Amsterdam News
Wednesday, October 19, 1927
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
DR. CHENEY CONVICTED
HAMPTON INSTITUTE CLOSED BY STRIKE OF STUDENT BODY
REGULAR WEEKLY EDITION Brooklyn and L. I. News
DR. PERRY CHENEY CONVICTED OF 2ND DEGREE ASSAULT
DR. PERRY CHENEY CONVICTED OF 2ND DEGREE ASSAULT
Jury, While Finding Him Guilty in Lesser Degree Than Alleged in Indictment, Disregarded Self=
Dr. Perry W. Cheney, 200 West 135th street, was convicted in the Court of General Sessions. Part 6, on Thursday of assault in the second degree before Judge William Allen and a jury, after a two-days' trial. The case was given to the jury shortly before three o'clock and the verdict was reached shortly before six.
The charge was that on the 26th day of December, 1926, Dr. Cheney was engaged in a fist fight with Hyman Pincus at 145th street and eleventh avenue following a colision of their cars. John Torpy joined in fight with Pincus and was stabbed by Dr. Cheney in the region of his heart. He was taken to the Harlem Hospital, where he remained about thirteen days, the first two or three days of which he was not expected to live. He finally recovered, however, but claims his recovery is only partial. He gives his age as twenty-three years.
Dr. Cheney pleaded self-defense and it is evident that the jury gave most careful consideration to his defense, for they were almost three hours determining that single point. After the jury was out for about two hours they came into court and asked to see Dr. Cheney, Hyman Pincus and John Tormy in order that they might judge their comparative sizes, and also requested further instructions as to the law of self-defense and after deliberating for about an hour thereafter declined to convict Dr. Cheney of assault in the first degree, but brought in a verdict of assault in the second degree. The point which the jury had to determine in the case was whether, in a street fight, Dr. Cheney could not otherwise have protected himself and defended himself from his opponents than by the use of a deadly weapon. Dr. Cheney will be arraigned for sentence tomorrow. The maximum penalty under the law is five years in prison or $1,000 fine. At the discretion of the court sentence may be suspended. He was defended by Cornellus W. McHughald.
JUMPED BAIL 4 YEARS AGO; APPREHENDED
Florence Quall, white, 3426 Atlantic avenue, Atlantic City, N. J., who qualified before the law four years ago on a narcotic charge and jumped ball in $1,500, was recently apprehended by Detective Sergeant Battle of the West 135th Street Station
Editorials 20
Special Articles 10
General, Local and National
News. 10
News of Society and Women's
Activities 4, 6
News of Churches and Fraternal
New Months 15
Amusements 9
Sports 7, 8
News of Brooklyn and Long
Island 12
Nearby Briefs 12
News of New Jersey 14
Music and the Drama
Editorial Page
ADVERTISING INDEX.
Houses and Restaurants. 13
Underground. 15
Real Estate Advertising. 18
Employment Agencies. 19
Bulkers and Building Materials. 19
Music. Neglects. 19
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"BLACK HERMAN" GIVEN SENTENCE IN PENITENTIARY
Special Sessions Justices Find Him Guilty of Administer ing to Policewoman Nettie Sweatman Without License
Herman Rucker, or "Black Herman," the magician, 39, 119 West 136th street, was sentenced to an indeterminate period in the penitentiary on a charge of practicing medicine without a license when arraigned in Special Sessions Court Friday before Justices Caldwell, Healy and Kelly. His attorney, Louis A. Lavelle, 15 Park Row, arrived when the proceedings were nearly half over.
The testimony consumed nearly two hours. Policewoman Nettle Sweatman, who arrested Rucker several months ago, retold her story to the court. She testified that when she called on Rucker, after having received a complaint of fortune telling and practicing medicine without a license, she was told by Rucker that she was suffering from appendicitis, high blood pressure and gas.
At Rucker's directions, she said, she was sold a bottle of "Black Herman's Body Tonic" for $1.25. In addition to this she was given a dark fluid in a small bottle, the contents of which she was to rub behind her ears and on other parts of the body.
The magician (?) had eight witnesses to testify in his behalf, but to no avail against the policewoman's testimony. He produced two old certificates, one from the Health Department and the other alleged to be a permit for the operation of the Herman Herb Garden, Inc.
specifically at Herman's direction
On the charge of fortune telling Rucker was recently convicted in Heights Court by Magistrate Vitale who, because of the good word of Junius M. Green, bondsman, 168 West 136th street, in Rucker's behalf, let him off with a fine of $50, following his express intention of sending the Harlem medicine man to jail. On Sept. 2 Magistrate Douras sitting in Heights Court fixed ball of $1,000 upon Rucker to appear in Part VI of Special Sessions for trial on the medicine charge, and his conviction came Friday.
According to Attorney Lavelle an appeal from the Judges' decision will be made in the First Department of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, and he will also seek a certificate of release to fix ball pending the appeal.
Rucker made a blanket dental of all of Mrs. Sweatman's charges, and declared that his wife sold her the body tonic. This was not denied, but it was shown that the sale was
The Florence Garnsite School for Girls
THE NEW YORK Amsterdam News
Margaret Gordy Granted Divorce
Sister of Late David Brown
Wins Decree
Mrs. Margaret Gordy, 2315 Seventh avenue, was granted a decree of divorce against her husband, T. William Gordy, by Justice Platzek in the Supreme Court on Tuesday, October 11, when her case came up for trial. Miss Nora Bell Smith, who was a lodger in the Emma Ransom House of the Y. W. C. A., 175 West 137th street, was named as co-respondent.
At the hearing the detectives from the Boulin Agency testified that, after trailing Gordy and Miss Smith from the theatre, they finally raided the apartment 67 at 108 West 141st street early in the morning.
Mrs. Gordy is the sister of the late W. David Brown, funeral director, and conducts the business in company with her sister at 2315 Seventh avenue.
She was represented by Attorney John Bradshaw Thorne, 101 West 135th street.
ERMAN"
ENTENCE
UNITENTIARY
find Him Guilty of Administer-
on Nettie Sweatman
at License
Herman," the magician, 39, 119
paced to an indeterminate period
of practicing medicine without
special Sessions Court Friday be-
nd Kelly. His attorney, Louis
loved when the proceedings were
specifically at Herman's direction.
On the charge of fortune telling,
Rucker was recently convicted in
Heights Court by Magistrate Vitale
who, because of the good word of
Junius M. Green, bondsman, 168
West 136th street, in Rucker's beah-
let him off with a fine of $50,
following his express intention of
sending the Harlem medicine man to
jail. On Sept. 2 Magistrate
Douress sitting in Helights Court fixed
ball of $1,000 upon Rucker to
appear in Part VI of Special Sessions
for trial on the medicine
charge, and his conviction came Frid-
day.
According to Attorney Lavelle an
appeal from the Judges' decision
will be made in the First Department
of the Appellate Division of
the Supreme Court, and he will also
seek a certificate of release to fix
ball pending the appeal.
Try Your Hand at Making a Beautiful Lampshade for Your Home
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Leona Lillard, an
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NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19, 1927
APPOINTED ASS'T U. S. ATT'Y; WIFE DIES SAME DAY
APPOINTED ASS'T U. S. ATT'Y; WIFE DIES SAME DAY
Brilliant Daughter of Emmett J. Scott Had Been Ill About Six Months Became Wife of H. T. Delany Year Ago
Happiness was turned into grief last Tuesday when Attorney Hubert T. Delany, 240 Broadway, was recommended to the Attorney General for appointment to the position of Assistant United States District Attorney by Charles H. Tuttle, U. S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. Earlier the same day his wife, Clarissa Scott Delany, died. She had been ill about six months.
Mrs. Delany, who was the daughter of Emmett J. Scott, secretary-treasurer of Howard University, died at 3 a.m. last Tuesday in Washington, D. C., at the home of her parents, after an illness of six months. Funeral services were conducted Thursday afternoon from St. Mary's Episcopal Church, the pastor, Rev. O. L. Mitchell, officiating. The Delanys were married Oct. 9 a year ago in the same edifice.
Attorney Delany is the son of Bishop H. B. Delany of the North Carolina Diocese of the Protestant Episcopal Church. He graduated from St. Augustine School, at Raleigh, N. C., 19 May, 1919, and was the president of his class.
He came to New York and entered City College, where he won the Board of Trustees' prize in oratory and was elected to be president of the Educational Club and the Douglass Society. He graduated in June, 1923, with fifteen credits beyond those necessary for his degree, having specialized in history, education and psychology.
law; Dr. Henry B. Delany of this city, and Dr. and Mrs. Lemuel Delany of Raleigh, N. C., her two brothers- and sister-in-law; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wortham of this city; Mr. and Mrs. Watt Terry, Brockton, Mass.; Miss Helen M. Wheatland, Newport, R. I., who was a classmate at Wellesley; Miss Eolyn Knight, Boston, Mass., who was one of her bridesmaids; Mrs. Laura Terrell Jones, Tuskegee Institute, Ala., who was one of her first teachers, and Miss Frances Grant, Bordentown Industrial Institute, Bordentown.
In addition to his college work Attorney Delany has had valuable experience in psychological examinations, having corrected more than 3,000 group tests given to ex-service men who were training at City College.
After his graduation Attorney Delany worked his way from Montreal to Liverpool on a cattle boat. Upon his return he resumed his study of law at New York University, graduating in January, 1926. He was one of the few men admitted to the bar upon his first examinations.
Mrs. Delany was born at Tuskegee Institute, Ala., May 22, 1901, and graduated from there in 1916. In the fall of the same year she entered Bradford Academy in New England and graduated as an honor student in June, 1919. During the same year she entered Wellesley College. She was a great lover of outdoor sports and at Bradford and Wellesley, she played on the varsity hockey teams. Upon her graduation from Wellesley in 1923 she received the coveted Phi Beta Kappa key.
In September, 1923, she was appointed to teach English in the Dumbar High School, resigning her post upon her marriage in October of last year. She then made her home in New York City. In the fall and winter of 1926-27 Mrs. Delany conducted a "Study of the Negro Child" for the Committee of Fifty in cooperation with the Department of Research of the National Urban League and the Women's City Club of New York. She completed the survey before she was stricken.
Her death is mourned by her parents, her husband, two brothers, Horace of Washington and Emmett Jr. of this city, and two sisters, Mrs. Anron Payne of Chicago and Miss Lenore Scott of Atlantic City.
Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, president of Howard University, spoke at the funeral services. There was a profusion of beautiful floral tributes. Interment was in Harmony Cemetery.
The following were among the out-of-town friends at the funeral: Mrs. H. B. Delany, her mother-in-
law; Dr. Henry B. Delany of this city, and Dr. and Mrs. Lemuel Delany of Raleigh, N. C., her two brothers and sister-in-law; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wortham of this city; Mr. and Mrs. Watt Terry, Brockton, Mass.; Miss Helen M. Wheatland, Newport, R. I., who was a classmate at Wellesley; Miss Eolyn Klugh, Boston, Mass., who was one of her bridesmaids; Mrs. Laura Terrell Jones, Tuskegee Institute, Ala., who was one of her first teachers, and Miss Frances Grant, Bordentown Industrial Institute, Bordentown, N. J.
Young Man Kills Self With Gas
Brooklyn Woman Drinks Lysol While Visiting Harlem Friend
A 22-year-old youth committed suicide 6 o'clock Saturday morning by putting a tube in his mouth and inhaling gas. Matilda Samuels, 205 West 148th street, found Herbert Clark in bed with the tube still in his mouth. The police were summoned and Dr. Maer hurried to the scene from Columbus Hospital, but death had already claimed the young man.
Clark was rooming in the basement with a tenant to whom he had confided that he was born with tuberculosis. He was being treated at Harlem Hospital, it is said, but his condition showed no improvement. He was able to work, however, and had just returned from his day's toil when despair overcame him.
He removed the clothing from his bed and placed it on the floor and lay upon it, and then turned on the gas, placing a long rubber tube in his mouth. He was dead when the police and ambulance were summoned and his jaws were in a death-lock and the gas tube was taken from his mouth only with great difficulty. The only sign of identification the youth left was a passport from Jamaica, B. W. L.
A young woman, just two years older than Clark, attempted to end her life Friday by swallowing a quantity of lysol. She was Martha Lansing, 24, and was visiting at 127 West 132d street, when she took the nolson. She was rushed to Harlem
Entered as second-class matter Dec. 21, 1905, at the Form
Office at New York, under the Ant of March 3, 1919.
DR. DAVID BOONE HELD WITHOUT BAIL IN BRIBERY CASE
Accused With Roy Carey of Offering Bribe to Man Robbed of $115 Not to Press Charge
Dr. David C. Boone, 37, veterinary surgeon, 146 West 133rd street, and Roy Carey, 36, a porter, 51 West 134th street, charged with attempted bribery, were arraigned in Heights Court Friday before Magistrate Dodge, who held them without bail for trial in General Sessions. They were represented by Attorney James J. Low, 331 Madison avenue, who sought to show that the complainant, Charles Dyer, 2597 Eighth avenue, had asked Boone and Carey for the alleged bribe money.
Man Loses Foot and Hand Under Trolley
Knocked Under Wheels of Lenox Avenue Car by Taxicab
His left foot and hand cut off under the wheels of a westbound Lenox avenue trolley car at 133d street, after he had been knocked under the car wheel when struck by a northbound taxicab, Rafael Casto, 27, 165 Lenox avenue, was rushed to Harlem Hospital in a serious condition last Wednesday afternoon shortly after four o'clock. Casto's brother was told of the accident by Patrolman Geeselman of the West 136th street station.
The near-tragedy was witnessed by Norman Robinson, 30 West 137th street, and James Perkins, 19 West 133d street. It is said that Casto was struck by the taxi when he dashed across Lenox avenue from the east to the west side. Samuel Levine, white, 972 Kelly street, was the driver of the cab, which was proceeding north on Lenox avenue. Women screamed and a crowd collected. Responsibility for the accident could not be fixed and no arrests were made.
DR. DAVID
HELD WITH
IN BRIL
Accused With Roy Carey
Robbed of $115 No
in C
Dr. David C. Boone, 37, veteran street, and Roy Carey, 36, a charged with attempted bribery Court Friday before Magistrate out bail for trial in General Court by Attorney James J. Low. 333 to show that the complainant, O'ne, had asked Boone and Carey
According to the testimony, Dyer had been robbed of $115 at the point of a gun held in the hand of one Harvey Collins, on September 23. Collins has since been arraigned and held for the Grand Jury.
On October 4 Boone and Carey called on Dyer, and Boone counted out $115 cash and offered it to Dyer, it is said, to keep him from appearing in court against Collins. Boone would not give Dyer the money unless Dyer signed a receipt on Boone's business card, it was testified.
Dorothy Hipolite, who lives in Dyer's apartment, corroborated Dyer's testimony regarding the conversation Boone and Carey had with him.
Boone, it is said, had tried to reach an agreement with Dyer before this, and Dyer notified the police. On the morning of the above incident, Detective Duane and another detective from the West 125th street station secreted themselves
Hospital and treated for lysol poisoning by Dr. Stern. Her home is at 56 Quincy street...Brooklyn.
EXTRA REGULAR WEEKLY EDITION
Trouble Precipitated When Lights Are Turned on at Movie Presentation in Ogden Hall, During Which Faculty Charges "Petting Parties" Were in Progress
HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Oct. 17.—Following a strike of the majority of the student body and a series of events which started last Saturday night week, the world-famous institution located here closed its doors Thursday. Immediately thereafter the parents of the students were notified of the situation and the movement of 900 of the 1,200 students from Hampton Institute back home began. The situation is quite the most serious one with which the institution has ever been faced.
Dr. James E. Gregg, the principal, announced his intention of reopening Hampton next Tuesday, at which time only students acceptable to him and the faculty will be readmitted.
in an adjoining bedroom. When Dyer refused to sign the doctor's card as a receipt for the money, Carey is said to have raised his voice angrily, demanding to know if Dyer wanted to start an argument. Both turned to go and Dyer locked them in the room.
At this point the detectives came out of the bedroom and asked the men why they were there. Boone said he was on a professional visit to treat a dog, and Carey declared he was accompanying the doctor. A search of Boone disclosed $120 on his person.
When Attorney Low asked that bail he fixed Magistrate Dodge replied: "They were just as bad as the robber, for they were there to prevent conviction of a robber." Addressing Dyer, he continued: "You are entitled to the commendation of the public. Too many people are bought off."
Boone has a criminal record in Boston. It is said. Both he and Carey pleaded not guilty.
20 PAGES—5 CENTS PER COPY
STUDENTS FOR HOMES; ACTION SERIOUS
When Lights Are Turned on at in Ogden Hall, During Which "Petting Parties" Were in
TE, Oct. 17.—Following a strike of silent body and a series of events on night week, the world-famous in its doors Thursday. Immediately the students were notified of the situa- of 900 of the 1,200 students from some began. The situation is quite which the institution has ever been the principal, announced his inten- next Tuesday, at which time only and the faculty will be readmitted.
According to a statement sent to parents or guardians of the students on Friday that, since Saturday night, October 8, there has been so much "insubordination and disorder among the students as to make it necessary to close the Institute until further notice."
The outbreak was precipitated by dissatisfaction with the lighting of Ogden Hall at a moving picture entertainment on Saturday evening, during which the faculty charges that "petting parties" were attracting more attention than the silver screen.
On Sunday morning the college students in James Hall refused to admit the inspecting officers and the whole body of the students, aside from the choir, took no part in the singing at the morning and evening services. On Monday morning the serious consequences of this attitude and spirit were explained to the students by the principal, who also emphasized the importance of attendance, at classes and other scheduled work as an evidence of loyalty and co-operation.
Nevertheless, a large number of young men, possibly four hundred, absented themselves from their classrooms and shops, some undoubtedly under intimidation by others. They had appointed a committee to present a statement of grievances to the Administrative Board; but this the board felt obliged to refuse to consider as long as the petitioners were "on strike."
On Tuesday afternoon the strikers returned to their classes and on the same evening the board considered the committee's complaints. Some were not of great importance; others were distinctly noteworthy; several were impracticable; several were such as could not be adequately answered without investigation.
The board willingly agreed to consider them carefully, it is reported and to confer again with the committee.
On Thursday the Administrative Board voted to close the institution until next Tuesday.
Wins Radio Contest
HOULTON, Me., Oct. 17.—Miss Leah McIntyre won the Atwater Kent national radio contest held cently in the high school auditorium here.
DETECTIVES
DIVORCES, INVESTIGATIONS
Etc.
BOULIN DETECTIVE AGENCY
119 East 182th Street
Harlem 5349 (day) Brad 0660 (night)
Spouse Was Killed While Working as Brickmason on New Apartment House
Case Heard in New York Supreme Court Before Justice Donohue—Decision Reached in Seventeen
Twenty-five thousand dollars was the sum awarded Mrs. Anna White of 7 East 131st street when a jury rendered its decision against the Orc Realty Company, 1024 East 179th street, before Justice Charles D. Donohue in Part IV of the New York Supreme Court.
The award brought an emotional climax to a fifteen-month-old fight waged by Mrs. White, in which she sought $75,000 for the fatal injury and death of her husband, Joseph, who lost his life while working as a bricklayer in the construction of the apartment house at 1024 East 179th street in August of 1926.
The principal witness, Berry A. Johnson, was brought all the way from Savannah, Ga.
Shot Intended for Mother Hits Son
Boston Man's Second Attempt to Kill Woman
Abigamh M. Fisch, 225 Broadway, who tried the case for Bernard Greenberg, Mrs. White's attorney, in his address to the jury palated a pathetic picture of the widows' dire circumstances during the past winter. her thwarted ambition to give her children an adequate education, her struggles to make ends meet and asked them to be unbiased, unprejudiced and to recognize her rights, privilege and prerogative as a mother. Judge Donohue followed this with a charge which lasted one hour and ten minutes, in which he outlined the various decisions at which they might arrive, and asking them to do justice in the case.
The jurymen, however, had practically made up their minds, for in seventeen minutes they returned and S. M. Brunn, the foreman, announced a unanimous decision in favor of the plaintiff.
The Orc Realty Company was represented by Attorney Moulton of the law firm of Nadel. Jones and Moulton, 22 Liberty street.
Six Shota Miss Wife
Declaring that her husband, Glenn Robinson, 29, 65 West 137th street, fired six shots at her and missed and then struck her over the head with the revolver, Mrs. Wilhelmina Robinson, 8 West 138th street, appeared against him last Wednesday in Heights Court before Magistrate Dodge, who held Robinson without ball for further examination. When rearranged Monday before Magistrate Farrell, Robinson was held without ball for the Grand Jury.
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TWO
Shot Intended for Mother Hits Son
Shot Intended for Mother Hits Son
Boston Man's Second Attempt to Kill Woman
BOSTON, Oct. 18. James Postell, postal employee, high secret order man and a former trustee of the People's Baptist Church, shot and dangerously wounded Benjamin Roberts, a frail 15-year-old boy, last Tuesday night, at 2 Wentworth place, Boxbury, home of the boy and his mother. Mrs. Genevieve Roberts. The bullet was intended for Benjamin's mother.
Several months ago, Postell, said to he insanely infatuated with Mrs. Roberts, attempted to take her life by firing several shots through the closed door when she refused him to enter her apartment one evening. At that time a warrant was issued for him, but he immediately fled the city. Later, overwhelmed with grief because of his mother's death, Postell returned to Boston and was arrested at his mother's bier. This case against him is still pending in the Superior Court.
Postell, himself a married man with several children, and who lives at 61-Fort avenue, Roxbury, went to the Roberts' home on last Tuesday night with a gun in his hand,汁ent on shooting Mrs. Roberts. In an effort to protect his mother, young Benjamin received a bullet in his left breast and is now the City Hospital in a serious condition. While being sought by the police, Postell gave himself up to his attorney, Edgar P. Benjamin, who surrendered him to the police on Wednesday.
Minutes
Fails
THE FAMILY OF THE MISSING WOMAN
Misses Ruth Ford and Belle Tobias
Two Harlem Boys Attempt Bronx Robbery
Two very young Harlem boys were captured in the Bronx early last week, where it is said they attempted to rob the jewelry store of Max Relbstein, 2401 Westchester avenue. They are James Hall, 15, and John Nelson, 18, both of 111% West 133th street. During the capture by Patrolman Welss of the Westchester avenue station, it is said Hall was shot in the right hand after he struck the policeman with a club. He was held on a charge of juvenile delinquency, while Nelson was arreigned in Morrisania Court on a charge of burglary. The youths are said to have attracted the attention of neighbors by climbing over the back fence of Relbstein's store, and Patrolman Welss was summoned to the scene. After their arrest it is claimed they admitted their intention of jimmying their way into the jewelry store.
ENGAGEMENT RING
CAUSES EXTRADITION
Connie Waller, 20, 151 West 140th street, was arrested at her home recently by Detective Sergeant Battle of the West 135th Street Station, charged with being a fugitive from justice from Washington, D. C., where she is said to have refused to return an expensive engagement ring to Archie Wade, said to be her former sweetheart, who now charges her with the theft of it.
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Two Women Involved in
Charged with violation of the Sullivan Law, Miss Aremonful Streets and Mrs. Marlon Carter, 242 Bradhurst avenue, were arraigned in Heights Court last Wednesday before Magistrate Dodge, who held them in $500 bail for Special Seasons.
Patrolman Marriam of the West 135th street station said that Mrs. Carter came up to him and said: "Here, somebody just tried to shoot me with this," handing him a fully loaded revolver.
As the woman turned to go, Marriam questioned her, and she is said to have told him that she had had an argument with Miss Streets and she ran into her room to get her gun. Fearing that she meant to shoot, Mrs. Carter admitted she took the gun from her.
Ruth Ford and Belle Tobias Win Scholarships Given by A. K. A. Sorority
College Courses
Two scholarships of $150 each were presented Saturday night by the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority at a joint meeting of Tau Omega and Laudabla Chapters at the home of Mrs. Louise Jackson-Johnson, 103 West 141st street. The winners are Miss Ruth Ford, a June honor graduate of Hunter High School, and Miss Belle Tobias, of Wadleigh High School, also an honor graduate.
Miss Ford is the 17-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Ford of 760 East 221st street. In September she entered Hunter College, where she plans to major in Latin and minor in Greek.
"I, too, am majoring in Latin," said Miss Tobias, the 18-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Channing H. Tobias, 203 West 122d street. After passing a rigid examination, Miss Tobias was admitted to Barnard College, the women's college of Columbia University.
Women as Leaders
Negroes' Hope, Says Dyett
That women as leaders are the Negro's new political hope in Harlem was emphasized by Thomas B. Dyett, Assistant District Attorney, in an address on politics before the Intercollegiate Association last Sunday afternoon at the Urban League Building, 202 West 136th
Both of these young ladies plan to teach Latin in the city high schools.
These awards, based absolutely on scholarship averages maintained in high school and on character, are the second group awarded by the local chapters of the sorority. The other winners are: Miss Harriet Pickens, now a sophomore at Smith College, and Miss Elizabeth Belfe, a sophomore at Hunter College.
Officers of the local chapters are: Tau Omega—Miss Florence Thomas, basileus; Miss Mabel Bickford, anti-basileus; Miss Isa M. Gittens, grammateus; Mrs. Ann Cox Greene, tamiouchos. Lambda—Miss Thelma E. Berlack, basileus; Miss Mildred Perton, anti-basileus; Miss Helen Lankford, grammateus; Miss Elizabeth beth Johnson, tamiouchos.
Women as Leaders Negroes' Hope, Says Dyett
That women as leaders are the Negro's new political hope in Harlem was emphasized by Thomas B. Dyett, Assistant District Attorney, in an address on politics before the Intercollegiate Association last Sunday afternoon at the Urban League Building, 202 West 126th street. The importance of having a good economic backing when considering politics, as well as the allying ourselves as a group with the major party and the selection of a leadership not so much on the basis of political officeholders but upon the basis of principle, were the other main points of Mr. Dyett's talk.
"The time is always ripe to elect colored people to political office," the attorney emphetically drove home to his hearers. "The time not ripe theory" is due to slave-psychology and we must rid ourselves of such ideas and face the facts. Politically speaking, we are never going to get anywhere other than what we take."
Others on the program were Miss Arnetta Jones, who played a piano prelude, and accompanied Miss Marjory Johnson, who sang a solo.
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In a quarrel over a girl for whom his love was blind, David Simms, 301 West 14th street, was blinded in both eyes when cut with a knife alleged to have been wielded by Artur Roemer, 23, 2718 Eighth avenue in Almma's flat. When arraigned before Singstrate Judge in Heights Court Friday Booker was held with out bulb for the Grand Jury.
The name of the girl was not given during the fight it is alleged that Booker slashed Simma across the face, severing his optic nerves and thus blinding him permanently. As Booker rushed from the Simma flat he ran into the arms of Detective Burns of the West 136th street station, who had been attracted to the scene by Simma's screams. Simma has since been committed to the House of Detention on a charge of disorderly conduct and the police said that he will appear as a witness against Brooks.
What the police believed to be a double attempt at suicide occurred Felix nigh, when Sol. Kell, 27, white, 1961 Ward avenue leaped to his death from the second floor guard of Harlan Hospital, where he and undergone an operation for the amputation of a leg which had been marched under a Lexington avenue subway train. Early in the afternoon Kell either jumped or fell from the platform in the 12th street station of the Lexington avenue subway, but as a train was glowing down into the station. He was pushed to Harlan Hospital in a semiconscious condition and physicians found it necessary to amputate the injured leg at once.
Despite over the loss of his limb is believed to be the motive for his arising from bed when the nurse loft the ward believing him all sleep under other and hurling him self to the yard below, dying instantly. Except for his death plunged the doctors expressed their belief in his recovery.
AGED WOMAN DISPOSSESSED IN BRONX
Preparing to Spend Night Outdoors When She Is Befriended by Boys
Preparing to Spend Night Outdoors When She Is Befriended by Boys
House Demolished to Make Room for Erection of Garage. Finally Taken Away With Friend, Who
Amanda Transer, 70 years old, crippled with rheumatic heart disease from her home at 106rd street and Melrose Avenue, prepared to spend the night out of doors early this work but was befriended by white boys of the neighborhood and policeman from the Morrisania station, where she was taken and later called for by a young woman friend, who
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and later called for by
wife to reveal her identity.
Mr. Transer said that some time
ago moved into the three-story
farm willing, for which she paid
the rent, which she earned
by living in boarders. When the
guest went into the boarders left
home there was no water, she
said and matters went from bad to
worse. Months later the landlord
said that she need pay no more
money would have to move in
September, because her house, with
owners nearby, were to be torn
The furniture was finally moved out of the house into a vacant lot格栅 but a representative of the landlord consented to her sleeping in the house on the cold floor. The roof of the frame building was removed next day and laborers began the work of building a garage on the site. The old woman ambled about 20 feet to the rear and sat down amid her belongings, prepared
to spend the night out of doors.
The boys of the neighborhood, seeing her plight, built a bonfire and sat with her far into the night. Persons passing over the 163d street vinduct gathered at the railing and wondered what the old woman was doing there, but none made a kindly gesture of assistance. She told the boys that she was waiting for her young woman friend, who had promised to come and take her to shelter. It grew late, and the young woman never showed up.
A policeman heard of her presence there and called and took her to the station house. "Lordy, it's nice and warm here," she said. Shortly afterward the young woman put in her appearance and assured the police that Mrs. Transer would be taken care of until she could find a place to stay.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19, 1927
SILVER
11th Anniversary Sale of FURNITURE
HUNDREDS AND HUNDREDS OF SUITES—
Beautiful Bedroom Suite of four pieces in rich 2-tone Huguenot finish Walnut. A group of furniture that will grace any home with elegance and distinction. Consists of handmade low-end Bed, large Dresser, very roomy Chair, forwardrobe and full-length Vanity with three-way mirror.
Other suites up to $125
$159
10-piece Dining Room suite in the extremely popular Denissoane style, with a beautiful high walnut finish. Delectably designed, yet of substantial and solid construction. Long extension Table, China Cabinet, spacious Server, large Buffet, one Arpi Chair and five Side Chairs, upholstered in attractively designed Jacquard Velour.
Other suites up to $129
$1 DEPOSIT
This very handsome 2-piece Davenport suite, the one in the foreground of the illustration above, is one of the many attractive offerings in this anniversary sale. The Davenport opens up very easily into a full-size double bed, and is just as comfortable as the roomy Arm Chair and the spacious Wing Chair, all with reversible, loose spring cushions. Covered in very good quality Jacquard Velour in a variety of designs and colors.
Other suites up to $175
$219
$1 DEPOSIT
Balance in Small Weekly Payments!
Lowest Prices in the City
Silver is making this Eleventh Anniversary Birthday Sale an event that will be long remembered. Greater values than ever, smaller deposits, easier terms, are its outstanding features and they establish Silver as the foremost value-giving furniture store of the city.
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"John Brown's Body"
Author Dies, Aged 93
BOSTON, Oct. 17. Captain Henry J. Hallgreen, Civil War veteran, who was credited with writing the words "John Brown's body Lies Moldering in the Clay," died Monday on his ninety-fifth anniversary at his home, 41 Clark street, Maldon.
He was captain of Company A of the Massachusetts Regulars, known as the "Old Fighting 'Tiger Regiment," and was one of the founders of Theodore Winston Post of Chelsom. He later joined J. C. Lawwell Post, O. A. R., of the South End.
Captain Hallgreen was a member of Mount Lebanon Lodge of Masons and wore the grand lodge veterans' medal, indicative of more than fifty years' membership in the order.
ETHICAL CULTURE
Ceremonies attendant on the laying of the cornerstone of the Fieldston School, Riverdale, to be conducted by the Ethical Culture School, were held Saturday afternoon. In September, 1928, the Upper and Lower High Schools under the name will move to the newly acquired eighteen-acre tract at Riverdale. Students of all races are enrolled in the institution.
Notable Tribute Paid Mrs. Frazier
P. S. 89 Teacher Underwent Operation for Cancer- III Some Time
A noted tribute was paid the late Mrs. Josephine Holmes Frazier, teacher at P. S. 89, at her funeral, held from St. Mark's M. E. Church, last Sunday. The Rev. Dr. John W. Robinson, pastor of the church, officiated at the service, assisted by the Rev. Richard N. Bolden. The funeral cortege arrived at the church from her late residence, 1980 Seventh avenue at 11 p.m.
Following prayer by the Rev. R. N. Bolden, resolutions were read from officials of St. Mark's Church, 1980 Seventh Avenue Household Corporation, Ladies' Aid Society, Welfare Council of St. Mark's M. E. Church, Stewardess Board, Women's Eveready Community Club, and from the teachers of P. S. 89. Rev. Dr. John W. Robinson delivered the eulogy. He praised her as a teacher. Mrs. Frazier died in the Edgecombe Sanitarium. Thursday, following an operation which she un-
dorment for course. She had been all of her residence all during the summer, but had recovered well, quickly to report for her class in It. S. 90 of the beginning of the school year. She was too weak to continue her work and was advised to confer a amputation. She was born in Atlanta, Ga., and graduated from the public schools of but city. She later entered Clark University in Atlanta, from which she graduated.
Secure Injunction in Gary School Situation
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is fighting in the courts the attempt to establish a segregated high school in Gary, Ind., in deference to the "strike" of Ku Klux Klan-inspired white students.
The Gary branch of the N. A. A. C. P. sued out a writ of injunction restraining the use of city funds for a segregated school, four attorneys being associated in the conduct of the case. The attorneys, as reported by John W. Russell, president of the Gary branch, over the long-distance telephone, are: F. Lawrence Anderson, Charles H. Mason, C. L. Carroll, and Edward McKinley Bacoyn. Mr. Russell also informed the national office that, of the twenty-two students in the Emerson High School, twenty-one were now in attendance.
Magistrate Scores Officers' Conduct
No Right to Invade Home Without Warrants, He Holds
"I don't think any officer has any right to go into a person's home or apartment and search it without legal evidence that warrants such a search." This was the decision of Magistrate Dodge, sitting in Heights Court Friday, where Irving Williams, 39, 207 West 141st street, and Ida Mullins, 30, 222 West 141st street, had been brought before him on charges of possession of policy slips.
Attorney Richard Cunningham, 1132 St. Nicholas avenue, representing the defendants, had drawn from Patrolman Price of the Sixth Division the admission that he had entered and searched the apartment of Mrs. Mullins without a search warrant, and apparently without legal evidence which warranted such a search. Patrolman Price testified that he informed Mrs. Mullins at the door that he was a police
officer and that he was invited in-
side. Edward Blanka, 30, West 123th
street, postmaster propietor was dis-
charged on a similar charge the
same day.
During a previous policy said on
an apartment at 21 St Nicholas
place, in which Samuel Fox and
five others were arrested, they were
found not guilty and discharged in
Heights Court Sept. 21 by Magistrate Silberman. The victim of the raid told the reporter that Officers Price and Howard entered the apartment by forcing their way in; that some of their furniture was wrecked, and the women were insulted and mortified by their vulgar expressions.
Junior High School
Representatives of several high schools of the city attended Washington Irving High School last Thursday night, to receive prizes for practical civics from the Women's Civic organization, represented by Mrs. Alfred Smith, wife of Governor Smith. Harlem and Junior High School 136, one of the prize winners, were represented by Miss Muriel Petell,
DR. J. MILTON WILLIAMS, has removed to 105 Edgecombe Ave., at 140b St. 8 to 10 A. M. 1 to 2 P. M. 6 to S. P. M. Phone: Bradhurst 2923
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SOCIETY
Branch, Mr. Singleton, Mrs. Gardiner, Flinkoff, Clifford Alexander, Mrs. Harriet Butcher.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd J. Calvin had as their weekend guest Miss Myrte C. Williams of Newark, N. J.
Mrs. Calvin and Miss Williams attended the matinee of "The Garden of Allah" at the Embassy Theatre Saturday and, accompanied by Mr. Calvin, were among the guests at the opening of "The Dark Tower" at the Walker Studio Saturday evening. On Sunday the Calvins were the guests of Miss Williams and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carter Williams, at their Newark home, 55 Miller street.
Mrs. Rose Wingo of Ocala, Fla., was the guest of honor at a reception given by Mrs. Lulu Shepard, 126 West 127th street, last Wednesday.
Among those present were: Mrs. Walter Williams, Mrs. Edward Lucave, Mrs. A. Ovington, G. Adderly, Mrs. A. Holland, R. Scott, W. Craig, Mr. Dabney, Mr. Bennick, Mrs. Manny Goodrum, Mrs. Esther A. Bell.
Mrs. Cora Gary Illidge and son, Gary, left the city Thursday morning for Valdosta, Ga., where they will spend some time with Mrs. Illidge's mother.
The Rev. H. S. Barnwell of Atlanta, Ga., spent several days in the city on business last week.
Attorney Julian Rainey of Boston, Mass., is visiting here.
The house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Shirley C. Williams Jr., 203 Edgecombe avenue, are Miss Nellie Profit of Washington, D. C., and Stanley Williams of Atlantic City.
Miss Charline Sawyer of Topka, Kan, has come to New York to study. She is living with her brother-in-law and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Douglas, 227 West 139th street.
After spending a few days in Washington, Mrs. Harriet Butcher has returned to New York.
The Women's Community Circle of the Epworth M. E. Church gave a pink tea Sunday afternoon at the residence of Mrs. Addle Dorsey, 156 West 141st street, from 3 to 7 o'clock.
About thirty guests were present at the party given last Saturday night by Miss Ehlid Raphael at 2433 Seventh avenue.
Miss Clinton Dingle, West 138th street, was hostess at a small bridge party on Wednesday afternoon.
Mrs. Edna Parker gave a "send-off" party at her home, 2441 Seventh avenue, last week, in honor of Ulysses S. Parkins, who has returned to Howard University, Mr. Per
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Starch from corn is the main ingredient of LINIT—harmless to the most sensitive skin—and being a vegetable product, it
FOUR
Side Lights on SOCIETY
Mrs. Nellie Macanic has returned from Springfield, Mass. With her was her daughter, Barbara, and sister, Miss Lillian Hodges, who spent the week-end here.
The Macanics, formerly of Brooklyn, live at 116 West 124th street.
The staff of the Harlem Tuberculosis office, 202 West 136th street, gave a pre-nuptial party Friday night for Miss Rita Toppin, who is to be married tomorrow.
Some of those present were: J. A. Thomas, Miss Dophne Willem, Mrs. K. Sumersill, Dr. J. A. Williams, Dr. and Mrs. A. L. Donnelly, Mrs. I. Senhouse, Dr. Llisle C. Carter, Miss J. Sheridan, James Pleasant, Mr. and Mrs. J. Glover, Dr. and Mrs. Ernest MacDonald, Dr. and Mrs. E. Collymore of White Plains, Dr. J. Thompson of Jamaica, Miss B. Toppin, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hubert, Dr. Russell M. Nelson of Astoria, Miss Lydia M. Holly, Harold Dixon, Irade A. Reid, S. DePass, Misses Paris and Ruby Goring of Jamaica, Dr. R. Perry, Miss A. Jackson, I. Fairclough, Miss Marion Petittford, Miss H. Novall, Miss Margaret Creth, Miss Myrtle Helms, Miss Louis Elms, C. Jackson, R. Beau, Miss Evelyn, Dr. C. Skeete, Miss I. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Toppin.
Harry D. Robeson, who spent six weeks visiting in Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas City and Butte, Mont., returned to the city last Thursday.
For several days Ernest Hemby,
$02 Edgecombe avenue, has been
confined to bed.
The management of Club Ebony,
Inc. 65 West 128th street, entertained
at a banquet Friday night in
honor of the metropolitan press.
Some of those present were. Harri-
lette Unlahler and Mark Baron and
Richard Watts Jr., of the Herald-
Tribune; Grover Thels, New York
Times; Abel Mallon, Graphic; Abel
Green, Variety; Charles S. Johnson
and Countee Cullen, Opportunity;
Roy Lancaster, 'The Messenger;
Samuel Marr, New York Amuse-
ments; Gerry Fitzgerald, editor of
Players and Dramatists; Miss Sara
Edwin Jenkins, The New York
News; George Morris, Metropolitan
Gulde; Lester A. Walton, The World
and The New York Age; Floyd J.
Calvin and Mrs. Geraldyn Dismond,
The Pittsburgh Counter; Miss Thela-
ma E. Perlack, The Amsterdam
News
Others were: Mrs. Sol Johnson,
Miss A'Lella Walker, Edward
Manchester, Miss Catherine Johnson, Dr.
B. Binga Dismond, Attorney Julian
Ratney, Mr. Hamilton, Bobbie
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Merely ask your grocer for a package of LINIT and follow the above suggestions.
. . .
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kins won the summer guest of his brother, Edward A., at 101 West 143d street.
The Katy Ferguson Home, 102 West 130th street, is asking for clothing, shoes, hats and household articles for its annual rummage sale, which begins today and continues through October 22.
The house committee of the home consists of: Mrs. Augusta Corbin, Miss Althea Hocken, Mrs. Jesse Fillmore, Mrs. Estelle Cautlon, superintendent.
"I really miss New York," writes Joseph Carwin from Meharry Medical College in Nashville.
Dr. L. R. Hampton of Ocala, Fla., who spent his annual vacation here, returned to his home Thursday afternoon. For several weeks he was the guest of Dr. C. M. Parker and Dr. Maurice Moore, 201 West 130th street.
Dr. Alain Locke, an instructor at Howard University, Washington, spent the week-end in the city.
Mrs. Ardelle Clark and her two daughters, Lenora and Anita, went to Montreal, Canada, to spend the week-end with their husband and father. The Clarks live at 117 West 138th street.
The dinner guests of the Barnes family at 666 St. Nicholas avenue on Sunday were: Miss Theressa L. Bass, Edward G. Perry and James A. Johnson.
