New York Age

Saturday, October 17, 1925

New York, New York

10 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page 5
Page 5
Page 6
Page 6
Page 7
Page 7
Page 8
Page 8
Page 9
Page 9
Page 10
Page 10
Page text (machine-generated)
Arbitrary Selection of George Harris as Associate Leader In Place of Minced Will Probably Lead to Revolt at The Polls and Defeat of Republican Candidates A political blunder which may result in the defeat of all Republican candidates in the 21st Assembly District was made last week by District Leader Robert S. Conklin. Without consulting with the colored captains of the district or any representative colored voters, Mr. Conklin has appointed George W. Harris, ex-Alderman and newspaper editor, as associate leader of the district. Republican Club moment of the colored or Age Classified Ads-48, 48 In the past five years, the colored associate leaders have either been selected in the colored County, Committee, or appointed after someone had been agreed on by the colored and white leaders in conference. So far, the colored and white leaders have not called no one in the appointment of a M. Merlman, Harris. as the killing of the entire local Justice's ticket in the 21st District, who is a candidate for reflection, and before B. Smith, candidate for Alton, protest the dictatorial conduct of the district leader, it is thought that the will both be defeated. Mr. Conklin who is himself a candidate for Sugame Court Justice, will, it is beamed, get few colored votes, as he is generally, considered the most unpopular of the candidates being both stubborn and vindictive in his attitude toward those who are oppose him. Dual Leadership Fight. only logical explanation of Mr. m's latest action is that it is a depose" those colored leaders district who have been waging campaign for dual leadership district—a leadership which give the colored associate equal with the white leader. ```markdown ``` night was started shortly after 2012 political campaign by such own Republicans, as Dr. Charles Hamilton, F. Travis, Charles Mitchell, then associate leader district, and others as well in the district. From the first collin opposed this movement given wholehearted support age W. Harris, although less ear previous Mr. Harris had in his paper that Mr. Conklin interest in the colored voters he forced out of the lead- ing butter was Harris in his conklin that he personally in for the district leadership, of dual leadership was by the party leaders and to let the district con- sider the same old way for an- east. 10 Weaken Colored Opponents for this apparent victory for he has used every effort to colored opponents of all pow- t they had been district years, the names of W. B. Mitchell, William A. and Hamilton J. Travis and striken from the ballots election for county com- this was done, it is al- insistence of Mr. Conklin to humiliate them, left to do so, for they were by having the voters in the district write in their pointed out by those affairs in the district, older never Charles, will full recognition as assistant to the district, although it was the choice of the colored captains. HisIVATE leader expired a and an associate leader been elected at the same that leader was reelected. Mr Mitchell ran for leadership of it was decided to position for a few weeks. No at the time, that Mr. will take advantage of his allies, was without an alteration one of his the post. Appomattox Club ganizations in the district had written Mr. Conklin asking for a conference to discuss the matter of an associate leader, but their letter was completely ignored. Some political leaders say Mr. Conklin lacks political acumen and diplomacy and that this is shown by his insistence in continuing as district leader, although a candidate for Supreme Court Judge. Harlem district leaders made a protest over the selection of Mr. Harrys and insist that meeting with the committee be held before the election. U.S. lawless investigators for this question is believed to many former Republicans will support the Democratic candidates in the November election. Home of Geo. Godfrey In Los Angeles Is Stormed By White Mob Home of Geo. Godfrey In Los Angeles Is Stormed By White Mob Los Angles, Cal.-The new home of George Godfrey, colored heavy-weight boxer who formerly lived in Philadelphia, was almost completely wrecked Saturday, October 10, by a white mob. All the windows were smashed and part of the furniture destroyed before the police could drive the vandals away. Godfrey and the owner-occupants of the house were away at the time the dutrage occurred. An Associated Press dispatch intimates that the "mobs" rage apparently was not directed at Godfrey personally, but against what residents declared was Negro enroachment on a white residence district. Godfrey, who is reported to have made money aging in several recent motion pictures, has purchased a home in an area where he now residential section. Since the reported outbreak against him, it is alleged that he has agreed to take the advice of his white manager, Jim Dougherty, and move into a section where there are more Negroes. 4 Men Stick Up A Pedestrian In 7th Ave.; Take $28 Sylvester Cerniglia, 26, of 2374 Seventh avenue, was stuck up about 3 o'clock Sunday morning by four stranger men who escaped. The robbers met Cerniglia in front of 2427 Seventh avenue. He was struck on the head with a blunt instrument which cast him on the left cheek and in the scalp. The stick up men escaped with $28 of his money. Man Is Struck On Head With Iron Pipe By Common Law Wife Robert Smalls, 27, of 104 West 134th street is suffering from lacerations in the forehead and back of head which he received when he was struck several blows on the head when from pipe. It is alleged that Smalls received the injuries Sunday night about 1 o'clock, during an altercation with his common-law wife, Mamie Young. Do you want to rent your room? Use The Age Classified Ads-page 10. Do you want work? See The Age' Classified Ads Help Wanted-page 10. The Ms. Olivet Baptist Church, Rev William P. Hays, Pastor, in holding its farewell services this week, at the old church edifice down in West 35 street. Each night some auxiliary of the church presents at program followed by refreshments. The final services forty on Sunday will be held the coming week and the landmark will be detected by the congregation for the new place of worship at Lenox avenue and 120 street. Mogunt Olivet will move into its new Church on October 25, and the dedication program will last until November 30. The Rev J. Raymond Henderson will serve as assistant pastor of Mount Olivet. St. James Church Holds Elaborate Installation for New Pastor A large number of friends are joining with the members of St. James Presbyterian Church in a three day's services of installation for their new pastor; the Rev. William Lloyd Imps; the Rev. Morgan on Wednesday night, October 14. The Rev. WM. LLOYD IMES. The installation service was on Thursday with the Rev. H. G. Mendenhall, clerk of the Presbytery of New York, presiding. The program included an organ prelude, by professor J. F. R. Wilson; invocation, the Rev. T. J. R. Harris of Bethany Presbyterian Church, Englewood, N. J.; scripture lesson, the Rev. L. B. Ellerson, pastor of Thirtenth Avenue Presbyterian Church, Newark, N. J.; selections, St. James Quarter installation, sermon, the Rev. E. A. Mitchell of Gothen, N. Y.; prayer of installation, the Rev. T. Guthie Speers, assistant pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, New York City; charge to pastor, the Rev. George S. Stark, pastor of Siloam Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, N. Y. and charge to people, the Rev. H. G. Mendenhall. Friday evening a service of fellowship and banquet was held with the Rev. T. M. Lowery, elder of the church, presiding. The program was as follows: Organ solo, Prof. J. F. R. Wilson; selections, St. James Quarter; addresses, Dr. E. P. Roberts and J. L. Whiten, E. P. Roberts the trustees; Mr. Merritt; greetings from wikiel pastors, including the Rev. J. H. Manoney, pastor of Rendall Memorial Presbyterian Church; solo, Miss Eloise Urgans; addresses by the elders. The general committee in charge of the service of installation was headed by the following: T. M. Lower, chairman; Mrs. Saddle Eilson Stockton, vice chairman; Dr. John R. Hilley, treasurer; and Miss Ebola Eugene, secrete- Child Injured While Pushing Toy Wagon Across Seventh Ave. Ulysses Nebbet, 12 years old, 134 West, 143rd street was run down by an auto while he was pushing a toy wagon, crossing to the north side of 143rd street, at Seventh avenue. The left front wheel of the car carried the little boy, blocking him to the side of the road, and igniting his knife. He was attended by Dr. Paleg of the Harlem Hospital and carried in his home. If you want a nice, comfortable room, com- pose This Age Classified Ad-Page 16. Prompt and effective aid from Influential sources resulted in the discomfiture of the last leader, the instiller of the sibilator machinery of the tortuous stool pigeon Charles Dancey, and his police alliance when Judge Jean Norris, sitting in the Jefferson Market Court on Thursday, October 8, threw out charges made by Officers Ryan and Gertezers, special service squad, against two respectable young women who had been framed up by Dancey. Judge Norris, in dismissing the charges, siated emphatically that the women were given an honorable discharge, as being entirely without shame and, accordingly, the sake of the police employing order of easy characters, as stool pigeons in the effort, to make a record of arrests. This particular case, she declared, had a most peculiar color and sinister aspect, and expressed a willingness to be involved in the alleged activities of the stool pigeon, who was not produced by the arresting officers as a witness. Offered - Woman A Job "The case was told of it last week's Age, in which it was disclosed that a man, believed to have been Charles Dancey, had told Mrs. Amanda Gross of 201 West 145th street that he was the chauffeur for a wealthy actress, who was a dope friend, and that this woman wanted a maid to work hard for her income, tempting salary Mrs. Gross told her sister-in-law, Mrs. Elhora Faulkner of 264 West 144th street, the mother of two children, and Mrs. Faulkner transmitted the information to Miss Ruth White of the same address, who was employed as a waitress in a diner on tea room floor. The larger case then came to Mrs Faulkner's apartment where he met Miss White, and discussed the position he claimed to have to be filled. Later, the trio went to Miss White's apartment, on the floor below, that Miss White might display her ability to play the piano, as an unaccompanied service in entertaining guests. After hearing one or two selections, he man excused himself to get a clarar. On his return, according to the statement made by the women, he said he had to go to the theatre for his employer, and as he started out he was met by the two officers, who arrested the women, charging with being a prostitute and the other with keeping an immoral house. Told Story To Age Editor Friends promptly furnished bail in the sum of $500 each for Mrs Faulkner and Miss White, and Emanuel A. Busch of 105 West 10th street was retained to defend them. Assistant District Attorney Jack Weston appeared for the state. In the meantime, the two young women called at The Age office and told their story to Fred R. Moore, the editor Mr. Moore immediately began an investigation that convinced the women statements, and that it was another instance of the nefarious and pernicious activity of Charles Dancey. The women were able to produce character witnesses of high standing, and after Judge Norris heard their stories, that of their witness, Mrs. Grosse, and the testimony of character witnesses as to the life of the accused, the case was promptly dismissed and the women given an honorable discharge, on the motion of Counselor Busch. The woman was issued for the "unknown" man in the case, who had not even been held by the police, but the address given by the officers as the residence of the man was found to be a vacant lot on 145th street Police Repudiate Dancey Police officials in authority declare that Dancyce has no connection with the police department in any capacity and that every patrolman and plashelother operative in the uptown section has been ordered not to em- WILLIAM McGRUDER, REPUBLICAN NOMINEE FOR ALDERMAN, 19th ASSEMBLY DISTRICT, IS CONDUCTING VIGOROUSLY HIS CAMPAIGN According to political observers, the Republican party has an excellent opportunity to elect Alderman in the 19th Aldermen District. The early manhood he has held positions of responsibility. He was first employed as an attendant in a public bath house by the city. Enter his business life and for the past four years he has been a deputy under Charles W. A. Derrison, Collector of Internal Revenue, for the Sharon District. He is an active member of the Council of the County and is identified with several other fraternal and social clubs. 3 Brooklyn Men Being Tried on Murder Charge Three Young colored men are facing justice in the Brooklyn County Court this week, on a charge of murder in the first degree. They are Leslie Brent, 24, of 712 Stone avenue; Penston Allette, 28, of 257 Livonia avenue; and George Serubbs, 31 of 323 Thatford avenue, all of Brooklyn. A man by the name of David Cohen was stabbed to death September 3 at Livonia and Thatford avenues. Democratic party has nominated Hugh Masterson, whose intellectual attainments and general ability are rare candidates. William Meredith, a public candidate, will be nominated. Mr. McGruder is a native, New Yorker and has lived in the district for twelve years. He plodges, if elected, to work for better police protection for the district, better school facilities, the extension of the rent laws, cleaner streets and better sanitary conditions. The Republican candidate is 34 years of age and lives at 25 West 31st street. He graduated from P. S. and attended DeWitt Clinton high school. He is married and is the father of five children. Since ploy him in any capacity. The subordinate officers themselves deny that they use Dancey, most of them fervently and vociferously asserting that they do not know him. Dancey has been seen in intimate association with certain police officers in Harlem, and persons who know him well report that he has even been seen riding around with some of the officers in the police flivvers. The Age again warns young women of the danger attached to listening to propositions advanced by men of whom they know nothing. In cases where such happens, they should reject without hesitation any such offers, and if there is persistency on the man, a uniformed police officer should be called and the man arrested. Young women, to protect themselves, must be careful in their dealings with unknown men Clothing Worth $25 Stolen From 142nd St. Apartment William Jones, 140 West 142nd Street is being held for the grand jury on a charge of burglarizing the apartment of Westley Pierre, 263 West 137th street. Pierre accuses Jones of breaking into his apartment and stealing wearing apparel valued at $25. The robbery is reported at the West 135th street police station and Detective Garvey was assigned to the case. He went out and brought in Jones. Domestic difficulties which have extended over a long period, seemed to have come to a climax with Dr. Alexander A. Kellog, of 210 West 139th street and his wife, Mrs. Grace T. Kellog, on October 11, when, at a late hour, Mrs. Kellogg rushed out of the house and enlisted the services of a police officer in having Dr. Kellog taken into custody on a charge of marring her beauty by throwing acid in her face. Lysol is reported to have been the chief chemical used G. early manhood he has held positions of responsibility. He was first employed as an attendant in a public office, an attendant in a state office, a clerk in the S. State office, and for the past four years he has been a deputy under Charles W. Anderson, Collector of Internal Revenue, for the State District. He is a member of the Board of Trustees, and is identified with several other fraternal and social life. 3 Brooklyn Men Being Tried on Murder Charge 3 Brooklyn Men Being Tried on Murder Charge Three. Young colored men are facing justice in the Brooklyn County Court this week, on a charge of murder in the first degree. They are Leslie Brent, 24 of 712 Stone, Fenton Allette, 28 of 257 Livonia avenue, and George Scrubbs, 31 of 323 Thattford avenue, all of Brooklyn. A man by the name of David Cohen was stabbed to death September 3 at Livonia and Thatford avenues. One of the trio is alleged to have committed the crime. Attorney Rulus L. Perry of 375 Fulton street is representing the defendants. HARLEM WOMAN BEATEN AND APARTMENT ROBBED When Mrs. Mildred Wilson of 132 West 129th street came home from work last Friday night, she walked into her apartment as usual, but to her surprise two strange men were there. Before she could find out why they were there, one struck her in the back of the head, knocking her unconcious. Two men were seen running from the apartment Later it was found out that they had departed with clothing and other valuable articles making their escape over the roof of the apartment house. Christmas Seals Sale For Health Association Programed For Harlem Christmas Seals Sale For Health Association Programed For Harlem An important conference for professional men and women, business men social workers and interrelated lay persons in Harlem will be held under the auspices of the Harlem Tuberculosis Committee of the New York Tuberculosis and Health Association, on Tuesday evening, October 20, at 8 p.m., at the W. Y. C. W. 179 West 137th street. The program will consist, for the most part, of subjects relating to the coming Christmas Seals Sale and its direct relation to the health of the community. Thomas B. Dyett will serve in the capacity of chairman, Harry L. Hopkins, director of the New York Tuberculosis and Health Association, will outline, the general plans for the work for the coming year, with special reference to the Seals Sale which supplies the funds to make that work possible. Dr. Louis T. wright will tell how the Press was successfully cared out in Harlem, and The Age Newman, assistant chairman of the North Harlem Dental Clinic Committee, will report the progress of the dental clinic. It is hoped that the conference will serve as a worth while preliminary to the coming Seals Sale which takes place between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Homes For Sale, New York City, Long Island, New Jersey—see The Age Classified Age page 138. Her face is alleged to have been badly burned on the left side, with a serious disfiguration above the left eye. It is also charged that Mrs. Kellogg was cut on her right hand in some unknown manner by a knife. Dr. Kellogg was held on a charge of felonious assault, to appear on Saturday, October 10, in Washington Heights Court, Judge Simpson, presiding, and when the case was called, Dr. Kellogg's Attorney, Assemblyman Pope B.-Billups, secured an adjournment until Friday, October 23. Dr. Kellogg gave bail in the sum of $1,500. Family troubles, have brought the Kellogg into public notice on new legal books. Some time ago, Mrs. Kellogg family home and it was with difficulty that friends succeeded in having the people adjust their differences at that time. On another occasion, it is said, there was a reported loss of jewelry by Mrs. Kellogg, which affected her to agree to give treatment given a local hospital. Just what was the immediate cause of this present trouble has not been disclosed by either of the principals, and it will probably not be brought out until the case goes to trial, if that ever happens. As a matter of fact, it is predicted by friends that the trouble will be settled out of court, and that the doctor and his spouse will resume amicable relations. American Legion Post Entertains With Smoker The Charles Young Post of the American Legion, Capt. M. V. Boutte, commander, gave a smoker Tuesday evening, October 13, at the Association of Trade and Committee, 2370 Seventh avenue which was attended by well-known colored and white men of the city. It was the biggest affair the post has given since its incipency. Thomas B. Dyett presided. the speakers were Col. William A. Taylor of the 369th Infantry; William F. Deegan, Past State Commander of the American Legion; Robert G. Patterson, Past County Commander of the American Legion; Fred R. Moore, Dr E. P. Roberts, the Rev. A. C. Garner, Alvin Mela, Lester A. Walton, Robert W. Bagnall, John E. Nail, Dr. Louis Wright and H Adolph Howell The need of the Charles Young Post developing in numerical strength as to be an influential force for good in the city was emphasized by the speakers Under the leadership of Commander Boutte the post has more than tripled its membership. TAXICAB OVERTURNS; 2 YOUNG WOMEN HURT Two young women were slightly injured when an auto in which they were passengers was overturned in a collision with another car at Eighth avenue and 135th street, Sunday evening. They were Birdie Banner, 22, and Eatelle Gordon, 25, both of 71 West Eighth avenue. Miss Banner sustained bruises about the head for which she was attended by Dr. Goldberg of the Harleim Hospital. Tailor Struck On Head In Shop By Stick Up Man Tailor Struck On Head In Shop By Stick Up Man An unknown man stuck up the tailor shop of Sam Brooks, 38, 263 West 143rd street and escaped after inflicting a scalp wound by striking Brooks on the head with the butt end of a knife. Brooks operates a tailor shop in the building in which he lives. No loss of property was reported. Republican municipal candidates are putting before the people of New York City what is considered to be irrefutable evidence of the failure of the Tammany democratic administration to give the citizens proper protection in the matter of safeguarding their lives and property, citing the prevalent crime wave in support of the contention. The alleged speeding up of court action, which District Attorney Banton is trying to put into effect, is referred to as "fake" endeavor by former Gov. Charles S. Whilman, the Republican "quidate" for District Attorney, an office which he filled with signal success, before ascending to the governorship. This phase of the situation is being emphasized nightly by Frank D. Waterman. Failure of the Tammany officials to protect the city from vicious gangsters, swindlers, graffitters and other offenders is being used by the Republican campaigners in vigorous denunciation of the Tammany policies. STAGE & A Urban League Launches 2nd Annual Charity Ball By Mrs. BINGA DISMOND Friday 13th of November, bad luck to all who do not attend the second annual Charity Ball under auspices of The 'New York Evening Post' prepared a list of questions which it submitted 'to Mr. Whitman, dealing with the crifice situation in New York, asking if the clitics want protection, if the city is safe as it should be, is the Police Department, properly directed, what is wrong with the District Attorney's office, and should 99-per cent of the citizens be penalized because one per cent. is neither properly disciplined nor adequately punished. Masses Need Protection. In replying to these questions, Mr. Whitman declared that the Republican campaign is not one "of reformation or reform" that the vast multitudes of the city, hard working and patriotic, are not in need of reformation. They do need protection, said he, and the first duty of government is to protect life and property. He asserted that New York is not safe today, and that there isn't a citizen familiar with conditions who can fail to realize that crimes of violence have been steadily on the increase. He compared the excitement caused by the shooting of the gambler, Rosenthal, which happened while he was District Attorney, for which crime Police Lieutenant Charles Becker and four gunmen were electrocuted, with the indifference displayed by the public when three murderers were committed in New York in one day, two weeks ago. "Apparently the public has become so thoroughly accustomed to conditions that they hardly attract passing notice," said he, commenting on the fact that in one of the murder cases, the murderers strolled leisurely away Record Should Cause Shame. The record of the District Attorney's office, he said, is cause for shame, and not for the elation which Banton is alleged to be exhibiting with regard to the drive on crime which he instituted four-weeks before election. "It is possible to fool the public. It isn't possible to fool the criminal. Speeding up the courts four weeks before election with indictments found last spring or last year is not a crime drive," declared Mr. Whitman. The mayoralty candidate, Mr. Waterman, is directing attention to failure of the Tammany administration to protect the public school system from political influences, and to give the public adequate subway transportation. On the issues, Mr. Waterman, Mr. Whitman and all the Republican candidates are giving owers of city something beautiful,壮丽 and wise observers of political conditions are of interest that the result will be in a manner most hurtful to Democratic interests when the ballots are finally counted after the November 3 election. Judge John R. Davies And John C. Smith's Orchestra at Forum Judge John R. Davies And John C. Smith's Orchestra at Forum The Citizens' Forum held its third session in P. S. 136 Sunday afternoon. A number of prominent men sat upon the rostrum and Counsellor Miles A. Paige was presiding officer of the session. Michigan C. Brown, clerk of the 7th District Court, made the speech introducing Judge John Reiss, as the 4th Circuit Court of the City of New York, who was the principal speaker. Judge Davies outlined in his address the progress that was made in the upbuilding of the colored section of Harlem. He recalled from memory the earliest days when there were only a few colored citizens living in the vicinity of Lenox avenue and 155th street, and toil at the work of a community forum began back in the days when Harvey Thompson was the captain of the Republican party in that district. He also told how he assisted Captain Harvey Thompson in ridding that section of the city of a clique of white men who were preying upon the morals of colored women. The musical feature of the afternoon was entertainment by John C. Smith's Modern. Dance, Orchestra, selection, and the gracefulness of J. Mardo. Brown, drum major of the Chocolate Jandles company. Miss Layle Lane spoke on current topics, and Dr Butler talked on the future plans of the forum. The Laws House Phone 3393 Chelsea Handsomely Furnished Rooms First Class Accommodations for Permanent or Transient Male or Female WLS, from For the comfort of the public. Bath on kitchen floor, a warm bath with kitchen floor. Ne couples admitted without suit case or hand bag. Harlem B. B. White, Prop. J. W. Taper, Mgr. STAGE & ATHLETICS Urban League Launches 2nd Annual Charity Ball Friday 13th of November, bad luck to all who do not attend the second annual Charity Ball under auspices of the Women's Audibility of the New York-Urban League. As last month, the dance men are held and to 'slude the jinx who are supposed to hound us on Friday, the 13th, the public is advised to appear in fancy dress. The hundred ladies of the committee will appear as Shebias, Gypsies and Queens are making elaborate plans for their personal costumes and for the decoration of the Casino. Prizes will be awarded the wearers of the most attractive costumes and manuscripts to enter to the spirit of the carnival to make Friday, November 13th, a night of good luck. Mrs. Eva Parks, chairman of the committee, will be assisted by Mrs. Sol. Johnson, vice chairman; Mrs. A. C. Deming who has charge of the tickets; Mrs. Florence Del. Richardson, sponsor for the boxes; Mrs. Ruther, Archer, chairman of the opening; Mrs. Walker, Walker - responsible for the music; Mrs. Josephine Wooten, chairman of publicity; Mrs. Best, chairman of printing; Mrs. Louis A. Corbin, chairman of finance; Mrs. Binga - Diamond, treasurer; Mrs. L. E. Kenerly, secretary. On Friday, October 9, the committee held an incheon meeting at St Luke's Hall, 125 West 130th street. At that time compete plans for the benefit were announced. Those present were: Meedames J. T. Bonner, Eva G. Browne, Jean L. Fischer, Ioanthe E. Sidney, L. E. Kenerly, Bertha M. Sawyer, Miss Exuida Holland and meedames Eddie Johnson H. Johnson, Miss Exuida Holland, F. Smelle, Miss A. E. Wilcher, Meedames Eather Archer, H. B. Cachemaille, Nora Ray, W. E. Stewart, A. C. Carhill, Miss A'Marie Thompson, Meedames Estelle, Castro Katherine Johnson, C. Thomas, G. Diamond, M. B. Hubert, A. C. Deming, Jainte Best Miss Lillian Smith Miss Andreas Lindsay, Dr. Gerritt Fayde, Andreas Lindsay, Dr. Andreas Lindsay, Miss Lydia Holly, Mrs. Isabelle Johnson, Mrs. Mae Logan, Miss E. Taney, Miss Anna Lewis, Mrs. Marceline Settler, Mrs. Mattie B.Taylor, Mrs. P. K. Burns. Roanoke, Va., Tennis Club Closes Successful Season Roanoke, Va.—The Olympian Tennis Club of this city has just closed its most successful season. Representatives of *te Olympian Club* were all winners in the city championship tournament. Dr. E. D. Downing won the men's singles, defeating his opponent in straight sets of 6-3, 6-2 and 6-3. Mrs. Eugenia Reed defeated Mrs. Alma Sewell for the ladies' single title, 6-3, 6-2. In a special match Page Crichton defeated Billy Cooper 6-3, 2-6, 6-3. Tommy Calloway, the 13 year old sensation at the national tournament in Bordentown and at the Southeast Side of Petersburg, was defeated by Dr. E. D. Dow, an interesting match The club on display nearly fifty cups won by its members in city, state, and national tournaments. Among its most successful representatives the past season were: Dr. E. D Downing, who won the men's singles at the West Virginia open tournament, was paired with Dr. John McGriff for the men's doubles tournament and with his brother, Dr. L C Downing, who won the men's doubles at the Southeastern tournament; Tommy Calloway, won the junior title at the Southeastern tournament; and L. C Downing, who was a winner in the mixed doubles at the national tournament. Claflin Defeats St. Athanasius In First Game of Season. 18-6 Oraigehurg, S. C.-Friday, October 9. Gaillin University opened her 1925 gridiron season with a victory St. Athanasius Academy of Brunswick, Gaillin furnished the opposition. The score ended Claim 18 St. A. & The Academy team, playing under the handicap of being very much overweighed, put up a spirited fight. In the first half, they practically out played Claim by getting five downs to Claim's four and by scoring a touchdown. However Claim improved in the second half and made practically all gains in this period. The Panthers offense showed accross three touchdowns, while the defense stiffened to such an extent that St. A was unable to gain a yard from scrimmage, in the second half. Forward passing played a considerable part of the offense of both teams. Most of St. Athanasius's gain came from this source. Both teams had a large pe cenage of incomplete forward passes. In running, and kicking St. A was approximately on par with Claim. In the other department of the game they were outclassed. Howard Beats Livingstone Eleven on Howard Campus Washington, D. C.—Defeating Livingstone College of College, Burlington, N. C. in a fast and exciting game before a large crowd on the university campus; the Howard "Bilson" on Saturday, October 10, won their second victory of the season by a score of 21 to 0. The aspiring taekwondo had left for South Korea and singling to the on account of the 18 to 0 victory over Hampton Institute. The "Bisons," playing a brand of football far superior to that of last week against Morgan College, took the boys from North Carolina into camp by 21-0 score. The "Ions" made the Livingstone line look like paper, ripping their way through the Livingstone line almost at will for five, seven, and ten yard gains, totaling in all fourteen first downs against three made by Livingstone. The Howard boys scored a touchdown in every quarter except the third. Livingstone opened up with an aerial attack in the second half which failed, as Coach Watson's boys had profited by last week, short comings against Morgan. Dan Brown broke through in the first half for a twenty-five yard run and Tyson repeated in the last quarter for twenty yards. Dokes, captain of last year's team, Smith, and Campbell were repeatedly seen to make clean tackles, thwarting every attempt, to break through the Howard line. "Tick" Smith halfback, was hurt on the second play after his substitution for Dodson. Howard Eleven Wins First From Morgan Washington, D. C.