Amsterdam News

Wednesday, August 12, 1925

New York, New York

16 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page 5
Page 5
Page 6
Page 6
Page 7
Page 7
Page 8
Page 8
Page 9
Page 9
Page 10
Page 10
Page 11
Page 11
Page 12
Page 12
Page 13
Page 13
Page 14
Page 14
Page 15
Page 15
Page 16
Page 16
Page text (machine-generated)
'HERE ON A VISIT; DROPS DEAD FONTANA SELECTS TWO VOICES INSTEAD OF ONE FOOM Naples, Italy, comes the word that the zealous police have inward another gang of clan- emigration agents who have been engaged in the prudent task of sending "would-be" United States im- piments over here, aided by severely forged passports to Marseilles and Havre, from whence the new U. S. "sub- jects" have been embarking for the good old U. S. A., to compete in the production of made-in-America goods, wares and merchandise. When it is considered that the bootlegging of labor across the Mexican border has become an industry which is rivalled only by the transportation of one-hundred-proof stuff, and that a number of Floridian and other industrial kings have been seeking to keep a good per cent of American labor, both black and white, idle, it can be seen that the full dinner pair of the American Negro workman is continuously the pendulum which swings back and forth between necessity and the unscrupulous practices of certain soulless American employers who, in sentiment, resemble these few. American tourists who go abroad and try to smuggle back into America, in their stockings or coat linings, things which they should be happy to purchase in the United States. The American workman, both white and black, is the best paid, most privileged, happiest workman in the world, and if the labor bootlegging game, conditioned, as it must be by certain unscrupulous employers, continues to thrive, the prestige, honor and integrity of the American workman will still doubtless survive. that even so, pray tell us what is the ethical status of the American employer who continues to hire bootleg labor, while he fires American born citizens who have as much right as the employer to the benefits and privileges accruing from American labor and production? Wife Disappears After Being Shot Husband Is Held Without Bail Pending Investigation angled with shooting his wife Hoggins, 213 West 142d was arrested and held with him to give the police authori- tory to find the person who has disappeared, was arrested before Albert Vitale in the Crown Hoggins Court Monday 17:15 Detective Christopher attended the 16th De- partment arrived at the 123th press in response to a will be found Hoggins in Court occupied by his hair was covered with A police was also the door by the other Logus Traffic Cop Fines Klansman $8 Naltz, unseason, Klan vis- ory, Pa, was the victim of the Post Office by the "loop" whose way was visible in the form of manhole. He was fired, lighted and was sent into the air through the entrance of his vice-chef. The man approved his living and left him off He gave Waltz care of a carriage car and ordered sort to the 3d Precinct on the police learned the prayer and the young Klanman Two days ago, a man answer the riot in final Silver to make NORMAN W. JOHNSON CITY and SUBURBAN BREAKING INSURANCE 10 N. STREET, N. Y. C. TO "BREAK THE BONDS" Patronize Only Stores Employing Negroes PROMINENT BALTIMORE CITIZEN IS DEAD HERE R. A. P. Johnson Was Here on Visit to His Niece and Nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Artemus Mitchell Whale on the way with his mee. Mrs. Katherine Mitchell, 200 West 144th street, to meet the woman's husband who is a clay watchman at the Hermules. Match Company, Brooklyn, K. A. P. Johnson, a prominent citizen in Baltimore, became suddenly ill and died before medical attention could be secured. Sunday afternoon. Mr. Johnson who was about 55 years old, figured as a witness here for the Great Hainault & Bates Jewelry Co. of Baltimore in the sensational trial that involved a cone chest that was stolen by hardliness from a Grand Central train about nine miles ago. Mr. Johnson came to New York Sunday morning on an excursion train from Baltimore to spend the week with his niece and nephew. After eating a neatly dinner he was anxious to go for a ride and look about Mrs. Mitchell said. As upon his suggestion, Mrs. Mitchell accompanied him. Others they had reached Brooklyn. Mr. Johnson made a fait excitation. Oh, Katie! and fell unconscious. A taxi cab was hailed and the man was rushed to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The body was carried to Salt Lake for interment last night. Governor of V.I. Resigns His Post Governor of V.I. Resigns His Post The latest development in the affair of the Virgin Islands, formerly the Danish West Indies, is the appointment by President Coolidge of Captain Martin E. Branch, commandant of the Navy Yard at Charleston, S. C., as the new Governor of the Virgin Islands, relieving Captain Philip Williams, U. S. N., who has held the Governorship since 1927. What the policy of the new Governor will be is problematic, but it is more than likely that he will follow in the footsteps of his immediate predecessor, Captain Philip Williams, who was severely criticised. There is a strong desire for a change to a permanent form of government, as there has been considerable criticism of naval $950 PURCHASES Finest Brownstone House in Brooklyn TONKONOGY, Owner 50 COURT STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. THE WOMEN'S WEEKLY G. O. P. Leaders to Ask Representation on Civil Service Com WASHINGTON. Aug 10. Negro leaders here will ask President Coolidge to appoint a man or woman of their race to the Civil Service Commission to succeed Mrs. Helen H. Gardener, who died ten days ago They point out that one of the "17 points" William C. Matthews, who directed the Coolidge campaign among the Negroes, desired EXTRA Train Crew Robbed of $250 MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 10—Two colored bandits last night boarded the Olympian, crack train of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway, and robbed one member of the train crew of $250. None of the passengers on the train, which was east bound, was molested. The bandits are believed to have boarded the train when it stopped at the Milwaukee depot in downtown Minneapolis. Shortly after it had left the depot they walked into the dining car, where they leveled pistols at John G. Gorth, Chicago, the dining car steward, and four waiters. The robbers forced the waiters to stand at one side of the coach while they searched Gorth and took the $250 from him. Then they stepped to the platform, pulled the signal cord and as the train slowed down they leaped off into the darkness for colored people was a place on that body. No candidate has been agreed upon by those behind the movement. Charged With 3rd Avenue Shooting Charged with shooting Benjamin Johnson, 27, 762 Third avenue. Andrew Todd, 24, 672 Third avenue. is being held for further examination. Todd was captured after a long chase by Patrolman Herbert M. Wilson of the East Stat street station Only Negro Fire-Fighter Passes Civil Service Exam. for Lieutenant Wesley Williams. Who Has Made Many Thrilling Rescues. Makes General Average of 89.12—Over 1,200 Fail to Pass With an average of 80.12 per cent, Wesley Williams, age 28, of 111 West 143d street, only Negro member of the fire fighting force of New York City, passed the civil service examination for heir tenant in the Fire Department, according to official notification received from the Municipal Civil Service Commission last week. Three thousand and ten were eligible for the examination, but 220 withdrew. One thousand two hundred and twenty failed and 867 passed. Williams is in the first 200. He has been a member of the fire department for six years and at the present time is attached to Engine Company No. 65. Williams, who is an athlete, has made many thrilling and heroic rescues since he has been a fire NOTICE The SARCO REALTY CO. & BOACH COMPANY is making financial arrangement to redeem all outstanding shares of the Stockholders will be notified thereof upon completion of such arrangements WITH BOACH FREE Passes Exam. for Lieutenant WESLEY WILLIAMS. man. His father James H. Williams is hear reded at the Grand Central Station. He is married. LINCOLN UNIVERSITY CHESTER, Pa. Aug. 10. The school rights raging in several cities throughout the country have at last hit Lincoln University, caused by the election of Rev. John M. Gaston, of Pittsburgh, presi- dent. 16 PAGES Complete in Two Sections 3c. IN GREATER NEW YORK ELSEWHERE 5c Largest Negro Audience Ever Assembled in Town Hall Hears Final Audition and Recital The last was first and the last moment Edoardo Ferrari pranos to train for a career one as originally planned, and recital in Town Hall. He explained this by saying that remarkable quality of the vow to be defeated in his pigeons in one basket. The two selected were West 137th street, first on Zackery, of 2369 Seventh ave. Over 1,200 persons were persons of high standing in magazine and daily newspaper an audience of white and combed for a Town Hall recieved in from several hundreally for the event. Training of the two s begun almost immediately in The twenty-four numb presented without an unto the effect. As contestant affection became rife as to who w by Mr Fontana Many gave only a person with an ex would be able to make a excellent voices. Encores were not po specific request of Mr. For the entire program had been The great tenor was singing of Miss Avery, wha as the audition progressed, increasingly difficult to mal had been permitted, or if been made by popular ap most likely have lasted unl Aside from Miss Aver an encore number from Es 120th street, who sang the program first and the first w hardo Ferrari-Fontan or a career in grant planned, following own Hall. Friday ever saying that his act y of the voices and in his purpose by it. lected were Marguer first on the prog Seventh avenue, last persons were present standing in the wort newly newspaper criti ite and colored peo n Hall recital. Any general hundred toilets the two successful mediately in Mr. F your numbers on at an untoward cir testant after conte s to who would be Many gave it as with an extensive k make a selection o be not permitted, of Mr. Fontana, an an had been render nor was visibly i Avery, who opened progressed, he too, ult to make his se sed, or if the sele popular approval, t lasted until morni Miss Avery, Mr. or from Esther F. to sang the eleven The last was first and the first was first; for at the last moment Edoardo Ferrari-Fontana selected two sopranos to train for a career in grand opera, instead of one as originally planned, following the final auditions and recital in Town Hall. Friday evening. Mr. Fontana explained this by saying that his action was due to the remarkable quality of the voices and his determination not to be defeated in his purpose by placing all of his eggs in one basket. The two selected were Marguerite Avery, of 137 West 137th street, first on the program, and Jessie A. Zackery, of 2369 Seventh avenue, last on the program. Over 1,200 persons were present, including many persons of high standing in the world of music, music magazine and daily newspaper critics—as appreciative an audience of white and colored people as has ever assembled for a Town Hall recital. Any number of persons came in from several hundred miles out of town especially for the event. Training of the two successful sopranos will be begun almost immediately in Mr. Fontana's studio. The twenty-four numbers on the program were presented without an untoward circumstance to mar the effect. As contestant after contestant sang speculation became rife as to who would be the person selected by Mr. Fontana. Many gave it as their opinion that only a person with an extensive knowledge of music would be able to make a selection out of so many excellent voices. Encores were not permitted, except upon the specific request of Mr. Fontana, and then only after the entire program had been rendered. The great tenor was visibly impressed with the singing of Miss Avery, who opened the program, but as the audition progressed, he too, probably found it increasingly difficult to make his selection. If encores had been permitted, or if the selection was to have been made by popular approval, the program would most likely have lasted until morning. Aside from Miss Avery, Mr. Fontana requested an encore number from Esther F. Hayes, of 34 West 129th street, who sang the eleventh number on the program. Additional Programs of Town Hall Recital So many requests have been received for additional copies of the special tabloid Town Hall Edition of The Amsterdam News, which carried short biographical sketches of each of the twenty-four singers on the program, together with their pictures, that it has been decided to reprint another edition, which will be ready for distribution to-day. The edition will be distributed from the Brooklyn and New York offices of The Amsterdam News, one free to each person. A copy may also be secured free by mail, upon receipt of a two-cent stamp. MILL-E-RITE Hair Dressing Still Leads NO Contains Water or Oil DOES NOT BURN THE NOR CHANGE THE C THE HAIR Ask your dressee Mr. Fontana's statement at the hour of the recital follows: "To have in your race such wonderful singers as Roland Hayes who conquered the European musical public, and who is now acclaimed in his own country as one of its greatest tenors; Marian Anderson, who won out in a contest of several hundred of the best singers in the United States for the Stadium concerts; Harry T. Bush, composer and baritone and Madame Florence Cole-Talbert, who is now studying in Tivoli, Haiti, is clear proof that Nerox have a remarkable tenderness for music, both vocal and instrumental. Mentions Freeman's "Vendetta." "I had the pleasure of listening to the opera 'Vendetta,' written by the Negro composer, H. Leastrance Freeman, and was greatly impressed." TETRA! TST ERTL TI I I TI FT TT I, jhe BADR ee SOIR pe BERBER MDNR Ee a fa tena cia DU VAY AMETOORAM AOWE UWONRATERAY AliMianT is (A098 ¥ INSURGENT A.M.E. CHURCH FA oA [ more powerfu A k ; bl. h aly . be NN | SS “ Yo petites % / (eZ FAN. i | NI , / y | My ae ON I NY ob Ay! gs ON 4 VEE Ce OY a ts NN ; Nadinola never faile to blanch the skin because it containe one , ‘of the moat pereletent and surest shin whiteners known, yet ; thie ingredient ie blended into a fine, smonth white cream so that Nadinoln never harma the skin. Thie ie the eupar-blench, extra-powerlul, never falling, You get your’monay hack if it :. doean't do just what wa say. Follow simple directions in the package, ° Begin tonight to make the applications! Soe how fact it wake! it Rem once’ youll notice @ change in your chin. Then ; i WATCHI Sere your akin grow lighter and falrar-~elearer and eS | amoother, all the oiliness absorbed, every eruption banished, . all the conrseness refined. You'll simply rejoice at the ‘ale : new color of your complezion—lighter in tone, fir.er in % texture, Reding Blnching Cronm hau ean the trent of i ; hecinoly Biseehing Eesner hak bean the fever at a Peo aice natal Sadr ettnntt ot Pec Mateeg deere tea cena an aece a fi 3 H'vouennnot buy It where you live, send us 300 oF $1 RE) narencag ma taereterab tte aha PN Repel Ade tarzan Bent oi s. ° 1 ,eNadinola Bleaching Cream y Bedarra ) ' £) | p y I i Gan Nadinoln Bleaching Cream —the skin whitener that Nadine Faces Powder. $00 never felle, Twn aires, 50¢ and Bt, —alturingly periumed emodelling U R S sreonakl easonably JACK REIGHBART --- 217 West 29th Street {One Flight Up) For Information Call or See Je eee 201 Weat 148th Street TEETH - is ehenout Conscientious PLATES Reliable Dental Work At Reasonable Prices Bridgework, Sete of Teeth, Fillings end Inlays coneciem Hously and carefully made to the best of our ability. Le ars oun tatractas cuentut oud Cie eae Heady Wik | hottie ESTABLISHEO OVER 10 YEARS FREE EXAMINATION - Dr. BLOOM (25th ST., COR, PARK AVE. (rs ott? 39th ST., COR. LEXINGTON AVE. (Over Liggett's) Min ST] COR, THIRD AVENUE Patty. eee ate BROKEN PLATES REPAIRED | Tare aaa tase p97 WHILE YOU WAIT d . oN 4 DIRECT FROM MANUFACTURER JACILETTS.. FOXES, BOA MARTENS. STONE MARTENS Aad all winay oF Nechuiets 7 j D, Ten Months to Pay 6 ae : YOU ARE INVITEO TO OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT || Which Sorents Payment Over TEN MONTHS and ty Entendes e To Any Dependable Person. ‘ We Oo Not Ask tor Embarrassing Raterences, a There Are No a Charges of Any Kind. | OD. WEE” OB, I Wie Fe tan ete erg ANC. c * sitickn of Colored Woman's ORK CITY bh Waskingtos, ins . ~ygiieaandiialae » ATHIGAN MISBIONARY HOC WE MATE Aline apatulion Unen cnaen tt Mitta Sian tums Mater BMG Went aid wienes caressed heen My fing, Mew Hater ae atatiinnd i Aunhiy Metered often Monin a Tne, sumer ohn ld totenion annie fhe henapht wack eM he Mh ndnptedd dicaehrce festa the jemand Welt, iste sutae ome Sey [ninds PEavoe Helen MiflAd hae Aire Wma mucleatitatad fog Muntay Sande WAKIEA HAIRKD OVE $+x.000 FOR NALA CLI Milian Mehkane, Flaht Anveatasy i Tae SAAL Amma intiits fF fh PAdenncanatt at Casita eagle, Henlow declatad (Nat etlarent ten Htolod, (NCuMGH feline inlet temta had hewn {ie anata ef tate Fine mete than $20 Gn fat the # PSA EW tn the eat raven menthea of (aps CALVARY M. E. CHURCH IN HANDS OF RECEIVER 1 Wefrermig te herein alfillat el wath the VOM Choteh: ithe srganizatian: whiel it de jsettend and filing tes wath ety trate inte the Mek, Chareh, [ie Si Calvary Independent PChuth dest it its. finanelal ‘etituule fer existence This [sae Miselesed be: fornnine trite, teescof the church. | The mathifven, elites shat ha {been soomplod by the Indapendent vhareh craantintion of PHth etrent nnd Milgecdinbe nyvenie bine now Hten Ine Hie hauls of rerebver (A potition ty bankrupter wae dined Fritey The Habilitios were [Hated MAM TEE ond meant nt HTML Z5, {fhe petition rereatod Eyal neers Mtoof property ie rtinreh poe vera wae morse oat for some (ine te. conmregation trad beon giving Nbernlly to the churehy rorriving In return notes oF none, itist how many of thease were out: Standing hug not sen. determine Ralph Co Taylor nf 42) frondway, he was appointed receiver hy fudge dchn C Knox, woul sat Uscfies the eituntion and nal he ‘iad tet bad time te. fumtitarize himself with ah the finanelal des falls of the congregation's affalrs, The financial AiMenttion of the ereevization. inte: been kept ak nest @ geeret by the peter of thes Church. Dianatiafaction has heen brewing among the officials of the [chiiech for some time ue a result jar the mintster'a- effects to farce ithe coneregation to follow hiv ale jschite vaundates, i's claimed | HT. Shepard, on real estate iMenlor, 2444 Seventh avenue, who wan preaident and treasurer of the echureh, Ix nileged to have sactt fred oa laree amount of personal capitol in the financing of the er. cantation ft fe claimed that he restaned and teft tie chareh (The Mt Calvary Church was or: konted aver pve yenre age Iya small number af people whe with row from Tetiel AMF Chureh hy Wert Lied atront ‘They rented a ronm ant shortly afterwards. the hall on the reennd Noor of the Lafayette Bullding was secured: From othe hall they moved Into the beautiful stone sirneture en Eilzeenmbn nvenun, ‘The edifice was purchased from the Evangelleot Lutheran Church of Alauement. Detectives Arrest Man After Chase Charred sith seting in enncert with te ether men whe rented Hye gaflare of $2) ative thee had cnraused in Harlem teaethen, so mord Meagan 23, 66 West G28th Mtreet. te heliet heh for fusther ex amination The sevlors Honjomin Ke 2, ond Mthert Adela, [boty white Ssteved thne thee eanin tee Haglan eu the Invttatiin af the alleged howd ne tan When thay wee ‘pen tea TS West 18% street Treen qailled ent a peedyer anil the we men. welt esc halt threston L thea, thes ewid Alor the allege thrzs robtyad he sitters af $20 they ded ts the Nant The trin wee thon chases ‘by the navy mon, Detesthes Seat ond Tlernay of the Woot reth street pniire atation later suerecton Town. acting upon tie seventy jHoma elven te the authorities ‘USEFUL CITIZEN DEAD ATLANTIC CITY, NO. Ave 10 aitev. Dr Jeremiah 7." Gregory pastor of the Union Mantle Tam ple. preatdent of the OW Falke’ Home. president of the Northside Ministerial Tinton, are of the fore mast ministers tn hie cn: ference and a tecognized and worthy leader In the religions, elvie and. educa Henal If nf the state, find at bis hame recently. fle was 62 rears ald KNOCKED OUT WIFE'S EYE WITH BALL BAT | FACKSONVILGE, Fla. Aug, 19.— ationnd te have kaocked tiie wife left eve ont with a basohall ‘at tee months ago, Robert Rrowa wate iftested Vat Thereday night by pret P facd, conetano and SH PHugivert city deteetiye, ene a swat rant charging aeautit to murder, | _ Waman Fight In Cabaret, Stella Haskin caleret perform: er US We 133d atrent, wns at. [tacked ny Gladys Franks, 27, 104 IW froth street, with a knife aatly Monday morning ins cabaret at 48 W. 125) atecoi, in In charged, Cha accused aanalinct Is being held in $3,000 balk Se Nt SL fe id YOUTH HELI OK ' TAKING POCKHTHOOK ‘theee roulla ate coaened With ARATE MIA ite feted ite CE Ade Ty helatete in Wtheilie Feaneh ad, ott bond Amal, hin aia ead fina on Am ound raven ateoet rap Munday ‘tee a ana captured nfioe a eheel ohaae fin ia Maroue Fneeell, Tf and te Het tn Net nett fee fatter ae syitiimtton hile @ memtil in hating ance tate tee | . a wie Fadel 4 ca) : Yaav [ if Ae vont lord? feratt store, th nth yatt menor of the mammoth, mnierh fnetetten protesting seohiates high atade omogehntuline aeniine fntultiag (rade canines, witch an Heat, Hurotent. Hentatd: Kantleok, Kiento tid Jonteet, ‘Thonn factoring tteraity neti theae peedueta theeuah pireet ‘Te Tot welthont any mrddionione promt and at eulvatnnitiat anying to. gan, ‘BIG BARGAINS. DURING OUR FACTORY-TO-YOU SALE dontee! Tale ahown here in but one example of the excellent bargains offered dur'ng this, sale. Jdonteel Talo je unex celled for use. after ahaving of Bathing— ea Regular Price 800 \e Ouring This Sale... 3 We are offeeing nenrly 201 popular’ Hema covering all classes oof omerchandian ont pecially reduced priees te show yOu extra eavings on Rods yor use regularly nel to help you ret acquainted at lowest cont with other {tems You Save with Safety at Your Rexall Drug Store |B. KIRSCHSTEIN PHARMACIST rae Rexall, sure 2433 SEVENTH AVE. 8. E, CORNER 142ng ST. 7 c Rausch & Lomb “Sf PUNK TALS Lf ase 7 : PRREECT 4 VISION SESSA on Clas DR, MAURICE HOENIG Optometrist and Optician 2313 7th AVE. BRAD. 0446 } Open Evenings Untli ‘So | a a EXPERT REPAIRING PHONOGRAPHS—VICTROLAS SEWING MACHINES Reasonable PHONE HARLEM 6912 H, Proven 120 East 117th St. D A a | r. A. Shapera- Karlem's Well Known: Dentist Tarsoaal attention hy a well trained dentist. therouchle ox eerienced in all branches of Dentistey, He convinesa, Reasonadis Prices Gacy Payments 12 W. (88rd STREET COR, LEKOX AVE. . Prene Heriem 6134 Charge of Assault Vs. Woman Fails Mrs. Mildred ‘Thompson Freed When Accused hy Saleawornat CC Wat HHL nttunt, waa freed We Hinaletentn Atlmed Ciimin i the Waahingtin Haiahta Cauel somone nent, on n changer of oaanit Mea Thenpann wan mteedtad Ot A eae nn et Holi Fa. hile, a Antonine In the Bewiette frenne hop, LTE Maienth avenue Ott Ati. i Mere, Thatipaen pur. ase a dheme ont the keanoiy Rhop after thay find eluted fat the day. The eatinn wena wraeil hy the owner of the ahop tar itey the Metetrent heme to try ay Atal th the Avent that (C sene ton amnall tor te tutn He the nest dag, the nectar weatiat elatiied ‘Tho dtwar being tue sini, ae foetiehed HH the nest day | The atute ciuld fet Then Rupply her [With in Ineane alae mii anes tint eat ally toe AYO, thn eum wont hack te the patahlishment t1 Rot the deena they hrd protitsed to Brie fot har, nie elated ‘the avtner of the dts shop then elaiined that the returned pens wae rotted anit tetused to feconnlan the womat's credit ally A bitter atgument onaund, when fentited Ih a fet Aeht between the omner of the rhop aod Mea Thomp. aon : The Fast woman, «ho altotnisted to help defend her employer, ‘re. celved oKoveral htowea and) woe nerntched ph her Nrnast: ‘The womnt {hen wan nerested Altern cfoxeeanininatlan, made by Attorney Richard f. Cunning: ham, 1192 St. Nicholas avenue, eotinacling for the defendant, the tagintente acted upon ble. motion and disinianed the chatge NORTH EASTERN FED. IN SESSION THIS WEEK Thy Northeastern Federation of Women's Clubs, oreanticd In Don. tom In 1886, is in seasicn (tin week in’ Stamford, Conn, : OMcotn are: President,” Mies Bitenbeth C. Carter, New Tedford, Mara; Recording Secretary, Mre. Susie 1 Amen, New Hnven, Cont: Chairman, Executive Hoprd, Miss Roberta Dunbar, Providence. 1 L.: “Trenmurer, Mes. Eva Rernard, Cam teldae, Mase: Honorary. Prot Hente, Mra, Mary 1. Dickerson, Newport, 11; Mrs, Jox st Morte RuM@n, Moston, Moss; Mrs. Allee Wiley Seay. Nronklyn, No Yio Mew Cleely 8. Gunner, sitar, N.Y br. AdenaC K. Minott, 248 Weat AnHth sient, Is head of the history department COLUMBUS HILL Miss Louls Cowling, of Norfolk Ss Laale Caine ot Sera ant ae ia Mr Charles Wilt returned from Seen, si. ‘aie aamnnTLR 10 a SEMA le The store sind Mfe_and te JM, Wallave last Saturday, lenv- Ing a fine baby girl Mother and daughter are doing nively. sie Thaiion Talat aan a wc, BRST ery at tine Bee as sight a eee wire aS eS ea) RCL J AT ALL DRU GISTS Clearance Sale | Street and Dinner DRESSES | a $15 to $18) 90 S2 | ase ODESSA | 2293 Seventh Ave. — en samen om ly OY LL TT rin ion | MM TTC © DN HH We | HHT Zig ig, mt Ee dN ||| i CS pails > | | oa Sd a : a || {ki ASS RGA \ mu ASS ARS cs | } : BSN Rees cecal? J 4 a VEEN AY oot ceaeteneegt) 1 m e NY Sif all a en AS \\ re y / Er SU ; py SS yy 4 PF sr 3, MISS.HELEN STOKES ~ ee & a cy LEADING LADY 2 SS Ss IE DARKTOWH BATAARCO,"',') Se 4 wey we Ni we A) he ON Qe &- - a, i) _— anno A p Hs Dainty Fragrance Is s0 alluring and it leaves your hair so smooth and {- xlossy that you, like Miss Helen Stokes, will be de- ©) & lighted with Pluko, the hairdressi_, whichstraight- (+ Cc ens hair without the aid of hot irons— Miss Stokes, whose gloriously alive. satiny, black hair ee eé “Your is the admiration of the crowds who sec her as lead- D s Nearest ing tadyin the "Darktown Bazaar.” says: “Ilove to Black and }( The Big Dealer use Pluko. Ithas sucha wonderful perfume and White Cans |] GreenCans leaves my hair so smooth and glossy.” 50¢ 25¢ ies pees |S t FURNITURE. 139 WEST. 125th STREET : : (Opposite Koch’s) | MAKE YOUR PAYMENTS As 3 WEEKLY OR MONTHLY $ 5 | e|| Cash Prices for e Delivers 380,00 ° » Delivers 100.00 nwt || Liberal Credit | “S.! | Valuable Present Given With Every Purchase of $50 or More ae iz Ai cs ee WATCH FOR mapaepan HW : ie hace “SATURDAY'S SPECIALS" i = =: F Ha al i tn ff AS 5 ee err mas 1] aiso Mahogany aa TE hte) Biter || ing Stand, RARER SREY |S nb BOC! . (-Piece Dining Ronm Suite. .. aati as Cris © gens ee ri a \. ‘ auth Priore [ ee a veh ae as Be heat | (Eas ar ee oe Fe pee aren ie | UL = OY 50c Week and Up. . ve Sewing Cabinet Free With 3-Piece Bedroom Suite...... $1 10.00 Each Machine FISHEL'’S LIBERAL CREDIT—FISHEL’S LIBERAL CREDIT--FISHEL'S CREDIT rr I ta a | MKCINT HTH, OLGA GUEATA Wiad WE Meet tte peta PR Te dh tee te ewe ait, UUstinddetgtite, tay ty 4 fawntseae, Htbactodyehit, Aen tad Cnet Colentiie, Oh) Mie ton AY fisting, Mtetipaitil, Say tes Hoanle Aiton, Menten, Mace, ti ett Mee Miawatl Htintens, Snes 5 Win fe thee, Woatlnetin thot. Me nnd Ane L, Siar Choon, WU Afi foes tenga tate Ete arign, tt Viti, FOP TA Agen Win C2 Mnthiowe, Bustin Amen MMe andl Mim Nott Phat ele, (intent Mans He $Te fow Mugen, Cal He mtuf fee tate 4 Eating Within Haete, ify toe Riheneeta Hnannpett hail) Ate abd Mt Tati Hoot, Patindadgita, Hey Meg ftaratn Fonte, Malar ad, NM 15 f Rewne, Chteaes, Hy ttt ert Tt fonen, | Witiaefieee, rod Wilaen, fintttinies Mel Cham tapes, Fatladetphia, tas Ww fF Jhhinan,, Reve Catuden, cath: Win, te Hngela, Akgan, 1 Conn Homer, eaten bas It A test, Minial Fin: Wes fibenliger. Wrehtiatan, 0 4 Tt Dwnng, Aewpoel i fy Mtr anit Stee dus, Ford. Cleentand (Mee Ut Viiinine, Pitindetphia, Ma, Mite AA Cala, Aa Latin, CH fanttoe Hotere, forte Oy Sit rit Men te ficet Wenatitamtin, 0 FA Land Weaabtapion 1 4, the Ateaatiter Wanlilagton ch rgheacl iager, Meaegiatan ty en tcebinie ‘date y Yo. fhe tetehonite FAitene TE Nh tatinnyer, Hayter (0, WH siptehitas Mt Baul, Mie 60 Ble atti Pitterarrehe te, Merete that tte Law Angnion Cob: ste ned Mee etter Haw cee tiettit WOaae Abia Minter tel Hau weet Pvetoth, Stee dedi Weothuetbe de hth Holnhta fin Afr omit Mn Pepe Htveenetls de aul Iniitly, Pat tine fe (Ue ROE Matee la BO eat well Mishel pita Eee: \rammtta Cnniee i Baath Leute ay Cncat Hetigen's Cauigiter Hare by Aute Mibteod — ftenenn, ale veneantl (owehtor of Minh Mie Garnet J fHeineasnh verte ate fie An inate hile ane) eertenety Hifired fe feet wf her hetne th WAth atreet Wel tsatas weoning WilteaRen of th neelitent enetiod bee ite the Tar Teng Hospital wherts atte yen tone! fn nave autinred a compan frne Tare of the te Het foat wie ot Seiad aacenewl Wariea's Glue Laide te Hold Mane Moating ST ee ee] Annet, Tir all inal 4 anion UE Gk uma t ide, HLH aye tte tuapoortnnl trpsten ‘the OCF foneting elit te held to At tna Weel foray Chueh ue Hit hh muaplona uk the Rebun ola, Auaual A trade Ua stunfeer, “Vnantine sa we et CHE SAREE LH ink Hetitet ant anit NUT caf totter pxecenttiOAt shiva) Hate ‘the atonal cancer apactaliat, foe 1 ole felnnerg: We tale Wien. ue Catena Ploeont, Me Mobile nd iidtey weit apn. at Intae timed ines, IMPORTANT Atenbe inewelig the «hare rhode nt Mire Merthaceilinuen Hendltied kind}e motifs Mew Stary Hilntre, EM Wot 126th BE New Seek City, pecnnan af hee daneh. tore death. (Adel Hale ctsrted and dreanid, free ONU-LIFR" NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY JUST 12, 1925 N. Quarles of Brooklyn Appointed Guard in Sing Sing Prison N. Quarles of Broc Guard A.F.OF L.HEAD WARNS NEGRO LABOR OF IMPENDING CONGRESS President Green Compares American Negro Labor Congress to Boll-Weevil "Backed by Communists" WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 William Green, President of the American Federation of Labor, in warning Negro members of trade unions Sunday night not to attend the American Negro Labor Congress called by the Communists to meet, in Chicago, Oct. 25, characterized Communism in America as "Comparable to the bell weed in the cotton fields." "Although there can not be more than a few hundred Communists in the country," said Mr. Green, "they give an impression, because of their noise-making propaganda, that there are mulitus." Samuel Gompers, who preceded the Green as president of the Federation, was one of the bitterest foe of the Communist movement at present, warned the workers of the country against giving sympathetic autport to the communists. The outspoken manor in which Mr. Green endorsed the policy of Mr. Gompers attracted much interest. Mr. Green told the Negro workers that the Communists were preparing to stir up race agitation by promising them that all social, political and economic discrimination would be ended by the establishment of a Soviet Republic in America. In his statement Mr. Green said during the past few days I have received a number of letters and telegrams asking if the American Fraternity of Labor, improves of the American Negro Labor Congress called by the Workers' (Communist) Party to meet in Chicago October 25. "The American Federation of Labor has not and will not approve of such a congress. It will not be held to benefit the Negro, but to instill into the lives of that race the most pernicious doctrine that hatred. "Distressing phrases are used to stir the colored men, one of them being 'Negroes did not come into the world with saddles, on their backs nor the whites with spurs on their heels." "The Negroes are led to believe that the dark races of the world are in rebellion against the whites and that all they need to do is to form an American Labor Congress and all social, political and economic discrimination will be wiped out." "The originators of the congress have headquarters in Chicago. They conduct a number of communist organizations with interlocking directories that work under the direction of Moscow. Communism in America is comparable to the bollwerk in the cotton fields. Both are importations and equally injurious. "While the convention to be held in called the American Negro Labor Congress, behind the purpose of its originators is to mislead the colored men into believing that all their grievances will be remedied by overturning the Government of the United States and establishing a social republic—otherwise, the dictatorship of the proletariat. Race listed will be encouraged to bring about this end. "A number of unions composed of colored men have been deceived into sending delegates. They have been led to believe they will attend a convention of union Negroes. "The fact is that the convention was called by men who are not members of trade unions or, if they are, they do not attend the unions of which they are members. The organized labor movement is ex-pelling Communists as rapidly as they are found out. "Although there cannot be more than a few hundred Communists in the country, they give an impression, because of their noise-ranking propaganda, that there are millions. "I wish to warn all Negro members of trade unions that they are being led into a trap that will eventually be their undoing." Hairgrowing Hairgrow —"NURIFE" ```markdown ``` Attempt Made to Create Situation to Bring About Him Diamond Assigned to Duty Outside Walls COWNAMET, N.Y., Nov. 20 An attempt is being made to create an embattlement situation in Stup Shop Prison because of the app pointment last week of Harry N. Quattle, of New York City, son availible. Brooklyn, an guard Quattle took and successfully joked the trump in State Civil Service examination and when his name was reached on the list he was ordered to