New York Age
Saturday, December 16, 1922
New York, New York
Page text (machine-generated)
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$2,000,000 Fire Destroys 1,200 New Bern Buildings
Negro Fire Insurance Co. Establishes Record in Prompt Adjustment and Payment of Fire Losses
5,000 Colored Citizens Are Made Homeless By Conflagration That Devastated Two Square Miles in Residenial and Business Section
Dr. Moton Makes Good Will Tour Through Georgia Towns
FOR QUALITY READ
The New York Age
THE HOME PAPA
Read the Spanish Section
$2,000,000 Fire
1,200 New B
Negro Fire Insurance Co
cord in Prompt Adj
ment of Fire
5,000 Colored Citizens Are
flagration That Devastate
in Residential and B
(Special To The New York Age)
New York, N. C. Approximately 1,200 buildings, including the homes of some 5,000 people, and many of the largest businesses in the city, were destroyed here on December 1. When a disaster fire swept over an area of forty blocks, more than two square miles, leaving only smoke-marked chimneys, a black on the outside as inside the building standing watch over the neighborhood and happiness of the community.
his will amount to
many (1,000,000) And as a climax
he would wreat, as though he
were not pleased, on Wednesday,
Dear Sir, the Northern College In-
stitute was bound down, adding a loss
incurred by the mere $15,000
fearful loss to the community,
from the point of view, was
the destruction of Roger's Saw Mill, one
of the United States, and the
matter that furnished employment
for the entire male population,
for colored men being on its
own.
Smith Estate Houses.
The loss sustained in the residence was that of the Isaac H. Smith Estate, which owned about 100 acres of land, the house which were destroyed, the valuable residences located there of Attorney W. A. Wilson, Dr. P. H. Kennedy, Joseph H. Smith's perimeter, Mrs. Isaac H. Smith's perimeter, C. W. Poole, Isaac H. Smith and Rev. J. A. Smith. The cause of pretentious edifices of St. Louis, A. M. E. Zion, Rue Chapel and Presbyterian Churches were totally destroyed. Scores of business pieces were burned, including the drug store Dr. Kennedy, the wall paper installation of Joseph Anderson, Dr. W. N. Williams' dental parlor, the district offices of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, and innumerable tailor and barber shops and other small business enterprises.
Members of the race are the chief sufferers and they have been given temporary relief by various organizations, including the Red Cross, the United States government, city officials and neighboring towns. The Newbern, N. C. sufferers' Ramp has been formed to aid of town contributors are asked and directed to this committee.
Insurance Co's. Prompt Action.
One of the Outstanding developments following the fire was the action of the Banker's Fire Insurance Co. of Durham N.C. owned and controlled by Neptune, and one of the heaviest holders of fire risks in New Bern property. Balancing the suffering that must ensue following such widespread destruction the Banker's officials had representatives in New Bern on Monday morning, December 4, three days after the flames had scorched the city, and waiving all formality of proving losses immediately began to adjust and pay claims. This was through Monday and Tuesday, and until about 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday, when about $20,000 in claims had been paid.
The unfortunate reaction made it necessary for the Banker's Fire to postpone further payments. At that time a notification representing other insurance
Dr. Moton Makes Tour Through G
White and Colored Citizens of Tuskegee Head Preach Do Will to Promote Be
(Special Correspondence)
Columbus, Ga.—The good-will tour through Georgia, on which Dr. R. R. Moton principal of Tuskegee Institute, started at Atlanta, November 27, was brought to an auspicious ending at Columbus Sunday, December 3. It was the most successful, and in some respects the most remarkable tour ever made in the South.
The Moton party traveled in a Pullman car. All the meetings were large and participated in by both races. In every town the welcome and introduction addresses were delivered by leading white citizens, usually the Mayor, Superintendent of the Board of Education, and a business man, oftithes a banker. White people sat on the platform and in the audience.
Among the towns visited were Atlanta, Athens, Wayneaboro, Savannah, Albany, Americus, Fort Valley, Mason and Columbus. Dr. Moton also spoke from the Pullman car and went by automobile to make addresses in the rural districts.
The local colored delegates vied with each other in the respective towns in entertainment of the members of the party. Dimers and bussards galore were given in booth of Dr. Moton and three accompanying him.
White Press Optimistic
That the tour will do much toward
their about better relations is the
sense of opinion among both white
and black. In particular does the
speak in an optimistic vein.
Information of braching and other
The New York Age
The National Negro Weekly
NEW YORK, N. Y. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1922.
Beat Edited—Beat Known
Fire Destroys Bern Buildings
Fire Co. Establishes Re-adjustment and Pay-Fire Losses
Are Made Homeless By Con-tated Two Square Miles and Business Section
companies holding policies in the burned district visited the temporary offices set up by the Bankers' and set forth that the prompt settling of claims by the Bankers' was causing trouble for other companies, inasmuch as many of their policyholders were making demands that the other companies follow the Bankers' example and make immediate settlement of fire loss claims.
Acted to Relieve Distress.
This was impossible, as most of these other companies could not get adjusters and accountants on the ground to handle the claims until the week following. Realizing the tremendous proposition brought into being by the big fire, and in order to work in harmony with the other insurance companies, the Bankers' Fire agreed and stopped payments of losses until such time as the other companies were prepared to handle their affairs. It was tentatively agreed that this would be during the week of December 11.
The Bankers' Fire, in thus promptly adjusting and paying fire losses, was not acting with any thought of being the first company to settle its claims, said one of its officials, but had in mind solely the relieving of suffering and supplying necessities for those who had lost everything in the awful conflagration. Officers of the Bankers' Life, all colored, are W. G. Pearson, president; C. C. Spalding, A. M. Moore, A. J. Strong, vice-presidents; W. Gomez, secretary-manager; M. A. Goin, assistant secretary; J. M. Avery, treasurer.
HOWARD LAW SCHOOL
(Special to The New York Age)
Washington, D. C.-On Monday evening a large and interesting crowd gathered at the Howard University Law School, 420 Fifth street, Northwest, to witness the opening of the remodeled building of the Law School of Howard University.
Judge Fenton W. Booth, dean presided. The principal address was made by Congressman James Madden of Illinois to President David Durkee, Judge Robert H. Terrell of the Municipal Court; Dr. Emmett J. Scott, and James A. Cobb.
The faculty is composed of Fenton Whitlock Booth, dean; Dion Scott Birney, James Adlai Cobb, William Lepre 'Houston, William Henry Richards, James P. Schick, Charles Simpson Shreve, Robert Herbert Terrell, James Cornelius Waters, Jr., librarian and secretary; Andrew Wilson.
(Jpecial To The New York Age)
Jersey City, N. J.-The Union Thanksgiving services of all of the Protestant churches of the Lafayette section of Jersey City, N. J. were held in the Lafayette Reformed Church this year.
The sermon was preached by Pastor W. S. Smith of the Monumental Baptist church. This was perhaps the first time in New Jersey that a colored minister was chosen by white people to preach a union Thanksgiving sermon. His subject was "Think and Give Thanks."
Good Will in Georgia Towns
of Eleven Cities Hear Doctrine of Racial Good Better Relations
forms of injustices were frankly discussed by Dr. Moton, who also pointed out to Negroes some of their faults.
NEW YORK, N. Y., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1922.
HOFFMAN MOVES IN HERBERT DENT CASE
Attorney Herman Hoffman, 233 Broadway, who is voluntarily giving his services in the matter of investigating the alleged beating to death of Herbert Dent, a young Negro, in the West 135th street station house; where he was being held for examination, has not relaxed his efforts in the matter. He has been awaiting action by the District Attorney's office, following the production before Assistant District Attorney John R. Hennis of a witness, a young white man named Buckley, who testified to being present when Dent was beaten to death, and who gave to the county official an account of the occurrence. This witness was heard on November 1, since which time Attorney Hoffman has been waiting action by District Attorney Banton. On December 7, Attorney Hoffman wrote to Mr. Banton as follows:
"Dear sir:
On November 1st, last, I produced before Mr. Hennis, one, Huckley, who was an actual eye witness to the brutal assault committee upon Dent in the 135th street police station which resulted in his death. This witness was examined several hours by Mr. Hennis who promised to take the matter up with you for early disposition.
"I have heard nothing since that date and I will be glad to have you advise me upon your return to the city, which I understand will be on Monday, what determination you have reached with reference to taking action as a result of the evidence above submitted."
SEN. EDGE DENIES OPPOSING DYER BILL
(Special To The New York Age)
Montreal, N. J.—An aftermath of the recent effort to have the Dyer Antilynching Bill favorably acted upon by the United States Senate was the circulation of reports that Senator Edge had lacked interest in passage of the Bill. As a result, the Senator wrote the following letter to James E. Sadler, North Fullerton avenue, who is chairman of the Colored Republican Council on the Fasst county. "Any stories that or have been circulated as to my non-interest in the passage of the Bill are not only untrue but surely must have been circulated with deliberate malicious intent. I have both on the public platform and in letters iterated and reiterated my conviction that the Dyer Antilynching Bill, or a bill providing similar provisions, should and must be passed by Congress. How can I make it more specific? I always try to have my position clearly understood."
POLICE AND BONDSMEN
(Washington, D. C.-Proof that the police are smarring under the pitless publicity given the vicious and unlawful practices of certain professional bondmen and the blue coated police allies by Royal A. Hughes, president of the Washington Lawyers' Association, and Armand W. Scott, was presented to Judge Hardison in Police Court in the shape of the battered head of one Harry Boyd, arrested on mistaken identity, a former sergeant in the quartermaster's detachment of the Second Division, A. E. F., in France. It had been called to the attention of the Court by Attorneys Hughes and Scott that there are certain professional bondmen who work in connection with the police, and when a man is arrested, he must take the bondmen offered to take the police, they are clubbed and beat up.
Harry Boyd, who is still suffering from being gassed, when arrested asked that Lawyer Armand W. Scott he notified, and that was told that they had stopped sending for lawyers, and when he insisted that he wanted his lawyer notified of the fact that he had been locked up, he was dragged from his cell by two policemen and unmercifully beaten with clubs. When he appeared in the police court his eyes were blackened and his head showed several bumps. The case against him was dismissed.
"THE COLOR QUESTION IN THE TWO AMERICAS"
(By Dr. Bernardo Ruiz Suárez)
This is the latest contribution to the study of problems affecting our race. A comparison is made of the conditions in which the colored race lives in Central and 'South America on the one hand, and in the United States on the other hand.
The price of this book is $1, but we are making a special price to subscribers of The New York Acr, giving the book and ne year's subscription to The New York Acr for $2.30, within the United States, and $1.40, foreign countries. All orders must be addressed to The New York Acr, 230 West 135th street, New York City.
CAUTION!
In sending money or valuables through the mail at this season of the year it is especially necessary that utmost care be used in wrapping, sealing and addressing. REGISTER EVERY LETTER. OR. PACKAGE-containing valuables.
Miss Ethel Hamilton, a young New York colored girl, died in her room at 1600 Division, street, Baltimore, the home of Mrs. Mary E. Addison, with whom she was sleeping while in that city in connection with her duties as maid to Florence Odenhawn, a white dancer with Billy Burke Company, which was playing at the Ford Theatre. When the maid, failed to appear at the usual hour to go down to the theatre, Miss Addison went to her room and found the girl dead. Miss Odenhawn testified that Miss Hawkins had been subject for some time to fainting spells, and it was concluded that death came when she was seated on this occasion. The body was returned to New York City.
135TH ST. BOYS FORM
NEW YORK AGE CLUB
A number of boys of Public School 69, who live on 135th street, between Seventh and Eighth avenues, and vicinity, have organised a boys' club, which they have named The New York Age Club.
The club is for social and athletic purposes, and the members have already gotten together a basketball team with the following regular players: John Workman, Thomas Schumer, Jeffery Jenkins, Calvin Jenkins and Robert Broadax. The boys average about 90 pounds in weight and are anxious to meet other local teams around this weight. All communications can be sent them care of The New York Age. The officers and some of the members are: John Workman, president; Calvin Jenkins, vice-president; Thomas Schumer, secretary; Lloyd Jones, mascot; Jeffery Jenkins, Robert and Harry Broadax, James Workman, John Burton, Herman and William Bowles, and Joseph Martin. Their club colors are orange and black.
The first affair of The Age Club will be a social and dance on Friday evening, December 15, at the apartment of Mrs. Brown, 247 West 135th street.
MARRIED 35 YEARS HOLD CELEBRATION
Their thirty-fifth wedding anniversary was celebrated by Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Fleming of 316 West 119th street on Tuesday evening, December 5, at their home. It was an enjoyable occasion, many friends being present to join in celebrating the happy couple. Mr. Fleming is said to be the oldest colored business man in Harlem, conducting a carpet-cleaning establishment at 249 West 116th street. He has been in business for thirty years, and for the past fifteen years he has had his son associated with him. The firm being known as J. C. Fleming & Son. There are two children, the son, Eugene, and a daughter, Mrs. Seth Cochrane of Brooklyn.
TO TENDER BANQUET TO
ASSEMBLY MAN, FLEET
ASSEMBLYMAN - ELECT
The Pochoontas Negro Democratic Club of the 21st Assetsby District, New York City, John William Smith, president and leader, will pay honor to Assemblyman-elect Henry W. Shields, successful Democratic candidate in the November election. Mr. Shields will be the only Negro member of the State Assembly during the ensuing term, and the first Negro Democrat.
The new official will be tendered a banquet by the club, the function to be held Wednesday evening, December 20, at the Dumas Hotel, 205 West 13th street, formerly the De Van. Guests will pay $2 per plate, and reservations can be made at the club house, now located at 210 West 13th street, or with President Smith at his residence, 145 West, 13th street.
The vice-president, Dr. Gustavus Henderson is chairman of the banquet committee.
A LOCAL IDEA GROWS
Jersey City, N. J.-Five years ago the Rev. W. S. Smith, pastor of Monumental Baptist Church, began holding in his church annual educational conferences. The idea has spread and last week was designated as National Education Week, the outgrowth of Dr. Smith's conception.
The conference has received the endorsement of a President of the United States and by leading educators. In lectures to race audiences, Dr. Smith has used a his subject, "Up the Ladder of Freedom," while to others he has spoken on "Help that is worth more than money—The Spirit of Good Will."
Aid Asked for N. C., F
Five thousand colored people families, are practically destitute fire which, on December 1, destro over an area of forty blocks, in which was the principal industry.
Immediate relief is needed a food, clothing, medicines, etc., a direct to the
Aid Asked for Newbern. N. C., Fire Sufferers
Five thousand colored people, representing 1,000 to 1,200 families, are practically destitute following the devastating fire which, on December 1, destroyed $2,000,000 in property over an area of forty blocks, including Roper's Saw Mill, which was the principal industrial opportunity in the town.
Immediate relief is needed and contributions of money, food, clothing, medicines, etc., are asked for to be shipped direct to the
SUFFERERS' RELIEF,
NEWBERN, N.C.
Or. Counsellor R. O'Hara, Local Box 324, New Bern, N.C.
Rev. William Sutton, New Bern, N.C.
Rev. K. T. Thompson, New Bern, N.C.
The fire raged through both the business and residential sections. For the benefit of residents of New York an information and correspondence bureau has been opened at 181 West 135th St., to find relatives who may be temporarily lost.
Or Counsellor R. O'Hara, Local Box 324, New Bern, N. C.
Rev. William Sutton, New Bern, N. C.
Rev. K. T. Thompson, New Bern, N. C.
The fire raged through both the business and residential sections. For the benefit of residents of New York an information and correspondence bureau has been opened at 181 West 135th St., to find relatives who may be temporarily lost.
SETTLEMENT HOUSE
MANAGER DRAWS LINE
The southern born white woman who is manager of the eating department of the Henry Street Settlement at 97 Park avenue, the long-established center of social service activities conducted by the well known Miss Lillian D. Wald, put a crimp in the plans of members of the board of directors of the Urban League when she objected to their having luncheon in the Settlement dining room because two of the participants were colored. And Miss Wald upheld the woman's action.
Messrs. Baldwin and Holden, white, with Mr. Hubert and Dr. Witers, colored, had planned to have a conference on Urban League matters, and these plans included lunchroom at the Henry Street Settlement dining room, 97 Park avenue. When the woman manager of the eating place learned of it, she put her foot down in the most emphatic way, declaring she would not permit Negroes to be waited on in her dining room. Protests made to Miss Wald had no effect, as that lady permitted her subordinate to control the situation. The conference was held but it was lunchless.
Order of Moor
York City
New Fraternal Body, to W
Yorkers Have Paid $3.1
By U. S. Official t
Controversy appears immin
organization of the Order of M
set up in New York City by R
thousands of colored citizens of
bership.
Order of Moose, In New York City, Clandestine?
New Fraternal Body, to Which Thousands of New Yorkers Have Paid $3.50 as Joining Fee, Is Said By U. S. Official to Be Unauthorized
Controversy appears imminent as to the authority for the organization of the Order of Moose, a fraternal society recently set up in New York City by R. V. Ridley of Chicago, to which thousands of colored citizens of Harlem have subscribed to membership.
It is generally alleged that representation had been made that the colored organization was acting under dispensation from the Loyal Order of Moose, of which a Federal cabinet officer is the head, and which carries close to a million members, and that the Ridley combination was an off-shoot, duty authorized and fostered by the original Moose, with a view to extending to colored desirants an opportunity to become members. This impression was generally bruited about and several thousand colored men and women became members at a nominal consideration of $150 per capita.
It is said that there were other lodges of colored Moose located in Chicago, III, Norfolk, Va., Atlantic City, N. J., Newark, N. J., and elsewhere, but the largest acquisition to the new fraternity was in New York, where colored people stood in line to pay over the initiation fee to enter into $100 death benefits and other emoluments of membership.
At that time the regularly establish-
York, buying pages of advertising space in downtown daily papers, from which the colored fraternity profited in a peculiar way, the impression obtaining that this advertising was intended for the colored lodge.
Two months ago avirious intimations found surface and circulation that the Moose a in Ridley was not truly thoroughbred; that it lacked essential phases of genealogy necessary to genuineness; that it was not an offspring of the original Moose, and was being vigorously opposed by the officials of the white organization who were seeking action in restraint through the courts as suggested "to protect their ritual, insignias, and fraternal assets from infringement."
Seeking the truth THE New York Am addressed a letter to Edward J. Hemming, Assistant Secretary, U. S. Department of Labor, Washington, who is of the World, Loyal Order of Moose, to ascertain just what connection the colored order had with the original or-
At that time the regularly established
increase of its membership, in New
DEPARTMENT STORE TO OPEN DEC. 15
DEPARTMENT STORE TO OPEN DEC. 15
On Friday evening, December 15, the formal opening of the A. I. Hart Department Store in the new Renaissance Casino Building, 138th street and Seventh avenue. We will be held. The opening exercises will include short addresses by representative business men of the community, a band concert and inspection by the public.
A representative of The Age inspected the store on Wednesday and found that it has thirty departments, artistically and attractively arranged, and with a larger and much better line of goods than has been carried before by a similar store in the neighborhood. Among the new departments are the baby department, where everything can be secured by the babies, and the bargain basement. In the basement there will be some real bargains on sale during the opening week. Some of the bargains noted were a 10 quart waterpail for 10 cents; a regular 59 cent broom for 25 cents; 25c stompies for 10 cents, and children's serge dresses trimmed in colors for $1.
Another feature of the new store is
Newbern, Fire Sufferers
able, representing 1,000 to 1,200
rate following the devastating
attorney $2,000,000 in property
including Roper's Saw Mill,
trial opportunity in the town,
and contributions of money,
are asked for to be shipped
Ball Box 324, New Bern, N. C.
New Bern, N. C.
New Bern, N. C.
in the business and residential
dents of New York an infor-
ceau has been opened at 181
who may be temporarily lost.
Friends Fight For Girl Put In Insane Asylum By Father
Neighbors of Brooklyn Undertaker Are Working Hard to Relieve Condition of Young Woman Who Made Se Cheves Against Parent Further investigation of the circumstance attendant upon the commitment of Miss Olivia M. Harris, daughter of George H. Harris, undertaker, 646 Herkimer street, Brooklyn, to the King Park State Hospital, an institution for the insane, discloses a number of conflicting developments
Best Edited—Best Known
Friends Fight
In Insane Asy
Neighbors of Brooklyn U
Hard to Relieve Condi
Who Made Se
Further investigation of the commitment of Miss Olivia B Harris, undertaker, 646 Herkime Park State Hospital, an institute her of conflicting developments. Interviews with residents in the neighborhood of the Harris residence have resulted in the discovery that there is a feeling of intense bitterness against Mr. Harris, the charge being made that he virtually railroaded his young daughter to the King's Park institution, which is quite a distance from Brooklyn, and inconvenient of access. These people declare with emphasis that up to the time of her removal from home to the hospital, Miss Harris had not shown any signs of abnormality, but was exceptionally well-balanced, quiet and cultured in bearing, and manner. In talking to an Age representative, Mrs. Agnes LaTour, who husband conducts a grocery store at corner of Her-
ose, In New
y, Clandestine?
Which Thousands of New
50 as Joining Fee, Is Said
to Be Unauthorized
ment as to the authority for the
loose, a fraternal society recently
V. V. Ridley of Chicago, to which
Harlem have subscribed to mem-
York, buying pages of advertising space
in downtown daily papers, from which
the colored fraternity profited in a peculiar
way, the impression obtaining that
this advertising was intended for the
colored lodge.
Two months ago avid intuitions found surface and circulation that the Moose a in Ridley was not truly thoroughbred; that it lacked essential phases of genealogy necessary to genuineness; that it was not an offspring of the original Moose, and was being vigorously opposed by the officials of the white organization who were seeking action in restraint through the courts as suggested "to protect their ritual, insignias, and fraternal assets from infringement."
Seeking the truth THE NEW York Ace addressed a letter to Edward J. Hennings, Assistant Secretary, U. S. Department of Labor, Washington, who is of the World, Loyal Order of Moose, to ascertain just what connection the colored order had with the original or-
(Continued on Second Page)
A CHRISTMAS PRESENT?
Your friend will have a weekly reminder of your thoughtfulness throughout the year if you have THE NEW YORK AGE sent as a Christmas present, One Year, $2.
Iodas, cream, and light lunches will be served at reasonable prices.
The new store was expected to have opened on November 15, but the builders were delayed and could not have it ready for opening until the present time. The store is well stocked with Christmas gifts, toys, decorations, cards, flowers, etc, which must be sold in two weeks instead of the six as originally planned. The management of the new store is confident, however, of the public, and invites all who have Christmas shopping to come in and inspect the new Hart's Department Store before going to 125th street or downtown.
POLICE TIGHTEN
HOOCH SALE ORDERS
Recent orders issued by Chief Inspector Labey of the New York City Police Department are designed to tighten up to a material extent police control of the hooch situation. Heads of inspection districts are to be held accountable for all raids in their territory and reports must be made at end of each day giving minute details as to happenings in raided places, including information as to who goes in and out, how many eat in raided places, what is charged for drinks, etc.
The daily reports must embrace a description of the premises, names of owner and proprietor, waiters, bartenders and assistants, nature of business; approximate number of customers; kind of dumshair service; name of any police officer in uniform who visits the place; kind of liquors served and price thereof as shown on the cash register; and any other information available as to character of the business.
WHEN YOU SEE IT IN
The Age
YOU CAN DEPEND UPON IT
News That Is Informing.
PRICE: FIVE CENTS
ht For Girl Put
sylum By Father
In Undertaker Are Working
dition of Young Woman
Charges Against Parent
of the circumstance attendant upon
via M. Harris, daughter of George H.
Kimmer street, Brooklyn, to the King
ution for the insane, discloses a num-
ents.
kimer street and Schonecky avenue next door to the Harris home, told an interesting story of the happenings of the morning of September 13, which alleged to be the day on which Mrs. Harris was taken to Kings County Hospital by orders from her father, the thinking all the while that she was an ordinary automobile ride.
Mrs. LaTour states that on this morning Miss Harris came hurriedly into the store, clad in a thin silk kimono, over her underclothes, which was considered torn, and asked Mr. LaTour, who was alone in the store, as to the whereabouts of Mrs. LaTour, who, at the moment, was in the rear of the building. He dishevelled appearance attracted Mr. LaTour's attention, the more so as Mrs. Harris was always exceptionally careful as to her personal appearance. As swerving her question concerning Mrs. LaTour, Mr. LaTour at the same time suggested to the young woman that she was hardly presentable and advised she return to her home. This Miss Harris did.
Screams Arouse Neighborhood.
A few minutes later the neighborhood was aroused by agonizing screams coming from the Harris home, a woman voice crying "Munster! Murder! Mother!" Mrs. LaTour had come back into the store and on hearing the crushed out to the street and into Harris home, accompanied by a wid man named McCone, employed in a stall located on Schenectady avenue, Mrs. Herkimer street, who had also been traced by the screams.
Mrs. LaTour declares that when she and the man entered the house, she found "Ollie," as Miss Harris is called by her intimates, in the grasp of her father, who, it is alleged, was apparently attempting to throttle her. The woman clothed, says Mrs. LaTour, as she LaTour had described her cousin, who Mr. Harris was dragged in an unmanned and trousers. But the trousers off alleged, were dropped down around ankles, and the first act of McCone, entering, was to catch Harris and put his trousers up around his bare legs on middle.
In response to Mrs. LaTour's questions, "Ollie" is alleged to have made the most serious charges against her father, referring to him as to an other personage of whom she was dead afraid, saying that Mrs. LaTour would never believe the character of the actor made upon her. The girl says Mrs. LaTour, was cold and shaking her fright, and begged not to be left alone in the house with her father. Her cousin, married, lives in the house, he had previously gone out with her young baby.
She Leaves Home
So, in response to the girl's pleading Ms. LaTour says she assisted in getting her clothed and then accompanied her a neighbor's house, Mrs. Winter, when the girl felt she would be safe and cool rest in quiet. This friend was out, but she seen down the street, and "Ollie ran to join her. Learning of the experience through which "Ollie" had passed, and neither Mrs. Winter or the girl having any money with them, Mrs. Winter went to a neighbors and borrowed a quarter with which the girl payed on fare down town a ways, going to the home of Mrs. Dahney, mother of Mrs. Mabel Dahney, another friend, when she was put to bed to rest. And it was from this home that "Ollie" was taken, later in the day, on when she thought was an auto ride for the benefit it might be to her, but it was a ride that ended in the King's County Hospital. It is alleged that when she was taken out to ride, Mr. Harris reected the plans, but remained invisible so far as his daughter was concerned. After being kept at the city institution for a week, Miss Harris was removed to the Kings Park State Hospital, on Long Island, where she has been even since.
Another friend, Mrs. Hattie Whittle who lives at Fulton street and Albany avenue, learned of the commitment of Miss Harris to Kings Park instituting some time after it had been made. She believed that her young friend was being restrained without justification and took steps immediately to interest some of the organizations formed to handle cases of that nature. An appeal to the Big Sisters, says Mrs. Whiking, brought no response. So Mrs. Whiting began to get busy on her own account. She made a call upon District Attorney Ruston, laying the matter before him. She had also, in company with her sister, Miss Fannie Yancey, called upon Rev. J. B. Adams, pastor of Concord Baptist Church, to which congregants Miss Harris belongs, and who, it is alleged, had consulted with Mr. Harris concerning the sending of "Oilie" to asylum.
Vistore Barred m Arytum
Securing an order of admission from Mr. Ruston, Mrs. Whiting made a long trip out to King's Park to a Min Harris. Here she found that Mr. Harris had given orders acquiring a daughter from visitors, and instructing that she was armed with a District Attorney's order, first枪入 case and then another was put forward delaying her access to the prison, and just within a few minutes of time.
destination of the only available train to the city. When family she was invited to say, "Ohin." Mrs. Whiting said that she was compelled to talk to the girl, the immediate presence of both a nurse and the doctor, the latter, perhaps being so close he could look into them their throats.
