Amsterdam News
Wednesday, March 13, 1929
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
Sanatorium Is Ready for Formal Opening
POLICE LIEUTENANT FIRED
REGULAR WEEKLY EDITION Complete in Two Sections
50-BED INSTITUTION OF DR. U. C. VINCENT OPEN FOR INSPECTION
Institution Also Houses Newest in Dentistry and Pharmacy Advisory Board of Citizens to Co-operate
Formal opening of the Vincent Sanatorium, 2348 Seventh avenue, will take place Sunday when the fifty-bed private institution founded by Dr. U. Conrad Vincent throws open its doors to the public. Announcement of the advisory board was made yesterday.
Public inspection is scheduled Sunday from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. The medical, pharmaceutical and dental professions will inspect the institution Monday. Special guests will include medical members of the advisory board, county and State health officials, and officers of medical societies.
The general public is invited to inspect the hospital during the period beginning Tuesday and ending Saturday, March 27. The hours life from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
Head Nurse Named
Mrs. Ruby Buster Burke, formerly assistant head nurse of the Harlem Hospital operating room, will be head nurse at the sanatorium. Miss Sadie Styner, Dr. Vincent's private office nurse, will continue to serve in that capacity. V. H. Tulane, Dr. Vincent's father-in-law and Tuskegee trustee, is superintendent.
Advisory Board
Wilhelm H. Austin, attorney; B. Robert W. Bapell, attorney; branches, N. A. A. C. C.; Harry Bemston, attorney; Walter C. Clamp, M. D. Zaragoza, married B. J. Street Hospital; John R. Dressman, president Prudential Bank, Washington, D. C.; Edmond P. Holley, department of Finance, City of New York; Plederick C. Holley, professor of Geology, New York University; Susan Johnson, immigration
(Continued on Page 2.)
Anna Cooper Johnson, D.D.S. whose luxurious dental suite occupies the ground floor front at Vincent's Sanatorium.
This Week's News Index
Page
Education ..... 16
Social Articles ..... 16
General Local and National
News ..... 1 to 2
News of Society and Women's
Athletics ..... 4, 5
News of the Churches and Fraternities, Gaths ..... 11
Amusements and Sports..... 6, 7, 8
News of Brooklyn and Long Island ..... 10
ADVERTISING INDEX.
Classified ..... 12, 13, 14
Financial ..... 15
Real Estate ..... 15
Utilities ..... 11
U. Conrad Vincent who occupies a 4-room suite as his private office in the 50-bed sanitarium he founded.
TEACHER DANCES WAY
BEFORE SCHOOL BOARD
BELLAIRE, O., March 11.—Charged with teaching her pupils to execute the Charleston instead of their three Rs. Ruth Timmons, 19, has been ordered to face the school board.
Chelsea Bank to Change Quarters
Will Open More Modern Offices on Southwest Corner July First
Having outgrown its present quarters, the Harlem branch of the Chelsea Exchange Bank, 2301 Seventh avenue, at 135th street, is busy with plans for moving from the northeast to the southwest corner of Seventh avenue and 135th street. The new location, which will take in five stores at the corner of Seventh avenue and West 135th street, will be ready for occupancy about July 1.
The new bank will be modern in every detail and will cost approximately $60,000. Architects are now drawing up the plans, said Charles G. Rapp, vice-president, in an interview Monday. "Much more space is needed to serve our 20,000 depositors, especially in the special interest department, where we plan to have four windows," he said.
"We have been at our present location for seventeen years and have taken a twenty-one-year lease on the new location, which will occupy 2,400 square feet on the ground floor and 1,600 square feet in the basement. The latest type of safety deposit vaults will be installed in the basement and office space on the ground floor will be greatly enlarged. The leases of the present occupants on our new location expires March 31.
"An outstanding feature of special interest to our patrons at the new bank will be the unit system whereby much time will be saved by having deposits and withdrawals made at the same window."
THE NEW YORK Amsterdam News
THE BAR
VINCENT'S SANATORIUM, a monument to the indefatigable labors of the founder, Dr. U. Conrad Vincent, which is to have its formal opening the week beginning Sunday, March 17.
Amsterdam News Sponsors Civic Campaign of Unusual Importance
Industrial, Commercial and Professional Merits of Community to Be Special Topic in Newspaper for Seven Weeks
The greatest civic publicity campaign ever conducted in the best interests of Harlem will be launched within a few weeks by The Amsterdam News under the slogan of "Harlem Firms You Should Know." As a community is best known and respected by its business institutions, the campaign will include a booster feature setting forth the merits of Harlem as an industrial, business and professional center.
The campaign will be conducted for a full period of seven weeks.
At the least two full pages will be devoted to setting forth the merits and advantages of Harlem's most reliable business and professional institutions, and many columns of editorials will be written elaborating upon the service, value and prestige that these institutions render to the community.
The ideal underlying the campaign will be to show industrial leaders outside of Harlem the unused advantages of making this community an important center of their business activity, thus increasing in a manner profitable to them the general prosperity and welfare of Harlem.
Appomattox Club Endorses Johnson
Conference Held at Association of Trade and Commerce
Former Assemblyman Edward A Johnson was endorsed for the Republican nomination for Congress to fill
MAN AND WOMAN
CHARGED WITH BIGAMY
Charged with knowingly committing bigamy, Julius Hoffman, 37, 2 East 130th street, and Vivian Williams, 22, 118 West 127th street, were arraigned Thursday before Magistrate Farrell in Harlem Court and held in $1,500 bail each for a further hearing.
According to Detectives Graham and Kammerrer of West 133d street station, who arrested the couple, Hoffman married the Williams woman on July 2 last. The woman, according to the police, was married to Arthur Smith, whom she married on March 4, 1923, in Brooklyn.
Former Assemblyman Edward A Johnson was endorsed for the Republican nomination for Congress to fill the vacancy in the Twenty-first Congressional district created through the death of Royal O. Weller, in a conference of Harlem Republicans held on Friday in the Association of Trade and Commerce. The conference, which was sponsored by the Appomattox Republican Club, considered a number of individuals, and following extended discussion Johnson emerged as the unanimous choice. Under the law the governor may within thirty days, call a special election to fill the vacancy, such action, however, being discretionary with the chief executive, who, if he so elects, may refrain from calling a special election and permit the vacancy to be filled at the next gen-
(Continued on Page 2.)
YOUNG MOTHER ACCUSED HIM OF ATTEMPTED RAPE
Man Who Espoused Tammany's Cause Here for Half Century Succumbs at 80 in Sanatorium "Chief" Is Paid Tribute
Tammany Hall paid tribute Monday night to Edward E. Lee, founder of the United Colored Democracy, when funeral services were held for the aged politician at St. James' Presbyterian Church, 141st street and St. Nicholas avenue.
The old political chiefleft, known as the associate of the past rulers of the Democrats' local wigwam, died Friday night at Wiley Wilson Sancterium, 200 Wiley 138th street, following a confinement of nearly six weeks.
The funeral was preached by the Rev. William Lloyd Imes, pastor of St. James'. The Southern League and Monarch Lodge, I. B. P. O. Elks, sent representatives to the services. A message of condolence from Mayor James J. Walker was read.
"Chief" Lee, as he was familiarly known to thousands in his heyday, was born in Fairfax County, Virginia, eighty years ago. He came to New York while a young man and almost immediately espoused the cause of Tammany.
He organized United Colored Democracy more than a generation ago and served the Democratic party for a half-century. For a number of years he served as inspector in the city Department of Public Works.
Lafayette Ushers Accused of Assault
Charged with assaulting a patron of the Lafayette Theatre, 2227 Seventh avenue, where they are employed as ushers, Bernie Denver, 21, 137 West 131st street, and Frank Holland, 26, 139 West 131st street, were arraigned before Magistrate Well in Heights Court last Wednesday and held in $1,000 ball each for Special Sessions on charges of assault in the third degree.
The complainant was Eugene' Wallace, 131 West 100th street, who told the court that on the night of February 22 the two ushers assaulted him when he moved down the alley to get an orchestra seat in company with a lady friend, and that he was thrown violently out into the lobby and his friend thrown on top of him. The excitement nearly caused a panic in the closely crowded theatre.
The late Robert N. Wood succeeded him as head of the Democratic organization in 1909 and Ferdinand Q. Morton. Civil Service Commissioner, took the reins in 1915. Mr. Morton and "Chief" Lee were friends and the, Commissioner took his place with the mourners Monday night.
Interment was made yesterday morning at Woodlawn Cemetery, under direction of Duncan Brothers' funeral establishment, 2303 Seventh avenue.
Mr. Lee left no close relatives, his wife having died here a few years ago. He lived at 294 West 137th street with friends before being taken to the hospital.
Aged Real Estate Man Would Plead Own Case
Answering for tril Monday on charges of practicing medicine without a license. John Sydney de Bourg, 75-year-old real estate salesman. 50 West 120th street, told the court of Special Sessions that he would plead his own case. The Attorney General's office was not ready for prosecution, however, and the trial was set for April 1.
The aged man was arrested Jan. 29 by Officer John E. Roberts of the Sixteenth precinct. The policeman charged that he was examined by Mr. de Bourg at his office and given a bottle of colored liquid upon payment of $2.
The real estate man entered a plea of not guilty. Another real estate man, Ralphael Gonzales, 32. 1267 Fifth avenue is awaiting trial on charges of practicing dentistry on March 25. J. Ackman Holland, 2335 Seventh avenue, chiropractor, will again face Special Sessions on April 5 on charges of violating the medical practice law.
Lafayette Ushers Accused of Assault
Charged with assaulting a patron of the Lafayette Theatre, 2227 Seventh avenue, where they are employed as ushers, Bernie Beaver, 21.17 West 131st street, and Frank Holland, 26.19 West 131st street, were arraigned before Magistrate Well in Helps Court last Wednesday and held in $1,000 bail each for Special Sessions on charges of assault in the third degree.
The complainant was Eugene' Wallace, 131 West 100th street, who told the court that on the night of February 22 the two ushers assaulted him when he moved down the alley to get an orchestra seat in company with a friend, and that he was thrown violently out into the lobby and his friend thrown on top of him. The excitement nearly caused a panic in the closely crowded theatre.
Believed That Oscar Permitted to Take
Chicago Congressman, Ho Contested When H Extra
Believed That Oscar De Priest Will Be Permitted to Take His Seat April 15
Chicago Congressman, However, May Have His Seat Contested When House Organizes for Extra Session
By LOUIS R. LAUTIER
WASHINGTON, March 19
ponent contesting the seat of C
elect from the First congress
the certificate of election, it is
that he will be permitted to take
of the seventy-first Congress co
WASHINGTON, March 11.—hasmuch as there is no opponent contesting the seat of Oscar De Priest. Representative-elect from the First congressional district of Illinois, and he has the certificate of election, it is believed in congressional circles that he will be permitted to take his seat when the extra session of the seventy-first Congress convenes April 15.
Mr. De Priest, it has been learned, has been placed on the payroll. William Tyler Page, the clerk of the House, issued a certificate to the sergeant-at-arms authorizing him to place the name of Mr. De Priest on the payroll. Mr. Page based his action on the fact that Mr. De Priest possesses a certificate of election properly signed.
It is not unlikely, however, that objections will be offered to the swearing in of Mr. De Priest when the House meets to organize. When the clerk calls the list of members-elect by States to take the oath, it is expected that objection will be raised to his being sworn in.
After the House has been organized, a resolution will probably be offered that the question of his right to be sworn in as well as of his final right to a seat be referred either to the judiciary committee or a special committee. It is predicted that the part of the resolution dealing with his right to be sworn in will be defeated. The vote on that part regarding his right to a seat in the House may be determined by the outcome of his trial in Chicago on charges of graft in connection with a primary election there.
The precedent of denying the cath to a member-elect was established by the House in the case of Brigham H. Roberts, a polygamist, of Utah, in the Fifty-sixth Congress. It was followed in the case of Victor L. Berger in the Sixty-ninth Congress. It is these precedents that members who will oppose the swearing in and the seating of Mr. De Priest will seek to have the House follow in his case.
EXTRA REGULAR WEEKLY EDITION
Invited Into Captain's Private Room When She Went to Station House to Complain About
Dismissal from the police force on Fridav was the penalty meted out to Lieutenant Francis A. (Frank) Dugan, white, on desk duty at the Communipaw avenue station, Jersey City, who was found guilty of "conduct unbecoming an officer" in connection with an alleged attempted assault upon Mrs. Doris Geter, 24, 20 Ege avenue, who is the mother of two children and is about to bear another. Dugan is 39 and has a wife and two young children at 146 Randolph avenue.
Girl, 17, Guilty In Death of Boy
Mrs. Geter testified that Dugan attempted to assault her on the morning of December 28, last when she disliked the station house for the purpose of getting a policeman to "scare" her and murdered four passengers. She said had struck her during a quarrel at their home.
The alleged disgraceful conduct
Sylvia Williams to Get Sentence Tomorrow; Changed Plea
A 17-year-old little girl will stand tomorrow before the bar in General Sessions and receive sentence for the fatal stabbing of a youth of her own age December 25. The girl is Sylvia Williams, 62 West 131st street, and the slain lad is Major James Clemens, 202 West 130th street.
The reason for the girl's action when she plunged the knife in the breast of the youth will probably never be known as she failed to give any testimony in the Homicide or Criminal Court. She entered her plea to second degree manslaughter Thursday before Judge Charles C. Nott.
According to evidence of witnesses the girl called Clemens from a restaurant at 388 Lenox avenue on the fatal night. When he stepped to the street the girl buried the knife in his breast without warning. The youth struggled, but Miss Williams stabbed him several times.
Mr De Priest Will Be
take His Seat April 15
However, May Have His Seat
House Organizes for
Session
R. LAUTIER
—Inasmuch as there is no opp-
roscar De Priest, Representative-
nal district of Illinois, and he has
believed in congressional circles
he his seat when the extra session
unvenes April 15.
right to a seat be referred either to the judiciary committee or a special committee. It is predicted that the part of the resolution dealing with his right to be sworn in will be defeated. The vote on that part regarding his right to a seat in the House may be determined by the outcome of his trial in Chicago on charges of graft in connection with a primary election there.
The precedent of denying the cath to a member-elect was established by the House in the case of Brigham H. Roberts, a polygamist, of Utah, in the Fifty-sixth Congress. It was followed in the case of Victor L. Berger in the Sixty-ninth Congress. It is these precedents that members who will oppose the swearing in and the reating of Mr. De Priest will seek to have the House follow in his case.
WHEREVER Possible Trade With Stores in Harlem That Do Not Practice Discrimination in the Selection of Their Employees.
Mrs. Geter testified that Dugan attempted to assault her on the morning of December 28, last when she visited the station house for the purpose of getting a policeman to "scare" her and displease the passengers she said had struck her during a quarrel at their home.
The alleged disgraceful conduct took place in the private office of Captain Edward O'Connor during his absence.
"Station House Scandal"
The Jersey City Journal referred to the incident as "the station house scandal," which created a sensation in police circles when Dr. Francis L. Golden, white, a columnist on the Journal, first reported in his column the startling details of the affair and called upon Walter F. White of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to investigate this case instead of giving so much attention to the Negro's plight in the South. Dr. Golden is known as "F. L. G." and lives at 22 Emory street.
John J. Beggans, white, commissioner of public safety, began an investigation on the strength of the columnist's report. Having full power of judge and jury, the trial was held before Commissioner Beggans Friday, at which time Dugan was defended by former Judge Mark A. Sullivan, Assistant Corporation Counsel Frank Reardon, white, prosecuted the case for Jersey City. Judge Sullivan announced that he will appeal the adverse decision of Commissioner Beggans and ask the State Civil Service Commission to consider the case. The Patrolmen's Benevolent Association is expected to help Dugan, who is a member, fight the decision.
Criminal Action Due
It is reported that Prosecutor John Drever will take immediate action against Dugan on a charge of attempted assault, basing his case upon the findings of Commissioner Begans. Assistant Prosecutor Irving Eisenberg, who was present throughout the trial, will report the case to his office, it is said.
Captain O'Connor was given hearing on a charge of "neglect of duty," and was exonerated of all blame in connection with Mrs. Geter's accusation, to which she and her husband swore affidavits.
Commissioner Begans said, "Our police stations should be safe at all times, no matter what race, color or creed enters them."
Prosecutor Reardon declared, "We are going to push this case to the limit. Let the clap fall where they may."
Mrs. Getter's Story
Commissioner Beggans is reported to have criticized P. L. G. for his report of the case in his column and invited him to be present at a hearing of the case last Tuesday night. Dr. Golden was out of the city. James Burkitt, white, president of the Non-Partisan League, had investigated the case and planned to air the scandal before the City Commission.
An investigation was also made by Walter Carter, 24 Ege avenue, and Charles P. Simns, 118 Clarencemont avenue, who appealed to Prosecutor Drewen to probe the affair.
The hearing Tuesday began at 8 p. m. behind closed doors in the presence of the Commissioner, Mr. and Mrs. Geter, Chief of Police Richard T. Battersby, Lieut. William V. Mc-
(Continued on Page 2.)
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929 “
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garrre | | |S oemecgee 8 ena Ghat ther esc : e en men who put Borno in
Cee | || | |e ers sie os ey arrived at the Fourtl Capt, Marshall, declared. ‘Th
a een || | See ee (Continued from Page 19 | precios and Geter hely interrogated Capt. Marshall Ad feats of Haitian condition
Disfranchisement in South, Elimination of Negro From PRE Ee |} oe mien ERSGe|| | Laughlin, the Commissioner's seere-| Dugan, the latter denied making im-|GApt. Marshal dresses tainea in a special investigat
7 || foe || SRI 2 RAT | Wes aD" athe ery: that the Geters| MOper advances to his wife, - Mass Meeting—To Peti« | ort. was suppressed.
Party Councils and Discrimination in | | Gite ne a | [oR SY) ltcia neze ‘was the same as that to" have a good mind to punch you ‘i ‘The Rev. Mr. Miller declare
i SoAu ce Sip a BG) | when they testined “Friday "when | i the nose!” Geter selled at Dugan. tion Hoover President Woodrow Wilson's
Government Cited - Po Saas Ep ENG ge SE 2] | Dugan was dismissed, Dugan was | “If you were not 2 Lieutenant but an — “Make the World Safe for 1
| | eee ae ae | | Ngee ages] | suspended o week ago. ordinary man like Tam I would hit} sen qaitt falls, it will be not{T#” 8Nd _“self-determinatio
—_——__ | ESS Sree || |e, OS A] | Mrs. Geter said she went to the |sou right here in the station house.”| qq When Haiti falls, it, will be mot sma nations” during the war
‘ eo ae ee So 57) ASMA |communipaw avenue station, the)” «rock him "i A a 4
WASHINGTON. Mareh’ 11. Protection against wniair Bee © =e REL. cee Reeeaete| | Fourth precinct, on the morning in up for being a disorder- | tion that has won independence and ; “beautiful le,
ASIINGTON, March’ tr. — Protection against were | | gs: aac 2|.| | Fats Qo Need! | Guestion twhich she designated at|}¥ person,” called out Lieutenant jrespect by the sword, but every other A committee of | twenty ts
treatment and the granting of equal opportunity were asked for [iS Ae 2] | eget, Seg | (Some time between. Chrisimes and Prank Mechan, who was there to re-/ Pack nation will {ali with het.” formed to secure 20,000 signat
the Negro of President Herbert Hoover shortly before his in- Go ecm | | | a | | new years”) about 7 o'clock’ and eve Dugan at the desk. Geter, who |, 82, declared Capt, Napoleon B.| 2 petition to be submitted to
auguration by John Kk, Hawkins, financier, who directed Re- epee | | io Sees ah) | made her complaint against her Hus-| arco testified at the trial, sald there | M@rshall, who spent six years in, dent Hoover, asking the cessa
ublican campaign work among colored voters, it became known }- CS sere S| | |S Seem Meee] |vand to Dugan. When she said she a ie trial, said there | Heit, ata mass meeting demanding | military occupation of Haiti,
Feces here thesanemorantl he BRmdene was Sen epee | || OS] | oniy wanted to soare him, Dugan told | Were @ “whole lot of cops” there at | the withdrawal of U. 6. Marines from | ______
last week when the memorandum to the President was made RES iE MEN || alr ecole) | ho that he could give her no assist-| the time. He said he consented to’be ,that republic, at St. James’ Prcst]-| —_———__—
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. AMADAMAGEORGIA syRLIPCO, ee ao
Monttomery. Albena es
ee
Two
public.
Mr, Hawkins declared that equa
opportunity under the Government
has not been accorded to all group:
of American citizens. He cited dis-
franchisement, elimination of the Ne-
gro from the counelis of the Republi
fan party. discrimination in the elvl
service and segregation in the Gov-
ernment departments as examples of
the denial of equal opportunlty” to
the Negro.
‘The full text of the memorandum
of Mr. Hawkins to President Hoover
follows:
“Pie we apnranels thn time seen Sen
are to tate tath ae Tresident ot the
‘fined Statee nnd agstnne conte se
The exsentive hud af age tsevertt=
tenth eatunes Fexiet the felis tt
atin une tn insnenpee for ne bo rhe
Fit to you a meworarahun of eres
Tikal things ta wwhiie T hope Pea Hl
sive sone eutsideratta
“Spence avast Inmate seesene
tative of tio colored peuple. Anier=
Sean hike fe age tome tha for
the food sears peare nealing. hs =
Ienvtetea titewn ‘as timeouts be
Morden your. speach 0€ aserpaae
Teclaring that espn) nt apnortenct
ie the tight af uvers) Anorexic
fr Ywmor, Toren or aiivectorm. ites
Sheetive oe faith wr volurs enter:
Cees propreetive mid libre! thou
font auvion imee thee aale. eat tee
fev ehetiee: ee: vemtiats” tenet
Coportimity, wheter ales hii oen
the door e€ wynorrunitye Ve ties in
tot, thse ‘are tate In hele prevaiee,
No watier ‘swhae sheie mime Hage te:
Homminy of eyobortauiy. hea fandae
Inental qlee inthe tert of uur
Governments
A inne Mol to sas our Goverment
has tnat liver ‘yp to this. ter, reise
the jrinciie ne equal opportunity has
hot hon aed to all eitizate alle
‘The Colored elthaene ne Ainerien ays
Salferot. nud, ices att witbetos bee
Sate of the failtre wn the part of OWE
Sowernrnt_ tw apply this. primelpe.
Farhe sectie. lot We vite eases,
“:Alhong. tho’ Guanamental Fisiss ant
_ privileges of repute foo et
trnnient be that of lective. franchise,
Kua set O€ ponte winy ave denied hn
rivilege ‘of exprelshig thie tight wih
Ino wemneeet erie in nosing. vo
shut etvie atdiee inthe’ comntuntt.
Phe oF nation of which they are a
ints
“Fit she oolored citizens have Veen
‘iscriminated against and. dened. ths
gis in ecerinity nections of oie cote
ire ean'e he denied? and ie is cone
Henig ened aunt “expected thse
tater sour aulninintention tiny door 02
feaual eppartuniis that han been AM
Sgninmt tn, wil ho epened to all ite
zine soho ea qualify under fait, =
actin’ teat
“ye asithie for this privitere, the
culored citizens a not want any spe |
Sint evusileration, ae a favors They
tue ig vont te he conaidiere ne wae
or ‘Shlects of charity ai. sinpatly.
AN we Wart aud jak for ig {hat We be |
iirumga the sume privileges, prowectel
iis" the sane Inaee sit elven A sndnee
Uo rtaipate. fe the ‘fates: of “unr
Gwwenment. inher the sain Gest 2
Anplied to wth eitinns,
“mie our syntem cf powermt
the vesponettity a shaping phaeforsne |
teint nesting eivie polices by asst
is. seria politieal parties to hoe
principles the voters subserihe, We |
etiace parts alignment, sini ax |
File the Nragroes have altgned.uieae
solves wilh the Htepubiean yarty bes |
aure of their fait and ttlet in the
Nedrve princinien set. forth In the
Bintiorm ‘we that parts, We "hava
Tones faith nant loyal in, oUF super
Ahimsa fort Heat the heir bed a
aliaful tow Ang ateenpt to elleie
hate Neatots trom tie parts tolls
tree stony thet the priehiegee Ut pare
Uedpation i sil that pertain 40. he
Hitigad setith weil lower. thy stale
fed of the high lent procaine he
Tiecolu nd. Hourevele tint veattiraed
dy sou an sur standard bearer
“siya revublic tke oar n prewisns
shioult” Yo laced “on efficiency ai
althfutnean'to wntss Ths tw now the
(he ttl tm this tule of principle
Is. istored in many “waxey When ie
onnen 10. colored persone serving ti
the "saroue governmental eparte
nents. ‘They are subjected to Innit
ing” emditions. “atu ivechminntten
ad often denied the henette nt pes
Inotion in ‘tine of “efficient. service,
‘They have heen entusndaeegonea|
to “works even after pagvhne tha tes |
‘itced chet servis examinations ere
tied to att went up for apgwiniunent_|
Ysith the hishert rattnas om te lie
Tint
have been notifled of appointments
aint on writin of telegraphic orders
have cone fo Washington ami report.
eat for duty at ae given salary waned
fant on appearing at the destenated
Anpartinent or. bureau tnve Ween
Timed away sith the Mimsy exense
that ‘some, inistake has been made
somewhere!
“The aethad of requiving one to
state the rive dently ad submit 2
phatogeapa with the anpllentien for
Ciel service examinations las been
Abused aud fe often a bar to equal
eyporumity for the votored applicant.
Jt ouxhe 19 be enouzh for ony to. tas
dicate ag. to his or Rer natioua:tty.
So certify that one is an American
cltizen onghe to mean more thin to
Wwe chissitled ag a member of a cere
taln race or color or greed. Any other
conrss Is un-American,
“in severat of our Government tee
partnents there are regulations and
jsetices enforced seainst colored em-
Hiesers that subject thent to ieonve=
Juetors and fdhenities purely because
Gf tele racial wenthty.. These condl-
Tous ean be sind should he remediod,
taut T sincerely hope sumd pray that
When. yon avsiime the duties of the
Jrosideney Sout WI soe that thie be
Mone." Stett aetion on your part will
he alted ae tne ef the most. Impare
tart sets of any President siaee to
Gays of the immortal Linon,
“ais aniy apology for yrecenting
sou wih this memorandum is chat
T'want to foe the wolored people prem
teeted againet untdy Trertment and
Gch HS Mell vent ot "equal emper=
Mr. Hawkins stated that he hoped
ho had expressed the wishes of the
colored people. He desires comment
and criticism from all sources.
‘A testimonial banquets was. given
last. Wednesday night at the Arm-
strong High School in honor of Mr.
Hawkins. ‘Two hundred men and
women were in attendance, Letters
and telegrams from notables, includ-
ing Dr. Hubert Work, Chairman. of
he Republican National Committee.
were received, William L. Houston.
an attorney, served as the master of
serneeiied.
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By New. Harlem Store
Pianos that will stand up excel:
tently under punishment at house-
rent parties and all-night gaiety are
Uese being sold in Harlem now a:
the new Mallory Piano Store, 2983
Seventh avenue. near 729th street.
Jaccording to the manager, B. E.
| Roberts, white, Their first customer
pat their opening two months ago was
Canada Lee, popular prizefighter,
| who purchased a reproducing grand,
Erol Williams, plano mechanic, 36
West I17uh street, and Fran Barber,
white, anvslcian, are. the two
salesmen einployed at the new and
bencetifu) Mallory store. There are
now forty-five of these stores in
Greater New York.
The instruments range in price
from $430 to $1,200 and include
models built hy Leonard and. Come
rany, Mallory. Gable and Sons and
the Lester Piano Company, the lat
ter one controlling all" the others
and combining them into one of the
largest plano companies in the
world, sed pianos are taken as
Gown payments and purchasers are
siven three years in which to pay
in fut,
| "tive down payments th cash are
said’ fo. hn very small.
‘Mr. Roberts lays particular. stress
on the, company’s fairness and leni-
ency in dealing with its customers
and states that every instrument is
absolutels newt, All instruments. are
guaranteed for one year, with free
tuning service for that period.
Miss Alma Reid ts the office secre-
tary.
‘Mr. Leon S. Adger. 240 West 145th
street, muste teacher and organist. at
‘Union Baptist Church, is numbered
amonss the moro Tecent and enthu-
Siastic. endorsers of the instruments
sold atthe Mallory store. Mr. Ad=
fer owns a grand plano, whieh he
ses for teaching purposes.
zs:
“e
_*
| Superintendent
Some:
eee
he . ig
7 nes 9 es. ae
see Ee.
Nee
Ooi ey
teed & oe
a ae a
— V. H. Tulane —
Former Montgomery, Alz., busi-
ness man and trustee of Tuske-
gee Institute, who is assisting his
Son-in-law im management of
Yincent Sanitoriam.
F 1 Opening of
‘Sanatorium Sunday
| (Continued from Page 1.)
[Hoard of Directors, ue Guarantee &
ney; Hed 1, Moore, editor New York
|New York University; William Vickens,
‘feta necretary Ne Ao ALC. 1 ET
Dream Realized
‘The opening Sunday will mark the
reallzntion of the dream of Dr. Vin-
cent's boyhood. With a practice of
less than ten years behind him. the
physician and surgeon will -witness
the results of two laborious years ot
building" under a ‘handicap. ‘The
modern, fireproof structure cost. over
$150,000, including the equipment.
In’ addition ‘to, the hospital,. the
building houses’ the’ prescription
pharmacy of Dr. Oliver N. La. Mo-
rell, former “manager of the ‘Chelsea
Pharmacy, 2905 Seventh avente. Lo-
cated conveniently for serving the
ganatorlum, the dispensary will also
ye open to. the public. and. to all
physicians,
Pharmaceutical and chemical sup-
plies will come from leading drug
firms. Hospital supplies and rubber
goods are also included in the stock.
The offices and laboratories 2
Earle F. Johnson, dental technician.
and his wife, Dr. Anna Cooper John-
son. dentist, are also housed in the
building, The Johnson suites are the
final word in dental equipment and
appointments.
‘The partnership of the two dates
back tore than @ decade when Mrs.
Johnson worked at the bench with
her. husband with their meager
equipment in their home. The two
are now prepared to give every ser-
vice to patients and dentists with
their ultra-modern equipment.
I¥ IN TROUBLE CONSULT US
Any. Personal, Business, Finanelat
ar Domestic. Stateer quickly invertl-
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MAURICE. F. GESNER
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PLAYERS — GRAND
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132 West asth STREET
Member of Plano Tuners’ Ass'n
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| SECRETARIAT—COMM ERCIAL COURSES
REGESTE AIMS—Aleohe. Enalioh, Grammar, Artiaetle, (elementary
sng {Seeing wate ae ete ROY ttn So 8 EN semen:
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FAMILY SHOE STORE
SHOES FOR TENDER, DEFORMED AND FLAT FEET
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womens ; EX'S
PUMPS 5] 90° | OXFORDS 3] 0.00
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WILL 4 |
i] DELIVER
Used PLAYERS
with <ANY PIANO
kolls $1 65] Gvaranteep igh, Class
FOR 10 YEARS | Graxp $245
REPRODUCING Must Sell About 600
GRAN VS—siss PIANOS and PLAYERS ‘time Yayments
Yormeriy $950 REGARDLESS OF PRICE Yenr's tiunruntes
Wigh-Cigse Sangin, Hemonateating and Diseonthuaed Mandel, Viogee, e135. |
Mies in MawCiwes Cranes prod camdiions few as ae cin
Mlatiuger hage'Wenmdy very benntifaly Fae Uhed Chickering’ Cieihty #8
. NEEDHAM PIANO CO. ;
yt OPEN EVENINGS TO 9 P. MM.
| 524 W. 48th St. are EPEN ESO TO 2
Te YOU CANNOX CALL. MATH, THIS COUPON
ADRERE Sco yce ee ee APE ee
RELIABLE DENTAL WORK
at
Prices You Can
Afford
Dr. I. Schmidt
Dr. H. Rothblatt
# Surgeon Dentists
286 St. Nicholas Ave. Cor. 125th St.
| Pharmacist
5 gee Sones
ge es “a
SR See
of
eR ra
* (
Cee
inf one Rees
a
oat, So NSB etree
OO ae
pee. - |
2 OU
x eae
Sd 4
ae sg ! Pieris
—Oliver N. La Morell, Ph. G—
who ‘has opened a prescription
dispensary dh the Vingent's Sale
foclum.
Appomattox Club
Endorses Johnson
(Continued from Page 1)
eral election, In view of the fact
that the Democratic party has car~
tied the ctistrict for several years the
consensus of opinion is that Gover~
nor Roosevelt will call the special
election, to be held early in April.
‘The conference responsible for the
endorsement of Johnson was pre-
sided over by Hamilton J, Travis,
and* among. those present were
Charles W. B. Mitchell, Mrs, E.'H.
Warner, William A, Cornelius, Arthur
8. Francis, Angelina Blocker, Jane
Croley, Harold ©. Burton, ‘James
Peters, Dr. Julia P. Coleman, Mich-
jan Brown, Walter Handy. Wil-
liam MacGruder, John Dunn, Wil~
liam Holman, Rosa.L. Lamkins and
Mary Williams. A committee .to
formulate plans was appointed by
the chairman and will report at a
general mecting to be held at the
Association of ‘Trade and Commerce
on Thursday night.
New Jersey Police
(Continued from Page 1.)
Laughiin, the Commissioner's secre-
Journal, The story that the Geters
which they testified Friday when
Dugan was dismissed. Dugan was
suspended a week ago.”
Mrs. Geter said she went to the
Communipaw avenue station, the
Fourth precinct, on the morning in
question (which she designated at
“some time between Christmas and
Se fine einen, Chess a
made her complaint against her hus-
oniy wanted to scare him, Dugan told
her that he could give her no assist-
ance and thet she would have to go
to the Fifth precinct, she testified.
Dugan then came from behind the
‘fer husband could do a thing like
bese ake eo Mt
in the habit of making dates with
| In the Captain’s Office
“Come to the back room; I want
to talk to you,” Dugan fs said to have
‘told her, whereupon he led her into
the captain's office in the back room
of which the attempted assault i
alleged to have occurred.
As Dugan came from behind the
Gesk several Polleemen and a. fev
firemen from Engine House No. 5
next door left the tom. The back
fom inthe captain's office contains
Clothes lockers and a couch. When
they reached this room, Mrs. Geter
sald Dugan subjected her to familia.
ities and indignities, and only ceased
his indecent conduct, wnen 80 of-
cers entered the station.
When they entered Dugan warned
her to come into the front part of
the office end pretend that ano ‘was
making. complaint, and when. the
two officers left he returned and re-
peated his attempied assault, she
swore. Finally forcing her way past
Dugan she hurriedly feft the station
house and went directly home, ‘she
claimed,
Geter was still in bed and when
she came in he asked if she had got-
ten the warrant, as she had threaten-
ed to do, “No, I. went to the wrong
Siatione.s." she replied. "Then
nent into the front and sat on the
devenport and he stayed in bed. I
was nervous and upset and started
crying.” She then told her husband
———— FRIDAY, MARCH 15th-————
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‘all that happened. Geter was
furious. He made his wife put on her
hat and coat and accompany him to
the station house.
‘Would Punch Dugan’s Nose
|. This was about 7:15 a. m., she sald,
/and when they arrived at the Fourth
precinct and Geter hotly interrogated
Dugan, the latter denied making im-
proper advances to his wife. *
“I have a good mind to punch you
in the nose!” Geter yelled at Dugan.
“If you were not a Lieutenant but an
ordinary man lke I am I would hit
Jou right here in the station house.”
“Lock him up for being a disorder-
Iy person,” called out Lieutenant |
Frank Meehan, who was there to re-
Ueve Dugan at the desk. Geter, who
also testified at the trial, said there
were a “whole lot of cops” there at
the time. He sald he consented to’ be
arrested, but that he was merely de-
tained until Captain O'Connor came
fx about an hour and a half later.
Geter said he told his story to
O'Connor and expressed his desire to
complain against Dugan. He was
told that he could not press the com-
plaint there, but to return at 10
o'clock. At the trial O'Connor testi~
fled that Geter and his wife refused |
to give him any details of the alleged |
attempted assault and would not |
state their business at the precinct.
O'Connor was exonerated upon this
statement.
Dugan Denies All |
Dugan was on the witness stand
for an hour, during which time he
strenuously denied the alleged dis-
graceful incident. He said that he
was In the lavatory at the time Mrs,
Geter came into station house and
that he afterwards saw hor in the
Captain's office with Patrolman Ed-
ward Johnson, and that she .was
weeping hysterically. She said her
husband had beaten her and that she
did not wish to make a complaint
but only wanted him scared, Dugan
‘said, “and I advised her to swear out
@ warrant.”
“She may be in error about every-
thing in the case but the assault,”
said the prosecutor, “and it she is
night in.that nothing else matters.”
Commissioner Beggans replied, “I
have no reason to believe this woman
would attempt to frame up any such
story as she has told, I don't doubt
the ‘evidence given by the police offi-
cers, I believe they testified to the
truth as they know it, but I have no
reason to believe this woman lied,
“I'am heartily sorry for you,” he
safd to Dugan, “but I find you guilty
and dismiss you from the Police De-
partment.”
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“Haiti Robbed of
‘Her Independence”
Capt. Marshall Addresses
Mass Meeting—To Peti-
tion Hoover
“When Haitt falls, it will be not
only the loss of the only black na-
tion that has won independence and
respect by the sword, but every other
black nation will fall with her.”
So declared Capt, Napoleon B.
Marshall, who spent six years in
‘Haiti, at a mass meeting demanding
the withdrawal of U, 8. Marines from
that republic, at St. James’ Presoy-
terlan Church, dist street and 8t.
Nicholas avenue, Sunday sfternoon,
under the auspices of St. James’
Brotherhood and Ladies’ Auxiliary.
Junius M. Green, 168 West 136:b
street, is president of the Brother-
hood.
Dr, Charles A. Butler, president of
the Citizens' Welfare Council of Har-
lem, presided. The Rev. Georg
Frazier Miller’ of Brooklyn spy
also.
President Bono was tle
elected, after three Haitian lads
distributed $35,000 among the four.
teen men who put Borno in oft,
Capt, Marshall, declared. ‘The tre
facts of Haitian conditions coy.
tained in a special investigator's re.
‘port was suppressed.
‘The Rev. Mr. Miller declared thet
President Woodrow Wilson's ery ot
"Make the World Safe for Demo.
racy” and “self-determination for
‘small nations," during the war, was,
“beautiful: Ie.”
‘A committee of twenty ts to by
formed to secure 20,000 signatures
a petition to be submitted to Pred.
dent Hoover, asking the cessation of
military occupation of Haiti,
Dunbar Apt. Bldg.
GROCERY STORE
R. T. PEACE
FRUITS & VEGETABLES
= Prices Reasonable—
Orders Delivered
2804 Sth Ave, Brad. 2059
OLD HOUSES BRING EXORBITANT RENTS
135th Street Offers Few Apartments Within Reach of Average Family Income
135th Street Offers Few Apartments Within Reach of Average Family Income
Three Hundred Block West Offers Dark and Unsanitary Rooms With Hot Water, but No Heat, at Low Rental Bath in Kitchen-Toilet in Hall
By THELMA E. BERLACK
Time: Friday, March 8.
Place: Houses in West 135th street.
Similarity of Conditions: No objection to children and dogs; all walk-up houses; only one month's rent required in advance.
Although 135th street is losing its popularity as a residential street, I chose it for my first "apartment hunting" trips because everybody knows the location. All of the cheap means of transportation—subway, "L." trolley car and bus—are within easy reach, and working people like to be near more than one.
No. 223—Seven rooms, gas and electricity painted walls, third floor, $37.50. Each room had at least one window and a closet, except the parlor, and in it were two bay windows and no closet. The room just off the parlor and the dark room originally intended for the maid (just off the kitchen) were small, while the other rooms were exceptionally large. In this house garbage is called for every day except Sunday at 6 o'clock.
Hold Final Rites For Mrs. Howell
Deceased Headed Funeral
The superintendent, a woman, told me that the tenant who moved out on Thursday had been paying $100 a month. Perhaps the reduction was due to the fact that no light is kept on that floor and the push button in the apartment does not work. The apartment does comfortably heated. No. 229—Eight rooms, gas and electricity, top floor, $90. The painter had gone out to lunch and took with him the key to the apartment. The woman who owns the house, however, volunteered to let me see her apartment. All the rooms are spacious and square, closet space being in abundance. A heavy carpet covers the stairs all the way to the top floor; the hall is lighted during the day; garbage is called for around 6:30 o'clock; sufficient steam heat is supplied.
No. 243-Eight rooms, gas and electricity, third floor, $120. This apartment is laid out very much on the order of the one I saw in No. 223, except that the small room adjoining the parlor had no closet in it. I noted that on the wall of the long bathroom were twelve hangers and I wondered whether or not so many people had lived in the apartment at one time.
Every room in the apartment runs into a long hall, one so long that if the occasion arose (and I have heard of such being the case) my cots could be placed in single file to accommodate "the, sleeping nch."
As the superintendent gave me the key to the apartment, she assured me that the torn wallpaper would be fixed, but she added, "I think some one is going to take the apartment." Nevertheless, I gave the eight rooms the "once over," and decided that a common laborer has to make an annual wage to be able to pay $120 a month for rent, unless he has his home packed with roomers.
No. 245- Seven airy, light rooms, gas and electricity, painted walls, top floor. $85. Of the apartments I inspected, this one was perhaps the best barcain. The janitor told me that he might be successful in keeping the rooms for me for $80, and after the first month had passed I could pay my rent on the first and ninth of each month. He calls for the garbage daily at 5 or 6 clock, cleans up the hall every other day, sends up as much steam and hot water as are needed in an apartment. My question about parties must have stunned him, for after hostaging a while he said, "Well, this is a fairly quiet house, but people must have parties some time."
No. 306—Four rooms, small, dark and dirty, gas and electricity; no steam heat; hot water, ground floor; $37; same type on top floor, $35. When the superintendent, an elderly brown woman with a pleasant smile, told me the price of the rooms I was happy—I had not seen them! A thorough inspection of the ground floor front apartment showed there was no dumbwalter and garbage would have to be put on the sidewalk every day; all the rooms were so cask that you'd have to burn lights all day. And to cap the climax, the people who occupy front apartments are a private toilet in the hall, while those who occupy the two back apartments on the same floor share a hall toilet. Bath tubs? Oh, yes. the landlord had decided recently to put an inservice tub in the kitchen of each apartment in the house. With all of these inconveniences, I care say that a small family could not save very by trying to live there at $37 or $35 a month.
For those of you who may be troubled with rent problems the following information is given:
The existing Emergency Rent laws, which expire on June 1, offer protection from increases in rent to tenants of apartments renting for $10 a room or less. Until Dec. 1, last. it also covered apartments renting for $15 per month or less, but that phase of the law lapsed at that time.
Day after day legislators are proposing bills for the extension of the Emergency Rent laws, and day by day these bills are killed.
Next week I shall seek living quarters in another section of Harlem and tell you of my experiences.
ROCKLAND PALACE DAMAGED BY FIRE
Three firemen were injured Friday night about 7 o'clock during a fire at Rockland Palace, formerly known as Manhattan Casino. 155th street and fifth avenue, causing an estimated damage of $15,000. Hikid who harned the firemen's work while they tried the blaze for one hour. Flight des of water covered the dance
et. section to children and dogs; all walk-required in advance. bring its popularity as a residential apartment hunting" trips because "All of the cheap means of trans- car and bus—are within easy to be near more than one.
Hold Final Rites For Mrs. Howell
Deceased Headed Funeral Establishment Since Death of Husband
Final rites for Mrs. Martha E. Howell, president of H. Adolph Howell Funeral Church, Inc., 2382 Seventh avenue, were conducted Sunday morning at St. David's Church, 384 East 160th street, Bronx.
The Rev. Arthur G. Best delivered the funeral eulogy. Interment was made at Wooddawn Cemetery.
Mrs. Howell died Thursday morning after an illness of three months. Her husband, H. Adolph Howell, founder of the funeral establishment, died April 2, 1927.
The wife headed the funeral concern upon the death of her husband. She was not a licensed undertaker, however. The Howell establishment is the largest and the finest designed and appointed in Harlem.
Numerous celebrities, including Florence Mills, have been buried under the direction of the Howell firm
der the direction of the Howen firm.
Mrs. Howell was born at St. George's, Bermuda. She was the daughter of Ann Elizabeth and Thomas Parras. Thirty-three years ago she came to New York and was married to Mr. Howell. There were no children.
The husband became a licensed undertaker and opened his first establishment on 133d street in 1906. Later he moved to larger quarters in the same street, and still later to 136th street.
In 1925 the imposing establishment, including the funeral church, was opened. Mrs. Howell assisted in managing the business from the first. Surviving the deceased are three brothers and five sisters. Harold H. Hedgeman, nephew of Mrs. Howell, is acting head of the concern.
