Amsterdam News
Wednesday, July 25, 1923
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
FOUR KILLED IN DETROIT
12 PAGES
Complete in Two Sections
3c. IN GREATER
NEW YORK
ELSEWHERE 5c
VOL. XVII. NO. 30
HINES MARKS TIME TO LET IN WHITES
Rejects Plan for All-White Staff of Doctors and Nurses, With Colored Maids to Nurses to Do Actual Nursing.
(Crusader Service.)
WASHINGTON, July 24. Director Hines of the Veterans' Bureau intimated today in a statement to the public that while the Bureau is still willing to subordinate its own policies and the rights of the colored people and their injured veterans to the dictation of the Ku Klux Klan of Alabama, the whites must move fast with a new plan for white control of the hospital on Gum Hines (hero
Shot By Wife; Man Held for Having Gun
Following a family quarrel at their home, 79 Old Broadway, Thomas Turner, an elevator operator and his wife, Ella Turner, were arraigned in the Washington Height Court on Monday. Turner displayed two scars, one on either side of his nose, where he said his wife had shot him, the bullet entering immediately under the eye on the right side of his face, and coming out on the left, inflicting a Seek Wound. Turner was discharged a few days later from the hospital only to see a charge of illegal possession of a revolver. Patrolman Duggen of the 60th Precinct said that when he entered Turner's home after the shooting he found the weapon with one cartridge lying on a chair, and that when he asked him about it the defendant said that it was his and that he had bought it in St. Louis. Hall for Mrs. Turner which had been fired at $1,000 was reduced to $1,000 for appearance in General Sessions. Turner is held in $500 for Special Sessions.
"From Superman to Man"
Another Story by J. A. Rogers, Author of "BLOOD-MONEY"
"From Superman to Man" has been harred from the libraries of New York and Chicago because it hints the idea of white supremacy.
BEGIN READING IT NEXT WEEK IN
The Amsterdam News
INTOSTATE HOSPITAL
BOULIN'S NATIONAL DETEC-
TIVE AGENCY
Uptown 2378 Th Ave. Awd. 9185
Apartment Protected. Exports
Pursued. 8349 Cart.
Might, 8360 Bradhurst.
Democratic Excursion One Battle Royal After Another; 2000 Attend
Perverts of All Kinds in Evidence As White Guests of Ferdinand Q. Morton Look on.
In the opinion of several hundred of the two thousand people who attended the excursion of the Williams Banks Democratic Club of the 19th A.-D., recently, it was quite the most disgraceful affair held in a long time. There were fights galore and bootlegging and gambling were some of the outstanding features of the day.
The excursion was scheduled to leave the foot of West 182d street at 9:30 a.m., but did not leave until about 11:05 a.m. In the first place the management did not reach the pliers until nearly two hours after the crowd had congregated.
No sooner than the heat was put in motion, than the battle of words began, mixed with the opening up of temporary rum stations. By the time the ship had reached up the river about two miles, the word battles had changed to fist fights, and what remained of the word battalions had taken on the proportions of so much noise that no one present knew nor cared what anyone else was talking about.
When Yonkers was reached several black eyes were apparent; and many dunce crap games and three card Monte games were in full swing.
Harlem Streets Are Than They Are
Publication of Letter in A. Immediate Response
A Harlem Citizen's op-commissioner A. A. Taylor sterdam News two weeks ago. The street of Harlem are
When the good bishop of Grand Rp publicity called up the king Sing Prison could be viewed in the distance one lady got erased and completely removed by force a dark brown dress from the person of another, whom she claimed was her wife, and that if she caught her promenading the decks again she would miss both to places with a certain social weapon.
One very remarkable thing about this excursion was, that numbers of the women present smoked cigarettes throughout the trip without the slightest show of shame.
There were two kinds of women aboard the boat according to their own announcements and declarations from time to time—the masculine woman and the feminine woman, and most of the fights and cutting scraps were caused by the antagonism evident between the women-men and the women.
The men while drank and nolay and gambing, were not as warriors as the two kinds of women passengers, and did not engage in not provoke one-third of the fights. The conduct of this class of new women was a revelation.
The greatest spectacle of the day, however, was not the sight of pickpockets, male and female, at work, not the drunkenness and vulgarity of the men and women nor even the half undeness of the battlers after each engagement; but the sight of the great and mighty Ferdinand Q. Morton, seated in an exclusive portion of the beat with his white friends and Negro hirelings seated around him like a great Indian chief of ancient times, adored and honored because of his sublime majesty and hungly glory. Mr. Morton's subjects were displaying their worst conduct for the amusement of these white strangers.
We are at a loss to understand what fun can the leader of the United Colored Democracy find in having these white people on the boat to see the worst elements in the race outvagining the vulgar. It was noticeable that during the exercises ashore Mr. Morton kept a safe distance from the crowd and had a fine spot for himself and his white friends to see the vulgarity ashore as he and they had witnessed before aboard.
The trip down was just like the trip up, with the exception that a gentleman who tried to separate two ladies in a light get's four-inch razor cut on his arm, and was attended by Dr. Hudson Oliver. This year's excursion was an improvement over last year's, in the fact that no deaths occurred. On the whole the management displayed very little regard for the life of the patrons. In the poor arrangements which it employed in getting the people on and off of the ship. As a matter of fact, one man fell overboard trying to get off.
WATCH FOR THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF AMSTERDAM NEWS. HOTEL TATTLER AND PENNSYLVANIA RED CAPS COMBINED ATLANTIC CITY EXCURSION, SUNDAY, AUGUST 16.
Amsterdam News
Harlem Streets Are Now Cleaner
Than They Have Been in Years
Publication of Letter in Amsterdam News Meets With
Immediate Response by Commissioner
Taylor.
A Harlem Citizen's open letter to Street Cleaning
Commissioner A. A. Taylor, which appeared in The Am-
sterdam News two weeks ago, met with a hearty response.
The streets of Harlem are cleaner today than they have
been in recent years. Dismounted street chalk and seal
change all these conditions and appears about by super-
natural powers. A representative from the Commission-
er's office called at the office of The Amsterdam News and
gave assurance that street cleaning was the Commission-
er's job and that he was not afraid of it.
Two Arrested in Garden City, Long Island; Charged With Many Brooklyn Robberies.
After a search lasting over three months the police authorities are confident that they have at last caught the one who shot George Ashton, colored, living at 1979 West Fourth street, Coney Island, gatekeeper of the Long Island Railroad crossing at Atlantic avenue and Milford street, Brooklyn, last June. Ashton was shot from a bandit car that appeared at the crossing at the time the gates were down. The bandits had demanded that Ashton let them be. H₂ refused, and when the train passed and the car had made the crossing, someone within turned and fired four shots at him, one of which struck him in the back.
He also stated that drivers of street cleaning carts, tracks and wagons are not authorized to "cause" out the residents of the district. "If your investigators and reporter," he told us, "see an employee of the Street Cleaning Department taking into himself the powers of the Mayor and the Police Department when making his rounds, all you have to do is take his number or the number of the vehicle he is driving and turn it into the Department. We will not stand for our employees abusing the citizens of Harlem."
Employees of the Street Cleaning Department are paid by the city and it should not be necessary to tip them to get them to take your rubbish away. Be sure, though, that the regulations of the Department are complied with.
It is against the law to mix garbage and ashes and paper should be used carefully.
On the first trip in the morning the wagons collect ashes; on the second trip garbage. Paper is collected by a segregat, to cast. Don't get mad if driver collecting ashes refuses to take your garbage, and violates it. It is against the regu-
Bandits Who Shot Island R. R. W.
Two Arrested in Garden C With Many Broo
After a search lasting of authorities are confident that one who shot George Ashton, Fourth street, Coney Island, Railroad crossing at Atlantic Brooklyn, last June. Ashton that appeared at the crossing down. The bandits had dembe. He refused, and when he had made the crossing, some four shots at him, one of which arrested are: Joseph Fulton his wife, Rene Fulton, and Brent Mouer, all white. All are charged with committing a series of abbreviations in Brooklyn in Mar. The were arrested at Garden City L. 2.
The arrest of the alleged benefit trials said to have been indirectly due to their circumstances. In the setting the fish and game laws of Indiana. The three week fishing onlay in a spot protected against troutmen. leaving their site in the pond. They were arrested and gave their addresses as Little Fall, N. Y.
Trace Bondit Car,
shooting, episode had
picked a vibrus search for
Colored Bootleggers BAIL FIXED Spring New Stent
(Crusader Service.)
WASHINGTON, D. C., July 14—Washington police, perverting two colored bootleggers at 65 miles an hour early this morning, were felled when the bootlegger car shot mustard gas from its exhaust. The police car had nearly overloaded the fugitives when the fumage, thick and black as those used in the Argonne, shot out, and the cops, virtually blinding, were forced to stop.
Now Cleaner
Have Been in Years
Amsterdam News Meets Wif-
use by Commissioner
Taylor.
en letter to Street Cleaning
which appeared in The Am-
o met with a hearty response.
cleaner today than they have
been with children. Gavin
sought about by super-
native from the Commission-
of The Amsterdam News and
cleaning was the Commission-
afraid of it.
Listings of the Department, and his
job as dear to him as yours is
to you.
When dead animals are left in the streets, the Department of Street Cleaning is blamed for it, when as a matter of fact it has nothing to do with it. The removal of dead animals is supervised by the Board of Health direct, which should be notified, or the Police Department.
A number of residents are in the habit of throwing refuse of all kinds into the streets. Maybe they do not know that they are liable to arrest and imprisonment, but they are, and the Amsterdam News has been asked to past along the tip that in the future persons caught throwing rabbits in the streets will be handed a summons to court.
The Harlem office of the N. A. A. C. P. has organized a Civic Conference to help in this work. Mr. Hubert of the Urban League has asked the Visiting Nurse Association, through its staff of workers, to give information to residents of the district concerning the proper disposal of rabbits.
Colored Long
Watchman Captured
City, Long Island; Charged
Holdyn Robbins.
Over three months the police
they have at last taught the
colored, living at 1979 West
gatekeeper of the Long Island
avenue and Milford street,
it was shot from a bandit car
at the time the gates were
banded that Ashton let them
the train passed and the car
rose within turned and fired
ick struck him in the back.
old car, and the Indiana police
notified the New York authorities
of the note belonging to the fah-
ing party. It will their uncovered
that it was the gunman that
which the shoot had him fired at
Ashton.
While the New York police were going in, in touch with the Indiana authorities, police. Police and her husband disappeared. They were traced to Newcastle, Pa., where they met with a breakdown and were obliged to get another car. It was this machine that led to their arrest, the police declare
Ashion, after the shooting, was rushed to the King's County Hospital, where he remained in a critical condition for three months.
Alleged to Have Held Up and Robbed Store in West 143rd Street; Recognised by Detectives.
Joseph Kountz, 27, 5 West 135th street, was held in bail totalling $000 for the the Grand Jury, charged with robbery and felonious assault. The police had been on the trail of Kountz since March 12. On that date he is alleged to have robbed the grocery store at 152 West 143rd street, after holding up the clerk and several others at the point of a gun.
According to the story told by Redding in court, Kounts and a companion went to the grocery store while several customers present. Drawing guns the two men are alleged to have ordered everybody to hold up their hands. One of the men then went to the cash register and took $110. A passer-by chanced to look into the store, and saw that a hold-up was in progress. He telephoned to the W. 135th St. station, and Redding and Winterhalter hurried to the store in an automobile. Kounts and his companion had left the scene of the robbery, and were walking toward Eighth Ave. Recognizing the detectives, the two men broke into a run. Redding drew his revolver and fired at the fugitives. Kounts, according to Redding, suddenly stopped and fired four shots at him. The two men then ran into an apartment. A search of the premises failed to disclose their hiding place.
For weeks following the robbery, the detectives watched the various podrooms and enclosures for their quarry, but without success. A few nights ago, Redding and Winterhalter were at 135th St. and Lenox Ave., when they saw their men.
Both detectives drew game and stook them into the body of Kenneth before he had a chance to run. He was taken to the police station and questioned. He is said to have informed the police that his companion was wounded in the post by one of Detective Hedding's shots.
Negro Republicans Hold Convention
The Delegates Come From Fourteen States; Advocate Independence.
By EDGAR G. BROWN
ATLANTIC CITY, July 21.—A decidedly cool reception was given Senator Walter R. Edge to-day by the delegates to the first national political convention held by the colored voters since 1918. Only one of the 30 members of the resolution committee emerged from the private room in which they were meeting when Senator Edge's arrival in the main auditorium was announced. All, however, hatred intensely to his defenses of the Funding Administration and his plan, Dr. continued patience, under a rather stringent condition, the latest being the Tuskegee wring:
Mightiest Page of the New Jewry delegation, in his address replying to the Senator's words of welcome, got somewhat away from his main subject and brought up the absence of Mr. Edge on the second rebellion on the Dyer Anti-Lyaching bill in the Senate. Whereupon the Senator, evidently somewhat embarrassed, retired unceremoniously and did not return.
The Resolution Adopted.
The attitude of the assembled
EXTRA
FOUR MURDERED IN DETROIT
DETROIT, July 22.—Roy McGoy is under arrest charged with shooting and killing Sidney Liner, a preacher; Leon Patrick, and an unidentified man, all colored, in a street break resulting, according to police, from shooting remarks addressed to Liner while he was propping on a street corner here.
An unidentified man at the same time is said to have stabbed Jesse Gillen. Gillen is believed to be finally wounded.
Kapoleon Boulette is dead, police say, from a blow received in a fist fight with Paul Carriera.
THREE MEN BURNED TO DEATH
WOODLAWK, PA., July 24.—Three men are dead and four others are in hospitals seriously burned, the result of a slip of No. 1 furnace of the Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation here last Tuesday night when men were repairing broken connections.
THE DEAD—Samuel Singleton, aged 25, of Lumberlion, N. 0. Robert Bussy, aged 23, Orangesburg, S. 0. Mack Bullock, aged 23, of Lumberlion, N. 0.
THE INJURED—Richard McGoy, aged 22, of Raleigh, N. 0. Leonard Euro, aged 21, of Portsmouth, Va. John W. Walker, aged 36, of Washington, B. 0. Nathaniel Gay, aged 25 years, of Alabama.
INSANE CRIMINAL SLAIN.
GINESTER, N.I., July 23.—William Jackson, convicted in Chicago for murder and sentenced to the State Hospital for Criminal Innocence, was killed when he and forty other incense criminals escaped from the hospital, last night.
colored leaders is set forth in the following resolutions adopted by the convention, which was made up of representatives from New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Ohio, Delaware, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut and West Virginia:
We realize that the Negro in America has reached a crisis in his political life, a crisis which must be met by debate and constructive action. As an American citizen he finds himself in a large section of the country distranchised. Jim Crowed, subjected to segregation, handled and tyrannical, and in other sections, under similar conditions to which other groups are not subjected.
MINISTERS ASKED TO JOY GARDEN MEETING
Alderman John William Sart of the Twenty-first D. D. has issued a call to the white and color ministers of his district to meet to-morrow afternoon at 3 P. M. in the Garden of Joy. With the newly elected alderman prelude that the meeting he held at pleasure resort was not met in his letter.
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the needs of the district groups, who in cooling their veil will hold the interest of the trio.
We believe that colored citizens in the State where they vote and where their votes are counted should use to the fullest extent all the political power they can command to abolish such conditions and for the greatest benefit to the entire race.
To this end we argue that in every State colored citizens, where they have the privilege of voting, organize (themselves later)
YOU CAN BUY AND SELL MOST ANYTHING IN THE AMSTERDAM NEWS
Alerman John. William Smith of the Twenty-first A. D. has issued a call to the white and colored ministers of his district to meet him tomorrow afternoon at 1:00 P. M. in the Garden of Joy. Why the newly elected almanac preferred that the meeting be held at a pressure resort was not stated in his letter.
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the needs of the district.
groups, who in costing their votes will hold the interest of the those paramount to any party organization.
To make these steps effective, we urge upon colored voters that the next 15 months be devoted to forming and participating these political groups, through which the masses of Negro voters should be educated and trained in the qualifications for voting, and armed to take concerted action necessary to learn about the government policy.
SECTION ONE
BOY, FOUR, POISONED, SAYS MOTHER
Race Hate Vents Itself on Little Child; Family Victim of White Neighborhood.
Four-year-old Joseph Stanford, shunned and hated by parents of his white playmates at 116 East Second street, sat on the fire escape of his mother's tenement home Wednesday drinking soup.
While Joseph was innocently eating his soup, it is charged that some white flood from an adjoining fire escape coolly tossed bits of meat into the child's soup watch, it is alloged, had been soaked in rat poison.
Mrs. Marle Stanford, mother of Joseph, attributed this revolting smell to Baldwin Moreau, years old and hungself the ruin of eleven children.
Mrs. Stanford recited a long list of neighbors.
fered by her and her four little ones since she went to live at No. 116 That Second Street. At first, she said, she was notified that no colored people would be tolerated there. When she refused to move, she added, her door was blocked with three barrels of ash. She had to climb down the fire escape. Mrs. Stanford complained to the police and the barrels were removed.
But other forms of annoyance, she alleges, were substitution to make her life a very unhappy one. She lived in the neighborhood, she said, because she was not able to pay the occupant rentals asked in the colored sections, as she was the sole support of her four children.
Meet, alleged to have been thrown into the child's soup, has been placed with expert chemist for analysis, following the diagnosis of the attending physician that the boy was suffering from rat poison.
Little Joseph, who was treated in the Babies' Hospital, returned home Friday.
James Weldon Johnson, Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, today announced that he had served his connection with the New York Age, of which he has been contributing editor for the last nine years. His last editorials to appear in that journal were published in the issue of Saturday, July 14.
"WHO SAID MINISTERS MUST DESPISE MONEY?"
That the ministry of the Protestant churches is not enlisting sufficient applicants among the youth of today, and that this condition is due to the greater restrictions of more lucrative professions, was the opinion voiced by the Rev. W. L. Lee, Bishop of the A. M. H. Xion Churches, Sunday night at the golden Jubilee celebration of the Nazarene Congregational Church. Herkulne Street and Trey Avenue.
Our ministry is fast losing its hold upon the ambitious young men as a profession to-day, be said, "because there are so many other professions that prove attractive. It seems to be a prevalent idea that ministers must never think of money at all, and there are many what, because of this idea, go on to pursue other professions.
and who raid that minute
must despite money? Since what
I believe that God wants his min-
ters supported by their congrega-
tions, and I further believe that
he does not want them misogyny
supported, either."
COMING SOON!
Another story by the author.
1858 SEVENTH AVE. SET. 135TH & 136TH ST.
THE FINEST DRUG STORE IN HARLEM.
Prescriptions carefully and accurately compounded by registrar clerk. The most elaborate ends fountain in upper New York. Everything first class in the drug line.
JULIUS TAMM, President. WALTER J. JACKSON, Manager.
PAGE TWO
Haywood Robinson, 22, 117 West 14th Street, was held in $3,000 ball, charged with illegal possession of narcotics by Detective Louis Ramires of the Narcotics Squad. According to the officer, he found the drug on the defendant when he searched him at the corner of 124th Street and Lenox Avenue.
George Snead, 22, a porter of 182 West 140th Street, who had been held in $500 ball, charged with driving an automobile in areckless manner, thereby hitting Lawrence Johnson, 570 Leroy Avenue, will receive a hearing on the 30th Johnston, who had been in Harlem Hospital, appeared in court on Monday badly crippled.
Firenze O'Meill, 27, 237 West
142d Street, was charged with per-
session of two packs of brolin by
Detective Daniel Christ of the Narcotic
Squad, who said that he
found the drug on a search of the
premises on which she lived.
Fines ranging up to $5 were assessed against Charles Cutting,
136 West 144th Street; Fitz Marshall,
36 West 140th Street; John Wheatland,
558 Riverside Drive;
and Lean Brooks, 155 West 133d
Street for violation of the corporation ordinance.
Elizabeth Pitt, 21, 144 West
130th Street, who had been held
in $1,000 bail, charged with assault
by Officer Jasper Rhodes, was dismissed.
William Gray, 24, 101 West 14th Street, was hired $5 on a complaint of disorderly conduct preferred by Patrolman Monahan of the 13th Precinct.
David Garvey, 30, 225 West 133d Street, and Theman Allen, 202 West 103d Street, received suspended sentences when charged with intoxication by Patrolman Burnes.
Richard Washington, 10, 173 West 132d Street, was held in $5,000 bail for General Sessions, charged with arracy by Officer Summers of the 33th Precinct. The officer was passing the grocery store at 61 West 132d Street after midnight, when he saw the flash of a match within.
Curtis Williams, 304 West 135th Street was held without ball when charged with assault by Mrs. Maggie Helm, 304 West 135th Street. According to testimony given by her in the Washington Heights Court on Monday, before Magistrate McQuade, Mrs. Helm de clawed that Williams used to annoy her, although she had told him that she was married. On July 8, she alleged that the defendant after entering her house uninvited, walked into her bedroom and struck her in the face, charging her with going with another man.
This testimony was corroborated by William Good, a roomer, who said that Williams burst through the door so soon as he had opened it, following the ringing of the bell. He also said that the defendant bruised him badly about the shins after he had pried him loose from Mrs. Helm.
Williams denied the charge. He said that he had not struck Mrs. Heilis; that he had never been in the apartment; that he and Mrs. Heilis had been friendly for three months, and that he had taken her to the剧院 and other places.
He was found guilty and held for sentence on July 26, after the probation officer has made his report.
William Williams, 31, 252 West 129th Street, a laborer, was held in $1,500 bail, charged with stabbing Leroy Lowie, a porter, 454 St. Nicholas Avenue, in the throat and chest with a knife.
Prof. Joseph Gommage, 132 West 129th street, who was found guilty by Magistrate Goodman in the Heights Court of violating the law regarding fortune telling, was fined $100 or 30 days in jail. He paid the fine.
Charged with conducting a dance hall without a license, Irene Maltanese, 16, 2246 Fifth avenue, and Harold White, 108 West 124th street, cashier and ticket taker, respectively in Happison, 141st street and Fifth avenue, were paroled for a further hearing when arraigned before Magistrate Hatting, Harlem Court.
Jeff Curtie, 27, 2009 Eighth avenue, was placed on probation for a term of six months, when he was arraigned before Magistrate Goodman in Heights Court for sentences following his conviction of abusing his wife.
Policeman Symmers of the West 125th street station, arrested Richard Washington, 22, 173 West 123rd street, on a charge of burglary.
Washington was assigned before Magistrate Geocamman, the Heights Court and held in 31300 ball for a further examination.
George Green, 23, 255 West 133d street, indicted for felonious assault on the complaint of Richard Flynn, 371 West 123d, has been adjudged finance by a commission appointed by Judge Koug of General Session and committed to the State Asylum for the Crimeshall Br
name at Methapenn. Green is a victim of possession detention, according to Dr. Gregory, of Bellvue Hospital.
Samuel S. Brigit, 239 West 151st street, was convicted of violating the lease of terms of a white tenant by not turning sufficient hot water in Special Requests Thursday, and was fined $20 by Justice Frederic Kerabchan, Daniel F. Murphy and Moose Herman. He paid the fine but gave notice of appeal.
Betty Cook, 35, 78 West 141st street, arrested July 10 in a downtown department store for stealing a dress valued at $29.50, pleaded guilty to the charge the other day. She was continued on $500 ball for investigation by probation officers and for sentence on July 27.
Alenze Lieyd, 31, 38 West 138th street, a chauffeur, pleaded guilty before Justice Kornochan, Murphy and Herman in Special Sessions the other day to assault in the third degree. He was remanded until July 20 for sentence.
Mamie Moore, 25, 101 West 138th street, arrested June 17 for stealing clothing valued at $150 from Leroy Wyche, 212 West 138th street, pleaded guilty to the charge before Judge Collins the other day. She was given a sentence of 26 days in the Tomba, but upon the statement of the prosecutor that she had been in the Tomba that long awaiting arraignment in court she was discharged.
Henry Goings, 22, 123. West 144d street, a laborer, has been indicted for felonious assault on the complaint of Thomas Smith, of the same address. Smith alleges that Goings ran amuck with a rapper the afternoon of July 5, and slashed him in the back. Goings pleaded not guilty to the indictment and was sent to the Tombs to await trial.
James Goffette, 23, of 449 Second avenue, was arrested last week by officers of the 47th street precinct and held. charged with attempting to attack an 11-year-old girl.
COP, DRUNK, FIRES AT CITIZENS, PENALIZED
Patrolman Thomas J. McKennan,
who gave a colored man a bad
care about two weeks ago while
standing out in front of his home
at 65 Kewark Ave. Jersey City, was
flooded 6 days' pay by Commissioner
William B. Quinn at a hearing last
Thursday morning. McKennan
pleased guilty to the charge of
firing a revolver shot at Frank
Wright while intoxicated, in impi-
nion; sentence upon him. Com-
missional Quien told McKennan
that it was only a previous good
record that saved him from being
dismissed.
Although McKenna offered no defense, it is said that, immediately following his arrest, he stated that he "thought" Wright was acting suspiciously and that he shot at him when he refused to obey a command to halt. According to the charges, McKenna fired at Wright as the latter was entering his home, about eleven o'clock Sunday morning, July 1. Wright, becoming feightened after being fired upon, ran into the house and locked the doors. Detective Berrt. intrigued, who was near by when the stunt was fired, arrested the drummer jatroman.
NELSON FOUND DEAD
John Nelson, 60, 62 East 121st
Street, a driver employed by the
Steiblen's coal yards, 202 Rider
Avenue, was found dead on the
driveway in the coal yard one day
last week.
Dr. Korn, of Lincoln Hospital, said the man had been dead about an hour. The body was taken to the Furdham morgue. Dr. Korn was unable to say whether Nelson had fallen off the wagon and died from injuries or whether heart disease had caused death. The medical examiner's office, therefore, may hold an autopsy to day.
MAX SHOT BY GARAGE
OWNER DIES IN HOSPITAL
John Whitkinson, 26, of No. 323
West 81st Street, died in Bellvue
Hospital of eight wounds received
when he was shot by Albert Gordon,
member of the Greenville Garage,
at No. 321 West 60th Street. Gordon
told the police that Whitkinson,
with four others, entered the garage,
and believing they were
about to rob him, he grilled at Robinson,
who was leading the intruders. The police say
the charge of assault against him will
be charged to homicide.
SMILES ON GALLOWS
TEXAKANA. Tex. July 22-
Sol Johnson, alleged murderer of
G. W. Lenders, white, was hanged
this noon inside the Bowie County
Jail at Bogom. Johnson went to
the gullies smiling and unmasked.
How Did He Do It?
NEW ORLEANS—Roy D. Ashley, white, our veterans and student at the University c: Alabama, who lost both hands in the war, is under arrest hears charged with raising a Government compensation claim from SLAWS to BURNS.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1972
(Crusader Service.)
ALBANY, July 24.—In its frank endeavor to evade the Walker law, which compels public disclosure of its secrets and membership, the Ku Klux Klan falsified official documents and has got its head tighter than ever in the noose of the law.
The Klan's certificate of incorporation and that of its women's auxiliary, Kamella, were decried after they had been approved by Supreme Court Justice George R. Pierce and before they were died with the Secretary of State. The Justice, his attention called to these facts, declared the Klan should be prosecuted criminally for falsification of public paper, asserted the incorporation papers had never been valid because of the changes made, and advocated summary action against the Klaners under the Walker Act.