Arna. In Tour and another neighbor, Dr. Bradley, had previously visited Lumpkin. Park, and had better success in obtaining access to Ward 6, where "Ollie" appeared. It appears that the sequencing order were given by Mr. Harold. We learned that those women had visited his daughter.
Mrs. Adelle Carter of 16-A Dewey
glen, Brooklyn, conducting a beauty
courter at 81 Troy avenue, also a friend
of Mrs. Murray, secured from Mr. Harri-
s a permit to see "Ollie" making the
trip work; there on Sunday, December
3. Mr. Harris went out, the same day.
Whether purposely or by inadvertence,
however, Mr. Harris gave Mrs. Carter
strong information as to time the special
Kings Park train, running only on Sun-
day and at reduced rate, would leave
the Flatbush avenue station. She got
lots, but would not be out.
She found that a later train would take her to a nearby point, and at that point she hired a taxi and drove the remainder of, the distance to the state hospital. Exhibiting her permit in the office, she was given a pass to the ward, where she found Harris with his daughter. After a while, the nurse, according to Mrs. Carter, came to Mr. Harris and asked him, in a most insolent manner, pointing to the visitor, if he wanted "that woman" to see his daughter. As he had given Mrs. Carter a written permit, he could hardly help affirming it.
Nurse Was Insolent.
Then Mrs. Carter spoke and declared that she was duly admitted on a pass but the nurse demanded to know why the permit had not been shown to her; being informed that no one had asked for it, she insultingly declared that it should have been handed to her when the visitor arrived. Notwithstanding this unpleasant experience, Mrs. Carter remained and had a talk with "Ollie." It appears, from statements made by these visitors, that Miss Harris is not being provided for in a manner that will make for her comfort.
In a telephone conversation with the author of The Age, Mr. Harris last week suggested that women friends of his daughter, instead of trying to get her out, might help more by taking out clothing, fruits, etc., for her. When told of this suggestion, some of the women declare that Miss Harris, if permitted to have her own wardrobe in its entirety would be amply supplied with garments. Nowwithstanding that she was always neatly and tastily dressed, turning herself out nicely at all times, some of the friends of Miss Harris do not hesitate to make the charge that she has not been allowed to have her clothes. Some go even further and allege that others are wearing the clothes left at home by "Ollic." One visitor alleges that at the time of her trip out to Kings Park, the young woman was wearing shoes with holes in shoes which necessitated layers of paper in the shoe to keep her foot off the ground. Hospital officials, in response to telephonic requests, say that the girl's condition is unchanged since coming there.
District Attorney. Investigates.
An-Age representative called on District Attorney Roston and inquired as to the status of the case so far as his office was concerned. That official referred the inquiry to Chief Clerk Birdstye, who courteously went over the entire matter with The Age. He told of Mrs. Whiting's bringing the case to attention of the District Attorney, and of the filing of a written statement by Miss Olivia Harris, in which a definite charge of the most serious nature was made against her father, George H. Harris. He also told of a letter which had been written Mrs. Whiting by the Rev. J. B. Adams, of Concord Church, asking her to drop activities in connection with the case of Miss Harris, making a promise, if she complied with this request, to see that Olivia was returned home within twenty-four hours.
In addition to these exhibits, Mr. Birdseye told of two separate and entirely unrelated examinations which had been made at request of the District Attorney, that he might have a knowledge of Olivia's mental condition as a basis upon which to predicate action. The first examination was an official one, made by Dr. Garvin, head physician at the Kings Park Hospital. The second was made by one of the most prominent ailemists of Brooklyn, at the personal request of Chief Clerk Birdseye.
Has Dementia Praecox
These reports, declared Mr. Birdseye, comitted in their essential parts, both finding that Olivia was decidedly deranged mentally, suffering from a well-developed case of dementia praecox, developing a series of hallucinations, the most prominent one being expressed in the idea that she has contracted a marriage by radio with a certain individual, whose name and address she readily gives. Strong dislike of hospital officials is expressed by her because she believes that they are holding her in constraint to prevent the consumption of her imaginary marriage vows.
Because of the unfavorable reports made by these aliens, say Mr. Birdseye, the charges made by Miss Harris have no value from a legal standpoint, and as a consequence the officials' hands are tied. "We are up against a brick wall in this case," said Mr. Birdseye, "as long as the girl is declared to be innae." According to this official, the medical authorities say this ailment is progressive, though patients sometimes live for years, and years in that condition.
Notwithstanding this turn in the case, of the folks who have become interested in the case express a determination to continue their efforts in behalf of their young friend, "Ollie" with a view to at least securing alleviation of her present plight by, if possible, helping her removed from the state institution to some private sanatarium, more comfortable in appointment and more comfortable of access.
Notwithstanding the reports of the biologist, Mrs. Carter affirms that in her conversation on Sunday, December 3, Miss Olivia was perfectly sure and rational, conversing calmly and intelligently during the entire period of her visit, exhibiting no sign of mental stress save a natural dislike to being confined and expressing remorse toward her father, who was held responsible for her present plight. When Mrs. Carter was leaving, Miss Harris was in no way persecuted or distracted, saying good bye to the most normal manner.
According to the Report of the African Education Commission to Phelps-Stokes Fund Educational and Religious Problems Will Be Solved By it
That Liberia's future seems to depend on the proposed American loan is an observation made by the African Education Commission whose report has been published by the Philips-Isoches Fund. "It is generally agreed that the successful administration of this loan will solve the serious problems confronting Liberia and make possible the extension of educational and religious facilities for the development of the Republic," says the Report.
Some facts contained in the report about Liberia are: That the Republic has an area of 45,000 square miles which is equal to that of the State of Pennsylvania and but little less than the area of New England. Its coast line is 350 miles long and its jagged interior boundary runs at a distance varying from seventy-five to one hundred and fifty miles from the coast.
Liberia's native population is estimated at between 1,000,000 and 2,000,000. The coast groups, which have attained various degrees of civilization, are estimated to include from 30,000 to 60,000 persons of whom probably 30,000 may be said to observe European American standards of life. The American Liberians probably number about 15,000, and the white population includes not more than one hundred persons of European and American origin.
Differences Between Peoples.
The significant elements in Liberia are, first, the emphatic differentiation of the interior masses of the native peoples from the small groups of American-Liberians and native peoples associated with them in a series of settlements along the coast; second, the economic possibilities of the country, and third, the present form of government, together with the forces, historical and otherwise, that have contributed to the present condition and the possibilities of Liberia.
Since 1822 America has shown varying attitudes toward Liberia. "The result of American attitude has been that Europe regards Liberia as practically a protectorate of the American Government," it is pointed out by the Commission. "On more than one occasion this interpretation of American interest has probably saved Liberia from catastrophe threatening its existence."
In the opinion of the Commission the most important element in the future possibilities of Liberia is the native group, variously estimated at from one million to two million. The general condition of this group ranges from barbarianism to the higher forms of primitive society, with a negligible few who have attained simpler forms of civilization.
As neither the coast government nor the missionaries have exerted any appreciable influence upon the natives, they are living according to the customs of their tribes. The chiefs exercise authority and enforce order to suit their own purposes and to carry out tribal traditions. The situation has been modified only by the spasmodic efforts of the government to collect taxes and draft soldiers, though in the past two or three years the government has been able to exercise this authority with more success, than formerly.
Mohammedaniam Prevalent
Mohammedanism has gained a strong foothold in Liberia, and the Commission learned that Christianity has evidently had practically no influence in the interior of the country. Monrovia is both the political capitol and largest town of Liberia. It has about 4,500 inhabitants, of whom 1,500 are natives of the Kru tribe, who live according to her native habits in an adjoining settlement. Monrovia is located on a peninsula. The four or five important streets of the town run parallel to the hay for a distance of five or six blocks. It is on the inside of the warehouse and jail complex is Water street, a narrow way paved with cobble street. Many of the buildings are low sheds in front of which vendors sell vegetables, fruits, candy and other small wares. This street also contains the post office, the custom house and a number of small stores, some of which are well constructed.
The second street, slightly elevated above the level of the first, is known as Front street, on which are located substantial buildings of the Bank of West Africa (British), the Elder-Dempster office and Faulkner's Hotel, owned by an American Negro. The third is Ashman street, which contains most of the important buildings in the town, including the homes of the representatives of the American and European Governments, the buildings of the American Methodist Missionary, the Executive Mansion, offices of the War Department and the Court. The last is Broad Street, on which are located the hall in which the Legislature meets, three or four churches and a few residences.
Fail to Utilize Resources
The report says further: "The present condition of the country as well as the conception of the government and life all indicate the failure of the Americo-Liberians to recognize the importance of the agricultural, industrial and commercial development of the country. The observer obtains the impression that the great economic movements of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries seem to be unknown in Liberia. There has evidently been no effective interest, in highways, railroads, telegraphs and telephones, agricultural and industrial development, and many other activities now under way in every African colony visited.
"The economic possibilities of Liberia are very great. Nearly all of the 45,000 square miles of land is believed to be suitable for cultivation. The country is drained by an annual number of streams. The land is rolling, and in the interior sections has an appropriate elevation of one-thousand to two-thousand feet above sea level."
"There are extensive forests and considerable evidences of mineral resources. American officers state that mineral and precious stones are known to exist in Liberia, including petroleum, gold, diamonds, asbestos, coal, mica, aluminum and iron."
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1922.
Comments By The A On Sayings of O
Comments By The Age Editors On Sayings of Other Editors
Order of Moose, in York City,
Order of Moose, in New York City, Clandestine?
grant case of plagiarism and in every way a highly improper proceeding in law, ethics and morals.
In view of the high-handed proceedings undertaken to sequester our name, illinois and insignia, have requested the Secretary of Justice to issue the articles of this initiating organization should not be stricten. From the record, if this cannot be done under pressure, we should immediately in Illinois acting to prostrate any one from proceeding under the articles of incorporation mentioned to organize any other organization or lodges, restraining the organization or anything specific restraining order on the incorporators, the alleged supreme officers and alleged lodge organizers or lodges, restraining the organization or anything whose owner in Illinois or anywhere in the world, and proceeding against the initiators for any wrongdoing, may answer the organization or anything disobeying the law. There isn't any question about our ability to maintain such action in Illinois. We propose all such action where kidney has claimed to have organized lodges.
PULLMAN PORTER NEWS
By JAMES M. HOGANS
Burrowing by the Palmman Porter's Athletic and Social Club a few weeks ago we run into a group of "wife ones" of that organization arguing that much dull questions are better questions for the colored ones—traditional or business?"
Now, the pupil is a little more secure in its love, due to the fact that ministers meet ticket comes from the rank and life. The pupil is also more secure as a rule are drawn from the masses; the doctors having no time or inclination to serve in these capacities. Consequently, the person cannot give rent to the amputee by filling his executive board-with doctors. Just the same he gives rent to his affection in this manner; looking his congregation over, he remarks very glad to the Curre. Curre. This welcome is made Jr.
In the column entitled "By the Way," published in the Africo-American Press byterian of Charlotte, N. C., appeared the following story of Southern inconsistency:
One of our professional young men in one of our South Carolina cities went to the city building committee a few days ago to obtain a permit to erect a dwelling. On presenting the permit to the young man, whom the committee let pass as white, not knowing that all the blood in his veins was not "white," they reminded him: "Remember our gudge. You know we white people have pledged to give all of our labor to the white carpenters, except such work as a white man will not accept." At this juncture, the white colored man left, Kiying explained on what side of the fence he belonged. But this past week a white man in upper South Carolina was arrested with a truck load of colored laborers en route to some part of North Carolina and was heavily fined for transporting labor of the State of South Carolina. Conditions get like this it becomes a glaring paradox; they don't want you to go and they don't want you to stay.
This illustrates the conspiracy to exert an economic pressure to keep the Negro from bettering his condition through the occupation of skilled labor and at the same time prevent his going elsewhere. That delegate to the Moscow meeting who alleged that slavery still prevailed in parts of the United States was not without warrant for his assertion.
Referring to Education Week, which was observed December 3 to 9, the St. Luke Herald, published at Richmond, Va., said:
Education Week should mean much to the people of this city. It should mean, in the first place, an awakening of the interest of the authorities to the needs of the schools; second, an awakening of the interest of the teachers and parents to know and understand each
(Continued from First Page)
ganization. Mr. Henning has written
The Ack as follows:
November 7, 1993
Non. Fred R. Moores
Editor, The New York Age.
New York, N. Y.
by Moores:
Replying to your recent inquiry, regarding "The Improved Benevolent Protective Order of Moose" and its relation to the Supreme Order of Moose, known as the Supreme Lodore of the World, Loyal Order of Moose, I beg to say it is no relation between them whatever.
The Supreme Lodge of the World, Loyal Order of Moose, was organized in the year 1893 and is always been exclusively an organization of people of the white race and people not married to anyone of any other than the same age, my attention was invited to the fact that articles of incorporation had been filed in Illinois by Dr. R. A. Willis, of Chicago, incorporating the Improved Benevolent Protective Order of Moose. I wrote to Mr. Riley, the only one of the articles, advising him as to the articles, inquiring as to the purpose of tight organization, and advising him as to the purpose of Moose; that if the intention was to operate a fraternal society under that name, he would have to resort to legal steps before he received a reply from Moose this day.
I have read the article of incorporation,
and have been informed that there is no
need for there to be any security to them
understaff the organization of a (free)
company in a Burgundy, Lodge of
leaders in all靡雅, officer in fifteen or
something else.
I have heard heard that those together
have been very successful in generating
huge revenues here, and appropriated our
our various funds, any amount and
their various uses, in this in lieu of
their own money, from the regular array of funds, to the
WITH OUR GIRLS
In a Communist Crowd.
An old piece of bridal satin with a remembrance of Brussels lace clinging to it, lay in a jum-yard with other memorabilia scrap and piece, its glory, faded and its usefulness finished.
"I have lived a long time," it spoke to itself. "Who would have thought that I would have come to such an and as this. Fifty years ago I was woven on the loom of a little shop in Lyon, France, and I was a thing of beauty then. They shipped me to America to be made into a wedding gown for a shy little New England maid. Her eldest daughter wore me and her grandchildren cut me up into doll clothes and now here I am. Well such is life!" "Exactly," said a rusty deep iron frying pan, lying, leaning against broken spokes of a wagon wheel. "I went along with a young man struck with the gold fever to California in the rush of
perspective of what other important visitors there may be present who are making this their first appearance at his church.
offer; and, third, an awakening of the people as a whole to the necessity of educating the youth for that broad vision which is the heritage of each and for that large service which each owes to humanity.
Every week should be Education Week, so far as the race is concerned. Parents should never relax their efforts to make sure that their children utilize all the means of education open to them.
According to Prof. J. B. McPherson, who is a farm demonstration agent in Alabama, as quoted in the Birmingham Reporter, this work is proving a great success in more than one war. He said:
"The result of the farm demonstration work and the practical application of the progressive ideals has been the promotion of friendly relations between the white and colored people. The work that the people have done in improving corn yields, increasing the fertility of the soil and improving live stock, building school houses, improving churches and improving hope life, has won for the colored the respect and good will of the white people. The whites are friendly towards groups of colored, whereas, formerly, they were friendly to individual Negroes. I often meet white friends who give me a cordial welcome and speak of the good work that has been done in Randolph county among the Negro farmers. I hope this work will always be kept up. Unless we continue to supply strong, efficient and intelligent leaders we cannot keep up the standard that has been set."
The importance of the farmer as a producer and the need for encouraging the improvement of farm life and methods have been frequently emphasized. If the results from demonstration work are so apparent, its utility would seem to be established. Better farmers, better crops and better race relations are much to be desired.
49. Sometimes he used die, to cook his meals in and again he used me to pan gold in. Years after he struck it rich. I was hung in his den and he used to point me out admiringly to his friends. He passed away, his wife disposed of me to the junk man and here I am also."
"Don't leave me out," said a nike well built horsehoe. "I was one of four which adorned the feet of the fastest horse that over ran at Saratoga. When he ran it seemed as if he was on wings and his heels shone like silver as they flashed in the sunlight. My usefulness was short lived for here I am."
At that moment the owner of the place said to a half grown boy, "John, seperate that hush over there in the corner and that'll be all for the night."
DEAR GIRLS:
I know you are as busy as can be making beauties for Christmas and getting your stocking ready to hang up for Santa, now remember, we are still "Kids," and there really is a Santa, now isn't there? Well, girls, we have certainly broke the resolution we made when Mr. Moore was so kind as to give us another chance. Yet I cannot complain, but I always send in a letter every month, and if every girl would write once a month, just think what a jolly column we would have every week. "Buster," I am glad you discussed my suggestion with your girls. After I had made the suggestion, I thought of the same thing. But you see I love my column so much and I'm always ready to help build it up, that I sent in my suggestion before I thought of how kind Mr. Moore has already been to us. I am glad, also, "Buster," that you explained the small fee of 25 cents to us, as I have never clearly understood it myself, although I have sent it in. And I think some of the girls are like myself, especially the new ones. Perhaps that is why some of the girls are a little slack in writing. But this fee is not compulsory, and if we haven't got it, send the letter on and send the 25 cents when you can. In my suggestion for December 23, I asked all the girls to send in one subscription to The Age, and many of the girls have promised that they would Now I am asking all that did not get to because I don't know your address. Please send in one subscription to The Age. Now girls, this will be a good way to get The Age in some girl's home who has not heard or read of our column, and this will help build up our column. And perhaps out of all the members there will be a faithful few who will not let our column go down. I am always with you girls in any effort you may not forth.
HELLO GIRLS:
I'm like the proverbial bad penny, always turning up. At our Y, W, C, A three is a little saying something like this. "If every girl in this "Y" were like me what kind of a "Y" would my "Y" be?" I suppose that can be applied to this column. Because if, all the girls were like me the column wouldn't survive very long. New Years isn't very far off so I can make a resolution to never desert the column for such a long time again. "Procrastination is the thief of time" and I just kept putting off writing and then I never did seem to find time until I just made time.
"Wilhelmina" wrote some time ago suggesting that we ask Mr. Moore for a whole page for December 23. I think that would be a very nice thing. Then all the girls can show their talent and make up for lost time by making a special effort to contribute something extraordinary for that date. Don't you think that would be nice? I'm doing my best to help her on that date and I think that we all ought to give her our very best support so we can show others just how strong we are.
"LITTLE GIRL."
Our column has been missing from The Age for a few weeks. I wonder what was the trouble. Well, girls, I guess they think we have been so faithful and prompt that we deserved
Defeat of Dyer Bill Impala Women's Missionary Council, M. E. Church, South, To Demand that Southern States Make Good and Stop Lynchin
Atlanta, Ga.—Leading white women of the Southern Methodist Church have launched an organized movement for the enactment of adequate State laws to suppress Lynching. At a three days' conference on Christian principles in race relations held in this city, December 4 to 6, an address to the public was issued urging Southern officials, citizens, putpit and press to give united support in a concerted effort to be made to stamp out mob law and lawlessness in the South. Thirteen sixties were represented. Each woman pledged herself to work individually and in an official capacity in an insistent and persistent campaign waged on behalf of law enforcement.
Mrs. Robert R. Moton of Tuskegee Institute, Mrs. John Hope and Mrs. S. S. Butler of Atlanta, and Mrs. Jennie Porter Barret of Peake, Va., attended the conference.
Following is the statement issued by the women of the Southern Methodist Church:
"Whereas, the defeat of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill, which provided Federal control of lynching, has thrown the whole responsibility back: upon each State for removing this hideous crime; therefore.
"Be it resolved, that we, the Commission on Race Relations of the Woman's Missionary Council, Methodist Episcopal Church, South, the conference social service superintendents and other officers in conference in Atlanta, Ga., December 4, 1922, do now demand of the authorities of the several states that they make good their claim proving their competency" to abolish mob violence and lynching.
"That we assume our responsibility as citizens for the protection of human life and hereby call, upon all the peole of all the States, upon the pulpit and upon the press to join in an insistent and persistent agitation against this harbarous practice.
"That we formulate plans for an organized movement in behalf of adequate State laws and law enforcement. (Signed)
Mrs. Luke Johnson, Atlanta, Ga. Mrs. L. P. Smith, Dallas, Texas; Miss Estella Haskins, Nashville, Tenn.; Mrs. W. A. Newell, Winston-Salem, N. C.; Mrs. A. B. Smith, Nashville, Tenn.; Mrs. W. J. Piggott, Irvington, Ky.; Mrs. L. W. Alford, McCombs Miss.; Mrs. L. S. Arrington, Augusta, Ga.; Mrs. T. A. Benington, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mrs. Harvey Boney, Rose Hill, N. C.; Mrs. T. J. Copeland, Baltimore, Md.; Mrs. W. T. Cunningham, Natchitoche La.; Mrs. Frank Eanes, Lakeland, Fla.; Mrs. T. M. Francis, Montgomery, Ala.; Mrs. Charles W. Griffin, Eastman, Ga.; Mrs. S. W. Henry, Alendale, S. C.; Mrs. R. L. Keaton, Fort Mill, S. C.; Mrs. T. G. Lowry, Newbern, Tenn.; Mrs. R. P. Moody, Maysville, Ky.; Mrs. W. L. Mortison, Nashville, Tenn.; Mrs. W. V. Pittman, Winona, Miss.
a little credit and rest, but anyway we will leave it at that. "Kindness" what is the matter Hurry up and write, as I am anxious to hear from you. Girls, I do not think that there is anything else for me to say, but to leave space for the rest. "MARSHMALLOW." Plainfield, N. J.
.
Mrs. R. M. Rutta, Leesburg, Va.; Mrs. J. C. W狂莎, Owensboro, Ky.; Mrs. Oscar Reinbart, Birmingham, Al.; Mrs. F. L. Siler, Franklin, N. C. Ga.; A. W. Albright, Atlanta; Mrs. K. Atkins, Atlanta; Mrs. F. Frank Atlin, Atlanta; Mrs. L. M. Awtrey, Awnorth Ga.; Mrs. W. W. Baskin, Carrollton Ga.; Miss Mary DeBardeleben, Norman, Okla.; Mrs. Frank Harwell, Atlanta; Mrs. Frances Howard, Atlanta; Mrs. J. M. Lathan, Atlanta; Mrs. S. K. Lowder, Atlanta.
Mrs. C. A. Mauch, Atlanta; Mrs. R. B. Smart, Atlanta; Mrs. N. McEachern, Atlanta; Mrs. H. Howard Park, Atlanta; Mrs. Helen B. Pendleton, Atlanta; Mrs. Will Reeves, Calhoun; Mrs. Wallace Rogers, La. Grange; Mrs. W. A. Smart, Atlanta; Mrs. W. A. Turner, Neman, Ga.; Mrs. J. C. White, Atlanta; Mrs. W. J. Young Atlia; Mrs. R. H. Wynn, Shreveport, La.; Mrs. George Matthews, Fort Valley, Ga.; Mrs. Elijah Brown, Atlanta
BURZAU OF NEGRO WORK
MAKES GREAT ADVANCE
MAKES GABAY ADVANCE
The report of Dr. W. A. C. Hughes
the colored superintendent of
the Bureau of Legend under the Board
of Missions and Church Exten-
tion of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, which met in Philadelphia
recently, was one of the features of
the program.
Dr. Hughes selected the Upper Mississippi Conference as an example of the work for 400,000 Negroes carried on by the Bureau. Pointing out that the Negro population of the State of Mississippi outnumbered the whites by 81,000, Dr. Hughes showed that only $58,000 was appropriated for Negro education in the State by the law legislature.
"In the Mississippi Delta, an area of 1,200 square miles, Methodism has flourished," said Dr. Hughes. "Six years ago we had 1,200 members, today 4,044; 1,000 Sunday School pupil then, 2,775 now; twenty-six churches then, and fifty-night churches now."
Of the 116 ministers serving in the Upper Mississippi Conference, six-five have at one time or another registered in our, rural schools and thirty-two charges now have some type of weekly and recreational program.
"During the Centenary period the Board has provided $13,688 to supplement pastors' salaries and $25,317 to aid twenty-seven church buildings and parsonages needed for Negro Christian expansion in the South. Dr. Hughes was formerly area secretary of the New Orleans area of the Methodist Episcopal Church. At the Philadelphia meeting he was re-elected to his present position.
LYNN MA88
Lynn, Mass.-Mrs. Hattie Fox on New York City, who has been in Lynn several weeks has begun extensive repairs and improvements on her real estate which will not be completed until after the first of the year.
The "Name Party" held at the West Lynn Community School, Thursday evening, under the direction of Mrs Fannie Gaines, superintendent, primary department, assisted by the teachers, was a success.
Rev. W. H. Jones, P. E. of Boston district, was the speaker at the assembly period of Bethel A. M. E. Sunday school, and Miss Queenie Lacey told the Christmas story.
RYE AND PORTCHESTER, {The evening scrimon was preached by 2
NY. rustor, Rev. R. S, Oden. ‘The servic
bi were enjoyed by all, The Sunday-scho
to yivter, ON. YirMrs, Batefie] hid'a larwe qtiendanee, one schoher Jo
1 wha has been visiting herd ing the junior department. Collection {
doc an sister, Mrs, Emma: Corbin | the diy, $85. aim
ars’ Gertrude Levi of Portehester,} | Mrs." Nancy Jones, superintendent
TE). ued.co tier home at 101 Parsh-fte Young Women’ Mlssmwary S
i. ote, Trenton, N.°J, ciety of the Hudson River disteict, a
ye) Lenue S. MeDonaid sailed forf Rev. R. S. Oden: attended. Uke quarter
Ki = umana, BL WT, for about { mas meeting of the Women's Hor
te sacabion, | Jand Forcigm Missionary, beld at the ,
. Devember 10 was communion} M. E. Zion Church, Peekskill, N.
$. +. ot Bethesta Baptist Church, the | Thursday. December. 7.
2.) ‘t Lesister, pastot. Morning | The. "Trip Around the Workl.” giv
pe, San well attended, In the after-] by Steiwardess Board, No, 1, Decemnb
Tole A! Prophet Jones of Philadelphia] 6 and 7. was very snccesstul, The co
ic ws enlightening sermon, Many] tumes worn by the ladies representir
e e-\ the Holy Communion and a] the varions countries were very uniqu
Bie So ee money was raised. At] ‘The senior choir of the church turin
Oe cnr servive the pastor, Kev. J over to the trustees $17.50 from the »
& reached cial given by the choir.
2 V2 "Aenue. December 7. the} ‘Thursday evening, December 14.
gown co wisi was appointed by the] playlet, entitled “Little Red Ridin
es. Ratist Church gave their pas-| Hood.” will be given. by the junio: an
yf 1M Levister, a house warm-{ intermediate departments of the Stinday
pss) tpidence, Purdy avenue, Rye, | schoo! ,
EM (Ace cvering was spent by alll Master John Harold Hamilton attend
pos Pinte Mas a large truck and fed a birthday party of Mise Colbert, 6
. sat tov tvey the crowd from} West 42nd. street, Monday aiternocr
Xf oe and other neighhoriiig | December If
pew Ses teedut articles were ren] “the sick of the church are Mre M
S ant tinen, 185 pounds] C. Griffin, 125 Waverly street: Toy
GR ae weseties Rev, Lassiter] Hale, 1515) Waverly: street.
suid vs thank his members, . ————_—
fers Sow hers for such ani AUBURN, N. Y.
LE ROY, N.Y.