report for duty, which he did last Thursday. Supposedly because he formed the appointment might create trouble. Warlen Lawes assigned Quarles to night guard duty outside the prison walls. Quarles is the first Negro to be appointed. He stood fifth on the eligible list with an average of 10 per cent. Quarles stated yesterday that he is perfectly satisfied with his job, which pays from $1.490 to $1.590. He saw service in France with the 367th Infantry. PUBLICURGED TO BUY COAL AND NOT WAIT EMERGENCY City Powerless to Buy Commodity for Redistribution Delay May Mean Higher Prices By EDWIN J O'MALLEY. Com. of Public Markets. With the possibility of a coal strike on Sept. 11, the people of New York are again face to face with a situation which may become a serious one. The state of affairs in the winters of 1922 and 1923 should be a warning to the people now avoid the hardships, with possible stinkness and even death, resulting from a short age or lack of coal. There are several outstanding advantages derived from the costly purchase by the people of their coal supply. The first of these is the new store at which it is sold early in the year. In April coal is cheapest and the advance in price is about 25 cents per ton per month until the fall, so that the longer we wait the more we have to pay. July and August are the quickest months in the coal industry and are an excellent time in which to buy. At this time the coal is dry when it comes into the dealer's yard and can be thoroughly screened and you will not be compelled to take slate, slug or dirt. The mines are not rushed and the coal is better prepared. There is no pressure on the dealer and deliveries can be made promptly at the convenience of the housewife. Not only can coal be bought cheaper now, but we should remember that a strike or even the mere threat of one is often but an excuse to "jack up" the price and by waiting until on the people only put themselves as the merry of the dealers. The mine owners and operators are not concerned about the public welfare they are interested only in profits DEMOCRATS IN 21st A.D. NAME CANDIDATES The Democratic County Committee of the 21st Assembly District, at its meeting last week, named Henri W. Shields, a lawyer, of 123 West 135th street, former State Assemblyman from the 21st, as the regular designate for nomination in the September primary as candidate for the City Board of Aldermen, instead of the present incumbent, John William Smith. A white Democrat was designated for the Assembly. PIER LABORER DIES OF HEART TROUBLE While working on the platform in front of Fler 23, North River, Michael Ward, 40, 40 West 133rd street, became suddenly ill and died before a physician could be summoned, Friday. When Dr. Harkus of the Beekman Street Hospital arrived he pronounced the man dead, stating that in all probability he died of heart trouble. The body removed to the Roach Street and his relation is notified. We present, for your approval HARLEM'S OWN APPAREL STORE SANFORDS 1 N or about August 25th, the biggest specialty store in Harlem will open at the famous corner, 135th Street and Seventh Avenue. SANFORDS is the name of this store which fulfills a definite need by offering you a place to shop, up in your own neighborhood—and by giving you the most attentive service and the newest styles in Dresses, Coats, Millinery and Furs, at much lower prices than anywhere else in the city. Why should you go down town to shop-why should you put up with inattentive, grudging service-why should you pay high prices for inferior goods-when here you can shop conveniently, can enjoy perfect service, can serve yourself if you wish, and can obtain the most chic, the most de luxe costumes and wraps at rock-bottom prices! WE BUY FOR CASH AND SELL FOR CASH! for quality coats, dresses and furs. Furthermore, we will refund your money, within three days from date of purchase, if any garment is not entirely satisfactory. That is the secret of our astoundingly low prices. We do away with expensive overhead by omitting charge accounts, deliveries, etc. Thus, our prices to you are lowest in the city THE CITY'S MOST BEAUTIFUL STORE! SANFORDS is here to stay. It is Harlem's own store a Harlem institution. Come in and feast your eyes on the beauty of a store fit to contain the most beautiful of coats, dresses, millinery and furs. You will be dazzled by the beauty of SANFORDS Harlem's own De Luxe Specialty Shop. It is not one of those mushroom concerns that spring up overnight and disappear as suddenly. No- SANFORDS 7th Ave, & 135 St, DRESSES $5 to $75 I am sorry, but the image provided is a graphic design, not a chart or graph. It does not contain any data, axes, or labels that can be extracted and converted into a markdown table. year is held in closet "Nu- mber in Wook N" with the only Association as W W The New wank as it only to the Nation- hip the poles are valuable and the on of volume the class the players are for identical with it and the tournai- ment event for the making the highest tombs universe who was a temporary three of the union. National York port. of we that at all New the do the nt. like a con- t know the the New w a heav- th of the a toucha in at the York is on New who in their are no by New l any smooth is bound whether will or the cause of the is and set them rise to population to build it up for the contested for the and beautiful happy for mans been in compa- the Brahminite guilds, donated in for the mans in bubbles, and funer- hops will be pre- treated. These identified at the tur- sport of Mr Horow in street and Southwav- ring the work are seven courts at the K Grounds and a large stand, scating capacity of several eds. During the week a will be held at the Mansion Walker Studio and their will be given on Saturday to the out-of-town players in good weather this season should be one of the best by the New York Tennis Association Organ Gives Early Call the first time in the history organ College, Baltimore, Md. on the members of its foot team to report on September all for practice. legen, under Coach James former coach of Rinkon Uni- ty, will meet Howard Uni- versity, D.C. in a man man fight on October 1, 1925. ch Law feels with the coop- ion of his men he can whip best Negro football clubs in country; he doesn't want to oil but show the public he now makes an hon- all the members of for practice on Next Week and Games Will in, N. J., to Which Place Will Journey FRANCIS championship of the New York city on Saturday, August 16th at a Land Club, 100th street in New York City, with from Home as the referee from coast to coast in tennis clothes group of the New York State open the past few years held the same event the national championship Royala Run Away From Lincoln (Illinois), Then Fled Them in 2nd (Warr The Royal tiara of Windsor defended the British tiara in the first gallop of 2012 in the first gallop of their double handlers at the Chelsea Park Procter's Grand Prix in motion and then plunged to the tunning tiara. The second tiara called at the end of the first gallop of rain. A commemorative mourning ceremony pictured in the Royal tiara to mark the Royal tiara to the first gallop of rain. The tiara is carried off the ground in the first gallop of rain. ```markdown ``` called in the first minute of the game on balls of Holland after the ball was hit by them by the Pistons Shelf and the Pistons Barbara La Hart Has Film Double Remarkable Similarity to Stu- ls Revealed in "The Heart of a Siren" at Lincoln The timing of The House of Strom, the Sawyer-Lubin production, with Harriet La Nier, brought to light two important London lions, both of whom work in this film. Arthur Narsoll, who plays the outfit of a French officer is strongly like Vieghon Wong in hisique, personality and then the admirers of Mongon and that is hard to distinguish between them when they see this as Mongon. The other double in Mongon is Wood, who resembles Mage. More so strongly that she and Wood double for her. Nariman dimitha the bishop of the monastery of the honourable honor they took like some humble star for their way into the lower ranks of the monastery. But in the name of Vishu Nariman and his Loknool, the similitude of and with desirous will. The House of a Green will first National offering Lincoln Theatre this Thursday was directed by this honourable made by Abraham Lincoln Theatre in confession Miss La Mair Mae Kemp Much Better Hubbard Ranks as Greatest Broad Jumper of All Time The author is a well-known writer and journalist who has written numerous books and articles on various topics. He is also a professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley. His works include "The New York Times" and "The New York Times Magazine." He is known for his insightful and thoughtful writing, which often explores complex social issues and human relationships. Capped Prometheus in 1881 ```markdown ``` In the past few years, the U.S. has been a major international center for the study of the world. In 1980, the U.S. was able tobegin the development of a world-wide network of international research. In 1990, the U.S. was also a major international center for the study of the world. In 1980, the U.S. was able tobegin the development of a world-wide network of international research. In 1990, the U.S. was able tobegin the development of a world-wide network of international research. Pavilion New ```markdown ``` The Composer as Homer The following table represents the data provided in the image. The text is not clear, and the image is a graphic design, not a chart. Therefore, it is not possible to extract numerical data from it. ```markdown ``` Nicholas Hobson, Hobson the architect, born in the town of Bristol in 1810, and died in the town of Bristol in 1870. He was a professor of architecture and was the author of several books on the architecture of the English country. The image provided is too blurry and low resolution to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a grayscale image with no discernible text. Therefore, no text can be extracted from this image. we are proud to be a member of the the record loop of 25 foot the track number then the the distance of the the total com the took place at the nation the colored a show world the of 25 foot 30 inches. We hold the former standard the Dora Olympics into mind. A NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1928 Sight-Seeing Buses 42-PASSENGER CARS TO HIRE New York Tennis Association on the Courts of the E. and E. Tennis Club 146th Street. Between Seventh and Eighth Avenues. New York City AUGUST 15th to 22nd (inclusive), 1925 Reserved Seats for the Finals Can Be Secured Prizes made through W. A. E. Macdowell, 684 Lenox Ave. New York City, N.Y. BANQUET TO OUT OF TOWN PLAYERS. SATURDAY EVENING. AUGUST 22, 1925. ON THE BOARDWALK SOAP BOX FROLIC RENDEVOUZ PALACE DAY EVE A.M. AUGUST 28th ROKETS Thompson Takes Up Cudgels in His Own Defense But Alan Bullings a Mean Polltinge, as Linda Uncia Wintl Bay, Towards Pittsburgh Writer. HAVING noted with notice the world --- very that has appeared in print relation to the baseball situation here in the East, on which Manager Dean Challenger of the Hampshire Giants and Clown man Edward Baldwin of the Eastern League have played the stellar roles, it appears a thought, with Red Nixon, sports editor of the Pittsburgh Celtics, taking the stance from another angle the situation has assumed a complication that closely resembles another situation. Just how much good this heated debate in printer's ink will do the game, is to be continued upon that the paramount issue with me is that Bill Nunn has raised the question and asked for further relation to the Eastern League standing covering a period between the 15 years of the weekly periodicals on our race of July 15 and 25, respectively with the Harrisburg giants and Hildaia clubs very much in wooed. Now, before completing with the request that closely resembles a demand from Bill Nunn I would like to know the matter prompting game. Why should the recognized sal and sport show take the initiative in attempting to defend the guild? The public is believing the league standing has been set forth more poorly by intimate futures have been juggled to favor any partisan club when the clubs involve particularly the Harpsburg to whose rights the overzealous scribe is char plaining, can not question same? The indubile fact of a game war or host is final and beyond question. To the fact that some clubs in the circuit have played more games than others, will advise that it is a matter for the officials to answer. However, as in other lines of business, we have been seriously handicapped. Just as many of our weekly papers are printed on low-quality paper, so are our ball clubs formed to play in leased parks and try to arrange schedules in a manner to show a financial position. But why in his important post of sport dispenser and in the role of a constructor centre should Bill North be dismissed? In the West, Nurses City won the first half of the league race with 81 victories, with 9 defeats a total of 65 games. For the same period of time the tables won 12 lost 18 a total of 25 games. Birmingham won 12 and lost 88 a total of 47 games. To those who are informed on the recitals of our weeklies, it is a known fact that news must match the offices in Tuesday to be in time for the current issue. In no cases to baseball comes at means that Sunday games have been closed in all weekly exposures of the Eastern League standing. Now for the period in question the papers dated July 15 carried scores to and including games between July 12 and so indented. The games for the two shows of Hammers leading as follows M 14.167 M 14.286 M 14.286 The following scores on the same leading week July 28. showed To beautify bobbed hair—"NU LIFE" with the following three cases: Hamilton July 14 and won by the Washington Volunteers was one of the league through out of the league because the commissioner had and referred in the release of the league standing July 24. The difference in percentage can easily be displayed by any one familiar with the percentage table. Signed Lloyd P. Thompson. Official record keeper and statisticalian for the Mutual Assn. Billiard Notes At last the inevitable has happened. Lyles defeated Black Court two out of three last week at the Importum hearing out Lyles a man. "If you have brains, you will progress in billiards, and if you have not, you will go so far and no farther." Dennuts: "one of the attendants in the Lafayette Importum, took a lunch last week when Dennuts hied in front at Sanologa, rifle course. Dennuts has a little Dea." Jewelry Planned When you want Jewelry Required Tall and Free St. Oeo. V. Corinaldi Diamonds, Jewelry, Watches 2394 Seventh Ave., con. 140th St. Phone Bradhurst 8221 G. HAYWOOD VIOLIN STUDIO 227 W. 141st St. Tel. indubon 1446 Student of Mr. Christian Arlens Lampe Wall Only a limited number of pupils for individual instruction HARVEY BAKER TENON Recital and Concert Arranged The Harlem School 203 W. 199TH ST., BRAD. 8135. Tuition in Plano and Voice Culture LET THE STAATS-ANDER- SON STUDIO FURNISH YOUR MUSIC 1 to 50 Musicians for Any Occasion. 25% WEST 148TH ST. Phone Morningside 6110 PAUL'S CLEANING PRESSING DYEING REPAIRING Wash and Dry Delivered 257 SEVENTH AVE. New York, N.Y. NEW YORK CITY Tenor Soloist Wanted for prominent church: good reader preferred, salary $300 per annum Phone University $161 for further information. Bing Buses CARS TO HIRE on for Daily and Sunday Rings PAN, Manager L. NEAR 133rd ST. Night Phone: Dayton 2813 OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP In all offices of the Inheritance Military Institution after leaving challenge and payment them to a New military institution in lieu of their good military institution, the New military institution and it will take thursday morning and if not taken thursday morning then arrived at the Inheritance military institution to make known that military institution at this a than the first instance, they already off with the first match and served in a final institution until Military institution in it. The institution and served up in force and held that VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS NOW SHOWING MALINDA & DADE ROBIE & SLIM HENDERSON Baby & Bardl All Bingling and Dancing PRESENTED EXCLUSIVE Lincoln The IMMIGRANT Bonds BONDS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION PROMPT COURT HARLEN'S LARGEST H A FINANCE 169 WEST 130TH STREET MORNINGSIDE OPEN AU RAGTIME PIANO P GUARANTEED IN ALSO BANJO, BANJORLINE, MAN HAWAIIAN OPITAR, CLARINET TONIC, DRUM AND ONE easy, short term course simple in ing to be desired in the way of those so obey that impulse to learn to play—N Complete Course for $30 11 Down and $1 Weekly IMPORTANT—When we tell you that we quickest possible mastery of any instrument Sorry, the LOVE LOST thorou dly—you may know, about question, BEST OFFER ANYWHERE AVAILABLE years of experience and the successful schools—from coast to coast—recommend LUTELY DEPENDABLE. Call from to to daily, Saturday to to 6 for PERFORMANCE. If you don't call, write for Booklet H. DEVILLE ACTIONS BROWING DADA & DADÉ E & BLIM DEDERSON A Bardi All and Dancing PRESENTED EXCLUSIVELY FIRST AT THE coln Theatre MIGRANT BAIL C Bonds Bonds F EVERY DESCRIPTION WRITTEN IN ALL IPT COURTEOUS SERIES CHARLEM'S LARGEST BONDING COMPANY H AND H FINANCING CO. WEST 130TH STREET, N. E. COR. 7TH MORNINGSIDE: 2017 — 4126 OPEN ALL NIGHT AGTIME JAZZ PANO PLAYER GUARANTEED IN 10 LESSONS JANO, MANORLINE, MANDOLIN, GUITAR, UKULELE, NUTTER, CLARINET, VIOLIN, CORNET, PHONE, DRUM AND XYLOPHONE Short term pay simple in the extreme, and yet yet in the way of the thoroughfare and completeness. Larriple to learn to play—NO WILL the instrument of your course Parcel $30 Special 10 Lesson and 11 Weekly 18 Days and 11 Weekly —When we tell you that we will guarantee you the stable mastery of any instrument you'd like to learn with LAWY COST throughout instruction will may know, without question, that you are facing the ER ANYWHERE RE AVAILABLE. Our premises and the successful record am court to co-commend it to AB30 DEPENDABLE. Call from only Saturday to 6 for NON-MAKEN IF you write for Bonnet It CHRISTENS SCHOOL OF POPULAR 11 WEST 130TH STREET, NEAR LENOX AVENUE 12 WEST 42ND ST., BET. RWAY & BIGHTH AVENUE VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS NOW SHOWING MALINDA & DADE ROBIE & SLIM HENDERSON Baby & Bardl All Binging and Dancing PHILIP PLAYS Thursday, Friday, and Sunday, This Week! "THE HEART OF A SIREN" With Barbara LaMarr and Gonway Tearle Mon., Tuesday, Wednesday, Next Week! "The MANICURE GIRL" Thursday, Friday, Saturday—next week "ANY WOMAN" With Allie Terry PRESENTED EXCLUSIVELY FIRST AT THE Lincoln Theatre 68 W. 180TH ST. at Lanex Ave. IMMIGRANT BAIL CIVIL Bonds Bonds Bonds BONDS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION WRITTEN IN ALL COURTS PROMPT COURTEOUS SERVICE HARLEM'S LARGEST BONDING COMPANY H AND H FINANCING CO. 168 WEST 130TH STREET, N. E. COR. 7TH AVE. MORNINGSIDE: 2017 — 4126 OPEN ALL NIGHT RAGTIME AND JAZZ PIANO PLAYING GUANATINDR IN 10 LESSONS ALAG BANJO, BANJORIN, MANDOLIN, GUITAR, UNDLELK, HAWAIIAN GUITAR, CLARINET, VIOLIN, CORNET, BAXO, PHONE, DRUM AND XYLOPHONE Our easy, short term course, simple in the outside, and yet having much to be desired in the way of thorny addresses and completeness, harring to owe that impulse to learn to play—NOW—the instrument of your choice. Complete Course Fax Code $30 Special 10-Lesson Course $15 Down and 11 Weekly $10 Down and 11 Weekly IMPORTANT: When we tell you that we will guarantee you the ability to play the LOWER LEVEL instrument you would like to learn to play—you may know, without question, that you are facing the BEST GUFFER ANYWHERE AVAILABLE. Our years of experience and the successful record of schools—from coast to coast—recommend it as ABSO-LUTELY DESPENDABLE. Call from FREE DEMONSTRATION to 6 for you to call, write for Booklet. It AUTOMOBILE SCHOOLS Harlem's Oldest School YOUNG MAN GRASP YOUR WE TEACH OPPO How to Become How to Become How to Do M Your training is given in day an onal instruction of Complete course Only $10 Harlem River Auto Sc Longest Road Lessons, $1 Oldest School License Go MAN YOUR OPPORTUNITY CH How to Become an Expert Mechanic How to Become a Chauffeur or Tru- How to Do Major Repairs. ing is given in day and evening classes und- sonal instruction of CLANROD JONES. Complete course guaranteed Only $10 starts you! On River Auto School £165 MADIS Telephone Ha Road Lessons, $1 Special Instruction NOT LEARN A TRADE? DON'T WASH WHY NOT LEARN A TRADE? DON'T WASTE TIME All the great parties are publishing in the press and in the press机构. In the press机构 we have the opportunity to make the press机构 the last of the year and to make the press机构 the last of the year. SUITS FOR THE MAN WHO CARRIES Made to $40 Measure Theresa Tailors 2088 Seventh Ave. Morningside 4306 Photin Plays Thursday, Fri, Sat, and Sunday, This Week! "THE HEART OF A DIREN" With Phara LaMarr and Gonway Tearle Mon., Tue., Wednesday, Next Week! "The MANICURE GIRL" Thursday, Fri, Sat, A Sun—next week "ANY WOMAN" With Allie Terry VELY FIRST AT THE 88 W. 185TH ST. at Lanox Ave. BAIL CIVIL Bonds Bonds ON WRITTEN IN ALL COURTS TEOUS SERVICE BONDING COMPANY ND H ING CO. ST, N. E. COR, 7TH AVE. S: 2017 — 4126 NIGHT E AND JAZZ LAWARDS 10 LEASONS COOLIN, GUITAR, DRUULEL, VIOLIN, CORNER, SAXS, XYLOPHONA. The atmosphere, and yet having such music and conjuring, having you will—the instrument, your choice, special 10-Leason Course $15 Term and 21 Weekly We will guarantee you the only you like to learn engaging instruction will that you are facing the ARLIS. Our record is well as ABSO. KRISTENSEN HALL OF POELIAR MUSIC NEAR LEONOX AVENUE BROADWAY & NIGHT AVE. License Guaranteed ORTUNITY me an Expert Mechanic. me a Chauffeur or Truck Driver. Major Repairs. and evening classes under the pen CLANROD JONES. guaranteed starts you! School 2165 MADISON AVE. Telephone Harlem 0715. Special Instruction to Ladies Siki Shooed From the Ring at the Commonwealth Club Saturday Night The "Singular Renegade" Acted the Ruffoon Until Fight With Silvan, Another Hunt, Was Stopped Door Hall to Show Here This Week ```markdown ``` Whenver Shilah did Poor in shalt shaine, he made Shilah look as framely bad... Shilah could not land solitude in his chaundry stool and when he misused the soil was almost as contribe as Shilah stiff. The battle exhibited the African inter- pretation of the Christian chaundry and humour, but little story. The money for the perform- ance was held up until the bovine commission decided another the cantabile stage on the time to the proper place for such acts. Shilah wished 120 pounds and Shilah the two pounds heavier. The southland by foundation in which through building on cultivated French Wolf of Leavaston Mead and Lord Wolf of St Paul Mun took up was a bishopric of an inn with Baltham winning the east south of The Wolf was the saint and the opponent was Baltham unassisted plains were swamps, a town of which their mere, and Wolf fought a history sort of a way that back to with the adaptation of the states Wolf, weighted 1836, of his long war input to an at 1838. the six large a Winner. the six sound found in which on pages of London and Clam- tonium, a colourful light-fi- cent springs displayed at all four that was the host of the night great winning a show decoration and landed plenty of left, center to rival and Clouds rotatable a show of lights in every sound. In the fourth session, on two London surveys, a house spanned a each west and on springs leaves left eye, and the nation of blood buttress Kirkwood, somewhat Paras attached last pounds more than his station Hall Here This Week. Bird Christmas, Badgers sea lightweight, who served a decorative history over Jimmy Goodwin in yellow towns and holder of the world's lightweight last year as will have Joe Hall, the collector in the second centre of the Commonwealth Sport- Club in Harlem on Saturday West The soulful trium will bring another Joe Savinio, the hard hitter, cast elder, and Sixt Burt of Illinois, while in the third round Meyer Cohen of Hydobeka, who has been a victim at local clubs, to the mark against Jimmy Kelly of the Bronx. The remainder of the card are ranged by Jess McMahon cells for a six-round season between Joe Porta, the South American middleweight, and Jim Layon of the woss side and a four-round featuring Jimmy Mendosa, former amateur champion, and the Bronx Flash Doubledek de Verreoln Henderson at Renaissance Regular Dance Saturday Fletcher Henderson and his musicians appeared at the Renaissance Casino last Saturday night to play for the regular Saturday night crowd which has been attending these dances all during the summer months. That a crowd would be on hand to greet Fletcher was a certainty, there's always a crowd at the Renaissance on Saturday night. This Saturday night the men held the Renaissance will again resume and offer their own music, the bunch which helped to make these dances what they are, "Shallie" "Rob" "Mercer" King and Shilee will again be on the floor and the boys and girls will be given the old warm welcome which has done so much in keeping the Renaissance Saturday night class to the fore. We have one builder and built contractor to each group of land inhabitants, as come one which contractor to Cuban Stars Split Double Hill With Guy Ridge Lean After being after the dish, he said the pants had to be cut off and the pants should be erectified. The pants should be erectified. four and five acres with seed in the boundary lines through which the theoretical third boundary where the same age existed in the in- field of the threatened wildlands and insisting from his agreement just at the border point. In the place the uninhabited formerly of forest the other monocroceous area was laminated in plains who also died the first year. Keen through Walsh was not plaining. He was bound to see his territories in no threat and set in a hot land the boundary lines throughout the water afterlife presentations. ```markdown ``` BAN RENZO Morris in Wills' Party Traveling in Europe It was not generally known when Harry Wills the great colored boyer, together with his wife and constant companion, Mrs Wills sailed out of New York Harbor several weeks ago for a European tour that they were accompanied by Harleen's host known music store's proprietor, Mr Morris of the Morris Music Shop, and his wife and son. Many years before the new famous Harry came into publicity greatness, Morris, who is himself widely known among the sporting fraternity, influenced many favors to be advanced to the then almost unknown fighter. Those kindly of officers supplemented with daily contact soon centred a bouf of friendship between the two, which culminated in the entire party carrying out a hugearrangement plan to visit them and staying at the residence of Mrs Morris parents during a part of their tour. During Murrell's absence from the city his two stores, situated at Lenox avenue and 133d street and 180t East Fortham road, are being able and efficiently managed by Mr Joe Fishew, who has for many years served in the capacity of manager for the North Music Shops, and Senior manager of the About Things Theatrical H. M. KYELYN MANIN I have issued an order to put preliminary forthreads at all the great buildings that those who have not attended to begin a presentation of what is now in making buildings of doubt rather than doubtless. We want to press our part with who have to help them to build the London where they live in the Empire house and be as successful as can take out contracts at the cheapest time age to repurchase through the collusion of a thoughtful artist. Recently we have been able such a contract as a comparison of two types of plans in the management of Right Vision and Color for Walking to Follow with one of our undertaking in the San Francisco Bay Area of the New York to the effect that a house of National Anderson could interest in be made where former forks were and take in two machines for New Beginnings upon them this fall. Mr Anderson was presented out of San Francisco in this stated in the course of which he should have taken out than New York so he proceed upon his arrival here. "Somebody said that at a But he with a simple that maybe it couldn't. Who wouldn't say so. So he buckled right in with Without a doubt so. He started to sing as he That couldn't be done. "There are thousands to be There are thousands to pay The dangers that we But buckle right in with Just pull off your coat And start in to sing as That couldn't be done. The Sportive The Sportive Spotlight I have been in the presence of commendable work that has and performed on throughway and alley and which other that is the great indulgence that we make to the city thinking upon those who have not resigned on the behalf of respect to the home of promotion and who have made to the highest and warm making habit of it to the city on which these have tender rather than commended have presented the thesis We have given press and Paul Reason with his champion with whom he him to make those helpings are applying the high we are trying to London where Sir Robinson will do the least we are successful now on the behalf of the writer and thus we are commendable in the place of our mistress. and their ages to be appalled the Mutual Thunderstorm through the columns of a theatrical paper that they would be exhibited at. The audience of our group was surprised for their time and cannot be appalled why they should need the most obvious reason to applaud that season. I learn has made such an accord with the Columbia Thunderstorm composition of two other composers responsible for the chance of place in the management of their competition. the writer attends to say that yet long before call from San Francisco the Warner of that city is arriving the Marion of New York to the effect that one ofichtigness a note on the process of arrival Anderson Negro bottler playright has shall interpret in his manner the prize Appreciation "to a whole bound for reassurance and hope San Francisco with his Locke in two machines for New York where respectate will begin immediately upon their arrival for his Broadway playment this fall Mr Anderson and his wealthy magnate will be presented out of San Francisco by a bond. The Broadway prize have stated in the course of publication yesterday that he will not afford to have abounded on the occasion of one more than New York to be proposed to exchange a similar prize amount for his bounty. "There are thousands to tell you of cannot be done" "There are thousands to prophesy failure." "There are thousands to point out to one by one" "The dangers that want to assault you." "But buckle right in with a bit of the chin" "Just pull off your cost and go to it" "And start in to sing as you talk the thing" "That couldn't be done and would they." The Sportive Spotlight 1 Special to The Amsterdam News Nesai H. Thomas, president of the Washington branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has scored again against racial discrimination in this district this week. This time it has invaded the realm of sports. The Fenning Star, the leading white daily of the city, announced that the Mudge News of the District would win a game of baseball in the American League Dunk preliminary to the regular league game between the Washington and Chicago teams, and that the first two thousand white boys will be invited free as guests of the world champions the Washington team. Mr. Thomas wrote to the manager. Mr. Clark coiffed contesting against the decision on telling him that the social public, many of whom, being regular patrons of the game, were surprised and sorry that our pernicious American color prejudice had at last invaded the popular sport of baseball and that sports are tar in advancement of the white church in democratic ideals and sentiments of human brotherhood. Mr. Clark with telephoned Mr. Thomas that he would rescue the rules and announce it in every white daily in the city which he did and every one of them announced "First come, first served." Mr. Thomas then visited the park and saw the brown black and white, being received and settled in the order of their counts. Nevai H. Thomas, presides the National Association for the plea has sent again against the trust this week. This time of the Evening Star, the leading nominee that the Midget New game of baseball in the Americas the regular league game between teams, and that the first ten witted tree as guests of the team. Mr. Thomas wrote to the protesting against the discriminated public, many of whom, before supposed and sorry that prejudice had at last insulted that sports are tar in advance, criticize ideals and sentiments with telephoned Mr. Thomas that and announce it in every white and every one of them amount Mr. Thomas then visited the white, being received and sent. President Thomas is also in mission for the appointment from the list applying, not trouble passing the draft board, but who are now said by the mining hearts." Some of the eminent physicians and have he is also insisting upon the trepilemen who invaded the home, attested a small box to tell the parents the cause of After getting him to the police the other. The chief police and promised adequate law Thomas, president of the Washington Association for the Advancement of League against racial determination, this time it has invaded the town Star, the leading white daily of the Midget News of the District, in the American League Park playground game between the Washington that the first two thousand white South guests of the world champions the Thomas wrote to the manager. Mr. Thomas against the descrimination telling him, many of whom, being regular patrons and sorry that our persecutors had at last insulted the popular sport of the war in advancement of the white city and sentiments of human brotherhood, asked Mr. Thomas that he would treat it in every white daily on the city of one of them announced "Dost come, then visited the park and saw the best received and seated in the order of Thomas. He also informing the new in the appointment of a number of co-opted applying, many on it being met with the draft boards lot rigorous selections now said by the police physician to its "Some of the applicants have co-opted and have been proscribed phishing upon the trial and punishment who invaded the cock room of a reputed a small box without warrant, assents the cause of the unlawful entry him to the police station the town Star. The chief police has ordered an adequate law case. President Thomas is also unsurprising the new police commissioner for the appointment of a number of colored police men from the last applying, many on it being men who had no trouble passing the draft boards for rigorous service in France but who are now said by the police physician to have "murmuring hearts." Some of the applicants have consulted other eminent physicians and have been proscribed physically sound. He is also insisting upon the trial and punishment of the white policemen who invaded the sick town of a reputable coloured home, attested a small box without warrant, and refused to tell the parents the cause of the unlawful entry at 1 A.M. After getting him to the police station the law was beaten by the others. The chief police has ordered an investigation and promised adequate law code. WITH THE CRICKETERS BY AROLD LEWIS BY DAROLD LEKIS The morale of the team captured by discussion, the great Barbados machine, with many of its most essential parts missing, was unable to cope with the aggression. Norma had gathered in its combined effort for supremacy. The games played at New York Oval drew a nice gathering, and the contest was on such equal terms it kept the crowd entranced. Saturday's match was held up on account of a dispute, it seems that West Indiana's C. C. of which 28 per cent represents the Sons and daughters of Barbados who staged the game, desired a cut of the gate; on its refusal West Indians sent out an order with drawing it men from play. --- --- of communicateable with the and shoved the light that rises and makes the man think and the light present bound to the sound and to the length of the line to the light that rises protect the theatre with the light with the shining lightships are calling the light Mr. Robinson will do the best protecting by a white light in the author can him of one mistress of the Manual Theater stated with paper that they would act of our group was supported identified that this change them in impossible so that reason with the Columbia Theater was responsible for the change of their competitions New York, No. 1000 N. 1000 W. 1000 E. chaperon in Broadway plumed at his long tenure will from his role in arranging the Marvel of all of theatricals in the Neville Theater, plumed right the pro. Newcastle, to a Newcastle San Francisco with his in New York where colleagues will work for his Broadway plumed with health matters will be a local. The Broadway press information yesterday that he moved to Newcastle and New were to arrange a similar event. cattle be no use regulated limit he would be one will be used to a trace of a gem a point of marked the string and the 1914 E. will not of cannot be shown the purpose of failure not but because one by one to assault you a bit of the chin and go to a to take the thing and so on. Spotlight of the Washington branch of the Advancement of Colored People's determination in this dismal insulted the team of usurpers white daily of the city, and of the District would have a League Dark proximate to the Washington and Chicago and white black would be allied champions the Washington men manager. We dark conflict on telling him that the only regular partisans of the game are persecutors American white the popular sport of baseball and out of the white church in some human brotherhood. My task must be would record the order daily on the city which he the most "first some, first served" black and saw the brown black and in the order of their coming announcing the new police corps of a number of colored police on it being men who had no for vigorous service in Prison police officers to have "more applicants have consulted other proscribed physically sound and punishment of the white black town of a reputable colored without warrant, and returned to the unlawful entries at a M. M. station the bar was boasted by he has ordered an investigation. CRICKETERS LEWIS the information obtained in the for use and information posted by 77. B Clark was working in no 0110. Odds and Ends --- --- and manage it. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` DISCOUNT SPECIAL Odd and Ends 1074 Single Piece Trade to Entr 图 国 no where must be used or copied H Michigan Say It So -174 No Just think an average reduction of one-third on all merchandise throughout our great stores that means a dollar's worth for less than sixty-five cents and all of the designs and finishes are included see the example Claimant of Flyweight Title Afraid to Meet Fast Little Cuban Black Hill Wan Supported by Havana Hosting Con- mmunition but Gennaro Would Not Flight We are now about to begin pursue last work I have done their managers of that hall disguised as to give us the last down on the staircase of that hall to inaugurate and thus allow us deal The manager of the bank built on the staircase tells a short length of explaining and which will have trouble connoisseur in the stage with that other hel- lum. Lord Dempsey Since conducted. In the past few years the American people have been making a great deal of their work. The American people have made a great deal of their work. The American people have made a great deal of their work. THE NEW YORKER THE NEW YORKER THE NEW YORKER ```markdown ``` The image provided is too blurry and low resolution to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a blank or heavily pixelated document. Therefore, no text can be extracted from this image. Students' Chautauqua and Reception a Big Success finally there a magnificent alliance thusmanum empire and alliance demonstrated in the making that was equipped and anticipated for to be the provinces and the two banks and portstates the light was a thief within his hide and did not be a thief within his hide and did not ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` THE MUSICIAN --- ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` 1. ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` Last Week! Last Call! Morris Music Shop Announces the Most Seasonal Sale ```markdown ``` Name Your Own Deposit and Terms THE Brunswick RADIOLA THE NEW YORKER I will not be able to provide a transcription of the image as it is too blurry and illegible. Morris Music Shop SENSATIONAL SALE ? Name Your THE For T No Victor Son THE CAN AND NAME YOUR OWN TERMS AND REPORT ON OUR CHAMPIONSHIP MORRIS & SAN PLAYER FRANDS Morri ```markdown ``` or This Week Only Any Phonograph No Deposit Victor, Brunswick Sonora, Columbia ris Music 6 2 3 ```markdown ``` it and Terms ADIOLA --- New As Low As $170 Have New As Low As Ripens the Complaint Date of 1864 Sorumanjuk RADIOLAS we have now in our House Imminis the Covenant Dine of 1846 ```markdown ``` FREE! ```markdown ``` SENRATIONAL SALE --- ```markdown ``` --- CABROR IN 21 ```markdown ``` --- ```markdown ``` --- ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` --- --- RUL C 2024 THE WEEKLY NEWS OF NEW YORK 1930 1930 1930 ```markdown ``` NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1924 "Parents More Incorrigible Than Their Children" Xolanto ```markdown ``` --- 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` How This Made Her ```markdown ``` EXELE All women are born separate from men and have that antigrain hair the principal attribute, who warns that the weight in women is a very small amount of money in Embroidered Skin Pamphlet, Embroidered Quilted Pamphlet and Embroidered Skin Pamphlet and a small amount of money in the embroidery them mentioned pamphlet on the pamphlet. "People are all born small and all are women mainly there and the characteristics in past her beauty that and so her working women with their applications of Embroidered Skin Pamphlet and Embroidered Quilted Pamphlet." ```markdown ``` --- BEST PROGRAM 486 7284 2844 --- OOSMORINE ROONE AND WATKINS Everybody Is Using It Now. What? Euroka Hair Dressing PRICE ON: PRICE ON: HARDWAL MAYOR ORGANIZER, INC. AND BEAUTY PARLOR HARD WAL MAYOR ORGANIZER, INC. AND BEAUTY PARLOR 900 6-7 HARDWAL MAYOR 900 6-7 HARDWAL MAYOR 900 6-7 HARDWAL MAYOR GRAY HAIR --- PAMO BEAUTY SALON antaGirl Beautiful Xekuto DreamWorks GRACE GARDEN Electric-Benip Treatments Hurricane in New York City Ridgewood, NY Mrs. G. D. Brooks Hairdresser NEW AT 213 W. 185th St. Kidderwood, NY PORO BLEAS ```markdown ``` BOOTHS TO RENT ```markdown ``` A. ```markdown ``` Mme. Crawford MALL STORE 456 LENOX AVE. TWOOI - JN MAIN ST. THRONE HARLEM AVE. Mme. Fields Voting's ```markdown ``` ```markdown ``` Washbar is so hard on a man as dirty staining is on a man. And it's just about as impatient and more mischievous. Washbar, it's on your face with our Wat and Flat secretion to do all the staining and flat warm leaching at a coat that's reasonable indeed. MANHATTAN Laundry Service 110-120 E. A 100th Street Writing an essay is a challenging task. WAT WANI 14 4 1H MATHINK IHNKER 14 4 11 HANI IHNKER 14 4 1H WHAT DOES YOU Suaveline RO- A FACE I THAT REALLY Another HIGH Toilet Prepa Harmless, but effective. Ro-rol also cleans the Marmite. Keeps the fresh and rouchful kool. RO-ZOL A FACE BLEACH THAT REALLY BLEACHES Ro-Zol also cleans the complexion of all Nermishen. Keep the skin smooth, firm, fresh and roughful looking. Will remove Mark-heads, liver epitches, tum. and freckles. Also removes dark rings and marks on the risk and arms caused by collara, furra, etc. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUG GISTS THE OVERTON INCIENT THE OVERTON AGENTE OUTPUT NO. GREEN, 178 MINIMUM CHARGE: $1.00 MINIMUM CHARGE: $1.00 MINIMUM CHARGE: $1.00 FURAL HAIR WIGS ALEX MARKS HAIR MEANT TO YOU ZOL BLEACH LY BLEACHES GH - BROWN separation. at surprisingly the completion of all the skin smooth firm. looking. eplatches, tam, and freckles. Also removes dark rings and marks on the risk and arms caused by col- tara fura, etc. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUG- GISTS THE EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER S. D. LYONS 216 N. Central Oklahoma City, Oklahoma JAMAICA BECKONS HOME SEEKERS ```markdown ``` JAMAICA Jamaica Builders to for Interests o With Local People Among F Within Easy Distance Prices That N Jamaica Builders to Enlarge Scope Interests of Colored Buyers With a lot of People Among Foremost Putting Up Homes Within Easy Distance of New York and at Prices That Now Obtain the editor of the Brooklyn and Long paper sent letter to all real estate brokers to tell them ongoing business with us, asking for information on their activities and suggested that pictures of individuals will be inserted in a special number of newspapers for the issue of Aug. 10. Negro newspapers not being financially agile more than a score of pictures and the paper we also suggested that brokers will have them returned as then the editor of the Brooklyn and Long paper sent letters to all real estate brokers their business with us, asking for minor their activities and suggested that pictures of ind their business will be inserted in a special number in the issue of Aug. 10. New newspaper, not being financially more than a score of pictures and the paper we also suggested that brokers will have them returned as then after being used wish to state that it never will be building our policy to discriminate against any man on account of color. That is the very thing we are fighting today and if we hope to break down the existing barriers we must contact our business relations with men at the opposite side on grounds of equality for that brings A far more we have always or more all along the continuation adjournage of our life the times. We have all been with the people who draw for them and those white men that must usher with colored men. The principle of the wrongs have been right, right, right, and ideas as old as the other time. We should not but a young Jewish man with the Jewish knowledge of our minds we asked for, and the Jewish people of the people of the dead. and we have to make sure that we have the money for the project. We have to make sure that we have the money for the project. As we know, the number of points in a square is equal to the number of angles in a square. I am sorry, but the image provided is too blurry to recognize any text content. The image is a graphic design and does not contain any chart, graph, or data. Therefore, it is not possible to extract numerical data from it. Dr. H. SKEETE For All Osteic Ailments Dermat of Lions and Birds Bone and Muscle Ailments Biological Therapeutics By Appointments Dr. Fulton St. Car and Classon Dr. H. SKEETE For All Osteamic Ailments Dentist, Lap and Body Surgical Specialist, Rehab Educational Therapeutics By Appointments 495 CLASSON AVE. BROOKLYN Dr. Carl Dally, PhD, Prospect 10:07 Prof. Thomas Ogun- shola ST AFRICA MASTER OF SCIENCE instructors to bring peace and hope himnes to your home. Advise and look given on business. They are what you want as to lost friends, articles, love, finance, etc. All kinds of information given. Treat men. Hours 10 to 8 p.m. and 8 to 10 p.m. 76 UNDERHILL AVE. BROOKLYN, N. Y. Tel. Nealus 5695 Take thruen St car; put you on in front of place. Master for Public Writing for "The Dagger" Must Read His New Letter This Month AICA to Enlarge Scope of Colored Buyers Foremost Putting Up Homes of New York and at Now Obtain editor of the Brooklyn and Long at letters to all real estate brok- ness with us, asking for infor- mation suggested that pictures of indi- serted in a special number o issue of Aug. 10. newspaper, not being financially than a store of pictures and also suggested that brokers will have them returned as them wish to state that it never will be our policy to discriminate against any man on account of color. That is the very thing we are ignoring today, and if we hope to break down the existing barriers we must conduct our business relations with men at the opposite race on grounds of equality, for this brings as a step closer to the just claims which we are making for the same recognition along lines of business. Shots Halt Race Man Fleeing From Scene of Burglary Patrolmen Commandeer a Taxi and Overtake Porto Rican Near Borough Hall After Chase From Myrtle Avenue Store Several hundred persons in the thorough rail section carry on Monroe and witnessed the terrifying capture of an alleged Port Richeau by two patrolmen of the Popep street station, who chased the fugitive for seven blocks and fired five shots before the man was captured. When the prisoner was housed at the station, house he described himself as those Gonzales 36, a scammer on the S. S. Manti took up at Pier 6. East River Assisting to Patrolmen Frank Frank Ditturado and Cornelius O Leary they saw the man kick in the window of the tailor shop of Joel J. Flynn at 87 Myrtle avenue reach through the opening and take eight rolls of imported cloth. When the man started the walk away with his foot he saw the patrolmen approaching him. Cropped his foot and started to run through Myrtle avenue to lay siege where the officer shot at the chase. The tugitive, armed with a rifle, entered the house when a tax collector pulled into view. Dimaire and O'Garry commanded the cub and continued to chase the man through day to nightly street. Dimaire's son on the left, walking board of the cub, library was stationed on the ramp. As the tugitive was reaching Willoughby street, near Adams street, the policemen each tried two shots. Despite the fact that the bullets passed close enough to leave a mark on one of his ears, the man kept running. As the tugitive attempted to run through Borough Hali Park Patrol, Dimaire diced another shot at him. The man then dropped to the street, shooting. "I give up, don't shoot any more." The police quickly slipped hand cuffs on the prisoner and he wintagan to Poplar street station charged with burglary. The real Beauty aids—"NU-LIFE" Prof. Thomas Ogunshola ST AFRICA MASTER OF SCIENCE Guarantees to bring peace and happiness to your home. After and back given on business. They are what you want as to lost friends, articles, love, finance, etc. All kinds of information given. Treatment --- News of Brooklyn and Long Island T. --- Secretary Treasurer of the Milton-Conn Building Corporation and One of the Young Men Responsible for the Home Owning Room Among Colored People in Long Island. Brooklynite, First Guard of Race At Sing Sing, Finds Job Pleasant A Row of Houses Erected by the Minna-Coom Building Corporation, Which Were Bought by Colored People Who Are Daily Seeking Relief From Rent Gougers by Purchasing Their Own Homes in Jamaica, L. I A Row of Houses Erected by the Minna-Coom Building Corporation, Which Were Bought by Colored People Who Are Daily Seeking Relief From Rent Gougers by Purchasing Their Own Homes in Jamaica, L. I Harry N. Quarles, of No. 510 Class A, avenue. Brooklyn, the first Negro guard to be appo- nied at Sing Sing, on Sunday, declared himself perfectly satisfied with the job and said that every- one at the prison had been deced- dally courteous, even going out of his way to help him. Quarles started on his work Thursday night, having qualified by Civil Service examinations. Quarles said he was as surprised as Sing Sing officials were when he reported for duty and found he was the first of his race on the guard roster. But he asserted he has found no objection to him At St. Barnabas' Church The characteristics of the Gospel Matt. 24:14, formed the theme of a sermon preached Sunday morning at St. Barnabas Church by the Rev. Father Dude. He pointed out in his discourse that the world is well supplied with religion, but is sadly in need of Christianity. He spoke of the lynching in Missouri and the K. K. K. convention in Washington as being a demonstration of the preaching of a Christless gospel, a gospel without love. Among other things the pastor said the gospel of Christ, is first, a gospel of love; second, a gospel of peace; and third a gospel of hope. NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1925 510, either by prisoners, other guards the or prison officials. "My hours of duty are from 10:30 at night to 6:30 in the morning. He said, "but, as the last man ap- peared, I should normally expect very this. In fact, I hope I will be al- lowed to keep this tour of duty, be- cause I commute from home and the hours are perfect, so far as work trains are concerned." by Quarles served in France as Regi- mental Stable Sergeant of the 367th Infantry Supply Company. He is when married. His job pays $1,400 a year. the Quarles is a graduate of Public School No. 15 and spent two years in Manual Training School. NOTICE. All agents and representatives of the Mime Isadora Currie Beanry Culture System are requested to communicate with Mime Currie in regard to the celebration of her seventh anniversary of business in Brooklyn, to be held September 21 Address 269 St. James place. Brooklyn, N. Y.-Advt. AGED BISHOP HERE Bishop W. H. Heard of the First Episcopal District of the A. M. K. Church is here this week. Although the bishop is 57 years old, he boasts of his youth. Flushing, L. I., Colored Man Accidentally Killed by Italians Police Believe Peacemaker Was Hit by Bullet Intended for Foreigner in Heated Argument With Countrywoman Detectives are making an intensive city-wide search, which started Monday morning, for an Italian man and woman who are wanted in connection with the murder of William Miller. 35 a colored coal truck driver, of 19 North Prince street. Flushing, who was shot to death at 11:50 clock last Sunday night at Lawrence and Grove streets. Flushing Miller, the police believe, was the innocent victim of a feud that has long existed among a group of Italians in Flushing. The man sought by the police is said to be about 27 years old, weighs 125 pounds, and is 5 feet 2 inches tall. The woman is about the same age and height. She wore a Black dress with white stripes. The fatal bullet was fired from a 45 calibre Colt revolver, pen- rated Miller's chest just below the neck, made its way though body and out under his left shoulder. Miller was in a taxicab with two other colored men and zot out with one of them at Lawren and those streets. Fishing when they were trained by an Italian man and woman who were arguing excitedly in their native tongue. Miller walked over to the warrior couple an effort to specify when she rang out from the direction of those streets, quickly followed by another which struck Miller. The colored peacemaker fell dead, and the Italian man and woman disappeared as did the other two col- dred men. Police Search Neighborhood. James Stark is living man at channels Garage directly across the street upon hearing the shot new a police whistle and a night watchman employed by the Oakdale Contracting Company at Lawrence and Amity streets telephoned the police station and in a few minutes reserves and detectives of the Flashing prescript arrived. They searched the neighborhood for trace of the murderer, the two Negroes who had been with Miller and the Italian man and woman who had been quarrelling Scores of persons in the neighborhood were questioned, but none could tell who did the shooting. James J. Conroy, Assistant District Attorney of Queens and James F. Conroy, secretary to the District Attorney Newrombe, joined in the investigation. The police believe that the shot which killed Miller was intended for the man engaged in the argument. The woman in the case is believed to be the wife of the mur-deepen who in a rage of jealousy set out to "get" the man he had seen with his wife. Mr George Murray Jr. spent last Sunday as a guest of Mr Harvey Levi. The Marjorie Club met at the home of Mr Ralph Levi on Thursday evening last for their meeting and sorral. Miss Florence Bunn is very sick in her home on Willis Farm. Rev. G. N. Dunbar and some of his members went to Lakeville last Sunday to be with Rev. Scott in his quarterly meeting. A reception will be given on this Friday evening at the H. H. Garnett home by Mrs Fannle Forest and Miss Ordie Hill. WESTBURY, L. I. Medica Strikes Back at Ignorant White Preacher Professing Christianity "You Are Trying to Encourage Ill Feeling Between the Races," Flushing, L. I. Man Tells Pastor of Lutheran Church The statement of Rev. Henry C. Wolk, pastor of the Immanuel Lutheran Church of Whitestone, at a meeting of the Whitestone Booster's organization Thursday, that egress has brought a letter plus Medica, of 27 South he objects to living next to of protest from Albert Adol-Prince street. Flushing. The agitation arose over the presence of a colored family in an apartment house in the center of a prominent white residential section of Whitestone. An attempt was made to have the floodsters go on record as being opposed to an increase of the colored population in Whitestone on the grounds that a depreciation of property values resulted. The movement was given on the support of Rey Wolk. Medical charges the minister with insulting racial feeling, and accuses him of being insincere in his expressions of friendship. The letter asks the Mr Wolk to show why the Creator made the discrimination in color referred to by the minister at the floodsters' meeting. I have seen where you have expressed in the papers your hatred against the black man as God's inferior work in that you, as an ambassador of the Gospel, have given the people to understand that God has marked the black man. Consequently any other human being of unmarked character must not or should not live with or against them. I would like to know from you when God put his peculiar mark on Can for killing his brother and if it was black. Can't you say also that He has put a mark on Elijah's servant causing him to be white. "You are trying to encourage a feeling among the race. Should you not preach against it?" For as you have alleged, God made the black man and if God made him the black and you the white, are we not brother?" If you say that you do not want to live with or near the black man, then you must have thought that God had no right to put us on this earth is that the idea? "God never made the black man as expressed by your of an inferior race. You said you have helped the black man, aptly if so, it was not sincere from your heart. Mr. Armstrong did not preach the Gospel but he believed in it you can see." "The pupil and the press are the ones today who should agitate and try to correct the people of wrong dolls and try to bring them in peace and harmony to the ones of their human duty on duties one toward another. Love thy neighbor as thyself. The black man in this case is your neighbor, then why object to us in the world? "I would like to know what harm would it be to have a black man 2. Long Island Office 250 Union Hill St. Phone: Jimmie Willey KERS nd a Reply SEEKE A Letter and a Mr. Romeo L. Dougherty, Associate Editor, Amsterdam News, so Hanson Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Dear Sir: Will you allow us space in ourums to make the following statement: conditions that have recently afflicted especially here in Jamaica? Daily the population of Jamaica is our people are contributing their share and more are they acquiring homes, hurry most instances, these homes are being built real estate dealers, in spite of the fact the share of licensed colored real estate dealers competent, willing and very desirous or so a satisfactory manner. They have the same properties; an exact and on exactly the same terms as the white man but in the face of these evident facts in consequence of our people to aid the white brother's dependence rather than the colored brother. There is at present, on the part of one of homes for our people an effort to dissect colored real estate dealers. It is for this is written, so that our people know accordingly, as we must rise or fall together appeal to you for your patronage. This is not a personal appeal, but applied colored real estate dealers of Jamaica, past favors, and believing that your will the situation, we are very trusty. The Frederick Douglas Realty Co. JOHN We welcome the above letter from the last Realty Corporation and are glad to space, as it will give us an opportunity to sider most opportunity to point out certain the subject brought forward by this corpse. We believe that this company and this paper will admit that we have done every power to prove that we are at disguise or "race first," and cannot be charged with leanings towards those of the opposite race ing us, but we are prone to be fair enough selves the many things lacking in the real make for concerted effort on the road of pro. It is indeed unfortunate that we do not cooperation of race men and women in than half the time we ourselves are to blast. In attempting to do everything with further the interests of Negro real estate Island we laid a proposition before each and in these columns some weeks ago. Of the score or more approached but do us the courtesy of replying and of the truth Unlike the majority of our colored men white man, the only one of his race approves saw the possibilities and went to the trot direct touch with the writer. We point that many instances in which the colored brother Incidentally we might mention that the last Realty Corporation happens to be one we approached. While it is true that white charging more for their properties we must quite a number of Negro real estate men in Harlem and other places, and we might not at all satisfied when we personally made piece of real property through one of our ago. But for the interest of the president Bank of Brooklyn we would have lost all. There is only one way for us as a race place where we can hope for the unanticipated people, and that is for us to accept the to which we ourselves contribute directly an article appearing in these same columns that a concerted effort had been made to real estate scalpers from the City of Chicago having crowned the efforts of these who initiated the move they are now aware of their own people in Brooklyn. If it is true that white builders are against us in Long Island then the less attitude is clear. Negro builders all FOR ONE AND ONE FOR VILLAGE to differ with the Frederick Douglas that the majority of our people are white brookers until such time as we know as a fact that a large number of purchasing homes in Jamaica through not until our brookers take advantage of white men do, will we be able to must use our newspapers like white men are right now doing in running over the tate booms in the East at the Brooklyn Amsterdam News places in those who would reach a larger number this, as we pointed out in personal letters, without any added cost. Jammina is on the increase and all the increase shall share in this increase among homes, but strange to say that being bought through within of the fact that Jammina has lines sequestrate densities who are capable of serving the name in particular as exactly the same principle as the white man estate in the fact in terms to the property white man to communicate intended breaker; the part of one of the buildings form to disseminate aggregate time for this reason the method may know that lines and are fall together. We make this stage, neat, but applies for all of the Jammina. Thinking your own that you will remain immensely too busy. Ready Composition. JOHN B. LEE Brendan. Letter from the Freuditee Dungatee glad to give in the immense opportunity, which we cannot certain things concerning our this corporation. Company and other readers of this are done everything within our disciple of the teachings of charged with hawking any minute opposite case in matters affective fair enough to admit to our usage in the race within should the road of progress. that we do not receive the full women in business, but more we are to blame for this complicating everything within our power to real estate operators in Long before each and every advertiser ago. Unheeded but two cases for every land of the two one was white colored men in the grunt this is race approached immediately to the trouble of getting in. We point this out as one of the colored brother calls functions that the Frederick Huguenne to be one of the concerns that white men are part proprieties we must not forget that estate men have lived their own and we might say that we were personally made a purchaser of one of our own many years the president of the Frederick have lost all our savings. Thus as a race to arrive at that the united support of our accept the truth of conditions directe and indirectly. Our columns last weeks shown been made to serve the colored "City of Charleston." Success of these words colored amme now among the confidence in Lieber are to be determined from brothers together FOR VIII. are to commission work Longmina Corrasser and his business must be handled Vernumber are to be handled through them Dear Sir: Will you allow us space in your valuable columns to make the following statement: saving to certain conditions that have recently arisen affects our purpose especially here in Jamaica? Uaily the population of Jamaica is on the increase and our people are contributing their share to this increase in amount and more are they acquiring homes, but strange to say in most instances, these homes are being bought through private real estate dealers, in spite of the fact that Jamaica has a share of licensed colored real estate dealers who are capable of competent willing and very desirous of serving the name in a satisfactory manner. They have the same properties, as exactly the same premises, and on exactly the same terms as the white-near existence, but in the face of these evidence facts in seems to the appearance of our people to add the white-benharr to economic independence rather than the colored brother. There is at present, on the part of one of the hundreds of homes for our people, an effort to determine again three colored real estate dealers. It is for this reason that notice is written, so that our people may know that interest and are accordingly, as we must rise or fall together. We make this appeal to you for your patronage. This is not a personal appeal, but applies for all of the colored real estate dealers of Jamaica. Thinking your four past favors, and believing that you will never miss the situation, we are very trusty. The Frederick Douglass Reality Commission. We welcome the above letter from this Frederick Huntinglass Realty Corporation and are glad to give the dissolved space, as it will give us an opportunity, which we consider most opportune to point out certain things concerning the subject brought forward by this corporation. We believe that this company and other readers of this paper will admit that we have done everything within our power to prove that we are at disciples of the teachings of "race first," and cannot be charged with hearing any further leanings towards those of the opposite race in matters affecting us, but we are prone to be fair enough to admire ourselves the many things lacking in the race which should make for concerted effort on the road of progress. It is indeed unfortunate that we do not receive the final cooperation of race men and women in business, but more than half the time we ourselves are to blame for this condition. In attempting to do everything within our power to further the interests of Negro real estate operators in Long Island we laid a proposition before each and every advertiser in these columns some weeks ago. Of the score or more approached but two, we fit to credo us the courtesy of replying and of the two one was white. Unlike the