BARKWELL ACQUITTED IN ELEVEN MINUTES
COLUMBIA, Mo., July 22. George Darkwell was found not guilty last Thursday of murder by the jury that tried him on a charge of lynching James T. Scott here April 23. The jury was out eleven minutes. The lynching of Scott was witnessed by several hundred persons, including many students of both senses.
Ruby N. Hulon, presenting at
corner, expressed belief that the
prosecution might prove a war-
ning against transgression of the
law.
Meet Us Next Sunday and Every
Sunday at
GROTON POINT BEACH
(Harmon St.)
Our New Salt Water Beach and
Fresh Water Fishing.
For directions on R. W. Junkie 449
Lemon Ave. or Telephype Morn. 8643.
A FOREWORD TO THE SICK
If you are sick, Have Faith. No
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Natural methods. Operations
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Morningside 8718. Heures 28.
By appointment.
180 W. 127TH ST.
Treatment For Baldness
Gross new hair on bald heads and
keeps the hair growing. Try our 30 to
60 days harmless treatment.
Harlem 5613 by appointment.
HAIRDRESSING 'PARLOR
12 West 130th St.
HAIRLINE STRAIGHTNER
is the latest Improved
Hair Dressing for men
For Sale at Drug Store, Harler
Shoe and Hair Discension, m
00041.08 to HAIRLINE PRODUCTS CO., 1525 South St. Philadelphia, Pa., and we will ship by Parcel Post.
SEWING MA
All Makes
Estimate
Work Guarantee
Phone Harle
Norbert Prevot
STOP — Give This Adv
diate Considera
LOOK — Over the Post
Trade.
LISTEN — To What W
Courses in D
Those Desiring to Become
'C. JONI
There Are Plenty of Good Po
Eventually — Wh
HARLEM RIVER A
MADISON AVENUE A
Phone Harle
ARENA - AUTO - SCHOOL
begin. Our special complete course to fit a student after to make up those who were damage of this opportunity good opportunity, which includes 13 months and learn all in-school curriculum, including the pupil last to pass State Rehabilitation history shall be covered. We hope you will prepare the pupil you are sending. All New York City, Wilmington Aqua City.
When Mangia Brown, of 117
West 141st street, walked into
the shop store at 188 West
182th street she wanted an
orange colored; King Turt store,
Otto Cohen, white, 461 East
140th street, it is alleged, shew-
her a red one instead, and tried
to persuade her that it was
ragged.
Mike Brown happened to be an expert in mixing colors, and insisted, that it wasn't. An argument ensued in which Colton charges he was with a shoe hammer by the defendant.
When arraigned in the
Heights Court she was held in
8100B. Bail, however, has
been reduced to $500, and she
will in all probability be dis-
charged, as it developed that
Cohen was hit with a red shoe
by another woman customer
last month. Miss Brown
charges that Cohen attacked
her.
Madame Walker Agents to Meet
Seventh Annual Convention Promises to Surpass All Others.
The thousands of agents of the Madam C. J. Walker Mfg. Co., Inc. of Indianapolis, are the only group of our women nationally organised for the purposes of increasing their efficiency as business women, and their usefulness as citizens to the
GEO. B. KNOX
CIVIL & BAIL BONDS
INSURANCE
Office Phone Aud, 8445
Residence Phone Aud, 6545
220 W. 141st St., N. Y. C.
M. Q. Ballantia Taylor
2 WEST 130TH ST.
Phone Marlton 7347
Instruction in piano and cell branches
of musical composition, theory, har-
mony, counterpoint, ear training and
orchestration. Reasonable terms.
CATARRH
of the
BLADDER
Guard Your Health
Be Sure To Use
The Mining Prevention
All the Time
PREVENTIVE
SCHOOL WITHOUT
PROTECTION
Tuesday, No. 130th St.
At Dumbo or St. Peter's
On St. Peter's
For the Best in Fresh Killed
Meat and Poultry
See
LAMPERT BROS.
100 W. 181st St. (Br. Labor Av.)
Fresh Killed Poultry
Every Hour
At Rewearable Prices
Friars increased in weight and
reduced in price.
Branch 411 Lenox
Investigate our Profit-Sharing
Plan. $10 Purchase entitles
you to 80s in Trade.
MACHINES
Makes Repaired Reasonably
Inmates Cheerfully Given
Anticiped Prompt Attention
Marlem 6p1s, or Send Postal
Venue, 120 East 117th St., N.Y.C.
Advertisement Your Imme-
dation.
Possibilities of Learning a
At We Are Offering—Special
In Driving and Shop Work.
Some Automobile Mechanics—
ONES
And Positions for Trained Men
Why not Now?
R AUTO SCHOOL
WE AT 430th STREET
Harlton 6718
151 W. 54TH ST., N.Y.
The ARMNA AUTO SCHOOL which is known as one of the largest and best equipped schools in New York and has been gradually expanding to have graduate diplomas and professional pupils during the course of business and also known to go through many chemical and driving lessons with this institution to earn 50%. But this month only we need want to take a course and take seriously which we have to offer the students and from now to come with the success of the course, and a information will be given free of charge we will enroll with us and we will ARMNA AUTO SCHOOL, in New York.
If You Suffer
FROM ANY BLOOD DISORDER, ULCERS, SKIN DISSEASE,
STOMACH, HEART OR LIVER DISORDERS, KIDNEY OR
BLADDER TROUBLE, 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
THE SMALL FEE OF TEN DOLLARS
SPECIAL AILMENTS GAREFULLY TREATED. OFFICE
HOURS 18 A. M. TO 18:30 P.M.; SUNDAY 18 A. M. TO 1 P. M.
ARE·YOU SICK?
from any newly Completed or Completed Shines, Norwinter Shores, Mammoth Mountain, Pinnacle Blvd and Kill Misture, Flaming Spots blinds the eye, Fear Memory, Wonderland, Moppamamam, Palm in the Mark and Jack, Stiff Jack, Sare Threat, Thunder and Illness, Trouble, Naughty Nails, Stormy Trouble, Cured Tumors and Complications, come to my method of injecting Cured Tumors and Complications directly into the Blood, blood with the aid of Meditation and Mindstress, have restored Health and Happiness to most of patients.
communities in which they reside.
Each year large numbers of them
attend their National Convention
and profit by the advanced instruction,
lectures and demonstrations
that are there given.
This year the seventh annual national convention of Madam C. J. Walker agents will be held at Detroit, Mich., August 8, 9 and 10, and the plans call for a far more interesting and helpful convention than has thus far been held. Discussion of important business matters, demonstrations in advanced methods and research lectures on Beauty Culture are on the program. Several characters of national repute are invited. A picturequeque book ride through the harbor, sightseeing trips and receptions are among the entertainment features now planned. This year $1,650 will be distributed to agents.
Inquiries-regarding the convention and reservations for homes will be answered if addressed to the convention headquarters, care Mrs. Alice C. Burnett, 309 St. Antiope Street, Detroit, Mich.
I can come to ms. before going elsewhere. No matter how slight or serious your sickness is, I will cure you better, quicker and cheaper than any other Specialist. For the last 25 years I have cured the 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 care where others fall. 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, Wax
Nerve, Pains in the Stomach or
Back, Indigestion Constipation,
Headache, Rheumatism, Blood
Disorders Skin Disease Pimples,
Eczema, Sore Throat, Asthma,
Bladder and Kidney Trouble.
Advice Free.
Notice Results after first treatment.
DR FALK SPECIALIST
20 WEST 51ST ST NEWCASTLE
AND EAST WEST
Office Hours from 11 A. M. to 7 P.
M. Daily Sunday and American
Holidays from 11 A. M. to 1 P. M.
FREE. BOOKLET
BECOME SUCCESSFUL, happy,
healthy; gain your wisdom; rest-
ice a better life; avoid foul, evil,
worry, trouble and failure. Send
for this booklet "THE MAN OF
POWER." It is FREE NOW TO
YOU. Write at once to Maryland
Herb Store, 18957 Penne.
Ave., Baltimore, Md.
EARLYBIRD
LAXATIVE
For wind colic, poor stomach, diarrhoea
or any trouble of stomach, liver or
bowel.
Sto & 800 per bottle, all druggists.
Swedish Surgical and Orthopedic Massage. Cabinet
Baths and Electric Baking
Superior and Progressive
Methods of Drugsess
Treatment
If you are nervous, you can gain calm. If sleepless, you can be given healthy, natural sleep. If you have indigestion it can be battled. If you have constipation it can be eliminated. If too stout, your flesh can be reduced. If too thin, healthy weight can be added. If frail and delicate, you can acquire muscular strength with muscle energy. With headache, rheumatoid asthma, catarrh, weakness of the geniourinary organs—these handicaps can be overcome.
Bampl B. Lighton. M.T.D. G.
Office Hours: 9 to 12 a.m. 5 to 6 p.m.
2194 SEVENTH AVENUE
Phone Morningside 2548 (At 13th st.)
YOU CAN HAVE
STRAIGHT, SILK HAIR
By using "Suveline," the delicately perfumed lotion which straightens and strengthens the hair, makes it soft, silky and brilliant; removes dandruff, cleans the scalp; does not discolor the hair or injure the scalp; no irritating nothing to wash out; contains no preservatives absolutely hermetical.
At your Dugget, or write to us.
SUAVELINE MFG. CO.
150 Housen Street, New York, N. Y.
Dunham Supply—Again Wanted
Suveline
6 6 6
is the most speedy remedy we know for
Constipation, Biliousness,
Colds, Headaches and
Malaria Fever
Suffer
DER, ULCERS, SKIN DISEASE,
DER DISORDERS, KIDNEY OR
UMATISM, DO CALL ON ME.
BET OF MY FORTY YEARS'
HOSPITALS), MY PERSONAL
Mr. and Mrs. Fischer, 2408 8th Ave.; Mr. and Mrs. Chase, 282
West 136th St.; M. Lille Dovall, 178 W. 136th St.; Paid White,
82 W. 140th St.; M. Johnson, 220 W. 141st St.; Mrs. C. Morvia,
161 West 129th St.; Edward Anderson, 224 W. 141st St.
Mr. and Mrs. Fischer, 2666 8th Ave.; Mr. and M.
West 15th St.; Miea Lillie Devall, 178 W, 129th St.
62 W, 140th St.; M. Johnson, 220 West 141st St.; M.
161 West 129th St.; Edward Anderson, 224 W. 149
DR. ROSENTH
FAMOUS DENTAL SURGEON
203 WEST 125TH ST. (Corner 80)
Hours 9 A. M. to 8 P. M.
Sundays 9 A.
X-Ray
Examiner
TEETH
WITHOUT
PLATES
SETS OF
THAT S
Bridge Work that
comfort and service
SPECIALTY of Our
From the moment
looks, there are
tissue Bond Implants.
It is VERY ST
of the through mouth
Your old tooth extracted carefully and
short time. Sons of Teeth, Bridgework, G
Ginn and Silver Carefully Made at Research
DR. BL
163 EAST 125th STREET-
(OVER-LOFTS CAR)
740 LEXINGTON AVE.
(OVER LIGGETTS L)
169 EAST 34th STREET
HOURS:
DAILY.....9 TO 6
TUES. and THURS.....9 TO 7
SUNDAYS.....9 TO 1
tooth extracted carefully and a NEW
State of Tooth, Bridgeway, Gold Crown, Filipino
Carefully Made at Respectable Price.
DR. BLOOM
ST 125th STREET—Corner Park
(OVER-LOFTS CANDY STORE)
LEXINGTON AVE.—Corner 39th
(OVER LIGGETT'S DRUG STORE)
EAST 34th STREET—Corner Third
HOURS:
THURS.....9 TO 6
FRIES.....9 TO 1
Broken Pinkes
While You
RHEUMATISM
Why suffer with rheumatism, lameness permanently by using SCHAPIN, refunded if not satisfactory. It is used best results. Try it—you lose nothing a bottle; 6 for $5.00. Mail orders attend WILLIAM SCHAPIN 122 First Ave., Cor. 11th
SICK AND MEN AND W
IF YOU SUFFER from Nervous Disease, Blood and Skin Diseases, Spots before Week and Unsteady Nerves, Sleepiness Back, Rheumatism or Stiff Joints, Abdominal Troubles, Neuralgic Paination—COME TO ME
FREE Consultation Examination
Modern Methods Need
If you have made it obtain a cure for your Attment, "Don't Give up." Call and be examined FREE. I have had Water Supply,ence and practic of Medicine and Surgery in treating Nervous and Circulus Disease, if you and your two personally ask time you call.
Office Hours
9 A. M. to 8 P. M.
120 East 29th St., bet. 4th & Le
RO-
A FACE H
THAT REALLY
Another HIGH
Toilet Prepare
Harmless, but a
effective.
Ro-Zol also clears the blemishes. Keeps the a fresh and youthful looking
with rheumatism, Imbago, etc., when
family by using ECHAPIRA LIQUID AN
satisfactory. It is used by well known
try it—you lose nothing and gain your b
$1.00. Mail orders attended to.
WILLIAM SCHAPIRA PHARMACY
182 First Ave., Cor. 11th St. N. Y. City.
BLOCK AND AILI
N AND WOMEN
OFFER from Nervous Disorders, Dizziness,
Skin Diseases, Spots before the Eyes, Poor
anatomy Nerves, Sleepiness, Palms in the
mathematics or Still Jolts, Sore Throat, St
Troubles, Neuralgic Pain, Coated Tongue.
HE TO MR.
C E
Consultation and
Examination
Used
mailed to
for your
don't Give
and be on
experi-
ction of
Burger
Nervous
Disease
you
need time
DR. LEWIS
19 A. M.
29th St., but. 4th & Lexington Avena, No
RO-ZO
FACE BLEA
IT REALLY BLEA
other HIGH - BROW
Toilet Preparation.
formless, but surprising
effective.
also clears the complexion of
shoes. Keeps the skin smooth,
and youthful looking.
Why suffer with rheumatism, lumbago, etc., when you can be re-
lived permanently by using SCHAPIRA'S LIQUID ANTIDOL. More-
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 $0.00. Mail orders attended to.
WILLIAM SCHAPIRA PHARMACY
182 First Ave, Cor, 11th St, N. V. City,
IF YOU SUFFER from Nervous Disorders, Dizziness, Weakness, Blood and Skin Diseases, Spots before the Eyes, Poor Memory, Weak and Unsteady Nerves, Stiffness, Pain in the Neck and Back, Rheumatism or Stiff Joints, Sore Tissue, Stomach and Abdominal Troubles, Neurologic Pain, Contorted Tongue and Constipation—COME TO ME
Office Hours DR. LEWIS Sundays
9 A.M. to 8 P.M. M. to 1 P.M.
120 East 29th St., bet. 4th & Lexington Area, New York
Another HIGH - BROWN Toilet Preparation. Harmless, but surprisingly effective.
ORIGINAL
RO/01
COMPLEXION ARMER
HITCHCOCK
PREPARED BY
THE OWNER HYDRALIC OF
CHICAGO
MADE ON L
THE OVERTON
MEN W
PONGO
ADE ONLY BY
OVERTON HYGIENE
MEN WHY NOT
ONGOLE
FESTIVAL
IF I HURT YOU-VOU
ARE THE JUDGE!
Following in a list of patients I can refer you to, for whom I extracted tests to their complete satisfaction and sorries.
M; Mr, and Mrs. Chase, 280
78 W. 1306 N. St.; Paul White,
not 141st St.; Mrs. G. Morrison,
on, 284 W. 141st St.
NTHAL
SURBEON
(Corner 8th Ave.)
Sundays 9 A. M. to 1 P. M.
Examination Free
SETS OF TEETH
THAT SATISFY
Bridge Work that endures, gives
softness and comfort, in a strong
SOCIALITY of Ours.
The work is finished
there is a sense of eminence
and confidence.
It is VERY STRONG—result
of a NEW set, ready to wear in a
Corner, Fillings of Gold, Purple
Prizes.
DOM
Corner Park Avenue
Y STORE)
Corner 90th Street
(UG STORE)
Corner Third Avenue
Ken Plains Repaired
While You Wail
o, etc., when you can be a
LIQUID ANTIDOL. Most
ly well known physicians who
wid gain your health. Price
d to:
PHARMACY
L. N. Y. City.
‘ALHOUN ORDERED BACK 10 TUSKEGEE HOSPITAL
Announcement
a
THE
ta EE (incorpatensi / ee
- BOSTON, MASS.
. SK |
Prd hs NS
Ne NY
DAE Ee NS
Asnounces That Arrangements Are Now
Being Made for Monthly
$110 Round Trips to Europe
Bostoa—Soutkamptoa Bostoa—Gothenburg
| $110 $138
One WAY Ss ONE WAY $75
| Commecting for Christlante, Steeithoim, Helsing.
London, Liverpest, LeHavre = fors, Danzig, Riga, Copenhagen
THE ABOVE PRICES INCLUDE RAILROAD FARES TO
POINTS AS FAR NORTH AS STOCKHOLM
_ Te ere anny. Mast soar Dune sow tar 8 tip?
@uring the coming season.
Lives ef passengers will be protected by
EVER-WARM SAFETY-SUITS
_ Which prevent drowning and protest from expotur:
A rowed trip. with all expreces om = thousands of tatetligent
smipbearé tacluded, Si Be more ex. Whe wish te visit the La
Si See Ee Se a
qreaemg Gement in (iis country Oua, ete A chanse of
Se betinttecass Roy Re pot Re
oe oe Taseinte sey. pass ie tatltua dr a permancet
Se SMe asus ot ine Coste enn 3 ate rena
Cee Sica wie rating the a Pd or taie Teaigie ot" prebt
captions opportunity offered new daa sirendy dora proved and ie
Pee aris oe eee co
” ‘WE WILL ALSO 8HOW YOU HOW YoU May
BECOME A PART-OWNER IN THE MOsT
TALKED-OF ENTERPRISE IN YEARS
Egy” Cat ont and mall ue with your name. eng adérees yey
a
eerste, |e
Dep't « .
=e" si.
t ea taherested sewing Bostoa, Mess.
trip to: t
Mark with X) Owe way Reena tre | I am tmerested tu decoming
Basten gentee | Seteds | pervowaar ta the Qrest North
Gormeny liste Lill] | # Stonmetip Company,
Hormey ine LIT] rieane ea me. prospestas
Desmerk sss | and fal partientars, ‘
Baltic ~
Provinces ....06 =o
vanet acy cece -_ SUTRA Rha hi eas eae
Waa soomevereererresereree | peryet OF BLE, seseseessten
Srrest or RL a seseeeeeseene | 4
i
HINES MARKS
TIME TD LET
WHITES IK
tion the Bureau's own plans
for the Federal Hospital. -
Recommendations forwarded to
the Bureau by the “Kommittes uf
Three,” representing the ‘Curke-
Gee Kluxers, were rejected. ‘The
plan, Gen. Hines stated to-day. war
for white control of the hospital
Throughout and was rexarded as
unsatisfactory, It {s said that. un-
der this plan, the white nurses
would have Negro maids to weit or
them and do the actual nursing of
the tujured oolored World War ret-
erans, in order that the rhite
Burses, olie coming in’ contact
with the salaries paid by the Gov-
ernment for the caring for the in-
fared rete, would not hare to come
‘was Joo's insight into the)
it seemed to act like am
for his players and
i the sphere sprinted
the bases, Poles, Perry. and
11 scoring and tying the score | &
a bit was one of the grest-| ¥
drives of the season snd | »,
showed their appre: |
as did good matured Jim
the manager in a sub.| ©
way. tt
the score tied tz the ninth | N
%& “High Pocket” Hadsfeth | f
Hesderson and sent a whis | ©
to left Geld. Percy
o oat at second by 2 close
‘west gut to left|*
(ito actual contact with the Negro
volaters.
Gen. Hines served uotice ip an
unconvinelng manner that the Gor.
ernment was jn no way intimidated
by Ku Kluz Klan demonstrations
in Alabama, as has Leen charged
widely in the Negro press. Keen
Observers-of the situation do not
ave how his present action can-be
made to jibe with this statement.
Bixty per cent of the hospital
personnel at present le colored and
there are elghtyfive to ninety Ne
gro soldiern receiving treatment al
the moment, although many others
refused tc go to the Government
Hospital ‘f they were to be “doc:
tored" by cracker doctors. The
nurses, attendants and laborers are
colored. THE PHYSICIANS ARE
WHITE. Gen. Hines added that
the bureau HAS FOUND A SUFFI.
CIENT NUMBER OF QUALIFIED
NEGRO POCTORS to man the hos-
pital throngh and through,
CALHOUN ORDERED
BACK TO TUSKEGEE
WASHINGTON, July 23.—Direc-
tor Hines of the Veterans’ Bureau
bas begun an inquiry into charges
that sheets belonging to the pew
Federal hospital for exeervice men
at Tuskegee, Ala. were used by the
Kn Klux Kian members in a dem-
(Preston News Servies.)
NEW YORK CITY, Joly 24—And
again it looks as though Harry
Wills, allent, waiti.-, with endless
petience—but colored—ia to be
sidetracked by the money dpmone
of the fight game. acd this time,
It looks, as though the “Panther of
New Orleans,” will be forced to
step aside ustil the “Wild Bull of
the Pampas,” Luis Firpo, is given
his chance.
‘What a farce? How unequal
would be a fight between Firpo and
SN ee eee ee ena. len
JUgest wen. Ine experenes gATRET Ena the amy oF Fr weurer
sts'ce In’ predicting Gx they will come, before the poslie, with
lng owt of the ordinary and something which we are all leeking
to with plessureble. anticipations. Ne stone will be left o>
ened in trying te make thie latest shew one of the best of its kind
(Predveed with a real glory brimful of humer running threvpheut.
& Tutt Whitney, who came te town recently, enced us the Informa
jon that Whitney and Tutt have put together something that will
ta the theatre-going public. We readity belleve thie from what
have seen of the Whitney and Tutt offerings and uniess they ore
te change their book material through thevmachinations of seme
ofays we would likes te eee them start right hers In lew Yerk
bit the read. Intelligent and with a true conception of the business,
are looking forward te that day when they wil! come tate thelr ewn,
Here's a tittle story taken from life fer you. He had neo pasepert
trom se teow of shines he wrente net bs ite fe sane ons oo See
make the big trip te Europe where he In today enjoying great popular.’
; Like a lengtest brother he came running and seen we had the
In motion that made "lt smooth salling for him. tHe csoured
pecoperts and left ve with words of thanks and promising te cond
‘werd of hie suesese in Londen. We have net received even a pest
onstration against Tuskegee Ne-
grees July 3.
‘Two suspended nurses of tho
Tuskegee hospital, Mrx. Evelyn
Robinson, of Philadelphia, and Miss
Adella Woods, of Norfolk, appesr-
ed at the burean today with what
purports to be a receipt received
by hospital employees for the
sheets later used as disguises by
Klanamen. .
According to reports which have
gained wide circulation among the
Negroes, Kiansmen risited the
‘Tuskegee establishment and search-
¢4 tor John Calhoun, civil ssrtice
employee. sent down from the
North, whose life has been threat-
ened unless he left town, Calhoun
left Tuskegee 2 few hours after be
arrived.
Gen. Hines stated that after per
sonally investigatiog he had order-
ed Calhoun back t> Tuskegee. but
he denied he had ordered # military
guard for the man.
Col. Robert H. Stanley. U. 8. A.
tn charge of the institution, says
there was no foundation for the
charge the Ku Klu= were supplied
with hospital sheets for their dis-
play of force.
CHURCH LEADERS RISE
TO TUSKEGEE DEFENSE
Lake Junaluska, N. C., July 23.
(Special):—The Social Service
Commission of the Methodist Epis.
eopal Church South, in annual see-
sion here last week. gave out a
statement expressing appreciation
of Tuskegee Institute and declar-
tng that any interference with the
Institution would de a “lasting
diverace to Southern civilisation.”
—1_——.
LW. W. PLOT zo
SUPPLANT NEGRO
NEW ORLEANS, July 33.—Warn-
ing the South against the invasion
of the Industrial Workers of the
‘World, a full page advertisement
‘that bas been inserted in the news-
‘papers bers, ander the heading
“Peace ad Prosperity or Pillage
and Peredition.” and bearing the
Dotation that the page was the
frat of @ series: of frank telks on
the general labor: and business sit-
uation by &@ group of leading Loutsi-
ana Institutions.
The advertisement, in part,
reads:
“Massed cheek by jowl and shout
der to ehoulder, 3.608 members of
the Industrial We sof the
World are marking time in Naw Or
“Watching the trek of Negro
laborer to thé North: Bee and
West, they wait confidently the
Ume when they shall step forward
and fill the vacancies im the cot-
ton and sugar flelds acd tumber {o-
dustries created by the exodus of
the black.
Withdraws Application
for Dance Permit
(Preston News Service)
NORFOLK, Va., July 23.—Appll-
cation of L. W. Wright for permit
to operate a dance hall at Little
Bey Beach, his summer resort for
Negroes, was withdrawn last Wed.
Resday night, after the city council
bed bad the matter under advise.
ment for more than two weeks. It
{e seid that @ number of white
teaidents in the vicialty of the re-
sort had requested that the permit
be denied asd Wright bad received
threats from the K. K. K. warning
Rim against having damcing at his
resort.
Judge Willcox appeared before
the city council and aupowtoad that
the permit would Bo longer
sought. a6 Wright had withdrawn
hie application. The resort will
coattnue, however, on its regular
schedule,
ting & . Picnic
it Beach
Pe SS
i siptetee A
Bee ae
eee ae |
Gy yee |
a See Me
Pee ee
es ke tee
Sa ha a
pees ames
Be
ee
| ae SS
HONORED — Mrs. Mary
Lane, who, with Charles W.
Anderson, is Republican
Co-Executive Leader of the
rgth A. D.
ANDERSON AND MRS.
LANE NAMED LEADERS
Charles W. Anderson. 156 Weat
1824 street, Collector of Internal
Revenues for the Third New York
‘District, was named associate ex-
ecutive member of the Central Re
publican Club, 19th A. D., 23 West
124th atreet, at a meeting last
week, Mrs, Mary Lane was nazed
as the woman coleader. David B.
Costune Is leader of the district.
‘The two colored leaders are en-
titled to one-half vote in the Repub.
lican County Commities. —*
Tonight a meeting of the club
will be held to select the organize.
ton condidates for Assemblyman
and Alderman.
KU KLUX MEETING IN
DENVER PREVENTED
A public meeting of the Ku, Klas
Klan, scheduled 10 be held in the
city auditorium of Denver. Colo.. on
the night of June 27, was prevent-
ed by the Nations! Association for
the Advancement of Colored Peo-
ple. Mayor Stapleton of Denver
granted a permit for the meeting.
The Commissioner of Public Safe-
ty, after he had been called on by &
eiegation from the NA. A, C.B.
ordered 1 Caled lt.
oa: AS ay 88. coll
Seite * weaver see
Betty Sa, Ecanett Wiss 226
‘enry. at
A. H.W. Ross. *° *?”
PURSE SNATCHER HELD.
(Crusader Service)
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 23.
—George Turner, a colored chair
baste on the Boardwalk, ‘for
whom'the police had been looking
since the night of May 19, was ar
rested here today on a charge of
having smatched @ purse from age
of hia patrons.
Turner was held without ball on
a charge of highway robbery.
FAIL 3 TO STOP. APTER
RUNNING MAN DOWN
(Preston News Bervice)
BALTIMORE, Md. July 28.—
Police of the northwestern district
are making an effort to find the
driver of the automobile that
struck Ernest Walker, and after
striking the man, failed to stop.