—The Howard "Bisons" took the field Saturday, October 3, against Morgan College of Baltimore, Md. The final score was Howard 27; Morgan 0. The Howard team seemed capable of smashing up the best of its opponents' lines. They were weak, however, in their defensive against forward passes. Morgan completed six forward passes out of fourteen attempts. Howard team Captain Long was hurt in the first quarter and was unable to direct his men for the remainder of the game. Coach Law's team showed up quite well. Charlotte, N.C.—Johnson C. S. Smith football team opened its season there Saturday, October 3, against the WVGinalia Seminary team of Lynchburg, Va. The game was played in a continual mist of rain, before a small crowd of rosters. Smith's line was a 10-0 victory for the team in its "phantom four" got within striking distance of Seminary's goal several times National Equal Rights League in Annual Session Baltimore, Md—Dr. W. A Sinclair, president, and delegates, were welcomed by the pastor of the church, Rev Luke G Reynolds. In welcoming the delegates, Rev Reynolds stated "he repaired to be a member of one organization which contended for the rights of the race." Rev J. G Robinson, editor A M. E. Review, Philadelphia, Pa, responded to the address of welcome, and, in the course of his remarks to some of the ills suffered by the colored group—segregation, discrimination of almost every kind, lynching and a number of other crimes of the whites against the race. He saw a silver lining to the dark cloud overshadowing us in the recent address of President Giddick. Dr. Stuart O'Neill, one of the popular of Baltimore addressed the convention following Dr. Robinson. He dwelt at length upon the failure of the Negro to appreciate and enjoy some of the rights which were his, especially the right to vote. Many going North from the South are not careful to exercise their rights. Dr. T. S. Harten of New York was the last speaker of the evening He reviewed the activities of the Brooklyn Branch of the N. E. R. L. and showed the possibilities of good fr all the branches. The second day's session, after naming of the various committees of the convention, was unade an open meeting which each present could join and give expression to whatever though he or she might have in mind. Many speakers participated, among them being Wim Trotter, Rev C. C. Summerville, De T. S. Harten, L. C. Newby, Dr. Ernest Lyons, C. H. Oliver, Edward Jones, L. A. Baldu J. L. Neil All of the addresses had to do with racial conditions and wrongs and extended along all lines—regions, political and industrial. Resolutions were passed in memorialize the President, commending address to this the citizen his respect address and petition for removal of segregation in Washington, D. C. and other wrongs in his power to change A new branch of the League was organized in Baltimore. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. 137th St. Y Holds Memorial Service For Departed Members 137th St. Y Holds Memorial Service For Departed Members 'On Sunday, October 11, the annual memorial services was held for members who have died during the past year. The services, held in the flower beckoned auditorium, were impressive and beautiful. The reception under the direction of Miss Lulu Hunt, was composed of members of the Music and Dramatic Club. Deceased members in whose memory the services were held were: Miss Vera Seour of the Girl Reserves; Miss Gladys Chase of the Beau-Arts Club; Miss Amy White and Mrs. Bessie Wiggins of the January Club; Mrs. Leola Moriety Jones. February Club; Mrs. Louise J. Foster, March Club; Mrs. Constance I. Tyrell, May Club; Mrs. Fallie Young and Mrs. Gwendolyn Edwards, Sept. Club, Miss Rosa Cottman, November Club, and Mrs. Ruth Younger, December Club. Miss Hattie I. Green, membership secretary, spoke about the importance of these memorials. Griffin spoke in memory of Mrs. Louise J. Foster; Miss Leola Polk, in memory of Miss Vera Seour, and Mrs. Martha Hall in memory of Rosa Cottman. Miss Mae Chin sang in memory of Mrs. Gwendolyn Edwards, and Miss Helen Lucas sang in memory of Miss Seour Many lovely flowers were sent by friends and families in memory of their beloved ones. On Sunday, October 18, comes our annual 'Silver Bay Sunday,' when we try to pass on to those who could not attend, something of the spirit of summer conferences Mrs. Adah Thomas Smith will preside at this meeting, the music will be in charge of Miss Lulu Hunt and others participating will be Mrs W Hortham, Miss Cornelia E. Pedro, Mrs Irene B.irey, Miss E. V. Sarrels and Mrs W. William. The Educational and membership departments are offering a free conference to members in 'Everyday Law for Women' There will be six lectures beginning on Forum night, Thursday, October 15, and continuing every Thursday night through the course. The speaker for Thursday is Lamar Perkins Classes opening next week are Spanish 1 and 11; interior, Decorating French and Trade Embroidery, on October 20, 21, 22, and 23, respectively: Ministers' Conference Elects Officers For The Next Ensuing Year --- The Intl. denominational Ministers Conference of New York City at its regular session Monday at Salem M. E. Church, the following new officers were installed for the ensuing year the Rev Garner, pastor of Grace Congregational Church, president, the Rev W O. Carrington, pastor of St. Catherine A M E Zion Church, vice president, the Rev I H. Thomas, secretary, and the Rev John W. Robinson, pastor of St Marks M E E Church, treasurer The Rev W C. Brown, the retiring president, presided- and installed the new officers Rev Garner stated that his program for the year called for the cooperation of all religious bodies A resolution was unanimously endorsed by the conference of the candidacy of William McGruder for alderman in the 19th Aldermanic District; Theodore B. Smith, candidate for the alderman from the 21st Aldermanic District, and Pope B. Billups, candidate for reelection to the state Assembly from the 21st A. D.; Alhraam Grenthal, for Assemblian. Among the investigators present were Julius W Watson, Theodore B. Smith, Fred R Moore and Mrs. Cecile C Saunders. Student Leaders To Attend Conference of Y Workers, Washington Student Leaders To Attend Conference of Y Workers, Washington The 21st National Conference of The Y M C A for Work among Colored Men and Boys, meeting at the City Y Building, Washington, D.C. October 21, 22, 23, will have in its midst many prominent student lead- ers from all parts of the nation. There will be college presidents, noted faculty men, student counselors, and various officers of the student organization from the more than one hundred such organization throughout the country, states General Secretary John R. Mott. The student section, of the conference will discuss some of the following subjec tives, War, Men and Religion, Church Rehab and World Service for Students, Student Councils, Personal Evangelism, the College situation and Student Responsibility, etc. Among the invited leaders and speakers are: Dr. Mordecai Johnson, pastor, Charleston, W. Va.; Conrad Hoffman, secretary International Student Service, Geneva; Dr. John R. Mott, general secretary National Y. M. C. A.; Kirby Page, World Court Worker; T. Q. Harrison, Secretary World Worker; T. Q. Harrison, Secretary of Youth for Peace; Dr. W. J. Kirk Alfalfa; Howard Thurman and John Billingham, students Rochester Theological and Yale School of Religion, respectively. Pred S. A. Johnson, Lincoln University, Pa., and Rudolph Moses, New Orleans College. The colored members of the National Student, Council, are working hard for a successful conference. Mrs. Roscoe Conklim Bruce Elected As Chairman Board Of Undergraduate Editors Boston, Mass. Mrs. Roscoe Conklin Bruce, one of two $_{1}$ students of the upper classes of Boston University Law School to obtain an honor average, was elected chairman of the board of undergraduate editors of the Law Review. The board consists of eighteen ranking students of the two $_{2}$ classes and Mrs. Bruce was elected to membership ago. She is the oldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe of Washington. It is stated that this is the first-time a woman has held such a post in the United States. Julia Evans of Washington, a graduate of Howard, and a former student of the Harvard Law School, was elected to membership on the board. Rare Print and Books Given Howard University Washington, D. C.—During the past few days the Carnegie Library, Howard University, has been the recipient of gifts of books from three friends of the University Seven books of books were donated by Mrs. Cox, box widow of the late William V Cox, trustee of the University; and one hundred volumes by Justice Frédéric K. Siddons, of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. From Dr. J. E. Moorland, trustee of the institution, came an interesting old wartime print, entitled, "The reading of the Proclamation of Freedom in the Slave Cabin." This last makes a very fitting addition to the Moorland collection which increases in value day by day. During the summer months more than fifty volumes from this collection, owing to age and handling, were rebound. It's All In The State of Mind BY ARTHUR GRANVILLE If you think you are beaten, you are; If you think you dare not, you don't; If you'd like to win, but you can't, It's a cush that you won't. If you think you'll lose, you'll lost; For out in the world you find. Success begins with a fallow's will, It's all in the state of mind For man a race is lost, Ere even a step is run, And many a coward-faith, Ere even his work's begun. Think big and your deeds will grow, Think small and you'll fall behind Think that you can and you will It's all in the state of mind If you think you are outclassed, you are; You've got to think high to rise. You've got to be sure of yourself before You can even win a prize Life's battles don't always To the stronger or faster man; But soon or late the man who wins, Is the fellow who thinks he can. --- Service The Keynote of This Great Business Institution PORO COLLEGE Upon this lofty principle, inspires Race Women with ideals of personal neatness, beauty, pride, self-respect, physical and mental cleanliness. Because of this nation-wide demand for PORO thousands trained by PORO COLLEGE in the art of PORO HAIR AND BEAUTY COLEURE, now conduct highly profitable PORO AGENCIES right in their homes. Through PORO profits, thousands are prosperous and independent. There are now openings for wide-discharge enterprising Race Women to earn nice profite as Our Agents. It will pay you to investigate. WRITE TODAY Name of PORO College and Tudor Products Leading School of Race and Beauty Culture PORO COLLEGE 4100 ST PERDINAND AVENUE ST. LOUIS, MO U S A. The United States Flag Association with headquarters at 17 East, 42nd street, New York, City, of whifle President Calvin Coolidge is the honorary head and Honi. Ehlin Root of New York, statistician and jurist, of the active president, ignites a call upon the American people for 25,000 saving Flags. It is the announcement of an intensive movement to recruit 150,000 new members for the Association, to be organized as Living Flags—sixty-three members in each Living Flag, representing its forty-eight stars, the pline field, the thirteen stripes and the flagstaff—each flag a definite patriotic unifl. rendering a definite patriotic service. The 'other officers of this Association' which takes the field in militant fashion to foster reverence for the United States flag and to actively combat all forces hostile to the ideals, principles, and institutions for which that flag stands; are Otto H.-Kahn, of New York, treasurer, and Colonel James A. Moss, U. S. A.; retired, director general. Dr. Moton A Founder The founders of this crusading organization—thirteen in number, typifying the thirteen stripes in the flag—are former Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes; the late, Vice President Thomas R. Marshall; Cardinal O'Connell of Boston, senior Catholic prelate in the United States; Rabbi Abram Simon of Washington, D. C.; president Central-Conference of American Rabbi; Bishop James E. Freeman of Washington, D. C., president of the National Cathedral foundation of the Protestant Gospelfounder Dr. Robert R. Motto successor to the late Booker T. Washington as head of the Tuskegee Institute; United States Senator Irvine L. Lenroot of Wisconsin and Oscar W. Underwood of Alabama; Governor Alfred E. Smith of New York; Secretary of the Navy Curtis D. Wilbur of California; Mrs. Thomas G. Winter, former president general of the Federation of Women's Clubs and Judges Elbert H. Gary; chairman o f the United States Steel Corporation; late Samuel A. Benton, general of the American federation of Labor was one of the thirteen founders and an ardent supporter of Association's plan of practical patriotic service for the preservation of Americanism. Three Incorporators The incorporators of the Flag Association are three in number—typifying the three colors of the flag—red, white and blue. They are Admiral William S. Sims, U. S. Nazyx, General Amos A. Fries, U. S. Army, and General George C. Rickards, National Guard. A National Council, which will cooperate with the Flag Association in the big campaign now officially announced, includes the governors of the forty-eight states, typifying the forty-eight stars in the flag. A National Advisory Board, made up of representative men in every important industry, trade and profession, includes the Association's national program and direct the allimportant work of stimulating public interest in the movement. This is one of the big jobs on the Association's schedule. Although the official home of the Flag Association is at Washington, D. L., the big membership drive will be conducted from New York City, where headquarters have been established at 17 East 42nd street Branch headquarters will be opened at once the headquarters of the city and all departments of the campaign will be supervised by Colonel Moss, director general. Colonel Moss has followed the flag literally from childhood as a West Point cadet through thirty-two years of active service in the army and through three wars, retiring at his own request. He is the author of many standard technical works on military subjects and is the organizer as well as the author of the Flag Association which he serves without remuneration of any kind. Plan of Living Flags The campaign for 25,000 Living Flags is the outgrowth of many months of intensive study by the leading supporters of the movement seeking the right way to quicken public interest and broaden public understanding of the practical patriotic service to which the United States Flag Association is pleased The plan decided upon in of the Living Flags. In its announcement the Association emphasizes the fact that no change has been, or ever made on the life members of one dollar which goes into a com- ment fund that remains in legal safeguards that are not no single penny of the fund, nor be expended. No item of ad- mption can be expended, an apallog outlay can be against it. It stands for never, growing less, but ce- nning dollar by dollar as the grows. Only the interest fund can be used, and this according to the official measure--that, every member goes on contributing its interest practical patriotic service during the life of the men but down through all the centuries to come in the life of the Nation. A vitalizing phase of the program is the plan which makes of the life member a component part of the flag. Every Living Flag will designate the association representing the Association representing the teen stripes, the forty-eight inches of the blue field, and the flagstaff is organizer and executive of his or her Life Flag, every component part of which is represented by a life member of the Association who is officially designated as, a blue field, a stripe, and is so listed in the order of the Association. Each Life Flag represents a total life member designated by the patriotic yield in interest which good educational campaign fund. Every Living Flag will be within the organized patriotic unit placed to the aims of the Association and the program of ever active patriotic vice. A life membership certificate will designate clearly the record number of the Living Flag to which the life member is assigned together with his or her designation as star, stripe or blue field. The flagstaff certificate records the full data of the flag including the names of those forming its component parts. Financing The Movement It will cost money to organize these Living Flags the entire revenue from which goes into the permanent fund, and the Association announces the following plan for financing the big movement. Expenses will be met by men and women of means and conscience and patriotic vision who will volunteer as flag founders. Estimated cost of creating a flag unit is $25 and the contribution of this amount founds one Living Flag. A man or woman may found one Living Flag or as many Living Flags as his or her means will permit. The contributions of the flag founders will form the operating fund to be used in carrying out the big patriotic program of the year. The Flag Founders and their aid, to the patriotic movement, will be recognized by annual ceremonies at the National Flag Day, the known as Flag Founders Day, sponsored by the Federal authorities. All children will be admitted to junior membership in the Associates and they will organize their Living Pages and receive their membership certificates and official designation as stars and stripes and blue held just in the case of full life members. A junior membership for twenties-five cents. Prominent educators are cooperating with the Association in the formulation of a children's educational program that weary from month to month and maintain novelty and interest. Real Estate For Sale—tell about it in The Age Classified Ads—page 10. HOTEL OLGA 695 LENOX AVE. Cor 143d ST NEW YORK CITY Select Family and Tourist Hotel Running hot and cold water in each room. All Rooms Outside Exposure Service—Subway and Surface Lines at Door RATES REASONABLE E.D. H. WILSON, Prop. NEW YORK CITY Phone AUDUBON 3776 Nov10-Jm because of the advisability of the FSA to move to ming a labor union under the authority of representatives of the federal federation of Labor, the occupation having already been called under the name of, "Brother of Sleeping Car Potter," with Philin Ralpholph, editor of the magazine as general manager of Jan. 1, 1915, the Senior Heard and Pour Amateur employee, column of. The A. A. K. address addressed a series of articles in the issue of October with regard to what appeared to him to be affiliation of the A. A. A. C. B. and F. A. the questions asked by Mr. Hogan had reports of a meeting held recently of the proposed porters, un- like John Weldon Johnson, sec- cret to the A. A. C. P. and Hugh O. L. of L. orga. were sent from the same platform, thus finding what to Mr. Hogan was an affiliation of the two BROTHERHOOD OF SEEK- ING NO CAR PORTERS Hesaparters, 211 Seventh Avenue New York, October 6, 1925 after the New York Age: Marilyn the privilege, through volume of your valuable paper, answer the questions raised by Mil- lard Morgan in a recent interview, and I will be relieved to have organize the Pullins A. L. Miller may say that this business has a story around the first West W. Means to RC. S. Fuller, who will wrong all wrongs, with the previous error of wronging material. He pulls the F. L. L. the N. A. A. C. P. and the L. L. Hand Society in the state upon organizations. Now, one and a half stale the N. A. A. C. P. and the F. L. L. as upilf organizations that he could the Standard Oil company the Republican Party. Self organizations are those that are to receive the miseries of the unsuccessful the application and dis- charge charities, such as the Sal- tation Army, whereas, on the con- tain, the N. A. A. C. P. and the A. L. L. are institutions, whose reason being is based upon their demand or social justice. An upilf organization is a begging institution, exceeds the N. A. A. C. P. and the A. L. L. are fighting organizations. A difference, this. The upstart organization accepts unimpaired the present order and seeks to utilize existing social suffering, whereas the N. A. A. C. P. and the A. L. L. are working to remove the cause of our social ills and maladjudgment. This material and basic damage, Mr. Hogans has inconsciously or consciously ignored. The law of motion of the modern short story story of but only as scrupulous adherence to the selection of material is the selecting of material. This constant and imperative canon, Mr. Hogans unfortunately violated in the erotic selection and classification of sexual facts. Just a word now abo' the affiliation between the N. A. A. C. P. and the A. F. I. as alleged by Mr. Hoggan. I pray tell me, did it become the to the 'N. A. A. C. P. and the A. F. I. to affiliate with each other?' as Mr. Hoggan. I did not know the had affiliated. Nor, are the curials of the N. A. A. C. P. for the O. L. aware of a tany such situation. No one seems to be aware of Mr. Hoggan. I am aware of God only more. Obviously he must misinformed; for I am sure he did not descend to the ignoble孝 pure invention and misinterpretation of the exchange of his good view to injuring this movement, which he too, as a porter. fact of common knowledge Weldon Johnson, Se- cret N. A. A. C. P. while ad- hoc the Brotherhood of Sleeping Gar did not breath anything the institution of the N. A. A. C. C. P. the A. F. of L. He did not A. F. of L. in his entire he gave the endorsement of the P. to the Brotherhood of Porters. And may I say information of Mr. Hogans public that the Brother- sleeping Car Porters is not connected in any way with organization. It is entirely indepen- dence in receiving the moral Big Four Brotherhoods American Federation of Labor. successfully deny the tre- of these organizations, the value of their moral affirmation, the Plain Port certainly the concern for the refutation of the institution of this organization institution very soon. Brotherhood of Sleeping Car to affiliate with any shall publicly pro- forging question, while he is neutral in the matter against the Pullman station. While I don't incertify of his statement, but his ability to establish the minds of the Pullman public. The old say, "I am not a restless ring of truth when issues of burning are before the public, a great movement for or- man porters. Even that his position is interpreted as against it hence, he states it stated it no one when he believes that man is that he make us violent in other words, that he right, his head of which it is our correct It is ignorance is such that I beg that it be hereforefore laborer that the N A. and use with the rights of color- become more important in the work of the public health system. In order to work effectively with the public health system, it is important to have a higher standard of living in the most important aspect of our social rights. Why? Because we must first be able to work effectively with the public health system, we can be anywhere, for compulsory rights are supported to protect the interests of an existing human being, and a need opportunity and one cannot must be increased by unionization, the movement to organize the Pulham porters communities, one of the most important workers in the public health system. My Honeys would consider ground does the N.A.A.C.G.F. prepare its belief that malign interests is the best for the Pulham porters interests. My answer is, the grounds of common sense. He also includes if the N.A.A.C.G.F. has investigated into the conditions of the Pulham porters and whether it has any articles of agreement from the A.F. of ILL. guardianship of the Pulham porters protection if they should come under the A.F. for its supervision. These questions are superfluous, if relevant and immaterial. People are too busy to investigate everything they complain or support. We deploy and comment crime waves, but that does not require or makes a internment and hardship owl to oppose gun smuggling to find out if they are animals. We also support animals. We also support animals, although we don't go peeping into the books of the 'unfortunate' to find out if there really are any people in indifferent circumstances. No, not at all. Some things are self evident, such as the existence of poverty of priotic crime waves, of overwork and underpaid workers of the oppression of the weak, and that in the main, power comes through organization. Again: no-one has mentioned, anything about the Pullman porters being put under the supervision of the A. F. o. l. F. M. Higgans is setting up his own scarcetow to shoot it. It has no existence outside of his imagination, unless he is the victim of the machinations of some avilicious person. But there is hardly any excuse for he should know better. He should know better. He should properly inform himself before he attempts to write about so serious a question. Sill writing about the ghost of the dreams, Mr. Hogans says that; "Unless the 'N. A. A. C. P.' has articles with the A. F. of L. to show for its endorsement of a movement which is highly tentative and problematic as to its ultimate success, its advocacy and good judgement in this particular case is to be seriously questioned. 'This is queer reasoning. All movements are tentative and problematic in the sense that no one is sufficiently omniscient to force the consequences of social action at any participles of social action according to our present knowledge of the social nature of social and theories, it is impossible to predict the social consequences of certain social methods with the exactitude, that we can predict the reactions of certain chemical compounds. This does not, however, render certain forms of social action unnecessary or without social value. For instance, no one could tell, in 1863, the results of the emancipation of the negro slaves would in years to come. But few will now question the wisdom of the act. In the main, one is justified in assuming that movements whose objects are to liberate the large masses of people from economic, social and political bondage, are useful and beneficial to the development of civil citizens. Whether they achieve their objectives or not is beside the point; the fact that they have set to achieve them is quite sufficient. Their success will depend upon the good sense and spirit of those who compose the movements, together with an enlightened and awakened public opinion. Mr. Hogans observes that this is not the first time that an attempt was made to unionize the Pullman porters. Well, what's that got to do with the value and necessity of organization now? He says further that, "If the N. A. A. C. P can endorse the A. F. of L. for Negro workers, then the Association has not the right to issue statements against the Ku Klux Klan or any other persecutor organization with indicted aganglement in the Negro." Now this is figacious. The N. A. A. C. P, let me reiterate, has not endorsed the A. F. of L.; but granting that it had, the conclusion drawn by Mr. Hogans is entirely unjustified. By no stretch of imagination can you compare the A. F. of L. with the Ku Klux Klan. It is unworthy of any serious 'seeker' after truth to maintain that there is. One has to read the constitutions of both organizations and observe their conduct. It is just as reasonable to compare the U. S. Government with the Ku Klux Klan. Individual international unions discriminate against the Negro just as individual states such as Georgia, Florida, etc., discriminate against the Negro. It is not necessary to excuse such discrimination in order to treat it as an offense of Negroes who are working in the building trades, receive the same wage scale as the white workers, because of their membership in the A. F. of L. It is, suicidal short-sightedness to ignore the power of five million workers in the A. F. of L; at the same time we need not criticize its policies; we dislike. Mr. Hogans concludes with several admonitions, "First," says he, "remember that your individual interests are at stake in whatever takes place." This is only a half truth. This movement to organize the Pullman porters involves the interests of all of the porters collectively as well as the interests of the race-it transends the interests of the individual porter. It is this doctrine of individual interests which is responsible for the present-desirable condition of the porters. Man has been the seat of the porters. This message means the end of that backtracked, antiquated doctrine. In its stead we proclaim the stalemant: "All for each and each for all" Second, says she, "bear in mind that no matter who advocates unionism to you, it is really up to you to decide which is the best thing for you." May I say that it is not always true that one can decide what is best for him. Just as the sick do not always know what is best for them, individuals and groups who are the victim NATURAL HAIR WIGS SWITCHES, TRANSFORMATIONS, CURLS, CLUSTER PURFS, HAIR NETS, STRAIGHTENING, COMBS, AND EVERYTHING IN HAIR GOODS, WIGS MADE TO YOUR ORDER Free-Catalog Bottle to Out-of-print Wearlure on Request Alex. Marks The chinch and its relation to world problems; its remarkable educational activity; its growth to nearly every state in the Union and even foreign fields; its equation of organic union with other Mesoamerican constitutes some of the telling observations of either whose literary taste is both pleasing and attractive. The History stamps the bishop a ripe scholar, an eloquent writer and a keen student of Methodism and her problems. It is indeed a distinct contribution to the literary annals of the church and Race. Washington, D. C.-The College of Applied· science; Howard University, under the zorgization plan of the board of trustees administers the work of students who plan to become (1) professional architects; (2) painters, illustrators, commercial artists and designers of art objects in industry; (3) makers of costumes; (4) civil engineers; (5) forest engineers; (6) mechanical engineers; (7) dietitians; and (8) cafeteria and institutional managers. During the past summer the special building set apart for the College of Applied Science has had many repairs and improvements, including the following: (1) the ceiling in the office of the Art Department has been lowered to make the height of the room conform with the floor area, thus making the office much more attractive; (2) the side walls and ceiling of the room are well as the stair walls were painted giving the rooms a very clean and neat appearance; (3) nine new lockers were made for the art department for the purpose of storing student drawings, equipment and supplies: (4) concrete bases have been made for all motors and testing apparatus in the electrical laboratories making the apparatus more accessible for testing purposes as well as giving the equipment a much neater appearance; (5) the steam engines and refrigeration laboratories are now being set up, which, when completed will furnish facilities for testing purposes of various types of steam engines, steam engines, and refrigeration machines; (6) the class rooms have been fitted with new greenboard to replace the old black boards which were worn out. The College of Applied Science offers the degrees of bachelor of science in art; architecture; civil engineering; electrical engineering; mechanical engineering; and Home Economics. Opening Exercises at Walden University Nashville, Tennessee—Walden College held auspicius opening exercises; October 6, on the campus, when a large number of alumni and citizens were present. Among the members of the board of trustees of the institution, who gave short addresses were Bishop I. B. Scott of the Methodist Episcopal Church; Attorney J. C. Napier and Dr. J. H. Hale; Dr. H. H. Walker, president of the alumni association, spoke enthusiastically on the alumni plan of conducting the nation wide financial campaign among the alumni, and the teachers and students of the institution pledged liberally in interest of the campaign. Rev. J. D. Chavis and Rev. W. E. Mitchell and Dr. G. W. Lewis represented the Tennessee Conference in pledging unprecedented support of the institution. The new members of the faculty were presented and Pres. F. T. R. Davis mentioned that the institution is entering upon its fifty-ninth year of work under most promising and encouraging circumstances. Thoughtfully the service the students rendered songs and yells. Do you want work? See The Age Classified Ads High Wanted - page 18. ```markdown ``` **Oral:** to you, gentlemen, who report research the State, committees and the N ational Council to urge local associations to think of the Association,肚盆 as em- bracing "all men, and boys, like a com- munity" instead of "the track, or one group, as is often the case today. Dr. Kenneth H. McCormick, a state em- pire, sat on the committee in the coming three-year program, that the field be, white unto harvest. I plead for consideration of the colored work on that score." Because of this new development, it is, considered probable that fresh importance will attach to the National Conference, on Colored Work, which is to be held at Washington, D. C. October-21 to 23. Both white and Negro delegates, many of them nationally prominent in the Y. M. C. A., will attend, in can' effort not only to solve the problems of expansion resulting from the rapidly increasing Negro population, but also to bring abbot better feeling, between the two races in this country. Brooklyn Masons To Aid Home For Aged People Sunday afternoon, October 18, at 3 o'clock, the Prince Hall Masonos of Brooklyn will assemble at the Concord Baptist Church of Christ, Adelphia street, near Myrtle avenue, and give a benefit for the Brooklyn Home for Aged Colored People. Rev. James B. Adams, pastor, will preach. Deputy Grand Master Edward T. Sherwood, jr. will be the principal of the Second Masonic District. The Concord choir will sing. "The lodges will assemble at Ionic Temple and, escorted by the Grand and Subordinate Commanderies K. T. M., march through Clermont to Fulton, thence to Carlton avenue and to the church. On Thursday evening, October 22, at 8:30 o'clock, a concert and dance will be held at Brooklyn Labor Lyceum, 949 Willoughby avenue, thence to Carlton avenue and to the church. The proceeds are to be used by the Christian Stocking Committee to brighten the lives of fortunate ones at Christmasmide. E. Aldama Jackson, organist of St. Marks Church, Manhattan, and Andrew T. Williams, of the Williams School of Music, have prepared and donated a fine program for the occasion, in which several good artists will appear; and William H. Remix is contributing a splendid and interesting music from the City Amsterdam and other clubs, who will furnish music for the dance. Deputy Grand Master Samuel A. Gibbs and the committee are putting forth every effort for a big Masonic night. Apartment to Rent or For Sale are listed in The Age, Classified Ade-page 10. MISS M. P. CRAWFORD Speaks To Women Atlanta, Ga.