New York Age

Saturday, February 13, 1926

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)
Rev. A.C. POWELL IS IMPROVING A REAL HOME PAPER The New York Age Goes Into More Homes Direct Than Any Other Paper Published The New York Age CLASSIFIED OPPORTUNITIES The New York Age Cleared Ade Will Bright Effective Results BEE LAST PAGE VOL. 39. No. 22. CIRCULATED IN ALL STATES AND ALL FOREIGN COUNTRIES NEW YORK, N. Y. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1926. BEST ENITED—BEST KNOWN ALL NEWS FIT TO PRINT 5 CENTS IN U.S.A. (TEN CENTS IN FOREIGN LANDS) 14 Year Old Girl Dies as Result of Attacks by 10 White Men Howard University President Called to Brooklyn Church Mrs. Brown, Founder and Principal of Palmer Memorial Institute, Sedalia, N. C., Noted Race Leader and Lecturer, Has Closed Campaign For Permanent Endowment of School With $250,000 In Pledges and Cash Gifts in Palmer, of one of the institute and knowl. results being general, a words of those greater education. members of the contributions to One Woman the years of ex- has grown wom- nishing at a rapid protection. Its only brought about by the principal, Mrs. we all have come of the northern time the war have toward Negro were taken a different thousands of dollars name so fluency has treated decrease. The are various but one a sons can be attribu- turing of the smaller learning for Negroes Southland thus make- ly contributors feel and efforts had been made? question that Mrs. asked almost end- the last few years of raise the necessary school. What is to be school, Mrs. Brown, same? The only ans- a mere hope backed up prayer to God he has come to pass and have been answered, and there is now being be- manent basis and from there will not only stand in Sedalia for the North south but as a whose chief pur- pell the lives and cha- students and make of American citizens 1 A Takes Over School An Missions Association New York city has contented the school and now Pat unmarried daughter of Anne J A M A and the same guiding influ- (Continued on Third Page) BROOKLYN LODGE OF ELKS NEGOTIATE FOR PURCHASE OF PUTNAM AVE. PROPERTY AT COST OF $55,000 FOR NEW HEADQUARTERS Detective Kirley of the Narcotic Squad sprung a little surprise last Friday, morning on Albert Jones 43, 111 West 132nd street. Officer Kirley found several tubes of heroin in Jones possession at 445 Lenox avenue, valued at about $3,000. Jones is alleged to be one of the biggest narcotic drug sellers of Harleigh. Jones pleaded guilty and was held in $10,000 bail for Special Sessions. Less than a block away, Officers Patrick Monaghan and John OBrien ridden a apartment of James Brown, Brown and William John Swain, sons of 101 West 139th street, who was employed by Brown to sell narcotics to addicts. Several customers who came to the home of Brown to purchase drugs were arrested. They gave their flames; as Edward Shober, 183 West 134th street; Louis Harris, 471 West 123rd street; Joseph Thompson, 114 West 139th street; Charleston Hutchinson, 47 West 145th street; Idore Miller, 471 Lenox avenue, and Trederick Wilson, no address. Brown was arranged in Washington Height Court and held in $10,000 bail. John was held in $5,000 bond. "Numbers" Collector Held In $10,000 Bail The "numbers" runners had a cold reception Monday morning at Washington height Court when they faced Judge Weil Leo Hewitt 29, 120 West 134th street was one of a number of men arranged in court charged with policy playing. Instead of having the case dismissed and walking out with a smile as other policy players have done, he was held on $10,000 bail for further hearing: Miss Belle Tobias Is On Super-Honor Roll For the third consecutive term Miss Belle C Tobias has distinguished herself and brought credit to the race by qualifying for the super high honor roll of Wadleigh High School, West 14th street, Manhattan. At the recent half year assembly she was called to the platform and acted the honors that go to those who maintain an average of 90 per cent or above in all prepared subjects. Before attending Wadleigh Miss Tobias was a student at Dunbar High School of Washington, D.C. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Channing H Tobias of 203 West 122nd street BROOKLYN LODGE OF I PURCHASE OF PUTNAM COST OF $55,000 FOR If negotiations now under way go through the Brooklyn Lodge No. 32, I B P (O) of the Word will soon acquire a spaces and hand some home at 65 Putnam avenue, now owned and occupied by the exclusive Lincoln Club. The lodge has its present headquarters at 1022 Putton street, a residence building which has been partly adapted to lodge purposes. The Like lodge is one of the largest fraternal organizations in Brooklyn and the present quarter have long since been inadequate. When ever initiation or other large ceremonies are to be carried out, the lodge has had to use the Mason Temple at Clermont and Lafayette Brown & Stevens Bank Depositors To Receive Redundant OTH Members Church Where Henry Ward Beecher And Ernest Adbutt Pastored Extends Call To President J. Stanley Durkee 3,500 of 10,000, The Small Creditors To Be Paid In Full: Others Paid Later "The Jews, only a century ago were despised, hated and oppressed, but they have defied, met and vanquished the hard conditions imposed upon them, and are now opulent and powerful, and compel respect in all countries. Take courage from the (Benited on Second Page) Brown & Stevens Bank Depositors To Receive Refund Of $10 Money 5,000 of 10,000, The Small Creditors, To Be Paid In Full; Others Paid Later Philadelphia, Pa—Herman N. Schwartz, Receiver for Brown & Stevens Bank, Broad and Lombard streets, has sent notice to the 10,000 depositors announcing that commencing February 11 thirty-five hundred depositors will be paid in full. Receiver Schwartz states it will be necessary for every depositor to sign a proof claim and leave the book at the bnak before any money will be paid. This is the first of a series of payments to be made to the Brown & Stevens creditors. It is expected the next will soon follow. On account of the large expense involved in handling such a large number of claims the receivers decided to pay off the small creditors first, as it would make a savings to the estate In the announcement Receiver Schwartz states "You will be glad to know that through the personal efforts and assistance of Mr. F C Brown, the Receiver has been able to save indirectly for the estate one of the large apartment houses in New York City. Belle Butler Opens First Store In New Odd Fellows Building On 135th Street Belle Butler Opens First Store In New Odd Fellows Building On 135th Street --- The first store to be opened in the magnificent new apartment building erected by the G. K. O of Odd Fellows at 20 West 151st street was opened last week by Belle Butler, a prominent member of it Household of Ruth whose husband is one of the officials of the lodge. Her establishment will handle cigars and cigarette stationery and newspapers. She will make a special feature of Negro newspapers and magazines. The store is well equipped and stocked with standard brands of tobacco and seems to be doing a prosperous business during its first week. ELKS NEGOTIATE FOR M AVE. PROPERTY AT R NEW HEADQUARTERS avenues The Lincoln Club property is just a short distance from the present like home and is being held at $1,000. A committee named by the club has been conferring with the club officials and Architect Mitchell has been called into the conference. The transaction it is believed by those familiar with the situation, will be the basis of a favorable report by the committee and this will almost certainly be approved by the lodge. Brooklyn Lodge No. 12 is said to be in an excellent condition financially, some reports being that it has in the neighborhood of $100,000 in cash on deposit in local banks. Plymouth Congregational Church of Brooklyn, made famous by the pastorate of Henry Ward Beecher, noted abolitionist, and Lyman Abbott, noted editor, has extended a call to the Rev. Stanley Durkee, president of Howard University, Washington, D. C. Every Seat Reserved $1.25—that's all Broadcasting Over WHN 9:30 to 10:30 Tickets On Sale At Monarch Home 245 W 137th St. Aud. 9013 MI-TEE MONARCH'S Ball & Reception Wed., February 17 New Madison Square Garden 50th ST & EIGHTH AVE ADMISSION $1.25 (WITH SEAT RESERVED) Program and Dance from 9 P M to ? (Come early to hear Orchestra and Broadcasting) Monarch's Band Of 100 Pieces Under leadership Of Lieut. Fred Simpson Be One Of Mongrch's 20,000 Guests February 17th G Exalted Ruler J Finley Wilson G Exalted Dgt Mrs Laura E Willifama And their Staffs Will be present To secure to each laborer the whole product of his labor, or as nearly as possible, is a worthy object of any good government. It may seem strange that any man should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing bread from the Church Where Henry And Lyman Abh Call To Preside Plymouth Congregation famous by the pastorate of abolitionist, and Lyman Abh ed a call to the Rev. Stanley University, Washington, D. Dr. Durkee has been given ten days to make a decision in the matter but according to the Associated Press, he has already indicated his intention to accept the new post. He has for several weeks filled the pulpit of the Brooklyn Church at the request of the trustees and on February 8 was officially notified of a call to succeed Dr. Newell Dwight Hillus as pastor Dr. Hifis resigned on October 1 because of ill health Will Finish Present School Term Should Dr. Durkee accept the call he woud arrange to remain as head of Howard for the balance of the present school term. His resignation it is thought, will be tendered the Howard Board of Trustees at their spring meeting. Dr. Durkee has been president of Howard since 1918. During this time the university has made marked progress, both scholastic and material. But during the past year a section of the alumni have been extremely critical of the policies inaugurated by Dr. Durkee and last summer went so far as to demand his resignation. This last act was brought about by the dropping of several prominent members of the faculty and the discontinuance of certain courses of study. Although the Board of Trustees voted unanimously to stand by Dr. Durkee in his attitude it is believed that the criticism directed against him has done much to cause him to decide to give up educational work. Every Seat Reserved $1.25—that's all MI-TEE M Ball & I Wed., Feb. (At Harvard Commencement, June 24, 1896—Alumni, Dinner) Mr. President and Gentlemen: "It would in some measure relieve my embarrassment if I could, even in a slight degree, feel myself worthy of the great honor which you Ward Beecher Pastored, Extends J. Stanley Durkee al Church of Brooklyn, made Henry Ward Beecher, noted ott, noted editor, has extend- Durkee, president of Howard C. Rev. A. C. Powell Returns Home Sick The Rev A Clayton Powell, pastor Abhysian Baptist Church, who recently went to Los Angeles, calif. has returned home seriously ill, due to collapse from overwork. He is being attended by two physicians and they have to undergo an operation. As The Age goes to press, he is showing decided improvement. Harlem Man Held For Federal Authorities Robert A Byrd, 312 West 140th Street is being held for the Federal authorities on a warrant from Washington D.C. He was arrested at 2 a.m. Sunday by a detective of the 10th Precinct squad on a Federal warrant for some sort of swaddle in the Nation's capital which was a later act of the Federal law. He was arranged before Magistrate Blood in the Washington Heights Court Monday morning and ordered held for authorities from Washington who were expected to take him back to the District of Columbia Tuesday morning. MONARCH'S Reception February 17 Monarch's Band Of 100 Pieces Under leadership Of Lieut. Fred Simpson Be One Gov. Smith Sends Greetings; Mayor Walker and Other City Officials Appear In Person and Command Work of Social Service Agency—No Color Prejudice In A. F. of L. Declares Hugh Frayne, General Organizer of Body The fifteenth annual conference of the New York Urban League, held in New York City, February 3 to 5, was marked by several unusual features—the presence of Mayor James J. Walker and Civil Service Commissioner Ferdinand Q. Morton on Wednesday night; addresses by Hugh Frayne, general organizer, American Federation of Labor; Police Commissioner George V. McLaughlin; Health Commissioner Dr. Louis I. Harris; and a complimentary luncheon to delegates by the Metropolitan Life Go., Haley Fiske, president, at the Metropolitan Building, with a talk by Lee K. Frankel, second vice-presi- Fatal Illness Follows Upon 3-Day Detention In Barn By Ten White Men Death put an end to the sufferings of the fourteen year old colored girl who was held captive in an old barn at Bailey avenue and 234th street for three days without food and who was assaulted by at least ten white men during this period. She died in the Metropolitan Hospital on Welfare Island, Friday. February 5, from pneumonia, which came as a result of exposure during this period. Although the authorities are maintaining the utmost secrecy and the daily papers failed to carry a story about the child's death. The Age learned that the body was taken South on Monday by an aunt, who lives in Harlem, for burial Men Still Charged With Rape At the office of the Children's Society in the Bronx it was stated that the ten men arrested would be given a hearing in the 8th District Court of the Bronx on February 16. They are charged with rape and an effort will be made to have their bonds in released. The Children's Society, the N A A P, and other social and civic organizations will assist the District Attorney in prosecuting the case. Detectives Fuley and Dinan of the Kingsbridge Station, who made the arrests declare that three men fell followed the girl from the 21st street subway station and took her to a barn where for three days she was detained against her will and assaulted. A citizen noticed the suspicious actions of a number of men entering and leaving the barn and reported the matter to the police. When the girl was found her low embrys were almost frozen and she declared that she had not been given any food for the three days she had been held. She was removed to the Metropolitan Hospital where her condition grew worse and became hopeless when pneumonia developed. Before her death the young girl gave a detailed story of her experience, which the authorities believe will be sufficient to convert the men held. Race Lawyers Appear In Texas Court For First Time In History Race Lawyers Appear In Texas Court For First Time In History Austin, Tex. Two Chicago lawsuits the cost of our rare case are to appeal the Court of Appeals of Texas represented the National Colored Shriner Organization in a case involving use by the order of white shriner emblems and rubals at the opening session on February 11 in Alexandria, Haiti. Chairman of the board, Mrs. Leroy D. Clayton Powell, pastor, the presiding officer was Commissioner Morton, and Mayor Walker was the principal speaker. Mayor Strong For Morton. The city's head made a strong plea for greater tolerance and for less prejudice and bigoty. The Mayor took occasion to play a high tribute to Commissioner Morton, landing his ability and praising his work as a member of the Municipal Civil Service Commission. Incidentally, Mayor Walker declared with emphasis that as long as he retained the mayoralty chair, Mr Morton would be a member of his cabinet. The opening session of the annual conference was held Wednesday morning in the auditorium of the West 137th street branch Y W C A. 129 West 137th street Delegates from fifty cities were enrolled, the longest distance travelled having been covered by Mrs Katherine Barr of the Los Angeles branch of the Urban League. John F. Nail vice-president of the New York Urban League, was the presiding officer, and the speakers were Walter W Pettit, assistant director, New York School of Social Work and E. Franklin Fravier, director Atlanta School of Social Work. Secretary Hubert Speaks Luncheon at 12:30 p.m. was served at 184 West 135th street, with Arthur C. Holden, president, N Y Urban League, presiding, a talk by fames H Hubert, secretary, N Y Urban League on "Social Work in New York City, and a discussion on relations between National and Local Urban Leagues The afternoon session at 2 o'clock was presided over by Mrs Elizabeth Walton of the executive board, National Urban League the subject of discussion being "A program to Meet Negroes Social Needs in Cities" Lawrence A Oxley director Bureau of Colored Work Raleigh, N.C. led the discussion which was engaged in by Forrester B Washington of Philadelphia for the North, and J Marshall Ragland of Louisville, N.C. for the South At 4:45 o'clock, the formal annual meeting of the National Urban League was held in the Y W A auditorium At the night session at Abyssinian Church, the Weir-Jeter Trio played a musical program and the speakers besides Mayor Walker, were Mrs A W Hunton, L. Hollingsworth Wood, president, National Urban League, and Mrs Blanche Armstrong Beatty of Tampa Fla Labor Unions Discussed The second day's session was given over in the morning to the "Experience of Negroes With Labor Unions," and the afternoon to "Training For Industrial Opportunities." Miss Nelle Swarts, director of Bureau of Women in Industry, N Y State Department of Industry, presided at the morning session in the Y W (A auditorium) and an exhaustive report of a survey of the trades union situation was made by Charles S. Johnson, director Department of Research and Investigations, National Urban League. Mr Johnson said that only four unions invite Negro members, although from MIDDLE OF NORTH, N.Y., November 18, 1914, taken by widener emblazon, and sent, although the A. F. L. has already supported the association of Negro workers so that they may not be the available as armed workers in the Federation (favors formation of separate Negro organizations). The survey was discussed by Ira A. Keld, industrial secretary of the local league, and A. J. Fortner, chief advisor of the State Department of Labor, who requested assistance Brady, director of the Negro League, would not be present. Mr. Fortner declared that until the Negro becomes as competent as the white worker he might expect to find prejudice. A member of the International Typographical Union, and for forty years a union man, the speaker said there is no color line in "Big Six" Typographical Union in New York City, which, with a memberhip of 10,000, has between forty and fifty Negro members holding union cards. David Scores White Critics S. E. Grain, field representative of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, reported the activities of that or- ganization towards securing higher wages for the Pullman porter. The Thursday afternoon session, at 10:30 a.m. was held in the Russell Sage Foundation Building, 22nd street and Lexington avenue, with Dr. James E. Gregg, principal of Hampton Institute presiding. The principal speech was made by resident John W. Davis of the West Virginia Collegiate Institute, Institute, W. Va., who described the effort of "white collar" professional merit to attempt to stigmatize the students at industrial schools of trades and industries. T. Arnold Hill, director, Department of Industrial Relatlng, National Urban League, F. D. Bluford, president, A & T, College, Greenbore, N. C.; Mrs. Gettrude E. McDougall, assistant principal, F. S. 69, and Dr. George E. Haynes of Federal Council of Churches, also spoke. The evening session was held at Holy Trinity Church, Montague and Glinton streets, Brooklyn, and the Rev James B. Adams, pastor Concord Baptist Church, Brooklyn, member Executive board of the church, president "Inspire" the theme and Director Hill gave a resume of industrial work of the National Urban League William Pickens, field secretary, was also on program. McLaughlin Hits Cabarets. Police Commissioner George V. McLaughlin of the City of New York was the principal speaker. He praised the Negro for having improved the condition of his race, but thought too many were seeking success as lawyers and physicians. The Commissioner described what he denominated the two principal evils in Handmaid's "Numbers" playing and ant in "slumming parties." He asked cooperation from the race in dealing with these two conditions. Emphasis was laid upon the fact that in the Police Department, under his administration, there would be no politics and no prejudice, and that Negro policemen would receive the same consideration as the others. He urged a social program to get young men and women of the race into the churches, and urged Negro workers to strive for efficiency rather than posing as strike breakers if they want to make permanent progress. Commissioner McLaughlin declared that the Negro has made wonderful progress in the past ten years, are enjoying prosperity, own some of the best homes in the city and have a right to feel proud of their achievements. Other speakers were William H. Baldwin Jr. Arthur C. Holden and Robert J. Flay. The Friday morning session, held at Russell Sage Foundation Building, was presided over by Roger N. Baldwin, director of Council Room. The subject was "Working for Industrial Opportunities," was continued with Hugh Praye, general organizer, A. F of L., as one of the speakers. Governor Smith Sends Greetings A personal message was received from Governor Alfred E. Smith, who was unable to be present, in which he gave expression to his Interest in Urban League work. Governor Smith to Secretary J. H. Hubert as follows: STATE OF NEW YORK INVOCATIVE CHAMBERS ALBANY February 4th 1926. Mr. JAMES H. HUHERT, Executive Secretary New York Urban League 202 West 10th Street New York City Dr. Mr. HUHERT Pressure of the States business at the capital keeps me from greeting in person the delegates of the fifteenth annual conference of the National Urban League. I regret my absence all the more because the conference is the guest of the New York branch whose members I am glad to count as home-town friends and neighbors. It's an event of no more local significance however for your organization is dealing with vital problems affecting a large part of the National population. The progress of the coloured people of America is properly a source of pride to that race and to every white man who treasures the basic principles upon which our democracy is founded equal rights to all and special privileges to none. Easy Mobility Brings Changes If there is one characteristic of modern society which differentiates it from life even fifty years ago it is the speed with which changes take place today. This easy mobility has affected fundamental changes in the status of our colored fellow citizens. I need only refer to the last migration of colored people from the South to the industrial area of which there has cared with it in the industrial population of congested districts, such housing health and general living condition. Your organization throughout the country is dealing with them una constructive way. They are so difficult and complex that I congratulated you upon the existence of these Urban League branches which are serving as unengled agencies to solve them not only for colored but for all Americans. For I am one of those who believes that the same adjustment of the races in a spirit of tolerance and instigue is one of the most pressing Troops Called Out To Guard Prisoner in Georgetown, Del. Georgetown, Del.—Delagare goes on record following Kentucky in upholding the law by using the State's National Guards to protect a prisoner charged with criminal assault upon a 12 year-old girl from a lynching mob. Harry Butler was arranged for trial Monday in the County Court House, while his little victim was reported ill in a local hospital. A crowd throughed the streets as the state troops marched through the town to guard the court house while the trial was in progress. The entire square was roped off and machine guns were used while a squad of 25 state police was on duty. The alleged crime was committed on January 21. Soon after Butler's arrest a mob of nearly thousand men searched every jail in the vicinity but the prisoner had been put away for safe keeping. Baltimore Jails Negro Living In White Block Baltimore--Henry Johnson is in jail here today for refusing to move out of a white block following a court order. Judge Duke told Johnson he would be in jail until his family and all the furniture in the house had been removed. Julius Benton Killed When Auto Overturns Jacksonville, Fla.—Julius Benton, well known in Jacksonville and New York City, was instantly killed when the auto mobile in which he and five other young men and women were returning from a dance in St. Augustine overturned. Benton's skull was crushed but the others escaped without injury. questions facing our country Wishing your conference every success I am Frayne Talks On Preindice. In his address, Mr Frayne said he brought good wishes and good will from President Green of the A F of L. Takup the matter of prejudice against the Negro laborer, Fayne asserted that the national body does not discriminate at all against a Negro, or against any race or creed. The doors of the A. F. of L. he declared, are opened wide. But, he admitted, there is discrimination in local unions—groups that have not learned that to close the door against any worker as not helpful to that cause of trade. He admitted that to break down this prejudice the "Negroes should "sell themselves to the white man," through educating the latter to the point of understanding the Negro's value as an industrial entity. Jesse O. Thomas, southern field secretary, National Urban League, cited facts showing a definite rivalry between the North and South for Negro labor. This had developed to the extent that in small towns in Georgia Negroes were not able to buy raffle tickets to northern schools, so they came to moderate point first, such as Memphis or Atlanta. In other states, said he, the interstate transfer of laborers by contractors is heavily taxed. And agents are sent North to traign back Negroes who have migrated. At the same time, Mr Thomas disclosed that Chambers of Commerce and other civic bodies are using "legitimate means" for Keeping Negro labor aboard the South for elementary and vocational schools and by campaigns for better rural understanding in such cities as Atlanta and Birmingham. Interracial Movements do Good Inter-racial movements, continued Mr. Thomas, are bringing about better conditions as is evidenced by conferences between white and colored college students, and the recent observance in Atlanta of Religious Emphasis Week in which both races took part when the Rew Mordecai W. Brown of West Virginia was invited to speak to white congregations, with non-segregation in scaring arrangements in the majority of white churches. In the am, the Metropolitan Life luncheon was served, followed by an inspection of the Metropolitan building Vice-President Frankel in charge of welfare work for the insurance company said that of the 23,000,000 policy blenders a goodly percentage were Negroes. Dr Hoffman Stira Discussion The 2-room session, on Health's found Dr E P Roberts in the chair at the Russell Sage Foundation Building with one of the lowest discussions of the three days session ensuing. This was preopted by statements in the address of Dr Frederick I. Herman, commissioner of the National League of Professional Insurance Co. to which a number of the colored physicians present took exception lago Goldstein of the N.Y.Tuberculous Association Dr Ovide H Donnell medical director North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co. and M O Bousefield, president of the Liberty Life Insurance Co. of Chicago, who other speakers. The discussion was a dinner conference in the Fifth Avenue Restaurant: Fifth avenue and 24th street and H. Lollingworth Wood president of the National Urban League, president Titer racal Good Will" was the topic discussed. The principal speaker was Dr Louis I. Harris, Health Commissioner of New York City, whose subject was Heterosexuality. He compared infant mortality in Harlem with the lower East Side, showing 163 against 56 to the 1,000 deaths respectively for the two sections. He declared also that 75 per cent of the small cases in New York during the past ten years originated from migrant Negroes out of the South. This however he declared attested poor health conditions and was not a criterion of the Negroes. Leslie Punkey Hill principal Chester Normal School, Chester Pa. Eugene Kinkle Jones executive secretary National League and Miss Gertrude Vande president of the National Conference of Social Work were the other speakers. VIRGINIA LEGISLATURE HAS BILL THAT WOULD CLASS STATE'S FIRST FAMILIES AS BEING MEMBERS OF COLORED RACE --- Knappos, v.a.