Amsterdam News
Wednesday, June 26, 1929
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
COURT TO HEAR OF U.N.I.A. FIGHT TODAY
HARVARD HONORS TUSKEGEE LEADER
DR. ROBERT R. MOTON
AWARDED HONORARY
ACHIEVEMENT DEGREE
MARY SNEPPS FOUND
NOT GUILTY BY JURY
Booker T. Washington, Founder of Tuskegee
Institute, Only Other Negro so
REGULAR WEEKLY EDITION Complete in Two Sections
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 24 (ANP). — Dr. Robert R. Moton, principal of Tuskegee Institute and president of the National Negro Business League, was awarded an honorary degree of master of arts here Thursday by Harvard University, thus marking the second time in the history of the University that a Negro has been so honored by Harvard.
The first member of the Negro race to receive an honorary degree was the late Dr. Booker T. Washington, founder of the Tuskegee Institute and of the National Negro Business League, who was awarded the master of arts degree in 1886 in recognition of his service in the field of education.
The degree conferred upon Dr. Moton was in recognition of the service he has rendered in the development of Tuskegee Institute.
As principal of Tuskegee Institute, the position to which he was elected in 1916 following the death of the founder, it has been Dr. Moton's effort to keep the institute well in the forefront of vocational schools of the country. The school has grown steadily in number of students and faculty members and in equipment.
The endowment rund, which in 1916 amounted to $1,800,000, now totals $3,000,000. More than a million dollars in buildings have also been added to the Institute and courses in education, agriculture, home economics, and technical arts have been raised to collegiate rank, the bachelor of science degree being granted in these fields.
Dr. Moton, however, has not confined his activities to Tuskegee. He has been active in many movements for the advancement of the Negro and for the betterment of race relations.
Tuskegee's principal was instrumental in having the Federal government locate on grounds adjacent to the institute a Veterans' Hospital, a two-and-a-half million dollar plant entirely managed and operated by Negroes.
He is a charter member of the Southern Commission on Interracial Co-operation; member of the National Committee of the Y. M. C. A.; trustee of Hampton, his Alma Mater, and Tuskegee Institute, Fisk University in Nashville, the Phelps-Stokes Fund; vice-chairman of the National League on Urban Conditions among Negroes; and president of the National Negro Business League, which has recently published a report of a survey of Negro business which it conducted in thirty cities of the country.
In 1927 Herbert Hoover, then Secretary of Commerce, appointed Dr. Moton chairman of the Colored Advisory Commission on Rehabilitation in Mississippi flood area.
Dr. Moton has travelled extensively, having made several trips to Europe. In 1926-27 he made a tour around the world, visiting Hawaii, Japan, India, China, Jerusalem, Egypt and European countries.
Dr. Moton's most recent, and rated by some as his most outstanding achievement, is the publication by Doubleday, Doran and Company of his "What the Negro Thinks," a volume setting forth the Negro's reaction to the American situation in which he finds himself. He is also author of "Finding a Way Out," an autobiography.
This Week's News Index.
Editorials ..... 20
Special Articles ..... 20
General and National News.....1-4
Society and Women's Pages.....5, 6, 7
Sports ..... 9
Music, Radio ..... 11
Amusements ..... 12, 13
News of Churches, Fraternities ..... 14
News of Brooklyn and Long Island ..... 10
New Jersey and Out of Town ..... 6
ADVERTISING INDEX.
Classified ..... 13, 16, 17, 13
Classified, Automotive, Business,
15 GARVEYITES UNDER ARREST FOLLOWING FACTIONAL FIGHT
Three Taken to Harlem Hospital in Serious Condition—Parade Muskets and Sabers Used as Weapons
Charges of felonious assault and rioting will be heard today in Heights Court before Magistrate Flood against several members of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, headed by the deported Marcus Garvey. Charges and counter charges grew out of a riot staged between two factions of Garveyites at Liberty Hall, 120 West 138th street, Sunday night shortly after eight o'clock, it being necessary to summon police reserves to quell the disturbance.
Honored
© A.N.P.
DR. R. R. MOTON
15 GARVEY
ARREST FOR
FACTIO
Three Taken to Harle
Condition—Parade
Used as
Charges of felonious assault
in Heights Court before Magist
bers of the Universal Negro I
by the deported Marcus Garve
grew out of a riot staged betwe
Liberty Hall, 120 West 138th st
eight o'clock, it being necesar
quell the disturbance.
"The fighting ceased immediately upon the appearance of the police," said Captain Edward Bracken of the West 135th street station. Fifteen persons have been arrested so far. From ten to fifteen members of each faction were dressed in the official uniform of Garvey's Black Legion—black suits trimmed in gold bralid with a broad red stripe down the trousers legs. Parade muskets and sabers in possession of the uniformed men were the chief weapons used in the combat. Knives, bricks and bottles served as additional ammunition. It is a miracle that many were not killed on the scene, it is reported.
Clash Over Meeting.
The clash was between two factions one led by Emily Capers, and the other led by Fred A. Toote. Faction number two is reported to have broken with faction number one when they named their organization the Garvey Club. Faction number two retained the name of U. N. I.
THE NEW YORK Amsterdam News
Dunbar Tenants Elect 6 Advisors
Three Williamses, Dr. Haynes, C. T. Greene and Mr. Parks Winners
Williams seems to be a popular name—at least with tenant-owners in the Paul Laurence Dunbar Apartments. On June 17 and 18 notes were cast by 329 of the 503 tenant-owners for six members of the board of advisors of the corporation, and three men by the name of Williams came out victors. They are Joshua H. Williams, of the 210-286 West 150th street section; Dr. Oscar Williams, of the 211-227 West 149th street section; Henry Williams, of the 230-246 West 150th street section.
The other three men elected are as follows: Dr. George E. Haynes, 2588 Seventh avenue; Charles J. Greene, 2816 Eighth avenue; Edgar N. Parks, of the 231-247 West 149th street section.
The supervisors of the election were Roscoe C. Bruce, resident manager; Clara B. Bruce, Carita V. Owens, Wilbur F. Coleman, Fred D. McCracken and Sybil B. Poston. Tenant-owners who served as witnesses were Lucious Owens, Mrs. Frank Wright, John Barnwell, Thelma E. Berlack, Delbert Braithwaite and James Ford.
ITES UNDER
FOLLOWING
NONAL FIGHT
em Hospital in Serious
Muskets and Sabers
Weapons
It and rioting will be heard today
rate Flood against several mem-
improvement Association, headed
by. Charges and counter charges
been two factions of Garveyites at
street, Sunday night shortly after
by to summon police reserves to
Bernstein Given Light Term in Holstein Case
A sentence of one and one-half to three years in the penitentiary for Michael Bernstein, white, 29, 1182 Lebanon avenue, ended the Holstein kidnapping case last Wednesday in General Sessions.
Judge Max S. Levine imposed the term after the white man had pleaded guilty to abducting Casper Holstein, 111 West 136th street, reputed wealthy head of the Turf Club. The sportsman was taken to an unknown hiding place by a gang Sept. 20 and kept in captivity five days after a ransom of $50,000 was asked for his return:
Four other men arrested with Bernstein were freed in October in Heights Court when Holstein failed to identify them. Bernstein was reported abducted by a gang and did not surrender until Dec. 20. The gangster never gave any open testimony on the affair.
SINCE 1890 STOVERFIELD & HUNT
Photographed in Bronx County Court Shortly Before She Was Acquitted of First Degree Manslaughter Charge in Killing of Seymour Irick, a Musician.
ONE CORRESPONDENT, in particular, whose letter is printed elsewhere in this issue, questions the motives behind the exposure of druggists who pay commissions to physicians who send them prescriptions. "I am persuaded to believe," he writes, "that you are trying to favor some particular group of disgruntled pharmacists and physicians." We do not know how our correspondent arrived at such a conclusion, since no specific pharmacists or physicians have been mentioned by name, inference or otherwise.
THE MOTIVES behind the expose are no secret. If possible, we aim to save the Harlem public the overcharge it pays for its medicines and, at the same time, rescue the medical profession from an unethical practice that is fearing at its foundations. Because the practice has existed for a long number of years and is practically nation-wide, is no reason whatever why it should not be exposed. Furthermore, it is our firm conviction
(Continued on Page 2.)
White Girl Who Slew Seymour Irick Following Quarrel Over Another Man Freed of Manslaughter Charge in First Degree
Tragic jealousy had a backfire Monday night when a jury acquitted Mary Snepps, white, 21-year-old blonde taxi dancer and admitted common-law wife of Seymour Irick, 30, night club cornet player, whom she admitted shooting to death in their apartment in the two-family home of Johnny Hudgins, famed comedian of two continents, at 3579 Fish avenue, the Bronx, on February 7, following a quarrel with Irick over another colored man.
The jury deliberated for two hours over the first degree manslaughter charge before rendering a verdict.
The trial consumed five days before Judge Harry Stackell in Bronx County Court, Tremont and Arthur avenues, beginning last Tuesday. During the trial the former night club hostess admitted she lied to the police when she first told them that Irick was accidentally shot when she was struggling to wrest from him a revolver with which he had threatened to kill her.
Their Tangled Lives
The tangled lives of the pair revealed that Irick had had three "wives," including Mary, and that she had married an Italian robber, who was the father of her baby girl, and that she had once lived with a white man, who deceived her with promises of Broadway fame on the stage.
Dr. U. Conrad Vincent, who has been ill several days with pleural pneumonia, was reported today as resting comfortably at the sanatorium he founded at 2348 Seventh avenue.
Dr. Vincent's illness began about Sunday, June 16, when an infection developed in his left nostril. He continued at work, however, until Wednesday, when he took to his bed at his home in West 138th street. The next day saw him a little improved and he attempted to resume the direction of the sanatorium and his own private practice.
Following an examination by Dr. Jesse Godfrey Bullowa, assistant physician at Harlem Hospital and a pneumonia specialist, it was ascertained that the surgeon was also suffering from pleural pneumonia. Dr. Vincent was then confined to the institution he founded as a patient.
Negro Regiment Rifle Champions
WASHINGTON, June 24. (CNS). Scoring fifteen points more than its nearest competitor, the 24th Infantry small bore rifle team knocked out a clean-cut victory in the national regimental small bore championship match recently staged at various posts throughout the United States. The 24th won its match in competition with twenty other teams, which represented each corps area. Each team fired the match on its own range and the targets were then sent to Washington, D. C., for scoring. The three high teams and their scores were: 24th Infantry, 3.382 (out of a possible 3.500); 121st Engineers of Washington, D. C., 3.367, and the 7th Infantry, Vancouver Barracks, Washington, 3.340.
EXTRA REGULAR WEEKLY EDITION
20 PAGES—5 CENTS PER COPY
E LEA
FOUN
BY J
new Seymour Irick
her Man Freed of
charge in First Degr
backfire Monday night when a taxi dancer and admitted com-
player, whom she admitted show
e of Johnny Hudgins, famed
ronx, on February 7, followi
or two hours over the first degr
days before Judge Harry Sta-
tes, beginning last Tuesday.
she lied to the police when
she was struggling to wrest
kill her.
LEADED
FOUND
BY JURY
Amour Irick Following Q
Freed of Manslaughter
First Degree
day night when a jury acquitted Mar-
and admitted common-law wife of
she admitted shooting to death in the
Hudgins, famed comedian of two c
february 7, following a quarrel with
over the first degree manslaughter c
Judge Harry Stackell in Bronx Coun-
last Tuesday. During the trial th
the police when she first told them
struggling to wrest from him a revo
Their Tangled Lives
the pair revealed that Irick had married an Italian robber, once lived with a white man on the stage.
Very little, if any, race prejudice though the defense did score halls.
Miss Frieda B. Hennock, wrist attorney for the defendant, in pictured the night club hostess gilded cage," terribly mistreated giving her the best of the mater life if she dared leave him.
Miss Hennock asked the judge "prejudiced against Mary be man," and pleaded with them to her baby."
The prosecutor, Assistant D. sky, pointed out to the jury in the character of the dead Irick Snepps, on a charge of manslaughter in detail, drawing material f that Irick was seated in a chair fired the three shots into his body.
The manner in which the but impossible for him to have been mon-law wife, the prosecutor st
called that Irick had had three "wives" in Italian robber, who was the father of a white man, who deceived a judge.
tle, if any, race prejudice was injected into the defense did score race mixing in New York.
ieda B. Hennock, white, 25 West Forty-fifth the defendant, in her summation before a night club hostess as a "little innocent," terribly mistreated by a colored man in the best of the material things of life, three leave him.
Hennock asked the jury not to allow the need against Mary because she lived with ahead with them to "send this little moth executor, Assistant District Attorney Barnes out to the jury in his summation that her of the dead Irick that was on trial a charge of manslaughter. He dramatized, drawing material from previous testimony was seated in a chair when Miss Snepps gave shots into his body.
Very little, if any, race prejudice was injected into the trial, although the defense did score race mixing in New York dance halls.
Miss Frieda B. Hennock, white, 25 West Forty-third street, attorney for the defendant, in her summation before the jury pictured the night club hostess as a "little innocent, a bird in a gilded cage," terribly mistreated by a colored man who, while giving her the best of the material things of life, threatened her life if she dared leave him.
Miss Hennock asked the jury not to allow themselves to be "prejudiced against Mary because she lived with a colored man," and pleaded with them to "send this little mother back to her baby."
The prosecutor, Assistant District Attorney Barney Mogilesky, pointed out to the jury in his summation that it was not the character of the dead Irick that was on trial, but Miss Snepps, on a charge of manslaughter. He dramatized the shooting in detail, drawing material from previous testimony to show that Irick was seated in a chair when Miss Snepps deliberately fired the three shots into his body.
Admits She Lied. The manner in which the bullets pierced Irick's body made it impossible for him to have been directly facing his white common-law wife, the prosecutor stated.
Color Line Flares Up Again in Paris
Haitian Charge d'Affaires Denied Admission to Ballroom
According to cabled dispatch to the New York Times the color line flared up again in Paris last Wednesday when Stephanie Alexis, charge d'affaires of the Republic of Haiti, after dining at the Coupole in company with Princess Mansour Doud, wife of the Crown Prince of Egypt, started to enter the downstairs ballroom.
"Sorry, but I cannot let you in. Formal orders from the manager: Americans won't tolerate colored people here."
The Haitian diplomat did not insist on himself and the Egyptian Princess being admitted to the dance floor, but he straightway indicted a protest, addressed to Premier Raymond Policare, relating all the facts in the case and reminding the Premier, that 500,000 of France's Negro citizens are liable to similar treatment in their own country.
ADER
ID
URY
The Following Quarrel
Manslaughter
free
jury, acquitted Mary Snepps,
minon-law wife of Seymour,
noting to death in their apart-
comedian of two continents,
g a quarrel with Irick over
gree manslaughter charge be-
ckell in Bronx County Court,
During the trial the former
she first told them that Irick
at from him a revolver with
had three "wives," includ-
who was the father of her
man, who deceived her with
judice was injected into the trial,
race mixing in New York dance
white, 25 West Forty-third street,
her summation before the jury
was a "little innocent, a bird in a
d by a colored man who, while
tial things of life, threatened her
jury not to allow themselves to
because she lived with a colored
"send this little mother back to
District Attorney Barney Mogile-
his summation that it was not
tick that was on trial, but Miss
highter. He dramatized the shoot-
from previous testimony to show
when Miss Snepps deliberately
ly.
She Lied.
bullets pierced Irick's body made it
in directly facing his white com-
ated.
The taxi dancer admitted during her testimony, under the prosecutor's merciless cross-examination, that she deliberately lied to Detective Lieutenant James Dlnan and others of the Wakefield station in relating to them the manner in which Irick was murdered. Asked why she lied, she said, "I was afraid."
Miss Snepps on the witness stand contradicted her first versions of the shooting by admitting that she fired the fatal shots, not at close range but at some distance from Irick while an overturned table was between them.
She also revealed that from the time Irick entered their home on that tragic winter afternoon until his death he had not had his hand on the 32 caliber weapon, nor had he even touched her, although she said he had chased her around the room and threatened to choke her
The fruits of Jealousy.
The full version of the tragedy together with the story of the dancer's life, was unfolded throughout the testimony, in which jealousy was the dominant note. Irick was fatically, almost madly, yet childishly jealous, it was said, and it finally ended in his death. He is said to have forbidden the girl to associate in any way with either color or white men, and she dared not be seen in conversation with a colored man.
Mary Snepps was born 21 years ago at Elizabeth, Pa., the daughter of a Bohemian coal miner and Austrian scrubwoman. Her family moved to McKeesport, Pa., when she was seven and lived in a 10-family house
WHITE GIRL SLAYER FREED BY JURY
Mary Snepps Found Not Guilty In Death of Seymour Irick
Bares Sordid Life in Bronx County Court, Where Verdict Was Reached at 11 o'Clock Monday Night
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25TH ANNIVERSARY SHOE SALE
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2539½ Eighth Avenue
In appreciation of your patronage we are extending this opportunity to you to buy shoes at a very low price during June only.
THIS IS LAST WEEK OF OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE
At 136th Street
West Side of Street
TWO
tenanted by white and colored people. She attended public and parochial schools, but was forced through poverty to leave the seventh grade and go to work as a domestic laborer. Later she went to Pittsburgh and worked as as domestic for more wages. Three years ago she went to Philadelphia and worked in a factory as a machine operator. She met an Italian, one Delgolo, whom she married at Elkton, Md., in May, 1928, after a courtship of six months. She worked as a nurse for the parole of cruelty, and Delgolo was later sentenced to prison on a robbery charge. Mary's baby came, via a surgical operation, in February, 1927, and after a month in a Philadelphia maternity hospital she secured a job behind a counter in Climber Brothers, a clothing store from September to December, 1928. Unable to support her child she had sent it to her husband's parents.
Lived With White Man.
Along came one Victor Taylor, a white man, who told her she was too cute to be behind anybody's store counter, and painted vivid pictures of her as a glorious success in the role of a Broadway stage beauty along the Great White Way. She came on to New York and lived with Taylor for three days, only to discover that she had been chasing rainbows. She quit him dead cold. Then came her lucky day; she landed a job as "hostess" at the Orpheum Dance Palace, Forty-street street and Broadway, and soon learned she testified, then all she employed there, hostesses were running around with the colored musicians in the band, and advised her to choose her man. So she met Trick, who prayed at love as well as he played the cornet. She "went with him" from March until August, when she finally accepted his invitation to go and live with Wendy a "sweet apartment" at 20 West 147th Street; her love nest was kept until December.
Irick is said to have assured her that he would treat her "better than lots of white men." According to what Mary told the police, Irick more than kept his word. "He was the only man I knew who treated me well and said. And they had their own car, and she did not have to work.
He Pined for Her.
While the couple was living at the 14th street address she was required to spend some time at the Knickerbocker Hospital, where she said she was needed for female trouble caused by the Caesarian operation Crick pined for her.
The scrubwoman's daughter told her attorney that the trip to the hospital was necessitated by her colored husband's mistreatment. "He kicked me in the stomach once when he met me, she said. The police know that she told them, "He often abused me in public. . . . He is not responsible for that. . . . He only makes believe he is cruel, he doesn't mean it. . . . He has a funny disposition like that. I often said I was going to lie to him, he said. Mary testified that she "did not remember" making such statements.
Assistant District Attorney Mollgesky, who sought to place Miss Sneeps in the light of hard-bolled innocence, read into the records letters identified by the petition prisoner at the court to be by Trick while she was in the hospital. They all were of the most endearing character, such as "to the dearest
little girl I know, "Sweetness," "I want to be loved by nobody but you, you, you."
One letter quoted Irick as reminding Mary that she had omitted in her last letter to him the words, "I love you," that he missed her, wanted her back home. He wrote: "Home is just waiting to welcome you, darling."
Irick was pining for her, but when she left the hospital on November 29, 1928, she did not return to his arms; instead she went to live with Rose, a white girl friend, "because I intended to leave him." This was the time, Mary said, when Irick threatened her life and said he would write and tell her parents that she was living with a colored man unless she returned.
Kids she Was Foolish.
Monteiro before she had lost her job at the Orpheum on account, it is said, of the management learning of her relationship to Irick.
When she told her white girl friends that she intended giving up her colored husband, she said they told her she was foolish and reminded her, "You don't have to work and he gives you everything you want." So Mary went back to Ickle, and around the first of January, 1929, they rented the Fish avenue apartment in the house of Hudgins.
Had Three Wives.
Attorney Hennock endeavored to show that the "little innocent" had been "taken in" by Irick, who is said to have told her that he was divorced from his first wife.
The prosecutor introduced evidence to prove that Mary did know that her lover was not matrimonially free, by reading a letter addressed to her as "Sweetness" and signed "Your own husband" (signed) Sey. In this letter Irick wrote:
"In everything to Rose about living with me because the case is not settled yet." This referred to a court case involving Irick and another musician, the Sneeps woman answered.
At the time of Irick's death Virginia Lee Irick, 2155 Seventh avenue, who had lived with the musician for three years as his common-law mate, told a reporter of The Amsterdam News that Irick had a legal wife by the name of Loula Clemens, whose aboutbouts were unknown. Virginia attended a few sessions of the trial.
Anofher Triangle.
Edward Murray, the 261 West 129th street, is the man Irick was jealous over. On January 15 when Mary came to Harlem to do some shopping, and Irick was playing at the Lafayette Theatre, she met Murray, and they met daily, until they and then sat in the car with her to chat. Irick came out of the theatre, flew into a rage, smashed Mary in the nose and threatened Murray, it is said.
On February 7, the day of the shooting, the dancer and her husband came to Harlem to look for an apartment, having had a "run-in" with the Hudgkins, who are reported to have met the telephone ringing in the morning and having to call Irick.
Irick got out of his car on 131st street near Seventh avenue, and went into a musician's club nearby. Mary sat in the car. She saw Murray and called him over. She admitted she liked him. Her. jealous mate observed them talking and after upbraiding Murray and cursing Mary he dragged out of the car, she said, and followed Murray into Gerald's restaurant at 167 West 131st street, all the way to the kitchen.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
Where Irick Died
100
Two-Family House Owned by Johnny Hudgins, at 3579 Fish Avenue, Bronx, Where Seymour Irick Was Slain by Mary Sneeps.
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Murray, saying, "If you want her, there she is, take her!" and walked out.
The white girl followed, pleading with her colored lover to allow her to explain, asking him not to make a scene. She got into his car but he threw her out, it is said.
She got into a taut seat and told the driver, "I wanted to get home first because I was afraid he would lock me out," she told the police.
On the witness stand she said that Irick came home five minutes after she did, and as she heard the car outside she went to the closet and secured the gun, which was in a holster in a woolen sock. The velvet holder in the cushion in an overstuffed chair in the living room.
What's the Truth?
When Irick entered the apartment he continued quarrelling, she stated, and after going to the clothes closet and rummaging for the gun, he demanded to know where it was. Meanwhile she had taken the gun from beneath the cushion and held it behind her, she testified.
"I don't need the gun; I will choke you with my hands," she said he and then and then chased her ground the table in the living room. The table was overturned between them and as he reached out after her she said she fired three shots in succession. Irick was facing her, she swore.
Assistant Medical Examiner Dr. John Riegelman testified that the death bullet pierced Irick in the back, plunged through his heart and emerged in the left chest. Another bullet entered under the left armpit and emerged in the lung, while the third shot entered the right chest and came from the body in the lower right back.
Detective Henry F. Butts, pistol expert, testified that no powder marks were on the dead man's clothing and that it was his opinion, that the shots were fired more than six inches from the body. He did not witness to the tragedy except the accused, and dead men tell no tales.
Mary told the court that when Mr. and Mrs. Hudgins came downstairs to learn what had happened she asked them not to come in, and that they came back about four minutes later and she let them in.
My God, what did she done?" she said to her. "I ought to kill myself" and attempted to pick up the gun where she had brought it from the other room and laid it on the dining room table. Mrs. Hudgins picked up the weapon and carried it upstairs, she said, and called for the police.
On Monday a police stenographer read the帖 of the commissioner. Mary Captain Dinkin and other officers who questioned her on February 7.
During the trial Mr. and Mrs. Huggins testified, as did Murray and Detective Jerome F. Heaney of the Wakefield station, the latter giving
the lie to Mary's statement that she had given him Irick's keys while standing in the bedroom. "I took them from the body," Heaney said. During the cross-examination the prosecutor was often required to ask Mary if he had broken her objections in legal form and not otherwise. Twice during Monday's session a court officer gave Mary a call-down for turning around and talking to a reporter of The Amsterdam News, the only reporter she had spoken to. He asked her what newspaper he represented and what photos of her this paper would carry.
Garveyites to Air Troubles in Court
Garveyites to Air Troubles in Court
(Continued from Page 1.)
A. and held meetings in the basement of 108 West 138th street. Faction number one continued their meetings at Liberty Hall.
Lying in Harlem Hospital in a serious condition as the result of wounds received in the fray, John Spalding, 60, 90, 148, 148 street, nephew Benjamin, 26, 625 Lenox avenue, and Daniel Burke, 45, 298 West 138th street, are being held prisoners on charges of rioting. These men, especially Burke, who was still unconscious on Monday, may die of their injuries, it is reported.
Numerous Casualties.
Early reports placed the number of rioters at several hundred, but actually less than 100 Garveyes participated in the conflict, the Garveyes declare.
Women as well as men participated in the fighting, but only one Garveye was killed in the cannails. She is Ruby Thornhill, 29,151 West 128th street, who is also accused of slashing Burke with a razor and was arrested on a charge of folonious assault.
Dermott Bailey, 47, 68 West 131th street, is a co-defendant with Mrs. Thornhill, as he is said to have landed on the street and as well as with some blunt instrument.
Among those injured in the bitter conflict was St. William Grant, 29, 137 West 138th street, who a year ago was brutally beaten by the police because he appeared as a witness against them in the near riot on Lenox avenue at 139th street. Grant sustained a broken nose wound, the police said, and William Wattley, 34, 248 West 138th street, of the assault.
Also Alexander Eden, 49, 165 Henry street, Brooklyn, laceration of the right leg; Arthur Francis, 30, 355 West 127th street, scalp wound; Isabel Camel, 26, 105 West 138th street, lacerations of the right arm and wrist.
Arrested For Rioting.
Spalding, Doubin and Burke
in the fight against
and face. They are under arrest, for
rolling, together with Charles Bramble, 29, 152 West 141st street; Ernest Jeffrey, 44, 50 West 117th street; Leonard Corbin, 25, 101 West 141st street; Edgar Auglin, 21, 109大道 avenue, Brooklyn; Tony Wallace, 24, 122 West 117th street; Eugene Chapman, 24, 108 West 141st street, and Daniel.
Wattley was charged with rioting and felonious assault on complaint of Grant, who was also held on an assault charge.
All of the injured persons were treated at Harlem Hospital by Dr. Howley.
With the exception of the three men confined to the hospital, all the prisoners were arraigned Monday morning before Magistrate Flood and held in $1,000 bail each on each separate charge, for a further hearing today.
With the Murk Burke wife of Daniel Burke, Might Monday to have one Fred Henry taken into custody as one of the men who assaulted her husband.
Mrs. Burke told a reporter of the Amsterdam News on Monday that before the fight started there were no lights in Liberty Hall, but that a number of men with their muskets, sabers and missiles were stationed inside in the dark, while ten uniformed men stood outside. She said that faction number two, of which she is a member, had notified faction number one that they intended using the hall Sunday night, and that faction number one was therefore on the scene, prepared for battle. As faction number two consisting, Mrs. Burke said, of not over fifteen persons, including about four women, entered the door of the hall, they were attacked both from the front and rear. Then the strife began.
Motiv
BEHIND THE DRUG CON
(An Editor
Motives
THE DRUG COMMISSION
(An Editorial)
Motives BEHIND THE DRUG COMMISSION EXPOSE (An Editorial)
(Continued from Page 1.)
that before long it will not only but laws will be passed making BUT OUR FIRST CONC the poor, sick and needy Negro pays, and pays dearly, for evaded it. To us the practice ble, because the offenders are standing in our community, we look the fact that their prosop must be built upon the prosp Nor does it make any different are white or colored. It is just a by a white man as it is to be and doctors who accept com for prescriptions they are paid public.
it will not only be con-
spassed making it iller-
fIRST CONCERN is the
needy Negro public
clearly, for every ser-
the practice is the
offenders are profesio-
community, men who
at their prosperity, t
ton the prosperity of
any difference whet-
ed. It is just as unpleas-
as it is to be robbed
accept commissions
they are paid to write
that before long it will not only be considered unethical, but laws will be passed making it illegal.
BUT OUR FIRST CONCERN is for the public—the poor, sick and needy Negro public of Harlem, which pays, and pays dearly, for every service that is rendered it. To us the practice is the more reprehendible, because the offenders are professional men of good standing in our community, men who should not overlook the fact that their prosperity, to be permanent, must be built upon the prosperity of the community. Nor does it make any difference whether the offenders are white or colored. It is just as unpleasant to be robbed by a white man as it is to be robbed by a black man, and doctors who accept commissions from druggists for prescriptions they are paid to write are robbing the public.
THEREFORE, we repeat:
If you have occasion to go to o
in whom you have the greatest fail
you want him to render you.
If he writes a prescription for y
a drug store where you know that t
istered graduate pharmacist. If you
duty of your physician to recommend
and without receiving an additional
If you are able to go to the doct
to take your prescription to a dru
There is certainly no need for him.
motion to go to or call a p
the greatest faith for the
order you.
prescription for you, TAKE
you know that there is a
armacist. If you don't kn
to recommend one to
o ing an additional fee or
to go to the doctor's office,
prescription to a drug store or
o need for him to telepho
If you have occasion to go to or call a physician, select one in whom you have the greatest faith for the particular service you want him to render you.
If he writes a prescription for you, TAKE IT YOURSELF to a drug store where you know that there is a competent and registered graduate pharmacist. If you don't know of one it is the duty of your physician to recommend one to you, without charge and without receiving an additional fee or other consideration.
If you are able to go to the doctor's office, you should be able to take your prescription to a drug store of your own choice. There is certainly no need for him to telephone your prescription from his office, and rarely is it necessary for him to telephone it to the drug store from your home. There are drug stores on every corner.
If, after taking your prescription to a drug store, you are told by the pharmacist that it is written in a code that he does not understand, change your doctor immediately.
REMEMBER that, no matter how good the physician is who prescribes for you, his medicines may not do you any good unless they are compounded according to his orders as to quality and quantity, so select your druggist with the same care with which you select your physician.
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H. R. George Denied Bail Until Fingerprints Are Made by Police
Charged with larceny in the amount of $750, Hugh R. George, prominent Harlem stock broker, with offices at 200 West 135th street, was arraigned Monday before Magistrate Flood in Heights Court and held without bail until he could be taken to police headquarters and fingerprinted. Bail was later secured, it is said, in the amount of $1,000 and bond for George's release was furnished by Junius M. Green, 168 West 136th street. The hearing was adjourned until July 29.
The larceny charge grew out of a scam in which George was accused of unlawfully withholding property in the form of stock purchased by Charles A. Squires, 539 West 133rd street, who obtained the summons from a Heights Court magistrate on May 28.
"Intent to Cheat."
In his complaint, Squires, who is a carpenter, alleges that on the night of September 4, 1928, he paid George $50 for the purchase of 500 shares of preferred and 60 shares of common stock in the Monarch Royalty Corporation, and was given a receipt for the stock. "The stock is good." George is said
As far as the Amsterdam News could learn, the New York Garvey organization has been split three ways. The U. N. I. A. proper is head-
tives
COMMISSION EXPOSE
(ditorial)
The larceny charge grew out of a summons in which George was accused of unlawfully withholding property in the form of stock purchased by Charles A. Squires, 539 West 133d street, who obtained the summons from a Heights Court magistrate on May 28.
"Intent to Cheat."
In his complaint, Squires, who is a carpenter, alleges that on the night of September 4, 1928, he paid George $750 for the purchase of 500 shares of preferred and 50 shares of common stock in the Monarch Royalty Corporation and was given a receipt for "The stock is good." George is said to have told Squires, "You will get monthly dividends, and within three ed by E. B. Knox; the Garvey Club is headed by Mrs. Capers, with Ethel Collins as secretary and Mme. M. L. Collins as secretary and Mrs. M. L. Collins third faction is said to be headed by Mr. Toote and retains the name or U. N. I. A. Both the Capers and the Toote factions claim that they have paid rent for the hall and have a right to hold meetings there. Jacobson and Jacobson are the renting agents for the owners, the Monarch Lodge Corporation shaped by Cappar Hollism. The Garvey Club is reported to be a duly incorporated body (1927), which recognizes no leadership except Garvey himself, personally.
Of the twelve Garveyites arraigned Monday, Mrs. Thornhill, Grant and Bailey were members of the Garvey Club, while the remaining nine belonged to faction number two.
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The complaint says further it "deponent (Squires) discovered the transaction was a fraudule representation, false, misleading with intent to cheat."
Thus far, Squires declares, George has made restitution in the amount of only $30, and that he made pealed requests for the return of his stock certificates and received on "false statements, promises and fusals."
Many Complaints
Four other complaints, all on mouses, charging unlawful withholding of property, were adjourned in a further hearing. The complaints were Edwin Mardenboro, 2 West 113th street; Alfred Armstrong, 400 Manhattan avenue; Russa Thomas, 235 West 148th street; David Hines, 406 Lenox avenue. George, who is 35, lives at 187th avenue, and is a native of Grenada, British West Indies.
CONSUL TO LIBERIA
STRICKEN BY FEVER
WASHINGTON. June 24—William T. Francis, United States Minister to Liberia, is critically ill with yellow fever, according to a cable received from the American Legation by the State Department.
Mr. Francis, a St. Paul, Minn., attorney, was appointed to his post last summer by former President Coolidge. He filled the long vacancy led by Dr. Solomon Porter Hood, now a Southern educator.
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PATROLMAN'S ASSAILANTS SENTENCED
Long Prison Terms Smash Gangsters Who Shot Cop and Robbed Collectors
Long Prison Terms Smash Gangsters Who Shot Cop and Robbed Collectors
Milk Wagon Bandits Plead Guilty to Terrorizing Harlem and Receive Heavy Penalties for Series of Crimes
The law had the last laugh and the shooting of Patrolman Joseph L. Carrington of the Sixteenth precinct was avenged yesterday in General Sessions when two youthful bandits were sentenced to long prison terms. The two were Lenwood Turner, 18, 2317 Eighth avenue, who was sent to the Elinora Reformatory, and Charles Alexander Lewis, 21, 274 West 135th street, who received a term of seven to fifteen years. Turner and Lewis pleaded guilty to the holdup of Michael Bohan, white milkman, 516 West 132d street. Carrington was shot through the hand when he attempted to halt the robbery at 279 West 150th street. Three others linked with the pair in the recent wave of depredations against collectors in Harlem were sentenced last week. They also entered pleas of guilty after the district attorney's office had gone ahead with plans for prosecution.
fight against the parliamentary action asserting that he would take a Negro in preference to liquor and the supporters of Alfred E. Smith.
One friendly gesture from the South was made by Bishop W. N. Ainsworth of the M. E. Church, South, in Macon, Ga., on leave from the Orient. The prelate declared the function to which Mrs. DePriest was invited was official and not social. There could be no justification for refusing to invite the wife of a duly elected Congressman, he said.
Oscar DePriest preserved his calm and continued to assert that no social principle was involved.
Richard Roberts, 17, 5 East 132d street, who is said to have been one of the gang that shot Carrington, was sentenced to seven and a half years in the reformatory.
One of his pals, George Lewis, 30, 243 Eighth avenue, who was present at the shooting and is said to have engineered the holdup, received a heavy term of twenty to forty years in the penitentiary. Leon Farmer, 23, 2779 Eighth avenue, another of the trio who attacked the policeman, received seven and a half to fifteen years.
Police believe the backbone of the organized gang has been broken, although two men charged with being members are still at large. Lewis and Farmer were charged with the holdup of Charles Boer, white, 285 East 157th street, on April 16 at 203 West 148th street. Two other collectors, Thomas Russo, 304 East 112th street, and Charles Tschuden, 718 Fourteenth street, pressed charges against members of the gangsters' clique.
Hoover and Wife Still Under Fire
Legislators Slam Mrs. De Priest's Presence at Tea Party
---
WASHINGTON, June 23. The tea party is over—that of Mrs. Herbert Hoover to which Mrs. Oscar DePriest was invited—but the furore over the incident continues apace.
The smug capital continues to lick its chops in anticipation of the latest protest or approval of what most of Dixie has chosen to call an outrage against white standards and social recognition to the submerged portion of America's population. Congressman Green of Florida announced Thursday that he would never attend another social function at the White House while the Hoovers are there. Other members of Congress side with him, he said.
Another attack by the Knights of American Protestantism, who were in convention at Norfolk, Va., was made the same day. The Texas Legislature voted last Tuesday to condemn Mrs. Hoover's action and rebuke Texans who bolted the Democratic party last fall. The lone G. O. P. representative, Reno Elchenroht, voted for the resolution, and Governor Dan Moody approved the action of the Legislature. The Rev. B. J. Forbes at Weatherford led the
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fight against the parliamentary action asserting that he would take a Negro in preference to liquor and the supporters of Alfred E. Smith.
One friendly gesture from the South was made by Bishop W. N. Ainsworth of the M. E. Church, South, in Macon, Ga., on leave from the Orient. The prelate declared the function to which Mrs. DePriest was invited was official and not social. There could be no justification for refusing to invite the wife of a duly elected Congressman, he said.
Oscar DePriest preserved his calm and continued to assert that no social principle was involved.
Taken From Bed, Beaten and Shot
Man's Only Offense Was That He Slept in House He Was Building
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., June 24. With three bullet wounds in his body and his head torn by blows from the butt end of a revolver, Jim Mencion, a carpenter, was found on a Jacksonville Beach street last Wednesday night. A mob of unmasked white men had left him for dead. The mob attacked him because he was sleeping in a house he was building for a white man, Chief Deputy McRae of the sheriff's office said. The cottage was in a white neighborhood. Residents of the district warned the Negro not to sleep in the house, county detectives learned. That night cars drove up. The men told Mencion to come outside. When he refused they went to his bed, beat him on the head and forced him into the street.
Then they told him to run and before he had gone ten feet members of the mob, which numbered between thirty and fifty men, started shooting at him. He was left in the middle of the street. Police who arrived fifteen minutes later took him to the County Hospital in Jacksonville, and he will recover. Sheriff W. B. Cahoon has no hopes of identifying members of the mob.
Congressman Demands Equality of Law for All
WASHINGTON, June 24—Congressman Oscar DePriest left here Saturday on an extended speaking tour following the close of the special session of Congress. Mr. DePriest's engagements will take him through Virginia, Tennessee, Illinois and other points in the East, South and West.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn., June 24—"All I want is white equality before the law," said Oscar DePriest, Representative from Chicago, in an address in the city courtroom here tonight, which was attended by ten white persons and 500 Negroes.
"Who on earth asks for social equality?" he continued. This statement was loudly applauded by the audience.
"Negroes never will gain their political and civil rights guaranteed by the Constitution until they organize politically." DePriest said. The future progress of the Negro was placed squarely up to the Negro himself by the noted leader.
"It is no longer possible for a white man to stand and fight the Negro's battles. That is getting unpopular, even in Northern cities—even in Chicago." DePriest attributed to Mayor William Thompson the greatest service to Negroes in Chicago. He enumerated the long list of office-holders in Chicago, the total running above 1,000.
U. S. LAW BODY ASKED TO SMASH LYNCHINGS
President Hoover's Law Enforcement Commission, for which a Negro member was urged last week by Kelly Miller of Howard University, has been asked by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to make a study of lynching, peonage, mob violence and segregation, it was announced Monday.
The brief of the association asks the commission to urge a Federal law against lynching and mob rule. with the Dyer bill as a model. The requests also include the formation of a Federal agency of members of both races to recommend needed legislation and conduct interracial education.
Mayor Walker to Speak
Mayor James J. Walker will address the Parent-Teachers' Association of Mother Zion A. M. E. Church. 140 West 137th street. Sunday at 4 p.m. His Honor's subject will be "Juvenile Crime Wave." Mrs. Eliza Y. Steele is president of the association.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26. 1929
I
President American Federation of Labor SPEAK ON "The Negro Workers, the A. F. of L. and the Pullman Porters' Fight for Justice" Sunday Afternoon, 2:30 P.M., June 30
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Ramon M. E. Rodriguez
After examination, the University of the State of New York has granted a professional engineer's license to Ramon M. Edrelra Rodriguez, who has opened an office at 129 East Twenty-seventh street.
Mr. Rodriguez is a civil engineering graduate of the University of Havana, Cuba.
He has served as chief engineer in the division of contracts, properties, supplies and bridges of the Cuban Republic, by the recommendation of the Civil Service Commission, for a period of twenty-seven years.
Later he was appointed and served for several years as chief engineer in the office of Berenguer Development Company.
Prejudice Dissolves As Heflin Is Jailed
WASHINGTON, June 24 (CNS)—J. Thomas Heflin Jr., profilegent son of Senator Tom Heflin, dry and anti-Catholic crusader, and hater of Jews and Negroes, was arraigned in police court Thursday on a charge of driving a car while under the influence of drugs.
Young Heflin pleaded not guilty, and demanded a jury trial. He was released on $1,000 bond, as fate would have it, through the efforts of the professional bondsman, Milton S. Kronhelm, a Jew, his colored assistant, George Noble, and Patrick Haltigan Jr., clerk of the court, a Catholic, against whose people the vitriolic Senator from Alabama maintains a constant and fierce verbal warfare.
Young Heflin had no prejudices at the time and claimed "that anybody who could get him out was all right." While waiting to be arraigned in court the dry leader's son repeatedly asked newspaper men where he could get a drink.
The Rev. Ethelred Brown, pastor of the Hubert Harrison Memorial Church, is now on the office staff of The World Tomorrow.
Serious Charges Made Against School Officials Of Public School No. 90
WOMAN ACCIDENTALLY
SHOT SELF; ARRESTED
Elsie Baumet, 27, 1897 Madison
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Lieut. Williams Felled By Smoke Fighting Fire
2
Aiding in the rescue of four women and two children in a tenement fire at 91 Allen street and directing his company in the thickest of the smoke proved too much for Lieut. Wesley Williams, only Negro officer in the New York Fire Department, Thursday.
Lieut. Williams fell unconscious at his post and was revived after a department surgeon and the officer's white comrades worked over him for two hours. The blaze was fatal for Fireman James H. Murphy, white, 43, of Hook and Ladder Company No. 9.
The revived fire fighter is second in command of Engine Company No. 55. He was named a lieutenant nearly two years ago. All Williams' subordinates are white.
Mrs. James L. Curtis and Better School Club Complain to Superintendent Conroy of Deplorable Conditions
Serious charges against members of the teaching faculty of Public School 90, 225 West 147th street, the principal of which is Louise E. Tucker, white, were made Saturday to Superintendent of Public Schools William O'Shea by Mrs. Helen Curtis, chairman of the Better School Club, who lives at 2816 Eighth avenue, the Dunbar Garden Apartments.
Mrs. Curtis is the widow of the late James L. Curtis, well known attorney and minister to Liberia. Other members of the Better School Club include Mrs. Watt Terry, first vice-chairman; Mrs. William Lloyd Imes, second vice-chairman; Mrs. Lemuel L. Foster, treasurer, and Mrs. Marie K. Coleman, secretary.
Intimidation Charged.
In her letter Mrs. Curtis states Mrs. Anna Sterrett, teacher of the 4-A class at P. S. 90, spoke to her adopted daughter before the entire class as follows: "This child, Helen Johnson, is a tattletale who runs home and tells everything that happens to her mother."
complain about many highly unsatisfactory and unhealthy conditions at P. S. 90, and asked for better and more competent teachers at the school.
She, Mrs. Curtis said, was told that the mothers of white teachers who are awaiting appointment by the Board of Education object to their daughters teaching Negro children. "We will ask Mr. O'Shea if this is so," said Mrs. Curtis. Dr. Conroy, she added, appeared to take it as a personal affront that the Better School Club had had the temerity to complain.
The letter states that at another time Mrs. Sterrett said to the class: "We could have a lovely time today but Helen Johnson would run home and tell her mother, so get out your books and do your work—Helen would run and tell her mother if we did no work today. Helen's tattling is the cause of all the trouble we have had at this school."
Mrs. Curtis wrote: "This attitude has caused the child much nervousness and embarrassment. Further, the limit was reached when the children lined up and surrounded her on the street to 'beat her up.' The child is highly nervous and afraid to go to school. The children threaten her, saying that she is the cause of their having to do their work in school.
"It seems a shame that a teacher would create mob violence in a school," Mrs. Curtis concluded.
White Teachers Prejudiced?
At the close of her letter to Dr. O'Shea Mrs. Curtis stated, "We are told that first-class teachers refuse to come to Harlem to work. Will you kindly tell us what is to be done in this case."
In an exclusive interview with The Amsterdam News on Saturday, Mrs. Curtis said that she had gone to District Superintendent J. P. Conroy to
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complain about many highly unsatisfactory and unhealthy conditions at P. S. 90, and asked for better and more competent teachers at the school.
She, Mrs. Curtis said, was told that the mothers of white teachers who are awaiting appointment by the Board of Education object to their daughters teaching Negro children. "We will ask Mr. O'Shen if this is so," said Mrs. Curtis. Dr. Conroy, she added, appeared to take it as a personal affront that the Better School Club had had the temerity to complain.
Mistreatment Admitted.
On the same day that Mrs. Sterrett embarrassed and humiliated Helen Johnson Mrs. Curtis immediately sent a note of complaint to the principal, Miss Tucker.
"I have told Mrs. Sterrett," Miss Tucker replied by letter, "that it was an unkind question to ask the child. Mrs. Sterrett agrees with me that her question was unkind and regrets that she asked it."
A touch of sarcasm crept into the closing paragraph of Miss Tucker's letter to Mrs. Curtis in the statement that "the only difference between us here and the group of ladies you represent is as to the method of helping to make this one of the finest schools in the city."
The Complete Charges.
When the Better School Club outlined their charges to Dr. Conroy, Mrs. Curtis said he told them to write to John P. Leo, chairman of the Local School Board of District No. 13. They did so, making the follow-
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erette; new springs. No delivery
age.
Furniture Stored Free Over Summer While You're on Your Vacation
Phone CAThedral 4231 for Samples
Roxy Upholstery Co.
Harlem: 120 W. 125th Street (1 Flight
Broad: 378 E. 149th Phone 4210 | 1321 Noble Ave. Phone 0782
YONKERS BRANCH: I PALISADE AVE. TEL YONKERS 8749
Sunday and Night Phone for Samples: WESTCHESTER 0782
DOORS — MOULDINGS — WALL BOARDS
FRONT and ENAMELED BRICKS
WIGGINS
DIRECT
from the MINES
to YOU
When You Fill Your Coal Bin
With
QUALITY
STANDARD COAL
You Are Assured of
Satisfaction and Economy
"SATISFACTION IN EVERY POUND"
Direct receivers from
the Mines
JOSEPH WIGGINS COAL CO. INC.
- Urmost
an Service & Quality
Main Office and Order Department
Fifth Avenue and 141st Street
TEL.
BRAdhurst 7334
ing accusations, which they based upon personal investigation:
Miss Tucker conducts a coaching class in the school building for those desiring to pass the examination for teacher, and enlist the services of the teaching staff, thus necessitating their absence from their class room work for hours at a time. And the principal employs members of her coaching class as substitute teachers, fourteen of these having been used in one department at one time.
The principal is frequently absent for days at a time, leaving the school unsupervised. Mrs. Curtis explained that this was investigated and discontinued, Miss Tucker now being required to sign in every day.
"Candy is sold throughout the school during school hours; the teachers have to stop their classes in order to carry on this sale. Milk is not handled in a sanitary way. Some of the mothers complain because a crate of milk was found in a puddle of urine on the fourth floor. As a result the sale of milk was discontinued. The water fountains are out of order and children are permitted to use old milk bottles or a common drinking cup or to put their heads under the faucet over the filthy sink in the halls around which are hand mops, scrub-brushes, rags, pails and brooms.
"A teacher who was known to have epileptic fits, and who as a result was frequently picked up by other teachers in the yard and other places, was placed in charge of small children. Many times she would fall out in a fit and the babies were left shut up in the room with her until she regained consciousness. Experts tell us that our babies' nerves might easily be permanently injured from the shock of such an experience.
"There is a shocking lack of supplies—not a supplementary book in the school. Some children in the third and fourth grades have had but one book in the two terms of this school year.
"The children are given solled paper for their school work.
"Pay entertainments have been given as often as three times a month.
"The toilers are horrible. There is never any toilet paper.
"The 4-A-3 and 4-A-5 children have not had their two-minute drill
THREE
for months. Children have been known to have monitors over them for a week at a time while the teachers are absent.
"Incidentally, we may mention that the epileptic teacher was sent to Bellevue the week of May 1, and from there to the Government Hospital at Central Islip."
The Better School Club is demanding supplies and books for P. S 90; regularly appointed teachers; sanitary conditions and a new principal who will see that the school is kept up to the standard.
WILD BEAST HUNTER FINDS "MONKEY-MAN"
George Bistany, white, wild animal collector, returned Sunday from Africa with a story to the effect that he had discovered "an African Negro with the torso and general characteristics of a chimpanzee." Like the biggest fish caught by the angler, however, the freak was left in Africa because of intervention of the British authorities.
Do You Doubt the Need for Protection?
The latest report of the
National Safety Council
for one year shows:
LOST in wages .....$827,000,000
SPENT in medical fees.$187,000,000
KILLED persons ..... $8,000
INJURED persons ..... 10,000,000
Was any part of Your wages or sav-
ings included in the above?
How are you protecting them this
year?
Policies issued on monthly, quarter-
ly, semi-annual and annual basis.
Rates cheerfully furnished upon
application. Write or call.
NATIONAL ACCIDENT SOCIETY
217 West 125th Street
NEW YORK CITY
Monument 1183
Life—Accident—Health Insurance
Over 44 years of service
BUILD YOUR OWN BUSINESS
Good Agency Contracts to Men and
Women (live wires only)
FOUR
Phone Harlem 0682
LOTUS TEA GARDEN
Open Day and Night
Tables Reserved by Phone
104 WEST 130th STREET
ROBT. H. HILL. Prop.
Johnnie Jackson's Lunch
Now Located at
2285 SEVENTH AVENUE
Between 134th and 135th Sts.
Larger Quarters — Latest
Equipments
NEVER CLOSED
ELLERBE'S TEA ROOM
Formerly at 247 West 130th St.
Now Located at
205 WEST 130th STREET
Near Seventh Avenue
Meals Served, 10:30 A. M. to
10:30 P. M.
SPECIAL BOILED DINNERS Mon-
tage, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
REGULAR DAILY DINNERS,
6:30, Sunday and holiday,
8:30, Sunday and holiday, with
butter and maple syrup, 20c.
ROOSEVELT SEA FOOD and RESTAURANT
2195 Seventh Avenue
Near 130th St.
Harlem's Newest, Most Beautiful
and Modern Eating Place
Cholest of Fresh
Sea Foods and
Home Cooked Meals
Open All Night
Prices Very Reasonable
THE BOOIE ROOMING HOUSE
64 EGREGEMBE AVENUE.
All modern implemen-
tation facilities. Recreation,
other facilities for social functions.
W.M. E. BOOIE, Prop.
1900-1901.
Dolly Thorpe's Dinner Club
56 WEST 135th STREET
Wonderful Food
Moderately Priced
Surpasses Anything in Harlem
Lunch, 11 to 3; Dinner, 3 to 9.
Harlem 8615
WHEN AWAY FROM HOME
HOTEL ROCKLAND
3 TO 13 WEST 1868 ST.
NEW YORK CITY
Hot and cold water in each room;
immaculately clean; courteous treat-
ments; Special rates; DAILY or
WEEKLY CHAS. J. JONES, Prop.
LINCOLN ROOMS
Up-to-Date Single and Double
Rooms
With Hot and Cold Water, Showers
Transitics Accommodated
301 WEST 134th STREET
New York, N. Y.
Audubon 3777
HOTEL DUMAS
DINING ROOM
295 WEST 1234TH STREET
Phone Address 212-888-7777
STRICTLY HOME COOKING
Ideal Place for Banquets and Parties
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Davis, Prop.
HOTEL OLGA
NEW YORK CITY
695 Lenox Avenue
Corner 145th Street
SELECT FAMILY AND
TOURIST HOTEL
Bring your child and
Water in Each Room
All Rooms Outside Exposure
Service—
Subway and Cars at Door
Interes Reasonable
ED. J. WILSON, Prop.
Tcl. Audubn 3796
HOTEL DUMAS
100
Highest In Service
Lowest In Price
205 West 13th Street
AT SEVENTH AVENUE
Phone Anduhon 4123
Bingles, $135 and up per night
Steam heat, running hot and co
water in every room.
Used Cars
Re-built
Re-modeled
BRONX BUICK
200 OTHER TO SELECT FROM ALL RECONDITIONED EARns GRANTED FOR 6 MONTHS
GET OFF MOTT AVE. SURB, STATION-OPEN
TEL. NOT 4 Haven 0617
Long. East Term. Tender
A RELIABLE HOME FOR YOUR CAR
LOWEST RATES — SUPER SERVICE
$10
PER MONTH
Any Size Car
Live Storage
$10
PER MONTH
Any Make Car
VIADUCT GARAGE
235-49 West 154th Street, opp. 7th Ave., New York City
5 Minutes' Walk From 158th Street Station 8th Ave. "L"
Hotel Olga
Miss Maynard Eliott, Mrs. W. D. Williott, Mrs. J. H. Breland, C. Simpson, Mrs. S. Davis, Atlantic City; Mrs. G. Thomas King, Mrs. C. Wewbush, Mrs. M. Kinner Louis; Mrs. and Mrs. R. Thomas, Elizabeth, N. J.; Mrs. and Mrs. J. James Floyd, Abursy Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Elworth Benson, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Alston, Jack Pebra, John Day, Emily Dawson, Mr. and Mrs. A. Finney, Miss M. Townsend, G. W. Johnson, Philadelphia, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Scales, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Vanderpool, Mt. Kisco, N. Mr. and Mrs. William Bowling, New Haven, Miss E. V. Bolden, E. Morris, Stamford, C. E. Williams, Charles De Phillip, Phillip R. Alston, Clarence Willis, Boston, Frederick H. Williams, Savannah, Ga.; B. Brown, C. W. Moore, R. W. H. Penny, F. H. Butts, Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur McCoy, Memphis, Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs. W. Williams, Harrison; Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Harris, Lynchburg, Va.; Mrs. G. Bowman, Albany; George H. Carter, Charlotte, George H. Young, F. D. Jones, William H. Thomas, R. B. Parsons, Columbus, Ohio.
Captain Fitzpatrick, Youngstown,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clay, Paterson,
N. J.; Lindsey W. Hill, James
W. Wright, Wilton, Conn.; Miss Grace
Malsonette, Miss Aida Jette, Rochester;
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Young, White
Plains, Alonzo Morgan, Newton, Mass.
, John J. E. Jackson, Palmfield,
N. C.; Henry J. Roberts, Mr.
and Mrs. D. C. Virgo, Hendersen,
N. C.; Mr. and Mrs. James C. Murray,
Nashville; Mr. and Mrs. F. Morris, New
York; Mr. and Mrs. James Floyd,
Nashville; Mr. and Mrs. Roberts, Trenton;
Mr. and William Jones, Jersey City,
Emma Ransom House
Mrs. Pearl Johnson, St. Joseph, Mr. M.
Mrs. Hortense Phane, Springfield,
Miss. Miss Lillian Williams, Charles-
land, Miss. Miss Catherine Scott, Boston;
Miss Fannie Wintree, Miss Evelyn
Jackson, Mrs. Nellie Skinner, Mrs. Mary
Brown, Miss Catherine Scott, Loveletta Alen, Richmond; Mrs. C. D.
Fisher, the Misses Adelaide and Mary
Gillard, Miss Mildred Garland, Mrs. J.
Brown, Miss Sidney Strickens, N. C.; Mrs.
Bryant, Miss Cornella Bryant, Miss
Alma Washington, Miss Marjorie Young,
Delphinia; Miss Annie M. Mercer,
Miss Marjorie Young, Eleanor Alexander, Cleveland; Miss Lutilelle Ferguson, Miss Edith Burwell,
Lynchburg, Va.; Miss Marjorie Watkins,
Atlanta; Miss Marjorie Gillard, Huntington, W. Va.
Miss Hattie Cunningham, Lawrence.
Ride an Indian Motorcycle
$5
7 Starts You, on
Former
$20 Garnitured
Used Motorcycles
Open Evenings
STERN BROS.
1700 1st Ave. near $20 St.
Used
Re-built
Re-m
BRONX
USED AUTO
Oldest and Most Reliable Used
461 MOTT AVE, BETT
BARGAINS
BUICK '26 coach, late model,
sight repairs..... $125
JUICK '26 master coupe..... $125
JUICK '26 master coupe..... $125
CHRYSLER '26 coach..... $255
CHRYSLER '26 coupe..... $255
CHRYSLER '27 coupe..... $255
CHRYSLER roadster..... $255
200 OTHERS TO WALK ON
All reconditioned cars
461 MOTT
GET OFF MOTT AVE. SUB. STATION
Tel. MOTT Haven 8617
Long, Easy T
FREE AUTO
DRIVING COURSE
For anybody who buys one of our
used cars.
Price $50 and up
All Our Autos Are Guaranteed
SIX STERN BROS.
#
Be Sure to Mention The Amsterdam News When Calling on These Dealers.
A RELIABLE HOME LOWEST RATES
$10 PER MONTH Any Size Car
LIV STOR
VIADUCT
235-49 West 154th Street, op
5 Minutes' Walk From 155th
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
CITY NEWS BRIEFS
Treated at Hospitals
(As reported by the Police Department.)
HARLEM.
Sunday—Wesley Prichard, 2, 67 West
133d street; removed from the
bay of the Coastal, Henry Willi-
am, 31, 2232 Fifth avenue; possible
fracture of the skull by falling from the
stoop of his home into the basement.
Benjamin Green, 6, 187 West, 2414
street; black knuckle of the janitor, James Chappelle, James
Scott, 25, 16 West 137th street; laceration of the forehead during an alteration with two unknown men at 153d street; black knuckle of the Morelles, 24, 57 East Ninety-ninth street; laceration of the left shoulder during an alteration with an unknown man at
135th street and Eighth avenue. John
Robertson, 35, 830 West 119th street;
unknown man; removed to hospital.