Marriage Certificate Frees Man of Charge
And so they were married!
Thus ended the case of Phillip Antonio Griffith, 25. 269 West 134th street, who, after being arraigned in Heights Court Thursday on a charge of soducing Delnetha Edwardina Austin, 20. 211 West 148th street, was married upon the order of Magistrate Well the same afternoon by the Rev. William Lloyd Imes at the minister's home at 205 West 137th street. The Rev. Mr. Imes is pastor of St. James Presbyterian Church, 141st street and St. Nicholas avenue.
Junius M. Green, bondsman, 168 West 136th street, and a reporter of The Amsterdam News were present and signed their names as witnesses to the ceremony. Mr. Green provided bond of 5500 for Griffith's release to enable him to purchase the marriage license. The case was adjourned for 24 hours and Griffith, now a married man, was dismissed on the charge Friday morning.
B. F. THOMAS
WILL EXAMINE AND ADJUST
YOUR CAR FREE
Special discount on repairs to your
car on the first letter and
spring months on all makes; expert
mechanics.
217 WEST 123rd ST., N. Y.
Phone University 8569
Auto Instruction $10
Men Wanting Chauffeur License
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ACE AUTO SCHOOL
1938 MADISON AVENUE
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time. Conditions required for our graduates. If
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chauffeur, mechanic; also ladies' classes;
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---
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929
Husband Dies From Wounds; Wife Held
Lee Grover, 35, laborer, 385 Lenox avenue, who was stabbed by his wife, Emma, during an altercation in their home on Feb. 28, died in Bellevue Hospital on March 1 from his injuries.
When Magistrate Farrell in Harlem Court Wednesday was informed that Grover had died, he dismissed the charge of felonious assault pending against Mrs. Grover, and directed Detectives Ross and Chiquette of the West 123d street station to rearrest the wife on a charge of homicide. Mrs. Grover was rearrested and taken to the Homicide Court, where she was held for a further hearing, and lodged in the Tombs without bail to await Grand Jury action.
Grover, prior to his death, was a prisoner in the hospital on a charge of felonious assault made by his wife, who was also cut in the stabbing affray which followed an argument between Grover and his wife.
Killer Gets Seven Years, Maximum for Jealousy
A fit of rage ending in the killing of his wife, Mrs. Edith Dover, 28, 6 West 126th street, with a knife, caused Louis Dover, 29, 135 West 122nd street, to be sentenced to five to seven years in the penitentiary Thursday in General Sessions. Dover pleaded guilty to second degree manslaughter before Judge Max S. Levine. Five years of the sentence must be served for possession of the knife. The man slew his wife January 20, when he discovered her in the hallway of the 128th street address with Eladio Medemetm. 145 West 130th street. The Dovers had been separated several months.
Women May Take Town
MASHPEE, Mass, March 11—(ANP)—Mrs. Bessie Sturgis is running for town clerk in Mashpee; Mrs. Mabel Avant for tax collector; Mrs. Anna Pocknott for library trustee, and Mrs. Emily O. Molls for town treasurer. These places are now held by men. The inhabitants of Mashpee are Indians of the Wompanooy tribe and Negroes.
RHUMA-JELL
A Quick Relief From Rheumatism
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143 and 375 Lenox Ave.
JAPANESE TEA ROOM
224 W. 135th STREET
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Phone Bradhurst 0374
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NEW YORK OFFICES:
34th Street, corner 3d Avenue
86th street, corner Lexington Ave.
125th Street, corner Park Avenue
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classes also correspondence courses.
The Right Address
AVE. BET, 45th ST.
22nd YEAR
Republican Dixie Chief Quits as President Sees "Bob" Church
WASHINGTON, March 11.—President Hoover's white chief Dixie standard bearer in the late political conflict, Col. Horace A. Mann, quit his position as campaign and patronage czar in the South Saturday after Robert R. Church of Memphis paid the President a call at the White House.
Although the G. O.P. chieftain left his resignation in a cloud of mystery, general belief is that he opposes any favor shown to Church by Mr. Hoover. Church is boss of Memphis Republican forces and is the avowed enemy of Colonel Mann in his program for making the party "illy white" in the South.
Not only does Church control the entire organization in his city and county, but he directs the Negro vote in eight states of the Middle West. Whether the political chief came to seek patronage for his voters is not known, but the job seekers are growing more insistent in their demands daily.
ever, has given the Republicans and disgruntled Democrats something of a loot. The President has direct control over only 17,000 of 820,000 persons on the Federal payroll. Of the former number 14,000 are postmasters who now come under the classified service.
Church is believed to have not asked for an appointment for himself. He is probably as powerful and influential in his domain and in national politics as he could hope to be with any of the minor plums handed to Negroes by the administration.
Much of the ardor of some applicants has been cooled by announcement that the President will make only twenty or thirty changes in the positions at his disposal. Coupled to that distressing news is the fact that Mr. Hoover early announced that he would seek men with legal training whose local standings would insure them efficiency in their own communities.
This latter has been taken to mean that few Negroes, if any, will get any important posts in the South because of the natural opposition of the whites. It is also believed that the President is holding the party's doors open to a few Democrats who supported the ticket in the South.
Mr. Hoover's failure to place any Southern man in his Cabinet, how-
LIBERTY CATERING CO.
CATERERS TO
WEDDINGS, RECEPTIONS,
DINNER PARTIES
WM. H. ENGLISH, Mgr.
J. L. BROWN, Asst.
4 CEDAR ST. Phone John 1626
Dr. E. S. Kashlansky
Surgeon Dentist
CAREFUL EXTRACTIONS
X-Ray
MODERN DENTISTRY
Easy Payments—Reasonable Prices
Hours Daily, 10 A. M. to 2 P. M.
and 3 P. M. to 8 P. M.
Sunday, from 12 A. M. to 2 P. M.
2034 FIFTH AVENUE
125th-126th Sts.
Phone Harlem 0929
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE NEGROES OF NEW YORK
The Peoples Medical Institute offers you an opportunity to secure high-class medical treatment at a very nominal fee. Dr. D. P. Doyle, the head of this institute, has practiced medicine for over 37 years, giving his greatest attention to those who cannot afford to pay high fees for the proper treatment and prevention of diseases of men and women.
In order to give you an opportunity to satisfy yourself that in this high-class private institute you can get the relief you long sought, and that our charges are the most reasonable for high-class and conscientious 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 $5.
This examination includes the all-seeing Fluoroscopic 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 that some of the most fatal cases can be avoided by attending to it in the proper time with conscientious and reliable treatment.
At the Peoples Medical Institute you will receive the host there is 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. Doyle over a period of 57 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 3d Ave.
ever, has given the Republicans and disgruntled Democrats something of a jolt. The President has direct control over only 17,000 of 820,000 persons on the Federal payroll. Of the former number 14,000 are postmasters who now come under the classified service. LOOK!
Badges and Regalias
PHOENIX REGALIA CO.
Banners, Badges and Regalias for
all Lodges, 445 LENOX AVE. near
182d St. New York City Hearst 4011
Bakeries
Unity Bakery and Lunch
390 LENOX AVE. Harlem 2900
We Specialize in
WEDDING and BIRTHDAY
CINEMAS.
Also Pies and Home Cooking
Prompt Delivery on Phone Orders
GAUNTLETT and BRADLE, Propriet.
Beauty Shops
JOHNSON'S BEAUTY SHOPPE
201 W. 130th St. Apex system taught.
Prop. Lucille Johnson, formerly
teacher of Apex School.
NELLIE JONES
Walker System
Scalp Treatment
Facial Massage
Marcel Waving
Manicure, Beauty Culture
202 W. 130th St.
Brend. 4079
MANIKIN BEAUTY SHOPPE
30 WEST 185th ST. HARLEM 0052
Hair System taught.
Scientific hair culture, massaging
and manicure. Poro System taught.
Diplomas awarded. Open daily, 12
A. M. to 10 P. M. Ida B. Scott.
MME. T. E. MILLER. 10 W. 185th
St. Harlem 0455. Barber Shop and
Hair Dressing Parlor. We specialize
cutting children's hair and bobbing
hands' hair. AH branches taught.
LAURA A. PATTerson BEAUTY
SALON, 105 W. 134th St. Walker
Electric Face and Scalp Treatment
Clarn Campbell. Belle Ford
LETTLE E. RICE
APPEARANCE DIGITAL
302 West 151th Street, 8-B
WEST 151th Street, 8-B
RHEA SAMPSON,
Nu-Life" Hospital Beauty
Fitting Parlor of Beauty Culture
and Hair Dressing. All branches
taught. Diplomas awarded. 189 W.
136th St. N. Y. Audubon 8591.
MARGARTIA JACKSON
135 W. 189th St. Cathedral 5720
Hairdresser and scalp specialist. Specializing in all kinds of scalp diseases.
KITTYS BEAUTY SHOPPE
142 W. 140th St. Enclave 7072
Writing in Dyeing, Violet Ray, Electric Massage, French Mud Pack,
RUTH D. SMITH, Prop.
Mme. C. J. Walker Beauty Salon
No. 2
2550 Seventh Ave.
WAVES OF BEAUTY AND GRACE
We meet your every
BEAUTY NEED
Shifted Operators
Mrs. Berridge Inc., Mgr.
Brund. 3034.
Mme. C. J. Walker Beauty Salon
No. 1
110 West 180th St.
WAVES OF BEAUTY AND GRACE
We meet your every
BEAUTY NEED
Skilled Operators
Mrs. Maybelle Renne, Mgr.
Brad, 0675
Carmen's Beauty Shoppe
FORMERLY AT 157 W. 138th Nt.
is now located at 250th Ave. bet.
187th-189th Sts. Specializing in
fine arts and all branches of
harmony culture and art from
plastic art. Mrs. Emma Briggs,
Pron. Brad. 7781.
MME. J. WARREN
79 West 123rd Street
HAIRDRESSER
8 P. M. to 10:30 P. M.
ISABELLA CHILD'S WRIGHT
10 Hairdressers, 10 Systems.
Powell Dressers, French Mar-
celling taught. 47 Lenox Ave. bet.
132d and 133d St.
MME. PHNIZER
wishes to announce that her beauty
partor is now located at 92 W. 131th
St. formerly at 129 Lenox Ave.
Special Treatment for Spine Hair
At 126th Ave. Southern Pathr
Living System
M91, L144 M140
210 West 126th Street
THE Business Guide
Just what efforts will be made to make the G. O. P. a pure white organization in the South is not known yet. Veiled hints that the President would clear the organization of Negroes have not been confirmed by action. Leaders in the state organizations continue to hold their posts along with the whites. The Mann policy was approved yesterday by Representative Franklin Fort of New Jersey, who opposes the hostile attitude shown by Chairman Work toward the Colonel. Work was willing to let the Southerner.go because of his fear that the Dixie Republics would antagonize Negro voters in northern and border states.
ACTOR FREED OF ONE
CHARGE, HELD ON OTHER
John Reid, 40, an actor; 40 West 128th street, was discharged by Magistrate Vitale. in Harlem Court when he was arraigned on a serious charge made by a 14-year-old girl of the same address. On an additional charge of violating the Sullivan Law for possessing a revolver without a permit Reid was held in $500 ball for trial in Special Sessions.
Busi
Coal and Wood
NICK'S
ICE-COAL-WOOD
ICE-COAL-WOOD
67 WEST 1844 ST.
Phone Harlem 0433
Coffee Pots
JEANNETTE'S
• Best Coffee in the City
• Strictly Home Cooked Food
2121 SEVENTH AVE. (Corr. 126th St.)
Dressmaker
MME, INA. MAE MOLLTON
School of
DRESSMAKING
Designing
Drafting
Pattern Maklog
Millinery
Day and夜间 Classes
$21 ST. NICOLAS AVE.
Cor, 126th St.
Dry Goods
BARGAIN BASEMENT
Everything in Dry Goods at
Lowest Prices
231 W. 14th St, st. 7th and 8th Ave.
Express & Moving
FERGUSON'S SERVICE
With a Smile
OFFICE 1409 N. AVE.
Res. 215 West 140th St.
Night Telephone Edge. 1533
W. C. WALL
Local and Long Distance Moving,
Packing, Crushing, and Storage
100 West 140th St. 101st Ave.
N. w. Cor, Lenox Ave. Residence
16545 90th Rd. Jamaica, L. I. Day
phone 18258 8528, Night phone
Jamaica 505.
Engravers and Printers
CARDS
Visiting and Business
Staffing and Inventory
BASCOMB ART SALES CO.
403 Edgecombe ART, Phone Edge, 2648
Electrician
Night Brad. 0819
VICTOR F. FRANCOIS
Licensed Electrical Contractor
All Kinds of Wiring and Repairs
Better Work for Less Money
Economy, Efficiency, Reliability
Satisfaction Guaranteed
208 WEST 122TH ST. Monu. 2301
Hair Preparations
BLACK DIAMOND HAIR
STRAIGHTENER dyes and straight-
ens at the same time to lust black
and light hair. Wear wax
terpure. Made from a costly oil
extracted from a tree in Brazil.
Large box $1.00. and money order
payable to C. Cathedral 5728.
St. N. T. C. Cathedral 5728.
Special terms to barbers.
Mme. J. THOMPSON
Announces the Removal of Her
Hair Dressing Parlor
Formerly 257 W. 122d St., Now
2026 SEVENTH AVE.
Apt. 3. Mon. 8129
Herbs
KATONKA HERBS
Twenty-one orders ordered
Roots, Herbs, Burkes and Berries,
all mixed together. For Poor Vitality
and Loss of Appetite, Don't wait
now. It may be too late.
Who knowst
LARGE BOXES $1.00
PROF. HERBS Specialist
183 W. 128th St.
Wholesale and Retail Cata. 6729
Licensed Midwife
EXPECTANT MOTHERS
Why wonder what to do or where to go? Ask for help and be comfortable with the nurse.
A COMPETENT MIDWIFE
Doctors not necessary except in compilations.
MRS. FRED SOBERS
2137 SEVENTH AVE. Cathedral 5116
By Appointment
Hat Manufacturer
F. YANCY
President of
Yancy Hats Manufacturing Co.
Manufacturer of
New York Hats
Retail at Wholesale Price
2035 LIGHTHAVEN, N. Y. C.
Near 110th St.
NATIONAL NEWS BRIEFS
WASHINGTON, March 11.—A case which may have a far-reaching effect on segregated public schools was argued in the Supreme Court of the United States last Tuesday. It involves the right of a Chinese citizen to attend public schools in Mississippi. This question is raised in the case of Joe Tin Lun against W. F. Bond, State Superintendent of Education.
Churchmen Confer
WASHINGTON, March 11.—Twenty-four representatives from eight of the principal Negro church groups met here last Tuesday in the library building of Howard University to consider and recommend to the Negro churches of the United States a plan of cooperation in dealing with the interests and needs of the people. Dr. A. M. Townsend was chosen as chairman and Dr. George E. Haynes as secretary of the tem-
Jewelers
CLAUDE N. CAMPBELL
DIAMONDS, WATCHES,
JEWELER
210 West 14th St.
N. Y. City
Luncheonette
BUNCHES' LUNCHONETTE
Good Southern Cooking, Ice Cream,
Candles, Candles, and
Smoothies between 115th and
119th Sts, Univ. STS3,
Massage Cream
DEW DROP GREASELESS
BLEACH AND MASSAGE CREAM
Makes the skin more charming by
removing old skin impurities.
$100.00. Makes payable to T. Jackson, 133 W. 125th St, Cathedral 5720. Special terms to dealers.
Masseur
Licensed Scientific
MASSEUR
103 WEST 135th ST.
Phone Edgecombe 6809
Medicine
PREVENT "FLU" AND "GRIPPE"
Take Ho-ro-ro Tonle, Nme, E. K.
Menderson, 312 W. 135th St. Edge,
2836. Also Toilet Preparations.
Mimeographing
MIMOGRAPHING
on your
$100. Each additional 100, 256.
Envelopes addressed 256 a hundred,
153th St, Room 100, Brad, 1216.
Music Instructors
MRS, M. M. E. HINES
258 WEST 130th ST. Bradhurst 650f.
Plano Instructor. All Wind Music.
Violin Lessons. 12:30 A. M. to 10:20
P. M.
SCHOOL MUSIC & LANGUAGE
K. S. ALLEN & CO. Incorporated.
Conservatory of Popular Music, Jazz
and Languages. 29 W. 117th St. N.
Y. Instructions on all instruments
guaranteed in 20 lessons for $16.
K. S. ALLEN & CO., Inc. Conservatory
of Popular Music, Jazz and
Languages. 29 W. 117th St. N. Y.
Instructions on all instruments
guaranteed in 20 lessons for $16.
University 6251.
Pen Repairing
EAST SIDE PEN AND
NOVELTY SHOP
Pen Repairing
NOTARY STAMPS AND SEALS
Made to Order
Cast Decorate When
OFFICE 48 WENT 90th ST.
Phone Academy 5142
Optician
ANDREW WILLIAMS, Optician.
Specializing. 2255 SEVENTH AVE.
2 doors south of 135th St. Harlem
5331.
Paper Products
E. VERNON CHALLENOR
PAPER & PAPER PRODUCTS
214 WEST 1438 ST.
Telephone Audubon 7166
Private Dining Room
REID'S—Southern Cooking
Continuous Service
2400 SEVENTH AVE., APT. 6
Aud. 2271
Printing
EURERA PRESS
High Grade Printing
Book and Job Printing
of Every Description
1. W. WeCarthey. See-Manager
44 LENON AVE. Barlem 4611
Orchestras
THREE
porary committee which called the meeting.
One of Coolidge's Last Acts
Washington, D. C., March 11.—Before noon, March 4. President Coolidge approved a joint resolution for the creation of a commission on the erection of a memorial building in the Nation's Capital as a tribute to the Negro's contribution to the achievements of America.
BOSTON, March 11 (ANP)—The 189th anniversary of the death of Crispus Attucks and his Irish and English comrades in the Boston Massacre, March 5, 1770, was observed Tuesday. The Boston branch of the National Equal Rights League and other organizations conducted the exercises.
Locksmiths
D. SURLES
Master Locksmith
In All Its Branches
2106 SEVENTY AVENUE
Phone Edgecombe 6816
From 9 A. M. to 5 P. M.
Sat. to 12 A. M.
YAIT
HOTEL
SAN FRANCISCO
Radio Service
DUNBAR RADIO
ENGINEERING CO.
All mkts of Radios Repaired.
Auto Service Service, installation and
lighting.
Services all types.
WORK GUARANTEED
2529 SEVENTH AVE.
Det. 147th and 147th Sts.
Bradhurst 2531
HENDERSON & CO. Batteries
called for and delivered. Radio
Parts and Repairs. Auto and Motorcycle
Accessories. 206 W. 132d
St. Phone Aud. 8067. Res. Edge. 8280.
PARAMOUNT BATTERY SERVICE
140 WEST 1838TH STREET
Radio Specialist. Repairing
Just Call Brad. 5885
Hartlem 0592
Work Called For and Delivered
DIAL
BATTERY & TIRE SERVICE
Thomas Robinson
Batteries Rented. Rebuilt. Recharged
New and Used Tubes
Day and Night
1 WEST 133th STREET
Religious Articles
RELIGIOUS ARTICLES SHOP
Why go elsewhere when we can supply you with all kinds of Candles, Lamps, Pictures, Statues, Prayer Books, Bibles, Tapers, Sanctuary Oil, Candle Stands, Vigil Lights, Holy Water Mugs, a sample of W. N. increase with each purchase. 299 W. 137th St., Apt. 9707.
Signs
Phone Bradhurst 3871
(CEO, W. McDERMON
SIGNS "of the Better Kind"
103 West 189th St., New York City
Spiritualist Churches
THE COMMUNITY CENTER
SPIRITUALIST CHURCH
Rev. E. Fields Spiritual Adviser
Regular Service Every Evening at
8:30 P. M.
Sunday Morning 11 o'Clock
Interviews any evening
by appointment
153 WEST 129th ST. Aud. 2030
BUSY BEE TAILORS'
PRESSING CLUB
JOIN THE PRESSING CLUB
AND SAVE MONEY
Pressing $1 Per Month
130 WEST 143d ST.
Edge, 3307
MAX GOOSEY
Dry Cleaner and Tailor
2255 SEVENTH AVE.
Near 135th St.
Harlem 1420
F. A. SAWYER
Merchant Taylor
Ladies' and Gentlemen's Suits
Made to Order $50 and Up
200 West 135th St. Near 17th Ave.
Sea Food
BEST FOOD IN HARLEM
Quick Service
Good Food
LUK DANLEM
2281 Seventh Ave, Corp. 1818 St.
Social Clubs
NIGHT & DAY SOCIAL CLUB
In the Heart of Harlem
Just the place to drop in after the
show.
FOR RENT
Nightly or Weekly
Halls nt 125 West 135th St.
Inquire 107 W. 135th St. Paper Stand
Auto Sales Service
Harlem Automobile Sales Service
A DISCOUNT AGENCY
2305 7th Ave.
Edinburgh 6205
VISIT US
Undertaker
183 WEST 123D ST. Harlem 8115
WHITE & EDWARDS
Undertakers and Embalmers
Notary Public
Female Fathers,
Night Thought and Abundon 8921
S·O·C·I·E·T·Y
DEFINITION: "The more cultivated portion of any community in its social relations and influences."-Webster.
THE more exclusive the society, the more possessed its members should be of good character and integrity — worthwhile endeavor and achievement.
The careful host or hostess excludes from social functions persons or disreputable character, menials, and those possessed of ill-gutten gains.
FOUR
Mrs. James Gentry, who will be remembered as Miss Ethel Carter, was given a surprise birthday anniversary party Monday evening by her husband at their home, 294 West 137th street.
The guests present were: Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Jones, Mr. and Mrs. George Whitley, Mr. and Mrs. Artie Holcombe, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Keyes, Mrs. Bessle Hynwood, Miss Louise Carter, Miss L. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Lawson Young, Mrs. Anne Brown, and Mrs. Gertrude L. Rose.
Miss Idahelle Yelser of Philadelphia spent the week-end here with her mother, Mrs. A. G. Yelser, 70 West 118th street.
Mrs. Nannie King of Boston is visiting her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone Douglas, 125 West 133rd street.
A surprise birthday anniversary party was given on Saturday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. William Mahood at their home, 178 West 137th street, by their daughter, Martha.
Mrs. Ida Young, 144 West 141st street, is ill at her home under the care of her physician, Dr. P. M. H. Savory.
Miss Alice Lee of West 134th street spent the week-end in Havre de Grace and Aberdeen, Md.
Miss Ann M. Snowden. 281 Edgecombe avenue, has recovered and is out again after an operation on her eye in Manhattan Hospital.
Winifred Watson. 130 West 138th street, has been ill for several day with an attack of pleurisy. Dr. R. E. Taylor is the attending physician.
Miss Elizabeth Wright of Montclair spent several days here last week as the guest of Mrs. Ruby Adams, 7 West 113th street.
Mrs. Alma Stansel-Jeffries. 357 Edgecombe avenue, had as her week-end guest Mrs. Dorothy Vincent-Neil, of the Alice Allen H. N. J. Mrs. Taylor was entertained by her brother, Carl Vincent, while she was in the city.
A surprise anniversary party was given by Mrs. F. R. Houston at her home, 75 St. Nicholas place, Sunday evening, in honor of her husband.
A birthday anniversary party was given by Mrs. H. Forsythe and Mrs. Blanch Harris at 409 Edgecombe avenue Friday evening in honor of Miss Pearl Brown, 168 Lenox avenue.
Mrs. John White, 211 W. 149th street, entertainers bridge on Saturday night. Her guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Edward Castro, Capt. and Mrs. Allen Atkins, Dr. Charles Middleton, Dr. Andrew Johnson, Miss Bentrice Taylor, Miss Ruth McGhee, Miss Alice Simms, Fred McCracken, and John Nush. The prizes were won by Miss Taylor and Mr. Castro.
Mrs. Susie Wheatley, 128 West 13th street, who has been silently "out for the past month, is bulleted ill of danger" and is improving daily.
Mesdames Dora Hobbs and Lula Robinson-Jones spent several days in Washington, the guests of Mrs. M. E. Osborne.
Mrs. Mattle Hunter of this city is now enjoying the sunshine in Cuba.
Among the visitors in Washington, D. C., last Monday for the inaugural parade and ceremonies were Samuel Wuester, president of Bethel Women's People Temple, and Misses Muriel Stovell, Lorencia Albright and Mrs. Lucie Jones. While there they were the guests of Mrs. A. Bell, 1438 Q street, Northwest.
George H. Clark, 110 West 143rd street, entertained Sunday evening in honor of the birthday anniversary of Mrs. Clark's mother, Mrs. Melissa Page. After serving delightful refreshments the guests were entertained with a short program.
Mrs. Joseph Sweeney, 2424 seven avenue, and Mrs. Gabriel T. Colom, 108 West 142d street, have returned home from Washington.
Mrs. Augusta Levinthal entertained at her home, 701 St. Nicholas avenue, at a buffet supper last Sunday.
Mrs. Willie Mae Manner, 19 West 130th street, entertained at bridge Saturday evening the following inland Array; Naomi Phillips, fourth prize winner; Mayne Wimbush.
Also Mesdames Pauline Royall, Gladys Peyton, Edith Alexander, Jolanthe Sidney, Blossom Holland, Arkansas Harris, Teddy Lowache, Marian McInlosth; Willa White, Chicago; Mayme Jayne, Edity Medley, Marlene Berce, Margaret Reeves, Julia Pitcherne.
Also Mesdames Adèle Kenerley, third prize winner; Hubbard, Chicago; Mayne Briggs, Dellahll Phleps; Jane Best, first prize winner; Sarah
SOCIETY
I·E·T·Y
Activated portion of any community relations and influences."—Webster.
the society, the more pos- should be of good char- — worthwhile endeavor and
postess excludes from social reputable character, menials, —gutten gains.
CORA M
LUNO
The Co. Big Sister en, Policie York, a M last Thur- lest Thur- lyn, was cent and speakers.
Lady A Mrs. Horne the Board Sisters, is are proud
CORA HORNE SPEAKS AT
LUNCHEN FOR WHALEN
The Co-operative Committee of the Big Sisters tendered Grover A. Whalen, Police Commissioner of New York, Incon at Hotel Bilmore last Thursday to Grosse Horne, 189 Chaucey street, Brooklyn, was one of the 525 guests present and one of the thirty-one speakers.
Lady Armstrong, in introducing Mrs. Horne, said: "She, a member of the Big Sisters, is proud of her race and we are proud of her."
At the conclusion of the card tournament being sponsored by the Men's Group of the New York Urban League on Monday evening, March 15 at 8:30, nine individual prizes and three silver loving cups for clubs will be awarded for the first prize for bridge is a 5 gold cup for whist, a bridge lamp; for "500", a moiré covered card table.
A stocking shower was given Miss Jessie Faust, bride-elect, by the Saturday Night Club on March 9 at the residence of Mrs. E. R. Alexan-der, married to H. E. Harris in Philadelphia on April 3 and then return here for a formal reception that night.
Mrs. Bessie Williams entertained the Diversion Bridge Club and some special guests at the Jack and Jill, 205 West 138th street, last Tuesday. For more information, see Mesdames Lucy Branson Manley Special members of the club; Mesdames Jane E. Best and Blossom Holland, guests. Those present numbered twenty.
Les Chechures and Ayaka surprised Mrs. Gretchen Thornton, 1990 Seventh avenue, Sunday afternoon with an infant shower. The two clubs, of which she is a member, presented her with a rubber collapsible both tub and all the bathing accessories.
About thirty-five guests were present at a party given by the Clinton Club at Leroy Alston's, 229 West 144th street. Friday night.
This club group will meet Sunday with David Daughtry, 1771 Madison avenue.
Henry J. Smith, 210 West Sixth-third street, was host to the Round Table Social Club last Wednesday night.
Mrs. Gertrude L. Rose was hostess to the Exelent "500" club at her 257 West 192th street, last Monday evening.
Won by Mrs. Martha Best, first; Mrs. Eva M. Eubanks, second; and Mrs. Effe Young, consolation.
Miss Victoria Gordon was hostess to "The Arabesque Social Club" Thursday evening. Plans were completed for the second of a series of teas next Sunday afternoon at the home of the president, Mrs. J. Albright.
The Alpha Whist Club held its weekly meeting Monday night at the home of Oliver L. Smith, 28 West 118th street. Plans were made for the club's annual dance in April.
After the meeting, the entire club was the guest of Miss Bessie Williams, 2400 Seventh avenue, who gave a birthday anniversary party for William the a member of the Alpha Whist Club.
William Jerridore was host to the club the preceding week.
The Georgia State College Club held its regular meeting on Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Jerridore, the a member of the home of R. R. Abbott, 309 West 146th street, on March 23.
Mrs. Olivia. Haywood was hostess to the Carnation Literary and Social Club last Monday evening at 220 Bradhurst avenue. Those present were: Melville Taitt, Mose Gittens, Christopher Grichlow, Rose Gittens, Elsie May Fields, Ethel Wallace, William McFee and Violet Taitt.
Genuine FUR Used for Fashion
SALLY 35W48THSt
Rawlings, Juliette Winters, Ossie Gudleen, Mattle Bowe, Maude Forguson, Carrie Haywood; Ruth Brown Price, winner. Mattle Haywood; winner. Also Msdon Bryant Bryant, Ethel Jenkins, Mattie McGhee, Pearl Jenkins, Willette Rowe, Eleanor Johns, Agatha Caines, Estella Hixon, Craig Phillips, Anna Lee, Aggle Cogbill, Consuela Ryan, Mymne McAllester and Kate Vanduek. Mrs. Anna Tanner and Mrs. Anna Lee Mitchel received the guests, while Mrs. Clara Rucker and Mrs. Marian Heard served them.
Mrs. J. Wesley Shaw of Chicago is visiting here for a short while.
Mr. and Mrs. James Newsum entertained at their home, 208 West 143d street, on Wednesday evening in honor of William Russell, who sailed for Europe on the S. S. Berengaria cards and danced were the pleasures of the rejuvenate Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. E. P. John Syder, Miss Nina Dupe, Leonard Brewer, Mrs. Carolyn Henry, Mr. and Mrs. John Necklez, Mr. and Mrs. Roden Nesbit, Miss Clare Boyd, Miss Irene Augustine, Jack Rudder, Sam Taylor, Mr. Fontane, and Miss Relia Beech.
Mr. and Mrs. Shelton Walker, 337 Edgecombe avenue, had as their guests for dinner on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Patrick H. Carrol of Hewlett, L. L, and Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Moore.
Willis Cross was called to Connecticut during the past week to attend the funeral of his father.
Mrs. Esther Williams, 444 Manhattan avenue, spent the week-end in Richmond, Va.
Miss Anna B. Toles. 149 West 128th street, was confined to her bed during the past week suffering from la gripe.
James Walker entertained a few friends at his residence, 409 Edgcombe avenue, Saturday evening.
Miss Hattie Tinsley. 310 West 150th street, was called to her home in Louisa, Va., to attend the funeral of her mother.
Mrs. Lillian Grinnell of the Dunbar Garden Apartments left the city last Wednesday to spend some time in Harrisburg and Carlisle, Pa.
Mrs. Martha Crawford of the Dunbar Garden Apartments left the city last Tuesday to be at the bedside of her mother in Harrisburg, Pa.
Miss Isabell Stark. 305 West 138th street, spent a few days in Washington last week as the house guest of her grandmother. Mrs. Isabell Spears.
Mrs. Della Butler of Sound Beach, Conn. conn the week-end in the city as the guest of her daughter and son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Hillon Lane of West Sixty-third street.
Mrs. Viola Rice and son. Lincoln, of Perryman, Md., are spending some time in the city as guests of Mrs. Flora Footman. 207 West. 18th street.
Miss Henrietta Mitchell is visiting relatives and friends in South Norwalk, Conn.
The Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Thomas. 223 West. 12th street, entertained at dinner inst. Tuesday evening in honor of Mrs. Ida J. Carey of Baltimore, Md.
The other guests present were Rev. and Mrs. D. Ward Nichols, Misses Gertrude Bailey, Hattie Ladson, Earsale Nelson, Benzine M. Thomas, E. D. Alston, William Rowe and Mr. and Mrs. J. Rowe.
Miss Mayne Jones, a school teacher of Lexington, Vn. was the guest of Miss Emma Maltland. 69 Edge-combe avenue, for a week.
Mrs. M. A. Johnson of San Francisco, Calif., is spending two months here with her son, John Ivory Johnson, 365 West 118th street.
Mrs. Sarah F. Bishop, 420 West Fifty-second street, spent the week-end in Philadelphia.
Miss Winifred Granderson entertained at her home for five o'clock E. R. Seargent and Mr. Murray of Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, were the guests of honor.
A surprise birthday anniversary party was given to Mr. Furry Johnson, wife of their residence, 75 St. Nicholas place, Sunday night.
An informal gathering will be held at the Gumbys Book Studio. 1144 Fifth avenue, Sunday, at 4 p.m. Poets, musician, scheduled to appear on the program. Miss Belle Morgan, 409 Edgecombe avenue, Apt. 8-C, sister of Nella Mellie addressed to the Bellevue Hospital Monday after a week's illness at her home.
Reid to Exhibit
O. Richard Reid will present a new group of oil portraits at the Urban West 136th street, tomorrow at 8:30 p. m. The callibt will March 28.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929
Genuine FUR COATS
CLUB
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Sydney J. Braithwaite entertained
Pattern Making
Grading, Cutting, Fitting and
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288 WEST 130th ST.
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Other Beautiful Furniture
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Large selection
129 models. All size. Ge-
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All these fur costs,
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LANIYISH FURNED
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WEDDINGS
A BUSY PRESIDENT
Mrs. Charlott
M.
Mrs. Charlotte Hawkins Brown
The principal of a Southern institution often has a much harder job than the principal of a Northern one, for he or she has to raise money throughout the year for the support of the school. Such is the case of Mrs. Charlotte Hawkins Brown, founder and principal of the Palmer Memorial Institute, Sedalia, N. C., who spent a busy week in and around New York.
Although Mrs. Brown was here in interest of the concert she is to present at the Town Hall, 113 West Street, at the Town Hall, 113 West Street, evening, April 18, she found time to be the guest of honor at a dinner in the Blue Room of the Y. W. C. A., 179 West 137th street, last Wednesday at 6:30. Mrs. Ruth Logan Roberts was hostess to the group, included the following persons:
Belle Davis, Eva D. Bowler Julia P. Coleman
Hunter of the Empire State F. Women's Clubs, was more than 100 club of friends from various state in honor of Mrs. Thursday from 4:30 to 6:30 in the presence of the president of the Nation of Women's Clubs.
Mrs. Hunter was asleep by her daughter nice Hunton-Carter, as A. Holbrook.
Mesdan Jana Horne and Sylvan Jarreau, from Paris, Craig, S. J. Precna, Styles, Benjamin Speak and Miss R served the refreshments.
As a speaker Mrs. Precna was one of the She is added to the team, at Smith College.
Alderman Fred R. Moore, the Reverends W. P. Hayes, A. C. Garner and William Lloyd Imes; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Dilton, Mr. and Mrs. Watt Terry; Mesdames E. R. Alexander, M. V. Boutte Peyon W. Anderson, Anne E. B. Daly Reed. Elith McAllister-Alexander, Cora Horn, Ada B. Thomas, Speaks, Bessy J. Bearden, Misses Ethel Caution, Florence Lee Thomas,
the Aristo Literary and Social Club Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Richard C. Skeete, 167 West 145th street.
The Owl Club had election of officers at the residence of Alice Young. The new officers are as follows: Muriel Cole, president; Emily Gibbs, vice-president; Alma Hinkson, recording secretary; Denise Armstead, financial secretary; Ellinora Hinkson, treasurer.
The Jolly Workers' Social Club gave a Japanese tea party at the home of Mrs. Beuth Rogers last Sunday.
The Parrots' Social Club met at
the home of Mrs. Mayne Maginley.
136 West Eighty-first street, last
Sewing Machine Bargains
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200 W. 135th ST.
Open Evenings
Belle Davis, Eva D. Bowles and Dr. Julia P. Coleman.
Mrs. Addie W. Hunton, president of the Empire State Federation of Women's Clubs, was hostess to more than 100 club women and friends from various parts of the country, from Thursday to 4:30 to 7 o'clock.
Mrs. Brown, by the way, is vicepresident of the National Federation of Women's Clubs.
Mrs. Hunton was assisted in receiving by her daughter. Mrs. Eunice Hunton-Carter, and Mrs. M. A. Holbrook. Mesdames Vernon Van Horne and Sylvanus H. Hart Mesdames Walters Craig S. J. S. Craig William Styles, Benjamin Spearman. Eleanor Pollard and Miss Ruth Vincent served the refreshments.
As a speaker Mrs. Brown is ranked as one of the race's best. She is scheduled to give chapel lectures at Smith College and at Mt. Holkyole during the week of April 7. The Contributor's degree to "Life" is the object on which she will speak before a seminar class.
This nationally known educator spoke before the Central Congregational Church at its regular forum Sunday night. In Worcester, Mass., on "Saving America Through Her Negro Youth."
Thursday, at which time the following officers were installed by Mrs. Catherine Calhune: Mrs. Magniley, president; Mrs. Franklin Powell, president; Mrs. Anna E Gaynor, financial secretary; Mrs. Lola Harris, recording secretary; Mrs. Ida Oston, treasurer; Mrs. Lucy Blas, chaplain; Mrs. Tola Lawson, sergeant-at-arms.
Mrs. Rose Y. Wood, 192 Bradhurst
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Mme. J. L. L. CRAWFORD
103 West 10th Ave. New York Shop
103 West 10th Ave. New York Shop
avenue, entertained the Mes Amies Bridge Club Friday evening. All of the members were present. The prizes were awarded to Mesdames Cordella Booker, Anna Lane and Winifred McCoy.
Les Bacchantes Bridge Club was entertained by Mrs. Alice Porter, 211 West 149th street, on Saturday evening. The guest prizes were won by Mesdames Alys Lyons Wright and Hedwig Lewis. Mrs. Olive Johnson is president of the club.
The Nannie Burroughs Club met last Tuesday at the home of its vicepresident, Mrs. Margaret Byers, 14 West 127th street.
Miss Ella Baker, who gives a course in Negro Life and History at the Y. M. C. A., was guest of honor Monday evening at the regular meeting of the Chi Tau Upsilon Girls' Club
Mrs. Bessie Knapp, 2816 Eighth avenue, entertained the Parennial Bridge Club last Tuesday. Dr. Ardella Dabney donated a prize to be given to the member holding the highest points during February. Dayz Washington was the winer.
Guests of the hostesses were: Mr. and Mrs. G. C. C. Mrs. Rosa Banks, M. Booker, Mrs. Haskell Williams, Mrs. Wilhemina Hooker, Andrew Brisbane, Miss Lillian Treadwell.
The Twentieth Century Tuxedo Club was entertained at the home of Mrs. Sarah Ellis, 219 West 135th street, Thursday evening.
Club La Clique was entertained at the residence of Mrs. Florence A. Smith, president, Thursday evening. The bridge prizes were won by Mrs. William Butler of Englewood, first; Mrs. Annette Johnson, second; Mrs. Grace Winfield, third.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bruton entertained the Manhattan Whist Club at their home, 144 West 14th street, on Saturday. Eleven members and six guests were present.
La Gai Veuve Social Club held its regular meeting last Wednesday at the home of the president, Miss Hortense Aklen.
A meeting of the Nightingale Club was held on Thursday evening at the home of D. Car, 22 West 132d street. Progressive whist was played. Mr. and M. O. Johnson received the honors for the evening.
Mrs. Ruth Logan Roberts, 130 West 130th street, entertained one of her bridge clubs Friday night at her home, 130 West 130th street. Mesdames Charles Roberts and Gertrude Campbell won the prizes.
The Why Club, a recently organized club of men, the majority of whom are the husbands of the Satellite Alumni and Les Mysterious Clubs, will hold its next meeting at
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The portrait of Taylar Gordon, singer of spirituals, along with a number of New York's celebrities, is being exhibited by Bob Chanler at the valentine Galleries until March 23.
Mr. Gordon will be among the distinguished persons who will attend the twentth anniversary dance of the N. A. A. G. P., at the Renaissance Casino on Friday evening.
the home of the president, George Flowers, 57 West 140th street, toromore at 8:00 p.m.
The officers of the club are as follows: George Flowers, president; George L. McIntyre, secretary; Nathan Kilne, treasurer; O. Ward chaplain, and W. Mitchell, sergeant-at-arms.
Les Mysterious met at the home of Mrs. Alleen Jefferson, 248th Avenue, Thursday evening. Plans for an April fool party were made.
An inter-club meeting, sponsored by Frank T. David, president of the Utopia Literary and Social Club, was held at Madam Walker's Studio, 108 West 12th Street, New York, to discuss the possibility of organizing an Association of Literary and Social Clubs.
The Les Chercheuses Bridge Club was entertained Saturday evening at the home of Mrs. Henrietta Williams, 678 St. Nicholas avenue. The following were prize, winners: Guests—Mrs.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
The Arbor Vitae Co-eds are giving a St. Patrick's Novelty Dance at their clubhouse, 309 West 138th street, Saturday evening, March 16, 1629.—Advt.
Miss Jessie Guigulf of Columbia, S. C., was guest of honor at a reception tendered by her Mr. S. B. Williams at his home, 127 West 141st street, Baltimore, some of those present were: Mr. and Mrs. John Christian, Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. E. Franklin, Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Logan, Misses Beatrice Brown, Mary Goodwin, Agnes Goodwin, Marguerite Caldwell, Ruth Hunter, Edith Ford, Ena Hagood, Fannie Carwyle, Ella Hagood, also albums Downs Jr. C. G. Garrett, James Giles, E. H. Clark, R. Garrett, and Jas. A. Wakefone.—Advt.
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Just smooth on this fragrant, super-bleach at bedtime—let it start its wonder-work while you take your beauty sleep. You will be amazed how swiftly all olliness and roughness disappear, how pimples and eruptions vanish, while your skin grows lighter and more beautiful day by day. If you have been disappointed in other bleaches, remember Nadinola always works, quickly, surely. Every package carries our written, money-back guarantee and simple directions.
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Gertrude Rudd, first; Mrs. Gertrude Davis, second; Club-Miss Berta Sawyer, first; Mrs. Ruth Handy, etc.
Others present were: Mabed Josephine Harris, Barbara Walker Irene Royal, Bessie Christmas, Grace Steady, Etta Cachemalle, Georget Winstard, Newark; Mamie Johnson M. Wilson, Louise Johnson, W. Bacon, Evelyn Moore, Gretchen Thornton, Rose Woods, Sadie Hollow Also Misses Maude Turner and Majorie Shephard.
The Rose Bud Social Club held a regular meeting on Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Iris Salbs, West 144th street.
The Rennaissance Gris' Social Club held its meeting on Wednesday at the Rennaissance Casmo. The aid of the Rennaissance Gris. The charity these girls are planning a gala event for early May. Election of officers will be held on Sunday.
The regular meeting of the Douglass Club was held at the residence of McClain L. Gregg last Wednesday evening. Officers and members of the group are: Charles I. Peters, president; Richard Bell, vice-president; McClain L. Gregg, secretary; Stuart Swan, treasurer; James I. Sims, chaplain.
Also Fred W. Davis, James S. Hardy, Dr. W. Marlin Cooper, Dr. R. A. Lewis, Emmett Andrews, Charles Nathan, Nathan Epps, and Walter Bryant.
The Jontelle girls gave an afternoon tea party at the residence of Catherine Queen, 271 W. 119th street, last Sunday.—Advt.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilkle are spending a few days in Moulton Ga., with sister, Mrs. J. C. Beazer, 418 Fourth street.—Advt.
Mrs. L. E. Varnadoes of 125-H West 127th street, formerly Emily Ga., with sister, Monday night for Chicago, to visit the R. J. Varnadoes of Indiana avenue. Before returning she will visit friends in Pittsburgh.—Advt.
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_ __ ; NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929 a
Flapperettes : : By W.C. CHASE
ie, BACHELOR. WHO rs
BOISTS THAT He Cel ollie
HURRY ANY GIRL HE. af
PLEASES , PROBABLY 2S
DOESNT PLEASE ANY CA
OF THEM re Pi
Cavs
{() a
~~
Np aye
With the
SORORITIES
Lambda chapter entertained Tau
Omega chapter, both of the Alpha
appa Alpha sorority, with bridge in
honor of Founder's Day, Saturday
afternoon at the residence of Mis
Olyve Mae Thomas, 2041 Fifth ave-
nue. The prizes were won by Mrs.
Margaret Smith-Douglass, Misses
Laura Smith, Helen Lankford and
Lucile Spence.