—the Legislature has before it a so-called "rational integrity" bill, which its opponents, who number among them many parliaments, have called "rationality" colored, some of the most distinguished families, in Virginia. The measure classes as colored. all persons with any "known, demonstrable or ascertainable admixture of Indian or Negro blood" forbids their marriage to white persons and declares "void absolutely abanitio" any marriage entered into between such a "colored person and a white." One historian who has studied the que- expressed belief that passage of the bill was a dozen members of the General Assembly and not less than 20,000 Heirs Start Fight On Will of Mrs. Gittens For $60,000 Estate Heirs Start Fight On Will of Mrs. Gittens For $60,000 Estate The Will of the late Mary Cattarina Gittens of Brooklyn, N. Y., who died June 27, 1925, will be contested by Viola Harris, niece, of 234 Putnam avenue and nephew, Benjamin Harris, of 286 Putnam avenue, in the Kinga County, Surrogate's Court, Surrogate George Albert Wingate presiding, on Thursday, February 11. Under the conditions of our agreement, 177 cash avenue was appointed executor, while C. W. Crobsy of 399 Clonasson avenue was appointed sole broker and agent for the sale of all of her real estate. The estate is to be divided as follows, according to the will: $1,500 to her godchild, Ruth Britt of 73 Lexington avenue; $500 to the Old Folk Home for Colored People of Kingston avenue; $500 to Benjamin Harris avenue; $500 to the New York residence $1,500 to Viola Harris, niece residing at 234 Putnam avenue; $100 to Lea Crump of 73 Lexington avenue; $500 to Eliza Harry of 73 Lexington avenue for faithful services rendered. $200 to Elizabeth O'Donnell of 231 Putnam avenue; $200 to Armstrong of 362 Gold street; $200 to Baptist Church of 166 Adelphi street. $500 to Charles Gittens of 54 Lexington avenue. $1,000 to Salvatore Rillo of 633 Myrle avenue, janitor of her houses; $500 to Charles Crosby of 429 Lincoln place; the above all of Brooklyn, N. Y.; $500 each to following granted land; John following, John Earl Johnson, Henry Johnson, Floretta Johnson, Olga Johnson and Vincent Watts, all of 31 West 99th street, New York City; $500 to Marion G. Essig of 10116 118th street, Morris Park, Long Island; $500 to be used for a headstone and a monument on the estate, the balance of the estate to be divided equally, share and share alike among the legates menti- above. The estate is said to be worth about $60,000. Rulus L. Perry b-375 Fulton street, Brooklyn is attorney for the contestsants. Randolph Says Pullman Wage Conference Was A Miserable Failure Randolph Says Pullman Wage Conference Was A Miserable Failure In a telegram to The New York Age A Philip Randolph general organizer for the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, declared that the Pullman Wage Conference held at Chicago, under a call from the Pullman Co., with representation from both company and employee body had ended in failure He wired, in part. First the Brotherhood two delegates refused to sign agreement All delegates disgusted It is a victory for the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Conference raised wages only 8 per cent. Brotherhood will go in for more. "Seen by an Age Representative, Mr Randolph only had the conference failed intuitively that was an insult to the porters, and that he had predicted such an outcome. The conference was called according to Mr Randolph in order to halt the amazingly rapid progress of the Union The Brotherhood compelled the company to call it The Brotherhood also compelled the company to grant the wage increase and to give back the porters' dittions. The Company realizes this, and consequently, it did not give the men at this Conference any higher increase than a painful 8 per cent, because it knew it would have to deal with the Brotherhood in the very near future and that it would have to grant another increase in wages, wake up and dissatisfaction have occurred by porters throughout the country because of the failure of the Conference. According to Mr. Randolph the Brotherhood is preparing its case to go before the Railroad Labor Board or any other government agency, which may have jurisdiction over this class of railroad workers in the very near future. It should be on the Brotherhood to rally, as it has done, for the per cent of the porters as an evidence of their whelming repudiation of the Wage Conference; and that the men realize that their only salvation lies in an organization of, by and for Pullman porters The Scotia Chapter Thanks to our friends and patrons The Sestia Chapter of New York City and visitors wish to thank their many friends for attending the Hope Chest contest and dance given on thursdays evening, January 21 at the Lake Auditorium. Miss Marie King of Englewood I won the Hope contest. The set third, and fourth prizes were gold pieces. The Hope Chess an annual affair gave by the Chapter and has worked up much enthusiasm among the young eaters. The January meeting of the Chapter met at the home on Mrs. Mewhite's Armory, street Englewood. Business from 4 to 5 10 p.m. After wards the Chapter compiled a delightful fellow hour and was served a col- lation by the hostess. The only exceptions under the bill would be dissendants of Indians and whites married prior to 1619, in which Pocahontas and John Rolf, are included, descendants of the civilized Indian tribes, and Pocahontas and John Rolf, are included, descendants of the civilized Indian tribes, and Pocahontas and John Rolf, are included, descendants of two very famous marriages between Indians and whites which took place about 1644 and 1684. At least a score of the State's most famous families are descended from these Indian marriages, it is said by genealogists. It is understood a Judge of the State is under the guard of Appeals, fall under the hand of the said to be directly descended from the English-Indian union of 1684. Grenthal Introduces Bill To Change Party Control In N. Y. City Grenthal Introduces Bill To Change Party Control In N. Y. City Assemblyman Grenthal of the 19th A.D. of New York City, has introduced a bill in the State Assembly which provides that instead of five county committee chairmen, the City of New York would have one city-wide committee which would direct and control party polities, thus eliminating the situation of divided authority which obtains at present. "The City of New York, with approximately half the population of the State," said Mr. Grenthal, "frequently finds itself in opposition to the rest of the State regarding politics. It has never succeeded however in impressing its importance upon the State because of the divided authority in the city. "In the Republican party particularly, in which I am interested, we have three or four leaders in Brooklyn and one in New York. "The city is big enough to have a city leader who would represent the entire city in its political affairs. Intelligent city leadership should result immediately in more effective county leadership. "My proposed bill makes the head of the city committee an elective officer chosen by the enrolled voters of the city because I believe that to he the only way a city leader can be elected in which the mass of voters have confidence. "In New York County it is practically impossible to displace the chairman. He has so many district leaders under obligation to him that they are bound to support and re elect him to his office. Strong city leader should immediately be able to exert conditions in different of the city where divided responsibility has dissipated the Republican vote." Atlanta City Council Reconsiders Bill To Ban the Negro Barber Atlanta City Council Reconsiders Bill To Ban the Negro Barber Atlanta, Ga.—Almost instant reaction in the shape of protests from the Chamber of Commerce, the Georgia Manufacturers' Association and the laymen's Regional Conference and Methodist Church caused Councilman John White of the 4th ward to call for reconsideration of the ordinance passed by the City Council prohibiting Newco barbers from slaving white parrons. The strong protests from these leading white organizations stirred some of those who voted for the ordinance to a realization of the measure's unpopularity and several announced a willingness to vote for a reconsideration. Consequently when the City Council convened on Thursday, February 4, there was an almost uniform voice vote to reconsider the measure, and to hold a public hearing on the matter on Thursday, February 10. Would Ask Court Action Prior to the holding of the adjourned session of council, called by Alderman Claude Buchan, Mayor protegem a number of protests from various civic and commercial businesses had been tied with Mayor Simons' office by Hoffman, president of the Chamber of Commerce, deferred the chamber would go into the courts to enclose the office of enforcement the ordinance in control of its enactment. Councilman White, in moving for a reconsideration of the measure, said he had voted for it originally under a misapprehension that he had been threatened out in a public meeting meeting and a number of the councilmen had voted for the bill under the same conduct. The motion for reconsideration made by Councilman White was seconded by Councilman Gus Dobbles. Then a statement was introduced by Councilman Harry York from John W. Swain, president of the white house, stating that the measure was sponsored by that or organization. At the same time statements were read from the City Club and the Committee on Church Cooperation opposing the measure. The bill was originally introduced by Councilman D. W. Adams of the 12th Ward and he made a statement de la harpe he acted in good faith the best will as a Negro barber's large well as a Negro barber's and deserved an attorney at large license. To Have Public Committee Hearing The Human York then moved the art of a special committee for deliberation in the measure, as a substitute Councilman White moved that the measure be tabled by the senators should come through the State Legislature. Councilman Russell as a substitute both moved the measure to the Dainance Committee to public hearing. This was almost unanimously carried on a sly vote, and Chairman Horace of that committee set the tenth date for the measure provided that after June 1, Negro barter may serve on his patron, and vice versa. ahead of other men's faces, if Pro- fess in the Bible as the Word of God of us the face shall thou eat bread, and to peach therefrom that "In the sweet of other men's faces shall thou eat bread to my mind can scarcie be re- conciled with honest sincerity. When a year or two ago those pro- fessedly mild men of the South meet in the semblance of prayer and devotion, and in the name of Him who would do unto you, do ye even so unto them, appealed to the Christian world to aid them in doing to a whole race of men as they would have no man do unto themselves, to my thinking, they condemned and insulted God and His church far more than Satan did when he tempted the earth. The devil's attempt was no more false and far, less hypocritical." "Fellow citizens, we cannot escape history. We of this Congress, and of this administration, will be remembered in spite of ourselves. No personal significance or insignific can spawn a fire through which we pass will light us down with honor or dushon, to the latest generation. We say we are for the Union. The world will not forget that we say this. We know how to save the Union. The world knows we know how to save it. We, even we here, hold the power and bear the respon- sibility. In the face to the tome, we assure freedom to the free. Honorable alike in what we give and what we preserve, we shall nobly save or meanly lose the last best hope of earth." Douglass At Astor House Editor of The New York Age: Much comment is going the rounds of the metropolitan journals concerning the passing of that old and famous hostess, the late Barbara Dawley and Vesey street, for the erection of a more imposing structure for office purposes. One journal, in speaking of the many celebrities who enjoyed the entertainment of this liberal hotel neglected to state that our own Frederick Douglass was also entertained there during his escape from slavery, through the assistance of the Underground Railroad. In 1863, the officer of Ann street and Broadway that whereupon Douglass tigned quickly and was lost in the Astor Hotel, whence he escaped to Canada. While the Astor House and its passing may not be of much interest to the average Negro citizen, yet it appears to the writer that the younger element should be informed that there was sufficient liberality to give one of their race a chance to attain better conditions. W F. H CHASE. Frederick Douglass (Continued From Print Page) example of all religious denominations that have sprung up, Magna Luther. Each, in its turn, has been oppressed and persecuted. Methodists, Baptists and Quakers have all been compelled to feel the lash and sting of popular disfavor—yet all in turn have conquered the prejudice and hate of their surroundings. Greatness does not come to anyone on flowery beds of ease. As people on the ground, people to whom liberty is given can hold it as firmly and wear it as grandly as those who wrench their liberty from the iron hand of the tyrant. The hardships and dangers involved in the struggle give strength and toughness to the character, and Calantheans Hold Joint Installation of Officers The Courts of Calantha of Brooklyn held a point installation on Friday evening, January 15, in their castle hall Jonne Temple Building, 165 Cleermont avenue, with Grand Worthy Commander Bessie Johnston as installing officer, assisted by Grand District Deputy Worthy Counsellor Charlotte Golphin and Nedie Robert Zeno and Inspector General Roland R Johnson of the Uniform Rank K of P State of New York Officers of the following Courts were installed Naomi, Ben Hur Pythagorea Monitor and Units. It was a big night with the Calanthaes "My wife's health broke down and for years she was just a physical wreck," says Mr. Thomas Glynn, of Gibson, La. "We did everything we knew, yet she seemed to get worse and worse. She was so weak till she couldn't stand, and had to be carried like a baby. It looked like nothing would save her that had been done. "I knew that Cardul was for women. I decided to try it for her as all else had she couldn't eat, she couldn't sleep, and I was desperate. "After taking a few doses of Cardul, we were so glad to note that she wanted an appetite with each bit of nourishment, each day's doses of Cardul, she grew stronger and got up out of bed. She is now able to cook, and stronger than long time." Tikki Grace dishonor at Sing Song on the Hudson or Atlanta-by-the Sea. Of course, he always returns-after many days—with a brand new red hot scheme, better than the one before; one that will prove Hopest Abe was all wrong and which will incidentally corral a gang of bucks for its contriver—no foolin'. And so he puts his plan to work, and it does work for a while. Then after a time some bright lad suddenly discovers that "there ain't no Santa Claus", and another of the schemer's schemes falls to scheme any longer. A few setbacks like this and we find our friend the fooler, is almost ready to admit himself licked and he retires backstage— enable it to stand firm in storm as well as in sunshine. One thought more before I leave this subject, and it is a thought I wish you all to lay to heart. Practice it yourself and teach it to your children. It is this: Neither we, nor any other people, will ever be respected and we will never respect ourselves till we have the means to live respectably. An exceptionally poor and dependent people will be despised by the opulent and despise themselves. "You cannot make an empty sack stand on end. A race which cannot save its earnings, which spends all it makes and goes in debt when it is sick can never rise in the scale of wealth. The laws it may change, to be. With money and property comes the means of knowledge and power. A poory-stricken class will be an ignorant and despised class, and no amount of sentiment can make it otherwise. Every dollar you lay represents one day's independence one day of rest and security in the future." do me today. Why you have called me from the Black Belt of the South, from among my humble people, to share in the honors of this occasion, is not for me to explain, and yet it may not be inappropriate for me to suggest that it seems to me that one of the most vital questions to bring the American life, is how learned into helpful touch with the poorest, most ignorant and humble, and at the same time make the one appreciate the vitalizing, strengthening influence of the other. How shall we make the mansions on your Bracon street fee or see the need of the spirits in the lowest cabin in Alabama, cotton indies or Louisiana sur-ward University is solved by bringing itself down, by bringing the masses up." If throughlug me, an humble representative, seven millions of my people in the South might be permitted to send a message to Harvard—Harvard that offered up on death's altar young Shaw, and Rus- and Lowell, and scores of others that have a free and united country—that the richest would be. Tell them that the richest was not in vain. Tell them that by hard thrift and economy, by way of the industrial school and college, we are coming. We are drawing up working up, sea, bursting up, often through oppression unjust deocration and prejudice, but through them all we are coming up and with intelligence and property, there is more earth that can permanently stay on progress. In the economy of the world. APARTMENTS TO LET Newly Renovated 5 and 6 Room Apartments To Let, all Improvements 261 West 129th Street, Corner 8th Ave. MORTGAGES NEGOTIATED — PROPERTY AND ESTATES MANAGED — APARTMENTS TO LEI AND SUBLET — RENTS COLLECTED ANTONIO DE SILVA Real Estate and Insurance Broker 2257 SEVENTH AVENUE New York City Phones—Morningside 4327 and 3550 For satisfaction and expert workmanship. We build to suit Let us do your designing. Come in and consult our architects THE LEROY CONSTRUCTION CO. Leroy Sumner, Presid 50 HANSON PLACE, Brooklyn, N Y Phone Sterling 10 Abraham Lincoln, sir, said a mouthful when he made that remark. Many, a man in, his egotism, has kidded him self that he could fool everybody right on. But he generally wails up-by. Booker T. Washington (Continued From First Page) or wherever fooled for ers go—or sympathetic with himself. And the shade of the Kentucky rail splitter settles at another laugh at a dumb world—when a younger, pepperier man hid his legs in wise cracks that Lincoln's plphy is "the bunk", "apples, etc. Once more the mills of gods must grind for his benefit. And so it goes. Meanwhile, Abraham Lincoln birthday always fills me with sense of gratitude when he seen who brushed biggie who loved everyone well as he loved himself, and who died a martyr to his own tions. May his tribe increase and by the way—along with your collection of wall mortars you might add this one. All king's horses and all the king men "can't fool all the people at the time." but one standard by which individual van succeed—there is for a race. During the nec- century and more, my race is tinue passing through the Wettest in my patience, our ance, our perseverance, our endure wrong, to withstand tions, to economize, to ail use skill; in our ability to succeed in commerce, to the superficial for the real pearance for the substance, to and yet small, learned and wi this is the passport to all that in the life of our republic. Negro must possess it, or be ed. "While we are thus being to 1 beg of you to remember that ever our life touches your we or hinder Wherever you like weaker you make us weaker When Weapons mits crime, New England crime, and in so much, how standard of your civilization is no escape—man drags man or man hits man up." APARTMENTS TO LET Steam Heated Apartments 7 and 17 West 135th st. 2 a 3 room apartments—40 and 17 West 135th st. 4 and 3 roo apartment—20 West 120th st. 6 rooms (elevator house) Cold Water Rise 121 Edgecombe Ave, 5 room Stores Corner store, 622 St. Nicholas Ave, cor. 141st st. -Basement store, 286 West 142nd st. -Basement stores, 40 and 42 West 142th story Philip A. Payton Jr. Company 328 LENOX AVENUE (bet. 126th and 127th Sts) Telephone Harlem 8092-7662 Phone Morningside 1128 C. JACKMAN Real Estate and Insurance Fire, Life, Strikes, Accident Bonding Automobile—All Branches Licenses, State of New York, New York 178 W. 135th St. New York City Sept. 5, 2015 S. J. COTTMAN Real Estate And INVESTMENTS 2303 7th Avenue New York TS TO LET ed 5 and 6 Room or wherever fooled for krens go-to sympathy with himself. And the shade of the Kentucky tall splitter settles in dumb world—when younger, peppier rises on his hind legs TOM I. NICHOLAS Police Inspector Day and Captain Mulrooney Gradually Tightening the Lines On Harlem's Bootlegging Group Increased activity in Harlem shows that under the new police regime, with Police Commissioner George V. McLaughlin putting the entire force on its mettle, there is a gradual tightening of the lines around the bootleggers "numbers" players, with a consequent increasing curtailment of the freedom with which these gentry have Capt Mulrooney On Job And the ozone the use warning of and a stuff after arcal and and flavor which hun are drinking intalments fraternity Proud of that although parlor in with avenue in the corner claberately fixed at the barber only located on the opening This will operate with 2211 just the northern West 1100 me deployed after the ozone Florida Undecided How To Execute Negro Who Is Convicted of Murder The governor Mar- sor Attenborough provision of delegat- e the state of Ab- sidged but there held up because the electorate chan- Washington out of a local had appointed N of Washington uncalled the the Supreme from the de- not the law did not read that the supreme when the entenced him to be hang Jacobson Duval Circuit Court Cabaret Girl Gives Clue That Leads To Arrest Of Murderers Night Watchman Slain; 50 Rolls Of Silk Stolen; 4 Men Caught Four men are being held without bail on a charge of having murdered William B Young. 67 of 3422 Giles avenue, the Bronx. a night watchman of the Holmes Electric Protective Co., while he was on duty early Sunday morning in the shop of the Abe Dickman, manufacturer of women's silk garments, 578 Fighth avenue. Detectives found three men in a room at 267 West Fortisht street, which was the apartment of Benjamin Bradley In the room with Bradley were Edgar Humes, 21 and Charles Goldson, 25, a seaman both of 227 West 130th street Later they arrested George Williams, 112 Dekalb avenue, who was accused of having struck the elderly watchman with an iron boxoemper while he was asleep. Police report that William admitted the killing The murdered watchman was found early Sunday morning by Phillip Marcus who has a business in a loft adjoining the Dickman shop. He reported the murder to the police who found a cloak in a story to him a white girl who was a cabaret. The girl's story of being some colored men loading clothing into a taxicab while she was going home from work early in the morning caused the detectives to search in the homes of colored men suspected of being crooks The recovered property included 50 rolls of silk a number of silk dresses and a quantity of squirrel skins which is used to trunk collars on women's coats. Two Men Held For Having Revolvers Without Permits Two men are being held for ex- amination for having postos in their rooms without permits. Both were arrested on February 1 and tried before Magistrate Blood in the 12th District Court. George Rawle, 30 laborer, 31 Bradhurst avenue, was taken from a room at 2019 Eighth avenue. He had a fully loaded reservoir in his posses- sion. He was held in $10,000 bail for total. William Mitchell T. of 142 West Bird street was arrested in a room at 242 Seventh avenue. He had a fur- leaded revolver and cartridges in his possession. He was held without had for trial on Tuesday. Man And Women Try To Commit Suicide Nain and Aynon are attended at the Harlem Hospital Saturday night for indie poisoning. Both had swallowed the drug while dependent. The first was Mary Wilson 22 of West 130th street. He reported that she was taken at the Harlem Hospital 12 of West 130th street. He then swallowed the drug after he had drunk a bottle of the nerve oil at 11th avenue and 152nd street. Harry Richardson 22 of 221 West 135th street was brought to the Harlem Hospital at 10:40 p.m. suffering from the effects of indie poisoning. It is reported that he swallowed the drug while in the apartment of Mr. Lleanor Hudson. LEADER COSTUMA NAMES BRONX MEMBER OF ASSEMBLY AS AUTHORITY FOR CHARGE THAT KOENIG CAUSED DEFEAT OF GRENTHAL BILL David E. Costuma, Republican executive committeeman from the 19th A. D., in response to an invitation from the chairman of the Resolutions Committee of the County Republican Committee, to attend a meeting of the Resolutions Committee and submit such information as he had to support the resolution which accused County Chairman Samuel S. Koenig of having brought about defeat of the Grenthal Rent Bill in the last Legislature, has informed the committee chairman that Assemblyman B. Democrat, of the Bronx, had given such information both to Assemblyman Greenthal and to himself. Costuma, in the presence of a reputable witness. After acknowledging receipt of the invitation to attend the "adjourned meeting" of the Resolutions Committee on Tuesday afternoon, February 9, at 4:30 o'clock, at County Committee headquarters, 105 West 140th street, Mr. Costuma wrote the chairman, Judge John R. Davies, under date of February 6, as follows: Leader Costuma's Letter. "The moving clause of my resolution called for the appointment of a special committee of five for this specific purpose of following up the Grenthal Bill in an effort looking toward the enactment of such legislation in the 1926 Session of the Legislature. It is my judgment that a special committee should be appointed for this purpose. If the Resolutions Committee does not agree with me, they will report against the resolution, but if they do agree with me, all that is needed is to report favorably on the enacting clause. I think that all members of the Committee are fully cognizant of the import of the measure in question and, of course, you, my dear Judge, are intimately familiar with its aims and purposes. It would seem to me that the scope of your Committee would cover just this phase and none other." "Where Information Came From." The other question involved, that is, the source of my information leading up to the introduction of this resolution would have been very properly handled if the acting chairman of the January meeting of the County Committee had adopted the recommendation offered by Judge Gilbert and Congress Perlman that a special committee, be appointed for the purpose of investigating the information given to me; I think you will agree that it was never intended that the function of the Committee of Resolutions should cover the scope of an investigation such as this matter would require I am only too willing and ready to cooperate with you in the siting of this matter, and in order that the picture may be clear before you, permit me to recite the following history "After the November meeting of the County Committee, when the Jesse Committee submitted a recommendation that the County Committee indorse the Grenthal Bill, and which recommendation was assailed on the floor of the County Committee by a number of members, one of whom I think was Mit Stanley Isaacs (who, I understand, represents several landlord organizations) the chairman suggested that the consideration of the Grenthal Bill he laid on the table for a future meeting, which suggestion the County Committee voted down. Grenthal Quotes Berg. Assemblman Grenthal repeated to me what had been told to him by Assemblman Berg of the Bronx after the close of the last session of the legislature. I did not introduce my resolution on Assemblman Grenthal's report but I had him arrange a lunchroom appointment with Assemblman Berg so that I could hear the story first hand and direct. Mr. Berg related to me the facts and circumstances upon which he based the statement that the defeat of the Grenthal Bill was due to the personal activity of the Chairman. I would also add that I arranged a second meeting with Assemblman Berg and brought with me a highly estimable citizen who heard 14-Yr. Old Girl, Gone For Month, Found With Harlem Theatre Porter Margaret Brown, a 141, year old school girl, living at 676 St Nicholas avenue, disappeared from home on December 28 and was missing until January 29. She was found at the Cedar Theatre by Leight Sauder welfare officer of the 10th Precinct, and taken to the Police Station and questioned. She stated that she had run away because her mother had spanked her and that during her month's absence from home she had lived part of the time with one Uncle. Who lived at 33 West 131st street Christian works as organist and porter at Franklin Theatre 132nd street and Lenox avenue. The other man she accused is Howard George 36 years old, of 26 West 16th Street George a porter at the Old Street Theatre 14th street at the 5th avenue. Both were held for imprisonment in the 12th District Magistrate Court on Monday charged with theft. The girl, here held by the Childress Her mother, who is a reptile woman and a cat owner, in a prominent downtown office, to hear broken case her daughter conduct. Both the and a counsel certified there was no occasion for the child leaving home. The correction the child received was deserved and judged. They are at a loss to understand why the child should have left home. When the case came up on Monday, Christian was held for action of the guard put her George was the charged --- Mr. Berg recite in detail the various incidents. Upon this information given me, first, in the presence of Assemblyman Greathal and secondly in the presence of another witness, I felt thoroughly justified in the introduction of my resolution." Urges Special Committee. "This is all the information I am able to give you on the subject and I strongly urge that your Committee recommend the appointment of a Special Committee charged with the sole purpose of investigating the entire matter, or, and I think this course would be more fruitful, suggest to the County Committee that one of the Assemblymen from New York County move for the appointment of a Legislative Committee so that all records incident to a complete investigation would thus be available and which Committee could call on Assemblyman Berg to repeat what he twice told me." The Resolutions Committee, at its meeting on Tuesday, took up the letter written by Mr. Costuma, but decided to take no action further than reporting the entire matter back to the County Republican Committee. Judge John R Davies, chairman, said afterwards that several other letters had been received from members of the Legislature the tenor of which was to deny that Koenig had worked against the Grenthal bill. He said: As no evidence sustaining the charge was produced, we shall accordingly submit a report disappointing the County resolution in the most meeting of the Executive Committee and the County Committee on March 18." Mr. Koenig did not attend the meeting, but was in his office in an adjoining room. Members of the committee present were Charles D Hiles, Justice Sidney C Crane, Eli Rosenberg, Miss Sarah Schuyler Butter, Charles Griffiths, Francis O'Neil and Mrs. Nellie Wilson. Mrs. Brown Raises $250,000 for Palmer Institute In 1 Year Mrs. Brown