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YONKERS, N. Y.
et * Y o-Mrs. Mo Sommers,
K ars and Oliver Jones spent
Be eee old with Mr, and Mes, Oliver
% v4 Hendersun of 36 Morgan
ie + 1 Thanksgiving with her
c FE, >cott of New Britain,
Pea ct Mitchell and son of
Frot tN. L. were guests of Mrs.
s +i af 20 Wood place. tat
” Carson of Ashburton
. pot hime on last Satur-
i. + trom. the Homeopathic
ae evs having undergone.a very
J. 1 HF Donaldson of Florida, a
of teangeitst, was. entertained
“> December 3, by Mise Ade-
1% oon at her home, 437 Walmat
+ 4 Huward of 26 Wood place,
“ sith for Virginia to bury his
1 SW. Smith'was taken with a
"i sas unable to preach on Sast
“Om Sunday morning MON.
‘ aened the sermon. tn the
* 6 tex, Janes preached the sem
2° 2 Calhoun postponed ‘his reé
December 22, Bee af
tes at the Metiorizt ASM. 1.
7 so were welt sue, The
Sem men We pre by Mercy
“4 Of the deseons of uate hutAS”
? Se ee ee
The evening scrmmon was yrvached by the
pastor, Rev. R. S, Oden. ‘The -serviets
were enjoyed by all. The Sundax schoo!
hid a larpe qticndance, one echclar Jose
ing the junior department. Collection for
the day, $85. :
Mrs. “Nancy Jones, superintendent _of
the Young Women'd Missmmary So-
ciety of the Hudson River district, and
Rev.'R. S. Odes. attended. the quarterly
mass meeting of the Women's Home
and Forcign Missionary, held at the A.
M. E. Zion Qhurch, Peekskill, N.Y.
Thursday. December. 7.
The. “Trip Around the World,” given
by Stewardess ‘Board. No. 1, December
G and 7. was very sncceasiul, The cos-
tumes worn by the ladies representing
the varius countries were very unique.
‘Tue senior choir of the church turned
over to the trustees $17.50 from the s0-
cial given by the choir,
Thursday evening. December 14. a
playlet, entitled “Little Red Riding
Hood.” will be given, by: the junio: and
intermediate departments of the Suinday-
schoo! :
Master John Harold Hamilton attend:
ed a hirthday party of Mise Colbert. 60)
West 12nd street, Monday afternoon.
December 11
“the sick of the church are Mrs M.
C. Griffin, 128 Waverly street: Dloyd
Hale, 13's Waverly. street.
AUBURN. N. Y.
Nobu. N. Y.—-Mr. and Mre Netson
W Rue and daughters spent. the week:
what Mazvellis, NY. where they wee
whe Rates of Weir parent. Mr. ant
Mr. Howard Ray.
Mrs Frank Northrup is itt at the
Aubarn City Hospital where she passed
throagh 3 terion. operation.
Thomas Freeman, who me: with 3
palntvl injury te hoe head at the Colum
Tut Rege Factory a few wecks ago,
lias fituised to hee work again,
| ors Veins Jarier and chitdred. Joh
Rare and. Warl why have! been the
gure af ter uscle ead aut Mr. and
Mrs Myron A. Bator, and her cousin,
Miss Mary Baker Isit se Monday. De-
Zamber MWoane mee nbne on Washing.
tor. Dt
Nisron Raker. in. ef Recheaer, VN
Yo fat sarda December here with
vin rarest
Mis \etceeSanads ae su @oring with a
porines asthe
fos Maved Parker, Mre Philp Gas-
Re aei Vr Mary Prime were en the
Gio TH et Rte
fee O88 Smith and BAL
te Le were the geeets at Rev. and
Mec t foe os seraeuse, NOY,
a Soot where they spoke at sere
Mes che AM 1 aan Cheech
Tie Masse Cane? and Supper
gte ar the NMOL gas Cnngch te
Mes Ges Come on Decenber 7, 03g
erech oseyed Ine all present
Kes © OV Sauth preached an inter-
esting sermon at the AL ML OB. Zion
Charch last SGndav morning in. the
CVening a acre cumcert program wat
rendvred by the choir under direction of
Reber Hellant
Noe Scndey morving the pastor, Rew,
EAU Brosks, will deliver the sere
mot In thr evening Kev. George C.
Laurier wall lx the speaker. Dering the
siternoom 2 chicken dimer will be sere:
{ein thy Cugrcl pariors hy Mrs, Titus
teema:: and committee,
‘Vhe “Anti-Lynching Crucadess met at
Sc home of Mr. ard Mrs. Willard AL
tmatk on December te
, ROCHESTER; N. ¥.
Rochester, . V.-Mes. Henre Cole
man and Mes, Edwth Coleman or Sara-
toga Springs. were the guests of Mr. atut
Mrs Alexander Williams, & Wavertey
place, over Thanksgiving.
WW. H Sredgrass of Mexico cas id
the city’ last week enroute te Boston.
He was of the 24) Infantry
Mrs JE. Hattersran af Bay. sizees,
ict jast Sunday te vit Mr. and Mrs.
Rebert Jones ef Addison, NOY
BL Moure of Caiedonia avenue was
railed tn the bedside of his mother in
WWastungtet fast Sanday.
FoSam Larimer ot bodustelad creet fest
et betas tne New York enreatie en
Pol Beh Blas where be wll spend
cht scatcr at the Dreaker: Hotei
Mas A Witham ef Waverley pitt
rw cats patty in banes of Stes, Coles
Ts AML Zien Cheeetes far wee
qrediegcces Peaat amounted
gn
CORONA. N. ¥
Carona, SY Mere 6 Wears
af MV Tac | Snore aveiue entersamed
Te tunis ocral ot ai wan. treats
<n Sunday. December 190 Pf Leon
ard Hofman Caldwell was the guest
of honor,
lNew Jersey|
PLAINFIELD, N. J.
Piainfield, N. J.—Mrs. Clara Joshesu
of New York spent most of last weel
here atiending her daughter, Mrs, Chas
AL -Tackron of Plainfield avenue, wii
be teen 1] with a severe attack of la
eripne. Mrz, Jackson ix mux improvet
now and wishes to thank her mam
friends for their sympathy and. kind
‘ness, and especially those who brougi
fruir and flowers.
The case of young Milton Deloatch
va. Potiteman Anchor Urber, was dis
missed by Judge Demaza in the Police
Court un Deceniter 8 Although i wai
generaily known that the hoy was no
throwing -stomes when struck by the of.
fer, no one. excepting a littie boy, coukd
be found who would testify Aqainst Che
policeman. Rev. Coberth tried hard to
seeate sume ane who would become 3
witness, but was unsuccessful. Some
day we will wake up to our imerest 35.3
face and cooperate more with each otter.
Young Deloatch is the brother of Mrs.
WW. Hodge of West Ind street.
‘Mrs. Ellen Edmonds of Danville, Va.
who spent-fowr moaths here visiting her
fon, the Rev, W. W. Hodge, returned
(6 ber home on Saturday, December 9,
Mrs. Tucker Jokmson of Webster
place. was made vey happy las: week
npom the receipt of a photo of her tong
lost" brofher and his wite, who are living
in the West. ‘
Miss Margaret Jolmen, Mrs. J. W.
Maury and damgbicr, Laura. © spemt
Thenkes:ving Day in Washlagion as the
etl Mr. Myrsy's -daugher, Mise
seg, Marys. ges a evden’ at How-
Leisetery. ber :
agg Covet: bo gueoted toe iene
THE MEW YORK AOE: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1928.
Dp geal a ye a Sr 1 eo Sig
Mr. amd Mrs"). C. Hamer.’ They re
turned home on Sunday, after aver
vlearent'tan. eg
Charlgs A; Reed the singing cyan
ErTaL bs. eceived reply from the ete
be ‘he French “Tiger,” M. Clem
enceau, thenRing Mi mior the siand b
bad taken io behalf of the Negro race.
Mr. and Mrs, Isaac Johas of Rich
mond sircet and a parcy of friends -pen
Thankagiving with Mrx. Jobns’ sister
Mrs. Bertha Bailey, in New York City
C.S. Sovay of Richmond street, wil
driving, wat run into by an awtombbi
laut week driven by an employee 0
Schwarts & Company. Mr. Scesy 3:
wninjured,” tut his horse was so badl
hhure thes he had to kill the poor animal
Although the lois of the horte was a s2¢
Dow to its owner, he received a satis
factory settlement from the owners 01
the automobile
‘A tnass meeting bas been arranged foi
‘the Crusaders for Tuceday cvening, De
| cember 19, af Bethel Ctrapel. Tt is hope
‘that this rceting will be largely attend:
cd, ax the meeting at Washingtow Schoo!
on December 3 was poorly attended be-
cause of the funeral of a member of
the Elks at Calvary Baptist. Church.
Mrs. Gtorge E. Canton of Jersey City
will positively be precent and detirer an
address.
Henry Vanblake spent Thankepiving
at home with his family and parents
of East 3rd street. He is Still here and
is looking fine.
The ‘next regular mecting of the
Piainetd Branch of the No A ALC. Pa
wilt be tetd at Calvary Baptist ‘Church
Monday evening, Decrraber 18 at which
time, in addition to the regular routine
business an excctient program will be
cendered Members. and friends are
ureed to make s sacrifice and be pres-
crt, an this is the last_mectilg of the
sear. Mra M. Cary is chairman of
she meeting committer.
Mz. Wykel of Phiniell avenue is
stil very vick at his home.
Mize, Kates of West dth gtree:, who
hay been in the hospital or several
warks re somewhat improved, which at
pleasing news to her many fricndt.
Plainheld Lyceum etd services on
Sunday afterno.n, Devemice 10. at
Bethe! Chanel wich Alas. Washington,
Re secretary, in sharke nf an anverest=
az program. The program was as fol-
ows: Recitacion, Muy Teanette King:
viano tole. Mirv Arita Saunders; paper.
Min Eitnat ven. socal git. Mra Are
nid Doves. accompanied by Mre_ Saun-
jera und an sntes sting and timely ade
ners ty Do. Water (Quinn. Ail
penne and praise ts Mrs AW Sain
fers foe hier wiltingness to give her ser
Hes at the iano for anything that is
enetioal tw the race
One hundred and iorty-hve members
sere in attendance at the regular meet:
newt tie Mutawk Lodge of Eas,
Stich wae held om Toteday evenings:
deccartier S$ ihe business ch the meets
ng ves the ciretin of atheers
Veitiesns Cartes. oz ef Wear ath street
Coinahinp some sabe sibiteone to
+ bane
cAmet of cnr cnterpriune young
vn, Wi'lam Jeter of Webster pis
ay gong inte business for Inmet Ie
ts opened a beautiful tile tailoring
nd preemg establishment on Fatt ced
rect The writer extends Ins congrats
lations and wish him success. The old
eterans in this business are tie Nesman
others of North avenue. who ztwary
ave their hands full of woth. - Cone
ralulations are in order for they alsa,
His is not written to advertise their
dsincss, hit we delight to encourage
ur basiness rmen, especially when they
MM not do without reading The New
ork Age
Charies A. Johnson of Went Jrd stceet
te on Sunday night tor) Washington
here he will attend to some business
"the Sprreme Court.
Communion services were ohserved ia
V of the Baptist churches here on Stn-
ay evening, December 10
Ars, Molly Goldcioue and Miss Mace
ret Redd of Plante) avenae were
Ruerts on Sunday. Decem’er 1, of |
ex Gandstone’s. cousin. Mine. Lectin
New Vork City
Me and Mee Liseote Brews 0! West
Wowtreet have estiened hone toons
ighifel meter tip woliter ss where
vy sent” Thankagmeing Dat woth
went ard otinr telatterr. Whe tp
as aiide wathout aml.
Mio Lise Geren, the siier ot ADs
aria Vase! Wed dil street. asf
Mel Dace!" Rahinwa of Mamenn |
four comfned ty) ber bent
NEWARK. N. 1
Necars No J.=-Pilap AL Fees of
ciauaytranager of hs eS Alben
Pablisheg Company and the Chivage
Lijtiia ih a uta 2a Wen
Dhiteday. tas eter of Juin Wo Singer,
Mr. aad Mrs .Nicholdy Spratios. Mr.
‘at Mrs Wiliam: Mitaeit tar? Dan.
ty Jenn W. Shaver and ©. 8 Donnell
Golgi a big at ee Slaninuan a
Se 1 Nese Work last dimradyy events
at tre basketball game between the Chi-
cago Defender Big § and Howard Uni-
versity Collegiate Stare.
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Mzon, former-
ty of 123 Bsldwin street, have moved to
134 Somerset street.
The Calendar Club of S:. John's M.
E. Church, Academy street, Rev. W.
A. Hubbard. pascer, conducted a bazaar
at the chur 4. .
Mrs Havgond, the affable wife” of
Rev. N.- F. Haygood. pastor of St
John's C Mo E Church, at Mulberry
and Was streets, arranged. a fine con-
cert at the church jast Monday evening,
She secured good local talent to take
pare in the program, among whom were
Miss Florence A. Mann, Mrs. E J.
Coptey, of St. James A. M. E. Church,
Usion sivce, and others. *
John W. Slater, Mrs Carl Flipper
avd several’ other Newarkers rendered
selections on a program for the CHfis-
tian Endeavor League at St. Masks’
Church, Jersey City.
Many colored men have taken tbe
civil service examination for the pos-
Mice in this city. Last Tharsday even.
ing ‘seventeen were interviewed hy the:
assistant postmaster, relative to: tempo-
rary appomements. sat |
A local branch of the Young ? fan's
Christian Association 1s being forged
in this oe Rev. H. A. Onque: is
heading the movement. >
Bere nen Of 102 Monmouts street
died last Ts yy at his horse. He was
4 member of Pride of Newark Lodge,
No. 93, |. B. P.O. E. of W. Fumeral
services were hek at his home. Imter-
ment in Evergreen'Cemetery, David D.
Weody, undertaker, : -
Alexander Braithwaite. grand cea
jecturing knight. J. B. FP. 0. E. af. |
bales Sov mies Thobay aoiog
Ne ads, Test :
Lagos. ‘be installed ‘the newly elepted of-
‘pere of ee ate 7
“Migs Netde Coogde, Sormeriy of Ap
paiachies, Fle. rho had resided
Jetvey City, N. Ji Me. ‘the past thre:
years, Ged suddeoiy lant Friday even
ing. She was stricken while in ith
screct, ‘about 6: p.' mand was taker
to the Jersey City Hospital, where ah
died in Tess.than three hours, The bod:
was prepared by” Undertaker James H
Beckett, and abipped to her old hoc
Eugene Austin accofipanving the body
«Rev. R. T, Parson of Heard’s Chapel
‘A.M. E, Church, Roselle, preached a
St James A. ME. Church “Sunda
st.
Rev. E. E, Ricks of Bethany is at.
tending the Natiogal Baptist Convention
at St. Louis, Mo.
‘A mother's program will be the fea-
ture of Sundayaafternooy Mite Mision:
ary meeting af St. James ALM. E
Church. -Each wecety in the city wil
‘send deelgates who will take pact in
the program. Mrs Curoline Thomas,
Conference Branch’ president. and. focal
presidents will “attend. Bishop W. H.
Heard, who tae returned from the Ala-
Lanta conference, is expected to be pres-
ent and address the workers and moth-
crs, Paster Carl F. Flipper will preach
at bot serviers Sanday, December 12,
at Macon and 8 opm
Mey. Deiphin “Downings of Hosion,
Mass, aunt ef Emanuel Jackeon of Un:
fon street. is spending a few days with
Felatives and Griends in, the city.
Bishop W. T. Veruseces Sonth “AT?
rice will preach the annual sermon to
the old folks at St. James A. M. E.
Church Sunday mozn.ng, December 31.
The stewardesses ‘will serve dinner free
tie all the aged way le Persons desiring
old pedple te be sent for will please
phone Market 3184-3, not later thao
December 28. °Autormpile service (ree.
The aged. members of ihe Colored’ Home
at Montclair will be gueets of che church |
that day ‘
Death, Xd + Trude ¢ Stemark, No 93, 1.
gts “Tike of “the Wortde bela tel?
min antual ehectian ot omneeea tant Pe
Gar seting “ine. Tolewing omcers. were
niectea, George. Peterson wae unani>
ously elected e¥alted rule: Cliford T
Cas eerie, “Tearing “amignts Watt
Wiuta, esiecimea inves sAntentz Georke!
Pemuna, entered Ieetiting Anlept: Jonn
uninoura “Ye rine\ea wreretary: charien
“itr, re-election. treavurer tn Seadion
An Nrenore iat “terocied more inca
AOL Ty watlected a sig the eae
The Ast snivia) ‘reeegitin abd halt was
cin vn Sradaw ecentive. Dee mt
ree "at the Tauret “warden: Springmetd
Tey ie nade of. Moor: “steuanaet
Wiatnmaties dictator, And Joti Muenet,
eceery
The goduel Thanxseving services were
2 an ethany sbaptiot Cnoneh dew
sucka pastes, Tete ae Ws tiatibard. ae
‘ered the sunval sennan | the collection
fe day. reperted Bp the varus chute
< emounind (e "P43e Gre wae donated to
tetColered Meme far tue Ape et Mont
Mate The Tatseet amounts rontenbiind
tne cuneate were st Dame NM Fe
puren, bias en “wetbane aptiet Church,
Tee T, Mn St genne M cnucen be
The tuocial wervices of tne iete Georee
anne were. candurted ay Bromine Unoer
shin “sctanitanment., Weaneeday\attre
om, Nev rar! Fuvper, omeraied. Inter
rent Mecenaie
Nother epeaimag’” an wey M8
yearenan, were Buesiy ae Me and Mes
ON bak sk oe Che sie
RIDGEWOOD. N. J.
Ridewood No Jus Services at tire A.
Moh Zim Church were well astended
Sunday "The pacar, Kes. J. He White
preached morning and. evenine
The Third quarterty conterenee was
held at the A.M. EL Zion Churc: Thur-
pte ctiaetiicineeton
At Greatly Reduced Prices
vane En yesagpecat
Never worm on the @reet. The
greatest Fur welues that you can
get anywhere, Deposits accepted
Capes and Wraps
$60. up |
CONEY COATS $35. up
THEATRICAL FUR Co. |
MARCUS LOEW'S ANNEX ,
160 W. 46thSt., New York |
Take clevator—Suite 415.
Open eve., IOP. M. Sun 10 A. Mo
ESTABLISHED 2 YEARS
MRS, IDA WhITE-DUNCAN
HAIR WORKER
ig Prescott St, Jersey Cin, N. J
Wigs, Braids, Bangs, Pompadours
Tarpstormations, Combings, made up
to any etyle, Scalp Treatmect, Sham-
pooing, Hair Dressing, Face Massage,
Nanicarizg. Colored peoples combings
bought. Lessona tsugbt }. har work,
Diplomee. 7
]
The East. India
Hair Grower
“ys q
P |
=
eu resi
my monte a Tull
Fut
ees
aetna
y -. strengin
oA
; sage Bemns eee
Pa
a,
sant ell? wan
| aa!
" zen ae bothered eth
Hye My erates ose
Fee sate SO
Perit Br ee
My, 8 lat! choiaina medical persian:
Wee pares cca ma pee:
1p Pha te ane tress
Se eee css ns Ma ant
Fat ae a ar!
proert, ie O ran eet
SE ee teers ent bewetity! Smee
tara ager eee
Tet Rercra "Onion, Can be urea wtin
eee Creer
MPT ONE, Canragie 1216 hora
8 int Con cates: tay: cme
rage aT g MAIL bec.
eae
tor onthe tape Ott ee,
3 ah & rem
Rear tee! 8
| day, Decermber 7, tit ‘Rev. Langféed of
Bai, Park, residing, Toul amcor
raised thistquarter. ih
De. J, We Easton wiipreach ai"the
ALM. #. Zien. Church Sunday, Dec-
ember {7, ut 300 P.M. He will also
reach. ai ML Bethel “Baptist Charl
7 Ehuon Munday mgt a the A.
M. E. Ziou Church wil lecture’ jon
“The New Way. for The New Dey.”
: TRENTON NI
ae ES See mene. SM ORRE (Bee
Stenart'of West End avenue, entertain-
ed most elaborately : in ‘their :beaadt ied
new home on Friday evening. laid. bo
honor of Mrs. Goorge Hoagland of
Bradford. N. J: ‘Whist was the feature
of the evening. after, whigs the orches-
tea’ played until. midnight for dancing.
Among thie present were Mrs. Georne
Hoagland, Mrs.-Augusta Wells. Fhush-
ing, Long Island, N. Y.r Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Goins, Mr. and Mts. RK. Foster,
Mr. and Nes. H. W.. Reynolds,"Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Lewis, De. and Mrs
Henry Afistin, Mra Agnes 1. Kemp.
amt Mr. and Mrs. Hughes Stewart.
PToeaina. 5. 1 ~The des. ¥ Horace
hrowet uf Nerwign, Conn. "was the recent
eet of Sra de rahary and. fasniiy
nq’ other friends in Treqton,
Sash Tey Mayo at a1 Weel Knd avenue
sent Thanksgiving Day in” Wainineton,
Ritending tne ttwward-Lineatn wane
isin (here. she war the mer of Way”
fant Towel and Nea State meat,
Mir tnt Mrs, ohn “Mere. mniertatned
Mrs stephen tircen And Mek f.1szl0 Brown,
of snaten” tana
“Mer RRbeDeIn Allen of 99 West Und
menires spent Thankerivine hay at Sew
York City. Whe guest of Mr. and Mrs
James ‘kivion of aitornia They ales
cieitet Yonkers e* the guest of Mts. i
_ Mes. Jubnan and aaurhter of Orden,
XY Spent” thankeen tne Day ith sr:
corre tition. Tt West. bad” aventie,|
andl with Mise Rogenia Willunvof, \ewat
Mitee ila Johann spent few Gays In
Phitecerhtie
Ta Thwaees Fortune was: here Jatt week
fora reat A
Tees Niseee toroiny tamnpton. Lavinia
jackean. Mabel Hampton, carrie” Waitin
ena "Nir. Burke motored "up trom Sree"
mia. 3m ‘Thanbsgreioe Day. 7
Mine tileays adhoron spent. the MINNS;'¢
n iNew Vork tity. °
Miss Georsiarhe Thomas was 4 rerent
enor io aman, Sd.
Sirs Kinet Williaine and CV enppen
hank all wie helped to Make the “I relies
rte as: wnuercas, Giver 8133. wae cra”
M tar Nk Namicee Seitelan
RAHWAY WNT
Tahway Vd. Mire. inrence irdshets
ot Remark“! visiting her mother Mey
fogs Brower. 112 Raat Mittan avenue,
Meo au ‘ire Hes" or Sutamersilie. were
Fecent munste or Mr and Mee, Memiton
Paney ef Main atrent
Mee “Amy. Smith has retarneg’ to ser
bene’ tn Haydock street fromm the Hahway
Hospital
AL MOK election” wae held at Ebenezer
AE “churen bx the trusters Uy tater
flindiggover #27 haa Deen ravi-d itp, bi
rina Ger“ineaunted. “The heaviest batlat
Mag Woe in the presidential campaign, Wit?
Mee We I rulieg suerenatal caniigate.
recelviog 144 \aire "The suttrage nuine=
Nice Cenmmatt reressing eiglity votes
Nui president. Mien Kebrerone. flotnes
one hundred and “eleven votes” Senator
Mrs. "Mare Davies Cangreszoun,
Wr canter. Gonernat. Mre
Wuham viamimonde: _Asrembisman. Vre
Ginton Taylor: |Sberiff. damea Parker:
Surrorae Mrs. Mary Taylor: Mayor, Mrs.
‘Anna Penticton: Couineilroen. Mist Erman.
Trude Wilson, Ses, Poward Pratt and Mr~
ET. Dickerson Juwtice at the Peace,
Nips Josephine Mandeep.” After the elec:
tian supper wae served to the wurde. by:
the Board of trustees, Thomas King. Jerry
Bitte. Raymond nabitne, Joho Gibson,
William “Hammonae, samuel hdgar and
Reed Wwe taller,
Earness’ Parker (9 died Monday at
Ronnie Rurn Sanatorium | Me tae tar
some. tine resided at bake and Coraell
Avenues. Me leaves a widuw and one
Gaughicr, Adeline The Tuneral services
Sere eit Tuesday at funeral parlore of
Tainan A" petit, nT Irvin wereet, Rev,
Alfred WrieBt. tastor, af th ‘Sevood Rap:
Het Church. condurted sereices. Inter
inant wan tn fahmay. Cemetery,
Wiltam Mate son of Mand Wes
Chas AU Maize, uf 10D Lark Beott avenue,
retned hniie Sunday feony New Rerne,
XC. where he was professe of Fneiien
Trench, att Aigedea in the Eastern Sort
Carntina Industrial Aeaarroy. In the ereat
rennagration thet wdewasiad New Berne,
thie, feat hu'lding’ af thm decadent wae
Durned, teeter with Temas. iitenee,
Caciitves, att public Duildinge Tne Nigh
Mehul deqarinient ait resupie wok th
pnrttee “Davianis, Jandary 2, 4993, there
fore Me Matar will he et Rome Nt
mat Nise,
PRINCETON, N. J.
Prneeen, 6 Pf Cannon was
called 10 the fea of bie wife in Pennsock.
eo
Tae Temerton nrescn of the 4
cP” yeht a tuate aneetnie inn Tuesday
feening Meerenier in Bright lobe
Paptist «tauch The speaker int the evehe
the ae Tae ete ae New Wark em
The meetes Was attends 1) m large au:
Meuer New aitieets were installed Far
Thr eacnme. Meat Mane. innmners Were
arvctied Afier Waien tefresnments Were
The Mos: Wondertul Discovery of
Age. lt You Wast Lomg Bonutif
iar Ue:
eames
COCOA*BALM
‘Reeci's Grastoet Baie Goren
‘Tt clesre the heir of dandrafy, mops
ablug, stops the hair from Yalliog
out or breaking otf, teeds the rocis
and pots new Iife in it, Every box
felly guaranteed,
sean. See
Selene os hy saan:
“Yeu can t-kc REGINALL ‘PER.
FBCT SYSTEM in HAIRDRESSING
by mall. Write for SPECIAL TERMS
TOAOENTS. “Adare
‘THR TCRMAL LADORNPONY,. ante, 6a.
MAKE YounsELr:
MORE ATTRACTIVE
Use Quinade
Quinade will help to beastity and im-
prove tre hair, {twill soften, hatih
ie caf ele be" Ween wil Sena
aay
Seety's Quinade cnmextns
Soe ap aloes to ania, Be
scalp anc] roots of the lic, thereby ae
eT tcbeie ben reveity (rom dhe use ol
epee clams the wl repatly wih
Tr cable coals ern}
me Ee, eee Beet we
_naweost ro eeu
eng Baume ey N.Y,
see
Mra, Berths Carter hes returmed after
having “spent, Teenaraiving at “home as
the pwest of Ber sister an Reltimore.. Na.
Mra Ball, fr., recemty. Wad Ciaitibg in
Mastceipasa. Va, the gaat of bar sicer
tna :
Ming Makan Jackson, “the daugbicr
vf \tred “P. Jacknm, ime” of tbe oldest
Taraliive of Frincetch, wot marrind Wes
seedy. November 2, Im New York City
erat Aikius. ot Une osigence of
her sister, Mis. Now. 13204 Béventh aventic,
Per tisler. Mrs. Rlow, 3806 Seveuun avenue.
vit. i. Chim, secretary of abe Ve Ne A
ie ‘euntined "40" Ma bed at bowie.
aire ney” Jordan and Gauguter Mave
moved io their hew home om Leigh
aveane °
The junor “Y" boya were served
the ACE As by patty, “Lotener on De=
MIME Grorgie Rrown, and motner wern
in Princeton visiting “her, brothers "and
wicaas, <
Vauxhall. X. J ~Mes, Samucl Huns
dhed of pneumonia on the &th pf De.
cember.
Rev. and Mrs, Wim, Sutton have
moved into their new: Inngalew on
Oregon street.