majority of our colored men in the grimmer, this white man, the only one of his race approached, immediately saw the possibilities and went to the trouble of getting in direct touch with the writer. We point this our one of the many instances in which the colored brother raids to function. Incidentally we might mention that the Frederick Hourglass Realty Corporation happens to be one of this concern we approached. While it is true that white men are pernapp充电ing more for their properties we must not forget that quite a number of Negro real estate men have blended their name in Harlem and other places, and we might say that we were not at all satisfied when we personally made a purchase of a piece of real property through one of our own many years ago. But for the interest of the president in the Frederick Bank of Brooklyn we would have lost all our savings. There is only one way for us as a race to arrive at that place where we can hope for the united support of our people, and that is for us to accept the truth of conditions to which we ourselves contribute directly and indirectly. An article appearing in these same columns last week showed that a concerted effort had been made to create the colored real estate scalpers from the "City of Charities." Success having crowned the efforts of these worthless clerks who initiated the move they are now offering the confidence of their own people in Brooklyn. If it is true that white builders are against us in Long Island then the lesson is clear. This attitude is clear. Negro builders should together ALL FOR ONE AND ONE FOR ALL. We beg to differ with the Fraternal Daughters Association that the majority of our people are purchasing white brokers until such time as we know as a fact that a large number of purchasing homes in Jamaica through them not until our brokers take advantage of white men do well to must use our newspapers like this them are right now doing in evening news the guest rate booms in the East at the Rockaway Amsterdam News places its services to those who would reach a larger number of this, as we pointed out in personal letters to reporters, without any added cost. 11.12.1925. No well thinken black man is feminist. I claiming for social equality. Who am I? Matter for Publication for This Page Must Reach Us Not Later. Than Monday Mr. Romeo L. Dougherty. respectably to live next door in you whose faces are white. Would that tend to darken your com- plexion? "What would it be to have a disrespectable white neighbour next door to you?" he问 that the black man and you would enjoy the same blessings and joy of privileges in Heaven if worthy with no discrimination there?" God our maker, Christ, our Godswinner and the white man is our brother. Discriminate as you like, insane racial questions as you please, but God will take care of the black man. Jamaica A. T. Augusta N. 2000 THE NEW YORK MUSEUM A NEW GAS OFFICE FOR the greater convenience of our customers, and in accordance with our policy of providing prompt and efficient service, a new District Office will be opened at 21 Audubon Avenue, at West 166th Street Telephone-WA.Shington Heights 6000 to meet the growing demands made upon our service in the district now being served by the office located at which will be closed after that date. The Branch Office of The United Electric Light and Power Company will also be located in this building. S. I. Quiz Still on By Grand Jury Unable to Identify Persons Who Attacked Brown's Home The Richmond County muse quizzing heights of well-brown, a postman and a gentleman. Carthage a large number of tra- national welfare organizations have offered their assistance association of the gallery that are found 1. I know the home was as assaulted by my white vandals, who were the family to move to neighbours. I was from the Na- tionalion for the Attorney and People sent to investigate and day. Some 22 witnesses heard notting, and it was that after Brown had for his house a deputa- tion they came to hire and that he was the only New neighborhood and that they pay him a fair margin for his home. They of- ten to $100, but he re- sults it involved a for which he was willing the witnesses heard that he was a number of Incur- rers. Brown told the that two times during the insurance com- pany called his police with any reason. that the Grand and the Instrumenta the recommendation of Victory Albert C. Foch. EXCEPTION CLOSES ACTIVITIES OF BOARD social reception to meet members marked the close activities of Show No. 2 of Mother A within the last Monday beautiful good cross tied to the president as president in which she is president then present the officers with small appreciation of their refreshments were serv- members and friends spent evening. The re- hearing at 140 West 130th street of Mrs. Corrine president. The treatment of applied science—"NU.LIFE" (Oscar Garrett LAWYER 206 BROADWAY Address: 6017, 3018 Cortlandt Post Office Phone: 0970 Audubon A N FOR the greater with our policy District Office will be 21 Audubon Tel to meet the growing now being served by 19 which will be closed The Branch Office of will also be located Consolidated ```markdown ``` Other Applicants Who Sang in Final Town Hall Audition Miss Butterey Miss Blue Miss Bresson Miss Collins Miss Dowdy Miss Edness Mrs. Ford Miss Gordon Miss Harris Miss Hayes Miss Heartwell Miss Hunt Miss Margetson Miss Mason Mrs. McAbeen Miss Olden Miss Robinson Miss Roley Miss Russell Miss Sherrill Miss Stewart Miss Wardell Sanford Hirschberg to Open Store in Heart of Coored Neighborhood --- Sanford Hirschberg has leased for a period of 20 years appro- mately 8,000 feet in the new build- ing heating completion at the Th NEW GAS OFFICE ter convenience of our customers, a policy of providing prompt and effici- lity will be opened at on Avenue, at West 16 Telephone - WA.Shington Heights 6000 OFFICE customers, and in pt and efficient serv West 166th Heights 6000 Sanford Hirschberg has leased southwest corner of Seventh ave for a period of 20 years upheld here and 130th street, comprising nearly 8,000 feet in the new build the corner unit and basement needing completion at the This store has a strategic location On September 1st wing demands made upon our servi d by the office located at wing demands made upon our service in the by the office located at 1909 AMSTERDAM AVENUE closed after that date. of The United Electric Light and Power ed in this building. red Gas Company of New c. Light and Power many of New Geo. B. Corvelyou. President --- THE NEW YORK Amsterdam News NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1925 doing the best corner. In the only improved office building north of 125th street. He will sell dresses, coats, suits, millinery, skirts and fur coats, and he further believes that a large volume of business can be done in this neighborhood, which has been sofully neglected up to now, considering the vast amount of people who live in that section. Mr. Hirschberg is well known in the trade, having been connected with Worth, on 34th street, for the past eleven years as a buver. Extensive alterations are being made and, when the store opens, late in August. Mr. Hirschberg will present one of the most beautiful stores in the city and catering to the popular priced trade. An Ounce of Prevention Plus A Jar of 'Admirola' Bleach Creme, Equals One Clear Beautiful, Smooth Skin Amazing French New Discovery Whitens Skin almost Over Night Clears Your Skin of Blackheads, Liver Splotches, Tan, Pimples, Bumps, Sallow Skin, Freckles and All Skin Blemishes as if by Magic! Have, you a skin that "he" will tolerate. There is a hidden beauty in your skin. Why hide it away? Dust, wind and clogged pores may have infused it, but the application of AUREACH CREMER will bring out that hidden beauty. Make this THREE-MINUTE-REFORE-BORE-TIME test. Apply this reine before retiring each night and watch the results next morn- Money-Back Guarantee Get a jar today and use for five nights only. Then if you are not invited, money will be formed, your money will be instantly refunded "A Revelation to the Woman or Man Who Cares" FERRARI-FONTANA OFFERS ASSISTANCE TO ALL CONTESTANTS ed by the deep emotional feelings in the composition. "I feel absolutely certain that before long you will hear of some of the singers you have listened to tonight conquering huge audiences on the operatic stage. I promise you that I will do all within my power to bring this about. "Art Has No Color." "Art, the true art, has neither nationality nor color. It cares not for race. The world is her home and the heavens her shelter. We are but her cultivators. "Art is the expression of feelings and sensations; the harmonious expression of life. It predisposes that all men are brothers in the God Who created us." "At the time I talked this matter over with William M. Kelley, editor of The Amsterdam News, it was with the understanding that I would coach only one voice for grand opera; but the remarkable quality of most of the voices you have heard, and my determination not to be defeated in my purposes by placing 'all of my eggs in one basket,' prevails upon me to make two selections instead of one. My selections are: Miss Marguerite Avery and Miss Jessie Zackery. Will Help Other 22. "The others who participated in this audition are not to be discouraged. I will do all in my power to help each and every one of them. Mr. Kelley and myself are now working out the plans for the Community Chorus with a special class for opera and concert singing, and you may expect to hear more of these plans as time goes on. Assisted by such unselfish women as Mrs. Alice Reed and Mrs. Edward A. Warren, owner of The Amsterdam News, and the gentlemen who gave freely of their time in assisting Mr. Kelley in the preliminary and semi-final auditions, together with the vast public The Amsterdam News commands, our plaus cannot fail." "Always Wanted to "Sing"—Miss Avery "I have always wanted to have my voice trained extensively and when the Ferrari-Fontani award was offered I was determined to sing my best whether I came first St. Luke to Dedicate New Building Friday The dedicational exercises of the I. O. of St. Luke Building. 125 and 127 West 130th street, will be held Friday, August 14, at 8:30 p. m. Rev. W. P. Hayes will deliver the dedicational address. Other prominent speakers are: Mr. Fred Moore, Dean Pickens, Mrs. A. S. Reed, Hon. John Clifford Hawkins and Hon. John William Smith. In addition there will be several musical selections by prominent artists. BIBLE TRUTH CHURCH DISPUTE SETTLED The church troubles of the Bible Truth Churches of God. 223S Fifth avenue, were adjusted in the Washington Heights Court Monday morning. Magistrate Vitale scored an allied minister. D. A. Alleyne, for attempting to have the Rev. Leon A. Bynoe, pastor of the church arrested. The Rev. Bynoe left New York last February for a six months' inspection trip through the Canal Zone and Kingston, Jamaica, B. W. I., and left his deacon, Alleyne, in charge. When the pastor returned last Sunday to resume his work, Alleyne shouted out "get a cop," it is alleged. When the officer refused to make an arrest, the minister had his former deacon to appear with him before Migratrate Vitale to settle their differences. The minister claimed that a conspiracy had been formed to oust him from the church. "Pleurez! pleurez, mes yeux" (Aria from Le Cid)...Massenet MARGARITE AVERY "Homing" ..... Del Riego MURIEL RAHN BATTEY JESSIE COVINGTON. Accompanist (Continued from Page 1) or last on the program," Marguerite Avery excclaimed when she was asked about appearring first on the program. Singing to her is an innate instinct, she said. Her father had a wonderful voice, and to use her own words about her mother's voice: "Oh, my mother, she has a golden voice even now for a woman of her age." When Miss Avery was a little girl, there were no music teachers who lived in Morganton, N. C. By mere chance an instructor came to the little town and stayed for two months. During that time little Marguerite, who was then only 8 years old, was taught the scieson on an organ. After the teacher had gone, she continued to practise and soon became able to play an organ. That enabled her to pick tones and work out simple compositions. "When I finished my preparatory training, there was only one thing for me to do if I stayed at home—teach, and I always detested the idea of teaching in a little country school. I made up my mind to go some place where I could get my voice trained. I wanted to sing." Training Will Mean Much to Me," Says Miss Zackery "I knew of Matzenauer, Ferrari-Rontana's former wife, and I knew what it would mean to me if I could win the award. Going about ten weeks without practise, I had to work very hard. The training will mean so much to me and I am happy that I won." That was a part of the conversation had with Miss Zackery Saturday morning. "When I sing, I don't control my action. I have been taught to act when I sing and it is natural for me." Prof. H. Lawrence Freeman officiated until at the close of the program when he presented William M. Kelley, editor of The Amsterdam News, who in turn presented Mr. Fontana. Clara Novello Davies Volunteers Services Details of the Community Chorus to be organized and sponsored by The Amsterdam News are being worked out and will be published next week. In a letter to the editor, Mme. Clara Novello Davies, who directed Enrico Caruso in chorus, has volunteered to assist Mr. Fontana and The Amsterdam News in the project. Her letter follows: "I feel very happy over the result of the contest sponsored by you for sopranos at the Town Hall, and am also keenly interested in your triple project for the advancement musically of your gifted race. "Since my childhood in Wales, when, 45 years ago, my father took me nightly to hear the Fisk Jubilee Singers. I have always looked up to the race as having the most uplifting influence in music, and especially in regard to the human voice, which is my lifelong interest. "I have made many friends in Harlem, and entertained them at my studio. Some time ago I endeavored to interest them in grand opera, as I consider it a wonderful and almost unexplored field for their great musical abilities. "I was so pleased to teach such singers as Turner Layton, Bledsoe and others, and have now finished after 11 years' preparation Caska Bonds, as a teacher of my method of voice production, in which he is fully qualified, and a most successful exponent in his Harlem studio. I am prepared to join forces with Mr. Ferrari-Fontana and you, and my services and world-wide experience as a conductor are yours to command. Believe me to be." Believe me to be. Yours most sincerely. CLARA NOVELLO DAVIES. August 8, 1925. Part One A CLASSIFIED 'AD Is the Key to Everybody's Pocketbook III ARISSA D. BLU MAM IV WILLIAN BROWN MR. EMNA DE LYON V ARNISIA COLLI VIVIA VI ELEEN J. DOWE WILLIAM A. Part Two VII D'Amore" ... ALVINA EDNEY VIII NUCILE N. FOR HERBER IX MINIFRED GOR THEODORE PAR X RJORIE T. HA LEON XI outh" ... THER F. HAY RUDO XII ELEEN A. HEAR HERBER III Mascheroni LARISSA D. BLUE MAMIE L. HOPE, Accompanist IV Straus WILLIAN BROWN MB. RMNA DE LYON LEONARD, Accompanist V Calcott ERNISIA COLLINS VIVIAN DOUGLASS, Accompanist VI Sanderson HELEN J. DOWDY WILLIAM A. CALHOUN, Accompanist Part Two VII D'Amore" ... Puccini CALVINA EDNESS VIII H. L. Wilson BUCILE N. FORD HERBERT A. ALLEN, Accompanist IX Faust WINIFRED GORDON THEODORE PARASCANDOLA, Accompanist X Tschaikowsky MARJORIE T. HARRIS LEON S. ADGER, Accompanist XI Tschaikowsky STHER F. HAYES RUDOLPH GRANT, Accompanist XII Cadman HELEN A. HEARTWELL HERBERT A. ALLEN, Accompanist "My Hero" ..... Straus LILLIAN BROWN MMR, EMNA DE LYON LEONARD, Accompanist "Vissi D'Arte, Vissi D'Amore" ..... Puccini MALVINA EDNESS "At Dawning" .....Ladman HELEN A. HEARTWELL HERBERT A. ALLEN. Accompanias Part Three XIII BIL ELISE HU E. ALICE FRAZIER XIV aught Me" ..... ROSE MARGET EDWARD M XV Madame Butterfly SA EMEAS MA JESSIE XVI TH LEE McABE MRS. VIRGINIA XVII TTIE B. OLDB LEU XVIII ATRICE ROBIN MRS. AQU XIII Speaks BIL ELISE HUNT ME. ALICE FRAZIER ROBINSON, Accompanist XIV Taught Me" ... Dvorak ROSE MARGETSON EDWARD MARGETSON, Accompanist XV (Madame Butterfly) ... Puccini GA EMEAS MASON JESSIE COVINGTON, Accompanist XVI Frank La Forge UTH LEE McABEE MRS. VIRGINIA CASTELLE, Accompanist XVII J" BETTIE B. OLDEN LEON S. ADGER, Accompanist XVIII Briel EATRICE ROBINSON MRS. AQUILLA RICE, Accompanist "In Maytime" ..... Speaks SYBIL ELISE HUNT MME, ALICE FRAZIER ROEINSON, Accompanist "Songs My Mother Taught Me" ..... Dvorak ROSE MARGETSON EDWARD MARGETSON, Accompanist XV "Un Bel Di" (From Madame Butterfly) ..... Puccini OLGA EMEAS MASON JESSIE COVINGTON, Accompanist XVI "Song of the Open" ..... Frank La Forge RUTH LEE McABEE MRS. VIRGINIA CASTELLE, Accompanist XVII "The Cry of Rachael" ..... NETTIE B. OLDEN LEON S. ADGER, Accompanist "Song of the Soul" Briel V. BEATRICE ROBINSON MRS. AQUILLA RICE, Accompanist Part Four XIX IDA ROLEY HAR XX ANCHE RUSSE MRS. XXI Beloved" ..... N ANDRE SHE XIX Mozart IDA ROLEY HARVEY BAKER, Accompanist XX J. Rosamond Johnson ANCHE RUSSELL MRS. H. H. PRICE, Accompanist XXI Beloved" Coleridge-Taylor N ANDRE SHERRILL "The Awakening" ..... J. Rosamond Johnson BLANCHE RUSSELL MRS. H. H. PRICE, Accompanist "Thou Art Risen, My Beloved" ..... Coleridge-Taylor HELEN ANDRE SHERRILL JESSIE COVINGTON, Accompanist "Caro mio Ben" ..... Giordani JUANITA STEWART HERBERT A. ALLEN, Accompanist "Who Knows" Ball ADA E. WARDELL WILBUR JOHNSON. Accompanist "O cicii azzurti" (From Aida) ..... Verdi JESSIE A. ZACKERY LYDIA MASON. Accompanist --- -- News of Churches, Fraternities and Organizations i | Sees i : pera Peta he Hipm I erg ten paces Sd - a Aes j UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMERS NOW AT 162-164 WEST (36th ST. PHONE BRADHURST 0512 NOTARY PULLS Our deepest and heartfelt sympathy In extended to the bereave? families whom we have served during the month of Jul: 1 Banks, Mary 15. Mathews, Eliza 2. Brown, Bernell 16. Rakestraw, Ernest 3. Bussey, Alice 17, Satchell, James 4. Collins, George F. 18. Seabrook, John 5. Cook, Mary 19. Sisco, Lester 6. Deshand¢, Absa 20. Smith, Willie 7. Dinzy, Thelma 2 8, Henson, Helena a 9. Hunt, Thomas M. saben Besser 10. Jackson, Joseph 23. Washington, Susie C. UL. King, Wiliam B 24, Warren, John 12. Kirby, James A 25. Wiggins, Walter 13. Kyals, Simon 26. Willis Reeves 7 14. Marshall, Fitzherbert 27. Wiliams, Ervin (2) The strength invisible that holds old customers and adés =: friends is the result of our ideals united with a name, (2) If you want quality at the right price you will find {t =: WAINWRIGHT & DANIELS. TELEPHONE HARLEM 4334 - OR ome-—THOS. H. KIRTON — Licensed Embalmer FUNERAL DIRECTOR ” 32 WEST 137th ST. NEW YORK Civ Motto: Economy, Courtesy and Satisfaction. & (10 years! experience). a Res, 2508 Seventh Ave. at 145th St. Apt. 2 2 SE er te ae —<—<—<__ Telephone Bradhurst 0442 W.DAVID BROWN. .catenzauee . ESTABLISHMENT Under the Management of Anna €,. Brown and Margeret Brov-a: Gordy. ©. Bray Purvi, Asstatant, HIGH GRADE UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS . 2315 SEVENTH AVENUE SERVICE, COURYESY, SATISFACTION RGSA L. LE GARR & PHILIP P. KELSEY, JR., C0. . 121 West 132d Street, New York City Funeral Directors Phone Morningsiae. 2022 AL\ AYS OPEN NOTARY PUBLIC DR cELSEY, JR. Manager. Residence Phone Penn, 0839 a \— —— MARY LANE Morningside 6363 UNDERTAKER FREE FUNERAI. PARLOR AND CHAPEL 2 142 WEST {33d STREET Bodlea Shipped to All Parte of the World. a «at..44 Bhana tiaddinewas 7224 .@® #2 80 | Telephone Never Sleeps. Phone Haddingway 7084 | HOWARD M. SCOTT | Licensed Funeral Director and Embalmer SHIPPING A SPECIALTY Chapel for Funeral Services Free 4836 DEAN STREET, Near Rochester Ave. BROOKLYN, N, Y. J ee wR. EDET EFFIONG | NIGERIA REMEDY CO. Pr ee: Siwea eage by iifora us numerous | ie clients. that Naural Temediag will ree ee SEES Cit pate hte an” omer | EAS RIO Be Smate hate tala. Sicerin ters | em ys Sota act ete AE Rihae ot | Rama tee Oia BRE atcha, Ahonen ee ah 4 oe eR aac ea oth: Mn es ae gla, Stomach Disorders, Riehache and ast Ws Sire ee Rasipent nen Etta ct | ea CS Sted Gonderfal nrmmagic neopertion, mnt [io 87 Ree Pees area ge! Wek ee oat toe es day. “Delays ‘are always dangerous! a ‘ te Me guetta” wlth ee whe tar tn tails ay a mate Heath with netress aeandera EDET EFFIONG — NIGERIA REMEDY CO. 452 St, Nicholas Ave. (mear 133rd St.) New York City Phone: Bradhurst 8085 Painting of Sir Harris . . Unveiled at St. John’s St. John’s Commandery No. 4, Katghts Templar, pail homage to the late Sir Shoiriek Hurris, one of the last of the Knights of old Paul Drayton Commandery, and for many veurs active in St. John's Commandery. ‘A portrait, painted hy the Juntor Warden, Sir William HH. Burns, from an old photograph, was un Velled with impressive ceremonlen, at the conclave. Wednesday even- Ing, Augnst 5, at the Asylum in Aquit Se Haola Espanol DR, hi, FRIEDER The Gentle Dentist Brines modem dentistry within the reach of all. PAINLESS METHODS SCIENTIFIC EXTRACTIONS Eyre PLATE ANH NRIDGE Work EASY PAYMENTS OPEN RVENISoS d80 LENOX AVE. Cor tet at ONPHONE HARLEM 138 Prince Hall Masonic Temple, 165th atreet and Eighth avenue. The painting {s‘a superb tikeness of Sir |Harris, who died. in 1921, and will jhe hung tn the brary of the ‘Tem: ple, The ceremonies were under tho direction of the Eminent Com- mander, Sir Charles E M ‘Brooks. Addresses were made by Past Commanders Sir Nenjamin I. Gray, Mt. Calvary, No. 1; Sir William: A. Murphy, Sir Jesse D. Phillips and Sir Daniel P. Walden; also by Str ‘Isaiah G. Wilson and Sir Edward iC, Holden, of Gethsemane No. 3 WE BEG TO ANNOUNCE 560 LENOX AVENUE Fistoe™t newtenttona “and Rade: ge can Se Deprevented hy W. T. R, RICHARDSON ‘NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1925- RENDALL MEMORIAL Pres. CHURCH, 1288 West 120th Sty Be tween Lenox aud Seventh avenues, Preaching every Sunday at 11 avn. During the month of August, Chris tian Endeavor vervice from 7 (0 8 pom. Rey, Jas. W. Manoney, pastor. BAPTIST MOUNT OLdyEt BAYTIAT CHURCH, Tel West bird. Bt, between 6th and ith Aves. Rev, Willlam P, Baye: BID Bisons" Preaching ” services every Sunday at iiam. and 7:0 fim. Sunday’ school at? pm, Sun Saya, “Communion services second Suhday Gp every month at, Fm, Di B, 6. inevte every Sunday at > Dm Bh Un Literary ngete Bitry Wedaesday at § pm, "The Seckiy jeaver, meeting on Friday Svening jut f orock. "Church. Ald Sociea® and Momiay. evening th avery menek. Dareag, Blssionasy Sosaty ects every tree. Tuewday 2 BsesNGES made welsom:. Pek Circle’ 902 AHTROPOLITAN WAPTINT CHURCH. Tate Se and Seventh Ave. Hey. We We prown, D.D.oPamor. | ‘Sunday Achoat 2240 man HY Ly Same church it :36 acm. METHODIST MOUNT CALYARY INDEPENDENT SEThopiaT Cuowen, iam” a Bru faneanmbe Ave. Rev, Oe 3M cogeie iaaton, Teajtence 203 Fagceeinte Aver ten! tad” 3368 Eofices "10; 40 a.m, and $50 ‘pam. EGruase, “Gunaaysschoct, 2:00 p.m: RErunt hob pin Sunday, Chetian Endeavor, bu pam. Chie meeting Foendey soo pie Prayer meeting Frida overing, "$00, pm, Holy Eimmuuga arse Bunany in ad front FM, eye, sexton, 141 W. Hist Be, ToTuER A. MB ZION CHURGAL SIAM ye Mau” ee eae Gy Brown, Ub, Pastor.” Parsonage. 108 RUN Be "Serieomelt wep aud Js pa.) Sunday. wchool 2 pam Jontor Badeavor.every. Friday after Beone'« orcleck. Pastor's office at the Betherhoods Hours: 30.10 3. Phone Aidubon ceds. “Seats free, All wel Some: SALEM METHODINT _RRISCOPAL Lilthoit Tite’ Stvenuy aves «Rew ee Culiens Pastor, reaching at 35a qin ida pre. Sundays Sun, aapathowl, Sad fe eGR? rare SMeetiar Sint ems Subic Chae “Soto's pee, Lyceum, 4 pom. Su gaye and” 330 “Thursdaya; Frank Johnson, Pres. “Epworth, 6G p.m. Sundays; | Thos. Morgan. T'res, eirred”' Mouday, “Puesday pane SUlGhchaas tights ana’ i pm. Sn aon METROPOLITAN A. M. B. CHURCH. Tee Wr etch St. wear Seventh Ave. Hev. KJ Htepinsom Pastor. Parson. are at Bigesonite Ate, Phone Rigocembe sees, sunday services: Brtaching i am. and. § pam. Sule Say schoot Lipa” Allen’ Learue €:0 eo Holy ‘eSmmuaton at ate Hest Bunuay eden month. Weleda ner Niece? clase mecting every Tuesday Behe. “Taiber ane’ price, meetinr BAOny might ‘Lage Friday nigh ‘Feiday night.” Lag ir ST, MARK'S METHODIST EPIACO- BAL CHURCH, Sird St. near Ligath Aya, New York City, “Vastor, Jono We 'ftahingon, D.D.. residence 235 W. Sard St "Preaching 11 a.m. and 7:48 Bm, Prayer. meetings Friday ove Ding at 6:30. and Bunlay morning at Geetclock,. Sunday rchoot at 2 bm. Lyceum Sunday ac 4 pm. Thursday cNening Ont, 8 Coclark. “Epworth Icongue sunday, a 630 pom, C-xgees Tuesday and Wednewdny evenings a Ste and Sunday. att bun. Holy Commanion xecond Sundny evening fn'each month, Welcome to al! RYN, MEMOBIAL AM. F. Z10¥ CHURCH. 8.00 W. T38in’ St” G. Mt Oliver, D'D.. Pastor; residence, 137 We Tist! Si, phone’ Audubon ‘37¢u, Sunday” xerviees: Holy commaauer gn fret Sunday, Vub.te worst, It am. ands juin. Sunday, rehon! 2 pm, “Sc. He. 6 wm, Cina meet- Ties of’ Tueedas! eWeniags.” Fnsturs Ofice hours at the church 11 to 1 Arwelcome to all. ADVENTISTS HARLEM tnd 5, D. A, CHURCH, 106- Tos We astth St. Hours of nervice: Erlany. 330 pom. braver mectine: Saturday, 8:20 am. itiole atady; SiO atin. Sabbath” schoo: "12:18 Aum, preaching; 8:00" pan. one Tiladionary; 4:00 pm, youre! people. Sunday, ¢2i0 p.m. special xddzeoses : Siu pm, preaching, Al. C. Strach: an, Banter, Stputtiye. SPIRITUALIST THE JAGHTROESE SPIRITUALIST MISSION SHALL SHINE. THE LIGHTHOUSE SPIRITUALIST MISBION, 44 W. ‘330th St. necond Door wert. conducted by tr. “and Mre, Got MeaNbter, will hold ser. Sices oh Sunday and Friday evenings from 8:30 untl 11. Messages will be given. All are welcome. stra, EA. Seduilster, Iastor. Oct. 29.48 REDEMPTION OF SOULS, Spiritual Ee Tcharce, Meetings every” nIgRE Messages and woot lectures, ETAW: MSS “Porter ASBumners uni Hite ht, dimmers, Dirretorn, Timea prIMITUAR CHURCH, Tor Wee dea eee api BENE te INS Who ars “Sekueered” abroad, peeing We ‘are ‘having. our forty Tee Shirteusl Pentecome meeting for poe ean Atents "Shes ot serees Yrom Tigo sam: to 130 pam, FSS FOF to aT" pom, Come Rear ‘the’ muted siixers. — You RES weltome, ‘Biwter “Wowie” PAL Btaxton, basor. Unity Practical Christianity, 2525 Seventh avenue. Sunday ser- vices 11 A. M. and 8 P.M, Classes every evening at 8-15, All are welcome. Jos. H. Johnaon, Lead- an—(Advt.). Feb.i1tt Mrs. M. BE. Coleman. Mootings Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday svenings, 2441 Seventh Ave. Apt. 1. cor, 42d St. seen by appoint- ment. Aud. 4438.—(Advt.) NOTICE. Dr. William oH, Jernssa en Rnounces to has given up his branch office In Brooklyn and is now located at his regular offve. i West i320 street, New York | City. (Adve) J rear tL - fica sien ca | SEE IIR Se sare ease aa Rpeter Sr ce ener S Li TEES On. Me WERDEGAR 2 E. 125TH ST. Cor. Sth AVE., Office Hours: 9 A. M. to 9 P.M. Sundays, 9 to 1 Phone: Harlem 7348 OBITUARY. GLOVER—James S. Glover, well: known und highly respected citl- zen of Greenwich, Conn, died ‘Tuesday, August 4, 1925.” Born in Virginia, he came to Green- wieh in 1991, where he had since lived. Leaves a wife, wo broth- crs, host of friends, |Funeral at Bethel A. M, E. Church, Friday, ‘August 7, “Interment In’ Putnam Cemetery. GODFREY—Isadore Le Roy; torm- erly of N.Y. C, but who for the Dast years has resided in Asbury Park, passed away after fow hours’ illness Saturday, Funeral will take piace Wed- nesday from David | Brown's Undertakers’ Establishment, Mother. : Mrs. Susie Godfrey Hots:::. McTOOTLE—Mrs. Cora DB. ile- Tootle of 219 W. 143rd stroet, New York, died at the home of her sister, Mrs. E, L. Hunt, Sun- day, Avgust 2, 1925, at 3:30 p,m. Funera! and burial at the family burying ground, August 3. Her hyband wax there to take charge of all the arrangements. G. L. MeTcc*ts. MEARS—Harry L. Mears, 2 recl- dent of New York for the past twenty years, passed away Au- gust 8, 1925, His funeral was held at Duncan Brothers, August 11, 1925, at 8 p. m. The deceased leaves @ mother, three sisters; brother, three aunts and: host ot friends tn each city to mourn thelr loss. His sister, Mrs, Nors Young, accompanied’ the bods home to Norfolk, Va. (Norfolk papers please copy.) WOOTEN—Mr. Thomas Wooten. member of Abyssinia Baptist Chureb, died at 6:40 2 m., Fri- day, August 7, 1925. Sleop on dear husband 2nJ take thy rest; God called you bome, as He knew dest. Although. we miss thy leving face, There is no one who cxa txke your place. Mrs. Gertrude Wooten, kis !2v- ing wife. Women’ Receive Legacie= After 8-VYear Search See ae eee INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. Aug, 10.— After a nation-wide seuren extend: ing over'a period of eight vears. Mrs. Lizzle Harrison Potter and Mrs. Mamle Harrison Cox were said to receive a legacy held in trust for them since 1904. Rendall Memorial's New Minister, Rendall Memorial Presbyterian Church, 122 West 129th street. hax called the Rev. James W. Manoney soe? Stee ‘Seabee: Confidential Advicc : _ — KS z z A pee ee FUTURE EVENTS CAST THEIR SHADOWS BEFORE Let Us Help You Solve Your Problems ef Life Knowledge is Power and — Enables Men to Be Masters. Ignorance compels men to be Slaves, Pey us a visit and get the benefit of our -nodern and up-to- date experience. We carry a complete ine of alt andi Motus Sea Magical Goode, Beate hentaustern for nt) ode Monde’ RBA ect Good “Tuck Heete Mortis and Roots, Talla: mane enaene, ate Send ae in_stampe or coin for athe, Wee heuding and Sompicre far et eirevlarse tSend blrte date) Uhhieresanee “ta ‘too ancreds oo folk nathing tne abuardesig be NEED. e a Astro-Phrenologic-: 210 W. 62nd STREET NEW YORK CITY ‘Col, 2823 A. N. Dept. pe - RES RES ty e E Rant aes " Ee ee Rea ee ios oh r’ aes i (hth ah 2 a | J. Du JAJA A Mohammedan Scientist ACL TREE BEng OBE LW hont beet Giaken TEETH that are GUARANTEED | FILLINGS, GOLD CROWNS, . 1 BRIDGEWORK OR PLATE : . GUARANTEED FOR 18 YEARS . TEETH Extracted "| FREE } it tt ‘ : Hurts This is my guarantees to those afraid to have teeth extracted. WIPE BAD TEETH OFF YOUR SLATE ‘DR. EDWARD ROSENTHAL SURGEON DENTIST wg 303 WEST 125TH ST. (Corner 8th Ave.) Fours 9 A.M, to 8, Me Sundays 9 A.M, to 1. M. X-mey Fxsmisation Free MEMORIAM, ATKINS—In memory of our dear mother and wife, Mrs, Mary At- kins,-who departed this life Au gust 10, 1922, Now the home ts vacant, has no charms for you; one dear form fy absent, mother, kind and true. Evermore she ‘dwells where pleasure never dies, Irene Ferdinand, Marie Nelson. Frank Atkin, Oscar Brathwaite, FELL—In memory of Mrs. Rolin Fell, who departed this life on August 13,.1924, My loving wife ts gone, but net forgotten. . Sleep on, my love, and take your Test. May God bless your soul, 't Fel’. FIELDS—In everlasting memory of my beloved daughter, Flor- once Edith Fields, who «fell asleep one year ago, August 7, 1924, Zeloved in lite, how cam you tr forgotton? There Is ane who ‘misses you sadly And grieves for you since sou went; ‘kore fs one who thinks of you daily, Dut tric’ to be brave and. ¢o- tent. Dut J shed my tears in silenc:. ‘With longing and regret; Yor you are my own to reme=i- her, dear, It everyone else forget, Sadly mised “by Mother and Crendmother. LANCASTER—In ‘sad and loving, mamory ef my “dear daughter, Dorothy M. Lancaster, who de- parted thin Mfe Anzust 11, 1924.| Ia_my heart memory Hngers, Swcotly tender: fond and trae: | Thero ts not a day, dear danzt- ter, ! ‘Phat T do not think of you By a devoted Mother, Father, snd Sister. MASON—In loving memory of my devoted tiusband, Benjamin C Mason, who departed this lite August 11, 1922. No one knows the silent heart: aches; Only those who love can tell. Of, the grief thet 1s borne i: silence Yer the one T loved so well, Loving Wife, Anv: N LOVING fenenbrance, of as| dear beloved husband and broth: er-indaw, who doparted this life August, 1916, and August, 1921. Gone, but not forgotten. T loved you both, but Jesus lorzd you bert, So He took you home with Him to rest, There ix till a vacant chatr in your home that will never be filled. Wife and sister-in-law, ANNA L. PREC. SAUNDERS—In fond memory of my dear husband, James 1. Saunders, who. died August 10. 1924.” Death's but a path that must be trod If man would ever pass to God. Belle Saunders, wife. 1M MEMORY of a loving father and husband who died August 9 1918, ‘A bitter grief. a shock revere. To part with one you love dear. What a wonderful memory you leave behind. Always loving, tender and kind, ‘Wite. Angeline Wade, and chil aren, WILLIAMS—In loving memory of my denr daughter. Meta, two years in God's safo keeping. Oh, Meta, dear, though time dries the tents, T love and long’ for your com- Panionahip through the years. Mether, Olivia F, Willams. Card of Thanks ‘We are greatly indebted to Mr. Robert Shepard, the efficient un- dertaker of Oxford, N. C.. for valu- vble service rendered at the burial af Mra. Cora B. McTootle. of 218 W. 1434 streot, Now York, at her home in Oxford, NX, C. It was one of the most imposing burials of the race. 7 Salem M. E. Church Rey. Richard M. Bolden, pastor of First Emanuel Church, another of the Ust of vacation ministers whom Rey. Cullen invited to serve ‘Salem in his absence, preached the Jmorniug sermon. In. bis own vis. crous style. Rev,- Bolden xought to Inspire confidence in the worship- pers by. showing to them the st Ipreme authority Christ possessed when He declared unto His diset- ples:” .