &
chat with newspaper representa
tives stressed the fact that the ac-
tivities of tha African Blood
Brotherhood and {ts many poste
throughout the country were large
ly concerned with the working
class of the race in the Brother
hood’s efforts to protect the inter
ests, Increase the earning power
and elevate the status of Hving of
the colored workers. “After all
no race can get far when Ita prole
tarfat Is as mercilesaly exploited
and oppressed as are our workers,”
remarked Otto FE. Hulswoud, na.
tional organizer of the Brotherhood
and chairman of the dance commit
tee, “The proceas af living from
hand to mouth. of barely eking au!
an existence. is not conducive to
the process of thought or to efforts
for racial betterment.”
Quite a number of white workers
were present and both races min-
gled freely without any thought of
the artificial lines created by white
capitalists and the kept press for
the purpose of keeping the workers
apart, In order to more readily ex
ploit them.
Muaic wan furnished hy the Har
ris Orchestra nod was enthustastl-
cally praised by the dancers.
Many prominent Haflemites
were also in attendance. including
several of the international officers
‘of the Brotherhood.
Silver
Jubilee
KNIGHTS OF
PYTHIAS
CIRCUS
—AND—
BAZAAR
UNDER WATERPROOF
CANVAS ,
sxtumpay June 9
Daily, Including Sundays
-_ GROUNDS
LENOX AVENUE AND
144TH STREET
BAND CONCERTS
REFRESHMENTS
AND Sovabrnes
AUSPICES GRAND
LODGE KNIGHTS OF
PYTHIAS
N, AS. AE, AcA, & A.
10c ADMISSION 10c
"Fai See ory |
Wilttem C, Bikins, Director |
Lessons In Singing
Voices Wanted Fer Chorus
te? W. 127th ST. N.Y. CITY
Cariton Loses to Highland
‘The Caritons lost their first
league game Saturday to the High-
land Park Branch by # score of 13
to 2, The game was closer than
the, score indicates, Highland get-
ting most of their big lead in the
last two innings, two in the eighth
es in the ninth. er the
riton’s crack young southpaw,
who scored shutout victories in bis
two previous starts, was on the
toound for Cariton and with good
support would have given his oppo-
Jnents a close fight. The youngster
wan reached for four ruts in the
opening round, when the damege
should have been averted, although
the first three men bit eately, aliing
the bases with none out. next
batter raised an easy fly down the
first base line. Brown and Garcia
got mixed up trying to make the
catch, the ball dropping on foul
| Sound, giving the batter wlife. He
then hit the second and when, the
batt got away from Meyers one run
went over and the bases were still
jfiiled and none out.
| ‘Wilson took care of the next two
batters, the second out resulting in
2 sacrifice fly, Clausen scoring.
Bennett doubled, sending two more
runs over. Wilson got under
Parry's hoist for the third out.
Carlton got two of these tallies
‘back In the recond, A. Thompson
reached first when Clausen fumbled
his hit over third, and Transon
walked. Williams hit = ‘Texas
‘Leaguer to right, scoring Thompson,
but Transon was out at third. C.
Thompson forced Williams, Sea-
man singled and Brown doubled.
Thompson scoring and Seaman go-
ing to third. Morton ended the
‘Main 2664 of Drop Me a Card
P HAVE YOUR
1. Tuned, Repaired,
4 Polished By a Negro
n A. RICHARDS
0. ‘Taasxetars: MEET
"HARVEY BAKER, Tener
‘TEACHER OF PIANO
AND VOICE
Training in Sight Singing, Cherue
and Orchestra
103 West (36th Street
Learn to Play Ragtime
Chetete ° ow
= 15
fee =
Piano—16 Lessons .
Violin—10 Lessons
Instructions
Cameo Meledy Studies
56 WEST rasth ST.
Near Lenox Ave.
Phone Hartem $729
| LEARN TO DANCE
| Prof. Chas. H. Anderson
PRIVATE er
864 LENOX AVE.
Phone Harlem 2071
Mme. Levi B. Brown
Music Teacher
STUDIO 2209 SEVENTH AVENUE,
NEW YORK
Clase Music, Piano, Organ, Vocal,
Special Attention Given to Time
and Tone
Orders Taken For Hymn Booke
Western Music Studie
Plane Instruction. Geod oppor
tunity. fer children. Speclal ar
rangements for rehearsals, Hours
12, 8.
Phone Morn, 2023
M, B, WOODS
‘4133 W. 128th St. Apt. 2: East
LOOK!——LOOK!
: Grand Opening
- Saturday, June 9th —
‘RIVERVIEW PARK
BEAUTIFUL
| euerseutenmeeeum: wal: FERRIS |
WHEEL, RONEYMOON SWING, “DOLLY -RE-
-FASGN MME. ZAZ8 AMD THE TOTO SISTERS.
AND FIFTY OTHER ATTRACTIONS, .
‘FRE — DMSO —— PEE
Harlem Conservatory of Misic
RICHARD R-HAAS, Direetor, .
a7 Lenox Ave, at 123rd St. * ‘Tet, Morn. 2005
Brench-Smith Building, Far Rockaway, N. Vo
‘Tel. Far Rockaway 0801
“A SCHOOL FOR REFINED COLORED PEOPLE”
BRANCHES TAUGHT: Plane, Vielin, ‘Cello, Veles Culture,
Harp, Mandolin, Banjo, Ukelele, Saxophone, Clarinet, Cornet,
Diplomas and Gold Medgle Awarded Annusity, Teachers Courses,
Apply Personally-Only: Monday, Tuesday, Thureday, 28 P. ie
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD |
14 — HOURS AT THE SEASHORE "24 ; :
Asbury Park and Long. Branch
>» EXCURSION |
ae |S , }
—_—
THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1923
Given Under the Auspices of thie 2
"- Amsterdam News and the
_ Peansylvania Red Caps
. . ROUND TRIP $a.50 2
"pula br in ae en AoE Me
Roxas, ON SALB—New Peak geneterdase rte, se.
fit sere ees
rally by flying out to center. Cary
ton threatened soreral times, but
could not hit safely when hits
meant runs, Good support saved
the Highland Park twirler several
times. After the first Brown beld
bla opponents scoreless until the
‘sixth, when errors paved the Way
for two more tallies. Stevens re-
‘placed Brown in the eighth with
two on and none out, and both
these men scored, in the ninth
Highland bunched four hits with
two errors and added five runs for
good measure.
Next Saturday Carlton will meet
the West Side Branch at Prospect
Park at 4 o'clock, ;
’
Hampton Awards ‘H. T. T.
By H. A. CORNISH.
HAMPTON Va., June 4.—Follow-
ing the intercollegiate track meet
at Hampton, the coveted "“H. T.
T." was awarded to Capt Reuben
F. Jones, of Baltimore, and a group
of other track and field stars, s0-
cluding:
Edward L, Dabney, Hampton.
Va.; Wheeler C. Ervin, Darlington.
8. 'C.; Edward Hargrove, New
York; Ralph Graham, Phoebus,
Va.; William McK, King, Cyath>
ans, Ky.; Junius T. Langston, cs
‘tainelect for 1934, Whaleyville,
Va. and Ellsworth P. ‘Woodson,
‘North Long Branch, N. J.
‘The, men were awarded letters
jon the basis of three or,more points
scored during two meets. Five of
these men will be graduated tn
June. :
It is hoped that the material on
hand, plus the new material, will
be In position to regain the intere
collegiate track champlonahip that
was recently lost to Howard by @
difference of two points.
——_—_—__———-
All Latest Sheet Music Hits
The Melody Music Shep.
GOVER BROB., Prope.
Planos, Player Rolls, Records and’
Sheet Music. st
131 W, 138TH ST, NEW YORK
————_
PIANO INSTRUCTION .
L ELIZABETH HUTCHINGS, OF
‘THE CONSERVATORY OF
MUSICAL ARTS :
Pianist. ‘Teacher
: Progress Ascured
BTUDIO: 228 W. 140th St, Apt 8
ieee el : NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 192 ae eee rermeremenmnnanioeeaen EINE
SS ea ae a Cee
Hatters Theatres and Other A ts ‘mew <= §
2 . a el
eG -- exec, Theatres an er Amusements 23°" -- &g
| Marion Davies in . . + 40m, F, Eugene Corble, Dr. Scot{ them, “Dreams of Long Aro." opeatng performance, and was
Thousands Motored Out to Shady [Mess ture Big Show Coming From Philadelphia: |:3-lici% Sa Mes) ioe. Sitetis| Sera Gs
7 = * : Gaiiver the ‘annual University Day| the asthor ‘of several succorstul| cineme produnion shows few” oe
el vi cessful} cinema pI (01
Rest.Country Club Decoration Day Beautiful Star Has Delightful for an Indefinite Ran v1] Harlem ea pesitéiy Win bogseeo a commaions books and lyrics, Seas be wa ot eS sont
_ ——— wNondan Sod Bet | ae Biggent Shows Ever Bs si gcd eee ee Se ree aoe | cee toed eee
4 —— e ges ver lays —_—_—_—_ come’ a theatrical producer. His] musical comedy bas brought th
Five Hundred Automobiles Were Parked on the} su 1 ein oe mon sc” “ate and One ofthe Rew Really Boasting an” | stitute of Manlcal Art| flees ato afr sorter
. Grounds at One Time; Visitors Came From All the Davie veaaua Chamoru sar Unusually Good Looking Chorus, COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES | rany zoee end pagreonda| 28
é in mount pictures, ever es ‘ cred os
Neighboring Cities and Towns; Dr. W. £. B. Du- Sesret att jcAdtm, and Ere") How Comet, the muchalket- | Dythien’s Circus and uiriegait sale ihe Ihe ffowever, Gio dteater aldol ae see a
Bois Addresses Assemblage. ater next Thureday for four days.{°% thow headed by Eddie Hunt cer | Rasanr dn Start Gatuntec| 10 0ce 50 er he ne Deke Zion (oer nee oe et onal fl! Coming A
Everything was in keeping with the spirit of the people
who thronged Shady Rest Coanter Club May joth, at which
time Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, in very fine form and in keep-
ing with the setting, spoke to a large assemblage .of people
from New York City, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and as far
away as Baltimore and Washington.
Fully five hundred automobiles were parked in the club
grounds, and towards evening they were still coming in from
all parts. The finest cars that money can buy were among
those of our people at the club on this day. Most of these,
however, came from New York City.
Members of the club and thelr
friends played coif and tennis all
day, with the chief interest in golf.
Most of the persons who were out
for the first time were surprised
at the spaciousness of the grounds
and the very fine condition in which
‘they were kept.
‘The matinee and evening dances
attracted anothe> large group of
Dersona in the dance auditorium.
Aery fine dinzer was served 0
edining ‘hail and out on the ve-
eat among those were
im the club and out on the
Greens were: Mr. and Mrs, Henry
Beet; with Mrs. Meyer; Dr.
J. R, Anderson with Miss
Lucy Ross; Mrs. Gardner and Mrs.
W, B, Handy, Mrs. B. A. Lightfoot
of Newark; Mr, Peters with Dr.
Riley, Miss Sawyer and Miss Jones,
Mr. and Mrs, Walter Reid with
‘Miss Clifford Bones-Meyers and
Mr. Deveaux; Dr. and Mrs. Vincent,
Mr, and Mra. Geo. E. Bates, Mr. J.
T. Cheshire, Dr. and Mrs. Best with
Miss and Mrs. Burton and Miss
Rhoda Best; Mr. and Mrs. Louis
George. Miss Pauline Miller, Miss
Octavia Stalisworth, Mr. Thomas
Bowen, Mr. and Mrs F. 9, Grant
with Mr. and Mrs. Sweeney, and
Mrs. B. Gardner.
Dr. W. E. B. DuBois with Mrs.
MeGhee snd daughter; Mr. Clark
Smith of Baltimore; Miss Pauline
and Maude Turner with Mrs. J. W.
Jobnson; Mr, Frank Turner, Prof.
3. 8, Brown with Mra. B. A Free-
man and Miss E. Meiburne; Miss L.
Ross with Miss Eva Williams; Mr.
and Mra. A. C.” Deming with Mr.
is Justice; Mr. and Mrs, Will-
’ M. Kelly of the Amsterdam
pee, with Mr. H. Perkins; Mr. and
irs. Thomas Freeman, Mr. Tenner.
we and Mee Willan Houch
3 My. and Mrs.
Wun hares Caso and Miss Jackson:
Mr, James T. Allen of Jersey City
with Mr. Joseph Dereift and Mr.
aug Mrs. Dogan; Mr. A. Black of
Newark and party: Mr. Allan’ L..
Bland, Jr. of Newark; Mr. and
Mrs. H. Parker of Brooklyn.
Dr. and Mrs, Pettit with Mr. Mc-
; Miss Sadie Chase, Dr. J.
c. of Jersey City; Miss
B Mr, and Mrs. Chapman
oe Nad perty with Sr and Mra
party with Mr. and Mrs.
Harrold; Judge J. H. E, Scotland
of Newark and party; Mr. and Mrs.
Btovall of Rockawsy; Miss Muriel
Thomas with Dr. Anderson; Mr.
and Mre. Gary with party; Mr. tnd
Mrs. J. W_ Rose and party; Dr. P.
H. Savory and party. |
‘Several persons became interest-
silage ac tn Se se
e mem:
berships are closed. On June 10
My. af Gibson, ‘ professions)
golfer, atage an exhibition golf
game om the links with Mr. Dewsy
Brown; Mr. James Keely with meet
Mr. Bob Milis (both white players |
from Low & Hughes Golf Shop),
Sunday, June 10.
Jim Barris Passes Away
‘Word came to this city on Mos:
day from Virginla announcing the
death of Jim Burris, a well-known
performer, who for the past year
om 90 bas been suffering with
tubercilosis, At the tine he was
taken alck and unable togo on with
bis work &6 a song writer and per-
former, he was teamed up with
Chris. Smith, amd, under the name
of Smith and Burris, they filled
vapny dates.
‘Burris played the straight to Bl
HL Dudley when the comedian came
through thin part of the country
with the original Smart Set, which
wes previously headed by Ernest
Hogan. Secking rest and quiet,
like most sufferers of the dresd dis-
ease, Barris removed to- Brooklyn
and wae tater taken to the farm of
tis ond partuer, 8, H. Dudley, where
be died on Sunday morning, June 2.
———_.
Al Atkins a Daddy
& baby doy was born to Mrs
ates Atkins on May 32 and now
AL is a Beppy Geddy. Mrs. Athise
as Marien Doser. sian Dah
ee Ty reat neo, tal
y Sune. Mr. Atking was ose of the
early members of the wellknows
fie Par catty Gi
Cid Geetew yeare afo wae consid
Seed coe of the most powerful is
Poe the. war he went 10
iy fe an oficef with the fe
aera ct
NY oe fp the 260b Infas-
Famous Wrestlers in
Deck Fight for “Fury”
‘Ivan Linow and Adolph Mitar
| Battle for Knife—Barthel-
mess Nearly Over-
; board
A rolling sea, a slippery deck,
and two giants fighting in grim
tury tor each other's death. This
was the scone whieh confronted
the boy a3 he cowered on deck.
Yet, wher he saw a knife fly be.
tween the two, and the better man
reach for it, he forgot his fear and.
rushing in. gained the Weapon and
tosred: it {ato the sea.
Richard Barthelmess is the boy;
and in “Fury,” his new screen pro-
duction, which will be shown at
the Roosevelt Theatre to morrow.
Friday and Saturday, thts gripping
fight is enacted. So realistically
was it staged on the old fourmast.
ed schooner out on the high seas
that, for a moment, it seemed that
a tragedy in real life was to be en:
acted,
Ivan Linow, the famous wrestler.
and Adolah Milar.of the Motropoll.
tan Opera Company were the two
contenders . Stripped to the waist.
thelr bulging muscies shining in
the sun, they entervd the fight
with fervor, and slipped and slld
on deck as the ship tossed.
‘When Mr. Barthelmesa rushed
In to gain Losnansion of the knife. 2
terrific roll brought the ship wp in
the alr on the ane side, and reced:
ing. brought tt down to the other
with suck momentum that Barthel-
mesa went crashing to the scup-
pers, and was only saved from g0-
dng overboard by the intervention
of a member of the crew, who
blocked hit passage over the alde
with his own body.
Roosevelt, this Friday and Sat-
urday.
Sensational Drama
_ At New Douglass
Life of an Unhappily M
‘Sea’ Woman Pomrayed in
“Truth About Wives”
There are the quiet ones, they
who go through life saying nothing.
‘There are the deceitful ones.
they who are neither true to them-
selves nor to their husbands.
‘There are the brazen kind. they
who go off with “the other man.”
But they are all wivee—quiet or
deceltful, or brasen—wives, the X
quality, in marriage, tova man: the
unknown, mysterious — essence
which has to be understood before
happiness can betall.
‘Now “The Trath About Wives”
fs to be known to all. Betty
Blythe, the gorgeous Betty. will
arrive at the New Douglass Thea,
ire next Sunday and Monday in
her latest ‘starving vehicle, which
Deara that title—one sufficient to
seeks sented mem walk more than
a mile.
‘The failure to understand each
other is always & tragedy of mar.
ried. life. %t is doubly poignant
when one understands, and tho
other dosen't; when one is loyal
and faithful and brave, and the
other {s unfaithful and weak, It
is this situation which ts grapht-
cally portrayet ia. “The Truth
About Wives.” *
Miss Biythe’s role is that of #
typical young American girl who
marries a man at the bebeat of
‘her mother, tnstead of waiting for
her heart's dictates. The result {s
a tragedy, which becomés pro.
found because of the presence of
& chilé—the innocent sufferer 10
the misfortune. How ft works out
may be a lesson for mode than one
person,
Big Crowd at SS.
Grace Giles’ Affair
i s
and .lance
ST ate Ue See mer even
Ration, ‘oat Friday Bah, We TE
‘Star Casino, ot to be one
Of the biggest successes of the see.
son “Svcry reserved sest, box end
loge were taken and an equal muy
ber standing when the final cur-
t3o Splecdia ‘progiain ‘obered
a1
the Little wonders of our Race, and
every ate vw highly appreciated.
Geets nated Tes sertorwers
Ceete prevented to the pertors
Roosevelt |
7 7th Avenue, corner r4sth Street _
Sun., Mon., Tues. & Wed. — June ro, 11, 12 & 13
., ‘The Everlastingly Exciting
«e ”
: “BAVU
Thurs. Fri. & Sat. — June 14, 15 & 16
«“« ”
MIGHTY LAK’ A ROSE’
A Symphony of Life |
CONCERT ORCHESTRA — AFTERNOON AND
EVENING e
TS
new Douglas
Lenox Avenue, corner rqand Street.
_ SMARLEW'S LARGEST AND FINEST THEATRE”
aa ee ee
BETTY BLYTHE in Joneien, patias
: * e Ps
About Wives”| Gone Mad?”.
a TE ETD
' : 2
_new Douglas Casino.
: “arMu FINEST DANCE PLOOR We Anta
Have you danced on the smoothest floor ?
eee SEY. eaturday ond Sunday Night te.
‘Thereday Evenings 400,
Rocke New Open. Dirvetion Prof, Chas, H. Andersen,
. Have You Heard the Jasziest of Jazz Bands
Marion Davies in
Splendid Picture
Beautiful Star Has Delightful
Role in Latest Picture,
“Adam and Eva"
Bald to be one of the most de-
lightful pictures in which Marion
Davies, beautiful Cosmopolitan star
{n Paramount pictures, has ever
appeared fs “Adam and Eva,”
which comes to the Lincoln The-
ater next Thuraday for four days.
Us scenes range from the fashion-
able home pf a capitalist, to a farm
where much of the action finally
develops.
“Adam and Eva,” adapted for
the screen from the famous stage
comedy by Guy Bolton and George
Middletim, was directed by Robert
G. Vignola, ‘creator of “When
‘Knighthood Was in Flower,” also
starring Miss Davies, In support
of Mias Davies is an excellent cast,
Including such well-known players
as T. Roy Barnes, Tom Lewis,
William Norris, Percy Ames. Leon
Gordon, Luella Gear, William
‘Davidson, and Edward Douglas.
One of the most striking and
beautifu scenes ever filmed is the
Venetian carnival scene in “Adam
and Eva.” This scene brings into
play all the atmosphere of Venice,
Including a festival barge. a feet
of six gondolag and « Venetian
jcanal. “The carnival scene was
jtaken at the beautiful Laddin’s
Rock Farm, near Stamford, Conn.
where the opening scenes of
“When Knighthood Was in Flow
er” were filmed. Its constructior
cost. more than $40,000. During
the “shooting” of this scene, Miss
Davies and her supporting player
worked four “days” from sunset to
sunrise, this particular action of
‘the picture calling for nothing but
night scenes.
A Frost They Say
(From Fae NB. 5. Worle?
Members of a colored theatrical
company, known as the Plantation
Syncopated Players, have returned
to the United States with an in-
creasing love and veneration for
their mother land. Three months
ago they sailed for London to be-
gin an engagement at the Empire
Theater. ‘Their spirits soared
Singer Buildingward and they saw
visions of acquiring coin of the
reaim as easily as picking up a
tax! on Broadway. e
Before the show opened the
Negro thespians learned there
were other kinds of préjudice be-
side that of color. It was forcibly
fought to their notice English
actors, for economic reasons, were
taking a similar attitude toward
the invasion of actors from Amer-
Ica as maintained by Americans on
the Pacific Coast toward admission
of Japanese.
Paul Whiteman and his orches-
tra, members of “Merton of the
Movies” company and other Amer-
ican importations in some, manner
were victims of an unfriendly at-
mosphere crystallized by English
actors. As forthe Plantation Syp-
copated Players, the public gave
them a trapped reception go far as
relating to attending performances
in goodly numbers.
Big Show Coming From Philadelphia:
for an Indefmite Ran in Harlem
One of the Biggest Shows Ever Brought to the Lafay-
ette and One of the Few Really Boasting an
Unusually Good Looking Chorus.
“How Comet”, the much-talked-
of show headed by Eddie Hunter,
which played for five weeks at the
Apollo Theatre on West 42nd
street, will be the big attraction at
the Lafayette for an indefinite run
commencing Montiay. June 11, Be-
fore coming into New York ‘to
make thelr bow to Broadway the
show smashed all records at the
Dunbar Theater in Philadelphia,
where they returned 2 week after
closing their. Kew York engage-
ment,
The production will be brought
to the Lafayette intact with one of
‘the best looking choruses we have
seen. in a colored show since
*ghume Along.” The work of
Eddie Hunter won the critics
lower down town and ably support:
ed by Billy Higgins. Amon Davis,
George Cooper and a host of other
well-known performers, it {8 a fore-
gone conclusion that this section
of the city will give them a big
welcome on the opening night.