Master William Moles, aged tive,
entertatned at dinner five litte guests
during the Thanksgiving holidays. with
a iment which included everything
from turkey to mine: pie
The Key. Levi Franklin ef Urook-
Hn filled the patsit wt Macedoma on
Sunday. delivering two soul tittle g
nerions, Mr. Archer uf Uroakipa was
a RUCK at the morning eorvice
Elisabeth, SN. J.- Durmg tae week
of December 4, the revival meets of
Siloam Presbyterian Church wen suc-
cessful under the Wadership of Miss
Alice &Wayces, evangelist, Gi New York
City. There were seven converts
Abraham Crawley of 450 Penn
avenue was confined ty his home one
week with a heavy cold and light touch
of the grippe.
Mrs. Hagar Van Deren of Public
Lane, and-au old president of Etiza-
ae contined io her home for
four days suffering with 4 heavy cold,
Gladys, Francis Carriet, age 14.
daughter of John F. Carrier ot 441
Edgar road, Elizaberh. died Monday
morning. November 20th. at Bonnie
Burn Saniterium, Farmweud. NJ,
Funeral sersices were held a: the Ss
loam Presbyterian Church, Rev, S. 1.
Trener, paster-n-ciarge. buried on
Rosehill Cemeiery, Linden, N. J.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
The New York Age Bureaa
611 F. Street, XN. W.
‘Mis, Jeanette Carter, Mangr.
| Washingion, D. C—The Dunbar
Ugh School had ay ie guest. Prof
Robert Kerlin, formerly a professo1
gt Virginia Military Institme, The
School was also visited by several dic.
Unguished) Japenese. These gentle-
men who were accompanied by Gare!
C. Wilkinson, assistant superintendent
of schools were Cneshiro Suzuki, mem-
ber ef Parliament: K. Tujimura, T.
Shirayanagi_and Tateu Okada,
McCants Stewart of Virgin Islands
is here as the house guest of Prof. and
Mes Cromwgll_of Swann street.
Lieut, RS. Toomey of Jacksonviile,
Fia, was a caller at the Age Bureaus.
James Weldon Johnson, executive
secretary of the NOA. A.C. Po ae in
the cy inthe interest of the Dyer
Anu-Lynehing ill.
Gamet C. Watkinson, avustan: su-
perintendent of public schewls, returned
ta the ety after an educasional tout m
the West.
Oharles S. Johnson, Jaw Bee David
ton and lunes Catling presented
Turner Layton sf New York, a torm=
cr Washington fey. st ac mdiigat alow
tthe lancela There
Ty. Richard 1, Hanks. heeatte of sil
heath, has severed hiv connection woz
he deug firm of Thatks and Harwell.
Dr AC Rurwelt parchared the anes
sat of De, Bauks, and now te site|
owner. |
Washington, 0c. The nanaiet given
gt Ine Wehitclaw Bete) be toward Atumnt
Reenciatyan ware a huge wireese. Inger
Sting apeecting, were male ty yISTene
members and wan piedse= fer the ouye
port and. maintenan-e af Rs Assoriaciec
rae made. ir Strre fewle renresentiie
be oward Univeraty Hienial seenetatien,
leaped 220.000. Tanyer Isaac Mutter oF
WHantie Cite, president Of the Asmarialten,
resided. ie 'Waihant © Sinelatr, newly:
Jet fet secretary. alan eperke
Sens Nelen Parker Whiteman ct foston,
ars, hey recently visited. friends. In
Ma ity for. ter weeks retrned te
ire: Fore City. "Aes WAliemany Mas the
nko purl of Miss A De Mell, tSe2 Stl
treet, Norinwest,
Catherine Ne liichardenn, a prominent
ttornes nf Richinond.. Ind. represeatue
he Republican. sate Canunitter, arn
T the NowehacLincaia toate classte.
ENTON SCHOOL OF DESIGNING AND DRESSMAKING
INCORPORATED.
. | 31 MONTOOMENY PLACE. TARSTON, x. 3.
IA Nice Three-Story Brick Building with all Improvements for Stadeq
‘Cours compteted tu Pour Weoks Miptumad Given
[NCLOSE. STAMP FOR REPLY MRS. AGNES L. KEMP. Prenctpe!
$$ SS
e ;
IS THERE A DESERVING YOUNG
eeieeR Sais MAN OR YOUNG WOMAN
A iis students devote IN YOUR COMMUNITY
ope Bult tbeIr me WHO NEEDS A
at ueetul work 1
32 e"timewrtn_ common +o on GHANCE?
feose that we are amazed Kz peraape Tushorse Institute offers
Ger'ine sae baa 10 De |. very oppcctuniy wmentne wane”
But aa erection oy ua | Toakery, Ih a oaiy © seasok 1 te wn
x-slave ite waver 2 once.
for ais disfrenctised rece. Lodatted Sp ROay, Seudawt 30 nat
Gur greet siscoveries are | tradea ane iwanoeries ‘for "pees ae
always ercidents; + we | Nomen “Excetape Literary” end’ Petmat
wore ting aa | :
poe momar. | etpect tnt Home Roonomics, Agricalture,
toe aay writ come and Industries
lone, een he gree: sisal Weekaseaal Gotredi
Saveretae of the word | Seaman =
Ensen me it egerne |. Ngee USTTIUTE, @, 28. See
eons ft rer a ett
tee merger te mare | [00 prowram-criin, chkesrond“ohape “6
tremasives tram being ane :
syeared by ie Coerce | Mafbe your boy neods fast the sagt
tame inte soneey _ Write for Catalog sud information,
Pa ROBERT B:-MOTON, sot
tee aseais_ al : 1, Tushoges Enaiome, re
VAUXHALL. N. %.
ELIZABETH. N. I.
RALEIGH, N. C.
Raleigh, NC Reve OW. Perey,
Walker and. 0, Walker have retiened
from tbe aonualcunference. sehien was
Dela th Morganton Sit were retuened
fo Raleigh. The Maleten district led all
Gisteirta ecent in muasionary snaney”
Mrs tite Perry. wite of Dt. G. >. Ferry.
fied “inday, Tacember 3. after tnred
weeks Wliness) oSbe wae as eiRnIN Reade
Tearher inthe Garietd School,
Dro. S. Mullack, pastor of First Rap-
{st Church It confined 10 his home on
sceunnt nt ulpess
Mira. Frank Watson spent ‘the Thanks-
miving. holiaaye here with her” hisdand.
Sirs Wernop 18 teaching at Maxton,
"A number of the city leareors atienand
By sae
EN ort:
ae tote sae ae
cee
Rae we oon
Sora tare
we eS
ee eae
etal ae
Gur Fre uiscoveries are
‘always = accidents; - we
Bose tne os
To teen ape
ye
oe ics, Tan owt
Seven of pe re
Sor
Tre ta ene
ores
ne eee
Apeenred by te Colerce
mT:
met inate,
wont ee
a
é “os
ie eecker's Atvectauon in Wineupe
SMtry eta Rewards, coer at
wre, "Lule marron aie SSS
ober 8 und wes ware c—
oe and irs. Cogent at —
‘eoqes
Sis 'aene'coarats :
a Aver f
Mise Nallte Pairbey who teaches tu Stas
tom Spent’ Thankeeiving baton ith bet ‘pars
Nit. A. L.vAlenamder and children epeat
the holiday’ in Nendaraoa. :
Mrs. Susie coy. spent Thsakagiviag:
in Menacrsom and Sirota 5
Dain Rrowns the” “iwelro-year ead
aaueicc OF WP and” Mes” Fame
Gied | Thursday Bight, “Novesetber wy
See buried fromthe Tieat Bate Ch
Siaay’aiternooas
FAYETTEVILLE, N. C.
Fayetievile, X. CoM. and Mee, Wenry
Robiawon, Nek, Copabell, rae Metin aod
Mino elvin otorea ta" Raleigh to pee
Tnanutetving "wih Murcee Tan ead. Neate
tonade
TT” rane and the teachers deserve
reat reat Tor suecere_ Of eatertainenert
EI"Soutneae School "the Parent Teseeers
Msvclation ts Snare We leeoersbip ot i
Sairman, wea Seorritey
Ni Cds Nh Trance: ie at Rome arver
a tong! vinit to: ner father. "MIke Lilie A,
Trubone at murtagione Ned aun
ce tieney Rooinses Rak some .
cri inne ao Bewtl, tenchinge
inn inary Tas MAtoter wah Deen ape
palniod’ dunia” exaaniner byone' CB
Vencran, Bineau ‘of Waeamgton end sta
tioned at tavatteritte
GEORGETOWN. S.C.
; Gcorretown, ST. A “sacred diama was
| rendered at Weatly M. FE. Church Sun-
i tay, December 3, under the direction of
{MrCl L. Lawten, with Mrs. FE. .T
| Brew) pat the organ. and Mi... Jenne
‘Youle in the leading rale.
| Mrepreventative gathering of Bethels
vites greeted the Rev. D. P. Pender-
/Rrasx on his first apperence at Bethel
i A.M. E. Church Sunday December 3.
. Captain and Mrs. A. A. Smith have
| returned from an extensive tour of the
South. They went as far as Mobile
| Ala
‘The country store will be = featere
at the Palmetto Theatre.
Mise Rubie Woodbury. 2. N., has ree
tumed from Charleston S.C.
Grand Master I. J. MeCotrie and L,
D. Anderson attended the funeral of
Major J. MH. Fordham in Orangeburg,
S.C. “Thureiay, December 7.
Miss Ezhel C, Sumpter, nurse at the
FPeoptes’ Horpital, passed the State
Board of Exmairers and is pow a regis~
‘tered marae ww”
Rebert Fraser. agent for Siegling
Music House, Charleston. S.C. ree
caved orders for a number of pianow
and victrolas in Gris city recently.
Mr. W. H. Robinson, W. M. of Maceo
Lodge, number 50, A. F. and M. wea
to Cheraw to attend the annual comer
nication of the Grand Lodge of Mae
sone. s
‘Marshall Jones of Copes spent ¢ few:
days here af the bedside of his brother,
F. O. Jones.
VIRGINIA NEGROES IN
10TH ANNUAL SESSION
tee aly EN eat agree
school term for every child and at feast
avnormal graduate as teacher in every
Virginia schonl,” was the educational
‘objemne of the tenth annual session
af the Nexto Organization Society of
\orginia. whose officers include Robert
. Moten. honorary president; Allen
Washington, president and John BM.
Gandy. executive secretary, P
| Hon. E. Lee Trinkle. Governor of
\irginia. declared that this eyes bed
heeu opened, since he took office. to the
many fine things that Virginia Ne~
grocs have bren doing to help advance
their raze. “Every colored man and
woman in Virginia.” he said, “ought
te belong t this Negro Organization
Society, which will achieve results and
do much goad” -
Ment and women." said Governor
Trimkie, “can do almost anything thet
they ate determined tu do. Jt is alwaya
a great ply for people to gave up.
Colored people today are reaping great
Feed from the eflurte of 2 previous
Reneration, So tnday are men and
women «owing seeds. While there are
Rreat end, that men can accomplish
as individuals, it is also trae thar by
a cambination of good services and
good wishes men can "pa: over amy=
thmg they wash,
“i want you to know that I am back
nf you in any honest effort you are
making tp advance your race, Whee
we can get all the colored people harn-
cased up to exert their force for good,
t will mean much to Virginia. Let
romplaints be built on constructive pro-
ptams. We want to find the thrage
hat will make us all better and happier,
| wish to felieitate the colored people
si Virginia en their obediance to the
Major Alien Washington, command+
wt at Hampton Institute, in his ans
ual. presidential address, outlined the
~oxtety’s progress during ten years of
erveie to Virginia.
At the clnsing mteting addresses were
nade by President W. J. Clarke of
Vidriwa Unten Universtiy Mre B.
+. Munford, president of the Co-opera-
ive Fducation Association of Virginia,
‘rarihlin O. Nichols of the American
social Hygiene Association, Dr. James
: Gregg. principal of Hampton Ie-
tisune, the Rev. G. Lake Imes 7 Tus
egee Inditute, and Dr. Robert
foros.
ae ~
PAGE POUR
he Wie York Ag:
> Tike Notions Mepro Weebly.
j ‘Meturday, December 16, 1922.
Pemdabey ve eure, OL RT weet
; felony "§
be Volume 36—No, 13. :
mn rep 230 West 130m
. Yor.
Soe
Mn et semress be
COS RE oad’ vada ants
sonMon CuUNTma t tial 6.22 by
cea Ss
Battred 0s Seosed Clase Matter Bap-
jenna iy, lotse at, post, Omen as New
‘Yors, A. ¥, under the Act of Maren, 3,
ae :
: is Tevephoes Mornimgelde 8504 eo |
ERED 10 ugoam, -Puntiepee aa, Baller
LUCIEN . WHTK, ..,. Managing Saior
daMby \W. JUHNBON, ace
Lesten a, wactox SBronsts Sauer
TOA MAY DUDLEY 062.0 .. 0005 Commner|
EUDENE L: NUORE
‘OILBERT 5. MOO)! ieee manne
MOO sazer Printing Det!
London Omce: Oorringe's Agencr; Re 17.
London Oct wavcenter Buare; Leeeon,
wee
Areas ol yuire gag sate al chace
no tdece, payable
Fone sak.
g¢ SHORT SIGHTED VIEW.
The Atlanta Independent, .in its issue
ot November 30, devoted some sixty
inches of its valuable space to the re-
production, free of any cost, of an ad-
vertisemen: entitled “The Shame of
America.” taken from the Atlanta Cox-
Alitution of November 22. The Indepen-
dent assumed that this advertisement
“wai placed in the Constitution by the
National Association for the Advance-
ment of Colored People and paid for by
the Association and the Anti-Lynching
Crusaders.
Benjamin Jefferson Davis, the pres-
dent and editor of the Independent, is
to be commended for his generosity in
“making this ample donation of advertis-
sing space to the public work’ of, the
association, but his editorial comment
was not equally magnanimous. He said:
The Independent regards it a queer
policy for the Association to xpend
its funds for such paid advertisement
im white dailies which have done little
or nothing for the removal of this
evil of lynching from American life,
when ihe Negro papers have cham-
juoned every cause of colored people
and have always willingly and liber-
ally given space for the publication
of whatever matier the Association
hay sent out, |
The Independent coniesses ite ine
ability ts sre where or how this ade
vertising, which cost several hundred
duliars, is going to help the cause to
any great extent, and regards it asa
mere waste of the money of the Asso
ciation
ase Tf ahe swbre dailies had taken a
sands agemst tenching years ago.
Iynehing would he a mere matter of
“RistGry now, but ¢hese same dailies
the Association is giving money to,
have done nothing but aired the crimes
which precipitated the lynching, and
they silently condoned or openly en-
couraged it.
We repeat that it is a queer policy
and a needless expenditure. ‘
We think Ghat Editor Daviy takes 2
shortsighted view of the situation and
fails to do justice to the policy inaugu-
‘ated by the National Association, in
the extensive adverfising campaign care
ried on in che daily press, which includ-
ed newspapers in New York and Chie
cago, as well as in Atlanta. The special
point aimed at through this campaign,
as we see it, is to educate the white
public as to the enormity of the lynch-
ing evil. The Negroes of America have
undergone a primary and secondary
course of education in chis respect. They
appreciate the need of anti-lynching leg-
islation without any intensive newspaper
propaganda, The Association has there-
fore done well to direct its efforts in
this matter (0 2 broader field.
~ OF course, it is only natural that
donte of the editors of the Negro press,
who have given-their efforts and thelr
epace freely and ‘without price to the
furfierance of the work and influence
of the National Association, should feel
@ certain amount of chagrin and resent-
gent at being’ ignored in the distribution
Of this large advertising appropriation.
Jt might have been good policy on the
part of the Association to have ap-
propriated a small portion of the amount
expended among colored papers which
have worked so faithfully to further the
emmse, It would have created a better
feeling amorig: these editors and would
have had its effect on the readers, who
always include a certain number of
whites who maintain a friendly or criti-
cal interest in race matters.
*;But the main proposition is to edur
exe’ white sentiment in favor of anti-
Igoching legislation, and as 2 step in
Bar dixcction the policy of advertising
im the great dailies on the scale pursued
Dyce National Association is to be
uate. = 7 :
AW. EEBLANATION IN ORDER
An -Atlama dispatch to the Macon
Telegraph: gave publicity to a state-
tet issued from: tie headquarters of
Gre_mceaiied, Republican State Commit-
tee; te-which it was stated that J. Louis
Philiga- bras inno way relinquished the
refaé “60, authority as state chairman
The <drrespondent added :
Though not s0 stated in’ the above
Deadquarters satement. it is under-
+ stood that Chairman Philips ts fune
tiemiog in. Wasttington in the” deat
dapecRy of state chairman for Geo
we asd Reoiien nations! omnis
semen irom Georgia. .Hency Lin-
ohn Sebmier, Oe Negro rated com:
is sand 10 cat mo figure ot
ai The tesloasl committer ic said te
about 3 a calle on
OR: te been gut politiog
Bey HOG a Py
eeoubten eth Pegrons, Fa:serem
;
Ag reprinting’ this story, the Atlanta
Independent said that Mr. Johnven hei
wade ne denial of this serious charge
against hie, but'dimt i did not believe
the story. As the editor af the Inde-
dendent and Mr. Johasom at ose thee
were, and still may be, firmly boosd in
the ties af personal and politics! friend-
ship, thls ‘refusal to credit the charge
is wndoubtedly based on the persom! re-
latioris still existiig between Une.
Nevertheless, in justice to himself aad
the race of which Re is a representative,
Mr, Johnsoa shoisld not let dhis charge
go without denial or explanation.
As to the alternative suggestion made
by the Independent, that it would riher
believe “that Mr. Johnson was paid by
Philips himself to stay in the back-
ground and let him act ax national com-
mitteeman,” we can only say that Mr.
Johnson should pray to be delivered
from his friends, past or preseet.
‘Ler the National Committeernan from
Georgia speak out in his own defence.
LETTER WRITING EXTRA-
ORDINARY.
Despite the plaint of the literary: re.
viewer that. the day of letter writing a
an art fias passed away, the public pres
feequently finds some samples of cor:
espondence that both interest and edi
‘the readers. Recently published letter
7 ex-President Woodrow Wilson, for-
mer Secretary Lane of his Cabinet and
‘the fate Theodore Roosevelt are instan:
ces of this nort, But the most extra
ordisary letter of a political chancter
that hat come to our notice is one writ
fen by Perry W. Howard to Senator
Dupont of Delaware.
When Mr, Howard took his pen in
hand, or punched his typewriter keys, of
dictated 10 2 long suffering steoograpber,
as the case may have been, he confessed
that “I have blood in my eyes for the
National Association for the Advance
ment of Colored People.” This was
hardly the frame of mind ia whide to
compose an epistle comporting with the
office which Mr. Howard holdy in the
Department of Justice. Hence we’ find
the writer denouncing the National As-
sociation as a "Negro Democratic ot-
ganization” and insisting that no legis
lation ought to be enacted through or by
reavon of this Association or its sympa-
thizers. Of course this blow was aimed
at tie Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill.
The writing of thie letter by Me.
Howard and the circulation of copies
of it among prominent Republican Seo
ators has won for him the unenviable
netoriety of being the solitary member
of his race who openiy opposed the
adoption of a Federal law to prevent
and punish Iynching. Mr. Howard
comes from Mississippi, so he cannot be
excused on the ground of ignor-
ance of the evil which he was willing
to allow to continue, rather than favor
the measure advocated by the National
Association.
There is room among members of the
race for differences of opinion as to
various phases of the policy pursued
by the National Astociation and the
views expressed on certain subjects by
ite officers and others connected with it
Bur sits —contistent’ and aggressive
fight against mob law and Iynching there
can be no division within the race. He
who ie not with it is against it. Neither
partisan affiliation nor personal jeal-
ousies should be allowed to interfere in
the prosecution of its campaign against
lyncing.
Asa letter writer Mr. Howard has
crealed for himself a unique position
as the only Negro opponent of the Dyer
bill, We trust that the stisma will not
prove ineradicable.
During the present year twenty-tno
indictments were returned against alleg-
‘ed Iynchers in Georgia, bit only four
convictions were secured, carrying peni-
tentiary sentences. Georgia has not yet
gone about its house cleaniug in earnest,
Judging by his action in seeking to
revoke the appointment of Walter L.
Cohen, the Norfolk Journe! and Guide
says that the only difference between
Governor Varker of Louisiana and the
Ku Klux Klan is that “hs does not wear
a mask and gown.” They are probably
jof the same breed.
In arguing that we as 2 raco must
build up our own industries, the Chris.
tion “Recorder of, Philadelphia said
jamong other things:
We have got to build up our own in-
dustries inutead af begging white people
to pu a Negro in this place or that.
Instead of begging for a place as a clerk
ina grocery store. We have got to have
our own grocery store. We have the
numbers, the means, and we cat enough.
We remember very well when we were
trying to get colored men as linotype
operators oP the daily papers, but we
daanged our tactics and put’ Tinotype
operators in the Book Concern, and
now we have colored linotype operators
in'a number of colored establishments in
this city, and the number is growing
larger every year, If we waited for
the.great metropolitan dailies to put in
colored linotype operators. we would
not have any. But what happened? As
soon as we devalop cur own men in
Gwe shops, them where. there Ii & chord:
ge emons the Hinetype operator? i
wi we gett a in
cea Ber ont if he tle mal
permanent ioe
Rrewit: eased ‘Ure plen, worked. (so
Well, fee 3 white shop took our fore.
man at higher pay. and a rewaber ef
others trained in the Book Coacern awe
not had to beg for jobs but got im
jobs against ourswill (?)
Mhece' is sated pense in this arguement,
Which showid ‘commend itself to the Taq
at large ar an addition! reason for the
mapport of race emerprises. In building
up ow own indewrics we furnish cmp
piermirnt for the membere of the race
wd Forvich an incaive. for. training for
THE NEW YORK AGE: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1923.
ViRW. GAG AE VIL We
--. | By James Weldon Jehnsea, Contributing Editor.
THE REPUBLICAN ABANDONMENT OF THE DYER
. ANTI-LYNCHING BILL.
* ‘The failure of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill to be passed by
the Senate may be ascribed to two contributing causes. The first
was the filibuster on the part of the Southern Democrats. The
second was the apathy and insincerity of the Republicans, This
filituster is acknowledged to have been the most naked and brutal
exhibition of its kind ever made in the Senate. A filibuster is
generally carried on under some sort of disguise, “but Senator
Underwood of Alabama, Democratic leader, made a statement
on the floor of the Senate regarding the tactics of his party in
which he said:
“We are not disguising what is being done on this
side of the Chamber. It miust be apparent not only te the ©
Senate but'to the country that an effort is being made to
event the consideration of a certain bill, and 1 want to
he perfectly candid about it. The bill is known‘in the
“Record” as the Dyer Bill, I believe; I have forgotten its
number. * * © “At the Jast session of Congress we had
* this ‘force’ bill up and [ think I very candidly stated to
the Senate when it was up that we did not propose to allow
it tobe passed, and [ want to say right Yow to the Senate
that if the majority party insist on this procedure they arc
not going to pass the dill and they are not going to do any
other business, © * * We are going to transact no
more business until we have ‘an understanding about this
hill, Tam saying this because 1 am not trying to put the
responsibility upon the other side. They can say I said it.
If you gentlemen want to continue, after this candid state-
ment of the case, and keep this bill before the Senate you
know it is going to be blocked and cannot be passed, there-
hy stopping the transaction of all other business. go ahead.
* © © Sf you do not intend to do that we might as well
come to an understanding and lay the bill aside, because
you cannot pags it. * * * The members of the ma-
4 jority party do not have to take the responsibility. We
are willing to take the responsibility and we are going
to do it. z .
There is no doubt that Mr. Underwood meant-what he said
and that he voiced the sentiments of the Southern members of his
party. .
Equally responsible for the failure of the bill was the luke-
warmness and apathy and even the insincerity of the Republicans.
From the beginning. the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill has been a dis-
tasteful measure to the great majority of Republicans in the Sen-
ute, one that they, dreaded having to face. The progress which
the Bill made from the time of its being referred to the Senate
Committee on the Judiciary to its being brought up for considera-
ion on the floor was made literally under whip and spur and not
because the Republican leaders in the Senate tried or even wished
10 advance, it. The Republican leaders in the Senate, Senator
Lodge in partigular, hoped and expected that the Bill would be
eft to sleep and die in committee. It took Herculean efforts to get
he Bill reported out and it took efforts equally strenuous to have it
placed on the legislative program, and even after it was there, it
was necessary to bring great pressure in order to have the measure
prought to the floor.
The.statements made by Senator Underwood te the effect that
he Democrats assumed full responsibility for the defeat oi the
Bill by not allowing it to be taken up fell like sweet music upon
he ears of most of the Republican scnators. They felt that such
; course on the part of the Democrats would relieve the Repub-
icans of the necessity of fighting for the passage of the Pill and
t the same time relieve them of the responsibility for its failure.
The Republicans evidently felt that such appearances would
leceive the Negroes of the country, In this they will find them-|
elves mistaken. The colored people of the country will not be
leceived by such a cheap show. They know and fully understand
hat the actual fight was the onc made by the Southern Democrats
gainst the Bill rather than by the Republicans in its behalf. If
he Republican senatorial leaders think the Negro will be satisfied
nerely because they allowed the Southern Democrats to “put
hemselves on record” they are mistaken. The demand of the
Negro was that the Republicans also put themselves on record,
nd this they failed ta do.
On Saturday night, December 2, the Republicans in the
Senate held a caucus to discuss what should be done about the
Sil. The caucus was largely attended and the question of aband-
ning the Bill was hotly discussed for more than two hours. Grad-
ally the attendance dwindled until there were only some twenty
dd senators left. A vote was taken and the majority agreed to
bandon the Bill. Against this vote nine senators held out for
arrying the fight until the 4th of March if necessary.
We believe that if the majority of the Republicans in the Sen-
te bad had the backbone of these nine men and had met the chal-
enge of the Southern filibusterers and dared them’ to stop ab-
olutely the business of the government rather than allow the
onsideration of the Bill, public sentiment would finally have
rought a pressure which the filibusterers would not have been able
o withstand. At any rate, such a course would have shown
ourage and sincerity on the part of the Republicans and would
ave brought to the public mind a realization of the antiquated:
ARTISTS OF NEGRO DESCENT.
“Is it not-curious to know that the greatest poet of Russia is
Alexander Pushicin, a man of African descent; that the greatest
romancer of France is Aleyander Dimas, x man of African descent,
and that one of the greatest musicians of England is Coleridge-
Taylor, a man of African descent?
_ “The fact-is faitly well known that the father’of Duman was
a Nagro of the French West Indies, and that the father of Coleridge-
Taylor was a native-born African; but the facta concerning Push-
it's African ancestry are not so familiar.
++ i74WVhen Peter the Great wan Czar of Russia, some potentate
presented him with a full-blooded Negro of gigantic size. Peter,
the. dost eccentric ruler of modern times, dressed the Negro up
ia Soldier clothes, christened him Hannibal, and-made him a special
bodyguard. ‘ais
: {But Hannibal had more than size, he had brain and ability.
Hé‘not only looked ‘picturesque and imposing in soldier“clotties,
ht showed that he had in him the making of a real soldier- Peter
pacognized this, and dventually made him's general. . He alter-
wards .erinobled -hiew, and “Hannifisl, tater, married ‘one of the
father of Pushkin, the national poet of Russia, the’man whe bears
the same relation to Rusalan literature that Shakespeare bears to
English literature. oe .
en know the ‘questiqn naturally arises: If out of the few
Negroes who have lived in France there came a Dumas; and out of
the few Negroes who lived ‘in England there came a Coleridge~
Taylor; and if from the man who was at the time, probably, the
only Negro in Russia there sprang ‘that country’s national poet,
why have not the millions of, Negroes in, the United: States with all
the emotional and artistic endowment claimed for them produced
a Dumas, or a Céleridge-Taylor, or « Pushkin? :
“Tite ‘question ‘seems difficult, but there is an answer. The:
Negro in the United States is consuming all of his intellectual]
energy in this gruelling racestruggle. » 2. = ‘
“Bui, even so, the American Negro has accomplished ne
thing in pure literature. The list of those who have dome so
would be surprising both by its length’and the excellence of the
achievements. .