—I suffered for a num- ber of years with feminine weakness. I tried many remedies but nothing gave me any permanent relief or strength Finally, I began taking Dr. Pierce's. Favorite Prescription and this medicine gave me health and strength, so I am glad to recommend M F Crawford, 119 Tattail street. If you want to be well, start at once with this "Prescription" of Dr. Pierce's. Get it from your neighbo- hood druggist, in tablets or liquid; send 10 cents to Dr. Petree's Invali- date Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for trial pkg. Write for free medical advice. I am going to 6 conjure this particle to the type of pneumonia, bound most often in children under five, years of age. Let me attempt to give you a lesson in anatomy—a difficult task! Take the structure of the lung graves. Let us branch out of graves to your hand in the may, be compared to, a bunch of usual way by the stalk; suppose there is the main stalk and that this has two branches, and that from each of the latter there are smaller branches. Now, upon each of these branches there will be a bunch or group of graves, and each group may have still smaller branches and groups of graves. Imagine **you** will **that** the stalks are hollow also, the grape, and contain air. The main stalk may be compared to the "wind-pipe" or fractions, the first, two divisions, the main bromeliad and the smaller branches, the smaller brohchi. Finally we come to the stem of each grape which we shall call the smallest bromeliad or bronchioli. And lastly Michigan Making Survey Of Negroes In the State Lansing, Mich. According to reports emanating from the Division of Negro Welfare and Statistics at Lansing, the tabulations of the census work, time by this department, and now near completion, will bring to light some interesting and surprising facts relative to the Negro in Michigan. This work, because of its newness and necessity for limited expenditures, has consumed over a year of time and has been accomplished in practically every case as a result of volunteer labor. The work has been completed with the exception of the cities and rural communities in the southern section of the State. However, this work is being rapidly pushed to completion and C. Campbell, director, is expecting to be able to release the results of the tabulation before the end of the year. It is interesting to note that the tabulations of the Northern Peninsula show the Negro group to be well established and progressive. Although only 95 permanent residents are recorded, they represent the ownership of property aggregating $2,500 in value, and report $500,000 worth of life insurance. In view of the fact that various sections of the Peninsula are widely known resorts, the Negro population increases threefold during the summer months with the advent of hotel employees, who could not be classified as residents of that section. WILL PRO- mence a full growth of hair; will also hectare the Strength and the Beauty to the hair If Your Hair is Dry and Wavy EASY INDIA HAIR GROWER If you are bothered with welling hair, bracelet itching Scrap, or any Hair Troubles, we want you to try a jar of East India Hair and properties that go to the roots of the hair and curves the skin, helping nature to grow silky. Perfumed with a balm of a thousand flowers. The best known flowers are the red, pink, and Eyebrowsh and also intenses Gray Hair in its Natural Color. Can be used with a jar of D. LYONS. Glen 1216, North $ Hair Grower, $ Temple UU, $ Sham poo, $ Pressing UU, $ Face Cream and Blizzard for Belling. $ 9.00. See Extra for Postage. Guard Your Health Be Sure to Use SANYKIT The High Pressure Pressure A PREVENTIVE FOR MEN UNTIL Alarming Pressure Producers. Take UU. $ 21.00 Worldwide Classics. $ 12.00 Michigan State New York The Popular Remedy for Catarrh of the Bladder Easy and Safe to Take The Prevents for Santa Mild Caprices is a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. It kills the germs IF U DON'T C CONSULT DR. KAPLAN THE EYESIGHT SPECIALIST RELIABLE AND REASONABLE LYEEN EXAMINED FREE 531 LENOX AVE. Opposite Hayleem Hospital. Real Estate and Insurance Fire, Life, Bikini, Acidist, Bonding Automobile—All Branches Licensed In Bate of New York & New Jersey 178 W. 135th St. New York City Sept. 5.5m. Undertakers W. DAVID BROWN Undertaker's Establishment Under the Management of AMATE, BROWN AND MAGNENT ALBRA-CROYD B. BRAKY PURVIS. Assistant HIGH GRADE LICENSED UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMERS 2315 SEVENTH AVENUE Telephone, Brethsburg 6454 Bst. 135th and 136th Sts. Phone Bushwick 3529 ALLEN & LILL DILLARD Undertaker and Embalmer LADY IN ATTENDANCE 563 Quincy St., Burlyn, N. Y. JAMAICA BRANCH; 53 ALLEN ST. Maine State Manager Telephone JAMAICA 2357 Martin WHEN DEATH OCCURS AND AN ECO- NOMICAL FUNERAL IS DESIGNED CALL UP PHONE 9239 AUDURON H. ADOLPH HOWELL 1371th Street and 17th Avenue, New York Remains Shipped To All Parts of the World Always Open Lady Attendant PHONE 6351 MORN. J. WESLEY LANE Undertaker and Embalmer OPEN ALL NIGHT, FUNERAL PARLOR AND CHAPEL FREE Lady in Attendance Prompt Service Moderate Rates 112 W. 183rd 6L Near Lenox Ave. PHONE 4926 BRADHURST WILLIAM C. PERRY FUNERAL DIRECTOR & EMBALMER LARGE FUNERAL PARLOR 248 West 132nd Street Between 7th and 8th Aven. Sept1-Jm New York City MORTGAGES NEGOTIATED ESTATES MANAGED — AT AND SUBLET — RENT ANTONIO Real Estate and I 2257 SEVENTH New York Phones—Morningside 4327 and MORTGAGES NEGOTIATED — PROPERTY AND ESTATES MANAGED — APARTMENTS TO LET AND SUBLET — RENTS COLLECTED ANTONIO DE SILVA Real Estate and Insurance Broker 2257 SEVENTH AVENUE New York City Phones—Morningside 4327 and 3550 NOW RENTING In 3 New Houses—3, 4, 5 and 6 Rooms Large, light and strictly private; all modern improvements; tiled bathrooms, tubs and showers Select Neighborhood 54-58-62 WEST 138th STREET Apply agent on premises or EVERARD EDMUND :: 263 W. 137th Street In 3 New Houses—3, 4 Large, light and strictly private ments; tiled bathrooms, t Select Neighb 54-58-62 WEST 138 Apply agent on premises or EVERARD EDMUND :: Oct 10-4t Now before you come into paragraph 3, know you will need the companion terms of the doctor. That work is important. But it will take much work, appalling and one ill-institution and one ill-institution and one ill-institution with your doctor. Broncho Pneumonia In this type, that is the most ordered area of indemnification of that kind, there are inter-space areas usually both sides. Under five years from 60 to 75 per cent of the cases are of this type. This is one of the most frequent diseases of the carve years depicted in the case, which is high worst the wipers the children in one series of cases. This is one of the cases under one year of whom 75 cases are died. There were 50 cases between 40 of whom 40 per cent died. There were 15 cases between 2 and 3 years of whom 27 per cent died. There were 43 cases over 13 years of whom 40 per cent died. These are hospital figures, higher than for cases treated in the home. It shall not do, in case of broncho-pneumonia here, read The August 10th, page seven. In this type, of pneumonia the child needs constant care. The nurse or mother who will follow exactly the advice, advice is absolutely necessary, cases are lost because of failure in the child. The child needs warm, frosty milk, not cold air, which is the thing for another type of pneumonia. For another care must be taken of the care, nose, mouth, bowels and diet—the latter according to the directions your doctor gives you. Again there is no 'serile' in this condition; how often do-mother's life if the baby will be well after the month, ninth or twelfth day! Prepare a group of two to four weeks and another of convalescence. Have faith in your doctor; he says the baby has a bronchitis one day and the next day pneumonia believe him. I have explained how this believe him by extension, and so few hours after that is necessary. There is no cure medicine for this condition, but your baby will give you medicine for the baby's heart and to assist nature in the battle, for such it is. Will: Sell or Lease PRIVATE HOUSE 12 rooms, electric light, fully furnished; exclusive neighborhood. L. C. COLLINS 2313 7th Avenue Tel. 4040 Bradhurst Great Opportunity 9 ROOM, ELEVATOR APARTMENTS rents reasonable; concessions to the right party. Apply, intermittent 849 ST. NICHOLAS AVENUE (Near 153rd St.) Oct10-2t APARTMENTS 3 and 4 rooms, hot water supply REASONABLE RENTS Apply JOHN D. SAUNDERS 264 LENOX AVENUE Telephone Harlem 3902 REAL ESTATE Private & Apt. Houses FOR SALE 1 Wn Loan You Money To Buy 2 Bills and Fee CONRAD T. GITTENS 32 West 130th Street - Harlem 9342 July 4th - 1 yr. S. J. COTTMAN Real Estate INVESTMENTS 2303 7th Avenue New York Facing St. Nicholas Park S.E.Cor.St.NicholasAve.&141stSt Nine room st. NicholasAve.&141stSt improvements, including electric lights, steam heat, hot water. Every room private and facing on the street, assu- suring plenty of light and air. Imr.edi- late occupancy. Rents $100 -Apply- PHILIP A. PAYTON JR., CO. 127 West 141st Street Telephone Audubon 1945 ED — PROPERTY AND APARTMENTS TO LET NTS COLLECTED DE DE SILVA Insurance Broker H AVENUE K City Id 3550 NTING Aug29-4t --- Address all letters and make all checks and money orders payable to THE NEW YORK-AGE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1925 NEWSPAPER KNOCKERS EXPRESSED NEWSPAPER ANNOUNCERS Experience has shown that it is a difficult task to induce big advertisers to take space in weekly newspapers. Of course there are exceptions to this rule in the case of national weeklies with millions of readers or class publications that reach only specialized industries. But the statement holds good in the case of most weeklies with a circulation less than one hundred thousand, and especially as applied to Negro newspapers. This is the reason why the greater part of the advertising in such papers is of a local character, such as real estate and housing, neighborhood stores and specialized toilet preparations. It experience has shown that it is a difficult task to induce big advertisers to take place in weekly newspapers. Of courses there are exceptions to this rule in the case of national weeklies with millions of readers or class publications that reach only specialized industries. But the statement holds good in the case of most weeklies with a circulation less than one hundred thousand, and especially as applied to New York newspapers. This is the reason why the greater part of the advertising in such papers is of a local character, such as real estate and housing, neighborhood stores and specialized toilet preparations. Many of this class of publications have deeved out to escape this condition by forming out their space to outside agencies that absorb the greater part of the profit. The Age has chosen to control its own columns and to reject advertising that it considered harmful to its readers and not founded on good faith. On the other hand, it has sought with some measure of success to interest substantial business houses using its columns for the legitimate purpose of attracting customers. In this way, it has published advertisements of saving banks, chain stores and other institutions that would benefit those dealing with them. A solicitor of advertising for another week is seeking to imitate the success of The Age, went to these same advertisers trying to secure their business. While this be played a lack of initiative in blazing our new business trails, his main error was that he seeking to get advertising for his own paper he found it necessary to disparage The Age and present reasons why these advertisers should not use it. In other words, he order to boost his own publication, he deemed it necessary to knock The Age. And it the paper which this knocker represents a strenuous advocate of racial unity and cooperation. The policy of The Age has been to present its own claims to advertisers as a medium for publicity for their wares, without seeking to depreciate the advantages of and its contemporaries. It has refused to estimate their circulation or influence on the ground that these matters are not within its scope of information. It has even had the opportunity to recommend to advertisers resiring to reach certain fields, the name of contemporaries which it regarded as suitable for that purpose. And it has been a source of satisfaction to be able to do this. Instead of knocking another paper in order to steal its advertising, the builders and workers of the Negro press should seek to cooperate in securing new business and in revising better methods for handling circulation and advertising. There is need for cooperation in dealing with the problem of delinquent agents and non-paying advertisers. If a system could be devised to away with these twin evils, it would worth thousands of dollars to our publishers. The National Negro Press Association might justify its existence and become a practical organization of real benefit, if it would tackle these problems and find a workable solution of them. It might also calculate a system of newspaper ethics that would ban "knocking" as part of the equipment of the advertising solicitor who lacks the energy to blaze his own trail. Many of this class of publications have endeavored to escape this condition by farming out their space to outside agencies that absorb the greater part of the profit. The Age has chosen to control its own columns and to reject advertising that it considered harmful to its readers and not founded on good faith. On the other hand it has sought with some measure of success to interest substantial business houses in using its columns for the legitimate purpose of attracting customers. In this way it has published advertisements of savings banks, chain stores and other institutions that would benefit those dealing with them. A solicitor of advertising for another weekly, seeking to imitate the success of The Age. went to these same advertisers trying to secure their business While this betrayed a lack of initiative in blazing out new business trails, his main error was that in seeking to get advertising for his own paper he found it necessary to disparage The Age and present reasons why these advertisers should not use it. In other words, in order to boost his own publication, he deemed it necessary to knock The Age. And yet the paper which this knocker represents is a strenuous advocate of racial unity and cooperation. The policy of The Age has been to present its own claims to advertisers as a medium for publicity for their wares, without seeking to depreciate the advantages of any of its contemporaries. It has refused to estimate their circulation or influence on the ground that these matters are not within its scope of information. It has even had the opportunity to recommend to advertisers desiring to reach certain fields, the names of contemporaries which it regarded as suitable for that purpose. And it has been a source of satisfaction to be able to do this. Instead of knocking another paper in order to steal its advertising, the builders and workers of the Negro press should seek to cooperate in securing new business and in devising better methods for handling circulation and advertising. There is need for cooperation in dealing with the problems of delinquent agents and non-paying advertisers. If a system could be devised to do away with these twin evils, it would be worth thousands of dollars to our publishers. The National Negro Press Association might justify its existence and become a practical organization of real benefit, if it would tackle these problems and find a workable solution of them. It might also inculcate a system of newspaper ethics that would ban "knocking" as part of the equipment of the advertising solicitor who lacks the energy to blaze his own trail. COOLIDGE HITS THE KLAN. In the gradual revelation of the character of Mr. Coolidge in the high office of President, it has been shown that his process of reasoning out a problem and arriving at conclusion are cautious and calculatin. He is not to be hurried into action by popar clamor, nor to be deterred from his pose by formidable opposition. His address made before the American Legion at Omaha last week is significant as denoting his aitude toward the Ku Klux Klan after careful study and reflection of the policy pursued by that organization. Mr. Coolid In the gradual revelation of the character of Mr. Coolidge in the high office of President, it has been shown that his processes of reasoning out a problem and arriving at a conclusion are cautious and calculating. He is not to be hurried into action by popular clamor, nor to be deterred from his purpose by formidable opposition. His address made before the American Legion at Omaha last week is significant as denoting his attitude toward the Kn Klux Klan after careful study and reflection of the policy pursued by that organization. Mr. Coolidge has been slow to take issue with the Klan in its campaign of stirring up race hatred and religious intolerance but he has shown that he is awake to the evil results of its policy. In stressing the after effects of the war, Mr. Coolidge referred to intolerance as a natural reaction, but he advocated an intellectual demobilization as well as a military demobilization, so as to regain the advances made by tolerance and liberalism through long periods of development. This country has not been exempt from unfortunate experiences, he declared, due to manifestations of an intolerance of opinion and narrowness of outlook. During the war, differences of race and religion were submerged in a common cause. As Mr. Coolidge put it, "Wellnight all the races, religions and nationalities of the world, were represented in the armed forces of this nation, as they were in the body of our population. No man's patriotism was imputed or service questioned, because of his racial origin, his political opinion, or his religious convictions. Immigrants and sons of immigrants from the central European countries fought side by side with those who descended from the countries, which were our allies, with the sons of equatorial Africa, and with the red men of our own aboriginal population, all of them equally proud of the name "Americans." The President insisted that in times of peace no part of this structure of patriotic unity must be permitted to be lost. He recognized the necessity for 100 per cent. Americanism, but declared that 100 per cent. Americanism may be of various elements. Divine Providence, he said, has not bestowed upon any race a monopoly of patriotism and character. The address throughout was a pointed and stinging rebuke of the doctrines disseminated through klan propaganda, and emphasized the essentials of loyalty to the country and its fundamental institutions as more important than differences of religious worship or racial stock. A plea was entered for the demobilizing of racial antagonisms, fears, hatred and suspicions, and the place to begin was here at home in America. Mr. Coglidge has hit the Klan and hit it hard by his exposition of the meaning of true Americanism. TRAPS FOR THE INNOCENT. several news articles during the past days have shown the numerous piet t lie in the pathway of unprotected women, as they go their way in their sk and its suburbs. Beginning with a way, we were told how female passers the rush hours are indecently crowded unhandled by males of lewd instru- tured by outward respectability. A num- eral malefactor was charged with deco- least eight young women and girls included sections of the Bronx on the side of finding them attractive employe- ers then assaulting and robbing them. A similar pretext, a notorious police been obtained entrance to the rooms of expectable women and caused their a false charge. All these incidents reported in the piet illustrate the traps and perils that and womanhood in a large city. It is eough, that girls and women should met with the innocence of the dove, just be armed with the wisdom of the not to avoid the traps set for them. Eighteen year old girl from Philadelphia pertened by her unhappy experiences, so away out of her troubles by drowning Central Park Lake. She was rescued deceased, however, before she sank. She pinned to her dress, she gave as her is for attempting suicide that she need of everything." that a girl "can't park without men getting fresh" and is just like being in a den of beasts." a tremendous indictment of the so- man with whom this girl had been ther contact. Unfortunately there are too many are dominated by their brutal pass and deliberately prey upon the weaker long as these perverted criminals a large, it is well for women and girls to rise the utmost caution in dealing range men. Under no circumstances al- protected girls be beguiled into ac- tlying strangers into lonely neighborhood admit them to their domiciles. The incing the inducements held out for purposes, the greater is the risk incu- se seeking employment should be entering strange places, which give evidence of being occupied for business uses. A business woman whose occupation saves her out at night, when she has to use a taxicah, adds a warning ag- ging strange vehicles with no sign of ship on them, and especially not to be that carries another man beside auffeur. Such a combination she has to believe bodies no good to the pass especially if the latter is a woman. The lesson of all these stories of wif- er perpetrated upon girls and women is innocence, when combined with ignor- ment illly fitted to cope with the traps of the unwary. A large amount of ca- dial discretion is a necessary part of woman's equipment, when she ventures to the world. Several news articles during the past few weeks have shown the numerous pitfalls that lie in the pathway of unprotected girls and women, as they go their way in New York and its suburbs. Beginning with the subway, we were told how female passengers in the rush hours are indecently crowded and manhandled by males of lewd instincts masked by outward respectability. A more brutal malefactor was charged with decoying at least eight young women and girls into secluded sections of the Bronx on the pretext of finding them attractive employment and then assaulting and robbing them. On a similar pretext, a notorious police stool pigeon obtained entrance to the rooms of two respectable women and caused their arrest on a false charge. All these incidents reported in the press go to illustrate the traps and perils that surround womanhood in a large city. It is not enough, that girls and women should be clothed with the innocence of the dove, they must be armed with the wisdom of the gerpent to avoid the traps set for them. One nineteen year old girl from Philadelphia, disheartened by her unhappy experiences, sought a way out of her troubles by drowning in Central Park Lake. She was rescued by a policeman, however, before she sank. In a note pinned to her dress, she gave as her seasons for attempting suicide that she was "tired of everything," that a girl "can't get work without men getting fresh" and that "it's just like being in a den of beasts." That is a tremendous indictment of the sort of men with whom this girl had been thrown into contact. Unfortunately there are too many men who are dominated by their brutal passions and deliberately prey upon the weaker sex. So long as these perverted criminals are at large, it is well for women and girls to exercise the utmost caution in dealing with strange men. Under no circumstances should unprotected girls be beguiled into accompanying strangers into lonely neighborhoods or admit them to their domiciles. The more enticing the inducements held out for such purposes, the greater is the risk incurred. Those seeking employment should beware of entering strange places, which give no evidence of being occupied for business purposes. A business woman whose occupation often takes her out at night, when she has occasion to use a taxicab, adds a warning against taking strange vehicles with no sign of ownership on them, and especially not to enter one that carries another man beside the chauffeur. Such a combination she has reason to believe bodes no good to the passenger, especially if the latter is a woman. The lesson of all these stories of wrongs perpetrated upon girls and women is that innocence, when combined with ignorance, is but illly fitted to cope with the traps laid for the unwary. A large amount of caution and discretion is a necessary part of every woman's equipment, when she ventures out into the world. CRIMINAL BLUNDERING. There are certain blunders committed by critics that deserve to rank as a crime. Adults are so serious and damaging to crests of individuals and the party at to bring down the severest reprob There are certain blunders committed in politics that deserve to rank as a crime. The results are so serious and damaging to the interests of individuals and the party at large, as to bring down the severest reprobation show the preparation of them. Such a blunder was committed by the leader of the Twenty-first Assembly district, Robert S. Conklin, when he appointed George W. Harris, a former alderman and newspaper editor, an associate leader of the district. This appointment was made by Mr. Conklin without consulting the colored captains of the district or any of the representative colored voters. During the past five years the associate leaders have either been selected by the colored members of the County committee or named by agreements of the leaders of both races in conference. Mr. Conklin appears to have totally ignored the colored leaders in the appointment of Harris, who was formerly one of his most bitter opponents. Mr. Conklin himself is a candidate on the Republican ticket for Supreme Court Justice, with but all chances of success. His lack of political acumen and sagacity is shown by the fact that he continues to retain the post of district leader after he had been nominated for a judgeship. His naming of so unpopular and unreliable a quantity in politics as Harris has proved himself, for associate leader, has aroused widespread indignation and threatens to jeopardize the success of the whole local ticket in the part of Harlem affected. The capacity for blundering is not unknown among Republican leaders, but in this case Mr. Conklin has exceeded the margin of safety. POLITICS-VERSUS BUSINESS. The failure of politics and politicians have the problems of city management we need by the Republican candidate for Mayor as a reason in favor of a business administration. Mr. Waterman pointed out in one of his speeches that Tammany itself has nominated two business men for mayor, serious times in its history and elected them referred to the late William R. Gray and Abram S. Hewitt. The Republicans nominated and elected two business men Mayor in the person of the late William Strong and Seth Low: The idea of business man for mayor is not entirely need has worthy precedents in its favor. The shortcomings of the political administration of the past eight years were city furnishing substantial reasons why business administration should be chosen to put the municipal house in order. Brokedges for subway extension need to be emitted by new construction. The vast increase in the city budget needs to be justified by the increase of public improvement the city needs more schools, cleaner and better streets, better methods of garbage collection and disposal, and more active work in the prevention of crime and enforcement of law. In order to bring about such a change, is the whole system of political administration needs to be changed and better business methods substituted. This can only be done by placing a new business administration in office. The politicians have helped to get results, and their methods have been characterized by graft and waste, well as inefficiency. Every person who lives in New York is vitally interested in bringing about better government, whether he direct taxpayer or not. If he does not pay taxes directly, he is bound to pay them directly in the form of rent or in the price upon all the necessaries of life. Economy and efficiency in the management of city business are necessary, if the citizens are to get the full value of the money spend as residents of New York. Political administration now in power helped to give this value. It is up to a thinking citizens to try a business administration that promises good results. The election of a real business man mayor is an assurance of better government for the next four years. The failure of politics and politicians to solve the problems of city management was cited by the Republican candidate for Mayor as a reason in favor of a business administration. Mr. Waterman pointed out in one of his speeches that Tammany itself had nominated two business men for mayor at various times in its history and elected them. He referred to the late William R. Grace and Abram S. Hewitt. The Republicans also nominated and elected two business men for Mayor in the person of the late William L. Strong and Seth Low. The idea of a business man for mayor is not entirely new and has worthy precedents in its favor. The shortcomings of the political administration of the past eight years were cited as furnishing substantial reasons why a business administration should be chosen to put the municipal house in order. Broken pledges for subway extension need to be redeemed by new construction. The vast increase in the city budget needs to be justified by the increase of public improvements. The city needs more schools, cleaner and better streets, better methods of garbage collection and disposal, and more active police work in the prevention of crime and the enforcement of law. In order to bring about such a change as this the whole system of political administration needs to be changed and better business methods substituted. This can only be done by placing a new business administration in office. The politicians have failed to get results, and their methods have been characterized by graft and waste, as well as inefficiency. Every person who lives in New York is vitally interested in bringing about better government, whether he is a direct taxpayer or not. If he does not pay taxes directly, he is bound to pay them indirectly in the form of rent or in the price set upon all the necessaries of life. Econpmy and efficiency in the management of city business are necessary, if the citizens are to get the full value of the money they spend as residents of New York. The political administration now in power has failed to give this value. It is up to the thinking citizens to try a business-administration that promises good results. The election of a real business man for Mayor is an assurance of better government for the next four years. COLOR PROBLEMS THE WORLD OVER. That the growing tenseness of Great Britain's problem of maintaining amicable relations between the mixed races of her core is being recognized by thoughtful Eisenhower was evidenced at the Church of England congress held at Croydon last week demand was made by a retired Eastman official, former governor of Bombay and adress that the color bar he let down That the growing tenseness of Great Britain's problem of maintaining amicable relations between the mixed races of her empire is being recognized by thoughtful Englishmen was evidenced at the Church of England congress held at Croydon last week. A demand was made by a retired East Indian official, former governor of Bombay and Madras, that the color bar be let down in order to prevent future interracial strike. He maintained that a white member of Parliament must meet on terms of absolute equality those whom he has previously regarded as inferiors. The policy of a united white front against peoples of other colors was unsparingly denounced by the secretary of the International Missionary Council, who has traveled all over the world. In calling on the members of the congress to face the facts squarely, the missionary secretary was quoted as saying: "A solid white front certainly and inevitably means a solid yellow front, a solid brown front and a solid black front, and that can have only one end—war." The warning that if the white races wished to continue their association and influence upon those countries which they have The Age Readers' Forum developed largely for their benefit of the colored man; it must be in a spirit of absolute equality without arrogating an attitude of race superiority, sound, and upy the former governor still carried the tone of British authority as portrayed by an English writer in "A Passage to India." The invasion of such countries as India, Egypt and Africa "largely for their development of the colored man" is largely a figment of British officialdom. These countries and the native races have been exploited in the interest of British trade and commerce. Their development has been an incidental byproduct, unintended and even unwelcomed, as in British South Africa. Nevertheless, the former governor enunciated a living truth, when he added: "The white man must no longer dominate the colored man even for his own good." According to the Pittsburgh Courts, Alderman Robert H. Logan, who was defeated for renomination in the Republican primaries by the opposition of certain ward leaders, will get independent support at the election in November. It said: The colored people of Pittsburgh feel that the Independents have declared themselves for fair play. 