Miss Florence Lee Thomas, basileus
of the graduate chapter. gave a short
history of the sorority and introduced
two visiting sorors, Mrs. Helen Coh-
ron: of ‘Cleveland, who was once the
dean of women at Howard Univer-
HY, and Miss Idabell Yelser, a teach-
erin the Bbiladelphia schools. Miss
Margaret “G:- Welmon is basileus of
Lambda chapter.
With the
FRATS
Phi Beta Sigma established the
‘pita Delta Chapter at City College
wi Monday evening, C, D. King,
president of the Upsilon Sigma
Chapter, presided.
The following officers were elected:
Alston Norton, president: Alonzo
Redwin, vice-president; Gordon R.
Kine, secretary; Albert Nesbitt, fl-
neneial secretary; Walton Mitchell,
ircasurer; Cecil Janis, chapter editor;
Withian Silcott, chaplain; Renee De
Gan-, poriamentarian.
Dr Gilbert H. Jones, president of
Wilozvtorce University, was the
sex Of honor on Saturday evening
42 ihe Jack and Jill Tes Room, 205
West 136th street. where a smoker
was ridulged in by Omicron Chapter
cf the Kappa Alpha Pst Fraternity.
Over fifty fraters were present. The
toastmaster, James Egert Allen, in-
Mociuced Arthur A. Schomberg and
Rober: W. Bagnall, who addressed the
bedy. Dr. Jones spoke on the “Op-
Portunity of Negro College Youth. *
Charles A. Collier 4s polemarch of the
chapter, 7
Y. W. C. A. Notes
‘There ts to be @ carnival in the
West 137th street branch of the Y.
W.C. A. on April 10, 11 and 12,
Dr, Roscoe Brown gave @ talk on
“Health” to the members at thelr
lecular Thursday night meeting.
A recognition ceremonial wil! be the
chlef feature of the Vesper Service to
be sponsored by the Girl Reserve De-
partment on Sunday, March 17. Mrs.
Margaret Douglas 1s in charge of the
service; Mrs. Vernon Johns, the
rrusie,
‘The Motivers' Council of “the Girl
Reserve Department maets tomorrow.
Mrs. Waller Wilkerson of 408 Edge-
tombe avenue. now convalescing at
lice hoine after a very successful
{2eration performed by Dr, Louls P.
Wright, "wishes. to. thank her many
Itiends’ fer their kindness shown to
her and beautiful floral gifts during
per stay at Edgecombe Sanitarlum—
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Girl Scout News
BY EVELYN HILL,
Age 13.
are
All out for the “Music Contest” on
Priday evening at the Y. W. C. A.
Auditorium at 7 o'clock! Only troops
participating will be admitted. The
‘winning troop or troops will contest
jagainst the winners of the other dis-
‘tricts in April. Mrs. Lula Robinson
Jones, with her selected judges, is in
charge.
‘Troop No. 175, at St. Mark's Catho-
jc Church, ts 2 wide-awake set. Ev-
jery Saturday morning the girls are
one hand at 11 o'clock in large num-
bers.
‘An Investiture ceremony is beng
planned by Troop No. 155 for the
new Scouts in the troop. Parents
and friends of the troop will be in-
vited.
On Saturday at 12 o'clock Troop
No. 91 of the Urban League will
make its first hike of the season.
Troop No. 124 of Mt. Olivet Baptist
Church, under Miss Margaret Eman-
uel. registered recently.
The girls of Troops No. $2 and 93,
who camped at Elwemar the past
summer, attended the camp reunion
at Mother Zion last Wednesday.
Five of them received camp letters.
‘Troop No, 153 took a short hike In
the Parkside on Saturday.
Opens Office
Dr. Robert S. White Jr. has opened
an office at 140 West 140th street,
Suite 1-M, where he will practice
centistry,
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ick’ rivers 50 that they produced no Ssh; Cooking Hint
St. Patrick’s Day Isr aa ete a8 TH ay, Cookin Hints
a ‘ jem boll, that food,
Sr. aware etmek | ane, toe Se. SHE fase ae ah
that Fepresenting fealousy—has been |" St Patrick and his followers were | ‘HP dough as ttle as possi
in evidence everywhere in the form|cn a mountain one cold morning, an- | coi Pore coite tary aoe tin
of hats, ties, shamrocks. other legend states. ‘They had no|celd., The colder they are th
‘Although "you "may not be irish,| fire with which to cook thelr meal |e 4ouBn may be handled,
you can enjoy the spirit of the St.| ‘The men collected a pile of ice and] qav.,“ne working, the, fa
Patrick's season. The old saint knew,| snowballs and St. Patrick breathed |Our and other dry tngredier
it is sald, in spite of the fact that upon it—instantly a fre was started! | Treating it in This is done
Druids’ fertile lands so that they be- St. Patrick’s Dinner peacedly catching che balls
came dreary bogs; to curse their pir PME Ss. SRNSE between two knife edges and
Confidences
Questions and Answers
— By EGYPSY ANN—
For Young Men!
[PS the young men who are in fo;
& Inying out today. You young-
sters under 25, sit up and llsten! Are
you going to let the girls get ahead
of you? Are you going to let them
graduate from high schools, colleges,
business schools and training schools
while you sit pretty on a public schoo!
diploma? Are you going to let them
get all the good fobs while you labor
for “pin money?"
If you're In school, specialize in
something that you like. If you've
loft school, go to night high schoo! or
business school or college. Go for
the sake of learning something and
so NOW.
Improve your speech by reading
standard books and good magazines.
¥or heaven's sake, don't be a bore. 1
have heard more than one girl say
that she could forgive a man for any:
thing exeept dullness. So polish up,
boys, and don’t feel so sure of yout
inherent power. Developing ‘this
power is what counts.
Dear Dan:
Are you sure you aren't a bore? I
know you are coneelted. Anyone can
tell that from your letter. A good
character Is indeed something to be
proud of, but the person who has one
fs seeking improvement rather than
spending his tlme admiring himself,
‘The man who belleves he Is the
personification of righteousness 4s
usually a real pain,
‘Improve yourself mentally and be
one of those rare persons—a man who
really doesn’t believe he is the an-
swer to every matden’s prayer.
EGYPSY ANN.
Cover That Cough!
If you have a cold, remember to
cover your mouth when you snecz
or cough.
Visit your family doctor, or the
Harlem Tuberculosis and Health
Committee,.202 West 136th street, for
information on colds. The commit-
tee’s telephone is Bradhurst 2995.
‘Mage 225-3100
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FY) chanical ang by hand), French curling, ry
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er te he
Mabe
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TERMS OF AGREEMENT —
Coupon value .....0-eceeeeeeeceresererecees $15.00
Registration fee ...eseesesseseeeeeneereeees 5.00
Balance (in weekly payments) .....seeee-+ 50,00
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REGISTRATION FEC MUST BE PAID BEFORE APRIL 18th
Ceurse can be completed in 8 or 10 weeks
APPLICATION BLANK er
Apex Hair Co, 1726 Arctic Ave., Atlantic City:
t herewith encicse a money order for §3 a3 REGISTRATION
FEE to be applied cn a full end complete course In Apex Beauty
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to enter class on date .....seccessesseeeeeeauneeee es ‘
Address \.sssssssesesscssssseesssesessterstictasaveesenen,
rivers so that they, produced, no fish;
to curse their kettles so that fire
could not make them boll, that food,
Boalt, ‘and happiness were closely
related.
* St. Patrick and his followers were
cn a mountain one cold morning, an-
other legend states. oe had no
fire with which to cook their meal.
The men collected a pile of ice and
snowballs and St. Patrick breathed
upon it—instantly a fire was started!
St. Patrick’s Dinner
Cream of Spinech Soup.
Roast Beef with Watercress.
Mashed Potatoes with Parsley.
Green Peas Brussel Sprouts
‘Mint Jelly Parker House Rolls
Pistachio Ice Cream.
St. Patrick's Cakes
Coffee Green Mints
Pistachio Ice Cream.
‘TO plan ice cream mixture add onc-
one-quarter teaspoon extract of
almond, one cup cl oped. nuts for
less than two quarts of cream and
enough vegetable coloring to the mix-
ture to make it an attractive light
Green shade, Freeze.
St. Patrick Cakes.
1c= Individual cakes, one and one-
half inches in diameter, with white
bolled frosting. In the center of the
frosting on each cake place a green
shamrock-shaped candy.
Golden League
Doings
| By BERYLE BANFIELD.
‘The dancing club of the Golden
League meets Friday at the Urban
League, 202 West 136th strect. It Is
directed by Lucia Segundo and Bet-
Ue Biene, assisted by Rosenda Se-
gundo and Beryle Banfield. A con-
cert and dance will be given by this
eiub at the Imperial Auditorium on
March 22.
Every department of the League
was represented at the camp re-
union banquet at Mother Zion
Church, West 137th strect, last Wed-
nesday. The Kewpie Debs squad
won first prize for the best decorated
table, while the Yattawas came nost
with honorable mention. The Brown-
ies captured the prize for having the
largest number at their table. Most
of the camp awards went to Golden
Leaguers. .
‘Those who recelved Camp letters
were: Evelyn Hill, Vivienne Frank-
In, Rosendo Segundo, Lucia Se-
gundo, Olivia Hill and'Beryle Ban-
field, ' These letters were presented
to girls who earned ninety-five
points or more out of a possible 183.
Cooking Hints
aH TTb secret of deliciously
The secret of making della
light, tender biscuits is in handling
the dough as little as possible.
2, Be sure the fat and milk are
cold. ‘The colder they are the easier
the dough may be handled.
3. When working the fat unto the
flour and other dry ingredients, cut
it in, rather than beating, stirring or
pressing it in. This is done by re-
pestedly catching. the balls of fat
between to iniife edges and cutting
4. Bake in_a very hot oven.
Suggestions
Plan your marketing and work
schedule by the week.
‘Assign one morning each week for
concentrated _ cooking — preparing
baking mixtures, a variety of sala
dressings and other parts of the
menu that will keep.
Carry outas much oy morning
work as possible. Spinach, greens
and lettuee may be prepared and
placed, tightly Govered, in the ice
x to keep for several days. | Prac-
tically all vegetables except, potatoes
permit early ‘morning prepareicn.
Address communications for_ this
department as follows: Editor, From
Cellar to Garret, care The Amster-
dam News, 2293 Soventh avenue.
To Exhibit Babies
In observance of National Negro
Health Week, March 31 to April 7,
the Training in Practical Nurses’
Circle will conduct its fourth annual
bables' health exhibit and clinic
April 1 to 5, at the St. John's A. M.
E. Church, 70 East 128th street.
Looking
E By ree
How to Get Plump
pe you fecl that you are losing
welght? Do people remark, “My.
how thin you're getting?” Do you fect
tlred and wornout and nervous?
If you do, yon want to snap out of
it NOW. When you feel fagged out
you not only look much older and act
iauch older, but you atso neglect your
dutics, whatever they may chance to
be.
. Suppdse you start today and plan &
The Feminist Viewpoint
—— Turkey. Takes the Lead ——
MERICANS so often pride themselves with being
A noticeably progressive. Ever so often, though, a law
passed in some country of the old world tends to
show us up, to make us admit that we sometimes overlook
matters that are vital to our advancement and success.
This time, according to a release, “a recent law of Turkey
forbids the issuing of marriage licenses except on presentz-
tion by each party of a health certificate signed by a Govern-
ment physician or a private physician whose signature is
registered at the local health department. Certificates is-
sued by private physicians must be sent to the local health
authorities for investigation. The law requires that the men
shall be given thorough physical ¢xaminations, and that the
woman shalt have their hands, throat and mouth examined,
All applicants for licenses must present birth certificates.”
In this city the boy and girl desiring to get a license
have to present a birth certificate only when they look as
though they are less than the age of consent, 18 for the girl
dnd 2r for the boy. As far as health and examinations arc
concerned, one question js asked and it relates to venereal dis-
eases, Always the answer to the question is “No.”
Perhaps, if we tried the health certificate method in cun-
nection with our licenses—even to the extent of having both
parties thoroughly examined—we might have fewer unhappy
marriages and a lower mortality rate—T. IE. B.
“Self-Improvement Month.” You arc
golng to improve yourself physical-
ly (and mentally) not by superficial
means, but by nature's remedies and
by good wholesome treatment.
One of the mest important factors
in gaining weight {s eating enough
food. Order s quart of Grade A milk
every morning and drink the whole
quart yourself.
If you have not got an appetite.
work up one, Get out in the open air
and walk ahout 30 blocks and by that
Ume you will feel toned up and
bungry.
Potatoes, macaroni, meats, grecn
vegetables. cakes and ples are a few
of the fattening and building foods.
Cut out the late hours. Get the
sleep you need and when you want to
step out this spring you won't look
like something “the cat dragged in.”
Marriage Licenses
Issued Last Week
——— i
Burne, Mire, 345 West 1220. street:
Misx’ Lore Tucker, 127 West 1st
Street.
Booker, James, 228 West 142d street:
Mise" Lena ios, 310 West” 427th
treet.
Braithwaite, Herman, 206 Green street.
| Rovton:. Mlex Torine Watts, 21
West Sixty-secand atséet,
[brewn, Otiver, 240 "Seventh avenue:
: Mise Pinkie Mughes, 200 West 143d
| nrert,
eet: ia, oe nah
| B
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gets rid of that “shiny” appearance. The Face Beg 0 255 He Me
Powder, in addition to keeping the skin soft; (Re 80 05 V0 SAAC
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Atreet; Miss Lilllan Miley, same ad-
rere.
Cabror, Frank, 86 Lenox avenue: Miss
Teubiel Lopen, a Kcist 1iath street,
Catlin, Eldon, GL Went 1S3in thee:
Mina Kate Levy, 4o7 Went 143th street
Coleman, James, 237 Wert 126d street
Misg adie Wilbur, 18° West 1st
aires.
Colion, Santiago, 161 Weel 140th street :
Mig Kate Levy, 407 West 1Sdh strert.
Cralley, Sednes, 406 Wert 121st treat
‘Mle Llzabeth Clark, 2 West Sth
street. :
Cruz, Hatacl, 22 Morningside avenue
Misa Inocenela Yantin, 38 West 135t0
-_etreet.
Cemimings, Mloazen, 292° West 119th
Snireet: Miss oatelce Lord, 136 West
| Tisth streets
Dorves, tlatence, 101 West 110!
street; Mie Rowena MeCrea, 225
| Wert 180i street.
‘Dever, Charles, 437 West 136th street ;
| Migs Dalsy Johnson, 238 West 128th
street.
Exser, Jack, 100 West 1ITth street; Mise
Sernh Elam xame wlress.
Fremeta, Antonie, 120 West 120th
virect; Miss Ana Duprey, 2166 Fitth
avenue.
Gaskins, Frank, M44 West 133d street:
Mies Lula Fulton, 2441 Elghth avenue,
Gregory, James, 103 Edgecombe avenue ;
Mix Halith Duncen, 66 West Ninety
iinth wureet,
Griffith, Themas, 127 West 41st strest
‘Miss Agatha James, 25 West 136th
Street,
Hartwell, Kenneth, 103 West 100t!
atreet; Mixy Allena Showers, same ad-
‘rew.
‘MTawkins, Forest, (2 Bird wtvect, Nyack,
ON, Yer Lula Sutton, 60 Van Brunt
street, Englewood, N. J.
Henderyon, George, 225 West 133d
Sore Vuuttlan tascuay eae chun
[Hoftier, Nea), 1977 Seventh avenua; Mise
Marietta Nixon, 318 West Fifty-ninth
| area
‘Holmes, James, 2532 Seventh avenue;
Milas ‘Lease Merritt, 133 West 240th
_atreet.
Jacob, Eugene, 149 West 117th streets
“"Misy Marla Libany, snme address,
Johnson, Norman, 69 Jefferson avenue,
‘Brooklyn ; Blea Alina Fostor, 206 West
addth street.
Johnson, Revert, 2027 Seventh avenuo;
"Misg Murtha ‘Smith, 21 West 118th
| Street,
|yones, Hobart, 258 West 104th street;
‘Misa Else Robinson, same uddrere,
Toner, Maille, 409 Engecombe avenue;
‘Mins Beulah Perry, snme address, *
Laudin, Arthur, 278 Decatur streot,
| “yroukiyn; Mies Dorothy Fatrfax, 1864
| Seventh avenue.
‘Lee, Thomas, 05 Wert 19th atreet:
i “Minw Augusta Stennett, 61 West 118th
| treat.
Lee, John, 2532 Seventh avenue; Miss
Ruth Johnson, same nddress,
Lewis, Andrew, 127° West 132d_atreet;
‘Mist Flerence Campbell, 608 Pavonia
avenue, Jersey City.
Lave, Mexander, St Went 117th street;
Misa Marlo Brawn, 69 West 190th
street.
Mazon, Charles, 2290 Fifth avenue ; Miss
1" Olive Ragiand, 205 Went 119th street.
jMeFuekiand, 235 West 116th atreot: Msn
| Gladys Chambers, 22 Audubon ave~
nie,
Melntosh, 17 West 123th street; Miss
1 Kugel Mores, same address,
Melon, 400 Manhattan avenne; Mss
| “Sisk stub, 128 St, Nleholaw avenue.
Miller, Waiter, 117 West 126th ntreets
Miss Marcia Asbly, 14 West 137th
sttent
Pimmnucr, Paul, 127 Went 1420 streets
‘Miss Adelina) Segee, 51 West 329th
Streat.
[obinzon, Earl, 115 West 1dsth street;
1 Miss Kean Wiliemson, 261 West 11st
} street,
' simmons, Frank; 39 West 126th streets
j gli Heaarice ioutter, annie wor
Suu, George, 9 South street, Orange,
|X. es Miss Myler Moxey, wuine ad-
ares,
| Seance Ulysses, 2090 Madison avenue;
Mig Erdle Hill, 2129 Pith avenue.
iUter, Aubrey, 201 Weat J24th stroet 5,
1 Miss Laura Worthan, seine addresn,
j Waser, Ellawortth, aig West 119th
street; Mise Edna 1ililard, same ad-
ales
Webs, Nelmour, 31 Wost 154th street:
‘Mis Beatrlee Syne, 262 West 12ith
sweet, .
Wikis, William, 117 West 12ist_ street ;
Mss Loulse “Jlenderson, 1499 Figen
Whilinnts, Alexander, 67 West 130th
sirect; Miss Mary’ Durhum, 28 Me-
Comntx place.
+ witlioms, Harry, 202 West 193d streot;
‘Mlox Loulso Tyler, 109 West 14th
Ptreot,
Williaiis, Jnck, 2512 Seventh avenue:
| 3itae Bae rove, 25 geventn ager
jue.
Wilson, Tslehard, 2510 Seventh avenues
| ‘Misa Beulah Iichardson, 7 West 133d
‘Seeach
Utepia House Notes -
‘Mrs, Bertha DesVerney of “Show
Boat” is conducting a group of “con-
cert artists,” who will meet every
Friday, from 4 to 6.
‘The art class, under the direction
of Miss Helen Smith, is open to all
children over 15 who are interested
in developing their talents in this linc.
The class meets every Wednesday,
from 7 to 9.
SIX : . NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929
BestAmusementPages || BRI
in Greater New York |) Kic
Broadway Stars to Again Assemble at
Lafayette for Special Midnight Ramble
‘Testimonial to Members of “Porgy” Company Sailing
for Europe and Presentation of Silver Loving
Cup to Bill (Bojangles) Robinson
ALDERMAN JOHN C. HAWKINS TO MAKE PRESENTATION
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, Winning Entry to Ameri-
can Federation of Labor, to Benefit by Turnout of Great
Array of Theatrical Sttars Midnight March 24
While It fs true that the Lafayette Theatre has koused many celebrities
at midnight shows in the past, it ls Goubtful If such an assemblage as will
gather midnight of Sunday, Mareh 24, has ever graced the stage of the
Jocal house presided over by Mr. Frazi: Schiftman, who recently took over
the Lincoln ‘Vheatre on 135th street. Mr. Schiftman gave the house without
© mon:ent’s hesitation and Hariem will again enjoy one of the olggest
nights along entertainment lines,
‘Members of the “Porgy” company. headed by Frank Wilson, appearing
Jn the titie role of the show. sailing the next night for Europe. members
of Lew Lesite's famous “Blackbirds” with the sensational “Blackbirds” Or-
chestra furnishing the music and members of Florenz Zelefeta's “Show Bont”
and other stars will appear on the above night at the Lafayette Theatre,
Leigh Whipper. whose character In the part of the crabman in “Porgy” has
won acclaim all over the country. will be master of ceremonies, assisted by
dacs Carter, another member of the “Porgy company whose work has
‘von Im commendation at the hatids of critics wherever the show has
Pde ttionr s
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters
‘hose affair in’ Philadelphist som
weeks ago failed to register. and wil
be in conjunction witha regular “bot
voyage” party to the members of th
“Porgy” conipany going abroad t¢
show Europe why they have been 1
success in America for more thar
seventy-cight weeks. Little Kid Choc:
late, the sensational ittle fehte:
from’ Cuba, who Is the most colorful
claimant for the world’s title in ht
Giass {1 the United States. will alsc
flash his famous smile from the stage
ef the Lafayette, as will Garland
Anderson, creator and producer of the
play “Appearances.” now In this elt
fo open “negotiations for “anothe!
Broadway showing of the _vehitcic
‘hich he recently ‘closed in, Chicago
‘One of the big features of the night
Will be the presentation of a. sliver
loving cup to Bill (Bojangles) Robin-
fon, star of “Blackbirds.” for the un-
selfish manner in which he has sup-
Ported and to which he has personally
contributed to so many worthy, or:
Sanizations in this and other ities
‘ne hand that will go to Robinson on
this occasion woitld make the heart
of any man in the public eve feel
lad, Alderman John Cifiord Haw:
Ins, one of the most able lawyers in
the United States, will make the
presentation. :
John Clifford Hawkins spent three
pints in the New York Scate, Assem:
ly and was counsellor to the United
States Shipping Board for five and 8
half years. At present he Js the Alder-
man from the 2ist Aldermanic dis-
trict and the second Negro to ever
serve in the New York Assembly. Four
Negroes have altogether served seven
years in the Assembly nnd out of
Those seven years Alderman Hawkins
has served three. He was also the
‘only Negro. to_ serve as Assistant
Counsel to the Shipping Board,
Alderman Hawkins has also been a
eandidate for election four Umes and
he has been elected four times, When
elected Alderman he had not been a
candidate for office for seven, vears.
proving that he holds the confidence
ef the people and could make a
“comeback” whenever he felt the
urge. ‘The cup to be given to Amer-
Sea's foremost dancer’ is a present
from the dramatic editor, of the
‘Amsterdam News to Mr. Robinson.
Bho, has appeared on every, ene
bill fostered by’ the editor for, organt-
vations in this city and in Philadel-
phis. Although a partial ist of the
€clebrities will appear in the next Is-
gue, a number of surprise acts will be
held in abeyance to be sprunt on the
‘audience the night of the big affair.
Notes of London
ee nr ae
Mr. and Mre. (0. Bovemetnl are to:
eliviie Saat ian a aie tien
cite aan neti
Sine tate em, a
Bihar nie Cy tea
Ee eri Gee
Sina ie ae rs
ire, lt te of he
it Boke he am
Bit ih eon tl
Bre Dea an sh,
die ea nd et
ire 9 Doge el am ie
Mh ete En
ce
ee ee
antici fu meg tsb th
siritaeas chee i
ieee ean trae
resets of i
ier ee a he
Ae ae Tm
foc esa ae
See etic pang
eel oi tea
feo theme
beet
alate ae ar am Masicm
ante ates a aon Hew Ta
guise ne tn tof fr wr
Bias tas Ae ar aun
sr ei ta
ri ase ano tor hes
Eran, fr fn tape,"
ee our
he Vast a: FR
cite amon gf ssonma
Sea AP heater
gine oe ala re
Eee armel oat vat ae
wor eure oa ne
hea te io ath oa
ae ee carne le a
Englant, France and Germany on Uhe
Eager na
eae Si ny vn Wao
cian amp ga et Kean a
gti Ha 2 a
Bee ate iia taal
Bae tt cee ri
Sei ara hn Neh
Sivas apenas
merge cain Sata
Bushes ever ss atten, ° ‘
7 tae te Fence on
Sobre stumtesiten vege pak te ate
Maran aud bok, Hild ond eda
aaa, dame geese
_— STARS AGAIN IN MIDNITE SHOW
Kid Chocolate Among Celebrities Here Mar. 24
quieres IUisey Nunvlerey iat. Bhepbelt
Siig They en atthe ote
ocaeee
sein auliee erbein
oi anata some
Urey have been appearing In popular
aap ae
Sher
eae tert ahaa
Seite Eater ee
Se oa ae,
ee esi es
deal oe ee
sein i
aarmsiren.
on marie dbesace
sh ie oe
eee tera as
fo A oe ae Me se
e
Charming Mrs, Nell Hunter of Dur-
See SB toe at
eS Ait a
shea pees
i ets SP se
Fa tet
once ee
Seater ts ee
ri
a
Ughttul stay in London, has returned
1 ae as
iste oh eet Gee
Lode nae
Atom 1 made a_inistake {2 her name,
Sa ott ge
Bi ono
fo Ba i Se
Ehysiuoe meats
ommaal en the continent,
seam soie ioe
sedate Wht
ae ae Ra dt
Se a tt SS
Siti mata eyes
Ser
ae
st io
oi ee al oe
sae eon
sete ees ti
ek Mo
Se RS ane
ie Satori
Sh ae ca
ae
a ea
salen Br dae
ce ae a ia
Sete
alles AMpera Tanier's plane afte
eet i are not compieie since
ten, ee ae
ental ae
fe i oat ae
ioe fee geoae
iat
ee sa
wheel th
shea
Feats wie i
ES te Gee te
ather hand she ds still diewing way down
Scie ee a
ier fea Con
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regs
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THEATRE
Seventh Ave. and 137th St.
NOW PLAYING
CLUE wy
ant ea)
eae
CES LES
Made Marlem Gaxp at the Marvel
ef the Snoken Screen
Come, See and Hear in the Bean-
tiful, Kenovated Renaissance
Theatre :
Married to Cuban Musician
ee PPE TAs iti PET
ner PISS a Ng To al By
Big. a rn OS.
BARS nd Si i a Sake
Se raed decd
ry Avec ee a iy
Bek Lage Soe 5 y
Bie” Saeeoas err , A
a SA Pan Ro! ‘Se
oa a oon Be
meverie mm Cay, % Ee a eae
Ree we eae SS
Renee ae é o ap
es wt ae ae
Be iy {eer "eae
eee Ar ak ee
a Cee CaS BONE Lee
; ; ee, Oe
a SOS oe
ca 2 CNY pas
ees | see
: eames © ipo meee
merase Shel Maer ae
Reereeroramea © Se) Danae
Mrs. Dora Barreto, a Charming Chicago Girl of the London
“Show Boat” Company, Stepped Out of an Imperial Airplane
From Paris Recently and Quietly Married Senor Marino Bar-
reto, Well Known Cuban Pianist.
Texan eer SCT eT
* NOW PLAYING
+ THIS WEEK > 7
“JACK THE RIPPER”
Who Is the Mysterious Unknown Who Drives Richard Norman to
‘Madness With Black-Hand Letters Threatening Death?
SEE IF YOU CAN GUESS THE GUILTY ONE?
GEORGE RANDOL is the Man Threatened — ALF. WATTS his
Hypocrite Friend — BARRINGTON CARTER and, TED BLACKMON
are Clumsy Village Detectives—ARTIE CAIN is a Mischievous Boy
and SUSIE SUTTON Is the Mother—EDNA MARRIS and WILL
BRYANT are Victims of a Conspiracy. i
Drama, Fun and Tragedy Blend in “JACK THE RIPPER”
“SPORTING BLOOD”
SANDY BURNS, the Famous “ASHES”
Is Back With the Happy Alhambra Family. DORIS RHEUBOTTOM,
the Prima Donna Everybody Loves. JONNNY LEE LONG — APUS
BROOKS — MANDA RANDOLPFH—THE SIXTEEN GIRLS and
All the Merry Gang.
ag
EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION
Sharkey-Stribling Fight
JACK DEMPSEY Presents the Gfficial and Exclusive Ringside Moticn
Pictures of the Heavyweight Boxing Contest
PAULINE GARON in “THE GIRL HE DIDN'T BUY"
Continuous, 1 to 11 P.M. — Midnite Show Wednesday
Next Week — Starting Meuday — Entire New Triple Program
“CHINATOWN AFTER DARK”
A Chinese Festival That Turns to Tragedy—Spiendor That Turns to
Horror—A Revelation’ of Accursed Craftiness of the Orient
Transplanted to America
Ts
“CRAZY STREET,” With Sandy Burns, “Ashes”
Picture Feature — JEAN LESLIE in “Paying the Price”
| Ameriean acts, the Three Dudies and
BR Sas sy, Bear
| Miss Mazel Sheppare, popular mem-
[tor of the Greenlee ond Drayton Arts
SEbeas mse
silane S Ee
to Isave with the act for Hamburg, Ger-
Site Ghia gies
soso ee
pane all
‘the I. T. C. cinemas, are pinying the
Alhambra, Leleester Square, this Weel:
a
seri
SETA
en
tire tne
eg tt
ee as
Halls and are slwaye fuyuriies cvery-
i 7
= rue sar yen te
erageiveae a
-ppetring at the new Capital Cinema tn
eet
ia A a
Sas ec
ee
sa, ae
Sheet et
ie ea ae
rae cae a ee
Empress Rooms, ant the — Plecadilly
Club. London, during ie month o!
Apri,
The well-known team of Williams and
Taylor are playing thelr fina} weeks
with the Englinh Blackbirds Co, They
Inve licen a hig success with Black-
Virds xince Joining the original company
two years ngo, and havo worked hard
with the present company for the past
fear, Clinton “Taylor has developed
into a real frat Fate comedian, ail bie
[work with Eadie Ilunter Is one of the
eutstanding bite It the revue: Wil-
Came and Taslor return to. Variety.
where thes azn alwasn w Uig euccern
iad are extnblished faverites fn the
halls. Oening thortly at tie Holborn
Lunpire, the hos will play ‘@ Tong tour
qa the GT. G. time.
‘The Musical Spillers are doing creat
over the tT. C. tour and from all
Soporte the act Is an outstanding hiten
Sere tll
AT YOUR SERVICE
GEO. C. LAYNE’S
ECCENTRIC DANCE
ORCHESTRA
Terms Reasonable & Good Music
PHONE AUDUBON 2208
263 W. 144th ST,
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By BESSIE SMITH .
Axo the way Bessie sings that mean, insinuatin’ song on
her latest Columbia Record—well, it just gets you all
confused and flustered, that's all! The temperature of this
number is ragingly feverish—red-hot and boilin’! And the
one on the other side has no icicles on it!—it’s a sizzler!
Get this record today—at your Columbia dealer's!
Record No. 14399-D, 10-inch, 75¢
POOR MAN'S BLUES ie Smit
YOU OUGHT TOBE ASHAMED} > Voo#ls, Bestio Smith
OTHER POPULAR RECORDS
Record No. 14400-D, 10-inch, 75¢
C.C. & O. Blues { + Vocals, Pink Anderson and
Cvery Day in the Week Blues Simmie Dooley
Record No. 14397-D, 10-inch, 75¢
Sigint om MeL ko oo + Vocals, Jackson Blue Boys
eisk your dealer for Latest Race Record Catalog
Columbia Phonograph Company, New York City
NS
.
7 “NEW.
Columbia »2%..Records
Viva~tonal Recording ~The Records without Scratch
er to Retire
-- From the Stage
Fhawes Stage and Vita-
phone Star to Devote
Time to Promotion of
Symphonic Orchestra
Noble Sissle, one of the creators
and stars of the never to be fortol
ten “Shuffle Along." “Chocolate
Dandies" and other ploneer - Negre
stage successes, who returned from
Europe on the Berengaria on Marck
6, has throun a bombshell into the
amusement business by announcing
that at the conclusion of his forth-
coming engagement, which takes him
back to Europe about the first of
May, he will retire from aciive stage
work.
In ‘speaking of his Just completed
European tour, Mr. Sissle confided
that ft had been the most profitable
and pleasant one in his career and
that tn the short space of 18 months
jhe has become one of the biggest box
office attractions in England and, in~
eidentally, the highest’ pald single
eclored artist to ever appear in that
‘country.
“It 18 an interesting cycle of events
that Props. me to announce that
I am retiring from the stage.” says
Mr. Sissie. in his usual serious man-
ner. “I was engaged during | the
months of July and August last year
to furnish and conduct a band at the
|Cafe Des Ambassadeurs, in Paris, and
while playing this engagement I
came in contact with a great many
friends that I had made while as-
sociated with the late "Jim" Europe.
who as you know. Br me my sturt
In the amusement business.
“These comments. were all en-
couraging and, after hearing my or-
chestra, which was one of the sen-
sations of Paris, a great many of
them asked me why it was that no
Negro had come forward to take the
place of “Jim” Europe as a leader,
Organizer and promoter of dance or-
chestras. Irene Castle McLaughlin,
for Instance. sald to me one night’
‘Noble. your band, with you conduct-
ing, reminds me of 1913 and the time
when “Jim” Europe. Vernon Castle
and myself first became famous.
‘There has been no outstanding. figure
in the field of Negro music since Mr.
Europe's aragic death and since
Vernon Castle and I always consid-
ered. “um one of our partners in
busthess, I feel privileged to confer
his crown upon you.’
That was a litte more than I ex-
pected from the woman who is gen-
erally. credited as t:ing responsible
for the present dance craze, As the
seacza went on and my band. bee
came more and’ more popular <.
Race Horse Owner
1 Se
a
toe RF
: ? se me" xe
ei
ee
SIS
pees
NN ee’
“gee
3 a
yk
B ad
SHE 3
ALONZO WHITE, Shown
Above, Ie the Owner of “One
Silly Wire” and “Lenox Ave-
nue,” Two Thoroughbreds, One
of Which He Is Entering in the
Pimlico Futurity. He Is Leav-
ing for Baltimore the Latter
Part of the Week to Train His
Racers at the Pimlico Track
thought of what she had said and,
although I had to dismiss my band
at the conclusion of the season at
the Ambassadeurs in order to finish
out certain contracts which T had to
play in England, I continued to keep
that thought in’ mind and now that
‘Ihave just signed contracts with Mr.
Edmund Sayag, the manager of the
Cafe Des Ambassadeurs, for the com-
Ing season to again present my band,
T have determined to definitely give
up active stage work in favor of the
orchestra business.”
Mr. Sissle laments the fact that the
Negro musicians, except in remote
instances, are not holding thelr right;
ful place’ in the music business and
have let the white musicians step In
and assume the "style of | playing
which the Negro originated and to
corner most of the work that right-
fully belongs to the Negro musician,
by reason of his having created whnt
is popularly known as “Jazz music.”
Mr, Sisste ts hopeful, however. and
fecis that with proper organization
the Negro musicians will again come
into their own,
Edited by
Romeo L. Dougherty
! BIGGER AND BETTER SHOWS ! gy
———_|_ BIGGER AND BETTER SHOWS |
AQ THe
| LINCOLN arn
i ‘135th Street
East of Lenox Ave.
Tins NERS Die SHOW
INVIN C MELERS GREATEST ASS EAL REVUE
Brownskin Models of 1929
With JACKIE MABLEYoutLLY youxe
and Supparting Cnet ot 3s Punaiar Rhases
. FEATURE PHOTOPLAY
Richard Barthelmess in “Scarlet Seas”
SEX? WEERCHEGINSING NON MWARGIDIS
LEON AD HARPER'S NEW NEVER TET
MIDNIGHT STEFPERS
FEaTeHR protorray
“NED McCOBB’S DAUGHTER”
THE GHEAT STAGE MELODRAMA
EEE EE EEE EEE EEE EEE
M. & S. Douglas Theatre
Lenox Ave. Cor. r42nd St. Phone Edg. 8013
The Leading Colored Moving Picture Theatre in Harlem
Se ee nab em
Saturday, Sunday, Monday, March 36th, 17th, 18th
DOLORES DEL RIO in “THE TRAIL OF ’98”
A story of adventure and romance—of brave men and women
storred to the depths by the quest for gold. Buried bencath the ava-
Janche, swept to death from flimsy beats In fey water, still they kept
on with that Indomitable courage of the American pioneer.
Second Episode of “The Diamond Master"—A Serlat
Also Comedies and News Events .
—————
———oSSS ee
M. & S. Roosevelt Theatre
Seventh Ave. Cor. r4sth St. Phone Edg. 7860
Saturday, Sunday, Monday, March 16th, 17th, 18th
VICTOR McLAGLEN in “CAPTAIN LASH”
A romantic drama of seaports and the sea in which tyrant
among stokers on an ocean liner is toppled from his throne of strength
by a lovely adventures. A romance of the “Black Gang.”
Sixth Episode of “The Tiger's Shadow”
Chapter No. 12—"Kacing Blood” Featuring Alberta Vaughn & Al Cooke
THE WORLD'S GREATEST 1 THE FINEST OF
TALKING PICTURES [ MUSICAL COMEDY REVUES
"AMERICAS LEADING COLORED THEATRE:
L RaW NEY TS i
NOW PLAYING (UP TO SUNDAY, MARCH 17, INCLUSIVE)
Ralph Cooper in Assoclation With Clarence Robinson, Presents
With AL MOORE and FREDDIE WASHINGTON, RALPH COOPER,
ALEX LOVEJOY, FREDDIE TAYLOR, LOUIS and BUSTER—
COTTON CLUB BAND
Feature Photoplay
VILMA BANKY in “THE AWAKENING”
asi Es
NEXT WEEK—BEGINNING MONDAY, MARCI 18
With BILLY HIGGINS and 1ZZY RHINGOLD
Also the Mighty Epic of the Alr
“LILAC TIME”
11 #0 Sensational Month
fos) Ye
psAER LED i fai
Ree LEW
wLESLIES.
with, f
ADELAIDE HALL ~ BILL ROBINSON
fastes. funnest WORLD FAMOUS BLACKBIRDS
extrcvaganza in- ORCHESTRA
Gudingtheseng "\qond JOHNNY HUDGINS €
Te Suey Ss EIT INS
ANYTHING BUT LOVE” ‘ss TENE es
PRICES RES $100 to $385 AE BAERS ws
LMATS $100"bo 4220" NOTAS_ \, nats pant? Be
Lowe Featured at Repertory
Appearing Sunday night before
capaclty crowd ae the Civic Reper-
tory. ‘Theatre. James B. Lowe, the
featured artist of Molshe Nadir's'pro-
gram, received an ovation that cx-
‘eceded all expectations.
Other than Mr. Lowe the program
was comprised of Yiddish actors, ac-
tresses and. concert artists, ’ well
known In their various walks of life.
‘Nadir's one-act play, “The Messiah
Comes to America,” drew much fa-
vorable comment,
Dr. Savory ‘and several of his
friends formed » Inrge theatre party
to represent Harlem.
Thompson Beats Andrews
BUFFALO, N. ¥., March 12—
‘Young Jack Thompson, San Fran-
cisco fighter, who flattened Joe Dun-
dee, welterweight champion, in Ch:-
cago last fall, easily outpoimed Heasy
jAndrews, of Erie, Pa. in a ten-tound
bout here last night. Sam Bruce.
‘Buffalo, 143%, beat Jimmy Mollette,
‘Chicago; 138, in ten rounds. Frankic
Schoell, Buffalo, 155, defeated Wilson
Yarbo, Cleveland, 156, In another
ten-rounder.
—___.,
——_—_—_—_——,
AESTHETIC & JAZZ
GROUPS WANTED
FO Mites AATEC
TMEATINCALS
Wrtte if you wish to enter: Mise M,
Medlou, BY West 1830 Sh Gluten
Alhambra Revue and Drama Scoring
P
Street Calls of the South
PRESENTIVE substitute for our mod-
ern advertising is to be found in
the latest call of the South which ad-
dores the goods of workmen selling
diverse items as devilish crabs,
among watermelons or doing such
things as cutting grass or mending
Within the city salesman of the North who is hustled by intense competition and is aided by a variety of advertising devices, the street hawkers and soldier men of the South live in the city, where they are burdened by heavy burden on their miserable shoulders. They are not to exert themselves in the same manner as their Northern brothers; they will manage to call their wares or their adaptability for certain tasks to be compelling a fashion that attracts their attention. "Worba's Flatbush theatre this coming week, are two direct calls. One writer recently objected to a statement that there are no direct calls in American. This objector and the two calls used in "Forge" use of them is used by a seller of honey and a seller of water. The seller of the stress with his body is followed on his head, calling in lounges on his heals:
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Here comes the honey man—I gets money in de coupe—yes, man, I gets money cheap—here comes de honey.
A good call. It states the simple fact that the man has honey, that it is in the cup and not bottled, that it is cold and that here it is.
The other call, certainly the more attitudinal of the two, is that used by the man in a wristband, the unpacked arm while he yells, with his white wrist moving in silent rhythm to the call. This is his call, rendered with the accent heavily placed on the last words of each line:
I'm talking 'bout devil' crabs,
I'm talking 'bout devil' crabs,
'instantation' when done
Takin 'instantation' when done
I'm talking 'bout devil' crabs.
At this juncture he may get a customer. If so, the cry is varied:
I'm talking about de pocketbook,
I'm talking about de pocketbook,
Intatatatat, as I done talking
'Bout do pocketbook,
I'm talking 'bout devil' crabs.
Leigh Whipper, one of the actors of the play, is a South Carolinian and is responsible for the insertion of this call in the drama, as he is for many other calls that appear in this article.
The truck farmers of the South who drive into the cities on the market days of each week (Tuesday, Friday and Saturday), also take a turn through the residential sections of their local consists of tomatoe, here is their slogan:
Tomato-o-o-o-oes,
He's fresh—he's fine,
Just off the vine—
Tomato-o-o-o-oes!
A shrimp seller invites his customers not presuming, one may imagine, to stop within their kitchens. At any time, he crabs:
Fresh shrimps—fresh shrimps.
If you want to see me.
Come down with the dishpan.
Come down with the dishpan.
Fresh shrimps—fresh shrimps.
The Billed Man's Plea.
A more pathetic plan, and one un-
known hereboise, is that used by
bird beakers. Unable to play the vi-
sion or to acquire those nearly painted
cold and mild, of their informative content, these be-
gars take up their location and, instead
of offering caramels or shoestrings
with the cact, oft-repeated injunction
"buy one," buy one," they simply call:
Billed man sit on the road and cry.
Billed man sit on the road and cry.
Lord Oh Lord, won't you let me see?
Billed man sit on the road and cry.
It is a direct plan to the sympathies,
spoken plea plus the visual plea al-
ready made by the mere sight of a
bird beaker.
Some of the other calls are distinguished, not so much by the novelty of their lyrics as the novelty of their utterances. There is the call of the rake tree and iron man, set down by Sir Whipper with the injunction that the first words of the line must be uttered with a paean:
Big, burgess and old old old-ron,
Burg, burgess and old old-ron.
"There is no novelty, certainly, to the call of:
"beerade-made in the shade-
with a shade- lemonade."
I wish with a pride—lemonade!”
As children are used to giving it there is the news in the face that it is fired by the hand of an old man of whom no information in itself could be obtained, fixing of the knife can only be imagined.
The great outfitters have a novel call to the vocal flourishes that give information interest. In order to give it more value, the word “grass” is related to “grasses.” The call gen- “rrrrrrr!” I do out- yyyyyyyes I do out- out.” It is effective and interesting.
.
Green corn—sure you're both—yard
COOPER-ROBINSON SHOW HIT AT LAFAYETTE Miller's "Brown Skin Models" at the Lincoln
At Harlem Theatres
By OBSERVER
AT THE LAFAYETTE
A controversy has arisen between Mr. Lawless, the famous producer and creator of "blackbirds," and the producer of the show which is playing at the Lafayette this week. This controversy arises over the fact that this week's Lafayette stage offering is called Harlem, and Mr. Lafayette's attorneys have said this is a slight infringement on the title of the Broadway show. Due to the friendship and close association between Mr. Lafie and Mr. Schiffman, this controversy is not likely to assume any greater proportions than a lot of heated discussion.
No matter what the result of this controversy, however, it is generally conceded that this week's at the Lafayette Theatre is not an attempt at imitating the Broadway production, but is one of the finest reviews that Harlem, or even Broadway, has seen in many months.
"Junior Blackbirds of Harlem" was created by Halph Cooper, in association with Clarence Robinson. The cast includes the finest colored entertainers and all of them are the best celebrities. Some of them have also appeared in Europe.
With the Cotton Club Band on the stage and Ralph Cooper as the enunciating and pleasing "master of ceremonies," these performers go through their work in a manner which brought storms of applause and innumerable cheers at Monday's opening performance.