We understand that some new
and very catchy song number:
bave been added to the show and
with Frank Montgomery keeping
the chorus up to the specd thes
maintained while at the Apollo, i
is not far-fetched to predict that
the opening weck at least will be
a humdinger and things will be
very lively at Seventh avenue and
332nd street.
“Salome” Here Again
“Salome,” as acted by the col
ored artists who won a great meas-
ure of praise all over the country,
is the attraction at tho Lafayette
Theater this week. As in the past,
“The Chip Woman's Fortune” is
being presented as the curtain
raiser and winning great applause.
‘The show will play all this week
with the usual midnight perform-
ance on Friday night. Sidney Kirk-
patrick, Laura Bowman, Charlie
Olden, Miss Taylor, Lionel Mon-
agas and the others In the original
cast are repeating the splendid
showing made when the offering
first appeared at the Lafayette.
Waters Opens Cabaret
On Decoration Day night Oncar
Waters, well known in political
and other ‘cjreles in thig city.
opened his new cabaret at 126
West 185th street, at the old stand
where “Gib” Young held forth for
many years. A latge crowd turned
out to give Oscar the once over
and enjoy an evening full of enter
tainment. z
aa
——<———
LAURA .
vagy F FAM DIO
131 W. 136th St, . Y.6.
‘Telephone Audubon 1987
At rgand St. : ‘ one. : Morniaguide
ey 5 THEATRE a
a |
rursMAENEE.,,, COM. MON. EVE, JUNE 11 rupdtATNRE oan
THE WOW ROAR OF THE TOWN OO
. DIRECT FROM THE APOLLO THEATRE, BROADWAY . is a
mae ; i? a a
{ : me ae |
5 100 PEOPLE — 100
= The Barnum & Bailey of Colored Musical Comedy,
SCORE BY BEN HARRIS — BOOK BY EDDIE HUNTER ~ ADDITIONAL NUMBERS BY. iHENRY:
\ CREAMER AND WILL VODREY
. : — cast —— i ‘ oad
‘Eddie Hunter — Geo. Cooper — Billy Higgins — Andrew Tribble —.
PAndrew Fairchild — Nat Cash — Amon Davis — Johnny Nit — Leroy
Brownfild — Alice Brown —: Alberta Hunter — Nina Hunter -- Nona
‘Chester — Geo. Lane — Cuba Joyce — James Dingbat mr
1 , -——— AND THE —— ‘ .
SAME SENSATIONAL, FURIOUS CHORUS WHICH TOOK BROAD-~
: = ‘ WAY BY STORM ~ foaes NNN
SS LT
; 3 PRICES—EVE., 30—so—73—$9 | MAT., 2g~—35—s0.. (Including Tax 3. ", :
. SUNDAY VAUDEVILLE AND PICTURE FROM 3:30 TO 18 .-
Pythian’s Circus and
Bazaar to Start Saturday
Starting Saturday next, and con-
tlaing to ahd including June 17,
the Grand Lodge, Knights af Py-
thias, N. A, BA. EB. A, & A. will
holds azar and indoor circus
ander’ canvas, on their gtounds,
Lenox avenue and 14éth street.
The proceeds are for the purpose
of entertaining during the supreme
encampment of the Knights of Py-
thias and building of a new temple.
There will be numerous {ree
acts, band concerts, games and con-
ceasions of every description, with
& grand street parade of the uol-
form rank on Saturday preceding
the opening.
Among the novel acts already
contracted for are Moss's ¥ducated
Animals, including bears and dogs
and said to be th: most unique act
of its kad before the public today:
fronhand and the Squaw Trick Bi-
levclists, who have records for long
aistanee stunts, and who rode a
unteycle’ on a large wager from
costes to Philadelphia, en route
around the world; Gray and Gray,
‘In an exhibition of teeth juggiing
chair and table balancing, anc
thrilling Acts on a wire, Tickets
ace on sale by the members of the
organization. and, judging from the
reports of the sales to date, the
success of this undertaking is s
certainty.
ANNUAL UNIVERSITY
DAY‘ EXERCISES AT “Y”
‘The annual University Day exer.
cises, which are given vach year by
university students and graduates,
will be held on Sunday afternoon,
Jane 10, at the Y. MC. A. Grad:
uates of leading colleges and -
veraities will make up the progfm,
ang the occasion promises to be of
unusual Interest, ‘The program {6
being arranged by Cleveland G.
Allen, formerly of New York Uni-
versity and a graduate of the Com-
munity Training School, held at Co-
lumbia University. The speakers
will be Abram Harris, George Hall,
Dr. W.-E. Allen, Miss Othello M.
Harris, Rev. Norman Holmes, Mrs.
Ruth Whaley, Mrs. Sadie R. Peter-
son, F. Eugene Corble, Dr. Scot
Wood, Louls H. Berry, T. B. Dyett,
and Charles 8. Johneon, of The
National Urban League, who will
deliver the annus) University Day
address.
Musical pee, will be given
by Mr. and Mra. John Eckles and
Rufus Wimberly.
Institute of Musical Art
COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES
\ JUNE 18,
‘The graduation exercises of the
Martin-Smith Music School, Inc.,
will be held Monday evening, June
18, at 8.30 P, M. im Mother Zion
Church. A cordial invitation js ex-
tended to the public. Admission
free.
TO HELP CELEBRATE JUBILEE
+ A concert wil be given by the
‘Martin-Smith Muaic School, Inc., ia
the great hall of City College.
Weduesday evening, June 13th.
This concert is gives under the
auspices of the Mayor's Commit-
tee as one of the official’concerts
of the Silver Jubilee Celebration
of the City of Greater New York.
A cordial invitation is extended the
public. Admission free,
Eugene Mars Martin Graduates.
Among the graduates of the In-
stitute of Musical Art, Eugene
‘Mars Martin established the record
of being the first colored student
to receive a diploma from the Vio-
in Department. He also holds the
Tecord of being the youngest stu-
dent of bis class. He will now en-
ter the Artists’ Course, which has
produced many notables in the
musical world.
“Bava” at Roasevelt
“Bavu" was the production that
opened the beautiful Earl Carroll
Theatre in New York City in Feb-
ruary of last year. Bavu, played
by Wallace Beery in the Universal
Jewel production which comes to
the Roosevelt Theatre on nert
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday, was played in the orig-
inst drama by Henry Herbert.
Other players in the two produc:
Uoar, rereen and stage, the name
of the character belng given first:
that of the film player second and
of the stage perfurmer last, were:
Princess Annia—Fatelle Taylor—
Helen Freeman; Miachka—Forrest
Stanley—Witlam H. Powell; Kur.
off—Nick de Kuiz—Charies Wray
Wallace; Olga—Svivia Breamer—
Carlotta’ Monterey: Piplette—Mar
tha Mattox—Maude Eburne.
It also is Interesting to note that
Bavu was written by Mr. Carroll.
Ten years ygo Earl Carroll was 3
programme boy in a Pittsburgh
theatre. This youthful impresario
earned his first bank rol as 2
writer of popular songs. Oge o!
1922: mee ee
FIRST ANIIVERSARY CELEBRATION AND
CARIIVAL wt
— oF — oe
Happy Rhone’s Orchestra Club:
| Happy s :
In. = Bie
LENOX AVE. AT 143RD 8T. e AUDUBON emt:
FRIDAY, JUNE (, TO FRIDAY, JUNES =:
NEW FEATURES NIGHTLY NOVELTIES SOUVENIRS,
HAPPY RHONE, Pres. CASSIO O. NORWOOD, Sec'y:
RESERVE YOUR TABLE NOW S
Ee we
» Sunday |
NOW PLAYING Larder nengtel tag 5
ALL STAR MARION DAVIES In
v “ADAM AND EVA" |
t ga tlie to £'de oe stint a et
jor :
“D Monday. Tucaday, Wednesday (Next Welt),
5 Ez s THEODORE ROBERTS in
Acts v Acts “aRUMPY"~ 2
—_ I —— | Whether you're simees or sixty rows
| L tove Grumpy,
L Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
) - poLA NEGRI in”
| ame “BELLA DONNA” .
Monday a eftareday | ect Ene Tea a
ee
'PREGENTEO FIRST AND EXCLUSIVELY AT
, - LINCOLN THEATRE |
., BB WEST 185TH. ST: AT LENOX AVE,
them, “Dreams of Long Ago,”
which he wrote in collaboration
with the late Enrico Caruso, rolled
up a small fortune. He also was
the author of several successful
musical comedies, books and lyrics,
as weil as music.
Carroll was well on his way to
easy strest when he decided to be-
come’ a theatrical producer. His
first production, “The Lady of the
Lamp." wiped out his savings of
many years; and hisesecond fail-
ure, “Daddy Dumpling,” cut off his
credit—tor the time being, at least.
Howevor, this disaster did not diy-
courage him, He obtained the sup-
port of a millionaire Texas ol! man
and a few weeks later broke
ground for the beautiful theatre
which bears his name. Strikes,
deiaya tn delivery of equipment,
failure to find a satisfactory play,
were only & few pf the annovances,
but Carroll kept right on fighting.
He solved the diffculty of a play
by writing his own, “Rav,” which
won Instant fame upon its presen-
tation, Carl Laommlo. president
of the Universal Pictures Corpora
tlon, wae one of the guests at the
opening performance, and Was so
impressed with the merits of the
piece that he opened negotiations
for the film rights, and the present
cinema production shows how gsc-
cessful he was. At the closs'of
“Bava's” ongagement, “The Glas-
ham Girl" cponed at the Kari Car-
roll Theatre, and this sensational
musical comedy has brought the
youthful theatre owner both fame
and fortune.
| The ——
AT NEW STAR CABINO ;
Wed. Eve., Jane 6th’
* The famous dancer == ©
MISS CIBYL BAZIL
To Appear
‘Short, Snappy Program
Gus Creag's Cracker Orchestra
Pretty Girls to Greet Yow ,
Fow Boxes Left at $6 *
ADMISSION 78c 4
BLACK STAR LINE HAS ONLY $31.12 IN BANK
(Continued from Page One)
had not been accounted for; to of $511,219 from July, 1919, to Government stepped in; that f from $500 to $2500 each, we keeping as there had been wa able; that Garvey ran things men on the board of director at the stockholders' meetings owned stock or not, could v mails to send out circulars, a vertising stock to some of the
had not been accounted for; that there was a total deficit of $511,219 from July, 1919, to January 5, 1922, when the Government stepped in; that forty-three stock books, worth from $500 to $2500 each, were missing; that such book-keeping as there had been was of the loosest kind imaginable; that Garvey ran things to suit himself; that he had men on the board of directors who owned no stock; that at the stockholders' meetings anyone present, whether he owned stock or not, could vote, and that Garvey used the mails to send out circulars, and the Negro World in advertising stock to some of the 40,000-odd stockholders.
These are some of the main charges against which Garvey and his co-defendants will have to defend themselves in the coming weeks. The government seems to have proved its charges pretty thoroughly.
$31.12 In Bank.
The final touches to the government's case were given by Thomas A. Merlites, expert accountant for the Department of Justice. The accounts of the Black Star Line, he said, "had to be built" and turned checks as there had been no vouchers of any sort." According to Merlites the was a liability of $721,462.87, a deficit of $476,169.58, a depreciated asset of $255,293.29, and $31.12 in the bank. This, he said, by no means represented the total sum lost, as "the first year had not been written up at all. One hundred and five thousand and fifty shares valued" $765,130 had been accounted for by the stubs. If the certificates in the missing books had been sold then it seems that almost a million dollars in stock had been sold.
Garrey's direct contact with the witnesses have resulted in many sharp encounters in which personalities are freely indulged in. Many of these witnesses have proved more than a match for him in a
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that there was a total deficit to January 5, 1922, when the forty-three stock books, worth are missing; that such book-ss of the loosest kind imagin- to suit himself; that he had s who owned no stock; that anyone present, whether he ate, and that Garvey used the and the Negro World in ad- 40,000-odd stockholders.
battle of words. There has probably never been a case like this in a Federal court. The tongue of Mrs. Annie Carrington, for instance, proved to be a live electric wire that gave Garvey a shock each time he came in contact with it. Mrs. Carrington said that she had bought $55 worth of stock and that when she had asked Garvey about it, that he had called her "a d—d foolish woman," and had threatened to his office. "You can throw me out of the Black Star Limo office but you can't throw me out of here," she said wrathfully, returning, Garvey at least ten words for his every one. Garvey appealed to Judge Mack again and again, but even he seemed powerless to check the flow of cutting words. "Oh, lady, please behave yourself." said Garvey in a conciliatory tone.
"Behave myself! Behave myself, eh?" she stormed. "it is time they sent you some place for robbing people's money."
"Did Mr. Mattucks tell you what to say?" asked Garvey meekly, with the air of a husband who knows that it is impossible to outtalk his wife and that she is going to have the last word anyway.
"No one had to tell me what to say," she retorted waspily," after you've taken my $55 and threatened to throw me out."
Harry Watkiss, former chief stock salesman of the Black Star Line, told of trips with Garvey on which Garvey had collected as high as $3,800 from the sale of stock, Redemption of Africa fund, Liberty Loan, and other funds, about $3,000 of which Garvey spent in maintaining his retinue. All the money, he said, was always turned over to Garvey, who would take it to his hotel and count it with Miss Amy Jacques, his present wife. On one occasion he said that he told his son that Garvey had $700 that and that Garvey told him he would see the report later. Watkiss said that the placed the report in his desk, the desk was broken open, and the report taken. Garcia went to Africa, and the matter was never brought up again, he said.
Garvey Ran Away.
Watkins told of a trip on which the Ohio police got at his corps of salesmen for violation of the law regulating sale of stock in that State. Garvey, he said, ran away, and hid behind a tree in an alley while he and others were arrested. Watkins admitted that he had put up $300 as ball from the funds of the Black Star Line, and that he hid again. "Do you mean to say, Mr. Watkins, that you absconded your bond?" thundered Garvey. "My leader ran, and so I ran to," retorted Watkins quietly. "Is you wife a white lady?" asked Garvey, making an evident bid for race prejudice. "The jury is white." "None of your business," snapped Watkins. "Answer," said Attorney Mattucks. "Yes," said Watkins. Garvey: Now, isn't it a fact that you ill-treat your wife?
Q. How many times did you ever kick her?
A. I never kicked her.
"Impossible Man."
His Excellency, "Sir" Sydney de Bourg also proved difficult for Garvey to handle. He said that he had told Garvey that the Kanawha was no good and that he had advised him not to buy it, but Garvey had replied: "I know the ship is no good, but we need her for propa-
after
COMPANY
3197 Third Ave.
Near 161st St.
RHOOD STORE
On the March to Arlington Cemetery
THE UNION
WITH THE DOME OF THE CAPITOL in the background the body of Colonel Charles Young is here shown in funeral procession moving down Pennsylvania avenue on its way to Arlington National Cemetery, where it now rests.
ganda. You said it was the yacht of a millionaire and it would do well to go in from place to place to sell stocks."
Garvey said de Bourg lived well while in the West Indies. He said that Garvey collected $28,000, besides having money sent to him, all of which was spent.
Garvey: Do you know Mr. Garvey paid 50 cents a day for his room?
A. It is impossible to believe that. Q. Did you expect Mr. Garvey to sleep on the floor?
The question was ruled out.
Q. Did you live in the same house with Mr. Garvey while in Kingston, Jamica?
A. After you came from the races and said you were broke you came to live with me.
Q. Did you complain to any of the officers of the corporation about me?
A. Yes. I spoke to Miss Davis, the vice-president. She said you were an impossible man and that I was to let you go to the edge of the preciplice and break your neck.
Garvey then read a letter that had been addressed by him to "His Excellence Sir Sydney B. de Bourg, Lord of the Western Province of the West Indies." Sir Sydney, it turned out, had not been officially knighted at Liberty Hall but had received the title from Garvey because of another Sir Sydney that Garvey knew.
"Is that your official title?" asked Attorney Mattucka.
"No. He called me Sir Sydney because of another Sir Sydney he knew."
Henry Lincoln Johnson. Is that the Sir Sydney of the Mutt and Jeff cartoons?
A. No. Sir Sydney Olivier, a governor of Jamaica.
Garvey. You are a peculiar sort of person to get along with, aren't you, Mr. de Bourg?
A. No.
Q. But haven't you been married ten times?
A. Only four—and never divorced.
Bought Pensance to Africa.
John Heron, asb collector, another witness, proved to be a regular hound at buying Black Star Line stock. He presented nine certificates, one for himself and for each member of his family. He also presented a receipt for $500 he had paid for passage to Africa on the phantom "Phyllis Wheatley". He said he had been informed that the vessel would sail in three or four A number of stockholders from Pennsylvania, Indiana, Connecticut and Washington, D. C., testified to receiving stock and circulars through the mail.
Objected to Garvey's Methods.
According to Fred D. Powell, 309
West 142d street, a former assistant
treasurer in the Black Star
Line, Garvey "wouldn't stand for
any system any time." Entries of
stock sold were never made, he
said. Garvey, he said, would order
Tobias to sign blank checks, sometimes "whole rows of checks," which Garvey would place in his pockets. "I objected publicly at Liberty Hall to your corrupt system, and because of that you put the cold iron hand on me and said that I was a conspirator."
Garvey: isn't it a fact, Mr. Powell, that everybody was afraid to trust you. You are so suspicious, so shyster-looking?
The question was overruled.
According to Powell, Tobias "is a good man, but you exercise an undue influence over him."
There are frequent clashes between Garvey and Attorney Matlucks. The case promises to go on for many weeks yet, but said Judge Mack: "We have all got to keep our tempers, no matter how long this lasts." Judge Mack has also warned Garvey that beginning Monday he "is going, to cease conducting a law school in his court." The other defendants are almost lost sight of. Garvey is the whole show. Now and then their attorneys, Henry Lincoln Johnson, J. P. Hill and Wm. C. Matthews, of Boston, raise an objection, or cross-examine a witness. The one point on which all the government witnesses agreed, is that Garvey is an autocrat, that he would listen to or take advice from no one.
Garvey Addresses Jury.
On Monday morning the case for the defense began.
In outlining his case to the jury, Garvey said that he was more than ready to prove that there had been no fraud nor intent to defraud on the part of the officers of the Black Star Line. This corporation, he said, was the result of honest efforts on the part of the members of the U. N. I. A. to find an economic solution for the race prize.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1923
lem. Both the Black Star Line and the U. N. I. A., he said, were great spiritual movements working toward the freedom of an oppressed race. The Black Star Line, he said, had been severely handicapped from
THRIFT MONTH Deposit in the Bank the Money You Save at OUR STORES
the start. Many were opposed to him because he was a foreigner, and they did not want to give him credit for what good he had done. The Black Star Line's entry into the business field had acted as a stimulus to Negro business, he de-
stared, regardless of what the prosecution might have said about its being a failure. Although the corporation was capitalized at $10,000,000, only a few hundred thousand dollars' worth of stock had been sold. His persecution had been inspired by a cliquet of jealous Negroes. Of the 400,000 stockholders, only 25 or 30 had disaffected, with the result that the government had literally been dragged into the case. "The money," he insisted, in closing, "had been lost in a legitimate way without intent to defraud any of the stockholder of a single penny." Fill and Johnson also outlined the cases of their respective clients, Geo. Tobias, Orlando Thompson and Elio Garcia, who are also held with Garvey.
The first witness for the defense was Miss Henrietta Vinton Davis, second vice-president of the Black Star Line.
Washington, D. C.
Impressive ceremonies marked last rites of Col. Chas. Young; many floral tributes were sent. The Ohio Legislature passed resolutions and sent a special delegation. Services were participated in by the United States Army, the Grand Army of the Republic of Germany, the American Legion, unaffiliated Veterans of the World war, and prominent civilians. The final tribute was paid in the massive marble amphitheatre, where only three other persons have been given funeral services. All the colored schools in Washington were closed in his honor. The order of the military academy, the Platoon of police, parade Commander Capt. Arthur C. Newman, infantry and staff. Howard University Reserve Officers' Training
Corps and Band, Company A, 167
Separate Battalion, D. C. N. G.
Battalion Senior R. O. T. C. High
School Cadet Band, 24th Regiment
High School Cadets, 25th
Carrall commander, Chaplain O. J. Scott and infanting clergymen
the body in caisson,
Col. Young's riderless horse, honorary mailboaters, Mrs. Young and
family, officers of the army, official
delegations and other friends,
Community Center Band, Charles
Sumner Post, G. A. R. U.
Spanish War, G. A. R. Charles
Thomson Camp General Berry Camp,
G. V. Henry Garrison,
G. V. Navy Union, American
Legion, unaffiliated veterans of the
World War, veterans in civilian
attire, Boy Scouts, troops and
police rear guard. At Fort Myer,
escort was joined by a military
arm, consisted of a cavalry band,
troops of cavalry and the
service detachment, the firing
sound and the bugler.
The program at the Amphitheater was as follows: Howard University Choir, Miss Lula Vero Childers Directress, and Miss Beatrice Lewis Accompanist. No. 1. Dirge: Third Cavalry Band. 2. Processional: (the audience standing) Choir. 3. Hymn: Nearer My God to Thee. Choir and audition. 4. Prayer: Col. John T. Axton. Chief of Chaplains. Obstuary: Chaplain O. W. Scott. 6. Hymn: Chaplain Little Light. Choir. 7. The Psalm: Rev. O. E. Jones. 8. The Scripture Lesson, Chaplain Wm. R. Scott. 9. Anthem: Deep River. Chaplain 10. Address: Col. Young: A Soldier. Chaplain Axton. 11. Address: Col. Young: A Friend. Chaplain O. J. W. Scott. 12. Hymn: Abide With Me, Choir and audience. 13. Benediction. Chaplain O. J. W. Scott. 14. Appalachian: Chaplain 16. Nearer My God Thee. Third Cavalry Band. Application at the Grave: Chaplain John T. Axton. As the coffin is lowered, Committal: Charlin
O. J. W. Scott, Primer. Nov. O. J.
Jones. Collect. Chapman William
Booth. Bateh. The Lord's Pra-
grant. By the Choir. Benedictine;
Chapain O. J. W. Scott. Salut-
tary. Military Service of Charles
Young. Born in Kentucky, March
12, 1864. Appointed from Ohio.
Cadet, M. A. June 15, 1864.