Mark Parks of Lincoln University came home for the week-end.
Miss Mayme White of Philadelphia spent the week-end here as the guest of Miss A'Lella Walker.
Mrs. Cora Banks and son, Harold, of Savatoga Springs, N. Y., were the house guests of their cousin, Mrs. Saddo Warren-Davis, 2293 Seventh avenue, for a week.
Attorney McGill of The Chicago Defender is in the city on business.
Miss Ernestine Brown of Newark, N. J., is now enrolled at the Institute of Musical Art of which Dr. Frank Damrosch is the director. Miss Brown's major is piano.
After a delightful vacation with friends in Massachusetts, Mrs. Ruth Haymes Alan, 225 West 146th street, has returned home.
Mrs. Annie Rhone, who visited her niece, Mrs. Rebecca Harris, of Harrahof street, Boston, has returned to New York.
At the opening of The Dark Tower, the rendezvous for the aesthetics 108 West 136th street, last Saturday evening, the following were present: Attorney Stanley M. Douglas, Richard B. Harrison, A. D. Roane, M. Eloise Bibb Thompson,
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY. OCT. 19. 1927
WEDDINGS
OCTOBER BRIDE
[Image of a woman with a headscarf and a face mask].
1
Mr. and Mrs. Fitzherbert Howell, Mrs. Willie A. Europe, McCleary C. Stinnette, Arna Bontemps, William B. Crampton, S. H. Turner, Frank Richard, Richard Thomas, Alton C. Berry, Gene Holmes, Threet L. Welss. Ivan W. Hutchinson, Arthur Dickson, Miss Edith McAllister, Dr. L. B. Smith. O. Richard Reed, M. E. Proctor, Henry L. Cooley, James C. Thomas. Dr. Rudolph Fisher, Alain Locke, Miss Gwendolyn B. Bennett, Dr. Henry Branham, William MacKinney, Mrs. Sarl Price Patton, Mrs. Katherine Johnson, Countie Cullan, Edward L. Perry, William Smalle, Dr. John K. Tinley, Mrs. Rhea Gray Tinley, Gardner D. Pinkett, William W. White, Alston W. Burleigh.
Mrs. Frank Oliver, street, Brooklyn.
Mrs. Mae Walker-city some time the her husband, Attor Perry, in Little Ro.
H. T. Miller, mary of the West 131 of the Y. M. C. A. Edgecombe avenue.
Mrs. C. P. McCleen Mae Sawyer, Miss and F. B. Grant mo City for the week-Grant, who was the ney and Mrs. John weeks.
Aaron Douglas, Alta Sawyer, Richard Hough, Wallace Thurman, James C. Yeargangs, Robert T. Douglas, Miss Myrtle C. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd J. Calvin, Dr. Anna Cooper Johnson, Earle F. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Johnson, Miss Edna Cooper, Miss Carlotta Grant, Alphonse Tribl, Ernest Hebby, Jack Lynas, Robert Varnyard, Dp. and Mrs. Marshall Rose, Mrs. Harold H. White, Robert Varnyard, A. White, Mrs. H. C. Miller
Mrs. Marie Payton, Clinton R. Moore, Mrs. Jane Ryder Flosher, Mr and Mrs. Paul Theodore Franke, Dr and Mrs. Emil—Maye Stogle, Dr. Frank Andrews, Erna Balogh, Mr and Mrs. Howard Boarden, Mr. Emma Layton, Thomas Layton, Miss Jooseis Pauset, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Austin, N. K. McGill, Dr. R. A. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Miller, Mrs. Florence Garnette, Cyril Thompson, Dr. and Mrs. Llisc C. Carter, Mrs. Anne Dingle, Dr. and Mrs. Phil Brooks, Lloyd C. Thomas, Cnaska Bonda, William G. Holly, Dr. Adgle G. Williams, Dr. Mary Jane Watkins, Mr. and C. M. Scharschmidt, Miss Enfd Raphael.
Embry Bonner, Miss Stella Johnstone, W. Howard Brown, Dr. H. Blinga Diamond, Mr. and Mrs. Ford Dabney, Mrs. Lucille Randolph, Dr. Walter I. Delph, William P. Smith, Miss Lelle E. DeWendt, Merrill R. Dames, Richard Bruce, Miss Eloge Walker, R. C. McPherson, Miss Donggy West, Miss Helene Johnson, Miss Pearl M. Fisher.
Miss Catherine · Johnson, Miss
Mayna White, Miss A.Lella Wake-
r, Mrs. May Walker-Perry, Miss
Lois Wilson.
Mrs. Samuel Bryant and Mrs.
John Nix. 201 West 144th street,
weekend guests of Mr. and
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Mrs. Frank Oliver, 63 Kosciusko street, Brooklyn.
Mrs. Mae Walker-Perry leaves the city some time this week to join her husband, Attorney Marion R. Perry, in Little Rock, Ark.
H. T. Miller, memberhip secretary of the West 135th street branch of the Y. M. C. A., now lives at 401 Edgecombe avenue.
Mrs. C. P. McClendon, Miss Bertha Mae Sawyer, Miss Margaret Kay and F. S. Grant motivated to Atlantic City for the week-end to join Mrs. Grant, who was the guest of Attorney and Mrs. John Dykes for two weeks.
The group was honored with a "600" party at Pleasantville, given by Mrs. Alyda Hamilton on Saturday evening. Other guests were: Dr. and Mrs. Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Higa, Miss Langston, Mr. and Mrs. Reid, Dr. and Mrs. Lucas, Mr. and Mrs. Holland of Atlantic City. The guest prizes were won by Miss Sawyer and Mrs. McClandon.
Edward Garrett, 115 West Fifty-third street, sponsored a small birthday anniversary party last Wednesday night at Bamboo Inn in honor of Ralph Walker.
Those present were: Miss Enid Todd, Miss Alice Smith, Clarence Evans, Miss Jessie Cotman.
Some of those who attended the N. Y. U.-Fordham football game Saturday afternoon were: Miss Lucia Jones, David Mitchell, Ullys Sarson, Asa T. Spaulding, Miss Helen McIntosh, Dr. Edward Weltek.
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Lewis of Jacksonville, Fla., are spending a few weeks here as the guests of their sisters, Mrs. E. E. Dixon, 749 president of the Afro-American Life Insurance Company.
St. Nicholas avenue. Mr. Lewis is
the Lewises, who motored here,
visited friends in the following
places: Augusta, Ga.; Asheville and
Durham, Raleigh, N. C.; Richmond,
Va.; Washington and Philadelphia.
Mrs. L. C. Hunter, 1960 Seventh
avenue, entertained about fifty
guests at her apartment on Columbus Day.
Harry Pace, president of the
Northeastern Life Insurance Company,
entertained the following persons
at a luncheon at the Civic Club
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ENGAGEMENTS
Saturday: A. T. Spaulding and Mr. McNugal of Durham, N. C.; Robert L. Vann of Pittsburgh, John H. Nall, William H. Wortham, Mr. Bullard, A. I. Lewis.
After lunchon the group went to the Majestic Theatre.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard McDugal of Durham, N. C., are living at 749 St. Nicholas avenue while in the city. Mr. McDugal is one of the vice-presidents of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Olvey Rockling, who were married recently in Buffalo, N. Y., have come here to live.
Mrs. Rockling, nee Frances Gentry, is the cousin of Mrs. Lela Kellar, 810 West 138th street. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Gentry and studied for three years at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston.
Mr. Rockling, a registered pharmacist, is a Juno graduate of the Massachusetts Pharmaceutical School.
Under the auspices of the Howard Medical Reading Club, a number of Harlem physicians assembled on Friday night last at 226 West 139th street to listen to a lecture on gastric ulcer, diagnosis, medical and surgical treatment, delivered by Dr. A. A. Derg, the well-known gastroenterologist of Mount Sinai Hospital.
Dr. Peter Murray introduced the lecturer to the audience. A discussion followed in which Doctors Murray, Lucien M. Brown, Louis T. Wright, Granaday and Ralph Young took part.
Among the other members of the club present were: Doctors Pottinger, Powell, Dolph, Edwards, Holbrooks, Oliver, Pelham, Howard, Bragg, Warner, Petani, Mason, Embden, Willie, Richardson, Fisher, Allen, Greaves, Lowry, Wiley Wilson, Costeros, Ross, Rufus Young, Best, Riley and Scott.
Others who attended included: Doctors Savoury, Wright, Smith, McGhee, Brown, Middleton, Alexander, Rawlins, P. T. Reld, Omar Price, J. L. Wilson, Armstrong, Thomas and Harold Amos and Chinn.
Several important items concerning medical men in Harlem were also discussed before the assembly adjourned to partake of a sumptuous repast.
Mrs. Nannle M. Smith, 137 West 141st street, gave a dinner party recently. The following guests were present: Mrs. Charles Douglas, Miss Helen Douglas, Mrs. Naomi Atcherson, Mrs. Emma Winston, Leon Coward, Herbert Sims, Washington Montgomery, Miss Marguerite Henley. After dinner, Mr. Sims favored the guests with a saxophone solo; Mrs. Helen Douglas was the accompanist.
Mrs. Flora C. Clark, 109 West 139th street, gave an elaborate birthday dinner last Sunday afternoon. Among those present were: Mrs. Margaret McDonald, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Love, Miss Ella Foster, J. C. Robinson, Charles Brewster, Edward Dyer, Augustus Fleet and Mrs. Desale Payne.
Herman Kenny of Geneva. N. Y. is visiting his cousin, Mrs. Julia Lewis Jackson, 538 Cortlandt avenue, the Bronx. A dinner party was given for Mr. Kenny on Sun
S. D. LYON
PRIM
FOR THE HA
Simply apply Primp to your halt and
diately fix it any style, either wavy or
-no hot irons-all you need to make a
as you want it is a jar of Primp and a
Price Sent by Mall, 50c; 10c Extra for Postage
S. D. LYONS 316 N. Central Oklahoma City, Okla.
Simply apply Primp to your hair and you can immedi- diately fix it any style, either wavy or straight-no caps -no hot irons-all you need to make your hair lay just as you want it is a jar of Primp and a comb and brush.
Primp is an unexcelled pomade for men, women and children. It is not greasy, sticky or gummy and will not discolor or injure the hair or scalp.
HAIR DRESS
YOU
(Reg. U. S.
HAIR DRESSING CREAM
---
. . .
MME S.D. LYONS
AGENT'S OUTFIT:
1 Hair Grower, 1 Temple
Oil, I Shampoo, 1 Pressing
Oil, I First Cleaner, DI-
rection for Selling, $2.00.
$5c Extra for Postage.
I
DRUG STORES and BARBER'SHOPS
Coming Events
Oct. 21—Tennessee Club Dance, Renaisance Casino, Card Tournament at Hope Day Nursery, 33 West 133d street.
22—Formal Banquet, Lesance Club, Venetian Studio.
25—Formal Dance, Ace of Clubs, Imperial Auditorium.
day night. Guests present included the following:
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Spicar, Mr. and Mrs. James Peters of Ozone Park; Mrs. Ellizabeth Robertson, Mrs. Pearl Jackson, Miss Anna Stovall, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar N. Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. William Lynch of Saratoga Springs; other house guests of Mrs. Jackson; Gardiner A. Jackson, William Hendricks, A. MacWeath, Mrs. Oscar Jackson is giving a party tonight in honor of Mr. Kenny.
Miss Anna Arch, 200 West 128th street, has returned to the city after spending the summer with her aunt at Southampton, L. I.
Attorney B. F. Wilson left the city Thursday night for St. Louis, Mo., where he will open law offices. He is a graduate of the University Law School.
...
Miss Mayrie L. Bell, 389 West 133th street, executive secretary of the Harlem Community Center, has returned from Des Moines, IA, where she was called because of the illness of her mother, Mrs. Peter Bell. While West, Miss Bell visited her niece, Miss Harietta Harris of the University of Iowa, and her brother, Attorney T. W. Bell of Leavenworth, Kane.
---
Mrs. Claemmie Perkins at her residence, 222 West 123d street, on last Sunday, entertained Mrs. Mabel Austin of Ansonia, Conn.
Mrs. Salie Harston served a six-course dinner at her home, 28 West 135th street, last week, in honor of her birthday anniversary. She was assisted by her sister, Mrs. Rhodia Sanders.
Guests present were: Marcellas Eldridge of Washington; Miss Hazel Norwood and Mr. Keys of Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. David Woody of Orange; D. L. Clark, Mrs. Carrie Crawford, Mrs. Annie Boone Hollday, Miss Carrie Thelma Taylor, Attorney and Mrs. Humphreys, Mrs. Nancy Parker, Mr. and Mrs. James Harston, Mrs. Almegda Cox, Mr. and Mrs. Boyden, Mr. and Mrs. Golden, Dr. and Mrs. Harding, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Sanders and children.
Frank Harrison, brother of the hostess, with Miss Frances- Reees and the Rev. J. W. Brown, arrived at the house while the guests were there—and they were married! Miss Louise Humphreys was the brides-
KIDNEY, BLADDER OR
PROSTATE TROUBLE
GETTING UP NIGHTS, PAINS,
BURNING FIS.
To prove that these troubles can be stopped, often in a few hours, the w. B. Way Co. 40, Westover the mall, W. Way Co. 40, Westover the mall, postpaid, to any sufferer a full $1 treatment without a penny deposit. Use it, and if satisfied pay the full charge; otherwise pay the small charge. You risk nothing. Write today.
THE EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
Will Promote a Full Growth of Hair. Will also Restore the Strength, vitality and the Beauty of the Hair. If your Hair is Dry and Wiry Try
EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
If you are bothered with Falling Hair, Dandruff, Itching Skalp, or any Hair Trouble, we want you to try a lot of EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER. The remedy contains medicinal properties that go to the roots of the Hair, stimulate the skin, helping nature to do its work. Leaves the hair soft and silky. Surrounded by a beauty of a thousand flowers. The best known remedy for Heavy and Beautiful Black Eyebrows, also restores Gray Hair to its Natural Color. It can be used with Hot Iron for Straightening.
50c; 10c Extra for Postage
NS 316 N. Central Oklahoma City, Okla.
PETER M.
an unexcelled pomade for men, women
aren. It is not greasy, sticky or gummy
not discolor or injure the hair or scalp.
PRICE 50c
Send today for a bar and see for yourself
just what this marvellous pomade will do
PRIMP CHEMICAL CO.
Armstrong St. Atlanta, Ga.
Write today for full information
MAKE
USING CREAM
OUR PAL
S. Patl. Office)
Sale at
I. POSNER, PERFUMER
111 W. 128th ST., N. Y. C.
AGENTS WANTED
- -
Simmond—Williams.
Miss Roselle Milford Williams was married to Fredrick Harvey Simmons on Wednesday evening, October 12, at 7:15 o'clock. The Rev. J. W. Brown, pastor of Mother A. M. E. Zion church, officiated. Only the parents of the bride and groom witnessed the ceremony.
Mrs. Simmons is the child of Mr. and Mrs. Willis A. Williams Sr. 149 West 142d street, who are formerly of Jacksonville, Fla.
Mr. Simmons, who is also originally from Jacksonville, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Simmons, 69 West 138th street.
Immediately following the cermony a few of the intimate friends of both families were entertained at a reception at the home of the bride's parents, where the couple will live. Shortly after 11 o'clock the couple slipped away to the home of Mrs. Marie Jones, 100-23 Ninety-third avenue, Richmond Hill, L. L. for the week-end.
maid; James Harriston, brother of the groom, was best man. The Frank Harristons will make their home at 52 West 139th street.
Dr. Ida T. Love of Philadelphia was the house guest of Mme. Estella, 580 St. Nicholas avenue, Sunday and Monday.
The guests of honor at the installation dinner of the Hi-Y Club at the West 135th street branch of the Y M. C. A. Monday night were Miss EsCobedo V. Sarreals, Girl Reserve secretary, and Miss R. Johnson president of the Tri-HI Club of the West 137th street branch of the Y W. C. A.
Tel. Morningside 3553
ELIZABETH NEELY
APEX SYSTEM
Superior Beauty Culture Positively No Waiting
Now at
803 WEST 18TH STREET
Near Corner Seventh Ave.
VENETIAN STUDIO
The Studio Beautiful
224 WEST 135th STREET
A Few Doors West of
Seventh Avenue
The Ideal place for your Wed-
ding, Receptions, Banquets, Card
Parties and Teas. Clive, Formal
or Informal Affairs, by people of
resident cared for in every de-
tail by high-class caterers if se-
rified.
For dates apply on the premises
or call
Morningside 7858
MRS. IOLANTE E.
STORRS-SIDNEY
PROPRIETOR
Phone Brad. 0484
LUCILLE E. RANDOLPH
BEAUTY SHOPPE
Scalp Treatment, Marcel Wav-
ing, Facial Massage, Manicu-
ing, Hot Oil Treatment.
WALKER SYSTEM
All Branches of the Trade
Taught. Diplomas Given
2505 8th AVE., Near 139th 8t
Open 2 A.M. to 9 P.M.
IRIS
(HALL) IS NOW AT
Harris Beauty Shoppe
2196 SEVENTH AVE.
Southwest Cor. 130th St.
SCALP TREATMENTS
Gives for executive dandruff, dry and falling hair, promoting growth and beautifying the hair. French system of Beauty Culture Work. By appointment, day and evening. Phone Morningside 2440
MRS. CARRINGTON
MRS. C. H. SMITH
(Idensol)
NURSE - MIDWIFE
With many years of practical
experience
Moderate Terms.
103 W. 141st ST. APT. 8
Phone Edgecombe 5579
SCHOOL OF DESIGNING
AND DRESSMAKING
Pattern Making, French Draping,
Grading, Catting, Fitting and
Tailoring. Pupils given dress of training.
MME. LA BEAUD'S STUDIO
209 FIRST 104th W.
Fel. Monument 4177
Practical instruction in Dress-
making $1 per lesson.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
THE DIAMOND BRAND.
Endless Ask your Druggist for
the Pills in Blue and Gold metallic
boys, sealed with Blue Rubber.
Boys, sealed with Blue Rubber.
Druggist, Ask for CILK-GER-PEER
DIAMOND BRAND.
Yours truly, always Right.
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
Then Join the
WASHINGTON SOCIAL
LETTER CLUB!
Receive lots of letters from
Interesting men or women.
DON'T GROW OLD
ALL ALONE
Write for information today
Post Office Box 3273
Washington, D. G.
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More than ever housewives
appreciate home-like Bond Bread
TEN REASONS WHY THEY DO:
their parties most successful, you will useally'find
the sandwiches made of Bond Bread.
4—Crust. ot 2 brown which indicates ex
ceptional value in food ingredients, the crust of
every Bond loaf is delightfully appetizing. That
inviting look tells you of perfect baking. And so
pleasingly crisp and tender is it to the taste that
you will want every morsel. One doesn’tftrim away
3 Bond Bread crust. :
5 —Size. When housewives baked their own.
bread they preferred a loaf of Bond Bread’s size.
They knew from experience that too large a loaf
showed over-fermentation. It looked bigger, but
it was less substantial. Unsightly air-boles appeare!
when it was cut. Most important of all, the rich.
delicious home-like flavor left with the quick dry-
ing of the leaf. And so, following the example of
truly economical housewives, the bakers of Bond
Bread have held to the loaf of gr >ater values.
6—Uniformity. wherever you buy it,
Bond Bread is always the same in appetizing ap-
pearance, firm, close-knit texture and homedike
flavor. It is the same loaf ‘to-day that it was when
housewives first welcomed it to their tables, made
from the same pure ingredients, with the same
purpose of making it unnecessary for these house-
_ wives to bake their own bread. No other bread sold
to-day has such a record of unchanging, uniform
excellence.
7—Freshness. Bond Bread is delivered
fresh from the oven to most grocers every day. This
rromptness and regularity of delivery enables you
to make your bread purchases according to your
requirements at home and at the same time to be
sure that it will be fresh for your table.
S8— Nourishment. Because only the par-
est and finest quality materials are used, Bond
Bread is wholesome and nowrishing. Children
thrive on it. Mothers write of its beneficial
effects upon youthful appetites and digestion.
Robust bodies and good dispositions testify to its
high nutritive value.
9— Freedom from labor. sctore
Bond Bread came, women had to keep on baking
at home. They could not buy bread that was as
pure and flavorful as their own home-baked. To-
day Bond Bread gives thousands of women phys-
ical freedom. It has taken them out of their kitch-
ens and given them an opportunity to devote their
time to wider, happier pursuits.
10— Guarantee. on the wrapper of every
Bond Bread loaf is the “bond” of the General Bak-
ing Company that only the pure ingredients listed—
and nosubstitutes—are used in making Bond Bread.
Bond Bread gets its name from this “bond.” It is
the same “bond” that was on the first loaf of Bond
Bread bought by housewives ten years.ago. Since
then more than two thousand million Bond Bread
loaves have carried that guarantee.
1—Fi lavor. You recognize instantly the
home-likeness of Bond Bread’s favor. Many
housewives, recalling their own skill as bakers, de-
clare they can distinguish no difference between
the flavor of Bond and that of their .best home-
baked bread. It is the flavor of sheer goodness,
telfing you of quality ingredients and perfect bak-
ing. And when you toast Bond, its rich, delicious
flavor is emphasized.
2—P: uUrity. Only the purest and finest in-
gredients—the best that money can buy—are ever
used in making Bond Bread. Read the list of these
ingredients on the wrapper of the Bond loaf. They
are the kind you would use if you baked your own
bread.. They are the kind that housewives used
when they showed the General Baking Company
how they wanted bread made. For ten years the
bakers of Bond Bread have kept their pledge to
these housewives that this loaf would have the
purity of the best home-baked. Every day more
than a million housewives see the pledge renewed.
3—Texture. Whee you cut a loaf of Bond,
notice how firm and close-knit the texture is. Evi-
dence again of quality ingredients and extreme
care in baking. Bread cells such as these retain
flavor and moisture. The slices do not crumble,
as they will when texture is uneven. Cat them ever
so thin, into whatever shapes you desire, the sur-
faces are compact, the edges clean. And sand-
wachesP Where hostesses are most charming and
You and your friends are corcially ‘ : ™ : ,
invited to inspect any of these Bond , an
Baas Binds Rosswood St- New York . 4 & Fon those who do not know the fizm,
ios ben ates See New You : . close-knit texture and home-like flavor
Telephone: Mott Haven 4207 se a ““A . of Bond, we add a second, unqualified
540 East 81st Street, New York E ‘ : SUMARIES
Telepbowe: Butterfield 1700 - F ,
10010—9 1st Avenue, Richmond Hil } )
Teepbone: Richmond Hill 2800 . r 3
495 Flatbash Avene, Brooklyn F ‘ * You will like Bond Bread better
Telepbone: Flatbush 9621 ‘ shan any other bread—except the
314 Mercer Street, Jersey City ' Xs . best bemo-made—or you may have || .
‘Telepbense Montgomery 3012 ' : . your money back—every cent. Just |}- ,
248 Waverly Avenue, Newark :
"Telephone: Terrace 0400 twriteortelephoneour nearest bakery.
rebar gieen € HOME-LIKE. Brea :
90 that arrangements can be made to take : . :
cnre of yorrr group. / . : : :
CE ER nn Sear nn LEN SIO MeO ETON ETD CHEESE NNW i ANKSGIVI DAY
RAINES EAN AI REZ aera NST NRO] NOI] SUN, Eee NO | a ER EST OBE EE OO ie te T pe gaily: Om GL x DATS
* Ne NSO Pa Neeal NO) WOO NGO) NOI NGI NC ANE AS CANOE gantyze eng Relieere by epolnt~ Fs TIGKETBON SALE AFTER NOV!
= . sUniveraity Gag0” nee Mt ee BL gE Se ee
} : q |Y rece
if CLUBS =; SORORITIES + FASHION + BEAUTY + |
ey is
‘was her daughtorsmand |
tor, Miss Lilflan By, |
the week-ond here. 11!
‘The Macantes, tained, at
lyn, live at 116 waThe Aco
‘The ptagt ‘.
Ionig, ie gave 8 party
wave. Mee the residence
tor 2/*8; Wiggins, 235 West
ani ine honor of Wilinin
#do “is; Teturning to his
Ti Indiangpolis to attend
x, Tee, "F
a
Seilet Bacon, 772 St. Nicho-
J. was: tendered a_miscel-
andy ‘shower by the Les
ExneqCiab at her apartment
Collypjest Sunday. Among
Phomeent were: Mrs. Enrico
pins, ‘Urs. Eduardo Castro.
Rug B., Delany, Mrs. Ruth
Lpdhirs: Aaron MacGhee,
deAmin. Taylor, Mrs. H.C.
‘ands. Leonard, Mrs. Eiith
Pernnd Mrs. Blossom Hol-
amy he
Hines ‘Hart, 1990 Seventh
“Bimettained the Kortwrixht
Erebipsday. Officers of the
Brow. Hart, president; Mrs.
pétary;) Mrs. Huggins,
Hm}?
reel |-| —
Kawnique Colony Circle. 254
tum, street, on last Sunday
the Polyhedron Club pour-
+ ghonor of ils first aunizer-
poaong those present were
teatrs: Cooper, Ars. A. Al
S%°S. Sherwood, Mrs. C.
? ga, V. Holliday, Mrs. MW
yn’ Christmas, H. Livingston,
Lesesne, Alfred Chandler,
“EBrown. A. Taylor, Al Jones.
Sirhur Calhoun,’ Mrs.
Mrs. E. Gibson, Miss M.
Stirs. yl. Henderson, Mrs. C.
Bu. lough, Mrs. M. 1,
“gk. Francis. Mrs. Hunt:
TimetSummers, Mrs, L., Will
Greenave Warren, Mrs. W.
and :s, Helen Byrd, Miss
Roy son, Mr. and Mrs, Will:
Samuy, Mr. and Mrs. Brooks,
Pao Baylard.
Fae g sg program. consisting
Neeer 1g numbers, was ren
Galde, Vivian Moore. ptanc
SaaS. L.. Johnson, reading:
Cale Moore. n paper on the
the Polyhedron Chub:
Grian Wallace, vocal solo:
‘ia Montage. recitation; AL
‘nith, tenor solo; Prof. Arthur
_n was the accompanist.
Doubles Club rent out invita
this week to its Pre-Hallo
dunce at the Renaissance
a next Wednesday night. Mc
L. Gregg is president of the
Dr. W. Marion Cooper, vice
tent; Osman S. Williams, secre
George Kennie, treasurer.
“ts annual autumn dance, th
of Twenty has chosen Manhiat
Casino for Thursday, Novew
2 first meeting of tho Ivy Ar
2 for the season was het las
y night at the home of Mrs
s Robinson, 225 West 1591
i
a luncheon meeting last Wed
Yat the Veneifan Tea Room
were completed by the Wom
Auxiliary of the Urban Leagu
A Night in Spain" on Armis
night, at Manhattan Casino.
ong those actively co-operatin
Mrs, Eva T, Parks, presiden
9 auxiliary, are Mrs, Florence
rdgon and’ Mrs. «A. C. Deming
are already receiving reserv:
for boxes,
s annual Columbus Day dane
by the Utility Club at th
issance Casino last Wednesda
noon Was a success, This clu
n was organized In 1917, 3
2d by the following persons
Elizabeth Younger, president
Elizabeth Ely, vice-president
Clifford Myers, Anancial secr
Mrs. Estelle Jarrot, treasw
Mrs, Philltus Joyce, Secretar,
money received at these dancé
sed for ald to such organiz
as the XN. A. A.C, P., the Ni
1 and New York Urhan Leagu
Day Nursery, St. Philip's Ol
s’ Home, the ‘Katy © Ferguso
e and for baskets at Christma
committee of ladies will supe
a cake sale at the Utopt
nborhood House, 170 Wes
street, Saturday from 2 to 1
» for the benefit of the clu
Mrs. Daisy C. Reed is pre
tof the cluh: | Mrs, Esthe
it, chairman of thee ommittee.
e annual fall dance of the-C
Club was given at Harlem C
last Friday night,
s. Charles Moore, 75 St, Nict
place, was hostess to the men
of the’ Just Us Club at th
meeting of the season on Fr
night.
2 Recond meeting of the seaso
e Peter Pan's Pals was hel
e home of Miss Claudia Davi
SIIGAR; CANE SYRUP
a MYVNCL PY)
a tH Yt (PAAN ber
MU CAYO HL re
j al Wort Hl A
Outfit the Family
Through Our »\) .
Credit Plan ECE
a &: —
ei pene aT,
CLOTHES FOR @ 4
WCMEN, MEN AND oe ‘ *
CHILDREN
Heller Sales Corp.
118 W. 125th ST. --- 1 Flight Up
Phone iorningside 9507 Open Evenings
Formerly M. Heller of East Broadway
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eae f oe ee el
eo
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oc: ee
Ce bi
= =
—— tf CO
_ wd
- |
- “ee ,
& .
Lovely, fair skin at last!
5
OT in to make my kitchen at-
tractive is my greatest
worry {n the home. I have
used bluo and white for several
years. My landlord will decorate to
sult me. Please tell me what colors
1 should use?" querfes one of my
readers,
In our present-day apartment
houres the majority of us have mo
dining room and the kitchen an-
fswers a twofold purpose. Conse:
Jauentiy, it is sery necessary to, use
kood taste and care in making it as
[pretty as posethle, Have your walls
and ceiling a pretty light green. No
aauby you have an old table with a
drop leaf discarded ta your pack:
room, Paint your table and chairs
orange, decorate in black. Then
‘hang orange curtalns and orange
‘shelf oilcloth, Gather your curtains
to one foot in width, thus exposing
a white sush curtain of dainty mate:
rial. If yon cannot use the above,
your kitchen would be very pretty
in yellow. or even red, with white
|walls and ceiling.
pal
| Furs
Now Is the time to select your
furs for the coming season, In buy:
ing furs there are many things to
consider. First of all, which is the
most becoming? A number of wo-
men who wear them syould nat. It
Is not necessary to have a fur coat
to be well dressed. Cloth anats are
very popular, There is always some
kind of fur collar that is becoming
and it is the most iniportant feature
of a coat. Let us not always be
gnided hy style and fashion, hut by
cial which makes us look beat,
"1 would suggest raccoon or munk:
tat for the business girl. or for gen-
,eral street wear, These will wear
‘well and are not matronly. The
‘stout woman must Haut herself to
‘the short-haired furs, for they are
neater than the shaggy ones. Red
‘fox {fs still very papular and ts effec:
tive as a trimming on cloth coats.
ISquirel ts the most youthful of all
ldress furs, but is very perishable.
'For a dress coat. seal is the old
standby and looks well at all times,
A. cond, inexpensive coat is dyed
[cone and wears well, if care is tak
en in choosing your pelts.
| Now, girls, do not wear ermine
mole or beaver to football games of
fother sport events, A snappy ante.
ct ET Nadinola Bleaching
. Le Sees ‘open the way tonew
. beauty—to a whiter, love-
ler complexion, ‘The moaant
you apply it, Nadinola rins to
1 lighten your skinseveral fones, It
1] never hesitates, never fails. Tt con-
.| tains the surest bleaching proper-
; ties known, double-quick, super-
2{ powerful, yet cannot harm your,
: skin. If you are embarrassed by
.| pimples, excessive oiliness or
: Toughness, Nadinola will clear
them all away,
‘ Just rub on this never-failing
super-bleach and watch your skin
grow lighter every day. Almost
Overnight you will see a change.
Spode ear eee
i uct,”
_ By Lillian E. Sharpe
lope or leopard will be qtilte in or
der.
Velvet
Velvet {x the tending material for
‘this season. The printed velvets
jare especially good, und need litle
or no trimming. The transparent
olvet 1a not very practical. The
cleaners will not guarantee them;
they are g loosely woven they ravel
right out.
Questons and Anewers
Dear Miss Sharpe:
| 1 am in mourning and have a
black caracul coat with mink cuffs
and collar, I must change my fur.
What shali 1 uso? MAUD M.
Dear Miss Maud M.:
Black fox trims black caracul
very effectively. It Is not absolutely
necessary (o change the trimmings.
Dear Mies Sharpe:
I have a cocoa brown (dark) lv-
ing room suite, window drapes and
portieres the same color, My room
is very dark. Would you suggest
some color to make an effective com-
bination? Can they bo dyed?
MRS. EB. WILLIAMSON,
Dear Mrs, Williamson:
Please iet_me know the color of
your walls and floot covering. It is
essential in getting the desired ef-
fect, Of what material ara your
drapes: and portieres?
Dear Miss Sharpe:
Please give me a color scheme for
my bridal chamber. J have gor-
geous new furnivure. CL.
Dear Mre. C. L,
Orchid and Nile green make @
pretty combination, especially in
taffeta for bed covering and drapes,
Combine the colors on bed light,
reading lamp and magazine stand,
Food
Monday is usually the day to rid
the ice box of the many left-overs
from Sunday. There are sq many
dainty dishes that can be made of
cold food,
If you have pan fish, convert it
Into fish cakes for breakfast next
morning, Your chicken will make
delicious soups, croquettes or hash.
‘Then constant improvement antl
your skin is as light as you have
tonged for!
Begin tonight—let Nadinola
beautify you while you sleep, It
never fails— positive, ‘written,
money-back guarantee (together
with simple directions) in every
package. At all drug stores and
toilet counters, a generous jar,
50c. Extralarge size, $1. Orsend -
us 50c or $1 and we will send it
i promptly pasteal, with dainty |
giftsample of Nadine Face Powder
and free beauty booklet. Money
back: promptly if not satisfied.
Address Department D, National
ToiletCompany, Paris, Tenn,US.A,
ee ele Sea 105
SALE of FURS
and Beautiful Gowns
z i “ THESE COATS ~
Society Women $35
of New York, Newport and South. a —.
Ghete wondetlaivearia’ Sone ot
them are hardly worn. Many of Many Worth $200
thé coats are trimmed with mink, to $300 When New
squirrel, fox, squirrelette, masmink,
beaver, skunk, etc, ana most of
them are beautifully lined. N —
| SS SS SSS —C.
SEY ies (le ta Bia A ee
a ye Nes
Ce aE A ee
i Lira (ae BY Ao Weel) Bee On|
Pe oper cao Eas he
| | BNE CVRD Soccer,
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ONE WEEK SPECIAL
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HARTMANN’S
120 WEST 125th STREET
Phone, Morningside 2068—One Flight Up
a Mergen eee on aT
—=—=——=—==>—_—SS_s_
SAVE YOUR MONEY!
Box Springs $6» Mattresses $3 ex
+ MeMied Fok end Hellteted Wane nas”
Roasts are all palatable served cold
with relishes, Cold string beans on
lettuce with French dressing make
@ delicious salad. Green pens are
quite tasty In an omelette, Cold
lima beans on crisp lettuce,
sprinkled, with minced green pep-
pers, garnished with ripe olives and
tomato quarters, French dressing oF
mayonnaise. make an attractiva dish
and a delicious salad. A highly sea.
woned creamed sauce will make
your spianch aatistying.
The following {8 your menu for
Monday:
BREAKFAST.
Prunes
Bacon and Eggs
Toast Coffee
LUNCH.
Chicken Soup with Rice
Sardines on Lettuce
Cratkers
DINNER,
Roast Beef Hash with Peppers
Green Peas with Carrots
Lettuce French Dressing
French Bread Butte
Brown Betty Hot Tea
(Hard Sauce) (Lemon)
Address all communtcations fo
this department to Lillian B, Sharpe
care of The Amsterdam News.
Y.W.C.A. Notes
A group of Girl Reserves met at
the West 137th Street branch of tho
-Y. W.C. A. om last Friday evening
w plan for the annual High School
Girl Reserve Conference, to be hold
on Friday, October 28, at °5 o'clock,
In tho branch, ‘Those ‘who attonded
the meeting were: The Misses
Bello and Mary Tobias, Ethel
Dwight, Mabel Turner, Amanda
Johnson, Cynthia Brown, Annie
Scott, Bernice Marshall, Olga Dean,
Geneva Thotateon, Hazel deer PILL
With the |
thee yon ae une Jonit meet
Ing of Tha Omega and Lambda
Chaptors of the Alpha Kappa Alpha
Sorority on Saturday evening Wore:
Mra, Alta Sawyer Douglas, Mrs.
Margaret Smith Douglas, Mra, Por-
tia Wiley Nickens, Mrs. Ethel Me-
Ghee, Mrs_ Elizabeth Johnson,
Mrs, Anno Greene, Miss Margaret
|Welmon, Miss Loulte ‘Logan, Miss
Anna Welmon, Mrs, Ruth Logan
Roberts,
Mra, Ann Robinson, Miss Molva
Price, Miss Mae Kinckle, Mrs
Gladys Armstrong. Misa Heler
Cantrell, Milas Lucile Spence, fis
fsa Gittens, Miss Mabol Bickford
Miss Chaline Sawyer, Miss Virgini
Powell, Mrs, Gladys Reld, Mrs
Loutse’ Johnson, Mrs. Helen’ Hagat
Williams, Mrs, Leth Hemaschandra
Those ‘pledged to the graduate
chapter that night include the fol
lowing: Misses Hilda Stoute
Bleanor Coleman, Lillian Bragg an
Ruth Martin.
Plans are now being made fo
the annual scholarship matine
dance at the Renaissance Casino 01
‘lection Day, Nov. &
abeth Heggins, Erelyn Burwell,
Helen Douglas, Evelyn Kemp, Hat
Ue Byrd and Madeline Magee. These
girls comprise the members of the
peabinats: of the three high-schoo!
Clube — Every-Ready, Tri-Hi and
ese,
Miss Belle Tobias was elected as
the presiding officer for all commit.
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Fans Almost Riot When Jack McVey Was Robbed of Decision Over Shade
White Fans Indignant When Colored Boy Was Jobbed for Third Time in Cleveland and Staged Demonstration That Had to Be Quelled by Police
(Special to N. Y. Amsterdam News)
CLEVELAND, Oct. 17.—Juized colored welterweight and ped Dave Shade of California Public Auditorium here last W could get for his efforts was a hinkle, local boxing promoter, A consensus of the newspaper McVey with winning precision almost caused a riot, as long and loud for fully ten make, them leave the auditorium
NND, Oct. 17.—Jack McVey of New
velterweight and middleweight of
one of California in a twelve-rou-
tum here last Wednesday night,
his efforts was a draw decision, re-
moving promoter, who refereed the
s of the newspaper opinion at the
thrilling practically every rou-
taused a riot, as the 12,000 fans
for fully ten minutes until giv-
e the auditorium.
CLEVELAND, Oct. 17.—Jack McVey of New York, recognized colored welterweight and middleweight champion, whipped Dave Shade of California in a twelve-round bout at the Public Auditorium here last Wednesday night, but the best he could get for his efforts was a draw decision, rendered by Matt Hinkle, local boxing promoter, who refereed the contest.
A consensus of the newspaper opinion at the ringside credited McVey with winning practically every round and the decision almost caused a riot, as the 12,000 fans present booed long and loud for fully ten minutes until policemen could make them leave the auditorium.
The New Yorker speared Shade with lefts to the body until it appeared as if the Californiaan would wilt from the punishment. McVey seemed to have Shade's bobbing and leaving style down to a nicety, for as the latter tried his tricks he was met with terrific left hooks to the body under which he was almost paralyzed.
All through the twelve rounds Shade fought in the peculiar crouching style that brought him to the top among the middleweights, and almost won for him the welterweight championship when Mickey Walker.
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GREAT SALE OF SUITES
Beautiful 3-Pc. Living Room Suite
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Handsome Bedroom Suite
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HUNDREDS OF OTHER BARGAINS
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GUARANTEE BOND
LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEE
This Bond Is Our Guarantee
No. 15
OCT. 15th
to the purchaser that if within 3 months of purchase here the same article can be bought elsewhere for less than was paid to us under the same conditions, we will, upon certification, refund cash or credit the account with the difference.
Coxwell Chairs
A marvelous collection of fine Coxwell chairs in beautiful velour coverings, as low as:
$29.50
Open Every Evening Except Friday Evening
Jack McVey of New York, recog-
middleweight champion, whipin
a twelve-round bout at the
wednesday night, but the best he
draw decision, rendered by Matt
who refereed the contest.
her opinion at the ringside cre-
tically every round and the de-
tle 12,000 fans present booed
minutes until policemen could
body under which he was almost
paralyzed.
All through the twelve rounds
Shade fought in the peculiar crunch-
ing style that brought him to the
top among the middleweights, and
almost won for him the welterweight
championship when Mickey Walker.
FANS PROTEST CLEVELAND RING ROBBERY Amateurs Still Hot; Barrett K. O's Abrahams
the Toy Bulldog, was cock o' the walk of the 147 pounders. Although Shade tried every ring trick he ever learned in six years of campaigning among the topnotchers, McVey made him look ridiculous as he kept pounding lefts and rights to the body with monotonous regularity. It was McVey's fourth appearance in a Cleveland ring in a period of nine weeks. Jack knocked out Wolfft Langford, of Chicago, in ten rounds, and was awarded a draw with Bob Sage, of Detroit, and Pete Latzo, ex-welterweight king, although his margin of victory over the last two was almost as decisive as that he scored over Shade last week. The bouts were promoted under the auspices of the local branch of the American Legion. McVey and Shade both scaled at 15 6 pounds at 1 o'clock.
PHILA. TEAM ISSUES CALL
The Dunbar Basketball Club, a fast team of Philadelphia, has started booking games for the season and would like to add New York teams to their schedule.