'Colored people are not ingrates. If the Independents are acting sincerely in their offer, to help Logan, they have played the wisest card this city has seen for many moons. The Independents will get almost every colored vote in every section of Pittsburgh in return for their assistance to Logan in the Fifth Ward. Colored people will help those who help them. They are powerless when standing or acting alone, but they are a mighty power when get mixed by supporting Logan. They will in actual support and votes from any other political alliance; they will have a nucleus for future efforts If Logan fails, they will be accused of double-dealing, and they will die abnormally, so far as colored people are concerned. We shall see what we see. This is another evidence of the spirit of independence born among Negro voters and their intention to use the ballot to further their own interests, within party lines or without as occasion may demand. A Baltimore hold-up man in staging a bank robbery adopted a device practised more or less successfully by white criminals further South, blackening his face so he might be mistaken for a Negro. The Baltimore Herald-Commonwealth related how after shooting the bank teller, one of the robbers was shot by a police sergeant, as follows: The bandit, with his face masked in stove polish, stood at the head of a flight of stairs and fire dwarf times from guns in both hands, Dochler said. Koch fired once. The bullet penetrated the temples and the bandit fell. A second bandit, who had been in the room behind, escaped, Koch said. They carried the man to Colonial Hospital, where, he died. Bank employees, however, said positively he was one of the bandits. But for this exposure, the robbery would have been charged to "Negro Work Of The Interracial Commission In the South Work Of The Interracial Commission In the South INTERRACIAL COMMISSION COMMISSION ON INTERRACIAL COOPERATION 409 Palmer Building Atlanta, Ga., October 9, 1925 Editor of The New York Age In The New York Age of Saturday, October 10, is an editorial discussing the reception which southern cities have given certain large Negro organizations within the last year. This is part of a considerable discussion that has been going on, particularly in the context of the memorial of Elks at Richmond. There seems to have been great surprise on the part of the visiting delegates at the interest the community took in their visitors I wish it were possible for the people who enjoyed this hospitality in Richmond to know that nearly a year before the Elks came, the matter o' their coming was discussed in the State Interracial Committee, in session at Richmond. Mrs. Ora Stokes, the wife of the pastor of the leading Negro Baptist Church in Richmond, called the attention of the State Committee to the coming of this convention. After full discussion, the State Committee requested its individual members, as well as its secretary, to attend the reception of the city for the proper reception of this important convention. Quietly for nearly nine months this preparation went on with newspapers, city officials, etc. Mr. Miles, our secretary for Virginia was in Richmond several days before the convention and every hour while the delegates were in town. He worked night and day with the newspapers, city governments, and others who could help in making the convention a success. I had daily reports from him as to what was going on. This is an illustration of the sort of think the Interracial Commission is trying to do. We have felt that it The missionary secretary emphasized the warning uttered by the former governor and said that no one could look over the world today without realizing the deep and growing antagonism between the races. He did not hesitate to ascribe much of this to the rivalry for markets and for access to raw materials. And, he might have added, the ruthless exploitation of colored races to swell the profits of white investors, regardless of the suffering produced among the former. The exclusion of immigration from parts of the British dominions and from the United States was also regarded as having produced a tension in Oriental countries. It is well that these problems of race antagonisms should be brought before a British church congress. The churches of America also have to find a solution to them, based upon justice and equality. Bandits" in big newspaper headlines. The decision of the county superintendent of Seminole county that the Negro school shall be designated as the separate school, when that race is in the majority, is to be contested, in the courts. The Oklahoma City Black Dispatch in discussing the matter said: All citizens of color in Oklahoma understand and know that when the white man framed this tangled maze of inconsistency called the School Laws of Oklahoma, he purposely intended to tea the black man on the outside of things. That is why he designated what he calls the "District School" and the "Separate School." The "District school" is maintained by a tax on all of the people, from an assessment and levy running as high in some independent districts as fourteen and fifteen mills. In Muskogee County for instance, the assessment and levy for white schools run as high as 14.8 mills, while the assessment for the separate schools only 1.7 mills. The injustice of such an apportionment is readily seen when it is pointed out that there are 6,499 white children in this Muskogee district and 2,279 colored children. In only few districts in Oklahoma, the Negro children out-number the whites, and in all such instances, the white children under the provisions of the Oklahoma Statutes, attend the separate school. Evidently this county superintendent thinks that when the intricate and discriminatory school law works to the advantage of Negroes, it is to be disregarded. Such violation' should be contested, as is being done in this case. In an article by Dr. Francis W. Shepardson, secretary of the Julius Rosenwald Fund, published in the Wisconsin Enterprise-Blade, the aid given to rural education in the South through this fund was set forth as follows: Rosenwald schools in southern United States now number 3940. They are rural schools for Negroes. They have been constructed on a co-operative plan, with a half dozen contributing factors. They have a total value of $12,400,000. A general summary shows that since the movement began in 1914 under the stimulus of aid from the Julius Rosenwald Fund now totaling $2,299,000, there have been 2940 buildings erected with a teacher capacity of 7404 and a pupil was better to work behind the scenes and not rush before the public to claim credit for everything of this sort. It would, however, be of great value to our work if the Negro leaders could know that the Commission had some specific part in helping to create the atmosphere which would make such meetings possible. The Negro leaders we are doing tends more and more to make such instances possible, and whenever we have advanced notice we always make a particular effort to see that the community is adequately prepared to do the right thing. The editorial in The New York Age suggests that the treatment received by these Conventions in the South was a surprise to those attending them because the Conventions were benefit to the community where they meet. This we most accurately believe. The South more than anything else needs to know the facts regarding Negro achievements and Negro organizations. Actual contacts between southern communities and this aspect of Negro life is a valuable contribution to the adjustment nad improvement of racial attitudes. Yours sincerely, WILL, W. ALEXANDER This Outbreak (Macon, Ga., Daily Telegraph) In Georgia, a band of determined, bold men, made a raid upon the institution where we house our insane people took a crazy Negro out and lynched him for a crime for which he was not responsible under our laws—a crime that appears to be without light of investigation, a crime of negligence. The Negro was chained to a tree and beaten to death with pick handles. The young woman who surrendered her life to the Negro's dementor, would have been the last person to have wanted any such retribution to come to her murderer. The nobility of her character led her to turn side from the plasterer paths of the With this week's issue of The Age, C. Edward Hops of Plainfield, N. J., begins his thirteenth year as representative of this paper. He has made a splendid record and the Age congratulates him upon his success, taking his opportunity to express appreciation of the faithful and consistent effort he has put forth. The past year's work was handicapped by a serious illness, but through it all Mr. Epps continued his work and maintained his weekly correspondence. capacity of 333.180. The public funds, including Santa county, and district, have provided most $7,000,000, these allotments making 56 per cent of the entire outlay. The Negroes have been most generous contributing nearly $7,200,000 of the total raised. The remainder has come from gifts of white neighbors and friends, or from the General Education Board, which has made occasional grants toward the equipment of the larger schools. The exact figures show the amount at $122,510,101 provided below: From public funds $8,828,978 Negroes $6,633,010, from the Ju- Rosenwald Fund $2,191,983, from whites in addition to amounts voted from public funds, $599,219. The large amount of money raised by the race itself is a gratifying showing of self-help in the matter of education. Writing in the Jersey City Times at the request of Newark business man a correspondent said: Last Saturday and Sunday were Jewish Holidays, colored grocery stores dared a very profitable business those two days mostly from people of our race. Why is it we cannot patronize and support them all the time? Not just three days in the year, but all of the year. We are the only race that don't believe in trading with one another except in a few cases. Of course there are a few exceptions among us. If we all would pull together a little bit more, we would be a powerful race. I will admit that a lot of our people in business do not carry a complete list of the kind of business they are in. Try them, support them. If you do, who will? There are at least between sixty and seventy thousand Negroes in Newark What can they boast of as a big enterprise? Nothing. Why? Because we do not patronize each other. If you patronize the small places, they will grow to be strong and healthy; if they are undernourished, they will die out. Let all pull together and patronize one as other. The same conditions apply to the Harlem section where there is a population of two hundred thousand Negroes and retail business of all kinds is inadequately represented. To be sure, there are pioneers, who need and deserve support of the masses. Prohibition does not appear to be enforced any better in the West than it is in the East, if we are to credit as Iowa university professor who charged that bootleggers were trafficking among high school boys and girls. The Du Moines Bystander said: An investigation has been started by Mr. Jenny, superintendent of pizzeria safety and Mr. Steeper, principal of West High School. Both men have the problem at heart but nothing in need of their efforts. Bootleggers want their customers to bit more carefully—and of course the students—it is not customary—it is not added to squealing even on bootleggers. This whole system of handling prohibition is a joke and we had a well look for some other method of regulating it. The Bystander is absolutely opposed to illegal liquor believes the Volstead Act shows forced along with all other laws that the old saloon must not be regulated again, but refuses to be killed agreeing with those parrots who don't believe Prof Carson what he is talking about. The chief results of probation have been to increase the price the quality of liquor, entitlement to bootleggers and grafters, and to a large part of the community. nursing profession to take among the demented Cera- her broad human sympathy not have wished that any grace come to the prop State and to the institu- she served, as has come crime. We have not yet emergence of barbarianism, it comes out of these crime other crimes in which man is not owned hands, the swift and moment that should come really claim to be civilized the veneer of civilization coating of culture and the crimes against society these crimes against society the primal instincts of the the savage NOTICE TO AGENT All news and correct for The Age must be by Tuesday evening or publication. All items Wednesday will not be ed until the following Twenty newsboys wanted to sell The New York Age. Good opportunity. Call at The Age office—230 West 135th Street—Thursday or Friday morning. The pastor preached to a very preative congregation last Sunday the theme was "Serving T ers." It was handled in a very ima service more hourly and shall the pastor, and church members in particular in Congregations Night October 19, at our alt- er church, Mother Zion. We are also that a large delegation be received Rev George Hinton of Co- mputer master of ceremonies, and the Rev Garner will preach. Later the same group will be at Mt. Qil- ter church, where Rev. Prector will preach. We are now making preparations for the tall fair. We have made this year in that the arrangements are in the hands of the staff. We are expecting all the hers to rally as one. We club. Club. Mondays. We circle. and Fridays is open to the ten of all denominations. The you are from 3 to 5 p.m. M. N. 8. The Sunday school superi- nder is in charge. Boy Scout meeting every Friday at 7:30. Last Wednesday all girls on the boys had a roller skating portion on 19th street in front of the bush. All expressed themselves as girls had a fine time. Help the boys be supporting them. Send your boy be one of them. The Club meets every Friday at 7:30. All girls have the ages of 14 and 18 are eligible for the membership. The program for the year is ready and a success year is assured. All girls of the above ages are invited to join. Miss Her恩arner, the director of girls activities of the church, is very enthusiastic in the work and is anxious to cause the enrollment. Send your girls. The Y. P. S. C. E. has planned a man-made party for the night of October 30 Miss Nettie Mays, the president, has taken things in has and is encouraging for her to undertake society. meeting every Wednesday helpful service is assured St. James Pres. Church The sermon of the morning by Mr. William Lloyd Imes was based upon the theme, "God's Discipline, with the text from Isaiah 49:12, he made me a polished shaft. Through choice, through the power of faith and through sacrifice, the礼教 of Christ for the human soul is needed. His experience," the speaker said, is not only a matter of an- ticipation, but it is a challenge for you today who look forward to the use of usefulness, and truth. He was engaged in the second ser- ment in a series on the Psalms was chained, "The Psalm of Pardon." Sunday, October 18 the sermon names will be "The Daniels of To- dow" and "The Psalm of Pilgrimage" - Psalm 84). The church was represented in the African American Presbyterian Council Victoria Hall, October 8 by the Elder H. Elder, and the Elder H. E. Williams, and they all re- splendid meeting week the installation services the new pastor will be held in a as follows: October 14, ser- prayer; October 15, service of initiation; October 16, service of ship and all members and are most welcome to come each evening at 8 o'clock. St. James Forrester meets Sun- tember 18 at 4 p.m. Mrs. Melcoed Bethune, special Let everyone hear her mes- sion Church School, Brotherhood of Christian Endeavor meet each Sunday at appointed hours, and well- all ages, interests and talents. Mother Zion Church Sunday marked the beginning fourth week of the dedicatorial of the New Mother A. M. E. church. Three services were of a large congregation wor- ldeach. ...? ... ointed juniors assembled in ard room to hear their morn- on preached by Nelson Wil- 100 a.m. At the close of use four were received into W. J. Walls was the preach- in auditorium at 1 a.m. m was both informing and eighteen persons were re- the church at this service m, baptism and holy were administered One adult were baptized. C. Clement was the over 500 persons com- fer of visiting clergymen of this service, among Wilson C. C. Alleye, of Norfolk Virginia, Dr. of Portland, Maine; Rev. of New Rochelle, Rev. Sparkill, and Rev. L. Hester, New Jersey Bishop B. G. Shaw an annual sermon to the honenevient organization church that has grown membership of forty-five to tied and sixty-seven in the seven months They left a $335.91 Mrs. Virginia president. local services continue. served every day from dinner room. Refuge Church of Apotheosis Earth; sermon Pentecost; music; Re- Christ Choir Mature Grand Lodge of New York, and Eureka Order of Eastern W. Grand Master Joseph John, music, Mother L. Jamesman, Epworth W. Wesleyan Church; Dr. R. M. Bolden; Dr. C. H. Andrew, presiding, and D. Jay L. Thibodeau,卿, H. Emmanuel cloison. N. Next Sunday, 6 a.m., early morning, prayer meeting, 11 a.m., sermon by Bishop D. E. W. Jones, 3:30 p.m. (Professional aid, and Worship Fred RI Moore, presiding, Principal speaker, Dr. Robert Rusa, Moton, principal, Dr. Taukeager Institute, Ala. Other prominent citizens, to speak are: Frank D. Waterman, Col. William Hayward, Charles S. Vytum, Iam Hayward, Charles S. Vytum, Little, Col. William A. Taylor, David B. Costuma, 8 p.m., sermon by Rev. W. H. Daxenport. The following offerings have been made by the Slater Church and Organizations during the past week: October 5, *Knights of Pythias*, $102.70; *Little Mt. Zion, Shiloh and National Baptist Churches*, $130; *Episcopalian Night*, $115.50; *B. Bethel A. M. E. Church*, $403.85; *W. Valker Church*, $403.85; *The sticks, Edith G. Jr.* $299.10; *street, Jesse Godden*, 163 West-14st street; *Priscilla Wynn*, 178 West-137th street; *Lillian Whittingham, Sea View Hospital; Amelia Burroughs, Harlem Hospital; Mary Grey, Harlem Hospital; Arthur Pope, 406 St. Nicholas avenue. Mt. Calvary Methodist Church The services at Mt Calvary Church were carried on in the usual way with good attendance at all services. At the morning service Dr. Coggin taught us the light of the world' John 9:5. An courageing and timely subject show the benefits of following that Great Light which only can give guidance, strength and help at all times. The evening topic was chosen from Matthew, 19:16 that shall I do to inhale the light like? The theme was the test of stewardship in surrendering our lives to Christ for the upbuilding of His kingdom. - Rendall Memorial Church Sunday was communion day at Rendall, Rev. Wm. R. Lawton, romer-pastor, was present at the morning service and spoke forcibly on the "Battlefields" in the life of Christ. Dr. Lawton also assisted in administering the Holy Communion. The Sunday school at 1 o'clock was in session and showed a marked increase in attendance. Six new members joined. Come out and help us make the Sunday school what it can and ought to be in this community. At 7 o'clock p. m. the Christian Endeavor Society was held. Attendance good. Topic for next Sunday, is expected of a Christian citizen? The minister Rev. J. W. Manoney, spoke on "the worth while life" found in Psalms 37:18. The interest manifested at both services was noticeably keen, and the attendance gratifying. On October 27 a "Fashion Show" depicting styles from 1875 to 1925 will be given by the ladies of the church and on October 29 a sacred canata, entitled "The Great White Willow" will be exhibited at the prices of the Willing, Workers Club, Merrill Daniels will be the soloist for next Sunday morning. Rush Memorial Church The Children's Church convened at the usual hour Sunday morning with a goodly number present. Dr. Oliver preached to them. At 11, o'clock, the congregation in the main auditorium heard an uplifting and educational sermon by Dr. Oliver, the pastor, on the "Palmistry of the Saints". Text: Deuteronomy 33.3, "All the saints are in Thy Hand." Great stress was laid on the significance of the Hand. Moses says that all the saints are in God's Hand. In olden days, the hand, as an organ of meditation or transference, as considered to be of great importance to be who will all or in need of spiritual life. The priest lays his hand on as a suggestion of revelation of God. Whatever there is in our hand, let us use it for the upbuilding of God's kingdom. Dedicate our hands to his service. In the evening, Bishop W J. Walls, of the 10th episcopal diocese, preached to a large congregation. His subject, "The Ruling Passion," was taken from text, Psalm 74. "One thing have I desired of the Lord, that will I seek after that I may dwell in the life, to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to inquire in His temple." Bishop Walls said in part, "Desire is the touchstone of character—the product of our ideal Man's heart is expressed in his passion. His ideal is either high or low. David's stick-to-it-iveness is a fair example by which we can all be governed. The devil tried to destroy David and the openness of our desire for the house of the Lord his desire from destruction. There is nothing worth while attained except by hard work, unity of purpose. A Lincoln would never have accomplished so much good had he not centered his heart and mind on one particular thing. To those who thought of the physical and spiritual strength is unfailing. We must work out our own salvation. Upon the Bishop's invitation, a soldier came forward and enlisted in Christ's Warfare. Rev. Adam Jackson led the congregation in prayer. He was joined by Dr V. H. Davenport of Charlotte, N. U. editor of the Star of Lion, our official church organ, will deliver the sermon. The public is cordially invited to come out and hear him. The fair begins October 19 to 23. A musical program will be rendered each night. The star to be being much more beautiful than last year. Prizes will be awarded in the three most beautiful At 3 p.m. next Sunday a special music will be render d by Brian Trilo. Salem M. E. Church The services at Salem on Sunday was divided between the Revs. Mullard Robinson and Hugh Houston, respectively. Dr. Robinson at 10:45, and Dr. Houston at 7:45. Both services were well attended, and twelve new members were added to the church roll. Where To Go To Church The Senior Epworth League, period at 6:30 was well represented, an unusually large congregation attended the service and the topic "His Play", was ably delivered. Too much cannot be said of the choir in the way of encouragement for the time and manner in which the young people are giving their time. The anniversary services will continue during the week, preaching every night. The class meeting will go on as usual. First Emmanuel Church At the 11 o'clock services; Sunday, Pastor Bolden preached, from the following tekti: 'Take, heed, therefore how we, hear, for whosoever hath, to him, shall be given, and whosoever hath which he seemeth to have', St. Luke 8:18. Theme: "Hearing" its meaning and value." Pastor Bolden said: Our Lord Jesus the Emmanuel. Warned. His apologies and disciples to give much thought and attention to the sense of heating. We get the impression that He stressed a biblical sense of bounty much more of the physical element of care as regards hearing, but because of the understanding and spirit- METHODOST EPISCOPAL PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL ST. LUKE'S BISCIPAL MISSION, 28 Edgence Avenue, corner 188th street the Rev. E. Elliot Judean, B. A. Vicar, 12 telephone lines, 12 church services, in the celebration of the Holy Communion; 11 a. m. Morning prayer and sessions; 3 p. m. Church school; 5 p. m.晨昏 song; 5 p. m. Mass; 5 p. m. the celebration of the month. Choral celebration of the Holy Communion. The Vicar can be found in all office from 2 a. m. and from 5 16 7 p. m. except Monday. YONKERS MEMORIAL A. M. ZION CHURCH, 42 Living room, 12 a. m. service; 12 a. m. and from 5 16 7 p. m. accept Monday. YONKERS MEMORIAL A. M. ZION CHURCH, 42 Living room, 12 a. m. service; 12 a. m. and from 5 16 7 p. m. accept Monday. YONKERS MEMORIAL A. M. ZION CHURCH, 42 Living room, 12 a. m. service; 12 a. m. and from 5 16 7 p. m. accept Monday. various books that come from different gospels and the petitions from the time of Jesus. The one that the spirit of God? The person that all attention has assigned unto Jesus' little attention to articulate words and audible sounds around the finds, dividing and their energy radiating from such words and sounds. That illuminated, you stand, stands, upon the rock of love and truth of what revealed in Jesus Christ, our Lord, the Emperor, when he has heard the words of God and knows that He is clothed in His own mind and soul as a dynamic presence. This Presence becomes the grace that attires the emotion, fires the passions, charges the whole being, and sweeps the person on to, duty and service. This kind of a person, the Christy Spirit, the Holy Ghost, dwells in. Hence walking upon the earth daily is God the "Father, God the Son, Gloil the Holy Ghost. Jesus our Lord the Emmanuel made known a great truth to His disciples and to the world of humanity, when He not only lifted Himself, out of the category of His physical and human relationships based upon physical kindred, when He denied the claims that His mother and brettren were standing without desiring to see Him; but declared a higher and a truer kindred, when He said: "My mother and brettren are these which hear the word of God and do it." This truth of our Lord's transference of the truth of ourselves class distinctions, clanish groups, family ties, and religious sect interest. This truth is above the human understanding, relation and distinction of sex. For the kindred of our Lord Jesus the Emmanuel are sexless. When persons have come into the understanding of the truth of themselves thought they are human after they have been regenerated by the Holy Spirit, they discover that they are new creatures with a spiritual consciousness that enfolds the reality of themselves under the light and guidance of their Father BETHEL A. M. E. CHURCH, 52-60 W. 1345 N. 12th St. Herbert, W. 1345 帕姆兰, W. 1345 service: Prayer meeting 6:45. Presche 10:45. Sabbath School, 9 a.m. m.: A. C. E. League, n. m. n. creening service, 7:45. Meetings for Sunday Class meetings Friday nights; Love Feast last Friday night. PRESBYTERIAN RENDALL MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. 122 Wast 129th St. Rev. J. W. M. MAHONEY, Minister, Sunday service 11 sunday. 12 p.m. Sunday school. 12 p.m. Christian Endorse; 8 p.m. Every Wednesday 8 p.m. Prayer service. All are cordially invited. 59-81 West 129th Street—Rew. Wm. Lloyd Imes, M. A. Patr.—Sunday. 11 a.m. sermon; 8 p.m. Graded Sunday School; 8 p.m. First Sunday School. Endorse; 8 p.m. Sermon. Wednesday Evening at 8 mid-week. Hour of Prayer; 8 p.m. Boy's Athletic Association. 8 p.m. First Sunday. 