2nd L. at 10th Cw. Aug. 31, 1869.
Trans. to 35th Inf. Oct. 1, 1869.
2nd L. at Oct. 11, 1869. Trans. to
Nov. Dec. 22, 1866. Captain, Feb.
2, 1901. Major, Aug. 29, 1912. IA.
Col., July 1, 1916. Retired as
Colonel. June 22, 1917.
LIBRARY NOTE8.
At the North Harlem Community Forum on Thursday evening, June 16, Mme Sushila in Sushila and Political Outlook of Indie. Open discussion.
On Friday evening, June 8, in the library a mass meeting will be held to protest against the actions of the American Committee of the Pontineaule School towards Miss Savage. Speech will be made by open people, there will be open discussion, and it is suggested that a petition be drawn up, signed and sent to the school. No friend of equal rights for all races can afford to be absent. New books: "League or War," by Irving Fisher; "Relentlessly timely novels," by hereditary. Several new novels by such authors as Philly Bottome, Clarence Mulford, Ernest Poole. Some new Spanish stories. Teachers will be pleased to have their attention called to several new collections and to see. Ad have literary awards, but are designed to appeal to the understanding and sympathies of school chil-
Students of art will be interested to learn that the 136th Street Library is planning; this summer to hold an exhibit of artistic students in the library. Communal with Miss Ernestine Rose, the librarian, to learn further details.
SECTION TWO NEWS
BUSINESS MEN TO
STAGE MASS MEETING
At a conference of Harlem business men, held at 250 West 13th Street on Friday, with Rev. A. C. Garner presiding. It was decided to hold a mass meeting on June 11th at 8 P. M. in the Metropolitan Baptist Church, 128th Street and Seventh Avenue. Rev. W. W. Brown, D.D. pastor.
The purpose of the mass meeting will be to stimulate race enterprise in Harlem. Aside from those men who are members others interested in the move are:
Conrad V. O'Nman and J. D. Anderson of the Progressive Commercial: H H. Pace, secretary; Mrs. Alice Watkins, treasurer; John E. Nail, Thomas E. Taylor, Rev. N. S. Holmes, Rev. W. M. Morris, H. Varlack, Mme Estelle, A. I. Hart, Dr. Boutez, William H. Roach, Rev. F. W. Browch, W. M. Wills, Rev. H. Ingram Thomas, Rev. J. W. Somers, Calvin Lane, Rev. Geo. W. Allen, U. S. Poston, Rev. Scott Wood, Rev. J. W. Brown, Rev. J. D. Bushell, Rev. G. M. Oliver, H. C. Parker, Arthur Rhone, Mrs. Alico Watkins, Mme. Allone.
POLICE LOOKING FOR
HERBERT MCEAN
The police are searching for Herbert McLean, elevator operator of the apartment house at $20 West 84th Street, who, according to Mrs. Catherine Levine, a widow, lives with her sister on the third floor, forced his way into her apartment, attacked her and beat her into unconsciousness.
Mrs. Homan, Mrs. Levine's sister, returned home about midnight. She found Mrs. Levine living unconscious on the floor Hurriedly sunning Dr. Kupper of the Knickerbocker Hospital, she then notified the police. At the hospital Mrs. Levine was found to be suffering from lacerations of the scalp and internal injuries.
On the floor of the apartment the police found a whistle and a policeman's billy, broken in three places. McLean was seen leaving the apartment at midnight by the superintendent, who said McLean told him he was going out for a sandwich. The police found that McLean did not live at the address he had given to the superintendent.
Man Killed at 137th Street
Hannah Wilson, 35, 248 W. 17th street, was run down and killed when an automobile struck him while he was crossing Seventh avenue at 137th street. The operator of the machine was served with a summons.
CHURCH
METROPOLITAN
ATHLETIC MEET
School repeated in the annual athletic
last Saturday, meeting out Metropol-
io pots. This marked the second
annually under the auspices of the
ly composed of the representatives
community.
St. James', second; J. Hughes,
Bethel, third.
440-yd. relay—Won by Metropolitan; Mother Zlon, second,
third.
Broadway Jones'
Rendezvous
Supper Club
MOTHER ZION CHURCH
NOSES OUT METRO
BAPTIST IN ATHL
Mother Zion A. M. E. Sunday School repeat
classic held at McCombs Dam Park last Saturday
itan Baptist Sunday School by two polats. A
meet of its kind which is conducted annually u
United Older Boys' Council, a body composed
from the Sunday Schools in the community.
MOTHER ZION CHURCH NOSES OUT METROPOLITAN BAPTIST IN ATHLETIC MEET
Mother Zion A. M. E. Sunday School repeated in the annual athletics class held at McCombe Dam Park last Saturday, noting our Metropolitan Baptist Sunday School by two polites. This marked the second meet of its kind which is conducted annually under the auspices of the United Older Boys' Council, a body composed of the representatives from the Sunday Schools in the community.
Broadway Jones, the popular orchestra leader of Palm Beach fame, who has the enviable reputation of being the most well-known entertainer among the American millionaires, opens his self-styled Rendezvous Supper Club, at 65 West 129th street, New York, June 7, 1988. This club is positively the most well-appointed place in the United States, designed especially for the elite of society. It is unlike many other amusement saloons, in that a special provision has been made for a cuisine par excellence.
The decorations and fixtures are designed with exquisite taste and possess a most artistic beauty. A universe sunburst over the dance floor, surrounded by a replica of the framment, produces an amazing spectacle amid the soft lights. The color scheme presents an artistic study in old rose and grey with gold and green trimming. The wall settles of green upholstery, create a club-like appearance, with chairs and tables to match.
Broadway Jones' exclusive Palm Beach Orchestra, under the leadership of his personal accompanist, Mr. Leslie Hutchings, together with selected artists of song and dance, will provide the entertainment.
Lottery Charges Are Dismissed
Policy Slip Players Discharged For Lack of Evidence.
Almost 300 who have been arrested and indicted during the past six months for holding so-called "policy slips" which would have entitled the lucky ones to win $125 swarmed into the Criminal Course building Thursday to have the charges against them dismissed. This was going as fast as Judge Rosalsky and his assistants could make out the papers.
It became known that the indictments were to fall down when Sam Graham, of 7 West 137th street, was called for trial before Judge Rosalsky on Tuesday. The court asked the policeman who had arrested Graham how he knew that gambling had actually taken place. The patrolman said that he did not know. Judge Rosalsky then agreed to a motion to instruct the jury to dismiss the defendant. At the same time thirteen others were discharged.
A Word of the action of the court spread through the district of Harlem and the inflow followed.
Those acquitted with Graham were: John Starkey. 108 West 140th street; Felix Santiago, 100 West 138th street; James Donald, 214 West 140th street; Ivan Merkic, 255 West 144th street; Joseph Brown. 2427 Seventh avenue: Henry Jones, 24 West 129th street; Frederick Colson, 266 West 144th street; James Kelly, 229 West 129th street, and Manuel Rivas, 111 West 129th street.
The fourteen discharged by the Grand Jury were: Shropshire Avery, 246 West 144th street; Samuel Williams, 146 West 142d street; Theodore Hill, 161 West 148d street; Henry Jackson, 108 West 141st street; James Abraham, 255 West 144th street; Charles Wharton, 128 West 145d street; Charles White, 227 West 143d street; William Jackson, 17 West 131st street; Martha Boisson, 131 West 183rd street; Archie Smith, 250 West 128th street; Edward E. Skinner, 469 Lenox avenue; Benjamin Shields, 79 West 161st street; Philip Frederick, 212 West 143d street, and Charles Anderson, 228 West 140th street.
Nearly a hundred boys competed from the various Sunday Schedules scoring the following polish Mother Zion 47, Metropolitan Baptist 48, St. James's Presbyterian 18; St. Mark's Methodist, 12; Bilich Baptist, 11; St. Joseph's Episcopal, 8; Bethlehem, M. E. 1. A banque will be held at the West 115th Street Branch Y. M. C. A. 111 West 158th street, on Saturday evening, June 9, at 9:00 M. at which time the medals will be presented by Alderman George W. Harris.
SUMMARY.
Under 126 lb. Class.
50-yd dash—Won by M. Weeks,
Mother Zion; C. Loadrum, St.
Mark's, second.
75-yd dash—Won by W. Brown,
Metropolitan; H. Harris, Mother
Zion, second; W. Cunningham,
Mother Zion, third.
Standing broad jump—Won by J.
Ball, Metropolitan; C. Landrum,
St. Mark's, second; R. Walker, St.
Mark's, third.
220-yd relay—Won by Mother
Zion; Shilok, second; St. Mark's,
third.
Under 125 lb. Class.
75-yd dash—Won by M. Perry,
Mother Zion; R. Neason, Mother
Zion, second; F. Hickland, Metropolitan, third.
100-yd dash—Won by J. Brown,
Shilok; M. Perry, Mother Zion,
second; R. Neason, Mother Zion,
third.
Running broad jump—Won by
M. Perry, Mother Zion; R. Neason,
Mother Zion, second; O. Wiggins,
St. Mark's, third.
144-yd. relay—Wen by Metropolitan; Shilka, second; Mother Lion, third.
Unlimited Class.
199-yd. dash—Wen by R. Taylor, St. James; B. Dawkin, St. Jude, second; H. Van Motor, St. Mark's third.
128-yd. dash—Wen by R. Dawkin, St. Jude; R. Taylor, St. James, second; R. Hayes, St. Mark's, third.
Running broad jump—Wen by R. Taylor, St. James; I. Yerke, St. James, second; L. Bryan, Metropolitan, third.
A CORRECTION
Through a typographical error in last week's issue it was stated that Attorney Matthew, counsel for Mike Gerwin, had asked for a severe sentence on . Linda Charles, who was sentenced to two months' imprisonment for contempt of court. It was Attorney Matthew, Assistant District Attorney, who did so, and not Attorney
THE NEW YORK Amsterdam News
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1923
The Sun and Two of His Stars
Black Swan Phonograph Company Celebrates Second Anniversary
GEE BUT IT'S WINDY FOR THIS TIME OF THE YEAR
SHUCKS! THERE GOES THAT WAT AGAIN!
HAIR FOR WIGS ETC.
I HAD A STRENDOLDS DAY AT THE OFFICE SWEET WIFE
I SEE YOU DID, YOU WATCH!
[Pictorial portrait of a woman]
ANTOINETTE GARNES
Within Two Years Only Record Concern Owned By Race Has Taken Its Place Alongside White Companies; Every Kind of Record Made.
The Black Swan Phonograph Company, of which Harry H. Pace is president and general manager, has now passed its second anniversary. Started two years ago in a basement room in 138th Street. the concern now uses practically the entire building at 2289 Seventh Avenue for its general offices, and has a large plant in Long Island City
"Black Swan" records feature colored musicians and artists exclusively, having the distinction of recording the first opera records using the Negro voice. Furthermore, it is concealed that these records, made by Antolina Garnes of the Chicago Opera Company and Florence Cole-Talbert, are as good, if not better, than the same recordings of other companies.
In Ethel Waters, "Black Swan" records have the greatest blues singer in America. Her new records, "I ain't Gonna Marry and Settle Down," "Brown Baby," "Memphis Man" and "Midnight Blues" are being sold as fast as they can come from the Long Island and plant. "Ethel," as she is familiarly known, has just completed a two weeks' engagement at the Lafayette Theatre, where she stopped the show every night. Her appearance here caused a run on "That Do It Strait" and "Georgia Blues," and this record is selling as fast now as it did about a year ago, when it was recorded.
Harry H. Face, on whose shoulders rests the future of "Black Swan" records, is possibly the most versatile business man in Harlem. Within the past two years he has not only mastered every detail of the phonograph and record business, but, in addition, is an expert in the insurance and banking business, having held responsible positions in both fields. He is one of the four Negroes in New York City certified by the State Banking Commission as able to hold office as a bank director or president. Mr. Face is also active in all fraternal and other organizations.
While the Black Swan Photograph Company is the only Negro concern of its kind in the world and the only programmand TF and the only programmand using Negro voices and musicians exclusively, it does not ask the support of the public on this ground alone.
"We ask and sat the support of
1.
HARRY H. PACE
President
Black Swan Co.
HARRY H. PACE
President
Black Swan Co.
The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text or details. It appears to be a grayscale architectural drawing or a schematic diagram.
In this four-story building at 2289 Seventh avenue, the Black Swan Phonograph Co. has its general offices.
colored people," said Mr. Pace the other day, "because our products compare favorably in merit and price with the products of other companies of the same kind."
O
FLOREENCE COLE-TALBERT
MME. WALKER AGENTS TO MEET IN PHILA.
The Sixth Regional Conference of Madam C. J. Walker Agents has been called to meet at Philadelphia, Pa., June 14 and 15. All Walker Agents in the States Malone, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey will come together in the city of brotherly love for the purpose of discussing ways and means by which they might do larger business, learn the latest phases of their profession and be of larger service to the public.
This Regional group of business women is a part of the National Convention of Madam C. J. Walker Agents, which is the only organisation of its kind in the world. Mrs. Sommerville Z. Fauntieroy. 1924 Fitzwater street, Philadelphia, is in charge of arrangements for this conference and would be glad to direct all delegates and friends upon arrival in Philadelphia.
PAWNBROKER HIT ON
HEAD WITH HATCHET
Sigmund Cohen, proprietor of a pawnshop at 577 Lenox Avenue, was hit on the head with a hatchet last Wednesday by an unidentified colored man, following an argument over over the redeeming of a suit of clothes.
The argument was begun the night before. The man had no ticket, Cohen said, and he could find no record of the suit. Becoming angry, the man picked up a hatchet and directed two blows at Cohen's head.
Detectives Butler and McFarland of the West 135th Street station hurried to the pawnshop and called an ambulance from Harlem Hospital. Cohen was able to walk from the shop to the ambulance.
He gave the police a good description of his assistant, who is about 26 years old, 5 feet 8 inches tall, and weighs about 150 pounds.
Cohen's cuts are painful but not serious. His home is at 130 West 113th Street.
GETS M.D. DEGREE
FROM L. I. COLLEGE
Among the eighty-five students of the Long Island College Hospital who received their medical diplomas at the graduation exercises held in Brooklyn Academy of Music Thurday night was Lucien M. Brown, 240 West 143d Street.
Dr. Brown, who was the only colored student in his class, graduated with high honors. He is a graduate of Howard and Columbia Universities.
Dr. Brown was given a reception by over a hundred of his friends at the home of Dr. Louis Corbin, 214 West 187th Street. Friday night.
Will Make Request That Next Legislature Establish a Social Relations Court.
(Preston News Service.)
NEWARK, N. J., June 4.—A resolution requesting the next Legislature to enact a law establishing a Court on Social Relations to aid in adjusting the colored people coming from the South to conditions in New Jersey, was passed by the Federation of Colored Organisations of this State last Thursday at its annual meeting in Roosevelt Memorial Temple. The resolution also asked for a bill authorizing the appointment of a commission to prevent racial friction. The meeting also went on record in favor of the appointment of a Negro in the War Department to care for the interests of colored service men and their relatives. It is said that a memorial to this effect is to be presented to President Harding in the near future by a committee composed of Rev. W. A. Byrd, Jersey City; William H. DePaur, Summit, and Rev. H. C. Van Pelt of Newark.
Among the speakers at the meeting were: Dr. S. L. Carrothers, Mrs. M. E. Burrell, Assemblywoman; Mrs. Agnes Schermhorn and William B. Brandon. The general subject was social relations and kindred problems. It was decided at the meeting to conduct an intensive campaign throughout the State for the purpose of bringing about a better understanding between the races and thereby promoting better racial feeling.
PAWNED SEALSKIN
COAT FOR ONLY $5.0
Admitting that she had pawned a sealskin coat for 25, Lulu Moss, 25, 102 West 135 street, who was arraigned before Magistrate Corrigan in the Heights Court on a charge of grand larceny, was held in $1,000 ball for trial.
The girl, who was employed as a maid by Mrs. T. F. Morgan, 640 West 215th street, was arrested at the latter place by Detectives Mullins and Geiger, of the West 177th Street Station.
Mrs. Morgan recently reported to the police that when she looked for her fur coat, preparatory to putting it away for the summer, she was surprised to learn it had disappeared. A camera and several articles of clothing were also missing.
Suspicion turned toward the maid, but she stoutly denied knowing anything about the thefts. Pawn tickets for the fur coat and other articles were found in her possession, according to Mullins and Gelger, and they placed her under arrest. She is said to have broken down and admitted the charge.
"TUSKEGEE.FINDS
THE WAY OUT"
A wonderful film has been produced by the Crusaders Film Company of New York, which took two years to produce, entitled "Tuskegee Finds the Way Out." It is the story of Booker T. Washington's life work—his vision realized.
This film has been shown at Columbia University and to a very large crowd in Philadelphia, and is to go to the Dunbar Theatre, Washington, D.C. The next performance will be at the Carlton Avenue Branch, Y. M. C. A., 405 Carlton Avenue, Brooklyn, on Thursday night, June 7th, at 8:30 o'clock, for the benefit of Tuskegee Institute and the Y. M. C. A.
The admission will be 25 cents. Don't fall to see this picture, as it is one of the most remarkable and unique educational films ever produced—(Advt.)
EDITORIALS FEATURE ARTICLES LOCAL AND SOCIETY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS
CLIMBING THROUGH
WINDOW; CAUGHT
Surprised as he was climbing
through an open window of a
ground floor apartment at 592 West
132d Street, Monday, Ray-
land Thomas, who said he lived at
32d Street and Second Avenue,
was caught in a chase into the
basement yard of the apartment
building at 540 West 136th Street.
Patrolman Pat Mitchell, spied
him and made the capture. Six
shots from the cop's revolver
aroused the neighborhood and
frightened the fugitive, but hit no-
body.
He was trying to get into the apartment occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kiley. Mrs. Kiley had $1,000 in cash under the pillow, the police learned later.
THOUSANDS EXPECTED
AT AERO EXHIBITION
The scheduled daredevil aeronautical exhibition of Lieut. Herbert Julian and Capt. Edison C. McVey will be hold this coming Sunday afternoon over Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. The field will be open at 10 A. M. At three o'clock in the afternoon the plans will be christened by Mrs. Edward A. Warren. From that time on the two young men will do most everything known to exhibition aviation, such as looping the loop, nose diving, changing from an aeroplane to an automobile, tail bridge, etc.
Tennis golf and baseball will also be featured.
WIFE MURDERER'S
TRIAL NEARS END
(Breston New Service)
(Preston New Service)
HOUSTON, Tex., June 4.—Arguments were heard Friday morning in the trial of Joseph Parker, charged with the murder of his wife, Julia Parker, on March 16. last. The taking of evidence was completed last Tuesday afternoon. Mr. Parker was well known and a very attractive woman, active in social and welfare work throughout the city. The prominence of the murdered woman and her husband has made this trial attract an unusual amount of attention. According to the testimony, Parker shot his wife 13 times. The defense attempted to establish self-defense. The fate of Parker is in the hands of the jury. It is expected that the jury will be out a considerable length of time.
PHILADELPHIANS HAVE PAGEANT
(Preston News Service).
PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 4.—The largest pageant ever given in this city by Negroes was staged last Thursday night at the Philadelphia Association for the Protection of Colored Women. It was an extravaganza entitled "From the Beginning," and was participated in by scores of talented young women and children of the city.
The pageant was under the direction of Mra. S. W. Layton, superintendent of the society. The participants were trained by Prof. E. L. Cramer, assisted by Dr. C. G. Glimore. The music for the occasion was arranged and directed by Prof. Arthur Birchett and the orchestral numbers were rendered by James Johnson, Jr.'s orchestra.
VIRGINIA WOMAN DIES
(Preston News Service.)
SUFFOLK, V., June 1.—Mrs. Lillah Barnes, wife of Cooper Barnes, a well-known citizen of this city, died Monday night at her home in Liberty street. She is survived by her husband and six sons and daughters. The funeral services were held Thursday afternoon at the First Baptist Church in Maban street and were conducted by the Rev. Dr. J. A. Harrell.
Autos Collide.
Irene Temple, 124 W. 189th street, suffered lacerations of the thigh when the auto in which she was riding collided with another auto at Lenox avenue and 188th street. She was attended and taken home.
Labor Situation Acute in Virginia
Farmers, Building Tradesmen and Tobacco Workers Are Becoming Very Scarce.
(Preston News Service)
RICHMOND, Va., June 6.—The scarcity of farm labor has become more acute as a result of the continued migration of Negroes to northern industrial centers, and farmers who depend upon day labor are finding it difficult, and in many instances, impossible, to secure help to plant normal crops, according to a report issued by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, in its monthly review of labor conditions in the Fifth Federal Reserve District.
Next to farm laborers, the greatest scarcity seems to be in the building industry and allied fields, including lumber and brickmaking. Skilled workmen are principally needed in construction work, while lumber mills can furnish employment to many unskilled laborers, it is reported. A serious shortage exists in the logging camps and mill yards. There is a slight scarcity of labor in the box and shear factories, but the supply of workmen in the textile and other manufacturing lines, including tobacco, fertilizer and furniture, is sufficient for the present needs.
It is said that practically all the industries in this district are operating as fully as the labor company will permit. There has been a raise in wages in some of the industries, but on the whole there has been but little competitive bidding for satisfactory labor. Manufacturers appear to be willing to curtail production greatly rather than advance manufacturing costs by increasing wages.
The experiences of 1930 are still fresh in the minds of manufacturers, and they realize that, unless costs to consumers are kept within bounds, consumption is likely to be affected, and they are not watching very closely the consumer reaction to every change in the cost of manufacture, which would crease the selling price. In this district the workers themselves have some appreciation of the situation, and, while there appear sporadic strikes from time to time, labor on the whole is renewable and no serious disputes have arisen during recent months. Manufacturers feel that the lack of strikes in this district is due to a large measure to there. Here such a small number of foreigners employed in this district.
MRS. WHITNEY INDICTED
WITH ALLEGED ASAULT
Mrs. Jennie Whitay, 41, 18
West 181st street, has been
inicted for felonious assault, on
the complaint of Mrs. Mildred Cooper
of the same address, who charges
that Mrs. Whitay tried to show
her on May 12, firing four shots
at her.
Mrs. Cooper stated that she was
given an ultimatum to vouch with
in twenty-four hours. Both women
then went to the police station and
asked for protection.
The following day at 4:30 pm
according to Mrs. Cooper, Mrs.
Whitay, rang the doorbell, and a
soon as the window was opened
fired four shots, two of which was
through the door and two through
the window. No one was hit.
DOMINICAN U. N. I. A BOON
BEING AUDITED.