For games write to Ernest Dinzie, 629 Addison street, Philadelphia, Pa.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19, 1927
KIDS REPEAT AT ASBURY PARK
Barnstormers Again Beat Nat Strong's Team—Kids Swipe Balls
Swarming kids last Thursday jumped upon every ball that came from the gloves or bats of Babe Ruth's and Lou Gehrig's barnstorming team playing the Brooklyn Royal Colored Glants at Asbury Park, bringing about an utmely end in the seventh inning because of a lack of baseballs.
Ruth estimated the loss at 40 baseballs. The game was an extremely slow affair because of the many periods taken out to permit Ruth and Gehrig to shake clinging boys from their legs.
Bases were stolen several times while the catchers chased boys feeling with a ball that fell from their gloves. Fielders were forced to untangle masses of fighting unclips to get at the long drives. The final score was Ruth and Gehrig -6 and the Giants 5. Ruth hit a home run.
Wins Over Dave Shade
THE BATTLE OF THE WORLD
JACK McVEY Whipped Dave Shade in Almost Every Round Last Wednesday Night in Cleveland, but. Was Robbed of the Decision and White Fans Staged Demonstration in His Behalf.
Defaults Marred Fine Set of Amateur Bouts Last Week
Two defaults in the finals marred a fine set of bouts conducted at the Maris Stella Knights of Columbus clubhouse at Far Rockaway last Friday night.
Jim Davenisch, after defeating Tom Collins, of the Metropolitan Life, in the preliminary, was unable to continue because of an injury sustained in the Collins encounter. The other casualty, Tom Murphy, broke his hand while disposing of Oscar Hulford and was unable to meet Ed Calvin of the South Ozone Club in the final of the 145-round class.
Charles Beckler, of the Astoria K. of C., and August Ferdinand, Salem-Crescent warrior, fought toe to toe for three rounds. Beckler copped the verdict.
Beckler was a bit more the aggressor throughout, and but for a short period in the second round, when Ferdinand rocked him with well-timed blows to the point of the jaw, Charley had the situation well in hand. The bout was a special one, both boys being 138 pounds.
In the other special, a 128-pound tussle between Jack De Santi and Patsy Silvestri, De Santi won by a knockout early in the final stanza.
The summary:
118-Pound Class—Lou Simmons, One Hurley, Patsy Silvestri, M. C. A., knocked out Sid Platlik, unattached, first round; Jim Davenport, Salem-Crescent A. C., defeated Tom Collins, Metropolitan Life, three rounds. M. C. A., knocked out Sam Breishand, Commodore A. C., defeated Tommy Thomas, Salem-Crescent A. C., three rounds; Joe Corey drew a bye.
145-Pound Class—M. Calvin, South Carolina, Metropolitan Life, Pat Dardenko, Reesch's Gym, second round; Tom Murphy, Veteran Foreign Wars of Far Rockaway, defeated Oscar Hulford, Salem-Crescent A., three rounds.
182-Point Class—Jack De Santil,
South Ogane A. C. knocked out Patsy,
Silvester, Union Settlement, third round.
183-Point Court, toight of Columbus, defeated
August Ferdinand, Salem-Crescent A.
C. three rounds.
Holmes Loses to Delmont
BOYON, Mass.—Gonnie Holmes, featherweight of New York, lost the decision to Al Delmont of Dorschester in a fast and furious sight round bout at the Suffols A. A. show in Mechanic building, Friday night.
Two weeks ago Holmes knocked out Delmont in four rounds. He was not a fortunate Friday, for the white boy came back strong and in a manner surprising to the game little colored man. However, many of the experts who saw the fight declared that the referee could have easily declared the bout a draw.
Herbert A. Allen
IMPRESSARIO
Artists furnishing for all occa-
sions. Special attention given
Churches and Schools.
138 WEST 117TH ST.
N. Y. C.
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DANNY LEVINE MAKING GOOD
Al White Went Out Against Carl Hansen in the Second
Danny Levine, whose boxing has been more or less of a sensation in the simon pure ranks, added another bout to his credit last Friday night. The Seward Gym bantamweight won a special 118-pound class bout over Alfred Valent, unattached, in the amateur boxing show at the Columbus Council, K. of C. Levine was extended to the limit to earn the decision.
Carl Hansen won the 128-pound class laurels by knocking out Al White. This ending was surprising, as White had a commanding lead until the middle of the second round when Hansen dropped him with a hard right.
18.Pound Class—John Lazaro, Mission Club, defeated Dick Koehl, unattached, three rounds, John King, Natasha, defeated Tony Ambrosio, Boehner's Club, Spartan rounds.
18.Pound Class—A. Cohen, Beecher's Club, knocked out Ed. Hughes, unattached, first round, Carl Hunsen, Talentioch, Clark House, first round.
18.Pound Class—Leo Brause, Trinity Club, defeated Paul Cerosoy, unattached, three rounds.
18.Pound Class—Danny Levine, Seward Club, defeated Alfred Valent, unattached, three rounds.
18.Pound Class—Salmon, Sempress Cresent A. C., won on foul from Tony Felson, National A. C., third round.
Finals.
18.Pound Class—King knocked out Lazaro, second round.
18.Pound Class—Hansen knocked out Cohen, second round.
18.Pound Class—Hansen won from Brause when the latter was disqualified for using illegal tactics, third round.
```markdown
```
Edited by Romeo L. Dougherty
COLUMBIA CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
Courses in All Branches of Vocal and Instrumental Music
Individual Instruction by Eminent Artists and Teachers
Public Appearance Assured — Diplomas Awarded
All European Teaching Staff—Open Daily, 10 A.M. 9 P. M.
368 CONVENT AVE. (West 145th St.) NEW YORK CITY
WEDNESDAY. EVENING, NOV. 16th, 1927
STEINWAY HALL — 113 WEST 57TH ST.
Tickets, $1.65 - $1.10, at Box Office
PACE WAS TOO FAST FOR VOGEL
PACE WAS TOO FAST FOR VOGEL
Bruce Flowers Rose to Great Heights at the Garden Last Week
In the semi-final of ten rounds between Bruce Flowers, fast flash from New Rochelle, and Sammy Vogel, Harlem, to the Delaney-Renault bout at Madison Square Garden last Friday night, customers saw another bout won by Flowers by a big margin. Vogel in the second round sent Flowers sprawling to the canvas. In the sixth and seventh Sammy had Bruce hanging on the ropes.
Flowers rose to great heights in this battle and took the show by storm. His punching at close range and clever boxing proved too much for the rugged Harlemite, who had an advantage of six pounds in weight. Flowers took seven of the ten rounds, Vogel scoring in the second and fifth, while the eighth was even.
After Vogel had clipped him with a long right in the second Bruce elected to box carefully, allowing Vogel to come to him. Sammy kept coming in all through the fracas but he was met by a straight left jab that sent his head back repeatedly. Vogel tried to bring his excess weight to advantage in the clinches but Bruce punched too fast, forcing Vogel to give way continually. The New Rochelle fighter, who seems destined to become a lightweight of renown, set an infernal pace throughout and after the second round the ultimate result was never in doubt. Vogel was clearly outclassed but his aggressive tactics made it a fine bout to watch. Vogel weighed 141 while Flowers scaled the beam at 135.
TRENTON, N. J.—Babe Ruth broke up the old ball game here last Tuesday afternoon when his third homer of the afternoon put the Brooklyn Royal Giants to rout by a score of 9 to 4. The Babe and Lou Gehrig played as members of a specially formed Trenton team against the Royals. The field was taxed to its limit by fans anxious to catch a glimpse of the famous fence busters of the American League.
Twice before the eighth as Ruth poled, the ball over the right field fence, hundreds of youngsters swarmed into the field to romp from third to home with the King of Swat, each time holding up the game for 15 minutes before the field could be cleared.
After his third homer in the eighth with two on base, however, officials found it impossible to get the fans from the field and the game was called with the score 9 to 4 in Trenton's favor.
Lou did not fare as well as the Babe, collecting a double and a single out of four times at bat.
SEVEN
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
SUNDAY EXCURSION
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA.
$7.50 Round Trip
LYNCHBURG, VA.
$8.00 Round Trip
DANVILLE, VA.
$9.00 Round Trip
Stopping at Culpeper and
Orange
SUNDAY, OCT. 23d, 1927
Leaving New York City
9:25 P. M., Oct. 22d
Over 12 Hours in Each Place
For Less Than Half-Fare
See Flyers or Consult Any Penn-
sylvania Railroad Ticket Agent
PRIVATE TUTORING
PROFESSIONAL
All Subjects—Reasonable Prices
Justian Evening
Reduction from Overseas
R. JAMKS COOPER
216 West 139th St.
Augubon 5470
O
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Stetson Hats, $8 to $40
Town Hats, $3 to $6.50
Special Selections of Caps,
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Town's Hats
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149 West 125th St.
New York
C. L. MAXEY, Jr.
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198 WEST 134th ST.
Phone Morningside 8178
VATORY OF MUSIC
Local and Instrumental Music
Instrument Artists and Teachers
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Open Daily, 10 A.M. 9 P.M.
18th St.) NEW YORK CITY
TON S. HELM-Baritone
ING, NOV. 16th, 1927
What "The Blues" Also Brought Clarence
FOR SALE
Stage and Film Hits at Lafayette
"What Price Glory" and Jessie Smith Draw Record Crowd
One of the world's greatest motion pictures and one of the finest revues in the road share honors on this week's wonderful program at the Lafayette Theatre. In spite of the terrific downpour which deluged the city Monday afternoon, a crowd that overflowed to the sidewalk greeted this offering at the opening performance.
Both stage and screen show were acclaimed by the audience. Never before has any single act received the ovation accorded to Bessie Smith when she sang and danced and made merry with the other members of the company. And never before has an audience sat in such sense anxiety or burst forth in such wild laughter as the inspiring scenes of "What Price Glory" were reeled off.
Resale Smith heads by far the best revue she has yet led. Aided by Clarence Scott, The Taskiana Four, Dinah and Gertrude Scott, Clarence Smith, Hooten and Hooten, Darling and Philips and several other well-known entertainers, the revue, which is entitled "Harlem Follies," is as pleasing a show as one would want to see. And the work of Miss Smith places it at the head of the many shows of this kind now touring the country. Encore after encore held the revue on the stage until the dinner hour had long passed. The show was shedled to end at 5 o'clock, but it was after 6 before the applause of the audience ceased and the tired company was permitted to set off the stage.
The chorus deserves particular mention. Twelve of the fastest, jolliest, peppest girls it has been the pleasure of Lafayette audiences to see went through the numbers in a way that brought storms of applause. These girls probably could not get into the chorus of a Broadway night club—but they certainly can dance and sing! The musical part of the program was rendered by a twelve-piece band under the leadership of Fred Longshore.
As to the picture, "What Price Glory" certainly deserves the tribute paid by the critics, who have called it the world's greatest motion picture. As a spectacle, as a romance, as a story of adventure, and as an example of hilarious screen comedy, "What Price Glory" is by far the greatest production yet given to the world. It is greater than the stage play which caused such a sensation, for the unlimited scope of the screen has been used to the utmost. Scenes of unbelievable magnitude form the background for a most remarkable story that carries the spectator around the world and through the World War. To miss "What Price Glory" is to miss an event that comes once in a lifetime. When presented on the same program with "Harlem Follies" the Lafayette is certainly offering its patrons one of the finest programs possible.
LAFAYETTE PACKED DESPITE BAD WEATHER Many Novelties at the Alhambra Theatre
Performers and Others Should Turn to Our Long Island Page
We take pleasure in presenting another side of the colored performer in The Amsterdam News today. Many years ago when the dramatic editor of this paper came to Harlem to record the doings of our people on the stage, one of the things which we pointed out was the readiness of the average performer to throw his earnings to the winds. We felt that the performer, earning, much more in a shorter period than many of his brothers in other walks of life, should look to the furture and not to the forced "benefits" which are the result of a heedless life on the stage, counting not the cost of refusing to save for the rainy day.
In recent years good fortune directed our activities to Brooklyn and Long Island, and realizing that a home was the first step towards that independence to which the thinking among us aim, we directed every ounce of energy towards pointing out the advisability of our people on the stage securing their own homes before prices became prohibitive. The answer to our plea can be seen if the reader will turn to the Brooklyn and Long Island section of The Amsterdam News today. When the work of these people is done they will always be in a position to look forward to the comforts of their own home. Let others take heed and follow in the footsteps of those among them wise enough to provide in time of plenty and "make hay while the sun shines."
"PORGY."
"PORGY." A play in four acts by Dorothy and Du Rose Heyward. Stuared by Rouben Mamoulian, Set-neted by the Theatre Guild as the first production of Its Tenth Subscription Season. At the Guild Theatre with the following cast:
Munz ..... Georgeette Harvey
Juke ..... Wesley Hill
Lilly ..... Dorothy Paul
Bobbie ..... Wesley Paul
Annie ..... Ella Madison
Sporting Life ..... Percy Verwayne
Serena ..... Rose McLendon
Robbins ..... Riley
Jim ..... Peter Cluck
Clark ..... Mary Young
Peter ..... Haye Bryant
Troy ..... Bryant
Crown ..... George Moore
Crown's Best ..... Evelyn Ellis
A Detective ..... Stanley de Wolfie
Policeman ..... Mayfree Meliae
Undertaker ..... Leigh Whipler
Selpie ..... Meliae Greene
Bruzer ..... Colleen Nelson
Nelson ..... G. Edward Brown
Allan Arendale ..... Edward Felding
The Crab Mun ..... Leigh Whipler
The Crab Mun ..... Leigh Whipler
Residents of Catsch Row, Fishermen,
Children, Stewardess, Etc.
The estimable Theatre Guild started another season Monday evening a week ago as its own profile playhouse with an astonishingly accurate transcription by Dorothy Heyward. The authors have made the dramatization of the book themselves, resulting in an always interesting, and often super, play by the talented Negro actors, this drama of the lowly Carolinian colored folk was enthusiastically received by its first-stage audience and gives every evidence of conformance with the experimental by the Guild. If you will but a particularly fortunate one.
Catfish Row, a squallid Negro quarter
in Charleston, serves as the play's
incite. In It, Mr. and Mrs. Hewey have
placed romance, hate, comedy and
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY. OCT. 19. 1927
At the Theatre Guild in "Porgy"
THE WOMAN WHO WAS A WOMAN
MRS. ROSE McCLENDON, One of the Chief Reasons for the Success of the 1927 Pulitzer Prize Play, "In Abraham's Bosom," Is Now in One of the Foremost Roles in "Porgy" at the Theatre Guild
tragedy, mixing all these elements into a potent connection that is easy to here. Here we find Porgy, a crippled peddler, pathetic in his ingenuousness and likable for his many qualities. During a deco tossing contest a player is murdered by Brown, a black blazer. The blazer is to the positions of the palmato jungle, leaving behind Brown, the dusky lady of his illicit affections. Shunned by the community of the unhappy girl takes refuge in the lodgings of Porgy. Loew comes to this strange pair and their constant association with the murderer the girl runs to far away. New York with "Spouting Life" a "high yeller." Bess loves her "happy dust" and hoofing too much to remain long in Porgy's company and is quite possible that both will to minate a vared, fascinating and profitable theatrical career at the end of this season.
Norma Talmadge's latest production, "Camille," will be shown at the same program with Drake and Walker next week.
plenice on a secluded island, when Bess is confronted with Creon the renegade again. There follows his return to Caina, and he is hurtured, hurried, his defiance and ridicule of the prayers and impassioned spirituals of the fellow Sagresos, and his subsequent affliction. Porgy. The play does not end here, but continues to show that Bess, after all, is made of poor stuff, suff, and is unable to answer questions evasively about the murder the girl runs off to Ennay. New York, with "Sporting Life," a film by the author, "happy dust" and booting too much to remain long in Porgy's company and she hastily departs, leaving the crippled and broken-hearted at the final curtail.
The play unfolds in a series of graphic and well conceived episodes, with a highly effective. There is in the scene showing the shabby courtyard teeming with shaky humanity in a magnificently showy the Negroes in a perfect frenzy of religions fervor of song and incantation, tangled growths in vivid silhouette, the colorful departure for the picnic armed with a blaring brass band; these has been translated in terms of the stage with remarkable flexibility, and in the original book will be lead in the praise of the Guild's newest play.
Frank Wilson, the actor-postman, whose work in "Abraham's Rosam" has been played by the actor Porgy with beautiful skill. As the crippled beggar, wheeling through life by means of a goat-drawer he played the role of Porgy with high drama in rich drama and greatly to be admitted. The part of Bass was played by no less brilliantly by Evelyn Mills, the actress who played the able Rose McLendon in a secondary role. That she made her work brightly stand out in a play full of more special effects, and she made her great credit. Georgette Harvey as the voluble feminine leader of the community and Wesley Hill as jake the fisherman especially fine performances by George Moore, Leigh Whigh. A. B. Comathie and Percy Verwayne. The cast of the play and sleeper the play has been wonderfully well staged by Mr. Mamoulain.
The Theatre Guild is to be congratulated exceedingly on this new presentation, the printed page, "Porgy" is a play with a truly great first act and three plays, it almost equals the same high level. It is a thoroughly interesting undertaking.
Drake and Walker At the Lafayette
Bringing a company of fifty popular performers, Henry Drake will present his "My Chocolate Gall" at the Lafayette Theatre next week. With many new faces and the famous band that has played in the best theatres of the country, Drake and Walker's new show promises to be the crowning achievement of the noted couple's theatrical career. "My Chocolate Gall" will be of greater interest to the theatre-going public, as it may be "Drake and
NEW ALHAMBRA
The Friendly Theatre — Sit Where You Please 126th Street and Seventh Avenue
Now Playing — The Balance of the Week
Seventh Avenue Strollers
A Harlem Musical Comedy Melange With National and International Favorites
LENA WILSON, Back From Her Triumphs in London and Paris, Leads the Twenty Pretty SEVENTH AVENUE STROLLERS in Her Latest Hit, "Got Everything but You."
MANTAN, THE CALIFORNIA NUT, in His Unique Whirlwind and Eccentric Dances and Comedy Capers.
GERTIE MOORE Presents a Sensational Novelty, RODERICK'S TRAINED SEALS — the First Act of Its Kind to Be Offered by a Harlem Girl.
SLIM and ROSE HENDERSON in Their Laughable Domestic Tangle, Told in Song.
"ICE CREAM CHARLIE," Comedy Playlet With Emmett Anthony, Mantan, George W. Cooper, Lena Wilson, George Booker, Georgie Green and Others.
KITTY BROWNE and the STROLLERS in "Did You Mean It?"
OTHER ACTS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION "Meet Me at the Wednesday Midnight Ramble"
Entire,New Show Every Week
The New Alhambra Management Announces for WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, OCTOBER 24
FLAMING FOLLIES
An Elaborate Scenic Production, With the Largest Cast of Famous Comedians and Bronze Beauties Ever Seen, in Harlem
Always a Great Show at the Alhambra — Get the Habit
Courtesy Brooklyn Daily Times.
is quite possible that both will terminate a varied, fascinating and profitable theatrical career at the end of this season. Norma Talmadge's latest production, "Camille," will be shown on the same program with Drake and Walker next week.
Novelties at The Alhambra
Novelties at The Alhambra
The "Flaming Follies". Underlined for Presentation Next Week
There is something new and novel at the Alhambra this week—what is believed to be the first trained animal act to be presented by a Harlem girl.
During the course of the revue, "Seventh Avenue Strollers," Gertie Moore presents an amusing act with trained seals. The intelligent animals play ball, juggle, balance various articles, and catch in their months firebrands tossed by Miss Moore.
"Look at the sealskin browns!" exclaimed an amused patron. The odd pets are well known to vaudeville folks as Roderick's Seals. Gertie Moore devoted a week to making friends with them and they perform beautifully for her.
Another surprise at the Alhambra is Mantan, known as the "California Nut." He is a protege of Punchon and Marco, the eminent producers of the West Coast. Mantan's eccentric comedy and whirlwind dancing, added to the funmaking of Slim Henderson, Emmett Anthony, George W. Cooper and George Green, makes "Seventh Avenue Strollers" a remarkable laughing show.
Lena Wilson, who made a great hit in London and Parts with Florence Mills in "Blackbirds," leads the Alhambra girls in "Got Everything but You" and was tumultously applauded. Rose Henderson scores a success in "Varsity Drag" and Kitty Browne archly renders "Did You Mean It?"
A domestic tangle in song by Slim and Rose Henderson goes over big with the crowd. George Green and Billy Petway lead the score of Pretty strollers in "Chocolate Brown."
The height of the merriment is reached in the playlet. "Ice Cream Charlie," in which Emmett Anthony and Mantan, supported by the entire troupe, have a hilarious time. The photoplays for the balance of the week are: Leo Maloney in the action drama, "Border Blackbirds"; the Hal Roach comedy, "Hired and Fired"; the Aesop's fable, "The Big Reward," and, as always, the Pathe News on the very day of issue.
"Flaming Follies" Coming.
LINCOLN THEATRE
Lenox Avenue, at 135th Street Week Starting Monday, Oct. 17
With Salem Tutt Whitney, J. Homer Tutt, Stewart Hampton,
Clarence Nance, Curtiss & White, Alonzo Fenderson, Mabel
Ridley, Theresa West, Ida Brown, Alice Gorgas
(Splendid Miller Dancing Chorus)
On the Screen Thursday to Sunday
"THE CALLAHANS AND THE MURPHYS"
For next week the attraction is "Flaming Follies," for which a very expensive and elaborate scenic mounting is now being completed.
One of the principal episodes in "Satan's Day Off," the locale being the inferno; but everything that happens is comic.
The costumes will be grotesquely artistic, as befits the surroundings, and the music most unusual. The management of the Alhambra says it will be the most ambitious production they have staged, and that there will be an abundance of surprise features.
The rehearsal hall is buzzing with activity in preparation for "Flaming Follies."
Monarch Band in Rare Program
Simpson to Interpret Contributions on the Masters on Nov. 4
When Lieut. Fred W. Simpson's Monarch Band appear in their next concert Friday night, November 4, at Manhattan Casino, the public will be given an opportunity to hear the crack band play selections which, it is claimed, have never before been played by a Negro band in New York City. This concert is the annual affair that the band gives each year.
Some of the distinctive selections which will be played that night include "Cavalry Charge," a descriptive fantasia by G. Luders, with special arrangement by Lieut. Simpson. The piece opens with the entire band singing. The bando part in "Cavalry Charge," is particularly good and the beating of the horses' hoofs may be easily distinguished. The selection has a vivid ending with the discharge of several revolvers.
Recently the hand purchased at considerable expense a handsome set of chimes. They will be heard for the first time in public at the concert when "Cathedral Chimes," a reverie by Arnold and Brown, is played. Charles Brooks, wilt-known drummer, plays the chimes. One of the outstanding numbers on the program and one of the most difficult band selections ever played will be the "1812 Overture" by P. Tschalkowsky. Here will be heard the national anthems of both France
"DESIRES OF 1927"
Homer Tutt, Stewart Hampton,
white, Alonzo Fenderson, Mabel
Ida Brown, Alice Gorgas
AND THE NEGRO ART
THEATRE
N. Y. Public Library, West 185th St.
HEMSHEY WINFIELD, Director
Presents
THE SEKONDI PLAYERS in
A Lyric Program of Plays
Including
VACHEL LINDSAYS "CONGO"
and
"HE SAID AND SHE SAID"
By Alice Gerstenberg
MONDAY AVES, OCT. 24, OCT. 31
Tickets 500
On Sale at the Library
LAFA
Now Playing (Up to
The World's Great
"What Pr
ALSO THE FINEST
BESSIE
AND
HARLEM
Now Playing (Up to Sunday, Inclusive) The World's Greatest Motion Picture
Edited by Romeo L. Dougherty
7th AVENUE at 13and STREET
ALSO THE FINEST REVUE ON TOUR BESSIE SMITH AND HER HARLEM FOLLIES
---
and Russia. The overture is the story of Napoleon's defeat at Moscow. The new chimes again come into excellent use in this number and they may be heard pealing joy of the Russians as the French are driven out of their city. Still another musical gem that will be played is Victor Herbert's "Favorites," comprising an arrangement of some of the best selections by Victor Herbert. Rachmaninoff's Prelude will also be played. It is said that this prelude calls for an exhibition on the part of the musicians who play it of rare talent. Burleigh's "Deep River," in a special arrangement by Leit. Simpson, will complete the program
Lovers of good music and the most severe musical critics will find that program worthy of hearing. The lieutenant has his men rehearsing faithfully for the concert, as the band has a national reputation to sustain, having met and defeated the finest colored bands in the country for first prize at the annual Elk conventions for the past five years. This year's concert will likely be the finest and most successful the band has ever given.
ROBINSON TO PRODUCE
NEW REVUE SOON
Urged on by the spectacular success of his "Jazzmanla." Clarence Robinson announces that he is casting for his next revue, which will have an early presentation at the Lafayette. The splendid entertainment which Robinson organized in his last revue stumps him as one of the most able and most enterprising of the younger producers. He will be well worth watching.
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SATURDAY EVG. OCT. 22, 1927
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FIGHT PICTURES DREW WELL HERE
New Management at Alhambra Theatre Did Not Falter in Showing Film
The new management of the Alhambra Theatre is decidedly making good on its promise of surprises and novelties in its programs. Last week it was the motion pictures of the Dempsey-Tunney championship fight which the Alhambra boldly presented, in spite of the activities in official circles to prevent it.
The Alhambra management knew the law—and the august District Attorney didn't—which he now admits. The harlem public clamored to see the light pictures, and the Alhambra supplied the demand, despite threats and attempted intimidation. Several days after the Alhambra broke the ice" other theatres mustered the courage to follow suit. The answer was that the Alhambra was crowded constantly, as the public seemed to realize the courage and initiative which it required to be first in the field.
Even Tex Rickard, with all his legal staff, was cowed into keeping Madison Square Garden dark after the most elaborate preparations had been made and great expense incurred. Madison Square Garden didn't have the Dempsey-Tunney pictures, but Harlem did—at the Alhambra.
SALEM BOYS IN FINE BATTLES
Barrett Springs Surprise by Knocking Out Abrahams Last Week
The simon pures was at it again hot and heavy last Wednesday night at the Garden in the Metropolitan A.A. U. seven-class bouts. Johnnie Van Butten, that promising little 112-pounder of the Salem-Crescent Club, started the ball roll when he knocked out Nat
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BRUCE FLOWERS IN BRILLIANT VICTORY Salem-Crescent Fighters Score Quick K. O's
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Esgman, unattached, in the second round, closely followed by another Salem performer in the person of Dave Miller, who laid low Eugene Collins of the Silent Four A. C., also in the second round.
The outstanding fight of the night was that between Gus Abrahams, of the Holy Name Club, and Joe Barrett, unattached, in the 157-pound division. In the first round, Abrahams had Barrett groggy from a series of hard blows to the midsection. Joe could not seem to land a blow on the elusive Abrahams and was missing with lefts and rights. It appeared that Gus would stow away his opponent by the second stanza.
In the second heat Barrett rushed from his corner and nailed Abrahams with a right to the head. Gus toterted for the moment and Barrett followed his advantage with another right to the chin that spun Gus around. Before his victim could recover, Joe sunk a left to Abrahams' stomach and Gus went to the canvas. He arose without taking a count, a little dared, and Barrett punished him with three rights to the jaw and he was down again. He took a count of seven on one knee and as he arose Barrett rushed him to the ropes and caught, him with another right to the jaw. This time Abrahams fell flat on his back and did not budge while the fatal count was tolled over him. The summary:
112-Pound Class—John Van Putten, Salem-Crescent A. C., knocked out Nate Bessman, unattached, second round; out Bugee Collins, Silent Four A. C., second round.
125-Pound Class—Danny Lovine, Edward Gymnasium, knocked out Sam Boudreau, Holly Name Club, second round, Holly Murphy, Grace Club, semifinal, Larry Murphy, Grace Club, semifinal, defeated Winston Graham, Salem-Crescent, four rounds, decision; William Gordon, National A. C., defeated George Johnson, National Club, three rounds, decision; The Coca-Cola Club, three rounds, defeated John Kennedy, unattached, three rounds, decision.
125-Pound Class—Frank Carraro, Orzana A. C., defeated Jimmy Mann, Holly Name Club, three rounds, decision; Orzana A. C., defeated Jimmy Mann, knocked out Henry Wilford, unattached, second round; Joe Mulholland, Holly Name Club, knocked out Roger B. Joseph Catholic Club, first round; Hugh B. Bout Troop, 290, defeated Mao David, Salem-Crescent, three rounds, decision.
135-Pound Class—Louis Lubbert, Holy Name Club, defeated Joe Steinfeld, Seward Gymnasium, three rounds, decision.
147-Pound Class — Thomas Curtin, Ozanas A. C. defeated Ray Mulehy, decision Tony Logan fourth, three rounds, knocked out Harry Welner, unattached, first round; Ted Matheson, Norwegian A. C., defeated Charles Malone, Holy Oman, knocked out Bennie Bunce, Joso Burrett, unattached, knocked out Jos Abrahams, Holy Name Club, second round.
155-Pound Class — Casco Gasperoni, unattached, knocked out William Harrison, Joseph Catholic Club, first round; Henry Nealon, Paulist A. C., knocked out William Harrison, St. Joseph Catholic Club, first round.
147-Pound Class — Joseph (semifinals) — Aron Schwartz, unattached, knocked out Tom Curtin, Ozanas A. C., third round.
Invitations for Postos Club Dance All Out
All is in readiness for the fall invitational dansant of the Postos Club, the first organization of postal clerks to give high class entertainment in New York, when they greet their friends at Manhattan Casino this Friday night.
This being the ever popular Fletcher Henderson's first appearance in Harlem for the season, he is striving hard to make that one that Harlemites and the other folks who may be invited to the popular Postos' affair, will long remember. Just so, Bill Vodrey, who but recently returned to this country from London where his Plantation Orchestra was the rage, will strive hard to make the folks "at home" long remember his home-coming and that of his orchestra, for this, too, will be Vodrey's first appearance in Harlem for the season together with his celebrated Plantation Orchestra.
In addition to the crack orchestras, the young men who handle Uncle Sam's mall by day and entertain by night, have arranged several surprise specialties for Friday night and all who respond to their invitations are certain to long remember the evening. The Postos Club, of which John N. Wilson is now president, have a record for enjoyable evenings which every member claims will be upheld this time in a manner that all will enjoy.
It may save you many dollars later
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY. OCT. 19. 1927
LEAGUE STARS TO PLAY HERE
Renaissance, in Big Opening, Down Hebrew Giants Before Monster Crowd Sunday
From far and near the crowd gathered in Harlem last Sunday evening. The occasion was the official start of the popular Renaissance basketball five season and more than two thousand fans went wild when the boys hit the court to mingle with the crack Hebrew Glants from the Bronx. And it was like old times at the home court of the local players, for many an old star eased in to be in at the big doings and Manager "Bob" Douglas gave the gathering the promised surprise. This surprise came when Bruce Flowers, one of the most promising lightweights in the game today, threw out the ball that started the game.
The victory of Flowers over Sammy Vogel last Friday night was fresh in the minds of the audience, and when Bruce stepped to the center to start the boys on their way a great big hand was the result.
Old favorites appeared in the lineup of the Renaissance team and when the referee called a half the colored players had the lead by a sale margin, having secured 32 against the 22 score which the Hebrews managed to ease through.
The coming Sunday night will find another bumper house on hand to witness the game, for the American League All-Stars are coming to Harlem, bringing such well-known players as Ripley of Washington; Denhert of Celtics; Meuser of Chicago; Cliff Anderson of the Long Island Pros, and Russell and Hickey of Cleveland. It is going to be a big night, if you ask us.
In the premillinary game last Sunday night those fast-going Majestic Cubs defeated the boys of the Indian A. C, by a score of 27-17. Score and line-up of the big game follows:
RENAISSANCE
Saltch ..... 1
Ricks ..... 1
Saunders ..... 1
Mayers ..... 1
Jenkins ..... 1
HEBREWS.
F. G. Fouls
Ricks ..... 5
Saunders ..... 0
Mayers ..... 4
Jenkins ..... 1
F. G. Fouls
Sunolick ..... 2
Davis (G.) ..... 0
Davis (H.) ..... 0
Selfert ..... 0
Brown ..... 2
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Athenians Open Season Nov.11
The Baltimore Athenians, one of the oldest basketball organizations in the east, have gone into hard training to be ready for the opening game on November 11.
Old age having pretty well wrecked last season's team, young blood hsa been secured to fill the gaps. Joe Jackson and Veney remain from last years squad. Around these two, the team will be built. A month of practice has brought results. Prospects point to a team equal to the sensational 1925-26 machine, which cut such a wide swath in national basketball circles.
The Carlisles will open the home season.
Out-of-town games are wanted with teams anywhere. A few home dates remain open. Write Wm. S. Harris, 1801 Madison avenue, Baltimore, Md.
Frank Young Field Judge At Fisk-Tuskegee Came
TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Ala.
Oct. 17.—Frank A. Young, the well-known sports editor of the Chicago Defender and a nationally known football official, has been selected as field judge for the Fisk Tuskegee football game which will be played in the Alumni Bowl on November 5. it was announced here today by the committee on the regulations of athletics at Tuskegee. The other officials will be S. B. Taylor, referee; B. C. Jacobs, umpire, and T. T. Robinson, head linesman.
A large number of Nashville fans will accompany the Big Blue team to Tuskegee to cheer the Nashville eleven on to their first victory in several years over the thrice Southern champions.
"V" Basketball Teams Preparing for Busy Season
Thirty young men responded to the call for candidates for the Y. M. D. basket ball team last Tuesday at which time the first practice of the season took place. The Y. M. D. will again be coached by George Gregory, well known to all basket ball fans in Harlem. Robert Payne will be in charge of the Y. M. D. lightweights, while Samuel Reese and Jack Livingston will teach the seniors and junior league teams respectively, the fine points of the game.
It is the plan of the Basketball Advisory Board of the West 135th street branch which is composed of the above coaches. Messrs. Quentin Hands, Lawrence Hunt assistants in
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TUSKEGEE BAND TO BE AT GAME
Will Stop Off for Concert on Way to Philadelphia This Week
GREENSBORO, N. C., Oct. 17. Music lovers of Greensboro are promised a musical treat of rare interest when the 12-piece Tuskegee Band, en route to Philadelphia on the occasion of the Tuskegee-Lincoln football game, Oct. 29, stops off here for a concert engagement. The Tuskegee Band is considered one of the best school bands in America and has delighted, audiences all over the country because of the high type of music rendered.
Traveling with the band will be the well-known Tuskegee Singers, nationally known artists and markers of records exclusively for the Victor Talking Machine Company, Captain Alvin J. Neely, the leader of the quartet is the registrar of the famous Alabama institution and will take a few minutes during the evening, to tell the audience something of the work being done at the school which was founded by the late Booker T. Washington, and now being successfully carried on by his successor, Dr. Robert R. Moton. The band is under the leadership of Captain Frank I. Dyre, who was decorated for bravery in the battlefields of France, and who is a coefit soloist of unusual merit. He was formerly cornet soloist of the Ninth United States Calvary Band, and served as assistant conductor of the famous Handy Band of Memphis, Teen. Captain Dyre is himself a composer of popular music.
the personnel of the band is made up of students from all sections of this country, who possess rare musical talent, as will be dem-
the Boys' Physical Department—to open the season on Saturday evening, November 5. Announcement of teams to oppose the home clubs will be made at a later date.
REMARKA
NEW DISCO
Removes:
Freckles, Black
Tan, Muddin
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BLEACH
The Unique Fash
Former
Designers and Great
Will Stage
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Featuring What the Smalls
ON FRIDAY EVENING
At MANHATTAN CASINO
GENERAL ADM
Boxes $8.00, not including admi-
mals. Music by John C. S.
OFFICERS—Fras. Mrs. Hattie B.
Field Strayhorn; Cor. Secy. Mrs. Ma-
sia Ruth H. Cantwell; Fin. Secy. M
The Unique Fashion Club, Inc.
OFFICIER—Freas, Mrs. Hattie Lynch Jones, V.-Preas, Mrs. Mary Field Stryborn; Cor. Secy, Mrs. Mabel L. Whitman; Asst. Cor. Secy, Miss Rina Cantwell; Fin. Secy, Secy, Mrs. Pope, Treas, Mrs. J, H. Donne; Asst. Treas., Miss Margerite Talifar; Chaplain, Mrs. Harriet V, Walter
MEMBERS-Mrs. Lula Burney, Mrs. Frances Varlick Dear, Mrs. Bessie Bassett, Mrs. Josephine Stanley, Mrs. Ethel Walks, Mrs. Howe Mulligan.
HEADQUARTERS FOR TICKETS—Mrs. Josephine Stanley, 2 W. 180th Bt. Tel. Harl. 4890; Mrs. Mary Field Stairhorn, 189th Ae. Tel. Harl. 4890; Mrs. Mae Howard, 1893 W. 140th Bt. Aud. 9205. LOGS AND REHERVED SEATS—Mrs. J. Ready Donna, 579 W. 127th Bt. Morn. 5181.
onstrated on the appearance of this organization here.
President Bluford of the A. and T. College and Tuskegee graduates in this city are interesting themselves in having the band come to Greensboro for this engagement.
135th Street "Y" Organizes Leaders Corps
The Leaders Corps of the Boys' Work Department was reorganized with the following officers elected, namely: Herbert Sims, President Leon Coward, Secretary. The duties of this body consist of leading the younger boys clubs, coaching athletic teams, teaching boys to swim, etc. Every Monday evening at seven o'clock the group comes together for an instruction period in "The Principles of Leadership." "How To Do It," "Problems Discussion," while the course is primarily for the leaders of the Boys' Department, others are welcome to participate if interested. Mother Zlon A. M. E. Church has eight of her leaders enrolled in the course.
The members of the Departmental Corps are: Herbert Sims, Leon Coward, Ernest Jackson, Hillary Thorne, Richard Elderidge, Jack Livingston, Charles Jones, Kenneth Robinson, Samuel Reese, Willis Hanks, Vincent Finkett, George Gregory, Edward Marshall, John Fowler, Clifford Storey, Raymond Creamer and Norman Saunders.
Eddie Whalen Again Cops
Verdict Over Henderson
Eddie "Kid" Whalen defeated Billy Henderson in the feature ten-round bout at the Fourteenth Regiment Armory last Saturday night. Whalen proved too clever for his ever-willing opponent.
In the semi-final Pete Martin and Ralph Landers boxed an sight-round draw. In another scheduled eight Mickey White, scored a technical knockout over Johnny Ferris.
Young Marino was awarded the decision against Rocco Napoli in a six. In the first six-round Joey Knapp knocked out Mickey McGovern in the first round. Frankie Sinder outpointed Joey Rose after four fast rounds to open the show.
ABLE
OVERY
WHITENS
CLEARS AND
SOFTENS SKIN
ALMOST
OVERNIGHT!
Backheads, Pimples,
Bness, Sallowness,
Hes, Dark Spots,
and all Blemishes
and Surely!
irola
CREME
AT ALL
DRUG STORES
Fashion Club, Inc.
Amerly
Creators of Fashions
Stage Their
FASHION SHOW AND DANCE
Smart Women Will Wear
ING, OCT. 28, 1927
O—155th St. & Eighth Ave.
DMISSION $1.00
Immission, and Logos $0.00 ench
J. Smith's Orchestra
Clarence --Dotson, the country-famous colored comedian and dancer, has started reheasing with Leonard Harper's company for his forthcoming appearance at the Lafayette.
- DANSE DE LUXE
Given by
RED W. SIMPSON'S
MARCH BAND
I. B. P. O. E. of W.
Night, November 4
NHATTAN CASINO
In St. and Eighth Ave.
Are and After the Concert
TO HEAR THE COUNTRY'S
AMIER NEGRO BAND
- Loges $3.00 — Boxes $5.00
May Be Made at Monarch Home
West 137th Street
WANTED!
.00 --- $50.00 Per Week
CONCERT - DA
Give
LIEUT. FRED
MONARC
No. 45, I. B.
Friday Night,
AT MANHAT
155th St. and
Dancing Before and
COME AND HEAR
PREMIER N
Admission $1.00 —. Lo
Reservations May Be N
245 West
MEN WA
$25.00 --- $35.00 ---
-DANSE
Given by
FRED W. S.
NARCH BAY
I. B. P. O. F.
Night, Nove
BHATTAN O
th St. and Eighth
fore and After
D HEAR THE O
AMIER NEGRO B
Loges $3.00
May Be Made at 1
5 West 137th St
WAN
5.00 --- $50.00
CONCERT - DANSE DE LUXE
Given by
LIEUT. FRED W. SIMPSON'S
MONARCH BAND
No. 45, I. B. P. O. E. of W.
Friday Night, November 4
AT MANHATTAN CASINO
155th St. and Eighth Ave.
Dancing Before and After the Concert
COME AND HEAR THE COUNTRY'S
PREMIER NEGRO BAND
Admission $1.00 — Loges $3.00 — Boxes $5.00
Reservations May Be Made at Monarch Home
245 West 137th Street
MEN WANTED! $25.00 --- $35.00 --- $50.00 Per Week
Unnecessary. Neither is capital necessary. Ambition to better yourself and capacity for industrious work.
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Dotson is one of the greatest headliners on the vaudeville stage and his appearance at the popular Seventh avenue playhouse will be a big event in the theatrical doings of the day.
Dotson's appearance is tentatively set for the week beginning October 31. John Barrymors's sensational romance, "Don Juan," is also scheduled for presentation that week.
NINE
DRY GOODS
Men's Shirts
Bolster Sets
Blankets
Curtains
Portieres
Household Goods
SPECIAL ARTICLES
Keeping Fit
By E. ELLIOTT RAWLINS, M.D.