‘Walker was taken to the Frank:
(in Square Hospital, where Re Is
belng treated for tnterzal Injuries.
Walker, however, was able to fur
aish the police a very good de-
acription of the automobile.
NOW PLAYING
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Featuring’
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+ BILLY meTCHELL i
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TRING SMITH a
Caltheated Phone Artist =<
, , MEORET PARKA
“THe 4 STRUTTERS
Prom the “Liss” Co
“LINCOLN T
| 8 WEST 128TH BT.
HILLSIDE TIRE & RUBBER CO.
. HARRY PONNELL, Prop. ;
"MANY STANDARD MAKES OF
TIRES AT SPECIAL BARGAIN
inited Statep,
Goodyear, U:
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We Have Served the Sporting and
Dramatic Editor of re
: q Jamaica for the Past Six Yeers—
: WHY NOT YOU? -
We Are in a Position to Repair Your Blown-Out or
Ag top an gt
pee {ow the’ Past: Feurtesn- Years. ,
| a, ’
b AUTO ASORSSORIES-ALSO-POR- SALE. . -
46 HILLSIDE AVE, at 168th PL—JAMAICA, LI. !
Tel. Jamaica 2617 !
‘The Only Stere em Hillside Ave Np Otier Rewsmentativa.
Sen. Gourard to
Be Guest of 369th
keception fo Be Tendered
iim Upon His Retura
to the City.
Gen, Gouraud. the ‘famous
French general, who is in this
cuimtry as & guest of the Rainbow
bivision. and under whom the Old
Pitteenth bad the honor to serve
and gain world-wide fame, har
heen tnvited by Colonel Little to
be the guest of the 369th Infantry
st a large reception and cntertain-
ment to be tendered him upoa his
return to the city, some timo be-
tween August 7 and M—the exact
dates, which will be subject to the
committer of the Rainbow Divi.
stou, will be anncunced later, The
Seventh Regiment Armory has
been tendered to Colonel Little for
this purpose.
It is proposed to have a mesical
program with war hits of singing
znd dancing to nerve as 8 reminder
to Gen. Gouraud of the regiment's
service under his command, and
the General will undoubtedly wish
to deliver bis message of affection
in the euape of 8 speech. It is also
expected that the General will take
advantage .of (his opportunity to
fake s formal presentation to the
coh Regiment, on behalf of we
Government of France, of an off-
cial naviana) color to carry with
the Stars and Stripes and those of
the Slate of New York.
A large audience, such as befite
this beloved soldier. Is hoped for
and invited, Admission will be
free, but will be ‘made only by
lickel. Preferrsce in allotment
Of. tickets will be made to colored
citizens, and tickets may be cb-
jained only upon sppitcation to of-
jeere and enlisted men of the ac-
live regiment. to whom allotments
will be made in as liberal propor-
tens ay the seating accommods-
Most Us Next Sunday and Every
CROTON POINT BEACH
(Harmon Sta.)
‘Our New Sait Water Beach and
a tae rene, _Flehing:
er
“IGge%
a7 ae
Latest Ways of Making
Dentistry Pleasant -
a
Sr consert ob meant coset:
Soules are Geneeety homes to
Soe Coe meting ted
mts ne ®
} ON Ty
y i ONUERH)
ee Nerthonct Carner of
188th St. & Leones Ave,
boys Kat (heir Meals
From Mantelpiece Now
$e
Trreston news serview.)
STEUBENVILLE, 0. July -
22.—Twalve boys, employed by
the La Selle Steel Works, are
now In the company's heepital
euffering from severe burns. It
Ia said that 13 young men on-
piged in 2 “friendly little geme
of galloping dominoes” result
log in the unpleasant, predicar
ment following a thrilling mo-
ment in the game.
It Ie claimed that the 12
young lade ranged along the
side of a long table while the
thirteenth and wisider éf the
spotted Ivorlee faced them on -
the opposite side of the “Gretna
Green, or Lady Luck Table.”
As the prancing deminess stop
ped to be read, one of the young
men, with a bearding house
reach, grabbed the “pet” in the
center of the table, ‘The wisider
of the gallopers reached for a
pistol and ae it came inte sight
12 men ducked. All eat dewn .
on a red het fuel pipe. Twelve
pairs of treusers were ruined,
‘and the ewners will “take thelr
meals from the mantelpiece
new,” at least fer several days.
‘tions of the Seventh Regiment Ar-
mory will sdmit. As soon as fut-
ther particulars are available as
to date, thme and program, pablica-
tick will be made through this
Ose
Reada's Ante Sagply C0.
20 FIFTH AVE.
We carps Sepite lee af ete
Accessories, Xew and Used Tires, Ford
Za" igcition Pare. Let us remecnt
feds voleanise your tires, Free sir.
Open til midnighe.
———
REE,
Sight S °
Seating 35-40 Passengers
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j °
THERESA SIGHT
: SEEING CO.
1asth St. & 7th Av.
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TO GO 70 KAPLAN
at S31 LENOX,
AND HAVE A
PAIR OF GLASSES
(Err eb yes me
“SAVE MONEY
RE SATISFIED HE IS
RIGHT OPPOSITE THE
IARLEM HOSPITAL
Ne Sa
\ a Pee
4 Wi}
UE
ai Alt
en ee ee
A on AR nt i I Me Ee |
@CALLH TOL
= Tae =e Schat far oa forse =
‘A NEIGHBORHOOD QTGRE ~ >
With « Repu for Square Desi Bs} Tea |
co on eS
Ae ae Sa
ecoomeb st D
ae
i. eee TED. :
ne = Megat asck ae ac :
WHEN. You WwaNT- Good. FURNITURE thi
Go to SCHAFFER’S:
Ya a ge! |
iets aves | Ves ee EER BcE gt
7 Oe ea :
; be ze hehe
PROFESSOR OF ,AFRICAN.“AND. ORIENTAL
OCCULTISM, PSYCHIC SCIENCE, WHITE -
“+ “AND BLACK MAGIC, ETC. 2. |
7 = NATIVE OF AFRICA 6 > |
ADVICE GIVEN — EGYPTIAN AND, © *
AFRICAN. FORMULAE USED ~ ‘
Studio: 206 West 129th Ske:
Hours 9 A.M. to 10 PML.'” | Phone Morningside -seee |
ci ‘ From the remotes |
ra >». periods’ of uaa's ale
h tory, there "hai? ys
> . exinied the ence
' SW ness. within -him- that
eect an PA there ae awe orem
he ee ing him aiid his affaii
en ah a whieh ‘to succeed arid
eae cee ates | enjoy the best: there
EEE SM) is in life he must mas-
Pe eee fH ter and-control.
Pasa Tl, Ae In physical- matters
: eM) ie has’ been’ able'sto
. vd } discover at size
5 the underlying princj-
‘ens ples around ice and
. ¢ater “to. his, comfort
- — ae dnd well-being thein-
. % . ventions of the. twea-
son t+: tieth century2pomt: to
‘the marvelous forces: which-surround: us. | some
_Feason, oo for the'retearches of men sfitiAAlly”in-
~ehined, the forces that tontrol and underly: man’s true
Self, and their study, have been neglected by the aver-
ABR co Eek he adh oae
“ip doe nas ea aaron con eet
in these as it Po jes
tages oS
= __-Man is: mare.than flesh and dlood, His -powery
a S K . Chaldea, Indi
at eae al ea Af age are today
being ated: by” man. We iavite all
shows who i Cane Gest tr os
» ail : ii les But -t:
the ITER TED, AS SOP aR haan esdeh i
let him understand... 1. 5; .
‘ . ALLAR.BE PRAISED
» “Replies: to Critic
an fori et San ee
Seeking to Exploit Bat :
" Y\to Uplift Masses.:7° °
Fe WASHINGTON, b. Su aay nt
tat it ans ‘ee!
So See Fr al
Somally: conducted’ affatr "By “Dean
Kelly. Miller, oF that 1t i to be
Gnder ths patronage or
any self-appointed grvep, Doan Ste
Jer has eae a tor fo
Benjamin J. or
Atlante ‘indepenenk’‘ blue corth
‘Bis point of view with reference {0
the whole matter. Ar. Davis secmny
Clocepticus reeuicg’ ihe. Couter
nee. It 14 regarding this ” that
on ‘Miller noe erties shat?
tort Ht Agata ‘indebetert
Fy our caustic edlinzlei 1ntS 4s
sure: of. the -Independent of June
2%,-ander caption, ‘The same Old
Kelf-Constitutad Leaders.’ has tern
called te my attontion. Your great
journal, located in the heart of thy
South sod spenking {rors tee neare
qt the people. must ‘carry with fe
arcas-weight and fofuoncs ainons
Renee even ste saly: upon
soar wisdomand sincerity."Tbls. {
am sure, dispose you (9 fF
‘careful ag-to the accuracy of rour
facts and, the soundness of your
conclusions: ; Your’ editorial wis
pointed, pigturesque” and. almost
vitriolic in Sta-dogmatic finality.
25 beg: MB Editor, that: you al-
Jay voor. fears and aét calad yoar
misgivings; ‘The Senbcdrin fs an
Ausured fact”. All eletacnts of (ho
Teed: are'-responding ‘as. neater be-
fore: ‘The movemnent'-(6 bit; with
hopa-andpromst (Or ritiut? rood.
Eoelf-scoking—-political mavl_yila-
tion avai glaister <cSatrol- will fini
ne place inthis rovément./All of
the:orgabtaations “invMed aro rr
sponding. with gladness atid? hone.
Away: withsycur’ misgtounded ap-
brekensions. Toner =o
‘Wrenct! ‘the tatnclhie, THety, mnust
be no atscgrdant note, We twust
all york \fogether for: the. untied
ttateof the rete. Ret us’ -closo
ranks #pd‘Jote“in Ae concerted
cho¥us*" ‘Oh (8 the Hantedrin: "
YA POUR Se aaa TARE DUE: WG. i ett
vAGe POUR
ge OL aia ee Ske ca SR te pe IP OI LPC ASE RTI
3.. Ee THE W a
g2.. i THE WORLD OF SPORT fn. -- @s
ae Football : od By ROMEO L. DOUGHERTY fast ee Events -- Billiards me
=. s a 1 ar os . ¢ | e
Heavies to Clash at Commonwealth Saturday Nigh
a a einic Saal” « 6chhLhe
Colored Fighter Who Defies Wills | Bede ca SS oe en ee a See ne pews KAA
-— three of whom play ———————— i i:
“to Meet Buddy Jackson uly 28x = omar SSeS TS cn cos onan ee LINCOLN, GIANTS
Boxing Promoters Posted Twenty-five Thousand for] Wil Be Packat . Si emNE c nag gen Witt Local Team | (Prost Novy seven) CUBAN STARS OF HAVANA:
Wills, But Harry Refused to Meet Tate in Bout ser, ty es, cl, an | Sera Tree cag ort emtan edt | Ola? ePut aurm: Ol = v, -
et clicers Mouths Age. | gaan, Denes Se tem nied See Ed hs “synthe |e set actual esornen gar [Ueetimsae ea oettaees|| AY GAYROLID PROTEATORY: GTAL.
“Big Bill” Tate, now under the management of George
P. Moore, will crawl through the ropes the coming Saturday
nighk at, the Commonwealth Sporting Club to cross swords
witl Buddy Jackson, who won on a technicality from Eddie
Kelley last Saturday night at the same place. Tate is also
slated to mect George Godfrey in Chicago on August 10, and,
what is-more, he is being groomed for the championship by
his.new manager, who las a great deal of confidence in the
ct tise, of “Die Bill” to whip all comers.
THEY 7 Q i F: rs
Hilldales’ Reserve Force Big Factor
in Keeping Phila. Club Out in Front
Cuban Star’s Pitchers Have Given Quaker City Boys
Most Trouble, While the Bacharachs Have
. Flashed Reversal of Form.
Deprived of the services of John Henry Lloyd, their
crack shortstop ; being forced to do without Mackey and San-
top in turn, and having only two hurlers that have lived up
to expectations in keeping the opposition away from the glad
gum, the Hilldale Club jumped out in front in the first pen-
nant chase of the Eastern Colored League early in the sea-
son and have been headed but once, that for a brief time
when the Baltimore Black Sox forged ahead. :
While the majority of the fans have attributed the suc-
cest of the Hilldale Club in flattening their opposition by the
murderous attack of their blungeons, which have wrought
havoc with the hurlers in the new circuit, they have over-
looked the fact that Bolden has corralled a bunch of athletes
whote versatility equals, if not surpasses, that of the Cubans,
who are noted for their ability to fill several positions with
TheWentas’% Tate to meet
Sieksen at the Commonwealth re
calie Ube story which went the
randy ws time ago from an au:
thoritgtite sonrco’ that promoters
out West haf offered Harry Wills
£25,000 % meet Moore's fighter in
Chicage. Jt is sald. that Paddy
Mallics ted Wills away from such
& match with the ease and prect-
sicp of Jack Kearns hogging the
entire gate when Jack Dempsey is
{nm the ring strutting his stuff.
While Paddy seams to be unable
tc get any speed for Harry towards
a champtonship fight, they say that
he: is a marvef when {t comes to
Keeping Tate and Harry apart in
these days, To turn down $25,000
forga wid, Wea or draw proposition
ts fomethtdg-to- make the averass
fan start to thinking and the dyed-
Inthe-woot can give Tate the once
ever Saturday night and get 2 line
vn whether pe fe of championship
calibra by bis showing against
Jucksens 10777
Vale cee won trom such well:
known fighters as Tom Cowler,
Mexican Jon Lawscn and Sam
fangtord. He knocked out Tutt
Jeckson In four rounds, while {t
tok Harry Willa five rounds be-
lore He could put the quletas tn
Tutt. lt is the opinion of George
Meere that be has the most prom:
‘cng Leavy in Ma stable, and be
1s prepared to match bim against
the best'In the game, Harry Wills
nevterrcd:.
ee ee ee
‘That a team Is only as strong as
ftey pabelitutes, is = maxim thet
carries @ whole lot of weight, and
{f the present Hilldale combixation
depended on the individual efforts
of weveral players, it is & safe bet
thag at this time they would not
‘be gujoying the comfortable lead
that: they have amassed. With
either of the catchers out of the
, the ted appears to have
Tho dame ancl, and the recelring
ond is capably taken care of, as
has: been evidenced when Mackey
was ont of the game with e wreach-
ed nec and Santop’s wing devel
ened oogritte. Later on Capt
Lioyd we-out of the game for s
couple of weeks, but the Hilldale
stegm roller Jost nons of Ste mo
mentum, Kid Steevns and Mackey
filling in the ea George Carr,
the boy from the State of the
Golden Bears, horns in for his
share of the glory by capebly Gt
Ing tres positions for the Phils
datphia cinb, playiag the outfield
end frst dase fr awhile, and was
presied into service bebiad the
bat hon both Mackey and Saatop
wero out of the game, He per
formed 1a = manner that made the
fang fecl it was all right for the
silpnies to mend at lelware =~
Walle Boldeo'’s Busters bave
geen running rampent agalast (he
brand ot hurting that tas bees
verted them by the sled artists
ireupd the cirewlt, it 1s ome thing
bure thot Alex Pompes’ singers
havo sivem-the clan of Bolden more
Trouble cua hives give s Gueara>
pd sGiior. Ow peves occasions the
fee clubu have mingled matters te
7 more oF tcze hostile way, and the
lalenders hare begged the od@
‘ot 4 four-tothree count; alse
Serpamee that went to the Philo
Jalptia crew, with one exception.
nigh Sirliag of tbe Gehan
te slg
any plier on the CF
Taal ate apssars to be elective
wgpagpet Ube Seems leoders.
AT PROTECTORY OVAL
After an absence of two montis
on ihe road, the famous Cuban
Stars of Havana will be seen at
Protectory Oval, East ‘Tremont
Avenue, near 180th Street, on Sun-
day afternoon next, when they play
two gamer egaiast the Llacoln
Gients, world’s colored champions,
in the series for the Easter Cot
cred League champlonship, ‘The
Crbans are great favorites az the
Protectory Oval, and the two
gamer sbould surely be well com-
tested, as the (cams ara very even
ly matched. In the openiox game
Oscal, the atart twirler of the Ce
bans, will be opposed by Dave
Brown, the great left-hander of the
Lincolas.
NO Q.RS8. BRANCH HERE
Im an article appearing in our
last ignve we made 2 mistake i
stating that the well known Q. R.
®. Company had established a
branch is Harlem. No sach move
was made and the Morris Music
Shop is but one of the many
agencies handling the rolls of this
company, =
Mr. Amadeo Francia, tor many
years one of the most efficient
teachers in the Virgin Inlands um
der the American Goverment, ar
rived here om vacation Last week.
By grabbing four cut of their
last six leegue cogtests, the Backs-
rach Gissts have emerged from
fourth place and are shoving the
Cubans for the rung cles to the
top. If the Downe-Landy-Francis
combination can taject a litle more
of the ever necessary panch tnt
their battles it will mean that the
seashore gang hes yet a good
chance to figure fm premier honors
for the current seasoe. :
ben vid
BL pening ly goat
‘The excess’ that there Yo 80 plnse
to hold a fight between Despecy
and Wills will not etand ee a group
of Indiasapolis business mon are
cousidering making an offer te
stage a 1¢round, no decision bout
between Jack Dempsey, heavy
Sout Gemples ant Bury wae
ig the ita intron erates,
tere to conter with business men
regarding the possibilities of such
8m event. ‘se
It 1g oadd, howeve:, Geverner
weary ps aprender
of the sporting freteraity
doubtful if there will be fest
Maged in this state. The Ger
ernce’s tend ta the Dampeoy:
‘WATCH FOR THE AN.
NOUNCEMENT OF a=
STERDAM NEWS, HOTEL
TATTLER AND PENN.
SYLVANIA RED CAPS’
COMBINED ATLANTIC
CITY EXCURSION, sUR-
DAY. AUQUeT a :
Edwards Ready for
Bout With Cartia
Semi-Final’ to Comapiceahs ip
“letton aah Bobs Groans”
‘Will Be Packed .
Now thet Eugene Criqui and
Jobnny Dundee have about Snished
trainmg for their 1é-round world's
(catherweight champoinship match
at the Pole Grounds on . Thursday
night, attention is being draws to
the preliminary bouts, which are of
unusual calibre. The semifinal
bout of elght rounds between
“Irish” Jobany Curtin of New Jer
sey and Denny Edwards of Cait
fornia would ordiuarily ll aay box:
ing club in New York. Curtin and
Edwards bave met three times,
cach bas won a decision and the
third contest ended in a draw. The
Polo Grounds affair will, theretefe,
be the rubber, and gives a guaran
tce of plenty of action and excite
ment Thousands of Jersey fight
tana will de on hand to root for
Curtin and, as Edwards is the first
Negro to appear im one of the big
boxing ‘arenas, the colored: section
cf Harem will be out im force to
cheer for him.
‘The first contest of four rounds
will Bring together Chattes Glasser
of Calcago, @ mewcemer, touted to
bo of the top rank, and Davy Jones
of Jersey. The Srst aix-round
bout will introduce Toay Vaccs-
relll. a protege of Dundee’s and &
rugged, fast-going youtheand Jacki¢
NeCoy, betleved by Jerseyites te
be 2 comiag-champlon. The first
cight-round comtest will be between
Leon Poutet, a protege of Criqui
antl 2 former lightweight champron
cf France, aud Pat Mille, ope of the
Cow reel inishmen tx the ring to
ee : 3
Homestead Grays Con-
tinue Wianlag Streak
PITTSBURGH, Pa, Jaly 24—
‘The Homestead Grays,. recognised
as the colored somtoro champions
of |. world, eel ey lished
of thy ort Femarkanie eco i
the history of lamond 91
this sessou. Pisying practically
avery day during the- mouths of
May, June asd ear-y pert of July,
the club has -won'4S games and lost
1G, and ted 3, foram srerage at
"And mest - important fa thel
string of victories, has been the
wonderful showing of their ver-
catile pitching staf. With four reg-
war pltobers, three of whom play
in other positions when sot gracing
the rubber, their record of wins,
as stacked against their compare
tively fow losses, seems all the
more amasing.
‘There Is Oscar Owens, who Fri
day night tarned :n his fifteenth
victory of the eeasop. Owens has
deen called the “Iron Man” of the
Homestead Grays, and is one of the
aveatest drawing cards of the Gray
team. In addjtion to his wonderful
pitching record, his work with the
stick has endeared him to the
hearta of the Gray followers and
others, wherever the team plays.
‘Then, there is Canady, the roost
woe ane as
won 13 games wi
he fe not pitching he ts used either
BS Stator Wills, dhe soethpe
.
“ace” of the Grays, has 18 victories
fe Ris pred, and Re also ts hey
ia the/game at times when not
weed on the mound, because of his
ability to drive in runs. Clark, the
latest addition, has won the rest of
the games, and ff occasion de
mands, Xe can be used im the tn
fore vereatila eray of pcg
a more array
talent. Talent ‘is correct, as thett
records and the record of the Grays
will show, and the pitchers are
decked up by an infield Which
would compare favorably with
many of the big league teams. The
caly apparent weakness ‘e im the
outfield, and Manager Posey has
promised some radical changes in
the sear futere im that department
of the game. .
Tiger Flowers Beats
Tut Jackson Again
SPRINGFIELD, 0, July 4—
“Tiger” Flowers, pride of the
South, won his secod fight from
Tet Jacksoa. bere Vedsveday, aight
whea be was awarded the
by Referee Jack Carroll at the ead
Of 13 rounds of fighting. _
Flowers was so elusive and clever
that Jackson did not lay a glove on
him, except when they were in
clinches and close quarters. Flow:
ers moved so fist, Jacksca wee
hitting the alr with his famous
right from start to finish, and be-
fot Be could get in position te
ebavt, the Tignr waetd-ehewdy iia
With right and left Books about the
ody and face.
WHEN IS YOUR NEXT DANCE?
Let The Tempo Orchestra, Inc., Make it a Success
Willlam H. Oever, Jr, Musical Direster
Phone’ Maree eee 27 WEST ITH STE Y-G. APTS
RENBALL! RENBALL! |
REMEMBER THE GREAT FAMILY PICNIC OF THE. |
wet — PRESBYTERIAN GnUROH
Addn eaten 40 wk & Children Under 12 fe, Fk July 27
, eS 6tF-U- DON” Se 3
(/ ara cQnsULT ge Ca,
ee ets aes
c A \ Pi
WM esT. 1908
\, = ¥
McMahon Bros. Sign
- Sessoms for Next Season
Crack Center of Loendi Has
Deserted. Posey and Will
Be Seen in Pivot Position
With Local Team
“Long Boy” Sessoms, admittedly
the best basketball center now play-
Ing the game because of his height,
Piseed bis name to a set of artistes
calling for bis appearance
Commonwealth basketball team
next season when the local players
again take the court. Sessoms af-
ter quitting the Spartans went to
Pittsburgh, and became the talk of
basketball circles because of bis
success lest season,
It was in Pittsburgh that See-
soms attracted the:attention of the
basketball world, and many games
that went to Smoketown can be
eredited to him. Two seasons ago
he removed to New York and join-
od the Spartan basketball club, but
he did not seem to get his stride
‘with the green and gold element,
and ft was not until he returned to
his old home that he developed un-
der the hard games - played by
Coendi with the crack white teams
of Pennsylvania.
Last season he gave his word to
come here and play against one of
the best white teams in the game,
but he failed to put in his appear.
ance. However, be apologized and
tcld the McMahon brothers that he
would be with them when the snow
started to fy, and this time he has
kept bis word. It ts more than
Ukely that “Pappy” Ricks will also
find a place on the Commonwealth
team with Sessoms, but so far no
announcement has been made that
‘the Mew Jersey “Kanearas” has
(“A OUBLE MEABER
LINCOLN, GIANTS
CUBAN STARS OF HAVANA:
AT CATHOLIC PROTECTORY OVAL.
Sunday, July 29th, 1973
signed. Sessoms also came from the,
Btate of New Jersey and started
th game there in his early days.
———— |
Tut Jackson to Meet = *
Lester Johnson
(Preston News Service.)
‘WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE,
Ohio, July 24.—Tat Jackson, Ohio
sensation, who has failed to keep
up his sensational performance
which bis early long List of knock-
outs would seem to have warranted,
fe acheduied for perhaps the tough
eat fight of his career this week,
when he meets John Lester Joho
son in a 22round bout here.
Johnson, wary, experienced aud
schooled through experience, is ons
of the hardest hitting heavyweights
in the ring today. His long list of
knockouts and the fact that he
broke several of Dempsey’s ribs in
a fight with that gentieman before
be ascended to the heavyweight
throne, attest to his punching abil-
ity.
The Shady Rest Country
AUT! = R
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"TO, ROCKAWAY BEACH
Sighetien bee wil lave a6 ow.
Tipth Strest at A, Me and ags Lenox
Arcane stig Ac Me Tiebes-gset
feof Arrangements! hi e
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Brown, Sec’y.
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182 First Ave. Cor, Tith St. N. ¥. City.
Meet Us Next Sunday and Every
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(Harmon Sta.)
Our New Salt Water Beach end
Fresh Water Fishing.
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Formerly Lafayette Hall 7
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_ ASBURY PARK, N.J.
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Spectators See Diamond Artists in Great Exhibition
Lincoln Giants Defeat Famous Bacharachs in Double Bill
Lincoln Giants Defeat Famous Bacharachs in Double Bill
Burban Tells Us That "Cyclone Joe" Recalled Milton's Warrior As He Posed Upon the Diamond Hurling Advice Coupled With Defiance Born of Studied Resistance at the Oval.
(By S. U. Burban)
The great colored teams, Lincoln Giants and Bacharachs, met at Protectory Oval on Sunday and the Lincolnns sent the spry visitors down to a double, but strictly honorable, defeat. Streetor and Henderson kept on even terms for six innings, when Bacharach forged ahead with a score of two to one.
The great colored teams, I met at Protectory Oval on Sun spry visitors down to a double feat. Strector and Henderson innings, when Bacharach forget to one.
To make matters worse for scored two in the seventh and Then the Protectory band followed by the sweet strains of Williams took the coaching li
To make matters worse for the Lincoln's the Bacharachs scored two in the seventh and blanked the Lincoln.
Then the Protectory band played "Tell Her I Stutter," followed by the sweet strains of "Dixie," and redoubtable Joe Williams took the coaching line for Lincoln.
Joe stood for a moment and appeared as Milton described the warrior: "Like Tunerife or Atlas unremoved," or "Expert when to advance, to stand or retreat."
Such was Joe's insight into the game that it seemed to act like an inspiration for his players and they pounded the sphere sprinted around the bases, Poles, Perry, and Marcell scoring and tying the score Marcell's hit was one of the greatest line drives of the season and the spectators showed their appreciation, as did good natured Jim Koenan, the manager in a substantial way.
Is Harry Wills to Be Sidetracked?
(Preston News Service.)
NEW YORK CITY, July 24.—And again it looks as though Harry Wills, silent, wait... with endless patience—but colored—is to be side-tracked by the money demons of the fight game. And this time, it looks, as though the "Panther of
With the score tied in the ninth inning, "High Pocket" Hudsfeth faced Henderson and sent a whirling single to left field. Perry forced him out at second by a close margin. Poles went out to left field. Pierce drove a grounder between Francis and Lundy and Perry scampered over the rubber with the winning run amid volefroes cheers and general. intense excitement. Score 5 to 4 in favor of Lincoln Giants.