The cost is headed by Al Moore and Fredille Washington, who have recently returned from an appearance of two years in Paris and Berlin. This wonderful pair of dancers gave an exhibition of ballroom dancing which has soldon been squallied. The comedy is mainly handled by Alex Lovejoy and Nikol Cooper; the vocal singing by the duo Vivian Brown; the specialization by Fredelle Taylor, Lewis and Buster and several other popular players.
As a special attraction the producers spring a surprise by presenting Noleel Slible and Uble Blake, the international stars of syncopation. This was, of course, accomplished on the marvelous Vitaphone. This wonderful pair of enunciating and pleasing three songs. The presentation which the group from audience could hardly have been greater had they appeared in person.
The photopolyipin presented this week at the Lafayette Theatre also deserves particular mention. It is the new Vimphone Vimphone. This is the greatest picture in which Miss Ranky has yet appeared. It is a stirring romance of heart-rending warfare and a dance made doubly enjoyable by the use of special Vimphone synchronized scores.
The Lafayette Next Week
Another great stage and screen program is promised patrons of the Lafayette next week. This time the stage show will have better comedy than has the due to the presence of Billy Biggins and Henry Jinek. Biggins has not appeared at the Lafayette Theatre for some time. He is a great favorite there and always manages to give the audience more laughs than almost any other comedian. The show is entitled "Blackouts of 1922." It will be presented by a cast of some 40 players, including Izy Bingold.
The feature photoplay for next week at the Lafayette Theatre will be "Libus Time," the greatest drama of the air that has ever been screened. Colleen Moore is the star. "Libus Time" played for a soldi year on Broadway and was regarded by the critics as being a greater picture than "Wings."
As a special nailed attraction with "Blackouts of 1629" and "Lilac Time" the management of the Lafayette Theatre will also present Aunt Jemima, one of the stars of Ziegfeld's "Showboat," on the Vitaphone. Aunt Jemima is in the audience of "Can't Help Loving That Man." Next week's program at the Lafayette Theatre gives promise of entertainment equal to this week's splendid show.
"The best show ever presented at the Lincoln." This was the unanimous opinion of the large audience which crowded into the Lincoln Theatre to witness Irvin C. Miller's 1529 edition of his book *Brownskin Model* in 1629. Utilizing a comedian, dancer, singers, musicians and model, as well as some of the most dazzling scenery and costumes which have ever been seen on a local stage, Irvin C. Miller has certainly one of the finest of his creations in "Brownskin Model." The cast of "Brownskin Model" includes Dilly Young, Jackie Mable, Blanche Thompson, Eva Medcald, George Grawford, Michael Sherod and other celebrities.
Originally scheduled for an hour and a half, the show lasted well over two hours, with encore which the audience demanded.
The photoplay program being presented in addition to the "Brownskin Model" includes Michael Barthelmsen's latest picture, "Scarlet Seal." "This is a nightly middrama of the sea and takes its place with Tullible David" is one of the greatest pictures in which Barthelmsen has ever appeared.
With the improvement in the enter-
long—ears strong—green corn."
It is an ingenious call. With one rectal it sets forth the fact of possession and the willingness to sell, plus the fact that the ears are both long and short, which means farm and free from defy.
The men who go about collecting fatty wastes for soup factories naturally have to ride far and wide through the rural districts in search of the farmers who may have experienced a hog-killing season. In the quiet atmosphere of the country their cull penetrates into inany farmhouse. The cull is "Boup fit-fit-fit-fit-fit-sons fit-fit-fit." This is all you believe so that the "fat-fat-fat" becomes equivalent to a "fat-int-fat-fat-fat."
There are other culls. In Norfolk, Porsmouth and that viability water melons are pedled with the same "isle of Wight" emphasized over that of "watermelon." This is a local cull, and is explained by the fact that prize water melons grow on the Isle of Wight, which is across the river from Newport. Newport is in Newport News that the schooners come and, once loaded, the huskers go off, yelling "Isle of Wight watermelons are pebbles and I
AT THE LINCOLN
tainment being offered at the Lincoln
Theatre, a notable change has come over the house. Structurally one of the finest in Harlem and long an important factor of Harlem's theatrical life, the theatre is quickly coming into
progression. A larger and larger crowds are
growing and the appearance of the theatre as well as the splendid type of stage and screen shows now being presented.
At the Lincoln Next Week
Leonard Harnor's latest musical comedy, the "Midnight Steppers of 1938," will be presented at the Lincoln Theatre next week. This show has not met the expectations of some theater forms. The cast includes Joyce Brooke, the McClain Twins, Billy Mitchell, Crackshot Hackney and Bud Scripp.
The feature picture for the week will be McCobb's Daughter. Prong Rich is the star of the picture, which is one of the greatest of last year's stage plays.
AT THE ALHAMBRA
"Jack the Ripper" at the Alhambra, starts with fun, then suddenly becomes serious drama, then more fun, then a moment of tragedy, and ends with a laugh chasing away a thrill. And how those Alhambra drama folk play it! George Hammel is a village school principal and, secretly, a high-stake boothgerer. He is driven to terror very on insanity by a series of mysteries, including death and signed "Jack the Ripper." Barrington Carter and Ted Blackmon are two "thouh" detectives. Elena Harris and Will Bryant are victims of a conspiracy. Artie Calm is delightful as a mischievous boy and Susie Sutton is the mother. At the very end comes the solution of the mystery.
Sandy Burns, the likable "Aather"
now back among his Alhambra friends.
It Feels So Good!
...your heart's gonna start a throbbin',
honey ...there'll be a sweet emotion a
stirrin' yuh...when this greatest of all love
songs takes you to a Garden of Eden.
8664 - Lonnie Johnson - Spencer Williams
"IT FEELS SO GOOD"
Part I and II
~ Vocal Duet With Piano & Guitar ~
75¢
RACE ELECIRIC
Okeh Phonograph Corp., 25 West 45th Street, New York, N. Y.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 13. 1929
joins with Apus Breaks, Johnny Lee Long, Manda Randolph, and the others in the revue, "Sporting Blood." Doris Crubbottom, the prima donna famous for her top notes, wears some of her own shoes and sings a lyrical ovation. she sings "Ready for the River" while the comedians enact a unique travesty on the theme.
Jack Dempsey's presentation of the official ringlead motion pictures of the seven Sharkey-Stribling boxing contests added attraction for the entire week.
Jamal Garon in "The Girl He Didn't Buy" is the feature picture.
The Alhambra Next Week
"Crazy Street," as conceived by Sandy Burns, whose nickname in "Inches," said to rival the famous "Catfish Row" in "Porgy." It is a thoroughfare where anything is likely to happen—especially anything exciting or amusing. Next week "Crazy Street" will be the musical comedy affair of the Albamba's triple program, with all its liveliness action and antics, and of course, plenty of girlz. "Chinatown After Dark," the drama, will reveal a gorgeous Oriental festival where the wiles of the Far Part invade the splendor—a demonstration of Anistic craft transplanted to America. The picture feature, "Fixing the Pace," will have Joan Leelio as its hero.
AT THE RENAISSANCE
One hundred per cent talks, the real Viphone and Novelstone, set off to an enthusiastic reception at the Renaissance Theatre last week, starting with an invitational premiere at midnight Friday, at which "In Old Arizona" had its initial appearance. Deep, soft carpet has been laid in the theatre and other changes made to make the house one of the finest of the kind and size in New York. Manager Charity and his assistant, Joe Sweeney, saw to it that their midnight guests were accorded real hospitality.
The first outdoor drama to be filmed with dialogue and sound, William Fox's
"In Old Arizona," it will remain at the Renaliance, where it is now playing, the balance of the week. The sounds of the band are not as familiar, even to the squeal of plugs and the pounding of horse' hoofs. Dorothy Burges, a new film star, rises to great heights in this production. In Cairo Kiss, gives a super exhibition of a local bandit in the early Arizona days.
Whitney and Tutt to Foster the Higher Art
By L. BAYWARD WHITNEY.
A new era in original Negro dramatic art is anticipated in the coming inauguration of the Harlem Little Art Theatre Guild, Salem Tutt Whitney and J. Homer Tutt, managing directors. The new venture is mounted at the former Open Theatre. In the Savoy Building, 140th street, and Lenox avenue.
A distinct change in the trend of
Negro dramatic art was seen in "Deep Harlem," recent one-week Broadway show written by Whitney and Tutt, veteran producers of a quarter-century, "Children of the Sun," "My People" and other similar productions by these same playwrights years back stamped them as the logical mediums through which the new trend in Negro dramatic art would ultimately find expression.
The purposes of the new movement, according to the managing director of the Negro theater, were to foster felicity between the public and all persons in any way engaged in the fields of not only the drama, but in art, literature, music and the dance.
"A special effort will be made to make the public feel that it has a partnership in a great enterprise and that mutual benefits will accrue from intimate co-operation. Suggestions will be welcomed and asked for consideration, full credit being given to those who offer such advice.
In a word, the Guild will strive to render a service that will awaken in sympathetic understanding between
Whipper's Work Recalls Street Calls
all races and engender a spirit of harmonious relationship.
"The special task of the Guild will be to awaken that immensely rich vein of creative genius resident within the Ninja Temple, present plays that are wild, dare to be beautiful, unconventional, yet effectively done. Dramatic playlets of merit, no matter how ultra-modern or radical, will be presented, but within the boundary of intelligent approbation."
A game room and art exhibit will be an added feature for the entertainment of patrons. Tea, coffee and cigarettes will be served in the comfortable lounge room without charge, the directors report. It was announced that it is their plan "it will be the Guild a home for the artistically inclined, giving the amateur as well as the professional an opportunity to present himself and his creations before the public."
JAZZ
MUSIC!
GUARANTEED IN 20 LESSONS
on the following instruments: Piano, Trombone,
Bass, Bassophone, Dewet, Guitar, Violin,
Bassoon, Bassophone, Drum, Piano, Drum,
Bassoon, Also harp and percussion
Karate, Bassophone, Piano, Guitar,
Bass, 125 Baritone, Quartet (incl. violin
and advanced students); expert individual
instructor; 20 private one-on-one sessions; Joe Burris
Free Demonstration Daily from
12 a.m. to 10 p.m., Saturday 10
a.m. to 10 p.m. Write or phone
for Booklet.
218 West 42d St. Broadway & 8th Ave.
Tel. WEN consi 218
111 West 18th St. near Lenox Ave.
Tel. CAT bedrail 1220
Many Valuable In
All Ages Who Can
AESTHETIC AND JAZZ
YOU MUST ENTER
PRIZES TO BE AWAR
CHILDREN'S AMATE
AUSE
HOPE DAY N
33 West 13
To Be Held at Rocklane
Write if you wish to enter-
131st St. (1
My Valuable Prizes for O
ages Who Can Sing on
AESTHETIC AND JAZZ TEAMS DESIRE
YOU MUST ENTER BY SATURDAY
PRIZES TO BE AWARDED BY JUDGES
CHILDREN'S ANATEUR THEATRICALS
AUSPICES
PE DAY NURSERY,
33 West 133rd Street
e Held at Rockland Palace, Friday,
you wish to enter—Miss M. McAdon
131st St. (Harlem 1682)
Many Valuable Prizes for Children
All Ages Who Can Sing or Dance
AESTHETIC AND JAZZ TEAMS DESIRED
YOU MUST ENTER BY SATURDAY
PRIZES TO BE AWARDED BY JUDGES
CHILDREN'S AMATEUR THEATRICALS
AU$PICES
HOPE DAY NURSERY, Inc.
33 West 133rd Street
To Be Held at Rockland Palace, Friday, May 3
Write if you wish to enter—Miss M. McAdoo, 221 West
131st St. (Harlem 1682)
NOTICE
Damage Caused by
Cancellation of the
Manhattan L
March 15 --- Post
age Caused by Fire Competition of the Following A
nhattan Lodge No. March 15 --- Postponed to Apr
Damage Caused by Fire Compels the Cancellation of the Following Affairs
Manhattan Lodge No. 45
March 15 --- Postponed to April 4
Eureka Temple
March 21 --- Postponed
Sons of Georgia
Sons of Georgia
March 22 --- Postponed
For Further Details
WATCH THESE COLUMN
ROCKLAND PALA
For Further Details WATCH THESE COLUMN CKLAND PALA
For Further Details WATCH THESE COLUMNS
ROCKLAND PALACE
155th St. & Eighth Ave.
REOPENS APRIL 1st, 19
LEARN TO DANCE
TO BE IN SOCIETY, YOU MUST DANCE
Dancing is a Necessity. We Teach You All
STAGE AND SOCIAL DAY
Waltz, Fox. Trot, One Step. Block Bottom. Argentia
Lindbergh Hop
NOPENS APRIL 1st, 19
BARN TO DANCE
TO BE IN SOCIETY, YOU MUST DANCE
Dancing is a Necessity. We Teach You All
GE AND SOCIAL DANCE
Ex. Trot, One Step, Block Bottom, Argentine
Lindbergh Hop
REOPENS APRIL 1st, 1929
LEARN TO DANCE
TO BE IN SOCIETY, YOU MUST DANCE
Dancing Is a Necessity. We Teach You All
STAGE AND SOCIAL DANCES
Waltz, Fox Trot, One Step, Block Bottom, Argentine Tango,
Lindbergh Hop
We Train You Direct for All Broadway Revue
$5 and $10 Will Start You Dancing
CHILDREN'S CLASSES EVERY SATURDAY, $1.00
Under Miss Mary Williams, Directress
PROF. DARLING MACK'S STUDIOS
150 WEST 136th STREET, NEW YORK CITY
You Are Invited to the
FIRST SPRING DANCE
OF THE
UNITED MECHANICAL
CLUB, INC. (Plasterers)
FRIDAY EVENING,
MARCH 15, 1929
At the
UNIQUE COLONY CIRCLE
224 West 183th St.
Music by the Blue Jay Serenaders
ADMINISTRATOR
George Flowers, Jr.
Thomas L. Jones, Sesey.
SUNDAY
EXCURSION
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA.
LYNCHBURG, VA.
DANVILLE, VA.
MARCH 24th
Leaving New York March 23
9:05 A. M.
Pennsylvania Station
See Flyers or Consult
Ticket Agents
Prizes for Children
Can Sing or Dance
ZZ TEAMS DESIRED
BY BY SATURDAY
ARRDED BY JUDGES
FOR THEATRICALS
INCES
URSERY, Inc.
3rd Street
1 Palace, Friday, May 3
Miss M. McAdoo, 221 West
Harlem 1682)
Fire Compels the Following Affairs
Lodge No. 45
opened to April 4
Georgia
Postponed
r Details
E COLUMNS
O PALACE
APRIL 1st, 1929
NO DANCE
YOU MUST DANCE
We Teach You All
SOCIAL DANCES
Back Bottom, Argentine Tango,
Hop
SEVEN
} Best Sport Pages
in Greater New York
EIGHT
KID CHOCOLATE
IN GREAT FIGHT
Little Cuban Wonder K. 0.’s
Phil O'Dowd in First
Round Saturday Night
AT THE LAFAYETTE NEXT
Jt “ALS Et" chocolate, meade “10
tum “that, Eid" Chocolate, mada “to
Gotham teat Aacurcey night when. Ne
ppesred at the Gump ory Ch
ahd pa Seay, ih te
fins found ‘ot’ « scheduled ten-round
bout. <The ius Govan wonder, with
Coby same confine, "whe, has
fing sine, he rarieg hi ore aretha great camn-
pepiadarttd ception at’ thei
score te Boge i, when he
fabled down tho’ al Bnd ‘eravied
Wigs hight wen Hardly, a minute old
before Choeaiste uncorked a eft, to
a ee
Tee "rahs ‘then as fs beeame only &
mmauer of the Ouben waren to
Peer rae, cute
Heantoc thetinwy whlch wad (ho “coup
Botprace’ and O'Doed was counted
‘oat ‘dst the. thinderous roar” sent
Sp by the exclled crowe,
Pre demands on Chocolate for ring
and Theairical engagements OF ex
Semaine heavy. but Lana Quitteres
Iwanaaer of tha popular ele fahter,
Teadly gave bls word to te sporting
Shoe Seton atapertace ere
Pe ga tae Brosdwy si {0
SP ie eaeepete Theatre metal of
Sunday. Maren 24 on (oe benefit bl
for the Brocheriood of Sleeping CaF
win the ‘aresal Tenunesiat (0 the
Eat host wil als appear ou
“rnrough the intercession of Jem
Machdatia, owner of the Olympla Cap
Rod former matchmaker for the late
es futckard et Medion Square Oar
Gem, arrangements for the appearance
SE REE Chpeuao for Or
Bea aA aay Uo trongn and te
Eatagetts Teste rant ner Se
Heel be te oie Sa age
al le dows re ue thotds
a hand for the Big
arte coher Joos, Seco Dias 8
alieaale af fd Pee
4. ede Stan re re
IES oes Comoe a Be
Bae ge ue Fane
Se Set steer tat the Cuba
os masier of the situation throcgh.
Sp een the ecto at Ue end
Ry, Seikt, 0 riablemate ot oo
ABs Gugine Devine and abe Te
Spee wan forced to call & halt {2 the
frlra"round to avy Devoe tom
{he mason bouts whut gare the
Sar kishuaSon's taanous house of reat
ee wight
Concord Church Team
Triumph Over Lutherans
‘The Concord Baptist Church bas-
‘Taratey im in a Brooklyn Sun-
Gay School ‘contest on the
court of the Cari ‘Branch ¥. 3. C.
A. ‘The score wes 51 to 18, and i
‘marked the thirtoonth success in
foment for the victors,
Thele triumph the Concord Bar-
tins, tightened held on. first
brah Clams A of ‘148-pound di-
‘At the end of the first, period the
‘Concord Baptis 8.17 to 2 ad-
‘vonage 8 rid goal eh Clar-
ay. ngeraen Cone ‘the only
eat Oe ee ces
ty oa 8 team's
yeas high scorer, tails
Era as 2S mare peda
‘Toe line-up.
ebxconp Gn,
Tonia Poste Votnts
Jamies 0 &
Sethe e of
Ulier Fe secsssccoeee SHE
Mecismmg "cesses BF
Mim @secccccs 9 &
fe esacas fk
Jere nrecers 8S
Wate teaccs 88
Fins vessseveneeegs 1
Tsive Levin a,
‘eels Pauls ving
[eit Tweens od
Reet
Anbemone sscces 4d
Speci cscs 8 &
echera “Coccsscsecereo® @ OD
Gamers tie sce
Total searsseeeesee SO 8
Tiefers ss hints, ‘Fame of halver, 13 ad
a niees
Two Victories End Borden-
town Home Season on Court
BORDENTOWN. N, J. March 8—
‘Two wins, one over Johnson C. Smith
High Getbol of Seftustre, ended the
Tel weabortall season for the Bar-
Sha ac game will bo plarot “the
eee when the strong Monteatr
fro wel engage the encoders a
ie in, fst gama het 9a
eaten
Seiahg Ge einrres fd ner cur
im a remcan a S
Fine Ry eden iat
Hove tena €¢ Sei at the Gwe of the
‘fret half, when Coach Granger re-
placed his varelty string with abel
Raleigh and Thomas cf the
this, for Uvey promptly retaliated ‘as
Eumaing roughshod over the wrrarse
and ie score Up to 25-31.
into the fray.
‘KID CHOCOLATE STOPS O’DOWD IN FIRST
Another Splendid Crowd Saw Rens in Victory
The Little Cuban Wonder
Toon tte eae eee
* aay a Bs" .
oe -
F :
¢ Bent. ‘J
“ ee
= ra a ¥ es
x oa 2 a 4
os
a
| wy.
‘oe
' Sank 39 a
REESE.
KiD CHOCOLATE, Making His Intel Bow te Gothemitas Last
From Cain‘ Knocked Ovt Phil OGewd tat the Fit Rose
CHOCOLATE Wil Re on the BIl at the Lafayette Theatre a
‘Same Special ai Will Be Broadway Stars From “Porgy,”
“Show Boat” and “Blackbirds.” .
i y that the "
BEARS AND “Y" Settle eee
Ste af eit alte
MEET IN FINALS EFS
—_. Defenders Shut Out .
Sheey en Mark Celestials iri Fine Game
lay in North Jerse; a
District | aS SMa eran, ward fw
BORDENTOWN, N. J. March 11.
=-Btormy arguments in“ the north
er He Sao aa
er
are
row te 9 Bor-
Sener on the tath for poy in ihe
fer ol Genome id Taseds ot ere
Same to be Tied is tee tee minute
during a hecile game at Titan Ha'l.
weer eae ae
Set ORA then saatened three
Raid! eth chs see mitene when
‘Tuxedo anpeosched to iia one
point by lox a lone thom Pane
edo cla foris~hye seconds
See remained torbe played A tase
ers watch, whose minute hand
pointed exactly to five while the sec-
cna hand polnted to fifteen. seconds,
ras the reason for the a-yument. Of-
Soors boing upheld as reading Tin
See we
material for another acrimonious
gispute when they appeared w-thout
4 ACU. Co a
meter bes ‘Sho
prolost. The maneger of tre
‘Newark Inds declared that they had
cards, put thut ae keen leit
Aehibal Inala te Ac, end
quarters 1 int the fact ‘pat spo
SSanel openers the tarzament
committee: Rg throw out
pe me, aoe 02. the Mont-
ome of nexth fee GA
need ut, Berdeatonng very oo)
ahieh the trenstaers trated Chroogh
ho as with a Pie to 5. 7)
Berta giant guard for the seat
me Ee came, when Pla
ort Adan Gh home, "couk, es
Gio Tinea toe the seu Jersey ane
Ee Seon ce
jumotied over Bordentown. 39-25. i
Meanwhile, extenrive preromtions
nave ora Mas a Prenton to
Rien then ehciee be
Eichten the 18h, Renien sirivery
Bones ctoe ef Tae See eae
Seon earl Teite iven of the pig
Pata Gaueer stat hare ten tnete
tein Uy seven eed to penton te
A tegen st coset ot 009 et Bi. the
BEAN ean bese nee a he
ta Orenee nts er
Boa worker, Min charee tc
Eas rons, and wit bon pel:
Invited to Africa
EEO, te
TT at
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929
$id to play in South rtiee, te salt
of 1929. schedule been
fake the trip. bat wee appreciate Use
honor,” mud the coach.
Defenders Shut Out .
—- Celestials ist Fine Game
on ‘March
aie pay Bt Mase Gris, the Deteod
or ae Tan Wie nesinat the Simoe
SESS Setensers clesriy outchaesd
heir Opponents throughout the entire
“On Maren 15 the Defenders wit
‘yavel to Staten Tnand and wo
SRB Spratendonal ‘game which
= ‘oe a at West
Eights of Scan Halon. even
1 ‘Defenders will eaein ee, 2
spans the Colestals 35 eae
fouso Gym in West 134th >
Tineepe
DEYEXDERA.
‘eal Fouts Total
f Polar th wees nS ae
Eiieaving, ii 8 bt
Bi Sowa fees Fe
Th Mowe tec 8
Ucn ie cot mE
Einabinn geese ® 88
| Wi aed, 1B
GiideaTiaLa
Goals Foote Teint
HMA oe OO
Hluker ierceo 8
fi Morigen inte 8 88
tl Natdh recner Ek
Ae Dpety Me voeseeeene © o o
| Tytnte evssssssssees a
Time of quarters, 18 min Teferen,
Hickey Takes His Place in
“The Mile of the
Century”
VonElling, cosch New
vant ouersigt ack team. ews
crowned ie Si champion.
uotified the ‘of Columbus
ge ‘commities last week that
a decided to eeaeh 20
middlo-tistance
shite of the Centzy” to, the "asey
eh Manet of tp inaretieaine
nsllg bape That Saturcay
pent, 1a uve strides wiih ay
Concer, Farin Wain 3-9 Tarmnend,
i 2 zt and Czisn kiliors in the
ont Battie sasten a ne
aires genaihn to, een Sem.
PE Ste on Oe
retake teh tee en
Eagar ete Fe Me
occ) gees
BAEE SS es af oe
stained atthe eat
Prof Viel, ho 3 e¢ mn-teriet nt.
senna Si ee
felay chamaionshte Saturday n'eht
‘hav bean entered for the apec’al halt
mile rico at tha K of © gems, am
the an chamvlon relay teim will
fours later-in the evening.
Monster Boxing Carnival
* YOR BENEFIT OF
Harlem Children’s Fresh Air Fund
‘TO RAISE MAVANCE OF SUM NECESSARY TO FUR-
(CHASE COUNTRY CAMP FOR THs POOR CHILDREN
. OF HBAULEM TO BE OPENED THIS SUMMER
Teatnre Attractions .
7
Izzy Groves vs. Nick Testo
TONY CAR..SLIANO VS. CLYDE JONES
Amt Gr er fe? 7 Bouts ie
ACLS TIA ATE OC 7e CLIT. Mahan Ave. & 128th St |
, On Sara Fo, Tpaad a
coturlay, baich 135
GEORGE W. HARRIA Chairman Commitice
ga
‘News, 2233 ith Avene: Olympia Club, 125th and Madien
GIANTS MEET
~ RENS SUNDAY
Fur Will Fly as Visitors Are
Claiming World’s Cham-
neni
ROCHESTER CLUB’ LOST
Philly Giants First Colored
‘Team to Make Real Bid
in Years
(By puawctsi
| 4 one mactamie One, Jeatn sae
Aaa of basketball that ts Teeponabl
for thelr position ts tha. fret rank.
‘Weat dows (o defeat at the hands of
HiGnt te tne eeoslraisco Casino by
Tbe score of 40 t0 30.
serpents tate ver Dex ‘wis in
Sis oes eee
‘Fee‘ckosk fun of ard: tase dashing
BSS, Geet reset Suse
large crowd thet Dasked the casino.
ois SL Sue
Ing out process. the Bec” drawing
Ry ote eee ee
low of the vitiors Had tolsecd, his
hance. “Tbe vaxy ten mulnuiee found
eae win cay a te petals eparat=
[et potnt lend only to ase thn Roches”
ter team make « determined spat
that tied the sore at 18 all, amd a
eee Se oe ao «hres
The Rens did not, seem to relish
this, and soon, started = spurt of their
cen that ar fail
aces mae oe
that gave the Reng. tha lead’ at
ena dt the fame, 3220
tatoo betlians playing by born ain
eo sets
Bue ine ona by che <
base feed at Si to at che Roche
eer tsar ower, ve all tt had,
iii Hees whe four peste, The
ined stand to protect ttt lend
form Gong Bresso
%9 the ball. menztime baskets ey Jen-
Hog nicks and Gait ith 2 dom
Resa pol ite. iochester’ ich
Fir tian with erent oa goal we
th ae Dasets ‘end two foun ed
Bis team. :
Suighe ohn Oo =
phe Colored Giants, wie Reve. tt
ocaluse of m recent victory ove?
Eneoraaissence, wile at the tate
Droluiiee to be che af the best gaines
fren here. in many. mo
Rinaiseice ig daterrtinad not to 1
the Glan got away with the claim.
ye peliary purse the Seho-
tastes ry % to ah
it meet the Be anbrosa tea
Sa
‘Goals Fouls Tota!
Riker server ee NTE
Maltch wiesssseecsecces
Matders sescssces SOB
Mayert ssssesse $F
Hinde SUNS Boa
| Toles veissecreendt
ROCHESTER,
‘Guals Fouls Tow),
Miltter wesc ss
Bera CLK 8 4
Sey coed 2 ow
Groly seca ed E
fabian Sciisiiswce 8 23
Totals soescesseereedd 8 3D
Teteree,” Ghia” (aich) | Htutewoud.
Ting uf halten, twenty talauten.
”
Flashes Defeat Trenton
In ono of the fastest gamen pinred’
af ES cian ts wencant the Obeera
WS, ¥. Flashes defonted Trenton Ctub
of the at Teague on Poe
Boveri wnsoine Seated ome!
for the vietors with 18" pins,
nox xcORR,
‘Original Ylasken. ‘Trewin,
ween. ier,
Pura sooo BI Darko oo SET
Seon". 5" Ramtetn “2S ‘
Taman ot 2 3 Kell ssa 0
Tree oii 4 8k Kenneleon nO)
Ginter Wald g 3 Meehan. 3 348
F =
Our Baseball Leagues
eS ee ee aoe me tee
them up pretty Uvely. If they koep up this trading business much longer,
‘when the bell rings for the opening game of the season it will be bard 1
pick cut an individual player without a scorecard to help you. About al
the teams in the league will have different lineups from last season. Some
for better and som for worse. Am inclined to believe the trading on the
whole will be, or rather, waa a good thing tor the league. J am somewhat
interested in ‘the deal that sends Britt and. Dehigo, the Cuban player, tc
‘Hilladale in exchange for Kennedy and Stevens. ‘The former Homestead
Greys’ players are two great all round men, They can play almest any
position on = bell club like regular, An cener wouldn't need to hire only
even men to compose a team if they were players like Britt and Dehigo
‘Hilledale gives Kemnedy sud Stevens to the Homestead Grays for these
men. Tt seems lke owners and players are satlsfled with the deal, nothing
having been beard to the contrary, and so far everything ia lovely and
the goose bangs high. Whal the soazoa's play wil bow in these exchanges
remains to be seen.
‘When it comes to a question of a player's greatness, one's judgment shoul
not rest solely on his abiiity. He may have everything that goes to make
® great ball player, but 1f he doesn't know how to use what he's got or if
Der week to is graployers ere ia 8 Bg’ ong point is taver of the ou
per 7 fa hig, strong FOr
Stoer tn contrast tp the bors of today. ‘The old-timers when they tlt tin
playing fleld, would put everything they game, Thay workod
from the timo they hit the fleld unt) the lest man was called out: and
all the while took it in sport and thought i fun. Today the players
have had 20 much business shot into them you could not expect a display
‘hat payers ot aay tas a eta eftachcsst toward Gis pase, Sot Sy
ve & strong atl wame,
are working under conditions, too tumerous to mention here. far different
from the days long gona by. ‘What it takes to be a great bail player some
of them have got. but the foolish boys don't put it out. ‘The game is the
thing in baseball business. Pans admire conscientious ball players and ko
to see them play. Fans pay the salaries, Please the fans and you will
draw the crowd. ‘The bigrer crowds you draw the more money is taken i,
at the gate. ‘The more money taken in at the gate the more salary plaverr
will gat. They will be justified in asking for mare salary whether they
et it oF not. One thing I will add reganiing salaries and that i, if this
vero American League, as now composed, will unite and stick as members
of @ League, they can crash any storm cenler that threatens thelr organiza
tion and proceed slong harmonious lines for better baseball and better
‘There ia cna thing sbout colored baseball business I never could under.
sand: When « group of men will stand by and passively submit to =
fllm-flamming, the like of which is unprecedented in any other legitimate
business and seem to like it; when the fllm-flammars are making tho-,
sands and they are losing hundreds they seem to piace every reliance in
the fiim-flammers and very reluctantly sever their business relationanip
‘with them. When you notice these things sou can readily discern the cause
for mediocre salaries and other allments thet our baseball 9 herr to, Maybe
you don't gramp my meaning. A baseball flim-flammer ia a fellow wno has
4 tot of colored teams to keep playing and calls himself a booking agent:
the teams are owned by other men, but the teams are the book agent's
attractions, which gives him considerable prestige in the field of semi-pro
basobell: not being responsible for salaries or club expenses, he books the
teams hither and yon and collects hie percentage of 5 or 10 per cent while
the club owners, just before the ist and 1h of summer month, start
to die for the pile thet pays the players, If a film-flammer get away
with his stuff for severe! sears he is ready to retire and live at case or
take the money he got by booking and invest it in big league baseball
He has « perfect right to invest his money any way ho Mikes.
Lions Ran Into Accident
And Are Almost Ruined
PHILADELPHIA, Pa, March 9. —
Following the example set by * five
other teams, the Lincoln University
Lins tock it upon themselves to hand
the Commandeurs their seventh de-
feat of the season, and, incidentally.
by a three-point margin, the charges
Of Coach Walls outplaying and out-
fighting the Chick Edwards ensemble
to eke out « hard-camed 22 to 19
viotory Friday evening at the Broad-
way A. C. here,
a Sa et Ee
happened tt when the
ez laged last sata rally that
turned the spacious arena into a
madhouse with close to a thousand
roaring inmates.
‘The Commandeurs, with their back
to the wall. started another rally
which fell a. nee short of sucetes,
but not until all the supporters of
ihe, hone ane tear ier he
Soret The off machine was rushed
Ge hea ee
coh ane eee sa! ee
‘and Troy Mashed for tho Coma.
EARCON Aee
es ‘Grals Youls Tal
Woitington, Lue Sf
Ft, Cinswesee, & ®
Aver, Loecce 3 3 8
Fatioen, fic 88
Auderwon, Greece? RE
Deiggian e cusccesees 8 8 oo
Mawiing go csccccccee dT
Rqilth, Rosse 88
Gecotiar ge accede 08
| Totale ceseeeseerere B sos
COMMANDEUTR (19),
‘Goala Fouls Tetal
T Carges cieeseeee ® TT
He dorman Koicacct 8S
ag Gerace? 4
Mote fuss ee
Rarett, @icae 8 e
Morton. ke ssscescosee 24
KeatK sce Re
i Yolwarday je sevseee oP
fe Blwany yoccces3 2 ®
Palade ecsseeecveres 3D
ALPHA PHI TO
MEET MORGAN
ic Doings When Gregory
and Jones Face Each
Other at Center
gs? fvening, March 1
the Renaimanea Casino, Eta Chap.
fer ot PLE Alpha wii tach
Sota in & basketbal oot:
tae eta rival to intered
eure the tanmed scries 12 protest
sfranks the :
sivranka between the Clue and fe
‘This great event will bring togeth-
eg, Mopgan «Collage indubiaige” th
Shampisaship test amon catieees
ie. experts ia be tae Coane ict?
In view of Morgan's trium
ove
Howard and all other oppositions
og Alpia's ery evident ‘ruperiari
Svar ‘all the other fraternity vas
thls contere aboaid eeute the ques
Hoe, Gites ‘put forth="Are. the ir.
ternty teams dou aves’ with the
fale, bres aaa te they faving
iho Babic = totter ee wor ‘brand o
leaettball” tn audition to ttt he
these or Tian 3 the cue, oeoree
2 be the bess center in Ong Ansere
So Tait wane
lee Bap thus wil bo © Hehe wart
Siacaer: Morgan wil! present one
ff the bee oor amen and Gand
cent vont, Pinky Cee ate
Gia Yar nere andthe suppontag
“Ripka will rind into nation the
f
fei Oe iat, we cect
Georse Orensey sf Celeste ct ook
ter, Prakle Palle. focmer’ Eineats
mat, and Quentin Randa nt Goh=
‘hia ‘as forwards; Chatile Major, Net
sppoulan A, ALU high Jump thors
Figo: Ted chemtoerme ae Wer
Rew Yennig Ghasip, aid Lop Cot
in virw of tho fact that thle para
fa tpted ex a “nietural™ and brea
Hig sient nieran alteady, me
etenen st Sick
Daveetbnt aro trea
Te sre bewerteed & rare:
Golf Players Getting Ready
—
winter ond and
sau eg ee
Ey cothumtans are tooking forward
te che time Abey can again cut
up ‘divoce, hook. into tha rough, alice
in the FES ee oes, oven
Fitts spd then ep. and call
ond ot 8, Dartert Gar.
Members of the St Golf
Club of New York City aro siready
Blaming instr echedule and hope i
Frakes this scaron evon tare miccrre:
Haerve ere baad paces eR
Leko Motancis grit finder at" ‘Peek-
Fick Sing, St the Feiner Bay
‘The chib also played an trter-
dub match with tho Fairview Golf
Shemyonsnip taurimmnent ed
fear Gearwe Adon again won high
‘The aext meeting and also anual
will bo id Bunday.
Section will to held un Sunday,
Edited by
Romeo L. Dougherty
Don’t Ask for an “Italian Cigar”
Insist on the Genuine
mf
Aion ap
oh
"i
A LONG SMOKE — A STRONG SMOKE
A GOOD SMOKE
Over a Hundred Million Sold Yearly From Coast to Coast
. Beware of Imitations and Substitutions!
Ask Your Dealer or Write to
DE NOBILI CIGAR COMPANY
LONG ISLAND CITY. N. Y.
George Gregory
ea
ek Ge Bees
Hemi og NeOe
ie ae Bee
ais mms et
ae ees
a ee
aa.
ee (eee ee
ae Parse
ee
fr
Dao Se Ral eee Se
Be am mgs
ee isis”
3p i BY
co an eee:
Peers eae
ReneS mai ema
fe ee. |
er ae
"Phayes Wil’ Lead Alpe Pa
tthe Haatemee Goalte
Saturday Night, March 16,
Ramiro Ramirez and Havana
Red Sox Leave for Miami
Rymizo, Ramires, paring manager
Wal tia taves Cube Sexe Tussday
iR preparation for several days) wark-
cut upon arrival at Miami, Plorida,
prior to opening their United States
Golored ‘thetic Otub on “Bundey,
March 24, in an eight-day series.”
Ramires has had vast
dent coled aucrgerioes Sea. and i
doe ot ihe erenlent independent Tal
Sie in aces this we
connected with sich Tamour, quate
sa the Bacharach Giants,
Giants, Boston Black ei end last,
but not the least, the Havana
Hed Sos. which club he is now te
nilot of, and with Whom he has been
faa foee gears PY. ioe
cee Poe
spending the majority of his time
lerribhaet in center field, as well as
ding his boys. Backed again this
Pollock Barsball Agwney, 1peated wih
‘Pollock ball Agency, located
ooking offices at North Tarrvtown.
iS sive the Glens the touch of Gio-
linction and class which they de-
saree on Zeeremiotives ef Savanws
Pho club booked for & series bt
Peace Gareveoert, are mae
te eany. Apel Ton ues
tween thess. out of Miami are
new being (uboked ‘and te Cubans
Beetle SY Paving
Sharkey-Stribling Pictures
At Alhambra This Week
Avhen Jack ot
sane i wedilcg "rae Asad
iain tan -round po bef
Soumtey there were exciting (sea
Connie era were, exsiln
ine shown a reek’ at the Alnus:
ides the Tequlae programs
ee eerie pO
Gnd cdetirere of the many art @ fat
fie than wee tad by nay epectatse
‘rho. made th 3
eng jounraey
clas avenue. All enloned, golfers
fing in the suptropotttan digriet wit
Sf inuerested in golf, ara invited to
with Elmer E Brent, 33 Bradhure
s
MORGAN FALLS
BEFORE CHAMPS
Collegians Prove ‘They Are
Not abe aad Local
the Mcrgan Sohoge quintet, Exa-
‘orp collegiate champions, attemmed
$0 repeat toes rene ete omer
the New York Collegians, New Yorr
‘State amateur champions, last Sev.
day night at the Renaissance Caste,
bus met a team that was in an
Suit that they were oot beck by de
ex wy hoard that. the
‘When we Mora,
team had defeated the
Sided "that they amuse habe het
jscmne team. After seeing them on fa-
rday might we are convinced ta
ey ary totus team nd 0 te 2
a ore eee
quince fEacefere the" be
quiniay and the
team, the Morgan quinte i 5
SS Sette moat Sore
‘two wonderful natural ince
only and Johnnie Ha
ei {ie Morgen gut
ase, ok in apts
ee is Now Yorkers ere
‘as 8 five-man team so fer a
moet Livtnepeoe end 2k
mn
Soppatin, The her mem, though
Taboled wail to the victory.
sone Ses Sl
jones was gilt
aan ee os
iwesty-one “Erion” while the “Xr
Yorkers caged twelve out of twentr-
two chances from the foul line.
wpe ederee, “Buen ‘Hulswoud,
leplans 0 much overrated; eh, what!
ere em
Goals Foule Too
Livingsten wssssesseees RB Te
Rowiney veiwveeceeeees 9 0 Z E
Hie scevecencneee § z 3
ist tassssncsccsecs 38a
fteale seceweccreeese tL O8
Lind sites ® 2 oT
MOUS veer de Ow
ee an a
Goats Fouls Total
Clark visser e eT
Toderiiwce 88
Foes ccnecct SS
Grecian: 2 F
Hacer ee
Whewiy ceca 8
= Seewece fF
Brwws ica’ 8D
Totals veered FF
Y¥. W.C. A. Girls Loos
‘Last Priday evening
wom exciting emer Sane tara
season when ‘Blue Birds defend
ek team ot Ln rer at 8
Mark's gym, Edgecombe avenue and
thts" game being an ‘Seren os
Hoth tens stig base:
R Se
bal sith many 4
estan did tome necurale six
but the Blue Birds’ fast plas mm
too much for them. ‘Bunks,
and Dorothy Halo were the outs.ind-
Ing stare of the game, with cacy
bathets ¢ cuhelr credit” Finale set
was; Biue Birds, 23; Y. wom
Miuer lon, TOL We bln ee
Seen Gitratiars wid Golden Fag
| Jerseyites at Carlton
ON Seturiey, sighs, Marchi It oe
Reo eh ournes, ie oe ee
Match tossed with the Youne 3ro
Division team. Mercury is composed
Shares oer tal are
Sues Shei ta
ye folrrere Garin la
ed with caelement
ANDERSON STUDIO
864 LENOX AVE. APT. 14
‘Brad. 3873
All Puptia Guaranterd
SECOND SECTION
SECOND SECTION
Listen, Folks Listen By JIM HAYSEED
And Big Stomachs
HAD Sweet Tooth, Took $25.80
of Purs. Lads Pilfer Fancy at Y.
X. C. A. and Land in Hoosegow,
leadin in Baltimore contemporary
asserts. A jimmy and excellent appe-
nies were of great assistance to the
youths in obtaining and disposing of
their loot, the article adds.
Reasonable Enough
SIGN on a Seventh avenue buil-
dings: $1 per week for Men and
women. John Doe, Undertaker, Em-
talmer.
Sweet Mama Now
SEE by the papers that one dam-
cerrative boy friend rapped the
girl of his choice on the head with a
sugar bowl. Trying to get sweet on
her, maybe.
Shorn Love
CULLED from a college wisecracker
column:
Smithie: Dear, if you'd only grow
your hair longer I'd marry you.
Smithie's Girl: Thanks, I prefer to
remain shingle.
Ox Tale
HER lips were stained
A flaming red,
And auburn locks
Adorned her head.
A rosy blush
Glowed on her face,
Her chassis trim
And full of grace.
Her knee-high skirt
Of garnet hue
Was just the thing
You'd like on Sue.
And yet the male,
Old evil cow
That chased the miss
Got riled somehow.
—Bronx Street Bard.
WASHINGTON, March 11.—Edward A. Savoy has just completed 50 years of service as messenger to the Secretary of State.
Open Their Establishment
SATURDAY,
7th Avenue at
2380 Seventh
--- and
7th Avenue at
200 West 13
Suite 2
7th Avenue at 135th Street
200 West 135th St.
Suite 221
---
---
Dramatic Reader
THE MISSING
Miss Venzella N. Jones
The Three C's Club is presenting Miss Venzella N. Jones, dramatic reader, in a recital Friday evening, March 2. at the Grace Congregational Church, 310 West 139th street.
A special feature of the program will be the interpretation of scenes from popular dramas of Negro life, in which Miss Jones will portray all the different characters.
Miss Jones is a graduate of King's School of Pittsburgh, and she is recommended by that school and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts of this city.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
George A. Melvin, attorney-at-law of Portsmouth, Va., was the guest of Jerry Carpew and family of 1949 Seventh avenue last week; also Mr. Edward Teamoh, formerly of Portsmouth, now of Baltimore. Md., who was called to the city on account of the death of his son, Edward Teamoh Jr.—Advt.
in Their Uptown
establishment
SATURDAY, MARCH
Avenue at 139th St.
2380 Seventh Ave.
--- and ---
Avenue at 135th St.
200 West 135th St.
Suite 221
A large and varied assortment of beautiful furniture will be shown at 200 WEST 135th ST. Suite 221
IRWIN COMPANY IRWIN COMPANY
DRAMA
The Girl's Club of the West 135th street branch of the Public Library will present the play "Folly Patchwork." which has been dramatized from the book of that title by Rachel Field, on Friday evening, March 15, at 8 o'clock in the auditorium. Children and parents are invited.
Widow Given All in Will of Late Dr. Johnson
Mrs. Ada Ann Johnson, 24 West 132d street, widow of Dr. William H. Johnson, is to receive the whole of the late physician's estate, according to the will filed for probate Thursday in Surrogate's Court.
Dr. Johnson died Jan. 10 at his home after a short illness. He had practiced in New York since 1885.
The will was written in October, 1920. Simple and terse, it directs that burial be made in the family plot at Cypress Hill Cemetery, that Frank A. Butler, 49 Cottage avenue, Ridgewood, N J., execute the will without bond, and that Mrs. Johnson receive the entire estate for herself and her assigns.
Value of the real property is set at "over $1,000." Personal property is less than $500.
Dr. Johnson's son, Earl F. Johnson, mechanical dentist, and wife, Dr. Anna Cooper Johnson, dentist, lives at 2588 Seventh avenue. A sister, Mrs. Grace H. Carter, makes her home at Venice, Calif.