Future Health of the Negro
THE death and sick rate of the Negro in the United States has been reduced in the last ten years. Statistics have proved this. But what has caused this improvement in health and the reduction in deaths? I believe that it is due to the better municipal hygiene and sanitation forced upon the ignorant and thoughtless Negroes. It is not due to our individual health measures, since the majority of us today are still lax in personal hygiene and the application of fundamental health laws. Popular health intelligence among us is low—and this is the crux of the health situation. Unless we apply the laws of health to our everyday life, certain prevalent diseases are bound to occur. Take, for instance, syphilis, gonorrhoea, kidney disease, heart disease, arterio-sclerosis (hardening of arteries), apoplexy — these are the prevalent diseases that are causing most deaths today among us.
Many of these are preventable. Some are curable. All can be treated and prevented from getting worse and developing serious complications. But we seem to think little of these diseases, and take either no treatment or very little treatment. This is the difference between us and the white race. White people have these diseases too, but they treat them to a finish with scientific medical measures, and the treatment starts early.
Today we are reaping the benefits of modern municipal sanitation. In towns and cities there are now sewers and sanitary lavatories. There is prompt removal and disposal of garbage and refuse. There are no stables, due to the lack of water. There are paved, cleaned and sprinkled, thus the fly as a source of contagion is diminished. There is pure water, a pasteurized milk supply, household ice boxes and public cold storage plants. All these are a part of modern municipal and community sanitation. All the people, white as well as colored, receive these blessings of the municipality. Death and sickness are rare in this city, it is about a fair in health matters. Government can go to safeguard its people. Beyond this, the individual must "watch his step."
Individual hygiene has to supplement municipal sanitation. We are deficient here. Diseases of inheritance, pregnancy, delivery and infancy are too prevalent among us. There is lessened fresh air and sunlight for us.
Humorous Comment on C
By GERALD
Something
Be
Humorous Comment on Customs, People and Theories
By GERALD HAMILTON
Something Ought to Be Done
Are Men the Aggressors?
CONTINUING in my self-
vant, I respectfully call
ment Eve made, and one
have kept living. They neve-
tion with me whether the par-
due to respect for Eve or for
inclined to say it is both, but
ask, "Is that nice?"
Woman says man is now
the aggressor. It is he, she
the one who sought out—whe-
ously seeking, "while our sex
have to protect ourselves."
CONTINUING in my self-appointed task of a public servant, I respectfully call attention at this time to a statement Eve made, and one which her wonderful daughters have kept living. They never will let, it die. It is a question with me whether the perpetuation of this statement is due to respect for Eve or for protection of the sex. I am inclined to say it is both, but fear that some woman would ask, "Is that nice?"
Woman says man is now, has been and will always be the aggressor. It is he, she charges, who has always been the one who sought out—who hunted and who is continuously seeking, "while our sex has been on the defensive; we have to protect ourselves."
There are two classes of aggressors in the eternal warfare of the sexes: the active offensive and the passive offensive. And when it comes to passive aggression any sensible male will pin honors on the woman.
Take the youth and the maid on a June moonlight night. Why is it that she will suggest that a better view of the moon may be had in the garden? Why will she seemingly be led to a seat which she was thinking of when she made the suggestion? Why is it that she and groups desperately at the youth's arm, and, when he rights (?) her on her feet, she murmurs something about his being "so strong" and then, as if it were an afterthought, he hears her wish she was a man? Now I ask you, is that a nice thing to say? Cught that youth's ego be infailed thus? Should his imagination be started off on a mad rumble, in which he visualizes a life of blissful demonstractions, strong even being a harbor to which clinging-vine ship may always run into in the time of storm?
And women say men are the aggressors. What is as powerful as the psychological actions and statements of women? They don't make love to man—women prepare the stage and let man do the love making. And what is so amusing for women? They think he is forcing the issue when there is no issue—the fact has been long settled. Life is full of examples of woman's passive aggression. Take any case—the poor fellow in the never realizes how much like he he is in the hands of the man who likes and admires when he "happens in" in love; the day, woman "just have the coolest saliva water." The mere
especially for the babies. We should demand more playgrounds and parks in our communities. You cannot get these if you do not vote and demand them. We should think more about the hygiene and economics of marriage. Poverty, low wages, overcrowding with large families breed disease. I have seen more disease in our people after marriages. We have to give the responsibilities and its obligations. We marry too young, under our present economic standard, and so the babies do not get the best care. They are artificially fed while the mother goes to work; there are too many babies for a tired and worn-out mother; there is not the proper medical care because the parents cannot pay for adequate medical services; the husband drowsens his worries with drink, and the family budget is increased in cost and cost of living numbers. Thus disease thrusts its poison into the bodies of many of us who otherwise would be well.
Our death rate can still be further reduced, but only through individual care and hygiene. Each of us must do our part along lines of social and individual health laws. Dispensaries, health centers, milk stations, visiting nurses are all good, are all helpful, but unless the majority of us apply to our individual bodies the rules, laws and regulations of personal and social hygiene, the death rate among us will continue to be high.
storms, People and Theories
HAMILTON
* Ought to Done*
appointed task of a public sentiment at this time to a state-which her wonderful daughters will let, it die. It is a ques-pretension of this statement is the protection of the sex. I am fear that some woman would has been and will always be charges, who has always been hunted and who is continu- has been on the defensive; we clinking of the ice in the glass sends a breeze through the room or over the porch. Does a man believe these things just happen—these salads, cakes and iceed beverages?
If it is in winter, with a cutting nor-wester coming around the corner at "umteen" miles an hour, and he calls, does his chilled senses, ever warm up to the thought-out arrangements of every piece of furniture in the living room? No. The dumb sap walks in like the brave 600 rode.
First, feel the comforting temperature. Next, how convenient the table or chair is for the man's hat and overcoat. Now look at the lights—subdued and seductive. The chairs are full of magazines and newspapers—no place to sit except on a davenette. Gaze over my shoulder as I word-paint this seat: Pillows are strewn all over the desk and SEAT PLACES of the end—and I can sit but there? The man sits, smiling, like the simp he is, over the fact that the woman must move the pillows or sit very close to him. AND SHE DOESN'T MOVE THE PILLOWS.
And try as he might, he can never tell just how it happened. he remembers the arm next to her became cramped. He recalls he lifted this arm up to place it on the back of the davenette behind her. These preliminary facts he can recollect with distinctive niceness, but he racks his dulled brain in a futile effort to figure out just how his arm got on her shoulder and she got into the crook of his arm.
And there she is—a smiling, altruizing, desirable piece of humanity. There she rests in his arms like an infant, looking up into his face with those eyes reminding him of the glowing fire; the subdued lights, send a mellow re-
Belgium's Race Problems
While Not Based on Color, It Is Acute
BRUSSELS.
"O U1, monsieur," said the man who sat opposite
man who sat opposite me as we rode from Aix-la-Chapelle to Brussels, "the Flemings are the oppressed people of Belgium. For every Walloon killed or wounded during the war there were two Flemings, but no sooner was the war over than they began to call us "Boche."
The above remark, reported exactly as uttered, is by way of saying that Belgium has a race problem of its own—a genuine race problem—in so far as it is possible to take any group of the human race and speak of it as a race. Here are two people—the Walloons and the Flemings: The former of French descent or with a leaning to French culture; the latter of Teutonic descent, with a language, or more strictly speaking, a dialect of its own, who won't blend with or accept the ways of the other. Each believes his traditions to be the better.
Another striking fact is that both are of the same color, and their features are so similar that it would take an expert to distinguish a Walloon from a Fleming. Here indeed is a genuine race problem, for every sociologist worth his salt these days is insisting that the difference between man and man lies not so much in their skin color and facial features that it does in the ideas in their brain.
For instance, the Negro in America has been thoroughly absorbed mentally, he is so much of a white man within, that as I said in my last article, even the newsbys in Europe recognize him for an American the moment they see him. Further, the Negro reared in Europe or America is at once called "a white man" by the genuine Africans when the former goes amongst them.
Many interesting elements—social context—enter into this problem and I shall endeavor to give them as best as I understand them.
A thousand or so years ago, Clovis, King of the Franks, or what is now the French, Invaded Flanders and settled it. At about the same time certain Germanic tribes they became next door neighbors of the French colony, or the Walloons, as they were known. Centuries passed during which English, Spanish, Austrian, Burgundian, French, Dutch and other invaders swept over or possessed the land, but jover in a degree strong enough after the mature of the two original colonizers. The latter statement, must be modified, for while the Walloons gradually adopted the modern French language in the place of Walloon, which was a mixture of election over her features; her lips are half parted, half smiling, inviting, questioning, challenging.—CURTAIN
Epilogue: He leaves, believing she let him kiss her. After they marry, he proudly walks down the streets of time congratulating himself that he wooed and won her.—(Preston News Service.)
Confidences
Questions and Answers
By EGYPSY ANN
"No One Shall Understand Me"
His boast is, "No one shall understand me." He refuses to tell his wages to the girl to whom he is engaged. He fully believes that he has the privilege of changing his mind without giving any explanation. Whatever he does is his own business.
BUT. Just let his sweetheart try that stun! She's got to be perfect. She must have her past to him so that he can have the satisfaction of turning her away or tormenting her by bringing it up every time he feels like hiding his own guilt, he boasts: "That kid thinks the sun rises and sets in me. My word's law with her. Why, man, she couldn't live without ME." The writer of a letter which I received yesterday knows all, this, but still asks: "Should I marry him?" My answer is! "Yes. If you join to the throne of neglected and cast-aside wives, go ahead." "Yes again. If you want to spend sleepless nights wondering what he's angry about. God only knows." "Yes. If you want him to hand you a few cents a day for food for you and the babies and him. You don't know how much he earns.
Amsterdam News
By J. A. ROGERS
When independence was won, the Walloons, the leaders, for some reason did not make their language the official one, and in time there began a struggle for supremacy, with the final result that both languages were declared official and legal in all affairs. But as we Negroes know only too well it is one thing to declare a thing legal, and quite another thing to be strong enough to a sort its legality. The Walloons remain in power and the French language is dominant at least in those circles where money talks. The simple fact seems to be also that the Walloon is the most populous of the two. Of the 13 or so per cent of illiteracy, the Flemings furnished about 66.2 per cent, proportionally; of twenty-four leading dailies only one is Flemish. The Flemings are rather of the farming type and seem to furnish the most of the laboring class.
I asked many persons which of the two outnumbered the other, and was told by some that it was the Flemings; by others, the Walloons; looked up the figures and these were what I found: Flemings, 318,500; Walloons, 2,850,825. Speakers of both languages: 967,813. To find which really outnumbered the other in the library, how much of the last named are Walloons, and how much Fleming. I think, however, that the majority of this last-named figure must be Flemings since they would need it to get positions from the Walloons.
For instance, the Fleming who would get work on the railroad must know French. The same holds true for all government positions and the French plains. The Fleming who is used in the universities and in only one of them are the two languages taught, the University of Ghent.
As I said in the opening, my traveling companion said that the Flemings are the oppressed people of Belgium, nevertheless I was unable to find any evidences of oppression, such as we know it in Amsterdam. As we were conversing the conductor came around for tickets and, seeing the Fleming smoking in a compartment reserved for non-smokers, he made him stop, whereupon the Fleming told me indignantly that if he were a Walloon the conductor would not have anything, that the fact that he had crossed the German border, and while the French and Belgians do not observe the rule as to smoking, the Germans strictly do. Nevertheless, the Fleming position is not without justification. It is a very difficult thing to learn another language, especially one unlike yours. In the case of the fleming, it is an economic loss, and here there is cause for complaint.
The older generations of Fleming's hold on to their traditions. They say: "De tail is gansch hot volk" (The language is the life of the people). Their children grow up speaking Fleming, to find new metaflections and mentioned they must speak French. And growing up in Fleming traditions, they naturally feel that those are the best.
All the Fleming's need do is to change their language. To us, who are asked to change our faces and undo the wounds that we have, this is a hair in the soup. There is something much deeper involved;
October 19 is a birth date that does not promise very much to its children in the first half of the birth year, but the latter part should be more full of good fortune. The women will be inclined to quarrel with the source of their bread and butter, and this will be a distinct disadvantage. Those who are in business and those who are in the health care year, but they must use care in spending money, since they will be inclined to spend too much. October 29 promises a year that will require care of the health, and care in regards to real estate and property. Elderly people will cause much annoyance. These people will not gain satisfaction through any legal adjustments understands and the best policy seems to be in making things quite and going about accustomed duties.
October 21 does not promise very much to its children, except to those who follow artistic trades and pursuits and to those who are in love, but their love affairs will be rather lively. Business and employment are not favored, but those who are already in business or employed should use care and good judgment to hold on. Finances will not be so good.
October 22 is a good year for those who are on the screen; who are 'celloists; and for those who are in business and employment. These accidents, sudden ideas, and lack of ready money because of these sudden ideas to spend money unwisely. The year is one of advancement.
October 23 begins a new sign, the Scorpion, and is a fiery, warlike, and progressive sign. These people, are represented by the
primitive French and that of the natives Clovis found there, the others (now the Flemings) held on to their language. This, of course, was also mixed in with that of the natives among whom they settled. Only a very small percentage of Belgians now speak Walboon. This rather dry detail is necessary to what is to follow. The Flemish language now is really Low German, being strikingly like the language spoken in Holland. Both languages in turn
M.
— J. A. Rogers —
are very much like German. The fact is, Flemish and Dutch are really German dialects, no matter how much they may dislike the idea. Incidentally, I might add that a large number of English words are precisely as they are in Flemish, and at the movies I could sometimes read the Flemish part of the sub-title, instead of the French one, and get a pretty good understanding of it. For example, the child of the sign would read, "Arret des Trems," while the Flemish half read, "Tram Still Stand."
All public notices and signs are written in the two languages, and Belgium is the paradise of the printer, the sign-painter, and the interpreter. Just imagine the people of our North speaking one language and the South another and both carrying on commercial, political and other intercourse, and you'll have some idea of it. Here also it is a matter of North and South, for the Flamings are in the North.
I might add that this North and South problem seems to exist in America, in India, in Italy, in America, and even in France there is a certain rivalry between le Midi (South), and le Nord (North). People of the North - sometimes call those of the South "Moke", which, by the way, is no term of affection.
To return to our theme, Belgium, as is known, became in time an independent nation, winning its independence from Holland. The revolt was also the result of a conflict of language—the Dutch insisted that the Belgians should use the Dutch language. To this the Flemings offered little opposition since their language is almost the same as Dutch, while the Walloons strenously objected and took the lead in the revolt.
therefore how can you judge how much to demand?
"Yes, if you want to be lorded over, punched in the eye, occasionally sneered at and treated as if you were far beneath him."
Go ahead, sister. You can have him, and luck to you.
Dear Ecuyss Ann:
I am in love with a girl of seventeen. She has other fellows come to see her, goes out with them, and likes to kid and talks too much to suit me. She told me she won't give me up, na she's going to kid me, you think she loves me? I am 25. PUZZLED.
Dear Puzzled:
I don't think that she loves you. son. When a girl loves a fellow she doesn't want to be bothered with other boys. She wants him and him only. She wants all his spare time and is easily bored with other fellows.
She's really only a kid and you can't expect her to be too serious. She doesn't discourage you, so satisfy yourself with her friendship.
Now, be honest with yourself.
Haven't you done a little stepping about yourself? I wouldn't be surprised but that you'd be happier with an older girl. If your heart is so far gone that you can't leave this girl, the best thing for you to do is to wait for her.
EGYPSY ANN.
To My Colummites:
Don't get impatient if your letter hasn't appeared yet. Because of shortage of space, I am sending out a number of personal replies to letters with names and addresses. The others will be answered as soon as possible.
Your friend.
EGPSY ANN.
Remember the horns that gorged you yesterday will do the same tomorrow and the day after, unless those horns are cut off.
Your Horoscope By THEARCHER
Flemings and Walloons Furnish Study for Sociologists
the Flemings are staunch Catholics; while the Walloons incline toward the anti-clerical and the liberal ways of France. Hence, to hold on to their religion more strongly, the Flemings hold on to their language and their traditions.
In a religious land like Belgium, politics is, of course, strongly mixed with religion. The two strongest parties are the Catholics and the Socialists. According to the latest figures I was able to obtain the former former nate slightly in the Senate, while the latter have a very slight majority in the Senate, both being present in a matched, a fact that matches the struggle keener. This contest between Church and State has been going on since independence was won in 1830.
A third party is called Liberals. These Liberals unite with the Socialists in putting the blame for the alleged high illiteracy of the Flemings on Catholicism. The Catholics, in reply, insist that they encourage education, since before young people are admitted to their first communion they are taught to read. Needless to say, education is not compulsory in Belgium. One Walloon said to me that he felt sure that if the Flemings were a little less religious they would be much further ahead. And this seems to be sound sense. One has to choose symbolically between good and evil. That is, between things that have to do with the hereafter and those things that have to do with the here and now. And usually the man who is experienced in the one is ignorant in the other.
In my "salal days" I was very religious, and while I could tell quite positively such things as where Cain found his wife, and what happened in heaven, I knew far less than I do now of such things as scientific farming, of life as it is actually lived, of hygiene, in general of those things that make for a healthy, well-informed, competitive life on this earth. Of course, in the life beyond, provided there is one, the religious man will be the expert while the earth one will be a greenhorn. In that time the Flemings will be ahead of the Walloons and the Negro ahead of the Nordic. Geographical position has also something to do with the dominance of the Walloons. They are in the south, while the Flemings are in the agricultural area. It is astonishing what some mineral, as coal, iron, gold or oil, will do to mold and even to change the ways of a people, as for example, the Indiana of Oklahoma.
It is difficult to tell how this problem will end. Because of the nearness of Holland, with its similarity of language, it might go on for still more centuries. Then, too, Holland is near Germany, with its language, which is really low German. Germany, it is said, is destrous of seeing the Flemings retain their language, here will seen the Fleming-Wallock problem has a deeper political significance than appears on the surface.
water element, and like water, they can and do mix easily with every one. The undeveloped Scorpions are ruthless, and utterly disregard the rights of others, whether loved ones or friends. Nearly all of these people, even those who are highly developed, keep the right of self-interest and their interests supreme. The men and women do not make very good parents, and the men are especially inclined to be thoughtless in using force upon their children, because they rather command obedience than to understand the child. "Me and you" is a typical quotation of some Scorpions. These people can become less lethal, doctors, and social workers, because they are fearless, when working for a charity.
This date promises a birth year that is mixed with blessings and annoyances. The people who deal in real estate are favored. There seems to be an indication of travel, but care should be exercised to avoid accidents and injury. Affairs should prosper with good judgment and forethought.
October 24 brings its children a birth year that favors domestic happiness and regular duties. New plans or ideas will hardly be worth the effort expended. These people should have money enough for all their needs, if they do not gamble or enter into new enterprises, for they are well aspected financially. Those who follow professional pursuits are most fortunate. Sudden ideas and plans will cause trouble.
October 25 is a birth date that gives its children an active and energetic year, although there will be much inclination to illness, and care in this respect will be greatly to the advantage of these people. Regular duties and affairs are favored. A very good year for regular business. All of these people should learn a deeper consideration of others. The tendency to ridicule and hurt others
MAGAZINE PAGE
NOW that the fall season has arrived, social functions are in evidence and invitations are winding their way to our mail boxes. Whether or not it is possible for us to attend all of these functions, we feel honored to know that we have a place on the social list of our friends. If the affair is a formal one or of a limited number, it is proper to acknowledge receipt and advise the hostess of our acceptance or regret.
Many invitations carry the phrases "R. S. V. P." "Please Reply." Some authorities claim that all invitations should be answered; and that, therefore, these requests for a reply are a reflection on the good manners of the people invited. But such is not the popular understanding. All invitations that are plainly limited to a certain number of hosts, parties, and cards and certain exclusive receptions—should be answered at once, in order that the vacancies may be filled. Whether or not the invitation is accompanied with the request for a reply, all thoughtful people will recognize the propriety. But on many occasions where numbers are not necessarily limited, only the hostess can say whether or not the reply is urgent, since it is a question of her personal convenience, the limits of house room, or some other limitation. A note invitation to a dinner requires a written note of reply within twenty-hour hours.
Those who entertain often and in a formal manner may use a card invitation, engraved in script, with blank spaces in which may be written the name of the guest, the words "at dinner" or "at cards", etc., and the date and hour. If a special event is to follow the dinner or cards, the words indicating it are written on the lower left-hand corner of the invitation or across the lower part; "Musical Program"; "Outing"; etc.
Card invitations to a wedding are issued in the name of the bride's parents, or; if she is an orphan, by a guardian or some relative or friend who gives her the
Man's Poor His Slav
Man's Poor Relations His Slaves in Africa
(Preston News Service.)
FREETOWN, Sierra Lea have always had a hard time books, but in this tropical seepoor relations are his slaves. Dr. G. W. Wright, bish there are 219,000 slaves in the Leone, whom the British Go with native chiefs, is unable of $20 each.
FREETOWN, Sierra Leone, Sept. 30.—Poor relations have always had a hard time of it, according to the story books, but in this tropical section of West Africa a man's poor relations are his slaves.
Dr. G. W. Wright, bishop of Sierra Leone, declares there are 219,000 slaves in the British protectorate of Sierra Leone, whom the British Government, because of treaties with native chiefs, is unable to release, except by payments of $20 each.
"Slaves are inherited," the bishop says in a statement calling attention to the evil, "and in most cases are relatives of the family. Last February my cook came to me and wanted to borrow $10 to complete a sum of $40 with which to buy freedom for his stepbrother and sister, who were slaves in the protectorate area.
Can You Tell?
1. What is the approximate value of church property owned
"I pointed out that these relatives were actually in my house in Freeport as his visitors when he made the request, and therefore, being in the colony and not in the protectorate, were, lpso facto, free. My cook, however, insisted that they should be properly paid for, and went back the next day with them to get their freedom certified before the district commissioner. They are now working as foreigners in the protectorate. Many of the men who are slaves, Bishop Wright, said. One chief I know has fifty wives. Most of them he has inherited, and his first duty to them is not as husband but as protector."
Domestic slavery, however, will last only another generation. Under the 1926 ordinance of the legislative council, of which the three leading chiefs are members, all persons born or brought into the protectorate are free, and all slaves are to be freed on the death of the master. The Sierra Leone slaves live under primitive condition. They are cotton on tiny spindles twisted between their gers and weave it on easily inadequate looms of stick and rope. They are scantily clothed and one of the chief modes of travel is in dugout canoes.
Pen Pointers
Pen Pointers
By Clifford L. Miller.
Now is the needy time for
handkerchief-headed leaders to
take a long vacation without pay.
Mark the man who shuns paying
his honest debts and buys
what he fancies! At his death,
the tin cup will be passed for
coins to bury him in Potter's
Field.
The Jew is still the landlord of
the Negro.
In public discussions should also
be controlled, as there is no insti-
ng friendship gained through this
inclination, and then, too, there
will come a time when these people
will need their friends.
wedding. They are sent in two envelopes; the inner one contains the invitation itself—the flap of this envelope is not much enlarged. The outside one bears the name and address.
A popular method of inviting guests to small affairs is followed by the use of the visiting card. It may serve to request one's presence to an informal dance, a musical, a dinner, to bridge, etc. The hostess merely writes the date and hour and "Bridge at 6 o'clock, or "Dancing at 10 o'clock," etc, and in the lower corner, R. S. V. P., or if she is entertaining in honor of someone, "to meet Miss Mary Smith" is written above her name. Wednesday, October 20, "Dancing at 10 o'clock" to the left and always two lines. Even visiting cards must be answered formally or worded in the third person.
Short notice invitations are often issued over the telephone, at which time acceptance or regrets are usually final.
It is permissible to ask for an invitation to a luncheon, card party, or club dance for a friend who is visiting one's house. When regrets are malted, it is not necessary to give the reason for declining. Invitations once accepted are binding obligations. If illness or any other cause arise, the invitation should be dinner or luncheon after the acceptance, an immediate note, of explanation or regret should be sent to the hostess. If one finds it impossible to attend a wedding, a telegraph of congratulation should be sent immediately after the hour for the ceremony.
Relations
lives in Africa
News Service,)
Leone, Sept. 30—Poor relations
of it, according to the story
action of West Africa a man's
top of Sierra Leone, declares
British protectorate of Sierra
Government, because of treaties
to release, except by payments
Can You Tell?
1. What is the approximate value of church property owned by Negroes in the United States?
2. When was the Spingarn Medal established?
3. When was the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill first introduced in Congress?
4. Who is the author of "Birthright"?
5. When and where was the first ecclesiastical seminary in the United States to educate and train Negro boys for the priesthood established?
6. When did Abraham Lincoln officially issue the Emancipation Proclamation?
7. How many Negro towns and settlements are there in the United States?
8. Who was Phyllis Wheates?
9. Where did the word "amen"
come from?
10. What baseball team won the
last Negro world's series?
(Answers on Editorial Page)
Know New York State
Only one Speaker of the United States House of Representatives has ever come from New York State. He was John W. Taylor, who served two terms and completed the last one one hundred years ago, in 1827. The people of the Empire State of 655,850 radio sets, total greater than any other State, Pennsylvania comes second with 503,100, and Illinois third with 468,000. Fossils of the oldest known forest in the world are preserved in the upper-Devonian rocks at Gillibon, New York. These rocks contain seed-fern tree trunks three feet in diameter. In 1855 the population of New York State was three and one-half million, and about one-fourth lived in New York City. Today, with a population of about eleven millions, more than half of the people live in Greater New York.
The first real estate auction in New York State was held in 1945 when an old burying ground in New York City, on lower Broadway, was divided into lots and sold.
I like the honesty of the man who takes off his mask and saves to the world. "Hey, there, look at me as I am."
BROOKLYN AND LONG ISLAND SECTION
a BROOKLYN Orrick | . THE NEW YORK [ -
168 Fulton Strest CLASSIFIED ADVS.
mee ee | . ; | REAL ESTATE ADVS.
=| Awitertam Neng 9 22
OT ten uel oral To Appear in Play at Brooklyn “Y” | | Home of Mabel Vance Smith |
Young Lawyers, Much to the Delight of the People Pres-
ent, Apparently Took Matters Seriously and One
Witness Wilted Under Cross-Examination
The Brooklyn Chapter of the Omega Pei Phi Fraternity
cked the newly purchased Nazarene Congregational Church
iwith an audience of the socially prominent, who had turned
out to witness the mock trial of “Dr. Wayne G. Cooper” for
murder in the first degree last Friday evening. It proved to
be one of the most highly entertaining performances staged
by the young people of the borough for many a day, and will
long be remembered for ‘the rare ability and knowledge dis-
paver by the participants, as well as the close approach to
treclity in the conduct of the trial itself.
Attorney Stanley M. Douglas had taken the murder mys-
tery plot of S. Malcolm Dodson and constructed out of it a
splendid court scene, The defendant, a dentist, had been ac-
cused of murdering one of bis patients by planting a capsule
containing deadly cyanide poisoning underneath the filling of
a tooth of the patient, which resulted in his death the following
at
day, -
As counsel for the prosecution,
Mr. Pougiss proved a brilliant show-
map from start to finish, and in &
fighting, strong, silver voice, blazed
tray at the defense throughout the
trial. Associated with him were
Cecil A, MoCoy and Henry Asheroft
of the Brooklyn Law School, who
displayed the technique of natural-
born lawyera. The defense also
thowed spurte of cleverness fitting
for the actual courtroom, Its legal
battery was headed by Clarence N.
dobnson, graduate of Brooklyn Law
Bchool and president of the local
duupter of the-fraternity, He apd
his nexonistes ‘Were quite at home
ft promeace of tn ares eather
‘4s they botty contested with the
Provecution various points tavolving
the lxw ee Percy 1 New-
bie and Coleman of the
Bete =o
= ‘alded fn the
Aatecee tits
‘everat Scnksonn young members
of Oe metioal provéesion fn ‘Brook:
bu, wha were also members of the
triaraity, were called as witnesses
to determing the oange of death by
lending thet Knowledge of homie
|fy, medicine, pharmacy and den.
Nety. They included Dra, V. Leon:
Ferd lama, 8t, Himo Taylor, Hen:
17 Jackson and Gerald H. Seon.
iiss Nounle F, Branche and Miss
Qlsdys Gmith made pretty and alert
‘Witnesses for the prosecution, as the
cae ax Widow of the deceased and
‘the other as her friend told the
Story of the terrible discovery of
death, and the persistent attempts
made by the defendant to steal the
¥idow's affections, since. scheol
days, from the deceased.
Alexander F. we the de-
fendant took the chalr' In bis own
behalf and dented nearly everything
that might connect him with the
‘crime.” But bie fiancee, at the trial
Mise Carrie Dunlap, wilted under
nation by the prosecu:
on.
The mock trial was not without
{te bumorous moments that at thnes
brought uproare of Ieughter from
the throng. ‘The defendant ald not
teem to know that his being taken
to fall constituted bis arrest. He
forgot the name of his sweetheart
ang she forgot his addres§. Dr.
Seon, from the witness stand, re-
sented defendant's counsel's calling
him “Doc.” Mr. Douglag referred
to the defendant ag denying every
thing and was certain that he would
have denied that he was born had
he thought ft would tnerimiaate htm
to admit ft. Mr. C. W. MeDougald,
who acted as judge at the trial, de-
aie ‘counsel the rlghe (9 ask’ the
fendant's sweetheart whether he
fter made love to other women. on
the xround that {t would be impos-
Nble for her to answer the question
Ineuizentis.
James Holbrook was the Sherlock
Foimes nf the evening and told how
te nd tracked his man. trom the
Siscovery of cyanide polsoning In
the victim's body right back to
Clarence Pope's drug store, where
the defendant. had purchased | It
However, the Jury brought tn a ver-
dict cf “not guilty." which was ap-
Parently_a popular one.
rroRSets FOr THE
PRogRC TION.
Binitey at, Douglas (he Roy Ta Te Ba,
Cui A, MeCor...Fenanign Taw pehon
Nawwn\cheratt;. Hreaklvn Law School
(SONNETS FON THE DEFENSE.
Charreea Yonnson, te eB
‘Brockiyn Law schoo!
J. Melvin Coteman,
"Ai, John's Taaw Sehoot
Prey, Newble (89,
ee Borin Univeral
hem, cameltue Sy MeBougatd
te cernee "Bunitee ater
NOSEMER nO He STATE,
Mrs Rufus Witherton (widow cf
fe tN tate Be Branche
Dr Fasd Nelson Gfedical Exun-
Ieee +0 DP, onard Williams
OF ase orden’ Uaggiree:
Eltrence, Pope
Dr Hterlert Royal (inmuranee. Gos
On vine lettal oxperti
Bee anne Oe Gerald Ht, Seon
t Tateok Merarland, Cdatect¥e)
inte Holbrook
agli tien staittand (wrdowe fptend).
3 Stade Sra
I Kilt Grason (defendant's
Dea renee etrnden: Landees
str ‘ited aden @epert)
Te ene Bee eirte Tayler
Biseses pon Hy DEFENAE
sine rf Wenopen, By Deg. (aatend:
By ne OO Rag Ee Miller
iMarten ‘Spencer (defendant's ances).
[trv ttusnes, kag. tettormey)
[nt snes, Bea: Castor) walker
Christopher Jones (character witness),
Lalllan Hazelton (patient), Dessen
= Miss ‘Marte Dodson
Robert Curtis (patient) 18" Elite Bletnt
Author ot Bist?
8. Malcolm Dedenre A,B.
MEMBERS OF THE cnr.
cB Soles sie Winter
SF Rerion & 3 Bait
Wii Butcher We ecander
Bhompses oalah roberts
Xb Eerton ae Moore
LR Een ae
COURT ATTENDANTS
HLL. Ashton Hens. sherman
Tease Saran James Beckton
Rose, Wea
USHERS,
Mildred Pevton Edna Morton
Martie tayior Egna Mewon
Gian Jacobs” Gilve Thomas
Harel Thomas Hortense’ "Thompson
sia sh ca
Chief G ‘
*
Harry Walker Was Veteran
of Three Wars When
He Retired
Veterans of three wars, with, a
host of friends, crowded Into the
Dunbar Center on Herkimer street
Veteran Buried
|
aN
Ges |
ESS
wi
wa as 3
rd ee.
we
bY Sa
:
HARRY STEVENS WALK-
ER, veteran of two wars, who
| died October 8. He rose to
the rank of Chief Gunner's
_ Mate in the U. S. Navy,
Wednesday evening, October 12. to
yay the last tribute of respect to
‘larry Stevens Walker, 45, a re
‘tred chief gummer’s mate of the
ul S, Navy, whose funeral was be-
ng held there, Brother Elks of
Brooklyn Lodge also were out in
arge numbors. ‘The Rev. James A.
Manning, a former comrade of the
decreased, officiated.
Mr. Walker, who lived at 1831
Dean street, died in the Naval Hos:
pital Saturday, Oct. $. He had boen
taken there for treatment the same
day. Stevens had been In poor
health for over a year,
He also served in the World War,
but retired from the service several
vears ago. He recelved medals for
bravery in action while in the Span-
tsh and recent war,
Mr, Walker 1s survived by a wid:
ow, Anne,
Tnterment was in the Natfonal
Cemetery at Cypress Hills with full
military honors, which included a
fitlus notad.
87 IRVING PLACE
BROOKLYN
RESTAURANT
te the Place to Dine
Home Cooking—Gives Service
All Night
To Appear in Play at Brooklyn “Y”’
oe Ce Pisa A e
Oy I bol aa >,
ee ee wit ME MEd fot cae a Met Seo
se ‘| £Z ae ny ere BP a
ee: | Bae ae shires Seo a iid oie es
oa | Pe SA [eres 4 bee Se
re a Beas Ol are : SE i
. \ | Pe BL See ey
4 a e| = y:
4 iy T be S12 eS |
On Friday Night, October 21, Which Nears the End of “Stunt Week” at the Ashland Place
Branch of the Young Women's Christian Association, the Young Ladies Shown in the Pic-
ture Will Appear in a Play for Which They Have Been Rehearsing for the Past TWo Weeks
7 °
reat Pulpit Brooklyn N d Social Brief
Orat H | FOOKIVN News ald Social briels
ee ee ed
rai ors ere! Funeral services were held Sunday Club have resumed their regular meet
=a | arise, BEGG Toe" ARERR eh eer eh el
inasnoees GED, Be fee ren
Doctors Cadman and Hillis | "te S°% Rekha eta | A. very micceentut hella’ “dance a
4 | Keel. who wean a native ofthe Britian | elven hh she Calunthe Nuteew ‘Cait No
at Nazarene Church i winsy"tectee Meant aueh oe ig |! OF Me BOF Pon Columns Bar
| Next Sunday | of the B. 0. of Free Gardeners, She fs | qg2hmes Williams, of 181 Dumela atreet
Two of the greatust pulplt, orators
in the United States ara to be the
features at the celebration ot the
senian ceremonies at Nazarene
mext Sunday. At the moming hour
the Rev. Dr. Newel Dwight Hillls,
Pastor-emeritus of the Plymouth
Church, Brooklyn, will be the
Preacher, and at the evening hour
Dr. Samuel Parkes Cadman, the fa-
moun radio preacher, will give the
sermon, At the evening hour Dr.
Cadman will be accompanied by bis
cholr and church {na return visit of
the Naazréne Church. Record:
breaking audiences are expected to
hear there two great divines.
(large audiences were on hand
both moming and night last Sundas,
which wag denomtnatlonal day. At
the morning hour the Rev. S. 0. B.
Johnson of Buffalo, X. ¥.. gave the
fetmon on “The Living Christ.” At
the evening hour there was a plat-
form gervice when addresses wern
made by the Rev. Dr. A.C. Gur.
ner at the Grace Congregational
Church, Manhattan; Dr. G. E.
Haynes, assistant moderator Nation:
al Counell of Congregational Church:
(es of the Untted States, and Rev. §.
(0. B. Johnson of Buftalo, Thera
[were nso on the platform Father
Danier and Rey. Calvin Lana, as:
alstant pastor of the church.
‘The services continue overy night
this week, a6 follows:
Monday evening, October i7—
Rov. J. W. Hamlin ‘and Rev. Porter
W. Phillips, wizh musie by the Leb-
azion chote,
‘Tuesday evening, October 18—Mr.
[Watt Terry, Mr, GE. Wtbbecan,
Counsellor Rufus L. Pery, Mr. Rob:
ert Bess and ‘Judge Lawrenca Fish.
Wednesday avening, October 19—
Rey. N. P. Boyd, Rev. George Fra-
wer Miller and Rev. H. Clute. with
music by St, Augustine's and St.
Fhitip’s choirs.
‘Thursday evening, October 20—
Rev. W. P. Hayes, Mt. Olive
Chutrh, and cholr,
Friday evening, October 31—Ba-
hal Amity meeting, with dinner at
$:20, and the following speakara at
8 o’clocs, Mrs. Bishop, H. Lewin,
Worace Holly, Wandyne Mathews
and Mary Hanford Ford.
‘The Bahat gathering promises to
be a most notable occasion, as the
unity, of the faces tn to be strensed
qnd'a room ‘ the church ts to be
Ret apart for the Bahal cause, which
ig making a generous contribution to
the Naazrene Building Fund.
The Nagarene choir will sing and
Male, Mand Goudreaux will be solo:
ist.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
‘Mr. and Mrs, James F. Carter an-
nounce the engagement of thatr
niece, Gertrude H. Walton, 376 Cum-
berland street, to ous KR. ‘Mat:
ews, 104 Vanderbilt avenue,
“They will be married some time
next year at the bride's home, fol-
lowed by reception,
| Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shenherd. of 42
pacific" nerest, entertained fechas trom
New York City and New Jersey last
junday afternoon and: evening.
Brooklyn News and Social Briefs
Corona Briefs and News Notes
Jamaica News and Social Briefs
Funeral services were held Bunday
atiernooa, Gstoher 3 for Mem Sarah
innit 63, from hee late home, 1i6-&
Mivon street. ‘Tho Rev. Mtr Smithytok
At the SEK. Church ofteinted. Men
Urea, who waa & native of the British
ACNeeIndins ands who fad ‘bean here
Nearly ltwents ears, ied Oct She
SPOR momber of the Ladlen’ “Auxiliary
of tne BO. of Free Gartenera She fe
Shrvived by @ gon and owe, dnugtters,
intsrment” was inthe Evergreen Geme:
Miss Ida Yarhorough, a_pomutar mem-
har ef the sounger ant. ‘who testes ai
{85 Vanderbit avenues tefl the eit a
few “days ago for, Brick University,
Bricks ST CS where ane ‘will remume
har" studlons
joes. Sallie Fisher, of 1400 Bergen:
surset, who has beer iit at her home,
is'hn the road vy recovers
| The members of the Phyliss Wheatley
eee ene
.
‘
Orona Driers ¢
| SS GORA AL Sie. Ok. GUEARL. 08
108th street, had as thelr gueete recent
Ip Mrstand’ Mem. Grorge Shaw of Cnt
Seer ah he” viene. atetied. hat
their stay Wan enloyable.
Among ane many atending the Sun
ade” anssvon of the. Rtate. Baptist, Cop.
Seauteny eanventnge ih onkere, SY
Were Mendamen “F. Willigrym Ea Me:
Earimgne' Davis and Mina Sata Brocks
froin Coronn ‘The Indlew wore Rrontiy
nproneed'hy thecstivring "addre ae
Ilvered hy Alien Nannie H. Burroughs
af Waenlngton, D.C.
Tho Men'a Wolverine Athlette and
souitt hin or Lang intend promien an
svelte nf foal Joy te. those “why. At
Sead holt seat fall dango te be gtven
tn Friday evening, Oct, Si, at the Corp:
munity Haliy in forth -atreet.
“Therw ta ne piace lke home" thought
Mist Ciadyn Harria, for she apent. her
month vacation renting at her Rome tn
intield, tee” However, che. id And
Ui to.'nage ‘back vail eaiis previously
trade ‘hy "her Corona. friends
The N, MT Glad mot at tha rest
dence of Mrs. H. Button on. Thiirwaay
niternoon, Cet ag The Yadles “en
Joyed sitting to a game of whist. Tap
aeoren “were won “Gy” Mendamea
Hears. (A"comey, & Buckman, tH
Banthite ann Gordon: Pes ai reel
ca suitable awarde” The othera ‘pees
anc “Were:" Stesdames “Be Hinton "and
orann of Baslewood, N. J.: B Greene
AP tityen, Ce Brunson, H. Thomas
Wells, “A."'Brinbane and’ F. Moods. The
mevtlig was enjored by ail.
Bilan Simmons and Ming Bf, Jones,
gt Fiuanings ang fire, 3 inh apd
her daughtdr, Meien, were deltenttally
eitortalted da Buaday by Ste. "and
Sire T "Nichola
Rev. and afrs. Troup, erangelist sing-
Club have resumen theie regular meet-
ings. after a lengthy vacation.
A very micceastul holviay ‘dance was
given hy the Calunthe Nurtew Cait No.
Tor tha K. of B. on Columbus Day,
James Williams, of 181 DumMeld atreet,
who Ras been iil, is Improving,
-Mrs, Gertrude Rrawnery of Hancock
street, has returned” from. Colimbus,
Ohio, "vehere she attended. the ‘quadran:
‘plat seanien, of ane Womeg's Home and
Forelgn’ Missionary of the A'S"
Church, F
‘Thomas Ingraham. 49, of 227 Johnaon
street, died on October 7. The nervices
were held at the Wallace Chapel. 2
Fieet atreet. on October 10, Jngrahim,
who had been emploved in a. Jewish
chicken market on Hudeon avenun, wis
well known In the downtown section,
ers. helped to enlighten the spirit of tn:
Service ‘Sunday morning at the First
Bantlat Church of Corana
Dorothy and Majorie Williams made
tt vers plonsant for thetr cotsin, “Mise
Bolorita Knight, who spent the week
end in ‘Corona.