Bacharach ...0 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 0—4
Lincoln ...0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 1—5
Batteries: Henderson and Jones;
Streetor and Doctor Wiley.
Umpires: McLaughlin and Adler.
Attendance about 7000.
Second Game.
"Keeping the pot boiling is an old adage and the Lincoln Giants must certainly are following out the great maxim. They took all the teams from Philadelphia to Morristown. one after the other with Cyclone Joe Williams and little Fred Wiley, the Atlanta,
"Surprise" as victors in such fast company as Dave Brown twirled out in the second game with the Bacharachs on Sunday at Protectory Oval.
The Bacharachs had a great secret vls: "That no one could tell the pitcher's name until he got on the pound."
The secret was Harper, the star twirler, but diminutive "Davie" Brown pitched circles against the husky Bacharachs to the tune of nine hits for the Lincoln Giants with a total of four runs, while Davie only allowed the visitors five hits, which were so sparsely spread that only one tally resulted. Jewel Thomas followed Captain Marcell's great feat of the first game by knocking a sky scraper so far over center field fence that one of the spectators ejaculated: "Nobody is going after it, it is still flying to the northeast."
The coaching of Cyclone Joe Williams and Bill Pierce added greatly to the life and spirit of the game, white Poles, Perry, Singer, Hudsapeth and Wilson are worth the journey of miles to witness their lightning like plays due to intelligent thinking and clear psychological insight during critical moments.
Singers' two plays in blocking two hits and intercepting the bass runners and Wilson's stab with his left hand of a liner near right feld tense were worth many times the price of admission. "Jake Heat" the City Island sage of the game wanted to treat everybody, because he claimed that the players honored the national game and one bystander chimed in maintaining that the memory of Clarence Williams, Al. Thomas, Monroe Harrison, Grant, Seldon and White, against whom the writer had many great tusks, was graced by such, creditable performances as the Lincoln Giants enacted at Projectory Oval. "Too much credit cannot be given to these colored players, who maintain their dignity against fearful odds, blind prejudice and ignorance of the technical points which are bound to crop out during moments of intense excitement.
The Lincoln played a clean scientific and sportsmanlike game, which might be a criterion for many white teams to follow:
Michaelsch
0 0 1 0 0 0
Lincoln
0 0 3 0 1 0
Batlries: Harper and James; Brown and Pierce.
Umpires: McLaughlin and Adler.
Attendance, 7,000.
Western Music Studio
Piano instruction. Good opportunity for children. Special arrangements for rehearsals. Hours
9-12, 6-9.
Hong Kong Morn, 5023
M. B WOODG
132 W. 129th St.
APL 2 East
Is Harry Wills to Be Sidetracked?
(Preston News Services.)
NEW YORK CITY, July 24.—And again it looks as though Harry Wills, silent, waitful, with endless patience—but colored—is to be side-tracked by the money demons of the fight game. And this time, it looks, as though the "Panther of New Orleans," will be forced to step aside until the "Wild Bull of the Pampan." Luis Firpo, is given his chance.
What a farce? How unequal would be a fight between Firpo and Dempsey, the man killer. The match could be aptly termed a two-fisted man and a one-fisted man. Firpo showed conclusively in his two fights in this country that, in so far as the prize ring is concerned, he has but one hand, and that is his right. His left is mainly as an article of adornment and defense, but as an offensive weapon, it is entirely no good.
Just what show would Firpo have, with all his wildness, if pitted against one of Dempsey's experience. True, many have said that Dempsey has gone back. We do not doubt that fact. Dempsey showed in his fight against Tommy Gibbons at Shelby that he is weak at in-fighting. And BUSINESS would seem to demand, for this very reason, that he postpone meeting Willis as long as possible. The world knows that Willis isn't getting younger as the days go by.
And perhaps, Jack Kearns, wily manager of the champ, realizing the importance of the fight and just what the state is, is putting off the final day of eckoning as long as possible. For the very fact that Tommy Gibbons made Dempsey look mighty bad at close quarters, is a danger signal for Dempsey to keep away from Wills. Wills is at his best at in-fighting, and unlike Gibbons, he has something more than a clever defense. When it comes to one-arm-free fighting, Dempsey is likely to be jolted and jolted hard. This bout looks like a battle in which endurance and gameness will be the deciding factors. And If Wills does get a chance to go into the ring with Dempsey, then you can really look for the "Battle of the Century."
For years the better class of colored people in Harlem have felt that colored aggregations of musicians should be engaged to furnish music at stated intervals during the summer for their people in the neighborhood, but nothing was done until recently when William H. Wiggins was selected to head a number of colored musicians to furnish open air concerts during July in St. Nicholas Park. We understand that through the interest of Andrew B. Kesting, leader of the 12th Assembly District, arrangements were made whereby Harlemites will be enabled to enjoy these concerts which started on July 13th. This Friday night another concert will be given and the program as arranged by the leader will include operatic and popular selections.
Sight-Seeing Outing & Picnic
TO
Croton Point Beach
ON HUDSON
30 MILES UP THE HUDSON
Buses Will Step 2 Minutes for a View of Menn. Walker's Palatial Home.
Thursday, August 2, 1923
Bring Bathing Suite and Fishing Nets. Spend a Dig on Our New Beach. See This Beautiful Property and Summer Colony.
Buses Leave 467 Loans Ave. R. A. M. Mine Reservations NOW AT NEW YORK ACADEMY BUILDING.
ROUND TRIP
$1.25
in the Event of Rain. Outing to be Postponed to Following Thursday.
BLACK AMERICANS RESPOND WITH THE "MARSELLAISE"
Asked to Sing Star Spangled Banner by Crackers Who Were Discriminating Against Them, They Gave Sharp and Thrilling Rebuke.
PARIS, July 23—White Americans must check the "color line" at the three-mile limit.
American capitalists and petty bourgeoisie, touring France, have caused a furore in Paris—where the color line does not exist—because they resent the presence of French Colonial Negroes as guests and out-tomers in cafes, restaurants, hotels, trains and sightseeing buses.
So indignant are the colored residents of Paris ever this attitude of the boorish Anglo-Saxon that Deputy Diagnes, representing Senegal, the home of Battling Siki, the fist conqueror of "the best blood of Europe," has protested to Premier Pelocaine asking the government to show the impudent Americans "their place."
Deputy Diagnes, in a letter to Pelocaine, refers specifically to the row caused by the boorish Americans when they found that several Senegalese had booked passage on the same sightseeing bus which was to convey their little tinged majesties to the battlefields.
"Too many Americans," stated the Deputy, "are running loose in our boulevards trying to enforce their savage customs on the French gentlemen of color.
"It is necessary that the police intervane to make the Americans, who are here as the guests of France, respect the rights of every citizen."
There are frequent rows created by the crackers in Montmartre cafes because the management permits dancing between white girls and Neare men.
A significant reaction to the activities of white Americans in spreading their violent propaganda against Negroes and attempting to institute the "color line" in Paris as they have instituted it in Cuba and one or two South American countries occurred the other evening at a concert where there was present a large number of black and white Americans. At the conclusion of the concert, the white Americans burst forth into the "Star Spangled Banner," while the colored Americans stood by in guillion silence. Noting this, one of the leaders of the white Americans hollered out to the colored "citizane" of the United States to join in "in your national anthem." He waved his hands, conductor-fashion, and his companions held their voices to give the colored brethren a chance to lead off with the anthem. There was a brief conference among the colored Americans, quickly followed by their bursting forth into sonorous, rich-throated song. But they sang, not the "Star Spangled Banner," but the "Marsaliases," the French National song and in a large measure the international song of all oppressed peoples. And the French orchestra which had ignored the singing of the "Star Spangled Banner" quickly whipped out their instruments and accompanied the dark Americans, while the Parialian crowd which had been speeding towards the exits to escape the infliction of the American anthem stopped in their pace to join the colored men in their resolution of the "Marsaliases" and thunderously cheered them at its conclusion, several members feting them later at one of the leading cafes in Paris.
Two weeks ago with the opening of "Raisin Cain" at the Lafayette Theatre we gave the same old honest opinion of the show, which was to the effect that it was no show at all. On Saturday night the production (7) closed, after very bad business and did not even go to South street, Philadelphia, where most any kind of a coffered offering will go over.
Hunter is as near to Bert Williams as any colored comedian ever came and with the material from the pen of Alex Rogers we predict that the comedian will come into his own. The style of work as done by Hunter will be greatly enhanced with the kind of material Rogers will prepare for him and this means that at least on the records we will have another Bert in the near future.
Miller and Lyle in their new show will hit the road on or about August 6th. The experience gained and the ability of Fieneyne Miller warrants us in predicting that they will come before the public with something out of the ordinary and something which we are all looking forward to with pleasurable anticipations. No stone will be left turned in trying to make this latest show one of the best of its kind ever produced with a real story brimful of humor running throughout.
S. Tutt Whitney, who came to town recently, ensured us the information that Whitney and Tutt have put together something that will appeal to the theatre-going public. We readily believe this from what we have seen of the Whitney and Tutt offerings and unless they are forced to change their book material through themachinations of some unknown fashions we would like to see them start right here in New York and hit the road. Intelligent and with a true conception of the business, we are looking forward to that day when they will come into their own.
Here's a little story taken from life for you. He had no passport and from the looks of things he would not be able to secure one in time to make the big trip to Europe where he is today enjoying great popularity. Like a long-foot brother he came running and soon we had the machinery in motion that made it smooth selling for him. He secured his passports and left us with words of thanks and promising to send us word of his success in London. We have not received even a postcard yet.
RAGTIME AND JAZZ
PIANO PLAYING
GRATUITATE IS A HONOR TO ALL THE MUSICIANS WHO WERE PART OF THE RAGTIME AND JAZZ PIANO PLAYING. Every year there are numerous inmates in the prison system who are eager to learn the art of piano playing. We offer a variety of lessons for your children, ranging from beginner to advanced levels. The lessons are designed to help you develop your piano skills and enjoy the music. We are here to help you that we will provide you the best possible experience. Our teachers are experienced and knowledgeable about the instrument and the music. We are also familiar with the most recent report of the peace movement and the successful report of the peace movement.
CHRISTENSEN
SCHOOL OF POPULAR MUSIC
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1923
Abbie Mitchell, Scoring at Head of Present Week's Bill at Popular, Seventh Ave. House
At the Lafayette Theatre this week Miss Abbe Mitchell is heading a fine vazdeville bill assisted by Will Martina Cook and Edward G. Brown. Miss Mitchell was warmly received on Monday night, and rendered some of the old favorites and showed her versatility in a small sketch. She will continue as the big attraction at this playhouse during the entire week.
Next week Sarah Martin, Okeh record singer, will top the vanderville bill to be offered by the Coleman brothers. We understand that another attempt will be made to secure a bill in keeping with the high standard of the house. Supporting Miss Mitchell this week were Allen and Ross, Jessie and Herbert, the Crompton Sisters, Brawn and Williams, the Southern
RAGTIME PIANO P
GRANTED THE
MAJORITY FAME OF
THE MAYOR OF
MARYLAND.
Can you teach the piano in any
city or country in the world?
Can you teach the piano in any
city or country in the world?
$30 IMPRINTS. When you buy that
piano, please pay the
amount of the LOWEST OFF
the price of the piano.
Government and the financial payoff of
the piano is the lowest off the
price of the piano.
If you don’t call, write to
Beacham II.
CH
SCHOOL
ANNUAL PICNIC
Society of Sons of Virginia
Dexter Park, Woodhaven, L. I.
THURSDAY EVE., AUG. 2, 1923
Music by Van Dyke Players, Ad-
d. Levin, Levin
Kibbutz-Dome - Olmert-Haskel-
Chairman, P. D. Hardy, Sec. Trus.
Cash in Installments
RADIO
Installed & Repaired
MACHINES MADE TO ORDER
WITH OR WITHOUT
OUTDOOR WIRES
John B. Williams
257 WEST 140TH ST. Apt. 4
ZELLMAN'S
336 LENOX AVE.
Pianos, Players
GRANDS
Everything in Music
and Radio
This thing of trying to camouflage a show makes even the owners of the Lafayette Theatre laugh and we fear we will ever be unable to say these attempts are world beaters when they are not. Out in Chicago they have a way of telling us that everything at the Grand is better than Williams and Walker and yet these shows never get any further. We consider it an insult to the reading public to say a show is great when they can see for themselves it is not.
Which reminds us that one of the gentleman connected with "Rabin' Cain" called up the Amsterdam News office and left word that he wanted to see the dramatic editor. The dramatic editor upon his arrival called up the theatre and wanted to know if this gentleman did not know where the Amsterdam News office was located. But, anyway, the gentleman tried to show us wherein we were wrong and we concluded the conversation with asking the gentleman if Park Rew gave an opinion would he have the temerity to call up Park Rew and question such an opinion.
Eddle Hunter, leading comedian with the "How Come?" show, entered an agreement recently which we think will be the means of bringing him even further into the limelight and the move being perhaps the foundation for a brilliant career. Mr. Hunter signed up with the Victor people to make records and immediately enlisted the aid of Alex Rogers, who will write the lyrics, the music of which will be furnished by Luckeyth Roberts.
HARLEM CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
257 Lenox Ave. (123rd St.)
A School for the Highest Type of Colored People.
All Instruments Taught to Artistic Perfection.
Meet Us Next Sunday and Every Sunday at
CROTON POINT BEACH
(Harmon St.)
Our New Salt Water Beach and
Fresh Water Fishing.
For directions see R. W. Junker, 407
Lenox Ave., or Telephone Mora, 8427
PIANO INSTRUCTION
L. ELIZABETH HUTONINGS, OF
THE CONSERVATORY OF
MUSICAL ARTS
Pianist Teacher
Program Assured
STUDIO: 220 W. 140th St., Apt. B
Now Showing
There, Fri, Est. Sun. (This Week)
FRANK KEEMAN in
"SCARS OF JEALOUSY"
A Stirring Dramatic Offspring.
Men, Tues. Wed.—Next Week
SO AGNES AYRES
In "THE HEART RAIDER"
A Picture of Thrills.
Men, Fri, Sat. Sunday (Nine Weeks)
"THE RUSTLE OF SILK"
shimmering, stirring resumes in a set
of silks and satins. Preparing
city Composes and Comedy Tears
Coming Soon
NOW PLAYING
AH This Week
HARPER & BLANKS
Plantation Revue Junior
Featuring
SPEEDY SMITH
From the 7-11 Company
BILLY MITCHELL
From the Big Thriller
TRIXIE SMITH
Celebrated Photos Artist
GEORGE PASHA
Just Both from Europe
THE 4 STRUTTERS
From the "Lion" Co.
Now Showing
Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun. (This Week)
FRANK KEENAN in
"SCARS OF JEALOUSY"
A stirring Dramatic Offspring.
Mon., Tues., Wed.-Next Week
See AGNES AYRES
In "THE HEART RAIDER"
A Picture of Thrills.
Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sunday (Next Week)
"THE RUSTER OF BILK"
A shimmering stirring romance in a setting of mills and nation. Presenting Bethy Campbell and Company Tearls
Coming Soon
Dorothy Dalton in "Fog Sound"
Romance, Adventure, Mystery.
PRESENTED FIRST AND EXCLUSIVELY AT
LINCOLN THEATRE
18 WEST 18TH ST. AT LENOX AVE.
EXHIBITORS FROM ALL OVER THE COUNTRY WILL DISPLAY NEGRO ACHIEVEMENT IN COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY
Four, Josephson's Icelanders and the Gavers, Internationals.
The vaudeville change being offered patrons of the house will naturally what their appetite for the musical shows which will come into the Lafayette at the start of the regular theatrical season, although the present offerings are meeting with much favor.
"Denver Ed" Says Leonard Is a Real Champion
Sat at Ringside While Bennah Lambastes Tendler With All He Had on Monday Night
Ever since Benny Leonard announced some years ago that as champion he would defend the title against all comers and proved it by meeting and defeating Leo Johnson and Eddie Dorsey, the colored people always carried a warm spot in their hearts for him.
If there was any doubt of his ability it was dispelled on Monday night after he had gone through 15
Alberta Hunter's "CHIRPIN' The Blues"
SHE sure can chirp 'em! Alberta Hunter has put all her pep into this record. It's an爽ing, sobbing, shooting Blues sensation with a thrilling piano accompaniment. Hear it today.
Paramount Records—All Mega Tapes
12017—Chirpin' the Blues and Sensation Blues Will Take Your Place
Paramount Red Record—Sung by Alberta Hunter, piano acc. by Richard Henderson.
12021—Belle Rapture Tenderness and Ally's a Woman—By Natalie Jan Quercette.
12021—Messing Hearted Blues and You'll Keep Just What You Saw—Sung by Alberta Hunter, acc. by Pender Henderson's Catch.
12030—The New "Drops" Hearted Blues—October variability of the Wood Grown Blues and Shell Count Blues—Sung by Alberta Hunter, piano acc. by Glenwood Japan.
12030—Midnight Blues and Playwell Blues—Sung in real Blues tones by Pender Henderson's Catch.
12034—Dear Lord, Remember Me and Jesus in Creating Sound—Satellitized by Cecil Clark.
Send Me My Message—If your music desires can bring you three records, order from factory. Records are made by C.O.D. D. Records and Music Publishing Records. Agents Wanted Where We Do Not Mingle Dudes.
Manufactured by
The New York Recording Labels, Inc.
75 PARAUMONT CLOSE
Port Washington, Wisconsin
Paramount Records
rounds of hard fighting against Low Tender and "Dewey Ed" Martin turning to the writer said: "You can say for me that this boy Leonard is a real champion; I have seen a great many fighters in my day, champions, near champions, would be champions and the beat in the game, who really threatened the crowns worn by the champs, but this Benny Leonard is all that I have heard of him and a little bit more."
"He is blest with everything a champion should have and-bellowe me, it is going to be a long way off before they can dig up a boy to take the crown from him." George Moore, who is quite some pampkins in the game himself, also voiced the opinion that there isn't the least doubt, of Leonard being a real champion, and what we want to say in conclusion, is that when Denver Ed Marin and George Moore are of one mind in rendering an opinion we go down hook, line and sinker on it.
PAGE VIIVL
__ HOTELS — RESTAURANTS — CABARETS
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Another story by the author
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_ JAMAICA NOTES
tn our iesue of July 1ith there
appeared gh Soooan of the wed
ng. Rath
datkater of Mr, nod'Mis. Bama!
Blanchard of Jamaica, L. i, and
Mr, Joseph P, . Mr. Gallego
{s well and favorably known as 8
dramatic reader, having, appeared
throughout the Eastern States.
In the Feblianes article of the
wedding the reporter omitted to
mention the names of some of the
participants present ong
them were: Mr, John Vasques,
as best msc, and Prof. Ellsworth
R. Groce and Mr. Kdwin Wilkins.
noted violinists, whose playing de-
lighted the guests, Miss Beatrice
‘Henderson, dramatic reader of
Tare sbility, gave e charming and
natural rendition of “Love's Art
and Cupid.”
‘Mr, Gallego states that he bad
absolutely nothing to do with the
publication of the first report.
eens
‘Weleewe to the
PURNELL HOUSE
and BOUQUET DINING ROOM
Wighetuse server delicious ome, cooks
ing, “Neauly laraubed rooms, dally or
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2 ie
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ARVERNE, L. |.
‘Take Rockaway Beach train to Ham
Eel'Siston, teen walk to 77th Street
Bathing Suits Excurion, Parties
for ite Recommodstes
* 410 CONGRESS 8ST.
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y.
Furniabed rooms by day or week: all
outekde reoms; single or ensuite; three
minutes’ walk to RR. trolley mation;
parks and mineral springs; bot and
| cold bathe.
MISS LOTTIE FORRESTER, Prop.
Phone 1016-W
3
The Ray Cottage
I8 NOW OPEN
‘The Ray Cottage. William Street,
Sarstogn Springes N.Y. ls wow eyes |
wader the management of Samuel G.
Craw(ord, Treaserer of the Tart Chub,
Inc., New York.
Nice light and airy rooms, eleganely |
for are_avuilable ot rensonsble |
ae ore cet
Rota Walcott the Sen cnc fall,
BOOK YOUR RESERVATIONS
‘Tel. Belle Harber 3622-W reat
FLEE, Mer,
‘An ideal spet to spend your vacation.
Reoos by the day, week or season.
Take Rockaway Beech train st Penn,
giatog lesa, Arms, Beestire
237 -— 84th Street
ARVERNE, L. L
- Halt Beck free cation
Brooklyn Notes
On July 23, 1933, the Woodcli
Pleasure Ciub gave a bus ride to
Pelham Bey to « groyp. of forty
two, in August. the club ts
lng a trip to Rockaway.
Mr and Mrs. Arnold H. Landin
of 445 Franklin Ave, sccom-
panled by Mr and Mrs. Hubert
jennings and Mr. and Mrs. B.
Jones of N.Y. ©, malored down ts
‘Asbury Park on ‘last Bat, to spend
the ‘week and with Mr Lendin’s
sister and brotheriniaw, Mr. and
Mrs. John Hill, who live at the
perk,
Mr, Leon Ross, Clerk in the
General Post Oftlce of N.Y. C.
was married on Juge 38rd’ to one
of Jersey City’s popular youns
ladies, Miss Alice Theresa Souss,
also a clerk in the same office.
‘They are spending their belated
Boneymoon in New Haven, Conn.
A substantial sum of money was
Fealised through the block | party
held on last Monday evoning in
Jefferson Ave., between Throop and
Summer Ave. for a fund to con-
struct a Parochial school adjoin-
ing the Colored Roman Catholic
Church at Jofferson Ave. and
Ormond Place. The affair was
under the auspices of the Wo
men's Democratic Organization in
the 17th Assembly District and the
residents on the block on which
it was held. A baby perade and
athletic, games for boys and iris
featured the program. The Rev
Father Bernard Quina, pastor of
St. Claver’s, the only perish of
colored people in Brooklyn and
District Attorney Chas. J. Dodd
participated.
agente an ee
A mass moeting, at which time
will be discussed the Various
‘Phases of the Tuskegee Hospital
situation, will be held Sunday
‘sfternoon, July 29, in the Holy
Trinity Baptist Church, DeKall
Ave, near Franklin, Rev. T, 8.
Harden. pastor.
Among the, speakers will be:
Ex-United States Senator Wm.
Calder and District Attorney
Dodd have been invited. Others
who are asked to make ten minute
speeches:
Bishop W. L. Les, Rev. Geo, F.
Miller, Rev. James B. Adame. Fev.
H. H. Proctor, Rev, E. X. Tyler,
Rev, W. C. Brown, Rev. J. D. Gor
don, Rev. A. C. Matthews. Mrs. M.
C. Lawton. Rev, N. P. Boyd, Dr.
FM. Jacobs,
BETHANY BAPTIST.
Rev. Kimball L. Warren. preach-
ed Sunday, morning and eveniag.
Mrs. Margaret Johnson sang “O
Rest In the Lord.”
‘The Missionary Circle under the
splendid leadership. of Mra alice
Jones, » very ardent worker ia the
church, 18 . Meetings ore
held from 6:20 to 7:30 P. M. every
Sunday.
‘Thuraday, July 19th, the Brother-
hood of the church’ gave their
‘Third Annual outing to Rye Beach
by automobiles, This wasa de
| Meprany elabt prayer meeting had
ant oded “tontare, The ‘male
quartette of the Lynchburg Theolo-
‘gical Seminary. and College sang
several jubilee songs.
ARVERNE, L. I.
‘The followt ests spent the
week-end or Tart ot it me “The
Douglaston": Mr. and Mrs. John
Burrell of 3183 Fifth avenue. Mr.
and Mrs. L. Lawrence. 110 West
32nd street; Mr. and Mrs. H.R
Furlonge, Mr. and Mrs. Jobs 3.
Jobmson, 149 West 132nd street;
Mr. and Mra. Jeaanesse; Mrs.
Mery EL Tagtor, 318 West 6lst
street; Mrs. el O. Taylor, 138
‘West €0th street; Mrs. Martha Bul
Han, 144 West 144th atroet; Miss
Goldie Dickerson, 144 Wess 144th
street; Miss Marie Jackson, 331
‘West 69th street; Mise irene Bat-
ley. 6 West 124th street; Miss
street; “Mesere. dt Joses, “2363
5 . Jones,
Seventh avenue; Chartie Bullock,
371 Woot 144th street: D. C. Ber-
Hubbard, tes, West Tatnd street,
‘EBd A. Grier, 2400 Seventh avenue
‘A movement is on foot by some
gt fae colored residents of the
Sockeeeys ‘organise & com;
te Detter housing oad.
tions for cer people.
RAST SIDE NEWS.
Mre. Jessie ©. Willis. hair
Grosser of M6 Bast 56th is
Seen y
Tittesio Avense. .
Tard Arvass tne Soon lea Se
tive. en Tasaebe. ‘Sie desiren to
thaxk ber many friends for fruit
and Sowers. :
tr. end Mrs. Charles Mason of
x ‘
gy htt Areas em ventana
Sars. Bale L. Barney of Nor.
eet bey ocks, with te ‘=
Frost etna werest, :
Jersey City Notes
Docker T. Waskiagto:
lore eet es
meetings Sor extire mou!
fag wit be bad tas itt Fostasy
i ct the Feat tiead
Sean Seasres tas
‘reek, at Which time the Snale
the stcste comalites ‘report "was
Cy who
fe now at her Resear t-
ing and wapecte te be ont again
won.
te pleawing ts ome Seeranine
nbhte br wivigg © pleaie
‘ile Schuetoea Pan abowt Ae.
eist
Wintam B. Joues of 668 Com-
Conttned st Wome for ther beat ame
eral, monthe, will enter te
Bilal this week ve ubageo ba Qe
meatal Baptist Church and Sunday
Schcol last Wednesday to Keans-
burg. N, J., was well attende’. ‘The
schoct ig Under the leaderenip ct
Prof Join J. Graves. Rev. W. 8.
Smith, pastor.
‘The Tri-City Club of Brookiy:
New fork an Jersey. City wil
hold a Bummer night's festival and
danco at Schustzen Pars on Friday
IgA, Jedy 27. Maron Smith's ver
a eetra will furnish muse
for
Madam Ida L. Robbisis, president
of the deruey Ciey Branch ef Hest
ty Culturist » No. 37, ts mak-
ing grest plana for the entartain-
ent of the delegates who will be
‘our midst ¢ annoal cox-
aaa, Which will be held ia New
York Clty August 14, 18 and 16 at
St. Mark's Hall, 138th Strest. This
ednvention will be preceded Ly 8
sermon at Mother Zon Chureh,
Sunday evening, August 13, As &
special feature of the meeting the
ervey City Branch will entertain
is del ites at tl jersey iy
Communtty “Center on’ Tuesday
evening, August 28.
The National Convention opened
lant Friday tp AUantle City. W. Jy
at Fitzgerald's Auditoriom, " and
many delegates were presant. Dr.
George H Cannon, who was chalr-
man, felt encouraged at the re
sponse given the call
Little Florence Junita Williams
of 83 Montgomery Street has re
tarned home from the hosaita},
having been run down by an auto-
mobtle,
jo Mrs, Lulian D, Feacher of 46
Newark Avenue is now spending 1
‘uch needed vacation at her rasth
‘er’ cottage, The Morningside, tn
Asbury Perk, N J. Mrs, & B.