DR. LOUIS T. WRIGHT
SELLS HOUSE, BUYS ONE
Selling the private dwelling located at 223 West 138th street to Jacob Goodman, Dr. Louis T. Wright, police surgeon. purchased the five-story apartment at 2210 Seventh avenue from his customer. The apartment building accommodates eight families and two storekeepers. Nail and Parker were brokers in the deal. The New Utrecht-Reality Company last week purchased property at 122 West 134th street. The tenement is five stories.
To Address Forum
Dr. David N. Snedden, professor of sociology at Columbia University, will address the Harlem Educational Forum. 169 West 133d street, Sunday at 3:30 p. m. on "American Democracy as Related to the Negro."
DIXON.
ital
ording genu-
sus given Sun-
ongregational
park, baritone,
ous occasions
nt of their
Mr. Clark and
special of un-
the beaten
program con-
Rudolph Gaston Sce-
member of the Palmer
institute in Sedalia, N. C.
cert appearance last Tu-
at M. Olivet Baptist Ch
On Mr. Scott's var-
appeared such artists as
cell, Massenet, Fonte-
ter and Paust.
Mrs. William Neelding
St. Cecilia's Choir of
Church, consisting of
will make their fourth a
visit to St. Jude's Chu
Ninety-ninth street, S.
p. m.
For three consecutive
choir has won the silver
By FRANKYE A. DIXON.
Carrol Clark and
Hugo Bornn in Recital
A matine concert affording genuine musical pleasure was given Sunday at the Grace Congregational Church by C. Carrol Clark, baritone, and Hugo Bornn, pianist.
Both artists on previous occasions have given good account of their musical capabilities. Mr. Clark and Mr. Bornn presented a recital of unusual merit, well beyond the beaten paths of hackneyed program construction.
Mr. Clark was not entirely in his best voice in the first part of the program, and the Brahms' song, for instance, suffered for lack of warmth. His diction and phrasing were good. As he advanced in his program, he sang better, in spite of a weakened physical condition, and did himself fuller justice.
The writer feels that Mr. Clark was best in the combined French and English group. "L'Adieu du Matin" by Pessard. "An Evening Song" by Olliberte, and Cyril Scott's "Song of London," and not in his principal number, "Zaza Piccola Zingara" from "Zaza," by Leoncavallo.
The usual spiritual group was impressive. Hall Johnson's conception of "Hold On" is truly a stroke of genius.
As an assisting artist, Mr. Bornn has made creditable pianistic progress. Obviously, he is a diligent student. struggling as all other young musicians to overcome faults of the amateur.
To the classic number of Bach's
up was im-
conception
stroke of
Mr. Bornn
mistle prog-
ligent stu-
ther young
ults of the
of Bach's
VIOLIN RECIT
At the Brooklyn Academy
SATURDAY EVENING,
At 8:30
LUIS CARLOS V
Licensed Cuban Violin
Harrlet Morgan at the
Tickets on sale at Bo
Orehestra $1.40
Directions: From New
Tampa to Nolina St.
one block to LaFayette Ave
RADIO
Bring Your Troubles to Those Who Know
We Repair Anything in Radio
All Night Service
Phone Monument 3327
Authorized Service for
Radio Technical Masters, Inc., &
Tobe Deuthmann Products
The growth of the Irvine is attributable to an devotion to high idle patient desire to give toomer the personal to the owners.
This wealth of person has converted goods will, casual callers into patrons, and a single lished in 1900 at 52 way, has grown into equipped sales rooms to the metropolis of York.
JACKSON RADIO
LABORATORIES
2405 Eighth Ave.
Near 129th St.
JAC
N
The gr
is attri
devotio
patient
tomer
the ow
This w
has co
will, ca
patron
lished
way, h
equipp
to the
York.
The growth of the Irwin Company is attributable to an unswerving devotion to high ideals and a patient desire to give each customer the personal attention of the owners.
This wealth of personal service has converted goods into goodwill, casual callers into permanent patrons, and a single store established in 1900 at 52 East Broadway, has grown into three fully equipped sales rooms catering to the metropolis of New York.
Our facilities to serve you uptown will be greater than ever.
---
---
Amsterdam News
Radio News and Programs
MUSIC
"Prelude and Fugue in A Minor." Mr. Born gave a thoughtful interpretation.
Rudolph Gaston Scott, a faculty member of the Palmer Memorial Institute in Sedalia, N. C., made a concert appearance last Tuesday evening at Mt. Olivet Baptist Church.
On Mr. Scott's varied program appeared such artists as Handel, Purcell, Massenet, Fontenallies, Hahn and Faust.
Mrs. William Neldlinger and the St. Cecilia's Choir of St. Michael's Church, consisting of forty voices, will make their fourth annual Lenten visit to St. Jude's Church, 19 West Ninety-ninth street, Sunday, at 4 p. m.
For three consecutive years the choir has won the silver loving cup awarded by the New York Music Week contests.
"The Chapel of the Messiah," a sacred concert, will be given by J. C. Pennicott on Sunday at 4 p. m. at Grace Emanuel Church, 216 East 116th street. Among those appearing on the program will be Mrs. Rodriguez Wynn, pianist; Mrs. C. P. McRae, soprano; M. Williams, baritone, and other artists.
Augustus Granville Dill, assisted by Chauncey Northern, tenor, will play an hour of organ music at the Community Church. Park avenue at VIOLIN RECITAL
At the Brooklyn Academy of Music SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 23
At 8:10
LUIS CARLOS VARONA
Celebrated Cuban Violin Virgioso Harriet Morgan at the Piano Ticket on sale at Doe Office Orchestra $1.00
Ballety 1:30
Directions: From New York, I. R. T. subway to Newing St., then walk one block to Lafayette Ave.
SINGERS WHO TEACH
TEACHERS WHO SING
WINIFRED WATSON, Soprano
ANDREW W. WATSON, Tenor
128-130 W. 138th St.
Edgecombe 2993 Apt.4-G
growth of the Irwin Company, adaptable to an unswertion to high ideals and a desire to give each of the personal attention to owners.
wealth of personal service converted goods into general callers into permanent, and a single store exist in 1900 at 52 East Broad was grown into three fixed sales rooms catering to metropolis of New
---
EDITORIAL PAGE
BROOKLYN AND L. I. NEWS
NEARBY NEWS BRIEF'S
CLASSIFIED ADS
NINE
Cultivate Your Voice
The Harlem Conservatory
Will Develop Your Talent
A rare opportunity is now offered. Valuable advice by expert artist teachers. Pupils prepared for concert and broadcasting. We also teach piano and all other instruments.
Open Daily Until 10 P.M.
Call and be convinced. Do not miss this chance to advance your social position.
257 LENOX AVE.
Near 133d St.
---
NINE
Thirty-fourth street, Sunday, at 2:15 p. m., for the benefit of the Columbus Hill Day Nursery. Mr. Dill's program will include numbers from Stoughton, Harris. Tschalkowsky, Van Goens and Palestrina.
The Youth Committee for the Brotherhood of Pullman Porters, of which Miss Gladys MacDonald is chairman, is sponsoring a benefit recital at Mother Zion A. M. E. Church tomorrow night at 8:30 o'clock.
Luis Carlos Varona, Cuban violinist, will appear in recital at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Saturday evening, March 23. 8:30 p. m. Harriet Morgan will accompany Mr. Varona at the piano.
The ultra-modern, composer-
pianist, Henry Cowell, will appear in
a lecture-recital of his own compo-
itions at The International House, 500
Riverside Drive, tonight at 8:30 p. m.,
under the auspices of the Hall John-
ton Singers.
HARVEY BAKER
TENOR
Recitals and Concerts Arranged
THE HARLEM SCHOOL
203 WEST 139th STREET
NEW YORK CITY
Tel. Brad, 5123
Talent in Piano and Voice Culture
BENEFIT MUSIC REGITAL
For
BROTHERHOOD
PULLMAN PORTERS
Dr. Melville Charlton
Gertrude Martin
Cart Dilton Doris Trotman
MOTHER A.J.I.E. ZION CHURCH
March 14, 8:30 P. M.
TICKETS $1.00
1 OF BROOKLYN AND LONG ISLAND NEWS. --
TEN
White Leader at
Republican Club
Makes Plea for Harmony
Among Negroes in Party
Activities Here
Over 200 prominent colored and
‘whute ‘politigal Teaders, “headed, by
Repubucan Couniy teader inca, A
Livingston, attended the ‘second ait
gual Spanguct, of tho, Kings, Gounty
Bolored "Republican “ongantzation a
Bunbar Genter fast. Wednesday even-
ing. A, ieature ot the evening was
the address of Mr. Livingston. "He
Sated tint the time haa come ior
Kégro Republicans to work, a8 0 um
‘and Atop fighting among themselves
and therety’ be more able to get thetr
age Of paiitieal receanivion:
Prank A Olthert, preaident of the
organtation, also delivered a strong
Sddrese. He stressed the ‘point. tht
the “new Nearo is waking tp” and is
rot "sallsfled with empty honors
alone from the iepublicant jars. He
elted the case of George £. Wiverenn,
fio las given over forty Sears 0: x
ue to the Republican” party ‘ns. a
worker without ary: epprecible 12-
rs, M,C. Lawton, vice-president
of the organization aiid leader of the
Negro ‘Hepublican women in’ tha
county, in her talk mange a plea for
Teprescutarion in the inner circles ot
the pare gare in Brook
‘Other speakers, were. Mrs, Addie
WV. Hunton. president of the’ Empiro
State Federation of Women's Clubs:
Nire. Afaudo A. Neale, white, co
leader of the 11th A. D.. who lind
fist reitened from the Hooter in-
duguration. She congratulated tic
Negroes ‘upon the election of Oscur
Depriest, 10 j
Suche ate travis, Republican
leader of the 110A, B._ praised the
‘work of the organization in the courte
{youd also spoke in high terms af
the'worlt of irs. Dalsy Biv, co-iraciar
of the district and-a member of the
Feaular county ‘committee,
Faward T. Shes, secrctart of the!
ain A. “D.- Invinelble Club. abo’
spake ‘find thanked | the sotern Tor
sling in the lection of Robert
Story to. the Assembly.
‘Mrs, Gertrude Brakner, co-leader|
tinh cian aS a
the ith A.D. 2
tlon in the 27th A. D.. reel |
Annual Fair of Bethel
Church Now Under Way
‘The annual falr of Bethe) A. XM. E.
ae Oe ee Paes
Spened’ ‘on F
irre crowd in attendance, A fea-
ture of the evening was the concer:
rendered by the inembers of the Or-
Gor of Moose, Independent Benevo-
feat Learme,
On Tuosday night the concert was
given by the of the Sons and
Daughters of ith | Carolina.
Knights of Pythias and the Courts
of Calanthe.
On Wednesday night the concert
Bil be ven by, the members of ths
Order of Oddfeliows, the Household
of auth and tho Order ot Antelopes
‘Thursday night. the Masons il
have charge: “On Friday night the
Members of Excelsior Temple of the
auener ‘Elks will render the pro-
Mrs. Brittamore A. Cole is presi-
Gent of the fair. Other officers aze
Mrs, L, Hodge, Miles Alice Antes, Mrs.
Agnes Latour. Mrs. Cinerva P. Wor
Uams is chairman of tae progrom
committee.
‘There are twenty-two booths, all
ot which are uniquely and beautiful-
ly decorated,
Alderman Moore to Speak
In Brooklyn Next Sunday
Alderman Fred R. Moore of the
ith A. Dy Manhatian, will be the
princtpal speaker at the Sunday af-
ternoon forum of the Kings County
Civic Association. formerly the Bor-
‘ugh Givie Association. on March 17
LH, Woodward ts the chairman of
thet Yorum comimaiee ot the organs
nition.
‘A well arranged vocal and Instrn-
mental progmm hn beet Arranged
{oe'the Season.
“The meeting will be held at the
New Howland Studio, 1660 Fulton
rect.
Notes of Glen Cove
Mine Stren Powell, Mise Mateedinus
Air, tot Stim Franie Want aunt fante
get a Pe et ad te
ei late Ae
Tage et OR eu 8
Mrs. Nelile Aten wf THunttngtean Ins
i, eter aa om
diet Ahan ai iy tact se
nat Ena ah es eet
Tere eS re
ahs
Le ome Tiere tates
ally atten Tere
Cele Memorial Church.
The Rev. Ethelred Brow” will
speak on “Why T Am What t Am"
Al the Hubert Harrison Memorial
Chureh, “Sunday” evening at 0:20
‘oclock.’
Brooklyn News and Social Briefs
[street han returned from Washingti
ro apn th eect
Knut, ete itt ene
fsseeatie ai yaa,
[Erne epee ce the Cait
Ui lene
Among the Hoe of Concord ans
iar "Sade rm wi
Lae chnvcp amie Ee ae
testy nuetie Petnany share. Sop
ie tn rence ohare y
res "ias ese teach
ae 1 ee etry sates
ination 12 Sear avecee’ ta
aces ate vec si
See nd 2 Ot ee
ciate “aire Chae leet
Heater tat SAAT Satan se
a ntmit atta of Ton enti
ese, tena Shasta he to
et certs oe ioe Conference
ees ner anueraie wie Reda
inen'oe sae
| rie cts Tieive Delt thelr regula
| wevlay necting st the reekicace of St.
ae eae oe ote ae
SCTE sie tetas "nate pend at
oat aa ain erenee
tse an rea tel ie
entice Be Mes diet Oe Seene
Seat contnriea Uy toe Abaees Coe
Si demuee’ ton ses
yonng peue throughout the country,
Be ee eee
ean oh eae ate tate
Shalit Sythe edwentenn "oer
Sata" weiatca seer “Coes
Static aie of BS tistics etna
Stles Rath tania of § Qlenats snes
sth San teen whee wert eno
cn iy fee tera ter be
Bat igonuial hae rorored My "wth
Carat tie whe Mkt woah Nee
Cs"tasnem at tberttan ba hte bas
Icon aie tte aes tthe aut
Ira Sieve es, Chari eat
Amhng the Drowkivniion in Wasting
1 tn ae enantio aes ane
Pte get ia a a
Snare Mite aa ins tytn
Sie tata ar tie nee
Satcon al het woe seks Taos
Neninmin haar dey the Yate
nseee fas whet eon tt Se Me
sce aa eat toe ae
tai iste of Sas ateg at
frnten oe Hewett iaage ot Taka
A raroree Liber party srs leon
ihn? fst ta Tots et
atari at Hoe tne ah Te ates
rae tne "eRe wemunfae ee
lt pn are ington
set ashe “Sin aa Sas hate
agate tia Sia hae” sere
Site ihert bP nnd ona sks
Ses Re Mak nosed WF Sie oad
ce acre
Cea saber Sea It Reali ot ton
a1 cua Ural tndte ot
be Nanton Phce tot Acetted tet
i te Var iet han eTtned rn
ice, Aik, ehare’ bet eines
Lake canzone fetta to atin
seit thee sas Stele Sete
tie tomas wil cba we Bets
rt ee
‘The seating meetiat of the Dereat
ate Lan Tevet ndeaats, Rect
eee tee eater ee nee
ae teeta soe isa He re
ines Tatnitlane cutee ae ins
ios a eait A eet cha os
eee at Se Laie a
ta Sek tn Se teh eee
Se pe eae |
Cieorer We, Johar af 62 Washo
ra Chemnehnerrnwee aa
acta ult wt tee anne he as
i tien ot hi ania rasa
Bie |
Mer, Daley Bis, evcleader of Eleventh |
serrate Bart wie te ak TO
recta ine at ten Sea
itlenl aervitier, =
Mra Carctine Tiveley fe railing:
walnagra the SE Eee ea taneE
rotated et Ste. anal tea
ates 3 tne aa mesa
tte une te Tecan
Ti emt pnaeal prota of tho
iad yeanceeet seats. Sy
a ineadn at setae Tah oe race,
sees eae ee
ag ace sgl Ny Neo oe
‘A surgeon Movida” party sean sheen
a ont Sita? ants at ston
tein, Kawanl Tylor, nt the resi |
Soe th ate Uy A ett te fae
hgben evening chee
Sark und sates eee ihe etter
(tha attan Fin eet at as
iaernige RF tts Pea
ata tae ac od he onviten' a
ple ute ok teat
Te fret ns” Leeurat nooatd
ante
Tua |croe active tn he peck
feed tareie ath ean Aree |
atten he any See te ten |
ste Se ant hare Boat
12 ota ee, ta tae ea
ee. Willian Hedies, “Mey ated "ay. |
Sindy at ieee meet!
oe te ae ate
rat it Wait eereme ae |
ire. dub i. Gunenn, Mr atid at |
ir gree” Shon,
Ve cart Ae iw Stee eae
Mion ne, gneer ce Laem
Mais aetians ey Wankea ne
stein Prin aisined Tose ot
icity nuslor
er siitned Ay Younes 46. Lettre
oer ci cy Lael iattete
star mptoan ence Pee Sats
ic wil y'the now of frenda
Lovet Thursisy evening the Busy
pci Gray Sie te 9 EA
DAA Fone eas ea hese
€ Mere. Connick of Jameites, Cards und |
ata. weer ies hater af tae oe
tw, Muse wun furnished by ithe fel. |
Ses Lawille ©, Smutle, formerly: of
ER Wut sites, moe dvr at 1 8
Fs Rigehid
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929
‘The members of the Gethremaim
Commandery, nlghta Tomplar. yt
make thelr aununt pilgrimage to iiridne
ixtreet A. Me E Chitrrh an Sunday
evening, March 3 ‘The pastor, or. Fale
wurd Erneet Tyler, wit deliver the wer-
mon.
Miss Gertrude Jackwon, daughter of
‘Mr. ond Sra. 5x Jackson, leenme the
Unite of Normau J, Fields at the home
‘of Sr. and Sex. Anthony Wesley, 116
Waverly avenue, recently, ‘The | cere-
tnuny was performed by Tev, George
Shippen Sark. Drersed tn a gown of
white watin and a lace vell, the Uride
carried a bouquet Of orchida anil Iles
of the willey. Her attendants were Mra
Florence Carrington, matrun of honor;
Miny Tittle Beckett, ridesmatd:
Kerman Hing, ring bearer, and little
Dorothy Fields, flower ‘girl, Irvin
Green wax best man. ‘The wedding
march wur played by William A, White
‘and ° Dromiso Me” waa aung Uy Stine
Ethel Bing.
tre. Utelle Walrond et 318 Clifton
‘Place entertained Mr. anil Mra. $, De-
Wit at teu Suuday evening.
sDirs, Isabelle Bennett of 97 Dutfato
Avenue entertalned the membern of Vie=
torit Chapter No, 43, Onder of Earteri
Star, ut her hoine Tuesduy evening. At
uluborate collallvn wax werved Ly the
hhurtess,
Funernt rervices were held at the
porlira of Artuur Q, Mertin, 392 Cartton
avenue, Tuerday afternoon’ fur” Bre.
Kiva Strow! of 76 Columbia elehts.
She was an old Brookiynlte, ernie
here from the Weut Indies when hut
kil Sra Strond dled in the Kings
County Homiul on Kunday: from
faralytle stroke. She way the aunt of
Mins Dalay &¢roud,
‘The members of the Ftoral Clu of
Lridgo Street Church are wannlng 0
elven chicken waffle supper ait "the
chutvh an March 20, “Mre, MM. Merri
Wenglive In pweakiont of ‘the eluly and
dire. Henrietta Edwnnds fy chalrnan of
the mupper eunuittee.
‘The Republican Colored Voters Aw
sovlution Of the 1vth A.D. are tanning
to lve x tworday Lotanr at thelr clubs
fom, 283 Kumaer avenue, on Maret IS
Rn 20. Mrs, Marie La. Field ix chatr=
uty of the nftsir nnd Mixes Ielen
Mawel, accross
as
Mr. Annie Aiwbon of 111 Pacific
street, leader uf Queen Victoria Tent,
Veputy o€ tha Tanta of Trckisn anil
New York aml past grand sleputy af
the Tente, why hae heen Wl mt her lume
for some Line, tanbet went amt operarion
Fatunlar, sho fe now vu the road tw
recovery.
Mee, Ag Stannard Simi te ebales |
men wf the eomuiittes rponwuring the
Dig Sater dinner at the Lined sete |
Hement, Jv Fleet pluce, saturday, |
The need for a Wexer ard Inter Sele
lement Houxe In Brooklyn prompted:
Arr. Laura Rellork wo yolunteer to raise
the Art $1.00 ts promoting tha Lincoln
Settlement Follies on May 9 nt Prospect
Holl, The east ix to contain 13H peopie,
minis a rou of outrtanutins ote
stonnis,
Students and Fraternity
Members Held Debate
in ht, Spacious Brown Memorial Bap-
list Churen, of whiah the Bev. Porter
W. Phillins is pantor, was fited £0 ca-
pacity Sunday atierncon when mem-
bers of the Phi Delta Tau fraternity
of New Rochelle engaged in debate
frithi members of the Seudents: Debats
ing League of Brooklyn. ‘The mem-
bers of the fraternity who had the
affirmative of the question were de-
clared the winners by fhe Judges, ‘The
subject was; “Resolved. That Negroes
of the Present Generation Should
Than Higher Education.” ihe debate
F Education.” ‘The debat-
era for the aifirmative were Edward
Crawford. graduate of the New Ro-
chelle High School: John Beal. a high
school aludent, wid Howard” Gamp-
bell. of New York University. The re-
buttal was made by William Ellegor
of the New York News.
‘The negative was taken by Misses
Ethel Banks of the Girls’ High
School and Thelma Herod of Hunter
College, also Kenneth Hunt of City
Goliegé, “The rebuttal ‘was made. by
Wesley Nacis, Holder, who had ar-
ranged ‘the debate.
Sudges "were Larkin Brown,
r. Fe Powwow and Walter Fe Lofton of
thew Amuierdan, News. Attorney
James P. Ifill of Manhattan presided.
A splendid program was rendered
by a nimber of artists.
‘Both teams put up a high-class de-
bate. Those. for the affirmative
stressed the following points: The in-
dustrial side of the Reon se.
tik Gf Negroes are at this tims poo
sik are al
ple who are non-profcasiona]l and
should develop the industria] side. In-
dustry and trade are the basis of suc-
cesar Of all nations, ‘The higher edu-
cation wit follow inls,
‘The negative emphasized these
voinia: Higher education is essential
because it aids the Negro to mould
character. aids racial solidarity, alds
{reducing ‘racial frictin, aids ‘tie
Negro fn securing amole economic
epportanity aud eno aids in his cul-
at development.
‘The artists ‘ho rendered pleasing
numbera were Misses Lillian Aaron
and Ruby’ Otto. piano duct; Miss
Florence Hawthorne, piano, solo; Miss
pore Bacote, ian ae, Loi
arn. piano sole. and Winston
more. violinist. ries ae eee, ace
rompailed by tawood.
companied by William Boe
CLOTHING
ON CREDIT
“har Wares
Tribute of Affection From a White Friend
To the Late Haitie Buchanan Hanley
et ll OY hCABEPEY BPRBEBT. hh
QN THE death of Mrs, Joseph Han-
ley of 363 Bridge street, the bore
has Jost valuable oltizen, and er
chureh, her clubs and her family and
other friends a loving, effetent, com-
rade who cannot be Teplaced.
Hattlo Buchanan Hanley was bom
Jin North Caroling, at Fedsville, in
[1869, coming of fine old American
stock, “She was recelved into Allen
[Chapel of that town on conversion
Int the age of sixteen years, and from
that time until her sudden death inst
[Wednesday sho has been most active
in chureh work, an active vivid Chris-
lan personality, holding igh the
clear-burning torch of absolute Faith
land Love in Our Father in Heaven,
50 that weaker brothers might see the
way for their faltering steps to follow
in the Way of Jenus.
Mrs. Hanley was the devoted and
much loved wite of Hanley of
the Hotel Ciarendon, on of tha ost
Popular men in the’ ald’ hotel. where
eine ight force. for pears no has
Been the fevoriee of all tne. worth:
ile patrons of te amos fd ea
. rom. St.
Briuait Wes! indies, but marvied the
North’ Garoiise i op her arrival
ave “cept hous foe Gary Seared
few doors fram Fleet Street Church,
‘Thole home hes always been open for
the Benefit of chureh friends snd any
fess fortunate brother oF sister,
Rica Hanley waa an ective tember
of tie Fin Ausembly cians: Repu
lean Club, & Talunble helper her
alstt an ‘ardent pouliela of the
Fight sort barn leader of He. opie
fraternal socitles ca bested het
distinguished service os @ memter of
°
| -- (Corona News Briefs
pt rere
The Jaullen ot the Chapel of Renur-| Corena dwellers, Dn
rectiin were. succewstal In thelr wake | partner, ‘Dre We A, TC
sale hei Inet Saturviay at Mead’s Real] ly of Bay Shore, have
Huate ottice, “Ancther day for’ tue | tice Ii the. fel of
fase whl by Sian 4. town. Together with
Dr G, Ar Phillipe, bo
four ten ot
[A saupetve wean toners ar, and sry, | ove ctaaaaten of
Wo Gi Davin of #1 Wert Hinyen mvenue | tated thinee ooee a
wn Feb. si, through ‘the Initiative et | aemeee ‘Other feign
Sree te As’ Teunmun, Thome present | ee, gener, flame
trove Hews ara Mra. GW. Minton, stem | {hia ata ee Mey
Vines Sew Cuts. Mee, Daucy” SMe: | end“ aten Meena 3
Chntin, ira, Nuett, Site. G Tasean, | George Wills:
Sire ‘Allan. Stra. 1. Pages aire. “donne
“ton. Slew. Tanner, ‘Str Watt, are, 1 —
Gren, ir, and She As D. Woods, sire | Runday being an i
runiers. Sirs Hn Gndreye Stee | tne, Mp Falken 1
Stephemun. Stee. C. Lavedas, Stee, sh | lowanl corona, at th
Hacwell, Sire, Whltsten, Mes, Ta Wil SMleqes Helene,” Sarton
Itami Sire Tiandohin, Siem “acneton, | tierd and Charles Vn
Stier’ Jackson, Sire, Worter, Site | lem. ‘The vido termin
Perris and ethera dence of Sir aud af
gf Ninetoseventh are
ire Danlel TM of 188tN treet wan] yaenne ram eee
hoptera tn the Ladies Hachange Inet tific Sonnet were a
Weduenduy afternowt, aealaet nous te
A etighetul rotten war enjoyed Sun-| _Mtew Ford, one of U
‘ay at_the hone of Tir abd Sire. A. In | teachera at ihe Const
sider, S212 with reels who Feoritty | wam tently Nlesed fe
Jined the peace aud tranqulility of the! due to illneer,
Int " . Fi ht Carlton Lose:
lensive On. saturday ‘igh
ig) Alpha vaerey. ‘ten
Carlton and defeate
or Playground sities.
‘an
moments. Carlton.
Borough Civic Association
Among Many Fighting for
New Park .
From all indications the much dis-
cussed. playground in Rusurban Park
on Fulton street, near Grand avenue
veil at last be a fact as it was placed
Im the clty budget a few dayx ago
through the efforts of Borough Presl-
dent Byrne and Park Commissioner
James J. Browne, In all, Brooklyn
will have fiftcen new playgrounds at
total cost of $864,011.25 in casa the
Board of Estimate approve them, and
ail signs point to this approval.
Several. years ago tho white reat-
dents of the Grand avenue and Ful-
ton street section urged turning the
Rusurban Park into’ @ playground,
‘This was befora so many Negroes
game into the district. ince the in-
‘ux of Negroes there has been a de-
sided change on the “part ‘ot the
the Wear ii te nat a necessity Row.
the miaeground Is not a necessity now.
‘They alo advance the argument that
there is so much traffic Chat it would
berot Iitis value to the children,
‘The elty authorities thought. the
layground was a fine idea "and
the park. “They planned Tor
the taxpayers in this afea to pay for
Ik? ‘The auseammient was $104,000,
[Fis wave, the white people 10, the
aust nat ey another
Good chaneo to kil the ‘playground
Pokey ain advanced, Une areu-
Sarai od ‘not focal moe
‘The Borough Civic Association took
up he atlas and ‘agnt for the
Roem ce tee
™ 2
es and vie aseciations ight
plan. ‘Taxpayers who were mersbers
Sf the Borough Civic. Asscclation st
ons ue were’ biscred for" ia,
ume.
iors omere peers
{ef dawn and tho wits organisations
stated any taxpayer coud Soin,
‘This Bageround tf opeied” would
aiford 1B 000 children to enjoy theme
tate Senator Marcellus Hf, Evans.
Democrat, has introduecd a bill in the
State Lewisiaturo whieh states that if
the ‘assessment’ are not made etis=
Wide, the eite ean sell the Property"
‘The bil is in the hands of the
Cemumltzee on City Aitaise
Migs atel "Macomber, white,
pessident of, the “lig” Slayground
{ever ot the Papua repartes oF
Whether the enwt Ie a cliy=aide oF fo-
fehinesrerment. She lives in the die
Trish sesewed:
Sierra Leone Circle $30, of The Fleet
Surest Hallet Socety. ot Fleet street
(Bridge St.) ‘of which con-
jerogation she was a valued member
‘or Shelter, No. 7 Anislopes
fof the Ladies" Auxiliary of the
Sons and Baughtars of Altice
tented ‘at the funeral service ‘held
March 3 at tho Fleet Gtrect A. NCE,
Zon) Church and beautiful resolu-
tions, from each ‘were read to. the
gpeded audienco of mourning
TET W. Brown, pastor of the church
and “friend for many years of the
Fanged servioes, fir eloquent eyian
rani
Was bullt about the comforting dec-
aration of Our Lord. “He that be-
Heveth in ME shal! NEVER DIE”
ihe tusic program was under
the organ aaalted by tie iasgo Yaeed
je
choir. Miss Iola Ohafiin sang “It Is
Well with My Boul" with exquisite
‘si the splendid troral offerings
were Tange et from the
Ganagemont of the hotel, A” Golde
man; from the fellow eniployees of
Joe, from the guests of the hotel and
from individual guests, William S.
Dursea. E.R. Cram, Major Boujac;
Veterans ot Foreign Wars, Jean, C.
je rican Legion, and saany
others, ‘filing the ehurch and later
the grave at Evergreen Cemetery with
sweetness and beauty—roses sweet, 1g
ra es caer
os ;
Hon. Bren asa bulb is buried in the
around, 0 it blowoms into later
tired God a0 tearful weld te
0 ly we
Fang, qaeya,tigoms forever im the
lovely garden of our God.
‘Atfectionately submitted by.
‘J. CABELL HERB!
‘of Richmond, Va.
Corona dwellers, Dr, Soler and hin co-
huariner, Dr. WA, It Slelutosn, formers
Jy of Bay Shore, have establiehed prac
Ulco the. eld! of chirupenctic tm Gn-
tona., Together with Dr, fr D. Raptiste
Dr. G, Ar Philipe, both of Halen tho
four chissmaten of tho Conmopelltan
Eeho:l of Chiropractic. of Neve. York
“alkel tiling over at Drs Soler Ter
dene, ‘Other frlenin to” congentdlate
ile wonjie were Aire, Metnterhy Nuree
Uciia inrlant ot Harisin Horpiai, Se
fnd Stee, Sltchell, Silay “Manth atad
Score Willan,
Bunday being an Meat day tor driv.
Ing, "Fivgot Folken turned the wel
(owant coronny at the Tequert of the
Stlvsea eleue, ‘Marton ant Marine Pet=
Uterd and Charles Hackney, nll nf 1tar-
fem. ‘The rido terminated ‘atthe rent
dence of 3ir. aud ‘Sire Jarmes Wilson
oe Nineis-eaventh street: “An-appatixing
inner wan served awe otters te. Join
in'the repnre were Silowe Nieginia sit
oldie Stwrrte amt Wiliatn Xinithe alas
Theodore Davia of Jersey ‘Clty.
Mlem Ford, ome of the fumlay School
teathera at ihe Conaresatisnal Chaseh.
Was greatly tleged from clava, Huiniuss
due to filneer,
Carlton Loses to Alpha
(On Saturday night the Alpha Phi
Alpha “Fraternity eam fourneyed to
Carlton and. defeated tho Y. M.D,
‘ery fast od offered Tagng eneltg
‘an exe
Moments. "Carlton took “the lead
after the first ive minuves ot play by
Hon. ne” for Bante and” one fe
One for Bartiete and one
Day, Hand of Alpha, retaitated by
‘Aipha® spurred “an ‘bythe ancsary
on
shooting of Hand and Polite took the
lead from Carlton and after Nfteen
minuter of play tea br < points, "the
first half chded “alpha, {6;"Caniten,
‘At the beginning of’ the second
half Carlton made & desperate effort
19 tle the “Alpha core. Anna's de-
fense was a ifttle too strong for Catl-
ton to break trough at. will, Thetr
offense was very fast and seeiningly
Dewildering to” Carlton at times
Hand, the star forward. of Alpin’
team ‘and high scorer. demoristrated
some ‘wonderful floor work and
een eye for tho basket, scoring 11
points. Bartlett, the ‘rangy center
and high scorer for Carlton, used bis
height “and shopting, ability to great
advantage, scoring # points,
Boeh ‘played wall sid are to
be congratulated upon thelr showing.
bere ears
Siorgan on March 16. *
Carlton Sunday School
- Basketball League
Besnits, Feb, 26,
St Veter Clnvar, 162 84. Piline, 3,
Fleet Surety 2: Et, Harney, 0.
‘Feat Blanding.
Wan Last 1c.
BL VU seesseseee Nt
Fleet iret cisccciss 2 tie
RL Barmabes sees 2 aaa
cme: 6s lS
Sote:—Rt. Yarnabas withdraw from
league becausc of shortage of players,
Fleet Street va, St. Meter Claver,
TMG Gee ara,
Omega Plays Carlton
On Tuesday night. March 19, the
Omega Pst Pa Pattee, ‘one of the
outstanding basketball teams of the
Bern Sar act lich
See a a
cuite ® reputation in New York in
competition with other fraternity
teams and will no doubt give Carlton
“RY ERY FR oe omer ts
eee ate Op be
SL eae oe
strong and root for the home team.
Large Funeral Parior, With
Homellke Convenience, Free
109-57 NEW YORK AVE.
Su JAMAICA, N.Y.
ote
e
Jamaica News and Social Briefs
“The Whisteria whist Club eld tt
regular meeting Mopday evening at the
home of Mra, Hannah Southers of 145-20
Shore avenue, Membera present were
Meadames Handy, Allaway, Quarles,
damea, Jackson, Sinimong, ‘Tollavar and
Una Btitchell as guest of honor, | Mrs
‘Nora Jackson won first prise: Sire Jo-
‘sophine Alloway, second, and irs. Flor-
‘ence Simmons, third,
Mr. anf Are. ‘Thomas Lewis of 1724
atrea) had as thelr house guests for the
pant tea daye Me, and Mra. Lincoin
Dabney and Miss Stamle Lowis of Falr-
mount, W. Va.
‘The Pedagogues, at their next meet-
ing on Saturday, March 16, which will
bo Wield after a theatre party and oup-
per. will plan for-a trip to cover the
Eauter vacation, A group composed of
Bir, Edith Mock, ‘Sirs. Bernadine Bur
well, Mra, Ethel’ Carman and Mra
Hurry W, Drown apent_ Washington's
Birthday “and tho following week-end
at Atlantio City. One of the members
Sine Jonephine Campbelle, la as Lib-
erty, XN, X., recuperating.
fre, William Lewis gave ber nlece,
asiee Entzabeth Young, w surpeive birth-
day party on Monday evening, March 4,
at her home on 172d _atreet, Guests
were: Mr. and Afra, A. Walker, Sir. and
Sine 11, Harris, Sire 8. Duckett, Mra. 8.
Dougherts, Dougherty, Wm. ‘Thomp-
eon, Mr. and Mex, Ze Dabney, Sr. and
Sire, “Win, Iiarper and Stine SI. Leis
AIT spent @ vary pleasant evening,
‘The members of Whtsterta Walet Club
were the guests of Mra L. Ready of
W016 105th avenue last Friday’ eve-
ning. After playing carda a moat deli
‘cloun waffle supper was served. Those
Prenent wore Menlames James, ards,
Houthers, Yarbourh, Allaway, Jnckwon,
Quarles ant\Follaver. Firat ‘prio went
to Mra. Nora Jacksoi: sceatd, Jonephiine
Allaway, and third, dna ards,
Among those from Jamaica at the
raduation exercises and mustetie-tea
Elven by the Vero Club of New Yorke
At Bother Zion Church wero” Ste
Jeter Greene, Ira, Hattle Clarke, Mrs.
Fruncen Avery, Sir. and. Sire Norton,
Silas Dianche Clarke, Mle Elsie Norton
‘and Mr. Brown. The Poro Club of
Jamaten vene reprerented on the | nro-
ram by the Miasen Blanche Clarke,
Elie Norton and airs. J. Greene,
John Quarles of 160-28 108th avenue
hne Just returned trom Blackstone, Va.,
where he waa called on account of tho
death of hit father.
Mra John I. Jackson, &2 ts much
inproved after her rrevst Illness Bho
Ww convalencing ot her home, 172-06
108th avenue,
‘Mra. Dortuls 11, ‘Thompking thas re-
centiy filed gult against her husband,
Augunus A. Thempking, Jr, for abro:
iue «livoree. The estranged couple have
been married uly a year, |
‘The Young People’s Literary Union of
Jamalen met at Shilo Raptiat Chureli
on Sunday, Mare 10, Tt veus well at-
tended. Miss Iilancho Clark, president,
wan in charge of the meeting.
‘The Ja+Fiush Girtx will hold thelr
cegular meeting at the resltence of
Mins Helen A. Qankfont, 371-23. 100d |
road, on Sattinlay, March 16 Orrteers,
for the Drescht year will bo Installed,
On Tweaday, March 5, Jamatea tort
one of itu pluneers by the death of Mev.
Eliaaleth Heown ef 200 Nerrin avenue,
Arm irom came to Jamaléa from
Brooklyn thirty-five yearn ago and wan
Alwayn a deiived aint respected mem=
ber ef the cummunity. Ter death, ate:
ter am ilncrs of almost a year, wan,
cauned Iiy heart trouble, She leaves t0
mourn ler loew a husband, a daughter,
Mra, Adelo Hroaitus, and x son, Harry
AW. Drown, also wasters and hrothers, in
Brooklyn, and a host of friends,
Funeral services were held Thuralay:
evening from the hove, with Interment |
Friday morniug In Flushing Cemeters.
‘The many friends cf Mra. Benjamin
Noy of 108-17 132M Perot wre plait 10
ver her out neal atter the accldent fi
Which she way kealded,
Mrs, Tiarry ule of 107-38 17st atreet
was hioateas to the Thalia Uridga Club
Lut. Friday evening. "I'rlees wero won
by the following: Fire, SMre U.N.
Georga: recon, re. IL “Washington;
third, aes, ¥. Binumona Guest yrlze to
Mra A. Linton, "Tho other Ruevis were
Moqdames 1. Burke and G. Th Huntley.
Tho members prescnt were "3texdames
Tanherry, Dunham, Browa, Drcoks,
Hoyd and SMtiae Sinkler,
‘The Misses Julia Dickerson and An-
nla Richardson of New Yerk City wero
out visiting friends in Jamaica last
Sunday,
‘On March third the fret regular mect=
Ing of the Sphynx Club wax heb at the
home of La Ros Meclean,, The object
Of this club tq tr eneourage and atimus
late aeilvitlen along soclat and. atnteve
linge, ‘The efficsen are? Vreskdent, 10
Ruy’ McClean; vlec-prevident, | Hlverod,
Bontarues secretary, Willhuin uftn;
tredwurer, ‘Vamsr Taikford. =
Eight ladies mot Thursday evening
lamt at tha home of Sra A. Collrmore
and organised the Tragrersive Social
nnd Art Club of damaiea. The follow
Ing: are ofticern ain nigmbera: SFA
Ucaublan, presilent: Mev. Green, vice-
president: dire, Collsinere, chapinin:
Sire, SinCnR, treamurer; Siem M, Barner,
March 17, 1929
4PM
COMMERCIAL COMMUNITY
eto
KINGS COUNTY CIVIC ASS'N
Hoard of liteeters Monarch: Jedee |
RES ee eae ee
ce ate ee
weoretary; Afra, Ward, fnancla] secre-
tary; ra BL Blerby, social” editor
thd bare Sehaon We ch wile 3
iisted' to tent members
‘The D. ¥. W. ¥. K 600 Ciub‘met on
Monday afiertson at the ouuaenst 92
Ue Na iotgenn' se tor s8 aetna
sami sere datagy ‘este a
Sieg the Pellowine ater the "gune’
Hesttniee diapers Telnvare” chez
Burke, Hoffman, The guests were dirs.
Cowie! Hes: Besubiow od Mae Stone
Fat piss wos won by Sten STouea
second, Mra, Cooper, and third, Diis
Bes
‘Miss Ruby Linton of 270-15 108th
arate, Bigvick Park, toact the wen
na wit Sti Grace’ MeCican of Sem
ey cla
ats and Mra te Burke, Nn and ru
we bales MEP naan AN
Madame be Shaw ane'it. Gatiast ter
ine nutes of te Ainge Listes
‘170-16 108th avenue on Sunday evening
at's teu given te Bonet of her esugaics
Ruby's birthday, ‘
‘The Two Ts met at the Nome of Are
dares Bomeet SF ate chem ok ae
deatay. Mate adler who enone Vote
I cclauan were Mccaarees Staten
Eandolph, Dright, urnett and E.
‘Elders.
‘re momiars of the _Fiur-decta
Bilge Gib ware the Poeae et site
Ghariee Cyprens task Westenae’ after
toon tt See bomen ise I eee
a ivply Yumch mee sartehs sie eines
the fllgwtog ladies siayed briege: wer
amen Swain, Wroolvele sineins Pae
George, Fansen\ Be dara” Wetainy
itor and Huser. ‘the peten tl bs
fiven af die ett ent
Dir. and tre, Artur Humane of Union
WA strot spent lent Suna ieee
fone Sa tiaman fa Torney
Eon Engitrond!
alte, Urry lapel’ of S86 rutman
averte entrained ie Het Hones
Cheb on Saturday ettnlum Meee
‘Thon Drosant evo Memtariea Se fuck
fon, Re Temthange ae Ateneo See
Fenight and ior ee aieeieighe, etsy
Rewrs He Marty. 2 semiees She
Lele, iowa tinea apes od
eee A laeely eae
Junior Hi-Y Club Gives
Successful Presentation
On Tuesday evening, 5 at
| centrat Branch Auditorium, B Pian
eon cs the Junior Hi-Y Club of
the riton Avenue Branch Y¥. M. O.
A. gave @ most successful dramatic
Frat specialtice ‘ne Brograte poe
por meagre ta
clay written for Juniors, and enc
With the “Heathen Chinee,” the same
kind of play. The bogs appearing, in
eee ee Panera
ce noe igameth, Docse
Boyd shaw, Diraley Gosdrive Hare
Old Goodridge. | Ot Harrison and
glen saree: fie tnd, of pork they
ies pero yy those Who saw
perform.
‘AS specialties, Lioyd Shaw
i ae ee, Pare
Set." by Deppen, and liiroe,” by
Gharminade; Kennet Dodson | ren-
sompositian, af the poets Schackel-
Rting, and dance ‘novel? Daley
a ‘novelty:
Ge and = Harold Seociiage
payed. ‘8 duet on the piano and viol!
thelr number being “Hindu Chant,”
from st age actin ese ee
“Badko;” Gene Henderson ent =
ed delectably with his “uke,” singing
Popular songs; Kenneth Dodson
Owen Dodson gave « aketch, “A King
for 2 Day.” Spe eenneth, bacon
cil Taylor, Durntey Goodridge and
‘Olls Harrison offered & ‘num
ber, the dh? eos songs and trip-
Pa te ra en
op a i eee
Soillie Soyer 3 Ae
the Caritén Avenue Branch ¥. M.
Cornerstone of New Church
Laid in Corona Sunday
On March 2 ‘the Rey, George A.
Lonzo,'B. D. surrounded pas
tors of iteens chureher, of jneuray
towns and Manhattan, with the aic
of the Grand Lodge of Prince Hall
Masons, Daniel Teagle, Grand Master
‘and his staff, laid the’ cornerstone ‘of
Be, Baers AB, Obssrels in corns.
mans were nde by Stanop soaiia
‘H. Jones, presiding lers A. i. Wile
son of Manhattan and Coverdale of
Brookin, and other noted speakers.