Saturday—Mabel Snick, 22, 215 West 140th street; sprained ankle when she fell in hallway of 141 West 139th street. Alice Jones, 7, 246 West 141th street; Mary Jane Smith, 7, 246 West 141th street; Fannie Williams, 5, 244 Seventh avenue; illness; Mary Jane White, 48, 158 West 133d street; illness. Madeline Jenkins, 21, 218 Eighth avenue; illness. Walter Wyatt, 40, 24 Bradhure ave. illness. Amanda Anthony, 18, 140 West 14th street; illness. James Brooks, 21, 147 West 158d street; stab wound in the right side during an altercation with an unknown woman, against whom he refused to make a complaint. Algery 19, 246 Edgecomb avenue moved to the hospital with rheumatic fever.
**Friday—James Novels,** 2, 314 West 141st street; removed to hospital with pneumonia. Clark Johnson, 34, 140 West 138th street; overcome by the heat Robert Johnson, 45, 123 West 188th street; stab wounds in the left chest and arm; police are investigating. Frances Miller, 38, 2605 Seventh avenue; contusions of the scalp when she slipped on the floor. Thursday—Herman Brandt, 32, 260 West 158d街; picked up in a faint at 21 McCombs place and tooken to the West 188th street police station and received by Dr. Ashkil, Unnel Roles, 18, 252 West 158d街. Johnson, 48, 123 West 188th street; incarment of the back from a stab wound said to have been inflicted by another tenant; Detective Connelly investigated. Esther Fredericks, 25, same address, the same manner. Lenn McAllison, 23, 123 West 100th street; taken in ill of 2868 Eighth avenue. William Flemington, 24, 315 West 137th street; alcoholism. Robert Lee, 10, 202 West 158d街; left and the hallway; dog owned by Claude Domin, same address.
BELLEVUE,
Saturday—Wilhelmina Warring, 17
S. C.; Mrs. Mary Skinner, Miss S.
Skinner, Rossbury, Moss; Mrs. Mary J.
Lee, Hartford, Conn.; Mrs. Gladys H.
Bristow, Princeton, N. J.; Mrs. Nettle
R. Martin, Charleston, Va.; Mrs. M.
R. Manly, Tuckekee, Institute, Albemarle;
Miss Merle Barcliffe, Miss Carrie Boone,
Elizabeth City, N. C.; Mrs. Ruth Johnson,
Los Angeles.
MODELED
BUICK
TO CORP.
Car Dealers in Bronx County
148TH AND 149TH STS.
$ GALORE
CHRYSLER 25 roadster ... $675
JEEP coupe ... $90
NASH 26 coach ... $355
OVERLAND redin, late model ... $110
STAR coupe ... $165
STUDDEBAKER touring, late mod. ... $145
WHIPPET coach ... $245
OBEI quick, rock body ... $60
I. G. G. C. PAYMENT PLAN
announced for 6 months
AVENUE
BOX-OPEN EVENTINGS & SUNDAYS
connection with any other company
terms—Trades
BUY YOUR NEW OR USED CAR
Where You Get A
Discount on All 5% 10
Makes of Cars 10%
B. F. THOMAS
Broadway Auto School
817 WEST 123d ST. U18. 3698
We Do All Kinds of Repairing
Gearlance USER CARS
Lowest Price for Mechanically Perfect
Cars. Buy. Save.
PONTIAC. Buy. Save. excellent mechanical condition. sacrifice $350.
Oakland. Coach. 1928; wire wheels,
many extracts; like new; genuine
charpins; $630.
CHIEF. 1929 Sedan; thoroughly reconditioned; guaranteed;
must sacrifice $450.
CHIEF. 1930 Sedan; 928; excellent condition throughout; runs like new. Only $399.
CHIEF. 1930 Sedan; 928; excellent condition throughout; runs like new. Only $399.
602 West 132th St. Phone Univ. 7600
G. M. A. C. Time Payment Plan
E FOR YOUR CAR
- SUPER SERVICE
$10
PER MONTH
Any Make Car
GARAGE
p. 7th Ave., New York City
Street Station 8th Ave. "L"
101 West 133d street; labor pains
Treated by D. Caproza of Harlem Hospital and removed to the maternity ward at Bellevue.
After her Henderson, 18, 2712
Eighth avenue; removed to the observation ward.
COLUMBUS
Thursday--Margaret Gray, 23, 300
West 158d street; childbirth at home;
treated by Dr. Pecora. Isaac Booker,
289 West 146th street; possible fracture
of the skull; treated at home by Dr.
Marrello.
Struck by Motor Cars
Sunday-Jamison James, 25, 101 West 131st street; laceration of the left eyebrow and knee; taxicab driven by Elmo Winfree, 45 West Ninety-ninth street, at 141st street and Lenox avenue. Treated at Harlem Hospital.
Saturday-James Tate, 19, 298 West 149th street; laceration of the left ear in front of 271 West 150th street; taxi driven by John Clements, 230 West 147th street. Treated by Dr. Apfel of Harlem Hospital.
Agnes Joseph, 23, 8 West 182d street; contusions of the left-thigh-and-abrasions of both knees at the corner of 130th street and Lenox avenue; taxi driven by John Stewart, 350 West, 145th, street. Mrs. Joseph was standing in the safety sons and was run down and rendered unconscious. She was removed to Harlem Hospital in another taxicab driven by Hislop Arkles, 31 West 128th street, and later attended by a private physician. The accident occurred on June 8 and was reported Saturday by Detective Joseph G. Hasser of the Sixth Division.
Refer Brown, 21, 786 West 181st street; contusions of the body at 139th street and Lenox avenue while a passenger in a car driven by Ernest Laman, 531 Lenox avenue, which collided with another car driven by James Weeks, 160 West 120th street. Treated by Dr. Holley of Harlem Hospital.
Robert Nicholson, 35, 616 West 1818 street; sprain of the left knee at 123d street and Eighth avenue; taxi driven by Maroldo; Mothers struck Nicholson, it is said, while the latter was about to enter another cab. Hackett Marshall, 38, 226 West 121st street; refused medical aid when struck by Mothers struck Nicholson, it is said, while the latter was about to enter another cab. DavidA. Wilgins, 52, 2613 Eighth avenue; contusions of the left arm and leg at Lenox avenue and 133th street crosswalk; auto driven by Ed Johnson, 2 West Abraham Kellogg, 44, 2708 Eighth avenue, of P.S. S. contusions of the right knee and scam at 143th street and Eighth avenue; auto driven by William J. Benham Human Simmonsa, 44, 2707 West 1818 street, of P.S. S. contusions of the right foot, which was run over by the wheel of a truck driven by Theodore Perman, white, 38 East 103rd street, street; contusions of the left chest, abrasions of the right leg and laceration of the upper lip; taxicab driven by Michael Levinson, white, 41 Coster street, at 132d street and Fifth avenue. Injuries treated at Harlem Hospital.
Friday—Olive Ming, 10, 240 West 134th street, of P. S. 157; contusions of the left knee at Seventh avenue and 134th street; car driven by William Fraser, 80 Perry street. Treated at Harlem Hospital by Dr. Fugazzal. Louis Grant, 207 West 134th street. Was a witness.
David Christian, 5, 25 West 135th street; possible fracture of the skull and fracture of the left thigh, in front of 8 West 136th street; car driven by Albert Morant, 257 West 143rd street. Witness, Harry Oglesby, 241 West 130th street. Child removed to Harlem Hospital and treated by Dr. Fugazzal.
Ida Jenkins, 29, 114 West 135th street; contusions of the right elbow and chest; run down by Joseph Appel, white, 1692 Weeks avenue, at 135th street and Lenox avenue. Treated by Dr. Fugazzal at Harlem Hospital and sent home.
James Evans, 44, 115 West 134th street; sprained right ankle and contusion of the right knee, when a crunch driven by Charles Cohen, white, 612 Fox Street, the Bronx, backed into him while he was standing in the roadway in front of his home. Treated at Harlem Hospital by Dr. Ashkin.
Carrol Grace, S, 2452 Eighth avenue, or B, 119: abirations of the scalp, conclusion of the scalp, and slings of the stomachs of the pit of the stomach. Struck by a hit-and-run taxicab at 133d street in the city of Simmons, 234 West 143d street. Treated by Dr. Capo of Harlem Hospital.
Fell From Trolley Car
Saturday—Frank Boyan, 23, 214 West 148th street, sustained a laceration of the chin at Lenox avenue and 138th street when he fell from a trolley car as he stepped off while it was in motion. He was wounded, were, respectively, N. DeVito, white, 318 East 121st street and P. Goonan, white, 700 Westchester avenue.
Harlem Court Briefs
Before Magistrate Dodge.
Charged with being a fugitive from
Providence, R. I., Rossell Lee, 17, 123
East 110th street, was held without ball
in the courtroom on Thursday.
James Smith, 38, 14 East 135th street,
was held without ball for the Grand
Jury when arraigned, charged with
burglarizing the photographing store of
Miss Erlina, Thursday.
Cyrus Benn, 23, a garage worker, 61
West 137th street, was held in $1,000 ball
for a further hearing when arraigned
Thursday on a statutory charge made
Miss Erlina, 18, 25 Bradhurst
Elsie Wroteen, 28, 264 West 122nd
street, was discharged Thursday from
a charge of felonious assault when the
St. Nicholas avenue, failed to appear.
Frank Lebalsame (white), 24, an ice
dealer, 228 East 104th street, was held in
$500 ball for a further hearing when
Dodge in Harlem courts on a charge
impaling the morals of a minor ten
years of age.
Sam Brown, 38, 151 West 117th street,
was held in $500 ball for a further hearing
in arraigned on a charge of polite
larceny.
John Bradley, 27, $80 St. Nicholas avenue, was fined $10 last Wednesday for tamming in a fire alarm of fire from the box at Lenox avenue and 130th street.
Louis Schrier, 24, a chauffeur, 29 West 190th street, was fined $25 last Wednesday and a chauffeur, 20 Olivey Lovell, a chauffeur of 222 West 190th street, with an automobile crankhandle.
John Parker, 26, and Dan Overett, 25,
Consulting Mathematician,
Accountant, Instructor
G. L. MAXEY JR.
198 W. 134th STREET
Bloomington 2106
SICK MEN and WOMEN
SICK MEN and WOMEN
Are you satisfied to carry that LOAD OF SICKNESS, thereby letting the PRIZES OF LIFE go to those better equipped because of their SPLENDID HEALTH?
If you are disheartened, why not come to my office? Disorders of the Nose, Throat, Lung, Biomach, Bowel, Liver, Kidneys, Bladder, Skin, Chronic Blood and Nervous Disorders, Rheumatism, and Handache, as well as Complicated Diseases of both Men and Women, have yielded to my treatment. Where others have failed, another may succeed. Before accepting a patient for treatment, a thorough examination is imperative, employing, when necessary, Blood, Urine, Urinary and other Laboratory Tests, including the X-Ray, intravenous and intermuscular injections are employed. Delays are dangerous. Be examined TODAY. If in my opinion I cannot benefit you, I will tell you so. Office Hours: 8 A.M.-4 P.M. and 8 P.M. to 8 P.M. Sundays and Holidays: 18 A.M. to 1 P.M.
400 West 1458 street, were sentenced to
ten days each in the workhouse
Thursday. A policeman caught the two
men on the roof and they were unable
to escape. The police arrested George Martin, 21, 1130 East 1188
street, was held in $1,000 bail on a
charge of felonious assault Saturday on
complaint of Rose Wilson, 134 East 1198
street.
New Varsa, 30, 304 West 1218
street, was discharged from a charge
of having cut Albert Valdespino, 216
West 1168 street, on the hand with a
Before Maristrate Dodge.
Charged with an annoying subway passengers by offering pencils for sale as they passed through subway trains, Joseph Rice, 40, 306 East 110th street, street address, sentence, while James Payne, 51, 765 Sixth avenue, was fired. 55
Heights Court Briefs
Before Magistrate Simpson.
Sunday—Jayne Turner, 7, 211 West
1491 St. James, 1491 St. West
137th street, where found guilty of
disorderly conduct and received sus-
pended sentences, while Walter Smith,
23, 225 West 146th street, arrested on
the same charge, was dismissed.
Before Magistrate Flood.
Monday—William Haywood, 46, 591
Lenox avenue; arrested on a slot
machine charge; dismissed.
Leroy Campbell, 28, 222 West Twenty-
third street; grand larceny; on complaint:
Patrolman Jordan of the West
185th street station; no ball, for a
further hearing today.
Before Magistrate Well.
Saturday—Arthur Lowery, 22, 617
West 141st street; felonious assault on
complaint of Lucas Shauches, 13 West
132d street. Arrested by Detective
and arrested on a 15,000 ball for a
further hearing today.
William Harris, 24, 216 West 166th
street; arrested on the serious charge
SICK MEN and
Are you satisfied to carry that LOAD
the PRIZES OF LIFE go to those
the SPLENDIDI
If you are disheartened by your
Tarot, Lange, Stomach, Bowel, Liver,
Blood and Nervous Distressers, Rheumatics
Plicated Diseases of both Men and Women
to my imaginary, These others may
may succeed. Before accepting a pati-
ment, a thorough examination is impor-
tant in determining whether Blood and
Laboratory Tests, including the X-Ray,
and intermuscular injections are employ-
ed to Diagnose. If in my opinion I cannot benefit you, I
Office Hours: 8 A.M.-1 P.M. and 8 P.
Sundays and Holidays, 10 A.M. to
Dr. A. B. DAVIS
(SPECIALIST)
LOOK!
Beauty Shops
MANKINY BEAUTY SHOPPE
80 W. 16th St. N. Edgerton, MA.
Ethi Elkhares Smith, Prop.
Scientific hair culture, massaging
Scientific hair culture, massaging
Diplomas awarded. Open daily, 15
A. N. to 18 P. N.
MARTHA SAMPSON.
"Nu-Life" System. Sampons Beauti-
ty Taping Parlor of Beauty Culture
Dressing. Dressing. Brow-taught.
Diplomas awarded. 100 W.
180th St. N. I. Audubon 881.
KITTY'S BEAUTY SHOPPE
148 W. 17th St. Edgerton, MA.
Specialist in electric Massage, French Mad Peak.
RUTH D. SMITH, Prop.
TRY
MME PHIHZEES'S BEAUTY MASK
A discovery of the world's study.
It is the greatest skin beautifier.
It eliminates blackheads, draws up
masses of skin, firm and clear. Women of advanced
years will have the complexion of
WEST 186th St. near Lesox Ave.
401-861-300 Drive, Jamiea, L.
ISABELLA CHILDS WRIGHT
Assistant Teacher
Positively booing. French Mural-
culing taught. 447 Lobox Ave. bet.
182d and 183d Sts.
MME. S. SIMMONS
Hale Business - Foose System
Manicuring - Facial Massage
System Taught and
812 W. 185th St., 1st Floor. Edge. 2598
MME. FANNIE E. GRAY
Formerly of 822 W. 185th St., wishes
to announce that she is now con-
nected with Hunter Beauty Perior,
168 185th St., Bob Morrissy, Ex-
port Hall and French Marcelo,
Cathedral 2854.
MARGARITA JACKSON
EXPERT SCALP SPECIALIST
Guarantees satisfaction in the treat-
ment of your needs.
Appointments at your home or 185
W. 185th St. Cathedral 2854.
Mme. C. J. Beauty Salon
110 West 136th St.
WAVES OF BEAUTY AND GRACE
We meet your every
BEAUTY NEED
Stilied Operators
Mrs. Maybelle Roane, Mgr.
Brad. 4678
ROSA SPANNER
$2 EAST 136th St. Harlem 8664
Beauty Shoppe—Apex System
Hairdressing, Facial Massaging,
Manicure and Spa Treatment,
Hair Drying
ELKO BEAUTY SUPPLIES
129 WEST 136th St.
Elko Supreme Hair Grower is guar-
mented to grow hair two inches with-
in when used with Elko Tar Shampoo.
SEND $1.00 FOR TRIAL
NELLIE JONES' BEAUTY
SHOPPE
$262 WEST 136th St. Hendhurst 1978
Walker System
Electric Scalp Treatment
Facial Massage—Manicure
System Tugged
MME. A. MAINS
Futto System
No Hair Treatment or Fatto
Try It and Be Convinced
$264 EIGHTH AVE.
LILAC BEAUTY SALON
Apex System
All Branches of Beauty Work
System Taught
Marketing & Specialty
684 ST. NICHOLAS AVE.
(Cor. 160th SL)
Brad. 0911
Business Guide
of a 15-year-old girl by Detective Garvey and held in $1,000 bail for a further hearing on short notice, which he found onondaughter the girl *Harris* home on May 19. The law firm of Lavelle & Marshall, 200 West 135th street, is defending Harris.
Friday—Alphonse Williams, 88, 88 West 135th street; vagrancy; pleaded guilty and sentenced to three months in the workhouse.
Arrested by officers of the Pickpocket Squad, William McKetcham, 18, 114 West 135th street, and Willie Green, 28, 2431 Eighth avenue, were sentenced to five and six months in the workhouse, respectively, on charges of disorderly conduct.
Phillip Griffith, 24, 269 West 126th street, arrested during a fight with his wife, Delmetha, 211 West 148th street, was found guilty of disorderly conduct and given suspended sentence. West 126th Street, accused by Poloweoman Nettle Sweatman of practicing medicine without a license, was held in $200 ball for a further hearing tomorrow. West 126th Street, 88, 541 Lenox avenue; violation of corporation ordinance; fined $1.
Burley Price, 42, 246 West 146th street; disorderly behavior on complaint of sentence sustained. Price, city address; guilty; sentence sustained.
Arrested on pickpockets, John Tucker, 58, 810 Grand street, Jersey City, N. J., was held without ball and George Shell, 35, 2077 Henry street, Long Island City, N. J., held $3,600 ball, for both a for-aurther hearing on Friday, on charges of disorderly conduct.
Refusing to give his first name, one
REMOVE THE CAUSE
BLOOD PEP
RHEUMATISM
INDGESTION-CONSTIPATION
A BOTTLE OF HEALTH FOR
AT DRUNKISTS
or write RP 168 175 N.C.
AND WOMEN
HEAD OF SICKNESS, thereby letting
more better equipped because of
HID HEALTH?
to my office. Diseases of the Nose,
eye, Mouth, Digestion, Chronic
Artism and Headache, as well as Com-
munity, have yielded
to failed, another
failure, where
operative, employ-
ment and other
travelers are
involved when indi-
vidualized TODAY.
P. will tell you so.
P. will 10 P. M.
to 1 P. M.
120 EAST 29th ST.
Bet. Lexington and 4th Ave.
NEW YORK
Business
Beauty Shops (Con't)
LEE'S BEAUTY SHOPPE
All Branches of Beauty Culture
Mareel Waving
Lake View Waving
Elsey Window, Manicurist
166 W. 186th St. Formerly 802 W. 144th
MNE, G. O. COAXUM
HAIRDRESSER NABARLO
Fallo System
No hair too short for Fallo to grow
Phone Bradhurst 1373
802 WEST 144th ST.
Elliott's Beauty Parlor
Apex System
Hairdressing and Manicuring. Facial
Massage and Manicuring. Two ope-
tions.
W. 186th St. Satin Shin Are.
Open B.A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Brad. 4857-
Beauty Culture
Thick lips are ugly. Nu-Lips will make them thin and beautiful. Thousands recommend it.
PRICE $1.55 BOX
Write to
NU-LIP COMPANY
770 Hegney Place, New York City
Blacksmith and Welder
A. L. EASTMOND
Auto Blacksmith and Welder
Chasse Straightened and Welding
Towing—Day and Night
TOWING WEEK
Day Phone Brainday 2540
Night Mott Haven 2808
NICK'S
ICE-COLL-WOOD
I Delivery All Over Harlem
67 WEST 184th ST.
Phone Harlem 9483
Commercial Art
ART FOR ADVERTISING
ILLUSTRATION
PHONE
HARLEM
3484
Hy-Ads
2189-244
N.Y.C.
COPY
LAYOUT
DESIGN
Dressmaker
N. VAUGHN
EXPERIENCED DRESSMAKER
200 West 138th Street, Apt. 4
Bridal Gowns, $1.00-$7.00
Dresses From $8.00-$15.00
Usher Dresses, $8.75
Open Bay and Night Tel. Brad. 8864
B. HARRISE
LICKENSED PIANO MOVER
864 WEST 18:3rd ST. NEW YORK
Electrician
Bradhurst 8154 Prompt Service
SEE SAWYER
For Electrical Work
874 West 10th Street New York City
PROTECT YOURSELF AND FAMILY REAL LIFE INSURANCE
Gentlemen, I want to take advantage of your offer of a Special Life Insurance policy for $100. I enclose check or money order for $1.00 to pay for first month's premium.
My Name Is... Write name in full—Do not use initials
My Address Is... Street City State
Beneficiary
(Write here the full name of the persons to whom you want insur-
NOTE—This insurance will become effective if and when issued by the Underwriters Mutual Life Insurance Company at its Home Office in Chicago. A short-form application for this Insurance will be mailed to applicants in accordance with requirements. The Underwriters Mutual Life Insurance Company reserves the right to reject any application for this Insurance for any cause whatsoever, and in such cases will return to the applicant the full amount of the payment sent with this Coupon. This offer open only to persons between 9% years of age and 50 years of age. Only one Policy to a person
THE
Hawayne, 27, 210 West 147th street, was
suspended. He was suspended. Sen-
lence, it was suspended.
Special Sessions
The following were included among the prisoners sentenced Friday in Special Sessions:
PROTECT YOURS REAL LIFE
AMOUNT OF INSURANCE YOU GET FOR $1 PER MO.
Age 10
Amt. of Triple Indemnity
Amt. of Amt. for Nat-
10 42,058.00 1,370.00 6855.00
11 2,095.00 1,330.00 675.00
12 1,962.00 1,208.00 654.00
13 1,932.00 1,283.00 644.00
14 1,908.00 1,272.00 638.00
15 1,875.00 1,350.00 625.00
16 1,839.00 1,228.00 618.00
17 1,803.00 1,202.00 601.00
18 1,767.00 1,178.00 589.00
20 1,731.00 1,154.00 577.00
21 1,692.00 1,132.00 568.00
22 1,659.00 1,108.00 552.00
23 1,622.00 1,082.00 541.00
24 1,587.00 1,085.00 539.00
25 1,548.00 1,022.00 505.00
26 1,527.00 1,000.00 503.00
27 1,475.00 988.00 481.00
28 1,445.00 982.00 469.00
29 1,407.00 938.00 456.00
30 1,363.00 912.00 436.00
31 1,382.00 888.00 444.00
32 1,259.00 868.00 422.00
33 1,262.00 842.00 421.00
34 1,227.00 818.00 409.00
35 1,191.00 794.00 377.00
36 1,155.00 770.00 356.00
37 1,122.00 745.00 374.00
38 1,086.00 724.00 362.00
39 1,053.00 702.00 351.00
40 1,017.00 678.00 328.00
41 959.00 654.00 317.00
42 951.00 634.00 308.00
43 918.00 612.00 296.00
44 885.00 590.00 295.00
45 852.00 568.00 254.00
46 819.00 546.00 272.00
47 789.00 526.00 263.0
MAIL THIS COUNTY UNDERWRITERS MUTUAL LINK 1119 North Fifth Street, Houston, Texas Gentlemen: I want to take a Life Insurance Policy without need kind. I enclose check or money or premium.
My Name Is... Write name in full.
My Address Is... Street
Date of Birth... Day Month
Beneficiary
(Write here the full name of unance malal or death.)
NOTE—this insurance will be the underwriter. The underwriter will be the Chicago. A short-form application applicants in accordance with requirements Insurance Company reserves the right Insurance for any cause whatsoever the applicant the full amount of the This offer open only to person years of age. Only one Policy to a
THE
ness
Grocers
JEFFER'S GROCERY
69 WEST 181ST STREET
We Can Cater You
Meats and
Country Sausage
Phone HARIBIM 7164
MAE DUNDAS
JANETE SUPREME SYSTEM
Visiting and at Home
114 Wash Street, Apt. 8
Phone University 4464
Hairdresser (Cont.)
Bradhurst 7668
Hourst 19 A. M. to 1 P. M.
Mme. L. Wardle, Mitchell
AFEX SYSTEM
Scientific Hair Culture, Manuring
Facial Massage
Waving
110 West 143d Street
Apt. A
NEW YORK CITY
Hair Preparations
DR. DELANO'S COCO-TAB HAIR
GLOWER FOR HAIRS
Two inches in two months. On sale
at 916 West 181st St. M. Fatterson,
agent.
Masseuse
LICENSED SCIENTIFIC
MASSEUSE
108 WEST 186th St.
treatment Phone Edge. 8398
Music Instructor
MRS. M. E. HINES
259 WEST 186th St. All Wind Music.
Piano Instructor. All Wind Music.
Violin Lessons. 12:30 A. M. to 10:30
P. M.
Children's Nursery
REFINED NURSERY FOR CHIL-
DREAUGHT 186th St.
Apt. 3, ground floor. Phone Uni-
versity 6188. Mrs. Phillips.
Nursery School
A NURSERY SCHOOL
FOR CHILDREN 1 TO 7 YEARS
A Thorough Moral, Physical and
Intellectual Development
Convenient to All Parents
Maywood Pinkett, Directress
228 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. Aud. 9768
Painter and Decorator
PAINTING CONTRACTOR
Good Work
Responsable Prices
CHARLES FLORENT
860 Edgecombe Ave.
Phone Audubon 6476
R. L. NICHOLSON
WELL-KNOWN PAINTER AND
DECORATOR
We paint four rooms for $60; six
rooms for $60 and up. Scalloped
outside, windows, two coats paint, $1.80
each.
148 WEST 126th STREET
Phone: 86083456
8601
PIANO SLIP COVERS
I specialize in high-grade slip covers, pianos, players, players, OSCAR HOLT, S. E. 14th St, Algonquin 9211.
SEN-
tion
possession of metal knuckles, penitentiary; Alice Jones, 34, 20 West 187th street, possession of drugs, six months; May Coleman, 22, 114 West 120th street, shoplifting, three months; William Thomas, 28, 222 Cherry street, petit lavey, three months; William Stevena, a seaman, 25 south street, drug addict.
URSELF AND FAMILY
FE INSURANCE
Only $1 Per Mo.
NO MEDICAL EXAMINATION
NO RED TAPE
FULL CASH: SURRENDER VALUE
POLICY SOLD ON LEGAL RESERVE BASIS
Don't go around unprotected another day. Read the table, at left, and find the names of the people whose figures alongside tell you how much insurance is received for $1.40 per month. Note that you get twice as much if death occurs, so much more if much death is due to travel accidents. Once insurance is secured at the present date, you get a pass up. It is your duty to husband or wife on your family protected. Send in the coupon with $1.00 TODAY and be safe.
READ WHAT OTHERS SAY
Too much cannot be said concerning your wonderful Insurance Co. Your prompt settlement of my claim made me pay for Johnson, 623 W. 10th St. Rock, Ark.
Underwriters Insurance Service is most prompt and courteous. I recommend it to everyone. L. B. Williams, 4602 Indiana A. St.
We pray that the Underwriters Insurance Co. may ever go on being successful, for we are highly pleased with its figures and Elizabeth Marshall, Indiana Ind.
LIFE INSURANCE CO.
MILITARY ORDER FOR A DISASTER. ILL.
take advantage of your offer of a special
medical examination or red tape of any
key order for $1.00 to pay for first month's
in full—Do not use initials
City State
My Age Is.
th Year
of the persons to whom you want insur-
lance become effective if and when issued by
Insurance Company. If Home Office in
writing for this Insurance will be mailed to
requirements. The Underwritter Mutual Life
right to reject any application for this
cover, and in such cases will return to
of the payment sent with this Coupon.
persons between 9½ years of age and 50
to a person.
Guide
Printing
EUREKA PRESS
High Grade Printing
Binding and
Drawing of Every Description
L. W. Warner, Sec. Manager,
446 LENOX AVE.
Harlem 461H
446 LENOX AVE.
DUNBAR RADIO
ENGINEERING CO.
Expert Radiotechnics, Kochsmiths
and Electricians
Repair Specialists on All Makes of
Batteries Charged, Emergency Service
2388 SEVENTH AVE.
Det. 14th St. and 14th Sts.
Bradhamst 2381
GARY - POTTER
RADIO and BATTERY SERVICE
Battery Recharging
Delivery and Central Service
2192 SEVENTH AVE.
Brad. 2194
Religious Articles
We can supply you with all kinds of
Religious Lighting, Fonts, Rosaries,
Vigil Lights, and Holy Water Bottles, RELIGIOUS
187th St. Andover 2197
Rheumatism
If You Are Suffering From Rheumatism, Neuritis or Lumbago
Prof. T. G. Jackson can relieve you.
Try him and be creative.
Take treatment by appointment at your home or his office.
1203 WEST 126th ST. Cathedral 8190
School of Languages
French, Spanish, Italian, German, English
Short courses—conservational methods
Experiential native teachers
Fisher's School of Languages
75c¢ 1404 LEXINGTON AVE.
hour Bout. 88th and 88th St.
R. PILGRIM & CO.
Shoes for men, women and children.
Prices to meet the need of all. Fill
the Harlem 7481. Established 1988.
Phone Bradburst 2871
GEO, W. McDERMON
SIGNS "Of the Butter Kind"
108 West 18th St., New York City
Hours Daily From 10 A.M. to 10 P.M.
Phone Bradstreet #122
Distributing history of the old religion.
RUTH & RUTH, Spiritual Advisers
#228 Seventh Ave., New York
Borough of New York.
They have eyes of an X-Ray; they can look through your body and tell you about your infected parts. Should you have an infected part, the above address and they will put you on the road to success.
Undertakers
Residence 285 W. 53th St.
Phone Columbus 1256
Office Phone Alwater 1261
EUGENE H. PLASKETT
Licensed
Embalmer and Undertaker
Shipping Specialty
of Chanel Free
800 EAST 100th STREET, N. Y. O.
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 of disreputable character, menials, and those possessed of ill-gotten gains.
Mrs. Sara Rawlins, 8 West 130th
greet, spent the week-end in Philadelphia.
Mrs. Joseph H. Sweeney, 2424
seventh avenue, has returned from
Rosnoke, Va., where she was the
guest of her brother, James Elliott.
Stuart L. Whitting, an instructor of
business English and accounting at
Hampton Institute, has been in the
city more than a week.
Dr. W. Wallace Andrews of Washington, D. C., spent several days in the city last week.
George W. Fields of Charles Dillingham's office, with Mrs. Fields,
will enjoy the ocean breezes of Asbury Park for the next two weeks.
Mrs. Julia Dudley, 2417 Seventh avenue, has as her house guest Miss Eise Green, the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Green.
Charles Hunter, 76 St. Nicholas place, who has been in the Wiley Wilson Sanitarium more than two weeks, was operated on Friday.
Misses Thelma and Julia Lay, who attended Scotia at Concord, N. C., are visiting their brother, Preston Lay, 8 East 115th street, for the summer.
Miss Lillian E. Cashin, professor of English and comparative literature at Pisk University in Nashville, and Miss Willie P. Russell of Waukee, Ill., one of her pupils who taught English and French in the Kentucky Normal School, Frankfort, Ky., sailed at midnight last night on the S. Paris.
Miss Cashin, the first Negro woman to hold a chair in comparative literature in a college, will do work in the principal libraries of England, Scotland, Germany and France leaden to the doctorate degree. She will direct the reading of Miss Russell in preparation for her work as teacher in the schools of Durham, N. O., in the fall.
Mrs. Anna Jones-Robinson. 103 West 141st street. gave a surprise bridge-shower Friday night in honor of Miss Louise Craig, who will be married on Saturday in Washington to Claude N. Lane.
Mrs. Madeline Edwards and her daughter, Doris, are visiting at 335 Edgecombe avenue, Apartment 4-F for another week. They are residents of Buffalo.
Foley Graden, tenor, formerly of Ocala, Fla., returned to the States from Australia on Saturday. He is on the Keith circuit and may be in this country about eight weeks.
Mrs. Annette Johnson. 728 St. Nicholas avenue. has returned home after a three weeks' illness in the presbyterian Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac E. McLean of
White while you sleep!
If you want a whiter, prettier complexion, you can have it with Nadinola! You can secure the light-toned beauty that all your friends will admire and envy with this double-quick, extra-powerful bleach. Nadinola, the amazing skin-whitener, will bring you this new loveliness just as it has done for thousands of attractive women. No tedious waiting for results—no disappointments.
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 oiliness 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.
Nadinola contains the most powerful skin-whitening properties known to beauty science, yet
Nadinola
Makes skin whiter while you sleep
SOCIETY
ATED portion of any community relations and influences."—Webster.
the society, the more pos- should be of good char- worthwhile endeavor and
stess excludes from social outable character, menials, gotten gains.
BACK HOME
MARIA MAYORAL
After a three and a half months' visit in the far West, Mrs. Louise M. Jackson, wife of Major William H. Jackson, has returned home.
She visited friends and was highly entertained in Columbus, Chicago, St. Louis, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Denver. In Los Angeles Mrs. Jackson was the house guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rivers. Mrs. Rivers, by the way, was the former Miss Carolyn Minort.
Collonna House, Georgetown, British Guiana, sailed on the Sa. Voltaire last week for their home. They were here for three weeks visiting Mr. Mclean's sister, Mrs. T. A. Berry, 470 West 146th street.
Mrs. Saille A. Barnes, 246 West 130th street, left the city Monday afternoon for Ocala, Fla., where her mother, Mrs. Josephine E. Smith, is ill.
Madame Estelle, head of the Nu Life System of Beauty Culture, has returned to the city after having visited her agents in Pittsburgh, Bradock and Duquesne, Pa.
Mrs. Matilda Riddick of Ports-
Deltas to Have Tea
Alpha Sigma Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority will entertain all visiting sorors on Sunday afternoon, June 30, from 3 to 6 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Alice Fairclough 2588 Seventh avenue. All visiting members of Delta are hereby invited to attend.
er skin
Nellie B who work dresses tr were the baskets of Churchill suit of iv Gilbert best man Foster, F Arthur E brother of The br beach a beads to A receiver Studio mony. T noon a b at the he Besides t mate fri ent. Mr. and living at at home from 4 to is a gra School a School. secretary concern. of the M
it is prepared so skillfully that it cannot possibly harm the most delicate skin.
Don't let the days go by while you wish you had a lovely, lighttoned skin—start tonight with Nadinola! Stop at your favorite toilet goods counter today and ask for Nadinola Bleaching Cream. Fifty cents for a good-sized jar. (Extra large size $1.) [If you can't buy Nadinola where you live, send us 50 cents or a dollar and we will mail it to you at once, with valuable FREE Nadinola Beauty Booklet and generous gift sample of Nadine Face Powder. Address, Dept. A, National Toilet Co.; Paris, Tenn.
Bleaching Cream ivory sat on and ried a b illies of Clendenn was the r
Coral J. Lowe Now Mrs. B. S. Anderson
A select group of social celebrities witnessed the marriage of Miss Coral Jacqueline Lowe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bryant Lowe, 59 West 130th street, to Bruce Schuyler Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Anderson, of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., at St. Philip's Church Thursday at 8:30 o'clock. The Rev. Father Shelton Hale Bishop officiated.
The bride was given in marriage by her father. Her ivory satin gown with duehess lace-godets had a bodice of princess effect and a long, clinging skirt draped in back. She wore a num effect tulle veil with a jewel cap. On her train were orange blossoms, and her bouquet was of calla illies.
Mrs. Marguerite Wilson, matron of honor, wore a gold metal cloth dress which shaded into green and rose at the bottom. Her hat was of green horsehair; her slippers, gold kid with hand-painted flowers; her flowers, pink roses and lilies of the valley.
The maid of honor was Miss Wilhelmia J. Lowe, sister of the bride. She wore an orange taffeta and tulle gown and a nude-colored horsehair hat with a huge orange bow to the side. Her slippers and roses were orange.
The bridesmaids wore dresses of taffetta and tulle, princess effect, in rainbow colors. Miss Iris Wilson, of Brooklyn, wore dark and light green; Miss Helen Douglass, pink and rose; Miss Ethel Wilson, orchid and lavendar; Miss Mildred Brown, of Mr. Vernon, canary yellow and brown. Each carried a bouquet of deep pink roses and lilies of the valley.
Nellie Eppe and Clarisse Quinney, who wore yellow taffetta and tulle dresses trimmed with forget-me-nots, were the flower girls. They carried baskets of sweet peas. William P. Churchill Jr., the page boy, wore a suit of ivory satin.
Gilbert Anderson was the groom's best man. The ushers were Mahlon Foster, Fredrick Hill, J. S. Wilson, Arthur Edwards and Richard Lowe, brother of the bride. The bride gave her attendants each a chiffon handkerchief and beads to match their dresses. A reception was held at the Walker Studio immediately after the ceremony. The following day at high noon a bridal breakfast was served at the home of the bride's parents. Besides the bridal party a few intimate friends of the couple were present.
Mr. and Mrs. Anderson, who are living at 618 East 219th street, are at home to their friends Sunday from 4 to 10 o'clock. Mrs. Anderson is a graduate of the Morris High School and the Woods' Secretarial School. At present she is private secretary with a downtown business concern. Mr. Anderson is a graduate of the Mt. Vernon High School and the Mt. Vernon Commercial Business School. He is employed in the Mt. Vernon post office. The couple spent the week-end in Atlantic City, but they will go to Niagara Falls and Canada in July.
Miss Nina Shervington, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Shervington, 228 West 149th street, became the bride of James D. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brown, 199 Halsey street, Brooklyn, last Wednesday night at 8 o'clock at St. Phillip's Church. The Rev. Pather Shelton Hale Bishop officiated. A reception was held at the home of the bride's parents immediately after the ceremony.
The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of ivory satin trimmed with moire ribbon and orange blossoms. She carried a bouquet of white roses and ilies of the valley. Miss Winifred Clendennant, who were green chiffon, was the maid of honor.
The other bridesmaids, who were gowned in orchid chiffon, were Misses Alice Hughes, Ruth Conley, Gladys Praxier and Hilda Parker.
Mr. Brown had Frank Flagg for
---
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
THE WEDDING
Left to right: Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Anderson, Miss Iris Wilson, Miss Helen Donglas, Mrs. Marguerite Bolling Wilson; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Schuyler Anderson, groom and bride, Willemina J. Lowe, Miss Mildred Brown, Miss Ethel Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Lowe, Mrs. Epspe. Back row: Malom Foster, Fred Wilson; Gilbert Anderson, best man; J. S. Wilson, Arthur Edwards; Richard B. Lowe Jr., brother of the bride. The children are: William P. Churchill Jr., Clarice Quinney, Nellie Epspe.
Young Couple Spend Week End in Atlantic City; to Go to Falls in July
Brown—Sherylurton.
WEDDINGS
A·S·BECK FEATURES
WHITE
FOR GRADUATIONS AND VACATIONS
White 'shoes are more important this summer than ever—because they contrast so dashingly with sunburned bare legs.
SPECIAL VALUE
HOSIERY
Guaranteed £15 SHEER
Perfect
9 Points—£2.25
Kidskins for vacation chic . . . satins for weddings and graduations . . . all at A. S. Beck's phenomenal price!
A·S·BECK·SHOES
```markdown
```
his best man. The ushers were Charles Wilson, Norris Shervington, Charles Conley and Roger Chaney. A miscellaneous shower was given in late May by the Polly Perts, a club of which the bride is president. Mrs. Frances Greene, 214 Bradhurst avenue, gave a kitchen shower on Wednesday, June 12.
Mr. and Mrs. Brown are at home to their friends, in their cozy apartment at 205 West 150th street, on Sunday. The bride is a graduate of Wadleigh High School; the groom is a student at City College.
Rev. E. Payne of Charleston, S. C., is stopping at 11½ West 133th street, New York City.-Advt.
The St. Paul League of Greater New York met in the club room at St. Philip's Parish House last Thursday night. The Rev. N. B. Boyd gave a brief resume of the commencement exercises and of the progress of St. Paul School.
The Bescony Girls' Club met at the
BECK FEAT
DUATIONS AND V
SPECIAL VALUE
HOSIERY
Guaranteed £1.15 SHEER
Perfect
SERVICE
3 Pairs—23.25
BECK·S
THE — 545 FIFTH AVENUE
$5
ALL ONE
PRICE
ALL STORES OPEN EVENINGS
home of the president, Miss Jervina
E. Reeder, 246 West 139th street, last
Friday evening. The Bescony Boys
came by for the social hour.
The Bescony Club went to Pallisade Park Sunday morning.
The Hyacinth Club was entertained
by Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel Colon Frid-
day night at The Dark Tower. This
marked the last meeting of the club
for the season.
Specially invited guests were Judge
Scotland of Newark, and Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer A. Carter.
The Sussex Cricket and Social
Club met last Tuesday evening at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Branford
THE NEW YORKER
CLIP THIS AD IT'S WORTH $25.00 SPECIAL INDUCEMENT OFFER $100 Beauty Course For ONLY $75
WE TEACH THE MOST AUTHORITATIVE METHODS. AND NEWEST IDEAS OF SCIENTIFIC BEAUTY CULTURE EVERY TEACHER IN THE VARIOUS BRANCHES OF SCIENTIFIC STUDY IS SKILFULLY TRAINED, DEXTEROUS AND COMPETENT
Madame Sara Spencer Washington, founder and president of the Apex College, is offering a full and complete science course in Apex Beauty Culture for only $15 for a period of 60 days, from July 14, 1929.
The applicant must register and pay the REGISTRATION FEE of $10 before September 14th, 1929, at the
Coupon value ..... $25.00
Registration fee ..... 10.00
Balance (in weekly payments) ..... 65.00
$100.00
REGISTRATION FEE MUST BE PAID BEFORE AUGUST 31st
(Course can be completed in 8 or 10 weeks)
I herewith enclose a money order for $16 as REGISTRATION FEE to be applied on a full and complete course in Apex Beauty Culture, for which I am to receive a diploma upon graduation. I wish to enter class on
Church Clubs to Honor High School Graduates
The Young Women's Council and the Young Hostesses, both of St. Philip's Church, are entertaining with a party in honor of the high school graduates of Manhattan on Monday evening, July 1, at the Parish House, 215 West 133d street. Two hundred couples are being invited.
The members of both groups are as follows: Misses Virginia Boyd, Gwendolyn Brown, Dorothea Dismuke, Helen Douglas, Ethel Harris, Eisie Hunter, Helen Imrie, Anna Jones, Mildred Myers, Rae Olly, Viola Phoenix, Eunice Shreeves, Anna Salths, Ruth Stevenson, Elise Styles, Sadella TenEyck, Agnes Young; Mesdame Shelah Bain Jackson, Dorothy Boyd Faige and Bernice Wilson Slaughter.
Dash. 60 West 128th street. J. T
Phillips presented the club a bat.
Invitations have been issued by the Teneco Club, Inc., for its summer dance at Washington Irving High School roof garden, 40 Irving place. on Saturday evening, July 6, from 8 to 12 o'clock.
The Junior Matrons gave their closing bridge party Friday night at the Myrtle Anderson Welfare Center, 132 West 136th street. The prize
(Continued on Page 7.)
FIVE
BIRTHDAY PARTY.
On Saturday evening, June 15, Miss Gladys Ophelia Bryce of 379 West 157th street gave a birthday surprise party in honor of Miss Rosa Clarke. The house, decorated with yellow, and pink June roses in the foliage. During the course of the evening a delightful repast was served, after which the happy company enjoyed themselves with dancing. Music was furnished by Mr. H. Cumming, pianist, and Mr. Harold, violinist. Miss Ophelia was the recipient of many useful and beautiful presents.
Among those present were: Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Hunt Sr., Mr. and Mrs. William Trott, Mr. and Mrs. William Hayward, Mr. and Mrs. Engene Means,
Mr. and Mrs. Adolphus Crichlow, Mrs. May Logan, Mrs. Oscar Galloway, Mrs. R Collins, Mrs. Anna Marke, Mrs. Corbin, Mrs. Norman Fraser, Misses Sybil Eilen Hunt, Madeline Johnson, Edith Caine, Lottie Hampton, Laura Clarke, Alma Shepard of Brooklyn, and Oresta England of Mount Vernon; Messra. Edward Moore, Wilfred Callender, Dudley Taltt, Cecil Miller and Archibald Arnold.
And as the strains of "Home, Sweet Home" were played declaring that they had had an enjoyable time.
At the regular meeting of the Lydia Tent Number 2, the Senior Matron, Mrs. Julia James, officers and members attended a reception to their leader, Mrs. Emily Freeman, in honor of her election to the Grand Senior Matron of the Eastern District Grand Tent. A presentation of a beautiful bouquet of flowers was made by Mrs. Mary Gale, superintendent of Brooklyn. A most enjoyable time was spent by all present.-Advt.
SIX
VACATION CALLS
SAUNDERS' COTTAGE
All Bus Lines Lead in Our Door,
upposite Paradise Inn. Light, airy
rooms, modern conveniences, ver-
fessional services.
$ 65 Ridge Avenue
ASURBY PARK, N. J.
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y.
THE GENEVA COTTAGE
27 WALWORTH ST.
Furnished rooms, by day or week;
first class meals served; hot and
cold baths. Dt. Bessie Freeman,
Prop. Telephone 2179-R.
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
American & European Plan.
Special Spring Rates on American
Plan. Established 1901-1929
Continuous Service. Mr. and Mrs. M.
A. Ridley, Owners and Managers.
MONTREAL, CANADA
Why not spend your HOLIDAYS here?
The Booker-Tee Rooms
1500 St. Antoine St. (near Guy)
Rooms by Day or Week
Striktely First Class
YAEGER'S INN
DINING AND BATHS Rooms, Rooft
Gardens, Private Jinning Rooms,
Gardens, and Chicken Coops
Chicken Coops, Strictly Fresh
Sea Food, Homemade Pastries, Fresh
Home Reservations, Home
reservations for Shore Jinners.
MISS ELINOR YAEGER.
Hosts.
Phone Abbury Park 4112
1106 MATTTISON AVENUE
CINEMAS 4112
ASBURY PARK
"SHINNECOCK ARMS"
JEFFERSON AVEENN
QUOGUE, L. L. N. Y.
WILL REOPEN
MONDAY, July 1, 1920
BOOK NEW OPEN
MR. M. ENOS DENT
1890 Seventh Ave. New York
Tel. Monument 4766
Quogue 4766
Chas, Savoy Beach
On the James River.
RUSHMERE, VIRGINIA
Stop at
CEDAR HOTEL
GROVE
Reasonable Rates
Bathing, Boating, Fishing, Free
Camping Grounds. Dancing Mon-
day, Wednesday and Friday.
B. F. WHITEHEAD, Prop.
TANGLEWYLDE
Catskill Mountain Resort
Open Year Round
KERHONKSON, NEW YORK
BRIDAL SUITES
A SPECIALTY
Two thousand feet above sea level.
120 acres of beautiful scenery. A
thoroughly modern resort with
several conveniences for rest,
comfort and pleasure. Bathing, fishing,
hunting and all sports. Special
rates for week-end parties.
Write for summer reservations, or
phone Kerhonkson, N. Y. 14 F. 32.
MAMIE J. BOYER, Hostess.
BEAUTIFUL SPOT IN MOUNTAINS
With City Conveniences and Country Comforts
Horseback Riding, Tennis, Beautiful Walks and Scenery. Excellent Table Board.
RATES
Single Rooms, $20.00 Per Week
Two in a Room, $18.00 Each, Per Week, With Board
To Open June 22, 1929
$2 NORTH 91st ST.
W. PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Mrs. Beasle Jaffa, Prop.
NEARBY SOCIAL AND CIVIC NOTES
HOTELS and RESORTS
ROCKCLIFF FARM
ALBERTA) ATTENTIONS—Southern Cook, Swimming Tool on pro-pitch, one-season Court, Pair-Riding, Horseback, RUBY, N. Y.
(Near Kingston)
ALBERTHA INN
ROCKAWAY BEACH, L. I.
229 Beach 71th Street
Phone Bell Harbor 3739
Home Cooker Dinners, Boating
and Bathing; Bus Parties
Solicited
Dellightful for Vacations or
Work-Ends
THE GREEN TREE INN
EAST HAMPTON, LONG ISLAND
Three hours by train or a mar-
veller driven to beautiful
part of Long Island, Ocean bathing.
Mrs. Anna Scott, Pron.
HAMMEL'S COTTAGE
260 BENNET ST.
ROCKAWAY BEACH, N. Y.
The Ideal Spot for Home Comforts
Small
By Day or Week
One Block From Ocean
Please Be Warmed
EDWARD HARRIS, Pron.
LAYLOR COTTAGE
Private cottage one mile from the oak.
All modern improvements,
week-end parties catered.
MRS. MAUDE TAYLOR, Prop.
Union Avenue
MANSION
Phone Spring Lake 101-1
THE FORRESTER HOUSE
FORRESTER, N.Y.
SARATOGA FRIENDS, N. Y.
The ideal spot for home comforts.
All rooms furnished.
All outside rooms. By day or week. Hot, cold and mineral baths.
Phone 101-105.
DT. ICONA FORRESTER.
Prometheus
THE STENCIA TYN
Flo Shimmer Ln
167 Beach Md N.
HAMMEL STATION
ROCKAWAY BEACH, L.
Doono meets by day or week.
Half block from beach. Hot and cold water.
Phone Bell Harbor 1230
CAINE'S VILLA
SPEND YOUR VACATION AND
WEEK-ENDS IN THE HEART
OF ROCKLAND COUNTY,
SPRING VALLEY, N. X. FOR
INFORMATION CALL AUDUBON
2004, OR SPRING VALLEY
533
BUSES LEAVE HOURLY
Week Days from 12:44th St. Ferry
Sunday and Holidays from Astor
Hotel Bus Tervurry
Hotel Bus Terminal
Spend the 4th of July Here
An Ideal Spot for Quilings
When in Atlantic City do not forget to visit the RISING SUN
First Class Lunches and Cakes served
also confettieries.
MIME, SLOCA REVERE
SHADY REST
COLORED AMERICAN FORESTMOST
14-Hour Upholstery 9-Hole Golf Course,
11-Hour Upholstery 9-Hole Courts. (Troquel,
24-Hour Dining Room Service,
American Cuisine,
American Furniture)
Special Induction--250 Yolts
with a special Induction
delve.
For further particular phones or call
WILLIAM J. WILLIAM
207 N. NORTH AVE., N. J.
Phone: Flintfield 8100
Morris Cottage, Belmar, N. J.
418 NINTH AVE.
Phone Belmont 1086
Alry and light room. 2½ blocks
Opening Many午 New
management, latrine and R
management, day or week.
Employment
agency in connection.
Misses B. Brinkley and M. Shoekey
THE HARLEM RESTAURANT
200 WEST AVENUE
VILLAGE PARK
On the Boston Post Road
Sightseeing tour of the Barrie
Come and Enjoy our Courtyard
MRS. C. L. MIMPSON, Prop.
URETTTA COTTAGE
Located in heart of
Adirondack Mountains
Largest rooms with wonderful mountain view. A modern improvements.
ALICE L. WALKER. Proprietor
box 606, Lake Placid, N. Y.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
Jersey City, N. J.
Alpha chapter of Phil Delta Kappa met with Mrs. Ella Wells Ford last Wednesday at her home, 469 Bergen avenue.
Mrs. Mattle Wilson, 70 Bidwell avenue, and Mrs. T. T. Brown of Woodlawn avenue are spending the summer in Saratoga, N. Y.
Misses Ernestine Worthy, Naomi White, Norma Featherston, Geneva Carrel, and Wilhelmina Smith, Elizabeth Irvine, Toddie Parker, Bergen Jones, and John Jeter were among the June graduates of Lincoln High School.
The annual excursion of the Church of the Incarnation, Storms avenue, will be held on July 1 to Bear Mountain.
Morgan Tabb, 145 Myrtle avenue, was recently operated on at Christ Hospital.
Miss Laura Powell, 55 Orlen avenue entertained the New Jersey mayor last Wednesday day evening, after which a delightful luncheon was served.
Among those present were: Mrs. Thelma Reed, Miss Alberta Ellis, Miss Tremaine Nelson, Miss C. Green, Mrs. L. Jenkins, Miss D. Jones, Mrs. M. Moore, Mrs. E. Weaton, Mrs. J. Clare Bowles, Mrs. D. Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Ruby and Miss E. Morgan. Also Elmer Slappey, Charles Jones, F. Wiggins, T. J. Byrd, C. J. Ferguson, Johnson, W. Mann, Ewol Robinson.
The We Moderns, a bridge club, entered the noon at the home of Miss Gladys Cannon. 354 Pacific avenue. Miss Merguerite Abrams, president, made the artistic tally and score pads with each prize. Prizes for highest scores were awarded Miss Thelma E. Berlack of New York City, first guest; Miss Milton Cannon, second guest; Miss Cannon, first club.
Some of the others present were: Misses Lolita Lynn, Elizabeth Brooks. Alvah Jones, Clarice* Currey of the University of Michigan, Marellichell. Theresa L. Bass of New York. Rheta Sutherland, Julia Ashbury. Margaret. Dora and Carrie Skeeter. Mrs. Octavia Catlett of Montclair. Also Misses Delma Holland, Martha Williams, Sadella Pen Eyck, Daly Williams, Sadella Pen Eyck, Bernice Rouser, Mrs. Maude Johnson.
Newark, N. J.
The Racketeers Club will hold its annual bus ride to Rockaway on July 4.
W. Owens, 19 Hoyt street, has returned from a week-end spent visiting relatives in Englewood.
The Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Hillary of St John's G. M. E. Church were the Sunday dinner guests of the Rev. and Mrs. F. C. Terry, 543 Bergen street.
M. Wilden of Rutgers street recently entertained in honor of his daughter, Pauline.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Carter are spending their honeymoon in Atlantic City.
Joseph Douglass appeared in a violin concert at the Thirteenth Avenue, Presbyterian Church in Boston street, and Thirteenth avenue, on Sunday evening, June 23.
A play "At the Potterville Post Office will be given at the Thirteenth Avenue Presbyterian Church on Friday.
Orange, N. J.
Edward V. Williams, while attending the Baptist convention, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Permalen, Malp street.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Bacon, 349 Heywood street, are the parents of a son, born June 13. Mrs. Bacon is the grandaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Jackson.
The state annual order of Elks will meet in New Brunswick from June 25 through June 27.
The Daughters of Eastern Star turned out Sunday afternoon. They were headed by Mrs. Georgia Robinson, 96 South street.
Trenton, N. J.
The HI Y Club of the Y. M. C. A. held its second annual banquet at the Montgomery street "Y" on Friday.
Miss Helen Gentry has returned from a week-end spent visiting relatives in New York.
Mr and Mrs. James Lyle have returned from a week-end spent in Newburgh, N. Y.
Mrs. L. Slater wife of the Rev. L. Sister of Cohh Baptist Church, has returned to Virginia after a visit to her husband.
The monthly meeting of the New Jersey Student Forum was held at the Montclair Y. M. C. A. on Friday afternoon. Miss Ernestine Worthy of Jersey City is president. A boat ride to Atlantic Highlands has been planned for August 7.
Miss Bessie Louise Nelms, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. George H. Hill on Sunday at 0:30 o'clock at 50 Forest street.
The bride-elect, a marna cum laureate graduate of Howard University, teaches at the New Lincoln School in Trenton. She is a member of the Alpha Kappa alpha sorority.
Parlor Car Buses
Individual Seats (30-35)
Go Anywhere at Reasonable Rates
THE GOTHAM TOURIST
CORPORATION
123 POST AVE., NEW YORK
TELEPHONE LORRAINE 8861
Writer
MISS EVELYN WILLIAMS, 1041 William street is the person to whom your Elizabeth society notes should be sent each week between Thursday and Sunday night.
Elizabeth, N. J.
By T. H. WILLIAMS.
Worde—Henry.
Miss Mary Josephine Henry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Henry of Asbury Park, was married Saturday moning to Albert Kenneth Worde at St. Augustine Episcopal Church. The Rev. Father Wedgwick, rector of the church, officiated.
A balloon concert is being given at St. Augustine Episcopal Church on Tuesday, July 9.
Mme. Marion L. Simmons of Elizabeth is giving a musical concert tomorrow night at the Elks' Rest on Dickerson street.
P. N. Campbell, 1226 East Broad street, will spend the week-end with his family in Richmond, Va.
Ernest Day, Grant Morris, David Sharp, Alston Hobert and Wade Morris of Morristown College, Penn.; Ralph Martin of Knoxville College, Tennessee; Joshua Salkow of Salem, and Graves, Herbert, Huwen and William Hawthorne of Bluefield Institute, W. Va.; Jesse Garrison of Clark University, Atlanta; William Peebles of Howard University, and Robert Hornstein of Huntington, W. Va., are living at the Broadway, 889 Pennsylvania avenue.
The First Baptist Institutional Church with a community center, at the Broadway, was opened-two-Sundays a Broadway. The Rev. A. L. E. Weeks is pastor.
Plans to secure a Y. M. C. A. were discussed at the Siloam Presbyterian Church during the week.
Junis Mosely will go to the Young People's Sunday School Conference at Lincoln University as a delegate from Siloam Presbyterian Church on July 3.
Mrs. Franklin Pierce gave a card party at her home, 1089 William street, last Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Wilson. 1019
baby boy, Andrew Alexander.
Paterson, N. J.
Alpha Council No. 1414, I. O. of St. Luke's, will hold its annual bus ride on July 4.
Mrs. W. W. Walker and daughter, Eloise, of Baltimore, have returned to their home after visiting friends in the city.
W. G. Hughes has returned from a week-end visit with relatives in Philadelphia.
A banquet was given in honor of Dr. Norman T. Cotton at G. M. A. Hall on Thursday.
Mrs. W. G. Hughes had as her week-end guest Miss Dorothy Styles of New York.
Plainfield. N. J.
A June fete will be held at the Y. W. C. fete tomorrow and Friday to get money with which to send girls to summer camp.
The Rev. A. C. Sanders preached the annual sermon to Stone Square Lodge Mason's No. 38 at Mount Zion A. M. E. Church on Sunday.
Mrs. Lua D. Tuxson of West Third street has returned from a week-end spent in New Brunswick.
Mrs. Mary Crite of Richmond street has returned from Virginia, where she attended the funeral of her mother.
Mrs. H. C. Chaner and baby of West Third street are spending the summer in Canada.
Miss Gertrude Gilbert has returned from Bordentown Institute for the summer.
Rahway, N. J.