SAN PEDRO DE MACUER, Dominican Republic, West Indian (U. Mall)—Investigations are the order of the day among the cut deluded but slowly waking officers of Marcos Carvey. The few deluded followers of the all but dead San Pedro de corsis division of the U. N. K. are having their "bedgers" employed by a special audition, with charges of misrepresentation of funds by thick and foul
Items of Social Interest
PAGE EIGHT
Items of Soc
The Breakfast Dance of the
tikky Club Ladies, Decoration
by morning, was a very wonderful
access. It was given in the Re-
ligance Casino. Most of the pro-
le attending journeyed out to
hady Best Country Club for diner
and golf and tennis.
The Epallion Chapter of the Zeta
Phi Beta is giving their initial Beta
and Dance for the benefit of
heir scholarship fund, at the
renance Casino, on Saturday
afternoon, June 16, at 2:00 P. M.
The Artists who will appear are:
Miss Minnie Brown, Soloist; An-
trades Lindsay, Planist and David
Martin, Jr., Cellist.
The Directors of the Shady Best
Country Club staged a smoker in
the club house on Saturday, June
2, for the purpose of stimulating
interest of non-members to become
members, and to create goodfellow-
ship among its many members.
Broadway Auto School, 213 West
53d street, is giving a special
measure, including everything, during
the Winter months for $10. Also
long road lessons on the Locom-
bile, for 50 cents each—Adv.
Before buying an automobile consult B. F. Thomas for expert advice. Broadway Auto School, 213 West 43rd street. Phone 995 Circle.
The Rev. Dr. Lewis of San Antonio, Texas, came to the city a few weeks ago, and has decided to take up his residence here. He has a son in the University of Michigan, and a daughter in the University of Illinois.
Miss Louella King, Miss Mary DuKalb and Miss Cora Franklin are among the new students who registered and began their courses at the New York Academy of Business last week; also Mr. Leslie H. Egram of the Veteran Bureau.
Graduation exercises of the New York Academy of Business will take place this year in the assembly rooms of the Academy Building, the last Friday in June.
CCSTUME BALL
NEXT WEDNESDAY
Everybody to New Star next Wednesday night, June 6th, for the biggest hit of the season—The Cresture Ball and the naming of the most popular ones in the various business groups. Short program, popular stars appearing. Pretty girls to greet you. Gus Creagh's Crack Dance Orchestra to keep things lively. Get your bursa, $5.00 and $6.00. Admission 70 cents—(Advt.)
Mrs. Louise Robinson, president; Mrs. Roberta Jackson, Vice President; Mrs. Ida Benson, Secretary; Mrs. Arikher Jones, Treasurer; Mrs. Corrine Thomas; Mrs. Bertha Harris, Mrs. Daisy Greene, Mrs. Willibrima Towe and Mrs. Anita Robinson.
Upper Ten Moonlight Excursion Wednesday evening, July 4th. Other clubs take notice—Advt.
On Decoration Day, May 30, Counselor Roy S. Bond of Baltimore, Md., was a guest of Miss Bessie Murphy, of 241 West 134th street.
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Tyler, of 211 West 124th street, returned on the 30th from a two-week tour to and from Spartanburg, S. C., having made the trip in their car. Philadelphia, Wilmington, Del. Richmond, Va. Durham and Greensboro, N. C., were visited. Mr. Tyler reports migration to be the chief topic of conversation among the people.
The fourth complimentary dance of the Amity Club will be held at Laurel Gardens, 75 East 116th street, tonight.
NOTICE
J. Charles Cherry, formerly Adjutant of the Booker T. Washington Post 200, American Legion, has resigned from that office.
Sunday, June 10, will be known at "University Day" at the regular Sunday meeting at the Y. M. C. A. at 4 P. M. The meeting will be held in the auditorium. Mr. Charles S. Johnson of the National Urban League will be the principal speaker. Mr. and Mrs. Eckles will furnish music. All student bodies and
Saturday Night Promenade
EVERY SATURDAY EVENING
Summer Admission 55c.
MENAISSANCE CASINO
J. E. Lymas
J. R. Benn
Dr. William Owen
Has Resumed Practice at
111 WEST 120TH ST.
W. GREEINOW
Our popular 8th duster in Harlem has moved his store of 100 West 143rd St., to 246E 7th Ave., where he is fully prepared to serve you with the best and cheapest and fresh, direct from each every day. Give him a call and be convinced I give 8 per cent discount on the deluxe. Give your receipt. They are valuable. Phone And, 6728.
fraternities are invited to attend this meeting
NOTICE
The Hygrade Bottling Corporation is prepared this coming season to offer to its many customers better service and prompt delivery, at 250 West 12th street.
Three of the members of the Board of Directors have sold their share, thereby allowing the board to function for the better of the corporation. Hundreds of grosses of bottles, and thousands of cases he bought, also three more motor trucks.
The runner concerning the sale of this corporation is not true. Mr. Cooper, Leacock and White sold their shares to the new board on April 27, 1923.
Respectfully yours.
HYGRATE BOTTLLING CORP.
H. D. M-Laughlin, Pres
TRY CHIROPRACTIC
FOR YOUR HEALTH
Chiropractic, the wonderful dru-
less science, has proven to be one
of the most efficient curative meth-
oda in removing the cause of dis-
ease. It has cured thousands of hope-
less patients and, indeed, is giving
many others hope and courage.
Dr. Albert Solar offers consultation free at 211 West 137th street from 7 to 9 p.m. and by appointment. Telephone Bradhurst 1563. Advt. May 30 off.
Examinations for the position of stenographer and typist are being held each Tuesday in the United States Civil Service Commission, on account of the increase demand for workers.
Mrs. Lennie Moore Grant, an energetic young woman, of 135 West 133th street, has just completed a course in millinery with the most up-to-date milliner of upper Harlem, Madam Odda Warner, at 2221 Seventh avenue. Mrs. Grant plans to return to her home in Jacksonville, Fln., in the early autumn for an indefinite time.
Mr. Fred R. Hawkins and family motored over from Philadelphia Sunday to visit his father, Sergeant Charles Hawkins, newspaper man, and his aunt, Mrs. P. E. Leighnard.
Mrs. Leighnard also entertained Mr. John Walker of 1520 Montrose street, and a friend, of Philadelphia, who motored over to this city Sunday.
On Thursday evening, June 7, there will be a special meeting of the Boys' Work Committee. Matters of great importance affecting the Boys' Department will be discussed at this meeting. All members are urged to attend.
NOTICE
This is to inform the public that I have dissolved partnership with Llord R. Johnson of the "Harlens Real Estate Exchange." 2296 Seventh Avenue, and am no longer asociated or connected with the busines
WALTER F. CRAIG.
PIANO RECITAL
Piano recital by the students of Florence Herbert. Miss Herbert is giving the public an opportunity to listen to a program out of the ordinary. The program consists of selections from Scarletti, Grieg, Coleridge Taylor, Rachmaninoff, Moszkowski, Tachalkowsky, Beethoven, Chopin, and many others, at the Renaissance Casino. 1338 street and Seventh avenue, on Sunday evening, June 10, 1923, at 8:30 p.m. Steinway piano used. Music by Allie Ross and his orchestra. Dancing after 12 o'clock. Admission, 75 cents. Boxes seating eight, $5; loges, $3. Boxes and seats on sale at the studio. 207 West 139th street. Phone. Audubon 4265.—Advt.
TO THE NEW STAR
CASINO TO-NIGHT:
The Costume Ball and Gus Creag's crack orchestra will keep things likely for you all evening.
Enjoy the short, snappy program.
Be in line for the grand display march at 12 o'clock. Pretty girls to greet you. Henry Wilson, floor manager. Boxes. $6; tickets. Tsc. In aid of Harlem Children's Fresh Air Fund.—(Advt.)
YOUNG POST MEETING.
A special meeting of great importance to every member of the Col. Charles Young Post will be
held Thursday evening, June 1, at
10 P. M. in the W. A. A. C. P. office.
Show your loyalty by being present.
Mr. and Mrs. William Forster
entertained Mrs. Ular Marshall.
Mrs. G. Dickerson, Miss Alma Dickerson
and George Dickerson
Y.W.C.A. NOTES
Spring seems to be infecting all the departments of the Branch and the building rings, most of the time, with the gay voices of girls going to swim or play tennis, having parties or other "affairs" of various kinds and gathering in the lobby for bikes and picnics. They are for the Girl Reserves. They conducted a very successful booth at the Carrival and made several contributions to the programs; they participated in the Y. W. C. A. Music Week celebration at the International Institute; they had charge of Vespers on one Sunday during the month; the Business Girls' Club had a jolly Gypsy party; eight girls represented the Branch at the Inter-Branch Girl Reserve Tournament and Get-together. The Allen Branch, two clubs and outing groups in Park and we have mentioned before the Mother and Daughter celebration.
More than 50 meetings were held in this building during May by outside organizations and individuals. The summer swimming schedule is in effect. The pool is open every day from 3:30 to 9:30 and on Tuesday mornings from 11:30 to 2:00. We were interested to have as many young women who had motored in a three-passenger sport car from Detroit to Washington to attend the Social Workers' Conference. They were motoring back to Detroit. Miss Hattie L. Green, Membership Secretary, has returned from a week's vacation in Atlantic City.
a week's vacation in Atlantic City. The Delta Sigma Theta Sorority gave a "Going to College Party" for the High School Girls' Reserve Club on Friday evening, June 1, in the gym. June, December and July Clubs will hold meetings on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of next week. The Membership Social comes on Friday, June 15, and will be in charge of the June Club
ASHLAND PL. Y.W.C.A.
One of the first of the Young Women's Christian Associations for colored girls and women to be established was organized in Brooklyn in 1903 and then known as the Lexington Avenue Branch. Since 1918, when the Association moved to its present large well equipped building, the Association has been known as the Abland Place Branch of the Brooklyn W.C.A. C.A. and has planned plans for the celebration of its twentieth anniversary June 24 and 25th. At the Anniversary Service Sunday afternoon, June 24 at 4:00 p.m. the principal speaker will be Mrs. Mary Church Tertell of Washington, D. C., and there will be greetings from former chairmen of the Branch, Mrs. Robert Dickinson, Mrs. Walter Wood and Miss Alice C. Dickinson, and Mrs. Dalay Tapley, Glee Club Director. The Anniversary Reception will be held Monday night, June 25 and will be a welcome reception
Christen Son of Mr. & Mrs. Holder
On Sunday evening, May 27,
1962, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Holder was christened Master
Reuben DeCoursey, *ffolder,
at Union Baptist Church, 204 West
63d Street, by the pastor, Rev. G.
H. Simms, followed by a reception
on Tuesday evening. May 29th,
given him by his parents at the
residence of his grandmother, Mrs.
Mary Lyons, 649 Leon Avenue.
He was the receiver of many useful and beautiful presents and a large sum of money. After listening to the beautiful toasts and remarks, the guests were served with a delicious repast.
Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Richard Holder and daughter, Miss Minerva; Mrs. Mary Lyons and son, Charles Lyons; Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Thomas and daughter, Miss Clarine; Miss Lillian Brown, Mr. and Mrs. W. Francis and son James, Mrs. L, K. Smith and son Whitford, Mrs. M. Nixon, Mr. J. Kennedy, Mr. A. Robinson, Mr. B. Prescott, Mr. and Mrs. C. Bonnett, Mr. W. Haskins, the Misses Lucille and Mabel Morris, Miss Lillian Morris, Mr. and Mrs. A. Moore, Mrs. A. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. A. Howell, Mrs. S. Glover, Mr. and Mrs. J. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. N. Thorpe and daughter Florence, Mrs. G. Ivins, Mr. B. Lightbouren, Mr. J. Cadogan, Mr. N Burnett and brother, Mr. B. Crick, Mr. B. Broomes, Mrs. M. Lawson and son Joseph, Mrs. A. Narberry, Mr. T. Williams, Mr. J Donney, Mr. H. Clement, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel, Mr. and Mrs. E. Yearwood, Mrs. A. Martina, Mrs. Jones, Mrs. D. Morris, Mrs. C. Reed, Mrs. A. Anderson, Mrs. T. Gonazabo, Mr. B. Thomas, Mrs. Bursh, Mrs McClean, Mr. B. Hammond, Mrs. and Miss Norman, Miss G. Lasso, Mrs. C. Brown, Mr. S. Yound Mrs. V. Fisher, Mrs. J. Trumn, Mr. T. Outerbridge, Mrs. E. Parish, Mrs. Benjamin, Mrs. J. Scudder, Mrs. B. Flynn, Mrs. M. Howard, Mr. G. Halnes, Mrs. Young.
The Membership Council is making special efforts to bring up the membership quota before Anniversary Sunday. During last week 25 memberships were aroused in by Mrs. M. J. Taylor and 15 each by Mrs. M. E. Hardy and Mrs. M. A. Moore.
The Glee Club is preparing a feature entertainment for its annual concert at Memorial Hall, Thursday evening, June 21. In addition to club talent the Selixa Quartette will be heard. This quartette is composed of: Minnie Brown, soprano; Daisy Tapley, contralto; Charles Wateren, tenor; G. Warren Tarrant, bass; Andrades Lusdys, accompanist. They will sing Lisa Lehmann's "In a Persian Garden." The Glee Club will sing Newlas "Ueneela."
Kinky Hair
Grows
Long,
Soft
and
Silky
When Harriah Pumma Hair Dress
Lace and silk transform the hair
ceasing natural growth. The thousands
of the most beautiful indie of the spa
own their pretty hair to
HEROLIN FOR MADE HAIR
CREATIVITY
Not picky up pennies, pry money, stump things, seak and grove soft, straight hair. Send 30 to day for single can be $1.00 for five. Sell by dust shores everywhere.
Agents Wanted Write for Details
Herolin Medicine Co.
Atlanta, Ga.
Be A Beauty Specialist
My simple, easy lessons will show you how to make big money in this business. You will learn how to make money from your customers absolutely free if you will edit down and write more NOW. In return I only require that you use Herolin Medicine Pro in your work. Only $800 will be given away. Dont let this BIG CHANCE slip by-WRITE.
MDM, MARCELLE
Herolin Med. Co. Atlanta, Ga.
THE EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
and the beauty of the Hair If Your hair is Dry and Wiry, Try
EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
If you are bothered with Falling Hair, Dandruff, itching Scalp, or any Hair Troubles, we want you to try a jar of East India Hair Grower. The remedy contains medical properties that help to the roots of the Hair, stimulates the skin, helping it to do its work. Leaves the hair soft and silky. Perfumed with a hain of a thousand flowers. The best known remedy for Henry and Beautiful Black Kyehrower; also restores Gray Hair to its Natural Color. Can be used with hot Iron for straightening.
PRICES SENT BY MAIL, 39c. 11c Extra for Postage.
S. D. Lyons Gen. Ag., 316 N.
AGENTS' OUTFIT
Street, Oklahoma City, Okla.
1 Hair Grower, 1 Temple Oil, 1 Champion, 1 Pressing Oil, 1 Green Cream, and Directions for Selling, $4.00. 35c Extra for Postage.
WHY STAY GRAY?
HAVE YOUR HAIR DYED THE SAFE AND SURE WAY
Will give treatment at your own home, if desired. By appointment only.
MME, STEVENSON
2233 SEVENTH AVE.
Phone Audubon 7235J
WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT HAIR AND ITS INFIRMITIES? ASK THE NU LIFE SYSTEM.
F.
What is Hair? Describe its
Structure. How many technical
portions are there? What are the
divisions of the root? Describe the
anatomy of the hair shaft? Why
is singing necessary? Learn the
"NU-LIFE" System; it is THE
ORTECTICAL, PRACTICAL and EDUCATIONAL, and will teach you all these and more. Write
"NU-LIFE" BEAUTY COLLEGE
Dept. H.
72 West 33rd St. New York City.
Phone: 212-826-2000.
M.
MME. J. L. CRAWFORD
Main Store, 456 Lenox Ave.
SCHOOL AND PARLOR
103 West 138th 8c
Phone: Harlem 4431
Madam J. Warren
HAIR CULTURIST
Is Now Located At
350 LENOX AVENUE
8. W. Corner 128TH STREET.
Bleeks School
Designing, Dressmaking, Patternmaking,
Praping, Grading and Millinery.
Individual Instruction, Sketching and
Drawing.
Courses for Business and Home Use.
Morningside 7200
116½D-118 WEST 125TH ST.
Crying and Walking
Colored Dolls
Wholesale and Retail.
O. K. DOLL COMPANY
2293 SEVENTH AVE.
NEW YORK CITY
PHONE MURTHING 3622
MRS. M. L. JACKSON
200 WEST 180th ST.
Hairdressing, Electrical Facial
Message, Scalp Treatment,
Manicuring, Dyeing,
Bleaching
MRS. FRANCIS SMITH
302 W. 138th St
CROCHET, BEADING AND ART
SCHOOL.
Beading on Dresses and Waists,
and Opera Bags, Arabian Wear-
ing, Lallice Work, Fringing, Tars-
selling. Learn a Trade, be your
own Boss, for only $4.00.
Phone Audubon 0297.
Mrs. M. Sertha Sutt has removed her shirt shop to her
apartment, 107 West 138th St.
Will gladly serve her customers
in the future as in the past.
Shirts made $2.50 and up.
TEACHING THE FAMOUS
Louisine
System
ENROLL IN THE SPRING
GRADUATING CLASS NOW
MARIA
MME. LOUISE HORTON
Guaranteed to stop falling hair with
one month's treatment. Gives health
to the scalp. Growth of long, fluffy
hair.
Electric Scroll Treatment One Specialty
MME. HORTON
BEAUTY PARLOR
819 WEST JOHN PARK
NEW YORK CITY
Auction and
O
CONSTANT CARE—NOT LUCK
Human history and experience have taught us that many persons believe that a head of naturally long and beautiful hair, a healthy scalp and a lovely smooth complexion come from luck, but they do not. Constant care and the frequent use of preparations of proven merit are the secrets.
Use Madam C. J. Walker's
The Madam C, J.Walker Mfg. Co., Inc. 640 N.West St. Indianapolis, Ind.
---
News of Churches, Fraternities, and Organizations
Masonic Grand Lodge Turns Out in Large Numbers at Abyssian
Dr. A. Clayton Powell
Preaches First Sermon
in New Church; Melville
Chariton to Appear in an
Organ Recital Next Monday.
The interest increased instead of
diminished during the second week
of the Opening and dedicatory
winter. The great auditorium was
comfortably filled each night and
was packed on Wednesday night
when the Martin Smith Music
School had charge of the exercises
and rendered a most excellent program.
The musical program given by Mine Leah Kate Walker on Tuesday evening was one of the best board in New York recently. The Wanmaker Quartet, the renditions by Mine Theresa V. Greene, the numbers by the Female Trio, the baritone soloist, Mr. J. B. Brown, all brought forth hearty encroaches from the audience. The exercises on Friday night were in charge of the White Baptist Societies and the music was rendered by Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wade Kimsey, who brought along with them a number of finished artists. Dr. J. Robbinson, Field Secretary of the New York Bar Association, preached an able sermon to an audience Sunday morning that occupied all standing space and Rev. Marsh Sheppard spoke to an over-slow audience in the lecture room.
A crowd that even exceeded the one on the opening day was brought by the Masonic Grand Lodge of the City of New York in the afternoon at 8 o'clock; 1,100 seats had been reserved for the Masons, but this only accommodated about half the number that turned out, and hundreds of visitors failed to gain admittance. Grand Master David W. Parker presided, and introduced Rev. John Robinson, the new pastor of St. Marks, and T. H. Samuels. Most Worshipful Grand Master of the State of Illinois, who made brief speeches.
The message of the afternoon was delivered by Rev. A. Clayton Powell, and this account also for the unusual crowd, as it was Dr. Powell's first sermon in the new anditorium. The lodges left an offering of $266.57 for the Building Fund. The offering for the week amounted to $1728.70. One hundred and two persons have united with the church since the beginning of the dedicatorial exercises.
Rev. Chas. E. Stewart, pastor of the big Bethel Church, Washington, D. C. will be the speaker next Sunday morning. Rev. Wm. P. Hayes and the M. Olivet Baptist Church will have charge of the services at 3:30 o'clock in the afternoon, and Rev. Arthur J. Payne, formerly assistant pastor of this church, will deliver the message in the evening. On Monday night, June 11th, the Legislative Organ Recital by Nellville Charlton will be one of the outstanding features of the month's exercises.
Tuesday night will be devoted to women, and Mrs. Lillian A. Alexander will preside. Music by the Metropolitan Church Choir. Among the "noted speakers are: Miss Hannie H. Burroughs, Mrs. M. C. Lawton, Mrs. G. Richardson and Miss Myrtle Bernice Anderson. Wednesday night the New Eng and Baptist Missionary Convention will be in charge of the program. Dr. W. F. Graham of Philadelphia presiding, and Dr. J. C. Jackson, the president of the convention, being the chief speaker.
Thursday night good citizenship will be discussed by Alderman Geo. W. Harris, Dr. Chas. H. Roberts, Rev. W. R. Lawton and Rev. Scott Wood, Rev. Richard M. Bolden will preside. The First Immaculate Church Choir under the direction of Prof. Wilson Lamb will render the music.
Friday night the Abrasimian preschoolers provided over by Dr. A. R. Vincent will render the program. At the close of this program the ordinance of baptism will be administered. Dr. Pewell has been presented with a casket of water from the river Jordan, where Jesus was baptized, and this will be used on that evening to consecrate the new pool. Mr. Sidney Woodward will be in charge of the music.
MOTHER ZION CHURCH
The preliminary services Sunday morning, June 3, at Mother Zion Church were of a high and inspiring order. The service was preceded by the Pastor. He announced as the theme of his discourse, "Another Test of Discipline."
in substance, Dr. Brown said:
The Christian relation is just as essential to the life of the individual, the community, the state and the nation as are fire and water to the physical well-being it is demonstrated in the lives of those whom sacrifices to adhere to the cause of righteousness. Having put your hand to the plow, it is absolutely necessary that your continue in the work. As a race, there is much and ardour work for us to do. Respect for law and order, proper self-deployment, and respect for the right of others must be impressed on the minds of our people in a manner that will be productive of these results. When our people who are bound to our nation are found to observe these principles, there will be greater satisfaction. We will for our eternal good in the uncompro
To Give Organ Recital
THE MUSICIAN
MELVILLE CHARLTON
mining price of permanent liberty.
It is the duty of the church to stand on guard and sound the alarm, all the waile exercising faith in the Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ.