Merotr ts also there and will re-
wain until after Labor Tey.
Washington, D. C.
2, FRANCIG SPRIGGE,
Odd Fellows’ Pieid Day
and Baseball Game.
Saturday, July 21, at the Ameri-
Se aise orete woh
le No. 18 of wea FS.
te witness tne great’ competitive
Grill between “the ‘Henderson
Commandery No. 1 of the Knights
Templar, and the crack Patriarch-
Th ree ge a ocean arate
ere, was, & gran
icipated in the Odd Fellows
Gand "ang the Patturskie ‘Band
Ut. John H. Mayo was chairman of
the Executive Committee of A¥-
rangements.
Prudential Bank Opened
say a8.
Prudential Bank officially
Gre gible Moutay worming. July
public lon. aly
2rd. The bank [s located on
Fiorida Ave, batween 7th and sth
Streets, northwest, right in the
center of the Negro Business Acti-
vitles, It will open with an
authorized capital of 000 un-
dat the supeerialoa of the U.
Government.
In Publie Part, . §
‘Tos music tm the Public Parks
this year is divided between the
Marine Band, the Army Band, the
Boys’ Independent Band and ‘Mill-
ers Community Center Band. The
Miter with, Chester Dodson. is
creating big hit with both white
ae people.
Bureau Giris Gives
Benefit Picnic.
Saturday evening, the Bureau of
Engraving gave a bene
enke at Green Willow Park. The
Eolembisa Orchestra furaished the
music.
Bey Scout Troop Goes
peop S02 of Bt. 's Parish
Pp ‘s
ind"ihe ‘other Boy Scouts. of the
eity left for Highland Besch, on
the Cheasapeake Bay near Anna:
polis, Md., Monday, July 22rd.
where they will remain unui
August 4th.
| Reid Music Store
o B. Reid, Washington's only
colored music house, bas enlarged
cecepiod SF Georgs We Tayior. the
jeweler. Ho carries a complete line
‘of musical tastruments.
Mrs. A. Colbert of 46 Detrees
Street left the city Sunday for
‘Diamond Hill, Connecticut. for a
abort vacation, as guest of ber sis-
ter, Mrs, Veronica Quander.
Mrs, Leas Berry, of Toledo, Ohio,
a speoding her vacation in this city
as the guest of Mrs. Cora Yous
Mrs. Berry was initiated in Bt.
Thomes Auxiliary No. ¢4 of the
Knights of St.John, .
YONKERS, N. Y.
Mr_and Mra. Calvin White of
New York City ware the weekend
core ot eee John Jackson of 1
‘averue.
aa pe aed
fant at $78% New Main street.
Mrs. Curie of Los An-,
‘who has been visiting,
was the guest of re Nancy Joaes
of 4% Locust Hill oa last Thurs.
Nise Hattie Scott has ja re
Ubrouga Now York tate to Canad
aud the New Euglena State She
ig Bow going fo take up work st
as Hospital in Asbury
Maite ikims Thomas of Rosalte,
¥. J, 2 visiting Mre. Emily L.
Mr. Maward Weth and dssatier
pies: Dorothy ‘Webb, of Newark.
bee tare Mary Feitbenien ot i
trviag piace, on last Sunday,
Sepon00 RAISED BY
[OWARD UNIVERSITY
WASHINGTON, July 24—The
campaign of Howard University 12
rake $260,000 to mahe wp a $500.
Se sedommant for is medical
wy ae Genegat’ ferstion Tose.
WONDER os ) , ay rh coME
VALUES ea Zet| 4 gh MAivy 4
EVERY a v : FINEST
Fo wal SEAM N aaah Oa tol: Sar
tonishing finest furniture is marked “tor immediate sale,
cecardies of cost” Beautlal period calles crag odd ploces—a host of inviting values priced s0
low it will pay you to buy NOW! ® . é
| Te me punn 0 =MICHIGAN’S CREDIT 9 112 wety puiren s10 |
91.00 Wedly Diinn 75 TERMS ARE EASIEST 8 Weiy mire s00 |:
ra Gag WEE Oper | | (I
ve : Co . beg of i y 7 Uy = Fir
CES || ea carmen Lees || UTP Bere
Porch || ae ee ee SPECIAL
Rocker. " Greenpoint Bed |}
$3.95 COLONIAL GOLDEN OAK $12 95
A. tmited amber of] . DINING ROOM SUITE || ,, oe
these ite looking. rocks Teloned te ivory, with artistic | -
unuaual (price. "Be. sure Consists of buffet. china tics cwdatonn May be had :
Eeert 3|(90000 ma || CS
ou . _¢ ' . t.- yee”
K -Daliware CIAO of Moarrnandice ;
— (IOP VGnle was -..
— NE See ee
wana Querido 2 Bey Blount)
BISHOP ROSS HONORED
(Pre aton News Service.)
HOT SPRINGS, Ark., Jaly 23.—
Bishop I. N. Rows, of Washington,
D. C., previding bishop of Arkau-
sas in the A. M. &. Church, was
highly honored here last Thursday,
whos Negroes from all denomina-
tions and from all parts of the
Btate gathered to celebrate the 48
years he has been in the ministry.
The celebration was under the
management ot Rev, J. D. Dennis,
State chairman; Rev, E. J. Lunnon,
Rev. O. L, Moody and Rey, V. M.
Townsend.
an
ba
3-Piece
Bed Outfit
$24.75
2:m. continuous poet, Ivory
Enamel Bed. Genuine
et
ata Lael |
ra |
ee]
Refrigerator
$27.75
Constructed of oolid hard
wood with white enameled
‘steel lining and ceamiess
rounded corners. Also &
completa line of genuine
ren nee
B. T. WASHINGTON IN
HAMPTON PAGEANT
HAMPTON, Va., July 23.—A pas-
eant adapted from Booker T. Was-
ington's “Up From Slavery” and
arranged by Helen A. Whiting of
‘Tuskegee Institute was presented
in 18 episodes at Hampton Instt
tute by students of the summer
School on the Fourth of July eve.
ning, with a wide-range program of
Negro religious folkecngs which
were sung by a large chorus of
students led by Heary L. Grant,
teacher of music, Dunbar High
School, Washingtos, D. C.
| Save $32.75
On This Beautiful
3-Piece Bedroom ,
ibe pg al
a El EP pe
Tenens el
Hoo Pear A) eer
This gteructive Bed Now!
‘lwatcan Walnut; oe $99.75
sists of Dresser, Bow-end Bed and
Chifforette. Dressing Table Extra. A
wonderful value!
RUGS and LINOLEUMS “
6x9 Grass Rug; was 6x9 Linoleum Rug; |
$6.95. Special... 88.98 eer Special.$7.95 |
46x76 Grass Rug: - WiwasSi4gs. Specel. $68 :
was $4.95. Special $198 612” Seamless. Vel
&x10 Grass Rug: was | vet Rug; was
$795. Special.....398 $3995. Special... .$ee.98
es . . es
Fishel Furniture Co.
~ Inc.
soc CASH—soc WEEKLY & UP
WILL BRING THIS MACHINE:
‘TO YOUR HOME
_ Fishel Furniture Co.
. Inc. “4
; . q typ WEST resth 8T.. N. ¥.¢. 4
l
Galden Oak
Extension
Table
$12.95
Seiden otk tna satiety
es
IV
Special Sale
Fibre Chairs
and Rockers
Each
$9.95
Woven ef finest quality
Coke and cushitees seats
Your ehelce cf various fin-
she. Covered with cre
.@ In various patterns.
+ Be purchased In ects
i, enarately,
Atlantic City Exeursion Sunday, August 26th
SECTION TWO NEWS
Broadway at Its Best Ha
Nothing on
Hundreds Turned Away on Opening
Jazz Artists Entertain
Broadway at its jazziest and snappier. That is the opinion heard on all sides to lucky enough to get in Thursday at Connie's Inn, Harlem's latest and greatest at 131st street and Seventh avenue. This bang, and those who had to be turned a one of the treats of their life.
Broadway at Its Best Has Nothing on Connie's Inn
Hundreds Turned Away on Opening Night; Leading Jazz Artists Entertain Guests.
Broadway at its jazziest and snappiest brought to Harlem! That is the opinion heard on all sides from those who were lucky enough to get in Thursday at the opening night of Connie's Inn, Harlem's latest and greatest place of amusement at 131st street and Seventh avenue. Things went over with a bang, and those who had to be turned away certainly missed one of the treats of their life.
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 23. A call on the Negro voters of the country to organize themselves into separate political units for the purpose of securing their "just dues from the Republican Party" was contained in a resolution adopted at the National Republican Conference here today. Fourteen states were represented.
After a stormy session, during which there was talk of bolting the Republican Party until the latter gave them equality in party councils, the majority report of the Resolutions Committee, calling upon "the colored voters of the country to devote the next 15 months in perfecting concerted action to bring about political pressure for Negro interests." was adopted.
"As an American citizen," says the resolution, "the Negro finds himself in a large section of the country disfranchised, 'Jim Crowed,' subjected to peonage, mobbed and lynched, and in other sections under limitations to which other groups are not subjected. We believe that the colored citizens in the states, where they vote and where their votes are counted, should exert all the political power they can command to abolish such conditions."
After a struggle in an upstown subway train Monday, between Times Square and 50th Street, during which more than a score of women were crushed and sent into hybrids, three colored men were arrested charged with attempting to pick the pockets of Glovna Pullast, here on a visit from Cleveland.
Detectives Rastis and Mugge, Pickocket Squad, trailed the men from Sixth Avenue. Passengers in the train were under the impression that the detectives were hold-up man and refused to aid them.
The prisoners gave their names as Connie Kennedy, of No. 119 West 132d Street; Jeffrey Mills, of No. 290 West 3d Street; and Robert Bessalay, of No. 29 West 132d Street.
Speaking before a large audience Sunday at the A. M. E. Community Church, 325 Seventh avenue, Dr. M. A. N. Shaw, DD., M. D. of Boston, and William Monroe Trotter, president and executive secretary, respectively of the National Equal Rights League, made stirring pleas for more co-operation and a greater solidity on the part of the race throughout the nation. "Unity," said D. Shaw, "is the imperative necessity of the hour. As the race progresses the more it finds that attempts are being made to segregate it and prevent it from attaining free and unarmed citizenship." "The only means of obviating this," said Dr. Shaw, "is for the members of the race to pool their efforts. All Negroes," he said, "believe in equal justice. Here is at least one point on which the many schools of thought do agree on. Why, then, should they not pool their efforts in this direction?"
Mr. Trottier spoke of the coming Negro Sanhedrim, which had its first meeting earlier in the year.
The purpose of the Eankheim is to form an alliance among the many groups, under a single head, to agitate for the broader aspects of the race's rights.
Three Day Conference.
The three day educational conference which will be held August 5th. Thir and Sth under the auspices of the New York "College Chapter of the N. A. A. C. P. and the West 116th street Y. M. G. A. promotes a most interesting program. The speakers who have already been secured are: Dr. W. B. D. De Bols, Robert W. Barakun CHINDFR J. KILLEN of the Urban League; Mrs. M. Dengual, A. Philip Randolph, John B. Nail, Mrs. Jesse Tempest, Prof. R. C. Williams and Prof. J. H. Aggrey.
Atla
Leading Jazz Artists.
Willibr Sweatman, king of Jazzdom, and his Arme Syncopatons keep things busy from the start. Sweatman is the originator of the present jazz crane. The melodies and movements he and his band can coax from their instruments are sufficient to start a dancing all but the immediate monarchs at a funeral. To read about them is one thing; to see them is another. Sweatman and his Syncopatons have just returned from a long and successful engagement on Keith's Circuit, where they were the headliners on the bill. They will be a regular feature at Connie's Inn. Sweatman will conduct the band personally every evening, and promise to give something new right along.
Another feature of the evening was the excellent work done by Harper and Blank's Review. This Review, with its thirty-one performers, has just returned from the London music-halls, where, in spite of the hostile attitude of the English newspapers toward American actors, and Negro ones in particular, it made a clean success, gimming over its audiences everywhere. Its appearances at Connie's Dan is the first in America for this year.
In this Review there are, among others, Trixie Smith, Billie Mitchell, The Siren-Tone Four, George Paha and his Pepper Chores of the girl, George Stamper, Ruth Brown, two may clever dancers, and last, but not least, seven of the peppiest and most intricate you ever saw from the "Lion" and "Shuffle Along" chorus. The entertainment is novel, the dancing superb, and of a high class throughout. The costumes are beautiful and novel and were designed by Mise Toy Brown. Harpers and Blank are to be a nightly feature.
Colored Artists Beers.
The color scheme of this elegant new café is a vision of beauty. With its soft rose-tinted lights, its decorations in black and gold, tapestry, sunburst draperies over the raised dance floor, its spotless floor, its calcium lights and general artistic arrangements, it is the equal in beauty of any other similar place in New York City. It is, in short, something that Harlem is never before.
There are seating accommodations for five hundred. The meals and drinks served are of the finest—Chinese and American dishes—bradway service at Harlem prices. The dining-room is under the management of the savve and popular Mr. Harry Griffin. Extent fuss and numerous walls keep the temperature deliciously cool. The cafe has been renovated throughout—all the work having been done by cooled workmen. Colored artists did the designing and colored artists the exquisite decorations on the walls and the setting. The woodwork was done by the firm of S. I. Beamman, 172 West 322d Street. Seventy-one colored persons, including the acres are employed slightly.
The management declares that its intention is to maintain at all times an up-to-date and respectable atmosphere, such a place to which one may take his wife and daughter for an evening's fun, and a done in the European cafe.
"The place," said the general good-hearted proprietor. Connie immalman, "is for all descent, self-experting citizens, regardless of who they may be." Connie's fun, in short, is something for Harlem to talk about—harming place—a place that everyone with the spirit of amusement and fun in his blood will want to see again and again.
RANDOLPH- APPOINTED
U. S. ATTORNEY IN N. J.
The appointment of Assemblyman Oliver Randolph, lawyer of 84 market street, to be an Assistant U. B. District Attorney for New Jersey, headquarters at Newark, was made last week.
Assemblyman Randolph has made a splendid record in the New Jersey Legislature. At his instance an anti-Klan and an equal rights bill were passed.
ALLEGED PICKPOCKETS
TAKEN IN SUBWAY
EQUAL RIGHTS LEAGUE CHAMPIONS IN CITY
Amsterdam News
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1923
SUPPERM" TOMAR, BUT IT'S HOT, GUESS I'LL GO SEE IF WATSON CAN'T HELP ME TO COOL OFF!
SAY JIM AS MAN TO MARSH I ASK YOU CAN'T YOU PUT ME DOWN AT THE SHORE OR SOME PLACE FOR THE SUMMER?
TERRIBLY SORRY OLD WORSE, BUT I JUST FIGURED OUT A STUNT FOR YOU TO PULL NEXT WEEK RIGHT HERE IN THE CITY!
YA DID, DID YA? WELL I'M CONTAIN PARK RIGHT HERE WITH NEXT WEEK COME, YA BIG SLOB!!
Doubting Thomases and others who are always speaking persistently of the business of the New York Negro would do well to attend the Negro Commercial and Business Show, held under the auspices of the Association of Trade and Commerce, which opened on Monday and will last until Saturday night. The show is being sitting held on the ballroom floor of the new Renaissance Casino, itself a monument to Negro business, and the financial genius of Mr. William H. Roach, president of the Sarco Realty and Holding Co., which owns the building.
There are many lines of Negro epoderver and industry on exhibition in the many pickupqueen booths — machinery, plumbing, painting, sculpture, multigraphing, gems of the undertaker's art, electrical appliances, millinery, books, photograph records, and dozens of other modern products, all executed in a manner that ranks with the best to be found anywhere. The modern bathroom exhibit of J. A. Steele, 41 East 131st Street, is perhaps as fine a bit of work as is to be found in any part of the city. The exhibition throughout is an insisting and creditable one.
Addresses will be given on various days by some of the leading New Yorkers, as Dr. W. E. B. Du Bode, Mosema, John E. Nall, J. W. H. Willis, Fred R. Moore, Watt Terry, Adolph Howell, Attorneys Elliup, Pope and Dyeth, James Weslon Johnson, James Hubert of the Urban League, and Drs. H. O. Harding, Pottinger and Graves. Exhibitors.
The following are the listed exhibitors:
A. I. Hart & Co., A. P. Davis & Co., electricians; Hotel Tatler Push, Co. Swan's Hair Grower, the Anderson Laboratories, Inc., Anderson Furniture Co. H. Adelaide Howell, Funeral Director; the Critics, I. A. giselle, Plumbing and Heating; A. B. Piklingham, Real Estate; Harden Rand Litter Service; John W. Wright, cigars; Amsterdam News, W. W. Jewelry Store; Turner & Sawyer, electricians; Carman & Co., exporters and importers; Dr. Chan. C. Taylor, sight specialist; Cecilia, original designer; Gina. G. B. Needham, fire; Black Swan Photograph Co. Allied Art School, N. Y. Academy of Business, N. Y. Public Library, 155th Street Branch; Y. W. C. A. Nall & Partner, Real Estate; R. G. Heron, Inc., Tailors; Belalet Wet Wash Laundry, Odeon, Builder of Hats; N. Y. Urban League, Smith's Home Bakery, The Renaissance Art Painter, The Neocentric Co. M. H. Williams, electricians; Young's Book Exchange, Hayley and Hobbes painters; Dr. David Boone, veterinarian; Independent Press, Mrs. B. B. De Toucaune, badges; Pure Assorted Water Co. Chan. Cassell, taxidermist; Gee W. McBurney, Signs; Investor's Home Building Association, Wm. Moseley, Rheumatic Relief; Cocoa Manufacturing Co. Heard's Short Hospital, and Ebro Manufacturing Co. undertakers' supplies.
Dancing will be one of the features of each evening's entertainment. The exhibition opens each day at 1 P. M. and continues until 1 A. M.
THADDEUR TOOTE ON
WAY TO ENGLAND.
Mr routes to England to round the vacation, the Hunt. Thaddaeus Tota, member of the House of Assembly, Behamnes, W. L. is now in New York City, and will take passage on the Laconia.
Grand Deputy Thanks Citizens of Durham
To the Editor of The New York Amsterdam News:
Dear girl,
Please allow me space in your busy columns to speak a few words about the hospitality shown us by the loyal and progressive citizens of Durham, N. C., while there attending the Grand Lodge of the R. K. of K. I.
While there we were shown around the city by our old friend and brother, Oren Whitted, in his handsome Cadillac car. First, he carried us to the Farmers & Firemen's Bank, a five-story brick building owned and controlled exclusively by Negroes. This organization is doing a thriving business. They have in their employ more than twenty-five young men and women of our own race. Then we were shown through the R. K. of K. I. Temple by the Grand Master. This Temple is owned and controlled by the Grand Lodge of the Royal Knights of King David.
Too much praise cannot be given Messra. W. G. and J. L. Pearson, Supreme Grand Master and Grand Serge of the Order, for the way these gentlemen have kindled the business of this grand and noble order. Grand Master J. L. Pearson, in making his report to the Grand Sitting, stated that they had paid out $21,188 in death claims during the past year and had added 107 new lodges to the Order, making a total of 5,000 new members during the past year.
Every race-loving and professional Negro man and woman should join this grand and noble order.
For information, write or see
J. V. KENNEDY.
District Grand Deputy,
218 West 141st Street.
New York City.
EIGHT-HOUR DAY TO
SPEED MIGRATION
Writing Sunday in the World, Lester A. Walton says that "the bulk of labor mills of the North, made necessary by the eight-hour experiment soon to be introduced, will be Southern Negroes."
A statement signed by Negroes representing 163 counties of Georgia, is quoted by Mr. Walton as follows:
"The cause of most of the trouble to which we have referred has been in the fundamental error of attempting to run a democracy without all the people. The leaving of 65 per cent of the population of Georgia out of its governmental affairs, in our judgment, is largely responsible for the considered program which the state is operating and the neglect the colored people now sustain."
GA. TAKES STEPS TO
STOP MOVEMENT
ATLANTA, Ga. July 22—An effort to check the migration of Negroes and other farm laborers was given by the authors as the reason for the introduction of a MIL in the Georgia Legislature to-day which would make it a felony for any person or concern to solicit labor in Georgia for other States. Punishment would be a prison term of not less than three years nor more than seven.
Speaking editorially of the introduction of such a hill, the World says, in part:
"No legal law against enticing him North is likely to avoid much. The Nigra goes North because he gets better treatment and higher wages in the North. He brings along with him his children on our countryside, blessing and a social complication. Wh wherever he goes he is both welcome and welcome. His problem is not solved by the cadmia. It is merely contorted and shifted."
Charity Bureau to Entertain Orphans
The New York Charity Bureau, Inc., is again preparing to make glad the hearts of the orphan and half orphan children of the community.
On Saturday, July 28th, at 150 West 189th Street, the Parish House of Grace Congregational Church of Harlem, a Moving Picture Show will be given by the Julie Film Company at five o'clock after which ice cream, cake and milk will be given the children, free. The street will be closed to traffic in order that children may play in safety.
Interest, it is said in the work of the Bureau, is increasing. Among those who are looking after the interests of the Bureau are the following: Below 51nd street; Mrs. Lucile Ford and Mr. and Mrs. Goo, Summers. Above 60th street; Mrs. Elizabeth Buckner and Martha Caldwell. Brooklyn, Mrs. Cora Reddin and Mrs. Delamania. Recently a donation of twenty-five dollars was received from Mr. Robert Pollard; five dollars from Mrs. Ida Bedford; two dollars from the Magnolia Circle of Foresters and one dollar from Mrs. Frances Dyer.
The president of the Bureau,
Mrs. Marietta Crichlow, was one
of the invited speakers of the Con-
vention of the Empire State Feder-
ation of Women's Clubs, recently
held in Brooklyn, N. Y. at which
time she placed the work of the
Bureau before the 125 clubs of the
State and implored their support
for this deserving and well tried
organization.
A meeting of the Bureau, will be
held on Wednesday evening, July
27th, 1923, at the W. Y. C. A., 137th
Street at 3:00 P. M.
The many intelligent and serious-minded persons who have found so profitable and enjoyable the previous lectures given at 149 West 190th street, main hall, under the ambulance of Post Menlekk, No. 166, A. B. R. will be gled to learn that the next of the series will be given this Friday evening, 8 o'clock sharp, at the above address.
Richard B. Moore, educational director and member of the Supreme Executive 'council' of the African Blood Brotherhood, will handle in his masterly manner one of the most important of the major aspects of race relationships in this country.
The lecture will be preceded by a business meeting of Post Menlekk, from eight to nine o'clock.
PLACES STUDENTS IN JOB
The M. Y. C. A. Embryonyc Department was the medium through which a large number of students were placed with the Canadian Pacific RR. running out of Montreal. This marks a large step in the direction of putting representative men in positions where they will be able to show to the other races the best element at work. The "T" expects to be able to do a larger piece of work with this company in the future, and that way make it possible for a larger number of men to return to the various schools in the fall.
Hundreds have been enjoying the radio concerts held in the lobby of the Y. M. C. A. every evening. These concerts are given through the courtesy of Mr. Charles A. Aynsraus.
The Vamp and The Virgin
A Serial Story of Negro Life and Love
By AUBREY BOWSER
(Protected by the Kelley Newspaper Feature Service.)
READ THIS FIRST.
Christopher Bowling, an unaccomplished Harvard student, known to his classmates as Virgin, meets Beatrix Marley, a beautiful colored girl of Boston.
Second Chapter.
THE Virgin stood gaping at Beatrix Marley like a traveler in the woods at a rattlesnake.
"Why-Why," he said, after an oppressive silence, "I'm pleased to meet you, Miss Marley."
"No, you are not!" she said, flushing resentfully, "You don't like me; everything in your face and voice shows it. You almost shrank back when you heard my name. No, you don't like me. Mr. Virgin."
"Virgin!" he said, startled. "How did you know my nickname?"
"Don't you suppose the boys have told me all about you? I think it is a splendid thing for a boy to have such a nickname, and now that I've met you I'm sure you deserve it."
"The nickname is one of derision, not of praise," he said frowning.
"Ah, no," said Beatrix tenderly. "The name Christian was once applied in derision, but see what it is today. Oh, look, Mr. Virgin; the fight is over and the trolleys are running again. Suppose we go home now."
The two went out to take a trolly. The Virgin gripped the girl's arm to help her board the car, and was surprised. Never had he known that a human arm could be so soft. His rough fingers seemed to press it down almost to nothing. But it was the livest, warmest nothing he had ever known. It made every fib of his hand and arm tingle with stranga pleasure. In a moment they were seated side by side in the car. It was full of people who had been delayed by the Bloody Monday, and they barely found room to squeeze into their seats. "We'll have to cuddle," she said mischievously.
"Yes," said the Virgin, whose chest was trembling as he breathed. This warm, vital, palpitating woman close beside him, her round flushed checks and liquid black eyes, near that he all but touched them, the curls that fell over her forehead, live and sparkling. The full-bowed red lips now moving rapidly, now perused in pensiveness, and the rich, half-singing voice—the Virgin was not used to all this. His heart began to beat too fast and his head was a little unsteady.
"Do you like me any better than you did at first?" she asked pleasingly. "Because if you don't, I'll feel awfully disappointed."
"Of course I like you," he said, quickly and too calmly.
"You don't say it right," she said. "You say it like a busy man at the telephone. That's very hard on a girl who has waited until your sophomore year to meet you."
"I came here to study," said the Virgin, stiffly, "and to let the girl: alone."
"And so do you've done it," she said with a slow smile. "But you can't 'keep us out of your life entirely,' no matter how well you lay your plans. Tonight's chance meeting proved that. Why, any girl would be glad to know a fate."
straight, manly follow like you.
I know I'd be."
The Virgin was not prepared for such a direct attack. His innocent idea of girls was that they hid themselves in a corner until some man found them and then let themselves be dragged reluctantly out. It was the first time a girl had told him nice things about himself, and no young man, or old one either, is proof against the flickery of a pretty girl. The Virgin actually began to think Beatrix Marley was right; he was living too much like a hermit.
"The next street is mine," she said, looking out of the window.
They got off, and as her home was near the corner, they soon reached it. It was a nice, comfortable, Boston-looking brick house in a good part of the city. The girl showed the Virgin into the porter.
"It is still early," she said; "you might stay awake. For all I know, you might go back into your skull and not let me see you again."
The Virgin sat down and Boatrix Marley went apstairs to take off her hat and coat. The Virgin looked curiously around him. Three hours before he had and no thought of anything but going over his books and then going to bed, and here he was, in a Borton home for the first time in his college career. The thing was an adventure.
Almost before the Virgin had time to take in his surroundings Bentrix rushed down stairs and stood poised on the threshold like a vision. She had looked pretty before; now she was beautiful. She had slipped on a dress of white silk. This hair had reflected the color, and her eyes shone like stars on a clear Summer night.
"I didn't mean to keep you waiting so long," she said, going to the piano. "Do' you wish me to sing?"
The Virgin did; and she took
EDITORIALS FEATURE ARTICLES LOCAL AND SOCIETY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS
up the piece which had made
tummerable lovers weep in
self-pity—"Vous Avez Beau."
She seemed to have difficulty
turning the leaves, so the Virginia went over to turn them "or her and look down upon her waving mass of the black hair.
It is all in vain to implore me
Not to set her image beginle;
For her face is ever before me.
And her smile.