James Parker, a civil war veteran and on old citizen, died last Monday afternoon.
Miss Lillian Dawson of Main street is to be graduated with the June class of Rahway High School.
SOUTHERN JERSEY
Classed as one of the finest appointed vacation and amusement places in Asbury Park, Yaeger's Inn will become the place of the vacationers like like. Southern Jersey for summer sports and pleasure.
Mrs. E. C. Yaeger is the proprietor and is assisted by Miss Elizabeth Dining and dancing features and building is equipped with roof garden, lounge rooms, private dining rooms, shower baths and a banquet
New Jersey Elks Hold Three-Day Convention
The sixth annual convention of the New Jersey State Association I. B. P. O. E. W. is the guest of Superior Lodge No. 215 and Sunbeam Temple No. 104 of New Brunswick, through New. The convention started Monday. The meetings are being held by the lodges at the Elks' Home, 150 Baldwin street, and the temples at Ebenezer Baptist Church, Lee avenue and Cornstock street.
The committee consists of Charles C. Weathers, chairman; Harry Piererson, chairman; Dr. L. Morgan, Monroe Harris, C. Cunningham, H. Simmons, J. C. Mason and George Royster.
Englewood, N. J.
The Rev. and Mrs. J. V. McVlver, L. Corbis and Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Middleton motored to Germantown to attend the installation of the Rev. B. M. Ward of Faith Presbyterian Church.
Miss Beatrice Alston spent last week visiting a schoolmate in Atlantic City.
Miss Pearl Billings, a student at Bordentown, spent the week-end visiting her aunt, Mrs. S. Atkins. Miss Billings played a violin solo at the burning services at Bethany Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. P. M. Murphy and Mme. Florence Cole Talbot of New York were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Middleton on Sunday.
The Scotia Chapter meeting was held at the home of Mrs. D. E. Campbell last Sunday.
Mrs. Leora Lee and Mrs. L. Gaines of Brooklyn and New York were the Sunday guests of Mrs. L. C. Davis.
The Merry Maker's Social Club of New York City gave a program at Bethany on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Carey were in charge;
Somerville, N. J.
Ernest Vessel has returned from Bordentown Institute.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vessels have returned from a visit to Atlantic City.
Mrs. Mable Hoffman is confined to her home because of illness.
The Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Garner have as their house guests Mr. and Mrs. M. Corbin of Ithaca, N. Y.
The Women's Missionary Society gave a watermelon social at the home of Mrs. Alice Van Ness on Thursday evening.
Mrs. Charles Cross has returned from a visit to Easton, Pa.
Ezekiel Brown oof Newark visited friends and relatives in town last Sunday.
The recently elected officers of Cannanville, L. F. P. C. W. are as follows, J. G. Fisher, exalted ruler; E. A. Carroll, leading knight; Hudson Overby, loyal knight; Raymond Barnett, lecturing knight; B. J. Mason, esquire; James Christner, inner guard, and Leroy Jordan, outer guard.
Miss Evelyn Anderson, William Moore and friends motored to Tuxedo Park on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Wright visited friends in Brooklyn last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Braxton and Eugene Burnett visited friends and relatives in Atlantic Highlands on Sunday.
The Orphan Band from the Long Branch Shelter Home gave a concert at St. Luke's A. M. E. Zion Church last Friday.
The pupils of Mrs. Frances M. Talbot will give their recital at McKinley School, Osborn avenue and First street, this evening.
The Royal Order of American Eagles gave a tea at the home of Mrs. Mattle Van Pelt, Scotch Plains, on last Sunday afternoon.
The Past Daughter Rulers of Centennial Temple No. 246 entertained the Past Daughter Rulers of Council No. 1 at Shady Rest Country Club last Wednesday afternoon.
Mr. William Moore, who has been visiting relatives on Rahway avenue, has returned to her home in Vermont.
Mr. and Mrs. David Talbot of West Broad street had as their weekend guest G. R. Terrell of New York
Cranford, N. J.
The Community Club met at home of Mrs. Sarah Williams, 46 Johnson avenue, on last Monday evening. The wicketicker is president and Mrs. Hattie Gatech will be a Tom Thumb wedding was held at St. Mark's M. E. Church on Thursday. Coughman is confined to his home because of illness. Women's Day will be celebrated at St. Mark's M. E. Church on Sunday.
Eatontown, N. J.
The guests for the week-end at Shady Lawn Farm, at Pine Brook, every the following: Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Stuart, Mr. and Mrs. D. Newton, Dr. Taylor, Miss Lulie Woods, Miss Juanita Harris, Miss Eva and Iona Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Walton, Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Smith, Mrs. R. C. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Fleming, Mr. and Mrs. Human Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Sasle Wade, Mr. and Mrs. John Dias, Mr. and Mrs. Roestrick Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Jones, Miss Consul Johnston, Miss L. Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Miler, Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Stark, John Tribe, Witcher Walton, Mr. and
Bernardsville, N. J.
Mr. and Mrs. William Jones entertained the following persons on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Barker, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Shuster, Mr. and Josephine Anderson, Miss Pearl Turner, Miss Smith, New York; Bernard Mason, Red Bank; Miss Katherine Parker, Plainfield; Edward Granby and Miss Helen Springstead, Morristown.
Atlantic Highlands, N. J.
Misses Gladys Langhorn and Ethel Downs were among the Junior High School graduates last week.
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Lucas, assisted by Miss Ruth Godfrey, Miss Hilldred Gowers and Prof. Thompson, Gowers and Prof. Thompson, Heavenly Gate Ajar" at Mt. Olivet Baptist Church, New York City, under the auspices of the two usher boards, last week.
The University Art Club of Newark will give an outing 'at Chambers' Picnic Grove and Casino on July 3.
Recent visitors at the Madeline B. Lucas cottage, Mr. and Mrs. Flemon McThomas, Harold B. Nettles and Lucas Ferguson of New York City.
Asbury Park. N. J.
Crawley—Simms
Miss Edna Simms, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Simms, became the bride of Robert Crawley of Neptune and was married to Margaret Whitney of last Wednesday. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Doctor Crawley. The bride wore a gown of white satin and vase lace. The maids wore gowns of green, pink and orchid taffeta, while the maid of honor was gowned in yellow. The flower gown wore pink and white satin. The bride and groom were incorporated in white and yellow; so was the bride's home. One hundred guests enjoyed the hospitality of the reception. The bride and groom are now on their honeymoon.
The following persons attended
fri. Mrs. Sara Palge, Miss Magnolia
Mrs. Sara Palge, Miss Magnolia
Woodridge, Miss Bertha Woodridge,
Mrs. Bertha Woodridge, Mrs. Emma
Hayes and S. S. Edwards.
Newburgh, N. Y.
B. JOHN SPRINGS.
Mayor Walter Brown has returned after spending several days in Atlantic City.
The Bachelor Club gave a whistle party Thursday night.
Mr. and Mrs. William Russell entertained their club on Thursday.
The Matthews, 12 Smith street, entertained friends from Brooklyn on Sunday.
Mrs. Charles Taylor has been ill for several days.
Louis Finnie, who has been visiting his mother, Mrs. R. Hatchett, has returned to Middletown.
The engagement of Miss B. Pickens to I. Skipworth was announced recently.
Miss A. Earl, who has been visiting her mother, Mrs. George Earl, has returned to Liberty, N. Y.
H. Reed, an employee of the city, Smith street. The funeral was held at the A. M. E. Zion Church. He is also his wife, two daughters and a son.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Miss F. Mellicent Lawrence was hostess at a Saturday luncheon at the Marion Tea Room, Twenteth and eighth street, last Saturday afternoon.
The guests were: Medames R. W. Bailey, Vivian Bally, Joseph G. Moyse, James A. atterson, Howard. Friese, Chris H. Braxton, Moore Pride, William Morris, W. B. Carter and Miss M. Hundley.
The hand-made prizes for bridge were awarded: first, first; Mrs. Moyse, Mrs. Pride, third, and Mrs. Patterson, fourth.
The hostess, the head nurse of the Duclair Hospital, Sixteenth and eighth street, is on a year's leave of absence, following her illness last July.
Nyack, N. Y.
Miss Alice Avery was graduated with honors from the Nyack High School. She is also a teacher of Mrs. Ruth Handy, a teacher at Public School No. 89, New York City.
PLAINFIELD RESIDENTS
TAKE NOTICE!
"THE SUGAR BOWL," located at 451 West Fourth street, Plainfield, has been designated as headquarters, for THE AMSTERDAM NEWS. Rachel Mulligan and vicinity will please learn news here for collection. (AdrL.)
Notice to
NEW JERSEY
Readers
Beginning Wednesday,
July 3
The Amsterdam News
Will contain a number of
photos snapped at random.
Persons whose photos
appear will receive free tickets
to the Orpheum Theatre in
Newark, by presenting
photos at box office. Watch
this page for your photo.
New Jersey Headquarters
8 BOSTON STREET,
NEWARK
Now open for business. Kindly
leave news items here
Four Vacation Trips Will Be Given to Four Most Popular Residents of the State of New Jersey
Jersey merchants listed on the Jersey Page will give a coupon with each purchase of ten cents' worth of merchandise. Good for one vote. The four having the most votes will get a Free Trip to Atlantic City during the Elks' Convention or a choice of other vacation cities chosen by the judges.
T. B. James of Hackensack, Chairman; W. J. Willis, Plainfield, and T. L. Walker of Newark will judge contest.
Coupons Will Be Given With Purchases Beginning Saturday, June 8, Up to and Including Saturday, Aug. 10
Convenient places for depositing tes will be announced next week.
No employee of Amsterdam News or proprietor or employee of merchants handling coupons is eligible.
Contest Closes Mon., Aug. 12, 11 P.M.
In case of tie each will receive prize offered. For further information see your neighborhood merchant or call at the Newark Office of THE AMSTERDAM NEWS 8 Boston Street, Newark, New Jersey. CALVIN C. FERGUSON, Manager.
Society
(Continued from Page 5)
mouth, Va., is spending a short vacation in the city as the guest of her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Riddick, 221 West 141st St. She also plans a short stay with Mrs. Jenesta Elzy.
Dr. I. E. Williams and the Rev Thomas H. B. Walker, both of Jacksonville, Fla., arrived here Monday en route abroad.
A graduation party was given in
WHITE FRONT RESTAURANT
1009 Springwood Ave.
ASBURY PARK, N. J.
In the Heart of Activities
UNION STREET GARAGE
Gas—Oil—Lubrication—Service
Labor
General Repairs
103 UNION STREET
103 North Avenue
JERSEY CITY, N. J.
Phone Bergen $821
Tom Pinkney, Mgr.
MARSH'S
SHOE SHINE PARLOR
1703 Arctic Avenue
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
Cigars, Cigarettes and Candy
Special Attention to Ladies and
Children
A. Leonard G. Marsh, Prop.
B. LAWRY
Caterer — Confectioner
CIGARES — STATIONERY
Ladies' Rest Room
Amsterdam News Agency
150-A BLOOMFIELD AVE.
MONTCLAIR, N. J.
HAT CLEANING AND SHOE SHINING
Ladies' and Gents' Tailoring Specialty
We Are Now Open and
Ready to Serve the Public
HERMAN ALSTON
Dring, Remontting, Bellingham, E. J.
121 WOOD AVK. LINDEN, N.J.
Phone Orange 8116
THE LITTLE ELITE
Ladies' and Gents' Bootblack
Parlor
Ladies' Shiny Boots All Colors
88 HICKORY STREET
ORANGE, N. J.
RAY WILLIE CLANTON
Tab. Hack, 6588
Dunlop Bonded Tires and
Brooks Brothers Service
Station
Gas, Oil, Accessories
Cars Washed and Polished
General Cleaners, Overhauling
CORN, NYRH, AND GTS.
HACKENACK, N. J.
DUNBAR TEA SHOPPE
Special Chicken Dinner 12c
Stretly Home Cooked Food
$79 JACKSON AVE.
1389 N. CITY
Phone: 1-855-4988
J. Coulton, Mgr.
THE IDEAL LUNCH
Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Soda
214 CENTRAL AVENUE
HACKENSACK, N. J.
Four Vacation Trips
Four Most Popu
the State of
honor of Mrs. Alma Stansel Jeffries
Friday evening, at her residence, 31
Edgecombe avenue. Mrs. Jeffries is
one of the June Hunter College g
graduates who received the A. B. degr
anchoring and were the child
features of the evening.
Miss Rosey Louise Swain ent
tained Saturday evening in honor
of Miss Marion Thompson, a mem
member of the Howard faculty, and Miss
Selma White, a junior in Howar
Some of the guests played cards
while others danced.
Mrs. Margaret J. Brown, who has
been ill for two months, has de-
tended to her school duties. Mrs. Brown
has been granted a sabbatical lea
which will begin on September 8 and
end February 1, 1930.
LYLE SISTERS
Gowns to Order
1306 Springwood Ave.
ASBURY PARK, N. J.
T. B. JAMES
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
Employment Agency
RACKEN SACK, N. J.
Office: 261 First Street
BROOKS HACK, 121
Res. 293 Second 93
By Appointment Only
Industrial Cleaners and
Dyers
(Successors of Chan, McDonald)
Ladies Work Our Specialty
Cleaning, Pressing, Altering
1723 Arctic Avenue
Atlantic City, N. J.
Albert Eskridge, Manager
Forest Cleaners & Dyers
EXPERT CLEANING AND
ALTERING
We Clean Where Others Fall
We Call For and Deliver
1081 EAST GRAND STREET
Phone N. J. 2433 ELIZABETH N. J.
Shoe Shining Parlor Hat Cleaning
New Boston Shoe Shining &
Hat Cleaning Parlor
Hats Called For and Deli-
red J. B. New York, P.O.
A. B. Lewis, Mgr.
8 BOSTON ST. NEWARK, N. J.
CORDELIA
BEAUTY SHOPPE
Scientifique Operation in All Branches of
BEAUTY SHOPPE xp System
Miss Barbour and Mrs Jenkins,
Miss Barbour and Mrs Jenkins,
KEARNY AVEUE
ERSEY CITY, N. J.
Houston, TX 77004
Later by appointment Borges 8801
Residence Telephone 788
OFFICE 332 FIRST ST., Tel. 7447
J. P. ANDERSON, INC.
MASON AND BUILDER
REAL ESTATE BROKER
Home—Building Lots—Easy Terms
HACKENSACK, N. J.
THREE HOUSES
FOR SALE IN
ENGLEWOOD, N. J.
Large plot. Good neighborhood.
12 minutes from Bergen County
Bridge.
BARGAINS AT $6,000.
Small down payment, balance like
rent.
Other Northern N. J. Property
JOHN L. BROOKS
Building Contractor
Real Estate and Insurance
212 CENTRAL AVE.
HACKENSACK, N. J.
Phone Hack, 2083
25 Years in Business
s Will Be Given to lar Residents of New Jersey
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929 SEVEN
Flapperettes
NSUHERE. ARE PLENTY
OF GIRLS BESIDES.
=. THE DAUGHTERS OF
GF) MUSIC COMPOSERS.
©) WHO DONT SEEM TO
BANG KNOW THE MEANING OF
ga “REFRAIN’ 77”
4 S .
Oe f e s
f BETS A_fp ue
oe TT ate
aon Ke Bo ow.
eS B # oO
S| SAG
z= AS Wh -
eS Ong Thal.
| ES ae
| Le oat
AWANY To Harte. HORAE - CS
° @ we °
| The Feminist Viewpoint
$e
The Much-Talked-of “Tea”
RS. HERBERT HOOVER, no doubt, jcels better to
M because of a letter sent her by the Women’s Inter
tional League on Monday. For over a week the F
Lady ‘of the Land was the “talk of the town"—and al
cause she saw fit to invite Mrs, Oscar DePriest to a \\
House tea for Congressmen’s wives.
In part the letter says: “We believe that your hospit
to Mrs. DePriest adheres to the best American traditio
democracy and is a happy step in the direction of 1
normal and wholesome race relations. We beg you to
cept this expression of our very warm admiration.
“The league looks forward to the day when there
be no more inconvenience or self-consciousness conne
with race than with the possession of blue eyes or br
eyes.”
z When New York wakes up and sends a Congress
to Washington, the “tea party” problem will be even gre
And yet we venture to say that the presence of two or t
Negro women might not cause as much disturbance as
presence of. the firet one. The pioneering job, you kno’
always the real shock absorber.—T. E. B.
eS
RS. HERBERT HOOVER, no doubt, icels better today
M because of a letter sent her by the Women’s Interna-
tional League on Monday. For over a week the First
Lady ‘of the Land was the “talk of the town”—and all be-
cause she saw fit to invite Mrs, Oscar DePriest to a White
House tea for Congressmen’s wives.
In part the letter says: “We believe that your hospitality
to Mrs. DePriest adheres to the best American tradition of
democracy and is a happy step in the direction of more
normal and wholesome race relations. We beg you to ac-
cept this expression of our very warm admiration.
“The league looks forward to the day when there will
be no more inconvenience or self-consciousness connected
with race than with the possession of blue eyes or brown
eyes.”
z When New York wakes up and sends a Congressman
to Washington, the “tea party” problem will be even greater.
And yet we venture to say that the presence of two or three
Negro women might not cause as much disturbance as the
presence of the first one. The pioneering job, you know, is
always the real shock absorber.—T. E. B.
i
celebrated at a supper in honor |
- Club Chats ©, |the engagement of Eis K. Bour
. e to Miss Ruth Hopkins of Jersey Ci
Thnvedey nicht. The Counle pian |
(Continued from Page 97
winners, which follow. were permit-
ted to select their awards, in the
order named, from a dozen lovely
ones on display:
‘Miss Thelma £. Berlack, Mrs.
Adele Kennerly, Mrs. Sybil B. Poston.
Mrs. Gerfrude Porter, Mrs. Rosetta
Huggins, Mrs. Bertha Baynard, Miss
Georgia’ Washington, Mrs. Rebecca
Edwards, Mra, Marguerite Thomp-
Kins, Mrs. Louise Jackson-Johnson,
Mrs. Mattie Bowe and Mrs, Ruth
Handy.
‘Mrs, Ollie Porter was the official
tumekeeper.
‘The Junior League of the Nins-
teenth ‘Aldermanic District held its
weekly mecting at 107 West 132d
street. The officers are a6 follows:
William Speights, president; John
Jenkins, first vice-president; Beatrice
Randers, second vice-president; Marie
E. Drew, recording secretary; Agnes
Wilson, \financtal secretary; Jobn
Saunders, treasurer; John Urgubart.
chaplain: J. P, Thompson, sergeant-
at-arms,
‘The Clinton Club had a smoker at
ay Wert 133d street Monday night.
Bomé of the Alhambra chorus girls
‘vere the ect entertainers of the
evening. group {s having a
furty Friday night at William Black-
fan's home, 101-105 Thirty-fourth
avenue, Corona, L. I.
The Alabama Welfare League 1s
ficing @ reception st the Welfarc
Center, 122 West 136th street, Friday
Wight. “There will be cards and danc-
ng. Mrs, Vashti Flowers is presi-
dent of this group of ‘seventy-five.
. The Jolly Three Social Club girls
Baby in Your Home
tetor’s Prescription Sent Free
Hundreds ot
partied women,
Sait Ta Pte
suddeniytfin
iensare, 12
i
A Bilaatal ancicipa-
tion due to the in-
HAS? SP ase:
SAA, Bei Sactesadt
He etria
fal, srescgtion
ws sterility inmany
cases When due to
a 4 functional wea k-
4 ness. Mre. Ma 4
Etters of & Tent
St, Braddock, Pa.,
Thea: "We are diessed with a fins bady
*% Teconmratulate you of your splen>
Prescription. I will be i to reo~
‘Sheng it to any woman.” he mar-
woman who soalyy, wants children
nid write at once for a free trial of
= Prereripal and a free copy of an
fillable Book that Cella how to use Tt
steele age thas all er, artes:
Ud know. Please enclose 10 cents
postage and packing. Adérese im
Bidence.
f Dr. ©. W. Eiders,
MU Ballinger Bldg. St. Joseph, Me,
By W. C. CHASE
celebrated at @ supper in honor of
the engagement of Ellis K. Bourne
to Miss Ruth Hopkins of Jersey City
Thursday night. The couple plan to
marry late in Deceniber,
The A-1-21 Social Club was enter-
tained Saturday evening at the rest-
dence of Mr. and Mrs, Daily J.
Cockrum, 400 Edgecombe avenue, at
its closing meeting of the season.
A social was given by the Shaw
University Club at the residence of
the president, N. &. McMurren, 263
‘Weat 137th street, Thuredey evening.
‘The Red Rose Social Club held ite
Jest meeting of the season last
Tuesday night at the residence of
‘Miss Bernlece Mascoll and Mra. Ma-
tilda Jones, 653 Lenox avenue.
Officers of the club are. Mra. Nan-
nie B. Martin, president; Miss Mas-
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Dressmaking Course $35
Finest of Training
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A BEAUD DESIGNING
SCHOOL
208 W. 1234 STREET
Menument 6177 ‘
Duncan School
Of Beauty Culture
‘ild-Summer Offer
14-Day Course, $5.00
In All Lines of Beauty Werk
saree oa Mee
SORA
Phone Harlem 0683 :
TY ++ RECIPES -- HOUSEHOLD HINTS -- |
-» From Cellar to Garret «:
A Denartment for the Exchange of Ideas on Homemaking
‘Table Manners
(Continued from last week.)
The “Second Helping.”
‘WHEN, at fntormat dinners or sup-
pers at home. you pass your plate
ama’ nite attgiy’ iobetier atte’ be
aide on the plats, go that they” wil
not be Knocked off when you pass
your plate. To lay them on table
sloth would be, ort untidy, and to
Suspend them in air woul ‘be most
awkward.
At the End of the Cosrse,
oc any other course is whist ain
ana fore nave ‘Deen used, place ao
knife and together on the pau
aide by side. ‘The handles are turn
ed rp tr to the right. Since th
knife has been held. in the righ
hand, it is natural and convenient t
place it on the right of the fork. Th
°
Looking
Your Best
By FANNETTE———
Don’t Touch Pimples!
‘THE temptation to squeeze pimples
4s one that many folks can't re-
‘sist. What, indeed, 1» more madden-
‘ing than to have a big pimple make
tte debut on your face, Just when you
want to look particularly nice?
Now you may squeeze nine pimples
and be apparently none the worse
for it. ‘The tenth, however, may
cause you no ned of trouble. You
see, you are very lkely to push some
of the matter back into your sid
‘and clog up # blood vessel.
Or the following, may happen tc
you, a8 happened to s friend of mine
Bhe saw a little red speck on her
face, near her mouth, and thinking
lt was s pimple, squeezed it. ‘The
Blood immediately gushed forth sc
rapidly and continuously that she be-
came greatly alarmed, realizing that
she might bleed to death. The towe
she held to her face was rapidly be-
coming soaked. She ran to the near.
est doctor and he informed her that
one of the superficial blood vessel
had burst. ‘The little red speck
which she had seen was not a pimple
bbut the blood vessel which had come
to the surface, because the akin was
thin from the squeezing of forme!
ore Plcourse, the doctor stopped thi
flow of blood: and a atitch did no
have ‘tobe taken. Hep face might
have been scarred for life,
‘You can't tell what will happen o1
when infection will set in. Reet
your hands from your face. Regu-
late your diet, Omit sweets. Drink
plenty of water, Exercise, If yout
trouble perlas, ‘consult # skin spe
coll, vice-president; Mrs. Ella Col-
lins, secretary: Mrs. Jones, treasurer;
‘Mrs, Lillian Stennett, chaplain.
‘The Pedagogues gave # shower and
luncheon on Saturday afternoon at
\the Dark Tower, 106 West 136th
street, in honor of Miss Josephine
Campbell. who is soon to be married.
The club gave Miss Campbell a
modernistic lamp.
|
| Yap $25-S100
|23% WEEKLY
Za b ONLY THROUGH
ic BROE ROHRERS
Ne era WORLD
PREIS FAMOUS
| Qerhien) BEAUTY
>’ SCHOOL
Bota 5 PERMANENT
J marers. ereone, SER USE
ff 1ccRE, ETC. Look tor success: it
een ay ae ea rninE
‘Why let others xvow rich while roe
reals poor? Don't envy, 60 Ilke-
wise. ‘lreular explains,
‘118 West sng Street, N.Y. C. ond
S47 Broad Street, Newark, S. 3+
LATEST
SeRING MODES
LADIES?
HATS
‘ ae Ie)
Ce
Pt
Also Dresses
and Gowns
ODESSA
cumting edge, of the knife is turned
toward the fork. ‘The tines of the
fork are up. If the knife and fork
are placed in this way, there will be
slight, opoprtunity for an accident as
the plate is removed from the table.
*To be continued next week).
. The French Door
In most cases, French doors should
be treated aa doors, not windows, In
France they’ are almott «slmays left
ncurtained, apecally @vinere the
purpoce ofa glass door being to Bd
Boren ot Pere ca
Init iighe and ‘give an added sense of
spaciousness to a small room, it is 8
mistake to cub off the vista thus
created.
Often in| America, however, th
doors need to be screened for privacy
in which cage they may be hung witt
| single curtain of sheer. material
{shirred on & small rod, top and bot
—————
| Girl Scout News
| BY EVELYN HILL.
! ‘Age 13.
Even though the troops are closing
for the summer months, a new troop
No. 180, at Abyssinian Church, nas
Just registered 18 Scouts, Mrs. Oc-
tavia Gittens is captain and Mrs
Allce Harris is Heutenant.
‘With this additional troop, there is
a total of 18 troops and 300 Gir
Scouts in the district, “The more the
merrier!"
Camp is in the alr. Get registered
by reporting to the Urban League,
204 West 126th street, tomorrow at
4 o'clock. - Miss Loulse Parrott, ex-
ecutive, will give all necessary details
Camp will run from July 17 to 31.
Be sure to get in line. Many attrac-
tive activities await the camping
‘Scouts.
Of course, there will be something
new in town, too, The summer pro-
‘gram under Miss Parrott for all Girl
Scouts promises to be full of pep and
adventure. There will be swimming
on Mondays from 1 to 3 in the ¥
W.C. A. pool, Girl Scouts must reg-
ister for a definite time. Handlcraf'
and folk dancing wilt be given or
‘Thursdays st the Urban League from
3 to 6. Then, on Fridays, there wil
be some out-of-door activities a
hikes, plenics, trailing trips to piace
of interest, excursions, etc, to be
planned by the girls, Do join ou:
summer Girl Scout family. You can.
not afford to miss any of these op.
| portunities.
Reb Wie Lit
Cat, Made Fra,
Women Rats.
Price t8.00.
QrAL HUMAN
HAIR GOODS
Bodelettes with part, Bair long or
anorts, covers wnole bead. Price $3.
Traatformations: Loug or, short
Sate; 6he0, $100 op. Ladien’ Hats.
{2.06 Value for bre.
Mme. je L, CRAWFORD
Geode ang Beanty Sh
wen eet Hel de Near Lene
‘Aved, New York
Phone Edgecombe sate
ie ee ee
a se
e —
i Poe
ES Con <e i
MIME. A. MAINS
HAIRDRESSER
FULTO SYSTEM
THE SYSTEM THAT SATISFIES
2443 Eighth Avenue
| STRAIGHT BLACK HAIR
YOURS IN 3 MINOTES
MEN AND WOMEN
— No matter what the
| color of your wate, ja
BEF or white etrenks
A Wotewenng matter
ci how kinky it pone
Cr application of this
PONT Secilon will gitezeo
ve denutituly fuscrous,
) AERIEnE, bach hate:
re iat preparation, is
Bota fuere Hale dye,
Pi Sox merely asirsiant-
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coer, ang tate ister
WySnish RrRAvE-eLACE,
wubeMerimes ome, de
pee iy imported the Hol
It le SAFE and SURB
poss Sor Bara’ er Hee the Sealy
pee” Ceateae Te ‘aith. petsonses
Hud aves or se-caed "beta peed
Hoonisn STRATE-BLACKS 20
he" dewt application. pro-
FA agate, Four bait pecmoes s
Beautiful, lustrous, Diack. And
Si mote wongettoh A sngotiens
cut, becoroine ter with enco
sppiication,
FRE "Por 2, limited time only, &
will give away, Pree, with
gach Parchaes ot nortsh, Sinise:
Bisek a sarap le of my famous Meor-
White Pepade lair c
‘Winite Gace, ang.
mample of my popular Neerlen 3%
teacios ‘carnagion Pe is
apecieh cecronactory Prin Lae
Mafleé direct to you in plain 23:
py) Hopey with order: S1.5¢:
Nb, ads
bai ed st O. D. 64.60.
rr . ‘Speciation
eee ein me New Tern
¢ ; a a e a
x : a
AF + » e
- — :
: eo Ud.
HAIR DRESSED WITH MME. C.J. WALKER’S GLOSSINE
LOOKS GOOD |
No long time, or la- ; almost everywhere a
boriouseffortisrequired \\ have used Mme. C. J. 24
to havebale beaming vith \ ‘ Walker's Glossine day in *
loveliness if you use Mme. = \\, pee and day out to add justthe
. te Glossine to \ See, touch of beauty needed to ~
e re es make their hair dress the ulti-
A touch of Glossine applied reg. \ id Paeyeres mate of fashion. Such constant ©
ularly Ne the ints pact of oe \ a ad use must be deserved. It has ©
sitet io! 2 mae pleasing acftness \ f ‘4 taught these women that Mme.C. '
Justre, natural fluffiness and charm \ J. Walker’s Glossine is unequaled as
that sae a compliment from jealous as ep aye make the hair look
women even modest men. good and feel good.
For twenty-five years thousands of women N You, too, should try Glossine. .
i N
FOR BOBBED HAIR ceed pam . FOR LONG HAIR
Mme. C. J. Walker’s Glossine is H If long hair remains your prefer-
matchless for making bobbed hair <a ence, Mme. C. J. Walker’s Gloss-
sleek, soft and silky. Whether (fea, WALKER'S a] ine spplied Trequenlly wil enrich
ed, wind-bl ish, A S\ the scalp, make the hair glisten
bob wilt ‘ook eter wher dressed (ao iecener & i = with a lustrous sheen. make it soft
with Glossine. Weacseee noe Hand alive to remain in place just
Ve resem as you dress it.
ees Vas) Ff Write today for terms.
Agents wanted for this and 29 ea The Mme. C, J. Walker Mig. Co.
other Walker Preparations. 3 Walker Bldg. Indianapolis, Ind.
MME.C.J. WALKERS GLOSSINE
: Je e e
* 66 99 1
| 35¢ “25YEARSTHE STANDARD" = 35¢
tom. This curtains should have
aniple ) allowing twice th
width of the Bening
Where more’ lor needed, &
heavier Swartaced fabric, as damask,
brocade, feta, Linen. may be Toaealy
huog ‘on the side ‘the door whici
opts inward. This should have con-
siderably less fuliness than the sheer
curtains. not more than 114 widths of
the opening. ‘and should be hung
from fiat loops made of the. same
material.
‘Tape-weight the fastening
the upper. nd over earl to the
&. balanced effect between window
hd doors can be obtetned by hang:
tng botn with a sirnple, Teague
‘The Bliaing Door,
Siding doors should tn general b
lett ‘nctresined. it, pomever provi
alon has besn made in the slot the:
my of scteened with sheer curtains
sbi top and Bottom on very amal
rods.
Tested Recipes
| Greek Salad.
1 large raw carrot
* feanpoon salt ne
§ stalts celery
44 cup mayonnaise
Dice the carrot, celery, cabbage and
Peppers. Mix thoro with the
ilPand mayonnaise. Serve of 1eitte
Strawberry Parfait.
44 cup currant seliy
1 er amctecte
loners’ sugar
‘Beat fg whiten ati, Beat in the
Jelly. Continue to beat’ to a, whippes
Berries into parfait plaster ate th
glasses three-fourths full. Pour the
whipped mixture on top, Pack an Ice
‘and sait mixture around the outside
of the glasses and chill until frosty
‘Wash off. Serve cold.
FACE
POWDER
Peete poo
| JOELET, COSMETIC CO
Confidences
By EGYPSY ANN
Are There Any Happy Couples?
| YouNG people considering marriage
certainly hear and read enough to
discourage them. A great many are
actually afraid of marriage; taking
into consideration the unhappiness
and tragedies they read of, we can
tcarcely blame them.
But thera ia a cheerful side, a side
we seldomn hear of. Newspapers don't
write about the thousands of strug-
gling couples, happy in their com-
penionship with each other and in
their home and with children. Can
Jo) Imagine ‘a headliner “Husband
and Wife Happy Together?” What
we read of are the divorce scandals
jatatbings, murdera and 80 forth,
‘There is much happiness that we
don't hear of. In thelr own humbl
way, hitsband and Wife work together
go to amusements and to church to
gether, Perhaps @ quarrel now anc
then, which Pe Age forget, and ar
peste = ili Wiser and bette
accguuinted with each other.
‘Don't enter marriage with the im
Pression that it won't be long befor
yeu will be airing your domesti
troubles in court, Much depend
upon the frame of mind with whict
you enter into it. Do your share anc
no more can be expected.
SHE WHO makes her husband and
her children happy, who reclaims the
one from viee, and tratns up the other
to virtue, 8 a much greater character
than ladles described in romance,
shove whole occlipation is to murder
mankind with shatts from the quiver
eetnee efesOliver Golden.
{Slain tonPcer ker eenien SO
i} NATURAL HAIR WIGS
‘Made to Order
Alto Braids, Trantfor-
‘mations and Straight
ening Combe, A repre-
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you by appointment.
‘ Tel, Wisconsin 4688
or send for catalogue.
ALEX MARKS
| 640-462 Bighth Aven Cor. 4fnd Bt
MEW TORR, Sete
Open Daily 9:20 to 3180 F. Ms.
| anlek Ratardey.
APEX COLLEGE TO HOLD
| GRADUATION EXERCISES
|_When the Apex College of Beauty
Culture holds its third annual grad-
uation exercisés at St. Mark's Church,
137th street and Edgecombe avenue.
‘Tuetday evening,.July 2, diplomas
will be awarded’ ninety-seven young
Indies.
Miss Alice Anderson, soprano, sister
of Miss Marion Anderson, contralto,
is to come from Philadelphia to ap-
pear on the: program. Mrs, Sara
Spencer Washington, founder and
president of the college, will be pres-
ent. ‘During the past six months 198
have been graduated from the ¢ol-
lege.
:
| EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
aed
a
eed
ee a
(\ fe we
Lit ie Ome Ly
Wit Promote a Fall Growth of Hate.
Wilt Also Restoze the Strength
Fitaltt? aed Heanty of the fale.
It Your Hate is Dry and Wiry Tey
EAST INDIA HAIR ORE
atyee ate bothered with Palling Hale,
Bani Shh you to Wey a ir 2
fe, we want 2
peat he ain’ vale Grawers ‘The remedy
Contains medical properties that go to
fhe roots ot the hair, stimulates the
pula, beipines, palurs to do its work.
faaves the hair, soft and sitky. Per-
tomes with 1 balm of a thousand flow.
ote, ‘The beat known remedy for Heavy
‘and Beautiful Black Eyebtows, also fe.
Hotes Gray Tale to ite Natural Color
Cane ‘used with Hot Iroh for straight-
ening.
Price, Seat, by Mall, soe Postage ite
* & D. LYONS
ge &. Central, Okiahoma Ciiy. Okta.
AGENTS OUTFIT |S
1 Hale Grower, 1 Temple Oil, I sham.
poo, 1 Pressing Ol, 1 Face Cream
Bnd Directions’ for ‘Selline, $2.00.
‘Sse Kxtra for Postage
- You Need Sun and Air _-.
Sun and air—a cheerful palt: Bottp
go ae
Health Committée, 202 West 136thy
street, Bradhurat 2096, will give. you:
free health information, =
pai ana ‘
“Passidig” Increases. u
Log ANGELES, June 21--"Pass:
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Best Sport in Greater N
Best Sport Pages in Greater New York
LINCOLN WON TWO SUNDAY
Bacharachs Put Up Great Contest Against League Leaders at the Oval
The Lincoln Giants came on the field at Protectory Oval last Sunday looking like a bunch of crippled veterans of the World War than a team of ball players. Accidents and sickness in the last week had played havoc with the boys from the Bronx but they still have the dogged spirit of determination, them, crippled as they are, to trounce the Lincoln Giants both games of double-header.
Both games were hard fought and interesting. The Barcharachs put up a wonderful fielding game and the work of Reeld, who played first base and right field during afternoon play in the tention. Metton of the Lincolnins again electrified the crowd by knocking two smashing drives over the trees in center field for home runs in the first game and playing a good game in the field. In the absence of Scales and did a neat job. Rojo played first base when Manager Lloyd nursed a sore leg. Holland, Rector and Thomas, when not in the box pitching, were working in the outfield doing the game. The corn was pleased with the games, both of which were hard fought.
In the first game the Bacharachs scored a run on singles by Jenkins and Reld, a perfect bunt by Thomas. With bases full. White hit into double play. Jenkins hit for last out. They made two in the fourth; after Lindsey struck out, Eggleston hit a homer. Day singled, Jenkins struck out. Cooper singled and Jenkins single scored Day. Jenkins made three on hits by Thomas. White a sacrifice by Lindsey, a base on balls to Eggleston and an error by Washington. They made three in the sixth on base on balls to Lindsey. Reld's three bagger. White's single and a double on the eighth on base on balls to Lindsey and Eggleston and jores single.
These runs were overcome by the timely hitting of Spearman, Washington and Riggins, and the home run driver Bonds, and the home run driver on top for the first session of the double-header 12-11. The Lincolns were never in danger during the second game. Holland was right. The Bach's were helpless in the first. His shot curves and change of pace was working beautifully. With the earnest support of his playmates he breezed along to a 7-2 victory. Oral
Hildales play at Protectory Oval
next Sunday.
FIRST GAME.
Bacharach Ginnts.
a.b. r. h. p.o.a. e.
Lankins, lf. 4 1 4 0 0
Bald, lf. 4 1 3 6 0 0
Thomas, rf. 6 1 3 1 0 0
White, cf. 6 2 2 1 0 0
Lindsey, ss. 3 1 0 4 3 1
Egleson, c., 3b. 2 1 1 4 1 0
Day, 2k. 2 1 1 4 1 0
Walker, 3b. 1 0 0 2 1 0
Jones, c. 1 0 0 2 1 0
Cooper, p. 2 0 1 0 2 0
Cade, p. 2 0 1 0 0 0
Henderson, p. 0 0 0 0 1
40 11 17 25 8 2
Lincoln Ginnts.
n.b. r. h. p.o.a. e.
Melton, cf. 5 2 4 3 0 0
Washington, 2b. 4 4 3 7 5 1
Smith, rf. 4 3 1 1 1 0
Riggins, 3b. 4 2 1 1 2 0
Spearman, c. 6 0 3 7 0 1
Rojo, 1b. 4 1 1 6 1 0
Yanoco, ss. 5 0 1 0 3 0
Holland, 1f. 4 0 2 1 0 0
Rector, p. 4 0 1 0 2 0
Stanley, p. 1 0 0 0 0 0
40 12 17 27 15 2
Bacharach Giants..1 0 0 2 2 3 2 1 0—11
Lincoln Giants ....2 0 4 0 0 3 1 0 2—12
Stolen bases—Reid (2), Melton (2),
Eggleston, Riggins and Spearman. Two
base hits—Reid, Cade, Thomas and
Spearman. Three base hit—Washington
. Home runs—Melton (2), Riggins
and Eggleston. Double plays—Yancey
to Rojo; Washington to Rojo. Umpires
—Jamieson at plate; Connelly on bases.
SECOND GAME.
Bacharach Giants.
ab. r. h. p.o. a. e.
Jenkins, 1f. .....5 1 3 2 0 0
Reid, rf. .....4 1 1 1 0 0
White, cf. .....3 0 1 4 0 0
Taylor, 1h. .....4 0 0 6 0 0
Lindsey, ss. .....4 0 0 5 3 0
Eggleston, c. 3b. .....4 0 3 4 1 0
Day, 2h. .....3 0 0 0 1 0
Walker, 3b. .....1 0 0 0 0
Jones, c. .....3 0 0 2 0 0
Henderson, p. .....3 0 0 0 0 1
Thomas .....1 0 0 0 0 0
Melton, cf. 5 1 1 2 2 0
Washington, 2b. 5 1 2 2 2 0
Smith, rf. 2 2 1 2 0 0
Fisher, fc. 2 2 1 2 0 0
Riggs, 2b. 4 2 3 0 1 0
Spearman, 4b. 4 2 2 3 1 0
Rojo, 1b. 2 0 1 10 1 1
Kaplan, 1a. 2 0 1 10 1 1
Rector, rf. 4 0 0 1 0 0
Holland, p. 4 0 1 2 1 0
Bacharach Giants. 1.00 1 0 0 1 0 0 0-2
Lincoln Giants . 1.05 1 0 1 0 1 0-x
Sacrificio hits-Yancey and Rojo.
Stolen base-Smith. Two base hits-
Excelsior. Three base hits-Ringgia.
Home run-Spearman. Double plays-
Spearman and Rojo: Yancey to Washington to Rojo. Strikeouts-Holland; 2. Henderson, or Bases on balls-Holland.
Cambridge on plate: Connolly on balls-Cambridge on plate: Connolly on balls
VANCOUVER, B. C., June 22 (A.N.P.)—Leslie "Wildest" Carter, colored boxer of Everett, Washington, proved far too fast for Tom Cello of San Francisco last night when he all over the city took every of 10 and Jad Cello the verge of a knockout at the closing bell.
LINCOLNS IN FINE GAMES VS. BACHARACHS League Leaders Took Both Ends of Double Bill
Crack Flyers Shake Hands
A
Photo by International Newsheet.
Claude Bracey, Rice Institute Star Performer, Shaking Hands With Eddie Tolan, One of His Opponents in 100-Yard Race, After Winning the Race at the Metropolitan Association A. A. U. Games, at the Yankee Stadium, for the Benefit of the Gen. George W. Wingate Memorial Fund of the Public Schools Athletic League.
Batting 'Em Out With Lloyd's Crack Lincoln Giants at Protectory Oval
POUSE yourselves... and, like a dewdrop from the lion's mane, be shook to airy air. You get the aforesaid quotation from the works of Mr. Shakespeare. It's just another funny way we have of starting some baseball stuff for your consideration. The grand old game is not for molly-coddles, else we would have never mentioned the King of Beasts in the beginning. Baseball is for red-blooded Americans—men and boys who can give and take; men and boys who can hit the dirt and breathe the air with that feeling of—'Charity toward all and malice toward none'; men and boys who can shake the hand of a rival in victory or defeat in a God-like manner. Baseball is a game of unexpected incidents. Don't be surprised nor shocked at anything you see or hear at a ball game. In the end of a moment the fans are wild and players are wilder—some of 'em. So, look at baseball as if Is—a game. With all its faults, if any, America loves it.
IN TIMES back, when a baseball team would go on the field crippled and ailing, jump into a game and do the best they could with what they had, all the sports writers would acclaim them as game bunch of ball players. From the work of the Littlemore and the game bunch with Manager Lloyd and Sealer, we will have to join the old sports writers' union and say the Lincoln Giants are the gamest bunch of ball players of modern times.
THE work of shortstops last Sunday was actually fine. That Lindsey was great on ground balls. I never thought he was so good. He made some splendid pick-ups and catches. Vancey of the Lincoln was getting his hands on anything he could possibly reach. Twelve he went over second base for one-hand stops of hard-hit grounders and got his man.
WASHINGTON at second and Rojo at first, subbing for Scales and Lloyd, played hard and they were effective. Washington is a ball player, I'm telling you. Don't throw me down, Wash!
ROJO, Cuban catcher of the Lincoln Giants, is a good catcher and a good hitter. He is the Lincoln Giants' cut-up. Rojo is bound to become popular at the Oval because of his merry disposition on the coaching lines and his sunny smile for everyone.
OLD reliable Spearman was hitting them in the time of need last Sunday. He just couldn't bear to see a Lincoln on base when he came to bat.
WE DON'T know what Lloyd has been shooting into those ball players of his, but whatever it is taking. They are getting quite interesting.
CHARLEY SMITH, other than a dangerous hitter, is one of the best base-runners in the game. Smitty could be an idol of the Oval fans, but he can't control his temper. O, yes, he can and will. Smitty is going to be an ideal ball player from now on. Don't throw me down, Charley.
ANY time you meet a great big ball player just ask him—What part of Texas as you feel? The queen will be strictly in order. The Lone Star State has produced more good-hearted players than any other common wealth in the Union. Here they are: Rube Poster, Louis (Santop) Loffin, Joe Williams, Doc Wylie, Rich Gee, Huspeth, Mackey, Carr and others we cannot recall at this time. If it ever came to a battle on the diamond of teams composed of players from their native states, we would have to string along with the boys from Texas.
WE had a birthday this month, but we kept it under cover. People, you know, ask so many foolish questions these days—what year and where were you born, single or married, what are you doing now, etc—we thought it wise for reasons mentioned and other reasons we will not mention to let June 12 glide silently by and tell you about two other notable characters who were born in the merry month of June. Perhaps you don't know Jimmie Walker, who was born around the 19th or 20th, but you all know Connie Rector of the Lincoln Giants. Connie was born June 15. I looked up his horoscope. Gee whiz! You ought to see it.
NEXT SUNDAY Hildales, coming over to Protectory Oval with the best team they have all season. Blz Mackey will be with them and the hard-hitting Dehigo. George Britt, who is now in his old-time pitching form; there was none better. Charleston, Dallard, Judy Johnson and the fine fielding, heavy-hitting right field they've got. The boys from Darby are playing great ball. They recently took a double header from the Homestead Grays and are camping on the trail of the Baltimore Black Sox. These games will about settle the championship of the first half of the Negro American League championship. The Lincoln's are now in the lead, but there exists between the Hildales and Lincoln and there games will be fought between the game next Sunday and Scales will be back from his home town in Alabama. The Lincoln's need these games to make the championship safe for New York. Protectory Oval next Sunday.
By SQL WHITE
NEW YORK 'AMSTERDAM NEWS. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 26. 1929
BRONX GIANTS DEFEAT SPORTS
The Breaks Appear to Be Against Local Team These Days.
DYKMAN OVAL, Inwood, June 22.
—The New York Sports were defeated by the Bronx Giants, white rivals of the Lincoln Giants, by the score of 8 to 7 here today. The Sports are playing ball, but, the breaks seem to have been going against them in the last four games. Twice they've been nosed out in the last innning, the Bronx team started on the mound for the Bronx Giants, but was relieved by Jones under a flurry of base hits in the fifth. De Graff opposes them and was touched for the third. Doyle had two strikeouts, Jones three and De Graff two. De Graff was somewhat wild yesterday and is one. Hitting honors for the day were corralled by Lawrence for the Sports, with a double and a single in three times up, and Becker for the Giants, who duplicated the feat in five times up.
The game was nip and tuck all the way. The Sports got off to a flying
in the second, but the Bronx Giants
equalized with four in their half of
the second. Another pair of runs for
the Bronkites in the third gave them
the team's alternating scoring a run a piece
after that.
Taylor's error in the eighth gave
the Bronkites in the third give them
the team's alternating scoring a run a piece
after that.
Taylor's error in the eighth gave
the Bronkites in the third give them
the team's alternating scoring a run a piece
after that.
Fred Canton, business manager of
the Sports, through his untiring efforts, has groomed one of the best
the Giants' margin of victory.
Fred Canton, business manager of
the Sports, through his untiring efforts, has groomed one of the best
the Giants' margin of victory.
Feels that he's ready to clash with
any colored ball club in the East.
New York Sports.
A. B. R. H. E.
Martin, Sb. 3 1 1 0
Taylor, Sb. 4 0 0 1
Dennery, Ib. 3 1 0 0
Donell, Ib. 2 1 2 0
Flemming, rf. 2 1 1 0
Chamman, rf. 4 2 1 0
Booker, rf. 4 2 1 0
De Graff, p. 4 0 0 0
29 7 7 1
Bronx Giants.
Becker, lf. A.R. R. H. I.
Baker, ss. 5 1 2 0
Taquer, cf. 3 0 0 0
Hallerman, 2b. 3 1 0 1
Himpson, lb. rf. 1 0 0 0
Cunales, 3b. 3 2 2 1
Tonale, c. 1 1 0 1
Wornock, rf. 0 0 0 0
Owls, p. 0 0 0 0
Raskin, lb. 4 0 2 0
Jones, p. 2 0 0 0
N. Y. Sports. 1 3 0 1 1 0 1 0 7
Bronx Giants g. 1 4 0 0 1 0 2 8
Gans Boxing at Dexter Park Monday Night
Baby Joe Gans, the great colored junior wetterweight star from the Pacific Coast, will once more step on his chair when he exoses the box. New York wetterweight contender, in the feature event of ten rounds at the Dexter Park Arena on next Monday night. Baby Joe holds a unique position in the sport, being the boxer either lightweight or wetterweights, besides meeting the 140-pounders in his own division. The semi-final will bring together the top three boxers, weight protege, and Solly Eitz, the Brownsville lightweight. This match is a sort of neighborhood affair, and there is considerable interest as to the outcome. The boxer of the card is made up of two boxers and a four-rounder. A special bout will bring forth Salvatore (Red) Affinito, the hero of the recent golden glow course, Gwenn Garden, facing Harry Friedman, also a recent graduate of the simon pure ranks. This marks Affinito's first bout as a professional, and he will be watched all close observers of the manly art.
STANDING OF CLUBS.
American Negro League.
W. L. Pet.
Lincoln Giants .....14 7 .667
Balt, Black Sox .....15 10 .630
Homestead Grays .....12 8 .630
Hilldale .....12 16 .429
Bacharach Giants .....7 14 .333
Cuban Stars .....6 14 .300
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VIKING TIRES
In the other six, Frank Gooseby, stablemate of Baby Joe Gans, will box Jimmy Tantoros, the tough Greek welterweight who made a big hit at Dexter Park last week, while the peninsula's most famous stunt in Willie Gannon of Irish-town and Lew Farber of the East Side.
As usual, the prices will be from
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$29x4.00 9.25 30x1.50 15.25
$29x4.40 9.25 30x1.50 15.25
$20x4.40 10.35 30x1.60 16.25
$20x4.75 11.45 30x1.60 17.95
$20x4.75 11.45 30x1.60 17.95
$20x4.60 12.75 30x1.60 19.25
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$20x4.60 12.35 30x1.60 21.75
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S ALSO SOLD ON EASY TERMS
BEN LEVY
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Open Evenings. *Open Sundays.
We're With You, Frank
R. Romeo L. Dogherty,
Sports Editor,
Amsterdam News,
2253 Seventh Avenue,
Washington City,
Dear Sir:
No doubt, like the rest of us,
you are sometimes stuck for copy,
Well, here is a little tip:
You are young colored
fellow by the name of
Charles Jenkins, who is a mighty
good umpire. He apparently
knows what is about. First
picture is a real spot at a
tlemen, and I can vouch for him,
as I have had the pleasure of
knowing him several years.
Next picture is a real
umpire nowadays and Jenkins
is the first colored chap I
have seen work in that capacity.
He works regularly for colored
umpires nowadays and Jenkins
is the saying that when Jenkins
is officiating the teams are sure
of an even break. He is honest
not only in his umpiring, but in
his work. He is a responsible position with a bank,
which he has been connected
with for the past five years.
The only thing I am sorry
to you is that I am not a
picture of this fellow.
Now as the Negro-American League is under way, why not ask him to play for you? Jenkins the double "O." Personally I think he would make a great addition to the team. Anything you can for for him with the powers would be appreciated and I am sure that you will not be long gesturing this fellow, who is regular, hundred per cent at all times.
Fraternal yours,
FRANK N. KIDD
Sports Writer,
Newark Star-Eagle.
DAVE MEYERS SMASHES MARK
Gus Moore Also in Great Showing in Newark
NEWARK, N. J., June 22.—The New York Athletic Club easily defended its metropolitan senior A.A.U. track and field championship today, scoring 109 points in the annual meet at Weequahic Park. The Swedish-American A. C., of New York, was run-up with 22 and Newark A. C. third with 18.
The only record-breaking performance of the day was turned in by Dave Meyers, who hurled the javelin 192 feet, $3\frac{1}{2}$ inches, shattering the metropolitan mark of 186 feet, 7 inches set by J. C. Lincoln Jr. in 1917.
Gus Moore, the slim, smooth-striding Brooklyn boy, scored his first major triumph at the mile when he won the senior metropolitan mile championship in 4:23 1-5, one of the fastest district title races since Abel Kivlt set his metropolitan record of 4:20 4-5 fifteen years ago.
One of the biggest upsets of the meet came in the defeat of Ben Hedges, of Princeton, in collegiate basketball. George Spitz, of Flushing High School, Spitz, clearing 6 feet 2 inches in his third successive meet, was first, and Hedges, beaten for the first time this season, was second at 6 feet 11 inches. He tied for third at 5 feet 11 inches, and the former took the bronze medal on a jump-off. This was Spitz's third triumph in eight days. He cleared 6 feet 2½ inches, he won two games, and A. L. championships a week ago, then jumped 6 feet 2½ inches for a new mark (displacing Hedges as record holder) in the metropolitan jump championship last Sunday, and he won his bilihil performances to beat Hedges in person today.
---
Did We "Give 'Em a Chance?"
ANSTO
Above Is Shown a Picture Taken About Fifteen Years Ago at the Old Amsterdam News Office When the Champion Washington Girls' Basketball Team of Washington, D.C., Called to Pay Their Respects to the Sporting Editor—the Same Bimbo Still Dishing Up the Sport Dope.
Negro and White in Southern Sport
BY WILLIAM PICKENK.
(For A. N. P.)
WHILE in Texas I saw two great sport leavens, with Negroes as principals, and largely attended by both white and colored citizens. One was a baseball match in San Antonio, the other a boxing bout in Galveston, where Jack Dickens the baseball game was between two Negro teams—the San Antonio team and one from Tulsa, Okla. It was held in the great league park. The grandstand was well nigh filled—white on white, and black on black. Whites invaded the Negro side occasionally, for the Negroes seemed to be having the most fun clapping, cheering, yelling and dancing between the whites and blacks. These invaders were some white women. The whites are always the breakers of the color lines in the South, socially and otherwise. They just can't help it; they know how to respect him.
This game was one of the best games ever played in the history of baseball; at the ninth inning they stood 2 to 2; then they made goose-eggs, again unmute; each made one run, setting 3 to 2; the fifteenth, when Sun Antonio made one score and Tusa failed to score, leaving 4 to 3, in favor of the home team.
Everybody admitted that it was one of the best generated and most skillful plays in the game to see. All that Babe Ruth and his colleagues have on these fellows is the extra publicity and extra pay which Ruth and his crowd can get. The whites seemed to enjoy the game as sincerely as the blacks, and abandoned. The Negroes danced and cavorted and yelled, while the whites looked on, as it seemed to me, with something like friendly envy.
The fight was in Galveston on a Friday night. DeWalt, of Houston, asked: "Even when I am engaged in it," it replied.
We drove to Galveston. The great fight auditorium was packed—white, Negro and Mexican—the Negroes about Mexicans and Mexicans. A preliminary bout between a white and a Mexican. The Mexican won. The Negroes cheered loudly for the Mexican. We were told the Negroes always "root" for the Mexican. Then there was a sort of middle-weight semi-final between two Mexicans—one between a Galveston Mexican and the other a Mexican. The Negroes always "root" apart, often, as they are mostly the same stock. The Oklahomaan was outmatched by the Tex-Mexian and was knocked out in the ground—the only knockout of the evening.
But then came on the real fight and the real fighters, which everybody had really come there to see, to judge from the cheering and the comments. Two fighters, both well known in fatlans, "Bear Cat" Wright, originally of Galveston, and Walker (we forget his soubriquet) of Oklahoma. The "Bear Cat" weight in at 215 and Walker's weight in both packes down like stem hammered the greater favorite, and was aggressive with his superior weight. Walker was more scientific and defensive. They were both hard as tanned leather, judging from the punishment the could have been for, and the fact that "Bear Cat" was inclined to hit Walker a bit low. It seemed so to Walker, too, for once he protested. Once Walker knocked the "Bear Cat" down, but Wright jumped up immediately. And once Walker Wright the strength of Volunteer, the strength of Urus, put Walker through the ropes—not by blows, but by catapulting his massive body. The heavy "Bear Cat" had the disadvantage of age; the lighter Walker had a younger age of youth, being only 22 years old.
They fought twelve rounds, fast, furious, dutifully in its earnestness. In fact, their twelve-round fight was so interesting that it seemed much shorter than
Edited by Romeo L. Dougherty
LLOYD MEN DROP THIRD CONTEST
With Ping Gardner and George Carr in their lineup, the Bacharach Glaine showed a marked improve-ment in the game, and won an 18 to 9 victory over the Lincoln Glants in a twilight game at Protectory Oval Monday evening, Gardner was on the mound, and although the Lincoln hits him freely, his teammates: more than made up for it by getting 15 hits off Thomas Carr, and putting up the heavy batting included home runs by Lindsey, Carr and Yancey.
The complete score was us follows:
Bockhorn Gloss
Bacharach Giants.
A.B. R. H. O. A. E.
Jenkins, lf. 5 3 3 1 0 0
Lindsey, ss. 5 3 3 1 0 0
White, ff. 5 1 2 0 0
Carr, 1b. 5 3 3 8 1 0
Thomas, rf. 5 3 3 8 1 0
Eggleston, 3b. 3 1 2 2 0 0
Dixy, 2b. 3 1 4 3 0
Jone, bf. 3 1 2 2 0 0
Gandner, p. 5 2 2 2 0 0
43 18 15 21 7 1
Lincoln Giants.
A.B. R. H. O. E.
Melton, cf. 0 0 0 0 0
Washington, 2b. 0 0 0 0 0
Howard, lf. 1 1 0 0 0 0
Smith, rf. 3b. 4 2 2 4 3 0
Riggs, 3b. 4 0 2 1 2 1
Spearman, c. 4 1 2 2 0 0
Rojo, 1b. 4 1 2 2 0 0
Vinces, ss. 3 1 2 2 7 0
Recton, lf, cf. 4 1 1 1 0 1
Thomas, p. 0 0 0 0 0 0
Stanley, p. 4 1 1 0 0 0
*Holland batted for Howard in seventh inning.
21 0 13 21 12 5
Bacharach Giants .....7 1 5 0 0 2 1 5 - 1
Lincoln Giants .....0 1 2 6 0 0 9 - 9
Sacramento Giants .....0 1 2 6 0 0 9 - 9
Stolen bases - Carr (2), G.