8 p.m. First Sunday. Manse Phone. Bradhurst 704.5 Church. Bradhurst 3336 CONGRFOATIONAL OBACE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rey, A. 5 p.m.; GARNER, p.m.; Sunday, sunday-school, 9.45 a.m.; morning service, 11 p.m.; meeting at 6 p.m.; Fréaching at 8 p.m. Wednesday Church Night, 8.15 p. m.; other services in Bulletin SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST HARLEM SECOND SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH, 106.00 w. W. 127th Street, Saturday, 106.00 w. Bible prayer meeting, Saturday, 106.00 w. Bible study, 9:30 a.m. Sabbath school; 3:00 p.m. Sunday, 4:30 p.m. Young men's Sunday, 4:30 p.m. Men's Preschool, L. C. STRACIAN, Pastor. AFRICAN ORTHODOX CHURCHES OF NEW YORK CITY, Sunday services 11:30 a.m. Church of the Good Shepherd, 224 West 135th street, Aitchbishop McGuire, and Rev Glastonbury Nurse. (2) St. Joseph's Church, 135th street, Aitchbishop McGuire, and Rev Fred Krimson and Horace C. Hernd. (3) St. Mary's Church, 165 West 131st street, Canon's Church, 135th street, St. Barnabas' Church, 135th street, Aitchbishop Season Philips and Rev. Raphil Hawkus. (5) St. Anthony's Church, 218 West 132nd street, All Saints Church, 218 West 132nd street, All Saints Church, 30 West 131st street, Rev. Cyril O. Shepard. UROOKLYN NAZARNEE CONG. CHURCH (Institutional) Herkimer St. and Iroy Ave. Dr., Jr. University, 11 a.m., Bible School, 9 a.m., Sunday, preaching 1 a.m., Bible School, 9 a.m., Young People's Congregations, 1 a.m., mid week Sunday, congregation, 0 a.m., Scouts, Bogs, Memedy Sunday, 1 a.m., Open church, restaura office hours 10 to 12 a.m., and 2 to 4 a.m., telephone Decatur St., and 2 to 4 a.m., telephone Brooklyn, and take Subway to Stuyvesant St., Brooklyn, and take Subway to Fulton St., or surface cars for Iroy Avenue, within one block of church. God unto the wristless of eternity. They are sensible that they are eternity. They are in a candle stick of human bodies in a darkened world of humanity whose light is not to be hid under a bishop, not a bed, but to show that it will give light to those who come into the house of human activity, so that they may see their way to the gate that leads to life everlasting. Heat the warning of our Lord Jesus, the Emmanuel, takes care therefore how we fear, for whowhose hath to him shall be given, and whowhose hath not from him shall be given even that which he seemeth to have? Applyive thoughts constantly and daily to your lives and the kingdom of God will become to you until the recording to his will will be added to you. At a close of the morning service Pastor Bolden christened the baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Brown. Sunday school was opened at 2 p.m. by the secretary, Miss Dorothy Small. At the close of the lesson Pastor Bolden gave the children a wonderful review of the lesson. He also gave the prizes to the children who brought new schools to the school and also to the children who attended the morning service. At 8 p. m., Pastor Bolden continued his discourse of the morning service to a very attentive group. The dinner was served during the day by the members of the C. F. M. Circle. Monday, evening at the close of a short Bible study the Waterman Mayoralty Club held a meeting. The speakers were Oscar Waters. Charles Novello, ex-Governor Whitman, Judge Nevins, Theodore Smith, candidate for Alderman of the. 21st Assembly District, ex-Alderman George Harris, with closing remarks by Julius Watson and Rev. Rehard. M. Bolden. Siloam Presbyterian Church The services at the morning hour of worship at Siloam were in commemoration of Columbus Day. Rev. George Shippen Stark, pastor, spoke on "The Adventures of Faith" by taking his text from Hebrews 11:14. The pastor stressed very pointedly: that the world owes everything to the adventurer, citing as example many explorers and inventors, though often ridiculed and scorned, dying in poverty, in disgrace, in prison, the results of their adventures of faith the world enjoys today. The doubter, the one who hesitates, the one who disbelieves, nieces get anywhere or gives anything to the world. Faith adds to one's capital with in material and spiritual. Birth, marriage and death, which is a transition, to oneness and eternal life, are all adventures faith. Christ seeks to have man have a universal mind. It is in this world that we should have within the mind of Christ. The man who knows within his heart and soul Jesus Christ, shows by his daily actions that spirit of Christ. He bears no malice, no hatred, no ill-will towards his brother. A tenor solo was beautifully rendered with real spirit by Penman Lovinggood at this service, who sang "If with all your hearts" from "Elijah" by Mendelsohn. The following persons were visitors at the morning hour of worship. R. Reid, K. Parker, Mrs. Pearce, Mrs. Wright, Mrs. Marie Franklin. The Bible school met at 1:15 p. m. The attendance in all the departments is increasing and each Sunday finds new workers coming into the school. The outlook is promising and encouraging for one of the most successful pears in the life of the school. The pastor preached again at the evening hour of worship. The appeal of the pastor for persons who would give one hour or service and work for the Master has met with heartening response. Each week finds some person offering their service to be used where most needed. The Cadman service over the rai to a felicitous occasion on Sunday morning at the Parish House, Soilam has the honor of being the first church in our group in Brooklyn to have a radio for such purposes. The service is open to the community. A goodly representation from our church attended the Afro-American Presbyterian Council held in Atlantic City last week. Newman Memorial Church Rev. T. W. Cooper preached a soul stirring sermon to a fair congregation at Newman Memorial M. E. Church at 11 a.m., m. Sunday, October 11, 1925. He chose as his subject, "The Value of Kindness" The text was taken from Providence 3.3. "Let not Mercy and Truth forsake thee, bind them about thy vest, write upon the table of thine heart" The Sunday school assembled at 1 O'clock at which time the superintendent Rebecca Williams, conducted an interesting discussion of the lesson for the day. At 7:30 p. m. Mrs. Carrie Harrison, president of the Epworth League, began the fall and winter session. Rev. Cooper delivered an interesting stereoticon lecture. At 8 15, a descriptive song service was conducted by Rev Cooper, assisted by the chore. Everyone present seemed to enjoy this diversion from the regular preaching service and entered heartily into it, and joined, with the chore as they sang the old gospel songs that we seldom hear now. The service started with the singing of "Shall we gather at the river?" Mrs. Elmita Weeks led in the singing "The Shiming Shore" in its well with my Soul. Each number was announced a short hour of the occasion that inspired the hymn was reiterated by Rev Cooper. The congregation then rose and sang heartily "Praise God from whom all blessing flow." Mrs. Estelle Cooper then led in singing "The Sweet bye and bye." The last number was the singing of "Rock of Ages," led by Mrs. L. Hodge. Sunday. October 18, will mark the beginning of the 25th anniversary celebration. At 3:30 p.m., the services will be conducted by Rev H H Proctor and clergy of Nazarene Congregational Church. There will be services every evening following. Bridge Street A. M. E. Church the pastor, Dr. Edwar. L, Tytler, delivered a soul stirring discourse from the subject, "The Man and Sun." It seemed to grip the very hearts of the large congregation, and there were many audible expressions of the ef- fect of the serpent. The sea war L. John 2: 1 and 5. My life children the thief. What thief is a bounty that we in not. And if any man said we have an 600cask with the Father, Jesus Christ, the Lightcaster. And he is the progratification for our sins, and not for our sins, but also for the sins of the whole world." Dr. Tyler emphasized the life of gays and how Christ assured human form in order that he could better appreciate our trials and temptations. He showed the way of pardon, which is to repent and make open confession, for to rightly know. God we must keep his commandments. He showed the way of pardon which is to repent and make open confession, for to rightly know. God we must keep his commandments. Dr. Tyler concluded with a beautiful word picture of God's love for faith and his willingness to forgive us of our sins. Holy communion was served at conclusion of the session. The Sunday school met in the afternoon, and there was an unusually large attendance. The Allen League met at the usual hour. The president, Mrs. Augusta Duckett, presided. She has been able to infuse new life into the organization, and the attendance and interest is increasing. It was announced that Dr. Tyler will give a series of five lectures, to the League, commencing on Wednesday night, October 14. At the evening services Dr. J. C. Robinson, editor of the A. M. E. Review, was the speaker; Prior to his sermon he paid a high tribute to Dr. Tyler as being one of the best trained men in the A. M. E. Connection, and also told how several bishops had intreated him to give up his work at the church. He elicited the offers. Editor Robinson spoke on "The Romance of Faith." The text was St. Matthew 14.20. In a very vivid manner he depicted the scene of the disciples. In the storm and the sudden appearance of Jesus. He stressed the point that we are now living in the most exciting and most thrilling age of man, and the faith that Peter had, we in this day and time must have the same or else we will perish when we take our eyes of Jesus. At the close of the sermon the following joined the church: Mrs. Lorenta Sheffield, 95 80th street; and Miss Ruth Cromer, 120 Reims street. Communion was served again in order that those who were unable to be present at the morning services would be served. The total for the day was $419. Next Sunday morning the stewards and stewardesses will be presented to the church. The instalments for the rally will be received, and on the following Sunday also. The pastor and congregation are invited to St. Mark's A. M. E. Church, Elmhurst, L. I., Sunday October 18, at 3 p.m. The Rev. James Morning is pastor of the church on October 28 they will be at Mt. Lebanon Baptist Church of which the Rev. Mr. Haptian is pastor. On the 29th, 30 Allen A. M. E. Church, of which Mr. Coverdale is pastor, and on the fourth Sunday, they will be the guests of Union Bethel Church, of which the Rev. C. P. Cole is pastor. The Rev. Mr. Smiley, the singing evangelist, will be the attraction at the evening services October 18 at Beaumont Street Church he has been invited to. Dr. Smiley has been heralded as a great singer and a great preacher. The Stewardesses will serve the dinner in the Church House, Sunday afternoon October 18. Those attending the services at Fleet Street Church Sunday, particularly those whose hearts have been touched by God, experienced a peculiar satisfaction in having the pastor, Dr W. C Brown, discuss the text, "Thou are weighed in the balance and found wanting," using as the theme, "Underweight." Visitors on the platform at this service were Rev John T Battle, Portland, Ore., and Dr Roberson. At the usual Sunday school hour, "Decision Day" was observed. The procession formed in the Sunday school rogm and marched to the main auditorium of the church, procession being led by the school chor. The sermon on this occasion was preached by Dr. W. O. Carrington, editor of the "Quarterly Review", of the A M F. Z - Church, New Rochelle, N. Y Dr. Carrington's subject: "The man who would not accept the invitation," was developed and expressed as only Dr. Carrington, one of Zion's ablest ministers, could do. TRENTON SCHOOL FOR DESIGNING AND DRESSMAKING, Inc. $1 MONTGOMERY PLACE, TRENTON, N. J. A Nice Three-Story Brick Building with all improvements for Students Course completed in Four Weeks Diplomas Given Earlsfield School THE material contrast between the structures with which he (Booker T. Washington) began and the present great, ample and commodious plant (is a university) and the present great, ample and commodious about it, his Wacolleyacy and encouraging as this is, it is at, is an imperfect master of Dr. T. Washington's work and achievement. The education and annual turning out-of two or three of his students, most commendable and helpful, themselves and their families of it course, must commendable and helpful, and what he did and sought to do. His purpose was to radiate from a center like Tuskegee the light he has honestly living truths which must form the basis of his life and the race.—WILLIAM HOWARD SAFT, Chief Justice United States Supreme Court. Founded by BOOKER T. WASHINGTON Offers Excellent Opportunities to Young Men and Women to Secure an Excellent Literary and Normal Course and a Course in Mechanical Industries, Women's Industries or Agriculture Fleet St. Memorial A. M. E. Zion Church at the celebration of the sermon for Christ and through the school family to the church. At 8 p. m., Rev. Brown preached from the subject, Jeans, attitude to ward the Pharisee. "On Monday night, October 19, the Dramatic Entertainment Company of Westbury, Long Island, will present the "Widow's Convention, a musical recital and comedy at this church." Nazarene Cong. Church Rev Henry Hugh Procter preached at the morning hour, in continue allons of the secret of sermons, in the Footsteps of Paul, taking up an experience of the great apostle in Albens. Touching upon the auditorium, the audience and, the message, he gave a graphic picture of the great speech of Paul on Mars Hill, speaking incidentally of his own experiences there. At an earlier morning hour he gave the address, before the Trinity Bible Class at Staten Island. Before an audience that packed the large auditorium with men only he made a moving plea for cooperation between the race. At the evening he gave a great ovation. At the evening hour Miss Sophie Boaz, who is making an inference of the country in behalf of Fisk, spoke to the young people at their social hour, making a plea for each one to decide upon some useful career. At the closing service of the day there was a mass meeting against the growing spirit of abolition in O. D. Williams secretary of the local branch of the N. A. C. P. spoke of the alleged discrimination practiced at a Fulton street theatre. He was followed in a strong address by Robert W. Bagnall, who dealt with the matter from a national point of view in an address of rare comprehensiveness and discrimination. Samuel Brown spoke of the trials he had gone through in the maintenance of his residence in the Borough of Richmond. Among the visitors present during the day were: Miss Alice J. Palmus, of Boston, who sang at the morning hour; J. P. Drake, Montgomery, Ala.; G. D. Brantley, Columbia University; Mrs. C. W. Ware, Cambridge, Mass.; Mrs. Harriet Archung, Beverly, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. Satat C. Mukerij, Calcutta, India, who gave a joint engagement in the church Thursday evening. Mrs. Mary Johnson, 71, was buried from her late residence, 51st street and Church avenue, Wednesday afternoon, in the presence of a large course of friends and relatives. Mildred, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pogue, was baptized by the pastor at the Sunday morning service. The director concludes his series of service "In the morning of Paul" Sunday, speaking at the morning hour on Corinth and at the evening time Rome. THE SOUTHERN DYNASTY MEN "BLACK TO WHITE" "CLASS TO CASTE" Who refuse to have common soul, will return to savage —Dumas— NEWPORT NEWS, VA 3BDQ The New Negro Year Book FOR 1925-1926 An Old Year Book Does Not Keep You Up To Date Consult The 500 Pages This New Edition The Latest Information Buy A Copy—Agents Wanted Price: Paper Cover, $1.00; Board Cover, $1.50 NEGRO YEAR BOOK COMPANY Tuskegee Institute, Alabama Oct10-6t and" ing School and Orphanage Pines, N. C. PRINCIPAL Oct.3-3m DRESSMAKING, Inc. BACK TRENTON, M. J. with all improvements, for Students Diplomas Given MRS. AGNES L. KEMP, Principal structures with which he (Booster T. Wash- tat, ample and commodious plant) is su- lance man to bring about. But satisfactory out an imperfect measure of Dr. Wash- tat and annual turning out of two or three useful to themselves and their families but the only one opportunity of pose was to radiate from a teacher like living truths which must form the basis of WILLIAM HOWARD TAPT. Chal THE NEZON RADIO CLUB According to an announcement from Babe Culain, Newark boxing promoter, the only ring appearance of Harry Wills before he meets Jack Dempsey for the heavyweight title will be made at the Newark Armory on October 26. The Newark promoter had a verbal agreement, with Paddy Mullin, Walls manager, that the colored champion would fight for him this year. The match has been held up all summer waiting for a suitable opponent. Floyd Johnson of Tows, one time heavyweight contender, has been selected as the opponent. Johnson has been knocked out by Luis Rippo, Jesse Willard, and other second rate white boxers, but according to reports he has been staging a comeback on the Pacific Coast, having won his last nine bouts. He is training on his Washington ranch with two husky lumber-locks as sparring partners. He writes that he now weighs 208 pounds, and is as hard as nails. If Johnson has improved as he says he has, the bout will be better than it looks to be from the record. At least it will be a good workout for the If Johnson has improved as he says he has, the bout will be better than it looks to be from the record. At least it will be a good workout for the colored champion. JOHN LESTER JOHNSON SCORES EASY VICTORY OVER RAY BENNETT John Lester Johnson, heavyweight boxer, made a good start toward a comeback in one of the feature bouts at the Commonwealth Sport Club Saturday night, October 10. He flattened Ray Bennett of Brooklyn with the second of their scheduled two bout. Bennett substituted for Carl Carter of Cuba, and made a very poor opponent although 14 pounds heavier than Johnson. Evidently he had heard of John Lester's rough tactics of a few years ago, for he started on a stough he was fighting a tiger instead of a man. He made one pass, and then went on to clinch. John Lester quickly stumped himself, and began a murderous attack on Bennett's stomach. In a few seconds he shifted his attack to Bennett's head and the big fellow went down from a shower of rights and lefts to the nose and chin. He took the count of nine and was knocked down twice more before the round ended. The last time, the bell ridden him from being counted out. When he was gone, the ball was still dazed from the effects of his beating in the first and all Johnson had to do was land on his chin, which he promptly did. No excuse was given by the management for Carter's non-appearance. However, those who have seen the Cuban heavyweight are of the opinion that Johnson would have little to lose by bringing him a DeMave, recent conqueror of Johnson, Seems, would be the ideal opponent for Johnson at this time. DeMave is ambitions to build up a reputation and it would certainly increase, his following to have him knockout Johnson. On the other hand, if Johnson should be victorious, he would become a major opponent in the situation again. From a business point of view, this would be a great fight for the Commonwealth. The Street of Forgotten Men' at the Rsenaissance At the Renaissance Theatre, Thursday and Friday of this week, "A Fool And His Money" will be the attraction. This story has been adapted into a delightful screen presentation and is certain 't please all movie lovers. Saturday, Sunday and Monday, October 17, 18 and 19, the management has secured that strong, wid picture for Forgotten Men with Percy Marmont, the author of Mary Brian. Not since the days of "The Miracle Man" has there been an adaptation on the order of this picture and it is said that Percy Marmont has never shown to such advantage as he does in "The Street of Forgotten Men." This story is staged from life on the Bowery in the early 90's. It recalls many of the forgotten men and by-gone days when New York's world shone in all its glory. Over the years of life eventually to a happy climax, or is led in this picture and the interest is held until the end. Only the highest type pictures will be shown at the Renaissance at all times and in keeping with this policy the management has secured for early commencement. Other feature picture will be shown shortly are. D. W. Griffith's "Sally of the Sawdust," Gloria Swanson's "Coast of Polly," Norma Talmadge's "Graustark," Frank Lloyd's "The Jingles of Chance," Van Stroethi's "The Meyer Express," Von Stroethi's "Douglas Fairbanks" "Don Q." "Phantom of the Opera," and, in fact, all the big productions. The Ten Commandments' At the Lincoln Theatre Some books are read, and then thrown away. Some pictures are seen, and then forgotten. The life of an ordinary movie—the society drama or comedy is about two years. Classes of literature like "Hamlet" and Emerson's "Essay on Compensation" live throughout generations and are read again and again. "The Ten Commandments" has a theme of great importance as large and so elaborately produced that one of the small group of films which will never die. As a fine book can be read over and over again, so a picture like this can be looked at more than once without losing its flavor. DeMille's cinemasterpiece will be shown at the Lincoln Theatre next week for a run of seven days, at a popular scale of prizes. THEATRICAL JOTTINGS By POB SLATER. Miller and Lyes are at the Apollo Theatre, New York City. Moss and Frye are at the Temple Theatre, Detroit, Mich. Johnny Lee Long and Co. are at the Lincoln Theatre, New York City. Gaines Bros. are at Gordon's Olympia Theatre, Boston, Mass. Bill Robinson is at Proctor's Theatre, Albany and Troy, N. Y. Joe Sheftels Revue is at Pantages Theatre, Edmondton, Canada. Glenn and Jenkins are at Keith's Bushwick Theatre, Brooklyn, N. Y. Joyner and Foster are at the Strand Theatre, Stamford, Conn. Brooks and Powers are at Locw's State Theatre, New York City. Tabor and Green are at the Englewood Theatre, Chicago; Ill. Six Musical Byrons are at Pantages Theatre, Spokane, Wash Harris and Holly are at B. S. Moss' Jefferson Theatre, New York City. Forence Mills and Co. are at Keith's Theatre, Cleveland, Ohio. Four Chocolate Dandies are at the Rialto Theatre, Amsterdam, N. Y. Harry Bolden is at Pantages Theatre, Winnipeg, Canada. Buck and Bubbles are at Loew's Metropolit Theatre, Brooklyn, N. Y. Seymour and Jeanneette are at the Orpheum Theatre, Vancquer, B. C. Dixie Four are at the Colonial Theatre, Lancaster, Pa. Perrin and Covan are at the Lincoln Theatre, New York City. Bert Chadwick is at the Vaudeville Theatre, Bellingham, Wash. Carter and Cornish are at the Emery Theatre, Providence, R. I. Cooper and Thomas are at the Standard Theatre, Philadelphia, Pa. Mason and Zudora are at Pantages Theatre, Saskatoon, Canada. Rucker and Perrin are at Portchester, N. Y. Williams and Haynes are at the Majestic, Paterson, N. J. Arron and Kelly are at the Lyric Theatre, Bridgeport, Conn. Brown Skin Models are at the Lafayette Theatre, New York City. Seven-Eleven Co. is at the Gayety Theatre, Pittsburgh, Pa. Burns & Ford are playing out of the Sun offices, Splitting this week between Elyria and Norfolk, Ohio. Parson and Randall are at the Orpheum Theatre, Newark, N. J Lucky Sambo Co. is at the Capitol Theatre, Albany, N. Y. Rarin' To Go Co. is at the Lyric Theatre, Dayton, Ohio. Mamie Smith's Syncopated Revue is at the Howard Theatre, Washington, D. C. Philip "Gentleman" Giles featured with Harry Johnson is at the Stradford Theatre, Chicago. Hitt, Whitney and Tutt's Smarter Set (o) is at the Eumore Theatre, Pittsburgh, Pa Brooks Whirlwind Four are at the Empire Theatre, Toronto, Canada. RENAISSANCE THEATRE SEVENTH AVENUE AND 137th STREET Thursday, Friday, Oct. 15 - 16 Madge Bellemy and Wm. Haines In "A FOOL AND HIS MONEY" Sat., Sun. and Mon.----Oct. 17, 18 and 19 PERCY MARMONT in "The Street of Forgotten Men" THE DEXTRA MALE CHORUS First Subscription Concert AT SALEM M. E. CHURCH 7th Avenue and 129th St MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 23, 1925 At Eight-thirty Direct From ATLANTIC CITY Will Furnish The Music Red Hot Entertainment by Mabel White, Maude Woodson, Rosetta Shahka and Blondina, ably assisted by only singing and dancing Waiters in New York Special Attractions Entire Week Starting Royal Flashes To Play Philadelphia 5 Nov. 6 The Royal Flashes basketball team of the New York Colored Mission, 8 West 131st street, will meet the Philadelphia Flashes in the Waltz Dream Hall, Philadelphia, Friday evening, November 6. The Philadelphia will line up with Harris, Burke T. Parker, "Stretch" Yates, Johnson and "Stretch" Yates. It will be their first match on the road for this season. V. N. & I. L. Holds A. & T. College To Scoreless Tie Petersburg, Va.--Although ent-wedged fifteen pounds to a man, the Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute football team played the more experienced North Carolina A. and T. eleven to a scoreless tie on the local gridiron Saturday, October 3. Twice during the contest the visitors were within-scoring distance of the V. N. I. goal. On one occasion the game was saved by Baker, who made a 65 yard punt from behind his goal line. The ball went over Bell's head and rolled to A. and T's thirty yard line where it was downed by Tuner and Brown. Petersburg's only chance to score came in the second period when Baker attempted a drop from his forty yard line. The ball went wide by only a few inches. The game was marked by frequent penalties for off-side and rear clipping. colored baseball world today, in taking two straight games from the Kansas City Monarchs Thursday and Saturday, the batting Darbytaea ended the second colored world's series by completely outlasing their western opponents. The easterners won five out of six games. Robe Currie, star right hander, opticall Hilldale, to their fourth victory Thursday, October 8, 9, 9000 fans, the largest attendance of any game during the series, cheered the home team on to victory. The score was 2-1. Currie allowed seven hits and fainted four times, but his teammates gave him perfect support. The opposing pitcher, J. Bell, was latted out of the Dug in the fifth inning and Dean had to finish the game. George Carr's hounder, the first of the series, was responsible for one run and the other was made by MacKey off. Clint Thomas' double, the Monach's lone tally came in the sixth on the doubles by Allen and Moore. Phil Cockrell did the hurling for Hildale. In the final game, Bell was sent back, on the mound by Manager Mendez. In the series of 1924 the Moy Atlanta University Beats Knoxville Collège, 6-0 Atlanta, Ga—Atlanta University kept up its winning streak by defeating Kentuckyville College Saturday afternoon, October 10. The score was well. The boys of the home team were confident when the whistle blew for the kickoff. The Atlanta showed better form in this game than their first engagement; with the Atlanta line and backfield have been bolstered and all the weak spots eliminated. Her offensive has been perfected during the past week, and she has an array of backs that any coach would be nequd 'of handling. Knoxville put up a wonderful flight; its line held like a stone wall except in one instance when Stanley broke through for the gain that paved the way for McPherson to make the touchdown. Any line that can hold McPherson as Knoxville's did, only allowing him small gains, deserves credit. Ridgeway starred for the losers. McPherson, DeLome, Stanley and Jones were A. U's outstanding backs. Montgomery, Clay, Collum and Lamar starred on the line. Sam Cook's sheen able to get out and walk around to the C. V. B. A. Club. HILLDALE Hilldale ab r h o a e Briggs, rf. 4 0 1 1 0 0 Watfield, 2b 4 0 1 3 6 0 Marr, 1b 4 0 1 4 5 0 Marr, c 4 1 1 4 1 0 J. Johnson, 3b 3 0 0 1 4 0 Thomas, 1f 3 0 2 0 0 0 G. Johnson, cf. 3 0 0 3 0 0 Stevens ss 3 0 1 0 1 0 Currie p. G3 0 1 0 4 0 Johnston lf ..... 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 Allen 2b ..... 4 1 1 5 3 0 McNair cf ..... 4 1 0 1 0 1 Moore ss ..... 4 0 2 2 4 0 Joseph 3b ..... 3 0 1 1 1 0 Duncan c ..... 3 0 2 2 1 1 Sweat rf ..... 3 0 0 2 0 0 C. Bell p ..... 2 0 0 0 2 0 Dean p ..... 1 0 0 0 2 0 Totals ..... 31 1 7 24 15. 0 Errors-Mackey: Two base hits-Macwey, Allen, Thomas, Duncan, Moore. Home run-Carr, Struch out by By Curtis 4-Bell. Bases on balls-off Curie. Stolen bases-Carr 2. Warfield 1. Hits-off Currie 7 in nine innings; off Bell 8 in four innings; off Dean 2 in three innings. Double plays-Dean to Allen to Hawkins. Allen to Duncan, J. Johnson to Warfield to Carr. Sacrifice hits—Hawkins. Umpires—McDevitt and Derr. SAURDAY'S GAME r b o a c Briggs rf ..... 0 1 3 0 0 Warfield 2b ..... 1 1 3 2 0 Carr 1b ..... 0 0 10 1 0 Mackey c ..... 1 2 6 0 1 J. Johnson 3b ..... 0 0 1 3 1 Thomas 1f ..... 1 1 2 0 0 G. Johnson cf ..... 0 2 1 0 0 Cockerell p ..... 1 0 1 5 0 Stevens ss ..... 1 2 0 2 1 EDWIN A. SMALL, Prop. Howard Freedman Best Snow Bowl - 11^7 Washington, D. C. — The Howard University Freshman entertained the (elowest) representation Storer College of Harper Perry, W. V. from the University Camp- sus Friday afternoon, October 9, thus being the first game of the Howard Freshman, in the first game of the Harper boys from West Virginia, in nearly quarters of the game. The military of the (freedman) is hit, the line is known by fourteen first down 10 three by Storer College. Both touchdowns scored by the fresh- men were made by a series of lime-bucks and end runs, in which Stanes and Han- berry started, repeating the action of 3 7, and 10 yards. The look score of Storer College was the result of a for- ward pass received by Brown, who ran (60) yards for a touchdown. Whitted generalized the freshmen in great shape. The work of Starnes and Hanberry on both offensive and defensive was excellent. Arrington and Mackey, of the visitors, played a stellar game. St. Paul Defends N. C. State Normal, Score: 15-3 Lawrenceville, Va.—St. Paul had a big job defeating North Carolina State Normal School 15, to 3 Saturday afternoon, in their initial game of the 1925 football season. Several hundred persons, saw the young, speedy and determined Tarheels play the Tigers to a standstill forty-five of the sixty minutes consumed in the thrilling and memorable game. St. Paul played hard and unscored all she had, but the scintillating maneuvers of the *North Carolina* State boys almost proved the undoing of the celebrated "wonder team." St. Paul was forced to a defensive game thirteenth of the time, and she was held scoreless in the first and thirth periods. Jimmie Hudson's field goal from his twenty-five yard line in the second act somewhat relieved the monotony, but that field-goal by Eyerett in the third period from State's twenty-six yard line tied the score, produced silence in the St. Paul camp and put the Tiger rooters in a dilemma. St. Paul opened the last frame with an indomitable will that refused to acknowledge even the possibility of a defeat, and with a series of brilliant plays that caught the visitors unawares. The Tigers' variegated and exercising line attack in the fourth period was the death knell to the State boys whose food hopes of victory took to naught when Robinson cured their right end for twenty-yards and a touchdown. Another stellar spurt in the final minutes of play resulted in a touchdown by Smith through-center. The Carolinians played a marvelous game in every respect, and their performance on ancient Russell Field today surpassed all expectations—and was a credit to any football team. While the thirteen men who entered the fray played spectacular football, White, Everett, Royal, Woodhouse and N. Parker were THE ALLEN C. E. LEAGUE PRESENTS WINIFRED WATSON ANDREW W. WATSON TENOR At BETHEL A. M. E. CHURCH $3.40 WEST 123rd STREET Thursday, October 22, 1925 At 8115 P. M. MISS LYDIA MASON, At The Piano Admission to Auditorium 50 Cts. HABERDASHER Bell & Delany, Inc., 202 West 135th St. and 7th Ave.—Haberdasher. We carry the smartest styles in collars; shirts and belts. New York Urban League's AT NEW MANHATTAN CASINO Friday Evening, N John C. Smith's Vocal ADMISSION $1.00; BOXES Mrs. Florence deL. Richard (Costume) Under-a. The Women's Auxiliary Citizens Xmas C IN Press NEW YORK'S MOST EXCELLENT DESIGNERS OPERATORS FALL FASHION Friday Evening, O FASHION PROMOTER Music By JOHN C. SMITH and Admission, $1.00. Boxes, $8.00. P cluding Admission, $1.50. Boxes, 2454 Seventh Ave.; Mrs. Maude F. Virgie Lankford, 160 West 142nd Now Paying Great ALL STAR HEADLINE VAUDEVILLE NOW SHOWING G 400 "The BAN League's Fancy Dress Charity Ball BETTAN CASINO, 155th Street and Eighth Avenue Evening, November 13, 1925 Smith's Vocalizing Dance Orchestra for $1.00; BOXES $6.00; LOGES $3.00 or del. Richardson, 580 St. Nicholas Avenue (Costume Optional) Under-auspices of Auxiliary To The New York Urban League Xmas Cheer Committee INC. Presents MOST EXCLUSIVE CREATORS AND SIGNERS OF FASHIONS IN A FASHION REVUE Evening, October 23rd, 1925 FASHION PROMENADE, 9 P. M. C. SMITH and His Modern Dance Orchestra Boxes, $8.00. Loges, $6.00. Reserved Seats, In $1.50. Boxes on Sale at Mrs. Mamie L. Briggs. Mrs. Maude Ferguson, 227 West 139th St. M. West 142nd St. PHOTO PLAY ATTRACTIONS NOW SHOWING—Thurs. Yr. Sat. Sun.—THIS WEEK GLORIA SWANSON In "The Coast of Folly" ALL NEXT WEEK "The Ten Commandments" New York Urban League's Fancy Dress Charity Ball AT NEW MANHATTAN CASINO, 15th Street and Eighth Avenue Friday Evening, November 13, 1925 John C. Smith's Vocalizing Dance Orchestra ADMISSION $1.00; BOXES $6.00; LOGES $3.00 Mra. Florence deL. Richardson, $80 St. Nicholas Avenue (Costume Optional) Under-auspices of The Women's Auxiliary To The New York Urban League Citizens Xmas Cheer Committee Music by JOHN C. SMITH and His Modern Dance Orchestra Admission, $1.00. Boxes, $8.00. Loges, $6.00. Reserved Seats. Including Admission, $1.50. Boxes on 'Sale at Mrs. Mamle L. Briggs 2454 Seventh Ave. Mrs. Maude Ferguson, 227 West 139th St. M. Virgile Lankford, 160 West 142nd St. The Greatest Dramatic Spectacle of the Age See The Red Sea Clos on the hosts of Pharaon A Scene You Will Never Forget Presented Exclusively First at rely First at THE LINCOLN THEATR Every Prefer At The New Douglass Very often do our people reach the highlights of musical comedy stand out, so eloow do they reach the enviable tory that Evelyn Prefer holds in the story of dramatic art. An actress of rare ability, and intelligence, Miss Prefer was selected by David Belasco in only colored star. She appears at the New Douglass and Roosevelt Theatres, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday October 18-19.20 in mourn Mistique's / greatest production, the Devil's Desiccate, ably supported by Lawrence Chaguit, Percy Vaughan, and an all-star colored cast. The pre- fered first story of Negro night Hloom Hazelark brought to the screen. Every scene taken in the locality and every one will recite the hundred, and one landmarks that are familiar to us. The story, centers about a beautiful, but warm girl who falls in love with a degenerate. She delirimines to return him, but falls miserably, and is in turn dragged down and down. Heides being intensely gripping and delirious, the picture contains a good moral lesson for our stage struck sisters. "Miss West Virginia" to Be Featured at Wilberforce West Va. Game Thanksgiving "Miss West Virginia" to Be Featured at Wilberforce West Va. Game Thanksgiving Institute, West Va.