Beatrix Marley put herself into the song; her voice mingling and soothing, then blasting out in high, wild notes of passion. At the end of the verse she looked up sideways at the Virgin. His eyes were devouring her; his heart was shaking his body as a powerful engine shakes the ship it is driving through the sea. Their eyes half met; she took her away and began the second verse. And all through it ran the undercurrent plea: "Like me! Like me! Like me! Like me!" At the end of it she did not raise her eyes; she shout them, as if in an effort at self-magnety. Virginia fought with himself to keep his hand from hers, for she had charged, perhaps unwittingly, two words in the stanza, and made it apply directly to their talk on the trifle car.
It is all in vats to implore me
Mameties of his away to keep.
For if he willish to ignore me,
I can weep—I can weep.
The change from "her" to "him" and from "she" to "be" went through the Virgin's whole being. And now Beatrix sat with her eyes shut and her head thrown back, her face upturned. There was a tense silence, their breath rose and fell together. Then his down in her breast she began the third; it gradually rose in volume and intensity; the room thrilled with the sound. The Virgin's head swam, the keys shimmered before the mist in his eyes; Beatrix sang and sang as if she were drowning a sob, and in those last wild words of the song—"I can die! I can die!"—the sob burst out and cut the short. She flung her folded arms on the keys and dropped her glorious head upon them, her round, shuddering shaking silently. For an instant she lay thus, then she lifted her fumbed face and wet area to the Virgin.
"Bostrix," he said, in delirium, his arms dung madly round her, his burning lips to her. "Bostrix!" (To Be Continued Nest Week.)
(To Be Continued Next Week.)
REV. SUMMERS TALKS TO APPOMATTOX CLUB
Lant Thursday evening, Rev. Joseph Samman, pastor of the St. Augustine Baptist Temple, at 257 West 131st Street, delivered a stilt-sing address on the occasion of Repentation, Clan, 1572 Seventh Avenue, from the subject, "World Democracy and His Relation to His man brotherhood." His address was cheered, hardly throughout its delivery, being replaces with history, philosophy and science of the government.
Items of Social Interest
PAGE EIGHT
Items of Soc
Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Dias, of 2348
Seventh avenue, had the honor of
announcing the marriage of their
inter Addie Louise Walton to Mr.
John H. King, on Wednesday, July
18, 1923.
Wweek-and guests at the Magnolia
Cottage, Averne, L. L, are Mr.
and Mrs. Marcus Carpenter, Mr.
and Mrs. Gunner, Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Horner, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Fleming, Mrs. Duke Johnson, Mrs. Lucy Ruffin, Mrs. Rebecca Greene, Mrs. Nellie King, Mrs. Alceo Mars, Mrs. Kitty Willa, Mrs. Pauling M. Thomas, Mrs. A. H. Jarratt, Miss Justa, Miss Frances Jones, Edward Williams, Joseph D. Castro, Harry Sampson, Harold Cisco, Andres Cisco, William Walker, Bert Phillips, Thomas Waltcott, Harry Van Moter, John Do Sheers, Wm. Capers, George H. Taylor and T. Bledreaux.
Among those who motored out to Croton Point during the week and Sunday, and who made subscriptions for property were: Dr. and Mrs. P. M. H. Savory, Mr. and Mrs. Patrilh, the undertaker; Mr. and Mrs. Snead, Mrs. Jackson of Tarrytown; Mr. and Mrs. Hubert of the Urban League; Mr. and Mrs. Caines, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fisher, Mr. Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. N. Goodridge, Mrs. Baker, Mrs. Seward, Mrs. Julia Scott, Miss Annie Lowe, Mrs. Patterson, Rev. J. W. Robinson, pastor of St. Mark's Church; Mr. J. W. Daniels, Mr. J. P. Williams, Miss Elizabeth Watkins, Mrs. Anna Jackson, Mrs. Coleman, Dr. Bailey, R. W. Stewart of Newark; Miss Lydia Jones.
Bathing and fresh water fishing featured the day.
The old mansion on the place is being put into fine shape for the comfort and enjoyment of the visitors, and on Sunday afternoon they all sat out on the wide veranda of the old mansion and talked. Autos will leave in front of the Academy Building Thursday morning at 10 o'clock.
Miss Susia A. Grant, assistant principal of the High School, Ocala, Fla., has been visiting her brother, Prof. Rudolph Grant, for the last few days. She has now gone to visit friends in Patchogue, L. I.
Frank C. Caffoy, Jr., and George E. Haynes, Jr., are spending three weeks at St. John's Camp, East Brookfield, Mass.
A lawn-whist party will be given by the Harlem Branch of the N. A. A. C. P. at the Alpha Physical Culture Club, 126 West 131st Street, day evening.
"The Elamersa" moonlight rail up the Hudson will be Saturday evening, August 4. Officers are Roger S. Brown, president; Robt. H. Fraser, vice-president; Leon G. Marshall, secretary; Robt. H. Crumplier, treasurer; James C. Harris, and William M. Bolling.
Broadway Auto School, 212 West 53d street, is giving a special course, including everything, during the Winter months for $10. Also long read lessons on the Lecomb bills, for 50 cents each—Adv.
Correction.
The annual automobile outing of Post Office clerks will be on Wednesday. August 8, instead of the 6th, as was quoted in last week's issue.
The home of Mrs. Martha Davis, 4 Downing street, Brooklyn, was the scene of a happy gathering of many friends on Saturday evening, July 21, in honor of Mrs. Addie Herbert, formerly of 153 West, 133d street, New York City, who leaves August 4 for a month's vacation traveling in Chicago, Detroit and other cities. The evening was pleasantly spent.
Mrs. Ida Pertilla, of Brooklyn, has taken her grandchild to spend the summer in Sullivan County, N. Y.
Mr. W. L. Fields, of Scranton, Pa., was a recent visitor to Brooklyn.
Before buying an automobile consult B. F. Thomas for expert advice, broadway Auto School, 213 West 53d street. Phone 965 Circle.
E. B. Trotman, professor of history and civics and newly appointed chaplain of State College in Dover. Dela. is in this city visiting his relatives. He leaves shortly for MacMaster University in Canada.
WATCH FOR THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF AMSTERDAM NEWS, HOTEL TATTLER AND PENNSYLVANIA RED CAPS COMBINED ATLANTIC CITY EXCURSION, SUNDAY, AUGUST 26.
GEORGE F. HAZEL
Harlem's Reliable Jeweler
2257 7th AVIL, bct. 132d-152d St.
Wedding Rings, 10k, 10k and
22k, $8.00 up. Fully guaranteed
with other gifts in jewelry,
alterware, etc.
WE CARRY BARGAINS
Expert work and security training.
Also Vistroline and Talking Machines
Required.
Give us a trial and be invited.
nent school teacher of Portsmouth, Va., is visiting her cousin, Mrs. A. H. Thope, of 2135 Seventh avenue. Miss Johnson will remain until the 5th of August.
Dr. J. A. Gottam, a graduate from the University of Toronto, Canada, who has been actively engaged in the practice of his profession for the past 10 years in Pittsburgh, Pa., has removed to this city. His office is located at 204 West 114t street; 'phone Bradhurst 1591.
Mrs. Eva and Miss Lillian Blue, wife and daughter of Prof. M. Blue, of St. Louis, Mo., musical director of the American Woodmen, are now visiting New York and other points East. While in New York they are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Lowe, of 59 West 130th street.
Mrs. Blue and daughter will also visit her son William, Jr., a prince of the United States, and other daughter Mrs. Katie Hopkins, of Jersey City, N. J.
Confidential Sec'y to Schwab Weds
Joseph L. Ray, popularly known as "Joe Ray," secretary and confidential man to Charles M. Schwab, the Steel King, has wooed and won the beautiful and accomplished widow, Mrs. Lena Donglass Holt, of Chicago, Ill. Mr. Ray is nationally known by virtue of his unique position with the Steel King for more than 31 years, and is manager of the Bethlehem Steel restaurants and cafeterias, where thousands of employees dine daily. Because of Mrs. Holt's musical attainment she will be greatly missed in Chicago. She is the widow of the late George Holt, who left her a neat fortune, and it is known that Joseph L. Ray is rated to be wealthy himself.
Following the marriage they will sail aboard the Adriatic, on August 4. for England, France, Germany, Sweden and other parts of Europe before returning to America. Mr. Ray for many years was a citizen of Jersey, City, N. J., and is well known in New York.
VISITING STUDENTS
GET GRAND WELCOME
Visiting students and teachers were welcomed at the annual reception to the summer school students given at the West 135th Street Public Library, Tuesday evening. The audience, which included many of the most prominent Harlemites, was an overflow one.
Among the items on the program were the welcoming address by Miss Ernestine R. see, head librarian; Negro spirituals by the Hampton Quartette; an address to the students by Prof. J. Aggrey of Livingstone College; dramatic selections from Dunbar and other poets by Mr. Richard B. Harrison; and an address, "Placin" Your Aim," by Mr. John E. Nall, Jr., of the Association of Trade and Commerce. Short addresses were also made by some of the visitors.
After the addresses the students were introduced to one another at a dance, at which refreshments were served.
THE WOMEN' CIVIC
The Colored Women's Civic League of Harlem have opened a Housing Bureau for strangers coming to the city. The plans for civic betterment as outlined will be discussed at a mass meeting at Mother Zion A. M. B. Church, Sunday, July 29, at 3 P. M.
ORGANIZE BLOCK ASS'N IN WEST 130TH STREET
On April Tuesday night property owners of Mith Street, Linden, Lenox and Fifth avenues, formed a thick association for the purpose of keeping the block beautiful, sanitary and moral. With such a program it is hoped to keep up or enhance the property value of this beautiful street. The officers of this association are Rev. Bustel of Walker Memorial Baptist church, president: Mrs. Pierce, of *West Mith Street*, secretary, and Mrs.inden, treasurer. The association is composed of both white and colored property owners. The name of the association is "The Ural Black Association."
THE EXPLANATION
"Jones has the most happy idea of married life. He believes that man and wife should always be in full harmony; that they should mutually yield every point to this one end and have no thought but that of true domestic happiness." "Splendid! And, of course, Mrs. Jones agrees with him." "Dyell pet that way? Jones isn't married."—Richmond Times-Daily
STOCKMOLDERS' MEETING.
Notice is hereby given that the annual stockholders' meeting of the Knights Developing and Trading Co., Inc., will be held at Lafayette Hall, 101 West. 131st Street.
Room 8 on July 10, 1918, for the purpose of electing Directors for the inauguration term.
Joseph B. Smith, President.
SQUARE EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY
C. M. SNRADGE, Prop.
Established 1811
Nowe Avenue, P. M.
Doerner, Elevator, switchboard
Operators, Porter, Fireman and
Handymen.
304 St. Nicholas Ave., 130th St.
HELP WANTED
MALE & FEMALE
WILLIAMS COLORED
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
45 WENT 90th ST.
JOHN W. WILLIAMS, Mgr.
Eat. 1807
HELP
WANTED
Male and Female
N. DREW
ENFLOYMENT
AGENUE
N. F. Draw, Prop.
S. L. Draw, Trins.
W. West 120th st.
Phone Marten 7118
Est. 1897
HELP
WANTED
Male and Female
N. P. DREW'S
EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY
N. P. Drew, Prop.
N. P. Drew, Sec.
S. L. Drew, Truss.
60 West 186th St.
Phone Northem 7118
HELP WANTED AT
ONCE
SQUARE DEAL
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
124 WEST 186th STREET
Pinewood Northside 2222
WILLIAM'S
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
WILLIAM BLATNICK, Prop.
400 BIXTH AVE. NEW YORK
Between 24th & 28th St.
We Make a Speciality of Placing
Colored Mar in Good Pay-
ing Positions.
HARRIS EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY
WILL SECURE FOR YOU A
GOOD PAYING POSITION
If Out of Town, Mail Us a Card
Phone: Morn. 1009
445 LENOX AVR. Cor. 183d St.
BROWN'S EMPLOY-
MENT AGENCY
160 West 127th St.
3rd out of town call 1819 Morningville.
Help furnish i for private and
public work: all nationalities; first
claime service to employers and
employees out of town. Call or
write. May 24th.
Pennsylvania R.R.
Free Employment
Bureau
100 W. 124TH ST. MORN, 8780.
Freight Handling 48c per hour.
Track Workers $4.00, per day.
Board and room, 85c per day.
We Look After Your Interests
Without Charge
FRANK BROWN, Mer.
PLENTY OF EXCELLENT
POSITIONS
Top Wages—Male and Female
Domestic—Industrial
Radio Employment
Agency
2388 7TH AVE., Near 140th St.
New York Maygo-st
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1923
Phone or write for representative
BEAUX ARTS
INTERIOR DECORATING CO.
CREATOR AND DESIGNERS
Drywall Carpenter Centers
Furniture and Upholstery
Commercial and Professional Interiors
Office: 2280 Seventh Ave.
DRESSMAKER
Dressmaker fashionable dresses,
children's clothes. Prices reasonable.
Aud. 1420.
DAVID
255 W. 143RD ST.
MME, K, JONES
Hairdresser
Haircuturing and also wonderful treatment of the scalp. Poro System. Give me a trial.
14 WEST 126TH ST.
Phone Bradhurst 1268.
PROF. K. EYO
A MOHAMMEDAN SCIENTIST
AND ORIENTAL OCCULTISM,
PSYCHIC SCIENCE, WHITE
AND BLACK MAGIC.
Native of Africa, just arrived. Psychic
and scientific advice used.
Egyptian
and African formulas used.
243 WEST 128th ST., Apt. No. 3
NEW YORK CITY
Hours: 9 A. M. to 9 P. M.
W.GREENNOW
Our popular fish dealer in Harlem has moved his store of 100 West 143rd St., to 2482 7th Ave., where he is fully prepared to serve you with the best and cheapest sea food, direct from catcher every day. Give him a call and be convinced. I give 5 per cent discount on the dollar. Save your receipts. They are valuable. Phone Aud. 8728.
CROCHET BEADING
Crochet Reading on private dresses, bags. Also repairs, at reasonable prices.
MRS. BRIDGES AND SISTER,
259 West 129th St.
Harlem 1537
Mme. Geraldine Walters
SUPERIOR HAIRDRESSING
PORO
SYSTEM
Facial Massage, Manicuring
238 WEST 139TH ST. APT. 04
Mme. ANN E. SAMUELS
SWISS HAIR GROWER
Hairdressing, Manicuring, and Facial Massage.
Violet-Ray Treatment
2 WEST 132nd ST.
s Flights Front
NEW YORK CITY
Jul. 18 8:40am.
HAIRDRESSING
PORO SYSTEM
MRS. R. WARREN
29 WEST 120th STREET
Apt. 1-A
Phone Harlem 5697
Mrs. H. M. Bernard, Licensed
Mid-Wife and Hairdresser,
Walker's System, has removed
from 7 East 132d street to 2100
Fifth avenue, corner 132th, Apt.
2.
Jan. 3-6 mo.
system taught correctly — Diploma
awarded.
PORO BEAUTY SALON
105 W. 120 ST. Apt. 5, A one night
up Cor. 7th Ave.
If you have never had "real" Poro try
Soft Glossy
Hair
Day's best sidelight with balayage, more
hair when you can
hair when you can
hair when you can
be moisturized
and treated with
HEROLIN
Pamela Hair
Dressing
Make short, smooth, polished
hair with balayage, pamela
hair, and hair treatment.
Make hair 1 inch, smooth,
and finish the hair ends.
Sold by all good merchants, or equal 25c
in stamps or coins for full size package.
Austin, make big money Selling Herolin products.
Writes for special money making offer.
HEROLIN MED. CO. Ashburn, Ore.
Phone Morningside 1212
Harrison Silk Undergarment Co.
Maker of
Exclusive Silk Underwear
EXTRA SIZES A SPECIALTY
127 WEST 128th ST.
Bet. 7th and Lenox Avenue
THE EAST INDIA
HAIR GROWER
and the beauty of the Hair If Your Is Dry and Wiry, Try
EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
If you are bothered with Falling Hair, Dandruff, Itching Scrub, or any Hair Troubles, we want you to try a jar of East Indian Hair Grower. The remedy contains medical properties that go to the crown of the Hair, stabilizes the skin, helping Nature to do its work. Leaves the hair soft and silky. Perfumed with a balm of a thousand flowers. The hair is remedy for Hair and Beautiful Black Hairway; also restores Gray Hair to its Natural Color. Can be used with Hot Iron for straightening.
PRICES SENT BY MAIL, 9pm.
12c Extra for Postage.
S. D. Lyons, Gen. Apt. 316 N.
Central.
AGENTS' OUTFIT
Street, Oklahoma City, Ohio.
1 Hair Grower, 1 Temple Oil, Sham-
ing Oil, Providence Oil, Grace Crown,
and Directions for Selling, $2.00, acre
Extra for Postage.
WHY STAY GRAY?
HAVE YOUR HAIR DYED
THE SAPE AND SURE WAY
Will give treatment at your own home,
If desired. By appointment only.
MHE. STEVENSON
2233 SEVENTH AVE.
Phone Audubon 7233-J
WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT
HAIR AND ITS INFIRMITIES?
ASK THE
NU LIFE
SYSTEM.
To the many patrons of the Forrester House, 110 Congress street, Saratoga Springs, N. Y., the races start in Saratoga on July 31. Make your reservation for your room single and on suite. Enclose stamp for rates. Phone 1016-W. Miss Lottie Forrester, Prop.
SPECIAL SALE
Half Wig—with part—Long and
risk, covers the whole head. $2.00
Half Wig—Long and full, cow.
are the whole head. $2.00
Rebelletin, with part, and
covers the whole head. $2.00
Robbed Wig. $19.00 & up
Wige, knee, navy hair. $19.00 & up
Wige, crimp hair. $17.00 & up
Robbed Transformations,
thick and all shades. $2.00 & up
All Hair Goods and Be Washed
and Combed
Cash must accompany each
order.
Mme. Crawford's Hair Grower
50c.
Canvassers wanted, wages and
commissions paid,
Combings Bought
Also Made Up in Various Styles.
REAL HUMAN HAIR
Wige—$4.00 up
Thick Transformations and
Switches—$2.00 up
MME. J. L. CRAWFORD
Main Store, 466 Lenox Ave.
SCHOOL AND PARLOR
103 West 136th St.
Phone: Harlem 4431
Phone Morningside 8662
MRS. M. L. JACKSON
200 WEST 138th ST.
Hairdressing, Electrical Facial
Massage, Scalp Treatment,
Manlouring, Dyeing,
Blasting
HAIR CULTURIBT
Facial Massage, Manicuring, At
Reduced Prices. Open Sundays.
266 W. 127th St.
NEW YORK
Bleeks School
Designing, Dressmaking, Patternmaking,
Traping, Grading and Millinery,
Industrial Instruction, Sketching and
drawing.
Course for Business and Home Use.
Morningside 7240
116½D-118 WEST 125TH ST.
Crying and Walking
Colored Dolls
Wholesale and Retail
O. K. DOLL COMPANY
2293 SEVENTH AVE.
NEW YORK CITY
VISITING HAIRDRESSER
By Appointment and At Home.
MRS. J. R. SMITH
203 WEST 135TH ST.
Phone Bradhurst 1031.
TEACHING THE FAMOUS
Louisine
System
ENROLL IN THE SPRING
GRADUATING CLASS NOW
JANE
MME. LOUISE HORTON
Guaranteed to stop falling hair with
one month's treatment. Gives health
to the scalp. Growth of long, gaily
hair.
Electric Scalp Treatment One Specialty
MME. HORTON
BEAUTY PARLOR
NEW YORK CITY
TOKEN
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.
Wonderful Hair Grower
Nourishes and stimulates the growth of stubborn, lifeless hair!
The Madam C. J.Walker Mfg. Co., Inc.
640 N. West St. Indianapolis, Ind.
WILL DO YOUR PRINTING
Printers—Book Binders—Paper Rulers
306 WEST 133RD ST. Bet. 5th and St. Nicholas Aves.
Telephone—Morningside 1344 Coloridge F. Boyes, Prep.
P
Phone Audit
We Ext
Positive
Disinfecting
We Disinfect Hotels, Apartm
Etc.
178 WEST 137TH ST.
MME. HARRISON
ROOT-TEEN SYSTEM
Hair Dyeing, Facial Massage, Manicuring,
Hair Waxing, Mod Pack, Hot Oil Treat-
ment, Hair Bobbing and Curling. All
branches of beauty culture taught. Day
and evening classes.
RENAISSANCE BLDG.
144 W. 138TH ST.
Bradhurst 0488.
ARE YOU SUFFERING
Illnesses—Constipation? Take
Marco Vegetable Liver
Pills
250 a Box
For Sale at Loewenstein's Phar-
macy, 138th St. and 7th Ave.
STRAIT-TEX HAR Preparations
Are solidentically prepared to nourish the scalp and keep it clean and healthy. Your hair is bound to be lustrous and beautiful if you keep your scalp healthy.
STRAIT-TEX Hair Preparations are put up by a famous hair dressing firm that was established in 1867, and they have been used satisfactorily for many years.
Write for information and find out about these excellent hair beautifiers and straighteners.
Glossine
To soften dry,
curly hair.
“SEE AMERICA FIRST,” THEY SAY:
But See Crotton Point Beach and Property
And You’ll Be Satisfied For Life
Nine out of Ten who have seen it have bought.
LET US TAKE YOU OUT TO SEE THIS BEAUTIFUL. PLACE ANY WEEK DAY AT OUR EXPENSE. CALL,
WRITE OR TELEPHONE.
LOTS, 25x100, $300.00, 20% CASH. BALANCE MONTHLY.
BUNGALOW SITES FOR LEASE. $75.00 YEARLY.
Special Sunday Excursions
R. W. JUSTICE, OR YOUR OWN BROKER.
447 LENOX AVENUE. TEL. MCRN. 8642
WILLIAMSBIRDGE- 5 rooms, steam heat, electric lights.
Rent $40 per month. Use of garage.
FOR SALE—SUBURBAN
JAMAICA, L. 1,—6 rooms, on lot 25x100, enclosed porch, steam heat, electricity, garage. All improvements. BROOKLYN—10 room brick and brownstone with electric lights. Price $13,000. Terms.
FOR SALE—HARLEM
WEST 126TH ST., bet. 7th and 8th Aves.—17x100—9 rooms and bath. Price and terms right. House occupied by owner. Free and clear. Immediate possession.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1923
WEST 126TH ST., bet. Lenox and 7th Aves.—20x100—5 story; 16 rooms; 2 baths. Suitable for furnished rooms.
WEST 126TH ST., bet. 7th and 8th Aves.—House arranged for two families. All improvements. Occupied by owner. Possession at once. Owner wishes to leave city. Will sell reasonable for cash.
WEST 126TH ST., bet. 5th and Lenox Aves.—Two houses together. Size 21x100 each. One house contains 13 rooms and the other 12 rooms. Two baths in each house. Electric light and steam heat. Houses in tip-top condition.
Before development begins, and Share the increased value improvement must bring. The first 200 lots will be sold at $12.50 per lot or $25 for 50x100 feet to raise cash to develop the tract of 1,000 lots. Good deeds free and clear given. Owner holds guarantee policy of the strongest Title Guarantee Company in New Jersey.
WEST 127TH ST.—16x100—3 story and basement; 13 rooms; two baths. Electric lights. Can be bought furnished complete.
FOR SALE—APARTMENT HOUSES
WEST 127TH ST.—Size 25x100; 1/6 room apartment; 2 seven room apartments; 4 story brownstone. Good investment. Takes very little cash.
WEST 128TH ST.—50x100; twenty families. All improvements; white tenants; can be bought direct from an estate. Price and terms right. Reasonable amount of cash.
SPECIAL
To All Home seekers
See Rev. W. H. Wilson of 36
2nd St., Englewood, N. J., who
has put me in a 6-room house
with all improvements; lot 150
x125, and a garage on same, and
grape arbor, for only $5,000.
He certainly treated me fair,
the way he attended to my busi-
ness. He also has fine building
lots, 50x134, for sale. It would
pay anyone, who is home seeking,
to see him. I am yours for
success.
MRS. MAY WHITE
11 Genesee Ave.,
Englewood, N. J.
JAMAICA
BRITISH WEST INNER
Borough and Pudsey Avenue
S.S. ALLEGRA Sola July 1st
PRINCESS MAY, August 27th
DI GIORGIC FRUIT
CORPORATION
28 BROADWAY, N. Y.
Yel. Newlinx Green 1788
APARTMENTS
Furnished apartments bought and sold.
Best terms and quick buyers.
NORMAN W. JOHNSON
115 WEST 135TH ST.
Bradhurst 0383
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
One and two-family houses, in the
Bronx and Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Proceed your life and the life of your chil-
dren by living in the neighborhood, please
there a plenty of pure air and sun-
shine.
CASH, $1,000 UP
J. W. DANHELS
358 CANAL ST.
NEW YORK, N. Y.
Phone Canal 1089
$1,500 CASH
Buys 10-room Brownstone private dwelling; balance easy terms. Immediate possession.
GEO. A. BERRICK
100 West 131st Street
New York.
Telephone 5382 Morningside
Forw
Rally
Sh
Before development
must bring. The fin-
50x100 feet to raise
free and clear givee
Guarantee Company
When devel-
creased in line with
Positively 2
So get busy.
See Rev
or Ic
or Bo
The House You Built
Should be so arranged that it w
appeal to a prospective buyer as
as yourself. We can design, build
help you finance such houses.
JOSEPH & RHYMER
10 Culver St., Yonkers, N. Y.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
McDONOUGH ST.—Brick and frame; rooms and bath; furnace, electricity, newly decorated; possession; price $6,750; cash, $1,500.
HERKIMER ST.—Fancy shingle, brick filled, 13 rooms and bath; electricity; good condition; $7,750; cash, $4,000.
ST. JAMES PL.—Ten large rooms; bath; furnace; good condition; $12,500; $2,500 down.
G. B. LOVELL
780 FULTON STREET,
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Near Adelphi St.
From N. Y. subway to Atlantic Ave.
or "L" to Vanderbilt Ave.
Prospect 7727
FOR SALE
Private House, 127th St. 12 rooms; electric lights. House is leased $150 month. Price $13,000. C. $3,000. Term.
COMMERCIAL SERVICE CO.
103 West 131st St.
MOUSES FOR SALE
West 127th St.—10 rooms; cash, $3,100.
West 127th St.—10 rooms; cash, $1,750.
West 127th St.—12 rooms; cash, $2,500.
West 127th St.—12 rooms; electric lights; furniture; cash, $3,000.
West 127th St.—10 rooms; cash, $3,000.
APARTMENTS WANTED
Houses bought and sold anywhere you need it. Property managed and stores for lease. 813 and up.
S. BENJAMIN WALKER
11 WEST 121st STREET
New York City
Phone Morningside 2456
FOR SALE—EVERY ONE A BARGAIN
N. J. Boonton—House and several acres, garage, cellar and chickens. On the Lackawanna R. R. and auto tourist road to Lake Hopatcong. Terms to suit.
N. Y. City—14 room house on Edgecombe avenue, kitchenette and bath on every floor; electric light and steam heat.
JENKINS & TAYLOR
82 W. PALISADE AVE.
ENGLEWOOD, N. J. TEL.
Lots $20 up, $50 down, $10 month. Buy your lot and we will build your house.
Give 6 weeks Bungalow: gas, electric, hot and cold water, all oil improvements, including lot 45117 $20 down, $30 per month.