“Such a list begins with Phyllis Wheatley. In 1761 a slave
ship landed a cargo of slaves in Boston. Among them was a little
girl seven or eight years of age. She attracted the ‘attention of
John Wheatley, a wealthy gentlemaa of Boston, who purchased
her as a servant for his wife. Mrs. Wheatley was a benevolent
woman. She noticed ‘the girl's quick mind and determined to
give her opportunity for its development. Twelve years later
Phyllis published a volume of poéms. The book was brought out
ia London, where Phyllis for several montis an object of great
curiosity and attention.
| “Phyllis Wheatley has never been given her rightful.place in
‘American literature. By some-sort of conspiracy she is kept dut
of most of the books, especially the text-books on literature used in
the schools. Of course, she is not a great American poet—and in her
day there were no great American poets—but she is an important
American poet. Her importance, if for no other reason, rests on
the fact that, save one, she is the first in order of time of all the
wamen poets of America. And she is among’the first of all Ameri-
can poets to issue a volume. . . . . :
“Anne Bradstreet preceded Phyllis Wheatley by a little over
twenty years. She published her volume of poems “The Tenth
Muse,” in 1750. Let us strike a comparison between the two.
Anne Bradstreet was a wealthy, cultiyated Puritan girl, the daygh-
ter of Thomas Dudley, Governor af the Bay Colony. Phyllis,
as we know, was a Negro slave girl born in Africa. Let us take
them both at their best in the same vein. The following stanza
is from Anne's poem entitled ‘Cuntemplation’: *
‘While musing thus with contemplation fed,
And thousand fancies buzzing in tiny brain,
She sweet tongued Philomel percht o'er my heavi.
And chanted forth a most melodious strain,
Which rapt me so with wonder and delight,
I judged my hearing better than my sight,
And wisht my wings with her awhile to take my flight.”
“And the following is from Phyllis’ poem entitled ‘Imagina-
tion’: : |
“Imagination! who can sing thy force?
Or who describe the swiftness af thy course?
‘Soaring through air to find the bright abode. |
‘The empyreal palace of the thundering God.
We on thy pinions can surpass the wind,
\nd leave the rolling universe behind,
lrom star to star the mental optics rove.
Measure the skies, and. range. the realms above,
‘There is one view we grasp the mighty whole. |
Ur with new worlds amaze the ‘unbounded soul.”
“We do not think the black woman suffers much by compari-
son with the white.”
‘The above paragraphs are taken from “The Book of American |,
Negro Poetry.” We have reproduced them without permission
of the publishers. We give this extract because we think it gives}
some interesting and little known information and because we in-|:
tend to resume our talks about books with special reference to||
those relating to the Negro. These paragraphs will serve as al:
THE NEEDS OF THE SOUTH.
Reports of the exodus of Negroes
from the plantations of ehe South to th
North are discussed at some length in
4 column ‘of the Memphis Commercial
cIppesl, headed “Day by Day With
Governor Patterson.” Despite the sug:
Restion in the headline of De. Coue’s
treatment by auto-suggestion, che writer
does not claim that the situation “in
every way it growing better and better.”
fhut rather that if the reports are cor
Feet. a calls for most cateiul considera-
tion
| Me ‘admits that during the war, when
high prices ior labor, prevailed, the mi-
gration of Negroes was general. but in-
sists that since chat time little has been
heard of any further movement. High
wages are stated to be the lure again
and an acute labor shortage in the Nor-
thern mills is held responsible for reach-
ing out again for the Southern Negroes.
The aim oi this “Day by Day” writer
is to discourage the movement for the
treason, which he openly avows, that
“The Negro needs the Souts and the
South needs the Negro.” But he works
to this end in a somewhat disingenuous
fashion. He says thac it is to be hoped
for the wake of the Negroce themselves,
that they will not induce any consider-
able number to leave the South, that
the owners of the Northern mills and
factories have no love for them, na in-
teres in their advancement and no
sympathy except to use them for theie
own benefit and when through tn throw
them aside to shift for themselves, While
this policy is true in many cates of em-
ployment both Nort: and South, a more
enlightened sentiment has been born of
self-interest which looks tq the wefare
of those employed as a means of secur-
ing better results in the way of labor
performed. Better housing, senitaty pro-
visions for working. reereational and
educational facilities, the encouragement
of thrift constitute features of this pro-
Bram.
Again the prophet of woe claims that
while a few Negroes have succeeded in
the Northrapd- ave ‘well CamseiSeB “tere,
sie very large majority taken away from
oh aesociations become quickly discon:
fented. It is asserted thet the high wages
0 & deturion tiokt vanishes in the high
coe of living, ‘due to enormous: rents,
cost :of fuel and nothing free, and thet
ine; Negrecs sopm tow thes even from]
5 igemsia! standpeie they are: better’ off
in the South, This phate of the matter
mover “Gov. Paterson” to inveigh
against the effort ta prey upon cheir
credulity and inveige them away from
their home. “It ic ne: only an ontrage,”
he exclaims, “it is a moral and social
rong “He even goes s0 far as to tell
jhow an bis travels in the North he has
“witnessed the impositions practiced ‘upon
‘the Negro ard his opinion is that he has
‘a better chance, is happier, and hac fat
better healt in the South than in the
North, He tries to clinch the matter
fy saying that in the cold of -winter
thousands of Negroes have died in the
Northern climates from pneumonia and
tuberculosis contracted there.
Granting that the conditions -dexcribed
hy this special pleader were only half
true, th last state of the migrating
thousands would not be as bad as what
they left bésind them in the Hooker
Bends of the Somh, Investigation has
Proved that the vast majority of the mi-
krants from the South make good in the
North, Even in the slack times of the
past few years when employment was
acarce few would return ¢o their former
conditions in the South. As to their
heaith.” under decent fiving conditions
Srey readily adjusted themselves to the
change of climate and even bore the"ri-
tors of winter in the Great Northwest
without suffering. ‘The claim that the
Negrots have found a deeper seated
prejudice against them in the North than
im the South is another subtlety raised
by this writer, ¢0 discourage migration,
But the motive is 100 obvious to dwell
upon.
+The meat of the cocoanut is found in
Cie means soggested to prevent further
migration, These range {rom investi-
gation and action by Southern service
associations, chambers of commerce,
boards of trade and last but not least
the officers of the Jaw. The Tennessee
statute which makes it x misdemeanor
to entice labor from one employmeet
to another is invoked wich the hint that
there may be such laws. in athe: Scath,|
cen States." After baying thus ext ais
td ive arsenal of cajolery ad threaten
ing. even to the exter of, pronaige. or,
forced Igbor, the voice of reason is al-
Jowed s hearing, in this vise: :
alt th pa while ve i the South
ve_an the whol treated wie Negro,
nr eae eS
‘ we a
* He ought to be treated with g--a'e,
Jostee than be akttn cee
white man who robe him of tr wi
vantage of his ignorance to: 3,
spon him as dishonor ty tao
0 do 40 Is to injure the Neg: 3
it injures the white man miore
4 Tam a Southern man, with a a>.
“ceatry ‘wholly Southern, but tty
thae some of us have had. ties
philosophy in regard to the Nex: if
Fig a man and is entitled to t=: -y
of aman. To squeese him in a -
to get out of him all he can.g's 1
return nothing {¢ worse than:
the land and giving nothing = + 5
about which we hear 30. fouc’
“The Negro should pe bers - - 4
and better housed, And we - - +»
Ashamed to ket him live sexs oy
ander worse conditions thas
te,
Social equality of cours +=,
thinkable, but the cavality ¢: + ¢
and fair dealing is not
The Negro deserves this, Nor a4
South, and chat he doesn’t) alwa.s po
Gt if a reproach to both sect a
to any Christian civilization soe
erates it
“Gov, Patterson,” in his fina po. ‘sr
eater justice towarss the Nec: 1
he accordance to him af the ris +i
man, has hit unon the only cis +0
peans of keeping the race cums:
he South. The contention that o> * +.
ro nteds ‘he South and she Sour,
he Negro can be carried sut s-° ;
be basis of yustice and equal eres.
iy Now, of the ater patiuts +
sed ean have any lasting ef ¢ *
‘ssa tine: 7
Re eee: Fen me ae
the basis of justice and equal ors.
ity, Now of the otver pation s
posed cay have any lasting efi tg
situaion. :
A curions and significant fears> af”
the late clection in New York 4s
brought out by Chandler Owes it
California Eagle. He sid:
But the most surprising and ee 4s.
ing feature of the elections 1+
York is the fact that A. Pluimn iso
dolph, co-editor of the Messerse> =
candidate for Secretasy of Stave -+ +
Sécialist and Farm Labor tickes 7-4
more than 90,000 votes in New V+
City alone, and ran second on she ro.
tire State Socialist ticket Chars
Steinmetz. was fiest, and this a. 4 ~~
tess due €o his popularity as an "+s
cal wizard” Randolph even cam od
in New. York City of the Sora’ or:
didate for Governor. leading hin =>
proximately 25.000 votes Tt is ces =
Randalph got an overvhelnnng se =
of the Negro vote throughout the Sta +
Faen where Negeace voted wilets
the Democrats or Republicans + +s
other count, they invariably cast oo -
vote fer Randolph for Seerruy +
State. And news cnimes from Ko. +
ter Giat the Negrors there fined st +
idly tor Ranoiph, where thes s+
most equally ie fekdiy fr the be
stats on other cndmin
OF course this does not mean ther i+.
comuderable #rticn of the Necro + *
Fave been won over ta the Se +
party. but it dacs inheate a gre +
tendeney te discriminate ip the we:
the hatlot Gnd to comphment.a memrer
of the rae nominated for a Stare
office.
In wiew of the failure of the religions
prafeseed by tht Christan nations *
check war and the rumerc at svar Se
ilimgig Consersator sand:
‘The trouble is we need a new fs!
of freedom—another relision; 3)
these relugians have failed or none
them have stopped wars tace pres. *
murder. ivnching. Wiring men a +
Make, fapine, government by the = «
gun, tuch ay are the cases fn Missy
Texas and South Nirica Ver. a at
these places they preach Christ and fs
crucified, every Sun aw and dren
an stentorian tones—with tears Bow.
down their cheeks So what d> 97
say next?
Preachers join riets and meds art s+
in the dark of night and kill and
and terture in the name of Chri
and sau tell uss Christianity and th ¢
den Role must unite us and sane
We ask do you believe the aayen +
ever adopt and practice the Golda he = >
The trouble 15 nat so much we s+
igion itself, as with the impertes: - =
manity that fails to carry out te jo
cepts. It needs a spiritual revival a:
nation of the earth ta enforce as
living of the truths of Cheers
Great calamity and suffering may S¢ ot
agents needed to bring about this <i. +
Reciting the things that the rast”
te be sincerely thankiul for inom.
Hon of Towa, tite Des Moines £0 27
cnumerated among ocxers.
‘That this state in which w= 7 >
fords the best cliniate, profit
some of the dest people in thr.
country of ours.
Que Governcr of this ereat
wealth, Hon. N. Kendell, i¢ a re
searted gentleman,
That we have loyal hearted *
who will come to the front ati
for the rights of the oppressed
‘That we are living in an ides
with ity magnificent bridges, >.
parks—but that the thought ‘th:
day real true democracy will Ai
stamp out all segregation and fe:
Gion to an oppressed people.
That we have ten repress. €
churcies, with two of them ranks 9
class with the white ehurche: ~*
city. =
That wechave a YMC Mt
now being run under a manages
s unexcelled, and that the futese 4/2
«till brighter, for them
That the VOW OC. Alhae a oot
good earnest workers, who are ot
ing overs in x modest way, and
© success.
= That we can hose of ieee
stores. all in splendid trace
pwned. and operated" by. protic"
ness snen,.who are well liked in th+
munity.
That we have with us five o
enor, al of whom are well sx"
with their patronage. and, by the =
me lady doctor in the bunch
‘That our dentists are here 2 >
naraber, with well equipped citi
Fiat tedawy ere are pienie *
ive in number, wisi downto: n>
ind ene of the number is a Sacis
Tomether'with other bissines: ese
wentioned and acquirement of cil +!
ry whe youngsters in the hiah + *
a the State University. the clita
met @ case for congratulation. 11.
@ ounelder the bright side oi 3 i¢ «¢
SECCION EN ESPAÑOL
mas natural del mundo es que la raza blanca de los Estados Unidos
America le niegue a la Rama Negra el derecho de proclamar a este
una tierra comun a ambas rajas. Lo importante y necesario es que
en general, en esta hora de francas evoluciones progresivas en los
los desencimios colectivo de los pueblos y las razas, se den
fuera cuenta de que necesitan de una mayor suma de cooperación y de afinidad
en los mismos. No basta hablar de sentimientos raciales, no basta disarrar
en conscientio o no de estos problemas; es también indispensable que cada
mujer de esta raza, lleven en su corazon el verdadero latido de la
madar, en su alma el amor y el puro sentimiento, y en su cerebro una
mujera, mas definida de lo que significa la fase del problema Negro.
en su aspecto colectivo, sino en el individual. Es importante que se
cuando un hombre de color fracasa en el terreno de las ciencias; para
no es el indudando que ha fracasado, sino la raza negra. Igualmente
fracasa en las finanzas, en el periodismo, en la agricultura, etc.
en concepto de la raza blanca el conglomerado Negro el fracasado.
punto de vista se desprende que si la predicación de fraternidad racial
se semida, debemos prestarle más ayuda, mas atención a cada hombre
con capacidad animo progresivo se levante, y no mirarle con una
tempera que por su indiferencia es criminal.
plano, la raza de color de Estados Unidos de Norte America, si en
se muestra generosa, en casos aislados, se muestra reticente,
mimiento de generosidad poloctiva con la restricción de protección
elementos de su propia raza.
de protección personal, no nos referimos al hecho de que un indi-
nilo necesite diez dólares, y esté, a condicion de Negro, deba pre-
merlo de otro Negro. No, esto seria una especie de chantagimo
nongamos que un joven, ya graduado en una de las Universidades
anacidad técnica para ejercer su profesión, y amor para dedicarse
de los dólares suficientes para establacer su estudio. Por que
tustindades que le abran cuanto antes su porvenir?
muestran apoyándose en la tela del "selfmade" pero a nuestro
se aplica en casos como el sefalado, lo que se despende es
umismo de parte de los que consienten, y no evitan que los que
procurio obalo, acalicen a veces humillantes sacrificios.
estiones, es fácil aparecer siempre ante la vista pública en la
la vanidad del donante queda satisfecha. En los casos de
no ser la gratitud del que reciba el servicio, el hecho queda
lo todo.
El Patriotismo Como El Sentimiento Se Demuestran.
de la patrioteria no dehe confundirse, con la Vor del patriota, así
con el calidad no puede ser confundido con el "double". El que ama
con un sentimiento de bondad y no de falsia, está como el patriota
dispuesto a todos los sacrificios, se destaca dentro del grupo de los
prácticadores, como el oro puro dentro los falos metales. Para este apostol,
ma religión que la del deber cumplido en beneficio de cada uno de los
su comunidad. El matriz es su palma, es su consagración.
Asturiasa se admira en una populosa ciudad de Nueva York, al con-
numero de apostoles con que cuenta la raza de color. Con ranas
cada hombre Negro, desde el modestro barredor de calles hasta el
distinguido en su profesión, se suponen autorizados para conducir
conderos de glorio y de felicidad. Nunca habíamos imaginado en la
de los Estados Unidos una imaginación tan brillante, asemejantes en que ofrece curación para los males raciales, a la probla-
de los países tropicales, en que cada individuo se revela un médico
una enfermedad física se trata. Todos tienen una prescripción in-
mediamente ninguino como el origen de la enfermedad. Pero en
a donde los doctores del problema que tanto afecta al Negro en este
estilo "Miahana hay una disertación acerca de la vida moderna del
tal lugar, por un distinguido profesor de tal Universidad, a la vez
batalen en tal lugar. El distinguido profesor H. se encon-
turea en pleno desierto; el salón de bailes estará convertido en
hino no asombraria acostumbrados como estan
miguiertuales, a la vez que no se respira el
animo al espirim racial se refiere. Mas es sorprende
a cara de color quiere aparecer en atito prominente,
a embentrada de sus deberes.
de critica, recogemos las impresiones de un
leva en la cartera de sus observaciones esta nota para
publicación de color americana.
GRANDIOSO DESCUBRI-
MIENTO DE LA CIENCIA
La Diabetes y la Gangrena De-
tarán de Ser Azotes de la
Humanidad.
aviva que dos enfermedades
enfermedades hables, la dia-
sema hanse tratado con
mediante un método
detector Benjamin Jah-
sica casa No. 498 de
medidor inspector del
capital posible detener
gangrena y curar di-
sema que tra monester
En el curso de
echo meses, indicase
dicho método con felices
mas de 200 casos.
*estima del método del doctor*
*consiste en inyecciones intratas de una solución química, fue el martes, al tenerse cono-
*tione un paciente, Mr. Edward residencia en la casa No. 2, avenue, en Ossining, N. Y. dado al altar en el St. Mark. estar curado de la emisión de Renaud, una forma de de padecia, cuya causa se des-
*que curma treima y tres años el terrible mal por es-
*nuese años. Primeramente se un dedo de su pie derecho, que amputarse. Durante los años sufironce operación conoando ambas piernas y un dedo de derecha.
una cuartas semanas, amigo
Trainer se rehuja a revelar,
mon al doctor Jablons. Pre-
consecuencia, en el St.
Hospital, por espacio de tres
una inversion diaria. La
día que amanaraba su mano
nipirante a ceder de dure lugar y
resegreso a su residencia sintién-
mente curación de la diabetes,
tamiento del insulin, de que
trabajo en la metrópoli, tuvo
George Van Hassel, de 16
dad, con domicilio en la casa
de friving avenue, en Brooklyn.
Thomas Howell, superinten-
del New York Hospital, da fe de la
Hassel transportado a dicho
bital del Seney Hospital, hace
mesas, encontrándose en estado
en el hospital locativo de
lumediamente fué tratado con
división del penicero de un
y salió de la coma en que ar-
Owen Hassel, que malio del hospital
es condiciones físicas, tendida no
que guardar cierta dieza y re-
mociones de insulina de vez en
Vergura que vivirá indiscre-
guida guarda las presenizaciones de
Cronicas
ES NATURAL.
mundo es que la raza
la Ram Ngra e
a ambas ramas. Lo
la hora de francas
colectivo de los
an de una mayor sum
bablar de sentimientos
problemas; es tu
la lleven en su cora
amor y el puro sen
de la to que significa
sino en el indiv
e color fraca en el
que ha fracasado, si
ananzas, en el peri
a raza blanca el con
aprende que si la pro
presarle mas ayud
improve progreso se le
recencia es criminal.
color de Estados U
generosa, en casos
generosidad goleativa
copia raza.
personal, no nos refer
dolares, y este, a
degro. No esto seri
n joven, ya graduado
para ejercer su pro
suficientes para este
le abran cuanto ante
dose en la teoria de
n casos como el se
de los de los consi
calicen a veces hum
icil aparecer siempre
del donante quedar
gratitud del que reci
mo El Sentimiento
no debe confundirse,
de ser confundido con
de bondad y no de
des sacrificios, se deas
puro dentro los falas
de deber cumplido en
El matirio es su pa
n esta populosa ciud
con que cuenta
desde el modeste
profesión, se supor
y de felicidad. Nun
Unidos una imaginaria
cedecirca por los
ales en que cada in
se trata. Todos
no conoce el origen
del problema que tu
una disorientación ac
distinguido profesor
del lugar. El disti
dieron el salón de
el trabajo no asombraz
a sugestiones.
a cumplir racial se
a de color quiere a
empentrada de sus de
critica, recogemos
m la cartera de sus
cisión de color americ
mes que la rasa blanca de los Estados Unidos,
Rama Negra el derecho de proclamar a las
rasas. Lo importante y necesitamos que
la franca evoluciones progresivas en los
objectivo de los pueblos y las rasas, es
a mayor mayor suma de cooperación y de almí-
ndice de sentimientos raciales, no hasta disserte
oblemas; es también indispensable que cada
en en su corazón el verdadero latido de la
el puro sentimiento, y en su cerebro un
que significa la fase del problema Negro
no en el individual. Es importante que se
fracasa en el terreno de las ciencias; para
a fracasado, sino la rasa negra. Igualmente,
en el periodismo, en la agricultura, eto-
blanca el conglomerado Negro el fracasado
que si la predicación de fraternidad racial
mas ayuda, mas atención a cada hombre
progresive se levante, y no mirarle con un
es criminal.
De Estados Unidos de Norte America, si es
rosa, en casos aislados, se muestra reticente
padelociva con la restricción de protección
ata.
No nos referimos al hecho de que un indí-
vas y este, a condicion de Negro, deba pre-
No, esto seria una especie de chantagime,
ya graduado en una de las Universidades
referente su profesión, y amor para dedicar
antes para establacer su estudio. ? Por que
quan cuanto antes su porvenir?
en la teoria del "self made"; pero a nuestro
como el sefalado, lo que se desprende
os que consienten, y no evitan que los que
a veces humillantes sacrificio.
arecer siempre ante la vista pública en la
donante queda satisfiecha. En los casos de
del que reciba el servicio, el hecho queda
Sentimiento Se Demuestran.
Se confundirse con la vor del patriota, asas
confundido con el "double". El que ame
idad y no de falsia, estamo el patriota
ficios, se destaca dentro del grupo de los
dentro los falsos metales. Para este apostol
cumplido en beneficio de cada uno de los
irritio es su palma, es su consagración.
populosa ciudad de Nueva York, con rara
que cuenta la rara de color. Con rara
de el modesto barredor de calles hasta el
sepuen autorizados para conducir
africidad. Nunca habíamos imaginado en la
una imaginación tan brillante, se asemé-
ción para los males raciales, a la proba-
ción que cada individuo se revela un medic
trata. Todos tienen una prescripción
el origen de la enfermedad. Pero en
problema que tanto afecta al Negro en este
disserción acerca de la vida moderna del
profesor de tal Universidad, a la vera
Gar el distinguido profesor H. se encoun-
sel al salón de hailes estará convertido en
no aombraria acostumbrados como estan
inquisiturales, a la vera que no se respira el
número racial se refiere. Mas es supremerente
colle quere aparecer en alto prominente,
cada de sus deberes.
recoegemos las impresiones de
un barrero de sus observaciones esta nora para
e color americana.
Hasta la fecha todos los enfermos de
diabetes morlan en su mayoría y sin
excepción cuantos calan en un estado
comatón.
El insulin fue descubierto por los doctores Bantin y C. H. Bestgradados de
la universidad de Toronto.
La Delegation Panamericana Sus-
tenta Opiniones Divididas
Sobre la Federación de Sus
Paises Respectivos.
En la conferencia verificada ed dia 4 de los corrientes en Washington, a invitación del Sr. Presidente de los Estados Unidos, entre delegados de países centro-americanos, con motivo de discutir los problemas relacionados con la conferencia política de los cinco países, los delegados, desde luego, expresaron opiniones divergentes sobre lo acertado de trazar tales asuntos en la capital de este país. La conferencia tiene por objeto el establisher la par en los países referidos, y arreglar im tratado para guiar las relaciones mutuas.
La cuestión de la conferencia no fue mencionada en la nota de invitación que se extendió Estados Unidos; pero fur introducida por el Dr. Alberto Ucles, jefe de la delegación hondurea, al responder este al discuro de bien venida promovida por el Sr. Hughes, Secretario de Estado. El Dr. Ucles expliqué que bajo la cuarta clínula de la invitación se puede proponer cualquier asunto, y recomendó, al que al de la federación de Centro America los conferencistas deverían de dar preferente consideración.
El Sr. José Andrés Coronado, Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Costa Rica, quien representa a su país ante dicha conferencia, se opuso desde luego a tal idea, indicando que los gobiernos centro-américanos, al aceptar la invitación del gobierno de Washington, supieron muy bien que no habia llegada la hora histórica de su union política; al contrario, el delegado de Nicaragua, Sr. Emiliano Gusmorro, afirmó la realidad de la ambición que tienen los países en cuestión paraimir politicamente, y que tal ambición sería motivo para sobrivir a la cualquiera obstaculte que se interpusiera al resultado de la bandera de una nación sinfica.
En términos rotundos, el Secretario Hughes dija a los conferencistas que los Estados Unidos no tienen ambición alguna para gratificarse al costo de sus países respectivos, impionéndoles condiciones que no en contra de sus apropiaciones nacionales, anual al contrario su propósito era de promover la paz y ayudarlas de una manera que las han aceptable hara la solución de sus problemas. Asegurarlos que el gabinero que el represente, al acceptar su invención y estar presente en sus delimitaciones, fue activado solicitando por el diario de hacer cometido este su alianza para que la conferencia tenga tempo. Agrugar el Secretario Hughes: "El intento de los Estados Unidos contiene que la paz de cada hemisferio y la convención de sus intereses."
Los detegetes fueron antecedentes a
"el 'much'" obsequioes gar el Presidente
Murray. A el adelfero también Miser-
toros del Gobierno, aguilarse a lo
THE NEW YORK AGE: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1922.
PARA MI HIJA
Consejo tengo en ilorar
Y tristena en el reir;
En mi alma hay un pesar
Que se entiguirá al morir.
Siente mi ser cuando lora
Melancolida dulata
Tal perce que asl ahora
Tiempos de dulce ventura.
Natural es que mi llanto
Ma entristecas el corazon;
Ma a veces te encanto
En la pena y la afflicción.
Por lo que yo vierto lloro
Es duclicilumo ideal.
Una nifa yo adoró
Con pasión angelical.
Esta distante de mi,
Y cuando pieno yo en ella.
El alma con que nacl
M vida ya su vida sella.
:Dulce creación de mi vida
Préstame siempre tu alienta.
Que en mi esperana perdida
Solo en ti hallar contento!
ambos Cuerpos de la Legislatura, así
como oficiales de alto grado entre el
ejército y la marina americano. Casi
tado el cuerpo diplomatico, encabezado
por Monsieur Jusserand. Embajador de
Francia, asistió a la apertura de dicha
conferencia. Encaebarom las delgaciones
respectivas las siguientes personalidades: Guatemala, Francisco Sanchez Latour; Salvador, Francisco Martinez Suarez; Honduras, Dr. don Alberto Ucles; Nicaragua, Emiliano Chamorro; Costa Rica, José Andrés Coronado.
Valioslaimo Contrabando de Lí
cores es Descubierto Por la
Policia Del Puerto.
La chalana "E Frank Coe" detenida por la policía del Puerto de Nueva York el 4 de este mes, puede decirse que ha tenido a contribuir con un bono fundado económico para el erario público.
Debajo de muchas sorelas de carbono desacribió la policía mucho wiskey, deposítado en cajas y en sacos. Se calcula el valor de dicho licitor en unos doscientos mil pesos, según el promedio de vena de los traficantes ileitos. El carbón, aument, cuenta con menos valor, representa también una fortuna pequeña.
Según noticias proporcionaladas por la policía, la chalana trataba de entrar al puerto en la mudrugada del dia en que detenida, cuando el bordo poliario que hacía la patrulla se le acerció. "Que tienen Udes abordo!" La contestación fue dada en una sola palabra. "Carbon" "Vamos a correrarmos." insistió la policía. Se amarró su bote a la chalana, y unos seis gendarmes maritimos se puieron a bordo gritando. "Que nos presten unas pelas."