“I.am:the Way, the Truth anil ‘the Life.” A fairly good-sized audience was present to hear Rev. George Brown, a local minister of Salem, impart’ the evening message. He preached on “The Christian War- rior,” as described by St. Paul in tls Jetter to Timothy, 4: 6-5, ‘Mrs. Pocahontas Coleman was soloist for the morning service and Prince Hammond sang in the evening. ‘While Rev. Cullen is awny, Rev. Joseph Hill, assistant to the pas- tor, is conducting the services and attending to: the ministerial work of the church. “Education” was the topic dle: nussed at the Lyceum at 4 o'clock. Ira_D."Reld of the Urban League wove some very important facts out of the statixtics of the U. S. Department, of Labor concerning working women and mothers of the Negro race. He showed tha Intimate relnt{on of the nroblom of working mothers to the problem af Necro health and child training, Myles Palge went over some of the questions. discussed at the re- cent Nyack Intercollegiate Confer: ence. : Rudolph Grant, the chorister. leaves town this week for a short vacation. Another old .and faithful mem- ber of Salem his just passed In the ‘death of Mrs, Lizzie Hrown. the wife of ‘Levi| Brown, hend ‘gene St. Mark’s M. E. Church ‘The pastor, Dr. John W. Robin: son, preached in tho uptown vhurah and Rev. R. A, Bolden, as- sistant pastor, delivered the mes- sage in’an able and forcefil man- ner inthe downtown church, In-the evening Holy Sacrament was adninietered and 365 persons “ommuned. 5 Last, Thursday evening the clos- ing exercives of the Vuacational School wero -held. in the new ‘nurch under the direction of Mrs. Mary Rosa. principal; Mrs. Mayme Breoks. Riley. ..Mrs... Coleman, ond Miss Marjorie Robinson, teachers. Mother Zion Church Rev. J. W. Brown, pastor, preached at 10:30 a, m. in the Ju- nfor Charch upon “The Chtid in the Midst of Them,” and at 11 a.m in the main aitditorium upon “Thr ‘ospel—the Power of God.” ‘The Senior Choir is on its vaca Hon,-They ‘sang at the. A. M.-F. Zion Church in Atlantic City. Dnr- ing thelr absence the Lyceum Thorel will furnish the music. Bishop F, A. Wallace attended the service. At the close of the serv: ive ten people united with the hureh. At 3:30 p. m., baptism and holy | Builder of Hats and Exclusive Gowns of All Kinds Dal ae te : se \ ° ad . eee | Res ie Cesta ee teen See ODESSA 2203 SEVENTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY | Tele Morningside 0636 ee Ee ’ If You Suffer | PROM AMY BLCOD DIGORDER, ULCERS, SKIN DISEASS, | STOMACH, HEART OR LIVER DISORDERS, KIDNEY OR ‘BLADDER TROUSLES, RHEUNATIOM, DO CALL ON ME YOU WILL HAVE THR BENEFIT OF MY FORTY YEARS XPERIENCE (16 IN LARQE HOSPITALS), MY PERSONAL ATTENTION AND MY SERVICES UNTIL CURED FOR, $10 THE MALL: FRE OF TEN DOLLARS SPECIAL AILMENTS CAREFULLY TREATER OFvice | MOURD 0 AM. TO 6:29 P.M; SUNDAY WAM. TOTP. a ANDREW EGAN, M.D 168 W. 23RD ST. NEAR 7TH AVE. eee S. M. HAFFANEY ! , ee cdeing an Anclent Mvstle of Sclence, this meiiicins| Le as prepare bya wellknown body of aceite ae aS FORT WARCOERT Cove REMEDY em. <I Yatunnle for coughs and colds and chronic broneht. SRD oc TL cecal roe ane a ne, ah Seay 3. | ; Oe ae 4 VORT HARCOUUT LINIMENT SSRRMEMGaREE |The bent on the market for rheumatiam, inflamma: | geome sare BME FEE vomng toon voter the mm | bs Py 8. M. HAFFANEY tr Weer wat STREET : 1 Saeeeoneco Bradherst $177 | communion were administered. The sermon was preached by the Rev. Conrad Thonias, Two adults and two difants were Daptived, anu about three hundred and itty per sons cominuned. ‘The sick: Moses. Judge. St. Luke's Hospital, Ward 2: Isadore Wil: iiams, 187 West 1430 street; Bessfe Wiggins, 19 West 334th "street; Elza Washington, 63 West 1334 street; Fannie Darbour, 101 West 448th street; Jutta Daley, 172 West With street; Priscilla Wynn, 17s West 137th street; Nathaniel’ Sea port, 315 Wost 134th street. RUSH MEMORIAL . CHURCH In the absence of the pastor, Rey, G. M. Oliver, the shure has teen left fn the care of Rey. i. Kbnor. At 10 oclock Rev. Kirnon opened the Junior Church. Phe text was selected from 119th Pealm, 163th verse: “Thy word is * Jamp.unto- my. feetya lght unto my pathway.” Ac 11 A. M, tie services were rontinned and Rey. Kirnon select- ed ‘his text*from St. Luke, 6:8, aud St. John, 21: 7: “The Faro of Faith.” The junior choir of 22 members seng. ‘The Sunday school was opened at 1i2¢°sy" the” suncrintendent, Mr. EC. Holman,..Mr, Holman, pre- sented the school with a silver cup, which wes won by them at the Union Sunday schoo! picnic at the Rice Stadium in Petham Bay Park, Theeeday, August 6, 1925 A‘ 4:50 the Christian Endeavor wes gnened: the aubtect for discus: sion Was, “Wholesome Play.” Following the Christian’ En- Apavor caine the evening services. ‘The-kermon was delivered by J. A. Matthews. Text, Second Samuel: 14.28: “The Folly of Wasted Op- portunity.”*, EXCLUDING the 60,000,000 or more dark inhabitants of India, the Negro race numbers about 160,000. For, best instruction in America —“NU-LIFE” Enjoy Life! Hiaaee enease penaere, ENERGY mamas CR oe ci ‘eau, [Guard Your Health Bo Bo Sure To Uce : a Bc anecmsccionmccue, CATARRH] "cress ef the | Ban Tha Dep A BLADDER] © "rotten ——— ae BOILS CLINIC SPECIAL NO. 10 » SQRWALE naue ce. OMIN CeO TABLETS IMPARTS You are axl VIGOR ™ Fe32 ee eeor | 666 Is a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria It kills the germs. WHITE AND COLORED MINISTERS. CONFER The Negro ministers of Greeny voro, N. C., were recently the in vited gusts of the white mintaters ata regular meeting of the Minis. terial Arsociation. The @Mrposet of the joint meeting were’ to eatan- Mish bettér understanding beuseen the two groups and to confor as to the possibilities of cooperntion in meueiing the religlens and civic needs of. the cemmualty. The meeting ia said to have been mu- tually helpful. DR. WILLIAMS AGAIN “HEADS ROYAL CIRCLE LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Aug, 10— At the second day's session of the Supreme Royal Circte of Friends of the World. In convention at the Nethel A. M. KE. Church here, Dr. R A. Willfsinr was re-slected supreme resident by acclamation. wu ces OMIN, ‘ARE WEAK see INFUSES iFFER FROM Seaee STRENGTH SICK MEN AND WOMEN wolf You need tke services of » ‘00% doctor,.go to the one who does the most good. For the pust 26 years I have cured thou- sands ‘of sick men and women, and if your sickness is curable 1 will give you immediate relief, and satisfactory results, fir a smalier fee than many + ther Specialists, No matter what doctors or specialists you have visited, or what treatments you have taken, if you did not Bet relief, call to see me and | will convince you that I am a Specialist who thoroughly under- stands your allment, { 1 use the best Electrical and ‘Medical ‘treatments, and when | Beceerer? the Intravenous In- jections, Including the imported (606) for curing Impure blood. 1 treat: Lost Power, weak nerves, all stomach troubfes, pain in the back, rheumatism, Impure blood, pimples, eczema. “sore throat, swollen glands, akin diseases, bladder and kidney troubles and other curable diseases. Don't delay. Call at once, Fluoroscope X-Ray exam. inationa Consultations Absolutely Free. DR. FALK, Specialist 58 W. S18T ST.. NEW YORK | Between 5th and 6th Avenues Office Hours from 11 A. M, to 7 P.M. Daily. Sundays and Holi- days, from ‘1 A. M, to 1 P.M. MIN-NE-TON-KA Liver, Kidneys, Stomach, indigestion and Constipation ASK YOUR NEAREST DRUGGIST or write 158 E, 49th St. N.Y. : Jersey City Notes Popular Matron Dies. She less than one week in the bromer Sanitarium. New York city, death came last Tuesday morning to Mrs. Alice Theresa sower Ross, of this city, who was at 851, Orient avenue. She was a member of one of the most prominent families in the city, be- come one of the daughters of John Sawyer of Saugerties, N. Y., and Carrie Webster Souser, now de- ceased. About two years ago she married Leon Cooper Ross, former- ly of Brooklyn, N. Y., both of whom were employed in the U. S. Post Office. During the war period Mrs. Ross was very active in the Unity Council and other war work. She leaves two sisters, Mrs. Mamie Bellott and Mrs. Rachel Stevens, and two brothers, Robert and Hary She was a member of the La- salle Presbyterian Church, from which the funeral services were held last Thursday afternoon, Rev A. A Byrd, pastor, officiated. So- were rendered by Miss Lillian Brown, soprano, and Mrs. Genevieve Holmes. The church choir sang. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Bookknight and Mrs. M. Walker and daughter Sweenynullian of Brooklyn and Miss Luna Wetters of Charleston, S. C. were guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Hoffman, of this city, last week. Progressive Temple No. 98, I. B. P. O. Elks of World, held its first pious last Thursday afternoon and evening, and a large crowd attended each period. Maxie McClain and James L. Merritt will give a grand summer nights festival at the beautiful new Bayonne Casino at Bergen Point, on the Kill Von Kull River, Thursday evening. August 20. Many members from Progressive Lodge, with their families, will be leaving for Richmond, Va., where they will participate in the Grand Lodge Convention of the Elks of the World. Delegates are Richard Johnson, Louis Faulkner and Alderwyn S. Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Smith, formerly of 337 Claremont avenue, gave moved to their new residence, 9 Virginia avenue, where they will be at home to their many friends. Miss Ida Waldron of 61 Jewett avenue gave a party in honor of her birthday last Tuesday. The band of Progressive Lodge will open a carnival on the grounds of the Elsa' home, Ocean avenue and Virginia avenue, this week. Roy J. C. Branham of 43 Oak street is reported quite ill at his home. Mr. William Moore of Kearney avenue is confined at the City Hospital. Asbury Park A pageant. "The Queen's Con- test was given by club commit- tees for the rally fund of the St Stephen's A. M. E. Zion Church. Rev Chas. Walker, Myrtle ave- nue pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church, Manasquan, is again in the Mommouth Memorial Hospital in Long Branch. No improvement is reported in the condition of Dr. J. P. Sampson, Jr. who has gone to the country for the benefit of his health. Mrs. Fannie Payne, who was meant while visiting friends at the store, returned to her home on Wednesday, accompanied by her daughter. Her condition remains the same. Mrs. Mary Early was called to the death bed of her nephew, Ed- wain O. Oliver, of Providence. Mrs. H. J. Oliver and son, Hud- lin of New York City; Mrs. Ebruia Oliver, Providence; Mrs. Emma Dickerson, Baltimore, are working friends. Mr. and Mrs. Leon R. Thomas and baby Evelyn are spending the vacations here as guests of Mrs. L. Gardner. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Johnson, At- sia avenue, have returned from Lavenderville, N. Y., where they spend two months in the mount- ain. Mr. H. Burgess, of Springwood avenue, who suffered a fall a few weeks ago, has sufficiently recovered to be up and out again. Mr. John Richardson, Borden avenue, who has confined to his bed for some time, is reported somewhat improved. Mr. and Mrs. Steward Jones, of Avenue A. are entertaining their mother from New York City. Mrs. B Barbour is entertaining his son and daughter from New york over the week-end. Mr. Leroy Godfry, bellman at Coleman House, died at Mon- mouth Hospital August 8. Victimist Going on Tour. Count Giacomo Quintana, violin singer and teacher, of 1228 Madi- gan avenue, is going on a tour of the United States. News Briefs From Nearby Cities and Towns South is Providing Larger Number of Negro High Schools Orange. Mountain Boy's Glee Club. Under the direction of Mrs. Clarke and Prof. Edwards, a midsummer musical was presented at Mt. Sinia Baptist Church, 14th street, Newark, Wednesday evening. The whole affair reflected credit upon the promoters and the boy participants. The speakers of the evening were the Rev. S. H. Fitzgerald and James H. Anderson, of The Amsterdam News. Among the youths contributing to the program were Lawrence Franks, Reginald Hughes, William Bailey, Gordon, Russell Hughes, Walter Crocker, Kenneth Bailey, Louis Jones, Gradle Jones, James Stewart Mrs. Alice Enslow, of Boston, Mass.; Mrs. Lotte McNair, of Philadelphia, and Adolphus Turner were guests of Mrs. L. E. Johnson, of 231 New street, Sunday. M. Colson Woody buried John Sumier, 33 of 56 Collins street, at Bloomfield Cemetery Thursday afternoon. The deceased was a member of V. F. W.'s and had been long a resident of Orange, Rev. R. C. Pulley conducted the religious ceremony. Pall bearers were Gene Scott, Phil Goode and William Pick Oliver. Waverly Scott has recovered sufficiently to return to his residence, 33 S. Center street. Benny L. Hicks, of 249 W., 1333 street, New York, was a recent visitor in Orange. Mrs. George N. White and daughter, 193 Central place, left the city during the week for an extended visit to Roanoke. Prospect and other points in Virginia for a month's stay. Miss White is secretary and organist of the Sunday School of St. Paul's A. M. E. Church. Through the efforts of churches, traternal, civic and private individuals, the old folks of thi. city received their annual summer's treat. by way of an auto ride and dinner. at Potter's Crossroad on Wednesday of last week. The congregation of Ehenezee Baptist, Church, of which Rev. W. T Watkins is pastor, together with Sunday School, held their annual outing Thursday, August 6. Mo. motor trucks conveyed the merry party to and from their destination. Fortunately the weather proved satisfactory. William Lee, of 110 Parrow street, and Miss Lulu White, a resident of the same street, were married Friday evening in the par By WM. ANTHONY AERY. HAMPTON, Va., Aug. 11.-Through well-organized summer schools, colleges and county training schools the number of colored teachers is being rapidly increased according to Caldwell of Hartford. Ky. field director of the Jeanes and Slater Boards, who shares recently to the Hampton Instate summer school. Mr. Caldwell well described the work which is being done to train colored teachers in seventeen southern states including Missouri and West Virginia. "The southern states," he said, "are building high schools for colored boys and girls faster than they can train high school teachers. The movement for colored high schools is new. Up to six or seven years ago there was the general feeling that a school doing pretty well if provided elementary education for colored children. High schools ago there were more than colored high schools in the southern states; this year there are over 300. Texas has 234 colored high schools. There is not nearly a large enough supply of trained men and women for the Negro high schools." Last spring Mr. Caldwell made a WHITE STUDENTS CHEER FOR FAIR PLAY No address delivered at the recent Y. M. C. A. Student Conference at Blue Ridge, N. C. made a deeper or more favorable impression than that of Mrs. Mary McLead Bethune, president of the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs and of Daytona-Cookman Institute. Addressing hundreds of white students from Southern colleges, Mrs. Bethune made a powerful plea for better understanding and fair dealing between the races, declaring that the people of her race are not special and but only the rights and opportunities to which every American citizen is entitled—the right of life, liberty, protection education; the right to develop and achieve. "In assuring for these rights," said Mrs. Bethune, "the Nesro is not trying to be white. He only wants a fair chance in the race of life, that he may be his own best." The address was received with prolonged applause; many of the students crowded forward to express their appreciation of the address, spoke of it in the highest terms. NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1925 BY CURTIES RUTH. Hemsley Winfield, with his Little Treate Group, made their first appearance before the Yonkers public on Tuesday evening, August 4, at the Women's Institute, in four one-act plays. "Neighbors," by Zona Gale, scene of country life, was well presented by the players. "The Candle," by Edmund J. Kennedy, a tragedy, was effectively presented by Miss Ida J. Butler. A very melodious interpretation of music was given by Miss Marion Lee. "The Florist," by Winifred Hawkridge, a typical story of a Jew in business, was very interesting, being applicable to the present day. The last act. "Beyond," by Eugene O'Neill, was characterized by Miss Rush May Smyer, whose very soul was wrapped in the spirit of the play, in which a dead soul returned to life, only to find it had been entirely forgotten. A number of young folks assembled at the home of Miss Clara Norfleet, in Lincoln parkway, to celebrate her birthday last Monday. Among those present were: The Misses Eloise Senior of Wellington, N. C.; Doris Seay, Eleanor Carter, Evangeline Norfleet, Thelma Scott, Nellie Hunter, Sarah and Elizabeth Norfleet, little Minkle Norfleet and mother, and Messrs. Ray G. Yeats of Suffolk, V.; Clarence Jones, Kenneth Williams, John Hunter, Prescott Lucas, Luther Garrison, George Davidson, Harry Carter, George Spenale, Crombie and Curties Ruth. A goodly number attended the first annual excursion of Pallisde Lodge 229. I. B. P. O. E. of W., to Keansburg, N. J. on the "Pocahontas," August 6. A Who's Who Frolic was given on August 5 at the home of Mrs. Parson. Miss L. Wilkins of 112 Waverly stroll is home recuperating after a very serious operation in St. Joseph's Hospital. Miss Edna Chambers and Mrs. Cora Chambers left Saturday for Virginia, where they will spend two weeks visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Showery, Jr., of Mamaroneck and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hill of Larchmont were the guests of Mrs. S. J. Ruth Sunday to dinner. Miss Marie Ramusen of New York City is spending two weeks with Mrs. Eva Smith of Nepperhan, Yonkers. Mrs. John Jackson, Mrs. Towns and brother, Mr. Ambrose James, left on Wednesday for Petersburg, Va. to bury their father, Mr. Ambrose James, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. George Newsome of 30 living place last Monday for Niacara Falls and other points of interest, where they will remain two weeks. Mrs. E Fields of Montclair, N. L. was the guest of Mrs. Preston Banks of 369 Prescott street over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Davidson of 122 Woodworth avenue had as guests over the week-end Mr. and Mrs. William Davidson of Charlotte, N. C. Misses Rosetta and Marle Davidson have returned from their two weeks' vacation at Camp Elwesar, at Towers, N. Y. NEW LONDON. CONN. The Northeastern Federation of Colored Women's Clubs closed their 59th annual session at Stamford, Conn. Among those present were: Mrs. G. S. Williams of Savannah, Ga.; Mrs. Rebecca Styles Taylor of Savannah, Ga.; Mrs. S. Lscomb, secretary of the Southeastern Federation; Mrs. Addie Hunton of New York; Mrs. Elia Wallace, wife of Bishop Wallace of the A. M. E. Zion Church. The medal which is usually given to the club which does the most outstanding work was won by the Pastor's Aid Society of New London, Conn., who entertains the convention next year. Mrs. Eliza Beth Jeter Greene was re-elected publicity agent for the Federation. Mr. Andrew Patterson is indisposed at his residence, 43 Belden street. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson and family THE APEX PARK CLEAR LOOK FOR THE APEX TRIANGLE 851 No. 13th Street Philadelphia THE SQUARE AT 13TH STREET THE APEX PARK CLEAR THE APEX PARK CLEAR enage of St. John's M. E. Church by Pastor E. O. Parker. The bride is well known in Orange. The groom is a native of Atlanta, Ga. Mrs. Effie Friend entertained her father, Taylor Jones, and a number of friends at her residence, 12 Tuxedo place, Vaux hall. Among the guests were Walter Thomas, Miss Annie Lewis, Alberta Walker, Mrs. Stransbey, James H. Anderson and others. Jacob Fratm has been confined to his residence, 200 South street, for several days on account of illness. Arthur Willham, 196 South street, who was in an accident, is reported improving. Mrs. Alice Choriah, of 121 Parrow street, died suddenly in the Orange Memorial Hospital. Funeral services were held Monday from her late residence, with Rev. R. J. Strother, of the Congregational Church, officiating. Nine persons were admitted to membership in Ultra Lodge of Elks Saturday evening, and for the first time in the history of the lodge a minister was admitted, Rev. R. J. Strother, pastor of the Congregational Church. Motor guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Johnson, 200 Ogden street, during the week-end from Germantown. Ph. were Monroe McCord, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gavatt, Mrs. Alex Gavatt and Alex, Jr. "Cap" Allen and his Wilmington Potomacs engaged the Orange baseball team at the play grounds Sunday afternoon in a doubleheader. The first game was taken by the Potomacs. 9-6. Second by Orange. 6-5. LASTER COTTAGE Dr. Rocce Buckner, Newark, N. J., entertained a party of four at dinner Monday. Guests registered: Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. Armand, New York City; Mrs. Amanda Kemp, Mrs. Henry P. Masa, Miss Katharina Mars, and Mrs. E. G. Younger, all of Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mr. John Gunn, Detroit, Mich.; Dr. and Mrs. Chas. A. Butler, New York City; Mr. James Merrill, St. Joseph, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas, Philadelphia, Pa.; Mr. Taylor Polard, Mendowbrook, Va.; Mr. Roy Warren, Detroit, Mich.; Mr. Luther Whitted, Summit, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. Gro. Lyle, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Rodgers, Mrs. G. King, P. E. Shafer, all of Philadelphia, Pa. tour of inspection of the work which is being done for Negroes on the collegiate level. He found that a great deal of work was being done in many parts of the country, north as well as south west as well as east. Mr. Calhoun paid warm tributes to the fine work which is being done by 237 Jeanes teachers, who are rather uniformly distributed throughout the South Virginia has 57, North Carolina, 41; South Carolina, 31; Louisiana and Alabama, 29 each. Georgia, 24, and Tennessee, 23. The Jeanes teachers carry sound ideas of education to the people and help to raise: by slow, steady stages, the levels of community life and to bring about better understanding and co-operation between the races. "Teachers who attend summer school should have the opportunity" said Mr. Caldwell, "of being furnished with such lessons as will be guides to them in their future work and of hearing lessons taught by teachers with the easy voice of conversation." GALVESTON BUILDS $200,000 HIGH SCHOOL Galveston, Tex. has just taken a long step toward the education of its colored constituency by the erection of a splendid new high school. The building was erected at a cost of over $200,000, and is one of the best colored schools in the South. Started in a log cabin in the ninies, the Galveston Colored High now has an enrollment of nearly five hundred. AGED MAN IS SHOT TO DEATH NEAR HOME WARREN. Ark., Aug. 14. — Joe Dyrd, aged 60, was found Wednesday morning near his home shot through the heart. Neighbors heard a shot at about 4 o'clock that morning and it is believed that he was killed at that time. His brother-in-law, Everett Colbert, has been arrested on suspicion and is in jail. Byrd had worked for the Bradley Lumber Company for several years. DROPS DEAD AT WORK (Preston News Service.) PITTSEURGH. Pa., Aug. 10. — George P. Penn, aged 57, of 2621 Webster avenue, a laborer in the south side works of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation, dropped dead at his work Friday at 11.45 a.m. New York Making Elaborate Plans to Entertain Order of St. Luke The two busiest places throughout the entire Saint Luke jurisdiction are New York City and Richmond. The New York group of the Saint Luke Order are feverishly working to make the approaching biennial convention the best in the history of Saint Luke. The home office-force in Richmond is working with no less-zeal to complete all reports, get everything in shippap, and capture Col Knickerbocker's stronghold on August 16. The program for the week, arranged by the New York District Executive Committees, is without a doubt one of the best that could be arranged for the convention of a fraternal organization. The many social features on the program add spice and variety to the visit of the delegates to New York. The hosts to the convention have spared no pain in preparing for the reception and entertainment of the delegations on a large scale. It is expected that about two thousand delegates will be in New York during the week, in addition to the hundreds of friends who will accompany the delegations there to share in the entertainment prepared for the convention attendants. It is expected that the first meeting on Monday of the Matrons will be largely attended and most interesting, as much creditable work has been done in the Juvenile Department within the last two years and splendid reports are anxiously awaited. As usual interest centers around the annual address of Right Worthy Grand Matron Mrs. Maggie L. Walker. The first day will close with a pageant at the famous Manhattan Casino, to which all of the Matrons and their friends are invited. The meetings of the Adult Department get underway on Tuesday morning, beginning with a mass meeting at the Salem M. E. Church, at which place all of the sessions will be held. The annual sermon will be delivered by the Rev. Mr. Wm. P. Hayes, pastor of Mount Olivet Baptist Church. Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock will mark the beginning of the business sessions of the Adult Department, at which time the welcome address will be delivered by Hon. John F. Hylan, mayor of New York City, after which the annual address of the R. W. Grand Chief, Jas. H. of Springfield, Mass., motored to New London Sunday and were the dinner guests of his brother, Mr. William Thomas of 38 Hill street. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Connover are entertaining Mr. Connover's moths or at their home. The thirty-third anniversary of St. Paul's A. M. E. Church, Rev. L. Walter De Shields, pastor, was ob- served last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Brown and daughter, Miss Jessie, of Sharples, W. V., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Smoot last week-end. Archer Smoot is very ill and has been for several weeks. Frank Smoot one of the oldest citizens here, died last Tuesday. Rev. C. H. Black, pastor of the baptist Church, spent the week in visiting his friends here. Mrs. M. B. Price is improving after a long illness. STAIN SIDE FARM house. 13 rooms, open for week-end auto by the week. Special dinner, plenty milk, garden vegetables, shade trees, spring water, up-to-date. 2,000 feet above sea level. Two N. Y., on Erie Railroad. Plenty of sports. Eight miles from the city of Middletown. BURNER, OTISVILLE, N. Y., P. O. BOX 207 MOUNTAIN Colored boarding house. 13 parties and board by the wee chickens and eggs. Garden vege Everything clean and up-to-date. miles from Otisville. N. Y. on fishing and bathing. Eight mll. N. Y. Write for terms. MRS. HERBERT GARNER, OT MOUNTAIN SIDE FARM Colored boarding house. 13 rooms. open for week-end auto parties and board by the week. Special dinner. plenty milk. chickens and eggs. Garden vegetables, shade trees, spring water. Everything clean and up-to-date. 2,000 feet above sea level. Two miles from Otisville. N. Y. on Erie Railroad. Plenty of sports, fishing and bathing. Eight miles from the city of Middletown. N. Y. Write for terms. MRS. HERBERT GARNER, OTISVILLE, N. Y., P. O. BOX 207 "On the Beautiful Hudson" We are catering to a few refined guests—those that are seeking health, comfort, and the measure of eating the fresh products of the farm. Homelike Accommodation Rates Low MRS. L. CARSON, R. 4. Box 106, Sangeries, N. Y. INN Telephone Bells Harbor 4124. All improvements furnished rooms by day, week or season. Meals served. Mgr. 229 BEACH 77th ST., ARYERNE, N. Y. Saugerties, N. Y. For further details write MRS. L. CA THE ALBERTHA INN Teleg menta George W. Stovall, Jr., Mgr. 229 Open to summer guests. $2.00 per day. Fresh milk, milk, milk, milk, milk, milk, milk, milk, grouse meat. Write for reservations. West View Cottage EATONTOWN, N. J. R. F. D. Box 127 Mrs. Della Weaver, Prop. THE ARDMORE OPENS JULY FOURTH Mrs. M. Lacey Moore, Prop. ENGLISH HOUSE 144 North St., Catkill, N.Y. Grand view of the Catskill Mountains Light and fire poems Good Board Reasonable rates Always open Write for particulars MADISON, W. VA. SAUGERTIES FARM Blunt, will be given and the twenty-seventh annual report of the R. W. G. Secretary-Treasurer heard. A public meeting will be held on Tuesday evening at 8 P. M. An interesting program has been arranged for the occasion. A feature of the program will be the presentation of a "Gold Key" to the city of New York by Alderman John W. Smith. Musical numbers and short addresses will complete the program. In addition to the response to addresses of welcome. The response will be made by Attorney J. Thomas Hewin of Richmond. Mr. Hewin is an interesting figure in his profession and his response is being looked forward to with pleasant anticipation. The remainder of the sessions will be devoted to routine business and reports, being interspersed with several social events at the Manhattan Casino on Wednesday evening and a sail up the picturesque Hudson on Friday afternoon. The sessions will close with a final meeting of the Trustee Board on Friday morning at the Saint Luke office-building which has been recently completed.—(St. Luke's Herald). PRISONER SAVED FROM MOB BY TENN. SHERIFF Another sheriff has distinguished himself by saving a prisoner from a threatening mob. This time it is Sheriff Cromer of Marshall County, Tennessee, who, with a colored min accused of burglary and murder, won a long-distance cross-county race to Nashville and safely committed his prisoner to jail. He was-hotly-pursued by a score of automobiles—and had to change the car in which he started for a faster machine in order to make his getaway. It is-notable that the number of prisoners saved from threatening mobs nowadays is two or three times as great as the number of mob victims. FUND FOR MITCHELLS MOUNTS TO $95.75 PITTISBURGH, Pa., Aug. 10.—Surpassing early expectations, the fund for the widow of the Mitchell brothers, who gave their lives while attempting to rescue a white man from drowning in the Monongahela-River, July 27, amounted to $507.65 early last Friday. Contributions should be sent to Miss Hazel Deeley, Room 400, P. & L. E. Depot, Pittsburgh, who is arranging for the distribution of funds to the families of the two brothers as soon as that is feasible. INSTANTLY KILLED BY CHARGED PIPE HIGH POINT, Aug. 10.-Milton Hawwood, 40, was electrocuted here Wednesday morning when he grasped a charged pipe over an oven in the bakery, in which he worked. An investigation is being made why the current was passing through the pipe. NOW that our doctors and takers have formed state and national organizations, it's time for the mourners to do a little organization work. Hot oil treatment, free—"NU LIFE" Open the entire year round, Newly renovated with im- provements. Accommodations at the hotel per week; by email $30.00/Week end guests and auto parties a specialty. 15:16 MATTISON AVE. BURSY PARK, K. Home-like Surroundings Nice. Cheerful. Rooms HOTEL THE MUSEUM OF THE ARTS Service—Subway and Surface Carrier ED. H. WILSON, Prop. Phone Harlem 3593 Hotel Press 19-21 West 135th St. Euro No Private D Receipt Mrs. Annle Pro Everybody Wants the Best. THE PIE Wholesale at C. Lambright, N. Cooper, L. Epps, Pro Social Center Rest Dining Room 211 W. 125th St. N. T. C. Neatly P Measured Dinner Dial Radio Re SUMMER HOTELS Bell Phonet Orest THE HOME OF THE THE BALTIMORE 1436-38-40 LOMBARD ST. ALL THE COMFORTS OF HOT AMERICAN AND EU European and American Plan Neatly Furnished Rooms. Private Dining Room and Parlors for Receptions at Popular Prices Mrs. Annie L. Press Prop. W. J. Brown Mgr. THE PIE SHOPPE The only one in Greater New York Wholesale and Retail L. Epps. Props. Phone Edgecombe 9499 Best Neatly Furnished Rooms by Day or Week. Week served daily 4 am. to 12 pm. Regular Dinner 4 pm. to 9 pm. Table Board. Radio Returns. Music. T. R. Hall. Prop. HOTELS AND RESORTS Phonet: Oregon 10017 HOME OF TOURISTS BALTIMORE HOUSE MBARD ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA. PORTS OF HOME AN AND EUROPEAN PLANS MRS. L. J. WATERS, Prop. The House of Contentment and Good Cheer One of the Most Delightful Spots in the Berkshire Hills Good Cooking, Reasonable Rates, Excellent Train Service, Dancing, Radio and Other Sports Send for Booklet EDGAR F. M. WILLOUGHBY, Prop. Phone Harlem 3593 Hotel Press 19-21 West 135th St. European and American Plan Nearly Furnished Rooms. Private Dining Room and Parlors for Receptions at Popular Prices Mrs. Annie L. Press Prop. W. J. Brown Mgr. Everybody Wants the Best. THE PIE SHOPPE The only one in Greater New York Wholesale and Retail C. Lambright, N. Cooper, L. Epps, Props. Phone Edgecombe 8499 Social Center Rest Dining Room 211 W. 127th St. N. T. C. Nearly Furnished Rooms by Day or Week. Meals served daily 6 a.m. to 12 p.m. Regular Dinner 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Table Board. Radio Returns. Music. T. R. Hall, Prop. SUMMER HOTELS AND RESORTS Bell Phone: Oregon 10017 THE HOME OF TOURISTS THE BALTIMORE HOUSE 1436-38-40 LOMBARD ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA. ALL THE COMFORTS OF HOME AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLANS MRS. L. J. WATERS, Prop. Up-to-date accommodations. Prices mod- ual to $100. R. Atlantic Ave. P.O. Box 4091 7 to 10 P. M. D. E. Smith and E. Wili- mans. Props. F RUTH F A R E D M IDEAL FOR REST, porch. Hate $15 per BALDWIN PERRY, mar. N. J., or 100 Shark River Station, N. J., on Shark R I. FOR REST. Electric light, bath, screened Hate $13 per week. $3 per day. NAOMI WIN PERRY. Prop R. D. No. 1, Box 110, Bel- N J., or 100 W. 139th St. Apr. 20, Aud. 2070. J., on Shark River Rd., of Central R. R. of N. J. F R E U T H IDEAL FOR REST. Electric light, bath, screened RED parch. Hate it per week. 13 per day. NAOMI FA M parch. Hate it per week. D, E, W, N, O, N, O, mar. N, J, or 100 W. 15th St. Apt. 20. Aud. 2070. Shark River Station, N. J., on Shark River Rd. of Central R. N. of X. J. SWIFTWATER MT. POCONO, PA. Proprietress: Bessie Jaffa City Address: 22 N. 37th St. In Philadelphia Unt. SHADY LAWN FARM Pine Brook, Eatontown NEW JERSEY Do You Want to Know the Number? Try This! It is 248 Columbus Ave. Asbury Park, N. J. R. F. D. No. 1 lies, picnics, excursions and all o Asbury Park until you saw the Cl Beautiful Spot in MOUNTAINS City conveniences and country comforts. Beautiful walks, horseback riding, tennis, excellent table. RATES. $15.00 PER WEEK N. 37th St. W. Phila. Preston 5215 W Philadelphia Until June 1. 