If you want a home in Englewood or Hackensack, we set. When you cope up in New York and pay rent when you can make that rest you a nice, rooftop, country house!
WEST 134TH ST.—Sing 25x100; 5 story and basement. Rents about $2,900. Price $19,500. Small amount cash.
WEST 134TH ST.—25x100, between Lenox and 7th Aven; two six room apartments on a floor; two basement stores; two ground floor stores with rooms in rear. Steam heat and hot water. Rent about $6,000. Can be bought with reasonable amount of cash.
WEST 134TH ST.—26x100; 5 story, two six room apartments on a floor. Rent about $5,000. Small amount of cash down. Good terms.
PAGE TEN
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1923
FURNISHED ROOMS
BROOKLYN
# C1737 has a copy of Trustee's New
Book Directory. The only key that
intently furnishes complete information
on New York real estate and business
and building information at N. J. A.
American News Office.
# ADELBERT ST.,—Nearly furnished
room for married couple; all conveniences
and improvements; near all air.
# BAINBRIDGE ST.,—A nearly furnished
room; electricity; all improvements.
# BROOKLYN AVE., 60—Large and
small, light, alley rooms, furnished
or unfurnished; reasonable. Arthur Pease.
# CLASSON AVE., 512—Two nearly furnished
rooms; light, alley rooms. Call between 6
and 8 p.m. Littlefield.
# CLAYTON PL.,—Two furnished or un-
furnished room, suitable for large
buildings.
MUSIC FURNISHED
MUSICAL INSTRUCTION
PIANO & BALLET
are the two leading instruments.
To play them correctly depends upon
your theoretical knowledge as well as practical
knowledge in the language. In general,
you must know its grammar, music,
the language of town. Wife Michele
from p. a.m. to 10:15 p.m.
PROP. SIMMS
167 West 129th St.
Two fights on
Mormongol 9500
MUSIC! MUSIC! MUSIC! - Fundraising
for all occasions; large or small com-
munities.
L. B. P. O. E. of W. Lodge No. 24.
Davis Post American, League Bound and
Orchestra. Lienz. Lieuten. Mayers Indus-
143 Myrtle Ave. above Mona 4211.
TINK BAGLEY SCHOOL, of Fashion Dressing, Designing, Styling, K. Tailorware, 727 Palm Street, Birmingham, M. Tailorware, D. Basketry, principal Fashion Prospect code.
GROCMET bending, bending, bending, call 819 W. 1938 88, Phone Audrey 5476 - Feb-14.
BOONE, Harlem Dog and Cat Pet Store, west 1938 St. Broadway, June-6-11.
DRESSMAKING — Experienced colour: dressmaking. Mrs. Mayward, at West 1938 St. Broadway, June-6-11.
BAIRDING-WANTS — Bairding, bairding, bairding, week 6 month. Writer, Dr. H. Gahler,床 807 O'Derville Orange Co., N. Y.
MILK CECELIA HUBERT studio of furniture and hardware instructor, 819 O'Derville Orange Co., N. Y.
POR RENT, for all occasions. The Pair of Wheels Hotel Wheelbarrow, 1938 St. capacity 7000; Wardrobe room. Phone Harlem code.
PART OF STORE, call for barking or not cleaning, call all days.
---
: News of Churches, Fraternities, and Org.
HARLAND in real estate: Mt. Veronica,
10 rooms, all imply; $1,500 cash. Mt.
Veronica, rooms, all imply; $1,000
cash. Yankee, rooms, all imply; $1,000
cash. Yankee, 5 rooms, all imply; $1,000
cash. Yankers, 5 family and store
flat, all imply; $1,000 flat,
6 rooms; $3,000 cash. Long Island,
10 rooms, all improvements; $3,000 cash.
New Jersey, 6 and 6 room house, all imply;
6 room, petrate houses, all improvements;
some can be bought for as low as $3,000
cash first payment. Norman W. John-
sons 115 West 133th St. Bradford St.
Jose DOWN bays 6 room tax-exempt
house in Jamaica. Summer. 101 West
129th St. Room 12.
BOOMING OR LODGING HOUSE
for sale cheap; good money maker. 46th 69th
FOR SALE—Lancroft and concession in one of Hastings' largest cabaries; burgess, Jones, 48 W. 1916 St. Apt. 7.
BREVEN ROOMS—Electric lighted; all convictions; by appointment only; reasonable; no brokers. Hastings 716.
BROWN APARTMENT furnished, for sale, 10 W. 1917 St. Inchley Harvey's Leuch庙 2138 Madison Ave.
BRAADBURST AV. 19—10 room, two bedrooms, electric lights; all impairments; newly decorated; can be seen on 11 and 12 clock any morning; price $15,500; no less; $3,000 down.
B. FELLI ST.—Fine, furnished room bed; 10 room brick; $5,000; big burgess. Agar, 1013 Bedford Ave. Ilyth.
COMFORTABLE a family, 3 story brown rooms; all improvements; 12 rooms. Pineau Californie 2003.
BREAT SACRIFICE—Fruit must be sold at once. Apply S. Benjamin 1311 St. Telephone Morningide 4057.
BINE 4 ROOM, one 5 room furnished apartments. Oakland 4054, West 137th St. St. Anaheim 4056.
THE AVENUE—Stores operative, especially furnished, light bedroom, water, electricity, modern improvements, 9200 past $50. Johnson. Breadburst 4064.
FURNISHED apartment for sale, room 20 p.m. Ford, 2189 7th Ave. Apt. 8.
TWO improved barn, no junction Ave., near Gerry Ave., Elizabeth Avenue, business section, near two tractors, mary and Long Island R. R.; colored section, National Avenue R. R.
R. E. FOR SALE—BELLYN
MERKIMER ST., near Arbony Ave.
Beautiful 11-room house; furniture best;
遂县 4x200; price $8,500; cash, $1,500.
Apply S. J. Tranum, 34 Ormond Pl.,
Brooklyn. Prospect 3457-R.
Jul. 18-21
BRICK, a family house, complete, 11 rooms and a bath, furniture best; $11,500; cash, $2,000. Apply S. J. Tranum, 14 Ormond Pl., Brooklyn. Prospect 3657-R.
Jul. 18-21
A REAL RARGAIN for home seekers—
Reunion for sale in Beford section;
beaverton, 12 rooms, 2 baths, furnace
house, electricity; $13,500; cash, $1,500.
Apply S. J. Tranum, 24 Ormond Pl.,
Brooklyn. Prospect 3657-R.
Jul. 18-21
FRANK, a room, bath, electricity, fur-
nage best; $2,000; terms arranged.
Apply S. J. Tranum, 34 Ormond Pl.,
Brooklyn. Prospect 3457-R.
Jul. 18-21
TWO-FAMILY brownstone for colorful; g
and basement; $1,900 per cash
fountain; steam, electricity, Agar, two
Natural Ave., Brooklyn.
Service Directory
Twenty words, one-half inch,
only 68 cents per insertion.
RAYOR'S EXPRESS—Packing, shipping,
moving, storage.
101 West 91st St.
Phoenix, Maricopa, 8500.
ELECTRICIANS
MUPDU AWD. M. K. Williams, ally
of the West St. Mayflower
Mayflower.
DRESSMAKING
BEEMAKING, SHIRTMAKING. All kinds of serving done at house; restaurant. Prospect app. J.
UBLC STENOGRAPHER
K.I.N.G. of typewriting done;仓储 and quantity my script; prompt delivery. M.C. C.J. M. Morningstar 750e.
UBLC TYPEWRITING done and贮存 at house at house; herein given. Alkemen, 41 W. 197th St.
M.C. BRADHAM 095a. Comic for public stenography 135 W. 197th St. July 19th.
ultigraphing & Typewriting
ULTIGRAFING, Printing. Typewriter. Folding, Addressing, Mailing. Harbor Services. 295th 9th line, 197th St., phone July 19th.
BIG EARMAKING
Brick and frame houses. One and family; cold water flats, six twenty-family; steam and stricty. Small cash, any forms. Build the Square Deal Brother. I be your friend. W. A. YOUNG.
Waverly Ave. Brooklyn, M. Y. Prospect 3228.
AP THIS OPPORTUNITY
the Athletic Art School has
begun its winter classes,
enriched in crochet bending,
menduring, Indian weaving, lace
work, fringing, taxing, tassling,
shining and burgling, in her
own home, further money in
an absolutely given. Call Mi-
na Attica, 212. W108. 9184.
Mina Audubon 6140; prices re-
mumbled; diploma awarded.
HAVE an annual opportunity to
be our New York manager to as-
ssemble a new project, or to
making a stock in a fast-moving
market. Write The Anvail
Harry Park, Ln., 20 Waverly Fl.
Lincoln, Ct.
FOR SALE
FURNITURE - pruned trees, wood and
enlarged. We also repair furniture,
and furnish it with new upholstery.
makes over mattresses. George Arlington.
172 W. 131st St, Morrisonville. 3442. f.
HIGHEST PRICES paid for old gold, silver,
platinum, diamonds or pawn tickets.
Levitt, 25 West 197th St, near Lenox Ave. Phone Ilarlam 866. jm.20f.
BABY CARRIAGE for sale, responsible stroller, slightly used. West 197th St, 1 light up. Phone Ilarlam 866. jm.47f.
BOOTBLACK PARLOR - Good condition; price reasonable. Call all day. M. Dujon, 295 West 19th St.
bath, two closed porches, driveway, goatco, 500. Owner, 11 Mayer Ave. near Sutphin Blvd. Phone Jamaica 295.
BEAUTIPUL ONE family room, 7 rooms.
bath, two closed porches, driveway, goatco, 500. Owner, 11 Mayer Ave. near Sutphin Blvd. Phone Jamaica 295.
FOUR-ROOM furnished apartment; West 31st St, 850; rent 107 West 31st St, Room 1.
TYPEWRITER--Remilagton No. 10, for
tale type, good condition. Mine E. R.
233 West 136th st. N. Y. City.
BEAUTIFUL baby carriage for sale, very
cheap. Mrs. Johnson, 160 West 90th
st.
SITUATION WANTED
BOOKKEEPER-STENOGRAFER wishes permanent position. Brown, 229 West 19th St.
CHAUPFEUR for truck or family car. F. Washington, 429 West 29th St.
PIANIST would like position playing for parties or will play some church; price ranges will be specified. L. Augustine Pl. Jersey City, N.J. N.
FIRST-CLASS MANICURIST desires position; experienced. Address Manicurist, 99 West 19th St.
COMPETENT colored graduate wishes position as stenographer, bookkeeper or position as receptionist. West 19th St. 99 West 19th St. Tel. Andresa 1899.
WANTED
AMATEUR WANTED - Mast, female, tenure
amateur; use 1920 phone plane. I can
work in the office. I will be available
hours I have placed so musician
in positions earning $35 to $40 weekly.
What I have done for others can be
done in the office. Oversee my
Simon. p. a.m. to 10:15 p.m. 197 West
19th st. flights up. Morningings 950.
ALEXANDER'S EMPLOYMENT Agency
- 344 W. 123rd St. Cor. Rt. Ave. All
Kinds of domestic work. Morningings
150.
PAMILY IRONERS, day workers,
workers, workers; work for boys and
girls, in N. Y. City and country; whole
part time work; we have them all.
Work in N. Y. City. Agency, 44
West 19th st. New York.
HELP WANTED FEMALE
WHY run around looking for job? You are only waiting for time. The Male Manager will be on Sunday work; $10-$15 a week. Smith, 112 Madison Ave., near 123rd St., phone Harlan pedd.
MAKE $20 WEEKLY at home furnishing colored mosaic and addresses; unroutine customer service; participate in United Mailing Company, Dept. N, St. Louis, Mo.
SALEPERSON wanted; colored men and women to sell jewelry; salary and commissions; manage stock; improve quality qualifications and references. Bux R. I, care of Amsterdam News.
WANTED - A middle-aged lady to care for old lady; $25 month and good home; not a doctor. Thomas, Girls 1449, after 8 o'clock.
HELP WANTED - MALE
HEN WANTED
WHY NOT LEARN THE AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS?
WHY NOT LEARN THE AUTONO
LUXE BUSINESS?
Actual parking (innovation)
qualifies you in a new world time to repri
d or drive any number of car or truck. There
are always plenty of good positions open
American Auto School
796 Lexington Ave.
Near got 61
Pizza Plane 606
Jan 6
LABORERS
Track work. See an hour. Steady work. Free transportation to and from headquarters. NEW YORK CENTRAL R. R.
VACANCY positions available. G. S. Government positions $300-$1,500 month. Men, women, 18 up, female to 50. List positions in facilities. In facilities, Dept. A 145, Rackham, N. Y. July 4-11
FIRST-CLASS BARBER wanted. N. Y. Barber Shop, pay West Lendal St. Salary $15 per week.
COLORED MEN WANTED to qualify for sleeping car and twin partners; experiential training; transportation furnished. Witness R. M. McCaffrey, St. Louis, Ma.
EXPERIENCED high class staff; knowledge; good income to right man; most frequent calls to hotel. But L. C. care of Amsterdam News.
Only $8,000 Cash
Great Opportunity
Hotel Lodge Room. 9 Stairs.
Large corner plot at refurbished station and barry on the Ridson. 24 miles from 432 Street
Price, $17,500
J. CLARENCE DAVIES, lrm.
140th St. and 3rd Ave., N. Y.
JUMPS TO DEATH
(Preston News Service).
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. July 16—
Samuel Simmons, a member of a
gang of laborers laying new trucks
was instantly killed last Friday
afternoon when he accidentally
jumped in front of a speeding
fair-borne train.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY. JULY 25. 1923.
Bishop Hamlett Pleases White South in Plea
(Preston News Service.)
PINE BLUFF, Ark. July 20.
Bishop J. A. Hammett of Jackson Tenn., in an address to a audience of Nerges at the C.A. University Tuesday night told the Nerges that a change of habits rather than a change of location is the solution to the Nerges problem. Bishop Hamlett said: "The Negro has a habit of blaming someone also for his failures, and taking credit to himself for his success. We are a race to look at new doors for our own causes of our hard work. We are inclined to give more thought to 'our rights' than to our obligations. There is much unrest and moving around. I admit that conditions are far from what they should be, but I am firmly convinced there are more whites people than blacks people, and that they one thinks. Our problems cannot be met by changing locations. They must be solved by changing our habits."
Report Dearth of Preachers
---
1500 Needed Each Year: Schools Turn Out Less Than 100.
The demand for colored ministers of the gospel in the United States is 1,500 a year, according to statistics collated today by Howard University under the supervision of the Department of the Interior.
Last year less than 100 colored men graduated from any kind of training school in the country for preachers and of this number less than 10 were college graduates.
The average training of the other 90 for the colored ministry was about one and one-half years of grade school work.
There are about 50,000 colored church of all denominations in the United States. Shortage of preachers is illustrated by the fact that there is one white minister to every 888 white people, most of the later being graduated from theological institutions.
Howard University is one of the few colleges in the country maintaining a school of religion for colored people, the number of graduates averaging between five and ten a year. At the present time this school of religion receives no appropriations from the government.
West Harlem Club to Support Harris
At a large and enthusiastic meeting held in the club room of the West Hearst Republican Club, 306 West 124th St. Friday evening. Chairman A. J. Gary charged that the Alderman was "Ku Kluxed" out of office by the most brazen method ever dreamed of in the history of politics and equalled only by the Black Belt steal of the Southern Algarity. The Club went on record as standing by its President, George W. Harris, and called upon all voters of the 21st District to repudiate at the polls in November, the dastardly Tammany Democratic steal by electing Mr. Harris for two more years, regardless of whatever decision the Courts might render in the case. Other speakers were: Counselors ILL Watts, Griggs and ex-udge J. B. Raymond, and other celebrities.
SUMMER PLAYGROUNDS
AT P. S. NOS. 6g AND 11g
During July and August, playgrounds, under the instruction of George R. Rakuten, teacher in charge, will be conducted at Public Schools 99 and 119, for both children and parents. Follow the instructions: 9 to 12 A. M., at P. S. 99—Shower baths for boys. 9 to 12 A. M., at P. S. 113—Opportunity classes.
1:30 to 1:50 at P. 8. 39—Summer playground, with a principal and five play-teachers.
6:30 to 9, at P. 11. 19—Evening playground for mothers and babies and small children.
ENIGHTS OF PYTHIAIS
MEET AUGUST 22
S. W. Green, Supreme Chancellor of the Knights of Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia, has directed the officers and members of the Supreme Lodge of the Knights of Pythias to assemble in their twenty-second memorial session of East Middleschool Church, 58-89 West 1838 Street, New York City, Ansst 21.
The officers and members of the Pythian Temple Commission, the Committee on Finance, Order of Calathea and the Uniform Rank meet at the same time.
THE GLAIRVOYANT
Muse. White. 216 West. 15th
Street. Message and healing
hours from 8 to 10 P. M. Questions
will be answered. - AFTER
Broadway 0004
M. WILLIAMS — Undertaker
256 WEST 130TH ST.
Motto: "Education, Courtesy and Satisfaction"
Open day and night
Res. 212 W. 120th St. Morn. 0006
MOTHER ZION
A large congregation attended the 11 o'clock services at Mother Zion Church, Sunday, July 23. A few minutes later, we devoted ourselves to building the sermon was preached by the pastor, Dr. Brown. His subject was "The Ministry of Courage." Courage the speaker announced the dynamic nature that is responsible for many noble accomplishment. When confronted with the necessity of accomplishing a stupendous undertaking, the great need to insure success is courage. It is the element that enables us to triumph over disappointment and the dire necessity of want. Jahovah Himself, recognized the great value of courage when He admonished Joshua to be of good courage and assured him that an amount of courage will enable him to accomplish the work before him.
The Sunday School convened at 2 o'clock. The vacation season is on and many teachers and students are attending the attendance was 400; collection $32.00.
At 2:30 P.M. the Pastor conducted Baptismal Services at Walker Memorial Church. East 123rd Street, and immersed twenty-four adults and one child.
The pastor preached an annual sermon to the Eureka Primrose Household of Ruth. Dr. Brown will preach next Sunday morning. At 8 P.M. he will preach an annual sermon to the Eureka Temple-Daughters of Elk.
The sad news of the death of Class Leader Herman G. Bass of 65 West, 134th Street, was received. He was killed for many weeks. He was a highly respected Christian gentleman, and a conscientious worker. Funeral services will be held Wednesday evening at the church at the meeting of the Sisterhood at the Brotherhood House.
Friday, prayer and praise service under the auspices of the Board of Eawards.
The sick: Margaret Lloyd, Roosevelt Hospital; Mary Keys-Medical Ward, Welfare Island; Martha Wells, 2100 Fifth Avenue, Apt 45; Sadie House, 112 West 99th St, Madison, N.J. 67 West 99th St.
ST. MARK'S CHURCH
On Sunday, July 22nd, the morning, afternoon and evening services of St. Mark's M. E. Church were attended by unusually large congregations. The morning services was held in the church and the afternoon and evening services were held in the tent. The pastor, Dr. John W. Robinson, was the speaker at the morning and evening service. The pastor of Epworth M. E. Church, preached a very able and forceful sermon.
At the morning service, memorial flowers were donated by Mr. and Mrs. William Sanders in the presence of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Anthony, who died twenty four years ago.
The Sunday school was fairly attended and the collection good. Beginning Tuesday evening, July 24th. Rev. J. W. White, pastor of St. Mark's M. E. Church, polls, Indiana, will preach every evening in the tent. He will also preach at the morning and evening services next Sunday, July 25th.
The canvassers are working untimely to round up the subscribers to the building fund for the new church.
RUSH MEMORIAL
According to schedule, Dr. Oliver preached the third of a series of sermons at 11 o'clock, selecting as his subject "The Leaven." He likened the leaves unto the spiritual part of one's life. Bathminthan six purposes for his love of Christ in his beliefs and connected themselves with the church.
Rev. W. L. Carr preached at 8 o'clock.
Judging from the start made by the auxiliaries, the work this year will surely surpass that of all other years.
A special sermon will be preached next Sunday at 8 o'clock. Regular services at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m.
NOT SO SURE, BRISBANE
In his daily editorial comment under the captain of "To-day," Arthur Brisbane has the following to say regarding the coming of the Negroes to the North: "Constant migration of Negroes from the South to the North is a menace to Southern Agriculture. It may also prove to be an important factor in the 1994 campaign and others.
"In the North these colored men will vote, and $9 per cent, at least, will vote the Republican ticket. Twenty-five thousand colored voters, or fewer, located in the right spot, might decide a close national election."
To Bring Suit.
Walter Allen, 125 West 145rd street, has been appointed guardian of his daughter, Breyne, 17, by Supreme Court Justice Ford to enable him to bring a suit against West Side Cleaning and Dyeing Co. in his petition Allen says his daughter was hurt April 30, 1982, when she was run down by an auto track driven by Morrie Greenham.
OBITUARY.
WALKER—William Walker was
Abbey of New York City April
30th, 1898. deported this life
July 15th, 1923. He died trusting
in the Lord.
His grandparents, wish to
thank their many friends for
their expressions of sympathy.
Leonard and Julia Walker.
WEBSTER — Margaret Webster,
daughter of Spriggs and Priscilla
Gwynne. departed this July 15th.
Funeral services were held
Tuesday at her mother's residence,
165 West 133rd Street.
Interment at M. Olivet Cemetery.
Mr. William A. Webster, Mrs.
Priscilla Gwynne, Messrs A. and
P. Gwynne.
MEMORIAM
ADAMS—In loving memory of our
organiser, Sister Mary L. Adams,
who departed this life July 21,
1931. Gone, but not forgotten.
In life we loved you dearly, in
death we do the same. May
your soul rest in peace, dear
Mother.
Dorcas Tabernacle No. 57, G.
U. O. P. of G. of E. and W. H.
Lillian J. White, M. W. R.; Elizabeth E. Brown, Fin. Sec'y.
BROWN—In loving and sad re-
membrance of our mother, Catherine Elizabeth Brown, who departed this life July 23rd, 1921. Mother, we do miss you so much. We loved you, but God loved you best. Sleep on, my darling loved one and take your rest.
Your broken hearted daughter, Mrs. Lillian Scott, Allan B. Lynch, son and Mrs. Ruth Morris, sister.
PARKE—In memory of my dear husband, George Parke, who departed this life July 25th, 1922.
Your loving wife, sisters, nieces and nephews.
PETERSON—In loving memory of our beloved son, Thomas H. Peterson.
He little thought when leaving home
That he would ne'er return
That so soon in Death would sleep
And leave us here to mourn.
If only we could have been near
To bid him last farewell.
The blow would not have been
So hard on those, he loved so well.
Family.
SMITH-In sad and loving memorial to our dear sister, Bernice Porceau Smith, who passed away July 22, 1922.
Renew my will from day to day.
Rifle it with mine and take away
All that now makes it hard to say
They will be done.
Be done.
Mara Oleia Valsaco, Millie Smith, and
Wilhelmina McGill, sisters.
GROWING RAPIDLY
The Sons and Daughters of New
Jersey, organized January 9, 1922,
by Mrs. Mary A. Hopkins, is growing
rapidly under her leadership
as president and with a working
staff of officers and members
Meetings are held the second Mon-
day night in each month in the
Brotherhood Hall, 129 West 136th
Street, City. A club is open for
sixty days at joining fee of $1.00.
Any person Lorn in the state of
New Jersey, between the ages of
16 and 50, of good morals, is
invited to apply for membership
and help us grow
Mrs. Mary A. Hopkins, President.
101 West 138th Street
P. V. Aldrich.
724 Lafayette Ave.
Brooklyn Secretary.
ST. MARK'S METHODIST EPISCOPAL HUILD
Avenue, New York City. Pastor, John W.
Robinson. D.D. Residence 429 w. 43rd St.
Cummino Avenue 45 p. PM. Priest
Meeting Friday evening at 6 o'clock.
Sunday morning at 6 o'clock. Sunday
School at 2 p. m. Lycamina Sunday at
3 p. m. Pinewood Sunday at 4 p. m.
Powellville Sunday at 6:20 p. m.
Classes Tuesday and Wednesday evenings
at 8:15 p. and Sunday at 9:15 p. Moly
Holiday evening in each month. Welcome to all
25 Cents a Month
GUARDIAN ROCK AGAINST BEATRIN SVA
STREETS HARVARD
ABB
In all you pay for the advantages
of membership in the African
Blood Brotherhood, which
includes Economic, Social, Educa-
tional, Freemason, Athletic, etc.
Writes headquarters at 289 South
Avenue, N. Y. C., for full
information or attend the meet-
ings of POST MENELEK Ha.
108, A. B. B., hold every scool
and fourth Friday nights at 149
West 190th Street, Main Neor.
Mrs. Green Glives Dinner.
a dinner on Wednesday evening,
July 11, at her residence, 46 West
1938 street, in honor of Mrs. Whit-
fred Simmons Cannon of Washington.
Guests present were: Mitsa Helen
Kimbrough, Mrs. Vergie Haynes,
Mrs. Elizabeth Butler Dillard, Mrs.
Emma Butler.
Spencer Dallas, employee of the
Pennsylvania R. R., left the city
last week to visit his son, J. C.
Callahan, who is in Albuquerque,
M. david b. his daughter, Dallin
accompanied by his other son,
Charles, will go to Phoenix, Ark.
and other. Western cities before
returning. He lives in New York,
but is no extensive real estate
owner in Jacksonville, Fla.
ASKS GOV. SMITH HIS
ATTITUDE ON K. K. K.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 69 Fifth Avenue, New York City, today made public an open letter to governor Alfred Smith of New York requesting him to be talkative in response for the Presidency, to make public his attitude toward the Ku Klux Klan.
TEMPL2 OF
176, 183, 193, N. Y. C.
services every Sunday, 11 A. M.
and 8 P. M.; Sunday School, 2:30
M. Circle every evening, 8 P. M.
Messages, Healing.
TNOMAS R. HALL, Prose.
EPISCOPAL
J. JOSEPHUS UNIVERSITY, EPSICOPAL CHURCH, 207 west 139th st. Kev. J. N. Bridgman, Kettering, residence West 99th st. MST, 11 am.; Sunday School, 3:30 pm.; Lyme, Holy Cross, 1:30 pm.; Holy Cross, 1:30 pm.; Holy Cross, 1:30 pm.
CHURCH BULLETIN
NETHODIST
PRESBYTERIAN
BUNDALLE MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN
AN CHURCH. 2nd level basement 10 a.m.
daily service 11 a.m., morning 1 p.m.
sunday school 7 p.m., lunch 1 p.m.
sunday morning 1 p.m., worship
1 p.m., prayer service. All are per-
sonally invited.
LIBERTY SPIRITUAL CHURCH
We will learn to Aph. 8
To learn to be a Christian and it will make me free and in good graces again with the Jesus of Christ.
There will be healing of all your wounds.
At 8:30pm morning we begin at 10:30am.
Liberty Spiritual School, 2,500 sq. ft.
10am.
We was glad when they said unto me:
"Let us go into the home of the Lord."
Come and bring your Friends and children.
Tuesday, Development class to broaden your understanding. "Dion be the tie that binds; please be unto you."
Sister P. P. A. Bristow,
Spiritual Advisor
Messiah School, 2,500 sq. ft.