—An added attraction at the annual Wilberforce Institute game, which will be paved this year at Columbus, O. on Thanksgiving Day, will be the crowning of the most popular girl in this state as "Miss West Virginia." The popularity contest is being promoted by the Alpha Zeta Chapter of the Alpha fraternity at the University of advertise. Any woman in the state may participate. A similar contest is being conducted among the girls of West Virginia Collegiate Institute. Shaw and St. Paul Elevens Battle To A Scoreless Tie Lawrenceville, Va. The first up-set of the C. I. A. A. football season occurred here Saturday afternoon October 10, when the teams representing Shaw University and St Paul School battled to a scoreless tie. It had been predicted that the Shaw team would be victor by two touch downs. But as the game progressed it developed that both teams were weak on the offensive. Two bad plays in the defense proved the undoing of Shaw. St Paul registered 5 first downs while Shaw made six. The attendance was good and the officiating of Messrs Gibson and Jackson was excellent. WEST SIDE CASINO Harlem's Newest Dance Hall 2395 EIGHTH AVENUE (Near 128th Street) BEAUTIFUL HALL FOR SMALL DANCES, PARTIES, WEDDINGS, BALLGAMES, Etc. Booking Now on the Premises. or Phone Morningside 0945 CHARLES DE VAN, Manager Note: This hall is located in the quiet part of Harlem. Has been thoroughly renovated and is to the most select place of its kind in Harlem. I suggested in this column two weeks ago, the Negro no longer has to depend on alien, even though sympathetic, commentators for the preservation of the music of the race. The spontaneous verbal creation of this wonder once did not make for its perpetual, but skilled and trained musicians to recognize its value and the danger of its hating love to the world, and to scout up the task of putting it down in tangible written form. This was a vital service, one which was needed, and is to be appreciated. But there was always something lacking, something which could not be set down by an alien because of an unconscious element, which prevented complete understanding. The most satisfactory of these productions came from the research and study of Negro folk songs by the late Mrs. Natalie Curtis Burlin and the late Henry E. Krebbiel. Their work was given added value because both were wise enough to call into consultation and collaboration some of the well-raised Negro musicians, whose knowledge of music and the history of Negro music enabled them to give the white commentators an insight into the true spirit underlying and permeating the race music and the accompanying words. Dr. Harry T. Burleigh was particularly of service in this connection. Through the gradual process of development there have been produced men and women of the race who possess in ample measure the ability to set down for permanency the music of their people. Collections were published in crude form by various agencies, but these were mainly attempts at giving the melodies without any accompanying harmonic structure. And where attempts were made to set down a harmonic structure, it was usually of small value because the connotator's were not sufficiently versed in the science of music to understand just what was needed to bring out the real value of the primitive strains. Modern day recognition accorded Negro music and the increasing appreciation shown by the musical cognoscence when given an opportunity to appoinit, have led Negro students of music into a critical survey and study on the racial expression, with the result that the world's musical library is been enriched by collections that have the advantage not only of having been compiled by keen, scholarly, critical minds, but by minds that possess in addition a sympathetic understanding, which cannot be attained by the most sympathetic of alien minds. The latest contribution to this literature is "The Book of American Negro Spirituals," with some sixty-one. Spinningis given a dignified and suitable setting by J. Rosamd Johnson, whose work has long since stamped him as a competent and thoroughly qualified musician and composer, with a preface by James Weldon Johnson, author of "The American Negro in Dixie," who has also edited the words used in the avious songs. There are additional arrangements by Lawrence Brown which add to the value of the book. In an exhaustive and scholarly preface (so denominated in the book, but really a learned treatise), James Weldon Johnson has written down the most illuminating account of Negro music, its origin, development and meaning, that has yet been given the world. As a matter of fact, it is of great value that it might well be printed separately so that the widest possible circulation might be its portion. The writer of this column will not attempt at this time to do more than make this passing reference to Mr. Johnson's treatise since it has too much value and is too important not to be given the most careful analysis. But one word may be quoted, for its informative value. Write Mr. Johnson. "These people came from various localities in Africa. They did not all speak the same language. Here they were, suddenly cut off from the moorings of their native culture, scattered without regard to their old tribal relations, having to adjust themselves to a completely alien civilization, having to learn a strange language, and, moreover, held under an increasingly harsh system of slavery, yet it was from these people this mass of noble music sprang, this music which is America's only folk music and, up to this time, the finest distinctive artistic contribution she has to offer to the world. It is strangel." In providing a musical setting for these Spirituals, J. Rosamond Johnson has built wisely and well. He has, in most cases, avoided the temptation to construct a sophisticated garment with which to clothe these primitive airs, but he has, at the same time, not been satisfied to give them a carelessly meretricious modern musical background. Mantaining a digged poise at all times, he has entered into the spirit of each song, and the result is that a distinctive color and cadence is preserved, while at the same time the musically hypercritical can find no fault with the splendid musical structure which conforms always to the rigid requirements of the sense of musical theory and composition. This is strikingly exemplified in the arrangement of "Old time religion," which retains all the depth of fervor which stirred the hearts of our fathers and mothers in the days gone by. "Go down, Moses," "Lion to de Lambas," "Deep River," "Nobody knows the trouble see," and a score of others have been made known to the general public through the many forms in them by present-day composers, are invested with new dignity in this, retaining at the same time absolute fidelity to their primitive genesis. Blind man stood in the middle of the road," unfamiliar to most of us, is wonderful texture and strength and beauty, and there are many others the same degree of unfamiliarity which will delight the musical conness of generations to comp. COLORED ACTORS AND ACTRESSES We can place you for long engagements in AUDEVILLE, BURLESQUE and CABARETS! Can also use Jazz Bards' and Good Looking Chorus Girls WE HANDLE COLORED ACTS' EXCLUSIVELY Lillian Evans Tibbs To Sing In New York interest is being exhibited in the coming appearance of Mire. County (Mrs. Lillian Evans Washington), who recently America after a period of Parts with Mire. Ritter-Ci- who is credited with his most successful debut in a singing the title role in metra, "Lakme" by Delibes. a house at Nice, France only appearance in part will be on Friday eve- lance at the International Riverside Drive, at 124th the being presented by John Boutie and Mrs. under interest of the Fisk University Endowment Funu. The program is rich in interest, opening with songs by Handel, Scarlett Jane Philippe Rameau and the opera "Campa," followed by the aria from "Ballini's" "Puritan," "Qui la voce." The third group will include a Burleigh Spiritual, with other songs by Chadwick, Russell and Hagenham. The concluding number will be two scenes from "Lakine," given in full costume, with appropriate stage setting. From behind the scenes, the air sings the prayers to the rhythm, "Blanche the singer," and appara- tions the stage to sing the wonderful "Bell Song" ("La Clochette") for the second scene. In this number the singer will be intended by Miss Marion Mhore, superorganizing the "Page" in attendance upon "Lakine," Carl Dilton will be at the piano, and Lydia Mason will play two piano groups. Many of the 'most' prominent men and women in Greater New York are on the list of patrons and patronesses, and the indications are that a distinguished audience will greet Ms. Evans: If you have anything to sell, or if there is anything you want to buy, you'll get quite results from The Age Classified A—page 10. ability is/so well known to need comment, and he has arranged a program calculated to show all of the possibilities of the fine instrument. William R. David is chairman of the arrangement, and the other members being, M. Blair, Swain M., Sampson Mrs. M. Hall, Mrs. A. Wilson, Mrs. J. Blackman, C. A. Jordan. An address will be made by Fred R. Moore, editor of The Age, the pastor, Rev. J. W. Brown, and Capt. Paul Lorch of the 569th Infantry, N. Y. N. military, aide d camp to Governor Alfred Smith. Penman Lovinggood To Give Town Hall Recital Nenman Lovinggood, tenor, of Brooklyn, will make his formal concert debut at Town Hall on Saturday evening, November 14, at 8:15 o'clock o'clock. Mr. Lovinggood has been studying with Paul Volkmann of Philadelphia, and has been singing with the Wadamaker Quartet. He has broadcasted from Fort Wood, Bedloe Island, and has made a number of friends through his work in private homes and clubs. Henry Spencer McAvoy will be at the piano. Mrs. I. Montgomery Dead Mrs. Isabelle Montgomery, 72 years old, who had resided in New York for the past 40 years, died at her late home, 326 West 37th street, Sunday, October 11, after an illness of three weeks. Funeral services were held from Mt. Calvary Methodist Church on Tuesday night and burial was on Wednesday at Mt. Olivet Cemetery, with the W. David Brown Understake establishment in charge. The late Mrs. Montgomery was the mother of Edward Montgomery, prominent in church and fraternal circles in Harlem and had a host of friends. Floral offerings were beau-iful and included pieces from her Hon. Phelipha Phyllis and the members of the 10th A. 2 Republican Club, Paul Hargrove, the Nora F. Taylor Shelter, No. 1 and many individual friends. Her son wishes to express his appreciation for sympathy extended him during his bereavement. EPSILON CHAPTER Zeta Phi Beta Sorority Will Present Andrades Lindsay And Lydia Mason In a group of TWO PIANO NUMBERS Assisted by ELOISE UGGAMS Mezzo-Soprano Elks' Imperial Auditorium 169 West 129th Street Mon. Eve., Nov. 2, 1925 At 8:30 O'clock GEN. ADMISSION :: $1.00 John C. Smith's Ball Room Orch. Dancing until 2 PURE VOICE INSTITUTE Physical voice culture taught: silent tongue methods ENDORSED BY. GALLI BUCK and the BOSTON CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC C. W. GREEN Dramatic baritone and instructor, recently of Boston Madam CORA L. GREEN, Soprano TERMS REASONABLE Technique and police taught, pure voice assured in three years Apply by telephone to J. Gerson Brad. 4855; 117 W. 1481st St. Apt. 35 HOURS FROM 9 A M to 9 P M Reserve now, as it may not appear again TOWN HALL 121 West 43rd St. Saturday, Oct. 17, 8.30 p. m. Song Recital JULIUS WORLD FAMOUS NEGRO BARITONE Program in Six Languages Tickets 75c. to $2. Mgt. S. Hurok. Inc. Oct. 3-10.17 Courtney Oratorio I.V.O.CAL STUDIO FOR TEACHING THE ART OF SINGING 186 W. 136th St. N. V. City Honoree Solatz St. Mark's Church Choir Audubon 8128 SOPRANO will accept limited number of drama pupils, for serious study. Radio—2369 Seventh Ave. Dinee—Bradhurst 0388 E. SSIE COVINGTON (Mus B. Oberlin Conference of Music) Bachelor of Music in Music Pupil of Oglu Bamaram Accompanist to Concert Plannist Kescher 160 W. 1311 St. PANO STUDIO 160 W. 1311 St. Ahland Place (4th Floor) Morningside 4967 Brooklyn Morningside 4967 New York 192-191-191 communicate with the time. The issue of the moment as a thing that seldom happens, a workable idea with the power to work it. Once upon a time, (as all real fasty, leasing stories begin) the breezy Deacon had an idea. It is interesting to note that the condition which fostered the flowering of this idea destined it to slow growth. For how slowly, our ideas grow, when we reluctantly cling to primitive methods. Having an idea, however, takes not mean much, though ideas, bubbling out of the brain like water from a fountain are all very well and amusing. It is only when you solidify the idea into facts that thinking and ideas become worth while. For a thousand men probably thought of every great invention—saw it quite clearly in their ideas, long before the right man came along and made it a reality. Pioneer and soothsayer that the Deacon was, the New York musical world was not long learning that he was endowed with that, steadfast integrity and pioneer determination to do or die, and that the faithful old oracle had invested within him all her Delphian secrets and a sprinkling of the wit and wisdom for which the gods desi- Nothing new about the idea of a musical contracting exchange, you'll say, but when we gaze through the ractal mirror, there is reflected a barren field for New York. Nor too severe was the Deacon to recognize the proof of other men's work of art can last no longer than the strength of its business promotion; not too prejudice-ridden to believe that emulation is safer than originally when failure comes of ones own weakness; not too insusceptible to human impression to be convinced that what man has done man can do. Hence, still adhering to the idea that music shall become a profitable art only when integer out of which the performers spring as sunshine multiples the Deacons musicians exchange strides on. To quote the Deacon exactly, "There is a mistaken idea among musicians and entertainers that doing the task assigned to them is all that they are required to do on an engagement. Technically they are right, but nobody ever gets anywhere who do not think beyond the mechanics of his job. Organization members might ask themselves occasionally what are they doing to contribute to the growth of the business that supports them. Another of the seers of management who seemed to evolved the same kind of philosophy said. "Do what you are told and then some. It the then some that gets your salary raised." "Speaking of honest opinions, mine is that the dog that never bites (or the master who feeds) isn't worth the feed. The sooner a new York, mussican learn to contribute financially and morally to substantiating 'their own contracting agencies, the sooner they'll work six days in every week instead of the maximum three. It is a fine thing that we musicians can draw tip-top salaries, but it is pityable that we have not yet been fired with that, conscience integrity impelling us to give turtles and share in the creation and development of the institution destined to establish a system of even greater salaries, hence providing that which we so passionately want and sorely need. The long since embryonic idea of the Exchange and the Deacon's intrinsic spirit of leadership have become well linked. If we desire to judge by the services rendered—intimutive to believe that he (like Napoleon said of himself) has always lived a couple of decades. Somewhere he observes, "Men and this thing seem to be. As to ideas, the more definite the picture which the leader draws for himself of the future, the greater are its chances of coming true. When a great writer knows exactly what it is he wants to do in his book, it is written When a man of action forms, a perfect conception of his objective and of the means he will employ to attain it, we may almost say he has attained. Our ideas can be turned into facts. Nay, more* in a civilized world, almost all realities are ideas solidified. The New York musical world awaits the clientile to awake and possess itself of the power to mould the idea into a living character. Not until then will the aggressive idea of the independently operated Musical's Contracting Exchange and the race's temple of music have become a victory de facto* Sincerely yours Sara Edwin Jenkins Louis F. Mohr & Company 2899 Valentine Ave. New York City Telephane, Bodwell 1628 Day or Night ORGAN' TUNING AND REPAIRS References: M. Zion M. E., Newburg, N. Y. B. Catherine's A. M. E. Zion and Shilch Baptist Church, N. Y. B. C., Baptist Baptist Church, N. Y. C., CaleM. M. X. N. Y. C., Siloam Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., among others. 0:10-30 105 W. 130th ST., New York City PIRST EMMANUEL CHURCH Saturdays at 2 P M Home Studio, Metropolitan Building Orange, N. J. Phone Orange 7344 HARVEY BAKER TENOR Recital Concert Arranged THE HARLEM SCHOOL 203 Vost 139th Street Tultion in Plano and Vocal Culture Phone, Bradhurst 8133 Nov 15.3 m LadiesJoinNow The Female Band now being constructed by Laura Prampon. In 1997 we want, we build from the house. In 2000 we finish 9th. The Harry and Laura Prampon School (Kivall). 131 Weat 136th St. N. Y. C. Text Hebrew 1:22 Subl of Christ, the Finest Revelation. The life long desire and patrons of Man is to find God. God has an endowed man with a capacity, that the cannon grasp. He has given him, albeit such taste, the sense of smell, and the sense to feel after. God, God has rewarded Himself to man down through the centuries. Man has not always had a clear conception of God. It was very holy. God is one of those revelations Tuberculosis Problem Among New York Negro Population Increasing A statement issued by the New York Tuberculosis and Health Association directs special attention to the tuberculosis problem among Negroes in New York City which is affirmed to be an increasing one, in volume at least. If not actually at a higher rate in the relation to the total number of these residents. "In 1924," says the statement, "600 deaths from tuberculosis among Negroes were noted, as against 533 in 1923. Of these, 318 were of the male sex and 282 of the female sex. The present Negro population of New York City, on the basis of the 1920 Federal census, is now estimated at more than 780, 000; and if this figure be accepted, the death rate from tuberculosis in 1924 among Negroes was 332 per. 100,000, while that of the remaining population practically all white, was only 85, a ratio of four to one, as against the usual ratio of three to one in the past. Both among Negro men and women the largest number of tuberculosis deaths occurred in the younger age groups of 20 to 25 years. Negroes now furnish one tuberculosis deaths of every nine such deaths occcuring in New York City, though they probably number one in thirty of the general population," As regards the general situation in this city, in respect to the "white plague," the Association points out that among the 5,587 deaths from this disease, last year 2,287 were of the female sex and the male sex, according to the Bureau of Records of the New York City Department of Health: Tuberculosis called, as usual, more men than women, the death rate of females having been 76 per 100,000 and that of the males 110, or 45 percent greater. The highest tuberculosis death rate among women occurs at present among the younger groups, namely, those between 21 and 25 years of age. The rate in that group, was 119 per 100,000 living. The highest tuberculosis rates among women are all noted between the ages of 15 and 30. Among men, the highest tuberculosis death rate was between the ages of 55 and 60 years. Compatibly high rates in the latter sex prevail anywhere between 40 and 60 years of age. "WHO'S WHO IN THE CITY IN NEW YORK CITY" Containing Autobiographical Leading Colored Men Metropolis $10.00 PE Books Must Be Ordered N There Will SEND ALL C FERDINAND Q. M. 2322 SEVENTH THE ELF PUBLI PUBLIS 250 West 125th Street For the first time an authentic bla America's foremost Negroes has been writ he well known author, and will appear in collection of photographs of EDUCATIO VIDUALS. BEAUTIFULLY BOUND IN MOR GOLD, 8 1-2 inches by 11 1-2 inches, C ROSCOE CONKLING BRUCE Editor-In-Chief There Will Be No Second Edition! SEND ALL CHECKS TO FERDINAND Q. MORTON, Trustee. 2132 SEVENTH AVENUE THE ELF PUBLICITY SERVICE PUBLISHERS 250 West 125th Street Morningside 5865 For the first time an authentic history of the lives and achievements of America's foremost Negroes has been written by ROSCOE CONKLING BRUCE, well known author, and will appear in this work together, with an interesting collection of photographs of EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND INDIVIDUALS. BEAUTIFULLY BOUND IN MORGCCO, STAMPED WITH GENUINE GOLD, 8 1-2 inches by 11 1-2 inches, CONTAINING OVER 150 PAGES. ROSCOE CONKLING BRUCE Editor-In-Chief Secretary For those who appreciate the best there is the delightfully perfumed Pluco Hair Dressing, containing the fines, hair growing oils known to science— This wonderful preparation which so quickly straightens hair and makes it long, soft, glossy and easy to arrange in any manner is now being used by thousands of our men and women, whose beautiful hair is the admiration of all— Among them is Miss Gussie Williams of the famous "Runnin' Wild" Company, who says, "I just love to use Pluco Hair Dressing it has such a delightful fragrance and makes my hair so soft and easy to arrange in any manner I wish." kcrDRES New Book of Negro Spirituals (Born, The N.Y., World) All that there appears a satisfactory edition of Negro spirituals. It is called The Book of American Negro Spirituals, and it has been edited by James Weldon Johnson, Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Only one who has waded through many intelligent intelligences with which book is put together Mr. Johnson has selected his songs with discrimination and had them decently printed. With the aid of Messrs. J. Rosaindon Johnson and Lawrence Brown he has captured authentic harmonies, as much a part of the complete effect as melodies. And he offers in a brief sible explanation of the origin of this music, than all the learned commentators since the Civil War. But what, elemental poetry, what gorgeous music! Reading these songs over, one is transported back to half-remembered things: a countryside at twilight, a little Negro church back in the pines, and floating over the stitches a haunting chant which goes to the white car in the night and which has in it a memorial who listen never attain to. The editor is apologetic about the poetry, but to the white ear it has an irresistible charm. Here is a typical specimen: Dey crucified my Lord An' He never said a mumblin' word. Dey crucified my Lord. An' He never said a mumblin' word Not a word—not a word—not a word Dey pierced Him in the side. An' He never said a mumblin' word Dey pierced Him in the side. An' He never said a mumblin' word Not a word—not a word—not a word De blood' came twinklin' down, And he never said a mumblin' word. De blood came twinklin' down, And he never said a mumblin' word. Not a word—not a word—not a word Poetry like this, with the music that goes with it, touches the stars. Let us doff our hats to the race that brought it into being. A BOOK OF AMERICAN NEGRO SPIRITJALS To the Editor of The World: TO the editor of The World: If you "dow your hat" to the race that has produced such fine spirituals as have just been edited by James Weldon Johnson. I certainly doft my hat to the author of your beautiful editorial. It is a fine appreciation of a fine piece of work, and I wish to subscribe to every word of it. Those wonderful old Negro folk-songs have been used an dalso abused for many years, but at last Mr. Rosamond Johnson has given them an appropriate and at the same time a musically sentient WALTER DAMROSCH New York, Oct. 8 Child Study Group Is Organized at Public School 139 An organization 'meeting' of the Child Study Group of parents who held at Public School 139, Dr. Jacob M. Ross principal, Tuesday evening, October 13 The purpose of the organization is to give out information and conduct discussions on the proper training children especially in cowed sections of the city Margaret J. Quallard, director of field work for the Child Study Association of America, Inc., is in charge of the group and she will be assisted by a local committee Passengers Excited By Man Who Fainted On Subway Platform Philip Brads, 28. (white) of 23742 Third avenue, attracted a crowd of passengers in the subway station at 145th street and Lenox avenue. Sunday afternoon when he fainted on the platform. He fell upon the concrete floor and inflicted lacerations in his scale. BLACK AND WHITE CANS 50¢ BIG GREEN CANS 25¢ 100 DEALER$ EVERYWHERE ARE SELLING IT AT THE OVERWHELMING RATE OF MORE-THAN A MILLION PACKAGES YEARLY. Pikka HAIR CARE PATENTED BY THE UNIVERSITY TIMES OF LONDON 1910 God revealed Himself first in a Personal God. He was impregnated in the individual. We read that God came down in the cool of the morning and talked with Adam and gave him to understand what He was impregnated him him. There ye read how GOD GILLIAM Abraham from Ur of Chelsea told him that he was going to make a father of a nation. God took him out to the sands and stars under him that he would make his sword an numerous as these God in the cleft of the Hebrews was a Covenant making God. So it, was not only necessary that men high should get a revelation of God, but the next revelation was to a nation. Israel, never knew what law was. It was by God Himself. They pictured God as a God of law, a God that said, "An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth." A God very cruel and exacting in its nature. They were very yaw, because they had the conception of God as a hero. The Jewish religion felt that God belonged to them above. The second revelation, in that God fit a great law giver. He sat back on His Throne writing all the time. In other words they were making a bookkeeper, of my God. He gave the world to understand that He was, watching every turn. That He was not only a God of law but mercy. He let the wicked forsake their ways, and He will abundantly pardon. A God of Merely. Somehow it was an intriguing picture, yet, God gave to this world many pictures of Himself. But He was not satisfied So He said, "I am going to give to the world a real photograph of myself." God spake to the prophets and then wrapped Himself within His Son and showed to mankind just what God would look like. Philip said to Jesus, "Master show us the Father." Jesus said, "It is possible I have been so long with you and you don't know me." I am the image of my Father. God is ready to have mercy and I am too. God wishes all men to be saved, and so I, God, wish men to for-ward them, say, seventy times seven should they give thy brother. just like God in love - Jesus said, "He that hath seen me might, has seen the Father." All of these other revelations are marrow row Jesus took God out of a National to an International. He gave to the world a free salvation and a simple who I call Jesus finest because He represents the finest thing on earth, and that is love Jesus brought God to man. The church is going to move on, men and women are going to get a greater vision Jesus still remains the greatest revelation to man. This is under a very impressive serenity and most eloquently delivered by Rev J. R. Henderson. He is a young man, and is contemplating on becoming the assistant pastor, at Jt. Oliver Church, New York. I heard this sermon at Calvary Bap tist Church East Orange. N J. PIT-A-RAT Network I J COLORED RACE "AND ITS ENVIRONS" Images and Photographs of the Men and Women of the Titan Area PER COPY Now! Will Be No Second Edition! CHECKS TO MORTON, Trustee. FOR AVENUE CITY SERVICE PERSERS Morningside 5865 History of the lives and achievements of BROOCOE CONKLING, BRUCE, in this work together, with an interesting NATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND, INDI- COCO, STAMPED WITH GENUINE CONTAINING OVER 350 PAGES. WILLIAM K. SANDERS Secretary. WILLIAMS of WILD COMPANY AIR SSING --- Mrs. Core Horne of Brooklyn, N. V. who accompany pledd Mrs. Mary McLood-Bellhung, founder of Daytona Industrial Institute, was the house guest of Mrs. G. K. Smith of the house Herbert A. Payne, pastor of Brenoez Baptist Church, was in Kingston last Sunday and his pulpit here was filled by the Rev. Farmer. The C. C. C. had its formal opening and the enrollment of cases was unusually large. The young ladies, Vitasar College, will gain assis on the teaching force the winter, and the faculty of Red Hook has been visiting her sister Mrs. Jacob Smith. The many friends of Mrs. Georgine Kelly Smith are glad that she has recovered from her recent illness. Mrs. Saddie Tanner and a group of friends gave Mr. and Mrs. Louther a surprise party and many beautiful as well as useful presents were received. In appreciation of his faithful services and win account, to the love for his picture book, the Mohawk V. presented their pastor, Rev. W. J. Ellis, a new car. The white press gave honorable mention of the playing of Wilbur Thompson, that added so much toward winning the game for the Mohawk A. C.; a feat of which the Mohawk club may be justly proud. Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Hodges of New Haven, Colin, were the weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Winfield, while here they helped for Mrs. Hodges Miss Julia Eldridge a former Powbrykens girl. Miss Dora A. K.琴 entertained a few friends last Tuesday evening in honor of her birthday at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Winfield, 65 Academy street, eveningwas a fun occasion, hundreds of games. A dainty supper was afterward served and favors given to the guests. Those present were Misses Eyelyn L. Jones, Rose Nichols, Marguerite Quick and Rose Kye; Messes Whitaker M. Martin and Robertus Whitaker M. Martin and Mr. and Mrs. Jos. W. Winfield. The Sunday school of the A. M. E. Zion-Church has been reorganized. New Rochelle. N. Y. New Rochelle, N. Y.-Thomas Jaens of 226 Webster avenue, died Sunday, October 4, nt 9,15 a.m. He was a faithful member of St. Caleriano A. M. E. Zion Church, a member of Empire Lodge, No. 316, I. B. P. O. E. of W.; the True Heart Lodge, No. 18, K of P.; Xenia Lodge No. 50, F. and A. M.; also the Royal Arch Chapter. Funeral services were held from St. Catherine A. M. E. Zion Church, with the Rev W. O. Carington official, assisted by the former pastor, Bishop C. Allery who spike over the deceased and his many good qualities. A solo, "O Dry Those Tears," was sung by Mrs. Ethel J Minton. Resolutions were read by Mrs. Virginia Buck. The late Mr James is survived by a wife; Mrs. Hannah Jeanette James; three sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Downs of New Rochelle; Mrs. Carrie Hill of Simpsonville, S. C. and Mrs. Joseph Paden of Greenville, S. C and a host of other relatives and friends. Two automobiles were required to accompany the funeral. The following is the resolution adopted by the pastor, trustees and members of St. Catherine A. M. E. Zion Church; Whereas, Our Heavenly Father has taken Brother Thomas James from our midst to eternal rest. Whereas, He was a devoted husband, a faithful christian always willing to do his duty for the cause of Christ and fallen humanity. Whereas, We, the members of St. St. Catherine Church, mourn our loss. We shall miss him but with faith and divine strength we hope to meet him again. Resolved, That we bow in submission to the great Ruler of the Universe who is too wise to err. Resolved, that the pastor and of St. Catherine A. M. E. Zohn Church extend our heartfelt sympathy to the wife and family. We commend to God that understands. He knows why. "Weep not for one so true. He is now in Heaven, happy. Smiling down on you. He is not dead. He has just said goodbye Just gone away Resolved, that a copy of these resolutions he sent to The New York Age and a copy of the family resolution he sent to M. J. Boddie have remodeled their home on Horton avenue. It is now more spacious and beautiful. They gave a house warming Thursday evening, October 8. A large number of members of his church as well as other friends were present Dr. and Mrs. Boddie sang a duet with their son, Charles, accompanying at the piano. Rev. W. Harnes at the piano Cecero Sampon assisted in serving a delightful reapst Robert Washington, son of Mrs Amy Washington, left the city last week to enter St. Joseph's Industrial School at Clayton. Del The friends and well washers of Timer Harper were proud to see him working on the Catherine Church through only 90 years of age he has joined the Carpenters' Union Rochester, N. Y. Rochester, N. Y—Thomas Hawkins of Syracuse, N. Y, was the weekend guest of John Turner and Monroe Nash of 86 Industrial street Miss Erica Walls of Agnes street died last Saturday. The funeral was held from Mr. Olivet Baptist Church on Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Sarah Fields, several laws in New York City and New Rodeo, N. Y, visiting her daughter and friends. Mary A. R. Claw and Mika Iv. Ax Aker, of 79, Barren, nearen spent the weekend in New York City. While there (they attended Mother A. M. E. Zion Church and visited relatives and friends. Mrs. Lula Jones Deloch has returned from her, vacation. She visited Buffalo, Cleveland, Kentucky, Tennessee and other points. South, She is with her, brother, Chester Jones, 20 Hudson avenue, and Claude Johnson left that week for the New England States. Mrz. Fannie Freeman of 112 Indust repeat spent the weekend in At- lantic. Mr. and Mys. Robert. Round's of Caledonia. avenu spent the weekend Harbert Thompson of New York City, went several weeks visiting W. Alexander of Caledonia, N. Y., and other friends. D. C.