The. soir an Bunungton. E 2:
fmounted “fo S110. "too Tauck
Biman abo has Win ihe, commiaeonts
Eman ‘eho has laid the. cornpratones
‘and erected ight chureties, *
Adams’ Eighth Anniversary
At Concord Church Sunday
Sunday, March 3, marked the
eighth iniversary of the pastorate
ot the fev. James Br Adama at Cone
Soe SSS cs usa
er
Dr. ‘William "Mt. Moss, Dr. Adasnn
came to Concord in "1620" 8s ‘Supply
Paster, In ital ‘he wax choocn vas
ie actor. From ail Indications Dr.
or pink Dison, who secre
Concord for 48, years and ‘who made
thir church oat inown; and to
Storer
ct :
ters “and. moved from | Duftield t
Adeipht areet
within oo Jena after tho pastorate
lof Dr, Adains the membars Iiquidated
the_ $28.00 morgage and. purchased
a parsonage at tho. cost of 311,500
‘he have also secured two houses on
Garlion avenue at a cost of $16.00,
Een Teil be ued Yor &. moder
‘During the pastorate of Dr. Adants,
680 persons have ulted witht
church by baptism, 742 by Christian
Toho. peredas. During the ‘pase yeat
a ‘Were connected with’ the
ehoreh.
"The ‘prosent, membership. tn 2.630
making fe the “largest ehurels In
es.
A.M. E. Church
Holds Sessions
Leaders and Laymen Meet
to Discuss Methodist
Church Work
What was ane
spauive move and the ganseot PE
Gay in African Methodisas bean at
Sonday with the opening seats
the Bixt tald-year ‘conference of ik
New York anaonl Conference of
Biebk E gare oe hs Sea
‘ward E. ‘Tyler, pastor.” At ae
Terence ‘and for the first time ei
Hitery of tn church te’ prada
andthe favmen face est
on
Ground and’ discussed int free nat
Spen-maner the good and bad
the administration and rebgee
fork of the denomination att
Bate. °° ‘Thia "conferences naa (3
approval of the buhop. Jot
Ba Ht ‘Jones. who wes preses,
‘The OF the conference was
to mudy the condition of Atates
in New York Stats" aot
io secure a closer co-ordination
the ‘separate tinits of Airican Hae
for the ‘suenpthening’ of ieee a
a
churches it the Now Yona
"This sesaton was preceded by a ree
eee ft eueiacies
Sober delivered te sermon,
session on Mane
day De OF B Cole, presdeae tty
NU Preichers! Bitton. preaaee
several shott talks on te idee of tp
conference were made by Dr fe
Downs former editar of the Voie &
Missions and © Tow of ist
chureh at Freeport: Ur. Barat ©
Syter, presiding elder; J."P. Vander
arse of the AVM. E Chiureh in Ney
ete, and, others
yp Jones in bis talk, praled
the conference, ae a Big Wing Ast
ated that he belleved that tal can
ference and otters wil aid him i
Geeting tmany problems that ‘he bat
Been confronted, itn in adrabay
the work in New Ye
“Atver the bishop (sik the varias
pation and a Ruraber of aymen
Ereded to discuss some of the rem:
Bendacions “ot the conference i
i, Mm, they adjourned unl 3p.
Re "the ahernoon session. te te
cussion ‘was continued and ‘ay
aluable "augyeations were brow
‘At the evening, session Dr. Oi
presided, Tie in featire was Oe
esding of tne discussion by ihe Be
. Ward Nichols, of the Be
Manuel A.M, Manheim
‘he general’ theme wis -Atren
Methodiamn in ‘New York state, S
Present. Stats and How to Gonditn’
tg Further Development” :
De Nichols Ba tg poe
that development. coul
Brought * about. by coneentratia
Pires the eburch develop’ th
found already covered and detela
‘Consciousness of the people. It
sees ereentatlen Te chara a
les whers if was needed,
‘Bishop Jonés ina shore talle spoke
on tne representation of” th
iiyman, “He “aid he wan nat fore
Against’ the pan, but was 8 ste:
the question. "He stated. how
that fettere Taymen fre gion
representation they” should be come
Gated men with level heads ond be
‘iho loved thelr chureh
jeeday ev 30sec
session, was held atthe. Niacedeus
ie ee church “et Fushisg,
Shieh tie Rev. Willams Afck Dae
Kins is pastor, "Prosiding Eider Ab
Wilson ‘or the “Beanattan diac
Presdeds | Fiere waa a. sympoaes
PRiriean Methodism nthe etate o
New York! Among. ‘whe sprasen
Were members of the church, Tied
Yese, aiss inlloea nuler, Supe
Jackson and Joseph ‘Taylor.
Jones also. spoke.
‘On. Wednesday evening the ome
ference met at Bethel “A, ALE
Ghuren, the Rev. O. P. Cole, pate,
Br. A - Cooper preaides. The fa
tare was the symposium: “Ine Re
Intion of the Laity to the Ane
Development of African Methods
This topis was ably iscumed 07 3
umber’ of Jaymen and. layomen
Among them were Mrs. Mary & Bi:
Saree Ms ANAC ane
nD. Nixon rhe
ofthe hue renaered roel
Cae rises tS
Maine "final eeasion was bed st
Bridge Breet “Ghurch oa, Seat
ing. "The discussion. wat
on “Some Accomplished 1
Bie date Year Conferences
"Bumuop Jones attended ail seks
‘All of the sessions ere larney
tended and much interest was
tended and much interest "
Brooklyn Y. W. C. A:
Bien Bronta Moryek will te ot
apeaker of the Booklovers’ Hour 3
Sunday afternoon nt 4:20 n. = 3X
will speak ‘on Negro Milerature. T.
Meeting: wilt ba held under the aoe
ot the Stuilentet Uiterars cull aed O%
Aubland Placo Fiducation +metiey
Slaw Tenteloo Ieniterson, nreaieat &
the Guild, wilt preside, “athe | Cree
Aubliee Singern will be heart, tie BAe
era twing Tienes aston,” sdleecaet
Witter eiesin, Onto Ms rick amt Set
Watking, Others appearing on tht 2
gram are Dorothy Coleipa:t air! Fis
both iickenan.
‘The ESucation Committea | lark
felends to hear Mra Te Gratme Ee
Deugalt, formerly of Virus asain
and now connected with ASramam,
Btmmuy, at an aflornoan Leriute 238 04
uoxt Tueslay afternoca, March 1h at
Greloek. Mra, MeDotinait's subse
be The Art of Entertaining and Crs
tm Hoine Decorating.” <\inierien
free.
Dr. Alexander Lyons, rntbh of
Bighth Avenue Temple swt o2t
ircokiyara best known eiierts, wil
the speaker tn a. ecco talk 6 tat
forma nf retisions expresrnn, Tweets
evening, Marek 19, at € p. ee. Oe LEE
runjeet will bo. "Tie Techn et «Hee
Tah Libera.” “ste ara woenes are &
diatiy Tovited to es tie j
‘The Induxtriat Lewes vith etl
Femular niontiyly nehng tz Aamlae
Pave ‘Tuealay, March 3 at 8 M7
Atlan Bather anderen, artine Morena
tan executive of Hirvvilsa Ys W. Cs 4
Ree Absa ke th
NOTICE.
‘This {s to notify Mrs. Ink t
2 ete her ie Sapet
embarrassment. A qivorce, has beet
eranted her hustand, Elverton Ly
Cluston,
Deaths Reported
Arlino, Thomas, 40; 4 Bradhurst avenue.
Barnett, Richard, 21; 149 West 67th street.
Bowls, Lawrence, 51; 248 West 133d street.
Carlan, Emma, 77; 401 East 64th street.
Clark, Thomas, 63; 543 Lenox avenue.
Edgar, Thomas, 30; 307 West 134th street.
Fisher, Arnett, 30; 310 West 128th street.
Graham, Emily, 25; 201 West 148th street.
Hardin, Leon, 37; 39 West 126th street.
Howell, Martha, 58; 2332 Seventh avenue.
Hunter, Leah, 63; 550 West 144th street.
Johnson, Glenna, 40; 208 West 148th street.
Kyle, Charles, 74; 300 West 126th street.
Miller, David, 27; 23 East 118th street.
Lerus, Charles, 53; 123 West 127th street.
Powers, John, 55; 415 East 135th street.
Sharp, Jacob, 86; 410 West 36th street.
Slish, Willie, 25; 243 West 123d street.
Small, Frederick, 21; 207 West 120th street.
Smith, William, 32; 321 West 23d street.
Tolbert, Jennie, 33; 228 West 121st street.
Turbull, Lilly, 76; 401 West 118th street.
Walsh, Mary, 59; 156 East 122d street.
Wess, William, 51; 204 West 133d street.
Wilkerson, James, 51; 51 West 131st street.
Welf, Amanda, 62; 2090 Seventh avenue.
---
Obituary
BROWN, Lawrence, 248 West, 123rd
street, veteran, died suddenly March
3. Funeral services held March 5.
Pine Baptist Church, of which de-
veloped was member. Rev. George
Smith delivered the sermon. Inter-
view March 9. A, M. National Cen-
sury with fellow ministers will for-
ward. Drew was born in St.
Hebron, S. C., 1577; married Emily
Smith, 1895; joined U. S. Navy, 1923,
practicing around the world three
times served in two wars. Since re-
tained was a clerk in G. P. O. Was
a fellow, Knights of Pythians,
leader of Herald Union League and
Admiral Philip Naval Camp No. 15.
He leaves a wife, son, mother, sister,
blossoms and nephews, host of
MRS. EMILY BROWN, Wife,
FRANK BROWN, Son.
Colle, Mrs. Ann Marie Edwards, who joined the Bloom's Hospital Thursday morning at 5 o'clock. The funeral was conducted from the Abyssinian Baptist Church Sunday afternoon at 1 o'clock. Mrs. Cole leaves a husband, Mr. Herbert Cole, and an infant daughter, Bessy Ann a mother, Mrs. Mae Edwards, Bessy Ann a mother, Mrs. Mae Edwards, Mrs. and Mrs. W. C. Sanders, two cousins, John C. Williams, Willie Sanders, and a host of friends to mourn her loss.
In Memoriam
RE WHITE—Laura Yennicka. In loving memory of our beloved daughter,
who departed this life March 9, 1923.
Hope you, dear Laura, sleep on.
And take your rest.
I loved you, dear, but Jesus loved you.
Mother, Mary White.
Father, Prince White.
Sister, Sifronia and Dorothy.
Mother, Harry White.
QUINCILLE. Bessie II.—In sad and
long memory of March 16, 1924.
With the loss away.
You are gone but not forgotten;
Have your memory fade.
For this shall always linger.
And for the place which you
Want for your long rest.
Mother and Father.
WILLIAM—Rufus I. In sad and loving memories of my dear husband, who departed this life March 11, 1854.
Though your voice is heard no more, the father is vacant in thy home. Let your memories still live, within me, forever and eternity.
Wife, Elizabeth Vaughan.
WILLIK. Rosebald—In loving memory of our daring baby (Tootsie), who passed away on March 11, 1852.
"A vaint place is in our hearts That never can be filled."
Mother, Hyndelia Wilkle.
Pather, Henry Wilkle.
Aunt, Gerritte Devenish.
WILLIAMSON, Sarah—In sad and loving memory of one who passed away. Bib. 1855.
Sick Men and Women
Don't wait until your condition becomes chronic. If you suffer, call at once for a complete examination, and if your sickness is curable I will give you immediate relief. No matter how long you are sick or what treatment you have taken, if you are not satisfied with the results come to me and you will be convinced of my ability as a Specialist. For the past 22 years I have been treating thousands of sick men and women with success, and I can help you. I charge less for treatments than many other Specialists. I use the best Medical and Electrical treatments. Fluoroscopic X-Ray examination; also the intravenous injection (608) or the treatment of impure Blood.
th. pimple, eczema, bladder
double, sore throat, kidney
double and other curable di-
sases.
Don't delay. Advice free. No
charge for medicine.
Dr. Lealer. Successor to
Dr. FALK
M W. 51ST ST., NEW YORK
44th and 5th Avenues.
Office Hours from 10 A. M. to 7
P.M. Nurseries and Legal
Holiday Days. Lift to 1 P. M.
Circle 1988.
forgotten. Never shall your memory
finde. Our thoughts shall ever linger
around the grave where you were laid.
Your daughters,
MRS. M. J. YEARWOOD,
MRS. EMILY L. GEDDINGS,
MRS. SARAH A. SMITH,
MRS. HOSA NELSON, sister,
Sonah-Lay, Grandchildren and
Great-grandchildren.
WATT, Charles B.—In loving memory
of our dear brother, who departed this
life on March 11, 1925.
A year ago you passed away,
But to us it seems just a day.
Sleep on, Charlie, and take your rest;
We loved you well, God loved you best.
Lay your weary head on the Saviour's
breast.
And sleep on, Charlie, sleep on.
SISTERS and BROTHERS.
In loving memory of my dear husband,
who passed away March 1, 1925.
MRS. WALTHR. S. SMITH,
100 W. 139th St.
Cards of Thanks
Mr. Richard Barnwell acknowledges with grateful appreciation the sympathy and floral offerings of the many friends during the illness and death of his wife, Louise Barnwell, who departed this life Feb. 25, 1829.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Scholack and family wish to thank their many friends for their kind expressions of sympathy during the illness and death of their only child, Michael Leopold, on March 1, 1829, after a brief illness of fifteen days, at an early age of sixteen months.
Mr. and Mrs. I. H. Wilson of 2555 Revene Avenue, Dunkirk Apartments, wish to thank their many friends and members of Salem M. K. Church, also those of New York and Greenshore, N. C., for their kindness tendered them in behalf of their bereavement of their late daughter, Bernice Wilson
LEWIS H. WILSON.
LUCURTA D. WILSON
and Family.
We wish to thank our many friends for their kindness and expressions of sympathy during the recent death of our brother, Elonzo Merritt, who died February 13, 1929, after a short illness. Sister, Mrs Starthu Thomas, Brother, Isadora Merritt.
The family of the late James S. Campbell acknowledge with grateful appreciation the kindness shown them in their hour of bereavement.
Drineus Campbell, Wife;
Lorraine Campbell, Daughter;
Lorraine Smith, Sister;
Lenora Smith, Sisters.
Mrs. Emily Brown and son Frank wish
"Married Life" Not Worth While
"Married Life" Not Worth While
Blames Wives' "Nerves"
"Weak nerves," said a New York doctor recently, "in my estimation wreck more happily married lives than any other cause."
Besides making the sweetest disposition sour and irritable, nervousness is a terrible drain on your vital forces—it saps your youth and your strength and dulls your beauty. What a difference from the bright-eyed, vibrant girl he married. No wonder married life seems unbearable!
But you can get rid of your nervousness speedily too—and become the steady, radiant woman you once were. Take Tatasha before meals and before going to bed and if it doesn't soon make a new woman of you—doesn't rid you of that tired, strained feeling—go back and get your money.
Go to your drugsic now and get a bottle of Tanlac. Millions of folks have started back on the road to youth, health and happiness with this world famous tonic and there is no reason why you, too, can't begin today to rebuild your worn-out tissues and revitalize your entire system. Tanlac
A Baby in Your Home
The Remarkable Influence of a Doctors Prescription After Yearn
of Cruel Disappointment
THE WEEKLY PRESS
Hundreds of married women, children for years, suddenly and themselves in a state of the most bittersweet to the most inluance of a doctor's most tender assistance. Mrs. Annie M. Midtleman, Glencore, N. Y., writes: "I know just what Dr. Elders' prescription can do to a baby and two years ago I took ment and now we have a fine baby boy. He is eighteen months old. I haven't words to express how much I have done for me. Every married couple who really children should at once write to the doctor and get a free trial of this prescription together with his insistence. For your convenience did out the coupon and mail it today.
PRESCRIPTION COUPON
Dr. H. Will Elders,
865 J. Ballinger Blvd. St. Joseph, Mo.
Please send me a free trial of your treatment for Sterility and instruction on how to use it. I enclose fee for postage and packing.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929 to thank their many friends for their kind expressions of sympathy and floral contributions in their hour of bereavement. Debt Free, Baptist W. T. Beck of Detroit as the evangelist. The J. C. Brix Lyncum met at er of Mother Z. young people of the
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs. Susie Wheatley, 128 West 128th street, takes this means of expressing her thanks and appreciation to her dear and gift of flowers and fruit kind friends during her recent illness.
The family of the late Martha E. Howell, president of the H. Adolph Howell Funeral Church, Inc., 1282 Nesterville avenue, New York City, take this medium to express their thanks in the general public for the many expressions of sympathy which came to them during their bereavement and the understarks for their courtesies. Mr. C. Leon Estwick for his efficient merchant and funeral director, and the Rev. A. G. Best for the beautiful and impressive services conducted in St. David's P. F. Church Sunday morning, March 10, 1928.
Boy Scout News
By Scout Edward Lewis
By Scout Edward Lewis
Get-Together.
Monday evening was a big night for the Scouts of Troop 776 at their annual Get-Together at the Metropolitan Church, 139th street and Seventh avenue.
The yearly awards of 100 per cent duly-present were given to Scouts Roy Coleman, G Hunter, R Curver and Sinclair Simmons, who received during the year. The Get-Together closed with songs and the pledge to the flag, led by Scoutmaster Norman Cobb.
Hikers.
Twenty-one Scouts from Troops 773, 783, 770 hiked to Kanesen at Suffern, N. Y., Friday, on a three-day overnight hike.
Among the hikers were Stephen Aspinal, Joseph Wilson, Percy Verwayne, Garlen Patterson, Herbert Garity, Evans Crutchfield, Fred Williams, Lloyd Davis, Joe Harris, John Hudson, Edward Carter, Earl Singleton and Howard Warner.
Walters
A group of white Scout members of the Rover's Association of the Madonna House is expected to visit troops 773, 783, 770 at the St. Philip's Parish House on West 133d street at their Tuesday meeting.
Scoutmasters' Meeting.
On Scoutmasters' meeting was held at U.S. League, QM West 136th street, on Monday evening, 9 p. m. The purpose of the meeting was to welcome the new Harlem Executive, A. G. Fallings.
Troop 774 went on a hike Saturday at 7 a. m. First and second-class candidates were examined in outdoor requirements.
Marthattan Lodge.
Owing to the fire which damaged Rockland Palace and the skyscraper, the annual reception and dance of Marhamtian Lodge, scheduled for Friday night, has been put over to April 4. All tickets now out and boxes sold will be honored on that date.
Mr. and Mrs. St. Elmo Howard Jr.
new address and telephone number:
143 W. 138th street; Edgecombe 5633.
(Advt.)
SPIRITUALIST
116 West 118th St. Universal
Churchs; all are welcome Monday and
Wednesday evening, 8:30 o'clock, Mrs.
Hamilton.
If you are unhappy and have trouble
of any kind come to our public lectures
— philosophy of Divinity and Spiritual
tradition — P. M. Lectures who given to mediums
who are not fully developed. Chrs.
Samuel, 35 Lexington avenue, Brooklyn.
Spiritualist meeting every Thursday
and Sunday, S. P. M., 1523 Denn street,
near Rochester avenue, Brooklyn. Prospect
6774. Headquarters 65 Clifton place.
Rev. Richards. Mar.6-11t
Prof. R. S. Scarlett, initiate magician of Eastern Order of Sacred
Mysteries, diplomatic student of occultism by high cast adept. What is
your trouble? Come in and see him.
He will help you. Free consultation.
Phone Harlem 0022, 34 West 131st
street, ground floor, east side.
Spiritual Advice Given. Know the truth and be convinced. Bring your troubles to me. However difficult, I will probe it. Professor A. Love, 676 St. Nicholas Avenue, Near 1454th Street. Apt. 21. Consultation Daily 10 A. M. to 12 Noon. 2 to 5, 7 to 10 P. M.—(Advt.)
Spiritual Meeting, 62 West 1251th Street. 2:30 and 8 p. m. Colored and White mediums, private messages, developing, healing, Bishop J. B. Hummel, Harlem 7591. Top floor.—(Advt.)
SAINT MARY'S SPIRITUALIST CHURCH, 232 West 1371th street. Meetings held every Sunday, Monday, Thursday evening, 8:40 o'clock, by Rev. Mary Holmes. Feb 20-4t
You are invited to attend meetings of the Holy Divine Spiritualist Church, 147 West 132d St. Meetings each night; different mediums. Mime. Childs Sunday afternoon, 3 to 6. Rev. C. G. Johnson, pastor.—Advt. Feb 13-tt.
HAND-IN-HAND SPIRITUALIST
CHURCH, 423 Edgecombe Ave.
Meetings every night at 8:30.
Messages by various mediums.
Mayb-tf
JESUS SAYES—Beith-Typhillah IV Mo-
ravian Church, 124-126 West 1346th Rt.
Rev. Charles D. Martin, D. D. Sunda-
tary service: 11 a.m., 8 p.m., Sunday
school, 1 p.m., Tuesday, 8 p.m.
study and prayer meeting Wednesday,
8:30 p.m. Social night Thursday.
Come! We will do the good.
Jan.8-52t (Advt.)
ESTATE OF
J. Wesley Lane, Inc.
MARY LANE, Pres.
Undertaker
Free Funeral Parlor and Chapel
112 W. 133d St. Harlem 6485
Bodies Shipped to All Parts of
the World
J. B. S. McLEOD, Mnr.
Office at His Drug Store, 488 Lenox Avenue, Bet. 134th and 135th Sts,
NEW YORK CITY.
Office Hours: 10 to 1 P. M.—7 to 10 P. M.
TEL. HARLEM 6171-6472
Be Good
to your eyes, they will
be good to you and
will serve you through
your life.
Don't Cheat
your eyes by buying
cheap glasses at har-
gain offers. It may
cost you your eyes,
which is more than
money.
Have Your Eyes
Examined
Your Soul
Your eyes are the
windows of your soul.
Why abuse your own
soul?
Trust
You don't trust your
money to a bank of ill
repute, so why trust
your eyes, which are
shores valuable, to any
Tom, Dick and Harry?
Dr. KAPLAN
OPTUMETRIST
15 Years at
631 LENOX AVE.
EDWARD W. WAINWRIGHT MARION A. DANIELS
UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMERS
FUNERALS OF DISTINCTION
Distinction in design, highest quality, beautiful in appearance and performance, is the crowning quality that gives all other desirable features in Wainwright and Daniels Funerals their supreme value, for $100-$150 up.
Our Motto: Service and Efficiency
JOHN L. FOOTE, Jr.
LICENSED UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
NOTART PUBLIC
177 WEST 126th STREET, NEAR 7th AVENUE
S. R. LEVIN and B. F. HODGE
UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMERS
REASONABLE—SYMPATHETIC—DISTINCTIVE
Remains Prepared and Shipped to All Parts of the World
OFFICE & CHAPEL, 227 WEST 145th STREET, N. Y. C.
Office, Edgecombe 7802
Rea, Wadsworth 0085
LOUISE B. HART
MORTICIAN & LICENSED EMBALMER
2284 SEVENTH AVENUE, near 134th St.
ALSO 67 WEST 130th ST, N. Y. C.
Funeral Chapel—Funerals Arranged From $95 Up—
Within the Reach of All
2244 SEVENTH AVENUE, Corner 132nd Street, N. Y. C.
Dignified Service — Efficiency — Lowest Rates
BRANCH: 138 E. 290th St, LELIA E. BROWN, Ner. Phone Oliviaville 2322
Lawrence C. Ingram
NEW FUNERAL HOME
Service Will Always Be of the Highest Standard.
Very Moderate Prices Will Prevail.
232 WEST 135th STREET
Phone BRADHURST 5441
DAY AND NIGHT
2332 SEVENTH AVENUE Audubon 9239
Mrs. Martha E. Hewnell, President — George E. West, Manager
First Class Service at Moderate Prices—Use of Church Free
Your Inspection Invited.
Church Celebrates
The Metropolitan Baptist Church
128th street and Seventh avenue, is in the midst of an elaborate fifteenth day celebration of the church's seventeenth anniversary. . The exercises reached their climax yesterday, when the institution's mortgage was burned. The celebration began Friday, a week ago.
Metropolitan Church had its beginning March 12, 1912, at 55 West 134th street, where the congregation held services in what was known as the Subway Church or Mercy Seat Baptist Church. A merger was effected with Zion Baptist Church, with the Rev. N. S. Epps as pastor, and the new congregation adopted the name Metropolitan.
EVANGELISM CAMPAIGN
STREETS IN NARLY
Seven Harlem churches and pastors are participating in the visitation Evangelism campaign during this week.
They are the Rev. F. P. A. Cullen
Salem M. E. Church; the Rev. A. C.
Garner; Grace Congregational
Church; the Rev. M. C. Stranchan,
Second Seventh Day Adventist
Church; the Rev. W. L. Imes, St.
James' Presbyterian Church; the
Rev. H. I. Thomas, Buelah Wesleyan
Church; the Rev. J. W. Brown,
Mother Zion M. E. Church; the Rev.
T. J. B. Harris, Rendall Memorial
Church.
Mother A. M. E. Zion Church
Revival meetings are going on at
Mother Zion Church, with the Rev
EVERY PERSON SHOULD HAVE
Dr. M. J.
PHYSICIAN AND
SPECIALIZES IN DISEASE
606 TREAT
Office at His Drug Store, 488 Lenox Ave.
NEW YORK C
Office Hours: 10 to 1 P. M.
TEL. HARLEM 6
Be Good
to your eyes, they will
be good to you and
will serve you through
your life.
Don't Cheat
your eyes by buying
cheap glasses at har-
gala offers. It may
cost you your eyes,
which is more than
money.
Have Your Eyes
Examined
PETER B.
EDWARD W. WAINWRIGHT
UNDERTAKERS and FUNERALS OF DISTRICT
Distinction in design, highest quality and performance, is the crowning quality feature in Wainwright and Dank value, for $100-$150 up.
162-164 WEST-136th STREET
Notary Public
CATHEDRAL 8998
Our Motto: Service and
JOHN L. FOOT
LICENSED UNDERTAKER A
NOTARY PUBLIC
177 WEST 126th STREET, N
S. R. LEVIN and
UNDERTAKERS and B
REASONABLE—SYMPATHETIC
Remains Prepared and Shipped to A
OFFICE & CHAPEL, 227 WEST 145
Office, Edgecombe 7802
Phone Harlem 8221
LOUISE B.
MORTICIAN & LICENSED
2224 SEVENTH AVENUE, N
ALSO 67 WEST 130th ST
Funeral Chapel—Funerals Arrangement Within the Reach of
Phone Edgecombe 9049
Open All Night
RODNEY DADE S.
UNDERTAKERS AND B
2244 SEVENTH AVENUE, Corner
Dignified Service — Efficiency
BRANCH: 158 E. 129th St. LELIA E. BROWN
Lawrence C.
NEW FUNERAL B
Service Will Always Be of the
Very Moderate Price W
232 WEST 135th STREET
DAY AND NIGHT
H. ADOLPH
HOWE
FUNERAL CHURCH
2332 SEVENTH AVENUE
Mrs. Martha E. Hnwell, President — Go
First C'ass Service at Moderate Prices
Your Inspection Invl
W. T. Beck of Detroit as the evangelist
J. C. Price Lyceum met at 4
p. m. and was led by R. W. Willis,
the former president
At 8 p. m. the Lord's Supper was
swept. There was a meditation
by Dr. Crane.
There will be a Sunrise Prayer Meeting Sunday at 6 a. m.; at 10:30 a. m., Junior Church, and at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m., sermons by Dr. Beck.
Salem M. E. Church
Dr. F. A. Cullen preached on "Marriage" Sunday at Salem M. E. Church.
Mrs. Bertha Harris, religious work
NOTICE.
Cornelia or (Missy) Williams, her marriage name is not known to me. Her parents were Burton and Betty Williams; brothers, Tom and George; sisters, Kitty, Ella and Rosa of Charlottesville, Va. We at one time lived at Wheeler's Brick Yard. If any one has any knowledge of her whereabouts, please communicate with her sister, who is trying to find her. Mrs. Rosa Williams Burroughs, 7 West 131st street, New York City—Advt.
RUDOLPH GRANT
PRESENTS THE SALEM CHOIR
In Rendition of
St. Cecelia's Mass
Latin Text.
Sunday Afternoon, March 17, 1920.
At 3:45 O'Clock at the Elks' Choir
Auditorium, 160 W. 129th Street.
General Admission, $1.00; Reserved
Seats, $1.25; Boxes, $3.00.
HAVE HIS BLOOD TESTED
U. POLK
AND SURGEON
BASES OF THE BLOOD
TATMENT
Avenue, Bet. 134th and 135th Sts.
N.Y.CITY.
P. M.—7 to 10 P. M.
M 6171-6472
Your Soul
Your eyes are the
windows of your soul.
Why abuse your own
soul?
Trust
You don't trust your
money to a bank of ill
repairs, so why trust
your eyes, which are
more valuable to any
Tom, Dick and Harry?
Dr. KAPLAN
OPTOMETRIST
15 Years at
631 LENOX AVE.
P
MARION A. DANIELS
and EMBALMERS
DISTINCTION
quality, beautiful in appearance
quality that gives all other de-
Daniels Funerals their supreme
66th STREET
Bradhurst 0512
CATHEDRAL 0773
e and Efficiency
Serving the Public in a dignified manner and with professional efficiency, day and night, at prices within their means, has enabled Fred M. Williams to become one of New York's Leading Undertakers
Fred M. Williams
THE MUSEUM OF THE WORLD'S FINEST ART
Casket, as illustrated above, in polished hardwood, black or any color plus a wimmed with silver bar handles, engraved name plate and lined with silk, with pillow to match. Strong outside burial box. Removing Remains from any hospital in Greater New York. Embalming and care of Remains. Use of candelabra and candles, when requested. Use of Day Bed or Couch and palms. Flowers on door. Procuring Burial permits. Automobile Hearse. One Limousine to any Cemetery in Greater New York.....Total Cost
Complete $250 Auto Funeral
Massive Hardwood Square End or Plush Half Couch Casket, as illustrated above. Trimmed with silver bar extension handles, engraved name plate and lined with silk, with pillow to match. Strong outside burial box. Removing Remains from any hospital in Greater New York. Embalming and care of Remains. Use of candelabra and candles, when requested. Use of Day Bed or Couch and palms. Flowers on door. Procuring Burial permits. Automobile Hearse. One Limousine to any Cemetery in Greater New York.
$25
1
Metal Casket, Silver or Bronze Finish, open half length, lined with pick up silk and pillow to match. No glued joints to soak loose in wet grounds, will not swell and burst open like wood. Cannot be crushed by earth and is guaranteed to protect the Remains from the elements of the earth. Strong Outside Box. Removal of Remains from any hospital in Greater New York. Embalming and care of Remains. Use of candelabra and candles, when requested. Use of Day Bed or Couch and palms. Flowers on door. Precinct Burial permits. Automobile Incarnate. One Limousine to any Cemetery in Greater New York. Delivering Box to Cemetery.....Total Cost
REGARDLESS OF ANY KIND OF FUNERAL YOU MAY DESIRE, CONSULT ME
LADY ATTENDANT
er of Mother Zion, spoke to the young people of the Epworth League at 6:30. "Love Each Other" was her theme.
The officers of the auxiliary to the trustees were installed by the pastor at the evening service. Mrs. Elizabeth Lancaster was re-elected president.
The choir, directed by Rudolph Grant, will sing St. Cecelia's mass in Latin at the Elks' Auditorium, on Sunday.
That Baby You've Longed For
That Baby You've Longed For
Mrs. Barton Advices Women on Motherhood and Companionship
"For several years we was denied the blessing of motherhood by Mrs. Margaret Burton of Kansas City, " I was terrific nervous and subject to the hardship of suffering and melancholy. Now, I am of a beautiful little daughter and a true companion and inspiration to my mother, who had hundreds of other woman would like to be of my happiness, and I will gladly release it to any married woman who will wish to be with her. I have vice entirely without charges. She cannot nothing to sell. Letters should be addressed to Mrs. Margaret Burton, 126 Mt. Madison Ave., Chicago, response will be, strictly confidential.
EN and WOMEN
that LOAD OF SICKNESS, thereby letting go to those better equipped because of SPLENDID HEALTH?
Do not come to my office. Diseases of the Nose, Eyes, Ear, Hidneys, Bladder, Skin, Chronic Kidney Disease and Headaches, as well as Comorbid Wounds are yielders have failed to treat a patient for treatment is imperative, employ- Fice System and other the X-ray. Intravenous are employed when indi- aca. Be examined TODAY.
Nest you, I will tell you so.
M. and I. M. to F. M.
10 A. M. to J. F. M.
120 EAST 29th ST.
Bet. Lexington and 4th Aven.
NEW YORK
Consultation, Advice and Examination FREE
a professional efficiency, day and led Fred M. Williams to Undertakers
Williams
Embalmer
SICK MEN and WOMEN
NEW YORK CITY Service Day and Night
—Fred M. Williams—
auto Funeral
to Funeral
Illustrated
plate and
385 Complete
AY DESIRE, CONSULT ME
THE WORLD
"Christ Prays for Peter" is the subject to be discussed at tonight's service at the Beth-Thillah Fourth Moravian Church. An illustrated lecture on Martin Luther will be the feature tomorrow night.
ELEVEN
CHICHESTER S PILLS
THE DIAMOND BRAND.
Bristol, England. For sale by
Chichester Street & Bond Street.
Pillls in Red and gold print.
Take one other. Pillls in white,
red, blue, green, pink, yellow,
or black. Diamond BRAND PILLS.
SOLD BY DRUGISTS EVERYWHERE
$150
$250
$385
TWELVE
1917TH ST. 88 W. (Apt. 3)-Large, light, kitchenette room, furnished. University. Mrs. Sindler. Mar-8-49
1917TH ST. 82 W. (Apt. 5)-Room to let, man and wife or single bachelor. Mar-8-26
19TH ST. 317 W. (4 ft. up.)—Nest light room, furnished for rent, quiet home. Call evenings. Banks. Mar.8-21
19TH ST. 125 W.—Basement room, front, very nicely furnished, just what you are looking for; every convenience perfect. Feb.6-14
19TH ST. 124 W.—Nestly furnished, basement room; all conveniences, people preferred. University 0160.
19TH ST. 117 W.—Nestly furnished, single rooms to let, steam heat and electric. Phone University 6321. March13-21
19TH ST. 52 W.—Nestly furnished rooms for respectable people in quiet house, improvements; rates equal. Please call after 7 p. m. Hines.
19TH ST. 203 W. (4 flights, rear) Room for room. Forbes. Mar.13-21
19TH ST. 221 W. (Apt. 6)—Nestly furnished room, private; couple or single. Mar.13-21
19TH ST. 201 W. (7th Ave.) Nestly furnished room, suitable for young men. Mrs. Moyo.
19TH ST. 204 W. (4 flight up.) Purchased, private room, and 64. Call evening at any time and Sundays. Archer. Feb.20-41
19TH ST. 203 W.—Large and small kitchenette rooms; respectable room; open for colored; steam heat. Monument 9609.
19TH ST. 203 W.—Private steam heated room for single girl; use of kitchen. Mrs. Da Cost. Mar.6-22
19TH ST. 104 W.—Newly decorated kitchenette; small and large; from 53 up. University 4882.
19TH ST. 120 W.—Purchased or unfurnished room, steam heat, electric light and cooking privileges; plenty hot water. Mar.13-21
19TH ST. 116 W.—Small rooms, neatly furnished, all improvements. University 5128. Mar.13-22
19TH ST. 212 W.—Nestly furnished kitchenette room; also small rooms; privileges. Monument 7182.
19TH ST. 215 W.—Room, neatly furnished, kitchenette and, single room; hot and cold water. Mar.13-22
121ST ST. 204 W. (Apt. 2)—Large and small rooms, neatly furnished, respectable folks. Mar 6-28
121ST ST. 252 W.—Large and small light rooms, steam heat, suitable single person. Harwell, Cathedral 1018.
121ST ST. 180 W. (Apt. 4)—Guest home; small, cosy room for rent; 54.25. Feb 20-41
121ST ST. 204 W. (2 flights)—light room on 7th Ave.; couple or single. Monument 7033. Feb 24-46
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929
Classified Advertisements
12D ST. 212 W.—Nearly furnished or unfurnished rooms with ca without kitchenette; also large light, alty front basement room; private room; call and phone Monument 701. McLain. Jesup. Feb-27-4t
12D ST. 135 W.—Nearly furnished kitchenette room in private house; respectable people only. Feb-27-4t
12D ST. 308 W.—Basement room, furnished or unfurnished, steam heated; respectable people.
12D ST. 269 W. (I flight up) Room, large or small, $5 and up. Smith. Feb-27-4t
12D ST. 157 W. (Apt 19; cur 7th Ave.)—Nearly furnished, private rooms, $3.50 up, large front, running water, elevator, rent reduced. Call days, nights. Mar-8-2t
12D ST. 213 W.—Nearly furnished kitchenette rooms; steam heat.
12D ST. 145 W. (ground floor) Nearly furnished rooms, $6 and 87; convenences. Cathedral 8724. Mar-8-4t
12D ST., 223 W. (Apt. 2 and 3)—Furnished rooms, large and small, private. $3.00 up. Mar-6-2t
12D ST., 170 W. (corner 7th Ave.)—Light small front room, $3. Middle-6t. Mar-6-2t
1277TH ST. 274 W.-Large furnished or unfurnished kitchenette rooms,
small rooms, telephone, steam
heat. Mar.13-47
268 WEST 128TH ST.
High class furnished rooms; all improvements; $5 up; telephone service. Dec.26-13t
128TH ST., 52 W.-Nearly furnished rooms, small and large; all improvements; respectable. Feb.27-4t
128TH ST., 3 W.-Large front room, kitchenette; very cheap. Feb.27-4t
128TH ST., 108 W.-Beautiful large light kitchenette rooms. Mar.6-1t
128TH ST., 64 W. (Apt. 1-R; ground floor)-Furnished room, large, for rent, all improvements, convenient for cooking and washing. Apply Elly.
128TH ST., 248 W. (Apt. 2-W); Furnished large entrance elevator, conveniences. Inquire Apt. 3. Mar.6-2t
128TH ST., 130 W.-Large furnished front kitchenette room, respectable couple only. Mar.6-2t
128TH ST., 120 W.-Large furnished front kitchenette room, respectable couple only. Mar.6-2t
128TH ST., 255 W.-Furnished room to rent. Mr. Moore.
128TH ST., 250 W.-Nearly furnished rooms, large and small; no landlady; rent reasonable; all conveniences. Harlem 4132. Henry.
128TH ST., 168 W. (Apt. 5)-Nearly furnished, single or couple, respectable. Call before 6:30 p.m. March13-2t
128TH ST., 222 W. (Apt. 8)-Large furnished room to let. March13-2t
128TH ST., 246 W. (Apt. 7)-Light, large, furnished room. Tel. Mont. 4394. March13-2t
128TH ST., 118 W. (Apt. 2)-Furnished rooms for rent, apply.
128TH ST., 30 W. (Apt. 5-A)-Nice furnished room; no other roomer; quiet home. Call after two. March13-2t
128TH ST., 252 W. (Apt. 2)-Room and/or single, newly decorated. Call any time.
128TH ST., 109 W. (Apt. 5 ost)-Furnished room, rent costable. elevator. Harlem 4433 evenings.
128TH ST., 60 W. (Apt. 2-E)-Nearly furnished room, elevator room, $6.
128TH ST., 60 W. (Apt. 4-E)-Nearly furnished room, single or couple; all conveniences; elevator service; use of kitchen. Olbona.
128TH ST., 306 W. (Apt. 10)-Furnished room to let. Mar.13-2t
128TH ST., 221 W.-Furnished kitchenette room, $9; single room $5.50. Mar.13-2t
FURNISHED ROOMS
19TH ST. 207 W.—Room to let. Aud. 6930. Feb. 20-46
19TH ST. 308 W.—Large kitchenette room, neatly furnished, steam, electricity, quiet home. Brad. Mar. 2-8
19TH ST. 250 W.—Nearly furnished rooms for business people, improvements. Mar. 516
19TH ST. 114 W. (1 flight up East side)—Furnished room, neat. vate room for respectable young man or woman; $5 weekly. Call after 7 p. m. Rawlings. Mar. 2-7
19TH ST. 64 W. (Apt. 2)—Furnished room to rent, suitable one girl at $5 girls at $3 each. Warren Hamilton. Mar. 2-7
19TH ST. 202 W.—Furnished rooms, neat, convenient. Mar. 13-27
19TH ST. 120 W. (Apt. 4-W)—Private rooms to let; respectable man and wife or friends. Call after 6.
19TH ST. 217 W.—Nearly furnished rooms, steam heat, hot water. Tel. Audubon 3319. Mar. 13-27
19TH ST. 112 W. (Apt. 6)—2 rooms front, or single one. Audubon 1158.
19TH ST. 206 W.—Beautiful, large back parlor room; large kitchenette room; furnished small rooms. Mar. 13-4
19TH ST. 100 W. (Apt. 4B)—Nest light rooms for rent; reasonable price. Bellamy. Mar. 13-27
19TH ST. 118 W. (Apt. 5)—Nest furnished rooms very reasonable, large and small, all privileges. Bradhurst 4788. Mar. 6-4
19TH ST. 100 W. (Apt. 18)—Nest furnished rooms, large and small. Mar. 2-8
19TH ST. 212 W.—Room for one or two people outside convenient; homelike; cooking; telephone; elevator service.
19TH ST. 100 W. (Apt. 28)—Nest rooms to rent. Mar. 2-7
19TH ST. 153 W. (Apt. 43-B)—Nest, large, newly furnished, strictly paid, all rooms; quiet, pleasant surroundings.
19TH ST. 126 W. (3 flights, west)—Nest furnished rooms consulties; very reasonable; phone. Evans.
19TH ST. 242 W.—Large unfurnished room, newly decorated; kitchenette rooms. Brad. 0111.
FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED ROOMS to let, reasonable prices. 100 W. 139TH ST. APT. 42
159TH ST. 138 W. (1 night up, ei-
dle) Large room. Newton.
140TH ST. 216 W. (Apt. 9) Furni-
cal room. $55.00
"To Sell or Buy, You Must Advertise"
FURNISHED ROOMSFU
HIST ST. 239 W. (Apt. 3)—Large furnished room to let; all conveniences.
HIST ST. 276 W. (Apt. 3)—Room for people man with a respectable family. Mar.13-23.
HIST ST. 117 W. (Apt. 21)—Well-furnished room for couple or two friends.
HIST ST. 100 W. (Apt. 38)—Neatly furnished room newly decorated; very homely; all conveniences. Mar.13-23.
HIST ST. 209 W. (Apt. 2)—Furnished room, small, $4.50. Telephone Edgecombe 8907. Mar.6-21.
HIST ST. 148 W. (Apt. 7)—Light, private, use of kitchen. $4; call mornings and evenings. Burton. Mar.6-21.
HIST ST. 108 W. (Apt. 72)—Large room for rent, newly furnished. Mar.6-21.
HIST ST. 115 W. (Apt. 1-2)—Neatly furnished room, small; for roomers; ladies or gentlemen; business people; $7.50 week. Phones Auburn 0252 after 4 P. M.
HIST ST. 108 W. (Apt. 64)—Ideal rooms, furnished, for one or two; service, privileges; rent reasonable.
HIST ST. 127 W. (Apt. 46)—Large furnished room to rent, suitable for couple or two friends. Call.
HIST ST. 173 W. (Apt. 3-8)—Can be Ave.—Lovely furnished room; may be seen to be appreciated; mostly private; newly decorated; reasonable; respectable people. Telephone Bradhurst 10069. Ridick.
MIST ST. 223 W. (Apt. 40) - Com-
morable room; use of kitchen if de-
fect phone; home telephone.
Mar. 13-41
MIST ST. 218-216 W. (Apt. 2) - Nearly
furnished rooms, 45 up;
couples or single: privileges.
MIST ST. 221 W. (Apt. 41) - Nearly
furnished room, elevator apt, nice
family. 86. Aug 2030. Mar. 5
MD ST. 221 W. (Apt. 15) - Pur-
fect room. 86. Aug 2030. lim-
150TH ST. 402 W. (cor. Edgecombe
Ave.)—Room: single and double;
call office: Brad. 2246. Mar 13-29
151ST ST. 402 W. (apt 12-A)—Two adjoining furnished rooms. will let
as bedroom and sit room, or
separately as bedrooms; quiet
home. Mar 6-29
151ST ST. 441 W. (Apt 53)—Nearly
or room for respectable person
or couple, rent 84; no other
room.
152D ST. 409 W. (Apt 2)—Large
unfurnished room. Menile.
153D ST. 409 W. (Apt 6-E, cor. St.
Nicholas Ave—Furnished room with
cheerful view, for single gentleman
or interior. or quiet for oms wishing to study.
Brad. 10034. Feb 27-31
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929
Classified Advertisements
LENOX AVE—Furnished and un-
furnished rooms $3.50 up, $36 Lenox
Ave. Corner loft to rent for busi-
ness purposes. W. Eaton, manu-
agement, W. Eaton, manu-
agement, Eaton Brothers, Harlem
4937
Feb-27-31
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 582 (Apst. 209)
—Nearly furnished room; reason-
able; well furnished; red; apply evenings or Sunday.