On Sunday School convened at 2 o'clock, Mr. J. W. Eichelberger, General Superintendent of the Sunday Schools of our connection, was present and addressed both sections of the school—in the Lecture Room and in the main auditorium.
He spoke on the modernizing of the methods of conducting the works of the School.
In the evening, Dr. Brown spoke again on, "Making the Burden Light."
On Thursday evening, June 7, a drama entitled "Jeptahh's Daughter" will be given by a splendid cast, headed by Miss Mabel Diggs, for the benefit of the Building. The teacher will be the ing of the Brotherhood will also be held on this date.
On Friday evening, the Annual Memorial Services in memory of the members of the church who have died during the year will be meeting of the Sunday School Board.
Next Sunday Dr. Brown will preach at 10:45 a.m. Baptism and Holy Communion will be administered at 3:20 p.m. At 8 p.m. the monastery to the Robin Hood Circle No. 258. Ancient Order of Foresters
The sick: Ella Nipson. 103 West 157th street. Fannie Sold. 165 West 163th street. Rosa P. Barnes. 134th street. Olivia P. Barnes. 541 Lenox avenue. Rosa Coleman. 200 West 134th street.
SALEM M. E. CHURCH
On last Monday evening the choir of Salem Church, rendered the annual concert, Gaul's "Holy City." It was the finest ever given, and in all probability will be the last given in old Salem. The leading characters were: Mimes, Golns, McVey, Coleman and Gustaf, and Messiah, Jillian and Simmons. McVey, McVey, Gulliver and Mrs. Coleman deserve great credit for their proficient work because they had only a few days to learn their parts. The closing chorus sang "Great and Marvous," rendering it with great effect. Prof. Rudolph Grant, organist and choirmaster, has brought the choir up to its highest point of enclucy and service. Last Sunday was Communion Day; we had 474 communicans. Rev. F. A. Cullen, pastor, leader. The choir will render the "Garden of Flowers" at the Salem Reunion at Renaissance Carpio on June 19.
The White Rose Home will hold memorial services in memory of Mrs. S. R. Wilkerson at the home. 123 West 138th street. Sunday, June 16, at 9 o'clock in the afternoon. The principal speaker will be Rev. Mrs. Florence Randolph; G. W. Allen in charge.
ST. ANDREW'S BAPTIST
ST. ANDREW BAY BANK
On last Sunday夜, Rev. A. H.
Huseless, Pastor of St. Mary's Baptist Church, have been called out of the city, and a wonderful sermon was presented by Rev. Alone, Mrs. Will H. Wallace, secretary of the Progressive Club, presented to its President, Mrs. Catherine Harnay, in behalf of its members a presidential hedge. The club is only one year old and has turned over to the church $500.
NEW SEMINARY
WASHINGTON, D. C., June 4.—A large number of people attended the dedication exercises of the Baptist Seminary and College site at Douglase Park Wednesday afternoon. The crowd was so large that the exercise had to be held in the open instead of in a large tent that was on the lot. A special committee consisting of Dr. R. L. Bradby, of Detroit; Dr. B. F. McWilliams of Toledo; Dr. S. B. Butler, of Indianapolis; Dr. L. G. Rose, Rochester, N. Y., were present and took part in the exercise.
Dr. Bradby delivered the principal address.
FRANCE TO STAMP
OUT CANNIBALISM
WASHINGTON, D. C., June 6—According to advice received here the French government has decided to stamp out cannibalism in Western and Central Africa. It has determined to punish cannibals with death according to the decree issued by the French government. Cases formerly were dealt with according to local native customs and sentiments were frequently mild.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 6. 1923
369TH INFANTRY NOTES.
Headquarters Company is still after young men. Come on, fellows, be one of the first into the new armory.
Company D boasts of having perfect co-operation, from its company commander down. The slogan, "Recruits, Get Wise."
Lieut. Mikell is to be complimented upon his training of the junior band of the regiment.
Company A recruits are coming in fast, since Lieut. O. C. Des Verney returned to duty after being on sick leave for five weeks.
Skull Fractured.
Ruth Simon, six, 258 W. 133d
street, was run down and painfully
injured by an auto while playing in
front of her home. The child was
removed to Columbus Hospital, suffer-
ing from a possible fractured
skull and contusions of the arms
and legs.
OBITUARY.
HOLT—Agnes Gibson Holt, beloved wife of George Holt, of 361 West 126th street, departed this life Monday, May 28, 1923, at St. Joseph's Hoospital, at the early evening vices were held on Thursday, May 31, at the Clinton Brooks Chapel, Rev. Ben Johnson, of Beulah Baptist Church, of which deceased was a member, officiating. Beulah Lodge, No. 2. Ancient order of pilgrims turned over to pay their last respects. She leaves to mourn their loss a devoted husband, three sisters, other relatives and a host of friends.
MARTIN—Geraldine MARTIN, daughter of Matthias and Josephine Hoyer Martin, was born on the island of St. Thomas, 44 years ago, departed this life May 24, 1923, at 65 West 143rd street. She was a consistent Christian from early life and on coming to New York, she was a committant of the Chapel of the Nestiah. East 95th street.
Funeral services were held at the Clinton Brooks Chapel, on Sunday, May 27. Bishop McGuire officiating. Interment at St. Michael's. She leaves to mourn their loss one sister, four nieces, six nephews and a host of friends.
MYERS — Maria Myers, beloved mother of Irane Holmes, departed this life on Wednesday, May 30, 1923, at her late residence, 26 West 137th street, in her 58th year.
Funeral services were held on Sunday, June 3, at the Beulah Baptist Church, of which she was a member. Rev. Ben Johnson officiating. Loss of devoted daughter, brother, other relatives, and a host of friends. Arrangements by Clinton Brooks.
MEMORIAM.
BACON—In loving remembrance of our dear mother, Hattie Bacon, who died June 7, 1921, two years ago. Sleep on, dear mother, and take thy rest. Lay thy bead on our Saviour's bed. We loved you mother, but Jesus loved you best. Thou art gone, but not forgotten. Nor will you ever be. As long as life and memory last. We will always remember thee. Louise Bacon, Carrie Bacon, Gertrude Bacon, Ruth B. Jemmott, four sons and other relatives.
BEALE—In sad and loving memory of my sister and aunt, Ella Bacon, who passed away June 6, 1922. We hope to meet again in the great beyond where parting will be no more.
Lucy Joseph, sister; Gladys Parker, niece.
BELL—In fond and loving memory of our dear mother, Clemptina Bell, who died May 20, 1921.
Long days and nights she bore the pain
To wait for cure, but all in vain.
Till God alone knew what was best.
He took her home and gave her rest.
Her children.
BLANCE EMIL RIVERS.
Grandchild, OLIVE.
CROSBY—In sad and loving memory of your dear wife and mother.
Mrs. Georgia Crosby, who departed this life one year ago, June 3rd, 1922.
We love thee.
But God loved thee best.
Children: Arthur. Ruth.
Charles. Helen. Alexander Crosby. husband.
SNEAD—The tragic death of Charles G. Snead, Jr., on May 17th, 1922, brought to an untimely end one whose legal career bade fair to add lustre to the jurisprudential firmament.
Though gone in the flesh, our nephew is still with us in spirit, and in the undying influence of care and loyalty; virtues with which his life was so well marked. We believe that the host of friends he made while alive will so testify.
To them as well as to ourselves we would say: "Whatsoever things are true, whatever things are just, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good renort, think on these things" in thinking of Charles. Loving he loved; lovable he loved.
SNEAD
and family,
Mr. & Mrs. CHAS HANKINSON
and grandmother
GEORGE BENNETT.
FRANKJIN—In loving memory of
my beloved son, Joseph Frank
lin, who departed this life June
8, 1922.
www.georgetbennett.com
Isaac Barry, H. 99th Street.
Ethel Nestle, 222 Fifth Avenue.
Russell Kninkle, 227 West 132nd Street.
Maurice B. Mitchell, 66 West 132th Street.
Nelson Panies, Hotel Press.
Florence Idella, 2131 Madison Avenue.
Edward Middleton, 2188 Fifth Avenue.
Erasmus Palmer, 16 West 133rd Street.
Emma Houston, 68 East 92nd Street.
Isabella Brown, 131 West 143rd Street.
Hattie Roberts, 132 West 143th Street.
Albert Mopson, 144 West 144th Street.
Emma Hallback, 412 East 165th Street.
Joseph Jefferson, 157 West 133rd Street.
Victoria Uphar, 47 East 134th Street.
Gloria Willis, 123 Reddy Street, L. I. City.
Louisa H. Lubis, 117 West 131st Street.
Charles Ann Moore, 1148 Fox Street, Bronx.
Ronald Hamer, 266 West 131st Street.
Ronald Hamer, 266 West 131st Street.
Elizabeth West, 188 West 128th Street.
Charles H. Peterson, 310 West 119th Street.
W. David Brown Undertaking Establishment
Under the Management of Anna E. Brown and Margaret Brown-
Gerdy, B. Bray Purie, Assistant.
High Grade Licensed Undertakers & Embalmers
2015 SEVENTH AVENUE, (Bet. 135th & 136th Streets)
Telephone Bradhurst 0442
224 WEST 130th ST.
Motto: "Economy, Courtesy and Fatisfaction"
Oren day and night
Ppa. 212 W. 129th St. Mern, 0000
IN MEMORIAM
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William Henry Brooks
September 6, 1859
May 23, 1823.
Repose now in thy glory, noble warrior. Thy work is finished; thy immortality is established. Fear no more to see the edifice of thy labors fall by any fault. Henceforth, beyond the reach of frailty, thou hast been given the power of divine peace the infinite results of thy acts. The days, the months of suffering, which did not even reach thy grand soul, have brought the atlast that sleep which Christ Himself giveth to His beloved. A thousand more are born, and three times more endeared, since thy passing during thy sojourn here below. Between thee and God there will be a sweet communion; take possession of thy Kingdom, wither shall follow thee, by the rugged road which thou hast traced, thousands of the Lord's redeemed and blest.
THE FAMILY.
No one thy place can fill.
Thy loss to me is Heaven's gain.
Resigned am I to the Raster's will.
Your lonesome mother, Alice Prawl.
RODGERS—In loving remembrance of Edward Howard Rodgers, gone but not forgotten.
"Tis hard to break the tender cord
When love has bound our hearts;
'Tis hard, so hard, to speak the words
"We must forever part."
Daddy, our loved one, we lay thee
In thy peaceful grave embrace.
But thy memory will be cherished
Til we see thy Heavenly face.
WIFE AND SON.
THE WORLD'S FINEST WOMAN
Isaac Barr, 14 West 99th Street
Ethel Nesbitt, 2229 Fifth Avenue
Russell Jenkins, 227 West 132
Mamie B. Mitchell, 66 West 11
Nelson Panies, Hotel Press.
Florence Idella, 2131 Madison
Edward Midleton, 2186 Fifth
Erasmus Palmer, 18 West 133
Emma Houston, 68 East 92nd
Isabella Brown, 131 West 145
Hattie Roberts, 132 West 130
Albert Mopson, 144 West 144th
Emma Hallback, 412 East 1658
Joseph Jefferson, 157 West 133
Victoria Uphur, 47 East 134th
TURNER—in memory of my dear
loved wife, Lillie L. Turner,
who departed this life December
19, 1930. Sleep on, my dear,
and take thy rest. I loved you, but
Jesus loved you best. So His
will be done. I shall meet you
one bright morning.
I also wish to thank the friends who were out to the grave with me Decoration Day: Mrs. A. Green, of 60 West 12d street; Mrs. Susie Tull, of 239 West 13d street; Mr. Wm. Drayton, of 2263 Seventh avenue, and Mr. Lloyd M. Wilson, of 45 West 99th street. Husband, George W. Turner, 2423 Seventh Avenue
CARD OF THANKS.
Mrs. W. H. Brooks takes this means of thankening her kind friends for their thoughtfulness and devotion during her recent bereavement.
Mr. and Mrs. *Madison Homes of 236 West 64th Street* wish to thank all the friends, acquaintances and little playmates of their little daughter. "Mirts" for their lovely tokens of remembrance and also their faithfulness during their bereavement.
ST. MARK'S METHODIST EPSCOPAL CHURCH, 3rd St. near Eighth Ave. New York City. Pastor, John W. Robinson, DD, Residence 229 w. 3rd St. Meetings Friday evening at 8:30 p.m and Sunday morning at 6 o'clock. School at a p.m. Lyme University Sunday p.m. The University at 6 o'clock Epworth League Sunday at 8:30 p.m. Classes Tuesday and Wednesday evening and Sunday p.m. Holy Communion Sunday p.m. Evening in each month. Welcome to all
UNIVERSAL STANDS THE GUARDIAN ROCK AGAINST THE BEATING SEA
A.B.B
GIBRALTAR
is all you pay for the advantages of membership in the African Blood Brotherhood, which Includes Economic, Social, Educational, Fraternal, Athletic, etc.
Write headquarters at 2299 Seventh Avenue, N. Y. C., for full information or attend the meetings of POST MENELEK No.
105, A. B. B., held every second and fourth Friday nights at 149 West 136th Street, Main floor.
Initiation Fee Only $1.00
J. WESLEY LANE FUNERAL PARLORS MARY LANE
Prompt Service At Moderate Rates.
TEL. MORNINGSIDE 6363
The names of deceased people herewith submitted are those having been handled to the complete satisfaction of relatives and friends, by THE J. WESLEY LANE Funeral Parlors, from May 1st to May 31st, 1923.
Street.
Street.
Avenue.
132nd Street.
1st 128th Street.
Avenue.
13th Avenue.
133rd Street.
12nd Street.
143rd Street.
130th Street.
144th Street.
168th Street.
133rd Street.
Seriously injured.
Martha Stewart, 30, 241 W. 144th street, was run down and seriously injured by an auto as she was crossing seventh avenue at 144th street. She was hurried to Harlem Hospital.
THE LIGHTHOUSE SPIRITUALIST MISSIONS SHALL SHINE.
The Lighthouse Spiritualist Misa-
The Lighthouse Spiritualist Mission, 44 West 130th street, second floor, west, conducted by Mr. and Mrs. C. H. McAllister and Friday evenings from 8:30 until 11. Messages will be given, all are welcome. Mrs. E. A. McAllister, pastor.—(Advt.)
TEMPLE OF
ST. JOSEPH SPIRITUAL, INC.
116 W. 133rd St., N. Y. C.
Services every Sunday, 11 A. M.
and 8 P. M.; Sunday school, 2:30
r. M. Circle every evening, 8 P. M.
Messages, Healing.
THOMAS R. HALL, Pros.
EPISCOPAL
ST. JOSEPH'S UNIVERSAL EPCISCAL CHURCH, 209 West 139th St. Rev. J. N. Bridgeman, Mector, residence. Sunday School, 4:30 p.m. Lycæum, 4 p.m. Evening sermon, 8 p.m. Holy Communion, 1st and 3rd Sunday.
LIBERTY SPIRITUAL CHURCH
Liberty Spiritual Church, 103 W. 143rd street, apartment No. 2. To those who are scattered abroad, greetings: Beginning Monday, April 2, 1923, a forty days' Spiritual Meeting will be conducted and May 11th. Now letters: Let one and all come together to see that our God is with us and then trust. This note is to all ministers of the churches and all people that can come and receive Your blessing from above. hours of service: 11 A. M. to 1 P. M.; 2:30 to 4:30 P. M. and 7:30 to 1 P. M.
This was given to me by the Spirit of the Lord one year ago, do not Noh and his Ar. ... because that are sick, come and be healed. Sister Rosie P. A. Braxton, Spiritual Adviser—Advt.
CHURCH BULLETIN
BAPTIST
MOUNT OLLEY BAY BATTLEHIGH CHURCH
161 W. 33rd St. between 6th and 7th
Avenue. May. William P. Mayes, M.D.
Sunday at 11 a.m. Sunday at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School at 2 p.m. Sunday
Communion Services every Sunday at
4 p.m. Masses every Sunday at 5 p.m.
K. P. U. Literary meets every Wednesday
at 3 p.m. The weekly
meetings are at 4 p.m. Church Aid Society,
2nd Monday evening in every month
Dorcas Missionary Society meets
every first Tuesday night are
made welcome. The Circle seats
THE METROPOLITAN BAPTIST
Church, 161 St. and Streets Ave.
Dr. W. W. Brown, Pastor. Sunday
School, 5 p.m. Preschool, 11 a.m.
P.M. Church meeting, 4 p.m.
Prayer meeting, Friday
meetings at 8 o'clock. Communion service,
third Sunday in each month at 1 o'clock.
First Monday
meeting in each month.
METHODIST
MOTHER A. M. K. ION CHURCH,
10:10 1939 W. 13th St. St. W. V.
Brown, D. D., Pastor, Paranagua, 150
Avenue, 150 W. 13th St. St. W. V.
a. m. and 1:45 p.m. Sunday school,
a. p.m. Thursday evening, Junior
Andover every Friday afternoon, a. p.
M. Church, 10:10 1939 Hours: to 1. These Autumn 1750-
Seats free. All welcome.
RUSH MEMORIAL A. M. c. ION
Church, 2000 West 13th St. G. M. K.
Oliver, D. D., Pastor, Residence, 117
p. m. and 1:45 p.m. Anderson, 150
Sunday School—Midday Club.
first Sundays. Public worship, 21 a. m.
and 8 p.m. Sunday school, a. p. m.
and 8 p.m. Tuesday evenings. Pastor's office
at the church, 12 to 1. A welcome to
all.
EPVORTH METHODIST EPISCOPAL
Church, goel Lane Ave., Browns
C. H. Andrews, Pastor, A program
and ground breaking for the new causes
will be held Saturday afternoon, beep-
tion at 1:45 p.m. Ave. south of 126th St. From 12
to 1:30 p.m. B. Franklin, Church Lark.
SALEM METHODIST EPISCOPAL
Church, 100-149 West 123rd St. The
Kav. 5, A. Cullen, James. Preaching
a. s.m., and 7:45 p.m. Sunday,
8:30 a.m. Sunday, 9:30 a.m.
Bug. Men's Bible Class, 2:30 to 4 p.
M., Beo. Phillips, Instructor. Lyrum,
4 p.m. Sunday, 8:20 p.m. Tuesday,
9:30 a.m. Sunday, 10:30 a.m.
6 p.m. Sunday, T. Morgan, from
Chinese Monday, Tuesday and Wednes-
day nights, as well as 1 p.m. Sunday.
PRESBYTERIAN
BRENDAL MEMORIAL PRESBYZERIAN
AN CHURCH, 12 West 10th St. M.,
W. M. Lawson, D. D., Minister, ben-
jamin, b. p.m., service. 8 p.m.
Sunday school; b. p.m., service.
davar; 8 p.m., service. Wednesday.
8 p.m., prayer service. All are
bently invited.
LIBERTY SPIRITUAL CHURCH
West Island. To upstaff and know the truth and
will make us free and not be ostentatious
again with the Voke of message.
There will be healing at all services.
Evenings at 8:30; Sunday morning
7 to 9; Liberty spiritual Sunday
8:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Storm Haze P. A. Bristow
Spiritual Adviser
Meeting Room
Monday through Friday in
the month, Helping Hand Club. First
sunday in every month Power Funding
Service by
Storm Haze P. A. Bristow and others
E. W. WAINWRIGHT AND MARION A. DANIELS
E. W. WAINWRIGHT
UNDERTAKERS
NO. 4 W. 132ND BT.
Nothing makes us more mela
families in their hours of misfortune
reduced to a sad and pitiful state
task.
NOTARY P
INDERTAKERS AND EMBALMEN
O. 4 W. 132ND ST. TEL. HARLEM 4348
makes us more melancholy than to conson
hours of misfortune. In short, our ha
and pitilable state of mind, while perform
UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS
NO. 4 W. 132ND ST. TEL. HARLEM 4348.
Nothing makes us more melancholy than to console the contrite
families in their hours of misfortune. In short, our hearts have been
reduced to a sad and pitiable state of mind, while performing repentant
task.
MISS BURNIECE WILLIAMS MISS LOUISE CHESTNUT
MRS. IDA GREENWOOD MR. AUGUSTUS PITTS
MRS. NOMENA. ORAWFORD MR. JOHN LEE
MRS. AMELIA MILLER MR. CLEMENT LOPEZ
MR. WILLIAM HAMMOND MR. WM. JENKINS
MISS BEATRICE BROWN MRS. ALICE GIBSON COOPER
MISS GERTRUDE FIELDS MRS. WHEELER BOOKER
MR. ISAAC SMITH
SERVICE, COURTESY, SATISFACTION
ROSA L. LE GARR & CO., FUNERAL DIRECTORS
121 WEST 132ND STREET, NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
Phone Morningside 2822. Always Open
Remains Shipped To All Parts Of The World.
PHILIP KELBEY, JR., Embalmer. Residence Phone Pann. 0829
ROSA L. LE GARR & CO
121 WEST 132ND STREET
Phone Morningside 28
Remains Shipped To
PHILIP KELSEY, JR., Embalm
LE GARR & CO. FUNERAL DIR
132ND STREET, NEW YORK CITY
one Morningside 2822.
Always Op
remains Shipped To All Parts Of The World
ELSEY, JR., Embalmer. Residence Phone
MARY LANE
Morningside 6363
FREE FUNERAL PAY
112 WEST 1
Bodies Shipped to All Parts of
Phone Bradhurst 1241
W. A. RODRIQUE
UNDER
JOHN E. YATES
Night and Day Calls
225 WEST 134th ST.
Dec.3-12t
PHONE—MORNINGSIDE 5403
IDA C
Licensed Embalm
Quick and Efficient Service
Burial of the Dead. Large a
Chapel.
PRICES REASONAL
114 WEST 133rd STREET
H. ADOLPH
WHEN DEATH OCCURS AND
IS REQUIRED
9239 Audubon
REMAINS SHIPPED TO A
Always Open
Side 6363 UNDERSTREET
FREE FUNERAL PARLOR AND CHAPEL
112 WEST 133d STREET
Hipped to All Parts of the World.
Radhurst 1241
W. A. RODRIQUES & J. E. YATE
UNDERTAKERS
JOHN E. YATE, General Manager
Light and Day Calls Promptly Attended
ST 134th ST.
NEW YORK
MORNINGSIDE 5409
IDA COOPER
Licensed Embalmer and Undertaker
and Efficient Service With Every Require
the Dead. Large and Spacious Funeral
PRICES REASONABLE—ALWAYS OPEN
ST 133rd STREET
NEW YORK
T. ADOLPH HOWELE
EATH OCCURS AND AN ECONOMICAL
IS REQUIRED, CALL US
Lubon
107 WEST
IS SHIPPED TO ALL PARTS OF THE
Open
Lady
Morningside 6363 UNDERTAKER
FREE FUNERAL PARLOR AND CHAPEL
112 WEST 133d STREET
Bodies Shipped to All Parts of the World.