1925 An exclusive place in beautiful pine section of New Jersey, with large, airy rooms, open all year. A la carte service for motorists. H. G. Jeter, Jr., Manager. The Old Fashioned Cef Country Home is a real lucky place to spend your vacation and is now offering real joys and comforts to the traveling public. Those seeking rest, sport, work or any of life's enjoyments will find all conveniences at the Cef Country Home. Phone 2404 M. Wm. H. Turpin. Corky Williams, Props. Welcome to auto partns and all organizations. You didn't see you saw the Cef Country Home. SWIFTWATER MT. POCONO, PA. Proprietress: Bessie Jaffa Beautiful Spot in MOUNTAINS City conveniences and country comforts. Beautiful walks, horseback riding, tennis, excellent table. RATES, $15.00 PER WEEK City Address: 22 N. 37th St. W. Phila. Preston 5215 W In Philadelphia Until June 1, 1925 did not patrol parks, picnics, excursions and all organizations. You didn't see Asbury Park until you saw the Clet Country Home. Are you wondering where to send Cliffwood, N. J. Mrs. M. E. Johnson, Prop. where to send your girl this summer! We have prepared a beautiful place for Ginger Peltis. It states reasonable Write Box 97. Cliffwood, N. J. MRS. M. E. JOHNSON Are you wondering where to send your girl this summer? Cliffwood, N. J. We have prepared a beautiful place for the Fruits and the Rates reasonable Write Box 5. Cliffwood Mrs. M. E. Johnson, Prop. MRS. M. E. JOHNSON Beautifully located in the Borkshire Hills. Altitude 1,100 feet above sea level. Near and county Pembroke, exquisite architecture and fine art. Many provenances. Successful lawns, with pension and tennis court. Interesting hikes, fishing, boating and other sports. Home cooking. Farms and clubs entertained. For further information address Mrs A. J. Currin, Brewster, N. Y. R. a Phone Drewster 181-F8. Open for Boarders. Good Table Board Fifteen minutes walk to post office. Write all letters. Samuel Sears, Leeds, Greene County, N. Y. SUNSET INN GREAT BARRINGTON MASS. Now Open The Neptune Hotel ROCKAWAY BEACH, L. 121 BEACH 53th N1. THE HILL HOTEL 1111 MATTISON AVENUE ASBURY PARK, N. J. The Forrester House 110 CONGRESS ST. SARATOGA SPA, N. Y. Now Open SHOWCALE FARM HOUSE and COTTAGES BREWER, N. Y. Portic Mountain View House OLGA New York City 695 Lenox Ave., Cor. 145th Street SELECT FAMILY AND TOURIST HOTEL Running Hot and Cold Water in Each Room. All Rooms Outside Exposure at Door. Rates Reasonable. Tel. Audubon 3796 Clean and up-to-date rooms. All commissions $1,00 per sweep and cleaning. $4,00 per out-of-town guest for out-of-town and week-end guests. MRS. C. L. HILL, Prop. Furnished rooms by day or week, single or en suite; all outside rooms; 3 minutes walk to R. R. trolley station, parks and mineral springs. Hot and cold mineral baths. Enclose stamp for rates. ```markdown ``` L. FORRESTER, Proprietress Phone 1016-W Beauty It's Made in Our Shop! Shampooing (all kinds) Scalp Treatments for Dandruff, Tetter, Eczema, Falling Hair, Etc. Hair Bobbing, Pressing, Singing, Dressing, Etc. Eye Brow Arching, Dyeing, Etc. Here in an atmosphere of quite, cleanliness and utter refinement, our experts will willingly serve you in all the beauty Culture. Madam C. J. Walker's System Taught "The Trade of No Regrets" DAM C.J.WALK West 136th St Bradh cientific ye Exa R. D. M C.J.WALKER BEAUTY S West 136th St., New York, Bradhurst 0678 Scientific Proceed e Examinat By R. D. KAPLA 110 West 136th St., New York, N. Y. Bradhurst 0678 Scientific Procedure A OPTOMETRIST 531 LENOX AVENUE Reliable and Reasonable 906 12 Years MODERATE FEES CONVENIENT PAYMENTS 12 Years MODERATE FEES CONVENIENT PAYMENTS Doctor a tooth out than always aching EXODONTIA DEPT. EXTRACTIONS MINOR ORAL OPERATIONS MODERATE FEES CONVENIENT PAYMENTS Teeth for the Toothless PROSTHETIC DEPT. SUCTION DENTURE PLANTS BRIDGEWORK REPLACEMENTS FREE EXAMINATION NE at 125th Street and Lenox Ave. NY City The Complete Office of Dental Services EACH DENTIST GIVING SPECIAL ATTENTION TO THE BRANCH OF DENTISTRY IN WHICH HE IS MOST EXPERIENCED—ALL CO-OPERATING HARMONIOUSLY A scraped tooth injures the neighbors OPERATIVE DEPT FILLINGS - INLANDS FRACTURES RESTORATIONS OFFICE HOURS DAILY 9 AM to 7 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS OPEN MONDAY and WEDNESDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 8 P.M. Hidden Enemies X-RAY DEPT. ROENTGEN RAY DIAGNOSIS Est. 1906 Skin Treatments for Crowsfeet, Wrinkles, Pimples, Blackheads, Etc. Complexion Beautifying Manicuring BEAUTY SHOPP New York, N. Y. 0678 Procedure mination APLAN 12 Years in Harlem RATE S NENT NTS Teeth for the Toothless PROSTHETIC DEF NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1925 Elmsford Elects Negro Treas of School Board Over White Woman Chester A. Wilson Led Fight Against Use of Rubber Hose to Whip Children ELMSFORD, N. Y., Aug. 10.—Chester A. Wilson, prominent in political and civic affairs, has been elected to the office of treasurer of the school board. In spite of the plans of a few white people to hold an indignation meeting as a protest to his election, he has been assured by the entire Negro population and a large number of whites of their support. Mr. Wilson became the leader of his district last Summer, when he led a fight against the School Board for sanctioning the using of rubber by teachers to whip children. The fight began when a Dr. Polk's Dental Talks No.7 CLEANLINESS Grave danger lurks in unclean instruments and other equipment. In order to safeguard our patients, all of our equipment, from Cups for expectoration to instruments with which we do our work, are kept scrupulously cleaned and thoroughly disinfected. Here everything in sight is in a sanitary condition. Because promoting CLEANLINESS is our most important work. DR. HECTOR POLK Surgeon Dentist 488 LENOX AVE. Bet. 134th & 135th Sts. Phone Harlem 2333 For Men! 4 Genuine Broadcloth Shirts. Novelty Plisds with Collars to Match; or Plain Colors. all sizes; Value $10.00. ALL FOR Call or Write for Ful- BUY-RITE SALES C 174 WEST 135th STREET. Agents Wanted—Earn $10-Si- Experience not n SICK MEN Call or Write for Full Information. BUY-RITE SALES CORPORATION 174 WEST 135TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY Agents Wanted—Earn $10-$15 a Day in spare time. Experience not necessary. SICK MEN and WOMEN COME TO ME! If you are sick or oriling, come to me for help. I will give you good and amenable care. I will provide methods; such as the various forms of electricity combined with water, or the kinds of injections directly into the blood combined with Electricity and Medicine, for many diseases conditions. MEN AND WOMEN If you are suffering with any Chronic Nervous, Blood, Skin, or Complicated Disease, or if you are affected with Stomach, Kidney or Eludde. Disorders consult me today. I have helped him PAINLESS TREATMENT A thorough examination is most important my examinations are careful and the when necessary the instruments are made. I am an large, modern electrical equipment, the X-ray, hundreds of cases where were advised. If I cannot benefit yell you so. Come come and do it delay the dangerous. Ofice Hours 3 A.M. to 8 P.M. Dr. Lev A thorough examination is most important. My examinations are careful and thorough. When necessary, Blood, Crime and Spatum Lab oratory Analyses are made. I am aided by a large, modern electrical equipment, including the X-Ray, My treatments are painless and helpful in hundreds of cases where operations were advised. If I cannot benefit you, I will tell you so. Come to me and do it today, for Bet, 4th and Lexington Aves. Health, Streng For MEN and Health, Strength, Energy For MEN and WOMEN More Valuable Than Gold The richest man in poor health would gladly sacrifice treasures to regain his health. Health is restored by a of Physical Treatment and a of fitness. Health obtained Energy must be the fin. When you have attained these you will be as thankful as many who are willing to personally testify to obtained from my methods. If you have any newly or long standing complicated ailment and need the as Experiencee Physician you can make no mistake by ca The richest man in poor health would gladly sacrifice any of his treasures to regain his health. Health is restored by my method of Physical Treatment and Direct Blood Injections. Strength follows, health once obtained Energy must be the final outcome. When you have attained Energy you will be willing to personally testify to the results obtained from my methods. If you have any newly contracted or long standing complicated ailment and need the service of an Experienced Physician you can make no mistake by calling on me. One Week's Treatment After my careful examination and I be convinced why I get quick and where many other treatments have If You Suffer 'from Nervous Dizziness, Weakness Skin Diseases, Floating Stools before Poor Memory, Weak and Hurtady Necessity, Pains in the Bastion or Stiff Joints, Swollen Kidney Troubles, Stones, Abdies, Neurologic Pains, Coated Tongatipation, COME TO ME. My methods of Injecting Vaccines are Blood, combined with the aid of Me restored Health and Happiness to so I have done for others. I can do for Dr. HANNON, Specialist Office Hours: Daily, 9 to 4, Evening Holidays, 10 After my careful examination and one week's treatment you will be convinced why I get quick and lasting results even in cases where many other treatments have failed. If You Suffer from Nervous Disorders, Dizziness, Weakness, Blood and Skin Diseases, Floating Spots before the eyes, Poor Memory, Weak and Unusual Nerves, Sleeplessness, Pains in the Head, Back, Rheumatism or Stiff Joints, Stomach, Bladder and Kidney Troubles, Stomach Abdominal Troubles, Palms, Coated Tongue and Constipation. COME TO ME. My methods of injecting Vaccines and Serums directly into the Blood, combined with the aid of Medicine and Electricity, have restored Health and Happiness to scores of patients. That which I have done for others, I can do for you. Dr. HANNON, Specialist 146 E. 14th ST., NEW YORK (App) Tammany Hall Office Hours: Daily, 9 to 4, Evenings, 6 to 7, Sundays and Legal Holidays, 10 to 1. white teacher severely heat a little boy with a rubber hose. In the election, members of the Board who had upheld the action of the teacher who had used the rubber hose were not re-elected. "All that I have to say is that I will work for better educational facilities for Elmsford." Mr. Wilson stated. John R. McNeill Ass'n Fights Rent Gouging "Rent songers" are still demanding high rent from their tenants in Harlem. Identical apartments rented to whites at $10 a room are being rented to cooled now at $20 a room. This was disclosed by the John R. McNeill Association, 112 West 136th street, Monday. In Apartments Nos. 125-127, 129-131, 137-139, on 14th street. At a meeting of tenants held at the Democratic Club Sunday the condition of the apartment building at 754 St. Nicholas avenue was waived. Edward A. Watts, who has been retained by the association to give advice to tennants, informed them as to what steps to take. TO DISCUSS PROBLEMS OF WORKING GIRLS Keeping abreast with the trend of the times, a number of nationally known Negro women will meet at Salem Lyceum, Salem Church, Sunday afternoon, coming to discuss "The Working Girl's Problem and Its Remedies." An Rebecca McCormick field session of the National Ware Earners' Association, will be the principal speaker on a program which will include: Mrs. Geo. S. Williams, only colored National Committee woman from Georgia; Mrs. Addle Hunton, president, Empire State Federation of Women's Clubs; Mrs. M. C. Lawton and other, the distinguished women at Salem Lyceum on this occasion vouches for the importance which this meeting will assume. Mrs. I. M. Blackstone will preside. Miss Olive P. Hopkins and John Ivory Johnson are to be the solitaries. TWO building and loan associations, controlled by Negroes, and with capital of $225,000, are doing business in the State of West Virginia. For Women! 5 Pair Full Fashioned Pure Silk Thread Hose, Latest Shades. Value $10.00. FOR $1.00 Full Information. S CORPORATION SEET, NEW YORK CITY 0-515 a Day in spare time. not necessary. A Length, Energy and WOMEN Double Than Gold I would gladly sacrifice any of his Health is restored by my method direct Blood Injections. Strength Energy must be the final outcome. You will be as thankful and happy to personally testify to the results if you have any newly contracted illment and need the service of an make no mistake by calling on me. les and Serums directly into the of Medicine and Electricity, have no scores of patients. That which do for you. 146 E. 14th ST., NEW YORK Hop, Tammany Hall Evenings, 4 to 5 Sundays and Legal 10 to 10 Only. FREE CONSULTATION AND EXAMINATION Consultation Absolutely FREE Come Today G. O. P. Leader Attends Republican Picnic (Preston News Service.) BOSTON, Mass. (Jesse) Hon. William O. M. Mathews, present Negro G. O. P., spokesman, was a guest on July 29 of the Essex Club at its midsummer outing and reunion at Continental Grove, Essex. Mass. President Coolidge, Senator Butler, Senator Deneen and Senator Beveridge secretary and Mr. William L. Reed, secretary to the Governor's Council, attended with Governor Fuller and his Council. Pistol Permit Good All Over State Hikfake Craig, a real estate dealer and styled as the "Rockefeller of Harlem," was freed by Magistrate Richard L. McKinney in the Washington Heights Court. A charge of driving the Snillwan Law Friday morning. The hearing of the case began Thursday, but was discontinued when the district attorney was perplexed by Craig's counselor's interpretation of the penal code. Mr. Craig was arrested by a policeman who was passing 129th street and Seventh avenue when the officer's car stalled from chasing to bolster. When the officer accosted the man and questioned him, he produced a police permit issued by the police authorities of Albany. As soon as the patrolman had testified, he was severely grilled in a cross-examination by Attorney Frank K. Carson, the defense attorney. The district attorney made several objections, but the judge overruled them. Mr. Craig said that while he was motorizing from New York to Albany recently, he was attacked and robbed of currency and jewels valued at $4,000. To have some protections, he had required a permit to carry a weapon while in Albany. Counsellor Stanton then quoted an article from the penal code that made police permits issued in any part of the state legal in any other section. District attorney questioned the code. The counsel for the defense then literally made jest of the prosecutor's interpretation. For a few minutes a bitter argument ensued, Stanton winning the little word battle. Attorney Stanton pleaded for the legal right of the defendant and made a motion that the charge be dismissed. Magistrate McKinley held up his decision for one-half hour. He then ordered that the accused man Colored Hand Laundry Work satisfactorily done on promises. Goods called for and delivered. Prices reasonable. 1947 SEVENTH AVENUE Det. 117th and 113th Sts. Phone Driver. 864 Emma Miller. Prop. BATTERIES RECHARGED Called For and Delivered RADIO FAN SERVICE 228 WEST 140th ST. Phone Bradhurst 1995 EVAM EVAM MFG. CO., INC. 23 Walpole St., Boston, Mass. Price $6 cents and $1 IF YOUR BLOOD IS POOR YOUR APPETITE BAD AND YOU CAN'T SLEEP. TAKE GLANTOX AT ALL DRUG STORES # Tell your troubles to a relatable physician, early treatment. X-Ray Examination not hesitation, pre-vent disaster. vents disaster. from blood or Nervous Disorders, or kidney or Bladder Troubles, don't wait until it's too late! Call at once! modern, scientific treatments include the powerful X-Rays, the rays of the Kromayer and Apine vaccines, proteins, blood wash, etc. Confidential and humane treatments, which include blood, urine, X-Ray imaging of blood, urine. IGATE TODAY DR. NEUWIRTH (Studied medicine in Berlin, Budapest, Zurich) 228 LENOX AVE. (S. W. Cor. 16th Street) Office Hours: For men and women: 10 A. M. to 8 P. M. Sunday: 10 A. M. to 1 P. M. COWARDLY MO. WHITES LYNCH MAN ALREADY ARRESTED Brutal Act Witnessed by Passengers Aboard Railroad Train — Stain on Over 1,000 EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, Mo., Aug. 10.-Within a period-of-four-years-the-police authorities in the State are guilty of weakening and allowing a mob of cowardly white farmers to hang a man without trial. A mob of over a thousand white persons stormed the city jail and took Walter, Mitchell to a ravine a quarter of a mile from town, where he was hanged to an oak tree late Thursday night. He was accused of assault on a white girl while she was riding in a car with a man friend. Because her friend identified Mitchell, who was sleeping in a small house alone, as being the guilty man, the entire body of the department which consists of ten officers surrounded the hut and seized him. When news of the identification spread, a crowd formed about the jail where Mitchell had been taken. One farmer, with a sledge hammer, battered down the door leading to the cell room and smashed the cell lock. Mitchell, already in handcuffs, was dragged from the building through the main village street into the open country. As the man was dragged through the streets, he pleaded for mercy. A rope was produced, and at an oak tree about a mile from town a man shinned up the tree, tossed rope over a limb, and five other men pulled the man into the air. The hanging was witnessed by passengers on a train that runs between Excelsior Springs and Excelsior Junction. The mob swarmed over the tracks and forced the train to stop. Fifty policemen from Kansas City, armed with riot guns, arrived at the scene of the hanging 15 minutes too late. They cut down the body and turned it over to the coroner. "Justified," Says Official. Officials of Clay County have indicated that no investigation will be made of the lynching. "There will be no inquest," said H. W. Hill, coroner, as he signed the death certificate, which gave the cause of death as "strangulation." "We feel that justice has been done." Ray Cummins, county prosecutor said. "Of course, the methadone would have ferred that the Negro could have been hanged legally and I am convinced that it would have been done." AUGUST MONROE SENTENCED TO PRISON August Monroe, 28, 740 St. Nicholas avenue, near 147th street, was found guilty of burglary and sentenced to a term in Sing St from two and one-half to five years by the Monroe County Supreme Court Friday. In sentencing Monroe Judge John ordered that he be held in the County Jail pending an investigation of his record. Judge Cohn has decided to conduct this investigation because he was found guilty of Laws Bonds, which Monroe hoists are his own, were also found in his room. SPINGARN PRIZES TO BE AWARDED FRIDAY The Amy Spingarn prizes for Negro literature and art will be awarded at the Renaissance Casino Friday evening. Prior to dancing, the production of oratorio will be given. The prize winning poems and essays will be read. The most unique thing about the reading of the prize play there will be the tableaux illustrating it. The contest has been promoted by the House of Poems has been to encourage young men and women to develop their literary talent. FURNISHED ROOMS 36TH ST. 327 W.—Large rooms to lift, furnished or unfurnished; bath. Inquire F. W. Addison, 4th floor. Aug.12-21 36TH ST. 315 W. (Apt. 4)—Large, beautiful room, hot; private hotte, working people only; call or phone 7 p. m. to 10 p. m. Lee; Chickering 4430. 49TH ST. 143 W. (Bot. 6 and 7th Ave.)—Large and small, light, furnished rooms. Aug. 5-41 121ST ST., 229 W. 4th floor east: Neatly furnished room, for couple or single; kitchen privileges; respectable family. Evelyn Robinson. 121ST ST., 221 W. (Apt. 9)—Furnished room, man or couple, nice large room. Monument 1584. 121ST ST., 201 W. (Apt. 62)—Neatly furnished rooms in first class elevator apt. rent reasonable. Inquire all week. Aug. 12-21. 122D ST., 240 W. (1 flight)—Large furnished room, running water. $7.50; also small room, improvements. Mrs. Francis. July 22-41. 122D ST., 242 W. (2 flights, west) Room to let, furnished furnished. Aug. 5-21. 122D ST., 239 W—Neatly furnished kitchen rooms and small rooms to rent. Peeples. Aug. 5-24. 122D ST., 214 W. (Apt. 8, corner 7th floor)—Furnished room, furnished room, strictly private; running water, parquet floors; all improvements. Aug.12-21. 122D ST., 240 W.—Nearly furnished rooms; couple, single; near "L" and "sub"; improvements; ground floor west. Blackman. Aug.12-2t 122D ST., 230 W.—Private furnished room to let; $6 per week. Dail, Monument 1917. Aug.12-2t 122D ST., 222 W.—Nearly furnished room; large, light and comfortable. Thomas, 1 flight up. 122D ST., 201 W.—Comfortable room overlooking Seventh Ave. Gilbert. Monument 5522. 122D ST., 237 W.—Nicely furnished room with kitchenette; others $5 up; all modern conveniences. Goodridge. Cathedral 9129. 122D ST., 210 W.—Nearly furnished rooms, with use of kitchen; rent reasonable. 122D ST., 232 W.—Two furnished rooms, $6.50 each; first floor west. 122D ST., 273 W. (ground floor rear)—Neat, clean, furnished room to let. 123D ST. 252 W.—Nearly furnished rooms for couple or working girls; use of kitchen and ding room; respectable people. Phone 1513 Monument. H. Pulley. July 29 3-t 123D ST. 221 W.—Nicely furnished room in modern flat; electricity, phone, etc., $3 and $5. Archbold. 123RD ST. 145 W.—Furnished on unfurnished room with refined people. Call after 6 p.m. Call Morningside 2044. Morrison. 124TH ST. 236 W.—Furnished room to let; large room; bath. Johnson; phone Morningside 1430. 126TH ST. 163 W.—Beautiful front rooms; furnished, running water, price reasonable. July 22-4t 126TH ST., 225 W.-Large, light rooms in a private house, furnished or unfurnished at reasonable prices. Samuel Baker. July 29-4t 126TH ST., 223 W.-Private house; neatly furnished rooms for working people; reasonable Aug 5-4t 126TH ST., 35 W.-Furnished room table; light; home office table; quiet house; ground floor. Harlem 9:38. 126TH ST., 131 W.-Small furnished rooms, phone service, 3 minutes from subway. 162TH ST. 235 W. —Nicely furnished. reasonable. Jones. 127TH ST., 251 W.-Large, small rooms, beautifully furnished; hot, cold, running water; kitchenette; electricity. 127TH ST., 257 W.—Furnished room. Phone Morn. 5611. 127TH ST., 22 W.—Furnished or unfurnished rooms; kitchenette, running water, electricity and gas. Phore, Harlem 0906. 127TH ST., 141 W. (Apt. 33)—Furnished rooms to let. 127TH ST., 40 W. (Apt. 18)—Nestable furnished room to elevator, electric lights, telephone service. Bivin. 127TH ST., 250 W.—Furnished rooms to let, with running water and electricity. Aug.12-27 127TH ST., 24 W.—Private house; beautiful furnished rooms, kitchenettes, telephone, steady hot water; one flight up; one ideal small room. 127TH ST., 214 W.—Five furnished or unfurnished rooms with kitchenette; rent very reasonable. 127TH ST., 139 W. 4th floor west—Furnished room. $8.50; small room. $5 week. Parks. Jul.24-37 127TH ST. 249 W.—Furnished and unfurnished rooms, with kitchenette. Aug. 5-2t 127TH ST., 103 W. (Apt. 16)—Furnished room, respectful—working girl, single man, $5. Street. Aug. 5-4t 127TH ST., 141 W. (Apt. 2)—Furnished or unfurnished rooms, convenient for family. Aug. 5-4t 127TH ST., 36 W.—Neatly furnished rooms, basement room. Forville. Aug. 5-2t 127TH ST., 132 W.—Neatly furnished rooms; reasonable price; telephone. Aug. 5-4t 127TH ST., 226 W.—Large and small furnished and unfurnished front rooms with kitchenette. July 22-4t 127TH ST., 125 W.—Furnished rooms with kitchenette, also small rooms. July 22-4t 127TH ST., 220 W.—Large front parlor, furnished or unfurnished, and kitchenette; all improvements. 127TH ST., 135 W.—large and small rooms, all improvements, by day or week. Aug. 12-27 127TH ST., 141 W. (Apt. 21)—Furnished and unfurnished rooms for rent, convenient for family. 127TH ST., 126-A—Room for respectable couple who wish to live with respectable family. Phone Morningside 7016. 127TH ST., 60 W.—Large, beautiful rooms with kitchenette, furnished or unfurnished, hot water all times, phone privilege. 128TH ST., 140 W.—Neatly furnished rooms, small and large, convenences; telephone and bei. service. July 23-41 128TH ST., 229 W.—Neatly furnished and unfurnished rooms to let, running water, private house. Aug. 3-41 128TH ST., 246 W. (5th floor, west)—Furnished room in quiet family; elevator. Morn. 336) Aug. 5-14 12STH ST., 40 W. (1 flight west) —Furished room, with running water; reasonable; telephone service. Jones. 12STH ST., 66 W. —Your choice of large, small rooms; newly opened house; some with light house- keeping; very cheap. 12STH ST., 259 W. (3d floor east) —Light and airy furnished rooms for rent; reasonable. 12STH ST., 227 W. —Large and small rooms; kitchenette; rea- sonable rent; telephone service. Aug. 12-26 12STH ST., 201 W. (1 flight up) —Neat room; respectable; reliable person. 12STH ST., 156 W. —Large, light rooms to let, all improvements, reasonable rent. 12STH ST., 754 W. (one flight up) —Unfurnished or furnished, one or three, with kitchen. Morning- side 6835. Aug. 12-26 128TH ST.. 39 W. (Apt. 1-A)—Cozy furnished room, strictly private, modern improvements. Shirley. 128TH ST.. 221 W.—Furnished rooms to rent, large and small, kitchenettes, all modern decorities, $3.80 monthly. August 12, 1926. 128TH ST. 213 W.—Large or small front room with kitchenette. Call evenings, Dixon. Morningside 9352. August 12, 1926. 128TH ST. 261 W.—Large private room, ground room. August 12, 1926. 128TH ST. 209 W.—Large, front room for couple, also a small room to share with school girl. Phone Mon. 6682. 128TH ST. 4 E. (Cor. 6th Ave.)—Furnished rooms, running water, kitchenette, private house, newly opened for colored. August 12, 1926. 129TH ST. 214 W.—Furnished rooms; all conveniences; coupe preferred. Waccleigh. Aug. 21 129TH ST. 214 W.—Large, furnished room with kitchenette Aug. 5-24 STH ST. 225 W.-Private house, desirable rooms for redhead people, all conveniences. Bradhurst 5148. Aug. 3-4 STH ST. 217 W.-Nearly furnished rooms, with kitchenette, not to respectable colored people, other need other places. Aug. 3-21 NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1925 THIRTEEN FOR RENT VACANT HOUSE, 13 rooms, for lease or sale. Act quickly. Wm. Kaukas, 450 Manhattan Ave. 120TH ST. 14. W—Floor or unfurnished rooms to let. BASEMENT STORE at 100 W. 134th St. all fixtures for restaurant. Inquire taller store. FIVE large, light rooms and bath, small school, $49. 110 East 215th St. LARGE basement room or ground floor; nice basement; musical purposes. Scott. 51 W. 130th St. 113ST ST. 21 W.—Three-room basement to substitute for indebted period. Call after 6 J. John Green. LOPT TO LET, suitable for an line or lineage, by location at Harlem. Inquire 2733 8th Ave. Tel. Ashland 6864. CORNER STORE at 140th St. and 7th Ave., especially suitable for a ladies' furnishing and hosiery shop. Inquire Palace Garden Reality, Corporation 557 Fifth Ave. Tel. Ashland 6864. NICHOLAS AVE. 424—Seven rooms, all improvements, reasonable rent. John W. Neenan, Inc. 150 West 72nd St. Trafalgar 490. APARTMENT to sell, lease or sublet, respectable neighborhood. Nicholas AVE. W. 35th St. Chuckering 4321. 7TH AVE. 2507 (Apt. 36)—Room, dining and living rooms; electric light, telephone; good place for good people. 5:50 to 7:30 P. M. APARTMENTS 5 and 6 rooms, apply 288 W. 137th St. furnished rooms, 288 W. 137th St. BASEMENT for business purposes to let. 247 W. 122d St. STH AVE. 2537 (151st St.)—Five rooms, bath, hot water, white sinks; redecorated; no security, $45. 134TH ST. 308 W.—Six rooms, steam, electricity; redecorated; park view; no security, $70. 3ROOM apartment furnished, $20; party away for year; 350 W. 57d St. Mrs. Hall. FURNISHED apartment, 2 or 5 rooms to let; 2230 5th Ave. J. Frye. TWO furnished rooms, one small, one large, with kitchenette; 264 W. 131st St. private house. 127TH ST. 219-221-3 and 4 rooms newly decorated; hot water, Phone Harlem 3123. APARTMENTS, one and two rooms, furnished or unfurnished, Jordan. 273 W. 136th St. FOUR rooms, 393 W. 151st St. See Courts, 158 W. 141st St.; Brad. 7872. J. E. OVERTON has just opened for colored, 3 rooms; $45 and $50; steam heat, hot water, electric lights, new law room; see janitor in basement. 543 W. 133d St. between Amsterdam Ave. and Broadway. 2ROOM apartment, furnished, 112 W. 129th St. ground floor, west side. CEDATUR ST.—2 family stone, hardwood floor, 12 rooms and 2 bathrooms; to sit on John B. Moseley. 37 Cumberland St. PUTNAM AVE. 78—5 rooms and steam heat, rented. $35; Prince McDougall St. 12 rooms and bath $110. John B. Moseley. 38 Cumberland St. FOUR-ROOM apartment for sale, reasonable rent, cheap; $55. W. 135th St. Apt. 2. 145D ST. 309-311 W.—5 rooms, hot water, electric lights. Janitor. FRONT, two-room apartment, all conveniences; respectable; 267 W. 131st St. FOR RENT—Atlantic City, N. J. TWO nice communicating rooms for a family of 4 or 2 couples; with all conveniences, hot and cold water bath; price for the rooms, in whole, $25 a week; electric light and gas; shingles $121. W. Indiana Ave. Atlantic City, N. J. Jul22-13T FOR RENT. JAMAICA JAMAICA, L. I. FOR RENT—light-room house, all improvements; steam, heat, electricity, etc. Call Cumberland St. and Washington St. FOR RENT — CORONA TO COLORED FAMILY — 5-room flat in Corona, L. I.; all improvement rent reasonable, H. G. Lee, 10 44th St., Corona, L. I. Aug. 5-18 THREE-ROOM apartment for rent all improvements, 6 19th St., Corona, L. I. Phone Havenmey 0184-J. For Rent—Yonkers, N. Y. HOUSE—Eleven rooms, all improvements; garage; opportunity to sublet, near Bronx Parkway and railroad station, 21 Villa Ave. Yonkers; Hillcrest 2686-W. APARTMENT FOR RENT 99TH ST., 17 W. — 51 rooms; all private; steam heat, hot water, light, sunny, decorated; "L" subway, 365 to $75. Janitor, No. 15, or telephone Academy No. 358. April-15 FIVE rooms and bath; electricity ge “FOURTEEN ee Apartment for Rent SIXKOOM apartment; neatly. fur- Rimbed. Cult eveninzs etter 5:30. B46 W. 129th St, Apt 7. 120TH ST. 219 W.—Five rooms and bath, steam heat, hot water supply, slectric light: opposite farge ‘schovl. King caretaker's| bell. Subset BBTH ST. 639 WEST Four rooms, front; electric Nght: quiet House. See Janitor, st font front west. Augodt HAST ST, 201 Wy ane BEG Teh ve—Bievator, {and 3. large. Duautifal rooms, Ymmediate poe Aesalon; reasonable. AUBOIt MADISON ST. 400 (Manbattan)— Fhreeroom partment: “hot war ter, electric “Hights, bath tn kb eheny $26, Augot RENTING to colored; elevator apartment house: 4, 3 Inrge, light rooms, newly decorated, day ahd all-night elevator service: nu Mecurlty; $2290. monthly. “343 St Nicholas Ave., cor. 12:th St, = TaLlett APARTMENTS—Two rooms, kit- chenette: electricity, gas, fur. sBished. “unfurnished. Apply 15) W. 140th St. Apt IL. Dickerson, NEATLY furnished front rooms ‘and apartment af 5 rooms and ‘bath, all modern improvements. ia2 West 130th St. ‘Aug aeat EROOM apartment, all private: ‘call all week: 38 E. isla St. § APT, FOR RENT, # “WILLIAMSBRIDGE EROOM apartment. on Carpenter fave. (228th St), modernis equip. “ped, eleciricity, ‘bot and cold. wa: for ‘near subway’ and trolley “Mines; rent $50. Box Lai, care of Anisterdam News, REAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE for sale In Now, Jersey; high-grade residential, business and Investment proper: ee ottered Py er gorse jeading colored resity brokerage peamrvion-Honlty Co, #43. frond sSt, Newark, N. J. Mulberry ‘3337. Tul Itt | FOR SALE | RUGS, Bankrupt stock—9x12, $10; Wiltons,” Aaminsters, $185" $100 rugs, $38: carpets, linoleum. 43c; Conpolenn rugs, $5. Warehouse, TSeE Tautn St. near Third Ave” firet foor. Ojien evenings tii 10. Rigstt JOBBING CARPENTER SHOP tor sale; 10 years ol; best location in the ety. Box li, cure of Ams: terdam News, TROOM HOUSE—Dath, al im. Drovements, brass. plumbing, Atteewag: now agente! 88.500, Phone Wes:chester 1800. - Five malautes’ walk from East 180ch St subway station. Augte3t SEIGHTLY USED CARRIAGE, #8. Cotter, 245. West 128th St WAST ST, WEST —Privace dwell- ing, $13.80, e180 cake A Kane, 2239 Eighth ave. HOTH ST, fii W,—Pore Beauty Shop for sale reasonable; good Dotig” fait. ce BEAUTIFUL. large. mahogany droater. chisTonter, blew aes ma sple dresser, bed.” spring, nial Tnoteum® sacrifice. "BL. toss. 203 West ifoth St 22ND ST, 24) W—-Seven-room furnished’ apartment cheap: on Small monthly paymenss. Ang.t2e 229TH ST. 12 Wi~-Furnisied ‘apartment. 6 rooms; steam: rent- ab Face month. inquice Me ‘Thompson. UPRIGHT PIANO for sale: splen- +. “ald condition. 