Thomas (2) and Eggleston. Two base
hits - Lindsey, Carr and Yancey. Three
base hits - Lindsey, Carr and Yancey.
Home runs - Lindsey and Smith. Double
play - Thomas to Carr to Dny. Bases on
balls - Off Gardiner, 5; Thomas, 2, and
Stanley, 1. Strikeouts - Thomas, 1; 1.
Strikeouts - Jameson at plate; 1.
Williams Matched With Rocco
Johnny Keyes, matchmaker for the Rockaway Stadium, has signed One-Punch Leo Williams, fast going to George Rocco. They will box at the opening show, June 28.
Williams has stopped his last five opponents. In La Rocco, Williams has matched George Rocco. The overt war between Jack Rountail last week. La Rocco has boxed the best in the business and has more than held his own.
For the semi-final 10, Keyes has matched Google Mack, Jersey City fatcruiser, and Tony Pellegrino. This pair fought the star event at Dexter Park last summer and put up a winging battle.
The game around sessions of the preliminary boxers.
White men and women were entranced at the battle of these two inexhaustible black giants. When the two faced off, the display of judges and audience was "a draw."
We smiled to see the white men managing, rubbing, patting and petting the black battles between the rounds. The economic power is the most leveling or devastating of all power.
WILL BAN CUBA
OUTLAW TEAM
American Negro League Acts to Curb Suspended Players
Reports that Chacon, former shortstop of the Original Cub Stars, member club of the American Negro league, was bringing seven men to Alejandro Peppe's team to this season. Alejandro Peppe's team has acted on quickly by the officials in the league.
Booking agents throughout the league agreed of the league rule that no club will play any team which plays any outlaw using a suspended player or in any park with such a team plays.
The following men accepted teams with Pompey and some of them with Roxanne Oms, Rose Millito, Valgas, Pedra, Rogans and Bejerano. All of them excused and Valgas have been members of the Original Cub Stars.
These men went to San Domingo in the close of the Cub winter and refused to report to Pompey in time to start the A. season here.
Rumors have it that the backers Chacon and the new team is No Strong, former owner of the Brooklyn Giants, Strong is a power factor based around New York City.
League Race Tightens.
When the Homestead Grays in four straining games more Black Sox they pulled the team out of first place, elevated Lincoln Giants to the premier position and pulled themselves into place. Games of the past have placed the league in positions in the league with the clubs in and out of the glory the Closing days of the race bid to be exciting and the winner of the last day July 4.
The clubs have arranged the schedules to get as many postgame games played off as possible. and color weather seriously hamper the final day of the Hilldale Blizz Mackey of Hilldale George Carr and Ping Gardner of the Bacharach Giants have seen out their terms of suspension and working in league games. The all clubs will start the half at half full strength.
Meeting Friday.
The final schedule meeting of the league will be held in Philadelphia. Final second-half laws will be approved.
Other matters coming up below the league will involve the matters fines and suspensions for disgruntled and warring athletes and a final dues of $10,000 for teams to 15 men, including a play manager, is hardly acceptable to general owners and this may amended.
Outstanding Players
League officials are raised, show that the stars of other are still holding their own but are new faces are asserting their right priority. In these two groups may be named Correa, Alfonso, Saez, and Clemente. Charlie Smith, Scales, Riggs, Spearman, Naman Washington, De Gray, Rector, Holland, Lloyd, with Jap Washington, Ewing, Street, Joe Williams, Cannady, Dodge, Johnson, Stratton, Joe Lee, Hollow Wilson, Dixon, Warfield, Pete Wellington, Ryan, Lee and Clark
Grenada Rout Virgin Island Cricketers at Van Cortlandt Pa
The Grenada G. C. complet
routed the Virgin Islands G. C.
Sunday afternoon at Van Cortla
m and played five games, of
score 78 to 147 for five wickets.
Of the seven Grenada men w
went to bat; only one failed to
secede, figures, and W. Charles m
bibrilliant, and W. Charles for
40 runs before he was caught.
It is rumored that dissatisfaction
over Capt. Simmons' handling of a
team in recent matches may cause
new arrangements.
BATMAN NADA C. C.
Batman How Out Re
M. Williams, L. J. W.
W. Charles, caught
E. Benjamin, stumped
A. McCarroll, stumped
Dunlop, not out
Wolsh, bowled
Baldwin, not out
Extras
Batsman How Out
V. Thompson, caught
R. Dickerson, run out
H. Messer, caught
V. Clement, bowled
D. Simmons, L. B. W.
J. King, caught
A. Danielson, bowled
G. Dickerson, caught
T. Hazel, caught
W. Douglas, L. B. W.
L. Martin, not out
Extras
Emilio Sarda, Havana Red twirler, entered the "Hall of hit, no-run 8 to 0 victory over the ball Club, before crowd of full 500 fans at Chilloutte, Ohio Tuesday. The Red Sox are getting mighty fine pitching from their team, have ready scored their 6th victory, only 11 losses checked against since their season started early March at Miami, Fla. Colleen hard-hitting versatile list for the two weeks, returns to join the this week at Massillon. Ohio nandez's absence in left field has been felt and this fleet player expected back in the up-a-fire ground out the club full strength again.
GEO. MOORE'S THREAT WINS
George Dixon in Great Fight Against the Sensational Jock Malone
America's Leading Negro Manager Backs His Los Angeles, Cal., Boy Heavily
(Special to Amsterdam News.) Young George Dixon of Portland made good his promise to spoil Louis Parone's plans for a bout featuring Jock Malone and Ace Hudkins when he stepped the veteran St. Paul Irishman in the fifth round of their bout scheduled for 10 here last week.
At the conclusion of a terrific fifth round in which Malone's lip was split almost to the teeth, he conferred with his seconds and the referee and decided to cease hostilities. Malone took treatment at the emergency hospital.
although no time was Malone off his feet, at all times was he besieged as he has never been before in bouts on this coast. Dixon lose no time in engaging into action and was leading to Malone from the first gong. Dixon Leads. The Portland boxer took an edge in the first round of boxing and then took the next three by comfortable margins. He not only outboxed Malone, but outgunned him. It was that Malone, co-founder on points, began to love the fighting and Dixon met him toe to toe. Both slugged furiously to the body, but when they broke away Dixon sent in three sharp straight lefts which did the damage to Malone's lip. The cut bled profusely and both fighters were red with the claret. Malone was still strong at the finish and while it is problematical whether Dixon would have knocked him out, it was a guarded that one of the sluggled lefts he took did him very good. It would have foolhardy to continue and risk more serious injury.
The sudden termination to the light stunned most of the fans. Only George Moore, Dixon's manager, seemed to know what it was all about. he said that Dixon could beat Malone and backed his judgment in a thousand short end of Dixon held Malone to a six round draw in Portland, but most of the critics felt sure that Jock could do much better in this bout. May Box Again. Parente today made plans to use Dixon here again. Dixon goes North to battle Brolly. But will return here after that battle. Dixon's manager is anxious to pit his fighter against Ace Budkins and Parente will try to land such a match. Or one with Willis.
Utopia Boys Win Meet
On Saturday, June 15, ten buses loaded with boys from Brace Memorial Boys' Club, Columbus Hill Center Harlem Boys' Club, Italian Boys' Club, Jones Memorial Boys' Club, Sips Bay Boys' Club, Schermerhorn Parkground, Sullivan Street Boys' Club and topia House, Sullivan Street Boys' Club and id Society, traveled to Valhalla, New York, where held the first annual field day, boys, on arriving, were given plenty of fine, fresh milk to drink also ice cream and cake, after which races were held. Utopia had the usual winning trak on; and in spite of the many jobs who were unable to go, boys were able to pile with 22 points, and Columbus Hill, third, with 16 points. Results as follows:
14. Yard Dash—E. Shepard, Utopia,
I. Johnson, Harlem House, second;
D. Price, Utopia, third; Devon, Columbus
Hill, fourth.
15. Yard Dash—D. Bilgen, Utopia,
first; J. Holt, Columbus Hill, second;
P. Woodson, Harlem House, third;
T. Cristiano, Schermerhouse, fourth.
16. Yard Dash—J. Gordon, Brace Memorial,
first; T. Kent, Utopia, second;
S. Sito, Columbus Hill, third; N. Byer,
Beelem House, fourth.
17. Yard Dash—first; Columbus Hill,
second; Harlem House, third;
Schermerhouse, fourth. Utopia team was
qualified for running over the line.
Black Jack—T. Bennis, Schermerhouse,
first; O. Rejohn, Jones Memorial,
second; J. Moseley, Harlem House,
third; S. Benjamin, Columbus Hill,
fourth.
Running Broad—Lawrence Francis,
first; James Fisher, Utopia, second; Peter,
Harlem House, third; Tracknacur,
Harlem House, fourth.
Summing up.
19. Yard Dash—Utopia first; Endah,
Harlem House, third; Hartwell,
Utopia, third; Peterlon, Columbus Hill,
fourth.
14 Yards—Hanks, Utopia, first; Jack-
son, Utopia, second; Sayer, Harlem
House, third; Rice, Kips Bay, fourth.
16 Yards—Drummond, Utopia, first;
Willow, Utopia, second; Mutnakey, Kips
Bay, London, Kips Bay, fourth.
JUROR: JOHNSON, Chris
Summer Levy, coach of the younger
group, served as an official
boy Arthur, Jackson, director of
boy work, took charge of the running
lead team. The unusual fine spirit of sportmanship among the boys at Utopia House is he highly commended. Track prerequis will continue throughout the summer months at Macrombs Dam Park.
Red Sox 8. Marion 0
Nine dusky boys from the Fair Isle
of Cuba, tried and true in the art of
beach pastiming, handed the
Bron Eagles an artistic 8 to 10
alonging. The Eagles, tried and
hund wanting, were about as much
a match for the Havana Red Sox.
The dusky boys are named, as the
appyville Hornets would be for the
new York Yankees of the American
Nine. "was the way the "Marion
H." reviewed this game, which was
bred before a record crowd of 7,200
n. The score:
R. H. E.
Red Sox... 2 0 4 0 1 0 1 0 -3 16 1
Bron... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -6 6 3
Brucez-Williamez and Lamuza:
bod and Toomeilz.
GEORGIE DIXON STOPS JOCK MALONE IN 4TH Dave Meyers and Gus Moore Star in Champs
FIGURES
The Plate Above Shows AL BROWN, Who Was Crowned King of the Bantams Last Week when He Defeated Vidal Gregorio, in a Number of Poses Taken in Paris on His First Trip and Which Were Exclusively Assembled for The Amsterdam News. A Careful Survey Will Show That No Two Pictures Are Alike. Brown Will Fight Ofteener Than Any of the Other Titleholders.
LOS ANGELES, Cal., June 22 (A. N. P.)_—"Godfrey is the man I'll fight," said ex-Champion Jack Dempsey at a conference held at the Biltmore Hotel with Gene Normile and James Crofton, partner in the magnificent new racing and gambling casino at Aguas Calientes, Mexico, according to reports here.
Local fans, both white and colored, are all pepped up over the prospective match, which will in reality be held at the equally weight championship of the world.
The conference had hardly begun before the ex-heavy king was asked: "Will you fight George Godfrey?" "Why not take on Godfrey?" said the old Manassa Mauler, as he seemed to knit his eyebrows in surprise at the question. "They all look alike to me when I am in that ring. Godfrey has licked all of those fellows except Schmeling. He is a big card out here on the Coast, after having met him, and from what I gather Crofton and Born would like to see him in the ring at Aguas Calientes. It makes no difference to me whom I meet.
"I told them that I would be glad to meet the winner of the New York heavyweight tournament. If this fellow Schmeling stands up June 26 against Uzudun and wins a couple of more fights he would be the logical man for Aqua Calientes. Otherwise, I'd be willing to take on God-Jack Sharkey, Uzudun or anybody that can draw them in at the gate.
"I don't care when, but say about March 1 to 15 would suit me fine. That would give me a chance to go up into mountains for four or five months."
The proposal as outlined calls for the erection of an arena near the hotel. It will be built to care for 50,000 fans. The prices will be so good that so many dollar gate with capacity attendance.
Opinion is divided as to the outcome, but, white fans of course still believe Jack the superman, while colored fans just know the big, good-natured colored boy born in Mobile can beat the "man mauler."
Cathedral Giants in Their Sixth Victory on Sunday
George Lyons' Cathedral Giants, Harlem's outstanding combination of colored and white players, hung up their sixth straight victory in conquering the Stapleton All Stars on the losers' diamond in Staten Island, by the score of 3-2, in a thrilling 11-inning pitching duel Sunday. The Cathedrals, going into the eight inning inning, a 2-0 man gin and nine held hilts, only touched the Stars' twirler for four hits, tipping the score and going into extra innings when, in the eleventh frame, with two down, Lyons, pinchhitting for Ryan, singled and scored on Dugan's triple, winning the game for the Harlemites. The Cathedrals are a traveling club, consisting of former colored Giants, Philadelphia Colored Giants, Flood's New York Colored Giants, New York Colored Sports, besides several leading white stars gathered from the leading local colleges.
Cath. Giants '...000 000 000 2001 - 3 61
Stapletons ...002 000 2000 2001 - 3 82
Batteries -- Cathedrals, Lough and
Goldie; All Stars, Samson and Brooks.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1925
Crowned King of the Bantamweight Division Last Week
Lawson Wins Over
Gardner of Salem Club
Eric Lawson, of the Knights of St. Anthony, battled his way to a three-round decision over Cliff Gardner, Salem Crescens, in the 135-pound special bout last Friday night at the Maris Stella K. of C. at Far Rockaway.
In the final 125-pound class bout, Ernest Vaglica, National A. C., knocked out Jack Williams, unattached, in the third round. Vaglica won his way to the final bout, unattached out Jimmy Taylor, unattached, in the first round of the semi-final. The summary:
112-Pound Class — Aston Chambers, unattached, defeated Joe Teril, National A. C., three rounds, decision; Joe Marks, Seward's Gym, scored a technical knockout over Louis Knudson, Finnish-American A. C., second round. Final—Chambers won over Marks on a default.
118-Pound Class — Leo Sporn, unattached, scored a technical knockout over Laurie Shalouin, Finnish-American A. C., third round; Jimmy Kirkos, for Charlotte Spellio, Seward's Gym, first round. Final—Kirkos defeated Sporn on a default.
130-Pound Class—Patsy Ferraro, unattached, knocked out Arthur Brady, Bayonne, N. J., in the first round; Meyer Rowan, unattached, defeated Jimmy Flanders, unattached, three rounds, decision, unattached, defeated, defeated, decision, three rounds.
125-Pound Class—Ernest Vagilie, National A. C., knocked out Jimmy Taylor, unattached, first round; Jack Williams, unattached, knocked out Louis Delaney, unattached, third round. Final—Vagilie knocked out Williams in the third round.
Knights of St. Anthony, defeated Cliff Gardner, Salem-Crescents, three rounds, decision.
Cuban Stars to Play Bushwicks Sunday
Sunday afternoon at Dexter Park, Brooklyn, the Cubs Star of Havana will play their first games this season with the Bushwicks when the teams meet in a double header, the first game starting at 2 p. m.
Other games with the Cubans this season were scheduled, but all were called off through the weather conditions. Last Sunday two of the most exciting games of the season were staged when after thirteen innings in the first game the Chester, Pa. Jubilee by the Bushwicks by a 6-5 score, while the Cubs went to the Kandy Kids through the hit of Joe Weiss in the ninth inning, sending in two runs which beat Kennington, 4-3.
Another hurler, Jack Wisner, former Giants and Baltimore clubs' right hander, twirled the first game for the Dexter Parkers and was forced to go the entire thirteen innings against the Chester club. The Cubans have a very strong team this season and are one of the big clubs in the Negro American League and at present hold third place in the league. The first game on Sunday will start at 2 p. m. sharp and Jack Wisner and Stanley Baumgartner will be the Bushwick's slab artists in these contests.
Amateur Boxing Bouts
The Metropolitan-Association A. A. U. will conduct the first outdoor boxing tournament of the season at the Starlight Park, East 177th street subway station, this Wednesday evening, June 26.
Three four-man classes and two special bouts will be contested, making a total of 11 bouts or 33 rounds of boxing. Entry blanks have been issued and sent to all of the leading amateur boxing clubs in the district. All A. A. registered bokers desire to compete in their bouts and must send to their entry to the Metropolitan Association A. A. U. Headquarters, Room 2742, Woolworth Bldg., N. Y. C.
Salmon Knocks Out Italian in Second Round
PATCHOGUE, L. I., June 22.—Walter Salmon knocked out Jerry Ciclone in the second round of the 128-pound class finals of the amateur boxing show at the Elks' clubhouse here last night. The summary: 128-Pound Class.
Semi-Finals—Walter Salmon, Hempstead, knocked out Albert Harer, Patchogue, first round; Jerry Ciclone, unattached, knocked out Sherman Porter, unattached, first round.
Final—Salmon knocked out Cicclone,
second round.
128-Found Class.
Semi-final—Sam. Fisher, unattached,
defeated Sherman. Perry, unattached,
extra round; Steve Dayton, Rockville
Centre, defeated Frank Palmer, Lenox
Hill.
No final, both boxers hurt in semi-finals.
183-Pound Class.
Semi-finals-Stanley Knappe, Seward's Gym, defeated James Banks, Salem-Crescent A. C.; Tony Adamo, Lenox Hill, defeated Lewis Saccenti, Patcheokue.
Final-Knappe won by default from Adamo.
113-Found Glass.
Semi-finals - Perry Winters. Salem-
Crescent. A. C. knocked. Quincy
"Must
Be
N
"Any
safe-
=says Alfred
D. Litt., A
Famous Pure
"Must Cigar Smokers Be Endangered? No!!! I Say"
Do you remember the old, filthy shop where the man in the window rolled the leaves with dirty fingers...and spit on the ends? What a far cry this is from the modern, certified "Cremo-method" of manufacture!
WHERE'S JAMAICA KID
For the past few weeks an attempt has been made to locate Jamaica Kid. The Kid's real name is Robert Buckley and his father is dying in faraway Belize, British Honduras, Central America. S. A. Haynes of 2038 W. Oxford street, Philadelphia, Pa., is in possession of a letter from the Kid's sister, Mrs. Louisa Cattouse, Birdseye View Saloon, 986 New Road, Belize. Anyone, having information that would lead to the whereabouts of the Kid can get in touch with either Mr. Haynes or the Sporting Editor of The Amsterdam News.
Morton, Halfmoon A. C., second; Jerry Steffel, Lenox Hill, knocked out Lou Lieberman, unattached, second round. Final—Steffel knocked out Winters, second round.
At Cigar Smoke
Endanger
No!!! I Say
a man who smokes a Cremo
-I certify Cremo as sanitizer
W. McCann
L.B., LL.D.
Food Expert
Certified
(Special to Amsterdam News.)
NEW HAVEN, Conn.-The Dixwell Racquet Welders won the first preliminaries for the T. E. A. McCurdry trophy from the Springfield Racquet Welders who were played on the courts of Yale University. In the singles Dr. Carter Marshall of New Haven won from W. C. Williams of Springfield, 6-2, 6-2; Dr. Rudolph B. Costa. New Haven, won from Mr. Sawyer, Springfield, 6-3, 6-2; Mr. James, Springfield won from Dr. Fletch Flem, 5-6, 6-8, 6-4 in the doubles Dr. Costa and H. Fleming won from Meers. Jackson and Sawyer, 7-5, 6-4.
The remaining preliminaries for Southern New England will be played between Hartford and New Haven here during the latter part of the month. The winner of these matches will meet the winner of the Northern New England preliminaries in the finals in July, following the New England open tournament. The latter event is the big tennis match between New York and will be played in Springfield Mass. July 4, 5 and 6. In addition to a large entry list from New England, New York and New Jersey, many of the national ranking players are expected to take part in this tournament.
Brown Recognized as Bantam Champion
Lesser Lights of New Jersey Tennis Association in Tournament
NEWARK, June 24.—The lesser lights of New Jersey's tennis firmament will make their sixth annual pilgrimage to Asbury Park next week to play in the Class "B" tournament of the New Jersey Tennis Association, Inc. This year marks the sixth renewal of this fixture. This is the tournament that this association promotes to encourage and develop its future stars. Players who have won this tournament or who have been selected for the firmament are intelligible to compete. This tournament gives those who need a little encouragement an opportunity to engage in tournament play.
Last year the Men's Singles title was taken by Dr. Charles E. Bomar of Orange, N. J., who is ineligible to play this year. Those three perennial competitors, Dr. E. A. Robinson of Asbury Park, J. Mercer Burrell and Lawrence C. Dancy have already signed their entry blanks. The committee had been promised the team from the Orange T. C. and Tuxedo A. C., who have several youngsters recently returned from college and plan to enter them. Miss Julia Neal of Asbury Park seems to be the outstanding entrant in the women's events.
The play will start on Wednesday, July 3, and continue to Saturday, July 6. All matches will be played on the Springwood Avenue Course of the Asbury Park Temple of the Church. Already been donated for prizes to the winners and runners-up in each event.
The entertaining club (Asbury Park Tennis Club), will entertain the players and visitors with a reception at Roseland Hall on Wednesday evening, July 3. Various enterprising individuals, knowing that the tennis fans will be in Asbury Park over the holiday, have advertised their Dances etc., but the reception on Wednesday evening is the only one having the official authorization and endorsement of the New Jersey Tennis Association, Inc.
The regular monthly meeting of the New Jersey Tennis Association, Inc. will be held on Friday evening, July 5, at the residence of Dr. E. A. Robinson, 149 Atkins avenue, Asbury Park. Plans will be completed at this meeting for the entertainment of the National Championships to be held at Bordentown during the week August 19 to 85.
Policemen to Battle for Handball Championship
On Saturday afternoon, June 29, at 3 p. m. in the gymnasium of the West 135th streets branch Young Men's Christian Association. Detective Emanuel Kline of Sixth Inspection Division and Paul Moore of 16th Precinct will meet in a return handball match. A few weeks ago these two players met and Moore was returned victor over Kline by two games to win all of the games were closely contested. The defeat of Kline came as a surprise to the large number of both sexes who filled the gym. Kline has been training hard for this return engagement and insists that Moore will not take a game in the forthcoming watch. Handball is an interesting and exciting game which brings into play all of the muscles of the body as well as requiring lightning speed. To those who have not seen a game of its kind, the situation following the match will be an exhibition of weight lifting by members of the physical department.
DOUGLAS SCHOOL TAKES CROWN
Annexed Title for Junior H. S.'s by Trimming Prospect High of Queens
The Frederick Douglas Junior High School of Manhattan annexed the city baseball title for Junior High Schools by trouncing the Prospect Junior High of Queens, 7 to 2, Saturday afternoon, June 15, at the Astoria Field.
The first and eighth innings were the big ones for Dourlas, four runs being scored in the initial frame and the other three coming in their final trips to the plate. Prospect's two runs were scored in the first two innings.
After these runs were scored Anderson, Douglas hurler, settled down and the other three came in, though he was aided considerably by the accurate and spectacular fielding of the colored lads behind him. Only one error was committed and Anderson allowed but five hits and struck out eleven. Mortak fanned seven and was touched for eight hits. The third hit was preserved, however, and they were credited with six errors.
LeRoy Person, third baseman for the Manhattan nine, had a big day at the bat, accounting for four safe blows, scoring one run and driving in three more. Mortak, pitcher for the Bronx aggregation, only got one hit, but it was a long triple in the second inning. The triple was the best hit of the game and marked a desperate attempt to cut down the lead that the Manhattan ball-tossers had piled up in the opening game. The spore;
PROSPECT.
A.B.R. H. O.A.
Ganeles ..... 3 0 1 2 0
Siegel ..... 3 1 0 0 0
Benedict ..... 4 0 0 1 0
Miller ..... 4 0 2 1 1
Goodman ..... 4 0 1 0 0
Beachat ..... 3 0 0 12 0
Brodaky ..... 2 1 0 4 2
Hurst ..... 4 0 0 0 0
Mortak ..... 4 0 1 1 0
Totals ..... 31 2 5 21 3
DOUGLAS.
A.B.R. H. O.A.
Mosley ..... 5 0 0 3 0
Bourne ..... 2 1 0 2 2
Warren ..... 4 1 1 5 1
Mapp ..... 4 2 1 0 0
Divon ..... 4 2 2 1 0
Person ..... 4 1 4 0 0
Spiller ..... 4 0 0 5 0
Anderson ..... 4 0 0 0 2
Robinson ..... 4 0 0 0 1
Totals ..... 35 7 8 16 6
Prospect ..... 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0-2
Douglas ..... 4 0 0 0 0 0 3 x-7
Three-base hit—Martak. Two-base hit—Warren. Stolen bases—Ganeles. Mapp. Person. Struck out—By Anderson, 11; by Martak. 7. Errors—Bourne, Ganeles. Brodsky, Miller (2), Goodman (2). Wild pitch—Anderson.
Havana Red Sox Continue Dazzling Pace
the Havana Red Sox of Cuba continue their dazzling pace through the States, even though Manager Ramiro Ramirez reports that four of his regulars are out of the game and on the injured list, not seriously, however, and these boys are expected back into the fray any day now, placing the outfit at full strength again. The secondary defense of the Havanians has been put to the acid test for the past week or so, as the regulars were placed on the hospital list one by one, and have come through like real veterans, for the Red Sox scored their seventieth victory of the season this past week, logging their thirteenth game, however, to the Massillon Agathons, 5 to 4, at Massillon, Ohio.
The Cubans are booked at Muskegan, Mich., for morning and afternoon games on July 4 and Saturday and Sunday, July 6 and 7, make the jump to Redland Park, Cincinnati, Ohio, where they meet Jones' Royal Giants in a two-day series at the National League Park. After losing to the Fostoria Eagles, 5 to 2, at Ohio, the Havana representatives took five straight games in their tour of Michigan, defeating Ann Arbor, 9 to 4; Fenton, 2 to 1; Zeeland, 5 to 4; Muskegon, 2 to 0, and Pleasant Lake, 6 to 0. They scored a 15-to-4 triumph over Mansfield, Ohio, but were stopped in their tracks by the Massillon Against Bison, a thrilling and bitterly fought hall game.
The score by innings:
At Fostoria, Ohio.
P. h. e.
Havana ..... 0 0 2 0 0 0 x x - 2 5 1
Fostoria ..... 0 0 2 0 2 0 x x - 5 3 0
Batteries—Dixon and Lamua; Roberts and King, x-Seven innings.
At Ann Arbor, Mich.
Havana ..... 0 6 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 -9 10 2
Ann Arbor ..... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -4 4 3
Batteries — Brownez and Lamuza;
Bach, Dngwell and Reed.
At Fenton, Mich.
Havana ..... 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 -1 7 0
Kenton ..... 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 -1 6 1
Batteries—Tian and Lamuza; Robert
and Evers.
At Zeeland, Mich.
Havana ..... 0 0 0 1 3 0 1 0 0 -6 9 2
Zeeland ..... 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 -4 5 2
Batteries—Williamez, Tian and Lamuza;
Debits and LeRoller.
At Muskegon, Mich.
Havana ..... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -2 6 0
Muskegon ..... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -0 2 6
Batteries—Salda and Lamuza; Dobb
and Potter.
At Pleasant Lake, Mich.
Havana ..... 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 2 1 -6 8 1
Pleasant L. ..... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -0 2 6
Batteries — Brownez and Lazuma;
Terwiliger and Hollie.
At Mansfield, Ohio.
f. h. e.
Havana ..... 3 0 0 3 0 0 2 3 4-15 20 3
Mansfield ..... 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 4-1 2 3
Batteries-Dixon and Lamusa; Barrett and Teevena.
A PAGE OF BROOKLYN AND LONG ISLAND NEWS
BROOKLYN AND LONG ISLAND OFFICE: 868 FULTON STREET, BROOKLYN, N. Y.
TEN
Brooklynites Hear Orators
Brooklynites Hear Orators
Acme Associates' Club Holds Remarkable Oratorical Contest
A remarkable display of oratory was heard by those who attended the contest held Sunday at Christ Church Cathedral, who speakers from New York and Boston with each other for the coveted prizes. Eley Thorpe, president of the Brooklyn Branch of the U. W. I. A. started the contest by showing that the determining factor in the weal of all nations. The Negro, he said, is solely deficient in this respect. He concluded by showing those present how this condition can be remedied. Arthur Linton, college student of New York, believed that the economic condition of the Negro should not be a cause for alarm since numerous objections to the race only to be overcome by the dogged determination of the Negro. His speech was characterized by poise, a fine choice of words, and moderation. Archbishop Bellamy, apparently the most optimistic speaker, in a very optimistic vein, and used statistics to show that the Negro is doing admirably in the face of multifarious handicaps. His speech was interrupted only by the applause of the listeners.
The exceptional ability of John Ashurst of the Cavaliers made the audience seem sickle. He showed how the audience could be taken to mothers send their children to the country's higher institutions of learning. The speaker seemed to have been confused by the wild demonstrations of his audience and forgot proclaiming that he made a very convincing speech. The judge thought that he would have made a much better showing in a debate. Hisoration was characterized by forcefulness, sincerity, preparation, and foresight. A furore was created when Hubert Hughes took the platform to represent the Douglass Society of the College of the City of New York. The college was dignified and demonstrated a mastery of the English language which every one conceded to be remarkable. He maintained that the future of the Negro was very bright, and quoted the leaders of the race to back his assertion.
Wesley Holder of the Brooklyn Students' Debating League refused to grant that the economic status of the Negro was the negro as a blind imitator of his white brother. If the sporty man is the ideal, the Negro without thinking or questioning strives to attain to know themselves, be proud of themselves, and stop blind imitation based on an inferiority complex. Mr. Holder was by far the most forceful speaker of the evening, but was handicapped and would make his voice very hoarse. Danzil Carty, a graduate of City College, very seriously threatened the supremacy of Mr. Hughes. His choice of words and his fluency was almost phenomenal. His arguments coincided with those of Mr. Hughes. He had no patience with pessimists, he said. The Negro was the most successful from our colleges annually is an indication that the Negro is making serious preparation to take his place in the economic world. The judges unanimously decided to give the prize to Mr. Hughes of City College.
Mr. Carty received second, and Mr. Bellamy third. Messrs. Holder and Linton received honorable mention.
Special mention was made of Mr. Ashhurst, whose lapse of memory prevented the judges from giving him a prize.
The judges were Dr. St. Claire Critchlow, Counselor Hutson Lovell and Leonard Lashley, B. S.
A variety program was offered by Everton Eastmond, saxonaphonist; Miss Sadele Leopar, gorgeous bassist; Mrs. Eleanor Hayns, pianist; Benjamin Smith, bass; Miss Melvina Walters, Mrs. Katheline Nixon, and Claude Endehm, elocutionists.
Miss Winifred Gordon, famous soprano thought the contest was the best of its kind that she had ever heard.
Testimonial Dinner Given In Honor of Graduate
On Friday evening, June 21, 1929, a very elaborate testimonial dinner was given by the Educator of the Men's Guild, Miller, chairman of the Men's Guild of St. Phillip's Church to members recently graduating from the various educational institutions, and did the lecture room of the church, and was prepared and served by the Choir Committee of the Women's chairwoman, Mrs. Minnie Brown, chairwoman.
The occasion for this sumptuous repast was in honor of the Misses Verna Johnson and Doris Giles, who graduated from Girls High School, Brooklyn, NY, and Tring School for Teachers; J. Milton Coleman, Lincoln University; Major O. Jones, M. D., Howard University; Ernest Merrill, A. B., Howard and J. D. New York University. The guest speaker of the evening was the Judge Larry Spitzer, Judge of Kinsa County Court. The ceremonies were opened with a blessing from the rector, the Rev. N. Peterson Boyd, who turned the affair over to the toastmaster. Councillor Larry Spitzer who introduced the various speakers. Judge Martin delivered a very interesting address, the gist of which was that with a firm spiritual foundation and adequate preparation opened the door for the audience. Mr. Carrington, realtor, gave a very enlightening talk on thrift. From the professional side, Dr. Courtney Wilhite, optometrist, gave a very appropriate talk on succeeding as a teacher, represented by Mrs. Blanche Wright, who heartily congratulated the graduates.
NOW IS THE TIME!!!!!
Have your Furnace, Hance and Roof
attended in.
Third-two years' experience with
Richardson & Boynton Co.
SKEETE & SCOTT
567 Putnam Ave. BROOKLYN, N. Y.
Decatur 2852
Brooklyn News and Social Briefs
Brooklyn News and Social Briefs
The members of the Students' Debating League of Brooklyn were the hosts to a group of students at the residence of the late 17 Jefferson avenue, on Sunday evening. Prior to being entertained by the League, the party attended the third annual oratorical contest of the Acme Church Cathedral, 555 Cass Avenue.
Those present were the Misses Etta Banks and Sybil Herod, Girls' High School; Beryl and Mae Herod, Mark Hopkins, Junior Herod, Kate William, Washington Irving High School; Thelma Herod, Hunter College; De Vera Irving, Columbia; Lillian Bushel, Willie Branch and Helen Hill, Hunter College. Also John Ashurst, Columbia; Arthur Edgehill, Kenneth Edgehill, Tom Lysle, Clayton Glimman and Oliver Holder, of the Cavaliers; Albert Nebitt, Wesley MacD. Holder and Harold Edgehill, City College; Harold Linton, New York University; Isaac Briggs and Eustace Waldron.
Several Brooklynites have successfully passed the written examination for Probation Officer, Children's Court, according to the list released for publication by the Municipal Civil Service Commission.
The examination was held on Sept. 11, 1925, in which 1,070 men and women competed. Only 230 passed the written test.
Henry E. Ashcroft heads the list of Brooklynites held the list of Kate K. Wiben, Sara W. King, Stephen L. More and Samuel D. Carthan.
Blanche Webster of 20 Irving place, past daughter ruler of Progressive Temple 75, left the city on Sunday for Saratoga Springs, N. Y., as a delegate to the state convention of the I. B. P. O. E. of W.
On Friday evening the charming Miss O. Keller of 222 Amherst street, N. J. was a delightful hostess to a dinner given in honor of Rev. H. H. Jones of Massachusetts.
The grub, guided Rev. H. H. Jones, Dr. Paul L. Jones, Rev. H. S. Harten, Rev. W. L. Clayton, Mr. Faulkner, R. W. Bright, the Misses O. Keller, P. Foster, Hazard and Thomas.
A pleasant evening was enjoyed by all.
Herman Gardner, Jr., oldest son of Mrs. and Mrs. Herman Gardner of 55 Brooklyn avenue, graduated today from P. S. 5.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Gardner and family of 55 Brooklyn avenue are spending their vacation at their summer home at Sea Cliff, L. I., where they will remain until the early part of September.
Mrs. Evelyn Brown, Helen Fraser and Susie Johnson went to Warrenton, Va., on June 16, where, in company with her husband, Mr. Martha Ambush and Mary Edmonds, and a brother, Rev. J. T. Richards, of Washington, D. C., and friends, they gave their mother a surprise party and family reunion committee. Mrs. Richards, who is a resident and property owner of Warrenton, Va., celebrated her 74th birthday, and incidentally her first party.
On Friday evening, June 28, many Brooklyn parties will motor to Westbury, L. I., where they will be entertained by several popular artists such as Lynn Walker, Mr. Henderson, Mr. Sawyer, Mr. Thompson, Prof. Johnson, Mr. Jackson, Miss G. Weeks, Percy Gagler and other members of St. Louis City who are attending an all-star program at the new A. M. E. Zion Church.
Mrs. Cora Abbott returned from Newburn, N. C., where she laid to rest her mother, Mrs. Suan J. Abbott, who was born in Brooklyn. Mrs. Abbott died May 22 at the residence of her daughter, 56 Albany avenue. She leaves a daughter, son, two grandchildren, five great-grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
Mrs. Yohannes Travis, of 107 Bathbridge, street, has as her guest Miss Jimmie Braswell, a teacher in the schools at Rocky Mount, N. C. Miss Braswell is a native of Macon, Ga.
Through the efforts of Lucas Clark, of 121 Jefferson avenue, Albert Diggs has received a position as stock clerk with the Waltham Radio Company. Mr. Clark is head department. They are the only Negroes in this department. Mr. Clark is an usher in the Silicon Presbyterian Church. Mr. Diggs is also a Brooklynite and recently spent from Pittsburgh, Pa., where he spent two months with his father and mother.
Many persons prominent in the social life of Brooklyn and Manhattan attend conferences and frolic give by the Brooklyn Jowls at the Howland Studio on Friday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis, of 185 Leffert place, entertained a few guests at their home last Saturday night. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. Greene, McKillip, K. Willis, French, E. Thomas, H. Thomas of Bayonne, N. J.; Miss Mitchell, Miss Durham, C. Clarke, G. Lewis; also Messa Frankson, Saunders, Taylor, Johnson, Williams, Ross, Wignall and others. Music was furnished by the Bayonne Orchestra.
Prof. P. Albert Myers, who is directing the choir of Bethany Baptist Church, Newark, N. J., gained new laurels on May 30 when his choir won a prize in the test at Bordentown, N. J. The choir was awarded second prize. The cup was presented by members of the faculty of the Bordentown School at the regular services last Sunday. A special program was arranged for the occasion.
Mrs. Sally Purcell of Herkimer street, who has been ill at her home, is on the road to recovery. Mrs. Purcell was then taken to the Temple, of which she is a member, a few evenings ago.
The Rev. Henry H. Proctor, pastor of the Nazarena Congregational Church, was the principal speaker at the forum of the Kings County Civic Association which was held at, the Commercial afternoon. Mr. Proctor brought a very timely sage to the large audience. A short talk was also made by M. S. J. Freeman, president of the All-Friend's Circle. A fine musical program was also rendered.
The Class Leader's Board of Bridge Street A. M. E. Church and their six and annual sermon Sunday afternoon by the Rev. George E. Bluest, pastor of the A. M. E. Church at Douglaston,
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
Long Island. John H. McCoy, president of the leaders' board, opened the exercises and introduced E. Halsey Smith, who acted as master of ceremonies.
Miss Mabel Hayes of Windsor, N. C., is the guest of Deaconess Sister at her home, 442 Jefferson avenue. She is accompanied by her mother.
Next Sunday afternoon the Missionary Frum of Barile Street Church will be held at this the newly elected officers will be installed. The Rev. J. J. Derricks will deliver the sermon.
Miss Clarice M. Currey, 146 Schenectady avenue, had as dinner guests Sunday, June 16, Dr. A. F. Lomax and slater, Miss Cora E. Lomax.
The debating team of the Acme Associates Club of Brooklyn, captained by Leonard Lashley and assisted by Egbert Willehire, and completed by Egbert and delia deatell, clubs of Brooklyn and New York with which they have debated. The Acme Club will devote itself solely to tennis, this summer at the completion of its third annual oratorial contest. During the summer, he will present team plans to invade the New Jersey and Philadelphia field.
Alexander A. Gatewood, instructor in voice, and piano, will present his pupils in a recital at the Central Y. M. C. A. Auditorium on July 1.
Mrs. Levina Martis and her daughter, Miss Alice Phillips, of 417 Herkimer street, will sail Wednesday for Jamaica, and Miss Elizabeth for vacation. Miss Phillips is a student at the Washington Irving High School and is a singer and pianist of promise.
Mrs. Mary C. Hogan, supreme matron of the Oriental Supreme Chapter of the Eastern Star, was in Brooklyn a few days ago. While here she was the guest of Mrs. John H. Smith at her home, 559 Herkimer street.
The Dorcas Society of Concord Baptist Church met at the home of Mrs. Moorman, 1258 Prospect place, on Wednesday, much important, business was transact-
Mrs. Theresa Jones, vice president of the Ladies' Usher Board of Fleet Street A. M. E. Zion Church, was tendered a surprise birthday party by Mrs. Ada Bailey and Mrs. Mary. Wright at her home, 102 Wickey Street, where She received many beautiful presents.
The Rev. W. C. Brown has been returned as the pastor of Fleet Street A. M. E. Zion Church for the tenth time. This is the first time in the history of this church that a pastor has served that was Bishop F. M. Jacobs, who served twelve years. Dr. Brown was returned by Bishop Caldwell, who predeated the annual conference, which was held at Yankers recently.
Joseph Warwick, who recently underwent an operation, is now at his home on Kingston avenue and is much Improved.
A Children's Day service will be held at Bridge Street A. M. E. Church Sunday morning. The sermon will be delivered by the Rev. George C. Coverdale. Special music will be rendered by a chorus of children.
The members of the Sisterhood of Bridge Street A. M. E. Church are the Rev. John D. Forest of Connecticut was in the city last week. While he was the guest of the Rev. Eldridge, pastor of the Bercan Baptist Church.
Former Trinidadian Given Opportunity at Big Store
Friends of Francis Blondel, 362 St. James place, were pleased to learn of his recent success at the Hahn Department Stores, Inc. New York City, where he was a member of the staffs of that firm. Mr. Blondel has been a resident of Brooklyn for several years, ever since he came to this country from Trinidad. B.W.I. He has been affiliated with the retail department of the holding held responsible positions at Auguste & Co. of Marine Square, Port-of-Spain. While in New York he has been connected with the Merchandise and Research Bureau and the New York Lowes co. Inc. of the William Lowes Co. Inc., has spoken highly of Mr. Blondel and is believed that he will make good in his new position. Last month the "Women's Wear Daily," the retailers' carried lengthy article concerning his past career in the retail business.
While motoring to Philadelphia on Sunday last in company with friends Mr. Blondel admitted that he has been in a position and is hopeful that his services there will be as satisfactory as they have been in the past.
Officer's Feet No Criterion For Measuring Distance
Owing to the size of the foot of Traffic Officer Thomas J. Carney, white, Magistrate Leo Healy, in the Homicide Court on Wednesday, gave Attorney Norman D. Seymour, 37, of 50 New York avenue, the benefit of the doubt an alleged violation of the eight-foot law. According to Officer Carney, Mr. Seymour passed a standing surface car within seven feet, therefore violating the eight-foot law. Mr. Seymour stated to Magistrate Healy that the officer measured the distance that he was inclined to believe that would put him beyond the eight-foot law. "Maybe you are right," Magistrate Healy said. "I never saw a cop with delicate feet. Most of them are fourteen to fifteen inches. Officer Carney said, "I like pretty strapping fellow, so I'll give you the benefit of the doubt."
A Visitor to Corona
MARIA MAYORA
Mrs. Charles Sumler Hall, a Former Resident of Brooklyn, but Now of Berkeley, California, Has Been the House Guest of Mrs. Anna Tanner of Corona. En Route to the Golden West, She Will Visit Baltimore and Washington.
Brooklyn Is Growing
ARE YOU GROWING WITH IT?
You May by Getting in the New Civic Pride Campaign Now
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Take advantage of this opportunity to get before bigger,
busier Brooklyn
The Amsterdam News now makes this co-operative step to acquaint the Brooklyn public of your Line and Location.
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We Give Growth by Giving Results
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BROOKLYN OFFICE
868 FULTON ST.
Mrs. McKinney's Pupils In Corona Make Debut
A large and representative gathering witnessed the debut of Mrs. Blanche S. McKinney's Corona dancing pupils on Friday evening, June 11 at the League Building in Flushin.
The clever steps of the solo dancers, who ranged in age from four to sixteen, won enthusiastic approval of the spectators, and the ensembles, by their elaborate costuming and, staging, brought forth spontaneous and lively performances. It is difficult to select any individual numbers as particularly worthy of mention, so well were all the dances executed, but the toe work of tiny Thelma May as a "Kewpie Doll" was done with such charming natuitive that she seemed to demand a large amount of attention.
Marguerite Ray, also a tiny toot, brought down the house with her acrobatic dance. The other pupils both individually and in 'group numbers so captivated that all Corona will be on "their toes" within the year.
The members of the class are Dorothy Dals, Nancy Ambrose, Audrey Ruby, Ruby Bryan, Ruby Brassman, Catherine Godfrey, Audrey Gladman, Hazel Greene, Corinne Holden, Ethel Parker, Deloris Plator, Marguerite Trelma May, Mildred May, Lille Mac Smails, Marjorie Williams, Dorothy Williams, Marion Waller, Audrey Simpson, Gladys Smith, Gill Brathwaite, Lester Holmes William McKinney, 3d, and Hortense Beckman.
ROMEO L. DOUGHERTY. Editor and Manager
Siloam Church Celebrating Its 80th Anniversary
Sunday marked the beginning of the celebration of the eighteenth anniversary of the Sloam Presbyterian Church, the Rev. George Shippen Stark, pastor. At the morning hour the anniversary sermon was delivered and the sacristy was dedicated. In the afternoon the services were in charge of the young people of the church.
At the evening services members of the church of years ago occupied the address of the evening was delivered by the Rev. W. R. Lawton, a former pastor, who served this church over thirty years ago when it was composed. The choir was composed of members singing in the choir in former years.
On Monday night the Baptists were in charge. Baptist pastors and their clergy were in large numbers and rendered a very pleasing program.
Tuesday night was Methodist Night and the pastors and their clocks made a slow following. A fine program was rendered.
On Wednesday night the Episcopal
and other clerics and others
will be in church.
Thursday night will be fraternal and civic organization night. The Presbytery will be present on Friday night.
The celebration will come to a close
The celebration will come to a close
vices will be historical; in the afternoon a memorial service will be held
vices will be church and
organization service.
Jamaica News and Social Briefs
Jamaica News and Social Briefs
On Thursday evening, June 13, a party was given at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Carter, 110th street, honor of R. Wilbur Bright of Boston, honor of R. Wilbur Bright of Boston, Robert Carter, Mrs. Carl Granger, Misses Hazel Hamlin, Grace Jones, Doris Lilly, Doctors Paul Jones, Carl Granger, Robert Carter, George Carter, Gerald Seon and R. Wilbur Bright.
Mrs. Florence Johnson, who has been teaching in York, Pa., is spending the summer in Jamaica with her sister, Mrs. Albert Winton, 145-46 108th avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hopkins of 174-01 108th avenue had as their guests on Sunday, June 16, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Hall, Mr. and Mrs. S. Johnson and little Miss Johnson, all of New York; also Mr. and Mrs. T. Hooks and Mr. Spurick of Brooklyn.
Miss Ruth L. Johnson, a teacher in Chester, Md., is spending her vacation with her parents, Rev. and Mrs. Albert Johnson of Jamaica.
The Paramount Social Club of Jamaica made its New York debut at the Randall Memorial Church at 133th which turned out to be a great success.
The program included recitations by Ivan Horne, Horne Day, Frank Turner Jr., Stanley Diaz, Melvin Hawkins, violin solo by Leo Wilson, piano solo by Wilfred Lloyd, violin dust by Falconer Philip Johnson and Walter Morris, also a dramatic play, "Borrowed Money," in which Gilbert Mayers, Frank Turner and John Harris were featured. Dialogues by Eric Hedley, Bartium Hedley, Bernard Wade and Shelton Brooks Jr., and a play with George Brown as the narrator. Among those present from Jamaica were Mr. and Mrs. Shelton Brooks, Mrs. Diaz and Miss Ethel Hill.
The Ja-Flush Girls will hold their initial whist party on Saturday evening of this week at the Merrick Community House, 15 Dewey avenue.
A baby girl was born on June H to M. and Mrs. W. JM Union Hall street. The mother is the former Miss Rose M. Danielson. The attending physician is Dr. George C. Carter. Mother and baby are doing nicely.
The Paramount Social Club met at the home of Walter Morris, publicity manager, of 107-04 Liverpool street, on Thursday evening, those host present at the home of Stanley Stanley, Philip Johnson, George Brown, Gilbert Meyers, Leo Wilson, Horace Day, Freed Day, James Day, Irwin Harry, Eric Headly, Barrium Headly, Falconer Watt, Frank Turner Jr., John Harry and Melvin Hawkins.
The Executive Committee of the Junior Division of the National Association for the Advancement of Color-people meets the home of Miss Tyrone 105-15 115th street, Saturday evening. At this meeting it was decided that their first monthly week day meeting would be on Thursday evening, June 27, at the Community House on 105-15 115th street, following chairmen were appointed: Miss Geraldine Bryant, chairman membership committee; William E. Ruffin, press and publicity; Miss Maxine O'Relly, educational; Miss Marla Joery, financial; Miss Kathleen Nugent, president, and Frank M. Turner Jr., secretary.
Miss Carmelle Husbands of 107-25
117st Street, Merrick Park, entertained
a few friends on Friday evening.
Dancing and games were the enjoyment
of the evening, with many bare calf
twirling in Misser, Bentress Zull,
Myrlam Bribane and Mrs. Emily
Humans, Messrs. LoRoy McLean, Clement
Daniels, Duncan Turner, William Ruffin,
Andrew Goodall, Elwood Montague,
Arthur Humans, and Edgar Williams.
Miss Mamie Thompson of 107-04
Inwood street is a graduate of the High
School of Textile in New York City.
The graduation exercises will be held in
the Washington Irving High School
Auditorium.
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Jackson Jr. are
the proud parents of a bouncing baby
boy weighing seven pounds and one
ounce, born at the Cumberland Hospitol, Brooklyn.
Miss Mamie Thompson of Inwood
street spent last week-end in Spring-
field, Maze, with Mr. and Mrs. Somer-
ly, who attended Whitman College.
She attended the senior prom of General
High School.
Mrs. L. C. Taylor spent Sunday with Mrs. Edward Brisbane of Union Hall street.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Humans and Miss Myriam Brisbane and William E. Ruffin were the dinner, guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Carter of Englewood, N. J., on Sunday.
The Misses Ethel Elain Thompson, Bessie Bassiano, Almeta Johnson and Frances Morgan, William Dilworth and Theodore Bethel were among the graduates from Public School 60 on Tuesday evening.
The Jolly Nine Whist Club met on Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Agnes Walker of 272 Washington street. Present were Burke, Lewis, Beaulain, Myers, Webb, Larke, Hoffman, Gill, Gill, G Brook, Linton and S. Vanderzee. High honors were won by C. Miller, Burke, Hoffman, A. Linton, S. Vanderzee and B. Brooks.
John McLean entertained the Pleasure Night Club at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Smith of 108-17 171st street on Saturday evening.
The Twelve Knights' Whist Club held their closing meeting of the season and awarding of prizes at the home of James Amos of 105-01 171st place Saturday evening. A dainty supper was held at the home of James Amos were awarded: Amos, first, Beaubilan, second, Leighton, third, and Sinclair, fourth. Others present were McCbay, Vanderzee, Shelton and McLean as guests.
The D. Y. W. Y. K. 500 Club met Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Vern Hoffman of 107-09 Waltham street. Those present were Mesmeses Cooper, Harper, Bruke, Vanderzee, Doweres, Berry, Rajon and Mr. Ersers, and Mrs. Harper, second to Mrs. Harper, second by Mrs. Vanderzee and third by Mrs. Rojas.
TELEPHONE PROSPECT 6375
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Jones, Miss Florin Frasier and Miss Elizabeth Jones of New York City, Mrs. Ellis Felder of Inwood, L. L. and Mrs. Margaret of Oakway were the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dooley of 169-10 104th avenue on Sunday.
Lebanon Lodge No. 54, F. and A. M. hold their second regular monthly meeting at the Elks' Hall Monday evening, June 17. Present were Past Masters Scott, James and Julius of Lebanon, Lebanon, and Elks' Hall Monday No. 38, who addressed Lebanon Lodge on the higher branches of Masonry. The lodge closed down until the third Monday in September.
Celestial Chapter No. 29, Order of the Eastern Star, held their regular monthly meeting at the Elks' Hall Thursday evening the chapter celebrated its eighth anniversary with a reception at the Wawanda Tea Room on Prospect street.
Mrs. Alice S. Ladson, royal commandress of Oriental Court No. 5, Order of Cyrene, attended the tea given by the Unity Club of Queen Ethel Bathurst, E. S. Stuart after noon, June 16, at the residence of Mrs. Mamie Cave, 54 Irving place, Brooklyn.
The Invincible Whist Club held their regular meeting and party on Saturday evening at the home of Arthur E. Ottley, 74 Dewey avenue.
John Hill, real estate broker of George street, is spending his vacation up in Plattsburg, N. Y.
The members of the house committee of the Open Door Utility Club, 144-19 South road, but June 12 to discuss bus. of boys and girls. Two very interesting letters were read from Mrs. Willard Parker, Jr., and Dr. Mason Pittman, honorary members of the board. The members of the House Committee are appealing to the public to support this worthy cause.
Corona News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. C. Parker of 3748 1018 street had as their week-end guest Mrs. Ella Tate of Wilberforce, Ohio; William Eddy of Springfield, Ohio; Edward Widgen of Pennotan, N. Y., and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wright of Corona. The visitors enjoyed a delightful stay.
On Thursday evening, June 13, Alderman Fred R. Moore of Harlem addressed an assembly at the Corona Congregational Church, of which George W. Hinton is pastor.
The thirteenth anniversary celebration was launched Sunday at the Corona Congregational Church. A feature of the anniversary will be held on Wednesday, June 26. Dr. Albert S. Reed, has donated a silver receptacle for the ashes, it is expected that $1,500 will be raised.
As an adjunct to the Christian Endeavor, a junior order was organized on Friday afternoon at the Congregational Church under the direction of Dr. James W. Jackson and Miss E. M. Jackson and Miss Margaret Garzes. Children up to fourteen might be included in this group. Hazen Greene was elected president; Dorothy Baker, vice-president; Sarah Wimblish, secretary; Marjorie Williams, secretary; secretive freshworks were served after the meeting.
The First Baptist Church was filled to capacity Thursday evening in response to the presentation of an operatic musical. The Minister's Wife's Bunner" was selected by Ethel Prince. It was especially well performed.
The characters were Mesdames C. Lucas, Agnew, McCommon, Harwell, Loveday, Mr. and Mrs. Howard and the director. Everyone present agreed that the play was a howling success, for it furnished many laughs.
George Handy, formerly of 104th street, a well-known barber and all-nouncited citizen of Corona, is well eminent and a hard worker. And the spot now, for his barber shop, is in 3310 106th street, just off the Boulevard. Mrs. Kale White Handy also has her rented office next door. Both are old Coronates.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Carter of Thirty-second avenue were hosts to the Pro-Life conference last Thursday. This club is the oldest organization of its kind in Corona.
The Amaryllis Social Club, of which Mrs. Marceliene W. Zettler is president, gave a progressive whist tournament Friday night at 104-10 Northern Boulevard. The players included Mr. and Mrs. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Handy, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Fairley, Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Heyliger, George Wooten, Dr. W. A. McIntosch, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Perez, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene L. Nuett, Mrs. Irma Lindsey, Mrs. Susie B. Sharp, Mrs. Maude C. Harwell, Mrs. R. D. Gothard, Miss Electra M. Jackson, Joseph Lindsey, Eric N. Mitchell, Daniel Wynne, Mrs. James Kramer, Herbert Johnson, Silas J. Simmons, Roscoe Payne, Cerise Brangman, Ben Stewart, Mrs. C. Beckman, Mrs. Ruth Fernandez, Mrs. Payne, Joseph W. De Fossett and Ruth R. Watkins.
Top scores were won by Mrs. Irma Lindsey, Mrs. Kramer, Mrs. Katie White Handy and a consolation prize was given to Mrs. V. Pevez.
The gentlemen to receive awards were Messra. Mitchell, Perez, Brown and Mr. Curtis received the booby prize.
At the home of Mr. and Mrs. Crawley, 9515 Thirty-second avenue, Corona, L. I., a pretty wedding was celebrated on Sunday, June 2.
The bride was Mrs. Cella Richardson, a sister of Mrs. Crawley. The groom was Lee H. Austin. The bride and groom came from New Haven to be married at the home of the bride's sister.
After the ceremony a delicious repast was served to the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. Gushard of New York; Miss Lula B. Jones of New Haven; Mrs. V. Smith of New Haven; Mrs. M. Wilson of New Haven; Mrs. E. O. Baker and the Misses Mildred and Evelyn Baker of Corona; Mrs. M. L. Austin of Brooklyn; Mrs. M. R. Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Howard of Brooklyn; Mrs. Cora Kelly of Corona; Mrs. F. B. Baker of Washington, N. C.; Mrs. Julia Bunt of Brooklyn.
---
Dr. W. E. B. DuBois Speak
At Corona School Meeti
Dr. W. E. B. DuBois pointed the way to success last Sunday when he spoke to the elementary and high school graduate students at the educational meeting held at the Carnegie Congregational Church, Corena, N.J. Dr. DuBois depicted the story of three characters and the manner which each sought a career. His picture made plain the necessity of a curring a thorough education in which ever field one pursues. With this in mind, the next step is to abreast of the times, so as to be competent.
Following his speech, which was most eloquently delivered, Dr. Grassi told the Congressional Chair of Richmond Hill and his graduates. Dr. Cross was presented by Rev. G. W. Hinton. The speech on the importance of Education instructing the listeners to take an active role in the program was added to by solo, "The Garden," rendered by the Dabney. The Utopia Girls and Lucia Lyon also sang. The students were presented at the high school students.
The graduates included: Evely Ambrose, Stella Fog夫, Freihigh High School; Mildred Daniels, Newtown High School; William Blackburn, De Witt Clinton; Alter Morer P. S. I.9; Anna Brown, P. S. I.16; Ror Alters, P. S. I.17; Gladys McCullough, Mildred Wilson Carl Brown, Floyd Clemente, Lucia Blackburn, P. S. 92; Charlotte Ralinson, Junior High School.
Solemn Requiem High Mag For Late Grace Haddod
St. Peter, Claver Roman Catholic Church was the scene of a Soler Requiem Mass sung on Friday morning June 21, at 10 o'clock, or the day before. Claver G. Haddock, who died Tuesday, June 1 at her home, 505 Vanderbilt area after an illness of about a year. Upon her graduation from Gigante University, she familyly called by her associates entered the Jamaica Training School for Teachers from which she graduated in January. 1928. At that time she was the only colored girl to go to school. Her honor achieved as a result of proficiency, personality, service to school, attendance and character. Miss Haddock was a member of the business and art community in the Island Place V. W. A. and of St. Augustine's Proteus Episcopal Church until about six weeks before her death. Among those who mourn her hastily were Claver G. Haddock; brother, James Jr.; a sister, Marquette Herron; Miss Eva Goff who served in the dual capacity an aunt and godmother; Dr. J. Haddock; a number of near relatives as well many admiring friends.
Inferment was made at Evergreen
Cemetery in the family plot.