Edgecombe 1006. Mar-27
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 772 (Apt. 11),
—Pine furnished room, reasonable.
Mrs. Rowe. Mar. 6-21
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 685 (Apt. 22),
(corr. 145th St.)—Nearly furnished
room, and airy; 435 and provements.
Mar. 13-27
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 666 (Apt. 64),
—Nearly furnished room for
respectable man only.
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 684 (Apt. 7
North), (corner 145th St.)—Small
room, quiet home.
Mar. 13-41
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 580 (Apt. 1-B)
—Nearly furnished room for re-
liefs and conveniences and call any time.
Mar. 13-41
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 604 (Apt. 3)—
Beautiful rooms for the right
party; call all week; beautifully
furnished.
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 174 (Apt. 4-A
1 night), (near 119th St.)
—Nearly furnished room, com-
fortable home; reasonable.
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 772 (Apt. 62)
—Nearly furnished room, single,
couple; elevator; home priviledge.
Bradhurst 3561. Watson. Mar. 6-27
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 701 (Apt. 4-E)
(overlooking 145th St.)—Nearly furnished
room; call evening.
Mar. 6-27
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 180 (Apt. 72)
--Comfortable room for men or women; light and airy; elevator apt; telephone; call after 2 p. m.
Mar.6-11
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 614 (Apt. 2)
--Nearbed rooms, 4 up. call after 6 P. M.
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 188 (Apt. 46)
--Nearly furnished rooms to let, with respectable family Telephone
FURNISHED ROOM
N. NICOLAS TERRACE, 10 (Apt. 5, at 122th St.)—Outside room in quiet family.
N. NICOLAS PL. 701 (Apt. 2-2)—Neatly furnished room to let to respectable people only.
LARGE, steam-heated kitchenette room for reliable business couple; reasonable. Phone Brugge 6210. Feb-20-40
PRIVATE rooms, home privileges, with kitchen use; ladies, gentlemen or couple; single; $5; couple; $6.50; no objection to children. Huges 2033 Second Ave., at 1038 St.; call at Apt. 5.
POR RENT—Large outside room, all night, elevator service. Call Mon. 5-8.
PRIVATE rooms, home privileges, for ladies, gentleman or couple; single; $5; couple; $7; no objection to children. Humbert, 128 St. Ann Ave. Bronx.
LARGE, light, beautifully furnished room; all room comfort; convenient house; rent very reasonable; for respectable couple or two; call after six p. m. University 3840.
PRIVATE front room; respectable
Phone Bradhurst 1118. Apt. 41.
UNFURNISHED ROOMS
ST. NICHOLAS PL. 49 - Unfurnished, kitchenette rooms, large front room. Mar 5-4t
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
17TH ST. 218 W.—2 light rooms, newly decorated, improvements. See janitressing.
18TH ST. 431 W.—5 rooms, electric, newly decorated, improvements. See janitress.
46TH ST. 523 W. (colored tenants)—3-room apartments, electric, pitch balcony, very low rents; free time.
52D ST. 415 W.—3 ROOMS—32 and up. AVAILABLE TO CAREFULLY SELECTED TENANTS.
Apartmentes exquisitely decorated; electric lights, hot water, porcelain lights and tub covers, painted floors, window shades, etc. Owners actively to refine Christian folks desiring a permanent residence with quiet living conditions. in midwinter Male require Superintendent on premises.
32D ST. 425 W. (colored tenants)-
Large. light, 3-room apartments,
electricity; convenient location.
35D ST. 417 W. -3 and 4 rooms,
beautifully decorated, electricity,
white plumbing; rents $22-$28.
428 W. 53RD ST.
For selected tenants, newly decorated
rooms, electricity, hot water, white
sink, porcelain tiles, 3 rooms, $27;
4 rooms, $32. Two weeks free. Act
quickly.
55TH ST. 540 W. -For colored ten-
nants, 3-room apartments;
electricity, white plumbing.
56TH ST. 222-294-228 E. -3 nice
large room, new tenants;
concession; rent $18 month.
59TH ST. 329 W. -4, 5 rooms, all im-
provements, steam and hot water,
electric lights; rent $35-$40.
97TH ST. 207 E. -3 large, airy rooms,
electric; $18-$18; front and back
room near 98th st. subway and "L"
122D ST., 224-8 W.
SEVEN rooms, all private, all im-
provement. Apply Sept. on
premises. Jan. 23-f
413 EAST 123D ST.
WE have accommodations for 8 colored families, hot water, electricity, white tubs and white sinks; two rooms, $16; three, $18. White decorations, white clear. See sailor, Apt. 4, or phone Vanderbilt 6247. Jan-9f.
124TH ST. 152 W. 4 newly painted, light rooms; electricity; very cheap rent.
124TH ST. 226-228 W. -Three and partiment; electric light. hot water. Room premises.
124TH ST. 201 W. 4 light rooms. front, 4 rooms; light furnished. Apply Kesson Real Estate Co. Room 600.
149 EAST 126TH ST.
FOUR large, very light rooms hot water, electricity, white sinks, white tubs, white decorations: reasonable rent. See sailor, bus department, or phone Vanderbilt 6247. Jan-9f.
307 W. 126TH ST.
130TH ST. 119 E.—3-room apart-
ment for rent. Apply janitor.
Apt. 8.
131ST ST. near Lenox Ave. 7 rooms,
all private, panslled walls, marble
stairs, newly decorated. old im-
pressioned rooms. rented by
Goodman, 87 W. 125th St. Harlem
9000, Harlem 7100.
131ST ST. 49 E.—4 nice, large rooms,
steam, electricity, hot water, bath
walls, second floor; $45;
Length 5489.
131ST ST. 38 W. 1 flight, west.—3-room apartment, neatly furnished;
all improvements; $15 a week
131ST ST., 142 W.
THIRTEEN
"Small Advertisements Bring Big Results"
2 ROOMS $22.
4 ROOMS $32.
5 ROOMS $18.
31ft
REFINED, QUETT HOUSE
Electricity, hot water, percolate
plumbing, exquisite decorations,
light, sunny apartments, conven-
tions to 33th and 125th rowstown
cars, to 138th and elevated and
subway and surface cars.
128 SANT ANN'S AVE. BROX.
18T. 133D AND 1214TH STREETS.
Apply Superintendent.
WHY pay high rents; our prices $18
up, 3 large rooms, electricity, hot
water, white sinks, 2 blocks from
18th st., 138th st., subway station, con-
cession; 18th Lincoln Ave., apply Apt. 6.
Telephone Awaiter 7517.
4-3-7 ROOBS, ALL IMPROVEMENTS: PANELLED AND STEP-
WORK; REASONABLE, ROOGENS
AND RYAN. REAL ESTATE
AGENTS: 1369 7TH AVE. NEAR
BOOKREACH FOR PHONE BRAD
HURST 517.
“It Pays to Advertise” === *: =~= ¢
FOURTEEN
FURNISHED APTS.
FOR RENT
' 8 WEST 135TH ST.
_agha emey gprs ari
PEPER UR ae
Ss seu
ee ee
SBE Sta At
ee ae
; 138TH ST. 101 W.. Room 8—Fur-
PSE FT liad i
Se Oo bad
* 395TH ST., 101 W., Room 8—List your
"BREESE Ba SMR
Sra a a
FRESE al a
ee ye
273 WEST 146TH ST.
3 AND 4 ROOMS
"Furnished apartments; steam leat,
ROE Se
| 446TH ST. 302 W.—Four beautifully’
ELSE, en
“RS eae
‘Mrs. Smith, Apt. 4. ‘Mar.6-4t
: 2704 8TH AVE.
: 3 AND 4 ROOMS
Dagny eons
Pan es ah ae
ze HP wee
_ 8TH AVE, 2847 (Bist St. station —
RAE Me Yaad
ROT aa a ara
BEDE la epee
__ BENE RAS Bt
EI Sy ee
oP Lea aoe Ta aa
eS eae Set
2, all mprovenie
~{BRADHURST AVE. 220 (Apt. 25)
* Elaborately furnished apt. to share
With a nice refined working ei;
rent reasonable, Call after 2 ban.
MADISON AVE, 2119 capt. 4
Moor apt. furnisied: , as. Neat:
*, "BOSD per week Cail from 3 to 10
7 P.M.
“FOR RENT. completely furnished 3-
~ Soom apis, Apply 86 W. 142d St.
2 Ante te
ROOM apartment neg fulah
Sede sigty private. IU and
Bee reges abe carcaker. © 3bs Wy,
:_Tssun''st "See Posey. Mar.g-tt
“POUR-6-reom furnished apartments.
Onhes 168 W. lsd St; phone Har
., Jem as6e
‘2 FURNISHED APARTMENTS
2 FURNISURDESIRABLES
er ee ee ede Cree
buildings are kept the cleanest.
Gall at either address.
; Rooms and Bath, front apartment,
all rooms newly painted, with 3
Bedrooms, Si, weekly. Engulre
Supt. 2555 Eighth Ave, cormee
Ish St.
5 Rooms and Bath, front apartment, |
with 3 bedrooms, $1730 weekly. n=
Uulre. Supt, 2264 Eighth Ave, cor
er i2vth St
5 Rooms and Bath, front apartments
with 3 Bedrooms, ‘SI5-817 weekly.
Enguire Supt. 303 W. 15th St. |
5 Rooms and Bath, front apartment,
SUT-SI8 weekls. “Engulee landlord. |
322 W. 1008 St, near St. Nlehiolas |
1 Private Rooms, front apartments
new building. panelled walls paint: |
€d" rooms, "$25. weekly. ‘Enquire
Supt, iv. i3tst St. near Lenox
Ave,"or Sheil, 312 W. 133 Ste
AML apariments sicam heat, clec-
feiclty and het water. For fur-
ther” particulars see _ Sher?
Landlord, 312 W. 1334 St.
R. E. FOR SALE—
EEEVEN-ROOM house at a bargain;
fan be used either ng a ohe or wor
Emily, 'ail modern provements:
ay leading street In Jamaica.
articulars apply, cm
York ‘Ave, Jamalets Le x.
R. E. FOR SALE
OR LEASE
‘TARGE 25-foot, 14 room, steam heat
fed, private house: West 130th St;
Sale" or lease. 12 rooms, 4 baths,
Parquet floors, 120th St. sib. 13
Fooms, steam, St, Nicholss Pl. S10.
Many’ othe Svein conti
Apply Gi ve taan St
OER 10280.
See yee cee ee Sen ae arn ent eae
‘UP-TO-DATE i-room rei ee
‘Meonable ren oF terms; ‘best block
in’ Marien.” Foguire 3 W. 123th
{Si develry store.” aroxers “pro:
{tected
NEW, 2sfamily house. brick bulaing
Neth. garoge, 2 sie-room apts, ali
: “improvements, Rhinelander Ave.
Mea, Willlamsbrlgge “foad, "one
: Bock tram Morris Park Ave. trolley.
i deasgnable rent, Jacob Goouman,
Gf West sth St. Harlem» 906.
Harlem 7610.
iWEST 1ST ST. 1 icons, 2 baths.
i rept, S160: steam. Walker. 200. W:
1 1Ssth St, Room” 215." "Bradhurst
}_aen
‘HOUSES TO LEASE
UHROOM house. with or without fur-
‘Altore: Jow tert; will soll peasona-
Bie. Martin, 210 We, 198th Ste
HEARGE, beautiful, ~ steamn-heated,
;Mpaitaie nagzen i, eat. blacks af
i Hatten, “Ret §!23 "mouchiy. and
{up Sale of'08, cat and up Dene
{aks Baviards, o0 W. a3ith St Hor=
+ tem sii,
LOR Tease or sale, 10 roont house,
1 each room with” private. batt and
j> Wltghenettes, steam heat all im=
}° provements, nevis’ decorated, ne
1 ome "S90" nonthiss Wi mate
ferme to.suit, Inquire 221 Ww, 128d
} SE" Mow. S15r,
- MORTGAGES AND
; LOANS
i MONEY for necoed si “hind ant
eager: qulek actien: tues rare
Bakes Holding. Tucporrshin.
Fonte St, Brooks, trlingic
oar, May3ott
FOR RENT
Fit AVES Nalling addrens, 4250;
THE uh yeceven hephone od pete
PSO Thgsages “eatetay len
| rnlceltgrese, 850" ih, “Aver!
|i! evsit
|POR rent, 2 family. 13 room house,
POR tat lar Nirah Ba geet
Ee ti eer oB ae ode fork
Soe ee eeeceeas Te pace Lath
x ace
TROO3TS, anlacas purporen: uxenes, |
Cte Latin doutmegies ted
Stes, ORE APRESS
BORE bbe sea SY ayettet
|SOOTH TO LeT—Reosonable. For |
' System. 20 W, 118th St. ‘Mar.6-2t |
SPACE 16 1et in front of beauty
eae te, Ween aot Bae
ts ll sy
| iat St. Bradhurst 0679.
BOOTH to let; Foro, Hairdresser:
| Fent reasonable; pps afternoons.
ee ety “BBsoge ae.
IBN. Hanh et
STEW desoretee, eg FG
Sey caer aa st
eeeeRaia Ate: ear Sica:
Saale wee or phone Bevis
HEBER, da aces Boke Baye:
Sores Be
ROOM and kitehene:te; small dance t
BON a RISER parle and
pal teat i, Cue Patten “he
HOME Tight” eatable” for
Be akeing on Mar dome
Bai aae cts Hamilions St
! Nicholas Pl, Aud, 10483.
TARGE waschent.—front_caltmnee,
pee hed or unfurnished; muabie
fans waes aWe
pas
HaTM ST, 50 Woo excopiosily
ES otinas wt hens OF
ane, ot coe a dees
will ent, sep al |
AOTH ST. 23 E.—Mecting rooms,
guilaule for church oF Any oFRan-
ion; fully equipped and attrac-
-_tite. Harlem 932,
MUSIC STORE, front and back
Davior. ‘with kitchenette It neces
Err. ‘quiet. nome: best locality:
Well-kept house. Phone extension,
Monunient 2778.
REAL BARGAINS
6-ROOM HOUSE IN CORONA.
6-ROOM MOUSE IN BROOKLYN,
ROOD BUNGALOW IN TAMATCS
EFAMILY HOUSE IN THE BRONX
§ ROOMS IN JACKSON HEIGHTS
These homes nave ens. water, elec~
tele and steam and must be seen
to be appreciated. Send or entl for
Sar periuars, | owls Goodman.
Bio We goth St.
PRIVATE houses furnished, untur-
‘ished. 8 10 16 rooms, some with
eam heat, $125 up. Green, 131
(Win Si. Cathedral 5103,
TiSTH ST, 901 W—T-room apart-
ments, sieam heal. elecire ents:
private rooms. “Apply A. 7. Ander-
fon, 322 Lenox Ave. Tel, ‘Univer-
Sty diao.
WANTED—Boy to board. acliool ane.
‘Phors Monument 2108; 5) W:
nothst
UB Sr see we apt needa
‘oan waned. Mone’ and S13 pe,
pionth hy ezelnnye 10F services, AT-
rer Se : Matiz
Sar Be as we neta aes
Banat ge owt tenes aie
sake Bre ate huts, Call easly
Bradivurst 1432,
NEW YORK < AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1928
Classified Advertisements
FOR SALE
Tas, a wee a
St Was aie ah
et tees ae
seams memes at
Mle oe Te LAT
BEAUTY shoppe. 92 West igith St.
Pla easanable pice else "ent
sume, pobe, eres ae
See ne
ot bad eid OY et
SeATiy, sa ape
SRE ens WARE
Re alec ans Ho oe
Aras eibatt 8 Bag
ONTENTS of = oem apertmeats
|QETERTS sh seo, mst:
Bree ee ah aie
| ing 2130,
Bape CARRIAGE, pre, ca
SRY, CARRIAGE, BE mH,
Hoo bal ;
aesraueArr onan at ged
‘business location; sell immediately.
SeurE ee
13 SHARES of the capital stock of
eee ed
Spun, SER Ean
oc un ana Rahs 8 Ne
Beatle aes nae
Be aie
st en Ga Wocaaeae of ©
1g, Se 1 Mie Ot atings
eanearran Ave, a5 Ge a=
ATTN mea ale
SEAGL flaed Soon, BEE
SAE yup ee
Seis meee. Se Sele
Bick, Hope i
Beps, asers, besdng Tana ais
form, 42. pictures, tables, ehiffonicr,
ah SS as eae
foUR-ROGN tanked aor,
CUE-ROON,, Me a PS
SER GAPE Waa
ae
CADTEEAG Tea. ppl as pee
DUCA, nae a at
echten ce oe a
Bret ise dietetics “Et Sd
Bees aig wire ba
ISABY CRIB for sale, $3. Phone
i, SW wie ae
mie
ITEN-PAMILY apt. house for sale,
SrA aaa ae sae
SEE ERE G. Syed
SL AVE, Sop Sip Bearen
be ae eo
Berar
|p ST. 21 W. (Apt. -)—Pur-
SDT pian Ee Oe ae
ee
Sow boo Teale pea.
Oe. oe, WF natths Sa ae
ase rai ae meets os ae
iat
Tear a aig oe
Be fal aki, eas Se
es ety he ES oa,
ee
fine ot a Ww Ta, Ee
Te, eae (etn ee
He Pane y ere
Sip SHE bogs room tae, wee
Goa cay Uae
PESOS TR ae ae
in are
SEAGTE ma eae eos a
Talat haa tou Calais
Eanse gee
Sie oom sale 10 pag Valea
NG, aoe ae aa TN
Su aes SH SANE
}_ Sabie
CHILDREN
BOARDED
BEAUTIPUL Jersey country home.
pe ag a
seis Bea gee. Poglgeae
‘TAKE’ care of small children. Mrs.
ae eee
Feu.
TRLDREN aes Fae Dreher
Bho Bboy RATE
Tine aed Gren wae ats
Be ee BEE
HE SOME aA ltl
SOTHERS gat fo bay STE
Dig satis tae 8 baa
BABS, Picea he SE es
Se eeE dace as ay
in eh ek Pa
a te EUS ee
CHILDREN to boatd: best care;
Set teat, Red, Saat
aPet Pas aa eaeee
alt ode aes
Soa st We AT
Ty Ba aces an
| SERSEe See ARAN ane
Suir ee
0 ere wees
| Bei aes Sar eee
day school for boys and — girls:
| Selly ea, Bat
| SR et ey ba
| giaten caved for wh
§ WOULD LIKE to-care for smali
eblie, ay oniy, reasonable. Writs
are of Ainstosdan Nevts, Box J.
BOARDING “children wanted; best
gare: tating uchool, 200 W. 120%n
Suan
HELP WANTED
'WANTED, 2 men and women to as-
WANTED, 2 men and women to as-
‘Ane ia ay real slate made
SE RLY SLSR
ne Sse BE: APYeae
Sh Whang
TOU. are oping 5 Gop
Io a te dias
Bema ae mathe gt
He ee Ra ge tat
USE Sal ee
HELP WANTED—
FEMALE
[SGDEREY ema, ake er, taiy &
aDERLY omen cate ae NE!
BE TP ae
LADIES fo tint and decorate art
IS Nau cae Se
STS, BSE Ae ge
sina
RQUEREREPER anil, App
| Sirs Wiliams’ 206 We 132d Se
DIES work, ome spare tne, do
EAD rec bee eae as
Gaia wth ot lant SE
Maeib
BALL RACKERS, light, neat girl;
good tips; call early. Hise Agency,
ieee
| HELP WANTED—
sageGOR wanted to papas en
5 room apartment; Peay, wa ref-
ee TE San
See.
SITUATION
WANTED, FEMALE
aright ah AY Sa
oak, Sane ae"
AGENTS WANTED
CQULEGT od pares ang a
Se ESS es MG
SO RES Be Na
:
SAGE 8p geeky ip Tea Uae
agate ee os
Bae GERD SSR Be
Baty, Ma
“MISCELLANEOUS
DRESSMAKING — Dresses, coats
Tea. whee
pees seme ties ia
ak ae
FREE sample of amazing new in-
Pee ce eae
SE aE TRIS Sua gn
Ses Se eee a
i ER A
SRS, Euan Bae, BS ee
Sitges A cae nat
You AND sucess,
Degen Bese ESET ee,
ne Fa Pe ft:
1s AE eae
HA EN
seg RHA BAG
MME. C. DEVONISH. licensed mid-
REPS, Need, mig
Su addin oli oS AB
Mao 8:2
——_
LOST
BANK BOOK No. 36281, Chelsea Ex-
change Bank, 1asth St, Finder n0-
tify dob Logan, 219 W. 125th St.
Si, NICHOLAS AVE. 454 (Apt. 4)—
Lost. curtains and chair covers at
Buck “Inn, "2380 "7th “Ave. Liberal
Teward for retum, No questions
asked. Shields,
MUSICAL
INSTRUCTION
PIANO and singing lessons; _pupits
Thome, “cheap. = Josef = PobIner
(whitey, 138 2d Ave; Algonquin
8365, ‘Mar.bett
HOUSE FOR SALE—
NEW JERSEY
ELEGANT. HOME.
MONTCLAIR, "N, 5.—9" rooms, 2
baths, “butier's “pantry, laubdry
yoo steam heat, lelecict, ast
Tot gfx225. Price, $15,500. Adams
€ Thomas, 146" Blooinflela. Ave
\ Phone Montclair 4754, Feb.6-tf
ENGLEWOOD. N. 3—In very finest
Tesidential section: high. ground,
formaaing © view: pleturesdus
Home of T rooms and Bath: intge
porch on two sides of house. "Exe
alent "eandcion.» “Suto.” Easy
terms, ‘Tillotson & Probst. Bust
ness properties. nome site. acre
‘age, Citizens National Bank Bldg.
Engle St. Englewood, N. J.: phone
Eneserood (Sd, evenings "and
‘Sunday. 1. or 2200, far.a3-2t
reece Ne ti ore eT eer eee Le
BUILDERS wanted for 2 one ani
PUrovtamits houses, “E, Stele, Ta
Hania Ste Reekensacks NJ"
FOR SALE, N. J.
X Gezcom, house for sale, cheap, Nep
Aine: Asbury perk Ne dc onist
iad Se Ree cathedral Aa0e,
Soot, Maris
FOR SALE---
BLOOMFIELD, N. J.
~ FOR Sate IN BLOOMPELD,—
o-ROOM ealtage, only Beaoee Pu
Hse lot beet transportation elt
ES: ey erm If desired) Adam
& tomes. ts Bloomfeld “ave
Rontviais 3. Bhons “Monten
oS pent
HOUSE FOR SALE--
NEW ROCHELLE
STEW construction, ready, Mareh 15
on roed to New York’? hoot,
Improvemgats san parlor graye
Woe ae AeShanie St New Ro
cheut, Ne 2 pone Ss.
FURNISHED ROOMS
BROOKLYN & L. 1.
ADELPAT St, a—Neway_turni
a tpome to et, Witt heat
Slogrie Nahte, _"_Fenat-l
ALERT AVE, 16) Fumie room
Founding teense ane,
after 7:30; Mrs” Anderson.
ee
FURNISHED ROOMS
BROOKLYN & L. 1.
SqgNBRIBGE, SE, terse fur
‘hed Tos: pelt? Acar gla
estes’ gat nt alle
ise rebel
Ringe SF, Si Reaimed room,
Tanoenent foal URUME net wey
seatanaGl: oa! ter ache
Tagine sale MT eae
SERGEN ST. map—Nevins Het ah,
Sa lt om ie “nlghbee
Hobs, dh Sellen Mea? SEO,
Siiuui Stuest Suaes
sfiEio-2
SISSON AVE, ME cae Gates —
esate tote Soa wil steam
Eesha cquyeniense for" couple
Beas Guesmmeness_ Fae
SRPION Po; Reams, neniy
Miaatea, init fe” ali
Prererete! Home ues, un
Fei an ace sae
ESSETSE8S oP reepann en
or women. Unity Spiritual Building.
| Praga ates ahard Bae
SOMBEACAND BF, st7—iaege and
‘nail furnished for rent. Near Abs
itile Ae Mand
ToMBEREAND F_ S—Furnened
Geogr atm coven
ee Pood
SenREREAND Sh, se — neat
Wotnabed wore Tite ana Neal
ina Soe wats, cents tan
ue ee
CUMBERLAND 67, 961—Purnised
Voorn iday oie Rau Sate
(eerie i deupea umpraes
Bon MES
COMBEREAND SF, <i —Purnisned
/ large ond small rodms; ail convent-
(ids toler Yo al ca ines
Shoots” :
Dean gr. 19eb—Rumianed ream
TAN Sess mentee “RR
Preven App ett 6 prim
DECATUR, SF, tarps tare
Soha una icone at Someones
Feely Stl aparipent sae fr
Tine SanSdice “Neselee
nlghoorhods cosetnges a ca
thee
SecaToR STP tage and ara
cai Marnshet Airey “Seer
Stank eas suing all pro:
ents, "Ehcnes sages eae
Sealab
SSGATOR St, 285-A—Room, fir
Bahay asa, pecs ease:
Enprotentsts? Eat helgtetioas
Poa
Sun Ne ae eth, “ane
jroviments ES ae pi
iti.
SRTES AVE, Ftarge ang smal
‘oor, ‘needy tarnanee, at he
-_Sratenene Hanah
GATES AVE. 16l—Large furnished
Sires Ave, ia tanes tered
Eas a
GUENADA Pha, 7 (ape, 1) — Nis
Team ih eneoeanene! respecte
Bette no oil appeals ea
Soe Reba
Sugxapa Ph. 7 Gp fo, — Pe
WEnaP ar’ fo Pa peste
«Rents: elevator apariment an
Eile welt bebab
GREENE Ave. 368 (Be Prana
Esa Bedlordj Uarge and“
feSn eso a conten, SEN
fog’ is Sar
GREENE, AVE B_ceu_ Grand
Reet cafte ang all lusahog
foams, sath al gratemens cal
TeeMtns" of rlage Breas
ue
SREBNE AVE, stares Came
Teams a sonnets
foes. hse “Baad
ie Bae
FALSee SR, 75 Gear Tomotin
AvePLscriahe ae, Tale
Draven Cooper 2 ge
Bat
ARSaE SF BOs or we
‘epics’ fcapabie Fetes no be
eer SEE aie ee
Sit Hees
ANCOSE SR SR tani
ed soos ew hedding, or Fe-
SSecitle etfle Otte ol
quiet house. Calhoun. i
TANcOOK ST, «Reams, Gna
Gh epee a trees EE
Slngear Si
IRVING PE, Stange famed
ryan oi, Ss on cae Ha
‘steam, electric: housekeeping privi-
Teges." C. Douglas. Feb.20-4t
GEPEERES PL, si—taree hall bee
Teor it bushes aay Sones
PMmntencd® WB "Et
sea BBE rents
ipEERTS FL, eoNew fornahe
Foam to ee ath nin enionerant
egies Wh a Imorexer
TERERTS Pi Fomioat hall bed
Tom neatly Runtched alt
Ee Rind
GERPRRTS Ly TA lage tories
a room to.
ESPRERTS PL ie — Famine
Toni al conténlceary vale
EPTERTS FLL lesan a
FURNISHED ROOMS
‘BROOKLYN & L. 1.
FGRES_ Sr, = Ago,
Se a le cal a
ee
Aaa AE, Ae
Tales di ti etan ae
Tenant ny Date
Bas
ARR AE Fa ae
Tt on White ai
se sel
ST, FELIX ST., 62—Light, airy
pee ee
EERE nell na ag
| jarge and smail rooms; convenient
an he
Src er Hana aA
of Rip at et
= soa
peas
pss wr Lae
uate
EIS ie,
EE aes Pr, Tine Ta
Sun
SUGY BF, aN 1p
nished, steam and electric, Mar.6-2t
UTICA AVE. 66—Neatly furnished
Ta anata ae
SOAS a ate
ARE, av, oe Fan
ARENA a ee Eo
See Re eae
Taye, AVE, ae Ped
SEE ANE a
STs th HES
FORYISHED roone pe
a Hs
a
‘water. Decatur 0932. .
Sinisa To Fa
ae ae
Ta, aR a:
ae ee ah a OR
een Wiccan ree eee
Street)—Purnished “room to. lek,
‘with nit improvements: aro
WAVERLY, AVE, 47—Fumished
oor: ait fmprovemente;. tent
fn the came Hoo iganiaest
FURNISHED rooms to let. Decatur
Be Maret
NEATLY furnished room, running
‘water. Decatur 0932. .
SMALL, furnished room to Tet, Bros
pect 7138.
HALL ted, sullabie for gentleman:
Steam heat, eal al week! Hindding:
way ee
APT, FOR RENT—
BROOKLYN & L. I.
ADELPRT St 1S—aumctlre Tour
st Sse eve apres
iment. house With splendlg’ settee |
‘only ‘Ape 1 Saar ati
ACBANY AVE. IWi—Apariment 10
Tet 3 rooms’ newiy decorated.
AEBANY AVE, 145 crear Besgen)—$
Targe poms” bath electrics just
painted, rent reduced, $35, fine lo-
Entiat:
BILANTIC, AVE, toea—Four, ve.
Tooms and “both, “electricity. hot
ater and all Improvements, ness
Ii decorated rent 90 to Sat; Color=
a ‘eras Concession for moving.
Apaitoh prema °* roa
BAINBRIDGE ST, 75-1 room and
Recheneteer gad, ‘eleteie teen
heat $6 per Week; Feited colored.
Rous
BAINBRIDGE SF, 125—Pive rooms
na bath, steam’ New, all ‘modes
improvements
BERGEN ST. 160) —Five yooms and
Bath, \elesitig Tignes reasonable
Font’ Novhest.
BROORLYN'S BEST APARTNENTS
Near subway HGb-4@' Pocifc siveee
Sear rookirn Aves roomie
Bettye all mederh iniprovemeris:
eb. nquire Fenty, on wen:
Ee peed
BOROUGH HALE section, remodel-
fed aportment, soon and bath:
Steam nents $85-0007 one month
een ai iaotniigs, 12 ae anda
gesson Tio, Fab20-%
SuIETON Pi, S6r-00—6_ rooms.
‘team heat. Hoe water. new ace:
erated; $45: inquire Supe. iy bases
‘ment ebaicie
GLIFTON PL, GI—Nice 4 rooms and
Bath eleciie’ ght,” Feasonable
“rental Maret
GUETON Ph, Sm rooms and
‘uth sparctient” clean “and gust
Route, “Fesscnabie fen. |
GIFTON PL—Six rooms, steam, $0,
‘Youngs Prospect 88.
CLIFTON PL. 318 — Four-room
iferaent et, private hows!
ahtimmprovements: also iatge fur
ished’ room and’ kitchen.
DEAN ST, 2111, (near Saratoga —s
Tange ‘reams. ‘bat fine “losation,
Sette hot rate. $30"
DEAN ST.—Five rooms. steamy good
Totation:” bath, Woung, Brose
a)
| FREE NOVING.
DEAN ST eis—eie oom, nevis
decorated: “hear subway? cones:
Sony ont $85
DEAN SF, 16050] — RROON
APARTSIENT, STEAM HEAS
Ror WATER ELECTRIC. ALL
IMPROVEMENTS. "BET. BED:
FORD VAND PRANKLIS AVE
See hun! Stunioss, 0% PREM
SEs Feb sul
DECATUR ST, is—Aprtment_to
fet; four rooins and ‘ath all inne
Provemiente Phone Deeaiur 1187,
Somer
EASTERN PARKWAY. 195—Stor
pd sand rooms to fet inqute
anltor oF call detferson o83f.
| "Feb.20-4
SPECIAL, NEWS.
FISHING AVE SIN WEAR NOS-
RAND AVE) ‘BEAUTICCE
APARTMENTS. 2 AND 4 ROOMS
SEPARATE BATHS, |, NEWLY
PAINTED; JANITOR, APTS
Ferns
PRANRLIN AVE, @S—Fie and sis
oom apnrtmenia to let: “ioam
tah jaro service” Phone Prax”
Bese des or ‘Seg Janitor at 303
enklin’ Ave. rine,
FREE NOVING.
Fuvtox Sr heroes fooms, new-
Wy. decorates concessions near stb.
ost so.
GRAND — AVE, 218 — Fourzoom
partment: rent reasonable. Bhote
‘Braspect sia
APARTMENTS 70 LER
3 GLENADA Peace, BROOKLYN
‘Tres rooms, $30: all" proven
nth, steam ‘heats hot ‘water. cies:
{Mie" elevator. telephone’ and’ Sani
for'séreleer ons Block trom “Troy
Rive. station “on Pullen St SE
fheiwe Supt, of premises.
GREENE, AVE. 3-4 rocins.”paraus
oore oi0, $4, 4p: ston. Young.
Braspect ese” Ether:
SRECIAL ConcESsION
OREENT AVE: RA GES eal Ave.
ORE nen. rosin nati comin
a cer pms tain: | continuous
“If You Want to Buy or Sell,
Scan These Columns”
° * Scant
HALSEY ST, d11—Two Fooms with
Souplesiigne “howsexeepiag: 3s
ic a ales
Save :
HATSBY ST, 796 rooms and bath,
‘i improvements. “fed. Warner,
Isa Pulton st. Haddingway 8190.
HALSEY ST. 182—Four rooms, ail
oder lmnjrovements, nowy dee-
Orted. Seen aiter 3.
HANCOCK st. 452-A—Ploor to Jet
‘Suitable for Tesned couple: all tine
provements; in private house: rene
Fessonabies cal Riter 3 pm or an)
evening. Haadingway 0016.
HANCOCK ST, 330—Two beautiful
“unfurnished rooms, in, excelent
elghborhood: all” modern» im
Provemente: For refined coup,
Gaihoun. ei
HANCOCK ST, S77—To_ let, one
Tange, fom unfurnished "aha 8
eal kicchen,
HANCOCK ST, Sé—Apartment 16
fet; 24 floor, aiso parlor floor bast=
}_ment all miprovements.
HERKIMER, ST, 973 (al, Kingsion
‘Ave.)~Batior foot and “basements
Steam heats” Deentur’ 842%:
IRVING, PL. 22—Two rooms, jlght
Thousekeeplig”-apartmente,” front
Fooms. newly detorated. heated. &1
ber week respectable business only:
| _Foference required, Prospeet (031,
IRVING Ph. si—-room apartment,
Sleernie ghia ailsmnprovements:
Steam heats fot water! janitor oF
Brospect 0183,
JEPFERSON AVE, 113—Four-room
‘Abartment, bath; steam, hot waver:
in" private’ Rouse; ‘also’ tio ‘rooms
and” ilichenetie, ‘furnished,
‘Mar19-2¢
TAPAWETTE AVE, @9 near Levish
ea floor private ‘house, 4 Fooms,
path, Heat, ‘elestrle, $405" fine Toca
Hon
MACON SY. 477 «near Stuyvesant
‘Aved—4 beautiful rooms and bath:
ail Rewly’ decorated, panelled walls,
Paratet (ors, gas, Bleetriey steam
sat nice nelghborliood: for" Fe
fined’ peopte nis
MARION ST, #43—Four-room apart-
ent, Newly decorated. alt improves
ents, ery feained fans.
EREE MOVING. —
Marton Si ae-Four rooms, nev-
IY decorated; eat subways conces-
ston! “only S38.
MONROE ST, s30-A near Lewis
Sd. floor private “house.” 4 rooms,
Batn. cleedtle, $50: fine iocation.
FREE MOWING.
MOORE Si His Four seams, newly
Gecorated:" near’ subway! “cones,
Sion: only 820.
FREE MOVING,
MOORE Sty S405 Yooms. frst
‘Boor! concéssiony only Sie and $23.
FREE MOVING.
MYRTLE "AVE, Wo0T—=Three. four
Tiewi decoraicd rooms; concessions
only" 835.
SEYRTLE AVE, WE, ear Nostrand
“iBargaine: @ and b large rooms.
ipa Steam, eicettie rents 30-085,
SIRTEE AVE, s0.2—VERY FINE
APARTMENT, “"d-s Rooms
BATH: VFLECTRIC: NRAR
TOMPKINS AVE. JANITOR,
| APE Feuayat
SIPRTOE AVE, 969 tear Sumner —
‘Five tice lane rooms: electsie, Ane
Jocation. only €23, vanitor.
NEW YORK AVE, 50 wicar Auan-
tic)—s and 8 rooms, ath, steam,
prauiel."" cleccrie:” "Teasonable:
Phote Triangle 1647.
BOTNAM _AVE—Fire. as rooms.
seam tieatea? is." $30. Youne.
Brospect 80;
PUTNAM AVE, 366—Ideal_apare
mien; quiet aid refined neightor
Rood! four rooms: bath, hoe wacer
Heat. tot water Fear" round, eieer
Uieliy and. gas: for refined: Bustc
Hees “couple “or single person: no
chilaren: references required:
Sumner on premises.
PAGIFIG_ ST, 150 (Gor. Albany
‘Se -cFivectoom apartment, steam
frosted. hot waters all latese im:
Dproveniens: ‘weasonagie Tent. tn
Quire Supe” Phone’ Windsor ‘oil
PUTNAM AVE, 29—Large room and
Tetehen, foe water, Hight And “heat
Fensonsibie rete Siar.tiez
QUINCY SE, FIVE ROOMS AND
BATH; ELECTRIC LIGHTS: S30.
s. Manasetd
RALPH AVE, H0—3 rooms and
bath. cleetné lights rene rensona-
ble. Apply to Janitor on Prcnees:
ort
ROCHESTER AVE, #0—Four rooms
‘bath, newly decorated, in 2-famll
hour.
SOMERS ST. e0—Five rooms and
ath: Fent reasonable: neat FAl-
ton St, bet, Rockaway and Sumner
aren fearast
St, JOHNS PL, s80—Three Toome,
Bich heat. Kovins Sh
Sh, JAMES PL, i0-2—Newly reno-
Valcd Groom apartinenia tenes
REE MOVING.
WARREN St SScNite Fooms, now.
iyi decornied nea subway? et
ge
HELP WANTED.--
BROOKLYN
HOUSEKEEPER, for furnished rooms,
‘must be reliable. Gall mornines. 33
Glaver Pl. Phone Prospect 880%.
WILL give comfortable home ant
‘salary’ to elderly colored woman,
Who ‘wil gre far. tee chdeen
and 3, ‘work, Phone Nevins
80, “ar "illing.
JANITOR couple for light work;
must be ‘handy; man can work at
another ob; steani-heated apart:
ment for services: call betwen 12
and 1, Tagersoll 7819.
REAL ESTATE FOR
_ SALE, BROOKLYN
FINE HOUSE, 15 rooms, steam, G2
$00 chsh, Laieris place. Gates ave,
8 ‘rooms,_ $600 cash, ‘Green ave. 13
Fooms, $960 cash, to tot, 2 Tiouses
on Gtand ave. steam. 240 Grand
ave. Prospect 7396.
BARGAIN for quick buyer, Macox
St, brownstone, — S-family bull,
steam heat, modern imorovemen:<
MM B. Realty Go, S21 Franklin
Ave. Prospect 8084,
BROOKLYN'S Bargain, Stuyvesant
section. family “ule, Gi years
tiled ‘baths, must be seen to be us:
breclated.” Game ‘ready to. close,
Miller Bros..427 Gates ave., Devatur
9692." Other speculative " propost=
ee
35 PER MONTH will bay a Donat
orchards Gtnen, pata for,“ wah pat
Sour Shad caesar got ee,
Brown 23 MeBoaougn Set pron:
Bee POSS
MARION ST, 890 Geen room
fewer chesiy “'to que” buses:
vetigs, Saturday” afternoon
Rar g-at
LOVELY 4-story. basement brown-
tones reuiieiea pass 'st” Beaton
seetin “neni dated: pacers’
fami Seavonabiepaicer ernst
ear propo sation” or net Fale
Ion strode nian wig oncrtee
Sas en. crnrced: "aio: Stunt
Heamstented Urek! only so tah,
Sinbel Gt Baureyt 292" ontes Gves
ie" NO "Seiite "BRostR sce
Sawdon"
FWO-PAMILY bromnstons Houser
oom, ¥ bathe; haruce Porat
Beka aace, NERF SSS” ave
Decatur 2907." ‘i ”
FOR RENT, BKLYN
GRaND_AVE, Hoe, Sao,
Basemen® tei Foo ahaprowe:
Montes eee at 3UE Lettre pe
FOR RENT: whole houses lout
Teh te tery detente abet
wit hie aioue peloee eee:
Cntr our Ng Tai ane ae RIS
Bros. Yer Gates utes Deswtie BS
WAVERLY AVE, 41S—Howe 1h
ih funcite, es baud
Ese prospect saan
GREENE _aVE—ta-rooq, howe 4
RBS bibwagtanes eto wea
Ro iattre Young. Progieed G9,
FAVELVE-ROOM howe, Grand ave,
ening ates: 980, Young, Breet
peta Ot!
MOORE St, sa7 Store and grooms
Wood busiesey Tae Sap aio
VARET ST, 21s—Siore anda
‘int good using “neal auch
Wek ake! onl "Ss.
MOORE St, 169—Large dow ee
Boanwise aves eho Lalas
eee
RALPH_AVE, Si0—Stan 7 ome
Sha bach’ in “tear Seaate ie
Font eatontble” Apis taste
Brome ge 5
FOR SALE, B’KLYN
FRREE-PIECE Tving-rong cute
Rite sin oaks" Cal? oenitgee 3
ma a cern
o'clock, at 1080 Fulton St. .
R. BE. FOR SALE—
JAMAICA
ORE we, reotamlly tynaes von
Wilt garaness (080 tol Si auy cass
foment cin efehanger “ania
Siets ‘afore “Avea aeinaleh et
pute See ies
SPAMILY, brick pear sation, it
ome, 2 in bigetoess_ ai guest
inppeinte Sat gare wie
Sh Dane egal $ig00, He ete
fon HAP Share Ave. dena
SACRIFIOE Groom owe a” Ji
Tales enclosed porch teas
Sectribty, sewer connection. Pricr,
Segoe Gach rensonaie bn
Bea Fon sureee Broosivn SY:
FWO family house, Samaica,_ one
eee Sahplees ama
aoetu, Cathie 2a1S°Hth ave
EURNISHED ROOMS
JAMAICA
TPR AVE, ieei2—rraided Foon
for inate: condiemans ait conven
Secs Bn Samsied 22,
SunBeRnaND Sty Wiest
Bae Rea Sets annette
provements. mean ee bt a
Hains g0 ite oti fora
niet Belonelis te
Boat PP
APTS. FOR RENT
CORONA
Reem, ehh
eH SETA room wars
1 Sg Hore er as
j fees convenient tov eatisas. Call
Tian} aineesroun, ahs prvnte
Tae wpatseee Senge aoa,
| $30-$45, Phone Havemeyex A174.
<=: Tetan rg
CITY NEWS BRIEFS
Treated at Hospitals
MARLEM.
Jame? S.ngieson, 53, 266 West 144th
vets, ond Booker T. Tease, 20, 444 St,
* hoias avenue; precmenta: Satur-
fay; Ds Heit,
Harlem Court Briefs
Before Magistrate Getler,
Jksn Meade, 35, lronworker, 14 Enat
Iifia etteet, said Dy the potlee ue be o
euiector ef policy nummberw, was held in
dior tee fer teint
Jaca Zare®, 34, white. an automobile
reciaris, 4 Fart (08h atreet, waa dle-
shareel {OF “Iack Of evidence" from a
eta? ry eharce made by Mies Thelma
‘Mater, & Rurse ¢f 2351 Third avenue.
Fhe harzed shat while she «30 in a
tasted ZaroX and three cther men at-
Piet ter
OChireed with the theft of a taxicab
the peeiwety of Teter. ‘Killorne, £0
Moet tire steve, from ta front Oe at
Wert ifth street, Roy Melbert, 21,
ans 439d Martha avenue, was Held 1s
EES aE for the Geand dusts
ferretnd Detrich, 20, 22 Morningside
Frer 4, Woe sentenced to the workhouse
tor te, days fcr masquemnding tn fomale
ie
Heights Court Briefs
NE EOE MAGISTRATE WEIL.
Traine the arrival of extradition pa-
ber Leger Jackson, $3, 2$ West 1324
vre-t. wae committed Thursday to thy
woe Tre'n ns an alleged fugitive fram
Kern, where he is wanted fcr alleged
Charged with elarking with a knife
Hover Jokraen, 43,100 Wear sue:
gre", ciuncy hie confinement tc Har.
tem Meepital for 13 daya, Edward Ed-
Fards. 2222 Weet_ 103d street, wan
eethik HV dor the Grand Jury Thars-
4% Holland, 24, white, 8860 Etenth
Austut pleadal guilty Thurstas to a
shares of taxing a stmait colored child
in she Back ef his store and placing.
ra tands indesently upon her. He way
nesd for Invertigation and found evilty
+f Siserderly conduct Sundar, He m-
sraed A mtepended eentence.