Raises $250,000 for Palmer Institute In 1 Year (Continued From First Page) ence as Talladega College in Alabama—Straight College in New Orleans and Bricks Junior College in North Carolina. Fred L. Brownlee, secretary of the American Missionary Association, after going over the plant thoroughly made the agreement with the principal and trustees over a year ago, with a provision that at the time the be made that the fund of $300,000 be raised for the erection of buildings and to help establish a permanent endowment fund for the school. This marked the beginning of the big campaign which has just been completed through the tireless efforts o f the principal, with the assistance of Mr. Loder, the business manager for the school, and Miss Lee and Mr. Rudley, the stenographer and bookkeeper. These two young people are one and the same, needed for their uniting labo and after-hours work in assisting Mrs. Brown and Mr. Loder in this great effort $75,000 From Galen L Stone The campaign began January 1, 1925, with the goal set for $150,000, one half of the required amount, as this amount was required before the A M A would take the school over, the remaining $150,000 to be raised within the next five years. Mrs Brown laid her proposition earnestly before Mr. Galen I. Stone of Boston, a trustee of the school, and annual contributor of $1,500, who after careful consideration of the proposition, sent her the following telegram Boston, Mass., January, 1925 Charlotte Hawkins Brown, Palmer Memorial Institute, Sedalia, N.C. After careful reconsiderations of your problems Mrs Stone and I are willing to subscribe seven thousand dollars toward the one hundred, fifty thousand dollar fund, subject to the following condition that payment shall not be binding until the whole one hundred, fifty thousand is subscribed. GALEN I STONE Mr. Stone is a retired Wall Street broker and was formally a member of the Hayden Stone Company of New York City. Mr. Stone was also a very close friend of Mrs. Alice Freeman Palmer for whom the Palmer Memorial Institute is named. Greenahoro Folka Give $25,000 With the generous gift of Mr. and Mr. Stone, the amount was cut in half, but the effort continued with the same force, and thousands of people were approached by personal appeal and through the mails. A twenty-five thousand dollar campaign was started in Greensboro among the white and colored friends of the school, to which from $1 to $1,000 was subscribed. Quite a few of the white friends pledged $500 and several as much as $1,000. Such generous gifts from our southern white friends show clearly the good feeling that the white people of the community and general locality have toward the school and the work that it is doing. The cooled friends of the school both North and South called me nicely to the cause and this in a large measure added to the success of the campaign for in many instances people were induced to give due to the fact that the Newcomers themselves were doing all they could to help for a worthy cause for their own pleas Among the large donations were K. Land Hayes Dr. D. Strawat L. and George Mitchell W. W. Peak and Dr. M. Rivera M. many others contributed in amounts to $ 10,000 In this manner the cause was carried on throughout the New England States and portions of the other sectigs of the country, both North and South B N Duke of New York City contributed $ 7,000 and many other friends of the North contributed as high as $ 1,000 Stone Gives $16,000 More Our many friends contributed so splendidly that on January 1, 1926, the date set for the close of the campaign, Mr. Stone was so overjoyed at the success of the effort that he consented to relieve the school of all outstanding debt, amounting to $16,000, making his gift a total of $91,000, and leaving the school free of all incumbrance for 1926. The amount given by Mr. Stone, plus the assistance of Mrs. Brown with the assistance of the trustees, plus the amounts pledged annually, the next five years, places the figure at present at $250,000. Nearly 2,000,000 Negro children of school age never see the inside of a school house. This striking fact alone makes it easy to understand why the Negroes are highest in literacy of any racial group in the country, this at a time when restricted immigration has checked the labor supply, when trained mechanics are at such a premium that their leaders can virtually make any terms with their employers, and when the demand for high-grade domestic help, for another thing, far exceeds the supply With more education, and with education of a sort suited to his needs, the Negro could meet many of the industrial and domestic needs of the time. Where The School Is Located Sedalia is a quiet rural village, consisting of forty or more families, mostly colored people. It is ten miles east of Greenboro, N. C, and 4½ miles from McLennsville, the county seat of the National Highway from Washington to Atlanta. A post office was established for the school The school has grown from the status of one teacher, one building and 55 students, in 1901—to fifteen teachers, five buildings (main building, dormitory for girls, dormitory for boys, dining hall and kitchen, modern barn) and 225 students in 1924. The enrollment was 250, until two serious fires destroyed two of our dormitories. With these two buildings replaced the school could take care of 300 students, of whom 200 would be boarders, without increasing the overhead expense of the school's property is valued at $200,000. In addition to the buildings enumerated above, there is a holding of 305 acres, valued at $50 to $100 an acre. The main building, dedicated to Alice Freeman Palmer, is a splendid structure, with all modern improvements. The Course of Instruction The course of instruction given is of a double nature. The school gives the regular course of academic instruction specified by the state from the primary grades on up through high school. It also offers a course in music, which includes instrumental, vocal and choral singing. In addition to the academic work, there is a special industrial training in daily period of an hour and half. Furthermore, all the work around the school is performed by the students. The industrial courses are in three groups: a. Agriculture; b. Home Economics; c. Manual Training What Other People Are Saying "Mrs Brown is a power for good not only in the Palmer Memorial Institute, but in Greensboro and community. She has been sent for on several occasions for conferences, and, in fact, she has exhibited greater ability and discretion along this line than anyone I know of. If her influence could be extended throughout the whole country the race problem would be solved Yours sincerely, I P WHARTON, Greensboro Capitalist "More than any other woman of my acquaintance, Mrs Brown has the calmly enthusiastic religious courage which distinguished Mrs. Palmer Mrs Brown has, too, Mrs Palmer's clear judgment and tact. In steering the school through these difficult years, every one of her decisions has been sagacious Prof George Herbert Palmer, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass." "It is fitting that we should support Mrs Charlotte Hawkins Brown and the admirable work she is doing on the Palmer Memorial Institute because Mrs Brown was educated in Cambridge, and her school is named for Alice Freeman Palmer, whose strong educational influence was exerted from Cambridge for many years. We have known Mrs Brown, the founder and promoter for many years and have greatly admired her intelligence, courage and compassion. He has acquired his white neighbors and respect of her very remarkable degree, and it is on that account, among others undergoing the best kind of service to her race. The Palmer Memorial Institute has demonstrated its serviceability, and deserves the support of all friends of effective education for the Southern Negroes. Sincerely yours, Charles W. Lint President Emmentus, Harvard University." "I have very pleasant memories of my visit at your school. You have done a fine work, have almost 'made breaks without straw.' The whole appearance and spirit of your students and teachers as well as the physical appearance of your buildings and grounds impressed me very pleasantly, and I wish for your greatest support from the generous public North and South. You serve for that you are doing not merely for the shared care as such but for what you are doing for our future country in helping the men of different races to a clearer and more sympathetic understanding. Very truly yours. Robert R Moton Principal Lukegee Institute Palmer Institute As It Is Today The Institute is situated on North Carolina State Highway number 10 about ten miles out from Greensboro. The campus of the most beautiful highway in the state is connecting Durham and Greensboro and the beautiful Alice Freeman Palmer building with its magnificent stone column along with the level, $1 000 house of the principal adds much to the campus in the great highway. The Station is rather unique and means much toward making conditions at Palmer more enjoyable both of teachers and students. Very of ten artists and their people of note are called to Greensboro and find it convenient to: to Palmer. Already we have had with us Joseph Douglas, alumni Richard R. Harrison, teners Mrs Ruth Lillis, dramatic reader, and sex "Better Babies" By Dr. Alonzo deG. Smith Pluko has more to do with her charm than you think Pew of the thousands of admirers and friends of our Miss Lilian Russell, realize how much of her charm is due to her gloriously beautiful, long, straight, glossy black hair. Yet charming, beautiful and popular as she selected young women is today the says "Take away my beautiful hair and I would lose the greater part of my popularity at once. I know only too well this is true because try as I might, I could not make any headway towards popularity and success until I started using PLUKO HAIR DRESSING and the regular use of this wonderful preparation made my hair long, soft, glossy and beautiful, as you see it today." From the experience of this popular woman, you can see it is easy—if you want to be charming, attractive and popular—to have beautiful hair. You can get PLUKO HAIR DRESSING at your drugstore or merchant and the regular use of this wonderful preparation will quickly lengthen straighten and bring new gloss to your hair and health to your scalp, but as it is doing for Miss Russell and thousands of other of our successful men and women. To prove its merit and popularity, PLUKO HAIR DRESSING is now being used by race men and of more than a million packs. Pluko HAIR DRESSING Black and White Cans 50¢ Green Cans 25¢ If you want Long, Straight, Hair, use Pluko The Child's Instincts As doctor, parent, nurse or social worker we give much time, thought and labor to physically adjusting the child to his environment as a means of protecting him against disease. But in order that the child may be adequately capable to care for himself in adulthood it is necessary that we pay some attention to those phases of its life which eventuate in moral and spiritual values. If I may be pardoned the use of a "big word" it is urgent that we attempt to understand administer to, and direct into the proper channels of activity the psychological nature of the child. Now you know that even the newly-born bird separated from its mother will in time make efforts to obtain food or to build a nest. The little chick will peck at a grasen of corn without having seen the mother-her do likewise. The human infant will grasp for and suckle the breast immediately after birth, certainly before it could possibly "know" that in this wise it would obtain food. These reactions and such like them which seem to be inherent tendencies of the newlyborn, and not products of training after birth, are what I wish you to understand by my use of the word instincts or native impulses or tendencies. To properly train our children presupposes a knowledge of instincts, that is, what the child is likely to do of its own accord before it has learned by exper- eral others, including magicians, lecturers, etc. Student Recreations For the amusement of the students there are frequent socials, and twice a month there are moving pictures shown in the chapel. Some of the pictures shown already are Peter Pan, The Alaskan, and The Border Legion. The students pay at the beginning of the year, a fee that admits them to all lectures and concerts, with the exception of the moving pictures, to which the small admission of five cents is taken at the door. There are also a number of student clubs and organizations that mean much toward the moral and spiritual development of its members. There are also music and debating clubs for the purpose of developing and utilizing in every way the available talent Aside from the student affairs the teachers are organized into a club which meets every Thursday evening where all the members get together in a social way. Each teacher takes his or her turn in entertaining and the evening is largely spent in playing various games, after which a dainty repeat is served by the host. In conclusion, the faculty and students of Palmer wish to extend to all friends, both North and South, heartfelt appreciation for their loyal support in helping her to get thus far on her way Palmer further wishes to ask your prayful interest as she soars onward and upward toward heights of perfection "Fair Palmer, the pride of each rural home. Thus planted on soil all their own. Where the brar and the cactus once flourishing grew. Stands the tower of wood and of stone." Better Babies" r. Alonzo deG. Smith ince or the teachings of the parents. For so far as the best interest of the child as an individual is concerned we must know what instincts are "good," and which "bad," in fine which responses will enable him to live harmoniously in later life as a member of the highly organized group of individuals which we call Society. We do not use his word in the "pinkie-tea" sense. We may perpetuate instincts by two methods (1) by rewards, and (2) stimulation. It is necessary however to be sure that the instinct or impulse is a good one and that we connect the reward in the child's mind with its cause. In the case of food the child makes this connection itself, for eating of the food brings the satisfaction of taste and appeased hunger. Many children seem to possess an "instinct" to build things. This should be applauded and encouraged with emphasis on what his small efforts may mean as to future possibilities in, say, the mechanical field. It would be wrong however to attempt to perpetrate the fear of darkness or the bogey-man Neither of these are perhaps a real instinct. Even infants will share a cracker with one if invited, or a poor appetite may be increased by making the food and the table more attractive to the child's eye. An instinct which we deemed not be able to stimulate might be eliminated by (1) associating some dissatisfaction in the child's mind with its practice or (2) by discouraging its use. Here again some caution is necessary. Make the effort no associate the dissatisfaction as a logical out-come of the instinct itself and not with yourself or the person who prohibits the tendency. Take the common street fight. If one boy is bigger than the other here is a chance to talk to him and attempt to show him what would happen to HIM, if because of his greater prowess he should injure the smaller lad. Just to jerk him away with a cauff on the ear will not produce the desired effect of showing him the unpleasant consequences of such a fight. Or, suppose your boy shows cowardice. Just to jeer at him will result in aullen hate of you. But if his reasons for fighting are those of defense, here again the sensible course is to convince HIM that to not protect his rights, person or property will prove disastrous to HIM. Compare the other fellow, for example, to a burglar, and ask the potential coward what he would do in case a burglar entered his home at night. The response may be laughable in the extreme as I have found out. Again there is the appeal patriotism, patriotic warfare for DEFENSE. If a tendency is strongly rooted in a child disuse and dissatisfaction may not of themselves be sufficient to eliminate the undesirable. The impulse may be temporarily restrained, only to break out in greater fury later on. Here we must take recourse in other methods of elimination, such as (1) substitution and (2) sublimation. Under the first head we may mention stroking the dog's head instead of pulling its tail, "follow the leader" on an expedition of nature study instead of committing objectionable pranks, dancing for the training in beauty of bodily movements instead of sex sentiment provoking holds and movements. The second method, sublimation, means the substitution of new ideas and emotions for the undesirable one, such as fighting, not alone for oneself, but for another or fighting by the newspaper or committee or ballot ```markdown ``` Church Activities In Greater New York Rendall Memorial Church creation was pres- sence that the pastor in the venerious being of the previous the ideal Woman, would closely in- tense the sub- ject was the "ideal text found in heart of her hus- her so that it spool. The one of the points in order that harmony and com- pan subjects on reaching the the look to look around being a mate. The wife. God saw for man to be to be for him from "the woman." said them. Hence an anion. In choosing the carried away the man who so offer but his spart treat woman thereby a nuance to min chooses one she has, instead cath and Brechau man who has to sick forward to seek to seek to reaction to her She is a com- passion to sympa- tism when trials tough thick and short of the mar- kern of worse It halt the seem in trying to separate many divorces, husbands and the marriage status as being sured, there less of living and the lif were a be a poor benefi- tance than be would not tell oregationa. Church Adena Z. Kelly; music by the Choral Club, Mrs. Bertha DesVerney, directores. At 8 p.m. services were conducted by the Christian Endeavor Societies. This marked the forty-fifth annual celebration of the founding of the Young People's Society of Christian Endeavor Program was as follows: Mrs. Elvira Gordon preading. Synopsis of Christian Endeavor Society by Mrs. Estelle Foote, chorus by the Juniors; duet by Misses Gladys Stitt and Beatrice L嘉, members of the Intermediates; solo by Theodore Rooman; Remarks by Miss Leila Adams, sermon was preached by Dr. Brown. Friday, prayer and testimony meeting. Topic "Spiritual Witchcraft." Galatians 3 1 Next Sunday 10.30 a. m., Junior Church. 11 a. m., sermon by the pastor. 4 p. m. J. C. Price Lycem. Joseph Price Anniversary. Rev. W. O. Carrton, pastor of the A. M. E. Zion Church, New Rochelle, will be the speak-8 p. m., baptism and holy commun- meditation by Rev Calvin Lane. This will mark the beginning of our Commun- ation at the evening service. Children will be baptised at the morning service on the second Sunday. The sick 'sick' Gabriel, 122 West 139th street, Lesse Gill, Womans Hospi- cal, Gertrude Tramwell, 2410 Seventh avenue; Minnie Smith; 2310 Seventh avenue; Robert Washington, 218 West 141 street; Rosa Hunt, Stoanes Hospi- cal; Anna Thomas, Harlem Hospital; Farnie Brown, 46 West 136th street; Grace Briscoe, 2041 Fifth avenue; Mary Saunders, 2328 Seventh avenue. Rush Memorial Church The Junior Church celebrated Holy communion at ten o'clock last Sunday morning. Dr Oliver delivered a sermon, "The meaning of the Communion Service." At eleven the junior chorus sang in the main auditorium. Rev H W Morrison of Middletown, N J, preached from Phillipsons 2 5. Dr Harvey Anderson, former editor of the Star of Zion, now of Patterson, N J delivered the sermon at three o'clock on the value of the Christian's remembering the last Supper. Rev Alfred Johnson of Elmsford, N J, preached at 8 p.m on "Father I thank Thee That Thou hast heard me." Sunday February 14 at 3 o'clock, Rev W L. limes of the Presbyterian Church, will preach the sixth anniversary sermon to the Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary Society, Mrs. Oliver, president. February 17, the male usher Board will present a musical program at 8:15 p.m. Leonard Butler is president February 28, The Female Usher Board, Mrs. Mary Williams president, will celebrate its first anniversary, Rev Henry Spearman of Bethel A M F Church will preach Bishop Caldwell will preach Sunday morning February 14. The program of Solam is full from now until Easter. The slogan of the entire life of the church is "John to Easter." At the morning hour of worship on Sunday Rev George Shippen Stark, pastor spoke on religion as being the personal, private individual experience it is spiritual and is not experienced through the five services. The first step in being religious is a challenge to faith. We begin small in our christian experience faith is the first step. It we would know the mood of christ we should do as Christ says. Be out hearts of the word but does. The Sacrament of the Lord Supper was administered at the service. The Bible school consecrated at the annual hour 1:15 p.m. The school is taking a line with the Easter program of the church. It is being to retreat out the uninhibited among the parents of pupils and teaching those among its pupils to make their decision to that the Easter wives witness the greatest mangering of souls in the life of the church. The mid-week service for prayer on Wednesday evening was in memory of the Elder Cambridge Ritter. It was the prayer meeting following the Holy Sacrament of January that Elder Ritter was at the last time. His life and career in the church make this meeting on Wednesday night most fitting in men's life. February is a short but busy month. The calendar is full. The mid-week has its program developing all the time of the church. Today, right on the British House an annual evening with Mrs. M. Styx, the whole house is to be the event for the entire season. Next Sunday afternoon at four o'clock, Mrs. Styx will be held. An excellent program under the direction of Mrs. M. Styx will be presented. Where To Go To Church St. Paul Baptist Church New York City is now snow-bound as it has not been at any time before during the present winter. Notwithstanding this, people find their way to the house of worship. Wednesday night, while the storm was at its worst treacher David Doughty was down to the church to see that things kept moving in the B. Y. P. U. Group No. 2, led by that indefatigable worker, Jamie Anderson, was out, and fed the meeting, then gliding a short, but spicy program, the meeting was closed. Friday night Deacon Ware was on hand, having appointed Mrs Sarah Clarkson as leader for the evening, she gave a most helpful exposition on the 4th chapter of James, using as theme. "Humility." Sunday morning early, Deacon J A Doughtry had out his Prayer Band, preparing for their service in the afternoon, as well as getting the church spiritually warm for the regular services. The pastor, after a mast strenuous week of attending conferences, presiding over meetings, preaching funerals, and making calls on the sick, came to his pulpit Sunday morning, and preached a sermon that stirred all present on. "The Touch That Saves." In the afternoon he went over to Brooklyn, and preached in the Mt. Lebanon Church for Dr Hamlin his theme being, "The Necessity of Christa' Sufferings." "Coming back to his pulpit in the evening, he preached another great sermon on, "Keeping The unity of the Spirit in Peace." This sermon seemed to grip the audience as but few sermons do. The Choir rendered splendid services at both morning and evening services. In the afternoon Rev John Joseph Pastor of the New York Tabernacle Church preached a very good sermon under auspices of the Prayer Band. The sad news reached us during the week of the death of Mrs Logan who having gone to Richmond to the funeral of her sister, was while returning from the cemetery, killed in an accident which so injured her brother and sister, that both were taken to the hospital and just at the time of the writing of these notes, the news came that the Friar had also died from his injury. The family has held the Church's Sister Hare Nible, one of the most faithful workers of the Church is now in Memorial Hospital, wather she went a week ago Sunday, and though it has not yet been determined when she shall return home, as getting along nicely THE ST PAUL BAPTIST CHURCH, 233 W, 35th St. Sunday services 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Sunday-school 10 p.m. B P, Sunday school 10 p.m. Sunday-school Friday, Wednesday 8:30 Sunday meetings Sundays 6 to 8 p.m. Correspond meetings Friday nights before the third Sunday. Missionary Sunday, 8:30 Sunday. Communion third Sunday evening RFV H ARTHUR BUOKH r pastor Residence, 251 W 132nd St. Phone Morningside 19 UNION BAPTIST CHURCH, 204-208 63rd St. Rev GHU H SISL pastor, Sunday superintendent W H Johnson, 250 m. Communion, (2nd Sunday), 4 p.m. Missionary Sunday, U. D. direction of W H Lloyd, 7:30 p.m. Praise services, singing by the choir, W A Lathoum, organist and choir- man by the pastor, Sunday, 8 m. Literary and Social, Friday 8 p.m. praise service METHODIST EPISCOPAL MOUNI CALVARY INDEPENDENT METHODIST CHURCH, town 31 and Edgertonba Ave. Rev Dr J. N. C. Coggins Pastor Residence to Edgertonba Ave. telephone 212-500-2000, Sunday, January 2 4 o'clock, 8 o'clock, Sunday, January 4 4 o'clock, 8 o'clock, Sunday, January 4 Christian Endeavor, 0 o'clock, 0 o'clock, a saturday Tuesday, 0 o'clock, 0 o'clock, a friday meeting, Friday, 0 o'clock, 0 o'clock, a Saturday meeting, Saturday, 0 o'clock, a Sunday in each month, Sunday, December, 144 West 11th street APRICAN MELTH 81 ST EPISCOPAL ZION NEW MOTHER A M E ZION CHURCH 160-6 W. 1317th St, Ken J W BRIDGES, D. pastor, parishioner 110-10 W. 1317th St, Ken J W BRIDGES, 245 B. baptism and Communion every second Sunday, J p p m, S p p m, H l Henderson, interment J p p m, marick E. b. bp p m Cleases every Tuesday evening meeting every Tuesday evening brotherhood and Sisterhood house, 129 W. 1317th St, brotherhood house, 129 W. 1317th St, sunior Endeavor every Friday afternoon p phone Audubon 6038 Seats Free Welcome. RUSH MEMORIAL A M E ZION CHURCH, 88-0 W. 1317th St, Ken J W BRIDGES, MOLL L. p p p, pastor, interment W. 1317th St, Aprt 10 Phone, A house 5508 Sunday services Holy Communion every first Sunday, 129 W. 1317th St, Rush Lutheran and Historical Ass Sunday 4 p p p, Sunday interment Sunday 4 p p p, Sunday interment Sunday 8 p p p, Sunday interment PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL ST LUKE'S EPISCOPAL MISSION 183 Georgetown Avenue, corner 138th street (the Rev K. Elliot Jurans, B. A. Virar, telephone Bradford 0228, Sunday services at 11 a.m., Morning prayer at 11 a.m. monument 3 p.m., Church School, 6 p.m. ensang and sermon 11 a.m., Every Sunday of the month, choral celebration of the Lord's Prayer, found in his ome from 7 to 10 a.m., and from 8 to 10 p.m. accept Mondays THE NEW YORK AGE under the skillful treatment of the doctors and nurses of that institution. The storm spoiled our pleasure of going to the Day Star Church on Thursday night. Dr. R. J. Brown, the pastor was called over the phone, and, in view of the difficulty of traveling, suggested that the service be put off to some other time. "It was too late to inform all the Choir people, who has prepared to be there, and hence, we learned that several of them were present, while the Pastor was absent. We regret this, but certainly appreciate the loyalty of these people. Union Baptist Church Sunday was an ideal day to Church poets. At 11 a.m. in a large crowd gathered with us to worship. After many pleasing selections by the poor pastor Dr G H Sons delivered a very interesting and timely message Subject "Aide with the Lord." At 2 p.m. in the children assembled in the Sunday School room to study the lesson. The lesson was reviewed by the superintendent W H Johnson. Then followed an announcement by the pastor that the school of Reigion Education will open Wednesday at 3:15 p.m at the church. The young people were encouraged to attend. The program in the B A P U was in charge of the Juniors. They are busy getting read for their lunch day celebration. The missionary wakes of the church are planning to feed the old people of the community that evening Rev John Robinson will be the speaker The closing message for the day was delivered by the assistant Pastor Rev Huston Crutchfield. He spoke on the life of Moses. The message was heartily received. Offering amounted to $281.72 Harlem Second Seventh Day Adventist Church The Victorious Life," was the theme of *Paster Striathan* last Saturday morning at the Second Church 196 108 West 127 street. This sermon was one of a series which the pastor has been preaching each week on practical Godliness. The minister began his message by leaving "What it cost to live a victorious life, heaven has paid it. Be assured the price has been accepted and acknowledgment made. Today there is ample provision made for every honest person to overcome his inscrutious sins. His master is about the natural or It matters not about the natural or MEMORIAL A M E Z I O N CHURCH G Irving Place, Rev R S OLDEN pastor service 11 a.m. Sunday school 12:40 p.m. 11 a.m. preachings 8 p.m. Class meeting Tuesday evening Prayer meeting, Friday evening Pastor's phone Vonkers 1171 M AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL BETHEL A M E CHURCH 12 50 4 132nd Sf Rev Henry K Roosman, D D pastor Residence, S2 W 132nd Sf Church services Paver meeting 6 45 Preaching 10 43 Sabbath School, 9 a m A A C K cemetery n m service ser- ice of Communion first Sunday Class meetings Friday nights, Love Press last Friday nights PRESBYTERIAN REHMANY, MEMORIAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 122 West 19th St. Rev T W MAGONY Winterside Service 2 m seminary Sunday 2 p.m Christian Indoor Sunday 2 p.m Perry Wedding Day 8 p.m Prayer service We are cordially invited! ST IAMPS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1961 West 19th Street Rev Wm Hood Lore M A Pavement Sunday 4 p.m Lore M A Pavement Sunday 4 p.m Bristol Church Sunday 4 p.m Bristol Church Sunday 4 p.m Lore M A Pavement