Carlton Ave. 'Y' Resumes Free Swim Week Soo
The Carlton Avenue Branch Y. C. A. has made elaborate plans to bundle a large number of boys to learn to learn the art of swimming. The fifth annual Learn to Camp Campaign will be held in Carlton Avenue on June 6. The fifteen season brought over 900 boys to Carlton during the week. Five hundred of this number were successful learning how to swim.
It is the hope of the Association that the parents of Boulder boys will be encouraged to the "Y" classes of allowing them to take奕 chancees at the various beachs Every boy will receive instruction from leaders who have had years of experience teaching boys to swim Every boy is assured safety when swimming. The instructor is a Red Cross life and is assisted by many who had life-saving instructions under him. Every boy will be given a first card to fill out before he will be permitted to fill out the pool. Every boy will be given a Carlton might get in touch with either A. F. Miller. Boys' Work Retreat; or H. J. Dangerfield. Physical Director.
Braved Flames in Attempt To Remove==Er==Dynamit
Frank F. Hines, a watchman employed by the Mid-Eastern Construction Company in Brooklyn crosstown suction, braved flames on Tuesday night in the Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal at Fishing Village in Isle of Shanky, in an attempt to remove a quarter ton of dynamite. Three alarms were rung for the fire. Nine twenty streams were played on the crib.
The blaze, which did $500.00 damage, was discovered by Hines. He saw the fire apportioned to the five working for white workingmen nearby to him drag away the dynamic life of helping him. He stopped to get only one box away when heat became too great for him.
Look Pretty as a Picture
By Golson to
ROBERTA BEAUTY
SALON
1344 FULTON ST. near Albany Ave.
BROOKLYN, N. V.
Phone for appointments: Decatur
MRS. R. RODRICK
For Service Call Holdings war
HOWARD AUTO REPAIR Co.
Specialist on all makes of cars,
pulling, fender straightening, wring
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Emergency Call:
Promptly Attendee to
800-255-2555 ST.
BROOKLYN, N. V.
Near Sumner Ave.
APEX BEAUTY PARLOR
Poro and Apex Systems
CLARISSE C. STRONG
109-51 153rd STREET
JAMAICA
Marcelling, Cutting, Clipping and
Phone Republic 4533
SECOND SECTION
Tempy Smith's
Brain in Recital
Pupil
pupils of Mme. Tempy Smith,
722 St. Nicholas avenue, were heard
in their third annual restaunt at
Mark's, West 138th street,
evening.
Francis, pupils who are justly entitled to special praise are as follows: Lillie Miki, a three and a half year old Japanese girl; Joseph Smith, drummer, son of Mme. Smith, who gave three encores; Lucille Smith, Kenneth Bruce, Bellinger; Helena Smith, daughter of Mme. Smith; Smith Jessaming, Mildred Smith; Florence Francis, Julia Morford Dorothy Irving.
san Others who played were: Elaine Bennet, Gloria Campbell, Theda Tegue; Mary Scullley, white; Hellenle Miki; Japanese; Mocil Steinrock, Elmyra Smith, Jessie Lee Powell, Dorothy Smith, Althia Mennotte, Ernest Mennotte, Irma Hill, Doris Ernst, Alfrada Francis, Milton Tintling, Claudel Simmone, Richard DePass, Mary Holmes, Ruth Washington, Frank Hayward, Marion Moore, Marion McNeill, Ruby Strack- Dorothy Marks, Alice LaMott, Hertton, Lucille Irving.
The Tempy Smith family, consisting of the teacher and her eight children, gave a specially orchestra number at the conclusion of a gram. Mrs. Smith played by special request, her own arrangement of "Suwanee River" and a number by Lissy. It regular intervals song and dance numbers were given by Laura May Smith, little Tempy Smith,
VOCAL OPPORTUNITY
Aida Club of Musical Art offers
Free Scholarships. Write for
audition, Mrs. Cora Wilson, 52
Bradhurst Avenue, or phone
Spring 0551.
Y. W. C. A. SUMMER
SCHOOL NOW OPEN
DAY AND EVENING SESSIONS
Secretarial, Dressmaking and Designing,
Music and Beauty schools, Power
Operating, Other Trade and Cultural
Courses.
179 WEST 187th ST. Audubon 2900
The Empire
School of Music
PIANO, VIOLIN, VOICE CULTURE, SIGET SINGING, CORNET, HARMONY AND THEORY
Works of Some of the Best
ITALIAN & GERMAN MASTERS
Special Attention Given Children
and Beginners
272 W. 141st St.
PROF. L. PHILLIPS, Director
Telephone: Edgecombe 6011
MUSIC SCHOOL,
LANGUAGES
AND DANCING
K. S. Allen & Company, Incorporated. Conservatory of Popular Music — Jazz and Languages, 29 West 117th St, New York City. Instruction on all instruments. Guaranteed in 20 lessons for $15 and up. Certificates and Diplomas awarded to qualified pupils. Phone University 6281 Mon. Wed. and Frl. from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
ENROLL NOW
JUVENILE CLASS
Harry - PRAMPIN - Laura
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
121 WEST 1866 ST.
Aud. 1987
Teaching Violin, Piano, Cornet,
Trombone, Guitar, Clarinet,
Drum, Viophone, Theory of Music,
Practical Training. (No vacation.)
HARVEY BAKER
TENOR
Recitals and Concertes Arranged
THE MUSIC
203 WEST 133th STREET
NEW YORK CITY
Fiction in Plain and Voice Culture
SINGERS WHO TEACH
TEACHERS WHO SING
WINFRED WATSON, Soprano
ANDREW W. WATSON, Tenor
128-130 W. 138th St.
Edgecombe 2993
Apt.4-G
PIANO INSTRUCTIONS
ALL GRADES
Lessons' Given in Your Home
For Children
Marguerite Richardson
Brad. 3573 Brad. 78333
CULTIVATE YOURSELF
BARREL CONSERVATORY OF
217 Loux Avenue, New York
Near 123d Street
Telephone Number 10111
Director: Richard Io Haas
Instruction Given by Emiline Artists
Piano, Violin, Cello, Voice Culture
and all the branches.
Choir, and all the branches.
Band, Wind Instruments.
Harmony, Sightreading, Composition,
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Open Daily for Interviews
Voice Trials and Examinations
From A. M.
Branch Studio!
Metropolitan Opera House, Room 48
119 123rd Street, New York, N.Y.
Telephone Number 6891 6891
Mercedes Taylor, Joseph B. Smith.
Elmyra Smith, Mamie Hardy, Doris
Dawson, Evelyn Suey, Helena Smith.
The choir of St. David's Church,
384 East 160th street, with Packer
Ramsay as director and Miss Viola
Baines as organist, will be heard in a
musicale at 4 o'clock Sunday in
30. Rudolph Gran artist at
Salem M. E. G., will assist. The
Reva M. E. G. 'Best is vicar of the
arch.
Those scheduled to appear are as follows: Vocal, solos; Alice Gilbert, Katherine Armstrong, Flossie Garden, S. Woods, Mabel Brown, Junius Walker; Misses Gwendolyn Woods, Gloria McKay, Thelma Dyer, Doris Trotman; Mr. Ramsay, Thomas Wilkins, Mr. Earl.
Violin solos—Walter Wilkenson accompanied by Miss Carter; reading—Miss Modesta; singing—Ena Lascelles and Hart, organ solos—Mr. Grant.
To Be Guest Artist In Washingaon
Mrs. Marguerite Kennerly Upshire, 1947 Seventh avenue, is to be the guest artist with the Little Symphony Orchestra, in a recital at the Asbury Methodist Church in Washington tomorrow night.
Mrs. Upshire, a graduate of the music department at Howard University, studied with James Friskin of The Institute of Musical Art. At present she is an organ pupil of Dr. Melville Charlton. Miss Hortense Freeland is president of The Little Symphony Orchestra group.
Lyndon Hoffman Caldwell's chair, made up of 40 volunteer voices, will present "Holy City" at Concord Baptist Church, Brooklyn, on Sunday evening.
The Male Chorus of the Abyssinian Baptist Church, under the direction of George T. Payne, will give their final recital of the season at the Imperial Auditorium, 180 West 129th street, on Sunday at 4 p. m. The chorus will be assisted by Dayse R. Harding, soprano.
Justin Sandridge's recital, which was scheduled for last Sunday, has been postponed to Monday evening, July 22, at 9 p. m. at the Walker Studio, 108 West 136th street.
The eighth annual closing of the Musical Art Forum of Orange, N. J., will be held at the Y. W. C. A. auditorium, 69 Oakwood avenue, on July 18 at 8:30 p. m. The Forum will present "Dr. kyll and Mr. Hyde" and make scenes from "Macbeth" and "Othello" Malvin Gray Johnson, creator of the oil painting, "Swing Low, Sweet Charlot," will be introduced.
DRAMA
Utopia Players
To Repeat Play
So incessant have been the demands for the Utopia Players to repeat their three-act play, "The Whole Town's Talking," that the cast will be seen again at the Elks' Hall, 160 West 129th street, on Sunday evening, June 30.
Those composing the cast are: Miss Mildred Birch, Miss Gladys Fowkes, Mrs. Helen Tynes, Miss Mary Lewis, Miss Mary Smith, Miss Reid, Miss Sadella TenEyck, Milton Weston, Joseph Jackson, William Poe, Matthan Butt and Bef, John Koch, who is staging and coaching the play, Miss Gladys McDonald is director.
The proceeds of this affair will be donated to the Utopia Neighborhood Club, 170 West 130th street, to pay the interest on the mortgage on this property.
ANOTHER SCHOLARSHIP
FOR JESSE L. CASMINSK
Another general scholarship, this time one for $250, has been awarded Jesse L. Casminski, 32 West 131st street, who has just completed his sophomore year. New York University has vice-chairman of the Mall Committee, a group in charge of the freshman and sophomore classes, for the coming school year.
Mr. Casminski, who received in 1927 a four-year scholarship from DeWitt K. Dickinson, received a $200 general scholarship by New York University for excellence in scholarship last year.
INVITES COMMUNITY
UNION INTO PARLEY
The International Brotherhood of Hotel and Restaurant Employees, an affiliation of the American Federation of Labor, has invited the Community Progressive Women's Union to send a delegate to the annual conference of the American Federation City, Mo. early in August. Victor G. Gaspar, general organizer, is expected to represent the local organization.
CITY COLLEGE AWARDS
DEGREES TO STUDENTS
Listed among the graduates of the College of the City of New York whose commencement exercises were held last Wednesday, were the following:
Machelor of arts—Kenneth de P. Hurhes and Hugh E. Newam.
Hughes and Hugh E. Newman.
Bachelor of science—Leonard Lashle-
Angus Carty, and Norman B. Rowan.
Bachelor of science in social sci-
ence—Laurence E. Hunt.
To Speak.
Richard M. Lee, 144 West Twenty-
eight street, who will represent the
city convention of the Better City
Government League, is on the pro-
gram to speak.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
High Schools Give Awards Tomorrow
Julia Richman and Stuyvesant to Hold Final Exercises
Commencement exercises at local high schools tomorrow evening will graduate another small army of students armed with diplomas and four years of secondary academic training. Listed among the candidates for graduation at Julla Richman High School, 317 East Sixty-seventh street, are the following: Lurline Bryan, 164 West 147th street; Rachel Brown, 411 West Fifty-second street; Bessie Crowder, 727 Forest avenue, Bronx; Bronx Dixon, 450 St. Nicholas avenue; Edith Dover, 259 West 138th street; Dorothy Lewis, 055 Simpson street, Bronx, and Frances Nathaniel, 71 East 115th street. Graduates of Stuyvesant, 345 East Fifteenth street, include Oren Riley, Benjamin Garner and Clarence Weeks.
100 Graduate From Douglass Jr. High
---
Students Present Plays With Properties Made by Selves
Frederick Douglass Junior High School, 140 West 140th street, held its graduation exercises last night in the school auditorium. One hundred students of the 9B1, 2 and 3 were graduated. Dr. Jacob Ross is principal of the school. Dr. Jacob Ross is commencement address by Commissioner Ferdinand Q. Morton, elaborate exercises by the school orchestra and the physical training classes under Edward Washington were the scheduled features. Dudley Myers of 9B1 was the valedictorian and Fred A. Mussenden of 9B2 was the salutatorian. Music was directed by R. S. Dixon.
The list of graduates follows:
Alexander, Ralph
Armstrong, Max.
Bligs, Ernest
Billups, William
Bourne, Mewburn
Bowen, Lawrence
Brooklyn
Caines, Samuel
Clark, Cleveland
Daniels, Reginald
Delaney, Leon
Oressey, Arthur
McKinley, John
Green, Frank
Greenidge, Percy
Hall, Ralph
Howard, Adolphus
Hutchinson, Leon,
Jackson, Claude
**9B2.**
Alleye, Henry
Bell, James
Blackman, Harry
Campbell, George
Christle, John
Davis, Vincent
Ellis, Joseph
Entminger, David
Fulton, Abraham
Haynes, Cyril N.
Hicks, Lawrence
Brooklyn
Keets, Thomas
Lake, Neville
Jones, John
Sylvester
Lashley, Vincent
Mack, Wendell
Mayer, Dudley
Orrett, Charles
Person, Fred
Pilgrim, Francis
Robinson, Harold
Rooks, Caryl
Simmelkneer, Carl
Streat, Frank
White, Herman
Williams, Hegy
Williams, Oliver
Wilson, Samuel
Marahall, Cuthbert
Mckenelle, John Jr
Mosely, Syl. H.
Mussenden, F. A.
Price, Alexander
Z. A.
Scott, C. E.
Simonds, E. Irving
Tasewell, C. A. Jr
Thompson, Granvel
Warden, Emerson
Warner, Clarence
Warren, Henry
Alleye, Henry
Bell, James
Blackman, Harry
Campbell, George
Christie, John
Deare, Vincent
Ellis, Joseph
Entminger, David
Fulton, Abraham
Haynes, Cyril N.
Hicks, Lawrence
Keet, Thomas
Lake, Neville
Marone, Fred
Knight, Gordon
Langford, Wilbur
Marindale, Ken.
Moye, Robert
Newton, Edgar
Oresky, Meyer
Pearson, Peterson
Peterson, James
Rallos, Lloyd
Ross, James
Smith, Walter
Stoney, Hampton
Thutch, Ernest
Washington, Wm.
Wooding, Stafford
Bravo, Modesto
Brown, Allen
Birkette, Orville
Carrington, Albert
Christian, Robert
Duval, Robert
Evans, Basil
Ford, John
Ford, Paul
Green, Andrew
Green, Thomas
Gardner
Hendricks, George
Hutchinson, Lester
Jefferson, Clifford
The Frederick Players, directed by John G. Mitchell Jr., presented two plays Monday evening at the school auditorium. "The Turtle Dove," a Chinese piece by Margaret Oliver Scott, and "The Lion's Whelp," by George Ross Leighton, were on the program. Stage properities and costumes were done in the school's departments.
N.A.A.C.P.Meet Opens Tonight
CLEVELAND, June 26.—Greetings from leaders in England and the United States to the National Association for the Advancement of People, which opens its 20th anniversary conference here tonight, were made public today in the form of messages from Professor Gilbert Murray of Oxford, L. T. Hobhouse, the English sociologist, and from a list of Americans including Paul M. Warburg, former member of the Federal Reserve Board; Sinclair Lewis, H. L. Mencken, Waldo Franklin, W. H. Alexander of Atlanta, director of the Commission of the National Council of Catholic Father Charles A. Beard, Bishop William F. Faber of Montana, Oswald Garrison Villard, Dorothy and Mark Van Doren, T. S. Stribling and Professor Melville J. Herskovits of
Amsterdam News
Radio News and Programs BY RICHARD L. BALTIMORE
ARE YOU IN TROUBLE OR DOUBT—IN LOVE—FINANCIAL
DIFFICULTY—DISCOURAGED—OUT OF WORK. Then consult
PROF. CHRISTY. He can positively help you in a few days' time
through the methods of that marvelous science, APPLIED
PSYCHOLOGY.
Are you backward, timid, or unprepossessing, do you fall to win the
love of the one you most desire? Do you fall in your domestic affair,
financial affairs or business affairs? All this can be over-
come by developing that latent force possessed by all of us, called
PERSONAL MAGNETISM. Through such development your
heart's desire can be attained.
Call today — tomorrow may be too late.
CONSULTATIONS. $1.00
HOURS: I P.M. to 8 P.M. Daily.
I P.M. to 8 P.M. Sunday.
Studies arranged so you meet no strangers. Maid in attendance.
LECTURES TO BE ANNOUNCED LATER
257 WEST 136th STREET
Band Greets Singers
A hiatus, NBC Negro male quartet, when they went to Wisconsin, Pa., for a concert. Arriving in the Pleasers-Arrow in Chicago, they met their tour, the singers were greeted by the cheery boom and crash of a brass band, shouts of welcome from crowds of fans, and a parade of at least 50,000 shiny motor cars.
"Morning Glories"
The trick of turning night into day may never be successfully accomplished, but the National Broadcasting Company is taking a step in that direction. The company brings stars of radio to the daylight listeners, according to George Engles, vice-president in charge of programs for the NBC. The main feature, "Evening Stars," already is heard regularly over the NBC networks, while a second, "Morning Glories," made its debut yesterday at 10:30 o'clock in the morning. The company brings stars to the daytime listeners top-match artists, usually heard only during the evening hours, "Morning Glories" was inaugurated by The Wanderers, a male quartet, and Ever Jaylon and Clarence Williams. The company owns an arrangement of popular songs.
Program
Today,
11:20 a. m. WGBR. "Uncle Remus"
Stories.
1:20 WEVD—Frank Reed, Basso-Cantante.
5:00 WNYC — Mary Smith, Negro
Spiritual.
6:30 WCAU — Paintings Twins.
7:30 WEAF — La Touraine Concert Or-
chestra.
8:30 WEAF — Happy Wonder Bakers.
9:20 WEAF — Palmalee Hour.
11:00 WABC — Duke Ellington's Jungle
Tomorrow.
12:00 aoon WRYN—Lois Morgan, jazz
pianist.
1:00 WABC — Latin America.
1:00 WHN—Uncle Robert and His
Sons.
6:30 WABC — Duke Ellington's Jungle
Band.
7:30 WEVD—Duse Mohamed All,
Conquering African Arms.
7:30 WEAF—Coward Comfort music.
8:00 WEAF—Buck and Wing.
9:00 WJZ—Veedol program.
9:10 WGBS—Mammy of the Air.
9:20 WEAF—Broadway Lights.
10:30 WMCA—Paintings Or-
chestra.; Entertainers.
10:30 WEAF—National Concert
Bureau.
11:00 WEVD—Ye Qide Neste Club En-
trance.
11:00 WRYN—The Chine Gang.
Friday, June 28.
12:00 a. m. WAAT—Musical Chefs.
3:00 WOV—Three Graces.
3:10 WLTH — Mary Smith, Negro
Spiritual.
4:00 WEAF—"Negro Poetry," Beatrice
Henderson.
5:30 WRYN—Birmingham Bertha.
6:30 WEAF—Ray-bestos Twins.
6:30 WRYN—Cotton Blossom Min-
ner.
7:30 WEAF—Dark Town Wanderer.
Program
Northwestern University.
The National Association for the Alvancement of Colored People is the oldest body in the United States, since the Civil War, devoting itself to obtaining and safeguarding the civil rights of Negro citizens of the United States.
It was founded twenty years ago, following the race riots of 1908 in Springfield, Illinois, once the home of Lincoln, by white and colored people determined to bring about significant changes in relations between the racecats. The Association now numbers 305 branches in 44 states with a membership of 90,000.
Columbia to Aid Hospital School
Mayor Walker Dedicates
Nurse Training
Institution
The new Lincoln School for Nurses,
141st street and Southern boulevard,
has become affiliated with Teachers'
College of Columbia University,
it was announced last Wednesday at
dedication exercises of the institution's new quarters. Mayor James J.
Walker was the principal speaker.
The new school will offer a complete training course and Teachers'
College will co-operate in the arrangement and direction of the curricula. The institution is privately owned, but operates in connection with the city department of hospitals, furnishing the nursing staff for Lincoln Hospital.
Dr. William Schroeder Jr.. com-
Alec
Will Broadcast
P L
ARE YOU IN TROUBLE OR
DIFFICULTY—DISCOURAGE
PROF. CHRISTY. He can po-
through the methods of the
PSYCHOLOGY.
Are you backward, timid, or un-
love of the one you most desire
fairs, financial affairs or busi-
come by developing that latent
PERSONAL MAGNETISM.
heart's desire can be attained.
Call today — tom
CONSULT
HOURS: 1
Studios arranged so you meet
LECTURES TO BE
257 WEST
Tuesday, July 2.
10:00 a. m. Musical Choir.
11:00 p. m. WABC-Latin America.
12:00 WOR-Roseland Dance Orchestra.
13:00 WABC—"Cellar Knights," comedy skit.
14:00 WOR-Armand's Chillin'.
15:00 WJZ—Pure Oil Band Concert.
16:00 WJZ—College Drug Store.
17:00 WJZ—Dutch Masters Minstrels.
18:00 WMCA—Smalls—Paradise Orchestra.
19:00 WJZ—Freed Orchestralillas.
19:10 WKRQ—Norfolk Orchestra.
19:20 WEVD—"Oldie Neste Club, Negro Harmony."
The Lincoln Secretarial School will sponsor the Negro Achievement Hour Friday, June 28, featuring the well-known Four Musketeer Quarter of WOR, who are scheduled to appear are Miss Gwendobyn Bennett and George Smith.
COMMUNITY COUNCIL
TO HAVE FESTIVAL
The North Harlem Community Council, of which James Middleton is chairman, is giving an open air festival at the St. Mark's Playground, 65 West 138th street, Friday evening at 8:15 o'clock. An American flag will be presented to the organization on Sunday morning, July 7, at 10:15 o'clock, at St. James' Presbyterian Church, 141st street and St. Nicholas avenue, in recognition of the service the council has rendered the community.
Columbus Hill to Have Circus and Carnival
The Columbus Hill Children's Theatre, 224 West Sixth-third street, will open the second half of its program for the season with a circus and carnival on July 4 and continue through the evening of July 5. A special feature will be "The Sixty-third Street Follies." The Junior Melody Boys of the center will furnish the music.
last week that the Board of Estimate has appropriated $1,360,000 to pay for the reconstruction of Lincoln Hospital. The Infirmary was purchased from the managing board and money used for construction of the new training school. The building provides quarters for 195 nurses and laboratories and a library. The eight-story structure was erected at a cost of nearly $1,000,000.
Other speakers at the dedication exercises were Dr. Linsly R. Williams, director of the Academy of Medicine; Mrs. Arthur Trowbridge Tilton, former president of the medical board.
x Christy
at Over WYND Every Saturday Erening at 7:30 o'Clock
SYCHOLOGIST
IFE ADVISOR
Listen, Folks Listen By JIM HAYSEED
Listen, Folks Listen By JIM HAYSEED
Unsane and Unsafe
DANGER besets every move of the workers in Mr. J. Tincture de Brown's department—that of street cleaning—on July 4. Tink asserted yesterday that his ears have become more deafened every year by the cannonading of fireworks thrown into the streets. He has lost only two toes, a joint off his index finger and the lobe of the left ear as a result of being in the vicinity of exploding firecrackers, Mr. de Brown said.
Yet, when given the choice of working in the danger zone or staying in and out for a regular holiday spat with the madame, Tink decided in favor of the streets, he said.
With the advent of the nude leg and nude-effect stockings fad for women, the outlook for optometrists is increasingly brighter.
Househod Hint
MISS SEXA PEALE, penny-wise flapper that she is, has struck upon a novel and economical idea for one of those extra short sun-back bathing suits, she states in a communication to the column. She'll use the togery outgrown by 8-year-old Junior.
Short Story
HILL'S eyes grew wide with horror.
Yes, those infernal things were loaded! He gripped his wad of greenbacks with the clutch of a drowning man, fearful of the impending robbery. The pitiless eyes of his oppressor never wavered.
"Shoot, man, go ahead and shoot." Hill croaked in a voice pregnant with tension.
"Nikki dam," swore the disappointed dice shooter, facing the intended victim as the cubes rolled to a standstill. "Now I'll have to make my point."
Person-ifying
SEE by the papers that a Bagdad shek died at the age of 120 and left four wives and over 100 children and grandchildren. The communication does not state the cause of his death.
COMMITTEE INSPECTS
UPSTATE CAMP SITE
A committee headed by the Rev. William Lloyd Ims inspected a camp site in Standfordville, Dutchess County, Saturday, and will recommend to the executive board of the Harlem Children's Fresh Air Fund. Inc., 135 West 135th street, the acquisition of this property.
Others who were in the party included Guildford M. Crawford, secretary; Mrs. Catherine E. Williams, James H. Hubey, and Samuel A. Allen of the New York Urban League; Mrs. Mamie McAllister, Mrs. Bessie Weeks, William H. Davis, president of the Amsterdam News; Mrs. Laura E. Wiley.
At a recent meeting of the organization it was decided that the membership should be increased by at least fifty more volunteer workers.
PRIVATE TUTOR
ELEMENTARY AND HIGH SCHOOL SUBJECTS
CIVIL NERCY PREPARATION
Education for Groups
R. JAMES COOPER
316 West 189th St.
Andubon 5470
Tel. Bryant 0816
MAURICE F. GESNER
Piano Tuner & Repairer
PLAYERS — GRAND
FREE ESTIMATE
132 WEST 45th STREET
Member of Piano Tuners' Auzn'
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 25 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 latest Medical and Electrical treatments. Fluorescopic X-Ray examination; also the intravenous injection (606) for the treatment of impure blood.
Treat: Lost power, weak nerves, pain in the stomach or back, skin diseases, impure blood, itch, pimples, eczema, bladder trouble, sore throat, kidney trouble and other curable diseases.
Don't delay. Advice free. No charge for medicine.
DR. FALK
58 W. 51ST ST. NEW YORK
Between 5th and 6th Avenues
Office Hours From 10 A. M. to
M. P. Daly. Sundays and Legal
Holidays From 12 A. M. to 1 F. M.
Circle 8188
EDITORIAL PAGE
BROOKLYN AND L. I. NEWS
NEARBY NEWS BRIEF$
CLASSIFIED ADS
CHORISTERS TO SING
IN MEMORY OF BURNS
The Robert Burns Memorial Association will honor the memory of Robert Burns, immortal Scotch poet, at a meeting Saturday afternoon at 3 oclock at the Mall in Central Park, where the direction of the Gaelic Musical Society of America and will be broadcast from radio station WNYC. Perhaps the most unique feature of the projected memorial will be singing of a series of Burns' airs by the under direction of Rudolph Grant conductor of music at Salem M. E. Church.
SINGER TO APPEAR
AT COMMUNITY CHURCH
Madame Florence Cole-Talbert,
famous soprano solist, will sing at
the 11 o'clock Sunday morning
services at the Community Church,
Thirty-fourth street and Park
avenue, where the Rev. John Haynes
Holmes, white, pastor of the church,
will preach on the subject of "Civil
Liberties: Shall the Rights of Man
Prevail?"
E. G. BRANDON, D.D.S.
Successor to D. W. Onley, D.D.S.
ANNOUNCES THE REMOVAL
OF HIS DENTAL OFFICE TO
453 LENOX AVENUE
New York City
TEL. HARLEM 1913
The New Office Is Just 4 Doors
South of the Old Office
TUNE IN
STATION WEVD
These wide-awake Harlem merchants, broadcast each Saturday at
Nick's Radio Shop, 178 West 123d St.
Duncan School of Beauty Culture
286 Lenox Ave. Phone Harlem 0083
Nagel St. Phone Harlem 0083
2258 Seventh Ave. Phone Harlem 1286
La Murrell's Prescription Dispensary
Shorewood Ave. Phone Hudson 1192
Second Dollar Corporation
2258 Lenox Ave. Phone Cuth. 8547
Lincoln Secretarial
St. W. 1826 St. Phone Mon. 8650
Music by Harlem String Ensemble
Information regarding these mer-
catures of the utility plan or
verifying may be had by writing to
WEVD (Dept. B), 3 West 183d St.
N. Y. C., or phone Chelsea 2743.
30 Days Free Trial
NEEDHAM — EST. 1846
Imagine getting a Needham Player outfit for the amazing price of $145—then pay balance $1.00 per week.
FREE Bench, Cover, Rolls Delivery, Tuning
Special clearance sale on Grands in our stock. On sale now are some very famous makes such as Steinway, Knabe, Chickering, Clovilla, Aeollan, Needham.
$295 $5.00
And Up Deposit
No Extras $1.50
Per Week
NEEDHAM PIANO CO.
520 West 48th St.
Phone Chickering 1792
Name ...
Address ..
SECRETE
Lincoln
261-269 West
SECRETARIAL--ALL
CIVIL SERV
Regents Alds: Algebra, English, C
advanced, Social Science, Geography,
spondence Course--for license No.
1, Nummer 1, School Catalogs-40 Incur-
exams.
Lecture Course now organi-
LL. B. (Lond.), F. I. P. S.:Howard
sity, New York). Catalogues on B
Regents Alds: Algebra, English, Grammar, Arithmetic-elementary and advanced, Social Science, Geography and U. S. History. Special correspondence Course—for license No. 1 Exam. N. Y. City Elementary Schools. Summer School Coaching—80 hours July-August classes please examine. Exams. (Lend), F. I. P. S. (Lendow Day, B. S. M. I. (Afordham University, New York). Catalogues on Request—Phone Monument 3630.
"FORBES" LINIMENT
The "MIRACLE" Liniment for Rheumatic Pains, Gout, Neuritis, Lumbago, Sclatica, Severe Back or Body Pains. EVERY kind of Ache or Pain.
"RELIEF IN EVERY DROP"
$2,000.00 FREE TO AGENTS
We want colored Ladies and Gentlemen as agents to sell "FORBES"
Liniment to their friends and acquaintances. Will pay a good commission.
Make money in your spare time or devote all your time.
We will pay $1,000.00 to the agent selling the most Liniment in the period mentioned below, $600.00 to the second, $250.00 to the third, and
$250.00 to the fourth agent.
We want colored Ladies and Gent
Liniment to their friends and aca
mission. Make money in your spire.
We will pay $1,000.00 to the age
period mentioned below, $500.00 to
$250.00 to the fourth agent.
Closing sale of sales.
Checks will be paid.
Our records of sales will be attested
and can be inspected after the a
Agent's registration, selling
"FORBES" Liniment for demons
of $1.00. Start immediately.
THE "FORBES"
79 DOVER STREET,
and can be inspected after the awards have been made.
Agent's registration, selling instructions and 1 large bottle of
"FORBES" Limitation for demonstration purposes sent upon receipt of
$1.00. Start immediately.
THE "BORES" COMPANY
29 DOVER STREET, NEWARK, NEW JERSEY
CIVIC AND POLITICAL
CHIEFS TO HOLD MEET
Ferdinand Q. Morton, civil service commissioner, and six others prominent in Harlem civic and political life, will be the speakers at a mass meeting tonight at the Wiloka Civic Association, 222 West 145th street.
The speakers announced by Ray Waller, executive member, are Alderman John Wiloka, Hawkins the Rev. William Lloyd Impey, T. C. Church, Dr. O. M. Waller Sr., Casper Holsteln and J. R. McNeel.
STORAGE BATTERY
Willard
All makes of Auto Batteries
Radio Batteries charged,
rented and repaired. Radios
repaired.
HARLEM BATTERY and IGNITION SERVICE
Arthur Outram, Proprietor
2304 Seventh Avenue
Audubon 10272
Bladder&Kidney
Ailments Relieved
in a Modern Medical Way
The food you eat, your habits of living,
your age, the irregular elimination of
effects in the Bladder and Kidneys,
in the Bladder and Kidneys,
earning power depends on it. Dail backaches, getting up at night, a painful
channel or cloudy, acid, odorous urine
and a mucopurulent discharge. Act now—R-1728, the
Medical Clinic Prosecution now offered
through your drugstore, will relieve you
by stimulating the digestive membrane of
the bladder, restoring the normal flow of secretions, as it has many dis-
fects. But don't take any
substances. Insist on
R-1739 — Price $1.00
If your drugrist is slow to supply you,
send mail order direct to
HARBY TREATS CO.
229 South 11th St.
Phila., Pa.
ICE CREAM
64 Delicious Bricks,
3 Flavors, 2 Gallons.
$3.20
HICKS, 186 West 148d St.
Phones Brad, 2336 - 6477
Kindle, 2336 - 6477
Buy it because it's good. Churches,
parties and dances a speciality.
ACHING JOINTS
Mr. A. S. Jackson writes from Rutherfordton, N. C.—
"I would get up mornings and my joints would ache. I would feel sorrowful. I would feel sorrowful. I didn't feel like I wanted to work. "I heard of Black-Draught and how highly it was recommended. It certainly did me a world of good. So now I see how much the shoe has time. It keeps me in splendid shape."
Pains in your joints and muscles are often the result of poisons which have been absorbed into the system instead of being carried off in a natural manner. These waste products cause a great deal of trouble to many people, and much relief has been found, in many cases, by feeding to it that the bowels act regularly and freely every day. Thedford's Black-Draught should be taken as often as necessary to open the bowels and put them in a healthy state of daily activity. Sold by all druggists. 25 cents. Get a package today.
Thedford's BLACK-DRAUGHT for Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness
BestAmusementPages
in Greater New York
TWELVE
Theatres and Per.
formers — Big
and Little
ee es ee
“As Una is written, “Harlem,” that cole |
orful tires, of # phase of the Ife which
Sve York Negroes dead fs putting In
ies last Maye at Chleaze, | The plays was
Mian iy) Wallace Thanmsit, Young
Conrad nein, aiial in collaboration with
Mili: Jovtenn Rapp, whice, s¢ was
peeiared fr the theatre, It opened In
eae ork ducing the winter tnd. had
Rarsalte stivess, the |New York
[ikincis storing only atter repeated
Triuadertatalizgs otween the mene
Tore af tie twored cast, who felt they
Nese eateries awl the producer, Bd
Beard Hoag, han grown to sth. peopers
Tons thet isintt Uirew up bis hands in
Grcust end ule.
The eariy favor with which New
Yorks cr iieoadwa, viewed the pro-
ducuon was sufficient to Inspire the
men trinnd it to pus & secon company
fn training, which opened in betroit|
and went afterwards to Chleago, This!
cumpins, with Andrew Tilthop, Alston
Durteiriy and a youn Iniy find, Vivian
Bains, was said to have been vuperlor
to the original piayers, Jt did com=
Tienatie business at tho larze Ma
festic Theatre in tho Windy City.
“dlnrien” betongs th the class of play's
whose chief ‘attraction has heen ‘thelr
Approach twward u wort of cnarseness
that was on the borderiine of inde:
cency, It was of the “Diamond Lil,"
Speettkie ‘and Johnnie giv ltenesan”|
tine. When it reached Chicago one
€xltie westaticalig, Wrote that ft was 80
bad ‘Unat it made “Diamond Til" look
Clean, which Was OL merely exngrera~
tion, Wat untrith.. ‘There have been
quite a few white productions that were
Coarser than "Haslem."
‘One ef these, “Frankie and Yohsnte:*
was closed by" the Chicago police, who
Eprarcetly wore asleep throwshout the
Presperoiy run of "Diamond TA." Soon
Etter the senizens of the law Rot on
The trail of that show and cut its wind
Otg, the protecting mri. wun reached out
for “Iatiem® and the producer was ine
formed. that he would have to close up
than. ‘The pollce commissioner reported
That he hall received “numerous. objee-
Lions to the show in letters, The pro-
fiuetion was later expunged of some of
its worst fines and he dancing was
toned down to the point whero it was
permitied to continte, Wut the dirty
Srark had Teen sone, and & ls now
preparing 9 leave,
Tis interesting to note that _ the
clef complaints, against "Hatem"
came fron Negroes, They id not. At-
fend the show in ans geeat numbers,
Init aid plenty’ of protesting because, 5
they, ha Heard, the drama way a’ Te-
fisetion upon the Negro. One of the
privripal persona whe ad to bear the
irune of embarrassment, caused by
These attieks, was the wffaMe Chapple
Carina, who Wad a part in the pro
Guction and acted ax one of the pub-
Hise reyaesentatives.. Chapple. Wns
enimwerd Uo offer ail sorts of In
Guesneats ty pet colored patrons. out
to waive the best seats, bus they with-
Let themsctves and wrote. mean” et
tere. It is remrtot that. Lee Shubert
Wised from New York that he didn't
cure, tat Negroes could be segregated
in ‘his houses from now on.
Made Perseverance Pay,
Wilkam Foster te out in Los Angeles
a3 an honest-to-gonlness assistant di
Teeter In walored scenes for Tuthe
Dany of Fpster's Chicago frlends are
Unable to Wwileve that thls determined
Iman haw Kept on trying wotil he has
Fealized uw little on dreams he has
Wenved for tiny, many Years.
Forter has hat a long and Interesting
career which cartien him. back beyond
the days when he was with Peter Jack:
gon In exland and later when he on
“Jay Gould” were dolnz fret mighta
the show houses on roadway. TH
came to Chicago, knew the Pekin play.
Gre aid hegan the production of cot
ered motion picteres when enthusinen
for the Pekin phisers was at tts height
In those Ways hie was one of the clos
fent friends of Flournoy’ Mller, Foste
now carried a aliamond-rtivlded wateh
a cite trom the kindly Flournos.
“Ti” ns he Is known by most 0
his friends, got-ont of pieturer ond Int
the Rewspaper game, | so-called. Fo
some years he wrote sports for thi
Chicago Pefenler unter the pen nany
of Jull Jones Jr. Me left the Defende
and starved a dally paner of hie own
with Count Gary of New York, Gary’
health forsook him and the paper falle¢
but Foster did not ston trying, | HH
wanted to make pictures, He had writ
ten stories and he wanted to see ther
fon thr screen, Heaven only: lenows lio
he got to Los Angeles, but he reacher
there.
He himself tells of hin etforts to re
fon the movie lot, ‘Time and tim
exain he went with his story. Mont o
the times he could not get in, At othe
times he got in only tw be rent ou
Sometimes ho waa played with, nt oth
era ridiculed, “It was not until he ra
into ‘a Sr. Powell, vice-president. 0
Pathe, uhrough the intiuence of th
colored doorman st Pathe, that h
Struck w chord of Interest. Powelh wa
willing to talk to Foster. Ie came fron
Virginia and he fad we way of unvler
standing that Foster might hate
- fnlea. Foster's stories were read and re
reatl, Conversations. were held Wit
Jawyers and finally Foster was rent fo
to go to werk. He could searcely. he
Teva it lmsvit. Nor could the Negroc
whom he was to direct. When he gis
them omer they loaked at the Whit
men to see if they should do what U
Negra director wan telling them tat
Powvelt stuck behind Foster, tn spite. ¢
criticism frnin blacks and whites, an
now. Foster fs well In tho game. i
Fuck, And he” wen.
ieee chee
{iy The Asmuclated Negro Press)
NEW YORK—"Hlot Chocolates,’ the
tou hed up edition of the review at
Conale's inn, ie Harlem, with a book
hy Sdem ‘Tutt Wiltnes ‘and J. Homer
‘Tut!, and music aud lyties hy ‘Thomas
Wather, Harry Brooke mud Aniy Raat,
opened an Mroadway Thursday nlght at
the Huitvon Theatre, Bay Cox” and
Mato Cate hiead the cart-and Copnle
and George Inanerman provided the
Juke Ws get it going.
CHICAGO.-After showing at Aown-
town an natlylng theatres, “Hearts Ii
Dixie the Fox finging and talking
Bitira, wan Stepan Ketelt and Clare
ene Muse, is hilled for the week of
Puls Bat the Hegal Thentee, where Mt
fe rxperted the hutk of colored patrons
WHT meine tha opmortunlty to sen It,
LOS ANUELEA, Caiil—Speel Webb,
Sho brought his Molody Lada hera from
Ohio two Sees nee, hae hall uy an
enviable record on the coast and Ix atill
golng strong.
Chick Snuwden, planiat and brother!
[FULL STORY OF ATTEMPT TO BAN ‘HARLEM’
‘Bomboola’ Almost Ready for B’way Opening
Two Outstanding Youngsters at the: Alhambra
wy oe
eee ee rece See.
Saab > «5 ae
fae ee oo
aig wt” 3 AX.
= u fat
ba fe eee
| »-
| a ; :
| pO ee « ie
oe #0n i‘ Pig: Ss
fees Seek a oe
pe a cae
\
MISS EDNA HARRIS MISS ARTIE CAIN
These Clever Little Girls Are Products of the Alhambra Dramatic Company. Whether in Musical Revue or
Dramatic Playlet They Always Make Good. They Are Doing Splendid Work at the Alhambra Theatre This Week.
a eee
of the famous Carolyne Snowden, is ee opportunity it will have to hear Arm-
the city reporting good business in tho | =x. [strong and his band.
East, | |, Atmstrong and his band are wart of
Charles Butler, highly valued member AS fine @ musical revue ac one would
of Central Casting Bureau, could not ariem PAEH\S [eee cic Aone” produced
set released for a vacation. Even when by Addison arey. With Bob Williams
here ts no call for colored extras and | UK cleto Lod), Gatti De Gavton, Jos
ae et ee iy OBRERVER Soetoro it
be red neta wi Sw nd |tles tn the east, “Move Along” is almost
with other Important offlee work, | AT THE ROOSEVELT colored nein il, tncutes, Sean oad [ten 18 the cote anal ian $8 acne
“Trader Horn," now on location in aan eSetey Singleton and the “Three Rose- | lanices and gorgeous wenes, ‘There is a
‘Africa and cartytigeon in spite of be | For this Wednesday, Thgrsday ani | jus,” fast-working and good-looking chorus
o [Etiday, June 28, 27 and 25, Harlem's ee ef girls brought here from a_enson's
Ue aed aueys il eee Pein | “tee of hethect Talking Piccdres. engagement in Washington, ‘They had
extras on Ms lhe Roosevelt Thentre, which is lerate to respond to xeveral encores.
Sra oe res word that noe only. is Fox | ie, omeetelt Ta, ae geen | AT THE RENAISSANCE |!).35"Witisne acts na'the master. of
Movietone Follies tobe an annun! nro-lavenue, has announced for.its featur — ceremoniesa post which ho'has held for
Auction, but that st 4s to. be made in| attraction. “a Vitaphone talking and! |, « Widh Jenne’ Engels, a [fome six months, In Chleago's | best
four forelgn languages as well, aera wird, eaeiie’. State Street | The Letter." with Jenane Engels. © |i rosen colorad. theatre: Bob certainly
‘Colored theatre-goers. are.” evincing | Sygie:’ Thin ailerure Is. billed. ag “The | Peromounc 200 per-céHt all-Alking PT. | nove his stutt_-ae comedian; hand lead-
thelr interest in all colored cast 1e-| fowdown on the reat” underworia® and duction, now playing at the Henalsance | ov ana‘master. of the uxelele: /Gallle Do
lures by the way they have been flock-|toauts a very. fine talking cast of prom- [iene Ws ‘proven ieif a good box |& on ut oe yn have: been buen
ing to ste “Showboat” “Music ‘Huth |tnent screen players, including. Conrad office nttcaction despite, the, w8tm | (rom quarlem about a year. “Their new
Charms,” “Fox Follley,” “On With the | Nagel, Myrna. Loy, | Wililam | Rusuell, | Weather all this week. | Mettesl, S's 0" |chatter™ kept the large Monday audi-
Show" and “Hearts in Dixie," now on| Georgie Stone and Pat Hartigan. heart Interest, the story: te one vie and [ence holding thelr: sides ~with taughter.
the avenue, For Saturday, Sunday, Monday, ond | ways wilt couch ihe oie” the’ lant [Honey Brown received an ovatlon. | She
: — tuesday, Junes 39,20; July tend 2, the [hear thin splendid pleture oh Is the benutlful ‘girl chosen by | King
Roosevelt takes great pride tn anmoune- | showing will be Thursday nls Vidor ‘to star in “Hallelujah” who he-
i ‘Lotaretie Players Close, ing the présentation of one of the finest} Commencing Friday, June.2s, for four |came ill before the picture was complet-
LOS ANGELES, Cal., June 22 (A. N.
P.)—Winding up x forty-two weeks" run
in a glorious finish with a repetition
of “The Unborn,” by popular demand,
the famous Lafayette Players closed at
the New Lincoln Theatre, giving away
ton musical comedy: being’ brought Weet
hy Sam Kramer, director. According to
Robert Levy, manager of the players,
and Mr. Curtis Carpenter, manager
of the theatre, all records for attendance
have buen broken during thelr stay,
‘The way dramatic art interpreted: by
them was recelved by the public 18 algo
‘a revelation, and each night there have
been some of the greatest stare. of
zcroeniand, as well as some of the most
famous nuithors, and lepitimate actors.
Feginning Aug. 24, below.ts the list of
Ue plays, Including a few mualcal
comedies, as thes were staged, "Rain"
and “The Unborn" were reposted.
Raln, Kick In, Here Comes ‘the
Bride, In Old Kentucky, East Is West,
‘The Cat and the Canary, Madame X
Up im Mabel's Room. Within the Law,
Anna Christle, Ja Zat So, On Trial, The
‘Thirteenth Chalr, ‘The Noose, Commor
Clay, Branded, Bought and 'Pald For,
Chenling Cheaters, Queen High, ‘The
Gorilla, The Man Who Came ‘Back,
‘Why Women Cheat, Little Jesse James
Rain (Feb, 310), Salome, The Whole
Town Talking, The Unborn, Irene, Th
Fallen Sister, The Yellow Ticket, ‘Th
Outcast. Potwah and Perlmutter, Dam
nged Goods, Allns the Descon, ‘Shoule
the Woman'Tell? Dr. Jekyll and Mr
Hyde, Not Tonight, Dearie; Unde
Cover, Over the Hilts to the Poorhouse
The Divorce Quention, Are You a Ma
ae ead The aberk,
q
Learn to Dance
ANDERSON STUDIO
564 PENG Ne APT. 14
| alt posi | Sesrintesd
ees acces
GEO. C. LAYNE’S
eel Sle
| Terms fesseaote & Good Music
PHONE AUDUBON 2208
283 W. i44th ST.
te ‘Pianos Tuned
Ceazzl
GUARANTEED UN 20 gs
Tolerieg Disesevi, Pion Toee
TAL
Eee
Ebire. die Pipe ma eae
Mineced statinst acer eater cstros:
El
Free Demopstration, Daily from
wet forid bags sneuraag TS
Hin 16, © yim. Write oF Bhone
Tar 'roklet
. Schools of Popular Music
8 w Brontwaz & 8th Ave
ot ret Svintconsin aes Ae
‘111 West 185th St, mear Lenoz Ave.
pemmmase, Tél, CAT hedrnl 5220 one
NEW YORK ‘AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
| At Har By OBSERVER———__—___—__—_
AT THE ROOSEVELT | [cotorea acta will include: Swan i
—_ Lee, Andrew Copeland, ee andl
For this Wednesday, ‘Thyrsday and Dearker Singleton and the eee
Friday, June 26, 27 and £8, Harlem's: m
ing od of weriet Talking Fieares
the Roorevelt Thentre. which is lected
A Ree i itreetand seventn| AT THE RENAISSANCI
avenue, as announced for tw feat
atiraction. ‘a. Vitaphone talling and! 45 : :
found: picture, entitled. “State Street | “The Letter.” with. Jennne Engen
Shale: This splerufe Is billed. as “The | Poromoune 100 percent all-talklng pe
SOTA ae Mat underworht” ‘and { duction, now playing: at ti Henalssun
housts s very. fine taiking cast of prom- |ireste, ‘mus proven Itaelf ® good. b
Inent. screen. playery, including. Conrad [office attraction | despite. the. . wat
Nae, Suen Loy,’ William.» Ruavell,| Weather all thi week. | Because of
Gedtgie Stone and Pat Hartigan. heart Interest, the story. In-one that
For Saturday, Sunday, Monday and | Ways wil! catch the fancy, See. a
meting tune 39, ae July Land the |Hear thin splendid picture. The 1a
Roosevelt takes great prid¢ in announc- showing wilt be Thursday nlght.
ing the presentation of one of the finest}. Commencing Friday, June.2%, for fo
pictires of any yenr. This is “Woary| days, Wallace Beery In “Chinator
River," in-which Richard Darthelness.| Nights," with Florence, Vidor a
makes bin’ debut in talking pletures | Warner Olund also starring, comes
“Weary Fiver" gives Barthelmess his|ihe:Renaisennce, Here we have
Initial opportunity in Vitaphone ‘syh-| trigue,” myxtery, suspense, | all wonde
chronizatiog... For the first time this} tuliy.woven into an alt-tntking piety
Star's: volce will be heard'in’ convereaz| which will keep your mind and ye
tion and-song. Ie nlso plnyx tho plano. Jears:on the alert from start to fint
‘On the. same Program “the: Joonevelt )Chinatown Ix an American elty—ever
will; show the opening chepter of the|thing. of mystery. Seo “Chinato
finest -and.‘moat thrilling serial story of | Nights” and you will tnko a trip throu
the year. This ts "The Fatal Warning,” | these ‘mysterious places such as
\ehose cabt’ includes some of-tha Dent lacver: could otherwise.
satlal players’on the screen and is hend<|..,The. Avan Comedy Four suprty
24 by -Ralph’Graves and, Helen‘ Costelip:!'screnining all-talking comedy for bé
Fn NET ReIVER of the week's progtam. "Fort
1 * AT THE ODEON PS first half they appear in “False
eI ‘Alarm Company,” and for the Int
‘Patrons..of ‘Harlenr's fonty ‘vnudevitie
ind. motion: pleture ‘theatre, tho. Odeon;
which Is Ioeated on 243th street nes
Eighth-‘avende; have several, veryp fino
Treatnis store’ for: them: On’ Tharsaay
and Eriday, ‘Sune 27 and:28; Irene™mRich
Will be nen In het newest screen slrama,
entitled “Danghters of Desire.” :‘This'tn
8 gripping drama of modern life, well
photographed and superbly’, enacted ;by
& atrong cast. Jt will especially. please
[all of Misx Mich's followers. . The: vmude-
ville program: to, be’ presented with
“Daughters of Desiro” Includes. Harvey
and Hunter, laine Gherrs, Long and
Patterson, Haiph Demént and the ‘Three
Daneing Sensations. '
For aSturdny, Bunday and Monday,
June 20, 30 nnd July 1, the feature posi
lon on the nereen will be cccupled by
“The Wolt Song,” starring the xcreen’s
newest and best-liked lovers—the flery
and dynamic Lupe ‘Velez and the stat
wart Gary Cooper. tn addition — the
vanderille preeram of five all-rtar all-
HALL JOHNSON CHOIR
"MONDAY, JULY 1, 1929
Rie oe ae So ee ne ae
Et TR Ae cat
4 , ea Pants
£ | ig 7 4 4 Ree
1 ie | seas ¥:
ee en
- a Se ee an
ee ed
Pe ee ee
eR
Ed he a7. eae
ees ae eee
CONCEREANN MINCE. viet He aaT
RENAISSANCE BALLROOM
New York City Federation af Women’s Clubs
AnagsStOS ink
wat Jonton vse, Beta al Ae, neagnant tit
roetinaan diel egeatn Avrane
aun. ge Gueane Wed He Steet Haste 7H
Pree oe e s
| ce ‘ong «>
J: Sis ° ey re.
‘=e ™}) =F “a di
i Bi 3 al wh
colored neta will include: Swan and
Lee, Andrew Copeland, Johnson nnd Lee,
BDoorkey Singieton and the “Three Rose-
buds.”
AT THE RENAISSANCE
‘wphe Letter” with Jenne Engels,
Poromoune 100 per.céat all-tilking-pro-
duction, now playing at tN Renalasunce
‘Theatre, hus proven Itrelf « good box
office atteaction despite. the. warn
Weather all thix week. Becatiaa of, {ts
heart Interest, the story. {sone that ‘al-
ways will catch the fancy, Seo, and
hear. thin splendid pleture. ‘The last
showing wilt be Thursday night.
| Commencing Friday, June.2, for four
‘ays, Walinco Beery in “Chinatown
Nights,” with Florence Vidor and
Warner Olund also starring, comes to
ive: Kenalsennce, Here we have in-
trigue, inywters, suspense, all wonder-
‘taliy.woven into an alt-titking pleture
Whigh will keep your mind and_ your
jears-on the alert from start to finish,
Chinatown in an American elty—ever
thing ot mystery. Seo “Chinatown
Nights" nnd you will take @ trip through
these mysterious places such as you
aaeverscould otherwise.
[x:The. Avan Comedy Four suprty 8
‘screaming all-talklog comedy for both
halves of the week's program, For the
first halt they appear. in. "False ¥ire
Alarm Company," and for the intter,
Pknights In Venice.” : Are. yout looking
forthe retutn of “Hearts in Dixie.” 1
weilibe back here soon by popular de-
SAT THE:-LAFAYETTE
Louls Armstrong war: given an ova;
tion’ atthe: Lafayette, Theatre Mofday.
The ‘auidience. simply’ ‘rows and cheored
ag this. remarkable cornculat;drew' from
his golden trampet. muale: such ns has
eeldom been heard before here—rouxingj
knappy’ Jazz and sweet,, tender. molody.
Amintrong is certainly @ genius, In two
Appearances at. a local dance hall and
In veveral appearances with Rroadway’s
Intest colored musical comedy -hit—
“Hot Chocolater"—he has scored
aenisational hit. His appearance with
hls famous Chiergo Band:at the Lafay-
etto Thentre Iu certainly a triumph for
the enterprising management of thal
theatre and afferds Harlem the only
Spend the Holiday Afternoon at the
“New York’s Prettiest”
138TH STREET AND SEVENTH AVENUE
;
Independence Dav Celebration
THURSDAY, JULY 4
Commencing at 3 P. M. — Twelve Continuous Hours of Dancing
3 — ORCHESTRAS — 3
Confetti — Streamers — Balloons — Noisemakers
ONLY ONE ADMISSION, 75 CENTS -
Are you good at the Lindy Hop and Waltzing? If you are, come pre-
pared for a pleasant and profitable surprise. Be with the liveliest,
jolliest crowd in the prettiest and finest ballroom in Harlem. Como
to the Renaissance Casino and enjoy the hollday right.
Enjoy July Fourth at Atlantic City
IMPERIAL [DGE. NO. 121
opportunity it will have to hear Arm-
Se rad tame
Arias sid Sis band arezyarl o@
Achith Weubeal veo ae one weal
Saal te necohore. Aue" prsauced
ty Addluon rarey. With Bob Willems
Heer a ne gt
lane Tioney Brown and other celebri-
tes in the cnet, “Move Along” is almost
Het ee ea ees Gehan Seaver
Se es ee ere es
fast-working and good-looking chorus
Srcestiee el See eats, ears
‘engagement in Washington. They had
cremains Un ase
ee ee See alan ok
ceremonies--a post which ha has held for
some six months in Chleago's best-
known -colored:' theatre, : “Bob. certainly
knows his etutt—as comedian;'band lead-
lor and’master’ of the: ukelete:’Gallle Do
Fe ee ae one
(rom. Jiarlem about a year.” Their new
Po terrar inte ears
Perper ere carci
Se et eee ee es
Hoey. Broan eel oe eee ee
Bde a ee nanitee ate we
‘came Ill before the picture was complet-
ed. According to a well-informed source,
‘Mr.’ Vidor regards the work she did be-
fore her unfortunate SIlness as the great-
Fete Area
ee aes dtp el
Includer, ns the feature, Reginald
Denny"s Intest starring vehicle, “Clear
the Decks.” :
| The. Lafayette Next Week
Al Jolson, the world’s greatest enter-
tainer, will-apenr at‘the Lafayette The-
atre next week in his sensational Vita-
Phone production, “The Singing Fool.”
This pleture has Just finished a run of
Uwe yents ab-the Winter Garden The:
tre at three dollar prices, -
Tt Intremarded ox:one of the greatest
pleturén ever made, a combination of
Pathor, singing, tniking, drama and
comedy, which has never been equalled
fon atnge of screen. What moro need
be raid?
‘The musical comedy attraction for the
weele.sill be “Sam: From Bam,” star-
ring Lillian Brown, formerly of Rrown
and De Mont, and Emmett Antheny,
comedy, star of Low Leslie's “Black-
birds.”
YAT:THE NEW DOUGLAS
Another all-talking hit, Wilard Mack's
+The Voleo of the City,” Js the princl-
pal attraction at the Now, Douglas The-
Atre for this Wednerday, Thursday and
Veldny. The extreme wimplleity and
directners of thin thrilling underworld
melodrama make It one of the most Un-
Usual and popular pictures to play re-
cenuy' at Harlem's largest motion ple-
ture theatre,
“The Volee of the City” has been ae-
claimed by critics as a perfect example
of alt-talking picture technique. With
its ‘plot _confensed in a time space of
twenty-four hours, the story moves with
extreme rapidity.” From the moment
ft opens, with Doyle's aster and sweot-
heart awaiting word as to whether he
has really survived In a _xonsatlonal
prison break, there Ssn’t a wasted mo-
Iient through the exciting man-hunt by
Tif, the detective, unui the striking
climes and romantic finiah.
CU Willard Mick, who was a _ great
seveen star fn 1913 before he became one
fof Aieriea’s greatest playwrights, has
txerched to the limit Ris knowledge of
both stage and screen to create # real
Hijet lesson In how tatking pleturex
should bo made. The splendid cast of
Surge and sereen notables Incluten tol
crt Amex, Sylvia Field, Mr. Mack as
the detertive, John Sullivan and Duane
Thompxon.
Conimencing Saturday, for a four-
aay engagement, John Glibert cones to
tho New Jiwugiae in hls Intest success,
“Desert Nighis." ‘The atory whlch
opens In ths grim and death-Intested
recions of South Afriea, 1s based on the
senvationnLand daring robbery of a dise
mond tuine. How the manager Is trick-
ca into displaying ® fortune in uncut
Stones, only 10 bo made a prisoner and
forevdl ta tecompany his captors into the
heart of the desert country In an effort
to exeape with the priceless loot, 18 one
of tho most Interesting pletures to be
Seen in Harlem in some time,
AT THE ALHAMBRA
“My Carnival Girl" fs the romance of
a little daredevil trick rider who falls
heir ton large fortuno in England,
She goes ubrond to claim her In-
heritanee. Her aristocratic relatives
anub her, and she files back to the
tirma of her Yankee sweetheart of
carnival days,
‘Humor and pathos alternate through-
out thls dellcious offering of the Al-
hambra Drama Players. The nudlence
laughs and weeps with fascinating Mitte
Artie Cain, who rises to helghts of real
artistry as the carnival girl,
‘Susle Sutton fy the Engligh aunt who
resents the food fortune of the Amerl-
can girl from the circus ring. ‘Thomas
Mosely and Edna Harris are cousins,
in fear of losing the luxury to which
they are accustomed.”