Phone Bradhurst 1241
W. A. RODRIQUES & J. E. YATES
UNDERTAKERS
JOHN E. YATES, General Manager
Night and Day Calls Promptly Attended To.
225 WEST 134th ST.
NEW YORK CITY
Deg.3-13t
Licensed Embalmer and Undertaker
Quick and Efficient Service With Every Requisite for the
Burial of the Dead. Large and Spacious Funeral Parlor and
Chapel.
PRICES REASONABLE—ALWAYS OPEN
114 WEST 133rd STREET
NEW YORK CITY
H. ADOLPH HOWELL
H. ADULPH HOWELL
WHEN DEATH OCCURS AND AN ECONOMICAL FUNERAL
IS REQUIRED, CALL US
9239 Audubon 107 WEST 136th ST.
REMAINS SHIPPED TO ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD
Always Open Lady Attendant
Tel 8782 Morningside
GRANVILLE O. PARIS
UNDERTAKER & EMBALMER
151 West 131st Street
Lady Attendant New York City
Members of the Masons, Elks, Odd Fellows, Southern Beneficial
League.
GRANVILL
UNDERTAKER
151 West
Lady Attendant
Members of the Masons, Elks,
Le
RANVILLE O. PARIS
UNDERTAKER & EMBALMER
151 West 131st Street
pendant New York
of the Masons, Elks, Odd Fellows, Southern
League.
Telephone 2876 Harlem
JAMES C. THOMAS
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
8g WEST 134th STREET
Near Lenox Avenue New York City
CAMP CHAIRS & AUTO SERVICE TO LET FOR ALL
PURPOSES
JAMES C
UNDERTAKER
8g WEST 1
Near Lanox Avenue
CAMP CHAIRS & AUTO. &
PUR
Phone Morn. 82
JAMES WITHERS
JAMES C. THOMAS
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
89 WEST 134th STREET
New
CHAIRS & AUTO SERVICE TO LET FOR
PURPOSES
Phone Morm. 8234—Notary Public
S WITHERSPOON, JR.
LICENSED UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS
134 WEST 131st ST.
Licensed: New York and New Jersey States, Funeral Parlor Free
PHONE HARLEM 3008 OPEN DAY & NIGHT
Special Attention to All Cases
NORMAN B. STERRETT, JR.
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
Hearse and Limousines to Hire
56 WEST 134th ST., NEW YORK CITY
Funeral Parlor
Sept. 21-tt.
32 WEST 137th ST. NEW YORK CITY
Motto: Economy, Courtesy and Satisfaction.
(10 years' experience).
Res. 45 W. 138th St. Apt. 8; Tel. Harlem 9088.
Funeral Parlor 238 West 137th Street, New York
Open Day and Night. Special Attention to All Cases. Lady Attendee
Joseph J. Vaneys, 163 west 120th Street. Audubon 2008
Robert L. Moore, 229 East 120th Street. Rhineland 1998
ns :::
AND MARION A. DANIELS
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MARION A. DANIELS
Notary Public
AND EMBALMERS
TEL. HARLEM 4344.
ancholy than to console the contrite.
June. In short, our hearts have been
of mind, while performing repentant
MISS LOUISE CHESTNUT
MR. AUGUBTUS PITTS
MR. JOHN LEE
MR. CLEMENT LOPEZ
MR. WM. JENKINS
MR.S. ALICE GIBSON COOPER
MR.S. WHEELER BOOKER
O. JOY FUNERAL DIRECTORS
T. NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
822. Always Open
All Parts Of the World.
mer. Residence Phone Penn. 0630
UNDERTAKER
CHARLOR AND CHAPEL
133d STREET
of the World.
PAGE NINE
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BROOKLYN
45 CENTS born a copy of Trotter's Blue Book Directory. The only book that you instantly purchase compilations information on New York colored residing and business. One copy at R. Y. Amsterdam News Office.
BAINBRIDGE ST. 51—Purchased back parlor; married couple preferred. jm.6-10
BENSON AVE. 11:60 (Dyker Height)—Purchased room in Dyker Height house for men and wide or two small. Call after 8 p.m. Ring John Williams bell. jm.6-10
BAINBRIDGE ST. 51—Purchased back parlor; married couple preferred. jm.6-10
BENSON AVE. 11:60 (Dyker Height)—Purchased room in Dyker Height house for men and wide or two small. Call after 8 p.m. Ring John Williams bell. jm.6-10
CARLTON AVE. 410—Large unfinished room for rent; electricity. jm.6-10
CLASSION AVE. 510—Nine Greene Ave.—Purchased room for one or two young men. jm.6-10
CLIPTON PL. 840—Unfinished room to let. jm.6-10
CUMBERLAND ST. 319—Room to let. jm.6-10
all rooms all furnished to ten rooms.
11TH ST. 36: CORONA, L. I., (trip
floor) - Two rooms, furnished; gree
timen only; rent reasonable; access
to bathing beach.
June 6th
WANTED
AMATEUR WANTED--Male, female, two orchestra; we use 365 piano players. I am in touch with 365 piano theaters. The last month I have placed 60 musicians in positions earning $35 to $50 weekly. When I finish, I will the same for you. Open daily. Proof Simma. 9 a.m. to 10:15 p.m. 167 West 19th St. a flight up. Morningside 930.
MEN OR WOMEN
With Large Acquaintance
or selling ability, make salary and
commission writing the Unity Com-
bined Life, Health and Acidental
Insurance. Policy pays for all ill-
ness, every accident. Acidental
and natural death. The cost is
policy fee $3 and first month's
premium of $3, $2 or $1 per month
to cover the insured for extent of
$15 per week.
NORMAN W. JOHNSON, Mgr.
115 West 182th St, Bradhurst 0548.
ALEXANDER's Employment Agency, 21
West 124th St, cor. 5th Ave. All kinds
of domestic work. Morninggrade 134d.
WANTED - Musicians for Summer work
with orchestra. Norton J. Cumber, 218
W. 129th St. (Apt. 14), Morn. 6163.
INSTRUCTION
FRENCH and Spanish teacher; $1 lesson;
private; inside or home. Mime. Ver-
nellite, 310 West 123th St. Maye.
FRENCHMAN, high school education,
English speaking offers his services as
French teacher. Apply to Rene Ro-
mme, 219 West 123th St.
GIRLS, WOMEN - Learn gown designig;
making $40 work; learn while earning;
fascinating serving; experience anaconda-
discanty. Franklin Institute, Dept. Wg.4,
Rochester, N. Y.
HAIRDRESSERS
HAIRDRESSERS
TRELLI FREY: Buy a box of world's famous "Gordon's Glory Hair Grower" and get one box of Straightener free. Dr. O. C. Gordon Botanist, 24th Dr. near 133th St. New York, N. Y.
LOST & FOUND
BUNCH OF KENS found on 130th St. between 9th and 10th Duvier apply at Amsterdam News office.
ELECTRICIANS
AUDUBON 2466. M. Y. Williams, also
HELP WANTED - MALE
MEN WANTED
WHY NOT LEARN THE AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS?
Actual practice under expert instruction qualifies individuals to repair or drive any make of car or truck. There are always plenty of good positions open for trainees.
American Auto School
726 Lexington Ave. Near 94th St.
Phone Plaza 2016
Jan. 5-17
SITUATION WANTED
PARQUET FLUOORS - expert mechanic, laying, scraping, finishing; private trade.
McGregor, Audubon 0488.
APARTMENTS WANTED
28 CENTS buys a copy of 1 troster a plush Book Directory. The only key that instill furnished complete information on New York closed residences and business people. On sale at N. Y. Amsterdam News Office.
RELIABLE colored family wants 4 room apartment with basement; first floor or parlor floor and basement; bonus given. Phone Lafayette 1235. May16-47
WE PAY FLUOORS for furnished apartments; buyers waiting; quick action. Telephone Morningside 5382. May13-47
WANTED - Three-room apartment, $30 per month, 300 East 114th St. May30-47
RESPECTABLE couple wants 5 rooms, with improvements, on Long Island. Mrs. G. Skeede, care of Thompson, 50 West 133rd St.
WANTED, apartment of 4 or 5 rooms. House, 54 West 99th St.
APARTMENT WANTED - 4 or 7 rooms, will buy or lease if terms are right. Johnson, 115 West 135th St. Bradhurst 0383.
PRIVATE HOUSE wanted, to 10 rooms, will buy or lease if terms are right. Johnson, 115 West 135th St. Bradhurst 0383.
WANTED - Will rent small furnished apartment for summer. L. G. care of Amsterdam News.
WILL RENT small furnished apartment for summer. Write L. G. care of Amsterdam News.
A 4-ROOM furnished apartment to sublet, north of 138th St. Mrs. Davin, Bradhurst 1732, after 7 p.m. Call or write, 103 West 138th St.
WILL BUY apartment, furnished or unfurnished, rooms. Lowe, Morningside 1183, Apt. 6-8, or write, 166 West 129th St.
TWO 6-room furnished apartments, one 4-room. Phone Aud. 3900. Office, 193 West 137th St.
57 PRIVATE rooms, overlooking park, cheerful rooms; also 6-room furnished apartment for sale. Inquire Mr. Scott, 410 St. St. Nicholas Ave.
FOR SALE
Business Opportunities
GRAPH THIS OPPORTUNITY
The Alladice Art School has opened its winter classes courses in crochet beading, embroidering, Indian weaving, embroidery work, fringing, tasselling, lamp shades and flowers; be your own boss, make money in your own home; further information cheerfully given. Call Mr. James Alladice, 221 W. 140th St. phone Audubon 6143; prices reasonable; diplomas awarded.
HAIRDRESSERS
RESIDENTIAL Poro agent, by appointment. Phone Audubon 9725.
MUSIC — INSTRUCTION
MUSICAL INSTRUCTION
FLANG and VOIOL
are the two leading instruments.
To play them correctly depends upon your understanding of knowledge as well as prerequisite. In order to do this, you must know to grammar, so in music, the language of tone. Who Matthews Send Their Children Here. Open daily from 9 a.m.
PROP. SIMMS
187 West 120th St.
Two flights up
Mortonidge 9590
R. B. MONTGOMERY, whose instructions to artist perfection, 520th St. Mayra-
MRS. JEFFRIEN HUNT
Sarah Jeffries, 47, 214 W. 100th Street, alighting from a surface car at Lenox Avenue and 100th Street, slipped and fell to the roadway. She suffered a possible fracture of the left shoulder and, after being treated by a doctor, west-home.
Newly elected officers of the Bermuda Benevolent Association, Inc., will be installed to night at the Association of Trade and Commerce, 2170 Beech Avenue, at 9 o'clock, with Rev. Scott Wood an installing officer. A short musical program will be rendered.
The officers are Graham M. Bean, president; Mrs. Caryle Brasman, vice-president; Mrs. Emma C. Young, financial secretary; Mrs. Lucrina B. Scott, recording secretary; James H. Bounders, treasurer; Mrs. Mand Fuhitz, chairman and Mrs. Marie Simon, secretary.
Mr. and Mrs. William F. White,
2364 7th Avenue, gave a dinner
Thursday evening to Miss La Pell
of Washington, D. C. Among those
present were Messas C. Harn, Fred Young, Lester S. Stokes of Georgia and Fleming S. Lackey
Wade. He was also entertained by
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander, 200 West
1323 Street, in honor of his 84th
birthday. George W. Bunny of
Philadelphia was Mr. Wade's
guest last Wednesday.
Anna Boundry, 9th street of F.
167th Street, west of Savannah
Avonue, was one of the wives in
the recent poster auction held
by the Society for the Preservation
HARLEM REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE 2296 SEVENTH AVENUE - Southwest Cor. 135th St. LLOYD R. JOHNSON IF IT IS ABOUT REAL ESTATE WE CAN SERVE YOU
JAMAICA, L. I.—8 rooms; hot air heat; open plumbing; gas and electric lights.. Front lawn, flowers, fruit trees, grape arbor, chicken house.. Garden.. Absolute Bargain.
PRIVATE HOUSES—HARLEM
WEST 127TH ST., BET. 7TH & 8TH AVES.—3 sty. and basement store; 11 rooms. Heat and electric lights. Price $12,500.
NEGROES DEDICATE
JIM CROW PARK
(Preston News Service.)
WASHINGTON, D. C., June 4—Dedication of the site donated to the Negro Baptists by the Washington Development Corporation took place Wednesday afternoon with elaborate ceremonies. The principal address on this occasion was delivered by the Rev. Dr. E. W. Moore, of Pittsburgh, Pa. field secretary of Negro field work under the American Baptist home mission board of New York.
Others on the program were: Rev. R. L. Bradby, of Detroit, Mich.; Rev. B. F. McWilliams, of Toledo, Ohio, and S. B. Butler, of Indianapolis.
CAPTAIN STATEN TO
HEAD LIBERIAN ARMY
SPOKANE, Wash., June 4.—Moody Staten, who held the rank of captain in the American Expeditionary Forces in France, to-day received appointment from the Secretary of State to the Liberian Army. The Liberian Government, a communication from the Secretary of State explained, had requested assignment of an American officer who could assume command of the Liberian Army.
Staten said he will sell for Liberia June 9. He joined the American Army in 1912 as a private, and after his discharge became a student at the State Normal School at Cheney, Wash.
MAY SOON REALIZE HIS. ONE AMBITION
AUSTIN, Texas, June 6.—When John Merriweather, on whose farm oil has been found, gets enough money he plans to visit the white Merriweathers in Tennessee. On his farm in the new Prairie Lea oil fields, Merriweather is producing 500 barrels of oil a day, so it may not be long before he will have sufficient money to defray his expenses.
"Uncle" John, as he is called, was born in slavery in Tennessee. Joon after freedom came to him he came to Texas, where he has lived ever since.
THREE HELD FOR
DEATH OF AGED MAN
(Preston News Service.)
KINSTON, N. C., June 5.—Three men are in the custody of the police here on charges of complicity in the recent shooting of Frank Howard, aged 72 years, of Havertown, a suburb of Kinston.
Mrs. Virginia King Howard, wife of the wounded man, has identified George Blings as the head of the gang of four men who robbed the couple of $8, demanded $250, and shot Howard in the neck because the money was not forthcoming. Howard is practically blind and did not recognise the assailants.
ADAM LOGAN TO DIE IN CHAIR SEPT. 6
COLUMBUS, O., June 4.—Adam Logan, aged 43, who was convicted of killing Benjamin Phifer, aged 36, on March 3 last with a hammer, was sentenced to be electrocuted September 6 by Judge Klinkead in Criminal Court here last Thursday. Logan, who pleaded guilty to a general charge of murder, threw himself on the mercy of the court, but was found guilty of first-degree murder.
PROBE AFRICAN
SLAVERY, ITALIANS ASK
BOMB, June 2—Slave traffic in Abysinia is discussed in a resolution in which the Italian Anti-Slavery Society asks the League of Nations, to investigate the trade in human lives now carried on by Europeans in the jungle regions of Abysinia. It is suggested that European nations interested in the trade should not be represented.
OKLAHOMA GOVERNOR WILL STOP MOBISM
Governor Walton of Oklahoma, reply to a telegram sent him by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, with reference to the disorders at Bapalpa, has stated that there will be no mob violence in Oklahoma if he can prevent it.
SPURNED: HE
KILLS WOMAN
CAMDEN, Ark., June 4—Mrs.
Jennie Patton was shot and
instantly killed by Cophus Caviness
at her home on Magnolia road last
Tuesday morning. It is said that
Caviness entered the woman's
home unexpectedly and going to her
bedroom to take a shower.
FOR SALE
7TH & 8TH AVES.—3 sty. and base-
t and electric lights. Price $12,500.
Office for Harlem Re
SPADE USED
IN ASSAULT
GREENSBORO, N. C., June 4.
Wallace Blair is at his home, suffer-
ing with painful wounds about
the neck and head, inflicted by
James H. Mitchell, who is in jail,
charged with assaulting him with
a spade on Decoration Day.
POLICE SEEK SLAYER
CINCINNATI, O., June 5.—The police are searching for the slayer of Henry Montgomery, alias Henry Howard, who was found lying at Fifth and Stone streets last Thursday night, with stab wounds in the neck and heart. The man was unconscious when found and a description of his assassin could not be obtained.
HEAT KILLS MAN
PITTSBURGH, Pa., June 4. The first fatal heat prostration to be reported in Pittsburgh this year occurred Friday morning when Soloman Govan, aged 26 years, died in his home in Boone Way. Govan was stricken Thursday afternoon while at work in the Soho plapt of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Company plant.
MURDERED IN A8YLUM.
PITTSBURGH, Pa., June 4.—John Majkovic, an inmate of the Woodville insane asylum, was held for the murder of William H. Jones, aged 47 years, also a patient of the institution, by the coroner's jury at the institution last Thursday morning.
CHICAGO JUDGE SPEAKS
AT A. & T. COLLEGE
GREENSBORO, N. C., June 4.
The principal address at the opening of commencement week at A. & T. College was delivered by Judge William H. Harrison, of Chicago. During the course of his address Judge Harrison called attention to the state of unrest throughout the southland among beginners and pointed out that education was the best method for the solution of the various problems causing.
MURDERED SWEETHEART.
RICHMOND, Va., June 4. Among the thirty-one Federal prisoners going to Atlanta penitentiary is Junius Jones, sentenced to life imprisonment for shooting to death his sweetheart, Miss Emma Pead, at Old Point Comfort. He was convicted of murder in the second degree.
3,000 HEAR DYER.
Chicago. Ill., June 3.—Three thousand people here heard Representative Leonidas C. Dyer urge colored and white people to join in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in pressing for enactment, in the next session of Congress, of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill. Two thousand people clamored to gain admission to the hall.
CINCINNATI, Ohio, June 4.—Mark Cordell, aged 18 years, the son of William Cordell, head of the Hod Carriera' Union here, and vice-president of the American Federation of Labor, was arrested last Thursday night on a charge of firing at an officer.
MOVES AGAINST SMUGGLING IN OF WEST INDIANS.
WASHINGTON, June 4.—Drastic action is planned by Secretary Davis to prevent the unlawful entry of aliens into the United States from Canada, Mexico and the West Indies. It is said that many West Indians are coming in through Canada after the quota for the islands, under the new immigration law, has been exhausted.
WASHINGTON SCENE OF KLAN INITIATION
WASHINGTON, June 2—Five hundred members of the Ku Klux Klan met in a baseball field at Chesapeake Junction, Md., less than half a mile across the Maryland-District of Columbia line, last night and initiated sixteen men under a blazing cross. This is the first meeting held by the Klan within such a short distance of the capital.
ACCIDENTALLY SHOT
EXCEPTIONAL HIGH CLASS PROPERTY AT BARGAIN PRICES
WEST 127TH ST., BET. LENOX AND 7TH AVES.—3 aty. and basement; private house; 16.8x100; 12 rooms and bath; electric lights; long term mortgage.
EAST 130TH ST., NEAR MADISON AVE.—18.6x100; 11 rooms and bath; steam heat; possession August. Price and terms right.
WEST 131ST ST., BET. 5TH AND LENOX AVES.—3 aty. and basement brown stone, 16.8x100. Price $13,000. Terms reasonable.
BIG BARGAINS
Brick and frame houses. One and four-family; cold water flats, six and twenty-family; steam and electricity. Small cash, easy terms. Consult the Square Deal Broker and be your own landlord.
W. A. YOUNG,
409 Waverly Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y.
Prospect 8329.
Employment Agencies
West Side Employment Agency
263 WEST 125th ST.
Agency
Morm. 8870-2462
Doormen, elevator, switchboard operators,
porters, firemen, handymen, auto washers
and other help; also female help.
POSITIONS ALWAYS OPEN
50 GIRLS
WANTED
For All Kinds
of Work
N. P. DREW'S
EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY
New Haven, NJ 26
82 West 1341th St.
N. Y. CITY
Phone Harlem 7712
O
AGENCY
C. H. SHMADER, Prop.
Established 1312
Hours 9 A. M. to 8 F. M.
Doormen. Office. Wireless board
Operators. Porters. Fireman and
Handymen.
384 St. Nicholas Ave. 130th St.
WILLIAMS COLORED EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
45 WEST 90TH ST.
JOHN W. WILLIAMS, Mgr.
Pennsylvania R.R.
Free Employment
Bureau
100 W. 134TH ST. MORN. 8780.
Freight Handling 49c per hour.
Track Workers $4.00 per day.
Board and room. 85c per day.
We Look After Your Interests
Without Charge
BROWN'S EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
If out of town call 1250 Morningside,
public work: all nationalities; first
class service to employers, call
writers out of town. Mail 349-
217, write. May 2-17.
WILLIAM'S
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
WILLIAM SLATNICK, Rep.
468 EIGHT AVK, NEW YORK
Between 14th and 12th St.
We Make a Special of Placing
Colored Men in Good Pay.
ing Profession.
HARRIS EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY
WILL SECURE FOR YOU A
GOOD PAYING POSITION
If Out of Town, Nell Le a Card
Phone: Morn, 2000
441 LENOX AVK, COP 124 B
ONCE
SQUARE DEAL
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
124 WEST 121st STREET
Phone Morningside 2222
WORK! WORK! WORK!
Whole Time, Half Time. Sleep In
or Out. City or Country.
PASCHAL'S AGENCY
128 WEST 120TH ST.
PLENTY OF EXCELLENT
POSITIONS
Top Wages—Male and Female
Domestic—Industrial
Radio Employment
Agency
MONEY
WE HAVE MONEY ON HAND
TO LOAN ON SECOND AND
THIRD MORTGAGES AND
OTHER SECURITIES
FREE CONSULTATION
morris mortgage corp.
STOCKHOLDERS CITY
NEW YORK CITY
Telephone Worst 4500, Suite 631
JAMES L. THORNTON
LUMBER, MOULDINGS, SASH,
DOORS and BLINDS
Enameled and Gold Picture Mould-
ing, Upson Board, Veneered Panels,
White Wood Panels
270 WEST 126th ST., N. Y. CITY
Telephone Morningside 4447
Working Man, Look!
$500 buys 6 room bungalow,
15 minutes to New York; full
lot; all improvements; ready to
move in. Price $3,500; balance
monthly. Also have 7 and 9 room
houses for sale and a beautiful
home suitable for doctor, lawyer
or for boarding house. Every
improvement; large parcel of
ground. Garage for 2 cars.