This heing the season of the sear for
tales and bazaars. the, Chapel of Res:
urrection, 103-20 Burnside avenue, has
completed plans for their bazaar which
will take piace trom Oct, 2. to 26, An
entertaining program has been’ arrang:
ed for each evening.
That amie of Bernice Nichols was
grantly missed at the cub mesting of
Gre "suventaris Lotentae gine “She rhad
een Mt with “Ie grippe’ fOr over
weak, but f@ much {mproved,
A musicals will be glven nt the First
Rabitoe Chueh under the auspices of
the Pastors Ald Goclets, Oct. fi. Nre
Hmma ‘Smith is chalrmin of arrange:
mente
Mra Claudia Davis, of 8 West Haves
ayonite, wae hoatean to the Corona
ennle Club on Wednenay evening, tne
clement weather aid not Interfere. with
the netondance of tho members." After
buninens was transacted a game ot
shin Wak Diaxed. “The Kuess partook
of reGeshnenia and every One had
Boot time.
‘The Bide A While Soclak Cub was
rgvally entertained by the Chang clon
of New ‘Fork at Alma'a Sudlo. friday
Svening, Oct f. “Those recetving’ this
greggtlinal hong were, Ar, ‘and New
EW. Lindsey, Me cand “Mra Glen
Browa, Mr, acd Mra G. Warner, “air
und. Bre “Alex. Jafoeon, Mr. and’ Aire
Tigan ‘Harrison, Mesert, Caritan, Bar-
gare Prank Bunn, £-'Fleming “Cot.
ton’ and ‘Bilases Catherine Thompson
and Emily Woods.
Home of Mabel -Vance Smith
a
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Ti Sea pe | Sal y
Cee) 4b ree —
Were bo ONE Bee
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Se ae a ae. et ae
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hee Su pal eke id erent 2
| ne a tenenl & a:
bes i ] Bu Ag eG Lo aia ial fo tes
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le | 1 Wee Cee aS Ps LN Py
foo Le gmn | alia ee | st Bey
Pe eee eee a
TO | J Re bo. ha} oun
eres CReaERE 4 BOT ita ane Pein ae |
aE TELLER ac it
ya dite = oe eee a ide. ne ag a
Nap tAU SONAL A co ea Rice ees
Faso igs i ia gat oon rr ee oS ae
5 cae & Nee ae : .
a lore a ars
faS gers ey ores o Z
pees, ae Be eam ;
Pac |. fant 9": ress, hi
a oe Ree NT ee. ae a
ec ae eae Roa FARR SEE, ry RO
Sas ; Baio 2S ean
ea wee ie eee Ya
ieee : ie oe ad a oe ‘es
eer Camm = i eee
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In_Those Days When Whitney and Tutt Held Their Own in the Kind of Real Muslcal
Comedies Which We Do Not See Any More, Miss Smith Travelled With the Srmarter
Set Company. She Is Now Happily Situated on rg&th Street in Jamaica and in Private
Life Is Mrs. Aldridge.
Jn, on Saturday, Mra Joyce ts the
dinier of Mr. Waithal, well-known Ja-
imatem ‘realtor,
Mra Adele Styles Min Anna Y,
Rare and Mca. Qoverdate returned
on Mieday. from Golummas, "Chie,
There thee’ attened the convention
Teed Meulonars Society
A. detightta, ‘mgiortrin te Shady
Rae, “Wenner, Weg. en Gostiybus
Bayt was enloyea by. Sit, nd Atte seat
ward'A. Beaubian, Ar. and Mr Hort
many ana Sin aad’ airs Wilt con
Got Aided & pieaatne pastime: to. the
to's “enjoyment
Shelton Brooks well-known comedian
aceompaned by hin le oe a cum
Feet spent “Sunday at, Chen
cove Tn Ty whero Mic Lrodke filed
Sauuevie engaxement
‘The Biye Trlanaia Service Civm of the
yA PES Wade thaie Tnttiag a
Fearnace “atore "the public with “6
Gance ‘inst Pharadae, POctoyer™ teat
Ge bolts Hail,” Sutobie Soutevard.
Forbert ¥. Wiikon, of 10511 Pine
grace vairect, guntatned Sno” fracture
Shikie ust weet and has been cones
fo bis home
airs, Allawny, of 108-38 150th street
wan ‘homer Go Tho members” ot th
Winerin Whist_ciub on'Monanr’ eve
Bing’ abiek wero occupied by the (o>
Towing? “Motdamey Tolinver Hames
Tapes, Yariarenda, tenes Phompves
Enitiound, Hardy and” Hattersen
Honors" were’ won by Aira Thompeon
Hea? Vasher nnd airs samca Br
Senndl and third, tenpectivelss
Ansty repast wanserved ‘by th
nomtees
Jamaica, with Us fart growing yopu
lao. Se Tinea "Br Arehut ‘Bon
ellgy'eurmeon'denitnt. > open nie ot
Beas ge Leto “Lincs” aemun ov
fs Phaymnack. “alter six Seaze's
Dractles in New ‘York Cite, Dr Don
shelly 18 well prepared to Sire tanks
the Denefit of his professional expert.
chee
‘The funtor members of the Samatea
‘rerls Chun entered’ inte. u tournaroent
with the Juniors of the Concnn, ‘eas
SND er nile etertosn, at Corenn,
Meplendia ure win, piavew. by" both
Garin “The ganas ended “with” both
Gorona apt Tesnaiea havi abated thres
satu thet favor
aroaise. was represented by da:
qe Wanuaken ‘Bugene Srenk bed
Eikenart Turner, Bere eatiy, spa
Mie Bifenneth "Moret Soin ace Aire
Wilts Whvtexker" and) xe” ama: Stee
Frank ‘Parner aecompanted the team 15
Soran,
There will be a Japanese wedding
Even st Jericho A. ME. Zion Church,
& aps street, Friday evening, Octo-
ber 21, 1927, udder the auspices of the
choir C
Miss Ruby Hatterson of 108-08 Rich-
wrugeatrects pont Saturday afteraooh
in Goronn
The %.Q, ¥. Club mot at the hon
of Ming Tews Viton Sunany witepnors
St 6:30, "Tho tensors were well tem
aweie, Omiocrs of The cub, ate
Rath “ionnson." president! Sathorn
Nuget. vice-president, and Inex Hill
deofetary.
Mr, and Mra. Harry Joseph spon’
sunday” atternoon with Dre“aea "Rite
Charis Sr Heid o¢ Yo'19 Pacis otzset
Mlgs.Katherine | Anderson of 37
Nori avenue, chuaftalnea 18 nanor’A
Ger blater, Hsien, ata: farewell parc
last week! Among. those present were
Misses Alma Reld Dot and Sara!
Brown, of New York; Hettle Boyot, o
| Amityville, and Ethel Brisco, of Fo
| oe Sack” satya aoe
W. H. WALLACE, JR.
Funeral Directors
Service, Courtesy, Reftnement
OFFICE 2 FLEET STREET
RESIDENCE 31 FLEET 6,
BROOKLYN,.N. Y.
Office and Resident Phone
Triangle 9342,
Doctor, Dentist — Far Rent
beororementas Teh appoint asl!
weax diswict fa Jamaleee
7 JOSEPE KARPEL
B20 Xow York Bentevere
Phore Jemales s522
ee eee
—_——————
‘Mowing - Peating
28 rome |
ELLSWORTH’S EXPRESS.
LOCAL aSoreoee DUA CE.
Fiano Rovteg tnd Geant Erne
BHOORLEE Se
Storarn “eatvoine
ae ae se cece ceo eee a
COLORED REPUBLICAN
PROTECTIVE CLUB
Mosts Last Prday. In Rach
Month, 8:30 P. My *
12. SO. WASHINGTON. &Ty
ay ae Lae
A elcome. st
FW, hy GURAROMALL: Ry
PERFORMERS' HOMES AT JAMAICA
Home of Grace Taylor in Merrick Park
THE HOME OF THE MIDDLE SCHOOL FOR YOUNG PERSONS
MISS TAYLOR Might Not Have Reached the Dizzy Heights Aimed For by Many Luminaries of the Stage, but a Love for That Peace and Contentment Which Comes of a Gentle Nature Brought Her Among the Growing Numbers of Performers Now Residing in Homes of Their Home in Jamaica. She Is Now Mrs. Reed, But Will Be Remembered by Many When She Walks the Footlights as a Member of the Team of Chadwick and Taylor.
PENN RED CAPS IN LOSING FIGHT
PENN RED CAPS IN LOSING FIGHT
一
Dropped Both Ends of Double Header to Bay Parkway Club
The Bay Parkway Club closed its season at Erasmus Field last Sunday afternoon by defeating the Penn Red Caps in both ends of a double-header, 7 to 5 and 1 to 0.
The home team showed class in both games, but was hard pressed by their colored antagonists. The Caps got off on the right foot, but soon fell prey to the slants of Ike Gold, who gave away to Rube Zellers in the seventh inning.
The score of the first game should have been a little more decisive but for the wildness of Gold, who walked nine men. Taylor, the opposing pitcher, got four walks in as many trips to the plate. In the third inning the colored haltitossers gave a great exhibition of hunting and, only for a double play, they may have been doing it still. Cottingham lined up a twin killing.
The home team's five runs in the fifth inning were a little tainted, for only two were earned. Scott, who was playing right field, lost two balls in the sun which meant three runs.
Johnny Enzman and Slim Reeves hooked up in a pitchers' battle in the nightcap and both were at their best. The lone run of the game was scored in the third-inning on two hits and an infield error.
Enzman handled seven chances in this game. Willie Jurgess and Whiff Malay starred with spectacular catches. Thomas, the visitors' left fielder, really was the fielding star of the game, however, with five catches of the sensational variety.
Jurgess, Schreiber and Malay were the batting stars, with three hits, as their contribution to offense.
Reeves and Scott did the best with the stick for their team. The scores:
PENN RED CAPS.
A.B.R. H. O.A.
Scott, rf. 5 1 2 0 0
Johnson, 1b. 5 1 0 1 0
Thomas, 1f. 5 0 1 5 0
Wilson, 1f. 5 0 1 5 0
Lindsey, ss. 3 1 2 1 3
Pryor, 3b. 4 0 1 3 2
Cottham, 2b. 5 0 1 0 1
Saunders, c. 4 0 0 0 1
Taylor, p. 0 1 0 0 2
Totals 33 5 8 24 9
PAY PARKWAY.
A.B.R. H. O.A.
Jurgess, as. 4 0 2 3 5
Fayey. 4 0 2 3 5
Menzel, cf. 5 1 2 3 0
Fogarty, 1f. 4 1 0 2 0
McCarran, 3b. 3 1 2 0 3
Riley, 2b. 3 1 2 0 3
Malay, 1b. 4 1 2 9 0
Schreiber, c. 4 1 2 5 0
Gold, p. 4 1 1 1 2
Zellers, p. 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 36 7 11 27 11
Penn Red Caps. 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Benn Red Caps. 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Bases on balls: 0 Off Gold, 9; Taylor,
4. Struck out: By Gold, 3; Zellers, 1;
Taylor, 3. Three-base hit: Scott, 6;
base hits: Malay, (2); Bannife hit:
Riley, Stolen bases; Thomas, Judges,
(3); Taylor (2). Double plays: Jurgess
to McCarran; Gold, Judges, Malay;
Johnson to Lindsay to Johnson.
A card party will be given for the benefit of the Hope Day Nursery at the Nursery, 33 West 133d street, Friday evening, October 21, 1927. Games begin at 9 o'clock-"whist" and "500." Refreshments, Subscription 25c.
Home of Gr
The Smile of the Golden West
A young woman in a floral dress sits on a bench, smiling at the camera. She is surrounded by a natural setting with trees and a building in the background.
And in the Picture You See the Latest "Girl From the Golden West," MISS CAROLYNNE SNOWDEN, on the Grounds of Her Home at Los Angeles, California. She Is the Outstanding Colored Female Performer in Motion Pictures and a Dancer of Note. Miss Snowden Belongs to That Fast Growing Class of Performers Looking Forward to the "Rainy Day."
Man Held Without Bail On Stabbing Charge
Benson McIntosh, 27 of 160 Glennmore avenue; was held without bail for a hearing on Monday before Magistrate Liaota in the Gates Avenue Court on a charge of felonious assault. It is alleged that he stabbed Bobo Erskine, 19. of 142 Snedeker avenue, in a street fight early Monday morning. Erskine is at St. John's Hospital in a dying condition. Police are seeking a third man said to have assisted McIntosh.
Mineola, L. I., Man Convicted of 2nd Degree Murder
MINEOLA, Oct. 11.—Thomas F. Bryant of Inwood was convicted of murder in the second degree by a jury in the County Court last week. It was Bryant's second trial, within a period of about one week, for the murder, July 16 last at Inwood, of William Ritchie.
Bryant stabbed Ritchie to death following a quarrel in front of Ritchie's home after the latter had accused Bryant of being too attentive toward Ritchie's wife. Bryant said that he acted in self-defense and that he heard that Ritchie said that he was going to kill him when he met him.
Bryant died a few days after the stabbing.
Elvin N. Edward represented the State at the trial and Attorney William Bunker represented Bryant. At Bryant's first trial the jury disagreed.
TO ENTERTAIN "PORGY"
On Monday evening, Oct. 24, the Club Ebony Inc., 65 West 129th street is entertaining the executive staff and the cast of "Porgy."
Home of Clarence Williams
THE HOME OF THE MAYOR OF BROOKLYN
When Mr. Williams Decided to Answer the Call to the Suburbs He Built Himself the Home Shown Above in Jamaica. As a Creator of "Blues" He Is Known All Over the Country and Conducts a Publishing House on Broadway.
Home of Miss Mamie Smith
THE HOUSE
MISS SMITH Rode on the Crest of a Wave of Popular Favor When She Swung. Throughout the Country as the Original Singer of "Blues." She Saved Her Money and When She Decided to Live in New York She Purchased a Home. Recently She Heard the Call to the Suburbs and Bought the Above House on 158th Street in Jamaica, Where She Resides.
Surprise Party for Easons On Wedding Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Eason of 869 Hickerm street were given a surprise party on the anniversary of their seventeen years of married life by Mrs. Eason's sister on October 1. The home was beautifully decorated for the occasion. The happy couple were the recipients of many handsome and useful presents.
MISS SMITH Rode on the Cr
When She Swung. Throughho
Singer of "Blues." She Sav
Decided to Live in New Yo
cently She Heard the Call
Above House on 158th Street
Brooklyn Y. W. C. A.
Girl Reserves of Brooklyn are attending a week-end conference at Camp Boulder, where they will be attending are the Misses Louise Mowbray, Bridle Robinson, Emma McKinney, Renne Richardson, Glenda Jacken, Kate McKinney, Katie McKinney, Marlon Williams, Miss Frances Crabbe is adviser and Miss DeArona McCrory Girl Reserve secretary.
Miss Fortenske Ridley is bringing a group of girls from the Montclare, N. J., Y. W. C. C. and Stuart Week, which is now in progress and which continues through to Y. W. C. C. to bring loving will be awarded October 21. Girls will present the "Dances of Nations" those taking part including Louise Boulder, Rosemary Alton, Martha Foster.
Among those present were: Mesdames C. Wynn, I. Ballard and family, Stevens M. Brown and daughter, Annie Ballard, Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe and son, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Edith Jones and family, Misses Elise Helps, Mary Smith, Laura and Janet Brinkley.
Mr. Eason is an employee of the Title Guarantee & Trust Co. He is also active in the Masons and is an officer of Bridge Street A. M. E. Church.
rest of a Wave of Popular Favor
out the Country as the Original
Loved Her Money and When She
k She Purchased a Home. Re-
to the Suburbs and Bought the
in Jamaica, Where She Resides.
Carrie Allen, Martha Woodfaulk, Dolly Allen, Julia Dursey, Constance Marrow, Agnes Guode, Amelie Fitzroy, Ora Morgan and Mrs. Ariel Hayes, plummet.
The All Friends' Circle will hold a public meeting in the interest of their friendship, at 3:30 o'clock, at St. Augustine's Parish Hall, Marry and Lafayette avenues. Prominent speakers will make admonitions to the students of the program. All are invited to attend. The above club is organized to establish a home in Brooklyn for self-supporting colored girls.
At the regular meeting of the Education Committee of Ashland Place Y. W. C. A. October 11 Mrs. Marle Malone, R. N., gave an interesting talk on the importance of the arts in the life of a young loanee is employed by the Board of Health and is one of the instructors of the which registration is held.
Residence of Shelton Brooks
120
The Popular Comedian Pointed Out the Way to the Suburbs to His Fellow Performers When He Decided to Live in His Own Home in Jamaica. He Was the First in the Profession to Move Here and for Years Gave His Spare Time to a Vegetable Garden on a Large Plot of Land Adjoining His Home, Which He Later Sold at a Big Profit to the Millacohn Building Corporation.
The Popular Comedian Pointed Out the Way to the Suburbs to His Fellow Performers When He Decided to Live in His Own Home in Jamaica. He Was the First in the Profession to Move Here and for Years Gave His Spare Time to a Vegetable Garden on a Large Plot of Land Adjoining His Home, Which He Later Sold at a Big Profit to the Millacohn Building Corporation.
Let me thank you very much for the very fine report you made of our opening celebration last week. It is a great report touching our work that appeared in any newspaper in Greater New York. It is being widely read and favorably commented upon. In your great paper, and especially in the Brooklyn Department, I am with sincere regard. Yourss very truly. HI:B:B HI:L:L PROCTOR.
Flushing and Bayside
Mr. Dawes, of first street and Crochon avenue, is on the sick list.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, of Miami, Fl. After spending the summer on Long Island, leave for their home this week. While here they stopped at 212 Prince street, Bayside.
The Jonkins Orphanage Band of Charleston, S. S. Quvaded Flushing a concert with the Musicians of Madison A. M. E. Church and Blencoe Baptist Church.
The officers and members of the Community Church, and the Royals on hold a meeting recently at 218 Prince avenue. They are planning to secure a place of worship on Bell avenue.
Miss Anna Harding has returned from Columbus, Ohio.
There is much discontent among the "Colored Democrats" on the. North Side over the Walker incident in Rome. Some of them have even refused to register.
Mr. Ollie Rowe has returned to Atlantic City.
John E. Johnson spent Thursday, in New York city visiting.
E. L. Miles, of 65 Bell avenue, is better.
Robert Jones, thirty-four, of No. 21 West One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street, Manhattan, pleaded guilty before County Judge George W. Martin in Brooklyn Saturday to a charge of burglary, first degree, and was remanded to the Raymond Street Jail pending investigation and sentence.
Jones spent only one night in Brooklyn and on that night is alleged to have looted the home of Peter Welcome, at No. 795 Fulton street, of jowels, and cash valued at $350. He was arrested the following day.
Home of Miss Cora Green
Home of Miss Cora Green
THE HOME OF THE MIDDLE SCHOOL FOR YOUNG PERSONS
To the Merrick Park Section of Jamaica Came Miss Green When She Made Up Her Mind to Have Something Beside Rent Receipts to Show for Her Earnings. She Is Now in Europe and Continues as a Standout Member of the Tail of Harrington (Hamtree) and Green Silly
Carlton "Y" Activities
Old and new members will take part in the large "get-together" and rally on Election Night, Nov. 5, at the "Y" Storm Nights, walks and election returns by riddle will be held. The committee arranging the rally consists of E. L. Faulcon, chairman; Dean Yarhrough, Simeon Blank, Frank Romney, Counselor Charles Johnson and John B. McCarthy, secretary; New members and Brooks just week were: Dr. Phillip Brooks, Noel
Niles, Ruggsel Howell, J. Banis in Harold E. Lee.
The regular Sunday meetings will be held, with Rev. William B. as the speaker.
Regular gym classes for older boys are held every evening from 7:30 to 8:30 and Friday evenings from 8 to 2. Senior class are held every Monday and Friday for swimming. Each class is followed by bowling. All are open every Wednesday. A number of games have not scheduled for the fall and winter.
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Sofa
Albany, N. Y.
Mrs Allen Mayes and son,
Mr. and Mrs. Inez of
Fife, were visitors in the
city.
St. Joseph, who has been
Homphele, has returned to
Buddies Association, Inc.
the annual inquariee
Buddman's Academy on
Near Simma of New Hampshire of this city, and
Mr. Benjamin Har-
Mess Lillian Lawrence,
lng the week as the guest
Carles Lewis, 91 Second
and Mrs. H. Clanom, 93 Or-
der!
Buddies met with John
222 North Pearl street, last
Way.
Harvest Home Buzaar at the
A.M. E Church this week was
by the稚童 rendered each
Michigan Furniture Company
meeting by visiting churches. The
subject of the pastor's sermon on
Sunday "Writing was "Harvest
Home."
Yonkers, N. Y.
BY CURTIES RUTH.
The Building Fund Committee of Stuart Temple No. 211, L. H. P. E. of W. will entertain of the Savvy Bulletin in New York City on Wednesday October 26. The Stuart Temple Yerba to turn out string and support them.
Last Saturday, evening marked the opening of one of the finest lunchrooms in the city by Mrs. Edward Chiusen of New School street, near Nopperhan avenue.
Mrs. Otilia Dewan, an old resident of Yorkers and an active member of the Bethany Evangelical Lutheran Church, departed this life on Friday evening, October 11, at the Homeopathic Hospital, after an illness of one week, the funeral church on Monday 12. The pastor, the Rev. H. Hill, officiated. Her body was sited
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19, 1927
GUESTS AT LOCAL HOTELS
Hotel Olga
Mrs. Charlotte M. Cattenter, Mrs. Lennie Walker, Mrs. Alfred Cattenter, Mrs. L. M. Howard, Cliff Cattenter, Presidence II, J. L. Roy Cottin, Stoneville, Mass., Mr. and Mrs. H. Harris, Amos Ehlridge, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hoe, Mr. and Mrs. C. Evans, Mr. and Mrs. C. Evans, Friday evening, Her subject was The Colored Woman as She Is. Goof-followship Court, Order of Cattenter is preparing to hold a great affair having visited her cousin, Dr. Scott.
Mrs. Gertrude Cottinam of Newport heights has just returned home after having visited her cousin, Dr. Scott.
One of the most enjoyable affairs of recent date was the Old Folks' Concert given at the Metropolitan A. M. F. Zion Church on October 12.
Mrs. Anne Borden addressed the Westchester County, Federation of Colored Women's Clubs, at Grace Baptist Church, in Mt. Vernon, last
Wednesdays Till 9 P. M. S
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GUESTS AT LOCAL HOTELS
25
High grade three-piece upholstered velour Living Room Suite, Davenport Table, End Table, Bridge Lamp and Shade and Smoking Stand. This is just another example of the typical values always offered by us. This eight-piece outfit is offered at a price you would ordinarily pay for a single suite.
100
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Hotel Olga
Mrs. Charlotte B. Carpenter, Mrs. Jennie Walker, Mrs. Alfrefea Butler, Mrs. L. M. Howard, Charles Carpenter, Providence Hill J. J. L. Roy Cunningham, Soneville, Masse, Mr. and Mrs. H. Harris, Almos E. Knowles, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hoe, Mr. and Mrs. C. Evans, Mr. and Mrs.
Friday evening. Her subject was The Colored Woman as She is. Good-fellowship Court, Order of Calmite, is preparing to hold a great interfateral fraternity. All of the local fraternal orders have planned to participate.
Robert Roberts of Mobile, Ala., has returned to his home after spending a Charles Border of 20 Culver street.
The Rev. E. J. Hawkes and his followers are preparing to build the foundation for their new church.
Horace Jones, Edward J. Kelly, M. and Mrs. James Love, Townsend J. Johnson, Mr. and Syra E. Cole, M. and Mrs. M. Lee, Mr. and Mrs. N. Kelly, Philadelphia
Joseph Sewall, Pasdeeun, Calif.
Dari Johnson, William S. Budeley, Pittsburgh; Mrs. Emily Young and Jon, Springfield, Mage, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Smith, Richmond, M. and Mrs. E. M. Williams, Baltimore, John Campbell, Charleston, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. John Wade, Stanford; Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ferguson, Los Angeles, Culif, Herry Hall, Camden, W. Va., Cans, Allentown, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. W. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. C. Cly, Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Lansy, Mr. and Mrs. S. Scott, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Anderson, Boston
Claude Hile, Ireland, Atlantic City, Robert Lasky, Chester, Pa.; James Miller, Detroit, Mr. and Mrs. Harold, W. Carter, Bridgeport, Conn.; George H. Carter, Charlotte, N. C.; James Smith, Camden, Mr.
and Mrs A. H. Washington and edith
dion, Mrs Alison Smith, Atlantic
City, Mr and Mrs Krel Husband
Fogh Husband, City, S. J. Mr and
Mrs Charles Barnett, Sewardville
N. Y. Mr and Mrs John Moore, New
Belfast, Mans. Mr and Mrs Hines
Belfast, Providence, Mans. and
Mrs Charles Barnett, Worthing
Mans. A. T. Barnett, John Worthing,
Washington, I. C. Willmer
Patheon, Fitzpatton, D. M. Mr and
Mrs A. M. Moore, Newport
Hotel Press
Mr. and Mrs. W. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. H. Hailley, William Lewis, H. Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. R. Burnett, Samuel Robinson, Lewis R. Jones, R. H. Nicholas, Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. R. Johnson, Trenton; Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Manton, Jersey City; Volvin A. Maxwell, Wilmington; Del. J. Kennedy, Marcellus Brown.
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or who suffer ovarian pains, pains in
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How She Got Rid of Rheumatism
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2207 Seventh Avenue
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SICK MEN and WOMEN
Are you satisfied to carry that LOAD OF SICKNESS, thereby letting the PRIZES OF LIFE go to those better equipped because of their SPLENDID HEALTH? If you are disheartened, why not come to my office? Diseases of the Nose, Throat, Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, Liver, Kidneys, Bladder, Skin, Chronic Blood and Nervous Disorders, Rhaumatism and Headaches, as well as Complicated Diseases of both Men and Women, have yielded to my treatments. Where other have failed, another may succeed. Defeat.
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THE VENETIAN TEA ROOM
224 W. 135th St.
West 7th Ave.
BREAKFAST,
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Waffles and T
SPLENDID SPOT FOR Y
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(Formerly Happy Rhone's Club)
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BEST PLACE TO EAT IN HARLEM
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Phone—9066 Morningside
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Phone Harlem 3595
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2207 Seventh
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BLUEBIRD TEA ROOM
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H. D. Van Liew, Prop.
SICK MEN and
Are you satisfied to carry that
thereby letting the PRIZES
better equipped because of their
if you are disheartened, why not c
of the Nose, Throat, Lungs, Stoma
Bladder, Skin, Chronic Blood and Ne
and Headaches, as well as Complicat
Women, have yielded to my treatment
another may succeed. Before accept
THIRTEEN
Walker, New London; Mr. and Mrs.
I. H. Luthalia, Renewada; Mr. and
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PRESS, Prop.
J. W. BROWN, Mgr.
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SEETS. MORNINGSIDE 9134
to 3:30 A. M.
Phone Harlem 0187
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and WOMEN
What LOAD OF SICKNESS,
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FOURTEEN
NEWARK
Miss Winifred Ross, 151 Main Street, Helleville, gave a surprise party in honor of Robert Givens of Newark last Saturday. Those present included: Mr. and Mrs. Ned Klein, 151 Main Street, Knight, Brown, and Mrs. Roy Waters, Miles Miller, Ireno Morris, Myrtle, Van Blake, Gladys Smith, Mildred Morris, Henry Droughn, Duncan Givens, Leon Shakleford, Arthur Wright, Bertram Bland, John Douglas, Dr. Otto G. Palmer.
The regular meeting of the Bluebirds was held at the home of Miss Myrtle Van Blake. 23 Scott street, last Monday.
A miscellaneous shower was given in honor of Mrs. Marcia Brown Williams, the bride of Dr. Ferdinand Williams of Montclair, at the home of Miss Mildred Morris, 39 Chester avenue, last Friday. Those present were: Misses Hattie and Marguerite Grosse Helen Miller, Dorothy Carr, Marie Hanson, Dr. Myra Smith, Marie Hanson, Dr. Myra Smith, Una S. Janifer, Mrs. Ella Wells Ford and Miss Mildred Morris.
The Essex County Federation of Colored Women's Clubs met at the residence of Mrs. Henrietta Johnson, 39 Webster place, on Friday afternoon. The state convention was the topic for discussion.
The regular meeting of the board of directors of the New Jersey Urban League was held at their building, 212 Bank street, on October 12.
The Alpha Alpha Lambda Chapter of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity met at the home of Dr. Clarence S. Janifer last Wednesday. Members from various parts of the state were present.
The N. A. A. C. P. group is planning to repeat the play given by the Phyllis Wheatley Literary Club in the spring. It is "Miss Mollie of the Philippines," and will be presented some time in the very near future.
The Phyllis Wheatley Literary Club met at the home of Mary L. Granger, 26 Richmond street, on Monday.
Madame Marie Solita has opened a class in vocal instruction at the home of Mrs. Mildred Holmes, 49 Chester avenue. It will meet on Monday afternoons.
The committee of management of the Sojourner Truth Branch of the Y. W. C. A. met at the branch on Monday. Miss Florabelle Allen, the new secretary, was introduced to the committee. Mrs. Witherspoon of the Central "Y" was the main speaker.
A linen shower was held at the "Y" last Wednesday to secure linen for the branch. A committee of
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NEWS FROM THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY
ladies headed by Mrs. E. Morrall, chairman, sponsored the affair.
The Musette Gregory Big Sisters will entertain at a luncheon on Saturday, October 23, in honor of Mrs. Smith Albert, president of the prosecute his sisters, the residence of Mrs. E. Morrall, president of the local big Sisters, at 30 Chester avenue.
The purpose is to finance a party for children at Christmas.
The Paramount Attractions presented Billy Fowler and his original Club Alabam Orchestra on Thursday evening at the Laurel on Springfield avenue. It is the first time the company has available at the popular prices. The yaundville and other novelties are high grade. Dancing is an added attraction for those who will.
The Green Cross Nurse Association forum for the past two weeks has been addressed by Dr. J. H. Parks, a city dentist, on the subject "What Are the Young People Thinking About?" The musical program consisted of solos by H. Harrington and Mrs. Franklin; a duet by Mr. Byers and son, accompanied by Ms. Iris Hoang, Mrs. Bertha Onque rendered a solo, accompanied by her husband, Horace Onque.
The second regional eastern conference of V. M. C. A. secretaries and workers met last Wednesday in Plainfield, as the guests of the Moorland Branch on West Park street. They are now housed in their new building, a plant valued at some $150,000, under the direction of General Secretary A. J. Cary and his staff.
Orange
Mr. and Mrs. Jabal Field, 104 Willson street, announced the marriage of their daughter, Frances Louise, to James A. Hill Jr., on September 20, 1826, in New York City.
Edward McGoy, one of the oldest residents of Orange, died in the Orange Memorial Hospital last Friday. He is survived by his widow.
Mrs. Marla Scott, 172 South street, met with a serious accident recently, but is now convalescing.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Scott, 172 South street, are the parents of a baby boy, born October 12.
George (Charcoal) Bennett took a non-stop flight to Scotland road recently, despite the stormy weather and was seen by observers who were stationed along the coast. The light was照亮 by his brother David, John Schreiber and Clarence Robertson. He landed safely and received the congratulations of many friends.
At a mass meeting held under the auspices of the Progressive Building & Loan Association at the Y. W. C. A. last Friday evening the following persons participated in the splendid program which was rendered. William Thomas, Albert Tillery, Dr. F. S. Miller, Attorney H. J. Stanfield, A. B. Miller, Charles Beckett, and others. The officers of the association are: A. A. Hill, president; Dr. F. S. Hargrave, vice-president; A. B. Miller, treasurer; M. J. Middlesworth, secretary; J. S. Downer, assistant secretary.
The Police Department, headed by Chief Joseph McGonnell, announces its ball and reception at the Orange Armory on November 10.
The Rev J. H. Hughes, pastor of Union Baptist Church, has returned to the city after attending the funeral of his sister in Norfolk, Va.
A musical will be held at the East Orange High School, on Main and Walnut streets. Thursday, November 10, at 8:30 p.m. A contest
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I more Velvety
Started Using
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after getting your skin in the proper condition with Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment, your rouge and powder will be more effective.
Companion preparations to Skin Whitener Ointment are: Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Soap, Face Powder, and Hair Dresser, retailing for 25c each. Be sure to specify Dr. Fred Palmer's preparations to get the genuine, and if your dealer can't supply you, they will be sent direct upon receipt of price, or the four preparations for $1.00, by addressing Dr. Fred Palmer's Laboratories, Dept. A-378, Atlanta, Ga.
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NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19, 1927
NEW JERSEY OFFICE, 120 GLENWOOD AVE. JERSEY CITY, TELEPHONE BERGEN 10280; J. BARKSDALE BROWN, MANAGER
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between three leading quartettes of Northern New Jersey will be featured. The infants are Orange Jubilee, the Ultra Lodge of Elks and the East Orange Burch. Solos will be rendered by Mrs. Cora Jacobs, representing the Elite Social Club of Newark, Mr. Lambert of the Moyals of Vaux Hall; Ivy McHeney, representing the Elks of Orange.
This benefit is sponsored by the St. John's M. E. Church, the Rev. W. A. T. Milas, pastor.
The Missionary Circle of Christ's Congregational Church, on Parrow street, is specially inviting the friends and members of the community to join them on Sunday, October 30, in a "get-together" meeting at the church. The Rev. D. Collins is pastor of the church. Mrs. D. C. Collins is the president of the circle. Mrs. Leda Dairs is secretary.
The Essex Progressive Club of Orange expects to award a beautiful Cherry on Thursday, October 28, at the Orange Hall dance and entertainment will be held. The music will be furnished by Fess Williams and his orchestra.
MontBloom-O Club, a business organization, of which Mrs. Anna K. Brooks and Mrs. Anna Allenby are president and secretary, respectively, will give a prize whist party Friday at the residence of the treasurer, Mrs. Wm. Scott, 33 Irving street, Montclair.
James Holcomb and Mrs. William Scott, of Montclair attended a reception in Jersey City last Friday evening.
Miss Haassie Fowler R. N., staff nurse of the Orange Visiting Nurse Association, spent the week-end in Matawan, N. J.
The stork visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Callaway of Norris street recently and left a son. he was christened Lloyd Palmer.
Mrs. William Dorssey, 213 Oakwood avenue, is entertaining Les Nous Persons Club this afternoon.
Mrs. Anna K. Brooks will give a sacred concert at her home the last Sunday in November for the benefit of the Mont-Bloom-O Club. Harold Johnson of Trenton, general secretary of the Mont-Bloom-O Club in Princeton, will appear on the program. Mr. Johnson is a tenor or radio fame. Mrs. Brooks has secured many other out-of-town friends to assist, among whom is Miss Esther Cousins, principal of the Witherspoon School in Princeton.
At Wilson Lamb's Studios, 310 Main street, Sunday evening, under the auspices of The Musical Art Forum of Orange, a recital was given.
Mrs. Harriet Howard at the piano, rendered selections by Handel, Mendelssohn. Bach, Choreographer, Gluck - Kreisler. Dvorak - Kreisler, Pugnan-Kreisler.
The existing artists were: Miss Bunnelder, soprano; sang Tschalkowski's "Farewell"; and Miss Reba Maro, lyric soprano, who sang Handel's "Care Seloe."
Westfield
Several meetings were held during the last month for the purpose of reorganizing Shady Rest Country Club, Dr. William H. Washington, the new bank has been elected president. A vice-president, C. Lanning Newtown, secretary, Dr. W. G. Alexander of Orange, treasurer, Dr. R. H. Thompson of Westfield, chairman of the entertainment committee.
Arrangements have been made with the Progressive Realty Corporation to place a clubhouse and grounds for a period of fifteen months, with option for three years more. The new group plans to renovate elaborately the clubhouse, restore the golf links and tennis courts to their former excellent condition, place a competent steward and matron in charge of the dining room and clubhouse.
A drive for 300 members will be inaugurated soon and the membership will be limited to this number. It is intended to divide these members equally between New York and North Carolina, alluding number for prominent personages in other parts of the country.
The Entertainment Committee gave a reunion smoker on Wednesday evening, October 12, at which more than 100 persons were present. There will be open house on Sunday, October 23, and a Halloween Masquerade Ball on Monday, night, Oct. 31.
Spring Lake Beach
Mrs. W. J. Parks of Asbury Park and Miss Catherine Scott of Bordentown entertained at a dinner party at the Laater Cottage, 419 Morris avenue, on Wednesday evening in honor of Miss Helen Vick of Springfield, Mary Guest were wore: Mrs. M. C. Robbins of Miss Lola Lola Wilson, Boston; Miss Frances Grant, Miss Rosamond Alston, Miss Fannie Vick, Mrs. L. B. Granger, William Morrell and Charles Ray, Bordentown. Week-end guests at the cottage summit: Mrs. Worde, Summit; Mr. and Mrs. Willie Morrell; Miss Anna Carolyn Rice, Elizabeth; Mr. and Mrs. T. Paxton, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson, Paterson; Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Reed, Ridgewood; Miss Melray Peterson, John J. Bagley, City of City, Oracle Bridge, Samuel Bagley, Bagley Conn; Miss Adalela Williams, Miss Alberta Love, Mrs. L. M. Garey, John Masburn, New York City.
MODEL SCHOOL
The gymnasium classes will be conducted as usual.
The committee decided to utilize most of the time in the study of practical ways and means to coordinate plans with the obvious necessities of the Girl Reserve Club. Each member volunteered to help recruit a larger number of industrial girls into closer fellowship. An annual training course is being held at the 43 Belmont avenue association. The House of Friendliness expects to have a basketball team of girls. The gymnasium is open every Friday evening from 6 to 7:30 p. m. at the Recreation House on 43 Belmont avenue.
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The Rev. Levi Miller of Sylvan avenue, who has been confined to his home for over a year, is now convalescing.
Otis Searcy has recently leased the new Paradise Hall on Springwood avenue and Ridge streets.
Mrs. Laura Humes of New York City is spending her vacation as a guest of Mrs. Grey of Springwood avenue.
Osborne "Asbury" Carney was buried at Highland Cemetery last Monday. He leaves to mourn his loss his widow, Mrs. Cynthia Carney.
Mrs. O. J. Remsen of Union avenue, who was the guest of relatives in New Haven and Long Island, has returned to her home.
Mrs. Alice Wilson Brooks of Sylvan avenue has returned from her vacation, after visiting New York and other places.
Benjamin Brooks of Fayetteville, N.C., who spent ten days as the assistant avenue, Harvey J. Brooks, of Borden avenue, has returned to his home.
New Brunswick
CARRIE CLAYBORNE WALDRON.
Mrs. Isaac Holsey has returned from a ten days' stay in Columbus, O.
H. R. George of New York City was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Waldron, then secretary on his way home from Philadelphia.
The New Jersey Baptist State Convention has closed its session in Long Branch.
Dr. Charles B. Weather of Elizabetzer Baptist. Church preached the education sermon to the New Jersey Baptist State Convention on Thursday evening. Among those from New Brunswick who attended the convention were: Mr. and Mrs. S. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. William Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. William L. Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Reynolds, Miss Viola Reynolds, Miss Elizabeth Payne, and Mrs. Charles C. Weather.
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The House of Friendliness, W. Y. C. A., has designated this coming week, beginning Tuesday, as registration time for its regular classes in china painting, clothes, gymnasium, novelties and Denison crafts.
Mrs. Aldina Hayes of Baltimore, a graduate of Pratt Institute and a fellow of the Art Institute in "clothes" will conduct the class of draping, color scheming, rebuilding old clothes and general instruction in other branches. Mrs. Hayes has conducted classes in Boston and Baltimore with much success.
The class in Denison crafts will be conducted by Mrs. Howard Johnson of 27 Ege avenue.
Miss Mae Henderson of Orange will conduct the class in china painting. Miss Henderson is employed by the Denison leading firms of the craft in Newark.
The class in novelties will be conducted by Mrs. Lucy Clopton. An exhibition of her work will be given recently at 31 Ege avenue. Artificial daisies, violets, forget-me-nots and various other flowers will be made available. Not only will we learn the construction of decorations, but also how to make such useful articles as yarn hats, paper hats, woolen and paper folders and pocketbooks. The gymnasium classes will be conducted on an annual basis. The members of the Industrial Club and those of the Fodela business group took part in the demonstration of "Clothes" last night.
The Girl Reserve Committee held its first regular meeting on last May in the Fodela business group, presided. Plans were discussed for stimulating of an active and useful program for the year.
The New Jersey State Federation
of Colored Women's Clubs are meet ing in annual session today, tomorrow and Friday at St. Mark's A. M. E. Zion Church.
Charitable League Holds Health Rally
Under the auspices of the People's Charitable League in the Ideal Hall, 492 Jackson avenue, Jersey City, Monday night, Mrs. Elizabeth W. Tyler, R. N., of the State Tuberculosis League, was the speaker, Motion pictures, "The Priceless Gift of Health" and "He Who Laughs Last," furnished through the Hudson County Tuberculosis League, were shown. Once each month the public is invited to attend these health events, where they may learn the "Rule" to avoid disease. The officers are Mrs. Luia Edwards, president; Mrs. M. Slater, vice-president; Miss Gladys Brown, secretary, and Mr. Elmore Anderson, treasurer. Dr. J. Francis Johnson is the medical director in charge of all medical work.
Upwards of 100 men and women at a gathering at St. Peter's A. M.