Barrington Carter in the family law.
yer, and Georgo Wiltshire a financially
embarrassed nobleman, both of whom
try to marry the American girl and an-
nex her fortune, but she ts true to her
carnival pal, played by ‘Ted Blackmon.
Ednn Young, as a sympathetic dis-
tant relative, is the only friend she finds
ip England until Al F. Watts, as Chief
Tomahuwk, an Indian who owns. the
carnivai, appears suddenly to protect
her in his own savage way.
“feebers Follies” starts with a novel
terles of revels at the North Pole,
where gorgeous Edna Harris relgns as
the “Ice Queen; attended by the six-
teen Alhambra’ Girls In Arctlo attire
Aes the coolest sizht i New York,
“Roa White, previously appearing In
“Blackbirds” "and “Deep Har:em,"
makes her first appearance’ at the Al-
fhambra and is greeted with enthusiasm,
Henry Austin’s Band
Music for All Occasions
488 Lenox Avenue
Harlem 8028
REMOVAL NOTICE
New, Larger and Better
4 a
Old aed New Pupile of
PROF. DARLING
MACK
New Location
104 WEST 136th ST.
Phone Bradburst 6459
and Audubon 8972
FS ESE aE:
U.S.S.
Cordially Invites the Public to
Attend Its
INITIAL DANCE
At the Beautiful Whitaka Demo-
cratic Club
222 West 145th Street Hy
FRIDAY EVENING,
- JUNE 28th, 1929"
Music by Nappans
‘Subscription 60 Cents
. Edited by
Romeo L. Dougherty
AFTERNOON AND EVENING
“WHOOPEE!” An Old-Fashioned Southern
Given by the
AT DEXTER PARK
Jomaica and Drew Avenues, Woodhaven, N. To
MUSIC BY J. CORDY WILLIAMS AND HIS ARABIAN KNIGHTS
BATS! satery, All paris of the, Bis, except the grant, have bere
! prepared by’ experienced urtists.” On sale at moderate price
ADMISSION 69 CEXTS
‘Dancing TH 1A. 3, x
Direetions—From N. ¥, take Jamales “L,” get off at Eldert Lane,
LADIES, Do Not Forget to Visit the
WONDER ROOT REAUTY SHOP, 16 East 115th St. NX. Cy
before leaving for the Racbecue. Only professional Bealty Cuituriats of
feng sanding: wil wait upon you. Do not forget to give us a tril, Tou
wilt be-thanicful for it. K
~ LOUIS ARMSTRONG =:
mm ad
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Seas et re ee
“that melt om on pac Trot
yout motto! T BLUES” 2
Fag aSiN{STREET -
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eon by Louis Aematoon? "No. 3690
No. 8690 == b
¢ = Oo—K Gh 15
VAGREAN,
Sane Gigante Records
: -
| LEARN TAPPING
LEARN TO DANG
DIPLOMAS AWARDED TO ALL WHO QUALIFY
STAGE AND SOCIAL DANCES
Six eT ee Seer |
PROF DARLING MACK'S STUDIO
104 W. 136th St. Phones: Ato. on
Bruce Johnson, who produces unique
music from a washboard, has. an slto-
gether new line of fun, and dainty
‘Alma Travis twinkles ber toes in pret-
iy dances.
Sandy Burns and Pigmeat Markham
have a lot of upronricus comedy, as-
sisted by varlous members of the very
intwe cast.
“Black Cargo of the South Seas,” #
startling adventure picture, is having
its firat Harlem showing at the Alham-
bra, in the triple program. Edith Rob-
ets is the star of an enormous cast,
Including hundreds of natives of tho
Fiji Isiands in thelr very abbreviated
summer costumes,
The Alhambra Next Week
“The Police, System," # drama of the
mericleas hounding of a reformed crook,
ls the up-to-dace and true-to-life play to
come to the Alhambra next week. The
fough-neck detective almost succeeds
in “framing” his vietim, but Justice
fnatly urlumpha,
“Rockaway Revue” will find Sandy
burns and his pals among the bathing
Lincoln Closed for, Summer
‘Taking advantage of the summer sea-
yon, Mr. Schiffman has closed the Lin-
coln Theatre for a period of six weeks.
During: that time many smprovements
will be made in the structure to mod-
ernize it in accordance with the de-
mands of this new ern in the show
business.
In the meantime, Mr. Schiffman and
his large staff will redouble their efforts
to present the greatest stage and screen
shows at the Lafayette and the finest
picture programs at the new Douglas.
Former ‘Jazz Regiment’ .
Marines With ‘Bombooly.
Irving Cooper sends in a menayy
to the effect that his all-Nen
musicale, “Bomboola,’ will open pox:
tively at the. Royale ‘Theatre o
Wednesday evening, June 26. mT,
company has been augmented
seventy people and the band, ugq
the direction of Lieut. J. Tim Brym,
will number fifteen.
Included in the cast are Tea
Washington, Brevard Burnet,
“Dusty” ‘Fletcher, John Mason, Bil:
Cortez, Monte Hawley, Hilda Perling’
Winters and Merano, Revella Hughes
Billy Andrews, George Randol, th
McClain Twins and “Derby.” ‘sam
Rose is staging the numbers.
‘New comedy sketches have been in-
stalled since the Brooklyn engage.
ment and a travesty on “Harlen*
1 jed_this season, hi
Phisped ito shape “and wilt cor
tribute part of the action of th
second act.
| Robeson in “Talkie
Paul Robeson, has been engagec
by Asher and Rogers to play, in «
talicing pleture, Dr. Robeson in al
proba! ty will appear either in
‘Black April,” from, the novel by
Julia Peterkin, or “In Abrahami
Besom,” a translation of the play by
Paul Green. Production will start in
August when Mr, Robeson retum
from @ concert tour in England,
Walter Richardson Left
London for Australia
“Hot Chocolates”. | e
Well Received
Connie's Angmenited Revue
Finds Favor at Hands of |
Local Critics
PRESS TICKETS COMING?
Of all the revues making a bid for
faver on Broadway during the past
tow months, "Hot Chocolates" seems
11 have come nearer to measuring up
+) what Broadway expects than any
the others, The consensus of opin-
in among the writers on the local
caliy papers discloses that the show
really hitting as st should, and only
the hot weather, if it continues, will
work against the production.
The dramatic department of ‘The
Amsterdam News has been searching
yealously for the usual two tekets
usually sent by producers or press
agents of these shows, but so far he
has been unable to locate the mag-
retie Ilttle pasteboards that admit we
nf sundown hue along with the white
toys from downtown.
Anyway, throwing all the accounts
trom the white dailies into a hat and
closing our eyes and picking, we
vithdraw from the head-plece the
following account, from the pen of
F. P. Dunne Jr., son of a well-known
sire whose writings have for years
entertained newspaper readers of this
city. Finally, Peter Dunne wos a
worthy sire of a most promising
young newspaperman who tells us
that—
“The latest addition to_ the long
string of Negro shows, “Hot Choco-
lates,” which came to the Hudson
‘Theatre last night, proved to be a
colorful, fast-moving, spirited and
expert display of ric _accomplish-
ments, Sanecially in the dancing line.
‘These’ young bloods, of Harlem can
dance, and they do, with an immense
amount of energy and willingness. .
“Most of the performers in the
show also are on the entertainment
staff in Connie's Inn, a Harlem night
élub, and after ‘the curtain rings
down on their Broadway performance
they’ go uptown and do, most of it all
over again. G as
Fan fhe ne Uae eae
theatre as Ul T did last night, I can-
not for the life of me see how they
can do anything more upewe than
stagger across the floor. But it seems
that, they do.
“The show in the Hudson does not
so in for music yery heavily. ‘There
is a song called “Aint ‘Misbehavin’
on which much reliance is placed.
Almost everybody in the show sings
it at one ¢ or another, and as
there are a good many in the show
the song gets sung pretty often. It
4s humefit and plessant, and 1 should
eel like giving everybody m grea!
Seat of ergaie for‘ ie Te te only ‘ere
not so strikingly reminiscent of
something I seem to remember from
a year or 50 ago. Never mind what.
“What the show does go in for, and
perfectly grandly, is dancing. On the |
stage they. do Precticaly every known |
kind of dance that ordinary mortals.
fould ‘not, even think of trying to do,
The girls’ chorus is pretty and well:
trained and puts its heart and soul
into its work. But it has to defer
before the marvellously shythmic
clogging of a team of, eleht young
men, who seem to be the answer to
the question: Where do the young
street-comer dancers of Harlem go?
“Before the pectarcund. of ese
two choruses Eis ree_ performers
who really make the show. First of
all 4s one ‘Jazz-lips” Richardson, @
Powerful man with a wild gleam in
is eye, who comes out along and,
perfectly calmly, almost without vis-
ible effort. does an utterly unbelleva-
ble acrobatic dance, i ei Seen
nything more rhythmically gymnes.
tic. Last night he Mterally sto
Ee a ee ee eee dve,
crazy little person known as Baby
Cox. who insists on singing pathetic
songs slightily off Key, ‘and then sud-
denly begins to caper for all the
world Hike a monkey on a stick. And,
finally, there is one Loulse Cook, &
lady made entirely, of rubber, who,
while representing the Goddess of
Rain, does just such a dance as
grandfather used to sneak off and
see at the county fair,
“The whole show has pace and en-
thusiasm and enough talent to make
it the best Negro revue since “Black-
birds.” ‘There are even one or two
decently funny sketches, and the
lapses from good taste are few. And,
by the way, the report that the show
was postponed from Jast Monday so
the cast could have thelr gold teeth
out {5 a base canard.”
RENAISSANCE
THEATRE
Seventh Avenue, 137th Street
NOW PLAYING
Jeanne Eagels in
“
The Letter
4 Days, Commencing
Friday, June 28
Wallace Beery in
Chinatown Nights
With FLORENCE VIDOR
and WARNER OLAND
All Pictures 100 Per Cent
, Talkies
Keep in Mind
“HEARTS IN DIXIE”
Coming Soon
“HOT CHOCOLATES” RECEIVED WITH FAVOR
Browning Tells of Negro Performers Abroad
Louis. Armstrong
re 0 Y)
a
~~ ao:
Ds
= we se
v4 as *
Am) SL ha ee
a oe y
A rm Fan | we
ie eres 4
| eae a os
‘SP, oe aw
Se eS ZN a
Se ey a
ey sl Dp. A ale
— a ‘.
There’s Ni i i
Scent Coser te ee ine the Most
ree Git Creatine ver Appeared at a Theatre
i Stee Quite a Furore at the Lafay-
Our Performers in Europe
‘Mr. and Mra, Walter Richardson were
av the opera “Norma” at the great Co-
[vent Garden, Friday evening. Mra,
Richardon Wore a Parislenne.erention
of flowered chiffon on a pale pink
background, which was very, becoming
to her pretty, brown ukin, The dre
was of Ue “0. fashionable” now be
ing worn with tight fitting. bodice and
Mlounces reaching to the heel of het
dainty spangied silppers, of green crepe
do ‘chine, Over this ‘model waa her
black and white evening wrap. lltter~
ing around her neck was the lovely and
rare Wedding prevent {rom her husband,
a pearl and. diamond. necklace with
even half moons, © star in the center
of ench moon of. pearls, Aad. inicthe
jeenter of each star a respiendent ‘dine
mond. ‘They were magnificent couple
and made @ splendid showing “of "the
real modern. Negro.
Mr. "and ‘Sirs. Richardson left Lon-
don on June 14 for Australia. for one
year, and with to my good-bye to all
thelt frlends both in America and ov
thls aide. Going by the way of the
‘Suez Canal they anticipate a fovely trin
Sire. Richardson will write of her. alx
weeka on the ocean ‘so. all of thelr
fHlends can enjoy the trip with them.
Here's wishing them s lovely bon voy
age, much success and happiness.
The papuinr Walter will appear in
Sidney with the Auctralian company of|
“Show Boat.” ‘The Willlamson Produe-
ora have signed him to one of the fin-
feat contracts. ‘He is booked for = year
with an option, Mr, Richardson was a
tremendous success In "Winginin tn
London. All'mail wit reach the Teh
ardsons at the American Express, Sid
ney, Australis,
Coleridge Taylor's “Hiawatha” Is be-
Ing presented In Landon at. Albert. Halt
by the Royal School Soctety’ and ts be-
Ing directed by the’ great ‘English con-|
Auetor, Dr. Malcolm Sergent, ‘There are
400 in the chorus and & ballet of 200.
Itty a grand sight and privilege to be
ble to ‘nitend and tisten to the won-
erful music by the greatest of all Ne-
sro composers. Coleridge Taylor Was
Indeed one of the world's grentent, and
his memory will live forever In England.
Each year “Mlawalha” ig piven On &
grand neale and, of course, is always &
tremendous sucsean in every way.
Prof. Loule Drysdale and John C.
Payne, Esq, are making final prepara
tlons and will leave next. month. for
Vienna, ‘where both will study for elght
weeks with one of the old German man.
term. Mr. Payne will be greatly. missed
in London by his many frlends,
_A Dig frat night ie expected at the
Court "Theatre Sfonday evening when
the popular actor, Frank Wilson, Esq.
late ‘of “Porgy.” opens In “Ail God's
Caittuns Got Wings.”
Charming Mrs. Emma Layton {s often
seen here and there In het heat |
new car, which 12 Unusually attractive
because of Its color, which blenda with
that of her pretty ollve complexion.
Mra, Layton ts often mistaken for one
of the noted East Indian princesses liv
ing in London at this ume,
Caskn Bonds, Esq, nopular voce!
teacher ot New York, iz visiting In Lon-
don, ‘here he is spending a month with
old friends. Mr. Bonds, having lived tn
England for many years, fa well known
on this side, He was the guest, Satur
day evening at the Layton home and!
spent. a most delightful time with Mira,
Emma Layton and the Procters. Sunday
he spent the afternoon and evening at
Mr. John C. Payne's, where he met 20¥-|
eral of hig old friends,
‘After = fortnight In Zondon he leaves
tor Paris to remain n short time before
going to Vienna, where he will study
for six weeks, f
Reginald Foresythe, a very clever
Rnaltsh born Negro, lanist nnd ac-
compantst, tm sailing next. week-on the
#8, Maldavia. for Auntradin with Mr.
and Mra. Walter Richardson, Sr. Fore-
nythe will accompany te. Richardson
during ‘hin concerta nnd private party
work of which the popular Walter han
n number booked already, when he is
not appearing in “Showboat”
Countes Cullen, noted poet, after sev-
ral months’ slay in. Engiand, left a
few days ago for Paris, where he will
mend the ‘rent of the ‘summer before
ailing for America, 3. Cullen had &
jelightfut time tn Tandon, and between
criting and lecturing he mannged to
ake in many of the Intereating sights
and around England.
Mies Reba Callender of New York,
cho ta traveling with the popular les
cee ns tar
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
visiting fn London. Miss Cnllender ts
having a Jolly good time among her
many friends tn London,
Ara, Sam Patterson of New York hae
arrived in London and is busy taking
fn all the sights in and around England,
Bra Patterson is enjoying staid ole
Lunnon very much,
Taul Robeson, Esq. ts singing thin
week-end. at the. big’ Pavillon. at the
beautiful aummer resort in: Blackpool.
Layton and Johnstone’ are a tremen-
dous hit at the’blg Paliadlum, Oxford
Clreus, where: they will remain a fort
alate Te
‘Russell ‘and Vivian are in Paris 2nd
open at the Kit Kat Club in the sny
city for a fortnight.
‘T. Elder Hearn’s tntert revue, “Gooil
PIERS Cre reece ener
[ NOW PLAYING \
+ THIS WEEK °
HEART-THROB ROMANCE OF A LITTLE
DARE-DEVIL CIRCUS RIDER
ARTIE CAIN Is Great as the “Carnival Girl”
SUSIE SUTTON, as Her Aristocratic Aunt
THOMAS MOSELEY, as the Worthless Cousin
BARRINGTON CARTER, as Scheming Lawyer
GEORGE WILTSHIRE, as 2 @lssolute Nobleman
EDNA YOUNG, as's True-Hearted Friend
ALF, WATTS, as an Indian Carnival Owner
TED BLACKMON, as Her Loyal Sweetheart
SOBS AND LAUGHS FROM START TO FINISH
; “MY CARNIVAL GIRL”
—_—.——
KEEP COOL WITH SANDY BURNS
AND HIS ALHAMBRA PALS
ROSA WHITE—Direct From Broadway
ALMA TRAVIS—the Twinkle-Toes Girl
EDNA HARRIS—the Gorgeous Ice Queen
PIGMEAT MARKHAM—the Eccentrlo “Big Boy"
BRUCE JOHNSON—With His Mother's Washboard
| 16 — THE NORTH POLE GIRLS — 18
ig
“BLACK CARGO of the SOUTH SEAS”
First Hariem Showing of This Startling Adventure Picture, with
EDITH ROBERTS and an Enormous Cast, Incloding Hundreds of
Natives of the Remantic South Sea Islands
Continuous, 1 to i1 P. M. — Midnite Show Every Wednesday
Next Week, Starting Monday, Entire New ‘Triple Program
“THE POLICE SYSTEM”
A Drama of Official Hounding — and Final Justice
“ROCKAWAY REVUE”
Sandy Burns With the Bathing Girls at the Seashore
Picture Feature — “THE MODEL FROM PARIS”
Gracious," headed by the popular Eddi
Hunter, is at the Empire at Liverpool
Gihee Nmarlenne foatured in the reves
tre Miss Elizabeth Smith, Young Snow-
ball, Sieepy Harris, Willie Williams and
Norman Astwood. The revue is a big
weve
Popular Mrs. Nelt Hunter of Dur-
ham, N. C., who 1s studying in London
(with tho well-known Mr, Drysdale)
will leave early next month for Vienna,
where she will complete her course
CCN ‘one ‘of the old’ Gertan mactere
Mra. Hunter Is enjoying her stay in
‘England very much and regrets leaving
‘Me old staid city of London.
De W. W. Whitneld of Cleveland,
Ohio, who has tea studying. tn Parts
for the past year, tv Aoiening bie course
im volce culture and will sail for
Americz s00n, where he will begin a
concert tour, beginning in New York
And taking in the ‘Bast, Bilogie. Weet
and the. South, The popular doctor
should do wail because he has worked
‘ery hand since arriving on thia site
Mra Francis Mann of Chicago salled
last week for America on the 8, 8.
rancor “Stra, tape ‘ata ‘been ta Pasta
for the past year studying the pipe or-.
gan us well ns the plano, After a briet
Stuy in New Forte tiew Sinan will lenve}
for Chicsgo, where her many friends’
‘7. Elder Hearn's English Blackbirds |,
and his "Dark Town Scandals" have
closed and a number. of the artinie
have sniled for America. Eddle Hun-
ter, well-known comedian, and Ellza-
beth Smith from "Dark Town Scandals”
MBRA
Se |
me 69
“Va
a
hear =
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let George Bias croon this one in your ear! Melody?...
it fairly sparkles! And rhythm? . . . it’s downright restless
with it! The stuff George puts into this one is plumb
intoxicatin’! Hear this great record today — at your
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Record No. Rasse-D, 10-inch 750°
SWEETHEART IF YOU WERE MINE} Votals.. George Bias
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Spanish Blues Guitar Solo . 3 3 5 3 3 Lewis Black
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SU RRSTRRENE SESSA ERS GEESE RRL ASE SER ORE EPS TSE ALPEEE
ee ee ee
‘Willams and Taylor, popular come.
diane, will piay the Stoll and G. T. C.
tours for the remainder of the sumtner
and have been offered a continental
route In early September.
Russell and Vivian, always busy, are
tm and out of London and this week
playing the Hippodrome, Bristol.
Hatch and Carpentier, the two boys
who write ‘em and sing “em, are at tho
Regent, Henley, this week. ‘They virtu-
ally “tote up the bill" at the Finsbury
Park in London last week.
Marino and Norris Smith were a riot
from atart to finish at the London
Shoreditch last week. Possemsing power
and showmanship, they rendered in
Breat style x budget of syncopated
ongs and Marino 1s responsible for
brilliant work at the plane,
Tt doesn't matter what Scott and
Whaley call thelr show, tt Is always
Scott and Whaley in something or. oth-
er, and people,’ atter‘all, go to seo and
laugh at them. ‘The Encore states that
these boys are/funnier than ever and
defy the most ‘blase to keep immobile
under thelr attacks, ‘Thelr ‘show ~ i
called “Buninesa Is: Business,” In. eleven
scenes, ench.of which ‘contains a reason
for big: laughs. Regardless of} thelr
years, thene. boys ‘are .still very, popu
lar. ae ;
‘The Stusicat Spitters were a tremen-
dous. success In Edinburgh, Scotland,
‘last’ week’ and are doing the same at}
the. popular, Holborn Empire, this week,
where they ‘are big favorites at "this
well-known London hall, 7
Jimmy Fergeraon was a htt at the
Argyle, Birkenhead, last. week — and
all play ‘the rene ‘of the, D. J. Clark
dates shortly, which tnclude: “Dublin
and Belfast, Ireland, and the Hippo-
drome,. Sheffield and the London’ halle
afterwards, paar
: Feet
Misa 2alaes Jackaon; clever: entertain>|
efjmade onezetsher\ flying’ tripascite
London last .week from: Paris,” Shere
turned to the’ gay; clty;a' few days’ ages
Frank: CummingetssrRentuckys” are’
doing. fine at ,the:Kllburh-Grange, one
of the'outlyiigZdlatrict™houses' near
Londoners mami id esSsomire
Mra Belle ‘Davis Whaley. snd her
company hnve eft: for. the “continent,
where they will open thelr: summer sea-
whe open
‘The Four Harmony Kings and thelr
variety road combination are doing a
record business’ at.the Playhouse, Col-
cheater, this -Wweek.:and open at’ the
Theatre Royal, Wercester, next,” with |
che, Grand. Manchester to fallow.”
Popular. Layton. and: Johastone, after ||
n short provincial tour, return: to- the ||
ulg Palladium, -London, next week, ‘The
boys will headline: over everything’ else ||
on the Bill, much to the ‘diallko of one ||
nr two American turns on the Bilt with ||
chem.
A Letter of Thanks
0B | AMERICAN—PENNSIL~
VANIA RAILROAD.
Twenty-four hours between New
York and St Louls—Dictated 10
train stenographer. ‘x
Spectal Features—Stenographer,
Ladies’ Maid, Manicure, Barber,
Observation Car, Periodicals,
Bath Room, Vaiet, Tetephone.
ate. Rosaeo L., Dosey 2t 1929.
ir. Roraeo L, Dougherty,
Sporting and Dramatic Editor,
Amsterdam Nows, -
New York City.
Dear Romeo:
.; in beball of the Pennsylvania
Red Caps’ Scholarship Fand Com-
mittee and myself personally 1
ould keto, express our thanks
to you for the Interest you and
[oat publication took in the rals-
,fBs, of funds for one, scholarship,
Jim ‘Staging. the. midnight» benefit
performance at the Alhambra
theatre:the night of June 16.
sgkmomla als, lke to. talce the
opportunity: to express our appre-
ch;tion and thanks to the mans
ager, and stars..of | “Blackbirds,”
Who are-always willing to helps
iworthy cause, and who were:really
‘responsible for “the. tremendous
‘gathering’ at the Alhambra’ Thea-
“te; also the es ‘other ‘out-
standing ‘lights of “the «profession,
‘such as the great and: only Miss
«Ethel Waters, Mordecal and Wells,
‘Miss Amanda Randolph; Messrs,
George Wiltshire and Sandy
Burns; George Randolph, master
of ceremonies,
‘To the surprise act of the eve-
ping the greatest Negro enter-
tainer in world, ane whom we
do not have to ask’ to appear, but
who fs always ready at_all times
to help-any worthy cause, Mr.
Bill Robinson, we remain indebl-
ed for his presence, as well as the
many other stars. who came and
are, thelr services without being
asked yes iis teen
Last; but not least, let me thank |
the:management of; the Alham-
bra theatre and. its staff for the
c0: that ve me in
takingstnis show © seecess,
“Thanking you again, Romeo,
"Your friend
four friend,
: “HERBERT S, BRUCE.
Former “Master of
Dance” Still Busy
| Lay RED,
THE question came up the other day
, BS to Just.’ what’ New.:York City’s
dancing masters are doing at the
present time: since the passing of
ge that sav then ts Bower eatery
Nights set apart to tcack:New York:
th f ballroom. icing.
erg Cee fine: ate: bas het dancing.
Eddie Hunter Hits
in New Hearn Show
—_——,
The NewSong & | {7-7 cura ee
Dance Sensation g = | 81" Mey His.ep. Koo
7 MAR eS ime,
” crying “tloud for “amore! aa
CONNIE’S He a cert
she" Gazant
a Stephen Rathbun
with 7 os y - mag
Baby Cox "Eas Witon [SRE Tae:
“Jezzlips” Richardson seule lay nly ra wore |
“Audience, waxed violently f ”
Goee HUDSON i} heMis S ES
Eves, 6.30, Mats. Thurs. & Sat, 230” §.--Wilelin Waldorf, Eve. Post
HARLEM’S COOLEST THEATRE
Lu Liaw NAY dS =
NOW PLAYING (UP TO SUNDAY, JUNE 30, INCLUSIVE)
The World’s Greatest Cornetist re
AND HIS FAMOUS CHICAGO BAND fe
In Addison Carey's Revue al
“MOVE ALONG” 2
With (GKELELE) BOB WILLIAMS, GALLIE DE GASTON, JOE%
BYRO, HONEY BROWN and Other Musical Comedy Favorites. “2°
— ALSO THE PHOTOPLAY HIT — (7
REGINALD DENNY in “CLEAR THE DECKS" 4
NEXT WEEK~BEGINNING MONDAY, JULY 1!
AL JOLSON in “THE SINGING FOOL” ~~
Also the Musical Riot—"SAM FROM BAM” 3
With Lillian Brown and Emmett Anthony
“THE HOME OF PERFECT TALKING PICTURES” |
Seventh Averiue at 145th Street
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, June 26, 27, 26
‘The Lowdown on the Real Unierworld!
“STATE STREET SADIE”
A Vitaphone Talking Picture, With Conrad Nagel and Myms ‘Loy
‘Starting Saturday, Jane 29
Near Him Talk and Sing!
RICHARD BARTHELMESS in “WEARY RIVER”
Also the First Chapter of a Great, New Mystery Serial Story
“THE FATAL WARNING”
With Ralph Graves and Helene Costello
Lenox Ave., Cor. 142d St. Phone Edg. 8012
HARLEM’S LARGEST and. FINEST MOTION PICTURE THEATRE
Saturdey, Sunday, Monday and Tacsdss, June 29, 30, July 1 and 2
JOHN GILBERT in’ “DESERT NIGHTS”
Nights of Love—Nights of Mystery and Thrill Under the African
Moon! Don't Miss the Prince of Romance in His Newest Hitt
Also New “Our Gang” Comedy in Sound—Vitaphone Act
Wednesday, Thurmlay and Friday, duly 3, ¢ and §
CONRAD NAGEL In “KID GLOVES” ig
A Yitzphone Pietere, With Sound and Talking
away many years ago, out the popu-
lar masters of Brooklyn, Messrs.
Banks and J. Hoffman Woods, are in
other lines of endeavor. In New
York City Professor Charles H.' An-
dc.son is the only one of the old
te the fencuing of dancing. ana tha
e ten lancing, a
he continues to meet with’ success. is
ovident by glaneing around his pri-
vate studio.
Recently the genial professor who,
in his day, gave more Eipoare to the
Negro newspapers than all‘ others en-
gaged in this ling combined, had his
entire place on Lenox averue reno-
vated, and today it is @ place with
the artistic touch which will, without
doubt, appeal to his many’ pupils
‘anderson “eartied on" many’ years
ee, down on ‘53d street and, with
“the’ rising tide of color” in Harlem,
hhe followed the crowd, and thousands
patronized his classes weekly at the
Old. Lafayette Hall...
Lack of space forced ~ rofessor An-
derson to larger quarters at the. then
wou the title of "Anmepies's "leading
won the title o
|master of: the dance: of color when
‘eelebrities, which included Joan‘ Saw-
yer and many. others‘ from the the-
aerieal world. came to him ta acquire
the steps which helped to add to thelr
a ee i
rut the war came and: Wi
fatter it, for .that matter, “the’ jazz
jage. which mowed down everything of
8 finer nature ‘in. the... amusement
Ged ‘Andersons caties Sa BAS to
jerson' “only.
Jearn the Jnbest ‘steps but to gez2 ‘on:
the dancers..in thc.2 old «dances;
Which seem to be a thing of the: past
—not @ school of the-kind exists any-
Wherein the colored communities,
‘The scholtieche, mazurka, two-step,
cadet and the ever popular wall
held sway where today, when one is
not simply “walking to music," acro-
batic dancing that would have “no
place in cultured circles seem to be
“the thing.” Readers of this paper
will most likely recall that some
years ago we pointed out to Profes-
THIRTEEN
————
sor Anderson, while he was at # hall
on 129th street, that the times were
changing and, creditable as were his
efforts, a gies pune would not
$s pport his artistic introductions.
‘The professor lived long enough to
realize that we at least mee the
truth of what we were saying at the
time, even if, for argument's sake, it
can be said we did not know what we
were talking about. However, it is
jrefreshing to note that Anderson
never lost his smile and, when the
breaks against an old-established in-
‘stitution came he retired to the stu-
dio he never Fave up, even in the
halcyon days of his career. And to-
day, midst its Syoraligoe, his studio
fuling she are of eancing, wastoer
fu erate of dancing, “whet
be ‘Jazz or the refined ballroom
dances, =
Notes of Paris
the <presont: time Mr. Lasiie’s revue
will have & auecesstol run.
a ew Nore ‘Holt’Ray arrived tn Paris
8 few days ago. ,
| Mra, iting: Thomas, Messi A, Do Co-
mathlere," Mayes. Pryor and ‘“Chick”
aloKenny, all of “Porgy” company, spont
& few days here sight-seeing before they
cinbnrked onthe 8. S, Bajestle for New
OM ys Hed :
Mr. sind 3frs. Danny Smalla and ttle
son Are holidaying here before sailing
for Now York.
Groentee and Drayton ‘are back’ In
Parle after finishing thelr contract in
Spain, 1
‘The Kit Kat Club, recently opens on
Ruo Fontaine, ts doing a fair business,
The only colored entertainer there 1s
"Scrappy" Jones, dancer, ‘This cabaret
was formerly the Josephine Baker
Night Club. ;
tenn,
«Hot, Chocolates’ boasts
iy cntertainer” capable of
SE igh “pteiegde ss Knots
oe ‘N'Y. Times,
ooh ue dored | it,
cryin ‘aloud for moro" an
tare aid wont re ame
FOURTEEN
Deaths Reported
Alston, Allen, 27; 2446 Seventh avenue.
Barry, Sophia, 62; 59 East 127th street.
Blakely, Mildred, 27; 208 West 134th street.
Brown, John, 27; 514 Lexington avenue.
Brown, Mary, 57; 303 West 138th street.
Clinton, Francis, 60; 2040 Seventh avenue.
Cornet, Sarah, 62; 241 West Sixty-seventh street.
Daughtry, Pattie, 21; 225 West 140th street.
Gee, Jane E., 74; 418 West 122d street.
Jones, Josephine, 75; 1925 Seventh avenue.
Kerney, Margaret, 48, 383 East 123th street.
Laing, Sarah, 78; 2059 Eighth avenue.
Meyer, Minnie, 78; 220 West 123d street.
Parker, Molly, 48; 61 West 133d street.
Perrin, Anna, 50; 232 West Sixty-third street.
Riggson, Edward, 44; 289 West 147th street.
Rieker, Levinia, 70; 278 West 127th street.
Sargo, Ellsworth, 46; 2419 Eighth avenue.
Scott, Mollie, 31; 137 West 141st street.
Smith, Emma, 36; 8 West 135th street.
Wilkinson, Robert, 36; 180 West 135th street.
Williams, William, 46; 206 West Sixty-second street.
In Memoriam
JOHNSON, W. M. Jr.—In sad but loving remembrance of my only son, who departed this life one year ago, June 29th, 1925.
We miss you from our home, dear son,
We miss you from your place;
A shadow over our life is cast;
We miss the sunshine of your face.
Nobly by my side he stood—
My only son, good and true;
Beloved by all his friends so well,
And kind to all he knew.
Rest on, dear son.
Your willing hands will toll no more;
A faithful son, true and kind.
A truer son you could not find.
By his loving mother and sister.
MRS. N. B. JOHNSON,
STELLA SMITH.
MASON—John H. In cherished memory of my dear, beloved husband, who departed this life June 22, 1927.
His beautiful soul will forever be remembered.
Sleep on and take thy rest.
ANNA ALLAN MASON.
SMALL, Edythe Yvonne—In sad and loving memory of our devoted daughter, who departed this life June 26, 1823.
It is not our battle lost, but her victory won, for we have not lost her, but rent her on before us to be kept forever blest.
MR. and MRS. BYRD FINNEY.
WILLIAMS, Malissa—In loving memory of my dear grandmother, who departed this life June 25th, 1928. My heart is sad in this time of sorrow, but joy
ST. MATTHEW'S MISSION, 206
West 122d St. (between 7th and 8th Aves). Service hours: Sunday School, 2:00 P. M.; evening services, 8:00 P. M. All welcome. Baptismal and matrimonial services performed. Rev. Wm. M. Alston, Pastor.
Grace Gospel Chapel, 102 W.
133d St. N. L. Lord's Supper Woy.
Sunday, 10:30 P. M. Special Evangelists. Services, by Select Evangelists. Every Sunday Night at 8:00. Tuesdays and Fridays at 8:30. Ecumenical Song Service Preceding the Gospel Sunday Nights.
T. B. Nottage, Corres.
SPIRITUALIST
Spiritual meeting every Friday night at 8:30 P. M. at Mrs. A. Braxton's residence, 2465 8th avenue. Rev. R. Braxton in charge. All are welcome.
Horoscope and astrological consultation daily. C. A. Barrow, 969 East 165th street, Bronx, N. Y., phone Intervale 9901. Spiritual meetings every night at 8:30 at 339 Thattford avenue, Brooklyn. June 26-21.
Spiritual meetings, developing and healing, German, Slavish, English. Daily from 2 to 8 p. m. Elizabeth Gschwandner, 551 Cauldwell avenue, Bronx, N. Y., Apt. C-1; 5 blocks east of Third avenue, 149th street. Ludlow 1588.
Evelyn B. Green, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Sundays, 2:30 and 8 p. m. Top floor, 62 West 158th street.
Spiritualist meeting, 584 Franklin avenue, near Pacific, Fridays 8:30 p. m. Prospect 5165. June 26-121
SAINT MARY'S SPIRITUALIST CHURCH, 232 West 137th street. Meetings held every Sunday, Monday, Thursday evening. 8:40 o'clock, by Rev. Mary Holmes. Jun.12-3t
AFRICAN UNITY STUDIO—Meetings, Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday, Prince Ashson, 165 West 127th street, Apt. 1H. Cathedral 1365.—June19-4t
PROFESSOR E. GREENIDGE, Master of Spiritualism, Meetings every Sunday, Wednesday and Friday night, 3:30 o'clock, 165 Lenox Avenue, Apartment 1, ground floor, rear. Between 118th and 119th Streets. Phone University 1505. June 14-
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 St., ground floor, east side. June 19-4t You are invited to attend meetings of the Holy Dylive Spiritualist Church, 147 West 132t St. Meetings each night; different mediums. Mme. Childs Sunday afternoon, 3 to 5. Rev. C. G. Johnson, pastor—Advt. Feb.13-tt.
HAND-IN-HAND SPIRITUALIST CHURCH, 433 Edgecombe Ave. Meetings every night at 8:30. Messages by various mediums. May9-tt
JESUS SAVES—Beth-Typhillian IV Mo. majian Church, 124-126 West 136th St. Rev. Charles D. Martin, D. D. Sunday services: 11 a.m., 3 p.m., Sunday school, 2 p.m., yecum, 3 p.m., Sunday school and prayer Wednesday, 8:30 p.m. Social night Thursday. Come! We will do the good.
News of the Churches
Office Phone Cathedral 2849 Residence 307 W. 188d St., Audubon 3264 Our Motto: Service and Efficiency
JOHN L. FOOTE, Jr.
LICENSED UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
NOTARY PUBLIC
177 WEST 126th STREET, NEAR 7th AVENUE
Office Phone Bradhurst 0874 Res. 281 W. 137th St. Phone Edgescombe 6571
JAMES VEAL
Undertaker and Embalmer
2102 SEVENTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY
Kindly Investigate My $150 Funerals Before Making
Other Arrangements
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.
St. Mark's M. E. Church
The Citizens' Committee of the Lyceum at St. Mark's Church has begun a campaign to establish in Harlem an academy for or unprotected Protestant Negro children. Ernest K. Coulter, president of the Big Brother Movement and general manager of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, has served as the address which will formally open the campaign on Sunday at 3:30 p. m.
The Rev. Richard A. Bolden delivered the sermon at the 11 o'clock service at Mother Zion Zion general services of Christina Turner, one of the oldest members of the church, was held. The Rev. George A. Taylor delivered the evening sermon. The Epworth choir, Mrs Patricia Edwards, will repeat the cantata, "The Heavenly City," on Sunday at 6:30 p. m.
St. Cyprian's Church
The vicar, the Rev. John W. Johnson, preached at the 11 a.m. service at St. Cyprian's Church on Sunday. He advised the group to have confidence in Negro business enterprises. The church will ride to Ride on July 24. The closing exercise of the Sunday School will be held at the 8 p.m. service on Sunday. The children will participate in a special program.
Bethel A. M. E. Church
Dr. E. H. Colt, secretary of missions, preached the morning sermon at Bethel A. M. E. Church on Sunday. The pastor, the Rev. E. C. Clark, has gone to Wiberforce and Columbus, Ohio, preparatory to moving to New York.
At the Sunday School session in the afternoon, a delegation of thirty persons from Mother Bethel A. M. E. Sunday School in Philadelphia attended. They were under the leadership of their superintendent, Sidney Furnell. John Lester and Mary Carlotta Barnard took part in the program.
Colt preached the evening sermon to the Sons and Daughters of South Carolina.
The dramatic subdivision of the shall be mine when we meet in God's great tomorrow. Loving granddaughter, GLADYS BURTON.
Cards of Thanks
The family of the late Mrs. Frances M. Singleton, who departed this life May 15, 1853, to thank their many friends, for their expressions of sympathy and floral expressions of
Husband.
ANNA M. HOWARD, Mother.
The family of the late Anna Randolph wish to thank their many friends for the expressions of sympathy and floral pieces which were sent; also those written and verbal expressions of condolence received by the bereaved.
ALEXANDER RANDOLPH,
Husband.
MRS. EDNA McKNIGHT,
Daughter.
GIBSON McKNIGHT.
Son-in-Law.
Mr. James A. Haddock and his family take this opportunity to thank all those who so very kindly lent their aid and extended their sympathy upon the death of his daughter, Grace Adela.
I wish to thank the many friends for their acts of kindness and sympathy in the recent death of my husband, Newton Yearwood, who passed away so suddenly on Thursday morning, June 13, 1922; and also for the beautiful floral offerings received. Special thanks to Rev. Joseph Holder for his help at the funeral service and Miss Eva Branner, solo, and lodges, Herald League, Benefice Social Society of N. Y., with Law, Dunbar O. F., Utopia Benevolent Lodge.
ANNIE YEARWOOD, Wife.
The family of the late Mrs. Elizabeth
T. Johnson, 215 West 143th street, who
died at the Bellevue Hospital Sunday,
June 9, 1920, takes this medium of
expressing thanks to the many friends and
acquaintances of the family for the
numerous acts of kindness, consideration,
and sincere interest which were
exhibited by those friends during the
short illness of the deceased and particularly
at the time of death; acknowledgment is hereby made of the many beautiful floral pieces which were sent by friends and acquaintances to the funeral and also for those written and verbal expressions of condolence received by the family.
Mrs. Estelle Hill, Daughter,
Mrs. Bugene Loper, Grandson,
Mrs. Albertn Brice, Sister,
Mrs. Robchel Bryant, Sister,
Mrs. Mary Wailer, Sister,
Miss Rosalie Johnson, Sister,
Mr. Eljah Johnson, Brother,
Mr. Walter Johnson, Brother.
Office Phone Cathedral 2049 R
Our Motto: See
JOHN L.
LICENSED UNDERTAKE
NOTARY
177 WEST 126th STREET
Office Phone Bradhurst 9674 Res. 5
JAMES
Undertaker
2192 SEVENTH AVE.
Kindly Investigate My S
Other A
Lady Attendant
EDWARD W. WAINWRIGHT
UNDERTAKERS
FUNERALS O
Distinction in design, higher
and performance, is the crownin
sirable features in Wainwright a
value, for $100-$150 up.
162-164 WEST
Notary Public
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
Young People's Lyceum will give a religious drama, "The Rock," at Bethel Church, 52 West 132d street July 1 at 8:30 p. m. This is the story of the calling of Simon Peter to be a disciple.
Harrison Memorial Church
The closing meeting for this season of the forum of the Hubert Harrison Memorial Church, 149 West 136th street, will be on Sunday evening, and will consist of a short concert, and an address by the pastor the Rev. Ethelred Brown on "Religious Liberalism in Hawley." The contributing artists will be Miss Audrey Plantist; A. Ross, violinist; Sydney Addison, pianist; H. Shirvington and Miss Ferris Warren, vocalists.
Mother Zion Church
The Rev. J. W. Brown preached a special Children's Day sermon at the Sunday morning service. Ordination services under the auspices of the New York Conference were held at 3 p. m. Bishop J. S. Caldwell presided. The unveiling of the tablet and dedication of light in memory of the late Mrs. Marian Hill Brown, wife of the pastor, took place at 4 p. m. Bishop Caldwell was master of ceremonies.
Dr. W. E. Davis has been appointed leader of Class No. 10 and Charles A.
william the sick list are: Samuel Dell, 57 West 127th street; Samuel Strain, 120 West 135th street; Martina Mathews, Kings County Hospital; William Gant, 275 West 144th street; Olivia Beasley, 263 West 123d street; B. Allen, 131 West 133d street; Albury, 131 West 137th street; Presley, Tecpresley Hospital; Hattie Watt, 15 West 143d street; Ireng-Barker, 233 West 143d street.
St. James' Church
The series of sermons for June in St. James' Presbyterian Church will come to a close on Sunday with the celebration by this church of Women's Day. At the morning hour Dr. William Lloyd Imes will tell of "Famous Bible Women" and "Their Message for Women of Today." The Ladies' Bible Class, with their guests, will have special seating for them at this service. In the evening the Ladies' Missionary Society will have charge of the service, for which an excellent program has been pre-
p
A musicale and tea for the benefit of the Dally Vacation Bible School
THE NEW YORK TIMES
EARLINE FLATTS, height about
5 ft 4 in, weight about 115 pounds,
age 15 years, school girl.
Last seen on June 17; was wearing
a colored dress with blue flowers,
white hat with red and white band,
low, black lace shoes and flesh colored
stockings. Had scar on right
cheek and scar on bending of right
arm.
ESTATE OF
J. Wesley Lane, Inc.
MARY LANE, Pres.
Undertaker
Free Funeral Parlor and Chapel
112 W. 133d St. Harlem 6465
Bodies Shipped to All Parts of
the World
J. R. S. McLEOD, Mgr.
Residence 307 W. 183d St., Audubon 3264
Service and Efficiency
FOOTE, Jr.
MAKER AND EMBALMER
PUBLIC
EET, NEAR 7th AVENUE
302 W. 1837th St.; Phone Edgescombe 8571
S VEAL
and Embalmer
VENUE, NEW YORK CITY
$150 Funerals Before Making
Arrangements
Satisfaction Guaranteed
P
MARION A. DANIELS
and EMBALMERS
OF DISTINCTION
best quality, beautiful in appearance
ing quality that gives all other de-
and Daniels Funerals their supreme
T 136th STREET
Bradhurst 0512
With the I.B.P.O.E. of W.
By Charles Magill
F. F. Cruse will head the delegates from Henry Lincoln Johnson Lodge to the convention. Other delegates from that lodge are: Benjamin Fray, F. McIntosh, Laurie B. Elock, Lloyd McIntosh, Laurie B. Elock, elected staff of the Bronx lodge consists of F. F. Cruse, re-elected exalted ruler; Wesley Woods, leading knight; Henry H. Toppin, loyal, and C. Lushington Jones, lecturing knight. The lodge is planning an excursion to the grave of Col. Henry Lincoln Johnson, for whom the Bronx Antlers are named.
The eleven lodges on Long Island assisted by the temples will hold a field day on Thursday, July 4, at Patchogue. The grand exalted ruler will be the guest of honor that day. Buses and special training will care for the crowds leaving the Brooklyn Lodge Home, 1065 Fulton street. Athletic games, races, swimming contests, and an old fashioned field day in the country have been arranged by the committee, of which Henry H. Ham, district deputy for Long Island, is chairman ex-officio and A. Brisbane of Corona, chairman of the general committee.
James H. Bacon is chairman of the committee naming for the train of Imperial Lodge to Atlantic City on July 4. The train is scheduled to leave at 8.30 a.m. from the Pennsylvania Station.
A. V. Norrell, Dr. A. Reid and Attorney Joseph Pollard, all of Rich-
will be held at the church at 4 o'clock. The program is in charge of William H. Briggs, with the Rev. Horatio S. Hill, director of religious education of Abyssinian Baptist Church, as the speaker. An orchestra, composed of pupils of David H. Johnson's Music School, will render selections. There will be violin solos by Raymond Waters, winner of a gold medal; the recent Music Week contest; the doryothy solo by Hazel Walters; also winners of medals; tenor solo by Mr. Briggs, with Mrs. Blanche K. Thomas at the piano. The D. V. B. S. staff is composed of Mrs. Harriett S. Briggs, principal; Mrs. Blanche K. Thomas, music director; Mrs. Cristina Grey, junior director; Miss Carrie King, primary director; Mrs. Laura Hall, kindergarten director; Miss Florence Scott and Miss Vivian Hall and Charles Brooks, student-assistants.
Dr. A. A. Cooke, who formerly pastored at Rush Memorial Church for eight years, preached the morning service on Sunday. In the evening the Rev. Mr. Fisher of Baltimore. Md., preached.
Phone Harlem 8221
LOUISE
MORTICIAN & LICI
2284 SEVENTH AVENUE
AL80 67 WEST
Funeral Chapel—Funeral
Within the
Phone Edgecombe 9049 Open
RODNEY DAY
UNDERTAKERS
2244 SEVENTH AVENUE,
Dignified Service — E
BRANCH: 738 E. 229th St. LELIA
Lawrence
UNDERTAKER
Service Will Always Be
Very Moderate
232 WEST 135th STREET
DAY A
H. Adolph-Howe
Item 8221 Service Day and Night
LOUISE B. HART
MORTICIAN & LICENSED EMBALMER
2284 SEVENTH AVENUE, near 134th St.
ALBO 67 WEST 132nd ST., N. Y. C.
Central Chapel—Funerals Arranged From $85 Up—
Within the Reach of All
combe 9049 Open All Night Notary Public
BRODNEY DADE & BROS.
UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS
SEVENTH AVENUE, Corner 132nd Street, N. Y. C.
Signified Service — Efficiency — Lowest Rates
85 E. 229th St. LELIA E. BROWN, Mgr. Phone Ollinville 8237
awrence C. Ingram
UNDERTAKER & EMBALMER
Service Will Always Be of the Highest Standard.
Very Moderate Prices Will Prevail.
135th STREET Phone BRADHURST 5441
DAY AND NIGHT
dolph-Howell Funeral Church
INC.
2244 SEVENTH AVENUE, Corner 132nd Street, N. Y. C.
Dignified Service — Efficiency — Lowest Rates
BRANCH: 738 E. 289th St. LELIA E. BROWN, Mgr. Phone Ollaville 2822
H. Adolph-Howell Funeral Church
H. Adolph-Howell Funeral Church
2332 SEVENTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY
To the Many Clients
Mr. and Mrs.
late Presidents
Howell Funeral
The present ex-
mally announce the
progressing under
standards as es-
predecessors.
FUNE
Arrangements
Complete Funeral
ment, for $150.00.
spacious Chapel,
ity of 500, and acc
ternal organization
Organ. Lady Att
The Many Clients and Friends of
H. and Mrs. H. Adolph Howell,
the Presidents of the H. Adolph
Howell Funeral Church, Inc.:
The present executives wish to for-
ly announce that business is still
pressing under the same high
standards as established by their
lessors.
TUNERALS
Arrangements can be made for a
complete Funeral, including inter-
for $150.00. FREE use of our
vious Chapel, with seating capac-
f 500, and accommodation of Fra-
al organizations. Electric Pipe
n. Lady Attendant.
To the Many Clients and Friends of Mr. and Mrs. H. Adolph Howell, late Presidents of the H. Adolph Howell Funeral Church, Inc.: The present executives wish to formally announce that business is still progressing under the same high standards as established by their predecessors.
FUNERALS
Arrangements can be made for a Complete Funeral, including interment, for $150.00. FREE use of our spacious Chapel, with seating capacity of 500, and accommodation of Fraternal organizations. Electric Pipe Organ. Lady Attendant. GEORGE E. WEST,
HAROLD H. HEDGEMAN. Licensed Mgr.
mond, Va., were in town, several days last week, visiting social as well as fraternal friends. Norrel is the man, who as chairman of the General Convention Committee when it met in Richmond, made pleasant memories for Elkdom throughout the country.
Monarch Lodge Marching Club will turn out for a dress parade and uniform inspection on the morning of July. Led by Louis Pred Simpson's Monarch Band the club will parade over to Riverside drive, where a review by Mayor Walker is scheduled.
Greater New York now has another lodge. It is Industry Lodge No. 880 and is located in Long Island City. District Deputy David W. McDaniels and Louis Williams set the new lodge up, assisted by the Long Island Deputy, H. H. Ham. Wilfred Harris is the first exalted ruler and Harry Edwards, secretary.
J. Finley Wilson delivered an address to the Utica Lodge last Sunday, after which he left for Saratoga Springs, where he is attending the session of the New York State Association now going on there.
The Sunshine Club, of which Daughter Esther Washington is president, entertained Tuesday night at Bambo Inn. Nancyce Albright is vice-president; Leille Trotter, financial secretary, and Rossie Trotter, recording secretary. Rosa Sawyer and Dalys Freeman are honorary members.
George E. Wibecan, past grand exalted ruler, who is the only Negro entered in the popularity contest now being waged by the Brooklyn Standard Union, a white daily of Brooklyn, is making a creditable showing.
GRAND MASTER OF
N. Y. MASONS ILL
Daniel T. Teagle, grand master, F. and A. M. (Prince Hall), New York State, who has been confined in Presbyterian Hospital for the past two weeks, is improving. The grand master, who was recently re-elected to head the Masons in this state, will be confined to the hospital for several days yet. He is suffering from a serious heart ailment, which will necessitate a long rest before he will be able to resume his duties in the business and fraternity world. Arthur W. Handy Masonic grand secretary, will last week that the appointment of James Lawson as district deputy for the Second Masonic district, comprising Brooklyn and Long Island, and Emery Whitman for the First district
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
Funeral Director and Embalmer
249 WEST 128th STREET
Phone Monument 0977
NEW YORK CITY
Service Day and Night
Chapel Preferred
Many people prefer having funeral services in a well appointed Chapel, rather than burden their home with sad memories, especially where there are children in that home, and also because of living in small apartments.
Location Important
In selecting my Funeral Home, 249 West 128th street, away from the congested avenues, I chose this neighborhood, quiet, and befitting funeral services, where refined and dignified funerals, within the means of all, can be had amid the most appropriate surroundings.
Economy and Service
Always suggesting to the public the latest and better ways of arranging funerals, as economical as possible, with ideas of comfort, elegance, dignity and convenience, and with fairness that appeals to the finer sentiments of all, has enabled Fred M. Williams to have one of New York's foremost and unexcelled Funeral Homes.
REGARDLESS OF ANY KIND OF FUNERAL YOU MAY DESIRE CONSULT ME
Boy Scout News
By Scout Edward Lewis
Howdy, folks! I have a bad attack of camp fever, and this means that this week I shall write about nothing but camp.
Everybody is happy. At least. I know a bunch of fellows who are happy, or who will be. With school almost over and camp time only a week off, a boy cannot help but shout whopee.
On first arriving at camp, after spending the months in school a fellow can help but break loose. He wants to become like any wild thing in the woods, free to do as he chooses.
New York's Boy Scouts spend their vacation at the Manhattan Scout camps, located on the Kanohuahuek Lakes, 1,000 feet above sea level in the Ramapo mountains about fifty miles from New York City. Have a look at the camp of his dreams—the wonderful scenery; the tall trees bowing in the wind; and at night the flames of the camp fire leaping high in the sky; stories, games, and nothing but fun. The daily activities that have been planned for campers are not at all tiresome, but a pleasure to go through—the kind that send a fellow's blood rushing through his veins.
Here is the daily program that is a camper's delight:
6:55—First call.
7:00—Reveille.
1. Setting ups—morning dip.
2. Wash up (for Scouts not taking dip).
3. Blankets out to air.
Fraternal friends of the grand master who wish to visit him at the hospital may do so from Monday to Friday between 7 and 8 o'clock in the evening.
9:00- Details - clean up tents, etc.
10:00- Camp projects and Scout in-
cubes.
2:15 - Swimming instruction (for non-swimmers) - games, hikes,
5:30 - Retreat - personal inspection.
5:45 - Dinner.
6:30—Evening games—evening programs.
9:15—Call to quarters.
9:30—Taps.
Camp fires in the evening are big events up at camp, games, stories and stunts. There are evenings enjoyable. All during the day there are athletic contests and basketball, etc.
Now for the food, in my own words, fuel for the machinery of the human, and a bad time when none is around. This year the Scouts will not have to wash dishes. That is good news. The largest activity, course, swimming, and each one has its life saving corps and swimming location.
For Scouts who love fishing, the lakes offer the biggest opportunity.
Sunday is visitor's day at camp.
This day has many activities, such as religious exercises, etc.
Many awards are given out during the swimming. Any Scouts has an opportunity of earning at least one of these awards.
A boy attending camp must not necessarily be a Scout. Parents interested in sending their child to the camp may communicate with Manhattan Council at 104 West 104th street for further information as to camp rates, etc.
A. M. E.'s Guiana Chief Back; Plans Institute
Returning to New York last week for a furlough of three months after superintending the work of the A. M. E. Church in Nickerle, British Guiana, since October., the Rev. S. E. dignified manner and with profe thin their means, has enabled F one of New York's Leading Un
Churchstone Lord is formulating plans for the establishment of a normal and industrial institute in cooperation with the Guiana government.
The Rev. Mr. Lord, representing his church, is said to have secured the approval of Governor Sir Gordon Guggisberg of British Guiana. The proposed school would follow the general plan of Tuakegee Institute.
The mission superintendent is working in conjunction with Bishop S. L. Greene, head of the South American Episcopal district, and Dr. E. H. Colt, secretary of missions for the A. M. E. Church.
Williams Institutional Church
Bishop J. Arthur Hamlett, A. M. S. T. M. D. D., Kansas City, Kan. presiding bishop of the eighth Episcopal District of the C. M. E. Church, Institutional Church 218 West 130th Sunday morning. Bishop Hamlett whose work covers seventeen states, is the author of several books.
ANNIVERSARY UNITY CENTER
And testimonial days, Unity Center of Practical Christianity. Mrs. K. B Collins, teacher, Commencing Summer School, Commencing Invite. 220 West, 135th street—Advice.
LEGAL NOTICE.
NOTICE is hereby given to all persons having claims against James Nathaniel Headley, formerly of Christ Church, Worcester, Massachusetts, centently of New York County, deceased, to present the same, with vouchers of transacting business, at the office of Arthur A. Michelle, his attorney at No. 12 Nassau Street, Street City, New York, before the 26th day of December, 1829, after which date the undersigned will be entitled to the payment of the parties entitled thereto and the balance of said, estate will then be paid to the Escheah Act 1891-20 of the Escheah Act 1891-24. Dated, June 10th, 1893. H. GRAHAM, NEARWOOD, King's Society, Administrator of James Nathaniel Headley, deceased, Bridgetown, Barbados, British West Arthur A. MICHELL.
RTHUR A. MICHELL
Attorney for Administrator.
112TH ST. 58 W. (Apt. 11)—Neatly furnished room cheap; all conveniences, elevator, telephone.
112TH ST. 16 W. (Apt. 10)—Neatly furnished front room, also small room. Mrs. Benny. June28-47
112TH ST. 20 W. (Apt. 5)—Nearly furnished rooms; single, couple; comfortable. Monument 300 ft. June19-21
112TH ST. 26 (LENOX AVE). (Apt. 5)—Nestly furnished rooms of kitchen, homelike surroundings; all conveniences; opposite 110th street subway.
112TH ST. 56 W. (Apt. 8)—Large, light, furnished room, estate, 67. Call after 6:30. Mon. 6970. Jun12-47
112TH ST. 43 W. (Apt. 8)—Furnished rooms to let. Apply evenings. June19-21
113TTH ST.-Room, quiet, religious home, modern conveniences, convenient subway, good weather, gentleman preferred. Mon. 3289. Jun19-21
114TTH ST. 45 W. (1 flight, east)—Nearly furnished room; quiet family; reasonable rent; couple all week. Williams. Pril242
114TTH ST. 10 W. (Apt. 1-E)—Nestly furnished rooms, 45 up; convenient to trains; after 5 p. m.
June 12-4
14TH ST., 45 W.-Room to rent,
with young couple; quiet home;
man preferred. Phone University
6420. Mrs. E. L. Rulman. Call
at 6. June28-2
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
Classified Advertisements
121ST ST., 255 W.-Nearly furnished
front kitchen room, Mrs. Henry.
121ST ST., 154 W.-Nearly furnished
and unfurnished rooms, newly
decorated; colored tenants. Cath.
1598. Maynard.
121ST ST., 160 W.-Large, light, alr
unfurnished room, parquet floor.
121ST ST., 258 W.-Large, furnished,
unfurnished rooms, convenient,
for respectable business.