Theouth. Holping Hand School on Sunday in every month Please Reach Sister by
YOU CAN BUY AND SELL MOST ANYTHING IN THE AMSTERDAM NEWS
CRASH STORY UNDER EXTRA EEEKS DIVORCE
EEKSDIVORCE
SNELSON OF
SERVICE, COURTESY, SATISFACTORY
THE GARR & CO., FUNERAL
132ND STREET, NEW YORK CITY
Morningside 2222. Always
Always Shipped To All Parts Of the W
KEY, JR., Embalmer, Residence Pl
SIMARY LANE
16363 UNDER
FUNERAL PARLOR AND CHAP
112 WEST 133d STREET
led to All Parts of the World.
Hurst 1241
A. ROBRIQUES & J. E. YA
UNDERTAKERS
JOHN E. YATES, General Manager
Daily Calls Preemptly Attend
134th ST. NEW Y
WARNINGSIDE 6409
IDA COOPER
Emensed Embalmer and Underst
Emident Service With Every New
Dead. Large and Spacious Fund
ICES REASONABLE—ALWAYS O
133rd STREET NEW Y
ADOLPH HOWE
INH OCCURS AND AN ECONOMIC
18 REQUIRED, CALL US
on 107 WEST
SHIPPED TO ALL PARTS OF T
n La
WARNINGSIDE
MANVILLE O. PAY
UNDERTAKER & EMBALMER
151 West 131st Street
dant New
e Masons, Elke, Odd Fellows, South
League.
H Harlem
JAMES C. THOMA
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
9 WEST 134th STREET
venue
AIRS & AUTO SERVICE TO LET
PURPOSES.
SATISFACTION
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.
Always Open
Parts Of the World.
Residence Phone Penn. 0539
LANE
UNDERTAKER
AND CHAPEL
STREET
World.
R. J. E. YATES
KERS
General Manager
Attended To.
NEW YORK CITY
PER
And Undertaker
With Every Requirement for the
Necessary Funeral Parlor and
ALWAYS OPEN
NEW YORK CITY
HOWELL
ECONOMICAL FUNERAL
CALL US
107 WEST 136th ST.
ARTS OF THE WORLD
Lady Attendant
Notary Public
D. PARIS
EMBALMER
Street
New York City
Yellow, Southern Beneficial
SERVICE, COURTESY, BATISFACTION
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 KELPSEY, JR., Embalmer, Residency, Phone 0232
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 Premply Attended To.
225 WEST 134th ST. NEW YORK CITY
Dec-2-13t
Licensed Embalmer and Undertaker
Quick and Efficient Service With Every Requirement for this
Burial of the Dead. Large and Spacious Funeral Parlor and
Chapel.
PRICES REASONABLE-ALWAYS OPEN
114 WEST 133d STREET
NEW YORK CITY.
WHEN DEATH OCCURS AND AN ECONOMICAL FUNERAL IS REQUIRED CALL 1-800-222-5555
IS REQUIRED, CALL US
9239 Audubon
107 WEST 136th ST.
REMAINS SHIPPED TO ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD
Always Open
Lady Attendance
Lady Attendant New York City
Membore of the Masons, Elke, Odd Fellows, Southern Beneficial
League.
THOMAS
EMBALMER
STREET
New York City
C TO LET FOR ALL
89 WEST 134th STREET
Near Lenox Avenue
New York City
CAMP CHAIRS & AUTO SERVICE TO LET FOR ALL
PURPOSES
Phone. Morn... 3224 - Notary' Public
WITHERSPOON, J
UNDERTAKERS AND RE
134 WEST 132nd ST.
York and New Jersey States. Fune
RLEM 3008 OPEN DA
Special Attention to All Care
ON, JR., CO.
AND EMBALMERS
ST ST.
States. Funeral Parlor Pre
OPEN DAY & NIGHT
All Cases
RRETT, JR.
LICENSED UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS
134 WEST 131st ST.
Licensed: New York and New Jersey States. Funeral Parlor Pre
PHONE HARLEM 3008 OPEN DAY & NIGHT
Special Attention to All Cases
NORMAN B. STERRETT, JR.
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
Heares and Limousines to Hire
56 WEST 134th ST., NEW YORK CITY
Funeral Parlor
Sept. 21-tt
TELEPHONE HARLEM 4334
THOS. H. KENTON --- Licensed Embalmer
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
ys WEST 137th ST. NEW YORK CITY
Motto: Economy, Courtesy and Satisfaction
(10 years experience)...
Res. 48 W. 138th St. Apt. 6; Tel. Hallem 5035
W. David Brown Understaking Establishment
Under the Management of Anna. B. Brown and Margaret Brown
Gordy. B. Bray Parvin, Assistant.
High Grade Licensed Understaking & Embalmer
2015 SEVENTH AVENUE. (Bst. 193th & 194th Streets)
Telephone Bradhurst 0442
Officer Phone Audubon 5196
YANCEY & MOORE—Undertakers and Embalmer
140 WEST 191TH STREET, N. V.
Prompt Service Day or Night at Moderate Prison
Connected With All Leading Praternal Societies
LADY ATTENDANT
Residence
Joseph J. Yancey, 168 W. 138th Street. Audubon 699
Robert L. Moore, 229 East 73th Street. Rhinelander 5196
STORY UNDER EXTRA
LADY ATTENDANT
PAGE TEN
prevent Negroes from going North by passing laws prohibiting employment agents from the North from operating in the State. The present bill, ostensibly directed at the labor agent, is in reality directed at the Negro. Should it become effective it will succeed in keeping the labor agent out of Georgia, but it will not prevent the Negro from leaving Georgia.
EVENTUALLY bills will be introduced in Georgia and other Ku Klux States making it a felony for a colored man to leave the South, and we would not be surprised to see several States enact such bills into law. They, too, will fail of their purpose.
IN ORDER TO STOP the migration movement the South will eventually find that it will have to face-about in its attitude and treatment of the Negro, and the sooner she does this the better it will be for her. Laws designed to prevent the free movement of citizens from one locality to another are against the fundamental law of the land, and, like lynching and other evils sanctioned in the South, strike at the very foundation of the government.
THE NEGRO has everything to gain and nothing to lose by leaving the South at this time—the more the merrier. Living in the North and West is not so easy as in the South, but the Negro does not need easy living. Nor does he need the deceitful friendship the South professes to have for him. He asks only that he be permitted to work out his salvation the same as other groups of American citizens. The South denies him equal opportunity and he has decided to leave the South.
Where is Our Wandering Major Tonight?
THE ATLANTA INDEPENDENT, which several weeks ago tried to relieve Major Robert R. Moton of the responsibility for the Veterans' Hospital tangle, in an editorial printed last week pleaded with the Major to return to the field of battle and lend his support to the men and women of Tuskegee Institute who are still standing by their guns, but minus their leader.
BEN DAVIS, editor of the Independent, says that the "conditions at Tuskegee are intense—racial feeling runs high, and Major Moton, being officer in command, should be at his post to keep up the morale of the forces who have followed him so gallantly since the death of the lamented founder of the famous institution."
WHERE MAJOR MOTON IS at this writing we will not venture to say. For all we know he may be in the cellar of his Tuskegee home, and he may be in New York City or Washington. He is keeping very quiet, wherever he is. He is a deep thinker, and we confess that we are not able to understand either his thoughts or his action, but, like the Independent, we feel that he should be in Tuskegee. After his speeches here, in which he recited hitherto untold tales of bravery, we had every reason to believe that he would again take up his post as active head of the Institution.
THE INDEPENDENT EDITORIAL is so pithy that we are forced to again quote from it:
"Come home, major, and shoulder your part of the responsibility. Come home, major, and strengthen the morale of your followers. Come home, major, and defy the cowardice of the mob and the Ku Klux Klan by the presence of your brave and
lonality. Cowards stand in the ice, but fly in the hour of adobe soldiers never desert theirs in desert. If anything should Tuskegee and your life was absent, you would go down as a slacker who deserved his institution needed you; and mained at their post would goory as the heroes who stood itest.
He loves a hero, but hates a world despises a man who from the conflict to save hisoes others to die at the post should have stood the supreme fellow who seeks to save hisand the man who dares not life, finds it.
turn and bring your family,
take common cause with
their families who have been
illiant and true to leave the
boker T. Washington placed
mand. Show the world, make
you can do, that there
in your backbone, bravery in
terrorism in your makeup, and
bally."
WE ADD that if he is not
in to Tuskegee he should re-
someone else take his post.
Democratic Negro Leadership
AS THE TIME for the fall primary and election draws nearer we are beginning to hear of the many good things Tammany Hall and the United Colored Democracy, an affiliated Negro body, has done for the colored people of Harlem, as against the things done by the Republican Party. Alderman George W. Harris, Republican, and Assemblyman Henri Shields, Negro Democrat. "friendly enemies" occupying the same office, attempted to thrash the matter out at a recent meeting in the local branch of the Y. M. C. A.
THE TAMMANY SPEAKER told of the patronage handed out by his organization to colored men and women, and left it to Mr. Harris to say that Tammany Hall is "an organization of political trickery." No one knows this better at this time than Alderman Harris.
TAMMANY HALL, in so far as the rank and file of Negro voters are concerned, is more than an organization of political trickery. It is a breeder of crime in this district, and one is absolutely safe in saying that it is primarily responsible for many things of a disgraceful nature that happen here. In plain and unmistakable English, United Colored Democracy is a kind of fencing station for thieves, robbers, drunkers, and bootleggers. Any number of its leaders are ex-convicts and common gamblers, affiliated with the organization because of the protection it gives them when they are arrested. Don't take our word for this. Go into most any of the courts presided over by Tammany judges and magistrates and see how justice is dispensed to thieves, robbers, bootleggers, and common gamblers who are members of Tammany Hall or the United Colored Democracy and how it is dispensed to others.
IT MUST ALWAYS be remembered that a Tammany Democrat, white or black, is a Democrat—in New York City, New York State or the Nation's Capital. He has no principles. He is expedient. Tammany Hall is a powerful organization. United Colored Democracy is a powerful organization—far more powerful in fostering vice and crime than any other political body in Harlem. Did you go on its recent excursion? How did you like it? Was it the kind of gathering you would ask your wife to attend? Or your sister? Or your mother? Was there anything about it to inspire the youth of the race to right living and good citizenship?
POLITICAL PATRONAGE is all right in its way. We are entitled to some of it. We can demand our share of it if we use our balloting power in the right way, but Tammany Hall patronage is a millstone about our necks, so dear is the price we pay for it. We do not want colored criminals protected or let off with light fines and suspended sentences, and in shielding criminals in Harlem Tammany Hall and United Colored Democracy are doing more to prevent our progress than all the other stumbling blocks put together.
EXPRESSED BY CONTEMPORARIES
"IT IS WORTH NOTING," says the Newark, N. J., Star-Eagle, "now and then, that the Negro people of this country never have to be taught Americanism."
DU BOIS AT CHEYNEY
SINCE my chi' God I have had a contempt for Peter, "the Rock," because he allowed himself to get too scared to speak out when he saw his friend Jesus being railroaded to execution on false testimony; and because, when Jesus was being led away by the police, Peter became such a contemptible coward that he even indulged in a little "cussin" and swearin," just to prove to Jesus' enemies that he did not belong to Jesus' church, but was one of the wicked bullies, like them. As the mob was escorting and taunting his friend, he only dared to "follow afar off." But among those sadists there was a keen-eyed servant girl, who, when she saw this once valiant Peter sneaking along in the tail-end of the mob, called to the bullies who were mobbing Jesus and said: "Here!—this fellow is one of them—he's His friend—this fellow here." Whereupon Peter trembled and said: "No, I'm not. I don't even know Him. I'm no friend of His. I know not the man." And to prove it conclusively, he cursed and swore—to prove to the bullies that he was more like them than like Him."
SINCE my chi. god I "the Rock," because scared to speak out being railroaded to executive cause, when Jesus was being became such a contemptible in a little "cussin' and swen enemies that he did not bet one of the wicked bullies, licking and taunting his fr afar off." But among those servant girl, who, when she sneaking along in the tail-bullies who were mobbing fellow is one of them—he's Whereupon Peter trembled, don't even know Him. I'm the man." And to prove swore—to prove to the bulli than like Him."
"And the contempt which I have had for Peter for 25 years I would now have for myself for the rest of my life if I kept safely and judiciously quiet under the repeated erroneous statements which I read in our papers to the effect that William Burghardt DuBois, whom I know well, is a "segregationist." One of the most effective, even if it is the most cowardly, method of "bearing false testimony" is to keep loudly and eloquently quiet when you have an opportunity to sidethe truth through the "say no." DuBois is not a segregationist—never has been and although phophobia and precarious business, I predict he never will be. Up to date he has done more by his influence to oppose segregation and Jim-Crowism than any other man in American history. And he is almost too old to learn such a novel trick now.
This is not even a pretense of a defense of Dr. DeBol's attitude on the question and problem of Cheyne Institute. That particular case must be defended or lost on its own merits. It is the opinion of the writer of this editorial that when it was first proposed to make Cheyne Institute one of the State Normal Schools, the colored teachers of the state were demanded of the state authorities a clear and documented understanding, to this effect: The Cheyne Institute, on becoming a state school, is no longer to be a colored school exclusively, but pupils of all races (perhaps from a certain district) are to be admitted to it, regardless of race or color; and white teachers, as well as colored teachers, may be employed in any capacity and on the basis of merit only. Some teachers, that is, are confirmation of the democracy of the state schools of Pennsylvania, should have been secured from the state authorities, or else the colored voters of Pennsylvania should have opposed taking Cheyne Institute into the public school system.
The failure of some such precondition has created a dilemma, in which a good school will either be damaged or a great cause lost—or both. Even now the aim and objective of our fight should be to open Cheyney and all the other state schools to all qualified students and teachers of all the races.
Meanwhile it is a cause for pride and gratification that colored Americans have become so sensitive to the disgrace of the degradation and humiliation of their children in "Jim-Crow" schools. The least we can do is to fight the program "Jim-Crow" in its way. It will be a thousand times better in advantages to be beaten in a fight on this issue than to yield without fighting. For a settlement by force is no settlement. And there is a fight ahead of us.
And don't forget, dear reader, that "You know me, Al" and that W. B. E. DeBois will learn of this editorial just as you learn of it, by reading it. And let you and him and me gird our loins and unite our forces for the successful struggle of our careers against segregation and "Him Crowism" during the next ten years throughout the North and East.
Foot Notes to African History.
(By THE HAMITIC LEAGUE)
Helen, the Teasing Brownaki of Troy
Of course you have heard of Helen of Troy, that beautiful doll whose face launched a thousand ships to war! But did you ever hear that she was a teasing, tantalizing, troublesome brown? If you haven't, maybe it is because 'authors forgot to mention it. Nordic writers have such a careless way of forgetting to mention the color of the folks away back yonder under the sun.
have had a contempt for Peter, he allowed himself to get too when he saw his friend Jesus on false testimony; and be led away by the police, Peter cawed that he even indulged inrin," just to prove to Jesus' long to Jesus' church, but was be them. As the mob was esend, he only dared to "follow sadists there was a keen-eyed saw this once valiant Peter and of the mob, called to the Jesus and said: "Here!—this His friend—this fellow here." and said: "No, I'm not. I no friend of His. I know not conclusively, he cursed and that he was more like them
WEEK DAY S
By Dr. H. T.
Christ's Law and How to Keep It.
"Always carry one another's of Christ's law."—Gal. 6:2.
THE Jews, when Jesus was observers of the law or so much attention to the law that they often lost a came and made it unnecessary memorizing so much of the and one's neighbors as one's ing, is to keep every requiremets." Christ, therefore, has a love. His law, consisting of rule of conduct that would m and all places of punishment occasion for complaint again against the wise; the poor against the dishonest, nor the man. The Apostle Paul in the Christ, a panacea for all ills carry one another's burdens. Christ's law."
"Always carry one another's burdens, and so obey the whole of Christ's law."—Gal. 6:2.
THE Jews, when Jesus was on earth, were very strict observers of the law of Moses. In fact, they gave so much attention to the observance of the letter of the law that they often lost sight of its significance. Jesus came and made it unnecessary for them to bother about memorizing so much of the law. To love God supremely and one's neighbors as one's self, according to Jesus' teaching, is to keep every requirement of the "law of the prophets." Christ, therefore, has only one law, and that law is love. His law, consisting of only one word, constitutes a rule of conduct that would make useless all law, all courts and all places of punishment. The weak would have no occasion for complaint against the strong; the ignorant against the wise; the poor against the rich; the honest against the dishonest, nor the black man against the white man. The Apostle Paul in the text shows how the love of Christ, a panacea for all ills, may be obtained. "Always carry one another's burdens, and so obey the whole of Christ's law."
Owing the command to "always carry one another's burdens" is the only way to build love, Christ's law, into our lives. We value things in proportion as they cost us. The same rule applies with reference to "one another." If mothers love children more than fathers do, it is not because they have greater capacity for loving, but because the children cost them more pain, patience, anxiety and toil. A man never ceases to love the family to which he is giving whole-hearted support. It is only when he does not carry burdens that he lodge somewhere else and desertion becomes possible. Woman's independence of man's support has more to do with the prevalence of divorce in this day than anything else.
Opportunities for "carrying one another's burdens" are so abundant that no one needs to look for them. Every day, everywhere, we can find:
1. The burdened individual. The problem of adjusting one's self to
scream of her day and she had more suitors than Henry has flivers. She finally married Mr. Menelaus of Sparta, who traced his royal blood back to the Argives who planted Africa in Greece a thousand years before. Then Buddy Parks, shank of Troy, vamped the lady and eloped with her while King Menelaus was shooting crape. Said elopement caused the Trojan war that made Mr. Homer famous. The old man on the wall of Troy" declared that it was a shame for two nations to go to war over a woman. Just then Helen passed and the old rosters revised their opinions and voted more dough to carry on the fight foot.
So write it, down in your memory that Helen belonged to us. There is only one author we ever read who wasn't afraid to say she was a brownskin baby doll. It was Miss Barbain of England, "Yes," she makes Helen say, "I was brownskin and rather plump, but the boys fell for me just the same."
There is a long record of glory for us Children of the Sun.
Negro Melon Growers
ADHL. Ga.—The best price that Negro melon growers of Georgia have been able to obtain is to hire at $25 per carloed, white melon growers are able to get as high as $76.50 per carloed for their melons. It is said that the white men have formed a melon growers' association. to which Negroes cannot belong. to which Negroes shall sell their melons to individual members of the association or to commission merchants, who offer them practically nothing for their crop.
LIBRARY NOTES
Next Friday evening, July 37, at 8:30 P. M., there will be a Dunbar evening for children and their parents, Richard B. Harrison, well known for trays of Dunbar cookies, has fully invited to recite. All children and their parents are cordially invited to be present. At the exposition to be held at the Renaissance Casino by the Harlem Chamber of Commerce there will be shown all the activities of the library. Be sure to visit our booth.
Some New Books.
Katherine Mansfield's "The Garden Party," a selection of short stories; Walt Whitman's Marvel; Riddle, "short stories; Christopher Morlays' Power of Sympathy," essays; Enna St. Vincent Millay's "Renascence."
of Church Publication
NEW ORLEANS, La—Rap
resentatives of the 265,000
Negro Methodists throughout
the country gathered here last
week to celebrate the founding
of the Southwestern Christian
Adrocate, fifty years ago.
ERMONETTES
8. JOHNSON
burdens, and so obey the whole
has on earth, were very strict
of Moses. In fact, they gave
the observance of the letter of
right of its significance. Jesus
lery for them to bother about
law. To love God supremely
self, according to Jesus' teach-
ment of the "law of the proph-
only one law, and that law is
only one word, constitutes a
take useless all law, all courts.
The weak would have no
must the strong; the ignorant
against the rich; the honest
black man against the white
the text shows how the love of
may be obtained. "Always
and so obey the whole of
this environment is fraught with many burdens. Sometimes they result in tragedy and sometimes in heroic living. Many a suicide would have been averted if someone, by kind word or death, had lifted the burden which bore so heavily upon the victim. Young women burdened with aims committed while conscience slept; young men burdened with the embarrassment of financial loss or social disgrace; men and women of all ages and races, wrestling with religious doubt, furnish us opportunities every day to help bear some perplexed and dejected person's burden.
2. The burdened family. No home, regardless of wealth or station, is free from the multitudinous burdens which afflict family life. The rich and socially great do not have to struggle for existence and place in society, yet they may have problems of character that burden infinitely more. The poor, in addition to the daily grind, may also be burdened with character problems that cause every family has an economic, social, moral or spiritual burden to lift, opportunities for service in that regard await every one of us.
3. The burdened race. And we would have you know that the Negro is not the only burdened race. The Anglo-Saxon carries greater burdons than the Negro or anybody else. That is due to his prominence. Leadership is always burdened with responsibilities. But the heaviest load on the Anglo-Saxon's mind and heart is not constructive leadership. It is the problem of recognizing and maintaining "white supremacy," and, at the same time, being "a big brother to all other races." Deep down in the heart of the average white man is the disposition to deal more kindly than he does with other races, even the Negro. Because he fears that an absolutely square deal towards these people will be mistaken for an admission of their equality with him, he maintains an attitude towards them that, in his heart of hearts, he condemns. This of necessity gives the average white man a burdened conscience.
So I repeat, the Negro is not the only burdened race. Hard as the oppression of race prejudice may be, it is a burden put on us by others and weighs much less than the burden an acquiring conscience puts on the oppressor. Let me plead with men and women of my race not to add to the oppression others put on us the burden of an offended conscience. Whatever may be our handpalm, nor not be guilty of sailing. Thoughts of Lared distort our minds, omits our spirit and destroy the faith of God. Burdens borne unselfishly remind so much of the "Man of dullness" that we should not only accept them, but count it a signal honour and high privilege to be like Him.
COMING SOON!
Another story by the author of "Blood Money."
Keeping Fit:-
By R. ELLIOTT RAWLIN'S, M.D.
Religion, Medicine and Healing
WENT to the Palace Casino is being practiced by a woman believe in God, the blind will made to walk the dumb will be made to hear." These "cure" who was totally blind, deaf or not to speak. No one who was walk effectively use the trivial infirmity which causes and chronic rheumatic joints, of the cells composing the afflicted, due to the Religious hold of these people, and char attitude.
WENT to the Palace Casino on Thursday, where "faith healing" is being practiced by a woman, who said that, "if they will only believe in God, the blind will be made to see, the lame will be made to walk the dumb will be able to talk and the deaf will be made to hear." These "cures" did not occur as I looked on. No one who was totally blind, deaf or dumb left the casting able to see, hear or speak. No one who was completely paralyzed was made to walk or to effectively use the afflicted limb. There were cases of trivial infirmities, such as neuralgia, painful muscles, neurasthenia and chronic rhematic joints, where there was no complete death of the cells composing the afflicted region, that was momentarily relieved, due to the Religious Emotionalism which took complete hold of these people, and changed for the moment their mental attitude.
Such results are not new, and any amelioration of pain or infirmity is not permanent. This woman merely pallates suffering by overpowering the mind with a religious fervor and anticipation. The pathology or diseased cell-structure still remains, and after excitement of the hymn-singing, loud prayers and religious exhortations ceases the agony and the infirmity will manifest themselves again.
The human being has both a physical as well as a spiritual body. The mind, which is made up of brain and nerves, has an influence, it is true, upon the functioning of the physical as well as of the spiritual body; but its influence upon the physical is only partial; supplemental. If the physical body is diseased, there is abnormal cell-structure or abnormal circulation of the blood in some vital organ and the physiology of the organ is disturbed. To make the person healthy again requires a change to healthy cell-structure and proper circulation and physiology.
Hurely a mental excitement of hope and anticipation developed by a religious fervor cannot bring the diseased organ back immediately to normal—especially such complicated structures as the eye, the area of motion in the brain or the motor tract of spinal cord. Any improvement from an optimistic and "faith-believing," mental attitude can only slowly manifest itself when jumps in excitement and see the light of "gay"; if he is paralyzed he cannot immediately arise and walk. The realm of biology and pathology has cer-
Legal
ATTORNEY AN
A the present time the
and debate over the so
by Steward Browne
Owners' Association.
Legal Talks
By
ATTORNEY ANNA J. ROBINSON
At the present time there is a great deal of discussion and debate over the so-called iron-clad lease, prepared by Steward Browne, of the United Real Estate Owners' Association.
The provision in this lease which hits Harlem tenants hardest is that which practically forces the tenants to divide with the landlord whatever they receive from renting out furnished rooms.
Letting. In effect, it bases the rent on a per capita basis instead of on the number of rooms occupied, which has always been the basis for charging apartment rents.
Many people of moderate means have been forced, because of the high rents charged by landlords, to rent out rooms in order to make ends meet. The new lease forces the tenant to stipulate the number of people who shall occupy the premises and, be charged accordingly, and provides also if a greater number is taken as the tenant's additional rent may be charged or the tenant dispossessed. This clause is defended by saying that the landlord is entitled to his share of any revenue the tenant may derive from sub
The Post
Pamela sublimed for publication
turned valiant accompanied with
leaves.
Star
OUT in the night thou
The Poets Corner
Press publishing for publication in "The Poet's Corner" will not be re-returned unless accompanied with a self-addressed and stamped envelope.
Star of Ethiopia
OUT in the night thou art the sun
Toward which thy soul-charmed children run
The faith-high height whereon they see
The glory of their Day to Be—
The peace at last when all is done.
Thursday, where "faith healing" who says that, "if they will only be made to see, the lame will be able to talk and the deaf will be not occur as I looked on. No one left the castoo able to see, completely paralyzed was made to acted limb. There were cases of pain, painful muscles, neurasthenia there was no complete death and region, that was momentarilyotionalism which took complete for the moment their mental
tain laws relative to the repair of diseased cell-structure. This repair cannot occur momentarily. This repair to normal gradually goes on until finally there is complete restoration. The period of time may be days, weeks or months, depending upon the part discussed and the extent of the diseased organ to be considered in the healing of wounds and diseases, both spiritual and physical.
Man has a physical as well as a spiritual body; both must work in unison to keep a man healthy and strong. Religion as an aid to the spiritual body—keeping the mind hopeful, confident and stimulated—is of great help in the science of medicine and surgery. The heart is thus stimulated, the blood circulation is improved, the ductless glands keep up their normal activity, and thus the metabolism and physiological activities of the vital organs are improved.
In this way religion, with its faith and confidence in God, helps the process of repair and contributes to the removal of disease. The physician and surgeon is needed to instruct the patient along the lines of physical recuperation; the minister or religious teacher is needed to assist this recuperation through spiritual stimulation and a confident mental attitude. Scientific medicine and religion are surely the workhorses of God. The two are in no other way can one be made whole. Physical restoration as well as spiritual restoration is needed to completely cure any disease.
Talks
A J. ROBINSON
is a great deal of discussion
called iron-clad lease, prepared
of the United Real Estate
letting. In effect, it bases the
rent on a per capita basis in-
stead of on the number of
rooms occupied, which has al-
ways been the basis for charg-
ing apartment rent.
There is no reason for taking this form of lease too seriously, because the courts have already held most of the provisions void, as being against public policy. However, I would advise tenants not to sign one of them if presented, and if threatened with eviction, to go to the courts for relief. If a tenant signs this lease he will have to go through the trouble and expense of fighting the case in court in order to get away from its illegal term. He may have to go into court to keep from being evicted, but that is easier and less expensive than having the lease set aside after it has been signed.
rs Corner
"The Poet's Corner" will not be re-
self-addressed and stamped ave-
art the sun
poul-charmed children run,
whereon they see
be-
is done.
by one
neir plea,
cannot shun.
upon,
would be free