-Battles of Lockport, N. Y., spent the weekend in Rochester last week, visiting friends. Mrs. C. N. Cooper and Mrs. Walter Byard made a trip to Niagara Falls, while in the city. Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Mitchell of Bath, N. Y., were in the city, last week and were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Butler, of Buchane Park. Mrs. C. M. Cooper and daughter of Atlantic City were in the city this week visiting her brother, Rev. A. M. Kerney and family of Caledonia avenue. Little of Gary, Indiana, attended the ball game between the New York Central and Pennsylvania Railroad teams. Mrs. Patterson and mother have learned from Cleveland, Ohio, where they had been visiting Mrs. Mary Branch and friends. surprise party was given last Monday, by Mr. and Mrs. E. Bond, at the residence of Mrs. Coleman of Ford Street, in honor of Miss Sarah Band. A dainty lunch was served and dancing was enjoyed by all. The music was furnished by Mr. Gale. Mrs. Blanche Scott of West Main street is recovering from a serious operation, at the Lee Hospital last Tempi Holiday, one of Rochester's oldest residents, died Monday in LeRoy, N, Y. The funeral was held from A. M. E. Zion Church of which she was a member. Rev. A. J. Gorham of Hartford, Conn., preached the sermon. Interment was in Riverside Cemetery. Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers, N. Y.-Sir William H. Hawkins, K. of R. and Seal of Good Fellowship Lodge, spent three days at week in Boston, Mass. visiting friends. Mr. and Mrs. George H. Hilton of 60 School street tendered a birthday party for his son, Arthur N. Hilton, on Thursday evening, October 8. A pleasant evening, the house was beautifully decorated and he was the recipient of many beautiful gifts. Those present were the Misses Louse and Mary Peterson, Dorothy Riddick, Ethel Garrison, May Lee and her mother, Miss Green and Messrs. John Lee, Leon Middleton, Frank Thompson, Harold Daydison, Clarence Roberts and Patrick. Mr. and Mrs. Freeman and Miss Walker of Williamsbridge, Mrs. Alba of Oyster, Pa. Mrs Crabble of Chicago, Ill. Mrs Crabble Long Branch were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Parker of 670 Saw Mill River Road on last Sunday to dinner. Mr. and Mrs. John R Richardson of 16 Culver street were entertained at the theatre party on last Thursday evening by Mr and Mrs. L. Trott. Oscar Gross of Morgan street who has confined in St John's Hospital because of an attack of pneumonia, returned to his home on last Sunday John Lee of 4 Morgan street who met with an accident while working at the post office last week is improving greatly in his condition Miss Olivia Moore of 4 Cottage place who has been cofined in St John's Hospital for the past two weeks is much improved in her condition. Rev. R. S. Oden, filled the pulpit Sunday morning, October 11 and preached an inspiring sermon to a large congregation At 3 p.m on the Sunday school, Miss Helen E. Henderson held its rays and promotion. The sermon The Order was represented by the superintendent Oden. The primary department was represented by the various pupils who rendered a very splendid program. Twelve scholars were presented with diplomas from this department by Mrs Ernestine Palmer, superintendent. The Junior and Interpreter represented by Mrs. Fredella Brewer, the scholars in this department made a splendid showing of what had been taught them. The young peoples department was represented by Lester Kingland, who made a brief address. Lester Godbold, district superintendent made a splendid address at the school's morning school meeting "More and Better Sunday School" At 7 p.m on the Christ. Foudre held its regular social hour. A daily collation was served by the social committee. At 8 p.m De Oden again filled the pulpit Collection for the day, $70. The play presented by Hensley on Thursday, October 12, splendid success on Sunday, October 12, the Presbyterian Girls' Service League, Inc., held a society circus at the church, afternoon and evening. The sick of the church are Miss Oliveen Moore, 4 Cottage place; Oscar Gross, 7 Morgan street; Mrs Brown, 380 Riverdale avenue; Mrs Municipal Hospital, Lawrence Hospital. The Order of Tents will have their annual sermon preached by The choir of the Messiah Baptist Church sang for the Macedonian Baptist Church last week. They sing at Mount Moriah Baptist Church Friday evening; November 8 at Silhouh Baptist Church, New Rochelle; October 30, Mt. Oliver Baptist Church, New York City. The services at the Messiah Baptist Church Sunday, were well attended and one was admitted, to membership. The church is now in the midst of a big rally. The women are trying to raise more money than the men. Tuckahoe, N. Y. Tuckalock, N. Y.-Mis. Elsie J. Davis and Mrs. John H. Lounds of this town and Koheri Clark of Onkers, N. Y., spent the weekend, with their equin, Miss H. tite Payton of 807 Mt Thy, visited the National Training School, Washington Monument and other places of interest. Patchogue, N. Y. Patchogue, N. Y. - On the 28th of September Mrs. Mildred Tucker gave a surprise party for her father. Edward Josfens, and a number of friends enjoyed the occasion very much. F. L. Hart leaves next week on a trip to Burlington, N. V., by automobile, after a hard summer. K. G. Kellar, a prominent jeweler, donated a laying love of the Community Social Club whilst tournament, now being played at the club rooms every Tuesday night, to run for six weeks. On Thursday night of this week supper was served at the club rooms to the members and their friends. Mrs. Mildred Tucker of Waverly avenue is one of the contestants at the Patchogue Theatre in a singing contest which is held each Thursday night in October. Samuel Ransom, who has been in Southhampton for some time, has returned to Roe's Hotel and taken up his work again. P. Yayin has a week's vacation from Roe's Hotel. The ladies of Grace A. M. E. Zion Church will give an apron and necktie social at the church on Wednesday evening. Leave all news items for publication on Monday, not later than Monday of each week. Plainfield. N. J. News, memorials and advertising headquarters of The New York Age, 325 Plainfield avenue, greetings: Advertising in The New York Age reaches the most interested business people in the country, try it and see what good results may obtain. A job in the column must be signed and will be received up to 3 p. m. on the Sunday before publication. Plainfield, N. J.-Delegates and members of the Plainfield Lodge K of P had an enjoyable time at the K of P convention a long Brush ceremony. Outside the honor of being elected state's leader general. Quite a large number made the trip to Long Branch. On Thursday evening, October 1, a concert and drama was given at Curtis Hall for benefit of the building fund of the A M. L. Tent. Mrs. R Hobson was mistress of ceremonies and the program was as follows: Opening prayer, Little Miss Johnson; dramatic sketch, Mrs. Reed, Mrs. Lottie Henry and Mrs Hob on; vocal solo, Miss Dorsey, accompanied by Bessie Melchor; selections, Female Quartet, Mrs Alison and her three daughters; solo, Mrs Reechea McRay, accompanied by Mrs Melchor; bass solo, John Taylor, accompanied by Mrs Lottie Hetts, solo; bass solo, John Taylor, accompanied by Mrs Melchor, solo by Mrs Coles and Mrs Alison. Candida remarks were made by Mrs Dempsey. She told of the work the order is doing and the need for a new building. Much praise is due the order for its enterprise and effort. Mrs Reecha Mayo of West 2nd street left Thurday, October 8, for New York Ten Thursdays this winter. Mrs Wittatt attended summer school the past season at Sigma University. The Rev. D. S. Hoggard prescheduled one of his greatest serpents at Calvary Baptist Church Sunday morning, October 11. His subway was, "The present is not the christian's rest" from Michael 2 10. The junior choir gave a good account of itself at this service. Miss Pauline Flanner led in singing many of the oldtime the morning collection was $7197. Misses Hilda Johnson and O Quarternman, and Mr Chattman were Sunday school delegates from Calvary Banton Church to the convention at Atlantic City last week. Mrs M A Alexander of Plainfield avenue, while attending a convention of the federation of Women's Clubs in Atlantic City last week, met with a severe accident by falling down a flight of stairs. She was brought home and taken to the hospital Sat. October 10, to have an x-ray picture made. The Men's Club of Bethel Church gave their annual dinner Thursday evening, October 8. It was one of the best dinners ever given by any society or church in the city. Mrs John Smith of Hamble avenue has secured a licence to run for beautiful Cattail area in the county. Please contact us for information about accreditation in our website. identified. They were members, were displaced to give them safety consideration, to colored people, they do to her race, that is, in tell the alchets a they come to them and not to differ the bottom of the alchets for an undrelate luck whenever they see a colored customer. Caryway Baptist Church Sunday evening October 11, New D. W. Howard, gathered apoke from Auto Mall. Kye people joined this church during the day and the total collection was 615947. 'O A Davie of Richmond street has lovered a wonderful new salad dream. The Rev. R. C Lanh, pastor of Shilo, Baptist Church, preached at Mount Lebanon - baptist - Church Brooklyn, N. Y. con, Sunday afternoon, October 11. Sunday evening he preached a wonderful sermon at his church, which was followed by commi- nition. His subject was 'Jesus Will' from St. John 146. He would connect himself with the church. The total offering for the day was 60.14 On Monday evening, October 12, a celebration of the first anniversary of the Shilah Baptist Church began. "The celebration continues for five nights and a different minister presides each evening." Mrs. Josephine Jianagao is chairman of the general committee and A. S. Venable in the church clerk. C. Edward Epps, completed last week his twelfth year, as agent and correspondent to The New York Age. He wishes to extend his thanks and appreciation to his many patrons for their cooperation in the past and asks that this cooperation be continued. Illness during the past year caused me to cut-down on my activities but I have gradually resumed them.—C. EDWARD EPPS. Mrs. Molly Goldstone of Plainfield avenue has gone to Pittsburgh to visit relatives and friends. Before returning she will visit her sister-in-law in Chicago, Mrs. Higginbottom. Newark. N. J. Newark, N. J.-Rev. Harvey A. Ongue, superintendent of the colored department of the New Jersey Christian Endeavor Union, and member of the State Executive Committee reports that in the 39th annual convention church held Jersey City, N. J. October 7-10 that developments of the C. E. work in his department is gratifying and-encouraging to all concerned. During the past year twelve colored societies have been listed in the state office in the hands of State Executive Secretary Frederick L. Mintel. Some 21 delegates were elected to this 39th convention, and much of the stimulation and instruction was received. The choir of some twenty voices from 13th Avenue Presbyterian Church sang on the program. The convention closed to meet next year in Camden, N. J. Bloomfield, N. J. Bloomfield, N. J.—Miss. Ethel Valentine, secretary of the c. E. G. of Trinity Presbyterian Chapel, and Muriel Thompson, were delegates to the 39th annual C. I. Convention of New Jersey. The chicken dinner given in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Woolridge on Race street for the c. E. Society was a big success and all praise and thank the committee. Mrs. Walter Valentine and Mrs. John Jones were delegates to the 39th annual American Presbyterian Council which convened in Jethro Memorial Church, Atlantic City, N. J. October 8-11. Trinity Presbyterian Chapel is taking some serious steps to find a church building of her own in which to carry on social center and uplift connection with the church activities. Rahway. N. J. Rahway, N. J.—The Northern University opened for the school year with a great increase in enrollment and all indications point to a prosperous year. Rev. A. Philips, dean of the university, preached at Second Baptist Church and administered communion at the evening service. Mrs. Miller and sister of New York City visited Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Moorehead Charles Satchell morris jr, will lecture at 2nd Baptist Church Thursday evening, October 22 under auspices of the Ruth Missionary. Circle. Deacon Wilson, of Friendship Baptist Church, who has been very ill, is improving slowly. Passaic. N. J. Pow Rally air charge of N. Pennygill Miss H. Hatchett at Baltimore, Mrs. Carlie Shepherd, who has been president-of the—the Sons—and Daughters of Charity of the A. M. E. Church for 38 years was taken suddenly ill at the evening service. Sunday Mrs. Chester Venable of New Brunswick is the guest of her daughter and son-in-law Rev. and Mrs. J. W. Morrishow. *Reuben* JD Johnson, Inc., young, welcoming *New* Brunswick, wore, dressed, dine- say, Sunday, 65 mrs. Anna MC. Johnson and Mrs. M. S. Robinson New Haven, Conn. New: Harvey Cinn—Dr. J. L. Allen of Oakland; Gail did the pupil at the Immmaniel Baptist Church last Sunday, at the morning service, his subject being on the life of Paul. As the Metoka S. S. class was holding forth prominently with their "Every out To: Church, Sunday," Dr. Allen's splendid sermon was very and highly appreciated by the extremely large audience that greeted him. Rev. Edward Goins, popular pastor of Dixwell Avenue. Congregational Church is suffering from a nervous breakdown, caused from overwork, and will no doubt depart soon for other climes to regain his strength. Goins one of his best known pastor, the and his thousand of friends will learn with regret of his illness. Rev. J. B. Phar of the Immanuel Baptist Church has been entered in the nation wide contest of the Madame C. J. Walker Co., which will terminate in a trip around the world to those who are fortunate to win, and to those who are not, in coming here that Dr. Phar has been in such a contest, it is very fitting that the members of his church and the friends of the church rally to his support, and see to it that he polls hundreds of thousands of votes, to let the world know what New Englanders think of their pastors. Our race is well represented in the event, and on the 6th of the month. Varied and many are the courses being pursued by those in regular nightly or evening attendance. G. Benj. Mayo, leading shoemaker of our city, formerly located at 167 Dixwell avenue, now permanently at 173 Dixwell avenue, is fast making a few recent come here from Norfolk, Va. He is handling, quite a few race books, magazines, etc. Dr. Allen and Dr. Grant were the leading speakers last Sunday at the S. S. Class in the first annual "Every Man Out To' Church Sunday." Wilmington, N. C. Wilmington, N. C.-Miss Edna McDonald has returned from Philadelphia to spend a while with her mother, Mrs. R. J. McDonald. Misses Mildred and Fannie Ellen Story have entered Shaw University, George Telfair and George Telfair have entered the V. N. C. I. at Petersburg, Va. A. E. Jackson attended the confer Tells How She Got Fine Suit of Hair "When people admire my hair and ask what I do to make it so soft and lovely, I tell them my experience." "I used to have dandruff and it made my hair coarse, and hard to manage. I wished with all my heart for soft, pretty hair but did not have it. I learned of Exelento Quinine-Pomade." "With this wonderful preparation my hair soon become silky, long and lovely as it is today." "Exendeto skin Soap too did wonders for me. It cleared my faces of sallowness and clumps, leaving it valyety and admired by all who knew me." Any woman who wants beautiful hair and facial loviness should get Exelanteo Pomade and adobe powder. They can be obtained at all drugstores, only 25 each, or will basken, postpaid, upon receipt of price. Send your same today and set up your valuation. You will receive a sample of our preparation, FREE. ESTABLISHED 24 YEARS Mrs. Ida White-Duhan HAIR WORKER 19 Prescott St. Jersey CH- N. J. Wigs, Haighs, Hails, Pompoms, Transformations, Cobbings, made up to any style. Scalp Treatment, Shampooing, Hair Dressings. People's combies bought. Leisure taught in hair work Diploma. We Want 1,000 Agents To Sell HOBBS' Famous Hair Grower Agents can make from $3 to $5 a day. Guaranteed To Grow Hair In One Month SEND $1.00 For complete Treatment or Soc for Trial Box and be Convinced Produces Intimidate and astonishing results Beautifies your hair in one month MADAM DORA HOBBS BEAUTY EXPERT 224 West 141st St., New York Beauty It's Made in Our Shop! Shampooing (all kinds) Scalp Treatments for Dandruff, Tetter, Eczema, Falling Hair, Etc. Hair Bobbing, Pressing, Singing, Dressing, Etc. Eye Brow Arching, Dyeing, Etc. Skin Treatments for Crowsfeet, Wrinkles, Pimples, Blackheads, Etc. Complexion Beautifying Manicuring. Special Fancy Hair Dressing for Balls, Parties, Dances, Etc. Now in an atmosphere of quiet, cleanliness and utter refinement, one expert will gently serve you in all the areas of Beauty Culture. HOURS 9 in 6 Appointments anytime SPECIAL ATTENTION TO CHILDREN Madam C. J. Walker's System Taught "The Trade of No Regrets" THE MADAM C.J.WALKER BEAUTY SHOPPE 110 WEST 136th STREET BRADHURST 0678 Roanoke, Va.-Mrs. Susie Gray of Pittsburgh and her sister, Mrs. Alice Hill of Chicago, both former Roanokers, are in the city visiting relatives and friends. They are guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Robinson of Fifth avenue, N. W. Letters from Reys, Thurman and Graham have been received during the past week. They be a. re- regarded to all friends. Mrs. Emina Wright, a former Roanoker, who is now in Pittsburgh with her daughter, is quite feeble. Vernor Hackley of Lynchburg avenue is slightly improved from his recent illness. Mrs. George A. Thornton, a former Roanoker, now living in Wash- oden D.C., is recovering from a crital illness. L.P. Williams of Eighth avenue, N. W. is on the sick list. Mrs. Lillie Bulock of Durham, N. C., with her two small grand children, is spending two weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Louise. Wright of Seventh avenue, N. W. The Twilight Chapel Sextet of the Harrison. High School appeared in a recital at the Mt. Zion Ex. E. School, beginning October, 6. They rendered a pleasing program. J. C. Dugger, who has been confined to his bed the past month is improving. Martin Cooper, 55, wagon driver West 13th street was struck by a pier auto as he stepped from the step of his wagon late Saturday afternoon. He was delivering ice at 378 197th street when the accident curred. His back and right leg was brushed. Dingusting Performance (Spartanburg, S. C., Herald) All decent and patriotic citizen Georgia, no doubt feel mortified the barbarian performance enacted Milledgeville last Sunday night violently insane patient may un- nately kill some, one on startle body in his senses dreams of hold- the patient, morally responsible for a crazy. Negro should kill a nurse a dreadful occurrence but that him white men should force their way to a hospital, seize the miserable tim of insanity, drag him out and beat him to death is an infine more significant, shocking and dignifying performance. The lead ers, to say the least, in that unspo- sibly unhuman action, thorough- ly disgusting performance. Georgia, will vindicate her good name against such senseless criminals made in this mob. For any element of citizenship I go, fifty strong, to a hospital for the insane, browbeat their way in and take vengeance upon a poor, demented creature, who knew not what he did, was to display the very quintet of virtues he possessed: lawlessness, beastly cruelty and with it all fool stupidity. There is no possibility of putting forward any reason or excuse for such a deed. The more one-thinks on, all the circumstance the more difficult it is to imagine what the brave and righteous defenses he considered themselves to be doing. You must ensure that not a solitary one of the deliberate murderers of a demented defenseless victim would dare a knowledge today his part in the affair. The common form of influenza is the other forms of this disease may come upon a person very suddenly, first from a required, a period of time before the victim known that he has been tenants. That intergalactic spoken of as the incubus, found of the disease and it was with according to the german, italian, japanese and the three days. Children, followed by fairly high risk with headache, aneurysm, a nose, are the first signs of the infection, and after form or fire or the aching of the throat and the fever abate in which a cough may linger, for a while more, nothing in left, to the illness except a marked loss of spirits. And I might sound that the influenza, Sines, are the shiest blues of the illness if we are mentally not after the fingers and lips may be pierced and this is not a failure but a failure of the backside of the body is probably due to deficient circulation of the blood, breathing, but to the failure of the system by the pressure of the tissues which are called tissue. Blood, nausea and vomiting present and delirium when feature first rises to a height of 100-150 mm. the delirium and the pre-depression complications* the patient is not usually able to think, although studies find that the mental state is not only marked, but it is a difficult symptom. The patient is not able to suffer himself, or of ever regaining, the optimism and, spontaneous which characterized, his Other Forms of 'Flu' the common form of influenza which appeared in 1918 was the "respir- tory nose" that is, the type which af- flicted the nose and the chest, and concerning its attack elsewhere. Aarth was one of the first symp- toms and the cough which was dry bearer "loose" and productive of blood-blooded. The fever went high and ranged from 102 to 104 degrees borest. The pain under the ster- tern "breast bone" or in the sides of the chest was sometimes present. Pleasantly which is an inflammation in the delicate membrane covering outside of the lungs and lining of the nose and their muscles was either broken or damaged it is a painful thing. You know, it feels to swallow food that the lining membrane of your sore (inflamed). Even the food is painful. The chest wall stiffens and lifting move when breathing takes place. The lungs move with their covering following breathing that there is pain during breathing, when pleuria is present. Despite these occurrences which are had enough there was also present in the epidemic of influenza, a bronchial infection, brought twenty to twenty-five per cent of the cases actual pneumonia. The infection was not uncommon; treating was often severe. Pneumonia commenced at any age of the first week of the infection, and sometimes when it thought that convalescence had many of the patients developed pneumonia when they got unwell. In instances the cough flung days and weeks after the "fun" supposed to have gone. Some of patients showed symptoms much earlier than actually developed tuberculosis, weeks or months after, and there was a general agree- that the influenza had stirred up the bacillus which has been hiding unsuspected in the body. Haitians Ask Secretary Kellogg For Open Election Haitians Ask Secretary Kellogg For Open Election of four editors of Journal Portau-Prince, Haïti, have strong letter of protest to State Frank B. Kellogg, the country's electors, the county to name the country's that the selection be not that by the President, as during the past two years Portau-Prince. September 14th 1925 The undersigned have the power to you that for the last American military forces upying the Republic of Union of the country has All the Equalities, are no disorganized, our military authorities our legislative chambers solution has been imposed that shall plebiscite. That the Executive Secretary ex-Assistant Secretary say himself, had declared government, after have at constitution upon us, execution it in us, in 1922 did we elections to be made, des- signed by thousand electors will be necessary to the President of the United States as that of their to repeat the con- promise to have the Pres- Republic elected by the body of 21 function- nized by the Pres- Republic according to his State is incompetent The Constitution. 11. In connection with the above subsection, by or pursuant to this article, the parties may make one of the two grants, the other of the other, only pursuant to the law of the state, and may authorize by law the grant, the other, in the agreement, to provide for the construction of real property and for the construction of public works and improvements of public objects. — The provisions of this article shall be amended by the agreement, to the extent that the grant, the other, of the state, and the other, of the state, agree that the law shall be amended, and that the grant shall take effect, without prejudice to the nature of the article. TEXT OF PROPOSED AMENDMENT administration shall be, the following, chief departmental officer, executive, second, and third administration: fifth, state; sixth, public wor- ry; ninth, agricultural; tenth, conservation; thirth, northeastern; fourth, southwest; edu- cation; twelfth, health; thirteenth, education; fourteenth, courthouse; thirteenth, fifteenth seventeenth, banking; sixteenth, mour- nagement; seventeenth, military and naval twentieth. it is the head of the department of agriculture. The head of the department, controller and of the department of law, is the head of the department of education of the state of New York of the university of the state of New York to remove a commission of education to be the chief administrative officer of the agriculture and market share department of agriculture, and manner to be prescribed by law. Except this constitution, the heads of all other boards and commissioning committees of the artiste, excepting temporary committees, may be appointed by the governor by and with appointed by the governor by and with may be removed to the consent of the senate and in a manner to be prescribed by law. - Whenever the appellate division in any jurisdiction of the business within a reasonable time, majority of the presiding justice of the court by the presiding justice of the department, appeals from such department to the department for hearing and determination. Bellion 4. The official terms of the jure ten years from and including the first ten years from and including the first year after their election. When a vacancy occurs after their election, by an expiration of term in the office of the governor, the vacancy may be filled for a full term at the month after the expiration, but not less than three months after the expiration, until the vacancy shall be so filled, the governor, or, not in season, the government, or not in season, the pointment, which shall continue until and after the election at which the race shall be filled. In the court of appeals is continued. It shall consist of the chief justices, who shall hold their offices in now in office, who shall hold their offices until the expiration of their respective terms. Section 7. The jurisdiction of the court may be of death, or where the appellate division, or the court, has agreed to treat in an action or a final order, the new findings of fact and renders that the final order therow, shall be limited to the right to appeal that shall not depend upon the appeal that shall not depend upon the appeals to the court of Appeals may be taken to the court of Appeals in cases sumaritated in this section. In criminal cases, directly from a court judgment is of death, and in other judgment cases from an appellate division or other cases from a jury may from time to time provide. In civil copies and proceedings as follows: (1) As of right, from the judgment or order entered upon the decision of an attorney, the judgment or order which finally determines an action or proceeding wherein in directly involves the judgment or order of the state or of the United nation of the state or of the United nation of more of the justices of the appraisal from the decision of the court, or where from the decision of order is one of reversal or modification. (2) As of right, from an order of the appellate dissenting granting a new trial (the appellate applates that, upon affirmance, judgmentament shall be rendered against him. (2) As of right, from a judgment or order of the court, the person is entitled to a jurisdiction which finally determines and enforces any only question involved on the appeal of the case, and a statutory provision of the gate or of the court of the jurisdiction of life, state or of the jurisdiction of life, state or of the constitutional question shall be only the constitutional question shall be (4) From a determination of the court, a pallate division of the supreme court in the appellate division of the supreme court in order which finally determines the order or special proceeding, where the appellate judge that one or more questions of law that one or more questions of law ought to be reviewed, in its opinion ought to be in such case the appeal shall bring in such case the appeal shall bring in such case the appeal shall bring in such case the appeal shall certify to the appellate division so certified so certified upon such question or questions Section 4 Upon an appeal from judgment or an order, an appellate court to review judgment upon an appeal is also authorized to review such judgment which is an order may reverse or affirm, wholly or in order or order appealed from, and each of body judgment or intermediate or other judgment upon an order, and an to any or all of the parties, and to any render judgment of affirmance, judgment of indemnification, judgment upon the right of any or all of judgment upon the right of any or all of judgment upon the judgment of indemnification, therefore on account of it may be necessary or proper to grant a new trial, and when it may grant a new trial or biennial SECTION 12 The legislature, on application of the powers of the body, exercising similar powers, may in body exercising similar powers, may in provide for the election of county court, provide for the election of special aurate, not to exceed judge or special aurate, not to exceed judge or special aurate, not to exceed county judge or of aurate in any county, not to exceed county judge or of aurate. Any such special county judge or aurate hold in charge at the general election held in the county, not to exceed county judge or after the creation of any such office, to follow such election, to not appoint following such election, to not appoint following such election, the governor to such office meaning. The legislature may at any time preside over the county judge and surrogate any county judge by the same present for the relief of any county judge. The legislature may confer upon the superior county having a population exceeding the powers and jurisdiction of surrogates. Section 16. Vocasies occurring in the city of New York, including a judge, judge, surrogate, special surrogate, judge, judge, surrogate, special surrogate, judge, city of New York, or justices of the city of New York, or justices of the city of New York, shall be billed by appointment of the judge and with the advice and consent of the judge in the city, the governor shall fill such duties until and including the date the duties are completed at the location at which the legacy is be placed. Section 11. The electors of the savvars (or at such other time and in such manner) shall be the legislature may direct or at such other time and in such manner shall be four Years. In case of an elector of the expiration of a full term they shall hold for the remainder of the unexpired juries shall be regulated by law. Juries shall be appointed by the court of the city of New York, and judge or justices of juries court not of cause, after due notice and an oppor-tion for cause, after due notice and an oppor-tion or may be prescribed by law. All other judicial officers in cities, whose jurisdiction for in this article, including all provided for in this article, including all sessions, magistrates courts, or other inferior local courts of criminal jurisdiction by the electors of such cities, or appointed by the electors of such cities, may be prescribed by law. The boards of supervisors, or other officials exercising jurisdiction by the compensation to be paid or allowed to the compensation to be paid for their services in criminal matters. Section 18. Inferior local courts of civil jurisdiction is based on the legislature, but no such inferior local court which has been created hereafter by the legislature, and no such inferior local court which has been created hereafter established may be regulated or enforced, and eight hundred and ninety-five, or is the record of