Wednesday Loring at 8 p.m Lore M A Pavement Loring at 8 p.m Lore M A Pavement Waver House A August 20 4 Church Dome B August 19 4 GRAFT OF HAMMERATION CHURCH OF HAMMERATION W 19th St. Rev T C Cemetery Sunday days 2 p.m morning service 8 p.m Pine Street at 6 p.m Pine Wednesday Church Night 11 p.m BROOKLYN Brotherwood the inherited tendencies to do wrong. Under God, if men really desire to live right, they may do so. The Lord offers to change the character and transform the disposition of men. He declares he will give to men a new heart and cause them to walk in all his commandments, and keep them from falling into sin. "I know that many doubt the possibility of living to-day in a world like this without doing one single thing that is wrong. Now let me say this. If the gospel of Jesus Christ provides no deliverance of a man from every known and deliberate sin, then that gospel is a miserable and stupendous failure. In heathen lands, the benighted opium trend and rover pirate, and the sunken iniquity and vice, are delivered and changed into gentle loving Christians. Surely, if God can do that much for the idol worshipper, he can give you and me the victory over a bad temper, a deceitful heart, an evil tongue, and an impure mind. The morning lesson was very helpful to the worshippers. After the benediction, the more devout ones went immediately to a season of prayer which lasted about an hour. An afflicted sister requested prayer that she might be healed. She was instantly restored and went forth rejoicing. The Young People's Societies me at three o'clock, and took on new zeal at Mrs E. Smith presided Brethren Watkinson and Johnson had an excellent Missionary Society meeting at tour reck. Sunday night Pastor Stracian "choose for us the theme" God's Rule and Pillumline in the Judgement." Among other things the speaker said, Viewing it from one angle, it might seem altogether uncalled for and unnecessary for God to have a judgement to determine the character of all his creatures. Since it is admitted that God knows everything before hand, the question naturally arises, who have the investigative judgement to determine what is already known. Well, what God knows other creatures do not know. And it is certain that the judgement will leave no longering doubt in any creatures mind that possible mistakes have been made. James, the high bishop of the apostolic church reveal God's standard God's Pillumline's rule by which he measures men arranged before the bar of eternal justice. So say, and so do, says the apostle as they that shall be judged by the unchangeable law. All created beings are answerable to the divine law Wesley says, the law of God is not the arbitrary utterance of an inconsiderate ruler, but it is the wise and beneficent requirement of an Everlasting Father. And that man is blessed in his deeds at he keeps them. In civic life, the one who disregards the law defies the government under which he lives. So in the judgement, God reckons all disobedience as threatening the very existence of His throne. He stamps the deliberate offender as a rebel and an adversary. Only the obedient are counted as being the friends of God (Judg. 15 14, 10 14 21) Next Sunday pastor Stratham is stated to speak at Sharon on Saxs't first Street three o'clock, and at St Marks M. E. Church four fifteen, and at the Second Church at five thirty and again at night. St. Mark's M. E. Church The services during the entire day were largely attended. The pastor, Dr John W. Robinson delivered a masterly timely and instructive sermon to fathers and sons at the morning service. Theme The Prodigal Son Text St. Luke 16th chapter and from the 15th to 16th service inclusive. Prior to the morning service, a very interesting program was tendered under the direction of Alfred F. Foster president of the Sunday School. The services were in keeping with the day's was designated as fathers and sons. As the evening service Dr. Robinson gave a very ailible sermon to the St Mark Alliance, one of the auxiliaries in the church text genesis Belfast and red sermon. Theme (sold) be by Abrahams. At the conclubition on the sermon, a beautiful gold pin was presented to the president, Mrs Winnie I. Dyer by Mrs Wattled Winnie in behalf of the officers and the Alliance, a cash pre-presentation was made to Dr. Robinson, chore master Jackson, Mrs Rose Green, solist and Plays in Bell sexton. The Sunday school was largely attended. The Sunday school was largely attended by a large attendance at the sports at the Lapworth League First Emmanuel Church A wonderful crowd greeted Pastor Baden at the services Sunday morning. Pastor Baden preached from the text. Blessed are they which do hunger and the three righteousness for they shall be blessed. Bee the stare perfect even as I bear which is in heaven & heaven. Matthew 6:44 & 48 verses. 114 lines. The determination to do good and be holy self-sustain and alludent. East Belfast and The words of our Lord called Beautitude or by some The fear of Blessedness could be assigned that a program of the very highest degree of helpful and good condition is the measure among the people of the world. Blessed are they the hunger and the latter right to be helped by the common to an animal life, the hunger and that the story of the young and that the physical body after the seed and have the desire we must make known our need and must an effort to have that need. The simple concept of perage a struggle for food and to perate effort to preserve and to keep the life of the Immael and that Blessed are the hunger and that the need is introduced to the need of the Louis F. Mohr & Company 2899 Valentine Ave New York City Telephone Serigelk 5628 Day or Night ORGAN TUNIN AND REPAIRS References M; Zion M M; Newburg N Y St Catterine A M & Zion and Shiloh Baptist Newburg N N Y M; Olivet Y St Catterine Y N Y M; Olivet N Y Silent Inheritance Church Brooklyn Y, among others. Utility St THE material contrast between the structures with which he (Booster T. Washington) began and the present great, ample and commodious plant is inherently attaining to be enough for one man to bring about. But selflesser and encouraging as this is, it is but an imperfect measure of Dr. Washington's work and achievement. The education and annual turning out of two or three hundred young men and women for lives useful to themselves and their families is of great importance and valuable and helpful work, but that was only one part of the did and sought to be accomplished from center like Leaguee the light of the homely but ever living truths which form base of real advance for his race, or for any race.-WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT. Chelat Justice United States Supta 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 spiritual man. His declaration shows that he who knew the nature of the spiritual man understood his functionings, and the power that made for growth and development. He declared that the growth and development came to the spiritual man by the man just putting toth the thought that became a desire, with an urge in it, similar to that of a hungry and thirsty person. This righteous urge releases an automatic, self-fishing, right action machine from the power house of our Father. God's eternal place of love and goodness, and according to the capacity of the hungry and thirsty man or woman they are still. Does not this statement also suggest that to mentally hunger and thirst for art education, social betrayment and a true and higher expression of good citizenship is within the power of each and all who doth hunger and thirst after righteousness. We can have a right acting mind, a righteous social life, a righteous home. rightious community, city, state, nation and world, it each and all the people could have brought before their minds the truth and power in the words of our text. Blessed are they which hunger and torment after righteousness, for they shall be tailed. Thus righteous indeed life, makes manifest the perfect man, therefore it should be the earnest and determined effort of those who claim it to be disciples of our Lord Jesus the lambman; to get the spirit to will and to do as He has commanded. For He says, Be ye therefore perfect, even as perfect. That which is in Heaven is perfect. That possible in the person who is filled is the person. The Sunday school was opened at 2 p.m. by the assistant superintendent, W. H. Coleman. A short review of the lesson was given by him. At the opening service the Rev J Harvey Anderson of Patterson, N.J. preached Dr. Anderson is a former editor of the Star of Zion. He was introduced by Rev Bodden Dr. Andersons text was "His dwelling shall be on night, and the place of his defense the mumition of rocks. Bread shall be given him, and his water shall be sure" Isaiah M 10. Dinner is served during the day by the memorials of the Welling Workers. On July 12, February 12, a splendid program will be given at the church by coming men of the Y M C A. under the direction of Henry C Parker. St. James Pres. Church Despite the terrible condition of the streets, at 11 o'clock, Sunday morning, St James Presbyterian Church was well filled with wishspirits, eager to heap and witness the entire services. The churor was in out of Miss Eloise Uggams, the leading soprano, who has been absent on account of illness, was at her usual place and seemingly sung her solo with an unusual sweetness and melody. Mr Ragland at Pitt-burg rendered the solo just preceding the sermon. Dr Ims sermonette to the children was taken from the book of Judges, the parable of "The Fires Talking" told in two parts. He cited part 1 in choice, beautiful, yet simple English Part 2 will be continued next Sunday. The sermon from Proverbs 4:18 was indeed a masterpiece. His theme was "The Significance or Christian Bongraphy." He dealt at length with the supreme worth of the lives of the truly great men and women and not with those who are accounted great by worldly standards. "We have," said he infinitely more self respect and truthfulness too when he honor Benjamin Banneker more than George Washington and Noamer. A glowing tribute was paid to Frederick Douglass. At 4 o'clock the Forum held a virtual meeting. An inter-tribal and social program was presented. The topic What are the Saturdays and Laturies doing in Harlem for Educational advancement, was ably discussed by Mass F. Lane, Messys Ralph F. Muzel, Beane and others. Robert Douglass gave a reading from Dearbair Mumby by Miss Bailey and Mr. Simmons. At 8 p.m. in the Young People's Communion was the initiation of Christian Endeavor Week and a large number both of Emancipation and of young people as communant members were present. The pastoral address on the text in the Days of His Youth dealt with the Christian outlook to youth and the unparalleled opportunities of this day. Five persons united with the church The Brotherhood under Mr. Green, held two interesting meetings Monday and Wednesday nights. Friday night, the N. Chapter of John Brown Memorial Association welcomed the public to Lincoln's Birthday meeting. Dr. J. Max Barber was the orator for the occasion. The sack of the church are Arthur Craig, Mrs. Geraldine Johnson, Mrs. Spears, Mrs. F. D. Dunlain, Mrs. Spencer and Daughter, Mrs. J. Green, Mrs. L. B. Brown, Wm. C. Huntley. Bridge Street A. M. E. Church Nearby a thousand people were present at the church Sunday morning when Prot. John R. Hawkins poked on the subject. A Mass worth in the Making of a Nation. An extended account of TRENTON FOR DESIGNING AND IN MONTGOMERY PLACE A New Story Brick Building Course completed in Four Weeks Enclose Stamp for Reply THE maternal contrast between the attention) began and the present girl hastily attaining to be enough for and encouraging the boy to work and achievement. The education hundred young men and women for lives is of course a most commandable and help what he ought to do. His purpure lackage the homely but ever real advance for his race, or for any race, Justice United States Supreme Court. 8 PAGE FIVE NOW IS THE TIME TO PLAN YOUR BUILDING We cover every phase of the Building business. If you contemplate building a house, church, lodge rooms, stores or apartment building hi or near New York City, we are prepared to Plan and erect your proposed structure. Write or phone for free informa- the splendid address is given in another section of The Age Upon the conclusion, of the talk, Matthew Keith, formerly of Georgetown, S. C., joined the church by letter from his former church He is now residing at 20 St Felix street In the afternoon there was annually large attendance at the Sunday school session The superintendent, John D. Nixon, presided The school was regraded, and progressive new methods were inaugurated A campaign is on to build up the school in membership. At the vesper hour the Allen League met. O. C. Bascomb, vice-president, presided. Miss E. Wesley read an interesting paper on the topic At the evening hour the pastor, Dr. Tyler, filled the pulpit "The Value of the Soul" was the subject of his discourse. The text was St Matthew 16:20. He said among other things: "There are three selves in the human being. The material self the social self and the spiritual self. One must suffer for the advancement of the others. Jesus does not desire us to neglect the developing of the material or social self, but he does desire that we put our spiritual self. If we conceive our endeavors on the development of either the material or social self we will lose our soul. This is the most important part of man for it is immortal. The man or woman that seeks to hold us back from that discipline that we must pass through in order to make us perfect is not a help but a hindrance. We must enter into a spirit of negation, if we hope to attain the spiritual ideal. We must realize that God has given us desire or will power and it is up to us to determine which self shall rule. The pastor and congregation were invited to attend a special service at St. John's A M E Church in the afternoon. Dr Teller was unable to be present and the Rev Mr Warner, who is connected with the church preached in his stead. Henry Watkins pastor's steward was delegate to take a donation of $16. This was augmented by $6 more in the evening. A feature of the evening services during the pre Easter services is the evangelical singing by the choir. Dean Kelly Miller will be the attraction at the church at both services Sunday March 7. This is in keeping with the policy of the pastor and the officers of the church to present outstanding men and women of our group to the members and trends of the Sunday morning service was the splendid rendition of the anthem, "O Thou God of My Salvation" by the junior choir under the direction of Mrs Adalah Taylor. The young people displaced excellent conception of temporal qualities and exorcism. The ladies of Willing Workers on which Matt Hattie Martin is president, served dinner in the church house. The pastor will preach at both services next Sunday. In the meeting his topic will be, "Otherwise Engaged. At the evening hour it will be." At the Post of Duty. The New York Academy of Business and Preparatory School Offer to the Colored Youth of New York City and vicinity of Grammar and High School Training a thorough groundwork in Business Training, embracing the Fundamentals of Accounting, Elementary and Advance Bookkeeping and Auditing A complete training in the Essentials of Commercial Law and Business Practice. Shorthand and Touch Typewriting Preparation for all Civil Service Examinations under Federal, State and Municipal Commissions. The New York Academy Prepares For Work and Business Day Session Alternoon Session Night Session R W JUSTICH. Director 447 Lenox Ave Morn 8642 Crelin and Harris Not Worried Over Harrisburg's Decision Not To Give Up Eastern Colored League Franchise LTHOUGH some of the other teams are wondering what the Newark Stars are going to do for ball players now that Harrisburg has decided to remain in the Eastern Colored league, Walbur Creel, owner, and Andrew Harris, manager of the Newark team, do not seem to be worried. Harris is especially optimistic over his team's prospects for a successful season. He says the Newark Stars never proposed to buy the entire Harrisburg team but just some of the players. He has already signed up several very good then, he says, and expects to be able to announce the full lineup when his representatives return from Cuba and Porto Rico. Harris is probably the youngest manager to ever have charge of a colored professional ball club. He is not yet 27 years old, but has been playing ball since 1907. In that year he was third baseman for the original Hildale team and, with Otto Briggs, did much to make the team popular in Philadelphia. After a couple of seasons he joined the U.S. Navy and when his term expired he came to New York as a member of the Pennsylvania Red Caps. For the past few years Harris has been the mainstay and manager of the Red Caps. He was, in addition, the only colored representative on the Board of Directors of the Associated Baseball Cubs, an organization made up of some of the leading semi-professional clubs of Greater New York. He is popular with his players and has a large number of friends among the fans all of whom are wishing him success in his new position. When Iugene Q. Neal first presented his master play, *The Imperator Jones*, about five years ago, short sighted and super sensitive Negro critics denounced the drama as a burlesque of the lower type of members of their race. They did not like the theme and were not to tell the world so until someone suggested that it was a psychological study of tear and was not meant to degrade a particular individual or race. Those same critics are making the same claim of *Lulu Belle*, which opened to an indefinite run at the Relaxation Theatre on Tuesday evening. February 9. While we do not contend that *Lulu Belle* is the same kind of show, the *Imperator Jones* is believed that the authors intended to tell the old story of the same man and since it had been written much for other racial types, they turned to the Negro with the idea of making the story a bit difficult. The most just criticism of the play is that instead of using a complete Negro cast, Mr. Belasco put white actors in the principal roles. Since the Negro press was not favored with invitations to the opening performance a review of the play is here with presented, written by Alexander Woodford, New York's premier critic for the New York World. Rhopsdale in Brown "LULU BELLE" by Lawrence Shaw Charles MacArthur. Presented and directed by David Belasco at the Belasco A historical and social life in mumbai and india with which that is the most famous with the Bishops has been running the season and the times are important he ported the New York he has titled it with the work of a fashion with the work of a more than 100 years in the call of him Bell Mr. M. Bell Sheldon Shilton Shaikhon Mos Arthur a great newspaper man from the bridge was However than they say we want a Harlem time. However then they have told the tale of the mysterious travails from the dance floor of the Blue Grove in a Harlem basement to a dainty sikken, worked boulders in the Avenue Marques in Paris There, at the end, we find the snacks and content with peach raped round her lovely neck with attend- dants bowing and crapping all around her, with flowers falling at her feet and perfume in the air And there, at the end, he finds her too, the Negro lad to whom, years before, she had given the biggest bum's rush in Harlem history and who had been dragged off to jail with the unkinking laughter of Lulu Belle in his ears. Now he has crawled across the world to be with her again and when she spits on him the silken boudour becomes for a moment a bit of the ancestral jungle. For on the satin coverlet of her rosal hed he kills her with his bare and bitter hands and he is whispering over her in howl derment and sorrow as the final curtain falls. This Carmenita and the Barber wrought in the racy jazz speech of the New York street and told to the thrum of the Charleston has I think been kindly imagined and ex- ecuted with savage bite. It falters only once and then considerable for the creator part of the second of its title of a great user to a dull heavy handed dreary effort at com- rebel who can in Lulu Belle seduces and robs a passing bankroll from Syracuse. It was written or as played (or both perhaps) this emerges as a leaf out of a burlesque show that disguises and depresses an otherwise home and unfamiliar. Mr. Bielasso has marched a great troop for Light Bolt. For the most part he has turned the Negro rover into Negro players and the performance in the battles in that account. For this stroke of casting he raps a rich reward on the right flavor which all the scenes of tumult and obliteration have in particular that it remains first at when the scenes in a pod of light on a Sunny street corner are played to a gobble by housing a company from the old or new war brigade, the play by a Greek hero to the heroine here captures as a hero the cannon and the troop can have. There is no need to look at the dwarf. Do you see the same boy in the two pictures by Heron Hull? The same boy in Heron and by Me. John Bell. Mr. Hull is in the boy in the picture with him, but he has up all the room. Mr. Bell gave with him from the girl. She sawed in bad hair, but at night, but a the girl. Nathan Bell saw passed in hell, but all the saved in hell. May Kemp, Famous Stage Artist, Dead May Kemp, Famous Stage Artist, Dead Monogua Thomas M. Kylee, the head of highways, is a partner with William Cress, Thomas Brown, and Jeffrey Altier. Babe Herman, Lightweight, Outpoints Chick Suggs Boston Mass. Babe Herman, 17 in New York, died in Brooklyn. He was New York's first amateur gymnast, Monica Lugo. He was 84. Sugge Herman returned to New York after having defeated the could stem former amateur weight champion and was in training. He was a bally handpainted in the weight of Babe Herman weighed 127 pound and had been fighting as a lightweight Sugge, weighed on 118 pound THEATRICAL JOFTINGS By ROB SLATER. Ring and Marshall are on the bill with Ethel Waters and her Vanities, this week, at the Lafayette Theatre, New York City. U S Thompson is at Fay's Theatre, Providence, R I Clarence Dotson is at the Palace Theatre, New York City Jones and Peat are at the Majestic Theatre, Johnstown, Pa. Glenn and Jenkins are at the Temple Theatre, Rochester, N. Y. Bryson and Jones are at the Hippodrome Theatre, New York City. Exposition Jubilee Four are at the Palace Theatre, Waterbury, Conn. Watts and Ringgold are at the Colonial Theatre, Lancaster, Pa. Matt Housley and his Sheiks of Araby at the Lincoln Theatre, New York City. Tabor and Green are at the Orpheum Theatre, Winepeg, Canada. Lee Marshall and Co. are at Loew's Avenue B Theatre, New York City. Harry Bolden is at Pantages Theatre, Kansas City, Mo. Dixie Four are at Polt's Theatre, Wilkes-Barre and Scranton, Pa. Shuffle Along Four are at the E. F Albee Theatre, Brooklyn N. Y. Malinda and Dade are at Polt's Theatre, Meriden, Conn. Harrington and Green are at Proctor's Theatre, Troy, N. Y. Four Chocolate Dandies are at the Regent Theatre, Reaver Falls, N.Y. Cowan and Ruffin are at the Orpheum Theatre, Minneapolis, Minn. Brown and Domont are at Proctor's 12th Street Theatre, New York City. Green and Burnette are at the Palace Theatre, Pittsfield, Mass. Eddie Garrett is at the Prince's Theatre Montreal, Canada. Winfred and Thompson are at Loew's Boulevard Theatre, New York City. Joe Sheltel's Rescue is at Pantages Theatre Omaha, Neb. Lilian Brown Spengitt is at R. P. Keith's Theatre, Philadelphia, Pa. Gaines Brox, are at the Jefferson Theatre, Auburn N.Y. Chappelle and Stinette are at Pantages Theatre, Hamilton, Canada Cooper and Anthony are at the State Theatre New Brunswick, J DeLoach and Corbin are at Loew's Theatre Montreal, Canada "Phantom of the Opera" At the Lincoln Theatre A wonderful live story screened in the midst of some of the biggest thrills produced a hailing mystery told amid gorgeous scenes by The Phantom of the Opera's Jon Chaney a successor to The Humbleback of Notre Dame which Universal is presenting at the Lincoln Theatre. It now a new Jon Chaney in a new time of play a thunder told in terms of utter magnificence. Our gorgeous baller bright Parisian sites filmed in unusual colors in the largest scenes made for a motion picture these days with the dim and cere cellars under Paris where the Phantom half-bodied ghastly a In Chaos, past. The Phantom features a feature of darkness with kisses of a god and the fact that a god and a hate warded soul Mars. In his place, opera singer in the Phantom laces a spectacle that makes all Park summons here, seen on her Liver in December. With Idmund Carson, a compelling figure as the Wood Lore an friend and all of the Park Lore a right to escape the underground terror. The Phantom holds by an availing cause the underground to trail the green Phantom to his fate. And then attention is held to the final surprising thing that comes then. The tent of five or more presale in the big drama are all well known artist and all epic all well known Kenneth Ibbani shared treated the crew on the screen. The include Gobbs in Scotland as the Avenging Simon Arthur Ildumd Carew as the Persian figure of master Vergina Pearson as Carolina the operating John Sampello Bernard Sugol, Anton Vaselia and many other Mara Bello add another triumph to her already notable list as Christine the girl from whom the Platon launches her reign ofight and Norman Kerry her hero in her first triumph Mercy the Roundeen again to her life in the new picture Commissioners Of Eastern League To Meet, Saturday Philadelphia Pa. Consideration matter being metred in the om- ing of the Commissioners on the East en Colored League to be held here Saturday, February 13 The probable List of players on the Newark Star, the new club admitted at the last meeting will be announced and a schedule committee will be ap- pointed Somewhere in the stored away annals of opinion of the Deacon Johnson Column, musician's have been rated as fourth class business men. The forceful 'laws of commercial science that demand exactness of decision, steadiness in quest of a gain, integrity, self denial and rigid spartanlike determination in grappling for and holding the realization of an ideal is a negative quantity in the sphere of fiddling and singing. The musician, as a popular practitioner, is a short visioned, slovenly character, who lives in rigid and accurate swing of the old Greek slogan "Eat, drink and be merry, for to-morrow we all may die." They sip, drink and pay the price of today without a phantom or fantasy of what the cruel taskmaster of the future holds in waiting. Music as an art field holds forth many fair and gleaming lights who lift their heads in pride and shed their rays of honor and glory, with credit to the race, throughout the world. As to artistic accomplishment, there is much of which we as a group may boast. But where is our management, and where is our management, and who is contributing toward the building of the kind of musical government that will keep the art and the artist going on and on at a recompense that will prove worth the artist's study, time and professional struggles? But first we must know and provide, that the practitioner and the musical contingent at large be schooled in the needs and values of musical management and through virtue of this need he must be made to feel the desire to share in making musical management the ground work of his musical ambitions. We must have men whose souls live within the field of music whose desires ambitions and dreams are for perfecting the art, for the very first requirement in any stable government is a satisfied citizenship. The Deacon Johngott's Musicians Exchange urges the young and the old to swing into line and test out oneself for creating, stabilizing and forging into actually the best that is within him. Standardization and specialization are the keystone of the intellectual world today and the musical leader, like the leader of all other professions must be made to know values and the necessity of efficiency, laws and government. For no matter what the line of endeavor people must be educated to recognize the value of a law before they can appreciate the necessity of its enforcement. It is time that we give thought to our future and to the permanency of our present welfare. It is time that we look a few inches beyond our noses and concentrate upon the manning of our own interests that the white man now mans for us. It is time that we cease to be bargained as a commodity. It is time that the Negro provides the monopolys, at least, on the "Blues." It is time that the fellow artist can find publishers within the group, for his classes, as well as his popular songs. It is time that Harlem, with its meridian musical channels, has a solvent musical management corporation where all musicians can know and feel the common interests. We of our prominent Senators said in a discussion of the affairs of the nation. We are living over a life solicitor that is liable to burst into flames at an time. It is time that we stop quarreling and warring for unjust per cent salaries. For the safety of the profession is of more importance that technical quibbling. Yes, it is time that we stop squandering time. Chick Suggs Defeats Goldstein In Madison Square Garden Debut Chris Suggie. New Bedford, Mass. The New England bantweight champion made his debut at the New Madison Spain Garden Friday night. Ternary is defeating the Goldstein former bantweight champion of the world in one of the star bout at the evening Suggie had been rated No. 1 among bant ham by Tex Rickard in his annual ranking of busters and a capacity crowd turned up to see him in action. Goldstein has trained tautly for the bout and bowed some championship trains in the ear, rounds but was a waste a mark of Suggie's surprising let Suggie kept tabling away until Aire was dazed. By the seventh round the New England banther had picked up a big lead in pound but the occasionally got in a cold punch. In the ninth and sixth rounds he let the crosses go which landed square to thick chin but