Jun-26-21
121ST ST., 210 W.-Furnished rooms,
large and small, newly decorated
rooms reasonable.
121ST ST., 424 W.-Beautiful furnish-
ings, rooms adjoining bath; all modern
conveniences.
121ST
121ST ST., 216 W. Skylight room;
small hall bedroom to let.
June19-4t
121ST ST., 158 W. Needly furnished
kitchenette rooms, newly decorated.
June19-2t
121ST ST., 126 W. Large kitchen
furnished, private house. June19-2t
121ST ST., 204 W. (apk 2, September
7th Avenue—Furnished front
room; reasonable price for respectable
person; homelike.
121ST ST., 212 W. Beautifully furnished
kitchenette room, running
water; reasonable rent; privileges.
121ST ST., 208 W. Large and small
furnished rooms, comfortable; private
house. June28-4t
12DST. 242, W. (Apt. 1-W)—Neatly furnished room, with all con-
venience, responsible person, and
ument 8635. June19-2t
12DST. 243, W.—Furnished kitchen
enette rooms. June19-2t
12DST. 203, W. (Apt. 5)—Large light room, running water; $6. Call
evenings. Phone Monument 1992-2t
12DST. 214, W.—Furnished rooms with kitchenette use; large and
small. Call Cathedral 7996. Capi-
ville. Jennel-4t
12DST. 238, W.—Neatly furnished
room, with all convenience,
$4; and $ Johnson.
June12-4t
122D ST., 135 W.—Neatly furnished
kitchenette rooms in private house;
hot and cold water in all rooms;
respectable only. Phone number:
respectable only. Phone number:
June12-4t
122D ST., 135 W.—Neatly furnished
kitchenette rooms in private house;
hot and cold water in all rooms;
respectable only. Phone number:
respectable only. Phone number:
hot water. Between 7th and 8th
Ave. Near "L" and subway.
May1-4t
122D ST. 220 W—Nearly furnished
room, $5 per week; gentleman pre-
ferred. Phone Monument 3558.
June 6-4
122D ST. 212 W—Large and small
nettly furnished rooms, kitchen-
tenance home. Phone Monument
701.
June 6-4
122D ST. 247 W—Neat, small room
to let.
June 6-4
122D ST. 238 W (Apt. 1-E)—Furnished
furnished rooms, $5.90-$5.50; all
conveniences.
122D ST. 247 W—Nearly furnished
kitchenette room and single.
June 28-28
122D ST. 221 W—Large kitchenette,
private room, private bath, real
stoves; rent reasonable. Phone.
122D ST. 238 W—Private, furnished
room. Call after 6. Prazier.
122D ST. , 208 W.-Small room $3.50;
122D ST. , 208 W.-Respectable people. June19-46
122D ST. , 208 W.-Bacement room, bath, nicely furnished, respectable people. June19-46
122D ST. , 201 W. (Apt. 9)-Attractive front room on 7th avenue; quiet; reasonable rent. Monument 5522. June52-22
122D ST. , 235 W. (Apt. 4 West)-Nearly furnished; reasonable family; $4 week; call evenings. L. Roberts. June52-22
122D ST. , 235 W.-Nearly furnished front kitchenette room; also small room. Monument 7895.
122D ST. , 109 W.-In refined, private house, neatly furnished room; use of kitchenette, men or couple; American only.
122D ST. , 157 W. (Apt. 19)-Furnished or unfurnished private front rooms. Cathedral 1687.
122D ST. , 222 W.-Nearly furnished kitchenette room. front.
12D ST. 157 W. (Apt. 7) - Cool front room; homeile and reasonable. Cathedral 8324. June 28-29
12D ST. 151 W. (Apt. 41) - Furnished room; light, sunny, strictly private. June 28-29
12D ST. 157 W. (Apt. 41) - Neatly furnished room; couple two men. Call after 6 P. M. June 19-21
12D ST. 170 W. (corner 7th Ave.) - Nearly furnished front room for renamed couple or single desiring com-
munity. Call after 6 P. M. June 19-21
12D ST. 217 W. (large private Edmondson, 2 flights up. Apt. 6. Phone Monument 9018.
12D ST. 120 W. (2 flights up.) - Nearly furnished front room, $4.50; also large room, suitable for couple.
12D ST. 237 W. - Large front room one flight up, all conveniences, and am-
ple room. Call all weeks of Thomas. May 29-31
12D ST. 132 W. - Large furnished parlor; light housekeeping; $10; kit-
chenette rooms, $8.9; $9 single rooms, $3, $4.50. June 4-4
12D ST. 113 W. - Large furnished kitchenette rooms, $3; all single room, basement room. Cathedral 6845. June 19-4
12STH ST. 101 W. (Apt. 2-W) - Room to let, single or two persons; room to every convenience; near subway and "L"; call all day. Phone Cathedral 6894. Mrs. White.
10STH ST. 143 W. - Nettly furnished room, well furnished. Cathedral 6899 all conveniences.
12STH ST. 181 W. - Double kitchen-ette room, well furnished, near subway. June-28.
129TH ST., 111 W.—Nicely furnished kitchenette to it; large and small; steam, hot water.
rooms, $7.50. Per. Attendance June 28-29
127TH ST. 163 W. (apt. 18). Neatly furnished, private rooms; no landlady.
127TH ST. 135 W.—Large and small furnished rooms $3 up; by day or week kitchen privileges.
127TH ST. 325 W.—Large and small rooms, $5 up; all improvements. Bradhurst 6488.
127TH ST. 146 W.—Neatly furnished kitchenette rooms, strictly for kitchen use. June28-29
127TH ST. 41 W.—Neatly furnished and unfurnished kitchenette rooms; conveniences, from $5 up. Running water all rooms. June26-41
127TH ST. 43 W—Nearly furnished,
small, large kitchen rooms.
June26-41
127TH ST. 126 A W. (Apt. 11)—Newly
furnished front room, suitable
for two. Mrs. Webb. Cathedral,
1579. June26-28
127TH ST. 137 W. (Apt. 4)—Nicely
furnished light rooms, refined
home; fourth floor. June26-27
127TH ST. 141 W. (Apt. 5)—Furnished
and unfurnished rooms suitable
for couple; quiet home. June26-28
127TH ST. 227 W—Nearly furnished
large kitchen room to let; price
reasonable; call any time. Monument
3881.
127TH ST. 75 W—Large front base
rooms; kitchenette rooms;
small rooms; all conveniences.
June19-41
127TH ST. 33 W—Large and small
nearly furnished rooms, reasonable
rent. June12-41
127TH ST. 267 W.—Furnished kitchenette room; respectable couple; all conveniences. June19-47
127TH ST. 88 W.—Large kitchenette room, also small rooms, all conveniences. Jun.12-48
127TH ST. 60 W.—Large front kitchenette room, neatly furnished, suitable for couple. Jun.12-48
127TH ST. 18 W.—Large and small kitchenette rooms, neatly furnished; electricity; modern improvements; moderate rent.
127TH ST. 22 W.—Furnished and unfurnished kitchenette rooms, steady hot water. Call after 8 P. June25-32
127TH ST. 31 W.—Beautiful, light, large furnished kitchenette room, steady hot water, latest improvements; rent reasonable. June25-24
127TH ST. 71 W.—Furnished rooms, $4, $5, $5.50; kitchenette rooms, $7.50.
127TH ST. 115 W.—Kitchenette rooms, large and small, neatly furnished; electricity; moderate rent.
127TH ST. 210 W.—Large and small furnished kitchenette rooms, $5, $5 and $7 weekly.
128TH ST. 60 W.—Furnished room, 1 flight up front, west. Hill. June19-47
129TH ST. 73 E. (Apt. 10)—Furnished and unfurnished rooms to let. Jun.5-47
268 W.128TH ST.
High class furnished rooms; all improvements; $5 up; telephone service.
128TH ST., 218 W. (Apt. 5) (2 flights) — Furnished rooms, small; $4; large; $7; use of kitchen. Lowery. June 19-21st
128TH ST., 245 W. (Apt. 2-W, 1 flight) — Kitchenette rooms, furnished or unfurnished; single rooms, newly renovated throughout; steam heat; reasonablen rent; call.
128TH ST., 40 W. (Apt. 2-W, 1 flight) — Nearly furnished rooms; reasonable. Phone Harlem 5768. June 19-21st
128TH ST., 39 W. (Apt. 1 up, B) — Furnished room, telephone, electricity. Cassell.
128TH ST., southeast corner of 5th Ave.; Light front room, strictly private; respectable people. Telephone 8011. C. C. Jones. June 28-29th
128TH ST., 40 W. (1th floor, East) — Large room, cheerfully furnished; elevator; convenances and privileges; $6. Jorsling. June 19-21st
128TH ST., 227 W. (Nearly furnished, large, medium size, small rooms; continuous hot water; all conveniences, $5 up. June 12-4th
128TH ST., 6 E.-Nest and clean, furnished kitchenette rooms, large and small, continuous hot water, reasonable rent.
128TH ST., 3 W.-Large; furnished rooms, with kitchenette; very reasonable. June 26-27th
June 28-21
128TH ST. 235 W.-Private house, neatly furnished rooms for rent, front and back; reasonable prices.
128th-June 28-21
129TH ST. 50 W. (Apt. 25)-Neatly furnished room to jet. Mrs. Mary Williams. Phone Harlem 1195.
129th-June 28-46 W. (Apt. 45)-Neatly furnished private room, single or couple; elevator service.
129th-June 232 W. (1 flight up) - Light, air front room, private house. June 28-47
129th-June 246 W. (Apt. 55)-Rooms for rent; small and large rooms.
129th-June 166 W. (Apt. 5-C)-Neatly furnished small room, with young couple; homelife. Proctor, Cath. 648.
129th-St. 233 W.-Kitchenette rooms, small and large; parlor room to let.
129th-St. 232 W. (Apt. 3)-Furnished rooms, large and small; respectable working people; convenient; good home for right people. Mrs. Lambert, University 1298.
129th-June 26-21
129TH ST., 225 W.—Desirable room in private house; rents reasonable; large, suitable for three people.
University 4279.
June 19-41
129TH ST., 214 W.—Large, private, kitchenette room.
June 19-21
129TH ST., 39 W. (Apt. 5-A)—Nearly furnished room; no other room; good home for right party. Call after 1 P. M. J. Ledbetter.
June 19-21
129TH ST., 251 W. (Apt. 2)—Nearly furnished room; all conveniences.
Phone Monument 1194. Mrs. Nelson.
June 19-41
129TH ST., 21 W.—Large and small rooms, furnished or unfurnished, all conveniences.
June 19-41
129TH ST., 31 W. (Apt. 5)—Nearly furnished rooms for one or two persons; respectable.
129TH ST., 238 W. (Apt. 21)—Nearly room-for rent, with all conveniences. Phone Mon. 6531; call morning or evening after 10 o'clock.
Wright.
June 19-21
129TH ST., 259 W. (Apt. 6-B)—Furnished rooms for single or couple, conveniences, elevator service, telephone.
University 1438.
June 19-21
129TH ST. 60 W. (Apt. 7-F)—Large, nicely furnished room; elevator; use kitchen; homelike.
129TH ST. 246 W. (Apt. 15)—Room, suitable for one or two respectable men or women. ... June28-21
129TH ST. 251 W. (Apt. 34)—Beautiful furnished room to let; elevator or couple; working people; use of kitchen; homelike.
129TH ST. 109 W. (Apt. 2-E)—Beautiful furnished room to let; elevator apartments; price reasonable. June29-12
129TH ST. 43-45 W. (Apt. 15)—Furnished room; respectable couple only. June19-14
129TH ST. 143 W.—Furnished rooms to let, large and small, ring basement bell. Ruthring. June19-4
129TH ST. 25 W.—Nearly furnished and unfurnished kitchenette rooms, small rooms, private house. June19-24
129TH ST. 129 W. (Apt. 5)—Nearly furnished, light rooms, large and small. Reasonable rent. Cathedral 7431. June19-47
129TH ST. 261 W. (Apt. 34)—Large room, respectable working couple or single person, elevator. June19-24
129TH ST. 246 W. (Apt. 76)—Beautiful furnished room in light and airy apartment, working people preferred. Call after 6 p. m. G. Moseley.
129TH ST. 3 W.—Small, nearly furnished each; all convenences. June28-24
129TH ST. 247 W.—Large and furnished rooms; running water; private house. Aud. 0067. June28-48
130TH ST. 207 W. Kitchenette front room; clean; all conveniences.
130TH ST. 41 W. Furnished room to rent, large and small. Harlem 5016. June12-4t
130TH ST. 62 W. Furnished or un-furnished, all conveniences. June12-4t
130TH ST., 215 W. Furnished rooms in newly decorated private house; all improvements, $5 and up.
130TH ST., 150 W. Large and small furnished or un-furnished rooms all conveniences. Harlem 3227. June4-5t
130TH ST., 232 W. Large back parlor, basement room, also small room; all improvements. Brad. 5572. Jun5-4t
130TH ST. 255 W—Nearly furnished,
large and small front kitchenette
reasonable. Call Bradhurst. 1472.
130TH ST. 238 W—Furnished room,
couple or single, kitchenette, use
telephone service, hot water, electric $4.50 up.
130TH ST. 23 W—Large kitchenette,
nearly furnished. Harlem
3062.
130TH ST. 9 E—Large and small
kitchenette, furnished or unfinished rooms.
June28-tt
130TH ST. 165 W—Nicely furnished
kitchenette, all improvements; steam; from $4 up. Feb20-tt
130TH ST. N—Nice large fur-
# FURNISHED ROOMS
130TH ST. 65 W.—Nicely furnished kitchenette room; all conveniences; all improvements; reasonable. May 28-17
130TH ST. 209 W.—Large and small kitchenette front rooms. Call evenings. Monument 3396. June19-4
130TH ST. 115 W.—Furnished rooms to rent; reasonable; large and small rooms; modern walls. June19-4
130TH ST. 132 W.—Beautifully furnished front kitchenette rooms, large and small; electric, running water, cheerful; reasonable. June19-26
130TH ST. 60 W.—Beautiful furnished kitchenette room, all conveniences. June4-6
130TH ST. 217 W.—Front parlor room; for respectable couple only; modern; all conveniences; telephone; suitable for three. June12-4
130TH ST. 244 W.—Rooms for rent furnished or unfurnished. Mrs. E. Clarke.
130TH ST. 172 W. (Apt. 3)—Large front room to let, suitable for two; also small. Mrs. McGhee.
190TH ST. 226 W—Nearly furnished
kitchenette room.
June28-23
190TH ST. 250 W—Nearly furnished
kitchenette rooms, private bath;
large kitchenette, convenient;
very 888. June29-43
191ST ST. 226 W—Beautiful large
kitchenette rooms, newly decorated,
also small rooms. Neighborhood.
131ST ST., 241-235 W.—Nearly furnished kitchenette rooms, private house.
131ST ST., 242 W.—Nearly furnished kitchenette, all improvements; reasonable.
131ST ST., 149 W.—Nearly furnished, large and small kitchenette rooms; price reasonable. Harlem 4207.
131ST ST., 62 W.—Nearly furnished, large and small kitchenette rooms; convenience. Harlem 5350. Roach. June28-12.
131ST ST., 139 W.—Furnished or unfurnished front parlor in private house; convenience; newly decorated.
131ST ST., 139 W.—Large furnished kitchenette room in private house, first floor.
131ST ST., 28 W. (Apt. 15)—Furnished room, couple; otherwise private. Harlem 750; call evenings. June28-21.
131ST ST., 129 W.—Nearly furnished room; use of kitchenette and telephone service; reasonable rent. S. Moss. June28-21.
131ST ST., 29 W.—Furnished rooms, private house; convenience. June28-21.
131ST ST., 29 W.—private house—Nearly decorated rooms, kitchenette rooms; cold water, improvements. Harlem 9066. Jun12-18.
131ST ST., 260 W.—Nearly furnished, large and small front kitchenette rooms. convenience. Brad Hurd 2472.
131ST ST., 251 W.—Large kitchenette room, neatly furnished; home-like; references required. June19-47.
131ST ST., 9 W.—Gooy private rooms; convenience $5 and $0.50 per room. M. E. B. James. June28-46.
131ST ST., 224 W.—Large and small rooms; rents reasonable. June28-46.
131ST ST. 48 W. (Apt. 33.)—Nearly furnished room for respectable person only; call after 7 p. m.
131ST ST. 218 W.—Furnished back parlor rooms and others. $4.90 up. June28-21
131ST ST. 261 W.—Large 24-floor front room, furnished or unfurnished, improvement of working people only. June19-21
131ST ST. 204 W.—Furnished rooms to let, large and small, in nearly furnished private house. June19-21
131ST ST. 35 W. (Apt. 2)—Nearly furnished or unfurnished large room for couple or two men; convictions. Call evening. June19-21
132D ST. 144 W.—Single front rooms; 44 up. June21-21
132D ST. 240 W.—Furnished room in private house, hot water. Mrs. Thompson
132D ST. 277 W. (private house)—Furnished neatly furnished front rooms. June28-41
132D ST. 252 W.—Furnished rooms; reference people only. Reference June28-41
132D ST., 44 W.-Nearly furnished kitchenette rooms, large and small, all conveniences. Jun5-4t
132D ST., 201 W. (Apt. 5)-Private room to rent, street window with privileges. Bradhurst 4832. Mrs. Brook. Jun6-4t
132D ST., 235 W.-Large front room, second floor; kitchenette room and small rooms; convenience. Jun19-2t
132D ST., 220 W.-Large kitchenette an single rooms to let. Jun19-2t
132D ST., 289 W.-Nearly furnished rooms; telephone service. Jun19-2t
132D ST., 70 W.-Furnished rooms.
133D ST. , 301 W. (Apt. 6)—Nearly furnished, private room, Thorpe. June28-21
133D ST. , 172 W. (corner 71b Ave)—Nearly furnished rooms; kitchen privileges. Mrs. C. Holstein, Harlem 724. June19-21
133D ST. , 250 W.—Private, furnished front room, bedroom, one flight up, detailed rooms; student students; $6 weekly. Mrs. Richardson.
133D ST. , 323 W.—Nearly furnished rooms, one, $3.50, $5; all conveniences. Duncan. June19-21
133D ST. , 250 W. (ground floor east)—Nearly furnished rooms, $175; private improvements. June19-21
133D ST. , 58 E.—Furnished kitchen, all improvement reasonable. June12-4
133D ST. , 250 W.—Bedroom; dining room, kitchen, furnished, all private, one flight up, suitable for men and wife, for light housekeeping; couples; $8 weekly. Mrs. Richardson.
133D ST. , 138 W. (top floor, west furnished, private room, conveniences, 4-room apartments, furnished, modern. Harlem 6326.
134TH ST. 201 W. Lincoln rooms,
up-to-date rooms, hot and cold
water; transient accommodations.
Audubon 3777. June-45.
134TH ST. 217. W — Large front room for man and wife; respectable people only; nice, quiet house; whom it may concern.
134TH ST. 204. W — Private house, newly decorated, front room, tile hall, steam heat, hot water conveniences.
134TH ST. 211. W — Private rooms to let; $4 and up. Tyler: June12-47
134TH HST. 121. W. (Apt. 8) — Rooms, large and small; use of kitchenette.
134TH HST. 17. W — Furnished kitchenette, telephone, electric shower, weekly $4 and up; for quiet working people.
134TH ST. 253. W — Large front kitchenette to let, reasonable. Bradhurst 0168.
134TH ST. 219. W — Large and small furnished rooms, respectable people only. Brad. 1275. Land. June12-9.
134TH ST. 209. W. (Apt. 1) — Large, ally, furnished rooms, able couple or three; reasonable, privileges.
134TH ST. 101. W. (Room 8) — Furnished rooms to let, at subway station; reasonable. June12-17.
135TH ST. 111A. W. — Furnished private, kitchenette rooms; all white. White Phone Harlem 5688. April11-1f
135TH ST. 227. W. (Telephone service, light housekeeping privileges, furnished or unfurnished. Audubon 5588. June4-17
135TH ST. 184. W — Nically furnished large or small private rooms; Phone Harlem 9626. June4-17
135TH ST. 243. W. (Apt. 2) — Neat room for working people or mitters or after 9 p. m. Brad. 8888. June19-1f
135TH ST. 42. W. (Apt. 12-A) — Furnished room to rent, single or couple. Phone Harlem 1007.
135TH ST. 261. W. A large, neatly furnished front room, suitable for two. Private house. Bradhurst 6085.
135TH ST. 101. W. (Apt. 4) — Neatly furnished room suitable for single person; near subway.
135TH ST. 219. W — Nearly furnished kitchenette room; basement rooms. June19-17
135TH ST. 38. W. (Apt. 9) — Rooms for open, neatly furnished, homelike.
from $3.50 up; kitchen use.
1637TH ST. 309 W.-Furnished kitchenette room; also basement in quiet, private house.
6802. June 19-26
1637TH ST. 283 W.-Furnished back parlor, kitchen privileges, steam heat, or with room and board, two gentlemen.
June 19-21
1637TH ST. 269 W.-Large neatly furnished parlor, kitchen. Brad. 6802. June 15-41
1637TH ST. 243 W.-Kitchenette room, front parlor room, basement room, furnished or unfurnished.
June 19-21
1637TH ST. 259 W.-Large and small kitchenette room, $5.50 and $5.50. Bradhurst 6802.
1637TH ST. 258 W.-Nearly furnished large and small front kitchenette
FIFTEEN
"Advertising Pays"
FURNISHED ROOMS
137TH ST. 328 W—Purnished room
(1 let; respectable owners.
June19-4t
137TH ST. 319 W—Large and small
rooms, with all improvements.
June19-2t
137TH ST. 128 W. (Apt. 6)—Room
cable lighting, private facilities,
privileges and homekeeping;
reasonable; respectable working
person. Telephone Bradhurst 5269.
June19-2t
137TH ST. 323 W—Large and small
rooms, modern improvements; con-
venient to car lines; suitable for
light housekeeping.
June26-4t
137TH ST. 257 W—Beautiful large
and small kitchenette rooms, fur-
nished. Best neighborhood.
June26-4t
137TH ST, 613 W.-Eleganly furnished room, kitchenette rooms, wicker, pumpkin W. heat and hot water. John W. Johnson 10/10/1973
137TH ST, 247 W.-Large and small furnished rooms; comfortable comfort; respectable people. Juni68-8
183TH ST. (near '7th Ave.)—Lodge and small front room on bathroom and small front room on persons in exclusive private residence. Telephone Bradhradt 7083.
183TH ST. 304 W.—Furnished front hall room in private house.
183TH ST. 42 W. (Apt. 41)—Neatly furnished room. Apply.
183TH ST. 135 W. (2 flights west)—Neatly furnished rooms; all conve-
SIXTEEN "To Sell or Buy, You Must Advertise"
High class furnished: rooms, all improvements, $5 up; telephone service. Inquire janitor. Apr.10-13: 45TH ST. 349 W. cor. Edgecombe 410 W. Edgecombe, kitchenette, $8.50 and $9.50; front enclosures; phone. desk12-4
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
Classified Advertisements
7TH AVE., 1880 (Apt. 17)—Neally furnished room, large, in high class elevator house, with quiet family, suitable couple or single, reasonable rent.
7TH AVE., 1842—Rooms, furnished, all rooms, phone Monument 3680, all rooms, Phone Monument 3680, Mrs. Harris. June18-47
June 12-31
EDGECOMBE AVE. 40 (near 1397
St.)—Front parlor room, furnished
with a large dining room;
conveniences. Audubon 4919.
Jun.12-tt.
EDGECOMBE AVE. 351 (Apt. 60)—
Nearly furnished light, alry, side
view rooms, couple or single,
reasonable. Bradhurst 4919.
June26-28
EDGECOMBE AVE. 357 (Apt. 3-A)
(Gor. 150th St.)—Large double window
room to let; no children;
colleagues if desired. Call
between j and i a. m. Phone
abundon 5893.
EDGECOMBE AVE. 281 (Apt. 2-C)
—Nearly furnished room, single,
couple, conveniences; privileges;
Call about 6:20 p. m.
MANHATAN AVE. 408 (apt. 59)
Purnished room; all conveniences;
elevator service; use of kitchen;
couple or men.
June 26-28
ST. NICHOLAS OLE. 864 (Apt. 4,
north, cor. 145TH ST.)-Large and
newly built, and finished
mulsed; reasonable. Bradhurst
0211. Juni-26-27
FURNISHED ROOMS
ST. NICHOLAS PL. 52 (Apt. 31)-
Large, light, clean room, with two
beds, for couple. Family room,
able for couple. $8.50. June 26-28
ST. NICHOLAS TER. 10-
Nearly furnished room; lady or
gentleman. Taylor. June 19-29
STUDENT or young business man
can secure comfortable room with
bachelor; references necessary.
Box B, care of Amsterdam New.
June 19-29
SPACIOUS room, modern up-to-date
apartment; refreshed business couple
or single. Monument 2691. June 19-29
DESIRABLE room, in apartment;
adjoining bath; nice home for
respectable persons. Cathedral 6213. June 26-28
NEATLY furnished room, suitable
location, congenial home. Phone
Monument 5261.
TWO furnished rooms, for house-
keeping; private; no other room-
ers. Phone Monument 6961 nights.
NEATLY furnished room, all im-
provements, with small, quiet,
Christian family, gentleman pre-
fered. The house can be call
evening. University
7370. June 26-28
UNFURNISHED ROOMS
114TH ST. 109 W. (Apt. 1 Fast)- Large, light unfurnished room, reasonable rent; convenient to subway. surface cars. June5-4
118TH ST. 77 W.-Large room, unfurnished; all conveniences. June19-21
129TH ST. 227 W.-Unfurnished parlor rooms, also neatly furnished room.
129TH ST. 255 W. (Apt. 3)-Large, small, unfurnished rooms, with nice people. (Gd stairway).
129TH ST. 21 W.-Large rooms, unfurnished, private bath, all conveniences, small furnished room. $4.56 up. April19-21
130TH ST. 135 W.-Unfurnished room, large; unfurnished front base kitchenette room. June19-21
132D ST. 242 W.-Private house; large, unfurnished, front, kitchenette room; electric, running water, newly renovated; suitable for married couple.
137TH ST. 289 W.-Large unfurnished rooms, with kitchens. June19-21
138TH ST. 219 W.-Large front room, unfurnished, with running water; private.
141ST ST. 239 W. (Apt. 2)-Unfurnished large, light, private room; Christian business people; evenings.
17TH AVENUE 2052 (2 fights up)- Newly built, large, with walnut furniture all conveniences; small room. Mrs. Hookey-Monument 1538. Jun26-21
EDGECOMBE AVE. 114-Large unfurnished kitchenette room; all conveniences; for respectable people.
MANHATTAN AVE. 400 (Apt. 46, Crown St.) Home comforts for respectable people, unfurnished. Call evenings. June26-21
LARGE front basement room, unfurnished; private house; all improvements; working people only. June26-21
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
46TH ST. 523 W. (colored tenants) 3-4 room apartments, electricity, white plumbing. Very low rents.
52D ST. 425 W. For colored tenants; large 3-4 rooms, hot water, electricity. Free time.
433 WEST 52D ST.
A FEW unusually decorated apartments offered in a clean, quiet building; all apartments have new carpet, vinyl flooring, lain tubs with enamel covers, plenty hot water, snow-white airshafts and sunshine into your apartments. regulation locked mail boxes. You can get 3 rooms for $25 and 4 rooms for $25. A 4-room basement apartment. 7-weeks free. New linoleum on kitchen floors. Act quickly.
JUNE 19-46
$2D ST, 41 W. — 3 ROOMS — $22.00 and up.
3 ROOMS — $20.00 and up.
AVAILABLE CELLY SELECTED TENANTS
Apartments exquisitely decorated; all walls and woodwork enameled, cloak lights, hot water, porcelain sinks and tub, covered sinks, floors, window shades, etc. Ownership management, catering exclusions to refined Christian folks, desiring to refine living conditions with quiet living conditions in midtown Manhattan. Inquire Super-intendent. June19-1
$2D ST, 328-30 W. (near 8th Ave.). Four large, light rooms and bath; electricity, white sink, plenty hot water; plentiful facing street; plenty in welcoming hood. See Janitor in 330. Rent $38 monthly. June19-4
426 WEST 53D ST.
NEWLY decorated apartments in bright colored wall papers and bright electric fixtures, new electric fixtures, hot water, freshly painted airbaths, affording extra light; white sinks and porcelain shining new mail boxes; just the place you been looking for; down 3 rooms, $25; you can walk to work; two weeks free; you can't beat these; see them first. New linenum on kitchen floors. June12-4t 59TH ST. 640 W. For colored tiles, large 4 rooms, electricity, white plumbing. Free time. Rents $15 up. 59TH ST. 339 W. Four rooms, large 4 rooms, steam and hot water, electric lights; rent $35-$40. 64TH ST. 214 W. 3 light rooms, 214 W. 3 light rooms. Rents $35-$40.
115TH ST. 258-280 W.—Just opened for colored tenants, 6 large, light rooms, $45 and $50, steam heat, hot water, and a kitchen. Apply Jantor on premises or Everard Edmunds, 69 W. 138th St. Bradhurst 5874. May-29f
115TH ST., 207 W.—Four rooms, steam, hot water, electricity, low rent. Inquire Supt.
115TH ST., 262 W.—6 rooms, bath, hot water, newly renovated; rent $40.
117TH ST., 519 E.—3 rooms, $19; 4 rooms, hot water, white sinks, white plumbing, coal gas ranges.
June19-47
117TH ST., 258-200 W. (at St. Nicholas Ave.)—High-class apartments, new building, 3-4-5 large rooms, two private spaces, all three conveniences, rent reasonable. Inquire Supt.
117TH ST., 323-325 E.—Three-4 large rooms, hot water, white sinks, electricity, not rent. $18-23. Janitor. Apt. 4 ground floor. Apply janitor.
117TH ST., 274 W.—New decorated apartments, 6 rooms, hot water, convenient location, near "L." $40 per month. Apply janitor.
117TH ST., 19 W.—5 and 6 rooms, with bath, no rents raised; from $40 to private rooms. Supt. on premises.
117TH ST., 15 W. near Lenox-21 rooms, some private, steam, hot water, electric; $50. Inquire janitor or phone University 4475.
117TH ST., 11% W. (Subway 116th St. and Lenox)—4 large basement rooms, all improvements; bath; $28. See janitor.
118TH ST., 8 W.—High class 6 rooms, steam, hot water, bath, French doors, panelled walls, $88. Ellexander.
118TH ST., 27 W.—Large 6 rooms, steam, hot water, bath, French door, panelled walls, $56. Sharpe. 29 West 118th St.
118TH ST., 39 W.—High class 6 rooms, steam, hot water, bath, French door, panelled walls, $55. Ells.
118TH ST., 365 W. (Morningside Ave.)—Eight rooms, elevator house, $100.
118TH ST., 276 W.—5 rooms all improvements, painted walls, white woodwork, tubs and sink; ready for occupancy; quiet house; rent $60. Janitor.
121ST ST., 217 W. (near 7th Ave.)—4 rooms; steam, electric, bath, hot water, French doors, reasonable rent.
121ST ST., 223 W.—5 rooms, all private; reasonable rent.
122D ST., 224-8 W.
SEVEN rooms, all private improvements. Apply Janitor on premises. Janitor on premises.
122D ST., 221 W.—3 rooms and bath, improvements.
ONLY FIVE LEFT
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
144TH ST. 21 W.—Three and four apartments in new building, all modern improvements, reasonable rent. Superintendent.
149TH ST. 420 W.—5 and 6-room apt. new lease excellent service; refined room. $65 and $75. Janitor on premises.
147TH ST. 287 W.—Four rooms, hot water, $30. Apply janitor.
148TH ST. 233 W. — Four and 6 rooms; $46-$52; hot water, steam. June 24
148TH ST. 223 W. — $30 to $35; hot water, electric. Janitor.
148TH ST. 305 W. — 5 light rooms, all improvements. Inquire Samester Realts. Harlem 8880.
149TH ST. 200 W. — Four room apartments, all improvements, reasonable rent. Apply janitor on premises.
151ST ST. 450 W. (Near Amsterdam Ave. 4 private rooms, reasonable; raised room quiet house. Supl. or Bradhurst 8197)
151ST ST. 454 W. — Five-room apartments, up-to-date, to rent. Janitor on premises, or L. Levine, 166 W. 125th St.
163D ST. 463 W.—Four and 5 rooms; improvements; immediate possession; low rent. See Janitor.
167TH ST. 850-54 E.—4 and 5 high-class apts. for rent. Apply janitor.
BRADHURST AVE. 106 (near 147th ST.)—Pacing park. Exceptional space, beautiful light, large rooms, beautifully decorated; moderate.
Must see to appreciate
825 E. 167th St., Prospect Station.
AND 4 ROOMS from 205 to 211
East 89th St.; 3 rooms $14, 4 rooms
$18.
OUR large rooms, private, newly
decorated, all modern improvements,
facing Bradhurst Park, reasonable rent. 220 Bradhurst Ave.
IX large rooms, all private, newly
decorated, all modern improvements. 865. 265 W. 135d St.
HYP pay high rents? Our prices $15
up. large rooms, all white sinks; 2 blocks
from Third Ave. 'L' and Lexington
Ave. subway. 138th St. station;
concessions. 168 Lincoln Ave. ap.
Apt. 6. Telephone Awater 7517.
ROOMS and bath, beautifully
decorated; all latest improvements;
low rent. Inquire in glass store.
M. Kissel. 2377 8th Ave.
FURNISHED APTS.
FOR RENT—
4D ST. 337 W. near 8th Ave. 4 rooms, neatly furnished, with electric, running water; 9 weekly. June 26-28
04TH ST. 70 E.—1-2-3 furnished apartment. Inquire Real Estate Office. Apr24-tf
17TH ST. 57 W. (Apt. 5-N)—2 room apartment furnished; rent reasonable; overlooking Central Park.
15TH ST. 241 W. Nice, furnished apartment, light, airy; all convenences, 5 rooms, $15 weekly, respectable family. Apply.
18TH ST. 205 W. (Apt. 3: 1 flight)—Three large front rooms, newly decorated, electricity; near subway.
19TH ST. 208 W. high class—finished apartments, private bath, telephone service. Inquire Supt. Apr24-tf
28TH ST. 168 W. (Apt. 1)—3 beautifully furnished; newly decorated, inquire rooms; respectable people only; all improvements.
29TH ST. 134 W. (2 flights West)—finished apartment; reasonable, Inquire ground floor, west. Jorling.
30TH ST. 63 W.—Parkir floor, 2 large rooms, front, kitchenette room, all new, beautiful furniture, running water, suitable, 3 light housekeeping. Harlesen 4592
32D ST. 7 E.—1-2-3 furnished apartment, kitchenettes; 3 rooms, inquire supt. Apr24-tf
35TH ST. 158 W.—Furnished apartment, kitchenettes; 3 room apartment to let, furnished; reasonable; respectable people. June12-4t
35TH ST. 304 W.—Do you want a coffee, rent a room? I rent them by the week; nice people should call; 3 and 4 rooms, private. Posey. June4-1t
8 WEST 135TH ST.
1-2-3 floors, up-to-date, furnished with kitchen, 86 up. See Edwards, Supt. Feb.27-ft.
18TH ST. 128 W.—Elegantly furnished, 2 room apt. for couple or refined girl friends. Owner in country, Call evenings. Jamaica 1954.
13TH ST. 59 W. (Apt. 22)—rooms furnished, work space, convictions; bedrooms; respectable people, Edward Russell.
14D ST. 56 W. (Apt. 1)—Completely furnished and unfurnished apartments.
15D ST. 107 W. (Apt. 10)—Two furnished rooms to let for housekeeping. Call evenings.
273 W. 146TH ST.
3 AND 4 ROOMS
TTH AVE. 2460 (Apt. 40)—Rooms to
or apt. to sublease; furnished.
TTH AVE. 2505 (Apt. 16)—Four
furnished for two couples for summer.
Phone Edge. 214.
Something New.
FURNISHED studio apartments, one-
improvements, newly furnished and
decorated, $10 up, including every
thing in the room. Gas, linen, dis-
invention. Phone, apply 221
W. 12d St.
3 AND 4 rooms, all modern improvements, newly renovated. Call Edge, 3507 from 10:30 a. m. to 9 p. m.
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
Several 3-room and bath apts. available in Inquire Supt, 79 West 18th St. or
PRYME, OWNER
241 WEST 123D STREET
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
$16.00 UP WEEKLY
VARIOUS LOCATIONS
5 rooms and bath, 303 West 146th Street.
5 rooms and bath, 3 bedrooms.
Inquire Supt, 313 West 143th Street.
rooms and bath, 313 West 133d Street.
FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS
CALL DAVID VEWINGS OR
SUNDAYS
SHERRILL, LANDLORD
312 West 133d Street
CHILDREN
BOARDED
CHILDREN kept in lovely private home in city or Rockaway Beach; from 2 years up to 14 years; reu-
nished from 14 years on to the training of children; the daily program includes the following: music, dancing, kindergarten, audubon, Audubon 9765, 722 St. Nicholas Ave.
144TH St. 920, W. (Apt. 33) - Reliable woman wants to take care of children daily.
CHILDREN taken care of by day or week; individual care. 2689 8th avenue, Apt. 18. Mrs. L. Hall.
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
Classified Advertisements
FEMALE
YOUNG LADY wishes a position, whole or part time, or nursing. West 138th street, Parliament 7.
EXPERIENCED GINGT typist wishes position in an office. Apply Ada McMillan, 234 W. 129th Street.
LADY wishes position as manicurist; beauty parlor or barber shop. Audubon 2300, Apt. 2-F.
MUSICIAN—Young woman, refined, pianist, orchestra work; formerly employed gymnastics; concert church music. June19-21.
YOUNG LADY wishes position as stenographer or office work. Box F, c-O Amsterdam News.
YOUNG man, age 39, married, intelligent, honest and industrious, desires a connection with a reliable business firm. Has 60 years of business experience. Answer Box O, c-o Amsterdam News. June 26-41
A-1 MASON of wide experience in business firm, as construction former or Supt. Chicago Tech; graduate; not afraid of work; we go anywhere. Adjunct to 377 Halsted St. East Orange, N. J.
HOUSE FOR RENT
1937th ST.—12 rooms; 129th, 130th, 131st St.; 812s up; will sell reasonably. Martin, 210 W. 138th St.
HOUSE FOR SALE
BRONX—Beautiful 2-family brick, small cash, priced low for quick outdoor use. Nail Nall & Parker, 145 W. 138th St.
May 29-1f
FOR LEASE
WEST 122D ST.—12 rooms and bath,
museum and apartments, and 142.
Walker, 200 W. 125th St. Brad. 3977
PRIVATE house to let, rents $80 per
month; private house for sale, on
W. 126th St. Albene. Bradhurst
0356.
HOUSE TO LEASE
ST. NICHOLAS AVE. (Near 145th
St.)—Private house to lease.
Private house to rent, reasonable
O. D. King, 149 W. 128th St. Brad.
3817.
INFORMATION
WILKELMINA HARRIS or Thomas,
formerly of Meridian, Miss., and
Glencairn, N.C., in vicinity of 128th St. and Lenox
Ave.; any information concerning
her will be greatly appreciated.
Adresse Mary Turner, 244 W. 153th
ANONYMS knowing the whereabouts
or present address of Mrs. Wiley
Joyner who resided at 412 St.
Wiley, New York City in
1925. Please write box M.
Amsterdam News.
AGENTS WANTED
INTELLIGENT, energetic agents to
attractive educational plan;
teachers will find it profitable sum-
gages of $4,000 each easily earned. Miss Elizabeth W. Martin, 2270 7th Ave. Bradhurst
4863. June12-4t
SALESMEN and saleswomen wanted
to sell fruit juices. Biggest Com-
mission paid. Apply 234 W. 120th
Street, Roof 1.
AGENTS wanted for high-grade sil-
hoesy and linguee as excellent commission;
part-time permitted. Helix Co.
213 4th Ave.
HOUMB, business purposes; kitchen-
ette, laundry, amenities,
1414 W. 185th St. White,
Phone Harlem 8158 St. White.
April-fifth
TO LET.-Newly decorated hall, suit-
able for weddings, entertainments
or meeting room; very moderate
prices. 214 West; 131st St. Brad.
2148 or Aud. 3267. June-19-2
122D ST. 211-First floor, suit-
able for doctor's office. Call
time. June-4-8
1515T ST. 450 W. (user Amsterdam
Avenue. Four-room apartment, suit-
able for office; opposite new court
house. Supt. or Rogers and Ryan.
Bradhurst 9157.
132D ST. 70 W.-A church mission
for rent, any denom-
ination.
OFFICE FOR RENT, at subway station;
ideal location; reasonable.
101 W. 135th St. Room 8.
June-12-fifth
PART of store to let; wonderful locality. Phone Bradhurst 2379.
138TH ST., 30 W - Store to let, good for all kinds of business; rent $40. Supt.
128TH ST., 213 W - One and two unfurnished rooms, decorated rooms and kitchenette, $10.
118TH ST., 33-35 W. (Apt. 29) - Two desks, ground floor elevator service; very moderate price.
DESK SPACE to let in real estate W. 18th St., Room 8. Brad. 2345.
LARGE patio floor to let for club meetings, party dances, all kinds of social functions. Booking now. T. Busch Association, 245 W. 12th St. Phone University 2100. June26-27.
PORO booth; all modern, convenient. Apply 276 W. 12th St. Mine. Garner.
LOST
BANK BOOK on 138th St. Branch, Chelsea Nat. Bank, Finder notify Ernest William Smith, 174 W. 138th St.
FOR SALE
FURNITURE-Gouple compelled to
seel quickly before storing; gur-
niture; magnificent living diashow
(twins); magnificent living diashow
Chinese lamps, lamps, mirrors; de-
vishing almost new. Fair offer,
will take all. 720 Riverside Drive,
2-B, corner 180:18 St. Juni4-5
131ST St, 240 W. For sale or rent,
stk-box house; modern improv-
ments. Shaw. Juni4-5
FOR SALE OR PARTNERSHIP-
subway. Sell on account sickness.
Reasonable. Edge. 8304. Juni4-5
BEAUTIFUL bedroom set, odd vanity,
nutural living room furniture, rug,
kitchen table, everything like new,
chairs, leaving city. Mon. Juni4-5
Juni4-5
TWO furnished apartments, 4 and 5 rooms. Rent reasonable. All modern conveniences. Apply 128 W. 140th St. Apartment 18.
111TH ST. 228 W. (Apt. 14)—Nicely furnished apartment; bargain; rent 474. Call Thursday all day. Frank Walton.
153TH ST. 217 W.—Freshman radio, all electric, new, sacrifice; A. G. current, N. Hurt.
160TH ST. 122 E. (1 flight up)—5 rooms, bath, electric, car, Harlem
PERSONAL
RELATIVES OF the late Laura B. Graywood, Monroe, kindly wrote, *Lillie B. Wilson*, 1828. Dickinson papers please copy.)
APTS. FOR RENT BRONX
BROOK AVE. 900, near 184th St.—5
front rooms $21, electricity, hot
water, one month free; 2 rooms $12.
FOUR and 5 large, light rooms,
steam, electric, newly decorated,
near subway and school, best sec-
tion, Dr. Schwartz, 1008 Prospect Ave.
189th St. $21 K. (Bronx)—6-room
apartment to lift; reference re-
quired. Inquire Apt. 6.
3 ROOMS, with 6 modern conveni-
ences, near subway and schools;
$45 monthly. Louis Goodman, 810
W. 135th St.
R. E. FOR SALE
YONKERS, N. Y.
BELKNAP AVE. 41—Healthful living!
Yonkers, N. Y. For sale, rent, and
2-family houses. For rent, one
7-room houses (furnished).
R. E. FOR SALE
ENGLEWOOD, N. J.
HOUSE, 6 rooms and bath, all improvements, in fine location; price and terms are reasonable. Phone Englewood 2478 or write Samuel Mackey, 6 Forest Ave., Englewood, N. J., June19-48
HAVE a few lot for sale in Nepper-
town, NJ; residential community; $850 each on
each lot. balance easy terms. Rose,
45th, N. Y. 8, Bryant
2728.
CLAREMONT AVE. 68 (Jersey City)
= For refined refine or small family
of adults, 5 rooms and bath, all
improvements; private house; vaca-
tional July 1; 450 monthly. See
owner.
FURNISHED ROOMS
BROOKLYN & L. 1.
ADELPHI ST. 407—Nicely furnished
rooms to rent.
ALBANY AVE. 154—Nestly furnished
room to let, all conveniences.
Call after 7:30 pm. Anderson.
"If You Want to Buy or Sell, Scan These Columns"
SEVENTEEN
McDONOUGH ST. 580 — 2 story
brownstone, browning room, 9 rooms,
alcove, bath, store room; lot 18 by
100; parquet floors, electric, hot air
bath, gas, tile; kitchen, laundry in
2 weeks; price $10,200; cash can
be arranged. Owner V. W. V. Smith,
11 Bedford Ave., or phone Bush-
wick BEDFORD section, 2-family, parquet, beautiful house, reduced from
$12,500 to $11,000. Cash, $1,000.
Agar, 1013 Bedford Ave.
$750 CASH buys 11-room house, all
improvements: balance like rent.
Mall Baths, 427 Gates Ave.; Decatur
8352.
LEFFERTS PL. 36—3-story and
brownstone, 11 rooms, 3 baths, all improvements, reason-
able.
3-FAMILY brick, brick heat. $1,000.
cash. Agar, 1013 Bedford Ave.
HAVE 2-family houses, can sell with
the same house. Agar, 1013
Bedford Ave. Decatur 8800.
LET rent pay for your house—one
family, 10 rooms, 2 baths. Agar,
1013 Bedford Ave. Decatur 8800.
HELP WANTED---
BROOKLYN
-- Classified Advertisements
‘T EIGHTEEN
—— ee
new C. la
ee eeeeernees
FOR SALE ._
BROOKLYN
____BROOBKLEN __
BEST BUY in Brooklyn; 2 family
‘brownstone, 330 Stuyvesant ave.
Parquet Moor. Call ‘Had. 5987; also
jhouses $500 down in Stuyvesant
section. ‘June26-2t
FOR RENT
BROOKLYN
POUR
‘TO LET, lodge rooms and auditorium
for meetings and ‘social functions.
‘Commercial Community Bldg., 1658
Fulton St. Tel. Prospect 7948.
Jun.12-4t
STORE TO RENT---
BROOKLYN
CENTRAL AVE,, 457 — Store and
three roms, good business section;
only $50.
FULTON ST., 1364—Store, three
Tooms, reasonable. Phone Lafayette
1562,
FULTON ST. 1727 — Store, two
yooms; near Reid Ave, Telephone
Letayette 1582, $30.
ee SS
MOORE ST., 369 Lares, store near
Bushwick Ave.; good business, only
$25.
MYRTLE AVE. 1003—Store and
three rooms; near Sumner Ave.;
only $10.
VARET ST., 215-217 — Store, good
business section; concession; con-
sider storage $5.
FOR RENT ---
BROOKLYN
8, 6, 7 rooms, all improvements, ele-
vator service; house under new
management. Redmond Bros.
Prospect 8788, Nevins 5996,
June26-2t
ee
BROOKLYN
McDONOUGH ST.—12 rooms, hot
water, heat, $120; all improvements.
Hawes S. Gofeld, 122 Decatur St.
Decatur 1592.
LEXINGTON AVE.._ 399—11l-room
‘house, $65. Miller Bros., 427 Gates
Ave.; Decatur 9652,
HANCOCK ST. 493-11 rooms, 2
baths, alllmprovements, 290 Greene
Ave—11 rooms, all improvements.
452 Hancock St—4 rooms, 3 rooms,
all improvements, hot water heat.
John D. Nixon, 54 St. Felix 8t.
Phone Sterling 4388-1169.
PUTNAM AVE—1l4 rooms and 2
baths, furnace, newly decorated,
$130; also Waverly Ave. 10 rooms.
2 baths. furnace; Madison St. 9
rooms, 3 baths. Young, 409 Waver-
ly Ave.; Prospect $329.
ONE, two, three-family houses, some
‘with garages; $350 to $1,600 cash;
some I can exchange. Lighston,
145-17 Shore Ave, Jamaica. | Re-
public 7494. Dec.26tt
LIBERTY AVE, 172-18—Nine-room
‘house, well-built, all ‘mprovements:
open porch, large Erepe arbor; 50
x 150; two minutes from Hillside
station. L. I. R. R.; eight minutes
from 1ésth street subway, Owner.
Junels-2t
NEW 6 room brick house with garage,
$1,000 cash. Republic 9676.
June19-4t
$250 to $500 cash will take tile to
new 6-room house in Jamaica;
write or call; free auto trip to see
Homeseekers’ Service Bureau, 2343
7th Ave., Brad. 4192,
2 FAMILY brick, 10 rooms, all im-
Becrementa: $1,000 cash. Republic
678. Juner9-4
A REAL BARGAIN
0-ROOM house, with 2 sets of plumb.
. ing, new building, near subway
church and school. Terms as lov
gs $35 per month. Little cash re-
quired. This bargain is one of th
Biggest ever offered. Louls Good
man, 210 W. 135th St.
IF ITS a home in Long Island you
‘want, seo me. Six-room - house
furnished, unfurnished; reasonable;
near school and transit. R. Greene
114-32 158th street, Jamatea, L. I.
BARGAINI—Good homes, all sec
tons Jamaica, Hollis, etc; $30
upwards, cash, balanée lke rent
especial roperty. See mi
fetore Buying. Prpebilched 1910
Glarence Arrington, 88-25 172d St.
Jamaica. Open evenings and Sat
+ Urdays only.
WANTED—Poro hairdresser, experi
‘enced; single preferred; room, an
board can be arranged. 158-0:
108th Ave. Jamaica, N. ¥.; Repub:
lc 6079. Mme. Norton.
6,7 and 8 room houses, all improve
ments; near Eransporraion: x
+ $65. Lighston, 145-17 Shore « Ave.
telephone Republic 7404,
G7 AND 8 room houses, rent, $60 t¢
4, "$60." Republic 9678, ‘Junels-4
. APT, FOR RENT---
2 auign we ak a
Philadelphia Scouts
Return Charters
Nine Troops Resent Disbar-
| ment From Summer
| Camp
PHILADELPHIA, June 24.—Extinc-
tion of the Boy Scout movement
among Negro youth here was threat-
ened today following the return of
charters by nine troops because of
their disbarment from Treasure Is-
Yond summer camp.
Camping privileges were first de-
nied several members of Troop 32 in
June, 1928, Headed by thelr leader,
Dr. Aldrich R, Burton, nine of the
twenty non-white troops protested
the action and carried on extensive
correspondence with the Philadelphia
Council.
Dr. Charles D. Hart, white, prest-
dent of the local governing body, de-
clared that the nine troops repre-
sented a small minority and the Jim-
Crow order was instituted for what
was believed the best interests of all.
‘Treasure Island camp, above Tren-
ton in the Delaware river, is the gift
of Edward W. Bok, philanthropist
and peace advocate, who intended tt
for all Boy Scouts in the area. Char-
ters have been returned by the fol-
lowing troops: Reves Memorial Pres-
byterlan Church, No. 37, Fiftieth and
Aspen streets; Seger Recreation Cen-
ter, No. 132, ‘Tenth and Lombard
streets; St. Simon's No. 181, Twenty-
‘second and Reed streets; Union Bap-
‘tist Church, No. 202, Fitzwater and
Martin streets; Haven M. B, Church,
No. 251, Twenty-third and Oxford
streets: St, Paul's M. E. Church, No.
219, 623 Catharine street; St. Cy-
prisn's parish, No. 206, Eighty-fifth
street and Gibson avenue; Wissa-
Inekon Boys’ Club, No. 323, Pulaski
avenue and Coulter street, and
Bethel M. E, Church, No, 297, Sixth
‘and Addison streets.
"
Youth Who Slashed “Y”
. ,
Girl Gets “Pen” Term
A serious lovers’ quarrel had its
finale Monday in General Sessions
when Ernest Whyte, 21, 182 St.
Nicholas avenue, was sentenced to
the penitentiary for an indefinite
term by Judge Cornelius F, Collins.
Whyte’s change of plea from not
guilty to guilty was accepted by the
jurist last Wednesday. When ‘first
arraigned in General Sessions he pro-
tested his innocence in the slashing
of Miss Agnes Potts, his sweetheart,
who lives at the Emma Ransom
‘House of the West 137th street ¥. W.
cA.
The altercation arose June 3 in
front of the dormitory. Riled by the
situation, Whyte drew a pocket knife
and slashed the girl's left breast,
arm and leg. Her injuries were not
serious, The girl was not in court
at the time of the sentencing. hav-
ing left the city last week to visit
her mother at Silver Springs, Md.
Crosswalth Speaks.
Frank R. Crosswaith, head of the
United Colored Socialists, made an
address at the Town Hall esplanade
in Stamford, Conn., last Monday in
Interest of his party.
In the Policy Net
HARLEM COURT,
‘Two women and a man were held and
three other men discharged when are
raigned ‘Thursday before Magistrate
Dodge in Harlem Court on charges of
possessing policy slips,
Edna Brown, 19, 23 East 135th street;
Viola Dougins, 31, 64 West 126th street,
and Willinm Harrell, 50, 25 West 1324
treet, were held In $50 bail each for
trip! “in Special Sestions, ‘Those din-
charged were: Ralph Rodriquex, 22, 1470
Fifth avenue; Lorento Zordeno, 42, 65
Wert 217th sireet, and Adolph ‘Rivera,
38, 1707 Madison avenue,
Informed by the police that they were
only players of the polley game, Mag-
Isteate Dodge in Harlem Court ‘Satur
day held four men in ball for #50 cach
for trial in Special Sessions on charges
of possessing policy slips.
‘The accused mien were: Roderick
Garcia, 3%, 243 Eaat 30sth street; Do-
mingo Perez, 32, 216 East Ninety-ninth
street; Richard Collins, 44, 1162. Fitth
avenue, and Arthur Adrian, 27, 110
Lenox avenue.
HEIGHTS COURT.
Saturday—3agisirate Well held the
following persons under $300 ball for
Special Sessions on polley charges: Fred
Sterle, 40, 9 Went 118th street: Agatha
Wilron, 30, 24 West 13tst street: Mar.
[garet Thompson, %, 35 West 191et treet
Samuel Johnson, G7, 444 Went 1621
street; Cooper Allen, 44, 20 West 142¢
atreet: Inmes Ward, 41, 128 West 132th
street. ‘The cane of Joseph Brown, 45
136 West 138th strect, held in $300 ball
silt bo heard tomorrow, while Jonephine
‘Brown, 29, 35 West 131st street, was
held. in $1,000 bail for Special Sessions
Fridey—Herbert Brown, 40, 18-17
‘West_1330- mtreet, $3,000 bail for Spe.
clal Sessions; Joseph Baptiste, 46, 20%
Went 118th street, $1,000 bail for Special
Sessions; John Hardy, 51, 230 West
140th street, $500 ball for Speciat Sexe
sions ; Etta Williams, 46, 228 West 110th
street, $1,000 bail for a further hearing.
‘Thursdny—Held in $500 ball for Spe-
clal Sessions were the following: Esther
Stokes, 31, 117 West 14iat street: Mary
Wilson, 21, 210 Went 140th street; Susle
Ferguson, ‘52, 300 West 140th etfeet.
Nellie ‘Smith, 2%, 60¢ St. Nicholas
avenue, was paroled until tomorrow,
While Joe Harris, 22, white, 318 Went
140th street, was dinmissed. Held in
$1,000 ball ‘for m further hearing on
Friday wero Jamen Went, 31, 227 West
With street, and John Bruno, 46 271
Went 140th’ street, while the case of
Mary. Goburn, 38, 100 West 124th
ntreet, will be heard tomorrow. Bail in
the latter case was set at $300. On
Wednesday Thomas Williams, 39,167
West 13ist atreet, was beld In $3,000
bait for Special Sexslons,
‘Others arraigned on almilar charges
Included Willinmn Stokes, 50, 40, West
136th atreet, gnd Robert Sorel, 21, 172
Wert 33ith’ Rtreet, held In $500 ‘ball
ench for Special Sessions: Herbert Mar-
ratla, 40, 274 Lenox avenue, $1,000 ball
ror Special Seasions: Sam Scott, 28, 40
Went 135th street, $500 ball for a further
nearing tomorrow. Carts adjourned un-
iL next Friday included those of Sidney
Mack, 43, 2 Went 126th street, $1,000
atl; Aurelia Jackkon, 31, B40" Lenox
venue. $500 bail; damex Brown, 44 126
Seat 129th street, $1,000 ball,
NEW YORK 7 7°STE7 2.1 NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929
NATIONAL NEWS BRIEFS
Co-operative Elevator Apartments
FOR SALE
SEVENTH AVENUE, NEAR CENTRAL PARK
; Real Opportunity — Attractive Terms
VIMO CORPORATION
: GEO. F. HENDERSON, Manager
357 LENOX AVE. — At 128th Street
Cathedral 8852
| “The Modern Way to Become Your Own Landlord"
1,2and3ROOMS ~~ -
Kitchenette and Bath
NEW HOUSES
140 BRADHURST AVENUE
141 ‘WEST 144th STREET
141 WEST 139th STREET
115 WEST 141st STREET °
110 WEST 140th STREET
150 WEST 140th STREET
109 WEST 139th STREET
203 WEST 145th STREET
300 WEST 152d STREET
UPTON CONSTRUCTION CORP.
209 West 145th Street
Agent on Premises Brad, 5360
Three Notables Receive
Rosenwald Fellowships
CHICAGO, May 24 (ANP).—A re-
cent announcement from the office
of the president of the Rosenwald
Pund states that three scholars have
been awarded fellowships to pursue
advanced studies in Europe.
“Those who are to profit from the
Rosenwald benefaction are Dr. E. E.
Just of Howard University: Willis J.
King, professor at Gammon Theo-
logical Seminary, Atlante, Ga. and
Biss Augusta Savage, sculptor of New
York City. 7
A. Phi A. Awards
Ten Scholarships
‘WASHINGTON, June 24. — The
Scholarship Commission of the
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity _an-
nounced Saturday through its chatr-
man, Emory B. Smith of Howard
University, the award of ten §100
scolarships, ‘Those receiving the
‘scholarships include three ftes
women, a native African, and two
members of the fraternity.