record. All inferior local courts hereafter established may be regulated or enforced, and nature shall not hereafter confer upon any inferior local court of its creation any jurisdiction in other respects than is coherent with the statute of the statute, but it may provide that the territorial jurisdiction in civil cases of any such inferior local court of its creation established in any city or of any other county throughout the county or counties in which such city may be located. Inferior local courts of similar character abide and such jurisdiction of offences of the same character ascribed by law, and the legislature may admit a jury for the success of the mission of South Carolina, and worldwide, and will be a new model for all missionaries. We will be for the love that person will something for some other missionary, himself, and his family, missionaries. Mr. Tolbert, as the leader of The Ace, takes into mind the statement, declaring that the one of three Tolbert brothers holds public candidates, has been appointed, is recommended by this department to office, and that the Department Justice records will submit this statement. Mr. Tolbert states that there are a number of colored men in postmasters, U. S. C., the Customs House, and other members of the Federal service. The latter, charges also that Joel H. Jackson, member of the Republican organization, the Capitol, but is a heathman of the Tolbert, the officer of Internal Revenue, who has submitted to count Tolbert and be his successor. The letter of Mr. Tolbert is as follows: Greenwood, S. C. I have just learned that the new prohibition administrator for South Carolina, George and Norris Carolina, who will work with the Republican not going to allow the Republicans of South Carolina to name any of the prohibition agents for South Carolina, has been starting a lily white movement in South Carolina, using the prohibitions, agents as a nucleus. The State W. H. TOLBEN, Chairman, State Republican, Georgia. (Signed) JOSEPH W. TOLBERT, Chairman, State Republic Committee. Appeals to Rent or For Sale are listed in The Age Classified Ads—page 18. In a county having a population exceeding 10,000, the court shall not practice as an attorney or counselor in any court of record in this state bounded. The legislature may impose a restraining order in other counties. No district attorney can practice as an attorney or counselor in a district attorney shall appear in court of the state, nor shall any county court of the state nor shall any county special appeals appear or are counselled on proceeding payment in the county of any county county. In equity cases in county equity cases shall be taken in like manner as in equity cases in county equity cases shall be provided, the legislature shall have power to alter and regulate the jurisdiction in equity that it has established. In equity that it has established, counties shall be elected of the department shall be prescribed by law. The county of the court of appeals shall have the same jurisdiction as the county of the court of appeals and the county of the court of appeals as may be established by law. Persons as may be paid out of the county treasury. Section 23. The legislature shall make laws, statutes and all civil or criminal general legislation, and all civil or criminal general compilation and publication, and general legislation, the civil and criminal, judicial legislation, the creation of a state law, supervising legislation, the creation of an official state portor, who shall be appointed and be appointed to the office of the judge, who shall be charged with the duty, and who shall be directed by said court of publication, of the opinions or decisions of all the judges, judicial opinions or decisions shall be free for publication by any person. Section 12. Nothing in the article con- firms that the author is authorized (agre- lation to create or establish any board of directors) or to assume the audit or determine claims against the estate and any such仁傣仁 existing property. If the author is to be con- firmed with the powers then vested in the authority, the author must FORM OF SUBMISSION OF PROPOSED INVESTMENT ANNOUNCEMENT NUMBER ONE. ACTION VIII OF the Constitution, which adds: the numbered Section 16 is empowering the authority to adopt the amendment, allowing the adoption of the amendment, authorizing the creation, without further or debit not exceeding the aggregate safeguard, to provide passages for the se- curity, to provide property and and for the construction of the works and improvements for the state. and for more of such objects, be approved. AMENDEDMENT NUMBER POULK THE AMENDEDMENT NUMBER POULK the title VI of the Constitution relates by the organization of the judicial system of the State of New York. In the courts thereof, be approved. Ol. Thukkeres Institute FRANK. B. WATERMAN, Col. WILLIAM HAYWARD, Es.Gov. CHU'S S. WHITMAN Judge JOHN R. DAVIES Col. Wm. A. TAYLOR DAVID B. COSTUMA Will be at Mother Zion as M. E. Zion Church, Sunday, afternoon, October 18, at 3:15. This will be a big afternoon. The choir will be at its best under Director Chua. F. LeGarr. You will need to come early to get a seat. Fred R. Moore will provide. NOTICE If William Allen, who formerly resided at 259 West 134th street, will write to Bok A. S., % N. Y. Ag., he will bear something to his advantage. Mrs. Florence Kinney, 2456 Seventh avenue, is sick. *Mrs. Hyphitta* *Watson*, 414 Lenox *waffering from* *Sable, shee Mrs. Jennie, V. Keever, 211 West 10th street is confined to her bed with verticillium. Mrs. Laura Prampin, of the Prampin School of Music was sick at the Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Elizabeth Simpson, 137 West 2nd street, who has been suffering from pleurisy, is improving. Mrs. Emma Foster of 9-11 West 9th street, is still very ill in her home, and desires to see her many friends. EXTRACTION SPECIALIST THE 'GENTLE DENTIST' Extraction in Difficult Cases PYRORHEA TREATED CASES WITH ENTISTS AND LENOX, AVENUE, Oct. 1991 St. L.) New York Miss Florence Kash Cunningham, who has been unable to walk because of articular rheumatism, is improving slightly. Mrs. Edith Brown, 322 Mott avenue, who went to Elm City, N. C. to attend funeral of her brother, referred home Monday. Mrs. Cherry Bunch, 235 East 73rd street, who has been suffering from rheumatism for some time, is able to walk again. Mrs. Mattei Powell, 2172 Seventh avenue, has returned to her home from the St. Luke Hospital, where she underwent an operation. Mrs. Mollie Brown, 229 West 142nd street, who has been confined to her home for two weeks with a gripe is able to be out. After being confined to her bed for several weeks with pneumonia, Mrs. Billian Overstreet, 57 West 128th street, is chwelesing. Mrs. Josephine Jones, 2010 Seventh avenue, who has been confined to her home for several weeks because of illness, is improving. Mrs. Bessie McCaulley, 314 West 143rd street was sent to the "Woman's Hosspray last Tuesday, where she will undergo an operation. Mrs. Lula Ridley, 44 West 144th street, left Monday to Washington to attend the Grand Lodge of Moses, which convenes in that city. Mrs. Leonia Austin, 2400 Seventh avenue, who has been suffering from an injury which she sustained a few weeks ago, is much improved. Misses Margaret and Mary Jones of 330 West 33rd street who have been visiting their grandmother at Hampton, Vd. returned to the city Saturday. Miss Mammie Metz, 106 West 134th street died Saturday night, October 10th. Her funeral was held Wednesday at the Mother Zon A. M. E. Church. BLEEKS Designing, Dressmaking, Patternmaking Graping, Quoting, Military Illustration, Instructional Instruction Courses for Men and Women Positions Guranteed 103 K. W. Avenue, Wurringale T220 J D Hagnes and George L. McIntosh of Atlantic City were entertained by the last Sunday They were entertained by M Miss E. Whiting, 70 West 133rd street Mrs Bella Lopez and her sister Mrs Sasha Mdes of 185 West 143th street, informed to Huntington, L. L, last Friday where they spent the day with Mrs Joseph Murry Mrs Lara B Thomas, 47 West 191th street has returned to her home, from Bellevue Hospital, where she underwent in operation. She is reported to be improving rapidly Mary McLead Bethune will address the St. James Presbyterian Church Forum Sunday October 18 4 o'clock object "Opportunity." All Club women specially invited. Mrs. Anne Bonds of Governor's Island, and Mrs. Sophia Daniels of Morriatown, N. J., were the guests last Sunday of Mrs. Sophia B Smith, 113 West 130th street Dr Chal. Matthon, professor in the School of Medicine at Port au Prince, Haunt, and a corresponding member of the Pan-American Bureau of Sanitation, writing in New York City. Mrs. Edna Thomas, 312 West 148th street, is recovering from a severe attack of appendicitis. It was thought that she would have to undergo an operation, but her condition is much improved. The Order of Sisterblood held their anniversaries services Sunday night at the New Meyer Zion Church. This was the first service of its kind to be held in the new Church by a fraternal organization. The Officers and Members Of The ST. JAMES PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH NOTICE: TC SUBSCRIBERS Please have, your name on your mail box. Must investigate of, complain of or failure to receive rings in New York City, show that the mail boxes are unmetered. We, ask, your coopera- tion in this matter. Help, the postman in life offers to better service, by la- vying your name on your mail box. HARLEM HAPPENINGS William Curtier, 802 Amsterdam avenue, suffered an injury, when she tripped while passing, over wooden boards covering a sunken part of the sidewall in front of 21d West 145th street. Mrs. Emily Brice, 204 West 132nd street, suffered a contusion of the neck when she was struck by an auto while crossing at 163th street, and Seventh avenue. Arthur Evana, 235 West 148th street, was bitten on the left leg by a dog owned by Mega Barnes while walking along in front of 299 West 148th street. Garfield Burnett, 605 West 130th street, sustained a contusion of the left leg in an auto accident, while he was crossing Lenox avenue at 138th street. James Smith, 32 West 332th street, is suffering from an attack, of pneumonia. He was attended by Dr. Schlessinger, of the Harlem Hospital, Wilfred Sinkler, 15, of 24 West 131st street, was knocked down by, a private auto while he was playing in 137th street, near Seventh avenue. Helen Sheridan, 12, of 2794 Eighth avenue, slipped and fell while roller skating in Seventh avenue near 150th street, and struck her head on the curb stone. She received a laceration of the head and internal injuries. Mrs. Irene Byron, 70 West 133rd street, was afflicted at the Harlem Hospital by Dr. Goldberg for heart trouble. Ernest. Gant, 292 West 147th street, was a victim of an outo smushup in Seventh avenue near the corner of 147th street. He escaped with slight injuries and was, taken home. James Leonard, 262 West 153rd street, was bitten on the right hand by a dog owned by Herbert Reld. He was attended by Dr. Godfrey Nurse. Mrs. Olivella Young, of 20 West 129th street, is a patient in the Harlem Hospital. James Harris, 238 West 129th street, fractured his right leg and received a cut in his head when he fell from the top of the stoop of his residence to the yard below. He is a patient in the Harlem Hospital. Miss Dora Lee entertained at dinner Thursday evening, October 8, at the Villa Dora Mrs. and Mrs. George Moore and Mrs. Spence of Montreal, Mass. Mrs Cochburn of Worcester, Mass. Mrs Jennie Walker of Providence, R. L. and Ms. and Mrs Frank Scall of Brooklyn. Out of town guests at the Mother Zion parsonage were Bishop C. C. Clemens of Louisville, Ky., Rev Garrett and Dr. Bryers Norfolk, Va., Mrs. W. B Hill, Washington, D. C. Rev C. D Hazel, Portland Maine, Rev. Johnson, Ithaca, N. Y., Bishop W J. Walls, Charlotte N. Y., Bishop B G. Shaw, Birmingham Ala, and Dr B. W. Swan, Boston Mass. The Ladies of the Enterprise Female Band rave begin rehearsing for the fall season Mrs. Bertia Porter, organizer and president, 45 planning things for organization, which is offended of about thirty-five female musicians. They win he prize of fifty dollars in gold at the Elks Convention, at Richmond last month. Lieutenant J. W. Porter is the instructor. Mme Francesca Nicholas of 321 East 79th street, Yorkville, was tendered a birthday party by Mrs J. E. Middleton, 6 Culver street, Yankers, on September 23. Yellow and Green was the color being used in the decorating. The caterer, Moultrie, carried out the color scree in the birthday cake Guests motored from Englewood, New Rochelle and New York City. Harold Simmelaer, dramatic reader and Walter Crumbly of Dixie to Broadway, Co. were present. Whist and dancing featured the evening. The gift of honor received a diamond studded wrist watch. Jno. L. Stockton Appointed Delegate From New York Presbytery To Synod Jno. L. Stockton Appointed Delegate From New York Presbytery To Synod John L. Stockton, an elder of the St. James Presbyterian Church, the Rev. William Lloyd Jones, pastor, has been appointed as a delegate to the general Synod of his church which meets in Utica, N. Y. October 19 Mr. Stockton will represent the New York City P. bryder and is the first colored man to receive an appointment. The honor was given in recognition of the process being made by the colored members of that destination in this city. St James L. such is the largest colored Presbyterian body in the country and we the election of Rev. Lloyd as pastor a few months since he entered upon an endeavor to be a minister. Mr. Stockton is in the U.S. public service and is active in church and civic affairs of Helen Brother Hill Stanley is our new home man we are sure of a square deal. Nellie Carr, widow of the late Andrew Carr, was quietly wedded to Claas Thompson, October 7. Mrs. Ide Swindell, a prominent member of the Bethel A. M. E. Church, confined to her home 500 Macon streets. Mrs. Elise Little, Mrs. Jether Hoover of Winston, N.C., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Whitley while in the City of Churches. Mrs. George Shippon, Sharke of Clifton place, Mrs. Eilee Stannard Smith of Marcy avenue, spent the last week at Atlantic City. Ardue Miller, pharmacist at Blumenthal's Drug Store, has decided to go back to college this year, but will stay to fill prescriptions. Julius E. Dewearer of 503, Franklin avenue, known as "Jewel," has been a special clerk in the G. P. O., Brooklyn, another boost for our group. Mesdames Alice Palmas and Ella Weir of Cambridge, Mass., and Mrs Hattie Archung of Beverly, Mass., are visiting Mrs. S. A. Gibb, 518a Halley street. Funeral services were held over, Virginia W. Waters, wife of the late Rev. John Waters at Ralph A. M. E. Church, Chlancourt street, at 2 p.m., October 1. H. M. Scall director. The Brooklyn Mate Choral Club opens its concert season, October 20, at Brown's Memorial Churcha, Herkimer street, near Schneectady avenue. William H. Brown director. Mrs. Ruth Cole, 257, McDonough street, was recently elected president of the Tuesday Night Club. Mrs. Thomas Morton continues as secretary and Mrs. Morris Haight was retained as treasurer. Annual sermons of the Lady Auxiliary of the sons of North Carolina, at Fletch street Memorial A. M. E. Z. Church, 347 Bridge street, Sunday evening, October 4, by Rev. W. C. Brown pastor. Josepha Francesco Philipi Auxiliary, No. 4, of U. S. W. V. Mrs. William president, Mrs. Gertrude Duncan, secretary, are holding meetings in their new quarters, the parish house of the Siloam Presbyterian Church. A successful house party was held at the residence of Fred Thompson 1254 Prospect place on October 9, for the benefit of the building funds of Bethel A. M. E. Church, Schematy avenue, south Dean street. Rev. C. P. Coles pastor metted a near sum. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Martin, of Lexington avenue, son-in-law and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson, formerly of Augusta, Ga., celebrated their wedding anniversary on Saturday evening October 10, with a large group of their friends present to felicitate them. An elkhorse supper was served at midnight. H. S. Robinson Reelected To Head Bridge Street Church Relief Society H. S. Robinson Reelected To Head Bridge Street Church Relief Society Henry S. Robinson was elected for the sixth term as president of the Bridge Street M. E. Church Relief Society. The election took place on October 8. The members meeting in the church house. In the president's annual report it was shown that the society paid over $2,000 for sick aid and death benefits, and had a balance of over $5,000. In four years, Mr Robinson who is chief clerk, and who holds a very responsible position in the M. Tractant Company, as secretary to the purchasing agent, has built the society up from 89 members to 300, and from $400 to its present cash balance of $5,000. He has doubled the sick benefits and abolished death assessments. The officers are Henry S. Robinson president, George B. Durham, first vice president, Mrs. Katherine E. Fassett, financial secretary, Anna Calloway, assistant financial secretary; and secretary Jessica H. Johnson, recording secretary Henry C. Wadkins, treasurer, Rodger Harkleys, chaplain and John I. Taylor, sergeant-at-arms, Banking committee; T W Delaney, Mrs. Willie McCann and A O Martin. The officers will be installed on November 10, 2001, president of the First Street Church Relief Society Dr W C. Brown and Dr E F. Tyley. Boy's Skull Cracked When He Falls Down Stairs In His Home Wilhelm St. John, a 10-year-old school boy, fell down the stairs in his residence and suffered a possible fracture of his stall. He was taken to the Harlem Hospital, where medical aid was given him by Dr. Goldberg The fourteenth annual Safety Council, general of the National Safety Council, in Cleveland, O. numbered, among its nearly five thousand, delegates, eight Pullman porters, each representing one of the eight Pullman women. The Griffin of 623 East, 166th outstanding veteran in the service was the delegate from the New York town, and he has written an interesting account of his experience, there emphasizing the fact that although older, larger corporations employ more men, the Pullman Co. was the only corporation that colored delegates. Mr. Griffin's splendid account is given below. Mr. James H. Hugan New York City In accordance with my promise to you, I am sending you herein a brief account of the 14th annual, Safety Congress of the National Safety Council, held at Cleveland, O. Sepember 28-October 1, 1925. There were nearly five thousand delegates attending from the various departments, of most of the largest, indus- tries, concerns, in the country. There were also presidents, and other high executives, as well as shogun men, engineers, conductors, maintenance- alway, foremen, and workers from various railway companies. The highest al. well as the lowest meet there and listened to well-prepared papers and speeches on various subjects pertaining to accident prevention and safety first measures in it. It is a fact worth noting that the Pullman company was the only corporation that sent a Negro to this conference, although many of the concerns represented there are large employers of Negro labor, some of whom are employed in far more hazardous work than are our group in the industry. I also want to inform you that we were accorded exactly the same treatment, both by the company officials and in the convention, that any other delegation received. The Pullman Co. intended for our sleeping quarters while there and each delegate from our company, white and black, was given a seat in our car, night and day, to guard our belongings. The Pullman district Superintendent at Cleveland, and his entire force, were at all, times very coyoteous and even solitious, about our comfort. "All the delegates, white and black, were in the district's office and told that the company did not want its representatives to feel that they must eat at lunch counters or cheap restaurants." They expected us to forlame as well as the representatives of ours, other, company, and that we would be required to spend a lot of time and money related to expense. There were eight porters in attendance; one each from Mexico City, San Francisco, Atlanta, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Detroit, Cincinnati and "Yours Truly" from New York. These men acted as representatives for the porters. I am proud that our group conducted themselves in a highly creditable manner, both in and out of the Congress. Each delegate was supplied with transportation, both railroad and Pullman, for the trip both ways. Picked Up Here and There John B. Ford, who operates as a Pullman buffet car porter on the New York-Boston express of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, and who was struck by a terminal motor trick on September 28, at South Station in Boston, is still confined to his home at 2424 Seventh avenue, this city, as a result of that mishap. According to Mr. Ford's account of the incident, he had been receiving passengers to his car preparatory to its departure for New York, and was in the act of stepping aboard the car when he was hit by the truck, which was loaded with matter for the car preceding his on the train. The impact of the machine threw him face downward on the platform, fracturing his left knee and injuring his left arm. He said the driver of the truck did not give any signal or warning of his approach, and he was struck by the wheels, he didn't hear at coming, his back being turned in the direction from which it came upon him. His train, which was scheduled to leave the station when he was struck was held until a physician was summoned, the physician accompanied him as far as Worcester, where he was to his injuries. He is now under the care of Dr. P. W Cheney, a Harvard physician. The primary election for the nomination of candidates for officers in local 5, of the Pullman Porters' Bennett Association of the New York district, was closed on Wednesday, October 7. Candidates receiving the highest number of votes, thereby making them eligible to run in the election, delegate to the chairman, vice-chairman, secretary, treasurer, and on the grievance committee of the association were: A. L. Totten, T. E. Griffin, A. Goins, R. O. Unhan, H. P. Darden, A. P. Condy, J. H. Mingo and E. F. Efforts. An American Miss Floria Pheney, president of the Brooklyn League of Industrial Women, is receiving congratulations upon her selection as a scholarship student at Brookwood Labor College, Ketonall, NJ. She was awarded the $500 scholarship of the American League for Public Service and will leave to begin her studies at Brookwood on Monday, October 19th. She will be the first colored girl enrolled in student there. Miss Agatha Harrison, an English university, connected with the University of London, with the National, Y. W. C. A. will be the speaker at the verse service, Sunday 18th at 4:30 o'clock. Her subject will be 'How the Y. W. C. A. touches the women in industry around the world.' Miss Harrison is well equipped to speak on this theme as she brought through various countries. She is the first study of industrial conditions relating to women. Miss. Nellie Vershildi has been selected as assistant editor of the League. Light the monthly publication of Brooklyn League of Industrial Arts, which staff in charge of exchanges, and Clara Satterwhite is reporter for Aslain. Place Branch. The October issue contains a report of Woman's Trade Union League Conference wittily. Miss. Nellie Vershildi industrial secretary at Ashfield Plaza. A tented conference at Brookwood, Labor College. Interesting programs have been ar- ranged for each night of the Bazaar; October 19-24. On Monday night the Industrial Club girls will furnish the program; Tuesday, Mrs. Caleb Rich- mond; Wednesday, Girl Reserves; Thursday, Miss Deseraled Newton; Friday, Mrs. Augusta Slater. The thing the opening will be be held before the opening will be held Thursday evening, October 15, and all friends are urged to attend to assist with the decorating. Mrs. Eleanor Godwin of Borden-town, N., visited Ashland Place recently and contributed to the Branch a year's subscription to the Crisis. At an open meeting of the Committee of Management held Tuesday, October 6, Dr. Sara-Brown of Washington, D. C. rendered a report of the Health Survey made shortened by a survey of schools for trained nurses, practical nurses, trained attendants, infant nurses; of health education facilities and of the need for a girl's camp. Other interesting-reports were given by Mrs. L. A. Mulligan, concerning the Silver Bay City Conference, Miss Helene Gassaway on the Maqua Girl Reserve Conference, and Miss Mabel Byrd on Prospect and Naphawin hair. Miss Grace the present were Mrs. P. A. Wallace, Mrs. M. Welmon, Miss Bessie Dickey and Mrs. Dickey, Miss Daisy Holsey, Miss Harriett Crabbe and Miss Cora Lomax. A. Halloween masquerade, party will be given at Ashland Place Friday evening, October 30. Prizes will be awarded for the most unique costumes. The Amicita Club held a lively initiation meeting last Friday evening at the home of following members; Gertrude Montague, Marguerite Robinson and Elise Morean. The following officers were installed for the coming year. Cara Satterlywhite, president; Alta Carney, vice president; Harriet Crabb, secretary; Carrie Murray, treasurer. The following officers were elected in the Jolly Junior Club Dolly Dove; vice president, Virginia Groves; secretary, Pauline Springer; treasurer, Diane Lane A large number of girls and women have already signified their interest in the gymnasium class which had its first meeting last Tuesday when Rose Reed, a gymnast in Sibeden and has taught gymnastics on the continent for several years, She did work with Miss Edna Sandlin, metropolitan executive in France during the war. Since then she has traveled extensively in America. Mme. A'Lelia Walk.r Is Hostess In Honor Gi French Royalty. Sunday, October 4, Mrge A.LeLia Walker entertained at dinner at Villi Lewaro, Irvington-On-Hudson, in honor of Prince Kojo Tovalon Honrouru Paris France Her other guests included Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Stlanger, Mr. and Mrs. John Dorsot, Mrs. Anna Dorsotti, Mrs. Mae Walker Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Louis George, Atorney James A. Cobb of Washington, D.C. and Algeron Roane. FOR SALE—Chair, Baby Carriage, 7th Ave. 2194—Beautiful baby carriage, also walking chair, reasonable. Simpson. IN MEMORIAMS MEMORIAM—September, 1925 In sad but loving memory of the departure of my loving husband, Ralph W. Epps, one year ago. It seems as it was yesterday that you left me here in this cruel world to enjoy your life and I know you will happy in your home where you have one. I loved you, dear Ralph, but God loved you best and He took you with Him home to rest. I will never forget you my dear husband, and will meet you when this journey is over. Your loving wife. CARD OF THANKS Mrs. Laura B. Thomas of 47 West 139th street wishes to take this opportunity to express her sincere thanks and appreciation to her many patients and to remind illness in Bellevue Hospital. She is now a confessant at her home. New York Pharmacist Weds Leavenworth Girl Dr. C. B. Williams, formerly of St. Louis, Mo. now a pharmacist, with the Boutte Pharmacy, 7th avenue and 17th street, went to Leavenworth, Kah, and was married on Friday, October 2, to Mia J. Maxine Henderson of that city, director of physical education for women at Lincoln University, Jefferson City, Mo. The Rev. Mr. Tillman, pastor A. M. E. Church, admired, Miss Henderson was a graduate, from the Sargent School of Physical Education, Cambridge, Mass. The bridal couple spent a week in St. Louis and Indianapolis, reaching New York on Saturday, October 10. Dr. and Mrs. Williams are housekeeping at 137 West 130th street. WONDERFUL BARGAIN In 2-family house in Van Nest for colored buyer—$12,000. Can be bought low cash. For particular write box 52, N. Y. Age. SPECIAL NOTICES Lost-Bankbook No. 24577 on the Chelsia Exchange Bank and pocketbook containing $6. Kyres and pen, on seventh avenue, on 133rd street near Seventh avenue. Finder may obtain a copy of the book and pocketbook which is valued as a gift to the owner—Mrs. Clarise Holder 233 West 133rd street. SPECIAL NOTICE Mrs. Eliza Van Ness is very anxious to know the whereabouts of her sisters) Amanda and Emma Chandler and her brother, Jerry Chandler born in Graham, N. C. Address communications to Mrs. Eliza Van Ness, 111 West 136th street, clo Miss J. Jenkins, Information Wanted One STEVE JOHNSON has died in Columbus, Ohio, intestate, leaving considerable money. Anyone knowing the whereabouts of his sister, maiden name, Julia Johnson, last heard of in New York City, address unknown, will kindly communicate with his attorney, Joseph E. Bowman, Weldon-Harwick Bldg. 336 S. High street, Columbus, Ohio. TELEPHONE CIRCLE 1299 THE RADIO BARBER SHOP With S. R. VAN We use and sell Hair Promoter 131 WEST 53rd STREET New York City WHY NOT GET THE BEST? When It Costs No More Broadway AUTO School BENJAMIN F. THOMAS, Prok. 213 West 53rd St. New York Phone Circle 0995 Expressing and Trucking. LOCAL, LONG DISTANCE MOVING Baggage to and from Railroads and Stormship Piers T. & T. 302 WEST 140th STREET BRAD. 0232 Residence phone Edgecombe 8256. Junp06-Junp TO. SHARE ROOM Respectable client to share room with student, separate beds also late room, double bed. Retire as exchanged. Morningside first. Brooklyn FURNISHED. UNFUR.—B KLYN McDonough Bt. 272—Furnished, unfurnished, atove rooms, equal or two gentlemen. Use of kitchenette. Phone: 1027 212 602. Haddingway 602. APARTMENTS' MANH'N St. Michaels Ave. 605—7 rooms and bath, all improvements, room, year, apply, on premises. 120th Bt. 62 West—High class classroom, 78 room apartment to lease. 150th Bt. 67 West—Apartment furnished, three rooms, all improvements, $40. Daley. Parker St., 1628 - 7 rooms, in two milly houses; all improvements, must be seen to be appreciated take Pelham Bay train to Zerega avenue. APARTMENTS — B'KLYN Macon St., 504 — Floor; 4 rooms all conventions, call between 4 and 9 p.m. Mrs. Duckett. HOUSES FOR SALE $3,000 cash buys brownstone on 132nd St. $5,000 cash buysstorysnigle on 132nd St. $4,000 cash buys eight-family apt on 75th St. Fifteen years' mortgage on eaker parcel. Bellwood, 222 W. 132nd St. REAL ESTATE Three-family, 16 rooms, all improvement, near 180th street. Price $11,000. Trent, 1416 Vyse avenue, near Freeman street, Station. Long Island One family house with six rooms and bath, all improvements. One block from transportation, Jamaica Long Island. Apply owner Room 515. Bank of the Manhattan Building, Jamaica. Telephone Jamaica 0286 Oct10-31 Homes For Sale, New Jersey NEW HOME FOR SALE PLAINFIELD, N. J. In Plainfield, N. J.—6 rooms and tile bath, electricity and gas; near school, trolley and churches. Good residential section; $1,500 cash, 186 ft. avenue, near Terrell Road. Apply J Pashin, 626 West Front street, Plainfield, N. J., phone No. 3198. Oct13-6 HOMES—All improvements, single and families. $500 Real Estate, 328 Liberty Street, Plainfield, N. J. May23-6 **BARGAIN**—One and two-family houses in Westfield, Scotchplains, Plainfield, Cranford, Rosell and Kenelworth, N. J. Prices $2,000 upwards. Terms to suit buyers: J. Johnson, Broker, N.J. Phone Westfield, N.J. Phone Westfield 1882-1073. June 27, 1 Male and Female Help Salesmen and ladies wanted W $10 deposit we will let you carry lino consisting of high grade lad silk underwear and hosiery. mission will bring you up to $4 week steady position. Write H nior, 99 Union Ave., Columbu wearer Co., New Rochelle, N Men and women can earn a money during their spare home by knitting the hand ma- sher socks on the high speed family kitting machine. Call in person t to 5 p.m. any day or write in ticenters and free demonstrat how socks are made. A skirt Thomas C Craig, Room 25, fifth 1164 West 135th street. CANVASSERS WANTED $90 A WEEK EASY—Introdu and taking orders at 1000s of new product. Fast seller—R peater. La-Em-Strait Hair Dressing Keeps the hair in place, helps become straight, keeps healthy. Write quick for free ple and catalog of 100 fast household products, including talizing Brown Skin Face F Rush mame today Ho Ro Co. 630 Ho-Ro-Co Bldg. St Mstour. Cahvasser—Industrious, reliable worker wanted, to self-find downtown corporation ha- clothing, futs, dry goods, mature, phonographs on sis. Write I. C. Co. N. GOOD NEWS TO ALL Do you COUGH? Are TLESH and WEIGHT SURE & LIFE, that secretion checks and prevents cough tis, Asthma, Tuberculosis the BODY Vigor and Large bottle $175, smaller Drug stores, or Longest N Union St, Jersey City close copy of King Tut's Amulet Egyptian Secrets. The N RAY OF LIFE, 250 pages $2.20. Agents wanted Excelsior Regalia Co. UNIFORMS, BANNERS REGALIAS For all Societies Attributes cheerfully given 461 LENOX AVENUF North East Corner 133d Street