Suggie absorbed the stout wabbling. For every right cross that Goldstein landed Suggie browsed hard a dozen left ears and right to the body. The colored tighter laced up to the ex- piration of the tany although he scor- ed a potent compulsion the former champion. When the judges decision was awarded him no one complained. John Lester Johnson Has Heavyweights On Pacific Coast Scared John Lester Johnson Has Heavyweights On Pacific Coast Scared A clipping from John T. W. Malmons managed to John Lester Johnson in New York from our sites that John Lester is in great shape and has every right in which he has engaged since reaching the coast. A clipping was enclosed in which a demon was issued to all heavyweights on the Coast. It seems that John Lester is finding it as hard to meet first rate employment in the West as he found it in New York. Chick Suggs Battled Blizzard All Night To Keep Garden Date When Chick Suggs, the New England bantamweight champion, called at Tex Rickard's office Sunday to collect his share of the guarantees or fighting Abe Goldstein the previous Friday night, he told an interesting story of the exciting time he had in keeping his appointment for the fight. His story as told to Rickard was as follows: Fighting The Storm "You know I live in New Bedford up there in New England," said the boxer. "Well, I started to get out of that town on Thursday and I ran right into that awful billboard. There weren't any trains running out of New Bedford and the busses were all tied up, too. I made up my mind I'd make New York if I had to walk. I found a taxicab driver who offered to drive me to Providence for $55. I figured that I could get a train from there. We pulled out of New Bedford at 7 p.m. When we were seventeen miles from Providence we bounced into a snow drift and got stuck. We couldn't get the cab out and at 11 o'clock that night I started to walk to the nearest farmhouse in order to get a telephone. I walked about four miles with the snow just about up to my waist most of the tune. Soaked and Nearly Frozen "I got to an old powerhouse about 2 o'clock in the morning, nearly frozen and all in. I was soaked to the skin. That powerhouse was near Warren, R. I, where I found a telephone. I called up Providence about 3 a.m. and was lucky enough to get a taxabill to come out and pick me up. We reached Providence at 8 o'clock in the morning. It took us close to five hourse to drive eleven miles. Then I sat in the Providence railroad station until 9:30 o'clock for a train. We reached New York at 340 o'clock on the afternoon of the fight. I was supposed to weigh in at the offices of the Boxing Commission at 2 o'clock that afternoon. "I dashed into another taxicab and drove to the Platton Building and had left. They came back later, but it wasn't until 5 o'clock in the afternoon that they put me on the scales and I weighed 118.4 pounds. I had something to eat at 5:30 o'clock and had a hot bath and an alcohol rub. Then I reported at Madison Square Garden at 7:30 o'clock. I hadn't had a wink of sleep since Wednesday night, and I can tell you I was a pretty tired boy. If some of the New York fans were disappointed in the way I boxed they might take into consideration the difficulties I had in getting here through that storm. I wish I could have done better, but under the circumstances I did the best I could." At The Renaissance Two big spectacles are scheduled for presentation at the Renaissance Theatre shortly James M Barne's, "Kiss For Cinderella" will be the holiday picture there on Washington's Birthday February 22 and on Sunday, February 21. This is one of the big Broadway pictures that is as interest ing to the gren ups as it is to the young. The other big scheduled picture is Pantomom of the Opera. This superduous screening will be presented at the Renaissance Theatre beginning Saturday March 6. In this picture Lon Chanes is said to appear in his best role. "The Midshipman with Ramon Navarro will be the feature photo Thursday and Friday February 11 12. This is a picture produced at Annapolis and is not only spectacular but is a love drama as well that will interest all. Saturday, Sunday and Monday, February 13, 14 and 15, Dola Negrean in *Woman of the World* will be the attraction. In this picture the famous star appears in her first real American role. Produced in a small town with all the beauty of a small town background in *Women of the World* a masterful satire of American media. It is a wonderful picture and should attract a full house at each program. At The New Douglass Flight with a cousin Penella Dean will be to another big hit with local screen tans when The Danger Girl! her latest picture will be seen at the New Douglas Theater. Miss Dean in the delightful mysteries, photoplas, is first seen as a brave who travels over house tops at night and finds refuge in the apartment of two bachelor brethers, one of whom, of course falls in love with her. From the start, the a team pro- ceeds steadily in a seasonal finish. The team deal with the plottings of a band of thieves to steal a fortune in gems and while for a time it would seem that Marie Dupreuse the char- acter portrayed by Miss Dean was in league with the robbers the finale re- veals a contrast state of affairs. At any rate the picture is filled with thrillers that are war apted to hold the interest in the most place on the Lion Rows' plaza opposite the star and head an adequate supporting a treat places. Among these are fortune treats from Snellenberg (Crest Lagerdal Arthur H. W. Wallin Humphrey Clark Burton and L. L. L. The time deal is Edward D. Dreese w. land treasure in need of the changing aphids. At the Rise of Theater Sunday and Monday, February 14 and 15 between Betty Loomis and The Court of the Defense. Here is a thrilling tale of a modern woman one she feared another man nor the dead. She putted a stout heart her new lawyer's diploma and her suit against a band of thieves. All to save her kindly old dad from prison. And the wom'n won against the odds of danger death and desire that threatened her. HAMILTON LODGE No. 710, GRAND UNITED ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS Will Hold their Original Celebrated Old-Fashioned MASQUERADE AND CIVIC BALL RENAISSANCE CASINO, 138th St., & Seventh Ave FRIDAY NIGHT, FEBRUARY 26, 1926 $30.00 IN GOLD CASH PRIZES GIVEN AWAY as follows: Prize $15 in Gold; Second Prize $10 in Gold; Third Prize $5 in Gold. Will be given to the persons wearing the most artistic Masquerade Costume. The Judges will be well-known disinterested persons. In case of a the prizes will be given each. Music By JOHN C. SMITH'S Modern Dance Orchestra While this the 58th Masquerade given by Hamilton Lodge No. it will be the Biggest and Best of all Tickets and Boxes on Sale at Odd Fellows Headquarters. 244 W 135th St. S. C. Patterson, 109 West 137th St. Apt. 10. Telephone Aud. 6066; Palmer's Store, 200 W 129th St., W D Brown's Event Inishment, 2315 Seventh Ave. Popular Sunday, Afternoon Concerts By the Renaissance Orchestra Every Sunday, Promptly at 1 p.m REGULAR ADMISSION AT ALL TIMES Morehouse Wins City Championship When Clark 5 Is Defeated Atlanta, Ga., -Morehouse clinched the city championship on January 30, by downing Clark by the close score of 19 18. The game was hard fought from start to finish the thrilling plays of both teams repeatedly bringing cheers from the spectators - Clark led at the half 7-5. The maroon quintet came back with a rush in the second half and soon piled up a lead that the Clark basketeers were unable to overcome in the remaining minutes of play. Beck, Johnson, and Dalton were the mainstays in the Clark defense, while Traylor, Sykes and Captain Bailey starred for the Maroon tide Traylor was the backbone of the Morehouse scoring machinery, making 12 of the 18-points. Another feature of the Morehouse defense was the fast dribbling and close guarding of Archer. Beck and Johnson of Clark in a fast frantic effort to overcome the Maroon lead sank baskets from critical angles. Referee: Brandeis; umpire, Holt, timekeeper, Dent; scorer, Brazeal. Dempsey No Champion By JACK CONWAY In the N. Y. Daily Mirror The Boxing Commission has spent much time and squandered thousands of words in a fruitless effort to force Jack Dempsey to defend the heavyweight title against Harry Wills, the man the whose world acknowledges to be the logical contender. Nothing has come of it and nothing ever will Dempsey does not mean to fight Wills. Even the kids in the primary class and the inmates of old ladies' homes know that. He has proved it in a hundred ways, and there no longer is any doubt about the matter, although he refuses to admit the fact in so many words Dempsey lacks the physical courage to meet the giant colored man in the ring and he lacks the moral courage to admit that he will not fight. The New York Boxing Commission has placed Dempsey on what is calls its ineligible list. That means, that the champion cannot get a license to box in this State until he accepts the challenge of his colored rival. All boxers and promoters are forbidden to have any dealings with Dempsey, on pain of suspension, until he meets the man the commission has designated as his opponent. There the matter rests. The Commission holds that it can do no more. In the meantime, Dempsey goes on his way, gathering in thousands of dollars from stage work and motion pictures all because, in their, he is the best fighting man in While Dempsey is p thing that he is not the held from competition med his right to prosec member of the human Dempsey cannot beat circle. Bossing tats are done to see the championship of the State is deprived of lands of dollars in revenue accrue to the State if a match were held Concord Church Team Beats St. Barnabas 5 In League Tournament The Concord Sunday team, in its initial perfect Brooklyn Sunday School tournament, won a hard from St. Barnabas last ing. The first half was a affair and for the most fensive game. The half ended score 5-4 in favor of Concord. In the second half Concord run up its score and the with the score 20-11 in tac cord. Both teams displayed team work with Concord gressor Harris, one of players was forced to ret game with an injured leg. The line-up Concord--20 St L. Harris R. F Lane L. F Bartlett C Miles L. G Smith R. G Substitutions Concord Harris, St Barnabas P. Hunter Referee Quinton H. ```markdown ``` Atlanta Univ. Forfeits Game To Morehouse Five Atlanta. Ga. After coming in hind and tying their and Morehouse College basketball Atlanta University forfeited in refusing to play off the in a contest here Saturday. Morehouse led at the first half 20-6. Then Gass sent in his second team reserve strength and rested for their battle with Ham. week. Stanley began a brilliant A. U. with a shot from Baskets came thick and fast the A. U. boys were with points of tying gthe score. House varsity was rushed back lineup in a frantic effort to the lead. But when the time whistle sounded the score was Referee Brandes declared the forfeited to Morehouse when refused to return to the floor off the te Sykes, Frayler and Bailey were standing players for Morhouse, Stanley and Robertson featured Atlanta University attack. IN LODGE ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS Celebrated Old-Fashioned AND CIVIC BALL 10, 138th St., & Seventh Ave BRUARY 26, 1926 GIVEN AWAY as follows 10 in Gold; Third Prize $5 in Gold ring the most artistic Masquerade all-known disinterested persons will be given each. 'S Modern Dance Orchestra given by Hamilton Lodge Ne west and Best of all 'Fellows' Headquarters, 244 West 137th St., Apt. 10, Telephone 129th St., W D Brown's Essex Boxes $5,00 AS THEATRE ENOX AVE. January 14 & 15 A DEAN NGER GIRL" THEATRE r oR IE ee RE Ee RIN GY CHRIS NTR ey De RS OAL Mea Ma Teg 8 gy ee ame . te es al ef ar , 2 : Ma -# Autytay, Rebeaary 13, 6a¢, - - : . THE NEW YORK AGE @ jr The hap 4. “rt of *4 Realm’ #?" ° .Musi¢ ; By Lucien H. White >. DEAN OF MUSIC WRITERS DECLARES THAR HAYES IS THE FOREMOST LIEDER SINGER snore sang his third individual recital program on Wed- saunaty 22, at Carnegie Hall, this being his last recital of He was heard again, however, on Saturday, February 6, av cuf Must with dhe New Derk S¥pphony Orchestra 1 wday Tetenaty ¢ at the Mecca Vudttoriam, Manhat- Abe oatan with the sam eramizahon foo nape vale der thos reviewer to be present at Carnegie sor Walratn to Hendersan musig editar of the Now a meteppe btu waiters ca ams subjects telly the _ apis that tos beng repeduccd herewith: secamors that Hayes art has ‘shuwed seme deterior- tothangs which base beew card dately about the Ne- Ae Henderson answers si conclusively such ermuciyms Le cttateussare onal say however, for the bentedt of Fo ceamrranor thet asa catic or singing Me Tender- Fahd abeve fs ¢ afrrees an this country and has Fy a art! city an all phases of vocal expression. ‘ ——<———— wot tat HAYFS AGAIN | ase yews ct Ke tac at Carnegie Hall s fawn Ne bores tal . The a fone oun vere The oem or Fee et ganas teeth anh Be hans foam reoeone Bed Rasa nad aha, ise * ae heen M yt he mons * eit 7 Ae ‘ af w . + nger vow 3 “a cr os \nse vane «ate sant vt hea biases + best h cous ha ‘ sore awal \ hase eon 1 ig Grant To Conduct Race Singers In Westchester Annual Music Festival a Wes heeer ee Yen wie we cee ate es 1 sand 1 oY wb, soothe We . - be . fade seh Me ee Bes ae aneptent eo Me Bier 1. nave N ana cer dere ad te age: Me Lamb sen NTE soem came te The Seed vat yo seq a be Sowa seme . . eee te gg con AG bs sett oo . some ey eat era . wd Mase Deen ey ey wank base oF wee et OF peraream an par set et anal eee ot 8 that sheath bye hee Poriearted an support of bn 4% be hoped that this lack ¥ ato Pant he an esidenc tye othat Me Grant eke itind th + asians Wo dic Fak the rma. \ seas ii vy | aA. ae a | ; | 4 Ree . Roe "TR G PO a a a ema ey SRR es, erate. a ee: om an 3 Pan ee eae be “es Waes ROLAND HAYES ie vhoreugh'y capable from every pont ct wea -ebe ay an accompushed musician a sincere and serious student. smpathetie nt Aa. interpretatian af race fees Capresso and with a magnetic personal that Vins the eefdial cmop- eration ut the singers under hy baton There should be 1500 singers im the Squrttual choir group nor ere Hunter’s Pre-Lenten An Artistic Success The annnal Pre-Lenten « Regifal and Dance, sponsored by Walter Hunlerr the baritone, a popular young socul faver +s which hay vome 1) be considered, the Seasons Premier Socal Event, was held Treday evening February 5, at New Star Casino, and it was ene of the mont cnesahie affairs of the season The attendancd, dee priariga'ly to a number bt oenthesmg vets, sas ret of 18 tua anagrimde Sir Se ytegram, which preediel the he ce ad ta dame Ite t Bae tas sears ata 8 te Treat rank The artes ace bh e Tavane nvr 170 Spear waree oo twaking be debut in pre fs Ve agg + Joeaugh she base ten CSS unpre + ‘tee audiences Ge Py = ‘ing. as shes at tS dames Boo lavterian Clatety re Sh TE eres sPydin To Mason pat ae © Cares 1 Jarx bar tore I Hener ME Gurres om or ae swat aor weary pay ieee othe be ne etd ot Meatless at os ast Hain scvcesefet re to sopra ate woe the ew amet ont, ott pert pS werk sang te ate ye dower ahve eal Meg SVR we ae Sie eet Heese e ae tt see e pe amd be a et ot ted fenve Vise nwnbers oe sted OW Haig (Ded PTE ama = Mie the Marder qharne: te Ree eda tn Cae Ste Semen rom Paz ae 6 * . Serene Leoncas ay om kom fare Were sau tere ate Pod Peter ge ting dem be 600 ecangements by FET Ru riewh p Abe Piggams sang soning metan "eye vith fee andere Pe ae et wh Vore qe ddey oe Mer vee at te ees purattescetness conae ye ON tee Rae [Pee aa tetentpe Paul 5 8 5 acres . *s tase the ome . cor any ‘ oo he oh Ma - at . ae i aan . NTE tan 5 . 1 © 6 © ‘har [Net ot wt vena ye ¥ M Myw ate Meals watia dyace Vy, tag! te oats eae aw of soar Pde toe oh 3 gee uses ae eean & T 'NSSIE COVINGTON Praniat G WARREN TARANT Baritone EUGENE MARS MARTIN, Violinist Open For Recital Engagements Address or Phone G W Tarant, Business Manager. 117 Weat Mist S—(Bradhurst 4836) LeeS tm Sya(Brdherst 68) ZACKERY, Jessie Andrews SOPRANO Will accept: Limite ranber of cave pupils for sone red Studio—2369 Seventh Ave Phone—Bradhurst 0388 ____Phohe--Bradhurat 0385 __ pein a eatoty marted ent ce TIAN SOROS ee ne eee EER Kana mace °¥ es mt De Morningside 490° Newine 2590 eevee HARRY & LAURA PRAMPIN SCHOOL OF MUSIC Most Progressive School in Harter 131 West 136th St. N. ¥. G rarile for thedancing, which laatdd unfit Pee vhs Mr Sealth. aig is we ‘sunt act és between, this bffelr ian ‘another for the Katy Ferguson Hore Hanhattay Casino, ‘ a q ° Ee '| Music Notes | De Harry T. Burleigh. composer, sing- ey, puanist, barnone soloist in the choir ot St. George PE. Church and Temple Emmanu-El, went up to Rochester on February 3, andl sang a program of Sore tuals for the Mens Club of St V'aul's POE Church the recjur of which 1a [me Rev George Narton, who was form erly of the clergy attached to St George 5. Mr Buslaghs first rectal im Ruch ester was twenty sears ayo at the old YOM © A. buldng and he has ae peared a number oe times since for the Genesee Vislley Club, He sang four Rroups of Spirituals, all his own arrang: ‘tents Alexander Gatewood Sings For Siloam Church Group An imterest'ng program under di- rection of 7 Peny Gallego, was rene dered at Siloam Presbyterian Church. 404 Lafayette avenue, Brooklyn, the Rey George S Starke, pastor, on Thursday evening January 2k Special interest centered 1 the appearance of Alexander \) Gatewood tenor, the young singer who as holder for the Second vear on a huthard Musicale Foundation Fellowship. He sang the operatic ara ‘Une furtive lageima” from TE sir d Amare ¢ Dewizerte), and 3 grap of Negre Spiritual ar- ranged by Rurleigh, with Pinder Eloff. man Caldwell at the piane He was an Rood sone and sang wth unduly fme effect Other artists on the program were Mose Bete Dickes, pransst and read er) Milton Westhro kh hantone, with TO RO White fat pane Miss Julia Stevens teadet Mess Cwendolyr Walker seprane owe Mery Heter Howland Brive at pans. Mess Juamte Harrie fianet, and Wilbur PF John. son. baritone Bethany Choir, Brooklyn, g Cantata Splendidly The whut of Bethany Baptist Church, Rrooklhva numbering 25 vores, the Res Kimball Lo Warren pastor, El- mer Leon Payne organsst-director, song with splendid effect the cantata, Tidings of Great Tov" by Ashford The renditron was ter the henefit of the | Rethans Pertonage — renovatior tind, and way ar Tue sck, Sunday actrnacn January a \ large and appressatve audence teoved the heavy downpour and felt amply repaid am the excellence, af the performance The solorety were Misses Henrretta Hoparns and Roseva Tene soprano, Witten © Boe and W HW Tucker teners Woilour Ins nan ne Jans Cabhbetl, bac Pretes or Pasne direr ted the per germarce and Herhert Townsend ac companied at We grea" Marie Davis Plays Piano Program For Her Teacher Yeu “Mare P Day a fare of Sew Rake oN Voge arecatarne aL akin gt ie eae Fue Benham, Be avec oe Peatay attersaen Date va Hire ey cet invited some ah New Verh Tet omnscans and pews det tet reeatal | Mrhough tae see chee at a gaartly number Co eee Poe cee miget at press eh her ete aah at amrerd tat wah 8 fee een nies wrtoge BEERS s gnene Woof aas + ten he made a tes crams arte vat Mee Danes at whup oand artes He sid his heat ole wanted Whos te heas ber an that fa the future wher ore gnes her frst Pohie ore dal og New Vark © ty miey Nomad know ot Ter ata attend Tree ts were Fo See Vath City, Bowe Nw dene ot beng ty and Tee to wna progeam sa tendered Treas amt Peper boo Thetty to Varatone) Keethoven Wary in t Elat Abe Masneky af Monet ard Bal fade nes Tar Mal fog) Tew atte Peete ok te tye eda ge se bane Walk Pari bt sie See tent eos fog eae eet ae ME eae pind se ot . 1 Boston Tenor Sings Creditable Program em Pheesdas ee ta tarry ® Senet fe teers a a des 0 ve The se amter y +g am tendered mest credetar! wet het reseed pst sede es eS VOCAL STUDIO. 103 W_ 120, ST New York Ciy PIRST EMMANUEL CHURCIT Saturdays at 2 POM Home Studio, Met opolien Building Orenge WOE Phone Orange 7346 MINNIF. BROWN dame iota: Resta VOCAL STUDIO yOR TIACHING THE ART OF RINGING 165 W 136th St. NY City Soprane Somat St Marke Chureh Chor Ayduben nis Scammed HARVEY BAKER TENOR Recital Concert Arranged THE HARLEM SCHOOL 203 Vest 139th Street Toition in Piano and Vocal Culture Phone, Neadburet 8133 Nov 183m at LEAVE IT TO US Mave you a 1tle aalling problem on your Vande” eee voce how to determine the best adeerising medivm theaugh which to tell about your product or service” ‘Are you wm search of malligraphed Or mimenardphed sles letrery the bee | wctling powe? OE Pe ae selected bah ed parmpe to weno teuiesnarinme wae eee Bo roe ored Wb tell abut your product Whrourh eheuary Tatars er Bedres I¥ SO, JUST LEAVR 1i TO BAILEY’'S ; ADYVERTISING-MERCHANDISING i SERVICK | 25B best th Broert Biome: “Blom mgs ts T42 ss Now York nae & group of Nea@@Spirituats and Wit “Nirion ‘Cooke's “Exhortation.” Which he sang well Too much physi- cal effort 1s Stewart's greutest fault. However, ius voice possesses prossibil- ites of ‘power ‘and beauty that cons sistently Will serve to. greatly increase lc Was put do great disadvantage by the gees dtG own becoitpsniat whiph was reason’ for several change: In the arrangement of his program. Mrs Jackson and N. Sales of Mace: douia are responsible for bringing thi promising young man from the Hub city. The readings by Nass F Turner were well received as usual The pastors of Macedoma, Rev, B Bonapart and Rev. Gerdner closed the evenings program with fitting remarks ~-(lohn M, Johnson Critic) Circus de Luxe Date Changed to February 22 Due to the necessity 0) completing & gigantw program ef first class attrac: tions, the openmng date of the Circa de Lux. to be he'd under the auspices of the New York Music Week Asycration, has been advanced from Februarty 11, to February 22, Washington s Birthday. The circus. will be staged in the 104th Field Atullery Armory at Sixty-eighth street and Broadway, and the proceeds will be devoted to advaneimg the work ‘of the New York Muse Week Associa tion It has now been definitely decides to open the big show on Washiegton' Birthday and continue it for the follow: ing two weeks, closing on March 6 P"Plans for the Circus de Lux have ber in preparation for the past three months From ‘the first t was decided to make it to the greatest possible extent uniqui jin the annals of ehtertainment, Only th jvery best im the crews field has beer considered = | There will be the best of anvmal acts acrobatic acts, and darmg and sensavona aerial stunts. There will be the ver: heat clowns in the world, performing horses and dogs, enough wild animal to iil a jangle and mu'ttudinaus attrac (tons in addrien It 1s the arm oi the organizers of th Cireus de Lux to make this of particula interest t the ch Idren ot the city Sine My anegption many years G0, the Ne dark Mune Weck Association has de oted all of its enermes to bringing th seulture of muse ta the chidren © “Greater New York This work has hee maintained in the past by ss sedur lary contrebutians ef a few we thy it zens who have denred that the work ¢ the Association succeed It new seen desirable that financial support ‘shou! come from the larger circle or friend which shuld include those who are r cewing the direat benefit of “Se wor Tn addition ta the circus ise f and imenfental attractions there will be Fairyland T-xposmion, such as ‘as new before heen shown — In this wil he see all of the well knewn rendents of Farr land from Old Muthers Hubbar! to itt ee, Blas Spelman College Singers To Broadcast In Atlanta Atlanta, Ga—The students of Spet man College, members of the aiee club, broadcasted & special_program of Negro Spirituals on ‘Thursday evening February Il fram WSB Atlanta lournal broadsactong from the Atlanta Biltmore Hote! ‘The program was pur an at Rp om. Cen tegl time 19 pon Factesn ‘sme! and ancluded more than a dozer. numbers, same of which arr not generally used The readers were Fenestine Mor- row, Tesue Heath Fesie Heath, Het en Hasgood ard pee Johnson Memorial to Mrs. Burlin Given Hampton Institute T bridge 1 Adare of New Vork Coty whe was artnely associated with the Muen Scho Settlement in Harlem and an ntenate ferend ta the tate Mes Natale Corts Rurhie wh ite Me ie aie eke fet es et Nege fF heer ath ow dete cote ted amd) tan mmronthe and veare of std earch hae preeented ame oo Hampton Enetitate oo ber hee > ’ pranse ctatnette 6 a Nears suldeee the work of Mahoney Young sculp tar The Adams memorial carne: aise a permanent ehofarship fu same se’ected stident The statnerte was unvered on lan wary §) and Mes Carte Mire Whe man and Miss Constance f urte imether and s stereo! Mra Barle were present for the commemoratror Thr prapran 6 tuded nurhers bh topcase bt eee the: Hampe - Cuatter god the in ttute chee Sub-Debs, Under Dorothy Embry, Give Pleasing Program For Charity The Sab Doete am es Gar tate - arg hog Roe sae Poy hp aah e tretare ty ot ram -fovte vente wea at fe Nee Shae Vaan cane Beta lene bem ” . The reraeine was ther a a he veep twa te ad toe Bary t given Home ef unmarried! Af cher Doratly Dambes had charge ef the peagram an} oth Heten fe san sae papular sangs al ene nt the features tie programy The athe feature wat the zur proaam Ltt vate teulite was he wal University 6033 ward Errington Steele PIANIST Open foe Engagemerte 234 Went 120th ST New York Citv Neri ima singing of Miss Magion Moore, with a Chorus of siib-debs th spectally designed costumes by Mine. Jennie Hillmen. ‘Others numbers on the program were as follows: Fan dance, stelle Bibbins, wong aid sbance, Helen Trice and Har- riet Smatt; Spanish dance, Georgiana Sims and Daisy Foner son and, dane. Mane, Harris solo dance, vc Sint, song Harrtet Smult, dance, efisten Look , song and dance specialty, Pheon Hood . duo, Lyle Snuth and Helen ‘Irie Just hefore Staging the fast number, Fred K Moore, secretary Sof the board of man ager's for the Katy Ferguson Home, ‘thanked the cluh und those who pairs weed the affair for their aid in making it an_artistic success Dr ArdeWe Mitchell—Dabney, chap: erone of the dub-Debs, promoted the en: lertainment, and although the attenttance was comparatively small, she and hes co workers deserve great credit for then work Mention ‘shonld also he made of the dancing class of Miss Annie Jone: of Brooklyn, ot which Misses Rae he and Asana Small are instructors Mos of the talent for the dances was turnish ed_by thi school Following he program dancing was en yoyed for several hours wath | nvusi furnished by John Co Snuths Moder Dare Orchestra John R. Hawkins Speaks At Bridge Street Church ’This is nota finshed nation in the full sense of the term, and wall nor be until we develop eettam elements within us” said De Jobn Ro Haw kins, financial secretary of the AM F Church, during the course of bie address on "A Mans Warth in the Making of A Nation, before an au dience of nearly a thousand peopic at Rridge Street A MF Church, ot which the Rev Fdward 1 Iter ss Taster en Sunday morning, | ehruary Dr Hawkins traced the story of creation and stated that God reahr ed that His Handiwork was not con plete untal Hetmade man and de treed that he should hay doce meee over all the earth Hense man has been endowed with certain powers and on the waking of a nation he must have eretan elements or vor tues ‘The first ef the elements sy wes damn kor Ged did nee untend tha: man should be cgnerant tat déeloy every facies and thereby be war able te ret a better venception © God, and he stoe 19 draw nearer te Hie The other virtue +s strength © character By this at is nat $nean that we shouid neglect the physica Self, for a health. bed begets; healthy mind Kat weh strength o character we at tet meved Db every httle vets oe peputa movement and we have a well am Cpe n cf oobe awn wher i come te dang night and opposing wrong Tr takes 2 man er ste ng character t be brave and «wurage ous Such me and women ate assets im the makia of a church, and a nation The other virtue as tendernes: ‘This 18 brought about by contact wit hood women The speaker drew rd preture ef man having the ba er and mere brutal eff sr flened b contact with such «omen 1 The last element or virtue 18 visio! |] For where there 1s no Vision the: Hho progress Hence we must t able to veualive De Hawlens concluded with a fr Jovi appeal to the vast threng te uahze for Gad the race, tye rat Nand themselyee = Put an eet imate Jeourself ard Ive up ta at wer bi ae aie Mrs. N. B. Dodson Dead Mes Sarah Elizabeth Dodson, wife ef Natharve! Be Dodson. for a num bee ef yeara editer of the page of Are American news issued by the Amencan Press Vecneiaten died a? her tate hance WO Rere onan store Bact New Vark Reseiaan oe hare dav Tebesae The General was Pe'd the teilaw ng Surdy ae 1 0 e mo from Cane set Rapest Chureh tie Rev fe PP Adare pastor of fate ou ted bw the Rey Ut Atythewe cere 8 Beer Papen Mee Dade eae hare Ps tan Va anal helene beaming thew fe Ate Tends oe 1XO@ taught tse ans pears nthe Maat in pub sheds Che war at foun the ranks ot the Sree if te Danybiers Vir aed © the Past New Ved Chub of Ahh abe wae al Wermer peeedent ped these badee rms Deb a gaat’ Uh pee ec the eeral oe te eyte were 8 ud a ferne The taeda coat be coedt tn hob h ME Db nse fa boc ay vane a super tendent wae ceceecented re were other Sieewe: aa aah USL C= SE ea feos WN oto fis pede root aeoo et an aoe ee wl! we ge ae thy oe Bet ae teeth bk @ ROT fins Prat: Dae NEL Ete fe HEA Bee ff ae MES er © Marc seedy Poet “ee were arth tuners! Breede ore hla to Mire Pe deer aoe ed be te canghters shes DO cee tee thee three austere, om Leap bicME aed cher relates Ned ig Mate taetab es Va iu yege Fe dueetat et a Met beer Mrs. Marion Purcell Dead He HR we pw st aa . uy canes babe ue i Pee Bie Gaglse” ee Rigaien se os SE aa) aiseteny Taher ges Card vee cedu tt hy the we en ett wh be Additional-Church News PPP P LLLP PLL PDP PPP LLL LA PPP PPLLP LPI PLN Calvary ME. Charch (Sony, Etormtats_ Bre, Maude The sermon for Febriprysy/, war: bas ed on the text. “Let this mund be in you even also as it was in Christ,” from the Joth chapter, 4th verse, of Paul's mes- sage tv the Thessalonians. Rev. Will- sam Holt, evangelist, complimented the chor tor its hearty oo-peration with the puljt in rendering service to! the church and the master, Lhe sermon im the evening was preset ed ty the Excelsior Lodge of the House. hold of Ruth, PBC Noble, Daughter Randall was mistress of cergmonies 1. M_ Noble Daughter Robinson antrodto- ed the pastar Rev JON © Coggin, af: ter a resume at the history of the or kanization whuh was founded in 19% had heen given Dr Coggm welcome the lodge and proceeded to deliver hi message tahen frum the 4th chapter 0: St John “Whosoever dninketh of th water I shall give lum, shall neithe: thirst nor come hither to draw" Th order presented Calvary with a handsom sum The Unty Choral Class, under dree tion of Dr Thomas Hall, 1 giving recital at Calvary on February 18. The recital given hy the quartet Mes Blanch Smith Ecoles, soprano John Eckies. tenor, Mrs Rhogena Jami son mezzo-soprano, and James Watkin: lass, was a great success The quarte will give a recital in Planfiad, N J ‘on March 17, at Bethel Chapel, Rev AC Goberth. Gaster Nazarene Cong. Church Sunday was Consecration Day. when all the ofheers of the church gathered about the altar for a service of con- secranan ‘The to'lowing offigers were set apart to their sacred duties Deacons t Nash J Holmes, Deaconesses, Mrs F fsaacs Mea S J Freeman, Trustees, Sol breeman Wo Fulcher, AA Fag mins The pastar preached the sermon at the morning hour on Renewing the King dom. and urged officers ami member: ta ceroperate nthe work or the churct whieh he «aul was fire, to make the rommunity a hetter place in which 1 live, and second, to fit the members fen the eterna’ soinpamianshiy ‘The followirg new members were re creed ante the teilowsh p of the church (y W Mack. 470 Clermont avenue George Po Dickerson 12 Glenda place Mre Easeda'l Goihard 68 Putnam ave nue, E A Norris 408 Car'tan averse Mis Flectolo Hodge 07 Kingston ase nue, Mrs Sarah 4 Clarke 204 Var So foe Among our sick © Coes hong Rr Rev Hutchens Bishop ots Philhpe Po Church Interment was at St Michae's Cemetery Long Island The pail bearers were! Mayor Hubert Tachson Clarence Hutchison, fenest Hur hemson Frnest Hutchins in tes chincon Fenest: Huth reson foes Megane Gen No Hender an charles Michens teh ME Ma an acted as the fatmils ¢ representanye a details of the burial that didnt come under the undertakers dirce tin Mee Purcell will be remembere¢ bho New Verkers and Rronklynites o jong weedence as the former Marios Pabirson, who wed at Second ave rue ard Torthy secasd street thy Pn, ard whe was conedered one 6 the prettiest and mot papular gel jin the smeral sete ct New York ane Brask'vn a devade any She was at That bee a pleasing tepeot the madern 4.0 bur her mod ernen had pare ot the asperts © Present dg tempers ieemeam Fs Pee al) wae she a tact te wath the pe bean qatiants ct the dave whey far hed. Tetrees owas the few tromerade grenade ofthe Whows Whe ch th ae toes ile love and rrene | whe hth deveared wae hell) tarmer trvend ic arese. tM tbe ange pumbe sea eee than coer sun del he ber ase Cae che varee attondan Pneee coteae werreved Ob Biece and ocmeters 1 pay thes Vee pee tbat remaned ta dos ahr hora te ho ite mused caneviced boa bas hard three «os and twe sitters Mos AG Haywood of the ots and Weg Atethia Reed of Philadeiph a Courts of Calanthe In Joint Installation OO OS a aan Wye vesare Momtir ard Pan held oS e RR mk ee toepiet Hrehka er wed Race ae . eopathe on at fee netad og a) fo thee fae tes MMe ae a 4 } THE RISING TIDE | 4 ‘ Of Conscience FROM Neon Practical | Science [wal Panecate ome Sundar | morerga Neer: bihep are was Pasty rth ae hee Tew bee frera : Sais Paes Down os Te Hethae | When Togr woup tam reared he a hecer man thar fer) Wot ee ere ny be Rae Rae Heel ee he gee: OF Tae ve If oa chaubt pers es Wt a i Teaa Pav agcres tea great merchant ss that sou ast yeur fansily can? grew any bees thant the food and tothe Dare ft eon vo th daly T. Y. Dumas NE70N RADIO CLUB NEWPORT NEWS VA PAGE SEVEN County Hospnal, Mrs Maude Atfend, 752 Gates avenuc, Wm Snvth, di Herkdiner street, Baa La Tread 1019 Pacific. test." Nit eS Cures 146 Schnectady avenue: Hivane Wilh sams. Cumberland stecet Jamaica, N&! Yo: Mlsy Cooper. 