Tuskegee and’ Hampton
Get Corliss Bequests
PROVIDENCE, R. I. June 22—
Tuskegee Normal ‘School and Indus-
trial Institute, Tuskegee, Als., and
the Hampton Normal and Agricul.
tural Institute, Hampton, Va... wil
receive bequests by the will of Maria
L, Corliss, daughter of | George, L.
Corliss, manufacturer of the Corliss
engine. Hampton gets. $25,000 and
‘Tuskegee gets $20,000. Each’ bequest
Held for Alleged
Assault on Officer
Patrolman Pendergrass Hit
With Stove Leg Follow=
ing Family Row
James Hughes, 53, accused of as~
saulting a police officer at his home,
318 West 134th street, Sunday after-
noon following an altercation with
his son-in-law, was arraigned Mon-
day in Hleghts Court before Magis-
trate Flood and held in $1,500 bail on
a charge of felonious assault and in
$500 bail for violation of the Sullivan
law, and the case set for @ further
hearing next Tuesday.
‘The old man was fighting with his
son-in-law and threatened him with
'@ razor, it Js sald, because of alleged
mistreatment of ‘his daughter, who
is about to become a mother, Some-
one called in Patrolman John L.
Pendergrass of the West 135th street
station and, as soon as he sppeared
on the scene Hughes is sald to have
struck him full in the face with a
stove leg.
‘The officer subdued Hughes with
difficulty, as the latter Js tall, well
built and strong. An ambulance
physician was called from Harlem
Hospital to treat scalp wounds on
Hughes and to treat the swollen face
‘and contusions of the body of Pen-
dergrass, who reported off duty for
the rest of the day. The disturbance
occurred about 3p, m. The patrol-
man barely missed having his eye
knocked out,
DE PRIEST TO NAME
YOUTHS TO ACADEMY
‘WASHINGTON, June 24.—Con-
greasman Oscar DePriest will name
two more candidates and alternates
for entrance to the United States
Naval Academy, he announced
Thursday, following the fallure of
Charles E. Weir to pass the physical
test because of eye trouble,
‘When the mental tests were made,
in April, one candidate failed to ap-
pear for the examination and an-
other failed, Welr, an alternate,
passed with @ high rating. Mr. De-
Priest characterized the physical test
gs "eminently fair.”
is in memory of the testatrix’s fa-
ther.
First Annual Institute
Of Religion Meets
BUCK HILL FALLS, Pa., Sune 24
—Leaders of Protestant church life in
America assembled here at the calt of
the Christian Herald in the first an-
nual Institute of Religion and spent
three days in full discussion of the
problems of unity of the Protestant
Chureh denominations, ‘The confer-
ence was entertained at the delightful
resort Hotel, Buck Hill Inn.
Among the delegates were, Dr. and
Mrs. T.-H. Copeland of Hopkinsville,
Ky., of the Colored Methodist Epis-
copal Church, and Dr. George E.
Haynes of New York, secretary of the
Commission on the Church and Race
Relations of the Federal Council of
Churches, +
Shaw Man on Faculty
Of Pa. Medical School
‘PHILADELPHIA, June 24—Among
the many races represented on the
faculty of the University of Pennsy!-
varia Medical School ss Dr. James &
Mattin. Dr. Martin is a graduate of
the Leonard Schools of Medicine and
Pharmacy of Shaw University, He
holds ‘the chair of radiology in the
Pennsylvania Medical School.
South Carolina Wants
Tillman Monument
COLUMBIA, 8. C., June 24 (A. N.
P)—Negroes are looking askance at
White Man Says He
Was Flogged as Peon
ATHENS, Ga., June 24—How 2
twenty-eight-year-old white man with
a wife and four children was held in
servitude on a Webster County pea-
nut plantation by W."D. Arnold, also
white, was described here last Wed-
nesday by the alleged victim, Claude
King, of Preston, who is held in the
Clarke County jail es a material wit-
‘ness in @ Federal indictment against
Arnold.
‘King charges that Arnold not only
refused to pay him for his services,
other than to give him $250 weekly
for provisions and @ house in which
to live, but that when he went to a
neighboring town several months ago
to make arrangements for the flight
of his family from the alleged peon-
age farm Arnold followed him,
brought him back to the plantation
and caused him to be floged while
being held by Tucker Bronner and
Jordan Heywood. Bronner, Heywood
and the man who did the flogging
are colored.
Husband Given 8 to 20
Vears in Wife’s Death
‘Pleading guilty to the fatal stab-
bing. of -his pretty, young estranged
wile, Fred Flood, 28, 304 West, 134th
street, was sentenced to eight to
twenty years in the penitentiary
yesterday by the Court of’ General
Sessions.
Sentence was imposed by Judge
Otto A. Rosalsky after the accused
man retracted his innocence plea
Mrs, Lottie Flood, 21, 526 Lenox ave-
nue, was stabbed’ by her mate Apri
11 and died the following day i
Harlem Hospital.
Patrolman Cooper of the Sixteentt
Precinct came upon the scene of th
altercation, disarmed and arrestec
the slayer,
. SPECIAL!!
For Two Weeks Only
Wiring of Five-Room Apart
ment, Complete With
Fixtures
$42.00
Gparanteed Service
SAMUEL WESTERFIELD
‘Licensed Flecivical Contractor
2881 SEVENTIE AVE,
iM Phone Martem 4754
Real Estate
Now Open for Colored
ELEVATOR APARTMENTS
2-3-4 and 5 ROOMS
BEST LOCATION IN HARLEM
REASONABLE RENTALS
Apply Premises --- 1867 Seventh Ave.
os NEEWAT EENTING 0. I
the efforts of Governor Richards to
have the State erect a monument to
the memory of the late Benjamin
Ryan Tillman, an avowed Negro-
phobist, who according to the state-
ment of the governor, was largely re-
sponsible for the present Democratic
primary law and custom through
which " Negroes are virtually dis-
franchised in South Carolina.
5 Rooms to Let, 305 West 116th St,
All improvements: newly decorat-
edt 2 Moliciat elevator aparcment
Rouse: $100" Her month, AVDIy
H.C. & Le 1, DUNSTON
72 West 12d Street Fudge, 7240
| nanan
7-ROOM APARTMENTS
Panelled and Stippled Walls
In Ivory and Buff Colors
Enameled Kitchen and
Bathroom
Rent $68 to $75
MANHATTAN AVE,
(Cor. 11st St.)
Will rent only to select tenants
Apply Supt, on Premises
Or Phone University 1909
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
5 Rooms; Alf Improvements:
Steam Heat; Newly Remodeled;
S45 to $50.
1952 PARK AVE.
Corner 132d Street.
ee
—$—SS—S—S—S
APT. FOR RENT
240 W. 122d STREET
7 Extra Large Rooms and
Bath; Cheap Rent
Concession
SSS
FOR SALE
15 & 204amlly apartment houses.
Private houses, $1,500 up, 136th
139th Ste.
LUCILLE EDWARDS
2196 Seventh Ave.
Phone Edgecombe 3089
———
———— SS
Bail Bonds Broker
INSURANCE €
JAMES W. PETERS
REAL ESTATE
340 WEST 18th ST.
Omce Prone Bradhurst 6052
Residence Phone Hradhurat 1608
‘Residence 208 West 1g1at Street
APARTMENT HOUSE
Income $0 Price $25,500
ATLA : Pas se P,
Now Open
ELEVATOR |
2-3-4 and
BEST LOCATIC
REASONABI
Apply Premises --
NEUWAY REI
1895 SEVENTH AVE.
Cozy, Newly Decorated
4-Room Apartments
For refined colored people, with
white sinks, gas, electric
and hot water
FRONT AND REAR, $28-$25
423 W. 53rd St.
Inquire on Premises, or
Kissling, 690 8th Ave, N. ¥. C.
Large Unfurnished Room at
2282 Seventh Avenue
2 Rooms at 48 West 136th St.
For Light Housekeeping
Neatly Furnished Room at
100 West 118th St.
For Respectable People
For Information Call
EDGECOMBE 6022
7-Room Apts.
Paneiied and Stinsted Watis
Wn erg and Hut Calne
Enameled Rlichen and Wathroom
RENT $68 TO $75
- Manhattan Ave.
(Cor, 18 KL
WHE rent onty to select tenonts
Manly: Santa on Feemiers
Or Phone University 1909 |
Apartments
. 321 Edgecombe Avenue
; ate ae Ui. on
; ae tay cM
A most magnificent cle- SERN Gieue Senne:
vator apartment erected (ExRSm col Cee eeaey ore
on the highest part of .¥ Pita wee cf she Pr eae
upper Harlem, overlook- eee ee ies ee hia
ing .Colonial Park and ee eee Ce) eae eran
commanding a magnifi- [ea eocie ere] soem |
cent panoramic view of fees Ba ae a eoitee :
the Eastern part of the (== ee peels ‘
City. Se See
. i ee
age SS ‘
HOUSEKEEPING APARTMENTS IN SUITES OF j
1-2-4 ROOMS
KITCHENETTE AND BATH 3
"The following are some of the outstanding conveniences: i
FRIGIDAIRE---Electric refrigeration. i
KERNERATOR INCINERATORS. 4
OTIS ELEVATORS --- Two of the latest types, fully collective’
and automatic, 4
INTER-COMMUNICATING TELEPHONES AND DOOR IN-4
TERVIEWERS. 4
|
267 Edgecombe Avenue
1-2-3 ROOMS 4
KITCHENETTE AND BATH - ;
FO EER ee 4
For Rent
DESIRABLE APARTMENTS, SMALL AND LARGE
Newly Decorated — All improvements
RENTS VERY REASONABLE
Desirable Central Locations
APPLY:
TERRY HOLDING COMPANY, Inc. :
2380 Seventh Ave. Tel. Audubon 3073
Apartments to Let.
181 W. 138th St—6 rooms, all improvements, 5th floor east, $65,
137 Edgecombe Ave.—Steam, electric, bath and hot water, 5 rooms, $55,
1k W. 114th St.—Steam, electric, bath and hot water, 6 rooms, $55.
2429 8th Ave.—Hot water, bath and clectric, 5 rooms, $35 and $40,
66 W. 138th St.—Electric, hot water, 3 rooms, $26.
1985 7th Ave—T private rooms; all improvements; $75 and $85,
110 E. 97th St—Steam, electric, bath, hot water, $38 and $40.
144 W. 124th St—Hot water, clectric, 4 rooms, $35.
149 Edgecombe Ave—4 private Tooms, all conveniences; $55,
113 W. 134th St—Hot Water, bath and electric, 5 rooms, $35.
88 W. 134th St.—Bollers, Tanges, and electric, 5 rooms, $40.
.
JNO. M. ROYALL
21 West 134th Street, New York City
Tel, Harlem 3565 §
APT. FOR RENT
222-6 East Séth St, near 3d Ave.
3 Nice Rooms, Newly Renovated
Cheap Rent
MONTH FREE
———————
Teivate houses, it belek three fur~
mont ‘holuser, a fel, “ail improve:
ments,” full “rented. ° good" inveat~
Tents. $5,000 eamb, Taeation : Seve
enth Avanie, St. Nicholas Place, 133
Streot, Ta0th Street. “Apply
J. B. JOHNSON
382 LENOX AVENUE
‘Harlem $037
© - 7"
Phone EDGECOMBE 5252 . For Quick-and Satisfactory Service Cal j
3 4
GORDON REID'S EXPRESS & MOVING VANS «
201 West 130th St,, Cor. Seventh Ave.
ee : = - No JOB 4
2 - | T0004
APART. [2:'7 _— me Agana oe 4
MENTS | ee cae aaa . a Hi
370s | acerca ay “| NO
PER ROOM | Ge se a £| * LARGE ;
_ PIANOS Sn ee —
EXTRA re ae eb aia
is a as Ee > DAILY
— ee ean TRIPS
TRUNKS as Ar STATIONS
MOVED ; ) ‘AND
FROM “a j re STEAM:
$1.00 UP * : . si SHIP
= PIERS ;
Why Not Have a Responsible Firm Remove Your Furniture for the Same Price? “
iii oe ee ee is
NEW YORK AMSTERDAM NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1929 NINETEEN
; — Real Estate — Finance — Mortgages — Investments -:
ee AUCTION SALE
Sice—\-> —1-Family House, Plot 20x10
‘To Be Sold on the Premises
IFARGHER) 166.07 107th AVENUE
AVEPORNECE COR, CARMAN PLAGE
(Old Number, 17 Sampson Street)
JAMAICA, N. Y.
One Block From Merrick Road
Saturday, June 29th, 1929, at 4 P.M.
'6-Room House, Bath, Ail Improvements
past arate
For Further Particulars Address
T. F. ARCHER & SONS, Auctioneers
150-06 Jamaica Avenue, Jamaica, N. Y. Phone: JAMalca 0660
Why Live in New York
Wheri There Is a New 38-Family Apartment House
Now Renting at 111-17 NORTHERN BLVD.,
Corner 112th St., CORONA
s Overlooking the Bay, With 1, 3, 4 and 5-room apartments
Inquire on Premises or Phone Flushing 8094
Directions: Take B.-M. T. or I. R. T. Trains to Corona, get
off at 111th St. and walk 4 blocks to Northern Blvd.
JAMAICA HOMES —- 5, 6 & 7 ROOMS
SMALL PAYMENTS
| BALANCE LIKE RENT
R. B. LIGHSTON
REAL ESTATE EXCHANGED
HOUSES BUILT RENTS COLLECTED
Free Auto Service
145-17 GHOBE AVENUE, JAMAICA. N. ¥. ~ Republic 7496 -
Now Renting -
TOUSSAINT HALL
208 WEST 151st STREET Near 7th Avenue
Elevator Apartments
14—2%4%—3% ROOMS
: Sos hee TEE LCE Pe
| (Pisa) ts bak ce
Mik cca i
.» EVERY MODERN CONVENIENCE PROVIDED FOR SELECT TENANTS
Ready for Occupancy July, 1929
Sofmar Holding Corporation
Phone Bradhurst 5360 AGENT ON PREMISES
WOMAN SCHEMER GETS
TERM IN CHECK GAME
Nettle Smith, 31, 221 West 122d
street, who used to work as a do-
mestic and Inter found it more ar-
uous than playing the confidence
game, was sentenced Monday to an
indeterminate period in the pent-
tentiary by the Court of Special Ses-
sions.
| The woman pleaded guilty a week
before to securing $30.60 for:
‘Thomas Turner, an undertaker, by
the simple method of giving a worth-
Jess check in exchange. She went
to various Harlem undertakers and
posed as a bereaved woman making
Preparations to bury a relative. A
half dozen fell for the scheme within
a few days,
, New Rent Law Scored as
) Useless to Needy Class
tmoreats of “rent strike and
charges that the recently passed
emergency rent law does ngt give
tengnts the benefit of any practical
protection were heard Monday night
a the auditorium of the West 135th
street branch’ Public Library as the
| Harlem Tenants’ League met with
300 persons in attendance. .
| Richard B. Moore, president of the
organization, declared that the new
aw Offered no protection to thou-
sands of poor Harlem tenants, who
are already paying more than $15 2
room per month. Renters whose
apartments fall under the new mu-
nicipal ordinance are forced to bear
all the brunt of the fight to keep
rents down, he said, and there is
nothing in the bill favorable to needy
and unorganized persons.
‘The league issued a call Monday
night for an intensive drive to or-
ganize house and block committees
‘throughout Harlem. Linked with
jother tenants’ organizations in the
city, the Harlem group expects to re-
fuse any increases after a city-wide
conference early next month.
OWN YOURE OWN
HOME!
5 DOWN WILL
START YOU
alse Your Own
Chickens and
Vegetables
Own sour own Home, at New Bruns.
wick, "N. dy a big city with over £6
factories ‘abd. plenty of work with |
508 pay. Homes duflt $50.00 down,
Htooo monthly ready. vo move in’
Song Wednesday” evening Upto 'E
"Write or call for particulars, |
HENRY J. FRANKLIN,
1b PARK ROW, NEW YORK
Room 423 Phone Barciay 6235
Mr. & Mrs, Rent Payer
‘De you intend to pay’ your landlord
Pry high rent all the days of your
AEE ERG ASERS Oh We ira:
Stop Paying Rent
Own Your Own, Home
wi sna aoe erat ae
Your “ona tandlora. Let. me prove
mm & Ett | Fer fall particulars,
EMANUEL LAIDLEY
Real Estate
_. “AUG West 135th Street
Beadhurst 6737
Steward and Crew Commended
et el a, 2S tie ane oe
Pe yo Be ee ae
i) iy @ Beg. 8
ee ot es A ee RP 1 Ge 8 we
Ae gey * Sita: Bites, 28 Baker ft wd ng
OU aero lag es RR I. i
fo E oe i 4 : Paes eu ‘ i
= a
Labor Federation Head | cared for General Motors as
Fe dean Brotherhood| Cet, for General Motors Invactment-- .
William Green, president of the
American Federation of Labor, will
speak under auspices of the Brother-
hood of Sleeping Car Porters a!
Abyssinien Baptist Church, 138th
street. near Seventh avenue, at 3 p.
m, Sunday, according to ‘an an-
nouncement Saturday by A. Philip
Randolph, president of the porters
union.
‘The address will be the first of a
series to be made by the labor head
In the interest of the Pullman work-
ers. ‘The porters’ organization Is af-
filsted with the national labor body
and President Green has thrown his
}whole strength wehind the move-
ment. ‘This will be one of the few
times he has planned a speaking
tour for any union,
‘Local charters have been granted
by the Federation to sixteen local
untons and plays are under way for
setting up five more before Sept, 15,
when delegates will meet in Chicago
for application for an international
charter.
Immigration Quotas
Remain Unchanged
_ WASHINGTON, D. C., June 24.—
‘The Smmigragion ‘quotes’ which ‘will
be effective July 1 under the national
origins system will not aflect the
number of darker peoples to be ad-
mitted annually from any nation or
geographical area, it is shown by the
rosiamation of | President Hoover
putting the new system in force,
Cared for General Motors
Export Party on 13=
Day Tour
W. C. Lewls, steward-in-charge,
who {5 shown standing at the ex-
treme left, and this crack crew af
Pullman porters, waiters and chefs,
are being highly commended for
their service by the General Motors
Export Gorporation, © subsidiary of
the motor ‘car manufacturing con-
cern. Steward Lewis commanded
this corps on a thirteen-day tour of
General Motors’ plants and not only
received the plaudits of J. D. Moo-
rey, president of the export division,
‘but was also presopted: a beautiful
wrltiag set bearing, the insignis, of
Cadillac when the tour ended June
15 at Gand Central station. Repre-
eentatives of all foreign ‘branches
‘were in the party.
All the men were picked for thetr
efficiency in private service. ‘Assist-
ed by J. W. Slaughter, -chef-in-
charge, and six crews, Mr. Lewis ai-
reeted ‘the nine-car train over the
entire route, He hes been in. the
service since 1902 and has worked as
steward-In-charge of personal: ser-
vice: for eighteen years. He lives ay
1947 Seventh avenue. i
Pictured, left to right, kneeling,
are: CO, erg waiter; D. “oH,
Brown, chef; J. C. Cooper, porter;
J. D, Mooney (standing). ©. Noyes,
Waiter; “Ty £./Wernham,. walter; G.
Watkins, chef; standing, W.:C..Lew-
is, steward-in-charge: G. C. Mack,
waiter; W. Brown, waiter; M. H. Als-
ton, porter; G. W. Fenn, porter: A.
Dorsey; chef; C. Poe, porter; W. D.
Robinson, porter; O, A. Tolbert,
waiter; A. E. Kenny, chef; G. W.
Murrel, chef; N. Hi. Goleman, speciat
chef to Mr. Mooney; G. W. Slaugh-
ter. chef-tn-charge; H. P. Darden,
porter, and J. H. Simpson,
Hold Laboratory Mgr. as
Unlicensed Practitioner
Charged with practising medicine
without @ license, Ronald R. Felix,
39, & laboratory manager, 168 West
128th street, was held in $500 bail for
@ further hearing when arraigned
last Wednesday before Magistrate
(Qodge in Harlem Court,
Felix was arrested on @ warrant
issued by Chief Magistrate McAdoo,
on complaint of Detective Riberts of
inspector Ryan’s staff.
‘The detective alleges in his com-
plaint that he visited Felix in his
|otice on June 12. The latter he
caid represented himself as being a
angst ‘and after paying him $5
was examined and received treat-
(ment, Felix, the detective said, in-
‘formed him that the treatments
would cost $9 a treatment, and that
‘before he left he was given a bottle
‘nama quid.
°
Boy Swimmer Goes
Down in Hudson
| = |
‘White Youth’s Heroism
| Fails to Save Dunbar
| Apartment Resident
| _As late as Sunday afternoon the
drowned body of 12-year-old Atbert
Saunders, whose address was report-
red as the Dunbar Garden Apert-
ments, 246 West 150th street, had not
been found, ‘The police dragged the
Hudson River at the foot of 185th
street.
. ‘The boy lost his life ‘Thursday
| when cramps selzed him just after he
had plunged into the water to take
‘a swim with several other boys.
Herolsmn Faits.
‘I've got the cramp,” Saunders
yelied. “Come out and get mo.” ‘The
swift current caused the other chil-
‘dren to hesitate in going to the boy's
assistance. However, Michael Ryan,
18, white, B15 West 160th street, near
Broadway, heard the boy's cries'as he
was standing on the dock, and, quick-
ly shedding his outer clothing. Ryan
‘plunged into the river. The helpless
lad was now far out into the river.
As Ryan reached the boy's side,
‘Saunders, frenzied with fear and the
pain of the cramp, seized Ryan about
jthe neck and wrapped his legs about
‘his body. The white boy struggled
to free himself, trying at the same
time to hold on to Saunders, In
freeing himself Ryan lost his grip on
the boy, who ‘was immediately carried
out of his reach by the current,
Saunders went down before Ryan
oculd reach him again.
Investment --- .
What It Means
| It is a conceded fact that no one
can work, earn and save enough ever
aeridente Bi see sre
e.
wealth have saved and tavested ‘ver
period of ‘whereby an income
is created and passed “on to thelr
‘heirs and assigns.
But, for investment to be success-
fal and profitable, it must ‘be. wisely
and carefully made in stocks of insti-
Miding pepmanente, safety, pind el,
spprectation-ana Piont. to the ine
‘The investor, it can be.seen readily.
nof only ‘profs as a stockholder Bet
participates in. the distribution of
prsapersty, and is an asset to human
ety. ait .
The American Banker states: “Be-
fore George Washington died he sd-
vised “his executors to invest in bank
stocks.” If his executors had invested
in elther tho.Bank of New York or
the Bank of North America (two of
the three"American banks at the time
of his death), his. heirs would stil
hold: that:investment today. They
ould have & much larger number of
shares than” were iginally -pur-
chased and their value would be
many’ times'-the: origingl investment.
Tt would be diMeult to pick another
cass of security {hat could-have-been
ased125 years ago and profita-
By held throughout a that period,
such’ a record ustnes the, view of
many le, if one can no -
ter than invest in such a security.”
Marriage ‘Licenses
Issued Last Week
Baldwin, Benjamin, 283 Washingtor
treet, Jamaicn, L. 1.: ties Gladys
Gordon, 252 West 133d street,
Belgrara, Ardon, 311 West 1434 street.
Miss Sarah Thomas, same address.
Bernien, Eugene. 605 West 16lat street
Mins Lemore Jenkins, sume addréss.
Bisten, Edwin, 2302 Seventh avenue
Mion Sing. Wright, same address,
‘Borer, Joseph. 1916 Thirty-aixth ‘ave
nue: Sirs Elnora Brown, 2160 Fitth
avenue, ‘ *
Bradly, James, 67 West 124th street
‘Mius' Anna Burge, 261 “West 129th
ireot. ie
Juyrd, Stanford 201 West 130th street:
‘Mies Grace Reddick, 256 West 136th
rect.
carter, Wesley, 2138 Eighth avenue:
Biles’ Eslyn Griftith, 226: West 162d
street.
Cinyton, Finus, 6 Patchen place; Bites
‘Amanda Orr, same address. ‘
[Do Tan Cru, Rafael, 1346 Fitth avenite
Mins Minnie Cole, 100 West 139th
Mreet.
Dickerson, Phylie, 3 Went. 136th
aireet ; ‘Miss Elennora Rogers, same
address.
Edwarde, John, 156 West 120th -street :
Mise Evn Lowe, 195 West 1224 street.
Farrelly, Ralph, 9 Bast 117th street;
Miss Teen Jnekson, same address.
Field, Samuel, 39 West 128th ntreet;
Mlsn Dorothy Banke, 189 West 142d
street,
Gaskell, Icon, 404 Putnam avenue,
Brooklyn; Miss Mabel Cash, 144 West
329th street.
Gathers, Arthur, 1983 Park avenue:
‘Max Jennie Willams, 42 East 139d
street.
Goedwin, Hampton, 147 West 143d
mtreets/Aiiss Mary Barnwilj, 1 West
137th strect,
Halford, Frank, 168 West tint ntreet
‘Ming ‘Bario Walker, 106 West 23ist
nirect.
Hamiltop, Robort, 15 West 1354 street\
Mex Luin Bowman, 7 East 18tst
street.
Heblett, Aiba, 238 West 148th street
Mine ‘Ginays Alleyne, 236 West 1224
niree! 3
Houghton, Emnost, 216 Went 1434 atreet
‘Ming J. Denson, 211 West 145th strect.
Jeffers, Gerald, 34 Weat 126th street
‘Mins’ Christine Hawking, 125° West
11th ntreet,
Jemmott, Conrad, 249 Went 140th ntreet ;
‘Mine Bertha Hickson, 203 West 128th
street.
Jennings, Reginald, 310 Went 1534 street;
Bias Teadora Smith, same address,
JJoner, Armand, 70 Wert 121m street ;
‘Miss Ethelina Taylor, 2919 Eighth ave-
nue.
Knotts, Willlam, 161 West 136th street :
Bisa’ Deanle' Cammon, 321 Edge:
combe avenve,
Loeb, Ralph, 217 Went 1494 street ; MUxr
BMargaret Jackson, 38 West idist
nireet. "7
Lomax, William, 145 West Ninety-olghth
wirect: Miss Allee Cooper, 73 Bart
148th streot.
McCutcheon, “Harvey, 387 Edgecombe
avenue; Mies Mary Young, 269 Went
7324 street.
Mears, Robert, 041 Leggett avenue,
‘Bronx; Miss’ Viola Hicks, 202 West
1asth street.
Meyers, Otto, $31 West 145th atreot
“Mian Elmere “Williams, 101-A West
| 196th atreet,
‘Ming, Wille, 127 West t¢int strect ; Ales
Marie Trent, 101 West 140th alreet,
Monroe. Dan, 2449 Elehth avenue: Mins
Tin Mecloud, 101 ‘West 135th
sireet.
Muldgon, Solomon, 215 Pershing ave-
100,000 Shares «
BANKERS NATIONAL INVESTING CORPORATION
Common Stock Class A a
_, (Without Par Value). 3
FIDELITY TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORK
% ‘Transfer Agent
| ~ IRVING TRUST COMPANY, NEW YORK
: SAL ae, k Reristrar
BUSINESS: Bankers National Investing Corporation has been
formed under the laws of Delaware to buy, sell, underwrite,
offer and gencfelly deal in diversified corporation, govern-
mental and other securities of all kinds, including securities of
soundly managed commercia) banks and other financial {n-
stitutions in selected communities, The management of the .
Comey a the field of industri loans and i 1s belleved that”
e
| securities of corporations engaged in this field may be acquired *
from time to time at attractive prices. The Company, when ©
advantageous opportunities are presented, will purchase securi-
tles from interests with which it is affiliated and from persons
connected with such interests er with the management of ©
the Company. The Company will thus afford to its stock-
holders the means to participate {n diversified investpent and
financial opportunilies not ordinarily available to them as
individuals, .
Price on Application
‘A. Kay Devine-& Co., Inc. :
535 5th Avenue, New York City
$e tet
A Deal with the Fellatio
i Harlem
: Mortgage Corp.
1472 Broadway
Suite 1114
NEW YORK CITY
Tel, Sryant 6636
a ra me |
Ree ae ges 4
: Dues es ft , 24
ESS Seamless caen 4
Geo ox he =
Joa (ae :
rede pinsta
alte Hs
= re
aries
Scivatan Te
| FOR SALE _ SPLERAD ONE-FAMILY DWELLING
LOCATION: Lincoln Agenue, >
LOTR MPa AL tap
SHEE SE SU “aa feet ah fet,
ERT Sed bese] sincor aitg tain, Tints marek tony,
ENaC ERE RL GBS" Sore Gatun ibe aotieiee ilie ltchen,
| Banter Gruiee rnetare, tele st weest material wader’ personal
pans t BUOBIT ThPzstenteanessenetored. porch; 30 x28. entice trent of
Bente tmuramer and Mene ‘of Bricks Foyer Amit with solld walle oak
Malt icauin to"aueond Hoot,
Hise tem artes ee
Eltchen, ited Seailas erga. comblnation coal end pas range, :
| With fon ang tailet, aanary. Y
SECOND FLOOR: Hat} with stairs fo third oor,
Breese parehs 10 adr faelon Heat wirecte
fiifresit Wied wats and oor, balt-tn tan, medicine chest, petestat
IRD FLOOR: Tro be A yaer for nt be
BANA TERM ReATNR, Ma EELS NE coer, vet
GARAGE! Fwo-sar earape, same constraction ax houre, facing rear streets
THRER MINUTES WAT TO ATREET CAR
WulNites role LRs R. STATION .
Sereens. awnings and note enh for aii windows. Flowers, sreen, shrabe,
SiaperarSorss ensifad innns. "Steam nest, automata Ret ater
PRICE Meets ge aiatd, held hy Tile C
TEBASE Buby cna Ms BIS Be Tie Compans.
46-17 SHORE AVE. JAMAICA, L. 1, N. ¥-
nue, Newark, No 3.3 Biles Luellie
| Soils. 639 ‘Letiox avenue,
Perry, Lee, 315 West Ninety-aevanth
| "uereets Bitwe Liltian Robey, 2362 Ninth
| _avenve.
Piner, Atmold, 308 West 124th street
J Stes Startle Lou Pitts, 60 West 1301
| treet.
Reece, Morton, 225 West 149th strest
Mint Enid Philliys, 680 St, Nichola
| avenue.
‘ Rlck, ‘Edward, 25% Seventh avenue
Mins Elin Hawthorn, 2330 Seventt
avenue.
Resyuss, Donald, 111 West 197th street
Sales tae Wichardson, 126 West 21%
street zi
Reynoliv, Melbourne; 110. West 1280
Mrect:' Minw Alberta, Brown, 686
Nichoing avenue. +
Ronch, Willinm, 600° St Nicholas. ave
‘nue; Biles Luther Farrell, same ad
ross.
Sauideré, Willan, 911 Weat 145th street,
Stlaw Siltdred SicAtpin, 208 Went 146
street.
Satehell, David, 65 Weat 130th street:
Ditin Gertrude Briscoe, 8 West Ninety
nbnh street.
Schutterbratslt, Ernest, 23% West 14
Street; alles’ Lidra Schakleten, sami
ndaress,
Sliughter, Rolando, 267 West . 199th
‘rect Mlxs Gwendolyn Romondt, 15
Went iitst stzeet.
smurke, Harves, 231 West ist street;
Minn ‘Fodelia ‘Tetley, 281 West Mla
nireet. :
Tonster, Banlly 619 St, Nicholas averiue;
Mins Hallio Venn, same address.
Wallnce, Joseph, 269 West 156th street
‘Miss ‘Lillian Loniax, samo addres,
Waterman, Charles, 242) West 122
street; Atlee Viola Jordan, 301 Wes
160th street
Weston, John, 229 West i2lat_atreet:
Mlse Violn” Xing, 136 West 2260
treet. 5
White, Charles, 30 Wost 195th street;
Sites Theresa’ West, sume address,
willams, Nathaniel, 219° East, 421th
treet; 3ites Hattie Smith, 23 Enst
Libth street. :
wiillamt, Lonnle, 206 West 128th atreet:
Sse Harriet” Daughty, 222 Wes
Forty-sixih street.
Wiltshire, Carlton, 222 West , 111tn
fatreot; Slss Beatrice Stewart, 660 St
Nichoins avenue.
Wright, Simon, Jit West 149th street:
Sites Louvinia Bentley, 133 West 245th
| ee
Bar Examinations Today
Aspirants for admission to the New
York Bar will face examinations to-
day and tomorrow at the Main
Building, 100 East,. Washington
square, and at the Commerce Build.
ing, 48 West Fourth street, both of
New York University. :
Harlem Property
Sold for Million
Edward W. Browning Gets
Tidy Sum at Apart-
ment Sale -
Harlem properties of Edward W.
Browning sold last week at an auc:
Yon in Medison’ Square Garden
brought $939,780, it was announced
by Joseph P. Day, chief auctioneer.
‘The entire sale of fifteen parcels
brought $2,633,000.
‘The lst included the following:
Convent avenue and 150th street,
ceetwent corner, Brew oe
asement brick apartment, to W.
Dryspool, $89,500.
| Bradhurst avenue and 146th street,
southeast comer, with 8 Bradhurst
ayenue and 204 West 146th street, tc
‘Bred Horling, 968 Convent avenue,
$228,000. y
Seven-story brick, elevator spatt-
ment at St, Nicholas avenue and
116th street, to J, D. Boylan, $288,000,
‘Three alx-story apartments at 5-6
East 14th street, to Jobn J. Lilly,
$109,250.
Six-story elevator apartment at
54-56 East 120th atreet, to W. 8. Tor~
mey, $79,000. :
‘Two six-story apartments at 16-17
and 19-21 West 133d street, to F. J,
Mullen, $146,000.
‘Other Sales Reported.
Other sales last week include:
Stratford — spertments, 103-100
Lenox avenue and 101 West. 118th
street, by the 105 Lenox. Avenue Cor-
poration to Central City Exfates, Inc,
‘Two seven-story. houses at | 2002
and 2008 Fifth avenue, by Elizabeth
Miller to H. W, 8, Ino.
Four-story dwelling at 33 West
138d street, resold to Mrs, Jane F.
Benjamin, 103 West 148d street.
Block front on north side of West
198th strect between St. Nicholas and
Edgecombe avenues,” to Bankers
‘Trust Company for $20,000,
EDITORIAL PAGE
Published every Wednesday by The Amsterdam News (a corporation), 2238
seventh Avenue, New York. William H. Davis, President and General Manager,
James H. Davis, President and General Manager, $30. ADVERTISING RATES, $2.00 per year in the United States; foreign, $30. ADVERTISING RATES UPON REQUEST.
Address all communications and make all checks and money orders payable only to The New York Amsterdam News, 2293 Seventh Ave.-New York City.
Wednesday, June 26, 1929
Wherever possible Trade With Stores in Harlem That Do Not Practice Discrimination in the Selection of Their Employees.
Wherever possible Trade With Stores in Harlem That Do. Not Practice Discrimination in the Selection of Their Employees.
Dual Leadership
JUNE, 1923, Robert S. Conklin, of the Twenty-first A. D. Republic, note, notified members of the commission authorized by a resolution to design and woman as additional associate executive committee, and designated B. L. and Miss Sadie F. Wright. The I had voice but no vote in the committee, and in its issue of July 4, 1923, News had the following to say: The Negro leaders of the district are entitled to privileges given leaders of other racial groups two or more races reside, and should accey are entitled to a half vote in the executive and should be left free to cast this half vote fit to cast it, whether or not it is to the tenth of the white leader.
WHAT TIME the Twenty-first Assoc. about evenly divided as to the number of white county committeeemen, electives. The Appomattox Republican Amsterdam News were the sole sponsorship proposition, which if enacted have been an equitable arrangement in the district. But on June 17, 1923, Negig and other members of the Committee ignored the petition of the district and turned the dual vote down.
INTERVENING YEARS have a strange in the color of the Twenty-first, until at the present time there are 47 white members of the county district—a clear majority that by all the politics entitles the Negro to the tip of the entire district. But instead leadership of the district, and designate leaders, as was done back in Negig members of the county on Monday night for dual leadership had have had in 1923. And now they had to the executive membership of the only asked for half of it, Koenig and County Committee can be relied upon leadership and pass favorable ANY WONDER that with such in New York is so slow coming in. Is it any wonder that in a disdy colored that he is ignored in party stronage and given the status of a
IN JUNE, 1923, Robert S. Conklin, executive member of the Twenty-first A. D. Republican County Committee, notified members of the committee that he was authorized by a resolution to designate a colored man and woman as additional associate members of the executive committee, and designated Dr. Charles H. Roberts and Miss Sadie F. Wright. The members designated had voice but no vote in the executive county committee, and in its issue of July 4, 1923, The Amsterdam News had the following to say editorially: The Negro leaders of the district are entitled to the same rights and privileges given leaders of other racial groups in districts where two or more races reside, and should accept nothing less. They are entitled to a half vote in the executive county committee and should be left free to cast, this half vote in the way they see fit to cast it, whether or not it is to the interest or the detriment of the white leader.
AT THAT TIME the Twenty-first Assembly District was about evenly divided as to the number of colored and white county committeeeen, election districts and voters. The Appomattox Republican Club and The Amsterdam News were the sole sponsors of the dual leadership proposition, which if enacted at that time would have been an equitable arrangement of the situation in the district. But on June 17, 1925, Chairman Koenig and other members of the Republican County Committee ignored the petition of the Negro voters of the district and turned the dual leadership proposition down.
THE INTERVENING YEARS have seen quite some change in the color of the Twenty-first Assembly District, until at the present time there are 68 colored and 47 white members of the county committee of the district—a clear majority that by all the rules of the game of politics entitles the Negro to the executive membership of the entire district. But instead of taking the leadership of the district, and designating additional white leaders, as was done back in 1923 by Conklin, Negro members of the county committee voted last Monday night for dual leadership—a thing they should have had in 1923. And now that Negroes are entitled to the executive membership of the district, but have only asked for half of it, Koenig and the Republican County Committee can be relied upon to see merit in dual leadership and pass favorably upon it.
IS IT ANY WONDER that with such leadership the Negro in New York is so slow coming into his own politically? Is it any wonder that in a district overwhelmingly colored that he is ignored in party councils, denied patronage and given the status of a stepchild?
Boogaman!
HERBERT HOOVER'S tea party in the South. Southerners who voted lying at the mouth and the other Sig between curses to laugh at them. that the tea party has put the Hale of social recognition; some of playing for Negro votes. The
MRS. HERBERT HOOVER'S tea party continues to agitate the South, Southerners who voted for Hoover are foaming at the mouth and the other Southerners are pausing between curses to laugh at them. Southern papers say that the tea party has put the Hoovers beyond the pale of social recognition; some accuse the Hoovers of playing for Negro votes. The legislatures of Texas and Florida have passed resolutions condemning the President and his wife.
THE PICTURE of a backwoods "cracker" threatening the President of the United States with social ostracism is one of the best subjects for a cartoon that we have ever seen. It is like the rooster, Chanticleer, who believed that the sun rose because he crowed. Civilized people will find it hard to take the incident seriously.
ABOUT TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO President Roosevelt invited Booker T. Washington to lunch at the White House. This raised a greater storm than the one which now is centered about DePriest. In this case the Northern newspapers are defending and justifying the President's wife; in the Washington incident the President was censured by both North and South. As Dr. Washington was a private citizen the President could not be defended on the ground of official routine. Owen Wister, the famous author, said that the White House belonged to the citizens as well as to the President and that he had no right to insult them by misusing it. Wister forgot that the White House belongs to the Negro citizen as much as to anyone else.
AS THE HERALD-TRIBUNE pointed out, a black face at the White House is nothing new. Since the Civil War there have been twenty-one. Negro Congressmen and two Negro Senators, and all of them were re-
Letters to the Editor to be published under this heading should be plainly written on one side of the paper only, and should not exceed 280 words in length. Your full name and address must be given, although this information does not necessarily have to be printed.
received by the President. Black Haitian Ministers have been received at the White House by every administration, and even Woodrow Wilson received President King of Liberia.
THE SOUTHERNERS know all this. The suspicion grows, therefore, that they are using the DePriest incident as a scare. They wish to recapture the Southern Democrats who strayed from the fold last November; they are trying to make the South solid again. So they revive the old reliable political boogaman, the cry of race equality.
THE FINEST THING in the whole controversy is the statement of Congressman DePriest, who says that the talk of social equality is all moonshine, that his wife was asked to the White House merely as the wife of a Congressman. Mr. DePriest has proved that his constituents made no mistake when they sent him to Congress.
I AM taking the liberty of addressing you with reference to the appointment of a Negro representative on the Farm Board recently authorized by an act of Congress. It is generally believed that the proper functioning of the board will have far-reaching influence upon the agricultural and economic destiny of America. The issue between the agricultural and industrial elements has reached the state of acute irritation, whose efficient treatment calls imperatively for wise, constructive statesmanship. The country congratulates you upon your courage and firmness in handling this issue, which confirms our belief in you as master administrator and executive.
The Negro's destiny in this country, as was his beginning, is rooted and grounded in the soil. This is the one basic industry in which he is an essential factor. The farm offers him by far the best chance in which the weakest industrial rivalry, in which the weakest inevitably be forced to the wall.
The color bar is a bar sinister to the Negro as concerns city industries based upon machinery and organization. The uncontrollable law of race prejudice will permit him neither to compete nor to combine with the dominant white labor forces. In agriculture he is largely sheltered from this inexorable law of Aryan competition. The Negro should, therefore, be encouraged to sack for his salvation, as a mass, in the unopposed sphere of producing food and fiber to nourish and clothe the nation. He is forced to work at a disadvantage in all spheres of activity in which he may be engaged, but on the farm this relative disadvantage is reduced to a minimum.
Mother earth responds with equal readiness to the tickling by
QUESTIONS MOTIVE
This Correspondent Believes Expose Was to Favor Some Group. To the Editor of the Amsterdam News. Dear Sir;
After reading in today's issue of the Amsterdam News what I hope to be the last installment of the series of articles that seek to expose pharmacists that pay compulsory or prescriptions and physicians who accept the same, I am persuaded to believe that you are trying to favor some particular group of disgruntled pharmacists and physicians. I am led to this conclusion because-I refuse to believe that in all your years of journalistic experience, that the condition you write of has not been brought to your attention before, because you have many years, and is one of the many evils of pharmacy that all ethical pharmacists are fighting vallantly to destroy.
The Farm Board
AN OPEN LETTER TO MR. HOOVER
By KELLY MILLER
the black or white tiller. The mark
kets are color blind as to the com-
plexion of the producer. The Negro
should take over the farm as often
as the white man abandons it. The
Very unfortunately, the Negro is
in the raison d'etre of the
as concerns this blim
movement, Manufacture
transportation are und
trol of the monopoly
labor. The Negro, so far
THE BOSTON EDITOR
Kelly Miller
blindly imitating the white man in this mad cityward rush. They are both attracted alike by the glare of city allurements but the black arriver finds himself the more hopelessly delusioned by the enchantment.
The World War prolonged, for a while, the deluded hope of the Negro in competitive mechanical industries. A vacuum was created in the labor market and the Negro rushed in to fill the temporary demand. The increasing restrictions of immigration will serve to suspend his doom a little longer. But their normal state and the white labor fund becomes adequate to the demand, the black competitor will be pushed further and further down on the scale of desirable and remunerative employment.
There is an essential difference
based upon its cost and its value is determined by the consumer. Am I correct?
You have limited letters to 250 words, which makes it impossible to answer your articles completely, so in closing, since you seem so conversant with conditions within your articles, may ask you again to tell me through your valuable columns how one is to know a reliable drug store?
Respectfully yours,
(Signed) ARCHIE A. MILLER.
658 Berkerman street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
June 18, 1929.
GROVER WHALEN
Writer Says Commissioner Falls to
Practice: What He Preaches.
To the Editor of The Amsterdam News.
Dear Sir:
With great interest and amusement I read in the dailies of Police theahan's advice to the man of theahan's department on the subject of politeness.
The commissioner, sad, to say, gives advice which he himself fails to follow. At a meeting of the Forum, a student organization, at Teachers' College, Columbia University, to which Mr. Whalen came with questions for questioning serious breach of official elitque.
In answer to an inquiry about his attitude toward the third degree, Mr. Whalen described a visit which he had made to one of Harlem's police precincts. He and other members of his department had list a Negro in the custody of questioning concerning a hold-up, in which the Negro had taken part.
Commissioner "Whalen" stated that shortly after leaving the room, he heard groans, moans and screams. On opening the door of the room to determine the cause of the noises, the commissioner continued, he found that the "dirty nigger had knocked the policeman
in the raison d'etre of the two races as concerns this blind cityward movement. Manufacture, trade and transportation are under the confluence of labor. The Negro so far, has shown little developed aptitude for business and commerce. The rapid rise of the merger and the syndicate business, which frustrates the successful operation of all small concerns, adds gloom to the Negro to develop independent enterprise.
The saddest chapter in the history of Negro progress is disclosed by the last census, which reveals the decline of farm ownership and operation. The seeming increase in city holdings is a poor offset for this vital loss. The city Negro's possession consists all but wholly in home ownership, which is a dead asset without productive value. On the other hand, a farm represents a working tool whereby the owner is able to make a living for himself and family. The farm owner is his own proprietor and directs his own activities, whereas the urban Negro is merely a hired hand confined mainly to manual and menial forms of labor. If the Negro is to become habituated to self-proprietorship and the system and method of conducting business, he will be more likely to acquire both the knowledge and the knack by the orderly conduct of farming activities and more requiring skill, enterprise, than through the scant opportunity which an overshadowing city environment affords him.
I gather from various angles that your administration purposes to lay comparatively little stress on the race problem from the purely political point of view, but rather hopes to serve the Negro compre-
hensively by encouraging economic in his industrial and moral lot. Here, it seems, you have a strategic opportunity. The selection of a competent Negro man to serve on the Farm Board would go further to stimulate the mind of the race in the direction of its greatest usefulness to itself and the nation than the appointment of a dozen candidates as register of something, recorder of something else, assistant to BOOK
THE CAPTAIN'S DAUGHTER
Translated from the Russian by N
tion by Edward Garnett. The
WHEN a Russian is ask
expression of the n
answers: "Pushkin!"
Pushkin is the culmination
went before him and the radia
after him. All others are but r
the greatest romanticist and
literature. The Russian critic
as "pouring rain with brilliant
THE CAPTAIN'S DAUGHTER By Alexander Pushkin Translated from the Russian by Natalie Dudlington, with an Introduction by Edward Garnett. The Viking Press, New York. $2.00
WHEN a Russian is asked what author is the highest expression of the national genius he immediately answers: "Pushkin!"
Pushkin is the culmination of all the Russian poetry that went before him and the radiating center of all that has come after him. All others are but reflections of his genius. He was the greatest romanticist and the greatest realist of Russian literature. The Russian critic Wolkonsky describes his verse as "pouring rain with brilliant sunshine."
The Frenchman Merimee, who wrote "Garmen," wonders how Pushkin could write "such beautiful verses in the commonest words, cut from the heart of, every-day speech." No other Russian has so fused dream and reality, the sublime and the common. He has been called the Russian Byron. The comparison is inapt. His vogue was Byronic; but his position in Russian letters is far higher than Byron's in English letters. The favorite expression of Wolkosky for his works is "Earth imbued with heaven."
But in America Alexander Pushkin had said and added dity Jim Crow wars, would have refused service in restaurants, libraries and theatres. For Pushkin was a Negro.
His life was as romantic and contradictory as his works. Though a Negro, he was a Russian nobleman; though an aristocrat, he narrowly escaped imprisonment for his democratic opinions; though a hard worker, he had dudes and lovers of the Russian court at Moscow; though often in disgrace at court, he was forgiven because of his luminous genius and engaging personality. The Czar called him the wittiest man in Russia. He lived fully and swiftly; he died at the early age of thirty- and he was the descendant of his, the Countess Nielsen Torby, married Louis of Battenberg, one of England's royal princes. Two of his works, "Boris Gudunov" and "Eugene Gnegin" (pronounced "one gin," as in English), were adapted for grand opera. Besides his verse he wrote a history and a number of novels. One of his novels, "The Captain's Daughter," is still popular in Russia. "Enu-
down and had kicked him in his mouth."
These words were used by Mr. Whalen on a public platform before a group of prospective teachers and their friends. Commissioner has advised thousands of members to be more polite. My advice to him is to "go ye and do ye likewise." Surely, a race is as deserving of politeness as are individuals. Very truly yours, (Signed) HILLERY C. THORNE. New York, NY. June 17, 1929
SPECIAL ARTICLES
Russia's Black Genius
somebody or minister to somewhere.
I greatly hoped that you might have seen your way clear to select a Negro man for a place in your Crime Commission, mainly for the beneficial reaction to such a choice. You should be aware that the greatest victim of lawlessness and the chief beneficiary of law enforcement. The Negro should be led to appreciate the beneficent purpose and intent of a good government by entrusting him with some responsible relation to the machinery of government. The white race will prove to be a very useful instrument in this institution on laying down rigid regulations and beating the black man into obedience, without appealing to his conscience and intelligence.
The same principle applies to agricultural industry. Hampton and Tuskegee have been trying for a generation to inculcate upon the understanding of the Negro that his best chance and only salvation are in the farm. The powerful pull of city allurements has for the past decade been the strength of their appeal. The government can do much to direct the race in the wise way in which it should go.
I anticipate the objection that Negro men will be difficult to find whose opportunity and experience qualify them for the high standard which you have properly set for the membership of the Farm Board. The agents of a democracy can never be all men of genius, but men of representative talent and ability. There are several Negro men, well known to you, of requisite intelligence, knowledge and resource to serve effectively on this commission. The equality of their status and their constituency are by no means negligible features of qualification.
In this connection I beg to suggest for consideration Dr. R. R. Moton, principal of Tuskegee Institute, whose race philosophy is based upon the agriculture motive and Eugene P. Booze of Mound Bayou, Miss, who is conducting an agricultural and business experiment, the outcome of which is fraught with vital significance to the Negro and to the nation. Yours truly, KELLY MILLER.
REVIEW
By Alexander Pushkin
Stallie Dudlington, with an introduct-
ural Press, New York. $2.00
ed what author is the highest
tional genius he immediately
of all the Russian poetry that
ing center of all that has come
flections of his genius. He was
the greatest realist of Russian
Wolkonsky describes his verse
sunshine."
gene Onegin" is generally regarded
as his masterpiece.
Pushkin was patriotic to the core. With the vision of genius he saw a hundred years ago that czaristic Russia was headed for disaster. He was disaffected with the stupidity of the court and the condition of the common people. In his desire to improve conditions and head off disaster he got himself into trouble more than once, and was imploqued with his position, which would have cost an army more than "The Captain's Daughter" is Pushkin's historical novel. It deals with the revolt of Pugatchov, a wild Cossack who preclaimed himself Czar, ravaged the rural districts and made the Empress Catherine tremble before he was finally caught and hanged. This book was written in 1832 and it is still widely read in Russia. A hundred years is an unusually long life for a novel. Even Sir Walter Scott, whose example inspired Pushkin to romance, has been thrown on the daundress, and he will be followed by many others in England and elsewhere.
Pushkin's style is very different from Sir Walter's. Scott has been justly accused of prolixity; he tells wonderful stories, but he takes too long to do it. One is disposed to laugh, however, at the modernists who berate Scott for the length of his stories and then praise Dresler for five, his Scott Lewis for their novels of five, his Scott hundred pages. Training as a poet hundred pages from this fault, though it did not save Scott. Poetry is and must be concise; as Horace said, must be achieved in a few words. Pushkin achieves it. A modern novelist takes a hundred, pages or more to bring his hero to the age of twenty. Pushkin does it in five or six. With a few strokes he accomplishes what would take some writers ten years to accomplish. He reads with intelligence, he gives something, to their imagination.
The life and characters of the people in the Russian fortress, which is the setting of "The Captain's Daughter," are brought before us more clearly with a few strokes than they could possibly be with minute treatment. Pushkin is old-fashioned; he does not stop to analyze the digestions and nervous systems of his characters.
The old captain of the rude fort-
land, and
Puskin doesn't go, so Puskin
KELLY MILLER
A Health Column dedicated to the mem-
ory of Dr. E. Elliott Rawlins (1882-1928)
By Lucien M. Brown, M.
— Blood —
OF all the tissues of the body, the
interesting and inexhaustible field
people blood is just a red fluid cir-
sels. Its function nevertheless is most
provides for nutrition, the excretion of w
the skin and kidneys, the regulation of t
body, the distribution of internal secreti
thyroid glands, etc., and the interchange
dioxide in the lungs.
body, the blood offers the imitable field for study. To aid fluid circulating in blood is most vital to the body action of waste matter by wation of the temperature of secretions from the oxy merchange of oxygen and ca
OF all the tissues of the body, the blood offers the most interesting and inexhaustible field for study. To people blood is just a red fluid circulating in blood sels. Its function nevertheless is most vital to the body provides for nutrition, the excretion of waste matter by the skin and kidneys, the regulation of the temperature of body, the distribution of internal secretions from the ova thyroid glands, etc., and the interchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the lungs.
a bleeder—meaning that that son would bleed to death or slightest provocation. Surgeon such a patient would be out of question. A strange thing this condition is that it must be transmitted by a mother to a offspring; no case has ever known to occur in the female. A medical treatment today, transfusion. Not so ago this was a procedure of usual surgical skill, but the has been so simplified that the fusions are given daily by in every large hospital. Then four groups of human blood-3. 4—which are influenced by race, color, age or sex; an order to carry out a transfer the patient's blood must be typed to the group to which she belongs in important death may result from the mk of types of blood which do blend.
Dental Talks
By ROY C. PROCTOR, D. D. S.
One Year Ago
Ben Bess, former South Calf
farmer, was returned to jail
a white woman repudiated her
fession that she had accused
falsely.
John D. Rockefeller Jr.
$72,000 for the aid of Harlen
Columbus Hill children.
The National Democratic
ventation at Houston, Tex., segr
ed Negro spectators.
Marathon dancers complete
hours of dancing at Manh
Casino.
The A. M. E. Zion Church
nounced that $160,000 had
subscribed to Livingstone
lege.
Five Years Ago
Forty-three Negro employee
the office of the Register of
Treasury were discharged.
Willis W. Huggins, local school teacher, was ready to for England, where he was to Oxford University for adv studies.
The Philadelphia Common Court refused to grant an app for a receiver for the Old and Southern Banking Company.
Dr. Louis T. Wright was apped a major in the Medical Re Corps, U. S. A.
Line," in the July number of P er's Magazine.
"The truth is that the race coming together," writes Mr. Huggins, "the points of his contact are steadily increasing above all the whites, that are getting to know the blacks, cally the educated ones."
Is it because my face is black
My skin a darker hue;
Or, is there something that I
That makes me less than you
Is there some task I've left und
Some holy law profaned;
Some sin for which I must ais
That I must stand ashamed
Or, were not all men made as
Born and created free?
Are you a new creation sprung
Of better men than we?
If so, then why have we been tat
That all like Him were made
That manhood's not by e
wrought.
Blood
The red color is due to the presence of an iron compound called hemoglobin, and the quantity of this coloring matter will determine the presence or absence of anemia. The composition of blood may be considered under two divisions, the fluid portion or plasma, and the formed elements or, cells which float in the plasma. Both these elements form equal portions of the blood, and the drop of blood contains about 4,500-000 red cells and about 7,000 white cells; variations in the amount and character of these cells take place, to the extent that blood counts are done in every hospital case in order to determine the fighting power of the body and to arriving at a diagnosis. The process of clotting is a definite known chemical reaction and when the cells which cause blood to clot are absent this results in the individual known as
Impact Teeth
IMPACT teeth are those whose eruption is hindered or prevented so that the teeth remain within the jaw or fall to take their normal position in the dental arch. Any tooth may be impact, but the ones we find most frequently are the incisors, the canines, the premolars and the upper cuspidis (eye teeth). Concerning the lower molars, the probable cause is the lack of development of the lower jaw due to malnutrition during the development period. Partial impaction is more frequent. Due to the position that the tooth occupies, food is forced beneath the gum, keeping it sore and inflamed and giving it pain and pain. Treatment is removal.
Premature loss of the baby or temporary teeth is often responsible for the impaction of the upper cuspid. When the baby teeth are lost early, the permanent teeth just become just slightly tendency to move forward to fill the space vacated. The bicuspid, which are to occupy the space of the temporary teeth, are crowded and pushed forward. The bicuspid erupting after the bicuspides may be crowded out entirely, so that it may not be able to move forward. Partial impactions cause the tooth to stick out against the lip, causing the "buck" or dog tooth. Such teeth seldom give pain, but are frequently removed because of their unsightly appearance. However, in many cases their position is corrected by braces (orthodontic).
Completely impact teeth may be seen by the X-ray. In many cases they press on nerves, giving rise to severe pain and impairment of the mouth, sharp high deafness, partial blindness, impairment of speech. When impact teeth are discovered, even though they do not cause discomfort, they should be removed, as they are a potential source of infection and pain. They should be taken at time when it is inconvenient to have them removed.
VILLARD SAYS COLOR
LINE IS CRUMBLING
The color barrier between Negro and white in the United States is yielding before the contact of the best elements in both races, declares Oswald Garrison Villard, writing on "The Grumbling Color it. A sergeant into the captain's house to report that a corporal and a private have had a fight, and the corporalately gives orders to have them both punished. When two young officers are discovered dueling she gives orders to have them arrested and tells her servant to take their swords to the pantry! These incidents are typical of the story. A sentence, a phrase, often a single word, and a character must clearly. Punish's style is as straightforward and economical as Klinings.
There is plenty of excitement in "The Captain's Daughter." The snowstorm, the hero's dream, the love affair, the duel, the dumb prisoner, the revolt of the Cossack, contriving to have the hero arrested for treason—these incidents and more keep the story moving without a lull. One fault of the story is that, we are not told what that became of the villain. And the captain, in his jolliest pages more if they told how Pugatchov, the murderous-Cossack, was captured and hanged.
"The Captain's Daughter" takes us back to the days when a story was a story and not a pseudomedical thesis, when a man was a man and not a tangle of obscure complexes.
—AUBREY BOWSER
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(To Be Continued Next W
Bringing Back Yesteryears
THE POET'S CORNER
Poems submitted for publication in the paper not be returned unless accompanied with a self-dressed and stamped envelope
Color
We've lived our life and fought fight
For God and country, too;
Our alm is right for sake of rite
Our motto "Ever true."
So, why not join, both black
white.
—RAYMOND E. JACKSON
(Inspired by Cole Blease's "Nig
in the House" and
present contest over
Hoover's tea.)