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Segregation Hjt
Jane Anna Goudy, a 16-year-old girl of 128 Union street, Jersey City, was injured about the right ankle Saturday night when she was knocked down on Jackson avenue near Kearney avenue, by an auto opened and driven by Arthur College of 22 East Forty-second street, Bayonne. She was treated by Dr. Maredith of the City Hospital star and taken home.
H. Church, Bayonne, last Monday afternoon, under the skies of the local branch of the National Association for the Advancement Colored People, heard a very interesting address by William Pickens field secretary of the National association.
After being introduced by the local president, Dr. George L. Johnson, Mr. Pickens entered into a discussion of matters of interest to his race.
Other officers of the branch are vice-president, Ferdinand A. Smith secretary, Miss Ida Anderson; treasurer, Miss Morris; executor committee, T. J. Gregory, Mrs. Hattie Williams, Mrs. D. G. Morris as living Hauser.
FURNISHED ROOMS
BROOKLYN AND L. I.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY. OCT. 19. 1927
CHILDREN of reliable parents to
board and care for; good home.
35 E. Burnside Ave., Corona, L. I.
Easy to reach from Times Square,
60 fare only. Mrs. Olivia Phipps,
licensed caretaker.
Church Bulletins
DAYSTAR BAPTIST CHURCH, 812-14
W. 181th St. between Broadway and
12th Street. Admission $10. D. D. preschool. Prescribing service
every Sunday at 11 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Communion services second Sunday each
at 8:30 p.m. B. 4:45 p.m.
Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. Prayer meeting
every Thursday evening. Night
night and every first Sunday at 8:30
p.m. All welcome.
NEW MOTHER A. M. E. R. I. N.
M. M. E. R. I. N. St. B. J. W. Brown, D. D. Pasteur. Passage
165 W. 181th St. Services
3 p.m. Junior Endeavor every Friday
afternoon, 4 o'clock. Pasteur.
West 181th St. Phone Audubon 8038
Seats Free. All welcome.
INDEPENDENT FENECOSTAL men and women organising to spread the gospel and missionary effort. Are you interested? Then write L. P. c/o Amsterdam Newa
THE REPUCE CHURCH OF CHRIST men and women in the church of the Apostolic Church (or faith). Her name and blessed influence are known and felt by thousands. She feelings every day, including Divine healing on Friday night. Elder Divine healing on Friday night. Elder the sinner preaching of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Come one and all Yu are welcome. $3.66 West 132d st.
SPIRITUALIST
THE LIGHTHOUSE SPIRITUALIST
MISSION SHALL SHINE
THE LIGHTHOUSE SPIRITUALIST
MISSION, 101 W. 128th St., second
floor west, conducted by Mt. and
Mt. services on Sunday and Friday events
from 8:30 until 11. Messages will be
received on Monday. Mt. E. A.
McAlister, Flaston.
Apr 8-17
THE UNITED CHURCH OF SPIRITUALIST
BEST—301 W. 140th
treet, near 8th avenue. Mondays
and Fridays at 8:30 p.m. Revealing
the revelations of your loved ones.
Alex R. Joseph, leader.
SPIRITUAL CENTRE
455 N. 128th St.
Meetings Every Day.
2:30 and 8:30 a.m.
N.Y. CAREENE
Sunday, Monday and Thursday nights
and Wednesday Afternoons
REVENUE
FREEDAN
Friday Night
THE LITTLE PRIVATE SPIRITUALIST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
1455 Amsterdam avenue, ground floor
will be opened October 8. All are welcome. Beautiful spiritual meeting every evening at 8 p.m. Dear friends, please join our spirit demonstration. Wonderful messages will be given to every one from the spirit side of life by N. Buka, trance medium.
MORNINGSIDE 1051
JEDFEMENSTIDE OF SOULS
SPIRITUALIST CHURCH
113 West 180th Street
Meetings Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday
Open Class Monday evening at 11:30am
Timing Floral Street
Late Olive De Veaux
DE VEAUX—in memory of Olive Gibson DeVeaux, who passed away October 13, 1821.
Oh, Olive.
Thou dove of peace,
Thou in whom my soul confides,
Thou who bringsest cheer
To ye souls here.
Peace be with thee
And with thy spirit.
Sister, AGNES,
Brothers, WILFRED and JOHN.
Deaths Reported
Baria, Annie, 57; 131 West 131st street.
Cole, Robert, 27; 39 West 128th street.
Francis, Josephine, 43; 1980 Seventh avenue.
Humphreys, Oscar, 44; 324 West 144th street.
Jones, Florence, 22; 173 East 123th lawrance, Baby, 8 months; 148 West 143d street.
Lee, George, 64; 2450 Seventh avenue.
Millium, Mabel, 35; 161 West 183d Miburn, Mabel, 35; 161 West 183d street.
Robinson, Charlotte, 65; 412 St. Nicholas avenue.
Schoen William E., 31; 48 West 126th street.
Wyge, Mary E., 3; 300 West 140th street.
In Memoriam
BROWN-In remembrance of my devoted mother, Mrs. M. H. Brown, who passed away October 12. 1804.
NOTICE
Oh, wait a while. Look who is in town again—Professor F. Kingharman, the old master of spiritualism, mentalism, occultism and cannibalism. He can't go wrong by seeing the old master at 69 West 138th street, Apt. 9. Meetings Sundays, Tuesdays and Fridays. Phone Harlem 8323—(Advt. Sept. 23-f
St. Peter's Spiritual Church, 285 West 118th street. Apt. 1, meetings Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday evenings. 8:30 p. m. Mrs. E. M Dowdol, pastor.
EDET EFFIONG
CHURCH SPIRITUAL
RESTAURANT HARLAN
208 W. 12th St. Chicago
Funeral services are as follows:
Church service, Wednesday, Oct. 18,
Sunday, Oct. 19, 10 a.m.
Day, Oct. 20, 19:27, 8 p.m.; last rites,
Friday, Oct. 21, 18:37, 10 a.m.
NOTICE
LIBERTY SPIRITUAL PENTZ-
COST ALLIANCE CHURCH
265 N. 444d St. N.Y.
Hold services Sunday, 11:10 a.m.
and 8 o'clock Wednesday and Friday.
9:10 a.m. Public Invited. Mediums Wanted
BEV. ROSIE P. A. BRAXTON
Phone Brad. 8663
THE OLD AND RELIABLE
ROAD TO HEALTH
is Nature's own remedy, which has
been successfully proven amongst
the people of Asia, Africa, etc. in
such as Rheumatism, Stomach
Alimenta, etc.
Contains no drug-forming habits.
ALPHONSO HERB TEA CO.
118 WEST 127th STREET
Merringside 6187 New York City
A SERVICE FOR EVERY
HOME
WET WASH — SEMI-
FINISHED — COMPLETE-
LY FINISHED — RATES
BY THE POUND
CALL UP, OR ASK OUR
SALESMAN
Superb
Laundry Co.
Tel. Bradhurst 4309
8 WEST 140th STREET
NEW YORK CITY
We, the sisters of the late Mrs. Alice Wooding, wish to thank our friends for their kind sympathy shown us in our great bereavement, also for the beautiful floral offerings.
MRS. KATTE HOWARD,
MRS. NANNY SMITH
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE NEGROES OF NEW YORK
The People's Medical Institute offers you an opportunity to secure high-grade medical treatment at a very nominal fee. Dr. D. P. Doyle, the head of this institute, has practiced medicine for over 87 years, giving his patients treatment to those who cannot afford to pay high fees for proper treatment and prevention of disease of men and women.
In order to give you an opportunity to activate yourself that in this high-class private institute you can get the palatal palate and the maxillary teeth are the most reasonable for highclass and extenuated medical attention, we are offering you an opportunity to visit us and receive a thorough and complete examination for the small fee of only $2, instead of the usual fee of $4.
This examination includes the all-scanning Fluorescopic X-ray examination, blood, urine, heart, lung and blood-pressure tests.
If you are suffering from stomach troubles, kidney, lung, blood diseases, skin, heart, rheumatism, etc., remember that delay and neglect are dangerous and fatal cases can be avoided by attending to it in the proper time with concientious and reliable treatment.
At the Poppea Medical Institute you will receive the best they are in the medical line, as we are equipped with the latest and the most up-to-date equipment and the experience and knowledge of Dr. Doeve over a period of 27 years practice.
OFFICE HOURS:
Daily, 10 A.M. to 8 P.M.
Sundays and Fridays, 10 to 1
Dr. D. P. Doyle's
PEOPLES MEDICAL
INSTITUTE
129 E. 17th ST.
Bet. Union Square and 38 Ave.
No matter how long you are sick, you cannot be without be DO NOT BE DISCOURAGED There are few diseases that are not diagnosed, and thoroughly prop the latest scientific methods.
No matter how long you are sick, or how many doctors you have seen without being helped
DO NOT BE DISCOURAGED OR GIVE UP HOPE
There are few diseases that cannot be cured or healed, if correctly diagnosed, and thoroughly and properly treated, in accordance with the latest scientific methods.
DO NOT HESITATE
To come to us for a
NO MATTER WHAT YOU
This is a group of skilful Specialists
you choose to employ, and
up-to-date and scientific treatment.
Each Specialist has made a particular
service to you, and the service of an Expert is your
permanent way. It gives the best results.
Your esteemed staff are the Director and Consultant of over 80 years
each case personally throughout the year.
If your trouble can be cured or bred,
Many grateful patients can certify
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YOU! ALL FOR ONE MON
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ASSOCIATED
A Group of 5
58 West 51st Street, between 5th
Office Hours: Daily
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under the supervision of a Medical Director and Consultant of over 20 years of experience throughout the treatment and gives every patient his personal attention.
If your trouble can be cured or benefited, our methods will do it. Many grateful patients can testify to this. They came to us after trying many other treatments. We needced where other doctors failed. We helped these patients. WHY NOT YOU! ALL FOR ONE MOBILE FEE
DO NOT DELAY, CALL AND SEE US AT ONCE.
FREE CONSULTATION.
ASSOCIATED PHYSICIANS
A Group of Specialists
58 West 51st Street, between 5th and 8th Aves., New York City
Office Hours: Daily 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sundays and Holidays 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Star of Big Jamboree Company Says "Exelento is Wonderful"
Small White of Big Jenkins Cemetery
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**Exelente Skin Ointment**
If your skin is marred by pimples, blackheads or freckles, use this wonderful ointment. Skin blisters will soon disappear. It will help you to get and keep that beautiful, velvety skin so desired by women and admired by men.
So confident are we that you will be pleased with these remarkable preparations that we will send you free of charge a large sample of each, as well as a valuable book of beauty across written by specialist in the case of skin and hair. Write for them.
CARD OF THANKS.
Advertisement
---
Members attending the class meetings at Mother Zion Church on Tuesday evenings can always get the Amsterdam News in the dining room. NELLIE TAYLOR. (AdvL)
Stop Coughing
The more you cough the worse you feel, and the more inflamed your throat and lungs become. Give them a chance to heal.
Boschee's Syrup
has been giving relief for sixty-one years. Try it on 300 and 900 bottles. Buy it at our store, G. G. Groom, Inc., Woodbury, N. J.
GARNET'S FILE OINTMENT
Cures Bleeding or Dry Flies
Sold by reliable agents
Distributed by
LORENSTEIN'S PHARMACT
1833 7th Ave. Cor. 183th St.
Price 80c
Womanly Weakness
"I was suffering with womanly weakness—in a rundown condition, much under weight," says Mrs. Augusta Watara, 915 Mortimer St, Birmingham, Ala. "I was tired all the time. I would get a scarce, did not well feel, and did not feel like eating. "I had heard so much of Cardui, I sent for a bottle and took it regularly. I felt stronger and better, and wonders why I hadn't tried it before. I took 6 bottles at that time, and there was such a big change in my condition. I felt so much better, and did not have the weakness, and am now well."
CARDUI Helps Women to Health
A Message of Hope
To All Seekers of Health
Both Men and Women
for how many doctors you have
being helped
ED OR GIVE UP HOPE
of a severe, it correctly
perly treated, in accordance with
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OUR AILMENT MAY BE
that we are supposed to give
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years' experience. He follows up
treatment, and gives every patient
medicated, our methods will do it.
this day, you came to us after
did not help them. We succeeded
given these patients. WHY NOT
GOBEATE FEE
AND SEE US AT ONCE.
MULTATION.
PHYSICIANS
Specialists
and 6th Aves, New York City
10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Free Company
to is Wonderful"
Gonzell White, celebrated star in
her own big Bambore Company,
whose beautiful hair and lovely skin
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says she owes these charms to the
regular use of Exelento nide sida.
You too, can have beautiful hair and
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EXELENTO
QUININE POMADE
goes to the roots of the hair, cleans
the scalp and before you realise
it your hair is longer and more
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Shampoo Soap
and keep the skin soft, flexible and
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used it for years.
Ointment
Inches or freckles, use this wonderful
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图
WAINWRIGHT & DAN. DELIV
Hoor Broo
Distinction in Design, Highest Quality, Beautiful in Appearance and Performance is the crowning quality that gives all other dealers a premium. For $169.00 we furnish you a complete Funeral-1 Auto Heath, the general Car, 1 Removal within city limits, 1 Arterial Embalming, 1 Doe or Gent's Robe, Use 1 Chapel Free, 1 Interment Grave, 1 Car or Bed in any color desired or finished cask. Complete for $169.00.
Telephone Harlem SSN:
MRS. LOUISE B. HART
MORTICIAN
WILLIAM W. HART, Assistant
67 West 130th St., bet. 5th & Lenox Aves., N. V. C.
We employ the latest methods of embalming and caring for the body.
Our Innovation includes Individual Embalming Room, Pampered Room, our Spacious Funeral Chapel, with a Beating Room, 400 Persons Comfortably.
Prompt Service Day and Night, at Moderate Rates
Funerals Ranging From $125 Up
Under the Management of Anna E. Brown and
Margaret Brown-Gordy. Walt L. Rowell, Embalmer
HIGH GRADE UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
2315 SEVENTH AVENUE
Funerals Conducted Most Dignified
DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE
CHARLES J. COYLE
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
245 EAST 90th STREET, NEW YORK CITY
Telephones. Lenox 2922-4448
"Notary Public"
EFFICIENT AND ECONOMICAL UNDERTAKERS
208 West 129th Street New York
10
UNDERTAKERS and
182-164 WEST 132
PHONE DEADHURST 6519
FUNERALS OPEN
Distinction in Design, Highest Quality
Performance. Other Specially
toured in WAINWRIGHT & DANIELS.
For $150.00 we furnish you a complete
meal. One Room, Right side, Ideal
or Gentle Robe. Use & Chapel Free,
ead in any color desired or finished.
Telephone Here
MRS. LOUISI
MORTI
WILLIAM W. H.
67 West 130th St., bet. 51f
We employ the latest methods of ambi-
Our Innovation Includes Individual
Room, and our Special Funeral Ch
40th Personnel Service Day and N
Prompt Service Day and N
Funerals Ranging
H. ADO
HOW
FUNERAL CH
2332 SEVENTH AVENUE
Mrs. Martha E. Howell, President
First Class Service at Moderate
Your Inspection
Telephone Brae
W. DAVID BROWN
Under the Management of
Margaret Brown-Gordy, W.
HIGH GRADE UNDERTAKER
2315 SEVENTH
SERVICE, COURTESY
ROSA L. LE GARR & PHIL
Funeral Directors
121 W
ALWAYS OPEN
P. P. KELSEY, JR., Manager.
THOS. H. KIRTON
89 West 134th Street
Hartem
Mettoz Economy, Court
Res. 2508 Seventh Ave.
Telephone Brae
Funerals Conducted
DAY AND NIGHT
CHARLES &
UNDERTAKER AM
245 EAST 90th STREET
Telephones, Lenox 2922-4448
MARY LANE
Morningside 6363
112
BODIES SHIPPED TO ALL I
Phone Morning
"WE SATISFY THE
GROSVENOR
EFFICIENT AND ECONOM
208 West 129th Street
Brooklyn: Phone Triangle 8580
MARY LANE & ARNETA PENN
189 DUFFIELD STREET
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Examination
FREE
No
Obligation
EXTRACTION SPECIALIST
Use the Pro
Herola
Herola
Herola
Herola
Herola
Herola
Other Heron Products
Heronia Skin & Soap Scar
Heronia Skin Gloss & Temple Oil
Heronia Skin Face Pain
Heronia Skin Rhinoplasty
Heronia Reeves
Heronia Tetra Scales
SUCTION
DENTURE
PLATE
DO
H
AVE
tooth
ohar
show your
decay, if
you time
may give
```markdown
```
AND EMBALMERS
18TH STREET
NOTARY PUBLIC CO
DISTINCTION
City, Beautiful in Appearance
that gives all other dealers
FUNERALS their appraisal
the Punishment, Auto Risk
Arterial Embalming,
Internal Interment Grave, I. C.
cask. Complete for sale.
Arlem 5821
E B. HART
MICIAN
ART. Assistant
H & Lenox Aves., N. Y. C.
helping and caring for the
Embalming Room
apal with a seating Comfort
light, at Moderate Rates
From $125 Up
DOLPH
WELL
URCH, INC.
Audubon
— George E. Westman
Prices—Use of Church
on Invited.
adhurat 0442
UNDERTAKING
ESTABLISHMENTS
Anna E. Brown and
After L. Rowell, Embalmer
ERB AND EMBALMERS
H AVENUE
Y, SATISFACTION
J P. P. KELSEY, JR., GO.
Est 132d Street, New York City
Phone Morningside 2222
NOTARY PUBLIC
Residence Phono Penn. 0889
UNDERTAKING
LICENSED
EMBALMER
4334
Ceyley and Satisfaction
at 146th St. Apt. 2.
adhurat 3890
Most Dignified
SERVICE
J. COYLE
AND EMBALMER
NEW YORK CITY
"Notary Public"
UNDERTAKER
FREE FUNERAL PARLOR
AND CHAPEL
WEST 133rd STREET
PARTS OF THE WORLD
Galale 1894
E BEREAVED"
& Le GALL
MICAL UNDERTAKERS
New York
New York City
139th Street
183rd Street
Phone Monday 8:30am
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
AND EMBALMERS
Prompt Service at
Moderate Rates
Funeral Parian and Chapel
DR. WOLFE
DENTAL SPECIALIST
68 WEST 117TH ST.
Cor. Lenox Ave.
My Only Office
Gold Crowns—22 Karat Gold
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
Vice Presidents in N. Y. City.
Tax as you wish.
All Branches of Modern Dentistry - Gold Bridges, Fillings, Plates.
GAS NOXOCAIN
een Hair Grower
ROLIN
HAIR DRESSING
ens the hair, stops falling hair and gives
beauty to hair and new health to the
hair Dressing works on the scalp of the
all other diseases of the scalp. If more
straight, silky, soft and beautiful.
Not greasy or gummy.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY OCT. 19, 1927
FURNISHED ROOMS
sen eae ee
FTL AVE. 1090 (Apt. 7)—Private
oom; Headly furnleha; $7 per
week; iu elevator apartnient, dai
moons eon ‘
iTM Yee BU ony. furnished
Tpomis: il econventences for re-
Epectaile people, Call after six.
Sinwyson. Oct, 53k
Tril_AVE, 9185 (Apt 8)—Neatly
‘irnislied’ rooms, all conventences:
nise of kitchen; suftable for single
br couple: homelike, Morningside
iiz5. Mra, Brey. Oct. BAL
FT AVE, 2198 _—Neauy furnished
ros, Shaw's Hotel. Morningside
ts. ‘Soph ist
THE AVE 2300, (SE cor. 186mm
Si.\—Fuinished font rooin, one
fant up. Briggs. “Aug. 17-tt
TTT AVE, 2056" (near 128d St)—
Ttooms fo let, $6 Weekly: front
nil tear, Predorick. Sept. 254t
TF AVT.. 2505 (Ape 40, near 145th
‘Si.i—Coupio or single; only neat,
Clean person heed ‘call. Apply ,be=
tore 9 or evenings. ‘Oct, 4t
TTH_AVE,, 1978 (neat 19th St.) —
Respectable couple, all uprove-
ments, homelike, $850; e¥enings,
University 0644. Henry. Oct 12-26
ure See ee
FTE AVE, 2285 Capt 3) Neatly
furulshed rooms, all conventences.
Crt evenings. et. 12-24
TIM_AVB, 2048 (Apt_10)—Neati
tealaned room, £0" souple, “An Mk
Smith, Oot, 122i
TH_AVB, 2460 (Apt 27)—Neatly
furnished Toom to lek, - Bdgo-
combo 6408, Get. 12tt
STH AVE, 2857 (apt 12)—Private
oom: nicely furnlshed. eal after
@ p.m. All modern ocnveniences.
Octi9-2t
EDGECOMBE AVE, 885 (Apt. 227
Mee sth * Ge Sterna, Han
Fooms; 1 filgbt up; desirable io-
cality. Bradhurst 0810. “Oct 12-2t
EDGECOMBE. AVEL, 281 (Apt, 18)!
‘ee. lights, furnfaned “7gom for
Fent. Bradhurst 7883. Oct, 12-2
ENGECOMBE AVS, 199 (Apt 3)—
Neatly furnished "large "room,
steam heat, $6, for Tespectablid |
geneman.” NM Glark, Oct, 12at
EDGECOMBE AVE, 38—Parlor
floor room, private “house; par
quel, electri light, bot. water,
float, private tollei, washroom?
vousually destrable,
EDGECOMBE AVE, @& (Apt 4—
Bere roomie, nowhs furaionod.
Phone Audubon $460. Kelly.
(Oct. 12-8t
BDGRCOMBE AVE, 40 coeer 187
Si,)—Kitehensive” roomy, Bot
Water, steam heat. Odt, 122t
ENGECOMBH AVE, 255 (Opposite
Sark bares Rirntshed Food|
kitchenette, business people.
Ger 19-90
EDGECOMRE AVE, S27 (Apt 4,
near 245ta St)—Gouple oF sings
party may have private room with
Sled forny, “with Tpetilegee and
congenial y gurrot $n ideal
home for? qulet people; must be
seen to be “appreciated: reason-
ale. “Audubon. 1130.
ESRCONBE Ava. 3¢ Gaes tomb
‘St)—Large and small kitchenette
Teomne; neatly furnished,
ENGRCOMBE AVE, 68—Small fire
meted Piawovemonts; “private
roma: al outs;
house, Audubon 692," Oetipat
EDGECOMBE AVE, 227 —Nostly
furnished Tom; nowly decorated;
Kieenenetts; steam; phone connes-
tina. Galt any tee:
EDGECOMBE AVB,, 281 (Apt. 6-D)
“Large, airy, furnished room to
let. ee OotAget
EDGECOMBE AVE. 285 (Apt 37)—
SEONG room all night elevator
service; privileges.
EDGECOMBE AVE, S71—Nest front
oom; ground floor; for single glel
or mans All improvements, $5, S.
Hayes.
EDGHCOMBD AVE, 816 Apt 76)—
Large; lignt, airy "room: well fur.
nisted; elevator service, Call any
time, Phone Aud, 3460,
EDGRCOMBE AVE, $85 (Apt. 67)
oorarge neatly furnished room,
soltnble for bachelor or couple.
Valentine.
EDGRCOMBE AVE. 281 (Apt 20)
moar i4gth St )--Noauly Purnteke
ed room for couple oF alngle mon.
Sert9-2t
EDGRCOMBE AVE.. 281 (Apt 4-5)
Neatly furnished rooms: eleva-
tor; home privileges; good ser-
Wied, "Severin,
eee ee
ENGECOMBD AVE, 198—Large un-
fuenisned room; front, parlor.
Telephone 9418. ‘Oct. 122
_Teleohone 15__—_—~
EDGECONBE AVE. 357 (Ant, 2A)
eNeatiy furaished room, private:
quiet family. ‘ost, 12:2
EDGECOMBE AVE, 357 (Apt. 2)
DGXeatly furnished rooms to Tet,
Oct. 123
————
EDGECOMBE AVE. 377 (Ant, 9)—
urnisiiod rorms, strletly. private,
Higale-or couple: privileges. Call
all week. Mrs, Snoase.
tl seek,
TENOX AVE, 270-—Nicely furnish:
ed kitelienetie rooms: salect nelzh.
orhood: 2 girls or couple; steam,
electricity.
LENOX AVE. 145 (Apt 2), neat
Tivth) St, — Neatly" furnished
TAMA, glih conveniences, private,
Mrs. Spencer Romer. Sept. 28-6
_ra. Spencer Romer. _ S00 ——
TBNOS AVE. FoR (ARE 2) —Eur
Pinna room to bat. Call all week.
VENOX AVE, 42 (hot, 7324 and
izaa, Sis.)—Furnished rooms; reu-
sonable rents, Inquire housekee)-
eh premises.
LENOX AVE,, 620 (Apt. 27)—Neatly
‘Stud oom for young ah ot
Couple agit eonventences.
a ‘Oct, 19-20
TENON AYES 2i-Sinall furntshead
ENON irevenings, slonument
Bik Morris. Geass
INOS AVE, 092 (Apt, 7) Neatly
furnished rooms, with | Improve
tents. oct ttt
TESON AVE, S55 (Apt. 4)—Fur-
nished and” wnturnished ‘FOOMS. |
Miently private. Morningside 4415,
ee eae
MANIIATTAN AVB, 444—Larkey
aM Amulet, neatly furaialiod, new
Hicniedve, Foome all private, tea-
MANHATTAN AVE. 408 (Apt. 61)
Large, comfortable,“ private
front, Top gAwer family. elev:
ee fatally elevator.
FURNISHED ROOMS
MANHATTAN AVE, “417 — Largo
front vedroom; homelike; couple.
Call Monument 1485.
ST, NICHOLAS AVE, 87 (Apt 38)—
Private room with ‘hice, qulet peo-
ple: Netting girls cb mon bre-
terfed, (Call after 6 p.m. Adaras.
Phone and. 2410, Oct Bt
St, NICHOLAS AVE. 684 (Apt
7N)—large and small rooms:
newly decorated; in respectable
tome. Sept. 38-4t
ST, NICHOLAC AVE. 723 (Apt 6)
—Purnished rooms,’ all improvo-
teuis, rent reasonable, Oct 122¢
ST. NICHOLAS AVE, 605 (Api, 62)
“Burnished roomé, all” ‘cénve-
aiences, elevator; $8. Phono Au-
dubon 3980. ‘Oct, 12-21
Sh, NICHOLAS AVE, 660 (Apt
64)—Frout room, $8.59; home
eonoris, Get. 12t
ST. NICHOLAS AVE., 180 (Apt 72)
‘<-Large, airy room,’ for couple or
two sibgles, University. 5637.
‘Wilson, Oct, 12-2
ann
SR, NICHOLAS AVE, 849 (Apt 2)
(South, smear, 152i St)—Nicoly
furnlstied “Tight, airy" foom: al
conveniences.» Phone Edgecombs
e783, “Scuisst
ST, NICHOLAS AVE. 480 (Apt
51)—Furnished room, steam heat
electri Call evening.
‘ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 361 (Apt 6S,
near 128th St.)—Furnisted rooms,
| elevator, conventences. Morning’
side 5870.
39, NIOHOLAS AVE, 188—Beautl-
ful large front room, Kitchen oF
‘tehenette: also basement; steam
heat. Phone Bradhuret $363,
‘Oct inet
SE RIGHOLAS AVE, 107 (Apt. 41)
‘Furnished room for rent; large
Tom: modern apartment; gitl oF
couple; desirable for students,
Sk NICHOLAS AVB, 747—Zaree,
light rooms, fafnishéd and untur
afsheds steam heat; ail ‘convent.
ences, Ger1s-at
ST, NICHOLAS | A’ 180 (Apt
Ea) comer. Lith Neely easton
ed. large ‘oom sultable’ for two
y access. to. elther subway oF
“LM; homelike condition, Qet. 122¢
\BT, NICHOLASAAVD, 20¢ (apt 7)
“Bibfaished roomat” conrenibneas
ST, NICHOLAS AVE. 737 (Ai
on Saar Bt Neatly ented
large front: room. for two, $8;_ al
80 cheaper rooms, 1 filght. Call
all week,
SR, NICHOLAS AVE, (14—Neatiy
-furnished rooms, $4.50 to $7.60;
uso of. kitchen; respectable’ peo-
ple, “HL Henry.
BE, NICHOLAS AV, 684 (cor, 14gth
St)—Large and eriall, neatly fur
ished; couple or bachslors. Brad-
burst 6211. ‘Oct. 19-2
Pe
ST, NICHOLAS AVE (ssw St)—
Furnished room, attractive, clove
tor apartment, overlooking park:
peak electricity, telephone, use ot
Kdtelien: no otter roomers; Ameri
gan pesplo preferred. Telopbons
Edgecombe 8788, :
ST, NICHOLAS AVE, 660 (Apt
48)—Large, attractive room, ree
aonable sent. “Call any tne! ‘At
@ubon 0900,
BT. NICHOLAS AVE, 849 (bot. 1624
and 1894 Sts.) —Néatly furnished
rooms to let to high-class eleva:
for apartmont. Phone Bradnurat
Sto, Mire, DB. Rowe, Oct-12
ST, NIOHOLAS PL. 83 (Apt, 12)—
‘Neatly furnished” "rooms; #5 and
up. ‘oct. 13:21
ST, NIOHOLAS AVE, 416 (Apt 2)—
‘Neatly furnished réoms, large and
small. Hopkins. Oct 172
Sf, RICHOLAS AVE, 680 (asia
St), one fight—Room; beautiful
Trout, furnished or unfurnished
comfortable,
ST, NICHOLAS AVE, 190 (Apt 7
ub, St) barge, lien, “nowy
lecorated, furnished rooms; ele
Yator, steam, electric; for refined
people: two single, one double, or
couple. Octsac2t
St, NICHOLAS AVE, 454, near 1994
St—ront” rooms,” in.” furnished
apartment; quiet. Bdgecombe
2201. Cail evenings.
ST. NICHOLAS AVE, S21 (Apt 62)
Large, airy ‘room to rout rea
sonable. Phone Morningside 5864,
Mre, Delapenba.
ST, NICHOLAS TER. 2 (cor. 127th
St)—Largo furnished rooma, ‘prt
‘vate, all improvernents. James,
‘Oct, 12-2
ST. NICHOLAS TER.—Purnished
Toom With respectable couple, no
‘other Foomers, Young. lady’ 0
couple. Morningaide 4029.
ST, NICHOLAS PL, 87 (Apt. 33)—
Private room, with nice, quiet
peoplas, 2 yerking) gins or ‘mex
Preferred. “Cail atter 6 p.m,
Kaams, Bhone Aud. 1410, O8t. 5-4
ST, NIGHOLAS PL, 19 (Apt. A)—
Xently “furnished | room: mod
erate’ rental; all improvements
Eentioman preterred. Edgecomhs
558, Oct. 12-2
WEST END_AVE, 710 (Bet, ov
and 98th Sis.)\—Large unfirnish
oa ccnes alepee, or taveiahea. ak
SMALL rooms, nicely turnished,
bright and cheerful, $6 and $4.25;
Mleam Heat? respectable" peopl
Sige tae
A NEATEY Sernlenes Sais to. i
for working. people only.
Amsterdam News, Bord. i
Oct, 12-2t
ROOM for single person; homelike;
No oiner roomers; kitchen privi-
oxen. Eizecomnhe 4550.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
OSTH ST. 634 W.—Three, 4, 5
room; liot water, olectrie tishte;
Hat, doearacnd tn sult: rent, reg
sonable, Apply janitor on pram.
Ips. Get. 12-26
NTH ST.. 300 “H—Three rooms,
newly, decorated, Improvements,
Clectric. See Janitress,. 211 3,
<a
‘APARTMENTS FOR RENT
eee ee
TOOTH ST, 109 DF rooms, steam,
‘lectrie and hot water, Ront $45.
iooTH ST, 123 B—5 rooms, ateam,
‘hat water and slectric, Hone $36
and $49.
inst Sr, 62 6 Highy rooms,
Yah, ok water, olectricayy #5
decorated, 2 weeks free, Ashland
i058,
IgE BT, Fa We iive rooms;
‘iso. seven rooms; furnished
apartments, Apply 'muporintond.
et Mar. 24
iigTH Bh, 31 Wee rooms end
‘bath; ‘a{eam heat, hot ‘water, elec-
trie light, $55. Oct19-3t
TI6TH ST, 6 BD (near bth Ave)—4
rooms, steam, electric, hot water,
newly’ decorated,
ist ST, 10 B—4 Fro
MS Tile aati net wales
Ha2'to ga.”
iistH 8T, 20) WeSiz rooms,
‘ball, hot” water; rent, #50.” Soo
Janllor or office, 84) Bt Nicholas
Avo, at inten Bt Suly 13at
TiVTH OT, 68 B—Five rooms; hot
eater, Diet oectrioy 910 and $48
Taqutfe janitor.
TST HBT, 100 W—7 rooms, ground
Pg epee red
chivcpodise,
118TH ST., 352 W—S, 7 and 8 room
gpartmenta, Why pay High rent?
Rigreat train to "you when “you
could veutsin “any Zot" the above
tige apartments in a moder ele
eer BUliding ae "very reseotzble
Fentala, Rooms, must’ bo: poslilve-
preven x9. bovappreciated. Wil
carafe, o,eut prospective appli
ant pte eon prem
Gr Sherehiy 283 We 46th St
iene ST ot Ware 8
rooms, ali impravements, furnish-
4 rooms for couple or roommates,
also: small room, $4.” All private,
Modern. Cornet th “Ave. Ons
flight un Alen, Oct 182
BIST, ST. £17, Wes roops steam,
electra,” bath, hot water, ‘oy
decorated.
12D BT, 964 W. (ormer Sth Avo)—
4 rooms, bath, hot water SUDpIy,
i28'monin,
itr ST, 298 WThve and four
Wom. apartmente "to rent. aud
Stores aleo. "Apply Jasltar.
139TH GT, 909 WS laree rooms,
‘Sathy steam eat, all Improve:
monte, $50 and $86.
ITH GT. 505 WF room apart
ment fumished, newly decorated,
slectrie, and not water. - Reason:
able, Waltora.
Za7TH ST, 62 W, (corner Lenox
‘Ave.)—OBe and four large corner
Foowe;, bath, all fmproverente,
Pariet, Soora: ligat househjoup:
fag; references, Lavitt. Sfonu-
mene S863, s
18TH BT, 19 W.—Uptodato, 2
gnd,g "oom aparimonte, Apple
Satutor. Sina Phe
LETH ST, 368 We—Torge turlshe
ed. rooms for respectable people
cai te tee
‘128TH ST, 218 Wi—Apartments for
Tent, all improvements. Apply.
Aight up West, Oct, 19-2t
128TH BT. 318 W-—Apartments for
rent, all improvements. Apply 1
flight up west, Oct. 19-2¢
130TH ST., 100 W. Two rooms and
Kltcheneite, furnished apartment,
| front, Plenty: steam, all improve:
/_ments,"" Willams. Harlem 2444,
ROTH BT, 119 B—34 rooms to
Tent. Apply in office.
130TH ST. 93 H—One room apart
ments, furnished and unfurnished,
ait troprovemonta. Call basement.
i32D ST, 1 B—Uprdate, four
‘oom apartment, box rooms. fir.
Rished” or unfurnished. Inquire
Janitor, “Apt 2. une sat
STH ST, 6 E—Three and 4
rooms; bot water. Inquire janitor
| or John D. Saunders, 264 Lenox
Ave, Harlem 3902. ‘Aug. 10-tf
TATH ST, 908 W—Six rooms,
‘steam, all . improvements, — re-
decorated. Large rooms, $63.
185TH ST., 804. W.—34 room apart
‘ments, furnished, #11 to $14 week.
Inquire Mrs. Posey. Sopt, 14tt
TTR ST, 18 W—Four room
‘apartment, neatly furnished, all
improvements, 416 Wh. 4th ‘oor
west. Call evenlugs. Harlem
9544.
WsTH ST, 311 W—t1, 2, 3 room
‘apartments furnished, vaturalehed
/ Kltehenette, “conveniently. located,
_eteecomte’ ave (Oct. 18:21
JATTH ST, 304 W.—6 and 4 pri-
| ‘vate rooms, improvements, rea-
te tent.
IiTH ST. 403 W, (between Con-
vent and’ St. Nicholas Ave.)—
| Select neighborhood, 3. “rooms,
complete apariment.” atl improve:
ments tn private trouse, suitable
for refined’ party appreciating
quietness and comfort.
MISTH ST. 201 W, (corner 7th Ayo)
<8 room mpartinent to rent.” Cail
Janitor. :
MOTH ST., 305 W. (Apt a6)—Sub-
Tet 4 Toma, neatiy furnished, Call
day or evening.
|T6IST ST. 436 W—dust opened: 6
Inrge roma; bath, steam, eleciric
| lights, hot water; $5053.
| 15TH ST. 269 W—4 rooms, hol
| “water, electric light, $88. dainttor.
octas.at
320TH ST, 687 B—4 rooms, all fm-
Grovemobis, | Colored tenants,
invite 0668,
2D AVE. i83—Large | # rooms,
J electricity; white ‘sinks; reason:
| _able rent,
DAVE, ITG—5 rooms, electric,
‘white sini, low rents, one month
| _tent'tree, Oct 1221
TPH AVE, 2297—3 rooms furnished,
uae of Kltclion, $60, “All improve:
iments, “Moruingelde Bars. Lark.
{TH AVE, 2016--Seven-room apart
anents; All ‘Improvements, private
Fooms, reusuaable rent” "Apply
husemient.
ONL AVE, 2011 Gone 127th Sty—
Colored;” vy vlogant room, siec-
tricity, hot water, newly decorat-
ed: rebt $41. “Apply janitor.
STHTAVES, 841-2847 (at ToIst 8) —
§ rooms, bath, hot water, elecitie
Tty, redecorated, $40,
STH AVE, 3718-34 room. apart:
ments, ‘pleely furnished, “$1eS14
weekly, Supt,
STH AVE... 2821 (cor, 136th St)—
All improvements except sieam.
NEW YORK AMSIE
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
STH AVE, 2364—5 room apt with
gxtra stall room, one Might up,
front, steam heal, electricliy, hot
watet, turalaned with pane. 38
wh. Induire Janitor or
innalonds 268 We got Be.
BRADHURST AVE, 56—Two rooms,
Nichenetig, tees, clear. Fur
nlshed, unfuralshed, Opposite 144,
|_ Dickerson.
BRADHURST AVB, 104—6 rooms,
‘gold ‘water, reasofable rent. AD:
Pix phermtnes op onn J. Mecoan,
ing. 168 W. 72d St. ‘Tratalgnt
8406,
EDGECOMBE AVE, 3775 rooms,
ail, “Improvempnis, "overlooking
Park, Ingutro supe,
TINCOLN AVE, e8—Three large
“rooms electric lights, newly
. decorated; “2 blocks from 34 Ave.
“LF “and ‘subway, rents $15" Up.
Avply Apt. 6, Bronx,
MADISON AVE, 2088576 ond 6
Tooms; all “mprovementa, Iaquire
on premises or 205 W. i3let Bt.
MABISON BR. 400 Gtaabattaay
3 and Groom apartments, beth,
hot Water, slociriey #2010 $28
Octizat
MADISON 81, 100 (Manhattan;
Sand room apartments, bath, bot
‘wator, electric; §20 to $85.
‘Octaisat
[MANHATTAN AVE, 411-421—
Block front; modem’ apartmenta;
opened for "colored tenants,
Monument 2629, septate
MANHATTAN AVA, $10 (near
TSist St.i—Seven large rooms, all
inpruvyinents, ‘reasonable Tent
Apply Supe. Get abst
ST. NICHOLAS AVE, 666-3, 4, 5
room apartments, elevator, ‘rents
Topsonable. B. Ciena. Supt. on
premises,
ST, NICHOLAS AVE, 343 (oor,
ieith” St.) — Exceptionally igh:
class elevaior aparumenta; 3, 3
and 4 rooms: al improvematts:
$56 to $72 monthly. Oct, 12H
ST. NICHOLAS AVE, 430—Two
‘front roms Curnfshed,” unturaished
fipund oor’ ort, near 36th
te
ST, NICHOLAS AVE, 12/—Sevea
Fooms, all’ improvements, rents
$55. Apply premises,
TWO ROOMS and Litchenet
Wan Oat tal een
floors, showers al taprevements;
‘reasonable.
Gooaman, $f We 125th Se, Haron
5060.
THRE, {and sroom apartments
ip tives nem nouses: | alt lareg
guts atrictly' private: sele
moighborhood: all” modern” fm-
Provements: isled bathrooms, ths
and showers; rent reasonable, 82,
& tev. idstn St. Apply, dent
fii promise or Everard "Edmund,
263 'W. 137th St. Sunetb-tt
TUE td ot SES
rington Ave. (aie St)!
shot water, bath; §25 and $30.
Feboer
THRRBB rooms, 950456; tour rooms,
‘$70375; ‘Ave ‘rooms, $80-$90,. In
three new houses. All largo, light;
strictly” private; select nelghbor-
hood: all modern’ improvement:
tiled ‘bathrooms, “tubs and ‘sho:
fers; 219-259 We 344:h St. Apply
agent on premises or Everard Eu
Tund, 20° W, dorth St, dulylstt
LARGH basement, steam heated, for
Fent, sultable tor poo" room
cafe, at West 138th St. Phone
Owner. Lenox 7554. Feb
FIVE ROOMS and bath, staiim’ heat:
ear ast 1g0ih St station’ rea:
sonable rent. Westchestor 1600.