25 Spen.er place ght, following nave naMl alt duce if advance for 1926 Mys F fl Thompé ‘on Mrs Belle Cumberbach, Mrs Baa tha’ Archer Rey SS Sevier of Sourav. Label spdke at the evening hii | He esehifbl products of hs native eoantry, and fONg° of the great future in that wauntry fom colored business men Sunday evening February 21st y Rabbi Taons. and Cantor Radmtz mall be the special guests of the church and will speak and sing The chur wl cendet special muse Mra. Bectha M Cynis of Fhitadetphia, Pa, aang it the eseving War.” James) Weldon Johns “he well known pubhost and” aut’ owl speak Surday evening on The Contr Saban the Negro to American Gu ue The will be special music he the chor and notatfle evemng 1s antcpated Miss (lara Belle Davis and Tdwatd Irving Berry were anited on mariage by the pastor at 281 Fdge ombr aven New York Cin Saturday evening g © O'clock in the presence ai a large cons course of friends Mere ten fe Step ens, mother of the bride. and Mey Ma G "Berry. mother oi the gram, wer ‘eBid winsies be St. Memorial A. BM. E. Zion Church The sermons Sunday at Fleet Streah Memorial Church attracted iui attead ton, having been announced the Sundat Rrevions, he Wort Prayer an Made," at the morning sersice, “That Unrely Member “at the evenin servie The sermons at both serve were logical in ther respective plat Dr Brown was tet bey tant on mal the application «1 these sermons. to, a needed place in the queers way Ol Unrittians amtone Contant 9 BL ishop VY 1. Lee pokesbryet abe close a the serms " sy Seve food Usnup wes cti a happy a4 mind and was,hegrt Oy if ‘1 Nhiaese bee egy OMS Pl: Mee dua Wace tes present at madeape atse ce ea the Héer | + ithe MTV 28 were of Br inn se seat Sunday ev rg programs lace Me We PTL ly tie ght of the hair SAL wee ee BY ng alent tome thet Pent dar oe 8g thenRht nove re pate st wall + teeta as bare Sarg Sons Nagit sees Pee hee om S stained ste tan Sunday eon “% g the day winier Cag 8 anon Smith, There ws e 4 app aact , tarher and wa represcs seats) Dr Brows ami De We Vaxers tor the che te eee whl ate tmtalag aur * scwulty ara fthe vena aca soe chard with {its pa or sonirer sparit Jot ene tarry amt sone tma, Me cect ~ n the hemes mak ng ad bore oe Thursday ¢ ene ine utiers of tha churches of Been yt ‘ave their | Niiean ante! de oe Demat EP Witte ar fee Hane sty wri he the speaney Marace + Washes ingten wi Ror ate ot TS Cangig JT Jeree tame Jones + - Mrs [Tate te ‘ ‘gers ad ws Pa ‘ Rete ce We nan the | char a as te Rev. Baas wt * shu j] Mantas + Bt ag att ks sehen ote < oh Wie 4 te. Sonne fet = . Suh yew ae e . sot Newman Memoz'-) Church Noarer st ee te greeted he VEN : oak bie pe Se hale a omnes AE RQ co a 4 : 5 ? ect? was tare * ; = pane) ot “ H ata res ay Sindee Nal Uoaek 4 roman wtieR “ 7 , “a aed . " a ro wat o oy ‘ . oh ow 4 oo leattedwe " teak ” ¢ i ee ieee eee was ibaa pais c a8 sad __ - . . - . oil G = : arts Wwe ws eee “3 erate ' , ee ve ted — Hoye te awed 7 é ene atthe year . an ALLEN HOUSE 11°. West 135th Street.” Fe gate TS ta om 8 wh Noy 1 Tart a HOTEL OLGA 628 LENOX AVE Cor lesen ST a AP we Conte Laresure ae iow ae” fae CR VULLSLSSSFSSSLIOG Bors. _rereencecovozceoat The Laws House Mandtorely Porniahed Poome 243 West 20th Bt, Bet. 7th & Sth Aves, PAGE HIGH’ ee Neakats, N.Y. Bayt Me Sxbtikerd N. ¥.--Sunbeam Juvenile RL No 39 Bee Oe ors Pear lis. election of afficers on Sat: Méeycaiternoon, Janusry 24 The a Gwas turned over iv Dt. Jean- Be aiordy for the lection. “The fol- ot Pe icerasiwere clected: Miss Pa , Ereyccprendents Pearl ‘Tarbes, Mp-orésident; Evelyn ‘Taylor, assis- fetisevice-president; Master | Clyde Mice 4 chaplain 3 Edna Jones, escort, wait Gulliyer, doorkecper; | Joseph Pasats:<.uaiskeepers Charles’ Futz- BBS Giancial secretary; Dorsthy prent, recording secretary; Philip. Eigen, treasurer, Jun Godbotd, Miss Reacts. Gulliver’ and Alive Marjorie Famic. trustee, Di. Ruler of Sun- KiStemple spoke encouraginyly wo Heabebiliren. “Biles Slargarct Turner, or'mother of the Ruds of Prom: WeJuvenlles of New York City, who Nw fenoke to the cluldren in an in- Beipefing nd helpful manner, was re- Magsicd to by Dt, brances Lurner.’ JRE of the local’ class No 59 An) BepEtiziog collation was served by the waetsvisor, Dt. Mary Trent and Dt SBT Magee, B@mhough the nycht way cold last Mhlfrsday, the play entitled. the “Gy BE Picnic.” javen under the auspues| Bithe Stewardess Board No. 1, of Be Memoral A Mf Arn ‘Gare Of 42 Irving place, Rey RS (den, Jastor, was a glorious saccess Many flanks arc vatended te the parent of Rie children why partuipated | MERE will be wiven for titse chudren ME Bherr parents on Serdar eb FS VI, ag the church wom byt : io 3.30 pm | = Re Runyon Herghts bonne and. Coumtry Club of this city headed by ie Pteward. president Fe trusts, Captain, Genre Wilswn secretary BdpL ‘Steward, treasurer and wen: | Bere svaded New York tots last HBby cvenmpe and cave then test ance far the season at the New West a Casino Ty was well arended ie many shiek, and Harlem's) Jest shebas Ma. was ch { beautiul style by the Mead Syncopators «tthe Per wes oar He 5 Mises Fdna Chambers and PF Hayward, sith We Tt rene RMbinver, peor te week eoad on mqara? Wet go stu diets Pes Clary V Geathnes 6 UL k Taper Chany a tea ber 6 the : wooched adie ce bothe Me oi amd Nateral Bart 6 Sunda thnale ct New Vk tt one a fect ef Sunde Soh Tem lire ttm” an last Numday SPN and MW Ma Wert Waverly srret sted hae nies thy Ine ts Newae ST a ‘Burda Many ve; ‘ . ad porfned ws ooNe ” M SAddie Wane + ue aren or ay Pike HHacpetal M2) Ma Neppethat 0rd oN he tober Wow dict wh. ewes proven) ure ete ies Mice Rav Woh beat ty pte Secchuwie ti sewed) ates alse gous attat or the oepne Mee fenkine sv ier ct Mee Poowaes atid At. Rowman ot IS Culver rect WRG is contend the Bellevue HH fiital si New Vrk Ge amt ote fave an eats) Me tues Ral dich ot PSM bstorer eel cent Mee goa) eee opera ar Se be seph~ Ht tal bart talver Pek Fe Paty reat Vee a atk , Bees SMe ts . wow fend ot wee hd “Viet ® eH . beld vr st . Sunda ge Ny as hu iW . ie Mes Bae : ta The we Hobe oe Chueh ‘ ae cantata eh Re WM : 4 goings A WEE Fe Ra ed ue ab on » aie te et . Reoko ‘ h Mer st Peel the s+ — ay onda . # sheon ‘ amy i a 1 ue Ne 1 Na set dea 7 C3 rae gun as the pee : ue " iy a ' 6 Pw : vy an : ‘ ‘ Sieh vo. Har ros ' cin . a) diner we? 1 fehnes 4tetw ft © Wagon. 2 p 1} . £ Povahtoonsie, N.Y. ao OM WES 6 me ce Trane bhere 8 Nt he en ea thes my Mar Wot vat ay The vs : $s os Wear 6 en Bows ke + ee i Reo ' ae Teer ee eos I wane : Mey ye bta teas Kove! - 1h te Bits i . ies te ‘ Me a . * ae ted jab Fpl oh = Bin th see ‘ a at Sat ner Pate « so ' et es Par fer oe cer hurech bey He thee ven the of t ete se anny and fie Newre Mr Mabe! Paewolt et Mo Ash ie Wart vested thee ter Me arin Hear = 's A ery al ths fhe Meith tees Ghd iene _. Interesting Items Gleaned By The Age Correspondents mer pastor, Rev. Wicks, who preach: eda rousing sermon. ‘The high school girl's theatre par- ty Inst week was chaperoned by Mry GK. Smith and Mes. Mary K Wheeler. Andrew Brown hax gone South where he expects to open up a new ‘bustiess. Mr Mendez of Persting avenue gave his wife 9 surprise party “W. Pierce, father of Chas. Prerce is Incated“at 1 Rement avenue O"Mire Fila Frazier has pone to Vas ‘sar f be operated on for appends vert Mt and Mrs Elting are visiting ‘Mrs. Jacox. Mr. Dudley ws at Vassar with a broken arm. palotae Daniels 12 sill on the sick st Mrs © Pierce, who has been ll for some time, was at Vassar last week but has rermned to her home Household of Ruth, No 3539, gave a bazaar at their hall, 67 Catharine street, last week and it_was a suc- cess Mrs. Marguerite Do Witt pre- sided at the plano and Master Fred: dic Jackson at the drum Among those deserving mention are Mrs Chas Cooley for het vocal sole, and Samuel Bostick for the program on Wednesday mght Mics Kathryn Rush reahzed over $10) at_ her turkey sunper recently helt at Zion 4 MT Church. Mre Rial Tanner realized over $100 at her Uirhey supper last week at Thenerer Baptist Church + AN news for this paner must be in the hands ot the contributar no later than Eridas non for publication in the fallawing weeks issue (Signed) Ine Patrice Chas Caves of Waterbury, Cono, paseed thorugh the city ast Saturday Rochester, N. Y. Rinhestes, \ 2 SG Arinan: © tea we Week at 3 MF Zim out with a hve bea praser_meerag Wednesday even ag lead by JOH hee Friday evenng wis the real hour ot enthusiasm when (on Endeasors met hefore a feast that Nes pentful a weil as tasteful” Be heath) streamers ot red and white the Happs Endeavors gathered Cheers were set ap for WHT Green President of the Semors Ming Eestun Bebles, pren- lem of the Juntors Mrs Rall and Lee, superintendents of the Tt Land J COE Mr Stieknes president ot Mon tee County CoB LU was aarmly te ceved De Bal! paster made an in teresting talh Many songs were sung that were compored ty nar CoE peat Ase Nettie Benser There was a reat! pa by Mes illmas and Mee Green fang a beauty teve camber the hae quer came ty an end wel Mess Be Pe ee When at cmes ahs happy vile needs wei, tease ete Mes vu fe large sntelagent audeeme greeted Lathan Po Tilman dramanc reader ot HMartingd Cams at XMS Zion Chore, the Res OR OR Rall pastor Friday even g Mes Er'iman s charac ter work was and and real There were several pleasing mi sical numbers which meluded Mesdames Derham (Green Ferry and Miss Mines, wth Mrs 4M Lee as accompanist Rechester, NV --Gearge Grbbs propeetor ci the G been How ¢ tale fewa avenue a on Raltanore at the Toho Hophons Hospetal taking <necea! preateent ter his eyes Hes age an paid te by wite Me te oe Vat bh Pe Wot Weer vem 0 tah wo the re dene et Ma Wa tan Thoda cen gp fr reas OB a ae Hane tn eka tegatal vast oe da sore VME ee tay fie Pome Range et Hae an Moo Smoth Knocked these cal the Mii Wonter Careert at) Spence Kates Church on Borel avenue and Clee read amd VOM OT thw AS tun Chet ager Me Malia sites et BM Xda treet was cereatel ohnet Saturday when bee! fren a bates or whe be wa eth te Te sr att ess Peaeue ae MONT bated wee asene ee tat tere OM ALareae ved tee reat adam Se ade te ate tat Th Vee crew dam me ta ade nt ar Aik on sre t TL pened eden she manager cats Keene Mer and Me Cade Mody te Wheeter of Rohe te Sete he a ours pare MM VON A an he doe * MOD ta ata Soe woe Bes hia anal sae : ie et five V soon 8 Mr te New Rochelle, N. Y. 2 ke ee ee UF tor tds ua pea elias otis war we te da Dat Com at Senta enn Hes wet we the Shem bah Rey Coot hte Mt preached ae othe enemy pe MeO Tales awed Ohare: fieflew tebthe POY OD Lad M The Re Wore tae gt ntied Woopurt ar St Catherine AMF Zoe Church bot) Sandas rs ram. Weeenng Me satires ce tne pe bs hema tbe we he tat Woe Woy ew we eh cer rad ew tte we ant te hai @ Ga ee Nya i ee a ee pe, me a le CT sata Velinae ova haw ith PN wa woe bw A Ste wD ee Moon ola " kos “ : : Moot Mo Wea tte vt har ds Won Gath oe NM : oP ey Meas Soe rt ate tes ms 1 ue 2 EES Ba EW, GONE On cana Rk ne ae Mi RF Me Me Melend an and Mise Carne Nexen head the cummutter Rrbert Hawkins and Mice Mella Mattos roa mated tat WW sea Fane a THE NEW YORK AGE Dr. Percy Richardson, is ont, of the energetic teachers ansiting Superin- tendent Howser at the A M 1. Zion Sunday school, ‘Otis Brangman vf Brooklyn, was the dinner guest of the Key and Mrs. Waters last Sunday. If you wish to subseribe to The New York Age call New Rochelle 18Q2 Mrs Addie Robinson and son are both al at their hume on Hhrton ave- Miss © Grayson as out again and wan greeted by her many frends at church on Sunday, Debruary 7 . eee Tuckahoe, N. Y. ‘Tuchaher, NY —Mirs Gladys Brown of 42 Washington street gave ‘a dinner party mm honor ot her aunt, Mrs Bryant of Springfield, Mass She had as her guests Mr and Mrs Raymon Brent of New Yark City. Madame Brown of Bronxville, Mrs. Morton cf Mt Vernon, Mr and Mrs Wikerson, Mrs Inez Liggins and Mrs J H L.ounds of Tuckahoe Af- ter dinner, whist and dancing were enjoyed by all Mrs J He founds and ber two chidren, Dorothy and Francis, visited the home of Mrs H Folkes of Mt Vernon, N Y, February 6 Miss Sarah Walker and Miss Do- rathy Lounds, delegates of Shiloh Baptiet &hurch of Tuckahoe to the Westchester Hudson River Sunday School Union brought te the Sun dav school an excellent report The Union was held at the Limon Baptist Church, New Rochelle Nv VY. Jan. uary JI. sasenpeancs | | New Jersey | Plainfield, N. J. ee ee eke ee ewer Seer Sere Ur eeee) 326 Plamnfield avenue. greetings ‘Advertsing in The New York Age reaches the most interested business people in the country, try it and see what good results may be obtained. News items for this column must ‘be signed and will be received up to 3p. m, on Sunday before publication. Mawnetg Sof - George Worm Tes ot South Scoomd steeet whe un derwent a ete cesstaleperat om at he hoapitat reent's has ret ened home and isaac steve | Me Mas Whee oN Raf amertcaien aes eo, a at Oak her bome be be 0G De beets as much ompreaved The funeralics Mire Vired White of Plamneld averus was heid Febru any 2 fromthe VOM Zion thon h Among the telatwes tram ont of tewn whe attended the tread wee the tellewing neers ard rephew Mr and Mes Rudetoh Dawe in Me and Mrs dob tees and Me and Mrs bred Lowers «th New Voth Cite. Mrs Grfley and tanvily of Maseacha setts and Lowe Powers ae of \tlan te tt The chue how. crowded wath pend. ard the fle cal te butes were erots and beanrifit Traes Wa hee when ow has ape ou bates Va pada Ox ge OR ee bw Thode ie MO tae Tete va ® A a wrss ain) eslte Core Vat tt Sends a 2k wean he woe tog 8 on SE ally bw sw wae 5 Marten ign a si SAR Bela cae . 1 Ravis wih Ww eempanes bee we Meee wa Shey Vals Pr WH Led wd Wa tikiwery, Se dalle BBN Site Ho bea iP ake Be aes i ee Mi dae Mar Shete wae ead cM We bt eae Seeded le “tneeee fie: aniten Meee see Cites te ae OMe ae we Soul sv aysace degen 8 Mie mts ot Shadoloo te weed ee ow de suber eT ve uW de ERIE OU We ee we ee WW gee AU seater hae a ie he Men ear sah few \ a) she tie atv \ ON, bet ee Yee oa Howe % oy = HA wo duh aecnee sen oa How oe wh Meth ee Whee tH Vota oe ted tte be Dal pemes betta en be he te Bhd bs ME OM La ine Pater ued Peete tae welts ete Oo tes wae TA EE we wo on Wee isch he we 1 ce eR et sey no 1 a ee oa 4 Vers . ‘ moa ' tee 4 a a ih os ‘ ‘ fis » : 1 : won . . ‘ a Wea Hye and has een confined te hie bed wohies VER ailieotes ent edison! xi a¥ whiting Wed POM poe tent we ae as Fst tye ae” Gy Rhee Sunday, notified Pastor Hoansrd that he was unable to be preaent because of illness. Mra. William Page of Philadelphia was called here last week because of ite illness of her father, Mr. Hill of West 4th street, who is in the hos- pital ‘The Rev. RC Lamb, pastor of Sfilo Baptist Church of West 4th street, preached the aniversary ser- mon for the Rev, G. W Hamlet at St John's Rapust Church, Jersey- dend Taek Sunday afternoon, Febru- ary 7. Rev Lamb preached at hie church Sunday evening from the first epistle of St John 48. Subject, “The Hes nevolence of God.” The able divine handled his subject in a masterly fashion and five people joined the church at the close of the sermon. ‘The offering for jhe day, including binding fund mofey, amounted to $86.50. ‘The choir under direction of Prof Horton rendered beautiful se- lections. Mrs Sarah Caldwell! of West 3rd strect, who has been in charge of the office of her brother, Dr. J. Jones, in New York City,*has returned home breause of the iliness of her mother, Mre Leanna Jones. The Rev’ AU. Moore of Elizabeth will preach the baptismal sermon at Shilo Baptist Church Sunday even- ing, February 14 The pastor, Rev. Lamb, will baptize Mere. Rertha Backwell of Long Is- and, NY. was the guest of her sis- ter, Mra Rosa Washington, Sunday, February 7 She also visited Mrs. Thoma Carter and other relatives dnd friends while here Her many friends were glad to <ee her looking the picture of health John Stepp of Patercon, N J. was here February to jin in the celebra- tion of his mother's birthday, Mrs Wilham Randolph of West 4th street Tames Carter ye of Plainfield ave- nue, who has been confined to his bed with illness, 1 samewhat improv: cd under the devoted care of his mather and father The forum of Moreland Branch Y MC A held an interesting meeting Sunday afternoon February 7, at Shit Baptist Church. The program under direction of Miss Mildred Whinng was quite timely Mass Sarah Scott made 2 few remarks an men of our race, which were heartily ensoved by all Miss Margaret Alston of Fast_3rd street was the guest Sunday, Feb- ruary 7, of her cousin, Miss Esta Witham’ in Montear, NJ ANNOUNCEMENT The District Manager of the United States National Life and) Casualty Co ot Checage, ts at the branch of- fue 485 Broad street, Newark, NJ. AN members who have not becn scen by hint, will please phone or address So eeeville, NOD —Sunday scheel wa> well attended at Macedonia Bap- tet Church, the Rev | A. lacy of Painheld, pastor, Sunday, February 7. In the -afternoon the Rev. A. Hobbs preached an interesting ser- mon far benefig of the Walling Work: ers’ Club Deacon Walliams, president. Rey Hobbs text was from St Mat- thew 12) Subiect, "Repent y¢, for the Kwedom of heaven ts at hand“ The sermon wae tiled with: spiritual ews and was ereved by all present Cate a number or members are on thes) host ard were unable to attend Teqem and Meo Willams are suf a ales is Meo Cong “ilier +s confined to her ' eres i a bad tall Montclair, N. J. Moaviane No T—tIne Gonde 15 fe oogeemy foam an operation for ap- pondots at Meuntanude Hospital Als Walle Avere at 20 New street sefiees. with severely scalded he Tie te ces Tattler Club gave thers here daw ng elasy Enday even. eg Tapnas Mo anstead of Thursday ce ong farnary ML at corner Hart: He tid wonder rendered a wonder: More. am Tunerat services ter Capt Gen Nass whe died Monday January 2 were held Thursday fanaary 28 arse Mack oA Mo} Church Rev Tener «fr ated Mie Nk doom ot Pine street was bet an au sable Saturday foe Farnars) Mat cnener Hart . Ce \nd Hermteld avenue Se ee seved ty Mauetanede Honey whee her canditian + sad tte ey Vie A Agere the tater ar 1h Foe payer nec rapedlc mips A war dent and hopes ta be Pee be nt TR Rinambeld ave ee Oy whit party Saturday Sour eA large hove atendance | Refreshments ee ed tee tas wl Rive a Vactee atad Neveits Dance, Pridas Petes TP gt Fullerton Halt Meds (Oldham of 28 Miseion teen tertamed oa number 0 tee Fv amatinee and exenity (eu. s bee omg: Debenate 2 Newark. N. J. Meegee SOF The Pon ote Deug: ts ten ai celebrat on will be hel eee fp pore Breech senan €hureh ' af eee Pebesars TP? at 1p ee oe ee oP Oh Aha et ‘ ‘ Woonan bederatian « f a eet OR oe es , a a Ree goat og, el Sa ee ‘ on ibeesad ae iis Why, MEARE aes : AN gs Maes . * toate sth Weve Pe te atin ME, i cee ee iY gations ngs at ie aed fe eee The Sudan ache taee Imvueein ats eplendid work All were tlenved *- eee Mee. Elleresn one en permntendent in her place, having been port Away the peevione Sunda te foe viveee om the famity The J amy Mesple s meeting was well at tended. My4 Zinzer, one of the state officers of be New Jersey Christian ‘Endegvor, was present atid gave @ short ‘discourse, + Sunday, pebeuary 14, the New Jer sey Esileratlon of-Women’s Cubs will observe the Douglass celebration at the 8 o'cleoak service, “Friendly Visltation. Day” will be, obsesved .by officers of the, Church next Sunday. ‘The entire membership has been di- vided, and » pumber of homes given to cach officer to visit. The third Sunday, February 21, will ‘be observ. td as Women's Day. At the morn: ing service, Dr. Elferson will preach a special sermon to the women. At the 8 o'clock service, Mrs. Addie W. Hunton of Brooklyn president of the cere State Federation of Women's Clubs will be the speaker of the even. ing. A pew rally*will be conducted in the evening by the various organi- zations of the church, This is to be a Dollar Rally Day | The fourth Sunday will be observed as Men's Day. under auspices of the Brother: hood, The special speaker for the oceasion will be, announced later. Tt was a sad shock to all to carn of the sudden death of Theodore Green, one of the officers, of the church, and who also has been the sexton for the past three years Mr Gtcen was taken ill on Tuesday ever - ing February 2, and_departed this ife Saturday morning, February 6. Mrs. Way and Miss Goode are still confined to thelr homes. Roselle, N. J—Miss Marjone Scot who is a teacher in Trenton, spent the weekend with her parents, Rev and Mrs Scott The Second Raptist Church had a baptismal sermon on Sunday, bebru- ary 7. The sermon was preached by Rey. Edwards from Newark Ainong those baptized were Nettie Hairston Loujse Scales, Lula Terry., Mildred Donald and Mary Jackson, John Olams, Cornehus Jackson, Seaton Woody and Robert Willram~ Miss Emrha Thomas from Yonkers N Y= spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs Walker Miss" Gladys Johnson. who has been in Brooklyn for the part few months is bach again at Mrs Pur dett’s, 3 Rahway. N. J. Rahway, N J—Dr Joseph Brown of Keystone, Wo Va made a short viet to his mother and other relatives last week, Presiding Elder and Mrs 1 F Van derhorst attended the 3nd Quarterly ses- sion of the N J) Mite Missionary Con- vention at Trenton fast Thursday They also visited Prof an¢ Mro Wm Manze, Mrs. Maize being ther niece ‘At Ebenezer A ME Church last Sunday the pastor Rev J W. P Col- ker. preached im the morning At the Allen CE. at 7 o'clock a splendid. pro- gram was rendered, at which ume there were addresses by Dr J T Davis, and Counsellor Jas Jordan, both of lara beth, solos by Andrew ‘Crawley, accom- panied by Mr Royal Ochorne and Mr. Howard Hatfield, accdmpaned by Mrs Hartheld At the evening service Res RH Smith, of Plamfield, was the speaker The attendance was large at cach service Next Sunday Allen Day will be observed and at ¥ o'clock Rev © H_ Spurgeon Watlans pastor of Sec: ond Baptist Church. with his choir and congregation, will have charge of the service, At Second Baptist Church the pastor Rev CH Spurgeon Watkins. preach- ed in the morning In the evening. his father, Rey Samuel Hi Watkins, pastor of litle Mt Zion Baptist Church, Phul- adelphia, preached and administered Com- munton: Services largely _ attended throughout the day Next Sunday morn- ang Mrs Gertrude Cannon, Temperance worker will give a short talk en_her work before ar after the setmon Plans for the Installation of the pastor on the 4th Sunday an February, are progress: img meely Jersey City, N. J. Jersey Cy, N_ J—The snciement weather of last Sunday dc not mm pede the progress of the many true worshippers from services of St Mark's A M EF 7 Church Befo.e administering the sacrement at. the eleven o'clock service the pactor, ‘Rev J M Hoggard. delnered a brief but sterring discourse on “The Har est is rrpe but the laborers are few © At the head of the chor was Herbert Townsend of Rrooklyn NOY, the newly appointed chow leader | He fonk charge im a quiet and unascum ing way, but gave the impression that he is master of his are The Sun day school was well attended. ale the sumer and seman t The tap ve of the tener department * What me? owas opened by Mees Mamie Posey followed by general disens wen om Memday night before a Sarge and appresiatse audience acm eee ee tos hod ane tet The old melee ot days tome aus and readings ef Dumber were chet part of the concert Jie conett Princeton. N. J. Vemeton NJ Mere Mary Iinag fand wae given a surprise parte at her Tome Tuesday mght February 9 by a group of friends Those present were Mre Carre Pannel Mr and Mre John Gregory Mrs Recue Staats, Mrs Loune Gay ta Dickerson and) Mrs Garvin Gracies and money were presented Mire Hoagland whe 1s conveleseang from a tecent iilnese She expressed her appreciation far the accatance of friends Hedge members and clube durmg her sllnees at the Seepita and since her telat heme Pinkes ( \rhe af teoldshora NOs spending the saunter wth Ine caus as TOME and A Ro Mitnan Tae Rureit who wae andispoced a few ye last week wae able ter be voit 1 oeSsats an Soilay Mire Mars Pee has fet tned a ser spending tevera slave with her hushasd sche howe a Wastuagton 1 ¢ Ale and Mee Simon Hrawe and neve Mie ferme Be oer ot Philadetphia are Spenvieng the winter ar that tare: lame They have weeten Me ME MG raul thes even that the are hay ng ao detaghttat time and rerun ais Mar h Meat Me Me Mat ner tia pin taeda cot kane om De gh ave Sie Eke pan ewe les ONE pee Wetate The Power ba ND held ann sereaning meeting at the heme of Mee VG Ande on G8 Buch avenue, Feb nary 8 After completing arrange ‘nents fur their coming dance the ladies tetired to the dining room where they sete served with et calle ee ecco debate Ue ween nee Mew dames 1 Mewnar Jenne Hare, Hel i" . We Want 1,000 Agents { i re | To Sell HOBBS’ Famous} ' cae’ Hair Grower ! PRS Axents can make from $3 to $5 a day. PUCMIOE { Guaranteed To Grow Hair In One Month | ars SEND $1.00 , mB Bett For complete Treatment or §0¢ for Trial} of 3 ‘Bor and be Convinced . \ UP Setutiies your’ tats eS'seg mata . cn MADAM DORA HC=38 pein BEAUTY EXPERT Q ue! 224 West 14ist Str, Néw York 9 ae a ' oe A. L A on Rel iN {\ Naat Bz, Ye Hl) | Kan} p iE pe a hx ff i im\ \¥,5) SPIKED rg 4 ip Its Made in Our Shop: ‘Shampooing (all kinds) Skis Treatments for | “senate Hevionitet Sema Bee sctison Besley | Har Bobbing, Pressing, icuring | Dyeing, Etc. Dances, Etc. | NSS rie eat orto ; sro go Saal there of Broniy Cala { . HOURS 9106 Appecnmeas axyaime Madam C, J. Walker's System Taught | “The Trade of No Regrets” | frome BEAUTY SOO? U nde | 110 WEST 136th STREET BRADHURST 0678 en Higgins, ‘Ada/ Glenn, Harriet Ander- fy cpm ik ers a, ad Daley Ate. palatal se bet eting atthe ol ‘vice-presi My. and Mrs. Jeremiah, Grepeg tat week. “Hy S, Lee, president,” presided and two new members were taken in. ‘Me. end Mre. Fred Franke, enfertaln- of the Rev. J..G, Carlile of Troy, N. Yi he Reva ASB Beuwtt and J< W: Morrishow at a seven course dinner, at their home, 116 Witherspoon street, Sat urday afternpoo, January 23, ve igee Sunaay arhed ihe closing week of the revival helrig conducted at “Mt. Pigah Av ME. Church by the Rev Benj. I Robeson of ‘Pailadelphia- Dr. Robeson's sermons have been Inspiring and have done much good. fontay’e services were featured by the siogidg, ol both the Jor and Senior choirs, Sirs M.S, Robinson director... The offering ‘of $105.50 was sive Rey. Robeson, ‘Jarrytown,"N. Y. Tarrytown, N Y.