No habiendo abordo ninguno le las implementos pedidos por la política, tu sumu que echar mano de una espada, y como resultado del mucha trabajo que efectuín, descubri el litor excedente. Se condujo la chalama hasta el muelle "A" y después de amarrarla se descargel que, quedando la tripulación detenida. Sus nombres son los siguientes: Henry Hoile, 25 Calle Sur, Adam Rehm, 211 Webster Avenue, Jerser City, Dennis Mahoney, Calle 116 Oeste No. 109, William P. Connor, 1462 Hillside Avenue, Jerser City, James Smith, Calle 98 Oeste No. 28; y Stephen Randall, 29 Contes, Sip.
El bate policario fue capitancado por el Sargento Boyne, y se declara que el litor fué traído de la Iaíla Bahamas. A los detendidos se les dio libertad caudical por fianza de $500 cada um, pero como se negaron a comparer ante la Corte, las fianzas fueron canceladas, y su apre赫isión ordenada por el Magistrado Tomás J. Nolan.
Una Nueva Ley Bancaria Para Cuba.
Habana. Diciembre 9—W F G Harding, ex-governador de la junta de la reserva federal que fue designado por la administración de Washington para estudar el problema económico de Cuba ha expresado hoy sus opiniones en un disturso que ha pronunciado en la camara de comercio de los Estados Unidos.
Mr. Harding ha manifestado que no habia ido a Cuba a imponer al país un sistema bancario sino a acueradir cuales eran en su concepto los mejores medios de establecer una ley bancaria solida derivada de los resultados obtenidos en los Estados Unidos con la aplicación del sistema de la reserva federal.
En los centros financieros y políticos de esta capital, aguardidase con impaciencia el resultado de las investigaciones llevadas a cabo por Mr. Harding.
Las declaraciones que ha hecho hoy en la cámara de comercio de los Estados Unidos permiten conocer aproximadamente la tonalidad general que imperará en el informe que presentará con carácter oficial al presidente Zayas cayen desíndose que recomendará eficaciente la adoptión de medidas similares a las adoptadas en los Estados Unidos cuando se implantó el sistema de la reserva federal a fin de consolidar el sistema bancario de Cuba y normalizar la situación financiera.
Asegurar además que el informe oficial estará reductado en términos optimistas y que dada la garantía que ofrase persona de tanta significación en el mundo financiero será aceptado existiendo así la repetición del desbarajuate economía que siguíba a la crisis bancaria ocurrida en el año 1919.
Crese que Mr. Harding presentará mandana su informe oficial al presidente Zayas y que saldrá después, immediatamente, con dirección a los Estados Unidos.
El Nuevo Match Ski-Carpentier
Carpentier, encamponamiento mundial de
peso de peso compuesto que fue vencido
por el dengue Ski, la dirigido hoy
en la "Lumbar" solitario un match
un match de revancha.
La carta de Carpentier dice así:
"Por el encontrato con Ski porque
de precié com adacrario y y cuenta
tanta seguridad de que podía vencer
por "hincurrier" que comet el funcion
correr de jugar con el para contrerro
a los espacios dorros. Proponga a Ski que
a poner de la decalcación que la ha
imprenta la Federación Franca de
Boston, y a pener del riesgo que correr
de que decalcificado, se decide a celebrar
en nuevo encostro en pista en
la Federación Franca de
Boston, para correr la decalcación.
The Age Readers' Forum
By WILLIAM PICKENS.
Bullies, cowards and traitors—this awful trinity is responsible for the temporary defeat of anti-lynching legislation. The "bullies" have already exposed themselves in that immoral and anarchistic fillibuster. It remains for us to expose the cowards who pretended to be "beaten" by a minority, and the traitor, (Negroes) who secretly assisted and played into the hands of the whole devilish combination. Nobody ever heard of an honest majority anywhere giving in to a minority, so if the majority were in earnest. We do not make the charges against all the Republicans, but undoubtedly there was some collusion between some Democrats and some of the Republican leaders. The Democrats were very likely tipped off that if they would go ahead and "raise hell" for a day or two, it would give the Republicans a good excuse to lie down and holler "enough."
If half a dozen Democrats can say: "There will be no business done until we can have our unlawful way." Could not half a dozen Republicans say: "And there will be no business done until you permit the lawful thing to be done?" If a minority could nillbuster, could not a majority stick to its rights? If six or seven Democrats can stop the United States at their pony will, what on earth is the holy use of giving the Republicans a majority in Congress?
Then there are the traitors, black in heart and in face, or at least in a portion of their blood—and a great dishonor to all the great black group of the United States. They have played into the hands of the enemy all along. Our eye has been on them. We know all of them, and on some of them we have the proof that the humblest man can be made to see.
WOULD YOU EVER BELIEVE IT
THAT ONE GROUP OF BLACK
MEN WOULD EVER BE JEALOUS
LEST ANOTHER GROUP OF
BLACK MEN SHOULD GET A LAW
PASSED TO KEEP ALL BLACK
MEN FROM BEING BURNED
ALIVE WITH IMPUNITY?
For our part, if our worst enemy
were about to get a law passed to
counteract lynching in the United
States, we would not oppose him. More
than that, we would aid him. We
would help anybody on God's earth to
do a thing like that, and fight anybody
who tried to present the doing
of it.
But now we shall have to enter upon
a pitiful exposure of the pitiful sound-
reels who have betrayed the most vital
interests of their own race and suffer-
ing people. Verily some little fellows
would be jealous of a man, if that man
were about to murder himself a hero by
saving the little fellows' lives.
It's strange, but it's true. We shall
see.
DR. STRATON AND THE NEGRO
Editor of The New York Age.
I visited one of the larger white churches of this city, Calvary Baptist, Sunday evening. December 1, and heard its pastor, the R. Dr. John Roach Stratton, discuss the Ku Klux Klan. Dr. Stratton is one of the most able divines in the American judiciary today and has intercedences in his spirit before an overfitting house of white people搞 him as a traunch and powerful friend of the Negro Race. Dr. Stratton vindicated himself and his congregation from any alliance or connection with the Ku Klux Klan. "What else is there for me to say in this pulpit," said he. "but that I am unalterably opposed to the Ku Klux Klan and their activities, when I made this same statement in the Interracial Conference held in the very heart of the South, (Memphis, Tenn.) before a large gathering of both white and Negro people gathered together to bring about the interracial conditions, and when I also spoke before a board of Negro Baptist, preachers in Harlem."
Dr. Stratton plunged into a simple plain, forceful denunciation of the Klan that was most sincere and emphatic, minus any dramatics. In regard to the Negro, he was bold and outspoken and did not mince his words or camouflage his meaning. He touched on the tarring and feathering and burning of Negroes and said that it was an outrage; that God would visit vengeance for such acts and they should be stopped.
He spoke of the little town in Georgia, which, he said, was in an adjoining county to his home town, where the Negroes had gone with resolutions to their white friends to protect them from the calamity of being driven from their homes in a specified time by the Klan. "This is not right," he thundered. "Knowing the Negro as I do and loving him as I do, I consider this a crime. The Negro is the most harmless being I know and the most loyal." Continuing, he declared, "There is no hatred in me, but I do hate race prejudice in any form anywhere." He criticized the injustice and the war "In touching on the Jezus-Catholic, Dr. Stratton said any nation or people that migrated the Jew suffers, and he gave disheveled and bleeding Russia of today as any example. As to the Catholic, he said he maintained that every man had a perfect right to choose his own faith and worship God as he pleased, and he would stand by the Catholic in the same way and to the same extent as he would the Baptist.
Back to the Klan, he said, "We need no invisible empire" then he gave a beautiful picture of this visible empire of ours, going from the snow capped mountains of it, great northwest to the flowery gardens of the sunny South, from the sun-kissed shores of the gold en Pacific to the Statue of Liberty in el dimero que perciba por ee match. Tengo la absoluta seguridad de que puedo vencer a Sikh en tres asalto." La Federación Francesa de Boxe have vuelto a remir esta tarde a fm de estuaril la forma de lograr que el diputado Díaz diso-de-azar parlamentario para exigir la imminida parlamentaria, para exigir la debida responsabilidad, por las acuerdos que ha lanzado contra los dirigentes del encanto.
Madam C.J. Walker
Preparation
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Renowned Toilet Preparations
LEGAL DIRECTIONS ON EVERY ROOM
the dear old Atlantic, through Georgia,
North and South Carolina, Virginia
up the Chicagoake, on the beautiful
Potomac to our most wonderful Wash-
ington, exclaiming "Let this Empire
surface, it is enough for us."
Dr Straton said he did not like this
new color scheme—white, green, yel-
low and black.—White Klanism, Green
Sectarianism, Yellow Journalism, and
General Blackguardism, but there was
a color scheme that he loved that was
the Red, White and Blue.
(Dr. ALMA MARY HASKINS
2374 Seventh Avenue,
New York City.
NORTH CAROLINA "LILY WHITES."
Editor of The New York Age
Twenty years ago last April, two years after the suffrage amendment was in corporated into state constitution, he instituted a particularly thorn of his political strength, the State Republican Convention was called the convention was called to order in the city auditorium of the Municipal Building. The late Charles Price of Salisbury-former mayor of Salisbury, was elected permanent chairman. After Mr. Price had been presented to the concession, he came forward and the first sentence that fall from his lips, after thankening the delegates for the honor conferred upon him, "Mr. Paul, on one accession, writing to the Romans, exclaimed, 'Oh! wretcher men, on one accession, deliver me from the body of this flesh.'"
And he added in explanation "With no mention of being blasphemous whatever, no mention of being a slave what I wish to say that the years the white Republican of North Carolina have been crying out, who will deliver me from the slavery of the slave grot. At last this deliverance has been accomplished by the white voters of the state and for the first time in the old South State, a convention is met, composed altogether of worse delegates, assembled from the mountains to the seabass. Let a Jesse God from whom all blessings flow."
This writer, at the time the foregoing words were uttered, was sitting in the balcony, overlooking the white delegates in the room, noticing that the white delegates noticing their words. There were African colored men sent as delegates to this convention from their respective counties in the eastern part of the state. Two of them, formerly represented, at different times the Second Congressional District in Congress. Yet even they as well as their associates, were not permitted to attend the meeting; they were duly elected in this convention.
In fact, this writer was informed by a leading white Postmaster at a county courthouse held in the county courthouse the night before the convention met, that the questions to how to handle the colored ball was insisted upon upon their right to sit in the convention, was discussed at length. This party with the proceedings in the premises, told me that it was finally decided, should any colored delegates refuse to sit in the convention, that the cause that he should be forbibly thrown out of the convention ball. That the worst revenue officer were selected to execute the mandate of the causes.
Why was such unwarranted and unlawful
Republican gasoline, gas related about
them?
Simply for the purpose of catering to the officers of the organization to build up a white man's Republican party by excluding the Negro from the political shelter which white men were allowed to hold, the rights of citizenship had been conferred upon him by the constitution of the United States. The Democratic party, with the co-operation of the Lily Whites, "eliminated the Negro from the political politics. With such a result the Democrats were attainted. "The Lily Whites," however, were not contended until after the war, and were not franchised. The educated Negro by not permitting him, even though a duty elected by the Republican Convention since 1900.
What has been the outcome of all this unholy unprincipled propaganda? Simply put, the Democratic gro, whose number is tens of thousands, feels that he is a man without a party in North Carolina, as it is now managed. A small number of voters, section, site for a Democratic candidate running for a local office, not because they believe in his politics, but because they know the Democrat is more likely to raise the rate than the "Lily White" opponent is. The great majority of the qualified Negro electorate remain away from the polls, and the Democratic gro, wood" and saving the law dust for an emergency in the future.
In the mountains, what prepared him to use the twenty pounds, nearly a quarter of a century, in carrying a stake election, since the grapes had been plowed out of the party?
Let the student of political history compre the election returns before the New York City mayor and what will be found. That since it is "Lily Whites" have undertaken all by themselves, to run the Republican party, to run the Democratic party, from the Democratic, assimilative party two years, until in 1965 last election, last month, they received a welcoming, in the face of opposition, from the Democratic, assimilative party, checking only three senators and ten in the lower house. They are almost as completely assimilated, so far as republicans are concerned, as the Negro was assimilated politically in 1900 by the suffrage amendment. I trust I'll not be misunderstood. I trust that the Negro will be represented with the hope that in some way the Negro, who can qualify may be encouraged to be operative with the Lily Whites, will be opposed once more. May I indeed, for as the late Grover Cleveland once said in differing "We have come to the getting of the ways."
My only reason for calling what I have earlier is by the purpose of keeping the Negro in the warmth to venture this little prediction.
That the "Lily Wallace" by forsaking both principle or political expediency have about principle such habits of being careful in a state, or in any other election for that matter, as they would be in damming up the Mississippi River with cob-wobs.
GREENSBORO, N. C. CHARLES H. BOORE.
WOMEN ABOUSED ON LYNCHING Editor of THE NEW York Act:
I was invited to attend the three days' conference of the Commission on Race Relations of the Women's Missionary Council, Methodist Episcopal Church. South, held here in Atlanta December 4 to 6, and was present when the defeat of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill was frankly discussed by white women of strong character who were not afraid to openly express their convictions on this appalling crime—Lynching. One can see a ray of hope, now that the southern white woman is being awakened to the unjust conditions of this section of the country. For when she is convicted or converted, she has the courage to stand by her convictions and will bring things to pass.
SYSTEM
SELENA SLOAN BUTLER.
(Mrs. H. R. Butler).
Atlanta. Ga.
WOMEN WILL KEEP FIGHTING.
Editor of The New York Age:
In common with Negroes everywhere, the colored women of the South are bitterly disappointed at the defeat of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill. We deeply deplore this stumbling blow. Nevertheless we are urging our people not to lose hope. God is stronger than all the combined powers of injustice and wrong. He is at the helm; and these cruel practices that find victims in both races must and will cease. We must strive more and more to seek the right, to discourage sin and wrong in all men, and setting our fares unfinishingly toward the light we must be strong and very courageous. Above all, we must never grow weary. "Man is unjust; but God is just and finally justice triumph."
MARY McLEOD BETHUNE
Daytona, Fla.
TO INSPIRE THE CHIDREN.
Editor of The New York Act
Enclosed please find $2 for one year's subscription to your valuable paper. I am very much interested in the paper and would not be without it. The New York Age should be in every Negro home, especially where there are growing children, so that they might be inspired with race pride and a desire to "do things." Wishing you much success and a prosperous New Year.
ALBERT WORKMAN.
New Orleans, La.
Method, N. C-Berry O'Kelly, well known merchant, postmaster, educator and philanthropist, has been seriously ill at his home here, but is now on the road to recovery under the professional care of Dr. J. O. Plummer. Mr. O'Kelly is president of the North Carolina Negro State Fair, and is one of the wealthiest Negroes in his state.
8 a. m.—s. Mayaro for Grenada, St. Vincent, Trinidad, Ciudad, Bolivar and Guiana, via Grenada, Trinidad and Gorgetown.
9 a. m.—s. Munargo for Bahamas and City of Antilla, Cuba, via, Nassau and Antilla.
11:30 a.m. m—ss. General W. C. Gorgas for Haiti, Canal Zone, Panama, El-Salvador, Nicaragua, Amapala City, Chaluteau in Honduras, Cauca and Narino, via Port au Jirce and Cristobolus. 12 m—ss. Baracoa for Columbia, Narino, via Port au Prince, Kingston, Cartagena and Savanilla.
Saturday, December 16.
8 a. m.—ss. Siboney for Cuba via Havana.
8 a. m.—ss. Ulua for Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Amapala City, Cholisteque, in Honduras, Cauca and Narino in Columbia and Ecuador, via Havana, Criatobal and Port Limon.
8.30 a. m.—ss. Caracas for Curacan and Venezuela, via San Juan, Curacan La Guiraí, and Puerto Cabello.
8.30 a. m.—ss. Ponce (scapost) for Porto Rico. St. Thomas, St. Creu, Saba, St. Martín, St. Eustatius, San Pedro de Macoris and San Domingo City, via San Juan
9 a. m.—ss. Turrialbo for Jamaica, vutemala and Honduras, via San Santiago, Kingston, Puerto Castilla.
9.30 a. m.—ss. Inga for North Brunei and Iquitos, via Para Coara, Paraná beco, Bahia. Rio Janeliro and Santo
11 a. m.—ss. Vasari for Barbados St. Lucia, South Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay, via Barbados Rio Janeiro, Montevideo and Buenos Aires.
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THE STAGE AND ATHLETICS
In The Realm of Music
By Lucien H. White
"Liza" Is a Great Dancing Show But Weak in The Singing
"Liza" Is a Great Dancing Show But Weak in The Singing
Irvin Miller Has Brought Broadway a Nifty Aggregation of High Stepping Beauties Who Possess Great Terpsichorean Skill
To characterize "Liza," the musical comedy now being presented by Irwin C. Miller and a large group of talented colored belles and beauts at Daly's 63rd Street Theatre, as the best dancing show yet seen in New York, will not cause the writer to be convicted of exaggeration. For there has not yet been seen in this man's and woman's town a more agile, graceful, lithesome, lissom and limber group of dancers than has been gathered together by Irvin and his fellow workers in this new bid for the favor of New York's fickle theatregoers.
And they work as though they like it. From the going up of the first curtain on the "Tag Day" scene, to the grand finale by the entire company, during which time two acts and ten scenes have been galloped through in about two hours and a half, there isn't a dull moment. Verve, vivacity, pep, jazz—all these and others, if I knew them, could be aptly used in describing the efforts of those who make up the "Liza" company.
This production, revamped from the "Bon Bon Buddy, Jr." show which was seen in Harlem some months ago, and which brought forth some criticism because of an alleged plagiarizing of a copyrighted title, bears slight resemblance to its progenitor. Just here and there are there resemblances, but these have been toned down and polished up to an extent that raises doubt as to the relationship. And, too, the show has been speeded up to an almost unbelievable extent. The action does not lag, and the audience is kept on the qui zire all the time, wondering what is coming next, for sometimes it seems that from a terpischorean standpoint, the limit had been reached.
But they go on from one degree unto another, achieving new triumphs with each progression.
According to the program, the book is by Irvin C. Miller, music and lyrics by Maceo Pinkard, with special lyrics by Nat Vincent. Just what the special lyrics may be, I have had no means of discovering, but Pinkard has some good music in the show. The title song, "Liza," is attractively given, and constant recurrence of its melodic theme, woven artistically through the arabesque of harmony, both vocal and orchestral, sends the majority of the audience away humming its catchy refrain.
Other attractive numbers are "That Brownskin Flapper," sung by Maud Russell and a group of pretty flappers; "Planning," a sentimental duet, by Margaret Sjimms and Thaddius Drayston; and "My Old Man," sung by Elizabeth Welch and Emmett Anthony. The singing as a whole is not up to the standard. Much is left to be desired in this connection, and it is not altogether the fault of the singers. They are not sufficiently trained and developed, but the voices are there. A chorus master or director of sufficient calibre would work wonders with that group of ambitious and earnest workers.
Gertrude Saunders, the leading soubrette, has a lot of talent, but her work would be more enjoyed if she gave evidence of a little less self-conceit. Confidence in one's ability is a most desirable trait but a swollen head is a "maint."
It was a great surprise to find that the orchestra was giving such melodious service. The individual players are well-equipped, and the conductor, Lieut. J. Tim Brynn, has the reputation of being one of the race's most competent wielders of the baton. But results such as should be possible with this aggregation of able musicians are not attained. It is not possible, offhand, to say just what the trouble is. The impulse is to attribute the lack in some way to the conductor. Certainly there is one fact that stands out, perhaps by reason of a knowledge of Lazut Brymin's possible affinity to the brass and wood wind choirs. That is, the wind choirs continually overwhelmed the string sections, and at times even swept above the full choir of voices on the stage. These faults, evident in the first two weeks of the production, will undoubtedly be modified and eliminated, and there is every indication that "Liza" is in for a good long run.
Aside from their ability in tripping the "light, fantastic toy," the girls gotten to gether by Mr. Meller are way above the average in point of pulchrum. It is a pretty bunch of girls and there is little danger of any eyes getting tired from looking at them. The costumes are elaborate, tasty and attractive. The scenery is gorgeous, one scene especially, "On the Moonlit Swanet," causing the audience to burst into ablush appreciation.
It will be some feather in the Miller boys' caps if the three brothers should be connected up in what may turn out to be a breaking of theatrical records among race performers. One brother, Flourmey, is of the group of geniuses who put over "Shuffle Along." (at the same house, by the way, known then as 63rd Street Music Hall), and in "Liza" are to be seen Irwin and Quintard, the former starring, and the latter doing an artistic "old man."
THEATRICAL JOTTINGS
Malinda and Dade are at the Capitol, Union Hill, N. J., and Hamilton, New York City.
Tabor and Green are at the Temple Theatre, Detroit, Mich.
Sam Wilson is at the Palace, Brooklyn and Loew's Avenue B, New York City.
Gleen and Jenkins are at the Golden State Theatre, San Francisco, Cal.
Hightower and Jones are at the Grand, Hoboken, and the Rits, Jersey City, N. J.
Williams and Taylor are at the Palace Theatre, Chicago, Ill.
Easton and Stewart with Monte Carlo Girls Co., Gaiety, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Austin and Delaney are at B. F.
Seth's Pawtucket, R. I.
Wilson and Giles are at Gordon's Olympia Theatre, Boston, Mass.
Dixie Four are at Keph's Bushwick Theatre, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Carter and Cornish are at the Empress Theatre, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Creole Cocktail is at Loew's Greeley University Theatre, New York City.
Ceymour and Jeanette are at the Orpheum Theatre, Peoria, and Majestic Bloomington, Ill.
Morton and Brown are at the Grand Opera House, New York City.
Exposition Jubilee Four are at Panthers Theatre, Seattle, Wash.
Moss and Frye are at Proctor's Theatre, Newark, N. J.
China and Company are at the Pal-
Springfield Moss.
Allen and Jones with "7-11" Company, Lafayette Theatre, New York City.
Chadwick and Taylor are at the Orpheum Theatre, Sioux Fall, S. D.
Greenlee and Drayston with "Lizzi" Company at the 63rd Street Theatre, New York City.
Jazz Jubilee at the Emery Theatre, Providence, R. L. and Broadway, Springfield, Mass.
Kelly and Palmer with Broadway Flapper's Co., the Columbia Theatre, New York City.
Buck and Bubbles are at the Garrick Theatre, Chicago, Ill.
Ray, Thomas and Casmay with Plantation Revue, Broadway and 50th street, New York City.
Byron Bros. Saxo Band at Pantages Theatre, Tacoma, Wash.
Ray and Norman are at Beacon Theatre, Beacon, N. Y.
The C. V. B. A. will have a box party to see the "7-11" show at the Lasayette Theatre, Wednesday night.
Danny Edwards, colored bantam-weight champion of the world, will probably be the first colored boy to fight a mixed bout, under the present boxing commission, at Madison Square Garden. The managers of Midget Smith, Pancho Villa and Joe Lynch have all agreed to match these men with Edwards at the Garden and negotiations are now under way to have Matchmaker Flournoy stage the bout.
Godfrey Wins by K. O. at Pioneer George Godfrey, the new find of Jack Johnson, former heavyweight champion, scored a technical knockout over Jack Thompson, western heavy, after 50 seconds of the fifth round of a scheduled ten-round contest at Pioneer S. C. on Tuesday night, December 5. Thompson's seconds threw in the towel, and upon examination by the club doctor, it was found that the western battler had broken his hand. They both weighted 300 pounds.
THE NEW YORK AGE: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1922.
Although "Seven Eleven," which is being presented at The Lafayette this week makes no pretense of being the best musical comedy of the season, it is as entertaining and in many ways the equal of any that have been present at this theatre for some time. The show is built around "Speedy" Smith and Sam Cook, a popular vaudeville team, who take the leading comedy roles. May Brown is the leading female character. The plot is not original, but there is the thread of a story running throughout the show. The dancing of Mason and Bailey and of the chorus was a feature of the performance on Monday night, but the outstanding feature was the comedy work of "Speedy" Smith, who kept the audience continually laughing. Garland Howard and May Brown showed unusual peep in their dance numbers.
Among the principals of the show are: Charles Mason, Sam A biley, Demus Jones, Bob Allen, Garland Howard, Arthur Ames, Evan Robinson, May Brown, A. B. Connathiere, Sam Cook, George Myrick, Andrew Fairchild, Speedy Smith, Iris Hall and Julia Mitchell.
AT THE LAFAYETTE THEATRE
The Harvey Minstrels advertise Marguerite Jackson as "The Modern Black Patti." With her husband, this singer constitutes one of the features
NOAH ROBINSON.
With Harvey's Greater Ministerls at Lafayette Theater, Week of December 18.
of the celebrated vanderville section of
the Harvey Minstrels. Special scenery
is provided for the act and Miss Jackson
is first revealed as a poorly but
neatly dressed country colored girl,
attracted to a transient show company.
When she applies for a position, the
manager asks her to demonstrate her
voice, and then—and then the audience
realizes the surprise that is in store
for them.
Harvey's Greater Minstrels play at
the Lafayette Theatre, week starting
Monday, December 18, with matinee
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Mid-
night show Friday night.
AT THE LINCOLN THEATRE
Lincoln Theatre Presents Mae Murray in Broadway Rose. Sensational Picture This Week.
She cast him out of her life, but the millionaire's son says he will love the Broadway dancer despite her attitude. The scandal-mongers have spotted the entirely innocent friendships and in giving him up, he decides to give up Broadway too. But the charming favorite of the white lights did not realize how great a part he played in her life. When her earlier sweetheart comes into her life—then the puzzled dancer makes her choice. See "Broadway Rose," starring Mae Murray, now at the Lincoln Theatre.
LINCOLN UNIV. FIVE
TO PLAY DEFENDERS
For the first time in five years, the Lincoln University face will be seen in Harlem on December 22, when they meet the Chicago Defender's New York team at Manhattan Casino. Among the members of the Lincoln team are the following members of the past season's football team: Stanley Skinker, Decker McLean, Frank Pollit, and "Shag" Hogans. Herman Thompkins is captain of the team, and the other members are Massey Wood and Boone Hommer.
A CHRISTMAS PRESENT?
Your friend will have a weekly reminder of your thoughtfulness throughout the year if you have THE NEW YORK AGE sent as a Christmas present, One Year, $2.
EDWIN COATES
TEACHER OF
HARMONY, COUNTYPORT, COMPOSITION
(Clauses New forming)
Martin-Smith Middle School
139 W. 134th Street
Aud. 8216
Dec. 9-1y
HARRY LAURA Prampin
School of Music
131 West 190th Street, N.Y.C.
TELEPHONE ADDRESS 1000
WILSON LAMB
VOCAL STUDIO
106 W. 110th St. New York City
FIRST EMANUEL CHURCH
Saturdays at 1 P. M.
Home Studio: Metropolitan Building
Orange, M. J. Photo George Nixon
Commonwealth Five Wins Hard Game From Orientals
NEW YEAR'S NIGHT, MON.
1
JANUARY
1923
BIG HOLIDAY NIGHT DANCE
MOONLIGHT
NEW STAR CASINO
107th Street and Lexington Ave.
CABARET AND ZURPRIZE NOVELLIES FREE
MUSIC BY ALLIE ROSS'S ORCHESTRA
Capt. Henry Wilson will pilot the Good Ship
Walter Hunter & Coo. Buckner, Floor Managers
Bud Hewlett, Sergeant of Arms
ADMISSION 75c BOXES $5.00 LORES $4.00
Boxes and Loges on sale at Henry Wilson's, 116 W. 135th St., Morningside 9125
Don't Fall To Attend The BASKETBALL GAME & DANCE- Sesame's Greatest Attractions
Defender's "New York" Big 5
LINCOLN UNIVERSITY
FRIDAY EVE. DEC. 22
This team consists of the Great Football Heroes:
Come out and Meet Them.