249 West 127th St. YRIVATE HOUSE for sale: small anh. Williams, 203 W. 10th St Bradnuret 4463, GROOM apariment to share with rg. party. and West 119th St Phone Chickering 4213, FURNISHED fat tor sale oF rent, 3 roomy anil bath, $30; down: town. Circle 28, BABY carriage for swe. Call Brad hurst 3583, PRIVATE house for lease. Phone = Bradburst 3219. IX yacame apariments tor rent: ‘Geo furnished apariments tor * Rale or eublet. Atpiy Martin, 220 W. 188th St. GOING South, will sell Titoom hagas. Harlem: $700 down, Mir _tim 210 W. 138th’ St, sacrifice beautiful six piece, WILL sacrifice beautiful six piece, FOR SALE * —- SS TIRE vuleanizing businesn for sale; god paying proposition for Tight purl? nitiae welt at once, Cull aty day between 5:30 and TPM. 3F W. 139th St, New Yorke City. HEL WANTED SALESMEN—To sell lots, Fan- ‘wood, N.J.. colored development: tulary‘cominission. “Apply all Week, Kramer Realties, 236 W. Bath Bt, Augsit HOUSERERPER WANTED — 49 Bourdnan Ave., Jamatea, Ly tt gould opporiuniiy. Cull evedings Rite 3 b'eiock HAS, retlabie, general assiatant in ftive, capable of collecting large accounts, veal ‘estate and: insur. ance; salury $100, commission ex- tra; ‘cash sevurliy required: no other need apply. Boxttt, care of Amsterdam News. Augde-tt WOMAN, Felinblo, office, expen ence of ciking manageient Teal estate and insurance: sulary $80, Comission extra: cust security no other need apply. Box H. enre MC Limiordem Kewé.” AMbieat AGESTS te call at barber shops with new shalt. peimer iui straightener which will not burn the scalp nor turn the hair sed. Guanaiceed to docu ‘work with. out hot irons. Ready sale, and zocd pronts. Seo W. AL Joh gon, manufacturer, 219 W, 128th &r AGENTS WANTED SOLICITORS WANTED TO SELL, clothing on a new and novel plan, Quick ‘sales and Invem Commissions paid. tinmedt- iely, “Sample outlit,welgbing Jess than 5. Ibs.. tarnished tree. No" previous clothing experience hecessary. Refarences required. Fois Sle Cloching Mtg. Corp.. 1070 1B. duh St., cor. Rrowdvay, 10th floor. SITUATION WANTED EXPERIENCED office man, with knowledge of accounting. Span- Ish, stenography and generat of- fice routine, desires position. Six’ yours!” experience: © Immediate Salary secondary to opportunity for advancement. Goad refer. ences, Address C. A. Wa o-0 Amsterdam News. May-13tt INFORMATION WANTED! LOST CARGE platinum bar pip, ge with (iamonds, between fuga St, and Sth Aves and iasth St subway stution; reward. McLoughlin, 288 W. 1934 St. | SATURDAY on ith Ave. pair tor- Tcise. shell. Elasses: reward. arene ue WN. 2st Bt Tost. oR LEFT ON ELEVATED, BLACK HANDBAG WITH PA: PERS, B00KS, BANK BOOKS: PAYMENTS STOPPED: | LIB. ERAL REWARD: RETURN CONTENTS. KEEP BAG: NO QUESTIONS ASKEG. W. 0. FERRELL, 931 W. 38TH ST. WANTED WANTED, for adoption, mulatto or Yery light. browa-skinned baby Birk, few weeks old. Address EGnadential, care of Amsterdam News. Tulzatt TWO NEN to learn mechanical Mentistry {i private “Iaborators wih expert; 8 months course: tase Weekly payments. Call 22 Irving Pi. Hrookiya,— Aug.btt REFINED gentleman desires (0 Tent @ furnished cottage {or the Week of Aug. 15: nenr bathing preterred; good references. A. Howe, PO. Box 403, Grand Cen: tral Station, APARTMENT—Threo oF 4 rooms, finprovements, quiet neighbor: hood, reasonable rent. Hox EG. Care of Amsterdam News, WOO, small, neat. with lady who Gail tae care of Duby ond year Skt, ‘Cali Moruinaside 08st ater eee JANITOR—Single, man preferrad. Call Thursday, between Gand 7 BM. goa We Lsth St. SARWIED iniles wanted for part iimio to ‘call op, prospective buy. ern; can earn $20. week. Write Hox Sus "Amsterdam News, PRIVATE HOUSE wanted, with or ‘without furniture. Besse Tur- her, care of Amsterdam News, WELT, ESTABLISHED dress shop. since 1920, wants one ar two Partners, male or female, For Particulars “phone, of call in per- fon, Haddingway 6254. | Amert can’ Lady Dress Shop, 1996 Fut. ton Sc, Brooklyn, AUg12-2t BASEMENT apartment; must have iectricity. “Anawer by letter. G- _Tiarvel, 672 St.’ Nicholas Ave. PRIVATE 10USE, good location. NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY; AUGUST 12; 1925 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION TYAN igusona;, pups’ nome, ite hour; beainmers. specialized, . “Mme, Hrost, 23. 120th St. CHILDREN BOARDED CHILDREN BOARDED by permit day or week; mother's cary, large yard, 23 W. 127ta street. iisr- om 3864. ‘Suiy 22a WILL care for two children walle ing: ‘Be Monzon, 414 W. 127th St MOTHER wants a reliable place to Bourd two childrens. where no other ‘children ure " bourdad. _ Bulverson, cure Ammterdam News CHILDREN to board, by the day Or week) mothers care; permit. Sirs As Rayaen, 1S. asith Se GiLDREN boarded; mother's Mate; permit. “Moriingsive ved WILL give mother's care to boy, girl or baby. A. Humbert, 270 Weisha' Sty apt: 20, iF AVE, 31s5—wallcing chil ten board weekly mise places toom for mother.” Miteheth, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY BECOME todependent. Restan- ants, lunch. Fooins, tea rooms, Sofing pots, urugeund contection: ery stores are the money maitors OF today. We start you tn bust hess of your own by completely equipping. your store Small cash puyments, balance on eusy monthly installments. If you have location, “cally” wrlte. "or ‘phone “Sort” naiipinent Co, °F Ra St penn, Obes July tate PERSONAL BANDLEADER, who fg a widower, woul) lke the address of | widow wo ts @ goud pianist, 38 to 45 years ld, brown to fair, 410 5 it, 90 to 135 Ibs, graduate of some muste school "preferred. Address Dandieader, care of N. ¥, Age., 230 West 195th St. New York ah at INFORMATION is desired of the whereabouts of Webster Vaughn, his wife, Minnie, and son, Theo: dore, Webster Vaughn was horn tu Raleigh, N.C, ‘and lived in Washington, D.C. for many yours, Where our, son Theodore Was born. Julla Vaughn, care of Alice Handy, 2407 Sevenih Ave. Aug. 5-2 A PROSPEROUS young man wish. es to make the acquaintance ‘of @ young-lady: abject, matrimony: must be industrious and intelli Rent, also: nice lcosing: age, 18 to 28. “Hox A, care of Amsterdam News. MISCELLANEOUS GREEN'S AGENCY and. Real Bs: tate have good positions; accom mogations for bathers, Vacaticns also, 218 Beach 77th, Arverve. | Li, “Fetephone Beli Harbor 3878. Iul.28.tt WANTED—AIL friends of cauca- “Won, Aug. 20 at $"P. -t.t all -ex- students, graduates and’ friends - Of Kittrell” Colleze to attend grant reunion dance and rece ton at Imperial Elks’ Auditor: fum, "1600 -A¥. 139th St, N.Y. City. Excellent music. FURNISHED ROOMS BROOKLYN BERGEN ST, 248—Nicely tur. nlshed rooms in quiet family. reasonable Auig.lt BERGEN $T.,225—Furnished rooms, single, double; electricity, hot, wold water; four blocks ali subways: quiet location; Teason- able rents: telephone. Dr. Sones. CARLTON, AVE. 489-2 rooms. ““turaished “or tinturnished. with Kitchenette: hot and cold ‘water, eleciziewty | and “heat. Phone Nevins 6273. CLASSON AVE. 392—Beautitul Toons, turitshel or unfurnfshed Iarge ‘and small; modern Int: provenients; near Lexington “L and surface curs; private house. Aug.122t CLIFTON PL, 287—Large furnish- ¢q room: jady wishes girl to share room. Phone Decatur, 2583. JULED-At CLIFTON PL. 237A (near Bed. ford Ave.)—-Large and small rooms, all conveniences, reason: able, “Lafayette 2022, | Aug.s4t CLIFTON PL. 237—Farnished TooMs; one sultable two bust hess ladies. Or men. Decatur 2683. Aus,1240 CLINTON. AVE. s0)—Laree, light furnished” room:. electricity abd steam. Ring ‘first bell, Aug.12-2 CUMBERLAND, ST. 993—Large fom, steam heated. Telephone Nevins 6244. Augs-2t CUMBERLAND ST. 416-—Smail ‘and large rooms, fiicely furnish. ed. Prospect 5038, Ane,5-2t CUMBERLAND ST, 276—For rent. large‘and amail furnished rooms. Phone Neving 027, Aug.2ct CUMBERLAND ST.. 421—Large Tarnished room to" let; near xil subways. PRANKIIN AVE. 539 (near Ful ton St)—Large unfurnished oom: private” house: all im- provements; references. FULTON ST., 2148a—Rooms, one Suitable for single person. fur- nished: two nice largo roomie for Unt housekeeping, unturninhed: gas. electric. all front: rent rea: fonable: call after 7.30 p, m.. first floor. Aug.12-2t FULTON ST, 1440—Front_ room. furnished of unfurnished; elec: trielty, gaa. ‘Call ovenings. TWo flights’ Up. GATES AVE., 715—Fumished room to let: top floor, Call between 7:30 and 8 p.m. Aug.b-2t GATES AVE—Nicely furnished oom; all improvements, 489 Haneoek St. Decatur 8377. GRAND AVE, $95—Licht, iarge Tooms, Nicely farniched, styam heat and bath, Prico very roa- sonable. Aug, 5:2 |GHEEND AVE. G05 cUarce sinsle eee FURNISHED ROOMS, FURNISHED ROOMS JAMAICA BARGAINS. | 4 ' TEL ‘ BROOKLYN "| ____BROOKLYN ATTENTION Fensteony gee i te [I SOUTHERN = : man fatten eae ea eee: || MALSEY §T, #22 —Roging tg ent |TO BT, FOR COLORED—Drown: |] “war may sinh ene to ona: [HT TRE Tin Mas || fieniahod of wngarnfaned; ail Wm: | "stone, 2 hatha, all Improvements: |Bimonen when swith $200, or even || Hope, UreaktinM8tGe ten on Fa eee mi 2 ‘oantine nae ed eras en over | crac doetghtinae dine austere | ‘ _brovements: private Rouse, j provements, aad ¢ rooms. Phone | S100. Om 728 nt ete block || So°tare to New York Clty. | 4 HANCOCK ST, 622—Floor, wim | Prospect $468, iin” set" compictely psy for HiT Yon J. Hill, 89 George St. ; AN couveniences; advo rooin, tar: | —————_——————_—__-— rr, hone anunign.anere vith Sine or ‘unfurnished private | FOR RENT — BROOKLYN eee ster ving in she ay"or evening [SREB ECOw SERGE aPaG TN_ Roomy: | peur, Lieve, several benuttat | —$— Lots 50 x 125 Ft. BRKINER ST, To0—One large |OPFICE SPACH IN HOOMY.|Prousce in aomntcn with af solera | | cero | - WERT daratahed or anatensate (LIGHT, “WWSLL, Venti aTED | [nates anc" a area tea IV ADARTMENTS TO LET fig. 1% Fett Above Sex tever Kultahwe fortwo; “aisy one small | OfPICH TO WENT AT Mopen. || merci’ mice acorn” ‘ied Wi Al For. $150.00 furnished room {o let. ATE BRICE. GO) FO. SEB UE imi seed with an tows i 2 and 57 Rooms. alsa Houses}. ‘or $150. HERKIMER ST. 118t—Roome.! PSRs AT 40 HANSON PLACE. |[magnincent. and hale the money ‘for Sale, $1,000 and Up. ff, Tung, “einai | take ae haven EAE | SRE Vee hairy ent Soe ‘ds REDMOND i] Between Gatveston and Atntrable nelghborhood: i Sand apartments to Jet;! nam Ave., Brooklyn | louston, Texa: provementes “Haldingway" sissy | MOUSES ine omnstMents 2, MEE I privace nour to tease Go Putnam Ave, Brooklyn: one s MERKIMER ST., 208—Neat amali| _Chauncey St. ‘Apartment houses for sule, Mort-#/P Prospect NUNN UU Fon interdrban car and shel joom,. flngle” persons prlvste] BELMONT. | AVE 110 These |] Wate Jonne nenorinet 9] Road Connecting the Two Citles aeenes pacers atay- | roots. bath in chen, electric, ie ge « tie Gbeos TORT aweaeee| . Sieieth tenons soe DENNIS EDWARDS J/J""HEAL ESTATE Qif: i eu siemes to ut invING Pi, 7i—Large room. niee:| oem ENT FOR RENT [60 W. 127th St, Harlem 311?) Renae eo eee ’ iy foruahed, wiltable two: tiso| APARTMENT FOR Ri I. Investers— Wica Gliese 3 be. Donel rout catste Investment proposii || And Small Cash Payments and ARG, PE, GS—Laga, room, far | "Sloan neat hee ator, "APB G. Ay FLEMING i]. Fer Partcuars, wee an te tor aap an ere Fe ET eos \ meet ae acme | Seas CHT TER Multable for eoupios. Augie] WavERLY AVE, 143 (comer Myr- e. — : FRERTIGOS SCH nn | “les Seven rodnte, each opening || STORE AT 2878 ENGHTH AvE.f| ____________-__ S TEXAS roam Taingta singe mate at] setae telat ee eee ie —SEEE female, improvements, conven: | "ele! rent reduced.” Jun-| etc, immediate possession. We; ———— re ee a eee dines, Auer sac | Mor, basement, Jul223t] Fe nave a number of vacamfil ADADTMENTS Fi... . .. |JEFPERSON AVE. | 126—Large inde amail roams.” stoxm “hese See eteesiote. a TH eeatigee wSeeatas Tis Rugs JOWNSON ST, _2e—Furalaned PEON ic Twiun ase of Khctwle TORS Petia tose °F Aged: TeerERTS PL, 472—Ropma 0 APERTS fr” Phoae Boupest be, mee TereeER Po, Waianae Serta te. Pha i nae ant Gennes lt events. TEPEETS Pie, 1a3—Furatoned BR ented: Home ta me Aa, ERS: ora, Rion TERPERTS PL. W70—Foraisted ees ae | Tacos st, ato —Furatanea ReOR io Tat) imine ‘on arate ie ea MADISON ST., 821—Nicely fur. ADISON Statins anil Tpheg foot Betnauh: conte Tee cae ne a dace Biaae gall ae MOSHE te ee Jepoxouan st, _ais—large SPOS OURN, ec Resctiet enone es Cneest SQRTH PORTLAND AVE, 140— Qa ORinkl ipod edn tae Serene eee ree ‘Jul.22 4 ORMOND "PLY" 39 — Large” and BNGRD SUE ait mick ae saa aan Ah Romaine provements. mornings. PACIFIC . ST.. .1106—Large room. With: hoard. for two American men who would Ike to room to- gether, $9; wiso small single foom, with or without bowrd. Sackion. Prox, 5621. 5 PACIFIC ST, 18193 rooms. tare Kitchenette’ and pach; all mod- ern. improvements, ; PUTNAM AVE, 234—Furnished Tooms for rent: very reasonable. Phone Lafayette 1209. duly 29 4-¢ QUINCEY ST., 313—Small room. furnished, steam heat, electricity, quiet neighborhood: men pre: ferred, “Lafayette 2048. -Aug.o-2t QeINeY ST, 28¢—Larse unfur Rlshed rooni: Steam Meat, Bas, electricity, hot water: $6. 3 RYERSON ST. 16i—1 have some, beautiful Fosins to let. hot and cold water Im every room: also, Steam heat; convenient to all! Ines; one. block wext of Grand Ave. between Myrile amd Wil! ioughby. SOUTH ELLIOT PL. 168—Rooms to rent: hert, electricity; rent Fensonable. Augsett ST, PELIN ST, 18—Large. front Foons. Modern Imgrevements. Within 5 minutes, of all trans: portation. Call or phone Nevins EAs. ‘Aug. 520 St, FEUIN ST 39—Large anit small room, With water; preter couple or single man. Augie ST, PRLIX. ST. 7-A—Furnighed voontx; ail improvements. Tele- phone O6U5 Sterling, near sub- oe. "ANg.A2-20 ST, JAMES PL, 241—One large farnished room, also hall room. Suitable gentleman; all improve: ments. Aug.o-2t ST JAMES PL. 268 (near Fulton ‘St)—Large watirnished rooms for particular people. St, JAMES Pla, 280—Handeome large rooms, furnished or untur. nished; heat, electricity, hot and cold water in room. ‘Aug.12-2t SP MARKS Pl. 365—Furnichod rooms to let. Inquire Mrs. Riley. ‘Auig.12-2¢ WAVERLY AVE. 487—Furnished "or unfurnished Tooms; large and ‘Sronit. July 29 3+t NEATLY furnished and unfur- nished room: all tmorovements: convenient to surface car and elevator. Call Proxpect 19022. Sulya-it LARGE unfurnishd front room and ‘alcove, Suitable for couple, Kcit- chen privileges. Decatur S099, ‘Aug. 5t NEATDY tursished room for rent; convenient to “L" “and trolley car; working girl preferred, Call after 7. Haddingway 7101. FURNISHED ROOMS BROOKLYN TO LET FOR COLORED—Brown- TGroie, 2 baths, all Improvement: -fien’'9” room, 2 bathe all lin: frovementn, and 6 rooms. Phone | Prospect s4n8. 5 FOR RENT — BROOKLYN oemce’ seach 1y_ eon: TIGHT, “WELL VENTILATED | SEICh po iiT AT MODEL RTE Price. GO. To Sie tr AND OBTAIN FUL PARTICU- ERs At! do HANSON PLACE. HOUSES und partments to let; Cubnable. rents, aleals, It Chauncey’ St. : BELMONT AVE, _110— Three Toou bath in kitchen, electric. + olieioth ‘Initehens $25. = APARTMENT FOR RENT BROOKLYN ‘ FOR RENT—Apartment 6 rooms: Gtoatn leat; "hot “water. "Apply US" hedtord ave, duly ett WAVERLY AVE; 143 (corner Myr- tle)—Seven rooms, each opening Jato halls steam Neat, elec, tine helgnborhiood; reat reduced.” Jan: tor, basement, utaadt SUTTER AVE. 1085—Three to six Foon! apartments: improvements; Siontauk ave. “L station. EXRLTON AVE; 451—Aparimenta ‘nd roama to fety furnished, un- furnished: houses, for "sales" t= ee ei tate. ser Mase 2ND FLOOR private. house, with /profesatonal “man, 4 beauty Gecorated=roonis “ind bath, all -_biodern Improvoments, hardwood Boor throuRhout, to.” refined married couple: $80 per, mouth. Cait 22 teving Pl. “Aug.ott HALSEY, ST, 499 (near Stuyve- Sant)-—Top floor, room” apart: Ment, all (mprovements; euiable Uusiners couple... Aug.s-2t PUTNAM AVE, 39-—Two Tange un: furnished rooms sultuble house- “keeping, motern Improvements, first floor: also large and small furnished: rooms. “Aug.5-2 GROOM apartment; strictly rri- vate; ell improveraente: very Taree rooms.” olicek, 388 Cum .derland St.:_ telephone Sterling anes rea ¥ SPENCER PL. 97, (near Fulton Pani Prankliiy 2 roome:. base ment; very cheap; apply Cooper. eghremises. Soc ne Lor ue at SGXES-HOOM apartment, all pri “Nate rooms, centrally” located: RRL the Gling Mor ve couples. : Phone Prospect $496. CEPFERTS Py. 121—Aino apart: Mient,. conaisilng of 4 rooms: | mottern Couventetices: all even: ings. WAVEREY PL. 443 (coruer Myr. “fley--Seven Foums, each .openiog into hall: steam heat, ‘electric, Hine neighborhood: rent reduecd. “Daniter. basement... AURAZS JEFFERSON AVE. 154—Floor to font, six rooms and hath, Call Routh.0361.. inquire first foot. GREENE AVE. 280—Floor, 4 rpoms. and vat: all murove- tosis: Phone Prospect S831. ‘DEKALB AVE..-707—Seven- rooms ana ogy gu iminroxaments, ailre 492’ Noatraad Ave. Rrcoets. FLUSHING AVE, 865—Four larze, Wiehe reome: “bath. olectrlclty: $38. montis. Apri” Moses, hronsekeener WAVERLY AVE. Ga tneqr Ful ton)—2 dr 8 Fooms 10 let for /_HGME howsekeenin WALWORTH ST. €10—3 rooms ind batt: how and colt water. £35, "Take Dekalb Ave. car te Waneorth St. between Redford cand Nostrand’ Aves. aft Dewalb, Jor call Willlanisburg 2780, IRVING Pi., 12—To Tet, 4 roome Mand baths” steant ‘heat, hot and Cold water: furnished "or untur- ished reams, PULASKI St, 201—Apariment in private residence: four. rooms + nd bath: all improvements and heat! decorated: $00.. Phone Tushwick 131, SIX rooms and bath; stegm: all improvements: Sor. Brescatt, tor OPranidin Ave, — Prospect 1861, BALTIC ST. 470—Four rooms: all ‘ronveniences: respectnble fam: fv. Call evenings and voll say /_Sninday. GATES AVE. 6r4—Four beautiful Toons: very reasonable; electric Bnd gas included: ulso bath. PACIFIC ST. _87t—Parlor oor ‘and basement for rent. Call De- featur 2236, FOCR rooms, and bath; steam heat, wlectricity: goad ‘location. Prank’ Jones. 12 Fulton St. \rear Clinton Ave.) Avg.l2-2t HANCOCK ST. $89-A—Five rooins and baih: “newly decorated: Bleam heat; hot water supply: flectric: rent: $60. Can be seen after @ o'clock, Phone Decatur 8040. FOR SALE —B'KLYN QUINCY | ST.—Two-family, | store front: 12 raoms and 2” baths: ferma, cash 1.600, | John B, Mosely, 387 Cumberland St Buy THESE HOUSES WITH SMALL AMOUNT, CASH EASY TERMS ON BALANCE BEDFORD SECTION—2atory and ‘hagement brick, 6 rooms and ath, $5,850, 5 CUASSON AVE.—3-story and bane- “Nment, brownstone, 40 rooms and Bath, complete, 2xfamily, furnace, electric, $10,750, HANCOCK ST.—2-story and base. Sent browustone. 8 rooms and Bath, furnace, warauet, $2,780. AGAR. 4013 Bedford Ave. ATTENTION Why pay high rents. for apart= smonta. when ‘with. $1,300, 0F eve! | Fiinoo, Gantt you cnn uy a nee elvate house in a desirable. block | Wien wil completely pay for Teele? In case you prefer iving in the avineda, T have several beautiful ouses in Jamaica, with ait moslern Improvement: mish xa tran heat ee Tae ioe Vt GARR: Shoat Uhotaen! are really FREIND bot! neath Bar'eh Spartiicnt Wil pay Four morteaae. Private houses fo tease Apartment outer for axle, Mort- migt"Touny newotintel: DENNIS EDWARDS 60 W. 127th St, Harlem 3117: ——— FT TO LET STORE AT 2573 EIGHTH AVE. Suitable for butcher, grocery, ete. Immediate possession. We ‘miso havea number of vacant apartments conslating of 343 rome In various parts of Har- tem. Philip A. Payton, Jr., Co. “427 WEST 14187 ST. “Phone Audubon 0945. F. ©, B. $817.00 525 DOWN-S10 MONTHLY Raise i, f ei Your ER, SGaf] own Can etek Pee ie Be S ecm Wiens so Vege: tae gen gen tee et Sew Manage oy Mee ae. Se tie wun aged pag "hades ult EGA PE ane ea 10 RENE Io can. cor particulars, HENRY J. FRANKLIN soc WgoADI AY, SEW LOU nite HOA PAR Titik Shee i. WONDERFUL > NEW INVENTION = Eleettie briiah~ Makes Ite own clectriclty. No batteries. Great forthe ‘scalp and falling tar No home “complete without jones 4 eae a Only $7.50 tor this wondertal brash: Rematé to H. C. SHRUBEY 266 DEGRAW STREET J. BROOKLYN, N.Y. EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES Rstaptioned 1997 HELP WANTED Mate and Female rnrvoyanxt auexer SB ble, Rech: Se stree Near Bhaae aaviem’ Wie JOR SE 25—WANTED—25 Reliable help. male and tercals, for housework, cooks, kitchen men and porters. Apply 345 Cumberland St, Brooklyn, N.Y. Phone Nevins 61298272; bring Feterence. Harlem s9763820 H. FRIEDMAN, Prop. West Side Employment Agency 72 WEST 125th STREET Plenty of good positions open for male and female. Come up and see Us. shen zou wan , FOLD W TE REM RS Foote he ie Aeeocy taenox Aiinue' ast Pith Street nourstic KERVICE AGExeY ER Slewox "ties New, More Cia aH nee Ane eT LT SQUARE EMPLOYMENT AGENCY ©. H. SCHRADER, Prez. Entabllshed i912 Moars # A.M. to 6 P. a. Doormen, Elevator, Switchboard “Operators, Portas, Firemen nd Handstmen 496 BT. ICHOLAS AVES 12000 8k, RHEUMATISM ENDED Don't suffer any longer from rheu- matism. Why endure such intense pains in the muscles, nerves and joints? ‘The poisons of rheumatism are carried in the blood, LEONARDI'S ELIXIR FOR THE BLOOD com- bats these poisons, drives them out of the system. ‘Tho rheumatism vanishes, You can go about your aily tasks freely, happily. LEONARDI’ ELIXIR FOR THE BLOOD does more than this for you, Tt_ builds mew strength and vitality, Te’s use insures against recurrence of attacks, ‘Try LEONARDI'S ELIXIK FOR THE BLOOD now. ‘Refuse substitutes, At all druggists, JAMAICA BARGAINS; New houren, 6 rooms, and bath, Be Main ateeas, acange Holsen, 'Weeuerast wool: Iaundry. 0 Sear uk alts HGS Sunred: BOlare!to New York Clty. ‘ John, J, Hill, $9, Gaaie® St ay" or evening in APARTMENTS TO LET 3 and &7 Rooms. Ala, Houses ‘for Sale, $1,000 and Up. d. REDMOND 59 Putnam Ave., Brooklyn Prospect 8768 REAL ESTATE Investers—See FLEMING for real eatate Investment. propos! Rlons. Satisfaction guaranteed, G. A. FLEMING 2348 7th Ave., New York City are te ee Reasonable Rentals 2041 "r AVE. NEAR 26th ST. “Y COPELAND: REALTY os ek ————— Se THREE-FAMILY HOUSE Hancock Street. Parquet floors. All Improvements. Fire excape. BAKER 489 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Decatur 8377 ere err Sheer AUaER ED Se WM. H. WATKINS a, bleegeed. | Prompt Attentlon #3 AU Work .. 227 WEST 125h.STREET. New York—Brooklyn Nostrand.” Ave."y- Two-family brick, all. improvements; price $12,500, ‘New York City—West 120th, | i2tat, 136th and 139th Ste, ‘Jamalea—Seven-room house, ali Improvements, garage: cash, $1,000. Apartments te Reat Money Toaned on tet and 2nd mortgages. Consult HATTIE S, COFIELD Noury Paciie 40 W. e7th Bu” New York City Phones: Trafstgi'y 7861 Trospect 2165 Brklyn Offices. 29 Bainbridge St ‘and 64 Putnam Ave. 8 and 9 All Private Rooms 853 ST. NICHOLAS AVE, NEAR 183rd ST. All modern, elevator apart: ment house. Excellent service. Rents reasonable. Apply on premises, or Real Estate Office 231 W. 145th St Tel, Aud. 1335 FOR SALE One and Two Family Houses. | ‘Ail Improvements. - _$. H. SPARKES . | 43 GEORGE ST. JAMAICA Phone 10233 ° | Tel. Hariem 935200 HOUSES FOR SALE PRIVATE OR APARTMENT 1 WIil Loan Money to Help You! Bey & Hom : CONRAD T. GITTENS | 32 WEST istth ST” Leeeepeae aceon FOR SALE Apartment Houses in 138th, rgist, 134th, 130th Sts. Private Houses in 136th, 1goth, 126th, 127th, 137th, 134th Sts. INEZ R. GRAVES 410 ST. NICHOLAS AVE, Brad. 2802 Residence Phone, Brad. 5972 SS FRANKLIN WARD JOBING CARBENTER and CONTRACTOR work guaranteed, ‘Jun.3-3 | sae SOUTHERN ; HOMES © Lots 50 x 125 Ft. | ; " 46-Feet Aboye Sea Level ; . For $150.00 Between Galveston and Houston, Texas On Interdrban Car and Shell Road Connecting the Two Cities ©" Wii Build’ Homes to Suit 7 WM Bavorehacer ‘ And Small Cash Payments and ; Eaay Terme For Rartlcutars, Write | BOX soz | TEXAS CITY, TEXAS | . | Apertmenis For Reni 8&7 | Nace AN ine St.:Nicholas, Bee tts Place * Las Ms Seisiataon "| ana lecittn, “" TFLITS REAL ESTATE WE HAVE IT up Dwellings $1,000 up. Su R. B. LIGHSTON 2167 7th Ave, N. Y. City m@UNEY LOANED ON ALL REAL ESTATE pines, Bosansaold tes Hu efled Wace S. BENJAMIN WALKER a in Brooklyn’s Best ; Bargains eA eek =e Toathen Minster se EOS Se ae ' M.&B Realty Co. 486 GRAND AVENUE | MONEY | pay HORA ng | No Charge tor Gonganation SAMUEL A. KELSEY | Herald Building, 1340 Broadway Real Estate, ° Insurance NOTARY PUBLIC TO LET: FOR SALE Houses, 1 to 4 family. Flats. 6 to 18 family: steam and. cold water, electricity. Casn $500 to $3,000, WM. A. YOUNG 409 WAVERLY AVE. BROOKLYN, N.Y. | Prospect 8529 reese emer mer ree! Brooklyn’s - Greatest. ‘-* Bargains | Hettorts Maer, near Casson Ave. Iewisionn 3 familiar, complete, AM Improvenvates ath e280 easy ferma: Hest inorinnse $1 SAMUEL J. TRANUM M4 ORMOND PLACE, NROORLTS oS uae agit (PRIVATE AND APT. HOUSES Between 115th and 145th Sts at very inw prices: amall cash and easy terms, Two family houses tn Hrons. very reasonable, DANIELS BROS, 2286 7th Ave. Tel, Grad, 8862 PRIVATE HOUSES EDWARD u. W:LLIS tnguranceMorteagee—Uonr® eet enoe AVE: Fe anes Seer Biggest building operation ever started for colored people --- 50 beautiful cottages now under construction, located in the famous Merrick Park section. These houses have every modern improvement and must be seen to be appreciated. Cash required, only $800. Balance like rent. REMEMBER: Jamaica today is like Harlem was 15 years ago. Five years from now the house you buy today will be worth almost twice its present value. DUNBAR REALTY CO. Best Bargains for Colored Home Buyers Best Bargains for Colored Home Buyers Modern One-Family Frame and Stucco Houses in Jamaica, Long Island 18 Minutes From New York City 5 Cent Fare From Many Points to the City Jamaica Offers Best Living Conditions of Any Community Near New York THE HOMES OF THE TOWN Milla-Cohn Building Corporation OFFICE: COR. WASHINGTON & CUMBERLAND STS. JAMAICA, N. Y. Why Exist In Harlem When You Can Live In Jamaica? Best Bargains for CARLISLE Up=to=Date Six-Room Houses Shower and Tiled Bath rooms. Medicine Cabinets Upright Basins. Steam Heat, Electric Lights. With Fine Fixtures, Parquet Floors, Sun Parlors, Laundries in Basement, Pantries, White Enamel Gas Heaters, one-piece 42. combination Sinks, Gas, Water Heaters, and Driveway. Theatres — Schools Stores — Churches Parks Playgrounds, Etc. Milla-Cohn Bu OFFICE: COR. WASHING JAMA Repr CHAS. WERNER : Playgrounds, Etc. CHAS. WERNER E. D. STEWART Move to Jersey City With $300 Down Balance the same as rent; you can buy a one or two family house in a fine location Stop Wasting Your Money for Rent Receipts Balance the same as rent; you can buy a one or two family house in a fine location Stop Wasting Your Money for Rent Receipts Phone Delaware 2009 ORIS 43 Kearney Ave. Jersey City, N. J. Phone Delaware 2009 Phone Delaware 2009 ORIS 43 Kearney Ave. Jersey City, N. J. FOR RENT Large Private House in West 130th Street. Big yard. House all improved. For lease. Beautiful eight-room apartment. All improvements. West 128th Street. FOR SALE Private House. West 139th Street, between 7th and 8th avenues. Other Private Houses for sale in nice clean block. Small and large Apartment Houses; reasonable cash payment. HARLEM REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE, Inc. 2208 SEVENTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY Telephone: Bradhurst 0270-0271 FOR SALE FOR RENT Large Private House in West 130th Street. Big yard. House all improved. For lease. Street, between 7th and 8th Avenues. Other Private Houses for sale all look like. HARLEM REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE, Inc. 2208 SEVENTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY Telephone: Bradhurat 0270-0271 JAMAICA BARGAINS FOR COLORED HOMESEEKERS ```markdown ``` (one-family, 8 rooms; $6,500; with $800 cash. (one-family, 7-room, with garage; $7,500; with $1,500 cash. One-family, 6-room brick; $8,500; with $600 cash. Brand new 1-family 6-room houses with breakfast nook, brick stoop, enclosed stucco sun porch, hot water connected with steam; lot 2x100; driveway and all other improvements! $6,600. Pay $375 now and $375 when you move in. We explain mortgages, etc. Other bargains in 2-family houses. Lots in Merrick Park, $560 to $700, with $100 cash. For rent, 6-room houses, $60; 6-room flats, $58. Phone me at the station and auto will be down to meet you. Phone 7305 Jamaica WILLIAM J. WEIR — 111 SMITH STREET (Merrick Road) JAMAICA, N. Y. FOR RENT --- PRIVATE HOUSE WEST 137th ST., BET. 7th & 8th AVES. 13 Rooms — 3 Baths — Electric — $175 Monthly One-family, 6-room brick; $8,000 with $600 cash. Brand new 1-family 6-room houses with breakfast nook, brick stoop, stucco sun panel, fireplace in $1400, driveway in $1400, the improvement $6,000. Pay $375 now and $775 when you move in. We explain mortgages, etc. Other bargains in 2-family houses. Lots in Merrick Park. $550 to $700, with $100 cash. For rent, 6-room houses, $60; 6-room flats, $55. Phone me at the station and auto will be down to meet you. Phone 7508 Jamaica WILLIAM J. WEIR — 111 SMITH STREET (Merrick Road) JAMAICA, N. Y. FOR RENT --- PRIVATE HOUSE WEST 137th ST., BET. 7th & 8th AVES. 13 Rooms — 3 Baths — Electric — $175 Monthly . J. COTTMAN 2303 Seventh Ave. Bradhurst 1048 S. J. COTTMAN NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1925 To the Colored Rent Payers of Harlem BEST JAMAICA BARGAINS ```markdown ``` Our Decorations Will Be Put In to Suit Purchasers PRICES RANGE FROM $6,350 to $6,600 Small Cash Payment of $750.00 Balance Like Rent To invest in a home in Jamaica today would be one of the best investments you ever made in life. Phone 1004 Jamaica Phone Jamaica 5475 5475 GO-OPERATIVE OWNERSHIP FOR COLORED PEOPLE OF MODERATE MEANS IS NOW ASSURED. ST. NICHOLAS HILL APARTMENTS STOP buying Apartment Houses for your Landlord! BUY your own Apartment with the money you would pay in rent. money you would pay in rent. SHOW A DEED at the end of a few years, instead of a package of Rent Receipts. OWN your HOME! THOUSANDS OF OTHERS who have been wasting money in rent receipts are now enjoying the feeling of security afforded by tenant ownership. WHY NOT YOU? and 8 rooms with Tiled Bathrooms, Par- tern conveniences are now open to Col- means, on an instalment plan of pur- own your apartment on terms of pay- rent. All rooms light and airy. Building with all kinds of Rapid Transit If. You will be convinced that this is a YOU. open daily and evenings until 8:00 p. m. Apartments of 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 rooms with Tiled Bathrooms, Parquet Floors and all modern conveniences are now open to Colored People of moderate means, on an instalment plan of purchase that enables you to own your apartment on terms of payment that are less than rent. All rooms light and airy. High Class Elevator Building with all kinds of Rapid Transit facilities at the door. Come and see for yourself. You will be convinced that this is a genuine opportunity FOR YOU. Office in the Building is open daily and evenings until 8:00 p. m. ST. NICHOLAS HILL CORPORATION 695 St. Nicholas Avenue New York City (Corner of 145th Street) PACIFIC STREET Two-Family Complete Brownstone, Electric Light, Furnace Heat, 13 Rooms, 2 Baths Small Cash - Easy Terms LEFFERTS PLACE Three Stories and Bement, Brownstone, Electric Light, Furnace Heat, 13 Rooms and Bath Small Down Payment John J. Edmead, 537 Classon Ave., Brooklyn HENRY SOUTHGATE, Owner offers for sale seven (7) private houses located in various parts of Harlem. Terms, $1,500 to $2,500 cash down. They are the best to be had in houses and my monthly payment plan is the only safe way to buy. Save money and see me at once. Also suburban houses for sale. NEPPERHAN, YONKERS—Fine building lots: small payment down; building loans arranged. Fully developed property—high class neighborhood. Thirteen minutes to subway and 23 minutes to 4th and 5th Ave. "L." 201½ WEST 123rd STREET, NEW YORK CITY 'Phone Morningalge 8152 Palace Garden Seventh Ave., 139th to 140th Sts. AUDITORIUM FOR OVER 50 Elaborately furnished, with a Room SUITA BILLIARD ACAD DANCING HA CABARET CHINE OR FOR ANY PU ING PALACE GARDEN Tel. Ashland 6664 S. J. CO REAL FOR LEASE OVER 5,000 FEET errately furnished, with Balcony, Dressing Rooms, Room and Office SUITABLE FOR LIARD ACADEMY DANCING HALL CABARET CLUB CHINESE RESTAURANT OR FOR ANY PUBLIC AMUSEMENT INQUIRE ACE GARDEN REALTY CO. Ashland 6664 347 FIFTH D. J. COTTMAN REAL ESTATE Elaborately furnished, with Balcony, Dressing Rooms, Check Room and Office SUITABLE FOR BILLIARD ACADEMY DANCING HALL CABARET CLUB CHINESE RESTAURANT OR FOR ANY PUBLIC AMUSEMENT INQUIRE PALACE GARDEN REALTY CORP. Tel. Ashland 6664 347 FIFTH AVE. S. J. COTTMAN REAL ESTATE 2303 Seventh Ave. For Sale 4 Stories, laundry in the basement; 16 rooms, with 2-4 floors throughout; 2-car garage seen to be appreciated. Consult EVERARD EDMUND Phone A iss. laundry in the basement. Beautiful in design; 16 rooms, with 2-tone wall panellings and throughout; 2-car garage. This wonderful house be appreciated. Consult the Office ARD EDMUND 263 West 137th Phone Audubon 0147. 4 Stories. laundry in the basement. Beautiful in design and construction; 16 rooms, with 2-tone wall panellings and parquet floors throughout; 2-car garage. This wonderful house must be seen to be appreciated. EVERARD EDMUND 263 West 137th Street Phone Audubon 0147. Jamaica and Brooklyn BARGAINS $500 Cash will buy a beautiful home in Jamaica, all modern improvements, 2-car garage. Act quickly. $1,200 Cash will buy a 2-family, all improvements, brick, with driveway, 5 and 6-room apartments. IN RICHMOND HILL $1,000 Cash will buy a beautiful corner house, with all modern improvements, driveway. $1,000 to $2,000 Cash will buy either one, two or three-family house in Brooklyn, with all improvements. DABNEY 168-28 104th St., Jarnalca, L. I. $1,000 Cash buys 11-room house, parquet floors; 130th St. $2,000 Cash buys 11-room house; electric lights, steam heat, parquet floors, newly decorated, fully furnished. $2,000 Cash buys 11-room house, 2 baths; West 127th St.; price $15,500. $2,000 Cash buys 10-room house; West 131st St., near Seventh Ave. 24-Family house on West 136th St.; cheap; 10-yr. nitge. Money to loan on Second and Third Mortgages 2123 FIFTH AVE. Harlem 8468 Real Estate for Sale Brooklyn $800 down; 12-room; two-family frame house; two-bath business on easy terms; fine section in Brooklyn; immediate possession. Phone Rose, Bryant 2728. LEASE 1000 FEET Halcony, Dressing Rooms, Check and Office LEASE FOR EMY BELL CLUB USE RESTAURANT PUBLIC AMUSEMENT JUIRE N REALTY CORP. 347 FIFTH AVE. GOTTMAN ESTATE Bradhurst 1048 Private Dwelling, West 139th Street Between 7th and 8th Aves. Corner House, Size Lot, 32x100 nt. Beautiful in design and con- ne wall panellings and parquet This wonderful house must be the Office 263 West 137th Street ubon 0147. Private House for Sale WEST 131st STREET Electric Lights, Steam Heat. 7th Ave., near 132nd St., 5-story apartment house, 25x100. First floor store, upper floors 6-room apartments. PRICE $35,000, CASH $5,000 JAMES A. BRANSON Real Estate Broker 2162 SEVENTH AVE. N. Y. CITY Morn. 0939 WANTED Basement Apartment Must Have Electricity Answer by letter G. HARRIEL, 672 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. MUST BE SOLD 3-STORY and large basement storage; 11 rooms; running water; price $16,000; cash $1,000; imme- mediate possession. 