C. ADKINS
344 PACIFIC AVE., JERSEY
CITY, NEW JERSEY.
Telephone Bergen 5040.
IN BEAUTIFUL M.T. VERNON
FOR SALE—2 MILITARY house, all
improvements, steam heat, sepa-
rate furnace. Price $10,500. Terms
arranged.
BRAMBILL
114 East 4th St. Mt. Vernon
Phone Oakwood 8878
Jenkins & Taylor
66 W. PALISADE AVE.
ENGLEWOOD, N. J. TEL. 544
For rent, in Hackenack, 6-room apt,
all improvements, heat furnished; $60.
Beautiful country house; 7 rooms, bath;
near train; large plot; very reasonable.
$1,200 cash buys 6-room improved
house in Hackensack; brand new;
balance like rent.
Lots $190 up. Good terms.
SEE 'US BEFORE YOU BUY.'
Real Estate for
One and two-family houses, in the Bronx and Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Prolong your life and the life of your children by living in the suburbs, where there is plenty of pure air and sunshine.
J. W. DANIELS
358 CANAL ST.
NEW YORK, N. Y.
Phone Canal 1089
Telephone Bradhurst 0645
Hamilton & Co.
Inc.
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 115 W.135TH ST.
HALF ACRE ONLY. $300
$20.00 DOWN—$5.00 MONTHLY
Raise
Your
Own
Vegetables
Raise Your Own Vegetables
Own your own Home, at New Brunswick, N. J., a big city with over 50 factories and plenty of work.
Let us start you with $50.00 down, $10.00 monthly. We have some houses ready. Write or call for particular.
HENRY J. FRANKLIN
23 Church St.—New York
Phone Receiver 2776. Room 187
WEST 127TH ST.—3 sty. and basement; brownstone private dwelling. Size 15x99.11; containing 10 rooms and one bath. Price $13,000. Cash required $3,000.
EDGECOMBE AVE.—15x100, brick and stone; four story and basement; 12 rooms arranged for two families. Price right.
EDGECOMBE AVE.—3 story and basement; private house; 17.2x71; 9 rooms and bath; electric lights; hot water heat; open plumbing. Price $15,000. Good terms.
2295 Seventh Ave.—Near 135th St.
TELEPHONE MORNINGSIDE 8425
British WEST INDIES
Passenger and Freight Services
S.S. ALLEGRA Sails June 16th
PRINCESS: MAY, June 12th
DI. GIORIO FRUIT
CORPORATION
28 BROADWAY, N. Y.
Tel. Belowing Green 7788
$2500 CASH
BALANCE LIKE RENT
Buys 15 room private dwelling.
Immediate possession.
GEO. A. DERRICK
169 West 131st Street
Telephone 5382 3483 Morningside
FOR SALE
136th St., just west of Lenox Ave.
four-story dwelling, suitable for business;
12 rooms, adjacent to Edgecombe Ave.
3-story dwelling, fine condition;
12 rooms.
Prices and terms reasonable; early possession of each.
JAMES L. VAN BANT, Owner,
119 Nassau Street
Cordlands 2400
FOR SALE
IN BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Houses $500 to $1,000 cash down. Down town 2 blocks from subway, 2 ten room brick houses, $6,000 each; cash $1,000. Bargain, Bedford section, 2 family brownstones; all improvements. Cash $2,000. Price $12,780.
NEW YORK CITY—West 127th, 138th Streets. Apts. to rent. Particulars consult
HATTIE S. COFIELD
40 W. 67th St. New York City
Open Days and Evenings.
Phone Columbus 2203
Mortgage Loans
NOW IS YOUR CHANGE
S10 WILL START YOU
BUY LOTS BUILD HOUSES
Be Your Own Landlord
We sell you good lots cheap.
We build houses on small deposit, at North Jamaica, Long Island. New 5 room house, all modern improvements, now ready to move in.
COME AND SEE THIS PROPERTY FREE OF COST NEXT SUNDAY.
ROCKVILLE REALTY CO.
2128 5TH AVE. Harlem 8462
FOR SALE
Private house, 130th St., between 7th and 8th avenues, 10 rooms and bath; parquet floors throughout immediate possession.
C. D. KING
Real Estate and Insurance
135 WEST 135th STREET
Phone Morningside 8180
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
ST. FELEX ET.—10 rooms, brick
house; price $7,750; cash $1,000.
CLASSON AVE.—14 rooms, bath;
price $2,001; cash $5,000.
TO LET: TOMPKINS AVE.—10
rooms, all improvements.
G. R. LOVELL
You need a ready change of bed linens, bed sheets, pillow cases, bed spreads and general house furnishings.
Drop a postal or phone and representative will call with samples and particulars of, my EASY PAYMENT PLAN.
2305 SEVENTH AVE. NEAR
135TH ST., NEW YORK
Phone Morningside 7537
Phone Evenings, Sundays and
Holidays, University 4708
OPPORTUNITY
For a number of intelligent men
and women residing in New Jersey
to represent a fast-growing
Life Insurance Company.
For Particulars Call or Write
NORTHEASTERN MUTUAL
LIFE INSURANCE CO.
310 Washington Street,
Newark, N. J.
Broadhurst 2035
For Wall Paper
and Decoration
Get the Best Prices and
Quality from the
RELIABLE WALL
PAPER CO.
2446 Seventh Avenue
Painters and Decorators
Paper 7c a Roll and Up
Estimates Cheerfully Given
The House You Build
Should be so arranged that it would appeal to a prospective buyer as well as yourself. We can design, build and help you design such a house.
JOSEPH & RHYMER
10 Gulver St, Yonkers, N. V.
EMERGENCY EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
2295 Seventh Ave.
Cor. 135th St.
WORK! WORK! WORK!
For men, women, boys and girls. We
get the Best Wages. City or country.
Call to See Us at Once.
EDWARD E. BESS, Prop.
Morningside 4346
FOR SALE
A 9 ROOM STUCCO HOUSE
overlooking Van Cordland Park,
five minutes from the end of the
842nd Street subway station.
Hardwood floors, steam heat and
electric lights.
Price $10,500. Reasonable Terms
APPLY—
PHILIP A. PAYTON JR.
COMPANY
227 West 141st Street
Telephone—Audubon 0945
BUY A HOME
Own, property! Pay as next. An
established reliable corporation of
builders will finance you. Small gift
payments. Please Morton goz. Max-
imum repayment.
JAMES T. SIMPON
72 W. 132th St.
APARTMENT HOUSES—A few big bargains in small and large apartment houses on the avenues and in side streets.
6 ROOM APARTMENT on St. Nicholas Ave., steam heat, hot water, electric lights. Rent $80. One month's security. Apartment is now vacant. Tenant must furnish references. FOR RENT—On St. Nicholas Ave., ground floor apartment; suitable for business, near 1304N street.
PHONE: BRADHURST 0270-0275
Fitzherbert Howell
Specialist in Harlem for Colored Property
FOR SALE
On 126th, 127th, 128th, 129th, 130th, 131st, 132nd, 133rd, 134th, 138th, 137th and 138th Streets; beautiful private houses, some with electric lights and parquet floors, in some instances the owners will accept as low as $1500 cash as first payment. Balance same as rent.
Also beautiful houses on Edgecombe and Bradhurst Avenues with $2000 and up as first payment.
Many other good bargains with small amount of cash.
FOR FURTHER PARTICULAR CONSULT THE OFFICE OR
JOHN H. PIERCE
NO. 224 WEST 137TH STREET.
PHONE AUDUBON 8311.
HENRY SOUTNGATE, Owner, 112 W. 138th St.
'PHONE MORN. $152
Offers for sale a very fine house on 137th St., between 8th and Edgecombe Avenues
I also offer one on West 130th St., and one on West 127th St.
My terms are noted as the easiest and safest in existence. My mortgages run until paid out. Others sell their mortgages and then you are at the mercy of sharks.
AT NEPPERHAN, YONKERS, I offer a few very fine building lots, splendidly located; fully improved; 23 minutes to "L" and 30 minutes to Broadway Subway. 200 homes already erected; $55 down and balance monthly starts you. I help you to secure your building mortgage. Call and see my house plans and get my terms.
FOR RENT
6 ROOM APARTMENT on St. N. hot water, electric lights. Rent $80 Apartment is now vacant. Tenant must FOR RENT—On St. Nicholas Avenue suitable for business, near 130th street.
Loans PHONE: BRAD
Fitzherbert
Specialist in Harlem for Real Estate Bought Exchanges
Mortgages --- Loans
215 West 135th
Telephone Bradhu
FOR SELL
On 125th, 127th, 128th, 129th, 134th, 138th, 137th and 138th Streets some with electric lights and parque the owners will accept as low as $1 Balance same as rent.
Also beautiful houses on Edgecom with $2000 and up as first payment.
Many other good bargains with a FOR FURTHER PARTICULAR CO.
JOHN H. P.
NO. 224 WEST 137
PHONE AUDUBO
HENRY SOUTHGATE, Owner
'PHONE MORE
Offers for sale a very fine house on Edgecombe Avenue
I also offer one on West 130th St., as My terms are noted as the easiest mortgages run until paid out. Other then you are at the mercy of shark AT NEPPERHAN, YONKERS, I offer splendidly located; fully improved minutes to Broadway Subway. 200 down and balance monthly starts your building mortgage. Call and my terms.
AUCTION SALE
60 APARTMENTS OF SLIGHTLY
LIVED FURNITURE
LY UBED FURNITURE
25 Uplight and Player-Plano, Phonographs: Dining, Bedroom and Living-Suites, Suites, Chiclet Chiclet B dresses, Chiffonies, Brass and Enamel Beds, Springs, Mattresses; Baby Carriages, Pictures, Curtains, Brick-a-Brace, etc.
SALE, THURSDAY, JUNE 7TH
AT 10:30 A. M., AT
2237 FIFTH AVE., Cor. 128th St.
Dealers and Housekeepers Invited
Tel. 5650 Morningside.
104 W. 129th St. N. Y. City
FOR SALE—BARGAINS
Private house, all improvements.
West 123d St. Private house,
all improvements. West
136th St. Two nice lots, in
Brenx, near subway. Several
nice houses in Mt. Vernon. Sale
or lease. One 14 room house on
Edgecombe Ava.; kitchenettes
and baths on every floor. 12
room house, 2 baths, 136th St.,
near subway. Easy terms.
Zoeki K. Perry, Broker
Private House For Lease
11 rooms and bath, electric lights, all
improvements; term of 3 years. Apply
ROACH LEASING CO.
28 EDGECOMBE AVENUE
Audubon 1146
Elegant large and small rooms to let in newly decorated dwelling in West London. References absolutely necessary. Call at the office of
INSURANCE
BROADHURST 0003
Life, Health, Accident, Fire, Liability,
Rm.
AGENTS WANTED
JOHNSON,
118 WEST 126TH ST.
BEAVIS OUT RATE AUTO
SUPPLY CO.
All Kinds of Auto, Supplies . Tires
and Tubes. Ignition Parts.
2000 FIFTH AVE.
New York, 10001.
HENRY SOUTHGATE.
FOR SALE
Corner for sale; 5 gory store; 1
families. $28,000. Cash $4,500.
ALBMOUS
2230 7TH AVENUE.
CORONA
8 rooms, brick; all improve
ments; 2 lots. Cash $2,000.
7 rooms, brick; all improve
ments. Cash $1,000.
6 rooms; all improvements; driveway, $1,000 cash.
2 family, 11 rooms, 9 baths; all improvements. Cash $2,000
7 rooms; all improvements; 2 lots. Cash $1,500.
BROOKLYN
Anywhere you wish to live Je best sections from $1,000 cash up.
1 Have the Best.
If You Haven't Got Enough Cash
1 Will Make Arrangements.
Consult
W.P. DABNEY
229 CUMBERLAND ST.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Prospect ogag
Sight Seeing Cars
For All Occasions, Special Rates
for Clubs, Sunday School
and Churches.
THERESA SIGHT SEEING
CO.
123TH ST. & 7TH AVE.
Telephones: 3781 Morningside.
1681 Bingham.
AUTOMOBILE AUCTION
SALE
A fine selection of used pleasure and
emotional cars, located by different ocea,
are sold at automobile public auction.
MON, WED, THUR, and SAT
From no more than 8 p.m.
Call with a deposit — see
BROWNS AUTO SALES CORP
3rd Ave. One 11th Street
714. STUTVERANZ
SATURDAY No omission required when
contacting the office unless
been done then discharged by your
own or mail, unless consent.
Telephone Morningside 3701—3702
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Wednesday, June 6, 1923
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Books and Bayonets
WITHIN the last ten days and almost two of each other, cornerstones have been two new public buildings, the one that on 138 in 140th street near Lenox avenue that of the 15th Regiment Armory, 143rd Fifth avenue.
THE FORMER will minister to a fundal man need: the latter, to blind worship of each of War. The one, a preserver of the peace, the other, in the last analysis, a deserte frums of civilization.
TWEN when the cornerstone of the Armory shall Harlem was astir, windows were filled, nooks and standing room in the street that a premium, all because the god of war, his wares down the main streets is act. It was ever thus in all countries asomes.
TWEN WHEN THE CORNERSTONE of news was laid, except for the immediate block, greatly cared and comparatively few stops as momentous an occasion as the new school coming into being.
TWEN LONG will it be before frail man war continues to try to settle the woes of the light and by power?
TWEN Home, Carthage, Spain and modern all tried might and power and all of the miserably.
TWEN NOT the strong nations of today so far in the passing of empires which based upon self-desire and waged war to selfishness?
TWEN THINGS STAND today it is easy to do who seek means to abolish war, to duke idealists and futile dreamers. Yet the long side of self-assertion in the breasts uses of common folk which, if properly guides the god of war in his roughhoused station and consign him to the neither which he sprang. Hon. Chas. W. And used a worldwide human pulse when a series incident to laying of the cornerstone P. B. 139, he said that "this institution link in the chain with which civilization day bind the god of war." The simple nations must learn is that
WITHIN the last ten days and almost within sight of each other, cornerstones have been laid for two new public buildings, the one that of new P. S. 139 in 140th street near Lenox avenue, the other that of the 15th Regiment Armory, 143d street near Fifth avenue.
THE FORMER will minister to a fundamental human need: the latter, to blind worship of the Mcloch of War. The one, a preserver of the arts of peace, the other, in the last analysis, a destroyer of the fruits of civilization.
YET, when the cornerstone of the Armory was laid all Harlem was astir, windows were filled with craoning nocks and standing room in the streets was at a premium, all because the god of war was parading his wares down the main streets of the district. It was ever thus in all countries and in all times.
BUT WHEN THE CORNERSTONE of new P. S. 129 was laid, except for the immediate blocks nobody really cared and comparatively few stopped to witness so momentous an occasion as the process of a new school coming into being.
HOW LONG will it be before frail man wakes to the fact that his ills will continue to increase if he continues to try to settle the woes of the world by might and by power?
Greece, Rome, Carthage, Spain and modern Germany all tried might and power and all of them—failed mis-rely. DO NOT the strong nations of today see no lessons in the passing of empires which based their ideals upon self-destire and waged war to sustain such self-succes?
AS THINGS STAND today it is easy to deride those who seek means to abolish war, to dub them hollow idealists and futile dreamers. Yet there is a rising tide of selfassertion in the breasts of the masses of common folk which, if properly guided, will unhorse the god of war in his roughshod march over civilization and consign him to the neither depths from which he sprang. Hon. Chas. W. Anderson touched a worldwide human pulse when, at the ceremonies incident to laying of the cornerstone of new P. S. 139, he said that "this institution is one more link in the chain with which civilization will some day bind the god of war." The simple lesson which nations must learn is that "No house can stand,
No kingdom can endure,
Built on the crumbling rock
Of self-desire;
Nothing is living stone,
Nothing is sure,
That is not whitened
In the social fire."
AT "SOCIAL FIRE" is the school, the
if you please, where the youth of the
he taught to take education "straight" a
into the world with both feet on the group
is part in passing his tolerance and enlist
on to others who seek to remedy the w
is the bypath of war.
Negro and Prohibition Enforcer
SUPPORTED BY THE WETS in his campaign.
THAT "SOCIAL FIRE" is the school, the public school if you please, where the youth of the world may be taught to take education "straight" and go out into the world with both feet on the ground to act his part in passing his tolerance and enlightenment on to others who seek to remedy the world's illia via the hypbath of war.
The Negro and Prohibition Enforcement
SUPPORTED BY THE WETS in his campaign for Governor of the State because he favored the return of light wines and beer, there was little left for Governor Smith to do except to sign the Cuvillier bill repealing the Mullan-Gage prohibition enforcement act. New York State was, is, and unless greater security is shown by Federal prohibition agents in the future than in the past, shall remain wet. It is wet for two reasons: First, because a large number of its citizens are opposed to prohibition and, second, because there is so much corruption in its officials that it is next to impossible to enforce such a measure.
THE AMOUNT OF WISDOM shown by Governor Smith in signing the repealer over the protests of leading Republicans in the State and thousands of members of his own party outside of the State, remaining to be seen. New York City is undoubtedly with him, and we have every reason to believe that the majority of the voters in the State are with him.
FROM its colored man's point of view the enforcement of the prohibition amendment to the Constitution 'urnishes an interesting and vital side-light, which does not necessarily concern the subject of prohibition itself. This side-light concerns itself with the enforcement of the Constitution of the United States and its amendments over so-called state's rights. Grandfather classes and Jim Crow law, which clearly violate the Constitution, have been uphold by the Supreme Court of the United States on the ground that to nullify them would violate the sovereignty of the State. It was on this ground that the more or less Liberal New York WORLD opposed the Dyer Anti-Lynch Bill. Democrats everywhere are in favor of states' rights because they are left free to determine who vote and who should not vote; who shall abide
by the law and who shall not. Governor Smith in signing the bill has upheld the traditions of his party.
BUT THE BEST INTEREST OF THE NEGRO will be found in the enforcement of the Constitution over the laws of the individual states which has always been incorporated in the general principles of U.S. Republican party, and for this reason he ought to be willing to be denied whiskey, wine and beer if such a denial will give backbone to the supreme law of the land.
PRESIDENT HARDING has promised to see that the prohibition amendment and the Volstead act are enforced in this State even if he is compelled to use the army and navy in doing it. This too, furnishes an interesting precedent, for if the President has power to use the armed forces of the nation to enforce the Eighteenth Amendment, he likewise has power to use these same forces to enforce the Thirteenth. Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.
EXPRESSED BY CONTEMPORARIES
(From the Nation).
On May 5, 300 Negroes passed through Jack Miss, and 552 through Chattanooga, all bound Industrial work in the North. The same day a cry set up by the deserted planters, the inspector of the Tennessee Department of L arrested Negroes found near the employment sites in Memphis. Governor McLeod of South China has instructed sheriffs to enforce State law requiring licenses for labor agents; on May Charles Hampton was arrested at Greenboro for $500 for 'secretly enticing Negro labor to go to Pennsylvania. In Petersburg, Va., Edy Karabulus, in charge of twenty-five Negroes born for a New Jersey cement plant, was arrested for $1,000 for soliciting labor without a citizen. There are not arguments to convince awakening people that they should passively a further exploitation. The black citizens of Jack Miss, have drawn up an extraordinary protest, that they are leaving the State because Negro feels that his life is not safe in Mississippi. The South is awakening to the meaning of exodus; on May 19-meetings of white citizens held at every Mississippi courthouse to discuss situation. Economic pressure may finish the war of liberation begun in the Civil War.
On May 6, 300 Negroes passed through Jackson, Miss., and 552 through Chattanooga, all bound for industrial work in the North. The same day, at a cry set up by the deserted planters, the chief inspector of the Tennessee Department of Labor arrested Negroes found near the employment agencies in Memphis. Governor MqLeod of South Carolina has destructed sheriffs to enforce State laws requiring licenses for labor agents; on May 22 Charles Hampton was arrested at Greenabroor and fined $500 for "secretly enticing Negro laborers" to go to Pennsylvania. In Petersburg, Va., Edward Karabnik, in charge of twenty-five Negroes bound for a New Jersey cement plant, was arrested and fined $1,000 for soliciting labor without a city license. There are not arguments to convince an awakening people that they should passively awaken further exploitation. The black citizens of Jackson, Miss., have drawn up an extraordinary protest, stating that they are leaving the State because "the Negro feels that his life is not safe in Mississippi." The South is awakening to the meaning of the oxodus; on May 19-meetings of white citizens were held at every Mississippi courthouse to discuss the situation. Economic pressure may finish the task of liberation begun in the Civil War.
Whom Do You Hate?
(From the Indianapolis Freeman).
The Freeman hates the four-fusher. Whom do you hate? He is in every race, but it seems that the Negro has more than his share. Our bluffing, make bellee sense of Negro is legion. Self-appointed, self-conceited, shrewd, bold and thoroughly dishonest, he poses as a great race leader and usually goes away with it. His efforts are given up, and he is not a victim of this and claiming credit for them. Little indeed has ever been done for Negroes without his allied initiative and support. He is a veritable chanticleer who has received himself as well as the public so long until he really believes that he causes the sun to rise each morning by his crowing.
The Freeman hates the four-fusher. Whom you hate? He is in every race, but it seems that the Negro has more than his share. Our bluff make belle type of Negro is legion. Self polished, self-conceited, shrewd, bold and thouroughed, he poses as a great race leader, usually gets away with it. His efforts are given mainly, to finding out the certain drift of the and claiming credit for them. Little indeed ever been done for Negroes without his all initiative and support. He is a veritable chantier who has received himself as well as the public long until he really believes that he causes sun to rise each morning by his crowing.
Sometimes he is a politician who makes gull white office seekers believe that he absolutely trots the Negro vote. As a matter of fact, he trots nothing. He shines in Republican parties. Sometimes he is a preacher who speaks avers, for his entire congregation. Sometimes he an editor whose journal is the best ever, the most widely circulated and influential. He may be a physician, a teacher, or a lawyer, whom cloistances have given a chance for self-adulter Among us Negroes, he may be a foquacious bar a favorite waiter, or a bumptious porter. He is old voice in the wilderness, perfectly sure, with a single rosson for his assurance, that he 'tells the sentiment of Negroes on any and all import matters or movements.
The objectionable thing about the four-fusher not that he has opinions, for he rarely has one that he talks overmuch, for he rarely says anything. To be fair, he has the right to his opinion, has the right to be heard. He has the right, we ever his profession or job, to all that is due. He does not have the right to barter and ex his race for the benefit of his own vanity or poor book. He does not have the right to be disloyal. His alleged influence should be backed by factual reality and worth.