. athena
WEST SIDE—Five rooms and bath,
{40 ronth, Walker, 200 WY asbth
Rooms 216, ae
SBATEY fumbhea apartment to
Tet. Call Bradhinrst 4087" eve:
nings
REDUCED RENTS—Cieanest,
Foom apartments, unfurnished:
Steam, lot water, ted bath, elec:
tricity, whlte enamel wood-work;
Tease $10 per week: security.
Owner on premises, 117, Bdge-
conibe Ave. near 140th St. "L" ata-
tion (1 ‘bloek)..
FOER rooms, 140th street, between
tn and sth avenues; furnished,
Rood steam, “olectric. 3 rooms,
Tisih Street between “Twhand
Lenox aves, with kitchenette,
Apply, 112, W. 183th St, Apt. 6.
Andubon S165.
LIST your furnished apartments
with’ us, Havo clients waiting.
TOL West 135th street.
FIVE and sevon rooms, ail improve:
ments. Cheap rent, Manahattan
and Bronx, Collins, 23° 7th Ave
TWO roome and bath, unfurnished,
improvements, $25 ‘monthly. 104
Waste 120th street. vt use
FIVE room fwnlshed apartments
to. sujet, goo loralics, Brad:
Turst 2885.
APARTMENTS, 2, 4. 6. 7 rooms, all
Improvemonts, Apply, 2082 ' 7th
avenue.
bey eae eee ae eae bt aa
‘A. Patterson, 103 Wy 13%ra “St.
Roy c.
isertt. ST, 180 W—Store with §
Ego Ad bath 470. Inaulre
Nall and Parker, 445 W. 195th St.
TRD ST. 217 W—Private house
Tor rent;"lease; 7 rooms. Rent $110
per month, .
40TH ST, 274 W—4 and 6 rooms:
‘ail private; rent reasonable. ele-
Yaior apartment.
igsTH ST, 182 W—6 rooms and
| bath, hot water, electricity, $46
and. $60, Janitor.
1133p ST, 96 W. (2 filets, “east
Side} —A" furnished apartment of
Aix roome tnd bath at Si8 per
Wook. Get. 8-21
IST ST. 235 W—E6 largo rooms
ai private, Font Foneomaien
Tad St, a W.—Parlor floor to
lot, witti all conveniences, for par-
tles "and" entertaluments. FI.
Williams, Prop., Harlam $742.
2 Apr20et
WIT ST. 211 W—Room and
meals arranged to suit your con-
yentence. Phone Morningside
2486, + Octet
BRADUURST AVE. 24—8 apart.
tients to ront; 5 roams: steam
Hioat nad hot water; $48 und $50 4
;_month. Oerizat
WIST ST. 244 W—Two ronma &nd
Kltehenstte, furnished “or untur-
alted, sultuble "for couple. or
*-gmall ‘family, “Rent -reasonable,
WAM NuWo, WEUNESDAY
FOR RENT
‘EDGECOMBE AVE, 114—First foor
for business oF light housekeeping,
newly renovated.
WITH BT, 192 W. (Apt B)—Two
Taego "ushiraisbod & Pi "ream
steam, strictly. private, usp of lt:
chon, Ro other lodgers.
FOUR large rooms for rent,” bath,
hot water, 79 B. 6th street, near
Madison avenue.
CLUB room tp "rent, to small re
Spectable. club "groups, for. buat
ness meetings: or social evenings
at the Young Women's Exchange
244 Weat Iist street. Mre. Rosa
Gaston, proprietress.
WAST BT. 173 W. capt. 8)—2 nico
Doauuiful furnished rooms, kitchen
uge for couple,
aSTH BT, 285 W.— Two rooms,
wane focalion, dor, 8 doctors oftes
or other pustuess. Mrs. Freeman,
Bradhuret ord
LHNOX AVE, ica (iisih Bt)—
Tearge ores, suitable: say foal
ess,
OFFICE for rent, 3 rooms, nlcaly
Sesorued,, “endertil oeay,
guitable “tor “Iawyer or doctor.
Bradhurst 2343,
PRIVATE house to, eae, 4126
jonth, re! Mont
mont ef
iW2ITH ST, 148 W-—Private house,
al} improvements. ” Rooms newly
painted.” Apply Jake's allliard
Academy, 68 W. 128th St
LTH ST, ite W—Large hall,
auliable “for dances, a conve
nlences, Price reasonable, ‘Morn-
ingside 8167, Oct 18-2
iNTH ST, 60 W—Private houses
to lease; rent reasonable, Dennis
Eawards, "Harlem 8113,
TH AVE, Yea Twp rome aad
Kitchenette; furnished or untur-
nished. Ms, Harris, Phone Mon-
lument’ 3268,
Peeing katte eon Se
ian BL Bowell Co.,
2005 Tih Ave.; Bagecombo 4962,
Apartments for Sale
FURNISHED apartment, 4 rome,
complete, uat get ongos Ap"
Ply, gyonines” Samuel, 40i W.
Std St,
a
FOR SALE
PRIVATE HOUSE — Steam heat,
Wut terse’ or tell tuntlehed att
furnished, “Apply 310 W. ith
Su Sept, 14-t¢
RESTAURANT FOR SALB—Excel.
Tent location; on Tth Ave. Phone
1280 Edgecombe, ‘Sept.zi tt
EDGECOMBE AVE. (cor. 148th 6t)
—Rooming business; 9 years old
tance; 17 rooms, fully rented;
prioe $1,800, Inoluding turniture.
47 Gay St. Harris. Spring 4488.
Octztt
RESTAURANT for sale; going, live
‘business; ful pped. "7th
Aye. “Phone 13¥0 wasesetsbe.
et 5-tt
STH AVE, 2794—Fourroom apart
‘ment for sale; elogantiy furnish:
ed; call after 6; cheap. Oct-12-21
FOR SALB—20 years selting real
bargains in plano player, organs
and player organs, ‘Playor pianos,
95 ‘cash, $160 payments; pianos,
$88 cash 915. pevmena: ‘player
organ, ‘$128 cash, $150 Payments;
| FH Teetrota ‘my rice "ads ch,
Ho, payment; "4125" vlttota, 430
Cash, $85 paycionts; small organ.
$85," one large player orgau, $860
cash, $1,000 payments, cost $1,800,
same “a3 pew. All” instruments
Guaranteed.” Wo also do repair
fork. Yetts, 299 W. 145th street,
TH AVE, 2148—Cottes Pot and
-"Restanrait; location Lenoz.Ave.:
good trade: “reasonable price and
terms. McKenzie & Rawlins Ac
counting Co,, Room 108, Moraing.
Side Tal.
PRIVATS hounes, furnished oF un-
“toraished, Will tease or sell. 210
We 188th St.
WITH ST, 63 W—For vale cheap,
/gontents of entire fivezoom apart:
ment, regardless of value, How.
ard, $4 floor, ‘
HigTH ST, $37 W—Sixroom, halt
furnished, Call evenings. Samp-
son, University 7240,
ARSTAURANT, doing an averano ot
$60 daily. business;. excellent loce-
Yon an 7th Ave.; immediate pos:
session. Owner leaving clty, Wil
sacrifice for cash. W. Rt. Bats,
2550 Teh Ave., Room 202X.
Oct.19.4¢
HURNIBHED, two trout rooms, Kit:
chenatte; ‘couple only, working
people; 'very reasonable. Edge-
eombe 2581,
THNOX AVE. 698 (Apt. 4, south) —
Baby carriage, $8: 2 dressers, $3
each. “Bradhuret 1831.
MANHATTAN AVE. 400 (Apt 72)
(CUith St)—6 large, attractive
APARTMENT for sale; $50; fur-|
ished. 6 roomas; steam’ » 2 ‘W.
8th St, ‘Hussey. oct i22i|
BARBDR SHOP for sale. Good
Teighbortood, opportunity — for
Tight party, reasonable, 275 West
Hoth Gtrost.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
beer ae eee
PRIVATD HOUSE — Steam heat.
Wil leaso oF gell furnished, untur-
| ished. Apply. alo W. seth, St
ae Sopt14tt
_
WANTED.
REFINED GIRL to share . room.
‘Write Box J, Amsterdam Nows.
ASITH ST. 910 W—Girl wants gen-
eral housework. Whole or -part-
Ume, “References. Phone Brad.
burst 1195. i
BROADWAY, 562—Agents, wo start
you in business and help yon. sue:
Coed. No capital or. experlence
Beoded. “spare or fut time. You
ean eatn $50 to $100 weekly. Write
Madison Mille Stanufacturars, 862
Broadway, Now York.
x test
AGENTS—Now plan makes it easy
-to earn $80 to $100 weekly, soll-
ing shirts direct to wearer. No
@bttal "or" ‘experience needed.
Represent’ a ‘veal manufacturer
Writs. for free examples, Madi:
gen, Spies, Mators, B6F Broadway:
New York. Sunelosat
AGENTS wanted to sell Dr. Link's
Keep straight hair Grosser; $1.50
Der doz, 600 seller. Write for troe
Kamples. Dr. Link Medicine Co.,
2640 Elm St, Dallas, Texas.
‘Nov.3-Bat
YOUNG Indy, knowledge of short:
hand and typing, wishes position.
Bilgecombe $133.
WANTED, young men: or women
‘who, pla atelag or wind Tastru
Monts. Cell 22 W. Hist street,
Apt. 21, evenings.
MAN with knowledge commercial
faw. for invention matter. Small
capital required, Jessie B. Wills
inms, oth street, next | Hotel
Presa.
BT, NICHOLAS PLACE. “is (Apt.
42} Young "man ezine rooin-
mate to share large double room,
Callafter 4p. m. gbradhurst 2747.
‘STH AVE, 2154-30 men and wo.
‘men for’ all -iinds of positions
| free. “Apply Industrial Center of
Community, Raptist Church, Also
Several neatly furnished * rooms
fitted for Tignt housekeeping. All
improvements, $3.50 to $4.50 week,
Harlem 4832. Dr. Epps. pastor.
AGENTS WANTED,
Wonderful opportunity. to sell for
Jarge organization. Clothing, Silk
Underwear, Dry. Goode. Jewelry,
Furniture—on CREDIT, basis. Fall
in coupon below-—for detalls of 3
worthwhile money-making plan
Yor your spare time.
IRWIN COMPANY,
82 East Broadway:
AdBreGs oe seeeeeeteneeeses
(Write Platnly)
Oct5.tt
YOUNG WIDOW wishes table
doarders for dinner; pure, whole:
some, fresh cooked’ food y dally:
Fearonable pricen, Munls*sgrved
fiom 5.0.8 PM, Phone Trai
hnurst 10116, ‘Oct.12-20
CHILDREN BOARDED
BOARD children by the week; moth-
er’s care. Permit. 160 W. 142nd
St. (Apt. 12).
TO TAKE CARE of walking chil-
dren by day. Call at 53 West 139th
Streot. (Apt, 2).
1sSTH ST., 210 W. (Apt. 2)—Chil-
dren cared for by day or part time.
Chlldren'ta board $y dayee eeeke
Oclt922
OTH ST, 205 W. (Ape 8)—CH
dren. taken ‘care ‘of ght or day,
Besticare.
129TH ST., 133 W. (5th floor, east
side) — Essie ‘White's splendid
home for children; large” back
‘yard; large and small rooms for
Parents, if necessary, July13-tt
129TH ST., 200 W. (Apt. 8)—Nico, |
clean home for children; taken ta
School; give care just’ as own
mother, Ovt.12-2t
131TH ST, 23 W.—Ohildren board-
ed, day ‘or Weel, mother's ‘cares
‘health permit. Harlem 864.
NOekt22t
|128D. ST., 170 W.—Children boarded,
day or week. Monument 0919.
Sarnswell, Oct.19-9t
CHILDREN cared for ®y day or
Week with mother’s care. Mrs.
Davenport, 956 W. 145th St., Apt. |
ow,
et co. Siw. Tesh Se: Ape 8,
117TH ST.. 3$ W.—Children board-
ed weokly; mother’s care; health
Permit. Buntiug, one fight.
INFORMATION WANTED
NOTICE.
MILHOUSE—Intormation | wanted
concerning. Mra, Lizzie Milhouse,
eroteee agate elt
W. C. coe 164 W. Jackson Blvd,
Si
MUSICAL INSTRUCTION
THOROUGH tuition tn Bano. Mod-
ie Shame
Ae he ae Nin Be
—
TWOSKIN negkpiece lost, Latay-
Mange an
Se Pe
Lafayette Theatre. Oct1Z2t
137TH ST., 131 W.—Loat, black cat,
4 legs white with white breast.
Liberal reward -given for return.
MISCELLANEOUS
“atieEnTE,
ar TE aa
reat ae
AGE Tag oes
coaching. Miss White, Audubon
a
FORMER’ high school teacher as-
sists backward students. Peters,
2010 5th Ave,
Pcie ta EERE wate on
| Yacuum cleaner. *City or country.
“Peete Cees ial
Pere aaah Sala nee
emy 1102,
FURNISHED ROOMS
BROOKLYN AND L, I.
BERGEN ST. 231—Bxcellont room
to rent; very reasonable; "ton
lnotes trom subway, Doar Nevins
ee
BAINERIDGD ST, 95—Furnlehed
Toots. student ér_couple, Call
Thuréday, Friday, Saturday. Col-
lins, Haddingway 6046.
Ootaz2t
CLINTON AVE. 808 — Furaisted
Foom; respectable people; couple
or eligiey ateatn ‘heated. Call at-
ter 7 P.M, Ring. 24 bell from
| tee Sepuset
NO tae
CIAFTON PL. 27A—Smail and
large “turnisied or unturnished
rooms, - Latayette 2022,” Ootizzt
CLIFTON Pla, S0—Nico, Mehe fur
‘lalied” room" (m ateani-heated
Apartment; 24 floor, Ockl22t
CIABTON PL, s7—Purnished or ua-
furnished réom to let, 3rd floor:
steam heat. J.C. Smiih, Oct19-2t
CLIFTON PL. 26—Neatly furnished
Fooms, Inrgé nnd small, with home
privileges. Phone Decatur 6770,
Gee To
CHAUNCRY ST, 103—Furnished or
unfurnished rome; all Improve:
ments, Haddingway 1274,
‘octazet
DECATUR ST, 192—Reoms, with
“kitchen use, Swan. Sopt.2stt
DECATUR ST., 200—Largo roam:
“all Smproveménta. Phone "“Tad-
dingway 358%. Octet
DECATUR St, $22 (near Ralph
Ave.)—Rooms, heated: sultalte
couple or single. Call evenings,
‘Oct is4t
DEAN ST. 1067 (3d floor, lett)—|
Purnished room: ‘steam heat_and
hot water.” Phone Prospect 1833.
Oct.s-it
DEAN ST. 1092 — Large furnished
room, with respectable family.
Suitable for two adults,
DE KALB AVE. 661—Large room
to let sieam "heat, hot water:
rent, $6. Willlamsburg 4930.
DOWNING ST.32—Neat room with
hot and. cold water; steam heat
and electricity.” Keeno,
os 4 *Oct.19-2t
FRANKLIN AVE. 288 — Hall bed-
room; “heat; “all Improvements:
quiet’ ad respectable only. Pros
ect 7854, Get.19-3t
FULTON ST, 904 (cor, Washington
Ave) —Purnished Thoms; kitchen
privilege; 1 flight “up. Prosnect
Bint, Oetaz-2t
GATES AVE, 763—Purnished room
to Jet: private: “heat, Iushwiek
3872, Oewt2e
GATES AVE, 442—Furniaied and
unfurnished” rooms, steam heat,
hot water; all Improvements: rent
}_Toasonable.” Phone Decatur 1018,
GROENE AVE, 200-—Pumnisied room
to Tat, with “ranning water, Cal
atter 7 POM: Ting & bells.
|GREENE "AVE. 589 — Furnishod
room§,. all conventonces, Pion
weve ced
FURNISHED ROOMS ‘4
BROOKLYN AND L,I,
HALSEY ST. 888 (4th floor, Broo}
iyn)—Furnished or unfurnished,
modern “partment, 10 Tespegiabl
person. Lord.
HALSRY ST. 275, (oeae Tomi
‘Ave))—Furiilshed room; all
provements, Cooper, 2nd fl
right. ‘Oot.19:
HALSEY ST, 388 (24 floor; lett
oar Sumnér)—Furnished. ‘rome
stoam heaton, Ootta+
HANSON PL, 91 — Neatly turntane
room, 2 minutos’ walk from. i
way.’ Call all woo,
HANCOCK ST, 448—Furnished.
‘infurnished room to Tet; hes
electric; near Sumner Ave,
HANCOCK ST, 14—Rooms, fu
‘ished, all modern: improvement
hear Franklin Ave, and other)
Tinos. ‘Oct10!
HANGOOK ST, 495—Furnlshed: ha
‘conn, private, wih Moats Sor on
bien; call, :
ee
HANCOCK 67, 538 — Furnish
oom, sultablo for business co
or 2 man; r
Fasette 8808. ‘Getz?
HANCOCK ST, 14 (near Franklin
‘Rooms, front and back, lark
and smait, furnished or’ uf
nlahed. - “Bept2s-t
HERKIMER ST, s10—Fumnished o
unturntshed rooms to let, with st
cavenienea Ga ded
HERKIMER ST., eels fur
nished front bedroom; with re
Hoectable famiiys vail. Tote
ments, ee mene euiteele for oF
a or eee hacker eae
house, Mra. F. P, Jones, nea’
Troy Ave. 1
rey Ase ed
HERKIMER ST. 8&8 (BEDFORI
SECTION) —NiGe, “Lata PUR
RisteD Room, SUrtABte FOr
TWO, STEAM HEAT, HO?
When ‘eeecrnici atl cy
VeNIENcES! NIGELY PGRN
IoHko, Reasonasce. ABE’
LENA OUG, OWNER, TOF
FESS. eh
IRVING PL, 28—Large, small’
modern accommodations; privati
and quiet, Convenient transit. }
JEFFERSON AVE.—Private room fi
Brooklyn; hoat; all conveniences!
lovely home for a nice person. Oni
flight, Phone Bradhurst 4923,
TAPAYErR® AVE, 909 Tam
front room: furnished, steam heat
Seetee"Bhone Peeping
Oct.19-21
LAFAYETTE AVE, 887-4 (neat
Uineron Large Hoot Geom. ee
Tinted all goevorieaeod sooner
Brivileges; $6.
imerants Po, 16—Nie fie
2a Toon toet; a aoe eS
‘OctaZ-21
CERRERTSPL,_102 — Faraithoe
Toms, large and smadl, all im
Sovarianta Ve.
LEFFERTS PL., 157—Single room
Meraiahed or-aecraiie noon
tunes i
Sapisox St, ac0—Nowly tama
Sa poo: ail pelvioses.” Heat
Ba b Reoatal
MARION ST., 126—Young conpi¢
ave private room for one or tie
Yespectable girls” or gentlemen]
Cait atter 8. “hitler. 1
McDONOUGH ST, 231 — Furnishee
or unfurnished rooms; all improve
ments, Octt02)
MONROE ST, 211—Large front roo
‘with alcove, furnlahed or untur
nishod, heat, Apply on premiset
or Decatur 0397.
NYRTLD_AVb, 804 — Furnlehoc
ooms, suitable for ono oF vo por
fons, call any time, Oot iii
SIEEER AVE, 7 (pean, Tomales
Avenue)-—Pumishod roons. wil
hreat;" couple proferred, Oot 12-2
MONROB ST, 43—Targe fron;
Foom; steam heat, electric, run|
Ring water. Phoné Decatur’ 8084
‘Oct.E-4
a
PUTNAM “AVE, 68 — Furntohet
Toms, largo aia small; ail im
provements, Sct122
PUTNAM AVE, 185—Large front
oom, “nicoly “furnished eutable
for tivo working girls oF two gen
Ulemon; small room,” Call after 4
PLM." Prospect 3054.
QUINCY ST, 69—Large furnlsher
room to Tet” ‘Octi2e,
ROGERS” AVE, 01 — Purnishec
room to Tot, private; ateam heat
Deentur 1522, TOCLo 2
SPENGER PL, 17 — Comfortable
room, furnishied: reasonahle; heat
electtie: ail. conveniences: cen
trally Iocated. “Storing 4287,
ST. FELIX ST, &—Roame to let; of
improvements; convenient to al
car lines. Nevine 3162. Oct. 19-2
ST. FELIX ST., 19—Steam-hoater
rooms for reapectablo people only;
Tight “hnusokeoping; ‘married cow
ple preferred, Phone Neving 2481
Oct12-2
ST. FELIX ST.,G1—Furnished room
fieat, sloctricity, het ant cole
water in room; respectable couple
or two men; 3 minites teal
fain i
Si. JAMES i. 88 (near Greene
* Avec|—~Furnisiied all” bedroom:
io fat, with convenlences; call at
__temnodns and evenings,
ST. JAMES PL., 241—Purnished an:
unturnished Fooms, with tee. ci
kitchenctte. «_ Oct.idety
ST. JAMES PL. 280—Large- room
furnished ar unfurnished; » steare
heat, oleetricity, hot und cold, wa,
ter in room, Otis
80, ELLIOTT PL., 167—Nice, sunny
Foor, furnisheld oF unfurnished}
ail Improvencants; “near all
: peeps
80. ELLIOTT PL. 178—Farnfenet
oF unturnished rooms, large. Phong
Nevins 543. Get. 19:
TOMPKINS AVE., 467—Large’ unti
| mished” room; “all” tmprovement
Call evenings Rng Wyatarn tl
VANDERBILT AYE., 456-—Halito4
furnished; retitted eoloreds
‘VANOERDILT AVE, 461
ed or unfurnished’ rooms
|) provements.” Phone Ne
i 2 aE
| ViSDRRni AVE
1 "Girnishea tocms, ge
hoat, electric, .“WNer’
EIGHTEEN
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CITY NEWS BRIEFS
BEATS CHINESE WITH A CHAIR
Clarence McCoy, 43, stewarded,
162 West 19th street, was held in
1,000 ball for the Grand Jury
that beamed he was arraigned before
Magistrate Don McCoy, heights
Court on a charge of heating
Mon, Chinese proprietor of a restaurant at 2637 Eighth avenue, over
FISH
FINE FU
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139 West
(Opposite
If You Appreciate
FISHEL'S IS THE
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FISHEL'S
FINE FURNITURE
CASH AND CREDIT
139 West 125th St.
(Opposite Koch's)
You Appreciate { Courteous Treat
Reasonable Price
Good Furniture
HEL'S IS THE STORE FOR
Prices Slashed This W
to Get Floor Space
THIS 3-PC. VELOU
If You Appreciate Courteous Treatment Reasonable Prices Good Furniture FISHEL'S IS THE STORE FOR YOU
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All Sized
Cotton
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Roll Edge
All Sized
Cotton
Mattresses
Roll Edge
Windsor C
Mahogany F
Value $10.0c
NOW
7.98
Value $5.9
$3.9
open Monday and Saturday Until 9 P.
$7.98
Open Monday and Sa
Open Monday and Saturday Until 9 P: M.
CREDIT
LADIES' CLOTHING, MEN'S CLOTHING, DRY GOODS. FURS, SILK UNDERWEAR, JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, FURNITURE, RUGS, PIANOS, PHONOGRAPHS, RADIOS, ETC.
MY TERMS ARE WITHIN EVERYONE'S REACH
ALL BUSINESS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
LADIES' CLOTHING, MEN'S C
SILK UNDERWEAR, JEWELRY
RUGS, PIANOS, PHONOGRAPHS
MY TERMS ARE WITH
ALL BUSINESS STRI
P. J. B
135 WEST 123D STREET
NEW YO
CLOTHING, MEN'S CLOTHING, DRY GOOD
UNDERWEAR, JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, FU
IANOS, PHONOGRAPHS, RADIOS, ETC.
Y TERMS ARE WITHIN EVERYONE'S REAL
ALL BUSINESS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
P. J. BROOKS
T 123D STREET PHONE MORNING
NEW YORK CITY
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NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19, 1927
the head with a chair, causing three stitches to be taken thereon at Harlem Hospital. Mon lives at 36 Pel street.
JAILED ON GUN CHARGE.
William Rose, 25, 256 West 144th street, was held without bail for a further hearing when arranged in
EL'S
FURNITURE
P.O. CREDIT
125th St.
e Koch's)
Courteous Treatment
Reasonable Prices
Good Furniture
STORE FOR YOU
ed This Week
Door Space
C. VELOUR
SUITE
Former Price $135.00
NOW
$94.98
ALL OTHER PRICES
CUT IN PROPORTION
Windsor Chair
Mahogany Finish
Value $5.00
$3.95
Saturday Until 9 P: M.
WOOLTHING, DRY GOODS, FURS,
RHY, SILVERWARE, FURNITURE,
RADIOS, ETC.
IN EVERYONE'S REACH
CTLY CONFIDENTIAL
ROOKS
PHONE MORNINGSIDE 4305
PARK CITY
Heights Court Thursday before
Magistrate Dodge. Patrolman
Thorpe of the West 135th street street
station arrested Rose for disorderly
conduct and having on his person a
dangerous weapon.
MOTHER FAILS TO RECLAIM
CHILD
left seven months-old Clifford Yard,
left at Harlem Hospital some time
ago by Cora James, 203 West 135th
street, was given over to the custody of the Foundling Ward at Bellvue Hospital Friday after all efforts to locate Cora James or the
child's mother had failed. The child
was brought to the institution for
rehabilitation by Sophora S., and was re-
moved to the Baby's Hospital at
Sea Cliff, L. L. On Sept. 25 the
child was brought back to Harlem
Hospital. No one returned to claim.
WHITE BABY FOUND DEAD.
While Edward Newitt, white, 14SS
First avenue, a Department of Public Works employee, was digging in the catch basin at 141st street and the entrance last week, he found the dead body of a white baby. Detective Brown of the West 133th street station was assigned to investigate.
STREET CORNER MEDICINE
MAN ARRESTED.
Renold R. Felix and Marie Wilkey, whose address might be given at any street corner in Harlem were arrested Thursday night at 12th street corner of the West 13th street corner at the 13th and Lenox avenue, where Thoreau said Felix was exhibiting a live snake, which caused a crowd to collect. Thoreau said, when he demonstrated with Felix, he abused him when arranged before Magistrate Robert B. Bentley both Felix and Marie Wilkey were found guilty of disorderly conduct and fined $5 each.
EDMUND JOHNSON GETS
EIGHT-SUMMONS
Edmund Johnson, 63, 416 Lenox
avenue, summoned to Heights Court
eight times on the same complaint
of operating a cabaret without a
license in violation of the law, was
held in $200 ball on one of the
charges for a further hearing today
by Magistrate Dodge, who paroled
Johnson until Oct. 24 on the seven
remaining charges.
WHITE PATIENT RAISES
FUISS IN HOSPITAL
Jock Moran, 22, white, 220 West 120th street, who was taken to Harlem Hospital last Tuesday night to have a scalp wound dressed, objected to the way the doctors dressed it and began shouting and calling them indecent names and threatening vengeance. Patcolman Cohen of the West 135th street station was called in and arrested Moran. He was given two days in the Workhouse by Magistrate Dodge in Heights Court last Wednesday. The police said Moran was intoxicated.
WIFE.BEATER GIVEN 60 DAYS
IN WORKHOUSE.
Because he beat his wife, Henry Richardson, 33, 2326 Morris avenue, was sent to the Workhouse for felony by Magistrate Rosenbluth in Worcester, he had pleaded guilty. Richardson was arrested by Detective Fitzpatrick of the Highbridge station on complaint of his wife, Mary, who told the de- head with he had struck her on the head with the magistrate told the magistrate that he continually quarrelled and struck her on the least provocation.
DAVID PAYNE FREED.
David Payne, 45, of 65 East 133d street, was freed from a charge of disorderly conduct on Friday in Harlem Court, by Magistrate Farrell. Ellie Jay of 2115 Madison avenue said that Payne had insulted her by calling her names and threatening her.
Treated at Hospitals
HARLEM.
Marion Creadh, 13, 2234, Fifth avenue;
premona; Sunday
Ida Small, 11, 292 West 1420 street
liness Sunday
11, 292 West 1420 street
William Brown, 72, 111 West 136th
street; cancer; Sunday.
Ocindia Burrell, 32, 2218 Fifth avenue
distance: Sunday.
Nelson Williams, 27, 41 West 131st street; incarceration of the thumb during an altercation with big wife, Michele Brennan, refused to make a complaint; Sunday
Resale Fraud, 22, 711 West 137th street; incarcerations of the right leg during right with her husband, Clarence, against a complaint would not lodge a complaint; Sunday
Leroy Singleton, 15, 3 East 132d street; stabbed in the left arm by Emmet Christiane of the unknown. Detective christiane of the West 132th street station notified.
graham Simmons 31, 15 West 131th
street Philadelphia, adult women
stabled last Wednesday.
the ultramurals; last Wednesday,
Edward Lotton, 32. 131 West
operations of the head and lip
and apparently intoxicated; last
Wednesday.
Little Walker, 30. 33 West
street; acute indigestion; last
Wednesday.
James Marion, 22, 220 West, 120th street; incursion of the south when he wished a piece of iron last Wednesday.
George Allen, 42, 252nd Seventh avenue; incursion of the left thumb and a tondon during a fight with an unknown opponent in Oxfordshire.
Leola Thomas, 38, 31 West, 185th street; maternity; Friday.
Anna Sutton, 29, 394 West 135th
street; maternity; Friday.
Bena Brown, 30, 164 West 147th
Hall, 164 West 147th of the
Hills. Alleged to have been
beaten by her husband, against whom
she would make no complaint. Thur-
se
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L. S. Reed REAL ESTATE, LOANS AND INSURANCE
L. S. Reed
REAL ESTATE, LOANS
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60 EAST JACKSON AVENUE
(Near 49th Street)
CORONA, L. I., N. Y.
Havemeyer 0304
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PROPERTIES FOR SALE
NEW YORK JAMAICA
CORONA
Renting Collecting
K. B. WHITE
32.45 101TH ST., near Jackson Ave.
CORONA, L. L.
Tel. Newtown 6202
Res. Harveyyer 1213.W
J. D. ANDERSON
Real Estate and
All Lines of Insurance
LOANS NEGOTIATED
202 West 132d St.
Bradhurst 4464
High Class A
Better
Modern, Up to Date
NO. 55 WED
$49
Wilcox & Shelton
SUPT. ON
GREATEST
for COLOR
6 Rooms TAX E
5c FARE
NEAR SUBWAY, SCHOOL
Excellent neighborhood, large
tilled bath
Easy Terms
M. PORTO, Room 31, Col
Jan
Sutphin Blvd., Opp. M.
Open Daily — E
PHONE J
The PEM
Elevator A
824 ST. NIC
Cor. 151st St. and
Opened O
In Class Apartment
Better People
in, Up to Date --- 2 and 3
NO. 55 WEST 129th ST.
$49 to $66
Tax & Shelton -- 313 Lenox
SUPT. ON PREMISES
EATEST BARG
for COLORED BUYER
TAX EXEMPT
5c FARE MANHATTAN
SUBWAY, SCHOOLS, CHURCHES,
neighborhood, large plot, driveway, s
tiled bath, sun parlor
arms PRICE $
TO, Room 31, Corn Exchange Bar
Jamaica.
tphin Blvd., Opp. Main Jamaica, L. 1.36stat
Open Daily — Evenings — Sundays
PHONE JAMAICA 8373
ePEMBRO
elevator Apartment
824 ST. NICHOLAS AVENUE
151st St. and St. Nicholas
ened October
High Class Apartments for Better People
Modern, Up to Date --- 2 and 3 Rooms
NO. 55 WEST 129th ST.
$49 to $66
Wilcox & Shelton -- 313 Lenox Ave.
SUPT. ON PREMISES
5c FARE MANHATTAN
NEAR SUBWAY, SCHOOLS, CHURCHES, STORES Excellent neighborhood, large plot, driveway, shrubbery, tiled bath, sun parlor
The PEMBROKE
824 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. Cor. 151st St. and St. Nicholas Place
Opened October 1st
BEST VALUE IN CITY
4--5--6 ROOMS
All Front Apartments
Completely Renovated---Finest
Agent on Premises
S. J. COTTMA
4--5--6 ROOMS
All Front Apartments
Surely Renovated---Finest
Agent on Premises
J. COTTMA
All Front Apartments Completely Renovated---Finest Service Agent on Premises
S. J. COTTMAN REAL ESTATE
2303 Seventh Ave. Bradhurst 1048
FILL UP NOW
Don't Be Foolish!
"Order Your Coal Now"
4458
4457 Harlem 4459
DOBBINS
COAL CO., INC.
138th St. & Madison Av.
We Serve the Right "Welgh"
OWN YOUR OWN HOME!
$25 DOWN WILL START YOU
Rales
Your
Own
Chickens
and
Vegetables
Own your own Home, at New Brunswick, N. J., a big city with over 400,000 of work with good pay. Homes built
$50.00 down, $10.00 monthly; ready to move in. Open Wednesday evening up to 8 P.M.
Write or call for particulare.
HENRY J. FRANKLIN
15 PARK ROW, NEW YORK
Room 423 Phone Barclay 8235
WILLIAM A. YOUNG
REAL ESTATE—INSURANCE
409 WAVERLY AVE.
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Houses and Flats for sale, to let.
Steam and cold water; cash $500
up. Sundays by appointment.
Departments for People
--- 2 and 3 Rooms
T 129th St.
$66
--- 313 Lenox Ave.
PREMISES
BARGAIN
BUYER
EXEMPT Colonial
MANHATTAN
S, CHURCHES, STORES
plot, driveway, shrubbery,
parlor
PRICE $5,490
Exchange Bank Bldg.,
Aica.
Jamaica, L. I. Station
Sings — Sundays
AICA 8373
BROKE
departments
OLAS AVE.
St. Nicholas Place
October 1st
ROOMS
departments
ed --- Finest Service
Premises
TTMAN
New Elevator Apartments
1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 Rooms --- Highest Class Rents Cut to Meet Moderate Purses Only a Few Left --- Act Quick (The Last Thing in Appointments)
484 Convent Avenue
4, 5, 6 Newly Decorated Room
Very Reasonable Rents
APPLY ON PREMISES
Knights Developing & Trading Co
155 West 145th St. New York
Decorated Rooms
Available Rents
PREMISES
& Trading Co., Inc.
New York City
4, 5, 6 Newly Decorated Rooms Very Reasonable Rents APPLY ON PREMISES Knights Developing & Trading Co., Inc. 155 West 145th St. New York City
MORTGAGES
Brooklyn's Greatest Bargas
Stuyvesant Avenue, Near Bainbridge S
TWO FAMILY
Three-story and basement, white limestone; bay wi
hardwood floors and hardwood trim; two tile baths;
home. Price reasonable and Easy. terms.
Greatest Bargains
Clear Bainbridge Street
FAMILY
the limestone; bay window; all
trim; two tile baths; beautiful
sy. terms.
Brooklyn's Greatest Bargains
Stuyvesant Avenue, Near Bainbridge Street
TWO FAMILY
Three-story and basement, white limestone; bay window; all hardwood floors and hardwood trim; two tile baths; beautiful home. Price reasonable and Easy.terms.
S. J. TRANUMN
34 CLAVER PLACE, BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Prospect 1211
MOVE TO JERSEY CITY
ENJOY THE OWNERSHIP OF A. NICE H.
Your Present Monthly Rental in New York W.
for You a One or Two-Family House.
We Specialize in Selling Homes on the
Payment Plan
CALL OR WRITE
WILLIAM H. ORI
43 Kearney Ave. Jersey City
Phones—Delaware 3432—3433
An Institution of HOME FINANCING, BUILT
INDUSTRIAL LOANS and INSURANCE
FOR RENT
6-room apartment—all improvements—$66.00—on 7th
7-room apartment—all improvements—$70.00—West 13
7-room apartment—all improvements—$80.00—West 13
PRIVATE HOUSES
West 132d St.—Rent $150.00; steam and electric; 2 y
West 122nd St.—Rent $180.00; steam and electricity;
cold water. In every room; 3 baths. Lease
FIRE INSURANCE
HARLEM REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE
2208 SEVENTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY
Telephone: Bradhurst 0270-0271
NOW OPENED FOR COLOUR
High Class Elevator Apartment
SUITES --- 4, 5 and 6 ROOMS
Remodeled and Redecorated — Steam Heat —
Hall Service and Mail Chute — Moderate
15 Glenada Place, Brooklyn, N
OWNER ON THE PREMISES
Take Fulton St. "L" to Troy Avenue
DISTINCTIVE HOMES — 6 ROOMS
sun parlor, breakfast nook, tile kitchen and bath, bus
shower, steam heat, attic; plots, 30x100; near school
and churches; private driveway; paved streets, curbs,
copper gutters; brass plumbing; electric outlets th
asbestos fireproof roof; $5.00 cash; $25 monthly on
Price, $6,750 to $7,250
RENOLD B. LIGHST
REAL ESTATE EXCHANGED
HOUSES BUILT
FREE AUTO
145-17 SHORE AVE. — JAMAICA, N.
PHONE REPUBLIC 7494
ERSEY CITY
CHIP OF A. NICE HOME
Central in New York Will Buy
Two-Family House
Homes on the Monthly
Unit Plan
WRITE
H. ORIS
Jersey City, N. J.
Share 3432-3433
FINANCING, BUILDING,
INS and INSURANCE
RENT
ments—$66.00—on 7th Ave.
ments—$70.00—West 133rd St.
ments—$90.00—West 128th St.
HOUSES
Steam and electric; 2 year lease
Steam and electricity; hot and
room; 3 baths. Lease.
INSURANCE
TE EXCHANGE, Inc.
JUE, NEW YORK CITY
Hurst 0270-0271
FOR COLORED
Operator Apartment
and 6 ROOMS
Steam Heat — Electric
Chute — Moderate Rent
Brooklyn, N. Y.
THE PREMISES
"2" to Troy Avenue
HOMES — 6 ROOMS,
kitchen and bath, built-in tub.
, 30x100; near schools, stores
paved streets, curbs, sidewalks;
electric outlets throughout;
ash; $25 monthly on principal.
0 to $7,250
LIGHSTON
EXCHANGED
FREE AUTO SERVICE
JAMAICA, N. Y.
PUBLIC 7494
MOVE TO JERSEY CITY
ENJOY THE OWNERSHIP OF A. NICE HOME Your Present Monthly Rental in New York Will Buy for You a One or Two-Family House We Specialize in Selling Homes on the Monthly Payment Plan
WILLIAM H. ORIS
43 Kearney Ave. Jersey City, N. J.
Phones—Delaware 3432-3433
An Institution of HOME FINANCING, BUILDING.
INDUSTRIAL LOANS and INSURANCE
FOR RENT
6-room apartment—all improvements—$65.00—on 7th Ave.
7-room apartment—all improvements—$70.00—West 133rd St.
7-room apartment—all improvements—$80.00—West 128th St.
PRIVATE HOUSES
West 132d St.-Rent $150.00; steam and electric; 2 year lease
West 122nd St.-Rent $180.00; steam and electricity; hot and
cold water. In every room; 3 baths. Lease.
2208 SEVENTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY
Telephone: Bradhurst 0270-0271
NOW OPENED FOR COLORED
High Class Elevator Apartment SUITES --- 4, 5 and 6 ROOMS Remodeled and Redecorated - Steam Heat - Electric Hall Service and Mail Chute - Moderate Rent 15 Glenada Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. OWNER ON THE PREMISES Take Fulton St. "L" to Troy Avenue
DISTINCTIVE HOMES — 6 ROOMS.
sun parlor, breakfast nook, tile kitchen and bath, built-in tub,
shower, steam heat, attic; plots, 30x100; near schools, stores
and churches; private driveway; paved streets, curbs, sidewalks;
copper gutters; brass plumbing; electric outlets throughout;
asbestos fireproof roof; $500 cash; $25 monthly on principal.
Price, $6,750 to $7,250
RENOLD B. LIGHSTON
REAL ESTATE EXCHANGED
HOUSES BUILT
FREE AUTO SERVICE
145-17 SHORE AVE. — JAMAICA, N. Y.
PHONE REPUBLIC 7494
FOR SALE
Bargains
PRIVATE HOUSES
WEST 138TH. 130TH ST.
139TH AND 129TH STREETS
QUICK ACTION REQUIRED
$1,500 AND $2,000 CASH
15 and 20-Family Apt. Houses. Good Income propositions. Small cash
MONEY TO LEND, 16T, 2ND, 3RD MORTGAGES
LUCILLE EDWARDS
2196 SEVENTH AVENUE
Near 130th Street
Tel. Edgecomber
and income propositions. Small cash
2ND, 3RD MORTGAGES
EDWARDS
NUE. Near 130th Street
Tel. Edgecombe dosse
Oct 19
2196 SEVENTH AVENUE Near 130th Street
Tel. Edgecombe County Oct 19 2017
Bargains
Quick Action
Free Consultation
Deal with the reliable
Harlem
Mortgage Corp.
Suite 1114
1472 Broadway
NEW YORK CITY
Tel. Bryant 8908
ON TO JAMAICA!