—Miss Efizabeth Brown of Mechanic avenue is con- fined to her bed with the measles CC Jackson jr, of Springfeld College spent the weekend, with’ his parents Mr and Mrs CC Jackson of Washington street Boy Scaut Troop No 2 held servi- ‘ees "at the Shiloh Baptist Chureti in anemone ‘of Lincoln's Birth- ay Miss Marion Murray of Philspse ‘Manor spent a few days im New York Mrs © C Jackson attended the Wentchenter Federation of Womens Clubs which met in Yonkers at_the residence of the president, Mrs. Paul Bray. “Richard Plater entertained a few friends at his home Cards were play- ‘ed and refreshments were served. Miss Harriet Knapp, who has been confined to her home since December 1s able to be out again. Mrs Arthur Robinson, formerly of Tarrytown, died at her home in Greenwich, Conn., from heast_ dis- case, | Ruth Chapter of Tarrytown will take charge of the body ae Patchogue, N. Y. Patchogue, N Y.--Eugene Jefferson of Belfort 13 very sick with pneumonia Mrs Charles Pavoll. 38 Lake street ts visiting her sister in Washington, D _C, for a month Qn Friday, February § 2 number of friends, despite tbe deep snow jour neyed to the home of Mr and Mrs G FE. Hunter jr on First street and gave them a miscellaneous surprise shower Mrs Bertram Shaw acted as hostess, Those present were Mrs ESTABLISHED 25 YEARS Mrs. Ida White-Duncan HAIR WORKER 3p Prescott St. Jersey Ci NL J. ‘Wigs, Braids, Bangs, Poorpadors, Tians- formations, cortege oe up to any siyle Scalp Treatment, ipooing. Hels Dress log. Face Massage, Manicuring Colored people's combing, Ddought. Lessons taugbr ao belr work. Diplomas. Gatirday, Februasy jaturday, Februasy ' 1926. SS. a James Tucker, Mrs. Agnes \ ‘Miss Alice Joyiens; Maste: 1 worth Tucker, Mre Gok Hu « Miss Hida. Hunter, Hlarod, | Winfield, Hunter, ifts, Juha: Samuel Ransom,’ Muchell 1 4 A_P. Yancy. Emest Joyiens has purchases! « Six Studghaker and A. P \ Chevrolet Sedan. Wm. Deloatch and Miche en _spent the week end im the Benjamin Lee has been cont his home on account of alin. is out aga. un ma Rhone depacied’ this 1 liams Rhone departed this i + day, January 3H, after revetat - ., iliness, «She was & wonan + qaalittes, 2 devoted mathe: « ter She leaves two dani two sons: Mra Susie Grvce ot > burg, Va; Miss Amanda. 4°. in the public achvols here 1! , of Detrot, and Henry of ho, N.Y.) There are three grand’ »' ep three brothers, one sister, aw! i nieces and fievhews Nera was held at the Methodist (h West Raleigh on Wednesis : Rev. Mr. Cleland, pastor of S: 5. officiating. The deceased was a - ber of St. Paul. ‘Theo. Williams of Hampton 1. seph Williams of Greensboro The. dore Williamn jr. of New York « Rev. Gryce of Petersburg. Va wer there to attend the funeral of tie sister and aunt, Mrs. Lucy Rh Mr. Jenkins, father of Mre Mf 4 McCatiley, died Friday, Februar. * having been feeble for several wera: His funeral was held from his dau-i ter's residence, 1010 New Berne . « mue, Sunday, February 7 Friends of Mrs. Sadie Ashe «> glad she 1s able to resume her d+ as teacher in the Crosby Gs °- School ‘Miss Norme Tate of the «> * Garfield School has been cor tine her home on account of allne . week “Mrs Paschal announces the +. riage of her daughter. Margie to Leo Ellis. on Saturday ¢.- January 30, at the home of Mv fic Lytle, 519 South Bloum ~ Raleigh, NC Only a few + - witnessed the ceremony M-y took great pains in making « thing as pleasant as could be ryon! was beautiful The ar’ <: decorated with aweet peas va ttons and lilies of the valley *’ - Corrine Lytle played the wre march and sang, “Oh Pfoinise \I- The bride and groom were guct': 4 the Arcade Hotel on Saturday « Sunday The bride wore a blue «+; Pde chine trimmed in gray praie chiffon, and carried a lovely bugur Of sweet peas. The newly mar’ couple left Raliegh Sunday might + her home in Wakefield, N. ¢, car- ing Wath them the good avishes many friends there and at ot! places. Rev PR. DeBerry perfe- ed the ceremony “RESSOURCES TD PERT ANaeit RRR RRP TR OR Ban RR RTE ren Tea nan EES os naraneen ros tn enna rer rarea ces wrsnemcuns e EEN eee TEU Se ECE I aie ee ae ey we Tee pear ne aE HK eg ee Deg nee PRR age cebrmaity TRAGER, xy ehbatas ae Say geameln ede ue ites HE Wen EERO RC CGS SS ec Oe POSE cas saturday, Pebrmiry WARES, ay ANE Ba ESS LE a raie ys se ofLaIE sie fans eA de =i Seen adit sa Pr ee ere Te eT RTO TT TT oS TS ae ca Toe aE I oa Roa ap Sere Be tree aN AEST PERK DHCD AME. ee ti ae ny eae Nes: doi snversar OE The: |". coe elayes | man és eee 0: EE KBR PRIM: GL: LOEIASS VOR Sisiin rome ahd ie Ue Nigr Havehs Conibe-Tho Metoka- | Ea pgreantine NATION DV CMM FPFEE APIS RTO MEcecl Coa Beck Whe Re" aie To'Bo | Sets seu sgt! ttn ntl eare tne Sete al ch ab PCa Fen u Se SE 138 White Rose: Hot Sats Gate a é ¥ OUTLINED BY on VAR Te ral UTUISKEG Mar BEE ee eee ee eee ae ee eee Wednesday | ham the school Six spe | OPPORTUNITIES FOR _ AMERICAN NEGROES IN LIBERIA , Read | Of the History and Natural Resources : of Liberia in a Book written by One - Who Spent Years in that country. “LIBERIA AND HER PEOPLE” ' By Henry F. Downing, Late U. S. Consul St. Paul de Londa, West Africa Pice 75 Cents : . On Sale at the New York Age Office oy | gf UNG: Rete eren sve and varled shay + vndertaken in hehall s planned by the ex ce Nationat | Negen wish amet under the 1 Taylor, vice prins a 7 xe, and “Manrao ce wf the departinent search at the Instle 1 (the committee are ane un Novernber at w«umamediately fol- . al Negro. Conference swt tute The commit: . ¢ and enlarge upon rade in November yon These recom: + 4 neat a heatth week uggestians for see ad more effective ob- a al Negro Health + “n should be especial: y this year's health : as at Mnfth, the promo- vase of Health Week e+ health literature BN 4 state for distribution, wiowth of Health Work. 1 the work inspited by v1 National Negra w tast vear was reflected + read at the meeting by : + State Jeannes spper- S-eiquarters in Montgom- +s sed ten counties of «+ + tealth work in these 1 235 health sermons, y 8 ached, 118 lectures, 31 rs + ammnations, 63 movittg 474 posters distfibuted av 7) sarde cleaned: 182 ‘ te work, 20° news. “4 hemes and. yards saves whitewashed 01 1. amhers of schools, homes + caned . comme! that in the nex se sy \otk should be ad- ee ts, lodges, church: s+ She slogan adopt: + Negrs Healthy!” whieh + saved by_an appropriate veg p ter The North Car: ©, te Insurance Company \ sas donated $5,000 erent ot Negro health In addition to thes age te xdhng an the work ares sera have the as . <> woperation of man) . veiss ons, insurance wir (white health associ: sco National Tubercu: Nv onat Body Cooperates. +! se tetary of the Na- . tomy Assocation with © Kernungham, mformed se + at he had the assur- yetation of his organ- + ‘way possible and: that atran proposed to give . at its monthly bul- * health week fo a . yous phasey of Ne- eee tramter ‘are rach from a spesval + ared by members vee year This ser- rd . alte ptob- i ‘ eas Bk 5 canst oa ait . 3 for the soa vy oses, both ‘ oe . ates Denart. Bridgeyiort, Conn. > wand Mes. Y giacegie WY << Me and Mes. So South: Bfain + wes Thomas . Se od Prewae * anests of Mr Hanivette street vossted her sts sh New York s+ 4) Hoh street, <W Mies, Mamie Min ctreet, An 1 were, Cole Sends ay Tersey srgeae Thomas, vr cae te soho OD Tasne were wed Mis Harry Htah South sed the Traklya Wethae Garren, su tease party Mave and frome VM ater sate i ls take has The get of woinen of Harlem Josing ety By trick and devjes . becom: aie @ habit. Mrs, Sihel Hines, est 149th atreet be the Intest vletizn ‘Qn her complaint of having been vobbed of° $143 in the pocketbook awindle on February 6, Raymond Boswell, ex-convict, laborer, 34 years old, giving his address 2463 Seventh avenue, is being held without bail for the Grand Jury, Mrs. Hines charges that on Feb- ruary 6 while the was, out in th street she fas wcosted » a serarigs man who ingulfed of her if she cout inform him where he could find s good girl to do housework While she was talking with the strange man another man passed and the stranger with whoin sht was conversing asked Wer Wf she had ‘seen ‘him pick up pocketbook, The opher man was gronyed ‘and the stranger suggested’ that the man whe had picked, up the purse divide the contents’ with him and Mes. Hines since they saw him pick it up. The Iman agreed to) divide ‘the | mone ‘cqually between the three if they said ‘nothing about him finding it, ° A peep into the the purse was enough to ead’ Mrs. Hines to believe the men when they sald that it con- tained $1,000 in bills, Mrs. Hines was peruaded to go te the Post Office and draw as much money as she had there which she did- She gave the men $143 alter she had drawn it and was, given the purse ta hold with dollar bills show: ing at the ends of it. Alter the two men had disappeared Mrs. Hines opened. the pocketbook and found out that it contained only one single dollar bill weapped around a roll of paper She reported the trick to the de- tectives at the 16th Precinct bureau and Detectives Dennison and Bauer: schmidt from the description given Jarrested Boswell on Eighth avenue Mrs. Hines identified Boswell afte tne dietak a6 SGA OL Ve cee 2 4an Mighty Monarchs “Rarin | To Go! New Mad. Square | Garden, Wed., Feb 17 | No ome mould have thongh that th ‘efforts put forth by a handfel of men ir {the old downtown district in behalf | ‘the organszation ef Monarch todas, No 4. 1 ROP O E. Elks of the World could christalize into the mighty azure gation which will give its annual frolk at New Madison Square Garden, SOth sireet_and Eighth avenue, on Wednes: day February 17, 1926. We are relably infornted that the cox of giving this affair will. re 00 and that.as we xo to presy;! are on et receipts thos far have™tetited The Governor of the State and mém. rs of ins staff, and Mayor of the city rit fus staff, are among those invited, enone the things devised by the ef cient commrttee of Monarch Lodge for Mts quests are broadcasting of the concer by ats champion hand which played for the city in Central Park durmg the sum. ne of 1925, 7 Mayor of Englewood To ; | Address Boys’ Conference The vlder boys conference being sponsored by the Brooklyn Boys Work Council eld in Englewood, NJ. Fehroary 221, will have among. thes speakers Mayor TRempyen sf Engle wood, Dr Channing Ho Tobias serio VOM C4 Secretary and Prof Bust of Linon Theological Seminary The conference a being promoted for Rrooklyn, New Yark and Jersey Fhoys between the agey +f 18 and 2 ‘years Regrstratran 1s new under way and st 1s expecged that Rrooklyn wall Jsend 180 representative hays Siloam | Prestvtenian Chur.h has started the lead with six registrations, "The conference «smmitter, v4 headed by Warren Rowell” chaarmans W toordan McLean secretary Gus Moore, wubherty Middleton Harris, prom. ‘ton: Robert White. programe and Hareld Stevens finance The Brook bisa Boss’ Work Conner! 19 headed [hy Arthur To Jackson, charman, | W olames secretary [© Meuce as sstant chartman Pant Stewart treas urer Full conference information ban he had feons the Conneits head quarters 405 Garltan avenue Preok awvar: imine Wane: 3 ae 4 Be RON Pao «Marea 1 ¥ Bi Se mee Be Aeetracae aa de ey ca ‘Months Age In Ne nal Pgh ME tombe, \Egb oN, Popular: Young Couple Give Felends ‘A Surprise When. Marriage’ Ie’ Arinouneed - it sing thy is Pia rae oceaa 8 opular young achool teacher of Nem fork City, to Stanley 2M. Douglas, romiking young attoraey of Brook. Pinon June 191825 In Newark, Ned The coupta are well known in eocla clreles, the bride being » member o the Alpha -Kappa Alpha Sorority, ap the groom an exegrand officor of th Omega Pal Phi Fraternity. The couple will be at home at &i Marcy avenue, Brooklyn, Che hp cn Y. W.C. A. Residence Home, The Emma Ransom House, {s Now Ready for Occupancy Although the Emma Ransom House is not entirely furnished not ready for the formal opening atid public beapectiony it Sort seem pond Se fave saved on Atte the inevitable building delays, the house is enticely finished: a good’ many bed rooms are furnished and girls are mov- ing in daily, ‘The information desk in the hovee, 175 West 137i street, 18 op en day and night for the registration of applicants: : On January 29,.in the auditorium, the Girl Reserve Beaartanens, jeioed eae gf fora banquet. The tables were beau: fifully decorated with candies and the Programs und menu cards were in the ‘shape of a Roman lamp because of the theme of the program, “New Lamps for Olé." The parts of the lamp sym- Dolized were: ‘The Lamp—The Banquet The Flame TEI Laub “Songs: The Torch -Speake 2 ngs ; ‘orch—Speak- ert The Oil-Stunts, The Smoke Cheers : ‘The club songs, toasts and stunts were very amusing and quite origuml. Mis Scurlock, who is the national seceetary jor the ‘younger girls in colleges, gave an. interesting. flk on. ‘contribution brought from both old and new member: to olubs. ~ Sunday, March 14, is “Race Relations Sunday” ‘and Clarence V Howell, bes Known as the director of the recénel ation trips, will speak at our regula Sunday aftemoon service at four in the we Peay Cu ling ‘ebruary Club is pl & gay valentine party, (or Friday, Febtary 19, the date of” the regular membershe social Members and their friends, par: ticularly their men friends, are cordial) invited to attend, _ Rave Relations Metting At Carlton Ave. Branch A big race relations meeting will be heid Sunday, February 14, at 4 o'clock. Speakers will be, Rabb: Alexander Ly- e of the Eighth Avenue Temple and tev. Dr E. E. Tyler, pastor of the Bridge Street A. ME. Church _ The subject for the meeting will be “Fund- amental Feelings Atutudes of White and Colored Peon in Relation to Race Question.” Retij folk songy and aes will be sung by C Carrell lark, baritone The meeting is open to the public and everybody 1s welcome For the Carlton “S” annual fair, com- mittees are formmg for the vafious hwoths More volunteer workers are needed. The fair commuttee requests all [persons who can serve to report at the Branch Monday and Friday evenings at B30 Indication of interest on the part ‘of workers point to a big sucerss, Dates of the far are March 2 to 5. as pee Citizens’ Welfare Council Holds 2nd Annual Dinner The Cruzen s Wertare Council of New York rk we cecoml animal Better Tome dinner inthe dining roqme of Craig Dining Parlor, 193° West 130th street on Monday evenmg, February 8, a 93) pom_ A seven course meal wa served the 80 guests and members Rev Geurge Fraree Miller of Brook iva NY, was tnastinaster and he pre sided witht shignay. and ability speaker were Attorney George F Hall, Mrs Besue Beardon Dr fF Coleman At torney Stanley Mo Decglae Mix Olvve Mae ‘Thomas, Charles Athoon, Attorney Allen Dingle’ S J Cottman Rev AC Garnee and fF Pranklyn Fraser * Attorney Myle Marge secretary gave a synupes af the werk of the pad sear De Cures Hntler President coutinded the speaking program Muse and dancing f llowed until 2 a the commuter wae Charles Menre Abie Olyse Mac Thomae Mice Edin MeAlister De Charles Butler Dr any Mra James Thorninn, Mise Ruth Dem ery Miss Marion Moore Charles (Al Tiar Chffoed Alexander and Attorne; Myles \) Farge Thase yeracat were Mise Lva Deaver Antares Sey OM Daouglog Te barr I Mise Fd th Me Allister Me C Alexander Mas Mee Mase Ue eee we De ON Green Mee SN ce Ie Tharntan Rev De V Garnet, D Day, “fuss Marion Moore Mi Jand Mis T Porter Mass () Hawkine Mrs Bessye Rearden Moss Mami | apman Raber A. Janes Res Vand eraal Mas Rath Brown, Mey Charle Mare, Mrs Thornton “Mee Charles ‘Altsan Dr JP Coleman Mr and Mrs Samuel J Cottman, Me and Mrs Samuel Bright, 0 Franklyn Tranter ‘Aitorney George Fo Hall Attorney 4! ten Dangle, Mra Lome A Corbi ; SS 4 135th Street Library SN egea Heron week February 711 fin the YAS erreet bebrars die loses ed lory af the Negro fram Egypnan eve Hiration an Africa down to the present m $4 volumnes History + of all parts af Africa the West Indies and the Am- an ot hots thal Haut has had ~ presidente wince 1901? The semmnd settler a Alahama was a Negro who was im the De Soo Ex- pedition and wh» remained in Alabaina among the Indians? The first blood for American depen dence was shed by a Negro, Crispus Attucks at Boston? ye el Bite SORES tn y h Anniversary: OF The: TAM SRE BE i, apy ut Rose: ft To'Be Page : : ’ Weld Moda, Fe. 15 \ JPekiadgh giniers and taymen ste lnjag with the, directors and f AUN ieee Aesceass oF Webration of {te 2Mb amuiversaty “on Eis rhe Pebruary 15. A At aacinfion opersies the White Rose Home at dad West 136i atextgfor working we <The will be xs follows: Mus (cal Weetlon” Miss ‘May. Stoken: re marks, Former Alderman ens ‘Witlart Smith) musteal selection, Deacon Jobin. sowe ‘Entertainers: dramatic readiog Mae ‘Adena E. Kelly; address the Rev iiliam P. Hayes. The anniversary cominittee in charg ‘Of the celebration is composed of th following: Dr. Ado CE Minott, chairman, Mesdames Belle Burke, C. E Scott, M. B. Gordy, NM. Stokes and Mis: ——-t-—_—_— Auchoon-Anchi Club Installs New Officers Yonkers, N ¥ —Tho Auchoon Auchi Dub of the Girls’ Service League, combosed of fiftzt of Yonkers most prominent young women, held instatla- tion of their new officers Monday even- ing, February 8 The club was organized in 1923 with ve Esther Brown as the first presi- ea . The new officers were installed by Fred R. Mooore as follows: Ethel Garrison, president; Helen Smith, viee president; Dot Ruldick. seccetary; Bernice Porter. corresponding secre- tary; Allene Midleton, financial secre- fary; Helen Henderson, treasurer; Louse Peterson sergeant at arms; Ruth Wilson, chaplain. ‘The meeting closed with the serving of a sumptuous collation under di- rection of Mrs Paul H Bray, chape rone of the club. - = Mrs. J. B. Wallace Dead Greensboro. VY C —Mre J “F Wal. lace dicd early Sunday moming, Jan. tary 24, 1926, at the residence of her daughter, Mrs BoA. Sunkuns, North Dudley sireet Mra Wallace and her family came to Greensboro several years ago from Orangeburg, SC. where she and her husband, Lr J’ E, Wallace, had been connected with Cladin Univer: sity as members of tts faculty group Citizens in_Greensboro who welcom- ed Dr J F Wallace, who served as president of B@unett College for a number of years, learned to know and to love Mrs, Wallace, and bore testimony to the esteem and tender love which they felt for her in every way they could. ‘Telegrams and fetters from friends far away, as well as beautsful flgral designs which were sent by tele- graph, bespoke the hgh regard which’ fnends held her The flvral expressions from friends here wer many and uausually beautiful Mra Wallace left. a devoted hus band, Dr JF Wallace, Mes Fayth Wallage Johnson, Mrs ‘Lutitan, Wal Jace Simkins,emne soo, De Wo IT Wallace, and three grandchildren, ht te Frances, Gerard and J ean fh son The funeral services were condus® ed from the Church ot Une Redeem er, Fpiscopal, by lather Bartow President Tage of Heanntt College spoke of Mra Wallave as wie moth fer, and ae her sons pal The Len cnet College quartet, under diets a of Veofessor Paris, sendend Levny sons “Crosson the Bar Ry te fuest ot the fants ROG SOt Balner Memorial Institut en sat, “Theee Meetings wath the Say ov The Tabes Ach Club erred a fw er bearers Simdents et Berson College acted a actiys pall hears and. close frends of De amt Meet (F Wallace served as honerary gat bearers | Interment wae on Maplewerd Cre leterv. The most marvelous scientific discovery of the age. Gives the skin a beauty and velvety white- ness; contams a cream basis, Can only be removed by soap and wa- ter or cold cream 2 or. jar $1.00. Agents wanted Address El Fa Co, 230 West 135th St, coN Y¥ Age Deestf Ge ee ae THE EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER pete ae ey » BE ged im P at my . Sheud nee ah 3 wen . manet id ; crown / Bn . me POND cst Vitatity : ang ine neauty to the tiait AP Youg Maiente bry end Wity Try aanT iho Hain ‘anowan tr you aro. potbered 6B Bree ase Danartt Heaing edi on a7, NeDIDE, gee, want g0H 19 try “a jor of Bast India HATE Oren, & $2, Ldttag! commins medical proper Tae gamewy, wohtne foots ot the hte Wed Meee ere Sauin, Belpine nature to 40d, SURES, Ne ree ihe ate sotT ant G0 Me OE med wide DU Of i iand “nhowere, "TBE, Dest enown Tromeat oe Heavy, and, bewutifor Rieck Seer tc” ulna restares Oray ale | Front ettor canbe weed wh Hor Wrap. for stratehtentne 6 D. LYONS, Géh, Aad. 1956 Morin enter” wireet, OKitiorns Cy Ove 8. D. LYONS, Gen. Agt. | ‘$38 Beet Groter accel ity oul ‘Aontes outer res Hatp gruwary 1 teuyie ott snam A Preasing Un 1 Vace Cream rir a “ Pirtetin Weitthe.' e000 d3e Hse Pee I Sa eOSh ot Hawa: Conn” Led Bane fan. Naw Havens Porik—The:” Metoks: Galeda. tee Of Sinmoapnt <Daprs “Church feld=thelr ‘annual banquet at that. apaclotis edifice Wednesday evonings” «Mote than, 200 aitgutes. ‘On, Satprday ‘evering, Vast Rock Loved. ‘B.P.O. E. of W., No. Wt initiated some new members into the mynterign of the order, “A. banaue for wmenisbergsonly was a splendid af nic,” The Guild _of St. Luke's Churct prevented, ‘tee Dreams” xt th racial, House, ‘A large audience greeted Josep! H. Douglass, violinist, who way pro tented to New Havenites by the J B, P, World-wide Guild of Iimmanue Baptist. Church. “The tate Silas Purvis, one of th well known citizens of New Haves the ony Negro. on the police fore -a member of Zion A ME. Churck and an active fraternal man, died or February 3. The Rev. Mr, Mranct of Zion Church officiated af the fa neral, He 1s survived by the wi dow, 2 daughter, and other relatives Rev, Morse of Branford was in the city last week for a few days, ‘The Bachelor-Renediet annual re ception, held on February 5, was wel attended, +the fall being Beasetfutl decorated, Leon Fowler and Miss Wilson 0 Duy sireet vere umted in marriags go Saturday Thew are members 0 Immanuel Baptist Church and Sun ao eant Hazelhurst, Miss. Hazelhurat, Miss.—The Court House at Hazelhurst, the county seat of Copiah County, has been the scene of two quiet iter-racial meetings within the past week Eepab Coun- ty gs had an_inter-racial organiza. ae Rheumatism, lumbago, neuritis, batkache, stiff neck, sore muscles, strains, sprains, aching jvints. When you are suffering so you can hardly get around, just try Red Pepper Rub. Notlung has such comcntrated heat a sred peppers, and when beat penetrates right down into pain and Just as soon as you apply Red Pep- per Rub you tcci the tughng béat In three minute: the sore spot ts warmed through and thruogh and the torture 1s gene Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made fron red peppers, costs little at any drug store Get a jar at once Be sure to get th genume, with the Be quick—be sure Colds are dangerous. Stop them at ‘once. Correct their dazaage. Open the Bowels, ¢heck tha fever, tone the qt tem. You can do that in-24 hours with HILL'S. This way is efficient and complete, tis 49) well-proved that millions ‘now employ it It is #0 au- Benge aE we pad $1,.00000 foe it nt rely on minor treatments. Deal ‘with a cold in the best way known— and now. At your drug store. Bo Sure i's x Price 39¢ B/ ie Get Red Bex “2Q 5419" with Portrait re : a Bi Fs eae i iis At " a mi = : : : oo ack r ittag : F = a or 1 6 month, tre : a, a 3 ts 2 ie Te ca ul : ; a pile n't iets ea se sin . B get eed ig te ee : rch te : : ai - Hed, & é id ind eh “ B bor t <a ; D told mt : ; 3 , e ° : we ver ( « pat a r i 8 oH : ES : ae ene si: enh "ae 6 ge ae : a otf be a alts ie s oe ake as : ‘e are ee & «a ean jam ne 3 = e ea stem GB @ itt a See, «i tora ore i . i : e ee at! a: 5 a aoe re oh 4 parte d re a "i @ ae riben - : L ee M es : wea = : A it muy i ; vr -G SB “ : : asi _ SB bi es ee S Om mg verre i = = et wy ee ae “ fe fe Reni see o 2 ee 2 a ; a ze % “ “ = 7 te ? “@ = fet oe wae STN 9 i) TROUBLE Sa ont FAMOUS OLD’ INDIAN: DOCTOR HAS - DECIDED: TO MAKE THE MOST: DARING MOVE EVER MADE 10 GET NEW CUSTOMERS == WILL GIVE A FREE SAMPLE BOX OF HIS FAMOUS COCO-TAR HAIR GROW ER TO EVERY READER OF THIS PAS PER—JUST 10 PROVE THAT HIS: PRODUCT WILL GROW HAIR THO INCHES LONGER IN THO MONTHS 1) the Readers ¢) The New York Age Marl this COL PON PROPERLY FILLED OUT with your nahe and address to De J (Delano, care Herbs of Life Todan Med. 40, 10024 Dept 118, South arcet, Philadelphia, Pa, and RE- RIVE A FRE) SANPUF of De Delana's Coco-Tar Harr Grow- or FRET DAMI e -8 Fae ADDRESS eS mee ity SYATE! corsa. a Neo Whee «etme to Tt letane please mention The New York Ave THANKS . <a, sense amma ia ore: Cat’ seepral vemek,:* < Beteetibed law: af U}jin. Derstitate, a rbevoh Re vcommatine eas i dasibe with/e wccce.ol Kis ee frm the school Six speecies” trece made, a af Sagat Deiag’ short mpd frank, The cesxit of the whole a cor was the sing of ya i ee (Comit, Haush. for . r «5. H. Holesclain Alfitd Beay- gn Marrison, delegates to! the ax- wer Tesherce Tatthate Pureaer’s ee a ee Oe: CaO har dehghtfully soft, wavy and glossy; and in fact Dr Delano gua- Fantees it to grow your hair two in- ches longer in two months YOU MAY BE ASTONISHED AT QHIS TRULY ASTOUNDING OFFER For—considering the thousands af people who will read this article and avait-themcehes of Dr. Delano's of- fer--there must be some good. sound reason why he can afford to make it IT IS based upon this one fact. Dr Delano's Caco Tar Hair Grow- ef 19 positively the best product of wts kinid on the market, regardless of cost SULLIONS of people are us- ing it dally, and will use no other It has the largest sale of any hair Preparation on the market Te Planes experience has been that if hy unee induces a person to try Cove far Hare Grower they con: tinue to uce it This oe the only rea- con why he can afford to give you and thousands et ether readers of this paper a Bree Sample of Dr De- lanys Coen Tar Hare Grower Tt much take manthe of evaensive advertinin ty induce sou to buy a hor cf De Delano Core Lar Hair Grower Theretore, De Delano is sanply sperding thy thousands 08 dltars that he would etherwise be seampelled f+ spend in advertising to gee sat nue Sample of bre Coon Var Grawer tee of charge bor he Booms he wt amplsh immediately shat ow atl atherwie consume one aa poste seace ot uumne alt te tesmes than thie wil cast hes athe the expense ot ths Per Ube Creme pons Te Dea cs sincere an thie after vd wnt cere trader cf The New Yo Aue te asad themsees rat Pathe Mar Daw ands oi readers ths paper, we ash that they ser My seme freed cr thers wha as tov reader of The New Verk Ver and whe is ne ueing Dr Delany s Caen Tar Har Grower peta ere Sample Tin nes feel urder the least abi Aation 6 ay epting the offer ae De Deianes «te wish on making at as te have von try CnenTar Hair Grewer He i entirely wilbng. te Pra YY, LCC et, me =e a SINE G8 Saee ioe, resting ie bn tae Sach Schast (white), rendezed: es toate ean Keletal ppoaram:i tHe, Cte Lomltntis Chives, Suntag etterucor Tesiery JF. 7 | Cancer 2 a vibe on tie See leave it to you to decide~after hary ing tned his Coco-Tar Hair Growéq, —whether you will conunue to use it oF not. PERFECTION IN HAIR GROWER Dr Deano has been mfaking medic eines and Hair Preparations for number of years and since Cocotak Hair Grower was the first conceived, it has been his constant aim to ims Prove the quality With all his exe perience we do not see how it contd be improved. ‘ : It not only makes the har softy wavy and glossy, but st stops the hair from falling, breaking off, ree tards grayness and grows the hai¢ two imches Jonger m two months, | Sesentists say that Dr Delano fag puzzled the World with his jen preparation which never fails & gra the har . MADE OF PURE COCOANUT OIL AND CALIFORNIA PINE TAR Dr Delano s Coco-Tar Hair Gro er 1s made from California Pine * and Cocoanut Oi which he bring over 10,000 miles from the Oriente That 1s why he calls it Coco-Tant ‘He employs a <peciat process in malo ing Coco Tar ta get a perfect come bination, so that the beneficial effect rom these products ace multplicd over and over HERG IS THE ERED COUPON, WHI POSITIVELY is not GOOD ALLER MARCH & cer aur sew MAMIE IT DIRFET TO DR JG PITANG CART of HERBS OB LITE MEDICING COMPANY, 1821 South Sere, PHILADELe | PHIN Py SHERI WINE BY NO CHARGE WHATEVER COMPARE IT WHHL ALL OTHER HAIR PREB- ARATIONS AND WHEN YOU ARE CONVINCED THAI HI IS THT GREATEST OF ALL HAIR GROWERS-HFIP LHI OLD DOCTOR IN HIS WONDIREUL WORK BY RECOMMENDING ID. TO YOUR TRIENDS Chaplain, hostess, new organiza- tion and education in the June Enal- ligation in the 18th Century Public School in the City of New York, Boston, Massachusetts, and Correspo- nance Centre have given signal announcements. Self addressed stamped envelop- ses, detailed information or organisers between 6 and 7 p. m. Au- cademy, for appointment. Harvard Day, P. B., $. Instructor Treasurer, Dept. of English, New York City Public Jr. High Schools Buffalo, furnished if desired. Louisie I. George and Arthur A. Madison they to announce that they have joined a co-partnership and on New February 8, 1925, will con- tinue to be located at 200 West 135th Street Room 211, New York City. Wal. Edgecombe 5137, January 25, 1925. Feb13-51 Mrs. Sarah Groves, 66 West 138th street, is sick. Mrs. Marge McCrutten of 192 West 138th street, is sick Mrs. Estel Hines, 200 West 140th street is suffering from the lappie. Mr. Hunt of 203 West 148th street, confined to his bed with the lappie. Mrs. Clara, Vandusen, 160 West 156th street is suffering from rheumatism. Mrs. M. J. Devaux, 170 East 100th street, is confined to her home because of illness. Mrs. Mary Butler of 1048 Forest avenue, who has been sick for some time has taken a relapse. Christopher Jenkins, who lives at 250 North avenue, is confined to his home because of illness. Mrs. and Mrs. W. L. Jenkins, formerly of 10 West 134th street, have moved to 2306 Seventh avenue. IVory E. Coles of Schenectady, N. is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Brislaine. 