16x100 -- Three-story brownstone; price $14,250; small cash. WEST 131ST ST. near 7th Ave. 17x100 -- 3-story brownstone; bas- ement; price $17,500; small cash. 18x100 -- Three-story brownstone, 14 rooms, 2 baths; price $16,500. WEST 136TH ST. -- Three-story and basement; 14 rooms, 2 baths; price $16,500. 15 FAMILIES -- Private rooms; rent over $4,000; price $25,000. 52x100—Five-story and basement, corner tenement; rent over $12,000; make an offer. TORNER—Twenty-four families. $5 stories; rent over $18,000; price $100,000; small cash. LEASE FOR SALE—Fourteen rooms; restaurant in basement; rent $160 per month; 3½ years. Restaurant income $440 monthly; rooms $220 monthly; total income $170. FIVE VACA OF HOUSES for lense—Rent $100 per month and up. Five, 6, 7 and 8-room apts. S. Benjamin Walker and His Son 11 WEST 131st STREET TEL. HARLEM 7938 located Prices from $ 100. Bal- to $7500 FROM $ -411 W.145th St 409-411 W.145th Street Apartments to Let THREE HOUSES WEST ST. NICHOLAS AVE. let, 6, 7 and 8-room apartments; unneighborhood; about two blocks from the Station; out of the noise; out of the class, comfortable, elevator house; All hardwood floors and woods and showers; day and night elevator switchboard service. Three houses with sister apartment house, and one of them in the neighborhood. No security; on. Rent very reasonable. One 7-room $100. Call day and night. An insurer all any time, all week. Inquire of elec. MY PAY fancy prices in a crowded city as much as $20 and $25 per room? Are beautiful rooms a little farther West out $13 and $14 per room. Have so Move into rooms that are more room more Sunshine and Air. 9-411 W. 145th St THREE HOUSES WEST OF ST. NICHOLAS AVE. To let, 6, 7 and 8-room apartments; unfurnished; best neighborhood; about two blocks from Broadway Subway Station; out of the noise; out of the crowd. A high-class, comfortable, elevator house; beautifully equipped. All hardwood floors and woodwork; tile baths and showers; day and night elevator and telephone switchboard service. Three houses west of the Westminister apartment house, and one of the most beautiful in the neighborhood. No security; immediate possession. Rent very reasonable. One 7-room apartment for $100. Call day and night. An inspection is a treat. Call any time, all week. Inquire of elevator man. WHY PAY fancy prices in a crowded neighborhood—as much as $20 and $25 per room? You can get more beautiful rooms a little farther West Side for about $13 and $14 per room. Have some initiative. Move into rooms that are more roomy and have more Sunshine and Air. 409-411 W.145th Street 409-411 W.145th Street are you going to continue to aid the w- oot on your neck? are pride, support your own organizations, t your needs, your aspirations, and try to an- talling to Brother, licensed Brokers of the S offer you the same property, at the same p erms as the other fellow, the same courteou y earnest effort to please. cases, some finished, others under construc- breakfast nooks, sun parlors, hardwood flo- s, driveway, in fact every modern improv houses are selling for $6,500. Cash $750. Co- FREDERICK DOUGLASS REALTY 48 WASHINGTON STREET, JAMAICA, N Telephone Jamaica 4155. How long are you going to continue to aid the white man to keep his foot on your neck? Have Race pride, support your own organizations, they cater to you, know your needs, your aspirations, and try to anticipate your desires. Brother calling to Brother, licensed Brokers of the State of New York, we offer you the same property, at the same prices, and at the same terms as the other fellow, the same courteous treatment, plus a very earnest effort to please. New houses, some finished, others under construction, 6 rooms and bath, breakfast nooks, sun parlors, hardwood floors, electric lights, gas, driveway, in fact every modern improvement; fine locations. These houses are selling for $6,500. Cash $750. Come today. THE FREDERICK DOUGLASS REALTY CORP., 142 WASHINGTON STREET, JAMAICA, N. Y. Telephone Jamaica 4165. 71 WEST 132nd STREET—Entire building. Ground floor, large store, 18 ft. wide, 95 ft. deep. Upper floors, 7 rooms and bath; electric light, steam heat. Will rent for long term. 9th STREET—Three story and basement bldg. 500; cash $2,000; balance, long term mortg- gerly. 9th STREET—Three story and basement piz- nic lights, all improvements. Price $17,000; 200 quarterly for five years or longer. Post- er good bargains. Private Houses and Apart- Small Amount of Cash. WEST 138th STREET-Three story and basement brick dwelling. Price $17,500; cash $2,000; balance, long term mortgage; payable $200 quarterly. WEST 139th STREET-Three story and basement private dwelling. Electric lights, all improvements. Price $17,000; cash $2,000; balance $200 quarterly for five years or longer. Possession guaranteed. Many other good bargains. Private Houses and Apartment Houses. Small Amount of Cash. See: JOHN H. PIERCE 324 LENOX AVENUE Near 126th Street. Street. Phone: itz herbert Howe Specialist in Harlem for Colored Property Estate Bought, Sold Exchanged gages --- Loans --- Insu Fitz H Specialist Real Estate Mortgages Fitz herbert Howell Mortgages --- Loans --- Insurance 215 West 135th Street Other Beautiful Homes Prices from $6500 to $7500 FROM $500 --- to --- $1,000 CASH BALANCE $33.33 PER MONTH payable every three months on principal, or less than the rent you are now paying for your apartment or private house. 145th Street SES WEST OF OLAS AVE. from apartments; unfurnished; two blocks from Broadway the noise; out of the crowd. elevator house; beautifully floors and woodwork; tile and night elevator and tele- Three houses west of the house, and one of the most good. No security; immediate reasonable. One 7-room apart- and night. An inspection is a week. Inquire of elevator man. ices in a crowded neighbor- and $25 per room? You can is a little farther West Side- er room. Have some initia- that are more roomy and Air. 145th Street HOMESEEKERS. continue to aid the white man to our own organizations, they cater to directions, and try to anticipate your unsed Brokers of the State of New property, at the same prices, and at low, the same courteous treatment, please. others under construction, 6 rooms parlors, hardwood floors, electric every modern improvement; fine 6,500. Cash $750. Come today. UGLASS REALTY CORP., STREET, JAMAICA, N. Y. Jamaica 4155. FOR RENT FOR SALE story and basement brick dwelling. ance, long term mortgage; payable story and basement private dwell- ements. Price $17,000; cash $2,000; years or longer. Possession guar- ivate Houses and Apartment Houses. ount of Cash. Art Howell for Colored Property Bought, Sold and changed Loans --- Insurance Telephone Bradhurst 1735 s+ EDITORIAL -- AND -- FEATURE -- PAGE me TheNew York Amsterdam News 2293 SEVENTH AVE. Telephone Morningside 3701-3702 __Telephone Morningside 3791-3708 aad ape Ss ee $e, corRTeE AL eet Seem vente, NOE TS views ‘Presifent: Mrs. A HO Thorne, Serer’ Rutered 25 eng cine maces Dee E ieee “SURSCRIPTION BAREIS ck Wie ibs Sr tS FES \Opas Begs oe BAO * \, STAFF. ex sa wanes TE. sears BEE EE coins ot orgiane Ae SEES BolSHENTY soni wnt Driers Si Heeger > ST AAG ae BOY MORSE ’ = Crraulation Manager Bere ere: | wae States hae Seba caneri | sen Sais HERE OFFICES. sam came gos gegeSRE™ e. worgnte 2S ERLE Cae Peres contend eer Sota eet ong Games tere TE TT Adérees af communications and make all checks and ae eee al ae ee PS ES Wednesday, Angust 12, 1925 MORE THAN A NEWSPAPER —A WEEKLY INSTITUTION “THE AMSTERDAM NEWS is more than a newspaper—it is a weekly in- stitution.” If we do not entirely merit the assertion now, we shall strive more and more in the future to merit it. There- fore, beginning this week we have adopted it as our slogan and our guide. IN THE PAST we have striven to give to the newspaper reading public in the East the best newspaper commensurate with our ability and our income. We have tried to be an uplifting influence in the community. How well or how poor: ly we have succeeded may be deter: mined by our readers. We believe though that we have succeeded, at feast alittle, because the number of our read- ers has constantly increased. BUT we are no longer satisfied to publish a good newspaper, to increase our circulation, our advertising revenue _and our general income. We have as- sailed wrongs, turned the light of public opinion on corruption in high and low places and exposed the injustice of dis- crimination and lynching. This part of our program we shall continue to carry out with all the strength that is within us. SIDE BY SIDE with this program, however, we shall strive in the. future to open the way in every field of en- deavor for our young men and women. In art, letters, music, science, business and the proiessions, The Amsterdam News of the future will be found in the front ranks doing all in its power for the cultural and spiritual development of the Negro race. OUR TRAIL in the world of music was emblazoned Friday night when, under our auspices, twenty-four young Negro women sang in a public recital in Town Hall. Never before has there been such an array of Negro talent, and never be- fore was the talent of the Negro for music so dramatically placed before the public. And never before has a Negro newspaper had such wholehearted co- operation of its reading public. WITH SUCH CO-OPERATION we will surely become more than a newspaper. NEGRO LABOR AND A. F. OF L. DECLARING THAT the activities of the forthcoming American Negro Labor Congress are being directed from the Soviet headquarters in Moscow, Presi- dent Green, of the American Federation of Labor, in a speech warns Negro un- jonists not to attend it. He also stated that the purpose of the Congress was to “mislead the colored men into believ- ing afl their grievances will be remedied by overturning the Government of the United States and establishing a Soviet republic.” ‘THE AMERICAN Negro Labor Congress may have the backing of the Russian Government and it may not. We don't profess {0 know. We do know, though, that #se American Federation of Labor for a long period of years looked with disfavor upon the organization of Negro workers and refused to admit. them to membership in the organization, and that it is only in recent years, since en actment oi laws limiting European im- migration, that the A. F. of L. has shown a willingness to open its doors to Ne- ‘groes who wanted to affiliate them- selves with the unions of their trades. | WE ALSO KNOW that this was done Dot because the A. F. of L. was inter- ested in Negro workers, but to maintain ‘its own supremacy. Mr. Green’s at- tempt to give out the impression that the Negro Labor Congress would or ‘could. hamper the government in any way is too childlike to be given serious | consideration. SIGNS —Of Progress THE APPOINTMENT of a Negro as a Guard in Sing Sing Prison, who had qualified for the post in a State Civil Service examination. Why not? Pris- oners in Sing Sing are white and col- ored, why shoulda’t the guards be white and colored? Conviction, not ‘race, qualifies the inmate; examinations un- der the Civil Service laws, and not race, should qualify the guard. THE SUCCESSFUL passing of the Mu- nicipal: Civil Service examination for Lieutenant ‘in the Fire Department of the only Negro member of the force in the Greater City. THE ELECTION of a Negro in Elmsiord to the treasurership of the School Board by white and colored voters over a white woman candidate. —Of Retrogression THE ATTEMPT of the Clay County prosecutor to justify the lynching of a man accused, but not convicted, of a se- rious crime. THE PARADE of the Ku Klux Klan in the Nation's Capital. Expressed by Our Contemporaries The Town Hall Recital To the Editor of the Amstercam ews: | Sir: ‘The recital at Town Hall last Friday evening. in which 24 colored singera took part. was one of the most significant occasions ever held in this coun- uy. First it showed and called attention to the at- tainments and talents of a large number cf young women who reside right here in our community, and who are just waiting for an opportunity for s#lt- expression. It fs Intoresting to uote that our of the 24 singers who competed in the contest for the grand opera scholarship all of them, with perhaps a few excep- tions, were residents of Harlem, This ought to be the means of encouraging and giring inspiration to others who are aspiring for a musical career, and who sometimes wonder whether or not it is Worth: while. The opportunity to bave sung before such a lvaat gathering as was present at Town Hall was one ‘that any young singer might cherish. It may well ‘he regarded as a debut. The singers who appeared jar Town Hall deserve the congratulations of us all for they showed an earnestness and seriousness of purpose, which was borne out by their excellent singing. There were somo beautiful volces, with fine and delicate qualities, and most of them well placed. Nothing is more beautiful than the human voice when ft has been weil cultivated. And the singers at this recital seamed to recpgnize this fact, It ts an occasion for great joy to know that the young colored women are going to have an opportunity to aspire for the grand opera. which {s the highest form of musical expression. I have often wondered why this field of muelc was barred to the colored anger. ‘The plan of The Amsterdam News to encourage col- cored atngera in this direction will meet with univer- sal acclaim. The sngera who sang at Town Hall gave Harlem [some idea of what» graat community we bave here. This {8 the kind of effort tht ought ta be put forth. |Harlem has been written about more than any other ‘section, In the issue of the Saturday Evening Post of August § one of the feature articles {s on Harlem. ‘The world is being attracted to this section more and more, and such effortathat took place at Town ‘Hall wll help to make Harlem the great cultural ‘Negro center we want it to be. Mr. Fontana de- ‘nerves all the support that we can give him | To the singers who appeared last Fridar evening et me say to you to study bard, read much, be care- fal of your health, and hitch your horses to the stars. "Act well your part, there the honor Iles.” “CLEVELAND G. ALLEN. Important News—Rush! empsey will fight Harry Wills somewhen, t a, somehow—in the east or the west or the 1 ne xonth—in New York or somewhere else “Tex” Rickard’s promotion or under ths abody else—in 1926 or 1926—Prnbdabiy, S. and MAYBE. he fight is always “next year.” It {s al twelve months trom NOW. his ie fresh “news” all the time. Once up the audience laughed when the chairmat cad: “We have just received some tmpo: A—iftrue” 2. 1. ine thing we may assert with reasonable ces That “Jack” Dempsey will fight Harry | 1d when he is compelled to do so by public and boxing commissions. But not otherwis: rwhen_ Dempsey will fight Harry Wills somewten, some where, somehow—tin the east or the west or the nort? or the routh—in New York or somewhere else—un der “Tex” Rickard’s promotion or under that_o! somebody else—in 1926 or 1926—Probably, PER HAPS, and MAYBE. The fight ie always “next year.” It ts always Just twelve months from NOW. ‘This is fresh “news” all the time. Once upon * time the audience laughed when the chairman an: nounced: “We have jut received some Important news—if true”... One ting we may assert with reasonable con: fulenee: Thut Tack" Dempsey will flight Harry Wills if und when he Is compelied to do so by public pres: suro und boxing commissions, But not otherwise nor otherwhen, e WILLIAM PICKENS, ° - Te Maintenance of N. Y. Public Library Employees Underpaid, Some Receiving as Little as $82 Per Month—Money Also Needed for Purchase | of New Books | Determined to rouse the people of New York. to the need for more liberal appropriations by the city for the maintenance of, its public library system, the employees of the New York Public Library are about to launch a two months’ educational campaign, according to an announcement made public yesterday by Miss Harriet S. Wright. president of the staff ‘association, compused of nearly a thousand employees of. the ‘institu- In the 1926 budget submitted to the Board of Estimate last Tuesday, the trustees of the Library asked for an appropria- tion of $253,300 for the pur. chase of bocks and a uniform salary increase of $400 a year for the staff of the circulation department. the reference de- partment being supported by endowment funds. There 1s urgent need, the ii- brary workers declare in their statement. of a liberal grant from the ‘city treasury. to re: plenish the depleted stock of books and to replace thousands of volumes that are no longer fit for use. and should be with- drawn from circulation, The city’s appropriation for . this ftom was successively. reduced by the Board ot Estimate from $127,500 in 1920 to $100,000 the following year, $60,000 In 1922 and $61,000 ‘annually, there- after, in the face of @ 20 per cent Increase in the cost of books since 1920, In consequence of this dras- te“cut. the Ubrarians point: out, the number of yolumes in the circulation department tell off 45,612 between 1920 and 1824 and circulation Agures de- clined correspondingly. In the. mattér. -of salaries, Miss Wright, who holds a re- sponsible position as head of the children's department at the Seward Park Branch, 192 East Broadway, the largest branch library in the clty, de- clares that the majority’of the trained staff of the New York Public Library chave “never deen pald a living wage and that today half of them get only $82.67 to $102.42 per month, without an old age pen- sion, suchias {8 provided for teachers and other city em- ployees. Miss Wright calls attention in ber statement to the fact that public Hbrary workers are paid less In New York than in other efties and much less than public school teachers in this city, where the salary scale for even the lowest grades ip the elementary schools ranges from $125 to $239.58 a month. with the added advantage of a retirement pension, and cuar- anteed automatic yearly salary increases. In consequence chiefly of the low pay, {t ix said. 21 per cant of the trained staff of the New York Public Library resign each year, entailing constant changes of personnel. with con- sequent detriment to the serv- fee. ‘A comparative table of the per capita amount appropri- ated for public library pur- “Movies” miei : ‘Continued from Pace +.) What of the Floridians who, while their Negro labor chafes and suf ‘fers, seek to supplant them with Ports Ricans and Bahamlans? Have the former much claim to 100 per cent Americanism? ‘As the Good Book says: “A good ame {s better than riches.” and we sadiy beg to add that ff the good name of American employers fs to be preserved, the rank and file of the employer group must diacklist the black sheep amonz them who, to save wage payrolls are willing to defy the immigration laws beyond all conscience. These gnouls and rapists of American fn. ‘dustry, of whom, fortunately. there jare few. must be warned that Amertean-made laws are kin te ‘American-made goods, F Daniel Come ‘to Judgment 66 TERE is & good deal of humbug about the Nordic Superem- inency and touching Anglo- Saxon superiority, though many cling desperately to such a belief,” tesponds the editor of the Cincinnati Enquirer tc the mournful monologue of President Wanamaker, of the American Cotton Association, who recently said: “It may be gravely questioned whether merica is any longer. in the fullest sense of the word, an Anglo-Saxon nation. Elimi- poses by 36 of the leading cities of the United States shows New York to be nearly at the bottom of the list, in 33d Place. with Des Moines, Day- ton (Ohio). Detroit and Kan- sas City spending more than twice as much per inhabitant; ‘Boston, Indianapolis and Port- | land (Ore.), three times and Bridgeport and Cleveland four times as much as New York. As evidence of the extensive community service rendered by the New York Public Lf brary. the staff association's statement points to a total of nine and a half million books lent for home use in 1924, in addition to 50,000 pictures and 38.000 spectally printed books for the blind, 400 book stations /_ maintained In institutions and. outlying districts, through | which over 400,000 books were : issued, and 2,000 story hour and reading club meetings held fn branch libraries, besides many exhibitions of all kinda and hundreds of Hterary and educational meetings in librarr. auditoriums. Prominent Men to Address Youth Movement PHILADELPHIA. Pa. Aug. 1v.—The Negro. Youth Move- ment of America will hold its third annual convention at At~ lantle City, Ne J. August 28 and 28. Three of the foremost men fn the United States in their respective chosen fields will address the conference. “As outlined by A, Leon Richard: son, of Washington, D. C., sta- tistazian of the movement and in charge of arrangements for the conference, the speakers for the conference have been secured from three fields of importance to the movement and to the conntry. They are Hon. ¢. C. Spaulding, Chair. man of the Executive Com- mittee of the National Nesro Business League and Presi- dent of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Com- pany: Dr. Emmett J. Scott, of Howard University. one of the most astute manipulators of propaganda in the country. will address the “Movement of Practical Propaganda” in put- ting over a program, and Dr. Gilbert H, Jones. President of Wilberforce University and a profound student of psychol- ‘ogy. Is expected to ald the con- ference with a discourse on sthe “Potent Effects of Practi- cal Psychology.” nate the pure strain of blood that still continues to flow in the veins of the South and West, and it certainly is not so, In the South the Anglo- Saxon continues dominant, but even here there are mil- lions of men of color, who have no adequate conception of what true Anglo-Saxonism is." And regret there is where President Wanamaker spilled the beans, as the Cin- ‘cinnati Enquirer thoughtfully admits. The millions of colored people in the South and elsewhere huve no quarrel with those who would preserve the purity of Anglo-Saxon blood. And. quite contrary to the theory of President Wanamaker. they ‘quite thoroughly understand the whims of the blood supremacy in the solid territory named by the cotton manufacturer. To them the Anglo-Saxon corpuscles speak {n stirring terms of lim Crowism, sought to be made applicable to every sphere of life traversed by America’s black people. If this de supremacy, then God forbid its counterpart in any race. Rather be it trne. as the Enquirer mildly (mplies to President Wanamaker. “that America of tomorrow will nat be Anglo-Saxon. but it need be none the loss a land of free people—ot democracy, freerom and independ- ence.” To which we would gratefully add “amen"—for even as Lincoln sald. a nation could not endure half slave and halt free. neither can a country which 4s etriving to merit the standards of true democracy endure while an element of its con- temt is continuing to exact l1self over another struggling clement. “{am holler than thon” has no place in America—at least George Washington, Abraham — Lincoln. General Grant and Thecdore Roose: velt did not think so. And they were AngloSaxons, toa, Library of Congress Employee Saved the Honor of Librarian Hamilton Rucker has left the Library of Congress after 45 years of service. This old Negro. was one of the most trusted employees in the ll- brary and his career was of such Interest that now, upon his retirement, he {3 settling down to write his memotra. His npplication for the l- brary job was indorsed by “Unele Joe" Cannon and Judse David Davis, of the Supreme Court, When he began work, tn charge of bound newspaper volumes, the Library of Con- grevs was gituated in a few spare rooms on an upper floor of the Capitol. He has lived through its growth into its Present monumental _bome with its millions of volumes. Probably the brightest spot in his long recollection was bis search for fost copyright notes which, in absent-minded- ness, Dr. Ainsworth Spofford, the ibrarian, had misplaced. One year. in making up his an- nual report, Dr. Spofford found he was several thousand dol- lars short in his accounts. Copyright collections would not tally and the company that bonded the old doctor had to make up the loss. Congress, against all tradition, simply made Spofford assistant Il- brarfan for life and appointed another man with better book- keeping ability as chief. Rucker. thereupon started :to hunt out the lost. money. He Kept finding it, a few hundred dollars here, a thousand there. tucked away in forgotten cor- ners, under ‘papers or behind dooks, where Dr, Spofford had placed 1 thoughtlessly.. He eal- vaged one package of notes worth $2,800 from behind “Ten Nights in a Barroom." When that night he returned it to the Ubrarian the old. gentleman fainted dead away. with de- light. Byentually all_ the money was found and Dr. Spofford’s integrity was entirely cleared. —Brooklyn Eagle. Howard Teacher Given Harvard Honor Degre« WASHINGTON, D. C.—Prot. Charles’ H. Wesley, head of the Department of History. at Howard University, Washing- ton, D. C., has been awarded one of the highest honors which a university may confer, the degree of Doctor of Phil: osphy in History. at the Har- vard, University" (Cambridge. Mass.), ‘commencement last June. “He is the fourth scholar of ais race to be granted this dogree by Harvard University. ‘The -other_three include’ Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, Dr. GG. Woodson and Dr. A. 1. Locke. Dr, Wesley holds the degree of. Master. ofArts: from Yale University and Bachelor of Arts from Fisk University, Nashville, Tenn. He was ap- pointed a university scholar at Yale and an Austin scholar at Harvard. “He has pursued vourses of study at the Guilde internationale, Paris, France. Dr. Wesley has also served as pastor of Ebenezer and Camp bell A.M. E, Churches in Washington. and as secretary with the international com- mittee of the ¥. M,C. A. He has lectured ‘frequently to teachers’ Institutes, education- al eatherings, and his re searches have found place in several scholarly publications. He expects to publish at an early date 2 documentary stitdy of Negro inbor in the United States since the Civil mace N. A. A.C. P. Briefs Thanks Mayor and Army Officer torfiAverting Race Riot. Letters of thanks have been sent by the association to May- or Charles Green of Battle Creek. Mich. and Brigadier- General Benjamin A. Poore. commanding officer at Camp Cusier, for their prompt ac: Uon in snppressing wnat threat- ened ‘for a time to become a Tace riot between white sal. diers ani colored citizens of the city. Chinese Students Blame British for Disorder, The Chinese Students’ Tuo of Colorado College. Colornin Springs, has sent_*o James Weleon Johnson, Secretary of me. association, a_statement Placing the blame for recent Weorders In China upon Brit ish police, and asserting that unarmed Chinese students were massacred. FIGHTING BUBONIC PLAGUE WITH FIRE jhe Rev. Robert Shields. misstonary of the Methodist Bpiscopal Church in Loanda, Africa, reports that the health authority of the Portuguese Government has ordersd all owners of native huts fn vit. lages which suffered from the bubonic plague lost year to tear down and burn up their thatched roofs, It seems that these old grass roofs re A lurking place of the rata which carry the plague. Hundreds of vMares nse naw creates with new grass, and Vir. Shield> thinks that this saat: tary measure will prove effec. tive in preventing a retura of the plague this year. Overcrowding Facilitates Spread of Diseases The National Anti-stum League of Paris in {ts recent report.states that overcrowding is rampant in certain sections of that city and that {t may be viewed as the cause of s0- cial disintegration and the moral downfall of the family. “The danger of promiscuity, says the report, naturally ov- cure when parents and children sleep in the same room and younger brothers—and very often brothers and sisters— sleep in the same bed.” ‘The housing difficulttes in Germany, according to an ab- stract In’ “Social Pathology"— issued by the United States Public Health Service, have much to do with the increase of venereal diseases. particular: ly among children. Due to over crowding, entire familles have been infected, and a coincident laxity of moral standards has been found. One report states that @ family of nine slept in one room, two married cou- ples-being among the number. An editorial in “National Health," published in London, states that “We are not likely to attain a full measure of suc- cess in the control of venereal Special Lecture Co Africa __ In co-operation with the irica Committee of the Com- mittee. of Reference and Counsel. and the International Mis- sionary Council, the Kennedy School of Missions, Hartford: Conn., is offering a special intensive course of study on that continent from Oct. T to Dec. 22, 1925. Prot. Dr. D, Weatermann, of |, the University of Berlin, a / - Yeading. authority on African mission boards who have re- languages and anthropologs, | cently, Investigated conditions will be in residence for five | ! varions parts of Africa will -” weeks and-give three lectures | 7eport their conclusions: Rev. wer week in this course. Mr. Thomas, S. Donohugh, Rev, J. H. Oldham, of London, sec- Ernest Riggs and Dr. P. H. J. retary of the international ais. | Lorigso. slonary Council, and editor of In addition to this special the International Review of course on Africa. the Kennedy Missions, will give a series of | School of Missions Is offering lectures upon the relations of | five courses in its regular cur: missfons to governments and { riculum through the Africa upon other topics relating to: | Department. Mra: Agnes C. 1. Afrtea. | Donohugh, M. a. FLOR. A. Ly Several mémbers‘of the Afrl- | will give ‘courses in etholoss. can Education Commission | “The Life of Women,” “Africa which recently made an inten: Native Lite” Prof. W. C. Wil: - sive study of school work on loughby. F. R. R. 1, will give that continent will lecture: Dr. | courses in “Banta Relizion and Thomas Jesse Jones, educa- “Bantu Political Institutions.” tional director of the Phelps- Stokes Fund: Dr. Homer L. et Shantz, of the United States | CHINA today ts the chlet source Department of Agriculture. [of supply for eggs and ege prod- and Dr. J, H, Dillard, president facts. Last year she exported about of the Jeanes and Slater {100,000,009 “dozens of eges after Funds. Three secretaries of filling her domestic demands. I h P t C FFF FPDP FPDP PD DD DPD PLIES ONWARD. © on and up. inspiring Race. Faint not. nor shalt thou turn around-— Yea, travel with incessant pace: Fight on till thou art truly crowned. Press on, © thriving Race af mine. Some day the golden sun will shine: March on and up. though ostracized. Forsooth. ye shall be recognized! © Race of mire. se true and brave, Thy resting piace is not the grave: Look up and out, behold the morn In Land where thon wert truly born. So, onward march, O Race’ oppressed : Leave not sine evil unredressed— Strike only with God's truth and migh:, For truth though hid shall find the light, -—-ALEXANDER SEYMOUR, New Verte Giex! THE QUESTION OT whence we came or when or why or how N Coneerns the human soul in upward flight: No past, no future—iust the throbbing now Impels the upward struggle toward the light! We came—let that suifice: some Mighty Pow'r Spoke or thought or moulded us irom something: And made us masters ai each passing hour- OF cach brief now, sole Jord, heir. god and king! He is a fool who says there is no Gevi. He is a fool who thinks he understands The mind of that Supreme who from. some cho Created life and beauty for all lands. One thing alone we know that concerns us: The soul might struggle in its jleeting new To overcome the pow'rs that appnse tis . To find some solace for man’s poor sweating brow. Let feols raver the earth moves on er hee te gem! Ui there's a future. ‘tis alone ior those, Who, in the fleeting now. let ‘Trath lead then Up the hot, rocky path God’s great wisdom chose. we OWILLIAM OP aN, disease natll we have arrived ata solution of the housing ¢iz- feulty.” The Incubstors of lewiness and {ts frequent associates— gonorrhea und syphilis—are by Ro means Hmited to the lower strata of society. Promiscuiry 4g- very ditfusible, and one ot the most essential as well as productive measures for health. maintenance is the effort to gomba: venercul discases by both mental and physical ny- giene. The two leading British Societfes for the prevention of these diseases are now in ace cord as to the efficacy of per- sonal cleanliness and disintec- tion in the prevention of véne real infection. Widespread edu- cation by publicity regarding the great scour:e of venereal diseases 8 they affect the child, the family and the state, and the conditions infuencing thelr spread and prevention is very productive of good results ‘and {s universally recognized ag essential health work. The Washington Times of June 26th gives publicity ‘editorially to “The Curse of Deafness.” and points out the causative rele tion to certain types of deaf. iene: mission boards who have re- cently Investigated conditions in various parts of Africa will report their conclusions: Rer. Thomas S. Donohugh, Rev, Ernest Riggs and Dr. P. H. J. Loriggs. In addition to this special course On Africa, the Kennedy School of Missions is offering, five courses in its regular cur-, riculum through the Africa Department. Mrs, Agnes C. 1. Donohugh, M. A.. F. R. A. La. will give courses in ethology, “The Life of Women,” “Africa: Native Life’ Prof. W. C, Wil: - loughby. F. R. R. 1, will give courses In “Banta Retizion and “Bantu Political Institutions.” CHINA today ts the chief soure of supply for eggs and ere prod acts, Last year she exported abou 100,000,090 dozens of eges atte: filling her domestic demands.