Samta Frith, 3% a0 home: vagraney:
wriereal fie months and 29 days tn
be rkheuse Saturday,
DEFORE MAGISTRATE RENACD.
Wits Rridzer, 34, no hom, once
iene Poilttetan and street speaker, wae
sentenced 19 39 days in the workhouse
ca charge of deorderly conduct Stone
ads :
Lafarette Smith, 2% S:9 Eat 127th |
weet, charged with stealing a 32,00
ise taxes driven by Altred KE. |
MOLT Weat 14th strees. ard owned |
“yr ducia Alcmaa of the Mola Taal Core |
Tei. UP Wert 2asth cries, tena
cnlited tn peisca Monday tinder $1.
‘+: bait for tha Grand Jury on a charge |
vi grand larceny,
The Policy Net
see ae ce awe ee
Clinton Page, 33,225 Weet 44th stret,
fae held Monday By SLigurtmate Renawl
Ender #200 bail f-r a further hearing
IMay. Others asranced and: W:stnired
sneiuded William White, as. 200, Went
Wath street: Cleaver Donald. at, tet
West 36h street, and John Jérdan, 2,
3539 Eighth avenue,
Special Sessions
LsRoy Daniels, £5, a clerk, who tives |
t: 2b Wert ith sineet, wan fined ESS
Pr paueerion of a revolver Friday.
isa.ce guilty to Forrersk of pole
17 vige, Vincent Barthes, 23, 52 Weal
lod given, wae given Aa. bentence of
i Ay dare in the workhouse Sondny,
sizes Matthews, £4, 302 Wort 33sih
whet cearced wlth tenting nazi watch
fis Hesty Bent, #9, 25 a0 Sichoian:
Hire, reveled a nenteticn of thinny day. |
‘The pier that he was keeping a ree |
volar aa steurity for a leag tf roome |
“eg sstee fa ied to free Chaties Cook, |
so dm Wet TM ntreet, Merday, and |
So tiaa g.ten the chowe of seitdine Bee
AS ia the workhouse oF paring #2s
“tpn
st
WHEN tee FROM HOME
370 13 WEST 138th ST.
NEW YORK CITY !
Hot and colt water tn each rooms ¥
immaculately cleat courteons Great:
Brat, Rpeelel talon, DAILY or Pf
Hartem $452 CHAS. J, JONES, Trap
Johnnie Jackson's Lunch
Now Located at
2285 SEVENTH AVENUE
Between 134th and 138th Sts,
Larger Quarters — Latest
Equipments
NEVER CLOSED
—————————
——SSSSSS=S==
NEW YORK CITY
695 Lenox Avenue
Corner r4sth Street
SELECT FAMILY AXD
“TOURIST HOTEL
Rvaping Hot aad cold
War in bach ‘iene
AM Hooms Wnteice Cxposere
‘ervlee=
Sevmay ang Surface Core 91 Door
Eble Urevonneie
EDM. WILSON, Prop.
‘pelt Audubon 208
HOTEL DUMAS
Be
vy ee
5 eee a
Sake
ree
Bee Me)
a
ee, f 3 aE S
t ees
_ ee
eee!
Miso ta Fee
205 West 135th Street
ST SEVESTIT AVESEE
" Saetens Figs and ep por mlebt
i atire #6 and of ser aes
ee Lai stuniins het ant cold
To Speak Here
Es Pea
eee
a een
ey a bee
Pe os eae Dee |
ne Eg acer Pama
cr ‘a
E _ ate
| Ai Ae oa
— Mrs, Emma V. Kelly —
Founder and grand daughter
secretary of the Daughter Elks,
I. B. P. O. E. of W.. of Norfolk,
Va, who will speak Sunday
afternoon at 4 o'clock at Mother
Zien Chureb, under the auspices
of the Boosters’ Club, of which
Mrs. Bessle Walker Is president.
I. B. P. 0. E. NOTES
By CHARLES MAGILL.
It looked like an old-fashioned Es
gathering last Tuesday nlgne whea
| Monarch ledes cutertained at the
Renaissance Casino with a _smoxer
‘and an Elk ge:-torether. Representa-
ves from every local lodge and trom
several of the nearby lodges nad
fcepies. were presen: to hear their
brother Elk. Orear De Prfest. who is
now & congeeseman. The exals
Tuler 1s Caspar Holstein.
Brooklyn Lodge.
"The cornerstone of the new build
ing of Brooklyn Lodge will be laid
gn Falm Sundsy afternoon, Starch
anette’ GS particieater Nppsopriate
jn 0 Appropriate
sevices Sid. Be held under te dice:
tion of Brook! Lodge's exal
ruler. J. M. Washington.
Henry H. Ham has been appoint-
ed distrtet deputy of Brooklyn and
rengpotnied special Gepuiy and Honey
reas y and Hear
Ranbough sated that he also had
been made @ special deputy.
The Rev. £. ©. Tyler, ‘pastor of
Bridge Street Baptist Church, has
been selected chairman of the Ecuca~
onal Committee. i
Notes.
reins eenzal oar, cazce, of Eureka
empl. scheduled for | Rock-
iand Palace, has been put over to a
later date.
Charles ‘T. Nurse, forner exalted
ruler of Imperial Lodee, is confined to
his home. 300 Wes: 146th street. suf
fering from the effects of x fai!”
J. A. Wiley. porn member of
Manhacten. Re. 15 confined to his;
home, 148 Wess lind eircet, seriously
Charles H. Joell. state deputy, has
eturned. from Washington “3, "Gs
chere he was entertained by the
ind the frand secretary. J ae
, Jamon Kelty:
rha Was slio in Washington at that |
| Hotel Olga
| OMerean W, FL mekerson fr 3m
'Meutie, Atinnne City: dita FE Heah
CoH Stores, J. Reeder, Waeuicecn
Sir. and Sire, Weary Thos, U.S
[De Prare, MF, and Mire 3. Ne Jeseph
Mz. ané Stee, M. Marshall, Peniazin §,
Tuer, Marry Zabneon, Mr. and Mrs, Wit
lust Clark, Derey Matacten, Miia.
phn.
‘Themas Sitenira Je. ernswiite, N.
Te Mr cad Mtr BL ieuverte, Area
| Hiediainde, No3.2 Ste and Mrs 1 P
Wittars 9. Wartiah oiven, Che
cag; Me. ahd dire, Zee Wittanis, Mr
snd Mee. 0, 01. Couper, Marry Kaulsian
dona W. sohenca. ‘Str, ated Mire J. 1:
CEmerd, Min D. Weetets Mn ata) Sry
SL. Cru, Mr. aad Mra P. Morr
Brtoz.
F. Tuentana, Oscar. ta Mona, Pouting
Juneo, Havana, Cuba Aifenl Joney.
Vortcherver, N,V: Larenge Hares, Aw
tary Varg } Aire. Stason Rrvant, Roches.
ters Mr and Mrs, G. Chavis, Baltiniete
Charles V. diootrics, Ese: Hampina, S.
2 LT Watiams, 1. W. Jones, Nor-
tote,
sia Bint, Augusia, Ga tT. Kelty,
So Wvgies Uiekard Ivanmer!, Battalo;
LOW tee, Arskur Cuark, Keene, XH:
Size Vi inane, Brockitic, stone; Wit
fain E. Johnson, George Catlewar. Dale
Tench; J. W, Rotraca, chariesion, VE
te
Emma Ransom House
Miss Meter White, Vor heetiz, Mase. |
ite, Vila Berry, Curate, Tenn |
Biss Marien TL Tews. Meedent ier |
Dire, 31K Willlania, Mee, Tutte chlivs
way, Mea J.C. Mapps, Mrs 3.3L.
(lark, Chlesze: Mira Ada" Hosta ar,
Feocdiate, LT Mien Sirad Tauwcen,
Faria No Yor Mae Muro Mattture,
Kangas Chr, Kaa i Mire Kate Johasen,
Kanes Cit, Sia: Shoe Gptaiia Gino,
St, Lruia; New C. Le stuieeweres, Rus
tes, Aig.
Mew. iarrena Wather, Attantie City:
Mine Suite Bremiey, Verona, $Y:
Mex 1H. Titlma, Hartford; Mise Tunat
Washineton, Mise Ezaice Banlwin, Mise
Ieanor Merri, New York City? Miss
Fonate "Teck, “Triaton, No Jo: Mira
Viola Gillam, Washinete; tits Eliza
eth Taster. Euffatu:
pe
Re A |
=
< ;
You're the Judge
Order Your Coal
> tie
4457 Harlem 4459
eae
DOBBINS
peace LAS
| 13%h St. at Madiscn I
Wi toe be Rant wa
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929
NEARBY NEWS BRIEFS | (czas. jones & son |[ FOR S
Pew COR
Ln Se
ewer § O/RECT
oS as ee p) from the MINES
yp Oe Oy vou
Try Our COAL 5
A TON or LOAD
‘Try our coal NOW—you will want §
Us to fill your bins later. Pd
If You Burn Coal—Burn Good Coal !
With Each Order Goes Our
GUARANTEE of Your :.
Complete SATISFACTION y
OUR COAL COSTS NO MORE ;
A DISCOUNT OF 25c PER TON §
ALLOWED THOSE WHO PAY s
CASH OR WITHIN 30 DAYS
GB vs Re A EE oe @
EVERY TRANSACTION with this Company mest y
be to the entire SATISFACTION of the Custemer
“Setisfection in Every Pound” b,
"ER tes
wit | 7
Siege
———— art Service & Quali:
Main Office and Order Deppriment oe
Fifth Avenue and 141st Street p
TEL ' “ = 4
BRAdhorst 7334 . ck Ae
boat wild We relianne
Harlem
Mortgage Corp.
1472 Broadway
Sulte 1114
NEW YORK CITY
+. Fel. wrvent ese
Jersey City
Wilham Haney, 292 Forrest street.
is confined to Fairmount Sonttoriun
because of illness
Miss Latricia Martin, 292 Forres
street, is recovering from an opera-
ton.
ahh Eis, Wells $81; Dektalb ave
e. is confined as the result of a
paralytic stroke.
The annus] meeting of the House
of Friendliness, f. M G. Av will ‘be
held at the branch on Sunday, March
17. The Rev. Wiliam Liosd imes of
New, York will be the principal
speaxer,
John Harrel was buried from his
late residence. 95 Orient avenue, on
last Sunday afternoon.
‘Melvin Johnson. 389 Forrest street,
was buried from John E. White's Fu-
neral Home last Tuecday.
ai a Gada LE
. a
nue. will present Charlotte Wallace
Murray, mezzo soprano, and Ger-
(rude Martin violinist both af New
York, on Friday evening, Mareh 23,
Mrs. L. Gale of Communtpaw ave-
nue 1s recovering from a recent {ll-
ness,
other, Juines. of Hewett avenue. ene
er, James, of Jewett a1 en=
ertained a fow friends int
re y geen to B: nae, nnd |
ng. Spans n
ng. Mesdames Helen, Banks nnd,
Newark
On the sick Mst—Wuliam Potter
25 Wright stree:, St, Michael's Hos-
‘plal: Mrs. L ‘Sutton, 35" Howard
Btreet; James Howard. 31 Murray
Be eae ta a
: i
j James E. Lee, who was injured in ar
accident: Joseph Houston, City Hos-
{ pllal: Miss Harrie: Walton, {njured;
‘Complesely ceeovered Dr. Jame
| £, Lee, 134 Monmouth street: Mrs. 7.
| Hoimes, Bank street,
ee
During the week funeral sezvices
| were ka for the following persons:
| Sirs. Eula Conley. 18 Scott atheet. St
James’ Church; 11. Depex, 78 Sorer-
| set street.
| The local branch of the National
Insurance Association held tz first
eelebretion on ‘Thursday evening at
the ‘Thirteenth Avenue Presbyterian
Churen,
Mrs, Jamos G. Aden has revurned
from Virginia, “where she went to
bury ker Shustiand.
Montclair.
Mrs, MB. Williams of Bloomtietd
avenue entertained = the eauare
Brider Club end sriends w: her home
on.Sacurday. Guest prises sere won,
by Miss EA Lee and Mrs. J. A.
Touse, both of Jerser City. :
‘Westfield |
The Counts 1»
bare aa fis guestt thir evening Alpha
Alpha Lamisa chapter of Alpha Phi
Be Bee silat pee
Sent und £. wulette is secretary,
FOR SALE
ENGLEWOOD, N. J.
SIX-ROOM house, all modern im-
Eacage. Gan be seen at may: tase
Fate’ mngleweed Sost-w. "200" S.
Williams St. Englewood. 8.3.
|
| ‘The Sultans gave one of the most
the Grates Amore Bf ibst Thoreaaye
Kenneth ‘Woodruff was master of
ceremonies,
Past Exalted Ruler's Council will
meet in Srincetan Sunday. ‘April
Under. the auspices. of tits Wither-
spoon Lodge, No. 117.
Bayonne
Charles Giles, 83 West Forty:
fourth street, 1s ‘confined because of
Miness.
Young Women’s Club will
rare Sinelam Drax Social at the
Angelle Baptist. Church on Priday
evening March 22.
‘Achy eae.
| air and Mrs, Sidney Hawkins,
thelr Peekeend | euett Sars, saga
‘Johnson of Newark. :
i ‘Thiste Beata
| The sick: Tanther Skelton. City
las ‘Robiey Lindsay, at home,
‘Miss Rosalie Bu: was, married
[tc He Tiltery on Sursday. Sarena.
| Morristown
| ‘Miss Lorraine Maize hos returned
froma a visit in New York and Bos-
‘The 2 Miss ai ‘.
523 Glegeinid venue, Slemontl ore
pilal: Mrs E. C. Green, 40 Ann
stréet_ :
Yonkers, N.Y.
: By CURTIES RUTH.
|_ Mrs. Thomas Gross Jr. 3 Co:tage
place. on Saturday evening was hon-
ered at a murprse farewell pony at
her home by Mr. and aire. Carence
Roberis and Miss Doron? Riddick,
On, Saturday Mrs. Grois: it | foe
Bainbridge, Ga., where she will make
her home.
A party was given a: ine home of
wth alice Hares: 68 Radiord place,
on Ssturday evening. for the benefit
of the Flower Club of Sunset Temple
No. 211,
Winifred Watson, soprano. and An-
drew W. Watson, tenor. accompanied
Ee Rie
iy. th Joint
Beane Ar a fe chiseh Jast
Thursday evening.
‘The Lex Courtisans Date will pre-
sent a minisirel shox at the Masonic
Tempie. 5 Cottage place. on April 29.
- Mt. Vernon.
Mrs, Carrie "Philips, 132, South
Thirteenth avenue, is Ot at her home.
New London, Conn.
Al Carter will present a musical
Proea, under the ausplers of the
Negro Welfare Council, at the Com-
munity Bouse. Sunday a: 3 p.m.
The Rev, Charles Spaulding” wil
sptak on “Christ as & Leader.”
Edwin H. Hackley, who has been
in tho elty for some months direct-
Ing the Work of the Hackley Drama-
te Club, returned to his home in
Philadelphia Saturday.
‘The Eastern “Stars are giving a
Fupper at the home of Ars. Howard
Gubbs, on Richards street, oo Fri-
ay.
Miss Prancer Crook, who was oper-
ated on last Mondes' for acute ap-
sendicitis. is improvinr.
140 Bradhurst Avenue
OPPOSITE COLONIAL PARK
1, 2 and 3 ROOMS
KITCHENETTE and BATH
THE 1 AND 2 ROOM APARTMENTS ARE PROVIDED
3 WITH KITCHENETTES
THE THREE ROOMS HAVE SEPARATE KITCHENS
SOME OF THE CONYENIENCES PROVIDED ARE: :
OTIS ELEVATORS AND ECONOMY INCINERATORS
JAYMARS REALTY CORP, : 209 WEST 145th STREET
Telephone: Bradhurst 5360 :
Transportation facilities: c
6th and 9th Ave. ‘L’ Express Station; 145th St. Crosstown Cars |
St. Nicholas & Broadway Subway : |
_ CHAS, JONES & SON |
~ SHAS. JONES & §
| soe .
| MOVING VAN
}
S e
essuaseasaceen:
Licensed Piano Mover
‘Loest ang Sige Bisvasee ‘Moving
‘Baflroads and Henmedip Lines
2371 SEVENTH AVE. sear 18ta St
Phoue Edgecombe 7290
Bail Bonds Broker
INSURASCE
JAMES W. PETERS
REAL ESTATE,
$34 WENT 12518 ST.
onal prone bantbany tase
Seshircee Pate neato tt fats
Rerldence 268 West Uist Street
4 AND 5 ROOMS |
245 EIGHTH AVENUE
Near 13st St. Private bathe and
tollets, hot water supply, electric
Nght, enamel sink, gee range;
rents moderate; top floor; reduc
Jed price. Apply Supt.
ASTUYVESANT SECTION
Complete 2-family belek, 19 rooms,
nam heat, electrielty, newly" deco:
Tated: a. fine home. with income ! 13
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intce and easy tere,
23.4 Trateey Rurest
Brooklyn, Xs Fe
——————
437 MANHATTAN AVE.
Cor mans
4. 3, ROOM APTS.
‘Ait moriern improvements, elevator
sevice. Renta vary teamenae, Ete
lilre Gn peetziven oF ell
Non, 4807 oF Wathine 9345
Elevator, 7 and 6 urge, het
room 3 dd asain Sioa ol
feslent an ane eighborneod
Reterances required. Immediate
possession, ‘Reasonable reat.
‘Apply Supt. om Premises
APARTMENT HOUSE
Rent $8,600 — Rental
Average $8,50 Per Room.
Steam Heat; All Improve-
ments: Perfect Condition;
All Rented
Price $44,000
SMALL CASH
Apply
NEUWAY
RENTING CO.
2001 Seventh Ave.
FOR SALE
15 & 20tamily apartment houses.
Private houses, $1,500 up. 136th-
139th Ste,
LUCILLE EDWARDS
2196 Seventh Ave.
Phone Edgecambe $029
-4&5- Room
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ALL PRIVATE
MODERN IMPROVEMENTS
45 EAST 131st ST.
Apply
JANTIOR, APT. 4
3 & 4Room
~ Apts. to Rent
All Private \
Modern Improvements
2127 Madison Ave.
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L. Levine, 166 W. rasth St.
| For Rent New Houses
ieee
109 W. 139th St.
115 W. 135th St.
110 W. 140th St.
115 W. 139th St.
150 W. 140th St.
141 W. 144th St.
203 W. 145th St.
JAMAICA HOMES ~ 5, 6 & 7 ROOMS
Sun parlor, breakfast nook, tile bath and kitchen, bullt-In tub, shower,
steam heat, brass plumbing, flreproot roof, private driveway.
sewers, paved streets, curbs, sidewalks; near schools, stores and
churches; short distance from L. Il. R. Re and trolley: cash, $360°
ups 625 monthly on principal. Price, $8,500 to $6,500. Your lot,
taken as part payment. ae
R. B. LIGHSTON ;3 ¢ 7
REAL ESTATE EXCHANGED
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* Latest Improvements — All Private * _
$5.00 and Up Per Week 2
237 PROSPECT ST., JAMAICA, N. Y.
FOR BARGAINS IN REAL ESTATE
Consult mal
F. G. WILLIAMS
15 | DEWEY AVE. Tel. Jam. 7166
LITTLE MONEY PLUS BRAINS
Late aoges as ow a $2.08 dew
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—~~ FIFTEEN
Se
SS
4-ROOM APT, FOR RERT
1 4-Room Apt. for rent, $45.00
(Steam beat, hot water, lets
1 8-Room Apt. for rent, $100
Steam heat. water water, electric
| 1l-room, private, for sale, $12,500
One mortgage, $5,300; 51500 cash
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| George A. Fleming, Broker
56 Wert licnd Street
New York City
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EDITORIAL PAGE
Amsterdam News
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Address all communications and make all checks and money orders payable only to The New York Amsterdam News, 2323 Seventh Ave., New York City.
Wednesday, March 13, 1929
Wherever possible Trade With Stores in Harlem That Do Not Practice Discrimination in the Selection of Their Employees.
Police Terrorism
BE WHO FEEL that nothing can be done to vitality in Harlem should note the case of St. Dugan of Jersey City. He was broughed that he had assaulted a colored woman when she went there to make a man his husband. The police commissioner has which 1,500 people were present, and he is dismissed from the police force of the city. Beggans said: "Every mother, sister and husband has every right to walk into a police station unmolested." SAME RIGHT belongs to male citizens of City or in Harlem. Any man who submits arrest has every right to feel that he will totally either at the moment of his arrest, house. The sole duty of the police is to tend to theenders, not to try them, sentence them to the law says that no man shall be punished offence. This law is violated when they by the police and then by the courts. They to stand for this. If they will get to they did in Jersey City and demand the men who abuse the privileges of their unpat a stop to police brutality in Harlem.
Reaping the Storm
THE undoubted abuses which have grown in the fourth Amendment, part are due to the case mentioned, but part are due to the fact that to accept their share of responsibility, defendants to accept the obligation under their ousely to enforce the law. Our self-government will crumble either of the laws they will enforce or citizens elect to support. The worst evil of disregard for the destroys respect for all law. For our use the violation of a particular law on the people is opposed to it is destructive of the best protection of life, of homes and properly claim under other laws. If citizens do duty as honest men and women is to men; their right is to work openly for it as USE ARE WORDS of President Hoover's. They are noble words, and if he lives his lead to nobler actions. It is noticeable always regarding the Eighteenth Amendment and with equal force to the Fifteenth Amendment, more connection between the violations that is generally supposed. Distends to disrespect for other laws. In if the North have defended their violation of the Amendment with the argument that it right to violate it as the South has to have Amendment. The Government, by all of the Fifteenth Amendment for so many and a dangerous precedent. For the first of the Constitution the citizens learn of the country could openly disobey and get away with it. If the Government is its foot down when the Fifteenth Amendment, it would not be having so much trouble Eighteenth. The Government sowed the reaping the storm.
THOSE WHO FEEL that nothing can be done to end police brutality in Harlem should note the case of Police Lieutenant Dugan of Jersey City. He was brought up on the charge that he had assaulted a colored woman in the station house when she had went there to make a complaint about her husband. The police commissioner held a public trial at which 1,500 people were present, and Lieutenant Dugan was dismissed from the police force of the city. Commissioner Beggans said: "Every mother, sister and sweetheart here has every right to walk into a police station and to walk out unmolested."
THE SAME RIGHT belongs to male citizens, whether in Jersey City or in Harlem. Any man who submits peacefully to arrest has every right to feel that he will not be beaten brutally either at the moment of his arrest or at the station house. The sole duty of the police is to arrest and guard offenders, not to try them, sentence them and punish them. The law says that no man shall be punished twice for the same offense. This law is violated when a man is punished by the police and then by the courts. The people do not have to stand for this. If they will get together in Harlem as they did in Jersey City and demand the dismissal of policemen who abuse the privileges of their uniform, they will soon put a stop to police brutality in Harlem.
Reaping the Storm
Reaping the Storm
"OF THE undoubted abuses which have grown up under the Eighteenth Amendment, part are due to the causes which I have just mentioned; but part are due to the failure of some states to accept their share of responsibility for concurrent enforcement and to the failure of many state and local officials to accept the obligation under their oath of office sensually to enforce the law. . . . Our whole system of self-government will crumble either if officials elect what laws they will enforce or citizens elect what laws they will support. The worst evil of disregard for some law is that it destroys respect for all law. For our citizens to patronize the violation of a particular law on the ground that they are opposed to it is destructive of the very basis of all that protection of life, of homes and property which they rightly claim under other laws. If citizens do not like a law, their duty as honest men and women is to discourage its violation; their right is to work openly for its repeal."
THESE ARE WORDS of President Hoover's inaugural address. They are noble words, and if he lives up to them they will lead to nobler actions. It is noticeable that every word he says regarding the Eighteenth Amendment applies directly and with equal force to the Fifteenth Amendment. There is more connection between the violations of those two amendments than is generally supposed. Disrespect for one law leads to disrespect for other laws. In fact, wet citizens of the North have defended their violation of the Eighteenth Amendment with the argument that they have as much right to violate it as the South has to violate the Fifteenth Amendment. The Government, by allowing the violation of the Fifteenth Amendment for so many years, established a dangerous precedent. For the first time in the history of the Constitution the citizens learned that a large section of the country could openly disobey the Constitution and get away with it. If the Government had resolutely put its foot down when the Fifteenth Amendment was first violated, it would not be having so much trouble now with the Eighteenth. The Government sowed the wind and now it is reaping the storm.
Crime in Harlem
Crime in Harlem
AGE CHARLES, speaking at the annual national Probation Association last week, said one-half the inmates in the Tombs were only out of proportion to the Negro population. Conditions in Harlem are terrible, and an steadily increasing, they will become. He said also that legislatures were slow in an adequate staff of fairly paid, competers.
JUDGE CHARLES, speaking at the annual meeting of the National Probation Association last week, said: "Last summer one-half the inmates in the Tombs were Negroes, ridiculously out of proportion to the Negro population of Manhattan. Conditions in Harlem are terrible, and with the population steadily increasing, they will become steadily worse." He said also that legislatures were slow to see the need of an adequate staff of fairly paid, competent probation officers.
IT IS TRUE that Harlem has not enough probation officers; the few who work here are solely overworked. But the problem goes deeper than the matter of probation officers or other remedial agencies. If Harlem had ten times as many probation officers as it has now the real core of the evil would still be untouched. It would be like cutting off branches to save a tree when the roots are rotten. Historians like to say that the seeds of the French Revolution were sown by Voltaire, Rousseau and the other doctrinaires, who prescribed of the rights of man; but the real seed was in the gripping stomachs of hunger-maddened French peasants. If the stomachs of the peasants had been full the doctrinaires could have talked for a hundred years without getting a rise out of them.
IN THE SAME WAY the welfare workers and advisers are overlooking the real background of much of the crime in Harlem. Many children grow up as delinquents for lack of parental supervision because both parents are forced to go out to work to make ends meet. But why do mothers have to work? It is because the Negro man, though subject to the same expenses and extortions as the white man, often finds it impossible, because of his color, to get a job which will enable him to meet these expenses without the aid of his wife. He may have enough skill as a plumber to make $15 a day, but where can he get the job? He cannot even
```markdown
```
Hoover at the Helm
get a place as a street car conductor or subway guard. Even in many places where he used to work, such as hotels and clubs and private residences as butler or waiter or chef, his job has been taken by foreigners.
IF YOU SHUT OFF a man's chance at a good job you dull his sense of ethics. If you discipline him as a social and economic or cast you have done your best to make him act like one. Valyale, ethics and high curses of honor thrive best among people with full amenities and all the world before them. The advice of a hardheaded jurist to a law student was "Get on; get honor; get honest." If employers and trades unions would throw even their doors to Negro workers there would be far less Negro crime in Harlem and elsewhere.
HERBERT HIOOVER has assumed the captaincy of the ship of state. He found her floundered in a sea of lawlessness. With the intuitive genius of his sect he immediately sensed the moral predicament in which the nation is involved and sounded the alarm and prescribed the remedy. It was a daring step for the chief magistrate to take.
Other administrations have pointed out specific evils which threatened our national perpetuity, but none has gone so directly to the heart of the whole matter. Mr. Hoover now tells us in terms which we must understand, that the nation must be wounded and lawlessness will destroy the nation.
Any student of social law and cause can readily account for the existing state of lawlessness in America. The rapid exploitation of material reasons and the mad rush, after which they have and as a result will produce little change, is much easier to analyze the cause than to prescribe the remedy and to apply the prescription. Reform must begin with the people rather than with the government. The administration can go neither faster nor further than the government. The President must his finger directly on the spot.
As long as the self-styled good citizen selects the portions of the law which he elects to obey and disregards other portions at will, the situation is hopeless. The bootlegger would soon die of starvation if he were not supported by the government and the section of so-called good citizens. The half dozen Southern States which nullify the provisions of the
FOR several weeks one of the leading journals, Le Petit Parisien, has been carrying a series of articles entitled "Four Months Among Our African Negroes," by Albert Londres.
The following article, given in full, deals with the sad and unhappy lot of those children who have born to native women by white fathers, some of whom were officials and men of high position; the name is celebrated wrote to the general in command at Timkasoo:
"It is now thirty-three years, but I have never ceased to think of my time in the Soudan. Ah! my Soudan. What has become of my little but near Fort Bonnier? Where is my black sweetheart? And my son? He was so handsome and lithe. He was named Robert. He is a man now. Where is he? I must tell you that I have often asked about him, but have never heard anything. My mother... I would very grateful if you would send me news of him."
Here is another letter from another general:
"You will remember that in 1904 I buried in the French cemetery of M... near the fort, a child. On his tombstone I placed only the word Henry. If the sand has not covered it all, would you..."
"Robert Henry! Andrew! Only that, no nurnames."
"The little ones suck their Negro mothers. The father may be there or he may not be. He is an official, a merchant, an officer, or he may be only a passer-by. If he is there, it will not be for long. If he is there, it may be for all time. The child will grow up in the hut, the mother having returned to her parents. The people of the village will regard the child as a parish, a beggar and will want to know why he continues to eat their corn. No fine social reasoning will influence this manner of looking at the multoch child. The manner of looking down on him is instinctive. It is neither white nor black, hence it is nothing. The mother will marry with a Mandingn. Its little brothers by this marriage will have a race, a family, a country, a village, a multoch lattice will be a multoch. He will have no name, no soil on which to place his feet as his own.
"Even the breasts that he sucks belong only half-way to him. He will pass his life seeking the other half. As children, they have never the ability to be the best they can be. They are like the little playboys one sees in formulas.
---
Bu KELLY MILLER
Constitution which they dislike
know that they have the sinister
approval and dominance of the rest
of the nation. No part of the or-
— Kelly Miller —
gamic law is sacred unless all parts are equally sacred.
With statemanandike sagacity, Mr. Hoover lays down the general principle and applies the application at the point of least resistance and easiest accomplishment. He does not proceed logically by beginning at the point of maximum flagrancy.
Mr. Hoover does not begin with the unification of the second clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, which is openly flouted by common consent and universal conflance. This would be like heat-
"African Negroes"
Translated by J. A. ROGERS
soon as the wind blows them toward the edge they are immediately pushed back into the water. No harbor for them. If they reach the center of the fountain, a stream of water plays on them. Many sink. Those who survive have lost their force.
"Hamless, these half-bloods are sons of the saints of the Catholic
all have such large eyes.
"Those whose fathers appeared and who have do at the school are the villages. The mother old. She is only a Negro the land of the blacks. has only a Christian man."
"Look, says a pas
— J. A. BOGER —
religion. The Republic does not let them stay in the bushes. When they are seven years old they are torn away from the maternal calebish. They are brought together in the towns, in the schools, for the half-bloods. They form a strange category; orphans with father and mother.
"While the father is in Africa he does not abandon them. Does he happen to be near the school, he stops to see them. He goes to see them even when he happens to be married to a white woman.
"One meets these mulattoes even in the best homes sitting between husband and wife. The husband in coming to Africa breaks the news gently to his wife on the boat. The French woman recounts the story in a tale in Italian, and as she is often intelligent, she welcomes the child during her stay.
"As soon as she has some white babies, however, the little malnutite is thrust through the door. Poor little malnutites. The sons of their mother, who are black, are not their brothers; the sons of their father, who are white, are not their brothers. It is, perhaps, because of that; it is because they have been trying to hard to understand this.
ing on cold iron. There is no sentiment in the nation to which he could present such an appeal. Thirteenth members in the House of Representatives sat in their seats while Mr. Thikmha made forceful appeal to Mr. Thikmha for cooperation with the Constitution. It is entirely probable that this beaker does remain in their place from courtesy or forbearance, rather than from any respect for the nullified law. Negro politicians and newspapers are prone to condemn the administration for giving the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments precedence over the Eighteenth in order of enforcement. Harlan lies an obvious moral inconsistency which is apt to provoke hostile reaction on the part of those most immediately affected. Many go so far as to contend that they will not be allowed to vote in the Eighteenth until the Fourteenth and Fifteenth are enforced.
The moral indignation is at least understandable, but statesmanlike necessity must first deal with the probable and the likely before attacking the improbable and the unlikely. There is no public sentiment for the human rights amendment to the Constitution, but the entire nation is committed by repeated vote to the immediate enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment. Both political parties in their national platforms declared for the vigorous enforcement of prohibition. Among the legislature of a law to put an end to illegal manufacture and sale of intoxicating drink. It may be true that legislators do not always vote as they believe, but at any rate they vote as they believe their constituents want them to vote. So they must be reminded from the people to uphold the prohibition amendment.
Negroes"
J. A. ROGERS
that all have such large, wide-open eyes.
"Those whose fathers have disappeared and who have nothing to do at the school are to be found in the villages. The mother has grown old. She is only a Negro woman in the land of the blacks. The child has only a Christian name.
"If it's a girl and she is pretty, the white men all know her." "Some are luckier. Joseph, for instance, has his father. He eats every evening at table with his father at Mother Valentine's. His father is a buyer of cacan. Joseph is a favorite with everybody, and folks care him as they pass. Joseph is happy. He does not yet know that there are ships which take away white papas to France.
"Later boys will become teachers and the girls midwives. The teacher and the midwife will marry. The wedding is sometimes grand when the midwife is the daughter of a governor.
"These happy endings are very rare, however. The mulatto is proficiently happy.
At school they are taught that, morally, they are French. But the law holds them down to the status of native. The law forbids them to take the name of their father. At 20 they are conscripted into the black army. A Negro, because he is born at Dakar, Ruffeuse, St. Louis or Goree, is in name a French citizen.
The son of General X. of the governor and the governor-general, however, only a black like the rest. If he does wrong he is judged only as a Negro. When he gets a
To Leaders and Former Leaders of Pullman Porters
BY WILLIAM PICKENS.
(For the Associated Narr Press.)
WHAT'S the matter with you.
WHAT's the matter with you, anyway? Don't you know that if you just must fight, the Pullman Company will give you all the fighting you can stand up under—and then some? You do not need to fight one another; with one of the most powerful corporations in the country against you, with your small numbers and with a job which any intelligent person can learn to do in a day, you will be constantly staring in the face of failure even when you stick to together for your own. If any of you know that anything was wrong in the inside of
THE MAN IN
Letters to the Editor to be published written on one side of the 250 words in length. Your faith through this information does not
Letters to the Editor to be published under this heading should be plainly written on one side of the paper only, and should be 258 words in length. Your full name and address must be included, although this information does not necessarily have to be printed.
Bender Wants Action From Government Officials Annot Rents. To the Editor of The Amsterdam News. Deborah Sir:
The present session of the Legislature is almost over and no definite action has been taken on the emergency rent laws.
SPECIAL ARTICLES
RENT LAWS
The Negro should look upon the situation from a practical point of view. Whatever may be the relative merits of the violated amendments, it is plain to every citizen above the intellectual grade of the moron that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments will be considered inadequate. Eighteenth Amendment is disposed of. If the endeavor to enforce prohibition fails, the Constitution will be struck a vital blow by that failure, thus making the enforcement of the previous amendments impossible. On the other hand, if Mr. Hower is able to uphold the honor and supremacy of the Constitution, this holy contender will be able to foundation for the supremacy of the Constitution in all of its parts and provisions.
Mr. Hoover did not appoint a Southern man to his cabinet. His reason is not disclosed. My reasonable guess is that he stubbornly refused to stify his good Quaker conscience. He could select a gentleman representative the accepted basis of condoning the nullification of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. He could not face his conscience in a looking glass had he chosen among his advisors a man committed to the nullification of the Confederacy while at the same time upon the dire necessity of effectively upholding the organic law of the land.
Mr. Hoover has staked the success or failure of his administration upon the enforcement of the Constitution, beginning with the Eighteenth Amendment. If he succeeds, great will be the lasting benefit to the nation; if he falls, great will be the failure thereof. The greatest benefit that can flow from his administration, both to the nation and to the Negro, will be witnessed if at the end of the next four years it may be said that he found the nation wet and left it dry.
promotion he will paid only like a common black. Nine francs a day indemnity for the white elector, two and a half for the mulatto. One hundred francs for the child of the first; ten francs for him. Does he knock at the door of the administration? He is received as any other Negro. If he is a Negro of Dakar, who know how to hold a position in the French army, "The blacks have sent a deputy to Paris; the mulattoes remain in the Niger. They are neither black nor white, French nor African; neither kinky-haired nor straight-haired. The unhappy thing, however, is that nevertheless they are something.
"If one was nothing one could be happy; said Robert, 'one would not suffer. And yet, look here!' He shamed a picture on the wall of a general, cut from a magazine:
"That's my father."
"They have abandoned them. And they say nothing. They understand obscurely that they are not children, but accidenta, and that accidents are always unhappy. At the same time they are sent to schools. They recite that they are shoes, clothes, shoes, clothes and trousers. They themselves have added spectacles. It will be necessary to keep them from learning to read if one does not wish them to see their father's name in the newspapers. "However, they wish to better themselves. They do not ask for the right to bear the name of their father; they know the respect due and so, but son of a Frenchman, Andrew, Henry, Jack, Robert, if row want, but French chitoma."
your organization, why in thunder did you not say so before you got kicked out? Don't you know, it makes you look slightly suspicious, when, after you get booted out of the premise into the street, you jump up and yell for the police and say, in effect: "Those are crooks in there, and I stayed in there with them as long as they would let me not move they have kicked me out of the house, and you are attacked, after being thrown out, you must defend you:selves. But if thunes are as bad as you say on the inside, why did you not come out willingly? Then your position would be more advantageous and your charges more convincing? Perhaps things are as bad as you say, but now you cannot help them much.
Finally: Can't you see that the Pullman Corporation is laughing at you?
THE STREET
I would suggest that every tenant write his Senator, Assemblyman and the Governor and ask for an extension of these laws.
Very truly yours.
(Signed) LUCILLE ZUURIER.
President, Academy Tenants' Association.
223 West 108th street.
New York City.
March 1, 1933
AS common as gonorrhoea is, there is a surprising lack of knowledge on the part of the public regarding this disease. The popular cause for an attack of gonorrhoea may be anything from missing one's step to the eating of some article of food. This is positively wrong.
Homicides and Suicides
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 4 (Capital News Service, Inc.) That the deaths by homicides among Negroes are five times as great as those among whites from the same cause, while a very small percentage of the colored population die by their own hand, are the startling facts revealed by a comparative study of the reports of the Census Bureau of deaths from homicide and suicide for 1026 and 1027
Gonorrhoea is a germ disease caused by a well-known bug—the gonococcus. The first attack comes only by contact with the germ through toilet seats, soiled hands, and linen, and anemone bumps, both the source from which about 99 percent of the cases become infected. Repeated attacks of gonorrhoea may result sometimes from the slightest provocation, and are the result of the faring up of a nest of these germs which has not been thoroughly killed off. This is due in most cases to the fact that patients stop treatment too early, that the first attack was treated at the suggestion of a friend or邻居 drugging. A great number of sufferers have been treated by the discharge stops it is just time for the beginning of a new phase of the treatment.
Gonorrhoea is not primarily a blood disease, but stays localised in the genital tract. It does, however, get into the blood in some cases and gives rise to severe joint conditions which are often mistaken for acute rheumatism. Usually when joint complications set in the discharge stage, what makes it more difficult for patients to make it more difficult for patients to their newly swollen joints with the previous infection. Gonorrhoea is separate and distinct from syphilis, which is a blood disease.
This disease occurs much more
Homicides a
Deaths From These
Startlin
WASHINGTON, D. C., Man
That the deaths by homicide as great as those among white very small percentage of the col hand, are the startling facts rew the reports of the Census Bure suicide for 1926 and 1927.
In 1927, in the registration area, which includes about 88 per cent of the total population of continental United States, there was a total of
Library Notes
Some of the recent books added
to the library are:
*Miro Díaz*
*on the following.*
Faust, Jessie." *Plum Bum* "the story of a fair colored girl who passes.*
Heyward, Dubose." *Mamba's Daughter* "the second Nero novel of his life.*
Lacaselli, E. C. P." *Granville Sharp and the Freedom of Slaves on England.*
Hertz, E." *Race and Civilization.*
Ragats, J. L." Fall of the Plantation in the British Caribbean," 1785 ed.
Tinker, E. L." *Tobocouton* "a story of Creole life in New Orleans." *The Second American Caravan* "with a short story by Jean Toomer.*
Bringing Back Yesteryears
Mrs. Letitia Exenstine Brown
sued Carlion Curtis, prominent
white clanman, charging that he
was her common-law husband and
saking $2,000 counsel fees and
$250 a week alimony.
President Mordecai Johnson of
Howard University was assailed
by Congressman Tarver of Georgia
for his advocacy of social equality
and intermarriage.
The Interstate Commerce Commission dismissed the complaint of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters on grounds of lack of jurisdiction.
Clement Innis, editor of the Barbados Herald, died.
Bishop Manning made a plea for Negro education.
Isaac B. F. Allen, Giril, and
Spanish-American War veteran
former member of the Governor's Council of Massachusetts, died.
Five Years Ago
The Senate confirmed Walter L. Cohen's appointment as comptroller of customs of New Orleans.
William Jeffrey, white, entered a plea of guilty in the assault of a time-year-old girl and was sent to a maximum of thirty years in the New Jersey panitentiary.
Robert L. Poston, secretary of the Universal Improvement Association, died on a ship en route to America.
J. B. Ford, Pullman porter, lectured on transportation before 100 students at Darlington College.
Fit
to the mem-
(1863-1933)
Dwn. M.D
rrobea
it is, there is a surprising lack of
of the public regarding this
cause for an attack of gonor-
missing one's step to the eating
positively wrong.
often in the male than in the female, but in the latter it is a more serious problem, because of the frequency with which the germ affects the tubes and ovaries. A considerable percentage of sterility and operations in women dates back to a gonorrhoea infection. These germs have a special tendency to affect the eyes, and because of the large number of blisters of the urethra from this disease at birth, it is the law that every new born should be safeguarded against this by the use of silver nitrate or argrol in the area.
If gonorrhoea is to be cured, prolonged treatment must be carried against these germs at the instance of their first invasion. One they intrench themselves in the many minute crevices of the sexual organ, there is a question whether or not an absolute cure can be guaranteed. The disease constitutes a great social and hygienic problem. It is my opinion that the great prevalence of this condition will continue until we identify the problem and treat it, the doctors will use sound discretion and employ every preventive measure to safeguard themselves against infection, and that cases infected they will use every available means of freeing themselves thoroughly of these germs.
...
and Suicides
Causes Reveal Some
Facts
ch 4 (Capital News Service, Inc.).
among Negroes are five times
as from the same cause, while a
lored population die by their own
dealed by a comparative study of
au of deaths from homicide and
14,256 deaths by suicide, of which the
whites had 12,800 and the colored
only 476 or less than 4 per cent.
The homicides totaled 10,070, the
whites having 5,184 and the colored
4,286 or 48 per cent.
Of the 476 colored deaths by suicide in 1827, 1837 or 70 per cent of them occurred in the registration cities; while of the 4,398 homicides, 2,618 or 61 per cent were inflicted in urban districts. The term "homicide," as used here, includes murder, manhailer, juisifiable homicide and incendiarism, but not legal execution.
In a Greater New York in 1827 when, 1837, 20 percent of the total population, the colored deaths from suicide numbered 44 and the white deaths, from the same cause, 1,051; while the deaths by homicide were: colored: 72; and white: 355. In 1829 the deaths by suicide were: colored 23; and white 889; and deaths by homicide, colored 64. In 1830 the population constituted 1.8 per cent of the total population, the colored deaths from suicide numbered 5 and the white deaths, from the same cause, 322; while the deaths by homicide were: colored: 9; and white 14. In 1828, the deaths by suicide were: colored: 7; and white: 214; and deaths by homicide, colored: 7; and white 81.
In Newark, N. J., in 1927, where the population constituted 5 per cent of the total population, the colored deaths from suicide numbered 2; and the white deaths, from the same cause, 73; while the deaths by homicide were colored: 22; and white, 1928. Where the deaths by homicide were colored, 1; and white, 68; and deaths by homicide, colored, 12; and white, 25.
In Philadelphia, in 1927, where the population constituted 5 per cent of the total population, the colored deaths from suicide number 10 and the white deaths, from the same cause, 272; while the deaths by homicide were colored: 84; and white, 23. Where the deaths by homicide were colored, 12; and white, 281; and deaths by homicide, colored, 91; and white, 70.
THE POET'S CORNER
Poems submitted for publication in "The Poet's Corner" will not be accepted without a personal agreement with a perfect dromedal and stamped envelope.
Lovers' Dream
THE lovely dreams that lovers dream
Are bubbles red and green:
The red for love, the green for
hope—
With dust of silver sheen.
At times the dreams rise toward the
sum.
At times they burst in air;
But all the dreams that lovers dream
Are colorful and fair.