THE HISTORY OF THE HOME
```markdown
```
TO CO
THESE HOUSES WERE BUILT R
SACRIFICED TO COLORED FOR
OFFERED BEFORE
$375
ON CONTRACT
$375
TO COLORED PEOPLE
THESE HOUSES WERE BUILT FOR AN EXCLUSIVE WHITE CLIENTELE AND ARE BEING SACRIFICED TO COLORED FOR QUICK SALE. NOTHING LIKE THEM HAVE EVER BEEN OFFERED BEFORE — THEY MUST BE SEEN TO BE FULLY APPRECIATED
ON TAKING TITLE FOR ATTACHED HOUSES
NOTHING MORE TO PAY
FOR 3 MONTHS
Price $8,500
One Ton of Coal Will Be
OUR CAR WILL MAKE ONE O
CALL BRADHURST 4192 OR NEW
HOMESEEKE
Special
One Ton of Coal Will Be Given With Each House Sold Before Nov. 1st OUR CAR WILL MAKE ONE OR MORE TRIPS DAILY FROM OUR NEW YORK OFFICE CALL BRADHURST 4192 OR NEWTOWN 0179 FOR APPOINTMENT. SEATS MUST BE RESERVED ONE DAY IN ADVANCE
HOMESEEKERS' SERVICE BUREAU
R. O. GOTHARD, Mgr. Specializing in 1-2 Family Houses 104-10 Northern Blvd. CORONA, L. I.
Make Up Your Act Q
An Unusual Offer to
FOR THE NEXT F
JUST A F
UP-TO-DATE SIX-ROOM HO
DETAIL, WIT
6,600—The Best Barg
We Will Give Free to Quick P
Supply
These Splendid H
5 Cent Fare Zone
EAR SCHOOL, TROLLEY, STATION, C
LOCA
FOR FULL PARTIC
THE E. and J.
Headqu
Sirwent Building
80th Street and Liberty Aven
Phones Republic 4500
Make Up Your Mind Now and Act Quickly
An Unusual Offer to Prospective Buyers FOR THE NEXT FEW WEEKS ONLY
JUST A FEW LEFT
UP-TO-DATE SIX-ROOM HOUSES, COMPLETE IN EVERY DETAIL, WITH BATH, ETC.
We Will Give Free to Quick Purchasers Half of the Winter's Supply of Coal
These Splendid Houses Are Within the
5 Cent Fare Zone of New York City
NEAR SCHOOL, TROLLEY, STATION, CHAIN STORES, CHURCHES. IDEALLY
LOCATED
FOR FULL PARTICULARS INQUIRE AT
THE E. and J. DORF OFFICES
180th Street and Liberty Avenue
Phones Republic 4500-4501 and Jamaica 4153
OWN YOUR OWN HOME
Why pay high rents when you can buy beautiful family brick houses in Corona and Jamaica, near facilities, and near schools and churches? These team heat, electricity, parquet floors, tile baths and one or two-car garages. A one-family house can be low as $500 cash and a monthly payment of $ family can be bought with $1000 cash and $50 more of coal will be given to each buyer.
For those who prefer the city, I have magnificent houses in the best blocks of Harlem that can be reasonably amount of cash. Call and be convinced.
DENNIS EDWARDS
10 WEST 127th STREET.
Phone
Why pay high rents when you can buy beautiful one and two family brick houses in Corona and Jamaica, near transportation facilities, and near schools and churches? These houses have steam heat, electricity, parquet floors, tile baths and kitchens, and one or two-car garages. A one-family house can be bought with as low as $500 cash and a monthly payment of $33. The two-family can be bought with $1000 cash and $50 monthly payment. A ton of coal will be given to each buyer.
For those who prefer the city, I have magnificent private houses in the best blocks of Harlem that can be bought with a reasonable amount of cash. Call and be convinced.
$375
210 W. 135th St.
NEW YORK
AN ENTIRE BLOCK OF BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOUSES IN JAMAICA, L. I., NOW OFFERED
OLORED PEC
FOR AN EXCLUSIVE WHITE OR QUICK SALE. NOTHING LIKE
THEY MUST BE SEEN TO BE
DESCRIPTION
6 Large, beautifully paneled rooms, braekfast nook, tiled bath and kitchen, shower, parquet floors throughout, extra toilet on first floor. Sewera, curbing and sidewalks.
1-CAR GARAGE WITH EACH HOUSE
Near School, Street Cars and Trains
5c FARE TO NEW YORK
Be Given With Each House
OR MORE TRIPS DAILY FROM
NOWTOWN 0179 FOR APPOINTMENT
ONE DAY IN ADVANCE
ERS' SERVICE
R. O. GOTHARD, Mgr.
Specializing in 1-2 Family Houses
104-10 Northern Blvd.
CORONA, L. I.
r Mind Now and
Quickly
to Prospective Buyers
FEW WEEKS ONLY
FEW LEFT
HOUSES, COMPLETE IN E
WITH BATH, ETC.
gain in Jamaica — $60
Purchasers Half of the W
y of Coal
Houses Are Within the
e of New York City
, CHAIN STORES, CHURCHES. IN
CATED
MICULARS INQUIRE AT
L. DORF OFFICE
quarters
ing Corporation
500-4501 and Jamaica 4153
sufficient private
one bought with a
reed.
DS
phone Harlem 3112
FOR B
SIVE WHITE CLIENTED NOTHING LIKE THEM SEEN TO BE FULLY A
Each House Sold By
DAILY FROM OUR BROKEN APPOINTMENT. SEATS ADVANCE
SERVICE Bldg.
BARD, Mgr.
Family Houses
Eastern Blvd. 145
A., L. I.
Now and
Active Buyers
ONLY
GIFT
PLETE IN EVERY
TC.
Jamaica — $6,600
Self of the Winter's
Within the
Park City
CHURCHES. IDEALLY
RE AT
OFFICES
corporation
Jamaica, N. Y.
a 4153
24 W. 135th St.
5 rooms and bath, hot water supply, electricity
RENT, $50
Inquire Holly or
W. L. Frank, 290 Lenox Ave.
FOR BEST
FOR BEST RESULTS ADVERTISE IN THE AMSTERDAM NEWS
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19, 1927
PLE
NTELE AND ARE BEING
THEM HAVE EVER BEEN
LY APPRECIATED
NOTHING MORE TO PAY
FOR 3 MONTHS
Price $9,500
OLD Before Nov. 1st
OUR NEW YORK OFFICE.
EATS MUST BE RESERVED
BUREAU
Let Us Take Care of Your ELECTRICAL WORK
SPECIAL SALE
ST RESULTS
THE MUSEUM OF THE WEST
$500
ON CONTRACT
$500
ON TITLE FOR
DETACHED HOUSES
145-02 Jamaica Ave.
JAMAICA, L. I.
Jamaica 0240
75
St. Nicholas Place
(153d St.)
Newest and Finest
HEIGHTS
ELEVATOR
APARTMENT HOUSE
Just Opened for
COLORED TENANTS
3-4-5-6
2 BATHS
Agent on Premises
WIRING Motors Furnished and Repaired
Fixtures and All Electrical APPLIANCES
Prompt and Efficient
SERVICE:
VENTILATING FANS
SYSTEM
Nathan Zolinsky
2286 SEVENTH AVE.
Brad, 0146
Credit Extended to People With Reference
JAS. L. THORNTON
270 WEST 126th STREET
Moulding a Specialty
Lumber of All Kinds
Weather Strips Venuer Fargo
Sash, Doors and Blinds Wall Board
Monument 4442
Carpet, Linoleum and Rugs
751 Flushing Ave., near B'way
BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Closed Friday Evenings
Open Saturday Evenings
25—WANTED—25
Reliable help, male and female,
for housework, cooks, kitchen
men and porters. Apply 348
Cumberland St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Phone Nevins 6129-8272; brigg
reference.
COLORED HOME SEEKERS Here's an Opportunity Never Offered Before
MERRICK GARDENS, Springfield, L. I.
$250
$250 WHEN YOU TAKE TITLE
$8,250 for Our Corner Houses,
With a Cash Down Payment
of $375 and $375 When You
Take Title
Mill B
OFFICE PH
Merrick
Or Call Mr. Newhous
Mill Building Corporation
OFFICE PHONE ON PREMISES --- LAURELTON 5319 Merrick Road and 127th Ave. Or Call Mr. Newhouse, Cleveland 0929, Cleveland 3333 or Cleveland 6888
For Sale or Lease
ADVERTISE IN
For These Homes WITH BUT
CASH DOWN
and
40th ST., 319 WEST (Near. 8th Ave.)
AND BATH
Steam Heat — Hot Water
Rent, $48-$50
Apply Janitor or
S. L. WARSAWER
239 West 42nd St.
APARTMENTS TO LET
234 AND 236 GREENE AVE.,
BROOKLYN
3 and 4 rooms; all improvements
2461 AND 2448 SECOND AVE.,
N. Y. C.
3 and 4 rooms, hot water supply.
Cheap rents. Electric light
See superintendent on premises
RENAW REALTY CO.
654 LENOX AVENUE
Several Apartment Houses, new law, small cash; and several private houses; also 5 and 6 room apartments; good location.
M. J. WILLIAMS
102 WEST, 132d ST.
Phone Morningalde, 6211
OWNERS — BROKERS — AGENTS
You no longer need be in despair about placing your GENERAL LIABILITY INSURANCE. We can place you in the strongest GENERAL LIABILITY INSURANCE COMPANIES within 24 hours. Give us your application today and we will apply our policy your hande tomorrow. No associations to be joined. Insurance in strictly high class GENERAL LIABILITY COMPANIES.
PHILIP A. PAYTON, JR.,
COMPANY
328 LENOX AVENUE
Telephone Harlem B092-7662
PRIVATE AND APT. HOUSES
Between 115th and 145th Sts.,
at very low prices; small cash
and easy terms.
Two family houses in Bronx
very reasonable.
DANIELS BROS.
$284 7th Ave. Tel. Brad. 8562
-AT-
CK GARD
GARDENS,
```markdown
```
Assessments on All These Houses Are Fully Paid. A TAX PAYER Always Gets More Consideration Than a RENT PAYER
Building
WE PHONE ON PREMI
ck Road a
house, Cleveland 09
THE BEST INVEST
A "Good Investment is
against loss of money i
desirable.
REAL ESTATE MUST POSSE
GREAT OPPORTUNITIES
ness depends on what others
operator. The successful ma-
to success than "Good Luck."
strength, integrity, and you ha
"BE YOUR OWN LAND
some wonderful bargains tha
ments and especially Private
refinement are located.
HOUSES THAT MUST BE
that have modern appointment
Street, 127th, 128th, 129th, 1300
Avenue.
The payments on all of
With a small amount of
purchaser. From $1,000 to $4,
"I FINANCE AND LOAN
All Titles Guaranteed by
Begin to Cash in From the
Income for Old Age.
COME IN TODAY AND GET
FITZH
215 WEST 135th STRE
WE RENT AND LIST
FOR RENT
BUILDING CORP
ONE ON PREMISES --- LAU
Road and 12
Cleveland 0929, Cleveland 3
THE BEST INVESTMENT IN THE
good investment is one which combines
most loss of money invested, and produc-
table.
ESTATE MUST POSSESS BOTH THESE QUALITIES
ABLE TO THE AVERAGE
GREAT OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE HOMESEEK
depends on what others think or say of my method.
The successful man knows that honesty or
success than "Good Luck." Add to these hard w
th, integrity, and you have the man.
BE YOUR OWN LANDLORD—OWN YOUR OWN
wonderful bargains that I am offering to the p
and especially Private Houses in up-to-date resi-
ment are located.
HOUSES MUST BE SOLD REGARDLESS
have modern appointments, parquet floors, elec-
tric 127th, 128th, 129th, 130th, 131st, 132d, 136th, 137th.
The payments on all of these houses could be ca-
with a small amount of cash, balance like rent, or
user. From $1,000 to $4,500 down.
FINANCE AND LOAN MONEY ON BOND MONEY
Titles Guaranteed by Title Guarantee & Trust
gain to Cash in From the Day You Take Title and
for Old Age.
IN TODAY AND GET THE PICK WHILE I
For Full Particulars, Call:
FITZHERBERT
WEST 135th STREET
THE BEST INVESTMENT IN THE WORLD IS REAL ESTATE
A "Good Investment is one which combines both safety and Profit"—Safety against loss of money invested, and producing a profit sufficient to make it desirable.
REAL ESTATE MUST POSSESS BOTH THESE QUALITIES, AND AT THE SAME TIME BE AVAILABLE TO THE AVERAGE INDIVIDUAL
GREAT OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE HOMESEEKER AND INVESTOR—My success in business depends on what others think or say of my methods and ability as a real estate broker and operator. The successful man knows that honesty of purpose and honest goods contribute more to success than "Good Luck." Add to these hard work, prompt and efficient service, character, strength, integrity, and you have the man.
"BE YOUR OWN LANDLORD—OWN YOUR OWN HOME OR APARTMENT"—I have for sale some wonderful bargains that I am offering to the public in leasing and buying. Some apartments and especially Private Houses in up-to-date residential sections, where people of culture and refinement are located.
HOUSES THAT MUST BE SOLD REGARDLESS OF COST AND POSSESSION GIVEN—Houses that have modern appointments, parquet floors, electricity and some two bathrooms; from 126th Street, 127th, 128th, 129th, 130th, 131st, 132d, 136th, 137th, 138th and 139th, and some on Edgecombe Avenue.
The payments on all of these houses could be easily arranged.
With a small amount of cash, balance like rent, or arranged in convenient payments to suit the purchaser. From $1,000 to $4,500 down.
"I FINANCE AND LOAN MONEY ON BOND MORTGAGE WHERE CASH IS SHORT."
All Titles Guaranteed by Title Guarantee & Trust Co. (Or Money Refunded).
Begin to Cash In from the Day You Take Title and Start the Ball Rolling and Get an Immediate Income for Old Age.
COME IN TODAY AND GET THE PICK WHILE I HAVE THEM.
Income for Old Age.
COME IN TODAY AND GET THE PICK WHILE I HAVE THEM — It will pay you to Investigate.
For Full Particulars, Call, Write or Phone
FITZHERBERT HOWELL
WE RENT AND LIST FOR RENT
ROOMS, APARTMENTS,
ETC., ANY PRICE,
ANY SIZE
FOR SALE—Five-story, corner building, overlooking Morningside Park, ten apartments; little cash; terms. SEVERAL other bargains.
LEASE — Corner Edgecombe Ave., 17 rooms, completely furnished; reasonable terms; great sacrifice, if considered now.
BUY
JOLENZA
Exclusive He
PLOTS, 27 and 30 with large sun patio to kitchen without attic, tile bath and every other model one of the finest sive Merrick Park
TEAL REAL ESTATE & ROOM RENTING BUREAU
365-7 WEST 118TH ST., CITY
MONument 0988
YOUR ORDER NOW
Will Mean Complete Installation of American Ideal Heating System in Your Home
Will Mean Complete Installation of American Ideal Heating System in Your Home
Dealer in Electric Refrigerators and Oil Burners. Time Payments
LEHIGH HEATING CO.
2202 SEVENTH AVENUE
Bradhurst 9230
2707 Eightin
DESIREABLE APA
& ROOMS, ALL IMP
Apply janitor at
Avenue or Nail &
West 136th Street
0670-0671.
THE AMSTERDAM
ENS, Spring
Corporation
HOUSES --- LAURELTO
and 127th
St., Cleveland 3333 or.
MENT IN THE WORLD
which combines both safe
rested, and producing a pro-
fessional.
BOTH THESE QUALITIES, AND
RELIANCE TO THE AVERAGE INDIVIDUAL
FOR THE HOMESEEKER AND IN
or say of my methods and abili-
ows that honesty of purpose and
add to these hard work, prompt
the man.
OWN YOUR OWN HOME OR
from offering to the public in lea-
ses in up-to-date residential secti-
OLD REGARDLESS OF COST AND
arquet floors, electricity and so-
lst, 132d, 136th, 137th, 138th and 139th.
houses could be easily arranged
balance like rent, or arranged in
own.
KEY ON BOND MORTGAGE WHICH
Guarantee & Trust Co. (Or Mon-
key You Take Title and Start the B
THE PICK WHILE I HAVE THEM
full Particulars, Call, Write or Ph
RBERT H
Telephone—Bradhurst 1735
BUY YOU
FOR
JOLENZA REALTY
Exclusive Home Colony
PLOTS, 27 and 30x100—Exceed
with large sun parlor, extra pr
to kitchen without disturbing
attle, tile bath and kitchen, b
every other modern improvement
one of the finest ever offered
sive Merrick Park.
$7,250
CONVENIENT TO TRANS
NOTE—If you own a lot we
home with little cash. At pr
clients in the Merrick Park se
Jolenza Real
108th Ave. and 170th St.,
For App
JAMAICA 7125
PLOTS, 27 and 30x100—Exceedingly well-built 6-room dwellings, with large sun parlor, extra private hall, entrance leading direct to kitchen without disturbing living or dining room, stairway to attic, tile bath and kitchen, breakfast nook, parquet floors and every other modern improvement that goes to make this home one of the finest ever offered for the price in beautiful, exclusive Merrick Park.
NOTE-If you own a lot we will finance the building of your home with little cash. At present we are building for several clients in the Merrick Park section on their own lot.
108th Ave. and 170th St., Merrick Park, Jamaica, N. Y.
For Appointment Call
JAMAICA 7125 HOLLIS 8870
2707 Eighth Avenue
DESIrable APARTMENT
& ROOMS, ALL IMPROVEMENTS
Apply janitor at 2707 Eighth
Avenue or Nail & Parker, 145
West 135th Street. Tel. Eradhurst
0670-0671.
MSTERDA
EEKERS
ered Before
ringfield, L. I.
THESE MODERN HOUSES CONTAIN—
Steam Heat, Parquet Floors, Breakfast Nook, Shades, Brick Stoop, Sun Parlor, Tiled Bathroom, Shower Bath, Porcelain Sink, Stairs to Finished Attic.
A FURTHER GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION Lot 30x100, House 20x44, Sidewalks, Laundry and Kitchen Cabinet, Sewers, Paved Streets, First Mortgage Held by the New York Title Company
WORLD IS REAL ESTATE
both safety and Profit" — Safety
a profit sufficient to make it
RES. AND AT THE SAME TIME BE AVAIL-
INDIVIDUAL
RAND AND INVESTOR—My success in busi-
and ability as a real estate broker and
purpose and honest goods contribute more
prompt and efficient service, character,
HOME OR APARTMENT"—I have for sale
price in leasing and buying. Some apart-
ial sections, where people of culture and
COST AND POSSESSION GIVEN—Houses
and some two bathrooms; from 126th
18th and 139th, and some on Edgecombe
arranged.
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Wednesday, October 19, 1927
Hampton Students Go on Strike
Hampton Students Go on Strike
HAMPTON INSTITUTE, one of the most famous Negro schools in America, has been closed temporarily by a student strike. Four hundred students refused to attend classes, to take part in chapel singing, or to admit the inspecting officers of the school to their dormitories. Dr. James E. Gregg, president of the institute, suspended all classes and told the students to go home, furnishing their transportation expenses. When classes are resumed only students acceptable to Dr. Gregg and the faculty will be readmitted.
THE CAUSES of the strike, according to Dr. Gregg, were insubordination and disorder. According to the students, the immediate causes were a faculty order that the assembly hall should be illuminated during the showing of motion pictures, to prevent "petting" between young men and women; also the policy of confining the student body to the school grounds from an early hour in the evening. The students contend that these orders are reflections on their morals.
IF THE CAUSES given are real ones this is the most surprising school strike in history. The young men and women who attend Hampton are known for their seriousness of purpose; it is incredible that they should throw away their purpose simply because they are forbidden to "pet" at a motion picture show. Besides, they knew what the rules at Hampton were before they went there. Behind such a wholesale strike there must be deeper reasons than those given. It may be that the way the Negro student was handled thirty years ago is not the way to handle him now.
Forcing Darker Races Together
Forcing Darker Races Together
CHINESE were barred from white public schools in Mississippi last week by a ruling of the Mississippi Supreme Court. In the case of Joe Tin Lun the court said that friction, disorder and general unhappiness would result if efforts were made to associate the Caucasian race with the colored race in the Mississippi schools. The court defined as colored any race other than the Caucasian, and held that it would be necessary for Joe Tin Lun to enroll in a Negro school.
IF THE CHINESE and Japanese ever thought that the Anglo-Saxon did not class them with Negroes they must know better by this time. Many years ago the United States passed rigid laws against Chinese immigration. Twenty years ago, in spite of a treaty between this country and Japan, the Californians tried to keep out Japanese farmers an rid of
EDITORIAL PAGE
those who were already in California. At the Peace Conference following the World War President Wilson stood out against the recognition of Japanese as the equals of white people, voting to give them the rich lands of Shantung, with forty million population, rather than call them Mister.
A FARSIGHTED statesmanship, fearing the rise of the black race, might conciliate the yellow race with the object of using it as a buffer against the black race. But the white race, at least the Anglo-Saxon part of it, seems determined to isolate itself and make enemies of all other races. As a gradual but inevitable result, the darker races will come to feel that they have a common cause. With the white race lowering its birth rate and killing itself off in terrible wars, the rising tide of color will mount higher and higher.
Room for More
ACCORDING to Government statistics, more than 217,000 Negroes in the South own their own farms and more than 700,000 are farm tenants there are 254 Federally aided Negro agricultural schools, with an enrollment of more than 6,000 students. Dr. E. H. Shinn, the Government specialist in agricultural education, says that these schools are overcoming many of the problems in social adjustment in the South.
FARMING might also overcompete some of the problems arising from the tremendous Negro migration to the North. With the rapid development of manufacturing in the last thirty years and the consequent crowding of the white rural population into the large industrial center, the farming districts of the North have grown poorer and poorer in lack of labor. New England is full of abandoned farms and there are many of them in the State of New York.
THE NEGRO is still primarily a farmer. If many of the Negroes migrating from the farms of the South to the cities of the North could be diverted to the abandoned farms, New York and New England it would be a good thing for them and for the country. They would find work, which they are skilled and they would escape the fierce competition and high living expenses of the large northern cities. Here and there, New York State is found a Negro farmer who came from the South not hold of an old farm and work himself up to prosperity. There room for many more of them.
Dicted for Alabama Flogg
ACCORDING to Government statistics, more than 217,000 Negroes in the South own their own farms and more than 700,000 are farm tenants. There are 254 Federally aided Negro agricultural schools, with an enrollment of more than 6,000 students. Dr. E.H. Shinn, the Government specialist in agricultural education, says that these schools are overcoming many of the problems of racial adjustment in the South.
FARMING might also overcome some of the problems arising from the tremendous Negro migration to the North. With the rapid development of manufacturing in the last thirty years and the consequent crowding of the white rural population into the large industrial centers, the farming districts of the North have grown poorer and poorer for lack of labor. New England is full of abandoned farms and there are many of them in the State of New York.
THE NEGRO is still primarily a farmer. If many of the Negroes migrating from the farms of the South to the cities of the North could be diverted to the abandoned farms of New York and New England it would be a good thing for them and for the country. They would find work in which they are skilled and they would escape the fierce competition and high living expenses of the large Northern cities. Here and there in New York State is found a Negro farmer who came from the South, got hold of an old farm and worked himself up to prosperity. There is room for many more of them.
Indicted for Alabama Floggings
(From Thr World )
After laying itself open to the reproach of doing nothing to bring to justice those responsible for masked-gang floggings. Alabama is in a fair way to vindicate Itself. In Grenshaw county, where more than twenty-five such outrages were committed in less than two years, a Special Gurdy has returned 102 indictments against twenty-eight men in that county and eight others in Butler county. The indictments purported through the intimidation of public officials or other tacit confluence no longer holds good.
after laying itself open to the reproach of bring to bring to justice those responsible ked-gang floggings. Alabama is in a fair vindicate itself. In Grenshaw county, we than twenty-five such outrages were rated in less than two years, a Special Grant returned 102 indictments against twenty in that county and eight others In Butler crossposition of protection from pursuit through imidation of public officials or other tacit no longer holds good. Only after long and bitter agitation in the state has a conviction. Bane
Only after long and bitter agitation in the press was this action of the Grand Jury taken. Because of the circumstances the Ku Klux Klan was directly under suspicion, and in Alabama the Ku Klux Klan has been all-powerful in politics. At any rate, many months passed and nothing was done. When the Special Grand Jury had been sworn in, Judge A. E. Gamble denounced the rule of the "mask and the lash"; while assuming not to know whether the "outrages were committed with the sanction of the Ku Klux Klan," he called on the officers of the Klan to come to the aid of the officers of the law. Just what assistance, if any, they rendered does not appear, but one conspicuous leader, the Rev. L. A. Nails, Exalted Cyclops of the Georgian Klanver, promptly left home when the Grand Jury met and has not since been found. Other Klanmen of high rank are sharply rebuked by name in the Grand Jury's report.
New forces have been at work in Alabama; a changed spirit has been created under pressure of public opinion. In charge of the investigation, now so vigorously prosecuted, is Attorney Charles C. McCall, himself a Klanman. He promises that within two weeks the first case will be called. It looks at last as if Alabama were aroused to the fearless administration of justice in dealing with offenders of whatever class.
A True Reformer AN APPRAISAL OF NEVAL H. THOMAS
COLORFUL "MOVIES"
By THE CAMERAMAN
PRESTON NEWS SERVICE
A REFORMER is born, not made. Mankind is divided into two types of temperament — the conservative and the progressive, the reactionary and the radical. It is pathetic to see one trying to enact a role for which he is not adapted by nature. I know a number of persons who are conservative, cautious, even timid, but who assume the role of the agitator for reasons of profit or prudence. On the other hand, others of radical, restless spirit hold themselves in lamb-like submission, in order that thrift may follow meekness. But not so with Neval H. Thomas, the true reformer, whom the race is compelled to honor for his regular and recent accomplishments.
Washington is a city of conservatives. Here radicalism is not even respectable. The Government sets the conservative pace. The citizens follow. It makes little or no difference whether the Republican or Democratic administration is in power, the citizens shape their government. That of the people. Our local government has no politics, but are always administration organs. We are governed by three Commissioners, one of whom is supposed to be of opposite political faith to the dominant party. But one citizen in ten cannot tell the political differentiation. Everybody is either dependent upon the Government or at times finds himself in a political favor. Conformity is the price which all seekers after favors must pay.
The Negro contingent is in a plitable dependent position. The whole race is dependent in some form or other upon the crumbs of political favor. Negro politicians, whether in office or seeking it, live with the finger of silence permeated on their lips. Government functionaries are either too coward or too eager to give up their grievances. Noval H. Thomas lives in Washington. He succeeded Archibald H. Grimke as president of the local branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Mr. Grimke was independent and foot free; Mr. Thomas is dependent upon the powers that be; for his daily bread. And yet he lags no whit behind his emphatic predecessor in demanding equality for the black man. It "crossed. It requires indomitable table courage to do this.
The issue now uppermost with Washington Negroes is the question of segregation in the Government departments. This serpentine movement has been making headway since the days of President Harrison. At first it was all but imperceptible. It made bold headway under Woodrow Wilson, which momentum it has maintained under two subsequent Republican administrations. President Coulidge solemnly presides over the memorial by the fictitious Mormon Trettor that he would gradually put an end to the complaint. But he must have had a reservation of mind by which his words did not convey to us their ordinary significance and meaning. After more than a year we are wholly unable to see the effect of his effort. Indeed, the practice has become greatly emphasized.
Our conservative Negro popula-
"Drop-Kicks"
"And who is so poorly shod as the shemaker's wife."
THE lusty pigskin boys of Howard, University's football squad kicked against Mother Hubbard's training cupboard, and were forthwith dropped by Howard's courageous president and Board of Trustees, who still cling to the ancient but sensible idea that education—not football—should be the principal activity on Howard hilltop.
Upon being informed that the training table was to be abolished this year in favor of sensible economy and the stretching of funds for education, the football squad decided that a strike was the proper way of expressing their pouling minds and lack of collegiate grade.
Such a high-handed, farre could not, of course, be permitted by a struggling university which, through self-help and the aid of Congress, is availing to provide trained leadership for twelve million Negroes—that is to say, leadership in this pig iron world, not on the pigskin Krilltron—and the strikers were directed to put their football logs in cold storage in the basement for the time in classroom and laboratory. As we said above, Howard University is partly supported by Congressional appropriations, which are 'insufficient to meet all the
By KELLY MILLER
tion, when it wants any reform
accomplished, usually sits still
and lets "Neval do it." It was so
when we sought equalization of
public school provisions. Single-
handed and alone. Mr. Thomas
fought and secured the right of
Negro lawyers to be accommodated in the restaurant set aside for members of the bar. But after
he had secured the right from availing
themselves of the privilege for
which Mr. Thomas fought, fearing,
supposedly, that they might offend
the judges before whom
they would have to appear. The
DEAN KELLY MILLER.
same' Neval Thomas frustrated the attempt to segregate Negroes in the baseball park, the only unsegregated place of amusement in the District of Columbia. For years we have heard of segregation and rumors of segregation in the Government departments. Sundry ineffectual attempts have been made to educe the evil, but no substantial effect has been recorded. It was exceedingly difficult to get at the facts. The Jim-crow parties sidewash, evade and sometimes deny that segregation exists. They were intimidated by the imperative requirement of bread. J. (C. Napier resigned as Registrar of the Treasury rather than become a member to m-crowning his own race. But he did not make the nation ring with condemnation of the injustice of it.
It was Wilson's administration that boldly proposed the scheme to set aside a bureau to be offered from top to bottom by a Negro staff. This proffer was declined by the late Bishop Walters. And yet this process is taking place insidiously with less advantage than the Democratic regime proposed. Many Negro clerks, especially those who profit by being promoted to chiefstaff, approve this policy. About two years ago I induced the N. A. A. C. P. to send an investigator to inquire into discrimination in civil service appointments. The matter was frustrated because that was some time ago that this be yoked with investigation of the question of segregation. I insisted that the two issues were separate and could not well be handled by the same formula.
But at that time we found it very difficult to ascertain clear instances upon which to base action. But Novel Thomas has smoked out the facts. He has put courage into the face of deers' attacker. Department. who stated the situation to the secretary over their own signature.
needs of the universities. Further funds are obtained, of course, through tuition charges, athletics, and donations. But, in all, Howard's financial cupboard is none too full to supply its many needs. Unfortunately, at times many students are unable to supply their individual share of the actual cost of their university life and education; and not a few leave unpaid bills each year, which the college financial authorities have a delicate collection. Yet sympathy and mercy are freely extended in all cases, and the delinquent student is given every chance to cancel his worthy indeedness.
Upon those who remain, however, there is the patriotic duty to assist the University in every way possible; to keep alive the college spirit and to send down encouragement to those who are behind the Howard lines.
Just where this patriotism had concealed itself in this recent spectacle of the football strike it is difficult to know; but it is a blessing that the Howard authorities, without delay, brought to the mind of every student at Howard the fact that education—not football—is the main job at Howard. If other words, it football and strikes interfere with the regular curriculum, objectives in University, it was high time that those "pastimes" were given "the air." for which the majority of the twelve million Negroes whose future leadership is in the embryo
LETTERS
Not only this; but he ascertained that the number of examiners in the Pension Office has dwindled from twenty-five to five. This bears out my oft-repeated assertion that, under the present policy of the civil service machinery of the Government, the Negro clerk will soon pass away with the buffalo and the dodo. The question of segregation will then be solved by elimination. When Mr. Thomas confronted the secretary with these facts of segregation in his department he at first indignantly denied it. He has obviously been deceived by his advisers, aided and abetted, no doubt, by certain adaptable eminent men. But, under a further investigation, the secretary admitted the situation and undul the iniquity of his own doing and returned the situation to its previous status. This is the first effective step that has been taken in fifteen years to halt or check segregation in the Government departments.
Now that Mr. Thomas has indicated the way, the matter is squarely up to the race to urge the President to redeem his promise and wipe out the infinity altogether. This is more than a local victory. It is national and racewide. The national Government should set the pace. There should be no discrimination whatsoever at the part of the Southern Government. There is not even the excuse of numbers which the Southern States allege. It is a cheer surrender of the democratic principle at the behest of race prejudice. I have often said that Neval Thomas is doing the essential work of the central office of the N. A. A. C. P. Instead of dealing with sundry instances of discrimination, which occur at widely scattered places, it would be better to get at the heart of the matter by issuing a warning center here in Washington. If we can keep the fountainhead pure, the streams which flow from it will be pure also.
Here in Washington we have all of the forms of race discrimination which obtain in Mississippi, with the exception of the Jim-crow cars and anti-miscegregation laws. But separate coaches roll into the District of Columbia from the State of Virginia.
Residential segregation by tricky contrivance was first legalized by Federal courts of this jurisdiction. Separate schools have become so adjusted to the acceptance of both races that they no longer furnish a subject for discussion. True, anti-miscegregation laws are not on the statute books, but bills are pending in Congress housing the ten colleges in the city jointly controlled by Jim-crow municipal links. In places of amusement the races are as separate as in Georgia. Restaurants, barber shops and hotels are operated for whites only.
Judgment should begin at the House of God. Neval Thomas is trying to precipitate that judgment. Some say that he is rash and too heement. But we must judge a hero by his success. If I by Belzebuh cast out devils, by whom do you cast them out? Let those who criticise Mr. Thomas's methods compare their results with his. Neval Thomas is no doctrinaire reformer; he is no parlor preacher of abstract right; he does not conceive of the poor attitude of his culture and refinement to pity the poor and desplised, from whom he feels himself removed by an impassable distance. He is no pinkte agitator; but, like every true reformer, he takes the risks, the hardships and the perils which every genuine reform demands.
stage at Howard will be fervently grateful.
Citizens' Union of New York
THE Citizens' Union of New York City, a powerful civic organization, which asserts that it places no price upon race, religion, or party, has just proved itself true to this creed by endorsing six Socialists, six Republicans, and four Democrats for public service on the Board of Aldermen for the coming term.
Nor was the Citizens' Union's interracial promise ignored; for its committee unanimously endorsed, in the Twenty-first district, our own race candidates, John C. Hawkins, Republican, prominent attorney and counsel for the U.S. Shipping Board, and Henry W. Shields, Democrat, who has served his district creditably in the State Legislature.
Of Mr. Hawkins, the Citizens' Union said: "He is endorsed for the office on the creditable record he made as a member of the State Legislature;" and of Mr. Shields, the Union said: "He is qualified by experience." He is recognized that the two-party political system, as set up in America, is the best means of carrying out the wishes of the people, yet it is both safe and sane, particularly in a great cosmopolitan city like New York, to have an influential group of politically-neutral citizens, familiar with the municipality's governmental and administrative needs and watchful of the officials to be charged with their consummation, to designate efficient men, roarheads and leaders, to vote the ballot, the people may delegate the performance of acts of good government for all the people all the time.
"Portraits in Color," by Mary White Owington
The Viking Press, in this city, has published "Portraits in Color," by Miss Mary White Owington, chairman of the board of directors of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The book, which is composed of a series of intimate studies of colored men and women of distinction, will all personally known to Miss Owington, is dedicated to Moorfield Storey, president of the N. A. A. C. P.
In her introduction to the book Miss Owington says: "Thirty years ago it might have been possible to choose the twenty Negroes who could properly be called the most distinguishedressed women of today to one can make such a choice. The colored men and women who have done important
"PORGY," by Dorothy and Du Bose Heyward. Presented by the Theatre Guild. Directed by Rouben Mamoullan. Settings by Cleon Throckmorton. At the Guild Theatre.
THE CAST.
Maria ..... Georgette Harvey
Jake ..... Wesley Hill
Lilly ..... Dorothy Paul
Mingo ..... R. J. Huey
Annie ..... Ella Madison
Sporting Life ..... Percy Verwayne
Serena ..... Rose McLendon
Robbins ..... Lloyd Gray
Jim ..... Peter Clark
Clara ..... Marie Young
Peter ..... Hayes Pryor
Porgy ..... Frank Wilson
Crown ..... Jack Carter
Crown's Bess ..... Evelyn Ellis
A Detective ..... Stanley De Wolfe
Two Policemen,
Hugh Rennle and Maurice McRae
Undertaker ..... Leigh Whipper
Sciplo ..... Melville Green
Simon Frazier ..... A. B. Comathier
Nelson ..... G. Edward Brown
Alan Archdale ..... Edward Felding
The Coroner ..... Garrett Minturn
A vivid picture of life as it is lived in Catfish Row, Charleston, S. C., is presented at the Guild Theatre in the dramatization of Du Bose Heyward's widely discussed novel, "Porgy." The joys and sorrows of these simple folk are portrayed in a gripping manner.
"Porgy" is a crippled beggar who unwittingly falls in love with Bess, Jebebel of Catfish Row and sweetheart of Crown, a young fugitive murderer. There is a continuous conflict with Porgy, Crown and a sleek dope pedler known as Sporting Life, struggling kills Crown and during his short absence from Catfish Row the vendor of "happy dust" takes Bess to New York, where she becomes again an unhappy victim of dope. The curtain falls upon Porgy, having heard of Bess' departure, heading North in his little goat cart in pursuit of her.
The settings are admirable, several scenes being almost unforgettable. Possibly the most outstanding one is that in which Crown returns in a raging storm to regain his erstwhile mistress. While the Catfishers pray and moan in terror at the storm, that bold heaven assassin laughs and defies Heaven to destroy him. The contrast affords a thrilling moment to the spectators. The wake for the murdered Steve Robbins is also impressive. Some fine sinking of old-time spirituals is heard.
Frank Wilson portrays the character of Porgy ably and with sincerity. This somewhat reticent role forces him out of the picture and at times he is engulfed in the mass. Rose McClendon does well with the characterization of Serenna, Catfish Row's lone discipline of Christianity as taught by the white race. The work of Jack Carter as Crown and Evelyn Ellis as Beas is commendable. Georgette Harvey is entertaining as Marle, keeper of the cookshop, Leigh Whipner as undertaker and later as the crankman, and A. B. Conatham as Lawyer Frozier afforded the few amusing moments of the play.—W. G. N.
The New Newgro Art Theatre, located in the West 135th Street Branch Public Library, is opening its first bill at the theatre on Monday night, October 24, at 8:30, and will repeat it on October 31 and November 7.
The first presentation will be a lyric program, including an epic pantomime, "Congo," by Vachel Lindsay, and "He Said and She Said," a one-act comedy, by Alice Gerstenberg. On Monday and Thursday afternoons a school of acting, connected with the theatre, is offering a complete course in the theatre including the following: acting and interpretation, direction, dramatic literature, pantomime, dance composition, playwriting, scenic and costume design and stage lighting.
Those those appearing on the first bill are: Ardelle Dabney, Josephine I. Heinemann, Jeroline H. Winfield, Mace Lee, Victoria Moore, Marion Lee, Don Bryan Sybll Bryan Poston, Robert J. Douglas, Albert W. Patrick, James E. Trottman, Clarence Desdunes, and W. E. Williams. Hugo Bornn will be at the piano.
The children's Saturday afternoon theatre, which is affiliated with the theatre, will open on Saturday, Oct. 29, at 2:30 p.m. with a one act play, "The Princess and the Prince," and children, by Jeroline H. Winfield. Hensley-Winfield, director of the group, received his academic
work are too many in number.
I have therefore chosen my portraits with the idea of covering a wide range of achievement.
... It has been possible to present only one or two examples in each profession. I have written of no one whom I have not met and seen at work. The portraits are drawn from life."
The persons written about; characterized in the index, are as follows:
James Weldon Johnson, Marcus Garvey, Max Yergan, Mordecal W. Johnson, Lucy Lanyen, Robert Russa Moton, W. E. Burgard hardt Du Bols, Scipio Arican Jones, Walter White, Robert Abbott, Maggie Lena Walker, Geneine Kinnicle Wright, Ernest Everett Just, George Washington Carver, Janie Porter Barrett, Langston Hughes, Paul Robeson, Meta Vaux Warrior Fuller and Roland Haves.
Picked Cotton Nearly One Hundred Years
(Preston News Service)
SHELBY, N. C., Oct. 17.—Few people like to work at any single task for a day or week. When you do anything for three-quarters of a century with a few years thrown in for good measure, you should become an adept for turning out that particular work.
Mrs. Caroline Arnold, aged 102 years, has been picking cotton each season well over three-quarters of a century and at her advanced age she can still hold her own with most of the work.
Last Thursday Mrs. Arnold, the aged worker, picked 145 pounds of cotton in one day. Just how long she has been picking cotton the time-worn woman does not know. She started many, many years ago as a cotton picker on an old southern plantation when a child. One guess is that she might have been five years old when she started as it was the custom in slavery days to start the slave children picking cotton as soon as they were big enough to toddle. If she started as was the custom she has been picking cotton for 97 years, just three shy of a century.
Albon L. Holsey
Writes on Business
One of the clearest and most illuminating expositions of the present status and problems of Negro business in the United States is contained in an article entitled "Negro Business: Its Real will Ahead," by Albion Lholsey, senior of the National Negro Business League, which appears in the November number of The Messenger.
Mr. Holsey contends that the real test for Negro business is in the retail field, and that "in order to successfully enter this field the race must divert some of its better trained young men and women to the retail field and finance the enterprises with the surplus capital of Negro banks, insurance companies and fraternal organizations."
Homely Philosophy
BY GEORGIA, DOUGLAS
JOHNSON
Get a Little Joy
GET a little joy out of life. Don't sit in the corner and dig in the ashes, nor turn your face to the wall with a sigh. Make laughter. Turn your tears into smiles. It's hard at first, but it pays and pays in the end. Old friends are drawn nearer and new ones made. The whole world is seeking the sunshine. Make it. Get a little joy from life.
MUSIC
Ernest Hemby, tenor. leaves the city next week for a recital tour of the South. He is a pupil of Prof. Caska Bond.
71. Sixty-eight towns and twenty three settlements.
8. She was the first woman in the United States to attain literary distinction.
9. It was the name of the ancient Ethiopian Goda.
10. The Chicago American Giants.
education at Andover, Mass. He is a product of the Ethiopian Art Theatre School and the Theatre Guild School of Acting. At present he is connected with the Kirkwood's Triangle Theatre and the Children's Saturday Morning Theatre at the Princess Theatre on West Thirty-ninth street. There he has trained in teaching of the Tree Major, he has interested in developing a children's theatre. The second bill of plays is scheduled to open on Monday, November 14.