2394 Seventh avenue. James V. Ladson of 2251 Seventh avenue is sick at 112 Seneca avenue, Brooklyn. He is suffering from pneumonia. William Butler, 40 East 132nd street, 89th of Mrs. Gertrude Butler, is confined to his bed suffering from rheumatism. Mrs Hannah Brown, 15 West 99th street, who has been confined to Roosevelt Hospital, has returned to her home. BLEEKS DRESSMAKING SCHOOL Bridges - Business Making, Patternmaking Bricklaying - Bricklaying, Patternmaking Grinding - Millinery Courthouse - Interdirectional Construction Gourmet - Food and Women Polliants - Gauranteed 29 West 128th St. Bornimore 728 Mrs. Fester Hoglan, 20 West 130th street left Friday night for Richmond and her mother, who is so riously sick Mrs. Hirta Garrett 196 West 141th street left Monday for Virginia where she has been called to the bedside of her sick brother The Get-to-gether club of Losing Charity of Manhattan was entertained Monday night by Mrs. Sterling 1720 Pacific street. Brooklyn Brad Nixon, 488 Lenox ave. fine who has been confined to the Woman's Hospital has returned to her home much improved Rev. Jason Lawson, pastor at Morgan Hill Church has returned from California where he has been spending his vacation Mrs. McBelle White Williams wife of Dr. Lewis P. Williams of West 120th street, was commited at home a short period by a heavy cold Mrs. Clara Watkins, formerly of West 138th street Manhattan, is sick at 225 Lester avenue, Ashbury Park, N. I. She is suffering from a grape Mrs. Sarah Harris of Birmingham Ata who has been spending several months with her son George Harris of 148th street has returned to her home The grand ancestors of the Knights of Vin and Ladies of Omega were intertwined Wednesday night at the homes of Timm White West 120th street Mrs. Margaret Dawes 122 Last 10th street which has been suffering from thievery for several months and has thought to be recovering has taken a refuge Martha Lila Draston 2394 Second Avenue engraved a few friends at a wrist party Wednesday night. The guest, wife Mr. Lenora Bone, Mrs. Annelia Brown, Mrs. Sena S. Brill Bane, I W. Wilson I H. Smith, I Summer, Ia. Brohman, and Mr. Wirkin. The Bluebird Social Club held their seventh anniversary dance at Harlem Studio, last Saturday evening. Many members of the younger set were present and a most enjoyable dance music. The guest, Mrs. Gabrielle Rhodes and the original Nightlight Ser Martha Read, the sponsor of the Martha Bostess Two Weeks Mission In St. Benedict's Church WEST 53rd STREET By Two Capuchin Fathers Beginning Sunday, February 21 Ending Sunday, March 6 SPECIAL SERVICE EVERY NIGHT 8 O'CLOCK HARLEM HAPPENINGS Mr. M. Tucker, of 420 Lenox avenue corner of 105th street, known in Harlem as the gentle Dentist advises every one to have their teeth examined and treated and so avoid winter troubles. Examination is free. Easy payment, open evenings. Dec-1f Mrs. Florence Commodore, 215 West 112th street, who has been spending the past two months at her former home, Charlottesville, Va., has returned to this city. Pol. Clintes H. Moore of Greenesboro, N. C., who is visiting his daughters and other relatives and friends is New York was a caller at The Age office on Tuesday. Rev. Cullen Returned For His 25th Year As Pastor Of Salem District Superintendent Houston Presiding at the fourth quarterly conference of Salem Methodist Episcopal Church New York District Monday evening February 8, in the lecture room of the Church, promised the members present that he would see to it that the pastor Res F A Cullen is returned to them for another year. He is the trustee and senior board member of the church made short speeches requesting the district superintendent to see his influence with the bishop to keep the present pastor at his post. The entire assembly stood to show the members endorsement of the church officer request Res Hullen told those assembled that he will be pleased to have Res Cullen remain at Salem as long as he was in charge of the district Res Cullen has been pastor of Salem Church 24 years. He built up from a few wishers in a small room to a 1,000 member membership of more than 1,000. He will be the pastor of Salem Church was in charge of Salem Church was in cents. The trustees report showed his present salary is $4,000 a year. Salem is the largest colored church in New York. The report of the secrecy showed that the church members raised more than $34,000 last year exclusive of sums raised by the various clubs in the church. There were splendid financial reports from the various organizations. Rev. Colen a splendid pastorate of Salem Church on April 18, 1902 when a new building services in a small town in New York were building at 122 N. Nichola's avenue, between 122nd and 123rd street. In August they were dispsyed for non payment of rent. There were only three members left out of the original membership and they increased greatly under Rev. Colen. The church building at 232 West 12th street into two rooms, one of which was a back parlor in a private house. There the church remained for nine years, increasing in membership until the year 1011 when they were strong enough to move again to 102 and 104 West 12th street, where two private houses were converted into a church by removing the partitions. That was the church house on 102 and 104 West 12th street. Seventh avenue corner of 12th street in 1024 which was valued at $600,000. Rev Collen tells of hardships hardships and almost poverty without asking for aid during the year he was building up the present congregation. Urban League Delegates Visit The N. Y. Age Office Several delegates and visitors at the annual convention of the National Urban League were visitors at the Aege office last week. Mrs Katherine Barre executive secretary, from Los Angeles, visited the Pacific Coast, was a welcome caller on Friday. She expressed surprise at the size of the Aege printing establishment and the general progress she found among racial enterprises conducted in Harlem. Prof. J W Day, principal of West Virginia College, collegiate and memoirs 'S' Work, head of the Department of Records and Research at Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee Ala. were among the other attendees at the office. Dr. Geo. Frazier Miller To Address Citizen's Forum Dr. Geo. Frazier Miller To Address Citizen's Forum The Citizens' Forum on the auditorium of P. S. 136, 13th street and St. Nicholas avenue, will have a principal speaker Sunday afternoon February 11. The Rev. George Lester Miller, one of the first prominent inmates in the Male Maker community, will make a guest speaker. He will preside. The general public will be present. Mrs. Charlotte Alexander, wife of Rev. Jordan Alexander, is seriously ill at her residence, 128 Schienclady avenue. Mrs. Fred Thomas, who has been ill at Cumberland-H街 Street Hospital, can be seen at her home, 1254 Prospect place. Miss Georgia Johns of 617 Herkimer street entertained the Dec-Ibn Inn Embroidery Club on Monday, February 8, those present were the Misses Mable and Marle Patterson, Viola Harris and Clara Hicks. After partaking of a dinner lunch they adjourned to meet March 8 at 31 Lefferts place. Saturday, January 30 was a Royal Elk Knight. The cause-making sixty old Elks out of young does, so they could run from the courtyard and Lincoln-Douglas birthday celebration held by Brooklyn lodge, No. 32. 20-Yr. Old Youth Buys Grocery Store Where He Worked As Errand Boy 20-Yr. Old Youth Buys Grocery Store Where He Worked As Errand Boy James Price, a twenty year old Harlem boy, has recently purchased the grocery business at 2597 Eighth avenue. lem boy, has recently purchased the grocery business at 2597 Eighth avenue. Five years ago he started work in this same store as errand boy at a salary of $2 per week. Possessed of an ambition to become a groceryman, Price watched for his opportunity to become a better job with L. Oppenheimer, Inc. owners of a chain of grocery stores and meat markets. With the latter firm he learned the grocery business from bottom to top at the same time saved his money. Two or three weeks ago he visited his former employer on Eighth avenue who expressed a desire to retire from business and young people who promptly accepted. He is now receiving the congratulations of many friends who are buying all their groceries from Price so that he may succeed in his first business venture. Mrs. Scott Awarded $750 For Injuries From Falling Plaster Mrs. Scott Awarded $750 For Injuries From Falling Plaster 一 After six trials in the 12th District Municipal Court, the "famous falling ceiling case" was settled Monday, February 8. Mrs Susie Spot of 574 St. Nicholas avenue was injured several times in her apartment. Through her counsel, Max Loechin and H Wesman, an action was brought to recover $500 as damages. Five times the case was tried and each time the jury was unable to agree as to the guilty plea. At the sixth time, the plaintiff was willing to compromise for $250, but lawyers for the defendants Fanny Benno of 539 Broadway, refused to compromise. When the case was tried for the sixth time before Justice John R Davies, a court for $750 was awarded the Plaintiff. Girls' Glee Club, Under Minnie Brown, Director, In Annual Song Recital Race Relations Sunday will be observed by the Brooklyn Y W A A Sunday February 14, 4:30 o'clock, at the Central Branch 76 Schermerhorn street with all branches of the City Association participating. The theme of race relations will be treated from the international point of view by two women speakers representing Philadelphia, Music and America. Music for the season arranged by Lyndon H Caldwell organist of Concord Baptist Church Abland Place Glee Club will hold an animal lentent music at Meteoral Hall 776 Sherman street under the direction of Miss Monica Lynn Marguerite Avery, soprano some of summer of an opera theater will present her treat Harvey A Williams will be the companist and will present some of the most promising pinks Mem- lah at the Gler Club who will be brought to shore work are Mrs Lava Laura soprano Miss Helene tassaw- contralto Rosa Wright, M. O Mahon on Martha Mitchell Sutcliffe Paterson River Revival Vola Hof- lah tribute Nead, Glare Straw trace Heese, Mass. Straw Arlane Woodley, Grace Henry Lawrence Mirne Johnson Sarah Shipple, Mass. Johnson, An- niel H. Y. club boys of Callery Aven- lion M. A. A. will compete with behind girls of Abland Place and ashold spelling bee to be held in the M. A. gym. Thursday evening February 19 at 8 pm. Brooklyn Chapter Of Omega Psi Phi Frat Elects New Officers Brooklyn Chapter Of Omega Psi Phi Frat Elects New Officers At their annual election of officers, Sunday afternoon February 7, the Zeta Psi Chapter of the Omega Psi Fraternity, located in Brooklyn, N.Y., unanimously relected Stanley M. Douglas as their Husband for the ensuing year. The other officers elected were Malcolm Dodson, Keeper of Record, and Seal Melville Cole, Keeper of Honor. Tudlow W. Salmon, Keeper of Honor, Archbishop John S. Koch of Peace and Dr. Donald S. Haddam. The latter, which is the first chapter of a national collegiate fraternity to be established in Brooklyn, starts its second and year with a roster of sixteen active members. BY JAMES H. HOGANS A Pollman Porter's Opinion of Roland Hayes SOME circumstances of recent of mine, a fellow worker, came to see me on a willful occasion of business. During the visit our talk drifted to Roland Hayes, the Negro singer, with whom my friend is very much enamored. In fact, to use the vernacular of the street he fairly 'naves' about the singing ability and other attributes of Mr. Hayes. He informed me then that he was laying off from his job in order that he might attend Mr. Hayes' hospital at Cargnege Hall last evening. Being so impressed with his praise and idea of this artist, and with wanting to present some novel of a sort different from that usually contained in this column, I invited him to write for me an article on Roland Hayes as soon though the eyes of a Pollman porter. This porter, I well known in the New York District, but for personal reasons desires that his work be omitted. Therefore, simply for an appellation, I shall call him Henry John Doe. His letter and article follow: THE LETTER DEAR MR. HOGANS: Following our conversation of a few days ago, in which I promised you that I would write for your column an article on my impressions of Roland Hayes, I am afraid that I have essayed to do something for which I am not quite fitted—that is not literally fitted. It is easy, enough for me to relate in an aerial way how Mr. Hayes impresses me, but to put those impressions in a form that will make them acceptable for your column in The Age is another thing. Trusting, however, that your readers will give attention to the thought contained herein, and not the phrasiology, I shall endeavor to relate how this Negro genius impresses me." Following our conversation of the day that I would write for your column, Hayes, I am afraid that I have not quite fitted—that is not literal relate in an oral way how Mr. Hayes sions in a form that will make them another thing. Trusting, however to the thought contained herein, and to relate how this Negro genius imit THE "It is, of course, a well known music lovers, that Roland Hayes is doubt, that the Negro race has events in the realm of song a source I wonder how many of these American builder. I dare say the number is. "Most of our people give attention us who attend his recitals know that he charms—the audiences will ability upon his listeners in the which I seriously doubt is being Negro race in their appraisement of "As a builder of racial estimate is the third greatest exponent of American Negroes. To me, Freder Washington are the only two Americans placed ahead of him. Whether one is this certain fact: He is the most and ability we have among us today. "In terming Mr. Hayes a race his contribution to the progress of than the contribution that is now by and leaders; for should I say that, leaders build along one line; Mr. sentiment And this sentiment to singing. "Now, just what I mean by creed about a condition in which one race standing of another Roland Hayes least, between the whites and the blues. Wherever and whenever Mr. H is a rule, is composed mostly of the that he makes on these people is a racial group to which he 'longs; for of the white demagogue that a Negro scheme of tills. "A good illustration of how he occurred at one of his recitals at wounded white woman occupied a seat Mr. Hayes began to sing, she adjusted her lorgnette so as to get pletion of the song, she turned to m than merely sing, she has poured out. "Another time I sat next to a Hayes rendered one of his German I answered him in the negative 'W is a wonderful singer. "His recital on the night of J attendance of music lovers, and the which I have grown accustomed to I were exclaimed profusely after the "Maybe I am somewhat sophist a racial builder, but a character race, to heights, of rapture and pera ability, wield in some way a potent which he belongs." creation' of a few days our column an article I have, essayed to do not literally fitted. I Mr. Hays impresses mug, however, that you herein, and not the g genius impresses me.' THE ARTICLE well known fact, general and Hayes is a great source he ever produced, long a source of pride among a source of pride number is limited. We give attention to the skills that he draws audiences with his singings in the matter of race is being taken into consideration of this Negro estimation, in my component of Negro艺业, Frederick Douglas two American of one agree or is the most outstanding singers today. Hayes is a race builder, I progress of our race is that is now being rendered like; Mr Hayes, another line; Mr Hayes, another toward the mean by creating racialists one race will get a landlady Hayes helps to and the blacks. Most Mr Hayes is advo渣 mostly of the better class people is not only longs; for it demonstrab that a Negro can go out of how he impresses specials at which I was placed a seat next to the singling, she apparently, as to as get a better returned to me and said poured out the heart next to a man of German selection, a negative 'Well,' said he night of January 27 1895, and the expression customized to hear whenever after the rendition of what sophisticated in a character that can make and peaks of admiration a potent influence "It is, of course, a well known fact, generally conceded by all American music lovers, that Roland Hayes is a great singer—the greatest, without doubt, that the Negro race has ever produced. Especially are his achievements in the realm of song a source of pride to Americans of color. But I wonder how many of these Americans think of him in the light of a race builder. I dare say the number is limited. "Most of our people give attention to the quality of his art. Those of us who attend his recitals know that he draws capacity audiences; know that he charms these audiences with his singing; but the reaction of this ability upon his listeners in the matter of racial up-building is something which I seriously doubt is being taken into account by members of the Negro race in their appraisal of this Negro singer's genius. "As a builder of racial estimation, in my humble opinion, Mr Hayes is the third greatest exponent of Negro achievement in the history of American Negroes. To me, Frederick Douglas and the lamented Booker Washington are the only two Americans of color who are entitled to be placed ahead of him. Whether one agrees or not with this placement, there is this certain fact: He is the most outstanding example of Negro progress and ability we have among us today." "In terming Mr. Hayes a race builder, I do not mean to imply that his contribution to the progress of our race is greater or more substantial than the contribution that is now being rendered by many of our teachers and leaders; for should I say that, I would be in eper. Our teachers and leaders build along one line; Mr Hayes, another. He builds by creating sentiment. And this sentiment towards the race is effected through his singing. "Now, just what I mean by creating racial sentiment is this. To bring about a condition in which one race will get a better perspective and understanding of another Roland Hayes helps to do this, in this country, at least, between the whites and the blacks. And it works in this manner. Wherever and whenever Mr Hayes is advertised to sing, the audience, as a rule, is composed mostly of the better class of whites. The impression that he makes on these people is not only helpful to him but it helps the racial group to which he' longs; for it demonstrates the falsity of the cry of the white demagogue that a Negro can go so far and no further in the scheme of things. "A good illustration of how he impresses some of his white auditors occurred at all of his recitals at which I was present. A refined and dignified white woman occupied a seat next to the one in which I sat. When Mr Hayes began to sing, she apparently, seemed unconcerned. Simply adjusted her lorgnette so as to get a better view of the singer. On completion of the song, she turned to me and said, 'The singer has done more than merely sing he has poured out the heart throbs of a people' "Another time I sat next to a man of German descent, who, when Mr Hayes rendered one of his German selection, asked me if I spoke German I answered him in the negative 'Well,' said he, 'Hi-German is perfect. He is a wonderful singer' "His recital on the night of January 27 brought out the regular full attendance of music lovers, and the expressions of 'great' and 'wonderful, which I have grown accustomed to hear whenever I am one of his auditors, were exclaimed profusely after the rendition of each song "Maybe I am somewhat sophisticated in my evaluation of this man as a racial builder, but a character that can move people, irrespective of race, to heights of rapture and peaks of admiration, must through this ability, world in some way a potent influence for the good of the race to which he belongs." John D. Nixon was elected president of the trustee board of Bridge Street A M F Church for the seventh time, at the annual electron held at the church Friday night, February 4. Mr. Nixon, who has been in the Immigration service of the Federal government for a number of years, is also superintendent of the Sunday school. He is active in case, fraternal and political life, being at one time chairman of the board of directors of the Y M C A, a past master of Widow's Son Lodge, No 11, F A M, and one of the leaders of the M, G, and other officers of the board are Alfred D. Peyton, vice president, James F. Bruce, secretary, Anthony T. Barnes, treasurer, and Noah Bluford chairman of the house committee. IF UDONT C COMPUTER DR. KAPLAN THE EYESIGHT SPECIALIST RELIABLE AND REASONABLE EYES EXAMINED FREE 531 LENOX AVE. Opposite Harlem Hospital. In the old days the disadvantages. He has chin in stopping pain, client, a visit to the d dreaded. WHAT A CHANGE as it is with the bet it is astonished at the us for expert GAS EX Hector SURGEON DENTIST NUE, BET. 134th Phone Harlem 2333 In the old days the dentist labored under great disadvantages. He had little or nothing to aid him in stopping pain, so that to the average patient, a visit to the dentist was a thing to be dreaded. BUT WHAT A C In our office, equipped as it is we TRACTIONS, the patient is astonished pared to stop pain. Come to us for expert Dr. Hec SURGEON 488 LENOX AVENUE, BRE Phone He In our office, equipped as it is with the best appliances for GAS EX TRACTIONS, the patient is astonished at the way in which we are pre prepared to stop pain. 488 LENOX AVENUE, BET. 134th & 135th STREETS Phone Harlem 2012 John D. Nixon Heads Bridge Street Church Trustees for 7th Year --- ```markdown ``` in fact, generally conceded by all Americans, is a great singer—the greatest, without ever produced. Especially as his achieve source of pride to Americans of color, Americans think of him in the light of a race is limited. tention to the quality of his art. Those of us that he draws capacity audiences; know with his singing; but the reaction of this matter of racial up-building is something taken into account by members of the of this Negro singer's genius. tation, in my humble opinion, Mr Hayer of Negro achievement in the history of Frederick Douglas and the lamented Booke Americans of color who are entitled to be agreees or not with this placement, there is outstanding example of Negro progress May. race builder, I do not mean to imply that of our race is greater or more substantial being rendered by many of our teachers and Hayes, another. He builds by creating towards the race is effected through his creating racial sentiment is this. To bring race will get a better perspective and under eyes helps to do this, in this country, a blacks. And it works in this manner Hayes is advertised to sing, the audience the better class of whites. The impression not only helpful to him but it helps the for it demonstrate the falsity of the cry Negro can go so far and no further in the the impresses some of his white auditors which I was present. A refined and digited next to the one in which I sat. When apparently, seemed unconcerned Simply get a better view of the singer. On come me and said. The singer has done more out the heart throbs of a people a man of German descent, who, when Mr in selection, asked me if I spoke German Well, said he. 'Hi-German is perfect He. January 27 brought out the regular full the expressions of 'great' and 'wonderful' to hear whenever I am one of his auditors the rendition of each song histicated in my evaluation of this man that can move people, irrespective of speaks of admiration, must through this ant influence for the good of the race to George Gordon Battle Speaks On World Court Before St. Mark Lyceum the members and friends of St Mark's Liceum listened to an interesting address on "The World Court," by George Gordon Battle on Sunday after noon, February 7. Mr. Battle who is one of New York's outstanding lawyers, gave a thorough explanation of the workings of the Court. He also pointed out its advantages and the obligations incumbent upon the nations who joined. An address of seleme was delivered by G W Hodges, and short addresses were delivered by Fred R Moore and Brace Robert Repert. on the program were either reading Mrs Novello Pindle tenor solo, Morris Lasser. The invocation was by Mrs I W Mayfield and the Rev John W Robinson, pastor pronounced the benediction George W Butts was the presiding officer MAKE HAIR DRESSING CREAM YOUR PAL Reg U.S. Pat Off For sale at Drug Stores and Barber Shops I. POSNER, PERFUMER 111 West 128th St., New York Jan. 30th GAS EXTRACTIONS old days the dentist labored under great ages. He had little or nothing to aid topping pain, so that to the average pa- vish to the dentist was a thing to be A CHANGE TODAY with the best appliances for GAS EX- nished at the way in which we are pre- expert GAS EXTRACTIONS Actor Polk ON DENTIST BET. 134th & 135th STREETS- H. ADOLPH HOWELL FUNERAL DIRECTOR 2332 SEVENTH AVE. First Class Service at Moderate Prices—Use of Church Free Your Inspection Invited Audubon 97 FURNISHED ROOMS (The Age office is open Monday, and and Tuesday) evenings of each week until 8 o'clock to receive advertisements. 7th Ave., 2124—Neally furnished rooms, all convenient for respectable people. Feb13-21 Edgescombe Ave., 219 AB-4C—Nearly furnished, large city, 70pm. 8th Nicholas Ave., 426 (ground Roof) —Furnished room for couple, 54 up, steam, electric, kitchen, prillege. Spellen. 8th 82, 329 West—Furnished room to respectable man or woman. Call six p. m. Mrs. Mitchell. Feb13-21 1919th St., 204 West, Apt. 4. Large light furnished room, running water, steam, for couple or two men. 126th St., 221 West—Furnished rooms $5 and $7. D. Brown. Feb6-21 130th St., 217 West—Parlor and rooms to let, modern equipment, use of kitchen, heat and telephone. Respectable couple. $5.50 and $9.50 weekly. Feb6-4t 131st St., 202 West—Nearly furnished rooms, kitchenette to rent. Jan23-4t 135th St., 209 West—Nearly furnished rooms, large and small. Mrs. C. McGray, one flight up. CARD OF THANKS The family of the late Mr. and Mrs. Simon G. Buchanan wish, to thank their, many friends, for the kindness shown in every way during their re- cent bereavement. OBITUARIES Lillian Williamson died suddenly Saturday, January 30, at her late residence, 566 Hancock street, Brooklyn. She was born at Elizabeth, N.J. November 8, 1879, was a resident of Brooklyn for many years. She leaves a husband, Robert Williamson and a brother, Henry Shober, and a host of relatives and friends. Interment at Mt. Olivet Cemetery February 2. Granville O. Paris, undertaker. IN MEMORY In memory of my brother, George W. Smith, who departed this life, February 10, 1925. Sleep on dear brother, sleep and take thy rest. Wolved the well, but Jesus loved the best. Sister—LULA ANDERSON. Nephews—THEO. ANDERSON. ED. SCOTT IN MEMORIAM In memory of my beloved wife who departed this life February 11, 1925, Clara E. Jones. Quick and audden was the call, Your sudden death surprised us all. The shock was great and blow severe We little-bought your death so near. Friends may think you tragic. And our grieving heart healed. But they do not know the sorrow That our grieving hearts conceal May her soul rest in peace (Husband) WALTER JONES (Daughter) HELEN JONES (Aunt) MARY M. WILLIAMS (Uncle) ALONZO GREEN In loving memory of our de- mother, Mrs Julia A Moss, who departed this life February 10, 1925 The face we love is now lard low The fond true heart is still. The hand that always helped us on Lectures in death A J Daughters (Mrs) E BARRFTT E. J HARPER N. Y. Academy of Business New students registered at the New York Academy of Business this week are Misses Lallian Carsog, Ruth Lipscombe, Dorothy Handy, Susana Diaz and Celeste Eugenia Handy. Miss Josephine Boone was transferred from the night school to the day school. Other students are the Misses Inez Elmundo, Florence Kemp and Lucy Moway, and Ruben Jones. The Business Girls' Association is giving a Valentine Party on Saturday evening. February 13 at the Academy, 447 Lenox avenue. The girls are planning many surprises Undertakers W. DAVID BROWN Undertaker's Establishment Under the Management of ARNIA E. BROWN AND MAGGALY BROWN-CROSS B H BRAY PURVIS, Assistant HIGH GRAIN ENSEMBLED UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMERS 2315 SEVENTH AVENUE Bet 135th Aft 146th Telephone Bradhurst 0442 Phone Prospect 0536 Allen Dillard Lillian C. Dillard UNDERTAKERS 468 Franklin Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. (Corner Jefferson Ave.) PHONE 0536 MORN. J. WESLEY LANE Undertaker and Embalmer OPEN ALL NIGHT, FUNERAL PARLOR AND CHAPEL FREE Lady in Attendance Moderate Rates 112 W. 133rd St. Near Lenox Ave. PHONE 4916 BRADHURST WILLIAM C. PERRY FUNERAL BIRDCTOR & EMBALMER JARGE FUNERAL PARLOR 2/8 West 132nd Street Between 7th and 8th Aven. September 13m New York City3 H. ADC HOW Children To Board Good home desired for a baby Write stating terms. Box N N. Y. Age. Wanted—Desirable home dren. Willing to pay reasonable board. Write Box N Age. REAL ESTATE Brooklyn Bargegant Lafayette Ave be a suitable for 3 families, good cation and neighborhood, near cars and churches, less than $50 cash. Good investment we are immediately; also many other bargains. We have apartments houses to let. See us before Open evenings also. *Alarmen* Arlington, 1021 Bedford Ave. PLAINFIELD. N. J. If considering a Home, remember Plainfield, N. J. Edw. C. Duggan Real Estate, Bond & M. 324 Liberty street, Plainfield, N. J. BARGAIN—One and two tahouses in Westfield, Scotch, Plainfield, Cranford, Rosell and Elworth, N. J. Prices $2,000 upward Terms to suit buyers. J. Johnson Real Estate and Insurance 1615 South Ave, Westfield, I. Phone Westfield 1882-1073. June 27th We start you in a good profitable business of your own selling on trust. Write for our great office at once Sano Mfg. Co. 4508 Central Ave. Cleveland, Ohio Feb 6 ```text ce Manage MAIN M100 wrc cus MANAGE M100 wrc ERS, 562 Broadway, New ``` PRACTICAL OR GRADUATE ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN Civil Engineer To make detail drawings from plans for execution of work in the field. Good opportunity for the right man. Reply by letter ONLY, stating experience and salary expected. TO SELL GOODS Sell our quick selling med toilet goods Pay when sold quick Box 2273, Desert Memphis, Tenn West Side Tailoring CLEANERS and DWERS Fancy Cleaning a Special E. M. AMOS. Proj 200 West 138th Street Phone Bradhurst 144 Branch Shop: 2360 210 Tel. Edgecombe 58 Phone Edgecombe 0729 JOHNNY BRENT Sea Food and Chop House Box Trade A Specia 2244 SEVENTH AVENUE Cor 132nd St New Y Febl.3m WHY NOT GET THE MIST When It Costs No M Broadway AUTO School BENJAMIN F THOMAS 213 West 53rd St New Phone Circle 0995 15-3mo OLPH