Admission 75c - No tax
Boxes Seating eight $5
Defender's of Chicago
THURSDAY EVE. DEC. 28
Be Present to Witness the Rivalry when "East Meets West." Games Start at 10 Sharp. No Preliminaries.
Dancing with Extra Good Music
Manhattan Casino
WANTED MUSICIANS--ENTERTAINERS
SINGERS and PLAYERS for ORCHESTRA and ENTERTAINMENT IN AND AROUND
New York City
DEACON JOHNSON
MUSICIANS EXCHANGE
NEW YORK AGE B'LD'G
New York
Ed. Conn.
White P. O. Box 24 Station
(Special To The New York Age)
New Rochelle, N. Y.-Saturday evening, December 9. Frank Forbes and his mates journeyed up to New Rochelle to tackle the Orientalis and carried the long end of the score back to Harlem. The game was fast, displaying some excellent passwork on the part of Commonwealth, who sprang into the lead at the start and led all the way. However they were crowded in the second half and were it not for two successive baskets by "Tat" Jenkins and Slocum, respectively, the result might have been different.
The work of "Tat" Jenkins stood far above that of any other player. He scored four field goals and shot one foul. But his floor work, his ability to break up the Orientalis formation was even more valuable to his team than his shooting. The rest of the Commonwealth team played a great game.
Jones and Garcia starred for New Rochelle. The final score was 25-15. The Fanwood Deaf Mutts defeated the Oriental Midgets in the preliminary by the score of 15-11.
COMMONWEALTH FIVE
DEFEATES ST. IEROME
The Commonwealth Big Five won their fourth-straight victory on Sunday night. December 3, when they defeated the St. Jerome Catholic Club, 46-27, on the local team's court at Commonwealth Casino. The visiting team was outplayed in the first half, and followed to shoot only two goals. In the second half, they came back strong and shot eleven field goals. Fial, Jenkins and Stoccuh shot goals from all angles and both Hubbard and Forbes played a good game at guard.
In the preliminary game, the Harlem All-Stars were defeated by the Blue Helts in a one-sided game. The score was 23-7.
SANDY TAYLOR WINS
AGAIN OVER BUSH
Sandy Taylor, welterweight champion of the National Guard, scored his second victory over Georgias Bush of the 71st. Regiment in the main 12-round bout at the 15th Armory on Tuesday night. December 12. Taylor put up a good scrap all the way and outboxed his opponent in every round. Bush took many blows that would have knocked an ordinary tighter out, but apparently his head and stomach were of tougher material than the ordinary battler's. Taylor weighed 143.1-4 pounds, and Bush 140.1-2.
Eddie Kiley, former amateur flyweight champion, was successful in winning his initial bout in a professional. He scored an easy victory over Danny Lyons at the 102nd Legiment in the eight round semifinal. He showed speed, cleverness and an ability to box that should make him a valuable asset in the professional boxing circles of Harlem. His weight is 127 pounds and that of his opponent was announced as 125.
Henry Shaw of the 300th and Saddler Vasquez fought the most ferocious fight of the night on one of the four round preliminaries. Both fighters fought hard every minute, but Shaw was the winner on points. In the other preliminary bout, Saddler Golden knocked out Earl Jackson in the last round of a four round bout; and Kid Roose host a close decision to Kid Bates.
An all star card is being presented at this armory next week in which three star honors will be presented. Some of the contestants in these honors will be Wilhelle Walker the middle weight champion of the National Guard, Buddy Sanders the lightweight champion of the National Guard; and Wilhelle Simchair the Pacific Coast lightweight.
ORIENTALS DEFEAT THE MONARCH FIVE
The Mi-Tee Monarch Elks' five went down in defeat before the Orientalis of New Rochelle at Commonwealth Casino on Sunday night, December 10, in a game that was so one-sided that the spectators soon lost interest. It was the first game of a double-header and was witnessed by the largest crowd that has attended a basketball game this season. Occasionally Captain "Huddy" Oliver and Lester Fial played good ball for the Elks, but throughout most of the game the Orientalis had them completely outclassed, the final score was 33-16. Gaynor was the star for the New Rochelle team, as he scored seven field goals and two fouls for his team. Garcia and Monte also played well. The line up:
Substitute: For Monarch, Jenkins for Johnson; field goals: Monarch—Fial 3, Oliver 2, Spaulding 1; Oriental—Gaynor 7, Monte 3, Garcia 3, Jones 1, and James 1; feal goals: Monarch, 4 out of 9 trials; Oriental, 3 out of 7; Referee—Cria Huiswoud.
BOROUGH A. C. TEAM
BEATS SPARTAN BEAVES
The Spartan Braves met their second defeat this season at the hands of the Boreough Athletic Club five in a hard fought game at Manhattan Casino on Thanksgiving night, November 30. The Spartans appeared to be only the shell of their former selves, although—with the exception of Ritchie at center for Slocum—the lineup was the same as it has been for the past two seasons. Stewart and Wallace did not work together as they usually do, and Wallace seemed unable to hold the ball.
The Brooklyn boys took the lead early in the first half and held it throughout the game. During the first half, they had possession of the ball most of the time and completely outclassed their opponents. The score at the end of this period was 15-7. In the next half the Harlem boys made a game effort to overcome their handicap. Wallace was
Professional Collegians "5" Downed by Commonwealths
No Advance in prices Seats Now Selling Big Vaudeville Concert Every Sunday Continious from 2 to 11
Daly's 63rd St. Theatre East of Broadway Tel. Colbus 1446
Midnight performance Wed. 11:45 p. m. Mat. Sats. Proclaimed by the critics as the "Greatest Singing and Dancing Show."
Book by Irving C. Miller Lyrics and Music by Macca Pinkard Extra Lyrics by Not Viscount Staged by Walter Brooks
Basketball fans at the Commonwealth Casino were treated to one of the most exciting basketball games of the season on Sunday night. December 10, when the Commonwealth Big Five barely defeated the Professional Collegians by a score of 21-18. Both sides shot the same number of baskets, and throughout the first half it appeared that the local team would lose its first game.
The Collegians played a "five-man guard" game and allowed only one goal during the first half, while they scored five. In the second half the Commonwealth team broke through their defense and shot seven baskets, which, with three foul goals, gave them their three point lead.
From the beginning of the game, the taken out and Beckett, a member of the team, given his place.
The winning team appeared to be in better condition than ever before, and will no doubt be a strong contender for the amateur championship of the East. R. Evans and H. Brown were the two outstanding players on the team. Although both played guard, they did the bulk of the shooting. Evans having made five field goals and Brown three. About a thousand people witnessed the game. The teams lined up as follows: SPARTANS POS. BOR. A.C. Wallace L. F. A. Wilson Stewart R. F. W. Scott
crowd was yelling for Monde substituted for Frank Forbes, as generally considered a better player Forbes. In this game, however, played better than he has played this season and did not allow him to get away. The most danger on the Collegians' team was the center who shot half the baskets for team and outjumped Slocum during first half. The entire Commissary team played as a unit, and in the part of the game showed more skill in shooting than their ents. Their goals were shot low: Fial 4, Jenkins 3, and Sho After the game and between the large number of spectators dancing with music furnished by Rhone.
Ritchie C. J. B.
Gittens L. G. R. F.
Gumbs R. G. H. L.
Substitutes: for Spartans—Beckham
Wallace, Russell for Gittens; field g.
Spartans—Wallace 3, Stewart 2, B.
lyn—Evans 5, Brown 3, and Scr.
foul goals: Spartans 4 out of 12. B.
lyn 2 out of 7.
Referee—Hubbard of the Com-
wealth Big Five.
In the preliminary game, the Spartan
Hornets were successful in defeating
Harlem Comets in a fast game. The
score was 24-11. Charlie Mock was
referee.
(Special To The New York Times)
Atlanta, Ga. — Fik University regulated the footwear of the South in the heating. Morehouses here on Sunday hosted a Day of score at 20/19. The game was the most directly contested that has been seen here in years, and was witnessed by 8,000 people. The score represents the nature of the mingle, which abounds with forward passing, spirited rushes, stunts and tumbling, to gether with several and positions by the officials.
In the first quarter neither side scored, although Irving for Morchouse recovered a fumbled forward pass, which Johnson of Fisk threw away, and run forty vards for a touchdown. Referee Robinson tried that this was an incomplete toward pass. The fielder scored the second quarter, and Johnson had the ball within a few yards of Morchouse's goal and attempted a pass. Johnson shot the pass into the outstretched hands of Harris, who was waiting behind the goal line. Harris was tackled as he caught the ball and dug it. Harris dashed in, scoped up the ball and run the entire length of the field for a touchdown. Smith claimed that Harris did not fumble the ball, but he ran two incomplete vards, and two minutes of wrapping coaxing Fisk resumed plays. No Kelley kicked goal for the extra half. No other scoring was done the first half.
Fiss made her first touchdown a few minutes after the third quarter began, but failed to kick the goal. Morehouse followed with a touchdown from a pass by Johnson to Gentry, who ran sixty yards to goal. A pass from Kelly to Galloway added the extra point, but in the second quarter, when both teams thought the score was tied, the referee claimed the start. Morehouse made as much as the point, and did not cause the third quarter ended with the final Fiss's possession on her yard line.
During the last quarter the sun went down and part of this quarter was played in the twilight. Nevertheless, Fiss made two and Morehouse one last run during this period.
ATHLETICS AT PRAIRIE
VIEW NORMAL SCHOOL
(Special To The New York Times)
Texas View, Texas—The football
team which was a very intrepid and
highly satisfactory one this year for the
Prairie View State Normal, has closed.
The school was able to accomplish this
year more than it has done during the
whole history of its existence in the way
as an institution.
The new athletic field was surveyed
and put into shape, a grandstand with a
seating capacity of a thousand was con-
pleted, tennis and basketball courts
both for the boys and girls were built.
The football game the school has ever
was developed, having gone
through the season losing but a single
game.
Wiley University, Prairie View's most
formidable antagonist, and a victor of
three successive years, was defeated on
a new campus by a score of 18 to 6.
Plans for next year are already in the making and it is confidently expected that the school will stand in the front hand of Negro colleges so far as athletics is concerned. Athletics is under supervision of a committee approved by Principal, the duties of which are plan and divide for athletics at the classes. The present student has been successful in putting on a self-supporting basis in the interest which it has been able to locate locally and otherwise. H. H. Mason, secretary-manager; E. B. Evans, purchasing agent, and A. T. W. treasurer, have worked in community cooperation and harmony in order on the program thus far. G. B. Buchholz of Monroe and Minnesota, was a football coach, with J. R. G. Wrigley as assistant. The Committee, the Board, and eight games, including a ministry and conference games, for the annual schedule will be announced.
NEW ROCHELLR FIVE
TURNS PROFESSIONAL
(Special To The New York Age)
New Rochelle, N. Y. - The Oriental Merchants, which has been a member of the Metropolitan Racquetball Association and the esteemed organization, is decided to enter the professional field and announces their first professional game against the Commonwealth for the New Rochelle High School Saturday night, December 9. It is thought that their action will take their clubs desiring to make more moves out of their games, to break away from the amateur organizations.
HILLDALE WITHDRAWS
FROM WESTERN CIRCUIT
(Special to The New York Age)
Philadelphia, Pa.—A bomb shell was
attacked at the entrance of Colored Pro-
fessional Baseball Clubs, when the Asso-
ciation convened at Chicago, by Edward
Brown, pilot of the Hildale Club,
Philadelphia's representative in the West
Circuit, who tendered the withdraw-
al of the Quaker City team.
When interviewed on the matter the
Hildale mentor refused to repose in Philadelphia club
and working at a decided dimen-
sion with the Western Circu
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HAMPTON CLAIMS
FOOTBALL TITLE
(Special To The New York Age)
Hampton, Va.—The Hampton Institute
football team of 1982, Edward L. Dabney
of Hampton, captain, has won the
championship in the Colored Intercollegiate
Athletic Association.
Hampton won six of its seven games
and scored 46 points against its opponents,
who scored 25 points, as follows:
Morgan College, 6-0; St. Paul Normal
and Industrial School, Virginia
Normal and Industrial Institute, 6-12;
Lincoln University, 9-7; Shaw University,
1-0; Howard University, 13-0,
and Virginia University, 8-6.
Hampton Institute has awarded letters to the following members, of its varsity football squad: David Burrell, Roanoke, Va.; W. W. Cardozo, Washington, D. C.; T. T. Coleman, Comberland, Va.; E. L. Dahney, Hampton, Va.; C. W. Frye, Ren, Va.; S. L. Gayle, Hampton, Va.; D. L. Gunn, Stockbridge, Mass.; Herbert Hardwick, Savannah, Ga.; B. C. Jacobs, Pittsfield, Mass.; J. H. Jones, Boston, Mass. S. H. Scott, New Robbell, N. Y.; A. R. Buffin, Caworthville, N. Y.; J. S. Ruffin, Caworthville, J. W. Eberhart, Eberhart, G. and W. D. Dixon, Greenville, S. C. Gidon E. Smith and William S. Parker were the Hampton Institute coaches.
Theodore T. Coleman of Cumberland, Va., right tackle on the 1922 team, is the football tapton-elect for 1923.
DEFEATS MORRIS BROWN
(Special To the New York Age)
Atlanta, Ga.—Nearly two thousand and a half athletic football fans saw Atlanta University's football eleven down the dirt. Morrison Brown, 18-6, on Thanksgiving day, down in the first five minutes of the game, but a few other touchdowns pass from Lockhart to Clark almost scored a touchdown for the opposing team. Two other touchdowns were scored by the Grissom team in the next three quarters. Just a few minutes before the end of the game the Morris Brown spectators began to clamor for a score by their team. At this time Williams, full back Morris Brown, intercepted a pass thrown to Colum and ran half the length. At this field for their only touchdown of the game.
As Atlanta did not play Mourhouse this season and was undefeated by any other opponents, the team is claiming Seven championship this season. Whether this claim can be substantiated or not, A. U. has just completed its most successful season.
ST. PAUL'S RECORD
FOR SEASON OF 1922
(Special To The New York Age)
Lawrenceville, Va.—The following is the 1922 gridiron record of St. Paul School for 1922 season:
ST. PAUL
... Virginia Seminary
0 25. N. C. State School. 0
0 6. Hampton 0
6. Union 0
12. National Training School. 6
0. Lincoln 18
12. St. Augustine's School. 6
2. Shaw 3
63
St. Paul has made application for membership in the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association, and will send representatives to the 1923 meeting at Shaw University, Raleigh, N. C. in March, 1923. Winston Douglas, Lincoln '17, is St. Paul's coach.
St. Paul presents the following candidates for the 1922 All-American team: Maddux, left end; Walker, quarter; fullback, Coleman, left tackle; Miller, right tackle; Vaughan, left guard.
CLEARLY
(Special To The New York Age)
Orangeburg, S. C.—In a game where it was for man and not for difference in the number of Benedict students of Columbia, S. C., defeated Claflin University 8 to 6 here on Thanksgiving Day.
The game was thrilling and spectacular during all the periods. Benedict registered their touchdown in the second period by a forward pass from Williams to Jones, the pass being made from the 15 yard line. They later scored when they had Claflin on their three yard line. Claflin attempted to kick out of danger, and the ball was blocked and recovered by Benedict behind the goal line.
Claflin made their touchdown in the fourth quarter when Claflin on Benedict's 25-yard line passed the ball, which was caught by, Jack Williams, who was Benedict behind. In this at-bat, to touch the ball back he was tackled behind the goal line and fumbled the ball, which was recovered by Wright, right guard for Claflin.
Montgomery, Ala.—Humbled by the Tuskegee Institute warriors in their opening game by the score of 19-0, the Alabama State Normal School Tigers settled themselves down to a hard schedule that was climaxed in the thrilling 14-8 defeat of the Florida A. 8 M. College on Thanksgiving Day in Montgomery. Other scores of the opening game were Basing 26, S. N. S. O; Stillman 0; S. N. S. 36; Fort Borgwang 12, S. N. S. 0; Mobile Tigers 0, S. N. S. 31; and Belma University 0, S. N. S. 62.
In sending money or valuables through the mail at this season of the year it is especially necessary that amount may be used in wrapping presents and giving to the University.
THE NEW YORK.AGE: SATURDAY, DECEMBER, 16, 1982.
Atlanta, Gn.—Fred. H. A. Mant, Mr.
E. A. Williams and Jason O. Thomas,
while attending the Teachers' Association
of May, decided to call a meeting of
representative men and women of the
goes to consider the matter of having
Dr. H. B. Mason make a tour of the
State of Georgia similar to the ones
in Washington, and himself through other
states.
This meeting was called at the Fort
Valley High and Industrial School.
Invitations were sent to some thirty president men and women, all of whom gave their endorsement to the proposition and put their influence and personality behind it. Dr. Harris of Athens, who had already been in communication with Mr. Holsey and Dr. Moton with reference to a tour, was elected state chairman. The tour began in Atlanta, November 26. The kick-off meeting was held. Several thousand men and women of both races, representing every class and condition of mankind, assembled in the auditorium armory Sunday afternoon. Men high up in affairs of church and state occupied seats on the platform; some of them participated on the program. The address of welcome was delivered by Mayor James L. Key. Incidentally it is significant that in every city, with one exception, the mayor was made by the mayor. In one city it was made by his personal representative.
Like Sherman, the general, Dr. Morton marched through "Georgia, from Atlanta to the sea, in the wake of the war, and in the wake of many of its attendant evils, and in the wake of Moton lay prostrate much ill will, misunderstanding, race prejudice and injustice, and upon the ruins were understanding and good will.
PURPOSE
The purposes of this tour through Georgia were identical with the purposes that inspired Dr. Booker T. Washington, Dr. Moton's predecessor, to make trips through many states to make trips to itself and make similar trips through other states for the same purpose. In an effort to stimulate, create and cement better and more cordial relationship between the two races is the motive that actuated these good-will tours. As Dr. Moton said, "A total good-will, an effort to bring about peace on earth because there is good-will between man."
METHOD
The method in bringing about the conditions above described followed by Dr. Moton was, first of all, a frank face to face and heart to heart discussion of the conditions of circumstances that are calculated to destroy good fellowship and great harmonious and helpful relationship. Dr. Moton expressed his position in this regard in the following
Junior Sports
By JIMMIE WARD.
WINONO GIRLS
On Monday evening, December 15, at St. Mark's Hall, Harlem's pride, the fast race of the girls, New York State champions in the opening game of a series of five games, was a very fast and exciting one, but the visitors seemed to be more eager. During the first half the Winnsons scored 14 points while the Bets scores 10 on the part of the visitors over some decision made by Chris Hutson. His because it is decided harder to reference the season and Helen Ellense played splendently for the Harlem girls and it was too bad last after putting up such a strong fight.
DEFENDER DEFEATS
HOWELL COLLEGIATE
The Chicago Defender's New York five and the Howard University College five played one of the most thrilling basketball games of the season at Manhattan Casino on Thursday night, December 7. The Defender team won, but only by a score of 22-20. Wheeland of Howard also scored, but in a few minutes a unusual long shot by Simma, and other goals by "Stretch" Grant and Fird Lowery, put the New York team in the lead. Both teams fought hard but missed many good baskets, until a minute before the end of the first half when the Washingtonians shot another field goal that said the score. The team held the New York team to a tie score seemed to fill the visiting team with confidence, and they began the second half with an air of assurance: Within the first minute of play, they began drawing away from their opponents and so did had a lead of five points. This lead was not for long, however, for both teams. Glenn again grabbed the local team's first point of their opponents. A faint and a field goal by Butler less than two minutes before the game ended moved the day for the home team.
Although the game was close and intense from the spectators' standpoint, neither player played an exceptional game. The New York team had not practiced quarterback, and there was a lack of teamwork; while the Washington team seemed so dependent on the opposing team, who, with Dash, did the best work (or his best work) of the "Secret" Grant at comeback for the Defender masters him as the of the coming covers now playing the quarterback. He not only outcompeted Whiteman but was also the chief scorer for his team. Fred Loewry showed that he is still a dangerous man, forward, while Buster and Zan Johnson did good work as guard.
terms: "We have told about each other too much. The time is now when we must talk to each other, white and black."
Dr. Motton's message in each community was doubled-barreled in character. Out of one harrel there were slags of advice and counsel to his own group. To the magnitudes of his own race he said that the twelve or fourteen million of Negroes in America are one thousand or two thousand years ahead of a corresponding number of Negroes anywhere else in the world. He had many advantages for which they ought to be thankful. In the first place they all spoke one language of culture, rehement, of progress, of civilization. In the second place, they were essentially Christians. They believed in God and in His Son, Jesus Christ.
HOW TO GET RESPECT
In emphasizing the things the Negro himself must do from within in order to come with the demands of this civilization, he counselled the members of his group to have more race pride and race consciousness. He said, "We are Chinese, a Japanese, an Indian or members of any other race, with one exception, to give the impression that they felt called upon to explain why they were identified with their respective race group. I fear sometime the Negro, as he watched the white man achieve his success, to the white man propaganda, comes to feel that the white man's success is due primarily to his color. They paint angels white and devils white. I fear many Negroes feel that they have been cursed by reason of themselves desiring to find themselves except that which God has made them, and white are the same in the sight of God.
"The white man is successful, not because of his color, but because of his character, and he is ruling the world because he is more nearly doing what God wants done in the development of its species than has been done in the other race."
PERSONNEL
The personnel of the party was made up of twenty-five prominent and successful business and professional men, the most agreeable and adable group of men as a whole that the writer has ever been associated with for so long a period in such an intimate function. There was not an ugly spirit or repulsive personality in the whole group. (Name of party are given in another article, Ed.). In many places there was an adriatrum large enough to hold the people so the meeting took little outdoors. It was that between thirty-five thousand people heard him and everywhere he spoke he said his proposition. The concrete results of this tour will undoubtedly manifest themselves in the more cordial relationship between the two races in communities visited and as a by-product, a better feeling between the groups throughout the State.
people who had planned to go not witness the game. Nevertheless, the house was fairly well filled with followers of the game, including many former Howardites, who enjoyed dancing
The summary of the game was as follows:
Substitutes: Howard-White for Banks; Defender Five-Turner for Simmus; field goals: Howard-Wheatland 5, Dash 2, Banks1; Defenders—Grant 4, Lowry 3, Butler 1, Simmus 1; foul goals: Howard 5 out of 9; New York Defenders, 3 out of 6; Referee—Hopl Hubbard.
REDUCED RATES FOR
TUSKEGEE CONFERENCE
To The New York Age
Tuskegee Institute, Ala.-d extensive and elaborate plans for the thirty-second annual Tuskegee Negro Conference are being made by Dr. Robert R. Moton and the staff of workers at Tuskegee.
The program of the Conference, which will be held January 17 and 18, comprises many features of interest to farmers and rural workers. No pains are being spared in the effort to secure the best speakers for this occasion. Dr. Moton has announced that the railroads have granted a reduced rate amounting to a fine of $100,000 the round-trip to Ala, on the certificate. Delegates to the Con-
The J. F. P. Thanksgiving Bride.
Tuskegee Institute. Ala. —The J. F. P. Cub gave its initial frolie in the hallroom of the Chamball Hotel. Thanksgiving evening. The hall was decorated with beautiful half-turreted fireworks from the balcony, the inputs are shaded, with the colors of the club, black and gold, intertwined; the J. F. P. initials were placed on the front wall; and the black and gold crepe paper streamers draped from chandelier gave an appearance of intensity to the room. The autumn atmosphere was made even more the purpose of the crepe paper streamers, which were hollowed out and lighted within so as to throw into relief the cut-out human features.
The music of the Duvalie Musical Combination was enjoyed by the uttermost. The special feature of the entertainer was the Shadow White in honor of M. E. G. Bowden of Atlanta, Ga. who was the guest of Mrs. Bowden, the department of the Institute. An elegant spot-light or rotating colors was lashed around the hall giving a very annual lighting effect. An unimaginable supply of punch could very acceptably
NEWS OF THE CHURCHES
First Emanuel Church
Sunday morning. Pastor Bolden preached a wonderful perma. His text St. Matthew 6th chapter and the latter part of the 10th verse. "They will be done in earth, as it is in heaven." Pastor Bolden spelled out God's will for the earth about his earthly God.
The Sunday-school opened at the annual hour. Superintendent Hogans Hogans conducted the opening excercises. As the children arrived for the children rock plum, and many joined in the singing of the christmas carols. At three o'clock the Rainbow Circle was held. Short talks were given by Mrs. Copeland, R. M. Bolden, Mrs. T. Baldwin, R. M. Bolden. The Literary society convened at the usual hour. Mrs. Alston had charge of the program. It was as follows: singing from P 159; reading, Mrs. Alston; Singing from page 124; reading, Mrs. Alston; singing from page 24; Counting, Mrs. Alston; singing, from page 54.
At 8 o'clock PANor Bolden again prescheduled a very inspiring sermon. It was a continuation of the morning sermon. He emphasized what was God's will. Healso said that no person could know God's will in your life, but they could know God's will in their own life. God has many ways in which his own will known to all that mankind. God will. He also said that no contrary to this will that no person will this will we would always be happy and contented." This sermon was also the first sermon to Fellowship society.
The Missionary Society had charge of the dinner during the day and $BSS was turned over to the church proceeds from the same. The missionary twice the quarterly reports was rendered by all th auxiliaries of the church.
The last Sunday in December will be the pastor's rally day, we are putting forth every effort to make it a grand success.
On Friday evening: the children of the Sunday-school will give a cantata called "The dream of Fairyland. Ada will be 25 cents; all are invited."
St. Mark's M. E. Church.
On Sunday, December 10th, the morning and evening services of St. Mark's M. E. Church were attended by large congregations.
Dr. W. R. Palmer was the speaker at the morning service and delivered a very careful session on 2 Kings, 20th verse, and 22nd verse.
Theme: The healing power of God.
In the evening, Holy Communion was administered by Dr. Brooks to four hundred and seventy-two communicants.
Several probationaries received the right hand of fellowship and were admitted into full membership of the church.
The Sunday-school was well attended and the collection good. The musical and literary exercises of the Epworth League were largely attended and an enjoyable program rendered.
Dinner was served in the Church House by the Floral Circle and evening services the chair under Prof. Jackson rendered excellent music alternating in the affiring with the congregation at the evening service.
Rush Memorial Church
On Monday, December 4, the members of the church gave, the pastor, Dr. Oliver, a lovely surprise party in honor of his birthday. Many nce presents were given to the pastor and delicacies of all sorts were served. Every one had a bolder gift. Boldly Philadelphia, former Sunday-school teacher of our pastor, preached a soul-stirring sermon Eve of last Sunday morning. His subject was "Let your Buckets down where you are." He gave many vivid illustrations of his subject and from the attestations of the audience showed the sermon was enjoyed by all. With the forward and united with the church. The pastor then announced the sad news that hangs over Zion's Connection—Mrs. Anne W. Blackwell, wife of Bishop Blackwell, passed from this life on last Friday. The funeral services were held in Philadelphia on Monday, December Eulogy by Bishop Lee. This time very ill. He had to leave his Mid-year Conference in Virginia on account of sudden ill-
In the afternoon the pastor journeyed to Brooklyn to the dedication of the Ralph Street Church, Rev Mason, pastor. The members and friends of Abyssinian Baptist Church held services here in the afternoon, Rev Hayer, preacher. In the evening again we had another spiritual treat given us by Rev A. E. Ingent, firmly assistant-pastor of Wesley Zion and who is now pastor over in Long sland, he preached from Gal. 4.5.
Salem Church and Lyceum.
Last Sunday was a great day in Salem, Rev. F. H. Cullen, pastor. In the morning Dr. MacMullen district superintendent, preacher, sermon to prefect, flowering house, taking to the church, "Seek ye first, the kingdom of God."