Really Too Freeman hates his four-fushing, him. Usually, he is a likable follow, nevertheless, his ubiquity, his audacity, his monumental hypocrisy make him a menace to the race. The sooons wholesome, insistent, courageous, sane, effective gro public opinion puts him on his merits, the be it will be for the Negro race.
Sometimes he is a politician who makes gullible white office seekers believe that he absolutely controls the Negro vote. As a matter of fact, he controls nothing. He shines in Republican party politics. Sometimes he is a preacher who speaks, he avers, for his entire congregation. Sometimes he is an editor whose journal is the best ever, the most widely circulated and influential. He may be a physician, a teacher, or a lawyer, whom circumstances have given a chance for self-adulation. Among us Negroes, he may be a loquacious barber, a favorite waiter, or a bumptious porter. He is any old voice in the wilderness, perfectly sure, without a single reason for his assurance, that he 'loquently' the sentiment of Negroes on any and all important matters of movements.
The objectionable thing about the four-fusher is that he has no opinions for he has has one, or that he talks overmuch, for he rarely says anything. To be fair, he has the right to his opinion. He has the right to be heard. He has the right, whatever his profession or job, to all that is due him. He does not have the right to barter and exploit his race for the benefit of his own vanity or pocket book. He does not have the right to disheastern. His alleged influence should be backed by facts, by reality and worth.
Really Too Freeman hates his four-fushing, not him. Usually, he is a likable follow, nevertheless his ubiquity, his audacity, his monumental hypocrisy make him a menace to the race. The sooner a man becomes a menace the greater the grop public opinion puts him on his merits, the better it will be to irr the Negro race.
Letters to the Editor
Likes "Blood-Money"
To the Editor of the Amsterdam News:
Dear Sir: I take this opportunity to tell you how very much a family of three enjoy reading the wonderful story, "Blood-Money." We are so eager for the next installment we can hardly wait for the edition to be published. Mr. Rogers is certainly to be congratulated on writing such a wonderful story, and I am sure the Amsterdam News is equally fortunate in having it printed in each week's issue. Long may Mr. Rogers live and when "Blood-Money" has finished running, like "Oliver Twist," give us more.
Dear Sir: I take this opportunity to tell you very much a family of three enjoy reading the *dearful story*, "Blood-Money." We are so eager the next installment we can hardly wait for edition to be published. Mr. Rogers is certain he be congratulated on writing such a wonderful st and I am sure the Amsterdam News is equally tunate in having it printed in each week's *Long may Mr. Rogers live and when Blood-Mo has finished running, like "Oliver Twist," give more.
**THREE CONSTANT READERS.**
LEST WE FORGET
We present herewith a partial list of the work
charitable organizations of New York City on
Broadway.
NEW YORK CITY—New York Urban League,
Seventh avenue, New York Hubert, ex exe; Hope
Nursery, 23 W. 132d street; Mrs. R. K. D.
Columbus Hill Day Nursery, 203 W. 62d street;
colle House, 203 West 62d street; Rev. H.
Head Worker, St. Cyrane Hill, 1873 W.
street Mrs. J. K. Johnson; White Rose Working
House, 203 W. 190th street; Katy Pergusson H
143 West 190th street.
BROOKLYN-Hill-Diocca Settlement Nursery,
Fleet place; Mrs. R. N. Parkin, Women's Ch
Club, 178 Greene Avenue; Home for Aged Coh
We present herewith a partial list of the worthy charitable organizations of New York City and Brooklyn:
NEW YORK CITY—New York Urban League, 2803 Seventh avenue, James H. Hubert, ex ex; Hope day Nursery, 23 W. 1924 street; Mrs. R. K. Dahney, Columbia Hill Day Nursery, 302 W. 694 street; Lincoln House, 302 West 694 street; Rev. Holmes Head Worther, St. Cypripan Mingue, 179 W. 624 street; Mrs. J. H. Johnson; White Rose Working Girl Home, 302 West 1804 street; Katy Purguenen House, 163 West 1804 street.
BROOKLYN—Dincoln Settlement Nursery, 105 Fleet place; Mrs. R. N. Parin, Women's Charity Club, 576 Grussen avenue; Home for Aged Colored People, 1058 St. John's place.
"Blood-Money"
Ninth Installment.
AFTER the sudden rebuff by Philip just as the point of yielding to more firmly convinced than anything about the robbery of the had he taken up his hat as if turned on them so furiously: Lucille was exasperated o felt that there was at least one could speak the word that w that person? Was it Philip Bruce, or all three? She f least knew more than he can stand he seemed to have possible he had sworn to a private detective had told her the story about Philip's being the murder. As she reason over and over in her mind, da in hallucination, to arrive at And yet it was really so far her bewildered brain were power, some X-ray that couable her to point out to the
AFTER the sudden rebuff of Mrs. Walton and herself by Philip just as the latter appeared to be on the point of yielding to their entreaties, Lucille was more firmly convinced than ever that Philip knew something about the robbery of the examination papers. Why had he taken up his hat as if he were going out, then had turned on them so furiously?
Lucille was exasperated over the whole situation. She felt that there was at least one person in Nortonville who could speak the word that would set John free. Who was that person? Was it Philip or Gaston Leigh or Prof. Bruce, or all three? She felt sure that Prof. Bruce at least knew more than he cared to tell. On the witness stand he seemed to have been shielding Philip. It was possible he had sworn to a lie over Philip's alibi, as the private detective had told her that he was unable to verify the story about Philip's being at the theatre the night of the murder. As she reasoned the facts and suspicions over and over in her mind, day in and day out, she seemed, in hallucination, to arrive at the solution of the mystery. And yet it was really so far away, so baffling. Oh, that her bewildered brain were endowed with some magic power, some X-ray that could pierce the gloom and enable her to point out to the whole world the guilty one.
She decided to make an appeal to Prof. Bruce and called at his home. He received her kindly and listened with evident sympathy as she expressed her firm conviction of John's innocence and Philip's guilt. "Please help me, Prof. Bruce," she implored.
"My dear Miss Page," replied Prof. Bruce, I am very, very sorry for you, but there isn't the least doubt in by mind that Mr. Walton did it. The evidence is conclusive. My only advice is that you forget Walton. He has deceived you from start to finish. Mr. McLean and I as good as caught him in the act."
"But he is innocent," persisted Lucille. "You look so good and kind, professor. Won't you help me?"
"But forgetting everything else, Miss Page, how did his hair get in my wife's fingers when she was dead as he admits himself. He did it, and there's no doubt about it."
"Couldn't the police have put the hair there?" she asked.
"Why. Lieut. Childs showed it to me before Walton was brought into this room the night of the murder."
Prof. Bruce advanced a step nearer to her and continued impressively:
"Let me tell you that that hair and the fingerprints on the examination papers are incontestable proofs that Walton did the deed. No two things in the world are alike—no two human beings, no two sides of one face, no two blades of grass, no two grains of dust, no two hairs nor no two fingerprints, whether from the same person or some one else. Everything that is created by nature is different from every other thing. Duplication exists only in the realm of the artificial. This fact if nothing else convinces me absolutely of Walton's guilt." "But isn't it said that there is an exception to every rule?" stammered Lucille.
"Except in this case," said the professor authoritatively.
"Walton wanted to win you and to do so has lied to you. He was a bright student—the brightest freshman—but after telling you about his being bribed he simply couldn't take the chances of losing."
Utterly crushed by the professor's logic she sank into the nearest chair. The fear that she had so stubbornly fought at last seemed to have taken complete possession of her. She wept along.
"It isn't true! It isn't true," she sobbed. She made the denial by sheer effort of will.
"I'm sorry to have hurt you so," sympathised Prof. Bruce in a voice that convince her. He had knelt beside her, and was patting her shoulders.
She arose. There was something about the man that struck her as being horribly insincere. She faced him angrily.
"I don't believe you. I don't believe you," she stormed. "You do know something about this. You lied on the stand."
"I know nothing about it," he replied stiffly.
The next instant she was pleading again. "Oh, professor, won't you save him? I love him so. If he dies, I will die too. Philip Brockenridge robbed those papers, didn't he? Won't you tell the truth before it is too late? Put yourself in John's place."
"I know nothing about it," he replied coldly, but I shall go down to see Lieut. Childs and tell him what you have told me about Brockenridge. Where can I reach you? Are you still at the beauty parlor? She answered the affirmative. At the door he said:
"I promise to do what I can for you and will let you know."
The visit had proved a terrible blow to Lestella's morale. Yes, according to John's own admission, Mr. Bruce was dead when he found her.
He did it for me, she said to herself, he did for me. Why hadn't he said that she was alive when he entered? she asked herself. How easily all could have been explained in that case. Then he might have escaped with a prison sentence. But she suddenly remembered that
ER XX
of Mrs. Walton and herself
matter appeared to be on the
their entreaties. Lucille was
never that Philip knew some-
one examination papers. Why
he were going out, then had
over the whole situation. She
one person in Nortonville who
would set John free. Who was
so or Gaston Leigh or Prof.
elt sure that Prof. Bruce at
red to tell. On the witness
seen shielding Philip. It was
lie over Philip's alibi, as the
that he was unable to verify
at the theatre the night of
the facts and suspicions
y in and day out, she seemed,
the solution of the mystery.
away, so baffling. Oh, that
endowed with some magic
old pierce the gloom and en-
whole world the guilty one.
the fact of his not having said so was really in his favor. Did it not prove that he was no cool, calculating murderer? She recalled that this fact had not been brought out at the trial, and decided to call once more on the governor and point it out to him.
Suddenly she became aware of a car being drawn up at the sidewalk near her. Someone called her name.
Turning she saw Gaston Leigh. He was smiling at her. Instinctively she shrank away. How she hated him!
Ordinarily she would not have noticed him, but the thought instantly struck her that she might learn something about the murder from him.
"Good morning, Mr. Leigh." she replied with a forced smile.
"I see you are worrying too much. Lu—Miss Page. If you keep this up you'll lose the reputation of being the prettiest girl in Nortonville," she said, leaning over the side of the car. He added, open-ended: "I'll go to way to Madame Jean's, aren't you? Hop in and I'll take you here." She made a more forward as if to accept; then she suddenly remembered how John might misinterpret it should it get to his ears.
"No, thank you," she refused. She crossed the grass and came toward the car saying: "But Mr. Leigh, won't you tell me the truth as to whether you approached John—Mr. Walton—to offer him money to stay away? Please tell me if it is true or not. It means so much to me. I swear that I shan't breathe it to a single soul. I just want to be satisfied for myself. Don't you please?" "I never did." answered Leigh in a matter of fact tone, "and I'm sorry that you of all persons should believe that tale." He added lightly: "You did me a great injustice in court when you accused me before everyone on more hearsay. But I gladly forgive you. I forgive you anything, Lucillie." "Lucillie," he continued, "you are wanting your sympathy on Walton, you are losing your good looks. I have always thought the world of you. Can't we be friends?"
"No, Mr. Leigh," she replied fully, "we can't be anything, and I wish you'd stop calling me on the 'phone. Let me tell you once for all that the men of my race are perfectly good enough for me. There was a time when they were slaves, when they were down, and we colored women had no one to look up to. But that day is over. We have men in our race equal in every respect to yours now. They have just as much brains and character, and are making their way in the world in spite of everything that your race puts in their path. Let me tell you once for all that the company of the men of my race is good enough for me."
"But—" began Leigh.
She cut him short.
"Would you marry a colored woman?" she demanded in the same frigid tone. "Would you introduce her your mother and sisters?"
"Well, stammered Leigh," as for me I just as soon would. But you know what the sentiment is."
"Let me tell you then." she replied, "that before I'd associate with a man who wouldn't have the courage to own me in public I'd kill myself first.
"But isn't it a fact that it is some of the hidden relations of life that are worth the most, are the most precious?" paried Leigh.
"Absolutely not in this case. If a man really thinks highly of a woman he wants the whole world to see her and to join him in admiration of her. Diamonds are for display. Don't call me up a again or I'll complain to the police." "Walden, was a fine specimen of the colony from you we've brought home from France." "He was a better man than either you or Boehneridge. He had more brains than both of you put together." "A smash—and a murderer," he retorted, then added adamantly to the avowance the door of the car wide
By J. A. Rogers
Author of "From Man to Superman"
By the Killey Newspaper Feature Service.
Copyright 1923
open, "How beautiful you look when you're angry. Jump in and let's be friends."
She ignored his invitation.
She ignored his invitation. "He was so good that both of you were afraid of him and tried to buy him off. When he wouldn't you tried to rob those papers yourself, and lied on him, but I'm going to expose you if I have to come back from my grave to do it."
CHAPTER XXL
What Prof. Bruce had said in his calm, dogmatic way about no two things being alike had returned again and again to torture her all that day. Now she would believe John innocent, now she would believe that he did it in order to keep his promise to win the prize. The thought became an obsession with her.
"Child, you'll lose your mind if you keep on like this," warned Mrs. Montgomery.
The next evening on her way home she passed the single colored barber shop in Nortonville. The question of the dissimilarity of her became a monomania with her, and she looked inside, a thing she did not ordinarily do.
Suddenly she became aware of a large bright colored label struck on the show window. It read:
"Use Lusterine. It makes the hair a glossy black."
Underneath was crudely lettered the following: "Hair straightened, $1." Suddenly she recalled an elderly white woman who dyes hair she had been curling at Madame Jean's that afternoon. "Don't it funny?" she mused, as she read the sign. "White people kink their hair while our people straighten theirs." A few steps further on a thought pricked her like a red hot needle. She thought: Is it not possible that while the hair of no two persons is alike in a natural state might they not become so under artificial treatment? Might not dye and the use of heat, for instance, be exacted to the hair that had been in Mr. Brun's gargers was almost straight and black. Could not some one else have so straightened his hair or used some sort of dressing that would render it like John's? Might not her belief that Philip had employed some colored man to do the deed be right after all.
As the thought took shape in her mind, she murmured joyously: "He is innocent! He is innocent! Thank God." She quickened her steps to the police station. Here she told Lieut. Childs her suspicions.
He listened to her patiently. "I shall have a chemical test of the hair made tomorrow," he assured her eagerly. "I hope it turns out as you say, Miss Page. In spite of the strong evidence against Mr. Walton, I have great trouble in believing him guilty. He has all the appearance of an innocent man, and I say this from thirty-two years' experience with criminals. We don't want to see an innocent man go to his death. I for one would never forgive myself. My only aim is to that the law is carried out, and that every one in Nortonville, black or white, gets an even break. I'll be more than gled to do all I can."
"Tomorrow!!" exclaimed Lucille, who had been waiting impatiently for him to stop. "Can't it be done tonight, now?"
"Not before tomorrow. No one's at the office now. Leave the matter to me. I'll attend to it myself."
"Can I be present when the test is made?"
"Sure; meet me at the court house at nine tomorrow." He conducted her to the door. "Cheer up, have a rest in parting, I believe you have all done at last. You have done some clever thinking, and deserve to have it turn out right."
That night Lucille slept fitfully in expectation of the morrow's decision. It was a night filled with dreams, in some of which she heard the chemist saying it wasn't John's hair, and in others he declared it was.
(To be continued next week).
COL. YOUNG'S BODY
WASHINGTON, June 1.—With fitting ceremonies and full military honors, the, body of Col. Charles Young was buried in Arlington National Cemetery Friday.
WASHINGTON, D. C., June 5.—The annual commencement expoises of the Frelighhuysen University took place Friday night in the John Wesley A. M. E. Bion Church. Among the speakers were Hon. Louis F. Post, former assistant Secretary of Labor, and Dr. Garnett C. Wilkinson, assistant superintendent of public schools. Others on the program were Rev. Dr. W. O. Carrington, president Jesse V. Lawson, and Dr. Frank E. Hearns.
MNE, SUSIMLA DEVI
TO ADDRESS FORUM
Mme. Suninda Dovi will speak
before the North Islamic Community
Forum. Public Library, 162 West
18th Street, Thursday evening.
June 7, 1998, at 8:00 o'clock: Subject:
"Social and Political Outlook
for the Female of India."
-: Keeping Fit-:
By E. ELLIOTT RAWLINS, M.D.
The Increasing Sterility in Negro Women
IT is a proven fact that Negroes are migrating to the large cities. From the southern rural communities of the United States and the tropical villages of the West Indies they have taken up their abode in large cities of the north and west.
Thousands and thousands of Negro women in the United States cannot now be considered of the peonage and lowly class. Their ideals and ideas have changed with the state of society in which they now live. Negro women of the large cities of the United States are now grappling with urban problems—that of making money and securing superior educational advantages; others are entering into a life of excessive amusement and excitement and social climbing; they all are being weaned away from the old ideals and ideas of the heartside; they have been caught in the congestion, vanities and selflessness of the "big" cities. The old gospel of "Be fruitful; multiply and replenish the earth" has been superseded by a modern creed of "Practice birth control and enjoy yourself."
Negro women in the large cities are not entering into wedlock as early as if days gone by; an increased materialism, social cravings, a desire for pleasure, and the increasing irresponsibility of the
Dean Brown to Address Ministers
HAMPTON. Va., June 5.—The Rev. Dr. Charles R. Brown of New Haven, Conn., dean of the Yale Diversity School and well-known author of books on religion, including "The Religion of a Layman." "The Master's Way" and "Social Message of the Modern Pulpit" will deliver a course of lectures on "The Art of Preaching" at the tenth annual meeting of the Ministers' Conference of Hampton Institute, which will be held from June 25, through June 29, according to Rev. Laurence Fenninger, chaplain of Hampton Institute.
Conference Lecturers.
Conference Lecturers.
The conference lecturers will include Rev. Edward A. Clarke, D.D., pastor of St. John's A. M. E. Church, Cleveland, O.; Dr. James H. Dillard, president of the Jeanes and Slater Funds, Charlotteville, Va.; Prof. Kemper Fullerton, professor of Old Testament in the Oblerlin Graduate School of Theology, Oberlin, O.; Rev. William P. Hayes, D.D., pastor of M. Olivet Baptist Church, New York; Rev. Mordecalor W. Johnson, D.D., pastor of the 'First Baptist Church, Charleston, W. Va.; Rt. Rev. Lynnwood W. Kyles, D.D., bishop of the A. M. E. Zion Church, Winston-Salem, N.C.; Rev. Hermann N. Morse, director of publicity of the Presbyterian Board of Home Missions, New York, and Franklin O. Nichols, associate director, Department of Field Organization, American Social Hygiene Association, New York.
Correcting Faults
By Edith Lechridge Reid.
MANY a well-meaning mother is laboring under a false idea of what really constitutes a training in right habits and proper attitudes in her child. Often she thinks she is correcting a fault when in reality she is only nagging at the child, or at best shooting very wildly around the mark.
Here is Edward. He is carless, with his napkin. "I've been trying for six months to get him to fold it and put it in the ring," his mother observed, as we were clearing the table; "but he does it only about one time in ten." Now Edward's mother was actually sincere in her remark, imaginal! By her own admission she had struggled six months on the one little point of discipline. At the next meal I watched Edward. It was noon, and before he was quite through his lunch his boy chum rang the doorbell and Edward dropped everything and dashed to school, of course without folding his napkin. At dinner that night we were going for a ride and everyone hurried. Edward included, and no one paid any attention whether he folded his napkin or not. You mothers get the point. It would have taken perhaps a week of time and patience. to sit right there at the table and keep an active boy right there also until he had learned to fold his napkin automatically. Anything worth while takes time, but very few points in children's discipline require six months if property handled. If we make a child do a thing himself one time in ten, and then do it for him the other nine times, it is absolutely energy wasted, all the old garment which is too thin and worn to hold the stitches.
Training children is like a bus.
men are the chief causes. The result is a late marriage, with its resulting sterility either acquired or self-imposed. Immorality, with its resulting venereal diseases, is also increasing among the Negro women of the large cities; a large part of every city physician's practice is treatment for inflammation and congestion of the organs peculiar to women. This invariably leads to acquired sterility.
There are certain advantages gained by the Negroes coming to the large cities. These are financial, educational, social and political. Yet there are certain social factors entering into the modern development of Negro women in the large cities that are lessening in a great degree their pro-creative qualities. The only ray of hope is in the women still remaining in the rural sections of the country. In them maternal fruitfulness is still both a desire and an accomplishment.
ness proposition: we get just what we go after. If we invest patience, time and thought in the task of correcting a child's habits the results are inevitably successful. It isn't always easy, nothing worth while is; but a week spent in correcting a fault takes less attention and energy than nagging for months with no definite object achieved after all.
Another point is very important in correcting faults. He very sure the fault is a real one, that it bears directly on character training. If it is not one on which you are willing to expend time and patience to correct, then why mention it at all? But if a habit is really annoying and one that will prove embarrassing to the child and his friends through his life, then attack it at once and definitely and finally uproot it. Concentrate on that one thing until you and the child have conquered, it, and never again will you have that particular trial to meet.
The Poets' Corner
Poems submitted for publication in "The Poet's Corner" will not be returned unless accompanied with a self- addressed and stamped envelope.
Builders.
A
ARE you building a mansion or
cabin, my friend, in the
land of the sweet bye and
bye?
Are you building in frowns or
in bright, happy smiles, or has
indifference for you broken
grounds?
Have you laid your foundation on
Faith and Love, with Hope for
your cornerstone—
With beams of Friendship and
Trust for your roof, secure
against winds or storms?
Will Charity sweet form the wide,
solid door that swings outward
with Brotherly Love.
With Tolerance, Good-will and
Kindness combined forming
ceiling, and lathes and floor.
Are your windows the kind that
ever face the paths, and shine
with a cheerful gleam.
Across the dark valleys the pilgrims must trread as lowly they
march to the stream
Across whose dark waters we all must pass are we reach that dear land of our dreams? ...
Are you building with prayer, with sighs and tears: are you building in fear and pain
That will yet be a joy when the
struggle is o'er, and your
crosses will then be your gain?
The flowers that blossomed and
withered so soon you will find
in your garden there.
The song of the bird you delighted to hear will trill on the soft, fragrant air:
All things you have loved but lost,
almost your toys that you could
not keep
You will find again in the sweet bye
and bye, that land of the
beautiful sleep.
Go forth, then, and hasten your
mansion to build, nor loiter or
stray from the way.
Arise, do your building while yet
the sun shines, go build while
'tis today.
For soon on your path the dart
night will descend—too late
then to wall and to ween.
When the moon in the West calls
each star to her breast, and
the sun twins this old earth to
sleep.