In the evening, Rev. J. E. Dunn a graduate of Drew Theological Seminary, delivered a thoroughly prepared sermon. Subject "The Entrance of Jehovah into Jerusalem," the ark of Covenant." Dunn is one of the preachers in his ministry. The visiting preachers during the day were: Rev. J. A. Dingwall of Liberia, West Africa, and Rev. A. O. Chomondley a missionary. The choir rendered excellent music as usual under direction of Rudolph Grant. The Sunday-school and Men's Bible Class were largely attended and great interest was manifested in the lesson. At the Iyceum hour a foreign missionary meeting was held. The address was delivered by Mrs. Boudreau the Foreign Missionary board. The interest shown. The Epworth League had an inspiring meeting at 6:30.
Fifteen persons joined church during the day.
The revival is in progress and will continue during the month.
Mother Zion Church
The service at Mother Zion Church at 11 o'clock was attended by the great large number of worshippers. The sermon was preached by the pastor, Dr. J. W. Brown. Prior to its beginning, the congregation joined him in praying "Jesus keep me near the cavern." He offered a forgive prayer.
"But When The Failures Of Time Was Come, God Scent His Own Into The World." The preacher declared that text was appropriate to the Advent season, and that it is in which Christ, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit of the world was born. The text, as people open the many stories that have been installed on Nativity Day.
THE GREAT REVIVAL
Jan. 1st to Jan. 31st, 1923
At Commonwealth Casino
5th Ave. and W. 185th Street
Evangelist S. L. Johnson, Speaker
Station Churches in Union Bankal Service
Great Chores of 1000 Volunteers 1000 Persons in A Praying Sound
Services with
Song, Sermon and Salvation
Every week night, except Saturday; and Sunday Afternoons
ALL AT CASINO
W. W. Brown, Pres. W. Y. Bell, Secretary
J. W. Brown, Treas.
PHILIP A. PATTON, L. COMPANY
IN WHICH THE STUDENTS OF NEW YORK CITY
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the observance of the peole and declared that they were all necessary in the presentation of the hearts of the people for the coming of the Messiah. He referred to the fact that while Christ was pre-existent. He took upon himself the form of humanity and was thereby able to sympathize with the human being.
"The fullness of time," he pointed out, was when civilization had attained its highest—when it was language illuminated—illustrated that it was possible to communicate with the greatest number through one common medium. It involved the entire period of time between Abraham and the birth of Christ. He spoke of many of the events that transpired during this period a process of preparation for a divine judgment.
The sermon in its entirety was purposed to turn in the hearts and minds of the members of the congregation toward the significance of the Christmas season, and enable them, as possible, to possess the spiritual significance of its signification. It was a sermon full of instruction and apparently much enjoyed. Concluding the speaker declared that there could be no real enjoyment of the Christmas season without Christ. He then tended an audience to those outside to attend with the choir. At 2 o'clock, the Sunday-school convened as usual. There was a large attendance. Rev. A. E. Hendricks, who is musical director of the Sunday-school choir, has succeeded in the little full. An excellent program is promised to Christmas, which will be rendered during the Sunday-school hour, December 24. The financial receipts are on the increase. Amount raised was $45. At 3. 30 p. m. baptism and holy communion, sermon by Rev. Archie Walt
Next Sunday will be beaming day the rally. It is hoped to make the entire amount $12,000. At 10:45 a.m. the pastor will preach, submit the room for Jesus. At 8 p.m. we will preach an annuity to the Brown Methodist Brotherhood. The sick: Sister Mitchell, 137 West 142nd street; Rosa Hunt, 414 West 52 street; Emma Strockland, 50 West 140th street; Anna Pirk, 245, 50 Seventh avenue; Sadie Freeland, 153 Seventh street; Silie Black, St. Joseph House pitial; Margaree Turner, 201 West 142nd street; Sidie Route, 112 West 132nd street.
Abraham Baptist Church.
The roof is being put on the new church this week at all the entire building will be enclosed before Christmas.
The offering Sunday amounted to $1,541.85. All of it was given by the members, the coloring contri- tions, the Metropolitan Savings Bank, operated by colored men at Ocala, Fl.; SS; the Lincoln Sunshine Workers, Club, SS0. The Solid Workers Club, $150.
The church auditorium has forty-two windows in the first and second stories, hears of the church and end windows, these has been purchased by members and friends and presented to the church as gifts or as memorials.
ACIDS IN STOMACH CAUSE INDIGESTION
Create Gas, Sourness and Pain
How To Treat.
Medical authorities state that nearly nine-tenths of the cases of stomach trouble, indigestion, sourness, burning, gas, bloating, nausea, etc., are due to a lack of hydrochloride and in the stomach and not as somebody believe to a lack of digestive juice. The delicate stomach lining is irritated, digestion is delayed and sour, causing the disagreeable symptoms which every stomach sufferer knows so well.
Artificial digestives are not needed in such cases and may do real harm. Try laying all digestive aids and instead get from any drugsist a few ounces of Bisurated Magnesium and take a teaspoonful in a quarter of an ounce of this sweetens the stomach, prevents the formation of excess acid and there is no sourness, gas or pain. Bisurated Magnesium (in powder or tablet form—never liquid or milk) is harmless to the stomach inexpensive to take and is the most common of the digestive purposes. It is traded by thousands of people who enjoy their meals with no more fear of indigestion.
Guard Your Health
Do Some to Use
The Church of England has a new
Church in the City of London
and the Church of the
Cathedral of the
Bishop of London
St. John's Church
St. John's Church
St. John's Church
Rev. Arthur J. Payne spoke to a large audience Sunday morning on the Value Curse of a Troubled Heart," and Rev. A. Clayton Powell discussed "The Value of Sunshine" in the evening. The Lincoln Sunshine Workers worshiped at the church in a body. Mrs. Julia O'Hagan, the president of this organization, described its thirty years' work in the Lincoln Home and Hospital. The president said that through the organization more than seventy people were receiving Rotation during the thirty years. Mrs. Josephine Hall, presided and made a presentation to the pastor which he in turn donated to the building fund.
The afternoon meeting in the Rush Memorial Church was a great success, Dr. Haye delivered an intelligent and arousing sermon from the subject, "More Than Conquerors," and Mr. Page and his chair stirred the audience to high pitch of enthusiasm. The audience was 82. of this amount was presented to Dr. Hayes by D. A. Walker, and 65 was presented by A. C. Wilson, president of the Unedna Bible Class, to the trustees toward placing a window in the new church. This makes $165 this class has given toward its window.
The service next Sunday at 3:30 o'clock will be held at the Bethel A. M. West 132nd street. Dr. M. V. Thornton will donate their church to the Abstinent Church and choir, and Rev. T.S. Harten will deliver the message.
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Richard Jefferson as in Savannah, Ga, his old home, recently.
Miss Irene N. Gadsen was the Thanksgiving guest of Mrs. W. H. Burgess in Philadelphia.
Mrs. A. T. Millenze is visiting her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Davis in Savannah, Ga.
Miss Anna Gadsen is in Savannah, Ga, visiting her sisters, Mrs. Josephine White and Miss Sadie Gadsen.
The Reva, Geo. H. Sims and W. H. Moses are in St. Louis, Mo., attending the National Baptist Convention.
Mrs. M. Vandykie Askw, 821 East 167 Street has recently returned from the South where she made a second visit.
Mrs. Julia Dickerson will spend the Christmas holidays, with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wilson, Atlanta, Ga.
Mrs. Sarah E. Scott of Baltimore, who has been visiting in New York for some time, has returned to her home.
Mrs. May Edwards spent a few days in Savannah with her sisters, Mrs. W. C. Saunders and Mrs. Susie Williams.
Logan Harrison spent Sunday recently with Miss Martha Walker and family, 2318 East 97th street, Cleveland Ohio.
G. W. Thomas, a few months ago, was retired from the postal service. He and his family are enjoying themselves in their own home at Eatontown N. J.
Russell Crawford, who sails soon for South, America for an indefinite stay was the week end guest of his brother, Dr. M. L. Crawford, Cleveland O.
BLUEKS
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Miss. J. H. Marshall, Jr., 259 West
144th street, will spend the Christmas
season with her aunt and grandfather,
Miss M. A. Cole and Mr. Cole, of Harden
street, Savannah, Ga.
On Thursday evening, December 21,
the Howard Players will present at the
Y. W. C. A., a one-act play by Miss
Ditie Graham. The cast will include
Miss Graham, Miss Marion Moore and
Miss Georgia Washington.
Rudolph Grant, choir master presents
his Quartette and choir in a rendition
of Gauls' "Holy City," with orchestral
accompaniment on Christmas Sunday,
December 24 at 7:30 P. M. at Salem M.
E. Church, Rev. F. A. Cullen, Pastor.
Miss Blanche R. Johnson, general
manager of the Star Printing Co., New-
port News, Va., is visiting in the city,
the guest of Mrs. Helen Howell, of
West 127th street. She called at: The
Age office, in company with Mrs. Howell
and the latter's niece, Miss Harriet
Washington.
On Sunday afternoon, December 17, at four P. M. under the aupices of the J. C. Price Lyceum at Mother Zion A. M. E. Church there will be a meeting of the Anti Lynching Crusaders, through the courtesy of Mrs. Washington, Chairman of the Program Committee. Mm. Marie Jackson Stuart, Chairman of the speaker's Bureau, will preside Speakers' Miss Geneva M. Morgan and Mrs. Juanita Brady Halley. Musical Selections will be rendered by Miss Edith Cook, Mme. Beatrice Baiden Richards, Alain Montanya and others.
White Rose Home.
At St. Mark's M. E. Church, Rw;
W. H. Brooks pastor, 33rd street,
on Sunday, December 17, at 4 p. m., a
great public meeting will be held, in
interest of White Rose Home.
The addresses will be delivered by
Prof. Ulysses S. Poston of Fisk Uni-
versity. Special music will be rendered
by members of Salem's choir. G. W.
Allen will preside.
Manhattan Y. W. C. A.
We have not talked much latey about the sewing and millinery classes, but while we have been talking about other things the members of these classes have been stitching away. And now there is going to be an exhibition! It will take place in the sewing room so n-Friday night, December 15. This 8 to 10. Come in and see how easy it is to make your own clothes and to make hats that do not look a bit home made! The regular membership social is also on Friday night, December 15. This will be our Christmas social and the last one of the year. The members have worked well for Budget Week and a party is always especially nice after hard work.
John D. Rockfeller, Jr., will speak to the campaign workers of the Business Women's Division—to which our Branch belongs—at a luncheon on December 28, at one o'clock in the Central Branch. It is hoped that by that date the entire amount of money needed for the work in New York City will have been raised.
We are happily anticipating the entertainment which a group of former members of the Howard Players is planning for Thursday evening, December 21. A one act play written by Miss Ouse Graham will be presented. Miss Graham will act in the leaping part and Miss Marion Moore, popular in amateur theatrical circles, will play the principals. Miss Georgia Washington will play the principal. Miss Graham will give in himepicture of Nathaniel Dett's "Juba Dance." There are other numbers equally delightful. Miss Margaret Smith, a graduate student at City College, is manager and Mrs. E. P. Roberts is patroness.
The swimming contest which was announced for December 7, has been postponed until December 28. The public is invited to attend this contest. You will forget that it is winter if you come up to the pool. The water is blue and shimmering and the air is balmy. To come once is to come many times! On last Sunday Frank Nichols spoke interestingly at the vesper service on "Personality and Success." The soloist was Miss S. K. Thittle, who sang beautifully.
On next Sunday, December 17, at 4 p.m., former Dean Lewis B. Moore will speak on the subject, "Building a New World." Mr. Moore served in an important capacity during the late war and prior to that, for many years, served as dean and instructor of psychology at Howard University.
Among visitors' to the Branch last week were Miss F. B. Bessa, Melango Angola, Africa; Miss Martha Drummer, Atlanta, Ga., and Miss Susie Middleton, Newton, Va.
We wish to call members' attention to the meetings of the May Club on Tuesday, December 19 and October Club Friday, December 22.
135th Street Library Notes
The December book evening will be Wednesday, December 20 and the speaker will be Carl Van Doren, editor of the Century Magazine, who will talk on American fiction.
New books are: "Best plays of 1921-22"; Gilbert Chesterton's "What I saw in America"; a new book by Dunn Byrne's "The wind bloweth"; William McKeen's "Command"; Frank Shay's "Contemporary one act plays (American);" the "Next-to-nothing house" by a woman who furnished her own home on "next-to-nothing"; a cook book "by men for men"; called "The Stag Cook Book"; Gilbert - Parker's "Carnal folly; and "Nights and Days o. the Gypsy Trail," experiences of a young man who travelled in the South of Spain with a Romany tribe.
THE NEW YORK AGE; SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1922.
New York Deets Win and Gain.
On Saturday night Jan. 9th, the New York Deets Girls Basket Ball team won their second game this season, by defeating the Salem Crescent Cyclops by a score of 11 to 11. The Deers took things too easy completely did not make as many points as they had expected to. The Salem Crescent girls put up a good defense and will make troubles for some of the local teams before the end of season. The Deers will play the Bronx Edison. Girls on December 22, on January 8th they line up against the Blue Belts and January 12, the Oriental Girls will journey to St. Marks Hall once more to combat the Deers.
BROOKLYN
Rev. O. B. Thompson of the Union Congreton Church Mogtrel, Canada, and M. and Mrs. Harvey Petters were diminer Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Christian, 680 Herikimur Street on December 3.
Mrs. Julia Martin and Miss Florine Boens were called to Savannah, Ga., because of the death of their brother and uncle, Edward Macon. Mise Bowens is remaining South until after the holidays.
Pleat St. Church, Brooklyn
Fleet St. Church, Brooklyn.
An appreciative audience heard Dr. Brown preach Sunday morning from the theme, "Discovering men." This sermon precedes the revival season which begins on Watch Night. It will be a union revival with Bridge Street, M. E. and F. E. A. M. E, Zion Church, which time the Rev. B. G. Chauw, connectional evangelist, will conduct the services.
At 7: 45 p. m., the pastor spoke to the Professional Chauffeurs of Brooklyn; his theme, "Ernest council on the race of life," carried many practical truths. At 3 o'clock Dr. Brown attended the dedication services at the opening of the new Union A. M. E, Zion Church.
JIM HENRY SAYS:
YOU ARE INVITED TO THE
OPENING
our New Store
FRIDAY EVE., DECEMBER, 15th
at 8 P. M.
Leave Your Money at Home
Nothing Will Be Sold Until
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16
Doors open from 9 A. M. to 11 P.M.
There'll Be
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At Prices To Knock You Flat
During The Opening Week
Be sure to attend the
GRAND BAND CONCERT
Saturday, December 16
Starting 4.P.M.
Jazzfest of Music! Speeches Fall of Pop!
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GROSS HOUSE
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Mrs. MAYTTE E. GROSS Prepistler.
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Mrs. ADAM B. THOMAS, R. M. Liennese
317 West 130th Street
New York City
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Have positions open for work trained
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Garretta A. Christian, Prairie
Telephone Grade 2010
VALUABLE PREMIUMS
Dedicated and Valuable Building Lots At Westwood Terrace, Buryen County, New Jersey at $60.00 each
Serving prosperous community of nine places, Tower Inn (100) and Brownsbury Bay (100) are among the finest apartments in the area. There are beautiful interiors, large windows and impressive landscapes. There are lovely establishments at local shops. The area and other social and financial organizations.
The office is one entire department. This ALL is proud to be able to give you a reliable and complete service. Arrangements can be made to have a home built on a rent payable more than guiding you to rid yourself of the landlord.
There being only a limited number of those who are available, these drawing to take advantage of the opportunity immediately.
CIRCULATION DEPT., New York Age
230 West 135th St., N. Y City, N. Y.
NEW YORK AGE Circulation Department
Gentlemen:—
Without obligation on my part, kindly send particulars regarding your valuable offer.
Name.....
Address....
WHERE TO GO TO CHURCH
A committee was appointed to receive clothing and other supplies for those made homeless at the recent fire at New Bern, N. C., members of the committee are former residents of that city and will be at the church Friday's to receive contributions, the night's of Honor will celebrate the issuing of the Emancipation, Proclamation of New Year's Day, at 3.0 p.m. A great program is planned.
On Tuesday night Miss Carter of Concord Baptist Church was the speaker at a missionary meeting Thursday evening, and amateur concert was given by the Willing Workers Club. Several persons united with the church. Mrs. Frank Gilbert was present in interest of the Home for aged colored people. On Monday morning Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Brown, Dr. and Mrs. F. M. Jarobs and Miss Missouri Moore left the house to attend a funeral for Mrs. Anne W. Blackwell of Philadelphia, Pa. the wife of Bishop Blackwell.
Nazarene Congregational Church,
Dr. Henry Hugh Proctor filled his pulpit at both services last Sunday,
speaking at 11 a. m., on "The Love Letters of an Apostle," and at 8 p. m., he gave a special sermon to the Cherubim-Grand United Order of Odd Fellows on "The Man of the Hour." The church was filled with men and women of the order and their friends.
The famous Nazarene Choir, which has been heard in various parts of the city recently, will give its "Olde Folks Concerte" at Nazarene Church this Friday evening for the benefit of the organ fund.
61. PAVEL MARTIN, CHURCH, 922 West Saint James, New York city, Sunday, 12 noon p. m. m. m. School, 1:30 to 2:30 p. m. p. p. U. Services Wednesday night 8:30 general prayer Weighs Friday night to a A. C. Convention宿舍 Friday nights before untidied Sunday in school Lunch, third hour 4:30 Mass, fourth hour 4:30 Communion third Sunday evening, New York, Artist Boucher, Pastor, Residence west Lazard Street, House Moving soon 922 ABSENTIBILITY HARBOR CHURCH, 922 West Saint James, New York city, Sunday Services—11 a.m. in bed 7:30 p. m. Holy Communion every hour has Sunday at 11 a.m. Sunday outdoor, 1:40 p. m. Sunday afternoon, 1:40 p. m. Sunday evening, 8 a.m. in bed, 8 p. m. in bed, 8 p. m. Missionary Society, Prayer and praise service, Thursday, 10 a.m. Library讲座, Friday 4 p. m., high way and Paces society, 4 p. m., general prayer meeting, 4 p. m., power to residents, 124 West 136th st., Paces Avenue 1104.
Samuel Robbins, one of the oldest members of the church, died Saturday at the Long Island Hospital, and was buried from the church Tuesday evening.
An effort is being made to lengthen the honor roll consisting of those who have paid all during the year. Already quiet a number are enrolled.
Special efforts are being made to have a full pew day the last Sunday of the old year, which will close with a great watch night service.
The pastor will fill his pupit at both services Sunday, speaking in the morning on another Batch of Love Letters", and at the evening hour the choir will give a special service of song, when the white Methodist Church nearby will come over to visit in a body.
Special plans for Christmas exercises are being made, and a great time throughout the church is expected.
Bridge Street Church
On last Sunday, December 10th, the pastor Rev. E. E. Tylery, filled his pulpit, speaking from 4th, Psalms, 6th verse. His theme was "Who can show us any good?" After the sermon two persons connected themselves with the chutch.
At 3 p. m, The Rev. Wm. Stewart of New York was the speaker, and spoke from St. John 20:19, 27. His theme was "Peace." The service was well attended and communicants increase monthly. The choir members, add new life to the service. One person was received in full membership.
At 8 p. m, The Rev. R. C. Ransom.
BOTHMAN A. M. E. ZION CHURCH, 151-
153 W. 136th St. Rev. J. W. Brown, D.
Bishop, Personage, 165 W. 136th St.
Bishop, Personage, 165 W. 136th St.
Bishop, Personage, 165 W. 136th St.
and 7:45 p. m. Baptism and Commun-
ion every second Sunday, 3 p. m. B.
2 p. m. B. pastor, Superintendent,
C. Price Lyceum, B. Classes every sunday
evening. Prayer meeting Friday evening,
and午休 and午休, 2 p. m. third
Thursday evening and Brunch, 2 p. m.
House, 129 W. 136th St. Junior Endeavor
every Friday afternoon 4 p. m.
sunday hour at church 10 to
1. Phone Audubon 0038. Seats Free. All
welcome.
BUSH MEMORIAL A. M. E. ZION CHURCH,
5n-60 West 136th St. JEW. U. M. Oliver,
Bishop, Personage, 165 W. 136th St.
Apartment 10, Phone, Audubon 150
Sunday Services—Holy Communion every
first Sunday 3 p. m. Preaching at 11
p. m. Preaching at 11 p. m.
Jush Literary and Historical Association,
Sunday 4:30 p. m. Thursday
evening 3 p. m. Classes 4 p. m.
Sunday 3 p. m. Classes 4 p. m.
Sunday 8 p. m. Prayer Meeting, Friday
8 p. m. All are cordially welcome.
FLEKEY STREET MEMORIAL FIRST A.
BISHOP, OURHURON, 341-345 Bridges
street, street 341, Bridges
Pastor Paronage, 347 Bridges st.
sunday services, preaching 10:45 a.m. m.
sunday services, preaching 10:45 a.m. m.
third Sunday 2 p. m. Sunday School
Frank A. Italy, superintendent. Varrick
Ireland, holy ministry. Every
Wednesday evening; Prayer Meeting
Friday evening; Pastors phone, Rev.
2188, Scats Free. All are cordially
welcome.
MEMORIAL A. M. E. H. ZION CHURCH 274
New Main St., junkers. Her, K. b. Oden,
M. B. Oden, junkers. Her, K. b. Oden,
b. Sunday services; 11 a. m., preaching
10:45 Sunday school; 8 p. m., preacacia;
10:45 Sunday school; 8 p. m., preacacia;
class, Friday evening; prayer meeting;
Communion, first Sunday evening,
o clock p. m. Pastor's phone 6679-W.
Dec. 18-20-yr.
GRACE WORGREGATONAL CHURCH Y. W. W. A. 1720 W. 1910 B. 1930 A. Sunday, Public worship and preaching at Y. W. W. A. school at 1 p. m.; b. Y. W. W. A. school at 1 p. m.; b. Y. W. W. A. school at 1 p. m.; Tuesday Prayer and assemblies on meetings at 7:45 p. m. Wednesday on streets at 5 p. m. Thursday, Drama League at 8 a. edge on avenue at 8:45 p. m. Saturday, Tour rehearsal at Y. W. W. A. at 7:00 p. m.
NASSAU DOWNSHIP NATIONAL CHURCH (institutional), nursery school and truy avenue, Y. W. HENRY PROCTOR CLOSE, p. m. nursery school Y. W. HENRY PROCTOR CLOSE, p. m. nursery school Y. W. HENRY PROCTOR CLOSE, p. m. young people's colleges, 7 p. m. L. and week meeting, Wednesday, p. m. p. m.; youth afternoon, Open church; Please come on hours, 10 to 12 p. m.; and 4 to 6 p. m.; telephone place, 1905. To reside on Nevin's street, brooklyn, and change to Union "R" or surface code for truy avenue, within one block of church.
WANTED—more reliable, instructive men and women to represent the Globe Business and Association of New York in this state. Legal commissions pass. Good opportunity for advancement. Ben Globe Business, Lewis J. Jackson, General Manager. Home Office: 823-845 Broad street, Newark, N. J. Mitchell 1161.
editor of the A. M. E. Review, and familiarly spoken of as the "Silver tongued orator" was the speaker. His sermon was very impressive and his entirety was a masterly effort in setting forth God's meaning. At it's conclusion one person joined the church. At 2 p. m., Sunday-school convened, after the lesson study it was reviewed by the sr. c.r. intendent, J. D. Nixon. The school was attended. At 6:30 p.m., The Allen Endeavor Library held it's regular service. Chas. died by president.
On Monday evening Mrs. Nora Taylor the evangelist visited the church and spoke after class meeting, she is on her way to Africa.
On Friday, ecember 15th, a committee of ladies are arranging a grand concert and oyster supper for the benefit of the rally, the ladies are Mrs. E. E. Tyler, Mrs. Jane Barnes and Mrs. Maggie Monroe.
The last installment rally will be on Sunday December 17th. The speakers for the day are: 10:45 a.m. m. Rt. Rev. W, L. Lee, 3 p. m. Dr. J. B. Adams, pastor Concord Baptist Church; 7:45 p. n. Rev. Geo. R. Coverdale.
The entertainment "The trip around the world" given by the stewardesses on last Thursday evening was well attended, the inclement weather did not prevent a large audience. It was a successful and enjoyable affair. Mrs. Martha Chaton is the president of the Stewardess Board.
Siloam Presbyterian Church Brooklyn
On Sunday afternoon, December 10, was the pew rally under auspices of the board of trustees and men of Siloam.
The following program was rendered: Frayer, Rev. Starks; piano solo, Miss Clara Hudson; baritone solo, Belleville Riisbrook; reading, Mrs. Beatrice Christian, with organ prelude by William A. White; soprano solo, Miss Hattie Johnson; duet, Miss Clara Hudson and William A. White; bass solo, Horace, Mr. White at the piano. A large and appreciative audience was present, offering $5. Remarks by the pastor, Rev. George Shippen Starks.
Dinner to C. P. D. Kemp.
Friday evening, December 8, at Ionic Temple, 161 Cleermont avenue, the Stuyvesant Circle, a social organization of Masons and Odd Fellows, tendered a testimonial dinner to Chas. J, D. Kemp, worshipful master of Widows's Son Lodge, No II, F. A. M. Prince Hall, and district grand director or of the G. U. O. of F. S. 'Samuel A. Gibb, vice-president of the Masons, A. Gibb, ceremonies, and speches were made by President C. Allen Oliver, J. F. Cooper, Pierre Henry, John W. Helps, P. N. Cumberbatch, J. S. Walker, Wm. H. Burns, John A. Jacobs, Rev. James Marning, N. P. Dotson, E. A. Foster, S. B. Mayo, Chas. H. Vann, Walter A. Marable, A. Millhard and Joseph McFarland. Chas. H. Waters, tenor, sang several selections. Among the diners were R. N. Ash, Jules Adams, W H. Bowne, R. H.
The hospital deeply there was an omission in the entry of the article announcing the hospital's force of Mr. R. E. Sparrow, a former fireman who had been injured in a fire, reached the hospital of all injuries in Upper Lodge and White Island of New York City. Thanks was also accorded to the New Brunswick Lodge for quiet protest and spirited conversation during the last year of his illness.
STATISTICS WANTED - FEMALE
Bloodlines nurse will take care of presider by day. Reference: James Price for article.
Ashland Place Branch Brooklyn
Don't miss the Y. W. C. A. Christmas Party Thursday evening, December 11 at 8 o'clock. Admission is free and everyone is welcome. There will be a Christmas tree and a special program. The feature of the evening will be the play, "The Christmas Garden" given under the direction of Mrs. Jasie Mitchell.
Rafael, George Frazier Miller will be the speaker at the Christmas vesper service Sunday, December 17 at 4:30 o'clock. There will be special music. On the following Sunday the Gee Club under the direction of Mrs. Darya Tapley will render a Christmas eve musical during the vesper hour.
We are grateful to all who assisted Mrs. Dorcas Crabb, chairman of the Hervest festival, November 29, in making that event a success. Over $100 were reported from the sales of that day.
The classes in dressmaking, millinery and flowermaking will exhibit work done in these various departments at the membership society December 11. Registration is now open for new classes to begin in January.
Miss Bertha. Wright received news of her mother's sudden death and left for her home in Ocilla, Ga.
DR. ALBERT S. REED
The removal of the office from 516 West 522d street, to 127 West 130 street, (St. Luke's Building) Telephone 5085 Morningside, Hours 11 to 1, 5 to 7 p.m. Residence 129 East Hayes avenue Corona, Telephone Mavomayer 1549. June 3-6m.
Dr. James A Banks
Formly at 215 West 157th Street.
Surgical Dentist.
Now at
222 WEST 158th STREET
Ten Years With Dr. D. C. White
New York
Telephone 0929 Audubon
July 4-3m
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